Civilized Chaos: Signing the Treaty of Versailles, 1919

World War I was a massive conflict.

The total number of military and civilian casualties in World War I were about 40 million: estimates range from 15 to 19 million deaths and about 23 million wounded military personnel, ranking it among the deadliest conflicts in human history.


first-world-war-infographic-casualties-1-1024-2
During WWI ,230 soldiesr died each hour of the 43/4 years it continued;

Whole empires disintegrated. At the end, the winners carved up the spoils.

The war to end all wars” -was term for the First World War of 1914–1918.

Originally idealistic, it is now used mainly sardonically.

To “end ” this war, the leaders of the combined forces meet for the Treaty of Versailles, which is in effect, a treaty with Germany at the end of WW1.

The Paris Peace Conference is going to severely punish Germany.

At first, the Germans accept the guilt exponentially, but later Adolf Hitler, is going to use that negative energy, along with a sense of German nationalism and pride, to lead his rise of power.


For these reasons most historians would point out, the Treaty of Versailles which ended the WWI, was only prelude to another and one of the direct causes for WWII.

“Nicholson was sitting with the British, French and Italian heads of state, one day as they were drawing the line on a map of Anatolia between Turks and Greeks.

As they were drawing the boundary, Nicholson looked at the map and realized, they have confused a topographic map for an ethnographic map and thought that the brown (areas) are the Turks and the green (areas) are the Greeks, when in fact the brown is the mountains and the green are the valleys,”

harold nicholson versalle.jpg

Nicholson spoke up and averted that particular disaster, but it wasn’t enough to avert war between Turkey and Greece in the years to come. In fact wars have erupted in many of the places the peacemakers thought they were sorting out once and for all. His personal  letter is written at the bottom of this posts.



Let’s backdrop a little bit and take a look at the timeline.

7fa7e41bc6e6c1d1504cda3a0482ddd6--year--la-grande.jpg

For Americans, Armistice Day (an agreement made by opposing sides in a war to stop fighting for a certain time; a truce.)  is the beginning of the peace at the end of WWI -at least the fighting stops that’s November 11th 1918.

The Treaty of Versailles, which is specifically with the Allied powers in Germany isn’t going to go into effect, until June 1919 – that’s more than 6 months after the fighting stopped, so it’s a rather lengthy conference to dissect.


For Europe,  it’s actually actually 5 years to the day that Archduke Ferdinand was shot, which started World War I is almost of officially over, at least with Germany with the Treaty of Versailles.

poppies.jpg


Treaty of Brest-Litovsk

ruus.jpg


russAThe Treaty of Brest-Litovsk –

a peace treaty signed on March 3, 1918 between the new Bolshevik government of Russia and the Central Powers (German Empire, Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria, and the Ottoman Empire).

It  ended Russia’s participation in World War I.

The treaty was signed at German-controlled Brest-Litovsk (modern Belarus).

After 2 months of negotiations. The treaty was agreed upon by the Russians to stop further invasion.

According to the treaty, Soviet Russia defaulted on all of Imperial Russia’s commitments to the Allies and 11 nations became independent in Eastern Europe and western Asia.


A lot of commotion is going on in 1917.

the_bolshevik_consolidation_of_power_1_18.jpg

April 1917

America declares war on Germany, stating the Germans are unrestricted  submarine attacks.

The Bolsheviks were already fighting the Russian Civil War (1917–1922), following and the Russia Revolutions and claims on modern-day Poland, Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Ukraine and Lithuania.

Their Treaty , inspires the Germans to move all of their forces move to the Western Positions.

The treaty was annulled by the Armistice of 11 November 1918, when Germany surrendered to the western Allies.

However, in the meantime it provided some relief to the Bolsheviks .


The treaty Russia signed with Germany gave lots f land to Germany, about 1/3-third of was given, over 3/4 of their factories, their railroads and about 20 million people ended up in German hands, so the Russians aren’t really part of this. process anymore and Germany is certainly not going to be let into the door, yet .

images (26)


So that leaves the “Big 3” France, America and England.

big three

France  : Georges Clemenceau probably the angriest of the bunch but we have to remember: France shares a border with Germany, which was  most of the Western Front where they  fought in France. 


Along the border,  about 1/5th of their adult male population/. Their anger  doesn’t want to be involved or invoked  anymore.

world-war-one-paris-peace-settlement-treaty-of-versailles-1919-12-638 (1)

62a8edf2a19ce887f7fc4c2712ce72e6--french-posters-print-layout


France’s primary objective was to ensure her security. In 1814, 1815, 1870, and again in 1914, German armies had swarmed across France’s borders.

France sought a peace treaty that would assure that her homeland would never again be invaded by her German neighbor.

Additionally, as the war had been fought on French soil, the French looked to the Germans to pay for the restoration of her devastated homeland.


French, Premier ,George, Clemenceau, speaking, about the  Fourteen Points, President, Wilson, lasting peace, God Almighty gave us Ten Commandments, and we broke those. Now we have Wilson who gives us fourteen.

United Kingdom

David Lloyd George from the UK the Prime Minister and he’s really looking for more of a safe peace they have a huge economic investment in Germany as a trading partner he wants things to kind of go back to the way they were, but at the same time  don’t want this to happen again.

world-war-one-paris-peace-settlement-treaty-of-versailles-1919-15-638 (1)
llyold
Orlando,George, Clemenceau, Wilson

The political wrangling became intense.

At one point Wilson had to step between Lloyd George and Clemenceau to prevent a fist fight.

At another time Wilson threatened to leave the conference.

Orlando did leave for a time. Finally, agreement was reached and a treaty presented to the German representatives on May 7, 1919.


America:

world-war-one-paris-peace-settlement-treaty-of-versailles-1919-14-638 (1).jpg

Wilson pushed for the inclusion of his “Fourteen Points” especially the League of Nations.


Purpose of the Fourteen Points 

The main purpose of the Fourteen Points was to outline a strategy for ending the war and about specific goals, he wanted to achieve through the war. If the United States was going to fight in Europe and soldiers were going to lose their lives, he wanted to establish exactly what they were fighting for.

 Through this speech and the Fourteen Points, Wilson became the only leader of the countries fighting in the war to publicly outline his war goals.

Picture3

Wilson had been shocked at the outright savagery of the Great War, and while he wanted Germany to be punished, he also wanted ultimate European reconciliation.

The United States rejected the Treaty of Versailles due to the opposition of a group of senators called the “Irreconcilables“, who believed that under the terms of the treaty, the United States would lose too much of its autonomy to the League of Nations.

download (18).jpg

All of the Irreconcilables were enemies of President Woodrow Wilson, who originally advocated for the League of Nations and helped compose the details of the treaty.

Wilson’s idealistic foreign policy was a central feature of the conference.

His ideas about self-determination and his proposal for a League of Nations promised a new way forward.

But his words also complicated things, sending out mixed messages. The confusion over Wilson’s position began in the last year of the war.


In the spring of 1918 the Germans launched a last-ditch offensive on the Western Front.

b7ed08b05f488b2d17a8bef3d1fcee6f

They gained territory. By the summer, the Allies counterattacked and broke through the German lines.

The German Army was forced to retreat.

It was in bad shape, running out of men and running out of supplies.

To make matters worse, its allies were dropping out of the war.

At the same time, fresh American troops were pouring in.

In late September the Germans began asking for peace.

But instead of speaking to the British and the French, they approached the Americans, thinking they would take a softer line.


“I think there was misunderstanding on both sides, the Germans were led to believe that they were being offered peace terms on a Wilsonian basis, on a number of statements he’d made about a peace without retributions, a peace without revenge, a peace that would treat everyone fairly,” MacMillan says.

But it wasn’t realistic. And it contributed to a feeling that Germany had been promised a peace in which it wasn’t going to lose much.

wwi_infographicchart1.png

That didn’t turn out to be true.

In October 1918, while the armies were still fighting, a series of letters passed back and forth between Wilson and the Germans.

The Germans were negotiating for an armistice – a truce in effect – that would lead to peace talks. But Wilson and his allies wanted Germany disarmed – and they used the armistice to impose a defeat.

“What actually happened in the end, is the Germans sent an emissary, in a very old-fashioned way, bearing a white flag, and a car went through the lines and it came to Marshal Foch in the Allied headquarters in Campiegne, and in his railway carriage the armistice was signed.

The Signing of the Peace Treaty of Versailles, June 28, 1919

If you look at the terms of that armistice is really a defeat.


The Germans basically gave up all their heavy equipment, they gave up all their tanks their field artillery, their machine guns, they’d already lost their fleet,” MacMillan says.

world-war-one-paris-peace-settlement-treaty-of-versailles-1919-23-638

The armistice went into effect on November 11, 1918. What soldiers remembered was the silence as artillery finally stopped firing.

The war was over, at least for the moment. But if it was a defeat for the Germans, it was an ambiguous defeat. The final peace treaty was still months away. And this wasn’t the sort of ending the men who led the fighting were expecting.

world-war-one-paris-peace-settlement-treaty-of-versailles-1919-10-638 (2).jpg

“Generals in some ways still thought in terms of decisive battlefield success,” Strachan says.

“They still thought that all this fighting was going to lead to the moment when there would be the breakthrough, there would be the moment when Allied troops ended up in Germany and it didn’t happen. And yet the war was over.

They grappled to put a shape on this.”

In that sense, the end of World War I stands in sharp contrast to the end of World War II. In 1945, there was no question but that Germany was defeated.

It was occupied. Troops came in from both east and west. Every German citizen could see and feel the defeat. But after World War I, Germany’s future was still open.


Steiner says the German question loomed over everything else at the Paris talks.

image (5).jpg

“The fact is that Germany was not destroyed, and this makes it impossible to ignore Germany in any way.

She is the central figure at the peace conference, if you want. Because it is how you are going to treat Germany which is going to determine whether the peace will keep or whether the peace will shatter,” Steiner says.

But MacMillan says the peacemakers disagreed on how to treat Germany.

They agreed Germany should be made to pay reparations, but squabbled over the size and share.

Treaty-of-Versailles (1).jpg

They agreed Germany’s borders needed to shrink, but disagreed on where and why.

They had to decide how to control its army, and whether to try the Kaiser for war crimes. It took months. It took so long in fact that once the great powers had agreed among themselves, they didn’t dare open the debate up all over again with Germany.

world-war-one-paris-peace-settlement-treaty-of-versailles-1919-20-638.jpg

“They simply said, look, with great difficulty and great costs, we’ve put together these terms. We’ve got to just give them to the Germans and tell them more or less to take or leave it.

And so the Germans, who in the meantime had been preparing for the old style full negotiations, and had crates of material, arrived in Paris with all their boxes and all their positions already prepared, and found they weren’t going to negotiate,” MacMillan says.

The Germans were humiliated. And so the Paris Peace Conference turned into something different from what many had envisioned.

slide_4 (5)

Strachan says the end of World War I was paradoxical in that sense. He says until then, the Napoleonic wars were the model – a short decisive campaign, battlefield success, and then a peace settlement.

“In the First World War that isn’t how things go. There isn’t a decisive battlefield success.

We can’t simply say, as in 1815, there is the battle of Waterloo, Napoleon is defeated, he goes into exile, there is a new regime in France and a new international order is established which lasts until 1914.

otto-von-bismarck.jpg

What instead we have, is a much messier conclusion, no clear decisive battlefield success, and yet, we have a series of peace settlements which create a new world order, and which dictate a peace to Germany as though it had been defeated on the battlefield,” Strachan says.

But of course the end of World War I didn’t bring peace for long.

There’s been much debate over the years about whether the harsh terms of the Treaty of Versailles led to World War II.

The historians interviewed here refute the idea. It’s too simplistic they say.

Certainly, times were tough and certainly the bitterness Germans felt about the terms was easily manipulated for propaganda purposes.

But they reject drawing a straight line between Versailles and World War II.

Strachan says there’s a lesson in Versailles nonetheless – how not to treat a defeated foe.

“We have now come away from that saying, if we’re in that situation in the future, we must recognize the aspirations of both sides.

 

There needs to be a dialogue. Versailles from that point of view is seen as a warning: that you can’t have a peace that treats the defeated power as Versailles seems to treat it, if you want it to be a lasting solution,” Strachan says.

And if you’re not careful, the losing side will manufacture victory out of defeat. It turns out, concepts such as victory and defeat are oddly mutable, particularly when it comes to memory.

image-589668-galleryV9-mrfo.jpg

In London, at the Imperial War museum, you can walk through a simulation of life in the trenches.

Terry Charman, a historian at the museum, says the way the war is remembered in Britain has led to a perception not of victory, but of defeat.

“You know, it is the suffering, the portrayal of trench warfare, the war poets, Sassoon, Owen, especially, that somehow, you know, Britain lost the First World War.

And of course people dwell so much on the enormous casualty figures. So what is interesting is I think the fact that we did win the First World War,” he says.

The war ended 90 years ago, but certain places will forever be defined by it.

a37be4e9c652212dec535b9383a35f51.jpg

In the Belgian town of Ypres on the Western Front, the war is everywhere here.

The countryside is saturated with graves. The shop windows display artefacts. A museum on the war occupies the old market hall in the center of town. At 8 o’clock in the evening, traffic comes to a standstill at the city’s Menin Gate.

Buglers play what’s known as the Last Post, in remembrance of the dead. Not just once in a while, but every single night. Here too, there’s a sense that loss, rather than victory, is what pervades. It turns out the end of World War I holds more than one paradox, with consequences we still struggle to understand today.

hqdefault (8).jpg

In 1919, the Treaty of Versailles reached the Senate for a vote of ratification.

Most Democrats supported the treaty, but the Republicans were divided.

Besides the Irreconcilables, a second group of Republicans called the Reservationists, led by Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, declared they would support the treaty if certain alterations were made.


When Lodge formed a coalition with pro-treaty Democrats and submitted a revised treaty with 14 amendments to the Senate, Wilson persuaded the Democrats to reject it.

The final Senate vote fell far short of the two-thirds majority needed to ratify the treaty. It was the first time the Senate ever rejected a peace treaty.

Because the U.S. Senate never ratified the Treaty of Versailles, the United States signed separate treaties with Germany in 1921 and 1922 that enabled the United States to help Germany rebuild as a nation apart from the strict supervision of the League of Nations.

tv.jpg

Historian Margaret MacMillan describes the scene in her book “Paris 1919.

“It was a very formal ceremony, but at the end it was chaos.

The world leaders, Lloyd George, the British prime minister, Clemenceau the French prime minister, Woodrow Wilson the American president, went out to that gorgeous terrace, leading out to that great park, and the fountains went off, and there were a huge number of people standing outside and the crowd jostled everyone and Woodrow Wilson lost his top hat and Lloyd George was furious, so it was a mixture of ceremony and chaos.”

Mapping the Royal Naval Ships of WWI
Mapping the Royal Naval Ships of WWI

The Hall of Mirrors at the Palace of Versailles outside Paris is a gleaming, glittering place where the light ricochets off the mirrors and chandeliers – which is what they built for in the first place.

King Louis xiv – elf proclaimed Sun King, built as a royal a tabernacle of the Sun, -aka himself.

A dwelling place  of the divine and people, so all corners of the world could see his light emanating from them.

It was here, on June 28, 1919, that world leaders sat down with German officials to sign the Treaty of Versailles. The Paris Peace Conference began on January 18, 1919, with 21 nations in attendance. The representatives of Germany and the other defeated Central Powers were not allowed to sit at the conference table.


Sir Harold Nicolson was a member of the British delegation to the Treaty of Versailles.

He offers his observations of its signing on June 28, 1919:

“We enter the Galerie des Glaces (Hall of Mirrors).

1f3f7f32-c010-4e0a-938d-5b7bd9943103_1.e9be2f66b52aa08c8dd7459d9296c5aa.jpeg

It is divided into three sections. At the far end are the Press already thickly installed.

In the middle there is a horse-shoe table for the plenipotentiaries.

In front of that; like a guillotine, is the table for the signatures.

It is supposed to be raised on a dais but, if so, the dais can be but a few inches high…There must be seats for over a thousand persons.

This robs the ceremony of all privilege and therefore of all dignity.

…the delegates arrive in little bunches and push up the central aisle slowly.


Wilson and Lloyd George are among the last. They take their seats at the central table.

The table is at last full.

William_Orpen_–_The_Signing_of_Peace_in_the_Hall_of_Mirrors,_Versailles_1919,_Ausschnitt.jpg

Clemenceau glances to right and left.

People sit down upon their escabeaux  [stools] but continue chattering.

Clemenceau makes a sign to the ushers. They say ‘Ssh! Ssh! Ssh!’ People cease chattering and there is only the sound of occasional coughing and the dry rustle of programs.

The officials of the Protocol of the Foreign Office move up the aisle and say, ‘Ssh! Ssh!’ again.

There is then an absolute hush, followed by a sharp military order.

Versailles_1919

The Gardes Republicains at the doorway flash their swords into their scabbards with a loud click. ‘Faites entrer les Allemands,’ says Clemenceau in the ensuing silence.

Through the door at the end appear two Huissiers with silver chains.

They march in single file. After them come four officers of France, Great Britain, America and Italy.

And then, isolated and pitiable, come the two German delegates. Dr. Muller, Dr. Bell. The silence is terrifying.

Their feet upon a strip of parquet between the savonnerie carpets echo hollow and duplicate. They keep their eyes fixed away from those two thousand staring eyes, fixed upon the ceiling.

They are deathly pale. They do not appear as representatives of a brutal militarism. The one is thin and pink-eyelidded. The other is moon-faced and suffering.

It is all most painful.

They are conducted to their chairs. Clemenceau at once breaks the silence. ‘Messieurs,’ he rasps, ‘la seance est ouverte.’ He adds a few ill-chosen words.

‘We are here to sign a Treaty of Peace.’ The Germans leap up anxiously when he has finished, since they know that they are the first to sign. William Martin, as if a theatre manager, motions them petulantly to sit down again.

140606095547-25-wwi-main-timeline-0606-horizontal-large-gallery

Mantoux translates Clemenceau’s words into English.

Then St. Quentin advances towards the Germans and with the utmost dignity leads them to the little table on which the Treaty is expanded.

signing

There is general tension. They sign. There is a general relaxation. Conversation hums again in an undertone.

 

The delegates stand up one by one and pass onwards to the queue which waits by the signature table. Meanwhile people buzz round the main table getting autographs.

The single file of plenipotentiaries waiting to approach the table gets thicker. It goes quickly.

The Officials of the Quai d’Orsay stand round, indicating places to sign, indicating procedure, blotting with neat little pads.

Suddenly from outside comes the crash of guns thundering a salute; It announces to Paris that the second Treaty of Versailles has been signed by Dr. Muller and Dr. Bell.

Through the few open windows comes the sound of distant crowds cheering hoarsely.

And still the signature goes on.

gettyimages-515169306-e.jpg

We had been warned it might last three hours. Yet almost at once it seemed that the queue was getting thin.

Only three, then two, and then one delegate remained to sign.

His name had hardly been blotted before the huissiers began again their ‘Ssh! Ssh!’ cutting suddenly short the wide murmur which had again begun.

There was a final hush. ‘La seance est levee’ rasped Clemenceau.

Not a word, more or less.

We kept our seats while the Germans were conducted like prisoners from the dock, their eyes still fixed upon some distant point of the horizon.”

first-world-war-infographic-casualties-1-1024 (2).jpg

References:
Harold Nicolson’s account appears in: Nicolson, Harold, Peacemaking, 1919 (1933); Elcock, Howard, Portrait of a Decision: The Council of Four and the Treaty of Versailles (1972); Goldberg, George, The Peace to End Peace; the Paris Peace Conference of 1919 (1969). The Treaty of Versailles Explained.2015

The Great War Channel , Kahn.

French, Premier ,George, Clemenceau, speaking, Fourteen Points,14 points, President, Wilson, lasting peace, God Almighty gave us Ten Commandments, and we broke those. Now we have Wilson who gives us fourteen.”
Translate »