<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></SPAN>CHAPTER II</h2>
<h3>WHY GERMANY WANTED WAR</h3>
<p>It would be impossible to make a list of all the causes
which led Germany from time to time to take such
action as would tend to force war on one or another
of the nations of Europe. For besides questions of
national honor or of national rights there were the
writings of German philosophers, historians, and scientists,
a great majority of whom maintained that war
was a necessity if men were to continue to live in large
groups or societies. These writers were chiefly Prussian,
but Prussia, including more than half of Germany,
dominated the rest of the empire through the organization
of its government. The following paragraphs
present what seem to be the chief reasons why Germany,
and especially Prussia, wanted war.</p>
<p><b>War as a Profitable Business.</b>—According to those
German writers there are two results from a successful
war. First, the victors take more or less territory from
the vanquished; second, the victors may demand a
large sum of money, called an indemnity, from the defeated
people, who thus have to pay their conquerors
for having taken the trouble to defeat them.</p>
<p>In both of these instances the result is advantageous
to the winner of the war, and particularly to the governing
class of that nation. Through the taxes from
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 28]<SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28"></SPAN></span>the new territory more money flows into the national
treasury, and a great many new officials must be
appointed. These, of course, for many years are appointed
by the rulers of the victorious nation. Besides
this not only do we find new markets opened up for the
manufacturers and merchants, but the conquered territory
frequently contains great stores of raw materials.
In both cases the goods can now pass to and fro without
the drawbacks of possible embargoes or import taxes
which interfere with the freedom of trade. This is
well illustrated by the results of the seizure of part of
Lorraine by Germany from France in 1870. Lorraine
contains great stores of coal and iron ore. These
Germany wanted. So that part of Lorraine was demanded
which would give to Germany rich mines of
coal and iron. Some other ore deposits, which could
not be easily utilized, she left to France. Not long
afterwards a new process for making iron was discovered
which made the French deposits more valuable
than those Germany had taken. Undoubtedly one of
the reasons for the present war was that Germany
wished to increase her national wealth by seizing the
iron mines that had become so valuable.</p>
<p>Many times before 1870 the Prussians had made
large gains, in the way of increased territory and
prestige, by means of war. It was the boast of many
Prussian kings that each one of them had added to the
lands over which he ruled. In almost every instance
this increase was due to a successful war, enabling the
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 29]<SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29"></SPAN></span>king of Prussia to seize territory which did not belong
to him.</p>
<p>The indemnity which may be collected from a conquered
nation is also a source of profit to the conqueror.
The money is deposited by the government in banks,
which thus have large sums ready to lend to manufacturers
and merchants who wish to increase their business.
The result of this is a great stimulation of
manufactures and commerce. In the case of Germany,
the effect on industry of the $1,000,000,000 of indemnity
which she received from France following the Franco-Prussian
war was so great that Germany was soon manufacturing
more than her people could consume, and
German commercial agents spread all over the globe
seeking to find profitable customers for the surplus.</p>
<p>On the other hand, the German leaders have failed
to realize that the destruction of men and materials in
war is always a great national loss. In the case of a
long war, the losses from these causes may, even for
the victors, overbalance any advantage which may
be secured in the way of territory or money from the
vanquished nation.</p>
<p><b>Germany Wanted Land from her Neighbors.</b>—The
present war was largely the result of Germany's desire
to secure territory. The territory that was particularly
wanted was in a number of different places.</p>
<p>In the first place, Germany coveted the rest of the
iron mines which she had made the mistake (from her
point of view) of letting France keep in 1870. These
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 30]<SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30"></SPAN></span>are located along the northeast frontier of France,
about half a dozen miles from the boundary. Germany
wanted also the greater part of Belgium, because
it has valuable iron ore deposits, and especially because
it has great deposits of coal. It has been said that
without these mines of Belgian coal and of French iron,
which Germany seized at the very beginning of the war,
she would soon have had to give up the fight.</p>
<p>In the second place, Germany's only ports are on
the shallow north coast, and the channels are intricate
and difficult of navigation. These ports are inconveniently
situated for exports from Germany's chief
manufacturing region, the lower Rhine valley. The
best ports for western Germany are Antwerp, in Belgium,
and Rotterdam, in Holland. Germany wanted
a port toward the west through which she could more
conveniently reach her customers in North and South
America and elsewhere. It is interesting to notice
that the river Scheldt (skelt), on which Antwerp is
situated, passes through Holland on its way to the
sea. Even if Germany secured Belgium this would
not give her control of the Antwerp outlet nor would
it give her Rotterdam. It is certain that eventual
domination of Holland was part of Germany's plan.</p>
<p>Germany wanted that part of Russia which was
along the Baltic Sea. The part of Germany adjoining
this, called East Prussia, is the stronghold of the Prussian
Junkers, or landed nobility. These people already
own great estates in the Baltic provinces of Russia.
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 31]<SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31"></SPAN></span>Germany wished to govern this German-owned land
and provide a place to which her surplus population
could emigrate and still be in German territory. The
Junkers were especially anxious for this to come about
as it would greatly increase their power in Germany.</p>
<p>"Pan-Germanists" is the name given to a group of
German leaders who aimed especially to bring all German-speaking
peoples into the German Empire. In
general, however, the same leaders aimed to bring under
German control all the districts that have been mentioned
above, together with the Balkan states and other
lands.</p>
<p><b>Germany Wanted More Colonies.</b>—Germany's commercial
expansion came after most of the world had been
divided among the other nations. She thought she
must have more colonies to provide her with raw materials
and to give her markets for some of her surplus
manufactures. Other reasons why Germany wanted
colonies were that she might obtain more food, and
that she might establish coaling stations for her navy,
so that it could protect her commerce, especially her
food-carrying ships. As the war has shown, Germany
can hardly produce a full supply of food for her own
people.</p>
<p>The easiest way to get colonies seemed to be by making
war against some nation that already possessed
them, in the hope that a victorious Germany could
seize the colonies she desired. On the other hand,
without war, she had gained some large colonies and
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 32]<SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32"></SPAN></span>was assured of others in Africa, and she had secured a
prevailing influence over the immense domains of Turkey
in Asia. By 1914 the Germans had more than half
completed a railroad through Turkey to the Persian
Gulf, and expected soon to dominate the eastern trade
by the Berlin-Bagdad route.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/032.png" width-obs="400" height-obs="517" alt="THE BERLIN-BAGDAD RAILWAY" title="" /> <span class="caption">THE BERLIN-BAGDAD RAILWAY</span></div>
<p><b>Germany Wanted "a Place in the Sun."</b>—Germany
was acknowledged to be the strongest nation in
continental Europe.
Her position as a
world power, however,
was disputed
by Great Britain,
both by reason of
the latter's control
of the sea through
her enormous fleet,
and by reason of
Great Britain's numerous
colonies all
over the world. It
was galling to German
pride to have
to coal her ships at
English coaling stations. She wanted stations of her
own. By bringing on a war that would humble France
to the dust and make Belgium a part of Germany, thus
giving her a chance to seize the colonies of France and
Belgium, Germany would at once attain a position in
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 33]<SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33"></SPAN></span>the world's affairs which would enable her to challenge
the power of any nation on earth.</p>
<p><b>The Survival of the Fittest.</b>—German thinkers carried
to an extreme the theory of the survival of the
fittest. This doctrine teaches that all living things have
reached their present forms through a gradual development
of those qualities which best fit them to live in
their present surroundings. Those that are best adapted
live on, and produce a new generation that are also well
fitted to survive. Those that are not fitted to their
surroundings soon give up the struggle and die. The
Germans applied this same belief to nations, and claimed
that only those nations survived that could successfully
meet world conditions. They believed that war was
an inevitable world condition, and that that nation
would survive that was best able to fight. They believed
in war, because they believed that just as nature
removes the weak animal or plant by an early death, so
the weak nation should pay the penalty of its weakness
by being defeated in war and absorbed by the stronger
one. War would prove which nation was the most
nearly perfect. The Germans had no doubt that this
nation was Germany. Acceptance of this belief by
the German people had much to do with bringing on
the present war.</p>
<p><b>Germany Wanted to Germanize the World.</b>—As a
result of the reasoning outlined in the last paragraph,
German writers taught that those things which were
German—their speech, their literature, their religion,
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 34]<SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34"></SPAN></span>their armies, in short the manners, customs, and
thoughts of the Germans—were the best possible
manners, and customs, and thoughts. These things all
taken together are what is meant by <i>Kultur</i> (kool-toor´),—not
merely "culture" as the latter word is generally
used.</p>
<p>Since the Germans believed that their <i>Kultur</i> was
the highest stage of human progress, the next step,
according to the view of their leaders, would be to Germanize
all the rest of the nations of the earth by imposing
German <i>Kultur</i> upon them. If possible, this
was to be brought about with the consent of the other
nations; if not, then it was to be imposed by force.</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p><b>Suggestions for Study.</b>—1. Locate Antwerp, Rotterdam,
Hamburg, Bremen, East Prussia, Alsace-Lorraine. 2. Show on
an outline map the regions which Germany desired to control.
Who would have suffered? 3. If all countries adopted the German
idea of war what would be the condition of the world? 4. Has
any nation the right to impose its rule upon another people because
it believes its own ideals are the only true ones?</p>
<p><b>References.</b>—See page <SPAN href="#Page_26">26</SPAN>; also <i>Conquest and Kultur</i> (C.P.I.);
<i>War Cyclopedia</i> (C.P.I.), under the headings "German Military
Autocracy" and "Pan-Germanism."</p>
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