THE NATION AT WAR WORLD WAR I (1914-1918) Chapter 24—Part III.

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THE NATION AT WAR WORLD WAR I (1914- 1918) Chapter 24—Part III

Transcript of THE NATION AT WAR WORLD WAR I (1914-1918) Chapter 24—Part III.

Page 1: THE NATION AT WAR WORLD WAR I (1914-1918) Chapter 24—Part III.

THE NATION AT WARWORLD WAR I (1914-

1918)

Chapter 24—Part III

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Bird’s Eye View of the War

• 1914—Allied Victories

• 1915—Allied Reversals

• 1916—Stalemate

• 1917—U. S. Entry into the War on April 6, 1917

The U. S. initially remained neutral, i.e., technically allied with neither side.

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The rise of Paul von Hindenburg (left) and

Erich Ludendorff (right) to direct the German war effort made a monumental

difference. For the remainder of the war,

these two men guided the German war effort and, if

not for the eventual participation of the

American Expeditionary Force, might well have

succeeded in bringing the Kaiser victory.

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For the first three years of the conflict, Uncle Sam remained relatively detached,

observing the family conflict amongst cousins (the monarchs of England,

Germany, and Russia shared common ties of blood). On April 6, 1917, President Wilson asked Congress for a Declaration

of War and received his request with only six senators and fifty members of

the House opposing it.

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General John “Black Jack” Pershing chats with French Field Marshal Ferdinand Foch and British Field Marshal

Douglas Haig after the arrival of the American Expeditionary Force in France. Pershing resisted Foch’s efforts to use American troops as replacements for the

fallen Allied forces. In so doing, he preserved the identity of American soldiers. Between volunteers and draftees,

24.2 million men entered the U.S. armed forces.

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Why Did the U. S. Enter the War?

• Vindicate the cause of democracy through a crushing victory—realists like Theodore Roosevelt were dismayed over the lack of fighting spirit in the U. S.

• Think in terms of using war to gain position for the next war (i.e., they didn't think in terms of a "War to End All Wars" but rather a war to make the world safe for ourselves)

• Technological advances made isolation untenable

REASONS OF SELF-INTEREST — The "Realists“** 23A-2

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REASONS OF SELF-INTEREST** Continued

• Under international law, neutral countries could trade non-military goods with all belligerents

• Britain blockaded German ports stopping shipments of foodstuffs and most raw materials

• The U.S. economy boomed due to sales and loans to the Allies

• German submarine warfare violated the principle of “freedom of the seas

Wilson was aware that U. S. prosperity depended on movement of surplus products into the mainstream of

foreign commerce—this found expression in U. S. concern over "freedom of the seas," challenged by Germany and

thus endangering U. S. capitalism

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REASONS OF SELF-INTEREST** Continued

• British naval supremacy and the Atlantic community were vital to U. S. security

• A German victory was tantamount to invasions of North and South America

• Isolationism was made obsolete by unrestricted submarine war—military preparedness was the solution

• Idealism was equated with stupidity by the realists• Withdrawal of Russia from the war, tipping balance in

favor of Central Powers

Intervention was necessary in the national interests, i.e., for self-preservation

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Lenin actually returned to Russia courtesy of

Hindenburg and Ludendorff who sent him home in an

armored train car through neutral Sweden to the

Finnish-Russian border. They sent him into Russia

just as they would send poison gas against enemy

soldiers. Their ploy succeeded. Once in power,

Lenin’s program of “Peace, Land, and Bread” led to

Russian withdrawal from the war through the treaty of

Brest-Litovsk.

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REASONS OF SELF-INTEREST** Continued

• The money which she had loaned to the Allies was considerable and an Allied victory would ensure its repayment

• Munitions makers made money off the war, all the more so if the U. S. was drawn into the fight

• In this regard, war “violated the very spirit of progressive reform.”

Senator George Norris believed that they U. S. went to war on the command of gold, i.e.:

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George Norris (1861-1944) served as a Republican Senator from Nebraska

from 1913-1943. Trained as an attorney, Norris not only served as a legislator but practiced law and held

positions as county attorney and district judge.

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IDEALISTIC REASONS**

• To make the world safe for democracy, rights of man, future peace, world security. Wilson viewed U. S. participation in the war as an opportunity to reform the world order into a liberal-capitalist-democratic system. It took on the dimensions of a holy purpose.

• The U. S. entered the war not out for profit but as God's chosen vessel; He made America strong so she could achieve selfless aims in a spirit of sacrifice, a rather self-flattering approach.

Idealism—the belief in the linear development of history in a progressive direction toward a world without war, and with harmony, abundance, and happiness—was a strong

current in 19th century U. S. thought. Many cast the explanation in terms of "misguided idealism."

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IDEALISTIC REASONS** Continued

• This was a "War to End All Wars" and enforce disarmament

• The war was conceived as a struggle of good vs. evil

– Autocracy vs. democracy

– Imperialism vs. self-determination

– Militarism vs. disarmament

Germany came to represent an obstacle in the way to peace, all things evil and immoral, a threat to

civilization; the Kaiser a symbol of autocracy and militarism.

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IDEALISTIC REASONS** Continued

• Wilson stood on principle for rule of law, international justice, the rights of man

• Wilson saw the League of Nations as an independent force in the world capable of overriding old animosities, conflicts as a rallying point of world opinion.

• N. Gordon Levin's notion of U. S. liberal exceptionalism

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Professor N. Gordon Levin argued that the U. S. was

unfettered by feudal traditions, power politics,

and hence the obvious leader of a new world order

based on U. S. values of free trade, liberalism, rule

of international law, human rights—Germany

threatened the hope for universal democracy.

Levin argues that Wilson acted to serve man with a

combination of liberal anti-imperialism and missionary

nationalism—he equated universal human rights with

the U. S. value system. He envisaged a worldwide

Liberal-Capitalist system with political liberalism, social mobility, constitutional government, capitalist

production. N. Gordon Levin

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Debate on Whether the U. S. Should Have Entered the War

23A-3

• Common cultural ties and heritage • Resolution of Anglo-American differences • Institutional similarities• Popular ideas about race, i.e., Anglo-Saxon superiority • Common laissez-faire or Smithian economy • Exit of Queen Victoria and Lord Salisbury

#1—U. S. was pulled into the war thanks to slick British propaganda** (for which there was no

German counterpart) stressing ties of heritage and history as well as German atrocities

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Queen Victoria (left) and Lord Salisbury (right) were symbolic of the old aristocratic order and the

entrance of politicians like Joseph Chamberlain and David Lloyd George with common origins.

Edward VII—King in

Name

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The British portrayed the Germans as barbaric

invaders, using submarines and poison

gas, and fighting in Allied territory); the U.

S. was trapped into intervention through British cleverness—it was a battle between

British shrewdness and American naiveté,

idealism. The British capitalized on the

notions cited above.

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#2—The Pro-British Attitudes of Wilson, Ambassador Page, Colonel

House**

Wilson with friend and adviser, Colonel Edward M. House (right) and English King George V (lower right). As a student of political science, Wilson was a longtime admirer of the British parliamentary system. He had great respect for the leaders of the British Liberal Party.

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In assessing the gravity of the European conflict, he observed, “Everything I love most in the world is at stake.” Moreover, “at the deepest level, a majority in the country, bound by common language and institutions, sympathized with the Allies and blamed Germany for the war. Like Wilson, many Americans admired English literature, customs, and law. . . . [Germany] seemed arrogant and militaristic.”

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Debate on Whether the U. S. Should Have Entered the War**

Continued

• The U. S. Press created the illusion that the British fought for the rights of small, weak nations against ruthless bullies aspiring to world domination

• Submarine warfare was an attempt to save starving people, i.e., those hurt by the blockade, and end the war quickly

• The "Devil Theory of War" posited that the U. S. was unwittingly drawn into the war economically until suddenly she had a stake in the outcome; the choice was between entering the war or an economic explosion at home

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The “Revisionist”** Argument—The American View After the War

• Intervention was an avoidable mistake

• Germany was no more responsible for the war than others

• Wilson was a gullible super villain

The Revisionists expressed a post-war disillusionment when the liberal-capitalist-democratic "millennium" failed to follow the war. Their interpretation dominated most of

the inter-war period until 1938-1939.

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A Balanced View

No one power bears all the responsibility, and

none of the Great Powers are entirely free

from responsibility.

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Debate on Whether the U. S. Should Have Entered the War

Continued

• House believed if Germany won it would deprive the U. S. of moral leadership so he cast the struggle in terms of democracy vs. autocracy

• Statesmen like Lansing saw America's public indignation as a tool to end isolationism

• There is no such thing as a "just war" • The Versailles Treaty was unjust

Secretary of State Robert Lansing

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Aspirations of Neutrality

• Such a policy conformed to traditional avoidance of foreign entanglements

• Given America’s “Melting Pot”—an ethnic and national mix from peoples on both sides of the conflict, neutrality seemed the wisest course to take

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Election of 1916—“He Kept Us Out of War”

Wilson’s campaign slogan, “He Kept Us Out of War,” reflected American enduring sentiment favoring neutrality in the year.

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Wilson’s opponents attacked him from both directions.

“Preparedness” advocates like Theodore Roosevelt charged him with cowardice; pacifists assailed

his efforts to prepare America militarily. Republican candidate

Charles Evans Hughes (right) campaigned for a tougher line

taken against Germany. Roosevelt found Hughes little better than Wilson, alleging that he was a “bearded iceberg” who lacked dynamism and wavered on the

critical issues. 23B

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1916 Election Results

Candidate Popular Vote

Wilson (D) 91. million

Hughes (R) 8.5 million

Recently enfranchised women voted heavily for Wilson.

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Hughes’ success in the East gave the impression on election night that the Republicans had

gained the White House. Wilson was surprised the

following morning that he had swept the West and won.

Some newspapers called the election wrong.

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The Immediate Casus Belli

#1—The Sinking of the Lusitania—May 7, 1915** 23A-1

German Ambassador to the U.S., Count Christian von Bernstorff vilified in

wartime propaganda

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New York Times headline announcing the sinking of the Lusitania by German Unterseeboot U-20. Wilson

sharply warned the Germans to cease from such future “deliberately unfriendly” actions. Nevertheless,

in August 1915, a German U-Boat sank the British passenger liner Arabic.

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When President Wilson issued a

series of diplomatic notes demanding

Germany to change its submarine

warfare policies,** Wilson’s pacifist

Secretary of State, William Jennings Bryan, resigned.

23B

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England blockaded the German fleet and cut off trade; in response, Germany made U-

boat attacks on shipping without warning the targets in

advance (a violation of international law). On May 15, 1915 the German government published the warning to the right in the New York World.

Less than a week later, it made good on its promise that

travelers sailing in war zones did “so at their own risk.” At

issue was the “right of Americans to sail on ships of

belligerent nations.”

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May 7, 1915—a German U-boat U-20 sank the Lusitania, a British passenger ship; 128

Americans died, including millionaire Cornelius

Vanderbilt (upper left) and popular writer Elbert

Hubbard (lower left). The boat sank in 18 minutes.

Wilson demanded cessation of U-boat attacks and W. J. Bryan resigned. Not wishing to pull the U.

S. into war, Germany suspended her

unannounced attacks.

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German U-boat Deutschland (left) with commander Captain Koening in

November 1916. In February 1917, Germany informed Secretary of State,

Robert Lansing (right) that it would sink on sight all boats in waters around

England and France.

Lansing--a lawyer and counselor in the U.S. State Department--had replaced

Bryan. Subsequently, Wilson severed relations

with Germany.

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March 1917—The Zimmerman TelegramThis was a secret message from German Foreign Secretary Arthur Zimmerman (left) to German envoy in Mexico. In exchange for Mexican support, Germany promised to restore to them New Mexico, Texas, and Arizona. The British publicized the note to draw the U. S. into the war.

#2—The Zimmerman Note**

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When Wilson divulged the contents of the Zimmerman Telegram, a wave of indignation swept the country. This

information, compounded by the fact that German U-boats sunk five U.S. ships between March 12-21 made American

entry into the war inevitable.

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Declaration of War

When Wilson asked Congress for a declaration of war on April 2, 1917, he somberly observed: “It is a fearful

thing to lead this great peaceful people into war, into the most terrible and disastrous of all wars, civilization itself

seeming to be in the balance. But the right is more precious than peace, and we shall fight for the things which we have always carried nearest our hearts,--for

democracy, . . . for the rights and liberties of small nations, for a universal domination of right by such a

concert of free peoples as shall bring peace and safety to all nations and make the world itself at last free.” On

April 6th, Congress declared war.

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Americans in Combat

• The U.S. Army was far from prepared for war in 1917**

• Selective Service Act of May 1917

– Wilson believed conscription to be both efficient and democratic

– Some 24.2 million men registered for the draft

– Of those, 2.8 million were inducted into the military service

#1—Mobilization 23C

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#2—Americans Engaged 23C-1

• The first American soldiers reached France in June 1917

• American soldiers saw their first action at the Battle of the Marne, March 1918

• They blocked the German advance at Chateau-Thierry (right)

Second Battle of the Marne

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U.S. Marines held their ground at the Belleau Wood, June 6-25, 1918

Country singer Garth Brooks’

Belleau Wood plays fast and loose with

historical fact.

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American and French soldiers drove the German army from St. Mihiel, September 12,

1918

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“The American contribution. . . was

vital. . . . Fresh, enthusiastic American troops raised

Allied morale; they helped turn the tide at a crucial

point in the war.”**

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The War at Home

• Committee on Public Information

“Victory at the front depended on economic and emotional mobilization at home. . . . Wilson moved

quickly in 1917 and 1918 to organize war production and distribution. An idealist who knew how to sway public opinion, he also recognized the need to enlist American emotions. To him, the war

for people’s minds, the ‘conquest of their convictions,’ was as vital as events on the

battlefield.”

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Committee on Public Information

• Espionage Act of 1917**—imposed sentences of up to 20 years for aiding the enemy, obstructing recruitment of soldiers, or aiding the enemy

• Trading-with-the-Enemy Act of 1917—Authorized government censorship of foreign language press

• Sedition Act of 1918—imposed harsh penalties for using “disloyal, profane, scurrilous, or abusive language” about the government, flag, or armed forces uniforms

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Headed by George Creel (left), the CPI publicized the war. Through

use of the film industry, Americans saw Germans depicted as

bloodthirsty Huns with plans for world conquest. The campaign went

so far as re-naming traditional German items like sauerkraut

(which became “liberty cabbage”). The propaganda campaign was

quite successful in spawning anti-German sentiment throughout the country. Citizens gave lectures and encouraged the purchase of Liberty Bonds. Even the president himself

encouraged repression and promote unity by force. RQ24

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One editor of the period observed, “We must make the world safe for democracy even if we have to

‘bean’ the Goddess of liberty to do it.” The government took advantage of these wartime

sentiments to launch a frontal assault on American socialism, not to mention dispatching some 15,000

American troops to overturn the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia after Lenin orchestrated

Russian withdrawal from the Allied war effort. The president authorized an economic blockade against Russia and refused to recognize Lenin’s Bolshevik

government. In doing all these things, Wilson and the government helped to promote the “Red Scare” that

arose after the war.

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War Industries Board** 23C-3

• Oversight of production in all American factories

• Determination of production priorities

• Allocation of raw materials

• Set output quotas for steel

• Fixing of prices

Set up in 1917 by Wilson to increase production and control limited resources (rationing). The board’s tasks included:

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Bernard Baruch (left) served as director of the War Industries Board.

“Working closely with business, Baruch for a time, acted as the

dictator of the American economy. . . . As never before, the

government intervened in American life. . . . The partnership between government and business grew

closer. As government expanded, business expanded as well,

responding to wartime contracts.”

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National War Labor Board 23C-3

• Created April 1918 to prevent strikes during the war

• Sided with management some, but more often with workers

• The war brought organized labor into partnership with government

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Social Impact of the War

• 8 hour work day established in some industries

• Set standards of employment for women, children

• Demanded fair wages for workers

Working man—work conditions improved**

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Felix Frankfurter (right) headed the War Labor Relations Board

“Hoping to encourage production and avoid

strikes, Wilson adopted many of the

objectives of the social-justice reformers.”

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The WLB:

• Standardized wages and hours

• Protected the right of labor to organize and bargain collectively

• Ordered equal pay for equal work by women in the war industries

The draft created a shortage of male labor in industry. Both African-American and Mexican-American workers stepped in to fill the gap. The former, who resided largely in the South, embarked upon a major northern exodus. There, they found

jobs and made new homes.

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Women & Minorities

• Women stepped into traditional male work roles

• Minorities—benefited from shortage of white male workers; shift of Black Americans to North for employment opportunities

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Increasing Food Supply at Home

• Meatless and breadless days

• planting “victory gardens” in backyards

Committee for Public Information 23C-4

• Citizen lecturers gave pro-war speeches

• Encouraged Americans to buy Liberty Bonds

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“Like most wars, World War I affected patterns at home as much as abroad. Business

profits grew, factories expanded, and industries turned out huge amounts of war goods. Government authority swelled, and

people came to expect different things of their government. Labor made some gains, as did

women and blacks. Society assimilated some of the shifts, but social and economic tensions grew, and when the war ended, they spilled over in the strikes and violence of the Red

Scare that followed.”

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Fumbling Toward Peace—1919

Chapter 24—Part IV

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How can you win. . . but still lose?

”The Allies won the war but lost the peace.” This saying captures the essence of the

failings of the Treaty of Versailles which, rather than bringing to consummation the “war to end all wars,” merely initiated the “long armistice” (1919-1939). It has often

been cast in terms of the failure of American idealism to prevail over hardheaded

European nationalism.

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Making Peace: The Treaty of Versailles 23D-1

• Armistice—a truce or cessation of hostilities; it was signed November 11, 1918 at 11 p.m.

• The last comparable meeting was in 1815 at the Congress of Vienna

Armistice and Ending the War

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Opening of the Paris Peace Conference, January 18, 1919

The Major Players and Their Respective Aims

The So-Called Big Four of the Versailles Peace Conference

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Woodrow Wilson, U.S. President

• Wilson was the acknowledged leader of the conference, imbued with a capacity to interpret the aspirations of the peoples of Europe. He thrust the U. S. into the moral leadership of the world, making America the symbol of hope to the people of Europe.

• Wilson envisioned a “Peace Without Victory”• Wilson’s 14 points—the key ideas of his

“liberal” peace play

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Underlying Principles of Wilson’s Fourteen Points** 23D

• No secret treaties—“public diplomacy” (the Versailles Conference itself violated this principle, its treaty terms negotiated in secret)

• Limitations of national armaments• Principle of self-determination followed for all

national groups (not universally followed by the terms of Versailles)

• Establishment of a League of Nations (the only one of these 4 which seemed achievable)

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Announced before Congress on January 8, 19188, Wilson’s far-reaching, non-punitive terms “were generous and farsighted, but they failed to satisfy

wartime emotions that sought vindication. England and France distrusted Wilsonian idealism as the basis

for peace. They wanted Germany disarmed and crippled; they wanted its colonies; and they were

skeptical of the principle of self-determination.” While Wilson’s European counterparts were far from

cooperative, he proved a clever negotiator, trading small concessions for his major objectives: self-

determination, a reduction of international tensions, and the establishment of a League of Nations.

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David Lloyd George, British Prime Minister

He desired a fairly moderate peace but had just won an election based on promises of a harsh peace

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George Clemenceau, French Premier

The working chairman of the conference—he hated the Germans and his foremost aim was to weaken them in every way. He felt revenge was just.

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Orlando, Italian chief of state

He played a minor role in comparison to his foreign minister Sidney Sonnino; they were determined to hold the Allies to the promises they made to Italy in 1915

Vittorio Orlando, 1860-1952

Sidney Sonnino

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Those Excluded: neither the Central Powers nor Russia were represented at the

conference. Germany had no voice in the peace-making

process (contrast to France at the Congress of Vienna in

1815)**

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Problems of Making Peace

• Many secret treaties were made by the Allies—this violated the basis for Wilson’s proposed peace

• Many foreign and domestic disturbances came in the wake of the war’s end. Indeed, statesmen hurried to convene the conference because of the threat of Bolshevism, and numerous disturbances took place while the conference was in session

No one seemed to know how to establish a lasting peace, even though it was desired

External Problems:

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External Problems Continued

• The clamor in Allied countries for a speedy settlement and return to everyday life. There was a general and popular assumption that peace making was easy. When wars end, people want to stop worrying, to celebrate

• The general physical and nervous strain under which the delegates labored

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Internal Problems—questions on which the Allies did not see eye-to-eye

• Germany’s colonies

• The Rhineland

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Internal Problems Continued

• Reparations

The issue here was how to make good the damage done to the civilian populations of the Allies. To justify a large

penalty imposed for even pensions to victims of war and allowances to their families, “War Guilt” was placed on Germany for her aggression in starting the war. In the final analysis, the Allies imposed both responsibility for

the war and crippling reparations that came to a whopping $33 million.

Wilson urged “peace without victory” and the rejection of reparations.

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Internal Problems Continued

• Fiume Crisis

• Shantung Issue

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Signing and Terms of the Treaty

• Treaty signed June 28, 1919– Intended as an ironic twist, this was five years

to the day from the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand. It was a settlement dictated to the vanquished, the Germans

• Imposition of territorial, military, and economic restrictions

– Territory Germany lost:

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Territory Germany lost**

• A third of her pre-war territory• 15% of her coal• Almost 50% of her iron• 19% of her iron and steel industries• She gave up her colonies• She recognized the independence of

AustriaMany Allied powers wished to punish Germany and prevent it from becoming a world power

again.

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Militarily, Germany:

• Reduced its army to 100,000 volunteers• Limited its navy to 6 battleships of 10,000 tons

and a few smaller ships• Agreed to have no offensive weapons (e.g.,

submarines, aircraft, tanks, heavy artillery)• Dissolved its General Staff• Submitted to the supervision of an Allied

Military Control Commission to monitor those provisions

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Economically, Germany:

• Had to pay reparations with no exact amount set (a Reparations Commission was to decide; in the meantime, Germany was to pay $5 billion in cash or kind)

• France received large amounts of coal to compensate for the wanton destruction of her mines

• England received ships to compensate for losses of over 5,000 ships to submarine warfare

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Economically, Germany (continued)

• Most German rivers were internationalized

• German foreign assets of $7 billion were confiscated

• Many German patents were seized• Germany was prohibited from raising her

tariffs above the pre-war level

Finally, there was the call for punishment of war criminals including the Kaiser

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In short, everything possible was done to prevent and avert the

threat of a strong, vengeful Germany

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The Post-War Period

• Nations struggle to overcome the effects of war

• The defeated countries smart over

– The harshness of the treaty terms

– The violation of several of the 14 Points

– The fact that the principle of self-determination was ignored in many Slavic areas creating new nations with large alien populations (mostly Germans or Hungarians which would be vindictively answered by Adolf Hitler)

• Establishment of democratic governments

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Establishment of Democratic Governments

• Unfortunately, this was associated with the defeat in war (i.e., Germany, Austria, Hungary, Turkey)

• In the tense, tumultuous postwar atmosphere, democracy did not consolidate or function wellInexperienced parliamentary governments in Eastern and Central Europe could not handle arising problems

• In their place arose a new kind of dictatorial, totalitarian regime better suited to cope with the emergencies of world crisis

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Europe’s Tripartite Division

• The victors

• The vanquished

• Russia, i.e., the Bolsheviks

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League of Nations—Why It Failed 23D-2

Wilson envisioned the League as a world

conscience, an organized moral force**—a

parliament of nations in which international

problems could be discussed and solved (shades of the

Concert of Europe of 1815)

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Article X of the Covenant of the League of Nations—required member nations to protect one another against aggression, to guarantee mutual independence and territorial integrity. Americans like Senator Henry Cabot Lodge feared this would entangle the U. S. in war**

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Purpose and Goals of the League**

• Promote international cooperation

• Achieve international peace and security

• It was founded on the concept that collective security with peace maintained by the community of nations rather than a “balance of power

• Specific Goals:

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Specific Goals:

• International disarmament– In this, the League failed. Verification of

disarmament violations (e.g., Iraq after the Gulf War) were difficult to prove; secret treaties were made; it was hard to find a valid basis for determining the military power of a nation

• Arbitration of international disputes– Provision for the League Council were vague and

necessitated unanimous approval. It was effective for settling disputes among the smaller powers, but when big power interests collided, the League proved quite powerless

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Specific Goals Continued

• Sanctions against aggression

– To be effective, these sanctions needed the approval of all the big powers (and not all were members of the League). The League had not military troops to put teeth into its actions. Military sanctions were left to the discretion of each individuals member.

• Treaty revision

– Article 18 was intended to prevent secret diplomacy; Article 19 allowed for changes in treaties once the hatred of war cooled. . . but the powers did not use this opportunity fully

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Problems With the League

• Germany entered in 1926

• USSR entered in 1934

• USA never entered due to strong isolationist sentiment in postwar America—an “America for Americans” sentiment

– The US failed to ratify the Treaty of Versailles

– In its absence, the League was dominated by the European victors without an impartial arbiter which the US could have been

Several big, important nations were not members

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The Central Problem

The big powers would not act selflessly except in fields that did not effect their

national interests

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Accomplishments of the League

• It improved the standard of colonial administration

• It raised the status of workers everywhere by an international labor organization

• Its concern with matters of health• Its concern with illicit drug traffic• Its concern with the international arms

trade

Many of these important institutions were precursors of United Nations organizations for which they set important precedents.

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Changes made by Wilson to obtain Senate approval of the League Covenant

• Allowed for withdrawal from the League

• Recognition of the importance of the Monroe Doctrine in the Western hemisphere

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Wilson’s Failures 23D-2

• The division of the spoils of war and creation of new nations created new minorities, cf., Finland, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary

• Wilson’s position was weakened by:– The mid-term election of a Republican Congress in

1918**– Wilson had neglected to include any major

Republicans in the American delegation he took to Paris; this impolitic exclusion came back to haunt him after the 1918 election**

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Wilson arrived in Europe almost a messianic figure. “Never before had such crowds acclaimed a democratic political figure.” Understandably, “Wilson was sure that

the poeple of Europe shared his goals and would force their leaders to accept his peace.” When Lodge (below)

and others obstructed treaty ratification, Wilson took his case directly to the American people. In September 1919, he set out on an aggressive speaking campaign to muster grass roots support. In Pueblo, Colorado, after making perhaps the most effective speech of his tour, he fell ill.

Upon his return to Washington, he collapsed on the White House floor, the victim of a stroke. He remained at

least partially incapacitated for the duration of his presidency, leaving himself open to the charge that his wife, Edith Bolling Wilson, was actually running the

country.

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Wilson’s Failures Continued

• Wilson’s faux pas contributed to the Congressional rejection of American participation in the League of Nations, that aspect of Wilson’s 14 Points that the president felt most important

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Wilson’s omission of powerful Republican Senator, Henry Cabot Lodge (left) from Massachusetts proved fatal for treaty ratification. Lodge shortly became head of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and did much to block passage of the treaty in the Senate.

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League Appeared to be a Threat to American Sovereignty

Where Opinion Divided

William E. Borah (left—R-Idaho) was a key figure in the Irreconcilables,”** a group that opposed U.S. entry into the League under any circumstances.

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Frank B. Kellogg (right) from Minnesota was the leader of the “Mild Reservationists,” a group of 12 that accepted the Versailles Treaty with a few modest reservations. Lodge (above) headed a group of 23 “Strong Reservationists.” He used his Senatorial power to drag out the debate over ratification and in the end, on November 9, the Senate voted down the treaty by 39 to 55.

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And Finally. . .

not all Americans were ready to assume world

leadership, involvement in internal affairs

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Literary Expressions of the Period

Ernest Hemingway—Hemingway’s Farewell to Arms was a book that revealed the underside of war.

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John Dos Pasos published Three Soldiers in 1921.

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Laurence Stallings and Maxwell Anderson (right) produced the movie What Price Glory? in 1924.

Collectively, the works produced by these authors showed was “as waste, horror, and

death

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“After 1919, there was disillusionment. Would War I was feared before it started, popular while it lasted, and hated when it

ended. To a whole generation that followed, it appeared futile, killing without cause, sacrificing

without benefit.”

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By participating in the Peace Conference at Versailles, the United States began a tentative effort to assume leadership in world affairs (left). Versailles (above right), in contrast to the Congress of Vienna (above) in 1815 failed to establish a durable peace.

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The fact that the European delegates at Versailles were bent on sating their thirst for revenge condemned the peace settlement to failure. It sewed the seeds that would ultimately germinate in a second and even more destructive conflict only two decades later

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As a graduate student at Harvard University, Henry Kissinger (b. 1923, right) wrote a doctoral dissertation

(subsequently turned into the book, A World Restored, left) that examined the

Congress of Vienna and why it proved so successful in preserving the general peace

in Europe from 1815-1914. He argued that every party in a peace agreement

must have a stake in preserving the new status quo created by the treaty terms. If not, the nation or nations least satisfied with the resulting settlement will sooner or later act aggressively to overturn the

newly established order. Kissinger served as Secretary of State under U.S. president

Richard Nixon.