Remembrance Day in the eurozone

 | Nov 11, 2011 12:06AM ET

As those of us who live in British Commonwealth countries commemorate Remembrance Day, I want to reflect about what this day means to me, especially in the context of the eurozone crisis today.

Our story begins at the close of World War II. As that war drew to a close in 1945, the leaders of Western Europe came together and surveyed the wreckage. For centuries Europe had been racked by conflict, centered mainly between France and Germany. As an example of the level of carnage, consider that the French and Germans lost over 800,000 men (dead, wounded, missing and captured) in one single battle – the multi-year Battle of Verdun in World War I. By way of comparison, the Verdun casualties were double that of American loss in Vietnam dwarf American casualties in either the Korean Conflict.