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V. British War Aims and German Peace Feelers during the First World War (December 1916–November 1918)*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2009

W. B. Fest
Affiliation:
St Antony's College, Oxford

Extract

In 1914 Britain, though hesitantly, decided to enter the war, thus fulfilling her loosely-defined obligations towards the other Entente states. After the outbreak of the war, Britain was just one partner in an alliance whose members had undertaken on 5 September 1914 not to conclude a separate peace and also not even to consider any peace-offer without previous consultations. These mutual assurances were supposed to ensure a victory settlement satisfactory to all the Allies.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1972

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References

1 Extracts from the Minutes of the War Committee, 22 Feb. 1916, F.O. 371/2804, file 35940.

2 Cited, Taylor, A.J.P., ‘The War Aims of the Allies in the First World War’, Politics in Wartime (London, 1964).Google Scholar

3 A negative French answer on these lines was seconded by Grey on 23 Oct. 1915, when he referred to Asquith's Commons speech which had been approved ‘by the entire country ’. F.O. 371/2505, no. 158312, file 1500.

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5 Typical is E. S. Montagu's memorandum of 29 Aug. 1916, CAB 17/160.

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7 The memoranda by Robertson and Balfour are both printed in George, Lloyd, War Memoirs(London, 1936), II, 833–43 and 877 ffGoogle Scholar. The memorandum of the Foreign Office, slightly abridged, in George, Lloyd, The Truth about the Peace Treaties (London, 1938), p. 31 ff. Cf. the original with Grey's minute in F.O. 371/2804.Google Scholar

8 Printed in War Memoirs, II, 866–73. The originals of the departmental reactions to Lansdowne's memorandum are in the Asquith papers, Bodleian Library, Oxford.Google Scholar

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13 CAB 42/22/14 (Nov. 1916).

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20 Text and evaluation of this document in Link, A.S., Wilson, III (Princeton, 1960).Google Scholar

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27 U.S. For. Rel., 1917, Suppl. I, pp. 40–1.

28 Undated draft by Drummond, F.O. 371/3119, file 86512. For Balfour's order to send copies of the Secret Treaties to Washington, cf. F.O. 371/3081, file 89749.

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33 I.W.C. 13, CAB 24/40.

34 F.O. 371/3081, no. 87527.

35 WC 128 a, CAB 23/14.

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38 This basic French attitude was already reported by Bertie on 21 Feb. 1917, F.O. 371/3080, no. 43005, file 33294. For the problem in general, cf. Renouvin, P., ‘Les buts de guerre du gouvernement francais ’, Revue Historique, 1966.Google Scholar

39 Cf.Pedroncini, G., Les muteneries de 1917 (Paris, 1967). Sir Maurice Hankey submitted a memorandum on the events on 16 June, Lloyd George papers, F/23/1/12.Google Scholar

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42 The memorandum of the C.I.G.S. of 28 July (G.T. 1549) was discussed in the Cabinet on 31 July: WC 200 a, CAB 23/14.

43 WC 203 a, CAB 23/14 of 2 Aug. 1917.

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51 WC 220, CAB 23/3.

52 For the Anglo-French correspondence, cf. the British White Book, The Peace Proposals Made by His Holiness the Pope to the Belligerents (H.M.S.O., 1919)Google Scholar. For the originals with enlightening minutes, cf. F.O. 371/3083, file 150310. For the Cabinet decision, and Balfour's draft note to the French and American ambassadors, cf. WC 221, CAB 23/3. The quoted misinterpretation is by Steglich, W., Die Friedenspolitik der Mittelmächte (Wiesbaden, 1964), p. 179.Google Scholar

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54 War Memoirs, IV, 2062 ff. prints Wilson's answer in order to prove that the reproach to the British for having refused a peace opening is irrelevant. In fact Balfour, in a letter to Bertie of I Sept., criticized Wilson's phrase on ‘ the impossibility to negotiate with the present German government’, but this formulation was tacitly accepted in London to avoid an inter-Allied war aims discussion. Cf. Balfour papers, B.M. Add. MSS 496999.Google Scholar

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58 War Memoirs, IV, 2093–9; WC 238 a, 239 a, CAB 23–14.Google Scholar

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61 Minutes in CAB 1/25, fo. 16, cf. War Memoirs, IV, 210. Robertson was much more sceptical than Haig. Lloyd George, according to his own recollections, was influenced by Foch to whom he had talked during his recent trip to France.Google Scholar

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67 Official Statements…, p. 210.Google Scholar

68 Cf. the remarks by Lloyd George to C. P. Scott, cited Hammond, J.L., C. P. Scott of the Manchester Guardian (London, 1934), pp. 221–3 and 232Google Scholar. See also the Scott papers, B.M. Add. MSS 50904 (entry for 27/28 Dec.) and the diary of Milner's private secretary, Thornton, 27 and 28 Dec., Milner papers, box 301. Draft minutes of the Cabinet meeting of 28 Dec. (WC 307 a) were found in CAB 23/14,1.

69 War Memoirs, IV, 2480.Google Scholar

70 Official Statements…, p. 225 ff. For Lloyd George's intentions, cf. Lord Riddell's War Diary, p. 304.

71 War Memoirs, IV, 2496, WC 325 a of 18 Jan. 1918, CAB 23/14,1.Google Scholar

72 For the German background, cf.Steglich, , op. cit. p. 359 ff.Google Scholar

73 Smuts wrote a letter on his conversation with Haig to Lloyd George, LI. G. papers, F/45/9/9 (24 Jan. 1918). On the connexions of Lloyd George and Milner with the British Left, cf. Cole, M.I. (ed.), Beatrice Webb's Diaries, 1912–1924 (London, 1952), II, 112.Google Scholar

74 WC 427, CAB 23/6; Balfour's tel. to Cave, F.O. 371/3442, file 62451 (6 June 1918). Ahlswede, D., ‘ Deutsch-britische Friedensgespräche im Haag 1918, Welt ah Geschichte ’, xx (1960), 187 ffGoogle Scholar. mistakenly inferred a British inclination for a compromise peace from German and English memoirs. His theory is refuted in extenso by Ritter, G., Staatskunst und Kriegshandwerk (Munich, 1968), IV, ch. VIII.Google Scholar

75 F.O. 371/3442, no. III477, fo. 62451 of 24 June.

76 I.W.C-30, CAB 23/42.

77 Final report of the War Trade Advisory Committee, Board of Trade Journal, 2 05 1918.Google Scholar

78 WC 457, CAB 32Sol;7. Cf. Louis, R., op. cit. p. 109.Google Scholar

79 Smuts memorandum of 24 Oct. 1918 (G.T. 6091), CAB 24/67. Milner made his attitude public in an interview with the Evening Standard, 17 Oct. 1918.

80 Minutes of the meetings of 13 and 26 Oct., G.T. 5967, CAB 24/66 and WC 491 b, 24/14.

81 WC 500 a, b of 10/11 Nov., CAB 23/14.

82 Balfour to Lloyd George on 29 Nov., Lloyd George papers, F/3/3/45. Cf. A. J. P. Taylor, ‘ The War Aims of the Allies…’