English, asked by debajit67, 11 months ago

War: is it necessary? paragraph ​

Answers

Answered by rinasingh1978
1

Answer:

no

Explanation:

because it causes very big damage

Answered by pushpakala086
1

No doubt war is an evil, the greatest catastrophe that befalls human beings. It brings death and destruction, disease and starvation, poverty, and ruin in its wake. One has only to look back to the havoc that was wrought in various countries not many years ago, in order to estimate the destructive effects of war.

A particularly disturbing side of modern wars is that they tend to become global so that they may engulf the entire world. But there are people who consider war as something grand and heroic and regard it as something that bring out the best in man, but this does not in any way alter the fact that war is a terrible, dreadful calamity. This is especially so now that a war will now be fought with atom bombs.

Some people say war is necessary. A glance at the past history will tell now war has been a recurrent phenomenon in the history of nations. No period in world history has been free from the devastating effects of war. We have had wars of all types-wars lasting for a year or so. In view of this it seems futile to talk of permanent, everlasting peace or to make plans for the establishment of eternal peace. We have had advocates of non­violence and the theory of the brotherhood ofWe have had the Buddha, Christ and Mahatma Gandhi. But in spite of that, weapons have always been used, military force has always been employed, clashes of arms have always occurred; war has always been waged. War has indeed been such a marked feature of every age and period that it has come to be regarded as part of the normal life of nations. Machiavelli, the author of the well-known book The Prince, defined peace as an interval between two wars.

Moltse, the famous German Field Marshal, declared war to be part of the God’s World-Order. Poets and prophets have dreamt of a millennium, a Utopia in which war will not exist and eternal peace will reign on earth but these dreams have not been fulfilled.

After the Great War of 1914-18 it was thought that there would be no war for a long time to come and an institution called the League of Nations was founded as a safeguard against the outbreak of war. The occurrence of another war (1939-45), however, conclusively proved that to think of an unbroken peace is to be unrealistic and that no institution or assembly can ever ensure the permanence of peace. The League of Nations collapsed completely under the tensions and stresses created by Hitler.

The United Nations Organization, with all the good work that it has been doing, is not proving as effective as was desired. A large number of wars, the most recent ones being the one in Vietnam, the other between India and Pakistan, or Indo-China war, Iran-Iraq war or Arab- Israel war, have been fought despite the UN. man and fraternity of God.

The fact of the matter is that fighting is a natural instinct in man. When even a number of individuals cannot live always in peace, it is, indeed, too much to expect so many nations to live in a state of eternal peace. Besides, there will always be wide differences of opinion between various nations, different angles of looking at matters that have an international importance, radical differences in policy and ideology and these cannot be settled by mere discussions so that resort to war becomes very necessary in these cases.

Before the outbreak of World War II, for instance, the spread of Communism in Russia created distrust and suspicion in Europe; democracy was an eyesore to Nazi Germany; British Conservatives were apprehensive of the possibility of Britain being communized. In short, the political ideology of one country being abhorrent to another, the state of affairs was certainly not conducive to the continuance of peace.

Add to all this traditional enmities between nations and international disharmony that have their roots in past history. For example, Germany wished to avenge the humiliating terms imposed upon her at the conclusion of the war of 1914-18 and desired, to smash the British Empire and establish an empire of her own. Past wounds in fact do not perfectly heal up and are constant goads to an effort at vengeance. A feverish arms race is going on between the hostile nations in anticipation of such an eventuality, and disarmament efforts are proving futile. The Indo-Pakistani war was fought over the Kashmir issue. The war in Vietnam was due to ideological differences.

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