War Movies Recognizing Veterans for Veteran’s Day

Veteran’s Day: Best War Movies

Veteran’s Day is tomorrow and most all Americans will agree that our vets deserve to be remembered for the sacrifice they have made to preserve our freedom. Even if you didn’t serve, you probably know someone who has, including in your own family. You’ll certainly want to thank them for their service.

Hollywood has it own way honoring Vets, and that’s the War Movie. These can glorify the Vet in war, or point out the cost and folly of war, or advocate against war, or encourage it, for that matter. Whatever the purpose of the movie, the one purpose is always to entertain. So, if you are looking for a war movie as a way of recognizing Veteran’s Day, look no further than this list of outstanding movies presented in no particular order.

The Deer Hunter (1978): Vietnam War.

Saving Private Ryan (1998): WWII

Apocalypse Now (1979): Vietnam War

The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957): WWII

Patton (1970): WWII

Paths of Glory (1957): WWI

Full Metal Jacket (1987): Vietnam War

Black Hawk Down (2001): Mogadishu

Inglourious Basterds (2009): WWII (revisionist fiction)

1917 (2019): WWI

Platoon (1986): Vietnam War

The Thin Red Line (1998): WWII

w/c

The Biggest Killer in History Could Kill Again

The Great Influenza: The Epic Story of the Deadliest Plague in History

By John M. Barry

Humankind likes to think it is in control and rests comfortable in that thought. When something unknown and uncontrollable strikes, panic ensues. Just that happened when influenza struck the world in 1918, a world already weary of the first total world war, a war that led to a near suspension of democracy in the United States as Woodrow Wilson and his administration prepared to enter the conflict. John Barry not only tells the story of a disease raging rampant across the U.S. and the entire world but how humankind’s own deadly squabbling and compulsion to control, restrict, and distort information contributed to worldwide panic and, probably, millions of unnecessary deaths. His is at once a tale of terror, inspiration, and caution. It’s one that readers should pay particular heed to in light of the demoralizing beating truth and honesty are taking today in American society.

To truly appreciate the 1918 influenza, readers need an understanding of biology, chemistry, public health practices, medical practices, and the political and social milieu of the period. While a lot to ask, what makes Barry’s history so brilliant is how he weaves all these disciplines into the story to the point where you acquire a basic working knowledge of virology and bacteriology, in addition to a greater appreciation of modern medical science.

Barry begins with the state of medical practice and education and scientific research a century before the great influenza attack. Indeed, what a sorry state it was with no standards in sight. Over time, though, and with great skill and insight, dedicated, curious, and exacting people wrought the kind of modern medical world familiar to us today. It arrived just in time to face off with the influenza plague. What will strike you in particular is just how small the research community was, concentrated in a few institutions in the U.S., especially Johns Hopkins and the Rockefeller Institute (now Rockefeller University) and a few men and a woman, among them William Welch, Simon Flexner, Oswald Avery, William Park, Anna Williams, and a handful of others. Little known today, except to those involved in medicine and research, you learn just what giants they were and how they contributed a modern life we take for granted today.

You can’t fathom influenza without understanding something of virology and bacteriology. Barry does an excellent job of explaining and illustrating how viruses and bacteria work and how researchers isolate these organisms and devise methods for combatting them. Concomitant with this knowledge is an understanding of public health policy and techniques, which Barry threads throughout the story.

In many ways, the early part of the 20th century proved a perfect breeding ground and killing field for influenza as the Great War caused great concentrations of soldiers in camps, ports, ships, and battlefields in less than healthful conditions. As readers will learn, the times accounted for an accelerated dissemination of the influenza virus and its mutations. What also contributed to the disease, especially its capacity to strike raw terror into the hearts of people so overpowering and crippling that sister would not help sister or brother brother, is that the American government, from Washington straight down to local districts, lied to the American people about the severity and cause of the health crisis, and enlisted the media of the day to participate, all in the name of patriotism and the drive to focus and marshal resources on entering and fighting the Great War. In other words, something we find ourselves confronted with again, manipulation of our free press. Along with from 50 to 100 million deaths, two other casualties of the Great Influenza were Truth and Trust.

If you have never read this book, there’s never been a better or more important to change that. Needless to say, highly recommended. w/c

What Day Is Today?

Veterans Day, Armistice Day, Remembrance Day

It Depends on Where You Live

On this day, November 11, in the year 1919, was observed the first Armistice Day on the grounds of Buckingham Palace. Not only does the date signify the day hostilities ceased on the Western Front, it also signifies the hour, eleven in the morning.

Armistice Day was the original designation for the day, until the conclusion of World War II. Then, to incorporate honoring those who fought in the greatest world war, nation’s adopted more inclusive names. In the United States, we observe Veterans Day (originally All Veterans Day); in the U.K. and Commonwealth Countries, it’s Remembrance Day. In France, Belgium, and Serbia, it remains Armistice Day.

While the purpose is to remember those who have died in war, we might also take a moment to think of it as a reason to avoid war. w/c

Tumultuous Times … All the Time

The Proud Tower: A Portrait of the World Before the War, 1890-1914

Barbara Tuchman

Don’t you find it true that, especially these days, we live within our times? Perhaps it’s because history isn’t a subject we study because, let’s face it, it won’t get you a job, unless you plan to be a college prof. So, we might come to believe that the tumult of today is somehow unique. While it certainly impacts us greatly, either physically or emotionally, today’s brand of riotous behavior is by no means unique. Groups running around inflicting pain and suffering on others in the name of a cause have rampaged throughout human history. Butchering people, terrorizing people with heinous acts, blowing up buildings and people, none are anything new in human history. Today, we call these people terrorists. In another era not very long ago, they were known as anarchists or revolutionaries.

Well, you might offer, true enough; however, for complexity the old days don’t compare to our situation. And definitely people with big issues didn’t have the same kind of destructive power within easy reach.

Today, not as comfort, but for perspective and insight, a bit of historical reading might be helpful. There’s no better author to read than Barbara Tuchman to gain this and era to read about than that running up to The Great War, The War to End All Wars, the war that traumatized humankind like no other before it: World War I.

As Tuchman illustrates, few things are as they appear on the surface, and this surely holds true for the late 19th and early 20th centuries known as the Belle Époque. While creative, innovative, and exciting, and relatively peaceful (relative to the earlier part of the 19th century), plenty of problems entangled the people of the times. It’s these that Tuchman explores as the roots that nurtured what might have otherwise been just another in a line of assassinations into the quick blossoming World War I. Of course, you’ll want to read The Proud Tower to discover how such a fantastical age could contribute to such suffering and carnage. But you’ll especially enjoy learning about or refreshing yourself on the famous people of the times and familiar and unfamiliar historical events.

The people are legion. They include English, French, German, and American politicians, military men, writers, musicians, unionists, socialists, revolutionaries, and assassins. Tuchman does an excellent job of sketching a vast cast of figures when they make their appearance at a historical event. Some may strike you as the small fry of history; yet these people illuminate the age and cast light on our own times. For example, as mention earlier, trapped as we are in our own little bit of history, we may succumb to the notion that wild-eyed terrorists like our crop never existed before, or, perhaps, where of a tamer variety. Anarchist terrorism plagued France and Paris during the Belle Époque, as well as the rest of Europe and Russia. After a string of explosions and murders, Emile Henry bombed the popular bourgeois Café Terminus. Already on edge, Parisians became hysterical with fear. “When, at a theatrical performance,” Tuchman writes, “some scenery back stage fell with a clatter, half the audience rushed for the exits screaming, ‘Les Anarchistes! Une bombe!'” Henry explained his choice of the Café Terminus because it was where gathered “‘all those who are satisfied with the established order, all the accomplices and employees of Property and the State, … all that mass of good little bourgeois who make 300 to 500 francs a month, who are more reactionary than their master, who hate the poor and range themselves on the side of the strong.'” When the judge reproached him for endangering innocents, he replied with hauteur, “‘There are no innocent bourgeois.'” It’s one of scores of anecdotes that enlighten the age, and our own times as well.

Tuchman writes about many familiar incidents, none better known than the Dreyfus Affair. Most of us possess a general knowledge of Dreyfus’s persecution. However, it will interest you to know that while prejudice played a role, it wasn’t what got Dreyfus, generally believed to be innocent though a thoroughly unpopular man due to his cool aloofness, tried, convicted, and sent to Devil’s Island. Difficult as it may be to believe, Dreyfus suffered as a result of prideful respect and self-aggrandizement in the ranks of the French army. Tuchman says it all in these few sentences: “It was a club loyal to its membership and cultivating its distinctiveness of which the visible mark was the uniform. Unlike British officers, who never wore uniform off duty, French officers before 1900 never wore anything else. Poorly paid, slowly promoted, drearily garrisoned for long stretches in some provincial town, their recompense was prestige: the honors, immunities and cachet of their caste; in short, the esteem in which they were held…. In the eyes of the people the Army was above politics; it was the nation, it was France, it was the greatness of France.” To protect the Army, the high command, who knew the charges were false and who knew the identity of the actual culprit, covered up the truth until their redoubt of deceit shattered under public pressure. Just as today, people, especially in power, will do anything to protect their privileges. The Dreyfus Affair is even more disheartening in light of the true facts.

And the United States was no unblemished defender of right and justice. Tuchman recounts our colonialist and imperialist aspirations that included the Spanish-American War and our brutal suppression of rebellion in the Philippines, suppression of the very people we purported to be helping. But more compelling are the flotsam of history most of us have forgotten or never knew of, such as the so-called “disappearing quorum.” A tactic employed by the minority party to block voting on matters it did not support (representatives refused to vote—remained silent—though physically present; the rules required a voice vote) until Republican Speaker Thomas Reed ended it. It was an obstructionist tactic you can easily appreciate simply by thinking about our present-day supermajority rule in the Senate. Just as it would be no easy task to end the supermajority rule, it was torture to kill the “disappearing quorum.” However, Thomas Reed, a man of uncommon wit, intelligence, cunning, and tenacity, accomplished the task. How he did it makes for entertaining reading.

If you enjoy and learn from The Proud Tower, you may wish to read other Tuchman histories, among them The Guns of August, A Distant Mirror: The Calamitous 14th Century, and Stilwell and the American Experience in China, 1911–45. w/c

Tomorrow, the Anniversary of the Lusitania Sinking

A Brief Summary and Resources for Deeper Inquiry

Since the beginning of World War I, Germany had been trying to cripple Britain by using submarines to sink war and cargo ships, as well as passenger ships identified as enemy craft or sailing under false flags (that is, British ships flying the flags of neutral nations to gain safe passage).

On April 22, 1915, Germany issued a warning to its embassy in Washington for general distribution stating that Americans should not sail on British vessels. Doing so would put them at risk of attack. Nine days later, on May 1, the German embassy published the warning. It appeared the day the Lusitania set out on its fateful voyage.

On April 30, Captain Walther Schwieger set the submarine U-20 on a course toward the Celtic Sea, the part of the Atlantic south of Saint George Channel, between the southern tips of Ireland and England. His mission was to sink as much enemy tonnage as possible, not specifically the Lusitania.

On May 7, U-20 encountered the Lusitania and sunk it, resulting in 1,198 dead and 761 survivors.

In the aftermath, anti-German riots break out worldwide. However, the sinking did not drive the U.S. into the war. (The U.S. declared war on Germany April 6, 1917. The World War ended on November 11, 1918.)

As with the Titanic (lost on April 14, 1912), the sinking of the Lusitania has generated millions of words about the ship itself, the crew, the passengers, the torpedoing, along with its own list of controversies. Following are resources for those interested in exploring the subject in greater depth.

The Lusitania Resource A history of the event, facts about the ship, biographies of the passengers and crew, primary documents related to the sinking, a gallery of photos, and more. The most in-depth resource on the subject.

“Sinking of the RMS Lusitania” A comprehensive article covering all aspects of the ship, its sinking, and the various controversies surrounding the event.

Dead Wake, by Eric Larson A new history that interweaves the stories of various passengers, crew, and the captain of the German U-20, plus commentary on the controversies. Rendered in Larson’s familiar style.

Room 40: British Naval Intelligence, 1914-1918, by Patrick Beesly On the subject of the Lusitania, Beesly makes the argument that the British government, i.e. Churchill, deliberately put the ship at risk in the hopes of drawing the U.S. into the World War, probably the most controversial of all the controversies.

A Night to Remember, by Walter Lord Just about the best book on the sinking of a great ocean liner, specifically the Titanic. Like no other, Lord manages to delineate the facts while adding real humanity with fascinating biographies and remembrances of survivors. c/w