Though of course it is just my opinion, but Remarque was
commenting on the futility and the utterly back-breaking sadness of a war and its
ability to destroy an entire generation of youth from, in this case, Europe. Her
attitude is likely that the entire operation is pointless, driven by people so far
outside of the actual combat that they can make decisions with millions of young men's
lives without considering them as real or in any way as affecting
them.
One of the reasons why I tend to agree with
Remarque's attitude is that the author was excoriated by the pro-Nazi movement in
Germany and all copies of the book were burned. It was seen as a danger to the powers
that felt that war could be held up as a glorious enterprise and one that was worth
undertaking for whatever gains political or economic and damn the
casualties.
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