Potjeh wrote:jorb wrote:There were of course wars -- of Italian and German Unification, the Carlist wars in Spain, The Crimean War -- but those conflicts were fought between armies, and not against civilians. They did not disrupt international trade in any major way, and they were relatively short affairs.
So cutting off Danube from the Black Sea doesn't count as disrupting trade? And de facto cleansing of Bulgaria's Muslim population was purely a conflict between armies? Or the almost total destruction of Stara Zagora?
Frankly, I'd be willing to wager that there was never 50 years without a large massacre in Balkans alone, let alone Europe as a whole.
Haha, when Europe goes to war it often, indeed, seems to be over "some damned foolish thing in the Balkans", to quote Bismarck.

Certainly the Crimean war meant the imposition of a general blockade on Russia, but it pales in comparison to the unrestricted submarine warfare and seizing on the high seas of private merchant ships of enemy nations that we normally associate with the world wars.
The burning of tar warehouses and ships in Oulu and Raahe led to international criticism and, in Britain, MP Thomas Gibson demanded in the House of Commons that the First Lord of the Admiralty explain "a system which carried on a great war by plundering and destroying the property of defenceless villagers".
Similar sentiments were not, I believe, quite as common during the world wars.
I am not entirely familiar, I shall readily admit, with the exact courses of the various Russio-Turkish wars fought during the 19th century, but, I mean, at least
someone gave a damn. Again, it quite pales in comparison to the 20th century. Also, I have to try to make general arguments. The point isn't that there are no counter-examples to be found.