In the
summer of 1914 when the crisis began following the assassination of the
Archduke Ferdinand of Austria, heir to the Imperial Throne on 28th
June in Sarajevo the handling of this and therefore the future of Europe lay
with a handful of major powers.
They failed
to resolve it and the diplomatic crisis quickly began to escalate into
military threats and then the mobilisation of armies.
The consequence of a number of secret treaty obligations and the
timetables demanded for the movement of troops meant that once begun, stopping
it needed urgent effective action and leadership.
It was not
forthcoming. Emperor Nicholas II of Russia had been supreme Head of State since 1894
and although he had conceded some political authority Russia was
still a mix of firmly authoritarian ways, older advisers and a leadership of
the representative body that was confused and uncertain.
In Germany , Kaiser
Wilhelm II had been on the throne since 1888 and was determined to exercise
personal authority particularly in military and diplomatic matters. He was supported by a proud and fierce
military caste of advisers. That is when
they were not dancing around in ballet tutu’s to please their Kaiser.
Servia or
Serbia as we know it; was the epicentre of the crisis and governed by King
Peter I since 1903, a turbulent and difficult period in which he struggled to
maintain any sort of effective control.
The Empire
of Austria-Hungary was governed by the Emperor Franz Joseph who had reigned
since 1848 and lived through decades of strife, personal tragedies and constant
political threats and confusion. He was
an old and tired man with old advisers and an overflowing in tray with little
going out.
In France , due to
the party divisions and an electoral system that led to government by constantly
shifting coalitions, chaos was normal, order improbable and decisions were
forced by events. But in military
matters it still had an officer elite that operated on its own terms.
Then there
was Britain ,
trying to muddle through as ever with Herbert Asquith and a cabinet that had
been in place since 1908, a period of serious political conflict and
uncertainly with constant trouble at home and the Empire.
What was
common to all them is that they were all very tired men. They all had too much on their plate and had
been faced with not just awkward but impossible situations. In each of the countries the strains of
growing population allied to rapid industrialisation meant that the political
systems and its leaders could not cope.
Looking
around the world today, there are some strong similarities. Cameron is looked whacked out and the chaos
unfolding around him and the coalition mean that a lot of issues and problems
that need to be addressed are not. All
we are getting is short term easy to spin handling of matters that is getting
us nowhere.
President
Obama has just gone through a bruising campaign. Evidently, he too is tired and he is faced
with myriad intractable problems that neither he nor his advisers seem to be
able to manage. Also, he has a military
and financial elite that intends to go its own way, President or no President.
Chancellor
Merkel is facing elections soon and also has Balkan problems in the mix. She is faced with a Europe
in the middle of a major monetary and economic crisis whose leadership and her
advisers seem to be taking nowhere. She
is looking tired and seems increasingly to be on autopilot in a plane running
out of fuel.
In Russia
Putin has been around for a long time, possibly too long, in that he is playing
the same tune when the orchestra around him has moved on to the next item. Because of Russia it is not clear what could
happen but something will and Putin may not be able to control it.
In France ,
Hollande at the moment seems both secure and relatively fresh. He is trying to exercise some leadership but
it may be in the wrong direction. There
are still too many real problems in France for comfort. It is delicately balanced there but with too
many potential serious issues.
In the
situation of 1914 the end result was a major world war that destroyed some
powers and severely damaged the others.
In 2013 there may not be a war, we cannot afford one and these days
would not really know what to do.
Our
political leaderships are weak and strongly influenced by local elites. What there could be is either a major crash
or more likely the beginning of a series of system failures that will bring an
end to past prosperity, economic strength and any sort of financial security.
And all we
have is a bunch of tired people, desperately short of time who are struggling
to keep up with the travel schedules.
"And all we have is a bunch of tired people, desperately short of time who are struggling to keep up with the travel schedules."
ReplyDeleteMaybe they need to do less, put more effort into finding better people and getting rid of the dross.