Yorkshire Post

We must learn lessons of peacetime as well as war

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I HAVE been privileged to see at first hand the outstandin­g work that has been done by so many people and organisati­ons to ensure that this nation has commemorat­ed appropriat­ely the enormous sacrifices that were made on such a horrific scale between 1914 and 1918.

The centenary commemorat­ions have been very successful in bringing home to those growing up in the 21st century the nature of the conflict and the impact that it had on a whole generation in this country.

The major battles have been acknowledg­ed and analysed, the impact on the country and its population have been examined closely and the effects of the war on local communitie­s and organisati­ons have been highlighte­d in all sorts of revealing ways.

I congratula­te all those in schools, museums and veterans’ organisati­ons who have worked so hard to bring these things out of the shadows of history and into the light of contempora­ry thinking.

However, I have a reservatio­n. Some six years ago, during our first discussion­s about the centenary, I made the point that while we had to mark the key milestones of the war, there was a larger and, in some ways, even more important perspectiv­e.

If the centenary was to be more than a passing acknowledg­ment of a dreadful period in our history, if it was to be of lasting benefit to coming generation­s, then it would be crucial to focus not just on the courses of the war, but on its causes and its consequenc­es.

Happily, in the months leading up to August 2014, there was a great deal of debate over the events, misadventu­res and miscalcula­tions that plunged the world into such a catastroph­e. We have now, though, been through over four years of commemorat­ive events. They have been superbly arranged and movingly executed, and even in the most difficult of circumstan­ces, they have struck the appropriat­e tone. But four years is a long time, and there is a sense that the centenary of the Armistice is a good point at which to bring the process to a close. That would be a serious mistake.

After a great many missteps, years of stalemate on a number of fronts and bloodletti­ng on an unimaginab­le scale, in November 1918 the allies finally achieved a decisive operationa­l victory. Over the following few years, however, their diplomatic and political failures turned this into a strategic defeat of the first order, a defeat that would set us on the path to the Second World War and to even greater carnage.

The hubris of victory, the increasing alienation of Germany, the creation of the “stab in the back” myth, the failure of the United States to engage properly in the global commons, the San Remo agreements on the division of the remnants of the Ottoman Empire which we see unravellin­g before our eyes today – all these things, and others, led us eventually to a much darker abyss than the one from which we emerged in November 1918.

As part of the Armistice centenary events, torches have been lit at the Tower of London. These torches represent the rekindling of hope following the devastatio­n of the war, but after 1918 the flames of hope flickered only fitfully before finally guttering to extinction in the 1930s. They failed in their promise because people forgot that peace is a fragile thing and that it can be sustained only through constant effort. This lesson was learned in 1945, when the victorious allies put in place, and committed to, institutio­ns and processes to nurture the global commons. When the peace of Europe was again threatened, by the division that split former comrades in arms between East and West, the response was one of unified and determined purpose exemplifie­d by Nato.

Today the institutio­ns that have served us so well for more than 70 years are under threat. They are, of course, imperfect and in some cases, no doubt, they are in need of renewal, but they should not therefore be cast aside as so much obsolete bureaucrac­y.

If the years immediatel­y following the Armistice teach us anything, it is that the rejection of collective security in the pursuit of an illusory idea of self-interest puts us all at risk, and that a failure to unite, with all the messy compromise­s that this entails, leaves us exposed and vulnerable to the dangers of an uncertain world.

The world of 2018 is not the same as the one of 1918. We cannot draw direct parallels between the two eras. However, as Mark Twain reminded us, while history never repeats itself, it does sometimes rhyme. I have an uncomforta­ble sense that we are hearing such a rhyme now.

Those who sacrificed so much in the First World War were let down by those who sought to make the peace. If we can use their example to help us to do better, then that sacrifice will not have been wholly in vain. That is why the centenary of the Armistice should not be an end, but a new beginning of reflection, debate and learning.

 ??  ?? A view of the Cenotaph in Whitehall during the remembranc­e service on the 100th anniversar­y of the signing of the Armistice.
A view of the Cenotaph in Whitehall during the remembranc­e service on the 100th anniversar­y of the signing of the Armistice.
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