<h2><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P409"></SPAN></span><SPAN name="chapLXV"></SPAN>LXV<br/> THE AGE OF ARMAMENT IN EUROPE, AND THE GREAT WAR OF 1914-18</h2>
<p>The progress in material science that created this vast steamboat-and-railway
republic of America and spread this precarious British steamship empire over
the world, produced quite other effects upon the congested nations upon the
continent of Europe. They found themselves confined within boundaries fixed
during the horse-and-high-road period of human life, and their expansion
overseas had been very largely anticipated by Great Britain. Only Russia had
any freedom to expand eastward; and she drove a great railway across Siberia
until she entangled herself in a conflict with Japan, and pushed
south-eastwardly towards the borders of Persia and India to the annoyance of
Britain. The rest of the European Powers were in a state of intensifying
congestion. In order to realize the full possibilities of the new apparatus of
human life they had to rearrange their affairs upon a broader basis, either by
some sort of voluntary union or by a union imposed upon them by some
predominant power. The tendency of modern thought was in the direction of the
former alternative, but all the force of political tradition drove Europe
towards the latter.</p>
<p>The downfall of the “empire” of Napoleon III, the
establishment of the new German Empire, pointed men’s
hopes and fears towards the idea of a Europe consolidated
under German auspices. For thirty-six years of uneasy peace
the polities of Europe centred upon that possibility.
France, the steadfast rival of Germany for European
ascendancy since the division of the empire of Charlemagne,
sought to correct her own weakness by a close alliance with
Russia, and Germany linked herself closely with the Austrian
Empire (it had ceased to be the Holy Roman Empire in the days
of Napoleon I) and less successfully with the new kingdom of
Italy. <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P410"></SPAN></span>At first Great Britain stood as
usual half in and half out of continental affairs. But she
was gradually forced into a close association with the
Franco-Russian group by the aggressive development of a great
German navy. The grandiose imagination of the Emperor
William II (1888-1918) thrust Germany into premature overseas
enterprise that ultimately brought not only Great Britain but
Japan and the United States into the circle of her enemies.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-410"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-410.jpg" alt="BRITISH TANK IN THE BATTLE OF THE MENIN ROAD" width-obs="600" height-obs="581" /> <p class="caption">
BRITISH TANK IN THE BATTLE OF THE MENIN ROAD
<small><br/>The crew came out for a breath of fresh air during a lull
<br/>
<i>Photo: British Official</i></small></p>
</div>
<p>All these nations armed. Year after year the proportion of
national production devoted to the making of guns, equipment,
battleships and the like, increased. Year after year the
balance <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P411"></SPAN></span>of things seemed trembling towards
war, and then war would be averted. At last it came.
Germany and Austria struck at France and Russia and Serbia;
the German armies marching through Belgium, Britain
immediately came into the war on the side of Belgium,
bringing in Japan as her ally, and very soon Turkey followed
on the German side. Italy entered the war against Austria in
1915, and Bulgaria joined the Central Powers in the October
of that year. In 1916 Rumania, and in 1917 the United States
and China were forced into war against Germany. It is not
within the scope of this history to define the exact share of
blame for this vast catastrophe. The more interesting
question is not why the Great War was begun but why the Great
War was not anticipated and prevented. It is a far graver
thing for mankind that scores of millions of people were too
“patriotic,” stupid, or apathetic to prevent this
disaster by a movement towards European unity upon frank and
generous lines, than that a small number of people may have
been active in bringing it about.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-411"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-411.jpg" alt="THE RUINS OF YPRES (ONCE A DELIGHTFUL OLD FLEMISH TOWN)" width-obs="600" height-obs="329" /> <p class="caption">
THE RUINS OF YPRES (ONCE A DELIGHTFUL OLD FLEMISH TOWN)
<small><br/>To show the complete destructiveness of modern war
<br/>
<i>Photo: Topical</i></small></p>
</div>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-412"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-412.jpg" alt="THE DEVASTATION OF MODERN WAR" width-obs="600" height-obs="327" /> <p class="caption">
THE DEVASTATION OF MODERN WAR
<small><br/>Wire entanglements in the foreground
<br/>
<i>Photo: Photopress</i></small></p>
</div>
<p>It is impossible within the space at our command here to
trace the intricate details of the war. Within a few months
it became apparent that the progress of modern technical
science had changed <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P412"></SPAN></span>the nature of warfare very
profoundly. Physical science gives power, power over steel,
over distance, over disease; whether that power is used well
or ill depends upon the moral and political intelligence of
the world. The governments of Europe, inspired by antiquated
policies of hate and suspicion, found themselves with
unexampled powers both of destruction and resistance in their
hands. The war became a consuming fire round and about the
world, causing losses both to victors and vanquished out of
all proportion to the issues involved. The first phase of
the war was a tremendous rush of the Germans upon Paris and
an invasion of East Prussia by the Russians. Both attacks
were held and turned. Then the power of the defensive
developed; there was a rapid elaboration of trench warfare
until for a time the opposing armies lay entrenched in long
lines right across Europe, unable to make any advance without
enormous losses. The armies were millions strong, and behind
them entire populations were organized for the supply of food
and munitions to the front. Then was a cessation of nearly
every sort of productive activity except such as contributed
to military operations. All the able-bodied manhood of
Europe was drawn into the armies or navies or into the
improvised <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P413"></SPAN></span>factories that served them. There
was an enormous replacement of men by women in industry.
Probably more than half the people in the belligerent
countries of Europe changed their employment altogether
during this stupendous struggle. They were socially uprooted
and transplanted. Education and normal scientific work were
restricted or diverted to immediate military ends, and the
distribution of news was crippled and corrupted by military
control and “propaganda” activities.</p>
<p>The phase of military deadlock passed slowly into one of
aggression upon the combatant populations behind the fronts
by the destruction of food supplies and by attacks through
the air. And also there was a steady improvement in the size
and range of the guns employed and of such ingenious devices
as poison-gas shells and the small mobile forts known as
tanks, to break down the resistance of troops in the
trenches. The air offensive was the most revolutionary of
all the new methods. It carried warfare from two dimensions
into three. Hitherto in the history of mankind war had gone
on only where the armies marched and met. Now it went on
everywhere. First the Zeppelin and then the bombing
aeroplane carried war over and past the front to an ever-
increasing area of civilian activities beyond. The old
distinction maintained in civilized warfare between the
civilian and combatant population disappeared. Everyone who
grew food, or who sewed a garment, everyone who felled a tree
or repaired a house, every railway station and every
warehouse was held to be fair game for destruction. The air
offensive increased in range and terror with every month in
the war. At last great areas of Europe were in a state of
siege and subject to nightly raids. Such exposed cities as
London and Paris passed sleepless night after sleepless night
while the bombs burst, the anti-aircraft guns maintained an
intolerable racket, and the fire engines and ambulances
rattled headlong through the darkened and deserted streets.
The effects upon the minds and health of old people and of
young children were particularly distressing and destructive.</p>
<p>Pestilence, that old follower of warfare, did not arrive
until the very end of the fighting in 1918. For four years
medical science staved off any general epidemic; then came a
great outbreak of <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P414"></SPAN></span>influenza about the world which
destroyed many millions of people. Famine also was staved
off for some time. By the beginning of 1918 however most of
Europe was in a state of mitigated and regulated famine. The
production of food throughout the world had fallen very
greatly through the calling off of peasant mankind to the
fronts, and the distribution of such food as was produced was
impeded by the havoc wrought by the submarine, by the rupture
of customary routes through the closing of frontiers, and by
the disorganization of the transport system of the world.
The various governments took possession of the dwindling food
supplies, and, with more or less success, rationed their
populations. By the fourth year the whole world was
suffering from shortages of clothing and housing and of most
of the normal gear of life as well as of food. Business and
economic life were profoundly disorganized. Every-one was
worried, and most people were leading lives of unwonted
discomfort.</p>
<p>The actual warfare ceased in November, 1918. After a supreme
effort in the spring of 1918 that almost carried the Germans
to Paris, the Central Powers collapsed. They had come to an
end of their spirit and resources.</p>
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