World War 1 - what's changed 100 years on?
World War 1 - what's changed 100 years on?
by Don Franks
16,697 New Zealanders were
killed and 41,317 were wounded during World war I. Around
another thousand men died within five years of the war's
end, as a result of injuries sustained. The lives of
countless other men and women were blighted by the
conflict.
The little Wellington street that I live in
once housed numerous shell shocked returned servicemen;
poverty, unemployment, and alcoholism was all the reward of
their sacrifice.
One hundred years on, New Zealand’s
rulers glorify war.
They glorify war in a style to suit
these times.
Today there are no sabre rattling calls to
extend the empire and fight for God King and country.
Today, New Zealand troops are called ‘peacekeepers’,
they identify targets for radio controlled weapons more
often than charging with bayonets, but they still kill
people and are decorated for doing that.
According to a
2014 poll, the most trusted person in New Zealand is Willie
Apiata. Lance corporal Apiata won the Victoria Cross while
fighting in Afghanistan, where he saved a wounded soldier
under heavy fire.
Then: “having delivered his wounded
companion to relative shelter with the remainder of the
patrol, Lance Corporal Apiata re-armed himself and rejoined
the fight in counter-attack."
Yes, the guy was brave, far
braver than I would expect to be, but his brief from the New
Zealand state was to kill citizens of a country with no
designs on New Zealand.
Echoes of Willie Apiata ring out
every time a tv show or newspaper portrays an overseas
bound soldier embracing family members.
Where the
troopers are going matters little, what they’ll do there
is kept vague. What’s always highlighted is their devotion
to duty, in other words, their unquestioning
obedience.
Past Prime minister Helen Clark’s 2004
speech on the Unknown Warrior praised the:
“…ordinary New Zealanders who did not have the right to
decide the course of events, but who did their duty
according to the imperatives of their time”
Since
1914, New Zealand troops have been dispatched to fight in
many lands. Each time, ordinary New Zealanders have had no
more right to decide the course of events than our
grandparents had.
We stand in the same relation to war as
our grandparents did.
This is to be expected, because
we’re still under the same social system as World war 1
soldiers.
Capitalism is a system locked into relentless
production for profit, and this system dominates the globe.
Capitalist competition develops unevenly — some capitalist
states grow more quickly than others, and push for a
re-division of the world to favour them. This competition
between capitalist nations leads to armed invasion of
countries to grab resources or to safeguard trade routes and
markets and establish spheres of influence and alliances. As
in 1914, capitalist competition is the source of modern war.
Might capitalism ever come to operate peacefully?
As
WW1 began, leading socialist Karl Kautsky thought so,
arguing that only some capitalists benefited from war, such
as arms manufacturers, who relied on war and the threat of
war for their profits.
Kautsky wrote: “There is no
economic necessity for the continuation of the great
competition in the production of armaments after the close
of the present war. At best such a continuation would serve
the interests of only a few capitalist groups. On the
contrary capitalist industry is threatened by the conflicts
between the various governments. Every far-sighted
capitalist must call out to his associates: Capitalists of
all lands unite!”
Despite Kautsky’s plea, the
capitalists continued making war and have done ever since.
Even more ruthlessly, with new weapons like napalm, drones
and nuclear bombs.
To end modern war, the capitalist
system must be uprooted and destroyed. Therefore, meaningful
anti war activity must be uncompromisingly anti capitalist
activity.
Some say an explicit anti capitalist message
will put people off joining the anti war movement.
Radical ideas always have to be fought for. The idea of
votes for women once ‘put people off’. A dedicated
minority persisted with the struggle, built a movement and
women won the vote.
In recent times it’s been
fashionable in some sections of the left to campaign for
what is already acceptable. This is called “starting from
where people are at”.
If activists had taken that tack
at the outset of the anti Vietnam war movement or the anti
apartheid movement they would have built nothing. Both those
movements began with a tiny number of individuals taking
unpopular arguments out against indifference and hostility.
When I came to join those movements they’d already been
going for decades and won considerable ground, but were
still minorities of the population.
I believe we must
first find the truth, then seek numbers to support
it.
The truth is that capitalist drive for profits causes
war, the truth is that every party in parliament supports
capitalism.
It is therefore a waste of time appealing to
politician’s better nature, they are not to be reasoned
with. When in government, every party in the house has been
only too willing to wage war.
For their own purposes, the
authorities happily encourage a range of official
‘peace’ activities.
For example, Wellington Mayor
Celia Wade-Brown commended the Peace Heritage Walk,
noting:
“There is a lot of potential to refresh
awareness of the walk as another wonderful attraction for
Wellington”
In other words the thing is not only
harmless, it might bring a bit more business into
town.
Symbolic ceremonial peace activities do nothing to
prevent war. At best, they’re a waste of time, frequently
they’re positively harmful to building war resistance.
When capitalist politicians parade and pontificate as men
and women of peace, people are deceived and
demobilsed.
What is a better use of our time and
energy?
I believe we need to increase our understanding
of imperialism, particularly New Zealand
imperialism.
That will help us develop clear convincing
anticapitalist arguments on which to build a strong antiwar
movement.
An increased understanding of New Zealand
imperialism will also develop our internationalism.
Internationalism is crucial.
The only path to peace is
unity in action with workers of other lands.
Our enemy
is not in Iraq. Our enemy is here, local New Zealand
capitalists and their state forces.
A popular activist
slogan says: “No war but the class war”.
History
challenges us to translate this slogan from an abstract
phrase into habitual political activity.
A hundred years
ago, as the guns blazed in a world gone mad, Rosa Luxemberg
wrote us this legacy:
“In this war imperialism has won.
Its bloody sword of genocide has brutally tilted the scale
toward the abyss of misery.”
“The only compensation
for all the misery and all the shame would be if we learn
from the war how the proletariat can seize mastery of its
own destiny and escape the role of the lackey to the ruling
classes.”