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-   -   Should England have stayed out of WW1? A very good discussion, english, of course :) (https://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=216951)

Catfish 11-23-14 03:20 PM

Should England have stayed out of WW1? A very good discussion, english, of course :)
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BqO5CnnKLtA

Just listened to this to and fro, good arguments both sides, and very fair – of course, since it takes place in England (and no joke meant at all here).

Having read some books i heard again being spoken of in those speeches, i really enjoyed this. IMHO it is well worth the time :cool:

Betonov 11-23-14 03:23 PM

YES !!!

Why, Slovenia was a part of central powers :O:
And a German victory would prevent the rise of hitler and stalin

MGR1 11-23-14 03:35 PM

Plenty of pros and cons each way, but there is something of a consensus that Britain :03:(and Empire) should have stayed out of it.

The war may well have been over by Christmas if we had elected not to get involved.

The Middle East probably wouldn't be in such a mess either.

Although if WW1 and WW2 did have a benefit is that they eliminated Prussian militarism and the power of the Junker aristocracy, to Germany's long term benefit.

If Wilhelm II hadn't been a breech birth, history could have been quite different.:hmmm:

Mike.

Catfish 11-23-14 03:48 PM

Hello,
thanks for your opinions, but i really urge you to listen to what the speakers have to say (sorry if you did, i just thought you did not ;) )
:)

Betonov 11-23-14 03:52 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Catfish (Post 2263632)
Hello,
thanks for your opinions, but i really urge you to listen to what the speakers have to say (sorry if you did, i just thought you did not ;) )
:)

Speakers ??? :hmmm:

I think you may have forgot to link a link

MGR1 11-23-14 03:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Catfish (Post 2263632)
Hello,
thanks for your opinions, but i really urge you to listen to what the speakers have to say (sorry if you did, i just thought you did not ;) )
:)

There were two programmes on BBC Two back in June presented by Professor Niall Ferguson and Max Hastings that covered the same subject:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p01nl00x

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b03wtmz6

There aren't any links in your first post, but are either of those the programme you were referring to?

Mike.

Catfish 11-23-14 04:01 PM

Sorry, i forgot the link :oops: – fixed now :)

THEBERBSTER 11-23-14 06:50 PM

The answer to your question is absolutely no.

There are a number of reasons why.

The Kaiser had imperial ambitions that threatened the British Empire at the time especially India which was England’s jewel in the crown.

The Kaiser was related through Queen Victoria to England’s royalty and resented what we had and what he did not have.

He also had total control of the armed forces and the people as in his position as ‘the Kaiser’ he was looked on as a God, a chosen person.

His orders were carried out without question.

Germany started building up its navy in the early 1900’s by building its might in the Dreadnaught’s as England at the time had the most powerful navy in the world.

If we had not supported the French, the German armies would have over-run Europe and with France falling as it would have done along with Belgium the Netherlands etc, England would then stand totally alone with its territories now wide open for invasion.

So if we had not gone to war with Germany with French support in 1914 then we would undoubtedly been forced into war with a stronger Germany at a later date.

There was only one option at the time, sooner rather than later.

Peter

ikalugin 11-23-14 06:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Betonov (Post 2263626)
YES !!!

Why, Slovenia was a part of central powers :O:
And a German victory would prevent the rise of hitler and stalin

Or a Russian victory for that matter.

THEBERBSTER 11-24-14 06:42 AM

Hi Tribesman

We are talking about 1914.

Britain decides not to support France

Even though popular thinking is if we do it will all be over by Christmas.

France is alone there are no British forces on the continent.

Could France hold on its own?

The Germans nearly got to Paris even with us in France.

As it happened we did get involved and send troops.

The British high command had never fought what is termed ‘modern warfare’ and are inflexible to change things in the middle of battle when their plans were not working unlike the Germans.

There were 10s of thousands of needless deaths because of that and opportunities lost.

We only had a small professional army compared to the Germans.

The Germans were better prepared and better armed.

We still had the attitude of, “You can’t do that old boy, that’s not cricket”.

When you capture countries you get the resources and the manufacturing capabilities as well as the opportunity to take their assets.

The Germans would not have ended up with a starving population.

The Germans would have continued to have got stronger and stronger if we had stayed out and at some point they would have been able to have taken on the Royal Navy.

If France had fallen they would have had their naval ships as well.

We would not have been able to defend ourselves standing alone with Germany ruling Europe.

Russia as we know capitulated later on as they were in turmoil with the revolution and before that were poorly led even though they had overwhelming numbers.

America was not interested in activities happening thousands of miles away.

The Germans biggest mistake was opening up the U-boat war which was one of the reasons that brought America in to the war.

The Kaiser wanted a large Empire.

England had one.

Peter

Jimbuna 11-24-14 06:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by THEBERBSTER (Post 2263667)

The Kaiser had imperial ambitions that threatened the British Empire at the time especially India which was England’s jewel in the crown.

Germany started building up its navy in the early 1900’s by building its might in the Dreadnaught’s as England at the time had the most powerful navy in the world.

I agree that Britain was pushed into a position of having little or no choice, mainly because but not solely on the above points and whilst accepting that hindsight is a wonder to behold it must have appeared to the British government at the time that Britain had potentially more to lose than the other belligerents.

Once the lid on the European pressure cooker was removed Britain had little choice other than to protect her interests as was the position for so many other countries.

Dread Knot 11-24-14 06:47 AM

For better or worse, Britain, in 1914, was doing what she had been doing since the days of Elizabeth I, namely throwing her weight in on the side of the "balance of power" so that any ambitious state which looked like it was bringing all Europe under its sway should be cut down to size and made to reconcile itself to just being one power among several. In the event it certainly didn't work out the way it had done on previous occasions, but it's not at all obvious how any government could have forseen that, or done much about it even if they had. Going to war meant the end of British power in the long run, but in the eyes of the men in power at the time, standing aside while Germany possibly gained hegemony over Europe would probably have meant the same thing in the short run.

It's interesting to consider the knock-on effects had Britain stayed on the sidelines. While there is no guarantee that the Central Powers win, with no British distant naval blockade on trade and foodstuffs their staying power would have been substantially enhanced and the threat of food riots and revolution recedes. Without the British in, would would Italy have joined the Central Powers? Without the threat of conscription would the Irish Uprising of 1916 been delayed? Would Indian independence have had to wait another generation? Would the Arab Revolt against the Ottomans have succeeded without British assistance? I think without British involvement, the possibility of American involvement goes by the wayside too. Especially if Germany has to no need to conduct intensive U-Boat warfare. The "American Century" would have to wait, depending not on wars but on markets.

Possibly, British non-involvement in the world wars would have given the Empire two or three extra decades to flourish at the most. Any more and they'd face a subcontinent-wide uprising they couldn't defeat. With India gone, it's only a matter of time before most of the rest of the Empire followed.

It's interesting to think of the ponderous literary and cultural benefits of staying out too. How many potential great english authors, artists and poets died unknown in the mud and wire of Passchendaele and Thiepval? On the other hand, there might be a Hemingway, but No Farewell to Arms. There might be a Tolkien, but no Lord of the Rings.

Betonov 11-24-14 09:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ikalugin (Post 2263668)
Or a Russian victory for that matter.

A quick Russian victory or a quick defeat would have saved the Romanovs. Revolution was inevitable but perhaps it would have been more of a sudden shift to a constitutional monarchy than a full blown rebellion and civil war.

Dragging the war on would have brought in the same results, victory or defeat.



Let's not forget this was 1914 Germany. Ruthless as they were, their goal was not a conquest of Europe. Germany was just upholding their end of the deal in being an ally to Austria-Hungary and Wilhelm II even urged the Russian Tzar to forgo Serbia to prevent a war with Russia and consequently France.

In case France lost the war they'd loose colonies, no occupation, no concentration camps, no Hohenzoller eagle across the continent

MGR1 11-24-14 12:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Betonov (Post 2263763)
A quick Russian victory or a quick defeat would have saved the Romanovs. Revolution was inevitable but perhaps it would have been more of a sudden shift to a constitutional monarchy than a full blown rebellion and civil war.

A constitutional monarchy in Russia would have required another Tsar.

Nicholas II appears to have been psychologically incapable of accepting any limit on his power. His belief in his divine right to rule was as strong as any medieval monarch.

His inability to compromise doomed him and his dynasty.

In the same way, proper modernisation of the Dual Monarchy would have to have waited until Franz Joseph popped his clogs. Once that happened, history being different, Franz Ferdinand's proposals may have had a chance of working, assuming Karl became monarch and had time to implement it. But that would have required a short, victorious war against Serbia. Since the KuK Wehrmacht made heavy weather of their attack in the real world, I have my doubts if that would have occurred. Getting rid of von Hötzendorf and his monumental ego may have helped, but I think the basic War Plan used was faulty.:hmmm:

Mike.

Betonov 11-24-14 01:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MGR1 (Post 2263790)
A constitutional monarchy in Russia would have required another Tsar.

Nicholas II appears to have been psychologically incapable of accepting any limit on his power. His belief in his divine right to rule was as strong as any medieval monarch.

His inability to compromise doomed him and his dynasty.

If the entire aristocratic class in Russia would slowly star to feel the heat, the the Tzar would have been forced from the inside of the elite to do some changes. Even medieval monarchs were forced by their own direct vasals to relegate some power.
The war just made the revolution more explosive and more lower class oriented (for lack of a better phrase)


Quote:

Originally Posted by MGR1 (Post 2263790)
In the same way, proper modernisation of the Dual Monarchy would have to have waited until Franz Joseph popped his clogs. Once that happened, history being different, Franz Ferdinand's proposals may have had a chance of working, assuming Karl became monarch and had time to implement it. But that would have required a short, victorious war against Serbia. Since the KuK Wehrmacht made heavy weather of their attack in the real world, I have my doubts if that would have occurred. Getting rid of von Hötzendorf and his monumental ego may have helped, but I think the basic War Plan used was faulty.:hmmm:

Yes.
Franz Ferdinand was a polar opposite of Franz Joseph.
He was a pacifist and would have tried to work out a diplomatic way to punish Serbia, since Serbia already wanted to pay some sort of reparations to prevent an all out war.
Unfortunately Franz Joseph was probably already half demented and lived in the glorious old times when war was a gentlemens game and not a slaughterhouse of a generation.
Plus Franz Ferdinand had a plan to relieve internal tension to give slavs, Czheks and Slovaks the same status inside the dual monarchy as the Hungarians, turning it into a federation of states ruled by the Habsburgs.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_...reater_Austria

It's a shame this mess happened. There's should be an age limit for emperors.


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