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10 - The Paris Peace Conference

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 November 2022

Justin McCarthy
Affiliation:
University of Louisville, Kentucky
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Summary

My Dear Prime Minister,

I desire most sincerely to express to you, and through you, to the British Government my deep gratitude, as well as that of my country, for all you have done to enable us to obtain the fulfilment of our national unity. I feel however, that I am quite unable to give adequate expression to my feelings, for indeed, all that Greece has now realised of her legitimate claims, is due in major part, my dear Prime Minister, to your powerful and effective support, and no words of mine can efficiently express my country's deep sense of thankfulness to you.

Greek Prime Minister Venizelos to Lloyd George, 26 April 1920.

The Paris Peace Conference convened on 18 January 1919. Although delegates from twenty-seven nations attended the conference, decisions were actually made by the ‘Council of Four’, the so-called ‘Big Four’ – Britain, France, Italy and the United States – and to a much lesser extent by Japan. Although the Peace Conference ended with the signing of the treaties with Germany (Treaty of Versailles, 28 June 1919) and Austria (Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye, 10 September 1919), the four Powers, again only occasionally joined by Japan, continued to exert power as an Allied Supreme Council. After the German treaty was signed, the governing body of the Peace Conference became the Council of the Heads of Delegations of the Five Powers (Britain, France, Italy, the United States and Japan), called the Supreme Council. Japan was mainly excluded from, and had no real interest in, deliberations on the Middle East or the Balkans, leaving the other four to make decisions. America largely withdrew from Supreme Council considerations after the signing of the German and Austrian treaties, and as it had never been at war with the Ottoman Empire, power was in the hands of the remaining three. The Supreme Council deliberated on, and imposed, further treaties on other enemy nations and dealt with problems arising out of the original treaties. It was the Supreme Council that made the main Allied decisions on the Ottoman Empire.

Among the great European peace conferences, the Paris Congress was unique.

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The British and the Turks
A History of Animosity, 1893-1923
, pp. 353 - 396
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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