Wilson Fights for Peace

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Presentation transcript:

Wilson Fights for Peace Part 12

Wilson Presents his Plan

President Wilson presented his plan for world peace to Congress in January 1918. The plan was called his Fourteen Points.

The first five points suggested that wars could be avoided. They stated that: countries should not make secret treaties with one another. Freedom of the seas should be maintained. Tariffs should be lowered to promote free trade. Countries should reduce their arms, and The interests of the colonial people should be considered.

The next eight points suggested new national boundaries The next eight points suggested new national boundaries. Wilson believed in self determination: different ethnic groups should be able to decide for themselves what nation they would belong to.

The fourteenth point called for a League of Nations The fourteenth point called for a League of Nations. This international organization would address problems between countries before they led to war.

Wilson met with leaders of France and Great Britain, George Clemenceau and David Lloyd George, to discuss the terms of peace. These leaders had won the war, and they wanted to punish Germany.

Wilson had to give up most of his Fourteen Points. The one he insisted on was the League of Nations.

On June 28, 1919, the leaders of the Allies and the Central Powers met at the Palace of Versailles in France. They were to sign the Treaty of Versailles.

The treaty created new national boundaries by: Establishing nine new nations, including Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Yugoslavia; Shifting boundaries of other nations; and Carving out parts of the Ottoman Empire to create colonies in the Middle East for Great Britain and France.

The treaty took away Germany’s army and navy. It forced Germany to pay reparations, or war damages, to the winners.

contained a war-guilt clause contained a war-guilt clause. Germany had to admit that it was responsible for causing the war.

The Treaty of Versailles had three basic weaknesses. The first was its harsh treatment of Germany. Germany was humiliated.

Germany was not the only country that had also been militaristic, yet Germany alone was punished. And, Germany would not be able to pay the huge reparations.

The second weakness was that the Soviet Union (Formally Russia) lost more territory than Germany did. Russia had been one of the Allies, and had suffered more territory than Germany did. The Soviet Union was determined to get its territories back.

The third weakness concerned colonies.

The treaty did not recognize the claims of colonies for self-determination, in Southeast Asia, for instance.

Wilson brought the treaty back to the United States for approval. He found several groups opposed to it.

Some thought the treaty to harsh Some thought the treaty to harsh. Others thought that it favored the imperialists. Some ethnic groups objected to the treaty because of the way it treated their homelands.

The main opposition to the treaty was over the League of Nations The main opposition to the treaty was over the League of Nations. The League was the only one of Wilson’s Fourteen Points that was included in the treaty.

They did not like the idea of working with other countries to take economic and military action against aggression. They wanted the treaty to include the constitutional right of Congress to declare war.

Wilson refused to compromise on the League Wilson refused to compromise on the League. He would not accept amendments proposed by the Republican leaders.

As a result, the Senate failed to ratify the treaty As a result, the Senate failed to ratify the treaty. The United States never entered the League of Nations. It finally signed a separate treaty with Germany in 1921, when Wilson was no longer president.

The Legacy of War The end of the war made Americans yearn for what Warren G. Harding called “normalcy.” But the war had transformed the United States and the world.

World War I had strengthened both U. S World War I had strengthened both U.S. military power and the power of the government. It accelerated change for African Americans and women. However, the propaganda campaign left a legacy of mistrust and fear.

Also during the war, a worldwide flu epidemic (Spanish American Flu), probably spread by American soldiers, killed 500,000 Americans and caused disruptions in the American economy.

In Europe, the war left a legacy of massive destruction, loss of life, political instability, and violence. Communists ruled in Russia and soon after fascist organizations seized power in Italy.

Americans hoped that the war had convinced the world never to fight again. But in Europe the war settled nothing.

In Germany, Adolph Hitler exploited Germans’ discontent with the Treaty of Versailles and threatened to fight again. Hitler was true to his predictions; America did have to fight again years later in a second world war.