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When Diplomacy Fails Podcast

Versailles #7: George Clemenceau Profile Part 2/2

When Diplomacy Fails Podcast

Zack Twamley

Phd, International Relations, Korean War, European History, 17th Century, 18th Century, Politics, 20th Century, Thirty Years' War, History, 19th Century, War, First World War

4.8773 Ratings

🗓️ 24 November 2018

⏱️ 49 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

"From the blind confusion of factional strife the Frenchman has emerged in this hour all of a piece throughout, stronger, more resolute, silent, smiling, his eyes bright with an invincible fire which affirms that the legend of France shall not fail…It is in that mysterious hour when something comes to birth in us which burns out the dross and clears the way for the casting of a metal which neither steel nor diamond can scratch. And when, some day, after superhuman efforts, all these souls, fatigued with heroism, meet again under the vast blue vault of a regenerated fatherland, it must be that of so many hearts which were sundered a soul of France will forge itself, and the discords which are a condition of life will dissolve, fast fused in a bond of solidarity so closely knit that nothing will have power to shatter it."


These were the words which Georges Clemenceau used upon learning of the outbreak of the war. The war would cleanse France of its lethargy, provide it with an opportunity to redeem its past loss, and of course, provide an even more important opportunity to inflict a defeat upon Germany, and restore the rightful order of things. Nobody that marched to war in 1914 could have imagined the kind of losses which awaited their nation, and France was no exception. Her people quickly learned their lessons the hard way. In the month of August 1914 alone, 75,000 Frenchmen died. On the bloodiest day of the war for France, the 23rd August 1914, 27,000 men lay dead by the end of it.


With losses like these, George Clemenceau quickly turned his attention to that critical question - why was the war so costly, and who was sabotaging France's successful realisation of its aims? It was above his imagination to think that actually, such casualties were the result not of sabotage or anyone's fault necessarily, and were instead the predicable consequences of a French high command which preferred old tactics like charging straight at the enemy - the cult of the offensive - while the soldiery were decked out in the finest clothing and fanciest accessories. France's old world was shattered after successive years in this meat grinder, but Clemenceau remained somewhat aloof from it all.


A heavy critic of the government's method of fighting the war, Clemenceau found his paper banned and his friends no longer talking to him. Clemenceau became more shrill and less able to find some solution to the carnage, but in its hour of need, France relied on this formidable 76 year old once more. Against so many odds, this veteran statesman was at the helm of France again, and he had a strong message for those that would listen - not one more step back. Even if it took another August 1914 of casualties, Clemenceau was resolute in his determination not to give in to the German war effort. 1918 would test him to his limits, but at no point did the elder statesman ever imagine that making peace, would be just as difficult as winning the war

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello there, history, friends. You are listening to the Versailles Anniversary Project, more specifically, the second profile episode of George Clemenceau.

0:08.6

If you have no idea who George Clemenceau is, or what the Versailles Anniversary Project is, then hey, maybe check out the earlier episodes.

0:15.9

If you are really ready for me to get into this, though, then thanks very much for joining. But of course,

0:21.9

as is customary, I have to tell you what this episode is brought to you by. You may be unsurprised

0:26.6

to learn. It is brought to you by the delegation game. We are pushing the delegation game all over

0:31.5

the interweb, but especially through this podcast, because I believe the delegation game is something

0:36.6

that everyone can enjoy

0:37.8

and that everyone can be excited about. So far, lots of people have signed up. I think we're currently

0:42.9

at 11 people. So that is cool because I didn't even know if it would take off and it really has.

0:48.9

Our Patreon has also increased, which is very nice. And it's great to see. A lot of people have sent

0:53.9

me some really wild out there scenarios and avatars, which makes me very, very happy. It seems like this may just be the spark that I needed to kind of revitalize the Patreon and, well, connect more with my patrons in general. People are getting very excited about it and telling me that they want to be everything from a really resentful Hungarian to a socialist German to a Ponzi New Englander to a patriotic

1:18.9

Canadian to a Japanese guy. So everyone is all over the place and these ingredients will all add up to

1:25.8

an absolutely fantastic game once this

1:27.9

launches in the 18th of January. You could still take part absolutely after the 18th of January,

1:33.3

but the first 20 people will have the most influence because as far as I'm concerned, that's how

1:39.0

it would work in real life. So if you would like to join the delegation game, it costs $6 a month,

1:45.5

which considering the amount of work I think it will take, seems fair enough to me. It's almost like a pay-to-play version of a

1:51.2

fantasy booking or Dungeons and Dragons, or that kind of thing. For six months, we will be at the

1:56.8

Paris Peace Conference, making our own alternative path at the same time as actually

2:01.4

bringing you what really happened. So don't you worry. The episodes will be coming out every

2:05.5

single Friday. If you're aware of what we're doing at this very moment in time, then you'll

2:10.0

see we even launched a new graphic in line with it. You can visit the section of the website that talks

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