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The Ragtime Infantry On The Eastern Front

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  • The Ragtime Infantry On The Eastern Front

    THE RAGTIME INFANTRY ON THE EASTERN FRONT
    TOBY SINCLAIR

    Calcutta Telegraph, India
    http://www.telegraphindia.com/1070831/asp/op inion/story_8251138.asp
    Aug 31 2007

    Royal Irish Fusiliers, Gallipoli, 1915
    WORLD WAR ONE: A SHORT HISTORY By Norman Stone,
    Allen Lane, Rs 1,125

    This is a remarkably concise and readable history of World War I. It is
    full of details and interesting asides. Norman Stone leaves no doubt as
    to how Germany prepared itself and manipulated events until conflict
    was inevitable. This was a time when the arms industry dominated the
    economies of many countries, a time when railroads were built with
    troop movements in mind and rural platforms, long enough to disembark
    troops, built in "the middle of nowhere".

    Most people on both sides of the conflict thought it would all
    be over by Christmas of 1914. It then all went terribly wrong with
    millions killed, many more wounded and rendered homeless, and in some
    cases stateless. The statistics and figures are staggering. But one
    surprising fact was that, by 1918, thanks to the extraordinary advances
    in medicine, only 1 per cent of the wounded died. To say that the
    Western Front was a bloodbath has perhaps become a cliche, but what
    this book tells us is the extraordinary carnage on the Eastern Front.

    In every way, the war in the east was as bloody and as futile,
    with extraordinary acts of bravery and stupidity by the respective
    general staff. Here, the failure of Russia to invest in adequate
    railway infrastructure meant that they could not get men, food and
    materials to the front.

    Stone's book also has many delightful asides and a lot of new
    information. There is a good description, in a few short sentences,
    of how young Captain Rommel made his reputation with an extraordinary
    feat in the Italian campaign.

    There is a fascinating footnote about Kurt Riezler who was the German
    Chancellor Theobald von Bethmann Tollweg's private secretary during
    much of the war, but in 1933 was teaching at the University of Chicago
    (having defeated Karl Popper for the post) and in 1945 was appointed
    by Harry Truman to head a commission to judge the morality of dropping
    the atomic bomb. There are many more such gems.

    Sadly, two great areas of conflict have been overlooked by Stone. The
    Turkish Empire, in 1914, spread from Europe to the Caspian Sea,
    and from the Black Sea to the Arabian Sea. Four years later, it was
    reduced to the country we know today. Despite Stone's appointment
    at Turkey's Bilkent University, he only makes passing reference to
    the Dardanelles where Kemmal Ataturk made his reputation, but he is
    good on Turkish politics and cautiously honest about the Armenian
    massacres. But he makes no reference to Palestine or Mesopotamia
    where Indian troops fought, nor to the African campaigns.

    India Gate commemorates the lives of over 60,000 Indian officers and
    men killed in World War I. 10,236 Indian soldiers were captured at
    Kut on the road from Basra to Baghdad. It seems that we have learnt
    so little. One of Delhi's landmarks and, I think, the only Imperial
    statue to remain in the capital celebrates the last great cavalry
    victory when squadrons from the Mysore and Jodhpur Lancers charged
    Turkish machine guns defending Haifa on September 23, 1918 and took
    the town. It is the Teen Murti Memorial. In Africa, the "butchers'
    bill" totalled over 100,000.

    The aftermath was as tragic as the conflicts themselves. Stone suggests
    that the failure to occupy Germany, something that the Allies did
    after the next war, perhaps allowed for the rise of the Nazis. But
    he makes no mention of the other disastrous legacies of World War I
    that we have to deal with today - Rwanda, Yugoslavia and the horrors
    of the Nineties (still unresolved in Kosovo), and Iraq (Mesopotamia)
    and the failure to meet promises made to the Kurds.

    Despite these shortcomings, Stone's book is a useful, concise and often
    witty introduction. But it perhaps needs to be pointed out that World
    War I was not limited to Europe. The maps are excellent and certainly
    add to this very readable history, albeit too Euro-centric.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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