<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></SPAN>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
<h3>THE WAR IN 1914</h3>
<p><b>German Plan of Attack.</b>—As soon as the German
leaders had determined upon war, their military machine
was set in motion. The plan was first to attack
France and crush her armies before the slow-moving
Russians could get a force together; and then, after
the defeat of France, to turn to the east and subdue
Russia. The success of the plan was dependent upon
the swift overthrow of France; and this in turn hinged
upon the question as to whether German armies could
invade France before the French were ready. Speed
was the essential thing, and in order to gain speed
Germany committed one of the greatest crimes in
modern history.</p>
<p>From the nearest point on the German boundary to
Paris is only one hundred and seventy miles. But no
rapid invasion of France could be made in this direction
for two reasons: first, because of the very strong
forts which protected the French frontier; and second,
on account of the nature of the land, which presents
to the east a series of five easily defended ridges, each
of which would have to be stormed by an invader. A
German attack directly across the French frontier
could move but slowly past these natural and military
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 78]<SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78"></SPAN></span>obstacles; and the French nation would have ample
time to mobilize its forces.</p>
<p>Consequently the German military leaders determined
to attack France from the northeast. Here a
comparatively level plain stretched from Germany
through Belgium and France up to Paris itself. Many
good roads and railways traversed the land. Few
natural barriers existed to aid the defenders, and France,
trusting to the neutrality of Belgium, had no strong
fortifications on her northeastern frontier. One obstacle
to German invasion existed; it was what the
German Chancellor once<SPAN name="FNanchor_1_2" id="FNanchor_1_2"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_1_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</SPAN> called "a scrap of paper"—a
promise to respect the neutrality of Belgium, which
Prussia, France, and England had agreed to by formal
treaties. Similar treaties guaranteed the neutrality
of Luxemburg, a small country east of Belgium. Upon
these promises France had depended for the protection
of her northeastern border; for the German Empire
had accepted all the rights and all the duties of the
treaties made by Prussia. But now, under the plea
of necessity which "knows no law," the German rulers
determined to break their promises, violate the neutrality
of Belgium and Luxemburg, and crush France
before an aroused and alarmed world could interfere.</p>
<p><b>Belgium Blocks the German Plan.</b>—The invasion
of Belgium had two results which the Germans had
not foreseen. In the first place, it brought Great
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 79]<SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79"></SPAN></span>Britain immediately into the war to the aid of Belgium
and France. In the second place, the Belgian king and
people refused to be bought off with a promise of compensation;
they made the high decision to defend their
country as long as possible against the terrible German
army-machine. Said the Belgian king: "A country
which defends itself commands the respect of all; that
country cannot perish." This action of Belgium disarranged
the German army plans; instead of reaching
Paris according to schedule, the Germans were delayed
in Belgium for ten days. These ten days were full of
horror and suffering and defeat for the brave Belgians;
but they are precious days in the light of history. They
gave time for the French to mobilize their armies and
bring them up to the northeast; and they enabled
Great Britain to send across the English Channel her
first hundred thousand troops. In this way Paris was
saved from capture, and France from conquest; and
probably the whole world from German domination.
The German plans for world conquest met their first
defeat at the hands of brave little Belgium. The
would-be conquerors had forgotten to include in their
time-table the elements of honor, patriotism, and self-sacrifice.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN href="images/080.png"><ANTIMG src="images/thumb_080.png" width-obs="400" height-obs="389" alt="THE WESTERN FRONT 1914" title="" /></SPAN> <span class="caption">THE WESTERN FRONT 1914</span></div>
<p><b>The German Advance.</b>—Luxemburg was occupied
without resistance, for that little country had no army.
On August 4, 1914, the German armies attacked the
Belgian fortress of Liege (lee-ĕzh´), and within twenty-three
days Belgium was overrun, its capital taken, and all
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 80]<SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80"></SPAN></span>the important places except Antwerp captured. After
the delay in Belgium, the main German armies advanced
into France. Here they were met (August 21-23) by
French and British troops; but the defenders were not
yet strong enough to stop the German advance. For
twelve days they fell back toward Paris, fighting continually,
until the invaders were within twenty miles
of the city. The French government and archives
were withdrawn from Paris to Bordeaux in the southwest,
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 81]<SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81"></SPAN></span>so imminent seemed the capture of the capital.
The battle line now extended for one hundred and
seventy-five miles eastward from near Paris to the fortress
of Verdun.</p>
<p><b>The First Battle of the Marne.</b>—In the meantime
the French commander, General Joffre (zhofr), had
secretly been collecting another army with which to
attack the invaders on the flank from the west. At
the right moment he hurled this army upon the German
flank, while the men on the main battle line were commanded
to "face about and accept death rather than
surrender." On September 6-10 took place the first
great battle of the Marne, during which the Germans,
under these new attacks, were compelled to retreat
fifty miles from their most advanced position. The
French armies had rescued Paris in the nick of time.
The French government once more returned to its
capital. "France had saved herself and Europe."</p>
<p><b>The Race to the Coast.</b>—On reaching the river
Aisne (ân) the German armies had time to entrench
themselves and thus beat off the heavy attacks of the
French and British (September 12-17). The Allied
armies in turn began to entrench opposite the German
positions. But both armies turned toward the north
in a race to reach the North Sea and outflank the enemy.
The Germans were particularly anxious to reach Calais
(ca-lĕ´) and cut the direct line of communication between
England and France. Antwerp surrendered to
the Germans on October 9; Lille (leel) on the 13th.
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 82]<SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82"></SPAN></span>In tremendous massed attacks the Germans sought in
vain to break through the British lines (Battle of Flanders,
October 17 to November 15). The German losses
were upwards of 150,000 men. On the coast the Belgians
cut the dikes of the river Yser (ī´ser) and flooded
the neighboring lowlands, thus putting a stop to any
further advance of the enemy.</p>
<p><b>Trench Warfare.</b>—By this time the combatants
had reached a temporary deadlock. Both had adopted
trench tactics, and for over three hundred miles, from
the sea to the Swiss border, two systems of entrenchments
paralleled one another. The trenches were
protected in front by intricate networks of barbed
wire. Looked at from above, the trenches seemed
to be dug with little system. But they rigidly adhered
to one military maxim,—that fortifications must not
continue in a straight line, because such straight trenches
are liable to be enfiladed from either end. Hence the
trenches curve and twist, with here and there supporting
trenches and supply trenches. Sometimes the
trenches are covered; sometimes dugouts and caves
are constructed. Every turn or corner is protected
with machine-guns. In some portions of the line these
trenches faced one another for over four years with
scarcely any change in their relative locations.</p>
<p><b>German Treatment of Occupied Territory.</b>—Eastward
of the German trenches lay all of Belgium except
a very small corner, and the richest manufacturing
districts of France, including eighty per cent of the
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 83]<SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83"></SPAN></span>iron and steel industries, and fifty per cent of the coal.
On the other hand the Allies had occupied only a small
section of German territory at the southern end of the
line, in Alsace.</p>
<p>German occupation of Belgium and northeastern
France was accompanied by horrible barbarities and
systematic frightfulness, which were in violation of
the Hague Conventions as well as of other laws and
usages of civilized warfare. The aim at first was to
terrorize the people and reduce them to a condition of
fear and of servility to the conquerors. Men and
women were executed without adequate evidence or
trial; many German soldiers were quartered in the
homes; at the slightest sign of resistance innocent
persons were punished for the guilty; immense fines
and forced contributions were imposed upon the communities;
furniture, works of art, beautiful buildings,
and historic structures were ruthlessly pillaged and
destroyed. In the second place, the Germans began
a systematic plundering of the occupied country, taking
for transportation to Germany anything they deemed
useful or valuable. Nearly every article made of
metal, wool, rubber, or leather was seized. Machinery
from Belgian and French factories was taken to German
establishments. Households were compelled to surrender
bathtubs, door knobs and knockers, kitchen
utensils, gas fixtures, bedclothes, etc. Food, farm
animals, and farm products were confiscated; and the
population was saved from actual starvation only by
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 84]<SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84"></SPAN></span>the energies of Belgium's friends in France, England,
and America. At a later time, a third policy of the
Germans was to drag Belgian and French young men
and women away from their families and relatives
and compel them to work far from their homes in
factories, fields, and mines. Probably more than two
hundred thousand persons were forced into this industrial
slavery. Finally, where the Germans were forced
to retire from the lands they had occupied in northern
France and in Belgium, they sought to reduce much of
the evacuated territory to a desert condition. Not
only were bridges and roads destroyed, but houses,
factories, and churches were leveled to the ground,
and the foundation walls and cellars were obliterated.
In some parts of France even the fruit trees and
grapevines, the product of many years' growth and
care, were systematically destroyed, and everything
which might make the land habitable disappeared.</p>
<p><b>The War in the East.</b>—As has already been explained,
the German military leaders had counted upon
a rapid crushing of France by way of Belgium before
Russia should have time to complete her military preparations
for attacking eastern Germany. But during
the time lost through the unexpected resistance of
Belgium huge Russian armies were gathered together
in Russian Poland for an invasion of Germany and
Austria-Hungary.</p>
<p>The western border of Russian Poland is less
than two hundred miles from Berlin. But Russia
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 85]<SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85"></SPAN></span>could not advance along this road without running
the risk of having the Germans from the north
and the Austrians
from the south cut
off her armies from
their sources of
supply in Russia.
In other words,
Russia dared not
advance on Berlin
without first driving
the Germans out
of East Prussia and
the Austrians from
Galicia. Hence the
plan of her campaign
in 1914 was
to invade these two
provinces.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/085.png" width-obs="400" height-obs="535" alt="EASTERN FRONT Dec. 31, 1914" title="" /> <span class="caption">EASTERN FRONT Dec. 31, 1914</span></div>
<p><b>Battle of Tannenberg.</b>—Two Russian armies entered
East Prussia in the middle of August. At first they
met with success. The nature of the country, however,
was against them, as there was a chain of almost impassable
lakes, marshes, and rivers stretching across their
route. In this difficult territory they were surprised by
German reinforcements which had been rushed to the
east. In the battle of Tan´nenberg (August 26-31),
the German troops under the command of General
von Hindenburg inflicted a crushing defeat upon the
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 86]<SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86"></SPAN></span>Russians, capturing 70,000 men and large quantities
of supplies. Hindenburg followed up his success,
and the Russians were completely expelled from East
Prussia.</p>
<p><b>The Russians Overrun Galicia.</b>—The second part
of the Russian plan, the invasion of Galicia, was more
successful. In September the important city of Lemberg
was taken, and the fortress of Przemysl (pshem´ishl)
was besieged. By December almost the whole province
was in Russian hands. South of Galicia, separating
it from Hungary, are the Carpathian Mountains.
Russian troops penetrated the passes of this mountain
wall and conducted a series of successful raids upon
the plains of northern Hungary.</p>
<p><b>The Russian Situation at the Close of 1914.</b>—At the
end of the year Russia, while she had achieved success
in Galicia, had failed in East Prussia. An advance
toward Berlin was for the time out of the question.
Indeed the Germans had themselves taken the offensive
and had entered Russian Poland. In October
an advance of German and Austrian troops threatened
Warsaw, the most important city in Poland. The
Russians in spite of strong efforts were unable to drive
their enemies entirely out of this region. On the whole,
therefore, the Russian situation at the end of 1914 was
disappointing. Russia's accomplishment consisted of
her victories in Galicia, and, probably more important,
the drawing of German troops from the western front
and the consequent weakening of Germany's offensive
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 87]<SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87"></SPAN></span>in France and Belgium. Russia was no farther on the
road to Berlin than at the opening of the war.</p>
<p><b>Serbian Resistance to Austria.</b>—An Austrian attempt
to overwhelm Serbia in the first weeks of the
war met with disastrous failure. This was due to two
causes: (1) the brave resistance of the Serbian troops;
(2) the fact that the greater part of the Austrian forces
had to be used for defense against the Russian invaders
of Galicia. Serbia after severe fighting compelled the
Austrians to retreat beyond their own boundaries.
Early in September the Serbians took the offensive and
began an invasion of Austria-Hungary. This venture
failed, and before long Serbia was once more resisting
the enemy on her own soil. Belgrade fell into Austrian
hands on December 2. It did not long remain
in the possession of the conquerors. On the 14th, it
was regained by the Serbians, and the Austrian armies
once more expelled. The little Balkan kingdom seemed
to be holding her own.</p>
<p><b>Turkey Enters the War.</b>—In the years before the
war, Germany had carefully cultivated the friendship
of the Turkish government. By means of intrigue,
she had practically made herself master of that country,
particularly in military matters. The Turkish army
had been trained by Germans, and many of its officers
were Germans. Although at the opening of the war
Turkey declared herself neutral, she soon showed herself
an ally of the Central Powers. There is evidence
to show that as early as August 4 she had entered into
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 88]<SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88"></SPAN></span>a secret treaty with Germany. In October Turkey
startled the world by bombarding a Russian port on
the Black Sea and destroying French and Russian vessels<span class="pagenum">[Pg 89]<SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89"></SPAN></span>
at Odessa. These acts were regarded by Russia
as acts of war. A few days later France and Great
Britain declared war on Turkey.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN href="images/088.png"><ANTIMG src="images/thumb_088.png" width-obs="500" height-obs="318" alt="GERMAN COLONIES and locations of early naval engagements." title="" /></SPAN> <span class="caption">GERMAN COLONIES and locations of early naval engagements.</span></div>
<p>Germany welcomed the entrance of Turkey into the
war for two reasons. In the first place she expected
that the Mohammedans under English and French
rule, that is, those living in Morocco, Algeria, Egypt,
and India, would join the Turkish Sultan, the religious
head of the Mohammedan world, and engage in a
"Holy War" against Great Britain and France. In
this hope she was doomed to disappointment. In the
second place Germany rejoiced at the arrival of a new
enemy for Russia who might keep the Russians occupied
along their southern borders and so weaken their
efforts on other fronts.</p>
<p><b>German Colonies in the Pacific.</b>—During the first
four months of the war all of Germany's possessions
in the Pacific were lost to her. On the outbreak of the
war, Australia and New Zealand promptly organized
expeditionary forces which attacked and captured the
German colonies and coaling stations situated south
of the Equator. German Samoa, the first to be taken,
surrendered to the New Zealand expeditionary force
August 29. The other German possessions in the
South Pacific surrendered to the Australians.</p>
<p>England's ally, Japan, having entered the war August
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 90]<SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90"></SPAN></span>23, 1914, sent an expeditionary force which captured
and occupied the German islands in the North Pacific.
Kiaochow (kyou´chō´), Germany's only colony in China,
was captured by a combined Japanese and British force
early in November.</p>
<p>The loss of these colonies so early in the war interfered
seriously with German plans for a war on Allied
commerce by fast cruisers. In the absence of German
coaling stations, the only way such vessels could obtain
coal during a long raiding voyage, would be by the
chance capture of coal-laden vessels.</p>
<p><b>German Colonies in Africa.</b>—During the last quarter
century Germany had succeeded in getting control of
considerable territory in Africa. There were few German
colonists there. However, Germany hoped that
the Boers, who had recently fought a war with the
British, and had been defeated, would attempt to regain
their independence. In this case there was also
the possibility of capturing Cape Colony and Rhodesia
from the British. Much to the surprise and disgust
of Germany, the Boers promptly showed their loyalty
to Great Britain and aided in capturing the German
colonies.</p>
<p>The struggle for Germany's African colonies continued
for more than three years. Togo, a comparatively
small colony, was captured by French and British
troops shortly after the outbreak of the war. Under
the Boer leaders, Generals Smuts and Botha, German
Southwest Africa was conquered by July of 1915.
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 91]<SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91"></SPAN></span>Kamerun in West Africa was freed from German forces
in 1916. The final chapter in the fight for the German
colonies was written in December of 1917, when an army
from British South Africa, in coöperation with Belgian
forces, completed the conquest of German East Africa.</p>
<p><b>Germany's Fleet.</b>—When war was declared the
German fleet, which had cost the people of Germany
a billion and a half of dollars, was something less than
two thirds the strength of the British fleet. Germany's
task was to destroy the British fleet or to weaken it to
such an extent that it could no longer protect the British
trade in food and munitions from over seas, nor assure
the safe transport of troops from Great Britain or her
colonies to the various fronts.</p>
<p><b>The Work of the British Navy.</b>—The British navy
had two pieces of work to perform. In the first place
its aim was to destroy or bottle up in port the main
German fleet so that it should not be able to interfere
with the British plans for the war. In the second place
squadrons had to be sent out to search for and destroy
German squadrons or vessels that were far from home
ports at the outbreak of war or that were sent out to
raid British and neutral commerce.</p>
<p><b>Coast Protection.</b>—Both Great Britain and Germany
protected their coasts by laying fields of mines
in the sea so placed that they would float just under
water and arranged to explode on contact with the
hull of a ship. Through these mine fields carefully
hidden channels gave access to the different ports. So
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 92]<SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92"></SPAN></span>long as ships stayed in port or inside the fields of mines
they were safe from attack.</p>
<p><b>The Blockade of German Ports.</b>—In July, 1914, the
British navy had a grand review. When the review
was over, the war clouds were so threatening that the
vessels were not dismissed to their stations. At the
beginning of the war Great Britain announced a blockade
of German ports and assigned to her main fleet the
task of carrying out the blockade.</p>
<p><b>The Battle of Helgoland Bight.</b>—Hel´goland is a
small island rising steeply out of the North Sea; it has
an area of one fifth of a square mile. It was ceded to
Germany by England about twenty years before the
war. Germany had fortified it and made it a sort of
German Gibraltar to protect her chief naval ports.
The Bight of Helgoland is the passage about eighteen
miles wide between the island and the German coast.
Here a portion of the British fleet engaged in patrol
or scout duty came in contact with a part of the German
fleet (August 28, 1914). The arrival of four fast British
battleships decided the contest. Germany lost three
cruisers and two destroyers, while every British vessel
returned to port, though some were badly battered.</p>
<p><b>German Commerce Raiders.</b>—A few days before
the outbreak of the war the German fleet in China
slipped out of port. The cruiser "Emden" was detached
for work in the Indian Ocean, and the rest of the
squadron raided over the Pacific. November 1, a
British squadron met the German ships near the coast
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 93]<SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93"></SPAN></span>of Chile. In a little over an hour two of the British
ships had been sunk and the remainder fled to the
south. Immediately on news of the defeat the British
Admiralty sent a squadron of seven powerful ships to
find and destroy the German squadron. The British
vessels stopped at the Falkland Islands to coal. The
next day the German ships appeared. When they saw
the strength of the British squadron they vainly attempted
to escape. In the battle that followed, four
German vessels were sunk. Of the two that escaped
one was, a few months later, interned in a United States
port and about the same time the other was destroyed.</p>
<p>The "Emden," after separating from the other warships,
cruised in the Indian Ocean for three months,
and was the most destructive of the German raiders.
She was finally located by an Australian cruiser. After
a fight the German captain drove his vessel on the
rocks to escape sinking. A lieutenant and forty men
who had landed to destroy a wireless station, seized a
schooner and escaped, landed on the coast of Arabia,
and finally made their way back to Germany.</p>
<p><b>Naval Situation at the Close of 1914.</b>—As a result
of the activities of the Allied fleets, the German navy
was shut up in port back of its mine fields, German
commerce raiders had, with a few exceptions,
been driven from the sea or destroyed, German merchant
vessels were laid up in neutral or German ports,
and the Allies were free to carry on the transport of
troops, munitions, and other supplies with practically
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 94]<SPAN name="Page_94" id="Page_94"></SPAN></span>no fear of interference from the enemy. "The British
ships, whether men-of-war or merchantmen, are upon
the sea, the German in their ports."</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p><b>Suggestions for Study.</b>—1. Locate Metz, Cologne, Liege,
Namur, Lille, Verdun; the Meuse, the Marne, the Oise, the
Aisne; Lemberg, Warsaw, Königsberg. 2. Look at a large map
of Europe and by reference to the scale find out the following
distances: Metz to Paris; Cologne to Paris (via Liege); Verdun
to Berlin; Verdun to Strassburg; Liege to Paris; Warsaw to
Berlin. What is the length of the Belgian coast-line; of the
Dutch coast-line; of the Franco-German frontier? 3. Collect
pictures and charts illustrative of trench warfare, and of devastated
areas of Belgium and France. 4. Explain fully the influence
of geography upon the campaigns of 1914. 5. Define
neutrality; guarantee; treaty. 6. On an outline map of Europe
indicate the countries fighting against Germany at the close of
1914. Indicate those fighting on the side of Germany at that
time. Indicate the date when each of these countries entered the
war. Draw a line showing the farthest German advance into
France, and the farthest Russian advance into Germany and
Austria (map, page <SPAN href="#Page_124">124</SPAN>). 7. What might have been the consequences
if the Belgians had not resisted the German invasion?
8. Describe the German effort to reach the French coast in
1914. What would have been the probable consequences of its
success? 9. What was the purpose of the, English blockade of
Germany? How did this blockade affect the rights of neutrals?
Find out what the United States government did in the matter.</p>
<p><b>References.</b>—<i>War Cyclopedia</i> (C.P.I.); <i>Study of the Great War</i> (C.P.I.); McKinley, <i>Collected Materials for the Study of the War; National School Service</i>, Vol. I, No. 3 (C.P.I.); <i>New York Times History of the European War</i>.</p>
</div>
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