Perhaps the greatest lesson of World War I was the illustration of the phenomenon I call “irreversible escalation to total war.” After Archduke Ferdinand was assassinated in Sarajevo in June 1914, a series of escalating provocations and retaliations ensued, culminating in a world war – two, actually, if you follow the chain of causality following the Carthaginian peace imposed on Germany at Versailles.
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IRREVERSIBLE ESCALATION TO TOTAL WAR
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Perhaps the greatest lesson of World War I was the illustration of the phenomenon I call “irreversible escalation to total war.” After Archduke Ferdinand was assassinated in Sarajevo in June 1914, a series of escalating provocations and retaliations ensued, culminating in a world war – two, actually, if you follow the chain of causality following the Carthaginian peace imposed on Germany at Versailles.