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232 Annals Am. Acad. Pol. & Soc. Sci. vii (1944)

handle is hein.cow/anamacp0232 and id is 1 raw text is: FOREWORD

BETWEEN the two most powerful
states of Europe-Germany and Russia
-from the Baltic to the Adriatic and
Aegean seas, there stretches a zone of
small states. Some of these states are
old because of their long and glorious
pasts, and others are young in the sense
that their independence was won only
in the nineteenth and twentieth cen-
turies.
This central-eastern European region,
for which there is no common name, is
the real political weather pole of the
world, for it comprises more than 100,-
000,000 inhabitants and more than
thirty nationalities, some small, some
large, but none absolutely predominant.
It also represents the only remaining
economic frontier of the European Con-
tinent with immense potentialities of
development.
Although this European core has
shaken our contemporary civilization to
the very foundations by the fact that
both World War I and World War II
started there, and although the sparks
which have twice reached the United
States emerged from the embers of
Sarajevo and Warsaw, that region still
remains a terra incognita in the eyes of
many ethnocentric Anglo-Saxons. In-
deed, most American political writers
have treated that strategically impor-
tant section very lightly.  Although
Munich brought about a sudden inter-
est in that area, the increasingly com-
plex and always explosive conditions in
that part of Europe are not easy to
understand. Numerous misconceptions,
coupled with utter ignorance, are still
too evident in the majority of the writ-
ings and judgments concerning that part
of the world. These misconceptions are
particularly evident in the numberless
proposals of the postwar planners who
are working for a better future. In
many cases these dreamers fail because

they refuse to appreciate the complex
realities of the situation-realities which
simply cannot be wished away. The
culminating point of such unreasonable
tendencies was reached in Chamber-
lain's statement regarding the Czecho-
slovak crisis in 1938: How terrible,
fantastic, incredible it is that we should
be digging trenches and trying on gas
masks here because of a quarrel in a
faraway country between people of
whom we know nothing. Yet, it is
noteworthy that each of the World
Wars which menaced the very existence
of the British Empire started not on
account of imperial affairs but as a re-
sult of political tensions in central-
eastern Europe, and that World War II
originated in a country about which the
Prime Minister of the Empire knew
nothing.
The causes for this unfortunate state
of affairs are many. Among others, we
may note the influence exerted in the
United States and in Anglo-Saxon his-
toriography by the concepts of western
civilization and the related tendencies
in German historical scholarship.
For many years, America and west-
ern Europe have considered western
civilization identical with universal his-
tory. For the last century we have
been victimized by this kind of myopia,
and we have come to regard western
Europe as the world. Prior to the First
World War it seemed altogether plau-
sible to think of a single world order
based on the concept of western civiliza-
tion. It was a sort of cultural domi-
nance based on an attitude of cultural
superiority which, over a long period,
had tended to become chronic. From
this point of view, central-eastern Eu-
rope was not considered as being exactly
within the sphere of western civiliza-
tion; the farther east these states were
located, and the more unpronounce-
vii

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