Iraq, Gaza, Ebola: perfect storm tests Obama and Cameron

As US bombers attack Islamic State fighters, the world looks as flammable today as it did in 1914

Robert Fox

The contrast is stark enough. A century ago this week, the armies of the great powers of Europe were at war, each capital trying to master its own destiny. They had little idea of the global catastrophe of four years of industrial war on an unprecedented scale - Lloyd George’s ‘Great Convulsion’ - that lay ahead.

This week the powers are involved in conflicts and convulsions across the world with every sign that no one seems to be fully in charge of events: not Obama’s Washington, nor Putin’s Russia, nor the capitals of the great agencies for peace and harmony – Brussels for the EU and Nato, New York for the UN.

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is a writer on Western defence issues and Italian current affairs. He has worked for the Corriere della Sera in Milan, covered the Falklands invasion for BBC Radio, and worked as defence correspondent for The Daily Telegraph. His books include The Inner Sea: the Mediterranean and its People.