Originally posted by aeolium
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Reith Lectures - War and Humanity
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostFollowing my above spat with Richard Tarleton - and admittedly not as yet having gone through the earlier talks on iplayer - I stand to be corrected, but it still seems to me that cause cannot be disassociated from specifics when it comes to how power politics have re-enacted themselves through any war one wishes to mention. Over and above questionable assumptions of warlike tendencies being inborn which go far beyond the organism's need to protect itself, this surely has to be the biggest lesson of war.
By the way, aeolium, are you classing Korea and Vietnam, the two biggest conflicts since 1945, as civil wars? Not quite sure about your statement there, there have been an awful lot of post-colonial wars, border wars, etc...Vietnam...Iran-Iraq....India-Pakistan.... Civil wars in Africa, certainly, with tribal and post-colonial factors rubbing up against eachother....I haven't thought this through.
Haven't caught up with 3 yet.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostBy the way, aeolium, are you classing Korea and Vietnam, the two biggest conflicts since 1945, as civil wars? Not quite sure about your statement there, there have been an awful lot of post-colonial wars, border wars, etc...Vietnam...Iran-Iraq....India-Pakistan.... Civil wars in Africa, certainly, with tribal and post-colonial factors rubbing up against eachother....I haven't thought this through.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by aeolium View PostYes, those are not typical civil war conflicts, though perhaps it's the case that many of the civil wars that have cropped up in the last 60 years or so have been the result of post-colonial instability (and also foreign meddling). Still, you could have a look at the wiki list of civil wars since 1945, almost too many to count. The military might of the great powers, plus military alliances, plus the UN and the international criminal court make it quite unlikely that there will be significant international conflict now, at least between small nations, but there are plenty of civil wars that no-one wants to get too involved in.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by DracoM View PostQuestions and comments from the Lebanese audience FAR more interesting than the trot of commonplaces from the lecturer IMO.
And a swipe at Bomber Harris, an easy target...setting aside who was first to start bombing civilian populations (honours there to Germany in WW1 and WW2), the reasons for the bombing of German cities were more complex. There was a long interlude before the opening of a second front against Hitler in the West or Mediterranean, when Stalin was becoming increasingly resentful about shouldering the entire burden of fighting Germany on land, when there was only the U-Boat war going on. As Harris also said (quoted by Max Hastings): "Winston's attitude to bombing was 'Anything to put up a show'. If we hadn't [used Bomber Command] we would only have had the U-Boat war, and as he said, defence of our trade routes was not an instrument of war". Britain had to do something to annoy the Germans.
Germany even started "Baedeker bombing" - bombing places of architectural significance like Bath.....
Very little to get one's teeth into in the lecture, I thought - just too general.Last edited by Guest; 11-07-18, 09:40.
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I'm afraid I have become increasingly disillusioned as this series has gone on. Yes, yes, why listen etc etc..........
Trite, yawn-making commonplace statements by the lecturer, and interesting stuff from the floor, AND better analyses and discusison on this thread than at any time generated by the Reith Lecturer. I mean............!
How / why on earth the BBC decided to get this lecturer is beyond credibility given what we have heard on air..
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostYes some interesting questions. I liked the one about indecisive wars that linger on, and the one on the different impacts of national and civil wars. (Actually Margaret Harris's answer to that contains a sentence which is odd in the context of Spain, which she refers to - "And the temptation of course is to treat the defeated badly [true in Spain's case], but I think the temptation is always much greater in a civil war because you're more unforgiving in a civil war. You feel such a resentment to the other side for having created it..." - which might be true in a case where the losing side started it. But in Spain's case the winning side started the war - it was a military coup first and foremost.)
I'm not sure that MM meant "started" by the word "created" there. The origins of the civil war will always be blurred by the propaganda of the protagonists, and Franco's supporters may have really believed that the Republicans were responsible for the war, just as presumably Assad and his followers believe that the Syrian civil war was "started" by terrorists, not by his slaughter of demonstrators.
And a swipe at Bomber Harris, an easy target...setting aside who was first to start bombing civilian populations (honours there to Germany in WW1 and WW2), the reasons for the bombing of German cities were more complex. There was a long interlude before the opening of a second front against Hitler in the West or Mediterranean, when Stalin was becoming increasingly resentful about shouldering the entire burden of fighting Germany on land, when there was only the U-Boat war going on. As Harris also said (quoted by Max Hastings): "Winston's attitude to bombing was 'Anything to put up a show'. If we hadn't [used Bomber Command] we would only have had the U-Boat war, and as he said, defence of our trade routes was not an instrument of war". Britain had to do something to annoy the Germans.
I think the content of the lecture is, as you say, too general, but it does at least provoke interesting questions, as the Q&A showed.
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Richard Tarleton
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