Historians have long puzzled over why King George V first prompted the British Government to invite his cousin Nicholas II and his family to come to Britain following the February Revolution and then changed his mind and became adamantly against their coming, to the surprise and embarrassment of his Government. One royal biographer described it as “the most perplexing act of his reign: The abandonment of a loyal ally and much-loved cousin to degradation and death”.
There is little doubt that there has been a cover up of the events surrounding the refusal. Meriel Buchanan, daughter of Sir George Buchanan, the British ambassador to Russia in 1917, wrote in her book
The Dissolution of an Empire:
“Later on, when he had retired from the Diplomatic Service, my father had, I know, the intention of including in his book the truth about the attempt that was made to get the Imperial family out of Russia, but he was told at the Foreign Office, where he had gone to examine some of the documents, that if be did so, he would not only be charged with an Infringement of the Official Secrets Act, but would have his pension stopped,... The account he gives of the promise of the British Government to receive the Emperor in England ... is therefore a deliberate attempt to suppress the true facts.”
The Royal Archives contain almost no documents dealing with what happened to the Tsar between March 1917 and May 1918. All telegrams sent from the Palace dealing with Nicholas appear to have been removed. Even David Lloyd George, British prime minister during the War, was denied access to documents and told not to mention the events in his memoirs.
The usual explanation is that George feared that opposition, particularly working class opinion, might endanger his throne. That is very difficult to take seriously. Firstly, while there might have been some opposition it would have hardly been enough to threaten the dynasty. Secondly, George was an unimaginative, deeply conventional, court bound man. The idea that he was genuinely in touch with working class opinion is risible. If the idea had got into his head that the Bolsheviks would be at the gates of Buckingham Palace then someone must have put it there. The questions then become who, why and how?
Who? It could only have been Lloyd George. He would have had to do so against the opposition of Conservative members of his National Government but he had the ear of the King because he saw him alone in his weekly audience.
Why? That goes back to earlier events. In 1915 Britain had agreed in secret to the long held desire of Russia to annex Constantinople, assuming the War was won. By 1916 the British were also in serious discussions with Zionist leaders about setting up a national home for the Jews, which resulted in the Balfour Declaration in 1917. The real reason for the Declaration was that it was the key to US entry into the War. Lloyd George must have feared that Nicholas coming to England could easily have revived monarchist fortunes – the King over the water. The Provisional Government was very shaky, as the Bolsheviks showed soon after. A restoration would have revived the claim to Constantinople, something which Lloyd George opposed for murky reasons. He wanted it to go to Greece. Tsarism was also notoriously anti-semitic, which would have meant the Balfour Declaration would be dead in the water. Without the US, winning the War would have been very difficult, if not impossible.
How? It must have been more than simple argument. Some arm-twisting must have been involved. Was George bribed? Were secret funds sent from Russia to support the Tsar in exile used? The case of Peter Bark, the Tsar’s last Finance Minister who escaped to Britain after the revolution and was rewarded with a knighthood by the King and large loans from the Bank of England is curious to say the least. He was hardly your typical refugee. Did he know something embarrassing?
More bizarrely, was George blackmailed? There have been persistent rumours that Anthony Blunt, art historian, Surveyor of the Queen’s Pictures and notoriously, Soviet spy, was George’s illegitimate son. Certainly George and Blunt’s parents were well acquainted and there is a striking resemblance between Blunt and George’s eldest son, who became Edward VIII. The reasons why Blunt was never prosecuted and remained in all his posts after his confession in 1964 until finally unmasked in 1979 have never been satisfactorily explained. Did Lloyd George know of the rumours and did he use them?
If you are interested there is much more detail on this topic at
www.royal-betrayal.uk