This article
is excerpted from the chapter "World War I: The Turning Point"
in Great
Wars and Great Leaders: A Libertarian Rebuttal (2010).
The chapter is a much expanded version of an essay that originally
appeared in The
Costs of War: America's Pyrrhic Victories (2001).
With the
onset of war in Europe, hostilities began in the North Atlantic
which eventually provided the context or rather, pretext
for America's participation. Immediately, questions of
the rights of neutrals and belligerents leapt to the fore.
In 1909,
an international conference had produced the Declaration of London,
a statement of international law as it applied to war at sea.
Since it was not ratified by all the signatories, the declaration
never came into effect. However, once war started the United States
inquired whether the belligerents were willing to abide by its
stipulations. The Central Powers agreed, providing the entente
did the same. The British agreed, with certain modifications,
which effectively negated the declaration.[1]
British "modifications" included adding a large number of previously
"free" items to the "conditional" contraband list and changing
the status of key raw materials most important of all,
food to "absolute" contraband, allegedly because they could
be used by the German army.
The traditional
understanding of international law on this point was expounded
a decade and a half earlier by the British prime minister, Lord
Salisbury:
Foodstuffs,
with a hostile destination, can be considered contraband of
war only if they are supplies for the enemy's forces. It is
not sufficient that they are capable of being so used; it must
be shown that this was in fact their destination at the time
of the seizure.[2]
That had
also been the historical position of the US government. But in
1914 the British claimed the right to capture food as well as
other previously "conditional contraband" destined not only for
hostile but even for neutral ports, on the pretense that
they would ultimately reach Germany and thus the German army.
In reality, the aim was, as Churchill, First Lord of the Admiralty
candidly admitted, to "starve the whole population men,
women, and children, old and young, wounded and sound into
submission."[3]
Britain now
assumed "practically complete control over all neutral trade,"
in "flat violation of international laws."[4]
A strong protest was prepared by State Department lawyers but
never sent. Instead, Colonel House and Spring-Rice, the British
ambassador, conferred and came up with an alternative. Denying
that the new note was even a "formal protest," the United States
politely requested that London reconsider its policy. The British
expressed their appreciation for the American viewpoint, and quietly
resolved to continue with their violations.[5]
In November
1914, the British Admiralty announced, supposedly in response
to the discovery of a German ship unloading mines off the English
coast, that henceforth the whole of the North Sea was a "military
area," or war zone, which would be mined, and into which neutral
ships proceeded "at their own risk." The British action was in
blatant contravention of international law including the
Declaration of Paris, of 1856, which Britain had signed
among other reasons, because it conspicuously failed to meet the
criteria for a legal blockade.[6]
The British
moves meant that American commerce with Germany was effectively
ended, as the United States became the arsenal of the entente.
Bound now by financial as well as sentimental ties to England,
much of American big business worked in one way or another for
the Allied cause. The house of J.P. Morgan, which volunteered
itself as coordinator of supplies for Britain, consulted regularly
with the Wilson administration in its financial operations for
the entente. The Wall Street Journal and other organs of
the business elite were noisily pro-British at every turn, until
we were finally brought into the European fray.[7]
The United
States refused to join the Scandinavian neutrals in objecting
to the closing of the North Sea, nor did it send a protest of
its own.[8] However,
when, in February, 1915, Germany declared the waters around the
British Isles a war zone, in which enemy merchant ships were liable
to be destroyed, Berlin was put on notice: if any American vessels
or American lives should be lost through U-boat action, Germany
would be held to a "strict accountability."[9]
In March,
a British steamship, Falaba, carrying munitions and passengers,
was torpedoed, resulting in the death of one American, among others.
The ensuing note to Berlin entrenched Wilson's preposterous doctrine
that the United States had the right and duty to protect
Americans sailing on ships flying a belligerent flag. Later,
John Bassett Moore, for over 30 years professor of international
law at Columbia, long-time member of the Hague Tribunal, and,
after the war, a judge at the International Court of Justice,
stated of this and of an equally absurd Wilsonian principle:
what most
decisively contributed to the involvement of the United States
in the war was the assertion of a right to protect belligerent
ships on which Americans saw fit to travel and the treatment
of armed belligerent merchantmen as peaceful vessels. Both assumptions
were contrary to reason and to settled law, and no other professed
neutral advanced them.[10]
Wilson had
placed America on a direct collision course with Germany.
On May 7,
1915, came the most famous incident in the North Atlantic war.
The British liner Lusitania was sunk, with the loss of
1,195 lives, including 124 Americans, by far the largest number
of American victims of German submarines before our entry into
the war.[11]
There was outrage in the eastern seaboard press and throughout
the American social elite and political class. Wilson was livid.
A note was fired off to Berlin, reiterating the principle of "strict
accountability," and concluding, ominously, that Germany
will not
expect the Government of the United States to omit any word
or any act necessary to the performance of its sacred duty of
maintaining the rights of the United States and its citizens
and of safeguarding their free exercise and enjoyment.[12]
At this time,
the British released the Bryce Report on Belgian atrocities. A
work of raw entente propaganda, though profiting from the name
of the distinguished English writer, the report underscored the
true nature of the unspeakable Hun.[13]
Anglophiles everywhere were enraged. The Republican Party establishment
raised the ante on Wilson, demanding firmer action. The great
majority of Americans, who devoutly wished to avoid war, had no
spokesmen within the leadership of either of the major parties.
America was beginning to reap the benefits of our divinely appointed
"bipartisan foreign policy."
In their
reply to the State Department note, the Germans observed that
submarine warfare was a reprisal for the illegal hunger blockade;
that the Lusitania was carrying munitions of war; that
it was registered as an auxiliary cruiser of the British Navy;
that British merchant ships had been directed to ram or fire upon
surfacing U-boats; and that the Lusitania had been armed.[14]
Wilson's
secretary of state, William Jennings Bryan, tried to reason with
the president: "Germany has a right to prevent contraband going
to the Allies, and a ship carrying contraband should not rely
upon passengers to protect her from attack it would be
like putting women and children in front of an army." He reminded
Wilson that a proposed American compromise, whereby Britain would
allow food into Germany and the Germans would abandon submarine
attacks on merchant ships, had been welcomed by Germany but rejected
by England. Finally, Bryan blurted out: "Why be shocked by the
drowning of a few people, if there is to be no objection to starving
a nation?"[15]
In June, convinced that the administration was headed for war,
Bryan resigned.[16]
The British
blockade was taking a heavy toll, and in February 1916, Germany
announced that enemy merchant ships, except passenger liners,
would be treated as auxiliary cruisers, liable to be attacked
without warning. The State Department countered with a declaration
that, in the absence of "conclusive evidence of aggressive purpose"
in each individual case, armed belligerent merchant ships enjoyed
all the immunities of peaceful vessels.[17]
Wilson rejected congressional calls at least to issue a warning
to Americans traveling on armed merchant ships that they did so
at their own risk. During the Mexican civil war, he had cautioned
Americans against traveling in Mexico.[18]
But now Wilson stubbornly refused.
Attention
shifted to the sea war once more when a French passenger ship,
the Sussex, bearing no flag or markings, was sunk by a
U-boat, and several Americans injured. A harsh American protest
elicited the so-called Sussex pledge from a German government
anxious to avoid a break: Germany would cease attacking without
warning enemy merchant ships found in the war zone. This was made
explicitly conditioned, however, on the presumption that "the
Government of the United States will now demand and insist that
the British Government shall forthwith observe the rules of international
law." In turn, Washington curtly informed the Germans that their
own responsibility was "absolute," in no way contingent on the
conduct of any other power.[19]
As Borchard and Lage commented:
This persistent
refusal of President Wilson to see that there was a relation
between the British irregularities and the German submarine
warfare is probably the crux of the American involvement. The
position taken is obviously unsustainable, for it is a neutral's
duty to hold the scales even and to favor neither side.[20]
But in reality,
the American leaders were anything but neutral.
Anglophile
does not begin to describe our ambassador to London, Walter Hines
Page, who, in his abject eagerness to please his hosts, displayed
all the qualities of a good English spaniel. Afterwards, Edward
Grey wrote of Page, "From the first he considered that the United
States could be brought into the war early on the side of the
Allies if the issue were rightly presented to it and a great appeal
made by the President."
"Page's advice
and suggestion were of the greatest value in warning us when to
be careful or encouraging us when we could safely be firm." Grey
recalled in particular one incident, when Washington contested
the right of the Royal Navy to stop American shipments to neutral
ports. Page came to him with the message. "'I am instructed,'
he said, 'to read this despatch to you.' He read and I listened.
He then added: 'I have now read the despatch, but I do not agree
with it; let us consider how it should be answered.'" Grey, of
course, regarded Page's conduct as "the highest type of patriotism."[21]
Page's attitude
was not out of place among his superiors in Washington. In his
memoirs, Bryan's successor as Secretary of State, Robert Lansing,
described how, after the Lusitania episode, Britain "continued
her policy of tightening the blockade and closing every possible
channel by which articles could find their way to Germany," committing
ever more flagrant violations of our neutral rights. In response
to State Department notes questioning these policies, the British
never gave the slightest satisfaction. They knew they didn't have
to. For, as Lansing confessed:
in dealing
with the British Government there was always in my mind the
conviction that we would ultimately become an ally of Great
Britain and that it would not do, therefore, to let our controversies
reach a point where diplomatic correspondence gave place to
action.
Once joining
the British, "we would presumably wish to adopt some of the policies
and practices, which the British adopted," for then we, too, would
be aiming to "destroy the morale of the German people by an economic
isolation, which would cause them to lack the very necessaries
of life." With astounding candor, Lansing disclosed that the years-long
exchange of notes with Britain had been a sham:
everything
was submerged in verbiage. It was done with deliberate purpose.
It insured the continuance of the controversies and left the
questions unsettled, which was necessary in order to leave this
country free to act and even act illegally when it entered the
war.[22]
Colonel House,
too, was distinctly unneutral. Breaking with all previous American
practice, as well as with international law, House maintained
that it was the character of the foreign government that
must decide which belligerent a "neutral" United States should
favor. When in September 1914, the Austrian ambassador complained
to House about the British attempt to starve the peoples of Central
Europe "Germany faces famine if the war continues"
House smugly reported the interview to Wilson: "He forgot to add
that England is not exercising her power in an objectionable way,
for it is controlled by a democracy."[23]
In their
president, Page, Lansing, and House found a man whose heart beat
as theirs. Wilson confided to his private secretary his deep belief:
"England is fighting our fight and you may well understand that
I shall not, in the present state of the world's affairs, place
obstacles in her way.... I will not take any action to embarrass
England when she is fighting for her life and the life of the
world."[24]
Meanwhile,
Colonel House had discovered a means to put the impending American
entry into war to good use by furthering the cause of democracy
and "turning the world into the right paths." The author of Philip
Dru: Administrator
revealed his vision to the president who "knew that God had
chosen him to do great things."[25]
The ordeal by fire would be a hard one, but "no matter what sacrifices
we make, the end will justify them." After this final battle against
the forces of reaction, the United States would join with other
democracies to uphold the peace of the world and freedom on both
land and sea, forever. To Wilson, House spoke words of seduction:
"This is the part I think you are destined to play in this world
tragedy, and it is the noblest part that has ever come to a son
of man. This country will follow you along such a path, no matter
what the cost may be."[26]
As the British
leaders had planned and hoped, the Germans were starving. On January
31, 1917, Germany announced that the next day it would begin unrestricted
submarine warfare. Wilson was stunned, but it is difficult to
see why. This is what the Germans had been implicitly threatening
for years, if nothing was done to end the illegal British blockade.
The United
States severed diplomatic relations with Berlin. The president
decided that American merchant ships were to be armed and defended
by American sailors, thus placing munitions and other contraband
sailing to Britain under the protection of the US Navy. When 11
senators, headed by Robert La Follette, filibustered the authorization
bill, a livid Wilson denounced them: "A little group of willful
men, representing no opinion but their own, have rendered the
great Government of the United States helpless and contemptible."
Wilson hesitated to act, however, well aware that the defiant
senators represented far more than just themselves.
There were
troubling reports from the standpoint of the war party
in Washington like that from William Durant, head of General
Motors. Durant telephoned Colonel House, entreating him to stop
the rush to war; he had just returned from the West and met only
one man between New York and California who wanted war.[27]
But opinion began to shift and gave Wilson the opening he needed.
A telegram, sent by Alfred Zimmermann of the German Foreign Office
to the Mexican government, had been intercepted by British intelligence
and forwarded to Washington. Zimmermann proposed a military alliance
with Mexico in case war broke out between the United States
and Germany. Mexico was promised the American Southwest, including
Texas. The telegram was released to the press.
For the first
time backed by popular feeling, Wilson authorized the arming of
American merchant ships. In mid-March, a number of freighters
entering the declared submarine zone were sunk, and the president
called Congress into special session for April 2.
Given his
war speech, Woodrow Wilson may be seen as the anti-Washington.
George Washington, in his Farewell Address, advised that "the
great rule of conduct for us in regard to foreign nations is,
in extending our commercial relations, to have with them as little
political connection as possible" (emphasis in original).
Wilson was also the anti-John Quincy Adams. Adams, author of the
Monroe Doctrine, declared that the United States of America "does
not go abroad in search of monsters to destroy." Discarding this
whole tradition, Wilson put forward the vision of an America that
was entangled in countless political connections with foreign
powers and on perpetual patrol for monsters to destroy. Our purpose
in going to war was
to fight
thus for the ultimate peace of the world and for the liberation
of its peoples, the German people included: for the rights of
nations great and small and the privilege of men everywhere
to choose their way of life and of obedience. The world must
be made safe for democracy ... [we fight] for a universal dominion
of right by such a concert of free peoples as shall bring peace
and safety to all nations and make the world at last free.[28]
Wilson was
answered in the Senate by Robert La Follette, and in the House
by the Democratic leader Claude Kitchin, to no avail.[29]
In Congress, near-hysteria reigned, as both chambers approved
the declaration of war by wide margins. The political class and
its associates in the press, the universities, and the pulpits
ardently seconded the plunge into world war and the abandonment
of the America that was. As for the population at large, it acquiesced,
as one historian has remarked, out of general boredom with peace,
the habit of obedience to its rulers, and a highly unrealistic
notion of the consequences of America's taking up arms.[30]
Three times
in his war message, Wilson referred to the need to fight without
passion or vindictiveness rather a professor's idea of
what waging war entailed. The reality for America would be quite
different.
Notes
[1]
Charles Callan Tansill, America
Goes to War (Gloucester, Mass.: Peter Smith, 1963 [1938]),pp.
13562.
[2]
Ibid., p. 148.
[3]
Cited in H.C. Peterson, Propaganda
for War: The Campaign against American Neutrality, 19141917
(Norman, Okla.: University of Oklahoma Press, 1939),p. 83. As
Lord Devlin put it, the Admiralty's orders "were clear enough.
All food consigned to Germany through neutral ports was to be
captured, and all food consigned to Rotterdam was to be presumed
consigned to Germany.... The British were determined on the
starvation policy, whether or not it was lawful." Patrick Devlin,
Too
Proud to Fight: Woodrow Wilson's Neutrality (New York:
Oxford University Press, 1975), pp. 193, 195.
[4]
Edwin Borchard and William Pooter Lage, Neutrality
for the United States (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University
Press, 1937), p. 61.
[5]
Borchard and Lage, Neutrality, pp. 6272. The US
ambassador in London, Walter Hines Page, was already showing
his colors. In October, he sent a telegram to the State Department,
denouncing any American protests against British interference
with neutral rights. "This is not a war in the sense we have
hitherto used the word. It is a world-clash of systems of government,
a struggle to the extermination of English civilization or of
Prussian military autocracy. Precedents have gone to the scrap
heap."
[6]
See Ralph Raico, "The Politics of Hunger: A Review," in Review
of Austrian Economics, vol. 3 (1989), p. 254, and the sources
cited. The article is included in the present volume.
[7]
Tansill, America Goes to War, pp. 13233: "The Wall
Street Journal was never troubled by a policy of 'editorial
neutrality,' and as the war progressed it lost no opportunity
to condemn the Central Powers in the most unmeasured terms."
[8]
Ibid., pp. 17778.
[9]
Robert M. La Follete, the progressive senator from Wisconsin,
scathingly exposed Wilson's double standard in a speech on the
Senate floor two days after Wilson's call for war. It is reprinted
in the vital collection, Murray Polner and Thomas E. Woods,
Jr., eds., We
Who Dared to Say No to War: American Antiwar Writing from 1812
to Now (New York: Basic Books, 2008), pp. 12332.
[10]
H.C. Peterson, Propaganda for War: The Campaign Against American
Neutrality, 19141917 (Norman, Okla.: University of
Oklahoma Press, 1939),p. 112. Cf. Borchard and Lage, Neutrality,
p. 136 (emphasis in original): "there was no precedent or legal
warrant for a neutral to protect a belligerent ship from
attack by its enemy because it happened to have on board American
citizens. The exclusive jurisdiction of the country of the vessel's
flag, to which all on board are subject, is an unchallengeable
rule of law."
[11]
On the possible involvement of Winston Churchill, First Lord
of the Admiralty, in the genesis of this disaster, see "Rethinking
Churchill," in the present volume.
[12]
Thomas G. Paterson, ed., Major
Problems in American Foreign Policy. Documents and Essays,
vol. 2, Since 1914, 2nd ed. (Lexington, Mass.:
D. C. Heath, 1978), pp. 3032.
[13]
On the fraudulence of the Bryce Report, see Read, Atrocity
Propaganda, pp. 20108; Peterson, Propaganda for
War, pp. 5170; and Knightley, The
First Casualty, pp. 8384, 107.
[14]
Tansill, America Goes to War, p. 323. The German captain
of the U-boat that sank the Lusitania afterwards pointed
out that British captains of merchant ships had already been
decorated or given bounties for ramming or attempting to ram
surfaced submarines; see also Peterson, Propaganda for War,
p. 114.
[15]
William Jennings Bryan and Mary Baird Bryan, The
Memoirs of William Jennings Bryan (Philadelphia: John
C. Winston, 1925), pp. 39799; Tansill, America Goes
to War, pp. 25859.
[16]
To my mind, Bryan's antiwar position and principled resignation
more than make up for his views on evolution, despite H. L.
Mencken's attempted demolition of Bryan in a well-known essay.
[17]
Edwin Borchard and William Pooter Lage, Neutrality for the
United States (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press,
1937),pp. 12224. John Bassett Moore was scathing in his
denunciation of Wilson's new doctrine, that an armed merchant
ship enjoyed all the rights of an unarmed one. Citing precedents
going back to Supreme Court Justice John Marshall, Moore stated
that: "By the position actually taken, the United States was
committed, while professing to be a neutral, to maintain a belligerent
position." Alex Mathews Arnett, Claude
Kitchin and the Wilson War Policies (New York: Russell
and Russell, 1971 [1937]), pp. 15758.
[18]
In fact, during the Mexican conflict, Wilson had prohibited
outright the shipment of arms to Mexico. As late as August,
1913, he declared: "I shall follow the best practice of nations
in this matter of neutrality by forbidding the exportation of
arms or munitions of war of any kind from the United States
to any part of the Republic of Mexico." Tansill, America
Goes to War, p. 64.
[19]
Ibid., pp. 51115.
[20]
Borchard and Lage, Neutrality, p. 168.
[21]
Edward Grey, Viscount Grey of Fallodon, Twenty-Five
Years. 18921916 (New York: Frederick A. Stokes,
1925), pp. 10102, 10811.
[22]
Robert Lansing, War
Memoirs (Indianapolis: BobbsMerrill, 1935), pp.
12728.
[23]
Charles Seymour, ed., The
Intimate Papers of Colonel House (Boston: Houghton Mifflin,
1926), vol. 1, p. 323.
[24]
Joseph P. Tumulty, Woodrow
Wilson as I Know Him (New York: Doubleday, Page, 1921),
p. 231. Proofs such as these that our leaders had shamelessly
lied in their protestations of neutrality were published in
the 1920s and '30s. This explains the passion of the anti-war
movement before the Second World War much better than the imaginary
"Nazi sympathies" or "anti-Semitism" nowadays invoked by ignorant
interventionist writers. As Susan A. Brewer writes in Why
America Fights: Patriotism and War Propaganda from the Philippines
to Iraq (New York: Oxford University Press 2009), p.
280, "The Committee on Public Information presented the war
as a noble crusade fought for democracy against demonized Germans.
Such a portrayal was overturned by unfulfilled war aims overseas,
the abuse of civil liberties at home, and revelations of false
atrocity propaganda. In the years that followed Americans expressed
distrust of government propaganda and military intervention
in what they considered to be other people's wars." This helps
account for the appearance from time to time of debunking works
of popular revisionism by authors infuriated by the facts they
discovered, such as C. Hartley Grattan, Why
We Fought (Indianapolis: BobbsMerrill, 1969 [1929]);
Walter Millis, Road
to War: America 19141917 (Boston: Houghton Mifflin,
1935); and later Charles L. Mee, Jr., The
End of Order: Versailles 1919 (New York: E. P. Dutton,
1980); and Walter Karp's invaluable, The
Politics of War: The Story of Two Wars Which Altered Forever
the Political Life of the American Republic (18901920)
(New York: Harper and Row, 1979).
[25]
Walter A. McDougall, Promised
Land, Crusader State: The American Encounter with the World
since 1776 (Boston/New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1997),p.
127.
[26]
Seymour, The Intimate Papers of Colonel House, vol. 1,
p. 470; vol. 2, p. 92.
[27]
Seymour, The Intimate Papers of Colonel House, vol. 2,
p. 448.
[28]
The Papers of Woodrow Wilson, January 24-April 6, 1917,
Arthur S. Link, ed. (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press,
1983), vol. 41, pp. 52527.
[29]
See Robert M. La Follette, "Speech on the Declaration of War
against Germany," in Arthur A. Ekirch, Jr., ed., Voices
in Dissent: An Anthology of Individualist Thought in the United
States (New York: Citadel Press, 1964), pp. 21122;
and Arnett, Claude Kitchin, pp. 22735.
[30]
Otis L. Graham, Jr., The
Great Campaigns: Reform and War in America, 19001928
(Malabar, Fla.: Robert E. Krieger, 1987), p. 89.