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How Wars Begin

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Atheneum, 1979. Hardcover.

180 pages, Hardback

First published January 1, 1977

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About the author

A.J.P. Taylor

114 books195 followers
Alan John Percivale Taylor was an English historian of the 20th century and renowned academic who became well known to millions through his popular television lectures.

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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Anil Swarup.
Author 3 books721 followers
November 6, 2015
Another set of engrossing lectures from Taylor. He has his own style and approach to examining such issues. He is unconventional in his analyses and even in conclusions based on such analyses. Hence he comes up with an unusual conclusion "Wars in fact have sprung more from apprehension than from a lust for war or conquest. Napoleon and Hitler would perhaps not fall in this category. He is harsh and critical without being biased as he takes the British to task "The British are entitled always to mistrust other people but others are not entitled to mistrust British". How true of some other so called great powers.
Profile Image for Mike.
434 reviews4 followers
October 8, 2023
Long out-of-date. Some random thoughts:

Taylor refers to England and Britain interchangeably which is very much of his time but still jarring for a Scot.

Still, for an Englishman, he is very balanced when pointing out that the UK's actions are not always fair and even. When the USSR asked for an interest in Libya post-World War 2, the British and Americans thought it 'very Asian' and aggressive of them. This despite the fact that Britain wasn't giving up control of both entrances to the Med and that, if America had asked for the same interest in Libya, no one would have blinked an eye.

Taylor says that Napoleon's wars were, apart from 1815, preventative wars. Only if you use an extremely forgiving meaning to the word 'preventative'. He even manages to argue that the invasion of Russia in 1812 was 'preventative'!

Regarding the WW2 chapter, it was written before the work done by Stephen Budiansky and hence repeats the erroneous claim that Britain was almost brought to the brink by the U-boat war. In fact, new merchant ship production outstripped losses.'.

The chapter on the Cold War, written in the mid-70s(?) suffers most from a lack of a long-view - he focuses on the wrong things and sometimes draws the wrong conclusions.

The Kindle version suffers from bad proofreading - typos (years seem to be a hotspot with '1915' for '1945', for example), spelling and grammar issues, along with some repetition within the same or consecutive paragraphs.

I'll finish with a quote from the end of the book which is both a relief and a damning indictment of modern nations:

'On the whole we have done pretty well since the war in not producing any great men. Great men are splendid in war time, maybe essential, but they can be dangerous in peace time.'
Profile Image for Othniel.
Author 16 books1 follower
April 19, 2018
The legendary left-of-centre historian's take on a number of major wars, based on a series of lectures given on BBC television in 1977.

In six short chapters, Taylor offers an admirably clear take on world-changing conflicts from the French Revolution to the Cold War. He even manages to make World War I seem almost explicable.

The tone is learned, but conversational, in a way which points up the fact that history is always a matter of interpretation rather than objective fact. Nevertheless, despite the disdain he expresses for the "Common Market", it is hard to avoid the conclusion that the world is a safer place when nations are working together rather than each pursuing their own territorial objectives, as was the case before World War II.

A valuable, lively and brisk read. (This version does, however, contain some distracting typos).
Profile Image for Wej.
278 reviews8 followers
May 26, 2022
A collection of lectures about the origins of six different wars. AJP Taylor describes what he considers modern wars, i.e. from the French Revolution onwards. Wars described in this short volume are: wars directly following the French revolution, Crimean War and Italian war of liberation, Bismarck’s wars, WWI, WWII, and Cold War. Interestingly, Taylor notices that delineation that is commonly used for wars is misleading, as wars have their own dynamic and can be seen as having different phases, or almost being separate conflicts. Case in point being WWII, which was quite different during the September 1939 Blitzkrieg, and different when it was fought against the Soviet Union (Operation Barbarossa or Bagration).

The answer to the title question is not given directly, but it seems like the wars begin frequently by accident. At least, that was the case in times prior to the information technology revolution. More modern cases tended to start preemptively. The reasons don’t necessarily need to be seen as such by the other side. This particular point made me think of the Russian invasion on Ukraine. Unfortunately, Taylor’s view is that the wars will go on as long as human nature does not change, and this applies to WWIII.
Profile Image for Suzanne.
409 reviews9 followers
December 1, 2014
I was hoping for an answer to the question posed and I guess it was given. It would seem from Taylor's accounts that wars begin by accident or because of misunderstandings or, in the case of the First World War, partly because of the rigidity of railway timetables. Planning seems to have a very small role as does any consideration of readiness or calculation of the odds of winning. In the current era of terrorism driven by fanatics, this is not a very comforting conclusion. Nor is Taylor's final comment on the likelihood of a third world war given his confidence in the immutability of human behaviour.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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