(click on the image for a larger version)
‘Everybody Is Against Everybody – Somebody Has To Be For Them’: the message behind this Amnesty International poster is ultimately a pessimistic one – war is so endemic to the human condition that we can’t hope to eradicate, only to alleviate it.
That rather hobbesian world view is underscored by this world map composed of soldiers, warriors and fighters of every colour, creed and continent, a veritable United Nations of War, all placed as geographically correct as possible: from loinclothed tribes armed with long sticks or bows and arrows make up much of South America, while the north of the continent is lined with belligerents in Pilgrim dress, Revolution-era garb, Civil War uniform and even the Ku-Klux Klan costume. And so on for each continent, mutatis mutandis.
The map depicts many recognizable masters of war, among whom just three of the previous century’s bad boys stand out: Hitler, Lenin, Mao. The arsenal depicted ranges from stone-age sticks through medieval armor to ironclad battleships and tanks… The longer I look at this map, the more depressed I get. What is it about war that makes it both undesirable and unavoidable?
Here are some ‘pro-war’ quotes that extoll, or at least excuse some of war’s qualities:
- “War is an ugly thing, but not the ugliest of things. The decayed and degraded state of moral and patriotic feeling which thinks that nothing is worth war is much worse. The person who has nothing for which he is willing to fight, nothing which is more important than his own personal safety, is a miserable creature and has no chance of being free unless made and kept so by the exertions of better men than himself.” (John Stuart Mill)
- “It is well that war is so terrible – otherwise we would grow too fond of it” (Robert E. Lee; statement at the Battle of Fredericksburg, 13th December 1862)
- “The art of war is simple enough. Find out where your enemy is. Get at him as soon as you can. Strike him as hard as you can, and keep moving on.” (Ulysses S. Grant)
- “Against war one might say that it makes the victor stupid and the vanquished malicious. In its favor, that in producing these two effects it barbarizes, and so makes the combatants more natural. For culture it is a sleep or a wintertime, and man emerges from it stronger for good and for evil.” (Friedrich Nietzsche; ‘Human, All Too Human’)
- “War alone brings up to their highest tension all human energies and imposes the stamp of nobility upon the peoples who have the courage to make it.” (Benito Mussolini)
- “Everyone’s a pacifist between wars. It’s like being a vegetarian between meals.” (Colman McCarthy)
- “The object of war is not to die for your country, but to make the other bastard die for his.” (George Patton)
- “We are going to have peace even if we have to fight for it.” (Dwight D. Eisenhower)
- “The quickest way of ending a war is to lose it.” (George Orwell; ‘Second Thoughts On James Burnham’, 1946)
- “War and culture, those are the two poles of Europe, her heaven and hell, her glory and shame, and they cannot be separated from one another. When one comes to an end, the other will end also and one cannot end without the other. The fact that no war has broken out in Europe for fifty years is connected in some mysterious way with the fact that for fifty years no new Picasso has appeared either.” (Milan Kundera, ‘Immortality’)
Is war a ‘natural’ state of things? Not according to everyone. There are those who see it as an aberration, only possible through lies, (self-)deception and the suspension of common sense:
- “In war, truth is the first casualty.” (Aeschylus)
- “A day will come when a cannon will be exhibited in museums, just as instruments of torture are now, and the people will be astonished that such a thing could have been.” (Victor Hugo)
- “War: first, one hopes to win; then one expects the enemy to lose; then, one is satisfied that he too is suffering; in the end, one is surprised that everyone has lost.” (Karl Kraus, ‘Die Fackel’, 1917)
- “Naturally the common people don’t want war; neither in Russia, nor in England, nor in America, nor in Germany. That is understood. But after all, it is the leaders of the country who determine policy, and it is always a simple matter to drag the people along, whether it is a democracy, or a fascist dictatorship, or a parliament, or a communist dictatorship. Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is to tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same in any country.” (Hermann Goering)
- “History teaches that wars begin when governments believe the price of aggression is cheap.” (Ronald Reagan, 1984)
- “If we let people see that kind of thing, there would never again be any war.” (Pentagon official explaining why the U.S. military censored graphic footage from the Gulf War)
- “War-making is one of the few activities that people are not supposed to view ‘realistically’; that is, with an eye to expense and practical outcome. In all-out war, expenditure is all-out, unprudent—war being defined as an emergency in which no sacrifice is excessive.” (Susan Sontag, ‘AIDS and Its Metaphors’)
Maybe war is so constant and universal that all we can do is limit it, or lament it:
- “Only the dead have seen the end of war.” (Plato)
- “War never takes a wicked man by chance, the good man always.” (Sophocles, ‘Philoctetes’)
- “As long as war is regarded as wicked, it will always have its fascination. When it is looked upon as vulgar, it will cease to be popular.” (Oscar Wilde, ‘The Critic as Artist’)
- “Was it for this the clay grew tall?” (Wilfred Owen, Soldier-Poet)
- “The most persistent sound which reverberates through men’s history is the beating of war drums.” (Arthur Koestler, ‘Janus’)
- “I would like it if men had to partake in the same hormonal cycles to which we’re subjected monthly. Maybe that’s why men declare war – because they have a need to bleed on a regular basis.” (Brett Butler)
- “War is not nice.” (Barbara Bush)
- “I think war might be God’s way of teaching us geography.” (Paul Rodriguez)
Yet even if the propensity for conflict and violence is a constant in human nature, the art of war has been perfected to such a degree that it has become unaffordable.
- “Battles, in these ages, are transacted by mechanism; with the slightest possible development of human individuality or spontaneity; men now even die, and kill one another, in an artificial manner.” (Thomas Carlyle, ‘The French Revolution’)
- “The expendability factor has increased by being transferred from the specialised, scarce and expensively trained military personnel to the amorphous civilian population. American strategists have calculated the proportion of civilians killed in this century’s major wars. In the First World War 5 per cent of those killed were civilians, in the Second World War 48 per cent, while in a Third World War 90-95 per cent would be civilians.” (Colin Ward, ‘Anarchy in Action’)
- “War does not determine who is right – only who is left.” (Bertrand Russell)
- “The way to win an atomic war is to make certain it never starts.” (Omar Bradley)
- “The basic problems facing the world today are not susceptible to a military solution.” (John F. Kennedy)
- “We have failed to grasp the fact that mankind is becoming a single unit, and that for a unit to fight against itself is suicide.” (Havelock Ellis)


Haven’t there been any wars in New Zealand?
Comment by bingley — May 17, 2008 @ 3:01 pm
War increases uncertainty. As long as there are those that are certain they have nothing left to lose, and so long as there are those that are certain they cannot lose, there will be war.
Comment by CheapPaper — May 17, 2008 @ 3:07 pm
Pretty large omission of Ireland on that map. One of the most noteable modern wars in history has only really just finished there.
Is that a UK military boat in place of the Falklands?
Comment by PukkaPies — May 17, 2008 @ 4:19 pm
Excellent article.
Comment by Bob — May 17, 2008 @ 4:30 pm
Interesting. Well, I’d say they’re reaching back pretty far if they show pre-European Incas in northwestern South America. And you’re right – the whole thing is a bit pessimistic.
Fascinating nonetheless.
Comment by John F — May 17, 2008 @ 6:11 pm
[...] Maps is featuring an Amnesty International map of the world composed of images of human warriors; in the body of the [...]
Pingback by ocmpoma » war as human condition — May 17, 2008 @ 6:13 pm
[...] Vía Strange Maps [...]
Pingback by Todos contra todos « Pasa la vida — May 17, 2008 @ 6:28 pm
Excellent commentary. But where do you see Josif Stalin? There is one Lenin somewhere in the Ural Mountains, but there is no Stalin.
Comment by Malaj — May 17, 2008 @ 6:30 pm
Great entry.
Comment by Fernando — May 17, 2008 @ 6:31 pm
“‘Laddy,’ he told me, ‘without war we’d still be swinging in the f***ing trees. It’s God’s own university and anyone who says different is a self-deluding fairy.’”
–Tobias Wolff, In Pharoah’s Army
Comment by john — May 17, 2008 @ 9:37 pm
Derek Jensen reads strangemaps?
Civilization is doomed!
Comment by Robyn — May 17, 2008 @ 9:41 pm
About Woman with American Flag (NE America):
It is strange see à Character of French painting of XIX s. («La Liberté guidant le Peuple, of E. Delacroix) holding a American flag. In the original painting, Miss «Liberté» have French Blue-White-Red Flag and walk breast nude : Amnesty International are very prude and put cloth on this scandalous part of body.
Comment by Ema — May 17, 2008 @ 10:12 pm
[...] much so he subscribes to the blog of strange maps. The one he was looking at today was the Amnesty International map of war. I liked the look of it [...]
Pingback by for no real reason | tre's blog — May 17, 2008 @ 11:54 pm
This is one map that I’m glad to see my own country, New Zealand, has been left off. In answer to bingley at 1., images of New Zealand at war would not been hard to find. Start with a Maori haka (ceremonial challenge), then move on to the New Zealand Wars of the colonial period, then our contributions to the Boer War, the ANZACs of WW I and II, and Korea, Vietnam. It’s not until the latter part of C20 that NZ stopped sending troops to other people’s wars.
Comment by andrew — May 18, 2008 @ 12:56 am
I don’t really like the message of this map, beyond the cleverness of its conception. It utterly ignores power dynamics, and supports a liberal-Hobbesian viewpoint from supporters of Amnesty International. All we can hope for is parliamentary capitalism and resistance is as bad as attack.
Comment by Nathaniel — May 18, 2008 @ 2:35 am
This was one of the best entries I’ve seen of the blog. The map is utterly fascinating (I was playing “Where’s Waldo” with some of history’s biggest warmongers), and marvelling at how the pictures are put together, and the choice of characters for the map. My favourite, as #12 pointed out, is the American version of Delacroix’s “Liberty Leading the People”, rather telling I’d say (although probably included because “Liberty Leading” could not fit in France, and early America and early republican France are very much sisters, so could be used interchangeably.) And it does drive home how enormous war is. (I heard somewhere that of the past 6,000 years of recorded history, there’s only been something like 100 years without a war, and the last year without a war was sometime in the Middle Ages I think – I’m sure someone will correct me on this recollection.)
The bonus, just as good as the map, if not better, are the well chosen quotes that do as good a job as the map of demonstrating what war is. They say a picture is worth a thousand words, and interestingly the quotes on war that accompany this picture are just a few words over 1,000.
If you are still looking at publishing a strangemaps book, this entry *has* to go in!
Comment by David — May 18, 2008 @ 5:22 am
What are Theodore Roosevelt and Taft doing in Australia??
Comment by Karl — May 18, 2008 @ 5:32 am
A different Derek Jensen, Robyn. :)
Comment by Derek Jensen — May 18, 2008 @ 6:55 am
Execellent post. I’m a big fan, but I LURK.
First quote that came to mind:
“I have given two cousins to war and I stand ready to sacrifice my wife’s brother.”
Comment by AmbroseKalifornia — May 18, 2008 @ 11:27 am
Wow! What a map…
Raf
http://uzar.wordpress.com/
Comment by Raf Uzar — May 18, 2008 @ 5:25 pm
You forgot to mention Stalin as one of the really bad boys from the 20th century, hehehe.
Comment by Gebeleizis — May 18, 2008 @ 6:39 pm
“War is the health of the State.” It is the reductio ad absurdum of the notion that nothing good ever happens without compulsion.
Comment by Anton Sherwood — May 18, 2008 @ 6:52 pm
Showing the Klan in the USA is exposes AI’s anti-American bias. That group is a bunch of scumbags, not an Army. They belong in a map of scumbags of the world. And scumbags aren’t limited to the USA.
Comment by Cappy — May 18, 2008 @ 6:55 pm
Note the “Augustus of Prima Porta” with lorica (”body armour”) in place of Italy… to tell the truth, a symbol of peace (the “Pax Augusta”) rather than war.
Comment by Catalepton — May 18, 2008 @ 9:59 pm
Steven Pinker held a talk at TED 2007 addressing the perception of violence vs actual violence. He argues that never in the last millennia has there been as little violence as there was during the 20th century–including both world wars:
http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/view/id/163
Comment by Neal Walfield — May 19, 2008 @ 7:39 am
To suggest (#24) that Augustus was a symbol of peace is a little disingenuous. The title ‘Emperor’ he took for himself (imperator in the Latin) originally meant commander, and was usually given by his troops to a successful general.
Comment by MarkW — May 19, 2008 @ 8:21 am
Terrific map ! This has to be the dream of every little boy who’s been playing with tin/plastic soldiers, but I don’t think its message is very clear toward modern wars, that are far less romantic…
XXIth century is the reign of the guerilla, of the nasty, creepy, civil war with its suicide-bombers and children batalions, for instance.
Now I’ll try to make a geek of myself, too. Firstly, the soldiers I see in Egypt are taken from an egyptian painting, but they are from the Sardinian contingent, elite soldiers from a former invader “people from the Sea”, then eastern Europe seems covered by two pictures of war in Italy (the abductment of the sabines and Bonaparte at the Arcole Bridge) upon the Himalaya I think there’s a greek rebel from the rise against the othman Empire in early XIX. Century.
And too bad there’s not a nice Moshe Dayan upon Israël, his bucaneer looks would have suited perfectly the picture !
Comment by Tertius — May 19, 2008 @ 9:47 am
#26: I didn’t say that Augustus was a symbol of peace; but that that statue is it: the low relief on the lorica depicts the peace treaty with Parthians, who returned the Roman insignia they had seized at Carrhae. Moreover, do you notice the toga under the armour? That is, peace protected by weapons (an idea that I don’t agree with).
Comment by Catalepton — May 19, 2008 @ 10:24 am
@cappy: I don’t see how including the KKK makes AI have an anti-american bias? Surely you are not defending the actions of the KKK?
Comment by wds — May 19, 2008 @ 2:14 pm
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Pingback by Infographics · Amnesty International’s United Nations of War — May 19, 2008 @ 3:03 pm
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Pingback by anthro.pophago.us snippets of media, anthropology, design, culture and politics. — May 19, 2008 @ 6:36 pm
Anyone know where I can buy a copy of the map? Thanks.
Comment by Jason Lyall — May 20, 2008 @ 12:38 am
WDS: I identified the Klan as a bunch of scumbags, fit for a map of scumbags of the world. What is your point? How does that possibly defend that crap organiation?
Let me make this real simple, so even you can understand it. This is supposed to be a world map of armies. A world map of scumbags, OTOH, would prominently feature the Klan from America, as well as those that perpetrated massacres in Rawanda, those that did similarly in Bosnia and Croatia, and Al-Quaida, and other assorted terrorists and organized murderers around the world.
But AI only sigles out the USA for this dishonor, which identifies anti-American bias.
Comment by Cappy — May 20, 2008 @ 1:54 am
Quote: ” “War and culture, those are the two poles of Europe, her heaven and hell, her glory and shame, and they cannot be separated from one another. When one comes to an end, the other will end also and one cannot end without the other. The fact that no war has broken out in Europe for fifty years is connected in some mysterious way with the fact that for fifty years no new Picasso has appeared either.” (Milan Kundera, ‘Immortality’)”
that is just plain stupid. our culture doesn’t need war at all. thank you very much!
Comment by marc — May 20, 2008 @ 2:55 am
Catalepton @ #24 & #28:
My bad. I didn’t understand your point. Nor am I familiar with the sculpture concerned.
I get it now.
Comment by MarkW — May 20, 2008 @ 8:32 am
Yeah, the idea that they had the Klan representing the south, Teddy Roosevelt and Co. in Australia, and American military units in Spain, France, China, Saudi Arabia, Philipines, etc. was triggering some interest.
Also, I’m wondering about the people they chose to use to depict S. America and Africa. Almost none of them are from the 20th century, no?
If anything, I’m a little curious about the idea behind the map.
Comment by Andrew — May 20, 2008 @ 3:40 pm
where can i get one of these?
Comment by John — May 21, 2008 @ 4:44 pm
This idea that AI has this horrible anti-American bias is a load of crap. They equally oppose all violators of human rights. If anything, they may actually be a little harder on the developing world since human rights violations tend to be more prevalent in poorer countries. It’s a myth of the right that AI has it in for the United States. Basically showing the US in a negative light, even when deserved, is automatically construed as anti-American. How can a map that shows every country in the world being somehow complicit in violence and genocide possibly be called anti-American? People are projecting things into the map that aren’t there.
Comment by James S. — May 22, 2008 @ 1:03 am
The idea behind the map is that throughout history humans and nations have treated each other like garbage, and someone needs to stick up for those on the receiving end of the big stick. It has nothing to do with the 20th century; it’s a statement on the human condition in general.
Comment by James S. — May 22, 2008 @ 1:05 am
#27: «the Sardinian contingent, elite soldiers from a former invader “people from the Sea”». Surely we are dealing with “Shardana”; what is less sure is that Shardana coincide with Nuragic people.
Comment by Catalepton — May 22, 2008 @ 6:43 am
Excluded from the Australian map are three iconic incidents.
1. the Rum Rebellion – Australia’s bloodless military coup – which was William Bligh’s second mutiny.
2. the Eureka Stockade – miners from all nations uniting in a struggle against overt authoritarianism that kickstarted Australian democracy.
3. the siege at Glenrowan – the last stand of the Kelly Gang – 4 armoured outlaws battle 300 police, with 15,000 bullets fired.
Comment by Nudge — May 25, 2008 @ 9:51 am
Exellent blog and great strage maps!
Same as commentor Nr. 8 I wonder why is Lenin a bad boy and not Stalin??? It is a well known fact that Stalin has killied about 20 Millions of Soviet people – while Lenin was quite innocent in that respect.
Always these problems with depicting truth about Russia – really same story everywhere! :(
Comment by axinia — June 7, 2008 @ 8:24 am
[...] the other day. The security through obscurity plan for NZ is moving forward as anticipated. Strange maps had my [...]
Pingback by Hic Sunt Dracones » Blog Archive » Tweedle — June 16, 2008 @ 1:35 pm
Interesting map. But I’m surprised, given the number of conflicts that have recently taken place in Africa, that AI needed to depict a bunch of generic near-naked “savages” running across the Sahel.
Comment by James M. — June 21, 2008 @ 10:39 pm
[...] Original link [...]
Pingback by TINKIN’s Gibberish » Everybody Is Against Everybody, Somebody Has To Be For Them — July 3, 2008 @ 10:52 pm
thanks
Comment by games — October 15, 2008 @ 6:17 pm
To anyone who says that AI doesn’t have an anti-American bias…
There are only 4 flags in this map. 2 are nazi flags, 2 are American flags.
AI is and always has been anti-American. AI is an incredibly xenophobic organization. especially towards the US and Israel.
Comment by lostalex — March 24, 2009 @ 12:45 pm
مركز تحميل
Comment by y22icom — March 27, 2009 @ 6:51 pm
thank you
Comment by Tony — May 4, 2009 @ 3:42 am
thanks for this map
good
luck
…
Comment by Solomon — May 11, 2009 @ 8:55 am
merci
Comment by aspicco . — May 17, 2009 @ 6:41 am
Vielen Dank
Comment by moon — July 3, 2009 @ 5:16 am
Muchas gracias
Comment by sun — July 4, 2009 @ 7:39 am