ID | 133494 |
Title Proper | Why 1914 still matters |
Language | ENG |
Author | Friedman, Norman |
Publication | 2014. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Imagine that your closest trading partner is also your most threatening potential enemy. Imagine, too, that this partner is building a large navy specifically targeted at yours, hence at the overseas trade vital to you. Does that sound like the current U.S. situation with respect to China? It was certainly the British situation relative to Germany a century ago, on the eve of World War I. History never repeats, but it is often instructive to look at the mistakes of the past. The worse the mistakes, the more instructive. No one looking at the outbreak and then the course of World War I can see it as anything but a huge mistake. Hopefully we can do better. |
`In' analytical Note | US Naval Institute Proceedings Vol.140, No.8; Aug.2014: p.62-69 |
Journal Source | US Naval Institute Proceedings Vol.140, No.8; Aug.2014: p.62-69 |
Key Words | World War I ; Warfare Strategy ; Great War ; Western Front ; German Insurgencies ; Coalition Partnership ; Rising Conflict ; Herbert Asquith ; Economic Weapons ; United States ; Winston Churchill ; NATO |