BeBro - it is one of the ´achievements´ of the Clausewitzian perspective on the self-dynamic nature of war, that it only came to really bear some 80 years after he died. Until then, societies simply didnt have the means to carry war to such a totality. But by WWI, they could mobilize millions in terms of men, billions in terms of credit money and they showed, that the escalation of war, as predicted by Clausewitz, is only limited by what can be done to the opponent. As meaningless or even wrong Clauswitz´ ideas might have seemed before, as much were they proven to be true in the first half of the 20th century. There is just one ethic in war: Victory. If atrocities are not commited, then because they do not seem to contribute to victory, or are even seen as contra-productive to it. Or, because one side gave up, before it came to it. But if two sides are equally (and highly) determined and equally (and very) strong, war will start with the grossest of atrocities right away (like a nuclear holocaust). It´s one thing, to sent millions of your own people out to die on the battlefield or even in the cities at home, but it is completely different thing to explain to their families that they had died in vain and for nothing (but honor - uuhhh) afterwards... rather drop that bomb, lay those mines, kill those prisoners, if needed to avoid that...
(I say this, i think just as Clausewitz, without judging it as morale or immorale - it is simply the way things are)
(I say this, i think just as Clausewitz, without judging it as morale or immorale - it is simply the way things are)
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