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World War I Roots of the Conflict The assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir to the Austrian throne and future leader of Bosnia, triggered the worst war the world had ever known. In the end, World War I (1914-1918) would redraw national boundaries on three continents, shift the world balance of power, and take more than 10 million lives in combat, disease, and famine. Causes of the War Nationalism: By 1900 great waves of nationalist feeling were sweeping across Europe. The pan-German movement, led by Germany and including Austria, hoped to bring together all German-speaking peoples. The pan-Slavic movement, led by Russia, tried to unite Slavic peoples. These nationalistic beliefs were bound to lead to conflicts over territory. Bosnia, a small state in the Balkans, was one of these contested lands. Although many of its people were Slavs, it had been annexed by German-speaking Austria. Imperialism: Bosnia’s annexation was part of another form of international rivalry imperialism. For years, European nations had competed for territory throughout the world in search of raw materials and markets. To everyone, bigger meant better. Militarism: To protect their growing empires and display their national pride, the European powers engaged in an enormous military buildup. Nearly all European nations had a conscription system requiring young men to serve in the military. The drafts produced huge standing armies (Germany had the best-trained army). All nations stockpiled new weapons and ammunition. Alliances: Under the pressures of nationalism, imperialism, and militarism, the nations of Europe formed alliances to maintain a balance of power. Yet the system of mutual defense agreements, designed to keep the peace in Europe, ultimately destroyed it. The web of entangling alliances turned a small shooting incident into global violence. Chain Reaction 1. Franz Ferdinand had been murdered by a Slavic nationalist who thought that Bosnia should belong to its neighbor Serbia. 2. Austria blamed the government of Serbia for the killing and, with a pledge of support from Germany, declared war. 3. Serbia’s powerful ally Russia, mobilized its armies to protect its fellow Slavs. 4. To Germany, this mobilization meant only one thing - war. Germany declared war on Russia on August 1, 1914, and two days later on Russia’s ally France. 5. The Germans hoped to knock out the French quickly, then concentrate their forces on the Eastern Front against the massive Russian army. Therefore, German troops invaded neutral Belgium on August 4 on their way to France. This invasion brought Great Britain into the war since they had pledged to defend Belgium. *War had erupted. Opposing the Central Powers of Germany and Austria-Hungary were the Allies - France, Russia, and Great Britain. About 20 other countries would join the Allies, while Turkey and Bulgaria would side with the Central Powers. Stalemate in the Trenches *Everyone thought the war would be brief - “all over before Christmas,” a British slogan said. But everyone misjudged the intensity of the fighting. *The Germans pushed south into France only 40 miles from Paris. Casualties were enormous. To hold the Allied position, the French generals told their officers to “dig in.” From the North Sea south for 400 miles to Switzerland, Allied soldiers dug trenches in which to live and fight. German troops did the same. *With the move to the trenches, fighting on the Western Front became a bloody stalemate that was to last nearly four years. *Daytime in the trenches was bleak, uncomfortable, and often boring. Action came at night. Under cover of darkness, troops and supplies were moved into the trenches. Soldiers repaired their dugouts and the barbed wire in front of them. *Attacks usually came before dawn. One side would blast the other with heavy artillery, then send its soldiers “over the top,” bayonets fixed on rifles, to attack the enemy’s trenches. Few ever reached the trenches, most were cut down by a hail of machine gun fire in “no man’s land.” *During one two-week battle in 1915 the Allies gained about 1,200 yards at the cost of 17,000 men. New Weapons of War *Slaughter continued year after year because many generals still clung to obsolete battlefield tactics. The combination of old ideas and new technology produced heavy losses for both sides. *In an attempt to break the stalemate in the trenches, the Germans began using poison gas in 1915. Soldiers feared its deadly greenish-yellow cloud. *Against artillery and gas, the British devised the tank. They could smash through barbed wire and clear the way for waves of infantry. Yet the tanks were unreliable and commanders did not know how best to use them. Tanks did not really affect the war’s outcome. *Airplanes. too, played a part in the war. At first used only for observation, they were later equipped with machine guns. Pilots engaged in dogfights with enemy planes. *The most dreaded of the new weapons was the German submarine, or U-boat. The Uboats attacked without warning, sinking both military and commercial ships. *Germany used submarines to retaliate against the British naval blockade of the Central Powers. The British wanted to cut off supplies headed for Germany. In return, German submarines began sinking merchant ships in an attempt to starve the British, who depended on imported food. The United States Goes to War President Woodrow Wilson had vowed the United States would remain neutral. However, several events occurred that made neutrality impossible, and the U.S. eventually declared war on the Central Powers in 1917. The Sinking of the Lusitania *When the Lusitania sailed out of New York harbor bound for England, the Germans knew that even though it was a civilian ship it was secretly carrying munitions. In early May, 1915 a German U-boat sank the Lusitania, killing 1,198 passengers (128 Americans). *The Lusitania incident convinced President Wilson of the need to prepare for national defense. The Sussex Pledge *In March, 1916 a German submarine sank the French passenger ship Sussex, killing several passengers. To keep the U.S. from entering the war, the Germans agreed to the Sussex Pledge. In it they promised not to sink merchant ships “without warning and without saving human lives.” *The Sussex Pledge bought more time for the Germans. But the sinking of the Sussex showed Congress how little time there was to prepare for war. Congress soon passed laws to build up the army and navy, and organized industries and resources in case of war. *Wilson’s goal was to work for peace but prepare for war. The United States Enters the War *Several other events would soon pull the United States into the war. *The Germans won several victories over the Russians on the Eastern Front which allowed them to focus their attention on the west, where trench warfare was deadlocked. *In 1917 (less than a year after the Sussex Pledge) Germany resumed unrestricted submarine warfare, gambling that they could crush the British at sea before the United States had time to enter the war. *In response to the German violation of the Sussex Pledge, President Wilson decided to arm American merchant ships with naval guns. The United States was now practicing “armed neutrality.” *British intelligence intercepted a coded message from the German foreign secretary, Arthur Zimmermann, to the German ambassador in Mexico. It instructed him to offer Mexico a deal. If Mexico would join Germany in an alliance against the United States, Germany would restore territory in New Mexico, Texas, and Arizona to Mexico. Wilson made public the Zimmermann Note in March, 1917, causing a tremendous amount of anti-German feeling in the United States. *Public opinion turned even more so against Germany when submarines sank several American merchant ships. *President Wilson asked Congress for a declaration of war. On April 6, 1917, Congress voted to go to war. The President hoped that it would be “the war to end all wars.” The Last Year of the War *Despite heavy fighting in 1917, the Germans remained in control of northern France and Belgium. *In October 1917 Germany and Austria crushed Italy, a member of the Allies since 1915. *In November 1917, the Bolshevik Revolution turned Russia upside down. Promising the war-weary Russians “Peace, Land, Bread,” the Bolshevik wing of the Communist Party took control, under the leadership of V.I. Lenin. In March 1918, Russia signed a treaty with Germany and dropped out of the fight. *With no opposition in the east, the Germans then began an all-out assault on the Western Front. In one week in March 1918 they marched 30 miles to the west, more than either side had achieved since 1914. *To help the British and French forces stop the German advances, the United States rushed more “doughboys” (nickname for U.S. soldiers) across the Atlantic. By the end of the war there were 2 million Americans fighting in Europe. *In June 1918, American soldiers helped block the Germans and Chateau-Thierry, about 50 miles from Paris. Intense Allied fighting stopped the German advance and began to push the enemy eastward. The tide of war had turned. *The critical battle to end the war required attacking through the Argonne Forest, a vast network of uncut barbed wire, deep ravines, dense woods, and thousands of shell craters. *For 47 days, 1.2 million American soldiers pushed toward the German lines, under heavy enemy fire. In one month, more ammunition was used than in the entire Civil War. *Among the unstoppable infantry at the Argonne were several units of black troops. Black soldiers fought bravely in all the major battles. Yet of the 200,000 African Americans sent to France, only 20,000 saw action. Army policy kept black troops separated from whites and assigned most of them to noncombat duties. All Quiet on the Western Front *By mid-October 1918, the German lines were crumbling. Allied soldiers continued to fight their way forward and on November 8, 1918 the Germans asked for the Allied terms of armistice (a truce). *On November 11, 1918, the armistice was signed, and at the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month the fighting stopped.