The motion is Britain should not have fought in the First World War. You can vote yes or you can vote no or you can don't know. But if you say yes, Britain should not be fighting then you are on this side. And if you say no, then you're on this side - I did get that right. Yes, I did. Very concrete. So we're going to go, please try not to talk. We're going to ask Margaret McMillan to go first, then John Charmley, then Max Hastings, and Dominic Sandbrook for their final response. Order, order. Come on.
For this week's Sunday Debate, we're dipping back into the archive to 2014, when we gathered a panel of expert historians to debate whether Britain was right to fight in the First World War, a tragedy that laid the foundations for decades of destructive upheaval and violence across Europe. To debate the issue, we invited leading historians Margaret MacMillan, Max Hastings, John Charmley and Dominic Sandbrook to an event hosted by journalist, columnist and national security expert, Edward Lucas.
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