Observer Review: The Shield Of Achilles By Philip Bobbitt Essay, Research Paper
Achilles’s last standThe Shield of Achilles: War, Peace and the Course of HistoryPhilip BobbittPenguin ?25, pp993The shield of Achilles was hammered and forged into shape, according to The Iliad, by Hephaestus, who inscribed on it the history of its own making, a tormented saga of unremitting strife, havoc and death. The Marxist critic Georg Lukacs turned the shield into an emblem of epic: a story which must not only describe society but analyse the way it works, making clear the dependence of culture on power and violent expropriation. Epic is a song of force, a hymn of praise to the arms – a simple shield or the fighter jets and smart bombs deployed by modern warriors – that embellish and embolden man.Though Philip Bobbitt is a highly placed policy wonk, who served as President Clinton’s National Security Council director of intelligence, he clearly intends this ponderous, onerous, deeply depressing book to be an epic of a kind. Its subtitle swallows the title of Tolstoy’s novel about Napoleon’s war with Russia.It also begins with a long citation of Homer’s fable and is interspersed with poems, runes and prayers. They are a relief, fortunately, from the repetitive expository manner of Bobbitt himself, whose epic poem is written in stolid prose, and from his diagrams illustrating constitutional orders and their bases for legitimacy.But they also serve a more alarming purpose – to glorify and ennoble war and to establish its heroic centrality to civilisation. The epic poet for Bobbitt is a wheeling, predatory hawk who calls for military, not moral, rearmament. Significantly, one of the poems quoted is Larkin’s grumpy elegy, ‘Homage to a Government’, with its lament for an unimperial Britain that cannot afford an army.Michael Howard, in a characteristically wise and witty introduction, likens Bobbitt’s book to Spengler’s apocalyptic romance The Decline of the West (which, as Howard at once adds, is ‘now deservedly forgotten’). Bobbitt lacks Spengler’s cloudy Wagnerian rhetoric and he writes scholarly history rather than Spenglerian myth. But he, too, prophesies doom and announces a twilight of the gods or, rather, an Indian summer (as he calls it) of peaceful complacency, abruptly halted on 11 September.Bobbitt’s thesis is simple and hardly requires the near thousand pages he takes to elaborate and hectoringly reinforce it. Adapting Eric Hobsbawm’s notion of the Short Century, Bobbitt argues that the twentieth century consisted of a single, epochal Long War. We should not have expected anything else: the state, after all, is ‘a warmaking institution’. But during those decades of conflict, the state’s conception of its responsibility stealthily changed.Nation states in the past promised to look after the material welfare of their citizens, which is why they felt entitled to mobilise those citizens as a mass to fight wars. By contrast, the modern state, born from the marriage of minds between Thatcher and Reagan, defers to the market and contents itself with maximising opportunities for its citizens.So who will defend those citizens when they are terrorised by represent
The following apology was printed in the Observer’s For the record column, Sunday June 30 2002
This review of Philip Bobbitt’s The Shield of Achilles: War, Peace and the Course of History misrepresented the views of Sir Michael Howard, author of the book’s introduction. We said: ‘Michael Howard… likens Bobbitt’s book to Spengler’s apocalyptic romance The Decline of the West (which, as Howard at once adds, is “now deservedly forgotten”).’ We omitted Sir Michael’s next sentence, in which he writes: ‘Such a fate is unlikely to befall this volume.’ Our apologies.