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Imperialism, Alliances, and War
Chapter 26
Overview(I)
• The "New Imperialism“; rapid scramble for control of new colonies
concentrated on Asia & Africa .
• Nationalism intensified (particularly after Prussia's success in
unifying Germany changed the balance of power in Europe).
• Nationalism centered in Serbia and Bulgaria caused growing unrest
throughout the European portion of the Ottoman Empire.
• Imperial concerns, coupled with increased rivalries between the
great powers, led to the new alliance system in Europe inaugurated
by the Austro-German (Dual) Alliance of 1879, which became the
Triple Alliance with the addition of Italy in the 1890s. Britain was
drawn into the Franco-Russian orbit, forming the Entente Cordiale
with France in 1904 and making a similar agreement with Russia in
1907.
(http://wps.prenhall.com/hss_kagan_wsthertage_9/17/4566/1168963.cw/index.html)
Overview(II)
• Events that followed the assassination of the Austrian heir in June
1914 at Sarajevo transformed the Balkan crisis into the immediate
cause of World War I (the Great War).
• For over four years, the European states slugged it out on
battlefields and seas throughout the world. Casualties ran into the
tens of millions. The European world -- so safe, secure, and stable -had literally blown up.
• The Austro-Hungarian and Ottoman Empires were destroyed.
• Tsarist Russia had first compromised with liberal forces, and then
been swept away in a Communist coup in 1917.
• Germany and its allies sought an armistice in November 1918 to
avoid invasion by the Allies, who were now receiving fresh aid and
troops from the United States.
• The Versailles Treaty ended the war, but satisfied no one.
(http://wps.prenhall.com/hss_kagan_wsthertage_9/17/4566/1168963.cw/index.html)
‘New Imperialism’
• Imperialism can be
defined as:
“a policy of
expanding a nation’s
power by seeking a
form of hegemony
over an alien power.”
The economic, strategic, political, and cultural
rationales for the New Imperialism(I)
•
By the turn of the century, most of the world was under the control of the
industrialized West.
• The so-called "New Imperialism" was the most significant phenomenon of the last
third of the nineteenth century.
• Economic motives
Economic motives were proposed to explain the new imperialism like need for
market and raw materials. But investment did not follow colonization in any
consistent way, all the powers relied on vital raw materials from areas they did not
control, and colonies were only occasionally demonstrably profitable. So the new
imperialism depended on more than economics.
• Cultural, religious, and social motives
 The duty of European nations to extend the benefits of their superior civilizations
to “backward” peoples.
 The hope that imperialism might deflect public interest from domestic problems.
 To relieve population pressures in Europe
The economic, strategic, political, and cultural rationales for the
New Imperialism(I)
• Strategic and political factors(national pride) certainly played a role
in the scramble for Africa: the British needed to control the Suez
Canal in order to control the India trade, and to protect Egypt they
needed to control the Sudan.
 Likewise, control of the Cape of Good Hope seemed to require
control of increasing swaths of southern Africa. Using Britain as a
model, smaller European states equated colonization with political
status.
 Bismarck saw African protectorates as a way to improve Germany's
status in relation to France and Britain.
 Intra-European rivalries also influenced colonial ventures in other
parts of the world. In Asia, Japan emerged as a great power that
European nations felt obliged to contain. The United States
participated extensively in imperial ventures in the Pacific.
The search for strategic advantage among European nations and the
creation of opposing alliance systems
An Overview
 Prussia's military power and unification of Germany upset the balance of
power created at the Congress of Vienna.
 From 1871 until his dismissal by Kaiser William II in 1890, Bismarck acted
as an "honest broker" for peace in Europe. He entered Germany into
multiple alliances, some of them secret, in a successful effort to maintain
a balance of power in Europe. The Dual Alliance with Austria was an
anchor of German policy until 1918; Germany under Bismarck's leadership
was also at least intermittently allied with Russia and Italy. Bismarck's
system of alliances collapsed soon after he left office.
 Caprivi's incompetence and Kaiser William II's arrogance made an enemy
of Britain, which proceeded to enter relationships with France and Russia,
creating the Triple Entente. Germany's Triple Alliance (with Austria and
Italy) was weak and unstable by comparison.
The System of Rival Alliances
• Together with race for colonies, other major characteristic of
European politics in lead-up to World War I was development of rival
alliances. They were often established as result of defensive
motivations, (based on mutual fear), but their v. existence
contributed to distrust & tension.
• System of alliances that dominated Europe was to impt. extent
founded on underlying fear & distrust between France & Germany.
Yet, it was ultimately much responsible for allowing what might have
remained a relatively small, local crisis in Bosnian capital Sarajevo to
escalate into a general war. Each power had become committed to
support its allies.
• As more states began to see war as inevitable, efforts increased to
build-up arms in effort to enhance security. But, the arms race that
resulted, by raising fears, distrust & tension, contributed to making
war more likely.
The Three Emperors’ League
• After uniting Germany Bismarck initially
aimed to maintain peace & allow the
German state to develop stable
Germany
foundations. He tried to develop
alliances that would help safeguard
Germany. In 1873 & again in 1881 he
helped establish ‘Three Emperors’
League’, [Germany, Austria, Russia]. AustriaRussia
Members promised to remain at least Hungary
neutral if other members were attacked
by a 4th power. Both times, however, the
Leagues collapsed as a consequence of
rivalries in Balkans between Russia &
Austria.
Dual & Triple Alliances
• 1879 Bismarck also formed
secret military alliance with
Austria-Hunga
Austria-Hungary (The ‘Dual
Germany
Alliance’), to which Italy was
also added in 1882, (making it
the ‘Triple Alliance’). If any
member was attacked by Russia
Austriathe others would militarily assist,
Hungary
& would at least remain neutral
if attacked by other states. (Later
other states also joined, e.g.
Italy
Germany
Rumania in 1883).
The Reinsurance Treaty (1)
• 1887 Bismarck signed another secret treaty.. this
time with Russia. Known as the ‘Reinsurance
Treaty’, it consisted of a Russian promise not to
support France if she went to war against Germany,
(& more generally that each state would remain at
least neutral if the other were attacked by a third
party), & a German promise, in return, to support
Russian interests in the Balkans.
The Reinsurance Treaty (2)
• Bismarck’s ability to stay allied
with both Austria-Hungary &
ITALY
Russia at same time (while
these 2 states were rivals in the
Balkans) was a sign of his
Reinsurance
diplomatic skill.
Triple
Alliance
Treaty
GERMANY
RUSSIA
AUSTRIAHUNGARY
William II & the fall of Bismarck
• In 1888, however, a new emperor came to
the throne in Germany... William II,
unhappy with Bismarck completely
dominating German foreign policy,
supported a more aggressive stance
against Russia & more assertive foreign
policy generally. In 1890 he basically
forced Bismarck to resign & retire.
Bismarck’s intricate web of alliances was
thereafter not as carefully maintained &
Reinsurance Treaty was not renewed.
France & the Foundations of the Triple Entente
(1)
• France knew that there had been an alliance
formed between Germany, Austria-Hungary & Italy,
but was not aware of the details of their
agreements, (esp. of the fact that they were
essentially defensive clauses). This made her evermore distrustful of the new, powerful German state,
& esp. concerned about being left alone to fight
against the Germans as had been the case in the
war of 1870.
France & the Foundations of the Triple
Entente (2)
• Faced with Triple Alliance, France took opportunity of
collapse of Reinsurance Treaty to get her own alliance
with Russia with whom she had not traditionally had good
relations. With incr. cooperation between Germany &
Austria-Hungary (with whom Russians had particularly
strained relations in Balkans) & with added sweetener of
the promise of French loans & capital investment, Russia
was also willing now to form an alliance with France. In
1893 the 2 states formed basis of what was to become the
Triple Entente, promising mutual military support if either
was attacked by Germany.
Britain & the Triple Entente (1)
• Britain had for some time followed an isolationist
policy & avoided joining alliances.
• Further, Britain had also had poor relations with
Russia & France with whom its interests had tended
to conflict
• British & German royal families were related
• Some in Britain even suggested forming an alliance
with Germany
Yet Britain eventually joined Triple Entente. Why?
Britain & the Triple Entente (2)
• German insensitivity to Britain’s colonial interests – e.g.
“Krüger Telegram” congratulating forces opposing British in
S. Africa for their success in battle.
• Germany becoming an increasingly threatening industrial
& commercial rival to Britain
• Germany began to threaten Britain’s traditional naval
dominance
All of the above contributed to British decision to abandon
its isolationist stance & join the Triple Entente. In 1904
Britain reached agreement with France & in 1907 with
Russia.
Rival Alliances
The Triple Entente
The Triple Alliance
(Central Powers)
Britain
Italy *
vs.
France
Russia
Germany
AustriaHungary
By 1907 the great European Powers had been divided into 2 main rival blocs.
* While these alliances principally joined for defensive purposes in effort to enhance
national security, Italian motivations were somewhat exceptional & related to goal of
creating an ‘Italia Irridenta’ from territories won in the upcomming war. Italy, in fact,
eventually abandoned Triple Alliance & in 1915 joined Triple Entente upon promise of
territorial gains at war’s end.
Origins and course of World War I
An Overview
•
The 1908 Bosnian crisis, the second Moroccan crisis in 1911, and the First and
Second Balkan Wars (1912 and 1913) solidified Europe's alliances and
antagonisms, and left many of the powers feeling they could not afford to repeat
various "mistakes" they had made in facing these crises.
• When the heir to the Austrian throne, Archduke Francis Ferdinand, was
assassinated in Sarajevo, Bosnia, in June 1914, no country had a strong stake in
going to war over it. But as the crisis dragged on throughout the summer, all the
European powers came to feel, for various reasons, that they must go to war.
• Both the Triple Entente (Britain, France, and Russia) and the Central Powers
(essentially, Austria and Germany) had reasonable expectations of quick victory.
Both sides bungled their strategies, however. More significantly, neither side
understood how to take the offensive against machine guns; no one had foreseen
trench warfare. The land war dragged on with massive casualties and minimal
results. On the sea, Germany's fleet – the cause of so much antagonism with Great
Britain – served little purpose except, eventually, to help bring the United States
into the war against the Central Powers. United States entry into the war came
only after the Russian Revolution had overthrown the tsar.
(http://wps.prenhall.com/hss_kagan_wsthertage_9/17/4566/1168963.cw/index.html)
Assassination of Francis Ferdinand
• The local crisis which led to outbreak of World War I concerned
assassination of heir to Austro-Hungarian throne (& his wife)
on June 28th, 1914.
• Assassin was Gavrilo Princip, a young Bosnian Serb who
belonged to underground Serbian nationalist society called
“Union or Death” (aka “The Black Hand”).
• Habsburg government, already fearful that Serbia, with Russian
backing, was turning into potential Piedmont or Prussia, (i.e. a
state to lead national unification, in this case of Slavs), treated
murders as Serbian provocation of war. After getting assurances
of support from German ally, Austria issued an ultimatum to
Serbia, with demands that were virtually impossible for Serbia
to accept.
Outbreak of World War I (1)
• Austrian ultimatum directly challenged Serbian sovereignty
demanding Austrian officials take part in investigating &
punishing all those involved in planning the assassination.
• Serbia’s response was quite moderate, but rejected demands
seen to challenge its sovereignty. While aware of superior
power of Austro-Hungarian state, Serbs felt relatively confident
Russia could not afford to lose prestige in Balkans & so would
not leave Serbia alone.
• Russia, in turn, counted on France for support & France,
terrified of possibility of again being caught alone in war with
Germany, was determined to keep Russia an ally.
• When Serbia refused to fully accept ultimatum, AustriaHungary declared war on Serbia on 28th July 1914.
Outbreak of World War I (2)
• 30th July Russia began to mobilize its forces in support of
Serbia. Expecting that Germany would assist AustriaHungary, it also mobilized its forces along German frontier.
• Next day Germany began to mobilize its own forces & with
Russians failing to respond to German demands that they
end their own military activities, Germany declared war
against Russia on August 1st.
• Feeling certain that France would also join the war in
support of Russia, Germans also declared war against
France (Aug 3rd).
Britain Enters the War
• While Germans had been somewhat concerned about
danger of escalation of war, many German leaders
mistakenly believed that in final analysis British would not
get involved in the conflict... But they were wrong! Britain
had joined Triple Entente in an attempt to maintain a
balance-of-power in Europe & particularly to counter
danger of German domination.
• When Germany invaded Belgium, (the neutrality of whose
territory had been guaranteed by the 5 great powers since
1839), there was a united outcry & anger among the
British public. The same day, 4th August, Britain declared
war on Germany.
Major Causes of World War I
• Colonial Rivalries
• Growing Industrial/Commercial Rivalry
• The Alliance System
• Arms Race (esp. naval between
Germany & Britain)
• Rivalries in the Balkans
America Enters the War
• When Germans again began unrestricted submarine warfare in
1917, it became a cause of US entry into war.
• Gradually, by end 1916, blockade hurting Germans who were
suffering shortages of vital materials. They took a calculated risk,
believing that if they could crush Britain within 6 months by cuttingoff her contact overseas, then even if US entered war, it would take
too long for her to project her power.
• There had been strong non-interventionist stand among American
public, & even some pro-German sentiment, but Americans
progressively began backing Wilson’s position of support for
Entente powers & accepting US entry into war.
• Aside from anger at sinking of US ships, American public also turned
against Germans when in Jan. 1917 it learned of the ‘Zimmermann
Telegram’.
The Zimmermann Telegram
German Foreign Minister
Artur Zimmermann sent a
message to the Mexican
government calling upon
Mexico to form an alliance
with Germany & promising
German support in getting
back ‘lost territories’ of
Texas, New Mexico &
Arizona, taken by US in USMexican war of 1846-48.
Wilson & the ‘Fourteen Points’ (1)
Revolution in Russia in
March 1917 (see below) also
made it easier for Americans
to follow lead of President
Wilson & openly support the
Entente. With authoritarian
government of Tsar
overthrown & more liberal
provisional government
established, Americans could
see themselves as fighting
for ideals, on side of
liberalism, democracy
“civilization”
* Images available at http://calitreview.com/images/Debs_poster.jpg &
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:%27Destroy_this_mad_brute%27_WWI_propaganda_poster_(US_version).jpg .
Wilson & the ‘Fourteen Points’ (2)
• In Jan. 1918 Woodrow Wilson
publicly outlined his idealist
objectives for peace after the war in
his ‘Fourteen Points’. Wilson called for
“peace without victors”,
strengthening of democracy, national
self-determination, an end to secret
diplomacy & agreements, free trade,
general disarmament & an
international organization, the
‘League of Nations’ to preserve world
peace.
WOODROW WILSON
Wilson & the ‘League of Nations’
The Bolshevik Revolution in Russia
An Overview
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Nicholas II was incapable of managing a viable war effort, and on March 15, 1917, Russia's last tsar
abdicated.
The Duma (Parliament) formed a provisional government; the provisional government continued
the war against Germany, which meant that when the Russian army continued to suffer, popular
discontent turned against the provisional government.
Socialist factions formed soviets, councils of workers and soldiers, which did not support the
provisional government, although at first they did not interfere with it, either.
Meanwhile the Germans, correctly assuming that he would cause enough trouble in Russia to get
Russia out of the war, helped Lenin get from his exile in Switzerland to Petrograd (St. Petersburg).
The Bolsheviks, led by Lenin and Trotsky, attempted a coup in the summer of 1917, which failed.
On Novemer 6, 1917, a second Bolshevik coup took control. When Bolsheviks failed to win a
majority of seats in the new Constituent Assembly, the Bolshevik-controlled Red Army dispersed
the legislature.
The Bolsheviks nationalized land, factories, banks, and church property; they repudiated the tsarist
government's debt; and they withdrew from the war.
The Treaty of Brest-Litovsk imposed harsh terms on Russia, but Lenin had no choice but to sign. It
took the Bolsheviks until 1921 to overcome domestic resistance and a civil war against the White
Russians.
Russia, 1917
• If US entry to War was one major development of 1917, the 2nd was
Russian Revolution. Though it ultimately led to Russia’s withdrawal
from war, its impact was long-lasting & global.
• In March 1917* Tsar was overthrown & a provisional government of
liberals & social democrats, which determined to continue war took
over. The people, however, were tired of war, & new government’s
military efforts proved no more successful than those of Tsar.
• By November 1917*, in confusion & instability caused by major
military defeats, public discontent & hunger, socialists led by
Vladimir Lenin (& known as Bolsheviks), managed to carry-out a coup
overthrowing provisional government & taking control of Russia.
* According to calendar used in Russia at the time, dates were actually February & October,
so names “February Revolution” & “October Revolution” often used.
The Bolshevik Revolution
• 2 major factors seen as contributing to Bolsheviks’ desire to
end Russian involvement in War:
1) Pragmatic: Russia & the Russians were exhausted. The
war effort had little popular support, & by giving the people
what they wanted, i.e. peace, the Bolsheviks could hope to gain
their sympathy & support.
2) Ideological: As far as their political beliefs were
concerned the Bolsheviks saw this War as a war between
capitalist & imperialist powers. They preferred to see these
powers destroy each other.
• Despite having to make major concessions, Bolsheviks therefore
finally signed peace Treaty of Brest-Litovsk with Germany on
3rd March 1918.
The End of the First World War(I)
• Despite successfully ending war with Russia, & the initial success of
renewed submarine warfare, entry of US into War proved decisive.
Her fresh, well-equipped forces turned balance against exhausted
Germany & her allies.
• Within a few months British navy developed new means to combat
German submarine warfare, incl. use of depth-charges & large
convoys.
• By mid-1918 Germany & her allies were under severe attack on all
fronts & German generals insisted time had now come to make
peace... before German heartland was itself invaded. German
emperor abdicated on 9th Nov. 1918 & fled to neutral Holland, & 2
days later Germans signed an armistice to end War.
The End of the First World War(II)
• The Great War was over, at a cost of millions of soldiers'
lives and millions more civilians who died from war-related
causes.
• Europe was transformed forever: the German, AustroHungarian, Russian, and Ottoman Empires were all
dissolved; the United States became a factor in European
affairs; and the nineteenth-century belief in the inevitability
of progress was shattered.
• The Ottoman Empire, which had allied with the Germans
early in the war, was dismembered by a treaty between
Turkey and the Allies in 1920. Britain and France controlled
large swaths of the Arab world, while Ataturk established
the independent Republic of Turkey in 1923.
The Versailles Treaty and its legacies
An Overview
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
The Treaty of Versailles was ultimately a failure because it was not mild enough to win long-term
acceptance by all parties, but it was also not harsh enough to make another war impossible.
The victorious Big Four – Wilson for the United States, Lloyd George for Britain, Clemenceau for
France, and Vittorio Emanuele for Italy – represented constitutional democracies, and had to
respond to public opinion.
In Europe, nationalism had reached the status of a secular religion, while the pledges contained in
Wilson's Fourteen Points had raised unrealistically idealistic expectations; a comprehensive
resolution of Europe's nationalist controversies was impossible.
Previously made agreements and secret treaties could not all be honored, and in any case were
sometimes mutually exclusive. All the powers feared the spread of communism, while France in
particular feared a re-armed Germany.
The League of Nations was meant to be a mechanism through which the inevitable shortcomings of
the peace settlement could be remedied, but it had no military power to back up its claims.
The most problematic aspect of the treaty was the harshness of its terms towards Germany – which
was not even allowed to join in negotiations, but presented with a document that had to be ratified
– which included a blanket admission of guilt for "all the loss and damage" relating to the war, and
a huge reparations bill.
The exclusion of Russia from the settlement and from the League of Nations also reflected a
stunning failure of the Big Four to face basic realities of European politics.
The Paris Peace Conference
• The international peace settlement following WWI was reached at
Conference of Paris (Jan. 1919- Jan. 1920). Conference & various
treaties that resulted from it can generally be seen as a failure. Esp.
controversial, undoubtedly a failure, has been Treaty of Versailles
that was concluded with Germany. Other 4 treaties, which met with
various degrees of success were:
Treaty of St. Germain with Austria
Treaty of Trianon with Hungary
Treaty of Neuilly with Bulgaria
Treaty of Sèvres with Turkey
The Paris Peace Conference (2)
• Together these treaties created a new map for
Europe, with the political map of Eastern Europe in
particular being completely revised . 7 new
independent states were created largely upon the
territories held by powers that had been on the
losing side: Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania,
Poland&, Czechoslovakia & Yugoslavia.*
* The latter 2 are no more, & the 3 Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia & Lithuania only
recently regained their independence after Soviet occupation.
The Treaty of Versailles
• Many have argued Treaty of
Versailles itself became a cause of
rise of Hitler & of eventual
outbreak of World War II. Signed
in same location German Empire
had been proclaimed in 1871,
(‘Hall of Mirrors’), harsh
conditions of treaty too
humiliating for Germans to
accept. Others have argued
opposite... That the treaty was too
lenient, & any potential future
German threat should have been
completely eliminated by even
harder terms.
Palace of Versailles
Hall of Mirrors
Major Provisions of the
Treaty of Versailles (1)
1.
2.
3.
4.
Germany forced to evacuate lands occupied during the War
(e.g. Baltic states taken from Russia as a consequence of the
Treaty of Brest-Litovsk)
Alsace & Lorraine returned to France
Plebiscite to be held to decide the future of Schleswig
Germany’s military capacity v. seriously limited:
a) army no greater than 100,000 men
b) no longer permitted to build tanks, military planes, or
heavy artillery
c) size of German navy restricted to 36 vessels (no
submarines & naval base of Heligoland destroyed)
Major Provisions of the
Treaty of Versailles (2)
5. Germany prohibited from having any military positions to left
of Rhine River, or for 50km to right.
6. Output of Saar coalmines given to France for 15 years & the
region to be administered by League of Nations during this
period, & then to undergo a plebiscite
7. Occupation forces to remain in Rhineland till all reparations
paid (actual sum of reparations to be decided by a
Reparations Commission)
8. Germany to give-up some former eastern lands for
establishment of independent Polish & Czech states
9. Germany to lose all her colonies (to be administered under the
mandate system)
10. Germany to commit to never attempt ‘Anschluss’