Big robbers and small robbers trying to screw each other over while sending millions to die against other robbers' victims for a chance at the spoils.
Each time a new chapter started about a different country the story was pretty much the same, based on the "rank" of robber they were. If they're a big one - they had to defend their colonial interests but they also had to side with big robbers, who are their opponent in looting the same colonies, in order to prevent other big robbers from getting too big in Europe.
If they're a small robber - they still have imperialist ambitions (Italian bourgeois members wishing to restore the Roman Empire LMAO that gave me a good laugh) and they ally with whoever can give, or rather - promise but not really make good on it later, a bigger portion of stolen territory from the losers.
Chapter 12 showing us an account of what it was like in the trenches was what I thought was missing before that point and I'm glad that Barbusse's seemingly excellent novel is the way to present this to us. The endless waiting, "luxury" items like matchboxes being more valuable than medals, hopelessness, death. Their class consciousness seemed to be on point, but at what cost:
“There is little or no hatred for the Germans, who, they imagine, are slaves and cannon-fodder just like themselves. But there is a burning hatred of the rich, the parasites, the speculators and those who avoid being drafted through money and connections.”
“The conclusion becomes inescapable: here are two worlds inhabited by two classes of people: those who fight wars and those who profit by them; those who work and those who enjoy the fruits of the labour of others; those who create and those who exploit”
I will be giving "Le Feu" a read in the future, most definitely.
The epilogue urges us to be optimistic at the prospect of an upsurge in the class war. I find it very hard to sustain the belief that I will catch a glimpse at a better world in my lifetime, but I will not reject the opportunity to work for it so that my children can.