December 28th, 2007
Historian Jim Powell has written an informative book on the First World War and how the peace treaty at the end of the war paved the way for Hitler’s rise, and also the rise of Stalin and Lenin. He also discusses the dangerous policy of nation building. Powell explains in Wilson’s War that the Versailles Treaty of 1919 discredited the German republic and triggered dangerous national reaction.
Encouraged by French premier Georges Clemenceau, the Versailles Treaty allowed the Allies to hold Germany one hundred percent responsible for the war. It also allowed them to demand that Germany pay huge reparations and surrender long list of assets; trucks; guns, ships; and private property as well as property of the German government. As Powell explains, the reparations bill created powerful incentives for the Germans to inflate their currency and try paying their debts with worthless marks. The treaty also continued indefinitely the British naval blockade even after German soldiers had stopped fighting. This was done while German children were starving to death. Jim Powell correctly states that despite Wilson’s professed ideals about self-determination, he didn’t stop the Allies from dividing German colonies among themselves. Neither the British nor the French were about to dismantle their own colonial empires.
In the years following the war, Germany lapsed into huge financial troubles because of the harsh demands of the allies. This forced many Germans to believe that the only practical way to retaliate was by armed force. The people of Germany were so burdened by the outcome of the treaty that they eagerly, and blindly, accepted Adolf Hitler’s promise of Germany’s Arise to a world empire. Hitler used the Versailles Treaty as a propaganda tool to boost himself to power during the 1920s and 30s. He used the term “November criminals” to refer to those Germans who had signed the treaty. Powell states that without the dangerous policies of the 1919 treaty Hitler may have never risen to power. Millions of lives could have been saved if Hitler had been written off as a lone zealot. Another thing that Powell focuses on is America’s dangerous policy of nation building. On the issue of nation building, Powell concludes with this helpful advice. The focus should be on protecting the national security interests of the United States, not on defending other countries from a wide range of threats. Nor should the United States try to counter political instability elsewhere. There has always been political instability in the world, and most of it doesn’t effect the national security of the United States. We should avoid having American forces permanently stationed in other countries. American blood and treasure should be reserved for safeguarding Americans. We should repeal proliferating restrictions on civil liberties that, enacted in the name of fighting terrorism, do little if anything to protect national security. (Page 297) In summation, Powell concludes that American militarism is not the road to peace. Also militarism often results in another war, as did the end of the First World War.
Over all I agree with what Jim Powell says in his book and would suggest it to anyone who is concerned about America’s rise to an empire instead of a sovereign nation. This is a lesson that George W. Bush would do well to learn.