History of the United States eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 731 pages of information about History of the United States.

History of the United States eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 731 pages of information about History of the United States.
May 6, their work was completed and in a secret session of the full conference the whole treaty of peace was approved, though a few of the powers made reservations or objections.  The next day the treaty was presented to the Germans who, after prolonged protests, signed on the last day of grace, June 28.  This German treaty was followed by agreements with Austria, Hungary, Bulgaria, and Turkey.  Collectively these great documents formed the legal basis of the general European settlement.

=The Terms of the Settlement.=—­The combined treaties make a huge volume.  The German treaty alone embraces about 80,000 words.  Collectively they cover an immense range of subjects which may be summarized under five heads:  (1) The territorial settlement in Europe; (2) the destruction of German military power; (3) reparations for damages done by Germany and her allies; (4) the disposition of German colonies and protectorates; and (5) the League of Nations.

Germany was reduced by the cession of Alsace-Lorraine to France and the loss of several other provinces.  Austria-Hungary was dissolved and dismembered.  Russia was reduced by the creation of new states on the west.  Bulgaria was stripped of her gains in the recent Balkan wars.  Turkey was dismembered.  Nine new independent states were created:  Poland, Finland, Lithuania, Latvia, Esthonia, Ukraine, Czechoslovakia, Armenia, and Hedjaz.  Italy, Greece, Rumania, and Serbia were enlarged by cessions of territory and Serbia was transformed into the great state of Jugoslavia.

The destruction of German military power was thorough.  The entire navy, with minor exceptions, was turned over to the Allied and Associated Powers; Germany’s total equipment for the future was limited to six battleships and six light cruisers, with certain small vessels but no submarines.  The number of enlisted men and officers for the army was fixed at not more than 100,000; the General Staff was dissolved; and the manufacture of munitions restricted.

Germany was compelled to accept full responsibility for all damages; to pay five billion dollars in cash and goods, and to make certain other payments which might be ordered from time to time by an inter-allied reparations commission.  She was also required to deliver to Belgium, France, and Italy, millions of tons of coal every year for ten years; while by way of additional compensation to France the rich coal basin of the Saar was placed under inter-allied control to be exploited under French administration for a period of at least fifteen years.  Austria and the other associates of Germany were also laid under heavy obligations to the victors.  Damages done to shipping by submarines and other vessels were to be paid for on the basis of ton for ton.

The disposition of the German colonies and the old Ottoman empire presented knotty problems.  It was finally agreed that the German colonies and Turkish provinces which were in a backward stage of development should be placed under the tutelage of certain powers acting as “mandatories” holding them in “a sacred trust of civilization.”  An exception to the mandatory principle arose in the case of German rights in Shantung, all of which were transferred directly to Japan.  It was this arrangement that led the Chinese delegation to withhold their signatures from the treaty.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
History of the United States from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.