August 8, 2014
TGIF:
The 100th Anniversary of the Great State Crime
by Sheldon Richman
This week marks the 100th anniversary of the start of the First World War, the four-year bloody nightmare that claimed 16 million lives 7 million of them noncombatants and wounded over 20 million people.
That would have been bad enough, but the conflict was merely Act One in a much bigger war. The “peace” settlement vindictively branded Germany uniquely culpable and imposed border adjustments that made Act Two a virtual certainty. The so-called Second World War, which began after the 21-year intermission from 1918 to 1939, claimed at least 60 million lives, at least 19 million of which were noncombatants.
Act Two culminated in President Harry Truman’s two gratuitous atomic bombings of the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the 69th anniversaries of which are also observed this week. As has often been pointed out, without World War I (and especially Woodrow Wilson’s entry into it in 1917), there would have been no World War II nor any of the other major consequences that inflicted so much death and mayhem to the 20th century and beyond: among them the Bolshevik Revolution, which brought Lenin and then Stalin to power; Hitler’s rise in Germany; the Holocaust; China’s fall to communism and Mao Zedong; and the Cold War. (For an example of how the world still suffers the consequences of the Act One, see my “ The Middle East Harvests Bitter Imperial Fruit.”)
With so much having been written in the last century, what’s left to be said about the “Great War” at this late date? I think what gets overlooked is that the war is the clearest possible lesson about the omnipresent danger of government power. Governments politicians and monarchs went to war, some perhaps more reluctantly than others. All shared responsibility for the carnage and devastation. (Historians will debate the relative shares of responsibility forever.)
Could the men responsible for the war have wrought anything like the horrors they inflicted had they not controlled a state apparatus an army, a navy, a compulsory revenue-collection agency, and a bureaucracy to conscript (enslave) the nation’s young males? (The draft was fittingly called the blood-tax.) It wasn’t just the European state system that is implicated. Three years into the conflict, a purported constitutionally limited republic the United States joined the orgy of violence and determined the tragic outcome. That the Great War brought to an end the halting, imperfect journey toward genuine liberalism merely compounded the catastrophe.
This was no noble war, not by a long shot. It was a war driven by imperial rivalries (Germany was the relatively new player in the empire game); balance-of-power politics; the alliance system, which hid obligations to go to war from the people who would pay the butcher’s bill; petty, vainglorious rulers; and nationalism, that pernicious invention of ambitious rulers. “It is nationalism which engenders nations, and not the other way round,” Ernst Gellner wrote in Nations and Nationalism.
The Great War was a struggle for political aggrandizement, territory, domination, and economic advantage. The politicians’ solemn declarations to the contrary notwithstanding, it had nothing to do with democracy, self-determination, or a wish to “end war,” that marvelous means to national greatness, masculinity, and enforced collectivization. (Collectivist pacifists like William James lied those features, but hoped for a “moral equivalent of war.”)
Moreover and most disturbingly, the war demonstrated how easily populations can be incited to eagerly shelve their normal lives, leave their homes and loved ones, and lunge for the throat of the Other, or die trying. (The Left was stunned that average people put nation before class. This revelation drove Mussolini from the universalist totalitarian Left, Marxism, to the nationalist totalitarian Right, fascism.) Dehumanization of the enemy plumbed sickening depths. The idiotic willingness to take sadistic orders in the prosecution of the futile and lethal insanity of trench warfare hardly complimented a generation of young European men. (The hope engendered by the spontaneous Christmas truce was short-lived.)
But as we’ve seen from America’s experience in 1917 and beyond, this was not unique to Europeans. What induces young people and their elders to believe politicians who suggest that the noblest thing is to die for your country (meaning the government)?
In this connection I always think of the words Paddy Chayefsky wrote for his protagonist Charlie Madison (James Garner) in the movie The Americanization of Emily, spoken to a woman who preferred to pretend that war had not taken her husband and son:
- I don’t trust people who make bitter reflections about war, Mrs.
Barham. It’s always the generals with the bloodiest records who are the
first to shout what a Hell it is. And it’s always the widows who lead the
Memorial Day parades.… We shall never end wars, Mrs. Barham, by blaming
it on ministers and generals or warmongering imperialists or all the
other banal bogies. It’s the rest of us who build statues to those
generals and name boulevards after those ministers; the rest of us who
make heroes of our dead and shrines of our battlefields. We wear our
widows’ weeds like nuns and perpetuate war by exalting its sacrifices.…
Maybe ministers and generals blunder us into wars, Mrs. Barham, the least
the rest of us can do is to resist honoring the institution.
- War isn’t hell at all. It’s man at his best; the highest morality
he’s capable of.… It’s not war that’s insane, you see. It’s the morality
of it. It’s not greed or ambition that makes war: it’s goodness. Wars are
always fought for the best of reasons, for liberation or manifest
destiny, always against tyranny and in the interest of humanity. So far
this war, we’ve managed to butcher some ten million humans in the
interest of humanity. Next war it seems we’ll have to destroy all of man
in order to preserve his damn dignity. It’s not war that’s unnatural to
us; it’s virtue. As long as valor remains a virtue, we shall have
soldiers. So, I preach cowardice. Through cowardice we shall all be
saved.
- the way the dynamics and iconography of the Great War have proved
crucial political, rhetorical, and artistic determinants on subsequent
life. At the same time the war was relying on inherited myth, it was
generating new myth, and that myth is part of the fiber of our own
lives.
In The Great War and Modern Memory, Fussell wrote,
- Every war is ironic because every war is worse than expected. Every
war constitutes an irony of situation because its means are so
melodramatically disproportionate to its presumed ends. In the Great War
eight million people were destroyed because two persons, the Archduke
Francis Ferdinand and his Consort, had been shot.… [T]he Great War was
more ironic than any before or since. It was a hideous embarrassment to
the prevailing Meliorist myth which had dominated the public
consciousness for a century. It reversed the Idea of Progress.
- Everyone knew what Glory was, and what Honor meant. It was not until
eleven years after the war that Hemingway could declare in A Farewell to
Arms that “abstract words such as glory, honor, courage, or hallow were
obscene beside the concrete names of villages, the numbers of roads, the
names of rivers, the numbers of regiments and the dates.”
The world should keep this in mind as the politicians make choices today with respect to mythologized Ukraine and demonized Russia. This time the great powers have nuclear weapons. Who can be confident that these similarly flawed “leaders” learned anything from the Great War?
http://fff.org/explore-freedom/article/tgif-100th-anniversary-of-great-state-crime/ --
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