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Chapter 11 – Section 1 The United States Enters World War I

Chapter 11 – Section 1 The United States Enters World War I

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Page 1: Chapter 11 – Section 1 The United States Enters World War I

Chapter 11 – Section 1

The United States Enters World War I

Page 2: Chapter 11 – Section 1 The United States Enters World War I

Woodrow Wilson and Foreign Policy

• Wilson hated imperialism

• But, he also believed in promoting democracy– Preferred to do so

peacefully, but was willing to use force if necessary

– Mexico– The Caribbean– Eventually, Europe

Page 3: Chapter 11 – Section 1 The United States Enters World War I

U.S. Relations with Mexico• How is Mexico

related to World War I?

– Preview of Wilson’s diplomacy

– Shows tensions between U.S. and Mexico that will lead to American involvement in World War I

Page 4: Chapter 11 – Section 1 The United States Enters World War I

The Mexican Revolution• 1884 – 1911– Mexican dictator

Porfirio Diaz in power

• 1911– Revolution: Diaz is

exiled to France and Mexicans elect revolutionary leader Francisco Madero

• 1913– Madero is overthrown

(likely assassinated) by General Victoriano Huerta

Page 5: Chapter 11 – Section 1 The United States Enters World War I

Wilson’s Reaction to Huerta

• Wilson believes the Huerta government is illegitimate and undemocratic

– Refuses to recognize Huerta’s government

– Allows Americans to arm other factions

– Marines take Veracruz by force

• After international arbitration, American-supported Venustiano Carranza becomes President of Mexico

Page 6: Chapter 11 – Section 1 The United States Enters World War I

Pancho Villa Expedition• Pancho Villa was a

Mexican general

– Had been an ally of Carranza, but they had split

– U.S. gave weapons to Villa when he was a Carranza ally

– U.S. stopped providing weapons to Villa after Carranza took power

Page 7: Chapter 11 – Section 1 The United States Enters World War I

Pancho Villa Expedition

• Villa then attacks Americans and burns the town of Columbus, New Mexico to the ground

– It is unclear if he did so for revenge, or to capture supplies for his army

• Wilson orders General John J. Pershing to enter Mexico to capture Villa

– Pershing looks for Villa from 1916 until 1917

– The expedition is a failure

Page 8: Chapter 11 – Section 1 The United States Enters World War I

How Is This Related to World War I?• Shows Wilson’s

willingness to use force and interfere in other nations to support democracy

• Worsens America’s reputation internationally, especially in Mexico and the rest of Latin America

– Keep this in mind for the Zimmerman Telegram

Page 9: Chapter 11 – Section 1 The United States Enters World War I

Causes of World War I• Balance of Powers

– Try to keep military strength of nations similar

– Idea is that no one will start a war because, all militaries being about equal, no one can really win

• Rise of Germany as a nation has unbalanced the system, making other nations nervous

Page 10: Chapter 11 – Section 1 The United States Enters World War I

Causes of World War I• Balance of Powers

– Alliance system springs up in response to a powerful new German nation

• Triple Entente– France– Russia– Great Britain

• Triple Alliance– Germany– Austria-Hungary– Italy

Page 11: Chapter 11 – Section 1 The United States Enters World War I

Causes of World War I• Nationalism

– people start to feel attached to their country as a whole

– Focus on having the same language, culture

• Peoples with a distinct culture/language, but without their own state, begin to demand independence

Page 12: Chapter 11 – Section 1 The United States Enters World War I

Causes of World War I• The Balkans

– Slavic peoples begin demanding independence from Austria-Hungary

– Russia, which is also a Slavic nation, has close ties with Slavs in the Balkans, including the new nation of…

– Serbia: first independent Slavic nation in the Balkans

Page 13: Chapter 11 – Section 1 The United States Enters World War I

Causes of World War I• The Balkans

– Serbs wanted to claim more Slavic territory in the Balkans

– Became furious when Austria-Hungary took Bosnia, a Slavic area, from the Ottoman Empire

– June, 1914: Serbian assassin, Gavrilo Princip, kills Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir to the throne of Austria-Hungary

Page 14: Chapter 11 – Section 1 The United States Enters World War I

The War Begins• Austria-Hungary declares war

on Serbia

• Russia mobilizes to protect Serbia

• Germany and Austria-Hungary then declare war on Russia

• France declares war on Germany and Austria-Hungary

• Italy refuses to ally with Germany and Austria-Hungary

• Ottoman Empire allies with Germany

This is a joke headline, but it looks real.

Page 15: Chapter 11 – Section 1 The United States Enters World War I

Celebration?

• News of war is greeted with celebrations in every capital in Europe

• Every nation is sure that it will be victorious, and the war will be short

Page 16: Chapter 11 – Section 1 The United States Enters World War I

Celebration?

Page 17: Chapter 11 – Section 1 The United States Enters World War I

Schlieffen Plan• Germans can’t fight

France and Russia at the same time

• Schlieffen Plan

– Germans know it will take Russia approximately 6 weeks to mobilize, so…

– knock France out of the war in 5 weeks

– Unfortunately, they do this by moving their army through a neutral country, Belgium

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Britain Enters the War

• Great Britain has a 70 year old treaty with Belgium to protect its neutrality, but Germans never believed Britain would actually enter the war

• Then, Great Britain enters the war

• Allied Powers– Great Britain– France– Russia

• Central Powers– Germany– Austria-Hungary– Ottoman Empire

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A Long War Begins• Schlieffen Plan fails

– Although it very nearly succeeds

• Eventually, Germans, French, and British reach a stalemate, and so both sides begin digging trenches

• This becomes the Western Front, a line of trenches that stretches from the North Sea to Switzerland

Page 26: Chapter 11 – Section 1 The United States Enters World War I

American Neutrality• President Wilson

doesn’t want to get involved

– No need for America to get involved in a foreign war

– Remember, we have millions of immigrants from every part of Europe, so choosing a side poses a real risk of splitting the country apart

Page 27: Chapter 11 – Section 1 The United States Enters World War I

Americans Choose Sides Anyway

• Majority of Americans side with Britain and France

• A substantial number side with Germany

– German-Americans

– Irish-Americans (due to anti-British feeling based on British policy toward Ireland)

Page 28: Chapter 11 – Section 1 The United States Enters World War I

Pro-British Sentiment• Wilson and almost his

entire cabinet favor Great Britain

• American business also favors Great Britain

• Many American banks loan money to the Allies (Britain, France, Russia), giving America even more of a financial stake in the war

Page 29: Chapter 11 – Section 1 The United States Enters World War I

Blockades• British blockade food and supplies from reaching

Germany

• Germans invent U-Boats (submarines) to block food and supplies from reaching the Allies

• Germans do warn passengers not to travel on certain ships

Page 30: Chapter 11 – Section 1 The United States Enters World War I

Anger Toward Germany Grows

• In spite of warnings, Americans are killed in May of 1915 when the Germans sink the British passenger ship Lusitania, killing 128 U.S. citizens

• The ship was actually carrying loads of war material to Great Britain

Page 31: Chapter 11 – Section 1 The United States Enters World War I

Anger Toward Germany Grows• Responding to

diplomatic pressure from the United States, Germany promised not to sink any more civilian ships without warning in the Sussex Pledge

• America stays out of war, and Wilson is reelected in 1916

Page 32: Chapter 11 – Section 1 The United States Enters World War I

The United States Enters the War• In February of 1917, Germany

goes back to unrestricted submarine warfare

• Zimmerman Telegram

– German government makes an offer to Mexico: side with us if the U.S. enters the war, and we will restore territory the U.S. took from you (Texas, Arizona, New Mexico)

– British intelligence intercepts it, American State Department releases it the public

– Americans are furious

• United States declares war on Germany in April of 1917