Wartime:
Understanding and Behavior in the Second World War, by Paul Fussell
This book is about the psychological
and emotional culture of Americans and Britons during the Second World
War. It is about the rationalizations
and euphemisms people needed to deal with an unacceptable actuality from 1939
to 1945.
So begins Fussell in the preface. After touching on the physical damage, he continues:
Less obvious is the damage it did
to intellect, discrimination, honesty, individuality, complexity, ambiguity,
and irony.
In chapter 8 of Perpetual War
for Perpetual Peace, edited By Harry Elmer Barnes, William Henry Chamberlin
addresses
this topic. Chamberlin cites the
hypocrisy of Roosevelt and his Atlantic Charter, the hypocrisy of the war
crimes trials, the use of torture by the Allies, the lies of Roosevelt to the
American people leading up to the war.
In chapter 9 of the same volume, George A. Lundberg cites
Dr. Charles Beard, listing of twelve examples of the lies
and manipulations by Roosevelt before and during the war. There is no possibility of a properly functioning
democracy or republic when lying is the means to secure support.
It is the damage done to the psyche of the American and
British people that Fussell examines in this book.
Severe trauma was often the result
of the initial optimistic imagination encountering actuality.
Obviously the line from which I drew the title of this
post. When reading this line in Fussell’s
book, it struck me that besides having application to both those fighting and
those at home regarding the war effort, it also might apply to the reason why
so many worship those who fight. But I
will leave it to Fussell to tell the story.
At first everyone hoped, and many
believed, that the war would be fast-moving, mechanized, remote controlled, and
perhaps even rather easy.
Two things strike me about this: first, it seems a strange
thought given the then-recent
experience of the Great War, certainly for the British. Second, nothing changes. In every war, the lie is told that it will be
quick and easy. The first Gulf War is
still being fought; it has merely had a few name changes – to include the
latest chapter of Iraq, more than a decade old.
Its sibling in Afghanistan is even older. I guess in this regard things are getting
better – the mouthpieces now tell us that America
will be at war for decades.
Wars are all alike in beginning
complacently.
This hope was based on what, in hindsight, was naiveté:
small tanks with one-inch armor, armed with nothing more than a 37-MM gun;
20,000 horses were procured for the cavalry, announced with fanfare; in
Britain, lances and sabers were standard issue; rubber-tired armored cars with
machine guns were a mainstay. Such
“preparation” makes the Polish defense on horseback seem not so silly.
Further silliness – and more evidence that nothing ever
changes – was the belief that Yankee technology and precision bombing would win
the war. The B-17 could hit a target
within 25 feet from an altitude of 20,000 feet, or so they said.
…it wasn’t long before soldiers and
civilians would be killed in quantity and without scruple….
The reality of the Second World War is not so quaint, and
does not need a refresher: hundreds of thousands of airplanes produced by the
US alone; tanks of immense size and speed; carpet-bombing of civilian targets; the
atom bomb. Where the Great War put in
knife in the idea of civilized
warfare, the Second World War witnessed the obliteration of this concept – rules
of warfare developed over centuries, having reached fruition in eighteenth and
nineteenth century Europe. By the end of
the war, nothing mattered but heavy power and volume – fought as the North fought
against the South under Lincoln.
Outmoded now, hopelessly
irrelevant, were such former military values and procedures as the alertness of
the scout; the skill at topographical notice of the observer in the tethered
balloon; the accurately worded message correctly written out (with carbon copy)
in the nifty little book of Filed Message Forms.
Also quickly outmoded was the idea that the bombing could do
the job, let alone do the job well or accurately:
As the war went on, “precision
bombing” became a comical oxymoron relished by bomber crews with a sense of
black humor.
In August of 1941 it was clear to the RAF that only one in
ten bombers could even fly within five miles of the assigned target. “We made a major assault on German
agriculture.”
The Germans, when bombing London, dropped half of their
bombs over the water. On May 10, 1940, a
Luftwaffe squadron…
…setting out to bomb Dijon, by some
error dropped a load on its own civilians in Freiburg-im-Breisgau, killing
fifty-seven of them.
When RAF reports indicated that bombers wholly missed the
intended targets, the reports were rejected as inaccurate. This inaccuracy (along with other, more
sinister, reasons) eventually led to area bombing and ultimately Dresden and
Hiroshima.
Bombs were dropped by Allied aircraft on Allied troops,
resulting in Allied troops firing on Allied aircraft. Weeks before D-Day, in an effort to soften
the Germans fortifications, 480 B-27s dropped 13,000 bombs well inland, killing
only French civilians and their livestock.
Naval bombardments cost thousands of Allied lives.
Even after being told beforehand that it would be Allied
gliders overhead during the invasion of Sicily, the troops fired upon the
aircraft, shooting down 23 planes carrying 229 men. In 1943 it was a US PT boat – not a Japanese
submarine – that sunk the Marine Corps transport McCawley.
“The loser of this war will be the side that makes the
greatest blunders,” according to Hitler.
A world in which such blunders are
more common than usual will require large amounts of artful narrative to confer
purpose, meaning, and dignity on events actually discrete and contingent.
That this war is known to many in America as “the
Good War” demonstrates the success of the narrative builders in their
task. The blind passion by which this
narrative is accepted is, perhaps, proof of the severe trauma.
One of the most damaging thing to happen to US democracy was in 1940 when Wendell Willkie somehow became the Republican candidate
ReplyDeleteIn 1940 there was a significant amount of anti-intervention sentiment in the US. So much so that Roosevelt had to keep on pretending he was not in favor of joining the war. Yet even though there were at least 3 major Republican candidates who had at least moderate anti-war beliefs the Republicans at the last minute of the Republican convention chose Wendell Willkie as their candidate.
This was even though Willkie was
A life long Democrat
Had voted for and given money to Roosevelt in the 1932 election
Had never run for office
Only claim to fame was being a lawyer and running a power company
Was just as much an interventionist as Roosevelt and in fact went to work for Roosevelt pushing interventionism after losing the election
Stalin is supposed to have said "Those who cast the votes decide nothing. Those who count the votes decide everything." Yet in fact the communist system was set up where it did not matter who won the vote since the only candidates were ones approved by the communist party.
This is what happened in 1940, the interventionists could not lose since they had set up the election where the only candidates with a chance of winning were interventionists. The same thing happens today, for all they hype does anyone think that Obama, Bush, Clinton, Bush, have major differences in policy. Sure they have some small groups they throw a bone to once in a while in order to pretend they have differences but in major policy they have few differences.
You can say that Obama pushed through Obamacare but it was based on Romneycare and was similar to Bush II program for prescription drugs where the prescription drug makers wrote the rules just like the insurance companies wrote the rules for Obamacare
Foreign policy is still invade the world, invite the world, go in debt to the world.
Economic policy is still to do whatever makes the international financiers happy
Etc, etc
Thank you very much for this comment. I was not aware of those aspects of the 1940 presidential election. Now that I am, I definitely think that election was rigged.
DeleteMy understanding is that the US joined the side of the UK in both world wars because of business interests. Basically, if the UK lost (especially if it was conquered by Nazi Germany), the financial losses in the US would be tremendous. Clearly, the people who'd be facing those losses stopped at nothing to prevent them.
You have to wonder what happened to the American psyche between World War I and World War II. After the Great War, Americans, by and large, decided they had been duped. German imperialism? The sun never set on the British Empire!
ReplyDeleteAmericans could see the con. They weren't having any of this League of Nations nonsense.
Oh, how things would change after World War II! The U.S. knew it could no longer be "isolationist." It had to play the role of globocop, intervening always and everywhere--for no reason, for bad reason, for contradictory reason. War without end. Amen.
It represented a sea change in public opinion. And it all happened in one lousy generation. This is to say the Greatest Generation. Of course!
Tony, you might have just very succinctly explained why the meida labels that generations as "the greatest generation," meaning they were greatly responsible for making the final shift to the worship of state and empire.
DeleteThank you!
Tony, it's been the same song-and-dance for a while now, and apparently it's been all too easy. As Hermann Goering said: "All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger."
DeleteThe pro-interventionism soundbite has always been "It's a dangerous world out there, and it'll get more and more dangerous unless we stop it." Apparently, the most effective way of convincing "the masses" of the first part is to show them directly - by way of allowing (or causing!) certain events to happen that strike mortal fear in their hearts. They'll go along with it because they've been inculcated to trust "the authorities". The whole enterprise is basically a glorified cattle prod.