Denerick wrote: » As long as people felt that war was a good thing it was inevitable. At this stage people recognise war as a bad thing, but sometimes a necessary evil. Our own Padraig Pearse for example practically masturbated over the thought of WWI, feeling that the wine of the battlefield would renew Europe. Annnnnnnnyway....
brianthebard wrote: » Lol masturbated is a bit far, but I see what you mean. In the context of the time though his position wasn't exactly extreme. I'm still not entirely sure how people got to the stage of believing in blood sacrifice/bloodshed as cleansing though?
brianthebard wrote: » Good point Cap'n. I find it interesting however that after the lengthy and expensive Boer war Britain didn't seem to think twice about getting involved in a European war. Broadly agree Denerick.
brianthebard wrote: » Yes it had happened ten years ago, so should still have been in the minds of politicians in Britain. They thought they would defeat the Boers in a matter of weeks, it took years and was hugely expensive. They should have learned from that cost but they didn't.
McArmalite wrote: » Good point there Brian. They got a very bloody nose from the Boers. You would have thought going up against the Germans, Austrian/Hungarians etc would have put them off. Sure enough it was in alliance with France, Russia etc but I suppose the thoughts of having a hand in the spoils afterwards was too great to resist.
Happy Monday wrote: » Their naval and imperial interests were threatened by Germany. There was a clamour in the UK to give the Boshe a bloody nose and show them who ruled the waves. It was never believed that this war would last anything more than 6 months at the outside. Plus the Boer War had finished over 10 years before.
Denerick wrote: » WWI was the epitome of industrial warfare, as another user said. It was a chance for each nations industry to supply a nation of young men fighting on the front. The problem was that all of them were roughly technically and economically on a par. The US changed everything, bringing their industrial might to the table and cracking out infinitely more tanks and planes than the Germans. The Germans tried to keep up, because hither to this the Allied were roughly equal with the central powers in industrial capacity. The great campaigns which saw 000s of young men die were indicative of the moron-ity (Is that a word?) of the ruling class, seeing each major attack as vitally important... In taking a few acres of destroyed trenchland. People tend to forget, that on the western front at least, the Germans were not beaten. They probably could have kept going for years, just fighting off the allied offensives. Reason thankfully prevailed in the end.
loveissucide wrote: » Read Niall Ferguson's The Age Of Hatred.He makes some very interesting points about how the war was a result of nationalist drive, the desire to create empires by nations such as Serbia and Italy, and how nationalism was the driving force behind the war.Basically a pan-Slavic state was the aim of Serbia, and this would never have happened without the collapse of order in the Balkans which triggered the First World War.
Hookey wrote: » While you're correct that the Germans weren't beaten on the battlefield, after the failure of the Ludendorf Offensive, they didn't really have any more shots in their locker and the German people were suffering quite badly (3/4 million dead of starvation, whereas Britain didn't even introduce rationing until 1918),
brianthebard wrote: » Stay on topic. Mod.
Fratton Fred wrote: » The Boer war had not only ended ten years previous, but it had also been fought thousands of miles away, so the British government didn't have to look at dead bodies. people tend to turn a blind eye to bloodshed when they can't see it.
for Britian it had nothing to do with the "Spoils" as you call it, it was more to do with protecting the mother land.
Why else do you think Britian went to great lengths to scuttle so many of Germany's ships after the war (Many of which you can still see in Scapa Flow. as for the Archduke, his death was an excuse, not a reason.
Hookey wrote: » The US influence is much less significant in WWI than it was in WWII. Once they entered, Congress signed off on a massive armament programme, but a lot of the matériel wasn't delivered effectively (except ships), to the extent that the US Army had supply problems in France right up until the end of the war. And don't forget the immediate US effect had been counterbalanced by the Russian armistice. While you're correct that the Germans weren't beaten on the battlefield, after the failure of the Ludendorf Offensive, they didn't really have any more shots in their locker and the German people were suffering quite badly (3/4 million dead of starvation, whereas Britain didn't even introduce rationing until 1918), if the Germans hadn't negotiated a general collapse was entirely possible (after all the French in particular had come really close and the Russians did collapse). Strangely, if Germany had collapsed, a principle cause for the rise of Nazism (the so-called "stab in the back") may never have happened.
McArmalite wrote: » Well done mod. It's the standard tatic to drag any thread that is even mildly critical of britain into the IRA this, the IRA that, the IRA the other, when the IRA have little or most of the time nothing to do with whatsoever with the subject under discussion.
McArmalite wrote: » Tripe. The british govt. give a damn about dead bodies and bloodshed, absoulute tripe.
McArmalite wrote: » If britian had nothing to do with the spoils of WW1, why was the british empire bigger at the end of WW1 than before it ??
McArmalite wrote: » Admiral Ludwig von Reuter, the German officer in command at Scapa Flow, after waiting for the bulk of the British fleet to leave on exercises, gave the order to scuttle the ships to prevent their falling into British hands on 21 June 1919. Fifty-one ships sank without loss of life. However, nine German sailors died when British forces opened fire as they attempted to scuttle their ship, reputedly the last casualties of the First World War.
Morlar wrote: » I dont have the figures to hand but I believe over 300,000 of those Germans died of starvation after the unconditional surrender. This was in part due to the continuation of the naval blockade for several months after the end of the war (to give the british an advantage in post conflict re-building of trade links and so on). From what I recall during the versailles 'negotiations' the german delegate mentioned the above figure when he pointedly refused to stand (infuriating the french who the Germans viewed as extremely arrogant considering their performance on the battlefields).
Fratton Fred wrote: » How was the "Empire" bigger? Britain actually got very little out of WWI compared to France, Denmark and Poland. The colonies you are probably referring to are the ones taken off Germany and put under the control of the League of nations. these colonies were then administered by France, Belgium and Britain. Although these were "Defacto" colonies, they are not why any of the Allies went to war in the first place. OK, the Germans's scuttled them. That was probably their fate anyway but the Germans beat them to it. Reducing the size of the German fleet was one of Britains main aims from the treaty.