
The Imperial War Cabinet in 1917
The 'Imperial War Cabinet' was created by
British Prime Minister David Lloyd George in the spring of
1917 as a means of co-ordinating the
British Empire's military policy during the
First World War. The body met through 1917 and 1918 and consisted of Lloyd George,
Prime Minister of Canada Sir
Robert Borden, Prime Minister
Louis Botha and
Jan Smuts of
South Africa, Prime Minister
Billy Hughes of
Australia, Prime Minister
William Massey of
New Zealand, the
Secretary of State for India, Sir
James Meston, 1st Baron Meston and other senior ministers from Britain and the
dominions.
In 1917 the Imperial War Conference passed a resolution regarding a future special Imperial Conference to readjust the relations of the component parts of the Empire. That readjustement should be based upon the full recognition of the dominions as autonomous nations of an Imperial Commonwealth, with an "adequate voice" in foreign policy.
Winston Churchill revived the Imperial War Cabinet during the
Second World War at the insistence of
Australian Prime Minister John Curtin. Canadian Prime Minister
William Lyon Mackenzie King declined to join the body and as Churchill was already unenthusiastic about sharing power with the dominions, so the Imperial War Cabinet's role in the Second World War was greatly diminished in comparison to the previous war.
References
National Archives Glossary