暗殺

The hits and misses of history

On June 28 1914, Gavrilo Princip was hanging around outside Moritz Schiller’s delicatessen in Sarajevo. In some versions of the story, he had gone there to buy a sandwich (or some kind of roll, anyway). He was at a loose end. That morning, the 19-year-old Bosnian Serb and six other would-be assassins had failed to kill the Austrian archduke Franz Ferdinand.

Suddenly, quite by chance – a crucial factor in almost any assassination – the archduke’s car appeared in front of Schiller’s. The driver had taken a wrong turn into Franz Joseph Street. Princip shot the archduke. Within weeks, the first world war had broken out.

As the author David Winner muses: “No Russian revolution, Holocaust or European Union if only Princip had fancied a pizza.” Of course, all those things (and the euro) might have happened anyway. Still, assassinations and political executions – as the recent deaths of Osama bin Laden and Colonel Muammer Gaddafi remind us – provide some of the most memorable scenes in history. Assassinations are rare occasions when the fate of nations can seem to hang on a sandwich, a briefcase or a roll of fat – in other words, on chance.

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