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NI O I T SEC ORIGINS OF THE FI RST WORLD WA R The war of 1914–18 was not known, until later, as the First World War. When it happened, it quickly became known simply as the “Great War.” The world had seen nothing like it since the wars following the French Revolution that ended in 1815 and had no reason to expect a war like it when it broke out on August 1, 1914. Many historians consider World War I to be the watershed moment of the twentieth century. By the time the war came to a formal end at 11 am on November 11, 1918,1 it had not only devastated Europe, but had also transformed the way states operated. World War I was an event that ushered in monumental changes, destroyed tens of millions of lives, brought about the end of the great continental European empires, ushered in new technologies, and transformed the global balance of power. The Central Powers included the German Empire (also known as the Hohenzollern Empire, or simply Germany), Austria-Hungary (also known as the Habsburg Empire, or simply Austria), and from October 28, 1914, the Ottoman Empire (also simply called Turkey). Bulgaria joined the Central Powers in October 1915. The Entente (also referred to as the Allies) included the Russian Empire (also known as the Romanov Empire), the French Empire, the British Empire, Serbia, Belgium, Japan, and Greece. Although Italy had been in formal alliance with Germany and Austria-Hungary prior to the war, the country ended up joining the Entente on May 23, 1915. Portugal, Brazil, and Romania joined the Entente in 1916. You should be aware that in this resource guide, we will sometimes use the shorthand of “Germany” to refer to the German Empire, “Turkey” to refer to the Ottoman Empire, etc. Also, throughout the resource guide you will notice that some terms have been boldfaced and others have been both boldfaced and underlined. Boldface indicates a key term or phrase. Terms that are underlined as well as boldfaced are 4 included in the glossary of terms at the end of the resource guide. Impact of WWI—The Watershed Event of the Twentieth Century? In this section of the resource guide, we will begin by considering a brief overview of the major impacts of the First World War. Following this, we will analyze the origins and the causes of the war. Total Casualties It is difficult to comprehend the cost of World War I from the vantage point of the United States, which suffered “only” 117,000 killed in the war (0.13 percent of the population).2 For the U.S., World War II was a much greater, i.e., more devastating, war—the U.S. suffered more than three times as many people killed in World War II (418,000). But, for many countries in Europe, World War I was every bit as deadly as World War II. In all, approximately 9 million people died as a direct result of World War I. (This does not include as many as six million civilians who died as an indirect result of the war.) France and Germany both lost more than 3 percent of their entire population in the war. If the United States had lost the same percentage as France, it would have seen 4 million dead and 10 million injured.3 Some countries suffered even more: 5.6 percent of the entire Serbian population and 3.8 percent of the Ottoman Empire’s population died in the war. The bloodshed was particularly intense for some groups. For example, 26 percent of the 558,000 Scots who enlisted to fight in the war were killed.4 The term “casualties” refers to the total of those killed, seriously injured, and prisoners of war. Approximately 15 million people were seriously injured, and roughly 7 million were taken as prison- ACADEMIC DECATHLON SOCIAL SCIENCE RESOURCE GUIDE ® *REVISED PAGE 2013 –2014 tension among the Great Powers as they jockeyed for the most advantageous position to benefit from the Ottoman Empire’s weakness. It also proved to be an important reason why Turkey entered the war on the side of the Central Powers on October 28, 1914.16 Many German-speaking princedoms and states united to form a single, powerful German state in 1871. By that time, Britain, France, Spain, the Netherlands, and Portugal had built large overseas empires over the preceding centuries. When Britain and France became the primary competitors in a race for additional colonies in the 1880s, Germany lacked the naval power and existing overseas empire to join the competition in a major way, but it did acquire several colonies in Africa and in the Pacific during the 1880s. In the three decades prior to 1914, Germany’s industrial economy and population both grew rapidly, and Germany increasingly became the most powerful economy in Europe. Vocal nationalist groups in Germany complained that it was unfair that such a powerful country had such a relatively small overseas empire. Powerful lobbies such as the German Naval League and elected officials in the Reichstag (parliament) pushed the government to build a navy that could compete with Britain and enable Germany to become more of a global imperial power. The emperor and government’s focus on a naval buildup created sharp tensions with Great Britain, though Germany’s efforts were not enough to really challenge British naval dominance. Realizing that the race for colonies was already over and that the path to empire overseas was unrealistic, German strategists and publicists who wanted Germany to become a greater empire concluded that the better path to foreign conquest was by land.17 The German right wrote about building a great land empire by conquering Slavic lands to the East. The “Pan-German League” published many pamphlets and articles claiming that there were substantial numbers of Germans living in Poland, Ukraine, and Russia and that the Slavic peoples of those regions could be conquered and pushed further to the East to create living space for the growing German population. Such views were far from universally held in Germany. Many of the mainstream parties opposed the idea of a war of conquest. But expansionist views were loudly supported in some of the popular press, and the basic idea that Germany’s path to imperial conquest and world power status lay in the conquest of Slavic lands in Europe strongly influenced German strategic thinkers.18 THE ALLIANCE SYSTEM AND MILITARY STRATEGY Germany’s potential expansion also influenced other Great Powers in Europe. France tried to stop German unification in 1870, but was soundly defeated by a combined German force under Prussian leadership in a quick war that lasted only seven weeks. The 16 peace treaty forced France to recognize German unification and to cede two regions of mixed French and German population (Alsace and Lorraine) to Germany. The desire to recover these territories was a constant concern for France. By the late 1880s, it became apparent to France and Russia that Germany’s industrial and military strength was outpacing that of either country. Neither France nor Russia stood a chance alone in a fight with Germany. Russia probably had more to fear than France, given the widely discussed designs that Germany had on conquering territories within the Russian Empire. Moreover, in early 1882, Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy signed the Triple Alliance, pledging mutual support in the event of an attack on any of the three countries. Russia and France signed the Franco-Russian Alliance in 1892, despite huge differences between them—Russia was an absolute monarchy and France was a democratic republic. The alliance obligated each power to go to war if attacked by a member of the Triple Alliance. Its aim was to create a balance of power sufficient to deter Germany from attacking either France or Russia. A key provision of the alliance required both France and Russia to mobilize their armies and reserves as rapidly as possible and deploy them immediately in order to force Germany to fight a two-front war. These alliances created a rough balance of power in continental Europe. The one Great Power that could tip the balance was Great Britain. A long history of tensions with France and Russia over imperial questions ranging from Egypt to the Russian Far East and Central Asia kept Germany hopeful that Britain would either join the Triple Alliance or would at least remain neutral during a war. But Britain resolved many of its outstanding differences over colonial issues with France and signed the Entente Cordiale of 1904. This was not a firm alliance, but it greatly improved relations with France. Only two years later, military staff from France and Great Britain began to meet to discuss potential strategies for cooperation in case of war. British suspicion of alliance with autocratic Russia was tempered when Russia’s 1905 Revolution brought about Russia’s first elected national parliament (the Duma) and introduced many elements of the rule of law. In August 1907, Britain and Russia signed an agreement settling the most hotly disputed issues of contention on the borders of their two empires in Afghanistan, Persia, and Tibet.19 While relations improved markedly between Britain and the Entente, British relations with Germany deteriorated. Germany chose to continue building up its navy and used it twice to challenge France in Morocco, spurring the Moroccan Crises of 1905 and 1911. Britain read this increasing assertiveness and naval build-up as evidence that Germany was becom- ACADEMIC DECATHLON SOCIAL SCIENCE RESOURCE GUIDE ® *REVISED PAGE 2013 –2014 Germany demanded better rations and a conclusion of the war in the East. But the announcement of the peace of Brest-Litovsk stopped opposition to the war. Half the war had been won, and there was a promise of grain deliveries from Ukraine.200 In contrast to the Austrian and Russian armies, mutinies, desertion, or willful surrender to the enemy were extraordinarily rare in the German Army. It was structured to promote unit-level cohesion, and for most of the war, soldiers were very efficiently and generously provisioned with food and drink. However, the failed Ludendorff offensive of 1918 created a new situation. It left many German soldiers in lightly fortified positions, beyond the reach of supply lines. Hunger and demoralization over the failures of the offensive and the retreats that followed led to the first major instances of desertion, feigned injury, and mass surrender.201 Estimates run to about one million German soldiers “who in the last months of the war left their units without permission.”202 On top of it all, a new, virulent and more deadly strain of Spanish flu swept through the German Army, claiming one in six.203 Immunities were weakened by hunger, and the flu also spread through the civilian populations at home.204 On September 29, Ludendorff abruptly announced to the Kaiser and the civilian leadership that the war was lost. Popular opinion swung incredibly rapidly. Wartime censorship on news from the front had led people to believe things were going well. The sudden revelation that all was lost was a massive blow. The popular mood quickly shifted toward demanding immediate peace. The Kaiser moved quickly to grant sweeping democratic changes in an attempt to get lenient peace terms from the idealistic U.S. President Woodrow Wilson. The liberal Prince Max von Baden took over as Chancellor of Germany. Organized labor was granted major concessions, including the eight-hour workday. Promises were made to extend suffrage and put the military firmly under the control of the civilian authorities. On October 28, the Chancellor introduced the first major revision of the constitution since 1871. It made the Chancellor and the Minister of War responsible to the Reichstag (parliament); required the consent of the Reichstag for treaties, the declaration of war, the conclusion of peace, and the dismissal and appointment of officers; and ended the broadly defined powers of the Kaiser. In sum, the constitution gave the Reichstag control over military and foreign affairs. This major reform was introduced under duress, as a preemptive move to improve the chances that U.S. President Wilson would help Germany conclude a more favorable peace. Kaiser Wilhelm II refused to abdicate until General Wilhelm Groener, the new Chief of Staff, gathered thirty-nine of Germany’s most senior generals. A 2013 –2014 majority said they would not follow the Kaiser if he tried to lead military forces in an attempt to restore domestic order; half doubted soldiers would even be willing to put down a communist uprising if it were to occur. According to Groener, the most repeated theme was, “The troops are fully exhausted at the moment; only the ruins [of an army] are on hand.” Groener told the Kaiser that the army would no longer follow him and on November 10, Wilhelm II was on a train to exile in the Netherlands, ending 504 years of Hohenzollern rule.205 On October 22, Admiral Hipper prepared to launch a suicidal sortie of the German fleet against the much superior British fleet plus five American super dreadnoughts (battleships) to save the “honor” of the German Navy and thereby ensure its future funding. The sailors thought otherwise and rose up in rebellion. Admiral Hipper sent the mutinous sailors to the port at Kiel. From Kiel, the sailors started a revolution, quickly seizing Hamburg and Bremen. Councils of workers and soldiers were elected, and in Bavaria, on November 7 (the first anniversary of the Bolshevik seizure of power in Petrograd), they declared a socialist republic.206 On November 9, Philip Scheidmann, one of the leaders of the German Social Democratic Party, proclaimed a republic from the balcony of the Reichstag. On the same day, Karl Leibknecht, leader of the Communist Spartacus League, proclaimed a proletarian republic in a different part of Berlin. But, events then followed a course very different from that of the Russian revolutions. The military and civilian leadership came to an agreement with the more moderate Social Democratic Party leader Friedrich Ebert. Ebert was proclaimed Chancellor on November 10 and became head of a new “provisional government” of a democratic republic. In return, he agreed not to fire the old elites in the officer corps, civil service, and judiciary; agreed to restore domestic order; and agreed to fight the revolutionary movement. The first act of the new government was to accept the armistice agreement as dictated by the Allies. The Armistice took effect on November 11, 1918, at 11:00 am. The war that nearly everyone had assumed would last a few weeks had ground on for 226 weeks. Europe, the undisputed center of the world in 1913, was left in ruins, and the wake of destruction and transformation spread out to change the entire world. Section II Summary: The Course of the War The Imbalance of Population and Economic Might Although the Central Powers had the advantage * of a good railway network that could rush forces from one front to another, from the beginning ACADEMIC DECATHLON SOCIAL SCIENCE RESOURCE GUIDE ® *REVISED PAGE 65 GLOSSA RY Alsace and Lorraine – These were two French provinces with mixed French and German-speaking populations that were annexed by Germany from France at the conclusion of the Franco-Prussian War of 1870–71. The desire to recover the provinces proved to be a major issue of contention between France and Germany, and it may have been one of the reasons for French General Joffre’s strategy at the beginning of World War I, which focused on launching a major offensive in the direction of the two provinces rather than focusing on defending against the German invasion further to the northwest. The provinces were awarded to France at the end of World War I. ANZAC – This is an acronym for the Australia and New Zealand Army Corps, active in the Gallipoli campaign and elsewhere. Armistice – An armistice marks the end to hostilities, when both parties agree to stop fighting. The armistice that ended World War I came into effect on November 11, 1918, at 11:00 am, “the eleventh hour, of the eleventh day, of the eleventh month.” Although the armistice ended the fighting, it still left many questions unanswered that would have to be negotiated during the following months. Battle of the Frontiers – This was the first major German attack of the war. The Germans concentrated their attacks on Belgian forts using “monster guns” to breech the fortresses. Once the fortresses fell, a series of engagements between the French and the Germans began on August 14 and ended with the beginning of the Battle of the Marne on September 6. This series of engagements, known as the Battle of the Frontiers, involved over two million soldiers, making it the largest battle in human history to that date. Battle of Gumbinnen – A Russian victory over German forces in East Prussia on August 20, 1914, this battle convinced German Commander in Chief Moltke to dispatch two army corps, comprising seven regular divisions (approximately 90,000 soldiers), from France to the Eastern Front to prevent a rapid Russian march to Berlin. Some historians have argued that by undermining the attacking forces, the early Russian offensive thereby “saved France.” 2013 –2014 Battle of Jutland – The Battle of Jutland began when the German Navy tried to draw the British Navy into a trap of waiting U-boats and minefields, engaging in a major battle in a place of German choosing. In May 1916, 100,000 men in 250 ships engaged in a seventy-two-hour battle. It was the largest direct clash among surface vessels in modern history to that date. The British suffered greater losses than the Germans, but strategically the battle changed little. Britain retained its naval supremacy, and the German Navy returned to port. Battle of the Somme – This British attack on German positions resulted, in a single day, in casualties that were among the worst in the history of warfare; nearly one-fifth of the entire British force was killed on the first day. One of the reasons for the failure of the attack was the German embrace of a strategy of “defense in depth,” which held the front lines thinly, reducing the number of troops exposed to bombardment and possible capture in the event of a successful offensive. The Battle of the Somme is also unique in that tanks were used for the first time, although they were only marginally effective. Battle of Tannenberg – The Battle of Tannenberg (August 26–30, 1914) was the first of two great victories by the German Army against the invading Russian armies in East Prussia (the second was the battle of Masurian Lakes, September 9–14, 1914). 50,000 Russians were killed or wounded, and 100,000 taken prisoner in the battle, which stopped Russia from advancing deep into German territory. Battle of Verdun – At the end of 1915, both sides concluded that the decisive battles would be on the Western Front. The German commander decided to lure French forces into the exposed salient at the historic city of Verdun, and then bombard them with deadly, massive artillery barrages. French commander Joffre did not think Verdun was strategically important, but French Premier Briand insisted that it was important to hold the city to keep the morale of the population high. In all, the two sides shot 10 million artillery shells with 1.35 million tons of steel at each other during the battle. In the end, all the slaughter and expenditure of shells resulted in little change on the map. ACADEMIC DECATHLON SOCIAL SCIENCE RESOURCE GUIDE ® *REVISED PAGE 87 August 21 The Germans begin withdrawal to the Hindenburg Line. September 29 Bulgaria agrees to an armistice. October 30 1918 Turkey concludes an armistice with the Allies. The German fleet mutinies at Kiel. November 3 Trieste falls to the Allies; Austria-Hungary concludes an armistice. continued November 9 Kaiser Wilhelm II abdicates and flees to Holland the following day. Germany negotiates an armistice with the Allies in Ferdinand Foch’s railway carriage headquarters at Compiegne (in northern France). November 11 Armistice day; fighting ceases at 11 am. January 5 1919 Communist revolt in Berlin January 18 Start of peace negotiations in Paris May 7–June 28 98 Treaty of Versailles drafted and signed ACADEMIC DECATHLON SOCIAL SCIENCE RESOURCE GUIDE ® *REVISED PAGE 2013 –2014