and this is the results of the promise that he got from lord salzburg when he left town street after his audience. the prime minister said, well, if there's anything i can do for you in the future let me know. do said well, yes, sir. were quite like to go to the sudan. so churchill, churchill's full road to fame and glory, his participation among the last great cavalry charges undertaken by the british army in the sedan , his movement then on to cover the south african war as a foreign correspondent, his capture, his international acclaim and, of course, as a result his election to parliament and soon after his return he becomes so famous and britain that at the music halls there was similar plan. you have heard of winston churchill. this is all i have to say. he is the latest and greatest correspondent of the day. that was the 1890's. today, i think, when we look afghanistan and this, here, is a rather crucial year for the american-led campaign that we have had there for ten years ii think people will reflect on some of the lessons churchill and the british learned in the 1890's. th