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Every century has had its wars, but the 20th century has been the worst in the history of humankind. The First World War killed 10 million, the Second World War 50 million and since 1945 millions have died in theatres as diverse as Korea, Vietnam, Africa, Iraq, Afghanistan, Central America, the Balkans and the Falklands. And that the world hasn't yet been annihilated in a nuclear holocaust owes as much to luck as to judgement. Despite a general agreement among most nations that there should be no repeats of the catastrophes of the world wars and despite a growing breed of communitarians--politicians seeking a third way between capitalism and socialism--the threat of war is as ever-present as it always has been as we reach the year 2000. Keegan doesn't attempt a potted global history of warfare; instead he concentrates on certain themes such as the origin of war in human nature and history, the adoption and use of war by states as an instrument of policy and the experience of war by individuals and human groups and its effects on their existence.
This is not a long book, but much of its 74 pages makes fairly depressing reading. If you're looking for an affirmation of the essential goodness of human nature you aren't going to find it here. Keegan reminds us that it is not the military that are the warmongers, but the stay-at-home politicians and wannabe statesmen and women who often disguise naked political, economic, personal and national self-interest as the moral high ground and use them as a pretext for a campaign of destruction. No-one, on whatever side of a conflict, has ever said that God and right were not on their side. Poor old God, eh?
But there are touching moments, especially when Keegan is writing about the individual and war. He talks of the long periods of boredom interspersed with moments of high terror, and the poignancy of the first-person accounts of the relatives at home waiting for the telegram to be posted through their door is almost unbearable. Keegan's last chapter is devoted to the notion of whether there can be an end to war. He nobly and boldly concedes the idea as a possibility, but then underwrites his message with the caveat that human beings will almost need to reinvent themselves to achieve this.
Despite mountains of evidence, no-one it seems is willing to learn the lessons of war. We've seen it all before and we're going to see it all again. --John Crace
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