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Full-text of articles by
NYMAS Members
German and English Propaganda
in World War I
A paper given to NYMAS on December 1, 2000 by
Jonathan A. Epstein
CUNY Graduate Center /NYMAS
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1. Introduction
An analysis of British and German propaganda aimed at Americans during
World War One reveals four main trends: blaming the other for the war,
claims that America’s interests were antithetical to those of the enemy,
exposure of the enemy’s atrocities, and claims of cultural or racial
solidarity with America.
The Great War has been labeled the first modern propaganda war or
"the first press agents' war." This was particularly true
in the United States, which, as a major industrial power, was a rich prize
for propagandists and which was where compulsory education led to a
literate public which was ripe for the messages, which could now be
transmitted by cable or wireless, of the two warring sides.
In a chilling omen of what was to come, the German advocates painted
the conflict as a war between the Teutons or "White Race"
against Slavic or "Asiatic" barbarism. Russians were condemned
as "Kossacks" [sic],"half-cultured Tartars,"
and "Asiatics," while the British and French were excoriated for
using "colored savage troops" and encouraging Japanese
intervention and conquest of German territories "without troubling
about the consequences to the universal progress of the white race."
Indeed, the German-born Harvard psychiatrist and leading pro-German
propagandist Dr. Hugo Münsterberg painted a picture of a (presumably
dystopian ) future in which Britain and her colonies are conquered by the
Russians and the United States is destroyed by a Japanese-Chinese-(Asian)-Indian alliance.
For their part, the British simplified the messiness of the conflict by
blaming Germany for the crimes of its allies as well as itself.
Thomas Masaryk argued that Emperor-King Franz Josef, by giving
Germany effective control over the Imperial and Royal Army to Germany, had
ceded sovereignty to Germany while Arnold J. Toynbee, the eminent
historian, placed the ultimate responsibility for the genocide of the
Armenians on German shoulders for not stopping the Turks. Lewis Namier,
another noted historian, went so far as to blame the least savory aspects
of Russia, such as the pogroms, on the Germans resident in Russia.
However, pro-British propagandists generally made a distinction
(repudiated by pro-German propagandists) between German militarism, which
Britain was fighting, and ordinary Germans, or German culture, which it
was not.
All of these ideas were expressed in many media. There were films
and radio broadcasts, as well as many permutations of printing—books,
pamphlets, reprints of speeches, periodicals, and cartoons—all designed
to influence American public opinion and to convince it of the British or
German view of the world, the war, Europe’s best interest, and
America’s best interest. In this study, I use exclusively printed
media consisting of official, quasi-official, or unofficial productions by
authors from the warring nations or neutrals (the latter were highly
desirable for the veneer of objectivity they provided), written before
America’s entrance into the conflict and aimed at American readers.
In the end, the British were more successful, as evidenced by our entry
into the war on their side. However, it was not an even fight.
The British benefited from several advantages over the Germans: a common
language facilitated the disbursal of information, a common culture meant
British propagandists did not have to demonstrate cultural affinity, a
direct cable contact (the first British offensive move was to cut the
cable running between Germany and America), and thus, more available means
of communication.
2. German Propaganda Machinery
The Germans were first off the mark with the creation of
propaganda machinery upon the outbreak of war and they had a hard job
ahead of them; a November 1914 poll of 367 American newspaper editors
revealed that, of those who expressed a preference, 105 preferred the
Allies, while only 20 supported the Germans. Germany’s first propaganda
action in the US was to establish the German Information Bureau.
Another early move was the foundation of the Zentralstelle für
Auslandsdienst (Central Office for Foreign Services) by Matthias
Erzberger (a leader of the
Catholic Center Party and member of the Reichstag [German
parliament] and eventually a signer of the 1918 Armistice, and who would
be assassinated for this last deed) by decree of the Imperial Chancellor
Betthman-Hollweg. It was funded by the Foreign Affairs Department of
the German Government. It dealt mainly with printed matter,
collecting and studying works from all perspectives for its own
information. However, its main task was to distribute German
material abroad—purchasing likely propaganda material from publishers
and encouraging or commissioning propaganda works. The majority of this
material was pamphlets, books, official documents, speeches and even
anthologies of "war poetry," fiction, and children’s books.
All types were usually by Germans and were originally written in German.
A minority was periodical, especially The Continental Times which
ran to 15,000 copies in 1916; the monthly Kriegs-Chronik (War
Chronicle), 12,000 copies of which were printed in English, and Der
große Krieg im Bildern (The Great War in Pictures), with each
photograph captioned in up to six languages, including English; and the
weekly Illustrierter Kriegs-Kurier (Illustrated War-Courier).
The distribution of photographs was considered especially important and
a "photo centre" [sic] was established, becoming the
Filmed Photo Office" in 1917 to consolidate and coordinate visual
propaganda. Photographs were emphasized because they did not need
translation and could touch the emotions of the viewer. Much German
propaganda showed the war from the German perspective although eliminating
any negative aspects [See Appendix 1]. The following description of
fighting in the Argonne is typical of items in the War Chronicle:
"We soon brought superior means of attack to bear on the French, and
as our troops were unrivaled in perseverance, tenacity, and spirit of
attack, a strong feeling of superiority pervaded them during these
wood-fights regarding the enemy. . . . They could not resist our attacks
so that our troops were able to proceed slowly but continuously."
The Germans recognized the importance of winning American opinion.
However, German propaganda was hamstrung by an inability among the leaders
to understand propaganda techniques. Indeed, the German Ambassador to
Washington, and a leading German propagandist in his own right, Count Johann
Heinrich von Bernstorff, recognized that German propaganda in America suffered from a
misunderstanding of the American character:
"He is not interested in
learning the ‘truth,’ which the German press news and written
clarifications tried to bring across to him. The American wants to come to
his own judgment and, therefore, wants facts only. . . . [The works were]
written in a manner which was almost always legally precise,
propagandistic but completely misguided."
German propaganda was also
generally reactive. It spent much energy defending Germany against
Entente charges of crimes against persons, both civilian and military, and
cultural monuments. The German military leadership gave the
propagandists much to defend; the latter had to deal with the invasion of
Belgium and unrestricted submarine warfare, especially defending the
sinking of the Lusitania.
3. German Propagandists
As noted above, the German Ambassador to Washington, Count von Bernstorff (1862-1939), later to become a Reichstag member
and then anti-Nazi exile, was one of the main German propagandists in
America. Among his colleagues were the German-American journalist
George S. Viereck; a Dr. Karl A. Fuehr; the ill-fated Dr. Heinrich Albert
of the German Department of the Interior; Professor Münsterberg, who
tried to nurture a pro-German sympathy in Theodore Roosevelt and
threatened President Wilson with an electoral backlash on the part of
pro-German ethnic groups in America should he persist in his pro-Entente
bias; and Dr. Bernhard Dernburg (1865-1937), representative of the German
Red Cross, in charge of the German Press Bureau and Information Service,
and former Colonial Secretary. Dr. Dernburg received much ink in The
New York Times from the beginning of the war until he was hounded out
of America in late June, 1915. He also hired former Wilson advisor
William Bayard Hale (a leading American journalist) as a public relations
man. The Germans also made use of American authors, including the
Irish-American author Frank Harris (1856-1931), whose autobiography was
banned in the US, the German-American Frank Koester, and Professor Edwin
J. Clapp of NYU. The Germans also utilized the peace movements to
keep America out of the war as an Ally.
A major theme was the appeal to the American spirit of "fair
play." Pro-German propaganda was disguised as a righteous
attempt to offset the alleged (and actual) pro-Entente bias of the
American press and elites. Dr. Hugo Münsterberg even dedicated his The
War and America "to all lovers of fair play." They mined
American history to find examples of British offenses against the United
States and other nations with many emigrants in America, such as Ireland.
The Germans also reached out to American minorities, notably the Negroes
and the Jews. The German propaganda reached America via Italy until the
latter entered the war, after which it flowed through Holland and
Scandinavia. Once it reached American shores, a variety of groups
distributed it. Chief among them was The German-American Alliance
(also known as "The National German-American Alliance"), founded
in 1901 and chartered in 1907. By 1914, it had over 2,000,000 members in
branches in over 40 states. It was especially important in St.
Louis, Chicago, Milwaukee and Cincinnati and was "the largest ethnic
organization of its kind in American history." It was limited
to citizens but it also worked to naturalize immigrants. The 6,000-plus
Lutheran congregations in America also passed on bulletins from the German
Press Bureau and Information Service. Germany purchased the New York Evening Mail for $1,500,000 to reach urban readers. Count von
Bernstorff noted the utility of libraries, especially the Library of
Congress, in spreading the message around.
Despite these arrangements, the Germans, as did the British, preferred
to reach out to influential individuals. The German embassy had a
list of 60,000 people, mostly through the manifests of the Hamburg-Amerika
Linie (a passenger shipping company) and the efforts of the German Werkbund, ostensibly dedicated to arts, crafts, and German daily life but
who also gathered names of foreign neutrals who could distribute pamphlets
to the citizenry and press of their countries. Politicians, clubs,
and colleges were also included.
4. Blunders by the Central Powers
Several incidents particularly damaged German propaganda efforts in
America; the last of which, the infamous "Zimmermann Telegram,"
actually led to America’s entry into the war. The damage actually
started well before the war when the American public believed a story that
a German squadron had molested the American fleet after the battle of
Manila Bay and when President Theodore Roosevelt invoked the Monroe
Doctrine against German military threats to recover debts from Venezuela.
The sinking of the S.S. Lusitania on May 7, 1915 (which the Germans blamed on
the British putting American passengers on an armed munitions ship) and
the execution later that same year of Edith Cavell, the British nurse who
confessed to helping Entente prisoners escape in Belgium gave Germany
black eyes and created much work for German apologists. One modern
analyst describes the latter event as "every propagandist’s dream
come true" [See Appendix 2].
A few months later, on July 24, Dr. Albert made the mistake of falling
asleep on the El in New York. When he awoke at his stop, 50th
Street, he left in such a hurry that he forgot his briefcase (in which
were carried papers concerning German propaganda efforts in America) on
the train. By the time he realized his mistake and got back into the car,
another man had walked off with it. Unfortunately for Germany, that man
was a US government agent, Frank Burke, of the Secret Service. The papers
were passed to the New York World for publication. The first
installment appeared on August 15. Not surprisingly, many Americans
were outraged, presumably at the evidence Germans were trying to play them
for saps. Indeed, US Secretary of State (1915-20) Robert Lansing later admitted that
"[t]he purpose of publishing this interesting correspondence of
Doctor Albert was to counteract, in a measure, the political effect of the
slanderous articles on the government and its officials, which were
constantly appearing in the newspapers and periodicals receiving subsidies
from Germany."
On August 30 of that same year, British authorities detained James
Archibald, an American journalist working for the Central Powers and en
route to Germany from America. In his luggage, the British found an
intemperate letter from German Military Attache Franz von Papen noting
that "I always say to these idiotic Yankees that they should shut
their mouths and better still be full of admiration for all that heroism
(of Germans on the Eastern Front)." This was bad, but the
bombshells were papers from the Austro-Hungarian ambassador to Washington,
Constantin Theodor Dumba, to his government. These reports proposed
and requested money to subsidize labor agitation among American munitions
workers of Austro-Hungarian descent. Dumba also urged agitation in
America to affect (pro-Allied) American foreign policy. The British
published these papers, which excited great anti-Central Powers feeling
among Americans. President Wilson asked Dumba and Bernstorff to cease
their propaganda activities (they complied). On September 8, the
State Department declared Dumba persona non grata and he left
America on September 30. The day before the State Department’s
action, the New York Times declared "Never before has there
been another diplomatic representative who has in such an open and
unabashed way taken measures to make himself altogether
unacceptable"; and on September 23, the Boston Post
gloated in rhyme, "O Constantin Theodor Dumba/ You’ve roused Uncle
Sam from his slumba:/ That letter you wrote/ Got the old fellow’s
goat--/ Now his path you’ll no longer encumba! [sic]" The
Dumba-Archibald Affair put paid to Central Powers propaganda in the United
States.
The final blows in America for Germany and her allies were the
resumption of unrestricted submarine warfare and the Zimmermann
Telegram in
early 1917. The latter was a telegram from the German Foreign
Secretary Arthur Zimmermann to Bernstorff, to be relayed to the German
ambassador in Mexico City, promising the Mexicans much of the land they
had lost to their northern neighbor seventy years previously, should
Mexico join in an attack on America as a Central Power. The British
intercepted and decrypted the telegram and sent it to Washington.
Wilson released it to the press on March 1. Public opinion, as well as
that of Congress, demanded war against Germany, which was declared on
April 6, 1917.
5. British Propaganda Machinery
Despite a later start and greater disorganization than their rival, the
British were much more effective in America. "British propaganda
actually dwarfed German propaganda." A major reason for this was that
the Entente powers, especially the United Kingdom, dominated the influx of
war news to America. Britain had, however, more propaganda machinery
than the newspapers, although the exact origins of Britain’s World War
One propaganda are unclear and there appears to exist no evidence of
pre-war planning for propaganda organizations. Even on the outbreak
of war, Germanophobia combined with great pro-war patriotism and the
expectation of a quick victory to make the organization of propaganda
resources appear irrelevant. Early British propagandists shared with
their foes an inexperience in the matter; moreover, they lacked enthusiasm
for the task of molding public opinion. 1914-’15 British work was
essentially "cautious and defensive," although they increasingly
used aggressive counter-propaganda.
In fact, Admiral Sir Reginald Hall, the head of British Naval
Intelligence and his Naval Attaché in Washington Sir Guy Gaunt realized a
major counter-propaganda event would be the exposé of Central Powers'
activities in America, especially those which endangered US neutrality.
Largely through the help of Emmanuel Voska, a colleague of Thomas Masaryk,
Gaunt developed a wide net of counter-propaganda agents in the States. Sir
Gilbert Parker of the Foreign Office saw to it that that books by
"extreme German nationalists, militarists, and exponents of Machtpolitik
such as von Treitschke, Nietzche, and Bernhardi" were published in
English in America. According to analysts it was a brilliant move
and helped to demonstrate a unity of interests between the Entente and the
United States. It was also a relatively subtle way of painting the
Germans as barbarians—letting them do it to themselves.
The British relied on quality rather than quantity, in direct contrast to the Germans, who blanketed the US with
continuous, blatant
propaganda. This may be one result of the fact that until 1918 British propagandists had
only Asquith’s
points of November 9, 1914 upon which any peace would be based: the
restoration of Belgium, the protection of France from "future German
aggression," the recognition of "the rights of small
states," "and an end to Prussian military domination of
Germany."
The British worked to exploit their supremacy in newspapers. One early
propaganda organization was the Press Bureau. It was divided into four
parts including an Issuing Department which was the conduit for official
government information to the press and the Military Room which dealt with
all press material other than cables. The Press Bureau had to struggle
against the prohibition of using clear "terms of reference nor any specific
definition of duties." In addition, the military did not trust Fleet
Street; consequently, the former did not use much of the latter’s vast
propaganda potential in the early part of the war. The War Office so
feared the publication of military information that it banned war
correspondents from the front until May, 1915.
On September 11, 1914, the Press Bureau and the Home Office formed the
Neutral Press Committee to disseminate news to friendly and neutral
nations. It was placed under G. H. Mair, formerly the assistant editor of
the Daily Chronicle. Two committees having failed to establish
control, Mair was responsible only to the Home Office until early 1916. He
collected summaries of foreign news to track changes in public opinion
overseas to help his propagandists. He divided the Neutral Press Committee
into four parts which arranged the "exchange of news services between
British and foreign newspapers; the promotion of the sale of British
newspapers abroad. . ., the dissemination of news articles among friendly
foreign newspapers and journals; and the transmission of news abroad by
cables and wireless." Mair allowed neutral journalists to write their
own articles after giving them official information. This was of special
importance to American journalists. It helped camouflage the
official source of the propaganda, thus making it more palatable to the
public. This was in direct contrast to the German model which was usually
discounted by the educated, targeted American audience.
Another early introduction was the News Department which was formed by
the Foreign Office to issue news to journalists. It also compiled news
articles with the Press Bureau and the NPC to cable to lands such as the
United States that were too far away for effective wireless dissemination.
The News Department also had two transmitters of its own at Poldhu and
Caernarvon in Wales with which to supplement Reuters news services.
Caernarvon could reach the east coast of the United States. News
Department officials tried very hard to operate on a friendly, personal
basis with newsmen. Its head, Lord Robert Cecil, was one of the few
Foreign Office men who saw the propaganda potential of the press and he
worked to resolve Press Bureau-Fleet Street issues. He successfully
lobbied the service departments for weekly military affairs seminars for
the press. This program was judged very successful. In December 1915, it
succeeded in abolishing censorship regarding foreign affairs, putting
responsibility on the individual newspapers. This led to a new era of
openness between the Foreign Office and the press, while also allowing the
News Department to concentrate on propaganda. What actually happened was rather than
act directly, the News Department used the press to disseminate
propaganda. It also provided news reports to be used for propaganda by
consular and diplomatic staffs in foreign countries. Just like the Germans, the British diplomats distributed pamphlets and the like. They
frequently put them in waiting rooms to reach bored, casual readers. These
staffers represented "one of the most significant contributions of
the Foreign Office toward the conduct of British propaganda in the First
World War."
The British military also got into the propaganda act. MO5 (h) was
created within the War Office in February 1916 to handle propaganda from
the military end. It received its more familiar name of MI7 after a
January 16 (1917?) reorganization and the creation of the Directorate of
Military Intelligence. MI7 was run until December 1916 by
Lieutenant-Colonel Warburton Davies, and subsequently by Major J. L.
Fisher. As seems to have been customary in British propaganda
organizations, it was divided into four groups, the most important of
which handled the production of materials. Others dealt with censorship,
one with visits to the front, and one with collecting foreign press
summaries.
The Admiralty outstripped the War Office. Thanks to the activities of
Sir Reginald "Blinker" Hall, the Director of Naval Intelligence
and Captain Guy Gaunt, the admiralty led in the organization of
propaganda. Gaunt was the head of Naval Intelligence in the US and a
liaison with Wilson’s advisor Colonel Edward M. House. The two got on so well that
House wrote to the British Foreign Secretary Arthur Balfour:
"I want
to express my high regard and appreciation of Captain Gaunt. I doubt
whether you can realize the great service he has rendered our two
countries. His outlook is so broad and he is so self-contained and
fair-minded that I have been able to go to him at all times to discuss,
very much as I would with you, the problems that have arisen."
Gaunt
and Hall realized that a major counter-propaganda event would be the
exposé of Central Powers' espionage activities in the US, especially those
which endangered US neutrality. Gaunt also liaised with Emmanuel Voska, a
colleague of Masaryk, who had developed the spy network mentioned above.
Colonel House also became friendly with Gaunt’s temporary replacement as
liaison, William Wiseman, the head of Bristish Military Intelligence in America.
Gaunt and Wiseman became rivals and the latter won out as conduit between
House and Balfour upon America’s intervention.
The most important British foreign propaganda outfit was the War
Propaganda Board, more commonly called after the location of its offices
"Wellington House." Wellington House was formed in response to
the need, identified by then Chancellor of the Exchequer David Lloyd
George, to counter and correct the torrent of German propaganda,
especially in the US. Prime Minister Asquith tasked Charles Masterman with
creating an organization for justifying Britain’s entrance into and
conduct of the war to neutral and Dominion countries. By 1917, Wellington
House had 54 staffers, making it the largest British foreign propaganda
organization. Its governing body, which met daily, was "The
Moot" and included advisors such as Arnold Toynbee and Lewis Namier.
Wellington House operated in such secrecy (in order to conceal the
official provenance of their documents so they should more easily be
believed) that not even Parliament was aware of it. It used well-known
private figures, private printers, and private shipping to mask the
official nature of its propaganda. Its practice was established through
two conferences in September 1914. The first consisted of stellar literary
people such as J. M. Barrie, G.K. Chesterton, Arthur Conan Doyle, and H.G.
Wells. The second hosted representatives of the press, including the Pall
Mall Gazette and The Standard. This latter conference came out
with four unanimous resolutions. It resolved:
1.That it is essential that all the unnecessary obstacles to the
speedy and unfettered transmission of news should be done away with
and that all matter which has appeared or has been authorized to
appear in English newspapers should be put upon the telegraph wires
and cables without further censorship or delay in London.
2. That every effort should be made by the Government to procure
special facilities for news messages by cable from England to neutral
countries, especially those where German news at present obtains
precedence.
3. It is recommended that an official be appointed by the Foreign
Office to receive London correspondents representing all newspapers in
the Dominions and neutral countries and to give them such information
as, in the opinion of the Foreign Office, is desirable. . . .
Despite their claim that "our activities have been confined to the
presentation of facts and of general arguments based upon facts," the
War Propaganda Board was the official organization most responsible for
earning the British a reputation for lurid propaganda. In fact, its
refusal to lean on its writers led to frequently "inconsistent and
contradictory" propaganda. Many of its workers had previously
worked for the National Insurance Commission, which was created to justify the 1911 National
Insurance Act, a rare example of pre-war
Government propaganda.
Wellington House relied mainly on pamphlets in the
first part of the war. Although it used the press more extensively
as the war went on, pamphlets were still prioritized because it was hard
to disguise the official nature of a press article. These pamphlets
emphasized facts so readers could make up their own minds. There was
also a small charge for the pamphlets because, as one modern writer
observes, "people do not like to think they would buy
propaganda."
Wellington House was divided into subsections based on language; the US
was "a most important special branch" run by Canadian born
writer and Member of Parliament Sir Gilbert Parker. At first, the
goal was the negative one of keeping America neutral rather than the
positive one of inducing American intervention; Britain needed American
trade to offset the loss of German business. Later, as the United Kingdom
became more dependent on America, the aim became getting America involved.
Wellington House relied mainly on personal approaches; it aimed at
opinion-makers, not opinion itself. Its propaganda in America was written
for an educated audience by such luminaries as H. G. Wells, Namier, and
Toynbee, and was sent, along with a personal letter from Parker, to
prominent Americans. He used Who’s Who to compile a
list of notable Americans to approach. By 1917, he had 170,000 names.
Parker also sent material to about 555 US newspapers; because, as one
Briton observed, "through showing one important editor the concrete
evidence of this country’s achievements, you can reach hundreds of
thousands of readers."
Parker himself frequently visited the
States giving talks, especially to the Society of Pilgrims. One other
function of the War Propaganda Board was to undo the harm done in America
by unofficial voluntary propaganda associations, such as the Central
Committee for National Patriotic Organizations. By Spring, 1916,
there had been a rationalization in which the NPC was amalgamated with the
News Department and Wellington House was brought more under the Foreign
Office. Lord Newton was the head of the new organization.
On New Year’s Day, 1917, Lloyd George appointed friend and editor
Robert Donald to report on the state of propaganda. The latter urged
a more proactive strategy rather than responding to the Germans. He
also advocated the creation of a unified propaganda agency. By the
time his report came down, the cabinet had already accepted the idea. On
February 9, 1917, Prime Minister Lloyd George appointed the Scottish
author John Buchan (1875-1940) director of the new Department of
Information at a salary of 1,000 Pounds per annum. This did little to
remedy the plethora of semi-independent propaganda agencies.
Donald’s second Report in October reiterated the critiques of the first
and repeated many earlier recommendations, such as using telephone links
between the Allies and Switzerland.
6. British Propagandists
One of John Buchan’s earlier contributions had been to urge the use
of the cartoons of the Dutch artist Louis Raemakers (b. 1870), formerly of
De Telegraaf, an influential Dutch newspaper. His cartoons
only ran in a few newspapers until America joined the fray. However,
he was useful both as a gifted artist and a neutral, which gave him a
veneer of objectivity. Another Dutch contributor was Prof. A.A.H.
Struycken, who wrote a commentary on the German White Book (defending
German actions in Belgium) for "Van onzen Tijd" ("Of
Our Time") which was picked up, translated, and published in
Edinburgh. Among the Americans who took up the English cause was Dr.
Charles W. Eliot (1834-1926), the former President of Harvard. For the British
there were Lewis Namier and Arnold J. Toynbee. Namier (1888-1960) was
actually born in Poland and emigrated to the UK. His notable
books include Structure of Politics at the Accession of George III,
first published in 1929, and England in the Age of the American
Revolution, which came out in 1930. He was knighted in 1952.
Toynbee (1889-1975) would achieve some fame for A Study of History
(12 volumes, 1934-’61). He would work in the Foreign Office during
the Second World War as well as during the first. He was a prolific author
and pamphleteer during the Great War, exposing many atrocities committed by the
Central Powers.
The events which were so damaging to the Germans were, reciprocally,
boons for the British—the execution of Edith Cavell, the repeated
sinkings of passenger vessels carrying Americans, such as the Lusitania
and the Arabic (which was sunk on August 19, 1915 by a U-Boat), and the
Zimmermann Telegram. The only serious sore point for the British was
their brutal repression of the Irish Easter Rising. In the end,
through a combination of pre-existing conditions, their own good work and
the ineptitude of the German leadership, British propaganda won out.
7. The Underlying Preconditions for the War
One function of propaganda is to put forward one’s own view of the
world and its history. This was played out during the Great War by
competing allegations about responsibility for the war (naturally, neither
side admitted guilt in this matter), atrocities, and political
superiority. The British generally took the offensive in these
matters.
Both sides disputed who had created the preconditions for the war. For
the British, the root cause was German imperialism, both abroad and in
Europe. Namier took point and argued that the "fundamental
principles" of German imperialism were "expansion and dominion,
the very vagueness of its aims renders it the more universally dangerous;
no compromise nor understanding is possible with a nation or government
which proclaims a program of world-policy and world-power and yet fails to
limit its views to certain definite objects." Namier argued that
while it had failed to politically expand abroad, Germany had partially
succeeded in seeding German colonies throughout Eastern Europe.
Namier compared German eastwards expansion to an octopus surrounding the
Czech lands and cutting them off from the Poles; he observed that
"the whole history of the Tchech [sic] nation is the history
of resistance against German encroachment." He compared
contemporary Germany unfavorably to the Prussia which had initially
unified the state. The new Germans did not see the limits recognized
by their Prussian predecessors. Namier claimed that "had Germany kept
to the line of foreign policy laid down by Bismarck, she would never have
actively interfered in Balkan affairs." Kaiser Wilhelm II was the
perfect embodiment of the new German imperialism.
"He is not only the
chief. . . of the Prussian landed gentry, and the head of the Prussianized
army, but also the imaginary descendent of medieval crusaders, the
successor of anointed Holy Roman Emperors of German nationality, the
Emperor of Kings, the sovereign of all the Germans, the chief German Kulturträger
[culture-bearer]. . . ."
For their part, the Germans tended to blame the British monarch Edward
VII for creating the Entente of hostile states which encircled Germany.
Professor John Burgess noted that Edward VII united Pan-Slavic Russia
(whose defeat in 1905 thrust her interest back on Europe), revanchist
France, and jealous Britain; that his policies of encouraging Japan
against Russia, inciting the French, "seducing" Italy, and
creating the Entente threatened Germany and the Dual Monarchy. Frank
Koester declared that Edward VII’s encircling Germany with the Entente
was the immediate cause of the war. Dr. Münsterberg summed things up by
observing
"the spark was thrown by the Servian [sic]
murderer of the Austrian archduke; the explosive was heaped up by King
Edward VII, who created the mighty alliance of Great Britain, Russia, and
France; but the powder was made from the political jealousy of Europe
against ascending Germany."
This jealousy consisted for the
French of reversing 1871 and regaining the lost provinces ("the
chattering of a monkey for his peanut which did not originally belong to
him [i.e. Alsace-Lorraine was traditionally German]"), for the
Russians, it was the control over the Balkans in aid of Pan-Slavism, and
for the British it was commercial jealousy and the preservation of the
balance of power in Europe. The Central Office for Foreign Services
announced that Germany
"saw clearly that there was no escaping the
design to attack her simultaneously from three sides. France
demanded revenge: [sic] England demanded the destruction of
Germany’s commerce, and Russia demanded the downfall of Austria-Hungary
and supremacy over all Slavic nations. Each of these claims is in itself a
declaration of war."
Frank Koester questioned rhetorically
whether, given the conditions that [allegedly] threatened Germany, America
could have kept the peace as long as Germany did—forty years.
8. Austria or Serbia?
The actual trigger was the assassination of the heir to the thrones of
the Dual Monarchy Franz Ferdinand on June 28, 1914 by an ethnic Serb armed
with a Serbian pistol provided by a Serbian secret society dedicated to a
"Greater Serbia" and run by a the head of Serbia’s military
intelligence, and the Austrian response, which was an ultimatum making
such demands on Serbia’s sovereignty that it would be rejected, which
rejection would be a casus belli. Since educated opinion is still
divided on the subject, it is not surprising that both alliances claimed
the mantle of victimhood. "Shamrock" argued:
"....less than a year after the Treaty of Bucharest [ending the Second
Balkan War], came the crime of Sarajevo and Austria’s infamous
attempt to make it the pretext for destroying the liberty of a
kingdom. Weak as she was from her double conflict, Serbia was in
no position to offer battle single-handed to an enemy far more
powerful than either of the others. If one thing is certain
among the tortuous events of that time, it is that Serbia did not want
war.
James H. Beck, the former Assistant Attorney General of the United
States (1900-1903) declared "[I]t would be difficult to find in history a more
offensive document [than the Austrian ultimatum]."
"Shamrock" expressed incredulity that the ultimatum was intended
to be taken seriously and emphasized the extent of the Serbian
concessions. He (she?) called the Dual Monarchy a bully.
The Germans and their sympathizers saw things a bit differently.
A German official document asserted the Austro-Hungarian investigation
into the assassination had found the plot was hatched in Belgrade and
helped and armed by Serbian officials.
This crime must have opened the eyes of the entire civilized world,
not only in regard to the aims of the Servian policies [sic.
The aims would be the creation of a Greater Serbia by splitting off
the South Slav parts of Austria and incorporating them] directed
against the conservation and integrity of the Austro-Hungarian
monarchy, but also concerning the criminal means which the pan-Serb
propaganda in Servia [sic] had no hesitation in employing for
the achievement of these aims. . . . In this manner for the third time
in the course of the last six years, Servia [sic] has led
Europe to the brink of a world war.
Professor Burgess and the authors of the German White Book
agreed that Serbia was looking to avoid performing what the Austrians felt
was their duty to detect and punish the Serbians responsible for the
murder and that the Dual Monarchy had to take the actions the Serbians
would not. Nevertheless, there was at least one other party responsible
for the Serbian temerity and rejection of the ultimatum—Russia. The
German Foreign Office claimed that Serbia would not have acted without
Russian support. The Central Office for Foreign Services declared
"...come what may, the House of Habsburg must be sustained in its
defense against Russian arrogance, or be doomed to voluntary
disintegration by further tolerating Servian [sic] demoralizing
interference and allowing murder to go unpunished." And Frank Koester
claimed that Serbia would have given in if she not been backed by Russia
and Britain.
While the events and claims of the days leading to the general war are
very confusing to sift through, some facts are relatively clear and
provide a framework for understanding the claims and counterclaims
regarding war guilt. Austria-Hungary delivered the ultimatum to Serbia on
July 23. The next day, the Imperial and Royal [Austro-Hungarian] Army
partially mobilized. Serbia called up its reserves on July 25, the day it
responded to the ultimatum. Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia on July
28, 1914. The next day, Russia mobilized in support of Serbia against the
Dual Monarchy, but not yet against the Germans. The latter then began
mobilizing. The next day Nicholas II authorized full mobilization.
Meanwhile, Wilhelm and Nicholas, who were friends and first cousins, were
telegraphing each other, trying to prevent a Russo-German war. Austria
mobilized against Russia on July 31. France called up her troops the same
day. On August 1, Germany declared war on Russia, who changed the name of
her capital from the Germanic "Saint Petersburg" to the Russian
"Petrograd." On August 2, the first German patrols crossed the
French border. That same day, Germany requested free passage through
Belgium. The Belgians refused. On August 3, Germany declared war on France
and invaded Luxembourg and Belgium, while at the same time crossing into Russia in the east. On
August 4, Britain, which had demanded Germany not violate Belgian
neutrality, declared war on Germany.
9. Whose Fault was the Wider War?
Europe was at war. Not surprisingly, both alliances tried to fob the
responsibility for the conflict on the other, while posing as the workers
for peace. Lewis Namier’s analysis was that the first war was
fought because of Austria-Hungary’s internal problems. However, both
Thomas G. Masaryk and James H. Beck claimed that Austria was a pawn of
Germany, who knew and approved of the Dual Monarchy’s policy toward
Serbia. Masaryk closed his introduction by pleading for "the long
deserved punishment" of Austria for having attacked Serbia and
"by this unleashed the dogs of war." As for Serbia’s protector
(Russia), it was not expected to abandon her because while the
Austrians sent the ultimatum, "the voice which sanctioned it was the
voice of the arch-plotter beyond the Rhine." Moreover, Austria’s
minorities, largely Slav, did not want the war. Russia, far from
stiffening Serbia, as the Germans claimed, urged the Serbians to yield,
while the Germans urged the Austrians on. Meanwhile, Sir Edward Grey, the
British Foreign Secretary, proposed a four-power (Britain, France,
Germany, and Italy) conference to mediate while Russia pleaded for time to
resolve the issue. Beck asked, rhetorically,
"....[d]oes any reasonable man question for a moment that, if Germany
had done something more than merely ‘transmit’ [Grey’s plea to
accept Serbia’s response or at least see it as a framework for
negotiations], Austria would have complied with the suggestions of its
powerful ally or that Austria would have suspended its military
operations if Germany had given any intimation of such a wish?"
Beck went further and claimed that Germany’s excuse that Russian
mobilization required the German response did
"...not justify the war. .
. . If Russia had the right to mobilize because Austria mobilized, Germany
equally had the right to mobilize when Russia mobilized, but it does not
follow that either of the three nations could justify a war to compel the
other parties to demobilize."
Beck, the former assistant attorney generalof the U.S., complains that, while the British and Russians had published all
relevant documents (in books of various hues, the British being white),
the Germans, and especially the Austrians, had not. This was a
"significant omission and one which casts doubt upon the Central
Powers’ case."
Dr. Bernhard Dernburg responded to just this point when he condemned
"Lord" Bryce for basing
"...his argument [that Germany’s
violation of Belgium brought Britain into the war] on the expressions in
the so-called White books. To these White Books Americans give a great
deal of credit. I cannot follow. I know how they are made up (unfavorable
diplomatic documents are omitted)."
The Germans for their part
portrayed themselves as peacemakers alongside Britain, but they
inadvertently admited responsibility for encouraging an Austro-Hungarian
assault on Serbia, which despite German efforts to limit the conflict,
expanded into a world war. The German Foreign Office states that it worked
with England to
"...gain the possibility of a peaceable solution to the
conflict. . . . Austria-Hungary should dictate her conditions in Servia [sic];
i.e. after her march into Servia [sic]. We thought that Russia
would accept this basis."
Nevertheless, Germany rejected Sir Edward
Grey’s proposal because "we could not call Austria in her dispute
with Servia before a European tribunal." In any case, Vienna rejected
the proposal. The Germans largely blamed the war on the Russians for
supporting the Serbians. The German Foreign Office complained about the
failure of the British, French, and themselves, to prevent Russia from
intervening, even though Austria-Hungary assured Russia it had no
territorial demands in Serbia. According to the Germans, the news of
Russian mobilization came on July 26. German diplomats in London, Paris,
and Saint Petersburg were instructed to "energetically" warn of
the consequences of this mobilization—war versus Russia and France (the
latter allegedly because it stood by Russia, but not in small part because
the German mobilization and battle plan, the "Schlieffen Plan"
called for simultaneous attacks on the two and could not be easily be
changed). The Germans charged that the Russians had deliberately brought
about the war while the Germans were working for peace in Vienna. The
servants of the Hohenzollerns complained about Russian double-dealings.
Indeed, the first chapter of The German White Book is entitled
"How Russia and her Ruler Betrayed Germany’s Confidence and thereby
Caused the European War." According to this argument, Russia was
mobilizing while the Russian War Minister, Ssuchomlinow [sic] gave
his word of honor it was not. Münsterberg describes the Kaiser begging
his cousin to halt mobilization "and he reminded him of his pledge to
his dying grandfather to keep peace with Russia as long as possible"
and reminding "Nicky" that Germany had consistently helped
Russia.
Not only did the Tsar not suspend mobilization, he signalled the
French to mobilize. The Norddeutsche Allgemeine Zeitung (North
German General News—a paper that seems to have acted like an
official mouthpiece for the German Foreign Office) complained that Germany
had had to mobilize in the face of this obvious double-dealing on
the part of Russia. Just as the British blamed the Germans for not
restraining the Austrians, the Germans turned the tables, blaming the
British and French for not restraining the Russians. The Germans claimed
that Germany was prepared to spare France in case England should
remain neutral and would guarantee the neutrality of France. In fact, the
German battle plan already called for an attack into France. The German
Secretary of State Gottlieb von Jagow claimed that "the moral
responsibility" for the war lay with Britain who encouraged the
Belgians to resist and encouraged the "chauvinistic anti-German
tendencies in France and Russia." Moreover, Britain’s failure to
restrain the flames of a war that Germany fanned put the blame on the
former. Münsterberg declared that "Surely, although Germany made the
declaration [of war against Russia and France], this is a war against
Germany, and it is a sin against the spirit of history to denounce Germany
as the aggressor."
10. The Germans Blame Belgium
The issue of the invasion of Belgium was very important
not only because it allegedly brought Britain into the war but also
because it gave Germany a bad reputation in the United States where a
people who prided themselves on standing up for the underdog were offended
by the bully of the block (Germany) beating up on the little kid with
glasses (Belgium). Dr. Charles Eliot, late President of Harvard, condemned
the invasion of Belgium and the German "might makes right"
ideology. Alleged German behavior in occupied Belgium, thoughtfully
described for Americans by the British, offended American senses [See
Appendix 3].
The Germans had four main arguments justifying what most modern
historians agree was an invasion: Belgium was not really neutral; its
neutrality was first violated by France; even if Germany did invade
Belgium, it had to do so; the Belgians should not have defended their
neutrality.
On October 12, 1914, the Norddeutsche Allgemeine Zeitung
complained that Belgium, whose perpetual neutrality had been guaranteed in
an 1839 treaty by France, Britain, Prussia, Russia, and Austria, had
behaved unneutrally by cooperating with the British, not planning a
defense against a French invasion, and not reaching a neutrality agreement
with Germany. Therefore, Belgium brought the invasion upon itself. In
fact, the Schlieffen Plan called for an invasion of Luxembourg and Belgium
(originally Holland as well) in order to hit the flank of the French
forces correctly expected to attack into Alsace-Lorraine. The main
justification for Germany’s first charge was a cache of Belgian Defense
Ministry documents captured by the Germans in Brussels. These referred to
1906 meetings between the British military attaché and Belgian officers
to discuss British intervention in Belgium in the event of a Franco-German
war. They were interpreted to mean Britain had plans to violate Belgian
neutrality herself. Frank Koester quotes Lord Roberts in 1911 as saying a
British expeditionary force and the Royal Navy were ready "to embark
for Flanders to do its share in maintaining the balance of power in
Europe" and a Belgian military official as claiming "at the time
of (the Moroccan Crisis of 1912) the British government would have
immediately effected a disembarkment in Belgium, even if we had not asked
for assistance. . . . Since we were not able to prevent the Germans from
passing through our country, England would have landed her troops in
Belgium under all circumstances." However, none of the documents
reprinted indicate a British intention to invade Belgium; they all
presuppose an initial German incursion. In fact, a margin note on one of
the German-reproduced papers observes "L’entrée des Anglais en
Belgique ne se ferait qu’apres la violation de notre neutralité par
l’Allemagne" (The entrance of the English into Belgium would
only be done after the violation of our neutrality by Germany). The Norddeutsche
Allgemeine Zeitung of November 24, 1914 accepted Belgium’s right to
plan with the British a defense against German attack but complained that
the Belgians had not made similar plans with Germany to defend against the
Anglo-French forces and that "The Belgian government had decided from
the first to join Germany’s enemies and to make her cause one with
theirs." Dr. Münsterberg asserted that "Belgium chose to put
itself on the side of France, with which its sympathies have always
connected it. . . .Belgium was one great fortified camp [against
Germany]." In fact, according to the Germans, the French had beaten
them to the punch—France had guns and troops in Belgium by July 30 and
the British had landed in Ostend the same day. Dr. Münsterberg complained
that "when Germany goes through Belgium, America shares the
indignation of England [who, according to Münsterberg’s colleague Dr.
Dernburg, had actually invaded Belgium itself] to which it serves as a
welcome pretext. But that France went into Belgium first is kept a secret
in most American papers. This means playing the reporter’s game with
loaded dice." However, German Prime Minister Betthman-Hollweg
declared:
"We are now in a state of necessity, and necessity knows no law. Our
troops have already occupied Luxemburg [sic] and perhaps are
already on Belgian soil. Gentlemen, that is contrary to the
dictates of international law. . . . A French movement upon our
flank upon the lower Rhine might have been disastrous. So we were
compelled to override the just protest of the Luxemburg [sic]
and Belgian Governments."
Dr. Münsterberg attempted to take the edge off Germany’s invasion by
citing the necessity to invade Belgium to preempt the French and argued
"Germany did not come to Belgium as an enemy; it promised to repay
any damage and not only guaranteed the integrity of the land but was most
willing to make every possible restitution."
Germans, with some justification, condemned what they took to be the
hypocrisy of the British claim to have gone to war over Belgium. Münsterberg
observed:
"it was. . . especially absurd when England claimed that it
had to go to war because it could not tolerate the moral wrong of
Germany’s using the Belgian railways—England which had broken pledges
upon pledges in Egypt, in Tibet, in South Africa. . . ."
Dernburg
agreed, noting that Germany had a much better record of honoring treaties
than did the Allies, including Japan. Koester carped that:
"the
crowning piece of British hypocrisy in the present war was the great
holier-than-thou violation of Belgian neutrality. From a nation which for
hundreds of years has fattened off of the life blood of subjected races
such a protest was an unparalleled piece of national cant."
The
effect of these claims on American public opinion is unknown, although
this author would guess that the implied criticism of the treatment of the
Irish in Koester’s declaration may have hit home for some Irishmen in
America. However, the inconsistency in German arguments about Belgium
probably did not impress many observers, especially given the pro-British
trend in the press.
11. Atrocity Propaganda
The British took the offensive in publicizing atrocities allegedly or
actually committed by soldiers of the Central Powers. They focused on
German and Turkish massacres, especially of Armenians, to obscure
Russia’s reputation among American Jews. The British particularly hyped
German behavior in Belgium, whose citizens and valiantly resisting army
already had the sympathy of many Americans [See Appendix 4].
The most important document spreading reports of German misbehavior
(giving British propaganda a reputation for purple prose and, ironically,
after being debunked after the war, contributing to a discounting of
reports about the Holocaust twenty-five years later) was "The Bryce
Report" with its appendix. Officially called The Report of the
Committee on Alleged German Atrocities, it was published in an
American edition and many Americans accepted the truth (later found to be
much exaggerated) of the Bryce Report because Viscount Bryce, the chairman
of the committee, had been the ambassador to the United States
(1907-1913). The Report "had a profound and shocking impact on the United
States." The committee had been appointed by Prime Minister Asquith
on December 15, 1914. In keeping with the British striving after the
appearance of objectivity, the authors of the report stressed the legal
knowledge of the examiners taking the depositions of Belgians and Britons
and that:
"they were instructed not to ‘lead’ the witnesses, or
make any suggestions to them, and also to impress upon them the necessity
for care and precision in giving their evidence. They were also directed
to treat the evidence critically. . . . They were, in fact, to
cross-examine them. . . ."
The Committee also avowed it included
"in full" all statements "tending to exculpate the German
troops" and rejected any testimony from questionable witnesses.
Nevertheless, the Committee declared:
In the present war, however—and this is the gravest charge
against the German army—the evidence shows that the killing of
non-combatants was carried out to an extent for which no previous war
between nations claiming to be civilized (for such cases as the
atrocities perpetrated by the Turks on the Bulgarian Christians in
1876, and on the Armenian Christians in 1895 and 1896, do not belong
to that category) furnishes any precedent.
Arnold J. Toynbee draws heavily on The Report for his own The
German Terror in Belgium: An Historical Record. Because atrocities
occurred wherever the Germans advanced, but only for the first three
months of the war, Toynbee concludes "the systematic warfare against
the civil population in the campaigns of 1914 was the result of policy,
deliberately tried and afterwards deliberately given up.
The general themes of the Appendix to The Report, which contains
all the depositions on which the report was based, were seeing dead
bodies, the use of civilians as human shields, German threats, gang rape
of civilian women, the abuse of the young and old, the taking of hostages,
and looting. An example of the stories the British played up is:
I saw eight German soldiers. . . .They were drunk. . . .They were
singing and making a lot of noise and dancing about. . . .As the
German soldiers came along the street I saw a small child, whether boy
or girl I could not see, come out of a house. The child was about 2
years of age. The child came into the middle of the street so as to be
in the way of the soldiers. The soldiers were walking in twos. The
first line of two passed the child; one of the second line, the man on
the left, stepped aside and drove his bayonet with both hands into the
child’s stomach, lifting the child into the air on his bayonet and
carrying it away on his bayonet, he and his comrades still singing.
It is easy to see why an audience not yet exposed to the exaggerations
of propaganda could readily believe and be appalled by this and come to
anti-German sentiments; almost everybody hates to think of children being
mistreated. Another group to which Americans felt protective is women. The
British pushed this button as well. The Appendix quotes a Belgian
"married woman" who claimed to be pregnant after being raped by
two soldiers of the German 49th Infantry Regiment. There were
not infrequent references to Germans cutting off women’s breasts. Clergy
also came in for rough handling by the occupying power. The Appendix and
Toynbee also recount episodes in which Germans took out on civilians their
frustrations at being repulsed or forced to retreat by the Belgian army.
In addition to crimes against civilians, the Germans were accused of many
instances of looting and arson. The most noted case was the burning of the
university town of Louvain in which the library, repository of priceless
ancient documents, was torched.
The main justification presented by the Germans for their actions
against Belgian civilians was legitimate retaliation against francs-tireurs
(civilian snipers) or Belgian soldiers, especially in Louvain [See
Appendix 5]. Toynbee points out incidents in which, to avoid
embarrassment, cases of German friendly fire were blamed on Belgian francs-tireurs,
leading to reprisals against innocent Belgians, while The Report
emphasized the fact that the Belgian government assiduously warned its
citizens not to act against the Germans. Toynbee was not impressed with
the evidence presented by the Germans that their victims in Louvain were
actually Belgian soldiers or francs-tireurs. He described how
several German soldiers disguised as francs-tireurs fired on the
Secretary of the American Legation at Brussels, Mr. Gibson, who was in
Louvain "to enquire into the catastrophe" and were then
"captured" by his escort in order "to give Mr. Gibson an
ocular demonstration that the civilians had fired." In his commentary
on the German White Book [not the one cited earlier] justifying
German behavior, Professor Struycken declares:
"In considering why the German White Book [sic] has in so
many respects so little justifying power, one discovers the chief
reason in the fact that in justifying the cruel punishments
administered to the citizens of Belgium so little direct evidence. . .
has been collected, or at any rate, published. What we have before us
consists far too much of supposition, guesses, assurances for the
truth of which no satisfactory grounds are given."
Arnold J. Toynbee wrote a book on the massacre of the Armenians in
which American sources are emphasized. Many of his themes recapitulate the
Belgian descriptions. In the forward, Viscount Bryce estimated 800,000
Armenians had been killed in 1915.He emphasized that the killings were by
government order, not by popular Muslim passion. Toynbee concentrated on
the sufferings of women and children. He related a story about a
woman who threw
"her dying child down a well, that she might be
spared the sight of its last agony." An American "saw a girl
three and a half years old, wearing only a shirt in rags. She had come on
foot. . . [sic] She was terribly spare, and was shivering from
cold, as were also all the innumerable children I saw on that day."
Toynbee alleged children under twelve were frequently handed over to
"fanatical" Dervishes to be raised as Moslems or given as labor
to farmers, while their sisters were placed in "houses" to
service the Young Turks. As in reports from Belgium, crimes against
ecclesiastics were emphasized. Toynbee puts the ultimate responsibility on
the Germans who supported the massacres, could have intervened to stop the
killing and deliberately did not. "It is impossible to doubt that
those German consuls [in the towns from which the Armenians were deported]
could have saved the Armenian nation, if they had taken steps to do so, or
to suppose that the German Government was not informed of what was
happening in good time."
British propagandists also described atrocities in Austria-Hungary. The
Czech National Committee in London wrote a book describing the suffering
of the Czechs and Slovaks, using a Dr. Kramarzh, a leader of the
"Young Czechs", who was arrested on a charge of high treason at
the behest of the Imperial and Royal Supreme Military Command and
sentenced to death on June 3, 1916, as a metaphor for the suffering of the
nations. Masaryk declared that Austria-Hungary was not only at war with
Russia and Serbia but also with its own minorities. .The Czechs argued that
the Czech lands had suffered terribly at the hands of the Austrians and it
was futile to hope the Dual Monarchy would treat its nations fairly.
"The fact that the Government was obliged [by arrest or flight] to
get rid of the leaders of the nation shows what the real situation in
Bohemia is." The property of Czech soldiers captured by the Russians
or fighting for the Serbians was confiscated and the pensions for their
families were suppressed. They asked "[h]ow many women and children
are reduced to starvation to satisfy the vengeance of the
Austro-Germans." The Slovaks were also suffering as well. "The
country is absolutely dead, and [Prime Minister] Tisza’s Magyar
Government flaunts its triumph upon ruins."
Other (alleged) atrocities the British brought to the attention of the
world were Zeppelin raids on British towns [See Appendix 6],U-Boat
warfare, especially concerning the Lusitania, Arabic, Sussex (sunk March
1916), and the return to unrestricted submarine warfare in January of
1917; the deliberate starvation of Poland, the murder of prisoners; and an
incident in which, during a cholera epidemic at the POW camp at
Wittenberg, the German medical staff left the camp, allowing the British
to die or take care of their own problems.
The Germans responded in two ways to this atrocity propaganda.
One way was to emphasize the good the Germans were doing [see Appendix 7]
and the buildings the Germans did not destroy. A photo
caption in the War Chronicle was captioned "Old patrician
houses in Gent [sic], which remained intact as the inhabitants of
the town did not offer any resistance to the German troops."
They juxtaposed their reverent treatment of churches with the plunder of
the Russians in East Prussia. The Germans also complained about
the use of "dum-dum" (exploding or expanding bullets outlawed by
the Hague convention), the mistreatment of prisoners of war by the Entente
forces, the shooting or capturing of corpsmen, and the violation of the
Red Cross.
12. The Focus on America
There were also propaganda elements aimed distinctly at Americans. The
war itself was placed in an American context: "If a cruel fate were
to deliver the province of West Prussia with its capital Danzig to the
Slavs, it would be as if New England were handed over to Mexico as a
Mexican colony with General Villa as dictator in Boston."
One campaign was to convince the Yankees that their side had the
political system most worth supporting (and the other did not). The
British condemned "German [or Prussian] militarism." The
Report opined that
[I]n the minds of Prussian officers War seems to have become a sort
of sacred mission, one of the highest functions of the omnipresent
State, which is as much an army as a State. Ordinary morality and the
ordinary sentiment of pity vanishes in its presence, superceded by a
new standard which justifies to the soldier every means that can
conduce to success, however shocking to a natural sense of justice and
humanity. . . . The spirit of War is deified. Obedience to the State
and its warlord leaves no room for any other duty or feeling. . . .It
is a specifically military doctrine, the outcome of a theory held by a
ruling caste who have brooded and thought, written and talked and
dreamed about War until they have fallen under its obsession and been
hypnotised [sic] by its spirit.
Professor Struycken quoted the German Great General Staff’s German
War Book which warned officers against humanitarian values "which
not seldom degenerate into ‘Sentimentalität’ [sentimentality]
and . . . (flabby emotion). . . and which have already found moral
recognition in some of the rules of the Hague Convention." Some
propagandists attacked the nation as a whole. Namier complained that the
"talk about stamping out the spirit of German militarism is
meaningless. Militarism forms the creed of the German nation and will
survive any number of defeats." Despite such attacks, the British
were generally careful to make a distinction between that, which was their
enemy, and German culture, which was not. Michael Kunczik sees this distinction as
aimed at German-Americans. Mr. Beck declared "In visiting its
condemnation [upon Germany], the Supreme Court of civilization should
therefore distinguish between the military caste, headed by the Kaiser and
the Crown Prince, which precipitated this great calamity, and the
["noble and peace-loving" and "deceived and misled"]
German people.
The Germans rejected this model. .The Kaiser was routinely portrayed as a
peace-loving ruler, despite the image he cultivated as warlord [See
Appendix 8], and Germany’s record of having kept the peace for forty
years was emphasized. The Germans were not particularly militaristic:
"Germany has not created nor unduly fostered militarism in Europe,. .
. militarism in Germany forms but a very small part of our general
activities, and. . . the maintenance of an army and navy was forced upon
us by circumstances." The German people wanted peace but they were
all in favor of the war. Dr. Münsterberg claimed "Germany’s
pacific and industrious population had only the one wish: to develop its
agricultural and industrial, its cultural and moral resources" yet he
maintained Dr. Charles Eliot’s contention that the good, cultured
Germany opposes German imperialism is proved wrong by the huge numbers of
Germans volunteering for the army (over 2,000,000 men). Dernburg echoed
the sentiment that it was not just the Kaiser’s war; that it was
enthusiastically supported by the people. To prove this, he explained the
German system of government, showing that "while the Kaiser
represents the Empire in its foreign relations, he may not declare war in
the name of the Empire without the consent of the Bundesrat,
representing the single States forming the Empire, except when
German territory is attacked." Moreover, the Reichstag must
pass on war measures, and had done so. In fact, Dernburg emphasized the
similarities between the German and American constitutions—both are
"a union of a number of Independent States [sic], who have given part
of their sovereignty in favor of the Union. He argued the obligation to
obtain the support of the Bundesrat imposed a greater check on
executive power than did the US constitution and the Reichstag was
elected on a more liberal suffrage than was the Congress; therefore,
Germans were "as directly and democratically in their Government
[sic] as the American people are in theirs." Frank Koester compared
the two systems in a statement that probably did not favorably impress
many Americans:
The assumption that America has a better form of government or one
to which the people are more loyal or with which they are better
satisfied than are the German people with the German Government [sic]
is highly grotesque. No German, or German-American especially, having
seen the two systems in operation would dream of exchanging the German
for the American system.
Koester, who was apparently not a paid German propagandist, went on to
claim Germanic superiority in all areas of life over Anglo-Saxons,
including manners: Anglo-Saxons ate greasy food with their fingers, spit,
put dirty feet on chairs and tables, "smoke in the presence of
ladies. . . [chew] gum and tobacco in cow-like fashion" and even
Anglo-Saxon women got drunk; German women did not. Nevertheless,
German-Americans had much to be proud of their fatherland for: in culture,
science, industry, and so on. German propagandists were not shy about
stressing German advances. They also took great pride in Germany’s
military achievements.
Frank Harris took the lead in condemning British society. He condemned
its love of aristocracy, "the soul-destroying influence of this
privileged, parasitic, idle class," its libel laws resulting in a
society with less free speech than Russia [!], and its soullessness.
"There are no ideals in England, no enthusiasm, no high appreciation
of art or literature, no impersonal striving. There is absolute veneration
for the material standard of value. . . there is nothing but contempt for
the spiritual standard of value. . . ." The only hope for Britain was
a stunning defeat which would inspire the decent classes of Britain to
overthrow their parasitic lords.
German propagandists reminded Americans of how America had suffered at
the hands of these British. Koester declared:
[i]n fighting America in 1776 and 1812 the redmen [sic] were
treacherously employed, massacring women and children without mercy,
from the beginning to the end of each war, just as England employs the
fiercest of the savages of the hills of northern India in fighting
graduates of Heidelberg and Bonn [two German university towns] on the
battlefields of France today."
Koester also quoted a 1797 speech by Thomas Jefferson warning against
excessive British influence amounting to domination. Koester also reminded
Americans of Britain’s condemnation of the Union in America’s troubles
as well as of the 187,000 Germans who served the North, including Custer
("Köster [sic]"). Mr. Dernburg warns that America is
functionally encircled by British territories, including Canada, and
fleets; that, moreover, America and Germany have always been friends.
"We have never had a war, as England had with the United States;
never had difficulties such as the Alabama case; the Panama case, and the
counteracting of the Monroe Doctrine in the Venezuela business." Münsterberg
spoke at the unveiling of a statue to Baron von Steuben in upstate New
York and urged "[t]he American nation must maintain its neutrality at
any price. It has no right to aid the enemies of Germany as long as it
remains loyal to the memory of Washington under whom Steuben fought on
this side of the ocean." Koester also appealed to the Declaration of
Independence and observed that "America would be a sparsely inhabited
dependency of England had England won [the Revolution] and put into effect
the measures she adopted against Ireland."
It is not surprising that in a land with as many Irish immigrants as
America the Irish question should come into play. Sir Roger Casement, the
Irish nationalist leader hanged for high treason in 1916 after returning
to Ireland from Germany where he had been soliciting aid, appealed
directly to Irish-Americans.
In this war, Ireland has only one enemy. Let every Irish heart, let
every Irish hand, let every Irish purse be with Germany. Let Irishmen
in America get ready. . . .Let Irishmen in America stand ready, armed,
keen and alert. The German guns that sound the sinking of the British
Dreadnoughts will be the call of Ireland to her scattered sons. The
fight may be fought on the seas but the fate will be settled on an
island. The crippling of the British fleet will mean a joint
German-Irish invasion of Ireland and every Irishman able to join that
army of deliverance must get ready to-day [sic]!
The bloody suppression of the Easter Rising [an Irish attempt to wrest
independence from Britain], with British repressive activities in India,
turned much US opinion against the British and united Irish-American
groups. The British responded to these controversies by publishing details
of a German medal struck to commemorate the sinking of the Lusitania and
releasing excerpts of Casement’s diary indicating he was a homosexual.
"An English Catholic" wrote a pamphlet trying to defuse the
situation. He [she?] admitted past English wrongs to the Irish and claimed
England had changed and was now doing right by the Emerald Isle. The
author emphasized the Communism of the Citizen Army which joined the Sinn
Feiners for the Rebellion. This must have given pause to the majority
of Irish-Americans who were devout Catholics living in an anti-Communist
society. He or she also argued the rebellion was supported by the Germans.
It was averred that the rising failed because most Irishmen were satisfied
with British rule and the promise of Home Rule, which was interrupted by
the war. Besides, England, fighting for her life, had to take stern
measures to put down a rebellion fomented by Germany, who would not have
been as tolerant beforehand towards either the treachery or the
"hostile designs’ of the Irish as the British.
Another sore point of British policy was the naval blockade of ships,
including neutral ships, carrying goods, including foodstuffs, intended
for the Central Powers. The British tried to rationalize the effects of
this starvation policy by citing the involvement of all Germans in the
"total war." Robert Lansing felt German propaganda targeted
American businessmen suffering from the British blockade. Dernburg argued
US trade was threatened by British control of the world’s seas. This
would get worse if the German navy was destroyed. This would require the
creation of a huge, strong navy. Koester argued that the German fleet was
the best protection America had against British aggression. The Germans
claimed unrestricted submarine warfare in violation of international law
was only a necessary retaliation for the blockade which they accused the
neutrals of accepting. American ambassador to Germany James W. Gerard’s
response was that the US had not behaved unneutrally and will blame the
German government should its navy sink an American ship, and would
"take any steps it may be necessary to take to safeguard American
lives and property. . . ." Ultimately, those steps included joining
the war as an Ally.
12. The First German Race War
In most propaganda campaigns there was a tit-for-tat; one side accused,
the other responded and launched counter-accusations. This does not seem
to have been the case regarding race. The Germans posed as defenders of
the white (i.e. Teutonic) race. The reasons the Germans thought this tack
would play in the States, as well as the reasons the British could not
reply in kind are clear. Many Americans of Western European descent were
concerned about the influx of immigrants from Southern European and Slavic
lands and were calling for immigration reform, an effort which came to
fruition in 1924. On the West Coast, there was great concern about Asian
immigrants, who were first banned in 1882. A new Ku Klux Klan was formed
in 1915, combatting not only Blacks but Jews, Catholics, and immigrants. Birth
of a Nation was a hit movie.
The Allies could not (even if they wanted to; they may not have)
defended themselves in racial terms because they were the ones allied to
the Russians, Chinese, Japanese and also the users of African and Asian
troops. The British also saw the war as a conflict between Teuton and Slav
but did not attach apocalyptic significance the way the Germans did. Of
course the probability the Germans believed what they said cannot be
discounted. Pan-Germanism, the belief that all Teutonic people were linked
by blood and represented the deserved master race of Europe was a late
nineteenth century development and Pan-Slavism was only slightly older.
This was, therefore, the first clash between these two ideologies.
German propagandists played the race card for all it was worth.
Professor Burgess referred back to Bismarck, who arrived in Germany in
1871 [sic] and
"imbibed the doctrine that the great
national, international and world purpose of the newly created German
Empire was to protect and defend the Teutonic civilization of Continental
Europe against the oriental Slavic quasi-civilization on the one side, and
the decaying Latin civilization on the other."
The German
Government defended its support of Austria-Hungary in the Serbian crisis
by observing that "[I]f the Serbs continued with the aid of Russia
and France to menace the existence of Austria-Hungary, the gradual
collapse of Austria and the subjection of all the Slavs, under one Russian
sceptre [sic] would be the consequence, thus making untenable the position
of the Teutonic race in Central Europe." Dr. Münsterberg called the
war between Germany and Russia "moral" because it represented an
unavoidable and necessary clash between the two civilizations. Sir Roger
Casement warned that Britain, the foe of Europe and European civilization
was prepared to betray Europe to the Russians in her pursuit of the
destruction of Germany. The Russian/Slavic domination of all Europe was
portrayed as the inevitable result of Germany’s defeat (England and
France would be too weak to withstand the Russian steamroller). Münsterberg
made this point and warned that a triumphant Tsar would
"liberate" India and then, somehow, free Canada and Australia.
Therefore England was making a grave mistake in fighting Germany.
It was not only the Russians who were racial enemies, the Asian powers
and "Native Troops" in the British and French armies were also
excoriated. Münsterberg declared
The Americans did not like Japan’s mixing in at the side of
England. This capturing of Germany’s little colony in China by a sly
trick while Germany’s hands were bound [a stereotypical
"Asiatic" practice] had to awake [sic] sympathy in every
American. But this was outdone by the latest move of the campaign
which has brought Hindus from India and Turkos from Africa into line
against the German people. To force these colored races, which surely
have not the slightest cause to fight the German nation, into battle
against the Teutons is an act which must have brought a feeling of
shame for the Allies to every true American.
There seemed to be the belief that using colored, and therefore [to
them] inferior, troops against the Teutonic whites was somehow degrading
to the Germanics forced to fight them, similar perhaps to the feeling of
Confederate troops fighting Union black troops. Koester frequently
complained about the temerity of the British using Arabs and Indians
against white men. The Germans emphasized the primitiveness of the Allied
native troops [See Appendix 9]. Just about every picture of an African
soldier portrayed him as a curiosity and labeled him as a cannibal.
British Fijian troops were labeled as former cannibals. Gurkhas were
condemned for massacring German troops with their kukris
[distinctive sharp heavy knives] and called "Indian. . . [sic]
dogs." Interestingly, just as the Germans were able to rationalize
fighting alongside the Japanese in the second German race war, they seemed
to have had no problems serving with Turks in the first.
One of many World War One innovations which would shape the twentieth
century was modern propaganda. This was deployed in the all-important
fight for American sympathies and, through them, material and human
resources. Americans were urged to support one side or the other because
that side had been beset before the war, had supported its ally little
Serbia or Austria, and had attempted to keep the peace while the other
deceitfully sought war. The other side was reviled for committing gruesome
atrocities and for being anti-American. While many tacks in this
propaganda differed little from those used in previous conflicts and thus
can be eliminated from the list of wartime innovations, the racial element
was new to (non-colonial) European wars, a product of new European ideas
about nationalism; and it was brought to an audience greatly increased by
improved education and means of communications. It is therefore not an
exaggeration to say, as they themselves proudly declared, that the First
World War was also Germany’s [first] race war.
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