Excerpt from How Europe Armed for War: 1871 1914 This little work makes no claim to be an exhaustive analysis of the armament problem with which it deals. Nor is it written from the viewpoint of an anti-militarist agitator so much as from that of a keenly interested student of the economics of naval and mili tary power. It endeavours to discover and to delineate the part which the engineer and the chemist have played in the perfection of war material, and the reactions which the manufacture of muni tions, to meet an ever ...
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Excerpt from How Europe Armed for War: 1871 1914 This little work makes no claim to be an exhaustive analysis of the armament problem with which it deals. Nor is it written from the viewpoint of an anti-militarist agitator so much as from that of a keenly interested student of the economics of naval and mili tary power. It endeavours to discover and to delineate the part which the engineer and the chemist have played in the perfection of war material, and the reactions which the manufacture of muni tions, to meet an ever-growing demand, has had upon the metal, machinery and associated trades in industrial communities. Amid all the vast literature of naval, military, imperialist and pacifist writers one looks in vain for any thorough treatment of the war industries in relation to the development of the war system. There are a few pamphlets, but none of these are satisfactory. Very few militarists seem to have any appreciation of the dependence of the fighting services on the industrial system, whilst their Opponents display an equally displeasing aversion to a closer acquaintanceship with what they regard as the unclean thing. Personally, I un grudgingly avow a keen interest in all the wondrous machinery of war, behind, and inseparable from which, are the workshops and shipyards, ever the finest embodiments of modern production. There is romance in the war machines - the greatest triumph of human ingenuity and the crowning tragedy of its murderous application. It is within the last half century that nations have laid up vast armaments for war in time of peace. Formerly they collected and trained men, accumulated money, but did not furnish themselves with gigantic supplies of munitions. Perhaps that is why this aspect of militarism has no literature. Never before was the soldier or the sailor a mechanic. Only to-day is he becoming a machine-minder, an Operative. It is a memorable revolution, for it alters the whole nature of war. About the Publisher Forgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and classic books. Find more at ... This book is a reproduction of an important historical work. Forgotten Books uses state-of-the-art technology to digitally reconstruct the work, preserving the original format whilst repairing imperfections present in the aged copy. In rare cases, an imperfection in the original, such as a blemish or missing page, may be replicated in our edition. We do, however, repair the vast majority of imperfections successfully; any imperfections that remain are intentionally left to preserve the state of such historical works.
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