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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:22,000 --> 00:00:26,720 By summer, 1918, the war had been going for four terrible years 2 00:00:26,720 --> 00:00:28,520 and the end seemed nowhere in sight. 3 00:00:30,680 --> 00:00:34,080 Unless we can look ahead and plan for 1919, 4 00:00:34,080 --> 00:00:39,360 we shall be in the same melancholy position next year as we are this. 5 00:00:39,360 --> 00:00:44,040 Do the means of beating the German armies in 1919 exist? 6 00:00:44,040 --> 00:00:45,640 Have we the will power? 7 00:01:27,560 --> 00:01:30,480 Since spring 1918, the Allies on the Western Front 8 00:01:30,480 --> 00:01:32,680 had been battered by German offensives. 9 00:01:37,120 --> 00:01:40,840 But in August, the Allies secretly assembled a strike force 10 00:01:40,840 --> 00:01:42,160 in northern France. 11 00:01:42,160 --> 00:01:45,080 100,000 men of the Australian and Canadian Corps 12 00:01:45,080 --> 00:01:46,680 were backed by 400 tanks... 13 00:01:50,400 --> 00:01:52,880 ..1,900 planes, 14 00:01:52,880 --> 00:01:55,360 2,000 guns, 15 00:01:55,360 --> 00:01:57,200 three cavalry divisions. 16 00:02:00,280 --> 00:02:02,240 General Sir Henry Rawlinson, 17 00:02:02,240 --> 00:02:07,160 British commander at the Somme in 1916, had learnt from the past. 18 00:02:07,160 --> 00:02:09,560 He embraced new ideas. 19 00:02:09,560 --> 00:02:12,160 The close combination of men and machinery. 20 00:02:12,160 --> 00:02:14,240 The importance of achievable goals. 21 00:02:17,440 --> 00:02:20,280 My only difficulty will be to get enough divisions 22 00:02:20,280 --> 00:02:21,840 and to keep the thing secret. 23 00:02:26,000 --> 00:02:29,040 Rawlinson aimed his assault at a weak 12-mile sector 24 00:02:29,040 --> 00:02:31,040 of the German line, east of Amiens. 25 00:02:32,680 --> 00:02:36,240 He had the French in support to the south. 26 00:02:37,920 --> 00:02:41,880 General Erich Ludendorff, joint commander in chief of the German army, 27 00:02:41,880 --> 00:02:45,320 neither knew of an attack, nor feared one. 28 00:02:45,320 --> 00:02:50,800 We wish for nothing better than to see the enemy launch an offensive. 29 00:02:52,320 --> 00:02:57,040 100,000 infantry stand grimly, silently. 30 00:02:57,040 --> 00:03:00,560 All feel to make sure their bayonets are locked. 31 00:03:00,560 --> 00:03:03,560 The section officer counts the last seconds. 32 00:03:23,200 --> 00:03:25,640 The speed was terrific. 33 00:03:25,640 --> 00:03:29,200 Within a few moments of the Huns running from our tanks and infantry, 34 00:03:29,200 --> 00:03:33,040 our guns were coming up into new forward positions. 35 00:03:33,040 --> 00:03:36,680 It was glorious to be in the rush of an advance. 36 00:03:43,440 --> 00:03:45,920 The Allied attack sent the Germans reeling. 37 00:03:48,720 --> 00:03:52,480 By nightfall, Rawlinson's 4th Army had advanced eight miles. 38 00:03:58,040 --> 00:04:01,240 They killed and seriously wounded 9,000 Germans 39 00:04:01,240 --> 00:04:03,000 and captured 18,000 more. 40 00:04:08,200 --> 00:04:14,040 Ludendorff declared 8th August the "Black Day of the German Army". 41 00:04:14,040 --> 00:04:16,480 General Paul von Hindenburg steadied him, 42 00:04:16,480 --> 00:04:20,640 but both knew the Battle of Amiens was the beginning of the end. 43 00:04:23,800 --> 00:04:25,880 Mighty as Germany looked on the map, 44 00:04:25,880 --> 00:04:29,520 her armies on the Western Front were near the end of their tether, 45 00:04:29,520 --> 00:04:32,680 exhausted, hungry, fed up. 46 00:04:34,960 --> 00:04:40,040 Their generals had given them neither clear aims, nor adequate supplies. 47 00:04:40,040 --> 00:04:43,000 The Germans had lost nearly a million men since March. 48 00:04:49,000 --> 00:04:54,600 Ludendorff blamed the home front for spreading defeatism. 49 00:04:54,600 --> 00:04:57,200 I was told of behaviour, which I openly confess, 50 00:04:57,200 --> 00:05:00,200 I should not have thought possible in the German army. 51 00:05:00,200 --> 00:05:04,840 Whole bodies of men had surrendered to single soldiers. 52 00:05:04,840 --> 00:05:07,840 Germany's problems went beyond poor morale. 53 00:05:14,840 --> 00:05:16,960 She had lost a string of vital battles. 54 00:05:19,040 --> 00:05:21,640 The battle of the factories and technology. 55 00:05:23,120 --> 00:05:28,440 Germany had built just 20 tanks, the Allies, over 4,000. 56 00:05:31,960 --> 00:05:33,880 She had lost the battle of manpower. 57 00:05:33,880 --> 00:05:37,240 A quarter of a million Americans were pouring into France every month. 58 00:05:39,800 --> 00:05:41,640 She had lost the battle of command. 59 00:05:41,640 --> 00:05:45,640 The Allies worked together under the leadership by Marshal Ferdinand Foch. 60 00:05:48,600 --> 00:05:52,320 But Ludendorff's generals despaired of his lack of strategic plan, 61 00:05:52,320 --> 00:05:54,440 and some feared for his mental health. 62 00:05:56,440 --> 00:06:00,280 Great crisis this morning, very nerve-racking. 63 00:06:00,280 --> 00:06:04,320 Ludendorff is a bundle of nerves. It's never his fault. 64 00:06:04,320 --> 00:06:06,280 He looks everywhere for scapegoats. 65 00:06:12,720 --> 00:06:16,600 After Amiens, Foch orchestrated a series of attacks 66 00:06:16,600 --> 00:06:18,760 up and down the German lines - 67 00:06:18,760 --> 00:06:23,920 first French, then British, now American. 68 00:06:23,920 --> 00:06:26,560 The Germans fell back under the rain of blows. 69 00:06:31,520 --> 00:06:37,000 While the Allies pulled together, the Central Powers were tearing apart 70 00:06:37,000 --> 00:06:40,600 In Austria-Hungary, a third of a million soldiers had deserted. 71 00:06:42,720 --> 00:06:45,240 The people at home were starving. 72 00:06:45,240 --> 00:06:47,440 The multi-ethnic empire was splintering, 73 00:06:47,440 --> 00:06:49,400 its Poles, Czechs and Bosnians 74 00:06:49,400 --> 00:06:52,400 saw defeat as their chance to pursue independence. 75 00:06:56,800 --> 00:07:01,040 In mid-September, the Austrian Emperor Karl told the Kaiser 76 00:07:01,040 --> 00:07:03,400 he wanted to negotiate with the Allies. 77 00:07:03,400 --> 00:07:05,080 The Kaiser begged him not to. 78 00:07:06,720 --> 00:07:10,480 I cannot refrain from expressing astonishment and sorrow 79 00:07:10,480 --> 00:07:12,880 that you even think of this. 80 00:07:12,880 --> 00:07:16,040 You must know how destructive this course of action is. 81 00:07:18,840 --> 00:07:22,840 But Karl had already sent his proposal for talks to the Allies 82 00:07:22,840 --> 00:07:24,760 and they just threw it back in his face. 83 00:07:27,560 --> 00:07:31,880 Another great empire allied to Germany was dying. 84 00:07:31,880 --> 00:07:36,280 The 600-year-old Ottoman Empire was a spent force. 85 00:07:36,280 --> 00:07:41,320 Britain was driving the Turks out of Mesopotamia, Palestine and Syria. 86 00:07:41,320 --> 00:07:44,480 They were now fighting for their lives, not for Germany. 87 00:07:48,360 --> 00:07:51,600 Then the third link in Germany's alliance chain started to give way. 88 00:07:53,960 --> 00:07:57,560 Germany needed Bulgaria to hold the Balkan Front. 89 00:07:57,560 --> 00:08:03,160 But by September 1918, a huge Allied force had gathered in Macedonia. 90 00:08:03,160 --> 00:08:07,440 If the Bulgarians folded, the Allies' way would be clear to Austria-Hungary 91 00:08:16,400 --> 00:08:20,200 The Bulgarians were dug into these trenches, their morale cracking. 92 00:08:21,480 --> 00:08:24,360 Crown Prince Boris was almost attacked by his own soldiers 93 00:08:24,360 --> 00:08:25,920 when he visited the front. 94 00:08:28,960 --> 00:08:31,480 We are naked, barefoot and hungry. 95 00:08:33,440 --> 00:08:36,240 An empty knapsack does not guard a frontier. 96 00:08:41,080 --> 00:08:43,440 The First World War had begun in the Balkans, 97 00:08:43,440 --> 00:08:46,160 with Serbia as the tinderbox. 98 00:08:46,160 --> 00:08:50,400 Now, as part of the Allied force, she was in at the kill. 99 00:08:50,400 --> 00:08:52,680 And for the Serbs it was personal. 100 00:08:52,680 --> 00:08:58,280 In 1915, the Bulgarians had helped kick them out of their homeland. 101 00:08:58,280 --> 00:09:00,600 Here was the Serbs' chance for revenge. 102 00:09:06,560 --> 00:09:11,000 The heavy artillery made the Bulgarians crawl into shelters. 103 00:09:11,000 --> 00:09:15,280 Excitement made my hair stand on end, my blood was up. 104 00:09:24,880 --> 00:09:29,560 The Allies smashed through the Bulgarian lines and rolled north. 105 00:09:29,560 --> 00:09:33,080 On 28th September, Bulgaria sued for peace. 106 00:09:35,720 --> 00:09:38,280 When he heard this, Ludendorff suffered a fit, 107 00:09:38,280 --> 00:09:40,840 collapsing to the floor, foaming at the mouth. 108 00:09:44,440 --> 00:09:48,400 The next day, he learned the Allies had breached the Hindenburg line 109 00:09:48,400 --> 00:09:50,040 along the St Quentin Canal, 110 00:09:50,040 --> 00:09:53,600 Germany's last fixed line of defence on the Western Front. 111 00:10:04,640 --> 00:10:07,520 Two days later, on 1st October, 112 00:10:07,520 --> 00:10:11,600 Ludendorff summoned his senior staff to his headquarters in Spa. 113 00:10:11,600 --> 00:10:14,200 Among them, Colonel Albrecht von Thaer. 114 00:10:16,040 --> 00:10:22,080 Ludendorff stood up. His face was pale and full of deep worry. 115 00:10:22,080 --> 00:10:23,920 He said it was his duty to tell us 116 00:10:23,920 --> 00:10:26,440 our military condition was terribly serious. 117 00:10:28,560 --> 00:10:31,040 Bulgaria has already been lost. 118 00:10:31,040 --> 00:10:35,280 Austria and Turkey are both at the end of their strength. 119 00:10:35,280 --> 00:10:38,160 Any day now, our Western Front could be breached. 120 00:10:40,000 --> 00:10:43,920 Therefore, the Supreme Army Command demands 121 00:10:43,920 --> 00:10:48,120 that a proposal for bringing about peace be made without delay. 122 00:10:52,000 --> 00:10:57,200 Ludendorff's stark decision to ask for an armistice - or cease-fire - was a terrible shock. 123 00:10:58,800 --> 00:11:02,000 Generals quietly sobbed. 124 00:11:02,000 --> 00:11:06,440 When Ludendorff left the room, Thaer followed him. 125 00:11:06,440 --> 00:11:10,080 I grabbed his right arm with both hands and said, 126 00:11:10,080 --> 00:11:12,200 "Your Excellency, can it be true? 127 00:11:12,200 --> 00:11:15,040 "Is that the last word? Am I awake or dreaming?" 128 00:11:15,040 --> 00:11:17,200 I was completely beside myself. 129 00:11:18,720 --> 00:11:23,560 He remained calm and gentle and said to me with a deeply sorrowful smile, 130 00:11:23,560 --> 00:11:27,600 "Unfortunately, that is how it is, and I see no other way out." 131 00:11:45,960 --> 00:11:48,440 To the German people in October 1918, 132 00:11:48,440 --> 00:11:54,080 the prospect of an armistice seemed heaven-sent. 133 00:11:54,080 --> 00:11:59,160 A great sigh of relief escapes from the lips of the tormented nation. 134 00:11:59,160 --> 00:12:04,120 "This means peace" you can hear at every corner of the streets, 135 00:12:04,120 --> 00:12:07,640 and "Peace" smiles in the eyes of every shop girl 136 00:12:07,640 --> 00:12:09,560 in the baker's or grocer's 137 00:12:14,280 --> 00:12:16,880 Germany's soldiers had kept her politicians in the dark 138 00:12:16,880 --> 00:12:18,680 about the string of military disasters. 139 00:12:23,800 --> 00:12:27,440 So the news that they wanted an armistice came as a bolt from the blue. 140 00:12:29,440 --> 00:12:32,040 The deputies were absolutely broken. 141 00:12:32,040 --> 00:12:35,400 Ebert turned white as a sheet and didn't utter a single word. 142 00:12:36,200 --> 00:12:39,480 Another looked as if he'd had an accident. 143 00:12:39,480 --> 00:12:43,240 The secretary is believed to have left the room, saying, 144 00:12:43,240 --> 00:12:46,520 "The only thing left to do is to shoot one's self in the head." 145 00:12:51,320 --> 00:12:53,880 But peace talks were still a way off. 146 00:12:53,880 --> 00:12:59,200 First, the terms of the cease-fire would have to be settled. 147 00:12:59,200 --> 00:13:01,800 Germany approached US President Woodrow Wilson, 148 00:13:01,800 --> 00:13:05,240 asking him to broker the armistice with the Allies. 149 00:13:05,240 --> 00:13:09,680 They chose him because he had already proposed a peace plan - the 14 Points. 150 00:13:11,160 --> 00:13:14,880 French PM Clemenceau was unimpressed. 151 00:13:14,880 --> 00:13:16,760 14 points? 152 00:13:16,760 --> 00:13:19,040 The good Lord has only ten. 153 00:13:23,200 --> 00:13:26,560 Wilson's points were an idealistic package of liberal principles, 154 00:13:26,560 --> 00:13:29,600 including rights to national self-determination 155 00:13:29,600 --> 00:13:33,280 and a League of Nations to watch over it all. 156 00:13:33,280 --> 00:13:37,320 Germany believed Wilson would secure a fair deal for them on this basis. 157 00:13:39,840 --> 00:13:43,160 We are ready to be just to the German people, 158 00:13:43,160 --> 00:13:47,040 to deal fairly with Germany, as with all others. 159 00:13:47,040 --> 00:13:50,720 To propose anything but justice to Germany would be to renounce 160 00:13:50,720 --> 00:13:52,480 and dishonour our own cause. 161 00:13:54,920 --> 00:13:59,840 But Wilson also insisted Germany had to admit defeat and democratise. 162 00:14:03,280 --> 00:14:06,280 Britain and France did not want to talk about a new world order 163 00:14:06,280 --> 00:14:07,400 until the war was over. 164 00:14:11,440 --> 00:14:15,160 While the politicians argued, the fighting raged on. 165 00:14:15,160 --> 00:14:18,920 Germany's U-boats continued to sink Allied ships in the Atlantic. 166 00:14:22,040 --> 00:14:26,400 And as her armies retreated across France, they looted and laid waste. 167 00:14:36,040 --> 00:14:39,600 14-year-old Yves Congar had kept a diary throughout the German 168 00:14:39,600 --> 00:14:41,680 occupation of his home town of Sedan. 169 00:14:44,640 --> 00:14:46,200 He longed for freedom, 170 00:14:46,200 --> 00:14:48,920 but dreaded the price the French would have to pay for it. 171 00:15:00,640 --> 00:15:02,560 So here it is, 172 00:15:02,560 --> 00:15:09,160 the great moment we've spent four years waiting, hoping, begging for. 173 00:15:09,160 --> 00:15:12,600 And yet it brings with it the horror of bombing, 174 00:15:12,600 --> 00:15:15,680 gas, fire, perhaps death. 175 00:15:17,120 --> 00:15:19,320 We may never see friends again, 176 00:15:19,320 --> 00:15:23,080 many might be killed, the town destroyed. 177 00:15:24,840 --> 00:15:27,400 Our one great hope is an armistice. 178 00:15:28,720 --> 00:15:31,320 The First World War did not go quietly. 179 00:15:38,360 --> 00:15:40,760 The final months were more lethal 180 00:15:40,760 --> 00:15:43,680 than the trench war of past years had been. 181 00:15:43,680 --> 00:15:47,320 Men now had to leave the safety of trenches and cross open ground, 182 00:15:47,320 --> 00:15:50,360 with little place to hide from sweeping machine-gun and shellfire. 183 00:15:57,760 --> 00:16:03,800 British casualties in autumn, 1918 were higher than those a year before, 184 00:16:03,800 --> 00:16:06,000 during the terrible battle of Passchendaele - 185 00:16:06,000 --> 00:16:07,560 the epitome of trench slaughter. 186 00:16:17,360 --> 00:16:21,320 And the closer to peace, the harder it was to bear the losses. 187 00:16:30,720 --> 00:16:32,800 It was a slaughterhouse, 188 00:16:32,800 --> 00:16:35,040 just a mass of mangled flesh and blood. 189 00:16:36,120 --> 00:16:38,760 Bob's head was hanging off. 190 00:16:38,760 --> 00:16:42,120 You couldn't tell which was Harris and which was Kempton. 191 00:16:42,120 --> 00:16:45,160 What was left of them was in pieces. 192 00:16:45,160 --> 00:16:47,840 We knew the enemy was beaten. 193 00:16:47,840 --> 00:16:52,120 After three years in France and the end so near, 194 00:16:52,120 --> 00:16:55,080 Bob, killed. 195 00:16:55,080 --> 00:16:59,360 Harris, who had left a young bride, killed. 196 00:16:59,360 --> 00:17:03,760 Jimmy Fooks, whose time was nearly up, killed. 197 00:17:03,760 --> 00:17:07,200 Kempton, who also was due for leave, killed. 198 00:17:10,800 --> 00:17:13,560 General Haig had seemed careless with his men's lives 199 00:17:13,560 --> 00:17:15,440 at the Battle of the Somme in 1916. 200 00:17:16,600 --> 00:17:20,720 Now, he argued for stopping the war without a total defeat of the Germans 201 00:17:22,880 --> 00:17:26,200 The British alone might bring the enemy to his knees, 202 00:17:26,200 --> 00:17:29,440 but why expend more British lives, and for what? 203 00:17:31,960 --> 00:17:35,760 French General Charles Mangin insisted this would only store up 204 00:17:35,760 --> 00:17:37,120 trouble for the future. 205 00:17:38,480 --> 00:17:43,760 No, no, no! We must go right into the heart of Germany. 206 00:17:43,760 --> 00:17:46,360 The Germans will not admit they were beaten. 207 00:17:46,360 --> 00:17:49,640 It is a fatal error and France will pay for it. 208 00:17:53,320 --> 00:17:54,880 But, with winter setting in, 209 00:17:54,880 --> 00:17:59,000 any invasion of Germany would have to wait till spring 1919. 210 00:17:59,000 --> 00:18:02,240 By then, the Germans might have renewed their strength. 211 00:18:06,080 --> 00:18:10,440 Marshal Foch believed France would get what she wanted by negotiation. 212 00:18:10,440 --> 00:18:12,520 No need to battle on to Berlin. 213 00:18:14,880 --> 00:18:17,320 So the Allies set out to achieve on paper 214 00:18:17,320 --> 00:18:19,880 what their armies had not done in the field - 215 00:18:19,880 --> 00:18:22,840 obtain Germany's unconditional surrender. 216 00:18:27,960 --> 00:18:31,040 Foch chose to meet the Germans in Compiegne, 217 00:18:31,040 --> 00:18:33,160 45 miles north-east of Paris, 218 00:18:33,160 --> 00:18:37,280 in a secluded forest through which a railway line conveniently ran. 219 00:18:41,680 --> 00:18:45,680 In his train, on 8th November, Foch handed the armistice conditions 220 00:18:45,680 --> 00:18:50,280 to politician Mathias Erzberger, leader of the German delegation. 221 00:18:51,960 --> 00:18:56,200 Erzberger was visibly shaken by the terms Germany would have to accept 222 00:18:56,200 --> 00:18:57,960 just to obtain a cease-fire. 223 00:19:01,080 --> 00:19:04,240 Germany would have to evacuate Belgium and France, 224 00:19:04,240 --> 00:19:08,240 surrender her fleet and pay compensation. 225 00:19:08,240 --> 00:19:11,680 The Allies would continue their blockade, disarm the Germans 226 00:19:11,680 --> 00:19:13,680 and occupy the left bank of the Rhine. 227 00:19:15,240 --> 00:19:18,480 Germany was being forced to capitulate. 228 00:19:22,640 --> 00:19:27,440 Meanwhile, the country Erzberger represented was falling apart, 229 00:19:27,440 --> 00:19:29,240 its cities swept by revolution. 230 00:19:29,240 --> 00:19:31,440 SHOUTING 231 00:19:35,240 --> 00:19:38,280 The German people, exhausted by war and hunger, 232 00:19:38,280 --> 00:19:41,240 wanted democracy in and the Kaiser out. 233 00:19:41,240 --> 00:19:44,560 CHEERING 234 00:19:51,920 --> 00:19:55,400 But it was the German army which forced the Kaiser to abdicate. 235 00:19:55,400 --> 00:19:59,200 He asked his generals to turn the army against the people, 236 00:19:59,200 --> 00:20:01,080 but the generals refused. 237 00:20:05,040 --> 00:20:09,240 The army will return home in good order under its generals, 238 00:20:09,240 --> 00:20:12,800 but not under the command of Your Majesty. 239 00:20:12,800 --> 00:20:16,000 It no longer stands behind Your Majesty. 240 00:20:19,680 --> 00:20:22,560 The Prussian dynasty of Frederick the Great was over. 241 00:20:28,920 --> 00:20:33,560 The next day, the Kaiser slipped into exile in Holland. 242 00:20:33,560 --> 00:20:38,840 He would live long enough to hear Germany had beaten France in 1940. 243 00:20:38,840 --> 00:20:43,280 He never accepted that, in 1918, his army had been defeated. 244 00:20:44,680 --> 00:20:48,440 For 30 years, the army was my pride. 245 00:20:48,440 --> 00:20:54,280 Now, after 4.5 brilliant years of war, with unprecedented victories, 246 00:20:54,280 --> 00:20:55,880 it was brought down 247 00:20:55,880 --> 00:21:00,160 by a stab in the back from the dagger of the revolutionaries 248 00:21:00,160 --> 00:21:04,760 at the very moment when peace was within reach. 249 00:21:04,760 --> 00:21:07,760 CHEERING 250 00:21:07,760 --> 00:21:12,520 Most Germans rejoiced at the news that the Kaiser had gone. 251 00:21:12,520 --> 00:21:16,800 I felt as if a heavy weight had suddenly been lifted from my heart. 252 00:21:16,800 --> 00:21:19,640 This definitely means the armistice will be signed. 253 00:21:25,320 --> 00:21:27,360 Back in the forest at Compiegne, 254 00:21:27,360 --> 00:21:31,440 Erzberger now represented the German Republic. 255 00:21:35,120 --> 00:21:40,760 At 5am on 11th of November, he signed the armistice. 256 00:21:51,560 --> 00:21:54,520 Hostilities temporarily cease 11:00 today 257 00:21:54,520 --> 00:21:56,840 when all offensive action will cease. 258 00:21:59,840 --> 00:22:03,760 Present outpost line to be maintained and no troops to pass 259 00:22:03,760 --> 00:22:07,240 east other than road etc reconnaissance and working parties. 260 00:22:09,640 --> 00:22:13,000 No conversation with enemy to be allowed. 261 00:22:30,560 --> 00:22:36,000 The most remarkable feature was the uncanny silence. 262 00:22:36,000 --> 00:22:37,720 The war was over. 263 00:22:41,400 --> 00:22:47,200 Peace and safety was a new thing. It could not be grasped in a moment. 264 00:22:51,600 --> 00:22:55,920 A dreadful blow. I was just beginning to enjoy it. 265 00:23:08,760 --> 00:23:10,920 No more slaughter. 266 00:23:10,920 --> 00:23:12,960 No more maiming. 267 00:23:12,960 --> 00:23:14,720 No more mud and blood. 268 00:23:16,280 --> 00:23:20,680 No more shovelling bits of men's bodies and dumping them in sandbags. 269 00:23:20,680 --> 00:23:25,200 No more writing dreadfully difficult letters to next of kin of the dead. 270 00:23:27,280 --> 00:23:31,800 A strange and unreal thought was running through my mind. 271 00:23:31,800 --> 00:23:33,600 I had a future. 272 00:23:48,960 --> 00:23:53,600 It was the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month. 273 00:23:53,600 --> 00:23:55,920 CHEERING 274 00:23:57,960 --> 00:24:01,160 A great cheer arose all along the line. 275 00:24:01,160 --> 00:24:05,640 We could hear the men a thousand yards in front raising holy hell. 276 00:24:05,640 --> 00:24:09,720 The French, behind our position, were dancing, shouting 277 00:24:09,720 --> 00:24:11,720 and waving bottles of wine. 278 00:24:16,960 --> 00:24:19,400 We were stupefied to see crowds of Boches 279 00:24:19,400 --> 00:24:21,600 running over between the minefields, 280 00:24:21,600 --> 00:24:24,080 their hands up and yelling like mad. 281 00:24:24,080 --> 00:24:26,880 They were crazy for cigarettes and chocolate. 282 00:24:26,880 --> 00:24:31,480 We had burned rice our boys wouldn't eat and they fell on it like wolves. 283 00:24:47,600 --> 00:24:50,560 Our soldiers were choked with emotion. 284 00:24:50,560 --> 00:24:52,520 I thought about my family, 285 00:24:52,520 --> 00:24:54,760 about all the women of France... 286 00:24:55,920 --> 00:24:59,000 ..except those who are alone and who cry. 287 00:25:00,400 --> 00:25:03,040 BELLS TOLL 288 00:25:06,840 --> 00:25:09,120 CHEERING 289 00:25:18,720 --> 00:25:21,360 One great wave of joy swept round the world 290 00:25:21,360 --> 00:25:24,960 and found its way to every nook and cranny. 291 00:25:24,960 --> 00:25:27,960 No-one was more delighted than our African soldiers, 292 00:25:27,960 --> 00:25:30,000 who cheered themselves hoarse. 293 00:25:33,680 --> 00:25:39,280 Everybody came out, disabled old men, old women in slippers 294 00:25:39,280 --> 00:25:42,640 and housewives, leaving lunch on the stove. 295 00:25:42,640 --> 00:25:47,400 I wept with joy. 5,000 Indian soldiers lit their torches. 296 00:25:47,400 --> 00:25:52,040 The hilltops burst into fire with scores of bonfires. 297 00:25:53,760 --> 00:25:58,160 I found myself arm in arm with soldiers I had never seen before. 298 00:25:58,160 --> 00:26:03,400 I forgot where we went, toured the streets, and sang and sang. 299 00:26:03,400 --> 00:26:07,280 The significance of what it means was overwhelming - 300 00:26:07,280 --> 00:26:08,560 peace. 301 00:26:17,960 --> 00:26:21,360 People whose lives were shaped by the war went home, 302 00:26:21,360 --> 00:26:24,920 people the world did not yet know. 303 00:26:24,920 --> 00:26:27,760 Ernest Hemingway, Bertolt Brecht, 304 00:26:27,760 --> 00:26:30,680 Harold Macmillan, Vera Brittain, 305 00:26:30,680 --> 00:26:35,000 Charles de Gaulle, Josef Tito, Benito Mussolini, 306 00:26:35,000 --> 00:26:39,320 David Ben-Gurion, Mustafa Kemal. 307 00:26:40,400 --> 00:26:45,240 And one of the most insignificant of them all, for now, Adolf Hitler. 308 00:26:55,640 --> 00:27:00,840 The German armies in France and Belgium headed home. 309 00:27:00,840 --> 00:27:03,840 How we had looked forward to this moment. 310 00:27:03,840 --> 00:27:08,200 We used to picture it as the most splendid event of our lives. 311 00:27:08,200 --> 00:27:14,320 And here we are now, humbled, our souls torn and bleeding. 312 00:27:14,320 --> 00:27:17,720 But we can be proud of our performance. 313 00:27:17,720 --> 00:27:21,560 Never before has a nation, a single army, had the world against it 314 00:27:21,560 --> 00:27:24,760 and stood its ground. 315 00:27:24,760 --> 00:27:27,680 We protected our homeland. 316 00:27:27,680 --> 00:27:29,720 They never got into Germany. 317 00:27:40,920 --> 00:27:47,080 In mid-December, 1918, the first German troops arrived in Berlin. 318 00:27:47,080 --> 00:27:52,560 The people welcomed them as an army with no cause to feel ashamed. 319 00:27:52,560 --> 00:27:56,640 The men wore green laurel wreaths over steel helmets. 320 00:27:56,640 --> 00:28:00,480 The machine-guns were garlanded with green branches. 321 00:28:00,480 --> 00:28:03,400 Many a soldier had a child or sweetheart 322 00:28:03,400 --> 00:28:06,800 on his flower-wreathed horse. 323 00:28:06,800 --> 00:28:10,760 A feeling of confidence, of fresh hope in the future 324 00:28:10,760 --> 00:28:13,280 seems to have returned with the troops. 325 00:28:17,000 --> 00:28:18,960 Germany's new Republican chancellor 326 00:28:18,960 --> 00:28:21,720 Friedrich Ebert reinforced the dangerous illusion 327 00:28:21,720 --> 00:28:25,200 they were not beaten in this war. 328 00:28:25,200 --> 00:28:30,640 I salute you who return unvanquished from the field of battle. 329 00:28:41,320 --> 00:28:44,520 The Allies were in no doubt who had beaten whom. 330 00:28:44,520 --> 00:28:49,760 Allied troops moved into Germany and began their watch on the Rhine. 331 00:28:49,760 --> 00:28:52,920 The German fleet was surrendered to Britain, 332 00:28:52,920 --> 00:28:57,920 and the Allies travelled to Paris to dictate the terms of the peace. 333 00:29:08,520 --> 00:29:11,280 US president Woodrow Wilson crossed the Atlantic 334 00:29:11,280 --> 00:29:12,920 to put his idealism to the test. 335 00:29:15,240 --> 00:29:19,640 We have used the great words "right" and "justice". 336 00:29:19,640 --> 00:29:23,880 Now we are to prove whether or not we understand them 337 00:29:23,880 --> 00:29:26,280 and how they are to be applied. 338 00:29:30,000 --> 00:29:32,120 But the world had not stood still 339 00:29:32,120 --> 00:29:35,320 between the end of the war and the start of the peace talks. 340 00:29:35,320 --> 00:29:37,480 CHEERING 341 00:29:40,080 --> 00:29:42,560 On 22nd November 1918, 342 00:29:42,560 --> 00:29:47,240 the Belgian King Albert came home in triumph to Brussels. 343 00:29:52,640 --> 00:29:54,920 Occupied lands had been won back. 344 00:30:05,720 --> 00:30:09,080 The French repossessed Alsace-Lorraine. 345 00:30:13,240 --> 00:30:16,040 What a moving welcome! 346 00:30:16,040 --> 00:30:18,640 The people were so happy and smiling. 347 00:30:18,640 --> 00:30:22,000 Some were pale and cried while they greeted us. 348 00:30:22,000 --> 00:30:28,200 They speak pure French. They really are French, all those locals. 349 00:30:28,200 --> 00:30:32,320 We were treated like victors, like saviours. 350 00:30:43,880 --> 00:30:47,040 These scenes confirmed that France and Belgium 351 00:30:47,040 --> 00:30:49,640 had been liberated from an evil grip, 352 00:30:49,640 --> 00:30:52,240 that this was a victory for the Allies. 353 00:31:01,520 --> 00:31:08,360 And in eastern Europe, new nations arose out of shattered empires. 354 00:31:08,360 --> 00:31:10,920 They didn't wait for the peace conference 355 00:31:10,920 --> 00:31:12,960 to bring self-determination. 356 00:31:12,960 --> 00:31:18,240 They tore down all signs of foreign rule and put up new frontiers. 357 00:31:20,520 --> 00:31:25,880 Poland carved a vast territory out of Germany and Russia. 358 00:31:25,880 --> 00:31:31,040 Czechoslovakia took land from Austria and Hungary. 359 00:31:31,040 --> 00:31:34,160 And Serbia realised the aim she had started the war over 360 00:31:34,160 --> 00:31:36,720 by founding her own Slav super-state. 361 00:31:38,560 --> 00:31:41,800 The peace talks would recognise these new nations - 362 00:31:41,800 --> 00:31:43,360 they did not create them. 363 00:31:46,360 --> 00:31:48,920 CHATTER 364 00:31:48,920 --> 00:31:55,000 27 countries met in Paris to divide the spoils and define the peace. 365 00:31:55,000 --> 00:31:57,040 The losers were not invited. 366 00:32:01,320 --> 00:32:03,520 We are going into these negotiations with our mouths full of fine phrases 367 00:32:03,760 --> 00:32:05,800 with our mouths full of fine phrases 368 00:32:05,800 --> 00:32:09,080 and our brains seething with dark thoughts. 369 00:32:11,240 --> 00:32:14,320 The big decisions were made by the Council of Four - 370 00:32:14,320 --> 00:32:18,400 Prime Ministers Orlando of Italy, Lloyd George of Britain, 371 00:32:18,400 --> 00:32:21,760 Clemenceau of France, and US President Wilson, 372 00:32:23,040 --> 00:32:27,600 All liberals, but with different agendas and forceful personalities. 373 00:32:29,360 --> 00:32:33,880 Arguments between Lloyd George and myself were so violent 374 00:32:33,880 --> 00:32:37,080 Wilson interposed between us with outstretched arms, 375 00:32:37,080 --> 00:32:42,160 saying pleasantly, "I have never come across such unreasonable men." 376 00:32:45,800 --> 00:32:52,080 Clemenceau wanted Germany restrained for the sake of French security. 377 00:32:52,080 --> 00:32:56,320 Orlando wanted more territory for Italy. 378 00:32:56,320 --> 00:33:01,680 Lloyd George looked beyond Europe to safeguard the British Empire. 379 00:33:01,680 --> 00:33:07,200 Wilson wanted his new world order, with justice and democracy for all. 380 00:33:07,200 --> 00:33:10,560 But, first, there was the little matter of settling the war 381 00:33:10,560 --> 00:33:13,520 and that would force Wilson to compromise his ideals. 382 00:33:19,120 --> 00:33:21,560 The Big Four did not go into the talks 383 00:33:21,560 --> 00:33:25,480 planning to pin guilt for the war on Germany. 384 00:33:25,480 --> 00:33:28,080 But when they realised how much the war had cost, 385 00:33:28,080 --> 00:33:31,520 they looked for someone to foot the bill. 386 00:33:31,520 --> 00:33:36,000 France owed billions to Britain and America for financing her war. 387 00:33:36,000 --> 00:33:40,040 Britain couldn't afford to waive the debt and America wouldn't, 388 00:33:40,040 --> 00:33:43,520 so the Allies turned to Germany. 389 00:33:43,520 --> 00:33:48,240 She could only be made to pay if she accepted blame for the war, 390 00:33:48,240 --> 00:33:52,160 so the Allies included a clause pinning guilt on Germany. 391 00:33:55,200 --> 00:33:59,880 German accepts the responsibility of Germany and her allies 392 00:33:59,880 --> 00:34:03,160 for causing all the loss and damage to which the allied, 393 00:34:03,160 --> 00:34:05,040 and associated governemnts, 394 00:34:05,040 --> 00:34:07,600 and their nationals have been subjected 395 00:34:07,600 --> 00:34:11,200 as a consequence of the war imposed upon them... 396 00:34:11,200 --> 00:34:14,200 by the aggression of Germany and her allies. 397 00:34:20,080 --> 00:34:25,400 On 7th May, 1919, the German delegation came to collect the treaty 398 00:34:25,400 --> 00:34:28,040 expecting an even-handed settlement 399 00:34:28,040 --> 00:34:29,960 infused with Wilson's sense of fair play. 400 00:34:32,280 --> 00:34:34,680 They were horrified by what they read - 401 00:34:34,680 --> 00:34:37,560 440 articles beating Germany into submission. 402 00:34:41,000 --> 00:34:43,520 The Germans protested so vehemently, 403 00:34:43,520 --> 00:34:46,120 particularly against the requirement to admit war guilt, 404 00:34:46,120 --> 00:34:49,440 that Lloyd George worried the Allies had gone too far. 405 00:34:52,160 --> 00:34:56,560 A member of his own delegation, the economist John Maynard Keynes, 406 00:34:56,560 --> 00:34:58,560 was openly critical. 407 00:34:58,560 --> 00:35:03,840 Forcing Germany to pay could ruin Europe, politically and economically. 408 00:35:06,640 --> 00:35:11,240 The policy of reducing Germany to servitude for a generation, 409 00:35:11,240 --> 00:35:16,960 of degrading the lives of millions, should be abhorrent and detestable. 410 00:35:21,000 --> 00:35:24,520 But Clemenceau believed the terms were fully justified 411 00:35:24,520 --> 00:35:26,280 and Wilson's line had toughened. 412 00:35:28,360 --> 00:35:30,880 He had wanted to treat Germany fairly 413 00:35:30,880 --> 00:35:34,400 but, as a liberal, he was appalled by the way she'd waged war. 414 00:35:34,400 --> 00:35:38,640 And, as President of the US, he wanted America's loans repaid. 415 00:35:41,560 --> 00:35:44,560 It is a good thing the terms should be so hard 416 00:35:44,560 --> 00:35:48,240 so Germany may know what an unjust war means. 417 00:35:48,240 --> 00:35:52,240 If the Germans won't sign, then we must renew the war. 418 00:35:57,840 --> 00:36:03,840 Germany did sign, on 28th June 1919, in the Hall of Mirrors in Versailles 419 00:36:03,840 --> 00:36:07,200 five years to the day after the Sarajevo assassination 420 00:36:07,200 --> 00:36:08,600 that had triggered war. 421 00:36:13,000 --> 00:36:17,360 The settlement was far from perfect. 422 00:36:17,360 --> 00:36:22,560 The much-touted principle that people should govern themselves 423 00:36:22,560 --> 00:36:25,960 was not applied outside Europe and imperialism was condoned. 424 00:36:25,960 --> 00:36:29,520 But Wilson achieved his goal, 425 00:36:29,520 --> 00:36:32,680 the creation of the first global forum, the League of Nations. 426 00:36:35,080 --> 00:36:40,080 In the event, the Allies wound up with the worst of both worlds. 427 00:36:40,080 --> 00:36:42,240 The Germans paid little in reparations 428 00:36:42,240 --> 00:36:46,760 and the League of Nations proved powerless to force them. 429 00:36:46,760 --> 00:36:49,240 The Versailles terms left some Germans, 430 00:36:49,240 --> 00:36:52,920 like future Nazi Rudolf Hess, smouldering with resentment, 431 00:36:52,920 --> 00:36:54,920 with disastrous consequences. 432 00:36:56,240 --> 00:36:59,880 The only thing that keeps me going is hope for the day of revenge, 433 00:36:59,880 --> 00:37:02,280 however far off it may be. 434 00:37:02,280 --> 00:37:06,000 I wonder whether it'll happen in my lifetime. 435 00:37:09,480 --> 00:37:13,120 Marshal Ferdinand Foch felt the Allies hadn't been tough enough 436 00:37:13,120 --> 00:37:16,960 and realised the world would have to go to war again. 437 00:37:16,960 --> 00:37:23,400 This is not peace, it is an armistice for 20 years. 438 00:37:23,400 --> 00:37:25,880 He got it wrong by just 65 days. 439 00:37:39,320 --> 00:37:41,880 Men were killed in the war's final hours, 440 00:37:41,880 --> 00:37:44,400 whose last letters did not reach home for weeks. 441 00:37:46,480 --> 00:37:51,200 Men like Marius Saucaz who wrote to his father in Morocco. 442 00:37:55,120 --> 00:37:57,120 Dear Dad, 443 00:37:57,120 --> 00:38:01,840 if I were to die in a future attack, don't cry. There's no point. 444 00:38:03,280 --> 00:38:06,960 I would only be doing my duty and would die, like many others, 445 00:38:06,960 --> 00:38:09,840 for a noble cause, a great ideal. 446 00:38:11,520 --> 00:38:14,120 I am proud to be your son and I want to tell you today, 447 00:38:14,120 --> 00:38:18,400 because who knows what the future holds. 448 00:38:19,800 --> 00:38:23,320 I love you more than I have ever shown you. 449 00:38:23,320 --> 00:38:25,560 Love and kisses, Marius. 450 00:38:35,400 --> 00:38:38,640 Around 10 million soldiers were killed in the war, 451 00:38:38,640 --> 00:38:42,080 prompting Lloyd George's sardonic comment. 452 00:38:42,080 --> 00:38:45,160 When I look at the appalling casualty lists, 453 00:38:45,160 --> 00:38:49,920 I sometimes wish it had not been necessary to win so many victories. 454 00:38:55,960 --> 00:38:58,000 The tidy rows of crosses sanitise the deaths. 455 00:39:00,360 --> 00:39:02,480 They often cover mass graves, 456 00:39:02,480 --> 00:39:08,280 with a man represented by the part that could be found and identified. 457 00:39:08,280 --> 00:39:12,000 Verdun in France has a huge vault full of bones... 458 00:39:15,440 --> 00:39:18,880 ..some of the millions posted missing in the war, 459 00:39:18,880 --> 00:39:21,760 the place and circumstance of their death unknown. 460 00:39:24,960 --> 00:39:28,160 No-one is certain how many civilians died... 461 00:39:28,160 --> 00:39:33,080 women, children and elderly caught in the mayhem of the Eastern Front 462 00:39:33,080 --> 00:39:37,160 in the flight of the Serb nation in 1915, 463 00:39:37,160 --> 00:39:40,160 in the Armenian massacres... 464 00:39:40,160 --> 00:39:43,000 in occupied France and Belgium. 465 00:39:44,440 --> 00:39:47,480 Then, in 1918, influenza broke out, 466 00:39:47,480 --> 00:39:49,240 eventually killing 20 million 467 00:39:49,240 --> 00:39:51,480 soldiers and civilians around the world. 468 00:39:55,840 --> 00:39:58,400 20 million men were wounded by the war, 469 00:39:58,400 --> 00:40:00,720 of whom several million were badly mutilated. 470 00:40:07,000 --> 00:40:10,520 The French called one category the "gueules cassees" - 471 00:40:10,520 --> 00:40:12,240 the "broken faces". 472 00:40:16,960 --> 00:40:19,960 Some were given human masks to hide their wounds. 473 00:40:27,520 --> 00:40:31,200 New faces, new legs, new arms. 474 00:40:37,040 --> 00:40:40,480 New minds were more difficult. 475 00:40:40,480 --> 00:40:45,840 No-one really knew what to do with the victims of shell shock. 476 00:40:45,840 --> 00:40:48,640 Soldiers with a range of disorders were filmed, 477 00:40:48,640 --> 00:40:53,080 including 19-year-old Private Preston - his memory blank - 478 00:40:53,080 --> 00:40:55,760 responsive only to the word "bombs". 479 00:41:03,520 --> 00:41:08,400 Over the decades, the suffering and dying and the sense of futile waste - 480 00:41:08,400 --> 00:41:10,960 central themes in the war's poetry - 481 00:41:10,960 --> 00:41:14,480 came to dominate our perceptions. 482 00:41:14,480 --> 00:41:16,040 Come back, come back, 483 00:41:16,040 --> 00:41:19,160 you didn't want to die. 484 00:41:19,160 --> 00:41:22,640 And all this war's a sham, a stinking lie. 485 00:41:22,640 --> 00:41:26,160 And the glory that our fathers laud so well 486 00:41:26,160 --> 00:41:30,600 A crowd of corpses freed from pangs of hell. 487 00:41:30,600 --> 00:41:32,920 MUSIC: Brass Band plays "Abide With Me" 488 00:41:40,840 --> 00:41:44,880 But in its immediate aftermath, when memorials went up around the world, 489 00:41:44,880 --> 00:41:46,880 the First World War was not seen 490 00:41:46,880 --> 00:41:49,360 solely in terms of senseless slaughter. 491 00:41:53,240 --> 00:41:58,120 Their designs and inscriptions defined the war in positive terms, 492 00:41:58,120 --> 00:42:00,640 for defence against aggression, 493 00:42:00,640 --> 00:42:02,640 for love of one's country, 494 00:42:02,640 --> 00:42:05,760 for glory. 495 00:42:05,760 --> 00:42:07,560 So much hardship, 496 00:42:07,560 --> 00:42:09,800 so much heroism 497 00:42:09,800 --> 00:42:13,120 and now such overwhelming glory. 498 00:42:13,120 --> 00:42:17,440 Anything after this can be no more than an anticlimax. 499 00:42:20,320 --> 00:42:24,560 Germany too celebrated victory where she could. 500 00:42:24,560 --> 00:42:28,320 A gigantic monument was built in 1927 at Tannenberg 501 00:42:28,320 --> 00:42:31,760 to commemorate Germany's triumph over the Russians in 1914. 502 00:42:35,120 --> 00:42:38,400 It was inaugurated by Field Marshal Hindenburg. 503 00:42:41,040 --> 00:42:44,160 The war may have been lost, but the dead were proclaimed as heroes, 504 00:42:44,160 --> 00:42:46,880 the struggle itself honoured. 505 00:42:48,560 --> 00:42:51,920 Though the aim for which I fought was not to be achieved, 506 00:42:51,920 --> 00:42:56,000 we learnt once and for all to stand for a cause 507 00:42:56,000 --> 00:42:58,920 and, if necessary, to fall as befitted men. 508 00:43:03,480 --> 00:43:06,760 Many Allied memorials spelt out the values felt to be at stake 509 00:43:06,760 --> 00:43:07,920 during the war. 510 00:43:12,400 --> 00:43:16,120 In the stained-glass window in Canterbury University, New Zealand, 511 00:43:16,120 --> 00:43:22,400 the Central Powers are depicted as the dragon of brutality and ignorance 512 00:43:22,400 --> 00:43:25,640 The Allied troops have humanity and justice on their side 513 00:43:25,640 --> 00:43:27,440 and are naturally victorious. 514 00:43:36,640 --> 00:43:38,680 The years after the war were defined 515 00:43:38,680 --> 00:43:42,920 by the search for significance in the loss. 516 00:43:42,920 --> 00:43:46,160 National symbols, like the Cenotaph and the Unknown Warrior, 517 00:43:46,160 --> 00:43:49,080 helped answer the question in so many people's minds - 518 00:43:49,080 --> 00:43:51,000 what did all the suffering mean? 519 00:43:55,080 --> 00:43:59,960 In 1920, the body of an unidentified British soldier was exhumed in France 520 00:43:59,960 --> 00:44:01,800 and transported home. 521 00:44:05,200 --> 00:44:07,600 SEAGULLS SQUAWK 522 00:44:11,800 --> 00:44:15,680 On 11th November, the unknown warrior was brought to Whitehall. 523 00:44:21,080 --> 00:44:24,000 He did not seem an unknown warrior. 524 00:44:24,000 --> 00:44:26,240 He was known to us all. 525 00:44:26,240 --> 00:44:29,400 He was "one of our boys". 526 00:44:29,400 --> 00:44:33,920 To some women, he was their own boy who went missing. 527 00:44:37,600 --> 00:44:40,920 To many men wearing ribbons and badges, 528 00:44:40,920 --> 00:44:43,720 he was "one of their comrades". 529 00:44:57,400 --> 00:45:01,120 It was the steel helmet, the old tin hat, 530 00:45:01,120 --> 00:45:07,280 lying there on the crimson of the flag, which revealed him instantly. 531 00:45:10,120 --> 00:45:13,720 Herbert Thompson had lost his eyesight in the war. 532 00:45:13,720 --> 00:45:16,800 He could not see the proceedings, but he could feel them. 533 00:45:19,360 --> 00:45:22,840 There was ineffable sadness and melancholy, 534 00:45:22,840 --> 00:45:25,480 yet a message of inspiration and hope, 535 00:45:25,480 --> 00:45:28,560 as if the spirit of the unknown soldier 536 00:45:28,560 --> 00:45:32,440 had whispered "Courage, brother. Hope on." 537 00:45:32,440 --> 00:45:36,720 I felt with my comrades almost ashamed I had given so little, 538 00:45:36,720 --> 00:45:39,640 while he who was sleeping by us had given all. 539 00:45:51,520 --> 00:45:56,360 Vera Brittain had served in France as a nurse during the war. 540 00:45:56,360 --> 00:46:01,520 She lost her fiance, two close friends, her only brother. 541 00:46:01,520 --> 00:46:03,680 She went back in 1921. 542 00:46:11,080 --> 00:46:15,600 At Amiens, we stood in the dimness of the once threatened cathedral. 543 00:46:15,600 --> 00:46:19,600 We looked up with reminiscent melancholy 544 00:46:19,600 --> 00:46:22,480 at the still boarded stained-glass windows smashed by German shells, 545 00:46:22,480 --> 00:46:25,720 realising, with surprise, that in my mind, 546 00:46:25,720 --> 00:46:30,440 anger and resentment had died long ago, 547 00:46:30,440 --> 00:46:35,360 leaving only an everlasting sorrow and a passionate pity. 548 00:46:40,560 --> 00:46:43,280 The First World War had achieved its basic aim 549 00:46:43,280 --> 00:46:47,560 of containing German and Austrian militarism, at least for the moment. 550 00:46:49,160 --> 00:46:53,240 It moved Europe from the age of empires to the era of nation states. 551 00:46:53,240 --> 00:46:56,080 CHEERING 552 00:46:56,080 --> 00:46:59,760 It gave eastern European peoples independence. 553 00:46:59,760 --> 00:47:05,680 It gave a sense of national identity to Canada, Australia and New Zealand. 554 00:47:05,680 --> 00:47:09,200 It helped Russia become the first communist state 555 00:47:09,200 --> 00:47:12,400 and launched America as a world power. 556 00:47:14,640 --> 00:47:18,520 The ideas for which men fought have proved lasting - 557 00:47:18,520 --> 00:47:21,360 democracy and liberalism, religious faith and nationalism. 558 00:47:24,160 --> 00:47:27,160 GUNFIRE 559 00:47:29,520 --> 00:47:32,560 But the First World War solved few of the grievances 560 00:47:32,560 --> 00:47:34,200 over which it was fought. 561 00:47:34,200 --> 00:47:37,600 We live with its unresolved consequences in the Middle East, 562 00:47:37,600 --> 00:47:38,760 the Balkans, Ireland. 563 00:47:40,600 --> 00:47:42,520 It wasn't the war to end all wars, 564 00:47:42,520 --> 00:47:45,680 not just because it left dangerous loose ends, 565 00:47:45,680 --> 00:47:49,680 but because it bequeathed the world a terrible message - 566 00:47:49,680 --> 00:47:51,760 that war can affect change, 567 00:47:51,760 --> 00:47:56,280 that war can fulfil ambitions, that war can work. 568 00:48:01,920 --> 00:48:07,440 The battlefields were tidied up, or ploughed over or just abandoned. 569 00:48:07,440 --> 00:48:10,520 But they held their grip on the soldiers who had fought on them, 570 00:48:10,520 --> 00:48:13,200 on those who dared go back. 571 00:48:16,880 --> 00:48:20,480 I saw again with a pang of anguish the trenches, damp and muddy, 572 00:48:20,480 --> 00:48:25,880 and was surprised to have lived there for four years. 573 00:48:25,880 --> 00:48:29,080 So moving because of the endless silence, 574 00:48:29,080 --> 00:48:31,120 the gloomy, barren, deserted look. 575 00:48:35,560 --> 00:48:39,680 Old churches pierced, chipped, ripped open, 576 00:48:39,680 --> 00:48:42,480 and barbed wire everywhere. 577 00:48:47,200 --> 00:48:50,400 Life resumes, things remain the same. 578 00:48:52,560 --> 00:48:55,120 We are the only ones who have changed. 50134

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