Top Banner
WWI The Road to the Great War
23

The Road to the Great War. Imperialism As America has been building its empire, so have other nations Germany industrializes, and starts competing.

Dec 23, 2015

Download

Documents

Godwin Nash
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: The Road to the Great War. Imperialism  As America has been building its empire, so have other nations  Germany industrializes, and starts competing.

WWIThe Road to the Great War

Page 2: The Road to the Great War. Imperialism  As America has been building its empire, so have other nations  Germany industrializes, and starts competing.

SETTING THE SCENE Imperialism

As America has been building its empire, so have other nations

Germany industrializes, and starts competing with France and Britain for colonies and military bases, in places like Africa, the Pacific, and China

Page 3: The Road to the Great War. Imperialism  As America has been building its empire, so have other nations  Germany industrializes, and starts competing.

SETTING THE SCENE Nationalism

As countries start to expand, they become more protective of their national ethnicities…becoming competitive with other ethnicities as well as countries.

Countries like Russia start becoming protective of other Slavic nations like Serbia…which is going to create tensions with Austria-Hungary

Page 4: The Road to the Great War. Imperialism  As America has been building its empire, so have other nations  Germany industrializes, and starts competing.

SETTING THE SCENE Militarism

Countries no longer question if there will be a war, but when, so they start building up forces and glorifying military

Germany and Britain build up their navies to be able to compete at sea. Germany, Russia, and France build up their armies so they will be able to fight on land.

Guaranteeing that any war will involve more troops and advanced weaponry than ever before.

Page 5: The Road to the Great War. Imperialism  As America has been building its empire, so have other nations  Germany industrializes, and starts competing.

SETTING THE SCENE The Alliance System

Countries start allying with other countries as a security measure (nobody will disturb the balance of power).

Alliances make countries reckless as they start thinking that the advantages of peacetime aren’t as appealing as the benefits of war.

Page 6: The Road to the Great War. Imperialism  As America has been building its empire, so have other nations  Germany industrializes, and starts competing.

ALLIANCES BEFORE THE GREAT WAR

TRIPLE ALLIANCE TRIPLE ENTENTE

Germany Austria-Hungary Italy

Britain France Russia

Page 7: The Road to the Great War. Imperialism  As America has been building its empire, so have other nations  Germany industrializes, and starts competing.

BALKAN PENINSULA BECOMES “POWDER KEG IN EUROPE”-Ethnic Rivalries among

Balkan peoples-Russian need for

access to the Mediterranean Sea

-German need for rail link to the Ottoman Empire

-Austria-Hungary control over Bosnia, which was contested by Serbia

Page 8: The Road to the Great War. Imperialism  As America has been building its empire, so have other nations  Germany industrializes, and starts competing.

ASSASSINATION LEADS TO WAR

In June, 1914, heir to the Austrian throne, Archduke Franz Ferdinand, takes a trip to Sarajevo with his wife.

He is shot by a Serbian ultra-nationalist organization, the Black Hand

When Serbia refuses to help investigate into the assassination, Austria-Hungary declares war

Page 9: The Road to the Great War. Imperialism  As America has been building its empire, so have other nations  Germany industrializes, and starts competing.

ACTIVATING THE ALLIANCE SYSTEM – THIS TAKES LESS THAN A WEEK

1 – Austria-Hungary declares war on Serbia due to the assassination

2 – Russia declares war on Austria-Hungary to protect its Slavic ally

3 – Germany declares war on Russia because they have an alliance with Austria-Hungary

4 – France declares war on Germany to protect their alliance with Russia

5 – Germany declares war on Belgium (neutral) so that they can invade France from the north

6 – Britain declares war on Germany to defend their ally France, and neutral Belgium.

Page 10: The Road to the Great War. Imperialism  As America has been building its empire, so have other nations  Germany industrializes, and starts competing.

SCHLIEFFEN PLAN

Germany has a plan in place in case of a war with enemies on both sides…it is called the Schlieffen Plan. Phase 1: Germany

invades Belgium to quickly surround and defeat Paris, and the French

Phase 2: After Germany no longer has to worry about French resistance, they can shift their entire forces to defeat Russia

Page 11: The Road to the Great War. Imperialism  As America has been building its empire, so have other nations  Germany industrializes, and starts competing.

THE WAR

Once Germany invaded Belgium, the allies were quickly pushed back to France, and stopped at the Battle of the Marne.

At the Marne, troops literally dug-in to defend their positions, leading to a long trench warfare siege on both sides.

Page 12: The Road to the Great War. Imperialism  As America has been building its empire, so have other nations  Germany industrializes, and starts competing.

TRENCH WARFARE

In rows of dug-in trenches, usually less than a mile from the enemy, troops fought for 3 years to gain any kind of ground.

Trenches stretched from Belgium to Switzerland.

Between the Battle of the Somme and the Battle of Verdun, more than 2 million troops were killed, and only 7 miles of ground changed sides.

Page 13: The Road to the Great War. Imperialism  As America has been building its empire, so have other nations  Germany industrializes, and starts competing.

WHERE WAS AMERICA? The Popular Opinion:

American’s had no need to join a struggle 3000 miles away

No American lives were being threatened

No American property or land was being threatened

Page 14: The Road to the Great War. Imperialism  As America has been building its empire, so have other nations  Germany industrializes, and starts competing.

OTHER REASONS TO STAY OUT Socialists believed the war was

just a struggle between Germany and England over markets and land

Pacifists believed that war was evil and the US should set an example of peace for the world

Many Americans did not want to expose their families to the horrors of warfare

Page 15: The Road to the Great War. Imperialism  As America has been building its empire, so have other nations  Germany industrializes, and starts competing.

AMERICA’S INTERESTS AT STAKE Many Americans still had ties to

European nations from which they had emigrated

Americans shared common ancestries and languages

America had similar democratic institutions and legal systems

America had strong economic ties to the Allies – and sympathized with Belgium, who had tried to be neutral

Page 16: The Road to the Great War. Imperialism  As America has been building its empire, so have other nations  Germany industrializes, and starts competing.

AMERICAN INVOLVEMENT US provided many war

supplies to all of the European nations at war, items like dynamite, cannon powder, submarines, copper wire and tubing, and armored cars.

The quick outcome of the war was important, as we wanted to ensure repayment of debts

Page 17: The Road to the Great War. Imperialism  As America has been building its empire, so have other nations  Germany industrializes, and starts competing.

ANTI-GERMAN SENTIMENT

Anti-German propaganda showed how Germans were “bullying” Europe by destroying villages, libraries, and hospitals

The US wanted to prevent the German Navy from blocking and threatening US shipping

Page 18: The Road to the Great War. Imperialism  As America has been building its empire, so have other nations  Germany industrializes, and starts competing.

BLOCKADE AND RESPONSE British ships blocked the German

coast to prevent military supplies from getting in – which also prevented food from getting in (Germans starved from lack of food and fertilizer for crops). Americans were angry because it doesn’t allow American goods into Germany either.

Germany responded by sinking British and allied boats with their submarines (U-Boats), many of which had Americans on board

Page 19: The Road to the Great War. Imperialism  As America has been building its empire, so have other nations  Germany industrializes, and starts competing.

STEPS TO US ENTERING WAR

Wilson re-elected, calling for “a peace without victory…a peace between equals”

Germans announce plans to sink all ships in British waters

Page 20: The Road to the Great War. Imperialism  As America has been building its empire, so have other nations  Germany industrializes, and starts competing.

STEP #1 - SINKING AMERICANS When German submarines

sank the British liner Lusitania on May 1, 1915, more than 1200 people died, including 128 Americans (it was carrying ammunition, which Germany pointed out.) (Lusitania Reading)

Wilson demanded a formal apology, which they received.

3 more times Germany sank ships carrying Americans, and 3 more times Wilson formally protested, and Germany apologized.

Page 21: The Road to the Great War. Imperialism  As America has been building its empire, so have other nations  Germany industrializes, and starts competing.

STEP #2 ALLIANCE WITH MEXICO

US intercept “Zimmerman Note”, proposing alliance between Mexico and Germany, so Mexico could gain lost territory

Page 22: The Road to the Great War. Imperialism  As America has been building its empire, so have other nations  Germany industrializes, and starts competing.

STEP #3 – RUSSIAN REVOLUTION

Vladimir Lenin leads the Bolsheviks in Russia to overthrow Czar Nicholas II – giving Russia something of a representative government

Now war in Europe is democracy vs. brutal monarchy

Page 23: The Road to the Great War. Imperialism  As America has been building its empire, so have other nations  Germany industrializes, and starts competing.

WAR RESOLUTION April 2, 1917, Wilson

delivers his war resolution, which is passed by Congress

Americans hoped and believed that United States joined war to fight for future peace and freedom