A People s History of the Second World War
197 pages
English

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197 pages
English

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Description

This history reclaims the Second World War as a global fight 'from below'. The vast majority of historical accounts have focused on the regular armies of the allied powers, however, the often-neglected people's militias were crucial not only to the defeat of fascism, but also colonialism, imperialism and even capitalism.



Looking at militias in Yugoslavia, Greece, Poland and Latvia, as well as the Warsaw Uprising and anti-fascist movements in Germany, it presents a different battle, fought on different terms. Widening its scope to India – where an independence movement was shaking an already weak British Empire, and onto alternative anti-imperialist struggles in Indonesia and Vietnam, a global picture of people’s resistance is revealed.



Despite these radical elements, the allied governments were more interested in creating a new order to suit their interests, and many of these movements were ultimately betrayed. However, many shook the existing world order to its core.
Preface

1. Introduction

2. Spanish Prelude

PART 1: Yugoslavia, Greece, Poland and Latvia – Between the Blocs

3. Yugoslavia: Balancing Powers

4. Greece: Allies at War with the Resistance

5. Poland’s Warsaw Uprising

6. Latvia: Standing History on its Head

PART 2: France, Britain and the USA– Divisions Within the Allies

7. France: Imperial Glory Versus Resistance Ideology

8. Britain: The Myth of Unity

9. USA: Racism in the Arsenal of Democracy

PART 3: Germany, Austria and Italy – Under the Axis

10. Germany: Conservatives and Antifa

11. Austria: Resistance and Ruling Class Capitulation

12. Italy: The Working Class and the Two Wars

PART 4: India, Indonesia and Vietnam - Different Enemies

13. India: From Famine to Independence

14. Indonesia: Axis and Allies United Against the People

15. Vietnam: Anti-Imperialist Breakthrough

16. Conclusion

17. Chronology

Notes

Index

Sujets

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 14 juin 2012
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781849647205
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0005€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

A People’s History of the Second World War

First published 2012 by Pluto Press 345 Archway Road, London N6 5AA
www.plutobooks.com
Distributed in the United States of America exclusively by Palgrave Macmillan, a division of St. Martin’s Press LLC, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010
Copyright © Donny Gluckstein 2012
The right of Donny Gluckstein to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN 978 0 7453 2803 4 Hardback ISBN 978 0 7453 2802 7 Paperback ISBN 978 1 84964 719 9 PDF ISBN 978 1 84964 721 2 Kindle ISBN 978 1 84964 720 5 ePub
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data applied for
This book is printed on paper suitable for recycling and made from fully managed and sustained forest sources. Logging, pulping and manufacturing processes are expected to conform to the environmental standards of the country of origin.
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Designed and produced for Pluto Press by Chase Publishing Services Ltd Typeset from disk by Stanford DTP Services, Northampton, England Simultaneously printed digitally by CPI Antony Rowe, Chippenham, UK and Edwards Bros in the United States of America
To Penny
Contents

Acknowledgements
Preface

Introduction
1. Spanish Prelude


PART I: YUGOSLAVIA, GREECE, POLAND AND LATVIA – BETWEEN THE BLOCS

2. Yugoslavia – Balancing Powers
3. Greece – Allies at War with the Resistance
4. Poland’s Warsaw Rising
5. Latvia – Standing History on its Head


PART II: FRANCE, BRITAIN AND THE USA – DIVISIONS WITHIN THE ALLIED CAMP

6. France – Imperial Glory versus Resistance Ideology
7. Britain – The Myth of Unity
8. USA – Racism in the Arsenal of Democracy


PART III: GERMANY, AUSTRIA AND ITALY – UNDER THE AXIS

9. Germany – Conservatives and Antifa
10. Austria – Resistance and Ruling-Class Capitulation
11. Italy – The Working Class and the Two Wars


PART IV: INDIA, INDONESIA AND VIETNAM – DIFFERENT ENEMIES

12. India – From Famine to Independence
13. Indonesia – Axis and Allies United Against the People
14. Vietnam – Anti-Imperialist Breakthrough
Conclusion
Chronology

Notes
Index
Acknowledgements

I am indebted to many people who helped so generously with this book. Special thanks are due to Nick Howard, Neil Davidson, Manfred Ecker, Owen Gower, Gordon Davie, Gajendra Singh, Nelly and David Bouttier, and Charlotte Bence.
Preface

There is an official version of the Second World War that is relatively easy to unearth. Alongside the paper record, the Allied establishment happily proclaims its triumph in public monuments like the Cenotaph in London. Public parades, films, books and TV series like Band of Brothers , also testify to Allied victory. Others are calmer. Westerplatte, where the Second World War began outside Gdansk, Poland has a sombre atmosphere, as does the ruined Kaiser Wilhelm church, which still bears witness to the power of aerial bombardment in the centre of Berlin.
By contrast, the other war, the people’s war, is largely hidden. So unearthing it proved a challenge in time and space. It took as long as the Second World War itself to write this book and involved travel to the countries listed in the contents (as well as several excluded due to limitations of space). Sometimes concealment is deliberate, such as the resistance radio transmitter secreted in the roof of a warehouse in Bergen, Norway. Sometimes the motivation is more pernicious. At the Military Museum, Athens, there is absolutely no mention of the resistance movement that liberated Greece, because its politics was too radical.
When it fits the official narrative there are resistance museums, ranging from the spectacular Warsaw Uprising Museum, the futuristic Slovak National Uprising Museum in Banska Bystrica, to the Danish Resistance Museum in Copenhagen and the Vredeburg Museum’s diorama in Yogyakarta, Indonesia. Most resistance museums are tiny, however, sometimes in one or two rooms in obscure towns and villages. More often simple plaques tell the story – from the one dedicated to the Indian National Army in a quiet park in Singapore, to the bustling main square in Bologna. Other evidence can range from cemeteries, to the direct memory of participants, or even workshops for the disabled descendants of those genetically damaged by Agent Orange during the long Vietnamese war. Anywhere that fighting occurred, and that is almost everywhere, there is something to be found if it is looked for.
The difference between the two wars – the imperialist war and the people’s war – is well symbolised in my home town, Edinburgh. Towering above the streets on the Castle Rock stands Scotland’s National War Memorial. Hundreds of metres below, down a dark staircase, in a corner under a tree near the railway line, is a metal plate, hardly larger in size than this book. It is dedicated to those who died fighting fascism in the Spanish Civil War. Hopefully this work will put both aspects into a more balanced perspective.
Introduction

THE IMAGE OF THE SECOND WORLD WAR – A PARADOX
The Second World War is unique among twentieth-century conflicts. Other wars, such as the First World War, Vietnam, Iraq, or Afghanistan, began with public support whipped up by a supine media, but lost it once the deadly reality and the true motivations of governments broke through the propaganda smokescreen. The Second World War escapes this paradigm. Its reputation was positive from start to finish and it remains untarnished even now.
There was understandable joy at the defeat of the Germany, Italy and Japan in countries under the Axis heel. But pollsters in the United States found that the war’s popularity only increased as the death toll mounted. While approval for President Roosevelt never fell below 70 per cent, support for peace initiatives declined. 1
A similar situation prevailed in Britain, where Mass Observation volunteers measured public opinion. They assiduously recorded overheard conversations, and gauged attitudes. A ‘typical’ remark of the early ‘phoney war’ period (when hostilities had been declared but virtually no military action taken) was: ‘I cannot see why we are not doing something ... Why don’t we go and attack Italy, or start something in Abyssinia.’ One Observer noted the ‘overwhelming acclamation with which the news of any offensive action is received’. 2 Today’s imperialists do not shake cans in the streets to finance their bombing operations, but in 1940 a ‘Fighter Plane Fund’ was established whose ‘most striking feature was the way in which everyone joined in the collection ...’. 3 Years of gruelling struggle and enormous loss of life did not dim enthusiasm. News of the D-Day Normandy landings in 1944 evoked wild rejoicing:


The child excitedly exclaimed ‘Daddy – the second front’s started’. ‘Daddy’ rushed downstairs; fumbles with the wireless knob and asks; ‘Did we invade? No jokes. You’re kidding.’ The family sits down to breakfast but are much too excited to eat. We had an urge to rush all over the place, to go knocking at neighbours’ doors to find out whether the invasion has started. 4
Till the end Mass Observation surveys failed to detect war weariness. 5
Thousands of miles away Dmitriy Loza, a Red Army officer, eulogised the fight against Nazism as a ‘Sacred War’:


[W]ar came to us on 22 June 1941, bringing with it blood and tears, concentration camps, the destruction of our cities and villages, and thousands upon tens and hundreds of thousands of deaths ... If it would have been possible to collect all the tears ... that flowed during the four years of the war and to pour them out on Germany, that country would have been at the bottom of a deep sea... . 6
Even with 70 years’ distance, fascination with the Second World War endures. As Loza predicted ‘ten or even a hundred generations of true patriots will not forget this war’. 7 No other military event has spawned so many works of history, fiction, or drama. Nearly half of all war films made deal with the Second World War. The shares taken by the First World War, Vietnam and Korea are 12 per cent, 2 per cent and 2 per cent respectively. The rest – from Ancient Rome to science fiction – make up the remaining third. 8
The Second World War’s popularity is surprising given its enormous destructiveness. In comparing casualty figures the warning of this Japanese commentator should be remembered: ‘We shouldn’t make deaths into numbers. They were each individuals. They had names, faces ... My brother might just be a fraction of several millions, but for me he’s the only Elder Brother in the world. For my mother he was the only Eldest Son. Compile the dead one by one.’ 9
Nevertheless the statistics are staggering. The 1914–18 war generated up to 21 million deaths. 10 The tally for 20 years of fighting in Vietnam was five million, 11 while in three years the US-led war on Iraq cost 655,000 lives. 12 Although firm figures for 1939–45 are lacking, one source suggests 50 million people died, of which 28 million were civilians. Chinese losses alone matched figures for Germany, Britain and France in the First World War combined. 13
Why did such carnage not dent the Second World War’s reputation? The answer lies in the widely held and enduring belief that it was a ‘good war’, when righteousness triumphed over injustice, democracy over dictatorship, tolerance over racism, and freedom over fascism. Terkel’s oral history of America captures this spirit:


‘It was not like your other wars,’ a radio disk jockey reflected aloud ... It was not, most of us, profoundly believed, ‘imperialistic’. Our enemy was, patently, obscene: the Holocaust maker. It was one war that many who would have resisted ‘your other wars’ supported enthusiastically. It was a ‘just war’, if there is

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