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2025-05-01 23:13:00

On Anzac Day we remembered World War One and World War
Two, or at least the peripheral little bits of those
imperial wars that New Zealand was involved in. There was
and is little context given to how New Zealand got involved
with such far-away wars which need never have become world
wars. There were the usual cliches about 'our' young men,
invading the Ottoman Empire, somehow fighting for freedom
and democracy; and, through making 'supreme sacrifices',
establishing the invaders' national identities. There was
very little context about what these anti-German and
anti-Japanese wars were really about, and on why we thought
anybody could possibly benefit from Aotearoa New Zealand
contributing in its own small way to their
escalation.
The Great World War 1914-1945
we step back, we can see that there was really only one very
big war; best dubbed as The Great World War 1914-1945
(the GWW, which itself morphed into another in 1945, The
Cold War 1945-1990).
The Great World War
is really the 1914 to 1945 Russo-German War, embedded
in a wider state of conflict that might be called The
Great Imperial War.
The subsequent Cold War,
essentially the 'great hegemonic war', reframed world war;
from 1945 it was between the United States imperium and the
Communist powers of Russia and China; it was a 'proxy war'
rather than a passive-aggressive 'cold war'. The years 1991
to 2021 may prove to have been an intermission, just as 1919
to 1939 was an intermission in the Great World War; and
noting that, in the GWW, Russia and Germany became
'Communist' and 'Nazi' during that intermission. The most
important early 'hot' conflict in the Cold War was the
Korean War, a deadly proxy conflict – at its core between
the 'Anti-Communist' United States and 'Communist' China –
ending as a 'score-draw'; an armistice in 1953 which took
the hostile parties back to an almost identical position as
to where they started in 1950. For the second phase of the
Great Hegemonic War, the 'Communist' factor was waned; the
prevailing ideology in the west in 2025 is a distorted form
of self-congratulatory 'democratic imperialism', not unlike
the prevailing ideology in the west in 1914.
looking at 1914 to 1945 in this way, as a single albeit
complex conflict, we can more easily see that the essence of
the struggle was a conflict between the waxing German and
Russian Empires; and that the central prizes of that
conflict were the Russian imperial territories of Ukraine
and the Caucasus, and the waning Ottoman Empire: food, oil
and sea-access in the strategic pivot
of central Eurasia.
All (except one) of
the world's 'great' empires of the early twentieth century
became involved: the waxing empires of Germany, Russia,
Japan, and the United States of America; and the waning
empires of United Kingdom, France, Ottoman Türkiye,
Austria-Hungary and Netherlands. And the would-be empire of
Italy. (The exception was the empire of Portugal, a neutral
party; in 1898 the United States had acquired Spain's
remnant empire.)
The Result of the Great
Wikipedia has page entries for every war
ever fought in reality or mythology. And the Wikipedia
format likes to give a binary result, as if a war was a
series of football matches with a grand finale. Winners and
losers. It's not like that in reality: most wars formally
end in an armistice; albeit an armistice in which one party
– one nation or coalition of nations – has an advantage
and is largely able to dictate terms.
The core war
within the Great World War was the Russo-German War,
which ended in 1945 with a victory to Russia; then Rusia was
the imperium of the 'Communist' Soviet Union. The victor of
the wider Great Imperial War was the United States;
Imperator Americanus inherited a beaten-up world, much as
Emperor Augustus inherited the Roman Empire in 27 BCE after
about two decades of strife between warring would-be
The Great World War began in 1914,
essentially as the Third Balkan
War. The reasons this local war expanded from a part of
the world politically and geographically distant from the
British Empire – the empire of which New Zealand
understood itself to be an integral part – related to a
contested set of quasi-scientific socio-economic and
supremacist utopias (which will only be addressed here in
passing), and to a basic reality that an
expansionist western 'civilisation' was confronting
diminished returns.
Possibly the most
important and least understood year of the whole GWW was
1918. The context here is that Russia – Germany's new
great foe, the Russian Empire – had been defeated late in
1917, following both a successful democratic revolution (the
February Revolution) and a German-facilitated 'Communist'
'Bolshevik' coup d'etat (the October Revolution). The
formality of Russian defeat – the Brest-Litovsk
Treaty – was signed by Leon Trotsky in March 1918. The
problem for Germany was that there was still an unresolved
western front, there was a British naval blockade of
Germany, and that the United States had been persuaded in
1917 to enter the war as an Entente
power. Nevertheless, in March 1918, the Germans were winning
on the western front having already settled the
more-important eastern front; but Germany had no
thought-through exit strategy. They were in no position to
occupy Belgium, let alone France.
After the trench
warfare stalemate that had characterised the western front
for more than three years, it was Germany that broke through
in the winter of 1917/18; indeed, Germany advanced to
just-about big-gun-firing distance from Paris. The western
powers were in a state of panic, as Germany redeployed
soldiers from the eastern front to the west.
United States had entered the war in France, but their
soldiers were green and initially of little help against
battle-hardened Germans. But the American soldiers, without
realising the significance, had brought with them a secret
weapon, influenza. (The deadly strain of influenza in
1918 – popularly known as the Spanish Flu – was almost
certainly a hybrid of the Kansas strain and an Asian strain
already in France.) The tide of the war only turned against
Germany in August 1918, mainly due to economic limitations
but also due in some part to soldiers getting very sick. The
sickness had a bigger military impact on Germany, given that
Germany's soldiers (including one A. Hitler) were more
hardened fighters than the Americans.
Germany went
from winners to losers only in the last three months, from
August to November 1918; it was like a basketball game in
which defeat was snatched from the jaws of victory (or
vice versa, from a western viewpoint!). But they were
never losers in the absolute sense that they later were, in
1945. On 11 November 1918, Germany settled for an armistice
in which they were on the back foot. It was not an absolute
defeat, and should never have been seen as such.
Nevertheless, that sensible armistice came to be treated by
the Entente Powers (especially France, the United Kingdom
and the United States) as an absolute victory; Germany,
victor over Russia, was subsequently treated with great and
unnecessary humiliation, creating the seeds for a resumption
of the Great World War. Part of that humiliation was the
stripping of the territories in the incipient Soviet Union
that had been won by Germany (especially the loss of
Ukraine); another important part was the imposition of a
'Polish Corridor', through Eastern Germany to the Baltic Sea
at the then-German city of Danzig, physically dividing
A third humiliation was a set of reparations
that were imposed using similar mercantilist logic to that
which is upsetting the world economic order today; Germany
was supposed to pay France in particular huge amounts of
gold, but the only way Germany could acquire that gold was
for Germany to run a trade surplus and for the Entente
Powers to run trade deficits. But the 'victorious' powers
wanted to run trade surpluses, not trade deficits; they
wanted Germany to increase its debt to the west while
claiming that they wanted Germany to pay off its debt to the
(Today, the United States wants its Treasury to
accumulate treasure in the same way that it and France
sought to do in the 1920s, not realising that the countries
they want to extract 'modern treasure' from – China and
the European Union – can only get that treasure if they
run trade surpluses. The great 'modern treasure' mine is
actually in Washington, not in Eurasia.)
One result of
all this mercantilism imposed upon the 1920s' world order by
the liberal Entente powers was the Great Depression; that
was probably the number-one catalyst towards the resumption
of the Great World War in 1939 and the Russo-German War in
1941. This 'liberal mercantilism' was the first of the
pseudo-scientific utopias to fail. Other aggravating factors
were the intensification of the contradictions of the other
two 'scientific utopias': the unachievable 'Communist'
experiment in Russia, and the exacerbation of the
supremacist eugenics which was widely subscribed to
throughout Europe and which reached their apotheosis in
Hitler's Germany.
A defeated Russia played no part in
the formal hostilities of the GWW in 1918. Likewise, when
the Great World War resumed in 1939, Russia appeared to be
on the sideline; though that's another story. The true
nature of the resumed GWW – known as World War Two in the
west – became apparent in June 1941. The war continued for
nearly four terrible years, with Soviet Russia prevailing
over Nazi Germany in 1945, with some help from the western
powers. Russia will celebrate Victory Day in a few days on 9
May; the end of the Russo-German War, though the Great World
War continued until 15 August of that year. As regards the
result of the Russo-German War, the western Entente powers
were kingmakers rather than kings.
Overall, freedom
and democracy were casualties of the GWW, not outcomes. By
1950, there were many more unfree people in the world, and
few (India notwithstanding) who were more free than they had
been in 1913. Indians' post-GWW freedoms came at a huge cost
in damaged and lost lives. And they were freedoms from
Britain, not freedoms fought for by
Chief among the territories
won-and-lost by Germany was Ukraine. Considered in its
entirety, Ukraine was the number-one prize and the
number-one battleground of the Great World War.
territory of Ukraine had been occupied by Germany for five
years: 1918, and 1941 to 1944. In 1918, Germany lost Ukraine
because of events on the western front; in 1945 the Soviet
Union recovered Ukraine on the battlefield. Soviet Russia
was helped by three imperial nations throughout the active
phases of the GWW; by the British, the French, and the
Americans. Otherwise, Germany – the Prussian Empire –
would have almost certainly prevailed in its quest for
Ukraine, and the oilfields around the Caspian Sea (and
possibly the so-called 'Middle East', though that may have
been permanently lost to Germany in
With Ukraine once again being
centre-stage in geopolitics – the contested ground between
conflicting quasi-academic narratives – the world may be
set for a resumption of both the Cold War (especially in its
mercantilist Sino-American guise) and the Russo-German war.
Together, these have the makings of 'World War Three';
especially if we add in the Levantine conflict, the present
supremacist conflict in the 'Middle
In the geopolitics of early 2025,
the 'elephant in the room' is Friedrich Merz, who will
(eventually!) become Chancellor of Germany on 6 May. Merz is
a military hawk, who has already shown all the signs that he
would like to take the Ukraine War to Russia (ref. Berlin
Briefing, DW, 24 April 2015), and elite public opinion
in Germany seems to be staunchly 'pro-Ukraine'. In the event
of a new global Great Depression – or the Geoeconomic
Chaos Crisis that seems to be starting – could Merz become
the new Führer, a 'willing' militarist leader of the Fourth
Reich? At age 69 he's a young man compared to Donald Trump,
and he looks to be fighting fit. Germany has many of the
same issues today that it had in 1910 and in 1930; a people
seeking to re-flex their nationalist muscles while severely
constrained, within their German and EU boundaries, in terms
of natural resources. Will Merz try to shore up (and
militarize) the flagging European Union, much as Trump has
been trying (unsuccessfully to be sure) to unite the whole
of the Americas under his triumphalist banner? (Q. How do
you get to run a small superpower? A. Get yourself a large
superpower, and wait.) The battle for Ukraine may have a
while to run yet; possibly as a European 'civil' war, a new
Russo-German War.
My sense is that
if there's one thing that Aotearoa's post-2023 leadership
are even more attracted to than fiscal austerity, then
that's a good geopolitical scrap. We start to see war as
glorious rather than ugly. We bring out all the false
clichés and narratives, we extoll the likes of Winston
Churchill, we self-suppress the inconvenient truth that war
is a nasty, nasty, nasty business; indeed, we self-suppress
this truth even when we see war's brutality – or could see
it if we choose to watch Freeview Channel 20 – unfolding
Now that the 80th anniversary of the Great
World War has nearly passed, Anzac Day risks becoming a day
of martial geo-nationalism, and not a day of
remembrance.
Anzac Day has already become a day of
highly selective remembrance; probably it always was. I
visited Würzburg (the German firebombed city that suffered
more than any other on a per capita basis) in 1974,
and I visited West and East Berlin (via Checkpoint Charlie)
that same year. I visited Arras in 1975, near to where my
father's first cousin died in November 1918. I visited Derry
and Belfast in 1976, cities in a then-active civil war zone.
I visited the magnificently-sited Khartoum in 1978, now the
capital-centre of the world's most complicit and
under-narrated tragedy. I visited Cassino in 1984, the 40th
anniversary of the battles that pointlessly took so many
lives, including Kiwi lives such as that of my mother's
first cousin. I visited Dandong and Seoul in 2008, gaining a
first-hand insight into the Korean War, including a walk on
the American-destroyed bridge and an oversight of the North
Korean city of Sinuiju. (And I visited Port Arthur –
Lüshun – key site and sight of the Russia-Japan War of
1905, with its natural harbour and its extant Russian train
And in 2014, on the day after Anzac Day, I
visited Nagasaki, site of the first plutonium bomb ever
dropped over a city; and, that same month, I visited Ginza
and Asakusa in Tokyo, rebuilt sites of the worst example
every of a conventional fire holocaust; 100,000 mostly
civilian deaths in one March night eighty years ago. (I was
also lucky to get to walk through unbombed streets to the
northwest of Ueno Park, getting a sense of what the
neighbourhoods of Asakusa were once like.)
forget. Mostly, we have forgotten. (Including the worst of
The Holocaust. Who commemorates Treblinka today? Or Minsk?
Only Poland and Russia and Belarus.)
Our amnesia
extends to one place New Zealanders fought in. This week
Al Jazeera has done a series of news vignettes and a
longer documentary, to remember the fiftieth anniversary of
the end of the Vietnam War. This anniversary has not been
prominent in New Zealand's Anzac Day media-scape. (RNZ did
run a Reuters-syndicated website-only story on 30
April: Vietnamese
celebrate 50 years since end of Vietnam War. And, to its
credit, TV3 News ran an overseas-sourced story yesterday,
not a story about New Zealand's largely-forgotten
participation.) By-and-large, the still-living
anti-Vietnam-War generation is now silent, apparently
When martial narratives are not
sufficiently contested, then wars – big wars – happen,
almost by accident. That's how the Great World War began in
the first place.
- Keith Rankin (keith at rankin
dot nz), trained as an economic historian, is a retired
lecturer in Economics and Statistics. He lives in Auckland,
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Elena Petrova
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