Please click the
icon to follow us on Facebook.Zimmermann sent a telegram to the
United States. The World War had raged for nearly three years, and Germany
felt the pinch with trench warfare in France, the British blockade, and
bitter warfare on the icy Eastern Front.
Despite the pressures against them, the German Army had been the main
strength of the Central Powers and held against the Allied onslaughts. The
Battle of Verdun lasted ten months over 1916 and cost 300,000 lives,
ultimately ending in a failure of Germany taking Verdun, though some
ground was taken. Kaiser Wilhelm II had taken it as enough to declare
victory in the war and call for terms of peace.
Wilson, who had long been seeking opportunities to put into place his
ideal League of Nations, attempted to negotiate with the two sides in
note. The Germans requested a more open discussion, while the British
under Lloyd George took the opportunity to lead the Allies in creating a
list of enormous demands including reparations, evacuations, and
recognition of nation-states. The diplomatic gamble ultimately led to
further division between the Allies and Central Powers, Wilhelm blaming
the Allies for being unreasonable while the Allies did the same of him.
With time running out as supplies dwindled behind the blockade, Foreign
Secretary of the German Empire Arthur Zimmermann decided a new tactic.
The United States had gradually come into line with the Allies over the
course of the war after being vehemently neutral due to German naval
attacks and increasing economic influence due to war-profiteering in
Britain while Germany sat behind its blockade. The original
countermeasures to the blockade had been "unrestricted" submarine warfare
against Allied ships in the Atlantic, torpedoing them at sight rather than
stopping and conducting searches as was typical in naval warfare. While
tactically advantageous, the sinking of the RMS Lusitania and others had
resulted in grave negative response as many American passengers had been
killed despite being warned against travel. The outcry from neutral
countries had put an end to the U-boat attacks, but the failure of
diplomacy in December of 1916 prompted the German command to resume
unrestricted submarine warfare beginning February 1, 1917, though it would
almost certainly bring the United States into the war.
"This might have worked, but the Germans had pretty
much FUBAR'd their PR in the US with various things...by that time, the
news media of the day were about 90 percent pro-Allied. " - reader's
commentInitially, Zimmermann had considered finding more allies
such as Mexico and Japan to expand the war to soak up inevitable American
troops, but he settled on ways of keeping the United States out or even
voicing positive support for Germany. He sent a telegram through the
ambassador to Washington reading,
"We intend to begin on the first of February unrestricted submarine
warfare. We shall endeavor in spite of this to keep the United States of
America neutral. While such tactics are not to our pleasure, it has become
necessary to fight against the British Navy as they have sought to starve
the people of Germany into submission through their blockade. Americans as
well have felt the economic frustration of their activity of war. Please
call the President's attention to the fact that the ruthless employment of
our submarines now offers the prospect of compelling England in a few
months to make peace". Signed, ZIMMERMANN
Word of the German eagerness for peace seized many Americans, especially
the German-Americans whose parents or themselves had immigrated. Other
Americans began to demand the opening of German ports to ships with food
and medicine, especially those whose exports had been harmed by the
cut-off of German consumers. Britain had allowed searched ships through
its blockade, but propaganda through political cartoons showing John Bull
stealing dinner from starving German children's mouths stirred public
opinion. William Jennings Bryan, who had resigned as Secretary of State
due to Wilson's fascination with the war, spoke out from his stage on the
Chautauqua circuit that the United States must take up a fresh stand to
end the war before desperation pushed the Germans too far. Former
President Theodore Roosevelt spoke out against the German "pirates", but
promises of German U-boat escorts for neutral ships kept their image as,
at most, wartime privateers.
President Wilson delivered an address to Congress on April 6 to confirm
neutrality while publically rebuking the Germans for their unrestricted
submarine warfare and also rebuking the Allies for not seeking reasonable
peace. Allied freight was sunk by the millions of tons in the Atlantic,
and improved convoy and decoy tactics were limited by increasing neutral
support for blockade-running ships with courses set for lucrative German
ports. The war seemed to continue at a bitter stalemate over the summer,
but the collapse of Russia and decisive Central victory at the Battle of
Caporetto seemed to give the Germans an edge. As the revolutionary
government of Russia began talks for peace at Brest-Litovsk, the
beleaguered French also agreed to armistice with Austria through Belgian
intermediaries. Frustrated Britons felt that they could not carry the war
on alone and capitulated to US-led talks hosted in New York.
Diplomacy was bitter and nearly fell apart on a number of occasions as
various sides made overwhelming demands. Enumerated reparations caused so
much money to exchange hands that an equivalency was found granting
primary gains to France, Alsace-Lorraine became divided, and Northeastern
Europe became a variety of new states such as Poland, Finland, Latvia,
Lithuania, and Estonia, while Austrian advances on Serbia were rebuffed
and internal nationalities in the Austro-Hungarian Empire and the Ottoman
Empire gained significant self-rule. Over the course of the 1920s, many of
these nations would rebel to become independent states, as well as Ireland
in the UK, as the Balkans and Middle East shattered into other states.
Meanwhile, Wilson would get his wishes of a League of Nations to be hosted
in neutral Geneva. Upon the implosion of the Ottoman Empire, renewed
colonialism would swarm into the Middle East, sparking, along with bitter
economic downturn, the Second World War in the mid-1930s. Again, the
United States would seek neutrality.