conflict and tension

Cards (128)

  • Germany signed an Armistice to end World War One
    November 1918
  • Terms of the Armistice
    • Withdrawal of troops from France, Belgium and Luxembourg
    • Handing over of Alsace-Lorraine
    • Demilitarization of the Rhineland
    • Handing over of military arsenal
    • Payment of reparations
  • The Armistice terms were very contentious, with the leader of the German delegation who signed it being murdered in 1921 by right-wing groups
  • The Paris Peace Conference took place, with over 30 countries participating

    January 1919
  • The Big Three
    France's Clemenceau, USA's Wilson, Britain's Lloyd George
  • Clemenceau's (France) aims
    • Punish Germany for deaths, infrastructure damage and effects on French land
    • Demand maximum reparations to rebuild France
    • Break up Germany economically
    • Push German borders back to the Rhine to protect France
  • Lloyd George's (Britain) aims
    • Cautious about punishing Germany too harshly to prevent the spread of communism and allow for growth in international trade
    • Wanted Germany's colonies confiscated and British naval supremacy
  • Wilson's (USA) aims
    • Wanted a fair peace so Germany wouldn't seek revenge
    • Proposed the 14 Points including freedom of the seas, self-determination, and the creation of the League of Nations
    • Faced criticism from Americans who wanted isolationism
  • The Treaty of Versailles was the main product of the Paris Peace Conference, dealing specifically with Germany
  • Military terms of the Treaty of Versailles
    • Germany forced to demilitarize the Rhineland
    • German Army restricted to 100,000 volunteers, no conscription
    • Germany prohibited from having tanks, submarines, or aircraft
    • German Navy restricted to 15,000 men and 1,500 officers
  • Economic terms of the Treaty of Versailles
    • Germany required to pay reparations of 6.6 billion pounds
    • Saar coal fields handed over to the League of Nations for 15 years
    • Germany lost 10% of its land, 1/8 of its population, and 48% of its iron industry
  • War Guilt Clause
    Article 231 stating that Germany and its allies were to accept responsibility for World War One
  • Territorial terms of the Treaty of Versailles

    • German colonies became mandates under League of Nations control
    • Germany split in two by the Polish Corridor with Danzig becoming a free city
    • Memel given to Lithuania, Posen and West Prussia given to Poland, Alsace-Lorraine given to France, Northern Schleswig given to Denmark
  • Reactions to the Treaty of Versailles were mixed
  • French reaction
    • Clemenceau unhappy that Alsace-Lorraine and Rhineland were not fully annexed, but public somewhat unsatisfied
    • French right saw treaty as too lenient, French left saw it as too harsh
  • British reaction
    • Lloyd George happy with British naval supremacy and gaining more colonies, but privately said treaty would start another war in 25 years
    • British public praised Lloyd George as a hero, but some like Keynes and Nicholson criticized the treaty as too harsh
  • American reaction
    • Wilson moderately unhappy, felt 14 Points were ignored
    • American public saw treaty as harsh and unfair
    • U.S. Senate refused to ratify the treaty, preventing U.S. from joining the League of Nations
  • Americans felt very negatively towards the Treaty of Versailles, calling it harsh and unfair
  • Partisan political divisions and isolationist concerns about Article 10 potentially forcing the U.S. to protect other countries meant that the U.S. Senate refused to ratify the Treaty of Versailles
  • The U.S. could not join the League of Nations because the Senate did not ratify the Treaty of Versailles
  • The U.S. not being part of the League of Nations undermined the League and made it much weaker
  • Woodrow Wilson's goal of self-determination was not fully satisfied as the Treaty of Versailles was negotiated with France and Britain, which were massive global empires
  • Austria-Hungary
    • A truly multi-ethnic empire with many different ethnic groups wanting self-determination
  • The Treaty of Sèvres was signed
    10th of August 1920
  • The Treaty of Sèvres was very harsh on the Ottoman Empire, giving away significant territory to Greece, Italy, Britain, and France
  • The Locarno Treaties in 1925 aimed to improve diplomatic relations between Western European countries, leading to Germany joining the League of Nations in 1926
  • The Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928 was an unenforceable agreement between 62 countries to avoid using war to solve disputes
  • The Young Plan in 1929 revised the Dawes Plan, reducing Germany's reparations to 2 billion pounds and encouraging the withdrawal of Allied troops from Germany
  • The U.S. even took part as well as the Soviet Union following the Litvinoff Protocol of 1929
  • The Litvinoff Protocol was realistically unenforceable
  • The Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1929 was a failure
  • The Young Plan of 1929 reduced Germany's reparations to 2 billion pounds, a 20% reduction
  • The Young Plan encouraged the Allies to stop intervention in the German economy
  • The Young Plan was doomed by the 1929 Wall Street Crash
  • The League of Nations set up a disarmament conference in 1926 but Britain and France refused to cooperate
  • The World Disarmament Conference held in 1932 was a failure
  • League of Nations
    An organization for international cooperation based in Geneva, established in January 1920 by the Treaty of Versailles
  • Aims of the League of Nations
    • Disarmament
    • Improving global welfare
    • Preventing war through collective security
    • Settling disputes between countries through negotiation or diplomacy
  • Main bodies of the League of Nations
    • Council
    • Assembly
    • Secretariat
    • Permanent Court of International Justice
    • International Labour Organization
  • Council
    • The main part of the League, made up of permanent members (France, Italy, Britain, Japan) and temporary members, meeting 5 times a year and during emergencies