“1939 –
The War That Had Many Fathers,” by Gerd Schultze-Rhonhof.
Schultze-Rhonhof continues with an examination of the factors
that a) led to the Great War, b) came due to the Peace Treaty at
Versailles. These factors were key in
the run-up to the Second World War. I
will not go through these in detail; it has been well documented elsewhere a) that
– unlike the propaganda of the time – Germany and Austria were not the only
instigators of the war, and b) Versailles was instrumental in generating a
volatile political climate in post-war Germany.
Actions of the British and French especially were
instrumental in bringing on the conflict; at the same time, the Kaiser offered
proposals that could avoid the coming calamity.
Of course, the Kaiser also took actions – by design or by blunder – that
helped to move events toward war.
What I find of interest is the author’s focus on the
propaganda used in the democracies to motivate the populations toward war. In this, he provides a real-world example of
Hans-Hermann Hoppe’s work, for example from “Democracy:
The god That Failed.” Contrasting
monarchical wars with democratic wars:
In contrast, democratic wars tend
to be total wars. In blurring the
distinction between the rulers and the ruled, a democratic republic strengthens
the identification of the public with a particular state. …democratic republicanism inevitably leads to
nationalism, i.e., the emotional identification of the public with large,
anonymous groups of people…. Interstate wars are thus transformed into national
wars. (Page 36-37)
Today, this is readily apparent in the language used by
common citizens: “our war,” “our troops,” “we sent them to fight.” Such language would be foreign to the
population under a traditional monarch.
Hoppe, citing Michael Howard:
Once the state ceased to be
regarded as ‘property’ of dynastic princes, and became instead the instrument
of powerful forces dedicated to such abstract concepts as Liberty, or
Nationality, or Revolution, which enabled large numbers of the population to
see in that state the embodiment of some absolute Good for which no price was
too high, no sacrifice too great to pay; then the “temperate and indecisive
contests” of the rococo age appeared as absurd anachronisms. (Page 37)
Further, citing J.F.C. Fuller:
The influence of the spirit of
nationality, that is of democracy, on wars was profound… [it] emotionalized war
and consequently brutalized it….
National armies fight nations, royal armies fight their like, the first
obey a mob – always demented, the second a king – generally sane…. (Page 38n)
How does Hoppe’s work apply?
In order to mobilize an entire nation into war – not just for the
objective of gaining volunteers and legitimizing conscription, but also for a
complete takeover of the home economy – a frenzy must be created.
From “Monarchy and War,” by Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn –
taken from the volume edited by Hoppe, “The
Myth of National Defense”: in a
democracy, as recruits are taken from a general population – a population that
believes it has some say in its political dealings:
…the people itself has to be indoctrinated,
in other words, made to hate the enemy collectively. For this purpose governments invoke in modern
times the support of the mass media, which will inform the people about the
evil of the enemy – with little or no regard for the truth.
In World War I, the Western Allies,
being more democratic, were also more skilled in organizing collective hatreds.
(Page 97)
Further, from the volume edited by Hoppe: “Is a Democracy More Peaceful than Other
Forms of Government?” by Gerard Radnitzky, writing on the toolbox of tricks and
deceit of a bellicose president:
Rule #1: First, get control over
the media: they are indispensable as means of propaganda. A democratic president has to sell a “war,”
embarking on the mass marketing of the war that he has in mind. (Page 177)
Turning the enemy into something not human, into a
population bent on world conquest, via relentless propaganda, is a method first
significantly deployed in the west in the run-up to the Great War.
Schultze-Rhonhof explores this propaganda and the effect it
had on generating a war climate in Britain, France, and the US; the effects of
this climate were also felt when it came time for the peace conference after the
war, held in Paris with the German signing at Versailles:
…the peace negotiations which now
follow stand under still another burden (lit. “mortgage”). The governments and the media in England,
France, and the USA had run a public relations campaign to convince their
voters and soldiers of the point of the war and to urge them to endure – when
the war became hard. The arguments with
which the masses in France, Great Britain, and America “learn” that they stand
for justice and goodness against injustice and bad men are of quite different
sorts. (Page 79)
The Germans were portrayed as not human: for example, stories
of babies’ arms or hands being cut off, nuns being raped, and the like. Such stories are followed by increasing, and
similar propaganda that…bring British, French, and Americans into a rage
against the German “Huns” and “Teutons.”
After the war, such reports were investigated, and found to
be false. Further, in a book written
four years after the war by Francesco Nitti, Prime Minister of Italy in
1919-1920:
We had to win, to win at all
costs…. In order to win, it is necessary before all else to hate, and to hate
we must impute to the enemy all that is hateful…. At that time, one portrayed
the Germans as cultural barbarians, as the root of all that is evil in
mankind. There was no cruelty which one
did not attribute to them, and if they shot no defenseless women to death, they
did chop off children’s hands. Above
all, the legend of the chopped-off hands of children was exploited during the
war as irrefutable proof of the Germans’ Hun-like nature…. (Page 79-80)
A brief statement on this “atrocity
propaganda” from Wikipedia:
Atrocity propaganda, which aimed to
mobilise hatred of the German enemy by spreading details of their atrocities,
real or alleged, was used extensively by Britain in the First World War. It
reached its peak in 1915, with much of the atrocities related to Germany's
invasion of Belgium. Newspaper accounts of "Terrible Vengeance" first
used the word "Hun" to describe the Germans in view of atrocities in
Belgium. A continuous stream of stories
ensued, painting the Germans as destructive barbarians, and many of the
atrocities being reported were entirely fictitious.
The practice continues to be employed even today – it works
well; one of the more infamous examples can be found here.
The British, having cut the communication cable between
Germany and America, ensured only one version of the story would be told. Further, Lord Northcliffe, the previously
mentioned editor of several London daily newspapers (where he ensured that
nothing bad would be written about the French and nothing good about the
Germans), extended his reach into America as well. Through a foundation in the USA named after
him, he operated 4500 “publicity agents,” to influence the story told in
America regarding the Germans. (Page 81)
The religious calling was made complete in the US when
Wilson invoked one of the deadliest phrases unleashed in man’s history, when he
said “The world must be made safe for democracy.”
It is a regular feature of war since this time that the
enemy must be demonized. This is
absolutely required under democracies in order to get the support of the
population – support not required in wars between kings and nobles.
Through film the propaganda is also spread:
The film “The Prussian Cur,”
for example, shows a scene in which German soldiers crucify a captured
Canadian to a courtyard door. (Page 82)
The best that can be said of this event is that details are
either conflicting or historical impossibilities. At worst, it was complete fiction.
Finally, a prayer by Rev. William Sunday, offered in
Congress on 10 January 1918, including:
…Thou knowest, O Lord, that we are
in a life-and-death struggle with one of the most infamous, vile, greedy,
avaricious, bloodthirsty, sensual, and vicious nations that has ever disgraced
the pages of history. (Page 82)
The rage resulting from the propaganda used to motivate the
population in a democracy to total war cannot be immediately calmed when it
comes time for the peace. In Paris, in
1919, the blood-lust that the politicians created could not now be ignored in
revenge – and in much of the population, revenge was expected. Versailles, if it was nothing else, was a
treaty greatly influenced by the considerations of the political climate at
home – a climate beneficial to entering the war, but with long-lasting
consequences when it came time for a reasonably just peace.
From “Paris
1919: Six Months That Changed the World,” by Margaret MacMillan:
Public opinion, that new and
troubling element, was no help. There was
a widespread feeling that someone must pay for such a dreadful war; but there
was an equally strong longing for peace. (Page 162)
It rapidly became clear that the
electorate preferred talk of hanging the Kaiser. (Page 163)
Lloyd George, prime minister of the United Kingdom during
the war, at one point during the negotiations had some of his colleagues act
out roles of the various parties in regards to the treaty discussions. Henry Wilson, playing the role of a French
woman,
…the significant factor, he said,
in shaping French opinion. He painted a
moving picture of “the losses of so many of their husbands, sons and men folk,
the unbearable anxiety and long separations, the financial losses, and the
desperate struggle and overwork to keep their homes going.” Of course they wanted revenge and restitution
from Germany, and they wanted assurance that Germany could never hurt them
again. (Page 196)
For centuries, a monarch – not having to generate a mob of
opinion in order to support his war – did not have to show results to the same
mob after the victory. With the
democracies, this was no longer possible.
This all played out in the treaty negotiations between the
Allies and the Germans – although to use the term “negotiations” is a complete
stretch. I do not intend to go into the
details of the treaty. This has been
covered well elsewhere, and there is little that the author offers that is new
in this volume. The fundamental issue is
not the terms – onerous as these are – but the double-cross that the German
people feel: the language of the treaty – not negotiated language but an
ultimatum imposed under the blackmail of a food blockade – is diametrically
opposed to Wilson’s Fourteen Points. The
burdens placed on the Germans were far more restrictive than those placed on
any previous loser in conflict.
Many involved in the treaty negotiations at the time (1919 –
1920) expressed concern (from Schultze-Rhonhof, Pages 104 – 105):
From the first German post-war Chancellor: “From such a
peace must…new slaughter come.”
US Foreign Secretary Lansing: “We will have a peace treaty,
but it will bring no lasting peace.”
British Prime Minister Lloyd George: “I can hardly envision
a greater cause for a future war.”
Dutch Envoy Swinderen: “The peace terms of Versailles
contain all the seeds for a just and lengthy war.”
English delegate Kneeshow: “Were we the defeated people and
had such conditions imposed upon us, we would…have begun in our schools and
homes to prepare our children for a retaliatory war.”
MacMillan offers similar comments (Page 467 – 468):
Herbert Hoover, summarizing a conversation he had with Jan
Smuts and J.M. Keynes: “We agreed that the consequences of many parts of the
proposed Treaty would ultimately bring destruction.”
Also from Lansing, left on the sidelines by Wilson while
Wilson took charge of the negotiations: “The terms of the peace appear
immeasurably harsh and humiliating, while many of them are incapable of
performance.”
From the British delegation, Nicolson: “We came to Paris
confident that the new order was about to be established; we left convinced that
the new order had merely fouled the old.”
In France most criticisms were that the treaty with the
Germans was too weak….
The Germans, unfortunately having taken Wilson’s Fourteen Points
to heart, were left with the ultimatum. The
delegation hopelessly offered detailed counterproposals (again, from MacMillan):
Henry Wilson, no friend of the
Germans, wrote in his diary: “The Boches have done exactly what I forecast –
they have driven a coach and four through our Terms, and then have submitted a
complete set of their own, based on the 14 points, which are much more coherent
than ours.” (Page 468)
The deputy prime minister, Bonar
Law, found the German objections “in many particulars very difficult to answer.” Lloyd George agreed. The Germans were in effect saying to the
Allies: “You have a set of principles which, when they suit you, you apply, but
which, when they suit us, you put by.” (Page 468 – 469)
President Wilson could not let the double-talk go easily,
however, and rightly pointed out to actors like Lloyd George that they were
involved in each step, and only now – when the time has come to put the treaty
before the Germans – complain that the terms are too harsh.
As has been written many times by many historians,
Versailles was a major contributing factor to political discontent in German,
and with this discontent came the flowering of National Socialism – one more
example of political discontent in a democracy resulting in atrocities far
greater than seen under virtually any previous European monarchy.
And at the root was the propaganda required to bring the
population in the democracies to war.
BM, first of like to say I'm new and very blessed to have found your blog. I especially benefit from reading your post-discussions.
ReplyDeleteI'm curious what you think about the more authoritarian leaders' needs(Germany and Russia)for propaganda were, concerning what you said about democracies needing the backing of their constituents and kings of old not. It's seems that Stalin at the very least did not need such strong organs of propaganda; at least not for getting his people behind him, so what did he need them for, as he most obviously seemed to.
Josh
BM let me start by saying I'm new and very lucky to have found your blog.
ReplyDeleteI would like to know why, in your opinion Germany and russia(non-democratic nations)had such strong propaganda machines, when they do not need their constituents backing in the same way elected officials do. Basically I'm asking, if democracies need propaganda for their citizens backing in a way that "kings" and others don't, why did these two totalitarian regimes seem to need it so much?
I am not sure I wrote that kings did not need the backing of their constituencies; perhaps you can quote where this is so, and I will address it.
DeletePeople submit to the state for the purpose of protection - of property and self. The state uses propaganda to convince the people they are in constant danger, thereby increasing the demand for protection services. They use propaganda to make clear how much better life is solely because of the goodness of the state. How do you convince people that giving up 30% - 70% of their income is a good deal, without just taking the shortcut and turning them into slaves?
Stalin? I can think of reasons why - both for internal and external consumption. How to convince millions that killing other millions was good? That takes a lot of propaganda, it seems to me.
I do not claim to understand all of this perfectly; yet we see - every state, no matter how relatively free or totalitarian engages in propaganda. They have clearly found it necessary, whatever their reasons.
Thank you for your timely reply BM, I'm sorry that I have taken so long to reply in turn, I've been very busy catching up and reading some of your more current posts.
ReplyDeleteI'm sorry I put words in your mouth:
JFC Fuller said
"The influence of the spirit of nationality,that is, of democracy, on wars was profound... [it] emotionalized war and consequently brutalized it... National armies fight nations, royal armies their like, the 1st obeys a mob-always demented, the 2nd a king, generally sane."
I mistook this along with your posts on kings of old to mean that you were saying authoritarian govts do not need propaganda.
After I read it again, your post answered my question...
"From “Monarchy and War,” by Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn – taken from the volume edited by Hoppe, “The Myth of National Defense”: in a democracy, as recruits are taken from a general population – a population that believes it has some say in its political dealings."
Authoritarians do not control a populace that thinks it has a say in the state, therefore they need not trick anyone, it is plain for all to see who holds the power in an authoritarian state.
I would argue however, that stalin did not need to be persuaded to "get millions to kill millions"-the millions he had murdered up to that point were persuasion enough to get millions to kill millions. In any case though, I think that Stalin found that propaganda raised morale superficially and made it more efficient for said millions to die for a few.
Thank you again for your attention sir, I look forward to reading more from you.