Review by Choice Review
Clark (Cambridge) has made stunning use of new diplomatic evidence in European archives to present a "new view" of the march to world war in 1914. The meticulous trail of diplomatic notes and telegrams increases the likelihood that the author's view of "blame all around" will become the prevailing theory. Key factors that Clark considers: even though the Great Power alliance system was in place (Triple Entente versus Triple Alliance), countries within these blocs had suspicions as to whether their "allies" would back them up in the event of war. The murder of Archduke Ferdinand in June 1914 may have lit the match, but the fact that war actually broke out in August 1914 shows that diplomacy failed in large measure to "localize" the conflict (as Germany hoped), and spotlights Russia's ruthless pan-Slav policy against Austria-Hungary, which forced German action against Belgium, drawing France and Great Britain into war. German historian Fritz Fischer may claim that German revanchism was key, and that diplomats who wrote the Versailles Treaty and Article 231 tried to pin war blame on Germany's "blank check" to Austria-Hungary, but Clark's measured approach shows in actuality that there was enough blame to go around. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Diplomatic scholars of the period, graduate level and above. A. M. Mayer College of Staten Island
Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by New York Times Review
Nobody at the time called the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo on June 28, 1914, "a shot heard round the world." The phrase, filched from Ralph Waldo Emerson's "Concord Hymn," epitomizes a judgment that crystallized only as the horrendous sequels played out. Some parts of the international community weren't listening at all. America was serene in its isolation and prosperity. "To the world, or to a nation," The Grand Forks Herald in North Dakota declared, "an archduke more or less makes little difference." President Wilson, pacing the lonely corridors of the White House, was distraught over the first lady's failing struggle for life. Paris was engrossed in a murder trial brimming with sex and political scandal. London was too obsessed with Irish home rule to sustain attention until closer to midnight. From the outset there was a failure to realize that the murder of the heir to the throne of the Austro-Hungarian Empire by a young terrorist trained in expansionist Serbia might be the "some damned foolish thing in the Balkans" that Otto von Bismarck in 1888 had predicted would one day trigger a great European war. In "The Sleepwalkers," Christopher Clark, a professor of modern European history at Cambridge, describes how within 10 days czarist Russia's ministers had created a narrative to justify Russia taking up arms for its "little Serbian brothers" should Austria-Hungary try to punish them. The dead archduke was portrayed as a stooge of Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany and a warmonger (which he wasn't). The intent was to shift the moral onus from the perpetrator to the victim. France bought into that stratagem, and England more or less went along, the three bound by the Triple Entente of 1907. Austria-Hungary in turn had by July 4 sent an envoy on the night train to Berlin, where the Kaiser had just rebuked an official urging calm: "Stop this nonsense! It was high time a clean sweep was made of the Serbs." So Austria-Hungary got its famous "blank check," and 37 days after Sarajevo the Central Powers (Germany, Austria-Hungary, the Ottoman Empire later in the year and eventually Bulgaria) were at war with the Entente powers (Russia, France, the British Empire and also Japan, as well as, in months or years to come, Italy and Romania). The historiography of World War I is immense, more than 25,000 volumes and articles even before next year's centenary. Still, Clark, and Sean McMeekin, in "July 1914," offer new perspectives. The distinctive achievement of "The Sleepwalkers" is Clark's single-volume survey of European history leading up to the war. That may sound dull. Quite the contrary. It is as if a light had been turned on a half-darkened stage of shadowy characters cursing among themselves without reason. He raises the curtain at 2 a.m. on June 11, 1903, 11 years before Sarajevo. We see 28 Serbian army officers shoot their way into the royal palace in Belgrade. King Alexandar and Queen Draga, betrayed and defenseless, huddle in a tiny closet where the maid irons the queen's clothes. They are butchered, riddled with bullets, stabbed with a bayonet, hacked with an ax and partially disemboweled, their faces mutilated beyond recognition and the bloody half-naked remnants tossed from the royal balcony onto the grounds. Clark argues a direct connection between the assassins of Belgrade and Sarajevo. Though the regicide - and the murder of a repressive prime minister the same night - led to a more genuine parliamentary democracy, the conspiratorial network remained, its murderous passions now directed to undermining Austria-Hungary. The chief instigator of the Belgrade plot, Lieut. Dragutin Dimitrijevic, called Apis for his bull-like physique, became the head of Serbian military intelligence and was instrumental in the creation of the Black Hand terrorist networks that organized the assassination of the archduke. They dreamed of a greater Serbia encompassing all the Serbs on the Balkan Peninsula. The region was fertile ground for disaffection: two nonSlavic races, Austrians and Hungarians, held sway over millions of Serbs, Slovaks, Czechs, Croats and Poles, among others. Clark gives us a thoroughly comprehensible and highly readable account of the polarization of the continent. It is a pity that with so many characters and so many unfamiliar names, his editors fail to provide a list of the players and chronology: one has to go to McMeekin for that. An American professor who teaches in Istanbul, McMeekin has chosen the zoom lens. He opens with a crisp but vivid reconstruction of the double murder in the sunshine of Sarajevo, then concentrates entirely on unraveling the choreography day by day, as the hereditary monarchs in their palaces summon their ministers and generals and the ministers summon their aides for the writing and encryption of telegrams, and the ambassadors in top hats and tails in Vienna and Berlin, Belgrade and St. Petersburg, Paris and London summon all their eloquence and guile to follow up with their own glosses on their masters' flow of threats, promises and entreaties. The imperial monarchs were related - Queen Victoria died in the arms of her grandson, Kaiser Wilhelm II - but they were also consumed by greatpower rivalries and their individual authority was refracted through receding mirrors of bureaucracy. We get an indication of the ambiguities at a crucial point on the evening of July 29. Czar Nicholas II, having just agreed to general mobilization, is handed a telegram, appealing to him not to do just that. It is to "Nicky" from his third cousin in Berlin, Kaiser "Will." Nicky instantly rescinds the order: "I will not become responsible for a monstrous slaughter." Less than 24 hours later, kinship and prudence succumb to patriotic rhetoric and inflated estimates of Austrian military power. Both authors put a stake through the heart of a common narrative that has Germany mobilizing first so as to spring the preventive war its generals had long advocated. It didn't. Clark documents how Berlin's political and military leaders stuck to their blithe belief that any conflict could be localized. Russia's mobilization, he says, was "one of the most momentous decisions of the July crisis. This was the first of the general mobilizations." McMeekin says that Russia's crime was first in escalating a local quarrel by encouraging Serbia to stand up to Austria-Hungary and then accelerating the rush to war. He faults Barbara Tuchman in her classic "Guns of August" for misdating Russia's mobilization two days later than it was ordered. He is no apologist for Germany. In "The Berlin-Baghdad Express" (2010), he nailed the Kaiser as a half-crazy jihadist inciting Muslims against Anglo-French interests in the faltering Ottoman Empire, but his 2011 book "The Russian Origins of the First World War" lived up to its title. Clark lends authority by citing Russian-French falsifications of documents. The Russians backdated and reworded papers in the records. The French were even more inventive, fabricating a telegram reporting six days of war preparations by Germany that weren't happening. In Clark's phrase, both Russia and France were at pains, then and later, to make Berlin appear "the moral fulcrum of the crisis." MCMEEKIN is intent on indicting the men and nations he considers guilty. He could have entitled his book "J'accuse." It's his third with a polemical thrust. Clark declines to join McMeekin in what he calls "the blame game," because there were so many participants. He argues that trying to fix guilt on one leader or nation assumes that there must be a guilty party and this, he maintains, distorts the history into a prosecutorial narrative that misses the essentially multilateral nature of the exchanges, while underplaying the ethnic and nationalistic ferment of a region. "The outbreak of war in 1914," he writes, "is not an Agatha Christie drama at the end of which we will discover the culprit standing over a corpse in the conservatory with a smoking pistol." Not having a villain to boo is emotionally less satisfying, but Clark makes a cogent case for the war as a tragedy, not a crime: in his telling there is a smoking pistol in the hands of every major character. Still, his objectivity does not equate with a bland neutrality. By a stringent line-by-line analysis of the terms of Austria's 48-hour ultimatum to Serbia and the Serbian reply, Clark demolishes the standard view that Austria was too harsh and that Serbia humbly complied. Austria demanded action against irredentist networks in Serbia. It would have been an infringement of sovereignty, yes, but Serbian tolerance of the terrorist networks, and its laid-back response to the Sarajevo murders, inhibit one's sympathy with its position. Clark describes Austria's ultimatum as "a great deal milder" than the ultimatum presented by NATO to Serbia-Yugoslavia in the March 1999 Rambouillet Agreement for unimpeded access to its land. As for Serbia's reply, so long regarded as conciliatory, Clark shows that on most policy points it was a highly perfumed rejection offering Austria amazingly little - a "masterpiece of diplomatic equivocation." In sketching the characters of the key players, Clark makes a fascinating point I've not seen before: not simply were all the political players in the drama male, but they were men caught in a "crisis of masculinity." He cites historians of gender who argue that at this particular time "competition from subordinate and marginalized masculinities - proletarian and nonwhite for example" accentuated assertiveness. You'd expect the military men to exude testosterone, and they do, but Clark is struck by how ubiquitous in memoir and memorandums are pointedly masculine modes of comportment, and how closely they are interwoven with their understanding of policy. "Uprightness," "backs very stiff," "firmness of will," "selfcastration" are typical modes of expression. The brilliance of Clark's farreaching history is that we are able to discern how the past was genuinely prologue. The participants were conditioned to keep walking along a precipitous escarpment, sure of their own moral compass, but unknowingly impelled by a complex interaction of deep-rooted cultures, patriotism and paranoia, sediments of history and folk memory, ambition and intrigue. They were, in Clark's term, "sleepwalkers, watchful but unseeing, haunted by dreams, yet blind to the reality of the horror they were about to bring into the world." In conception, steely scholarship and piercing insights, his book is a masterpiece. Bismarck had warned that 'some damned foolish thing in the Balkans' would one day trigger a great war. Harold Evans is editor at large at Reuters and the author of "The American Century."
Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [May 26, 2013]
Review by Booklist Review
The immense documentation of the origin of WWI, remarks historian Clark, can be marshaled to support a range of theses, and it but weakly sustains, in the tenor of his intricate analysis, the temptation to assign exclusive blame for the cataclysm to a particular country. Dispensing with a thesis, Clark interprets evidence in terms of the character, internal political heft, and external geopolitical perception and intention of a political actor. In other words, Clark centralizes human agency and, especially, human foibles of misperception, illogic, and emotion in his narrative. Touching on every significant figure in European diplomacy in the decade leading to August 1914, Clark underscores an entanglement of an official's fluctuating domestic power with a foreign interlocutor's appreciation, accurate or not, of that official's ability to make something stick in foreign policy. As narrative background, Clark choreographs the alliances and series of crises that preceded the one provoked by the assassination of Franz Ferdinand, but he focuses on the men whose risk-taking mistakes detonated WWI. Emphasizing the human element, Clark bestows a tragic sensibility on a magisterial work of scholarship.--Taylor, Gilbert Copyright 2010 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
WWI is frequently described as a long-fused inevitable conflict, yet this comprehensively researched, gracefully written account of the war's genesis convincingly posits a bad brew of diplomatic contingencies and individual agency as the cause. Clark, history professor at Cambridge University, begins by describing the interactions of Serbia and Austria-Hungary, which sparked the conflict. He presents the former as a "raw and fragile democracy" whose "turbulent" politics challenged a neighboring empire held together by habit. Indeed, the instability across Europe further polarized alliance networks-foreign policies were shaped by "ambiguous relationships... and adversarial competitions" that obfuscated intentions. Nevertheless, the European system demonstrated "a surprising capacity for crisis management." But even the detente years of 1912-1914 were characterized by "persistent uncertainty in all quarters about the intentions of friends and potential foes alike." Beginning with the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, that uncertainty informed the burgeoning crisis-Austria-Hungary's hesitation allowed Russia to frame the event as a tyrant "cut down by citizens of his own country"; Britain and France offered no challenge to the narrative; and Germany "counted on the localization of the Austro-Serbian conflict." Instead Russia escalated the crisis by mobilizing, Britain by hesitating, and Germany by panicking: Europe sleepwalked into "a tragedy." B&w illus., 7 maps. Agent: Andrew Wylie, the Wylie Agency. (Apr.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review
A massive, wide-ranging chronicle of the events, personalities and failures of the run-up to World War I. Clark (Modern European History/Univ. of Cambridge; Iron Kingdom: The Rise and Downfall of Prussia, 16001947, 2006, etc.) lays out the long and violent history of Serbian nationalism, the confusion in the dying Austro-Hungarian empire and the struggle for dominance between the British and Russian empires. While explaining the irredentist mindset of Serbia then, the author also illuminates the causes of the Balkan unrest that erupted again in the 1990s. Surely he read every journal, letter, accounting and government document related to every nation and player in this period; indeed, there are points where some readers may wonder if this is a case of research rapture. Patience will be necessary to wade through the myriad details. However, given the vast amount of available material on World War I and the daunting task of trying to produce a readable account, Clark has succeeded admirably. The most remarkable fact about the crisis that led to this war is that none of those involved had any clue as to the intentions of not only their enemies, but also their allies. In fact, they weren't absolutely sure who the enemy would be. Consequently, many, including Czar Nicholas II and Kaiser Wilhelm II, tried to head off the conflict right up to the end, each waiting for someone to do something as the world stumbled into war. For readers who seek a quick overview of one of the most convoluted periods in history, look elsewhere. For those who enjoy excellent scholarship joined with logical composition and an easy style of writing, save a (wide) spot on your bookshelf for Clark's work.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.