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Treaty of Versailles

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Treaty of Versailles & Interwar Period * * Thomas Woodrow Wilson Fourteen Points The idealism expressed in them was widely acclaimed Gave Wilson a position of moral ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Treaty of Versailles


1
Treaty of Versailles
  • Interwar Period

2
Thomas Woodrow WilsonFourteen Points
  • The idealism expressed in them was widely
    acclaimed
  • Gave Wilson a position of moral leadership among
    the Allied leaders
  • In order to secure support of his 14th, and most
    important, point, which called for the creating
    of an "association of nations," Wilson was
    compelled to abandon his insistence upon the
    acceptance of his full program

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Thomas Woodrow WilsonFourteen Points
  • 14 Points were for political and economic
    reconstruction
  • abolition of secret diplomacy by open convenants
  • freedom of the seas in peace and war
  • removal of international trade barriers wherever
    possible and establishment of an equality of
    trade conditions
  • reduction of armaments
  • adjustment of colonial disputes consistent with
    the interests of both the controlling government
    and the colonial population
  • evacuation of Russian territory, with
    self-determination

5
  • 7. evacuation and restoration of Belgium
  • 8. evacuation and restoration of French
    territory, including Alsace-Lorraine
  • 9. readjustment of Italian frontiers along
    clearly recognizable lines of nationality
  • 10. autonomy for the peoples of Austria-Hungary
  • 11.
  • 12.
  • 13.
  • 14.

6
Treaty of Versailles
  • Peace treaty signed (June 28, 1918) at the end of
    World War I between Germany and the Allies
  • Paris Peace Conference was the making of the
    Treaty of Versailles, which opened on Jan. 18,
    1919
  • Represented were 27 countries, including the U.
    S., Great Britain, France, Italy, and Japan
  • Neither the German Republic, which had replaced
    the imperial German government at the end of the
    war, nor Soviet Russia was invited to attend the
    conference
  • Germany signed only under duress
  • The U.S. signed but failed to ratify the treaty,
    negotiating instead the separate Treaty of Berlin
    with Germany (signed on Aug. 25, 1921)

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Treaty of Versailles
  • Germany also lost its entire colonial empire
  • Germany lost some 71,000 sq km or 13 percent of
    its European domain
  • Alsace-Lorraine was returned to France
  • Saar Basin was placed under a League of Nations
    commission for 15 years
  • recognized Danzig as a free city administered
    under the League of Nations but subject to Polish
    jurisdiction in regard to customs and foreign
    relations

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  • Germany was required to abolish compulsory
    military service
  • to reduce its army to 100,000
  • to demilitarize all the territory on the left
    bank of the Rhine River
  • to stop all importation, exportation, and nearly
    all production of war material
  • to limit its navy to 24 ships, with no
    submarines, the naval personnel not to exceed
    15,000
  • to abandon all military and naval aviation by
    Oct. 1, 1919

11
  • Germany was required to make extensive financial
    reparation
  • Difficulty arose in collecting payment which was
    made in the form of
  • Money, Ships, trains, livestock, and natural
    resources
  • War-guilt clause stating that Germany accepted
    sole responsibility for causing the war
  • This aroused intense nationalist bitterness in
    Germany
  • The treaty also required provisional payments in
    kind and cash of 20 billion gold marks (5
    billion)
  • The Reparations Commission subsequently made a
    total assessment of 132 billion gold marks (33
    billion), which the Germans accepted only under
    duress

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The Versailles Treaty Negatives /
Positives
  • A dictated peace (diktat).
  • Reparations were exorbitant (33 B).
  • Artificial boundaries separating German people.
  • Polish corridor.
  • Took away colonies/resources
  • Some nationalities became forcefully separated
  • Germany was able to pay the amount asked needed
    access to foreign markets.
  • Created new states that did reflect national
    autonomy.
  • Rebirth of Poland.
  • International body The League of Nations
  • Captive peoples were freed. No other treaty ever
    released so many subject races from domination of
    oppressive empires
  • Major weapons were eliminated in defeated nations

14
Estimated Costs of the First World War (in US
Dollars)
Total for the Allied Nations 125 690 500 000
Total for the Central Powers 60 644 000 000
Grand Total 186 300 500 000
This total equals to costs approximately 125
000 000 for each day of the war and only includes
the direct costs of conducting the war.
15
  • Germany was required by the Treaty of Versailles
    to pay reparations due its moral guilt in
    initiating the First World War. The commission
    established by the terms of the treaty set the
    total payment of reparations at
  • 33 000 000 000 (US)
  • The commission also determined that this amount
    of money was to be divided among the victorious
    Allied nations as follows

France 52 Belgium 8
British Empire 22 Other Nations 8
Italy 10
16
League Of Nations
  • International alliance for the preservation of
    peace, with headquarters at Geneva
  • League existed from 1920 to 1946
  • First meeting was held in Geneva, on Nov. 15,
    1920, with 42 nations represented
  • Last meeting was held on April 8, 1946
  • During the last meeting, the league was
    superseded by the UN

17
  • During the league's 26 years, a total of 63
    nations belonged at one time or another
  • President Woodrow Wilson presented a plan for a
    general association of nations
  • The plan formed the basis of the Covenant of the
    League of Nations, the 26 articles that served as
    operating rules for the league
  • The covenant was formulated as part of the Treaty
    of Versailles

18
  • Although President Wilson was a member of the
    committee that drafted the covenant
  • U.S. Senate never ratified the covenant because
    of Article X all members preserve the
    territorial independence of all other members,
    even to joint action against aggression
  • During the next two decades, American diplomats
    encouraged the league's activities and attended
    its meetings unofficially, but the U.S. never
    became a member
  • The efficacy of the league was considerably
    lessened without USA as a member

19
The first meeting of the Assembly in 1920
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  • One important activity of the league was
    supervision of the former Germany and Turkey
    colonies/territories
  • Territories were awarded to league members in the
    form of mandates
  • Mandated territories were given different degrees
    of independence, in accordance with their stage
    of development, their geographic situation, and
    their economic status
  • A new world concept had prompted the league's
    inception, that of collective security against
    the "criminal" threat of war

22
  • Unfortunately for the fate of the world, the
    league rarely implemented its available resources
    to achieve this goal
  • League may be credited with certain social
    achievements such as curbing international
    traffic in narcotics and prostitution, aiding
    refugees of World War I, and surveying and
    improving world health and labor conditions
  • In the area of preserving peace, the league had
    some minor successes, including settlement of
    disputes between Finland and Sweden over the
    Aland Islands in 1921 and between Greece and
    Bulgaria over their mutual border in 1925

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  • Although Germany joined the league in 1926, the
    National Socialist government (Nazi Regime)
    withdrew in 1933
  • Japan also withdrew in 1933, after Japanese
    attacks on China were condemned by the league
  • The league failed to end the war between Bolivia
    and Paraguay over the Gran Chaco between 1932 and
    1935
  • The league failed to stop the Italian conquest
    of Ethiopia begun in 1935

In 1935, Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia
condemns the Italian invasion of Abyssinia in his
address to the League.
25
  • Finally, the league was powerless to prevent the
    events in Europe that led to World War II
  • The USSR, a member since 1934, was expelled
    following the Soviet attack on Finland in 1939
  • In 1940 the secretariat in Geneva was reduced to
    a skeleton staff, and several small service units
    were moved to Canada and the U.S.
  • In 1946 the league voted to effect its own
    dissolution, whereupon much of its property and
    organization were transferred to the UN.

26
  • Never truly effective as a peacekeeping
    organization
  • Lasting importance of the League of Nations it
    provided the groundwork for the UN
  • The United Nations formed after World War II, not
    only profited by the mistakes of the League of
    Nations but borrowed much of the organizational
    machinery of the league

27
Besides Manchuria Abyssinia, Other L of N
Actions
28
L of N Compared/Contrasted to UN
League of Nations
U.N.
  • No human rights in L of N
  • Leagues Council members had no veto power, but
    unanimity was needed.
  • No commission to supervise a free zone in UN
  • Contained charters
  • Collective Action
  • Designed to promote peace
  • Assemblies
  • Council
  • Secretariat
  • Mandate commission and Trusteeship commission

29
U.N.
League of Nations
  • International Courts of Justice are same
  • US a member of UN
  • UN is more intl
  • Headquarters based in New York, L of N was in
    Geneva.
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