In 1918, at the end of four years of World War I’s devastation,
leaders negotiated for the guns in Europe to fall silent once and for all on
the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month. It was not
technically the end of the war, which came with the Treaty of Versailles.
Leaders signed that treaty on June 28, 1919, five years to the day after the
assassination of Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand set off the conflict. But
the armistice declared on November
11 held, and Armistice Day became popularly known
as the day “The Great War,” which killed at least 40 million people, ended.
In November
1919, President Woodrow Wilson commemorated Armistice
Day, saying that Americans would reflect on the anniversary of the armistice
“with solemn pride in the heroism of those who died in the country’s service
and with gratitude for the victory, both because of the thing from which it has
freed us and because of the opportunity it has given America to show her
sympathy with peace and justice in the councils of the nations…."
But Wilson was disappointed that the soldiers’ sacrifices had
not changed the nation’s approach to international affairs. The Senate, under
the leadership of Republican Henry Cabot Lodge of Massachusetts—who had been
determined to weaken Wilson as soon as the imperatives of the war had fallen
away—refused to permit the United States to join the League of Nations,
Wilson’s brainchild: a forum for countries to work out their differences with
diplomacy, rather than resorting to bloodshed.
On November
10, 1923, just four years after he had established
Armistice Day, former President Wilson spoke to the American people over the
new medium of radio, giving the nation’s first live, nationwide
broadcast.
“The anniversary of Armistice Day should stir us to a great
exaltation of spirit,” he said, as Americans remembered that it was their
example that had “by those early days of that never to be forgotten November,
lifted the nations of the world to the lofty levels of vision and achievement
upon which the great war for democracy and right was fought and won.”
But he lamented “the shameful fact that when victory was
won,…chiefly by the indomitable spirit and ungrudging sacrifices of our own
incomparable soldiers[,] we turned our backs upon our associates and refused to
bear any responsible part in the administration of peace, or the firm and
permanent establishment of the results of the war—won at so terrible a cost of
life and treasure—and withdrew into a sullen and selfish isolation which is
deeply ignoble because manifestly cowardly and dishonorable.”
Wilson said that a return to engagement with international
affairs was “inevitable”; the U.S. eventually would have to take up its “true
part in the affairs of the world.”
Congress didn’t want to hear it. In 1926 it passed a resolution
noting that since November
11, 1918, “marked the cessation of the most
destructive, sanguinary, and far-reaching war in human annals and the
resumption by the people of the United States of peaceful relations with other
nations, which we hope may never again be severed,” the anniversary of that
date “should be commemorated with thanksgiving and
prayer and exercises designed to perpetuate peace through good will and mutual
understanding between nations.”
In 1938, Congress made November 11 a legal holiday to be dedicated to world
peace. But neither the “war to end all wars” nor the commemorations of it,
ended war.
Just three years after Congress made Armistice Day a holiday for
peace, American armed forces were fighting a second world war, even more
devastating than the first. The carnage of World War II gave power to the idea
of trying to stop wars by establishing a rules-based international order.
Rather than trying to push their own boundaries and interests whenever they
could gain advantage, countries agreed to abide by a series of rules that
promoted peace, economic cooperation, and security.
The new international system provided forums for countries to
discuss their differences—like the United Nations, founded in 1945—and
mechanisms for them to protect each other, like the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO), established in 1949, which has a mutual defense pact that
says any attack on a NATO country will be considered an attack on all of
them.
In the years since, those agreements multiplied and were
deepened and broadened to include more countries and more ties. While the U.S.
and other countries sometimes fail to honor them, their central theory remains
important: no country should be able to attack a neighbor, slaughter its
people, and steal its lands at will.
This concept preserved decades of relative peace compared to the
horrors of the early twentieth century, but it is a concept that is currently
under attack as autocrats increasingly reject the idea of a rules-based
international order and claim the right to act however they wish.
In 1954, to honor the armed forces of wars after World War I,
Congress amended the law creating Armistice Day by striking out the word
“armistice” and putting “veterans” in its place. President Dwight D.
Eisenhower, himself a veteran who had served as the supreme commander of the
Allied Expeditionary Force in Europe and who had become a five-star general of
the Army before his political career, later issued a proclamation asking
Americans to observe Veterans Day:
“[L]et us solemnly remember the sacrifices of all those who
fought so valiantly, on the seas, in the air, and on foreign shores, to
preserve our heritage of freedom, and let us re-consecrate ourselves to the task
of promoting an enduring peace so that their efforts shall not have been in
vain.”
—Heather Cox Richardson
Notes:
https://www.va.gov/opa/vetsday/docs/proclamation_1954.pdf
https://www.loc.gov/item/today-in-history/november-11/
https://www.va.gov/opa/vetsday/vetdayhistory.asp
https://www.cnn.com/interactive/2015/10/politics/woodrow-wilson-house-history/
Wilson’s 1923 radio address on November 10, 1923, which has slightly different wording than
his written notes, is available on YouTube (I’m worried that linking it here
will get this letter caught in spam filters, so am not linking it).
https://www.loc.gov/resource/mss46029.mss46029-478_0018_1212/?sp=1164&st=image
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.