Mark Steel: How 'leftie' academics hijacked the Great War

January 19, 2014
Issue 
Harry Patch, the last man alive to fight for Britain in the First World War, said: “Politicians who took us to war should have

Now the centenary of 1914 has got going, we should do as British education secretary Michael Gove suggests and celebrate the First World War, instead of taking notice of “left-wing academics”, who complain it was a regrettable waste of life.

But the other day, on the radio, they played an interview with Harry Patch, the last man alive who fought for the British in the war. Harry said: “Politicians who took us to war should have been given the guns and told to settle their differences themselves, instead of organising nothing better than legalised mass murder.”

Who let him on Radio 4, the dirty unpatriotic left-wing academic? It was all right for Harry, swanning about the Somme with his Marxist intellectual friends, lazing in the trenches discussing “peace studies”, but to really know what went on you have to rely on those with first-hand experience, people like Michael Gove. Because, as he made clear, he’s read a book on the subject and an article in a magazine.

It’s the same with these other poncey academic types who criticised the war, like Wilfred Owen and those poets. Just because they spent a few years being gassed and shot at, they thought that gave them a right to criticise it. Well, if they’d joined the real world, like Gove, they might not be so full of airy-fairy pacifist nonsense.

Hopefully, Gove will now remove these left-wingers from the school curriculum, and replace them with proper poets of the time, such as the one who wrote: “I’ve been shot in a trench somewhere Belgian or French, I’ll not walk again say the medics, But I’ll go home in glory as one day a Tory can use this to bash leftie academics.”

Gove insists it is time to reverse the “myths” spread about the war by relentless left-wing propaganda. The evidence he gives for this tide of pacifist mythology is an episode of Blackadder. And it is hard to see how anyone can counter a constant barrage of brainwashing, such as a half-hour of situation comedy broadcast 25 years ago.

A few brave souls over the years have tried to counter this tyranny. There are Remembrance Day parades, and the insistence that anyone on television has to wear a poppy during the month before or be denounced as a gargoyle, and prime ministers posing in tanks, and hymns, comics and computer games that glorify the war, and statues to the generals including one of Commander Haig in Whitehall.

But that can hardly be expected to make an impact in the face of a comedy show from 1989.

So the fightback has begun, with Gove attacking the academic Sir Richard Evans for saying: “The men who enlisted in 1914 may have thought they were fighting for a better world, a war to end all wars ... they were wrong.”

I wonder which bit of that statement Gove disagrees with. Presumably he thinks that those who insisted the war would end all wars were right, and it did end all wars. He must think that the First World War was the last war ever fought, and must even be puzzled as to why it’s called the First World War, seeing as there haven’t been any since. He’s going to feel so disappointed when he finds out.

His next point is that those who joined up “were not dupes but conscious believers in king and country, committed to defending the Western liberal order”. Well, yes, that’s what they were told they were fighting for. So his case seems to be they can’t have been fooled because they believed what they were told.

This means all those who’ve been mis-sold insurance packages shouldn’t be compensated. They can’t have been fooled, because they were conscious believers that they were buying insurance that would make them better protected.

Those who fought were told that the war was against tyranny, dictators, terrorists, and to defend “brave little Belgium”, all the usual stuff that justifies wars, as well as the “war to end all wars” line.

Most of the survivors spent the rest of their lives feeling they’d been duped. But if only they’d read that magazine article, like Gove, they’d have known the nightmares and missing limbs were worth it.

The war was “plainly a just war”, says Gove, because of the German attitude towards expansionism. And we certainly couldn’t stand by while another country fancied a bit of expansionism. Luckily, the one thing that you can say about the British in the century before 1914, is that at no time did it consider expanding or taking over anywhere or swiping anything from abroad.

The one disconcerting element to Gove’s article is that it contains no facts and no evidence and it is based on prejudices such as “left-wing academics”. If it was handed in as an essay by a 12-year-old, it would be handed back as a piece of nonsense. But it was written by the education secretary.

So we should suppose the next exam system he brings in will be one in which you’re no longer marked for research or making a case, but for how patriotic you are.

If you want top marks for an essay on how water turns into steam, just put: “Ingerland, Ingerland, Ingerlaaaand, two world wars, one world cup, boils and then goes floating up. Academics academics, you’re not fit to wipe my arse, you’re not fit to wipe my arse.” Then you’re guaranteed an A-star.

[First appeared in the Independent.]

You need 鶹ý, and we need you!

鶹ý is funded by contributions from readers and supporters. Help us reach our funding target.

Make a One-off Donation or choose from one of our Monthly Donation options.

Become a supporter to get the digital edition for $5 per month or the print edition for $10 per month. One-time payment options are available.

You can also call 1800 634 206 to make a donation or to become a supporter. Thank you.