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Not honestly, at any rate. It can only be constructed. The biggest influences, after all, are the ones we internalize. We have nothing to say. So the answer has to be construct- ed. The heads of the young are nearly empty, and their minds impressionable. I read it first as an undergraduate student of history at Dalhousie in the late s. But for us the two great shooting wars of the 20th cen- tury were far from empty abstractions. Our fathers and grandfathers had served in them.
The world wars, in short, were still very real in the s, and with atomic bombs spreading about, and sabres rat- tling, and the forces of the Warsaw Pact and the NATO alliance bristling at one another, it was self-evident that such lessons as could be found in them might still be germane. States mattered. Nations mattered. Beliefs mattered. And they all had a terrible habit of killing. Nicolson was only 33 and a relatively junior British diplomat when he arrived in Paris in January to take part in the conference that was sup- posed to bring the peace that was to end all wars.
There was general agreement that they would form the basis of negotiation. But then the real work began, and one by one the principles came tum- bling down, or were compromised beyond recognition. Their collapse started with the very first. The concessions them- selves, moreover, depended on a will- ingness to violate, one after another, the very points, principles and partic- ulars that the final result was sup- posed to embody.
The diplomatic agenda was cluttered in any case by shadowy deals and self-serving com- mitments that not long before had been secretly contrived in response to the necessities, or at least to the con- veniences, of war. It was all too clear, as the process wound down, that its intended job could not be done.