The Origins of the Second World War
by Brandon Harnish
by Brandon Harnish
Previously
by Brandon Harnish: The
Nasty Librarian: A Lesson in State Compulsion
Taylor,
A.J.P., The
Origins of the Second World War. New York: Simon & Schuster
Paperbacks, 2005. 278pp.
Alan John Percivale
Taylor was never comfortable with his book The Origins of the
Second World War being regarded as a contribution to historical
revisionism. He was ill at ease with the embrace of Harry Elmer
Barnes and denounced accusations that he himself was a revisionist.
Yet he remained unable to escape the label if only because the aim
of his work so closely resembled the aim of Barnes and others like
him. Historical revisionism is best known for its challenging of
state war propaganda after the smoke clears, and that is precisely
what The Origins does. It rejects the widely held view that
Hitler possessed a great scheme for total war and global dominance,
and instead puts forth a thesis that the German chancellor "exploited
events far more than he followed precise coherent plans." Moreover,
and perhaps most controversial, it challenges the notion that Hitler
is to take total responsibility for the war. This manner of "spreading
the blame" is valuable not only with regards to its historical
accuracy concerning the origins of World War II, but also in the
principle it lays down, in the need for historians to understand
that war is rarely a struggle between good and evil.
Taylor’s revisionism
also deals a critical blow to American nationalism, which rests
heavily on World War II mythology. The goodness of American involvement
in World War II is crucial to the "holy" perception of
American imperialism and of the American state. If the Allies are
to shoulder any blame for the largest bloodletting in world history,
then the clarity of purpose in contemporary American foreign policy
becomes clouded. After all, the American Empire owes its existence
to Allied victory in World War II.
"Powers
will be powers." And perhaps it is telling that Americans are
uneasy with the notion that America is an empire. Churchill displayed
no hesitation when referring to the British Empire. Yet, rarely
does the American political class refer to the United States as
an empire, or anything of the sort. Though Americans have been praised
for their pragmatism, the reality is that Americans are an ideological
people who, especially in terms of diplomacy, demand that the American
state act in a morally virtuous manner. Because a distinction is
rarely drawn between the American state and America as a country
and a people, revisionism which casts either a grim shadow over
American foreign policy, a similar shadow over American allies,
or purports to in some way explain a rationale behind America’s
enemies, is seen as an attack not only on the policies of the American
state, but on the virtue of the American people. Thus, any attempt
to erase the "good versus evil" motif of the "Last
Good War" is met with scorn. If one compounds this reality
with the jingoistic pride associated with World War II, the historian
who treads upon the illusions of the war finds himself in a perilous
and tabooed era of history. Yet Taylor bravely does just that.
The Origins
of the Second World War is a source as indispensable as it is
irrepressible. The fact that it rests as a quintessential piece
of revisionist history is made all the more ironic by the fact that
it comes from the halls of the establishment, from the highest court
of the court historians. Taylor is one of the greats, and his willingness
to risk his academic status in the name of his work only serves
to extol his legacy. Historians, wrote Taylor, must in the end "state
the truth as they see it without worrying whether this shocks or
confirms existing prejudices." And that, in the final analysis,
is the greatest value of The Origins. It is an inexorable
work of history that puts in the dock Allied civic heroes. It spares
no one, and never relents in pursuing its original argument. It
does not seek revision for revision’s sake, but for the sake of
those who lost their lives in the Second World War, a great and
utterly avoidable blunder.
July
1, 2009
Brandon
Harnish [send him mail]
is a student at Huntington University in Huntington, Indiana.
Copyright
© 2009 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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