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When Diplomacy Fails Podcast

#5: The Balkans and Other Wars (1911-1913)

When Diplomacy Fails Podcast

Zack Twamley

19th Century, 20th Century, International Relations, Politics, Thirty Years' War, Korean War, 18th Century, First World War, Phd, 17th Century, European History, History, War

4.8773 Ratings

🗓️ 8 July 2024

⏱️ 124 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this teeny tiny episode, we look at the Italian invasion of Libya and the Balkans Wars!


But first, get a load of these links!

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How do you kill the status quo? By forming a league of extraordinary states, who want nothing less than to destroy the empire which has ruled over them for centuries. When the Balkan War began in October 1912, Europe was far from ready for the implications which would follow. The end of Turkish rule in Europe, and the expansion of young nation states eager to prove themselves appeared to guarantee that the peninsula would never be quiet again. Yet, aside from Europe, Russia had played a key role in bringing this league to life. To this, we may be tempted to ask why?


The answer is found in the Austro-Russian rivalry, but also in the opportunistic mood of the moment. The Balkan League's members - Serbia, Montenegro, Bulgaria and Serbia - were not traditional allies. Yet they were certainly capable of smelling blood in the water. In September 1911, Italy invaded Libya, and instigated a year-long war with the Ottoman Empire. Watching their overlord struggle with such a wide-ranging campaign, the Balkan League seized the moment, and attacked just as Italy met the Turks at the peace table.


What followed was the shocking disintegration of Turkish power in Europe, at a scale and speed no one expected. Yet, even though the League had won the day, the spoils proved harder to divide up among them. Hostility increased between Serbia and Bulgaria over the fate of Macedonia, and when a second war came, the ensuing dogpile by the Ottomans, Serbs, Greeks and Romanians shattered Bulgaria apparently for good.


By autumn 1913, a different question thus emerged. If the Balkan states were justified in throwing off the Ottoman yolk and expanding their powers, just how much expansion was too much? In Vienna's view, the Serbian threat had become intolerable. The only solution was to threaten her with ruin, and prevent Serbian occupation of Albania, including an Adriatic port. Germany stood behind her, Russia backed down, but this was the last such victory of the Central Powers.

In this episode we weigh up the impact of these pre-war conflicts, with a depth and obsession for nerdy details you've never seen before! Join me as I attempt to navigate such a turbulent world, where old assumptions were slain, traditional rivalries were reinforced, and a new order beckoned.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

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In summer 1914, the world went to war.

0:47.0

Now 110 years later, we go back to those figures, to those debates, to those questions,

0:54.1

in the greatest failure in the history of diplomacy.

0:58.0

I am Dr. Zach Twomley. You're listening to When Diplomacy fails.

1:03.0

And this is the July crisis. Thank you. I'm The actual beginning of the Great Balkan War is felt here to be a moment of historical solemnity. Whatever its course,

1:46.0

it must radically change the situation. The Times, reporting from Vienna on the 17th of October,

1:53.0

1912. On the 29th of September 1911, Italian land and naval forces launched several attacks on the Ottoman dependency of Libya.

2:10.0

The expectation in Rome was of a lightning campaign, which would neutralise the sparsely defended Ottoman territories in Tripolitania and Sirenaca,

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