Between 14 May–15 June 1937, an Imperial conference attended by all the leaders of the Commonwealth was held in London to allow the Dominion Prime Ministers to attend the coronation of the new king
George VI and to meet the new king. Laurie prepared a memo that he was able to have issued to the Dominion prime ministers on the account of his reputation as a world-famous chemist, stating his views about Eastern Europe and asking for the Dominions to apply pressure on the United Kingdom not to become involved in Eastern Europe. Laurie believed that there was a possibility that the new government of
Neville Chamberlain might go to war with Germany on the account of a conflict in Eastern Europe and wanted the Dominion prime ministers to dissuade him from that prospect. Laurie began with the statement that airbases in Czechoslovakia exposed Germany to danger, arguing it was possible to bomb German cities from Czechoslovakia. Laurie argued the economic prosperity of Czechoslovakia rested on the Sudeten Germans and that: "Since the war, the Germans have been in a most unhappy situation. The glass factories are in ruin, the trade is gone, and what work is going is given to the Czechs". Laurie depicted living conditions in the Sudetenland as abysmal and claimed falsely that most Sudeten German children were suffering from hunger as he accused the Czechs of taking their wealth. Laurie wrote that he believed the main dangers to European peace were the French premier
Léon Blum and the Soviet foreign commissar
Maxim Litvinov. Laurie noted that both Blum and Litvinov were Jews, which led him to accuse both men of seeking war against the
Reich. Laurie ended his memo by stating that "Bohemia" should belong to Germany and felt that the Dominions should not go to war for the sake of Czechoslovakia, writing: "It is for the Dominions to save Great Britain from this terrible blunder". Laurie was influenced by the memory of the
Chanak Crisis of 1922 when the Dominions collectively put an end to plans for Britain to go to war against Turkey, and without Dominion support Britain was forced to backdown. In 1937, Laurie joined
The Link, a pro-Nazi group led by Admiral
Barry Domvile, which as its name suggests was intended to be a link with the NSDAP. Laurie sat on the national council of The Link. Other members of The Link's national council were
Lord Redesdale,
Raymond Beazley, C.E. Carroll, and A.E.R. Dyer. On 12 October 1938, Laurie had published a letter to
The Times advocating an Anglo-German alliance. After Germany violated the Munich Agreement by seizing the Czech half of Czechoslovakia on 15 March 1939, which became the
Protectorate of Bohemia-Moravia, there was a notable shift in British public opinion against Germany with even many of the former "enthusiasts" for the Third Reich either changing their views or falling silent. Laurie was an exception amongst the "enthusiasts" in continuing to defend Nazi Germany and even the March action, which had so enraged British people. On 8 May 1939, Laurie's work,
The Case for Germany, was published in Berlin with a foreword by his close friend, Admiral Domvile. It is pro-
Nazi anti-Semitic book and praises
Hitler's Germany. The book begins by commending Hitler as a painter and then expounds National Socialism. He continues with a defence of Nazism as he experienced it during his stay in Germany and criticizes Marxist socialism. In
The Case for Germany, Laurie professed to be taking the stance of an objective scientist who reached his conclusions based upon a strictly empirical approach.
The Case for Germany was given extensive publicity in Germany, and remained in print even after the war began. At the beginning of
The Case for Germany, Laurie wrote: "It is with admiration and gratitude for the great work he has done for the German people that I dedicate this book to the
Führer." On 26 July 1939 Laurie attended a dinner hosted by
Oswald Mosley and
Diana Mosley whose other attendees included the Conservative MPs
Jocelyn Lucas,
John Moore-Brabazon and
Archibald Maule Ramsay;
George Ward Price, the "extra-special correspondent" for
The Daily Mail newspaper; Philip Farrar, the private secretary to Lord Salisbury; Admiral
Barry Domvile of The Link; the journalist
A. K. Chesterton; and the famous military historian
J. F. C. Fuller. The main theme of the dinner was trying to find a way to stop the Danzig crisis from escalating into war, which those present at the dinner feeling it was the British Jewish community who were the ones pushing for a war. The principle fear expressed by those attending the dinner was that another war came, the British empire would be so weakened as to go into decline, thereby allowing so-called "inferior races" to take over the world. In an article entitled "An Open Letter to the Young Men of Britain" published in
Action, the official newspaper of the
British Union of Fascists (BUF), on 2 September 1939, Laurie — who knew that Britain would almost certainly declare war on Germany the next day — appealed to British servicemen to desert rather than fight in what he called the "Jews' War". In "An Open Letter", Laurie began with the statement: "Germany has committed the unforgivable sin of refusing borrow money from international financiers and so they must be punished". Laurie argued that Britain had no quarrel with Germany and as such he argued that British servicemen should desert en masse to prevent what he called two "Aryan" peoples from destroying each other in a war that Laurie insisted was the result of a Jewish conspiracy. During the Phoney war of 1939–1940, Laurie attended meetings of various "patriotic" groups that worked for peace with Germany. ==Death==