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I INTRODUCTION  World War I, military conflict, from 1914 to 1918,
that began as a local European war between Austria-Hungary and Serbia on
July 28, 1914; was transformed into a general European struggle by
Germany s declaration of war against Russia on August 1, 1914; and
eventually became a global war involving 32 nations. Twenty-eight of
these nations, known as the Allies and the Associated Powers, and
including Great Britain, France, Russia, Italy, and the United States,
opposed the coalition known as the Central Powers, consisting of
Germany, Austria-Hungary, Turkey, and Bulgaria. The immediate cause of
the war between Austria-Hungary and Serbia was the assassination on June
28, 1914, at Sarajevo in Bosnia (then part of the Austro-Hungarian
Empire; now in Bosnia and Herzegovina), of Archduke Francis Ferdinand,
heir-presumptive to the Austrian and Hungarian thrones, by Gavrilo
Princip, a Serb nationalist. The fundamental causes of the conflict,
however, were rooted deeply in the European history of the previous
century, particularly in the political and economic policies that
prevailed on the Continent after 1871, the year that marked the
emergence of Germany as a great world power.
CAUSES OF THE WAR ÂÂ
The underlying causes of World War I were the spirit of intense
nationalism that permeated Europe throughout the 19th and into the 20th
century, the political and economic rivalry among the nations, and the
establishment and maintenance in Europe after 1871 of large armaments
and of two hostile military alliances.
A Nationalism ÂÂ
The French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars had spread throughout most
of Europe the idea of political democracy, with the resulting idea that
people of the same ethnic origin, language, and political ideals had the
right to independent states. The principle of national
self-determination, however, was largely ignored by the dynastic and
reactionary forces that dominated in the settlement of European affairs
at the Congress of Vienna in 1815. Several peoples who desired national
autonomy were made subject to local dynasts or to other nations. Notable
examples were the German people, whom the Congress of Vienna left
divided into numerous duchies, principalities, and kingdoms; Italy, also
left divided into many parts, some of which were under foreign control;
and the Flemish- and French-speaking Belgians of the Austrian
Netherlands, whom the congress placed under Dutch rule. Revolutions and
strong nationalistic movements during the 19th century succeeded in
nullifying much of the reactionary and anti-nationalist work of the
congress. Belgium won its independence from the Netherlands in 1830, the
unification of Italy was accomplished in 1861, and that of Germany in
1871. At the close of the century, however, the problem of nationalism
was still unresolved in other areas of Europe, resulting in tensions
both within the regions involved and between various European nations.
One particularly prominent nationalistic movement, Pan-Slavism, figured
heavily in the events preceding the war.
B Imperialism ÂÂ
The spirit of nationalism was also manifest in economic conflict. The
Industrial Revolution, which took place in Great Britain at the end of
the 18th century, followed in France in the early 19th century, and then
in Germany after 1870, caused an immense increase in the manufactures of
each country and a consequent need for foreign markets. The principal
field for the European policies of economic expansion was Africa, and on
that continent colonial interests frequently clashed. Several times
between 1898 and 1914 the economic rivalry in Africa between France and
Great Britain, and between Germany on one side and France and Great
Britain on the other, almost precipitated a European war.
C Military Expansion ÂÂ
As a result of such tensions, between 1871 and 1914 the nations of
Europe adopted domestic measures and foreign policies that in turn
steadily increased the danger of war. Convinced that their interests
were threatened, they maintained large standing armies, which they
constantly replenished and augmented by peacetime conscription. At the
same time, they increased the size of their navies. The naval expansion
was intensely competitive. Great Britain, influenced by the expansion of
the German navy begun in 1900 and by the events of the Russo-Japanese
War, developed its fleet under the direction of Admiral Sir John Fisher.
The war between Russia and Japan had proved the efficacy of long-range
naval guns, and the British accordingly developed the widely copied
dreadnought battleship, notable for its heavy armament. Developments in
other areas of military technology and organization led to the dominance
of general staffs with precisely formulated plans for mobilization and
attack, often in programmes that could not be reversed once begun.
Statesmen everywhere realized that the tremendous and ever-growing
expenditures for armament would in time lead either to national
bankruptcy or to war, and they made several efforts for worldwide
disarmament, notably at the Hague Conferences of 1899 and 1907.
International rivalry was, however, too far advanced to permit any
progress towards disarmament at these conferences.
The European nations not only armed themselves for purposes of
“self-defenceâ€Â, but also, in order not to find themselves standing
alone if war did break out, sought alliances with other powers. The
result was a phenomenon that in itself greatly increased the chances for
generalized war: the grouping of the great European powers into two
hostile military alliances, the Triple Alliance of Germany,
Austria-Hungary, and Italy and the Triple Entente of Great Britain,
France, and Russia. Shifts within these alliances added to the building
sense of crisis.
D 1905-1914: Crises Foreshadowing the War ÂÂ
With Europe divided into two hostile camps, any disturbance of the
existing political or military situation in Europe, Africa, or elsewhere
provoked an international incident. Between 1905 and 1914 several
international crises and two local wars occurred, all of which
threatened to bring about a general European War. The first crisis
occurred over Morocco, where Germany intervened in 1905-1906 to support
Moroccan independence against French encroachment. France threatened war
against Germany, but the crisis was finally settled by an international
conference at Algeciras, Spain, in 1906. Another crisis took place in
the Balkans in 1908 over the annexation by Austria-Hungary of Bosnia and
Herzegovina. Because one form of pan-Slavism was a Pan-Serbian or
Greater Serbia movement in Serbia, which had as one of its objects the
acquisition by Serbia of the southern part of Bosnia, the Serbs
threatened war against Austria. War was avoided only because Serbia
could not fight without Russian support, and Russia at the time was
unprepared for war. A third crisis, again in Morocco, occurred in 1911
when the German government sent a warship to Agadir in protest against
French efforts to secure supremacy in Morocco. After threats of war on
both sides, the matter was settled by a colonial compromise between
France and Germany in November 1911. Taking advantage of the
preoccupation of the Great Powers with the Moroccan question, Italy
declared war on Turkey in 1911, hoping to annex the Tripoli region of
northern Africa. Because Germany s policy of Drang nach Osten (“drive
towards the Eastâ€Â) obliged it to cultivate friendship with Turkey, the
Italian attack had the effect of weakening the Triple Alliance and
encouraging its enemies. The Balkan Wars of 1912-1913 resulted in an
increased desire on the part of Serbia to obtain the parts of
Austria-Hungary inhabited by Slavic peoples, strengthened
Austro-Hungarian suspicion of Serbia, and left Bulgaria and Turkey, both
defeated in the wars, with a desire for revenge. Germany, disappointed
because Turkey had been deprived of its European territory by the Balkan
Wars, increased the size of its army. France responded by increasing
peacetime military service from two to three years. Following the
example of these nations, all the others of Europe in 1913 and 1914
spent huge sums for military preparedness.
MILITARY OPERATIONS ÂÂ
On a Europe thus heavily armed and torn by national rivalries, the
assassination of the Austrian archduke had a catastrophic effect.
A Diplomatic Moves ÂÂ
The Austro-Hungarian government, considering the assassination the work
of the Greater Serbian movement, concluded that the movement must be
suppressed by a military expedition into Serbia. Otherwise it might
become powerful enough, particularly if aided by similar movements
elsewhere, to cause the disruption of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. On
July 23 Austria-Hungary sent an ultimatum to Serbia submitting ten
specific demands, most of which had to do with the suppression, with
Austrian help, of anti-Austrian propaganda in Serbia. Urged by both
Great Britain and Russia, Serbia on July 25 accepted all but two of the
demands, but Austria declared the Serbian reply to be unsatisfactory.
The Russians then attempted to persuade Austria to modify the terms of
the ultimatum, declaring that if Austria marched on Serbia, Russia would
mobilize against Austria. A proposal, on July 26, by the British foreign
secretary, Sir Edward Grey, that a conference of Great Britain, France,
Germany, and Italy settle the Austro-Serbian dispute, was rejected by
Germany.
B Declarations of War ÂÂ
On July 28 Austria declared war against Serbia, either because it felt
Russia would not actually fight for Serbia, or because it was prepared
to risk a general European conflict in order to put an end to the
Greater Serbia movement. Russia responded by partially mobilizing
against Austria. Germany warned Russia that continued mobilization would
entail war with Germany, and it made Austria agree to discuss with
Russia possible modification of the ultimatum to Serbia. Germany
insisted, however, that Russia immediately demobilize. Russia declined
to do so, and on August 1 Germany declared war on Russia.
The French began to mobilize on the same day; on August 2 German troops
traversed Luxembourg and on August 3 Germany declared war on France. On
August 2 the German government informed the government of Belgium of its
intention to march on France through Belgium in order, as it claimed, to
forestall an attack on Germany by French troops marching through
Belgium. The Belgian government refused to permit the passage of German
troops and called on the signatories of the Treaty of 1839, which
guaranteed the neutrality of Belgium in case of a conflict in which
Great Britain, France, and Germany were involved, to observe their
guarantee. Great Britain, one of the signatories, on August 4 sent an
ultimatum to Germany demanding that Belgian neutrality be respected;
when Germany refused, Britain declared war on it the same day. Italy
remained neutral until May 23, 1915, when, to satisfy its claims against
Austria, it broke with the Triple Alliance and declared war on
Austria-Hungary. In September 1914 Allied unity was made stronger by the
Pact of London, signed by France, Great Britain, and Russia. As the war
progressed, other countries, including Turkey, Japan, the United States,
and other nations of the western hemisphere, were drawn into the
conflict. Japan, which had made an alliance with Great Britain in 1902,
declared war on Germany on August 23, 1914. The United States declared
war on Germany on April 6, 1917.
C 1914-1915: Entrenchment ÂÂ
Military operations began on three major European fronts: the western,
or Franco-Belgian; the eastern, or Russian; and the southern, or
Serbian. In November 1914 Turkey entered the war on the side of the
Central Powers, and fighting also took place between Turkey and Great
Britain at the Dardanelles and in Turkish-held Mesopotamia. In late 1915
two more fronts had been established: the Austro-Italian, after Italy
joined the Allies in May 1915; and one on the Greek border north of
Salonica (ThessalonÃÂki), after Bulgaria joined the Central Powers in
October 1915.
C1 The Western Front ÂÂ
The initial German plan of the campaign was to defeat France quickly in
the west, while a small part of the German army and the entire
Austro-Hungarian army held in check an expected Russian invasion in the
east. The speedy defeat of France was to be accomplished by a strategic
plan known as the Schlieffen plan, which had been drawn up by Count
Alfred von Schlieffen, German chief of staff from 1891 to 1907. The
Schlieffen plan called for powerful German forces to sweep through
Belgium, outflank the French by their rapid movement, then wheel about,
surround, and destroy them. As executed with certain modifications in
the autumn of 1914, the plan at first seemed likely to succeed. The
swift German incursion into Belgium at the beginning of August routed
the Belgian army, which abandoned the strongholds of LiÄÂge and Namur
and took safety in the fortress of Antwerp. The Germans, rushing onward,
then defeated the French at Charleroi and the British Expeditionary
Force of 90,000 men at Mons, causing the entire Allied line in Belgium
to retreat. At the same time the Germans drove the French out of
Lorraine, which they had briefly invaded, and back from the borders of
Luxembourg. The British and French hastily fell back to the River Marne,
but three German armies advanced steadily to the Marne, which they then
crossed. The fall of the French capital seemed so imminent that the
French government moved to Bordeaux. After the Germans had crossed the
Marne, however, the French under General Joseph Jacques Césaire Joffre
wheeled around Paris and attacked the First German Army, commanded by
General Alexander von Kluck, on the right of the three German armies
moving on Paris.
In the First Battle of the Marne, which took place on September 6-9, the
French halted the advance of Kluck s army, which had outdistanced the
other two German armies and could not obtain their support. In addition,
the German forces had been weakened on August 25 when, believing the
victory had already been won in the west, the German chief of staff,
General Helmuth von Moltke, dispatched six corps to the eastern front.
The French pressure on the German right flank caused the retreat of
Kluck s army and then a general retreat of all the German forces to the
River Aisne. The French advanced and, in an endeavour to force the
Germans from the Aisne, engaged them in three battles: the Battle of the
Aisne; a battle on the River Somme; and the First Battle of Arras. The
Germans, however, could not be dislodged, and even extended their line
eastwards to the Meuse north of Verdun. A race to the North Sea ensued
between the two belligerents, the objective being the channel ports. The
Germans were prevented from advancing to the French channel ports
chiefly by the flooding of the region of the River Yser by the Belgians.
The western part of the Allied line was held by the British who, in the
race for the channel, had advanced to Ypres, the south-west corner of
Belgium. After taking Antwerp on October 10, the Germans endeavoured to
break through the British positions in Belgium, but were checked in a
series of engagements known collectively as the Battle of Flanders. In
December the Allies attacked along the entire front, from Nieuport in
the west to Verdun in the east, but failed to make any appreciable
gains.
By the end of 1914 both sides had established lines extending about 800
km (about 500 mi) from Switzerland to the North Sea and had entrenched;
these lines were destined to remain almost stationary for the next three
years.
The Battle of Flanders marked the conclusion of the war of movement or
fighting in the open on the western front. From the end of 1914 until
nearly the end of the war in 1918, the fighting consisted largely of
trench warfare, in which each side laid siege to the other s system of
trenches, consisting of numerous parallel lines of intercommunicating
trenches protected by lines of barbed wire, and endeavoured from time to
time to break through the lines. In this type of fighting during 1915 in
the west, the Allies were on the offensive; the Germans, who were
engaged in a heavy offensive on the eastern front (see below), made only
a single attack in the west during the year. The principal attempts in
1915 to force a breakthrough included a British attack at Neuve Chapelle
in March, which took only the German advance line. The Germans
unsuccessfully attacked Ypres in April, using clouds of chlorine gas,
the first time in history that gas warfare was used in this manner on a
large scale. A combined attack by the British and French along the front
between Neuve Chapelle and Arras, in May and June, advanced troops 4 km
(2.5 mi) into the German trench system, but did not secure a
breakthrough. Unsuccessful simultaneous attacks were made in September
by the British in the town of Lens and French at Vimy Ridge overlooking
the town. A large-scale French attack in September on a front of about
25 km (15 mi) between Reims and the Argonne Forest, took the Germans
first line of trenches, but was stopped at the second. On the whole the
lines that had been established in the west at the close of 1914
remained practically unchanged during 1915.
C2 The Eastern Front ÂÂ
On the eastern front, in accordance with the plans of the Allies, the
Russians assumed the offensive at the very beginning of the war. In
August 1914 two Russian armies advanced into East Prussia, and four
Russian armies invaded the Austrian province of Galicia. In East Prussia
a series of Russian victories against numerically inferior German forces
had made the evacuation of that region by the Germans imminent, when a
reinforced German army commanded by General Paul von Hindenburg
decisively defeated the Russians in the Battle of Tannenberg, fought on
August 26-30, 1914. The four Russian armies invading Austria advanced
steadily through Galicia; they took Przemysl and Bukovina, and by the
end of March 1915 were in a position to move into Hungary. In April,
however, a combined German and Austrian army drove the Russians back
from the Carpathians. In May the Austro-German armies began a great
offensive in central Poland, and by September 1915 had driven the
Russians out of Poland, Lithuania, and Courland, and had also taken
possession of all the frontier fortresses of Russia. To meet this
offensive the Russians withdrew their forces from Galicia. The Russian
lines, when the German drive had ceased, lay behind the Dvina River
between Riga and Dvinsk (Daugavpils), and then ran south to the Dnestr
River. Although the Central Powers did not force a decision on the
eastern front in 1914-1915, the Russians lost so many men and such large
quantities of supplies that they were subsequently unable to play any
decisive role in the war. In addition to the Battle of Tannenberg,
notable battles on this front during 1914-1915, centred on Masuria were
the First Battle of the Masurian Lakes (September 7-14, 1914), and the
Second Battle of the Masurian Lakes (February 7-21, 1915), both German
victories.
C3 The War in Serbia  On the Serbian front considerable activity took
place in 1914-1915. In 1914 the Austrians undertook three invasions of
Serbia, all of which were repulsed; the Serbs, however, made no attempt
to invade Austria-Hungary. The front remained inactive until October
1915. Early that month, in anticipation of Bulgarian entrance into the
war on the side of the Central Powers, and in order to aid Serbia, which
would be the target of a Bulgarian attack, British and French troops
were landed at Salonica, the gateway into the Balkans, by arrangement
with the neutral Greek government. After Bulgaria declared war on Serbia
on October 14, 1915, the Allied troops advanced into Serbia. The
Bulgarian troops defeated Serbian forces in Serbia and also the British
and French troops that had come up from Salonica. Also in anticipation
of the Bulgarian declaration of war, on October 6 a strong Austro-German
drive, commanded by General August von Mackensen, was launched from
Austria-Hungary into Serbia. By the end of 1915 the Central Powers had
conquered all of Serbia and eliminated the Serbian army as a fighting
force. The surviving Serbian troops took refuge in Montenegro, Albania,
and the Greek island of Corfu (Kérkira), which the French occupied in
January 1916 in order to provide a place of safety for the routed Serbs.
The British and French troops in Serbia retreated to Salonica, which
they fortified and where they were held in readiness for later action.
C4 The Turkish Front ÂÂ
Turkey entered the war on October 29, 1914, when Turkish warships
cooperated with German warships in a naval bombardment of Russian Black
Sea ports; Russia formally declared war on Turkey on November 2, and
Great Britain and France followed suit on November 5. In December the
Turks began an invasion of the Russian Caucasus region. The invasion was
successful at its inception, but by August 1915 the hold that Turkish
forces had gained had been considerably reduced. Turkish pressure in the
area, however, impelled the Russian government early in 1915 to demand a
diversionary attack by Great Britain on Turkey. In response, British
naval forces under the command of General Sir Ian Hamilton bombarded the
Turkish forts at the Dardanelles in February 1915, and between April and
August, two landings of Allied troops took place on the Gallipoli
Peninsula, one of British, Australian, and French troops in April, and
one of several additional British divisions in August. The Allied
purpose was to take the Dardanelles; however, strong resistance by
Turkish troops and bad generalship on the part of the Allied command
made the Gallipoli campaign a complete failure. The Allied troops were
withdrawn in December 1915 and January 1916.
In the Mesopotamian Valley, meanwhile, British forces from India
defeated the Turks in several battles during 1914-1915, particularly
that of Kut-al-Imara; but in the Battle of Ctesiphon, November 1915, the
Turks checked the advance of the British towards Baghdad and forced them
to retreat to Kut-al-Imara. On December 7 the Turks laid siege to this
town.
C5 The Italian Front ÂÂ
Italy declared war on Austria-Hungary on May 23, 1915. The chief
military events on the Austro-Italian Front in 1915 were four indecisive
battles between Austro-Hungarian and Italian armies on the Isonzo River
(June 29-July 7, July 18-August 10, October 18-November 3, and November
10-December 10). The purpose of the Italian attack was to break through
the Austrian lines and capture Trieste.
D 1916: Continued Stalemate  German success in 1915 in thrusting the
Russians back from East Prussia, Galicia, and Poland enabled Germany to
transfer some 500,000 men from the eastern to the western front for an
attempt to force a decision in the west during 1916.
D1 Verdun and the Somme ÂÂ
The German plan, as worked out by Erich von Falkenhayn, chief of the
general staff of the German army, was to attack the French fortress at
Verdun in great strength in an effort to weaken the French irretrievably
by causing the maximum possible number of casualties. The Allied plan
for 1916, as laid out by commanders in chief, Marshal Joffre of the
French army and General Sir Douglas Haig of the British, was to attempt
to break through the German lines in the west by a massive offensive
during the summer in the region of the River Somme. The Germans opened
the Battle of Verdun, on February 21. After bitter fighting the Germans
took Fort Douaumont (February 25), Fort Vaux (June 2), and the
fortifications of Thiaumont (June 23), but did not succeed in capturing
Verdun. (It was here that General Henri Philippe Pétain gained
prominence as the “hero of Verdunâ€Â.) Because of the severe losses in
the battle, the French were able to contribute to the Allied offensive
on the Somme only 16 divisions of the 40 originally planned; the
offensive, which began on July 1 and continued until the middle of
November, consequently was largely in the hands of the British. They
succeeded in winning about 325 sq km (125 sq mi) of territory, but the
drive did not bring about a breakthrough. The First Battle of the Somme
marked the earliest use of the modern tank, deployed by the British on
September 15 in an attack near Courcelette. From October to December the
French staged a counter-attack at Verdun and succeeded in recapturing
Forts Douaumont and Vaux (November 2), restoring the situation that had
prevailed before February. In August Hindenburg replaced Falkenhayn as
German chief of staff with General Erich Ludendorff. In December General
Robert Georges Nivelle succeeded Joffre as commander in chief of the
French armies in the north and north-east.
D2 Russian Lossesâ€â€Romanian Defeat  On the eastern front in 1916 the
Russians staged an offensive in the Lake Narocz region about 95 km (60
mi) north-east of Vilna. Their attack, designed to force the Germans to
move troops from Verdun to the Lake Narocz region, was a complete
failure. Not only did it fail to divert the Germans in any degree from
their attack on Verdun, but also the Russians lost more than 100,000
men. In June the Russians carried out a more successful offensive. In
response to an Italian request for action to relieve the pressure of an
Austrian offensive in the Trentino-Alto Adige region (see below), the
Russians moved against the Austrians on a front extending from Pinsk
south to Czernowitz. By September, when strong German reinforcements
from the western front stopped the Russian advance, the Russians had
driven some 65 km (40 mi) into the Austro-German position along the
entire front and had taken about 500,000 prisoners. They did not
succeed, however, in capturing either of their objectives, the cities of
Kovel and Lemberg; and their losses of approximately 1 million men left
the army in a demoralized and discouraged state. The Russian drive had
nonetheless given sufficient evidence of strength to play a large part
in inducing Romania to enter the war on the side of the Allies (August
27, 1916). After its entrance into the war, Romania at once began an
invasion of the Austro-Hungarian province of Transylvania
(August-September), but Austro-German forces speedily drove the
Romanians out of that region. In conjunction with Bulgarian and Turkish
troops, the Austro-German forces invaded Romania (November-December). By
the middle of January 1917 Romania had been completely conquered, and
the Central Powers had gained a valuable source of wheat and oil.
D3 Italy and the Balkans  On the Italian front 1916 was marked by
another inconclusive battle on the Isonzo River, the fifth of a series
in that region, and by an Austrian offensive in the Trentino designed to
break through the Italian lines and reach the rear of the Italian
position on the Isonzo. The Austrians gained considerable territory in
the Trentino, but lacked the strength to accomplish a breakthrough, and
an Italian counter-offensive (June-July) succeeded in regaining most of
the captured terrain. From August to November four additional
inconclusive battles took place on the Isonzo; the principal gain on
either side was the capture of Gorizia by the Italians on August 9.
In the Balkans during 1916 the Allied powers interfered in Greek affairs
on the grounds that the Greek government under King Constantine I was,
in spite of its declared neutrality, unduly favouring the Central
Powers. Allied intervention brought about the establishment (September
29) of a provisional Greek government under the statesman Eleutherios
Venizelos, who had consistently favoured the Allied cause. At Salonica
the provisional government declared war on Germany and Bulgaria on
November 3. The government of King Constantine was still in power in
Athens and large parts of Greece, and friction took place between that
government and the Allies, who resorted to a naval blockade of Greece
and other action in order to enforce their demands that the Greeks cease
aiding the Central Powers. On December 19 Great Britain officially
recognized the provisional Greek government.
Two periods of fighting took place in the Balkans during 1916. In August
a Serbian army, brought to Salonica after having been reconstituted at
Corfu, advanced together with Russian and Italian troops against the
Bulgarians and Germans on the Salonica front. After they had gained some
initial successes, a strong counter-attack thrust them back. Beginning
in early October Allied forces began a large-scale offensive in
Macedonia. On November 19 the Allied troops captured Monastir, and by
the middle of December had reached Lake Ohrid, on the border of Albania
and Macedonia.
D4 The Turkish Dominions  Considerable military activity took place in
1916 in three parts of the Turkish Ottoman Empire: Mesopotamia, Arabia,
and Palestine. In Mesopotamia, the besieged town of Kut-al-Imara fell to
the Turks on April 29, 1916. In December of that year the British began
a drive towards the town, which they recaptured two months later. In
Arabia in June 1916 Husein ibn Ali, grand sharif of Mecca, continued the
traditional conflict between Arabs and Turks by leading, with his son
Abdullah ibn Husein, the revolt of Al Ḩijâz (now in Saudi Arabia)
against Turkish rule. Husein had the help of the British, who recognized
him as king of Al Ḩijâz in December 1916. As a diversionary move to
aid the Arabian revolt, the British in November began an advance from
Egypt, which they had garrisoned since early in the war, into the Sinai
Peninsula and Palestine, and by the early days of January 1917 had taken
several fortifications.
D5 Negotiation Attempts  In 1916 President Woodrow Wilson of the
United States, at that time a neutral nation, attempted to bring about
negotiations between the belligerent groups of powers that would in his
own words bring “peace without victoryâ€Â. As a result of his efforts,
and particularly of the conferences held in Europe during the year by
Wilson s confidential adviser, Colonel Edward M. House, with leading
European statesmen, some progress was at first apparently made towards
bringing an end to the war. In December the German government informed
the United States that the Central Powers were prepared to undertake
peace negotiations. When the United States informed the Allies, Great
Britain rejected the German advances for two reasons: Germany had not
laid down any specific terms for peace; and the military situation at
the time (Romania had just been conquered by the Central Powers) was so
favourable to the Central Powers that no acceptable terms could
reasonably be expected from them. Wilson continued his mediatory
efforts, calling on the belligerents to specify the terms on which they
would make peace. He finally succeeded in eliciting concrete terms from
each group, but they proved irreconcilable.
E 1917: US Entranceâ€â€Russian Withdrawal ÂÂ
Wilson still attempted to find some basis of agreement between the two
belligerent groups until a change in German war policy in January 1917
completely altered his point of view towards the war. In that month
Germany announced that, beginning on February 1, it would resort to
unrestricted submarine warfare against the shipping of Great Britain and
all shipping to Great Britain. German military and civil experts had
calculated that such warfare would bring about the defeat of Great
Britain in six months. Because the United States had already expressed
its strong opposition to unrestricted submarine warfare, which, it
claimed, violated its rights as a neutral, and had even threatened to
break relations with Germany over the issue, Wilson dropped his
peacemaking efforts. On February 3, the United States broke diplomatic
relations with Germany and at Wilson s request a number of Latin
American nations, including Peru, Bolivia, and Brazil, also did so. On
April 6 the United States declared war on Germany.
E1 Arras and Ypres ÂÂ
In 1917 the Allies made two large-scale attempts to break the German
lines on the western front. The first Allied attempt took place near
Arras between April 9 and May 21. While it was being planned by the
British and the French high commands, the Germans withdrew from their
original line along the Aisne to a new position, previously prepared
somewhat to the north, and known as the Hindenburg line, against which
the Allies directed their attack. Their offensive included the Third
Battle of Arras, in which Canadian troops captured the heavily fortified
and stubbornly defended Vimy Ridge, and the British forces made an
advance of 6 km (4 mi); and a battle on the Aisne, and one in the
Champagne district, both of which resulted in a slight French gain at a
cost in casualties so great as to cause a mutiny among the troops.
Because of the failure of his reckless attack, General Nivelle on May 15
was replaced by General Henri Philippe Pétain; the new commander s
policy was to remain on the defensive until US troops arrived.
The second great Allied offensive took place in June, when the British
under Haig made an attempt in Flanders to break through the right wing
of the German position. A preliminary battle at Messines set the stage
for the main attacks (July 31-November 10) at Ypres, the so-called Third
Battle of Ypres or Passchendale campaign. Desperate fighting, in which
each side suffered approximately 250,000 casualties, did not result in a
breakthrough.
E2 Use of Tanks  Other attacks of Allied forces on the western front
in 1917 included a battle at Verdun, in which the French succeeded in
regaining an additional section of the area they had lost the previous
year; and (November 20-December 3) the Battle of Cambrai, during which
the British opened the attack with a raid by nearly 400 tanks. This was
the first tank raid on such a scale in military history, and, but for
lack of reserves, the British might have achieved a breakthrough. As it
was, the British drove an 8-km (5-mi) salient into the German lines.
German counter-attacks, however, compelled the British to yield most of
the newly won ground.
After the United States entered the war in April 1917, it moved rapidly
to raise and transport overseas a strong military force, known as the
American Expeditionary Force (AEF), under the command of General John J.
Pershing. By June 1917 more than 175,000 American troops were training
in France, and one division was actually in the lines of the Allied
sector near Belfort; by November 1918 the strength of the AEF was nearly
2 million. From the spring of 1918 US troops played an important part in
the fighting.
E3 Submarine Warfare ÂÂ
In 1917 not only did the United States enter the war, but also the
Germans failed in their attempt to drive Great Britain to surrender
through the destruction by submarine of the British and Allied shipping
on which it depended for food and other supplies. At the outset the
German submarine campaign seemed likely to succeed. Towards the end of
1916 German submarines were destroying monthly about 300,000 tons of
British and Allied shipping in the North Atlantic; in April 1917 the
figure was 875,000 tons. Because the Germans had calculated that the
destruction of 600,000 tons monthly for six consecutive months would be
sufficient to force Great Britain to capitulate, they were doubly
certain of victory after April. Great Britain, however, roused itself to
unprecedented efforts to fight the submarine menace. By the adoption of
a convoy system of screening fleets of merchant vessels with warships,
especially destroyers and submarine chasers, and by the use of
hydroplanes for spotting submarines and depth charges for destroying
them, Great Britain, as the summer advanced, rendered the German
submarine campaign less and less effective. By the autumn, although
large numbers of Allied ships were still being sunk, the Germans were
sustaining heavy losses in submarines. At the same time the Allied
nations, especially the United States, were rapidly building new
shipping. By the outset of 1918 the Allies were turning out more new
ships than the Germans were destroying, and the German effort to end the
war by submarine warfare had clearly failed.
E4 Russia Withdraws  On the eastern front the dominating influence on
the fighting during 1917 was the outbreak in March of the Russian
popular uprising against the imperial government, which resulted in turn
in the establishment of a provisional government and the abdication, in
March, of Tsar Nicholas II. The provisional government continued the
prosecution of the war, in July, under General Aleksey Alekeseyevich
Brusilov, the Russians staged a moderately successful 2-week drive on
the Galician front, but then lost much of the territory they had gained.
In September the Germans took Riga, defended by Russian forces under
General Lavr Georgiyevich Kornilov, and in October occupied the greater
part of Latvia and a number of Russian-held islands in the Baltic Sea.
The Bolshevik party seized power by force on November 7. A cardinal
policy of Bolshevism was the withdrawal of Russia from the war, and on
November 20 the government that had just come into power offered the
German government an armistice. On December 15 an armistice was signed
between the Russian and Austro-German negotiators, and fighting ceased
on the eastern front.
E5 Italian Setbacks ÂÂ
The Allies suffered disaster on the Italian front in 1917. During the
first eight months of the year, despite deficiencies in troop strength,
artillery, and ammunition, the Italian forces under General Luigi
Cadorna continued efforts to break through the Austrian lines on the
Isonzo River and to attain Trieste. The Italian drives of 1917, which
resulted in the 10th and 11th battles of the Isonzo, did not attain
their objective. The latter part of the year (October-December) was
marked by a determined Austro-German offensive carried on by nine
Austrian and six newly arrived German divisions. Attacking on the upper
Isonzo near the town of Caporetto, they succeeded in breaking the line
of the Italians, who fell back in confusion from the Isonzo to positions
on the Piave River. In the disastrous Battle of Caporetto the Italian
forces lost 300,000 men as prisoners alone and, the morale of the army
broken, approximately the same number as deserters. In November British
and French troops arrived to reinforce the Italians on the Piave, and a
new Italian commander in chief, General Armando DÃÂaz, was appointed in
place of General Cadorna.
E6 Greece Enters the War  On the Balkan front in 1917, after the
Allied troops had fought several inconclusive engagements at Monastir,
at Lake Presba, and on the Vardar River, the Allies initiated an effort
to oust the Greek king, Constantine, claiming that his pro-German
sympathies and his aid to the Central Powers made it impossible for the
Allies to conduct successful operations in the Balkan region. In June
the Allies began an invasion of Greece, and at the same time exerted
diplomatic pressure on Constantine to abdicate. He did so on June 12;
Venizelos became premier of the government formed under Alexander, the
son of Constantine; and on June 27 the Greek government declared war on
all four Central Powers.
E7 The Middle East  In Palestine during 1917 the British made two
unsuccessful attempts (March and April) to take the city of Gaza. Under
a new commander, General (later Field Marshal) Sir Edmund Allenby, the
British broke through the Turkish lines at Beersheba (November),
compelling the evacuation of Gaza; and on December 9, Allenby s troops
took Jerusalem. The year also witnessed the beginning of the brilliant
leadership of British Colonel T. E. Lawrence, known as Lawrence of
Arabia, in the Arab revolt against Turkey. Arab troops led by Lawrence
took the Turkish-held port of Al Aqabah in July, and during the
remainder of the year executed many forays against the Turkish-held
Hejaz railway. The year 1917 was also marked by British successes in
Mesopotamia; they took Baghdad in March and by September had advanced to
Ramadi on the River Euphrates and Tikrit on the Tigris.
F 1918: The Final Year  The early part of 1918 did not look propitious
for the Allied nations. On March 3 Russia signed the Treaty of
Brest-Litovsk, which put a formal end to the war between that nation and
the Central Powers on terms more favourable to the latter; and on May 7
Romania made peace with the Central Powers, signing the Treaty of
Bucharest, by the terms of which it ceded the Dobruja region to Bulgaria
and the passes in the Carpathian Mountains to Austria-Hungary, and gave
Germany a long-term lease on the Romanian oil wells.
F1 Bulgaria and Austria-Hungary Withdraw  On the Balkan front,
however, the result of the fighting of 1918 was disastrous to the
Central Powers. In September a force of about 700,000 Allied troops,
consisting of French, British, Greeks, Serbs, and Italians, began a
large-scale offensive against the German, Austrian, and Bulgarian troops
in Serbia. The Allied offensive was so successful that by the end of the
month the Bulgarians were thoroughly beaten and concluded an armistice
with the Allies. The German success in Romania was nullified in November
when, with the support of Allied troops who had advanced into Romania
after the Bulgarian capitulation, Romania re-entered the war on the
Allied side. After the conclusion of the Bulgarian armistice, the
Serbian part of the Allied army continued to advance, occupying Belgrade
on November 1, while the Italian army invaded and occupied Albania.
On the Italian-Austro-Hungarian front, the Austrians, in June, attacked
on the Piave and succeeded in crossing the river, only to be driven back
with the loss of about 100,000 men. In October-November the Allies
definitely gained the victory in Italy, routing the Austrians in an
offensive that culminated in the Battle of Vittorio Veneto (October
24-November 4). The Allies completely shattered the Austrian army in
this campaign; they took several hundred thousand prisoners and the
remainder of the Austrian army fled into Austria. On November 3 the
Italians at last took Trieste, and on November 5 they occupied Fiume.
The shock of the defeat precipitated revolutionary events in
Austria-Hungary. The Czechs and the Slovaks had already set up a
separate state; in October the South Slavs proclaimed their
independence, and in December set up an independent kingdom, later part
of Yugoslavia (now Croatia, Slovenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Macedonia,
and Yugoslavia). In November the Hungarians established an independent
government. The Austro-Hungarian government at Vienna concluded an
armistice with the Allies on November 3 and nine days later the last
Habsburg emperor, Charles I, abdicated; on the following day the
Austrian Republic was proclaimed.
F2 Turkey Withdraws  During 1918 the Allies also brought the
campaigning in Palestine to a successful conclusion. In September the
British forces broke through the Turkish lines at Megiddo and routed the
Turkish army and the German corps that was assisting it; after being
joined by Arab forces under Lawrence, the British took Lebanon and
Syria. In October they captured Damascus, Aleppo, and other key points,
while French naval forces occupied Beirut, and the Turkish government
asked for an armistice. An armistice was concluded on October 30, and by
its terms the Turks were obliged to demobilize, break relations with the
Central Powers, and permit Allied warships to pass through the
Dardanelles.
F3 Last German Efforts  Despite the German victories over Russia and
Romania in 1917, at the outset of 1918 the Allies, principally through
their spokesman Woodrow Wilson, formulated war aims drastically opposed
to those already stated by the Central Powers; Wilson s peace policy was
enunciated in an address to the US Congress and comprised 14 points
designed to bring about a just peace, which were of considerable
influence in inducing the Central Powers to cease hostilities later in
the year. At the beginning of 1918 the Germans, realizing that victory
by means of submarine warfare was impossible, and that they must force a
decision on the western front before American troops might take up
positions there in force, planned for the spring of the year an all-out
effort to break through the Allied lines and reach Paris. The opening
drive of their powerful offensive, which began on March 21, was directed
at the British front south of Arras. The drive hurled the British lines
back 65 km (40 mi) before it was halted, on April 5, principally by
hastily summoned French reserves. The fear of a German breakthrough
aroused among the Allies by the German success in the first week of the
offensive caused the Allies to appoint General (later Marshal) Ferdinand
Foch in charge of assuring coordination of Allied operations; in the
following month he was made commander in chief of the Allied
armiesâ€â€French, Belgian, British, and Americanâ€â€in France. During
April a second German thrust took Messines Ridge and ArmentiÄÂres from
the British, and in June a powerful German surprise attack against the
French on the Aisne drove a salient 65 km (40 mi) deep into the French
position and enabled the Germans to reach a point of the Marne only 60
km (37 mi) from Paris. During this battle American troops first went
into action in force; together with French troops, the US Second
Division halted (June 4) the German advance in the Battle of
Château-Thierry. The Germans made additional gains of terrain in June,
but by the middle of July the force of their offensive had largely been
spent. In the Second Battle of the Marne, they succeeded in crossing the
river, but once they were across their progress was halted by French and
American troops. Sensing that the German drive had lost its power,
General Foch on July 18 ordered a counter-attack. The attack drove the
Germans back over the Marne, and the Allies took the initiative on the
western front that they retained to the end of the war.
F4 End of the War in Europe ÂÂ
ber 11, an armistice was signed in the Forest of CompiÄÂgne between
Germany and the Allies on terms laid down by the Allies; at 11 the same
morning hostilities ended on the western front.
G Colonial Warfare  The forces in the German colonies of Africa and
the Pacific, with the chief exception of those in German East Africa in
late 1917 and 1918, generally fought on the defensive. They were in some
cases swiftly overcome, and in others gradually, but by the end of the
war in 1918 practically all had capitulated to the Allies.
G1 Africa  In 1914 the German colonies in Africa consisted of
Togoland, the Cameroons (German, Kamerun), German South West Africa
(Nambia), and German East Africa. An Anglo-French force took possession
of Togoland in August 1914. In September of that year a British force
invaded the Cameroons from Nigeria, and a French force invaded from
French Equatorial Africa to the east and south of the Cameroons. After
many campaigns in which the Germans several times defeated the Allied
forces, German resistance was finally overcome in February 1916. German
South West Africa was conquered, between September 1914 and July 1915,
by troops from the Union of South Africa. The most important of the
German possessions, German East Africa, displayed the strongest
resistance to the attacks of the Allies. Early assaults by British and
Indian troops (November 1914) were repulsed by the Germans under General
Paul von Lettow-Vorbeck. In November 1915, British naval units gained
control of Lake Tanganyika, and the following year the Allied forces
(British, South Africans, and Portuguese) intended for the invasion of
German East Africa were placed under the command of General Jan
Christiaan Smuts. In 1916 the Allies captured the principal towns of
German East Africa, including Tanga, Bagamoyo, Dar es Salaam, and
Tabora, and Lettow-Vorbeck s troops then retreated into the south-east
section of the colony. Late in 1917, however, the German forces took the
offensive, invading Portuguese East Africa; and in November 1918 they
began an invasion of Rhodesia. When the armistice was signed in Europe
in 1918, the troops in German East Africa were still fighting, even
though most of the colony was in the hands of the Allies. Lettow-Vorbeck
surrendered three days after the European armistice was declared.
G2 The Pacific  In the Pacific a force from New Zealand captured the
German-held portions of Samoa in August 1914 and in September,
Australian forces occupied German possessions in the Bismarck
Archipelago and New Guinea. Japanese forces took the fortress of Qingdao
(Tsingtao), a German-held port in Shandong (Shan-tung) Province, China,
in November 1914, and between August and November of that year took
possession of the German-held Marshall Islands, the Mariana Islands, the
Palau group of islands, and the Caroline Islands. After the war ended,
Japan retained Qingdao until 1922, and received a mandate over the
Marshall Islands, many of the Marianas (including Saipan), and over the
Palau group and the Carolines.
H The War at Sea ÂÂ
At the outset of war the main British fleet, the Grand Fleet, consisted
of 20 dreadnoughts and numerous other ships, including battle cruisers,
cruisers, and destroyers; and the Grand Fleet was based principally at
Scapa Flow, in the Orkney Islands north of Scotland. A second British
fleet, consisting of older ships, was used to guard the English Channel.
The German fleet, the High Seas Fleet, consisting of 13 dreadnoughts,
was based on the North Sea ports of Germany.
H1 Early Operations ÂÂ
During 1914 no major naval engagements between the belligerents took
place in the Atlantic. In the Battle of Helogland Bight, the British
raided the German naval base at Helgoland, an island off Germany in the
North Sea, sinking three German ships. German submarines sunk several
British naval units, including the superdreadnought Audacious (October
27); and a daring attempt by German submarines to raid Scapa Flow caused
the British naval units stationed there to withdraw to bases on the west
coast of Scotland.
In the South Pacific a squadron of German cruisers under the command of
Admiral Maximilian von Spee did considerable damage to installations at
the French island of Papeete and the British-held Fanning Island
(September and October 1914); defeated a British squadron off the
headland of Coronel, Chile (November 1) in the Battle of Coronel; and on
December 8 was defeated with the loss of four out of its five ships in
the Battle of Falkland Islands by a British squadron under Admiral Sir
Frederick Sturdee. During 1914 and the early part of 1915 German
cruisers did considerable damage to British shipping in the Indian Ocean
and elsewhere until captured or otherwise put out of commission.
The year 1915 was notable for the submarine blockade Germany instituted
around Great Britain. The sinking by German submarine action of the
British passenger liner Lusitania on May 7 caused the loss of many
American lives, leading to a controversy between the United States and
Germany that almost precipitated war between the two nations. The firm
stand taken by the United States forced Germany to modify its method of
submarine warfare to the satisfaction of the American government. In
March 1916, however, the German sinking in the English Channel by
submarine of the French steamer Sussex, with the loss of American lives,
led to another controversy between Germany and the United States, a
virtual US ultimatum compelling Germany temporarily to cease its
unrestricted submarine warfare.
H2 1916 and After ÂÂ
The most important naval engagement of the war was the Battle of
Jutland, waged on May 31 and June 1, 1916, between the British Grand
Fleet and the German High Seas Fleet. Although the British losses, both
in ships and human lives, were greater than Germany s, the German fleet,
having returned to home ports, did not venture to give battle again
during the war, and the British retained their supremacy at sea.
Nevertheless, during the remainder of the war, German cruisers managed
to run the blockade of Germany, which the British had established from
the outset of the war. The Germans sank considerable tonnage of Allied
shipping in the North Atlantic and then returned to their bases. In 1917
the Germans again resorted to unrestricted submarine warfare, convinced
that this method was the only one that would defeat Great Britain. The
plan not only failed to force the capitulation of Great Britain, but
also caused the United States to declare war against Germany. The
attacks of German submarines on British convoys in the Atlantic and in
the North Sea caused much loss of shipping. As a result, in April 1918
the British attempted to block the German submarine bases at Ostend
(Oostende) and Zeebrugge in Belgium; they succeeded in partially
blocking Zeebrugge by sinking three overage British cruisers in the
harbour, but failed at Ostend. In October, however, British land forces,
advancing through Belgium, took the two submarine bases and other
Belgian ports.
H3 German Fleet Scuttled ÂÂ
By the terms of the armistice the Germans surrendered to the Allies most
of their fleet, consisting of 10 battleships, 17 cruisers, 50 torpedo
boats, and more than 100 submarines. All of the fleet with the exception
of the submarines was interned at Scapa Flow in November 1918, with
German captains and crews aboard. The Treaty of Versailles (1919), which
ended the war, provided that all the interned ships become the permanent
property of the Allies; that other warships still in German possession
also be surrendered; and that the size of any future German navy be
drastically limited. In reprisal against these terms, the Germans on
June 21, 1919, scuttled their ships interned at Scapa Flow.
The total tonnage of Allied ships sunk by German submarines, surface
craft, and mines was nearly 13 million; the largest tonnage sunk in any
one year was about 6 million, in 1917.
I The War in the Air  World War I provided a great stimulus to the
production and military use of aircraft, including the aeroplane and
airship, or dirigible balloon, and the tethered balloon, the evolution
of air warfare, and the tethered balloon. Aircraft were used for two
principal purposes: observation and bombing. For observation of
stationary battlefronts extensive use was made by both belligerents of
small tethered balloons; for scouting at sea, dirigible balloons were
extensively used, and aeroplanes were used for scouting coastal waters.
In connection with military operations on land, aeroplanes were used to
observe the disposition of the troops and defences of the enemy and for
bombing the enemy s lines or troops in action. A special feature of the
war was the raids conducted by means of dirigibles or aeroplanes on
important enemy centres far removed from the battlefront.
The first German aeroplane raid on Paris took place on August 30, 1914;
and the first German air raid on England was on Dover on December 21,
1914. During 1915 and 1916 the German type of dirigible known as the
zeppelin raided eastern England and London 60 times. The first German
aeroplane raid on London took place on November 28, 1916, and such raids
were frequent during the remainder of the war. The object of the German
raids on England was to bring about withdrawal of British planes from
the western front for the defence of the homeland; to handicap British
industry; and to destroy the morale of the civilian population. The
raids caused much loss of life and damage to property but accomplished
little of military value.
From the middle of 1915 aerial combats between planes or squadrons of
planes of the belligerents were common. The Germans had superiority in
the air on the western front from about October 1915 to July 1916, when
the supremacy passed to the British. Allied supremacy gradually
increased thereafter and with the entrance of the United States into the
war became overwhelming. In April 1918 the United States had three air
squadrons at the front; by November 1918 it had 45 squadrons comprising
nearly 800 planes and more than 1,200 officers. The total personnel of
the American air service increased from about 1,200 at the outbreak of
the war to nearly 200,000 at the end. Among the noted aeroplane
fighters, or aces, were the American Eddie Rickenbacker, the Canadian
William Avery Bishop, and the German Baron Manfred von Richthofen.
ÂÂ
World War I began on July 28, 1914, with the declaration of war by
Austria-Hungary on Serbia, and hostilities between the Allied and
Central Powers continued until the signing of the armistice on November
11, 1918, a period of 4 years, 3 months, and 14 days. The aggregate
direct war costs of all the belligerents amounted to about US$186
billion. Casualties in the land forces amounted to more than 37 million
(see the accompanying table, World War I Casualties); in addition, close
to 10 million deaths among the civilian populations were caused
indirectly by the war. Despite worldwide hopes that the settlements
arrived at after the war would restore world peace on a permanent basis,
World War I actually provided the basis for an even more devastating
conflict. The defeated Central Powers declared their acceptance of
President Wilson s 14 points as the basis for the armistice and expected
the Allies to utilize the principles of the 14 points as the foundation
for the peace treaties. On the whole, however, the Allies came to the
conference at Versailles and to the subsequent peace conferences with
the determination to exact from the Central Powers reparations equal to
the entire cost of the war, and to distribute among themselves
territories and possessions of the defeated nations according to
formulae arrived at secretly during the years 1915 to 1917, before the
entry of the United States into the war. President Wilson, in the peace
negotiations, at first insisted that the Paris Peace Conference accept
the full programme laid out in the 14 points, but finally, in order to
secure the support of the Allies for the all-important 14th point, which
called for the creation of the League of Nations, he abandoned his
insistence on some of the other points.
Trianon, Neuilly, and SÄÂvres were on the whole inadequately enforced by
the victorious powers, leading to the resurgence of militarism and
aggressive nationalism in Germany and to social disorder throughout much
of Europe.
"World War I",Microsoft® Encarta® Encyclopedia 2001. © 1993-2000
Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
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