Illustration by Simon Jenkins
The First World War centenary has been seized as a military propaganda opportunity, says Simon Jenkins, and so-called lessons learned have been ignored or forgotten.
Britain’s
commemoration of the Great War has lost all sense of proportion. It has become
a media theme park, an indigestible cross between Downton Abbey and a horror
movie.
I cannot walk
down the street or turn on the television without being bombarded by Great War
diaries, poems, scrapbooks and songs. The BBC has gone war mad. We have Great
War plays, Great War proms, Great War bake-ins, Great War gardens, even Great
War Countryfile.
There is the
Great War and the Commonwealth, the Great War and feminism, Great War fashion
shows and souvenirs. There are reportedly 8,000 books on the war in print. The
Royal Mail has issued “classic, prestige and presentation” packs on the war
that “enable you to enjoy both the stories and the stamps”. Enjoy?
Meanwhile our
finest historians compete to find the most ghoulish tales from the trenches,
the most ghastly cruelties, the goriest wounds. No programme appears on
television without some footage of men running through mud. Is there no other
way of remembering an event than with images of death, punctuated by men in top
hats with silly walks?
This has been
going on all year. When in January I apologised to German friends for the
impending avalanche of anti-German memorabilia, I little realised how great
that avalanche would be. A Martian might think Britain was a country of
demented warmongers, not able to get through a day without a dose of appalling
battle scenes from past national victories. On Monday the fact that Britain
went to war with Germany in 1914 actually led the morning news. Was this on
government instruction? Were this North Korea or Maoist China we would ridicule
such craven chauvinism.
Clearly
events of the magnitude of a war should be remembered. But when those who
fought and suffered are almost all dead, “remembering” is a task for the
intellect and imagination. It is essentially work for historians, but we have
to pump up “human interest” in it, especially for children, with tales of
personal distress and terrible cruelty. The repetition of virtually identical
“stories from the trenches” becomes banal, a nightly pornography of violence.
The war was
terrible, as are all wars. As the historian Max Hastings remarked on Radio 4’s
Today programme, the soldiers who experienced Napoleon’s march on Moscow or the
Russian front in the second world war would have regarded the trenches as easy
going. Besides, the actual outbreak of a war is by no means its most
significant moment, which surely attaches to its completion. No one in 1914
thought they were marching off to “the Great War”, but rather to drive the
Germans back over their border by Christmas.
Needless to
say, the centenary has been seized as a military propaganda opportunity. Last
week David Cameron crudely compared Vladimir Putin in Ukraine to Germany under
the Kaiser in 1914 (and under Hitler). This was neither true nor helpful. The
prime minister added that Britain was “not about to launch a European war”. In
which case why mention it at all, and why also send troops to train in eastern
Europe?
Eagerly
jumping on the rolling bandwagon was the chief of the general staff, Sir Peter
Wall. In the Telegraph on Monday he added that recent wars had bred a “warrior
generation” of soldiers eager to take the fight to any available enemy – even
back to Afghanistan, of all places.
The most
sensible commemoration of any war is not to repeat it. Hence, presumably, the
constant references by this week’s celebrants to “drawing lessons” and “lest we
forget”. But this is mere cliche if no lessons are then drawn, or if drawn are
then forgotten.
The Great War
centenary should indeed have been a festival of lessons. Historians have had a
field day arguing over its enduring puzzle – not its conduct or its outcome,
but its cause. I have come close to changing my mind with each book I have
read, veering from Chris Clark’s cobweb of treaties and tripwires to the
majority view that firmly blames the Kaiser and Germany. But I have read
precious few lessons.
The truth is
that Britain is as bad as America at learning from old wars. The American
defence secretary during Vietnam, Robert McNamara, remarked that every lesson
of Vietnam was ignored by the invasion of Iraq. In the past decade Britain has
waged three unprovoked wars – on Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya – at a vast cost
in lives and destruction, and no obvious benefit to anyone. The invasion of
Afghanistan ignored the lesson of all previous conflicts in the region and is
duly being lost. The truth is that “drawing lessons” has become code for
celebrating victory.
I doubt if
any lessons will be drawn next year from the anniversaries of Agincourt (1415)
or Waterloo (1815) – and certainly none from the Battle of New Orleans (1815).
We will just ring bells, bake cakes and put on costumes.
Nor is the
Great War celebration over. There are still four years of fighting to go, from
the Marne to the Somme to Passchendaele to Amiens. We can have “Oh! What a
Lovely War” each evening. Someone at the BBC will perhaps try to replay the
Anglo-German football match in no man’s land – and try not to win. And what of
Armistice Day? We know where that will lead, to the classic British 20th
century Boche-bashing.
The chief
lesson of 1914 must be not recklessly to rattle sabres across the frontiers of
Europe until all else is lost. The Germans have learned that. In Ukraine they
are still counselling restraint. Britain is doing the opposite, as its leaders
gently dust themselves in glory. When Cameron last year allotted £50m to
“remembering the lessons” of 1914, he was also planning to go to war on Syria.
I wonder what lesson taught him that.
Source:
Guardian
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