Their history and ours: the first world war that won’t be commemorated in 2014
by alethoBy Neil Faulkner | No Glory in War | January 5, 2014
Military
historian Max Hastings and education minister Michael Gove say we
should should blame the Germans for World War I and celebrate the
victory for 'freedom' and 'democracy'. Archaeologist Neil Faulkner
disagrees.
Max
Hastings has his new book on 1914 out already (Catastrophe: Europe goes
to war, 1914). In it he pulls no punches. Even the dustcover proclaims
the forthright revisionist message.
'He
[the author] finds the evidence overwhelming that Austria and Germany
must accept the principal blame for the outbreak. While what followed
was a vast tragedy, he argues passionately against the 'poets 'view'
that the war was not worth winning. It was vital to the freedom of
Europe, he says, that the Kaiser's Germany should be defeated.'
UK secretary of state for education, Michael Gove, writing in the Daily Mail, takes the same view:
The First World War may have been a uniquely horrific war, but it was also plainly a just war... The ruthless social Darwinism of the German elites, the pitiless approach they took to occupation, their aggressively expansionist war aims and their scorn for the international order all made resistance more than justified.
So
there you have it. Just as the rulers of Britain and France argued at
the time, it was all Germany's fault. Never mind that Britain had the
largest empire in the world, ruling over one-fifth of the world's land
mass and one-quarter of its people. Never mind that Britain's navy was
almost the twice the size of Germany's. Never mind that Britain had
formed a military alliance with Russia and France, leaving Germany's
rulers feeling corralled and threatened in an arms race they were
losing.
This
is not to exonerate the Kaiser. It is simply to say that he was no
worse than the rulers of Britain and France. All were imperialists and
warmongers. All were prepared to plunge the world into an industrialised
war for the power and profit of a few. The vast majority of humanity –
the vast majority of the people these rulers were supposed to represent –
had no interest in the war. The conscripted workers and peasants of
Europe were the victims of a millionaires' war.
'No
poet,' says Hastings, 'ever identified a route by which the British,
French, and Belgian people could have escaped the conflict, save by
accepting the Kaiser's domination of Europe.' This claim appears in a Daily Mail article in June this year headlined Sucking up to the Germans is no way to remember our Great War heroes, Mr Cameron'.
But
this is nonsense. There was a Europe-wide movement against war. Just
days before Germany's declaration of war there were 100,000 anti-war
demonstrators on the streets of Berlin. Across Germany, during four days
of mass protest in the final days of peace, there had been no fewer
than 288 anti-war demonstrations involving up to three-quarters of a
million people.
Across
Europe that last summer of peace, as millions of people took action
against their own rulers, there was a widespread mood of
internationalism and solidarity. But when the leaders of all the
mainstream parties lined up in support of the war effort, they
reinforced a tide of jingoism that the killed the anti-war movement and
swept the people of Europe into internecine carnage.
But
that mood would resurface, and when it did, beginning in 1917, it would
be charged with bitterness at the slaughter and impoverishment,
becoming a giant wave of revolution crashing across the continent,
ending the war, toppling tyrants, and shaking the foundations of the
entire social order.
'Far
from dying in vain,' continues Hastings, 'those who perished ...
between 1914 and 1918 made as important a contribution to our
privileged, peaceful lives today as did their sons in World War II.'
And Michael Gove agrees:
'For all our mistakes as a nation, Britain’s role in the world has also been marked by nobility and courage. Indeed, the more we reflect on every aspect of the war, the more cause there is for us to appreciate what we owe to our forebears and their traditions.'
These
are extraordinary claims. The British and the French used their victory
in 1918 to re-divide the world, helping themselves to German colonies,
hacking off chunks of German territory in Europe, and imposing crippling
reparations payments on the German people.
Meantime,
to control their enlarged empires in Africa, Asia, and the Middle East,
they gunned down protestors demanding democracy and independence. This
imperialist carve-up – 'a peace to end all peace' – created the
preconditions for the Second World War two decades later.
The
cost of the First World War was 15 million dead. The cost of the sequel
was 60 million dead. More human beings have been killed by war in the
last century than in the whole of the rest of human history put
together.
The
immense potential of industrial society to provide the goods and
service we all need has, again and again, been turned into its opposite:
means of destruction and waste on an unprecedented scale.
This
is not something to be rationalised into a choice between 'good'
empires and 'bad' empires; a choice between 'democratic' Britain and
France as against 'autocratic' and 'expansionist' Germany. This is to
trivialise historical events, reducing them to little more than a banal
discussion about who sent the final ultimatum, who mobilised first, who
fired the first shot.
Max
Hastings and Michael Gove want us to side with one empire against
another. He wants us to wave a Union Jack, celebrate a British victory,
and promote the lie that the 15 million dead of the First World War were
'a necessary sacrifice'.
What
is required is an analysis that roots tragedies like the First World
War, and all the other imperialist conflicts of the last century, in the
madness of a world divided into competing corporations and warring
nation-states.
No Glory - the real History of the First World War
Neil Faulkner's new pamphlet published by No Glory in War
More details and how to buy...
Neil Faulkner's new pamphlet published by No Glory in War
More details and how to buy...
Neil
Faulkner is a First World War archaeologist and editor of Military
History Monthly. He is one of the founders of the No Glory in War
campaign.

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