- Reaction score
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Although I agree with John Moore that "The Great War was a needless enterprise. Launched like a negative billing option by a series of reciprocal agreements ..." I suspect that he and I part company on which reciprocal agreements and why they were wrong. I also believe that humanity, individually and collectively, often (but not always) can reach new moral heights in war: fighting and dying for something worthy and, in the process making a better world for all. While every single German soldier fought in an evil cause in 1939-45, some gave us good examples of how to fight a modern war with some grace - fighting skillfully and courageously and then being magnanimous in victory and amicable in defeat.
Anyway, here, reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act from the National Post is Moore's commentary:
http://fullcomment.nationalpost.com/2012/04/13/john-moore-the-first-world-war-is-nothing-to-be-proud-of/
John Moore
http://www.newstalk1010.com/JohnMooresBio.aspx
The 1914-18 war represented a massive failure in British foreign policy, arguably the worst policy blunder in 900+ years, since Harold Godwinson screwed with William of Normandy. But the fact that we, the British Empire, of which Canada was a proud and content part in 1914, was suckered into an unnecessary war does not mean that we should not be proud of the ways in which Canada responded and of the ways in which Canadians contributed, especially on the battlefield. There is little doubt that the men and women of the Canadian Corps did take some extra pride in being Canadian after Easter Monday 1917 and there is little doubt that Canada's contribution in war, especially at Vimy, helped lead to Canada having its own seat in Paris in 1919 and to the Statutes of Westminster in 1931. So yes, Vimy in 1917 was the birth of a really independent Canadian nation, 50 years after Confederation, and we do well to remember it with pride.
Anyway, here, reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act from the National Post is Moore's commentary:
http://fullcomment.nationalpost.com/2012/04/13/john-moore-the-first-world-war-is-nothing-to-be-proud-of/
The First World War is nothing to be proud of
John Moore
Apr 13, 2012
Modern Canada was born on the bloodied field of battle of Vimy Ridge. Your high school history teacher told you that. Our current military-happy federal government repeats it often enough. The Governor-General recited the accepted wisdom to a crowd of thousands just this past Monday at the Vimy memorial, where he described the battle as a “very defining” moment in Canadian history.
The tropes are well known to Vimy devotes. Over four days in April in 1917, Canadian soldiers accomplished through planning, guts and guile what 150,000 dead French and British soldiers had failed to achieve: The capture of seven kilometres of land rising up to a ridge held by the Germans. It was the first time all four divisions of the Canadian Corps had fought together — 3,598 Canadians lay dead; 7,000 were wounded.
But is Vimy really the best of Canada? Does our modern identity and national purpose hinge on the harrowing slaughter of our citizens on a foreign field of mud in a pointless war?
It’s easy to romanticize war and reverse engineer its purpose. The Second World War — one of the most unambiguously moral wars in history — has fooled us into thinking there is honour in war itself. The Americans celebrate a conflict in which 600,000 died over a man’s right to own another man as evidence of romantic nationalism, when the Civil War should really be regarded as a five-year period of epic madness.
The Great War was a needless enterprise. Launched like a negative billing option by a series of reciprocal agreements between inbred, tottering royal families, the war consumed nine million souls and accomplished absolutely nothing, save laying the pretext for an even bloodier future conflict. Canada was roped into the enterprise by virtue of our colonial status. Canadian men descended from those who had fled the stifling working class slavery of Europe to build new and free lives in a country without horizon, were sucked into the vortex of internecine conflict between the crowned heads they had left behind. It’s worth noting many enlisted only under relentless pressure from former warriors and dilettantes who presented dissenters with white feathers as the ultimate public gesture of emasculation.
If anything, modern Canada should reflect on Vimy and our total First World War sacrifice as a national tragedy. Sixty-thousand Canadian men died in a war in which we had no real casus belli and which was largely administered by damnable incompetents. A generation of teachers, milkmen, farm hands, labourers, students and artists died on the field of battle, so hollowing out the population that many of the women they left behind would never marry. One hundred and seventy-three thousand returned home suffering from burns, chemical poisoning, amputations and traumatic stress disorder that would leave them depressed and spastic for the remainder of their lives.
So why, 95 years later, do we venerate Vimy? Perhaps because it’s far easier to stir emotions where military matters are concerned. You can’t erect a heroic statue to the civility for which Canada is renowned. Social justice has never been able to muster an inspiring flypast. The national understanding that in Canada we look after each other doesn’t have a solemn bugle call to draw a tear.
In place of the notion that our national identity might rise from something as unremarkable as compassion, hard work and character, we prefer to imbue the solitary terror of a prairie farm boy calling for his mother as he bleeds out into the soil of a French field with a purpose and nobility it does not deserve.
National Post
John Moore is host of Moore in the Morning on NewsTalk 1010 AM Toronto.
John Moore
http://www.newstalk1010.com/JohnMooresBio.aspx
The 1914-18 war represented a massive failure in British foreign policy, arguably the worst policy blunder in 900+ years, since Harold Godwinson screwed with William of Normandy. But the fact that we, the British Empire, of which Canada was a proud and content part in 1914, was suckered into an unnecessary war does not mean that we should not be proud of the ways in which Canada responded and of the ways in which Canadians contributed, especially on the battlefield. There is little doubt that the men and women of the Canadian Corps did take some extra pride in being Canadian after Easter Monday 1917 and there is little doubt that Canada's contribution in war, especially at Vimy, helped lead to Canada having its own seat in Paris in 1919 and to the Statutes of Westminster in 1931. So yes, Vimy in 1917 was the birth of a really independent Canadian nation, 50 years after Confederation, and we do well to remember it with pride.