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	<title>Comments on: American moments</title>
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		<title>By: Ana</title>
		<link>http://www.martinwestlake.eu/727/comment-page-1/#comment-366</link>
		<dc:creator>Ana</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 03 Feb 2009 09:04:34 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>Dear Martin,
Reading your post I was thinking of last year&#039;s celebrations of 90 years from the end of WWI. The 1914-18 war brought indeed an important transition from &quot;old-fashioned&quot; cavalry-based wars to what was called by historians &quot;the total war&quot;. It was the first war which not only affected huge masses of military and almost the entire territory of the planet, but had also a terrible impact on the civilians behind the frontlines, and affected a whole generation&#039;s dreams, hopes, and ambitions. Literary-wise it makes me think of Henry Barbusse&#039;s &#039;Le feu&#039; which described in very powerful naturalist notes all the horrors of the new weapons, and, in my homeland Camil Petrescu&#039;s &quot;The Last Night of Love, the First Night of War&quot;. I also recall a certain team building visit to Flanders Fields and all the horror of the Ypres gas which made those poppy fields become a huge cemetery. Yepers I&#039;m not saying that wars before, be it the American civil war or the Hundred Years&#039; War were best because they were more chevaleresque in the way of fighting.. In the end, it is not the number of casualties that matters: each human life is unique and has an absolute value in itself, each life lost stupidly on a battlefield is a testimony that human beings, despite having produced beautiful pieces of political philosophy, are not yet there, on the way to making the word &quot;war&quot; a dictionary reliquat. Next to other innovations, the adoption of the Lisbon treaty would allow Europe to start being more of a &quot;player&quot; and less of a &quot;payer&quot; in security terms. This brings me back to your Obama Top 10 European moments: the US are exhausted by their War effort in Irak and Afghanistan, and, notwithstanding long-term rivalry between both sides of the Atlantic and the ambiguities of NATO-ESDP interplay, the Obama administration has all interest to know as soon as possible &quot;whom to call in Europe if the world caught fire&quot;. Therefore, in my humble opinion, the top 10 should definitely include Obama&#039;s meeting with the President of the European Union and the new High Representative for Foreign Affairs once the Lisbon treaty is ratified. One can just hope, though, that Obama wouldn&#039;t have to wait for a second mandate until all this is done…</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Dear Martin,<br />
Reading your post I was thinking of last year&#8217;s celebrations of 90 years from the end of WWI. The 1914-18 war brought indeed an important transition from &#8220;old-fashioned&#8221; cavalry-based wars to what was called by historians &#8220;the total war&#8221;. It was the first war which not only affected huge masses of military and almost the entire territory of the planet, but had also a terrible impact on the civilians behind the frontlines, and affected a whole generation&#8217;s dreams, hopes, and ambitions. Literary-wise it makes me think of Henry Barbusse&#8217;s &#8216;Le feu&#8217; which described in very powerful naturalist notes all the horrors of the new weapons, and, in my homeland Camil Petrescu&#8217;s &#8220;The Last Night of Love, the First Night of War&#8221;. I also recall a certain team building visit to Flanders Fields and all the horror of the Ypres gas which made those poppy fields become a huge cemetery. Yepers I&#8217;m not saying that wars before, be it the American civil war or the Hundred Years&#8217; War were best because they were more chevaleresque in the way of fighting.. In the end, it is not the number of casualties that matters: each human life is unique and has an absolute value in itself, each life lost stupidly on a battlefield is a testimony that human beings, despite having produced beautiful pieces of political philosophy, are not yet there, on the way to making the word &#8220;war&#8221; a dictionary reliquat. Next to other innovations, the adoption of the Lisbon treaty would allow Europe to start being more of a &#8220;player&#8221; and less of a &#8220;payer&#8221; in security terms. This brings me back to your Obama Top 10 European moments: the US are exhausted by their War effort in Irak and Afghanistan, and, notwithstanding long-term rivalry between both sides of the Atlantic and the ambiguities of NATO-ESDP interplay, the Obama administration has all interest to know as soon as possible &#8220;whom to call in Europe if the world caught fire&#8221;. Therefore, in my humble opinion, the top 10 should definitely include Obama&#8217;s meeting with the President of the European Union and the new High Representative for Foreign Affairs once the Lisbon treaty is ratified. One can just hope, though, that Obama wouldn&#8217;t have to wait for a second mandate until all this is done…</p>
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