1 / 21

The Aftermath

The Aftermath. Steps Toward Peace . The “war to end all wars” had lasted four long years, and it was now time for peace The leaders of the victorious nations gathered at the palace in Versailles, outside Paris, to negotiate the terms. Wilson’s Plan.

roana
Download Presentation

The Aftermath

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Aftermath

  2. Steps Toward Peace • The “war to end all wars” had lasted four long years, and it was now time for peace • The leaders of the victorious nations gathered at the palace in Versailles, outside Paris, to negotiate the terms

  3. Wilson’s Plan • Wilson arrived in France with an idealistic vision for peace, including the establishment of a League of Nations

  4. - Wilson was praised just about everywhere he went, until he arrived at Versailles - The allied leaders held too much resentment towards Germany to agree to Wilson’s idealistic peace proposal, his “Fourteen Points”, which Wilson had presented to Congress before the end of the war

  5. Fourteen Points • The first five points were necessary to prevent another war: • No secret treaties among nations • Freedom of the seas maintained for all • Tariffs and economic barriers should be abolished to promote free trade • Arms should be reduced to the lowest safe point • Colonial policies should consider the interests of colonial peoples as well as interests of imperialist powers

  6. The next eight points dealt with boundary changes, trying to follow historically established boundary lines based on nationality and self-determination

  7. League of Nations • Wilson’s 14th and final point called for the creation of a national organization to deal with diplomatic crises, a “League of Nations” – a forum for nations to discuss grievances without having to resort to war

  8. Wilson ended up conceding on most of his Fourteen Points in return for the establishment of the League of Nations

  9. The Participants • The peace conference at Versailles did not include: • The defeated Central Powers • Russia • Smaller Allied Nations

  10. The Participants • It did include: • Georges Clemenceau, the French Premier, who had already lived through two German invasions of France • David Lloyd George, British prime minister who was voted into office on the slogan “Make Germany Pay” • Vittorio Orlando, Italian prime minister, who wanted control of Austrian territory as per their agreement during the war, which had flipped Italy to the Allied side • Woodrow Wilson

  11. Treaty of Versailles • June 28, 1919 – The “Big Four” leaders met with the leaders of the defeated nations to sign the peace treaty at Versailles

  12. What the Treaty did: • Established 9 new nations from the defeated nations, including Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia and Poland • Shifted the boundaries of other nations • Gave 5 areas of the Ottoman Empire to France and Britain as mandates, temporary colonies

  13. It also barred Germany from maintaining an army • It also required Germany to give Alsace-Lorraine back to France • It also required Germany to pay reparations, or war damages, of $33 billion to the Allies

  14. Treaty Weaknesses • Humiliation of Germany, including forcing them to sign a war-guilt clause, admission of sole responsibility for the start of WWI • Germany’s colonial possessions were taken away, which guaranteed their inability to pay their reparations

  15. Though Russia had fought with the Allies and lost more men, they were excluded from the Peace Conference, and lost more territory than Germany did • The treaty ignored the rights of colonized peoples for self-determination

  16. Opposition • Many Americans opposed the Treaty, because: • It was too harsh • It was a sell out to imperialism, trading one set of colonial rulers for another • Boundaries established did not satisfy all of the ethnic groups

  17. The League of Nations sparked debate over: • Whether it would spoil US policy of isolationism • Suspicion over joint economic and military action against aggression • Right of Congress to declare war was not included

  18. Uncompromising • Wilson refused to compromise about the League of Nations • On a campaign tour, exclaiming its virtues, Wilson suffered a stroke • The League of Nations was passed through Congress twice, and both times failed to gain enough votes for ratification

  19. Legacy of the War • Warren G Harding, the new American President, tried to soothe the American people by advocating a return to “normalcy” • However, the world had been too transformed by war

  20. War had changed things in the US, including: - strengthened the military and the government - accelerated changes socially, especially for blacks and women - propaganda had provoked fear and antagonism that had no other outlet

  21. War had changed things in Europe, including: - destruction caused severely damaged social and political systems - war created political instability and violence - communism and fascism started to rise

More Related