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RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited

 
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RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/7/2017 8:25:19 PM   
Joe D.


Posts: 4004
Joined: 8/31/2005
From: Stratford, Connecticut
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

Previous responses removed to make the post more readable.

quote:

ORIGINAL: Joe D.

To paraphrase one of your own playwrights, you protest too much, methinks.

The Serbian government was and still is responsible for its own military/paramilitary. Even today, Bosnia-Herzegovina said it would appeal against a 2007 UN court ruling clearing Serbia of genocide during Bosnia’s civil war. That's why I asked if you have ever been in the region.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/feb/18/bosnia-to-appeal-2007-un-court-ruling-clearing-serbia-of-genocide

And if posters don't source their "facts," how is that any different from just expressing their opinions?


warspite1

Please don't speak in riddles - protest about what?

What has a UN court ruling against Serbia got to do with 1914? Look you've been to the region, you've mentioned it once or twice, but you need to stay relevant here.

So are you saying all facts must be backed with sources? You always do that yes? Most posters to these forums do that yes? Of course not. But okay I have no problem with that. Although perhaps though you should check the accuracy of the facts you choose to support. Providing a source is all well and good, but if the fact is actually false*, it kind of defeats the object.

* The 1807 treaty wasn't false of course - just its relevance to 1914.


The fact that Bosnia could take Serbia to court over war crimes certainly proves states are responsible for the actions of their own military, even rogue paramilitary units.

Obvious facts don't need to be referenced, but when a citizen of one nation, say Great Britain of France, sits in judgement of another nation, say Germany, there is a fine line between fact and national bias. I recall reading something in Rebecca's West's "Black Lamb and Grey Falcon" about the bias of the Britains of her day towards Serbia, but I can't recall why?

And I was referring to your protest of the innocence of Serbia in starting WW I, or didn't you catch my reference to Hamlet? You do realize I'm posting from a town called Stratford?


_____________________________

Stratford, Connecticut, U.S.A.

"The Angel of Okinawa"

Home of the Chance-Vought Corsair, F4U
The best fighter-bomber of World War II

(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 121
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/7/2017 8:40:59 PM   
warspite1


Posts: 41353
Joined: 2/2/2008
From: England
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Joe D.


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

Previous responses removed to make the post more readable.

quote:

ORIGINAL: Joe D.

To paraphrase one of your own playwrights, you protest too much, methinks.

The Serbian government was and still is responsible for its own military/paramilitary. Even today, Bosnia-Herzegovina said it would appeal against a 2007 UN court ruling clearing Serbia of genocide during Bosnia’s civil war. That's why I asked if you have ever been in the region.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/feb/18/bosnia-to-appeal-2007-un-court-ruling-clearing-serbia-of-genocide

And if posters don't source their "facts," how is that any different from just expressing their opinions?


warspite1

Please don't speak in riddles - protest about what?

What has a UN court ruling against Serbia got to do with 1914? Look you've been to the region, you've mentioned it once or twice, but you need to stay relevant here.

So are you saying all facts must be backed with sources? You always do that yes? Most posters to these forums do that yes? Of course not. But okay I have no problem with that. Although perhaps though you should check the accuracy of the facts you choose to support. Providing a source is all well and good, but if the fact is actually false*, it kind of defeats the object.

* The 1807 treaty wasn't false of course - just its relevance to 1914.


The fact that Bosnia could take Serbia to court over war crimes certainly proves states are responsible for the actions of their own military, even rogue paramilitary units.

Obvious facts don't need to be referenced, but when a citizen of one nation, say Great Britain of France, sits in judgement of another nation, say Germany, there is a fine line between fact and national bias. I recall reading something in Rebecca's West's "Black Lamb and Grey Falcon" about the bias of the Britains of her day towards Serbia, but I can't recall why?

And I was referring to your protest of the innocence of Serbia in starting WW I, or didn't you catch my reference to Hamlet? You do realize I'm posting from a town called Stratford?

warspite1

Re the Shakespeare, Stratford, Hamlet line - no sorry that was far too subtle for me. You may want to use a brick in the face next time

I don't really want to get into the whole modern day political thing but why was Serbia found not guilty then?

And please I thought this national bias stuff had been dealt with. I blame Germany and AH the most because I believe they are most guilty. I blame Russia and Serbia (as well as France, Russia and Britain) because all of them are guilty to a degree in various ways - but were not the prime cause of the war. I DON'T NOT place majority blame on AH, Russia and France because of national bias. Russia was an absolutist monarchy and a horrible regime, The Serbian regime was distinctly unlikable and the French are....well the French (joke! ).

But the main problem with this subject (in terms of quoting loads of 'facts') is that one can quote all the facts they like, but as our discussion is proving, ultimately this comes down to personal opinion. So facts are unlikely to prove either's side of the argument.


< Message edited by warspite1 -- 9/7/2017 8:55:26 PM >


_____________________________

England expects that every man will do his duty. Horatio Nelson October 1805



(in reply to Joe D.)
Post #: 122
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/7/2017 11:18:39 PM   
Joe D.


Posts: 4004
Joined: 8/31/2005
From: Stratford, Connecticut
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

quote:

ORIGINAL: Joe D.


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

Previous responses removed to make the post more readable.

quote:

ORIGINAL: Joe D.

To paraphrase one of your own playwrights, you protest too much, methinks.

The Serbian government was and still is responsible for its own military/paramilitary. Even today, Bosnia-Herzegovina said it would appeal against a 2007 UN court ruling clearing Serbia of genocide during Bosnia’s civil war. That's why I asked if you have ever been in the region.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/feb/18/bosnia-to-appeal-2007-un-court-ruling-clearing-serbia-of-genocide

And if posters don't source their "facts," how is that any different from just expressing their opinions?


warspite1

Please don't speak in riddles - protest about what?

What has a UN court ruling against Serbia got to do with 1914? Look you've been to the region, you've mentioned it once or twice, but you need to stay relevant here.

So are you saying all facts must be backed with sources? You always do that yes? Most posters to these forums do that yes? Of course not. But okay I have no problem with that. Although perhaps though you should check the accuracy of the facts you choose to support. Providing a source is all well and good, but if the fact is actually false*, it kind of defeats the object.

* The 1807 treaty wasn't false of course - just its relevance to 1914.


The fact that Bosnia could take Serbia to court over war crimes certainly proves states are responsible for the actions of their own military, even rogue paramilitary units.

Obvious facts don't need to be referenced, but when a citizen of one nation, say Great Britain of France, sits in judgement of another nation, say Germany, there is a fine line between fact and national bias. I recall reading something in Rebecca's West's "Black Lamb and Grey Falcon" about the bias of the Britains of her day towards Serbia, but I can't recall why?

And I was referring to your protest of the innocence of Serbia in starting WW I, or didn't you catch my reference to Hamlet? You do realize I'm posting from a town called Stratford?

warspite1

Re the Shakespeare, Stratford, Hamlet line - no sorry that was far too subtle for me. You may want to use a brick in the face next time

I don't really want to get into the whole modern day political thing but why was Serbia found not guilty then?

And please I thought this national bias stuff had been dealt with. I blame Germany and AH the most because I believe they are most guilty. I blame Russia and Serbia (as well as France, Russia and Britain) because all of them are guilty to a degree in various ways - but were not the prime cause of the war. I DON'T NOT place majority blame on AH, Russia and France because of national bias. Russia was an absolutist monarchy and a horrible regime, The Serbian regime was distinctly unlikable and the French are....well the French (joke! ).

But the main problem with this subject (in terms of quoting loads of 'facts') is that one can quote all the facts they like, but as our discussion is proving, ultimately this comes down to personal opinion. So facts are unlikely to prove either's side of the argument.



According to the link I sent you:

"In the original case launched in 1993 by Bosnia’s then Muslim-dominated government, Sarajevo accused Belgrade of masterminding a genocide through widespread 'ethnic cleansing' during the war that killed more than 100,000.

"The Hague-based ICJ found only one act of genocide – the massacre of nearly 8,000 Muslim males by Bosnian Serb forces in Srebrenica – and said there was not enough evidence to suggest Belgrade was directly responsible.

"But it did find Serbia, which politically and militarily backed the Bosnian Serbs, had breached international law over the Srebrenica slaughter...."

Not enough evidence for direct responsibility, but Serbia had still breached international law? No wonder Bosnia had appealed this decision!


_____________________________

Stratford, Connecticut, U.S.A.

"The Angel of Okinawa"

Home of the Chance-Vought Corsair, F4U
The best fighter-bomber of World War II

(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 123
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/8/2017 8:31:27 AM   
warspite1


Posts: 41353
Joined: 2/2/2008
From: England
Status: offline
I think there are a number of issues here, not least of which is the fact that this is modern day politics so may see the thread locked. Rather than that, I will simply delete this post if it is considered out of bounds.

Let me just make absolutely clear, in discussing this I am simply seeking to understand your point. I, like you I’m sure, have no wish to express any support, favour or anything else positive to the perpetrators of genocide – whoever they are. I seek to make no judgement on any of the countries involved – BUT SEEK ONLY AN UNDERSTANDING OF THE LEGAL ISSUES so I can marry them with the events of June 1914.

Firstly I am not a lawyer. Trying to read through the case itself and the legal arguments is not easy – and of course it’s even less easy trying to match the case, international law – and what happened - with the events leading up to and following the assassination of the Franz Ferdinand.

The crux of this is: can you explain the subtle (or perhaps not so subtle) difference between the two statements below.

quote:

The Hague-based ICJ found……….there was not enough evidence to suggest Party A was directly responsible [for the crime against Party C].

quote:

But it did find Party A, which politically and militarily backed Party B, had breached international law....


I am a simple man and these two comments (in the absence of understanding the legal detail) don’t seem to follow. What international law did Party A breach even though they were not held to be directly responsible? Please no personal thoughts here, I just want to know legally what they were talking about and so why you believe this is relevant to the argument about 1914.

There are then a number of questions that stem from this, perhaps the first and foremost being what relevant international laws were in place in 1914? I suspect the one you mention was not. Was Serbia guilty of breaking any international law? Bringing up a recent case is all well and good but does it have relevance to 1914? Given the known stance of AH in the years preceding 1914 (see post 119), would AH have given a fig anyway?….

Finally, can you just confirm your thoughts on who started WWI? I know at the outset you said you thought it was Serbian intrigue that started the war (and Germany picked up the bill) and that the Alliance system roped everyone in. Are you saying that it was essentially Serbia’s fault entirely? I just want to be clear.


< Message edited by warspite1 -- 9/8/2017 8:39:31 AM >


_____________________________

England expects that every man will do his duty. Horatio Nelson October 1805



(in reply to Joe D.)
Post #: 124
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/8/2017 10:54:35 AM   
charlie0311

 

Posts: 941
Joined: 12/20/2013
Status: offline
For a change of pace the readers may enjoy:

1) Google "Rapture lyrics", and read the text version.

2) Next click on the lyrics with the music, should be on the right on the playlist.

3) Watch the live performance by "Blondie".

Don't cha know?

< Message edited by charlie0311 -- 9/8/2017 10:55:12 AM >

(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 125
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/8/2017 12:09:18 PM   
Joe D.


Posts: 4004
Joined: 8/31/2005
From: Stratford, Connecticut
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

I think there are a number of issues here, not least of which is the fact that this is modern day politics so may see the thread locked. Rather than that, I will simply delete this post if it is considered out of bounds.

Let me just make absolutely clear, in discussing this I am simply seeking to understand your point. I, like you I’m sure, have no wish to express any support, favour or anything else positive to the perpetrators of genocide – whoever they are. I seek to make no judgement on any of the countries involved – BUT SEEK ONLY AN UNDERSTANDING OF THE LEGAL ISSUES so I can marry them with the events of June 1914.

Firstly I am not a lawyer. Trying to read through the case itself and the legal arguments is not easy – and of course it’s even less easy trying to match the case, international law – and what happened - with the events leading up to and following the assassination of the Franz Ferdinand.

The crux of this is: can you explain the subtle (or perhaps not so subtle) difference between the two statements below.

quote:

The Hague-based ICJ found……….there was not enough evidence to suggest Party A was directly responsible [for the crime against Party C].

quote:

But it did find Party A, which politically and militarily backed Party B, had breached international law....


I am a simple man and these two comments (in the absence of understanding the legal detail) don’t seem to follow. What international law did Party A breach even though they were not held to be directly responsible? Please no personal thoughts here, I just want to know legally what they were talking about and so why you believe this is relevant to the argument about 1914.

There are then a number of questions that stem from this, perhaps the first and foremost being what relevant international laws were in place in 1914? I suspect the one you mention was not. Was Serbia guilty of breaking any international law? Bringing up a recent case is all well and good but does it have relevance to 1914? Given the known stance of AH in the years preceding 1914 (see post 119), would AH have given a fig anyway?….

Finally, can you just confirm your thoughts on who started WWI? I know at the outset you said you thought it was Serbian intrigue that started the war (and Germany picked up the bill) and that the Alliance system roped everyone in. Are you saying that it was essentially Serbia’s fault entirely? I just want to be clear.



It can't be Serbia's fault entirely if other nations were backing the two original belligerents. Serbia simply triggered Europe's dominoes.

Many senior military officers now have degrees in international law. My niece is a lawyer, but specializes in environmental law; I'm just a journalist, but murder by assassination or any other means that crosses national boundaries is by definition an international crime, and as I previously posted: "the fact that Bosnia could take Serbia to court over war crimes certainly proves states are responsible for the actions of their own military, even rogue paramilitary units."


_____________________________

Stratford, Connecticut, U.S.A.

"The Angel of Okinawa"

Home of the Chance-Vought Corsair, F4U
The best fighter-bomber of World War II

(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 126
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/8/2017 1:01:46 PM   
warspite1


Posts: 41353
Joined: 2/2/2008
From: England
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Joe D.


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

I think there are a number of issues here, not least of which is the fact that this is modern day politics so may see the thread locked. Rather than that, I will simply delete this post if it is considered out of bounds.

Let me just make absolutely clear, in discussing this I am simply seeking to understand your point. I, like you I’m sure, have no wish to express any support, favour or anything else positive to the perpetrators of genocide – whoever they are. I seek to make no judgement on any of the countries involved – BUT SEEK ONLY AN UNDERSTANDING OF THE LEGAL ISSUES so I can marry them with the events of June 1914.

Firstly I am not a lawyer. Trying to read through the case itself and the legal arguments is not easy – and of course it’s even less easy trying to match the case, international law – and what happened - with the events leading up to and following the assassination of the Franz Ferdinand.

The crux of this is: can you explain the subtle (or perhaps not so subtle) difference between the two statements below.

quote:

The Hague-based ICJ found……….there was not enough evidence to suggest Party A was directly responsible [for the crime against Party C].

quote:

But it did find Party A, which politically and militarily backed Party B, had breached international law....


I am a simple man and these two comments (in the absence of understanding the legal detail) don’t seem to follow. What international law did Party A breach even though they were not held to be directly responsible? Please no personal thoughts here, I just want to know legally what they were talking about and so why you believe this is relevant to the argument about 1914.

There are then a number of questions that stem from this, perhaps the first and foremost being what relevant international laws were in place in 1914? I suspect the one you mention was not. Was Serbia guilty of breaking any international law? Bringing up a recent case is all well and good but does it have relevance to 1914? Given the known stance of AH in the years preceding 1914 (see post 119), would AH have given a fig anyway?….

Finally, can you just confirm your thoughts on who started WWI? I know at the outset you said you thought it was Serbian intrigue that started the war (and Germany picked up the bill) and that the Alliance system roped everyone in. Are you saying that it was essentially Serbia’s fault entirely? I just want to be clear.



Many senior military officers now have degrees in international law. My niece is a lawyer, but specializes in environmental law; I'm just a journalist, but murder by assassination or any other means that crosses national boundaries is by definition an international crime, and as I previously posted: "the fact that Bosnia could take Serbia to court over war crimes certainly proves states are responsible for the actions of their own military, even rogue paramilitary units."

warspite1

But do you know the answers to the various questions I raised? I assumed you understood the legal aspect, which is why you were quoting the case. If not (and frankly I don't blame you ) then this statement is proof of nothing - and I don't see how you can accuse a state of breaking a law that (as far as I know) didn't exist at the time of wrongdoing.


_____________________________

England expects that every man will do his duty. Horatio Nelson October 1805



(in reply to Joe D.)
Post #: 127
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/8/2017 1:25:23 PM   
Capitaine

 

Posts: 1043
Joined: 1/15/2002
Status: offline
I think we know that if a soon-to-be-king Prince of Wales was assassinated by a cabal in the German military in order to bring about a favorable situation for Germany, we'd be hearing a different tune from Brits about the causation of a war based thereon. Am I right?

(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 128
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/8/2017 1:52:15 PM   
warspite1


Posts: 41353
Joined: 2/2/2008
From: England
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Capitaine

I think we know that if a soon-to-be-king Prince of Wales was assassinated by a cabal in the German military in order to bring about a favorable situation for Germany, we'd be hearing a different tune from Brits about the causation of a war based thereon. Am I right?
warspite1

Well its something of a shame that the same old national bias assumption comes up yet again .

So lets ignore that rubbish and ask instead that you try and sensibly develop your theme:

Who within the German military? - who leads this cabal, how big is the movement and who's support do they have?

Why have they done this - why chose the British Royal Family if the enemy is France and the Germans were desperate for the British to stay out of WWI?

How will an improved German position result from this one act?

A case has been made for why a Serb faction may have assassinated Franz Ferdinand. So exactly what is the case for the German action?

The murdered Prince of Wales is a close relation of Kaiser Wilhelm II (and related to the Czar). How does the Kaiser - and the ruling German class react to this outrage?

If you want a sensible answer then you have to ask a sensible question. So come on then, build a scenario here?


< Message edited by warspite1 -- 9/8/2017 3:28:28 PM >


_____________________________

England expects that every man will do his duty. Horatio Nelson October 1805



(in reply to Capitaine)
Post #: 129
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/8/2017 2:22:17 PM   
Joe D.


Posts: 4004
Joined: 8/31/2005
From: Stratford, Connecticut
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1


quote:

ORIGINAL: Joe D.


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

I think there are a number of issues here, not least of which is the fact that this is modern day politics so may see the thread locked. Rather than that, I will simply delete this post if it is considered out of bounds.

Let me just make absolutely clear, in discussing this I am simply seeking to understand your point. I, like you I’m sure, have no wish to express any support, favour or anything else positive to the perpetrators of genocide – whoever they are. I seek to make no judgement on any of the countries involved – BUT SEEK ONLY AN UNDERSTANDING OF THE LEGAL ISSUES so I can marry them with the events of June 1914.

Firstly I am not a lawyer. Trying to read through the case itself and the legal arguments is not easy – and of course it’s even less easy trying to match the case, international law – and what happened - with the events leading up to and following the assassination of the Franz Ferdinand.

The crux of this is: can you explain the subtle (or perhaps not so subtle) difference between the two statements below.

quote:

The Hague-based ICJ found……….there was not enough evidence to suggest Party A was directly responsible [for the crime against Party C].

quote:

But it did find Party A, which politically and militarily backed Party B, had breached international law....


I am a simple man and these two comments (in the absence of understanding the legal detail) don’t seem to follow. What international law did Party A breach even though they were not held to be directly responsible? Please no personal thoughts here, I just want to know legally what they were talking about and so why you believe this is relevant to the argument about 1914.

There are then a number of questions that stem from this, perhaps the first and foremost being what relevant international laws were in place in 1914? I suspect the one you mention was not. Was Serbia guilty of breaking any international law? Bringing up a recent case is all well and good but does it have relevance to 1914? Given the known stance of AH in the years preceding 1914 (see post 119), would AH have given a fig anyway?….

Finally, can you just confirm your thoughts on who started WWI? I know at the outset you said you thought it was Serbian intrigue that started the war (and Germany picked up the bill) and that the Alliance system roped everyone in. Are you saying that it was essentially Serbia’s fault entirely? I just want to be clear.



Many senior military officers now have degrees in international law. My niece is a lawyer, but specializes in environmental law; I'm just a journalist, but murder by assassination or any other means that crosses national boundaries is by definition an international crime, and as I previously posted: "the fact that Bosnia could take Serbia to court over war crimes certainly proves states are responsible for the actions of their own military, even rogue paramilitary units."

warspite1

But do you know the answers to the various questions I raised? I assumed you understood the legal aspect, which is why you were quoting the case. If not (and frankly I don't blame you ) then this statement is proof of nothing - and I don't see how you can accuse a state of breaking a law that (as far as I know) didn't exist at the time of wrongdoing.



You need to consult someone with a degree in international law, but murder by any means, e.g., assassination, is a wrongdoing that goes back to Cain. The modern crime of genocide was just an example that one nation could sue another, namely Serbia.


_____________________________

Stratford, Connecticut, U.S.A.

"The Angel of Okinawa"

Home of the Chance-Vought Corsair, F4U
The best fighter-bomber of World War II

(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 130
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/8/2017 2:24:15 PM   
warspite1


Posts: 41353
Joined: 2/2/2008
From: England
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Joe D.

It can't be Serbia's fault entirely if other nations were backing the two original belligerents. Serbia simply triggered Europe's dominoes.

warspite1

Well that makes for a very bleak outlook for the world doesn't it? What you are saying is that if an event of a certain magnitude happens, then people - world leaders, politicians, the military - do not think, the Germans, the Russians, the French etc didn't think they simply acted out their moves according to alliances - formal or informal.

So say some rogue nutter from a country in Asia lets off a nuclear bomb aimed at (in this example we'll say Japan). According to your logic the US must retaliate, China must then retaliate back, NATO (France and Britain) must then get involved, as must Russia.

One domino is knocked down and all the rest must follow regardless? Sorry I don't buy it. And I don't think the start of World War I is as simple as that.


< Message edited by warspite1 -- 9/8/2017 2:36:30 PM >


_____________________________

England expects that every man will do his duty. Horatio Nelson October 1805



(in reply to Joe D.)
Post #: 131
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/8/2017 2:30:23 PM   
warspite1


Posts: 41353
Joined: 2/2/2008
From: England
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Joe D.


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1


quote:

ORIGINAL: Joe D.


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

I think there are a number of issues here, not least of which is the fact that this is modern day politics so may see the thread locked. Rather than that, I will simply delete this post if it is considered out of bounds.

Let me just make absolutely clear, in discussing this I am simply seeking to understand your point. I, like you I’m sure, have no wish to express any support, favour or anything else positive to the perpetrators of genocide – whoever they are. I seek to make no judgement on any of the countries involved – BUT SEEK ONLY AN UNDERSTANDING OF THE LEGAL ISSUES so I can marry them with the events of June 1914.

Firstly I am not a lawyer. Trying to read through the case itself and the legal arguments is not easy – and of course it’s even less easy trying to match the case, international law – and what happened - with the events leading up to and following the assassination of the Franz Ferdinand.

The crux of this is: can you explain the subtle (or perhaps not so subtle) difference between the two statements below.

quote:

The Hague-based ICJ found……….there was not enough evidence to suggest Party A was directly responsible [for the crime against Party C].

quote:

But it did find Party A, which politically and militarily backed Party B, had breached international law....


I am a simple man and these two comments (in the absence of understanding the legal detail) don’t seem to follow. What international law did Party A breach even though they were not held to be directly responsible? Please no personal thoughts here, I just want to know legally what they were talking about and so why you believe this is relevant to the argument about 1914.

There are then a number of questions that stem from this, perhaps the first and foremost being what relevant international laws were in place in 1914? I suspect the one you mention was not. Was Serbia guilty of breaking any international law? Bringing up a recent case is all well and good but does it have relevance to 1914? Given the known stance of AH in the years preceding 1914 (see post 119), would AH have given a fig anyway?….

Finally, can you just confirm your thoughts on who started WWI? I know at the outset you said you thought it was Serbian intrigue that started the war (and Germany picked up the bill) and that the Alliance system roped everyone in. Are you saying that it was essentially Serbia’s fault entirely? I just want to be clear.



Many senior military officers now have degrees in international law. My niece is a lawyer, but specializes in environmental law; I'm just a journalist, but murder by assassination or any other means that crosses national boundaries is by definition an international crime, and as I previously posted: "the fact that Bosnia could take Serbia to court over war crimes certainly proves states are responsible for the actions of their own military, even rogue paramilitary units."

warspite1

But do you know the answers to the various questions I raised? I assumed you understood the legal aspect, which is why you were quoting the case. If not (and frankly I don't blame you ) then this statement is proof of nothing - and I don't see how you can accuse a state of breaking a law that (as far as I know) didn't exist at the time of wrongdoing.



You need to consult someone with a degree in international law, but murder by any means, e.g., assassination, is a wrongdoing that goes back to Cain. The modern crime of genocide was just an example that one nation could sue another, namely Serbia.

warspite1

No I don't have to because I am not quoting some legal action for which I don't understand its legal basis, the legal arguments or how it affects action taken in 1914.

You are, but you are guessing. You cannot tell me how the two main statements join together - and without knowing that you cannot possibly understand if the conclusions you are drawing are correct let alone can be compared with the position in 1914. You cannot tell me what the legal position was in 1914 either and have now resorted to telling me that murder is wrong and it said so in the bible. Well yes, but that does not mean the Serbian state is responsible for the assassination does it?



< Message edited by warspite1 -- 9/8/2017 2:34:10 PM >


_____________________________

England expects that every man will do his duty. Horatio Nelson October 1805



(in reply to Joe D.)
Post #: 132
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/8/2017 4:52:54 PM   
Joe D.


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quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

quote:

ORIGINAL: Joe D.


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1


quote:

ORIGINAL: Joe D.


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

I think there are a number of issues here, not least of which is the fact that this is modern day politics so may see the thread locked. Rather than that, I will simply delete this post if it is considered out of bounds.

Let me just make absolutely clear, in discussing this I am simply seeking to understand your point. I, like you I’m sure, have no wish to express any support, favour or anything else positive to the perpetrators of genocide – whoever they are. I seek to make no judgement on any of the countries involved – BUT SEEK ONLY AN UNDERSTANDING OF THE LEGAL ISSUES so I can marry them with the events of June 1914.

Firstly I am not a lawyer. Trying to read through the case itself and the legal arguments is not easy – and of course it’s even less easy trying to match the case, international law – and what happened - with the events leading up to and following the assassination of the Franz Ferdinand.

The crux of this is: can you explain the subtle (or perhaps not so subtle) difference between the two statements below.

quote:

The Hague-based ICJ found……….there was not enough evidence to suggest Party A was directly responsible [for the crime against Party C].

quote:

But it did find Party A, which politically and militarily backed Party B, had breached international law....


I am a simple man and these two comments (in the absence of understanding the legal detail) don’t seem to follow. What international law did Party A breach even though they were not held to be directly responsible? Please no personal thoughts here, I just want to know legally what they were talking about and so why you believe this is relevant to the argument about 1914.

There are then a number of questions that stem from this, perhaps the first and foremost being what relevant international laws were in place in 1914? I suspect the one you mention was not. Was Serbia guilty of breaking any international law? Bringing up a recent case is all well and good but does it have relevance to 1914? Given the known stance of AH in the years preceding 1914 (see post 119), would AH have given a fig anyway?….

Finally, can you just confirm your thoughts on who started WWI? I know at the outset you said you thought it was Serbian intrigue that started the war (and Germany picked up the bill) and that the Alliance system roped everyone in. Are you saying that it was essentially Serbia’s fault entirely? I just want to be clear.



Many senior military officers now have degrees in international law. My niece is a lawyer, but specializes in environmental law; I'm just a journalist, but murder by assassination or any other means that crosses national boundaries is by definition an international crime, and as I previously posted: "the fact that Bosnia could take Serbia to court over war crimes certainly proves states are responsible for the actions of their own military, even rogue paramilitary units."

warspite1

But do you know the answers to the various questions I raised? I assumed you understood the legal aspect, which is why you were quoting the case. If not (and frankly I don't blame you ) then this statement is proof of nothing - and I don't see how you can accuse a state of breaking a law that (as far as I know) didn't exist at the time of wrongdoing.



You need to consult someone with a degree in international law, but murder by any means, e.g., assassination, is a wrongdoing that goes back to Cain. The modern crime of genocide was just an example that one nation could sue another, namely Serbia.

warspite1

No I don't have to because I am not quoting some legal action for which I don't understand its legal basis, the legal arguments or how it affects action taken in 1914.

You are, but you are guessing. You cannot tell me how the two main statements join together - and without knowing that you cannot possibly understand if the conclusions you are drawing are correct let alone can be compared with the position in 1914. You cannot tell me what the legal position was in 1914 either and have now resorted to telling me that murder is wrong and it said so in the bible. Well yes, but that does not mean the Serbian state is responsible for the assassination does it?



I am not guessing that the government of Serbia was sued by Bosnia for international war crimes, or that a state-sponsored Serbian assassination plot that crossed national boundaries into AH was legally any different.

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(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 133
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/8/2017 5:05:23 PM   
Joe D.


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quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

quote:

ORIGINAL: Joe D.

It can't be Serbia's fault entirely if other nations were backing the two original belligerents. Serbia simply triggered Europe's dominoes.

warspite1

Well that makes for a very bleak outlook for the world doesn't it? What you are saying is that if an event of a certain magnitude happens, then people - world leaders, politicians, the military - do not think, the Germans, the Russians, the French etc didn't think they simply acted out their moves according to alliances - formal or informal....


I'm sure each state thought about what their respective allies would think if they didn't fulfill their obligations and that whatever happened it would all be over by Christmas.


_____________________________

Stratford, Connecticut, U.S.A.

"The Angel of Okinawa"

Home of the Chance-Vought Corsair, F4U
The best fighter-bomber of World War II

(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 134
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/8/2017 5:12:44 PM   
warspite1


Posts: 41353
Joined: 2/2/2008
From: England
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quote:

ORIGINAL: Joe D.


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

quote:

ORIGINAL: Joe D.

It can't be Serbia's fault entirely if other nations were backing the two original belligerents. Serbia simply triggered Europe's dominoes.

warspite1

Well that makes for a very bleak outlook for the world doesn't it? What you are saying is that if an event of a certain magnitude happens, then people - world leaders, politicians, the military - do not think, the Germans, the Russians, the French etc didn't think they simply acted out their moves according to alliances - formal or informal....


I'm sure each state thought about what their respective allies would think if they didn't fulfill their obligations and that whatever happened it would all be over by Christmas.

warspite1

Except as I've said there was no obligation that had to be fulfilled by Germany (the blank cheque) to AH or Russia to Serbia or the UK to France (apart from guarding the channel ports).


< Message edited by warspite1 -- 9/8/2017 5:32:37 PM >


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(in reply to Joe D.)
Post #: 135
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/8/2017 5:24:48 PM   
warspite1


Posts: 41353
Joined: 2/2/2008
From: England
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quote:

ORIGINAL: Joe D.


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

quote:

ORIGINAL: Joe D.


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1


quote:

ORIGINAL: Joe D.


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

I think there are a number of issues here, not least of which is the fact that this is modern day politics so may see the thread locked. Rather than that, I will simply delete this post if it is considered out of bounds.

Let me just make absolutely clear, in discussing this I am simply seeking to understand your point. I, like you I’m sure, have no wish to express any support, favour or anything else positive to the perpetrators of genocide – whoever they are. I seek to make no judgement on any of the countries involved – BUT SEEK ONLY AN UNDERSTANDING OF THE LEGAL ISSUES so I can marry them with the events of June 1914.

Firstly I am not a lawyer. Trying to read through the case itself and the legal arguments is not easy – and of course it’s even less easy trying to match the case, international law – and what happened - with the events leading up to and following the assassination of the Franz Ferdinand.

The crux of this is: can you explain the subtle (or perhaps not so subtle) difference between the two statements below.

quote:

The Hague-based ICJ found……….there was not enough evidence to suggest Party A was directly responsible [for the crime against Party C].

quote:

But it did find Party A, which politically and militarily backed Party B, had breached international law....


I am a simple man and these two comments (in the absence of understanding the legal detail) don’t seem to follow. What international law did Party A breach even though they were not held to be directly responsible? Please no personal thoughts here, I just want to know legally what they were talking about and so why you believe this is relevant to the argument about 1914.

There are then a number of questions that stem from this, perhaps the first and foremost being what relevant international laws were in place in 1914? I suspect the one you mention was not. Was Serbia guilty of breaking any international law? Bringing up a recent case is all well and good but does it have relevance to 1914? Given the known stance of AH in the years preceding 1914 (see post 119), would AH have given a fig anyway?….

Finally, can you just confirm your thoughts on who started WWI? I know at the outset you said you thought it was Serbian intrigue that started the war (and Germany picked up the bill) and that the Alliance system roped everyone in. Are you saying that it was essentially Serbia’s fault entirely? I just want to be clear.



Many senior military officers now have degrees in international law. My niece is a lawyer, but specializes in environmental law; I'm just a journalist, but murder by assassination or any other means that crosses national boundaries is by definition an international crime, and as I previously posted: "the fact that Bosnia could take Serbia to court over war crimes certainly proves states are responsible for the actions of their own military, even rogue paramilitary units."

warspite1

But do you know the answers to the various questions I raised? I assumed you understood the legal aspect, which is why you were quoting the case. If not (and frankly I don't blame you ) then this statement is proof of nothing - and I don't see how you can accuse a state of breaking a law that (as far as I know) didn't exist at the time of wrongdoing.



You need to consult someone with a degree in international law, but murder by any means, e.g., assassination, is a wrongdoing that goes back to Cain. The modern crime of genocide was just an example that one nation could sue another, namely Serbia.

warspite1

No I don't have to because I am not quoting some legal action for which I don't understand its legal basis, the legal arguments or how it affects action taken in 1914.

You are, but you are guessing. You cannot tell me how the two main statements join together - and without knowing that you cannot possibly understand if the conclusions you are drawing are correct let alone can be compared with the position in 1914. You cannot tell me what the legal position was in 1914 either and have now resorted to telling me that murder is wrong and it said so in the bible. Well yes, but that does not mean the Serbian state is responsible for the assassination does it?



I am not guessing that the government of Serbia was sued by Bosnia for international war crimes, or that a state-sponsored Serbian assassination plot that crossed national boundaries into AH was legally any different.
warspite1

Okay lets leave the legal question.

The first point because I can't keep trying to explain that the two sentences that you quoted don't follow and you can't tell me why i.e. you can't support your own use of this argument because you don't understand the legals.

You must know that the law is the law. Either a law existed in 1914 or it didn't - and you won't tell me which one applied if it did.

We are in a situation where two non-lawyers are discussing a complex legal issue that neither of us are qualified to comment upon. If neither of us are qualified to comment with certainty then this point should be discounted.




_____________________________

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(in reply to Joe D.)
Post #: 136
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/8/2017 5:36:05 PM   
Orm


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quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1


Except as I've said there was no obligation that had to be fulfilled by Germany (the blank cheque) to AH or Russia to Serbia or the UK to France.


I thought that Germany was allied with AH. There might have been loopholes to get Germany out of formal obligations but Germany surely had a moral obligation to AH after the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria.

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(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 137
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/8/2017 5:44:12 PM   
warspite1


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Orm


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1


Except as I've said there was no obligation that had to be fulfilled by Germany (the blank cheque) to AH or Russia to Serbia or the UK to France.


I thought that Germany was allied with AH. There might have been loopholes to get Germany out of formal obligations but Germany surely had a moral obligation to AH after the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria.
warspite1

I don't see how Germany could have a moral obligation that involved supporting an attack on a minor country that at that time was not proven to have sanctioned the assassination - an attack that they knew (well before AH launched the attack, even if they didn't realise immediately) would lead to a wider European conflagration. I don't see why that moral obligation extended to refusing the British proposal of a conference to sort out the problem.


_____________________________

England expects that every man will do his duty. Horatio Nelson October 1805



(in reply to Orm)
Post #: 138
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/8/2017 5:47:12 PM   
Orm


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From: Sweden
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quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1


quote:

ORIGINAL: Orm


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1


Except as I've said there was no obligation that had to be fulfilled by Germany (the blank cheque) to AH or Russia to Serbia or the UK to France.


I thought that Germany was allied with AH. There might have been loopholes to get Germany out of formal obligations but Germany surely had a moral obligation to AH after the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria.
warspite1

I don't see how Germany could have a moral obligation that involved supporting an attack on a minor country that at that time was not proven to have sanctioned the assassination - an attack that they knew (well before AH launched the attack, even if they didn't realise immediately) would lead to a wider European conflagration. I don't see why that moral obligation extended to refusing the British proposal of a conference to sort out the problem.


Germany didn't support the attack on Serbia. They supported the AH defence against Russia.

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Have a bit more patience with newbies. Of course some of them act dumb -- they're often students, for heaven's sake. - Terry Pratchett

(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 139
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/8/2017 5:51:59 PM   
warspite1


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From: England
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quote:

ORIGINAL: Orm


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1


quote:

ORIGINAL: Orm


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1


Except as I've said there was no obligation that had to be fulfilled by Germany (the blank cheque) to AH or Russia to Serbia or the UK to France.


I thought that Germany was allied with AH. There might have been loopholes to get Germany out of formal obligations but Germany surely had a moral obligation to AH after the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria.
warspite1

I don't see how Germany could have a moral obligation that involved supporting an attack on a minor country that at that time was not proven to have sanctioned the assassination - an attack that they knew (well before AH launched the attack, even if they didn't realise immediately) would lead to a wider European conflagration. I don't see why that moral obligation extended to refusing the British proposal of a conference to sort out the problem.


Germany didn't support the attack on Serbia. They supported the AH defence against Russia.
warspite1

That is not true. The Germans told the Austrians in no uncertain terms (hence the blank cheque) that they supported Austria in whatever she chose to do. And in fact the Kaiser's basis for giving that order was that the Austrians moved quickly before the Russians had time to act.

Problem was that when Wilhelm came back from his soujorn in the Baltic or wherever it was, the Austrians had still not attacked and Russia were by then all agitated - just what Wilhelm wanted to avoid. BUT importantly he didn't tell the Austrians the blank cheque was now cancelled....


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England expects that every man will do his duty. Horatio Nelson October 1805



(in reply to Orm)
Post #: 140
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/8/2017 6:00:36 PM   
Orm


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Sorry, I might be a bit slow. Are you saying that Germany went to war with Serbia alongside AH?

I've always thought that the "blank cheque" was that Germany promised to support AH against Russia regardless of what AH did with the Serbian situation.

< Message edited by Orm -- 9/8/2017 6:01:05 PM >


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Have a bit more patience with newbies. Of course some of them act dumb -- they're often students, for heaven's sake. - Terry Pratchett

(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 141
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/8/2017 6:07:37 PM   
warspite1


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Orm

Sorry, I might be a bit slow. Are you saying that Germany went to war with Serbia alongside AH?

I've always thought that the "blank cheque" was that Germany promised to support AH against Russia regardless of what AH did with the Serbian situation.
warspite1

No. I guess that is where the word support can have different meanings. Germany did not go to war with AH against Serbia. They gave the required support in terms of the blank cheque; that Whatever action AH takes, Germany will support them. As said, in giving this Wilhelm expected AH would move immediately - no one on the general staff appeared to have disabused him of this notion....


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(in reply to Orm)
Post #: 142
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/8/2017 7:06:25 PM   
Joe D.


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quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

quote:

ORIGINAL: Joe D.


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

quote:

ORIGINAL: Joe D.

It can't be Serbia's fault entirely if other nations were backing the two original belligerents. Serbia simply triggered Europe's dominoes.

warspite1

Well that makes for a very bleak outlook for the world doesn't it? What you are saying is that if an event of a certain magnitude happens, then people - world leaders, politicians, the military - do not think, the Germans, the Russians, the French etc didn't think they simply acted out their moves according to alliances - formal or informal....


I'm sure each state thought about what their respective allies would think if they didn't fulfill their obligations and that whatever happened it would all be over by Christmas.

warspite1

Except as I've said there was no obligation that had to be fulfilled by Germany (the blank cheque) to AH or Russia to Serbia or the UK to France (apart from guarding the channel ports).



Recall that the secret Sykes-Picot accord at the end of the war was just a "gentlemen's agreement" sent by letter.

http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/the-sykes-picot-agreement-1916

_____________________________

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"The Angel of Okinawa"

Home of the Chance-Vought Corsair, F4U
The best fighter-bomber of World War II

(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 143
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/8/2017 7:16:02 PM   
warspite1


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Joe D.


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

quote:

ORIGINAL: Joe D.


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

quote:

ORIGINAL: Joe D.

It can't be Serbia's fault entirely if other nations were backing the two original belligerents. Serbia simply triggered Europe's dominoes.

warspite1

Well that makes for a very bleak outlook for the world doesn't it? What you are saying is that if an event of a certain magnitude happens, then people - world leaders, politicians, the military - do not think, the Germans, the Russians, the French etc didn't think they simply acted out their moves according to alliances - formal or informal....


I'm sure each state thought about what their respective allies would think if they didn't fulfill their obligations and that whatever happened it would all be over by Christmas.

warspite1

Except as I've said there was no obligation that had to be fulfilled by Germany (the blank cheque) to AH or Russia to Serbia or the UK to France (apart from guarding the channel ports).



Recall that the secret Sykes-Picot accord at the end of the war was just a "gentlemen's agreement" sent by letter.

http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/the-sykes-picot-agreement-1916
warspite1

Sorry what has this agreement, formulated during World War I about the carving up of the Near East got to do with the subject at hand please?


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(in reply to Joe D.)
Post #: 144
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/8/2017 7:27:48 PM   
warspite1


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quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1


quote:

ORIGINAL: Joe D.


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

quote:

ORIGINAL: Joe D.


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

quote:

ORIGINAL: Joe D.

It can't be Serbia's fault entirely if other nations were backing the two original belligerents. Serbia simply triggered Europe's dominoes.

warspite1

Well that makes for a very bleak outlook for the world doesn't it? What you are saying is that if an event of a certain magnitude happens, then people - world leaders, politicians, the military - do not think, the Germans, the Russians, the French etc didn't think they simply acted out their moves according to alliances - formal or informal....


I'm sure each state thought about what their respective allies would think if they didn't fulfill their obligations and that whatever happened it would all be over by Christmas.

warspite1

Except as I've said there was no obligation that had to be fulfilled by Germany (the blank cheque) to AH or Russia to Serbia or the UK to France (apart from guarding the channel ports).



Recall that the secret Sykes-Picot accord at the end of the war was just a "gentlemen's agreement" sent by letter.

http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/the-sykes-picot-agreement-1916
warspite1

Sorry what has this agreement, formulated during World War I about the carving up of the Near East got to do with the subject at hand please?

warspite1

Re my answer (and question) above are you setting some kind of store by the fact it was a 'Gentlemen's Agreement'? I hope not but if so I think you should do some reading on the outcome of this 'agreement'. I recommend Lawrence in Arabia (Anderson).


< Message edited by warspite1 -- 9/8/2017 7:28:25 PM >


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(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 145
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/8/2017 7:28:20 PM   
Aurelian

 

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I think Austria bears a larger share than Serbia. Much larger. Why? Because after A-H sent their ultimatum to Serbia, Serbia's response was almost entirely placatory. Certainly the Kaiser thought so. "Now that Serbia has given in, all grounds for war have disappeared." (That same day, A-H declared war.) But A-H wasn't satisfied. She was determined to go to war. A-H felt threatened by Serbian ambitions in the Balkans as it was.

And what happened in 1993 has *nothing* to do with 1914.


http://firstworldwar.com/origins/causes.htm may be worth a read.

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(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 146
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/8/2017 7:30:00 PM   
warspite1


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Aurelian

I think Austria bears a larger share than Serbia. Much larger. Why? Because after A-H sent their ultimatum to Serbia, Serbia's response was almost entirely placatory. Certainly the Kaiser thought so. "Now that Serbia has given in, all grounds for war have disappeared." (That same day, A-H declared war.) But A-H wasn't satisfied. She was determined to go to war. A-H felt threatened by Serbian ambitions in the Balkans as it was.

And what happened in 1993 has *nothing* to do with 1914.


http://firstworldwar.com/origins/causes.htm may be worth a read.
warspite1

Indeed and the key here is that AH could take that stance ONLY because of the blank cheque.


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(in reply to Aurelian)
Post #: 147
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/8/2017 7:36:40 PM   
Jagdtiger14


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This is already a long thread, so perhaps I am re-hashing here, but there are some facts I would like to present/remind:

1. The Serbian Prime Minister Pasic knew of the assignation beforehand and assisted it.
2. Two days after the assassination Germany and A-H advised Serbia to open an investigation, Serbian government refused.
3. After that refusal: Take a look at the ultimatum. An innocent government in my opinion would have no problem accepting every one of those points. Germany/A-H knew it would not be accepted by that particular belligerent military government, and also considering previous actions/statements such as #2 above (not because the ultimatum was unjustifiable). Serbia had 48 hours to accept it...the penalty if they did not?: recalling the Ambassador.
4. Prior to the end of the 48 hours, Russia sends a telegram of support to Serbia (blank check anyone?), Serbia mobilizes its army (in those days mobilization of the military was considered akin to a declaration of war). After Serbia rejects the vast majority of the ultimatum...A-H response? Breaking of diplomatic relations.
5. 24 hours later recently mobilized Serbian troops are seen crossing the Danube into the A-H side of the river and skirmish with A-H troops.
6. A-H then declared war and mobilized its army.
7. The Franco-Russo secret treaty of 1892 was revealed, in which France and Russia mobilized their military.

If anyone disputes facts above, I can provide sourcing.

If Germany gets the majority of the blame by some here because of its "blank check" to A-H, then why not Russia equally so for its "blank check" to Serbia? Once again I turn attention to the French with its desire for conflict with Germany under the right circumstances for revenge over a war they started and lost...and on top of that having a SECRET treaty with Russia that if it were known by Germany and A-H might have altered their calculations.


< Message edited by Jagdtiger14 -- 9/8/2017 7:39:59 PM >


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(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 148
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/8/2017 8:01:22 PM   
warspite1


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Jagdtiger14

This is already a long thread, so perhaps I am re-hashing here, but there are some facts I would like to present/remind:

1. The Serbian Prime Minister Pasic knew of the assignation beforehand and assisted it.
2. Two days after the assassination Germany and A-H advised Serbia to open an investigation, Serbian government refused.
3. After that refusal: Take a look at the ultimatum. An innocent government in my opinion would have no problem accepting every one of those points. Germany/A-H knew it would not be accepted by that particular belligerent military government, and also considering previous actions/statements such as #2 above (not because the ultimatum was unjustifiable). Serbia had 48 hours to accept it...the penalty if they did not?: recalling the Ambassador.
4. Prior to the end of the 48 hours, Russia sends a telegram of support to Serbia (blank check anyone?), Serbia mobilizes its army (in those days mobilization of the military was considered akin to a declaration of war). After Serbia rejects the vast majority of the ultimatum...A-H response? Breaking of diplomatic relations.
5. 24 hours later recently mobilized Serbian troops are seen crossing the Danube into the A-H side of the river and skirmish with A-H troops.
6. A-H then declared war and mobilized its army.
7. The Franco-Russo secret treaty of 1892 was revealed, in which France and Russia mobilized their military.

If anyone disputes facts above, I can provide sourcing.

If Germany gets the majority of the blame by some here because of its "blank check" to A-H, then why not Russia equally so for its "blank check" to Serbia? Once again I turn attention to the French with its desire for conflict with Germany under the right circumstances for revenge over a war they started and lost...and on top of that having a SECRET treaty with Russia that if it were known by Germany and A-H might have altered their calculations.

warspite1

Yes please, I would be grateful if you could provide the sources for each point. Thank-you.


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(in reply to Jagdtiger14)
Post #: 149
RE: Who caused WW1 - revisited - 9/8/2017 9:39:34 PM   
Jagdtiger14


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quote:

warspite1 Yes please, I would be grateful if you could provide the sources for each point. Thank-you.





Points 1-7:

1. - Dedijer, Vladamir (1966) The Road to Sarajevo, p. 298 and p. 388-389
- Owings, W.A. Dolph. (1984) The Sarajevo Trial, p. 61-64
- Albertini, Luigi (1953) Origins of the war of 1914, p. 90 and p. 99

2. Albertini, Luigi (1953) Origins of the war of 1914, p. 273
3. No need to source since you can find it on Wikipedia, but I will be happy to outline it point for point if need be.
4. Albertini, Luigi (1953) Origins of the war of 1914, p. 373
5. Albertini, Luigi (1953) Origins of the war of 1914, p. 461-462; p. 465
6. No need to source since the fact and date of A-H mobilization is common knowledge. I put this on the list to show they mobilized AFTER the Serbs and Serb action on the Danube.
7. No need to source since you can find the details easily on Wikipedia.

I will also add another point:
8. Russia was aware of the plot prior to June 14th. The Russian Military Attache promised Russia's protection from A-H if Serbia's intel op became exposed and that Russia had funded the assassination. The assistant attache admitted the involvement of his office and then fell silent on the subject.
- Trydar-Burzinski, louis (1926) Le Crepuscule d'une Autocratie p. 128
- De Schelking, Eugene (1918) Recollections of a Russian Diplomat, the suicide of Monarchies p.194-195



_____________________________

Conflict with the unexpected: two qualities are indispensable; first, an intellect which, even in the midst of this obscurity, is not without some traces of inner light which lead to the truth; second, the courage to follow this faint light. KvC

(in reply to warspite1)
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