WWI: The Forces of Nationalism, Imperialism and Militarism
The forces of nationalism, imperialism and militarism irrevocably led to World War I in several ways. Germany had become an industrialized nation, vying for economic power and rivaling the power of Britain (Gilbert, 1994). Germany had also defeated France in the prior century in the Franco-Prussian War and taken the territories of Alsace and Lorraine. France wanted them back (Bradberry, 2012). Russia also had a grievance with Germany: it wanted the Bosporous Straights that were "controlled by Germany through her alliance with the Ottoman Empire" (Bradberry, 2012, p. 42). The only way for each of these countries to get what they wanted from Germany was to go to war: their alliance gave them the opportunity to attack Germany on all fronts, and Germany's support for the Austria-Hungary attack on Serbia (in retaliation for the Serbian assassination of Archduke Ferdinand) gave the Triple Entente (France, UK, Russia) the pretext it needed to attack Germany. Germany played right into their hands by reasoning that if she did not support Austria-Hungary against Serbia (which was allied with Russia), Serbia and the Russians might defeat Austria-Hungary and thus have Germany surrounded by enemies on all sides -- France to the West, Russia to the East. Of course, this is exactly what happened anyway; Germany wrongly considered that Russia would not join the fray if it saw Germany openly supporting the Serbian-Austria-Hungary context -- in actuality, this is exactly what Russia, France and Britain wanted.
Russia mobilized against Germany, and Germany responded in kind. France followed days later with its own mobilization against Germany. Germany reacted by entering into Belgium to deliver a swift blow to France -- desiring to close the Western Front as soon as possible so as to be able to concentrate solely on the Eastern Front against Russia. This did not go according to plan -- and the invasion of Belgium, followed by reports of atrocities committed by the German "Huns" as Western propagandists called them, gave support to the British reason for waging war against Germany -- officially based on the fact that Germany had "violated Belgian neutrality" (Bradberry, 2012, p. 40). The real reason for Britain's attack on Germany, however, was more complicated and -- like that of France, Russia and later the U.S. -- had everything to do with nationalistic, imperialistic and militaristic factors, which this paper will now explore. Lloyd-George, Prime Minister of the Wartime Coalition Government (1916-1922), had been very instrumental in securing this deal (Lloyd-George, 1939).
Imperialism, Nationalism and Militarism
One of the most important nation-states to emerge from the ashes of WWI and WWII was the Zionist state of Israel. Prior to the 1940s, Israel...
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