Waterloo Region Record

‘The old demons are rising again’: Macron

Dozens of world leaders drive home the message, ‘Never again,’ at ceremony

- JOHN LEICESTER, RAF CASERT AND LORI HINNANT

PARIS — World leaders with the power to make war but a duty to preserve peace solemnly marked the end of the First World War’s slaughter 100 years ago at commemorat­ions Sunday that drove home the message “Never again,” but also exposed the globe’s new political fault lines.

As Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin and dozens of other heads of state and government listened in silence, French President Emmanuel Macron used the occasion, as its host, to sound a powerful and sobering warning about the fragility of peace and the dangers of nationalis­m and of nations that put themselves first, above the collective good.

“The old demons are rising again, ready to complete their task of chaos and of death,” Macron said.

“Patriotism is the exact opposite of nationalis­m. Nationalis­m is a betrayal of patriotism,” he said. “In saying ‘Our interests first, whatever happens to the others,’ you erase the most precious thing a nation can have, that which makes it live, that which causes it to be great and that which is most important: Its moral values.”

Trump, ostensibly the main target of Macron’s message, sat stony-faced. The American president has proudly declared himself a nationalis­t. But if Trump felt singled out by Macron’s remarks, he didn’t show it. He later described the commemorat­ion as “very beautiful.”

As well as spelling out the horrific costs of conflict to those with arsenals capable of waging a Third World War, the ceremony also served up a joyful reminder of the intense sweetness of peace, when high school students read from letters that soldiers and civilians wrote 100 years ago when guns finally fell silent on the Western Front.

Brought alive again by people too young to have known global war themselves, the ghostly voices seemed collective­ly to say: Please, do not make our mistakes.

“I only hope the soldiers who died for this cause are looking down upon the world today,” U.S. soldier Capt. Charles S. Normington wrote on Nov. 11, 1918, in one of the letters. “The whole world owes this moment of real joy to the heroes who are not here to help enjoy it.”

The Paris weather — grey and damp — seemed aptly fitting when rememberin­g a war fought in mud and relentless horror.

The commemorat­ions started late, overshooti­ng the centenary of the exact moment when, 100 years earlier at 11 a.m., an eerie silence replaced the thunder of war on the front lines. Macron recalled that one billion shells fell on France alone from 1914-18.

As bells marking the armistice hour rang across Paris and in many nations ravaged by the four years of carnage, Macron and other leaders were still on their way to the centennial site at the Arc de Triomphe.

Under a sea of black umbrellas, a line of leaders led by Macron and his wife, Brigitte, marched in silence on the cobbles of the Champs-Élysées, after dismountin­g from their buses.

Last to arrive was the Russian president, Putin, who shook Trump’s hand and flashed him a thumbs-up. German Chancellor Angela Merkel was positioned in pride of place between Trump and Macron, an eloquent symbol of victors and vanquished now standing together, shoulder to shoulder. Overhead, fighter jets ripped through the sky, trailing red, white and blue smoke in homage to the French flag.

The geographic­al spread of the more than 60 heads of state and government who attended, silent and reflective, showed how the “war to end all wars” left few corners of the earth untouched but which, little more than two decades later, was followed so quickly and catastroph­ically by the even deadlier the Second World War.

On the other side of the globe, Australia and New Zealand held ceremonies to recall how the war killed and wounded soldiers and civilians in unpreceden­ted numbers and in gruesome new, mechanized ways.

Those countries lost tens of thousands of soldiers far away in Europe and, most memorably in the 1915 battle of Gallipoli, in Turkey. In central London, the Queen, clad in black, watched from a balcony as her son Prince Charles laid a wreath on her behalf at the foot of the Cenotaph memorial that honours the fallen. Britain had 880,000 military dead in the war.

Remembered for brutal trench warfare and the first use of chemical weapons, the First World War pitted the armies of France, the British Empire, Russia and the U.S. against a German-led coalition that included the Austro-Hungarian and Ottoman empires. Almost 10 million soldiers died, sometimes tens of thousands on a single day.

The U.S. came late to the war, in April 1917, but it became a key player and tipped the scales for the Allies.

 ?? LUDOVIC MARIN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Macron delivers a speech in Paris as part of the commemorat­ions marking the 100th anniversar­y of the ending of the First World War.
LUDOVIC MARIN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Macron delivers a speech in Paris as part of the commemorat­ions marking the 100th anniversar­y of the ending of the First World War.

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