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Journal ArticleDOI

VIII. Sir Robert Borden, Lloyd George and British Military Policy, 1917–1918

George L. Cook
- 01 Jun 1971 - 
- Vol. 14, Iss: 02, pp 371-395
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TLDR
Borden as discussed by the authors stated that Canada was "fighting not for a truce but victory" in the First World War, similar to Lloyd George's own declaration that the fight must be to a finish, to a knockout.
Abstract
‘Let the past bury its dead, but for God's sake let us get down to earnest endeavour and hold this line until … the end.’ No other words can more adequately express, after four years of war, the sheer agony of the Canadian Prime Minister, Sir Robert L. Borden. These words also suggest both his attitude to the war in general and his intense frustration with die supreme direction. Like Lloyd George, Borden was an exponent of total war and of victory. His proclamation that Canada was ‘fighting not for a truce but victory’, was strikingly similar to Lloyd George's own declaration that ‘the fight must be to a finish—to a knockout’. The objective, proclaimed at die conclusion of the Somme battles, seemed no less remote in the middle of 1918. Over the last two, and most critical, years of the First World War there was constant contention within Britain over how the objective was to be secured. One aspect of the contention was the direct involvement of Dominion leaders, especially Sir Robert Borden.

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And the Men Returned: Canadian Veterans and the Aftermath of the Great War

TL;DR: This article argued that Canadian veterans did not suffer postwar disillusionment, rather, they embraced the war alongside a renewed Canadian nationalism and this collective identification more than shaped a sense of self; it influenced understanding of the conflict's meaning.

A Continuation of Policy by other Means: World War I as a Vehicle for Transformation in Canadian Governance and Military Capability

TL;DR: The transformation of the largely amateur and inexperienced Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF) into one of the most effective fighting formations in the British Expeditionary Task Force (BEF) was described in this article.
Reference EntryDOI

Imperial war cabinet (1917–1918)

TL;DR: Lloyd George as discussed by the authors proposed a special war conference of the empire composed of representatives of the Dominions as well as India to meet jointly with his new war cabinet, a small inner-governmental body that effectively supplanted the cabinet and exercised oversight of the war effort.
References