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Causes of World War I

The identification of the causes of World War I remains controversial. World War I began in the Balkans on July 28, 1914, and hostilities ended on November 11, 1918, leaving 17 million dead and 25 million wounded. Moreover, the Russian Civil War can in many ways be considered a continuation of World War I, as can various other conflicts in the direct aftermath of 1918.

European diplomatic alignments shortly before the war. The Ottomans joined the Central Powers shortly after the war started, with Bulgaria joining the following year. Italy remained neutral in 1914 and joined the Allies in 1915.
Map of the world with the participants in World War I in 1917. Allies in green, Central Powers in orange, and the neutral countries are in grey.

Scholars looking at the long term seek to explain why two rival sets of powers (the German Empire and Austria-Hungary against the Russian Empire, France, the British Empire and later the United States) came into conflict by 1915. They look at such factors as political, territorial and economic competition; militarism, a complex web of alliances and alignments; imperialism, the growth of nationalism; and the power vacuum created by the decline of the Ottoman Empire. Other important long-term or structural factors that are often studied include unresolved territorial disputes, the perceived breakdown of the European balance of power,[1][2] convoluted and fragmented governance, the arms races of the previous decades, and military planning.[3]

Scholars seeking short-term analysis focus on the summer of 1914 and ask whether the conflict could have been stopped, or instead whether deeper causes made it inevitable. Among the immediate causes were the decisions made by statesmen and generals during the July Crisis, which was triggered by the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria by the Bosnian Serb nationalist Gavrilo Princip, who had been supported by a nationalist organization in Serbia.[4] The crisis escalated as the conflict between Austria-Hungary and Serbia was joined by their allies Russia, Germany, France, and ultimately Belgium and the United Kingdom. Other factors that came into play during the diplomatic crisis leading up to the war included misperceptions of intent (such as the German belief that Britain would remain neutral), the fatalistic belief that war was inevitable, and the speed with which the crisis escalated, partly due to delays and misunderstandings in diplomatic communications.

The crisis followed a series of diplomatic clashes among the Great Powers (Italy, France, Germany, United Kingdom, Austria-Hungary and Russia) over European and colonial issues in the decades before 1914 that had left tensions high. And the cause of the public clashes can be traced to changes in the balance of power in Europe that had been taking place since 1867.[5]

Consensus on the origins of the war remains elusive, since historians disagree on key factors and place differing emphasis on a variety of factors. That is compounded by historical arguments changing over time, particularly as classified historical archives become available, and as perspectives and ideologies of historians have changed. The deepest division among historians is between those who see Germany and Austria-Hungary as having driven events and those who focus on power dynamics among a wider set of actors and circumstances. Secondary fault lines exist between those who believe that Germany deliberately planned a European war, those who believe that the war was largely unplanned but was still caused principally by Germany and Austria-Hungary taking risks, and those who believe that some or all of the other powers (Russia, France, Serbia, United Kingdom) played a more significant role in causing the war than has been traditionally suggested.

Polarization of Europe, 1887–1914

In August 1914 The Independent magazine described the assassination of Franz Ferdinand and his wife in June as a "deplorable but relatively insignificant" reason for which[6]

the financial system of the world is in chaos, that international commerce is suspended, that industries are everywhere demoralized and families ruined, and that millions of men in Europe have taken up arms with the intent to slaughter each other.

"It may be doubted whether the Archduke [is] worth all this carnage", the magazine added. It discussed and dismissed ethnicity, race, religion, and national interests as motivations for war. The Independent concluded that "such is the ridiculous and tragical situation resulting from the survival of the antiquated superstition of the 'balance of power,' that is, the theory that the prosperity of one nation was an injury to others":[6]

Most of the people concerned in the present conflict have neither racial antagonism nor economic interests as an excuse for enmity. They are no more enemies than the Reds and the Blues into which an army corps is divided for practice maneuvers. But now the guns are loaded and those who bear them have nothing to say about whom they shall shoot.

"The only unexpected thing about the present European war is the date of it", the magazine added later that month:[7]

No war in history has been so long anticipated, so carefully prepared for and so thoroughly discussed, not only in the privy councils, but in the press of all nations. Every European soldier knew where his uniform and rifle were stored; he also thought he knew as well where he was to fight, with whom he was to fight and when.

To understand the long-term origins of the war in 1914, it is essential to understand how the powers formed into two competing sets that shared common aims and enemies. Both sets became, by August 1914, Germany and Austria-Hungary on one side and Russia, France, and Britain on the other side.

German realignment to Austria-Hungary and Russian realignment to France, 1887–1892

In 1887, German and Russian alignment was secured by means of a secret Reinsurance Treaty arranged by Otto von Bismarck. However, in 1890, Bismarck fell from power, and the treaty was allowed to lapse in favor of the Dual Alliance (1879) between Germany and Austria-Hungary. That development was attributed to Count Leo von Caprivi, the Prussian general who replaced Bismarck as chancellor. It is claimed that Caprivi recognized a personal inability to manage the European system as his predecessor had and so was counseled by contemporary figures such as Friedrich von Holstein to follow a more logical approach, as opposed to Bismarck's complex and even duplicitous strategy.[8] Thus, the treaty with Austria-Hungary was concluded despite the Russian willingness to amend the Reinsurance Treaty and to sacrifice a provision referred to as the "very secret additions"[8] that concerned the Turkish Straits.[9]

Caprivi's decision was also driven by the belief that the Reinsurance Treaty was no longer needed to ensure Russian neutrality if France attacked Germany, and the treaty would even preclude an offensive against France.[10] Lacking the capacity for Bismarck's strategic ambiguity, Caprivi pursued a policy that was oriented towards "getting Russia to accept Berlin's promises on good faith and to encourage St. Petersburg to engage in a direct understanding with Vienna, without a written accord."[10] By 1882, the Dual Alliance was expanded to include Italy.[11] In response, Russia secured in the same year the Franco-Russian Alliance, a strong military relationship that was to last until 1917. That move was prompted by Russia's need for an ally since it was experiencing a major famine and a rise in antigovernment revolutionary activities.[10] The alliance was gradually built throughout the years from when Bismarck refused the sale of Russian bonds in Berlin, which drove Russia to the Paris capital market.[12] That began the expansion of Russian and French financial ties, which eventually helped elevate the Franco-Russian entente to the diplomatic and military arenas.

Caprivi's strategy appeared to work when, during the outbreak of the Bosnian crisis of 1908, Germany successfully demanded that Russia step back and demobilize.[13] When Germany asked Russia the same thing later, Russia refused, which finally helped precipitate the war.

French distrust of Germany

 
American cartoon showing territorial dispute between France and Germany over Alsace-Lorraine, 1898

Some of the distant origins of World War I can be seen in the results and consequences of the Franco-Prussian War in 1870 and 1871 and the concurrent unification of Germany. Germany had won decisively and established a powerful empire, but France fell into chaos and experienced a years-long decline in its military power. A legacy of animosity grew between France and Germany after the German annexation of Alsace-Lorraine. The annexation caused widespread resentment in France, giving rise to the desire for revenge that was known as revanchism. French sentiment was based on a desire to avenge military and territorial losses and the displacement of France as the pre-eminent continental military power.[14] Bismarck was wary of the French desire for revenge and achieved peace by isolating France and by balancing the ambitions of Austria-Hungary and Russia in the Balkans. During his later years, he tried to placate the French by encouraging their overseas expansion. However, anti-German sentiment remained.[15]

France eventually recovered from its defeat, paid its war indemnity, and rebuilt its military strength. However, France was smaller than Germany in terms of population and industry and therefore many French felt insecure next to a more powerful neighbor.[16] By the 1890s, the desire for revenge over Alsace-Lorraine was no longer a major factor for the leaders of France but remained a force in public opinion. Jules Cambon, the French ambassador to Berlin (1907–1914), worked hard to secure a détente, but French leaders decided that Berlin was trying to weaken the Triple Entente and was not sincere in seeking peace. The French consensus was that war was inevitable.[17]

British alignment towards France and Russia, 1898–1907: The Triple Entente

After Bismarck's removal in 1890, French efforts to isolate Germany became successful. With the formation of the informal Triple Entente, Germany began to feel encircled.[18] French Foreign Minister Théophile Delcassé went to great pains to woo Russia and Britain. Key markers were the 1894 Franco-Russian Alliance, the 1904 Entente Cordiale with Britain, and the 1907 Anglo-Russian Convention, which led to the Triple Entente. France's informal alignment with Britain and its formal alliance with Russia against Germany and Austria eventually led Russia and Britain to enter World War I as France's allies.[19][20]

Britain abandoned its policy of splendid isolation in the 1900s, after it had been isolated during the Second Boer War. Britain concluded agreements, limited to colonial affairs, with its two major colonial rivals: the Entente Cordiale with France in 1904 and the Anglo-Russian Entente in 1907. Some historians see Britain's alignment as principally a reaction to an assertive German foreign policy and the buildup of its navy from 1898 that led to the Anglo-German naval arms race.[21][22]

Other scholars, most notably Niall Ferguson, argue that Britain chose France and Russia over Germany because Germany was too weak an ally to provide an effective counterbalance to the other powers and could not provide Britain with the imperial security that was achieved by the Entente agreements.[23] In the words of the British diplomat Arthur Nicolson, it was "far more disadvantageous to us to have an unfriendly France and Russia than an unfriendly Germany."[24] Ferguson argues that the British government rejected German alliance overtures "not because Germany began to pose a threat to Britain, but, on the contrary because they realized she did not pose a threat."[25] The impact of the Triple Entente was therefore twofold by improving British relations with France and its ally, Russia, and showing the importance to Britain of good relations with Germany. It was "not that antagonism toward Germany caused its isolation, but rather that the new system itself channeled and intensified hostility towards the German Empire."[26]

The Triple Entente between Britain, France, and Russia is often compared to the Triple Alliance between Germany, Austria–Hungary and Italy, but historians caution against that comparison as simplistic. The Entente, in contrast to the Triple Alliance and the Franco-Russian Alliance, was not an alliance of mutual defence, and so in 1914 Britain felt free to make its own foreign policy decisions. As the British Foreign Office official Eyre Crowe minuted: "The fundamental fact of course is that the Entente is not an alliance. For purposes of ultimate emergencies it may be found to have no substance at all. For the Entente is nothing more than a frame of mind, a view of general policy which is shared by the governments of two countries, but which may be, or become, so vague as to lose all content."[27]

A series of diplomatic incidents between 1905 and 1914 heightened tensions between the Great Powers and reinforced the existing alignments, beginning with the First Moroccan Crisis.

First Moroccan Crisis, 1905–06: Strengthening the Entente

The First Moroccan Crisis was an international dispute between March 1905 and May 1906 over the status of Morocco. The crisis worsened German relations with both France and Britain, and helped ensure the success of the new Entente Cordiale. In the words of the historian Christopher Clark, "The Anglo-French Entente was strengthened rather than weakened by the German challenge to France in Morocco."[28] Due to this crisis, Spain turned to the United Kingdom and France, and signed the Pact of Cartagena of 1907. Spain received British help to build the new España-class battleship.

Bosnian Crisis, 1908: Worsening relations of Russia and Serbia with Austria-Hungary

In 1908, Austria-Hungary announced its annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, provinces in the Balkans. Bosnia and Herzegovina had been nominally under the sovereignty of the Ottoman Empire but administered by Austria-Hungary since the Congress of Berlin in 1878. The announcement upset the fragile balance of power in the Balkans and enraged Serbia and pan-Slavic nationalists throughout Europe. The weakened Russia was forced to submit to its humiliation, but its foreign office still viewed Austria-Hungary's actions as overly aggressive and threatening. Russia's response was to encourage pro-Russian and anti-Austrian sentiment in Serbia and other Balkan provinces, provoking Austrian fears of Slavic expansionism in the region.[29]

Agadir crisis in Morocco, 1911

 
French troops in Morocco, 1912

Imperial rivalries pushed France, Germany, and Britain to compete for control of Morocco, leading to a short-lived war scare in 1911. In the end, France established a protectorate over Morocco that increased European tensions. The Agadir Crisis resulted from the deployment of a substantial force of French troops into the interior of Morocco in April 1911. Germany reacted by sending the gunboat SMS Panther to the Moroccan port of Agadir on 1 July 1911. The main result was deeper suspicion between London and Berlin and closer military ties between London and Paris.[30][31]

British backing of France during the crisis reinforced the Entente between the two countries and with Russia, increased Anglo-German estrangement, and deepened the divisions that would erupt in 1914.[32] In terms of internal British jousting, the crisis was part of a five-year struggle inside the British cabinet between Radical isolationists and the Liberal Party's imperialist interventionists. The interventionists sought to use the Triple Entente to contain German expansion. The Radical isolationists obtained an agreement for official cabinet approval of all initiatives that might lead to war. However, the interventionists were joined by the two leading Radicals, David Lloyd George and Winston Churchill. Lloyd George's famous Mansion House speech of 21 July 1911 angered the Germans and encouraged the French.[33]

The crisis led British Foreign Secretary Edward Grey, a Liberal, and French leaders to make a secret naval agreement by which the Royal Navy would protect the northern coast of France from German attack, and France agreed to concentrate the French Navy in the western Mediterranean and to protect British interests there. France was thus able to guard its communications with its North African colonies, and Britain to concentrate more force in home waters to oppose the German High Seas Fleet. The British cabinet was not informed of the agreement until August 1914. Meanwhile, the episode strengthened the hand of German Admiral Alfred von Tirpitz, who was calling for a greatly-increased navy and obtained it in 1912.[34]

The American historian Raymond James Sontag argues that Agadir was a comedy of errors that became a tragic prelude to the World War I:

The crisis seems comic--its obscure origin, the questions at stake, the conduct of the actors--had comic. The results were tragic. Tension between France and Germany and between Germany and England have been increased; the armaments race receive new impetus; the conviction that an early war was inevitable spread through the governing class of Europe.[35]

Italo-Turkish War: Isolation of the Ottomans, 1911–1912

 
Mustafa Kemal (left) with an Ottoman military officer and Bedouin forces in Derna, Tripolitania Vilayet, 1912

In the Italo-Turkish War, the Kingdom of Italy defeated the Ottoman Empire in North Africa in 1911–1912.[36] Italy easily captured the important coastal cities, but its army failed to advance far into the interior. Italy captured the Ottoman Tripolitania Vilayet, a province whose most notable subprovinces, or sanjaks, were Fezzan, Cyrenaica, and Tripoli itself. The territories together formed what was later known as Italian Libya. The main significance for World War I was that it was now clear that no Great Power still appeared to wish to support the Ottoman Empire, which paved the way for the Balkan Wars. Christopher Clark stated, "Italy launched a war of conquest on an African province of the Ottoman Empire, triggering a chain of opportunistic assaults on Ottoman territories across the Balkans. The system of geographical balances that had enabled local conflicts to be contained was swept away." [37]

Balkan Wars, 1912–13: Growth of Serbian and Russian power

The Balkan Wars were two conflicts that took place in the Balkan Peninsula in southeastern Europe in 1912 and 1913. Four Balkan states defeated the Ottoman Empire in the first war; one of them, Bulgaria, was defeated in the second war. The Ottoman Empire lost nearly all of its territory in Europe. Austria-Hungary, although not a combatant, was weakened, as a much-enlarged Kingdom of Serbia pushed for union of all South Slavs.

The Balkan Wars in 1912–1913 increased international tension between Russia and Austria-Hungary. It also led to a strengthening of Serbia and a weakening of the Ottoman Empire and Bulgaria, which might otherwise have kept Serbia under control, thus disrupting the balance of power in Europe toward Russia.

Russia initially agreed to avoid territorial changes, but later in 1912, it supported Serbia's demand for an Albanian port. The London Conference of 1912–13 agreed to create an independent Albania, but both Serbia and Montenegro refused to comply. After an Austrian and then an international naval demonstration in early 1912 and Russia's withdrawal of support, Serbia backed down. Montenegro was not as compliant, and on May 2, the Austrian council of ministers met and decided to give Montenegro a last chance to comply, or it would resort to military action. However, seeing the Austro-Hungarian military preparations, the Montenegrins requested for the ultimatum to be delayed, and they complied.[38]

 
Territorial gains of the Balkan states after the Balkan Wars

The Serbian government, having failed to get Albania, now demanded for the other spoils of the First Balkan War to be reapportioned, and Russia failed to pressure Serbia to back down. Serbia and Greece allied against Bulgaria, which responded with a pre-emptive strike against their forces and so began the Second Balkan War.[39] The Bulgarian army crumbled quickly after the Ottoman Empire and Romania joined the war.

The Balkan Wars strained the German alliance with Austria-Hungary. The attitude of the German government to Austro-Hungarian requests of support against Serbia was initially divided and inconsistent. After the German Imperial War Council of 8 December 1912, it was clear that Germany was not ready to support Austria-Hungary in a war against Serbia and its likely allies.

In addition, German diplomacy before, during, and after the Second Balkan War was pro-Greek and pro-Romanian and against Austria-Hungary's increasing pro-Bulgarian sympathies. The result was tremendous damage to relations between both empires. Austro-Hungarian Foreign Minister Leopold von Berchtold remarked to the German ambassador, Heinrich von Tschirschky in July 1913, "Austria-Hungary might as well belong 'to the other grouping' for all the good Berlin had been."[40]

In September 1913, it was learned that Serbia was moving into Albania, and Russia was doing nothing to restrain it, and the Serbian government would not guarantee to respect Albania's territorial integrity and suggested that some frontier modifications would occur. In October 1913, the council of ministers decided to send Serbia a warning followed by an ultimatum for Germany and Italy to be notified of some action and asked for support and for spies to be sent to report if there was an actual withdrawal. Serbia responded to the warning with defiance, and the ultimatum was dispatched on October 17 and received the following day. It demanded for Serbia to evacuate from Albania within eight days. After Serbia complied, the Kaiser made a congratulatory visit to Vienna to try to fix some of the damage done earlier in the year.[41]

By then, Russia had mostly recovered from its defeat in the Russo-Japanese War, and the calculations of Germany and Austria were driven by a fear that Russia would eventually become too strong to be challenged. The conclusion was that any war with Russia had to occur within the next few years to have any chance of success.[42]

Franco-Russian Alliance changes to Balkan inception scenario, 1911–1913

The original Franco-Russian alliance was formed to protect both France and Russia from a German attack. In the event of such an attack, both states would mobilize in tandem, placing Germany under the threat of a two-front war. However, there were limits placed on the alliance so that it was essentially defensive in character.

Throughout the 1890s and the 1900s, the French and the Russians made clear the limits of the alliance did not extend to provocations caused by each other's adventurous foreign policy. For example, Russia warned France that the alliance would not operate if the French provoked the Germans in North Africa. Equally, the French insisted that the Russians should not use the alliance to provoke Austria-Hungary or Germany in the Balkans and that France did not recognize in the Balkans a vital strategic interest for France or Russia.

That changed in the last 18 to 24 months before the outbreak of the war. At the end of 1911, particularly during the Balkan Wars in 1912–1913, the French view changed to accept the importance of the Balkans to Russia. Moreover, France clearly stated that if, as a result of a conflict in the Balkans, war broke out between Austria-Hungary and Serbia, France would stand by Russia. Thus, the alliance changed in character and Serbia now became a security salient for Russia and France. A war of Balkan inception, regardless of who started such a war, would cause the alliance would respond by viewing the conflict as a casus foederis, a trigger for the alliance. Christopher Clark described that change as "a very important development in the pre-war system which made the events of 1914 possible."[43] Otte also agrees that France became significantly less keen on restraining Russia after the Austro-Serbian crisis of 1912, and sought to embolden Russia against Austria. The Russian ambassador conveyed Poincare's message as saying that "if Russia wages war, France also wages war."[44]

Liman von Sanders Affair: 1913-14

This was a crisis caused by the appointment of an Imperial German Army officer, Otto Liman von Sanders, to command the Ottoman First Army Corps guarding Constantinople and the subsequent Russian objections. In November, 1913, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Sazonov complained to Berlin that the Sanders mission was an "openly hostile act." In addition to threatening Russia's foreign trade, half of which flowed through the Turkish Straits, the mission raised the possibility of a German-led Ottoman assault on Russia's Black Sea ports, and it imperiled Russian plans for expansion in eastern Anatolia. A compromise arrangement was agreed for Sanders to be appointed to the rather less senior and less influential position of Inspector General in January 1914.[45] When the war came Sanders provided only limited help to the Ottoman forces.[46]

Anglo-German détente, 1912–14

Historians have cautioned that taken together, the preceding crises should not be seen as an argument that a European war was inevitable in 1914.

 
The Anglo-German naval arms race became a considerable source of tension between Germany and Britain prior to World War I. Royal Navy warships pictured above in battle formation.

Although the Haldane Mission of February 1912 failed to halt the Anglo-German naval arms race, the race suddenly paused in late 1912 as Germany cut its naval budget. In April 1913, Britain and Germany signed an agreement over the African territories of the Portuguese Empire, which was expected to collapse imminently. (That empire lasted into the 1970s.) Moreover, the Russians were again threatening British interests in Persia and India. The British were "deeply annoyed by St Petersburg's failure to observe the terms of the agreement struck in 1907 and began to feel an arrangement of some kind with Germany might serve as a useful corrective."[24] Despite the infamous 1908 interview in The Daily Telegraph, which implied that Kaiser Wilhelm wanted war, he came to be regarded as a guardian of peace. After the Moroccan Crisis, the Anglo-German press wars, previously an important feature of international politics during the first decade of the century, virtually ceased. In early 1913, H. H. Asquith stated, "Public opinion in both countries seems to point to an intimate and friendly understanding." The end of the naval arms race, the relaxation of colonial rivalries, and the increased diplomatic co-operation in the Balkans all resulted in an improvement in Germany's image in Britain by the eve of the war.[47]

The British diplomat Arthur Nicolson wrote in May 1914, "Since I have been at the Foreign Office I have not seen such calm waters."[48] The Anglophile German Ambassador Karl Max, Prince Lichnowsky, deplored that Germany had acted hastily without waiting for the British offer of mediation in July 1914 to be given a chance.

The July Crisis

Full article: July Crisis

Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand by Serbian irredentists, 28 June 1914

 
Grave implications of the assassination were immediately recognized, as in this 29 June article with subtitles "War Sequel?" and "War May Result", and stating the assassination was "engineered by persons having a more mature organizing ability than that of the youthful assassins".[49]

On 28 June 1914, Archduke Franz Ferdinand, the heir presumptive to the Austro-Hungarian throne, and his wife, Sophie, Duchess of Hohenberg, are shot dead by two gun shots[50] in Sarajevo by Gavrilo Princip, one of a group of six assassins (five Serbs and one Bosniak) co-ordinated by Danilo Ilić, a Bosnian Serb and a member of the Black Hand secret society.

The assassination is significant because it was perceived by Austria-Hungary as an existential challenge and so was viewed as providing a casus belli with Serbia. Emperor Franz Josef was 84 and so the assassination of his heir, so soon before he was likely to hand over the crown, was seen as a direct challenge to the empire. Many ministers in Austria, especially Berchtold, argue that the act must be avenged.[51] Moreover, the Archduke had been a decisive voice for peace in the previous years but was now removed from the discussions. The assassination triggered the July Crisis, which turned a local conflict into a European and later a world war.

Domestic political factors

German domestic politics

Left-wing parties, especially the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD), made large gains in the 1912 German federal election. The German government was still dominated by the Prussian Junkers, who feared the rise of left-wing parties. Fritz Fischer famously argued that they deliberately sought an external war to distract the population and to whip up patriotic support for the government.[52] Indeed, one German military leader, Moritz von Lynker, the chief of the military cabinet, wanted war in 1909 because it was "desirable in order to escape from difficulties at home and abroad."[53] The Conservative Party leader Ernst von Heydebrand und der Lasa suggested that "a war would strengthen patriarchal order."[54]

Other authors argue that German conservatives were ambivalent about a war for fear that losing a war would have disastrous consequences and believed that even a successful war might alienate the population if it was lengthy or difficult.[23] Scenes of mass "war euphoria" were often doctored for propaganda purposes, and even the scenes which were genuine would not reflect the general population. Many German people complained of a need to conform to the euphoria around them, which allowed later Nazi propagandists to "foster an image of national fulfillment later destroyed by wartime betrayal and subversion culminating in the alleged Dolchstoss (stab in the back) of the army by socialists."[55]

Drivers of Austro-Hungarian policy

The argument that Austria-Hungary was a moribund political entity, whose disappearance was only a matter of time, was deployed by hostile contemporaries to suggest that its efforts to defend its integrity during the last years before the war were, in some sense, illegitimate.[56]

Clark states, "Evaluating the prospects of the Austro-Hungarian empire on the eve of the first world war confronts us in an acute way with the problem of temporal perspective.... The collapse of the empire amid war and defeat in 1918 impressed itself upon the retrospective view of the Habsburg lands, overshadowing the scene with auguries of imminent and ineluctable decline."[57]

It is true that Austro-Hungarian politics in the decades before the war were increasingly dominated by the struggle for national rights among the empire's eleven official nationalities: Germans, Hungarians, Czechs, Slovaks, Slovenes, Croats, Serbs, Romanians, Ruthenians (Ukrainians), Poles, and Italians. However, before 1914, radical nationalists seeking full separation from the empire were still a small minority, and Austria-Hungary's political turbulence was more noisy than deep.[citation needed]

In fact, in the decade before the war, the Habsburg lands passed through a phase of strong widely shared economic growth. Most inhabitants associated the Habsburgs with the benefits of orderly government, public education, welfare, sanitation, the rule of law, and the maintenance of a sophisticated infrastructure.

Christopher Clark states: "Prosperous and relatively well administered, the empire, like its elderly sovereign, exhibited a curious stability amid turmoil. Crises came and went without appearing to threaten the existence of the system as such. The situation was always, as the Viennese journalist Karl Kraus quipped, 'desperate but not serious'."[58]

Jack Levy and William Mulligan argue that the death of Franz Ferdinand itself was a significant factor in helping escalate the July Crisis into a war by killing a powerful proponent for peace and thus encouraged a more belligerent decision-making process.[59]

Drivers of Serbian policy

The principal aims of Serbian policy were to consolidate the Russian-backed expansion of Serbia in the Balkan Wars and to achieve dreams of a Greater Serbia, which included the unification of lands with large ethnic Serb populations in Austria-Hungary, including Bosnia [60]

Underlying that was a culture of extreme nationalism and a cult of assassination, which romanticized the slaying of the Ottoman Sultan Murad I as the heroic epilogue to the otherwise-disastrous Battle of Kosovo on 28 June 1389. Clark states: "The Greater Serbian vision was not just a question of government policy, however, or even of propaganda. It was woven deeply into the culture and identity of the Serbs."[60] Famed Serbian-American scientist Michael Pupin, for example, in July 1914 explicitly connected the Battle of Kosovo ("a natural heritage of every true Serb") to Franz Ferdinand's assassination. He wrote that the battle's "memory always served as a reminder to the Serbs that they must avenge the wrongs perpetrated upon their race".[61]

Serbian policy was complicated by the fact that the main actors in 1914 were both the official Serb government, led by Nikola Pašić, and the "Black Hand" terrorists, led by the head of Serb military intelligence, known as Apis. The Black Hand believed that a Greater Serbia would be achieved by provoking a war with Austria-Hungary by an act of terror. The war would be won with Russian backing.

The official government position was to focus on consolidating the gains made during the exhausting Balkan War and to avoid further conflicts. That official policy was temporized by the political necessity of simultaneously and clandestinely supporting dreams of a Greater Serbian state in the long term.[62] The Serbian government found it impossible to put an end to the machinations of the Black Hand for fear it would itself be overthrown. Clark states: "Serbian authorities were partly unwilling and partly unable to suppress the irredentist activity that had given rise to the assassinations in the first place".[63]

Russia tended to support Serbia as a fellow Slavic state, considered Serbia its "client," and encouraged Serbia to focus its irredentism against Austria-Hungary because it would discourage conflict between Serbia and Bulgaria, another prospective Russian ally, in Macedonia.

Imperialism

Impact of colonial rivalry and aggression on Europe in 1914

 
World empires and colonies around 1914

Imperial rivalry and the consequences of the search for imperial security or for imperial expansion had important consequences for the origins of World War I.

Imperial rivalries between France, Britain, Russia and Germany played an important part in the creation of the Triple Entente and the relative isolation of Germany. Imperial opportunism, in the form of the Italian attack on Ottoman Libyan provinces, also encouraged the Balkan wars of 1912–13, which changed the balance of power in the Balkans to the detriment of Austria-Hungary.

Some historians, such as Margaret MacMillan, believe that Germany created its own diplomatic isolation in Europe, in part by an aggressive and pointless imperial policy known as Weltpolitik. Others, such as Clark, believe that German isolation was the unintended consequence of a détente between Britain, France, and Russia. The détente was driven by Britain's desire for imperial security in relation to France in North Africa and to Russia in Persia and India.

Either way, the isolation was important because it left Germany few options but to ally itself more strongly with Austria-Hungary, leading ultimately to unconditional support for Austria-Hungary's punitive war on Serbia during the July Crisis.

German isolation: a consequence of Weltpolitik?

Otto von Bismarck disliked the idea of an overseas empire but supported France's colonization in Africa because it diverted the French government, attention, and resources away from Continental Europe and revanchism after 1870. Germany's "New Course" in foreign affairs, Weltpolitik ("world policy"), was adopted in the 1890s after Bismarck's dismissal.

Its aim was ostensibly to transform Germany into a global power through assertive diplomacy, the acquisition of overseas colonies, and the development of a large navy.

Some historians, notably MacMillan and Hew Strachan, believe that a consequence of the policy of Weltpolitik and Germany's associated assertiveness was to isolate it. Weltpolitik, particularly as expressed in Germany's objections to France's growing influence in Morocco in 1904 and 1907, also helped cement the Triple Entente. The Anglo-German naval race also isolated Germany by reinforcing Britain's preference for agreements with Germany's continental rivals: France and Russia.[64]

German isolation: a consequence of the Triple Entente?

Historians like Ferguson and Clark believe that Germany's isolation was the unintended consequences of the need for Britain to defend its empire against threats from France and Russia. They also downplay the impact of Weltpolitik and the Anglo-German naval race, which ended in 1911.

Britain and France signed a series of agreements in 1904, which became known as the Entente Cordiale. Most importantly, it granted freedom of action to Britain in Egypt and to France in Morocco. Equally, the 1907 Anglo-Russian Convention greatly improved British–Russian relations by solidifying boundaries that identified respective control in Persia, Afghanistan, and Tibet.

The alignment between Britain, France, and Russia became known as the Triple Entente. However, the Triple Entente was not conceived as a counterweight to the Triple Alliance but as a formula to secure imperial security between the three powers.[65] The impact of the Triple Entente was twofold: improving British relations with France and its ally, Russia, and showing the importance to Britain of good relations with Germany. Clark states it was "not that antagonism toward Germany caused its isolation, but rather that the new system itself channeled and intensified hostility towards the German Empire."[66]

Imperial opportunism

The Italo-Turkish War of 1911–1912 was fought between the Ottoman Empire and the Kingdom of Italy in North Africa. The war made it clear that no great power still appeared to wish to support the Ottoman Empire, which paved the way for the Balkan Wars.

The status of Morocco had been guaranteed by international agreement, and when France attempted a great expansion of its influence there without the assent of all other signatories, Germany opposed and prompted the Moroccan Crises: the Tangier Crisis of 1905 and the Agadir Crisis of 1911. The intent of German policy was to drive a wedge between the British and French, but in both cases, it produced the opposite effect and Germany was isolated diplomatically, most notably by lacking the support of Italy despite it being in the Triple Alliance. The French protectorate over Morocco was established officially in 1912.

In 1914, however, the African scene was peaceful. The continent was almost fully divided up by the imperial powers, with only Liberia and Ethiopia still independent. There were no major disputes there pitting any two European powers against each other.[67]

Marxist interpretation

Marxism attributes war to economic interests and rivalries, in this case, imperialism. Vladimir Lenin argued that "imperialism is the monopoly stage of capitalism," which emerges from the "free competition" stage of capitalism and is characterized by the presence of "five basic features":

"(1) the concentration of production and capital has developed to such a high stage that it has created monopolies which play a decisive role in economic life; (2) the merging of bank capital with industrial capital, and the creation, on the basis of this 'finance capital,' of a financial oligarchy; (3) the export of capital as distinguished from the export of commodities acquires exceptional importance; (4) the formation of international monopolist capitalist associations which share the world among themselves and (5) the territorial division of the whole world among the biggest capitalist powers is completed."[68]

Lenin concluded that these five features of imperialism had been established by the turn of the 20th century, after the great powers had spent the final decades of the prior century acquiring nearly all the remaining territory of the world that had not yet been colonized.[69] The largest and most lucrative uncolonized or semi-colonized territories at the time of the war were that of Persia (Iran), Turkey (including all of the pre-industrial territories of the declining Ottoman Empire), and most of China beyond the treaty ports.[69] Having completed the division of the world among themselves at the beginning of the century, the developed capitalist states would thereafter compete for hegemony in the form of a redivision of those territories, both in the industrialized areas (e.g., "German appetite for Belgium; French appetite for Lorraine"), and in primarily agrarian areas.[68]

In the final analysis, the conflict at the start of the war reflected the present state of that division among the capitalist powers seeking to export their capital abroad. Britain and France, chiefly the former, represented on the one side countries that were the first to industrialize under capitalism and therefore the first to develop monopoly capitalism where the entire economy fell under the domination of a handful of interlinked corporations and financial institutions. This gave them both the ability and, more importantly, the need to acquire colonies: places without industry that would finance their development, primarily via enterprises of raw resource extraction, in British and French banks through taking loans, floating bonds, and selling shares. Britain and France therefore had by far the most colonial territory at the start of the war, but this meant that the development of their domestic industries had slowed considerably, and their national wealth was now predominantly achieved through a return on financial investments (i.e., export of capital) in their colonies rather than through purchase on the global market of their domestically manufactured goods (i.e., export of commodities).[70] Russia, having become highly indebted to France in order to finance its own industrial development, rounds out the major powers of the Triple Entente at the outset of the conflict. On the other side, at the same time that Britain and France had turned to acquiring colonies, Germany's domestic development proceeded rapidly to the point that its output had exceeded that of Britain and France by 1914, but its ability to invest its new surplus of capital was limited by the territorial dominance of the other empires. Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire lagged considerably behind Britain, France, and Germany in their industrial development, and all three of the latter had made footholds exporting their own capital in the territories of the former (Germany financed and developed oil fields in Romania and the railroad under construction from Istanbul to Baghdad; Egypt, though nominally Ottoman territory, had been under British military control since 1882 to secure British and French interests in the Suez Canal). Accordingly, the Balkan crisis, from the point of view of the industrial powers, was predominantly a question of which country's industrial and financial cartels would control the states that emerged from the fledgling national movements there, and therefore reap the profits. Moreover, whoever lost the war would pay an indemnity and therefore have to cede some of its interests to the victor, whether in the form of the loser's directly controlled colonies or in their financial interests in nominally independent states.

Richard Hamilton observed that the argument went that since industrialists and bankers were seeking raw materials, new markets and new investments overseas, if one was strategically blocked by other powers, the "obvious" or "necessary" solution was war.[71]

Hamilton somewhat criticized the view that the war was launched to secure colonies, but agreed that imperialism may have been on the mind of key decision makers. He argued that it was not necessarily for logical, economic reasons. Firstly, the different powers of the war had different imperial holdings. Britain had the largest empire in the world and an historic monopoly on sea-trade in the Royal Navy, Russia had the second largest, and France had a modestly-sized empire. Conversely, Germany had a few unprofitable colonies, and Austria-Hungary had no overseas holdings or desire to secure any. So, the divergent interests require an "imperialism argument" to be specific in "interests" or "needs" that decision makers would be trying to meet. None of Germany's colonies made more money than was required to maintain them, and they also were only 0.5% of Germany's overseas trade, and only a few thousand Germans migrated to the colonies. However, in economics, the Baghdad railway was not only a potential threat to British control of trade by sea, but direct access to oil so highly preferred over coal would fuel the already large German economy and its growing navy. However, this was recognised as important enough to the British that it was actively and strategically being managed through financing to share rail access, and through diplomacy not to share northern rail access to the Persian Gulf. Thus, he argues that colonies were pursued mainly as a sign of German power and prestige, rather than for profit, which could be got through trade alone. While Russia eagerly pursued colonisation in East Asia by seizing control of Manchuria, it had little gain in wealth; the Manchurian population was never sufficiently integrated into the Russian economy, and efforts to make Manchuria a captive trade market did not end Russia's trade deficit with China. Hamilton argued that the "imperialism argument" depended upon the view of national elites being informed, rational, and calculating, but it is equally possible to consider that decision-makers were uninformed or ignorant. Hamilton suggested that imperial ambitions may have been driven by groupthink - because every other country was doing it, policymakers would think that their country should do the same. Hamilton noted that Bismarck was famously not moved by such peer pressure and ended Germany's limited imperialist movement. He regarded colonial ambitions as a waste of money but simultaneously recommended them to other nations.[72]

Hamilton was more critical of the view that capitalists and business leaders drove the war. He thought that businessmen, bankers, and financiers were generally against the war, as they viewed it as being perilous to economic prosperity. The decision of Austria-Hungary to go to war was made by the monarch, his ministers, and military leaders, with practically no representation from financial and business leaders even though Austria-Hungary was then developing rapidly. Furthermore, evidence can be found from the Austro-Hungarian stock market, which responded to the assassination of Franz Ferdinand with unease but no sense of alarm and only a small decrease in share value. However, when it became clear that war was a possibility, share values dropped sharply, which suggested that investors did not see war as serving their interests. One of the strongest sources of opposition to the war was from major banks, whose financial bourgeoisie regarded the army as the reserve of the aristocracy and utterly foreign to the banking universe. While the banks had ties to arms manufacturers, it was those companies that had links to the military, not the banks, which were pacifistic and profoundly hostile to the prospect of war. However, the banks were largely excluded from the nation's foreign affairs. Likewise, German business leaders had little influence. Hugo Stinnes, a leading German industrialist, advocated peaceful economic development and believed that Germany would be able to rule Europe by economic power and that war would be a disruptive force. Carl Duisberg, a chemical industrialist, hoped for peace and believed that the war would set German economic development back a decade, as Germany's extraordinary prewar growth had depended upon international trade and interdependence. While some bankers and industrialists tried to curb Wilhelm II away from war, their efforts ended in failure. There is no evidence they ever received a direct response from the Kaiser, chancellor, or foreign secretary or that their advice was discussed in depth by the Foreign Office or the General Staff. The German leadership measured power not in financial ledgers but land and military might.[73] In Britain, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, David Lloyd George, had been informed by the Governor of the Bank of England that business and financial interests opposed British intervention in the war. Lord Nathan Rothschild, a leading British banker, called the financial editor at The Times and insisted for the paper to denounce the war and to advocate for neutrality, but the lead members of the newspaper ultimately decided that the paper should support intervention. The Rothschild family would go on to suffer serious losses in the war that amounted to 23% of its capital. Generally speaking, the European business leaders were in favour of profits and peace allowed for stability and investment opportunities across national borders, but war brought the disruption trade, the confiscation of holdings, and the risk of increased taxation. Even arms manufacturers, the so-called "Merchants of Death," would not necessarily benefit since they could make money selling weapons at home, but they could lose access to foreign markets. Krupp, a major arms manufacturer, started the war with 48 million marks in profits but ended it 148 million marks in debt, and the first year of peace saw further losses of 36 million marks.[74][75]

William Mulligan argues that while economic and political factors were often interdependent, economic factors tended towards peace. Prewar trade wars and financial rivalries never threatened to escalate into conflict. Governments would mobilise bankers and financiers to serve their interests, rather than the reverse. The commercial and financial elite recognized peace as necessary for economic development and used its influence to resolve diplomatic crises. Economic rivalries existed but were framed largely by political concerns. Prior to the war, there were few signs that the international economy stood for war in the summer of 1914.[76]

Social Darwinism

Social Darwinism was a theory of human evolution loosely based on Darwinism that influenced many European intellectuals and strategic thinkers from 1870 to 1914. It emphasised that struggle between nations and "races" was natural and that only the fittest nations deserved to survive.[77] It gave an impetus to German assertiveness as a world economic and military power, aimed at competing with France and Britain for world power. German colonial rule in Africa in 1884 to 1914 was an expression of nationalism and moral superiority, which was justified by constructing an image of the natives as "Other." The approach highlighted racist views of mankind. German colonization was characterized by the use of repressive violence in the name of "culture" and "civilisation." Germany's cultural-missionary project boasted that its colonial programmes were humanitarian and educational endeavours. Furthermore, the wide acceptance of Social Darwinism by intellectuals justified Germany's right to acquire colonial territories as a matter of the "survival of the fittest," according to the historian Michael Schubert.[78][79]

The model suggested an explanation of why some ethnic groups, then called "races," had been for so long antagonistic, such as Germans and Slavs. They were natural rivals, destined to clash. Senior German generals like Helmuth von Moltke the Younger talked in apocalyptic terms about the need for Germans to fight for their existence as a people and culture. MacMillan states: "Reflecting the Social Darwinist theories of the era, many Germans saw Slavs, especially Russia, as the natural opponent of the Teutonic races."[80] Also, the chief of the Austro-Hungarian General Staff declared: "A people that lays down its weapons seals its fate."[80] In July 1914, the Austrian press described Serbia and the South Slavs in terms that owed much to Social Darwinism.[80] In 1914, the German economist Johann Plenge described the war as a clash between the German "ideas of 1914" (duty, order, justice) and the French "ideas of 1789" (liberty, equality, fraternity).[81] William Mulligen argues that Anglo-German antagonism was also about a clash of two political cultures as well as more traditional geopolitical and military concerns. Britain admired Germany for its economic successes and social welfare provision but also regarded Germany as illiberal, militaristic, and technocratic.[82]

War was seen as a natural and viable or even useful instrument of policy. "War was compared to a tonic for a sick patient or a life-saving operation to cut out diseased flesh."[80] Since war was natural for some leaders, it was simply a question of timing and so it would be better to have a war when the circumstances were most propitious. "I consider a war inevitable," declared Moltke in 1912. "The sooner the better."[83] In German ruling circles, war was viewed as the only way to rejuvenate Germany. Russia was viewed as growing stronger every day, and it was believed that Germany had to strike while it still could before it was crushed by Russia.[84]

Nationalism made war a competition between peoples, nations or races, rather than kings and elites.[85] Social Darwinism carried a sense of inevitability to conflict and downplayed the use of diplomacy or international agreements to end warfare. It tended to glorify warfare, the taking of initiative, and the warrior male role.[86]

Social Darwinism played an important role across Europe, but J. Leslie has argued that it played a critical and immediate role in the strategic thinking of some important hawkish members of the Austro-Hungarian government.[87] Social Darwinism, therefore, normalized war as an instrument of policy and justified its use.

Web of alliances

 
"A Threatening Situation", an American editorial cartoon depicting the supposed web of alliances. The caption reads, "If Austria attacks Serbia, Russia will fall upon Austria, Germany upon Russia, and France and England upon Germany." That dimension developed into the concept of chain ganging.

Although general narratives of the war tend to emphasize the importance of alliances in binding the major powers to act in the event of a crisis such as the July Crisis, historians such as Margaret MacMillan warn against the argument that alliances forced the Great Powers to act as they did: "What we tend to think of as fixed alliances before the First World War were nothing of the sort. They were much more loose, much more porous, much more capable of change."[88]

The most important alliances in Europe required participants to agree to collective defence if they were attacked. Some represented formal alliances, but the Triple Entente represented only a frame of mind:

There are three notable exceptions that demonstrate that alliances did not in themselves force the great powers to act:

  • The Entente Cordiale between Britain and France in 1905 included a secret agreement that left the northern coast of France and the English Channel to be defended by the British Royal Navy, and the separate "entente" between Britain and Russia (1907) formed the so-called Triple Entente. However, the Triple Entente did not, in fact, force Britain to mobilise because it was not a military treaty.
  • Moreover, general narratives of the war regularly misstate that Russia was allied to Serbia. Clive Ponting noted: "Russia had no treaty of alliance with Serbia and was under no obligation to support it diplomatically, let alone go to its defence."[89]
  • Italy, despite being part of the Triple Alliance, did not enter the war to defend the Triple Alliance partners.

Arms race

By the 1870s to 1880s, all the major powers were preparing for a large-scale war although none expected one.[90] Britain ignored its small army and focused on building up the Royal Navy, which was already stronger than the next two navies combined. Germany, France, Austria, Italy, Russia, and some smaller countries set up conscription systems in which young men would serve from one to three years in the army and then spend the next twenty years or so in the reserves with annual summer training. Men from higher social statuses became officers. Each country devised a mobilization system in which the reserves could be called up quickly and sent to key points by rail.

Every year, the plans were updated and expanded in terms of complexity. Each country stockpiled arms and supplies for an army that ran into the millions. Germany in 1874 had a regular professional army of 420,000 with an additional 1.3 million reserves. By 1897, the regular army was 545,000 strong and the reserves 3.4 million. The French in 1897 had 3.4 million reservists, Austria 2.6 million, and Russia 4.0 million. The various national war plans had been perfected by 1914 but with Russia and Austria trailing in effectiveness. Recent wars since 1865 had typically been short: a matter of months. All war plans called for a decisive opening and assumed victory would come after a short war. None planned for the food and munitions needs of the long stalemate that actually happened in 1914 to 1918.[91][92]

As David Stevenson put it, "A self-reinforcing cycle of heightened military preparedness... was an essential element in the conjuncture that led to disaster.... The armaments race... was a necessary precondition for the outbreak of hostilities." David Herrmann goes further by arguing that the fear that "windows of opportunity for victorious wars" were closing, "the arms race did precipitate the First World War." If Franz Ferdinand had been assassinated in 1904 or even in 1911, Herrmann speculates, there might have been no war. It was "the armaments race and the speculation about imminent or preventive wars" that made his death in 1914 the trigger for war.[93]

One of the aims of the First Hague Conference of 1899, held at the suggestion of Tsar Nicholas II, was to discuss disarmament. The Second Hague Conference was held in 1907. All signatories except for Germany supported disarmament. Germany also did not want to agree to binding arbitration and mediation. The Kaiser was concerned that the United States would propose disarmament measures, which he opposed. All parties tried to revise international law to their own advantage.[94]

Anglo-German naval race

 
1909 cartoon in the American magazine Puck shows (clockwise) US, Germany, Britain, France and Japan engaged in naval race in a "no limit" game.

Historians have debated the role of the German naval buildup as the principal cause of deteriorating Anglo-German relations. In any case, Germany never came close to catching up with Britain.

Supported by Wilhelm II's enthusiasm for an expanded German navy, Grand Admiral Alfred von Tirpitz championed four Fleet Acts from 1898 to 1912. From 1902 to 1910, the Royal Navy embarked on its own massive expansion to keep ahead of the Germans. The competition came to focus on the revolutionary new ships based on the Dreadnought, which was launched in 1906 and gave Britain a battleship that far outclassed any other in Europe.[95][96]

Naval strength of powers in 1914
Country Personnel Large Naval Vessels
(Dreadnoughts)
Tonnage
Russia 54,000 4 328,000
France 68,000 10 731,000
Britain 209,000 29 2,205,000
TOTAL 331,000 43 3,264,000
Germany 79,000 17 1,019,000
Austria-Hungary 16,000 4 249,000
TOTAL 95,000 21 1,268,000
(Source: [97])

The overwhelming British response proved to Germany that its efforts were unlikely ever to equal the Royal Navy. In 1900, the British had a 3.7:1 tonnage advantage over Germany; in 1910, the ratio was 2.3:1 and in 1914, it was 2.1:1. Ferguson argues, "So decisive was the British victory in the naval arms race that it is hard to regard it as in any meaningful sense a cause of the First World War."[98] That ignored the fact that the Kaiserliche Marine had narrowed the gap by nearly half and that the Royal Navy had long intended to be stronger than any two potential opponents combined. The US Navy was in a period of growth, which made the German gains very ominous.

In Britain in 1913, there was intense internal debate about new ships because of the growing influence of John Fisher's ideas and increasing financial constraints. In 1914, Germany adopted a policy of building submarines, instead of new dreadnoughts and destroyers, effectively abandoning the race, but it kept the new policy secret to delay other powers from following suit.[99]

Russian interests in Balkans and Ottoman Empire

The main Russian goals included strengthening its role as the protector of Eastern Christians in the Balkans, such as in Serbia.[100] Although Russia enjoyed a booming economy, growing population, and large armed forces, its strategic position was threatened by an expanding Ottoman military trained by German experts that was using the latest technology. The start of the war renewed attention of old goals: expelling the Ottomans from Constantinople, extending Russian dominion into eastern Anatolia and Persian Azerbaijan, and annexing Galicia. The conquests would assure the Russian predominance in the Black Sea and access to the Mediterranean.[101]

Technical and military factors

Short-war illusion

Traditional narratives of the war suggested that when the war began, both sides believed that the war would end quickly. Rhetorically speaking, there was an expectation that the war would be "over by Christmas" in 1914. That is important for the origins of the conflict since it suggests that since it was expected that the war would be short, statesmen tended not to take gravity of military action as seriously as they might have done so otherwise. Modern historians suggest a nuanced approach. There is ample evidence to suggest that statesmen and military leaders thought the war would be lengthy and terrible and have profound political consequences.[citation needed]

While it is true all military leaders planned for a swift victory, many military and civilian[citation needed] leaders recognized that the war might be long and highly destructive. The principal German and French military leaders, including Moltke, Ludendorff, and Joffre, expected a long war.[102] British Secretary of State for War Lord Kitchener expected a long war: "three years" or longer, he told an amazed colleague.

Moltke hoped that if a European war broke out, it would be resolved swiftly, but he also conceded that it might drag on for years, wreaking immeasurable ruin. Asquith wrote of the approach of "Armageddon" and French and Russian generals spoke of a "war of extermination" and the "end of civilization." British Foreign Secretary Edward Grey famously stated just hours before Britain declared war, "The lamps are going out all over Europe, we shall not see them lit again in our lifetime."

Clark concluded, "In the minds of many statesmen, the hope for a short war and the fear of a long one seemed to have cancelled each other out, holding at bay a fuller appreciation of the risks."[103]

Primacy of offensive and war by timetable

Moltke, Joffre, Conrad, and other military commanders held that seizing the initiative was extremely important. That theory encouraged all belligerents to devise war plans to strike first to gain the advantage. The war plans all included complex plans for mobilization of the armed forces, either as a prelude to war or as a deterrent. The continental Great Powers' mobilization plans included arming and transporting millions of men and their equipment, typically by rail and to strict schedules,

The mobilization plans limited the scope of diplomacy, as military planners wanted to begin mobilisation as quickly as possible to avoid being caught on the defensive. They also put pressure on policymakers to begin their own mobilization once it was discovered that other nations had begun to mobilize.

In 1969, A. J. P. Taylor wrote that mobilization schedules were so rigid that once they were begun, they could not be canceled without massive disruption of the country and military disorganisation, and they could not proceed without physical invasion (of Belgium by Germany). Thus, diplomatic overtures conducted after the mobilizations had begun were ignored.[104] Hence the metaphor "war by timetable."

Russia ordered a partial mobilization on 25 July against Austria-Hungary only. Their lack of prewar planning for the partial mobilization made the Russians realize by 29 July that it would be impossible to interfere with a general mobilization.

Only a general mobilization could be carried out successfully. The Russians were, therefore, faced with only two options: canceling the mobilization during a crisis or moving to full mobilization, the latter of which they did on 30 July. They, therefore, mobilized along both the Russian border with Austria-Hungary and the border with Germany.

German mobilization plans assumed a two-front war against France and Russia and had the bulk of the German army massed against France and taking the offensive in the west, and a smaller force holding East Prussia. The plans were based on the assumption that France would mobilize significantly faster than Russia.

On 28 July, Germany learned through its spy network that Russia had implemented partial mobilisation and its "Period Preparatory to War." The Germans assumed that Russia had decided upon war and that its mobilisation put Germany in danger, especially since because German war plans, the so-called Schlieffen Plan, relied upon Germany to mobilise speedily enough to defeat France first by attacking largely through neutral Belgium before it turned to defeat the slower-moving Russians.

Christopher Clark states: "German efforts at mediation – which suggested that Austria should 'Halt in Belgrade' and use the occupation of the Serbian capital to ensure its terms were met – were rendered futile by the speed of Russian preparations, which threatened to force the Germans to take counter-measures before mediation could begin to take effect."[105]

Clark also states: "The Germans declared war on Russia before the Russians declared war on Germany. But by the time that happened, the Russian government had been moving troops and equipment to the German front for a week. The Russians were the first great power to issue an order of general mobilisation and the first Russo-German clash took place on German, not on Russian soil, following the Russian invasion of East Prussia. That doesn't mean that the Russians should be 'blamed' for the outbreak of war. Rather it alerts us to the complexity of the events that brought war about and the limitations of any thesis that focuses on the culpability of one actor."[106]

Historiography

 
Louis P. Bénézet's map of "Europe As It Should Be" (1918), depicting imagined nations based on ethnic and linguistic criteria. It blamed German aggression on perceived threats to the traditional social order from radicals and ethnic nationalists.

Immediately after the end of hostilities, Anglo-American historians argued that Germany was solely responsible for the start of the war. However, academic work in the English-speaking world in the late 1920s and the 1930s blamed the participants more equally.

The historian Fritz Fischer unleashed an intense worldwide debate in the 1960s on Germany's long-term goals. The American historian Paul Schroeder agrees with the critics that Fisher exaggerated and misinterpreted many points. However, Schroeder endorses Fisher's basic conclusion:

From 1890 on, Germany did pursue world power. This bid arose from deep roots within Germany's economic, political, and social structures. Once the war broke out, world power became Germany's essential goal.[107]

However, Schroeder argues that all of that was not the main cause of the war in 1914. Indeed, the search for a single main cause is not a helpful approach to history. Instead, there are multiple causes any one or two of which could have launched the war. He argues, "The fact that so many plausible explanations for the outbreak of the war have been advanced over the years indicates on the one hand that it was massively overdetermined, and on the other that no effort to analyze the causal factors involved can ever fully succeed."[108]

Debate over the country that "started" the war and who bears the blame still continues.[109] According to Annika Mombauer, a new consensus among scholars had emerged by the 1980s, mainly as a result of Fischer's intervention:

Few historians agreed wholly with his [Fischer's] thesis of a premeditated war to achieve aggressive foreign policy aims, but it was generally accepted that Germany's share of responsibility was larger than that of the other great powers.[110]

On historians inside Germany, she adds, "There was 'a far-reaching consensus about the special responsibility of the German Reich' in the writings of leading historians, though they differed in how they weighted Germany's role."[111]

See also

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Sources

Further reading

  • Albertini, Luigi. The Origins of the War of 1914 (3 vol 1952). vol 2 online covers July 1914
  • Albrecht-Carrié, René. A Diplomatic History of Europe Since the Congress of Vienna (1958), 736pp; a basic introduction, 1815–1955 online free to borrow
  • Anderson Frank Maloy, and Amos Shartle Hershey. Handbook for the diplomatic history of Europe, Asia, and Africa, 1870-1914 (1918) detailed coverage of all major diplomatic events and many minor one online
  • Barnes, Harry Elmer (1972) [1928]. In Quest of Truth And Justice: De-bunking The War Guilt Myth. New York: Arno Press. ISBN 978-0-405-00414-8. OCLC 364103.; revisionist (argues that Germany was certainly not guilty)
  • Beatty, Kack. The Lost History of 1914: The Year the Great War Began (2012) looks at major powers and argues war was not inevitable. excerpt
  • Brandenburg, Erich. (1927) From Bismarck to the World War: A History of German Foreign Policy 1870-1914 (1927) .
  • Brose, Eric. "Arms Race prior to 1914, Armament Policy," in: 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War (Freie Universität Berlin, Berlin 2014-10-08). DOI: 10.15463/ie1418.10219. online
  • Carroll, E. Malcolm, French Public Opinion and Foreign Affairs 1870-1914 (1931). online
  • Carroll, E. Malcolm. Germany and the great powers, 1866-1914: A study in public opinion and foreign policy (1938) online; online 2020-08-01 at the Wayback Machine
  • Carter, Miranda (2009). The Three Emperors: Three Cousins, Three Empires and the Road to World War One. Fig Tree. ISBN 978-0-670-91556-9.
  • Clark, Christopher. Sleepwalkers: How Europe Went to War in 1914 (2012), major comprehensive overview
    • Sleepwalkers lecture by Clark. online
  • Evans, R. J. W.; von Strandmann, Hartmut Pogge, eds. (1988). The Coming of the First World War. Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-19-150059-6. essays by scholars from both sides
  • Fay, Sidney Bradshaw (1928). The origins of the world war. Vol. 1. Macmillan.
  • Gilpin, Robert (1981). War and Change in World Politics. Cambridge UP. ISBN 978-0-521-27376-3.
  • Gooch, G.P. History of modern Europe, 1878-1919 (2nd ed. 1956) pp 386–413. online, diplomatic history
  • Gooch, G.P. Before the war: studies in diplomacy (2 vol 1936, 1938) online long scholarly chapters on Britain's Landsdowne; France's Théophile Delcassé; Germany's Bernhard von Bülow pp 187–284; Russia's Alexander Izvolsky 285–365; and Austria' Aehrenthal pp 366–438. vol 2: Grey, 1–133; Poincaré, 135–200; Bethmann Hollweg, 201–85; Sazonoff, 287–369; Berchtold, 371–447. vol 2 online
  • Hamilton, Richard F. and Holger H. Herwig, eds. Decisions for War, 1914-1917 (2004), scholarly essays on Serbia, Austria-Hungary, Germany, Russia, France, Britain, Japan, Ottoman Empire, Italy, the United States, Bulgaria, Romania, and Greece. excerpt
  • Herrmann, David G. (1997). The Arming of Europe and the Making of the First World War. Princeton UP. ISBN 978-0-691-01595-8.
  • Herwig, Holger H. and Neil Heyman. Biographical Dictionary of World War I (1982)
  • Hewitson, Mark. "Germany and France before the First World War: a reassessment of Wilhelmine foreign policy." English Historical Review 115.462 (2000): 570–606; argues Germany had a growing sense of military superiority.
  • Hewitson, Mark. Germany and the Causes of the First World War (2004) online 2017-04-09 at the Wayback Machine
  • Hillgruber, Andreas (1981) [1967]. Germany and the Two World Wars. Harvard UP. ISBN 978-0-674-35322-0.
  • Hobson, Rolf (2002). Imperialism at Sea: Naval Strategic Thought, the Ideology of Sea Power, and the Tirpitz Plan, 1875-1914. BRILL. ISBN 978-0-391-04105-9.
  • Joll, James; Martel, Gordon (2013). The Origins of the First World War (3rd ed.). Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-317-87535-2.
  • Kapp, Richard W. "Divided Loyalties: The German Reich and Austria-Hungary in Austro-German Discussions of War Aims, 1914–1916." Central European History 17.2-3 (1984): 120–139.
  • Karpat, Kemal H. "The entry of the Ottoman empire into World War I." Belleten 68.253 (2004): 1-40. online
  • Keiger, John F. V. (1983). France and the origins of the First World War. Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-312-30292-4.
  • Kennedy, Paul M. (1980). The rise of the Anglo-German antagonism, 1860-1914. Ashfield Press. ISBN 978-0-948660-06-1.
  • Kennedy, Paul M., ed. (2014) [1979]. The War Plans of the Great Powers: 1880-1914. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-70251-1., scholarly articles; no primary sources included
  • Keiger, John F.V. France and the origins of the First World War (Macmillan, 1983) summary.
  • Knutsen, Torbjørn L. (1999). The Rise and Fall of World Orders. Manchester UP. ISBN 978-0-7190-4058-0.
  • Kuliabin, Alexander; Semin, Sergey (17 July 1997). "Russia – a Counterbalancing Agent to the Asia". Zavtra Rossii.
  • Lee, Dwight Erwin, ed. (1958). The Outbreak of the First World War: Who was Responsible?. Heath. readings from multiple points of view
  • Lieven, D. C. B. (1983). Russia and the Origins of the First World War. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-0-312-69611-5.
  • Lowe, Cedric James; Dockrill, Michael L. (2001) [1972]. The Mirage of Power. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-27367-1. all three volumes combined
  • Lowe, Cedric James; Dockrill, Michael L. (2013) [1972]. Mirage Of Power: British Foreign Policy 1902-14. Vol. I. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-03377-4.
  • Lowe, Cedric James; Dockrill, Michael L. (2013) [1972]. Mirage Of Power: British Foreign Policy 1914-22. Vol. II. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-46774-5.
  • MacMillan, Margaret (2013). The War That Ended Peace: The Road to 1914. Random House. ISBN 978-0-8129-9470-4.; major scholarly overview
  • Massie, Robert K. Dreadnought: Britain, Germany, and the coming of the Great War (Random House, 1991) excerpt see Dreadnought (book), popular history
  • Mayer, Arno J. (1981). The Persistence of the Old Regime: Europe to the Great War. Croom Helm. ISBN 978-0-7099-1724-3.
  • McMeekin, Sean (2010). The Berlin-Baghdad Express: The Ottoman Empire and Germany's Bid for World Power. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press. ISBN 978-0674057395.
  • McMeekin, Sean (2011). The Russian Origins of the First World War. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press. ISBN 978-0674062108.
  • Miller, Steven E.; Lynn-Jones, Sean M.; Van Evera, Stephen, eds. (1991). Military Strategy and the Origins of the First World War (2nd ed.). Princeton UP. ISBN 978-0-6910-2349-6.
  • Neiberg, Michael S. (2011). Dance of the Furies. Harvard UP. ISBN 978-0-674-04954-3. role of public opinion
  • Nester, Cody (2015). "France and the Great War: Belligerent Warmonger or Failed Peacekeeper? A Literature Review". History. 12: 2.
  • Otte, T. G. July Crisis: The World's Descent into War, Summer 1914 (Cambridge University Press, 2014). online review
  • Radojević, Mira (2015). "Jovan M. Jovanović on the outbreak of the First World War". The Serbs and the First World War 1914-1918. Belgrade: Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts. pp. 187–204. ISBN 9788670256590.
  • Remak, Joachim (1995) [1967]. The Origins of World War I, 1871-1914. Harcourt Brace College Publishers. ISBN 978-0-15-501438-1.
  • Ritter, Gerhard. The Sword and the Scepter: The Problem of Militarism in Germany: volume 2: The European powers and the Wilhelminian Empire, 1890-1914 (1970) online, chapters on the army role in politics in France, Britain, Russia, Austria-Hungary and especially Germany
  • Seligmann, Matthew S. "Failing to Prepare for the Great War? The Absence of Grand Strategy in British War Planning before 1914" War in History (2017) 24#4 414–37.
  • Snyder, Jack (Summer 1984). "Civil—Military Relations and the Cult of the Offensive, 1914 and 1984". International Security. 9 (1): 108–146. doi:10.2307/2538637. JSTOR 2538637. S2CID 55976453.
  • Spender, J.A. Fifty years of Europe: a study in pre-war documents (1933) covers 1871 to 1914, 438pp
  • Stavrianos, L.S. The Balkans Since 1453 (1958), major scholarly history; online free to borrow
  • Steiner, Zara S.; Neilson, Keith (2003) [1977]. Britain and the Origins of the First World War (Second ed.). Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-137-18217-3.[permanent dead link]
  • Stevenson, David (2004). Cataclysm: The First World War as Political Tragedy. Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-7867-3885-4. major reinterpretation
  • Stevenson, David (1988). The First World War and international politics. Oxford UP. ISBN 978-0-19-873049-1.
  • Strachan, Hew (2001). The First World War: Volume I: To Arms. Oxford UP. ISBN 978-0-19-160834-6. a major scholarly synthesis
  • Taylor, A.J.P. The Struggle for Mastery in Europe 1848–1918 (1954) online free
  • Tucker, Spencer C., ed. (2013) [1996]. The European Powers in the First World War: An Encyclopedia. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-50694-0.
  • Turner, Leonard Charles Frederick (1970). Origins of the First World War. Norton. ISBN 978-0-393-09947-8.
  • Zametica, John. Folly and malice: the Habsburg empire, the Balkans and the start of World War One (London: Shepheard–Walwyn, 2017). 416pp.

Historiography

  • Bresciani, Marco. "From 'East to West', the 'world crisis' of 1905-1920: a re-reading of Elie Halévy." First World War Studies 9.3 (2018): 275–295.
  • Cohen, Warren I. (1967). The American Revisionists: The Lessons of Intervention in World War I. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-11213-8.
  • Cornelissen, Christoph, and Arndt Weinrich, eds. Writing the Great War - The Historiography of World War I from 1918 to the Present (2020) free download; full coverage for major countries.
  • D'Agostino, Anthony (Spring 2004). "The Revisionist Tradition in European Diplomatic History". Journal of the Historical Society. 4 (2): 255–287. doi:10.1111/j.1529-921X.2004.00098.x.
  • Evans, R. J. W. "The Greatest Catastrophe the World Has Seen" The New York Review of Books Feb 6, 2014 online
  • Gillette, Aaron (November 2006). "Why Did They Fight the Great War? A Multi-Level Class Analysis of the Causes of the First World War". The History Teacher. 40 (1): 45–58. doi:10.2307/30036938. JSTOR 30036938.
  • Hewitson, Mark (2014). Germany and the Causes of the First World War. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84520-729-8.
  • Horne, John, ed. A Companion to World War I (2012) 38 topics essays by scholars; emphasis on historiography.
  • Iriye, Akira (September 2014). "The Historiographic Impact of the Great War". Diplomatic History. 38 (4): 751–762. doi:10.1093/dh/dhu035.
  • Jones, Heather (September 2013). "As the Centenary Approaches: The Regeneration of First World War Historiography". The Historical Journal. 56 (4): 857–878. doi:10.1017/S0018246X13000216.
  • Keiger, J.F.V. (April 2013). "The Fischer Controversy, the War Origins Debate and France: A Non-History" (PDF). Journal of Contemporary History. 48 (2): 363–375. doi:10.1177/0022009412472715. S2CID 159493977.
  • Kramer, Alan (February 2014). "Recent Historiography of the First World War-Part I". Journal of Modern European History. 12 (1): 5–27. doi:10.17104/1611-8944_2014_1_5. S2CID 202927667.
  • Kramer, Alan (May 2014). "Recent Historiography of the First World War (Part II)". Journal of Modern European History. 12 (2): 155–174. doi:10.17104/1611-8944_2014_2_155. S2CID 146860980.
  • Levy, Jack S., and John A. Vasquez, eds. The Outbreak of the First World War: Structure, Politics, and Decision-Making (Cambridge UP, 2014).
  • Lieber, Keir A. "The new history of World War I and what it means for international relations theory." International Security 32.2 (2007): 155–191. online[dead link]
  • Marczewski, Jerzy (1977). "German Historiography and the Problem of Germany's Responsibility for World War I". Polish Western Affairs. 12 (2): 289–309.
  • Mombauer, Annika (2007). "The First World War: Inevitable, Avoidable, Improbable Or Desirable? Recent Interpretations On War Guilt and the War's Origins". German History. 25 (1): 78–95. doi:10.1177/0266355407071695.
  • Mombauer, Annika. The origins of the First World War: controversies and consensus. (2002)
  • Mulligan, William (2014). "The Trial Continues: New Directions in the Study of the Origins of the First World War". The English Historical Review. 129 (538): 639–666. doi:10.1093/ehr/ceu139.
  • Nugent, Christine (April 2008). "The Fischer Controversy: Historiographical Revolution or Just Another Historians' Quarrel?". Journal of the North Carolina Association of Historians. 16: 77–114.
  • Ritter, Gerhard (1997) [1962]. Herwig, Holger (ed.). Anti-Fischer: A New War-Guilt Thesis?. The Outbreak of World War One: Causes and Responsibilities. Houghton Mifflin. pp. 135–142. ISBN 978-0-6694-1692-3.
  • Schroeder, Paul W. (2007). Levy, Jack; Goertz, Gary (eds.). Necessary conditions and Worlkd War I as an unavoidable war. Explaining War and Peace: Case Studies and Necessary Condition Counterfactuals. Routledge. pp. 147–236. ISBN 978-1-134-10140-5.
  • Schroeder, Paul W. (2004). "Embedded Counterfactuals and World War I as an Unavoidable War". Systems, Stability, and Statecraft: Essays on the International History of Modern Europe. Palgrave Macmillan US. ISBN 978-1-4039-6357-4.
  • Seipp, Adam R. (October 2006). "Beyond the 'Seminal Catastrophe': Re-imagining the First World War". Journal of Contemporary History. 41 (4): 757–766. doi:10.1177/0022009406067756. JSTOR 30036418. S2CID 162385648.
  • Showalter, Dennis (Winter 2006). "The Great War and Its Historiography". The Historian. 68 (4): 713–721. doi:10.1111/j.1540-6563.2006.00164.x. JSTOR 24453743. S2CID 144511421.
  • Sked, Alan. "Austria-Hungary and the First World War." Histoire Politique 1 (2014): 16–49. online free
  • Smith, Leonard V. (November 2007). "The Culture De Guerre and French Historiography of the Great War of 1914–1918". History Compass. 5 (6): 1967–1979. doi:10.1111/j.1478-0542.2007.00484.x.
  • Strachan, Hew (March 2014). "The origins of the First World War". International Affairs. 90 (2): 429–439. doi:10.1111/1468-2346.12118.
  • Trachtenberg, Marc. "The Meaning of Mobilization in 1914" International Security 15#3 (1991) pp. 120–150 online
  • Vasquez, John A. "The First World War and International Relations Theory: A Review of Books on the 100th Anniversary." International Studies Review 16#4 (2014): 623–644.
  • Waite, Robert G. (6 November 2014). "The dangerous and menacing war psychology of hatred and myth". American Historians and the Outbreak of the First World War 1914. An Overview (Speech). Berliner Gesellschaft für Faschismus und Weltkriegsforschung.
  • Williamson Jr, Samuel R., and Ernest R. May. "An identity of opinion: Historians and July 1914." Journal of Modern History 79.2 (2007): 335–387. online

Primary sources

  • Collins, Ross F. ed. World War I: Primary Documents on Events from 1914 to 1919 (2007) excerpt and text search
  • Dugdale, E.T.S. ed. German Diplomatic Documents 1871-1914 (4 vol 1928–31), in English translation. online
  • French Ministry of Foreign Affairs, The French Yellow Book: Diplomatic Documents (1914)
  • Gooch, G. P. Recent Revelations of European Diplomacy (1940); 475pp detailed summaries of memoirs from all the major belligerents
  • Gooch, G.P. and Harold Temperley, eds. British documents on the origins of the war, 1898-1914 (11 vol. ) online
    • v. i The end of British isolation—v.2. From the occupation of Kiao-Chau to the making of the Anglo-French entente Dec. 1897-Apr. 1904—V.3. The testing of the Entente, 1904-6 -- v.4. The Anglo-Russian rapprochment, 1903-7 -- v.5. The Near East, 1903-9 -- v.6. Anglo-German tension. Armaments and negotiation, 1907-12—v.7. The Agadir crisis—v.8. Arbitration, neutrality and security—v.9. The Balkan wars, pt.1-2 -- v.10, pt.1. The Near and Middle East on the eve of war. pt.2. The last years of peace—v.11. The outbreak of war V.3. The testing of the Entente, 1904-6 -- v.4. The Anglo-Russian rapprochment, 1903-7 -- v.5. The Near East, 1903-9 -- v.6. Anglo-German tension. Armaments and negotiation, 1907-12—v.7. The Agadir crisis—v.8. Arbitration, neutrality and security—v.9. The Balkan wars, pt.1-2 -- v.10, pt.1. The Near and Middle East on the eve of war. pt.2. The last years of peace—v.11. The outbreak of war.
    • Gooch, G. P. and Harold Temperley, eds. British Documents on the Origins of the War 1898-1914 Volume XI, the Outbreak of War Foreign Office Documents (1926) online
  • Gooch, G.P. Recent revelations of European diplomacy (1928) pp 269–330. online; summarizes new documents from Germany, pp 3–100; Austria, 103–17; Russia, 161–211; Serbia and the Balkans, 215–42; France, 269–330; Great Britain, 343–429; United States, 433–62.
  • Hammond's frontier atlas of the world war : containing large scale maps of all the battle fronts of Europe and Asia, together with a military map of the United States (1916) online free
  • Lowe, C.J. and M.L. Dockrill, eds. The Mirage of Power: The Documents of British Foreign Policy 1914-22 (vol 3, 1972), pp 423–759
  • Mombauer, Annika. The Origins of the First World War: Diplomatic and Military Documents (2013), 592pp;
  • Reichstag speeches

External links

  • Mombauer, Annika: July Crisis 1914, in: 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War.
  • Mulligan, William: The Historiography of the Origins of the First World War, in: 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War.
  • Williamson, Jr., Samuel R.: The Way to War, in: 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War.
  • Brose, Eric: Arms Race prior to 1914, Armament Policy, in: 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War.
  • Peter Geiss: Controversy: The Media's Responsibility for Crises and Conflicts in the Age of Imperialism, in: 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War.
  • Overview of Causes and Primary Sources
  • Russia – Getting Too Strong for Germany 2016-10-01 at the Wayback Machine by Norman Stone
  • The Origins of World War One: An article by Dr. Gary Sheffield at the BBC History site.
  • What caused World War I: Timeline of events and origins of WWI
  • Kuliabin A. Semine S. Some of aspects of state national economy evolution in the system of the international economic order.- USSR ACADEMY OF SCIENCES FAR EAST DIVISION INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC & INTERNATIONAL OCEAN STUDIES Vladivostok, 1991
  • The Evidence in the Case: A Discussion of the Moral Responsibility for the War of 1914, as Disclosed by the Diplomatic Records of England, Germany, Russia by James M. Beck
  • 'World War One and 100 Years of Counter-Revolution' by Mark Kosman (on the domestic causes of war)

causes, world, identification, causes, world, remains, controversial, world, began, balkans, july, 1914, hostilities, ended, november, 1918, leaving, million, dead, million, wounded, moreover, russian, civil, many, ways, considered, continuation, world, variou. The identification of the causes of World War I remains controversial World War I began in the Balkans on July 28 1914 and hostilities ended on November 11 1918 leaving 17 million dead and 25 million wounded Moreover the Russian Civil War can in many ways be considered a continuation of World War I as can various other conflicts in the direct aftermath of 1918 European diplomatic alignments shortly before the war The Ottomans joined the Central Powers shortly after the war started with Bulgaria joining the following year Italy remained neutral in 1914 and joined the Allies in 1915 Map of the world with the participants in World War I in 1917 Allies in green Central Powers in orange and the neutral countries are in grey Scholars looking at the long term seek to explain why two rival sets of powers the German Empire and Austria Hungary against the Russian Empire France the British Empire and later the United States came into conflict by 1915 They look at such factors as political territorial and economic competition militarism a complex web of alliances and alignments imperialism the growth of nationalism and the power vacuum created by the decline of the Ottoman Empire Other important long term or structural factors that are often studied include unresolved territorial disputes the perceived breakdown of the European balance of power 1 2 convoluted and fragmented governance the arms races of the previous decades and military planning 3 Scholars seeking short term analysis focus on the summer of 1914 and ask whether the conflict could have been stopped or instead whether deeper causes made it inevitable Among the immediate causes were the decisions made by statesmen and generals during the July Crisis which was triggered by the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria by the Bosnian Serb nationalist Gavrilo Princip who had been supported by a nationalist organization in Serbia 4 The crisis escalated as the conflict between Austria Hungary and Serbia was joined by their allies Russia Germany France and ultimately Belgium and the United Kingdom Other factors that came into play during the diplomatic crisis leading up to the war included misperceptions of intent such as the German belief that Britain would remain neutral the fatalistic belief that war was inevitable and the speed with which the crisis escalated partly due to delays and misunderstandings in diplomatic communications The crisis followed a series of diplomatic clashes among the Great Powers Italy France Germany United Kingdom Austria Hungary and Russia over European and colonial issues in the decades before 1914 that had left tensions high And the cause of the public clashes can be traced to changes in the balance of power in Europe that had been taking place since 1867 5 Consensus on the origins of the war remains elusive since historians disagree on key factors and place differing emphasis on a variety of factors That is compounded by historical arguments changing over time particularly as classified historical archives become available and as perspectives and ideologies of historians have changed The deepest division among historians is between those who see Germany and Austria Hungary as having driven events and those who focus on power dynamics among a wider set of actors and circumstances Secondary fault lines exist between those who believe that Germany deliberately planned a European war those who believe that the war was largely unplanned but was still caused principally by Germany and Austria Hungary taking risks and those who believe that some or all of the other powers Russia France Serbia United Kingdom played a more significant role in causing the war than has been traditionally suggested Contents 1 Polarization of Europe 1887 1914 1 1 German realignment to Austria Hungary and Russian realignment to France 1887 1892 1 2 French distrust of Germany 1 3 British alignment towards France and Russia 1898 1907 The Triple Entente 1 4 First Moroccan Crisis 1905 06 Strengthening the Entente 1 5 Bosnian Crisis 1908 Worsening relations of Russia and Serbia with Austria Hungary 1 6 Agadir crisis in Morocco 1911 1 7 Italo Turkish War Isolation of the Ottomans 1911 1912 1 8 Balkan Wars 1912 13 Growth of Serbian and Russian power 1 9 Franco Russian Alliance changes to Balkan inception scenario 1911 1913 1 10 Liman von Sanders Affair 1913 14 1 11 Anglo German detente 1912 14 2 The July Crisis 2 1 Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand by Serbian irredentists 28 June 1914 3 Domestic political factors 3 1 German domestic politics 3 2 Drivers of Austro Hungarian policy 3 3 Drivers of Serbian policy 4 Imperialism 4 1 Impact of colonial rivalry and aggression on Europe in 1914 4 2 German isolation a consequence of Weltpolitik 4 3 German isolation a consequence of the Triple Entente 4 4 Imperial opportunism 4 5 Marxist interpretation 5 Social Darwinism 6 Web of alliances 7 Arms race 7 1 Anglo German naval race 7 1 1 Russian interests in Balkans and Ottoman Empire 8 Technical and military factors 8 1 Short war illusion 8 2 Primacy of offensive and war by timetable 9 Historiography 10 See also 11 References 12 Sources 13 Further reading 13 1 Historiography 13 2 Primary sources 14 External linksPolarization of Europe 1887 1914 EditIn August 1914 The Independent magazine described the assassination of Franz Ferdinand and his wife in June as a deplorable but relatively insignificant reason for which 6 the financial system of the world is in chaos that international commerce is suspended that industries are everywhere demoralized and families ruined and that millions of men in Europe have taken up arms with the intent to slaughter each other It may be doubted whether the Archduke is worth all this carnage the magazine added It discussed and dismissed ethnicity race religion and national interests as motivations for war The Independent concluded that such is the ridiculous and tragical situation resulting from the survival of the antiquated superstition of the balance of power that is the theory that the prosperity of one nation was an injury to others 6 Most of the people concerned in the present conflict have neither racial antagonism nor economic interests as an excuse for enmity They are no more enemies than the Reds and the Blues into which an army corps is divided for practice maneuvers But now the guns are loaded and those who bear them have nothing to say about whom they shall shoot The only unexpected thing about the present European war is the date of it the magazine added later that month 7 No war in history has been so long anticipated so carefully prepared for and so thoroughly discussed not only in the privy councils but in the press of all nations Every European soldier knew where his uniform and rifle were stored he also thought he knew as well where he was to fight with whom he was to fight and when To understand the long term origins of the war in 1914 it is essential to understand how the powers formed into two competing sets that shared common aims and enemies Both sets became by August 1914 Germany and Austria Hungary on one side and Russia France and Britain on the other side German realignment to Austria Hungary and Russian realignment to France 1887 1892 Edit Main articles Dual Alliance 1879 and Franco Russian Alliance 1234Map of Bismarck s alliances1Dual Alliance 1879 2League of the Three Emperors 1881 3Triple Alliance 1882 4Reinsurance Treaty 1887 In 1887 German and Russian alignment was secured by means of a secret Reinsurance Treaty arranged by Otto von Bismarck However in 1890 Bismarck fell from power and the treaty was allowed to lapse in favor of the Dual Alliance 1879 between Germany and Austria Hungary That development was attributed to Count Leo von Caprivi the Prussian general who replaced Bismarck as chancellor It is claimed that Caprivi recognized a personal inability to manage the European system as his predecessor had and so was counseled by contemporary figures such as Friedrich von Holstein to follow a more logical approach as opposed to Bismarck s complex and even duplicitous strategy 8 Thus the treaty with Austria Hungary was concluded despite the Russian willingness to amend the Reinsurance Treaty and to sacrifice a provision referred to as the very secret additions 8 that concerned the Turkish Straits 9 Caprivi s decision was also driven by the belief that the Reinsurance Treaty was no longer needed to ensure Russian neutrality if France attacked Germany and the treaty would even preclude an offensive against France 10 Lacking the capacity for Bismarck s strategic ambiguity Caprivi pursued a policy that was oriented towards getting Russia to accept Berlin s promises on good faith and to encourage St Petersburg to engage in a direct understanding with Vienna without a written accord 10 By 1882 the Dual Alliance was expanded to include Italy 11 In response Russia secured in the same year the Franco Russian Alliance a strong military relationship that was to last until 1917 That move was prompted by Russia s need for an ally since it was experiencing a major famine and a rise in antigovernment revolutionary activities 10 The alliance was gradually built throughout the years from when Bismarck refused the sale of Russian bonds in Berlin which drove Russia to the Paris capital market 12 That began the expansion of Russian and French financial ties which eventually helped elevate the Franco Russian entente to the diplomatic and military arenas Caprivi s strategy appeared to work when during the outbreak of the Bosnian crisis of 1908 Germany successfully demanded that Russia step back and demobilize 13 When Germany asked Russia the same thing later Russia refused which finally helped precipitate the war French distrust of Germany Edit Main article French entry into World War I American cartoon showing territorial dispute between France and Germany over Alsace Lorraine 1898 Some of the distant origins of World War I can be seen in the results and consequences of the Franco Prussian War in 1870 and 1871 and the concurrent unification of Germany Germany had won decisively and established a powerful empire but France fell into chaos and experienced a years long decline in its military power A legacy of animosity grew between France and Germany after the German annexation of Alsace Lorraine The annexation caused widespread resentment in France giving rise to the desire for revenge that was known as revanchism French sentiment was based on a desire to avenge military and territorial losses and the displacement of France as the pre eminent continental military power 14 Bismarck was wary of the French desire for revenge and achieved peace by isolating France and by balancing the ambitions of Austria Hungary and Russia in the Balkans During his later years he tried to placate the French by encouraging their overseas expansion However anti German sentiment remained 15 France eventually recovered from its defeat paid its war indemnity and rebuilt its military strength However France was smaller than Germany in terms of population and industry and therefore many French felt insecure next to a more powerful neighbor 16 By the 1890s the desire for revenge over Alsace Lorraine was no longer a major factor for the leaders of France but remained a force in public opinion Jules Cambon the French ambassador to Berlin 1907 1914 worked hard to secure a detente but French leaders decided that Berlin was trying to weaken the Triple Entente and was not sincere in seeking peace The French consensus was that war was inevitable 17 British alignment towards France and Russia 1898 1907 The Triple Entente Edit Main articles Entente Cordiale Anglo Russian Convention and Triple Entente After Bismarck s removal in 1890 French efforts to isolate Germany became successful With the formation of the informal Triple Entente Germany began to feel encircled 18 French Foreign Minister Theophile Delcasse went to great pains to woo Russia and Britain Key markers were the 1894 Franco Russian Alliance the 1904 Entente Cordiale with Britain and the 1907 Anglo Russian Convention which led to the Triple Entente France s informal alignment with Britain and its formal alliance with Russia against Germany and Austria eventually led Russia and Britain to enter World War I as France s allies 19 20 Britain abandoned its policy of splendid isolation in the 1900s after it had been isolated during the Second Boer War Britain concluded agreements limited to colonial affairs with its two major colonial rivals the Entente Cordiale with France in 1904 and the Anglo Russian Entente in 1907 Some historians see Britain s alignment as principally a reaction to an assertive German foreign policy and the buildup of its navy from 1898 that led to the Anglo German naval arms race 21 22 Other scholars most notably Niall Ferguson argue that Britain chose France and Russia over Germany because Germany was too weak an ally to provide an effective counterbalance to the other powers and could not provide Britain with the imperial security that was achieved by the Entente agreements 23 In the words of the British diplomat Arthur Nicolson it was far more disadvantageous to us to have an unfriendly France and Russia than an unfriendly Germany 24 Ferguson argues that the British government rejected German alliance overtures not because Germany began to pose a threat to Britain but on the contrary because they realized she did not pose a threat 25 The impact of the Triple Entente was therefore twofold by improving British relations with France and its ally Russia and showing the importance to Britain of good relations with Germany It was not that antagonism toward Germany caused its isolation but rather that the new system itself channeled and intensified hostility towards the German Empire 26 The Triple Entente between Britain France and Russia is often compared to the Triple Alliance between Germany Austria Hungary and Italy but historians caution against that comparison as simplistic The Entente in contrast to the Triple Alliance and the Franco Russian Alliance was not an alliance of mutual defence and so in 1914 Britain felt free to make its own foreign policy decisions As the British Foreign Office official Eyre Crowe minuted The fundamental fact of course is that the Entente is not an alliance For purposes of ultimate emergencies it may be found to have no substance at all For the Entente is nothing more than a frame of mind a view of general policy which is shared by the governments of two countries but which may be or become so vague as to lose all content 27 A series of diplomatic incidents between 1905 and 1914 heightened tensions between the Great Powers and reinforced the existing alignments beginning with the First Moroccan Crisis First Moroccan Crisis 1905 06 Strengthening the Entente Edit Main article First Moroccan Crisis The First Moroccan Crisis was an international dispute between March 1905 and May 1906 over the status of Morocco The crisis worsened German relations with both France and Britain and helped ensure the success of the new Entente Cordiale In the words of the historian Christopher Clark The Anglo French Entente was strengthened rather than weakened by the German challenge to France in Morocco 28 Due to this crisis Spain turned to the United Kingdom and France and signed the Pact of Cartagena of 1907 Spain received British help to build the new Espana class battleship Bosnian Crisis 1908 Worsening relations of Russia and Serbia with Austria Hungary Edit Main article Bosnian crisis In 1908 Austria Hungary announced its annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina provinces in the Balkans Bosnia and Herzegovina had been nominally under the sovereignty of the Ottoman Empire but administered by Austria Hungary since the Congress of Berlin in 1878 The announcement upset the fragile balance of power in the Balkans and enraged Serbia and pan Slavic nationalists throughout Europe The weakened Russia was forced to submit to its humiliation but its foreign office still viewed Austria Hungary s actions as overly aggressive and threatening Russia s response was to encourage pro Russian and anti Austrian sentiment in Serbia and other Balkan provinces provoking Austrian fears of Slavic expansionism in the region 29 Agadir crisis in Morocco 1911 Edit Main article Agadir crisis French troops in Morocco 1912 Imperial rivalries pushed France Germany and Britain to compete for control of Morocco leading to a short lived war scare in 1911 In the end France established a protectorate over Morocco that increased European tensions The Agadir Crisis resulted from the deployment of a substantial force of French troops into the interior of Morocco in April 1911 Germany reacted by sending the gunboat SMS Panther to the Moroccan port of Agadir on 1 July 1911 The main result was deeper suspicion between London and Berlin and closer military ties between London and Paris 30 31 British backing of France during the crisis reinforced the Entente between the two countries and with Russia increased Anglo German estrangement and deepened the divisions that would erupt in 1914 32 In terms of internal British jousting the crisis was part of a five year struggle inside the British cabinet between Radical isolationists and the Liberal Party s imperialist interventionists The interventionists sought to use the Triple Entente to contain German expansion The Radical isolationists obtained an agreement for official cabinet approval of all initiatives that might lead to war However the interventionists were joined by the two leading Radicals David Lloyd George and Winston Churchill Lloyd George s famous Mansion House speech of 21 July 1911 angered the Germans and encouraged the French 33 The crisis led British Foreign Secretary Edward Grey a Liberal and French leaders to make a secret naval agreement by which the Royal Navy would protect the northern coast of France from German attack and France agreed to concentrate the French Navy in the western Mediterranean and to protect British interests there France was thus able to guard its communications with its North African colonies and Britain to concentrate more force in home waters to oppose the German High Seas Fleet The British cabinet was not informed of the agreement until August 1914 Meanwhile the episode strengthened the hand of German Admiral Alfred von Tirpitz who was calling for a greatly increased navy and obtained it in 1912 34 The American historian Raymond James Sontag argues that Agadir was a comedy of errors that became a tragic prelude to the World War I The crisis seems comic its obscure origin the questions at stake the conduct of the actors had comic The results were tragic Tension between France and Germany and between Germany and England have been increased the armaments race receive new impetus the conviction that an early war was inevitable spread through the governing class of Europe 35 Italo Turkish War Isolation of the Ottomans 1911 1912 Edit Main article Italo Turkish War Mustafa Kemal left with an Ottoman military officer and Bedouin forces in Derna Tripolitania Vilayet 1912 In the Italo Turkish War the Kingdom of Italy defeated the Ottoman Empire in North Africa in 1911 1912 36 Italy easily captured the important coastal cities but its army failed to advance far into the interior Italy captured the Ottoman Tripolitania Vilayet a province whose most notable subprovinces or sanjaks were Fezzan Cyrenaica and Tripoli itself The territories together formed what was later known as Italian Libya The main significance for World War I was that it was now clear that no Great Power still appeared to wish to support the Ottoman Empire which paved the way for the Balkan Wars Christopher Clark stated Italy launched a war of conquest on an African province of the Ottoman Empire triggering a chain of opportunistic assaults on Ottoman territories across the Balkans The system of geographical balances that had enabled local conflicts to be contained was swept away 37 Balkan Wars 1912 13 Growth of Serbian and Russian power Edit Main article Balkan Wars The Balkan Wars were two conflicts that took place in the Balkan Peninsula in southeastern Europe in 1912 and 1913 Four Balkan states defeated the Ottoman Empire in the first war one of them Bulgaria was defeated in the second war The Ottoman Empire lost nearly all of its territory in Europe Austria Hungary although not a combatant was weakened as a much enlarged Kingdom of Serbia pushed for union of all South Slavs The Balkan Wars in 1912 1913 increased international tension between Russia and Austria Hungary It also led to a strengthening of Serbia and a weakening of the Ottoman Empire and Bulgaria which might otherwise have kept Serbia under control thus disrupting the balance of power in Europe toward Russia Russia initially agreed to avoid territorial changes but later in 1912 it supported Serbia s demand for an Albanian port The London Conference of 1912 13 agreed to create an independent Albania but both Serbia and Montenegro refused to comply After an Austrian and then an international naval demonstration in early 1912 and Russia s withdrawal of support Serbia backed down Montenegro was not as compliant and on May 2 the Austrian council of ministers met and decided to give Montenegro a last chance to comply or it would resort to military action However seeing the Austro Hungarian military preparations the Montenegrins requested for the ultimatum to be delayed and they complied 38 Territorial gains of the Balkan states after the Balkan Wars The Serbian government having failed to get Albania now demanded for the other spoils of the First Balkan War to be reapportioned and Russia failed to pressure Serbia to back down Serbia and Greece allied against Bulgaria which responded with a pre emptive strike against their forces and so began the Second Balkan War 39 The Bulgarian army crumbled quickly after the Ottoman Empire and Romania joined the war The Balkan Wars strained the German alliance with Austria Hungary The attitude of the German government to Austro Hungarian requests of support against Serbia was initially divided and inconsistent After the German Imperial War Council of 8 December 1912 it was clear that Germany was not ready to support Austria Hungary in a war against Serbia and its likely allies In addition German diplomacy before during and after the Second Balkan War was pro Greek and pro Romanian and against Austria Hungary s increasing pro Bulgarian sympathies The result was tremendous damage to relations between both empires Austro Hungarian Foreign Minister Leopold von Berchtold remarked to the German ambassador Heinrich von Tschirschky in July 1913 Austria Hungary might as well belong to the other grouping for all the good Berlin had been 40 In September 1913 it was learned that Serbia was moving into Albania and Russia was doing nothing to restrain it and the Serbian government would not guarantee to respect Albania s territorial integrity and suggested that some frontier modifications would occur In October 1913 the council of ministers decided to send Serbia a warning followed by an ultimatum for Germany and Italy to be notified of some action and asked for support and for spies to be sent to report if there was an actual withdrawal Serbia responded to the warning with defiance and the ultimatum was dispatched on October 17 and received the following day It demanded for Serbia to evacuate from Albania within eight days After Serbia complied the Kaiser made a congratulatory visit to Vienna to try to fix some of the damage done earlier in the year 41 By then Russia had mostly recovered from its defeat in the Russo Japanese War and the calculations of Germany and Austria were driven by a fear that Russia would eventually become too strong to be challenged The conclusion was that any war with Russia had to occur within the next few years to have any chance of success 42 Franco Russian Alliance changes to Balkan inception scenario 1911 1913 Edit The original Franco Russian alliance was formed to protect both France and Russia from a German attack In the event of such an attack both states would mobilize in tandem placing Germany under the threat of a two front war However there were limits placed on the alliance so that it was essentially defensive in character Throughout the 1890s and the 1900s the French and the Russians made clear the limits of the alliance did not extend to provocations caused by each other s adventurous foreign policy For example Russia warned France that the alliance would not operate if the French provoked the Germans in North Africa Equally the French insisted that the Russians should not use the alliance to provoke Austria Hungary or Germany in the Balkans and that France did not recognize in the Balkans a vital strategic interest for France or Russia That changed in the last 18 to 24 months before the outbreak of the war At the end of 1911 particularly during the Balkan Wars in 1912 1913 the French view changed to accept the importance of the Balkans to Russia Moreover France clearly stated that if as a result of a conflict in the Balkans war broke out between Austria Hungary and Serbia France would stand by Russia Thus the alliance changed in character and Serbia now became a security salient for Russia and France A war of Balkan inception regardless of who started such a war would cause the alliance would respond by viewing the conflict as a casus foederis a trigger for the alliance Christopher Clark described that change as a very important development in the pre war system which made the events of 1914 possible 43 Otte also agrees that France became significantly less keen on restraining Russia after the Austro Serbian crisis of 1912 and sought to embolden Russia against Austria The Russian ambassador conveyed Poincare s message as saying that if Russia wages war France also wages war 44 Liman von Sanders Affair 1913 14 Edit This was a crisis caused by the appointment of an Imperial German Army officer Otto Liman von Sanders to command the Ottoman First Army Corps guarding Constantinople and the subsequent Russian objections In November 1913 Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Sazonov complained to Berlin that the Sanders mission was an openly hostile act In addition to threatening Russia s foreign trade half of which flowed through the Turkish Straits the mission raised the possibility of a German led Ottoman assault on Russia s Black Sea ports and it imperiled Russian plans for expansion in eastern Anatolia A compromise arrangement was agreed for Sanders to be appointed to the rather less senior and less influential position of Inspector General in January 1914 45 When the war came Sanders provided only limited help to the Ottoman forces 46 Anglo German detente 1912 14 Edit Historians have cautioned that taken together the preceding crises should not be seen as an argument that a European war was inevitable in 1914 The Anglo German naval arms race became a considerable source of tension between Germany and Britain prior to World War I Royal Navy warships pictured above in battle formation Although the Haldane Mission of February 1912 failed to halt the Anglo German naval arms race the race suddenly paused in late 1912 as Germany cut its naval budget In April 1913 Britain and Germany signed an agreement over the African territories of the Portuguese Empire which was expected to collapse imminently That empire lasted into the 1970s Moreover the Russians were again threatening British interests in Persia and India The British were deeply annoyed by St Petersburg s failure to observe the terms of the agreement struck in 1907 and began to feel an arrangement of some kind with Germany might serve as a useful corrective 24 Despite the infamous 1908 interview in The Daily Telegraph which implied that Kaiser Wilhelm wanted war he came to be regarded as a guardian of peace After the Moroccan Crisis the Anglo German press wars previously an important feature of international politics during the first decade of the century virtually ceased In early 1913 H H Asquith stated Public opinion in both countries seems to point to an intimate and friendly understanding The end of the naval arms race the relaxation of colonial rivalries and the increased diplomatic co operation in the Balkans all resulted in an improvement in Germany s image in Britain by the eve of the war 47 The British diplomat Arthur Nicolson wrote in May 1914 Since I have been at the Foreign Office I have not seen such calm waters 48 The Anglophile German Ambassador Karl Max Prince Lichnowsky deplored that Germany had acted hastily without waiting for the British offer of mediation in July 1914 to be given a chance The July Crisis EditFull article July Crisis Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand by Serbian irredentists 28 June 1914 Edit Main article Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand Grave implications of the assassination were immediately recognized as in this 29 June article with subtitles War Sequel and War May Result and stating the assassination was engineered by persons having a more mature organizing ability than that of the youthful assassins 49 On 28 June 1914 Archduke Franz Ferdinand the heir presumptive to the Austro Hungarian throne and his wife Sophie Duchess of Hohenberg are shot dead by two gun shots 50 in Sarajevo by Gavrilo Princip one of a group of six assassins five Serbs and one Bosniak co ordinated by Danilo Ilic a Bosnian Serb and a member of the Black Hand secret society The assassination is significant because it was perceived by Austria Hungary as an existential challenge and so was viewed as providing a casus belli with Serbia Emperor Franz Josef was 84 and so the assassination of his heir so soon before he was likely to hand over the crown was seen as a direct challenge to the empire Many ministers in Austria especially Berchtold argue that the act must be avenged 51 Moreover the Archduke had been a decisive voice for peace in the previous years but was now removed from the discussions The assassination triggered the July Crisis which turned a local conflict into a European and later a world war Domestic political factors EditGerman domestic politics Edit Further information Fischer controversy Left wing parties especially the Social Democratic Party of Germany SPD made large gains in the 1912 German federal election The German government was still dominated by the Prussian Junkers who feared the rise of left wing parties Fritz Fischer famously argued that they deliberately sought an external war to distract the population and to whip up patriotic support for the government 52 Indeed one German military leader Moritz von Lynker the chief of the military cabinet wanted war in 1909 because it was desirable in order to escape from difficulties at home and abroad 53 The Conservative Party leader Ernst von Heydebrand und der Lasa suggested that a war would strengthen patriarchal order 54 Other authors argue that German conservatives were ambivalent about a war for fear that losing a war would have disastrous consequences and believed that even a successful war might alienate the population if it was lengthy or difficult 23 Scenes of mass war euphoria were often doctored for propaganda purposes and even the scenes which were genuine would not reflect the general population Many German people complained of a need to conform to the euphoria around them which allowed later Nazi propagandists to foster an image of national fulfillment later destroyed by wartime betrayal and subversion culminating in the alleged Dolchstoss stab in the back of the army by socialists 55 Drivers of Austro Hungarian policy Edit The argument that Austria Hungary was a moribund political entity whose disappearance was only a matter of time was deployed by hostile contemporaries to suggest that its efforts to defend its integrity during the last years before the war were in some sense illegitimate 56 Clark states Evaluating the prospects of the Austro Hungarian empire on the eve of the first world war confronts us in an acute way with the problem of temporal perspective The collapse of the empire amid war and defeat in 1918 impressed itself upon the retrospective view of the Habsburg lands overshadowing the scene with auguries of imminent and ineluctable decline 57 It is true that Austro Hungarian politics in the decades before the war were increasingly dominated by the struggle for national rights among the empire s eleven official nationalities Germans Hungarians Czechs Slovaks Slovenes Croats Serbs Romanians Ruthenians Ukrainians Poles and Italians However before 1914 radical nationalists seeking full separation from the empire were still a small minority and Austria Hungary s political turbulence was more noisy than deep citation needed In fact in the decade before the war the Habsburg lands passed through a phase of strong widely shared economic growth Most inhabitants associated the Habsburgs with the benefits of orderly government public education welfare sanitation the rule of law and the maintenance of a sophisticated infrastructure Christopher Clark states Prosperous and relatively well administered the empire like its elderly sovereign exhibited a curious stability amid turmoil Crises came and went without appearing to threaten the existence of the system as such The situation was always as the Viennese journalist Karl Kraus quipped desperate but not serious 58 Jack Levy and William Mulligan argue that the death of Franz Ferdinand itself was a significant factor in helping escalate the July Crisis into a war by killing a powerful proponent for peace and thus encouraged a more belligerent decision making process 59 Drivers of Serbian policy Edit The principal aims of Serbian policy were to consolidate the Russian backed expansion of Serbia in the Balkan Wars and to achieve dreams of a Greater Serbia which included the unification of lands with large ethnic Serb populations in Austria Hungary including Bosnia 60 Underlying that was a culture of extreme nationalism and a cult of assassination which romanticized the slaying of the Ottoman Sultan Murad I as the heroic epilogue to the otherwise disastrous Battle of Kosovo on 28 June 1389 Clark states The Greater Serbian vision was not just a question of government policy however or even of propaganda It was woven deeply into the culture and identity of the Serbs 60 Famed Serbian American scientist Michael Pupin for example in July 1914 explicitly connected the Battle of Kosovo a natural heritage of every true Serb to Franz Ferdinand s assassination He wrote that the battle s memory always served as a reminder to the Serbs that they must avenge the wrongs perpetrated upon their race 61 Serbian policy was complicated by the fact that the main actors in 1914 were both the official Serb government led by Nikola Pasic and the Black Hand terrorists led by the head of Serb military intelligence known as Apis The Black Hand believed that a Greater Serbia would be achieved by provoking a war with Austria Hungary by an act of terror The war would be won with Russian backing The official government position was to focus on consolidating the gains made during the exhausting Balkan War and to avoid further conflicts That official policy was temporized by the political necessity of simultaneously and clandestinely supporting dreams of a Greater Serbian state in the long term 62 The Serbian government found it impossible to put an end to the machinations of the Black Hand for fear it would itself be overthrown Clark states Serbian authorities were partly unwilling and partly unable to suppress the irredentist activity that had given rise to the assassinations in the first place 63 Russia tended to support Serbia as a fellow Slavic state considered Serbia its client and encouraged Serbia to focus its irredentism against Austria Hungary because it would discourage conflict between Serbia and Bulgaria another prospective Russian ally in Macedonia Imperialism EditSee also New Imperialism Impact of colonial rivalry and aggression on Europe in 1914 Edit World empires and colonies around 1914 Imperial rivalry and the consequences of the search for imperial security or for imperial expansion had important consequences for the origins of World War I Imperial rivalries between France Britain Russia and Germany played an important part in the creation of the Triple Entente and the relative isolation of Germany Imperial opportunism in the form of the Italian attack on Ottoman Libyan provinces also encouraged the Balkan wars of 1912 13 which changed the balance of power in the Balkans to the detriment of Austria Hungary Some historians such as Margaret MacMillan believe that Germany created its own diplomatic isolation in Europe in part by an aggressive and pointless imperial policy known as Weltpolitik Others such as Clark believe that German isolation was the unintended consequence of a detente between Britain France and Russia The detente was driven by Britain s desire for imperial security in relation to France in North Africa and to Russia in Persia and India Either way the isolation was important because it left Germany few options but to ally itself more strongly with Austria Hungary leading ultimately to unconditional support for Austria Hungary s punitive war on Serbia during the July Crisis German isolation a consequence of Weltpolitik Edit Otto von Bismarck disliked the idea of an overseas empire but supported France s colonization in Africa because it diverted the French government attention and resources away from Continental Europe and revanchism after 1870 Germany s New Course in foreign affairs Weltpolitik world policy was adopted in the 1890s after Bismarck s dismissal Its aim was ostensibly to transform Germany into a global power through assertive diplomacy the acquisition of overseas colonies and the development of a large navy Some historians notably MacMillan and Hew Strachan believe that a consequence of the policy of Weltpolitik and Germany s associated assertiveness was to isolate it Weltpolitik particularly as expressed in Germany s objections to France s growing influence in Morocco in 1904 and 1907 also helped cement the Triple Entente The Anglo German naval race also isolated Germany by reinforcing Britain s preference for agreements with Germany s continental rivals France and Russia 64 German isolation a consequence of the Triple Entente Edit Historians like Ferguson and Clark believe that Germany s isolation was the unintended consequences of the need for Britain to defend its empire against threats from France and Russia They also downplay the impact of Weltpolitik and the Anglo German naval race which ended in 1911 Britain and France signed a series of agreements in 1904 which became known as the Entente Cordiale Most importantly it granted freedom of action to Britain in Egypt and to France in Morocco Equally the 1907 Anglo Russian Convention greatly improved British Russian relations by solidifying boundaries that identified respective control in Persia Afghanistan and Tibet The alignment between Britain France and Russia became known as the Triple Entente However the Triple Entente was not conceived as a counterweight to the Triple Alliance but as a formula to secure imperial security between the three powers 65 The impact of the Triple Entente was twofold improving British relations with France and its ally Russia and showing the importance to Britain of good relations with Germany Clark states it was not that antagonism toward Germany caused its isolation but rather that the new system itself channeled and intensified hostility towards the German Empire 66 Imperial opportunism Edit The Italo Turkish War of 1911 1912 was fought between the Ottoman Empire and the Kingdom of Italy in North Africa The war made it clear that no great power still appeared to wish to support the Ottoman Empire which paved the way for the Balkan Wars The status of Morocco had been guaranteed by international agreement and when France attempted a great expansion of its influence there without the assent of all other signatories Germany opposed and prompted the Moroccan Crises the Tangier Crisis of 1905 and the Agadir Crisis of 1911 The intent of German policy was to drive a wedge between the British and French but in both cases it produced the opposite effect and Germany was isolated diplomatically most notably by lacking the support of Italy despite it being in the Triple Alliance The French protectorate over Morocco was established officially in 1912 In 1914 however the African scene was peaceful The continent was almost fully divided up by the imperial powers with only Liberia and Ethiopia still independent There were no major disputes there pitting any two European powers against each other 67 Marxist interpretation Edit This section may contain an excessive amount of intricate detail that may interest only a particular audience Please help by spinning off or relocating any relevant information and removing excessive detail that may be against Wikipedia s inclusion policy January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Marxism attributes war to economic interests and rivalries in this case imperialism Vladimir Lenin argued that imperialism is the monopoly stage of capitalism which emerges from the free competition stage of capitalism and is characterized by the presence of five basic features 1 the concentration of production and capital has developed to such a high stage that it has created monopolies which play a decisive role in economic life 2 the merging of bank capital with industrial capital and the creation on the basis of this finance capital of a financial oligarchy 3 the export of capital as distinguished from the export of commodities acquires exceptional importance 4 the formation of international monopolist capitalist associations which share the world among themselves and 5 the territorial division of the whole world among the biggest capitalist powers is completed 68 Lenin concluded that these five features of imperialism had been established by the turn of the 20th century after the great powers had spent the final decades of the prior century acquiring nearly all the remaining territory of the world that had not yet been colonized 69 The largest and most lucrative uncolonized or semi colonized territories at the time of the war were that of Persia Iran Turkey including all of the pre industrial territories of the declining Ottoman Empire and most of China beyond the treaty ports 69 Having completed the division of the world among themselves at the beginning of the century the developed capitalist states would thereafter compete for hegemony in the form of a redivision of those territories both in the industrialized areas e g German appetite for Belgium French appetite for Lorraine and in primarily agrarian areas 68 In the final analysis the conflict at the start of the war reflected the present state of that division among the capitalist powers seeking to export their capital abroad Britain and France chiefly the former represented on the one side countries that were the first to industrialize under capitalism and therefore the first to develop monopoly capitalism where the entire economy fell under the domination of a handful of interlinked corporations and financial institutions This gave them both the ability and more importantly the need to acquire colonies places without industry that would finance their development primarily via enterprises of raw resource extraction in British and French banks through taking loans floating bonds and selling shares Britain and France therefore had by far the most colonial territory at the start of the war but this meant that the development of their domestic industries had slowed considerably and their national wealth was now predominantly achieved through a return on financial investments i e export of capital in their colonies rather than through purchase on the global market of their domestically manufactured goods i e export of commodities 70 Russia having become highly indebted to France in order to finance its own industrial development rounds out the major powers of the Triple Entente at the outset of the conflict On the other side at the same time that Britain and France had turned to acquiring colonies Germany s domestic development proceeded rapidly to the point that its output had exceeded that of Britain and France by 1914 but its ability to invest its new surplus of capital was limited by the territorial dominance of the other empires Austria Hungary and the Ottoman Empire lagged considerably behind Britain France and Germany in their industrial development and all three of the latter had made footholds exporting their own capital in the territories of the former Germany financed and developed oil fields in Romania and the railroad under construction from Istanbul to Baghdad Egypt though nominally Ottoman territory had been under British military control since 1882 to secure British and French interests in the Suez Canal Accordingly the Balkan crisis from the point of view of the industrial powers was predominantly a question of which country s industrial and financial cartels would control the states that emerged from the fledgling national movements there and therefore reap the profits Moreover whoever lost the war would pay an indemnity and therefore have to cede some of its interests to the victor whether in the form of the loser s directly controlled colonies or in their financial interests in nominally independent states Richard Hamilton observed that the argument went that since industrialists and bankers were seeking raw materials new markets and new investments overseas if one was strategically blocked by other powers the obvious or necessary solution was war 71 Hamilton somewhat criticized the view that the war was launched to secure colonies but agreed that imperialism may have been on the mind of key decision makers He argued that it was not necessarily for logical economic reasons Firstly the different powers of the war had different imperial holdings Britain had the largest empire in the world and an historic monopoly on sea trade in the Royal Navy Russia had the second largest and France had a modestly sized empire Conversely Germany had a few unprofitable colonies and Austria Hungary had no overseas holdings or desire to secure any So the divergent interests require an imperialism argument to be specific in interests or needs that decision makers would be trying to meet None of Germany s colonies made more money than was required to maintain them and they also were only 0 5 of Germany s overseas trade and only a few thousand Germans migrated to the colonies However in economics the Baghdad railway was not only a potential threat to British control of trade by sea but direct access to oil so highly preferred over coal would fuel the already large German economy and its growing navy However this was recognised as important enough to the British that it was actively and strategically being managed through financing to share rail access and through diplomacy not to share northern rail access to the Persian Gulf Thus he argues that colonies were pursued mainly as a sign of German power and prestige rather than for profit which could be got through trade alone While Russia eagerly pursued colonisation in East Asia by seizing control of Manchuria it had little gain in wealth the Manchurian population was never sufficiently integrated into the Russian economy and efforts to make Manchuria a captive trade market did not end Russia s trade deficit with China Hamilton argued that the imperialism argument depended upon the view of national elites being informed rational and calculating but it is equally possible to consider that decision makers were uninformed or ignorant Hamilton suggested that imperial ambitions may have been driven by groupthink because every other country was doing it policymakers would think that their country should do the same Hamilton noted that Bismarck was famously not moved by such peer pressure and ended Germany s limited imperialist movement He regarded colonial ambitions as a waste of money but simultaneously recommended them to other nations 72 Hamilton was more critical of the view that capitalists and business leaders drove the war He thought that businessmen bankers and financiers were generally against the war as they viewed it as being perilous to economic prosperity The decision of Austria Hungary to go to war was made by the monarch his ministers and military leaders with practically no representation from financial and business leaders even though Austria Hungary was then developing rapidly Furthermore evidence can be found from the Austro Hungarian stock market which responded to the assassination of Franz Ferdinand with unease but no sense of alarm and only a small decrease in share value However when it became clear that war was a possibility share values dropped sharply which suggested that investors did not see war as serving their interests One of the strongest sources of opposition to the war was from major banks whose financial bourgeoisie regarded the army as the reserve of the aristocracy and utterly foreign to the banking universe While the banks had ties to arms manufacturers it was those companies that had links to the military not the banks which were pacifistic and profoundly hostile to the prospect of war However the banks were largely excluded from the nation s foreign affairs Likewise German business leaders had little influence Hugo Stinnes a leading German industrialist advocated peaceful economic development and believed that Germany would be able to rule Europe by economic power and that war would be a disruptive force Carl Duisberg a chemical industrialist hoped for peace and believed that the war would set German economic development back a decade as Germany s extraordinary prewar growth had depended upon international trade and interdependence While some bankers and industrialists tried to curb Wilhelm II away from war their efforts ended in failure There is no evidence they ever received a direct response from the Kaiser chancellor or foreign secretary or that their advice was discussed in depth by the Foreign Office or the General Staff The German leadership measured power not in financial ledgers but land and military might 73 In Britain the Chancellor of the Exchequer David Lloyd George had been informed by the Governor of the Bank of England that business and financial interests opposed British intervention in the war Lord Nathan Rothschild a leading British banker called the financial editor at The Times and insisted for the paper to denounce the war and to advocate for neutrality but the lead members of the newspaper ultimately decided that the paper should support intervention The Rothschild family would go on to suffer serious losses in the war that amounted to 23 of its capital Generally speaking the European business leaders were in favour of profits and peace allowed for stability and investment opportunities across national borders but war brought the disruption trade the confiscation of holdings and the risk of increased taxation Even arms manufacturers the so called Merchants of Death would not necessarily benefit since they could make money selling weapons at home but they could lose access to foreign markets Krupp a major arms manufacturer started the war with 48 million marks in profits but ended it 148 million marks in debt and the first year of peace saw further losses of 36 million marks 74 75 William Mulligan argues that while economic and political factors were often interdependent economic factors tended towards peace Prewar trade wars and financial rivalries never threatened to escalate into conflict Governments would mobilise bankers and financiers to serve their interests rather than the reverse The commercial and financial elite recognized peace as necessary for economic development and used its influence to resolve diplomatic crises Economic rivalries existed but were framed largely by political concerns Prior to the war there were few signs that the international economy stood for war in the summer of 1914 76 Social Darwinism EditMain article Social Darwinism Social Darwinism was a theory of human evolution loosely based on Darwinism that influenced many European intellectuals and strategic thinkers from 1870 to 1914 It emphasised that struggle between nations and races was natural and that only the fittest nations deserved to survive 77 It gave an impetus to German assertiveness as a world economic and military power aimed at competing with France and Britain for world power German colonial rule in Africa in 1884 to 1914 was an expression of nationalism and moral superiority which was justified by constructing an image of the natives as Other The approach highlighted racist views of mankind German colonization was characterized by the use of repressive violence in the name of culture and civilisation Germany s cultural missionary project boasted that its colonial programmes were humanitarian and educational endeavours Furthermore the wide acceptance of Social Darwinism by intellectuals justified Germany s right to acquire colonial territories as a matter of the survival of the fittest according to the historian Michael Schubert 78 79 The model suggested an explanation of why some ethnic groups then called races had been for so long antagonistic such as Germans and Slavs They were natural rivals destined to clash Senior German generals like Helmuth von Moltke the Younger talked in apocalyptic terms about the need for Germans to fight for their existence as a people and culture MacMillan states Reflecting the Social Darwinist theories of the era many Germans saw Slavs especially Russia as the natural opponent of the Teutonic races 80 Also the chief of the Austro Hungarian General Staff declared A people that lays down its weapons seals its fate 80 In July 1914 the Austrian press described Serbia and the South Slavs in terms that owed much to Social Darwinism 80 In 1914 the German economist Johann Plenge described the war as a clash between the German ideas of 1914 duty order justice and the French ideas of 1789 liberty equality fraternity 81 William Mulligen argues that Anglo German antagonism was also about a clash of two political cultures as well as more traditional geopolitical and military concerns Britain admired Germany for its economic successes and social welfare provision but also regarded Germany as illiberal militaristic and technocratic 82 War was seen as a natural and viable or even useful instrument of policy War was compared to a tonic for a sick patient or a life saving operation to cut out diseased flesh 80 Since war was natural for some leaders it was simply a question of timing and so it would be better to have a war when the circumstances were most propitious I consider a war inevitable declared Moltke in 1912 The sooner the better 83 In German ruling circles war was viewed as the only way to rejuvenate Germany Russia was viewed as growing stronger every day and it was believed that Germany had to strike while it still could before it was crushed by Russia 84 Nationalism made war a competition between peoples nations or races rather than kings and elites 85 Social Darwinism carried a sense of inevitability to conflict and downplayed the use of diplomacy or international agreements to end warfare It tended to glorify warfare the taking of initiative and the warrior male role 86 Social Darwinism played an important role across Europe but J Leslie has argued that it played a critical and immediate role in the strategic thinking of some important hawkish members of the Austro Hungarian government 87 Social Darwinism therefore normalized war as an instrument of policy and justified its use Web of alliances Edit A Threatening Situation an American editorial cartoon depicting the supposed web of alliances The caption reads If Austria attacks Serbia Russia will fall upon Austria Germany upon Russia and France and England upon Germany That dimension developed into the concept of chain ganging Although general narratives of the war tend to emphasize the importance of alliances in binding the major powers to act in the event of a crisis such as the July Crisis historians such as Margaret MacMillan warn against the argument that alliances forced the Great Powers to act as they did What we tend to think of as fixed alliances before the First World War were nothing of the sort They were much more loose much more porous much more capable of change 88 The most important alliances in Europe required participants to agree to collective defence if they were attacked Some represented formal alliances but the Triple Entente represented only a frame of mind German Austrian Treaty 1879 The Franco Russian Alliance 1894 The addition of Italy to the Germany and Austrian alliance in 1882 forming the Triple Alliance Treaty of London 1839 guaranteeing the neutrality of BelgiumThere are three notable exceptions that demonstrate that alliances did not in themselves force the great powers to act The Entente Cordiale between Britain and France in 1905 included a secret agreement that left the northern coast of France and the English Channel to be defended by the British Royal Navy and the separate entente between Britain and Russia 1907 formed the so called Triple Entente However the Triple Entente did not in fact force Britain to mobilise because it was not a military treaty Moreover general narratives of the war regularly misstate that Russia was allied to Serbia Clive Ponting noted Russia had no treaty of alliance with Serbia and was under no obligation to support it diplomatically let alone go to its defence 89 Italy despite being part of the Triple Alliance did not enter the war to defend the Triple Alliance partners Arms race EditBy the 1870s to 1880s all the major powers were preparing for a large scale war although none expected one 90 Britain ignored its small army and focused on building up the Royal Navy which was already stronger than the next two navies combined Germany France Austria Italy Russia and some smaller countries set up conscription systems in which young men would serve from one to three years in the army and then spend the next twenty years or so in the reserves with annual summer training Men from higher social statuses became officers Each country devised a mobilization system in which the reserves could be called up quickly and sent to key points by rail Every year the plans were updated and expanded in terms of complexity Each country stockpiled arms and supplies for an army that ran into the millions Germany in 1874 had a regular professional army of 420 000 with an additional 1 3 million reserves By 1897 the regular army was 545 000 strong and the reserves 3 4 million The French in 1897 had 3 4 million reservists Austria 2 6 million and Russia 4 0 million The various national war plans had been perfected by 1914 but with Russia and Austria trailing in effectiveness Recent wars since 1865 had typically been short a matter of months All war plans called for a decisive opening and assumed victory would come after a short war None planned for the food and munitions needs of the long stalemate that actually happened in 1914 to 1918 91 92 As David Stevenson put it A self reinforcing cycle of heightened military preparedness was an essential element in the conjuncture that led to disaster The armaments race was a necessary precondition for the outbreak of hostilities David Herrmann goes further by arguing that the fear that windows of opportunity for victorious wars were closing the arms race did precipitate the First World War If Franz Ferdinand had been assassinated in 1904 or even in 1911 Herrmann speculates there might have been no war It was the armaments race and the speculation about imminent or preventive wars that made his death in 1914 the trigger for war 93 One of the aims of the First Hague Conference of 1899 held at the suggestion of Tsar Nicholas II was to discuss disarmament The Second Hague Conference was held in 1907 All signatories except for Germany supported disarmament Germany also did not want to agree to binding arbitration and mediation The Kaiser was concerned that the United States would propose disarmament measures which he opposed All parties tried to revise international law to their own advantage 94 Anglo German naval race Edit Main article Anglo German naval arms race 1909 cartoon in the American magazine Puck shows clockwise US Germany Britain France and Japan engaged in naval race in a no limit game Historians have debated the role of the German naval buildup as the principal cause of deteriorating Anglo German relations In any case Germany never came close to catching up with Britain Supported by Wilhelm II s enthusiasm for an expanded German navy Grand Admiral Alfred von Tirpitz championed four Fleet Acts from 1898 to 1912 From 1902 to 1910 the Royal Navy embarked on its own massive expansion to keep ahead of the Germans The competition came to focus on the revolutionary new ships based on the Dreadnought which was launched in 1906 and gave Britain a battleship that far outclassed any other in Europe 95 96 Naval strength of powers in 1914Country Personnel Large Naval Vessels Dreadnoughts TonnageRussia 54 000 4 328 000France 68 000 10 731 000Britain 209 000 29 2 205 000TOTAL 331 000 43 3 264 000Germany 79 000 17 1 019 000Austria Hungary 16 000 4 249 000TOTAL 95 000 21 1 268 000 Source 97 The overwhelming British response proved to Germany that its efforts were unlikely ever to equal the Royal Navy In 1900 the British had a 3 7 1 tonnage advantage over Germany in 1910 the ratio was 2 3 1 and in 1914 it was 2 1 1 Ferguson argues So decisive was the British victory in the naval arms race that it is hard to regard it as in any meaningful sense a cause of the First World War 98 That ignored the fact that the Kaiserliche Marine had narrowed the gap by nearly half and that the Royal Navy had long intended to be stronger than any two potential opponents combined The US Navy was in a period of growth which made the German gains very ominous In Britain in 1913 there was intense internal debate about new ships because of the growing influence of John Fisher s ideas and increasing financial constraints In 1914 Germany adopted a policy of building submarines instead of new dreadnoughts and destroyers effectively abandoning the race but it kept the new policy secret to delay other powers from following suit 99 Russian interests in Balkans and Ottoman Empire Edit The main Russian goals included strengthening its role as the protector of Eastern Christians in the Balkans such as in Serbia 100 Although Russia enjoyed a booming economy growing population and large armed forces its strategic position was threatened by an expanding Ottoman military trained by German experts that was using the latest technology The start of the war renewed attention of old goals expelling the Ottomans from Constantinople extending Russian dominion into eastern Anatolia and Persian Azerbaijan and annexing Galicia The conquests would assure the Russian predominance in the Black Sea and access to the Mediterranean 101 Technical and military factors EditShort war illusion Edit Traditional narratives of the war suggested that when the war began both sides believed that the war would end quickly Rhetorically speaking there was an expectation that the war would be over by Christmas in 1914 That is important for the origins of the conflict since it suggests that since it was expected that the war would be short statesmen tended not to take gravity of military action as seriously as they might have done so otherwise Modern historians suggest a nuanced approach There is ample evidence to suggest that statesmen and military leaders thought the war would be lengthy and terrible and have profound political consequences citation needed While it is true all military leaders planned for a swift victory many military and civilian citation needed leaders recognized that the war might be long and highly destructive The principal German and French military leaders including Moltke Ludendorff and Joffre expected a long war 102 British Secretary of State for War Lord Kitchener expected a long war three years or longer he told an amazed colleague Moltke hoped that if a European war broke out it would be resolved swiftly but he also conceded that it might drag on for years wreaking immeasurable ruin Asquith wrote of the approach of Armageddon and French and Russian generals spoke of a war of extermination and the end of civilization British Foreign Secretary Edward Grey famously stated just hours before Britain declared war The lamps are going out all over Europe we shall not see them lit again in our lifetime Clark concluded In the minds of many statesmen the hope for a short war and the fear of a long one seemed to have cancelled each other out holding at bay a fuller appreciation of the risks 103 Primacy of offensive and war by timetable Edit See also Cult of the offensive Moltke Joffre Conrad and other military commanders held that seizing the initiative was extremely important That theory encouraged all belligerents to devise war plans to strike first to gain the advantage The war plans all included complex plans for mobilization of the armed forces either as a prelude to war or as a deterrent The continental Great Powers mobilization plans included arming and transporting millions of men and their equipment typically by rail and to strict schedules The mobilization plans limited the scope of diplomacy as military planners wanted to begin mobilisation as quickly as possible to avoid being caught on the defensive They also put pressure on policymakers to begin their own mobilization once it was discovered that other nations had begun to mobilize In 1969 A J P Taylor wrote that mobilization schedules were so rigid that once they were begun they could not be canceled without massive disruption of the country and military disorganisation and they could not proceed without physical invasion of Belgium by Germany Thus diplomatic overtures conducted after the mobilizations had begun were ignored 104 Hence the metaphor war by timetable Russia ordered a partial mobilization on 25 July against Austria Hungary only Their lack of prewar planning for the partial mobilization made the Russians realize by 29 July that it would be impossible to interfere with a general mobilization Only a general mobilization could be carried out successfully The Russians were therefore faced with only two options canceling the mobilization during a crisis or moving to full mobilization the latter of which they did on 30 July They therefore mobilized along both the Russian border with Austria Hungary and the border with Germany German mobilization plans assumed a two front war against France and Russia and had the bulk of the German army massed against France and taking the offensive in the west and a smaller force holding East Prussia The plans were based on the assumption that France would mobilize significantly faster than Russia On 28 July Germany learned through its spy network that Russia had implemented partial mobilisation and its Period Preparatory to War The Germans assumed that Russia had decided upon war and that its mobilisation put Germany in danger especially since because German war plans the so called Schlieffen Plan relied upon Germany to mobilise speedily enough to defeat France first by attacking largely through neutral Belgium before it turned to defeat the slower moving Russians Christopher Clark states German efforts at mediation which suggested that Austria should Halt in Belgrade and use the occupation of the Serbian capital to ensure its terms were met were rendered futile by the speed of Russian preparations which threatened to force the Germans to take counter measures before mediation could begin to take effect 105 Clark also states The Germans declared war on Russia before the Russians declared war on Germany But by the time that happened the Russian government had been moving troops and equipment to the German front for a week The Russians were the first great power to issue an order of general mobilisation and the first Russo German clash took place on German not on Russian soil following the Russian invasion of East Prussia That doesn t mean that the Russians should be blamed for the outbreak of war Rather it alerts us to the complexity of the events that brought war about and the limitations of any thesis that focuses on the culpability of one actor 106 Historiography EditMain article Historiography of the causes of World War I Louis P Benezet s map of Europe As It Should Be 1918 depicting imagined nations based on ethnic and linguistic criteria It blamed German aggression on perceived threats to the traditional social order from radicals and ethnic nationalists Immediately after the end of hostilities Anglo American historians argued that Germany was solely responsible for the start of the war However academic work in the English speaking world in the late 1920s and the 1930s blamed the participants more equally The historian Fritz Fischer unleashed an intense worldwide debate in the 1960s on Germany s long term goals The American historian Paul Schroeder agrees with the critics that Fisher exaggerated and misinterpreted many points However Schroeder endorses Fisher s basic conclusion From 1890 on Germany did pursue world power This bid arose from deep roots within Germany s economic political and social structures Once the war broke out world power became Germany s essential goal 107 However Schroeder argues that all of that was not the main cause of the war in 1914 Indeed the search for a single main cause is not a helpful approach to history Instead there are multiple causes any one or two of which could have launched the war He argues The fact that so many plausible explanations for the outbreak of the war have been advanced over the years indicates on the one hand that it was massively overdetermined and on the other that no effort to analyze the causal factors involved can ever fully succeed 108 Debate over the country that started the war and who bears the blame still continues 109 According to Annika Mombauer a new consensus among scholars had emerged by the 1980s mainly as a result of Fischer s intervention Few historians agreed wholly with his Fischer s thesis of a premeditated war to achieve aggressive foreign policy aims but it was generally accepted that Germany s share of responsibility was larger than that of the other great powers 110 On historians inside Germany she adds There was a far reaching consensus about the special responsibility of the German Reich in the writings of leading historians though they differed in how they weighted Germany s role 111 See also Edit World War I portalHistoriography of the causes of World War I Diplomatic history of World War I American entry into World War I Austro Hungarian entry into World War I British entry into World War I French entry into World War I German entry into World War I Italian entry into World War I Japanese entry into World War I Ottoman entry into World War I Russian entry into World War I History of the Balkans International relations 1814 1919 Anglo German naval arms race Causes of World War IIReferences Edit Van Evera Stephen Summer 1984 The Cult of the Offensive and the Origins of the First World War International Security 9 1 58 107 doi 10 2307 2538636 JSTOR 2538636 Fischer Fritz 1975 War of illusions German policies from 1911 to 1914 Chatto and Windus p 69 ISBN 978 0 3930 5480 4 Sagan Scott D Fall 1986 1914 Revisited Allies Offense and Instability International Security 11 2 151 175 doi 10 2307 2538961 JSTOR 2538961 S2CID 153783717 Henig Ruth 2006 The Origins of the First World War Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 85200 0 Lieven D C B 1983 Russia and the Origins of the First World War St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 312 69611 5 a b The Forces Behind the Conflict The Independent 1914 08 10 p 196 Retrieved 2022 05 17 Anglo German Antagonism The Independent 1914 08 17 pp 229 230 Retrieved 2022 05 17 a b Jefferies Matthew 2015 The Ashgate Research Companion to Imperial Germany Oxon Ashgate Publishing p 355 ISBN 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William The Origins of the First World War Vol 52 Cambridge University Press 2017 Richard Weikart The Origins of Social Darwinism in Germany 1859 1895 Journal of the History of Ideas 54 3 1993 469 488 in JSTOR Schubert Michael 2011 The German nation and the black Other social Darwinism and the cultural mission in German colonial discourse Patterns of Prejudice 45 5 399 416 doi 10 1080 0031322x 2011 624754 S2CID 143888654 Felicity Rash The Discourse Strategies of Imperialist Writing The German Colonial Idea and Africa 1848 1945 Routledge 2016 a b c d MacMillan Margaret 2013 The War That Ended Peace The Road to 1914 Random House ISBN 978 0 8129 9470 4 p524 Hamilton Richard F and Holger H Herwig Decisions for war 1914 1917 Cambridge University Press 2004 p 75 Mulligan William The Origins of the First World War Vol 52 Cambridge University Press 2017 p 147 MacMillan Margaret 2013 The War That Ended Peace The Road to 1914 Random House ISBN 978 0 8129 9470 4 p479 Hamilton Richard F and Holger H Herwig Decisions for war 1914 1917 Cambridge University Press 2004 p 76 Weikart Richard 2004 From Darwin to Hitler Evolutionary Ethics Eugenics and Racism in Germany Palgrave Macmillan US ISBN 978 1 4039 6502 8 page needed Hamilton Richard F Herwig Holger H 2003 The Origins of World War I Cambridge University Press p 26 ISBN 9780521817356 Leslie John 1993 The Antecedents of Austria Hungary s War Aims Policies and Policymakers in Vienna and Budapest before and during 1914 In Springer Elibabeth Kammerhofer Leopold eds Archiv und Forschung das Haus Hof und Staats Archiv in Seiner Bedeutung fur die Geschichte Osterreichs und Europas Archive and research the Household Court and State Archives in its importance for the history of Austria and Europe in German Munich Germany Verlag fur Geschichte und Politik pp 307 394 Explaining the Outbreak of the First World War Closing Conference Geneve Histoire et Cite 2015 https www youtube com watch v uWDJfraJWf0 See13 50 Ponting 2002 p 122 Eric Brose Arms Race prior to 1914 Armament Policy in 1914 1918 online International Encyclopedia of the First World War Freie Universitat Berlin Berlin 2014 10 08 DOI 10 15463 ie1418 10219 online Hinsley F H ed 1962 The New Cambridge Modern History Material progress and world wide problems 1870 189 University Press pp 204 242 ISBN 9780521075244 Mulligan 2014 pp 643 649 Ferguson 1999 p 82 Mulligan 2014 pp 646 647 Ross Angus April 2010 HMS Dreadnought 1906 A Naval Revolution Misinterpreted or Mishandled PDF Northern Mariner XX 2 175 198 doi 10 25071 2561 5467 491 S2CID 247286659 Blyth Robert J Lambert Andrew Ruger Jan eds 2011 The Dreadnought and the Edwardian Age Ashgate ISBN 978 0 7546 6315 7 Ferguson 1999 p 85 Ferguson 1999 pp 83 85 Lambert Nicholas A September 1995 British Naval Policy 1913 1914 Financial Limitation and Strategic Revolution The Journal of Modern History 67 3 623 626 doi 10 1086 245174 JSTOR 2124221 S2CID 153540797 Jelavich Barbara 2004 Russia s Balkan Entanglements 1806 1914 Cambridge University Press p 10 ISBN 978 0 521 52250 2 McMeekin Sean 2011 The Russian Origins of the First World War Harvard University Press p 7 ISBN 978 0 674 06320 4 Ferguson 1999 p 97 Clark 2013 p 562 Taylor A J P 1969 War by Time table How the First World War Began Macdonald amp Co ISBN 9780356028187 Clark 2013 p 509 Clark Christopher 29 August 2013 The First Calamity London Review of Books 35 16 3 6 Paul W Schroeder World War I as Galloping Gertie A Reply to Joachim Remak Journal of Modern History 44 3 1972 pp 319 345 at p 320 JSTOR 1876415 Schroeder p 320 World War One 10 interpretations of who started WW1 BBC News 12 February 2014 Annika Mombauer Guilt or Responsibility The Hundred Year Debate on the Origins of World War I Central European History 48 4 2015 541 564 quote on p 543 Mombauer p 544Sources EditAlbertini Luigi 1952 The Origins of the War of 1914 Translated by Massey Isabella M Oxford University Press OCLC 168712 Clark Christopher 2013 The Sleepwalkers How Europe Went to War in 1914 HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 219922 5 Ferguson Niall 1999 The Pity of War Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 05712 2 Fromkin David 2004 Europe s last summer who started the Great War in 1914 Knopf ISBN 9780375411564 Holmes T M April 2014 Absolute Numbers The Schlieffen Plan as a Critique of German Strategy in 1914 War in History 21 2 193 213 doi 10 1177 0968344513505499 ISSN 0968 3445 S2CID 159518049 Jastrow Morris 1917 The War And The Bagdad Rail Way J B Lippincott Company Kennedy Paul M 1980 The Rise of the Anglo German Antagonism 1860 1914 Humanity Books ISBN 978 1 57392 301 9 Mulligan William 2014 The Trial Continues New Directions in the Study of the Origins of the First World War The English Historical Review 129 538 639 666 doi 10 1093 ehr ceu139 Ponting Clive 2002 Thirteen Days The Road to the First World War Chatto amp Windus ISBN 978 0 7011 7293 0 Williamson Samuel R 1991 Austria Hungary and the Origins of the First World War St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 312 05283 6 Zuber Terence 2011 The Real German War Plan 1904 14 History Press ISBN 978 0 7524 5664 5 Further reading EditMain article Bibliography of World War I Albertini Luigi The Origins of the War of 1914 3 vol 1952 vol 2 online covers July 1914 Albrecht Carrie Rene A Diplomatic History of Europe Since the Congress of Vienna 1958 736pp a basic introduction 1815 1955 online free to borrow Anderson Frank Maloy and Amos Shartle Hershey Handbook for the diplomatic history of Europe Asia and Africa 1870 1914 1918 detailed coverage of all major diplomatic events and many minor one online Barnes Harry Elmer 1972 1928 In Quest of Truth And Justice De bunking The War Guilt Myth New York Arno Press ISBN 978 0 405 00414 8 OCLC 364103 revisionist argues that Germany was certainly not guilty Beatty Kack The Lost History of 1914 The Year the Great War Began 2012 looks at major powers and argues war was not inevitable excerpt Brandenburg Erich 1927 From Bismarck to the World War A History of German Foreign Policy 1870 1914 1927 online Brose Eric Arms Race prior to 1914 Armament Policy in 1914 1918 online International Encyclopedia of the First World War Freie Universitat Berlin Berlin 2014 10 08 DOI 10 15463 ie1418 10219 online Carroll E Malcolm French Public Opinion and Foreign Affairs 1870 1914 1931 online Carroll E Malcolm Germany and the great powers 1866 1914 A study in public opinion and foreign policy 1938 online online Archived 2020 08 01 at the Wayback Machine Carter Miranda 2009 The Three Emperors Three Cousins Three Empires and the Road to World War One Fig Tree ISBN 978 0 670 91556 9 Clark Christopher Sleepwalkers How Europe Went to War in 1914 2012 major comprehensive overview Sleepwalkers lecture by Clark online Evans R J W von Strandmann Hartmut Pogge eds 1988 The Coming of the First World War Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 150059 6 essays by scholars from both sides Fay Sidney Bradshaw 1928 The origins of the world war Vol 1 Macmillan Fay Sidney Bradshaw 1929 The origins of the world war Vol 2 Macmillan Gilpin Robert 1981 War and Change in World Politics Cambridge UP ISBN 978 0 521 27376 3 Gooch G P History of modern Europe 1878 1919 2nd ed 1956 pp 386 413 online diplomatic history Gooch G P Before the war studies in diplomacy 2 vol 1936 1938 online long scholarly chapters on Britain s Landsdowne France s Theophile Delcasse Germany s Bernhard von Bulow pp 187 284 Russia s Alexander Izvolsky 285 365 and Austria Aehrenthal pp 366 438 vol 2 Grey 1 133 Poincare 135 200 Bethmann Hollweg 201 85 Sazonoff 287 369 Berchtold 371 447 vol 2 online Hamilton Richard F and Holger H Herwig eds Decisions for War 1914 1917 2004 scholarly essays on Serbia Austria Hungary Germany Russia France Britain Japan Ottoman Empire Italy the United States Bulgaria Romania and Greece excerpt Herrmann David G 1997 The Arming of Europe and the Making of the First World War Princeton UP ISBN 978 0 691 01595 8 Herwig Holger H and Neil Heyman Biographical Dictionary of World War I 1982 Hewitson Mark Germany and France before the First World War a reassessment of Wilhelmine foreign policy English Historical Review 115 462 2000 570 606 argues Germany had a growing sense of military superiority Hewitson Mark Germany and the Causes of the First World War 2004 online Archived 2017 04 09 at the Wayback Machine Hillgruber Andreas 1981 1967 Germany and the Two World Wars Harvard UP ISBN 978 0 674 35322 0 Hobson Rolf 2002 Imperialism at Sea Naval Strategic Thought the Ideology of Sea Power and the Tirpitz Plan 1875 1914 BRILL ISBN 978 0 391 04105 9 Joll James Martel Gordon 2013 The Origins of the First World War 3rd ed Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 317 87535 2 Kapp Richard W Divided Loyalties The German Reich and Austria Hungary in Austro German Discussions of War Aims 1914 1916 Central European History 17 2 3 1984 120 139 Karpat Kemal H The entry of the Ottoman empire into World War I Belleten 68 253 2004 1 40 online Keiger John F V 1983 France and the origins of the First World War Macmillan ISBN 978 0 312 30292 4 Kennedy Paul M 1980 The rise of the Anglo German antagonism 1860 1914 Ashfield Press ISBN 978 0 948660 06 1 Kennedy Paul M ed 2014 1979 The War Plans of the Great Powers 1880 1914 Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 70251 1 scholarly articles no primary sources included Keiger John F V France and the origins of the First World War Macmillan 1983 summary Knutsen Torbjorn L 1999 The Rise and Fall of World Orders Manchester UP ISBN 978 0 7190 4058 0 Kuliabin Alexander Semin Sergey 17 July 1997 Russia a Counterbalancing Agent to the Asia Zavtra Rossii Lee Dwight Erwin ed 1958 The Outbreak of the First World War Who was Responsible Heath readings from multiple points of view Lieven D C B 1983 Russia and the Origins of the First World War St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 312 69611 5 Lowe Cedric James Dockrill Michael L 2001 1972 The Mirage of Power Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 27367 1 all three volumes combined Lowe Cedric James Dockrill Michael L 2013 1972 Mirage Of Power British Foreign Policy 1902 14 Vol I Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 03377 4 Lowe Cedric James Dockrill Michael L 2013 1972 Mirage Of Power British Foreign Policy 1914 22 Vol II Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 46774 5 MacMillan Margaret 2013 The War That Ended Peace The Road to 1914 Random House ISBN 978 0 8129 9470 4 major scholarly overview Massie Robert K Dreadnought Britain Germany and the coming of the Great War Random House 1991 excerpt see Dreadnought book popular history Mayer Arno J 1981 The Persistence of the Old Regime Europe to the Great War Croom Helm ISBN 978 0 7099 1724 3 McMeekin Sean 2010 The Berlin Baghdad Express The Ottoman Empire and Germany s Bid for World Power Cambridge MA Belknap Press ISBN 978 0674057395 McMeekin Sean 2011 The Russian Origins of the First World War Cambridge MA Belknap Press ISBN 978 0674062108 Miller Steven E Lynn Jones Sean M Van Evera Stephen eds 1991 Military Strategy and the Origins of the First World War 2nd ed Princeton UP ISBN 978 0 6910 2349 6 Neiberg Michael S 2011 Dance of the Furies Harvard UP ISBN 978 0 674 04954 3 role of public opinion Nester Cody 2015 France and the Great War Belligerent Warmonger or Failed Peacekeeper A Literature Review History 12 2 Otte T G July Crisis The World s Descent into War Summer 1914 Cambridge University Press 2014 online review Radojevic Mira 2015 Jovan M Jovanovic on the outbreak of the First World War The Serbs and the First World War 1914 1918 Belgrade Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts pp 187 204 ISBN 9788670256590 Remak Joachim 1995 1967 The Origins of World War I 1871 1914 Harcourt Brace College Publishers ISBN 978 0 15 501438 1 Ritter Gerhard The Sword and the Scepter The Problem of Militarism in Germany volume 2 The European powers and the Wilhelminian Empire 1890 1914 1970 online chapters on the army role in politics in France Britain Russia Austria Hungary and especially Germany Seligmann Matthew S Failing to Prepare for the Great War The Absence of Grand Strategy in British War Planning before 1914 War in History 2017 24 4 414 37 Snyder Jack Summer 1984 Civil Military Relations and the Cult of the Offensive 1914 and 1984 International Security 9 1 108 146 doi 10 2307 2538637 JSTOR 2538637 S2CID 55976453 Spender J A Fifty years of Europe a study in pre war documents 1933 covers 1871 to 1914 438pp Stavrianos L S The Balkans Since 1453 1958 major scholarly history online free to borrow Steiner Zara S Neilson Keith 2003 1977 Britain and the Origins of the First World War Second ed Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 137 18217 3 permanent dead link Stevenson David 2004 Cataclysm The First World War as Political Tragedy Basic Books ISBN 978 0 7867 3885 4 major reinterpretation Stevenson David 1988 The First World War and international politics Oxford UP ISBN 978 0 19 873049 1 Strachan Hew 2001 The First World War Volume I To Arms Oxford UP ISBN 978 0 19 160834 6 a major scholarly synthesis Taylor A J P The Struggle for Mastery in Europe 1848 1918 1954 online free Tucker Spencer C ed 2013 1996 The European Powers in the First World War An Encyclopedia Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 50694 0 Turner Leonard Charles Frederick 1970 Origins of the First World War Norton ISBN 978 0 393 09947 8 Zametica John Folly and malice the Habsburg empire the Balkans and the start of World War One London Shepheard Walwyn 2017 416pp Historiography Edit Bresciani Marco From East to West the world crisis of 1905 1920 a re reading of Elie Halevy First World War Studies 9 3 2018 275 295 Cohen Warren I 1967 The American Revisionists The Lessons of Intervention in World War I University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 11213 8 Cornelissen Christoph and Arndt Weinrich eds Writing the Great War The Historiography of World War I from 1918 to the Present 2020 free download full coverage for major countries D Agostino Anthony Spring 2004 The Revisionist Tradition in European Diplomatic History Journal of the Historical Society 4 2 255 287 doi 10 1111 j 1529 921X 2004 00098 x Evans R J W The Greatest Catastrophe the World Has Seen The New York Review of Books Feb 6 2014 online Gillette Aaron November 2006 Why Did They Fight the Great War A Multi Level Class Analysis of the Causes of the First World War The History Teacher 40 1 45 58 doi 10 2307 30036938 JSTOR 30036938 Hewitson Mark 2014 Germany and the Causes of the First World War Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 84520 729 8 Horne John ed A Companion to World War I 2012 38 topics essays by scholars emphasis on historiography Iriye Akira September 2014 The Historiographic Impact of the Great War Diplomatic History 38 4 751 762 doi 10 1093 dh dhu035 Jones Heather September 2013 As the Centenary Approaches The Regeneration of First World War Historiography The Historical Journal 56 4 857 878 doi 10 1017 S0018246X13000216 Keiger J F V April 2013 The Fischer Controversy the War Origins Debate and France A Non History PDF Journal of Contemporary History 48 2 363 375 doi 10 1177 0022009412472715 S2CID 159493977 Kramer Alan February 2014 Recent Historiography of the First World War Part I Journal of Modern European History 12 1 5 27 doi 10 17104 1611 8944 2014 1 5 S2CID 202927667 Kramer Alan May 2014 Recent Historiography of the First World War Part II Journal of Modern European History 12 2 155 174 doi 10 17104 1611 8944 2014 2 155 S2CID 146860980 Levy Jack S and John A Vasquez eds The Outbreak of the First World War Structure Politics and Decision Making Cambridge UP 2014 Lieber Keir A The new history of World War I and what it means for international relations theory International Security 32 2 2007 155 191 online dead link Marczewski Jerzy 1977 German Historiography and the Problem of Germany s Responsibility for World War I Polish Western Affairs 12 2 289 309 Mombauer Annika 2007 The First World War Inevitable Avoidable Improbable Or Desirable Recent Interpretations On War Guilt and the War s Origins German History 25 1 78 95 doi 10 1177 0266355407071695 Mombauer Annika The origins of the First World War controversies and consensus 2002 Mulligan William 2014 The Trial Continues New Directions in the Study of the Origins of the First World War The English Historical Review 129 538 639 666 doi 10 1093 ehr ceu139 Nugent Christine April 2008 The Fischer Controversy Historiographical Revolution or Just Another Historians Quarrel Journal of the North Carolina Association of Historians 16 77 114 Ritter Gerhard 1997 1962 Herwig Holger ed Anti Fischer A New War Guilt Thesis The Outbreak of World War One Causes and Responsibilities Houghton Mifflin pp 135 142 ISBN 978 0 6694 1692 3 Schroeder Paul W 2007 Levy Jack Goertz Gary eds Necessary conditions and Worlkd War I as an unavoidable war Explaining War and Peace Case Studies and Necessary Condition Counterfactuals Routledge pp 147 236 ISBN 978 1 134 10140 5 Schroeder Paul W 2004 Embedded Counterfactuals and World War I as an Unavoidable War Systems Stability and Statecraft Essays on the International History of Modern Europe Palgrave Macmillan US ISBN 978 1 4039 6357 4 Seipp Adam R October 2006 Beyond the Seminal Catastrophe Re imagining the First World War Journal of Contemporary History 41 4 757 766 doi 10 1177 0022009406067756 JSTOR 30036418 S2CID 162385648 Showalter Dennis Winter 2006 The Great War and Its Historiography The Historian 68 4 713 721 doi 10 1111 j 1540 6563 2006 00164 x JSTOR 24453743 S2CID 144511421 Sked Alan Austria Hungary and the First World War Histoire Politique 1 2014 16 49 online free Smith Leonard V November 2007 The Culture De Guerre and French Historiography of the Great War of 1914 1918 History Compass 5 6 1967 1979 doi 10 1111 j 1478 0542 2007 00484 x Strachan Hew March 2014 The origins of the First World War International Affairs 90 2 429 439 doi 10 1111 1468 2346 12118 Trachtenberg Marc The Meaning of Mobilization in 1914 International Security 15 3 1991 pp 120 150 online Vasquez John A The First World War and International Relations Theory A Review of Books on the 100th Anniversary International Studies Review 16 4 2014 623 644 Waite Robert G 6 November 2014 The dangerous and menacing war psychology of hatred and myth American Historians and the Outbreak of the First World War 1914 An Overview Speech Berliner Gesellschaft fur Faschismus und Weltkriegsforschung Williamson Jr Samuel R and Ernest R May An identity of opinion Historians and July 1914 Journal of Modern History 79 2 2007 335 387 online Primary sources Edit Collins Ross F ed World War I Primary Documents on Events from 1914 to 1919 2007 excerpt and text search Dugdale E T S ed German Diplomatic Documents 1871 1914 4 vol 1928 31 in English translation online French Ministry of Foreign Affairs The French Yellow Book Diplomatic Documents 1914 Gooch G P Recent Revelations of European Diplomacy 1940 475pp detailed summaries of memoirs from all the major belligerents Gooch G P and Harold Temperley eds British documents on the origins of the war 1898 1914 11 vol online v i The end of British isolation v 2 From the occupation of Kiao Chau to the making of the Anglo French entente Dec 1897 Apr 1904 V 3 The testing of the Entente 1904 6 v 4 The Anglo Russian rapprochment 1903 7 v 5 The Near East 1903 9 v 6 Anglo German tension Armaments and negotiation 1907 12 v 7 The Agadir crisis v 8 Arbitration neutrality and security v 9 The Balkan wars pt 1 2 v 10 pt 1 The Near and Middle East on the eve of war pt 2 The last years of peace v 11 The outbreak of war V 3 The testing of the Entente 1904 6 v 4 The Anglo Russian rapprochment 1903 7 v 5 The Near East 1903 9 v 6 Anglo German tension Armaments and negotiation 1907 12 v 7 The Agadir crisis v 8 Arbitration neutrality and security v 9 The Balkan wars pt 1 2 v 10 pt 1 The Near and Middle East on the eve of war pt 2 The last years of peace v 11 The outbreak of war Gooch G P and Harold Temperley eds British Documents on the Origins of the War 1898 1914 Volume XI the Outbreak of War Foreign Office Documents 1926 online Gooch G P Recent revelations of European diplomacy 1928 pp 269 330 online summarizes new documents from Germany pp 3 100 Austria 103 17 Russia 161 211 Serbia and the Balkans 215 42 France 269 330 Great Britain 343 429 United States 433 62 Hammond s frontier atlas of the world war containing large scale maps of all the battle fronts of Europe and Asia together with a military map of the United States 1916 online free Lowe C J and M L Dockrill eds The Mirage of Power The Documents of British Foreign Policy 1914 22 vol 3 1972 pp 423 759 Mombauer Annika The Origins of the First World War Diplomatic and Military Documents 2013 592pp Reichstag speeches 1 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to World War I origins Mombauer Annika July Crisis 1914 in 1914 1918 online International Encyclopedia of the First World War Mulligan William The Historiography of the Origins of the First World War in 1914 1918 online International Encyclopedia of the First World War Williamson Jr Samuel R The Way to War in 1914 1918 online International Encyclopedia of the First World War Brose Eric Arms Race prior to 1914 Armament Policy in 1914 1918 online International Encyclopedia of the First World War Peter Geiss Controversy The Media s Responsibility for Crises and Conflicts in the Age of Imperialism in 1914 1918 online International Encyclopedia of the First World War Overview of Causes and Primary Sources Russia Getting Too Strong for Germany Archived 2016 10 01 at the Wayback Machine by Norman Stone The Origins of World War One An article by Dr Gary Sheffield at the BBC History site What caused World War I Timeline of events and origins of WWI Kuliabin A Semine S Some of aspects of state national economy evolution in the system of the international economic order USSR ACADEMY OF SCIENCES FAR EAST DIVISION INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC amp INTERNATIONAL OCEAN STUDIES Vladivostok 1991 The Evidence in the Case A Discussion of the Moral Responsibility for the War of 1914 as Disclosed by the Diplomatic Records of England Germany Russia by James M Beck Concept Map of the Causes of WWI World War One and 100 Years of Counter Revolution by Mark Kosman on the domestic causes of war Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Causes of World War I amp oldid 1154842469, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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