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The Last American Veteran of World War I and the Costs of War

The Boston Globe:

World War I veterans still have no national memorial. There has been no Hollywood blockbuster in recent years to bring their story to life. But they still have Frank Buckles. More than 90 years after he fudged his age to join the Army, Corporal Frank Woodruff Buckles, the last surviving American veteran of World War I, came to the Pentagon yesterday to represent the more than two million “doughboys” who braved the trench warfare and gas attacks of the “The Great War.” (…)
Now, Buckles is the last flesh-and-blood reminder of the 116,000 Americans who gave their lives to save Europe at the start of the 20th century.

Wikipedia tries to document the surviving veterans from all World War I combatant nations.

The surviving veterans remind us that the era of wars between the world’s major powers is not ancient history. I wonder what these veterans think when they hear how today’s politicians talk about the risks of terrorism. Do they think that this is just scare-mongering to win votes and that we shall consider ourselves to be lucky to live in such peaceful times? That Al Qaeda is just a nuissance compared to the Wehrmacht or the Red Army?

The human and financial costs of WWI were huge. America’s current wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are also expensive: $3.5 billion per week, according to William Hartung. German Joys quotes some comparisons from his article: The “whole international community spends less than $400 million per year on the International Atomic Energy Agency, the primary institution for monitoring and preventing the spread of nuclear weapons; that’s less than one day’s worth of war costs.” And the US government’s yearly budget for combating global warming is as big as two weeks of expenses in Iraq and Afghanistan.

I think fighting nuclear proliferation and combating global warming are at least as important as the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Julianne Smith and Alexander Lennon of the Center for Strategic and International Studies contend that climate change will further disrupt the stability of already volatile regions, which has the potential of producing multitudes of discontented individuals prone to radicalization…

Cross-posted from Atlantic Review

  • DLS
    World War I was an historical "fulcrum" or pivot point in Europe as well as marking the destruction of the old world as it was replaced by the new. (World War II was the completion of this process.) Though there were warnings (not merely in the Crimean War but obviously with the well-known example of the US Civil War, itself in the USA, this nation's second revolution), they went unheeded and World War I (which featured additional technical advances) consumed amazing numbers of lives as well as riches.

    I don't buy global warming hype and PC celeb drivel. Things are bad enough as it is. The Middle East is one area where the tremendous decrease in fertility levels throughout the world have not always or completely taken hold, and so you have a rapidly growing population in what is an urbanized desert. No matter what climatic changes may happen there are likely water wars that will will be fought.
  • Thanks for putting the costs in perspective. It's something that I feel deserves more attention. If it really is bin Laden's goal to bankrupt us, then I'd say we're losing.
  • Jim_Satterfield
    There is no memorial in Washington but not everyone has forgotten. Liberty Memorial in Kansas City was dedicated soon after the war. It just underwent a major renovation and has a major World War One museum.
  • Jim, thanks for this information. I will check out the museum's website.
  • kritt11
    There should be a memorial in Washington- we have one for just about everything else!
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