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BRITISH SMUGGLING OPERATIONS FROM SWITZERLAND, 1940–1944

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 January 2006

NEVILLE WYLIE
Affiliation:
University of Nottingham

Abstract

This article departs from traditional writing on British economic warfare against the Axis during the Second World War by highlighting the efforts made by the British government to evade German ‘counter-blockade’ measures and secure access to European sources of supply. It does so by examining British efforts to obtain Swiss industrial equipment and manufactures after June 1940, when German military success effectively severed normal communications between the two countries. In practical terms, Britain's smuggling operations were enormously successful. Some £1.8m worth of Swiss contraband reached British hands by October 1944. They also, however, exercised considerable influence over the development of Anglo-Swiss relations and Switzerland's relations with its neighbours. In illuminating the scale of Britain's commercial interest in Switzerland after June 1940, the article lends weight to new writing on the Second World War, which emphasizes the neutrals' importance to the war economies and political ambitions of the two belligerent camps.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2005 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

This article draws on the papers of the late Sir Anthony Lousada, given to the author by Sir Anthony's widow, Lady Patricia Lousada. Copies of these papers will in due course be made available to the Archiv für Zeitgeschichte, Zurich, and the Churchill College Archive Centre, Cambridge.