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How WWI Shaped The 20th Century And Beyond

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  • How WWI Shaped The 20th Century And Beyond

    HOW WWI SHAPED THE 20TH CENTURY AND BEYOND

    Agence France Presse
    February 20, 2014 Thursday 4:04 AM GMT

    PARIS, Feb 20 2014

    "It will have blood; they say, blood will have blood."

    The line from Shakespeare's Macbeth might easily have been written
    about the legacy of World War I.

    As the guns fell silent in 1918, the victors all agreed on one thing:
    Germany must pay.

    How much was a matter of debate but there was never any doubt that
    the post-war settlement enshrined in the Treaty of Versailles was
    going to be punitive.

    Germany did pay, but it was not alone. A century on, the world lives
    with the consequences of a peace accord that, even at the time,
    was criticised as making another war in Europe inevitable.

    The economist J.M. Keynes, then a British Treasury official, resigned
    rather than be associated with a Treaty he denounced as "Carthaginian"
    in its harshness. France's Marshal Ferdinand Foch judged it "not so
    much a peace as a 20-year armistice."

    The "war to end all wars" turned out to be the exact opposite. By
    ensuring Germany's economic ruin and political humiliation, the
    post-war settlement laid the foundations -- or at least provided
    fertile ground -- for the rise of Nazism and the horrors that ensued.

    - Famine, Terror and the Cold War -

    Just as important, the war served as the incubator for the 1917
    Russian Revolution.

    Against a backdrop of desperate food shortages, military failure
    left the Tsarist state crippled and vulnerable to an assault by
    Lenin's Bolsheviks.

    A civil war ensued in which the Western powers offered backing for
    counter-revolutionary forces. But war-fatigue restricted the scale
    of intervention and ultimately Lenin and co. won and established the
    Soviet Union as an authoritarian Communist state.

    Disastrous agricultural policies resulted in more than three million
    people dying in the famine of the early 1930s, millions more under
    the Great Terror unleashed by Lenin's successor, Joseph Stalin.

    By the mid-1930s, all the conditions were in place for the post-World
    War II division of Europe.

    That in turn produced the Cold War and its associated carve-up of the
    rest of the planet into Western or Soviet spheres of influence and an
    unstable global equilibrium that helped to fuel countless conflicts
    across the developing world.

    - A lasting mark on the Middle East -

    The first World War also left a lasting mark on the Middle East. By
    encouraging an Arab revolt, Britain helped precipitate the collapse
    of the Germany-allied Ottoman Empire.

    A secular Turkey emerged and Britain and France assumed post-war
    control of much of the Arab world.

    By then, Britain had also declared, through the 1917 Balfour
    declaration, its support for the principle of a Jewish state on land
    it had pledged to the Arabs.

    The creation of Israel might still have never happened but, by the
    end of WWI, it was a much more realistic prospect than it had been
    at the start.

    The collapse of the Ottoman Empire also resulted in the killing of
    up to 1.5 million Armenians in what they see as a genocide.

    The world's muted response to the massacres is credited by some
    historians with inspiring Hitler to think he could get away with
    annihilating the Jews.

    - A new social order -

    Events in Russia cast a long shadow over the rest of Europe, generating
    a fear of upheaval that helped accelerate reforms while also inspiring
    other revolutionaries, including the nascent fascist movement that
    was soon to seize power in Italy.

    Worker uprisings in Germany and Hungary in the immediate aftermath
    of WWI were crushed or collapsed internally.

    But waves of militancy in other countries -- in the Fiat factories of
    Turin, Italy or the shipyards of Scotland's Red Clydeside -- delivered
    major advances in terms of working conditions and the rights of trade
    unions to represent their members.

    More broadly, the aftermath of World War I was a period of rapid social
    progress in much of the industrialised world. This was most notable
    in terms of women's right to vote, which, in the popular memory,
    is often seen as having been "earned" through female participation
    in war-related activities.

    This version of events is challenged by some historians who argue that
    political moves towards equal voting rights were underway before 1914
    and may actually have been delayed by war.

    The notion of women entering the industrial workforce for the first
    time as a result of the war is also one that has been challenged
    recently.

    Less obvious positive legacies of a war which left millions maimed
    or traumatised were greater social acceptance of the disabled and
    the destigmatisation of mental illness.

    Some art historians have described the war as having interrupted
    a great artistic flowering that occurred in the opening decade of
    the century.

    But it undoubtedly also spurred new waves of creativity.

    Poetry was revived as an art form across the world, Dadaism, the
    avant-garde art movement, was born and led in turn to Surrealism, and
    Jazz, brought to Europe by American soldiers, became the soundtrack
    for the escapism and innovation of the "roaring '20s".



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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