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How An Assassin In 1914 Spawned Today's Ultranationalists

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  • How An Assassin In 1914 Spawned Today's Ultranationalists

    HOW AN ASSASSIN IN 1914 SPAWNED TODAY'S ULTRANATIONALISTS

    The Globe and Mail, Canada
    June 27 2014

    Doug Saunders

    Earlier this month, a swarm of fighters bearing the black flags of
    the jihadi militia known as the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant,
    busy invading a large chunk of northern Iraq, decided to pause and
    link their cause to the First World War.

    On that Tuesday, the Sunni fighters seized a bulldozer and some
    military vehicles and plowed a rough roadway through the earthen
    berm that divides Syria and Iraq. After dancing on the newly erased
    border and firing automatic weapons into the air, the ISIL fighters
    took to Twitter and YouTube to make a historic boast: By moving aside
    this pile of sand and earth, they said, they "are demolishing the
    Sykes-Picot borders. All thanks due to Allah."

    Our world, those Sunni insurgents reminded us, is still very much
    governed by the ideas that were blasted into global prominence with
    Gavrilo Princip's pistol.

    They saw themselves reversing a decision made only a few months after
    Princip's bullet killed the future leader of Austria-Hungary, one of
    the huge empires that controlled much of the developed world in 1914.

    Soon after the Great War's battles began in earnest that August,
    leaders of the Allied powers realized that those empires -
    Austro-Hungarian, Ottoman, Russian Czarist and German Hohenzollern -
    were likely to collapse. They set about inventing something new to
    replace them.

    Seeing that Constantinople was on the verge of losing hold of the
    huge expanse of the Ottoman Empire and worried that this territory
    (and the petroleum beneath it) would fall into the wrong hands,
    the Allies dispatched two diplomats, Mark Sykes of Britain and
    Francois Georges-Picot of France, to figure out how to divide the
    remains between the future victors. Two years later, their governments
    accepted a line those diplomats had drawn across the Middle East. In
    the years after the war, that line would define the borders of the
    newly created post-Ottoman countries: Iraq, Kuwait, Syria, Lebanon,
    Turkey, Jordan and, later, Israel.

    You might think that, by trying to create a Sunni Muslim theocracy
    stretching across a wide swath of the Arab world, those ISIL fighters
    saw themselves as undoing one of the great consequences of the Great
    War: the replacement of empires with scores of newly formed and largely
    arbitrary nations; that they were putting an end to the postwar world.

    >From another perspective, though, groups such as ISIL are the true
    heirs to the ideas of June 28, 1914. Their beliefs, and their way
    of organizing those beliefs into terrifying action, are very direct
    copies of those that launched the Great War - and which had really
    not existed, to any significant extent, before Princip brought them
    to life.

    Are we living through the long tail of 1914, or experiencing its even
    longer antithesis? The difference depends on how you weigh the two
    forces unleashed a century ago - one a new form of nation, the other
    a new form of nationalism.

    The new nations

    The modern idea of the nation - that is, a political entity claiming to
    represent people united by language or ethnicity - had existed only for
    a few decades before 1914, and at the time was regarded as something
    of an anomaly. Europe had been nothing more than 200-odd kingdoms and
    a handful of empires a century earlier; in June, 1914, it contained
    just three republics (Switzerland, France and Portugal). And it had
    only recently witnessed the birth of Germany (which is four years
    younger than Canada) and Italy (seven years older), both cobbled
    together from diverse collections of somewhat-similar kingdoms.

    At the same time, 1914 Europe was teeming with nationalist movements,
    most of them without nations: Armenian, Georgian, Lithuanian,
    Jewish, Macedonian, Albanian, Ruthenian, Croatian, Basque, Catalan,
    Flemish, Sardinian and Irish. Few had widespread popular support:
    The nationalist idea was an elite one.

    It was also almost entirely fictional. European states in 1914 were
    far more multicultural and multilingual than they are today; the idea
    of finding a common language, culture or ethnicity within any of them
    was implausible, and could be accomplished only by using extreme force.

    On the eve of the Great War, barely more than half the citizens of
    France spoke the French language or considered themselves ethnically
    French, as historian Eugen Weber famously illustrated; it was the war
    itself that replaced France's regional languages and identities with
    a national one.

    And France was one of the more unified nations. In 1914, less
    than half the population of Romanov Russia was ethnic Russian. In
    post-unification Italy, only 2.5 per cent of citizens spoke Italian
    on a daily basis.

    Multiculturalism was the prewar norm: For every 100 soldiers in the
    Hapsburg army in 1914, historian David Reynolds observes, "there were
    on average 25 Germans, 18 Magyars, 13 Czechs, 11 Serbs and Croats,
    9 Poles, 9 Ruthenes, 6 Romanians, 4 Slovaks, 2 Slovenes and 2 Italians.

    ... Many units operated with two languages, some as many as five."

    It wasn't the war that changed all that, but the peace. In the postwar
    wreckage of Europe's empires and economies, the Treaty of Versailles
    attempted to create a new peace by granting independent statehood to
    virtually anyone who sought it and asked loudly or forcefully enough.

    U.S. President Woodrow Wilson, the man most responsible for shaping the
    postwar world, famously declared, in early 1918, that "all well-defined
    national aspirations shall be accorded the utmost satisfaction." He
    took the phrase "self-determination" - a Bolshevik idea popular with
    Lenin - and gave it a much wider meaning.

    This was not at all an inevitable development - in fact, both countries
    best poised to determine the peace, the United States and Britain,
    were opposed to (and sometimes threatened by) ethnic and linguistic
    nationalism. But, as historian Eric Hobsbawm once observed, the
    postwar explosion of new countries "was the result of two unintended
    developments: the collapse of the great multinational empires of
    Europe, and the Russian Revolution - which made it desirable for the
    Allies to play the Wilsonian card against the Bolshevik card." Ethnic
    nationalism was ugly, but it trumped communist internationalism.

    These new postwar nations were of a very different flavour from those
    created in the nationalist fervour of the 19th century. "Whereas
    Italy and Germany had been created through the unification of various
    local polities with similar language and culture," David Reynolds
    writes in his superb history, The Long Shadow: The Great War and
    the Twentieth Century, these nations were created "through secession
    from dynastic empires that had hitherto controlled a volatile mix of
    ethnic groups in various stages of national self-consciousness and
    political mobilization."

    Even before the war was over, more cautious people warned that this
    thrust to create ethno-states was a ticking bomb. Wilson's secretary of
    state, Robert Lansing, expressed alarm: "When the President talks of
    'self-determination,' what unit has he in mind? Does he mean a race,
    a territorial area, or a community?" The phrase, in Lansing's view, was
    "simply loaded with dynamite," and would "raise hopes which can never
    be realized" and "cost thousands of lives." He was certainly correct.

    These newborn nations were destined for further violence:
    None was actually uni-ethnic or uni-linguistic, despite their
    claims; most contained competing nationalities and faiths seeking
    self-determination. Some, such as Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia and
    Iraq, were purely artificial hodgepodges of groups that had ancient
    rivalries. Arab states such as Jordan and Syria were essentially
    gifts to tribal families that had favoured the old empire. The
    Israel-Palestine conflict was the most inevitable conflict arising
    from the borders of this post-1914 world, but there have been hundreds
    of others - including, most recently, ISIL's Sunni-imperial challenge
    to the Sykes-Picot line.

    "Although nationalist frenzy was more consequence than cause of the
    Great War," Mr. Reynolds writes, "the war-makers had let the genie
    out of the bottle and the peace-makers could not put it back."

    The new nationalism

    That nationalist frenzy was not merely the product of top-down peace
    treaties and diplomatic deals, though. What Wilson and his allies
    unleashed was a new form of thinking, and a new form of politics and
    violence, that had filled the air in 1914.

    It is important to distinguish these nationalist movements from the
    liberal states that were created in their name. They were different
    things, with different consequences.

    The term "nationalism" was not coined until the final decades of the
    19th century; prior to that, the notion that people should form an
    independent political entity strictly on the basis of their language
    or ethnicity was confined to a few radical philosophers, especially
    in Germany. Unleashed, it spread like a disease.

    The decade before 1914 was pocked with scores of assassinations,
    bombings, kidnappings and violent riots on every continent as the
    new nationalism took hold. Princip's bullets were the first acts of
    nationalist violence of the war, but the first to succeed in creating
    a new country was Ireland's, which erupted in the middle of the war,
    overwhelmed Britain with exceedingly bloody conflict, and created
    the first of dozens of new nations to be born as a result of the war.

    The new nationalism, unlike the new nations, did not pretend to be
    orderly or rational. Whether applied by Serbians, Arabs, Basques,
    Jews or Sunni Muslims, it was a self-sacrificing, totalizing ideology
    that placed the imaginary nation above all else. Today's ISIL fighters
    would recognize, in every detail, the beliefs and motives of Princip,
    and the nature of the Serbian ultra-nationalist organization to
    which he belonged. Historian Christopher Clark, in his new work The
    Sleepwalkers: How Europe Went to War in 1914, makes this vividly clear:

    "What must strike any twenty-first-century reader who follows
    the course of the summer crisis of 1914," he writes, "is its raw
    modernity. It began with a squad of suicide bombers and a cavalcade
    of automobiles.

    "Behind the outrage at Sarajevo was an avowedly terrorist organization
    with a cult of sacrifice, death and revenge; but this organization
    was extraterritorial, without a clear geographical or political
    location; it was scattered in cells across political borders, it was
    unaccountable, its links to any sovereign government were oblique,
    hidden and certainly very difficult to discern from outside the
    organization."

    Princip and his co-collaborators were far from being rogue extremists:
    They were selected by organizations that received funding and support
    from within the Serbian state. But they were a type of nationalist we
    would recognize today: harsh ascetics, they rejected alcohol and sexual
    relations with women, "they read nationalist poetry and irredentist
    newspapers and pamphlets ... sacrifice was a central preoccupation,
    almost an obsession," Mr. Clark writes.

    Indeed, their act of June 28, 1914, was meant to be a suicide bombing.

    It isn't remembered that way - because the bomb exploded beneath
    the wrong car and a handgun was used instead, and because Princip's
    suicide capsule failed to kill him - but the language of martyrdom
    used by these young men would be entirely recognizable to the foreign
    fighters of ISIL and al-Qaeda.

    This new ideology had dire consequences. The previously polyglot
    countries of Europe discovered the new language of uni-ethnic
    nationalism: supremacy, xenophobia, ethnic cleansing. In the years
    before 1914, anti-Semitism, previously a Christian hatred of spiritual
    rivals that had peaked in the pogroms of the Middle Ages and gradually
    faded (though certainly not vanished) after the Enlightenment, burst
    back onto the scene in a new form: the Jew as disloyal, unpatriotic
    outsider, as civilizational invader.

    The war gave new licence to this ideology. In 1915, as the Ottoman
    Empire began to collapse, the Turks expelled and slaughtered Armenians
    in a mass atrocity widely considered genocidal (they would later also
    expel millions of ethnic Greeks). Then, starting in 1916, the Irish
    rose en masse against their British occupier. As the decades of war
    and extremism unfolded, the ethnic cleansings and expulsions became
    more intense: While the Great War and the Versailles Treaty did not
    authorize the hateful movements of the 1930s and 40s, they provided a
    welcoming climate for their gestation. In the years after the Second
    World War, the movements would spread with equal vehemence across
    Asia and Africa.

    We are left, a century after those bullets in Sarajevo, with two
    lasting consequences: a set of lines in the sand, damningly difficult
    to erase, and a set of ideas etched into countless minds, even harder
    to obliterate. Ours is a much more peaceful, well-ordered world,
    but its last remaining threats and menaces are almost all traceable
    to the dark origins of 1914.

    http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/how-an-assassin-in-1914-spawned-todays-ultranationalists/article19379226/?page=all




    From: A. Papazian
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