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Oswald Mosley’s British Union openly campaigned for peace before and after war was declared by a British government in September 1939. In 1940, over a thousand members of British Union were arrested and rounded up to be interned without charge or trial. Mosley and his wife, Diana, were included in these. His speech at Earls Court in July 1939 was a rallying call for to those who believed war would be disastrous for Britain in the long run. They were vindicated after 1945 when the British Empire was dismantled and the two new giants, America and the Soviet Union, carved up Europe between them. Mosley’s ‘crime’ was to campaign for a negotiated peace. 32 pages. ISBN 978-1-906620-04-2