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When Diplomacy Fails Podcast
When Diplomacy Fails Podcast

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#65: 5 August 1914 - 'This Frantic Stampede to Hell'

The world was at war, and there was much to do. In London, attention turned to the British Expeditionary Force. The BEF had been ruled out several times before, but that did not have to matter. How many divisions could Britain send, and to where? What of the Dominions, or India, or Egypt? How could one balance imperial possessions with European defence imperatives? At least, the Cabinet was mostly on the same page, and in Parliament, war credits were approved, though not without some vocal dissent.

The mood in Germany was both anxious and defiant. The sheer extent of the challenge posed by the Triple Entente made gathering more allies all the more urgent, but it also entailed a kind of desperation, where Germany must be prepared to fight to the end. Austria would also be pressured to clarify matters, and declare war on Russia and France. The First World War as we know it was taking shape, yet very few fully understood how it had happened. Where complex analysis was unavailable and sources lacking, governments turned to propaganda and noble causes. The war could still be seen as a kind of adventure, but within weeks, romanticism would collide with the brutal reality of industrial slaughter.

#65: 5 August 1914 - 'This Frantic Stampede to Hell'

Comments

Great series! (I liked it the first go-around too.) Loving Bismarck also. Thanks Zack. Wondering about your suggestion here, however, that John Redmond should have played hardball and demanded home rule as the price of support for Britain’s war effort. Hard to imagine a position that would have made him, and the Irish cause, more hated. His approach made strategic and, in my view, moral sense at the time.

Richard Riley


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