This summer marks the one hundred years since the beginning
of World War I, a military action proclaimed to be the “War to End All Wars.”
While it did not accomplish that, the war did change the world as anyone knew
it: devastating a generation in Europe, promoting technology while questioning
colonial ideals, and bringing the United States fully into the international
arena. In Archduke Franz Ferdinand
Lives!: A World Without World War I, author Richard Ned Lebow takes a step
into the genre of alternate history and examines what the world might be like
without a World War I.
Lebow comes from a solid background in political and
historical analysis with an impressive resume. Having written dozens of books
and over two hundred peer-reviewed articles, he is routinely called upon for
interviews by news media in the US, Britain, France, Germany, and beyond. He
serves as professor of International Political Theory in the Department of War
Studies at King’s College London as well as James O. Freedman Presidential Professor
Emeritus of Government at Dartmoth. In addition to his professional background,
Lebow includes his own experiences as a person of Jewish heritage and an
immigrant to the US and how different his life may have been without a World
War I.
Lebow actually paints images of two worlds as he reviews
counterfactuals following the Point of Departure from history at the
assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, the heir to the Austrian throne.
While some argue that World War I would have soon happened anyway with a
different spark, Lebow shows that it may not be as simple as that. In Germany,
the majority of the politicians and royals did not want war, German Chief of
Staff Moltke alone pressed for action. It was not until the Kaiser felt
honor-bound by the cowardly assassination that he committed himself and his
country to fight.
In the first world, the “Best Plausible World,” Lebow looks
at a world where one of a half-dozen things could have happened differently in
an assassination that was practically a fluke. Europe remains calm, and the
Archduke stabilizes the empire by extending voting franchises to minorities
(much to the chagrin of the Hungarians). Russia comes into political relations
with the crowns rather than Republican France, and a new balance of power takes
shape in Europe. In that world, we see the center of business, arts, and
science remaining in Europe. Lebow goes as far as to suppose what might happen
to famous figures such as Adolph Hitler (a mail-order salesman), Richard Nixon
(a televangelist), John F. Kennedy (the scandalous younger brother to the
president, Joseph Kennedy, Jr.), Jazz musicians who seek out better lives in
Europe, and Albert Einstein, who stays in Germany amid a circle of geniuses. Yet
there are also downsides to this world. Technological development such as
radar, penicillin, nuclear physics, and computers are stunted without the
enormous support of total war, and race relations languish through extended Jim
Crow.
Lebow also explores the “Worst Plausible World” where Germany
falls to military authoritarianism nonetheless as democracy crumbles. Atomic
weapons become part of an ever-escalating arms race. Propaganda and
information-control are understood day-to-day affairs. The United States and
Japan routine butt heads in the Pacific. When the war finally does come,
without the lessons of our own World Wars I and II, the all-out nuclear blasts
obliterate Europe.
The thought-experiments in Archduke Franz Ferdinand Lives! serve purposes on multiple levels.
At its core, Alternate History has always been an intriguing chance to ponder
“what it?” Through Lebow’s work, we may see further through analysis that we
can apply to our own world and judge our own trends in culture, and science,
and political leadership.
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