From Germany’s shock military spending rise to sanctions unity, leaders have come together over the war in Ukraine

Lenin, a Russian leader as obsessed with history as Vladimir Putin, famously said: “There are decades where nothing happens; and there are weeks where decades happen.” This has been the latter. The little more than a week since Russian troops invaded Ukraine has indeed shaken the world. Change has been telescoped, national taboos broken, moribund institutions given purpose and the spectre of a nuclear war in Europe has been raised for the first time since the 1980s. Germany has called it Zeitenwende, the Turning Point. It will not just be Ukraine that is being changed for ever by this war.

But there is something specific about how war accelerates change through a form of natural selection. In The Deluge, his classic work on how society is changed by war, the British historian Arthur Marwick wrote: “War acts as a supreme challenge to, and test of, a country’s social and political institutions. War results not only in the destruction of inefficient institutions (such as the Tsarist regime in Russia), but also in the transformation of less efficient mechanisms into more efficient ones”.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

UK inflation jumps to 11.1% on back of energy and food price rises

Rishi Sunak vows to prioritise fight against the rising cost of living…

Rudy Giuliani poised to cooperate with January 6 committee

Trump’s former lawyer may reveal the roles played by Republicans to prevent…

The Guardian view on John Williams and movie music: a complex magic | Editorial

The composer’s 90th birthday celebrations are a reminder of the underrated excellence…