On 2017 and 1914

Nobody foresaw a world war in 1914.  While historians argue about this, in my opinion, the war escalated from a minor localized conflict into a pan-European disaster as the result of the following miscalculations:

  1.  The Austro-Hungarian government somehow thought that the prestige gained by crushing Serbia was going to solve the problems of a dysfunctional political system.  The government also thought, with some reason, that the Russians wouldn’t intervene.  They had backed down before, most notably in 1908.
  2. The Russian government believed that the danger of backing down exceeded the danger of intervening and losing.  Guess how that turned out.

The current analogy is, of course, North Korea.  I don’t have the impression that Trump really wants to fight the North Koreans;  if he did, the war would already be over.  War could nonetheless come, however, over a miscalculation of motives, including the following:

  1. The administration could view a harmless North Korean provocation (say, a missile intended to miss Guam by 20 miles) as an actual declaration of war.
  2. Kim could start taking Trump’s tweets seriously and assume that a preemptive strike is imminent, when it really isn’t.
  3. And, of course, there is the matter of Trump feeling humiliated, and needing to “win” for his ego and for domestic political reasons, but that is the subject for another day.