
A Goodreads user
asked
Tim Butcher:
Hi Tim, I really enjoyed The Trigger. My question is: What do you think would have happened (or not) if Princip hadn't pulled the trigger, or if he had missed his target? (Sorry, I know you're not a fantasy author, but nevertheless ...!)
Tim Butcher
You asking the classic counterfactual question, one that probes the importance of the context of 1914 rather than the specifics of the assassination. In short, was WWI inevitable? Many historians, buoyed by 20:20 retrospective vision say, yes it would have. They argue the conditions (creaking empires armed to the teeth, clinging to an old imperial world order and anxious to establish once and for all which empire is top dog) made war inevitable.
I am not so sure. For decades after 1945 the conditions were there for global conflict. We call it the Cold War or its localised proxies, and the same acute rivalry, distrust and conceit of 1914 were there alive and well. But there was never a spark that took. The conditions were ripe but the opportunity never came about.
In 1914 the conditions were ripe and an opportunity came about when Princip fired his gun. Events bestow on Princip's two shots a sobering epitaph: the shots that led to more bloodshed than any in all time.
Historians love to frame events, to explain them, to deconstruct causal linkages. Sometimes historians need to remember a bit of humility and concede that sometimes x has an impact, on other occasions x does not.
I am not so sure. For decades after 1945 the conditions were there for global conflict. We call it the Cold War or its localised proxies, and the same acute rivalry, distrust and conceit of 1914 were there alive and well. But there was never a spark that took. The conditions were ripe but the opportunity never came about.
In 1914 the conditions were ripe and an opportunity came about when Princip fired his gun. Events bestow on Princip's two shots a sobering epitaph: the shots that led to more bloodshed than any in all time.
Historians love to frame events, to explain them, to deconstruct causal linkages. Sometimes historians need to remember a bit of humility and concede that sometimes x has an impact, on other occasions x does not.
More Answered Questions
Bongo
asked
Tim Butcher:
I did enjoy both your Africa books. I've always wanted to go to the Congo. Tell a lie I spent five minutes standing in a field in eastern Congo just over the border and a short bicycle ride away from Arua. I alwys travel light and I was wondering if you were to travel of the beaten track in Congo would you lug around a laptop again or just put a Black and Red notebook and biro in your back pocket?
Brad Patton
asked
Tim Butcher:
Where can I get a kindle of Chasing the Devil? Have searched high and low. Assume there is some contractual problems with them. Greene's book on Liberia / Sierra Leone is frankly terrible-- I stopped reading it when he adds a laundry list from social columns in a local paper. It was God awful for numerous reasons...he must have been learning to write as I like some of the later works. Read your Sarajevo book ..
Chris Lindley
asked
Tim Butcher:
Hi Tim. Everything book related seems to be owned by amazon today, whether new or secondhand or community focussed like this very website. And it comes as no surprise that they wield their power aggressively and unfairly for everyone except the consumer. Do you know where consumers should buy their books in order to maximise the cut that the author will actually receive? Thanks and I trust you're all well.
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