![]() This situation especially affected the nominal victors, France and Great Britain. This horror, on the other hand, could favor a country determined on war by restraining those who in their revulsion at war had disarmed, were reluctant to rearm, and believed that almost any sacrifices these actions entailed were likely to be less than those a new conflict would exact. On the one hand, that memory led many to have such a horror of military conflict that they shrank from the very idea. The maintenance of peace in Europe in the 1920s and 1930s was both strengthened and weakened by the memory of the costs of World War I. BACKGROUND THE WIDENING CONFLICT THE TIDE TURNS ALLIED VICTORY CONCLUSION BIBLIOGRAPHY
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