(World History) Woodrow Wilson and League of Nations

Thomas Woodrow Wilson (1856 –1924)

  • Woodrow Wilson was one of America’s greatest Presidents. He was the 28th President of the United States, in office from 1913 to 1921.
  • His domestic program expanded the role of the federal government in managing the economy and protecting the interests of citizens.
  • His foreign policy established a new vision of America’s role in the world. And he helped to make the White House the center of power in Washington.
  • Most historians rank him among the five most important American Presidents, along with Washington, Lincoln, and the two Roosevelt. 
  • Born in Virginia in 1856 and raised in Georgia and South Carolina, Wilson’s early memories included seeing Yankee soldiers marching into Augusta at the end of the Civil War.
  • Wilson’s father was a Presbyterian minister who fervently supported the South’s secession from the Union. 
  • Because of the war’s disruption, much of Wilson’s early education came from his father at home.
  • In 1875, he entered Princeton, graduating in 1879.
  • After a brief period at the law school of the University of Virginia, he studied on his own and passed the Georgia bar examination.
  • Bored as a lawyer in Atlanta, he enrolled at Johns Hopkins University, where he earned a Ph.D. in history and political science in 1886.
  • After a successful academic career as an author and professor at Bryn Mawr, Wesleyan, and Princeton, Wilson was elected president of Princeton in 1902.
  • In that office, his efforts to modernize the college brought him attention as a progressive reformer, and in 1910, New Jersey Democrats approached him about running for governor.
  • Wilson accepted, but on the condition that their support came with “no strings attached.

League of Nations (1919-1939)

  • The League of Nations came into being after the end of World War One. 
  • The League of Nation’s task was simple – to ensure that war never broke out again. After the turmoil caused by the Versailles Treaty, many looked to the League to bring stability to the world.
  • America entered World War One in 1917.
  • The country as a whole and the president – Woodrow Wilson in particular – was horrified by the slaughter that had taken place in what was meant to be a civilised part of the world.
  • The only way to avoid a repetition of such a disaster was to create an international body whose sole purpose was to maintain world peace and which would sort out international disputes as and when they occurred.
  • This would be the task of the League of Nations. After the devastation of the war, support for such a good idea was great.

The organization of the League of Nations 

  • The League of Nations was to be based in Geneva, Switzerland. 
  • This choice was natural as Switzerland was a neutral country and had not fought in World War One.
  • No one could dispute this choice especially as an international organization such as the Red Cross was already based in Switzerland. 
  • If a dispute did occur, the League, under its Covenant, could do three things – these were known as its sanctions: 
  • It could call on the states in dispute to sit down and discuss the problem in an orderly and peaceful manner.
  • This would be done in the League’s Assembly – which was essentially the League’s parliament which would listen to disputes and come to a decision on how to proceed.
  • If one nation was seen to be the offender, the League could introduce verbal sanctions – warning an aggressor nation that she would need to leave another nation’s territory or face the consequences.
  • If the states in dispute failed to listen to the Assembly’s decision, the League could introduce economic sanctions. This would be arranged by the League’s Council.
  • The purpose of this sanction was to financially hit the aggressor nation so that she would have to do as the League required.
  • The logic behind it was to push an aggressor nation towards bankruptcy, so that the people in that state would take out their anger on their government forcing them to accept the League’s decision.
  • The League could order League members not to do any trade with an aggressor nation in an effort to bring that aggressor nation to heel.
  • If this failed, the League could introduce physical sanctions. This meant that military force would be used to put into place the League’s decision. 
  • However, the League did not have a military force at its disposal and no member of the League had to provide one under the terms of joining – unlike the current United Nations. 
  • Therefore, it could not carry out any threats and any country defying its authority would have been very aware of this weakness.
  • The only two countries in the League that could have provided any military might were Britain and France and both had been severely depleted strength-wise in World War One and could not provide the League with the backing it needed.
  • Also both Britain and France were not in a position to use their finances to pay for an expanded army as both were financially hit very hard by World War One. 

The League also had other weaknesses:

  • The country, whose president, Woodrow Wilson, had dreamt up the idea of the League – America -, refused to join it.
  • As America was the world’s most powerful nation, this was a serious blow to the prestige of the League.
  • However, America’s refusal to join the League, fitted in with her desire to have an isolationist policy throughout the world. 
  • Germany was not allowed to join the League in 1919.
  • As Germany had started the war, according to the Treaty of Versailles, one of her punishments was that she was not considered to be a member of the international community and, therefore, she was not invited to join. 
  • This was a great blow to Germany but it also meant that the League could not use whatever strength Germany had to support its campaign against aggressor nations.
  • Russia was also not allowed to join as in 1917, she had a communist government that generated fear in Western Europe and in 1918, the Russian royal family – the Romanovs was murdered.
  • Such a country could not be allowed to take its place in the League.
  • Therefore, three of the world’s most powerful nations (potentially for Russia and Germany) played no part in supporting the League. 
  • The two most powerful members were Britain and France – both had suffered financially and militarily during the war – and neither was enthusiastic to get involved in disputes that did not affect Western Europe.
  • Therefore, the League had a fine ideal – to end war for good.
  • However, if an aggressor nation was determined enough to ignore the League’s verbal warnings, all the League could do was enforce economic sanctions and hope that these worked as it had no chance or enforcing its decisions using military might.

The successes of the League of Nations

  • In view of the League’s desire to end war, the only criteria that can be used to classify a success, was whether war was avoided and a peaceful settlement formulated after a crisis between two nations.

The League experienced success in:

The Aaland Islands (1921) 

  • These islands are near enough equal distant between Finland and Sweden.
  • They had traditionally belonged to Finland but most of the islanders wanted to be governed by Sweden.
  • Neither Sweden nor Finland could come to a decision as to who owned the islands and in 1921 they asked the League to adjudicate. 
  • The League’s decision was that they should remain with Finland but that no weapons should ever be kept there. 
  • Both countries accepted the decision and it remains in force to this day.

Upper Silesia (1921)

  • The Treaty of Versailles had given the people of Upper Silesia the right to have a referendum on whether they wanted to be part of Germany or part of Poland. In this referendum, 700,000 voted for Germany and 500,000 for Poland. 
  • This close result resulted in rioting between those who expected Silesia to be made part of Germany and those who wanted to be part of Poland. The League was asked to settle this dispute. 
  • After a six-week inquiry, the League decided to split Upper Silesia between Germany and Poland.
  • The League’s decision was accepted by both countries and by the people in Upper Silesia.

Memel (1923)

  • Memel was/is a port in Lithuania.
  • Most people who lived in Memel were Lithuanians and, therefore, the government of Lithuania believed that the port should be governed by it.
  • However, the Treaty of Versailles had put Memel and the land surrounding the port under the control of the League. For three years, a French general acted as a governor of the port but in 1923 the Lithuanians invaded the port.
  • The League intervened and gave the area surrounding Memel to Lithuania but they made the port an “international zone”. Lithuania agreed to this decision. 
  • Though this can be seen as a League success – as the issue was settled – a counter argument is that what happened was the result of the use of force and that the League responded in a positive manner to those (the Lithuanians) who had used force.

Turkey (1923)

  • The League failed to stop a bloody war in Turkey but it did respond to the humanitarian crisis caused by this war. 1,400,000 refugees had been created by this war with 80% of them being women and children. 
  • Typhoid and cholera were rampant.
  • The League sent doctors from the Health Organization to check the spread of disease and it spent £10 million on building farms, homes etc for the refugees. 
  • Money was also invested in seeds, wells and digging tools and by 1926, work was found for 600,000 people.
  • A member of the League called this work “the greatest work of mercy which mankind has undertaken.”

Greece and Bulgaria (1925) 

  • Both these nations have a common border. In 1925, sentries patrolling this border fired on one another and a Greek soldier was killed. 
  • The Greek army invaded Bulgaria as a result. 
  • The Bulgarians asked the League for help and the League ordered both armies to stop fighting and that the Greeks should pull out of Bulgaria.
  • The League then sent experts to the area and decided that Greece was to blame and fined her £45,000.
  • Both nations accepted the decision. 

The failures of the League of Nations

  • Article 11 of the League’s Covenant stated: 
  • Therefore, any conflict between nations which ended in war and the victor of one over the other must be considered a League failure.

Italy (1919)

  • In 1919, Italian nationalists angered that the “Big Three” had, in their opinion, broken promises to Italy at the Treaty of Versailles, captured the small port of Fiume.
  • This port had been given to Yugoslavia by the Treaty of Versailles. For 15 months, Fiume was governed by an Italian nationalist called d’Annunzio. The newly created League did nothing.
  • The situation was solved by the Italian government who could not accept that d’Annunzio was seemingly more popular than they were – so they bombarded the port of Fiume and enforced surrender. In all this the League played no part despite the fact that it had just been set up with the specific task of maintaining peace.

War between Russia and Poland (1920 to 1921)

  • In 1920, Poland invaded land held by the Russians.
  • The Poles quickly overwhelmed the Russian army and made a swift advance into Russia. 
  • By 1921, the Russians had no choice but to sign the Treaty of Riga which handed over to Poland nearly 80,000 square kilometres of Russian land. This one treaty all but doubled the size of Poland.

Italy and Albania (1923)

  • The border between Italy and Albania was far from clear and the Treaty of Versailles had never really addressed this issue.
  • It was a constant source of irritation between both nations.
  • In 1923, a mixed nationality survey team was sent out to settle the issue. Whilst travelling to the disputed area, the Italian section of the survey team became separated from the main party.
  • The five Italians were shot by gunmen who had been in hiding.
  • Italy accused Greece of planning the whole incident and demanded payment of a large fine. Greece refused to pay up.
  • In response, the Italians sent its navy to the Greek island of Corfu and bombarded the coastline.
  • Greece appealed to the League for help but Italy, lead by Benito Mussolini, persuaded the League via the Conference of Ambassadors, to fine Greece 50 million lire. 
  • To follow up this success, Mussolini invited the Yugoslavian government to discuss ownership of Fiume.
  • The Treaty of Versailles had given Fiume to Yugoslavia but with the evidence of a bombarded Corfu, the Yugoslavs handed over the port to Italy with little argument.

The social successes of the League of Nations

  • At a social level the League did have success and most of this is easily forgotten with its failure at a political level. 
  • Many of the groups that work for the United Nations now grew out of what was established by the League.
  • Teams were sent to the Third World to dig fresh water wells, the Health Organisation started a campaign to wipe out leprosy.
  • This idea – of wiping out from the world a disease – was taken up by the United Nations with its smallpox campaign. 
  • Work was done in the Third World to improve the status of women there and child slave labour was also targeted. Drug addiction and drug smuggling were also attacked.
  • The greatest success the League had involving these social issues, was simply informing the world at large that these problems did exist and that they should be tackled.
  • No organization had done this before the League. 
  • These social problems may have continued but the fact that they were now being actively investigated by the League and were then taken onboard by the United Nations must be viewed as a success. 

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