Chapter 13 Section 4 A Flawed Peace. Main Idea After winning the war, the Allies dictated a harsh...
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Transcript of Chapter 13 Section 4 A Flawed Peace. Main Idea After winning the war, the Allies dictated a harsh...
Chapter 13Section 4
A Flawed Peace
Main IdeaAfter winning the war, the Allies dictated a harsh peace settlement that left many nations feeling betrayed.
Hard feelings left by the peace settlement helped cause World War II.
IntroductionWorld War I was over.Terms of peace had
not yet been worked out.
Delegates met at the Paris Peace Conference to discuss peace treaties.
The Allied powers struggled to solve their conflicting aims in various peace treaties.
The Allies Meet and DebateThe Big Four
hammered out the major decisions of the Paris Peace Conference.Woodrow Wilson (US)Georges Clemenceau
(France)David Lloyd George
(Great Britain)Vittorio Orlando
(Italy)Russia and Germany
were not represented.George, Orlando, Clemenceau and Wilson
Wilson’s Plan for PeaceBefore the war ended, Wilson
drew up a series of peace proposals.Known as the Fourteen
PointsOutlined a plan for achieving a
just and lasting peace.First four points – end to secret
treaties, freedom of the seas, free trade, and reduced national armies and navies.
5th goal – adjusted colonial claims with a fairness to the native people.
Self-determination
6th – 13th points – specific suggestions for changing borders and creating new nations.
The guiding idea behind these points was self-determination.Allowing people to decide for
themselves under what government they wished to live.
14th point – proposed a “general association of nations” that would protect all states.Peacefully negotiate world
conflicts.
The Versailles TreatyBritain and France didn’t want to
agree to Wilson’s vision of peace.They wanted to make sure that
Germany was stripped of its war-making power.
The compromise – The Treaty of Versailles.Signed between Germany and
the Allies on June 28,1919Created a League of Nations.
An international association whose goal would be to keep peace among nations.
Versailles Treaty (cont.)Also punished Germany.
Lost substantial territory.Severe restrictions on military operations.“War Guilt” clause – placed sole
responsibility for the war on Germany’s shoulders.
Pay reparations to Allies.Money paid by a defeated nation to
compensate for damage or injury during a war.
All of Germany’s territories were managed by the League of Nations.
A Creation of New NationsWestern powers signed peace
treaties with defeated nations.Led to huge land losses for the
Central Powers.New countries created out of
the Austro-Hungarian empire: Austria, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, and Yugoslavia.
Ottomans gave up their entire empire, except present day Turkey.
Russia also suffered losses – Romania and Poland were created out of Russian territory.
Finland, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania became independent from Russia.
“A Peace Built on Quicksand”
Treaty of Versailles did little to build a lasting peace.
U.S. was considered to be the dominant nation in the world and rejected the treaty.
Many Americans objected to the settlement and to the League of Nations.
Americans just wanted to stay out of European affairs (isolation).
War Guilt ClauseThe war guilt clause left a
bitterness and hatred in the hearts of German people.
Africans and Asians were mad at the way the Allies disregarded their desire for independence.
They felt the Europeans only talked about self-determination.
European colonialism continued in the two areas.
Allied Powers Were Bitter, Too
Japan and Italy both had entered the war to gain territory.Neither gained as much as
they wanted.League of Nations was in no
place to take action on the complaints because they were not backed by the U.S.
Settlements in Versailles were but “a peace built on quicksand”.
In more than two decades, the treaties’ legacy of bitterness would help plunge the world into another catastrophic war.
WWII PreviewAllies v. Axis Allies– Great Britain, Soviet Union and U.S
Axis Powers – Germany, Italy and Japan