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WAR IN THE MODERN WORLD

Welcome to the website!

Most of the papers here are from my studies at King's College London in an online "programme" for mid-career British Army officers called War in the Modern World. About half were indeed British Army, including a captain who deployed to Afghanistan midway through the four years. (Alas, upon his return he dropped out of the course, left the army, and began to study law instead.) The rest of us were from militaries and civilian life, from a Danish pilot to an assistant to the prime minister of Singapore. I learned a great deal, and this website is to share it more broadly.

From Dan Ford's blog:

Tiptoeing around Armageddon

What we have here is a cross between the Third World War and a Cold War 2.0, with Russia again at the heart of things, just as it was in 1914-1918 (the First World War), 1939-1945 (the Second World War), and 1948-1991 (the original Cold War). The outcome, alas, is likely to be equally unsatisfactory to all hands.

Defending Ukraine today are the US, Canada, Australia, most of Europe, and an assortment of less committed nations, almost all of them democracies. Doing its best to destroy Ukraine is Russia -- of course! -- with help from Belarus, Iran, and a few less-committed nations like Turkey and China.

The consequences have been awful, with much of Ukraine destroyed and as many as 90,000 Russian soldiers killed, captured, gone missing, or disabled by wounds -- roughly half the invading force. Europe faces a cold winter and the possibility of a nuclear disaster on the scale of the Chernobyl meltdown of 1986. (Moscow is a European city, and the wind tends to blow from west to east.) Hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians and tens of thousands of Russians have fled their homelands to settle wherever they can. Millions of poor Africans go hungry from the damage to Ukraine's usually bountiful harvest of wheat, barley, and sunflower oil.

One man is behind all this: Vladimir Putin. He hopes to rebuild an empire that stretches from Warsaw to Vladivostok -- the Russian Empire as built by Catherine the Great in the 18th century, lost by Tsar Nicholas II in the 20th, restored by Joseph Stalin, and lost again by Mikhail Gorbachev. Putin failed in his first attempt, to topple the Kyiv government and replace it with one sympathetic to Russia. He then tried to extend his control of Ukraine's east and south, claiming that was his intention all along, only to have the Ukrainian army reclaim thousands of square miles in their astonishing counteroffensive in September.

What will Putin do now? Fiona Hill argues that he won't give up -- that he can't give up and still maintain his hold on the Kremlin. His weapons now are indiscriminate bombardment of Ukraine, a cold winter in Europe, hunger in much of the world, inflation everywhere, and occasional bluster about nuclear weapons. His Ukrainian adventure won't end prettily, and not this year, probably not in 2023, and perhaps not for another decade or more. Putin isn't a young man -- he's seventy -- but he seems to be healthy enough, and if not overthrown he could blight the world for another ten or even twenty years.

How Ukraine (and the war) came to be

[Sept 8; updated Oct 18] Timothy Snyder, the Yale prof who wrote the admirable Bloodlands among other good books about Eastern Europe, is teaching a course this semester on the making of Ukraine as a way to understand Putin's bloody and inept invasion of February 26. You can audit it on YouTube. Go to youtu.be/bJczLlwp-d8 for the introductory lecture, which has been viewed more than 380,000 times. Three of those views were mine: Sally and I watched it streaming on TV (I found it by searching YouTube for HIST 247); I saw it again next day on my computer when I discovered it was sub-titled; and then of course we streamed it again last night, so Sally could see the titles too. I didn't mind: Prof Snyder is altogether the finest lecturer I have ever heard, and he talks fast and crams a lot into each minute.

We're now up to Lecture ll, which appropriately was delivered on October 11: Russia: Empire and Nations. The reading list is formidable. See it and the course schedule at his Substack channel.

The essays (in more or less chronological order)

Other good stuff to read

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Poland's Daughter

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Posted October 18, 2022. Websites © 1997-2022 Daniel Ford; all rights reserved. This site sets no cookies, but Mailchimp and Amazon do, if you click through to their services. I never see those cookies.