Speech of Sir Winston
Churchill
Zurich, 19th September 1946
Mr. President,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
I am honoured to-day by being received in your ancient
university and by the address which had been given to me
on your behalf and which l greatly value.
I wish to speak to you to-day about the tragedy of
Europe. This noble continent, comprising on the whole the
fairest and the most cultivated regions of the earth,
enjoying a temperate and equable climate, is the home of
all the great parent races of the western world. It is
the fountain of Christian faith and Christian ethics. It
is the origin of most of the culture, the arts,
philosophy and science both of ancient and modern time.
If Europe were once united in the sharing of its common
inheritance, there would be no limit to the happiness, to
the prosperity and the glory which its three or four
million people would enjoy. Yet it is from Europe that
have sprung that series of frightful nationalistic
quarrels, originated by the Teutonic nations in their
rise to power, which we have seen in this twentieth
century and even in our own lifetime, wreck the peace and
mar the prospects of all mankind.
And what is the plight to which Europe has been
reduced? Some of the smaller States have indeed made a
good recovery, but over wide areas a vast quivering mass
of tormented, hungry, care-worn and bewildered human
beings gape at the ruins of their cities and their homes,
and scan the dark horizons for the approach of some new
peril, tyranny or terror. Among the victors there is a
babel of voices; among the vanquished the sullen silence
of despair. That is all that Europeans, grouped in so
many ancient states and nations, that is all that the
Germanic races have got by tearing each other to pieces
and spreading havoc far and wide. Indeed but for the fact
that the great Republic across the Atlantic Ocean has at
length realised that the ruin or enslavement of Europe
would involve their own fate as well, and has stretched
out hands of succour and of guidance, but for that the
Dark Ages would have returned in all their cruelty and
squalor. Gentlemen, they may still return.
Yet all the while there is a remedy
which, if it were generally and spontaneously adopted by the great
majority
of people in many lands, would as if by a miracle
transform the whole scene, and would in a few years make
all Europe, or the greater part of it, as free and as
happy as Switzerland is to-day. What is this sovereign
remedy? It is to re-create the European Family, or as
much of it as we can, and to provide it with a structure
under which it can dwell in peace, in safety and in
freedom. We must build a kind of United States of Europe.
In this way only will hundreds of millions of toilers be
able to regain the simple joys and hopes which make life
worth living. The process is simple. All that is needed
is the resolve of hundreds of millions of men and women
to do right instead of wrong and to gain as their reward
blessing instead of cursing. Much work, Ladies and
Gentlemen, has been done upon this task by the exertions
of the Pan-European Union which owes so much to Count
Coudenhove-Kalergi and which commanded the services
of" the famous French patriot and statesman Aristide
Briand. There is also that immense body of doctrine and
procedure, which was brought into being amid high hopes
after the first world war, I mean the League of Nations.
The League of Nations did not fail because of its
principles or conceptions. It failed because these
principles were deserted by those States who had brought
it into being. It failed because the governments of those
days feared to face the facts, and act while time
remained. This disaster must not be repeated. There is
therefore much knowledge and material with which to
build; and also bitter dear bought experience to stir the
builders.
I was very glad to read in the newspapers two days ago
that my friend President Truman had expressed his
interest and sympathy with this great design. There is no
reason why a regional organization of Europe should in
any way conflict with the world organization of the
United Nations. On the contrary, I believe that the
larger synthesis will only survive if it is founded upon
coherent natural groupings. There is already a natural
grouping in the western hemisphere. We British have our
own Commonwealth of Nations. These do not weaken, on the
contrary they strengthen, the world organization. They
are in fact its main support. And why should there not be
a European group which could give a sense of enlarged
patriotism and common citizenship to the distracted
peoples of this turbulent and mighty continent? And why
should it not take its rightful place with other great
groupings and help to shape the onward destinies of men?
In order that this should be accomplished there must be
an act of faith in which millions of families speaking
many languages must consciously take part.
We all know that the two world wars
through which we have passed arose out of the vain passion of a
newly-united Germany to play the dominating part in the
world. In this last struggle crimes and massacres have
been committed for which there is no parallel since the
invasion of the Mongols in the fourteenth century and no
equal-at any time in human history. The guilty must be
punished. Germany must be deprived of the power to rearm
and make another aggressive war. But when all this has
been done, as it will be done, as it is being done, then
there must be an end to retribution. There must be what
Mr. Gladstone many years ago called «a blessed act of
oblivion». We must all turn our backs upon the horrors
of the past. We must look to the future. We cannot afford
to drag forward across the years that are to come the
hatreds and revenges which have sprung from the injuries
of the past. If Europe is to be saved from infinite
misery, and indeed from final doom, there must be this
act of faith in the European Family and this act of
oblivion against all the crimes and follies of the past.
Can the free peoples of Europe rise to the height of
these resolves of the soul and of the instincts of the
spirit of man? If they can, the wrongs and injuries which
have been inflicted will have been washed away on all
sides by the miseries which have been endured. Is there
any need for further floods of agony? Is the only lesson
of history to be that mankind is unteachable? Let there
be justice, mercy and freedom. The people have only to
will it, and all will achieve their hearts' desire.
I am going to say something that will astonish you.
The first step in the recreation of the European Family
must be a partnership between France and Germany. In this
way only can France recover the moral and cultural
leadership of Europe. There can be no revival of Europe
without a spiritually great France and a spiritually
great Germany. The structure of the United States of
Europe, if well and truly built, will be such as to make
the material strength of a single state less important.
Small nations will count as much as large ones and gain
their honour by their contribution to the common cause.
The ancient states and principalities of Germany, freely
joined together for mutual convenience in a federal
system, might take their individual places among the
United States of Europe. I shall not try to make a
detailed programme for hundreds of millions of people who
want to be happy and free, prosperous and safe, who wish
to enjoy the four freedoms of which the great President
Roosevelt spoke, and live in accordance with the
principles embodied in the Atlantic Charter. If this is
their wish, if this is the wish of the Europeans in so
many lands, they have only to say so, and means can
certainly be found, and machinery erected, to carry that
wish to full fruition.
But I must give you a warning. Time may be short. At
present there is a breathing-space. The cannons have
ceased firing. The fighting has stopped; but the dangers
have not stopped. If we are to form the United States of
Europe, or whatever name it may take, we must begin now.
In these present days we dwell strangely and
precariously under the shield, and I will even say
protection, of the atomic bomb. The atomic bomb is still
only in the hands of a state and nation which we know
will never use it except in the cause of right and
freedom. But it may well be that in a few years this
awful agency of destruction will be widespread and the
catastrophe following from its use by several warring
nations will not only bring to an end all that we call
civilisation, but may possibly disintegrate the globe
itself.
I must now sum up the propositions which are before
you. Our constant aim must be to build and fortify the
strength of the United Nations Organization. Under and
within that world concept we must re-create the European
Family in a regional structure called, it may be, the
United States of Europe. And the first practical step
would be to form a Council of Europe. If
at first all the States of Europe are not willing or able
to join the Union, we must nevertheless proceed to
assemble and combine those who will and those who can.
The salvation of the common people of every race and of
every land from war or servitude must be established on
solid foundations and must be guarded by the readiness of
all men and women to die rather than submit to tyranny.
In all this urgent work, France and Germany must take the
lead together. Great Britain, The British Commonwealth of
Nations, mighty America and I trust Soviet Russia - for:
then indeed all would be well - must be the friends and
sponsors of the new Europe and must champion its right to
live and shine.
Therefore I say to you: let Europe arise!