As I say, I think a proper discussion of John Gill must also include WW1 as well, so imo you cannot derail this thread with itJonathan101 wrote: ↑Sat Feb 09, 2019 6:17 pm I might derail this WW2 thread with a WW1 rant, because I don't believe that war was inevitable, and I definitely don't believe it was just a case of winners writing the history books- the belief that this was a case in fact contributed to the ride of the Nazi's and even afterwards, became a sort spot amongst German historians when they got a hold of WW1 primary sources and concluded that yes, Germany and the Triple Alliance started the war.
There also seems to be some misunderstanding about German war crimes during WW1; lots of people, maybe most people, believe it was all British or Western propaganda, when in reality- although certainly propaganda exaggerated stuff- the initial German push into Belgium involved a range of atrocities against the Belgian people in accordance with the policies of the German High Command of the time: massacre civilians to quickly and ruthlessly crush all resistance.
So even allowing for lurid exaggerations by the British and others, the Germans still murdered thousands and thousands of Belgian civilians, often ordering men and boys in towns they occupied to march out just to be shot, homes were set on fire etc.
And it must be remembered that many of the German soldiers and officers who joined the Nazi party or rose through the ranks of the Wehrmacht by the time WW2 broke out either took part in these atrocities themselves, or (like Hitler) came to Belgium after the fact and didn't care. There was a culture of brutality even in then German army of the First World War that was inherited and exaggerated by the perpetrators of the Second.
Not saying the Western Powers or Russia were all fluffy and innocent, but make no mistake- Germany was still the bad guy of WW1 almost as much as they would be in WW2.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rape_of_Belgium
I'm not saying you are wrong, but my understanding was that the assassination of Archduke Ferdinand was an excuse for war rather than the cause which seems to imply that it was inevitable. No one was particularly eager to negotiate away from war.
I have to say as a Brit, the thing that stings for me the most is the Battle of the Somme, where our men were ordered to WALK into machine gun fire. Its not an official atrocity but should have been. Its called the lost generation for a reason.