A New Map of Europe 1911 1914
A New Map of Europe 1911 1914
A New Map of Europe 1911 1914
HERBERT
tADAMS T
GIBBC^NS
LIBRARY
presented to the
LIBRARY
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SAN DIEGO
by
FRIENDS OF THE LIBRARY
Date Due
THE
NEW MAP OF EUROPE
NEW MAP OF EURO
(1911-1914)
BY
NEW YORK
THE CENTURY CO.
1914
COPYRIGHT, 1914, BY
THE CENTURY CO.
MY CHILDREN
CHRISTINE ESTE of Adana,
LLOYD IRVING of Constantinople,
and
EMILY ELIZABETH of Paris.
Born in the midst of the wars and changes that this book describes,
may they lead lives of peace !
CONTENTS
PAGE
I. GERMANY IN ALSACE AND LORRAINE . i
" "
II. THE WELTPOLITIK OF GERMANY . 21
IX.
......
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
SLAVS
AND HER SOUTH
142
XIII.
XIV.
KEY
THE WAR
......
THE WAR BETWEEN ITALY AND
BETWEEN THE
TUR-
BALKAN
241
MAPS
TO FACE PAGE
impute to himself.
The changes that are bringing about a new map
of Europe have come within the intimate personal
experience of the writer.
If foot-notes are rare, it is because sources are so
numerous and so accessible. Much is what the writer
saw himself, or heard from actors in the great tragedy,
when events were fresh in their memory. The books of
various colours, published by the Ministries of Foreign
Affairs of the various countries interested, have been
consulted for the negotiations of diplomats. From
day to day through these years, material has been
gathered from newspapers, especially the Paris Temps,
the London Times, the Vienna Freie Press, the Constanti-
nople Orient, and other journals of the Ottoman capital.
FOREWORD xi
MONTESQUIEU.
THE
NEW MAP OF EUROPE
The New Map of Europe
CHAPTER I
16
GERMANY IN ALSACE AND LORRAINE
Since 1910, the German war budget has carried
successively larger items for the strengthening of
forts and the building of barracks in Metz, Colmar,
20
CHAPTER II
30
THE "WELTPOLITIK" OF GERMANY
at the twenty-fifth anniversary of the founding of the
Empire that the scope of the Weltpolitik was an-
nounced by Wilhelm II. He said:
1
While the Landtage of the German states are mostly controlled
geo-
. A
graphy now in its two hundred and forty-fifth edition
in the public schools (Daniel's Leitfaden der Geo-
"
graphie) states that Germany is the heart of Europe.
Around it extend Austria, Switzerland, Belgium,
Luxemburg, and Holland, which were all formerly
part of the same state, and are peopled entirely or in
the majority by Germans."
When German children have been for the past
generation deliberately taught as a matter of fact
not as an academic or debatable question that
Deutschland ought to be more than it is, we can
understand how
the neutrality of their smaller
neighbours seems to the Germans a negligible
consideration. No wonder the soldiers who ran up
against an implacable enemy at Liege, Namur, and
Charleroi thought there must be a mistake some-
where, and were more angered against the opposition
of those whom they regarded as their brothers of
3 33
THE NEW MAP OF EUROPE
blood than they later showed themselves against the
French. No wonder that the sentiment of the whole
German nation is for the retention of Belgium,
their path to the sea. It was formerly German. Its
inhabitants are German. Let it become German
once more !
century. We
cannot too strongly insist upon this
fatal tendency of the German to subordinate natural,
moral, legal, and technical rights to the supremacy of
brute force. There is no conception of what is
called "moral suasion" in the German mind. Al-
though some of the greatest thinkers of the world
have been and are to-day Germans, yet the German
nation has never come to the realization that the pen
37
THE NEW MAP OF EUROPE
may be mightier than the sword. Give the German
a pen, and he will hold the world in admiration of his
intellect. Give him a piano or a violin, and he will
hold the world in adoration of his soul. But give him
a sword, and he will hold the world in abhorrence of
his force. For there never was an ubermensch who
was not a devil. Else he would be God.
But the Weltpolitik has had other and more
tangible and substantial causes than the three we
have been considering. It is not wholly the result of
the German idea that Germany can impose her will
upon the world and has the right to do so. The
power of Germany comes from the fact that her
people have been workers as well as dreamers.
The rapid increase of the population and development
of the industrial and commercial prosperity of the
empire have given the Germans a wholly justifiable
economic foundation for their Weltpolitik.
United Germany, after the successful war of 1870,
began the greatest era of industrial growth and pro-
sperity that has ever been known in the history
of the world. Not even the United States, with all
its annual immigration and opening up of new fields
56
THE "WELTPOLITIK" OF GERMANY
people, intelligently and deliberately willed by them.
The statement that a revolution in Germany, led
by the democracy to dethrone the Kaiser or to get
him out of the clutches of the military party, would
put an end to the war, is foolish and pernicious.
For it leads us to false hopes. It would be much
nearer the truth to say that if the Kaiser had not
consented to this war, he would have endangered his
throne.
The principle of the Weltpolitik,
imposed upon
European diplomacy by the German nation in the
assembling of the Conference of Algeciras, was that
no State should be allowed to disturb the existing
political and territorial status quo of any country
still free, any part of the world, without the consent
in
of the other Powers. This Weltpolitik would have
the natural effect, according to Karl Lamprecht, in
his Zur Jiingsten Deutschen Vergangenheit, of endan-
57
CHAPTER III
THE "BAGDADBAHN"
the development of her Weltpolitik, the most
formidable, the most feasible, and the most
IN
successful conception of modern Germany has
been the economic penetration of Asiatic Turkey.
She may have failed in Africa and in China. But
there can be no doubt about the successful beginning,
and the rich promise for the future, of German en-
terprises in the Ottoman Empire.
The countries of sunshine have always exercised
a peculiar fascination over the German. His litera-
ture is filled with the Mediterranean and with Islam.
From his northern climate he has looked southward
and eastward back towards the cradle of his race,
and in imagination has lived over again the Cru-
sades. As long as Italy was under Teutonic political
influence, the path to the Mediterranean was easy.
United Italy and United Germany were born at
the same time. But while the birth of Italy threat-
ened to close eventually the trade route to the
Mediterranean to Germany, the necessity of a trade
route to the south became more vital than ever to the
new German Confederation from the sequences of
the union.
58
"
THE BAGDADBAHN"
When her political consolidation was completed
and her industrial era commenced, Germany began
to look around the world for a place to expand.
There were still three independent Mohammedan
nations Morocco, Persia, and Turkey. In Morocco
she found another cause for conflict with France than
Alsace-Lorraine. In Persia and Turkey, she faced
the bitter rivalry of Russia and Great Britain.
The rapid decline of the Ottoman Empire, and the
fact that its sovereign was Khalif of the Moslem
world, led German statesmen to believe that Con-
stantinople was the best place in the world to centre
the efforts of their diplomacy in the development of
the Weltpolitik. Through allying herself with the
Khalif, Germany would find herself able to strike
70
CHAPTER IV
can policy, for the form and direction which the evolu-
tion of Morocco will take in the future will influence
in a decisive manner the destinies of our North Afri-
can possessions." France agreed to a conference, but
won from Germany the concession that France's
special interests in Morocco would be
and rights
admitted as the basis of the work of the conference.
On January 1906, a conference of European
17,
States, to which the United States of America was
admitted, met to decide the international status of
Morocco. For some time the attitude of the Ger-
man delegates was uncompromising. They main-
tained the Kaiser's thesis as set forth at Algiers the :
by applauding loudly.
The aftermath of Agadir, as far as it affected
82
ALGECIRAS AND AGADIR
Morocco, resulted in the establishment of the French
Protectorate, on March 30, 1912. The Sultan
signed away independence by the Treaty of Fez.
his
THEcommercial
Morocco served to bring the colonial and
aspiration of Germany into con-
flict with other nations of Europe. The recent
fortunes of Persia, the third and only other
independent Mohammedan state,have also helped
to make possible the general European war.
The first decade of the twentieth century brought
about in Persia, as in Turkey, the rise of a constitu-
tional party, which was able to force a despotic
sovereign to grant a constitution. The Young
Persians had in many respects a history similar to
that of the Young Turks. They were for the most
part members of influential families, who had been
educated in Europe, or had been sent into exile.
They had imbibed deeply the spirit of the French
Revolution from their reading, and had at the same
time developed a narrow and intense nationalism.
But to support their revolutionary propaganda,
they had allied themselves during the period of dark-
ness with the Armenians and other non-Moslems.
As Salonika, a city by no means Turkish, was the
foyer of the young Turk movement, so Tabriz,
84
THE PASSING OF PERSIA
capital of the Azerbaidjan, a city by no means
Persian, was the centre of the opposition to Persian
despotism.
Young Turks, Young Persians, Young Egyptians,
Young Indians, and Young Chinese have shown to
Europe and America the peril and the pity of our
western and Christian education, when it is given to
eastern and non-Christian students. They are born
into the intellectual life with our ideas and are
inspired by our ideals, but have none of the back-
ground, none of the inheritance of our national
atmosphere and our family training to enable them
to live up to the standards we have put before them.
Their disillusionment is bitter. They resent our
attitude of superiority. They hate us, even though
they feign to admire us. Their jealousy of our
institutions leads them to console themselves by
and forcing themselves to
singling out see only the
weak and vulnerable points in our civilization.
Educated in our universities, they return to their
countries to conspire against us. The illiterate and
simple Oriental, who has never travelled, fre- is
95
CHAPTER VI
96
THE PARTITIONERS AND THEIR POLES
which has grouped people cities, and brought
in
them into closer association.This influence of city
life upon the destinies of Poland comes to us with
peculiar force when we realize that since the last
The
troubles of Russia in her relationship to the
Poles have come largely from the fact that the distinc-
tionbetween Poland proper, inhabited by Poles, and
the provinces which the Jagellons conquered but
never assimilated, was not grasped by the statesmen
who had to deal with the aftermath of the revolu-
tion. What was possible in one was thought to be
possible in the other. What was vital in one was
believed to be vital in the other. In the kingdom
99
THE NEW MAP OF EUROPE
of Poland, as it was bestowed upon the Russian
Czar by the Congress of Vienna, there were massed
ten million Poles who could be neither exterminated
nor exiled. Nor was there a sound motive for at-
tempting to destroy their national life. The king-
dom of Poland was not an essential portion of the
Russian Empire, and was not vitally bound to
the fortunes of the Empire. So unessential has the
kingdom of Poland been to Russia, and so fraught
with the possibilities of weakness to its owner, that
patriotic and far-sighted Russian publicists have
advocated its complete autonomy, its independence
or its cession to Germany. Because it was limi-
trophe to the territories occupied by the Poles of the
other partitioners, there was constantly danger of
weakening the defences of the empire and of inter-
national complications. Through failing to treat
these Poles in such a way that they would be a loyal
bulwark against her enemies, Russia has done irre-
114
THE PARTITIONERS AND THEIR POLES
possible to have sympathy with German national
aspirations, but not with the methods by which
those aspirations are being interpreted to the world.
To show how little regard he had for parliamentary
opinion in the German confederation, the Chancel-
lor forced through the Prussian Landtag, on April
118
CHAPTER VII
ITALIA IRREDENTA
127
THE NEW MAP OF EUROPE
land has been occupied by other races. Just as the
hinterland of Macedonia is very largely Bulgarian,
the hinterland of the upper end of the Adriatic is very
largely Slavic. Just as the realization of the dreams
of Hellenic irredentists would give Greece a narrow
strip of coast line along European Turkey to Con-
stantinople, with one or two of the larger inland
commercial cities, while the Slavs would be cut off
entirely from the sea, the realization of the dreams of
Italian irredentists would give to Italy the ports and
coast line of the northern end of the Adriatic, with no
hinterland, and the Slavs, Hungarians, and Germans
an enormous hinterland with no ports.
Italian irredentism, in so far as the Tyrol goes, is
not unreasonable. But its realization in Istria and
the Adriatic littoral is impracticable. Our modern
idea of a state of people living together in a political
is
130
CHAPTER VIII
138
20
PARTITIONS OF POLAND
Scale of Miles
24 Lonsritud
East 28 from Greenwich
THE DANUBE AND THE DARDANELLES
with the close and vital relationship between Con-
stantinople and Russia during the period of the
development of the Russian nation. Now that
Russia seems to be entering upon a period of national
awakening, the sentiment is bound to be irresistible
among the Russians that they are the rightful inheritors
of the Eastern Empire, eclipsed for so many centuries
by the shadow of Islam and now about to be born again.
On a July evening in 1908, when the constitutional
revolution in Turkey was beginning to occupy the
attention of Europe, I sat with my
wife in the winter
garden of the Grand Hotel in Paris. Wewere listen-
ing to a charming and intelligent Russian gentleman
explain to us the aims of the political parties in the
Duma of 1907. A came to tell us that our
waiter
baggage was ready. "Where are you going?" asked
the Russian. "To Constantinople," we answered.
An expression of wistful sadness or joy you can
never tell which it is meant to be with a Russian
came across his face. "Constantinople!" he mur-
mured, more to himself than to us "This revolution
:
will fail. You will see. For we must come into our
own."
The political aspect of the question of the Darda-
nelleshas changed greatly since Great Britain and
France fought one war with Russia, and Great
Britain stood ready to fight a second, in order to
prevent this passage from falling into Russian hands.
Almost immediately after the crisis of San Stefano
and the resulting revision of the Russo-Turkish
treaty at Berlin, the interests of Great Britain were
diverted from the north-east to the south-east Medi-
139
THE NEW MAP OF EUROPE
terranean. She decided that her permanent route
to India was through the Suez Canal, and made it
secure by getting possession of the majority of the
shares of the Canal and by seizing Egypt. The
Bulgarians began to show themselves lacking in the
expected docility towards their liberator. British
diplomats realized that they had been fearing what
did not happen. They began to lose interest in the
Dardanelles. This loss of interest in the question
world interests
of the straits as a vital factor in their
has grown so complete in recent years that Russia
has no reason to anticipate another visit of the
British fleet to Besica Bay if I refrain from pro-
phesying. It is safe to say, however, that London
has forgotten Mohammed Ali, the Crimea, and
the Princes' Islands, while the traditions of Unkiar
Skelessi are still dominating the foreign policy of
Petrograd.
For, while the future of the Dardanelles has come
to mean less to Great Britain, it means more than
ever before to Russia. Russia has been turned back
from the Pacific. The loss of Manchuria in the war
with Japan caused her once again to cast her eyes
upon the outlet to the Mediterranean. To the in-
crease in her wheat trade has been added also the
development of the petroleum trade from the Cau-
casus wells. Since the agreement for the partition of
Persia with Great Britain in 1907, and the mutual
"hands off" accord with Germany at Potsdam in
1910, the expectations of a brilliant Russian future
for northern Persia and the Armenian and Kurdish
corner of Asiatic Turkey have been great.
140
THE DANUBE AND THE DARDANELLES
Since the Congress of Berlin, Germany has come
into the place of Great Britain as the enemy who
would keep Russia from finding the ^Egean Sea.
The growth of German interests at Constantinople
and Asia Minor has become the India in anticipa-
tion ofGermany. When Russia, after her ill-fated
venture in the Far East, turned her efforts once more
towards the Balkan peninsula, it began to dawn upon
her that the Drang nach Oesten might prove a menace
to her control of the Dardanelles, fully as great as
was formerly the British fetish of the integrity of the
Ottoman Empire to keep open the route to India.
Diplomacy endeavoured to ward off the inevitable
struggle. But the Balkan wars created a new situa-
tion that broke rudely the accords of Skierniewice and
Potsdam. Austria-Hungary in the Balkans and
Germany in Asia Minor became the nightmare of
Russia.
141
CHAPTER IX
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY AND HER SOUTH
SLAVS
142
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY AND SOUTH SLAVS
therefore, the dominant race in Austria, and
the Hungarian race is the dominant race in
Hungary.
If one looks at the map, and studies the division
of the Empire, he will readily see that it is much
more durably constructed than he would have reason
to believe from statistics of the population. The
Slavic question in the Dual Monarchy is not how
many Slavs of kindred races are to be found in
Austria-Hungary, how they are placed in re-
but
lationship to each other and to neighbouring states.
It is a question of geography rather than of cen-
sus. The student needs a map instead of columns
of figures.
In only one place is the Austro-Hungarian Mon-
archy very weak, and that is in the south. The sole
port for the thirty millions of Austria is Trieste.
To reach Trieste one passes through a belt of Slavic
territory, and Trieste itself is more Italian than
German. The sole port of Hungary is Fiume. To
reach Fiume one passes through a belt of Slavic
territory, and there are hardly any Hungarians in
Fiume itself. The Slavs which cut off Fiume from
Hungary and the Slavs of the Dalmatian coast and
of all Bosnia and Herzegovina belong to the same
family. They speak practically the same language
as the Servians and Montenegrins.
The Hungarians, then, have exactly the same
interest as the Austrians in every move that has
been made since the proclamation of the constitution
of Turkey to prevent the foundation of a strong
independent Servian State on the confines of the
143
THE NEW MAP OF EUROPE
Austro-Hungarian Empire, and to prevent the
Slavs from reaching the Adriatic Sea.
Austria has not been necessarily influenced in her
attitude towards the Balkan problem by Germany.
Although her Drang nach Oesten is frequently inter-
preted as a part of the Pan-Germanic movement, the
Germans of Austria have needed no German senti-
ment and no German prompting to arrive at their
point of view in regard to the Balkan nationalities.
It must be clearly kept in mind that the Convention
of Reichstadt in 1876, which was the beginning of
Austria's consistent policy towards the Balkan
peninsula, was signed before the alliance with Ger-
many; that it was the conception of a Hungarian
statesman, and that the occupation of Bosnia and
Herzegovina had nothing whatever to do with Pan-
Germanism. It was a measure of self-protection to
prevent these remote provinces of Turkey from form-
ing a political union with Servia, should the Russian
arms, intervening on behalf of the south Slavs
against Turkey, prove successful. The extension of
sovereignty over Bosnia-Herzegovina in 1908 was
to prevent the constitutional regime from trying to
weaken the hold of Austria-Hungary upon these
provinces. Austria-Hungary certainly would have
preferred the more comfortable status of an occu-
pation to the legal adoption of a Reichsland. But
she could take no chances with the Young Turks. Her
military occupation of the Sandjak of Novi Bazar was
inspired as much by
the necessity of preventing the
union of Montenegro and Servia as by the desire to
provide for a future railway extension to Salonika.
144
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY AND SOUTH SLAVS
Hungary has had to grapple with two Balkan
problems, the rise of Rumania and the rise of Servia.
She has had within her kingdom several million
Rumanian and several million South Slavic
subjects
subjects. Most of her Rumanians, however, have
been separated from Rumania from the natural
barrier of the Carpathian mountains, and have not
found their union with Hungary to their disadvant-
age. For the Rumanians of Hungary enjoy through
Buda-Pesth and Fiume a better outlet to the markets
of the world, and a cheaper haul, than they would
find through Rumania. They have benefited greatly
by their economic union with Hungary. It is not
the same with the Croatians. They are situated
between Buda-Pesth and the Adriatic. They have
a natural river outlet to the Danube. They are
not separated by physical barriers from their broth-
ers of race and language in Servia, Bosnia, and Dal-
matia. Were they to separate from Hungary, they
would not find their economic position in any way
jeopardized.
Many South Slavs have advocated a trialism
to replace the present dualism. They have
claimed that the most critical problems of the
Austro-Hungarian Empire could be solved in this
way. Added to Hungary and Austria, there could
be a Servian kingdom, perhaps enlarged by the
inclusion of independent Servia and Montenegro,
whose crown could be worn by the Hapsburg
ruler.
But this solution has never found favour, simple
and attractive though it sounds on first sight, with
H5
THE NEW MAP OF EUROPE
eitherHungarians or Austrians. For it would mean
the cuttingoff of both kingdoms from the sea. The
Hungarians would be altogether land-locked, and
surrounded on all sides by alien races. Austria
would be forced into hopeless economic dependence
upon Germany. The Germans of Austria and the
Hungarians of Hungary have felt that their national
existence depended upon keeping in political sub-
jection the South Slavs, and upon repressing merci-
lessly any evidences of Italian irredentism upon the
littoral of the Adriatic. Italian irredentism is treated
in another place. Therepression of national aspir-
ations among the South Slavs, which interests us
here, has been the corner-stone of Austro-Hungarian
policy in the Balkans. For Hungary it has also
been an internal question in her relationship with
Croatia.
The Serbo-Croatian movement in southern Hun-
gary has been repressed by Hungary with the same
bitterness and lack of success that have attended the
attempts to stifle national aspirations elsewhere in
Europe. No weapon has been left unused in fight-
ing nationalism in Croatia. Official corruption,
bribery, manipulation of judges, imprisonment with-
out trial, military despotism, gerrymandering, electo-
ral intimidation, has been for years and is
this
still, the daily record in Croatia. If there were a
158
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY AND SOUTH SLAVS
gether as an empire in their relationship with their
south Slavic subjects. The Croatians, the Dalma-
tians, and a major portion of the inhabitants of
Bosnia-Herzegovina were Servian in language and
sympathies. They had never thought of political
union with Servia, the petty kingdom which had
allowed its rulers to be assassinated, and which
seemed to be insignificant in comparison with the
powerful and brilliant country of which they would
not have been unwilling, if allowed real self-govern-
ment, to remain a part. But a large and glorified
Servia, with an increased territory and a well-earned
and brilliant military reputation would this prove
an attraction to win away the dissatisfied subjects
of the Dual Monarchy?
flagration."
160
CHAPTER X
RACIAL RIVALRIES IN MACEDONIA
province.
Since the creation of modern Italy, the great Ger-
man trade route to the Mediterranean has been
changed. The influence in Teutonic commercial
evolution of the passing of Lombardy and Venetia
from the political tutelage of a thousand years has
been of tremendous importance, for the connection
between Germany and Italy had always been vital.
It was the first Napoleon who broke this connection.
It was the third Napoleon who nullified the effort
165
THE NEW MAP OF EUROPE
of the Congress ofVienna to re-establish it. United
Italy gave a new direction to Teutonic expansion.
United Germany gave to it a new impulsion. The
Drang nach Oesten was born.
By the Convention of Reichstadt in 1876, Austria-
Hungary secured from Russia the promise of the
Turkish provinces of Bosnia and Herzegovina in
return for her neutrality in the "approaching war
of liberation" of Russia against Turkey. In order
to liberate some Slavs, Russia changed the subjection
of others. The Convention of Reichstadt is really
the starting-point of the quarrel which has grown
so bitterly during the last generation between Austria
and Russia over the Slavs of the Balkan Peninsula.
Russia paid dearly for a "free hand" with Turkey
in 1877. She is
paying still.
In her attitude towards the Balkans, Austria has
had three distinct aims: the prevention of a Slavic
outlet to the Adriatic, the realization of a German
outlet to the ^Egean, and the effectual hindrance of
the growth in the Balkans of a strong independent
south Slavic state, which might prove a fatal attrac-
tion to her own provinces of Croatia and Dalmatia.
It was
this triple consideration that led her to the
179
CHAPTER XI
THE YOUNG TURK REGIME IN THE
OTTOMAN EMPIRE
event during the first decade of the twentieth
Moslem neighbours.
189
THE NEW MAP OF EUROPE
On April 14, 1909, on a morning when the sun had
risenupon the peaceful and happy city of Adana, out
of a clear sky came the tragedy which was the be-
EUROPE
In 1911
G Greenwich Jo
THE YOUNG TURK REGIME
Greek Church failed. The patriarch refused to sur-
render his privileges. The Greek clergy and the
Lay Council held out under persecution and threats.
In October, 1910, when the Lay Council met in
Constantinople, its members were arrested, and
thrown into jail. In Macedonia and Thrace, in the
^Egean Islands, along the coast of Asia Minor, the
bishops and clergy suffered untold persecutions.
Some were even assassinated. I shall never forget a
memorable interview I had with Joachim III, during
that crisis. His Holiness untied with trembling
fingers the dossier of persecutions, which contained
letters and sworn statements from a dozen dioceses.
in the future.
To go into all the tortuous phases of the Cretan
question up to the time of the Balkan War would
make this chapter out of proportion; and yet Crete,
like Alsace-Lorraine, has had a most vital in-
fluence upon the present European war. The
one point be emphasized here is, that to
to
bring pressure to bear upon Greece in defining her
attitude toward Crete, the Young Turks decided
to revive the commercial boycott which they had
used against Austria. I have seen from close range
the notorious Greek boycott of 1910 to 1912. It was
far more disastrous to the Turks than to the Greeks
of Turkey. It threatened so completely, however, the
economic prosperity of Greece, which is a commercial
rather than an agricultural country, that it forced
Greece into the Balkan Alliance much against her
will, for the sake of self-preservation.
203
THE NEW MAP OF EUROPE
If this boycott had been carried on against the
Greeks of Greece alone, it would not have affected
vitally the prosperity of the Greeks in the Ottoman
Empire. Their imports come from every country,
and for their exports the freight steamers of all the
European nations competed. But it was directed
also against the Greeks who were Ottoman subjects.
In Salonika, Constantinople, Trebizond, Smyrna,
and other ports, commerce was entirely in the hands
of Greeks. They owned almost every steamer
bearing the Ottoman flag. They owned the cargoes.
They bought and sold the merchandise. The Young
Turks, working through the hamals or longshoremen
and the boatmen who manned the lighters, all
Turks and Kurds, succeeded in tying up absolutely
the commerce of Ottoman Greeks. The Greek
merchants and shippers were ruined. It was urged
cleverly that this was the chance for Moslems to get
the trade of the great ports of Turkey into their own
hands. The Government encouraged them by buy-
ing and maintaining steamship lines. But the Turks
had no knowledge of commerce, no money to buy
goods, and no inclination to do the work and accept
the responsibilities necessary for successful commer-
cial undertakings. The result was that imports were
stopped, prices went up, and the Moslems were hurt
as much as, if not more than, the Christians. After
several voyages, the new government passenger
vessels were practically hors de combat. There was
no longer second, and third class.
first, Peasants
squatted on the decks and in the saloons. Filth
reigned supreme, and hopeless confusion. No
204
THE YOUNG TURK REGIME
European could endure a voyage on one of these
steamers, and no merchant cared to entrust his
shipments to them.
The boycott died because it was a hopeless under-
of defence.
218
THE YOUNG TURK REGIME
attempt to bring together the various races of the
Empire in a common effort for regeneration. The
Young Turks, having no statesmen among their
leaders, depended upon untrained men and upon
those Abdul Hamid had trained in sycophancy and
despotism. In spite of the heroic and able efforts
of the German military mission and the British naval
mission, no progress was made in reforming the only
force by which the Young Turks could have held in
respect and obedience the Sultan's own subjects, as
well as those foreign nations who were looking for the
opportunity to dismember the Empire.
If the hopes of the true friends of Turkey had been
all the wars of the past few years, including the one
which is now shaking Europe to its foundations,
would have been avoided.
219
CHAPTER XII
"
What the "rights of the Sultan might be were not
specified then, nor have they been since but articles
:
239
THE NEW MAP OF EUROPE
protection of Christians who lived under the Ottoman
flag. It is because the Powers did not fulfil the obli-
240
CHAPTER XIII
sandjak of
Benghazi, whose attention had been
turned from Italian activities by Italian gold pieces,
were replaced by members of the Union and Progress
party. These new officials, owing to their utter in-
experience and their sense of self-esteem, may have
been no better than the old ones; probably they
proved as executive power is not in-
inefficient, for
herent in the Turkish character. But they were men
who had passed through the fire of persecution and
suffering for love of their fatherland, and the renais-
sance of Turkey was the supreme thing in their lives.
Their patriotism and enthusiasm knew no bounds.
Their ambitions for Turkey may have been far in
advance of their ability to serve her. But criticism
is silent before patriotism which has proved its
willingness to sacrifice life for country.
244
WAR BETWEEN ITALY AND TURKEY
One can imagine the feelings of the Young Turks
when they saw what Italy was doing. It is easy
enough to say that they should have immediately
reformed the administration of the country and given
to the Tripolitans an efficient government. Reform
does not come in a twelvemonth, and the Young
Turks had to act quickly to prevent the loss of
Tripoli. They took the only means they had. They
began to thwart and obstruct every Italian enterprise,
to extend the military frontiers of Tripoli into the
Soudan, to bring all the Moslem tribes of Africa into
touch with the Constantinople khalifate.
Italy saw her hopes being destroyed as other
colonial hopes had been destroyed one after the other.
254
WAR BETWEEN ITALY AND TURKEY
ian commerce in the Black Sea and eastern Medi-
terranean was at a standstill. Upon Italian imports
into Turkey had been placed a duty of one hundred
per cent. Where, outside of Tripoli, was the pressure
to be exercised?
Premier San Giuliano had promised before the war
started that he would not disturb political conditions
in the Balkan peninsula. The alliance with Austria-
Turkey.
It is impossible to explain here all the diplomatic
263
THE NEW MAP OF EUROPE
steps leadingup to the Balkan alliance against
Turkey. They have been set forth, with much
divergency of opinion, by a number of writers
who were in intimate touch with the diplomatic
circles ofthe Balkan capitals during the years imme-
diately preceding the formation of the alliance. We
muet confine ourselves to a statement of the general
causes which induced the Balkan States, against
the better judgment of many of their wisest leaders,
to form the alliance, and to declare war upon Turkey.
Both Bulgaria and Greece had sentimental reasons ;
287
THE NEW MAP OF EUROPE
so that they could run more quickly. The artillery-
men cut the traces of their gun-wagons and am-
munition-wagons, and made off on horseback.
Everything was abandoned to the enemy. Nazim
pasha, generalissimo, and the general staff, who had
been in headquarters at Tchorlu, without proper tele-
graphic or telephonic communication with the battle
front, were drawn into the flight. The Turkish
army did not stop until it had placed itself behind
the Tchatalja line of forts, which protected the city
of Constantinople.
The battle of Lule Burgas marked more than the
destruction of the Turkish military power and the
loss of European Turkey to the Empire. It revealed
the inefficiency of Turkish organization and adminis-
tration to cope with modern conditions, even when
in possession of modern instruction and modern
tools. With the Turks, not a question of an
it is
299
THE NEW MAP OF EUROPE
by a clause of the Treaty of Ouchy, still held the
Dodecanese, that all of the ^Egean Islands were
not "gathered into the fold" by Greece.
There had been less than six weeks of fighting.
The Balkan allies had swept from the field all the
Turkish forces in Europe. The Turkish armies
were bottled up in Constantinople, Adrianople,
Janina, and Scutari, with absolutely no hope of
making successful sorties. Except at Constantinople,
they were besieged, and could expect neither rein-
forcements nor food supplies. The Greek fleet was
master of the ^Egean Sea, and held the Turkish
navy blocked in the Dardanelles. No new armies
could come from Asiatic Turkey. This was the
situationwhen the armistice was signed. The
Ottoman Empire in Europe had ceased to exist.
The military prestige of Turkey had received a
mortal blow.
305
THE NEW MAP OF EUROPE
like water. They live at Nice, as they live at Con-
stantinople, like princes or like American million-
aires! One of the sanest and wisest of Turkish
patriots, a man whom
have known and admired,
I
was appointed to head a committee to wait upon
these pashas, many of them married to princesses of
the imperial family, and solicit their contributions.
The scheme was that the subscribers should advance
five years of taxes on their properties for the pur-
308
BALKAN ALLIANCE AGAINST TURKEY
retrieving the fortunes of Turkish arms. They had
prepared the coup d'etat to get back again into office.
312
BALKAN ALLIANCE AGAINST TURKEY
Balkan War, and that her services in the common
cause were far greater than those of either of her
allies. One cannot too strongly emphasize the point,
also, that the capture and possession of Adrianople
did not mean to Bulgaria either from the practical
or from the sentimental standpoint what Salonika
meant to the Greeks and Uskub to the Servians.
The Servian contingent before Adrianople was not
helping Bulgaria to do what was to be wholly to the
benefit of Bulgaria. The Servians were co-operating
in an enterprise that was to contribute to the success
of their common cause.
Adrianople had been closely invested ever since the
battle of Kirk Kilisse. No army came to the relief
of the garrison after the fatal retreat of October 24th.
The Bulgarians had not made a serious effort to
capture the city during the first period of the war.
The armistice served their ends well, because each
day lessened the provisions of the besieged. Inside
the city Shukri pasha had done all he could to keep
up the courage of the inhabitants. He himself was
ignorant of the real situation at Constantinople.
Perhaps it was in good faith that he assured the
garrison continually that the hour of deliverance was
at hand. By wireless, the authorities at Constan-
tinople, after the coup d'etat especially, kept assuring
him that the army was advancing, and that it was a
question only of days. So, in spite of starvation and
of the continual rain of shells upon the city, he
managed to maintain the morale of his garrison. The
allies finally decided upon a systematic assault of
the forts on all sides of the city at once. In this way,
313
THE NEW MAP OF EUROPE
the Turks were not able to use their heavy artillery
to best advantage. Advancing with scissors, the
Bulgarians and Servians cut their way through the
tangle of barbed wire. On the 24th and 25th, the
forts fell one after the other. Czar Ferdinand entered
the city with his troops on March 26th.
It was at the moment of this heroic capture, in
which there was glory enough for all, that the clouds
of trouble between Bulgaria and Servia began to
appear on the horizon. Shukri pasha, following the
old policy of the Turks, which had been so successful
for centuries in the Balkan Peninsula, tried to surren-
der to the Servian general, who was too loyal to
discipline to fall into this trap. But the Servian
newspapers began to say that it was really the Servian
army who had captured the city, and that Shukri
pasha recognized this fact when he sent to find the
Servian commander. There was an unedifying duel
of newspapersbetween Belgrade and Sofia, which
showed that the material for conflagration was
ready.
In the second period of the war, the Servians gave
substantial aid, especially in artillery, to the Mon-
tenegrins,who had been besieging Scutari ever since
October I5th. I went over the mountain of Tarabosh
on horse with an Albanian who had been one of its
defenders. He related graphically the story of the
repeated assaults of the Montenegrins and Servians.
Each time they were driven back before they reached
those batteries that dominated Scutari and made
impossible the entry to the city without their capture.
The loss of life" was tremendous. The bravery of the
BALKAN ALLIANCE AGAINST TURKEY
assailants could do nothing against the miles and
miles of barbed wire. No means of stopping assault
has ever proved more efficacious. The besiegers were
unable to capture Tarabosh. So they could not enter
the city.
At the beginning of the war, Scutari was under
the command of Hassan Riza pasha. In February,
he was assassinated by his subordinate, Essad pasha,
an Albanian of the Toptani family, who had been a
favourite of Abdul Hamid, and had had a rather
questionable career in the gendarmerie during the
days of despotism. After the assassination of the
Turkish commandant, it was for Albania and not for
Turkey that Essad pasha continued the resistance.
In March, Austria began to threaten the Montene-
grins, and assure them that they could not keep the
city. The story of how she secured the agreement of
the Great Powers in coercing Montenegro is told in
another chapter. Montenegro was defiant, and paid
no attention to an international blockade. But on
April 1 3th, the Servians, fearing international com-
plications, withdrew from the siege. It was astonish-
ing news to the world that after this, on April 22d,
Essad pasha surrendered Scutari to the King of
Montenegro, with the stipulation that he could
withdraw with his garrison, his light artillery, and
whatever munitions he might be able to take with
him.
The Ottoman flag had ceased to wave in any part
ofEurope except Constantinople and the Dardanelles.
The war was over, whether the Young Turks would
have it so or not. Facts are facts.
315
THE NEW MAP OF EUROPE
THE TREATY OF LONDON
320
RUPTURE BETWEEN THE ALLIES
have already spoken of how fearful the European
Chancelleries were of an Ottoman victory. Had
they not been so morally certain of Turkey's triumph
they would never have sent to the belligerents their
famous and in the light of subsequent events ridi-
culous joint note concerning the status quo.
But if the Great Powers were unprepared for the
succession of Balkan triumphs, the allies were much
more astonished at what they were able to accom-
plish. Kirk Kilisse and Lule Burgas gave Thrace to
Bulgaria. Kumanovo opened up the valley of the
Vardar to the Servians, while the Greeks marched
straight to Salonika without serious opposition.
The victories of the Servians and Greeks, so easily
won, were to the Bulgarians a calamity which over-
shadowed their own striking military successes.
They had spilled much blood and wasted their
strength in the conquest of Thrace which they did
not want, while their allies but rivals for all that
were in possession of Macedonia, the Bulgaria irre-
denta. To be encircling Adrianople and besieging
Constantinople, cities in which they had only second-
ary interest, while the Servians attacked Monastir
and the Greeks were settling themselves comfort-
ably in Salonika, was the irony of fate for those who
felt that others were reaping the fruits for which they
had made so great and so admirable a sacrifice.
When we come to judge dispassionately the folly
of Bulgaria in provoking a war with her comrades in
arms, and the seemingly amazing greed for land
which it revealed, we must remember that the Bul-
garians felt that they had accomplished everything
21 321
THE NEW MAP OF EUROPE
to receive nothing. Salonika and not Adrianople
was the city of their dreams. Macedonia and not
Thrace was the country which they had taken arms
to liberate. The ^Egean Sea and not the extension
of their Black Sea littoral formed the substantial
and logical economic background to the appeal of
race which led them to insist so strongly in gathering
under their sovereignty all the elements of the Bul-
garian people. European writers have not been able
to understand how little importance the Bulgarians
attached to their territorial acquisitions in Thrace,
and of how little interest it was for them to acquire
new possessions in which there were so few Bulgarians.
Then, which had pushed
too, the powerful elements
Bulgaria into the war with Turkey, and had contri-
buted so greatly to her successes, were of Mace-
donian origin. In Sofia, the Macedonians are
numerically, as well as financially and politically,
very strong. I had a revelation of this, such as the
compilation of statistics cannot give, on the day
after the massacre of Kotchana. The newspapers
called upon the Macedonians in Sofia to put out
all
324
RUPTURE BETWEEN THE ALLIES
at the hands of Greece as at the hands of Bulgaria.
It is only because Greece feared that Servia might
be driven to combine with Bulgaria against her,
that the frontier in this agreement was drawn south
of Monastir. The Greek army officers opposed
strongly this concession, but Venizelos was wise
enough to see that the maintenance of Greek claims
to Monastir might result in the loss of Salonika.
The Serbo- Greek alliance was not made public until
the middle of June. Bulgaria had also been making
overtures to Greece, and at the end of May had
expressed her willingness to waive her claim to
Salonika in return for Greek support against Servia.
Venizelos, already bound to Servia, was honourable
enough to refuse this proposition.
But the military reputation of Bulgaria was still
so strong in Bulgarian diplomacy that Servia and
Greece were anxious to arrive, if possible, at an
arrangement without war. Venizelos proposed a
meeting at Salonika. Bulgaria declined. Then
Venizelos and Pasitch together proposed the arbi-
tration of the Czar. Bulgaria at the first seemed to
receive this proposition favourably, but stipulated
that it would be only for the disputed, matter in her
treaty with Servia. At this moment, the Russian
Czar sent a moving appeal to the Balkan States to
avoid the horrors of a fratricidal war. Bulgaria
then agreed to send, together with her Allies, dele-
gates to a conference at Petrograd.
All the while, Premier Gueshoff of Bulgaria had
been struggling for peace against the pressure and
the intrigues of the Macedonian party at Sofia.
325
THE NEW MAP OF EUROPE
They looked upon the idea of a Petrograd conference
as the betrayal of Macedonians and Bulgarians by
the mother country. Unable to maintain his posi-
tion, Gueshoff resigned. His withdrawal ruined
Bulgaria, for he was replaced by M. Daneff, who
was heart and soul with the Macedonian party. A
period of waiting followed. But from this moment
war seemed inevitable to those who knew the feeling
on both sides. Daneff and his friends did not hesi-
tate. They would not listen to reason. They
believed that they had the power to force Greece
and Servia to a peace very nearly on their own
terms. Public opinion was behind them, for
news was continually coming to Sofia of Greek and
Servian oppression of Bulgarians in the region be-
tween Monastir and Salonika. These stories of
unspeakable cruelty, which were afterwards estab-
lished to be true by the Carnegie Commission, had
much to do with making possible the second war.
It was not difficult for the Macedonian party at
Sofia to precipitate hostilities. The Bulgarian
general staff, in spite of the caution that should have
imposed itself upon them by the consideration of the
329
CHAPTER XVI
THE WAR BETWEEN THE BALKAN ALLIES
in their own
star. The proof of the fact that the
Bulgarians never dreamed of anything but the suc-
cess of their "bluff," or, if there was resistance, of an
easy victory, found
is in the few troops at the dis-
342
CHAPTER XVII
THE TREATY OF BUKAREST
the delegates from the various im-
350
CHAPTER XVIII
367
CHAPTER XIX
THE AUSTRO-HUNGARIAN ULTIMATUM
TO SERVIA
annexed provinces.
368
AUSTRIA'S ULTIMATUM TO SERVIA
This violation of the Treaty of Berlin by Austria-
Hungary aroused a strong protest not only in Servia
and in Turkey, but also among the other Powers
who had signed at Berlin the conditions of the main-
tenance of the integrity of the Ottoman Empire.
The was especially strong in London and
protest
Petrograd. But Austria-Hungary had the backing
of Germany, whose Ambassador at Petrograd,
Count de Pourtales, did not hesitate several times
during the winter to exercise pressure that went almost
point of being a threat upon the Russian Foreign
to the
24 369
Hungary. After several months of pourparlers an
agreement was made between Constantinople and
Vienna on February 26, 1909. Turkey agreed to
recognize the annexation in return for financial
compensation. The negotiations at Constantinople
concerning Bosnia and Herzegovina are a monument
to the diplomatic finesse and skill of the late Baron
Marschallvon Bieberstein and of Marquis Pallavicini.
To lose something that you know you can no
longer keep is far different from losing the hope of
379
THE NEW MAP OF EUROPE
10. To notify without delay to the Austro-
Hungarian Government the execution of the meas-
ures included in the preceding points.
Is there any man with red blood in his veins who can
be prevented from having hopes and dislikes, and
expressing them? Could Servia prevent Servians
from stating how they felt about the political status
of their race in Croatia and in Bosnia? Did Austria-
385
CHAPTER XX
GERMANY FORCES WAR UPON RUSSIA
AND FRANCE
title of this chapter seems to indicate that I
have the intention of taking sides in what
THEmany people believe to be an open question.
But this is not the case. The German contention,
that Russia caused the war, must be clearly distin-
guished from the contention, that Russia forced the
war. There is a great deal of reason in the first
contention. No impartial student, who has written
with sympathy concerning Great Britain's attitude
in the Crimean War, can fail to give Germany just
as strong justification for declaring war on Russia
in 1914 as Great Britain had in 1854. But, when we
come down to the narrower question of responsibility
for launching the war in which almost all of Europe
is now engaged, there can be no doubt that it was
consequences.
The next day, July 24th, a telegram from the
German Ambassador at Petrograd to the Chancellor
stated that M. Sasonow was very much agitated,
and had "declared most positively that Russia could
not permit under any circumstances that the Servo-
Austrian difficulty be settled alone between the
parties concerned."
There was still time for Germany, warned by the
attitude taken by Russia, to counsel her ally to accept
whatever conciliatory response Servia might give.
But this was not done. As we have already seen in
the previous chapter, the Austro-Hungarian Minister
at Belgrade, without communicating with his Govern-
ment, declared the Servian response unsatisfactory,
392
FRANCO -GERMAN
GERMANY FORCES THE WAR
even though it gave an opening for further negotia-
tions, and withdrew from Belgrade with all the
members of the legation staff.
This precipitate, and, in view of the gravity of
the international situation, unreasonable action could
have been avoided, had Chancellor von Bethmann-
Hollweg telegraphed the word to Vienna.
Not only was the Austro-Hungarian Minister
allowed to leave Belgrade in this way, but, after
three days had elapsed, Austria-Hungary took the
irrevocable step of declaring war on Servia.
During these three days, Sir Edward Grey re-
quested the British Ambassadors at Rome and Vienna
and Berlin to make every possible effort to find
ground for negotiation. On the morning of July
27th, Sir Maurice de Bunsen, British Ambassador
at Vienna, submitted to Count Berchtold the pro-
position of Sir Edward Grey, which was made
simultaneously at Petrograd, that the question at
issue be adjusted in a conference held at London.
In the meantime, after a conversation with Sir
Rennell Rodd, the Marquis di San Giuliano, the
Italian Minister of Foreign Affairs, telegraphed to
Berlin, suggesting that Germany, France, Great
Britain, and Italy mediate between Austria-Hungary
and Russia. In sharp contrast to the efforts being
made by the British Ambassadors, the German
Ambassador at Paris, in an interview with Premier
Viviani, insistedupon the impossibility of a confer-
ence of mediation, and announced categorically that
was a common
the only possible solution of the difficulty
French and German intervention at Petrograd. In
393
THE NEW MAP OF EUROPE
other words, France could avoid war by assisting
her enemy in humiliating her ally !
398
CHAPTER XXI
GREAT BRITAIN ENTERS THE WAR
balance of power in European diplomacy
led inevitably to a rapprochement between
THE France and Russia and Great Britain to offset
the Triple Alliance of Germany and Austria-Hungary
and Italy.
The Triple Alliance, however, while purely de-
fensive, was still an alliance. It had endured for
over thirty years, and the three Powers generally
sustained each other in diplomatic moves. Their
military and naval strategists were in constant com-
munication, and ready at any time to bring all their
forces into play in a European war.
France and Russia had also entered into a defen-
sive alliance. This had not been accomplished with-
out great difficulty. Were it not for the constant
menace to France from Germany, the French Parlia-
ment would not have ratified the alliance in the first
place, nor would it have stood the strain of increas-
ing Radicalism in French sentiment during the last
decade. While there is much intellectual and tem-
peramental affinity between Gaul and Slav, there is
no political affinity between democratic France and
autocratic Russia.
The commercial rivalry of Great Britain and
399
THE NEW MAP OF EUROPE
Germany led to a rivalry of armaments. The struggle
of German industry for the control of the world
markets the real cause of the creation and rapid
is
\ EUKOPE
In 1914
GREAT BRITAIN ENTERS THE WAR
As two statements, there is before
I record these
me a cartoon from a recent issue of Punch. The
Kaiser, with a leer on his face, is leaning over the
shoulder of King Albert, who is looking out with
folded arms upon the smoking ruins of his country,
and the long defile of refugees. The Kaiser says,
''See, you have lost all." King Albert answers,
"Not my soul."
To be just to Germany, necessary for us to quote
is
Germany answered :
412
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