6. Churchill, Young Statesman,
pp. 545–47 («whole fortunes»); Churchill, World Crisis, vol. 1, pp. 71–78 («intended to prepare,» «important steps» and «veritable volcano»); Fisher, Memories, pp. 200–1 («precipice»); Henriques, Marcus Samuel, p. 283; Randolph Churchill, Winston S. Churchill, vol. 2, Companion Volume, part 3, (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1969), p. 1926 («How right»).7. Churchill, Churchill,
vol. 2, Companion Volume, part 3, pp. 1926–27.8. Fisher, Fear God,
vol. 2, p. 404 («Sea fighting»); Churchill, World Crisis, vol. 1, pp. 130–36 (on his decision).9. Ferrier, British Petroleum,
p. 158; Jones, State and British Oil p. 170; Corley, Burmah Oil Company, p. 186; Fisher, Fear God, vol. 2, pp. 451 («betrayed»), 467 («no one else»); Mackay, Fisher, pp. 437–38; Churchill, Young Statesman, pp. 567–68; Churchill, Churchill, vol. 2, Companion Volume, part 3, p. 1929 («My dear Fisher»).10. Fisher, Memories,
pp. 218–20 («d—d fool»); Lord Fisher, Records (London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1919), p. 196; Mackay, Fisher, p. 439 («overwhelming advantages»); Fisher, Fear God, vol. 2, p. 438 («don't grow»).11. Ferrier, British Petroleum,
p. 94 («Champagne Charlie» and «decorous»); Jeremy and Shaw, Dictionary of Business Biography, vol. 2, pp. 639–41; Corley, Burmah Oil, pp. 184,205; Jones, State and British Oil, pp. 96 («Old Spats»), 151–52 («Jewishness,» «Dutchness,» «under the control» and «moderate return»).12. Bacon, Fisher,
vol. 2, p. 158 («do our d—st»); Jones, State and British Oil, pp. 164 («embracing as it did» and «pecuniary assistance»), 151 («Shell menace»); Ferrier, British Petroleum, pp. 170–73 («commercial predominance» and «Evidently»).13. Jones, State and British Oil,
pp. 166–67 («speculative risk»); Marian Kent, Oil and Empire: British Policy and Mesopotamian Oil, 1900–1920 (London: Macmillan, 1976), pp. 47–48 («keeping alive»); Churchill, Churchill, vol. 2, Companion Volume, part 3, pp. 1932–48; Corley, Burmah Oil, p. 191; Asquith to George V, July 12, 1913, CAB 41/34, PRO («controlling interest»); Ferrier, British Petroleum, pp. 181–82.14. Parliamentary Debates,
Commons, July 17, 1913, pp. 1474–77 (Churchill statement); Corley, Burmah Oil, pp. 187, 191–95 («scrap heap»); Ferrier, British Petroleum, pp. 195–96 («thoroughly sound,» «perfectly safe» and «national disaster»).15. Ferrier, British Petroleum,
p. 185; Corley, Burmah Oil, pp. 195–97; Churchill, Churchill, vol. 2, Companion Volume, part 3, p. 1964.16. Parliamentary Debates,
Commons, June 17, 1914, pp. 1131–53, 1219–32; Bradbury to Anglo-Persian Oil Company, May 20, 1914, POWE 33/242, PRO; Ferrier, British Petroleum, p. 199 (Greenway's question).17. Henriques, Marcus Samuel,
p. 574; Churchill, Churchill, vol. 2, Companion Volume, part 3, pp. 1951 («Napoleon and Cromwell»), 1965 («Good Old Deterding), Gerretson, Royal Dutch, vol. 4, p. 293.18. Gerretson, Royal Dutch,
vol. 4, p. 185; Jones, State and British Oil, pp. 144,12 («premier cru»); Ferrier, British Petroleum, p. 196; Churchill, World Crisis, p. 137; Churchill, Churchill, vol. 2, Companion Volume, part 3, p. 1999 (war order).
Глава 91. William Langer, «The Well-Spring of Our Discontents,» Journal of Contemporary History
3 (1968), pp. 3–17; McNeill, Pursuit of Power, pp. 334–35; Martin Van Creveld, Supplying War: Logistics from Walknstein to Patton (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1977), pp. 110–111, 124–25 (German general); W. G. Jensen, «The Importance of Energy in the First and Second World Wars,» Historical Journal 11 (1968), pp. 538–45. Llewellyn Woodward, Great Britain and the War of 1914–1918 (London: Metheun, 1967), pp. 38–39.