MILITARISM
I
To defend or recover freedom men must
be always ready for the appeal to arms. Here
is a principle that has been vindicated through all
history and needs vindication now. But in our
time the question of rightful war has been crossed
by the evil of militarism, and in our assertion of
the principle, that in the last resort freemen must
have recourse to the sword, we find ourselves crossed
by the anti-militarist campaign. We must dispose
of this confusing element before we can come to the
ethics of war. Of the evil of militarism there
can be no question, but a careful study of some anti-militaristic
literature discloses very different motives for the
campaign. I propose to lay some of the motives
bare and let the reader judge whether there may not
be an insidious plot on foot to make a deal between
the big nations to crush the little ones. For
this purpose I will consider two books on the question,
one by Mr. Norman Angell, “The Great Illusion,”
and one by M. Jacques Novikow, “War and Its
Alleged Benefits.” In the work of Mr. Angell
the reader will find the suggestion of the deal, while
in the work of M. Novikow is given a clear and honest
statement of the anti-militarist position, with which
we can all heartily agree. Those of us who would
assert our freedom should understand the right anti-militarist
position, because in its exponents we shall find allies
at many points. But with Mr. Angell’s book
it is otherwise. These points emerge: the
basis of morality is self-interest; the Great Powers
have nothing to gain by destroying one another, they
should agree to police and exploit the territory of
the “backward races”; if the statesmen
take a different view from the financiers, the financiers
can bring pressure to bear on the statesmen by their
international organisation; the capitalist has no
country. Well, our comment is, the patriot has
a country, and when he wakens to the new danger, he
may spoil the capitalist dream, and this book of Mr.
Angell’s may in a sense other than that the
author intended be appropriately named “The Great
Illusion.”
II
The limits of this essay do not admit
of detailed examination of the book named. What
I propose to do is make characteristic extracts sufficiently
full to let the reader form judgment. As we are
only concerned for the present with the danger I mention,
I take particular notice of Mr. Angell’s book,
and I refer the reader for further study to the original.
But the charge of taking an accidental line from its
context cannot be made here, as the extracts are numerous,
the tendency of all alike, and more of the same nature
can be found. I divide the extracts into three
groups, which I name:
1. The Ethics of the Case.
2. The Power of Money.
3. The Deal.
Where italics are used they are mine.
1. THE ETHICS OF THE CASE. “The
real basis of Social Morality is self-interest.”
“Have
we not abundant evidence, indeed, that the passion
of patriotism, as divorced from material interest,
is being modified by the pressure of material interest?”
.) “Piracy was magnificent, doubtless,
but it was not business.” “The pacifist propaganda
has failed largely because it has not put (and proven)
the plea of interest as distinct from the moral
plea.” .)
2. THE POWER OF MONEY. “The
complexity of modern finance makes New
York dependent on London, London upon
Paris, Paris upon Berlin, to a
greater degree than has ever yet been
the case in history.” .)
“It would be a miracle if already
at this point the whole influence of
British Finance were not thrown against
the action of the British
Government.” (On the assumed British
capture of Hamburg, .
“The most absolute despots cannot
command money.” .)
“With reference to capital, it may
almost be said that it is organised
so naturally internationally that formal
organisation is not
necessary.” .)
3. THE DEAL. “France
has benefited by the conquest of Algeria, England
by that of India, because in each case the arms were
employed not, properly speaking, for conquest at
all, but for police purposes.” .)
“While even the wildest Pan-German
has never cast his eyes in the direction of Canada,
he has cast them, and does cast them, in the direction
of Asia Minor.... Germany may need to police Asia
Minor.
“It is much more to our interest
to have an orderly and organised
Asia Minor under German tutelage than
to have an unorganised and
disorderly one which should be independent.”
.)
“Sir Harry Johnston, in the ‘Nineteenth
Century’ for December, 1910, comes a great
deal nearer to touching the real kernel of the problem....
He adds that the best informed Germans used this language
to him: ’You know that we ought to
make common cause in our dealings with backward
races of the world!’”
The quotations speak for themselves.
Note the policing of the “backward races.”
The Colonies are not in favour. Mr. Angell writes:
“What in the name of common sense is the advantage
of conquering them if the only policy is to let them
do as they like?” .) South Africa occasions
bitter reflections: “The present Government
of the Transvaal is in the hands of the Boer Party.”
.) And he warns Germany, that, supposing she
wishes to conquer South Africa, “she would learn
that the policy that Great Britain has adopted was
not adopted by philanthropy, but in the hard school
of bitter experience.” .) We believe him,
and we may have to teach a lesson or two in the same
school. It may be noted in passing Mr. Angell
gives Ireland the honour of a reference. In reply
to a critic of the Morning Post, who wrote
thus: “It is the sublime quality of human
nature that every great nation has produced citizens
ready to sacrifice themselves rather than submit to
external force attempting to dictate to them a conception
other than their own of what is right.” .) Mr. Angell replied: “One is, of course,
surprised to see the foregoing in the Morning Post;
the concluding phrase would justify the present agitation
in India, or in Egypt, or in Ireland against British,
rule.” .) Comment is needless. The
reading and re-reading of this book forces the conclusion
as to its sinister design. Once that design is
exposed its danger recedes. There is one at least
of the “backward races” that may not be
sufficiently alive to self-interest, but may for all
that upset the capitalist table and scatter the deal
by what Ruskin described in another context as “the
inconvenience of the reappearance of a soul.”
III
We must not fail to distinguish the
worth of the best type of anti-militarist and to value
the truth of his statement. It is curious to
find Mr. Angell writing an introduction to M. Novikow’s
book, for M. Novikow’s position is, in our point
of view, quite different. He does not draw the
fine distinction of policing the “backward races.”
Rather, he defends the Bengalis. Suppose
their rights had never been violated, he says:
“They would have held their heads higher; they
would have been proud and dignified, and perhaps might
have taken for their motto, Dieu et mon droit.”
("War and Its Alleged Benefits,” .) He can
be ironical and he can be warm. Later, he writes;
“The French (and all other people) should vindicate
their rights with their last drop of blood; so what
I write does not refer to those who defend their rights,
but to those who violate the rights of others.”
He does not put by the moral plea, but
says: “Political servitude develops the
greatest defects in the subjugated peoples.”
.) And he pays his tribute to those who die
for a noble cause: “My warmest sympathy
goes out to those noble victims who preferred death
to disgrace.” .) This is the true attitude
and one to admire; and any writer worthy of esteem
who writes for peace never fails to take the same stand.
Emerson, in his essay on “War,” makes
a fine appeal for peace, but he writes: “If
peace is sought to be defended or preserved for the
safety of the luxurious or the timid, it is a sham
and the peace will be base. War is better, and
the peace will be broken.” And elsewhere
on “Politics,” he writes: “A
nation of men unanimously bent on freedom or conquest
can easily confound the arithmetic of the statists
and achieve extravagant actions out of all proportions
to their means.” Yes, and by our unanimity
for freedom we mean to prove it true.