Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Military museums chronicle Europe’s wars

- RICK STEVES

In honor of Veterans Day, I’ve been thinking back to my recent stay in the Rhineland. A monument below my hotel window rememberin­g Germany’s war dead still had an unused panel. My hunch is that it’ll never be used. Germany, mighty today without the help of its military, has a profound distaste for war. Like so many nations, it rose by the sword … and then fell.

All over Europe, there is little stomach for war. The motto of one military museum I visited in Vienna says it all: “War is something for museums.” And many European countries have followed this advice — creating fascinatin­g exhibits about their military heritage.

For some, visiting military museums is the highlight of a European trip. For others, “military plus museum” equals “dull.” But you don’t need to know how a Jeep works to enjoy the ride. Even if you’re not a veteran or war buff, here are four national military museums that are worth a look.

IMPERIAL WAR MUSEUM (LONDON)

This impressive museum covers wars from the last century to the present. Exhibits include World War I biplanes, the rise of fascism, Montgomery’s Africa campaign, the Cold War, the Cuban Missile Crisis, The Troubles in Northern Ireland, the wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n and terrorism. The highlights are the new World War I galleries (renovated to commemorat­e the 100-year anniversar­y of that conflict) and the World War II area with its “Secret War” section and Holocaust exhibit. Rather than glorify war, this museum encourages an understand­ing of the history of modern warfare and the wartime experience, including the effect it has on the everyday lives of people back home.

ARMY MUSEUM (PARIS)

Europe’s greatest military museum is in France. The Army Museum in Paris’ Hotel des Invalides provides comprehens­ive coverage of many conflicts. See medieval armor, Napoleon’s horse stuffed and mounted, Louis XIV-era uniforms and weapons and the sword of the Marquis de Lafayette. Walk chronologi­cally through World War I displays on trench warfare, France’s horren-

dous losses, and the flawed Treaty of Versailles that led to the next war. The World War II rooms use photos, maps, videos, and a few artifacts to trace the Blitzkrieg that overran France, D-Day battles, the concentrat­ion camps, the atomic bomb and the eventual Allied victory.

ROYAL MUSEUM OF THE ARMED FORCES AND MILITARY HISTORY

(BRUSSELS)

This surprising­ly complete museum made me want to watch my favorite war movies all over again. It’s an enormous collection of weaponry, uniforms, tanks, warplanes, and endless exhibits about military history, focusing on the 19th and 20th centuries. The grand finale is the vast (and I mean vast) aviation hall filled with warplanes. You’ll see WWI biplanes and WWII aircraft, plus a Soviet MiG fighter (with camouflage paint) that crashed in Belgium in 1989 (one of the last airspace violations of the Cold War). This place is nirvana for fans of military history and aviation, but skippable for those who think a “panzer” is a pretty flower.

MUSEUM OF MILITARY

HISTORY (VIENNA)

While much of the Habsburg Empire was built on strategic marriages rather than the spoils of war, a big part of Habsburg history involves the military. And this huge place tells the story well. Its two floors hold a rich collection of artifacts and historic treasures going back to the 18th century. The particular­ly interestin­g 20th-century section includes exhibits devoted to the 1914 assassinat­ion of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo (you’ll see the car he rode in and his blood-stained uniform), the pre-Hitler Austrian Fascist party, the 1938 annexation by Germany and World War II.

While these museums honor the sacrifices of war, they never celebrate it. Europeans today prefer endless diplomacy to once-ina-while war. Europe’s reluctance to go to war frustrates some Americans. I believe their relative pacifism is because Europeans know the reality of war, while most Americans do not. In the age of modern warfare, no American city has ever been wiped out like Coventry, Dresden, Caen, Rotterdam or Warsaw. It’s easier to feel detached when a war is something you watch on the nightly news, rather than something that destroyed your hometown.

After World War II, in the rubble of a bombed-out continent, Euro-visionarie­s assembled and agreed that they needed to overcome the havoc that they were bringing upon themselves every couple of generation­s. Their solution was the European Union. It has been a tough sell, but in weaving together the economies of former enemies like France and Germany, everyone has become so interconne­cted that Europe should never again suffer such devastatio­n. Minimizing the possibilit­y of an intra-European war is the triumph of the European Union.

Europe knows what war is: It ripped itself to shreds twice within my grandparen­ts’ lifetime. It’s no surprise that while preserving the past, these museums also shout, “Never again.”

 ?? Rick Steves’ Europe ?? France’s Army Museum, housed in the ornate hallways of the Hotel des Invalides in Paris, is Europe’s finest military museum.
Rick Steves’ Europe France’s Army Museum, housed in the ornate hallways of the Hotel des Invalides in Paris, is Europe’s finest military museum.
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