The Rest Is History - 594. The First World War: The Invasion of Belgium (Part 1)
Episode Date: August 24, 2025Following the declaration of war in 1914, how did the outbreak of the First World War unfold? What were the earliest military engagements of this terrible, totemic event? Who were its key political pl...ayers and how did they respond? What was the attitude to the war in Germany? Were the allies unified from this early stage, or were they suspicious and frozen by indecision? And, how did the Germans, with the mightiest army in all the world, make its move on “plucky little” Belgium? Join Dominic and Tom as they launch into one of the most consequential events of all time: the outbreak of the First World War. Visit store.steampowered.com and search for ‘Total War Rome’ to buy now. Go to fuseenergy.com/history to switch your energy to Fuse and get £20 credit Join The Rest Is History Club: Unlock the full experience of the show – with exclusive bonus episodes, ad-free listening, early access to every series and live show tickets, a members-only newsletter, discounted books from the show, and access to our private Discord chatroom. Sign up directly at therestishistory.com. For more Goalhanger Podcasts, head to www.goalhanger.com _______ Twitter: @TheRestHistory @holland_tom @dcsandbrook Producer: Theo Young-Smith Assistant Producer: Tabby Syrett + Aaliyah Akude Executive Producers: Jack Davenport + Tony Pastor Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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That is, the rest is history.com.
for 44 years
since the time we fought for and won the German Empire
and our position in the world
we have lived in peace
and have protected the peace of Europe
like a silent vow
the feeling that animated everyone
from the emperor
down to the youngest soldier
was this
only in defence of a just cause
shall our suit fly from its scabbard.
The day has now come,
then we must draw it against our wish
and in spite of our sincere endeavours.
Russia has set fire to the building.
We are at war with Russia and France,
a war that has been forced upon us.
Now the great hour of trial has struck for our people.
But with clear confidence, we go forward to meet it.
Our army is in the field.
Our navy is ready for battle.
Behind them stands the entire German nation.
The entire German nation.
United to the last man.
and indeed woman
he should have said
but he didn't
because this is the 4th of August
1914 and the Chancellor of Germany
Teobald Bettmann Holveg
who was dressed in a dragoons uniform
and was addressing the Reichstag
he just wasn't a feminist was he Dominic
no he wasn't at all actually
Tom I felt that that reading became more
Germanic as it proceeded
there was a bit of Tom Holland in there but
you were progressing basically towards the Kaiser
no I wasn't
what I was doing there
was conveying the sense of
a peaceful nation, maybe one of the most cultured, the most intellectually advanced nation
in Europe and perhaps the world, slowly mutating into an army of spike-helmeted hans
set on despoiling Belgium.
You've gone there straight away.
Wow.
All right.
Well, that's what we'll be talking about today, isn't it?
As we begin a mighty series on the First World War.
So that is, you could argue, the speech that kicks off the First World War.
It's the first global industrialized war.
it kills about 20 million people. I think there's a fair case that it's the supreme, the defining
modern calamity. Oh, I would say indisputably, wouldn't you? I mean, there's nothing to compare to it.
Gaza, Ukraine. You can trace them back to, as it were, the original sin of that cataclysm in the
1910s and everything that flowed from it, I think. In this series, we're going to look at the
first months of the war up to the end of 1914. So we'll be looking at the Battle of the Frontiers
in which basically the Germans wipe the floor with the French and the British. The German advance on
Paris, the great turning of the tide at the Battle of the Marn, the very bloody struggle
for EPR, and the so-called massacre of the innocence, a huge sort of German nationalist
myth, the struggle between Germany and Russia in East Prussia, the rise of well-known
figures on the rest is history, Hindenburg and Ludendorf, and the beginning of the end for
the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and the Habsburg-Stalingrad, Tom.
That's very exciting, because that's basically a combination of two very exciting things.
But today, I think we should do the very beginning of the war and the German onslaught on plucky little Belgium.
So the heroic defensive liege by the Belgians, the fall of Brussels, and the issue that becomes so important in Allied propaganda, the so-called, to use the terminology of the time, the rape of Belgium, the German reprisals and the atrocities against civilians in Belgium.
Were they real? Were they contrived?
You know, what's the truth.
That's what I was conveying with that opening because obviously as someone who is British, the impact of this on Britain is immense, isn't it?
And kind of Steve, it's Britain for the war.
So that's what I was doing.
So any German listeners, I was kind of conveying the complexities of our shared history.
And I think there are still a lot of people who would go along with the old idea put about, obviously, about Allied propaganda in the 1910s.
And then by lots of historians, the idea that the Germans are almost uniquely responsible.
for the war. That it's a noble cause and that the Germans are the bad guys. And actually,
I don't know where you stand on this, Tom, but it's not just propaganda because there are lots
of very distinguished historians who've made that case, aren't there? Most notably a German,
right? Fritz Fisher in the 1960s, who essentially looked at the plans for conquests that the German
high command had the war aims, the war goals, and associated those war aims and goals and the behavior
of the German troops in the invasion of Belgium with what then happened in the Second
World War, kind of implied a correlation between the two, a line of dissent.
Yeah, Fritz Fischer was writing in the 1960s, and he basically said, come on, Nazis
have come from nowhere.
There's a continuity between the Wilhelmine Empire and the Third Reich.
And he dug out this bit of evidence, which was a, so the bloke that you were ventriloquising,
the Chancellor, Tehrbalt, Bethmann, Holveg.
In early September, he basically drafted this list of demands that just,
Germany would want when they'd won the war. And they would annex Eastern France, Luxembourg,
Belgium and Holland would become as kind of vassal client states. They'd take the Allies,
African colonies. There would be a German customs union from the Baltic to the Mediterranean.
So Neil Ferguson famously called this the Kaiser's European Union. And there are people to this day
who say, well, this is the proof positive that Germany started the war, motivated by a kind of lust for
conquest, born of their kind of insecurity and all their issues and whatnot. I don't agree
with that. I think there are a lot of historians who don't agree with that. I think this is basically
a wish list produced for discussion, produced after the war started as the German armies are
approaching Paris. I think the Germans are actually much more anxious and much more reactive
than most people allow. In other words, they're motivated by fear as much as they are by sort
of aggression. But the two aren't mutually exclusive, are they? No. The aggression is often
is there, of course. They're quite a militaristic society. But the aggression, I guess,
is exacerbated, heightened by fear. You're more likely to lash out, as we will see when
they enter Belgium, when they cross the Belgian border. But it's true for all the competence
that all of them are motivated by fear, and the fear feeds into hatred, and the hatred then
feeds into aggression. I totally agree with you. And if we remind ourselves how the Germans
got to this point. So things have moved quite quickly. On the 28th of June, Franz Ferdinand was assassinated
in Sarajevo. On the 5th of the 5th of the...
July, the Kaiser and Betman Holveg gave the Austrians their blank check. Do what you like against
Serbia to punish them. But then actually there's a hiatus of about 22 days where the Kaiser is off
on that lovely cruise of his. Yeah, everyone's on holiday, aren't they? Betman Holvig's on holiday too,
isn't he? I mean, the whole, basically everybody's on holiday. Most people go to spa hotels,
but the Kaiser who loves it, as we know, loves a yachting shoe. He loves a fjord.
Yeah, he does love a fjord. So he's gone off to, what, the sort of North Sea, hasn't he?
He's gone to Norway on a yacht.
He's gone to Norway.
And he comes back on the 27th of July.
And he basically, to his surprise, he finds the situation is completely out of control.
The Austrians have given Serbia an ultimatum that is designed to trigger a war.
Even at this point, Bethmann-Holveg says, you know, war might not happen.
And Kaiser then spends the next few days dreaming up elaborate weasers.
So basically, having spent 20 years of his life, dream up elaborate weasers to, I don't know, invade Paraguay or something.
Now his dream of elaborate weas is not to have the war that's actually going to happen.
Anyway, in the 28th of July.
a month after the shooting. Austria finally declares war on Serbia and begins the attack early
the next day and the next day the Russians really begin to mobilize in earnest. And this is the
key point, isn't it? It is. So this is the point when German is military commanders enter the
picture. And the key one who's going to play a big part in this series that we're doing is a guy
called Helmut von Moltke the Younger. So his uncle von Malka the Elder had been the great
victor of the Franco-Prussian War. And everybody thinks von Malka the Elder is absolutely
brilliant, fantastic.
And everybody basically has spent the last few years,
Saint-Volmalka the younger.
You're not as good.
Yeah, which plays on his mind
because actually, like almost everybody in this story,
it's clearly something in the water in the Edwardian period.
He's extremely kind of melancholic and brooding, isn't he?
He's a Christian scientist,
which I think we talked about last time when he came up.
Basically, that's that that Jesus was a scientist,
and science is great, is that right?
I'm not entirely sure.
I'm not entirely sure.
When we do a big series on Christian science, we'll pretend that we knew you all along.
He plays the cello, which I think is not a warlike thing to do.
He's obsessed with the occult and with spiritualism.
He's a follower of this lady called Madame Blavatsky.
Everyone is.
They're all into this kind of mad stuff.
I was just thinking about this.
His first name is Helmut.
And that's a little bit like helmet.
Okay.
Where are you going with this?
Well, so the German helmets with the spikes on.
I think in the kind of the British imagination, that is the.
embodiment of Prussian militarism.
It is.
Completely it is.
And also he has one of those moustaches where the ends turn up.
One thing to say, if people want to picture what the Germans look like and the French and the
British, every German has a moustache with the, I think, the ends turn up.
The French all have massive white warrous moustaches and the British all have kind
of reserved, clipped moustaches.
I thought with this first episode there were some excellent moustaches.
But you see, I know what's coming and you don't know what's coming to.
Tom, because I haven't yet shared the notes.
So in the later episodes of this series, when the Russians enter the picture, it's a very
different and much superior moustache game.
There's a guy called Renencamp and Alexei Brusilov, and they have moustaches that basically
would not fit on the screen.
But that proves my point.
So if you want to imagine the Russians, massive moustaches.
I mean, the moustaches essentially define the competent nations.
That's the key thing.
And so Mulk, he has this moustache.
And because his name's helmet, also subliminally, it conjured up a sense of him wearing a spike on his helmet.
That's what's going on in the head of British listeners, I think.
Well, certainly what's going on your head.
I mean, whether it's going on anyone else has said, I do not know.
Let's go back to Vonmulke.
Like a lot of bit Germans of his class, he is absolutely obsessed with this idea of the inevitable war between Teuton and Slav.
So they love talking like this in 1910s, Germany.
And they're very worried that the Teutons will lose because there are so many Slavs and not enough of them.
And so actually, Von Mouker has spent.
the last few years saying, well, I hope we have this war quite soon because otherwise we'll
probably lose. There are just so many Russians. And also, they're haunted by history,
aren't they? And the defeat of the Teutonic Knights. They are. We will come to that.
We will come to that. Very exciting. My history repeat itself will be reversed. We will see.
We will see. But actually, von Molka, once the crisis slows up, he doesn't really urge the
Kaiser into war. He's been on holiday, of course, during July. In a spa? In a spa hotel, having a rest
cure because he's like a lot of these people, he's really ill.
So half of these generals actually go into the war, like virtually at death's door.
And he has already said to the Kaiser, war will be a long wearisome struggle.
It will utterly exhaust our own people, even if we're victorious.
Oh, that's optimistic.
Fighting talk there.
At the end of July with the war just hours away, he says to the Kaiser, I still think we can win,
but just so you know, the war could annihilate for decades the civilization of almost all Europe.
Oh, brilliant. Well, I look forward to that. As we get to the very end of July, Malka realizes that the clock is ticking. And this sense of urgency is massively important to understanding what happens in Belgium. And this, like Malka's sort of brooding melancholy, reflects the broader strategic position that faces the central powers. So he is running the most modern, the most formidable military machine in the world. However, there are good grounds for fearing a conflagration,
that they might not win. Because if you're fighting Russia, Russia's population and therefore
manpower is a third bigger than Germany's and Austria-Hungaries combined. And if the Russians
are joined by France, Britain and by Belgium, the so-called Entente will have almost 280 million
people and the central powers only 120 million. And Dominic also, of course, Russia and France
are on either flank of Germany. So that's the other huge anxiety, isn't it? That they might be
crushed between these two sides.
The sense of being encircled, I think, is massively important to understanding the German
mentality, above all.
Economically, so you take those two powers on the flanks.
France and Russia, their combined GDP, is much bigger than Germany's and Austria's.
And they have far more soldiers.
Six million soldiers, the Entente have.
The central powers, less than three and a half million.
So if you're von Moltke, sitting in your spa, thinking about theosophy and the occult,
and you'll also make a little bit of time to think about this war.
You know that in a long war it'll be really hard for you to win,
that all the cards are in the Entente's hands.
And Dominant, just to ask, of course they're aware of the massive manpower that Russia has,
but they are also presumably fully aware that actually France is an even more militarized society than Germany, isn't it?
It is a formidable opponent, but you have to choose one of these opponents to go for first.
Their only realistic possibility of victory is to start to knock their enemies out quickly.
before the Entente's kind of underlying advantages can be made to tell.
So when Von Malka took over as the Chief of Staff in 1906, he inherited something
called the Schlieffen Plan.
Anyone who's done this for GCSE or A-Level in England will know about this.
Now, this doesn't mean that Germany was planning a war, as sometimes people think.
Basically, all nations had contingency plans.
The French had a plan called Plont de Set, which we'll come to next time.
But this Schlefen plan, elaborated by Malker's predecessor, Graf Alfred von Schlefen,
they've revised it and revised it.
And military historians basically spend their entire careers arguing about this plan,
but to boil it down and make it very simple.
It's all about the Battle of Caney, isn't it?
It is a muddled a little bit on the Battle of Cannae.
Because he was obsessed by it, encircling and wiping out superior enemies.
So the premise of it is, look, we can't win a long war.
If we have a long war, there will probably be an economic collapse in a revolution.
ocean when they're not wrong. So the priority is to knock one enemy out before turning on the other
one. Now we wouldn't be able to knock the Russians out quickly because their army is inferior,
but they have so many men. So we basically have to take on the French first. Now we cannot do
what we did in 187071. We can't just go across the Franco-German border because the French
have built these swanky new fortresses, Verdun, Nancy, Belfour, places like this that stand in
the way and they will slow us down.
So we have to find another way into France, and that is through Belgium.
And the brilliant thing about Belgium is that has a very dense railway network,
so we'll be able to move our troops really quickly.
And Dominic, just to ask, the French, it never crosses their mind the Germans might do this,
and so they don't build forts along the frontier with Belgium.
I think they, it's, I mean, they're not idiots, right?
It's not like they think it's impossible the Germans could go through Belgium,
but their priority is the forts along their own border, I guess.
And building forts along the Belgian border would,
seem a bit weird because it would look as if you're protecting yourselves against an invasion
by the Belgians, which seems very implausible.
It might be a threat to French self-esteem, I suppose.
Yeah, exactly.
It would be like suddenly England decided to build loads of forts on the border with Wales.
Well, it's good enough for offer.
Right. Yes, that's true.
Anyway, once you've gone through Belgium, basically the plan is that the left wing of your
army, so that's the southernmost wing, will pin the French against their own border,
against these fortresses.
And meanwhile, the northernmost, the right wing bit of the journey.
German army will go all the way around Paris and encircle the French capital.
That way, we'll crush their army against the frontier, we'll encircle their capital, France
will be knocked out, and then we'll use the railways to move all the troops east as quickly
as possible to the borderlands of East Prussia and Galicia, where hopefully our Austro-Hungarian
allies will have kept the Russians at bay.
We'll see how the Austro-Hungarians get on later in this series.
Now, we have to do all this in six weeks. We have six weeks to do all this before the Russians start to break through in the East. And if we fall behind, we'll be into that war of attrition that we don't want and we could well lose.
And also, presumably, if the Russians break through in the East, they can capture Berlin. They can go all the way into Germany. They can drive into Germany. They can drive into Central of Austria, Hungary.
So the risk is that the Germans might capture Paris and the Russians might capture Berlin. I suppose so. That would be a twist, wouldn't it? This is a massively risky idea. So even if the Germans concentrate their forces in the West, they will.
still have fewer divisions than the French, the British and the Belgians put together.
But that's where the canny thing comes in, right?
That you use the size of your enemy's forces against them.
Exactly.
They're lumbering and unwieldy, but you're moving swiftly.
Now, there's a brilliant book on Germany and Austria and the Central Powers in the First War
called Ring of Steel by a British historical Alexander Watson.
As he points out, this is, quote, a breathtakingly audacious and full-hardy aspiration.
Because the French are not nothing.
The French have one of Europe's most modern and biggest armed forces.
How are you going to knock them out so quickly?
And the very fact that von Malka is considering such a scheme is a sign actually of
Germany's underlying strategic weakness.
And that's actually one reason why I think, I don't think the Germans are motivated
by lust for conquest and aggression in this war because they're up against it from the very,
very beginning.
They have to consider such a mad gamble.
But speed underlies everything.
If you can't do it in six weeks, you're in real trouble.
So if we go back to the summer of 1914, by the last two days of July, Von Malker is studying all his reports with a massive sense of kind of panic.
The Russians are mobilising.
The Belgians are calling up their reserves.
The Belgians are fortifying Lijj, which is not just the key point in their eastern defences, but is their major railway hub.
And von Malka knows that taking liege quickly is central to his battle pan.
Hour by hour, he's thinking, God, it's slipping away.
it hasn't even started. So it's at this point that he and the Prussian War Minister, Eric von
Falkenheim, who is a person again will be hearing from in this series. That's a great name.
The thing about the Germans is they have the names that Richard Wagner would have given them.
Yeah, but again, it's a falcon. I mean, it's like a falcon waiting to sweep down. I think the names
are cundering up all kinds of images. So they say to the Kaiser, okay, right, the war's going to
happen and we've got to really crack on that. Stop messing around. So they proclaim a state of imminent war
on the 31st of July.
They send their ultimatums
to Russia and to France.
And then the next day,
this amazing scene
that I think we talked
about last time,
Wilhelm,
driving down the
Unter de Linden Avenue
in the sort of uniform
of a cavalryman
with his helmet on.
He goes into the Royal Palace.
He signs the mobilisation order
brilliantly at a table
hewn from the timbers
of Nelson's victory
that was a gift from the British.
They've all got tears in their eyes.
They're shaking hands.
There's a crowd outside singing
Frederick the Great Era hymns.
So a hymn called Now Thank We All Our God, which is a Lutheran hymn that Frederick the great
soldiers had sung after a victory in the 18th century.
And then the Kaiser, he goes out on the balcony and he gives this great speech, you know.
Can I do it?
Go on, go on, go on, go on.
In the battle now lying ahead of us, I no longer see any political parties.
I see only Germans.
All that matters now is that we're going.
We stand together like brothers, and God will help the German sword to victory.
That's how he spoke.
And I think he really means this.
He does.
It feels very impassioned.
Yeah, I think it's important for listeners to get that into their heads that the Germans genuinely think that the war has been forced upon them.
There's no question in their minds that God is on their side.
And that explains why, for example, the biggest party, not just in Germany, actually, but in Europe,
which is the Social Democratic Party,
a left-wing anti-militarist party
votes unanimously to fund the war,
to give them war credits,
and they agree they will not criticise
the German government for the whole of the war.
The trade unions promise
they won't strike for the whole of the war,
and this is because they really think
Germany has been very hard done by,
and this is a noble cause.
But it also reflects, I think, a sense of seriousness.
They know that the troops will not be home by Christmas.
Do they?
But the Schlieffen plan requires France to be knocked out within six weeks and then are they not hoping for a rapid victory?
Well, here's the thing.
I think they're hoping for a rapid victory but fearing they might not get it against France.
But once they've beaten France in six weeks, if they manage to pull that off, they're then up against the Russians.
And one of the sort of premises of their plan is the idea that the Russians will be very, very hard to beat.
because of their manpower, because they know, you know, you go east and you get lost like Charles
the 12th or like Napoleon in the great vastness of Russia. Best case scenario, you can probably
do that in another six months, a year. You know, who knows how long it takes? They are
expecting a water lasts that long. Of course. And the newspapers in Germany, you know, the Frankfurt
Zeitum, over everything hangs at great gravity in their quiet rooms. Wives and young women sit
nursing a great fear of terrible things of what may be to come.
That doesn't sound to me like the journalism of a country that thinks this will be done
and dusted really quickly like the Franco-Prussian War and we'll all be having, you know,
we'll be celebrating on the 25th of December.
That says to me they know that they're an existential struggle of fight for their lives.
In a later episode, we'll talk a little bit about why they didn't stop.
As in as the war becomes a stalemate, why don't people stop fighting?
And I think one reason they don't stop fighting is they think, rightly, the survival of our entire society depends on winning this war.
And if we lose it, you know, we're finished.
And so that's why the famous phrase in that speech that the Kaiser gives is that he no longer sees any political parties, he sees only Germans.
That becomes kind of emblematic of the German sense of an entire nation at war, right?
Yes, absolutely. It does. Absolutely.
But if you're a German and you think, well, we're absolutely the good guys in this.
You know, there's no doubt whatsoever that we're the plucky underdogs.
The one problem you have is that you are clearly breaking international law with your plan to go through Belgium.
Because Belgium, to remind people from last time, Belgium's a buffer state created largely by the British, actually,
after the revolution of 1830 against the Netherlands, all the great powers that signed treaties
to guarantee its independence and its neutrality, first in 1830.
39 and then in 1870 and during the Franco-Prussian war, Belgium had been neutral and
independent. And if the Germans go into Belgium and if the Belgians appeal for help, then Britain
is legally bound to offer help. They're what form that help will take is ambiguous and
undefined. So the British, just to quickly glance across the channel, they have been debating
this for the last few days. They're still very undecided. We talked last time about how in the
cabinet meetings, some of the British ministers have said, look, if the Germans just go through a little bit of Belgium using the railway, and they don't cause any damage and stuff, it's not grounds for us to fight. Churchill, incredibly bellicose in this period, actually said at one point to his cabinet colleagues, I don't see why we should come in if they go only a little way into Belgium. In other words, you know, maybe we can still stay out. The bad thing about all this is such a diplomatic fog. Nobody knows exactly what anybody else is thinking. And the Germans,
don't know what the British are thinking. And so they end up making a terrible mistake, arguably,
I would say the biggest diplomatic mistake of modern history. But of course, the French do know
that if the British are to enter the war, it's really vital that the Germans are seen to be
the bad guys, the guys who've infringed Belgian neutrality. And so they kind of issue military
dictates, don't they, that on no account are French troops to enter Belgium, that no French
planes are to go enter Belgian airspace or anything like that. It's really, really, you know,
vital to France's interests that Germany do this.
Exactly. And the French refrain from attacking Germany, from attacking the Germans,
they want the Germans to be seen as the aggressors.
And so on the evening of Sunday the 2nd of August, the Germans make this cataclysmic mistake.
At 7 o'clock, their ambassador gave the Belgians an ultimatum.
He said, we want our armies to have safe passage on your railway system.
We want to take over your border fortresses at Liege and Namur.
We're very sorry about this.
We will get out as quickly as possible.
We'll compensate you for any damage.
We'll also pay for our own kind of board and lodging.
So don't worry about that.
Did no one ever think they could just buy tickets?
Can you buy a ticket for like a million men?
I don't know.
Is that possible?
Get a discount.
It'll be a very amusing conversation at the counter.
I want to bring a few horses as well.
But then the Germans saying this alternative, we'll compensate you, but however, if you stand
in our way, we will crush you.
And you've got 12 hours to make up your minds.
Now, the mad thing is they could just have gone through the south of Belgium.
I mean, it would have been tricky, and maybe militarily it would have been very difficult.
But their foreign office, the German foreign office had said,
we think that persuading the Belgians, basically bullying the Belgians into agreeing,
is the only way to be sure the British won't intervene.
However, this gamble completely backfires because even as nightfall comes,
Belgium's King Albert, Albert, has already made up his mind.
And at 7 o'clock the next morning, Belgium rejects the ultimatum.
The irony is that to the hawks in London who wanted to join the war, Herbert Henry Asgwreth and Edward Gray, who we talked about in the last series, this is the perfect issue.
It's the perfect Kazas Beli to rally Liberal Party opinion.
So when Edward Gray spoke to the Commons, he made this huge deal about plucky little Belgium.
They just want to be left alone and get on with exploiting the people of the Congo.
No, that's, yeah, poor Belgium.
His pitch is literally liberal interventionism.
Literally liberal interventionism.
So even before the Germans have fired their first shot,
they've handed the British and their opponents,
a most amazing propaganda weapon,
breaking international law, all of this kind of thing.
And the next morning the British duly issued their ultimatum.
It's not true that the Germans weren't aware of this.
They were very aware of it.
So Beethoven-Holweg, when he spoke to the Reichstag,
he said, listen, I completely understand why the Belgians,
and Luxembourg as well.
Nobody even mentions Lexenberg in this story,
poor of Luxembourg.
We completely understand why they're aggrieved,
that we're invading them,
but we will make good the wrong we're doing
as soon as we've attained our military objectives.
When you're as imperiled as we are,
fighting for everything we hold there,
you can only think of how you'll cut your way out.
He's actually furious, though, in private,
that the British are using this as a pretext.
He has this huge argument
with the British ambassador, who's called Goschen.
That's a very German name, isn't it?
I know, everyone's got the wrong name.
Because this was a feature of the diplomatic exchanges,
is that the Germans all had French.
names and the French all had German names and so on. And the generals are just as bad, right?
When we get to General von Renenkamp, he's Russian. Yeah, exactly. And of course,
a field marshal French. Yes, who hates the French. Who hates the French more than anybody.
So anyway, the ambassador and Bethven-Holvig had an argument. And Bethvenorovic said to him,
you are fighting just for a scrap of paper. Yeah, it's another German gaffe, because yet again,
the British turn it into a great propaganda weapon. It features very heavily on posters. You can
Google them, and you can see the references to the scrap of paper, although not as much
as a gift as what the Germans get up to in the second half of this episode, because in Belgium
itself, the pace has quickened. At 8 o'clock that morning, so we are on the 3rd of August, Monday
the 3rd of August 1914, the first German units crossed the Belgian border. And at midday,
King Albert formally appealed to Britain as the guarantor of Belgian independence. And then he got
on his horse. He's wearing full uniform. He leads this procession, including his wife and his
12-year-old son, who's dressed in a sailor suit, through the centre of Brussels. There are huge
crowds of people cheering, some weeping, waving Belgian flags, the kind of trickular of Belgium.
And he leads his family into the Belgian Parliament. And truly, it's an amazing scene.
The deputies are all on their feet. They're chanting and shouting,
live Le Croix, Vive la Belchique. And he goes up to the soot of the Rostrum and he says,
not since 1830 has our country faced such a grave peril. The integrity of our homeland is under
threat. Their task will be hard, but we stand prepared for the greatest sacrifices. And then he looks
out and he says, gentlemen, are you determined at any cost to preserve the sacred heritage of our
forefathers? And as a man, they get to their feet and they're all shouting, we, we, we, find
words, Dominic, but when you have the mightest army of the world has ever seen preparing to
cross your frontier, are words enough? And what horrors may lie in wait for the people of
Belgium who we are legally obliged to describe at this point as plucky. We'll find out after the
break. This episode is brought to you by Sega and Creative Assembly. To celebrate 25 years of creating
award-winning video games, Total War, Rome 2 and Total War Rome Remastered will be on sale on
Steam. Get Rome remastered at 75% off and get Total War Rome 2 for 80% off from the 21st of August
to the 4th of September. Visit Steam and search for Total War Rome to buy now.
The discount is valid for a limited time only terms and conduct.
apply.
Hello, I'm Gordon Carrera, National Security Journalist, and I'm David McCloskey,
former CIA analyst or novelist.
And together, we're the co-hosts of another Goalhanger show.
The rest is classified, where we bring you the best stories from the world of spies and secrets.
We have just released an absolutely cracking new series on the infamous Colombian drug lord
Pablo Escobar, how the U.S. spent decades fighting a war on drugs to bring his cocaine
empire to justice. By 1989, Escobar was the seventh richest man in the world, wealthier than
the entire state of Colombia. He was a husband, a father, and the most feared narco-terrorist
in the world. But to the poor in his hometown of Medellin, he was kind of a hero. He built roads,
houses, soccer fields, became almost a Colombian robin hood to a nation weary with a very
unequal and violent political and legal system. Over the next few weeks, we'll take you deep inside
the murky world of the hunt for Escobar. Using accounts from members of the secret military units
deployed to find him, will reveal how Colombian and American forces work together to track down
the man who controlled a global cocaine empire. If this sounds good, we've left a clip for you
at the end of this episode.
Hello, welcome back to the rest of history. It is the 4th of August 1914 and the imperial German
army is poised to fall on the people of Belgium. Dominic, give us some sense of what exactly
this means. So this is an invasion unprecedented in human history. Von Malka is unleashing
750,000 men in three armies. They're being carried west to the border in more than 500 trains
a day. Of course, railway is very important to the First World War. An absolutely mind-boggling
sight for anybody who was witnessing it. These columns of grey infantry, many of them, Tom,
in those spiked helmets that you like so much. A column is 50 miles long, followed by horses and
trucks and artillery. So these three armies, they are commanded by three generals, Carl von Bulov,
Max von Hausson, and the most compelling of them, I think, is a guy called Alexander von Kluck.
And he had fought in the Franco-Prussian War. So no chicken he.
Very good. I like what you did there. He looks exactly as he should. The casting agency has supplied these men have done superbly. He's got a sort of polished, shining bald head, a fearsome look and an enormous bristling moustache. And his task, he is the guy who's going to smash through Belgium, he's going to sweep around Paris, who's going to finish off the French and then turn east. And remember, he and the other generals have six weeks to do all this. So their target, he has set, von Kluk has set his men a target.
of 20 miles a day.
And he says, we cannot fall behind.
One day where we fall short,
we have to make it good later on
because the clock is ticking.
And that urgency is absolutely essential
to understanding what happens next.
So that was the 4th of August.
On the 5th of August,
the Germans begin the assault on Liege.
So this is day two.
And already they're slightly falling behind their timetable.
And that's the thing, isn't it,
about the First World War,
that people always seize on, the importance of timetables,
say this is the thing about that the railway timetables
couldn't be changed or anything.
But I'm guessing that this reflects the industrial quality of the combat,
that industrial society depends on precisely gauged time schedules.
And it must provide the German high command
with a degree of pressure that no army previously had ever had.
People hadn't operated to these kind of timetables.
Absolutely not.
I think they go into this war under greater time pressure
than any other competent, arguably, in history.
They can't be like a sort of 18th century army
who sort of have a little campaign in the summer
and then go to their winter quarters
do a bit of hunting on the side or something
and maybe the war will take 20 years
they're not charged the 12th
they can hear a ticking clock
in the back of their heads the whole time
now liege has a garrison of 40,000 men
it's far more formidable than the Germans had expected
the first wave of men the Germans sent in
from Westphalia and Hanover
meet withering Belgian fire and are just cut down
So these scenes are described in Max Hastings's brilliant book.
I know you're a massive Max Hastings fan, Tom, catastrophe.
And he describes how line after line of German infantry advance on this fortress.
And quote, this is a Belgian officer, we simply mowed them down.
They came on almost shoulder to shoulder until as we shot them down,
the fallen were heaped one on top of the other in an awful barricade of dead and wounded men.
And you'll hear sentences like that again and again in this series about people
who basically their officers just say
this is going to be a bit like the Napoleonic Wars
come on lads go for it
and they all go for it and about 10 seconds later
they're all dead in an enormous peep
and the Germans I think learn that lesson
pretty quickly quicker than the French and the British perhaps
certainly quicker than the French I mean the French
as we'll see in the next episode
what's not like the Napoleonic Wars though
is what happens the next day right
because it's the first Zeppelin raid
in the history of warfare
yes the first ever air attack on a
European city, I read. I mean, they're literally just throwing bombs out of the Zeppelin,
and they killed nine civilians in Liege. I wouldn't want to go up in a Zeppelin with a bomb.
No, God, I wouldn't go in a Zeppelin at all, I think. On the 7th of August, they finally captured
Leijge and the Citadel, and the final assault on Leij was led by a man who will be meeting
again called Eric Ludendorff, who will be very familiar to people who heard our episode about
the Beer Hall Putch. So a man who I think goes on to greatly let himself down with his political
choices. But the surrounding forts fought on for about another 10-11 days, and they tied up the
German Second Army. You know, at this point, kind of steam is coming out of the German
general's ears because they are falling well behind their schedule. They can't move all their
troops as quick as they wanted. And Liege, although it's largely forgotten now, in the summer
of 1914, was a massive story. It was a bit like Mariapal or something. One of those
stories from the Ukrainian war, people follow it obsessively in the newspaper headlines.
John Buchan, the 39 Steps author, said that the Belgian stand at Liege was an advertisement to the world
that the ancient faiths of country and duty could still nerve the arm for battle
and that the German idol, for all its splendor, had feet of clay.
I mean, we should warn listeners that there's going to be a lot of that kind of prose.
Is that a warning or is that, I think, an advertisement, surely?
When you read it over and over again, you get fed up with it.
I did.
I love that kind of 1910.
Florid.
I don't think it is florid.
I think it's, I think it's massively over-emotional.
I think it has a kind of moral earnestness.
It does, which will end up, it's the kind of moral earnestness
that will end up shot to pieces on barbed wire and being gnawed out by rats.
Okay.
Well, since you're introducing such beastly subjects,
let us turn now to the very first reports of German beastliness,
to use the terminology at the time.
These reports start in the edge.
So on the night at the 4th of August,
so right at the very beginning of the world,
war. The Germans had moved into the nearby village of Bernou, and they hear reports of
unexplained gunfire in the night, and there are rumours that reach the Germans that
12 of their men have been shot. So the next day, they round up suspected culprits in the village.
They get about 10 of them, and they shoot them, including an entire family of five that they
found hiding in a cellar. Why are you hiding in a cellar? Very suspicious. We'll just have to get rid of
you. The next day, the Germans in a nearby hamlet, Saint Adelain, a Belgian shell landed in
the hamlet, and it wounded some of the Germans who were billeted there.
This time the Germans said, well, probably the guy who gave a position away was the local teacher.
And they got him and his family, rounded them up, and they shot them.
So this all sets the tone for what is to come.
So in the next few days in the village of Suman, more than 100 people, Belgian civilians, are shot or bayoneted.
In a place called Melen, a 72 people herded into a meadow, including eight women and four girls who are not yet in their teens.
And they're all shot.
The local mayor, the mayor of Melen, arrived to bury the dead, and the Germans shot him too.
And then they burned the whole village to the ground.
And there are examples in any number of Belgian hamlets and villages,
so that after just four days of the war, the Germans have executed at least 850 Belgian civilians.
And this is the sort of the taint that has marked the German record in the First World War.
ever since. And the one thing that a lot of people know is they disgrace themselves in Belgium.
And how do we know this? Who is reporting this? Are there Belgians? Are they Germans? Are they
admitting it? What's going on? So there are reports in the Belgians. There are lots of reports
in Allied newspapers, but there are also German letters, German diary entries and so on.
Because the Germans don't deny that this is happening. All wars have civilian casualties.
I mean, it's completely fanciful to imagine that you'll ever fight a war in which civilians won't be shot.
But this seems to go well beyond that.
And the German's own explanation is,
we are being ambushed all the time by Belgian civilian partisans.
So there's an example, I think Max Hastings quotes it.
A soldier writing home, he says, I'm shocked by, I quote,
the havoc wreaked by the bestial mob in Liege.
He's not talking about the German occupiers.
He's talking about the locals.
And he says, we were greeted at first with cheers,
people waving kind of white tablecloths and stuff as flags of surrender.
However, that was just a malicious trick.
Scarcely had we passed the houses when rifle barrels were poked out of the windows and we were shot in the back.
There were also shots aimed at our legs from cellar coal holes.
Now, the thing is, these probably weren't partisans.
These were probably regular Belgian troops who had taken cover and were ambushing the Germans.
But the Germans assume that this is a partisan warfare, that these are civilians who are betraying them in a cowardly way, attacking them when their backs are turned.
And why are they assuming that?
Well, this is the really fascinating thing.
I think the short answer is the Germans have traveled with an enormous amount of historical baggage.
And there's a brilliant study of this by two Irish historians called John Horn and Alan Kramer.
And they emphasize the Germans had an institutional memory of what had happened in 1870, 71,
when they had invaded France, occupied France, and they had come under severe attack from French partisans called Franc d'Irard, kind of free shooters.
Even before the Germans went into Belgium, they are dreading that there will be a repeat of this.
And so the stories they got from Liege about being ambushed
exacerbate their darkest fears
and they are then ramped up by German newspapers
in a similar way to the way that Allied newspapers
ramp stuff up during the war.
So German newspapers have loads of stories
about how they've been tricked by frontiers,
how they're being attacked, how they're being tortured,
how German soldiers have been beheaded by Belgian civilians.
So these are the mirror image of the stories
that Allied newspapers tell about the Germans.
In Britain, for instance, there's an assumption that if you're a soldier and you go to, say, a colonial war, there's always a risk that you might be shot.
So there's the famous Kipling poem, isn't there? About £2,000 of education drops to a 10 rupee, Jazea.
Yeah. Yeah. This idea that somebody might have a crack at you from behind a rock or something at any point.
This presumably is not something that has become part of German culture in the same way, that perhaps the German military are not as inured to the possibility of,
getting a bullet in the back from some guy with the cheap rifle to the degree that the British
or the French who are colonial powers are.
I don't know, because the Germans, of course, have been fighting colonial war in South
West Africa and what becomes Namibia.
So they're not completely strangers to colonial warfare.
I wonder if they have a different standard for European wars.
Do you not think that they think that in a European war, you're walking down at basically
a suburban street or the street of a village that's very like a German village, really?
And then you're shot in the back that it's seen as completely legitimate and unexpected,
that people who are so like you would behave in this way.
Kaiser's outrage and compares the Belgians to the Cossacks, doesn't he,
and say that this is terrible behaviour?
This is not a pretext for beastliness that the Germans were kind of itching to unleash.
The Germans genuinely believe that they have been kind of betrayed in some way,
that the Belgians have broken the rules of warfare.
The Kaiser, yeah, absolutely.
The population of Belgium, he writes on the 9th of August,
have behaved in a diabolical, bestial manner,
and not one iota better than the Cossacks.
He comes out with all the newspaper kind of tabloid cliches.
They've been torturing our men.
They've beaten them to death.
And he says, I mean, the Kaiser who's got a terrible track record of diplomacy with
the other monarchs of Europe, he says, tell the king of the Belgians, the since his people
have placed themselves outside European customs, they'll be treated according.
I guess that line is a giveaway, right?
We might expect this in Africa.
But in Europe, oh, that is shocking.
Except that notoriously in Africa, this is how the Bolgians.
The irony. Maybe the Belgians have got formed, Tom. Maybe the Belgians are the real villains of the story.
I mean, I'm just wondering, is that also maybe a part of it? There's kind of fear that...
No, surely not. The Belgians are going to start cutting off people's hands and forcing them to collect rubber.
I mean, there is obviously a kind of shadow that hangs over all of this, that atrocities that the Belgians had inflicted in the Congo are now being inflicted on the Belgians in their native land.
I just wonder the degree to which people are oblivious to that irony or aware of.
it. Well, do you know what? The fascinating thing is when the British papers exaggerate the German
atrocities. So even today, some historians basically parrot British propaganda and repeat these
stories about the Germans impaling babies on bayonets and cutting women's hands off and stuff.
Stories that I think are almost certainly luridly exaggerated because, I mean, they are doing
mass shootings and things, but they're not doing all this. These stories, as Alexander Watson
points out in his book, Ring of Steel, these stories are dire.
Directly inspired by newspaper reports about what was going on in the Congo.
I mean, unbelievable.
They're basically taking the stories about what, you know, King Leopold's men had been doing in the Congo
and just changing the names and making the Germans the bad guys and the Belgians, the victims.
It's really remarkable.
To go back to the German soldiers, I think there's an image in the popular imagination that most of them are hard-faced, kind of hatchet-faced, you know, stormtroopers in waiting.
But actually, as Horn and Kramer points out in their study, a huge proportion of the German soldiers are teenagers.
They've been mobilized in haste.
They've been very quickly and poorly trained.
Most of them have never been abroad.
They are excited, frightened, confused, and they're also often drinking heavily.
Because as they go through a town, they'll obviously, you know, soldiers always do this.
They'll loot the local shops.
They've got stuck into the kind of Belgian beer or whatever.
So they're a little bit tanked up.
And then when somebody shoots at them, they lose their temper very, very quickly.
But it's also driven from the top.
So by the 12th of August, von Malker is issuing a solemn warning.
Any Belgian civilian suspected of what he calls atrocities will be immediately shot under martial law.
And the Germans effectively, by this point, are running a formal policy of mass reprisals.
Even though this is forbidden by the Haig Convention, they're carrying out collective punishment for individual actions.
And there are just endless, endless stories.
Max Hastings lists a lot of them.
them. Bazai, 11th of August. The Germans shoot 25 people. They burn 50 houses. Visei, 16th of August. They shoot 42nd
people. A particularly grim story, a place called Tamin, which is on the River Sambre, on the 22nd of
August. So here, what's happened is the Germans moved in. The people in the village defied the
Germans, basically didn't obey their orders. They didn't shoot them, but they just didn't obey
their orders. They didn't collaborate. And they started chanting, Vive la France. So a Belgian inquiry
later found out what happened next.
The Germans herded 400 people in front of the church.
They lined them up.
They opened fire with a machine gum.
And the next day, the people who were left in the village
were ordered, assembled at the church to gather the bodies and bury them.
And the German officers stood there drinking champagne while watching this happening.
Now, the inquiry that the Belgians convened claimed that 600 people in total were killed in this.
In fact, modern historians put the death toll at less than 400.
And that tells its own story that so much of this was later sensationalised and exaggerated
that it is quite hard sometimes to get it exactly what happened.
However, you asked about how we know, and I mentioned German letters and diaries.
And it is really important to say that German officers themselves write about this.
So there are a couple of examples.
A guy could Count Harry Kessler.
He says the inhabitants of sea or sins attacked our pioneers building a bridge.
and they killed 20 of them.
As a punishment, 200 citizens were court-martialed and shot.
Isn't there a story also that the Germans take hostages and put them on the bridges to stop
them being destroyed?
Which I think is perfectly plausible.
You might well do that.
There's a guy in Leffer called France Steibing.
He says, we pushed on past house after house under fire from every building.
We arrested all the male inhabitants.
They were similarly executed in the street.
We only spared children under 15 old people and women.
There are stories, aren't there?
say that it's not just women who have their hands chopped off, that children as well are having
their hands chopped off.
And isn't there an American in Paris who offers a bet to the Belgian army or something
who are putting out these stories that children are being massacred and says, you know,
give me hard evidence that any child has been killed?
And I think that that's a kind of a bet that is left standing.
Is there a hard evidence that children are massacred or not?
No.
I think some children are definitely swept up in these shooting.
I don't think it's, I don't think there are zero.
Targeted.
There's no targeted.
They're not targeted.
Of course they're not targeted.
And probably about 5,500 people were killed in Belgium,
another thousand in France.
And about 15,000 people were probably deported to Germany.
And some historians have said, gosh, this is dreadful.
This is a preview of Nazism.
But actually, you know, you ask about our people being deliberately targeted.
Is this a sort of descent into total savagery?
I don't think it is.
If you look at Alexander Watson's book, he quotes a lot of people who talk.
who talk about carrying out these reprisals.
So he's got a brilliant example of a rifleman called Wilhelm Schweiger,
who's from a small town in northwestern Germany,
and he was killed and he left a diary for his fiancé.
And he describes coming under attack on a night patrol,
and he says, you know, we found the house that we thought we were being shot at from,
and we burned it down, we shot everybody who came out.
And he says, you know, we're really angry, we, all this kind of thing.
But then he goes on to say, it was terrible, quite terrible.
I did my duty and I obeyed orders, but it's dreadful, if only this horrible war at an end.
And you see that a lot, I think, in German letters and diaries.
The people say, it's dreadful that we have to do this.
I don't enjoy doing it at all.
You know, it's not an exercise in sadism.
It's very different from the sentiments in the Third Reich, where you're being told that what you're doing
is kind of important racial hygienic cleansing, and it's a noble thing to do and all of this.
These people feel bad about what they're doing.
They all know they feel bad about it.
The officers feel bad about it because the officers, as Watson says, they have an aristocratic
honor culture.
They see themselves as chivalric knights.
He gives an example of another guy, Major General Kosh.
His division shot more than 200 Belgian civilians.
And he wrote to his wife and he said, you know, we're doing this and we have to do it.
But I hope we can stop soon because, and I quote, we're not Huns and we don't want to
sully the honor of the German name.
So it's not as bad, for instance, as the behavior of the French in.
the peninsula war against guerrero or napoleon's troops in italy actually alexander
Watson in his book makes precise at this point he says if you look at previous european wars
on a similar scale there are far more civilian atrocities it's actually an interesting
example of how this sounds a weird thing to say but i think the value of human life increased
in the course of the 19th century however yeah having said that i mean i suppose you could argue
that this is because it's because the british or the french aren't actually invading anywhere
But the allies are not doing this.
It's only the Germans who are doing this.
Foting on home territory.
There's a lot more bad behavior to come by the Austrians, by the Russians and so on, almost always on enemy soil.
And that's because if you're fighting outside your homeland, you tend to behave badly.
If you're fighting on home turf, you tend to behave much better.
Was it within the allied repertoire to behave badly?
I think if anybody listened to this who is from Asia or Africa, would tell you.
say, come on. Well, Ireland, how does it compare to British behaviour in the War of Independence
that we did a series about earlier? Exactly, we've just done that series. Now, of course,
the numbers are much smaller because the whole conflict is on a smaller scale. But if you look
at the behaviour of the Black and Tanzan Island, is it in the British national character
to carry out reprisals of a similar kind? Clearly it is. What would the Boers say about this?
Yeah, and the British in that burn down a section of cork. And there is a certain degree of
burning things down in Belgium, isn't there?
It has to be said, the British don't, for instance, burn down libraries.
I mean, the Germans have been very poor at PR throughout this entire episode,
but there's one incident in particular, which is disastrous for their worldwide reputation.
And this is a story about a library, about the medieval university of Louvain or Leuven,
which is the oldest university in the low countries.
And basically what happened in this place, which is now, I mean, it's called Louvant at the time,
but now I think people call it Leuven.
There were reports of gunshots in this town, and the German soldiers,
run completely amok. They lose their discipline. They're beating up people in the streets,
bayoneting them and stuff. They break into the university library and they set it on fire.
And firemen arrive to tackle the blaze and the Germans hold them back. They want to watch it
burn. And basically a quarter of a million books went up in smoke and hundreds of, you know,
priceless medieval manuscripts. And then the fire spread overnight into the old city of Leven and
loads of it was destroyed, hundreds of people killed, all of this kind of.
a thing. And this is the one incident that goes around the world and leads to people saying
they're the Huns, they're barbarians, their book burners, all of this. And as you say, it's a
particular disaster, maybe particularly in Britain, where intellectuals and opinion formers
almost have a cultural cringe towards Germany. Germany's cultural and intellectual achievements,
the sense that Germany is the most highly educated nation in the world. I mean, it's not an
an accurate impression. But it is a disaster, isn't it? Because the spectacle of German troops
destroying a library, it detonates that image. It does completely. And so the remarkable turnaround
in the image of Germany in Britain between the sort of the summer before the war started, the summer
of 1914 and then the end of the year, Max Hastings quotes this British naval cadet. He writes in his
diary at the end of August. He says, if their army is capable of doing what it is doing, then the rest of the
race must be the same. From now onwards, I shall regard every German, man, woman and child
from the Kaiser downwards as a willful savage. The use of that kind of language, the Germans
are Philistines, they're barbarians, they're savages. That becomes very common. I mean, that's
the kind of language you might expect from a young man. But you do also start to get it among
British writers and intellectual scientists who previously had been in awe of German cultural
achievements. I mean, it's incredible how fast that sense switches. Obviously, the Kipling and the
people like that and the Buckens and whatnot, people who are basically co-opted for the war effort
and who previously, as you say, they'd been perfectly happy to go and give like a lecture at
the University of Heidelberg. But by 1915, they're saying, I'll never have a German
book in the house again. These people are absolute savages. They're the worst, the worst.
So all of this catastrophic, I think, for Germany's reputation. Now, meanwhile, their juggernaught
has been rolling through Belgium.
Now, they have fallen behind the timetable,
but they're still making amazing progress.
So they are sometimes hitting their 20 miles a day target.
And by the 19th of August, so what are we?
We are two weeks into the war.
They reach the suburbs of Brussels.
It's a brilliant description by an American journalist
called Richard Harding Davis,
who was in Brussels at the time.
And he describes the scenes that the streets are already crowded
with the wagons of refugees who fled from eastern Belgium.
sort of three generations of people. And he says the tears rolled down their brown, tanned faces.
To the people of Brussels who crowded around them, they spoke in hushed, broken phrases,
the terror of what they'd escaped and what they'd seen was upon them. Now, people are preparing
barricades. They're preparing for a great siege. But overnight, on the 19th, 20th, the king of Belgium
sends orders, he says, I don't want to see my capital destroy by fighting. There's no point.
The Germans are going to win. It's better to surrender intact now and hopefully we're
regain it later. So at 11 o'clock in the next morning, this guy Harding Davis, this American
guy, he watches the German advance guard coming down, ironically maybe, the boulevard, Waterloo.
And he says, the advance guard was three men, a captain and two privates on bicycles. Their rifles
were slung across their shoulders. They rode unwarily with as little concern as the members of a
touring club out for a holiday. So these guys and bikes come down. And then behind them comes
the might of General von Kloch's army.
Here's an amazing description.
This was a machine, endless, tireless,
with the delicate organization of a watch
and the brute power of a steamroller.
And for three days and three nights through Brussels,
it roared and rumbled the cataract of molten lead.
That is so good.
And it so sums up.
Everything that people admired about Germany,
and you can see how that admiration could turn into fear,
the idea of it being as delicate,
watch and as powerful as a steamroller. I mean, it's perfect. He has this description. They're singing
the Germans, Vaterland, mine Vaterland. He says their iron-shod boots beating out the time like
that blows from a giant pile driver. The sight was uncanny, inhuman, a force of nature like a
landslide, a tidal wave or lava sweeping down a mountain. It was not of this earth, but mysterious,
ghostlike. It carried all the mystery and menace of a fog rolling towards.
you across the sea. That's brilliant. And so Brussels has fallen. Ahead lie the fields of Flanders,
beyond them, the valley of the Marn and beyond that, the ultimate prize, Paris. But Dominic, as you
have been saying, the clock is always ticking down. And I suppose a huge question is,
will the Germans make it in time? And also, an even more important question, what have our own
plucky countrymen, the British? If you want to hear not just a
next episode, but all six episodes of this epic series in one go, then you can join our very
own crack-tutonic division. The Rest is History Club at the Rest is History.com. Afida Zane.
Afida Zane.
Hi again. It's David from The Rest is Classified. Here's that clip we mentioned earlier.
Victory over drugs is our cause, a just cause.
And with your help, we are going to win.
Pablo Escobar, the head of the Medellin drug cartel.
The world's 14th, which is man.
He was, in many ways, a terrorist.
This is an economic power concentrated in a few hands and in criminal minds.
What they cannot obtain by blackmail, they get by murder.
And I don't think he expressed any regret at all.
He tries to portray himself as a man of the people, this kind of like leftist, revolutionary outlaw.
Nearly everyone in Medellin supports the traffickers, those who don't are either dead or targets.
If you declare war, you've got to expect the state to respond.
This is the moment where he goes too far.
13 bombs have gone off to Medellin since the weekend.
By the end of 87, Bogota is essentially a war zone.
U.S. spending for international anti-drug efforts is going to grow from less than
$300 million in 1989 to more than $700 million by 1991.
It is the certain knowledge that no one is really safe in Colombia from drug cartel assassins.
It's a conflict where the goal wasn't even to stop, the flow of cocaine.
It was to bring down this narco-terrorist.
Everything has turned against him after this point.
The whole thing he was building is collapsing.
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