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Post Info TOPIC: Australian TV Miniseries "Anzacs".


Brigadier

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Australian TV Miniseries "Anzacs".
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I just aquired the new DVD set of this series, and by all accounts, this is a very good series - but I was wondering if it was somehow historically innacurate, or ratially biased.

Throughout much of the first episode there is mention that Germany is out to conqour the world, and that is the reason the newly independend country of Australia must protect her ancestral home, Britain, by sending troops to the front of WWI. There is also mention of one of the main characters fathers, who served in the Boer wars.

Now, I am from the USA. I am used to propaganda and sensationalist nonsense. When a brother once asked my father ages ago what WWI and WWII were about, he basically said "Both wars were started by germany, and both were finished by us." Somehow after WWII, most of the Allied world has begun to assume that WWI was as morally just as WWII. "The Germans started it!". That there were obviously the "Good guys", and the "Bad guys", as in WWII. However, all of us WWI readers know that is not the case. Virtually no one in WWI was an angel of any sort. All were guilty of horrible deeds. In essence, the blame for WWI cannot be levelled on any one culprit. That is the intrigue of WWI for many of us. (And Germany of course did not start WWI.)

My question is.. In WWI did people like the Australians really believe Germany was out to conqour the world and must be stopped?

Or was it similar to the Boer wars, where Britain was fighting primarily for territorial and financial gain (via the gold mines in the Boer nations), where the Australians and New Zealanders were fighting simply for the principal of it all, that Great Britain was indeed their homeland, and they should fight for it?

---Vil.

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Legend

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RE: Australian TV Miniseries "Anzacs".
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Germany was seen as a threat in 1914. And while it is currently fashionable to argue that no-one was really responsible for the start of WW1 and it just 'sort of happened', as if it were as morally neutral as an earthquake, that was certainly not the case in 1914. France hated and feared Germany, thanks to her disastrous defeat in 1871; Russia feared Germany; and even Britain feared her, thanks to the massive buildup of the German fleet from 1898; various maladroit interventions by Germany in colonial affairs (such as Agadir); and the economic challenge Germany posed.


There was also a fear of what was always referred to as 'Prussian Militarism', a sense that Germany was ruled by an aggressive aristocratic military caste and, frankly, the Germans didn't help to dispel that impression with an emperor who always appeared in public wearing any of a dozen different dress uniforms; a Chancellor who wore a uniform when opening the Reichstag; and the apparently overly major role of the Army in internal affairs in general. British fears can be seen, for example, in the way future war stories changed from depicting France and Russia as enemies (in the 1890s) to presenting Germany as the enemy (in the 1900s - H G Wells's The War in the Air of 1908 is probably the best known example).


And as far as the British were concerned, Germany did nothing to appear reasonable when she opened what looked like another Balkan War by invading Belgium and committing a variety of atrocities against civilians. Once that had happened, a distant central European crisis that had not in any way impinged upon the British public's consciousness became a fight for Civilisation against militaristic German Kultur. It was very easy to portray the Germans as inhuman brutes because, quite frankly, there was a kernel of truth in it. The Germans had expected Belgium to be a walk in the park, but the Belgians resisted; Germany's armies could brook no delays, and consequently reacted with brutality to hasten their passage through Belgium (shooting priests; imposing collective punishment by burning villages and shooting their inhabitants when there were snipers; destroying Louvain, which, being an ancient centre of culture and learning, seemed a particularly spiteful act of vandalism - one German officer wrote, 'We shall wipe it out. Not one stone will stand upon another. We will teach them to respect Germany. For generations people will come here and see what we have done'). This was a deliberate policy - the Germans even had a word for it, Schrecklichkeit, 'frightfulness'.


So, put together pre-war fears with what the Germans actually did in August 1914, and it is very easy to see how the struggle came to be about stopping the German Brute from conquering the world. Now, of course, policymakers and officials knew that Germany wasn't out to conquer the world - but she did look like she was going to conquer Europe, and in those days that meant much the same thing (Europe did, after all, rule most of the world in 1914). But for the man in the street, German Kultur was to be feared and stopped. And with their ties to the motherland, it was easy for Australians, New Zealanders and Canadians to believe much the same thing as the British man in the street; they were a family scattered across the globe fighting for the same ideals.



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Legend

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Yes and no.


As far as Britain was concerned Germany did start the war (with the UK) by invading Belgium a neutral countrywith which Britain had signed a very public treaty guaranteeing its protection if it were attacked. If this had not occurred its possible that Britain might have stayed out. One could say therefore that the immediate reason for Britain going to war in 1914 was exactly the same as that for going to war in 1939 - Germany had invaded a country  which Britain had guaranteed to protect.  As Britain had some time before effectively 'warned off' Germany from  a possible invasion of France through Belgium the German government must have been aware of what the consequences would be.


Whilst 'conquering the world' is somewhat of an extreme way of putting it the Kaiser's government did have an aspiration to become the dominant power. Policies such as 'The drive to the East' and 'Germany's place in the sun' which were begun after Bismark's dismissal were a reflection of this (Bismark had not had such grandiose plans seeing Germany's role as being the leading player in Europe). However up to about mid 1916 it would seem that Germany had a view of a post war world in which she had expanded into Eastern Europe and also acquired sizeable chunks of the British and French colonial empires as part of the peace settlement. It may have been one of the effects of the very heavy German casualties at the Somme which exceeded those of the attacking British and French forces (and the realisation that an absolute victory was not a foregone conclusion) that the German war aims became less ambitious.


Its interesting to note that after the German reunification when a government in Berlin could once again speak for the whole country a statement was issued apologising for Germany's leading role in creating the conditions that lead to both world wars. I can remember hearing the German ambassador to Britain being interviewed on the BBC at the time.


One of course must distinguish between governments and people. In 1914 the Kaiser's government had not been elected but appointed.



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Legend

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Spot on about Britain. In the summer of 1914, the bulk of the British government was more concerned with the possibility of trouble in Ireland (the Ulster Crisis) than war in Europe. The only government minister genuinely worried about Germany was the one man who could potentially do something about it, Edward Grey, the Foreign Secretary. But the only reason even he could persuade the Cabinet to take action (vague pre-war fears of German ambitions notwithstanding) was because Germany invaded Belgium. No matter how, at ninety years' remove, one tries to rationalise it (they only used Belgium as a corridor to France; if the Belgians hadn't resisted, they'd have been fine; etc.), Germany did invade a neutral country and, war being war, commit brutal acts. Germany also invaded France, with no provocation.


Now, oceans of ink have been spilled over Germany's role in starting WW1, and any discussion here probably won't resolve it (but for what it's worth, I believe that Germany and Austria-Hungary bear the burden of responsibility), but if we're discussing what public perceptions of Germany were, as opposed to official assessments, then it's very easy to see why people were persuaded to see it as a crusade.


It was only in retrospect that popular opinion began to see the war as a terrible waste, a futile war in which all the participants were morally equivalent. But that is a very Anglocentric impression. I don't think the Belgians or French ever felt that - they had been invaded, after all. The British began to see the war as a terrible waste thanks to the impressions of military ineptitude (lions led by donkeys) and futility (tens of thousands of casualties to take a mile of mud). This view only began to coalesce in the 1930s, thanks to various writers and poets and the growth of pacifism, fell into abeyance in the 1940s, and was stimulated again in the 1960s (Oh! What a Lovely War! et al).


But the massive casualties were only a consequence of that fact that, for once, British forces fought in the main theatre of war, on someone else's territory, against the bulk of the enemy's troops (unlike the Napoleonic Wars when the Royal Navy kept Bonaparte at bay, while relatively small British forces acted with much stronger allies on the continent; and WW2, when the Navy and RAF kept Hitler at bay, while relatively small British forces etc. etc.). And the perceptions of ineptitude were mainly due to the writings of axe-grinders (politicians currying favour with the public, and military men critical of the generals - 'If only they'd followed my advice...').



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Legend

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Roger Todd wrote:



But the massive casualties were only a consequence of that fact that, for once, British forces fought in the main theatre of war, on someone else's territory, against the bulk of the enemy's troops (I think there might be some Frenchmen who might disagree) (unlike the Napoleonic Wars when the Royal Navy kept Bonaparte at bay, while relatively small British forces acted with much stronger allies on the continent; and WW2, when the Navy and RAF kept Hitler at bay, while relatively small British forces etc. etc.).



A slight over simplification. Wellington in the Peninsula had no really effective allies at all (until Beresford retrained and restructured the Portugese army, whilst the Spanish were classic geurilla fighters and those units incorperated into the British army were ok the Spanish army worse sometimes even worse than useless). If you count Wellingtons force and those British operating in the defence of Cadiz and on the Med coast etc etc there was , for the time, a substantial British force in Spain and Portugal. However Wellington and his subordinate generals (Hill, Beresford etc)  kept winning battles and that changes perceptions. I think that the Waterloo campaign meets the characteristics of fighting in someone elses country against the main enemy. With regard to WW2 I think that you are in danger of joining "dear Lady Aster" in overlooking the fighting in the Italian campaign (she caused outrage by referening to the army as "the D Day Dodgers") In fact from 1943 onwards very large British forces fought in Europe and from mid 1944 after  D day this was even greater. However in general from 1943 onwards there was visible progress against the enemy and again this changes  perceptions.
Its interesting to note that an early exercise in mass opinion analysis was carried out in the British Army in 1918. This was at the time for internal consumption only but it would seem that the majority of British soldiers trusted their officers (including the generals with a few exceptions) and put most blame on the politicians.

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Legend

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RE: Australian TV Miniseries "Anzacs".
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True, it was an oversimplification, there isn't the scope on a web forum to go into massive detail - there are hundreds of books that do that. But I was discussing things from the British public's point of view - British forces on the Western front were always smaller than French forces, but the fact remains that the bulk of British forces were in the thick of the action, unlike their relatively peripheral activities elsewhere at other times. As for 1943 onwards, yes, significant British forces faced the Germans - but only because the Russians were fighting the main German forces in the East. The invasion of Italy and, later, D-Day would have been impossible without Barbarossa.


The point you make with the 1918 opinion poll is a good one, and one that bears emphasising, I think - at the time, most people thought the war against Germany was a just one. And they continued to believe this after the war. It was only with hindsight that the Oh! What a Lovely War!/Blackadder view has come to dominate. Who are we to say that the people who went to war in 1914 with the explicit belief that they were helping to eject the German invaders from Belgium and France (two countries which had done nothing to threaten Germany) were wrong? Was that really such a bad reason to go to war? Or should the French and British have simply sat back and let the Germans over-run Western Europe before turning on the Russians?



-- Edited by Roger Todd at 15:03, 2006-10-04

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Field Marshal

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RE: Australian TV Miniseries "Anzacs".
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Vilkata's question recalls a scene in Peter Weir's "Gallipoli". The young protagonist, eager to enlist, is traversing the vast desert of Western Australia. He chances upon a hermit who is surprised to hear that Australia and Germany are at war. When the hermit enquires as to the cause of the war, the young man replies, gesturing to the seemingly limitless wasteland, that it is to prevent the Germans from "taking all this away from us". 


Concern about Germany's expanding fleet led to the establishment of a navy in Canada and Australia during the years leading up to the Great War. However, I think it would be fair to say that fear of German expansionism would have been well down the list of concerns of an average overseas Dominion citizen in the spring of 1914. The war was greeted with enthusiasm (at least in the English-speaking portions of the Dominions) due to an intense loyalty to the UK, first- and second-generation British immigrants forming a large proportion of their populations at this time. In any case, given the constitutional arrangements of the period, the Dominions automatically joined the war with Britain's declaration. 


I saw ANZACS a number of years ago, in a truncated version broadcast by the CBC. It has an interesting sequence depicting tank-infantry cooperation at Amiens, and also pillbox storming at Third Ypres. The series was refreshingly free of blatent errors about uniforms, weapons, tactics and events.



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Legend

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However Australia's very first action was to raise a volunteer force to sieze those German held islands closest to Australia

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Captain

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this thread is in danger of becoming very political. i dont want to talk in absolutes, just generalities. this is a forum for modellers. i'm sorry if any of what i say here causes any offence: i mean no offence. i do always try to see as many different opinions as possible before making up my mind (and then leaving it open to change). here goes:


i think its impossible to say with certainty what a whole nation was thinking or feeling. even if an opinion poll had been gathered at the time, it would of course have been interpreted in a biased manner to suit anyone's objective, or asked in a biased fashion, or influenced by choosing whom one asks. i would have thought that that would also include seemingly unbiased canvassers (such as The Guardian newspaper or the BBC if they had existed back then). in that case, an opinion poll would become just another tool of propoganda ("in a recent poll, 8 out of 10 belgian mothers would rather not have their babies bayoneted", for example could mean only 10 belgian mothers were asked a rather stupid question that perpetuates an unsubstantiated outrageous claim)


i think a, perhaps, more relevant point is that propoganda was much easier a hundred years ago than it is now, for many reasons. perhaps people were less cynical and more trusting (the horrors of industrial scale slaughter had not been experienced), cinema was relatively new, and high speed communication consisted of the telegraph (not exactly mass communication). many working class people were illiterate and so believed what they heard, or were told. so, yes, perhaps a large portion of australians  believed that if they didnt stick up for mother england, they would be next. then again, it was a long time ago, and can anyone really be certain what an entire nation was thinking?


 


 



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Legend

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Well, to an extent, yes - but at what point point does legitimate reporting become propaganda? When WW2 started, there was much cynicism about the reports of German atrocities, because of what was perceived to be the lies told in 1914. But, stories of babies bayonetted apart, at what point does the killing of civilians become an atrocity? I don't know about the babies, but the fact remains that the Germans did shoot large numbers of civilians (okay, we'll argue about what constitutes a 'large number' of civilians later) in Belgium in 1914. Maybe it wasn't as bad as the propaganda suggested, but the fact remains. Yes, no-one can be sure what a whole nation was thinking, but, insofar as we can be certain about anything, publics, in their generality, were stimulated into action against what they saw as German brutality.


And, at the end of the day, the Germans did invade Belgium and France. That is a fact. It cannot be denied. You do not invade a country by saying, "Excuse me old chap, would you be so kind as to allow me to position my army of several hundred thousand men upon your land?" without a fight and the concomitant casualties. The very fact that the Germans invaded Belgium and France places the burden of responsibility in their court, and I don't care what any relativistic, revisionist historian has to say - how would you feel if some foreign power's army swept into your country? It takes very little imagination to envision the answer.



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Brigadier

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Thank you folks! This was something I knew very little about. Thank you all very much for informing me. So it seems Anzacs depics at the very least, a highly probable conversation for the Australians involved.

In todays world, there are still people who would view someones sympathy towards the German cause of WWI equivelent of supporting the Nazis of WWII. That's what I was wondering, if it was sort of a revisionist storyline where the Australians feared WWI Germany more than they actually did. All of you have done a great job of conveying that the average Australian did indeed fear the "mad brute". Now, we can go on and on about the reality of German objectives and attrocities, but the premise of this question was simply if the average Australian in WWI did actually believe Germany needed to be stopped at all costs.

Thank's again, and yes, this is a mechanics forum first and foremost! We are all great fans of the vehicles of WWI, and a vehicle in itself has no political stance. Keeping this forum free of individual politics is a great idea - I don't want anyone getting angry, offended, or anything of the sort. My original question was simply a question of realism in regards to the Australians portrayed in a TV miniseries, nothing more.

---Vil.

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Corporal

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Vil,
Trying not to sound to political or offensive, I shall point out I believe Australia did fear Germany in WWI.
Australians, being isolated from the rest of the world, view Australia as everything, with a national ego rivalled only by America (again, no offence intended). As such, and as Australia was so tied to mother England at the time, it is quite easy to percieve that the German menace, if willing to wage war with England, could well be considered likely to attack Australia, if not already doing so via Britains involvement.
Even later with WWII (Here Japan is assumed to have attacked Australia more predominately than China, the remainder of Asia, Russia or America) and today with the war on terror (most Australians seem to consider it a war against themselves, dispite no attack having been directed against nor taking place in Australia), Australia has always believed themselves targeted, dispite the indifference the remainder of the world feels against them, and an opinion supported by the media.
Again, no offence intended, these are merely my observations after just a decade of living in Australia, but I hope they serve to help you to visualise the national psychology in regard to your original question.

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Legend

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Long before WW1 and even before Australia became a single country Australian forces joined Britain in military actions even when these were to meet situations that do not seem to have had any connection with Australia. I believe that the first of these may have been a joint services naval and army  operation around the Horn of Africa to the coast of Sudan to support the Gordon Relief Expedition. (I'm not sure which Australian state mounted this operation).


Australian states appear to have had a desire to acquire some 'modern' military hardware even when there was no similarly equipped country within a thousand miles. I enclose an extract from one of my (as yet) unpublished books that describes how the State of Victoria acquired an ironclad turret warship in 1870 when such warships were the WMDs of their day.


There was a rash of monitor like ships in navies around the World. These usually took the form of ‘breastwork’ monitors. Although these retained the low freeboard characteristic of the original Monitor the turrets were mounted on a low armoured breastwork, in some cases a system of collapsible (or removable) bulwarks were also used to avoid the decks being awash in a heavy sea thus reducing the risk of swamping. Of course the bulwarks had to be dropped or removed when going into action so these ships were still not really suitable for combat in open waters. Typical of such vessels was HMVS (Her Majesty’s Victorian Ship) Cerberus. She was a monitor of the Cyclops class and was purchased by the Government of the Australian state of Victoria to defend Melbourne harbour (thus becoming the first Australian warship). Built in Britain the Cerberus had first to be got to Australia and it had been intended that the Royal Navy would convey the ship out to the antipodes and hand it over to the Victorian authorities. However so bad was the reputation of monitors as sea going vessels that there was mass desertion from her crew. In the end she sailed in 1870 with a civilian contract crew (presumable highly paid) and equipped with a temporary set of masts and sails and specially built up and reinforced bulwarks. The Cerberus reached Melbourne safely after all and a Victorian crew took over. One wonders what was threatening Melbourne in 1870 that required the city to be protected by an armoured vessel mounting heavy guns. Whatever it was the Cerberus must have acted as a suitable deterrent for she peacefully protected the harbour with her guns into the early part of the 20th Century and is still protecting it today, albeit as part of a breakwater.


Possibly a case of being able to say " you call that a warship? Well this is what I call a warship"


I suspect that in general there was a feeling in Australia that they were a European country (despite a few minor matters such as their geographical position) and what worried European countries should worry them


BTW If you want to read a very comic (but I think affectionate) view of Australian 'ego' and stereotypes try Terry Pratchett's The Last Continent in which he introduces us to the Discworld country of Fourecks peopled by people called Mad (driving an armoured hay lorry), Tin Head Ned, various desert queens, opera singers etc etc. No one wants to leave because 'no other place has got anything that isn't already here' and all politicians are sent to prison on being elected  'because it saves time later' (now there's a practice worth considering)



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Private

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Australian TV Miniseries "Anzacs".
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A minor correction regarding HMVS Cerberus. Cerberus was one of the two Cerberus class breastwork monitors. Magdala was the other Cerberus class ship with the slightly small Abayssinia being in a class of its own. The Cyclops class breastwork monitors were based on Cerberus with minor modifications and were Cyclops, Hecate, Gorgon and Hydra.

To my knowledge Cerberus was the only breastwork monitor to use bulwarks and they were only used for the delivery voyage to Australia. The problems with recruiting a crew were not due to the bad reputation of monitors, Cerberus being the first British monitor, but caused by the sinking of HMS Captain the month before the departure of Cerberus.

John Rogers
Fleet Engineer (Victorian Navy)
website, research & Friends of the Cerberus President.
www.cerberus.com.au



-- Edited by rogersjr on Thursday 5th of November 2009 12:26:09 AM

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