By Bill Moyers and Michael Winship
TRUTHOUT AND Moyers & Company | Video Report - Saturday, 28 June 2014
As fears grow of a widening war across the Middle East, fed by
reports that the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) envisions a
region-wide, all controlling theocracy, we found ourselves talking about
another war. The Great War – or World War I, as it would come to be
called — was triggered one hundred years ago this month when an assassin
shot and killed Austria's Archduke Ferdinand in Sarajevo. Through a
series of tangled alliances and a cascade of misunderstandings and
blunders, that single act of violence brought on a bloody catastrophe.
More than 37 million people were killed or wounded.
In America, if we reflect on World War I at all, we think mostly
about the battlefields and trenches of Europe and tend to forget another
front in that war — against the Ottoman Empire of the Turks that
dominated the Middle East. A British Army officer named T.E. Lawrence
became a hero in the Arab world when he led nomadic Bedouin tribes in
battle against Turkish rule. Peter O'Toole immortalized him in the epic
movie, "Lawrence of Arabia."
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