Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The Great War and modern amnesia: Imperialism still coming home to r

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The Great War and modern amnesia: Imperialism still coming home to r

    Twin Cities Daily Planet
    June 29 2014




    The Great War and modern amnesia: Imperialism still coming home to roost

    By Rich Broderick, Ground Zero

    Exactly 100 years ago, on the morning of June 28, 1914, the Archduke
    Franz Ferdinand of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and his wife Sophie
    were assassinated when two bullets were fired at them at close range.
    At the moment, the couple were riding through the streets of Sarajevo
    in an open car when the vehicle stalled while the driver attempted to
    turn around.

    The assassin, Gavrilo Princip, was one of a team of killers on the
    trail of the Archduke that day. All were Serb nationalists who laid
    claim to all regions of the Balkans inhabited by ethnic Serbs,
    including places that were part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
    Princip and the others were also members of a terrorist organization
    called the Black Hand founded by the head of Serbia's military
    intelligence.

    At the time, little was made of the killings. Virtually no one in the
    public sphere thought the event would lead to anything more
    cataclysmic than another round of fighting between Austria and Serbia.
    As we now know, of course, the assassinations precipitated a chain of
    events that, within six weeks, plunged Europe - and eventually the
    rest of the world - into the bloodiest conflict in history up to that
    time.

    The leading politicians, journalists and public intellectuals who did
    not foresee the outbreak of war were equally shortsighted about the
    course that war would take once it erupted. It was going to be short.
    A few weeks, a few months at most. Everyone home by Christmas.
    Everyone in the know was familiar with the deadliness of mechanized
    weaponry, from machine guns to aerial bombardment to heavy artillery.
    But until then, such armaments had mostly been used against poorly
    armed tribes or native insurrectionists in "uncivilized" lands
    colonized by a European state. In 1914, the best and brightest of the
    day fully expected that enemy troops would be routed by "our side" as
    easily as villagers in North Africa or tribal warriors in Southeast
    Asia.

    Once again, we now know different. But who could blame the European
    powers for their undue optimism? In current parlance, the leaders of
    those nations lived in a bubble. They were only told what those around
    them thought they wanted to hear, and they only listened - like elites
    everywhere, including Washington, D.C. - to those willing to tell them
    what they wanted to hear.

    In the run-up to the Great War's centenary, the already capacious
    library of books published about the conflict, like Paul Fussell's
    early masterpiece The Great War and Modern Memory, has swelled
    considerably, including Christopher Clark's magisterial 700 page The
    Sleepwalkers.

    Among the newer books - it was published in 2011 - The Russian Origins
    of World War I by Sean McMeekin should have special value for us in
    the United States. Not only does it offer an alternative, and
    convincing, take on who the most villainous player was in the lead up
    to hostilities in 1914, its examination of Russian policies before and
    during the war offers critical lessons for America, especially in the
    Middle East. There our current leaders seem doomed to keep making the
    same kinds of mistakes Tsarist Russia made in pursuing policies that
    were simultaneously fickle, feckless, and brutal, based upon premises
    that were little more than self-delusion. Epistemic cloture is a term
    currently in vogue for describing the echo chamber in which, for
    example, the GOP leadership seems to be operating. Epistemic cloture
    is also a good term for describing the milieu in which Russian leaders
    operated in the early 20th century. It is an equally apt term for the
    milieu in which American leaders operate, not just when it comes to
    the Middle East and Central Asia but, indeed, throughout all of the
    developing, non-Western world.

    The Russian Origins of World War I is a study of the unintended
    calamitous consequences that inevitably follow misguided decisions in
    the fields of foreign policy and war. Not only did the Tsar's secret
    service collude with Serbian intelligence in helping fund and train
    the Black Hand, but Russia's military leaders urged the Serbs to
    resist Austria's demands that it be allowed to participate in the
    investigation of the Archduke's murder, promising the Serbs in return
    slices of the Austro-Hungarian Empire's Balkans domain - territory
    that Russia was also promising to other nations. Most critical of all,
    it was news of Russia's secret general mobilization of its military
    nearly a week before Germany or Austria that enabled the German staff
    to overcome Kaiser Wilhelm's reluctance to rush to war.

    Russia's aim in all this was for France and England, its partners in
    the Triple Entente, to pin down Germany and Austria long enough for
    Russia to achieve its real strategic goals - dismemberment of the
    Ottoman Empire and seizure of Constantinople, which Russia planned to
    rename Tsargrad.

    In a shameful episode that bears a striking similarity to what
    happened to Iraq's Kurds and southern Shia when we abandoned them to
    Saddam Hussein's revenge following the 1991 Gulf War, McMeekin
    describes Russia's key role in triggering the course of events that
    resulted in the forced relocation and subsequent death of 600,000
    Armenians living under Turkish rule. This humanitarian disaster was
    set in motion by Russia's decision to arm and train Armenian militia
    in 1914. When Turkey responded, Russia walked away from its pledge of
    military support for the Armenians. The Turks, facing an internal
    uprising along the border with its traditional enemy, reacted, as we
    know, with unrestrained brutality.

    Whatever its proximate cause, however, and whichever nation bears the
    greatest responsibility for setting it off, WWI was ultimately
    European Imperialism come home to roost: a homecoming that in 1939
    would see the "scientific racism" concocted in the 19th century to
    justify the conquest of "lesser peoples" reach its apogee with
    Hitler's attempt to exterminate Europe's Jews, Gypsies and Slavs.

    As McMeekin's book shows, the war was also the coming home to roost of
    the Great Game Europe had played throughout the 19th and early 20th
    centuries with the lives and territories of people living in the
    Middle East, the Caucasus, and Central Asia. The ISIS horror show
    currently on display in Syria and Iraq is yet another consequence of
    Europe casually divvying up the Middle East without regard to the
    region's ethnic or sectarian realities - a Pandora's Box the U.S.
    obligingly pried open with its ill-fated decision to invade Iraq in
    2003.

    Over the course of the century since the assassination of Archduke
    Franz Ferdinand, Europe would - at the cost of more than 100 million
    European lives - come to see the error of its ways, turning away from
    armed conflict as the primary means of advancing national interests.

    But if the decades following the Second World War have demonstrated
    anything, it is that the United States still hasn't learned the
    lessons so painfully absorbed on the battlefields of Flanders and the
    killing fields of Auschwitz and Dachau. We continue to blunder along
    trying to impose our "civilizing" mission -- now termed "nation
    building" and "democratization" -- on lesser peoples, especially in
    the Middle East and Central Asia (think Afghanistan).

    Tsarist Russia, to its ultimate cost, found out how self-destructive
    its fantasies of hegemony in this part of the world proved to be.
    Would that we took note of Russia's fate in 1917 and acted
    accordingly.

    Not that I'm holding my breath. Even now, there is an assassin waiting
    for us to come into range. Only this time the name of the assassin
    isn't Gavrilo Princip. It's us.

    And the gun we hold is aimed at our own heads.

    http://www.tcdailyplanet.net/blog/rich-broderick/great-war-and-modern-amnesia-imperialism-still-coming-home-roost-1




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X