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High Death Drill Analysis

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High Death Toll
The actions of World War I and the subsequent deaths due to Australia’s decision to support Britain proved significantly detrimental both on a small scale level and for the nation in general. On a small-scale level, all the men who did survive had to deal with the destructive, soul-crushing nature of war due to the coercion of enlistments around them from both Britain, the “Great Empire”, and the Australian government. These World War I subsequently had to live with watching their fellow mates die on the battlefield, killing people, the enemy who were just young men like them and as James Donaldson recounted that “they waved and the Turks waved back too” in the Armistice, and those soldiers, they were put in the worst of situations just because they thought it was for the good of the country, when the men, the young men who did survive, suffered with mental, physical and psychological impact, …show more content…

But they were meant to be the lucky ones, as over 60 000 men were killed in World War I. By going to war for our alliance to Britain, Australia, just 13 years old, was killing off such a large majority of our male population out of the measly 5 million we had at that time. And the fact was that when enlistments first came, men weren’t signing up to die, this wasn’t a choice of free will of wanting to die, all they wanted was to show bravery and fight for their country. But war came, and due to Australia’s continual alliance to Britain, Bill Gammage describes “they knew they would die, and they were determined to die bravely, by running swiftly at the enemy”. Were these deaths worth the thousands of men dying over? And in Gallipoli, our greatest defeat when enlistments peaked during 1915 to 36 575 just in July, there were 26 111 Australian casualties in that operation with 8 141 deaths, showing the immense sacrifice Australia had made for Britain, with Gallipoli having no influence on the course of the war. Were these deaths worth the thousands

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