The End of the War
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Transcript The End of the War
The End of the War
Right before the end…
President Wilson issues the
Fourteen Points
President Wilson issues the
Fourteen Points
Jan.
1918
First five points:
End to secret agreements between nations
Freedom of the seas
Removal of trade barriers
Arms reductions
Fair settlement of colonial disputes
Fourteen Points
Next
8 points:
Dealt with specific territorial issues in Europe
and the Ottoman Empire.
Based on the principal of selfdetermination: the right of nations and
peoples to control their own fate and
decide what form of government they will
have.
Fourteen Points
Last point: called for “a general association of
nations”
League of Nations
Members would work together to keep world
peace. *collective security – joint action by
member nations against an aggressor to keep
peace.
*Other Allies don’t like his plan, but keep quiet
because they needed America’s help to win the
war.
The End
Russia
– withdraws in 1917 – Germans can
move all troops to Western Front
March 1918- launch a massive attack on
the British – Second Battle of the Somme
2 months of heavy fighting, both sides lost
about 500,000 men; German army gets
within artillery range of Paris!
American forces save the Allies and push
Germans back beyond their own border.
The End
Between
Sept and Nov 1918:
Bulgaria, Ottoman Empire, and AustriaHungary surrender
German military starts to mutiny once they
know they can’t win; revolts throughout
German cities
Nov 9: Kaiser abdicates
Armistice signed on Nov. 11 at 11 am
The Cost
65
million men fought
8.5 million died
21 million wounded
Civilian deaths/flu pandemic put death
tolls over 20 million
$200 billion – cost of fighting the war
$37 billion in estimated damages
The Paris Peace Conference
Jan.
1919
27 nations represented, but it was
dominated by the “Big Four”
Woodrow Wilson – US
David Lloyd George – GB
Georges Clemenceau – France
Vittorio Orlando – Italy
Defeated Central Powers and Russia
(Communist) not included
Conflicting Goals
President
Wilson wanted to spread
democracy and promoted “peace
without victory.”
Clemenceau wanted to crush Germany
and limit their future power
David Lloyd George – somewhere in
between
Orlando – just wanted the land Italy had
been promised; walked out when he
discovered the Allies had lied to him
The Treaty of Versailles
Required
Germany to accept full
responsibility for starting the war and pay
the Allies reparations
$33 billion (about $402 billion today)
Reduced
Germany’s size and population
by about 10%
Returned Alsace-Lorraine to France
(Franco-Prussian War 1871)
Treaty of Versailles
Limited Germany’s military to a small navy
and a 100,000 man army with no offensive
weapons.
German troops banned from the Rhineland –
region along the French border
Germany stripped of all overseas colonies
These harsh, unfair reparations sew seeds of
future conflict; leave Germany wanting
revenge. Explains why Hitler is appealing.
Old Empires Collapse;
New Countries Form
The
old multi-national empires were
broken up:
Poland was created out of land from
Germany and Russia;
Finland, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania out of
Russia.
Other nations: Austria, Hungary,
Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia
Post-War
The
League of Nations was formed to
oversee and settle disputes between
nations.
Relied on collective security – joint action
by member nations against an aggressor
to keep peace.
US Senate didn’t ratify it because of fear
of obligation in future conflicts – left the
LON powerless to keep peace.