War & Peace
My childhood was lined with war tales told by the losers. My grandfather, singled handedly, lost WWl and yet he came back with some pieces of metal, some converted into more or less shiny medals others discretely lodged in various body parts. Medals for losers ... strange ... apparently he wasn't happy with the outcome.
His son, my father, was drafted just 2 decades later. So it wss his turn to lose a war and he did. Good on him! Unlike his father he thought that you could lose a war more effortlessly.
After the war he ended up with a brand new parachute. He thought that jumping out of a fast moving plane hanging from a large and very visible object was a silly idea especially in a war situation. He thought this high risk sport, even higher during a war, would make him too easy a target.
Good thinking. His parachute was converted by a master tailor into an evening dress to be worn by the director of the Argentinian National circus, Trude Sarasani.
Having read a lot about The Great War, and listened to my grandfather describe his experiences at the front, I can say with great assurance that EVERYBODY lost that war.
But some lost it more than others.
@PontifexMarximus Unless your grandfather was one of those vainglorious generals of the time, He was probably just trying to survive.
@Donwhy no ... he was a fucking protonazi (DeutschNationale) who belueved that his role was to conquer the world as a representative of the master race. Because of his lack of formal education he didn't even enter the league of officers. He was proud that he made it to be the commander of a cannon boat on the Danube.
My father, one WW later, had a very different perception.
He realised that the right strategy was the one that enabled him to survive and best in one piece. The only body parts he left in the war were his tonsils.