François Valentin Profile picture
Apr 30, 2023 40 tweets 14 min read Read on X
In 1920, this historian managed to predict World War II step by step!

He called out the Anschluss and the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact included, by reading maps and history books

Buckle up, in this 🧵 we will explore the most prophetic book ever written in history Image
After WW1, Germany was amputated of 13% of its territory and 10% of its population by the treaty of Versailles

The Rhineland was demilitarized, the Saar coalfields given to France, the German army reduced to 100 000 and its fleet to 6 battleships (and no submarines) Image
In 1920, a then obscure British economist published "The Economic Consequences of Peace"

He predicted that this harsh « Carthaginian peace » would ultimately collapse Europe’s economic model

He argued that the allies need to help, not punish, Germany Image
The author is John Maynard Keynes, one of the greatest economic thinkers and his book continues to shape the way we think of Versailles and post-war treaties.

His book is often hailed as one of the most prescient forecast of the economics and politics of interwar Europe. Image
In comes... Jacques Bainville, a respected French historian who thinks Keynes is totally missing the bigger picture Politics trump economics, especially with Versailles

To make that very clear, he calls his pamphlet the *Political* Consequences of Peace Image
For Bainville Versailles is "a peace that is too soft for its hardness, and too hard for its softness."

It does humiliate Germany, but crucially it doesn't seriously weaken it. Germany remains Europe's demographic giant.

Worse still, Germany remains united Image
His main thesis is that Versailles is a moral and economic treaty, not a political treaty. As a result "Germany is unified in contrast to a fragmented Europe.

That’s the mother of all troubles. Image
Bainville is voicing long-established foreign policy thinking in France: for centuries France had kept Germany divided into a myriad of micro entities.

As François Mauriac would write during the Cold War "I love Germany so much I'm glad there are 2 of them" Image
The 30 year war is a good example of this strategy. France joined the largely protestant anti-Habsburg coalition, limiting the Habsburg's influence in Germany

By the way I did a thread on the crazy logistics of this war that you should check out:
It took Germany a century to recover from the demographic disaster that was the 30 year war. In the mean time France was the clear demographic powerhouse of Europe with weak neighbors on its eastern border.

Here's the population map of Europe in 1789 Image
But the French slipped up in the 1800s. Prussian chancellor Bismarck brilliantly managed to prey on an isolated Austria to take the south of Germany in 1866

Napoleon the 3rd stood on the sidelines. Perhaps the most consequential foreign policy decision in french history... Image
4 years later the Prussian war machine turned its eyes on France.

Bismarck brilliantly isolated France from the rest of Europe. Prussia crushed the French army, occupied Alsace-Lorraine occupied and crowned The Prussian king Kaiser of a united Germany in… Versailles! Image
So when Bainville is writing his book, Germany has only been united for 80 years.

He argues that the humiliation of Versailles should have been shouldered by Prussia, not by the whole of Germany

Instead it will create finalise German unity through this shared humiliation Image
Famously post 1918 Germany became a massively violent political battleground with communist and fascist militias battling it out in the streets.

Aborted revolutions and failed coups nearly toppled the Weimar Republic

Here are some scarily accurate predictions from Bainville: Image
On the demobilized war veterans in a chaotic political context he says:

"Perhaps new forms of militarism are being born [in the debris of the imperial army]. The only thing missing is the opportunity and the man who will set this militarism in motion." Image
Bainville fears that the Germans will be "chained to the same ball, with only one government, perhaps tomorrow one leader, to train them to break their chain." Image
He wanted instead a broken up Germany in regional entities, with their own armies and Princes. Something that was in the air until the communist threat waved it away.

The allies, even the staunch anti-German Clemenceau, always treated German unity as a fait accompli. Image
But what makes the treaty of Versailles especially stupid for Bainville, is the larger European geopolitical context in which a humiliated Germany finds itself:

Namely that Germany is surrounded by dwarves Image
Throughout the 19th century, great powers were constrained by a complex balance of power

Players of the diplomacy game know this tension well

But in the post-1918 world, and with the dismantling of Austria-Hungary, Germany had no one to check its ambitions in Central Europe Image
Germany is surrounded by weak new entities: Poland, Czechoslovakia, Austria.

Many of whom have inherited chunks of Imperial Germany. Easy prey for German revanchism

Reading these new maps, Bainville predicts everything: Anschluss, Sudetenland, Ribbentrop pact included Image
The 1st humiliation? Separating East Prussia from the rest of Germany at the benefit of Poland, which has a 1/3 of Germany’s population

Bainville writes ‘Germany just has to stretch its claws to reunite this island. Herein are written the misfortunes of Poland and Europe' Image
Worse still, Bainville predicts that, as it has happen many times throughout history, Germany and Russia will « marry through Poland »

Germans and Russians are complementary he argues: « Poland seems to have been invented to hasten a rapprochement » Image
Bainville just casually predicted the invasion of Poland in 1939 and the Molotov Ribbentrop pact 20 years before they happened! Image
While he predicts that Poland would fight to the death with Germany, what about the new Czechoslovak state to its east?

With 3 million Germans in Bohemia , war would be suicide. As a result he predicts its « submission » to Germany. Image
In effect, the Czechoslovaks have little choice but to submit. Hitler gets the Sudetenland with its strong German contingent in 1936 at the Munich conference before annexing the whole of Czechia. Image
On Austria, let me quote him directly: "Further south, it's worse. Here is Austria, an authentic piece of Germany. It alone is detached from the German unity. As long as one wanted to create an independent Austria, there had to be other independent parts of Germany as well. " Image
"Too great a temptation for Germany to reincorporate the Austrian countries into the German homeland. Too great a temptation for the state of Vienna to join a vast and powerful community."

The peaceful Anschluss proved him completely right. Image
In conclusion: "Poland, Czechoslovakia, Austria assumed, in order to last, that there not be a great Germany next to them."

"The authors of the peace treaty had never considered these questions of balance. The Treaty of Versailles is not a political treaty." Image
What about France? Can it be the necessary counterweight? With a population of 40M it is well behind the 60M-strong Germany.

Worse still, France was left alone (with Belgium) to check Germany. The Anglo-Americans were wary of French revanchism and unwilling to escalate Image
The Keynesian narrative has made French demands for reparations sound like rabid anti-Germanism

But France’s northeast, the industrial heart of the country, had been ravaged by World War I. Germany’s industrial heartland in contrast had been relatively spared. Image
The fundamental question is how can France alone check a Germany with a cause for revenge?

As Bainville writes « How can 40 million French people be creditors to a mass of 60 million Germans for over a generation? » Image
To sum it up here is Bainville casually predicting 1939-1940:

"The example of August 1920 (when the USSR invaded Poland) shows us that Poland, attacked by Russia, with a hostile Germany at its back found no support among its neighbors. We had to come to its aid." Image
« It would be exactly the same exactly the same if Poland were one day attacked by the Germans, Russia being ready to take advantage of her disaster and stab her from behind. » Image
« The march of Germany is indicated. It is through the East that she will begin its liberation and its revenge. If we do not deliberately intervene on the day she tries to reconstitute her eastern frontier, then, a year, 10 years or 20 years later, the danger will be ours. » Image
I'm only scratching the surface here, there is so much brilliant analysis on the contradictions of Versailles, on Scandinavia's desire to exit history...

He has exotic ideas too, like an alternative Austrian empire with Poland (an idea also defended by Emperor Charles)
At times it feels like he time traveled to make his predictions.

It’s a model for any political analyst on the importance of history and geography in forecasting the future.

He died in 1936 before he could see his fears become reality.
Pdf of the book available here: pratclif.com

You can read this thread in a more reader friendly format on my @memodapp account:

memod.com/francois45/the…
I hope you enjoyed this thread!

If you want more thread on history and maps, you're in luck I wrote many many more compiled here:

If you liked the thread, you might want to give a listen to @UnDecencyPod, a podcast I run on European affairs where we talk a fair bit about history.

Here's a good one on the legacy of the Habsburgs in Europe

Obviously 1938 not 1936, little frustrating to have paid for twitter blue and still cannot edit tweets

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This has to be one of the most fascinating "hive mind" phenomena in existence

During and after wars, the birth sex ratio skews decisively towards boys, as if to make up for lost men

Graphs below show the effect of WW1 on France and Germany

Why? A few theories below Image
One theory is that men that return from wars tend to be a bit higher than those who die (about 2 cms)

And it may sound bogus, but taller men are a little more likely to have boys! We aren't really sure why though
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This one is a bit weak biologically
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In a predictably 🇫🇷 twist, unions are blaming the Louvre fiasco on lack of staff

They claim that 100s of jobs were cut in the last 10/15 years. The French press took these number for granted

So I did what no one did and looked at the annual reports:

The unions are wrong Image
The unions are claiming that staff head count has gone down by 200.

In 2010 the Louvre's annual report claims 2100 employees.

By 2015 it has gone down somewhat at 2072

And in 2024? Would it be 1900?

Nope... it's even higher than in 2010 at 2242
Oh but perhaps the unions are talking about security agents.

In 2010 there's 1200 of them

In 2015 there's 1200 of them

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People often assume that French politicians never touch pensions out of fear of the grey vote

This is only partially true:

Working age Frenchies are also delusional or ill-informed on pensions

This is how they end up backing "Turkeys for Christmas" policies

A🧵 Image
French people don't see pensions as a big issue

When you ask them what to cut:

32% mention family benefits (≃50 bn)

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Only 6% mention pensions (400bn+) Image
French people overwhelmingly favor the abrogation of Macron's pensions reform Image
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Is Catholicism making a revival in France?

Latin masses, baptisms, pilgrimages, Catholicism seems hip again!

But behind the vibes, what do the stats and maps show?

A 🧵 on the decline and transformation of Catholicism in post-Catholic France Image
France is historically one of the most important Catholic countries in Europe

To this day the trace of Catholicism can be found everywhere in France

Here's a map of France with all the towns with "Catholic" names (with Saint or trinity in it for example) Image
But since around the mid 18th century, Catholicism stops being a mass phenomenon and is instead much more geographically polarised

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French PM François Bayrou has been ousted by parliament. Macron's 3rd PM to lose his job in 18 months

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Will Macron dissolve parliament? Will the left take over? What about the IMF?

A 🧵on what happened and what happens next Image
What happened?

Ever since Macron's snap election last july, his coalition has shrunk into a small minority government

Last December his previous PM Michel Barnier was deposed by parliament after 3 months.

Bayrou took over facing similarly impossible parliamentary arithmetics Image
On top of that his government had to deal with possibly the most toxic fiscal situation in a decade

France's deficit is well above the 3% EU target

Bayrou was aiming for 43 bn in savings!

A recipe for disaster with roughly 3 equal parliamentary blocks unwilling to compromise Image
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