VJ Day: the forgotten war
The defeat of Japan in August 1945 has become a footnote to Allied victory in Europe. But the world we inhabit today was forged in Asia…
ByReviewing politics 
and culture since 1913
David Reynolds is emeritus professor of international history at Cambridge and a contributing writer to the New Statesman. His most recent book is Mirrors of Greatness: Churchill and the Leaders Who Shaped Him. He co-hosts the Creating History podcasts.
The defeat of Japan in August 1945 has become a footnote to Allied victory in Europe. But the world we inhabit today was forged in Asia…
By David ReynoldsOn 31 January 2020, the United Kingdom left the EU – but four years later, Brexit is still a…
By David ReynoldsThroughout his career, Britain’s wartime prime minister studied how other leaders – Roosevelt, Attlee, Stalin and Gandhi – exercised…
By David ReynoldsHistory will record this deed as an achievement of the highest order.
By David ReynoldsFrom Kosovo to Ukraine, Lawrence Freedman’s book Command explores the catastrophes that occur when state and military strategy collide.
By David ReynoldsIt is 75 years since the US launched its ambitious aid scheme to rebuild postwar Europe and protect it…
By David ReynoldsAmerica sees the Second World War as its “good war”, when it won the right to world leadership. Now…
By David ReynoldsOn the 80th anniversary of the Nazis’ attack on the Soviet Union, arguments still rage about the Eastern Front…
By David ReynoldsIn his address at Fulton, Missouri, 75 years ago, Churchill played up the Soviet threat to bolster the case…
By David Reynolds