From its inception in June 1942, the Economic and Reconstruction Department within the British Foreign Office took on a significant role as a postwar planning department under the leadership of Gladwyn Jebb. Amidst numerous problems that were expected to arise at the conclusion of hostilities, the creation of a postwar international organization loomed large, as such an institution would be responsible for the maintenance of peace in subsequent years. Nearly six months into the department's existence, Jebb felt compelled to bring a historian into the department, particularly one with an expertise in previous international organizations dating back to the nineteenth century. The man he chose was Charles Kingsley Webster, a professor then on leave from the London School of Economics and serving in the Foreign Office Research Department. This “Roman-nosed, chinless extrovert,” as Jebb later described him, had “an encyclopedic knowledge” of international organizations dating back to the Congress of Vienna. But while Jebb considered the majority of policy-minded professors to be no more than “long-haired theoreticians” spouting impractical schemes, he considered Webster, like himself, to be a “Great Power man.”Footnote 1
While this description is important in understanding Jebb's motivations for bringing Webster into the department, it is a simplification of one of the most knowledgeable minds within the Foreign Office's postwar planning operation. Though Webster was indeed an expert on past organizations and often stressed the position and responsibilities of the great powers, he was also a liberal internationalist with radical, long-term visions of an international order of which Jebb, as well as others in the Foreign Office, was unaware. By the time of Webster's full involvement in the department by the spring of 1943, the “Prof,” as he was known to wartime colleagues, had been refining and articulating his nuanced views on international politics for almost forty years.
Webster's approach to the study of both diplomatic history and international politics has been addressed in previous scholarship, as has his worldview more broadly. On the latter subject, scholars have been split on how exactly Webster's views might be categorized, if at all. Ian Hall, in a study dedicated to Webster's historiographical and international thought, has sought to escape the narrow confines of labeling him an idealist or realist. His thought, Hall argues, “fits easily into neither category.”Footnote 2 Philip Reynolds and E. J. Hughes, who have undertaken the longest examination of Webster's work during the Second World War, have called him “idealist in his realism.”Footnote 3 Others, including the historian T. G. Otte, have described Webster as a “liberal internationalist” though “not an idealist,” while David Stevenson, one of Webster's successors in the chair of international history at the London School of Economics, has claimed that Webster was “a man of decided views and a proselytizing internationalist.”Footnote 4
This article puts forward a view which is in line with the argument, expressed by the scholars mentioned above, that Webster's worldview cannot be classified or categorized with ease. Indeed, his views were contingent on circumstance as much as they were on his understanding of historical events and figures. He rarely strayed from a view that military and economic power was a key determinant in international politics, and at times—especially with regard to his work in government during the Second World War—his concern for the national interest sometimes outweighed larger internationalist considerations. Equally, however, Webster was a committed internationalist, believing that increased international cooperation along economic, political, and social lines was inevitable and in the interest of the United Kingdom.
Where the article departs furthest from previous scholarship, however, is in advancing a line that Webster's thinking was infused with a utopian vision of a future international order—one which, while not radical in its means, was certainly radical in its ends. The first instance of this utopianism came in 1909 when, as a postgraduate student at the University of Cambridge, he argued that the development of a world state was not only a possibility but an inevitability. Though the product of a youthful optimism buoyed by some of the intellectual currents of his period, these views did not dissolve over time. Three decades later, as he found himself enmeshed in the United Kingdom's planning efforts for a postwar international organization, Webster was still expressing such views, albeit sporadically. While he kept these ideas from his government colleagues for fear of being labeled too much of a visionary idealist, it was the concept of an eventual world state that, as this article argues for the first time, sat at the back of his mind, providing a broad shape to his recommendations for a postwar organization.
This article traces several currents in Webster's international thought, from the early years of his university education, to the period of the Second World War (which was the pinnacle of his policy influence), to the last years of his life. In particular, the work focuses on the way in which historical study and concurrent ideas and events shaped his thinking. As an intellectual, he was not necessarily profound. His approach to history was more practical than philosophical.Footnote 5 In addressing some of the key questions of international politics and British foreign policy in these years, he was, in varying degrees, both contradictory and prescient. Yet through a reading of his published works, his lectures, and his correspondence, a recognizable, if complex, approach to history and international politics emerges. It is the aim of this article to trace these patterns of Webster's international thought, how they developed, and how they altered over time, especially in response to events he lived through. In so doing, the work shines light on a significant figure of the twentieth century, and how his thinking aligned with, or diverged from, certain strains of liberal internationalist thinking in the period spanning 1900 to 1960.
In terms of historians becoming involved in major policy planning, the case of Webster is one of the most consequential of the twentieth century. Few professional historians within the United Kingdom have been in such a position, and still fewer have their fingerprints on the structures of a postwar international order that survives into the present day. On perhaps a deeper level, his experience is representative of how, in any given period, countless ideas related to the structure and conduct of international politics merge and collide within one's intellect, and how, in turn, the resulting conceptual constructs come to be shaped by certain necessities. In the case of Charles Webster, we see how an individual's historical study and personal experience moulded his international thought, including his more radical ideas, over time. At the same time, we can also observe how these ideas were, or were not, directly applied when he found himself in a position often cordoned off to scholars and historians—the world of high policy.
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The foundation of Webster's international thought was his approach to historical study, a view nurtured and cultivated at the University of Cambridge in the first decade of the twentieth century. By the time he matriculated to King's College in 1904, the discipline of history itself was continuing an evolution that had begun nearly thirty years before. Under the direction of Oscar Browning and George Prothero, the Historical Tripos had been established in 1875, and, for the first time, history was treated as its own discipline outside the wider “moral sciences.”Footnote 6 By 1903, the Regius Professor of Modern History at Cambridge, John Bagnell Bury, remarked that historical studies remained in a transformative state, something he considered to be “a great event in the history of the world.”Footnote 7 It was in this environment that Webster's impressionable mind shifted in important ways. Though he was not a disciple, per se, of any iconic Cambridge historian—for instance, a John Robert Seeley, Lord Acton, or Bury—he adopted certain elements which, largely popular during his time, would go on to define his approach to history and politics in the succeeding decades.
Arguably the two most important aspects of his historical study were the scientific approach to investigation and the use of history for practical purposes. Concerning the former, Webster was open about the influence of Lord Acton, and specifically what he described as the one-time Regius Professor's ability to bring the methods of the famed German historian Leopold von Ranke to English historiography.Footnote 8 Other scholars who embodied this style were Samuel Rawson Gardiner and Frederic William Maitland, the latter of whom Webster considered to be “the most imaginative, the most scientific, and the most successful of all recent historians.”Footnote 9 The period itself was one during which, as Robin Collingwood and Herbert Butterfield each noted, began to move away from more partisan and dramatized accounts of history, especially national history.Footnote 10 In this sense, Webster was a product of the time. During a 1912 lecture on the principles and methods of historical study, Webster, then just twenty-six years old, described the “detective instinct of the historian” which relied on robust documentary evidence and the ability of historians to enter into the minds of their subjects. If scholars could adopt such a mind-set, Webster suggested, then they might be able to “lay the foundations of the new science.”Footnote 11
The second major theme of Webster's approach to history was the discipline's practical use. Here he was the latest in a lineage of Cambridge historians who championed a similar view. John Robert Seeley had spoken of history as the “school of statesmanship” in 1870, while Lord Acton, no stranger to politics or elite political circles, carried on the tradition.Footnote 12 The latter's inaugural lecture in 1895, in particular, reads as one of the great testaments to the utility of history for political life.Footnote 13 This was an approach which enveloped Webster and his young contemporaries, and by the time he submitted his dissertation on the Congress of Vienna in 1909, he was explicit about the modern applicability of his research.Footnote 14 “The Congresses at The Hague in 1899 and 1907 are in a sense the successors of those [at] Vienna and Aix-la-Chapelle,” he wrote. “An investigation of the policies of their predecessors should be of considerable assistance to the statesmen of the twentieth century.”Footnote 15
As he further honed his historical method, Webster's urge to influence the present at times crept into his treatment of the past. He saw it as necessary for historians, especially those living in a world becoming more unstable and hostile, to furnish large generalizations about international politics. The assumption here was that through historical study, one could gather the facts and arrange them in a way which might create practical knowledge about the way states can and should interact. With enough of this know-how, he believed, war might one day be “abolished.” Much of his confidence was derived from his own faith in human reason—a rationality which might be discovered through a reading of history and harnessed for the most noble of ends. “The movement to a deeper understanding of the course of modern history,” he wrote confidently, “is one that will fundamentally affect the whole destiny of the human race.”Footnote 16
While a decisive standpoint for a historian still in his twenties and yet to hold a permanent post, Webster's reflection here was not entirely unique for his time. In many ways, it built upon earlier ideas as expressed by Bury, who in his inaugural lecture at Cambridge in 1903 had spoken of adopting certain—though not all—scientific approaches to historical study, especially as this related to the development of human societies and the interactions between them. “The clear realisation of the fact that our conception of the past is itself a distinct factor in guiding and moulding our evolution, and must become a factor of greater and increasing potency, marks a new stage in the growth of the human mind. And it supplies us with the true theory of the practical importance of history.”Footnote 17 Though Webster would soon go well beyond Bury's sympathy for historical generalizations, the connection between scientific approaches to historical study and what this might reveal about the wider evolution of international affairs occupied an increasingly important place in his own thinking.
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Webster's approach to history in these years led him to a radically progressive view of the international system. Specifically, he believed that not only was a singular world-state the preferable solution for an inherently unstable international system, but that such an arrangement was a historical inevitability. Only months after submitting his dissertation, Webster drafted an ambitious argument, one that, while never presented to the world outside King's College, marked one of the earliest examples of Webster's internationalist thinking and his application of modern history to contemporary issues. It was a vision on international organization he would adjust in the future, but one whose central thesis he would never completely abandon. If anything, it remained his ultimate goal.
The paper was entitled “Evolution of a World State,” and across twelve handwritten pages he made a case for why the international system of nation-states should—and would—become a “world-state” in which all nations would submit to a single legal structure, the decisions of which would settle disputes and, most importantly, avoid open conflict. Given its sweeping range and the place it would occupy in his thought over the next decades, the paper is worth discussing in detail here.
For Webster, the period was one of great advancement in a number of fields, and relations between nation-states were no exception. Using phrasing which he would employ throughout his life, he wrote, “Today we are progressing with a rapidity such as has never before been experienced.” The development of international law and the increasing tendency by some governments to submit to arbitration, in addition to steady industrial and scientific advancements, stood out in his mind.Footnote 18 “There can be no doubt that in a few years the international machinery will be greatly perfected, and, as precedent accumulates on precedent, obligatory arbitration will be practically achieved.”Footnote 19
The central argument he presented concerned a parallel between the internal political evolution of a national state and the ongoing political evolution of the international state. There were four related stages to each evolution and of these, Webster believed that the international state had completed all but the final step: the abolition of war in favor of peaceful settlement of disputes. Beginning with a Hobbesian state of nature and private war between individuals, the state had moved into a second stage of centralized control, in which “private vengeance was regulated.” This control of violence was complemented by the third stage, which involved the creation of tribunals whereby individuals could seek justice “instead of settling their disputes themselves.” The fourth and final stage saw the cessation of private war altogether. At this point “it became compulsory to refer all disputes to a central authority.”Footnote 20
Turning to the evolution of the international state, Webster saw the Thirty Years War as the example of a brazen, lawless struggle between private individuals. But by the time it concluded with the Peace of Westphalia in 1648, Europe had split into different “states of equal legal rights.” This, Webster claimed, was evidence of the international state's entry into the second stage of evolution and “the date at which modern history practically begins.” In addition to the settlement at Westphalia which, in effect, regulated “private vengeance,” thinkers from Hugo Grotius in the seventeenth century to the statesmen responsible for the Geneva Convention of 1864, the Brussels Conference of 1874, and the Hague Conferences of 1899 and 1907 had all sought to develop laws governing the use of force which could restrict a nation's ability to wage war. Webster argued that these agreements had prevented unnecessary wars between civilized states except in those cases in which war was used as “an instrument for the adjustment of international disputes.”
In order to peacefully settle such international disputes, Webster noted that the international state, thus far, had in fact created the necessary machinery. Just as in the third stage of state evolution citizens had developed court systems to settle disputes based on the rule of law, so too had nation-states within the international system developed the International Court of Arbitration in 1899. “Arbitration has come to be regarded as a practical alternative to war just as a trial was … regarded as an alternative to the family feud,” he wrote. The final stage in the evolution of the international state—the abolition of war in favor of compulsory arbitration—remained elusive, however. While advanced nation-states had secured this evolutionary step internally, the international state had yet to reach this milestone, although Webster argued that the first steps had been taken and that the world was within “measurable distance of obligatory arbitration.” He alluded to the fact that in certain matters, for example those dealing with commercial treaties, referrals to arbitration had become the norm. Furthermore, Webster held up the first International Commission of Inquiry in 1905, which had prevented a war between England and Russia over the 1904 Dogger Bank incident, as a great example of the more general tendency to resolve disputes peacefully.Footnote 21
Now, as more international laws became codified and recognized by nation-states throughout the world, and as more governments submitted to arbitration in order to settle disputes, Webster envisioned the eventual formation of “an international Parliament at The Hague with an international executive responsible to it.” Importantly, the overall structure would take the form of a federation of states, one based on the American model. Like other British intellectuals in the decades surrounding the turn of the twentieth century, Webster looked upon the precedent of American federalism as a model of future interstate relations. “The experience of the United States,” he wrote, “shows how easily men of entirely different races and language can be assimilated into one nationality.”Footnote 22
The paper was delivered to a seminar chaired by Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson, and while no record of the subsequent discussion exists, it likely provoked a range of responses given its ambitious claims. What seems to be clear, however, is that Webster was caught up in the uncertainty, excitement, and general fervor surrounding the modernity of the period. Not only were technological advancements changing the way in which individuals perceived time and space, but political thought—particularly liberalism—was experiencing a transformation. Issues concerning democracy, nationality, federalism, and the future of the British Empire were just a few of the major topics undergoing a rigorous evaluation. Duncan Bell has described the period as one when there was an “intense and rapid transition in which many of the exiting categories and concerns of politics were being transformed, even revolutionized.”Footnote 23 Elsewhere, Bell and Casper Sylvest have written of a peculiar strain of liberal internationalist thinking which, like Webster's own view, put forward the idea of a “domestic analogy” to describe one way the international system might come to be ordered.Footnote 24
But where exactly did Webster sit in the context of other writers in the period? His views were optimistic but not entirely anomalous in the first decade of the twentieth century. Among some prominent English historians in particular, there was, as Collingwood observed of the turn of the century, a belief that the world was moving in a certain direction. “The idea of progress,” he wrote, became almost an article of faith.”Footnote 25 Within this broader intellectual climate, there was a sense that, with the right analytical approach, scholars could discover the direction of domestic and international politics (as well as economics) and then guide societies to peace and prosperity. The historian of international thought Glenda Sluga has described an “international turn” taking place in these years, as writers and organizers sought to develop new social and political forms against the backdrop of material progress.Footnote 26 If the nineteenth century was defined by nationalism, wrote one of the most famous journalists of the period, W. T. Stead, then the following would be the “Century of Internationalism.”Footnote 27 Moreover, Webster's writing was evidence of a wider fondness for, and faith in, international law. The Hague Conferences which Webster alluded to were, as historian Madeleine Herren has described, events which “led to the first official inventory of multilateral co-operation, and international unions and multilateral treaties served as models for a new world order based on arbitration.”Footnote 28
As for the great focus of the paper, the idea of a unitary or federal world-state, it was a concept not widely popular but one floated by a number of writers, including W. T. Stead, H. G. Wells and J. A. Hobson, as well as those closer to Webster, such as Lowes Dickinson.Footnote 29 Within Webster's paper, however, there were no references to contemporary writers or publications. Instead, he couched his argument in a range of more established political theories, including Jean-Jacques Rousseau's social contract, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz's writings on a universal jurisprudence, Jeremy Bentham's early calls for an international court of arbitration, and Immanuel Kant's theory of “perpetual peace.”Footnote 30 Webster, however, viewed these arguments as abstract theories. While they were invaluable to the evolution of the world-state, there were recent historical forces at play which proved that the international system of nation-states was moving towards a more unified structure that he described. Rather intriguingly, one of the only references Webster made regarding economic systems involved socialism, which he thought would be a “further unifying force” towards a world-state. Though he dealt with this aspect briefly, this issue was one which revealed, perhaps more than any other topic in the paper, the influence of the intellectual and social environment of his time. This period, as Patrizia Dogliani has described it, was part of a wider “golden age” of socialist international thought, and this is certainly evident in Webster's writing.Footnote 31 “The ideas of socialists,” he noted, “are largely cosmopolitan and their influence which must necessarily increase will be bound to be on the side of a world state.”Footnote 32 Though throughout his subsequent professional life he would largely avoid opinions related to the financial and economic aspects of international order (in favor of topics dealing with political and security matters), the reference to socialism here reveals important characteristics of how Webster recognized and made sense of contemporary forces within society.Footnote 33
Webster's sweeping predictions here could be written off as a consuming idealism so common to individuals in their twenties. Yet these were ideas which proved lasting. Indeed, his writings from 1909 would turn out to be ones that he would hold throughout the prime of his working life.
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Like so many others of his generation, Webster would come to be influenced in profound ways by the experience of the First World War. Having only recently taken up his first academic post—as chair of modern history at the University of Liverpool—when the conflict began, Webster soon joined the Army Service Corps as a junior officer, though poor eyesight kept him from the front lines.Footnote 34 Germany's violation of Belgian neutrality was certainly a catalyst for the twenty-eight-year-old Webster, but as he recalled in later years, he was motivated, in part, by the idea of being involved with the peace settlement which might conclude the war.Footnote 35 In the third year of the conflict, Webster was brought into the Military Intelligence Division at the War Office, and later the Historical Section at the Foreign Office. Thanks in large part to the classicists Arnold Toynbee and Alfred Zimmern, men who would go on to become Webster's close colleagues in the forthcoming decades, a number of Britain's best young historians were brought closer to the conduct of policy.Footnote 36
By December 1918, as the British government was preparing for forthcoming negotiations in Paris, Webster was asked to contribute a memorandum on the lessons of the Congress of Vienna. As one of the first British historians to examine this period, Webster had immersed himself in the national archives of capitals across Western and Central Europe. Throughout this time, he was motivated not only by the historical importance of the settlements which concluded the Napoleonic Wars but also by what he considered to be their contemporary relevance. Just a month before the Paris Peace Conference, he wrote that the Congress of Vienna was the “only assembly which can furnish even a shadowy precedent for the great task that lies before the statesmen and peoples of the world.”Footnote 37 For some, Webster's paper was enlightening. The young diplomat Harold Nicolson offered his praise, as did the permanent undersecretary at the Foreign Office, Lord Hardinge, who asked that the paper be printed and circulated widely.Footnote 38 But for others, including the American president Woodrow Wilson, the historical precedent represented exactly the kind of closed diplomacy and balance-of-power arrangements that they were hoping to transcend.Footnote 39 Webster, however, saw in the congress (and especially the Concert of Europe that followed) the first formal and sustained diplomatic interaction between modern European powers—an experience which had laid the foundation of modern internationalism.
Though his paper was of marginal influence for the more senior British statesmen who traveled to Paris, the work is indicative of certain central themes in his worldview. First and foremost, the paper made clear that his own internationalism was one which rested on the collective responsibility of the great powers. Their leadership was indispensable in that what they agreed to effectively be dictated to by smaller, less powerful states. But despite his opinion that the great powers should be responsible for all major decisions, Webster was sensitive to the concerns of small states, a sympathy which dated back to his study of the Congress of Aix-la-Chapelle in 1818. He acknowledged that the small powers were repeatedly ignored, which “caused great discontent,” and while it was a challenge to conceive of a manner in which the smaller states could be decisive, “the utter disregard of their rights was one of the main reasons for the comparative failure of the Congress.” Webster was careful to avoid overstating the role of smaller states, however. He wrote that while these governments must be involved in the wider settlement, they should be brought into the fold through the work of the allies. What must be avoided was the type of strategy employed by Talleyrand, in which the French ambassador courted smaller states with the aim of sowing discord among the assembly of nations. “It is essential, above all, that no opportunity be given to Germany to imitate the role of Talleyrand, and, by championing the rights of the small nations, to create discontent and even protest, which she can exploit for her own purposes.”Footnote 40 One way to bring smaller countries in, he suggested, was to create smaller subcommittees on which they would sit. This hub-and-spoke arrangement would allow their concerns to be expressed and views incorporated but through the appropriate channels. In practice, Webster's plan to include smaller powers into allied subcommittees was more about creating a feeling of legitimacy within the allied camp. He harbored no illusions about the secondary role of small powers. “The initiative on these matters must come from the Great Powers … If the Great Powers can formulate schemes, these can subsequently be discussed with their smaller allies, and the whole then presented to the enemy Powers as the considered programme of the Alliance.”Footnote 41
After the Paris Peace Conference, Webster returned to academia, a relative decline compared to the landmark proceedings in which he had just taken part. Still, he approached his postwar work, as did many of his wartime colleagues, with renewed energy and sense of mission.Footnote 42 Returning to Liverpool in July 1919, he helped to found the Institute for International Affairs and the Liverpool branch of League of Nations Union, an organization to which he would contribute throughout the interwar years.Footnote 43 Crucially, when it came to teaching and research, Webster continued to be guided by a feeling that historians of international politics had a profound responsibility to furnish knowledge which might guide citizens, and then statesmen, towards a more peaceful coexistence.Footnote 44
It was a theme which Webster had himself advocated as far back as December 1914, when, just months into the conflict, he delivered his first inaugural lecture. Though the scientific approach to history remained fundamental in his eyes, what such a method could achieve had expanded. By collecting, organizing, and interpreting disparate facts, he pointed out just months into the war, “It is possible to make large generalizations of the utmost possible value to the human race.” Nowhere was Webster more positivist in his thinking than in these years during and immediately after the war, when he urged that historians and scholars of international affairs employ the methods and testing of the natural sciences to develop a new “science of modern diplomatic.” It was this approach, Webster posited, which should be seen as “contributing to a work that is essential to the progress of modern society.”Footnote 45
Closely related to this plea was Webster's suggestion that English and European historians needed to become less insular in their outlook. What one needed to avoid, for the benefit of both international history and contemporary politics, was a continuation of historical writing with a strong nationalist bent. It was this kind of history which had radicalized societies and indirectly led to the nationalism which drove countries into the conflict. That Englishmen knew little of nineteenth-century history and less of the United Kingdom's relationship with the Continent during this period was part of the reason the powers had descended into war, he argued.Footnote 46 As often was the case when it came to his reflections on the method and practice of historical study, Webster was pointed though not profound. A number of liberal historians who were either influences or contemporaries of Webster—men such as Acton and George Peabody Gooch—railed against historical writing which championed nationalism. As Casper Sylvest has written, much of this opposition stemmed from concerns over German historians and their writing in the late nineteenth century and the twentieth. It was the base interpretations of realpolitik and worship of the state that liberal internationalists such as Webster hoped to transcend.Footnote 47
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In the years after the war, his earlier suggestions became more urgent. The conflict had not only shaken the foundations of political, social, and military affairs, but for scholars like Webster it was nothing less than an intellectual revolution. The Great War, he remarked in 1923, had “sapped the foundations of international order; and changed so remorselessly our conceptions of International Relations.”Footnote 48 Just as the leading Western statesmen in 1919 had sought to refashion the conduct of international affairs, the professors intimately involved in the peace process, whether as pamphleteers or assistants in the delegation, tended to return to their research and teaching positions with a similar mission—that of reinventing the study of international affairs, a development which they believed would, in turn, alter the conduct of diplomacy.Footnote 49
During his second inaugural lecture—this time for the Woodrow Wilson Chair at the University of Aberystwyth in 1923—Webster's view of modern internationalism came into clearer focus. The war, he said, had unleashed an international spirit among populations, and it was the role of historians like himself to channel this growing passion, by means of education and information, towards practical ideas for peace:
Humanity is moved by its emotions, and the springs of action lie deep in the hearts of men. If civilization is to be saved, we shall need something else than the study, however wise and zealous. But it is a function of knowledge or reason to dig as it were a channel for the immense and potent forces that lie within humanity. The upheaval that the War has produced in every country has liberated new and formidable masses of energy. Unless an outlet is found for them, they will overwhelm the world.Footnote 50
The idea of a newfound international spirit, one which might weaken more traditional nationalist emotions, coursed through Webster's writing and advocacy in these years.Footnote 51 Like other well-known writers and politicians in the period, including H. G. Wells, Lowes Dickinson, Alfred Zimmern, David Davies, and even Lord Cecil, Webster placed great faith in public opinion, provided citizens could be educated with modern histories of international politics.Footnote 52 Popular participation in debates over foreign affairs thus became a central theme of his work. Shortly after the war, he began to pressure the British Foreign Office to open its archives to historians, something he considered a “vital consideration in all attempts to make foreign policy depend upon the popular will.”Footnote 53 Elsewhere he warned, “No country can afford to neglect the study of its own foreign policy, without taking the risk that its ideals will be misunderstood and misconstrued.” It was in this vein that Webster championed what he referred to as “enlightened patriotism.”Footnote 54 But his persistence did not win him many friends on the official side. In 1924, the then permanent undersecretary at the Foreign Office, Eyre Crowe, labeled Webster a “terror.”Footnote 55
Wrapped up in his confidence in public opinion was his insistence on what was then known as open diplomacy. He accepted that secret treaties in wartime were “devices … as inevitable as poison gas or high explosives,” but he cautioned that diplomatic activity in general “must be discussed in open debate with the same frankness as domestic.” While always publicly advocating for open diplomacy and the outsized role that supportive public opinion could provide, Webster also understood the potential for popular opinion to constrain professional statesmen. Before a diplomat can execute a policy, he wrote, “A long preparation of public opinion appears to be necessary.” Given the possibility of diplomatic constraint by a naive public, Webster's recourse was to call for citizens to be properly educated on international affairs within national universities. “It is not much use teaching History to the Statesmen if the peoples which they represent are to be left in ignorance.”Footnote 56
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In addition to his historical research and teaching, Webster focused a great deal of his attention on contemporary affairs, especially those which involved the League of Nations. He became a prominent commentator on the nascent organization, even traveling periodically to Geneva to report on its activities. Taken together, his writing in these years reveals an idealist frustrated by a lack of progress. Much of his consternation was directed at British officials. The government's approach, he wrote, reflected “an attitude of negation” which left the delegation bereft of good ideas or proposals. It had resulted in a “humiliating position for a great power,” he said, particularly as France had assumed the “moral leadership of the Assembly.”Footnote 57 Much of Webster's criticism by the mid-1920s stemmed from the Conservative government's refusal to support the Geneva Protocol, which had been introduced in part by Ramsay MacDonald's Labour government. The main point of contention involved a stipulation concerning compulsory arbitration—a development which Webster had long championed and which ran through his suggestions as far back as his paper on the evolution of a world-state from 1909. Once states substituted the rule of law for rule of force, he believed, there could be true movement in the direction of world peace.Footnote 58
Webster also came to be a staunch supporter of the Treaty of Mutual Assistance, seeing in this proposal a guarantee which might pave the way for future disarmament. This view brought him into opposition with other notable internationalists in the period, including Helena Swanwick of the Independent Labour Party, as well as his former Lowes Dickinson. The latter warned that the treaty might be seen in other capitals as a hostile alliance, while Swanwick, though she considered the Geneva Protocol to be “a landmark of great significance in the evolution of international relations,” thought that the treaty was an example of all that was wrong in international politics—namely the idea that “security can be got by force.”Footnote 59 In contrast, Webster held that disarmament could only be achieved if there were adequate guarantees in place. For those countries retaining high levels of armaments, he believed that “their motive is fear.” He added, “This fear will increase rather than diminish unless some more definite safeguards are added to the formulae of the Covenant.”Footnote 60
His writings and correspondence from this period were notable for their sober and historical analysis, but equally they also revealed subtle reflections related to the interplay of ideas, individuals, and institutions across history. Great thinkers and statesmen, he suggested, were more the products than the prophets of their time. “Political philosophy is … the expression of its environment and not the cause of it,” he wrote to David Davies. “It was not Clausewitz that created European diplomacy, but European diplomacy that created Clausewitz.”Footnote 61 In this sense, the most forceful ideas grew up from experience of new phenomena, and over time they percolated through the masses. The League of Nations was one such example. As he wrote to his friend Lord Cecil in 1922, “It is already apparent that the Statesmen, who controlled the recent settlement, dwelt, no less than their predecessors, on the past rather than the future.” But there was a reason for this, Webster surmised, one which was revealed throughout history. “Men of action are inevitably behind the current of opinion of their time. Before new ideas, suggested by the ever changing facts of life, can be discerned with precision they must have already become something like commonplace.”Footnote 62
For Webster, great statesmen were those who could grasp, at least on some basic level, the animating ideas of their time and build lasting institutions which might embody and deliver on these principles. It was a position he reserved for Woodrow Wilson, one of his political and intellectual heroes. Perceiving a zeitgeist in the latter years of the First World War, the American president had channeled the forces of popular opinion into the creation of the League of Nations. That institution, Webster argued, “was more produced by the people than by the statesmen. It was imposed on governments by public opinion. In a great many countries, certainly in Great Britain, it was the existence of a new kind of public opinion which made it possible to bring it into existence.”Footnote 63 Crucially for Webster, the sustainability of institutions, not to mention their efficacy, depended to a great degree on adaptability. The importance of flexibility and gradual evolution came to be fixtures in Webster's opinion of international institutions. The Locarno Treaties of 1925, in particular, he held up as a prime example of how a larger organization such as the League could be buoyed by piecemeal agreements which sought to reinforce it.Footnote 64
Despite periodic criticisms of the League, Webster held that the organization, on the whole, represented a fundamental advance in international affairs. It was a judgment perhaps most evident in his pronounced affection for Wilson, which is scattered throughout his writings and lectures in the interwar period. Despite Wilson's earlier snub of Webster's paper at the Paris Peace Conference, the latter considered the American president to be “one of the main intellectual and moral influences” of his life.Footnote 65 His guiding inspiration had helped create the first true international organization, a development that Webster believed to be an “invention just as marvelous and as little expected as the invention of the airplane and the radio.”Footnote 66 These profound efforts, in Webster's eyes, had constituted “the greatest experiment in political machinery that the world has known.”Footnote 67
Enmeshed in his view of the League were the benefits that he thought the organization could bring to the British Empire and Commonwealth, and vice versa. Connections between the League and empire were common in the period, though opinion splintered along more national and international lines.Footnote 68 Mark Mazower has tried to draw the connection between empire and international organization in the thinking of Jan Smuts, something he refers to as “imperial internationalism.”Footnote 69 Other scholars have written of influential personalities like Lord Lothian and Lionel Curtis, men with whom Webster interacted, whether over meals or debates at Chatham House. Michael Pugh has written of Lothian and Curtis that they saw in the League a way to buoy the empire and Commonwealth, with the latter possibly taking over for the League.Footnote 70 Webster, however, differed from these individuals in that he placed great importance on Britain's connection to Europe as well as his ultimate preference that an international organization become preeminent. It was a view he developed in part through his multivolume study of Lord Castlereagh, which Webster began publishing in 1925. Among the Foreign Secretary's great achievements, Webster lauded his tendency to be “more interested in constructing the new Europe than in completing the ascendency of the British Empire in the rest of the world.”Footnote 71 Elsewhere, Webster wrote that the former Foreign Secretary was “a diplomatist par excellence” who had “as deep an interest in the reconstruction of Europe as he had in purely British interests.”Footnote 72 His great achievement—and the one which set him apart and above his counterparts in Russia, Austria, Prussia, and France—was the system of informal congresses and conferences set up in the aftermath of the Napoleonic Wars. It was a project that embodied, in Webster's view, one of the great qualities of Castlereagh, namely his willingness to consider sacrificing small British interests if it meant that some wider, more important agreement could be reached among the actors involved.Footnote 73 It is striking to consider the parallel between the Foreign Secretary and the man who helped unearth his legacy. Just as Castlereagh saw British interests as being bound up with those of the European continent, Webster, throughout the 1920s and 1930s, held his own opinion that British interests were staked in those of the League of Nations, and vice versa. To a full lecture hall at the University of Wales he warned that the very existence of the British Empire resided in the continued development of the League.Footnote 74 Later, as the weaknesses of the League began to be increasingly exposed throughout the 1930s, Webster stated plainly, in an article for the News Chronicle, that British interests were indistinguishable from those of the League. Britain's salvation, he declared, “lies in making effective the ‘League system.’”Footnote 75
By the mid-1930s, as it became increasingly clear that British statesmen did not attach the same importance to working through the League, Webster grew more frustrated. In June 1936, eight months after Italian troops had invaded Abyssinia and three months after German forces had moved into the Rhineland, Webster wrote that “the world is in full crisis.” British statesmen had made an “egregious error” in coming to terms with Benito Mussolini in 1935, while Adolf Hitler had eviscerated the Locarno Treaties, an agreement which Webster had considered to be the “main bulwark of the peace of Europe.”Footnote 76 The year 1936 was one of great reflection for internationalists in general and advocates of the League in particular. The League of Nations Union published a report criticizing a lack of resolve amongst leading nations to confront aggression, and they even submitted a list of possible reforms to the covenant.Footnote 77 In the House of Commons, the leader of the Labour Party, Clement Attlee, accused his opposite number, Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin, of “shaking like a jelly at every dictator who shakes his fist at you.”Footnote 78 Webster was of a similar mind, telling a group of his peers at Chatham House, “There is complete lack of confidence in any declaration that is likely to be made by us within a short period of time. No one will believe there is much chance of our implementing it, unless it suits our particular convenience at the time.”Footnote 79
In this and other analyses, the balance that Webster sought to strike between national power and international ethics comes into view. He held that it was through more traditional power structures, especially military and economic might, that the great liberal powers of the world were to usher in the international machinery that would eventually replace war. If the First World War had taught people anything, Webster argued, it was that theories aimed at ending war through increasing economic ties or altruistic calls for “brotherhood” were—to borrow a line from Lowes Dickinson—“just about as powerful as cobwebs across the mouth of a cannon.”Footnote 80 Ethical aims could thus never become divorced from material considerations. Years later, he would write rather cynically that the concerns of Berlin, Rome, and Tokyo needed to be taken seriously because of their military strength, whereas the voices of smaller Central and Eastern European states could be “ignored because they are too weak to make much trouble.”Footnote 81
But equally, a military power devoid of moral considerations was doomed to fail. “Without moral foundations no sure shelter can be built in this storm-tossed world. But high purpose is not enough by itself. How often have we seen it fail! It needs concerted effort directed by informed intelligence to bring high purpose to fruition.”Footnote 82 Thus he believed a successful British foreign policy was one which could identify certain moral forces in the international society and work towards defending these. “Moral power is as important as armed power,” he wrote, and there was a distinct need for “moral rearmament” within the United Kingdom.Footnote 83 Such considerations are partly representative of how, even in the dire straits of the 1930s, Webster continued to see the League as a relevant institution, despite its shortcomings. His reasoning lay in the fact that the institution had planted an immovable spring in the moral urges of statesmen and their publics. And while there was some way to go before societies and governments more naturally resorted to peaceful deliberation, there had been, in his mind, some irreversible progress towards this end. “The great forces of the age are clearly in favour of a new and against a return to the old system. The world has clearly outgrown the old system of unco-ordinated national units. They are too small and at the same time too powerful.”Footnote 84
And this progressive frame of mind did not stop at the League. All throughout this period, Webster's view of a future world-state remained in the background, a utopian vision which might gradually be brought into existence. The idea itself did not have the broadest appeal. In the decade after the First World War, writers like H. G. Wells continued to express his desire for such a development, as did more politically influential figures like Harold Laski and Hugh Dalton, yet the real advocacy for a world-state remained on the more radical fringe of internationalist thought.Footnote 85 In Webster's case, references to a such a development were scattered throughout his writing in the 1930s and even the early 1940s.Footnote 86 But the most public of his views on the subject came in the pages of The Times in 1938, after the Bishop of York had published a manifesto which expressed the need for a world-state.Footnote 87 The piece sparked a somewhat heated debate among some of the more well-known commentators in the period, including Lord Lothian, Lionel Curtis, John Fischer Williams, and Webster.Footnote 88 Responding initially to the Bishop of York, Lord Lothian had written in The Times, “The real root of all our troubles is the anarchy of sovereignties and that there is no possibility of organizing peace or the reign of law or morality except by creating a federal authority, representing all the people.”Footnote 89 For his part, Webster joined the debate with an article agreeing with the ends but differing in the means. As he wrote, “Lord Lothian is, of course, right in thinking that the ultimate objective of those who wish to bring peace to the world should be a world state … What Lord Lothian does not seem to realize is that the world State is not likely to be made by a single act but will come gradually into existence.” Especially, the League of Nations Covenant, Webster noted, was to be a “step to some more comprehensive and definite organization.”Footnote 90 Months later, in a response to a lecture by Lionel Curtis at Chatham House, Webster returned to the subject, stating that a world-state was not only desirable but “an obvious lesson of history.”Footnote 91
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When war was declared on the Continent in late summer 1939, Webster was quick to return to government service. He took up a leading role with the newly formed Foreign Research and Press Service (FRPS), an outfit led by Arnold Toynbee which conducted similar research work to that undertaken during the previous war. Here Webster oversaw the groupings dedicated to Anglo-American relations and international organization. It turned out to be a convenient fusion, given that Webster, like others within the FRPS, advocated for an Anglo-American core at the center of a wider global institution. This came during a period in which diplomats, politicians, and intellectuals, especially those considered liberal internationalists, were beginning to sketch broad new outlines for a postwar international order. Webster remained a champion of the League, but in its most dormant years he began to rethink the building blocks of a stable internationalist system. As he wrote to the British official Frank Walters in September 1941, “an Anglo-American security scheme should be temporary and later fused into a general association.”Footnote 92
Given his extensive contacts in the United States—he served as visiting professor at Harvard between 1928 and 1932—Webster was sent to New York to lead the British Library of Information. By the time Webster returned to the United Kingdom in late 1942, the Foreign Office had already taken some concrete steps towards outlining a postwar grand strategy. As the planning became more detailed, however, officials began to consult with Webster, then seen as the most knowledgeable mind on matters relating to international organization. Had officials in the Foreign Office, most notably Gladwyn Jebb, who was in charge of postwar planning, been aware of Webster's more radical views concerning a world-state, the professor would likely have never come as close as he did to the planning machine. Jebb, in particular, was harsh in his treatment of Webster's colleagues, including Toynbee and Zimmern, referring to the professors as too idealist and out of touch with political realities.Footnote 93 But in characteristic fashion, Webster's desire to influence policy meant that his ultimate aspirations were tempered by his more practical knowledge. The results were recommendations which, while more internationalist than Jebb's, were nonetheless rooted in more stark considerations of national power.
Of the conceptions which Webster brought to the planning process, several are worthy of consideration here. As a start, Webster held that political structures must come before those dealing with economic matters. This topic marked a common fault line among interwar internationalists, with some insisting that a working basis for peaceful relations must first arrive through economic bonds. Individuals as diverse as H. G. Wells and Ernest Bevin held this view, while others, including Norman Angell, emphasized the need for political agreements to underpin economic relations.Footnote 94 Webster's view tended to fall in line with the latter grouping. “Economic interdependence presupposes some kind of political interdependence. It cannot be obtained in a world in which national sovereignty is an end in itself,” he wrote.Footnote 95
Related to this emphasis on the political bases of international order, Webster held that the great powers, in particular, would need to take responsibility for the maintenance of peace. In the early 1930s, he had written, “The destiny of the League lies mainly in the hands of the Great Powers of Europe”—a point which carried over into his wartime recommendations.Footnote 96 He reiterated in a number of lectures and memoranda from the period that “power and responsibility must be commensurate with each other.”Footnote 97 This was a popular view, one held by influential politicians like Hugh Dalton and internationalist leaders like Lord Cecil, both of whom had, over the course of the previous decade, come to advocate for increased responsibility for powers harnessing a preponderance of force.Footnote 98 But this precept of power politics did not override the belief that for a world order to be broadly accepted, the interests of middle and smaller powers must be taken into account. While figures like Dalton and Cecil were of a similar mind-set, few, if any, couched it in historical terms as did Webster. He noted in one of his first recommendations for the Foreign Office that concern for the interests of smaller powers was a principle which dated back to the Congress of Aix la Chapelle in 1818.Footnote 99 Importantly, Webster held that if the new organization could establish functional bodies relating to economic and social issues, smaller powers might be made to think they had a larger stake in the wider organization. It was this view which placed Webster as one of the foremost defenders of smaller powers within Britain's postwar planning machine. Indeed, the respect for the views of medium and smaller powers that went into British planning papers, as well as the way in which British delegations defended the interests of these countries in conversations with the Americans and the Soviets, stems from the early recommendations of Webster.
Another theme which flowed throughout his wartime recommendations had been present in his writings as far back as the 1920s. It concerned the need for international institutions to be flexible and capable of adaptation. The rigidity of the covenant, he argued on multiple occasions, had discouraged members and stifled collective action. It was a view which was popular among some British internationalists of the period. John Fischer Williams, to take one example, had praised the work of British officials responsible for designing the League of Nations, men whom he believed embodied the traditions of a less rigid English constitutionalism.Footnote 100 Similarly, Webster argued against too strict a codification and instead put his faith in the articulation of principles which, if agreed upon by signatories, might guide the behavior of great and small powers alike.Footnote 101 The result came in the form of “principles and objectives” of the organization which Webster helped Jan Smuts to draft during a meeting of the dominion prime ministers in May 1944.Footnote 102 This document would eventually become the Preamble of the United Nations Charter.Footnote 103
Lastly, Webster's work on postwar regional and international order reflected the way in which he connected more traditional ordering mechanisms with an international organization. Here a crucial aspect of Webster's international thought comes into clearer focus—namely how concerns for the national interest shaped his unique brand of internationalism. Between the Moscow Conference of October 1943 and the Dumbarton Oaks Conference which began in August 1944, the Economic and Reconstruction Department engaged in what was a complex arrangement to secure British interests in what they thought would be a fluid postwar world. British planners, and chiefly Jebb and Webster, articulated a strategy which was based on the seemingly paradoxical conceptions of the balance of power and a worldwide organization. Specifically, they advocated the creation of an alliance of Western democracies which, in the future, might protect against an aggressive Germany and insure against a hostile Russia.Footnote 104 In this way, Webster carried out what was a long-held belief in the need for Britain to commit to the security of the European continent, and, borrowing from the precedent of the Locarno Treaties, to develop a system whereby a Western security arrangement might buttress—as opposed to contradict—a larger international order. Among Foreign Office officials, the conceptual linkage of regional and international structures was articulated most clearly in Webster's writing in 1944.Footnote 105 Though writers and statesmen had described, and even advocated for, the possible benefits of regional approaches to international order, none succeeded in uniting these strands within postwar policy.Footnote 106 The eventual Charter of the United Nations, specifically Article 51, bares the mark of this conception, which at its root was derived from the need to balance larger internationalist ambitions with more regionally specific national interests.
By the time the charter was signed in San Francisco in late June 1945, Webster had clearly become indispensable to the Foreign Office's planning operation. His influence was such that when it came time to select the British delegation to the committee that would design the mechanics of the new organization during the autumn of 1945, Jebb wrote to the permanent undersecretary at the Foreign Office, Alexander Cadogan, that there was no one in Whitehall who knew more than he, Cadogan, and the “Prof.”Footnote 107
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In the months after the San Francisco Conference, Webster remained optimistic about the future of the organization, even in the face of a breakdown in relations between Moscow and the Western powers. Concerning the Soviet Union, he wrote, “Her long-term interests are as much bound up with the success of the Charter as are those of any other State.” But it was also crucial for the United Kingdom to take a “resolute stand,” just as the government had done vis-à-vis Tsar Alexander's Russia in the immediate post-1815 period.Footnote 108 He noted that at three different points in the last two centuries—the Great Power Alliance of 1815, the Concert of Europe which followed it, and the more recent League of Nations—British statesmen had drawn back from a full commitment to a system of international organization. Webster warned that the government and public should not make the same mistake during this “fourth experiment.”Footnote 109
By the end of the decade his view had changed further, now moving more in favor of a robust Western security and economic architecture to defend against what he considered to be a communist menace in the Soviet Union. Regional organizations, particularly the Brussels and Atlantic pacts, he saw as key to the defense of the United Kingdom and Western Europe. In his public commentary, he continued to emphasize Britain's capabilities, as well as its diplomatic tradition of not allowing a single power to dominate the European continent. “It has for a long period been our special role in the world to act as the main link between the continents. We have three times before saved the liberties of Europe by serving as the medium through which the resources of the non-European world redressed the balance in Europe itself. We have a similar part to play today.”Footnote 110 But in the background of Webster's confidence in and encouragement of British power was a realization that American economic and military strength was the guarantor of the peace and security of Western Europe.Footnote 111
Interestingly, his earlier support for a world-state faded as the years wore on. Immediately after the war, he speculated that such a development could still take place. “If it be ever attained it will probably be through the development of the United Nations itself, and, perhaps, in some form not at present foreseen.”Footnote 112 It was an optimism rooted in his proximity—really his stake—in the creation of the organization, though it contrasted sharply with the views of other British intellectuals. Among them was George Orwell, who wrote in March 1946 that the United Nations’ “usefulness as an instrument of world peace is nil.”Footnote 113 As for a more federated or unitary world system, there was a new generation of internationalists such as Robert Hutchins and Giuseppe Antonio Borgese seeking to advance the idea of a “world constitution” and “world government.”Footnote 114 Strangely enough, however, it was in this period that Webster's belief in the organization—especially his faith in an progressive movement towards world unity on a political and social basis—had begun to fade against the stubborn resurgence of great-power politics. Reflecting on the United Nations in 1955, Webster wrote that the organization had become a “front in the cold war” rather than a place where the great powers, and principally the Soviet Union and the United States, could work out their differences. Overall, he thought the organization, while still serving a valuable purpose, had failed to become more “universal.”Footnote 115 By the time of his death, in August 1961, Webster had effectively abandoned his earlier prediction about a world-state being an inevitable development of human society.
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Individuals tend to study Charles Webster for his work as an esteemed scholar and his brief but influential time as an adviser during the Second World War. As a historian, he was both groundbreaking and successful for his time. His scholarship on the Congress of Vienna and later his biographies of Castlereagh and Palmerston placed him securely in the ranks of Britain's best diplomatic historians of the twentieth century. As a policy adviser, Webster also saw success, at least as compared to other academics of his generation such as his colleagues Toynbee and Zimmern. Rather paradoxically, Webster quietly held far more radical views than these academic contemporaries, yet he was seen by his Foreign Office colleagues, and principally Gladwyn Jebb, to be a man of practicality and concrete knowledge. This was a result of his ability to hold such ambitious ideas as a world-state quietly in the recesses of his mind. It was, for Webster, a larger vision that gave some purpose and shape to his more immediate recommendations for an inclusive world organization led by the great powers. And it was this work during the Second World War that helped to deliver the British plans for what would become the United Nations Organization. “It must be an abiding satisfaction to you to see so many of your own ideas taking form and substance,” Gladwyn Jebb wrote to Webster a month after the signing of the United Nations Charter.Footnote 116 Other colleagues in the Foreign Office heaped even larger praise, going as far as to call Webster the “principal father” of the new organization.Footnote 117
This is all to say that Webster's worldview, beginning with his approach to historical study, is worthy of detailed examination. As an analyst, few were as detailed in their reporting on League of Nations affairs and even fewer were as willing, or as able, to place events in their proper historical context. And his sober, penetrating analysis of British foreign policy during his lifetime was a reminder that even the most ardent of internationalists tend to retain a national instinct, however faint and fluctuating. But even for his empiricism and practicality on a range of subjects, Webster's great ambitions for the international system remain an intriguing detail of his thinking. His idea concerning the inevitability of a world-state and how this would gradually come into existence was not entirely uncommon among the intellectuals of his milieu, but it was also not exactly popular. And it was certainly anathema to the majority of British statesmen and officials with whom he came into close professional contact. It is hardly a stretch to posit that if certain officials had known of Webster's ambitions, he likely would have remained on the margins of the policy debates which he ended up greatly influencing.
Apart from his more radically internationalist ideas, Webster's intellectual tendencies also reveal important insights into the way in which historical thought influences one's worldview. Far from being a quirky interest, historical study constituted the blocks and bindings of his international thought. He was instilled from an impressionable age with a view that history retained relevance, but where some might have used this anecdotally, Webster discerned in facts across time a pattern of international relations. And, importantly, he perceived it as moving in a progressive direction, one that he, by chance and design, felt he might be able to nudge along. Thus his historical acumen not only helped him advance professionally but also, more importantly, served as the essence of his worldview and the source of his visions of the future.
Though he never stated it explicitly, it is apparent that a faith in human reason coursed through much of his thinking. Among other things, it led him to appreciate the power of common citizens, and in turn the emphasis that Webster placed on public opinion and popular ideas—specifically the influence that they could exert on decisive political moments—came to be a convenient justification for his own writing and teaching. The work of scholars of international politics, and especially their ability to inform and educate the masses, had become for him one of the most significant shapers of modern international relations. For all of his championing of ethics and morals in international affairs, Webster never completely lost, at least during the years of his greatest involvement in policy, his respect for realities of material power. The trying years of the First World War had shown the unrelenting damage of unrestrained violence, while the frustrations of the interwar years had evidenced the futility of good intentions absent adequate force. It drove Webster towards a view that some measure of morality and ethics in international affairs was essential, but that it depended on the behavior of the great powers in the international system, as well as on their ability to construct lasting institutions. Only with such intentions and influence could a stable, functioning, and just world order be brought into existence.
Though his contribution to the history of international thought in the first half of the twentieth century is nowhere near as notable as that of British writers like his former teacher Lowes Dickinson or his friend and colleague Toynbee—the former, with his framing of international anarchy, and the latter, with his theory of civilizational movements, were ones addressed by succeeding generations of writers—Webster's lack of intellectual profundity should not preclude students of the period from examining his thought and work. He was, far more than Dickinson or Toynbee, and perhaps more so than any of his contemporaries, with the exception of John Maynard Keynes, Lionel Robbins, or William Beveridge in the economic realm, a scholar who found himself at the center of a momentous period of British policymaking. To trace his work over the forty-plus years from the turn of the twentieth century is to identify and understand some of the key variances and divergences within British internationalism. But more importantly, it helps us to see how these ideas, nuanced as they were, made it to and through one of the most crucial points of delivery, namely the British Foreign Office's plans for a postwar international organization.
The case of Webster is evidence of how one's international thought develops over time, and perhaps more intriguingly, how it exists both outside and inside official policy making. On the fringes of power, he was one who supported more radical ideas about the progress of the international system towards a more unified structure, yet once he was in government and faced with the need to offer timely and achievable recommendations, he put forward more practical suggestions on how a new international order might be fashioned from the rubble of the latest great war. It was not that he abandoned his older ideas but rather that he recognized that the time in which he was working called for different, more incremental, steps. His experience is not only reflective of the tension and ultimate balance between visions and plans, ideals and reality, thought and action, but also a window into both the diplomatic and the intellectual history of this most consequential of periods.
Acknowledgements
The author would like to thank the editorial team at Modern Intellectual History, as well as the anonymous reviewers who provided great feedback on earlier drafts of this article.