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	<title>Far Outliers &#187; France</title>
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		<title>Far Outliers &#187; France</title>
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		<title>Secularizing Religious Education in Salonica</title>
		<link>http://faroutliers.wordpress.com/2009/12/10/secularizing-religious-education-in-salonica/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Dec 2009 16:30:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Joel</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Balkans]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[France]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[From Salonica, City of Ghosts: Christians, Muslims and Jews, 1430-1950, by Mark Mazower (Vintage, 2006), pp. 220-221:
The struggle for communal authority was fought out over many areas&#8212;care for the poor and sick, the upkeep of cemeteries, the administration of religious foundations themselves&#8212;but the key battleground was education. For religious learning alone was no longer enough. [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=faroutliers.wordpress.com&blog=1002386&post=4258&subd=faroutliers&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p>From <em><a href="http://search.barnesandnoble.com/Salonica-City-of-Ghosts/Mark-Mazower/e/9780375727382">Salonica, City of Ghosts: Christians, Muslims and Jews, 1430-1950</a>,</em> by <a href="http://www.columbia.edu/cu/history/fac-bios/Mazower/faculty.html">Mark Mazower</a> (Vintage, 2006), pp. 220-221:</p>
<blockquote><p>The struggle for communal authority was fought out over many areas&mdash;care for the poor and sick, the upkeep of cemeteries, the administration of religious foundations themselves&mdash;but the key battleground was education. For religious learning alone was no longer enough. Ties with the West meant also that local merchants needed employees to be familiar with modern languages, mathematics and geography. The notable Jewish families pushed hard for the use of Italian and French books in the old Talmud Torah in the 1840s. When they got nowhere, they obtained a <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firman_%28decree%29">firman</a> to found their own pilot school, run by a German rabbi whom the local rabbis regarded as an impious foreigner. But the real educational revolution among Salonican Jewry only came in 1873 when the same notables opened a branch of the Paris-based Alliance Isra&eacute;lite Universelle&mdash;the very embodiment of French Enlightenment liberalism&mdash;in the teeth of fierce opposition from the elderly chief rabbi. It was an extraordinary success: by 1912 the Alliance was responsible for educating more than four thousand pupils, over half the total number of children in Jewish schools. &#8220;I was once invited to an annual gathering of the Israelite Alliance,&#8221; wrote a British journalist during the First World War. &#8220;There were many hundreds of Jews there, male and female, and a great many of them were once removed only from the street porter class. But they rattled off French as if they had been born to it.&#8221; Not only were the majority of the city&#8217;s Jewish children receiving an education outside the control of the religious authorities, but they were receiving it on the basis of the principles of contemporary French republicanism. Such a trend had a corrosive effect on the authority of the chief rabbi, and helped turn him slowly into more and more of a purely religious and spiritual figurehead.</p>
<p>Within the Greek community similar shifts were taking place. In the old days, children learned reading and writing from the occasional literate priest or from the so-called <em>didaskaloi</em> who gave lessons as they passed through the city. But in 1828 the junior high school was reestablished, and a girls&#8217; school was set up in 1845. The primary school population climbed from 1500 in 1874 to nearly 2000 in 1900 and 3900 by the time the Greek army arrived in 1912. An Educational Society was set up in 1872 with its own private library and a commitment to &#8220;useful knowledge,&#8221; and in 1876 a teacher-training college followed. Salonica&#8217;s Greek high school was recognized by the University of Athens, a development of huge significance for the rise of Greek nationalism, and the control of school standards and appointments was also handled by representatives of the Greek state. Through education in other words, the Greeks of Salonica gradually reoriented themselves towards the new national centre in Athens. The Patriarchate in Istanbul, which had once enjoyed unchallenged authority over the empire&#8217;s Orthodox believers, found itself losing ground.</p>
<p>Within the city&#8217;s Muslim community, pedagogical arguments were also raging. All Riza, a minor customs official, quarrelled with his wife Z&uuml;beyde, over how to educate their son, Mustafa. Z&uuml;beyde, a devout woman who was nicknamed the <em>mollah,</em> followed the older conception or education and wanted him to attend the neighbourhood Qur&#8217;anic school. His father, on the other hand, favoured the new style of schooling pioneered by a renowned local teacher, Shemsi Effendi, who ran the first private primary school in the empire. In the end, the young Mustafa started at the first and finished at the second, before moving to the military preparatory college. Helped by his education and by Salonica&#8217;s new beer-gardens and nightlife, he became a pronounced secularist, thereby foreshadowing in his own upbringing the trajectory through which&mdash;by then better known to the world as Mustafa Kemal Ataturk&mdash;he would later lead post-Ottoman Turkey.</p>
<p>Mustafa Kemal&#8217;s experiences were not unusual, for the spirit of Western education was transforming local Muslim cultures of learning. The <em><a href="http://faroutliers.wordpress.com/2009/11/05/salonicas-heterodox-modernizers/">Ma&#8217;min</a></em> were setting up private schools like Shemsi&#8217;s, and state officials like Mustafa Kemal&#8217;s father shared their vision of a modernizing Islam. Investment in education had been a priority of the reformers in Istanbul, and m 1869 a new imperial Ordinance of General Education outlined a school system, based partly on the French lyc&eacute;e model that would promote knowledge of science, technology and commerce among both boys and girls. Reaction from the long-established <em>medreses</em> was fierce but under Sultan Abdul Hamid this was overcome, in part by emphasizing the Islamic character of the new schools. A state schooling sector emerged in Salonica and the city&#8217;s first vocational college the <em>Ecole des Arts et M&eacute;tiers,</em> trained orphans in typography, lithography, tailoring and music. Later came a teacher-training college, a junior high school, a commercial school and a preparatory school for civil servants&mdash;the <em>Idadi&eacute;</em>&mdash;housed in an imposing neo-classical building standing just beyond the eastern walls. (Today it contains the chief administrative offices of the University of Thessaloniki.)</p></blockquote>
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		<title>The Near Eastern Crisis of 1875-78</title>
		<link>http://faroutliers.wordpress.com/2009/11/22/the-near-eastern-crisis-of-1875-78/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 23 Nov 2009 03:44:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Joel</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Balkans]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[From Salonica, City of Ghosts: Christians, Muslims and Jews, 1430-1950, by Mark Mazower (Vintage, 2006), pp. 167-169:
Beginning with a peasant uprising in Bosnia-Hercegovina, the troubles spread in 1876 to Bulgaria and the Danubian provinces and ended with an invasion by the Russian army the following year. The Treaty of San Stefano, which Russia imposed on [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=faroutliers.wordpress.com&blog=1002386&post=4190&subd=faroutliers&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p>From <em><a href="http://search.barnesandnoble.com/Salonica-City-of-Ghosts/Mark-Mazower/e/9780375727382">Salonica, City of Ghosts: Christians, Muslims and Jews, 1430-1950</a>,</em> by <a href="http://www.columbia.edu/cu/history/fac-bios/Mazower/faculty.html">Mark Mazower</a> (Vintage, 2006), pp. 167-169:</p>
<blockquote><p>Beginning with a peasant uprising in Bosnia-Hercegovina, the troubles spread in 1876 to Bulgaria and the Danubian provinces and ended with an invasion by the Russian army the following year. The <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_San_Stefano">Treaty of San Stefano</a>, which Russia imposed on the empire early in 1878, created a vast new Bulgarian state which passed just to the north of Salonica itself and cut it off from its hinterland. Even after the other Great Powers forced Russia to back down and tore up the San Stefano agreement, there was no disguising the humiliation suffered by the Porte: at the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Congress_of_Berlin">Congress of Berlin</a>, Serbia was declared independent, an autonomous (if smaller) Bulgaria was established under Russian control, Cyprus was occupied by British troops (as the price for supporting the Turks) and the Great Powers forced the Ottoman authorities to pledge a further programme of administrative reforms.</p>
<p>These events deeply affected Salonica. As always in time of war, the city was in a febrile state&mdash;filled with soldiers, requisitioning agents, tax-collectors and rumours. Muslim notables criticized the diplomacy of the Porte and feared for the first time &#8220;being driven out of Europe.&#8221; The Bulgarian insurrection actually broke out just three days before the killing of the consuls in Salonica; rumours of the rising had reached the city, together with reports of outrages on Muslim villagers and of plans to drive them from their homes. At one point the authorities feared that Salonica&#8217;s Christians too would rise to prompt a Russian advance on the city itself, and the Vali warned he would quell any insurrection in the harshest manner. &#8220;I know him to be of the party in Turkey,&#8221; wrote the British consul, &#8220;who believe the Eastern Question can only be solved by the destruction, or at least the expatriation of all Christians from the European provinces of Turkey, and replacing them by <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circassians">Circassians</a> and colonists from Asia.&#8221;</p>
<p>The spectacle of vast forced movements of populations crisscrossing the region was no fantasy. While the eyes of Europe were fixed&mdash;thanks to Gladstone&#8217;s loud condemnation of the &#8220;Bulgarian horrors&#8221;&mdash;on the Christian victims of the war, thousands of Muslim refugees from Bosnia, Bulgaria and the Russian army were headed south. Added to those who had earlier fled the Russians in the Caucasus&mdash;somewhere between 500,000 and 600,000 Circassians and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tatars#Nogais_on_the_Kuma">Nogai Tatars</a> had arrived in the empire between 1856 and 1864&mdash;the refugee influx which accompanied the waning of Ottoman power was well and truly under way. A Commission for the Settlement of Refugees was created, and the figures provided by this organization show that more than half a million refugees crossed into the empire between 1876 and 1879 alone.</p>
<p>In January 1878, the Porte ordered the governor of Salonica to find lodging for fifty thousand throughout the province. The following month it was reported that &#8220;the whole country is full of Circassian families, fleeing from the Russian army and the Servians, in long lines of carts &#8230; panic-stricken, they strive to embark for Asia Minor and Syria.&#8221; While <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albanian_dialects">Albanian Ghegs</a> and uprooted Nogai Tatars settled around the town, thousands more left weekly on steamers bound for Smyrna and Beirut. Many of these refugees had been settled in the Bulgarian lands only a decade earlier; now for a second time they were being uprooted because of Russian military action. Destitute, exploited by local land-owners, many&mdash;especially Circassian&mdash;men formed robber bands, and became a byword for crime in the region. Two years after the end of hostilities, there were still more than three thousand refugees, many suffering from typhus or smallpox, receiving relief in the city, and another ten thousand in the vicinity. The Mufti of Skopje estimated that a total of seventy thousand were still in need of subsistence in the Sandjak of Pristina. By 1887, so many immigrants from the lost provinces had moved to Salonica that house rents there had risen appreciably.</p>
<p>The political outlook for Ottoman rule in European Turkey was grim. Only Western intervention had saved the empire from defeat at the hands of the Russian army; the consequent losses in Europe were great. The powers openly discussed the future carve-up of further territories, and Austrians, Bulgarians and Greeks fixed their eyes on Salonica. As discussions began at the Congress of Berlin on the territorial settlement, one observer underlined the need for a further sweeping reform of Ottoman institutions and the creation of an &#8220;impartial authority&#8221; to govern what was left. In view of the patchy record of the past forty years&#8217; reform efforts, few would have given the imperial system long to live. Indeed many expected its imminent collapse, especially after the youthful <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdul_Hamid_II">Sultan Abdul Hamid</a> suspended the new constitution barely two years after it had been unveiled. But they had to wait longer than they thought. The empire had another few decades of life left, and in that time Salonica itself prospered, grew and changed its appearance more radically than ever before.</p></blockquote>
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		<title>Belated Ottoman Religious Reform</title>
		<link>http://faroutliers.wordpress.com/2009/11/22/belated-ottoman-religious-reform/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 23 Nov 2009 02:16:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Joel</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[From Salonica, City of Ghosts: Christians, Muslims and Jews, 1430-1950, by Mark Mazower (Vintage, 2006), pp. 152-153:
In 1851 Christian testimony was admitted in a local criminal court for the first time, but it was not for another decade that it was given decisive weight when contradicted by Muslim witnesses. &#8220;Are we the masters of this [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=faroutliers.wordpress.com&blog=1002386&post=4184&subd=faroutliers&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p>From <em><a href="http://search.barnesandnoble.com/Salonica-City-of-Ghosts/Mark-Mazower/e/9780375727382">Salonica, City of Ghosts: Christians, Muslims and Jews, 1430-1950</a>,</em> by <a href="http://www.columbia.edu/cu/history/fac-bios/Mazower/faculty.html">Mark Mazower</a> (Vintage, 2006), pp. 152-153:</p>
<blockquote><p>In 1851 Christian testimony was admitted in a local criminal court for the first time, but it was not for another decade that it was given decisive weight when contradicted by Muslim witnesses. &#8220;Are we the masters of this empire or not?&#8221; demanded some of the beys, protesting on the &#8220;part of Islamism&#8221; against the constant infringement by foreign powers of the &#8220;rights of the Turkish nation.&#8221; A visiting dervish preached that Europe was &#8220;devoted to the extermination of Muslims,&#8221; and claimed that the sultan, by giving in to their demands, had shown himself to be no more than a <em><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kafir">gavur</a>.</em> &#8220;Let us massacre the infidels whom the Prophet and our first Sultans conquered,&#8221; he went on, &#8220;And then we will go throughout <em>Frenghistan</em> [the land of the Franks] sword in hand, and all will be well with us.&#8221; When <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abd%C3%BClmecid_I">Abdul Mecid</a> died in 1861, the view in the local coffeehouses was that he had been &#8220;too favourably disposed to Christians,&#8221; and many of Salonica&#8217;s Muslims, including highly placed functionaries, openly hoped that his successor would bring back the janissaries and revoke the reforms.</p>
<p>This did not happen. Instead the number of non-Muslims in the civil service rose, and in 1868 a Council of State with non-Muslim members was created. In the provinces progress was slower: as late as 1867, justice in Salonica was still loaded against non-Muslims, taxes remained inequitable and the clause relating to Christians being appointed to official positions remained a &#8220;dead letter.&#8221; Ibrahim Bey, the <em>mufti,</em> resisted reform of the local courts, and as he was very popular among the poorer Muslims of the city, Salonica&#8217;s governors hesitated to take him on. But the lead from the top was clear: the Porte instructed Salonica&#8217;s <em>mollah</em> to speak respectfully when he addressed the Greek metropolitan, and to refer politely to the &#8220;Christian&#8221; religion. &#8220;Looking at things reasonably,&#8221; wrote the British ambassador, Sir Henry Bulwer in 1864, &#8220;it is but just to observe that this government is about the most tolerant in Europe.&#8221;</p>
<p>The old ideology of the sultan as Defender of the Faith was now no longer appropriate for the new-look empire. It was supplanted by a new creed of Ottomanism, an allegiance to the dynasty itself that supposedly crossed religious boundaries. As the government gazette for the province declared in May 1876:</p>
<blockquote><p>Even though for centuries among us there has not existed something we might call public opinion, on account of our different religions, nonetheless Ottomans, Christians, Jews and in a word all those bearing the name of Osmanli and living under the sceptre of His Imperial Excellency have lived as faithful subjects of all ranks, as patriots and as a single unit of nationalities, each lending a helping hand to the other as brothers, none ever daring to attack the honour, property, life or religious customs of the other, and everyone enjoying complete freedom in the exercise of his social privileges.</p></blockquote>
<p>The new policy was underlined in religious holidays and official ceremonies. After the Ottoman fleet arrived in port, Greek priests from the city performed mass for its Christian sailors in the Beshchinar gardens, and Turkish naval officers complimented the archbishop on a &#8220;very appropriate sermon.&#8221; When the chief rabbi Raphael Ascher Covo died at the end of 1874 after twenty-six years in office, his funeral was attended by the staff of the governor, the president of the town council, the Greek archbishop, consuls and other notables: the procession was &#8220;one of the largest ever witnessed in European Turkey.&#8221; All shops were closed, Jewish firemen in the service of the North British and Mercantile Insurance companies provided the guard of honour lining the streets, and bells were rung as the bier passed the Orthodox cathedral.&#8221; A century earlier, such an occasion would have been inconceivable.</p></blockquote>
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		<title>Rise and Fall of the Nutmeg Monopoly</title>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 21 Nov 2009 07:35:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Joel</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[From The Spice Islands Voyage: The Quest for Alfred Wallace, the Man Who Shared Darwin&#8217;s Discovery of Evolution, by Tim Severin (Carroll &#38; Graf, 1997), pp. 117-119:
The conditions of soil and climate on Banda were so perfect for nutmeg trees that most of the trees were planted naturally by the same species of Tine and [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=faroutliers.wordpress.com&blog=1002386&post=4178&subd=faroutliers&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p>From <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Spice-Islands-Voyage-Discovery-Evolution/dp/0786707216">The Spice Islands Voyage</a>: The Quest for Alfred Wallace, the Man Who Shared Darwin&#8217;s Discovery of Evolution,</em> by <a href="http://www.iol.ie/spice/homepage.htm">Tim Severin</a> (Carroll &amp; Graf, 1997), pp. 117-119:</p>
<blockquote><p>The conditions of soil and climate on <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banda_Islands">Banda</a> were so perfect for <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nutmeg">nutmeg</a> trees that most of the trees were planted naturally by the same species of Tine and very handsome fruit pigeons&#8217; which <a href="http://web2.wku.edu/~smithch/index1.htm">Wallace</a> observed. These birds had such a wide-opening beak that they could swallow an entire nutmeg fruit and pass the round seed undamaged through the gut, so that it grew where it fell. The labourers had to keep the saplings free of weeds, tend the tall kenari trees which provided essential shade for the nutmeg trees, and pick the fruit. Obligingly, in that warm equatorial climate, the nutmegs gave their crop all year long. It is calculated that, in nearly two centuries of colonial rule, Holland produced a billion guilders&#8217; worth of these spices from their tiny Banda holdings. The income from the Banda spice monopoly so dominated Dutch foreign policy that Holland offered the island of Manhattan to the British if they would drop their claim to the minuscule islet of Run in the Bandas barely three kilometres long and one and a half kilometres wide. Even more remarkably, Run itself grew no nutmeg trees. The Dutch ripped them up in order to concentrate virtually the entire world production of nutmeg and mace on the other Bandas.</p>
<p>Slavery in the Dutch Indies was not abolished until 1862, so there must have been slaves on Banda when Wallace visited there in the late 1800s. Yet he says nothing about them and &ndash; astonishingly for an <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Owenite">Owenite</a> socialist &ndash; he voiced his strong approval of the Dutch system of monopoly plantation though he knew this opinion would raise hackles in Victorian England. State monopolies, he argued, were the only way for a colony to be viable. The mother country had to find some way of paying the huge cost of its colonial efforts, bringing education, peace and a &#8216;civilising influence&#8217; to unruly native peoples, and if the state controlled a lucrative monopoly, that cost could be met. It was far better, Wallace argued, for the state to reap the profits than to allow the local economy to pass into the hands of private businesses, who would exploit the natives and give nothing in return. The only condition which Wallace put forward was that the monopoly should be of a product not essential to the natives, who must be able to live without it. In this respect, of course, nutmeg was ideal; it was a luxury, not a subsistence food.</p>
<p>In truth, by Wallace&#8217;s time the state&#8217;s monopoly in nutmeg was in tatters. Nutmegs were being grown illegally elsewhere in the Moluccas, and the French had established nutmeg plantations in Mauritius, using seeds smuggled in from the Spice Islands. Corruption had been so widespread among the superintending officials in Banda and Amsterdam that tight control of the nutmeg trade was a sham. The Dutch authorities abandoned the system within a decade of Wallace&#8217;s visit, and handed over ownership of Banda&#8217;s nutmeg gardens to the <em><a href="http://indahnesia.com/indonesia/MALBAN/banda.php">perkiniers</a>,</em> the planters who had previously held them on licence. They in their turn would go under, unable to survive in world competition. The nutmeg plantations fell into neglect and Banda began a long, slow slide into obscurity while, ironically, the impoverished planters came to be replaced by a new generation of Bandanese <em>orang kaya</em> who re-established the age-old trade links. Twenty years after Wallace&#8217;s visit, the wealthiest man on the islands was a Javanese Arab trader, Bin Saleh Baadilla, who traded in pearls and bird products. His warehouse contained skins of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paradisaeidae">Birds of Paradise</a> prepared by the natives of Kai, Aru and New Guinea, as well as the feathers of other exotic and coloured species from the rainforest. Where his predecessors had sent the bird-skins to decorate the fans and turbans of a few Indian and Malay potentates, Bin Saleh now had a larger and more voracious market. He shipped his bird-skins to the milliners of Europe, who at the peak of the fashion craze were said to be importing 50,000 bird-skins a year to provide decorations for ladies&#8217; hats.</p></blockquote>
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		<title>Pacific Annexations, 1840-1906</title>
		<link>http://faroutliers.wordpress.com/2009/09/29/pacific-annexations-1840-1906/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 30 Sep 2009 06:46:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Joel</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[From Sailors and Traders: A Maritime History of the Pacific Peoples, by Alastair Couper (U. Hawai‘i Press, 2009), pp. 140-141:
The managers of the major merchant companies based at the main entrep&#244;ts in the [Pacific] islands were often ex-sailors. Several acted as consuls for their governments and supported the companies in many ways, including evoking gunboat [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=faroutliers.wordpress.com&blog=1002386&post=3903&subd=faroutliers&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p>From <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Sailors-Traders-Maritime-History-Pacific/dp/0824832396/">Sailors and Traders: A Maritime History of the Pacific Peoples</a>,</em> by <a href="http://www.gre.ac.uk/schools/gmi/gmi_staff/professor_alastair_couper">Alastair Couper</a> (<a href="http://www.uhpress.hawaii.edu/shopcore/978-0-8248-3239-1/">U. Hawai‘i Press</a>, 2009), pp. 140-141:</p>
<blockquote><p>The managers of the major merchant companies based at the main entrep&ocirc;ts in the [<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pacific_Islands">Pacific</a>] islands were often ex-sailors. Several acted as consuls for their governments and supported the companies in many ways, including evoking gunboat diplomacy. A prime example is <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Bates_Thurston">John Bates Thurston</a>. He served at sea in the island trades, was wrecked at Rotuma in 1865, became British consul in Fiji in 1867, was highly influential in the negotiations for the ceding of Fiji to Britain in 1874, and became governor of Fiji in 1887. The companies, the new settlers, and their sympathetic consuls pressed for annexations. The French were the first to act [but <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Waitangi">Waitangi</a> was 1840&mdash;J.] and took Tahiti, the Marquesas, and the Tuamotus as French protectorates in 1842 and New Caledonia in 1853. These were declared colonies in 1880, and the Australs and Wallis and Futuna in 1887.</p>
<p>The British annexed Fiji in 1874 and established protectorates over southeast New Guinea in 1884, Gilbert and Ellice in 1892, most of the Solomons soon after, and Ocean Island in 1900. They agreed that New Zealand would exercise authority over the Kermadecs in 1887, the Tokelaus in 1889, and the Cooks and Niue in 1901. The Dutch took western New Guinea in 1848. Germany annexed northeast New Guinea in 1885, along with the Bismarck Archipelago and the northwest Solomons; took possession of most of the Carolines in 1885; and ultimately purchased Yap and other islands in the Carolines and Marianas from Spain in 1899. The Germans also acquired the Marshall Islands in 1884 and took over Nauru in 1888. Chile obtained Easter Island in 1888.</p>
<p>America, after its disastrous Civil War, had not recovered a significant merchant fleet and showed little inclination for acquiring Pacific territory. American guano companies had already secured legislation in 1856&ndash;1860 that allowed claims over some small Pacific islands, and the US government went on to secure others, including Baker, Jarvis, Johnson, Midway, Palmyra, and Wake. In 1893 the influential American maritime geostrategist <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_Mahan">Alfred Mahan</a> wrote that it was &#8220;imperative to take possession, when it can be righteously done, of such maritime positions as can contribute to secure command.&#8221; In 1898, Hawai&lsquo;i was annexed (US citizenships were granted in 1900), as was eastern Samoa with Pago Pago as a main naval coaling station, while Guam was captured from Spain by the US Navy in 1898.</p>
<p>The Pacific was now effectively divided between several colonial powers mainly by agreements. In the final carve-up, it was confirmed that Western Samoa was a German colony separated from American Samoa in the east. In turn Germany agreed to relinquish claims for Tonga. As a result, in the closing days Tonga appeared to survive as the only independent Polynesian kingdom, although not quite. It was declared a British protectorate in 1900, and in 1905 it was decreed mandatory for the king of Tonga to take advice from the British consul on all matters of importance. Finally, in 1906 New Hebrides was divided as a condominium between Britain and France.</p></blockquote>
<p>I&#8217;m not sure why Couper omits the 1840 <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Waitangi">Treaty of Waitangi</a>, which made British subjects of the Maori.  Maybe he considered both New Zealand and Australia to be colonial powers by the 1840s, even though both were earlier annexed by another colonial power. (Like the Americas, of course.)</p>
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		<title>WW2: National Armies vs. Imperial Armies</title>
		<link>http://faroutliers.wordpress.com/2009/06/22/ww2-national-armies-vs-imperial-armies/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 22 Jun 2009 16:06:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Joel</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[From The War of the World: Twentieth-Century Conflict and the Descent of the West, by Niall Ferguson (Penguin Press, 2006), pp. 516-518:
The Axis powers were fighting not only against the British, Russians and Americans; they were fighting against the combined forces of the British, Russian and American empires as well. The total numbers of men [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=faroutliers.wordpress.com&blog=1002386&post=3553&subd=faroutliers&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p>From <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/War-World-Twentieth-Century-Conflict-Descent/dp/1594201005">The War of the World</a>: Twentieth-Century Conflict and the Descent of the West,</em> by <a href="http://www.niallferguson.com/site/FERG/Templates/Home.aspx?pageid=1">Niall Ferguson</a> (<a href="http://www.penguin.com/index.html">Penguin</a> Press, 2006), pp. 516-518:</p>
<blockquote><p>The Axis powers were fighting not only against the British, Russians and Americans; they were fighting against the combined forces of the British, Russian and American empires as well. The total numbers of men fielded by the various parts of the British Empire were immense. All told, the United Kingdom itself mobilized just under six million men and women. But an additional 5.1 million came from India, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa. Victories like <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_Battle_of_El_Alamein">El Alamein</a> and even more so <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Imphal">Imphal</a> were victories for imperial forces as much as for British forces; the colonial commitment to the Empire proved every bit as strong as in the First World War. Especially remarkable was the fact that more than two and a half million Indians volunteered to serve in the British Indian Army during the war &ndash; more than sixty times the number who fought for the Japanese. The rapid expansion of the Indian officer corps provided a crucial source of loyalty, albeit loyalty that was conditional on post-war independence. The Red Army was also much more than just a Russian army. In January 1944 Russians accounted for 58 per cent of the 200 infantry divisions for which records are available, but Ukrainians accounted for 22 per cent, an order of magnitude more than fought on the German side, and a larger proportion than their share of the pre-war Soviet population. Half the soldiers of the Soviet 62nd Army at Stalingrad were not Russians. The American army, too, was ethnically diverse. Although they were generally kept in segregated units, African-Americans accounted for around 11 per cent of total US forces mobilized and fought in all the major campaigns from Operation Torch onwards. Norman Mailer&#8217;s reconnaissance platoon in <em>The Naked and the Dead</em> includes two Jews, a Pole, an Irishman, a Mexican and an Italian. Two of the six servicemen who raised the Stars and Stripes on Iwo Jima were of foreign origin; one was a Pima Indian. More than 20,000 Japanese-Americans served in the US army during the war&#8230;.</p>
<p>The Germans, as we have seen, had made some efforts to mobilize other peoples in occupied Europe, as had the Japanese in the Far East, but these were dwarfed by what the Allies achieved. Indeed, the abject failure of the Axis empires to win the loyalty of their new subjects ensured that Allied forces were reinforced by a plethora of exile forces, partisan bands and resistance organizations. Even excluding these auxiliaries, the combined armed forces of the principal Allies were already just under 30 per cent larger than those of the Axis in 1942. A year later the difference was more than 50 per cent. By the end of the war, including also <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_French">Free French</a>* and Polish forces, Yugoslav partisans and Romanians fighting on the Russian side, the Allies had more than twice as many men under arms. Fifty-two different nationalities were represented in the Jewish Brigade formed by the British in 1944. They followed an earlier wave of 9,000 or so refugees from Spain, Germany, Austria and Czechoslovakia who had joined the so-called Alien Companies, nicely nicknamed the ‘<a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Kings-Own-Loyal-Enemy-Aliens/dp/0853036918">King&#8217;s Own Loyal Enemy Aliens</a>’.</p>
<p>The best measure of the Allied advantage was in terms of military hardware, however, since it was with capital rather than labour &ndash; with machinery rather than manpower &ndash; that the Germans and the Japanese were ultimately to be defeated. In every major category of weapon, the Axis powers fell steadily further behind with each passing month. Between 1942 and 1944, the Allies out-produced the Axis in terms of machine pistols by a factor of 16 to 1, in naval vessels, tanks and mortars by roughly 5 to 1, and in rifles, machine-guns, artillery and combat aircraft by roughly 3 to 1.</p>
<blockquote><p>*It is seldom acknowledged that for most of the period from 1940 until D-Day, black Africans constituted the main elements of the rank and file in the Free French Army. Even as late as September 1944, they still accounted for 1 in 5 of de Gaulle&#8217;s force in North-West Europe.</p></blockquote>
</blockquote>
<p>I did not quote the immediately preceding section that compares the mismatch in purely economic terms, but I cannot resist quoting the footnote appended to the end of it (on p. 516):</p>
<blockquote><p>‘We must at all costs advance into the plains of Mesopotamia and take the Mosul oilfields from the British,’ declared Hitler on August 5, 1942. ‘If we succeed here, the whole war will come to an end.’ But three-quarters of total world oil production in 1944 came from the United States, compared with just 7 per cent from the whole of North Africa, the Middle East and the Gulf.</p></blockquote>
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		<title>Blitzkrieg: British Theory, German Practice</title>
		<link>http://faroutliers.wordpress.com/2009/06/12/blitzkrieg-british-theory-german-practice/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 13 Jun 2009 03:17:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Joel</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[From The War of the World: Twentieth-Century Conflict and the Descent of the West, by Niall Ferguson (Penguin Press, 2006), pp. 386-387:
Blitzkrieg is, of course, a German word meaning ‘lightning war’. The ironic thing is that it was in many ways a British invention, derived from the lessons of the Western Front in the First [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=faroutliers.wordpress.com&blog=1002386&post=3496&subd=faroutliers&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p>From <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/War-World-Twentieth-Century-Conflict-Descent/dp/1594201005">The War of the World</a>: Twentieth-Century Conflict and the Descent of the West,</em> by <a href="http://www.niallferguson.com/site/FERG/Templates/Home.aspx?pageid=1">Niall Ferguson</a> (<a href="http://www.penguin.com/index.html">Penguin</a> Press, 2006), pp. 386-387:</p>
<blockquote><p><em>Blitzkrieg</em> is, of course, a German word meaning ‘lightning war’. The ironic thing is that it was in many ways a British invention, derived from the lessons of the Western Front in the First World War. Captain Basil Liddell Hart had drawn his own conclusions from the excessively high casualties suffered by both sides. As an infantry subaltern, he himself had been gassed, the long-term effects of which forced him to retire from the army in 1927, after which he turned to journalism, working as defence correspondent for the <em>Daily Telegraph</em> and then <em>The Times</em> and publishing numerous works of military history. In Liddell Hart&#8217;s view, the fatal mistake of most offensives on the Western Front had been their ponderous and predictable directness. A more ‘indirect approach’, he argued, would aim at surprising the enemy, throwing his commanders off balance, and then exploiting the ensuing confusion. The essence was to concentrate armour and air power in a lethal lightning strike. Liddell Hart defined the secret as lying</p>
<blockquote><p>partly in the tactical combination of tanks and aircraft, partly in the unexpectedness of the stroke in direction and time, <em>but above all</em> in the ‘follow-through’ &ndash; the way that a break-through is exploited by a deep strategic penetration; carried out by armoured forces racing on ahead of the main army, and operating <em>independently.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>The good news for Liddell Hart was that his work was hugely influential. The bad news was that it was hugely influential not in Britain but in Germany, With the notable exception of Major-General J. F. C. Fuller,* senior British commanders like Field Marshal Earl Haig simply refused to accept that ‘the aeroplane, the tank [and] the motor car [would] supersede the horse in future wars’, dismissing motorized weapons as mere ‘accessories to the man and horse’. Haig&#8217;s brother concurred: the cavalry would ‘never be scrapped to make room for the tanks’. By contrast, younger German officers immediately grasped the significance of Liddell Hart&#8217;s work. Among his most avid fans was Heinz Guderian, commander of the 19th German Army Corps in the invasion of Poland. As Guderian recalled, it was from Liddell Hart and other British pioneers of ‘a new type of warfare on the largest scale’ that he learned the importance of ‘the concentration of armour’. Moreover, </p>
<blockquote><p>it was Liddell Hart who emphasized the use of armoured forces for long-range strokes, operations against the opposing army&#8217;s communications, and [who] also proposed a type of armoured division combining panzer and panzer-infantry units. Deeply impressed by these ideas, I tried to develop them in a sense practicable for our own army &#8230; I owe many suggestions of our further development to Captain Liddell Hart.</p></blockquote>
<p>Guderian &ndash; who was happy to describe himself as Liddell Hart&#8217;s disciple and pupil and even translated his works into German &ndash; had learned his lessons well. In September 1939 his panzers were unstoppable. The Poles did not, as legend has it, attempt cavalry charges against them, though mounted troops were deployed against German infantry, but they lacked adequate motor transport and their tanks were fewer and technically inferior to the Germans’. Moreover, like the Czechs before them, the Poles found Anglo-French guarantees to be militarily worthless. At the Battle of Bzura they mounted a desperate counteroffensive to hold up the German assault on Warsaw, but by September 16 their resistance was crumbling. By the 17th the Germans had reached the fortress at Bresc (Brest) on the River Bug. On September 28 Warsaw itself fell. Eight days later the last Polish troops laid down their arms. The entire campaign had lasted barely five weeks.</p>
<p>The Poles had fought courageously, but they were outnumbered and outgunned. The most striking thing about the war in the West the following year was that the opposite was true. It was perhaps predictable that the Dutch and Belgians would succumb to superior German forces, but the fall of France within a matter of just six weeks was, as the historian Marc Bloch said, a ‘strange defeat’. Even without the support of the British Expeditionary Force, the French forces were superior on paper, an advantage that ought to have been magnified by their fighting a defensive campaign.</p>
<p>* Fuller had been the mastermind behind the British tank offensive at Cambrai in 1917. His frustration with the British Establishment led him to support Oswald Mosley&#8217;s British Union of Fascists.</p></blockquote>
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		<title>Ferguson on the Origins of World War II</title>
		<link>http://faroutliers.wordpress.com/2009/05/13/ferguson-on-the-origins-of-world-war-ii/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 13 May 2009 16:13:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Joel</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Austria]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[From The War of the World: Twentieth-Century Conflict and the Descent of the West, by Niall Ferguson (Penguin Press, 2006), pp. 312-314:
For obvious reasons, we tend to think of the years from 1933 to 1939 in terms of the origins of the Second World War. The question we customarily ask is whether or not the [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=faroutliers.wordpress.com&blog=1002386&post=3396&subd=faroutliers&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p>From <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/War-World-Twentieth-Century-Conflict-Descent/dp/1594201005">The War of the World</a>: Twentieth-Century Conflict and the Descent of the West,</em> by <a href="http://www.niallferguson.com/site/FERG/Templates/Home.aspx?pageid=1">Niall Ferguson</a> (<a href="http://www.penguin.com/index.html">Penguin</a> Press, 2006), pp. 312-314:</p>
<blockquote><p>For obvious reasons, we tend to think of the years from 1933 to 1939 in terms of the origins of the Second World War. The question we customarily ask is whether or not the Western powers could have done more to avert the war &ndash; whether or not the policy of appeasement towards Germany and Japan was a disastrous blunder. Yet this may be to reverse the order of events. Appeasement did not lead to war. It was war that led to appeasement. For the war did not begin, as we tend to think, in Poland in 1939. It began in Asia in 1937, if not in 1931, when Japan invaded Manchuria. It began in Africa in 1935, when Mussolini invaded Abyssinia. It began in Western Europe in 1936, when Germany and Italy began helping Franco win the Spanish Civil War. It began in Eastern Europe in April 1939, with the Italian invasion of Albania. Contrary to the myth propagated by the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg that he and his confederates were its only begetter, Hitler was a latecomer to the war. He achieved his foreign policy objectives prior to September 1939 without firing a shot. Nor was it his intention to start a world war at that date. The war that broke out then between Germany, France and Britain was nearly as much the fault of the Western powers, and indeed of Poland, as of Hitler, as A. J. P. Taylor contended forty-five years ago in <em>The Origins of the Second World War.</em></p>
<p>Yet Taylor&#8217;s argument was at best only half-right. He was right about the Western powers: the pusillanimity of the French statesmen, who were defeated in their hearts before a shot had been fired; the hypocrisy of the Americans, with their highfaluting rhetoric and low commercial motives; above all, the muddle-headedness of the British. The British said they wanted to uphold the authority of the League of Nations and the rights of small and weak nations; but when push came to shove in Manchuria, Abyssinia and Czechoslovakia, imperial self-interest trumped collective security. They fretted about arms limitation, as though an equality of military capability would suffice to avoid war; but while a military balance might secure the British Isles, it offered no effective security for either Britain&#8217;s continental allies or her Asian possessions. With withering irony, Taylor called the Munich agreement a &#8216;triumph for British policy [and] &#8230; for all that was best and most enlightened in British life&#8217;. In reality, war with Germany was averted at the price of an unfulfillable guarantee to the rump Czechoslovakia. If handing the Sudetenland to Hitler in 1938 had been the right decision, why then did the British not hand him Danzig, to which he had in any case a stronger claim, in 1939? The answer was that by then they had given another militarily worthless guarantee, to the Poles. Having done so, they failed to grasp what Churchill saw at once: that without a &#8216;grand alliance&#8217; with the Soviet Union, Britain and France might find themselves facing Germany alone. As an indictment of British diplomacy, Taylor&#8217;s has stood up remarkably well to subsequent scholarship &ndash; though it must be said that he offers few clues as to why Britain&#8217;s statesmen were so incompetent.</p>
<p>Where Taylor erred profoundly was when he sought to liken Hitler&#8217;s foreign policy to &#8216;that of his predecessors, of the professional diplomats at the foreign ministry, and indeed of virtually all Germans&#8217;, and when he argued that the Second World War was &#8216;a repeat performance of the First&#8217;. Nothing could be more remote from the truth. Bismarck had striven mightily to prevent the creation of a Greater Germany encompassing Austria. Yet this was one of Hitler&#8217;s stated objectives, albeit one that he had inherited from the Weimar Republic. Bismarck&#8217;s principal nightmare had been one of coalitions between the other great powers directed against Germany. Hitler quite deliberately created such an encircling coalition when he invaded the Soviet Union before Britain had been defeated. Not even the Kaiser had been so rash; indeed, he had hoped he could avoid war with Britain. Bismarck had used colonial policy as a tool to maintain the balance of power in Europe; the Kaiser had craved colonies. Hitler was uninterested in overseas acquisitions even as bargaining counters. Throughout the 1920s Germany was consistently hostile to Poland and friendly to the Soviet Union. Hitler reversed these positions within little more than a year of coming to power. It is true, as Taylor contended, that Hitler improvised his way through the diplomatic crises of the mid-1930s with a combination of intuition and luck. He admitted that he was a gambler with a low aversion to risk (‘All my life I have played <em>va banque</em>’). But what was he gambling to win? This is not a difficult question to answer, because he answered it repeatedly. He was not content, like Stresemann or Br&uuml;ning, merely to dismantle the Versailles Treaty &ndash; a task that the Depression had half-done for him even before he became Chancellor. Nor was his ambition to restore Germany to her position in 1914. It is not even correct, as the German historian Fritz Fischer suggested, that Hitler&#8217;s aims were similar to those of Germany&#8217;s leaders during the First World War, namely to carve out an East European sphere of influence at the expense of Russia.</p>
<p>Hitler&#8217;s goal was different. Simply stated, it was to enlarge the German Reich so that it embraced as far as possible the entire German <em>Volk</em> and in the process to annihilate what he saw as the principal threats to its existence, namely the Jews and Soviet Communism (which to Hitler were one and the same). Like Japan&#8217;s proponents of territorial expansion, he sought living space in the belief that Germany required more territory because of her over-endowment with people and her under-endowment with strategic raw materials.</p></blockquote>
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		<title>Ferguson on the Appeal of Fascism vs. Nazism</title>
		<link>http://faroutliers.wordpress.com/2009/04/23/ferguson-on-the-appeal-of-fascism-vs-nazism/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 24 Apr 2009 06:39:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Joel</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Austria]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[From The War of the World: Twentieth-Century Conflict and the Descent of the West, by Niall Ferguson (Penguin Press, 2006), pp. 230-231, 239-240:
Considering the emphasis the new dictatorships laid on their supposedly distinctive nationalistic traditions, they all looked remarkably alike: the coloured shirts [German Brownshirts, Italian Blackshirts, Irish Blueshirts, Romanian Greenshirts], the shiny boots, the [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=faroutliers.wordpress.com&blog=1002386&post=3327&subd=faroutliers&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p>From <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/War-World-Twentieth-Century-Conflict-Descent/dp/1594201005">The War of the World</a>: Twentieth-Century Conflict and the Descent of the West,</em> by <a href="http://www.niallferguson.com/site/FERG/Templates/Home.aspx?pageid=1">Niall Ferguson</a> (<a href="http://www.penguin.com/index.html">Penguin</a> Press, 2006), pp. 230-231, 239-240:</p>
<blockquote><p>Considering the emphasis the new dictatorships laid on their supposedly distinctive nationalistic traditions, they all looked remarkably alike: the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackshirts">coloured shirts</a> [German Brownshirts, Italian Blackshirts, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blueshirts">Irish Blueshirts</a>, Romanian <a href="http://www.nationalismproject.org/books/bookrevs/Nagy-Talavera.html">Greenshirts</a>], the shiny boots, the martial music, the strutting leaders, the gangster violence. At first sight, then, there was little to distinguish the German version of dictatorship from all the rest &ndash; except perhaps that Hitler was marginally more absurd than his counterparts. As late as 1939, Adolf Hitler could still be portrayed by Charlie Chaplin in his film <em>The Great Dictator</em> as an essentially comic figure, bawling incomprehensible speeches, striking preposterous poses and frolicking with a large inflatable globe. Yet there were in reality profound differences between National Socialism and fascism. Nearly all the dictatorships of the inter-war period were at root conservative, if not downright reactionary. The social foundations of their power were what remained of the pre-industrial <em>ancien régime:</em> the monarchy, the aristocracy, the officer corps and the Church, supported to varying degrees by industrialists fearful of socialism and by frivolous intellectuals who were bored of democracy&#8217;s messy compromises.* The main function the dictators performed was to crush the Left: to break their strikes, prohibit their parties, deny voice to their voters, arrest and, if it was deemed necessary, kill their leaders. One of the few measures they took that went beyond simple social restoration was to introduce new &#8216;corporate&#8217; institutions supposed to regiment economic life and protect loyal supporters from the vagaries of the market. In 1924 the French historian Elie Halevy nicely characterized fascist Italy as &#8216;the land of tyranny &#8230; a regime extremely agreeable for travellers, where trains arrive and leave on time, where there is no strike in ports or public transport&#8217;. &#8216;The bourgeois&#8217;, he added, &#8216;are beaming.&#8217; It was, as Renzo De Felice said in his vast and apologetic biography of the Duce, &#8216;the old regime in a black shirt&#8217;&#8230;.</p>
<p>Contrary to the old claims that it was the party of the countryside, or of the north, or of the middle class, the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Socialist_German_Workers_Party">NSDAP</a> attracted votes right across Germany and right across the social spectrum&#8230;. It is true that places with relatively high Nazi votes were more likely to be in central northern and eastern parts, and those with relatively low Nazi votes were more likely to be in the south and west. But the more important point is that the Nazis were able to achieve some electoral success in nearly any kind of local political milieu, covering the German electoral spectrum in a way not seen before or since. The Nazi vote did not vary proportionately with the unemployment rate or the share of workers in the population. As many as two-fifths of the Nazi voters in some districts were working class, to the consternation of the Communist leadership. In response, some local Communists openly made common cause with the Nazis. &#8216;Oh yes, we admit that we&#8217;re in league with the National Socialists,&#8217; said one Communist leader in Saxony. &#8216;Bolshevism and Fascism share a common goal: the destruction of capitalism and of the Social Democratic Party. To achieve this aim we are justified in using every means.&#8217; It was a mark of Goebbels&#8217; skill in making the party seem all things to all men that, simultaneously, dyed-in-the-wool Prussian Conservatives could regard the Nazis as potential partners in an anti-Marxist coalition. Thus were political rivals lured into what proved to be fatal forms of cooperation. The only significant constraint on the growth of the Nazi vote was the comparatively greater resilience of the Catholic Centre party compared with parties hitherto supported by German Protestants.</p>
<p>Other fascist movements, as we have seen, depended heavily on elite sponsorship to gain power. The Nazis did not need to. For all the attention that has been paid to them, the machinations of the coterie around Hindenburg were not the decisive factor, as those of the Italian elites had been in 1922. If anything, they delayed Hitler&#8217;s appointment as Chancellor, an office that was rightfully his after the July 1932 election. It was not the traditional elite of landed property that was drawn to Hitler; the real Junker types found him horribly coarse. (When Hitler shook hands with Hindenburg, one conservative was reminded &#8216;of a headwaiter closing his hand around the tip&#8217;.) Nor was it the business elite, who not unreasonably feared that National Socialism would prove a Trojan horse for socialism proper; nor the military elite, who had every reason to dread subordination to an opinionated Austrian corporal. The key to the strength and dynamism of the Third Reich was Hitler&#8217;s appeal to the much more numerous intellectual elite; the men with university degrees who are so vital to the smooth running of a modern state and civil society.</p>
<p>For reasons that may be traced back to the foundation of the Bismarckian Reich or perhaps even further into Prussian history, academically educated Germans were unusually ready to prostrate themselves before a charismatic leader.</p>
<p>(*A list of all the treasonous clerics who flirted or did more than flirt with fascism would be a book in its own right. If only to give an illustration of how widespread the phenomenon was, dishonourable mention may be made of the writer Gabriele D&#8217;Annunzio, who established his own tinpot tyranny in post-war Fiume; the poet T. S. Eliot, who wrote that &#8216;totalitarianism can retain the terms &#8220;freedom&#8221; and &#8220;democracy&#8221; and give them its own meaning&#8217;; the philosopher Martin Heidegger, who, as Rector of Freiburg University, lent his enthusiastic support to the Nazi regime; the political theorist Carl Schmitt, who devised pseudo-legal justifications for the illegalities of the Third Reich; the novelist Ignazio Silone, who shopped former Communist comrades to the fascists; and the poet W. B. Yeats, who wrote songs for the Irish Blueshirts. Thomas Mann, who had made his fair share of mistakes during the First World War and only with difficulty broke publicly with the Nazi regime, was not wrong when he spoke of &#8216;the thoroughly guilty stratum of intellectuals&#8217;.)</p></blockquote>
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		<title>Commissar Trotsky&#8217;s Military Tactics</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 14 Apr 2009 07:37:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Joel</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[From The War of the World: Twentieth-Century Conflict and the Descent of the West, by Niall Ferguson (Penguin Press, 2006), pp. 145-148:
Between May and June [1918], the Czechs swept eastwards, capturing Novo-Nikolaevsk, Penza, Syzran, Tomsk, Omsk, Samara and finally Vladivostok. Meanwhile, Russia&#8217;s former allies sent expeditionary forces, whose primary aim was to keep Russia in [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=faroutliers.wordpress.com&blog=1002386&post=3272&subd=faroutliers&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p>From <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/War-World-Twentieth-Century-Conflict-Descent/dp/1594201005">The War of the World</a>: Twentieth-Century Conflict and the Descent of the West,</em> by <a href="http://www.niallferguson.com/site/FERG/Templates/Home.aspx?pageid=1">Niall Ferguson</a> (<a href="http://www.penguin.com/index.html">Penguin</a> Press, 2006), pp. 145-148:</p>
<blockquote><p>Between May and June [1918], the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Czechoslovak_Legion">Czechs</a> swept eastwards, capturing Novo-Nikolaevsk, Penza, Syzran, Tomsk, Omsk, Samara and finally Vladivostok. Meanwhile, Russia&#8217;s former allies sent expeditionary forces, whose primary aim was to keep <a href="https://segue.atlas.uiuc.edu/uploads/jhkorte2/map-of-russia.gif">Russia</a> in the war. The British landed troops at Archangel and Murmansk, as well as at Vladivostok; the French sent men to Odessa, the Americans to Vladivostok. The Allies also supplied the White armies with weapons and other supplies. The Japanese seized the opportunity to march across the Amur River from Manchuria. Meanwhile, the cities that were supposed to be the headquarters of the Revolution emptied as factories closed and supplies of food and fuel dried up. When Denikin called on all the White forces to converge on Moscow in July 1918, it seemed more than likely that the Bolshevik regime would be overthrown.</p>
<p>On August 6, 1918, White forces in combination with the renegade Czech Legion captured Kazan. The Bolshevik 5th Army was haemorrhaging deserters. Ufa had fallen; so too had Simbirsk, Lenin&#8217;s own birthplace. Another step back along the Volga would bring the forces of counter-revolution to the gates of Nizhny-Novgorod, opening the road to Moscow. Having resigned his post as Commissar for Foreign Affairs in favour of Military Affairs, Trotsky now had the daunting task of stiffening the Red Army&#8217;s resolve. He was, as we have seen, by training a journalist not a general. Yet the goatee-bearded intellectual with his pince-nez had seen enough of war in the Balkans and on the Western Front to know that without discipline an army was doomed. It was Trotsky who insisted on the need for conscription, realizing that volunteers would not suffice. It was Trotsky who brought in the former Tsarist <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-commissioned_officer">NCO</a>s and officers &ndash; many of them hitherto languishing in jail &ndash; whose experience was to be vital in taking on the Whites.</p>
<p>Trotsky had two advantages. Firstly, the Bolsheviks controlled the central railway hubs, from which he could deploy forces at speed. Indeed, it was from his own specially designed armoured railway carriage that he himself directed operations, travelling some 100,000 miles in the course of the war. Secondly, though the Bolsheviks lacked experience of war, they did have experience of terrorism; like the Serbian nationalists, they too had employed assassination as a tactic in the pre-war years. It was to terror, in the name of martial law, that Trotsky now turned.</p>
<p>When he arrived at Kazan, the first thing he did was to uncouple the engine from his train; a signal to his troops that he had no intention of retreating. He then brought twenty-seven deserters to nearby Syvashsk, on the banks of the Volga, and had them shot. The only way to ensure that Red Army recruits did not desert or run away, Trotsky had concluded, was to mount machine-guns in their rear and shoot any who failed to advance against the enemy. This was the choice he offered: possible death in the front or certain death in the rear. &#8216;We must put an end once and for all&#8217;, he sneered with a characteristically caustic turn of phrase, &#8216;to the papist-Quaker babble about the sanctity of human life.&#8217; Units that refused to fight were to be decimated. It was a turning point in the Russian civil war &ndash; and an ominous sign of how the Bolsheviks would behave if they won it. In the bitter fighting for the bridge over the Volga at Kazan, Trotsky&#8217;s tactics made that outcome significantly more likely. The bridge was saved, and on September 10 the city itself was retaken. Two days later Simbirsk also fell to the Reds. The White advance faltered as they found themselves challenged not only by a rapidly growing Red Army, but also by recalcitrant Ukrainians and Chechens to their rear. The Czechs were weary of fighting; the Legion disintegrated as it was driven back to Samara and then beyond the Urals&#8230;. By the end of November Denikin had lost Voronezh and Kastornoe.</p>
<p>The end of the war on the Western Front was well timed for the Bolsheviks. It undermined the legitimacy of the foreign powers&#8217; intervention, especially as they now had left-wing outbreaks of their own to deal with. Only the Japanese showed any inclination to maintain an armed presence on Russian soil, and they were content to stake out new territorial claims in the Far East and leave the rest of Russia to its fate.</p></blockquote>
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