George III does not welcome a war…
June 1778 CE
The king believes he has tried to avoid the conflict, but "France chooses to be the Aggressor", and Britain had taken "all the steps necessary if it should end in war".
He is "prepared" for armed conflict with the French by remembering British victories over that Bourbon power in the Seven Years' War.
During that conflict, France had been pinned down in Europe fighting Continental powers while Britain defeated the French navy and won victories in India, the West Indies and North America.
However, Britain's strategic position at the beginning of 1778 was far different from the one she enjoyed in 1756.
Gone is the alliance with the Kingdom of Prussia: in 1778 Britain is diplomatically isolated and without European allies.
In the first months of this year, Britain had attempted, without success, to find a Continental ally to engage the power of France.
This failure produces the central strategic fact of the War of 1778: there will be no competing European campaigns to absorb France's strength.
European isolation doesn't matter in peacetime, but Britain is at serious disadvantage without European allies in war against France.