Looking back at the years of fury and carnage, Colonel Angelo Gatti,
staff officer of the Italian Army (Austrian front), wrote in his diary:
“This whole war has been a pile of lies. We came into war because a few
men in authority, the dreamers, flung us into it.”
No, Gatti, caro mio, those few men are not dreamers; they are schemers.
They perch above us. See how their armament contracts are turned into
private fortunes—while the young men are turned into dust: more blood,
more money; good for business this war.
It is the rich old men, i pauci, “the few,” as Cicero called
the Senate oligarchs whom he faithfully served in ancient Rome. It is
the few, who together constitute a bloc of industrialists and landlords,
who think war will bring bigger markets abroad and civic discipline at
home. One of i pauci in 1914 saw war as a way of promoting
compliance and obedience on the labor front and—as he himself said—war
“would permit the hierarchal reorganization of class relations.”
Just awhile ago the heresies of Karl Marx were spreading among
Europe’s lower ranks. The proletariats of each country, growing in
numbers and strength, are made to wage war against each other. What
better way to confine and misdirect them than with the swirl of mutual
destruction. Meanwhile, the nations blame each other for the war.
Then there are the generals and other militarists who started
plotting this war as early as 1906, eight years before the first shots
were fired. War for them means glory, medals, promotions, financial
rewards, inside favors, and dining with ministers, bankers, and
diplomats: the whole prosperity of death. When the war finally comes, it
is greeted with quiet satisfaction by the generals.
But the young men are ripped by waves of machine-gun bullets or blown
apart by exploding shells. War comes with gas attacks and sniper fire,
grenades and artillery barrages, the roar of a great inferno and the
sickening smell of rotting corpses. Torn bodies hang sadly on the barbed
wire, and trench rats try to eat away at us, even while we are still
alive.
Farewell, my loving hearts at home, those who send us their precious
tears wrapped in crumpled letters. And farewell my comrades. When the
people’s wisdom fails, moguls and monarchs prevail and there seems to be
no way out.
Fools dance and the pit sinks deeper as if bottomless. No one can see
the sky, or hear the music, or deflect the swarms of lies that cloud
our minds like the countless lice that torture our flesh. Crusted with
blood and filth, regiments of lost souls drag themselves to the devil’s
pit. “Lasciate ogne speranza, voi ch’entrate.” (Abandon all hope, ye who enter.)
Meanwhile from above the Vatican wall, the pope himself begs the
world leaders to put an end to hostilities “lest there be no young men
left alive in Europe.” But the war industry pays him no heed.
Finally the casualties are more than we can bear. There are mutinies
in the French trenches! Agitators in the Czar’s army cry out for “Peace,
Land, and Bread”! At home, our families grow bitter. There comes a
breaking point as the oligarchs seem to be losing their grip.
At last the guns are mute in the morning air. A strange almost pious
silence takes over. The fog and rain seem to wash our wounds and cool
our fever. “Still alive,” the sergeant grins, “still alive.” He cups a
cigarette in his hand. “Stack those rifles, you lazy bastards.” He grins
again, two teeth missing. Never did his ugly face look so good as on
this day in November 1918. Armistice comes like a quiet rapture.
A big piece of the encrusted aristocratic world breaks off. The
Romanovs, Czar and family, are all executed in 1918 in Revolutionary
Russia. That same year, the House of Hohenzollern collapses as Kaiser
Wilhelm II flees Germany. Also in 1918, the Ottoman empire is shattered.
And on Armistice Day, November 11, 1918, at 11:00 a.m.—the eleventh
hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month—we mark the end of the
war and with it the dissolution of the Habsburg dynasty.
Four indestructible monarchies: Russian, German, Turkish, and
Austro-Hungarian, four great empires, each with millions of bayonets and
cannon at the ready, now twisting in the dim shadows of history.
Will our children ever forgive us for our dismal confusion? Will they ever understand what we went through? Will we?
By 1918, four aristocratic autocracies fade away, leaving so many
victims mangled in their wake, and so many bereaved crying through the
night.
Back in the trenches, the agitators among us prove right. The
mutinous Reds standing before the firing squad last year were right.
Their truths must not be buried with them. Why are impoverished workers
and peasants killing other impoverished workers and peasants? Now we
know that our real foe is not in the weave of trenches; not at Ypres,
nor at the Somme, or Verdun or Caporetto. Closer to home, closer to the
deceptive peace that follows a deceptive war.
Now comes a different conflict. We have enemies at home: the schemers
who trade our blood for sacks of gold, who make the world safe for
hypocrisy, safe for themselves, readying themselves for the next
“humanitarian war.” See how sleek and self-satisfied they look, riding
our backs, distracting our minds, filling us with fright about wicked
foes. Important things keep happening, but not enough to finish them
off. Not yet enough.
from here
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