Answer:
While Churchill objected strongly to the Munich agreement, he had earlier made positive statements about Hitler. He initially hoped, as many did in the early 1930s, that Hitler, once he settled in and settled down, might prove a good and stabilizing influence on Germany. Churchill later, of course, changed his mind as Hitler increasingly showed his true colors and failed to normalize. From the mid to late 1930s, Churchill pushed for British rearmament, fearing that Germany would attack England.
When Chamberlain signed the Munich agreement, Churchill opposed the pact both because it was dishonorable and because he believed it was only forestalling the war he recognized was inevitable. He thought it would only make the situation worse later to appease Hitler rather than confronting him militarily over Czechoslovakia's Sudetenland.
Step-by-step explanation: