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🗓️ 21 August 2024
⏱️ 73 minutes
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By late 1912, it appeared the period of Anglo-German detente was over. The Kaiser assembled a War Council, and apparently planned for a war of domination. In fact, appearances were deceptive, and although Britain and Germany's relationship had been damaged, it was still intact. There now emerged a new opportunity to repair it, as the Balkan Wars brought the two disinterested powers together again.
The two powers had already achieved a great deal by pushing the naval race to the side. But other questions were more difficult. Both France and Germany came to terms with the role of Belgium in their war plans, but only Germany viewed its violation as a necessity. This key aspect of German strategy was already locked in, but this proved a grave miscalculation. That said, opinions in Berlin had arrived at more optimistic conclusions by 1914. Britain, it was said, faced an internal crisis over Ireland, and those intractable problems meant opportunities for the Central Powers.
Yet still, the Anglo-German detente continued, with fascinating trends emerging in the British Foreign Office. For so long dominated by anti-German sentiment and fear of Russia, a new generation of officials were graduating to new positions, and they were less sanguine about the Anglo-Russian relationship. A last minute trip by Grey's private secretary to Berlin suggested a new era of cooperation, but this, like so many other plans, fell to pieces once the Archduke fell in Sarajevo. Here we conclude the story of this underrated relationship, and set the scene for what was to come.
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0:00.0 | In summer 1914, the world went to war. |
0:04.6 | Now 110 years later, we go back to those figures, to those debates, to those questions, |
0:12.2 | in the greatest failure in the history of diplomacy. |
0:16.3 | I am Dr. Zach Twomley. You're listening to When Diplomacy fails. |
0:23.2 | And this is the July Crisis. I do think that our relations with Germany have cleared considerably, |
1:00.4 | so there seems no reason why we should not remain on perfectly friendly terms with her |
1:04.7 | and discuss in an amiable manner any questions which may arise between us. |
1:10.9 | Sir Arthur Nicholson writes to the Foreign Secretary, April 1912. |
1:17.3 | By December 1912, tensions were high in Europe. |
1:21.4 | As the Balkan War raged in that troubled peninsula, the great powers attempted to confine |
1:27.2 | the conflict and prevent |
1:28.9 | any unfortunate misunderstandings from fanning the flames of war. Should they succeed, they could |
1:34.6 | even have a role in developing the eventual peace settlement. Into this charged atmosphere, |
1:39.6 | an ill-timed speech by the German Chancellor,ising Germany's prerogative to come to Austria's |
1:46.1 | defence if she was attacked, provoked a new ripple of discontent in Anglo-German relations. |
1:52.2 | Offended by the spectacle of Britain taking offence, Kaiser Wilhelm demanded that his leading generals |
1:58.8 | assemble for a meeting of the War Council. |
2:03.1 | This gathering has been described as proof of Germany's plot to launch a World War, |
2:08.7 | but this has been heavily disputed, since there was nothing abnormal about general staff's |
2:13.7 | gathering before 1914, and several key figures, including Bethmann-Holvig, were absent |
2:19.5 | from this meeting. Yet it does tell us something of the Kaiser's mindset by this point. He was |
2:25.8 | furious with Ambassador Liknovsky for his moderating tone towards the British, yet Wilhelm |
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