AndDontCallMeShirley stated:
reslight2 said:
Many world leaders and military officers anticipated a major war starting in Europe prior to 1914. It was a matter of "when", not "if" it would happen.
I am not sure what this is based on. I learned in college that in 1913, the general consensus of most people was that there was NOT going to be any more wars.
ADCMS: Then you need to read more reslight2!! In fact, 40 years before the outbreak of WW 1, many saw it coming. I'm not going to give you my documentation or sources for this. If you care to know the answer, go look it up, just as I did!! I did not refer to "the general consensus of most people" as you do- I stated that political and military officials, persons actually aware of developing circumstances, were noting an impending major war. The "general consensus" is generally unaware and uninformed, so of course they thought everything was wonderful. Experts in-the-know thought differently.
Can you show me where I can find the documentation for the above? There may have been political and military officials some 40 years before the outbreak of WW 1 who were expecting an impending major war; indeed, if I remember correctly, many treaties were being signed to prevent such from happening.
To virtually anybody alive in the vibrant early years of the 20th century, nothing would have seemed further away than war.
http://www.theglobalist.com/printStoryId.aspx?StoryId=4290
It is ironic that statements before the war foresaw a time of lasting peace, perpetual advancement and an unceasing march toward utopia. Europe believed it lived a charmed life. War was a thing of the past. The new technological advances would usher in a period of unequalled prosperity.
http://www.jewishhistory.org/coming-of-the-great-war/
Moreover, as Europe had enjoyed nearly three decades without a major war, there was a widespread belief that war was a thing of the past, not of the future.
http://whiskeyandgunpowder.com/industrial-slaughter-and-war-the-march-of-progress/
This conforms to what I was taught in college; that the European and many other world leaders thought that all their treaties and trade agreements made war unthinkable, and thus, near to impossible.