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Hi, I'm John Green, this is Crash Course World History, and today we continue our discussion
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of how a regional conflict became World War I. We're also going to look at who started
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the war and although no one nation is truly to blame, some nations are more to blame than others.
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Like America, for once? Blameless. Well, not totally blameless. Largely blameless.
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Mr. Green, Mr. Green! That's easy, the Germans started the war.
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Well, Me from the Past, as it happens many historians and British politicians would agree
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with you. I mean, you have an opinion that can be defended. And I can't wait for you to defend it.
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Uhh... maybe they just, like, really liked war? I'm not really in the defending positions business,
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Mr. Green, I'm more in the like, bold proclamations business.
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Yes, Me from the Past, noted. But it turns out, there's more to life than that.
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So the topic of who started World War I remains one of the most controversial and interesting
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topics to discuss in World History, not least because, you know, we'd like to avoid having another one.
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But in general, when we talk about World Wars, as when we talk about World Cups, we pretty
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quickly end up discussing Germany.
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The idea that the root cause of World War I was Germany, or more specifically, German
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militarism, continues to be popular. This has been the case ever since the 1960s when
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this historian, Fritz Fisher, identified Germany as the chief cause of the war. But Germany's
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guilt for the war was also written into the Versailles Peace Treaty, in article 231, and
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most of you will be familiar with the idea that anger over that clause its incumbent
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debts helped lead to Hitler's rise.
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Also, pretty much however you slice it Germany was definitely responsible for starting World
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War II, and looking back that made it more plausible that they would have also stated
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World War I, because, you know, they had a history of starting wars. To be fair, the
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definition of a Western European nation is "has a history starting wars."
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Unless you're the Swiss.
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Cue the Switzereel, Stan!
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Yeah okay, but the thing is attributing characteristics like militarism or authoritarianism to entire
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national populations is a little problematic. Also one nation's militarism is another nation's
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strong national defense, and when you live in the country, as I do, that spends more
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on defense than any other nation, it's probably not that good of an idea to call people militaristic.
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There's just something about that broad-brush painting of an entire nation sharing a particular
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characteristic that feels a little bit propaganda-y. Also, it wasn't just Germans who were militaristic
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in 1914. The idea of "the glory of war" was a very popular concept all over Europe, and
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really there's no evidence that the German people of 1914 were any more or less militaristic
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than the French or the Russians, They all had poetry that celebrated heroic sacrifice
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and dying for the Mother and/or Fatherland.
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That's not usually and. Maybe, though. I'm gonna stay open minded.
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But there's another problem with the whole idea that the Germans were more eager for
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war than anyone else in Europe. That argument relies a lot on the behavior of Kaiser Wilhelm
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II, the German leader, and the Kaiser did make some pretty bellicose and stupid public
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statements, which in turn made people fear that Germans were eager for war. So Wilhelm
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became kind of a stand-in for German aggression, a literal cartoon villain, upon whom the world,
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especially the English, could project their stereotypes.
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So I would argue that the German character isn't to blame for World War I, and in fact
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no national character has ever been to blame for any war. But I am not going to let the
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Germans off the hook entirely.
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So you will remember that Germany offered the so-called "blank check" that Germans would
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always support Austro-Hungarians' ultimatum to Serbia. And in some ways this empowering
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by Germany's support encouraged Austria's foreign minister Berchtold to behave as recklessly
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as possible, under the mistaken impression that this is what the Germans wanted him to do.
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So basically, Austria thought that Germany wanted a war, so they were like, "Oh, we'll
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just behave really recklessly and we'll give the Germans the war they've been so excited
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about." But the Germans were offering the Austrians the assurance of support in the
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hopes that it wouldn't lead to war.
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So you could argue that in fact most of the blame for starting World War I should fall
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on the shoulders of the Austrians, after all, they were the ones who issued the ultimatum
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to Serbia, and they were the first to declare war, although only against Serbia. But, the
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Germans were the first to declare war on a major power, Russia, on August 1st, and the
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German advance on France through Belgium is what brought Britain into the war. And those
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are pretty solid arguments that Germany turned the conflict from, you know, a regional thing
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in the Balkans, which isn't unprecedented, to like this big pan-European war.
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But I don't think we're done assigning blame, because we didn't just have a pan-European
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war, we had a world war. Russia.
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Now you'll remember that of all the major powers, Russia was the first to mobilize its
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massive army, and it was Russia's mobilization that drew Germany, France, and Britain into the war.
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Putin is looking at me, isn't he, Stan. I'm just trying to--ah! you so scary!
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Stan, can you please make Mr. Putin go away, I'm just trying to talk about history, I'm
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not talking about any current conflicts.
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And it makes me nervous to say this, but there was really no good reason for Russia to mobilize
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in the first place. I mean, when Austria declared war on Serbia on July 28th, the Austrians
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could not mobilize their own troops for two weeks, because they were on harvest break.
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I mean, if we've learned anything about agriculture, it's that it's hard to have a large-scale
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war without it, so we can't go to war until all the wheat has been farmed.
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But even if Austria had mobilized and attacked immediately, their initial plan was an attack
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on Belgrade, not Russia, which by the way was called somewhat confusingly, Plan B. Now,
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Vienna did have a plan to mobilize against both Serbia and Russia, but they never used
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it. But even if Austria had launched an all-out attack on Russia, Russia had begun its pre-mobilization,
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the period preparatory to war, on July 25th, and while I usually don't care about dates,
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with the start of World War I, very important, because July 25th was before the Serbs had
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even responded to the Austrian ultimatum.
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And just as a general rule, it's hard to play the blameless victim when you're moving all
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of your troops to the border. Hey, why are you here again, Putin?
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So here we have Austrians and Germans receiving reports of Russian troops massing on their
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borders, and you know, that seems kind of like war. A lot of it comes down to how you
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understand Russia's period preparatory to war. I mean, do you focus on the "period preparatory",
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or do you focus on the "to war"? Regardless, Russia became the first power to actually
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put its war machine into motion.
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Let's go to the Thought Bubble.
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So talking about Russia leads us to some of the more meta arguments about the causes of
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World War I because it's difficult to understand what Russia was doing when it mobilized without
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trying to understand why they mobilized. After all, an Austrian attack on Serbia was hardly
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an existential threat to Russia, I mean, look at the map. Russia's huge, and at the time,
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probably had the largest army in Europe, if not the world. So why would they care about
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what was likely to be a skirmish on the Bosnian border?
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Well, here's where geo-politics and history come in. So, looking at the map, you can see
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that the Balkans are right next to the Dardanelles, the straits that give access to the Black
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Sea. Russia needed to maintain influence there in order to ensure traffic through those straits,
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especially if the Ottomans were going to form an alliance with the Germans, which they did.
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Also, at least in its own estimation, Russia was in danger of becoming a laughingstock
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in European politics: their humiliating loss to Japan in the Russo-Japanese War was followed
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by Russia's inability to stop Austria from annexing Bosnia from the Ottomans in 1908,
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and that was the event that sparked Serbia's drive to expand its own territory. Its history
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of prior weakness meant that Russia's foreign policy makers feared that without some decisive
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action, Russia wouldn't be taken seriously anymore.
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In the wake of Austria's ultimatum, Russian foreign minister Sazonov concluded that Russia,
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quote, "Could not remain a passive spectator whilst a Slavonic people was being trampled
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down. If Russia failed to fulfill her historic mission, she would be considered a decadent
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state and would henceforth have to take second place among the powers...if at this critical
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juncture, the Serbs were abandoned to their fate, Russian prestige in the Balkans would
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collapse utterly."
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Thanks, Thought Bubble.
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So judging from what we just learned in the Thought Bubble, it was really the Ottomans.
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If they could have just stopped Austria from annexing Bosnia in the first place, none of
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this would have happened. And if I may go a little further back, there wouldn't have
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even been an Ottoman Empire without the stupid Romans. And of course the Roman Empire was
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largely dependent upon constant expansion and looting, so if only the Gauls could have
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defeated Caesar, none of this would have happened.
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In short, no wonder Caesar was assassinated, he was about to start World War I in 1900 years.
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I bring that up because that's the tricky thing about the blame game. You can trace
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the causes of World War I back a bunch of ways. I mean, I can't think of anyone who
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you can't at least partially assign blame to - well, I mean except the Mongols.
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Actually you know what, if they'd just kept control of Russia, probably no World War I.
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Anyway, all of this only scratches the surface of the arguments about who's to blame for
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World War I. I mean, I haven't dealt with stuff like the alliance system or European
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imperialism, or you often hear about the naval rivalry between Britain and Germany, and then
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there are the ideological causes, like nationalism, and the Social Darwinist thinking that led
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people to believe that war was a natural and inevitable state of human affairs.
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You can tell all those origin stories of the Great War, and they're important, but ours
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centers on diplomatic history. There are a few reasons for this, first, the decision
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to go to war was ultimately in the hands of a very small group of diplomats. I mean, even
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in the most democratic countries, Britain and France, popular opinion didn't force mobilization.
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Also, in most countries that's still the case. It's still diplomats who decide whether to
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go to war. So understanding what makes governments and diplomats decide to go to war is very important.
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But looking at the diplomatic causes of the war also reveals something to us about the
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pitfalls of writing history. I mean diplomats are famous for keeping pretty detailed records
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of their dealings, both at the time and in retrospect, and then historians have to sift
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through all these sources and make choices about which ones to emphasize. And sometimes,
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even which ones to believe, because of course, often these sources are in direct conflict.
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Now, I'm no historian, but in creating this episode, we had to make choices that many
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of you will disagree with. Either because you don't think we gave enough evidence or
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because you don't like the things that we emphasized, and that's great. It's these constructive
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and critical conversations that lead us to dig deeper, to consult more primary sources,
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to read more broadly, and that in turn leads to a richer understanding of the world and
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a more engaged life.
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All that noted, the alliance system was certainly important and I'm sure you'll be discussing
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it in your classes, and in comments.
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Thank you for watching, I'll see you next week.
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Crash Course is filmed here in the Chad and Stacey Emigholz Studio in Indianapolis, and
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As we say in my hometown, don't forget to be awesome.