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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78609 ***
+ THE FIRST MOROCCAN CRISIS
+ 1904-1906
+
+
+ THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS
+ CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE BAKER & TAYLOR COMPANY
+ NEW YORK
+
+ THE CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
+ LONDON
+
+ THE MARUZEN-KABUSHIKI-KAISHA
+ TOKYO, OSAKA, KYOTO, FUKUOKA, SENDAI
+
+ THE COMMERCIAL PRESS, LIMITED
+ SHANGHAI
+
+
+
+
+ THE FIRST
+ MOROCCAN CRISIS
+ 1904-1906
+
+ BY
+ EUGENE N. ANDERSON
+ _The University of Chicago_
+
+[Decoration]
+
+ THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS
+ CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT 1930 BY THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
+ ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. PUBLISHED JUNE 1930
+ * * * * *
+ COMPOSED AND PRINTED BY THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS
+ CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, U.S.A.
+
+
+
+
+ DEDICATED
+ TO
+ MY MOTHER
+
+
+
+
+ PREFACE
+
+
+The fall of Morocco under European control marks the nadir in the annals
+of Islam. The land was the last important Mohammedan territory to be
+taken by the Christians. Thereafter began the Islamic revival which is
+still in course. This volume, however, deals not with that subject but
+with the history of a conflict in European diplomacy, referring to
+Morocco proper only when necessary to explain the moves of the Powers.
+
+The Moroccan crisis of 1904-6 contained all those elements that were
+present at the other crises on the road to the great war—desire for
+colonial acquisition, trade and investment rivalries, national honor,
+diplomacy which contained the threat of war, the principle of the
+balance of power, fears, and counterfears. The special interest of this
+episode lies in the fact that, as the first of the series, it shows the
+Powers choosing sides and fixing their opinions and policies. It
+determined the mental attitude of the players in the subsequent
+struggles and gave direction and mind, so to speak, to the later events.
+
+In the history of the Moroccan affair from approximately 1898 to 1906,
+when the first crisis ended, are mirrored almost all the important
+movements of the Powers with reference to one another. The grouping of
+the Powers around France, the development of Anglo-German rivalry, the
+failure of Germany’s policy of playing between Great Britain and the
+Dual Alliance, Germany’s _riposte_ and attempts to restore her
+position—all are either intimately connected with the Moroccan question
+or can be explained in the light of it. The Moroccan problem was the
+political barometer of Europe.
+
+In making this study I have relied chiefly upon the official documents
+contained in _Die Grosse Politik der Europäischen Kabinette, 1871-1914_,
+in _British Documents on the Origins of the War, 1898-1914_, and in the
+two _Livres jaunes_ concerning the Moroccan affair from 1901-1906. The
+presence of so much new material has rendered antiquated most of the
+older accounts of the subject. I have therefore not cited all of this
+secondary literature, preferring to give source references.
+
+In spite of this rich material, there are still obstacles to a complete,
+impartial, and balanced account of this episode. The outstanding one is
+the absence of adequate French documents. The French policy has
+practically to be studied through British or German eyes and on the
+basis of the accomplished fact. The British and the German policies are
+thus treated with more understanding and detail. But even here
+difficulties arise. History cannot be written alone on the basis of the
+official diplomatic documents of today. The variety and amount of
+information which Ranke found condensed in the reports of the Venetian
+ambassadors of the sixteenth century is now scattered in a hundred
+places. The improved facilities for communication and transportation
+have limited and specialized the correspondence of governments and their
+foreign representatives. Information is now obtained as well from
+personal interviews, newspapers, and all those means which create
+governmental as well as public opinion. Much of great importance is
+never written down at all. Foreign secretaries often give orders to
+their ambassadors without explaining their reasons. This is particularly
+true of the British, less true of the Germans. Moreover, statesmen are
+at times inclined for reasons of policy to write down how they wish a
+certain event to be viewed, not how they actually view it. To check and
+supplement the official documents, therefore, the intimate and more
+personal information in biographies, autobiographies, and memoirs has
+been especially valuable, although neither the number of those works,
+particularly on the French side, nor the material in them is complete.
+
+While international relations were more complex in the pre-war days than
+ever before in history, the study of them is facilitated by the fact
+that diplomacy was still secret, that a relatively few individuals
+guided it. By focusing attention upon these individuals, one can
+interpret the motives which consciously or unconsciously determined
+foreign policy. These men sublimated and represented the diplomatic mind
+of the nations. A new actor had also made its appearance in their midst,
+that combination of Proteus and Fata Morgana, public opinion; but even
+it was given tangible shape in the minds of the responsible statesmen
+who had to interpret it and respond to its demands. I have tried to test
+these interpretations by checking them against the opinions of
+contemporaries and by reading in the contemporary newspapers, magazines,
+speeches, and letters.
+
+Diplomatic policies and situations cannot be explained in a formula.
+Statesmen are all more or less opportunists; they usually keep several
+alternatives in mind. To assert that one country is bent on war and
+another on peace, one on revenge and aggression and another on defense,
+is to give an incomplete view. In handling the fluid and shifting
+materials of diplomacy, one must avoid both oversimplicity and
+historical fatalism. Further information will probably add or change
+many details in this study, but I believe that the main lines of the
+history of this crisis are herein explained.
+
+I wish especially to express my appreciation to Professor Bernadotte E.
+Schmitt, Professor Ferdinand Schevill, Associate Professor Arthur P.
+Scott, and Associate Professor Louis R. Gottschalk—all of the University
+of Chicago—for much beneficial advice and criticism in reading this work
+in manuscript, and to thank my sister, Dr. Jesse May McFadyen, of the
+University of Minnesota, for many hours of help in searching for the
+right phrase.
+
+ EUGENE N. ANDERSON
+
+CHICAGO, 1929
+
+
+
+
+ TABLE OF CONTENTS
+
+
+ I. FRANCE AND MOROCCO, 1898-1904 1
+
+ II. THE FRANCO-ITALIAN ENTENTE, 1900-1902 19
+
+ III. THE FRANCO-SPANISH ENTENTE, 1898-1903 35
+
+ IV. DELCASSÉ’S POLICY TOWARD GREAT BRITAIN AND GERMANY, 41
+ 1898-1902
+
+ V. THE ANGLO-GERMAN ALLIANCE NEGOTIATIONS, 1898-1901 52
+
+ VI. THE MAKING OF THE ENTENTE CORDIALE 81
+
+ VII. ANGLO-RUSSIAN RELATIONS AFTER THE MAKING OF THE ENTENTE 110
+ CORDIALE
+
+ VIII. FRENCH POLICY AFTER THE MAKING OF THE ENTENTE CORDIALE 117
+
+ IX. GERMANY AND THE ENTENTE CORDIALE, 1903-4 135
+
+ X. THE NEGOTIATIONS FOR A RUSSO-GERMAN ALLIANCE, 1904 159
+
+ XI. THE VISIT TO TANGIER 181
+
+ XII. THE MOROCCAN CRISIS FROM THE VISIT TO TANGIER TO THE FALL 196
+ OF DELCASSÉ
+
+ XIII. THE MOROCCAN CRISIS, JUNE 6-JULY 8, 1905 234
+
+ XIV. THE MOROCCAN CRISIS, JULY-OCTOBER, 1905 259
+
+ XV. THE TREATY OF BJÖRKÖ AND ITS ANNULMENT 279
+
+ XVI. THE PRELIMINARIES TO THE CONFERENCE OF ALGECIRAS 311
+
+ XVII. THE CONFERENCE OF ALGECIRAS 348
+
+ XVIII. CONCLUSION 397
+
+ INDEX 409
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER I
+
+ FRANCE AND MOROCCO, 1898-1904
+
+ I. THE DECADENT MOROCCO
+
+
+Morocco was one of the last of the “backward” countries to be taken
+under control by a European state. It was a historic land with a long
+record of wars against the Christians; but, like many another, it had
+never adapted itself to the course of European civilization, and by the
+end of the nineteenth century had consequently become consigned by
+statesmen interested in colonial conquest to the category of “dying
+states.” Hence it was qualified for acquisition, division, or control.
+
+The execution of this work was beset with unusually grave difficulties.
+Several centuries of more or less regular diplomatic and commercial
+relations with European Powers had assured Morocco international
+recognition as a sovereign and independent land. Moreover, the rival
+interests of the Powers there were so firmly established and so
+conflicting that they seemed irreconcilable. Down to 1900 these Powers
+had jealously blocked each other from a special position, and, in case
+of necessity, as in 1880, had settled common problems concerning Morocco
+by means of an international conference.[1] And while this disunion
+obtained, that country of eight million fanatical and warlike souls able
+to play one potential enemy against the other was secure.
+
+At the opening of the twentieth century Morocco was one of the least-
+known lands of the world. Insecurity of life, absence of roads and means
+of transportation and communication of any but the most primitive sort,
+undeveloped harbors poor by nature, and a governmental policy designed
+to prevent any Power from gaining a foothold in the land by the
+acquisition of property, mining or other concessions had excluded the
+“Christian dogs” and maintained Mohammedan purity.[2]
+
+Nevertheless, the country was reputed by Europeans to be rich in natural
+resources, the “pearl of North Africa.”[3] The plains and valleys, if
+irrigated and cultivated by modern methods, would, it was held, produce
+vast supplies of foodstuffs and would become one of the granaries of
+Europe. Other regions were declared to be admirably suited for grazing;
+while the mountains, those bulwarks against the encroachments of the
+desert, were envisaged as teeming with minerals. Popular imagination
+glorified Morocco into another Promised Land.[4]
+
+However that might be, Europeans were doing very little business there.
+Official French statistics reckoned the total amount of foreign trade
+with Morocco in 1903 as 109,495,888 francs. Of this small sum France and
+Algeria enjoyed 31 per cent; Great Britain, 41.6 per cent; Germany, 9
+per cent; Spain, 8.4 per cent; and the other Powers insignificant
+amounts.[5] The contrast between economic fact and economic possibility
+acted as a spur to the groups desirous of political acquisition; but the
+smallness of these economic interests and their substantial equality for
+a number of the Powers made it difficult to determine which had the
+dominant claim to develop Morocco.
+
+A conflict of strategic interests added to this complication. Morocco’s
+geographic situation on the Straits of Gibraltar and on the route to
+South Africa, her proximity to the French and Spanish possessions in
+North Africa and to Spain, made the Sherifian Empire a land coveted by
+all Powers with Western Mediterranean interests, in particular Great
+Britain, Germany, France, Spain, and Italy. Since each state suspected
+that any rival would abuse its advantages if it gained ascendancy,
+disagreement over the future of Morocco persisted. However, in an era
+which was coming to be more and more dominated by the urge for colonial
+control, this problem would not long remain unsolved. At the close of
+the century a favorable turn in international affairs and an
+accentuation of the chronic state of anarchy in the land itself brought
+the question to the fore.
+
+The period of strong rule in Morocco under Sultan Mulai-el-Hassan
+(1873-94) and the grand vizier, Ba-Ahmed, came to an end with the death
+of the latter in May, 1900, when the young, inexperienced, and
+incompetent sultan, Abd-el-Aziz, assumed authority in person. By his
+preference for foreign goods and society he soon not only exhausted his
+treasury but also estranged his subjects. He acquired a fantastic
+collection in which figured cameras, coaches, bicycles, dolls, pianos by
+the dozen, and animals for a menagerie. He amused himself lavishly with
+his European friends. He listened to the advice of his two intimates,
+Kaid Sir Harry Maclean, a former English soldier from Gibraltar who had
+been in Moroccan service for almost two decades, and Mr. W. B. Harris,
+correspondent in Morocco of the _London Times_; and by promulgating a
+program of fiscal reform sought to replenish his resources and
+reorganize his country in time to prevent the intervention of the
+Powers, particularly of France, and the consequent loss of his
+independence. But, while his intentions were good, his actions proved
+disastrous for himself and his land.[6] Scandalized by the tales of his
+antics with the Christians and outraged by the new taxes that violated
+the Koran, the natives revolted in 1900.[7] The rebellions in the north
+and northeast constituted a double menace since they might lead to
+attacks on the French and Spanish possessions and bring on an
+intervention of those two Powers.[8] The Sultan had no money, therefore
+no army; and without an army he could collect no taxes. The rumor spread
+that he had actually turned Christian and sold the land to the English.
+The political and religious ties with his people were everywhere
+breaking.[9] By 1903 his precarious authority was confined to a few
+towns; and his capital, Fez, was itself threatened by the rebels.[10]
+
+As this situation was nothing unusual in Moroccan annals, the natives
+were not greatly disturbed. If events had been permitted to take their
+normal course, a revolution would probably have replaced Abd-el-Aziz by
+some stronger man, and the country would have returned to its usual
+condition of semianarchy. The tragedy for Morocco lay in the fact that
+this disorder gave the opportunity for the interested Powers to
+intervene. The increasing insecurity of foreigners and the Sultan’s need
+for loans foreshadowed the end of Moroccan independence. In 1899 Lord
+Salisbury, British prime minister, had declared that Morocco was
+decaying and might collapse at any moment.[11] Politicians elsewhere
+began to turn their attention toward this corner of Africa. Among them
+the French assumed the lead and solved the problem.
+
+
+ II. FRANCE AND THE MOROCCAN PROBLEM, 1898-1904
+
+
+By the end of the nineteenth century France’s North African empire was
+assuming definitive form. In the 1890’s agreements with Great Britain,
+Germany, and Spain (1900) consolidated France’s possession and left only
+Morocco, a country almost inclosed on the land side by French territory,
+as an object whose acquisition was coming to be regarded by Frenchmen as
+essential to the completion of their ambitions in that region.[12]
+
+To aid in the achievement of this goal a Comité de l’Afrique française
+had been organized in 1889 to popularize African questions with the
+French people, to exert pressure upon the government, and to carry on a
+unified and consistent activity for colonial expansion which the French
+cabinets could not do. Its membership was relatively small—about seventy
+in all—but very select. With the Prince d’Arenberg as its president, it
+numbered in its ranks deputies, senators, military and naval officers,
+officials in the government (although no cabinet members, of course),
+members of the Academy, newspaper editors and owners, members of the
+Institute, members of various geographical societies, colonial
+societies, chambers of commerce—men such as M. Gabriel Hanotaux, former
+minister of foreign affairs; M. Jules Siegfried, who resigned
+temporarily when he became minister of commerce in 1893; M. Paul Révoil,
+governor-general of Algeria; General Joseph Galliéni, governor-general
+of Madagascar; M. Eugène Etienne, former undersecretary of state for the
+colonies and future cabinet member; M. Antoine Guillain, vice-president
+of the Chamber for a time and former minister of the colonies; M. Paul
+Deschanel, president of the committee for foreign and colonial affairs
+in the Chamber. Through common membership and close co-operation the
+Comité was assured of the active support of the other colonial,
+geographical, and commercial organizations. The character and position
+of its members in state affairs gave it an undeniably great influence
+upon the government as well as upon the nation. This influence was
+enhanced by the organization of groups favoring colonial acquisition in
+both the Chamber (1892) and Senate (1898), the former of which under the
+presidency of M. Etienne boasted in 1902 almost two hundred members.[13]
+
+During the 1890’s the French advocated a policy of _status quo_ with
+reference to Morocco. They opposed permitting any Power to gain undue
+influence there or allowing Morocco to reform herself. They were
+suspicious of any individual or collective intervention by the Powers,
+and wanted to hold the future completely free. But the defeats of Italy
+by Abyssinia in 1896 and of Spain by the United States in 1898 dampened
+the ardor of those two rivals. Then, when British attention was claimed
+by the Boer War and when the internal disintegration of Morocco
+increased the possibilities of intervention, the proponents of
+aggression demanded that France should act.
+
+Late in 1899 the official publication of the Comité declared that the
+Moroccan question was of paramount importance in French foreign
+policy.[14] It promoted the campaign for the acquisition of Morocco so
+successfully that by the end of 1903 almost all parties in France,
+including even the Socialists under M. Jaurès, had come to consider the
+French claims to predominance in Morocco as superior to those of any
+other Power.[15] The popular arguments, based largely upon the proximity
+of Algeria to Morocco, ranged from the theory of the “natural frontier”
+to economic and strategic contentions. In Morocco rebellions and
+religious wars could easily start, it was claimed, spreading thence over
+the whole of North Africa and endangering France’s possessions. If any
+other European Power established itself in that land, it could utilize
+the native resources in troubling France. On the other hand, by virtue
+of her experience in handling and employing Mohammedans, France was
+better fitted to perform this work of civilization than anyone else.
+These were, of course, the stock arguments of all parties advocating the
+establishment of European control over “backward” areas.
+
+The Comité formulated a policy for handling both the internal and the
+international aspects of the question—a policy which M. Delcassé,
+minister of foreign affairs from 1898 to 1905, was actually to follow.
+It was the popular solution, and, for France, the only possible one.[16]
+As the Fashoda affair had taught the French that the approval of the
+Powers was necessary for the acquisition of colonial territory, the
+first requisite was to make agreements with the interested states, among
+whom the _Bulletin_ included Germany. Moreover, the nature of the
+problem demanded this approach. For Morocco’s international status, the
+interests of the Powers there, the military strength of the fanatical
+population, and the consequent need of having French hands completely
+free from the danger of complications before attempting to reform
+Morocco made this preliminary international understanding imperative.
+The program contained four essential points. The sovereignty of the
+sultan and the independence and integrity of his land should be assured.
+Adequate guaranties for the freedom of the straits should be provided.
+The legitimate interests of the Powers, considered to be chiefly
+economic, should be satisfied through the acceptance of the principle of
+full commercial liberty. Lastly, Spain’s territorial claims should be
+satisfied. By this course the Comité and its followers thought to
+dispose of the international aspect.
+
+At the same time Morocco itself had to be won. The _Bulletin_ believed
+that a policy of “pacific penetration” carried on through the agency of
+the sultan would solve this task. The sultan was the sole source of
+authority, religious as well as political, that France could properly
+utilize. By working through him she might further her own interests and
+might introduce reforms without provoking the natives to war. The
+sovereignty of the Sultan would not be touched nor the independence and
+integrity of his land be violated. The “pacific” aspect would prevent
+the other Powers from taking offence and would satisfy the French
+people. The “penetrating” aspect would give satisfactory reality. It was
+a masterful combination, with an air of superficial plausibility so long
+as one did not attempt to reconcile the phrases “pacific penetration”
+and “preponderant influence” with those of “sovereignty of the sultan”
+and “independence and integrity of the land.”[17]
+
+The French minister of foreign affairs from 1898 to 1905 was, as already
+said, M. Théophile Delcassé. Born in 1852, he was at a very
+impressionable age when the Franco-Prussian War occurred. He became so
+ardent a disciple of Gambetta that he could never speak afterward of
+their friendship without emotion. Journalist, deputy, colonial
+undersecretary, colonial minister—such was the course of his rise.
+Uncommunicative by nature, he avoided Parliament as much as possible. He
+was on intimate terms with M. Waldeck-Rousseau, premier from 1899 to
+1901; but with the latter’s successors, MM. Combes and Rouvier, his
+relations were cool, and he asserted his entire independence in the
+conduct of his office. In a short and caustic sketch, November, 1900,
+Sir Edmund Monson, British ambassador at Paris, wrote of him:
+
+
+Delcassé is an unsatisfactory Minister to us diplomatists in Paris. He
+is extremely uncommunicative, not to say secretive. Consequently it is
+very rare that any one of us succeeds in extracting information from
+him. He has plenty of commonplace conversation, which flows glibly
+enough, and he will talk eloquently in an academical fashion. But he
+hardly ever tells one anything in the way of political news, and he has
+an adroit way of feigning ignorance which took me in at first, until I
+convinced myself that it was all shamming. He always urges that he is
+not a diplomatist by profession, but he carries the practice of
+subterfuge to an extent which I have hardly ever met before in a
+Minister of Foreign Affairs. On the other hand, he does not tell lies
+systematically, as X did.[18]
+
+
+His long tenure in office and the free scope given him by the cabinet
+and Parliament, both engrossed in internal affairs,[19] enabled him to
+put his own impress upon French foreign policy and to give it a
+positive, constructive content. Although a member of radical cabinets
+that reduced the military and naval budgets and neglected the defenses
+of the land, he openly disapproved of that policy and advocated rearing
+a virile, patriotic generation of fighters. He courted and received the
+support of all parties. He took as the sole objective in his foreign
+policy the maintenance and development of French interests, and avowed
+himself an opportunist in his method of diplomacy. He was a
+_Realpolitiker_ at a moment when the French people seemed to be turning
+toward internationalism and pacifism. His policy unfolded itself
+gradually, and, in the absence of adequate documentary material, it has
+to be explained largely upon the basis of its accomplishments.[20]
+
+The new elements introduced into French policy by this minister were
+associated almost altogether with the Moroccan question. He seems from
+the start to have coveted that country.[21] He thought that since the
+Dual Alliance was firmly established, France as well as Russia ought to
+reap some benefits therefrom. But, as Russia was turning her energies
+more and more to the Far East and was thereby weakening the
+effectiveness of the Alliance, he desired some means of re-establishing
+the equilibrium of forces in Europe. Particularly was this necessary
+since Germany had inaugurated her _Weltpolitik_; for, with German power
+increasing at so fast a pace, France had to seek new friends for the
+protection of herself, her colonies, her interests, and for the
+realization of her ambitions toward Morocco before it was too late.[22]
+This triple aim of better defense, of increased prestige, and of
+colonial acquisition in Northwest Africa he saw could be realized by the
+settlement of the international aspect of the Moroccan question. Italy
+and Spain as Mediterranean neighbors and Great Britain as a formidable
+colonial rival should be won to the French plan by agreements which at
+the same time should create friendships between them and fortify and
+aggrandize the French position in Europe. Moreover, M. Delcassé hoped to
+reconcile Russia with Great Britain, above all to prevent them from
+actual conflict. And, depending upon circumstances, he was apparently
+willing to treat with Germany. A colonial acquisition and a
+rearrangement in international relations were to be achieved together,
+and the Moroccan problem came to signify both.[23]
+
+The basis of the Franco-Moroccan relations was laid by the treaty of
+1845 regulating the boundary between Algeria and her western
+neighbor.[24] However, the frontier remained in part indefinite; border
+raids recurred; the possession of the oases, Touat, Gourara, and
+Tidikelt, discovered after the treaty was made, remained unsettled.[25]
+The consequence was chronic trouble, which France tried to eliminate by
+occupying these oases late in 1899 and in 1900 and by beginning to
+construct railroads toward them.
+
+Alarmed by this activity, the Sultan asked Queen Victoria in the autumn
+of 1900 to obtain assurances from France which would tranquilize his
+fears. Realizing that this would be impossible, the British government
+refused, and Sir Edmund Monson, the British ambassador at Paris, merely
+mentioned the Sultan’s anxieties to the French Foreign Minister (October
+17).[26] The Italian, Spanish, and German governments also showed some
+concern over this action at Touat.[27] M. Delcassé replied to them all
+with the statement which he had made in the French Senate on April 3,
+that in Africa France would honor all treaties signed by her, that she
+would respect the frontiers of neighboring states, and that she had no
+intention of changing the _status quo_ in the Mediterranean. She was
+merely occupying territory manifestly belonging to her.[28]
+
+The number of attacks of the Moroccans upon Algeria increased. After
+several particularly bold raids had occurred early in 1901, the French
+government sent a sharply worded note to the Sultan which he interpreted
+as threatening action against his ancestral home, Tafilelt.[29] He
+appealed to the British government for protection,[30] and in June and
+July sent an embassy headed by the minister of war, el-Menebhi, to
+London and Berlin to obtain aid against France and to negotiate a
+loan.[31] As the question of an alliance was then engrossing the
+attentions of both the British and the German governments, neither felt
+inclined to give the Moroccans anything but innocuous advice, and this
+mission was a failure.[32]
+
+The dispatch of that embassy just at the time when Anglo-German
+relations were so cordial alarmed the French Foreign Minister.[33]
+Through M. Révoil, governor-general of Algeria, he warned the Moroccan
+government against signing any political or commercial agreement without
+French approval, and exacted a promise from a Moroccan embassy then in
+Paris concerning the execution of any accord which might be signed.[34]
+Among the Powers, M. Delcassé had little to fear from Spain, with whom
+he was on intimate terms, or from Italy, with whom in the previous
+December he had made an agreement about Morocco.[35] He assured the
+British government that France had no intention of raising “serious
+questions in Morocco.” The Marquess of Lansdowne, British foreign
+secretary, responded with a frank account of his conversations with the
+Moroccan embassy.[36] It was Germany of whose reactions M. Delcassé was
+most uncertain. In June, through his friend M. Leon y Castillo, the
+Spanish ambassador, he suggested to Prince Radolin, the German
+ambassador in Paris, that if the German government, as the victor in
+1870, would take the initiative, he would like to discuss various
+matters with a view to arriving at an entente.[37] The German response
+to the Spanish Ambassador was that before Germany could enter into an
+arrangement with France whereby the hostility of a third Power might be
+incurred the two countries must make a mutual guaranty of each other’s
+territorial integrity. Since France would thereby have to guarantee the
+German possession of Alsace-Lorraine, the proposed negotiation was
+crushed.[38] None the less, in a conversation with Prince Radolin on
+June 23, 1901, M. Delcassé made and received an important statement
+about Morocco. When the Ambassador mentioned the discussion in the
+French newspapers of a French protectorate over that land, the Foreign
+Minister replied:
+
+
+“If by that word protectorate one means that France, mistress of Algeria
+and Tunis, has and must conserve toward Morocco an unique situation
+[_une situation absolument à part_], it seems to me that it is self-
+evident [_il me semble que c’est l’évidence même_].” “Nothing is more
+just, every one takes account of that situation [_tout le mond se rend
+compte de cette situation_],” answered Prince Radolin.[39]
+
+
+Much or little could be read into either remark; but together with the
+general diplomatic situation they enabled M. Delcassé in the Senate on
+July 5 to declare that
+
+
+if France, mistress of Algeria and through Algeria neighbor of Morocco
+along an immense frontier, is forced to follow what occurs there with a
+singular interest,—our vigilance does not aim at other than the
+tranquillity, prosperity, and integrity of the Sherifian empire. . . .
+.[40]
+
+
+The presence of an embassy in Paris simultaneously with the one in
+London and Berlin[41] gave the French Minister an opportunity for taking
+the first steps toward “pacific penetration.” The mission came to Paris
+to seek an agreement with the French government upon a definite boundary
+line between Algeria and Morocco which would assure Moroccan isolation.
+M. Delcassé, however, aimed, by leaving the frontier line indefinite, to
+utilize this geographic proximity as a means of creating a community of
+interests with the Sultan and his people and of familiarizing them with
+things European.
+
+The French Minister succeeded partially in incorporating this plan in an
+agreement with the Moroccan embassy in July, 1901, supplementing that of
+1845. Drawn “to consolidate the bonds of amity existing between them
+[France and Morocco] and to develop their reciprocal good relations,”
+the treaty provided that the boundary should remain uncertain, but that
+France and Morocco should each have the right to set up a line of posts
+for purposes of defense and customs collection in the desert region on
+soil which unquestionably belonged to them. The tribes living in the
+territory between those two lines should be permitted to choose which
+authority they preferred to reside under. Moroccans and Algerians could
+enter that territory freely for commercial or other purposes. Moroccan
+tribes who owned pastures in Algeria could continue to use them, and
+vice versa. For the preservation of amicable relations between the two
+countries each government agreed to appoint two commissioners annually
+to settle future border disputes.[42]
+
+To Ben Sliman, the leader of the embassy to Paris, M. Delcassé offered
+French friendship and aid, but added a veiled threat of the trouble
+which France would make for Morocco if his offers were not accepted.
+While the French Minister showed a nice regard for Moroccan
+sensitiveness toward innovations, he voiced the expectation that when
+the land should decide to “enter into new ways” it would give France the
+preference for furnishing it with the needed resources. In an important
+dispatch of July 27, 1901, M. Delcassé instructed M. Saint-René
+Taillandier, the French representative at Tangier, concerning his future
+conduct. The French Minister was to assure the Sultan of French respect
+for the integrity of his land and for his own sovereignty, to affirm
+France’s desire to give him friendly aid, and to point out the benefit
+which the Sultan, as ruler, might derive therefrom. He was to warn the
+latter against foreign innovations which might imperil the security of
+Algeria.[43] Lastly he was to support all enterprises, commercial,
+industrial, and philanthropic, calculated to increase French influence
+in the land.[44]
+
+Thus the French government could note with satisfaction that whereas the
+Moroccan mission to London and Berlin had accomplished nothing, the one
+to Paris had enabled France to feel out the Powers on this question, to
+proclaim publicly her special interests, and to begin the actual
+execution of her program. M. Delcassé was now started upon a conscious
+policy of establishing French predominance in the Sherifian Empire.
+
+When the French and Moroccan commissioners appointed to execute the
+agreement of 1901 set to work, they found that its terms were
+impracticable. The assassination of two French captains by Moroccans in
+January, 1902, also showed that if order were ever to obtain along the
+frontier, French power would have to strengthen the Sultan’s
+efforts.[45] The commissioners therefore negotiated in April and May,
+1902, two further treaties, the content of which was much more in
+harmony with the French objective of loosening the boundary instead of
+tightening it, of providing a complete program of military, economic,
+and political co-operation between the two governments as follows: In
+case of need the two states should concert in pacifying and policing the
+frontier from Teniet-Sassi to Figuig, but no guard or customs posts
+should be established between those two points. In lieu of these customs
+duties, France agreed to pay Morocco a lump sum annually. In the other
+frontier area the two governments should establish markets and customs
+posts at specified points in order to develop commerce between Algeria
+and Morocco.[46]
+
+It became impossible to carry out the commercial clauses of the treaty
+because of anarchy on the Moroccan side of the border. But the Sultan
+made immediate use of the military articles by requesting permission of
+the French government to send Moroccan troops and munitions to the
+frontier by way of Algeria, and by asking it in July to furnish military
+instructors for these troops. M. Delcassé readily agreed.[47]
+
+Notwithstanding these requests, the Sultan was dissatisfied with the
+course of affairs, and in September, 1902, sent Kaid Maclean to Europe
+to seek aid in stemming the tide of the French advance. Carrying
+personal letters from the Sultan to King Edward and to the German
+Emperor, the Kaid went first to London. He proposed to the King and to
+Lord Lansdowne that the integrity of Morocco be guaranteed by Great
+Britain, or, failing that, by Great Britain and Germany, for a period of
+seven years, and that, if at the end of this period Morocco had not
+thoroughly reformed her government and developed her natural resources,
+the guaranty should lapse. He proposed also that a Moorish loan be made
+in England, France, and Germany, and that all railway concessions be
+divided between those three countries. The British government approved
+the method of handling the project for a loan and for railroad
+construction; but, as it was already in conversation with the French
+government over the future of Morocco and was disinclined to tie its
+hands, it refused to consider the other measure. Thus the mission was a
+failure.[48]
+
+In 1903 the Sultan was in dire straits. While the whole country was more
+or less in rebellion, the main center of danger lay in the northeast
+near Taza where the pretender to the throne, Bu-Hamara, “Father of the
+She-Ass,” had acquired a large following late in 1902. He was in a
+position to attack the French along the border or the Sultan in Fez, and
+did so. His defeat of the Sherifian army endangered Fez itself. Even in
+his capital the Sultan angered his subjects by summarily executing the
+murderers of a British missionary. In this plight, he turned to the
+obliging French for further aid. He received permission for his troops
+and the loyal border tribes to seek refuge in Algeria. After M. Delcassé
+had officially intervened in his behalf, he was able to obtain a loan of
+7,500,000 francs from the French banking-house of Gautsch. By the time
+the Anglo-French agreement of April 8, 1904, was made, the Sultan seemed
+to be falling in line with the French policy of “pacific
+penetration.”[49]
+
+
+[Footnote 1: This was the Conference of Madrid.]
+
+[Footnote 2: See among the numerous works on Morocco: Albert Salmon, _Le
+Maroc. Son état économique et commercial_ (Paris, 1906); René Pinon,
+_L’empire de la Méditerranée_ (Paris, 1904), p. 96; Eugène Aubin,
+_Morocco of To-Day_ (London, 1906), p. 119.]
+
+[Footnote 3: Victor Piquet, _La colonisation française dans l’Afrique du
+Nord: Algérie, Tunisie, Maroc_ (Paris, 1912), p. 15.]
+
+[Footnote 4: For typical reactions see Pinon, _L’empire de la Médit._;
+M. Aflalo, _The Truth about Morocco. An Indictment of the Policy of the
+British Foreign Office with Regard to the Anglo-French Agreement_
+(London, 1904); _Zwanzig Jahre alldeutscher Arbeit und Kämpfe_ (Leipzig,
+1910), pp. 219 ff. For a more scientific discussion see Piquet, pp. 514
+ff.]
+
+[Footnote 5: The statistics about Morocco are all unreliable. They vary
+according to the persons taking them. The Moroccan government took none
+itself. Those given above are quoted in André Tardieu, _La conference
+d’Algésiras. Histoire diplomatique de la crise marocaine (15 Janvier-7
+Avril, 1906)_ (Paris, 1909), pp. 499 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 6: On the new sultan see Pinon, _L’empire de la Médit._, pp.
+150 ff.; Aubin, pp. 137 ff., 178; Walter B. Harris, _Morocco That Was_
+(Edinburgh and London, 1921), esp. pp. 65 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 7: See Aubin, pp. 203 ff.; Auguste Lombard, _La banque d’état
+du Maroc_ (Montpellier, 1911), pp. 14 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 8: On this disorder see Victor Bérard, _L’affaire marocaine_
+(Paris, 1906), p. 82; Ministère des Affaires Etrangères, _Documents
+diplomatiques. Affaires du Maroc, 1901-1905_ (Paris, 1905), Nos. 33 ff.,
+42 ff., 61 ff., 90, 98 ff. (This _Livre jaune_ is hereafter cited as
+_L.j., 1901-5_.) See also _Bulletin du comité de l’Afrique française,
+Supplément_, 1901, pp. 193 ff. (This magazine is hereafter cited as
+_Bulletin_.)]
+
+[Footnote 9: Aubin, p. 109.]
+
+[Footnote 10: _Ibid._, pp. 320-21.]
+
+[Footnote 11: Hatzfeldt to Bülow, Feb. 8, 1899, _Die Grosse Politik der
+Europäischen Kabinette, 1871-1914. Sammlung der diplomatischen Akten des
+Auswärtigen Amtes_ (im Auftrage des Auswärtigen Amtes herausgegeben von
+Johannes Lepsius, Albrecht Mendelssohn-Bartholdy, Friedrich Thimme;
+Berlin, 1922-27), XVII, 295 f., No. 5152 (hereafter cited as _G.P._).]
+
+[Footnote 12: See Pinon, _Empire de la Médit._; speech by M. Etienne on
+June 16, 1903, reprinted in _Bulletin, Supplément_, 1903, p. 179.]
+
+[Footnote 13: _Bulletin_, July, 1902, p. 267.]
+
+[Footnote 14: _Ibid._, Dec., 1899, pp. 412, 429.]
+
+[Footnote 15: See the debates in the Chamber on this subject, Nov.,
+1903, _Journal officiel de la République française. Débats
+parlementaires_ (Chambre des Députés, Nov., 1903); Tardieu, pp. 17 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 16: See _Bulletin_, Dec., 1899, pp. 412, 429; Jan., 1900, p.
+2; April, 1900, p. 140; June, 1901, p. 182; March, 1902, p. 107; Oct.,
+1902, pp. 347, 350; Oct., 1903, pp. 301, 305; Jan., 1904, p. 3, etc.
+Also speech by M. Etienne, June 16, 1903, in _ibid., Supplément_, 1903,
+p. 179.]
+
+[Footnote 17: See _ibid._, July, 1900, p. 257; Aug., 1901, pp. 259 f.;
+April, 1903, p. 120; Pinon, _Empire de la Médit._, p. 182.]
+
+[Footnote 18: Lord Newton, _Lord Lansdowne, A Biography_ (London, 1929),
+p. 209.]
+
+[Footnote 19: Such as the Dreyfus case, the law of the Congregations,
+the separation of church and state.]
+
+[Footnote 20: On Delcassé see Christian Schefer, _D’une guerre à
+l’autre. Essai sur la politique extérieure de la Troisième République
+(1871-1914)_ (Paris, 1920), pp. 221 f.; Georges Reynald, _La diplomatie
+française. L’œuvre de Delcassé_ (Paris, 1915); René Millet, _Notre
+politique extérieure de 1898 à 1905_ (Paris, 1905), p. 2; Robert Dell,
+_My Second Country_ (New York, 1920), p. 176; René Pinon, _France et
+Allemagne, 1870-1913_ (Paris, 1913), pp. 116 ff.; Delcassé’s speeches;
+Monson to Lansdowne, Nov. 15, 1904, _British Documents on the Origins of
+the War, 1898-1914_ (ed. by G. P. Gooch and Harold Temperley; London,
+1927——), III, 14 f., No. 11 (hereafter cited as _B.D._).]
+
+[Footnote 21: See his speeches, _Journal officiel, Debats parlem._,
+Sénat, April 3, 1900, pp. 299 f.; Chambre, Jan. 21, 1902, quoted in
+_Bulletin, Supplément_, 1902, pp. 46 f.; Chambre, March 11, 1903,
+_Journal officiel, Debats parlem._, p. 1356; especially his speech on
+Nov. 10, 1904, in the Chambre, _ibid._, pp. 2381, 2386; Sénat, Dec. 7,
+1904, pp. 1048 ff.; Reynald, p. 11.]
+
+[Footnote 22: André Mévil, _De la Paix de Francfort à la Conférence
+d’Algésiras_ (Paris, 1909), pp. 117 f. Mévil’s book contains the
+official apology for Delcassé’s work.]
+
+[Footnote 23: See Mévil, pp. 120 f., and Delcassé’s speeches. On Dec. 7,
+1904, in the Senate and on Nov. 10, in the Chamber, he spoke as follows:
+“The problem, in effect, was this: to establish the preponderance of
+France in Morocco, thereby to augment her power in the Mediterranean,
+not by alienating but rather by conciliating the Powers whose position
+in the Mediterranean brings them to our attention. . . . . In
+considering the positions occupied not only by England, but by Italy and
+by Spain in the Mediterranean, it is evident that if diplomacy succeeds
+in resolving this problem [of Morocco] it will have at one blow
+fortified and aggrandized the situation of France in Europe by the
+friendships which it will have procured and by the _rapprochements_ of
+interests of which it will have been the creator.”
+
+He further declared that this had been his conscious policy during his
+six years of residency at the Quai d’Orsay (see _Journal officiel,
+Debats parlem._, Sénat, Dec. 7, 1904, pp. 1048 ff.; Chambre, Nov. 10,
+1904, p. 386).]
+
+[Footnote 24: See Augustin Bernard, _Les confins algéro-marocaine_
+(Paris, 1911). Treaty given in De Clercq, _Recueil des traités de la
+France_, pp. 271 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 25: See various articles in the _Bulletin_; also Pinon,
+_Empire de la Médit._; Bérard, _L’affaire marocaine_; speech of Waldeck-
+Rousseau in the Chamber, July 2, 1900, _Journal officiel, Debats
+parlem._, pp. 1739 f.]
+
+[Footnote 26: Exactly what the Sultan requested is not known. Count
+Bülow, the German foreign minister, heard in June, 1900, from an Italian
+source that the Grand Vizier of Morocco just before his death had
+proposed to Salisbury, the British premier, that the Powers guarantee a
+new boundary to be made between Algeria and Morocco, but that the
+British Minister had refused to consider the matter. See Bülow to
+Tschirschky, June 5, 1900, _G.P._, XVII, 318, No. 5167. On the Sultan’s
+proposal of October see Monson to Salisbury, Oct. 12, 17, 1900, _B.D._,
+II, 259, Nos. 312 f.]
+
+[Footnote 27: We have positive evidence that the Spanish and German
+governments did so; and as Italy was then in negotiation with France
+over the question of Morocco (see below), it is safe to say that her
+government did also. See Bülow to Münster, April 27, 1900, _G.P._, XVII,
+299 ff., No. 5156; Münster to Hohenlohe, May 9, 1900, _ibid._, 301 f.,
+No. 5157.]
+
+[Footnote 28: See _Journal officiel, Debats parlem._, Sénat, April 3,
+1900, p. 299. He also said in private that France had no intention of
+attacking Morocco. Münster to Hohenlohe, May 9, 1900, _G.P._, XVII, 301
+f., No. 5157; Monson to Salisbury, Oct. 17, 1900, _B.D._, II, 259, No.
+313.]
+
+[Footnote 29: See Bérard, p. 68; Aubin, p. 178; _Bulletin_, Aug., 1901,
+p. 279; _L.j., 1901-5_, Nos. 1, 3, 4, 6. For the note see Révoil to
+Delcassé, March 23, 1901, Révoil to Si Mohamméd Torres and Ben Sliman,
+March 18, _ibid._, No. 2 and annexe.]
+
+[Footnote 30: So the British Minister at Tangier stated to his German
+colleague (Richthofen to Hatzfeldt, April 13, 1901, _G.P._, XVII, 326
+f., No. 5173).]
+
+[Footnote 31: Richthofen to Hatzfeldt, April 13, 20, 1900, _ibid._, 326
+f., No. 5173; 328, No. 5174.]
+
+[Footnote 32: See Cambon to Delcassé, July 4, 1901, _L.j., 1901-5_, 13
+ff., No. 19 and annexe; Hatzfeldt to foreign office, June 19, 1901,
+_G.P._, XVII, 332 f., No. 5177 and note; Holstein to Eckardstein, July
+8, 1901, _ibid._, 333, No. 5178; memorandum by Mentzingen concerning the
+conversations between Richthofen and the Moroccan Ambassador, _ibid._,
+334 ff., No. 5179, undated though handed in to the foreign office on
+July 19, 1901; Mühlberg to Mentzingen, July 19, 1901, _ibid._, 336 f.,
+No. 5180; Eckardstein to F. O., July 29, 1901, _ibid._, 338 f., No.
+5182.]
+
+[Footnote 33: On the cordiality of their relations see below. Late in
+1899 Joseph Chamberlain, the British colonial secretary, had made a
+speech at Leicester advocating an Anglo-German-American alliance; an
+accord over China had been made between them in 1900, and the Emperor
+had in January, 1901, hurried to the bedside of the dying Queen
+Victoria.]
+
+[Footnote 34: Delcassé to Saint-René Taillandier, July 27, 1901, _L.j.,
+1901-5_, 20, No. 21. What the promise was is not related. Also editor’s
+note, _G.P._, XVII, 332 f., No. 5177; Eckardstein to F. O., July 29,
+1901, _ibid._, 338 f., No. 5182; Richthofen to Hatzfeldt, July 5, 1901,
+_ibid._, XVIII, 781 f., No. 5872.]
+
+[Footnote 35: See below.]
+
+[Footnote 36: Lansdowne to Monson, July 3, 1901, _B.D._, II, 261, No.
+318; Cambon to Delcassé, July 4, 1901, _L.j., 1901-5_, 13 ff., No. 19.]
+
+[Footnote 37: On these conversations see Radolin to Bülow, June 5, 1901,
+_G.P._, XVIII, 772 ff., No. 5868; June 15, _ibid._, 775 ff., No. 5869;
+_ibid._, 777 f., No. 5870. Leon y Castillo declared that Delcassé had
+said to him that “he wished for nothing better than to converse with the
+German Ambassador on different points, that he would be very desirous of
+arriving at an entente with him” (_ibid._, 775 ff., No. 5869). At the
+same time leading articles appeared in _Temps_ and _Figaro_, papers in
+close touch with the foreign office, to the effect that Germany had the
+opportunity in the Moroccan affair to prove her good will toward France
+(Richthofen to Hatzfeldt, July 5, 1901, _ibid._, 781, No. 5872).]
+
+[Footnote 38: Bülow to Radolin, June 19, 1901, _ibid._, 778 ff., No.
+5871; Richthofen to Hatzfeldt, July 5, 1901, _ibid._, 781 f., No. 5872;
+Mühlberg to Mentzingen, July 19, 1901, _ibid._, XVII, 336 f., No. 5180.]
+
+[Footnote 39: Delcassé to Noailles, June 23, 1901, _L.j., 1901-5_, 13,
+No. 18. No account of the conversation is given in _G.P._]
+
+[Footnote 40: _Journal officiel, Debats parlem._, Sénat, July 5, 1901,
+p. 1207.]
+
+[Footnote 41: The British government might have prevented the sending of
+that mission. See Richthofen to Hatzfeldt, April 20, 1901, _G.P._, XVII,
+328, No. 5174. The German Minister at Tangier reported that the Sultan
+had asked Mr. Nicolson, British minister there, whether he should also
+send a mission to Paris and St. Petersburg.]
+
+[Footnote 42: On these negotiations see Révoil to Delcassé, April 27,
+1901, _L.j., 1901-5_, 5, No. 5; Delcassé to Martiniére, July 20, 1901,
+_ibid._, 15 ff., No. 20 and annexe; Delcassé to Saint-René Taillandier,
+July 27, 1901, _ibid._, 18 ff., No. 21; Saint-René Taillandier to
+Delcassé, Sept. 19, 1901, _ibid._, 22, No. 22.]
+
+[Footnote 43: Such, for instance, as the recent tax reforms.]
+
+[Footnote 44: Delcassé to Saint-René Taillandier, July 27, 1901, _L.j.,
+1901-5_, 18 ff., No. 21.]
+
+[Footnote 45: Révoil to Delcassé, Feb. 22, 1902, _ibid._, 31, No. 25.]
+
+[Footnote 46: Révoil to Delcassé, Jan. 18, April 26, May 17, 1902,
+_ibid._, 26 ff., No. 24; 33 ff., Nos. 27 f.; Graham H. Stuart, _French
+Foreign Policy from Fashoda to Serajevo (1898-1914)_ (New York, 1921),
+p. 144.]
+
+[Footnote 47: See especially Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé, July
+22, Aug. 6, 1902, _L.j., 1901-5_, 44 ff., Nos. 29 f.]
+
+[Footnote 48: See memo. for Maclean, Oct. 24, 1902, by Lansdowne,
+_B.D._, II, 272 f., No. 328; Sir Sidney Lee, _King Edward VII. A
+Biography_ (London, 1925, 1927), II, 220 f. Apparently Maclean did not
+go to Berlin at all, although he threatened to do so if the British
+government refused his proposal. See Lee, II, 220 f.]
+
+[Footnote 49: For instances of this co-operation see _L.j., 1901-5_,
+Nos. 33, 39, 44-46, 57, 60, 68, 70-72, 77-79, 81-84, 86, 89, 91-107,
+110-11, 119-26, 132; for Delcassé’s part in assuring the loan see
+Delcassé to Saint-René Taillandier, Jan. 5, 1903, _ibid._, 53 ff., No.
+39. The Sultan obtained similar loans in Spain and in England.]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER II
+
+ THE FRANCO-ITALIAN ENTENTE, 1900-1902
+
+
+When M. Delcassé assumed office in 1898, the Bismarckian system of
+agreements which had isolated France in Europe had already crumbled
+away. The formation of the Franco-Russian alliance had been followed by
+the lapse in 1896 of the ententes between Austria-Hungary, Great
+Britain, Italy, and Spain for the maintenance of the _status quo_ in the
+Mediterranean.[50] The way was clear for the enterprising French Foreign
+Minister gradually to win the friendship of the last three Powers,
+previously joined in enmity against France. The first of these
+_rapprochements_ to bear fruit was the one with Italy.
+
+During the nineties, Italian dissatisfaction with the foreign policy had
+been steadily growing. Italian leaders complained that Italy had
+suffered from a tariff war with France, that she had been unable to
+restrain France from denouncing Italian treaty rights in Tunis or from
+fortifying Bizerta, that she had failed to secure colonial territory in
+North Africa, especially in Tripoli, and in Abyssinia. They regarded the
+Triple Alliance and the good will of Great Britain as inadequate to
+Italian needs. They asserted that their country was the victim of the
+Triple Alliance, made to suffer by France because of membership in it,
+and not even protected against that Power, much less given compensatory
+benefits for these undeserved injuries. The anger directed at Great
+Britain was hardly less than that at Germany and Austria-Hungary.[51]
+
+To meet these difficulties, the Marquis de Rudini, premier from 1896 to
+1898, inaugurated a policy of friendship toward France which his
+successors in office continued. While remaining loyal to her alliances,
+the Marquis said, Italy would henceforth endeavor to prevent trouble
+with other Powers and to restore normal relations with France.[52]
+
+In 1896 Italy and France settled their difficulties over Tunis. In 1898
+a commercial treaty put an end to ten years of tariff warfare between
+them and opened the way to the flow of French capital into Italy.[53] In
+the same year the two countries made a settlement of the boundary line
+between their possessions on the Red Sea. So when M. Delcassé visited
+Rome in 1898, he found that both he and the Italian foreign minister,
+Marquis Visconti Venosta (1896-98), thought necessary a durable entente
+between their two countries which would respect the French possession of
+Tunis and the Italian membership in the Triple Alliance; and they agreed
+that the Mediterranean, which had previously divided their states,
+should become the means of their _rapprochement_.[54] The Italian
+Minister was overthrown before any further steps could be taken; but
+under his successor, Admiral Canevaro (1898-99), an opportunity was
+offered to initiate the negotiations which finally led to the
+consummation of the entente.
+
+In March, 1899, France and Great Britain settled the differences growing
+out of the Fashoda affair by an agreement which assigned to the former
+the hinterland of Tripoli. Since Italian leaders regarded the eventual
+possession of Tripoli as vital to the welfare of their state, they felt
+that Italy had been betrayed by her supposed friend, Great Britain, and
+the Italian government appealed to its German ally for advice.[55] The
+latter remained noncommittal, Lord Salisbury equally so.[56] It was
+France, the supposed enemy, who applied balm to the wound. The French
+ambassador, M. Barrère, assured Admiral Canevaro that Italy “need in no
+way fear that she will find France in her path if she should ever have
+ambitions toward Tripoli.” When the Italian Minister asked for a written
+statement to that effect, M. Barrère replied that, although Tripoli was
+Turkish territory, M. Delcassé would “under conditions” attempt to find
+some way in which to satisfy this desire. Those conditions, of course,
+had to do with Italy’s relations to Morocco. The materials were thus at
+hand for an agreement.[57]
+
+The negotiations were long drawn out; for, as France had Italy at her
+mercy, she drove a hard bargain. On December 14, 1900, Marquis Visconti
+Venosta, Italian foreign minister (1899-1901), and M. Barrère reached a
+secret agreement.[58] By its terms Italy received in writing a purely
+negative assurance that France harbored no designs upon Tripoli. The
+_quid pro quo_ for France was more valuable.
+
+
+In that which concerns Morocco particularly, it is agreed . . . . that
+the action of France has for its object to exercise and safeguard the
+rights which result for her from the proximity of her territory to that
+empire. Thus defined, I [Marquis Visconti Venosta] have recognized that
+such action is not in our view of a nature to prejudice the interests of
+Italy as a Mediterranean Power. It has been likewise agreed that if
+there must result therefrom a modification of the political or
+territorial status of Morocco, Italy will reserve for herself, as a
+reciprocal measure, the right of eventually developing her influence in
+the Cyrenaic Tripolitaine.[59]
+
+
+So vague a statement could be variously interpreted. M. Barrère thought
+that Italy had given France a free hand in dealing with Morocco so long
+as her action did not modify the political or territorial integrity of
+the land. Marquis Visconti Venosta declared later to the German
+Ambassador that the accord had only permitted France to take measures
+necessary for the defense of her frontier.[60] As either meaning could
+be read into the documents, the future course of Franco-Italian
+relations would determine which one would obtain.
+
+The _rapprochement_, attested by M. Delcassé in the French Senate on
+February 11, 1901, and affirmed by a visit to Italian waters of the
+French fleet in April, had been facilitated by a number of
+circumstances. On the one hand, the Italian government was angry with
+Austria-Hungary for having excluded it, in violation of Article VII of
+their treaty of alliance, from the negotiation in 1897 of an agreement
+with Russia over Balkan affairs. Tariff difficulties with both allies
+were looming up, and an occasional irredentist voice was being heard. On
+the other hand, an anticlerical government in France made certain that
+in the near future at least the republic would not attempt to restore
+Rome to the pope. Moreover, King Victor Emmanuel, possibly influenced by
+his Montenegrin wife, leaned decidedly away from his father’s policy of
+strict adherence to the Triple Alliance toward one of closer friendship
+with France, and, if possible, with Russia.[61] Italian public opinion
+was likewise showing itself markedly pro-French, a tendency which M.
+Barrère’s courting of press and public helped to develop;[62] and when
+in 1901 the King chose the pro-French M. Zanardelli to form a cabinet,
+the Italians applauded.[63]
+
+The affinity for France of the new cabinet and the greater defiance
+toward Italy’s allies were foreseen from the political past of some of
+its members. M. Zanardelli was a native of the Trentino, and would have
+been foreign minister in 1893 if the Austrian government had not
+objected.[64] M. Prinetti, the new foreign minister (1901-3), had spoken
+energetically in 1891 against the renewal of the Triple Alliance. M. de
+Martino, his undersecretary, had asked in the Italian Chamber, December,
+1899, “how this Triple Alliance is able to serve Italy.”[65] The
+attitude of these men was soon manifested. Toward the end of the year
+the Premier was making veiled threats of a tariff war with his
+allies;[66] while M. Prinetti, ambitious, inflammatory, and unreliable,
+was engaged in negotiations with France which radically transformed the
+nature of Italy’s international obligations.
+
+One of M. Prinetti’s first undertakings was to gain better terms for
+Italy with reference to Tripoli. He proposed to France that “each of the
+two Powers be able freely to develop its sphere of influence in the
+regions Tripoli and Morocco at the moment that it judges opportune and
+without the action of the one of them being subordinated to that of the
+other.”[67] The French government was willing to accept his overture for
+the sake of obtaining a freer hand in Morocco; it also saw an
+opportunity to win an even greater advantage. As the Triple Alliance was
+to be renewed in 1902, it determined to repeat its former endeavor to
+nullify the clauses in that treaty referring to France.[68]
+
+M. Barrère argued the French case to the Italian government as follows:
+Italy had joined the Triple Alliance because of quarrels with France
+about the Mediterranean. As the two countries were now friends, with
+their difficulties already harmonized or capable of becoming so, should
+not their friendship be assured for the future by the removal of any
+aggressive point against France which the Triple Alliance might contain?
+Were the clauses of that treaty compatible with Franco-Italian
+friendship? “The alliance remains defensive,” so he summarized his
+arguments later to his government. “But it permits a very broad
+interpretation of the duties of the allies; if France, openly provoked,
+should declare war, could Italy regard this declaration as a defensive
+step on our part? It is doubtful.” So he concluded that “under defensive
+appearances, the Triple Alliance implied an eventually offensive
+character which ought to be eliminated in the interest of our security
+and of the relations of friendship between the two countries.” Above
+all, the French government desired to bring about the suppression of the
+anti-French military conventions or protocols between Italy and her
+allies.[69]
+
+M. Prinetti acknowledged the force of these remarks. In June, 1901—that
+is, before Great Britain had turned away from Germany to France, and
+while Austria-Hungary and Italy were still on passable terms—he made a
+verbal agreement with M. Barrère by which the rights of Italy toward
+Tripoli were put on a par with those of France toward Morocco. In return
+he promised that the renewed treaty of the Triple Alliance should
+contain “nothing hostile” to France.[70]
+
+The problem of adjusting Italy’s alliance obligations to her new
+international situation growing out of the Franco-Italian entente was
+taken up at the end of the year when negotiations for the renewal of the
+Triple Alliance were begun.[71] To strengthen Italy’s hand, MM.
+Prinetti, Delcassé, and Barrère all attested publicly in December, 1901,
+and January, 1902, to the complete harmony of Franco-Italian interests
+in the Mediterranean; M. Delcassé referred pointedly to Tripoli and
+Morocco.[72] And the _Tribuna_ gave bold notice, January 2, that “Italy
+counts for something and can with her weight turn the scale one way or
+the other.”[73] In spite of his promises to France, however, M. Prinetti
+made very feeble efforts to change the Triple Alliance in accordance
+therewith. He said nothing to the German government about revising or
+omitting Articles II, IX, X, and the protocol[74] which Italy herself
+had had incorporated in the treaty. His sole proposal to Count Bülow, to
+whom he repeated his promise to M. Barrère, was that an introductory
+statement, intended for publication or for communication to France,
+should be included affirming the purely defensive character of the
+alliance. Other matters concerning Italy and her two allies were of far
+more importance to the Italian Foreign Minister in these negotiations.
+He wanted the allies officially to affirm Italy’s preponderant rights in
+Tripoli; he wished for them to have a more binding understanding about
+the Balkans; above all, he sought to make the renewal of the alliance
+contingent upon the negotiation of tariff treaties with Germany and
+Austria-Hungary favorable to Italy. In discussing these questions with
+the German government he grew excited, wept, threatened to resign or not
+to renew the alliance. About those which concerned France he was more or
+less apologetic.[75]
+
+German public opinion regarded the Franco-Italian _rapprochement_ with
+misgivings. But the Chancellor assumed a nonchalant attitude, stating in
+the Reichstag, January 8, 1902:
+
+
+The Triple Alliance still enjoys the best of health. . . . . The Triple
+Alliance is not a society for acquisition but an insurance company. It
+is not offensive but defensive; it is not aggressive but peaceful to a
+high degree. The Triple Alliance does not bar good relations between its
+members and other Powers, and I would not consider it proper if even a
+small part of the German press should show any uneasiness over Franco-
+Italian agreements. In a happy marriage the husband must not become
+jealous if his wife dances an innocent extra round with some one else.
+The main thing is that she does not run away from him, and she will not
+do so if she is best situated with him. . . . . The Franco-Italian
+agreements over certain Mediterranean questions do not violate the
+Triple Alliance. . . . . The goals of the present day _Weltpolitik_
+extend to areas and objects which lie far from Germany’s boundaries. I
+name in this connection, for example, the north coast of Africa, Persia,
+the Far East.[76]
+
+
+That speech, however, did not reflect the Chancellor’s actual feeling.
+He still assumed that, should any important change be made in the
+Mediterranean area, for instance in Morocco, Germany would be
+consulted;[77] but he relied upon Russia’s retarding influence, Great
+Britain’s hostility, and fear of Germany to prevent France from taking
+action in that land.[78] He was dissatisfied with the turn of affairs,
+and blamed Great Britain for having forced Italy into French arms by
+ignoring her interests.[79] He suspected that the Franco-Italian
+understanding contained more than M. Prinetti admitted.[80] He
+recognized the improvement in Italy’s international relations, and
+realized that her antagonism to Austria would thenceforth become
+sharper, and that her Tripolitan ambitions would be so zealous as
+possibly to cause trouble with Germany’s friend, the Turkish Sultan.[81]
+As to renewing the alliance, which he strongly desired, the Chancellor
+believed that self-interest and the known antagonism of Great Britain to
+the Dual Alliance would prevent Italy from changing camps.[82] Under
+other circumstances he might have been willing to make some further
+concessions to Italy in return for the renewal.[83] In the previous
+March he had relieved her from any obligations under the German-Italian
+military convention, although permitting the military conversations to
+continue as before.[84] But the Franco-Italian entente, the lever with
+which M. Prinetti expected to pry loose those concessions, was the very
+cause for Count Bülow’s refusing to permit any change whatever in the
+treaty. As the alliance was already defensive, he said, there was no
+need for an introductory statement to that effect. Pointing to the
+expectation voiced by the French press that anti-French clauses would be
+dropped, he declared that any modification would permit the French to
+draw the desired conclusion and thereby to belie the true nature of the
+alliance. Before he would renew the Triple Alliance he demanded of M.
+Prinetti an assurance that Italy had made no agreements with other
+states which could diminish its defensive forces. He even expressed his
+willingness to drop the alliance rather than make any changes in it,
+remarking that Italy’s adherence to it was of no fundamental importance.
+The Chancellor’s adamantine attitude was effective. By May, 1902, M.
+Prinetti agreed to the renewal.[85]
+
+In March, 1902, M. Prinetti had reported to M. Barrère the probability
+of his failure. He had refused to communicate the text of the treaty to
+the Ambassador, but had declared that the protocols thereto must be
+abolished,[86] and that he was ready, so M. Barrère reported, to give
+France “assurances of a nature to leave no doubt in our mind as to the
+character and scope of this document” (the treaty of the Triple
+Alliance).[87] On May 7, M. Prinetti informed the French Ambassador that
+“it will be necessary for us to discuss the future of our relations in
+regard to that treaty.” Under French pressure, he agreed that
+“thenceforth it was in a direct understanding with us [France] that he
+should find the means of fixing the interpretation with regard to us
+which Italy intended to give to her obligations as an ally.” He was
+willing to put this understanding into writing.[88]
+
+Before the proper negotiations were well under way, the actual renewal
+of the alliance forced M. Prinetti to declare in the Italian Chamber,
+May 22, 1902, as follows:
+
+
+The Triple Alliance as it is and as it will be, completely and uniquely
+pacific and defensive, will remain in the future what it has been for
+years: the most solid rampart in the cause of peace. . . . . The Triple
+Alliance, containing nothing aggressive, either directly or indirectly
+against France, nothing which menaces her surety or tranquillity may not
+in any manner constitute an obstacle to the conservation and development
+of cordial relations with our Latin sister with whom we are and wish to
+remain friends. . . . . And since it has been said that there exists
+between certain Central Powers conventions and protocols adjoined to the
+Triple Alliance which modify its pacific character and would even be
+aggressive toward France, I hereby solemnly declare that there is no
+convention and no protocol of that nature.[89]
+
+
+Presumably even prior to this statement, which was repeated in a formal
+note to the French government on June 4, M. Prinetti began negotiations
+with M. Barrère over the written agreement. It was the Ambassador’s
+intention that that agreement
+
+
+would contain the engagement not to attack, not to join in any
+aggression on the part of one or several Powers against one of the
+contracting parties; not to consider as aggressive on the part of the
+contracting Powers the obligation to declare war in consequence of a
+manifest provocation [this was “the capital point” of the project, wrote
+M. Delcassé]; finally to abandon the military protocols and other
+dispositions of the same sort concerning us and envisaging war with us.
+If we are able to arrive at that result [wrote M. Barrère to his chief],
+we shall have obtained all that we could hope and desire.[90]
+
+
+The negotiations were far enough along to permit M. Delcassé to declare
+in the French Chamber, July 3, as follows:
+
+
+The declarations which have thus been made to us [by the Italian
+government] have permitted us to feel assured that the policy of Italy
+by virtue of her alliances is not aimed either directly or indirectly
+against France; that she will not in any case be a menace to us, either
+in a diplomatic form or through protocols or in international military
+stipulations; and that in no case and in no form will Italy become
+either the instrument or the auxiliary of an aggression against our
+country.[91]
+
+
+That statement was stronger and more inclusive than the one by M.
+Prinetti on May 22. It indicated the existence of a fuller understanding
+than the public knew of. It caused M. Prinetti some embarrassment when
+the German Ambassador brought up the subject. The Foreign Minister
+declared himself “somewhat astonished” at the speech; but after a feeble
+explanation in which he betrayed nothing, he remarked that “so far as he
+was concerned, he regarded the question as settled.”[92]
+
+Meanwhile the Franco-Italian negotiations continued. On November 1, in
+an exchange of notes an understanding was reached by which Italy was
+given a free hand to develop her “sphere of influence” in Tripoli, and
+France the same right with reference to Morocco. Nor should the action
+of the one be necessarily subordinated to that of the other. Then
+followed a clause which M. Delcassé was particularly eager to have
+incorporated:[93]
+
+
+In case France [Italy] shall be the object of a direct or indirect
+aggression on the part of one or several Powers, Italy [France] will
+preserve a strict neutrality. The same will hold in case France [Italy]
+as a result of direct provocation is forced to take, for the defence of
+her honor or security, the initiative of a declaration of war.
+
+
+A conditioning clause was added:
+
+
+In that eventuality the government of the Republic [the Royal
+government] must communicate beforehand its intention to the Royal
+government [the government of the Republic], so that the latter may
+verify that it is a case of direct provocation . . . . I am authorized
+to confirm to you that there does not exist on the part of Italy
+[France] and that there will not be concluded by her any protocol or
+military disposition of an international contractual order which will be
+in disagreement with the present declarations.
+
+
+The Italian government asserted that these declarations were in
+“complete harmony” with its existing international engagements. The
+agreement was to be secret and to obtain until the Italian government
+abrogated it. A supplementary statement by M. Prinetti defined the term
+“direct provocation” to mean one which concerned the “direct relations
+between the Power provoking and the Power provoked.”[94]
+
+Was this accord compatible with the renewed and unchanged treaty of the
+Triple Alliance? With Article II it could be made to agree. Articles IX
+and X and the protocol it merely nullified but left standing.[95] It
+broke completely not the letter, but the spirit of the alliance. The
+dishonesty of the Italian Foreign Minister lay in three directions;
+toward the German government by permitting it to continue in the belief
+that the old relations as established in their treaty still obtained;
+toward the French government by informing it that this treaty contained
+nothing either directly or indirectly hostile to France, although
+Articles II, IX, X, and XI and the protocol of that treaty had been
+retained without any attempt to abolish them; toward Italy by not
+clarifying the situation.[96] The matter was so arranged that in the
+future the Italian foreign ministers would be able to determine whether
+or not the agreement with France would be abrogated and the clauses of
+the Triple Alliance, temporarily in abeyance, would again be called into
+action. The Italian government was safeguarding its country on both
+sides and giving up none of its securities, although its policy looked
+toward two different international orientations. This was the equivocal
+position between France and the Triple Alliance, later between the
+Triple Entente and the Triple Alliance, which Italy was to occupy until
+she entered the World War.[97] The advantages of it lay in the fact that
+it gave greater mobility to Italian policy, that it caused Great Britain
+to iron out her differences with Italy early in 1902,[98] that it opened
+up a future of closer relations with Russia, and that it assured Italy
+of the future possession of Tripoli.
+
+The French government profited most from these negotiations. M. Delcassé
+had won his initial victory in the execution of his policy.[99] He had,
+at least for the time being, nullified the anti-French clauses of the
+Triple Alliance and drawn Italy out of that group into a middle
+position.[100] He had also settled the important question of Morocco
+with the most jealous of the Mediterranean Powers, and had begun the
+process of pulling the Powers away from Germany and drawing them around
+France.
+
+
+[Footnote 50: Hatzfeldt to Hohenlohe, Feb. 8, 1896, _G.P._, XI, 99 ff.,
+No. 2664; Alfred Franzis Pribram (ed.), _The Secret Treaties of Austria-
+Hungary, 1879-1914_ (Eng. ed. by Archibald Carey Coolidge; Cambridge,
+1920-21), I, 124 ff., 142 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 51: For manifestations of this feeling see Pribram, II, 104,
+106; _Memoirs of Francesco Crispi_ (ed. by Thomas Palamenghi-Crispi;
+trans. by Mary Prichard-Agnetti; London, 1914), III, 330 ff.; Hohenlohe
+to Bülow, Feb. 15, 1896, _G.P._, XI, 230 ff., No. 2766; Bülow to
+Hohenlohe, Feb. 5, 1896, _ibid._, 89, No. 2657; Bülow to Hohenlohe, Feb.
+18, 1896, _ibid._, 89 ff., No. 2658; and in general the documents in
+_ibid._, chaps. lxviii, lxix. Currie to Lansdowne, Jan. 15, 1902,
+_B.D._, I, 285, No. 355; 286, No. 356; Currie to Lansdowne, Nov. 27,
+1900, Lansdowne to Currie, Dec. 12, 1900, Newton, _Lord Lansdowne_, pp.
+211 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 52: Bülow to Hohenlohe, Nov. 26, 1896, _G.P._, XI, 285 f., No.
+2813; Pückler to Hohenlohe, July 19, 1897, _ibid._, 286, No. 2814; Bülow
+to Hohenlohe, March 17, 1896, _ibid._, 293, No. 2819; Bülow to
+Hohenlohe, July 22, 1896, _ibid._, 296 ff., No. 2821; Bülow to
+Hohenlohe, Oct. 23, 1896, _ibid._, 299 f., No. 2823.]
+
+[Footnote 53: _Política èstera italiana_ (1916), p. 499; André Tardieu,
+_La France et les alliances_ (Paris, 1910), pp. 97 ff.; Radolin to
+Bülow, April 19, 1901, _G.P._, XVIII, 716, No. 5833; Pinon, _Empire de
+la Médit._, pp. 39, 44 f., 48.]
+
+[Footnote 54: Mévil, _De la Paix de Francfort à la Conférence
+d’Algésiras_ (Paris, 1909), p. 121; André Tardieu, _Questions
+diplomatiques de l’année, 1904_ (Paris, 1905), p. 14.]
+
+[Footnote 55: Canevaro called it an act of “perfidy,” of “dishonesty,” a
+“sharp slap in the face.” See Saurma to F. O., March 29, 1899, _G.P._,
+XIV, 429, No. 3946; Saurma to F. O., April 1, 1899, _ibid._, 429 f., No.
+3947; Saurma to Hohenlohe, March 29, 1899, _ibid._, 430 f., No. 3948;
+Marschall to Hohenlohe, April 14, 1899, _ibid._, 434 f., No. 3952;
+Bernhard Schwertfeger (ed.), _Zur europäischen Politik_ (Berlin, 1919),
+I, No. 12; Rumbold to Salisbury, March 31, 1899, _B.D._, I, 203, No.
+246; Currie to Salisbury, April 4, 1899, _ibid._, 203, No. 247.]
+
+[Footnote 56: Hatzfeldt to Hohenlohe, April 4, 1899, _G.P._, XIV, 432
+f., No. 3950; Saurma to F. O., April 28, 1899, _ibid._, 435, No. 3953;
+Bülow to Romberg, April 29, 1899, _ibid._, 436, No. 3954; Romberg to F.
+O., April 30, 1899, _ibid._, 436 f., No. 3955; Bülow to Saurma, April
+30, 1899, _ibid._, 437, No. 3956; Currie to Salisbury, Nov. 4, 1898,
+_B.D._, I, 194, No. 236; Currie to Salisbury, April 4, 1899, _ibid._,
+204, No. 247; Currie to Salisbury, April 10, 1899, _ibid._, 204 f., Nos.
+248 f.; Salisbury to Currie, April 25, 1899, _ibid._, 206, No. 251;
+Salisbury to Currie, May 13, 1899, _ibid._, 207, No. 252; Salisbury to
+Currie, Oct. 12, 1900, _ibid._, 282, No. 350. In Sept., 1900, Currie,
+apparently on his own initiative, appealed to his government to give the
+Lateran “some proof of our determination to stand by Italy in the event
+of her being attacked.” Lansdowne refused (Newton, pp. 211 ff.).]
+
+[Footnote 57: Saurma to F. O., April 28, 1899, _G.P._, XIV, 435, No.
+3953; Currie to Salisbury, April 4, 1899, _B.D._, I, 204, No. 247. See
+also Canevaro’s declaration in the Italian Senate, April 24, 1899,
+Senato, _Discussioni, XX Legislatura_ (2d sess.), p. 946, quoted by G.
+Salvemini, “La Triple Alliance,” _Revue des nationes latines_, Oct.,
+1916, p. 250. Also see the interview between Delcassé and Ojetta in
+_Giornale d’Italia_, Jan. 3, 1902, reprinted in the _London Times_, Jan.
+4, 1902.
+
+Italy had formerly thought that she had vital interests in Morocco, and
+her hope to acquire the land had received expression in a clause
+concerning its future in the treaty of the Triple Alliance of 1891
+(Pribram, I, 150 ff.; Vol. II, chap. iii). But the Moroccan vogue had
+passed; her wishes had become more modest. To be sure, the French
+occupation of Touat caused the Italian government in April, 1900, to
+declare excitedly to its German ally that the Moroccan question could
+become a reef upon which the House of Savoy might suffer shipwreck; but,
+as M. Prinetti later explained, what his predecessor in office had
+feared was that a French occupation of Morocco might force Italy to
+seize Tripoli in order to maintain the equilibrium of interests in the
+Mediterranean (Bülow to Münster, April 27, 1900, _G.P._, XVII, 300, No.
+5156; Bülow to Hatzfeldt, May 14, 1900, _ibid._, 302 f., No. 5158; Wedel
+to Bülow, Dec. 12, 1901, _ibid._, 718, No. 5834).]
+
+[Footnote 58: On these negotiations, about which very little is known,
+see Barrère to Delcassé, Jan. 10, 1901, Ministère des Affaires
+Etrangères, _Documents diplomatiques. Les accords franco-italiens,
+1900-1902_ (Paris, 1919), 1 f., No. 1. (This _Livre jaune_ is hereafter
+cited as _L.j., 1900-2_.) Salvemini, Oct., 1916, p. 249; Wedel to Bülow,
+March 31, 1901, _G.P._, XVIII, 712 ff., No. 5831; Metternich to F. O.,
+Dec. 21, 1901, _ibid._, 726 f., No. 5840; Wedel to Bülow, Jan. 5, 1902,
+_ibid._, 738 f., No. 5845; Wedel to Bülow, Jan. 19, 1902, _ibid._, 747
+f., No. 5851; Diplomaticus, “The Shifting Foundations of European
+Peace,” _Fortnightly Review_, LXXVIII (Sept. 1, 1902), 370 f.;
+Anonymous, “The Marquis of Salisbury,” _Quarterly Review_, CXCVI (Oct.,
+1902), 664 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 59: Terms of the accord given in _L.j., 1900-2_, 3 f., No. 1,
+Annexes I and II. See also Wedel to Bülow, Jan. 19, 1902, _G.P._, XVIII,
+747 ff., No. 5851.]
+
+[Footnote 60: Barrère to Delcassé, Jan. 10, 1901, _L.j., 1900-2_, 1 f.,
+No. 1; Wedel to Bülow, Jan. 19, 1902, _G.P._, XVIII, 747 f., No. 5851.]
+
+[Footnote 61: See Bülow to Wedel, Nov. 30, 1900, _G.P._, XVIII, 502 f.,
+No. 5704. The King made his first state visit to St. Petersburg in 1902
+(A. Savinsky, _Recollections of a Russian Diplomat_ [London, ——], pp. 25
+f.).]
+
+[Footnote 62: On Barrère’s activity see Currie to Salisbury, Jan. 18,
+1899, _B.D._, I, 281, No. 347; Currie to Salisbury, April 24, 1899,
+_ibid._, 205, No. 250; memo. by Richthofen, Dec. 17, 1901, _G.P._,
+XVIII, 507 f., No. 5708.]
+
+[Footnote 63: Salvemini, Jan., 1917, p. 12; _London Times_, Dec. 16,
+1901, p. 5; _G.P._, Vol. XVIII, chap. xxii.]
+
+[Footnote 64: Salvemini, Jan., 1917, p. 12 f., quoting Un Bresciano,
+“L’intervènto e le pressióni dell Austria nella crisi ministeriale de
+1893” (_Nuova antologia_, Oct. 16, 1915).]
+
+[Footnote 65: Salvemini, Jan., 1917, pp. 13 f.; Prinetti’s explanation
+of this speech in the Chamber, June 14, 1901, is quoted in _Política,
+èstera italiana_, pp. 536 f. See also Zanardelli’s interview in the _New
+York World_, quoted in _London Times_, March 27, 1901, p. 5.]
+
+[Footnote 66: Dispatch of Jan. 24, 1902, _Zur europ. Politik_, I, 91.]
+
+[Footnote 67: Barrère to Poincaré, March 10, 1912, _L.j., 1900-2_, 11
+ff., No. 11.]
+
+[Footnote 68: It had attempted to do this or to break the alliance in
+1891 and 1896. See _G.P._, Vol. XI, chap. lxix; _ibid._, Vol. VIII,
+chap. lxv.]
+
+[Footnote 69: These arguments are contained in Barrère to Poincaré,
+March 10, 1912, _L.j., 1900-2_, 11 ff., No. 11. One other argument,
+which, however, M. Barrère probably did not use with Prinetti, he
+formulated as follows: “What is more, nothing prevented her [Italy] from
+going beyond the actual text of the treaty, if she should judge that her
+political interests demanded it of her.” See also Salvemini, Feb., 1917,
+p. 197. The military agreement of 1887 between the allies had become
+known to the French government soon after its signing. See Salvemini,
+Feb., 1917, p. 198; also Jules Hansen, _L’alliance franco-russe_ (Paris,
+1897), p. 42. In March, 1901, _Matin_ published a version of it and
+demanded its annulment (quoted in the _London Times_, March 27, 1901).]
+
+[Footnote 70: According to other reports from the German Ambassador in
+Rome, Prinetti promised “nothing aggressive” (Wedel to Bülow, Jan. 5,
+June 27, 1902, _G.P._, XVIII, 512, No. 5711; 757, No. 5858).]
+
+[Footnote 71: See Salvemini, Feb., 1917, p. 197.]
+
+[Footnote 72: The occasion for these statements was the French
+occupation of Mytilene, which alarmed Italian public opinion. See
+Prinetti’s speech in the Italian Chamber, Dec. 14, 1901, Cámera dei
+Depitatio, _Discussioni_, p. 6747; Delcassé’s interview in _Giornale
+d’Italia_, Jan. 3, 1902, quoted in the _London Times_, Jan. 4, 14, 1902;
+Barrère’s speech on Jan. 1, 1902, before the French colony in Rome,
+quoted in _ibid._, Jan. 2, 1902; Delcassé’s speech before the French
+Senate, March 20, 1902, _Journal officiel, Debats parlem._, p. 605.]
+
+[Footnote 73: _London Times_, Jan. 4, 1902.]
+
+[Footnote 74: Article II of the Triple Alliance read as follows: “In
+case Italy, without direct provocation on her part, is attacked by
+France for any reason whatsoever, the two other contracting parties will
+furnish to the party attacked aid and assistance with all their forces.
+The same obligation is incumbent upon Italy in case of an aggression not
+directly provoked by France against Germany.” Articles IX, X, XI, and
+the protocol provided for the maintenance of the _status quo_ in the
+Cyrenaic, Tripoli, Tunis, and Morocco, and, in certain eventualities,
+for an aggressive attack by Italy aided by her allies, upon France. See
+the document given in _G.P._, VII, 99 ff., No. 1426.]
+
+[Footnote 75: On these negotiations see _ibid._, Vol. XVIII, chaps.
+cxxii, cxxv.]
+
+[Footnote 76: Bernhard von Bülow, _Reden_ (hrsg. von Johannes Penzler;
+Leipzig, 1903), I, 243 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 77: Bülow to Metternich, Dec. 18, 1901, _G.P._, XVIII, 721,
+No. 5835.]
+
+[Footnote 78: Alvensleben to F. O., Dec. 26, 1901, _ibid._, 727 f., No.
+5841; Bülow to Wedel, Dec. 17, 1901, _ibid._, 508 ff., No. 5709.]
+
+[Footnote 79: Bülow to Metternich, Dec. 18, 1901, _ibid._, 720 f., No.
+5835.]
+
+[Footnote 80: Memo. by Bülow, Jan. 12, 1902, _ibid._, 524, No. 5715;
+Mühlberg to Bülow, April 25, 1902, _ibid._, 589, No. 5754; Bülow to F.
+O., April 26, 1902, _ibid._, 590 f., No. 5755; Wedel to Bülow, Dec. 26,
+1901, _ibid._, 728 ff., No. 5852; memo. by Holstein, Dec. 31, 1901,
+_ibid._, 735, No. 5844.]
+
+[Footnote 81: Bülow to Wedel, Dec. 17, 1901, _ibid._, 508 ff., No.
+5709.]
+
+[Footnote 82: Memo. by Bülow, Jan. 12, 1902, _ibid._, 523 ff., No. 5715;
+Wedel to Bülow, April 10, Dec. 17, 1901, _ibid._, 715 f., No. 5832; 723,
+No. 5836; Bülow to Wedel, Dec. 17, 1901, _ibid._, 509 f., No. 5709.]
+
+[Footnote 83: Bülow to Wedel, Feb. 24, 1902, _ibid._, 545, No. 5727.]
+
+[Footnote 84: _Ibid._, chap. cxxiv.]
+
+[Footnote 85: See the documents in _ibid._, chaps. cxxii, cxxiv, esp.
+Nos. 5712, 5727, 5749, 5755.]
+
+[Footnote 86: This was easily said since the German government had in
+the previous year released Italy from her obligations under the military
+convention (see above). Prinetti made it appear as a special favor yet
+to be performed.]
+
+[Footnote 87: Barrère to Poincaré, March 10, 1912, _L.j., 1900-2_, 12,
+No. 11.]
+
+[Footnote 88: Barrère to Delcassé, May 8, 1902, _ibid._, 4 f., No. 3;
+Barrère to Poincaré, March 10, 1912, _ibid._, 12 f., No. 11.]
+
+[Footnote 89: Quoted in Salvemini, July, 1917, p. 321.]
+
+[Footnote 90: Barrère to Delcassé, May 8, 1902, _L.j., 1900-2_, 5, No.
+3; Delcassé to Barrère, June 18, 1902, _ibid._, 6, No. 5.]
+
+[Footnote 91: _Journal officiel, Debats parlem._, Chambre, July 3, 1902,
+pp. 444 f.]
+
+[Footnote 92: Wedel to Bülow, July 6, 1902, _G.P._, XVIII, 758 f., No.
+5859.]
+
+[Footnote 93: Barrère to Delcassé, May 8, 1902, _L.j., 1900-2_, 4 f.,
+No. 3; Delcassé to Barrère, June 18, 1902, _ibid._, 6, No. 5.]
+
+[Footnote 94: Terms given in _ibid._, 7 ff., Nos. 7 and 8. On July 20
+Barrère reported that Prinetti regarded the following cases as examples
+of direct provocation:
+
+“1. The publication of sharpened dispatches [_dépêches maquillées_] by
+Prince Bismarck in 1870; King William’s refusal to receive M. Benedetti.
+
+“2. The Schnaebele incident.”
+
+As examples of indirect provocation, Prinetti cited “Prince
+Hohenzollern’s candidacy to the throne of Spain, and such indirect
+initiative in Far Eastern affairs which do not aim at one of the
+contracting Powers, although that initiative may displease it and appear
+contrary to its direct interest” (Barrère to Delcassé, July 20, 1902,
+_ibid._, 7, No. 6). The choice of examples is significant.]
+
+[Footnote 95: See above.]
+
+[Footnote 96: For a severer criticism of his actions see G. Lowes
+Dickinson, _The International Anarchy, 1904-1914_ (New York, 1926), pp.
+94 ff. Dickinson asserts that the Italian Minister broke both the letter
+and the spirit of the Triple Alliance. The analogy of this agreement to
+that of Bismarck’s reinsurance treaty with Russia of 1887 was remarked
+upon by Italian statesmen at the time (see Lansdowne to Currie, Dec. 17,
+1901, _B.D._, I, 284, No. 353). Bismarck’s pacific attitude toward
+Russia was well known, however, and he was not responsible for the
+inclusion of the anti-Russian clauses in the Austro-German treaty of the
+Alliance. See Trützschler v. Falkenstein, _Bismarck und die Kriegsgefahr
+von 1887_ (Berlin, 1924), chap. v., and _G.P._, Vol. V. The Italian
+government, on the other hand, had not only pursued an anti-French
+policy, but had been responsible for including the clauses antagonistic
+to France in the treaty of the Triple Alliance.]
+
+[Footnote 97: For analyses of the Italian policy see Rodd to Lansdowne,
+July 9, 1902, _B.D._, I, 292 ff., No. 364; Bertie to Lansdowne, Oct. 20,
+1903, _ibid._, 295, No. 366. For the German discussion see below. Mr.
+Bertie in October, 1903, formulated his conception of the Italian King’s
+foreign policy as follows: “His aim, I believe, is that Italy should be
+a link between the several Powers of Europe and at the same time remain
+a partner in the Triple Alliance: that France should have hopes of
+drawing Italy away from Austria and Germany, and that those two Powers
+should be made to feel that an understanding between Italy and France
+and perhaps even with Russia also is possible. As to England the King
+probably feels pretty sure that her interests will not seriously clash
+with those of Italy, and he relies on England standing in the way of
+French supremacy in the Mediterranean” (Bertie to Lansdowne, Oct. 20,
+1903, _ibid._, 295, No. 366).]
+
+[Footnote 98: On the renewal of the Anglo-Italian entente see Lansdowne
+to Currie, Dec. 17, 1901, _ibid._, 284, No. 353; Currie to Lansdowne,
+Jan. 1, 1902, _ibid._, 285, No. 355; Currie to Lansdowne, Jan. 5, 1902,
+_ibid._, 286, No. 356; Lansdowne to Currie, Feb. 3, 1902, _ibid._, 287,
+No. 359; Lansdowne to Currie, March 7, 1902, _ibid._, 291, No. 361;
+Plunkett to Lansdowne, April 10, 1902, _ibid._, 291, No. 362.]
+
+[Footnote 99: This he realized. See _L.j., 1900-2_, 4 f., Nos. 2 f.]
+
+[Footnote 100: Cf. Barrère to Poincaré, March 10, 1912, _ibid._, 13, No.
+11.]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER III
+
+ THE FRANCO-SPANISH ENTENTE, 1898-1903
+
+
+The close of the nineteenth century found Spain at one of the lowest
+points in her history. She was disorganized, isolated, defeated in 1898
+by the United States; her navy was destroyed; her colonial empire was
+shattered. Spain was particularly embittered toward Great Britain, whose
+Premier had openly spoken of “moribund nations” with direct reference to
+her, and whose attitude during the recent war had been strongly pro-
+American.[101] Fearful that the British might seize a Spanish port,[102]
+M. Silvela, head of the Conservative government, with the approval of
+the Liberal leaders, early in 1899 determined upon a change of policy by
+which Spain would seek to bring about a secret defensive alliance with
+France, Germany, and Russia.[103]
+
+The sympathy of those Powers had been on the side of Spain during the
+recent war. But when the Premier laid the plan before them,[104] the
+German government was encouraging but skeptical; the French government,
+dilatory; the Russian government seemed not to favor it and advised
+Spain instead to hold closely to France.[105] Nevertheless, during the
+next few years the Spanish government continued its effort to realize
+this program, particularly a Franco-German _rapprochement_.
+
+One of the main objects of this grouping was the defense of Spanish
+interests in Morocco. In spite of Spain’s colonial losses in the war of
+1898, her concern over the future of that Islamic land remained active.
+Spain claimed a special position with reference to it, just as France
+did. Economic interests, the number of her subjects resident in Morocco
+(larger than that of any other foreign nation), geographic proximity,
+historical attempts at conquest, and Spanish pride were all advanced in
+support of this claim. Strategic reasons, reinforced by her actual
+possession of small bits of territory in Northern Morocco, also prompted
+Spain to seek control of at least the northern part of the land and
+above all to prevent that area from falling into the hands of France or
+Great Britain.[106] The Spanish leaders recognized the French interests
+in Morocco and the British right to participate in any settlement of the
+problem of the straits. But, conscious of their weakness in dealing with
+other Powers, they preferred to maintain the _status quo_ as long as
+possible unless the larger Continental grouping was consummated.
+
+In 1899 and 1900, when M. Delcassé showed a willingness to negotiate an
+accord over Morocco, the Spanish government evaded the overture,[107]
+and settled with him only the long standing dispute over the boundary of
+Rio de Oro.[108] During 1901 events moved faster. In March a Liberal
+ministry under M. Sagasta with the Duke of Almodovar as foreign minister
+came into office. It saw France, unchecked by Great Britain, pushing her
+frontier steadily forward in the desert region back of Morocco. So it
+suspected the existence of a secret accord between those two Powers. The
+British government denied it,[109] but Spain feared that an accord might
+be made to her exclusion and injury. The Franco-Italian entente also
+aroused her alarm. In this uncertainty the Spanish government endeavored
+to use the presence of the Moroccan missions in Europe in June and July
+to bring about a _rapprochement_ between France and Germany.[110] The
+move failed. In August, M. Silvela published an article in _La Lectura_
+advocating a solution of the Moroccan problem by agreement with France.
+Encouraged by this expression and urged on by M. Leon y Castillo,
+Spanish ambassador in Paris, the Spanish government determined to open
+direct negotiations with M. Delcassé on the subject.[111] And that
+minister was ready to listen. The negotiations progressed slowly, not
+only because M. Delcassé was disinclined to concede to Spain the
+territory which she desired,[112] but also because he was treating with
+Italy and, to the disgust of the Spanish Ambassador, with Great Britain
+at the same time.[113] By September, 1902, the main lines of the accord
+were agreed upon. Then came further discussion over details; and, after
+a last effort (October, 1902) by M. Leon y Castillo to bring France and
+Germany together had failed, the accord was ready for signing early in
+December.
+
+By the terms of the agreement Spain was to receive the region of the Sus
+in the south and almost all of the old kingdom of Fez, including the
+capital and Tangier in the north, as her sphere of influence, while the
+rest was to constitute that of France. The two governments agreed upon a
+policy of pacific penetration of the land, and the French government
+promised its diplomatic support to Spain in the execution of the
+treaty.[114]
+
+The failure of this agreement was an accident. On December 1 the Duke of
+Almodovar was called away from Madrid. Before he could return and issue
+instructions to sign the treaty, his government unexpectedly fell
+(December 3).[115] The incoming Conservative ministry under M. Silvela
+with M. Abarzuza at the foreign office refused to complete the accord.
+Although they recognized its advantages to Spain, they feared the
+possible attitude of Great Britain and decided to sound her out before
+completing the treaty. Upon doing so they were informed by Lord
+Lansdowne, early in January, 1903, that in case of a break-up of
+Morocco, Spain “would be entitled to a voice in any new international
+arrangements” over that land, but that the British government was
+strongly opposed to any discussion of such an eventuality at that
+moment.[116] In February, 1903, M. Abarzuza revealed the nature of the
+Franco-Spanish negotiations to the British Ambassador, and asked for an
+official British objection to it so that he (M. Abarzuza) would be in a
+firmer position to refuse his signature.[117] Lord Lansdowne replied as
+follows:
+
+
+We regard it as of the utmost importance that Spain and Great Britain
+should act together in regard to Morocco. . . . . I have more than once
+informed French Ambassador here that we deprecated attempts to bring
+about a virtual partition of Morocco. . . . . We should certainly not
+tolerate an attempt to deal with Morocco without regard to British
+interests.[118]
+
+
+Thus while M. Delcassé was assuring the Spanish government that their
+agreement could be concluded without fear since Great Britain was
+interested only in Tangier,[119] the Spanish Foreign Minister was being
+informed to the contrary by Lord Lansdowne himself. As M. Abarzuza did
+not believe in the possibility of an Anglo-French agreement over
+Morocco, he let the negotiations with France fall through.[120]
+
+Immediately thereafter, however, arose a report of Anglo-French
+conversations for that very purpose. In alarm the Spanish government
+questioned the British Foreign Secretary and received the following
+assurance: “We are quite willing to enter into an agreement with the
+Spanish Government that neither will commit itself to any settlement of
+Moorish question without previously consulting the other.”[121]
+
+As it developed later, Spain lost by relying upon Great Britain and not
+concluding this accord. For the British promise was too general to be of
+much value, and after the Anglo-French agreement was made, Spain had to
+accept the territory which the two Powers had reserved for her. Her
+portion was naturally not as large as before, nor were the terms as
+favorable. For France and M. Delcassé, on the other hand, it was
+fortunate that the project failed. The resulting agreement would have
+been strongly opposed by the French as too advantageous to Spain.[122]
+France obtained better terms by first arriving at a settlement with
+Great Britain. But the _rapprochement_ between the two Latin Powers was
+an actuality, and that had been one of M. Delcassé’s main objects.
+
+
+[Footnote 101: In 1898 Chamberlain publicly advocated an alliance with
+the United States. See Jerónimo Becker, _Historia de Marruecos_ (Madrid,
+1915), pp. 414 f.; Wolff to Salisbury, May 15, 1898, _B.D._, II, 253,
+No. 300.]
+
+[Footnote 102: Early in 1899 Silvela asserted to the ambassadors of
+Germany, France, and Russia that if Great Britain and France had gone to
+war in the previous year, the former had intended to occupy Vigo
+(_G.P._, XV, Vol. Nos. 4205-8). When this fear was brought to the
+attention of the British government, by an exchange of notes with the
+Spanish government it denied any such intention. See Wolff to Salisbury,
+March 10, 1899, _B.D._, II, 255 f., No. 305; Salisbury to Wolff, March
+16, 1899, _ibid._, 256, No. 306; Conde de Romanones, _Las
+responsabilidades politicas del antique régimen de 1875 á 1923_ (Madrid,
+——), p. 36; Becker, pp. 415 f. The British and Spanish governments also
+found by an exchange of views in January, 1899, that they both wished to
+maintain the _status quo_ in Morocco. The Spanish diplomat and
+historian, Becker, has written that they were about to make an agreement
+to that effect when the Liberal government in Spain fell from power
+(March, 1899) (_op. cit._, p. 415; Salisbury to Wolff, Jan. 11, 1899,
+_B.D._, II, 255, No. 304).]
+
+[Footnote 103: The plan was approved by Sagasta, leader of the Liberals,
+by Leon y Castillo, the Liberal ambassador at Paris, and by the Queen
+Regent. See Alberto Mousset, _La politica exterior de España, 1873-1918_
+(Madrid, 1918), chap. v; Radowitz to Hohenlohe, April 15, 1899, _G.P._,
+XV, 115 ff., No. 4205; Bülow to Radowitz, April 27, 1899, _ibid._, 119
+ff., No. 4206; Radowitz to Hohenlohe, May 28, 1899, _ibid._, 125 ff.,
+No. 4210; and others in _ibid._, chap. ic. Cf. F. de Leon y Castillo,
+_Mis tiempos_ (Madrid, 1921), II, 255, written after the World War.]
+
+[Footnote 104: Radowitz to Hohenlohe, May 28, 1899, _G.P._, XV, 125 ff.,
+No. 4210; Radowitz to Hohenlohe, Aug. 12, 1899, _ibid._, 127 ff., No.
+4211.]
+
+[Footnote 105: Bülow to Radowitz, April 27, 1899, _ibid._, 119 ff., No.
+4206; Bülow to Radowitz, May 16, 1899, _ibid._, 124 f., No. 4209;
+Radowitz to Hohenlohe, Oct. 5, 1899, _ibid._, 130 ff., No. 4214;
+Tschirschky to Hohenlohe, Oct. 24, 1899, _ibid._, 133 f., No. 4213;
+Radowitz to Hohenlohe, Feb. 4, 1900, _ibid._, 134 f., No. 4214.]
+
+[Footnote 106: Romanones, pp. 34 f.; Gabriel Maura, _La question du
+Maroc au point de vue espagnol_ (Paris, 1911), pp. 1 ff.; Becker, pp.
+446 ff., esp. chap. lxi; Pinon, _L’empire de la Médit._, pp. 123 ff.;
+Emile Vidal, _La politique de l’Espagne au Maroc_ (Montpellier, 1913),
+pp. 1 ff.; M. Ribera, “L’Espagne et la question du Maroc,” _Questions
+diplomatiques et coloniales_, Jan. 1, 1902, pp. 46 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 107: This is asserted by Becker although he does not cite his
+authority. See Becker, pp. 414, 419; Radowitz to Hohenlohe, May 10,
+1899, _G.P._, XV, 123 f., No. 4208; Radowitz to Hohenlohe, Oct. 5, 1899,
+_ibid._, 130 ff., No. 4212; Tschirschky to Hohenlohe, Oct. 23, 1899,
+_ibid._, 133 f., No. 4213; Münster to Hohenlohe, May 9, 1900, _ibid._,
+XVIII, 301 f., No. 5157; Wolff to Salisbury, Oct. 11, 1900, _B.D._, II,
+258, No. 311; Becker, p. 426; Romanones, p. 39.]
+
+[Footnote 108: Schefer, _D’une guerre à l’autre, etc._, p. 237; Mousset,
+pp. 121 ff.; Romanones, p. 38; Delcassé’s statement in the French
+Senate, Feb. 11, 1901, _Journal officiel, Debats parlem._, p. 295; Leon
+y Castillo, II, 143 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 109: Durand to Lansdowne, April 13, 1901, _B.D._, II, 259 f.,
+No. 314; Lansdowne to Durand, April 16, 1901, _ibid._, 260, No. 315.]
+
+[Footnote 110: See below.]
+
+[Footnote 111: Romanones, pp. 40 ff.; Mousset, pp. 132 ff.; Becker, pp.
+425 ff.; Vidal, p. 138; Leon y Castillo, II, 173 ff., 122 ff. See also a
+speech of the Duke of Almodovar in the Spanish Chamber, June 8, 1904,
+_Diario de las sesiones de Cortes, Legislatura de 1903_ (Congreso de los
+Diputados), pp. 4919 ff.; speech by Romanones in the same, June 7, 1904,
+_ibid._, p. 4883; Radolin to Bülow, June 15, 1901, _G.P._, XVIII, 777
+f., No. 5870.]
+
+[Footnote 112: Romanones, p. 41.]
+
+[Footnote 113: _G.P._, XVII, 343, editor’s note; Becker, p. 427.]
+
+[Footnote 114: Leon y Castillo was allowed a free hand in those
+negotiations. See Romanones, pp. 41 f.; Becker, pp. 427 f.; Mousset, p.
+135; speeches by Almodovar and Romanones in the Spanish Chamber, June 7,
+8, 1904, _Sesiones del Congreso, Legislatura_, pp. 4883, 4944 f., 4917
+ff.; exchange of letters between Silvela and Almodovar published in
+_L’Imparcial_, June, 1904, and reprinted in Leon y Castillo, II, 185 ff.
+The result was shown to Silvela early in September, 1902, and received
+his entire approval, “provided one treats of a work of peace and concord
+guaranteed against all suspicion and opposition of friendly Powers.” The
+exact terms of the proposed accord are not known, only the main points.
+See R. Gay de Montella, _España ante el problema del Mediterráneo_
+(Barcelona, 1917), pp. 40 ff., quoting an article by Leon y Castillo in
+_Mercurio_, May 27, 1917; André Tardieu, “France et Espagne, 1902-1912,”
+_Revue des deux mondes_, Dec. 1, 1912, pp. 635 f.; Durand to Lansdowne,
+Feb. 14, 1903, _B.D._, II, 279, No. 336; Lansdowne to Monson, Aug. 5,
+1903, April 29, May 13, 1904, _ibid._, 306 ff., No. 364; III, 33, No.
+34; 35, No. 37; Monson to Lansdowne, May 20, 1904, _ibid._, 37, No. 41;
+Lansdowne to Egerton, April 27, 1904, _ibid._, 31 f., No. 32; Leon y
+Castillo, II, 177 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 115: Mousset, p. 135; Leon y Castillo, II, 128.]
+
+[Footnote 116: On this question see a speech by Maura, minister of
+foreign affairs, in the Spanish Chamber, June 9, 1904, _Sesiones del
+Congreso, Legislatura_, p. 4959; Becker, pp. 429 f.; Tardieu, p. 635;
+Durand to Lansdowne, Jan. 3, 1903, _B.D._, II, 276 f., No. 332;
+Lansdowne to Durand, Jan. 5, 1903, _ibid._, 277, No. 333; Durand to
+Lansdowne, Jan. 17, 1903, _ibid._, 278, No. 335; Metternich to F. O.,
+Dec. 31, 1902, _G.P._, XVII, 247 f., No. 5192; Groeben to F. O., Sept.
+17, 1903, _ibid._, 353 f., No. 5198 and note; Monson to Lansdowne, April
+22, 1904, _B.D._, III, 30, No. 30; Leon y Castillo, II, 179 f. There is
+a story that Silvela tried to change the basis of the accord in such a
+way as also to obtain Russian support for Spain against Great Britain
+and that he was willing to enter the anti-British camp. His proposal to
+spend eight hundred million _pesetas_ in the building of a navy pointed
+in this direction; but that there is anything to the tale seems
+doubtful. See Mousset, pp. 137 ff.; Tardieu, pp. 635 f.; Anonymous, “Una
+nouva alleanza,” _Nouva antologia_, Aug. 1, 1903, pp. 511.]
+
+[Footnote 117: Durand to Lansdowne, Feb. 14, 1903, _B.D._, II, 279, No.
+336.]
+
+[Footnote 118: Lansdowne to Durand, Feb. 16, 21, 1903, _ibid._, 279 f.,
+No. 337; 280, No. 339.]
+
+[Footnote 119: Durand to Lansdowne, Feb. 21, 1903, _ibid._, 280, No.
+338.]
+
+[Footnote 120: See Tardieu, p. 635; Leon y Castillo, II, 179 f.]
+
+[Footnote 121: Durand to Lansdowne, Feb. 21, 1903, _B.D._, II, 280, No.
+338; Lansdowne to Durand, Feb. 21, 1903, _ibid._, 280, No. 339;
+Lansdowne to Durand, March 29, 1903, _ibid._, 282, No. 334; Leon y
+Castillo, II, 180.]
+
+[Footnote 122: Maura, p. 88; speeches by Ribot and Deschanel in the
+French Chamber, March 11, Nov. 19, 1903, _Journal officiel, Debats
+parlem._, pp. 793, 1111 f.; Millet, _Notre politique extérieure_, pp.
+193 ff.; Pinon, _France et Allemagne_, pp. 143 f.]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV
+
+ DELCASSÉ’S POLICY TOWARD GREAT BRITAIN AND GERMANY, 1898-1902
+
+
+M. Delcassé assumed office at a most unpropitious time for the success
+of his policy with reference to Great Britain. On September 1, 1898, he
+remarked to Sir Edmund Monson, the British ambassador, that “he had
+always . . . . regarded as eminently desirable a cordial understanding
+between England, France, and Russia,” and offered his service “in
+soothing the way both at St. Petersburgh and Paris for the attainment of
+this object.”[123] From then until March of the next year he repeatedly
+urged Lord Salisbury, British premier and foreign minister, to agree to
+a general understanding on all matters at issue, so that Great Britain
+and France could exchange the old relation of hostility for one of
+friendship.[124] But in spite of the French Minister’s cordiality the
+Fashoda crisis in the autumn and early winter of 1898 brought the two
+countries perilously close to war.[125] Anglo-Russian difficulties in
+China and elsewhere also remained acute.[126] Furthermore, Lord
+Salisbury replied to M. Delcassé that French ministries were too
+unstable to deal with.[127] Hence, instead of improving, relations
+between the two countries became more strained. In the late winter and
+early spring of 1899, the bellicose stand on the Fashoda affair taken by
+the British government and press aroused a general fear in France of a
+British attack.[128] By August, the French Foreign Minister complained
+bitterly to the British Ambassador that “the conduct of her Majesty’s
+Government seemed to show a deliberate intention of being unfriendly to
+France in every possible way,” and added that “he began to believe that
+the politicians who argue that there is nothing to be done with England
+are right.”[129]
+
+During the period of the Boer War, the presence of Lord Salisbury at the
+foreign office, the bitter feeling of the French against the British,
+the continued Anglo-Russian trouble in China, and the British attempt to
+align with Germany prevented M. Delcassé from obtaining any
+results.[130] In fact, conditions were more favorable for the pursuance
+of a directly anti-British policy. The Russian government wished it, and
+worked for closer concert against Great Britain among the Continental
+Powers.[131] The Spanish government had the more far-reaching ambition
+of bringing about a definite Continental union against Great
+Britain.[132] Italy was at odds with the latter. The German Emperor and
+his government had been wooing France and making veiled proposals for
+co-operation since 1890.[133] And French feeling toward Germany had
+become more amicable than at any time since 1870.
+
+The French Foreign Minister did not deviate from his original
+purpose,[134] but tried rather to be friendly to both Great Britain and
+Germany, to play between them for the advantage of France; and, warned
+by Mr. Chamberlain’s[135] open advocacy in November, 1899, of an
+alliance with Germany and the United States and by the signs of an
+Anglo-German _rapprochement_, he sought to eliminate the occasion for
+this alliance.[136] This policy had been foreshadowed during the Fashoda
+crisis.
+
+In December, 1898, immediately after France had retreated before the
+British demands, M. Delcassé in a conversation with Herr Arthur von
+Huhn, correspondent of the _Kölnische Zeitung_, had bitterly denounced
+the brutal threats of Great Britain against France, had expressed his
+fear that that Power was seeking war in order to have an excuse for
+destroying the French fleet, and had proposed a _rapprochement_ with
+Germany for pursuing a common policy against British encroachments and
+for making colonial accords.[137] Simultaneously with this indirect
+overture, which had never been followed up by either government, the
+French Minister had threatened the British government with the
+acceptance of indirect proposals from Germany for co-operation against
+it if Great Britain did not change her attitude toward France and assent
+to his offer of a general accord.[138]
+
+During 1899 M. Delcassé had turned farther away from Great Britain and
+had sought means of holding her in check.[139] But when the Boer War
+broke out, he held aloof from any movements for intervention, even
+risked unpopularity by publicly denouncing the expressions of rabid
+anti-British sentiment on the part of the French people.[140] Upon the
+retirement of Lord Salisbury from the foreign office in November, 1900,
+he again suggested a general understanding to the British
+government.[141] He was accused of being Anglophile to the detriment of
+French interests, particularly in Morocco;[142] for many of the French
+writers advocated a policy of co-operation with Germany for the
+settlement of colonial questions (among which, of course, would be
+included the Moroccan), while Great Britain could not effectively
+object.[143] But M. Delcassé was willing merely to occupy the Saharan
+oases back of Algeria during the war and to initiate the French policy
+for the eventual acquisition of the Sherifian Empire.
+
+Not that the French Foreign Minister was averse to any accord with
+Germany. As already seen, he made an indirect overture to the German
+government for an agreement while the Moroccan missions were in Europe
+in 1901. Although rebuffed on that occasion, he made another attempt in
+October of the same year at the urging of the Spanish and the Russian
+governments.[144] At this time M. Jules Hansen, a French agent, stated
+to the German Ambassador in Paris that M. Delcassé had recently
+expressed to him the earnest wish to meet Count Bülow personally. The
+problem was where and how to meet. The French Minister had said that if
+the Count would come secretly and unofficially to Paris, he would greet
+him most heartily and would make a public visit to Berlin in
+return.[145]
+
+Although very much interested, Count Bülow refused to run the risk. The
+time was inopportune, he said; the French government and people must
+first be more solicitous of closer relations with Germany.[146] That
+reply postponed the matter to the Greek calends.
+
+In 1902 M. Delcassé made a concentrated effort to establish the French
+claim to ascendancy in Morocco. His negotiations with Italy, which led
+to the agreement of November of that year, and those with Spain, which
+in December proved abortive, have already been considered.
+Simultaneously therewith, M. Delcassé again endeavored to negotiate with
+Great Britain and, perhaps, with Germany on the same question.
+
+On several occasions in January and February, M. Cambon, the French
+ambassador at London, discussed Anglo-French differences, including the
+Moroccan one, with Mr. Chamberlain, British colonial minister, and with
+Lord Lansdowne, British foreign secretary since November, 1900. While
+the British officials showed some interest, no progress was made.[147]
+For after the publication of the Anglo-Japanese treaty of alliance in
+February, France was forced to declare with her ally that the Dual
+Alliance extended to the Far East.[148] Under pressure from Russia[149]
+and with the hope of obtaining support while negotiating a treaty with
+Siam,[150] the French government drew closer to Germany.
+
+Late in June the French Ambassador, in asking the German views on the
+Siamese question, remarked to Count Bülow that “the present good
+relations between Germany and France justified the hope that France
+would receive the support [_coup d’épaule_] of Germany in the Siamese
+affair.”[151] As the German government ignored the suggestion, however,
+and as the French government was alarmed at the growing influence of
+certain Englishmen, particularly Kaid Maclean, over the Sultan of
+Morocco, M. Delcassé determined, in spite of probable Russian
+objection,[152] to open the Moroccan question with the British
+government.
+
+On July 23, when M. Cambon asked Lord Lansdowne about discussing fully
+the Moroccan problem, the British Minister replied that he would be
+ready to consider it “in the frankest possible manner.”[153] On August
+6, therefore, the Ambassador officially proposed an accord over the
+future of Siam and Morocco. After a consideration of the former
+question, the two men took up the latter one. While asserting that the
+French government preferred that the Moroccan problem should not become
+acute, the Ambassador desired that the two governments “frankly discuss
+the action which they might be constrained to adopt in the event of
+Morocco passing ‘into liquidation.’” Spain, he explained, could be
+satisfied by a sufficient allowance of hinterland behind her coastal
+possessions; Tangier could be converted into an international and open
+port—for France could not allow it to pass into the hands of any
+European Power; and beyond the Spanish line, France would expect
+“exclusive influence.”
+
+Lord Lansdowne replied that although he listened to the French proposal
+with great interest, yet since Italy, Spain, and Germany had also at
+various times manifested a concern in the Moroccan question, he regarded
+with the “greatest apprehension” any attempt to deal prematurely with a
+liquidation of that land, which “would be sure to lead to serious
+complications.” The Ambassador answered that at any rate there could be
+no harm “in discussing these eventualities in good time.” He pointed out
+that Spain and Germany had both failed egregiously in their attempts to
+establish themselves in Morocco, and that at present Germany was “not to
+the front there or elsewhere in the Mediterranean.” But the British
+Foreign Secretary, denying that his government had made any difficulties
+in Morocco for France, postponed further consideration of the proposal
+until after the government holiday.[154] When in October M. Cambon
+returned to the subject, Lord Lansdowne not only replied that the French
+terms were unsatisfactory, but he also refused to discuss the
+possibility of a liquidation of Morocco.[155]
+
+In the meantime, M. Delcassé had been again seeking the co-operation of
+Germany. In September the German government assured France of its
+disinterestedness in Siam, provided German economic interests remained
+uninjured. Although this reply contained no mention of the larger
+request for support made by the French Ambassador in June, yet the
+latter, in expressing the satisfaction of his government with the German
+answer, added that this opportunity had been used to emphasize the
+community of French and German interests, and not only in Siam. To this
+broad hint the German government made no response.[156]
+
+In the next month the Spanish Ambassador in Paris reported to Prince
+Radolin that the French Foreign Minister had recently said to him:
+
+
+I do not believe that Germany wishes to come to an understanding with
+France. . . . . Four years ago it was said to M. de Noailles at Berlin
+that there were points upon which the two countries might place
+themselves in accord. I found the matter so important that I immediately
+took it to the president of the Republic and to the premier. I was
+authorized by them to telegraph to M. de Noailles that I was disposed to
+treat with Germany on all points on which the two countries would be
+able to agree. M. de Noailles reported that they had informed him in the
+_Wilhelmstrasse_ that in view of its importance the question deserved to
+be studied. That was four years ago. Since then not a word more has been
+said on that subject. Our ambassador still awaits a response.[157]
+
+
+The German government replied to this overture with recriminations
+against the French Minister. It complained that his proposals had lacked
+in concreteness, that France had rejected several German offers of co-
+operation, and it accused M. Delcassé of consistent bias in favor of
+Great Britain.[158]
+
+When this reply was passed on to M. Delcassé by the Spanish Ambassador
+late in November, he remarked, “Then M. de Noailles is a fool”;
+thereafter he had no business to transact with the German
+representative.[159]
+
+The refusal by both the British and the German governments of the French
+overtures was followed in December by that of the Spanish government to
+sign the agreement over Morocco. So M. Delcassé’s campaign of 1902
+terminated in failure. At the end of the year he reverted to the policy
+of the _status quo_, and, anxious about the situation in Morocco,
+proposed to Lord Lansdowne that if disorders there should necessitate
+action “the Powers interested should take counsel together as to its
+nature and scope, and should agree that there should be no single-handed
+intervention . . . . on the part of any one Power.” In approving this
+policy the British Minister asked M. Cambon for a further explanation of
+the phrase “interested Powers.” The latter replied that Great Britain,
+France, and Spain were the ones referred to, that Italy had no interest
+in Morocco, and that the French government was solicitous of excluding
+the United States, and, above all, Germany from that group. He thought
+that “it would be most desirable that if Germany were at any moment to
+come forward and attempt to assume a conspicuous rôle, it should be
+intimated to her that she had no _locus standi_.” Upon that point Lord
+Lansdowne refused to commit himself.[160]
+
+M. Delcassé had shown a pro-British inclination from the start, and it
+may be that his approaches to Germany had been intended primarily to
+press Great Britain to an agreement. Certainly they had been
+sufficiently vague to be in harmony with the traditional French attitude
+of irreconcilability with the victor of 1870-71. But they had also been
+concrete enough to show the difficulty, if not the impossibility, of
+negotiating with Germany on acceptable terms. Whether M. Delcassé was
+sincere in those overtures cannot be said, although he seems to have
+been. At any rate, despairing of Germany, he devoted his full energies
+in 1903 toward achieving an accord with Great Britain, from whom no
+irredentist problem separated France.
+
+
+[Footnote 123: Monson to Salisbury, Sept. 1, 1899, _B.D._, I, 216, No.
+262.]
+
+[Footnote 124: Monson to Salisbury, Sept. 8, 1898, _ibid._, 163, No.
+188, and other documents in chaps. iv, v. Delcassé went so far as to
+state to Monson on Sept. 28, 1898, that “he would much prefer an Anglo-
+French to a Franco-Russian alliance.” See Monson to Salisbury, Sept. 28,
+1898, _ibid._, 171, No. 198.]
+
+[Footnote 125: Monson to Salisbury, Sept. 22, 1898, _ibid._, 169, No.
+196, and other documents in the same chapter.]
+
+[Footnote 126: Monson to Salisbury, Sept. 8, 1898, _ibid._, 37, No. 58;
+and others in _ibid._, chap. i.]
+
+[Footnote 127: So stated by Paul Cambon in an interview in the _London
+Times_, Dec. 22, 1920.]
+
+[Footnote 128: Monson to Salisbury, Jan. 13, 1899, _B.D._, I, 199, No.
+241.]
+
+[Footnote 129: Monson to Salisbury, Aug. 14, 1899, _ibid._, 212, No.
+259. Cambon had in March made similar complaints to Salisbury (Salisbury
+to Monson, March 15, 1899, _ibid._, 211, No. 257).]
+
+[Footnote 130: For expression of French public opinion against Great
+Britain see two articles by Ernst Lavisse in the _Revue de Paris_, Feb.
+1, 1899, and Jan. 1, 1900. See also Monson to Salisbury, Feb. 3, 1899,
+_B.D._, I, 200 f., No. 242; Mévil, _De la paix de Francfort, etc._, pp.
+128 f.; Sir Thomas Barclay, _Thirty Years; Anglo-French Reminiscences,
+1876-1906_ (London, 1914), pp. 193 f., 209 f.; J. A. Spender, _Life,
+Journalism, and Politics_ (London, 1927), I, 183 ff.; Newton, _Lord
+Lansdowne_, p. 209.]
+
+[Footnote 131: Romanones, _Las responsabilidades politicas, etc._, pp.
+27, 36; Monson to Salisbury, Oct. 27, 1899, _B.D._, I, 234 f., No. 287;
+Rumbold to Salisbury, Nov. 3, 1899, _ibid._, 237, No. 291; _G.P._, Vol.
+XV, chaps. ic, ci, ciii.]
+
+[Footnote 132: See above, chap. iii; also Emil Bourgeois et Georges
+Pagès, _Les origines et les responsabilités de la grande guerre_ (Paris,
+1922), p. 276.]
+
+[Footnote 133: The German Emperor made a special endeavor to win France;
+hence his numerous telegrams of congratulations or condolence to French
+leaders, his toasts and decorations for French officers, etc. The French
+called him the “new Lohengrin.” Both he and Bülow made repeated hints to
+the French representatives for a _rapprochement_; and one of the
+Emperor’s favorite schemes to form a Continental grouping against Great
+Britain and the United States was well known from his frequent
+references to it. See Theodor Wolff, _Das Vorspiel_ (Munich, 1924), pp.
+110, 114, 117, 123 f.; _G.P._, Vol. XVIII, Nos. 5860-71; Bourgeois et
+Pagès, pp. 277 ff., 256 f.; William II to Bülow, Oct. 29, 1899, _G.P._,
+XV, 406 ff., No. 4394; and the editor’s long note thereto, pp. 406 ff.
+On June 4, 1899, the French Ambassador reported a conversation between
+the French naval attaché, Buchard, and the Emperor in which the latter
+said: “The hour is certainly come when the Continent must defend itself
+against England and America, and I think that it is necessary for
+Germany and France to rely upon each other [_s’appuient l’une sur
+l’autre_].” And Buchard added, “The Emperor is very desirous of
+establishing good relations with you” (Bourgeois et Pagès, p. 279). See
+also Spring Rice to Villiers, April 24, 1900, Stephen Gwynn (ed.), _The
+Letters and Friendships of Sir Cecil Spring Rice. A Record_ (Boston and
+New York, 1929), I, 220.]
+
+[Footnote 134: How entirely alien to Delcassé’s mind was the idea of a
+Continental alliance with Germany was shown by the fact that in August,
+1899, at his instigation the phrase “the maintenance of the equilibrium
+between the forces of Europe” was introduced into the Dual Alliance. See
+Ministère des Affaires Etrangères, _Documents diplomatiques. L’alliance
+franco-russe_ (Paris, 1918), pp. 94 f.; Dickinson, _The International
+Anarchy, 1904-1914_ (New York, 1926), p. 108; Georges Michon,
+_L’alliance franco-russe, 1891-1917_ (Paris, 1927), pp. 87 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 135: Chamberlain was Colonial minister in the Unionist
+cabinet.]
+
+[Footnote 136: In September, 1898, Delcassé had spoken to Monson of the
+rumors of an “alliance” between Great Britain and Germany (Monson to
+Salisbury, Sept. 8, 1898, _B.D._, I, 162, No. 187).]
+
+[Footnote 137: Memo. by Huhn, Dec. 5, 1898, _G.P._, XIII, 247 ff., No.
+3558.]
+
+[Footnote 138: Monson to Salisbury, Oct. 28, 1898, _B.D._, I, 185, No.
+221; Monson to Salisbury, Dec. 9, 1898, _ibid._, 196, No. 238.]
+
+[Footnote 139: Count Witte writes in his _Memoirs_ (New York, 1921), p.
+178, that when Delcassé came to St. Petersburg in August, 1899, he
+sought means of accomplishing this end, and urged the Russian government
+to push the construction of the Orenburg-Tashkent Railway so that in
+emergency Russia could threaten India. Leon y Castillo, Spanish
+ambassador at Paris and an intimate friend of the Minister, likewise
+stated in round terms to Radowitz, German ambassador at Madrid, in May,
+1899, that Delcassé belonged to the party desirous of a closer
+understanding with Germany (Radowitz to Hohenlohe, May 28, 1899, _G.P._,
+XV, 125 ff., No. 4210. On the other hand, Sir Thomas Barclay records
+that upon Delcassé’s departure for St. Petersburg in August, 1899, the
+latter said to him that “there was nothing he [Delcassé] personally
+would welcome more warmly than a state of feeling which would permit the
+two Governments [French and British] to negotiate a solution of their
+outstanding difficulties in a friendly give-and-take spirit” (Barclay,
+p. 170).]
+
+[Footnote 140: Barclay, pp. 169 f.; Monson to Salisbury, Dec. 1, 1899,
+_B.D._, I, 242, No. 300; Monson to Salisbury, Nov. 7, 1899, _ibid._,
+239, No. 294; Wolff to Salisbury, June 9, 1900, _ibid._, II, 258, No.
+210.]
+
+[Footnote 141: Lee, _King Edward VII_, II, 214.]
+
+[Footnote 142: According to an anonymous article, “Quatre ans de
+politique extérieure,” _Revue politique et parlementaire_, Oct., 1902,
+pp. 24 f., 31, on one occasion during the Boer War when a deputy asked
+Delcassé if he did not think this an opportune time to settle the
+Moroccan affair with Great Britain, the Minister replied, “How do you
+wish me to speak with the English Government? It is so occupied that it
+has no time to reply.”]
+
+[Footnote 143: Robert de Caix, writing in the _Bulletin_, was one of
+these. Moreover, in March, 1901, not long after the German Emperor’s
+visit to England, Delcassé took advantage of the opportunity offered by
+the presence of the British mission in Paris for announcing the
+accession of King Edward VII to the throne, to let the British know that
+the French government wanted a “good understanding” with them (Lee, II,
+14 f.).]
+
+[Footnote 144: It must be remembered that Delcassé was then discussing
+the Moroccan problem with the Spanish Ambassador, who sought to use that
+question as the means for paving the way to the new Continental
+combination. Moreover, the Czar and the German Emperor, together with
+their foreign ministers, had an interview at Danzig in September at
+which the Russian Minister openly advocated a Russo-German alliance.
+From Danzig the Czar journeyed to France, and a short time thereafter
+occurred Delcassé’s indirect overture to Radolin. On the meeting at
+Danzig see Bülow’s account of the conversations on Sept. 12, 14, 1901,
+in _G.P._, XVIII, 28 ff., Nos. 5393-95; Savinsky, _Recollections of a
+Russian Diplomat_, pp. 17 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 145: The identical project was also proposed to Radolin by
+Pallain, governor of the Banque de France. Hansen also remarked that an
+important Russian personage had told him positively that Lamsdorff had
+spoken to Delcassé of the trip to Berlin. The idea seems to have been
+suggested to the Russian Minister by the German Emperor (Radolin to
+Bülow, Oct. 27, 1901, _ibid._, 782 ff., No. 5873).]
+
+[Footnote 146: Bülow to Radolin, Nov. 6, 1901, _ibid._, 785, No. 5874.]
+
+[Footnote 147: Metternich to F. O., Jan. 30, 1902, _ibid._, XVII, 342
+f., No. 5186; Hermann Freiherr von Eckardstein, _Lebenserinnerungen und
+politische Denkwürdigkeiten_ (Leipzig, 1919, 1921), II, 379; Lansdowne
+to Monson, Jan. 22, 1902, _B.D._, II, 262 f., No. 320; interview with
+Cambon published in the _London Times_, Dec. 22, 1920; Monson to
+Lansdowne, Feb. 6, 1902, _B.D._, I, 274, No. 339. Lansdowne was so much
+interested in the French Ambassador’s ideas that the latter wrote him a
+letter enumerating the differences which might be treated. King Edward
+read the letter and declared to Cambon, “It is excellent. You must go
+on” (interview with Cambon published in the _London Times_, Dec. 22,
+1920).]
+
+[Footnote 148: A few days later, however, Delcassé spoke in the Chamber
+so vaguely of this declaration and emphasized so strongly France’s
+pacific intentions that he cast great doubt upon its value. See Mévil,
+pp. 81 f. n.; Tardieu, _La France et les alliances_, pp. 21 f.; see also
+Newton, pp. 226 f.]
+
+[Footnote 149: Memo. by Bülow of a conversation with the French
+Ambassador, March 20, 1902, _G.P._, XVII, 179 f., No. 5064. In February
+the Russian government urged the German government to enter into an
+agreement against the new alliance, but the offer was refused (_ibid._,
+chap. cx, Part B).]
+
+[Footnote 150: On Siamese affairs, an old cause of trouble between Great
+Britain and France, see _ibid._, XVIII, 795 ff., Nos. 5881-83; Schefer,
+_D’une guerre à l’autre, etc._, p. 242; _Quest. dipl. et col._, Nov. 15,
+1902, pp. 577 ff.; and others.]
+
+[Footnote 151: Richthofen to Metternich, June 30, 1902, _G.P._, XVIII,
+795 f., No. 5881.]
+
+[Footnote 152: Memo. by Bülow of a conversation with the Russian
+Ambassador, Feb. 25, 1902, _ibid._, XVII, 160 ff., No. 5051; Alvensleben
+to F. O., Feb. 25, 1903, _ibid._, 349, No. 5195.]
+
+[Footnote 153: Lansdowne to Monson, July 23, 1902, _B.D._, II, 263 f.,
+No. 321.]
+
+[Footnote 154: Lansdowne to Monson, Aug. 6, 1902, _ibid._, 264 ff., No.
+322.]
+
+[Footnote 155: Lansdowne to Monson, Oct. 15, 1902, _ibid._, 268 ff., No.
+325; Newton, pp. 268 f.]
+
+[Footnote 156: Mühlberg to Radolin, Aug. 18, 1902, _G.P._, XVIII, 795
+f., No. 5882; Schlözer to F. O., Sept. 22, 1902, _ibid._, 797, No.
+5883.]
+
+[Footnote 157: Radolin to Bülow, Oct. 15, 1902, _ibid._, 797 ff., No.
+5884.]
+
+[Footnote 158: Richthofen to Radolin, Oct. 23, 1902, _ibid._, 799 f.,
+No. 5885. These accusations were unfair. In the previous June in a
+dispatch to Metternich, ambassador at London, two instances had been
+mentioned in which the French government had tried to secure the co-
+operation of Germany. The editors of _G.P._ admit that one of these
+proposals was definite; and in August, 1901, Holstein of the German
+foreign office had written that the French government was “not in itself
+irreconcilable.” That admission speaks volumes. Moreover, the German
+reply admitted that the French Ambassador had usually taken the
+initiative in these attempts at co-operation. See Richthofen to
+Metternich, June 30, 1902, _ibid._, 795 f., No. 5881; Holstein to Bülow,
+Aug. 8, 1901, _ibid._, XVII, 341, No. 5184.]
+
+[Footnote 159: Radolin to Bülow, Dec. 4, 1902, _ibid._, XVIII, 801, No.
+5886. As an explanation for this very marked attitude, Delcassé said to
+a third party that he had tried to co-operate with Germany but had been
+refused (Memo. by Klehmet, April 19, 1903, _ibid._, 801 f., No. 5887).
+None the less, up to Oct., 1903, the French government continued to
+approve the investment of French capital in the Bagdad Railway (memo. by
+Rosen, Oct. 29, 1903, _ibid._, 456 ff., No. 5274).]
+
+[Footnote 160: This conversation occurred on Dec. 31, 1902. Lansdowne to
+Monson, Dec. 31, 1902, _B.D._, II, 274 ff., No. 330; Lansdowne to
+Monson, Dec. 28, 1902, Monson to Lansdowne, Dec. 31, 1902, Newton, pp.
+269 f.]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER V
+
+ THE ANGLO-GERMAN ALLIANCE NEGOTIATIONS, 1898-1901
+
+
+The international position of Great Britain at the end of the nineteenth
+century was uncomfortable. The major Powers were all busy in the
+colonial world more or less in opposition to her interests;
+_Weltpolitik_ was the order of the day; the navies of all states were
+growing rapidly and by combining might be able to threaten her maritime
+supremacy. On the Continent, the German Emperor’s courtship of an
+apparently complaisant France, cordial relations between Russia and
+Germany, an agreement in 1897 between Russia and Austria-Hungary over
+Balkan affairs, and a growing amity between France and Italy and between
+France and Spain gave evidence of a developing _rapprochement_ between
+the two systems of alliance. Trouble in West Africa with France in 1897
+and early in 1898 made Anglo-French relations acute. Fashoda was on the
+way; so was the Boer War. British markets in China were being menaced by
+Russia, and the British feared that the Russian, French, and German
+governments might co-operate on Chinese affairs to their injury. Public
+opinion demanded that the government defend British interests more
+actively.[161] These were the more important of the difficulties
+confronting the island empire.
+
+To dispel these dangers, two policies were advocated by members of the
+Unionist cabinet. Lord Salisbury, prime minister and foreign secretary,
+did not believe that a Continental alliance against Great Britain would
+be made.[162] He clung to the traditional position of “splendid
+isolation,” of making special agreements with the various Powers over
+specific issues. As he realized the inadequacy of this policy if Great
+Britain attempted to expand her influence too largely in China, South
+Africa, and elsewhere, he only half-heartedly supported a vigorous
+program of aggression.[163] In January, 1898, he proposed to the Russian
+government a general agreement over China and Turkey.[164] On March 8 he
+asked the United States government to co-operate in maintaining the open
+door in China.[165] However, he was old, in poor health, and inclined to
+permit Mr. Chamberlain, the colonial secretary, to force his hand. In
+fact, the last five years of his administration have been called the
+“Chamberlain period,” so great was the latter’s influence.[166]
+
+This “stormy petrel” from Birmingham favored an entirely new
+policy.[167] Determined to maintain and extend British interests in the
+whole world, he sought to form a corporation for directing world-affairs
+by close co-operation with the United States and Germany. He was
+supported more or less fully by the Prince of Wales (who in 1901 became
+King Edward VII), in the cabinet by Mr. Balfour (who in 1902 succeeded
+Lord Salisbury as prime minister), and by the Duke of Devonshire;[168]
+while his influence with the masses and with the business elements
+seemed to assure him of popular approval.
+
+Various difficulties had in recent years arisen between Great Britain
+and Germany. But Mr. Chamberlain thought that in view of the German
+Emperor’s offers of alliance to the British government at various times
+during the 1890’s, one as late as January, 1898,[169] the German
+government would eagerly accept a proposal to that effect. When Lord
+Salisbury’s policy toward Russia failed and trouble with Russia[170] and
+with France[171] threatened, in March and April, 1898, the British
+Colonial Minister declared to Count Hatzfeldt, the German ambassador,
+that Great Britain would have to relinquish her isolation. Under threat
+of coming to terms with Russia or France if his overture were refused,
+he made an unofficial offer of defensive alliance to Germany.[172]
+
+Mr. Chamberlain’s proposal was coolly received. Count Bülow, the German
+secretary of state for foreign affairs, and his inspirer and guide, Herr
+von Holstein, privy councilor (_vortragender Rat_) in the foreign
+office, who with occasional interference from the Emperor were the
+directors of the German foreign policy, not only were mistrustful of
+British intentions, but also saw no reason for dissatisfaction with the
+current international position and prospects of their state.[173]
+Besides, this overture so increased the power of their situation that
+they were able to lay down a policy of the “free hand” to be followed
+during the next few years. A telegram from Emperor William II to Count
+Bülow on April 10, 1898, together with the latter’s marginal notes, best
+expressed this policy. After stating that Germany had less need of a
+British alliance since Great Britain had turned her attention from the
+Continent to the colonial world, the Emperor wrote:
+
+
+If the English need of support direct itself in the future toward
+European affairs also, we could consider it more closely than now.
+Nevertheless, it is also of great significance for the present to keep
+the official attitude in England favorable and hopeful toward us
+[Bülow’s comment, “Yes”]. . . . . Through an England friendly to us we
+hold another card in our hand toward Russia. [Bülow’s comment, “Very
+true, we must remain independent between them, be the tongue to the
+wagon, not the pendulum restlessly swinging about.”] And we thereby have
+prospects of gaining colonial and commercial advantages from England.
+[Bülow’s comment, “Also the reverse. The calmer relations we have with
+Russia, the more will England treat us with respect, not to say take
+great care with respect to us.”]
+
+
+The Emperor proposed that Count Hatzfeldt be instructed not to refuse
+the overture abruptly, but rather to express pleasure at the prospect of
+a profitable co-operation leading toward an alliance. To the Emperor’s
+remark that the pro-German sentiment of the British cabinet would not
+long remain concealed from Russia, Count Bülow wrote, “It does not
+matter, if only the English cannot prove to the Russians and _vice
+versa_ with the evidence in hand that we have played falsely.”[174] In
+accordance with the Emperor’s suggestion, Mr. Chamberlain’s offer was
+for the time refused.[175]
+
+The German leaders had found the policy by which they hoped to carry out
+their program of _Weltpolitik_, already so resoundingly proclaimed in
+their speeches and acts.[176] “I am the balance of power,” declared the
+Emperor in 1901;[177] and by utilizing the advantages of that position,
+he and his advisers hoped to gain colonial concessions from the Powers,
+to construct the Bagdad Railway, and to build the German battle fleet.
+It was a policy of finesse and at times of intrigue, one nicely suited
+to Count Bülow’s ingratiating nature, but one full of pitfalls. Success
+depended upon whether Anglo-Russian and Anglo-French hostility was
+temporary or relatively permanent, upon whether Mr. Chamberlain was in
+earnest in declaring that Great Britain must abandon her policy of
+isolation,[178] upon whether German diplomacy would be competent to
+force concessions from those Powers without driving them together.
+Guided by Emperor William II, Count Bülow, and Herr von Holstein, the
+policy of the “free hand” seemed almost foredoomed to failure.
+
+In 1898 the Emperor was thirty-nine years of age, but experience had
+taught him very little caution, moderation, or political understanding.
+He remained the spoiled sovereign of a spoiled country; each had risen
+to power so rapidly as to be unable to take this position for granted
+and not to demand explicit recognition of it, and as to be inclined
+consequently to abuse its power. The Emperor’s belief in and practice of
+his divine right to rule were not tempered by any consistent application
+to his task. While not devoid of political intuition, he lacked most of
+the qualities of a statesman. He was brilliant, but erratic and
+impulsive. In spite of his seeming wide knowledge, he was mentally lazy
+and devoid of profundity. Of a highly nervous temperament, he was guided
+chiefly by his emotions. He appeared rigid, severe, and forbidding on
+state occasions, but he loved to relax, to be jocose and sociable. He
+could be cordial and wonderfully amiable and charming, like his mother,
+and again, when his temper was aroused, he could be ruthless and
+crushing. He spoke often and dramatically, and traveled as much and as
+widely as he could. He frequently antagonized and angered people
+unintentionally by his imperious obtuseness. Then he would feel
+aggrieved and abused, for he expected all the understanding to come from
+the other side. One could not take him at his word; one had to interpret
+his meaning from his acts and intentions as well. At times his words
+would leave exactly the opposite meaning from that which he intended. He
+once remarked to Sir Frank Lascelles, the British ambassador, that “the
+noodles seem to have had a lucid interval,” when upon further
+conversation it developed he had intended thereby to express his great
+satisfaction with the communication from the British government.[179] He
+loved to set countries at odds by his intrigues and gossip. His jealousy
+of Great Britain, her empire, and her fleet was a cardinal reason both
+for his being constantly attracted to England and for his desiring to
+become her colonial and naval rival. Nevertheless, after twelve years of
+personal contact with the Emperor, Sir Frank Lascelles came to the
+following sane conclusion about him:
+
+
+In spite of his habit of twirling his moustache and rattling his sabre
+(I trust that this sentence may be taken in its metaphorical and not in
+its literal sense, for, as a matter of fact, I have never either seen
+him twirl his moustache or heard him rattle his sword), which he may
+think a befitting attitude for the ruler of a mighty Empire, he is
+really animated by the most pacific sentiments, and . . . . his great
+ambition now is that his name should be handed down to posterity as that
+of the German Emperor who kept the peace. It would seem that this is the
+estimate which the Emperor has formed of his own character, as in a
+recent conversation with Prince Radolin[180] he said he was at a loss to
+understand how, with his well-known peaceful intentions, he had come to
+be looked upon as a disturbing element—an instance, perhaps, of that
+“inconscience” which M. Herbette[181] considered a characteristic of the
+German nation, and concluded with the almost pathetic sentence, “Ich bin
+doch kein böser Mensch” [I am really not a bad person].[182]
+
+
+The Emperor’s deficiences were in part made up by Count Bülow, who had
+been chosen secretary of state for foreign affairs in 1897 to execute
+the program of _Weltpolitik_. Born in 1849 of an old North German
+family, he had had diplomatic service at St. Petersburg, Vienna, Athens,
+Paris, Bucharest, and Rome where he had been ambassador since 1894. He
+came to his task at a crucial time in the history of Germany’s foreign
+relations, but he lacked the farsightedness, decision, and firmness of
+character necessary to deal with the problems adequately. Although he
+learned with time, recognized his mistakes, and tried to readjust the
+German foreign policy, he was then unable to do so. While his
+cosmopolitan culture and knowledge enabled him to understand other
+nations better than most Germans did, he seemed incapable of using this
+understanding practically. Under him the German policy appeared to
+demand something for nothing, anywhere or everywhere, merely because
+Germany was so strong a Power. In 1907 Lord Sanderson, British permanent
+undersecretary of state for foreign affairs, 1894-1906, a sane,
+sympathetic witness, stigmatized the German method of handling foreign
+affairs as follows:
+
+
+The Germans are very tight bargainers, they have earned the nickname of
+“_les Juifs de la diplomatie_.” The German Foreign Office hold to a
+traditional view of negotiation that one of the most effective methods
+of gaining your point is to show how intensely disagreeable you can make
+yourself if you do not. They are surprised that the recollection of
+these methods should rankle, and speaking generally the North Germans
+combine intense susceptibility as regards themselves with a singular
+inability to appreciate the susceptibilities of others.[183]
+
+
+Under Count Bülow, German foreign policy lacked direction and stability.
+It aroused the mistrust of the other Powers, who could not comprehend
+what Germany wanted. The Count was abler at extricating himself from
+difficulties than at avoiding them. A confirmed optimist at all times,
+he was suave and reassuring; the French Ambassador complained that he
+“was a fluent speaker but when one came to recall and note down what he
+had said very little came out of it.” Sir Frank Lascelles called him a
+perfect master at expressing vague generalities.[184] Count Bülow no
+doubt had a difficult time keeping the Emperor within bounds and undoing
+the latter’s mischief, but he was by no means an able statesman himself,
+and he relied for advice upon a person whom many considered a
+psychopath.
+
+Since Prince Bismarck’s dismissal in 1890, Herr von Holstein had been a
+dominant influence in the German foreign office as the preserver of the
+Bismarckian tradition. Strangely secretive, he avoided all publicity and
+all responsible offices, yet he lusted after power behind the scenes. He
+was irascible, morbidly suspicious, both timorous and bold, by nature
+unfit to handle foreign affairs. He could not make up his mind to act.
+He could not understand the other government’s viewpoint. He knew few of
+the foreign representatives in Berlin personally, and rarely consulted
+with any of them. He relied for information chiefly upon the dispatches
+and upon newspapers, thus lacking the intimate contact with reality
+which might have balanced his recluse judgment. His mobile mind could
+make two plus two equal three, five, or seven and a half, but seldom
+four. His training under Prince Bismarck had taught him that master’s
+use of threats and force but not his caution and comprehensive sagacity.
+His adroit and intricate analysis of diplomatic situations and policies
+made him a power in the foreign office. The Emperor urged his dismissal,
+but Count Bülow clung to him, consulted him on all matters, and
+generally followed his advice.[185]
+
+During the next year the German plan worked. On the one hand, with
+troubles coming to a head in China, the Sudan, and South Africa, the
+British government was grudgingly compelled to play the German game by
+agreeing to a division of the Samoan Islands and a prospective partition
+of the Portuguese colonies and by acknowledging the utility of similar
+accords.[186] On the other hand, an indirect bid for a _rapprochement_
+by M. Delcassé in December, 1898,[187] and a proposal from the Russian
+government in 1899 for an agreement over Asia Minor[188] signified equal
+success, although the German government refused both offers. Then when
+the Boer War began late in 1899, Great Britain, surprised by the
+universal outburst of hatred against her on the Continent and
+apprehensive of German, French, and Russian intervention in favor of the
+Boers, had urgent need of Germany’s friendship. Hence the pressing
+invitation to the Emperor William II and his foreign secretary in the
+autumn of 1899 to visit England.[189]
+
+As Count Bülow cared nothing about the fate of the Boers, the visit took
+place (November 21-24). He and the Emperor were received
+enthusiastically by government, court, and people. The British ministers
+showed anger at France and Russia and a desire for co-operation with
+Germany.[190] Mr. Chamberlain, who boldly asserted that the two
+countries “must sooner or later come to a general understanding because
+we need each other,” repeated his wish for a grouping of Germany, the
+United States, and Great Britain.
+
+The German leaders responded as in the previous year that more intimate
+relations between the two countries should be prepared for by special
+agreements. The British Colonial Minister, readily accepting this
+program, suggested two subjects for negotiation, the Bagdad Railway and
+Morocco; whereupon it was agreed that he should take up the latter
+question with the German Ambassador in the very near future.[191]
+
+The visit to Windsor was apparently a complete success. Both governments
+were highly pleased with the results. The only discord in the harmony
+was the expression of mutual antagonism on the part of the English and
+German press. To counteract this opposition, Mr. Chamberlain, at Count
+Bülow’s suggestion,[192] openly advocated his project in a speech at
+Leicester on November 30 as follows:
+
+
+The same sentiments which bring us into closer sympathy with the United
+States of America may also be evoked to bring us into closer sympathy
+and alliance with the Empire of Germany. . . . . If the union between
+England and America is a powerful factor in the cause of peace, a new
+triple alliance between the Teutonic race and the two great branches of
+the Anglo-Saxon race will be a still more potent influence in the future
+of the world.[193]
+
+
+The Colonial Secretary’s act had the very reverse effect of that
+intended, for the German people rejected with vituperation the idea of
+allying with the oppressors of the Boers. The German Foreign Minister,
+ambitious for the chancellorship when the aged Prince Hohenlohe should
+retire, and inclined to follow the dictates of public opinion, felt
+compelled to take cognizance of this feeling. Speaking before the
+Reichstag on December 11, he made a cool rejoinder to Mr. Chamberlain’s
+proposal. In a chauvinistic declaration of Germany’s need for colonies
+and a navy, he proclaimed: “As for England we are gladly willing to live
+with her in peace and harmony on a basis of complete reciprocity. But
+since our international position is at present a favorable one, we must
+utilize it in order to safeguard ourselves for the future.”[194]
+
+Mr. Chamberlain was indignant at this reply, even though the German
+government made special efforts to explain it away.[195] Hence, as the
+two presses were at each other’s throats and the governments were
+wrangling over minor troubles arising out of the Boer War, he dropped
+the idea of an alliance, presumably also that of a Moroccan accord, at
+least until the close of the war.[196]
+
+In 1900, with the French advance on Touat, the Moroccan question became
+acute. In April the German government for the first time weighed
+carefully its ambitions with reference to Morocco and the means for
+realizing them.[197] Count Bülow held that Germany had maritime
+interests of her own in that land, and was no longer concerned merely
+for the sake of Italy, as she had been ten years before. He coveted
+particularly the southern area on the Atlantic Coast. A British seizure
+of Moroccan territory without consideration for German interests, he
+stated, “would within Germany greatly weaken and discredit the
+Government and in its foreign relations make any future co-operation
+with England impossible and force us to seek connection with Russia and
+France at almost any price”; while an Anglo-French settlement of the
+question to the exclusion or detriment of Germany “would have
+incalculable results for the further course of German internal and
+external policy.” In either case German foreign policy would be forced
+to take another direction whether the government wished it or not; and
+relations with Great Britain would become more strained than ever
+before. In fact, the German government “could not possibly accept either
+eventuality.”[198]
+
+In these words lies the key to the understanding of Germany’s
+precipitation of the Moroccan crisis in 1905.
+
+To obviate those dangers, the German government preferred an agreement
+with Great Britain. In May, 1900, it proposed to Mr. Chamberlain that
+they negotiate a Moroccan accord. But the Colonial Minister, while
+acknowledging that the only peaceful way to solve the Moroccan problem
+was by an agreement between Great Britain and Germany, had become more
+wary and requested the German government to make an official proposal
+which he could submit to the cabinet. He felt sure, he said, that it
+would be favorably received, and promised to support it, provided his
+well-known desires were given due consideration.[199]
+
+Fearing a rejection, the German government deemed it inadvisable to
+follow Mr. Chamberlain’s suggestion. Nor did Count Bülow warn the
+British government that Germany must participate in any Moroccan
+settlement, since he believed it possible to prevent the Moroccan affair
+from becoming serious until the opportunity for an Anglo-German
+agreement arose.[200] He held that an Anglo-French understanding about
+Morocco was impossible because of the conflict of French and British
+interests over the possession of the south shore of the straits. To
+avert a crisis, he issued a discreet warning to M. Delcassé in May,
+1900, not to go beyond treaty limits in the action against Touat;[201]
+he incited the Russian Foreign Minister, who, he thought, would be
+opposed to any Anglo-French agreement or to a European disturbance over
+Morocco, to restrain the French Minister;[202] and he instructed the
+German representative at Tangier to retard the collapse of the Sherifian
+Empire.[203] Thereafter the Moroccan question remained in abeyance for a
+time.[204]
+
+In November, 1900, Lord Salisbury resigned the secretaryship of foreign
+affairs to Lord Lansdowne. Lord Lansdowne had had a varied life. Of high
+aristocratic and wealthy family, he had entered politics as a matter of
+course and had served as governor-general of Canada, viceroy of India,
+and secretary of state for war. He fitted admirably into his new
+position as foreign secretary, for he possessed patience, tact, and the
+ability to inspire confidence, and he assumed responsibility with
+decision and courage. While he entered office with very few
+preconceptions, he wrote to Sir Frank Lascelles, he did believe that “we
+should use every effort to maintain and, if we can, to strengthen the
+good relations which at present exist between the Queen’s Government and
+that of the Emperor” of Germany.[205] In his foreign policy he sided
+with the new school, already represented by Mr. Balfour and Mr.
+Chamberlain. When King Edward VII gave royal support to this group after
+his accession to the throne in January, 1901, the Victorian policy of
+“splendid isolation” definitely terminated. However, the old Marquess of
+Salisbury remained premier until 1902; and the foreign policy eventually
+adopted was a compromise between the old and the new.
+
+The international position of Great Britain remained bad. If anything,
+it had grown worse since 1899; for the Boer War lingered on, and France
+and Russia were endangering important British interests, the one by her
+active policy with reference to Morocco, the other by her use of the
+Boxer Rebellion to extend her power in China and by her activity in
+Persia and Afghanistan.
+
+In the autumn of 1900, the British government had negotiated an accord
+with Germany over China to hold Russia in check.[206] In January of the
+next year Mr. Chamberlain, after repeating his assertion that Great
+Britain must ally either with Germany and the Triple Alliance or with
+France and Russia, proposed to Baron Eckardstein, first secretary of the
+German embassy in London, that as an introduction to the project for an
+alliance the two governments agree over Morocco. The subject could be
+taken up with Lord Lansdowne, he said, as soon as Lord Salisbury, still
+in feeble health, left for the south.[207] Before any negotiations were
+begun, however, far eastern affairs, as more pressing and vital, brought
+to the fore the question of alliance.[208]
+
+Early in 1901, reports were spread of a Russo-Chinese agreement which
+would give Russia practically a protectorate in Southern Manchuria. The
+problem which thereupon confronted the British government was
+illuminatingly summed up by Mr. Bertie, undersecretary of state for
+foreign affairs, as follows (March 11, 1901):
+
+
+Germany has assured Japan that there is no secret understanding between
+Germany and Russia respecting the Far East, and that, in the event of a
+crisis, Germany will observe a benevolent neutrality, the effect of
+which would be to keep the French fleet in check.
+
+The Japanese Government ask whether His Majesty’s Government have been
+consulted by Germany, and whether they believe the assurances given to
+Japan; and they further ask: “How far may Japan rely upon the support of
+Great Britain in case Japan finds it necessary to approach Russia?”
+
+It is assumed by the Japanese Minister that “approach” in the context
+means “resist,” which is war.
+
+Unless Japan can make sure of neither Germany nor France taking an
+active part on the side of Russia, she will not fight Russia over the
+Manchurian Agreement. If the possession of Corea by Russia were at
+issue, Japan would fight, with or without support, and independently of
+whether France or Germany would remain neutral.
+
+If Germany and England, in answer to the Japanese Government’s
+inquiries, deprecated war, and said that if unfortunately war broke out
+between Japan and Russia, it would be the object of England and Germany
+to restrict as much as possible the theatre of it, and they would
+consequently remain neutral, so long as no third Power attempted to take
+a part in it, then I think that such an assurance might be sufficient to
+satisfy Japan that France would not be allowed to join with Russia, and
+that Japan might fight Russia single-handed. . . . .
+
+If France were allowed to side with Russia, and they crushed Japan, the
+result might be a renewal of the triple understanding—viz., Russia,
+France, and Germany. Those three Powers would become supreme in China,
+and we should go to the wall.
+
+If Russia alone, or in combination with France, defeated Japan, and we
+came to the rescue to prevent the obliteration of Japan, we should incur
+the lasting enmity of Russia and France, and a defeated, and probably
+ungrateful, Japan would not be of much use to us as against Russian
+encroachments.
+
+It has been suggested that if Japan defeated Russia there would be grave
+danger to European interests in the Far East.
+
+A great military and naval Power, with unbounded natural resources and
+an immense population such as Russia, is not likely to accept defeat
+permanently. She would reorganize for a further trial of strength, but
+such a trial might be a long way off, and it would be greatly retarded
+by Japan being allowed to take as the spoils of war the Liaotung
+Peninsula. Its possession by Japan would be a guarantee that there would
+be no reconciliation between Russia and Japan. This would be an
+advantage to England and Europe. The yellow danger would be kept in
+check by Russia and the Russian danger by Japan.
+
+If we do nothing to encourage Japan to look upon us as a friend and
+possible ally against Russia and France, we may drive her to a policy of
+despair, in which she may come to some sort of terms with Russia. I do
+not say that it is probable, but it is possible, and our interests would
+greatly suffer if she did.[209]
+
+
+Therein lies the deciding reason why the British government tried to
+secure the support of Germany; why it made the alliance with Japan when
+this attempt came to naught; and why it subsequently established the
+entente with France. An agreement with Germany, supplemented by one with
+Japan, would have solved Great Britain’s difficulty of defending her
+colonial interests by assuring the maintenance of the balance of power
+in Europe. Failing this, an alliance with Japan and a policy of
+reconciliation and entente with the other Powers furnished the best
+solution. But in any case either alliance or close friendship with a
+European Power was essential.
+
+At the time the prospect of obtaining German aid looked favorable. The
+German Emperor had rushed impetuously to the bedside of the dying Queen
+Victoria late in January, 1901, and had remained for her funeral. In his
+talk with the British officials he had denounced Russia for her
+aggressions in China, had informed them that Great Britain needed an
+alliance, and, in a dinner speech at Marlborough House on February 5,
+had declared: “We ought to form an Anglo-German alliance, you to keep
+the seas while we would be responsible for the land.”[210]
+
+Late in January the British government tried to obtain German aid
+against the Russian aggressions in Manchuria by calling into action the
+Anglo-German agreement of the previous year; but the German government
+refused to permit an interpretation of that accord which would embroil
+it with its eastern neighbor.[211] Instead, it tried to persuade the
+British government to connive at embroiling Russia and Japan in war
+without binding themselves.[212] It assured Japan of the localization of
+that conflict by remarking that Germany would remain neutral and would
+thereby hold France neutral. In March, Lord Lansdowne, following up this
+assertion, asked Baron Eckardstein if Germany would undertake to hold
+France neutral in case of war (March 16). In violation of strict orders
+from Herr von Holstein “not to breathe a word of alliance” to the
+British government,[213] Baron Eckardstein replied that “if there were a
+defensive alliance between Germany and Great Britain covering all
+eventualities,” Germany would be able to do so.[214] Two days later Lord
+Lansdowne declared to the Baron that “England now stands at a turning
+point and must decide upon her future policy”; and in accordance with
+the Baron’s strong hint, a defensive alliance was tentatively set forth
+for consideration. By its terms each Power should preserve neutrality in
+case of an attack upon the other by either France or Russia but should
+come to its aid in case of an attack by those two Powers combined.[215]
+
+Baron Eckardstein reported the proposal as coming from the British
+Minister, and his government looked upon it as a British offer. Lord
+Lansdowne made the Baron responsible for the initiative. With the
+existing evidence, the contradiction cannot be cleared up; yet as each
+government was under the impression that the other had taken the first
+step and was therefore more eager for the alliance than was really the
+case, the negotiations endured longer than they might otherwise have
+done.[216]
+
+In the next two and a half months the course of the negotiations was
+checkered. On March 22, Baron Eckardstein unofficially brought up the
+subject with Lord Lansdowne. During their discussion they agreed that it
+would be best for the _casus foederis_ to arise when one of the Powers
+was attacked by two or more Powers, and that the accord should be
+ratified by the two parliaments. The British Secretary declared that the
+Premier approved “in principle of a strictly defined defensive
+alliance.”[217] On March 29 they again touched on the matter; but owing
+to Lord Lansdowne’s inability to consult his chief, who was ill, and
+owing to a flare-up between the two governments over a minor matter
+connected with the Chinese customs, Baron Eckardstein postponed the
+negotiations.[218] On April 9 he was ready to resume the discussion; and
+for the first time he mentioned to the British Minister the
+indispensable stipulation of his government, that Austria-Hungary and
+Italy must also be included in the alliance.[219]
+
+From the start the attitude of the German government toward these
+proposals was mistrustful. Since the British government had been
+disinclined to execute the Anglo-German accord of 1898 for a future
+division of the Portuguese Colonies, the German government was reluctant
+to consider even Mr. Chamberlain’s suggestion for an accord over
+Morocco, at least until events permitted its immediate execution.[220]
+Count Bülow and Herr von Holstein refused to believe that the British
+government would make an alliance so long as Lord Salisbury remained in
+authority. Moreover, they feared that if the negotiations failed and
+became known to France and Russia, owing to British perfidy or to
+Parliament’s rejecting the treaty—and either outcome seemed likely to
+them—Germany would be the one to suffer from the wrath of those two
+Powers while Great Britain, protected by the sea, would enjoy greater
+international security than before.
+
+
+I am especially mistrustful of this present storm of friendship by
+Chamberlain and comrades [wrote Herr von Holstein to Count Metternich]
+because the threatened understanding with Russia and France is such
+complete fraud. A retreat by England would postpone her struggle for
+existence for a few years, but would then make it all the more certain,
+because the opponents [France and Russia] will have been strengthened,
+while the English will have been weakened in power and prestige. A
+reasonable agreement with England, that is, one in which a proper
+consideration is given to the almost certain danger of war to which we
+should thereby expose ourselves, can in my opinion first be achieved
+when the appreciation of her constrained position has become more
+general in England than it is at present.[221]
+
+
+Count Bülow, chancellor since the previous October, held the same view.
+In fact, he was even more inclined to preserve the policy of the “free
+hand.” “Facts, sir, facts,” he wrote in connection with this question of
+alliance, and above all he wanted facts in the form of colonial
+acquisitions in Africa.[222] So while sensible of the power of such an
+alliance, these two would have it only on German terms, an alliance
+between the British Empire, on the one hand, and the Triple Alliance, on
+the other; or, as an alternative formulation, an alliance by which Great
+Britain joined the Triple Alliance.[223] To obviate all possibility of
+betrayal, they instructed Baron Eckardstein to demand of Lord Lansdowne
+the acceptance of this basic condition before continuing the
+negotiations. Not until then, they declared, should the terms of the
+Triple Alliance be imparted to the British government.[224]
+
+Conversations were resumed in the second half of May. When, on May 23,
+Count Hatzfeldt made clear to Lord Lansdowne the provision of his
+government, an _impasse_ was soon reached. The British Foreign Secretary
+approved the project of alliance in principle, but he had never expected
+much to come of it. Upon ascertaining the German condition he foresaw a
+breakdown when the time came to formulate the terms.[225]
+
+Moreover, Lord Salisbury persistently refused to admit that Great
+Britain needed an alliance. He asserted that it would be a bad bargain
+to join the Triple Alliance, for the “liability of having to defend the
+German and the Austrian frontiers against Russia is heavier than that of
+having to defend the British Isles against France.” He opposed any
+secret agreement on the grounds that Parliament had the right to decide
+questions of war and peace; and he continued to favor isolation and
+dependence on public opinion to determine governmental policy in a
+crisis. Nor did he believe that German public opinion, so hostile to
+Great Britain, would accept an Anglo-German defensive alliance.[226]
+Thus while some of the members of the cabinet discussed the possible
+terms of an alliance, and Sir Thomas Sanderson, permanent undersecretary
+of state for foreign affairs, even drew up two trial drafts of a treaty,
+the opposition of Lord Salisbury together with the German refusal to
+communicate the terms of the Triple Alliance forced the negotiations to
+a halt in June.[227]
+
+The German Chancellor readily accepted this turn of affairs. After
+expressing a desire for a future alliance, he assured the British
+government that Germany would continue the policy of the “free
+hand.”[228]
+
+The visit of the Moroccan embassy to London and Berlin in June and July
+afforded an opportunity to revive the Moroccan question. Lord
+Lansdowne’s uneasiness about the French actions with reference to
+Morocco was not allayed by the French Ambassador’s assertion to him on
+July 3 that France had no intention of raising that problem.[229] But
+nothing was done.[230]
+
+When el-Menebhi, the leader of that embassy, was dismissed in disgrace
+on his return home, the British Foreign Secretary expressed the wish to
+remain in constant touch with the German government on the Moroccan
+question.[231] Each Power, however, acted separately in defending the
+Moroccan Minister; and the German government looked on this as another
+occasion in which Great Britain was trying to employ Germany to defend
+British interests. The German leaders likewise thought that by refusing
+to make any separate agreements with Great Britain they would eventually
+force the latter to accept their terms for an alliance.[232]
+
+As soon as the negotiations with Germany showed no prospect of success,
+the British government followed up Japan’s offer of an alliance and in
+August began official conversations on that subject.[233] None the less
+it continued its efforts to make some kind of agreement with Germany.
+But on August 23, at Wilhelmshöhe, a meeting between Emperor William II
+and King Edward VII, which the British leaders hoped would pave the way
+for an understanding, had no result.[234] In November, Lord Lansdowne
+regarded the difficulties in the way of an alliance as “at the present
+moment virtually insuperable,” enumerating some of them as follows:
+
+
+1. The impossibility of arriving at a definition of the _casus foederis_
+which would not be either so rigid as to greatly hamper our freedom of
+action or so vague as to deprive the alliance of all practical value.
+
+2. The certainty of alienating France and Russia.
+
+3. Complications with the Colonies, which might not at all approve of
+the idea of hanging on to the skirts of the Triple Alliance.
+
+4. The risk of entangling ourselves in a policy which might be hostile
+to America. Without knowledge of the German Emperor’s views in regard to
+the United States, this is to my mind a formidable obstacle.
+
+5. The difficulty of carrying Parliament with us at a moment when the
+Parliamentary situation is as little satisfactory as it is at
+present.[235]
+
+
+But, he wrote, “the argument that, because we have in the past survived
+in spite of our isolation, we need have no misgivings as to the effect
+of that isolation in the future,” could be pushed too far. Besides,
+since negotiations then in progress for an alliance with Japan virtually
+signified that Great Britain did not wish to remain alone, he proposed
+that the government seek “a much more limited understanding with Germany
+as to our policy in regard to certain matters of interest to both
+Powers”—for instance, they might agree to co-operate for the
+preservation of the territorial _status quo_ on the shores of the
+Mediterranean, the Adriatic, the Aegean, and the Black Seas, for the
+maintenance of the “freedom for the commerce and navigation . . . . in
+the Persian Gulf, and the prevention of any territorial acquisitions on
+its shores by other Powers which might interfere with that object.” But
+only “whenever the occasion for it might arise” should the nature of
+their co-operation be determined.[236]
+
+The Premier remained vigorously opposed to the project; but Lord
+Lansdowne urged that the German government probably expected him to
+reopen the negotiations, and that if he made this offer, that government
+would be deprived of any grounds for complaining that Great Britain “had
+treated it inconsiderately or brusquely rejected its overture.” As he
+also suspected that “the German Gov’t. (or the German Emperor) desire
+something much more precise and far-reaching . . . . and that they would
+refuse an overture on the above lines,” he maintained that the proposal
+could cause no damage.[237]
+
+On December 19 the British Foreign Minister recalled to Count
+Metternich, the new German ambassador at London, the negotiations for an
+alliance and stated that “while . . . . we certainly did not regard the
+German proposal with an unfriendly or indifferent eye, I did not think
+that for the moment we could afford to take it up.” Instead he suggested
+that the two governments arrive at “an understanding with regard to the
+policy which they might pursue in reference to particular questions or
+in particular parts of the world in which they are alike interested.”
+Count Metternich expressed surprise that the British government had not
+“jumped at” this “magnificent opportunity” to end its isolation, and
+replied that he did not expect his government to favor this restricted
+proposal. “It was a case of the whole or none.”[238]
+
+There the matter rested. Lord Lansdowne and King Edward were both
+dissatisfied with Count Metternich’s critical tone;[239] but they
+continued to voice their solicitude, which the German Emperor and Count
+Bülow reciprocated, that the two governments keep in close touch.[240]
+However, public opinion in both countries remained bitterly hostile, and
+when in October, 1901, Mr. Chamberlain spoke disparagingly of the
+actions of the German army in the war of 1870-71, the protest of the
+German press was so vehement that the Chancellor, on January 8, 1902,
+declared in the Reichstag, “let the man go and do not become excited. He
+bites on granite.”[241] The pleasant visit of the Prince of Wales to
+Germany a short time later did not offset the discord resulting from
+this war of words.[242] By March, Count Metternich wrote that he
+“wouldn’t give two pence for Anglo-German relations”; while the
+Chancellor admitted that so far as Great Britain was concerned the
+Emperor was Germany’s “best card.”[243] It was a dismal fiasco for so
+momentous a negotiation.
+
+The British government thought that by considering an alliance the
+German leaders had manifested friendly feeling. Lord Lansdowne did not
+believe that the animosity of Germany toward Great Britain would last
+forever or that Germany would “let us ‘go under’ before a great European
+coalition.” “Is it not more likely,” he wrote, April 22, 1902, to Sir
+Frank Lascelles, “that she will stick to her rôle of the honest broker,
+taking advantage, if you like, of our difficulties in order to pursue a
+_politique de pourboire_ at our expense, but without pooling her
+ironclads with those of France and Russia?” The Ambassador agreed with
+him; but after talking to the British naval attaché in Berlin he pointed
+out for the first time that the German navy was definitely aimed at
+Great Britain.[244] The future for Anglo-German relations was therefore
+none too bright for the British government, and British public opinion
+cordially approved when on January 30, 1902, the Anglo-Japanese Alliance
+was concluded.
+
+The German government was not at all alarmed by this failure. Its
+relations with France and Russia were of the best. As a result of the
+Anglo-German intimacy in 1901, M. Delcassé had twice endeavored to
+approach Germany, while in September, during a meeting at Danzig of the
+Russian and German rulers together with their foreign ministers, the
+Russian Minister had asserted that “an alliance between Germany and
+Russia would be the greatest blessing and is a goal to be striven for.”
+The overtures were disregarded.[245] When the Anglo-Japanese Alliance
+was concluded in February, 1902, the Russian government urged Germany to
+enter a Continental combination against those Powers; but Count Bülow,
+pleased to see obviated the possibility of an Anglo-Russian
+understanding, bluntly rejected the proposal.[246] Nor did he believe
+that, since Russia and Great Britain were so decisively at odds, France
+would dare make an accord with the latter.[247] And Herr von Holstein
+wrote on December 31, 1901, that “at the present day Germany with her
+enormous strength on land and sea is a factor which no Power that wishes
+to perform an important act dare leave in its rear without having
+previously come to an understanding with her.”[248]
+
+Thus, the German apostles of _Weltpolitik_ guiding the destinies of an
+acquisitive and chauvinistic nation, refused to co-operate with Great
+Britain, France, or Russia. Apparently they did not know what they
+wanted or how they might utilize their favorable situation; for they
+derived no benefits whatever from any of the opportunities offered. An
+Anglo-German agreement would have prevented the formation of the Entente
+Cordiale and would very likely have brought about a settlement of the
+Moroccan question to Germany’s advantage. By cultivating France and
+encouraging her to draw closer, Germany might have come to some
+agreement with that Power through which she could have prevented the
+later Entente Cordiale from becoming so cordial, and through which she
+might have shared in the general improvement of relations between the
+Powers and in the settlement of the Moroccan question. The whole
+Moroccan crisis and many others to follow might thereby have been
+avoided. In a world of shifting friendships, of swiftly changing
+policies, a world demanding resolute and judicious statesmanship, the
+German Chancellor and Herr von Holstein refused to take risks. Toward
+the British government they had showed themselves too sensitive,
+suspicious, and peremptory in their demands.[249] The French and Russian
+governments they had rebuffed even more brusquely. Deluded by wrong
+preconceptions of international politics and overprudent in their
+negotiations, they believed themselves entirely safe in playing their
+favorite rôle of sphinx and of aligning with no one.[250] Their naval
+program alarmed Great Britain; their construction of the Bagdad Railway
+antagonized Russia; their Moroccan policy exasperated France. They
+played against all three Powers, and still did not expect them to draw
+together against a common opponent. Instead of alliances or ententes,
+they reaped animosities. By their refusals and their clumsy diplomacy,
+they paved the road for the Anglo-French and the Anglo-Russian ententes.
+And when, a few years later, those Powers came to agreement, the German
+leaders feared that their country was being encircled and isolated.
+
+
+[Footnote 161: Memo. by Bertie, March 14, 1898, _B.D._, I, 17 f., No.
+24; memo. by Tilley, on relations between Russia and Great Britain,
+1892-1904, Jan. 14, 1905, _ibid._, 1 ff., No. 1; O’Conor to Salisbury,
+March 15, 1898, _ibid._, 20, No. 29; Salisbury to O’Conor, March 24,
+1898, _ibid._, 24 f., No. 38; Monson to Salisbury, Feb. 26, 1898,
+_ibid._, 146, No. 172; Monson to Salisbury, March 6, 1898, _ibid._, 147,
+No. 173; Monson to Salisbury, May 19, 1898, _ibid._, 154, No. 179; memo.
+by Bertie, June 30, 1898, _ibid._, 54, No. 72; Erich Brandenburg, _Von
+Bismarck zum Weltkriege_ (Berlin, 1924), chaps. iv, v; Sir A. W. Ward
+and G. P. Gooch (eds.), _The Cambridge History of British Foreign
+Policy, 1783-1919_ (Cambridge, 1923), Vol. III, chaps. iii, iv,
+_passim_; _G.P._, Vol. XIV, chap. xci. The British were especially
+concerned over maintaining the open door in China. See Alfred L. P.
+Dennis, _Adventures in American Diplomacy, 1896-1906_ (New York, 1928),
+pp. 179, 182 f.]
+
+[Footnote 162: For expressions of this fear see Gwynn, _The Letters and
+Friendships of Sir Cecil Spring Rice_, I, 182 f., 225 f., 331 f.]
+
+[Footnote 163: Hatzfeldt to Hohenlohe, April 26, 1898, _G.P._, XIV, 221
+ff., No. 3793; dispatches from Hatzfeldt recounting conversations with
+Salisbury, May 12, 15, 1898, _ibid._, 230 ff., and notes; Hatzfeldt to
+F. O., May 15, 1898, _ibid._, 233 ff., No. 3797. The best exposition of
+Salisbury’s views is given in a memorandum by him, May 29, 1901, _B.D._,
+II, 68 f., No. 86. See also J. A. Spender, _The Public Life_ (New York,
+1925), I, 79; Salisbury to Lansdowne, April 21, 1897, Newton, _Lord
+Lansdowne, A Biography_, pp. 145 f. On Aug. 30, 1899, Salisbury wrote to
+Lansdowne that the British army would not be needed for a Continental
+war “in a blue moon” (_ibid._, p. 157).]
+
+[Footnote 164: Salisbury to O’Conor, Jan. 17, 25, 1898, _B.D._, I, 5,
+No. 5; 8, No. 9; and others in _ibid._, chap. i.]
+
+[Footnote 165: Dennis, pp. 170 f.]
+
+[Footnote 166: Salisbury was prime minister from 1895 to 1902.]
+
+[Footnote 167: On Chamberlain see Spender, I, 79.]
+
+[Footnote 168: Hatzfeldt, German ambassador to London, also thought that
+the Liberal leaders, Lord Rosebery and Sir William Harcourt, approved of
+Chamberlain’s plan. Hatzfeldt to Hohenlohe, April 7, 1898, _G.P._, XIV,
+209 ff., No. 3788. See also Gwynn, I, 188, 191.]
+
+[Footnote 169: Lieut. Col. Grierson, British military attaché at Berlin,
+reported to the British Ambassador a conversation with the Emperor on
+Jan. 15, 1898, as follows: “He [the Emperor] said that for eight years
+he had striven to be friendly with Great Britain to gain her alliance,
+and to work hand in hand with her, but had failed” (Grierson to
+Lascelles, Jan. 19, 1898, _B.D._, I, 42, No. 62). The Emperor said the
+same to Lascelles on Feb. 1. See Lascelles to Salisbury, Feb. 1, 1898,
+_ibid._, 43 f., No. 63; memo. by Tilley on the relations between Germany
+and Great Britain (1892-1904), Jan. 5, 1905, _ibid._, Appendix, 322 ff.;
+Brandenburg, chaps. i-iv.]
+
+[Footnote 170: Russia had just occupied Port Arthur. In speaking to the
+Russian Ambassador about that act on March 24, Balfour declared that the
+British government regarded it with “grave objection,” as a “menace” to
+the friendship of the two countries. See Salisbury to O’Conor, March 24,
+1898, _B.D._, I, 24 f., No. 38.]
+
+[Footnote 171: Monson to Salisbury, March 6, 1898, _ibid._, 147, No.
+173. Salisbury tried to obtain the support of the United States on
+Chinese affairs (Dennis, p. 170).]
+
+[Footnote 172: It was on March 24 that Hatzfeldt reported that Alfred
+Rothschild had arranged a meeting between him and Chamberlain and
+Balfour. See Hatzfeldt to F. O., March 24, 1898, _G.P._, XIV, 193 f.,
+No. 3779. For reports of the conversations between Hatzfeldt and Balfour
+and Chamberlain see the following dispatches: Hatzfeldt to F. O., March
+25, 29, April 1, 1898, _ibid._, 195 ff., Nos. 3781, 3782, 3784;
+Hatzfeldt to Hohenlohe, April 26, 1898, _ibid._, 221 ff., No. 3793. The
+editors of the _British Documents_ could find “practically no evidence”
+concerning this proposal in the archives of the British foreign office,
+and have stated that Chamberlain apparently treated the affair as
+private (_B.D._, Vol. I, Foreword). See also the dispatch from Lascelles
+to Balfour, Aug. 23, 1898, _ibid._, 101, No. 122. That Chamberlain was
+uncertain about the sort of agreement he wished was evident from the
+different formulations of the proposal which he made. As to the American
+aspect of his plan, Chamberlain was influenced by Ambassador John Hay,
+who supported the idea of an Anglo-American alliance. On May 13, 1898,
+at Birmingham the British Minister spoke publicly in favor of that
+alliance (Dennis, pp. 117 f., 122). Nothing of course came of the
+matter. The great affinity for the United States on the part of the
+British government was shown in July, 1898, by its indirect warning to
+Germany not to interfere in the Spanish-American War (Gwynn, I, 251,
+253). On the Anglo-German negotiations for an alliance see Friedrich
+Meinecke, _Geschichte des deutsch-englischen Bündnisproblems, 1890-1901_
+(München and Berlin, 1927); Eugen Fischer, _Holsteins Grosses Nein_
+(Berlin, 1925).]
+
+[Footnote 173: Holstein thought that the possibility for this alliance
+would first enter “when (1) Russia threatens us; (2) England acts less
+haughty than today.” See Holstein’s minute to a dispatch from Hatzfeldt
+to Hohenlohe, April 26, 1898, _G.P._, XIV, 223, No. 3793. On the German
+reaction see also the dispatch from Bülow to Hatzfeldt, April 3, 1898,
+_ibid._, 204 ff., No. 3785, and the following documents.]
+
+[Footnote 174: William II to F. O., April 10, 1898, _ibid._, 217 f., No.
+3790.]
+
+[Footnote 175: Bülow to Hatzfeldt, April 3, 24, 1898, _ibid._, 207, No.
+3785; 218 ff., No. 3792.]
+
+[Footnote 176: In January, 1896, the Emperor had sent the famous
+telegram to President Krueger of the Transvaal which was regarded by the
+British as showing a desire to take the Boers under Germany’s wing. On
+Dec. 6, 1897, Bülow in his first speech before the Reichstag as
+secretary of state for foreign affairs declared: “The days are past when
+the German left to one neighbor the earth, to another the sea, and
+reserved for himself the air. . . . . We do not wish to place anyone in
+the shadow, but we demand also our place in the sun” (Bülow, _Reden_, I,
+7 f.). In 1898 the first important navy bill was passed by the
+Reichstag. On September 23, 1898, the Emperor declared, “Our future lies
+on the sea” (G. P. Gooch, _History of Modern Europe, 1878-1919_ [New
+York, 1923], pp. 225 ff.). These were merely a few examples of Germany’s
+changed interests.]
+
+[Footnote 177: William II to Bülow, Jan. 29, 1901, _G.P._, XVII, 28, No.
+4987.]
+
+[Footnote 178: Hatzfeldt to Hohenlohe, April 26, 1898, _ibid._, 224, No.
+3793.]
+
+[Footnote 179: The occasion for this remark was the conclusion of the
+Anglo-Japanese Alliance early in 1902 (Lascelles to Lansdowne, Feb. 8,
+1902, Newton, p. 247).]
+
+[Footnote 180: German ambassador at Paris at the time.]
+
+[Footnote 181: Formerly French ambassador at Berlin.]
+
+[Footnote 182: Extract from “General Report on Germany for 1906, May 24,
+1907,” _B.D._, III, 437 f.]
+
+[Footnote 183: Memo. by Sanderson, Feb. 21, 1907, _ibid._, p. 429.]
+
+[Footnote 184: Whitehead to Lansdowne, June 28, 1905, _ibid._, 108 f.,
+No. 135; extract from “General Report on Germany for 1906,” _ibid._, p.
+435.]
+
+[Footnote 185: Emil Ludwig, _Wilhelm der Zweite_ (Berlin, 1926); G. P.
+Gooch, “Baron von Holstein,” _Cambridge Historical Journal_, Vol. I;
+Johannes Haller, _Die Ära Bülow; eine historisch-politische Studie_
+(Stuttgart and Berlin, 1922); Otto Hammann, _Bilder aus der letzten
+Kaiserzeit_ (Berlin, 1922); extract from “General Report on Germany for
+1906,” _op. cit._, III, 434 ff.; Wilhelm Spickernagel, _Fürst Bülow_
+(Hamburg, 1921); André Tardieu, _Le Prince de Bülow_ (Paris, 1909).]
+
+[Footnote 186: _G.P._, Vol. XIV, chaps. xcii, xcvi; _B.D._, Vol. I,
+chaps. ii, iii.]
+
+[Footnote 187: Memo. by Huhn, Dec. 5, 1898, _G.P._, XIII, 247 ff., No.
+3558. See above.]
+
+[Footnote 188: Memo. by Bülow, April 18, 1899, _ibid._, XIV, 540 f., No.
+4017, and the following documents. According to a memorandum by Bülow on
+May 5, 1899, Count Osten-Sacken, the Russian ambassador, attempted “in
+every way” to convince him that Germany “should hold in all questions to
+Russia and France and take position against England.” “England is strong
+only because Germany and France do not co-operate,” said the Ambassador
+(_ibid._, 546 ff., No. 4020).]
+
+[Footnote 189: Hatzfeldt to F. O., Sept. 30, 1899, _ibid._, XV, 397, No.
+4386; Bülow to F. O., Sept. 25, 1899, _ibid._, 396 f., No. 4385; Monson
+to Salisbury, Aug. 14, 1899, _B.D._, I, 213, No. 259; Monson to
+Salisbury, Oct. 1, 1899, _ibid._, 233, No. 285; and other documents in
+_ibid._, chap. vii.; Dennis, pp. 125 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 190: Salisbury was absent on account of the death of his wife,
+but the officials in the British foreign office assured Hatzfeldt that
+the premier was not at all prejudiced against Germany, as the latter
+supposed. See Hatzfeldt to Hohenlohe, Dec. 2, 1899, _G.P._, XV, 423, No.
+4401; cf. Gwynn, I, 351.]
+
+[Footnote 191: On this visit see Lee, _King Edward VII_, I, 747;
+Eckardstein, _Lebenserinnerungen und politische Denkwürdigkeiten_, Vol.
+II, chaps. iv, v; memo. by Bülow, Nov. 24, 1899, _G.P._, XV, 413 f., No.
+4398; Eckardstein to Hatzfeldt, Nov. 30, 1899, _ibid._, 421 f., No.
+4400; Hatzfeldt to Hohenlohe, Dec. 2, 1899, _ibid._, 422 ff., No. 4401.]
+
+[Footnote 192: Eckardstein, II, 107.]
+
+[Footnote 193: _Annual Register_ (1899), p. 227. Salisbury agreed to
+this act, but warned Chamberlain that Germany would very probably
+disappoint him (Spring Rice to Miss Lascelles, April 17, 1902, Gwynn, I,
+351).]
+
+[Footnote 194: Bülow, I, 88 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 195: Eckardstein, II, 126 ff., 133 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 196: _Ibid._, p. 125.]
+
+[Footnote 197: On several previous occasions Morocco had been the topic
+of conversation between British and German officials. In January, 1897,
+not to go back any farther, Lord Salisbury had sounded the German
+government on that question, but the latter had not been interested
+(_G.P._, XVII, No. 4979 n.). But when the subject was brought up in a
+conversation between the Premier and Hatzfeldt in February and again in
+June, 1899, the German policy, now launched on its career of
+_Weltpolitik_, was different. Salisbury stated that in case of the
+break-up of the Sherifian Empire, “Great Britain could not with
+indifference see the Atlantic seaboard pass under any other dominion.”
+Hatzfeldt replied that in his personal opinion his government would
+approve a British acquisition of territory in that land only in case
+Germany received her share; and he added that it would be very desirable
+to exchange views and ideas on the subject whenever action should become
+pressing. Salisbury, however, expressed the wish for the _status quo_ to
+be indefinitely maintained, and refused to enter into details. See
+Hatzfeldt to Bülow, Feb. 8, 1899, _ibid._, 295 f., No. 5152; Salisbury
+to Lascelles, June 7, 1899, _B.D._, II, 256 f., No. 307.
+
+A short time before the visit to Windsor in Nov., 1899, Chamberlain
+suggested to Eckardstein that the two governments make a secret
+agreement over Morocco by which the Mediterranean coast should be left
+free for Great Britain while Germany should receive far-reaching
+concessions on the Atlantic seaboard. See Hatzfeldt to F. O., _G.P._,
+XVII, 297, No. 5153. Eckardstein also states that in Jan., 1901,
+Chamberlain and Devonshire both told him that in 1899 Salisbury had
+approved the idea of a solution of the Moroccan problem with Germany
+(Eckardstein, II, 359).]
+
+[Footnote 198: These remarks by Bülow were chiefly contained in his
+minutes to the dispatches from Hatzfeldt. See Bülow to Münster, April
+27, 1900, _G.P._, XVII, 299 ff., No. 5156; Hatzfeldt to Hohenlohe, May
+1, 1900, _ibid._, 303 ff., No. 5159; Hatzfeldt to F. O., May 27, 1900,
+_ibid._, 309 ff., No. 5162; Bülow to Hatzfeldt, May 29, 1900, _ibid._,
+313 f., No. 5165; Hatzfeldt to Hohenlohe, June 1, 1900, _ibid._, 314
+ff., No. 5166.]
+
+[Footnote 199: Bülow’s plan was also to associate Italy later in the
+Moroccan settlement. See Bülow to Hatzfeldt, May 14, 1900, _ibid._, 302
+f., No. 5158; Hatzfeldt to Hohenlohe, May 21, 1900, _ibid._, 303 ff.,
+No. 5159; Bülow to Hatzfeldt, May 23, 1900, _ibid._, 308 f., Nos. 5160
+f.; Hatzfeldt to F. O., May 27, 1900, _ibid._, 309 ff., No. 5162.]
+
+[Footnote 200: Hatzfeldt to Hohenlohe, May 21, 1900, _ibid._, 303 ff.,
+No. 5159; Bülow to Hatzfeldt, May 23, 1900, _ibid._, 308, No. 5160;
+Hatzfeldt to F. O., May 27, 1900, _ibid._, 309 ff., No. 5162; Bülow to
+Hatzfeldt, May 28, 1900, _ibid._, 311 f., No. 5163; Hatzfeldt to F. O.,
+May 29, 1900, _ibid._, 312 f., No. 5164; Hatzfeldt to Hohenlohe, June 1,
+1900, _ibid._, 314 ff., No. 5166.]
+
+[Footnote 201: Bülow to Münster, April 27, 1900, _ibid._, 299 f., No.
+5156; Münster to Hohenlohe, May 9, 1900, _ibid._, 301 f., No. 5157.]
+
+[Footnote 202: Bülow to Tschirschky, June 5, 1900, _ibid._, 318 ff., No.
+5167; Bülow to Hatzfeldt, June 13, 1900, _ibid._, 321 ff., No. 5168.]
+
+[Footnote 203: Derenthall to Mentzingen, Aug. 2, 1900, _ibid._, 324, No.
+5170.]
+
+[Footnote 204: Bülow to Hatzfeldt, June 30, 1900, _ibid._, 323 ff., No.
+5169 and note.]
+
+[Footnote 205: Newton, pp. 196 f.]
+
+[Footnote 206: _G.P._, Vol. XVI, chap. cv; _B.D._, Vol. II, chap. ix,
+Part I.]
+
+[Footnote 207: Eckardstein, II, 235 ff.; Hatzfeldt to F. O., Jan. 18,
+1901, _G.P._, XVII, 14 ff., No. 4979. In the same month Lansdowne
+expressed to the German government the desire to remain in “complete
+harmony” with it on Chinese affairs. See Lascelles to Lansdowne, Jan. 4,
+1901, _B.D._, II, 20 f., No. 25; Lascelles to Lansdowne, Jan. 18, 1901,
+_ibid._, 21 f., No. 26.]
+
+[Footnote 208: On those far eastern troubles see _G.P._, Vol. XVI;
+_B.D._, Vol. II, chap. ix.]
+
+[Footnote 209: _B.D._, II, 43, No. 54. On Anglo-Russian relations see
+also Newton, pp. 215 f.]
+
+[Footnote 210: Quoted in Lee, II, 11. This was against Bülow’s advice
+(Bülow to William II, Jan. 21, 1901, _G.P._, XVII, 20 f., No. 4983). On
+the Emperor’s visit see Eckardstein to F. O., Jan. 29, 1901, _ibid._, 23
+f., No. 4986; William II to Bülow, Jan. 29, 1901, _ibid._, 24 ff., No.
+4987; Lansdowne’s memo., Jan., 1901, Newton, p. 199. The Emperor had
+been given an enthusiastic welcome in England. The Harmsworth press had
+called him “A Friend in Need” (Newton, p. 198).]
+
+[Footnote 211: Memo. by Mühlberg, Jan. 28, 1901, _G.P._, XVI, 286, No.
+4785, and following documents.]
+
+[Footnote 212: Lansdowne to Lascelles, March 18, 1901, Newton, pp. 199
+f.]
+
+[Footnote 213: Eckardstein, II, 279.]
+
+[Footnote 214: He naturally did not report this statement to Berlin
+(_ibid._, pp. 280 f.).]
+
+[Footnote 215: _Ibid._, pp. 277 ff.; Eckardstein to F. O., March 19,
+1901, _G.P._, XVII, 41 f., No. 4994; Lansdowne to Lascelles, March 18,
+1901, _B.D._, II, 61, No. 77; Newton, pp. 199 f. As the Ambassador was
+ill during most of this time, Eckardstein carried on the negotiations.]
+
+[Footnote 216: Eckardstein has written in his memoirs that in his
+private correspondence with Holstein he took the latter’s peculiarities
+into account and used expressions that were adapted to his “complex
+mentality.” “For instance, I very often avoided using the word
+_alliance_ and spoke of a _defensive arrangement_; then I emphasized
+that the whole affair was yet in embryo, although in fact the
+negotiations progressed very smoothly and were on the point of
+conclusion, etc. As soon as the negotiations began to run smoothly and
+lightly, Holstein became suspicious, and if the other party were willing
+to accede to our wishes, smelled a rat.” The truth seems to be that for
+this very reason Eckardstein sent home not less but more favorable
+reports of the British desire for an alliance than was really the case,
+and by stretching his instructions to the utmost in his ardent desire to
+ally the two Powers, may have been responsible for the contradiction
+mentioned above (Eckardstein, II, 273).]
+
+[Footnote 217: Hatzfeldt to F. O., March 23, 1901, _G.P._, XVII, 46 ff.,
+No. 4997; Eckardstein, II, 321 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 218: Lansdowne to Lascelles, March 29, 1901, _B.D._, II, 62,
+No. 79; Eckardstein, II, 326 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 219: Lansdowne to Lascelles, April 9, 1901, _B.D._, 62 f., No.
+80; Eckardstein, II, 335.]
+
+[Footnote 220: Bülow to Hatzfeldt, Jan. 20, 1901, _G.P._, XVII, 17 f.,
+No. 4981.]
+
+[Footnote 221: Holstein to Metternich, Jan. 21, 1901, _ibid._, 22, No.
+4984. Metternich accompanied the Emperor to England at that time.]
+
+[Footnote 222: See his minutes to the dispatch from Holstein to
+Hatzfeldt, Feb. 11, 1901, _ibid._, 37, No. 4989; Bülow to Hatzfeldt,
+Jan. 20, 1901, _ibid._, 17 f., No. 4981; Bülow to William II, Jan. 21,
+1901, 20 f., No. 4983.]
+
+[Footnote 223: The two formulations were in no way identical, but the
+negotiations never proceeded far enough to permit their being
+discussed.]
+
+[Footnote 224: Bülow to Hatzfeldt, March 24, 1901, _ibid._, 49, No.
+4998; Bülow to Hatzfeldt, May 11, 1901, _ibid._, 54 ff., No. 5003;
+Richthofen to Hatzfeldt, May 18, 1901, _ibid._, 60 ff., No. 5007;
+Richthofen to Hatzfeldt, May 20, 1901, _ibid._, 64 f., No. 5009; and the
+following documents.]
+
+[Footnote 225: Lansdowne to Lascelles, April 13, 1901, _B.D._, II, 63,
+No. 81; Lansdowne to Lascelles, March 18, 1901, Newton, pp. 199 f.]
+
+[Footnote 226: Memo. by Salisbury, May 29, 1901, _B.D._, II, 68 f., No.
+86.]
+
+[Footnote 227: Memo. by Sanderson, May 27, 1901, _ibid._, 66 ff., No.
+85; Lansdowne to Eckardstein, May 24, 1901, _ibid._, 66, No. 84;
+Lansdowne to Lascelles, May 30, 1901, _ibid._, 69 ff., No. 87 and
+inclosures; Hatzfeldt to Lansdowne, May 30, 1901, _ibid._, 71, No. 88;
+Hatzfeldt to F. O., May 27, 1901, _G.P._, XVII, 68 f., No. 5012; and the
+following documents.]
+
+[Footnote 228: Lascelles to Lansdowne, Aug. 25, 1901, _B.D._, II, 73,
+No. 90; memo. by Holstein, June 14, 1901, _G.P._, XVII, 83 ff., No.
+5019. Late in October, 1901, Holstein and Bülow had long talks with
+Valentine Chirol of the _London Times_ to a like effect. See memo. by
+Holstein, Oct. 31, Nov. 1, 1901, _G.P._, XVII, 101 ff., Nos. 5026 f.;
+Sir Valentine Chirol, _Fifty Years in a Changing World_ (London, 1927),
+pp. 288 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 229: On April 13, 1901, Lansdowne had written to Lascelles:
+“Things in Morocco look ugly. Do you hear anything?” See _B.D._, II, 64,
+No. 81; Lansdowne to Monson, July 3, 1901, _ibid._, 261, No. 318.]
+
+[Footnote 230: Eckardstein gives the following story:
+
+Early in July, soon after the arrival of the Moroccan embassy in London,
+Sir Arthur Nicolson, British minister in Morocco, told him that France
+was intriguing in that land for the establishment of a protectorate. At
+Lansdowne’s request he suggested the co-operation of Great Britain and
+Germany for the maintenance of the _status quo_ in Morocco. Then he
+touched upon the subject of a common Anglo-German peaceful penetration
+of that country, which should be inaugurated by a commercial treaty with
+the Sultan. Between the two European states an agreement should be made
+to determine which concessions each should receive. He proposed that
+Germany be given, among others, the right of supplying all railway and
+electrical materials and of installing them, and that all further
+political, financial, or economic measures should be carried through by
+the two Powers together. Eckardstein states that he sent a long telegram
+to Berlin in regard to this conversation, but received no reply
+(Eckardstein, II, 357 f.). The editors of _G.P._, however, found no such
+telegram (_G.P._, XVII, 333 n.), nor is there any mention of the
+proposal in any of the documents published by them or by the British.
+Still the offer may have been made, as will be evident later. Hammann,
+director of the press department in the German foreign office at that
+time, has also written that on the dismissal of el-Menebhi, the British
+government proposed common action to the German government, but that it
+was refused (Otto Hammann, _Zur Vorgeschichte des Weltkrieges.
+Erinnerungen aus den Jahren 1897-1906_ [Berlin, 1918], pp. 139 f.).]
+
+[Footnote 231: Eckardstein to F. O., July 29, 1901, _G.P._, XVII, 338
+f., No. 5182.]
+
+[Footnote 232: Memo. by Mühlberg, Aug. 8, 1901, _ibid._, 339 f., No.
+5183; Holstein to Bülow, Aug. 8, 1901, _ibid._, 341, No. 5184; Bülow to
+F. O., Aug. 9, 1901, _ibid._, 341 f., No. 5185.]
+
+[Footnote 233: _B.D._, Vol. II, chap. x; Newton, pp. 221 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 234: On that meeting see Lee, II, 130 f.; Lascelles to
+Lansdowne, Aug. 25, 1901, _B.D._, I, 259, No. 323; Lascelles to
+Lansdowne, Aug. 23, 1901, _ibid._, II, 73, No. 90; memo. by William II,
+Aug. 23, 1901, _G.P._, XVII, 94 ff., No. 5023. For the meeting Lansdowne
+gave to King Edward a memorandum on the questions which might be brought
+up. “With regard to Morocco,” he wrote, “the policy of the German and
+British Governments would appear to be identical. Both desire the
+maintenance of the _status quo_, and both would probably resent any
+indignity offered to the Moorish Envoy who lately visited, and was
+received with honours at the German and British Courts” (_ibid._, 124,
+No. 5033). By mistake King Edward gave a copy of this memorandum to the
+Emperor, whose government responded with a similar communication to the
+British government. The statement about Morocco was as follows: “In
+Morocco we follow a policy of reserve. The Morocco question by itself is
+not sufficiently important for us to justify a policy by which Germany
+might incur the risk of serious international complications” (_ibid._,
+129, No. 5025, Anlage).]
+
+[Footnote 235: Memo. by Lansdowne (very secret), Nov. 11, 1901, _B.D._,
+II, 78, No. 92. Late in July, Lascelles had expressed to Eckardstein his
+personal opinion that an alliance between Great Britain and the Triple
+Alliance was hardly possible, that at most one between Great Britain and
+Germany was all that could be expected (Eckardstein to F. O., July 29,
+1901, _G.P._, XVII, 91, No. 5021).]
+
+[Footnote 236: Memo. by Lansdowne, Nov. 11 and Dec. 4, 1901, _B.D._, II,
+76 ff., Nos. 92 f.]
+
+[Footnote 237: Memo. by Lansdowne, Dec. 4, 1901, _ibid._, 79 f., No. 93,
+and Salisbury’s minutes.]
+
+[Footnote 238: Lansdowne to Lascelles, Dec. 19, 1901, _ibid._, 80 ff.,
+No. 94; memo. by Metternich, Dec. 28, 1901, _G.P._, XVII, 111 ff., No.
+5030.]
+
+[Footnote 239: Lee, II, 133 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 240: Lascelles to Lansdowne, Jan. 16, 1902, _B.D._, I, 268,
+No. 331; Plunkett to Lansdowne, April 11, 1902, _ibid._, 274 f., No.
+340; Lascelles to Lansdowne, Jan. 3, 1902, _ibid._, II, 84, No. 95;
+memo. by Mühlberg, Dec. 27, 1901, _G.P._, XVII, 109 f., No. 5028;
+William II to Edward VII, Dec. 30, 1901, _ibid._, 110 f., No. 5029.]
+
+[Footnote 241: He was quoting Frederick the Great (Bülow, I, 242). See
+Metternich to Bülow, Nov. 19, 1901, _G.P._, XVII, 194 f., No. 5073;
+Bülow to Metternich, Nov. 26, 1901, _ibid._, 195 ff., No. 5074;
+Metternich to F. O., Nov. 26, 1901, _ibid._, 197 ff., No. 5075; Buchanan
+to Lansdowne, Nov. 20, 1901, _B.D._, I, 263, No. 325; Lansdowne to
+Buchanan, Nov. 26 and Dec. 3, 1901, _ibid._, 263, No. 326; 265, No. 328;
+Lansdowne to Lascelles, Jan. 14, 1902, _ibid._, 266 f., Nos. 329 f.;
+Lascelles to Lansdowne, Jan. 16, 1902, _ibid._, 268 f., No. 332. Cf.
+Chirol, p. 297; Gwynn, I, 350.]
+
+[Footnote 242: Lee, II, 138 ff.; _B.D._, I, Nos. 334 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 243: Bülow to Metternich, March 13, 1902, _G.P._, XVII, 149
+ff., No. 5046.]
+
+[Footnote 244: Newton, pp. 247 f.]
+
+[Footnote 245: Bülow to F. O., Sept. 12 and 14, 1901, _G.P._, XVIII, 28
+f., Nos. 5393 f.; memo. by Bülow, Sept. 14, 1901, _ibid._, 29 ff., No.
+5395.]
+
+[Footnote 246: Alvensleben to F. O., Feb. 19, 1902, _ibid._, XVII, 156
+f., No. 5049; Bülow to Alvensleben, Feb. 22, 1902, _ibid._, 157 ff., No.
+5050; memo. by Bülow, Feb. 25, 1902, _ibid._, 160 ff., No. 5051; and the
+following documents.]
+
+[Footnote 247: See below.]
+
+[Footnote 248: Memo. by Holstein, Dec. 31, 1901, _ibid._, XVIII, 737,
+No. 5844.]
+
+[Footnote 249: Eckardstein, III, 93.]
+
+[Footnote 250: Hammann, _Zur Vorgeschichte des Weltkrieges_, pp. 144 f.]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI
+
+ THE MAKING OF THE ENTENTE CORDIALE
+
+ I
+
+
+The Boer War had revealed to Great Britain the depth of antagonism
+toward her among the European nations and the haphazard inadequacy of
+her defensive preparations. The British government had therefore sought
+the support of Germany and of Japan. But the alliance with the second
+had not compensated for the rebuff from the first; and in 1902 the
+future direction of the British foreign policy, particularly with
+reference to Europe, remained undecided.
+
+In February, 1903, Mr. Balfour, who succeeded Lord Salisbury as premier
+in 1902, appointed as a permanent body a Committee of Imperial Defence,
+whose duty, he said, was
+
+
+to survey as a whole the strategical military needs of the Empire, to
+deal with the complicated questions which are all essential elements in
+that general problem, and to revise from time to time their own previous
+decisions, so that the Cabinet shall always have at its disposal
+information upon these important points.[251]
+
+
+Great Britain also wanted to maintain peace, to settle her outstanding
+international difficulties, and to form ententes. In the first part of
+1903 the government tried to co-operate with the various Powers. In
+January and February it asked the aid of Austria-Hungary and Italy in
+preventing Russia from sending ships of war through the Dardanelles and
+the Bosphorus. The two states refused although both were cordial friends
+of Great Britain.[252] Moreover, the British government associated
+itself with Germany in the Venezuela affair and expressed its
+willingness to participate in the Bagdad Railway. British public opinion
+protested strenuously, however, for it mistrusted Germany, regarding her
+as so chauvinistic, so hungry for colonies, so bold in her naval
+ambitions as to be not a friend but a rival. Hence the government had to
+settle the one affair as quickly as possible and, in March, to recede
+entirely from its stand on the other.[253]
+
+Anglo-Russian relations were most troublesome. Early in 1903 the
+antagonism of these two Powers became acute all along the line from the
+Bosphorus and the Dardanelles to Persia to Afghanistan to Tibet to
+China. The British government offered in March to negotiate over
+Afghanistan, but Russia refused.[254] Still more pressing for Great
+Britain was the problem which resulted from the Anglo-Japanese Alliance.
+In April, 1903, the renewal of Russian activity in Manchuria and its
+extension into the Yalu Valley caused a grave increase of tension
+between Russia and Japan.[255] The revived danger of war between those
+two states brought home to the British government the urgent need of
+assurance that it would not become involved if hostilities did ensue. By
+the terms of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance, the _casus foederis_ would
+arise only in case of an attack upon one of the allies by two or more
+Powers. Manifestly it would depend upon France and upon the nature of
+her obligations as ally to Russia whether Great Britain could preserve
+neutrality in case of a conflict.[256] Hence the British government,
+which in the previous year had refused to touch the dangerous Moroccan
+question, now concluded to accept the French proposal for a Moroccan
+accord and to liquidate the various differences with France. It would
+thereby win a friend who could act as mediator between Great Britain and
+Russia and would make certain that a Russo-Japanese war would not
+involve the allies of those Powers.
+
+The way toward France instead of Germany was indicated clearly by the
+drift of British public opinion; for while the animosity between the
+British and German peoples had increased in 1902 and 1903, the flow of
+vituperation between the British and French press over the Boer War and
+the Dreyfus case[257] had practically ceased, and concerted movements
+were on foot to create a popular basis for an “entente cordiale.”
+
+Political and business groups took the lead in this work. By 1903 King
+Edward, who two years previously had desired an alliance with Germany,
+advocated strongly a _rapprochement_ with France. His personal dislike
+and mistrust of his nephew, William II, and of Germany, his wide
+knowledge of men and of international affairs, his sensitiveness to
+currents of public opinion, caused him to incline toward France.[258]
+His willingness to take the initiative in clarifying public opinion and
+in defending British interests enabled him to play an important rôle in
+transforming British foreign relations.[259] One of his advisers was
+Lord Esher, a man who held no official position but who exerted quiet
+influence upon court, government, and press. Particularly interested in
+naval and military problems, he was instrumental in creating the
+Committee of Imperial Defence, of which he became a permanent member.
+Through him the press leaders were kept informed about the needs of
+defense and were guided toward friendship with France.[260] The
+influence of the business world in the same direction was represented by
+Mr. Thomas Barclay, former president of the British Chamber of Commerce
+in Paris and an active worker for the improvement of international
+relations. In 1901 he began a campaign in both France and England for a
+_rapprochement_, to which during the next two years he devoted his
+entire time and fortune.[261] In England these efforts had complete
+success.[262] In France they encountered more difficulty, for France had
+usually been the loser in Anglo-French diplomatic battles. However, the
+_revanche_ anti-German group, the socialists and internationalists, and
+the commercial and business elements approved. Then, after the French
+people at large became convinced that Great Britain was not so
+thoroughly egoistic and chauvinistic as they had supposed, and that she
+really felt amicable toward France, they heartily welcomed a
+_rapprochement_ as flattering and beneficial to their country.[263]
+Nevertheless, they remained skeptical about the durability of any
+entente with their old rival. The French press laid down as conditions
+for one that the Dual Alliance should not be weakened thereby and that
+Great Britain should convince France of her serious intentions by
+treating her equitably in the settlement of their colonial differences,
+particularly the Moroccan question.[264] This mistrust was not entirely
+dispelled for several years.
+
+Informal conversations for an agreement were resumed in April, 1903,
+between representatives of the two governments.[265] Then King Edward
+visited Paris (May 1-5); and, although at first he was met with cold
+silence, his felicity of speech and act soon won the French people. As a
+French Anglophobe said to a friend: “I can’t think what has come over
+the population of Paris. The first day they behaved well; the second
+day, they merely displayed interest; but the third day, _c’était
+attristant—ils ont acclamé le Roi!_”[266] This visit, so unexpectedly
+successful, created a favorable atmosphere for further
+negotiations.[267] Later in the month, at M. Cambon’s initiative, the
+project of a treaty of arbitration was taken up.[268] In July, when
+President Loubet, accompanied by M. Delcassé, returned the King’s visit,
+the newspapers reported a statement by King Edward to the effect that M.
+Loubet would be more heartily welcomed in England than any chief of
+state had ever been. The President was able to speak of the Entente
+Cordiale as established.[269]
+
+During the visit the foreign ministers agreed that the time was “in
+every way propitious for a frank exchange of opinions.” They began that
+long negotiation from which the Entente Cordiale was to result. They
+discussed the question of the fishing rights off the coast of
+Newfoundland, the question of Siam, of the New Hebrides, of Sokoto, of
+the treatment of British firms in French Congo, and of Morocco. The
+French Minister frankly stated that if they could come to terms over
+Morocco, “all other difficulties would disappear, or become
+comparatively easy to deal with.” While denying any desire “to get rid
+of the Sultan or to annex his country” or to “force the pace,” he
+declared that in view of the rapidly waning authority of the Sultan,
+France could not regard with indifference the prevalence of chronic
+disorder in Morocco or permit any other Power to undertake the task of
+regenerating the land. What France wished, said M. Delcassé, was a
+“reasonable assurance that their policy would not be obstructed by Great
+Britain.”
+
+In reply, Lord Lansdowne made three conditions for an accord over
+Morocco. First, British interests in the Mediterranean seaboard of
+Morocco, particularly in Tangier and the neighboring coast, must be
+protected. Second, Spanish ambitions must be fairly dealt with. Third,
+complete equality of economic opportunity in Morocco must be assured. M.
+Delcassé unhesitatingly accepted all three stipulations. Then the
+British Minister proposed that they make the settlement a comprehensive
+one by including the Egyptian question. Again the French Minister
+agreed, provided they reached accord “as to the position of France and
+Morocco.”[270]
+
+A few days later M. Cambon made to the British Minister a more detailed
+statement of the French proposal. Concerning Morocco, he said, the two
+governments could agree that the existing constitution _au point de vue
+politique_ as well as _au point de vue territorial_ should be
+maintained. But the British should acknowledge that France “has a
+peculiar interest in maintaining peace within that country, and in
+assisting the Moorish Government to bring about the administrative,
+economical, and financial improvements of which Morocco stands so much
+in need.” The French, in turn, should expressly attest that these
+improvements would not infringe in any way upon the principle of
+commercial liberty. The two governments, continued M. Cambon, might co-
+operate in securing a free passage through the Straits of Gibraltar by
+preventing the erection of any fortifications on the southern shore.
+When Lord Lansdowne raised the objection that Great Britain was
+interested in other parts of the Moorish littoral besides that abutting
+on the straits, the Ambassador readily acknowledged this point, and
+remarked that France wished to prevent any Power from establishing
+itself at any strategic position on the Moroccan coast.
+
+As M. Cambon did not mention the Egyptian problem, the British Minister
+immediately stated that its inclusion was an absolute condition to any
+consideration of the Moorish question. The Ambassador proposed that they
+leave Egypt alone for the present; but, when this suggestion was
+refused, he declared that if the French government, by acknowledging the
+permanency of the British hold upon that land, extracted this “big thorn
+from the foot of Great Britain,” it would expect _une grosse
+compensation_. This, he said, “might take the shape of greater liberty
+of action in Morocco—something less remote and conjectural . . . . than
+she [France] had yet asked for.”[271]
+
+After this agreement upon the questions to be included in the
+negotiation there remained the other preliminary matter of how to deal
+with Spain. Lord Lansdowne thought that “it would not be difficult for
+us to come to terms with France if Spain were out of the way.”[272] But,
+bound by the promise of the previous March to that Power and more
+desirous of having weak and decadent Spain than powerful France control
+the south shore of the straits, he upheld Spain’s interest in Morocco.
+M. Cambon declared that his government acknowledged this position,
+mentioning the Franco-Spanish negotiations of 1902 as proof. At his
+suggestion they decided on August 5 that a subsequent settlement between
+France and Spain in harmony with the proposed Anglo-French accord be
+made and be communicated to the British government.[273]
+
+The negotiations over these complex problems lasted almost ten months.
+Two months passed before the British answer was ready; for the members
+of the cabinet were on their vacation, a ministerial crisis occurred in
+September as a result of which several resigned,[274] and Lord Cromer,
+British consul-general and agent in Egypt, had to be consulted. This
+influential official had previously received permission to send Sir
+Eldon Gorst, financial adviser to the Egyptian government, to Paris in
+the autumn in order to sound the French government about converting the
+Egyptian debt and abolishing the _caisse de la dette_. Foreseeing the
+failure of that effort unless the British government made concessions in
+Morocco, Lord Cromer urged it to do so. He realized that thereby Morocco
+would “to all intents and purposes become before long a French
+province”; none the less he supported the proposed accord fully to
+strengthen British control in Egypt, and played a major rôle during the
+negotiations in determining the British policy.[275]
+
+On October 1 Lord Lansdowne stated to M. Cambon the British conditions
+for an arrangement.[276] He accepted the French proposal about Morocco
+with slight modifications. He suggested that France should agree not to
+erect any military or naval works along the Moroccan coast from Algeria
+to Mazaghan, and that the two Powers should engage not to permit any
+others to do so; that a certain amount of territory in Northern Morocco
+“should be recognized as destined to fall under Spanish influence” and
+that “in the event of a complete collapse of the Sultan’s authority,”
+Spain should be intrusted with the administration of the Moroccan
+seaboard as far south as Mazaghan. However, Spain was to “be precluded
+from fortifying this portion of the coast, and also from alienating it
+or her existing possessions in Morocco to another Power.” As the _quid
+pro quo_ for these concessions to France, the British Minister required
+in Egypt the lifting of the time limit to the British occupation and the
+French sanction of the abolishment of the _caisse de la dette_, the
+reorganization of the railway administration, and the conversion of the
+Egyptian debt. He also requested the consent of the French government to
+examine at some future time proposals abolishing the capitulations in
+Egypt and “tending to assimilate the Egyptian legislative and judicial
+systems to those in force in other civilized countries.” “His Majesty’s
+Government would, on their side,” he continued, “be ready to examine, in
+consultation with the Government of the French Republic, similar
+proposals with regard to Morocco, if at any future period France should
+acquire so predominant a position in Morocco as to become outwardly
+responsible for the good government of the country.” The other questions
+considered in the Minister’s reply, those of Newfoundland, Siam, New
+Hebrides, Nigeria, Zanzibar, and Madagascar, were less significant.[277]
+
+With the offers of each party known, the bargaining began. On October 27
+M. Cambon replied. He was still averse to dealing with the Egyptian
+affair so fully, and declared that the terms offered were unequal; for,
+whereas France received “hopes” alone in Morocco, Great Britain would
+enjoy immediate and concrete benefits in Egypt. Moreover, France would
+have to settle with Spain, and might even have to reckon with the
+pretensions of Germany. So he suggested that the proposed changes in
+Egypt be introduced _pari passu_ with correlative ones in Morocco. He
+also objected to giving Spain control over any seacoast farther south
+than the Sebou River. He further suggested that Great Britain and France
+undertake “to maintain, save for the consequences of the present accord,
+the territorial _status quo_ within a radius of 500 miles around the
+straits.”[278]
+
+When these terms were submitted to Lord Cromer, he was pleased with the
+progress that had been made. “Who would have imagined, only a short time
+ago,” he wrote Lord Lansdowne, November 1, “that we should ever have got
+so far? . . . . We _must_ manage to come to terms. . . . . I regard this
+as by far the most important diplomatic affair that we have had in hand
+for a long time past. . . . . _We must not fail_.” He added that Great
+Britain was asking for much more in Egypt than she offered France in
+return in Morocco. Lord Lansdowne agreed with him; but, he said, the
+French “are extremely anxious to have their position in Morocco
+recognized, and we must turn this feeling to account.” His suggestion to
+Lord Cromer that consideration of the conversion of the Egyptian debt be
+postponed so as to diminish the difficulties was not carried into
+execution.[279]
+
+On November 19 Lord Lansdowne replied to M. Cambon that he was willing
+to limit the Spanish and the neutralized portions of the Moroccan coast
+to those between Melilla and Rabat; but he refused the French proposal
+concerning the simultaneous introduction of changes in Egypt and
+Morocco, particularly the change by which the “abandonment of financial
+control by France in Egypt would proceed _pari passu_ with the
+acquisition of financial control by France in Morocco.” He likewise
+wished the French government to join Great Britain “in addressing the
+other Powers for the purpose of securing their assent” to the suggested
+British changes in Egypt. And he held out for absolute guaranties of
+full economic liberty in Morocco.[280]
+
+In the French response of December 9 M. Cambon reported that his
+government agreed to assist the British government in obtaining the
+assent of the other Powers to the Egyptian changes; but he objected
+strongly to the exclusion of Rabat from the French sphere. Moreover, he
+desired that the period of commercial liberty in Morocco be limited to
+fifteen or twenty years, and that the construction and administration of
+railways and ports there be kept under governmental control. In
+explaining the five-hundred-mile proposal, M. Cambon pointed out
+Germany’s designs upon Morocco which had recently been renewed, in all
+probability under the encouragement of Spain. He recalled the Spanish
+proposal in 1887 for the assembly of a European conference to discuss
+the Moroccan question, and added:
+
+
+It was quite likely that some such proposal might now be revived. It was
+in view of these circumstances that the French Government had proposed
+the maintenance of the _status quo_ within a radius of 500 miles from
+the Straits—a radius which would include the Balearic Islands, in which
+Germany might perhaps desire to obtain a footing.[281]
+
+
+Both Lord Lansdowne and Lord Cromer knew that Germany was interested in
+the fate of Morocco, and they fully anticipated a request from her for
+some territory there, for example, Rabat or some other port. They also
+realized that the French expected Great Britain to help in keeping
+Germany out of Morocco, and Lord Cromer gathered from conversations with
+French officials in Egypt that the French would like to embroil Great
+Britain and Germany, bring about an Anglo-Russian agreement, and isolate
+Germany. As both statesmen felt that a demand on the part of Germany for
+a coaling station would be very awkward to meet, Lord Lansdowne did
+nothing to clarify the situation beyond refusing M. Cambon’s anti-German
+project.[282] He thereby left to the French the possibility of forcing
+Great Britain to aid them in case Germany did try to intervene in the
+Moroccan question.
+
+In reply to M. Cambon on December 11 Lord Lansdowne signified his
+apprehension that if Rabat were not neutralized France might later
+transform it into a torpedo-boat station. The other points concerning
+Morocco he agreed to, except that he extended the limit for commercial
+equality to fifty years.[283]
+
+Thus far the negotiations had proceeded smoothly. The Anglo-French
+arbitration treaty had been signed on October 14. Agreement over the two
+main questions, those of Egypt and of Morocco, had practically been
+reached.[284] And on November 23 M. Delcassé had been able to declare in
+the French Chamber, with evident reference to Great Britain, that “when
+one speaks today of a Moroccan problem, the idea that in the solution
+the decisive word pertains to France has become almost familiar and
+appears almost natural, even to those who in the past would have
+believed themselves obliged to oppose it with the greatest vigor.”[285]
+
+
+ II
+
+
+These discussions had been closely connected with another diplomatic
+movement. The Anglo-French _rapprochement_ was logically followed by
+attempts at an Anglo-Russian settlement which in turn would have an
+alleviating effect upon Russo-Japanese relations. The British and French
+governments immediately recognized this fact, as did also Count
+Lamsdorff, Russian foreign minister. In July, just after M. Delcassé’s
+visit to England, conversations began, at the instigation of the French
+Foreign Minister,[286] between Lord Lansdowne and the Russian
+Ambassador. The British Foreign Secretary remarked to Count
+Benckendorff, July 29, as follows: “If Russia would put us in full
+possession of her ideas, and if she would bear in mind that for any
+concessions which she obtained from us we should expect corresponding
+concessions from her, I believe that we might put an end to the
+unfortunate rivalry which had so long prevailed between us in China and
+in the other parts of Asia.” But he declared a few days later that until
+he was “thoroughly satisfied” by Russia, especially as to Manchuria, he
+“must remain observant and critical.” The Ambassador, who seemed
+favorable toward a general agreement, left in August for a visit to St.
+Petersburg, and did not see Lord Lansdowne again until November 7.[287]
+
+An understanding along the lines mentioned by Lord Lansdowne would have
+settled both the Anglo-Russian and the Russo-Japanese problems. As an
+inducement to a _rapprochement_ the British Foreign Secretary was
+showing compliance with Russia’s policy in the Balkans,
+
+
+even to the extent [wrote on October 26 Sir Louis Mallet, précis writer
+to Lord Lansdowne] of suggesting reforms which will give them [Russia] a
+foothold in the Balkans. H. M. G. are therefore committed to a certain
+extent to a policy of not opposing Russia’s advance to Constantinople.
+At least, I read it in that light. . . . . It’s a chance Russia will
+never get again of buying off our opposition to their advance to
+Constantinople.[288]
+
+
+Russia, however, continued her Asiatic activity, so objectionable to
+Great Britain and Japan. She dallied with the Japanese offer of
+agreement over their Chinese differences while she made new demands on
+China, extended her interests in the Yalu Valley and in Seoul itself,
+and seemed on the way to take Korea.[289] She asserted her right to send
+agents into Afghanistan at will, contrary to the old understanding with
+Great Britain; and on October 5 made a communication to the British
+government on that subject which Sir Charles Hardinge, assistant
+undersecretary of state for foreign affairs, regarded as “peremptory in
+tone, and almost discourteous in its terms.”[290]
+
+In this grave situation Lord Lansdowne besought the help of the French
+government in restraining Russia. On October 26 he expressed regret to
+M. Cambon over the absence of frankness in Anglo-Russian intercourse.
+“Their conduct [the Russian government’s],” he complained, “placed us in
+a very embarrassing position.” The pledges which they gave—for example,
+with respect to the evacuation of Manchuria—remained unfulfilled. “We
+were . . . . told that the obstructiveness of the Chinese was to blame.
+There might be some truth in this, but it was impossible to test the
+truth of the assertion unless the Russian Government would really tell
+us what they wanted.” Lord Lansdowne expressed the hope that during
+Count Lamsdorff’s forthcoming visit to Paris (October 29-31) his
+conversations with M. Delcassé “might indirectly have an effect upon the
+attitude of the Russian Government towards that of this country.”[291]
+
+M. Delcassé took the hint. Count Lamsdorff agreed with him on the value
+of an arrangement with both Great Britain and with Japan.[292] He also
+expressed publicly Russia’s satisfaction with the Anglo-French and the
+Franco-Italian _rapprochements_.[293]
+
+This intercession had an immediate result. When Count Benckendorff
+returned to London, Lord Lansdowne summed up his assertions, November 7,
+as follows:
+
+
+Count Lamsdorff felt strongly that it was of importance that an
+endeavour should be made to remove all sources of misunderstanding
+between the two Governments, and that there should be “a change for the
+better” in our relations. Count Benckendorff was therefore instructed to
+discuss frankly with me the various questions outstanding between Great
+Britain and Russia, with the object of arriving at an agreement as to
+the manner in which they should be dealt with. In the meantime, the
+Russian Government would be careful to avoid any action bearing the
+appearance of hostility to this country.
+
+
+Lord Lansdowne was pleased at this response, for, as he said, he “had
+been seriously concerned at the position into which the two Powers were
+apparently drifting.” The two men then discussed in general terms the
+questions dividing their countries.[294] On November 17 and 25 they
+returned to the subject, and on November 22 King Edward and Sir Charles
+Hardinge each had an interview with Count Benckendorff. The Count stated
+that “the moment was riper now for a friendly understanding than at any
+time during the past twenty years.” He said that the matters for
+consideration “seemed naturally to group themselves into (1) questions
+concerning China in which Russia had a special interest (2) questions
+concerning India, in which Great Britain had a special interest and (3)
+questions concerning Persia in which both Powers were interested.” But
+it became clear from these conversations that the Ambassador was
+instructed merely to discuss the problems, that he had no definite
+proposals to make. Nor were the discussions satisfactory. The Ambassador
+could make no statement about Russian aims in China. He objected to the
+division of Persia into spheres of influence. He protested strongly
+against the British expedition to Tibet announced in that month. He
+refused to put anything on paper about Afghanistan.
+
+In order to make some headway, Lord Lansdowne made a frank exposition of
+the British desires. On December 11 Count Lamsdorff voiced “much
+satisfaction” with this “ready response.” The British Ambassador urged
+him to make “an early and equally frank expression of the views of the
+Russian Government,” which might “lead to a satisfactory understanding.”
+Count Lamsdorff promised to try to reply before February 2, when
+Parliament was to reassemble. And Count Benckendorff planned to go to
+St. Petersburg early in 1904 for consultation.[295]
+
+Just as Lord Lansdowne had expected, the negotiations did not proceed
+beyond that point; Russia would not limit her Asiatic ambitions. She
+would not accept the British terms, which of course included
+stipulations concerning China satisfactory to Japan, nor would she
+settle with Japan alone. Count Lamsdorff was willing to do so; but, as
+was well known by the other governments, he had no control over Russia’s
+far eastern policy. Since August this policy had been directed by the
+viceroy in the Far East, back of whom stood the Czar and the coterie
+around him interested in Russian expansion into Manchuria and Korea.
+Count Lamsdorff’s hands were tied; Russian activity made war with Japan
+a certainty. Toward the end of 1903 this menace grew so ominous that on
+December 11 Lord Lansdowne warned M. Cambon as follows:
+
+
+H. E. [His Excellency] was no doubt aware that, under the Agreement with
+Japan, our intervention could only be demanded in case that Power were
+assailed by two others. On the other hand, public opinion here might
+render it extremely difficult for us to remain inactive if Russia were
+to find some pretext for attacking Japan and were to endeavour to crush
+her out of existence.
+
+It seemed to me in these circumstances that it was the duty of our two
+Governments, which were, I rejoiced to think, at this moment in such
+friendly relations, to do all in their power to keep the peace.[296]
+
+
+The French government reciprocated this wish, and let the British
+government perceive that it would not enter a Russo-Japanese war. Early
+in January the other Powers also asserted their intention of remaining
+neutral.[297]
+
+Having been fully informed about Russo-Japanese relations, the British
+government had recognized the danger of war since July and had in
+consequence not let the negotiations with France lag or fail.[298] But
+since it now felt reasonably certain of not being drawn into the
+impending struggle, it allowed the transactions with France, on January
+13, 1904, to come to a deadlock over a question hitherto cursorily
+considered. M. Delcassé requested territorial indemnity for the
+relinquishment of certain fishing rights off the coast of Newfoundland;
+and the British government refused to give the amount desired. The
+difficulty imperiled the entire settlement since both sides were so
+fearful of public opinion that they refused to make concessions.[299]
+But on February 10 the Russo-Japanese War began. Admiral Fisher was
+certain that Japan would be defeated.[300] Rumors were abroad concerning
+Russo-German negotiations for closing the Baltic Straits,[301] and some
+British officials had misgivings that a coalition of Russia, France, and
+Germany might be formed against their country.[302] Moreover, the
+British government feared that a Balkan war might break out in the
+spring.[303] Under these circumstances the British government could not
+afford to risk alienating France.[304]
+
+M. Delcassé was surprised by the outbreak of the war.[305] His ambition
+had been for the Anglo-French _rapprochement_ to be supplemented by an
+Anglo-Russian one. Then as Italy was also trying to approach Russia, a
+more or less loose grouping of France, Russia, Great Britain, Italy,
+Spain, and Japan would be created.[306] Busy with the Anglo-French
+negotiations, he had been misled by the optimism of the Russian
+government into thinking that war would not occur.[307] He had not
+appreciated fully the weakness of Count Lamsdorff’s position. Not until
+January, 1904, did he perceive the danger and make belated efforts to
+maintain peace. But Great Britain refused to aid him.[308] Immediately
+after the war began he tried again to secure British co-operation in
+stopping it. When the British government again refused, M. Delcassé
+became incensed, for he saw the defeat of his larger program.[309] His
+better judgment soon calmed him, however, for with France’s ally
+eliminated from European affairs, he needed British co-operation more
+than ever in order to keep the war from spreading[310] and to offset the
+increased power of Germany. Late in February both parties were therefore
+ready to compromise.[311] And, after a threat by Lord Lansdowne on March
+31 to break off negotiations when the French Foreign Minister, alarmed
+by French public opinion, attempted to reopen the Newfoundland
+question,[312] the accord was finally completed on April 8, 1904.
+
+This agreement consisted of three documents: first, a convention which
+settled the Newfoundland question, modified certain boundaries between
+French and British colonies in Africa, and gave the Iles de Los to
+France; second, a declaration concerning Siam, Madagascar, and the New
+Hebrides; and third, a declaration concerning Egypt and Morocco. Only
+the convention had to be submitted to the two parliaments, since it
+alone provided for territorial changes in the existing possessions of
+the two states. While the solution of all these difficulties established
+the Entente Cordiale, the last-named declaration gave to the entente its
+great significance in international affairs; for through it two of the
+old sore spots in Anglo-French diplomacy were healed, and the basis for
+the future co-operation of the two Powers was laid.
+
+By the terms of this declaration France relinquished her rights and
+interests in Egypt in favor of Great Britain; Great Britain, in favor of
+France in Morocco. Only the clauses concerning Morocco are of interest
+here. Article II read as follows:
+
+
+The Government of the French Republic declare that they have no
+intention of altering the political status of Morocco.
+
+His Britannic Majesty’s Government . . . . recognize that it appertains
+to France . . . . to preserve order in that country, and to provide
+assistance for the purpose of all administrative, economic, financial,
+and military reforms which it may require.
+
+They declare that they will not obstruct the action taken by France for
+this purpose, provided that such action shall leave intact the rights
+which Great Britain, in virtue of Treaties, Conventions, and usage,
+enjoys in Morocco. . . . .
+
+
+Article IV provided for full commercial liberty, which, however, should
+obtain for only thirty years. Each government reserved the right “to see
+that the concessions for roads, railways, ports, etc. [in Morocco and
+Egypt], are only granted on such conditions as will maintain intact the
+authority of the State over these great undertakings of public
+interest.” By Article VII the free passage and non-fortification of the
+south shore of the Straits of Gibraltar were assured. According to
+Article VIII the interests of Spain in Morocco were to be respected, and
+the compact over them to be worked out between the Spanish and French
+governments was to be communicated to the British government. Article IX
+was included at the insistence of the British government, which planned
+thereby to enjoy French support in obtaining the acquiescence of the
+other Powers to the proposed changes in Egypt. Although the French
+reluctantly agreed to it, it eventually proved to be of the greatest
+value to them. It read as follows: “The two Governments agree to afford
+to one another their diplomatic support, in order to obtain the
+execution of the clauses of the present Declaration regarding Egypt and
+Morocco.”
+
+Five secret articles supplemented the public agreement. Article I was as
+follows:
+
+
+In the event of either Government finding themselves constrained, by the
+force of circumstances, to modify their policy in respect to Egypt and
+Morocco, the engagements which they have undertaken towards each other
+by Articles IV, VI and VII of the Declaration of to-day’s date would
+remain intact.
+
+
+Article II was included at the wish of the British:
+
+
+His Britannic Majesty’s Government have no present intention of
+proposing to the Powers any changes in the system of the Capitulations,
+or in the judicial organization of Egypt.
+
+In the event of their considering it desirable to introduce into Egypt
+reforms tending to assimilate the Egyptian legislative system to that in
+force in other civilized countries, the Government of the French
+Republic will not refuse to entertain any such proposals, on the
+understanding that His Britannic Majesty’s Government will agree to
+entertain the suggestions that the Government of the French Republic may
+have to make to them with a view of introducing similar reforms in
+Morocco.
+
+
+Articles III and IV marked out the portion of Morocco which should come
+within the “sphere of influence” of Spain “whenever the Sultan ceases to
+exercise authority over it,” and provided for the validity of the Anglo-
+French declaration in case Spain refused to make an agreement.[313]
+Article V concerned the Egyptian debt.
+
+The contradictions in the accord are apparent. The “political status” in
+Morocco was to be preserved, but it would take a statesman trained in
+diplomatic casuistry to explain how this was possible with France alone
+making all the proposed internal reforms. Of course, what was meant was
+that the “international status” of the land should be respected.
+However, the terms of the secret articles foresaw a future change even
+in that; and it can hardly be called showing a nice regard for Morocco’s
+international and sovereign independence for two alien Powers to set a
+time limit to the right of commercial liberty in that land. The doctors
+were agreeing upon a division of the patient’s property before they
+began to operate. That Morocco, an independent state, would eventually
+be partitioned into French and Spanish protectorates was evident to
+anyone with an understanding of contemporary political practices. To
+preserve peace and amity between themselves, Great Britain and France
+had simply made a division of spoils at Morocco’s expense.[314]
+
+The new accord was most cordially welcomed by all parties in Great
+Britain. In the House of Commons on June 1, Earl Percy, speaking for the
+government, and Sir Edward Grey, speaking for the opposition, both
+emphasized the need for Great Britain henceforth to follow a policy of
+“administrative concentration and consolidation” of her empire, and
+declared that similar agreements should be made with other Powers. Not
+all troubles with France had been disposed of, said Earl Percy, but the
+chief ones had been, and the others could now be more easily settled. As
+to the terms dealing with Morocco, while he admitted that the Sultan had
+not been consulted beforehand, he declared that Morocco needed setting
+to rights and that France had a better claim to execute that work than
+anyone else. He also emphasized the unique quality of the Entente
+Cordiale.
+
+
+The parties pledge themselves not merely to abstain from poaching on
+each other’s preserves but to do all in their power to further one
+another’s interests. We promise to give to one another, as friends,
+advantages which are ordinarily given only to allies, and it is as a
+pledge of friendship rather than as the terms of a compromise between
+jealous and exacting litigants that we ask the House to consent to these
+concessions.
+
+
+Sir Edward Grey approved of the relinquishment of Morocco to France.
+Together with other speakers, he praised the spirit of the agreement,
+and he expressed the hope that Article IX would enable the two nations
+to draw closer together by increasing the “opportunities for the
+interchange of international courtesies between them.”
+
+During the debates Mr. Gibson Bowles declared that the agreement
+amounted to a “partition of three new Polands” (Egypt, Morocco, and
+Siam), “a compact of plunder.” But from a European point of view he
+considered it of “the highest import,” for it signified a “return to the
+. . . . system of the balance of power.” “There are stalking through
+Europe,” he stated, “ambitions which must be curtailed and which may be
+developed to a greater extent than seems at present. Against such it is
+well to raise a visible barrier in England and France.” Mr. Balfour, the
+premier, however, denied that there had been “any reversal of the
+traditional policy of our party,” or that anything had been done
+“prejudicial to the interests of Germany or any other Power.”
+
+The _Times_ did not agree with him. Its Paris correspondent wrote on
+April 14 as follows:
+
+
+The Triple Alliance has long since ceased to be the European bogey which
+it once was. . . . . There is the Dual Alliance, the Anglo-French
+Agreement, and the Franco-Italian _rapprochement_, with benevolent
+diplomatic neutrality on the part of Russia. Now, in the midst of this
+happy family, the Triple Alliance only appears as the ghost of its
+former self.
+
+
+The editorial comment of that paper was in a similar tone.
+
+
+The days have gone by when the Germans could assume with some shadow of
+plausibility that in the larger questions of international politics
+Great Britain must follow in the wake of the Triple Alliance, and that
+the attitude of France might be ignored. There is no alliance between
+them, but there is a cordial understanding which will induce both to
+discuss all subjects affecting them fairly and without jealousy or
+suspicion, and which, combined with the relations in which they stand to
+Italy, must exercise a great influence upon all States, and, it may be,
+a great attraction upon some of them.
+
+
+Events soon proved that the _Times’s_ estimate of that entente was more
+accurate than that of Mr. Balfour.[315]
+
+Although happily surprised by the conclusion of the Anglo-French
+agreement, French public opinion did not accept the accord as whole-
+heartedly as did the British. Opposition to various parts of the
+settlement was expressed by extremists who regretted the final
+renunciation of French ambitions in Egypt and who thought that French
+interests in Siam and elsewhere had not been adequately upheld; by those
+in the maritime districts of Northern and Northwestern France who
+criticized the terms concerning Newfoundland as disastrous to French
+fishing interests in that region; and more or less openly by the enemies
+of M. Combes, the premier, whose stringent anticlerical policy had
+aroused bitter antagonism among the French. These critical forces,
+however, were more than offset by the elements who praised the
+agreement. “It is equitable, the equilibrium of the accord is
+irreproachable,” wrote M. de Caix. The recognition of France’s special
+interests in Morocco was especially commended by almost all parties. The
+strengthening of France’s international position was also acknowledged
+with satisfaction. In reporting the agreement to the Chamber of Deputies
+on November 3 M. Deloncle declared: “We do not wish a . . . . passing
+entente between our two countries. We think . . . . of the formation of
+accords always more intimate and durable, which, loyally executed by
+both parties, . . . . on the basis of reciprocal confidence, will cement
+the community and solidarity of the two countries.” Alliance with
+Russia, friendship with Great Britain, was the popular formula.
+
+Nevertheless, the convention over Newfoundland was accepted by the
+Chamber only on condition that M. Delcassé attempt to reopen the
+question with the British government. Many warned M. Delcassé not to
+trust Great Britain too far, not to permit the entente to assume in any
+way the character of an alliance, and not to involve France in the
+Anglo-German rivalry. In the Chamber on November 8 M. Delafosse declared
+that the accord signified a “detente,” not an “entente.” M. René Millet,
+former governor of Tunis, wrote that the arrangement was “a retreat in
+good order” which “does not justify the enthusiasm with which it has
+been received.” M. Millet found insufficient the diplomatic preparation
+for the French action in Morocco.
+
+
+It is not possible [he wrote] for France to undertake anything without
+knowing the thoughts of Germany. . . . . Our bad will toward the Germans
+will only render them more imperious, and, without declaring war, they
+will have more than one means of being disagreeable to us, especially at
+the time when Russia . . . . is unable to help us. . . . . Of all
+pretensions, the most foolish would be to wish to isolate the German
+Empire, as certain musketeers of the press advise.[316]
+
+
+Alarmed by the criticism of the Newfoundland convention, M. Delcassé
+tried in June and July to obtain some further concessions from the
+British government.[317] Although he had no success, he felt compelled
+during the debates in the French Chamber, November 3-10, to promise to
+reopen negotiations on the Newfoundland question. Otherwise, he feared a
+rejection. This meaningless concession, together with the fact that the
+entente had already proved its value by enabling M. Delcassé to mediate
+between Great Britain and Russia in October for a peaceful settlement of
+the Dogger Bank episode,[318] smoothed the path for parliamentary
+approbation. Hence M. Delcassé, in his speech of defense, was able to
+confine himself to generalities. He reviewed his achievement of the
+ententes with Italy, Spain, and Great Britain, by which the Moroccan
+question had been settled in favor of France and by which the French
+position in the world had been elevated. He advocated a policy of peace
+and conciliation, but he also declared that France must maintain her
+defenses.
+
+
+And this is what procures for France [he concluded], augmented in her
+credit and prestige, the trust and sympathy of the world. The world is
+convinced to-day that French policy does not seek the advantage for
+France other than in the harmony of French interests with the interests
+of others. And she is happy to affirm that that harmony, which no one
+believes or pretends to believe unrealisable, is being realised each day
+to the benefit of all.
+
+It will be the honor of our democracy to have practiced that policy.
+
+
+He was roundly applauded, and his achievements were approved by both
+Parliament and people. The accord was ratified in the Chamber by a vote
+of 443 to 105, and in the Senate by one of 215 to 37.[319]
+
+
+[Footnote 251: 4 Hansard, Vol. CXVIII, col. 1579.]
+
+[Footnote 252: See Rodd to Lansdowne, Jan. 9, 1903, _B.D._, IV, 41 f.,
+No. 32, and following documents. However, an extract from _Defence
+Committee Paper 1b_ (Feb. 11, 1903), read as follows: “What difference
+would it make to the balance of power in the Mediterranean if Russia
+were to obtain, through possession of Constantinople, free egress from
+the Black Sea through the Dardanelles, these remaining closed, as at
+present, against other Powers?
+
+“The answer to this question unanimously accepted by the Committee was
+that, while Russia would no doubt obtain certain naval advantages from
+the change, it would not fundamentally alter the present strategic
+position in the Mediterranean.”
+
+An extract from _Defence Committee Paper 2b_ of the same month read as
+follows: “It may be stated generally that a Russian occupation of the
+Dardanelles, or an arrangement for enabling Russia to freely use the
+waterway between the Black Sea and the Mediterranean, such as her
+dominating influence can extract from Turkey at her pleasure, would not
+make any marked difference in our strategic dispositions as compared
+with present conditions” (_B.D._, IV, 59 f.). This opinion was approved
+on April 22, 1904, by King Edward and by Sir Charles Hardinge, who had
+just been appointed ambassador at St. Petersburg (Lee, _King Edward
+VII_, II, 289 f.). It apparently led to a change of policy in the autumn
+of 1903 (see below).]
+
+[Footnote 253: Chirol, _Fifty Years in a Changing World_, pp. 276 ff.;
+_G.P._, Vol. XVII, chaps. cxii, cxiv, Part A; _B.D._, Vol. II, chap.
+xii. See also Lansdowne to Curzon, April 24, 1903, Newton, _Lord
+Lansdowne_, p. 254.]
+
+[Footnote 254: See _B.D._, IV, 41 ff., Nos. 32 ff.; memo. on British
+policy in Persia, Oct. 31, 1905, _ibid._, 365 ff., No. 321; memo.
+respecting Russia and Afghanistan, Oct. 14, 1903, _ibid._, 512 ff., No.
+465; Newton, pp. 271 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 255: The Japanese Foreign Minister, in communicating to the
+British Minister on April 27 the Russian demands to China, spoke “with
+unwonted seriousness” and asserted “that he considered the situation
+exceedingly grave” (MacDonald to Lansdowne, April 27, 1903, _B.D._, II,
+198 ff., No. 226. The dispatch was received first on June 2, but there
+is no reason to doubt that the view expressed therein was immediately
+known to the British government since the two governments were in
+constant communication. See Lansdowne to MacDonald, April 29, 1903,
+_ibid._, 200 f., No. 228; memo. communicated by Hayashi, Japanese
+minister to London, to Lansdowne, April 27, 1903, _ibid._, 201 f., No.
+228, inclosure; William L. Langer, “Der Russisch-Japanische Krieg,”
+_Europäische Gespräche_, June, 1926, pp. 310 ff.; Tyler Dennett,
+_Roosevelt and the Russo-Japanese War_ (New York, 1925), pp. 139 f., 355
+ff.]
+
+[Footnote 256: When Russo-Japanese relations became strained early in
+1901, Lansdowne asked Monson whether he thought “that France is under
+any engagement to take part on the side of Russia in the event of war,
+or that without such obligation she would attempt to do so” (Lansdowne
+to Monson, March 8, 1901, _B.D._, II, 40, No. 49). Monson replied that
+he did not know whether the Dual Alliance laid down the obligation of
+military aid outside of Europe, and that while the French people showed
+little zeal for far eastern affairs, yet nationalistic hatred against
+Great Britain might be aroused at any time and might make the French
+stand uncertain (Monson to Lansdowne, March 13, 1901, _ibid._, 44 f.,
+No. 56). The Franco-Russian declaration of 1902 in reply to the Anglo-
+Japanese Alliance stated that the Dual Alliance was extended to the Far
+East, although a few days later Delcassé cast doubt upon the
+significance of this engagement. While French public opinion was opposed
+to becoming involved in the Far East for the sake of Russia, yet this
+ambiguity left the French position in case of a war in doubt (see
+above).]
+
+[Footnote 257: See Pinon, _France et Allemagne_, pp. 79 f.; Jean Darcy,
+_France et Angleterre. Cent années de rivalité coloniale: L’Afrique_
+(Paris, 1904); Barclay, _Thirty Years: Anglo-French Reminiscences,
+1876-1906_, chaps. xiii-xvi.]
+
+[Footnote 258: Philippe Crozier, who in 1903 was French minister at
+Copenhagen, states that to his intimate friends King Edward “even
+foresaw the hypothesis of a positive alliance” with France (“L’Autriche
+et l’avant guerre,” _Revue de France_, April 15, 1921, p. 271).]
+
+[Footnote 259: Lee, II; Newton, pp. 292 f. Early in 1915 Balfour wrote
+to Lansdowne denying that King Edward was the author of the Entente
+Cordiale. “Now, so far as I remember, during the years which you and I
+were his Ministers, he [King Edward] never made an important suggestion
+of any sort on large questions of policy” (Newton, p. 293). This
+estimate may be true, but it does not give the King credit for what he
+actually did.]
+
+[Footnote 260: Spender, _Life, Journalism and Politics_, I, 185 ff.
+Esher had been furnishing information to Spender, who was editor of the
+_Westminster Gazette_, a Liberal paper, since 1900. Spender denies that
+the British foreign office inspired the newspapers (_op. cit._, I,
+185).]
+
+[Footnote 261: J. L. de Lanessan, _Histoire de l’entente cordiale
+franco-anglaise_ (Paris, 1916), pp. 218 ff., 229, 234; Barclay, chaps.
+xvii-xx.]
+
+[Footnote 262: The _Times_, the Northcliffe Press, the Chamberlain
+Press, the _National Review_, _Fortnightly Review_, _Contemporary
+Review_, the Liberals as well as the Conservatives, supported the
+movement. See _G.P._, XVII, Nos. 5081-83, 5087-88, 5094, 5026-27;
+Hammann, _Zur Vorgeschichte des Weltkrieges_, pp. 175 f.; Wolff, _Das
+Vorspiel_, p. 135; Barclay, pp. 177 f.]
+
+[Footnote 263: See Barclay, chaps. xvii, xx.]
+
+[Footnote 264: Reports from the Belgian ministers in Paris and London,
+May 4, 1902, _Zur europ. Politik_, I, 105 f. Impressed with the
+unanimity of friendliness toward France among the British, M. Delcassé
+expressed to Monson his regret that the French did not fully reciprocate
+this feeling. See Monson to Lansdowne, July 24, 1903, _B.D._, II, 302
+f., No. 361; _Bulletin_, July, 1903, pp. 211 ff.; _Quest. dipl. et
+col._, XV, 656 f., XVI, 147; articles from _Figaro_ and the _Temps_
+quoted in the _London Times_, May 5, 1903; article by Etienne in the
+_National Review_, July 1, 1903, esp. p. 748_a_.]
+
+[Footnote 265: So Eckardstein asserts, _Lebenserinnerungen, etc._, II,
+337; cf. Schefer, _D’une guerre à l’autre, etc._, p. 249.]
+
+[Footnote 266: King Edward’s trip was a bold move, for Paris was the
+center of anti-British feeling, and some members of the British
+government were doubtful about its success. But the King initiated the
+visit and took the entire responsibility for it, feeling certain that he
+would be well received. In his first public speech, more optimistically
+than truthfully, he declared: “There may have been misunderstandings and
+causes of dissension in the past [between the two countries], but all
+such differences are, I believe, happily removed and forgotten, and I
+trust that the friendship and admiration which we all feel for the
+French nation and their glorious traditions may in the near future
+develop into a sentiment of the warmest affection and attachment between
+the peoples of the two countries. The achievement of this aim is my
+constant desire.” Quoted in the _London Times_, May 2, 1903, M. Paul
+Cambon’s estimate of the significance of the King’s visit is as follows:
+“Of course, King Edward helped immensely. His visit to Paris in the
+spring of 1903 really made it [the Anglo-French entente] possible. . . .
+.” See interview with Cambon in _ibid._, Dec. 22, 1920. On the visit see
+Captain the Hon. Sir Seymour Fortescue, _Looking Back_ (London, 1920),
+pp. 279 ff.; _Quest. dipl. et col._, XV, 656 f.; Lee, II, 221 ff., 236
+ff.; Barclay, p. 218; Viscount Esher, _The Influence of King Edward and
+Essays on Other Subjects_ (London, 1915), pp. 57 ff.; Pinon, p. 114;
+Herbert H. Asquith, _The Genesis of the War_ (New York, 1923), p. 30;
+Metternich to Bülow, June 2, 1903, _G.P._, XVII, 590 ff., No. 5376;
+Crozier, pp. 272 ff.; Newton, pp. 275 f., 278 f.]
+
+[Footnote 267: Shortly before this visit Chamberlain remarked to
+Eckardstein: “Here in England the King’s visit to Paris is very popular,
+and if France gives him a good reception then everything will go well
+between us in the future.” See Eckardstein to Bülow, May 10, 1903,
+_G.P._, XVII, 568, No. 5369; Metternich to Bülow, June 2, 1903, _ibid._,
+590 ff., No. 5376.]
+
+[Footnote 268: Monson to Lansdowne, Jan. 20, 1902, _B.D._, II, 261 f.,
+No. 319; Lansdowne to Monson, May 19, 1903, _ibid._, 289, No. 352;
+Monson to Lansdowne, May 22, 1903, _ibid._, 290, No. 353; Monson to
+Lansdowne, May 29, 1903, _ibid._, 290 f., No. 354; Lansdowne to Monson,
+July 21, 1903, _ibid._, 301 f., No. 360, and inclosures; _Annual
+Register_ (1903), pp. 216 f.; Barclay, pp. 235, 242; expressions of
+public opinion on this project contained in _Quest. dipl. et col._, July
+1 and 15, Aug. 1, Sept. 1 and 15, 1903.]
+
+[Footnote 269: King Edward’s assertion had direct reference to the
+German Emperor, with whom he had never agreed (_Zur europ. Politik_, I,
+110; Lee, II, 244 ff.; _Quest. dipl. et col._, XVI, 147 ff.).]
+
+[Footnote 270: On this interview see the dispatch from Lansdowne to
+Monson, July 7, 1903, _B.D._, II, 294 ff., No. 357; also Delcassé’s
+interview in _Petit Parisien_, April 10, 1904, reprinted in _Quest.
+dipl. et col._, April 16, 1904, pp. 616 f. Delcassé’s conversation with
+Lansdowne had been prefaced by the talks between Cambon and Lansdowne
+during the previous year and also by a long talk on July 2, 1903,
+between Lansdowne and Etienne. Etienne had stated one of the reasons for
+an Anglo-French entente as follows (the account is from the hand of the
+British minister): “M. Etienne expressed his belief that the most
+serious menace to the peace of Europe lay in Germany, that a good
+understanding between France and England was the only means of holding
+German designs in check, and that if such an understanding could be
+arrived at, England would find that France would be able to exercise a
+salutary influence over Russia and thereby relieve us from many of our
+troubles with that country” (Lansdowne to Monson, July 2, 1903, _B.D._,
+II, 293, No. 356).]
+
+[Footnote 271: Lansdowne to de Bunsen, July 15, 1903, _ibid._, 298, No.
+358; Lansdowne to Monson, July 29, Aug. 5, 1903, _ibid._, 304 ff., Nos.
+363 f.]
+
+[Footnote 272: Lansdowne to Durand, July 14, 1903, Newton, p. 280.]
+
+[Footnote 273: Then Lansdowne notified the Spanish government of the
+steps which he had taken and asked for a statement of its views on the
+Moroccan question. Whether Spain replied is not evident. See Lansdowne
+to Monson, Aug. 5, 1903, _B.D._, II, 306 f., No. 364; Lansdowne to
+Durand, Aug. 11, 1903, _ibid._, 309 f., No. 366; Newton, p. 280.]
+
+[Footnote 274: J. A. Spender, _The Life of the Right Hon. Sir Henry
+Campbell-Bannerman_ (London), Vol. II, chaps. xxiii-xxiv.]
+
+[Footnote 275: Cromer to Lansdowne, July 17, 1903, _B.D._, II, 298 ff.,
+No. 359; memo. by Cromer, Aug. 7, 1903, _ibid._, 307 ff., No. 365;
+Newton, pp. 280 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 276: Lee, II, 245 f.; Lansdowne to Cambon, Oct. 1, 1903,
+_B.D._, II, 311 ff., No. 369; 400 n.]
+
+[Footnote 277: Lansdowne to Cambon, Oct. 1, 1903, _ibid._, 311 ff., No.
+369.]
+
+[Footnote 278: Lansdowne to Monson, Oct. 7, 1903, _ibid._, 317 f., No.
+370; Cambon to Lansdowne, Oct. 26, 1903, _ibid._, 320 ff., No. 373.]
+
+[Footnote 279: Cromer to Lansdowne, Nov. 1, 1903, Lansdowne to Cromer,
+Nov. 17, 1903, Newton, pp. 283 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 280: Cromer to Lansdowne, Oct. 30, 1903, _B.D._, II, 323, No.
+374; Lansdowne to Cambon, Nov. 19, 1903, _ibid._, 324 ff., No. 376.]
+
+[Footnote 281: The French government, Cambon said, knew that “the Queen
+of Spain during her recent visit to the Continent had been in
+communication with the German Emperor upon the subject of Morocco”
+(Lansdowne to Monson, Dec. 9, 1903, _ibid._, 329 ff., No. 378).]
+
+[Footnote 282: Lansdowne to Cromer, Nov. 17, 1903, Cromer to Lansdowne,
+Nov. 27, 1903, Newton, pp. 285 f.]
+
+[Footnote 283: Lansdowne to Monson, Dec. 11, 1903, _B.D._, II, 333 f.,
+No. 380. It was evident that in view of the monopolistic tendencies of
+the French, British trade in Morocco would practically cease at the end
+of the time limit (Cromer to Lansdowne, Dec. 11, 1903, _ibid._, 332 f.,
+No. 379).]
+
+[Footnote 284: Lansdowne to Monson, Jan. 13, 1904, _ibid._, 338, No.
+384; Cromer to Lansdowne, Dec. 11, 1903, _ibid._, 332, No. 379.]
+
+[Footnote 285: Quoted in _Quest. dipl. et col._, Dec. 1, 1903, p. 821.]
+
+[Footnote 286: Delcassé had received the hint from Chamberlain (see next
+reference).]
+
+[Footnote 287: Lansdowne to Scott, July 29, Aug. 12, 1903, _B.D._, II,
+212 f., Nos. 242 f. In September, Lansdowne wrote in a memorandum for
+the cabinet as follows: “A good understanding with France would not
+improbably be the precursor of a better understanding with Russia” (Lee,
+II, 246). In July, Lansdowne also sought the co-operation of the United
+States in checking Russia in the Far East (Dennis, _Adventures in
+American Diplomacy_, p. 359).]
+
+[Footnote 288: Mallet to Spring Rice, Oct. 26, 1903, Gwynn, _Letters and
+Friendships of Sir Cecil Spring Rice_, I, 366 f.]
+
+[Footnote 289: Lansdowne to MacDonald, July 3, 13, 1903, _B.D._, II, 206
+ff., Nos. 237 f., and the following documents. See MacDonald to
+Lansdowne, Sept. 4, Oct. 1, 1903, _ibid._, 214 ff., Nos. 246, 248;
+Alfred von Hedenström, _Geschichte Russlands von 1878 bis 1918_
+(Stuttgart and Berlin, 1922), p. 170; _Cambridge History of British
+Foreign Policy_, III, 324 f.; Langer, pp. 312 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 290: _B.D._, IV, 621; memo. respecting Russia and Afghanistan,
+Oct. 14, 1903, _ibid._, 518 f., No. 465; memo. on Russo-Afghan
+relations, Oct. 11, 1905, _ibid._, 519 f., No. 466; Hardinge to
+Lansdowne, Nov. 22, 1903, _ibid._, 194, No. 181 (_b_). There was also
+trouble over Tibet and the Persian Gulf (see Newton, p. 287).]
+
+[Footnote 291: Lansdowne to Monson, Oct. 26, 1903, _B.D._, II, 217 f.,
+No. 250.]
+
+[Footnote 292: Lansdowne to Monson, Nov. 4, 1903, _ibid._, 221 f., No.
+257.]
+
+[Footnote 293: Spring Rice to Grey, Feb. 12, 1906, _ibid._, IV, 224, No.
+209; Bülow to F. O., Oct. 31, 1903, _G.P._, XVIII, 853, No. 5918.]
+
+[Footnote 294: Lansdowne to Spring Rice, Nov. 7, 1903, _B.D._, II, 222
+ff., No. 258.]
+
+[Footnote 295: Lansdowne to Spring Rice, Nov. 7, 17, 25, 1903, _ibid._,
+222 ff., No. 258; IV, 183 ff., Nos. 181 f.; 306 f., No. 289; Scott to
+Lansdowne, Dec. 22, 1903, _ibid._, II, 226, No. 262; Lee, II, 280 f.;
+Lansdowne to Cromer, Dec. 7, 1903, Newton, p. 287.]
+
+[Footnote 296: Lansdowne to Monson, Dec. 11, 1903, _B.D._, II, 224, No.
+259.]
+
+[Footnote 297: In Dec., 1903, Delcassé informed the Japanese Minister in
+Paris that he did not approve of all of Russia’s designs in the Far East
+(Dennis, p. 385). Hayashi, Japanese minister in London, believed as
+early as Dec. 23 that France would remain neutral. See Eckardstein, III,
+62, 188; see also Metternich to F. O., Jan. 8, 1904, _G.P._, XIX, 20 f.,
+No. 5931; memo. by Eckardstein, Jan. 17, 1904, _ibid._, 38 ff., No.
+5945; Langer, p. 317; Bülow to William II, Jan. 12, 1904, _G.P._, XIX,
+26, No. 5936.]
+
+[Footnote 298: Lee, II, 282; Langer, pp. 316 f.; Dennis, chap. xiii.
+However, as late as Nov. 4, 1903, Lansdowne did not expect war, nor did
+Sir Charles Hardinge as late as Dec. 25. By Jan. 5, the latter did
+(Gwynn, I, 391 f.).]
+
+[Footnote 299: Cambon to Lansdowne, Dec. 27, 1903, _B.D._, II, 336, No.
+382; and the following documents, particularly the dispatch from
+Lansdowne to Monson, Jan. 18, 1904, _ibid._, 339, No. 386. The British
+were also surprised to learn early in January that Delcassé had kept his
+colleagues in the dark concerning the details of the arrangement, and
+feared some trouble on that account. It seems that as late as March 2
+Delcassé had not consulted the French Colonial Minister (Lansdowne to
+Cromer, Jan. 5, 1904, Monson to Lansdowne, Jan. 8, 1904, Newton, pp. 287
+ff.).]
+
+[Footnote 300: _Ibid._, p. 307.]
+
+[Footnote 301: _G.P._, XIX, 89 f., editor’s note, and the documents in
+_G.P._, Vol. XIX, chap. cxxix; Gwynn, I, 391.]
+
+[Footnote 302: Spring Rice to Ferguson, Feb. 4, 1904, Spring Rice to
+Roosevelt (no date given, though written in Feb. or March, 1904), Gwynn,
+I, 392 ff.; Sternburg to F. O., March 21, 1904, _G.P._, XIX, 112, No.
+5992. See also the dispatch from Alvensleben to Bülow, Dec. 20, 1903,
+_ibid._, 18, No. 5929. Sir Charles Dilke summed up the danger of the
+situation as follows: “If Germany were to declare war on Japan, Great
+Britain would be forced by her treaty engagement to declare war on
+Russia and Germany; and France, it is understood, to declare war upon
+Great Britain and Japan” (Dilke, “The War in the Far East,” _North
+American Review_, April, 1904, quoted in Dennett, p. 94).]
+
+[Footnote 303: Lansdowne to Monson, Feb. 17, 1904, _B.D._, V, 67 f., and
+following documents.]
+
+[Footnote 304: Lansdowne to Monson, Feb. 25, 1904, _ibid._, II, 346, No.
+391, and following documents; on March 1, King Edward wrote to Balfour
+strongly advising in favor of the territorial sacrifice asked by the
+French on the Newfoundland question, for, he wrote, “_more than ever
+now_ [in italics in the original] we must leave no bone of contention
+between ourselves and the French Government” (Lee, II, 248). See also
+Holstein’s keen analysis of the situation on Jan. 23, 1904, _G.P._, XIX,
+48 ff., No. 5951. Cromer also urged his government to make concessions
+(Newton, p. 289).]
+
+[Footnote 305: Tardieu, _La France et les alliances_, p. 23; E. J.
+Dillon, _The Eclipse of Russia_ (New York, 1918), pp. 330 ff.;
+Eckardstein, III, 57 ff., 187 ff.; Crozier, pp. 282 f.; Mévil, _De la
+paix de Francfort, etc._, pp. 83 ff.; Radolin to F. O., Feb. 11, 1904,
+_G.P._, XIX, 60 f., No. 5960.]
+
+[Footnote 306: Mévil, p. 82.]
+
+[Footnote 307: For an illustration of that optimism see Nicholas II to
+William II, Jan. 24, 1904, _G.P._, XIX, 53, No. 5952.]
+
+[Footnote 308: Lansdowne to Scott, Jan. 19, 1904, _B.D._, II, 237, No.
+280; Lansdowne to Monson, Jan. 27, 1904, _ibid._, 240, No. 283.]
+
+[Footnote 309: In July, 1905, Spring Rice reported to his friend
+Roosevelt a conversation which he had recently had with Lansdowne, as
+follows: “In speaking in general terms of our relations with Japan, he
+[Lansdowne] pointed out that from the very first our political interest
+had been to prevent the war [between Russia and Japan] which would not
+only expose us to great dangers of loss in Asia itself, but would
+seriously imperil our good understanding with France. . . . .” Then
+after explaining why Great Britain refused to press Japan to maintain
+peace, he continued: “As a result we all but lost our agreement with
+France” . . . . (Dennett, pp. 213 f.). Cf. Eckardstein to Schwabach,
+Feb. 10, 1904, _G.P._, XIX, 60, No. 5959. Spring Rice’s assertion was no
+doubt exaggerated in order to prove to Roosevelt that Great Britain
+really desired peace between Russia and Japan.]
+
+[Footnote 310: See Radolin to Bülow, March 15, 1904, _ibid._, XX, 3 f.,
+No. 6366.]
+
+[Footnote 311: See Lansdowne to Monson, March 1, 1904, _B.D._, II, 347,
+No. 393, and following documents.]
+
+[Footnote 312: See Monson to Lansdowne, March 30, 1904, _ibid._, 357,
+No. 405; Lansdowne to Monson, March 30, 31, 1904, _ibid._, 358, No. 406;
+359 f., No. 408; Newton, pp. 289 f.]
+
+[Footnote 313: The first two articles were kept secret at Delcassé’s
+desire; the next two for obvious reasons.]
+
+[Footnote 314: Ministère des Affaires Etrangères, _Documents
+diplomatiques. Accords conclus, le 8 avril, 1904, entre la France et
+l’Angleterre au sujet du Maroc, de l’Egypte, de Terre-Neuve, etc._
+(Paris, 1904); _Parliamentary Papers. Declaration between the United
+Kingdom and France Respecting Egypt and Morocco, together with the
+Secret Articles Signed at the Same Time. Signed at London, April 8,
+1904_ (Cd. 5969), Vol. CIII (1911); _B.D._, II, 373 ff., No. 417. The
+secret articles were first revealed in 1911.]
+
+[Footnote 315: On the reaction of the British people to the accord see
+Spender, _Life, Journalism and Politics_, I, 188 ff.; _London Times_,
+April 12 and 14, 1904; _Spectator_, quoted in Schulthess, _Europäischer
+Geschichtskalendar 1904_, p. 223. For the debates in the British
+Parliament see 4 Hansard, Vol. CXXXV, cols. 502 ff. Adverse opinion was
+expressed by Lord Rosebery, the _Daily Chronicle_, the _Morning Post_,
+and Mr. Aflalo who had lived in Morocco and was particularly interested
+in the fate of the land; but their voices were lost in the general
+applause (Metternich to Bülow, April 9, 1904, _G.P._, XX, 13 f., No.
+6375).]
+
+[Footnote 316: _Bulletin_, April, 1904, p. 107: Millet, _Notre politique
+extérieure 1898-1905_, pp. 168, 173. Millet was a follower of Hanotaux,
+Delcassé’s predecessor at the foreign office, and a consistent critic of
+the latter.]
+
+[Footnote 317: Count de Montferrand, who in company with M. Cambon
+talked with Sanderson about the Newfoundland question, remarked that “if
+M. Delcassé was not able to inform the French Chambers that they had
+secured this right, the Convention would be rejected” (memo. by
+Sanderson, June 30, 1904, _B.D._, III, 6, No. 5; see _ibid._, chap. xvi,
+Part I).]
+
+[Footnote 318: See below.]
+
+[Footnote 319: For a summary see the article by Louis-Jaray, “L’Accord
+entre la France et l’Angleterre. L’Opinion publique et le rapprochement
+franco-anglais,” _Quest. dipl. et col._, XVIII (Nov. 16, 1904), 593 ff.
+The debates in the Chamber, Nov. 3-10, 1904, and in the Senate, Dec.
+5-7, 1904, are to be found in the _Journal officiel, Debats. parlem._
+(Chambre), pp. 2255 ff.; _ibid._ (Sénat), pp. 1013 ff. See also Monson’s
+reports to Lansdowne, Nov. 9, Dec. 8, 1904, _B.D._, III, 11 ff., Nos. 8
+ff.]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII
+
+ ANGLO-RUSSIAN RELATIONS AFTER THE MAKING OF THE ENTENTE CORDIALE
+
+
+After the Russo-Japanese War began, the British and Russian governments
+decided that for the present nothing further could be done toward an
+understanding.[320] Russian anger was directed as much against Great
+Britain as against Japan for having caused the conflict;[321] while
+Great Britain could hardly jeopardize her alliance with Japan by coming
+to a settlement with the latter’s enemy. A few days after the signing of
+the Anglo-French agreement, King Edward tried to revive the negotiations
+in a talk at Copenhagen with M. Iswolski, Russian minister at the
+capital. When Count Benckendorff mentioned the King’s conversation to
+Lord Lansdowne, the latter reiterated his former opinion, adding that in
+the meantime the two governments should so handle any differences which
+might arise as to permit the renewal of the discussions for an agreement
+after the conclusion of the war.[322]
+
+This suggestion was acted upon, for, even apart from other reasons,
+Count Lamsdorff wished to hold Great Britain to the strictest neutrality
+during the war with the lure of an understanding. The British government
+assured him of its neutral intentions.[323] King Edward cultivated
+assiduously the friendship of the Czar during the next months.[324]
+Early in June the British government gave reassurances about its policy
+toward Tibet, in return for which the Russian government approved the
+Khedivial decree putting into execution the reforms in Egypt foreseen in
+the Anglo-French declaration.[325] Fraught with more danger was the
+possibility that Russia might send her Black Sea fleet through the
+straits. Lord Lansdowne warned her that that act “could not be tolerated
+by this country,” that it “might render conflict inevitable.”[326] So
+the fleet was never sent. In spite of British protests, however, Russia
+dispatched several vessels belonging to the volunteer fleet through the
+Dardanelles and the Bosphorus. When, in July and August, two of these
+ships seized some British merchant vessels suspected of carrying
+contraband, British public opinion demanded that the government defend
+British commerce. When Lord Lansdowne expressed indignation at the
+depredations, the Russian government immediately agreed to a
+conciliatory settlement.[327] In September the Russian government
+objected strongly to the terms of the recent Anglo-Tibetan Treaty, but
+without avail. Being in no position to follow up that protest, it had to
+acquiesce in the British action.[328]
+
+In October the two countries came dangerously close to war over the
+Dogger Bank affair. The Russian Baltic fleet, a makeshift, heterogeneous
+collection of vessels, was on its way to the war zone. While passing
+through the North Sea, it shot into a British fishing fleet off the
+Dogger Bank in the night of October 21, sinking one vessel and damaging
+others, killing two men and wounding members of the crews. The Russian
+fleet thought that it had fired at two Japanese torpedo boats, and
+continued its voyage without stopping to see what damage it had
+inflicted. The previous mishandling of British merchant ships by the
+Russians had already so irritated the British nation that it became
+incensed at this latest act. Public opinion was bellicose. Sir Charles
+Hardinge, British ambassador at St. Petersburg, described the fleet’s
+conduct to Count Lamsdorff as “an unqualified and brutal outrage.” The
+British government demanded a full investigation, punishment of those
+culpable, “ample apology and complete and prompt reparation as well as
+security against the recurrence of such intolerable incidents.” “The
+matter is one which admits of no delay,” asserted Lord Lansdowne to the
+Russian Ambassador; “if an attempt were made to fence with the question,
+public feeling here would become uncontrollable.” Unless prompt action
+were taken by the Russian government, he continued, “we should certainly
+be obliged to take our own measures for guarding against a repetition of
+these acts.”[329] The British admiralty mobilized the fleets at Portland
+and at Malta, rushed reinforcements to the fleet at Gibraltar, and
+advised the commander there that “it may become necessary for you to
+stop the Baltic Fleet, by persuasion if possible, but by force if
+necessary.”[330]
+
+This energetic procedure brought immediate results. The Russian
+government agreed quickly to the British demands. With the help of
+French mediation, the crisis passed within a week, and the final
+settlement was left to international arbitration. But on October 29 Lord
+Lansdowne warned the Russian Ambassador as follows:
+
+
+I owned . . . . that I lived in dread of new troubles arising. . . . .
+It had not been without the greatest difficulty that we had avoided a
+conflict. . . . . I would not, in these circumstances, dwell upon the
+results of a repetition of the North Sea incident.
+
+There was however another peril against which it was our duty to guard.
+. . . . If, during its [the Russian fleet’s] long voyage, the Russian
+captains considered themselves justified in the wholesale seizure of
+vessels suspected of carrying contraband, public feeling in this country
+would become uncontrollable.[331]
+
+
+A few days later the British Foreign Secretary again warned the
+Ambassador, somewhat more mildly to be sure, against permitting two
+particularly predatory ships of the volunteer fleet which had just been
+added to the Russian fleet itself to prey on neutral commerce.[332] No
+more trouble arose.
+
+After events of this kind, an Anglo-Russian _rapprochement_ seemed far
+off. The British and Russian presses were at each other’s throats. On
+December 2 Sir Charles Hardinge reported his French colleague’s views as
+follows:
+
+
+He [M. Bompard] impressed upon me that the attitude of His Majesty’s
+Government during the next year when the conditions of peace would be
+under discussion would be decisive of the relations between England and
+Russia for the next twenty five years. Thanks to the Japanese war the
+German Government were only now recovering the position which they had
+lost at the congress of Berlin. If His Majesty’s Government continued to
+maintain the same strained relations during the forthcoming year as in
+the past twelve months there would be no prospect of a rapprochement
+between the two countries for another generation. He begged me to
+remember that the many incidents which had occurred had redounded solely
+to the advantage of the German Emperor who now had a position at the
+Russian Court which a year ago would have been regarded as
+impossible.[333]
+
+
+In the next month M. Delcassé urged upon the British Ambassador the
+desirability of an Anglo-Russian _rapprochement_ and asked about the
+possibility of bringing Italy also into new quadruple grouping.
+
+Lord Lansdowne saw no reason why a permanent understanding with Russia
+should be impossible, but he pointed out the difficulty. “The Russian
+diplomatic currency has become debased and discredited,” he wrote to the
+Ambassador at Paris, “and it will not be easy to restore it to its face
+value.”[334] None the less he hardly needed the French warning and
+advice, for he had already been acting in accordance with them. The
+British government had shown as much consideration for Russian feeling
+in the Dogger Bank affair as circumstances permitted. In February of the
+next year it tried to reach accord on the Afghan question, but Count
+Lamsdorff was too much occupied with other matters.[335] Great Britain
+could well afford to be friendly since the Japanese victories were so
+eminently satisfactory to her. Moreover, she wanted no war, for, apart
+from her aversion to war as such, she feared what Germany might do in
+case of one.[336] Rumors of a Russo-German treaty were already abroad
+and spread rapidly toward the end of 1904.[337] British public opinion
+was becoming more mistrustful of Germany than of Russia. Having regarded
+the growing German navy, so near at hand in the North Sea, as a distinct
+menace for over a year, it now feared that Germany might try a sudden
+descent upon the English coast.[338] The British government viewed the
+situation more sanely, but it appreciated the danger of the German navy.
+As Mr. Spring Rice, first secretary of the British embassy in St.
+Petersburg, had written to his friend, President Roosevelt, in the
+summer of 1904:
+
+
+We are trying our best to come to some sort of understanding with Russia
+(when the war is over), so as to put an end to the continual régime of
+panic in India, Persia, etc. The reason we are doing so is that with the
+establishment of a strong German navy on our flanks we cannot afford to
+have a life-and-death struggle in Asia and the Far East. Germany is
+rapidly acquiring a very strong position in Russia. . . . . In any case,
+if we were at war with Russia, Germany would either take Russia’s side,
+or exact very hard terms from us for her neutrality. The German fleet
+has really revolutionized politics.[339]
+
+
+In August, 1904, Sir John Fisher, first sea lord of the British
+admiralty, had warned the government that “‘instant readiness for war’
+was imperative, . . . . unless naval reforms were ‘ruthless and
+remorseless, . . . . we may as well pack up and hand over to
+Germany.’”[340] In accordance with his recommendation, the British
+government reorganized and redistributed its fleet late in 1904 in such
+a way as to concentrate the main strength in home waters. And at the
+close of the year, when the German statesmen expressed fears of a
+British attack on their country, Lord Lansdowne wrote to Sir Frank
+Lascelles:
+
+
+They cannot seriously believe that we are meditating a coup against
+them. Are they perchance meditating one against us and are they seeking
+to justify it in advance? All this talk about one driving them to lean
+towards Russia looks a little like it.
+
+
+The knowledge gained early in 1905, that Germany was making approaches
+not only to Russia and the United States but to Japan as well, augmented
+British mistrust of her policy.[341]
+
+The pressure of events and the insistence of such men as King Edward,
+Admiral Fisher, and others were completing the change of policy which
+Great Britain had been making since 1901. Great Britain had abandoned
+her policy of splendid isolation; she was more and more taking an active
+share in European international relations and assuming a definite
+position in the Continental system of alliances.
+
+
+[Footnote 320: Lansdowne to Spring Rice, April 22, 1904, _B.D._, IV, 188
+f., No. 183. The breakdown of the negotiations as a result of the war
+had been anticipated early in January by Sir Charles Hardinge (Gwynn,
+_The Letters and Friendships of Sir Cecil Spring Rice_, I, 392).]
+
+[Footnote 321: Hardinge to Lansdowne, June 8, 1904, _B.D._, IV, 194 f.,
+No. 188; Radolin to Bülow, Feb. 28, 1904, _G.P._, XIX, 165 ff., No.
+6028, and following documents; Lansdowne to Scott, March 4, 1904,
+_B.D._, V, 73; Spring Rice to Ferguson, March 2, 1904, Gwynn, I, 403
+ff.]
+
+[Footnote 322: Lee, _King Edward VII_, II, 283 ff.; Lansdowne to Spring
+Rice, May 4, 1904, _B.D._, IV, 189 f., No. 184, and following documents;
+Savinsky, _Recollections of a Russian Diplomat_, pp. 90 f.; Crozier,
+_Revue de France_, April 1, 1921, pp. 275 ff.; Newton, _Lord Lansdowne_,
+pp. 307 ff.; cf. _ibid._, pp. 243 f.]
+
+[Footnote 323: Hardinge to Lansdowne, June 8, 1904, _B.D._, IV, 194 f.,
+No. 188; Newton, pp. 310 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 324: Lee, II, 287 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 325: Lansdowne to Spring Rice, May 4, 10, 1904, _B.D._, IV,
+189 f., No. 184; 307 ff., No. 291; Hardinge to Lansdowne, May 18, 1904,
+_ibid._, 190, No. 185; Monson to Lansdowne May 27, 1904, _ibid._, 193,
+No. 186.]
+
+[Footnote 326: Lansdowne to Monson, April 29, 1904, _ibid._, II, 401;
+Lansdowne to O’Conor, June 7, 1904, _ibid._, IV, 51, No. 46; Metternich
+to F. O., Aug. 18, 1904, _G.P._, XIX, 240, No. 6070.]
+
+[Footnote 327: _B.D._, Vol. IV, chap. xxiii, Part III; _G.P._, Vol. XIX,
+chap. cxxxii; Newton, pp. 313 ff.; Gwynn, I, 424 f. King Edward was in
+favor of showing to Germany, whose commerce was also being molested by
+those ships, a mark of friendship by co-operating with her in handling
+the matter with Russia. Lansdowne disapproved the idea (Lee, II, 297
+f.).]
+
+[Footnote 328: Hardinge to Lansdowne, Sept. 23, 1904, _B.D._, IV, 317,
+No. 299; Lansdowne to Hardinge, Sept. 27, 1904, _ibid._, 319 f., No.
+301.]
+
+[Footnote 329: Lansdowne to Hardinge, Oct. 24 and 25, 1904, _ibid._, 6,
+No. 6; 7 f., No. 8; 10 f., No. 12; Hardinge to Lansdowne, Oct. 24, 1904,
+_ibid._, 7, No. 7.]
+
+[Footnote 330: Admiralty to F. O., Oct. 28, 1904, _ibid._, 18 f., No. 19
+and inclosures.]
+
+[Footnote 331: Lansdowne to Hardinge, Oct. 29, 1904, _ibid._, 23 f., No.
+23.]
+
+[Footnote 332: Lansdowne to Hardinge, Nov. 3, 1904, _ibid._, 55, No. 52.
+On the Dogger Bank affair see _ibid._, chap. xxiii, Part 11; _G.P._,
+Vol. XIX, chap. cxxxiv; Lee, II, 301 ff.; Newton, pp. 315 ff.; Gwynn, I,
+432 f.]
+
+[Footnote 333: Hardinge to Lansdowne, Dec. 2, 1904, _B.D._, IV, 66 f.,
+No. 58.]
+
+[Footnote 334: Newton, pp. 339 f.]
+
+[Footnote 335: Lansdowne to Benckendorff, Feb. 17, 1905, _B.D._, IV, 520
+f., No. 466_a_; Lansdowne to Hardinge, March 8, 1905, _ibid._, 521, No.
+466_b_.]
+
+[Footnote 336: On Nov. 5, 1904, Spring Rice wrote to Roosevelt as
+follows: “Emperor William has got the ear of the Emperor here. . . . .
+It is plain that Germany naturally enough wants to see Russia have a
+free hand in Asia and hopes in exchange to have one in Europe; that if
+England could be engaged in a war with Russia which would require her
+fleet to be absent in the East, the German fleet, especially if France
+would come in, would have a good chance for a sudden descent on England”
+(quoted in Dennett, _Roosevelt and the Russo-Japanese War_, pp. 73 f.;
+see also Gwynn, I, 414 ff., 436, 438 ff.).]
+
+[Footnote 337: Lascelles to Lansdowne, Sept. 23, 1904, _B.D._, IV, 4 f.,
+No. 4; Gwynn, I, 427 f.; see also below.]
+
+[Footnote 338: Bernadotte Everly Schmitt, _England and Germany,
+1740-1914_ (Princeton, 1916), p. 180; _G.P._, Vol. XIX, chap. cxxxvi.
+Balfour denied in the House of Commons that an attack was likely or
+would succeed if it were made. But the British fear continued. See 4
+Hansard, Vol. CXLII (March 7, 1907), col. 595; Vol. CXLVI (May 11,
+1905), cols. 72 f.]
+
+[Footnote 339: Dennett, pp. 152 f.; Gwynn, I, 422 f. The letter was a
+reply to one from Roosevelt dated June 13, 1904. The approximate date
+given by Dennett is incorrect.]
+
+[Footnote 340: Fisher to Knollys, Aug. 19, 1904, Lee, II, 328.]
+
+[Footnote 341: Newton, p. 332.]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII
+
+ FRENCH POLICY AFTER THE MAKING OF THE ENTENTE CORDIALE
+
+
+As friend of Great Britain and ally of Russia, France was in an uneasy
+situation after the outbreak of the Russo-Japanese War. Hostility
+between those two Powers was increasing. Thereby the influence of
+Germany in St. Petersburg was greatly augmented, and Germany was
+assiduously courting Russia. M. Delcassé had to show enough sympathy and
+give enough help to Russia to prevent Germany from usurping France’s
+position at St. Petersburg and at the same time hold to the Anglo-French
+entente.
+
+The task did not prove to be unduly arduous, for Russia did not require
+much of her ally. M. Delcassé sought to maintain harmony between Great
+Britain and Russia by helping them settle their disputes.[342] He also
+did what favors he could for Russia, such as permitting the Russian
+Baltic fleet to use French ports on the way to the Far East. But
+otherwise he left Russia to her own resources and devoted himself to
+other tasks.
+
+The Anglo-French accord did not complete M. Delcassé’s work of
+establishing France’s right to preponderance in Morocco and of elevating
+her position in Europe, but it made the completion possible. The Foreign
+Minister still had to negotiate an agreement with Spain, to exclude
+Germany from the Moroccan settlement, and to execute the policy of
+pacific penetration in the Sherifian Empire. During the succeeding
+months he was occupied with these problems.
+
+
+ I. THE FRANCO-SPANISH AGREEMENT, 1904
+
+
+When M. Delcassé, in accordance with Article VIII of the Anglo-French
+declaration, proposed to the Spanish government in April, 1904, that
+they negotiate over the Moroccan question, he immediately met with
+difficulty. Relying upon promises by Lord Lansdowne and M. Delcassé, the
+Spanish government had expected to be consulted before the conclusion of
+the bargain. It therefore complained because the negotiations had not
+been conducted _à trois_.[343] The Spanish Queen Mother branded the act
+as an “unfriendliness” to Spain, and the Marquis del Muni (M. Leon y
+Castillo), Spanish ambassador at Paris, “clinched his fist in his
+pocket” at the two Powers.[344] When the Cortes met, the Liberals took
+occasion on June 6, 7, and 9, to expose the main terms of the Franco-
+Spanish accord of 1902 which the Conservatives had refused to sign, and
+to accuse that party of having inadequately upheld Spain’s interests. As
+the nation remained apathetic, M. Maura, the prime minister, had no
+difficulty in defending his government.[345] Urged by the British
+government,[346] he accepted M. Delcassé’s overture.
+
+The course of the negotiations, which began in April, was a rocky one.
+The Spanish accused the French of being too-hard bargainers; the French
+thought that the other party was too prone to alarm.[347] The Spanish
+government, ignorant of the secret articles in the Anglo-French
+agreement by which the Spanish sphere was already limited,[348] demanded
+the territorial terms which had been informally agreed upon in 1902. But
+M. Delcassé refused to give them, for, he asserted, Spain ought to bear
+her part of the sacrifice which France had had to make to Great Britain.
+Aroused by this reply, the Spanish government appealed late in April to
+the German government for an “active expression” of “sympathy . . . . at
+the opportune moment.” Although the German Chancellor was eager to give
+it,[349] Spain aimed to use this intimacy merely as a threat. While
+continuing the conversations more or less dilatorily with Germany, she
+asked for and relied chiefly upon the support of Great Britain to obtain
+satisfactory terms with France.
+
+Through Lord Lansdowne’s mediation, M. Delcassé agreed in May to extend
+the Spanish sphere of influence in the north from Melilla to the mouth
+of the Moulouya—a particularly sore spot with the Spanish since they
+owned islands just off this coast—and to expand the limits of the
+Spanish sphere in Southern Morocco. The French Minister made these
+concessions dependent upon Spain’s accepting his other conditions, and
+asserted to the Spanish Ambassador that “he was not prepared to prolong
+the discussion of these details, and his offer was _à prendre ou à
+laisser_.”[350]
+
+This bold speech did not impress the Spanish government, which, knowing
+France’s need for an agreement with it, followed Count Bülow’s advice of
+drawing out the negotiations.[351] Its views differed from those of M.
+Delcassé in that it desired Spanish control in Tangier, full commercial
+liberty throughout Morocco without any time limit, and the publication
+of the agreement—all of which the French Minister refused.[352] However,
+by the last of June accord was virtually reached, when M. Delcassé
+brought forth a new condition to the effect that Spain should be
+precluded from taking any action in her prospective sphere until the
+_status quo_ in Morocco came to an end.[353]
+
+M. Delcassé was confronted with the problem of how to maintain a unified
+Franco-Spanish policy in the peaceful penetration of Morocco, how to
+retain the initiative in that work in French hands, how to minimize
+Spain’s rights in Morocco in favor of France. Mistrusting Spain’s
+competence to handle subject peoples, he wished to prevent her from
+taking any action in her sphere that would arouse the Moroccans to a war
+not only against Spain but also against France and thus ruin the work of
+pacific penetration. He feared that Spain might precipitate the
+liquidation of Morocco so as to obtain full control of her area. The
+French policy was to postpone that event until a suitable occasion, in
+the meantime undermining Morocco’s integrity and independence while
+pretending to maintain them. He was legally within his rights in taking
+this line toward Spain, and was fortified against British intervention
+in the latter’s favor, because secret Article III of the Anglo-French
+agreement provided that the specified area should come within the sphere
+of influence of Spain and be administered by her “whenever the Sultan
+ceases to exercise authority over it.”[354]
+
+The Spanish government, protesting that this proposal would reduce its
+position to that of a subprotectorate, demanded the same rights in its
+sphere of influence as France would enjoy in hers. It desired
+particularly that Tangier be policed by Spanish altogether. The Spanish
+Foreign Minister asserted that Spain was averse to disturbing the
+_status quo_ in Morocco, but he and his colleagues suspected that France
+would never acknowledge a change in the political status in Morocco and
+would thus exclude Spain from any share in the land. The Spanish
+Minister declared that he “would not sign an agreement which abandoned
+Spanish rights,” and in complaining to the British government he
+threatened to “appeal to the Powers.”
+
+Lord Lansdowne knew that by “Powers” was meant Germany, who was just
+then showing marked interest in helping Spain in the Moroccan affair.
+Wishing to obviate German intervention, he advised the Spanish to make
+concrete proposals to France concerning ways of exercising an influence
+in the proposed Spanish sphere—for instance, as to “the construction of
+railways and other useful works.” He also cautioned Spain against
+undertaking to police Tangier. At the same time he urged M. Delcassé to
+be more conciliatory toward Spain so as to avoid the possibility of
+“international difficulties.”[355]
+
+M. Delcassé was willing to permit Spanish participation in the economic
+development of Morocco and also to associate Spanish officials with
+French ones in two of the three ports whose customs revenues were to be
+collected as security for the recent French loan. He refused to recede
+on the other points.[356] This reply so excited the Spanish that when M.
+Delcassé proposed a clause whereby Spain would be prohibited from
+alienating the Moroccan territory over which she should have control,
+the Spanish government rejected it as beneath its dignity. It offered
+instead to give France a right of preference in case Spain wished to
+alienate any or all of that area. Lord Lansdowne, who did not want
+France to gain this preferential right, persuaded the Spanish to accept
+the French proposal.[357]
+
+The main issue, however, that of Spain’s independence of action in her
+sphere, remained unsolved. In the middle of July, while leaving the
+impression that the cause of difference was the question of full
+commercial freedom, the Spanish government informally asked the German
+government to give Spain a _coup d’épaule_ in Paris. As the German
+government desired a more definite proposal, it did not carry out the
+request.[358] Nor was much support to be obtained from Great Britain.
+But as both French and British governments knew of Germany’s interest in
+the negotiations, M. Delcassé, in August, agreed to restrict Spain’s
+action for fifteen years only.[359] The Spanish government rejected that
+concession, but offered to take no action for that period without
+previous accord with France, provided France recognized that she “ought
+to proceed in accord with the Spanish Government in that which touches
+the zone of influence reserved to Spain.” Lord Lansdowne supported this
+proposal. So while M. Delcassé held to his previous stand, he agreed
+that “France would take no steps within the Spanish Sphere without
+giving previous notice to Spain.” Thus, although the Marquis del Muni
+thought that the two parties had reached a deadlock, there was in
+reality no great difference between the two demands. On October 3 the
+agreement was signed.[360]
+
+The accord consisted of a published declaration and of sixteen secret
+articles. The former merely expressed the fact that Spain adhered to the
+Anglo-French declaration of April 8 concerning Morocco and Egypt and
+that Spain and France were in agreement “to fix the extension of their
+rights and guaranty of their interests” in Morocco.[361] The secret
+articles were of a far different caliber. Spain received as her sphere
+of influence not only the area from the Moulouya to Larache in Northern
+Morocco but also the coastal territory and hinterland extending from her
+possession Rio de Oro northward to the Wad Sus, just south of Agadir.
+The rest of Morocco constituted the French sphere (Arts. II, IV, V).
+Provision for a future change was included.
+
+
+In case the political state of Morocco and of the Sherifian Government
+are unable to subsist, or if by the feebleness of the Government and by
+its continued impotence to introduce security and public order, or for
+any other cause to be stated in a common accord, the maintenance of the
+_status quo_ becomes impossible, Spain will be permitted freely to
+exercise her action in . . . . her sphere of influence [Art. III].
+
+
+Although the same rights of action were permitted to Spain in her sphere
+as to France in hers, yet for a period of not over fifteen years from
+the date of signing the convention Spain was prohibited from taking
+action in her sphere without previous understanding with France. The
+latter, however, could take action unrestricted by Spain in the French
+zone, and could also act in the Spanish zone after having notified Spain
+of her intention. After that first period expired and as long as the
+_status quo_ obtained, France could not act in the Spanish zone without
+previous agreement with Spain (Art. II). By Articles VII and VIII Spain
+agreed not to cede or to alienate in any form any of the territory
+assigned to her or to seek the aid of a foreign Power other than France
+in taking any military action in her sphere of influence. Article IX
+preserved “the special character” of Tangier “which the presence of the
+diplomatic corps and the municipal and sanitary institutions give it.”
+Article X ran as follows:
+
+
+So long as the actual political status continues, the enterprises for
+public works, railroads, roads, canals . . . . shall be executed by such
+companies as may be formed by French and Spanish. In the same manner it
+will be permissible for French and Spanish in Morocco to co-operate for
+the exploitation of mines, quarries, and, in general, of enterprises of
+an economic order.[362]
+
+
+The two Powers immediately communicated the agreement to the British
+government, which accepted it.[363] The Spanish government thanked both
+British and German governments for their aid during the negotiations,
+and briefly informed the latter that by the treaty Tangier had been
+neutralized and complete equality and freedom of commerce and trade had
+been guaranteed.[364]
+
+In Spain the agreement, grudgingly approved by the government as the
+best that it could obtain, was shown by the Premier to the various party
+leaders, and received their indorsement.[365] M. Delcassé informed none
+of the French politicians of the content of the treaty. During the
+debates in the French Parliament on the Anglo-French accord in November
+and December, however, the Franco-Spanish agreement was also accepted on
+faith.[366] The convention was a logical extension of the accord of
+April 8. Both agreements anticipated a change in the political status of
+Morocco and made provisions for a future division of the land. The one
+permitted commercial restriction at the end of thirty years; the other
+arranged for a Franco-Spanish monopoly of all economic enterprises. Both
+accords violated the principle of the open door. In fact, had the secret
+articles of the two agreements been known, they would have proved that
+the clauses concerning the independence and integrity of Morocco and the
+sovereignty of the sultan were complete shams. In declaring to the other
+Powers that commercial freedom would be absolutely respected, M.
+Delcassé was equivocating and attempting to disarm suspicions concerning
+his real intention of destroying economic freedom in Morocco.[367]
+
+
+ II. DELCASSÉ AND GERMANY, 1904
+
+
+It was manifest during the Anglo-French negotiations that the French
+government planned to prevent Germany from gaining any foothold in
+Morocco or the Western Mediterranean.[368] Fearing that that Power might
+try to share in the Moroccan settlement when the Anglo-French accord
+became known, M. Delcassé endeavored to avoid a discussion of the
+agreement with it.[369]
+
+When, therefore, on March 23, Prince Radolin asked the French Minister
+an “indiscreet question” about the reported Anglo-French negotiations,
+the latter replied that they had been going on for some time and would
+probably be successfully concluded. He said that they treated of
+Newfoundland, Egypt, and Morocco (the other questions he did not
+mention); and he explained the terms of the proposed agreement
+concerning the last-named land. “You know already our point of view on
+this subject. . . . . We wish to maintain in Morocco the existing
+political and territorial status; but that status, to endure, must
+manifestly be sustained and improved.” After citing the many occasions
+for intervention of which France had taken no advantage, he stated that
+the Sultan had already requested French aid. “It is now a matter of
+continuing it to him,” he said, and he assured the Prince that
+commercial liberty would be “rigorously and entirely respected. . . . .
+France wishes no special rights in Morocco, but it should be her task in
+the interest of all nations trading there to put an end, according to
+her power, to the anarchy in that land.” Moreover, the free passage
+through the straits should be secured by neutralizing their southern
+shore. As for Spain, her “positive interests and legitimate ambitions”
+in Morocco would be amicably treated. He did not mention either the
+clause limiting commercial freedom to thirty years or Article IX
+assuring mutual diplomatic support in the fulfilment of the accord. And
+of course he gave no hint of the existence of the secret articles.[370]
+
+This informal and incomplete notification misrepresented the true aims
+of the agreement with respect to Morocco. M. Delcassé expected that by
+avoiding an official notification of the accord to the German government
+and by omitting to request an expression of opinion from it he would
+cause the German government either to permit him a diplomatic victory or
+to take the initiative for a Franco-German understanding.[371] He felt
+safe in his policy,[372] because France, in addition to her alliance
+with Russia, whose victory over Japan M. Delcassé and the French people
+confidently expected,[373] now enjoyed with her ally’s public
+approval[374] the friendship of Great Britain, Italy, and Spain, whereas
+the Triple Alliance was weakened by internal strife. Moreover, the
+French Minister learned on March 30[375] that at Vigo a few days before
+the Emperor William had denied having any territorial interests in
+Morocco. Hence by shunning the word “protectorate” he hoped to avoid the
+responsibility for endeavoring to establish one.[376] In October his
+notification of the Franco-Spanish agreement to the German government
+was even more perfunctory.[377]
+
+
+ III. “PACIFIC PENETRATION,” 1904
+
+
+After the signing of the Anglo-French agreement, the French Parliament
+voted 600,000 francs with which to carry on the work of pacific
+penetration in Morocco.[378] The French government immediately
+dispatched a preliminary mission to Fez under Count de Saint-Aulaire,
+first secretary of the legation in Tangier. The Count gave the Sultan an
+exact Arabic translation of the published declaration of April 8; and,
+after setting forth the need for progressive reforms in Morocco and the
+special interest of France in executing them, he offered the friendly
+co-operation of his government to that end.[379] Thus, in spite of the
+persistent Moroccan raids across the Algerian border, the Sultan was
+asked to believe that France was once more manifesting her patience and
+good will.[380]
+
+The Sultan scarcely knew what line of policy to take toward the Anglo-
+French agreement.[381] His subjects, from the religious groups to the
+merchants of Fez, were all hostile to any form of foreign control.
+Alarmed at the news of the agreement, they feared an immediate invasion
+by the Christians. Suspecting their ruler of conniving with the French,
+they became even more rebellious; many denied that he possessed the
+_baraka_, the divine benediction. At court the Conservative party, led
+by Si Feddoul Gharnet, grew stronger in its opposition to all French
+actions and policies. The Sultan realized the precariousness of his
+position, and was very anxious about the effects of his acts upon his
+people. He was uneasy and angry at having been ignored in the
+negotiations over his land. Nevertheless, as he did not comprehend the
+full significance of the accord, particularly since the French had
+explained it to him in soothing terms, he soon became calmer. Some of
+his officials were not opposed to the French, as they realized that the
+present conditions could not last and that the French had the power to
+change them. Furthermore, certain practical considerations prevented him
+from closing his ear to the French altogether. His ambition was, with
+the help of Europeans selected by himself, so to strengthen his land as
+to enable it to maintain its independence.[382] The Sultan had no funds;
+the small French, English, and Spanish loans of the previous year were
+exhausted, and he could not collect taxes or maintain an army. Forced to
+seek foreign aid, he had begun negotiations with the Banque de Paris et
+des Pays-Bas for a large loan late in January, and had besought the help
+of the French government in obtaining it. M. Delcassé had readily
+promised his support.[383]
+
+In this situation the Sultan neither accepted nor rejected the Anglo-
+French agreement and Count de Saint-Aulaire’s explanation of it although
+he showed favor toward them.[384] On June 12 with the aid of the French
+government he concluded the transaction for the loan.
+
+The loan, made by a consortium of eleven French banks headed by the
+Banque de Paris et des Pays-Bas, fulfilled political as well as economic
+purposes, for it was backed by the French government and was admirably
+adapted to the work of pacific penetration. The amount was 62,500,000
+francs (Art. I), of which 80 per cent was actually to be credited to the
+Sultan (Art. XXIV). The interest was set at 5 per cent (Art. III). The
+loan was to be redeemed within thirty-six years, but the schedule of
+amortization was fixed and could not be hastened during the first
+fifteen years (Arts. IV, VII). The loan, guaranteed by the customs
+duties in all the ports of Morocco, was to have preference and priority
+over all other loans which might be similarly guaranteed (Art. XI).
+Sixty per cent of the customs revenues were reserved for the repayment
+of the obligation. If the necessary amount was not obtained thereby, the
+Moroccan government was to make up the deficit (Art. XVII). Two million
+francs were left in the bank at Paris to cover short payments; if
+withdrawn, this amount was to be re-established immediately by the
+Sultan’s government (Art. XXI). The remainder, after the Sultan’s
+outstanding loans were liquidated, was placed at the ruler’s disposal to
+be drawn upon at will (Arts. XXV, XXXV). By Article XIV the existing
+customs treaties and arrangements of Morocco with the Powers were
+guaranteed. Article XXXII prohibited the Sultan from using the customs
+receipts at his disposal to guarantee any other loan without a previous
+agreement with the French banks. By Article XXXIII those banks were
+given the right of preference in contracting new loans, coining money,
+or buying and selling gold and silver for Morocco, provided the
+conditions they offered were equal to those offered by others. The
+collection of the customs was to be supervised by a special group of
+French officials under the protection of the French legation. Their
+director should communicate with the Moroccan government through the
+French Minister at Tangier. Furthermore, if the stipulated funds were
+not turned over to the supervisors, the agents could appeal to the
+French Minister; and, with his consent and with due notification to the
+Sultan, they could collect the sums themselves. Thus, when by the last
+of July those officials were installed, the control of the customs was
+practically lost to the Sultan.[385]
+
+In May an act of banditry occurred in Morocco which convinced public
+opinion everywhere that reform in that land was immediately necessary
+and which enabled France to take another step in her work of
+penetration. On May 18, Raisouli, a sherif, ex-cattle thief, robber and
+rebel, avenger of wrongs, opponent to Europeans—in short, a Moroccan
+Robin Hood—took prisoner an American citizen, Ion Perdicaris, and his
+English son-in-law, Varley, in their home near Tangier. As the price of
+their release he demanded a large ransom, the dismissal and punishment
+of certain of the Sultan’s loyal officials who were his enemies, and his
+own appointment as pasha for the district around Tangier. The Sultan had
+to accept his terms. On June 24, through the good offices of the French
+government, working through some of its Algerian religious leaders with
+followers in Morocco, the release was effected.[386] But the panic-
+stricken foreigners in Tangier, fearing that Raisouli would continue
+such lucrative business and that he would have imitators, demanded
+protection.[387] Thereupon the French government stationed two warships
+in Moroccan waters and secured the appointment of French and Algerian
+officers over the Tangier police.[388] The work of “pacific penetration”
+was most auspiciously under way.
+
+Private French enterprise did not lag behind that of the government.
+Moroccan towns swarmed with hungry fortune-seekers eager to enjoy the
+opportunities for quick wealth which the opening of Morocco was expected
+to bring. The Comité du Maroc, formed in the preceding December from the
+ranks of the larger Comité de l’Afrique française, engaged energetically
+in directing and expanding the work of scientific exploration in the
+Sherifian Empire and of disseminating propaganda in France.[389] It
+received the financial support of the chief banks, maritime companies,
+steel works, railway companies, and some of the leading newspapers of
+France.[390] The list of guests present at a banquet held by it on June
+15 to enlist public support reads like a French _Who’s Who_.[391]
+
+In the autumn and early winter the French government made preparations
+to send a larger mission to Fez under the resident minister, M. Saint-
+René Taillandier, to obtain the Sultan’s approval of the French program
+of reforms. According to M. Delcassé’s instructions on December 15,[392]
+the Minister’s foremost task should be to institute police reforms
+similar to those inaugurated in Tangier, first in the towns already in
+contact with Europeans and then gradually in the other areas. In the
+border region order should be preserved by extending the co-operation of
+the two governments. The establishment of a state bank, the construction
+of means of transportation and of communication, the improvement of
+harbors, the support of philanthropic works, the spread of the French
+language, and the settlement of claims for damages inflicted on Algeria
+by Moroccan raiders were the other matters to be taken up. It was a
+comprehensive program, the achievement of which would end Moroccan
+isolation and independence.
+
+The departure of the mission was delayed by the long negotiations for an
+accord with Spain and by the fact that the French Chamber did not
+approve the Moroccan accords until November. When the mission was
+prepared to start in December, the situation in Morocco, apparently
+favorable for France in the spring, had become adverse. The natives had
+grown bolder in their attacks upon foreigners, venting their hatred upon
+them even in Fez. The Sultan had begun to show signs of resisting. In
+September he had disgraced the pro-foreign minister el Menebhi and
+confiscated his property. Later in the year he had supplanted his pro-
+French ministers by anti-foreign ones, such as Si Feddoul Gharnet. In
+December he had dismissed all foreign employees at Fez and Rabat.[393]
+These signs augured trouble for the French. While assuming an optimistic
+manner publicly, M. Saint-René Taillandier acknowledged to his chief on
+December 12 that he might “be powerless to make the Sultan accept the
+minimum of reforms that the present state of Morocco demands.”[394] But
+as firmness was the best means to “recall the Moroccan government to a
+sense of reality,”[395] he immediately countered the dismissal of the
+French officers by a sharply worded letter to the Moroccan Foreign
+Minister. After reminding the latter of the _acte international_ by
+which France had “assumed the task of aiding” the Makhzen[396] to reform
+the land, he stated that the Sultan’s co-operation was expected and
+desired, but that
+
+
+if that co-operation were not forthcoming, France would know how to
+accomplish the work alone. Dangerous counselors [he wrote] have led the
+Sultan astray as to the true state of affairs. And in consequence the
+French Government has decided to postpone the departure of the mission,
+and to recall to Tangier from Fez within ten days the French military
+mission, vice-consul, and all French subjects resident there.[397]
+
+
+The Sultan’s opposition wilted immediately. The French vice-consul at
+Fez reported that the Makhzen was “ready to welcome all French counsels
+and to accept all the reforms,” that it “withdrew all the actions which
+have offended us.”[398] But the Sultan’s submission was not so complete
+as it seemed. Although France was the victor in this encounter, the
+conflict had only begun.
+
+
+[Footnote 342: On Oct. 28, 1904, at the height of the Dogger Bank
+crisis, Lansdowne reported the following assertion by Cambon: “His
+Excellency [M. Cambon] said that he did not himself know precisely what
+obligations France had undertaken in virtue of that understanding [the
+Dual Alliance]. He did not however believe that if there was a
+collision, France would join Russia against us, but if a collision
+occurred, and particularly if it were brought on by unreasonable demands
+on our part, there would be a _revirement_ of public feeling, and the
+Anglo-French _entente_ could not fail to suffer” (Lansdowne to Monson,
+Oct. 28, 1904, _B.D._, IV, 22, No. 21).]
+
+[Footnote 343: According to a speech in the Spanish Senate on March 21,
+1904, by M. Abarzuza, who had been a member of Silvela’s cabinet from
+Dec. 6, 1902, to July 20, 1903, both the British and the French
+governments promised Spain in the first half of 1903 not to touch the
+Moroccan question or to make any alterations in North Africa without
+Spain’s previous knowledge and acquiescence. The speech is quoted by
+Becker, _Historia de Marruecos_ (Madrid, 1915), pp. 440 f. See above for
+Lansdowne’s promise. The Spanish government did try to participate in
+the Anglo-French negotiations by way of both London and Paris; but it
+was put off with general assurances of friendship by both Lansdowne and
+Delcassé. See Lansdowne to Durand, Aug. 11, 1903, _B.D._, II, 309 f.,
+No. 366; Lansdowne to Monson, Jan. 23, 1904, _ibid._, 341, No. 388;
+Lansdowne to Egerton, April 11, 1904, III, 25 f., No. 24; Bülow to F.
+O., Sept. 18, 1904, _G.P._, XVII, 354, No. 5199, and the following
+documents. For expression of Spanish public opinion over the Anglo-
+French accord see the _London Times_, April 11-16, 1904; Gay, _España
+ante el problema del mediterráneo_, pp. 31 ff.; Maura, _La Question du
+Maroc, etc._ (Paris, 1911), pp. 32 f.; Mousset, _La politica exterior de
+España, 1873-1918_ (Madrid, 1918), pp. 149 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 344: _G.P._, XX, 169 f.]
+
+[Footnote 345: The debates in the Cortes are to be found in the _Diario
+de las sesiones de Cortes_. Congreso de los Diputados (_Legislatura de
+1903_), pp. 4883 ff., 4917 ff., 4944 ff., 4959 ff. Also see Maura, pp.
+85 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 346: Lansdowne to Egerton, April 11, 1904, _B.D._, III, 25 f.,
+No. 24; Egerton to Lansdowne, April 11, 1904, _ibid._, 26 f., No. 25.]
+
+[Footnote 347: Egerton to Lansdowne, May 6, 1904, _ibid._, 34, No. 35.]
+
+[Footnote 348: The British government kept these articles secret
+(Lansdowne to Egerton, April 11, 1904, _ibid._, 25 f., No. 24).]
+
+[Footnote 349: Bülow to Radowitz, April 27, 1904, _G.P._, XX, 169 f.,
+No. 6481, and following documents.]
+
+[Footnote 350: Lansdowne to Monson, April 20, 1904, _B.D._, III, 29, No.
+28, and following documents.]
+
+[Footnote 351: Bülow to Radowitz, May 22, 1904, _G.P._, XX, 173 f., No.
+6484. Bülow repeated his offer of aid on May 31. Bülow to Radowitz, May
+31, 1904, _ibid._, 175 f., No. 6487. The Spanish Ambassador at Paris
+remarked to Monson that if Great Britain did not help Spain the latter
+“would be done out of half her rights in that country [Morocco]” (Monson
+to Lansdowne, May 20, 1904, _B.D._, III, 37, No. 41).]
+
+[Footnote 352: Romanones, _Las responsabilidades politicas, etc._, pp.
+49 ff.; reports from Madrid, June 15 and 21, 1904, _Zur europ. Politik_,
+I, 121; see also _G.P._, Vol. XX, chap. cxliv.]
+
+[Footnote 353: Egerton to Lansdowne, July 1, 1904, _B.D._, III, 38, No.
+43; Lansdowne to Egerton, July 2, 1904, _ibid._, 38 f., No. 44.]
+
+[Footnote 354: _Ibid._, II, 393 f.]
+
+[Footnote 355: Egerton to Lansdowne, July 1, 1904, _ibid._, III, 38, No.
+43; Lansdowne to Egerton, July 2, 6, 1904, _ibid._, 38, No. 44; 40, No.
+46; Lansdowne to Monson, July 4, 1904, _ibid._, 40, No. 45; Leon y
+Castillo, _Mis tiempos_, II, 182 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 356: Lansdowne to Monson July 8, 1904, _B.D._, III, 41, No.
+47.]
+
+[Footnote 357: Lansdowne to Monson, July 29, 1904, _ibid._, 42, No. 49;
+Lansdowne to Egerton, July 29, 1904, _ibid._, 43, No. 50; Egerton to
+Lansdowne, July 31, 1904, _ibid._, 44, No. 52.]
+
+[Footnote 358: Memo. by Richthofen, July 16, 1904, _G.P._, XX, 186 f.,
+No. 6503; and other documents in _ibid._, Vol. XX, chap. cxliv.]
+
+[Footnote 359: At first Delcassé said thirty years.]
+
+[Footnote 360: Egerton to Lansdowne, July 31, 1904, _B.D._, III, 44, No.
+52, and following documents; also Leon y Castillo, II, 183 f.]
+
+[Footnote 361: _L.j., 1901-5_, 164, No. 187.]
+
+[Footnote 362: The text of the agreement, which became public in 1909,
+is to be found in _British and Foreign State Papers_, CII (London,
+1913), 432 ff.; and in _B.D._, III, 49 ff., No. 59.]
+
+[Footnote 363: Lansdowne to Adam, Oct. 5, 1904, _B.D._, III, 52, No.
+60.]
+
+[Footnote 364: Radowitz to F. O., Oct. 7, 1904, _G.P._, XX, 191 f., No.
+6509.]
+
+[Footnote 365: Maura, p. 54; Radowitz to F. O., Oct. 7, 1904, _G.P._,
+XX, 191 f., No. 6509.]
+
+[Footnote 366: Maura, p. 78; Tardieu, _Questions diplomatiques_, 1904,
+pp. 75 ff.; Millet, _Notre politique extérieure 1898-1905_, pp. 179 ff.;
+and the French debates cited above.]
+
+[Footnote 367: For an estimate of this accord see Tardieu, _Revue des
+deux mondes_, Dec. 1, 1912, pp. 637 ff.; Stuart, _French Foreign Policy
+from Fashoda to Serajevo (1898-1914)_ (New York, 1921), pp. 154 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 368: See, among others, the dispatch from Lansdowne to Monson,
+Dec. 9, 1903, _B.D._, III, 332, No. 378.]
+
+[Footnote 369: Lansdowne to Monson, March 11, 1904, _ibid._, II, 353,
+No. 398. One day long after signing the accord Radolin remarked to
+Delcassé that he “had heard of an apparent treaty with England but had
+never read the text of it in any authentic form.” The Minister replied
+that he could find it in the _Livre jaune_ (letter from Radolin,
+apparently to Holstein, March 25, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 266 n.).]
+
+[Footnote 370: In repeating these assertions to the German government on
+April 26 the French Ambassador added that “the Anglo-French entente was
+directed against no other Power and in no way menaced the German
+commercial interests.” See Delcassé to Bihourd, March 27, 1904, _L.j.,
+1901-5_, 122, No. 142; Radolin to Bülow, March 23, 1904, _G.P._, XX, 5
+ff., No. 6368; Bihourd to Delcassé, April 27, 1904, _L.j., 1901-5_, 131,
+No. 155.]
+
+[Footnote 371: See Bertie to Lansdowne, March 22, 1905, _B.D._, III, 60,
+No. 67.]
+
+[Footnote 372: Bihourd, the French ambassador at Berlin, warned Delcassé
+in April that Germany had not said her last word on the Moroccan
+question and that more complete guaranties of commercial liberty should
+be given to her; but Delcassé disregarded the warning. See Bihourd to
+Delcassé, April 18, 1904, _L.j., 1901-5_, 128, No. 151; Delcassé to
+Bihourd, April 18, 1904, _ibid._, 129, No. 152; Bihourd to Delcassé,
+April 21, 1904, _ibid._, 129 f., No. 153; cf. Lee, _King Edward VII_,
+II, 338.]
+
+[Footnote 373: Michon, _L’alliance franco-russe, 1891-1917_, pp. 101 f.]
+
+[Footnote 374: Statement made by Nelidow, Russian ambassador to Paris,
+to a reporter of the _Temps_, reprinted in _Quest. dipl. et. col._,
+XVII, 607 f.]
+
+[Footnote 375: Radolin to Bülow, March 30, 1904, _G.P._, XVII, 365, No.
+5210.]
+
+[Footnote 376: There is some evidence, however, that Delcassé did make
+some vague attempts to approach the German government on the Moroccan
+affair in 1904. Bülow, in a dispatch of March 22, 1905, stated that if
+Delcassé should declare that he had discussed Moroccan affairs
+“thoroughly with German diplomats passing through” Paris, Radolin was to
+reply that those conversations were only private ones and showed plainly
+the inclination to avoid the official and proper authorities. See Bülow
+to Radolin, March 22, 1905, _ibid._, XX, 267, No. 6568. Theodor Wolff,
+at that time Paris correspondent of the _Berliner Tageblatt_, also has
+written that in the spring of 1904 Delcassé said to Lichnowsky, an
+official in the German foreign office, that they should come to an
+understanding over Morocco. According to Wolff, Holstein became furious
+at the dispatch from Lichnowsky (Wolff, _Das Vorspiel_, pp. 154 f.; cf.
+Ludwig, _Wilhelm der Zweite_, p. 342). Lichnowsky may have been the
+person to whom Bülow referred, although, if any such conversation
+occurred, it was not mentioned later by either the French or the
+Germans.]
+
+[Footnote 377: The French Ambassador merely left a copy of the published
+declaration and added verbally that the accord in no way infringed upon
+commercial liberty in Morocco. See Richthofen to Radowitz, Oct. 7, 1904,
+_G.P._, XX, 191, No. 6508; memo. by Richthofen for Bülow, Oct. 7, 1904,
+_ibid._, 230, No. 6534; Delcassé to Bihourd, Oct. 6, 1904, _L.j.,
+1901-5_, 164, No. 187; Bihourd to Delcassé, Oct. 7, 1904, _ibid._, 166,
+No. 190; Delcassé to Bihourd, Oct. 8, 1904, _ibid._, 167 f., No. 193.]
+
+[Footnote 378: This was done on a motion by Jaurès, made on Nov., 1903,
+and passed on April 25, 1904 (Tardieu, _La Conf. d’Algés._, p. 35).]
+
+[Footnote 379: Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé, April 14 and 24,
+1904, _L.j., 1901-5_, 124, No. 146; 130, No. 154; Delcassé to Saint-René
+Taillandier, April 27, 1904, _ibid._, 131, No. 156; Saint-René
+Taillandier to Delcassé, May 19, 1904, _ibid._, 133, No. 159 and annexe;
+Lansdowne to Nicolson, April 19, 1904, _B.D._, III, 28, No. 27.]
+
+[Footnote 380: _L.j., 1901-5_, Nos. 148, 157, 158, 183, 186, 189,
+194-98, 202-7.]
+
+[Footnote 381: On the Moroccan reaction see report by A. Bernard, who
+was in Morocco at the time, in _Bulletin_, June, 1904, pp. 203 f.;
+Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé, Jan. 1 and 24, Feb. 22, April 24,
+May 19, 1904, _L.j., 1901-5_, 119 ff., Nos. 135, 137, 140, 154, 159.]
+
+[Footnote 382: Kühlmann to Bülow, Jan. 31, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 250, No.
+6553.]
+
+[Footnote 383: Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé, Jan. 29, 1904, _L.j.
+1901-5_, 119, No. 138.]
+
+[Footnote 384: Ben Sliman, Moroccan minister of foreign affairs, wrote
+to Saint-René Taillandier on June 17 as follows: “The Sultan . . . . has
+instructed me to reply to you that he does not doubt your favorable
+sentiments nor those of your Government, either the humanity of your
+actions or the sincerity of your counsels. . . . . Your letter is an
+argument the more in favor of the reaffirmation of that conviction and a
+testimony of your good intentions, conforming to the desire of the two
+countries. This is confirmed also by the conversations which we have had
+with your secretary to clarify the difficult points of the accord. . . .
+. I express to you in his [the Sultan’s] name the fullest thanks for
+your happy efforts past and present which, we hope, will characterize
+the conduct of our future relations” (_ibid._, 156 ff., No. 177, annex;
+Mévil, _De la Paix de Francfort, etc._ [Paris, 1909], pp. 172 f. n.).]
+
+[Footnote 385: The prominent part played by the French government in
+making this loan is attested as follows: As already stated, in January,
+at the Sultan’s request, Delcassé promised his help in making the loan.
+Furthermore, Saint-Aulaire and his interpreter, in Fez at the time, took
+an active part in bringing the negotiation to a satisfactory conclusion,
+being consulted on various points and helping in the formulation of the
+terms (Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé, July 30, 1904, _L.j.,
+1901-5_, 162 f., No. 184.). The contract was signed and sealed by the
+French Consul at Fez (_ibid._, 142 f., No. 170, Annex I). And the terms
+of the loan were such as could never have been obtained without the
+approval of the French government. The contract is printed in _ibid._,
+143 ff., No. 170, Annex II. On the instalment of customs officials see
+the dispatches from Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé, July 24, and 30,
+1904, _ibid._, 159 ff., Nos. 181, 184; also Tardieu, _Questions
+diplomatiques, 1904_, pp. 60 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 386: On this episode see the various dispatches in _L.j.,
+1901-5_, 135 ff., Nos. 160 ff. On Raisouli see Rosita Forbes, _El
+Raisuni, the Sultan of the Mountains_ (London, 1924). On June 22, 1904,
+Secretary of State Hay cabled to the American Consul at Tangier, “We
+want Perdicaris alive or Raizuli dead.” See William Roscoe Thayer, _The
+Life and Letters of John Hay_ (Boston and New York, 1915), II, 383;
+Dennis, _Adventures in American Diplomacy_, pp. 443 ff. Both the British
+and the American governments requested the good offices of the French
+government in effecting the release. Mr. Hay, the American secretary of
+state, gave assurance that if more serious action were subsequently
+necessary in Morocco, it would not take place “without a previous
+exchange of views” with France. Thus he acknowledged France’s special
+position with reference to that country. See Saint-René Taillandier to
+Delcassé, May 30, 1904, _ibid._, 137, No. 163; Delcassé to Saint-René
+Taillandier, May 31, 1904, _ibid._, 137, No. 164; Jusserand to Delcassé,
+June 20, 1904, _ibid._, 152, No. 171; Porter to Delcassé, June 27, 1904,
+_ibid._, 155, No. 176; Mévil, pp. 172 f.]
+
+[Footnote 387: Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé, June 2 and 27, July
+2, 1904, _L.j., 1901-5_, 137 ff., Nos. 165, 175, 178.]
+
+[Footnote 388: Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé, June 11 and 27, July
+2, 1904, _ibid._, 140 ff., Nos. 168, 175, 178; Delcassé to Saint-René
+Taillandier, July 26, 1904, _ibid._, 160, No. 182; Saint-René
+Taillandier to Delcassé, July 29, 1904, _ibid._, 160 f., No. 183, and
+annex.]
+
+[Footnote 389: _Bulletin_, Dec., 1903, p. 377; Jan., 1904, pp. 3 ff.;
+March, 1904, pp. 76 f.; and others.]
+
+[Footnote 390: See the list of the large subscribers in _ibid._, July,
+1904, p. 224.]
+
+[Footnote 391: The names of those present, 355 in all, are given in
+_Quest. dipl. et col._, XVIII, 62 ff. See also _Bulletin_, June, 1904,
+p. 185.]
+
+[Footnote 392: Delcassé to Saint-René Taillandier, Dec. 15, 1904, _L.j.,
+1901-5_, 179 ff., No. 209. In October a conference had been held in
+Paris with Jonnart, governor-general of Algeria; Gen. Lyauty, commander
+of the French troops at Ain-Sefra in Southern Oran; and Saint-René
+Taillandier, on the Moroccan question (Monson to Lansdowne, Oct. 7,
+1904, _B.D._, III, 54 f., No. 63.)]
+
+[Footnote 393: _L.j., 1901-5_, Nos. 199, 210-12, 215, 218-20, 222-24;
+_B.D._, III, 55, No. 64; _Bulletin_, Sept. and Oct., 1904, pp. 279,
+320.]
+
+[Footnote 394: Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé, Dec. 12, 1904,
+_ibid._, 179, No. 208; Tardieu, _Questions diplomatiques, 1904_, pp. 78
+ff.]
+
+[Footnote 395: The words are Delcassé’s (Delcassé to Saint-René
+Taillandier, Dec. 20, 1904, _L.j., 1901-5_, 186, No. 213.)]
+
+[Footnote 396: The term is used to designate the Moroccan court and
+government.]
+
+[Footnote 397: Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé, Dec. 19 and 24, 1904,
+_L.j., 1901-5_, 185 f., No. 212; 186 f., No. 214.]
+
+[Footnote 398: Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé, Dec. 30, 1904, Jan.
+2, 1905, _ibid._, 188 ff., No. 216 f.]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX
+
+ GERMANY AND THE ENTENTE CORDIALE, 1903-4
+
+ I
+
+
+In the early part of 1903, although one of Germany’s allies was rent by
+nationalistic conflicts[399] and the other was no longer reliable, and
+although British and German public opinion remained so hostile that the
+former prevented Anglo-German co-operation,[400] Count Bülow and Herr
+von Holstein were untroubled about the international situation. Upon the
+announcement of King Edward’s forthcoming visit to Paris, the latter
+wrote to his chief, on April 2, that an Anglo-French alliance was “music
+of the future,” and that the Franco-Russian alliance was slowly breaking
+under the strain of conflicting interests in the Balkans. “We have
+blocked M. Delcassé’s policy in Turkey as well as in Morocco,” he
+stated. The Chancellor agreed with him.
+
+
+Delcassé’s coquetting with England [he wrote] would become serious for
+us only in case he should also succeed in bringing about a
+_rapprochement_ between England and Russia. . . . . Otherwise his wooing
+of England will . . . . strengthen Count Lamsdorff in the thought that
+the former League of the Three Emperors is, all things considered, the
+best combination for Russian autocracy. But the present groupings will
+not change soon, and in my opinion, we cannot take things too
+coolly.[401]
+
+
+Soon after King Edward’s visit to Paris the equanimity of the German
+government was somewhat disturbed by a dispatch of May 10 from Baron
+Eckardstein, formerly first secretary of the German embassy in London.
+The Baron expressed his belief that a general Anglo-French settlement of
+colonial differences including that of Morocco was under way; and that
+since the two nations were reconciled, it would very likely be
+concluded. He denied that this agreement would cause a breach in the
+Dual Alliance, as was supposed in Germany; rather, he wrote, “a new
+Triple Alliance is being formed, which, although it may assume no
+written form and perhaps may endure only for a number of years, will for
+a time cause us everywhere at least economic and political
+difficulties.”[402]
+
+This dispatch was referred by Count Bülow to the German ambassadors at
+St. Petersburg, Paris, and London, and to the first secretary of the
+embassy in London for consideration. Not one of these men believed
+possible an Anglo-Russian settlement or the formation of a new Triple
+Alliance. The Chancellor and Prince Radolin, the ambassador at Paris,
+were both very skeptical about the prospects for an Anglo-French
+agreement; but the German representatives in London thought that one
+might be achieved. Count Metternich’s opinion was that Great Britain and
+France were merely negotiating another colonial accord, which he
+admitted might lead to closer co-operation between them, but which need
+not cause alarm so long as Great Britain, already pacifically inclined,
+enjoyed only the fickle friendship of France and was confronted by the
+antagonism of Russia.[403]
+
+In September the German government believed that the Anglo-French
+settlement was already far advanced;[404] and, learning from the Spanish
+Queen Mother, who was visiting in Austria, that France and Spain were
+also negotiating over Morocco,[405] it resolved to intervene. To that
+end on September 24 it instructed Herr von Radowitz, German ambassador
+at Madrid, as follows:
+
+
+By virtue of our political international position and especially by
+virtue of the great significance of our economic interests in Morocco,
+we must seek to be considered also in a division of the land by
+obtaining territorial compensation, for example in the region of the
+Sus, or elsewhere in the colonial world, perhaps by the cession of
+Fernando Po. Your Excellency should weigh thoroughly the means by which
+we should best reach that goal, whether through direct negotiations with
+Spain, through breaking the way for participation in the negotiations of
+the most interested states, or through proposing a conference.[406]
+
+
+Thus the German government, realizing the improvement in the diplomatic
+position of France and the decline in its own, was apparently willing to
+make a division of Morocco with Great Britain, France, and Spain.
+
+When Herr von Radowitz immediately unfolded the German desire to the
+Spanish Foreign Minister, the latter, admitting the German right to a
+share, agreed to study the proposal.[407] After this the conversations
+appear to have ceased.
+
+Simultaneously with these efforts, in the autumn of 1903 the German
+government planned by maintaining strict reserve to allow the Franco-
+Russian antagonism about the Balkans and the Russo-Japanese hostility in
+the Far East to grow. It thought that any German leanings toward Russia
+would pull France back into line and cause Japan to recede before the
+danger of a new Continental triple entente.[408] On the Chancellor’s
+advice, William II, during his meeting with the Czar at Wiesbaden and
+Wolfsgarten on November 4-5, 1903, kept Germany’s hands entirely free.
+Nevertheless, after the Czar’s approval of the Anglo-French and the
+Franco-Italian _rapprochements_ was made public late in October, the
+Emperor began to suffer from the “nightmare of the coalitions.” During
+the visit he sought to incite Nicholas II against France and Great
+Britain and to urge him further into far eastern enterprises. In his
+correspondence with the Czar in December and January he continued these
+tactics.[409] Count Bülow remonstrated, but the Emperor, haughtily
+replying that these were private letters, advised the Chancellor to mind
+his own business.[410]
+
+To the satisfaction of the German government,[411] the Russo-Japanese
+War broke out in February, 1904. In anger at Great Britain, Russia
+immediately drew nearer to her neighbor;[412] and, with a war in
+progress, the German statesmen planned by a wise manipulation of their
+power to improve their international position and to gain concrete
+advantages.[413] For the time, however, they endeavored by assuring the
+British government that Germany would preserve strict neutrality to
+obviate the need for Great Britain to come to terms with France, arguing
+that a neutral Germany would entail a neutral France.[414] Moreover,
+carrying out a suggestion of the Prince of Monaco, the _Wilhelmstrasse_
+sought to effect, through the mediation of the Italian government, a
+meeting between the Emperor William and President Loubet of France
+during their visits to Italy in March and April.[415] But on March 23
+Prince Radolin surprised his government[416] by reporting a conversation
+with M. Delcassé which showed that the Anglo-French agreement was near
+completion. By March 26 it became evident that the French had refused to
+permit the proposed meeting.[417] So Count Bülow recommended to the
+Emperor on March 30 the dispatch of three small warships to Tangier as a
+direct intervention in the Moroccan affair. By thus arousing French
+animosity, Germany would show Great Britain that the formation of a
+Continental _bloc_ was impossible, that there was no cause for her to
+sacrifice her interests in Morocco.[418] The Emperor regarded the move
+as “entirely inopportune”; for, he argued, since France, Great Britain,
+and Spain were about to settle the Moroccan question, “a one-sided
+bellicose action by Germany . . . . would undoubtedly arouse the
+suspicion of those Powers, would undermine belief in our repeatedly
+expressed assurance, reiterated to the King of Spain at Vigo, that we
+claim no exclusive rights in Morocco, and would put the stamp of
+duplicity upon our policy.” He suggested that if the government wished
+to take action in Morocco, it should first consult those three Powers
+and secure their co-operation.[419]
+
+Without relinquishing the idea, Count Bülow had to content himself for
+the time with a renewed declaration to the British Ambassador on April 6
+of neutrality during the Russo-Japanese War.[420] On April 8 the Anglo-
+French accord was signed.
+
+
+ II
+
+
+German public opinion was disquieted by the Anglo-French agreement and
+by the Franco-Italian intimacy. Apart from the “lunatic fringe” as
+represented by the Pan-German League, which demanded an immediate
+seizure of a portion of Morocco,[421] no one expressed particular
+concern over the loss of that country.[422] The scandals in the colonial
+administration and the costly war with the natives of German Southwest
+and German East Africa had momentarily turned the nation against further
+colonial ventures.[423] The new international alignments, however, were
+viewed by the nation with some alarm. In the Reichstag on April 12 Herr
+Sattler, a National Liberal and a supporter of the government, expressed
+satisfaction that the Triple Alliance remained firm; but, he continued,
+“one has the feeling that otherwise a transformation has occurred in the
+relations of the great Powers which can be of the gravest influence also
+on German relations.” On the next day the Nationalist Count Reventlow
+sarcastically remarked that he could not understand why Germany should
+rejoice since France and Great Britain had settled their differences.
+“If the world is divided, we must assume a somewhat different attitude
+thereto,” he declared; “even in prudent circles of our people the course
+of our foreign policy is being followed with national sorrow,” for the
+government was trying to be overcordial to all without gaining anything.
+Herr Bebel, the Social Democratic leader, greeted the Anglo-French
+settlement on April 14; but he also regarded it as weakening the Triple
+Alliance and strengthening the Dual Alliance. Like Count Reventlow, he
+said that Germany’s international position in the last few years had in
+no way improved, acknowledging with regret the increasing antipathy to
+Germany in foreign lands.[424]
+
+Count Bülow endeavored to calm the public opinion by declaring in the
+Reichstag, April 12 and 14, that “we have no reason to suppose that the
+Anglo-French colonial accord is directed at any other Power.” To this
+apparently “amicable understanding . . . . from the standpoint of German
+interests we have nothing to object.” As to Morocco, “in the main”
+Germany had economic interests which “we must and shall protect. . . . .
+We have no cause to fear that these . . . . could be disregarded or
+injured by any Power.” While scoffing at the allegation that Germany was
+isolated, he added: “If we keep our sword sharp, we need not fear
+isolation very much. Germany is too strong not to be able to make
+alliances. Many combinations are possible for us.” Denying any thought
+of waging a war over Morocco, he upheld a policy of “prudent quiet and
+even of reserve”; but he concluded with the significant statement that
+“if one wishes to arouse friction in the world, one does not shout it
+from the house-tops. Frederick the Great may now and then have made a
+Machiavellian move in politics, but he previously wrote the Anti-
+Machiavelli.”[425]
+
+The Chancellor’s speech expressed only a temporary acquiescence in the
+Anglo-French agreement, an intimation to France and Great Britain to
+consult Germany over Morocco.[426] The German government liked that
+accord less than the German people did, even though it knew nothing of
+the content of the secret articles. The Emperor feared that now Great
+Britain “would put every consideration for us more and more into the
+background.”[427] And Count Bülow, who knew that the new alignment
+placed Germany in no actual danger,[428] admitted that “doubtlessly both
+Powers [France and Great Britain] win in international influence and in
+freedom of movement by this accord and by their _rapprochement_, and
+that the drawing force of the Anglo-French Entente on Italy will also be
+strengthened.”[429] The prospective loss of Morocco to Germany and the
+general dissatisfaction within Germany over the conduct of her foreign
+affairs accentuated Count Bülow’s ill will toward the new agreement.
+
+
+ III
+
+
+The Chancellor’s prophecy about Italy came true almost immediately.
+
+Italy’s policy was, of course, to play between the Triple Alliance and
+France for her own advantage. Italian opinion interpreted the Anglo-
+French _rapprochement_, following upon the Franco-Italian entente, as a
+setback to Germany, and became more independent toward its allies. After
+Italy’s special interest in the future of Tripoli was recognized, the
+Italian people raised the irredentist question in the summer and autumn
+of 1903. In the winter relations with Austria became so tense that war
+clouds loomed up.[430] Count Goluchowski, the Austrian foreign minister,
+desired to replace the Triple Alliance by the old League of the Three
+Emperors, and declared that if the present relations with Italy
+continued, Austria could not renew the alliance.[431]
+
+Count Bülow succeeded in patching up the raveling fabric of the Triple
+Alliance.[432] He suspected that Italy had made a reinsurance treaty
+with France after the renewal of the Triple Alliance in 1902, by which
+the alliance was nullified in case of a Franco-German war.[433] Neither
+he nor General Schlieffen, German chief of staff, expected Italy to
+support Germany in that instance or even to hold inactive the French
+troops on the Italian frontier. None the less, at the request of the
+Italian chief of staff, the Chancellor permitted the German-Italian
+military conversations to continue as before.[434] He endeavored to
+preserve at least the outward appearance of harmony.[435]
+
+But in the spring of 1904 the Triple Alliance almost went on the rocks
+over an intrinsically insignificant affair—whether or not the
+entertainment of the French and of the German chiefs of state, who were
+both to visit Italy at about the same time in March and April, should be
+on a similar scale.
+
+After the Emperor’s visit on March 26-27 had passed off quietly
+enough[436] the French government sought to expand the program of
+reception for President Loubet in order to demonstrate the great
+popularity of France in Italy,[437] while the German government
+endeavored to restrict it. Under threat of breaking the alliance, the
+latter forced M. Tittoni, the Italian foreign minister, to promise that
+Italy’s loyalty to the Triple Alliance would be warmly mentioned in the
+toasts.[438] But when the visit occurred, April 24-28, the Italian King,
+playing his own hand, helped the French to enjoy an unbroken
+triumph.[439] On April 25 and 26 affection for them was extravagantly
+displayed by the Italians while no mention of the Triple Alliance was
+made.[440] In an endeavor to stop further exchange of toasts, the German
+ambassador, Count Monts, complained bitterly to M. Luzzati, Italian
+secretary of the treasury, of the pro-French attitude of the King,
+government, and press; of the non-fulfilment of promises; of the King’s
+ignoring him at the festivals; of the failure to mention the alliance in
+the speeches. “My training and instructions prohibit me from using that
+tone toward the _Consulta_ which would correspond with its behavior,” he
+declared. He demanded that no more toasts be made.[441]
+
+Doubtless this peremptoriness would have produced the desired result if
+at the crucial moment the German Emperor had not sent a telegram of warm
+thanks for his reception to the Italian government and nullified the
+entire effect of the Ambassador’s indignation.[442] At Naples the King
+again exchanged toasts with M. Loubet without mentioning the alliance.
+
+Although the demands of the German government had been flouted, it could
+not execute its threat; for a dissolution of the Triple Alliance,
+occurring so soon after the conclusion of the Entente Cordiale, would
+have been too great a victory for France. “One would say,” wrote Count
+Bülow, “that our policy since the retirement of Bismarck has lost us
+first the alliance with Russia, then good relations with England, and
+finally the Triple Alliance itself.”[443] So, feigning cool indifference
+toward the renegade ally, he remarked to the Italian Ambassador that as
+the conditions out of which the Triple Alliance had developed no longer
+obtained, Germany had no need of Italy’s aid, nor, he supposed, had
+Italy of Germany’s.[444] Then came apologies. On May 18 M. Tittoni
+declared in the Italian Chamber that “the policy of Italy is not one of
+balancing, which would be unworthy of a great state, but one of loyal
+honesty. The alliance with Germany is not incompatible with friendly
+relations with France.”[445] Although the German government did not
+believe him, it accepted his excuses. The Triple Alliance resumed its
+precarious course.[446]
+
+As a result of this episode, the anger of the German government at
+France, already aroused over the diminution of German influence through
+the Entente Cordiale, was increased. The Emperor, who had tarried near
+the Italian coast in the persistent hope of a chance meeting with M.
+Loubet,[447] returned home feeling like the poor kinsman uninvited to
+the feast. On May 1, at the opening of the new Rhine bridge at Mainz, he
+gave vent to his chagrin in the following warning: “I desire sincerely
+that peace . . . . be kept. But I am convinced that if this bridge
+should have to be used for more serious transports, it would stand the
+test completely.”[448]
+
+
+ IV
+
+
+“We need a success in our foreign policy,” wrote Prince Lichnowsky,
+councilor in the German foreign office, on April 14, “because the Anglo-
+French understanding as well as the Franco-Italian _rapprochement_ is
+generally considered a defeat for us.”[449] The German government
+immediately took steps toward obtaining that success.
+
+To manifest its dissatisfaction at being excluded from the Moroccan
+settlement and to force M. Delcassé to agree with Germany on that
+question, the German government first considered in April the project of
+dispatching a warship to Tangier, ostensibly to settle certain
+grievances against Morocco.[450] As a precaution, General Schlieffen,
+chief of staff, was consulted, April 19, about the possibility of
+success in case of a Franco-German war. Herr von Holstein summed up the
+General’s reply as follows: “In case of the outbreak of a Franco-German
+war at the present, Russia’s participation would be improbable, but
+England’s attitude would be uncertain.”[451]
+
+The proposal was not executed at the time,[452] for Count Bülow had
+other plans. The first one was to test the strength of the Entente
+Cordiale, to weaken its force, and to include Germany among the Powers
+making ententes by endeavoring to negotiate an arbitration treaty and a
+general settlement with Great Britain similar to the Anglo-French ones.
+If accord, even in principle, were reached on Anglo-German difficulties,
+the Chancellor was willing to propose a naval agreement. He felt certain
+that by careful handling he could win the Emperor’s approval of the
+whole transaction.[453]
+
+The opportunity to make the proposal was afforded when about the first
+of May the British government asked the other Powers interested in Egypt
+to approve the changes which France had accepted in the declaration of
+April 8. The German foreign office replied that Germany must receive the
+same guaranty of her rights in Egypt that France had received, and
+proposed to include in the negotiations the Anglo-German troubles
+concerning Samoa, Transvaal indemnities, and the Canadian preferential
+tariff.
+
+The British government refused to broaden the basis of negotiations,
+declaring that the Egyptian affair must be settled on its own merits.
+How Lord Lansdowne regarded the German proposal was shown in his letter
+of May 6 to Sir Frank Lascelles.
+
+
+The proposal of the German Government to make their concurrence in
+regard to the Khedivial Decree dependent upon an all-round settlement
+[he wrote] . . . . looks to an ordinary observer like a great piece of
+effrontery. . . . . The suggestion that the consent of the German
+Government to a perfectly innocuous arrangement in Egypt can only be
+bought at the price of concessions elsewhere does not become more
+palatable when we find it connected with an intimation that Germany is
+hesitating whether “she shall turn to the East or to the West.” This is
+a veiled threat of which I remember Hatzfeldt used to be fond.[454]
+
+
+Pointing out the fact that Germany held only a very small per cent of
+the Egyptian bonds (he said only ¼ per cent), that the other Powers had
+agreed to the Egyptian changes unconditionally, and that France had made
+reciprocal concessions to Great Britain in return for the guaranty of
+her rights in Egypt, Lord Lansdowne refused to give Germany the special
+guaranty which she requested.[455]
+
+Count Bülow agreed (May 28) to confine the negotiations to Egypt alone;
+but he would not recede from the other demands. For, he argued, France
+had been given large compensation in return for her renunciations in
+Egypt while Germany merely asked an equal assurance of her rights and
+interests in that land, particularly of her commercial interests. Thus
+the two governments reached a deadlock. Each felt that it had a just
+grievance.[456] Herr von Holstein, considering the occasion a “test of
+strength,” thought that if Germany receded, the world would perceive
+that sharp handling was sufficient to vanquish her.[457] Count
+Metternich reported, however, that the British refusal was caused not by
+any malign designs against Germany, but rather by the fact that the
+government was opposed to weakening or endangering the Entente Cordiale
+by treating Germany in the same way as France, and by the fact that it
+saw no reason for making an exception of Germany after the other Powers
+had unconditionally accepted the modifications. Above all, he wrote, the
+British government feared another outburst of vituperation against
+Germany from British public opinion and of indignation against the
+British government itself for permitting Germany again to browbeat
+it.[458] So about the middle of June at the Count’s suggestion, a
+compromise was effected. The British government gave Germany a guaranty
+of its Egyptian interests in return for an acceptance of the French
+obligations in that land. The other Powers were to be asked to approve
+this new agreement.[459]
+
+Late in June King Edward enjoyed a pleasant visit as the Emperor’s guest
+at a naval review at Kiel; on July 10, at the King’s suggestion, some
+German warships touched at Plymouth; and on July 12 an arbitration
+treaty was signed between the two Powers. Their relations seemed to be
+improving. At Kiel, Count Bülow once more assured the King that Germany
+intended to guard strict neutrality during the Russo-Japanese War; and
+Edward VII declared that “no special agreements were needed between
+England and Germany since no conflict of political interests divided
+them.” He also stated that he wished a settlement with Russia, in fact,
+that he desired to diminish animosities among all Powers; but he added
+that he had no thought thereby of isolating Germany.[460]
+
+In spite of the King’s cordial words, the fact remained that Germany was
+still regarded with marked mistrust and antipathy by the British people,
+while the British government had shown a preference, not yet appreciated
+by Germany, for the friendship of France. Germany’s bid to participate
+in the formation of ententes had failed.
+
+
+ V
+
+
+Count Bülow’s second plan was to share in the settlement of the Moroccan
+problem. He had made preparations to that end in the previous autumn,
+but his policy had been repudiated by the German Emperor (who personally
+had no interest in Morocco)[461] during an interview with the King of
+Spain at Vigo on March 16, 1904. In one of his expansive and oracular
+moods William II advised the youthful King to keep on good terms with
+France and to make his first foreign visit to Paris, to be on his guard
+against Great Britain and her satellite, Portugal, but to maintain
+friendly personal relations with King Edward, and to come to an
+agreement over the future of Morocco with the other nations, especially
+France, interested in North Africa. Germany, he said, aimed at no
+territorial acquisitions in North Africa, but only the maintenance of
+the open door for, among others, “railway concessions, open ports, and
+importation of manufactured articles.”[462]
+
+In spite of the Emperor’s renunciation, Count Bülow did not relinquish
+his ambitions although the difficulty of realizing them was enormously
+increased. The indefiniteness and apparent duplicity of the German
+policy on the Moroccan question were caused by Count Bülow’s dilemma of
+gaining a share in Morocco without violating the Emperor’s assertions.
+
+Late in April, 1904, the Chancellor was afforded an opportunity to
+intervene through Spain, whose government asked for Germany’s sympathy
+and “practical proof of it at the opportune moment” during the Franco-
+Spanish negotiations then under way. Count Bülow was eager to fish in
+troubled waters by lending aid, and in his optimism went so far as to
+instruct Herr von Radowitz on April 29 as follows:
+
+
+Port Mahon we leave entirely out of consideration. Primarily Fernando Po
+interests us, for which under circumstances we would also pay well. If,
+moreover, a harbor in West Morocco is obtainable, that would be very
+useful. Perhaps Your Excellency can use the prevailing opinion in Spain
+against the Anglo-French accord in this direction.[463]
+
+
+The Chancellor advised the Spanish government to draw out the
+negotiations; for, he argued, if Great Britain were given time in which
+to recover from her fear that the far eastern entente of 1895 might be
+renewed, she would begin to rue her bargain, and would at least
+passively support Spain or acquiesce in the latter’s receiving better
+terms from the more powerful France.[464] When the Chancellor heard of
+difficulty between the two negotiating Powers over the control of
+Tangier, he decided to give diplomatic support to Spain in obtaining
+that port and its hinterland provided Great Britain was not obliged to
+aid France diplomatically in acquiring them. In other words, he was
+making it very easy for Great Britain to sin against her obligations to
+France. When the German Ambassador sounded Lord Lansdowne early in June,
+the latter, while not objecting, made it evident that he preferred and
+expected a satisfactory settlement directly between the two Powers
+themselves.[465] By June 10 the German government learned that this
+matter had been arranged, but that trouble had arisen over the question
+of publishing the agreement. Count Bülow immediately urged Spain in
+favor of it.[466] On June 17 Herr von Radowitz reported that Spain was
+insisting upon complete commercial freedom in Morocco without the thirty
+years’ limitation. As this was also a sensitive point for Germany Count
+Bülow on the next day instructed the Ambassador to advise Spain strongly
+to insist upon the assurance of the fullest economic freedom even for
+obtaining government contracts and concessions. He left it to Herr von
+Radowitz to determine “whether it would be advantageous for the
+achievement of the German goal to let the Spanish perceive that Germany
+would assume and maintain the same standpoint at the proper moment.”
+“Naturally,” he added for the Ambassador’s personal information, “it
+would be . . . . a great help to us for Spain to take the lead.”[467]
+
+By July, however, there seemed little prospect of Germany’s profiting
+from the Franco-Spanish negotiations.[468] German grievances against
+Morocco remained unsettled. German firms trading there demanded
+protection against the French monopolistic actions. In June, France
+practically gained control over the Sultan’s finances, and she was
+preparing an important mission to Fez in the autumn. Nor did M. Delcassé
+show any inclination to open negotiations with Germany. Already
+disgruntled at the French Foreign Minister, the German government came
+to feel itself slighted and humiliated by his disregard. Its resentment
+toward him became concentrated upon the one grievance which could be
+best supported in public, that he was infringing upon Germany’s economic
+interests in Morocco. It therefore decided to assume a more active
+policy, and late in July held a discussion of ways and means. The
+government did not follow up a hint from the Sultan for co-operation
+because of its unsettled claims against Morocco. Nor could it tender him
+financial support or begin an economic penetration of the land similar
+to that of France because, as Baron Richthofen wrote late in July, “the
+German banks all strike immediately when one mentions Morocco. The
+German Foreign Secretary advised against keeping pace with every act of
+the French in Morocco as too venturesome; while to take the initiative
+directly with the French government by requesting guaranties for
+economic freedom he regarded as both doubtful of success and beneath
+German dignity. So at the Baron’s suggestion a “gradual, purely matter-
+of-fact advance, ignoring as long as possible a special position of
+France,” was decided upon. German warships should appear from time to
+time in Moroccan waters, and during one of these visits the grievances
+against Morocco should be settled.[469]
+
+The uncertain international situation also caused the German government
+to proceed warily. On June 3 the Belgian Minister at Berlin had stated
+to the German foreign office that he suspected the presence of a secret
+article in the Anglo-French accord concerning the Rheinish frontier.
+Although believing that the agreement did contain secret clauses
+regarding Egypt, Count Metternich refused to credit this suspicion. Upon
+mentioning the rumor to Lord Lansdowne on June 19, he received a full
+denial that the accord contained any articles which concerned European
+complications.[470] Nevertheless, the Chancellor realized that “any
+attempt on the part of Germany to interfere in the Moroccan question in
+its present phase can lead to an action with far-reaching consequences
+and therefore deserves special precaution.”[471] For that reason he
+first sought to learn how the British government regarded its
+obligations to France with respect to Morocco.[472]
+
+On August 15 Count Metternich declared to Lord Lansdowne that “the
+French effort aimed at a monopolization in Morocco. We could not permit
+this.” Asserting that Germany was in no way bound by the Anglo-French
+agreement, he said that Germany’s economic interests in regard to
+governmental concessions and industrial enterprises in Morocco were
+endangered by France. “We could very soon be put in a situation in which
+we should have to protect our commercial interests [in the widest sense]
+against France.” He asked Lord Lansdowne how the British government
+interpreted the last part of Article IV of the Anglo-French declaration
+stating that concessions for roads, etc., in Morocco were to be granted
+“only on such conditions as will maintain intact the authority of the
+State over these great undertakings of public interest,” and Article IX
+obliging Great Britain to lend diplomatic aid to France.
+
+Lord Lansdowne denied that Great Britain had renounced her right to
+share in the concessions in Morocco, but he refused to interpret Article
+IX until a concrete instance arose. He declared that in the French
+agreement
+
+
+we [Great Britain] made no attempt to dispose of the rights of other
+Powers, although we made certain concessions in respect of the rights
+and opportunities to which we were ourselves entitled. I could at any
+rate say that it was not at all probable that, if any third Power were
+to have occasion to uphold its Treaty rights, we should use our
+influence in derogation of them.
+
+
+Count Metternich inferred from that interview that Lord Lansdowne would
+limit the scope of Article IX, and that in case Germany’s actions did
+not infringe upon the Sultan’s authority Germany would be safe in
+opposing France in Morocco. However, he wrote, if Germany sought, for
+instance, to acquire control of a harbor there, Great Britain would
+support France. He warned his government that Great Britain would not
+connive at blocking the French advance in Morocco or endanger her
+friendship for the sake of that land. If a third Power disputed
+politically the French position there, both government and people would
+support France. Within those limits Germany could execute her Moroccan
+policy. But, he continued, “in the present international situation, it
+will be difficult for us to arrest the process of France’s establishing
+herself in Morocco.”[473]
+
+Even before receiving Count Metternich’s reply, the Chancellor proposed
+to dispatch an ultimatum to the Sultan demanding under threat of a naval
+demonstration that he satisfy the German claims within three
+months.[474] But the Emperor, who remained strongly opposed to active
+interference in the Moroccan affair, refused his consent for the third
+time, and upset the Chancellor’s policy.[475] In September the foreign
+office discussed the plan to seize the Moroccan transport ship and even
+Agadir, but nothing was done.[476] Early in October Baron Richthofen
+suggested that since the Emperor was so averse to intervention the
+government should take up the Moroccan question directly with the French
+government. This project also came to naught.[477]
+
+While no action was taken German feeling continued to smolder. The
+noncommittal communication from the French government about the
+agreement with Spain early in October[478] and the repeated petitions of
+German firms for the defense of their interests in Morocco[479]
+augmented the bitterness against France. So while the German government
+itself played the sphinx, it showed its resentment through the
+semiofficial press and through conversations between German and French
+officials in Morocco and elsewhere. By the end of the year the Moroccan
+question was still very much alive. As an influential Moor remarked,
+“Germany has not yet spoken, and so long as that has not occurred, we
+cannot believe that anything definite has been decided.”[480] Before
+Germany did speak, she endeavored to solve her difficulties by an effort
+to ally with Russia.
+
+
+[Footnote 399: See among others Richard Charmatz, _Österreichs äussere
+und innere Politik von 1895 bis 1914_ (Leipzig and Berlin, 1918).]
+
+[Footnote 400: On the state of British public opinion see Eckardstein,
+_Lebenserinnerungen und politische Denkwürdigkeiten_, II, 397 f.; and
+the various dispatches from Metternich and Eckardstein, _G.P._, XVII,
+Nos. 5046, 5071, 5094, 5104, 5371, 5375, and others.]
+
+[Footnote 401: Holstein to Bülow, March 30, 1903, _G.P._, XVII, 573 n.;
+memo. by Holstein, April, 1903, _ibid._, XVIII, 802 ff., No. 5888;
+Holstein to Bülow, April 2, 1903, _ibid._, 838 f., No. 5910; Bülow to F.
+O., April 3, 1903, _ibid._, 839 f., No. 5911.]
+
+[Footnote 402: An ardent advocate of the proposed Anglo-German alliance
+and a sufferer from the “nightmare of coalitions,” Eckardstein had
+resigned his position in October, 1902, because he disapproved of the
+diplomatic method and the policy of his foreign office and “saw black
+ahead” for his country; also perhaps because of personal pique at not
+having been appointed ambassador in London upon the death of the aged
+Count Hatzfeldt (Eckardstein, II, 412 f.). For his dispatch to Bülow see
+_G.P._, XVII, 567 f., No. 5369; also published with minor changes in
+Eckardstein, II, 425 f. The few changes from the original which occur in
+some of the documents in Eckardstein’s memoirs are not of any great
+importance. On the whole his judgments were sound.]
+
+[Footnote 403: The dispatches are to be found in _G.P._, Vol. XVII,
+chap. cxv. In July, however, the German Emperor could not conceal from
+the French Ambassador his irritation at Delcassé’s success in the Anglo-
+French _rapprochement_. After expressing the wish that French vessels
+might repeat the visit of 1895 to Kiel, he remarked to M. Bihourd, July
+16: “‘I know well that nothing is to be accomplished with M. Delcassé.
+The advances to England are the work of M. Delcassé and M. Cambon. . . .
+. But the Russians are not content with that and some day they will make
+you. . . . .’ Here a gesture of disappointment, concluded M. Bihourd,
+made clear the prediction” (quoted from a dispatch from Bihourd in
+Bourgeois et Pagès, _Les origines et les responsabilités de la grande
+guerre_, p. 293).]
+
+[Footnote 404: Groeben to F. O., Sept. 17, 1903, _G.P._, XVII, 353 f.,
+No. 5198; Richthofen to Radowitz, Sept. 28, 1903, _ibid._, 357 ff., No.
+5202.]
+
+[Footnote 405: Bülow to F. O., Sept. 18, 1903, _ibid._, 354, No. 5199;
+Richthofen to Radowitz, Sept. 24, 1903, _ibid._, 354 ff., No. 5200.]
+
+[Footnote 406: Richthofen to Radowitz, Sept. 24, 1903, _ibid._, 355, No.
+5200.]
+
+[Footnote 407: Radowitz to F. O., Sept. 29, Oct. 4, 1903, _ibid._, 359
+ff., Nos. 5203, 5205.]
+
+[Footnote 408: Radolin to F. O., Oct. 17, 1903, _ibid._, XVIII, 845 ff.,
+No. 5915; Bülow to William II, Oct. 19, 1903, _ibid._, 847 ff., No.
+5916.]
+
+[Footnote 409: William II wrote to Nicholas II, Dec. 1, 1903, as
+follows: “The visit of the hundred British Parliamentary—gentlemen and
+ladies—to Paris shows how ‘the Crimean combination’ is warming to its
+work. Your ally is making rather free with his flirt [with Great
+Britain]. You should pull him up a little.” Again on Jan. 3, 1904, he
+wrote to the same: “Therefore it is evident to every unbiassed mind that
+Korea must and will be Russian. When and how that is nobody’s affair and
+concerns only you and your country.” See Bülow to F. O., Oct. 31, 1903,
+_ibid._, 853 f., No. 5918; memo. by Bülow, Nov. 7, 1903, _ibid._, 70
+ff., No. 5422; Walter Goetz (ed.), _Briefe Wilhelms II an den Zaren,
+1894-1914_ (Berlin, 1920), pp. 330 ff.; Savinsky, _Recollections of a
+Russian Diplomat_, pp. 63 ff. William II addressed Nicholas in various
+letters as “Admiral of the Pacific” and signed himself “Admiral of the
+Atlantic.” In spite of these words, to hold the Emperor responsible for
+the Russo-Japanese War is to underestimate the force of Russian foreign
+policy.]
+
+[Footnote 410: See _G.P._, Vol. XIX, chaps. cxxviii, cxxix, especially
+Bülow to William II, Jan. 4, 1904, _ibid._, 87 ff., No. 5972, and the
+Emperor’s minutes; memo. by Bülow, Feb. 14, 1904, _ibid._, 62 f., No.
+5961.]
+
+[Footnote 411: Bülow to Holstein, Jan. 15, 1904, _ibid._, 33 f., No.
+5942; memo. by Eckardstein, Jan. 17, 1904, _ibid._, 38 ff., No. 5945,
+and the Emperor’s minutes thereto.]
+
+[Footnote 412: Count Benckendorff, Russian ambassador at London, spoke
+of the Dual Alliance as going to pieces, and there was talk among other
+Russian diplomats of renewing the former League of the Three Emperors.
+See Radolin to Bülow, Feb. 28, 1904, _ibid._, 165 ff., No. 6028;
+Metternich to Bülow, March 14, 1904, _ibid._, 167 ff., No. 6029;
+Alvensleben to Bülow, March 18, 1904, _ibid._, 172 ff., No. 6030; memo.
+by Holstein, Jan. 16, 1904, _ibid._, 35 ff., No. 5944.]
+
+[Footnote 413: “Because of the importance of German neutrality we shall
+perhaps find opportunity to utilize our central position in case of
+further sharpening of the hostility in the same way that M. Delcassé
+intends doing with reference to Morocco,” wrote Holstein in a memo. on
+Jan. 23, 1904 (_ibid._, 48 ff., No. 5951). Also see memo. by Holstein,
+Jan. 16, 1904, _ibid._, 48 ff., No. 5951.]
+
+[Footnote 414: Bülow to Metternich, Jan. 9, 1904, _ibid._, 22, No. 5932;
+Lascelles to Lansdowne, Jan. 8, 1904, _B.D._, II, 232, No. 273. Bülow
+later complained that the British had offered very weak resistance to
+the French demands (Bülow to Metternich, June 4, 1904, _G.P._, XX, 28,
+No. 6383).]
+
+[Footnote 415: Radolin to Bülow, Feb. 4, 1904, _ibid._, 105 f., No.
+6431; Bülow to Radolin, Feb. 18, 1904, _ibid._, 106 f., No. 6432, and
+following documents.]
+
+[Footnote 416: For proof that the German government had not expected the
+signing of the accord then see Eckardstein, II, 426 f.; Otto Hammann,
+_Der misverstandene Bismarck. Zwanzig Jahre deutscher Weltpolitik_
+(Berlin, 1921), p. 110.]
+
+[Footnote 417: Monts to F. O., March 26, 1904, _G.P._, XX, 116, No.
+6439.]
+
+[Footnote 418: Although Bülow did not say so, it is manifest that this
+was one of his intentions (Bülow to William II, March 30, 1904, _ibid._,
+197 ff., No. 6512).]
+
+[Footnote 419: Tschirschky to Bülow, April 3, 1904, _ibid._, 199 ff.,
+No. 6513. On the interview at Vigo see below.]
+
+[Footnote 420: Bülow to Tschirschky, April 3, 1904, _ibid._, 8 f. No.
+6370; memo. by Bülow, April 6, 1904, _ibid._, 10 f., No. 6372; Bülow to
+Tschirschky, April 6, 1904, _ibid._, 201 and note, No. 6514. The last
+dispatch was not sent, for on April 8 the accord was signed.]
+
+[Footnote 421: _Zwanzig Jahre alldeutscher Arbeit und Kämpfe_, pp. 219,
+233, 235, 238 f.]
+
+[Footnote 422: See, for instance, _Berliner Tageblatt_, April 17, 1904;
+Dr. Th. Schiemann, _Deutschland und die grosse Politik, 1904_ (Berlin,
+1905), p. 118, and others; _Grenzboten_, June 23, 1904, p. 668.]
+
+[Footnote 423: Alfred Zimmerman, _Deutsche Kolonialpolitik_ (Berlin,
+1914), pp. 241 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 424: _Stenographische Berichte von den Behandlungen des
+Reichstages_, CXCIX, 2019, 2053 f., 2058 f.; Hammann, _Bilder aus der
+letzten Kaiserzeit_, p. 42; reports from the Berlin correspondent to the
+_London Times_, April 11 and 16, 1904.]
+
+[Footnote 425: Bülow, _Reden_, II, 74, 84, 90 f.; see also Hammann,
+_Bilder aus der letzten Kaiserzeit_, pp. 42 f.]
+
+[Footnote 426: This was Sanderson’s opinion. He was at the time British
+permanent undersecretary of state for foreign affairs. See memo. by
+Sanderson, Feb. 25, 1907, _B.D._, III, 421.]
+
+[Footnote 427: William II to Bülow, April 19, 1904, _G.P._, XX, 22 ff.,
+No. 6378.]
+
+[Footnote 428: From London, Bernstorff, first secretary of the embassy,
+reported that the British were entirely pacific in their intentions and
+inclinations (Bernstorff to Bülow, April 16, 1904, _ibid._, 14 ff., No.
+6376). The Emperor considered this report “excellent.” Alvensleben also
+wrote from St. Petersburg that Russia was not so well satisfied with the
+Anglo-French accord as French newspapers would have one believe
+(Alvensleben to Bülow, April 15, 1904, _ibid._, 21 f., No. 6377).]
+
+[Footnote 429: Bülow to William II, April 20, 1904, _ibid._, 24, No.
+6379.]
+
+[Footnote 430: On Austro-Italian relations see Wedel to Bülow, Sept. 14,
+1903, _ibid._, XVIII, 621 ff., No. 5779; memo. by Bülow, Sept. 20, 1903,
+_ibid._, 624 ff., No. 5780; Monts to F. O., _ibid._, XX, 47 f., No.
+6399; Monts to Bülow, April 25, 1904, _ibid._, 54 ff., No. 6404; Monts
+to Bülow, April 30, 1904, _ibid._, 64 ff., No. 6412.]
+
+[Footnote 431: Memo. by Bülow of conversation with Goluchowski at
+Vienna, Sept. 20, 1903, _ibid._, XVIII, 625 f., No. 5780; Wedel to
+Bülow, Oct. 20, 1903, _ibid._, 627 f., No. 5783.]
+
+[Footnote 432: An interview between the Italian and the Austrian foreign
+ministers at Abazzia on April 9, 1904, attested to this fact. See Wedel
+to Bülow, April 14, 1904, _ibid._, XX, 50 ff., No. 6401; memo. by Bülow,
+May 9, 1903, _ibid._, XVIII, 613 ff., No. 5775; Bülow to Monts, June 9,
+1903, _ibid._, 616 ff., No. 5776; and following documents in _ibid._,
+chap. cxxii, Anhang.]
+
+[Footnote 433: Monts to Bülow, April 30, 1904, _ibid._, XX, 64, No.
+6412; memo. by Holstein, March 3, 1904, _ibid._, 37 ff., No. 6388.]
+
+[Footnote 434: Chelius to Schlieffen, Dec. 1, 1903, _ibid._, XVIII, 705
+ff., No. 5827; Richthofen to Schlieffen, Dec. 11, 1903, _ibid._, 707 f.,
+No. 5826; Schlieffen to Richthofen, Dec. 14, 1903, _ibid._, 708, No.
+5829.]
+
+[Footnote 435: Memo. by Holstein, March 3, 1904, _ibid._, XX, 37 ff.,
+No. 6388; Monts to F. O., March 7, 1904, _ibid._, 41, No. 6390.]
+
+[Footnote 436: Bülow to William II, March 11, 1904, _ibid._, 46, No.
+6397; Monts to F. O., March 26, 1904, _ibid._, 47 f., No. 6399; _Quest.
+dipl. et col._, April 1, 1904, XVII, 524 f.]
+
+[Footnote 437: Monts to Bülow, April 16, 1904, _G.P._, XX, 53 f., No.
+6403. Giovanni Giolitti, who was then Italian premier, has written as
+follows about this visit: “In Delcassé I noticed particularly his
+finesse and ability, as well as the insistence with which he attempted
+to loosen or weaken our bonds with Germany, without however putting
+forward anything at all in the nature of a definite proposal” (_Memoirs
+of My Life_ [London, 1923], p. 183). On March 5, 1904, Sir Francis
+Bertie, British ambassador in Rome, wrote to Lansdowne as follows: “M.
+Ba[rrère] does all he can to create friction between Italy and Austria
+to alienate Italy from her partner in the Triplice” (_B.D._, V, 74). In
+contrast the British Ambassador in Vienna was in April, 1904, reassuring
+his Italian colleague about Austrian intentions in the Balkans now that
+Russia was in a far eastern war (Plunkett to Lansdowne, April 7, 1904,
+_ibid._, V, 80, No. 41).]
+
+[Footnote 438: Memo. by Holstein, March 3, 1904, _G.P._, XX, 37 ff., No.
+6388; Bülow to Monts, March 6, 1904, _ibid._, 39 ff., No. 6389, and
+following documents.]
+
+[Footnote 439: Monts to F. O., March 17, 1904, _ibid._, 45, No. 6396;
+Bülow to Monts, March 26, 1904, _ibid._, 46 f., No. 6398; Monts to
+Bülow, April 2, 1904, _ibid._, 48 f., No. 6400; Monts to Bülow, April
+16, 1904, _ibid._, 52 f., No. 6402; Monts to Bülow, April 16, 1904,
+_ibid._, 53 f., No. 6403.]
+
+[Footnote 440: Monts to Bülow, April 25, 1904, _ibid._, 54 ff., No.
+6404; Monts to F. O., April 26, 1904, _ibid._, 57 f., No. 6405; _Quest.
+dipl. et col._, XVII, 688 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 441: Monts to Bülow, April 28, 1904, _G.P._, XX, 60 ff., No.
+6410.]
+
+[Footnote 442: Monts to Bülow, April 29, 1904, _ibid._, 63 f., No.
+6411.]
+
+[Footnote 443: Bülow’s minutes to a dispatch from Monts, May 21, 1904,
+_ibid._, 78, No. 6419.]
+
+[Footnote 444: Holstein advised informing the Italian government that
+the Triple Alliance “practically speaking has had its day,” while Monts
+confined his relations with Tittoni to written communications. See
+Richthofen to Monts, April 28, 1904, _ibid._, 59 f., No. 6409; Bülow to
+Monts, May 7, 1904, _ibid._, 67 ff., No. 6414; memo. by Holstein, May
+12, 1904, _ibid._, 71 f., No. 6416; memo. by Bülow, May 12, 1904,
+_ibid._, 73 f., No. 6417.]
+
+[Footnote 445: Quoted in _ibid._, p. 75 nn.; Tommaso Tittoni, _Italy’s
+Foreign and Colonial Policy. A Selection from the Speeches Delivered in
+the Italian Parliament by Tommaso Tittoni_ (New York, 1915), pp. 12 f.,
+quoting a speech by Tittoni on May 14, 1904.]
+
+[Footnote 446: Memo. by Bülow, May 12, 1904, _G.P._, XX, 73 f., No. 6417
+and Anlage; Monts to Bülow, May 12, 1904, _ibid._, 74 ff., No. 6418; and
+the following documents. At a personal meeting on Sept. 27, 1904,
+Premier Giolitti affirmed to Bülow Italy’s loyalty to her alliance and
+promised to show more reserve toward France (memo. by Bülow, Sept. 28,
+1904, _ibid._, 81 ff., No. 6422).]
+
+[Footnote 447: The Emperor tarried so long that Bülow finally advised
+him to come home; otherwise he would make himself ridiculous. See Monts
+to F. O., April 17, 1904, _ibid._, 117, No. 6440; Bülow to William II,
+April 17, 1904, _ibid._, 117 f., No. 6441.]
+
+[Footnote 448: The Emperor made similar speeches at Karlsruhe, April 28,
+and at St. Johann-Saar-brücken, May 14 (Schulthess, _Europäischer
+Geschichtskalender 1904_, pp. 76, 92). At Karlsruhe he declared: “I hope
+that peace will not be disturbed and that the events which we see
+occurring will have the effect of . . . . making our eyes clear, of
+steeling our courage, and of uniting us if it should become necessary to
+interfere in the _Weltpolitik_.”]
+
+[Footnote 449: Memo. by Lichnowsky, April 13, 1904, _G.P._, XX, 203, No.
+6516.]
+
+[Footnote 450: Dr. Genthe of the _Kölnische Zeitung_ had recently been
+murdered by some of the Moroccans; a native employee of a German firm
+had been illegally imprisoned; and certain indemnities from the Moroccan
+government had to be collected. See Mentzingen to Bülow, April 5
+(received April 11), 1904, _ibid._, 202, No. 6515; memo. by Lichnowsky,
+April 13, 1904, _ibid._, 202 f., No. 6516; memo. by Bruning, April 23,
+1904, _ibid._, 203 ff., No. 6517, and Richthofen’s minutes thereto.]
+
+[Footnote 451: Memo. by Lichnowsky, April 19, 1904, _ibid._, XIX, 174
+f., No. 6031; Schlieffen to Bülow, April 20, 1904, _ibid._, XX, 175 ff.,
+No. 6032.]
+
+[Footnote 452: On May 21, Mühlberg, of the German foreign office,
+telegraphed to Mentzingen, German minister at Tangier, that since “a
+forceful action could be easily misunderstood and lead to erroneous
+conclusions about the German policy,” the ship would not be sent
+(_ibid._, 206, No. 6502).]
+
+[Footnote 453: Memo. by Holstein, April 19, 1904, _ibid._, 123 f., No.
+6443; Bülow to Richthofen, April 19, 1904, _ibid._, 124, No. 6444. All
+three men approved of the idea.]
+
+[Footnote 454: Newton, _Lord Lansdowne_, pp. 329 f.]
+
+[Footnote 455: Richthofen to Lascelles, May 4, 1904, _G.P._, XX, 127 f.,
+No. 6446. Whether or not the communication was sent in this form is not
+known. See Rücker-Jenisch to F. O., May 18, 1904, _ibid._, 128 f., No.
+6447; Villiers to Lascelles, May 24, 1904, _ibid._, 129 ff., No. 6448;
+Lascelles to Lansdowne, May 18, 1904, _B.D._, III, 1, No. 1; Lansdowne
+to Lascelles, May 4, 1904, _ibid._, 18, No. 16, and following
+documents.]
+
+[Footnote 456: Memoir handed to Richthofen to Lascelles, May 28, 1904,
+_G.P._, XX, 132 f., No. 6449; Metternich to F. O., June 1, 1904,
+_ibid._, 147 f., No. 6454.]
+
+[Footnote 457: Memo. by Holstein, June 5, 1904, _ibid._, 144 f., No.
+6461; William II to Bülow, June 6, 1904, _ibid._, 147 f., No. 6463.]
+
+[Footnote 458: Dispatches from Metternich to F. O., June 2, 3, 4, 8, 9,
+1904 (_ibid._, 138 ff., Nos. 6455, 6458, 6460, 6464, 6466). Cf. Mallet
+to Spring Rice, early summer, 1904 (Gwynn, _The Letters and Friendships
+of Sir Cecil Spring Rice_, I, 414). Mallet stated that the British
+government did not want to weaken the advance toward France by a
+settlement with Germany, especially since the Anglo-French accord had
+not been definitely ratified.]
+
+[Footnote 459: _G.P._, XX, 148 ff., Nos. 6464-80; _B.D._, III, 21 ff.,
+Nos. 19-23.]
+
+[Footnote 460: Memo. by Bülow, June 26, 29, 1904, _G.P._, XIX, 186 ff.,
+Nos. 6038, 6040; memo. by Richthofen (undated though probably written
+about July 4, 1904), _ibid._, 194 ff., No. 6042; Richthofen to
+Metternich, June 20, 1904, _ibid._, XX, 163, No. 6478; Lee, _King Edward
+VII_, II, 292 ff. See also MacDonald to Lansdowne, June 23, 1904,
+_B.D._, IV, 1, No. 1; Lansdowne to MacDonald, June 24, 1904, _ibid._, 2,
+No. 2.]
+
+[Footnote 461: In 1896 the Emperor had shown a decided interest in
+Morocco (_G.P._, XI, No. 2820). In the next years, however, his attitude
+had changed. The motive force behind the German policy toward Morocco
+was Bülow.]
+
+[Footnote 462: The Emperor thought of buying Fernando Po, but said
+nothing of this to the King. On this incident and the Emperor’s attitude
+toward Morocco see his minutes to Radolin to Bülow, Oct. 20, 1903,
+_ibid._, XVII, 362, No. 5206; William II to Bülow, March 16, 1904;
+_ibid._, 363, No. 5208; Radowitz to Richthofen, March 23, 1904, _ibid._,
+364, No. 5209; Radolin to Bülow, March 30, 1904, _ibid._, 365, No. 5210.
+On Oct. 20, 1903, Radolin had reported from Paris a conversation with
+the Spanish Ambassador in which the latter, after admitting that France
+and Spain were well on the way toward an accord over Morocco, remarked
+to him, “I suppose that you have nothing to object to our entente.”
+Radolin replied, “We have only commercial interests in those parts,
+which, however, are of very great importance and which we must
+safeguard” (Radolin to Bülow, Oct. 20, 1903, _ibid._, 361 f., No.
+5206).]
+
+[Footnote 463: Bülow to Radowitz, April 29, 1904, _ibid._, XX, 169 f.,
+No. 6481.]
+
+[Footnote 464: Bülow to Radowitz, May 22, 1904, _ibid._, 173 f., No.
+6484; Bülow to Radowitz, May 25, 1904, _ibid._, 174 f., No. 6486.]
+
+[Footnote 465: Bülow to Metternich, May 31, 1904, _ibid._, 176 f., No.
+6488; Metternich to F. O., June 1, 1904, _ibid._, 177 f., No. 6489, and
+following documents; also Lansdowne to Lascelles, June 1, 1904, _B.D._,
+III, 53, No. 61.]
+
+[Footnote 466: Radowitz to F. O., June 10, 1904, _G.P._, XX, 180 f., No.
+6494; Bülow to Radowitz, June 16, 1904, _ibid._, 181, No. 6496.]
+
+[Footnote 467: Radowitz to F. O., June 17, 1904, _ibid._, 182, No. 6497;
+Bülow to Radowitz, June 18, 1904, _ibid._, 182 f., No. 6498 and
+following documents.]
+
+[Footnote 468: Radolin to Bülow, July 27, 1904, _ibid._, 216, No. 6524;
+memo. by Richthofen, July 16, 1904, _ibid._, 186, No. 6503; Radowitz to
+F. O., July 21, 1904, _ibid._, 188, No. 6504.]
+
+[Footnote 469: Bülow to Radolin, July 21, 1904, _ibid._, 210 ff., No.
+6523; Radolin to Bülow, July 27, 1904, _ibid._, 215 ff., No. 6524; memo.
+by Richthofen, July 29, 1904, _ibid._, 217, No. 6525, and Bülow’s
+minutes. In the negotiations with Germany over the acceptance of the
+Khedivial decree, Lansdowne informed Metternich that France had agreed
+to support Great Britain fully if at some future time the latter should
+propose “a revision of the international agreements affecting the
+position of the Powers in Egypt” (Lansdowne to Whitehead, June 19, 1904,
+_B.D._, III, 22 f., No. 21). This was, of course, the content of one of
+the secret articles in the Anglo-French agreement of April 8, although
+naturally Lansdowne did not say so. Whether the German government
+inferred therefrom that a reciprocal concession had been made by Great
+Britain to France with respect to Morocco is not evident, but it
+probably did. Lansdowne also stated to Metternich on June 1 what the
+area was which should be supervised by Spain, although he spoke only of
+having emphasized this point verbally to the French government and said
+nothing of a secret article to that effect. So far as the documents
+show, the German government does not seem to have recognized the import
+of this statement, although this negative proof is not conclusive
+(Metternich to F. O., June 1, 1904, _G.P._, XX, 177 f., No. 6489).]
+
+[Footnote 470: Bülow to Metternich, June 4, 1904, _ibid._, 27 f., No.
+6383; Metternich to F. O., June 4, 1904, _ibid._, 29 f., Nos. 6384 f.]
+
+[Footnote 471: Bülow to Radolin, July 21, 1904, _ibid._, 210 f., No.
+6523. Radolin also warned that if “English diplomatic support of France
+does not signify much, we have a free hand, while an Anglo-French
+resistance could easily force us to retreat” (Radolin to Bülow, July 27,
+1904, _ibid._, 216 f., No. 6524).]
+
+[Footnote 472: Mühlberg to Metternich, Aug. 7, 1904, _ibid._, 217 ff.,
+No. 6526.]
+
+[Footnote 473: Metternich to Bülow, Aug. 15, 1904, _ibid._, 219 ff., No.
+6527; Lansdowne to Lascelles, Aug. 15, 1904, _B.D._, III, 53 f., No.
+62.]
+
+[Footnote 474: Metternich’s dispatch was sent on Aug. 18, although dated
+Aug. 15. Bülow approved of the new measures on Aug. 17. See Mentzingen
+to Bülow, Aug. 6, 1904, _G.P._, XX, 222 f., No. 6528; Mühlberg to Bülow,
+Aug. 16, 1904, _ibid._, 223 f., No. 6529; Bülow to Tschirschky, Aug. 17,
+1904, _ibid._, 224 f., No. 6530.]
+
+[Footnote 475: Mentzingen to F. O., Sept. 13, 18, 1904, _ibid._, 226
+ff., Nos. 6532 f.]
+
+[Footnote 476: See editor’s note, _ibid._, p. 225; also memo. by
+Richthofen, Oct. 7, 1904, _ibid._, 228, No. 6534.]
+
+[Footnote 477: Memo. by Richthofen, _ibid._, 228 ff., No. 6534.]
+
+[Footnote 478: Richthofen to Radowitz, Oct. 7, 1904, _ibid._, 191, No.
+6508; memo. by Richthofen for Bülow, Oct. 7, 1904, _ibid._, 228 ff., No.
+6534.]
+
+[Footnote 479: Memo. by Kries, Oct. 22, 1904, _ibid._, 231 f., No.
+6535.]
+
+[Footnote 480: Kühlmann to Bülow, Nov. 9, 1904, _ibid._, 232 ff., No.
+6536.]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER X
+
+ THE NEGOTIATIONS FOR A RUSSO-GERMAN ALLIANCE, 1904
+
+
+Early in July, 1904, Herr von Holstein offered his resignation because
+of personal differences with Baron Richthofen. In doing so, he stated
+that the prestige of Germany had diminished during the past years “while
+our opponents and rivals are on the point of encircling us”; and as
+“difficult situations” were to be anticipated, he was happy to be
+relieved of responsibility. Count Bülow patched up the quarrel, but his
+comment to Herr von Holstein’s remarks is illuminating:
+
+
+Now he [Herr von Holstein] speaks of our shrunken prestige just as the
+Bismarckian press does. But I cannot believe that Holstein, like that
+press, attributes the decline of our authority to the dismissal of the
+great Chancellor. Since that dismissal, from the non-renewal of the
+Russian Reinsurance Treaty and the East Asiatic Triple Alliance to the
+handling of the Moroccan and Egyptian questions, from the so-called
+Urias letter to Vienna to the publication of the Swinemünde dispatch,
+from the turn in 1896 against England to the Shanghai and Pauncefote
+difference with that Power, nothing of significance has happened in our
+foreign policy without Holstein’s advice.[481]
+
+
+The results of those errors, so frankly confessed, were apparent: the
+conclusion of the Entente Cordiale, the exclusion of Germany from the
+entente movement and from the Moroccan settlement, the British efforts
+to approach Russia,[482] animosity between Great Britain and Germany.
+They all caused that attempt at a new orientation of policy which in
+1900 Count Bülow had threatened in this eventuality.
+
+One of the most favorable aspects of the German foreign relations was
+the _rapprochement_ with the United States in 1903 and 1904. There was
+cordial friendship between President Roosevelt and Baron Sternburg, the
+German ambassador,[483] and the two governments both desired to maintain
+the integrity of China during the current war.[484] The President
+mistrusted Russia, about whom he could say nothing good, and France in
+their policy toward China, and he met difficulty in trying to co-operate
+with Great Britain.[485] As he was ambitious to mediate peace between
+Russia and Japan when the time came, he turned to Germany for aid, in
+August expressing the wish “to go hand in hand with Germany in East
+Asia.”[486] The German government perceived in this co-operation a means
+of protecting its interests in China, of issuing from its relative
+international isolation, and of preventing France and Great Britain from
+mediating peace—an event which might enable them to form a triple
+grouping with Russia or even a quadruple combination with Russia and
+Japan.[487] Count Bülow therefore cordially responded to the President’s
+invitation,[488] seeking at the same time to increase the latter’s
+suspicion of France and Great Britain.[489]
+
+As the German government realized the limitations to this intimacy with
+the United States, it sought a more effective association in an alliance
+with Russia. In January, 1904, the Chancellor had been unconcerned about
+such an alliance;[490] but by July he was waiting for the “psychological
+moment” in which to propose a renewal of the former “League of the Three
+Emperors.”[491]
+
+The advent of that moment seemed highly probable. Since the beginning of
+the Russo-Japanese War, the Russian people, government, and sovereign
+had drawn closer to Germany.[492] On June 1, “dearest Nicky” wrote to
+his cousin “Willy” (so they addressed each other), “I know that you feel
+for us in this serious time and it is a comfort to realize that one’s
+_real friends_ think and sympathize with one.”[493] And “Willy,” in his
+replies, overflowed with affection and advice—advice that varied from
+directing “Nicky” upon how to conduct war to lecturing him on the
+“piratical” practices of his ships, from urging him to send his Black
+Sea fleet through the Dardanelles in spite of British opposition to
+reporting gossip which would antagonize him against Great Britain and
+France.[494]
+
+In October the opportunity arose for the German move toward an alliance.
+A Russian company had given a contract to the Hamburg-American Line to
+furnish coal for the Russian Baltic fleet which was to sail for the war
+zone about the middle of that month.[495] As the German firm intended to
+use mainly English coal, it had chartered a number of British ships and
+had given a subcontract to a British firm to aid it in the
+transportation. None the less, on learning of the transaction, the
+British press bitterly attacked Germany for thus violating neutrality.
+In view of this attack Count Bülow on October 4 instructed Baron
+Romberg, first secretary of the German embassy in St. Petersburg, to
+make a communication to the Russian government as follows: Baron Romberg
+should state to Count Lamsdorff that this press campaign might provoke a
+war but that the German government would not prevent the execution of
+the coaling contract, that it “would run the risk of having the English
+kindle fire-rockets in Japan.” If war did occur with Japan and Great
+Britain, Germany would hold France also responsible; for not only would
+a large element among the French advocate grasping the opportunity for
+revenge against Germany, but also the arousing of the British zeal for
+war would be a direct result of the Entente Cordiale. “So if we lose our
+colonies, trade, merchant marine, and perhaps also a part of our war
+fleet in an unequal battle on the sea . . . . a reckoning with France on
+land would become unavoidable for us.”[496]
+
+Count Lamsdorff showed no inclination to respond to this feeler. On
+October 19, while thanking the German government for its friendship, he
+refused to credit either Great Britain or Japan with bellicose
+intentions against Germany. He interrupted Baron Romberg to assure him
+that nothing was to be feared from France; not a word did he utter about
+an alliance.[497]
+
+Meantime, the Russian Baltic squadron sailed, and in the night of
+October 21 occurred the Dogger Bank disaster which brought war between
+Great Britain and Russia dangerously close.[498] The “psychological
+moment” had come, reasoned Count Bülow and Herr von Holstein. Defeated
+in the Far East, menaced by revolution, and excited by this new danger,
+Russia should welcome the project of an alliance with the strongest
+military power in Europe. So on October 24 Herr von Holstein, who
+usually held aloof from all ambassadors, explained the German
+proposition to Count Osten-Sacken,[499] the Russian representative.
+Three days later the Emperor’s influence with the Czar, who was thought
+to be more pliable and more favorably inclined than his Foreign
+Minister, was brought into play. In a letter to Nicholas II the Emperor
+wrote:
+
+
+For some time English press has been threatening Germany, on no account
+to allow coals to be sent to your Baltic Fleet now on its way out. It is
+not impossible, that the Japanese and British Governments may lodge a
+joint protest against our coaling your ships coupled with a _sommation_
+to stop further work. The result aimed at by such a threat of war would
+be absolute immobility of your fleet and inability to proceed to its
+destination from want of fuel. This new danger would have to be faced in
+community by Russia and Germany together, who would both have to remind
+your ally France of the obligations she has taken over in the treaty of
+Dual Alliance with you, the _casus foederis_. It is out of the question,
+that France on such an invitation, would try to shirk her implicit duty
+towards her ally. Though Delcassé is an Anglophile _énragé_, he will be
+wise enough to understand that the British fleet is utterly unable to
+save Paris! In this way a powerful combination of 3 of the strongest
+continental Powers would be formed to attack, whom the Anglo-Japanese
+group would think twice before acting. . . . . My news from London say,
+that the Press and mob make a noise, the Admiralty some fuss, but that
+Government, Court and Society look with greatest calm at the event as an
+unhappy accident, arising from to great nervousness.[500]
+
+
+This broad hint, amounting almost to a proposal of alliance itself, was
+immediately effective. The Czar replied two days later:
+
+
+As you say . . . . Germany, Russia, and France should at once unite upon
+an arrangement to abolish Anglo-Japanese arrogance and insolence. Would
+you like to lay down and frame the outlines of such a treaty and let me
+know it? As soon as accepted by us France is bound to join her ally.
+This combination has often come to my mind. It will mean peace and rest
+for the world.[501]
+
+
+On the next day a draft of a treaty and a long explanatory letter, both
+composed by the Chancellor and Herr von Holstein,[502] were sent by the
+Emperor to the Czar. This draft, which was intended to test how far the
+Russian government would go, provided for a “defensive alliance . . . .
+to localize as far as possible the Russo-Japanese War.” The first
+article was the most important:
+
+
+In case one of the two Empires shall be attacked by a European Power,
+its ally will aid it with all its force on land and sea. The two allies,
+in that case, would make common cause for the purpose of recalling to
+France the obligations which she has assumed by the terms of the Franco-
+Russian treaty of Alliance.
+
+
+By the second article neither Power was to conclude a separate peace
+with a common adversary. The third article was designed to safeguard
+Germany in the coaling affair and to continue the alliance after the
+current war was over. It read:
+
+
+The engagement of mutual aid is equally valid in case acts performed by
+one of the high contracting parties during the war such as the delivery
+of coal to a belligerent should give place after the war to reclamations
+of a third Power, as pretended violations of the right of neutrality.
+
+
+In the letter the Emperor emphasized the defensive and the purely
+European character of the alliance. “It is very essential that America
+should not feel threatened by our agreement,” he wrote. He denounced
+France, “this republic of miserable civilians,” “the French radicals,
+Clemenceau and all the rest of the tag-rag and bobtail” for not
+fulfilling France’s obligations to her ally.
+
+
+I positively know that as far back as last December the French Finance
+Minister Rouvier told the Finance Minister of another power, France
+would on no account join in a Russo-Japanese war, even though England
+sided with Japan. To make doubly sure, the English have handed Morocco
+over to France. The certainty, that France intends to remain neutral and
+even to lend her diplomatic support to England, is the motive, which
+gives English policy its present unwonted brutal assurance. This unheard
+of state of things will change as soon as France finds herself face to
+face with the necessity of eventually choosing sides. . . . . The
+radical party . . . . abhors war and militarism, while the nationalist
+party while not objecting to war in itself, hates fighting for England
+and against Russia. Thus it will be in the interests of both parties to
+bring pressure to bear on and warn England to keep the peace. The main
+result will be, if you and I stand shoulder to shoulder, that France
+must formally and openly join us, thereby fulfilling her treaty-
+obligations toward Russia. . . . . This consummation once reached, I
+expect to maintain peace and you will be left an undisturbed and free
+hand to deal with Japan. . . . . Of course, before we can take any steps
+in this question and approach France that tiresome North Sea incident
+must first have been brought to a close.
+
+
+For, he continued, the French foreign office had already accepted the
+British view of the incident, and in case of difficulty over this
+matter, France would choose the British side. At the close of his letter
+the Emperor wrote that only he and Count Bülow knew of the project, and
+that when they had finished the draft the Chancellor had said: “May
+God’s blessings rest upon the work of the two monarchs and may the
+mighty three-Power group, Russia, Germany, France, preserve forever the
+peace of Europe. God grant it!”[503]
+
+The real object of this extravagant show of devotion to Russia was of
+course to inveigle her into an alliance. It did not signify a desire for
+a general conflict; the German government appreciated the British naval
+power too keenly for that.[504] Moreover, since it knew how averse the
+Russian government and especially the Czar were to an extension of the
+war, it emphasized the pacifying influence which the proposed alliance
+would exercise. The German leaders doubtlessly realized, however, that
+they were running a big risk, since Count Bernstorff, first secretary of
+the embassy in London, had warned them that Great Britain would regard
+an alliance between Germany and Russia, no matter how defensive in
+character, as an aggression directed against the security of the British
+Empire.[505]
+
+The Chancellor and Herr von Holstein considered the risk worth while,
+because, if the alliance could be concluded, they expected France, under
+the combined pressure of Russia and Germany, to enter the new grouping.
+If she did so, they no doubt reasoned, the Entente Cordiale would be
+destroyed, the work of M. Delcassé would be blocked, and, instead of
+Great Britain, Germany would be the center of the new combination.
+France, as the weakest member of the firm, would have to take orders
+from both her partners. In fact, the German government openly expressed
+to the Czar the expectation that in case of a war the control over the
+French army and navy would be put into German hands. If France, refusing
+to enter the alliance, elected to range herself with Great Britain and
+if the Russo-German alliance alone were made, the German statesmen
+apparently thought that the Dual Alliance would be broken, France would
+again be at the mercy of the German military power, and the possibility
+of an Anglo-Russian accord would be destroyed. The gains, both positive
+and negative, to be derived by Germany from such an alliance would be
+enormous. Its completion would constitute a far-reaching diplomatic
+revolution.[506]
+
+In Russian governmental circles opinion was divided. The Czar, who had
+proposed the alliance without consulting his Foreign Minister,[507] was
+its staunchest supporter. Weak and dependent, he usually agreed with his
+most recent adviser. His imagination, which could be vivid at times, was
+given freer rein because of his indolence. In 1903 he had succumbed to
+the arguments and ambitions of the adventurer, M. Bezobrazov, about
+Manchuria and Korea and had brought on the war with Japan. As the
+necessary European part of that program, M. Bezobrazov had advocated an
+understanding between the Dual and the Triple alliances. This aspect had
+not been achieved, probably owing to Count Lamsdorff’s opposition.[508]
+But the war was taking a disastrous course for Russia, revolution was
+threatening, and the German Emperor’s telegram arrived while the crisis
+with Great Britain was still acute and when Russia, according to the
+British Ambassador, would have welcomed a war with that Power.[509] The
+forlorn and troubled Czar returned readily to the idea of an alliance
+when William II suggested it.
+
+Count Lamsdorff was wary of this move from the start. Not a very strong
+personality, he was unable at times to maintain control of the foreign
+policy, yet he was a capable and loyal official who, when necessary,
+spoke frankly to his master. The Czar was actuated chiefly by sentiment
+and emotion; his Minister by shrewd diplomatic calculations. Although
+the one did not grasp the German motives, the other did; and the
+prospect of feeling “the heavy weight . . . . of the iron bands” of a
+German alliance was not to his liking. Count Lamsdorff did not believe
+that Russia needed this alliance as he felt certain that Great Britain
+would not attack her.[510] Furthermore, the conclusion of an agreement
+of neutrality about Balkan affairs with Austria-Hungary late in October
+relieved his country from danger in that quarter.[511]
+
+
+On the other hand [he wrote to Count Osten-Sacken], we manifestly need
+the friendship of our powerful neighbor for the security of our
+extensive frontier, for our provisioning with coal and other
+contrabands, etc. All this must be seriously considered and we must
+endeavor not to permit our relations with Berlin to deteriorate,
+although Paris must also not be disregarded. Only through the
+preservation of this balance will Russia succeed in obtaining all
+possible advantages from both sides.[512]
+
+
+When the German draft of the treaty arrived, the Dogger Bank crisis was
+over, but the Russian government remained embittered because Great
+Britain had made special naval preparations and a detachment of British
+cruisers, cleared for action, had followed the Russian fleet from Vigo
+to Tangier.[513] Still, that was no reason to assume the “iron bands” of
+a German alliance. The Czar and his Foreign Minister immediately set to
+work to make the terms more favorable for Russia.[514] They modified the
+first and third articles.[515] In the latter, to be kept secret, they
+incorporated a _quid pro quo_ by which Russia should receive German
+support in the Russo-Japanese negotiations for peace. The revised first
+article was the more important. The first sentence remained as before;
+but, instead of stipulating that Russia and Germany both advise France
+to enter the alliance, the second sentence was changed to read: “His
+Majesty the Emperor of all the Russias will take the steps necessary to
+initiate France into this accord and to invite her to associate herself
+in it as ally.” The Czar told the Emperor that the revised Article I
+must stand without change.[516]
+
+When the Russian government had been brought to this point, the German
+leaders revealed their real aim. They were, of course, obliged to accept
+the new first article; but the Emperor, in his reply to Nicholas II,
+November 17, made it plain that France would have to choose sides, even
+though, as he frankly wrote, “doubtless the French would much prefer any
+other grouping of Powers to that of the Alliance _a trois_ as in 1895.”
+The chief revisions asked by the German government were in the
+introduction and in Article III. The former was changed to read: The
+Emperor and the Czar “for the purpose of assuring the maintenance of
+peace in Europe have agreed on the following articles of a treaty of
+defensive alliance.” According to an entirely new Article III the treaty
+should remain in force until denounced one year in advance; however, it
+was left to the Czar to set any time limit he wished.
+
+These revisions transformed the basis of the negotiation. They made the
+alliance a general one to continue after the war. The changes were
+explained on the ground that, in the previous version, the treaty had
+been aimed too openly at Great Britain, and that, while this was the
+case, it was not politic to make the fact too evident.
+
+The Russian _quid pro quo_ in Article III was also rejected. Germany
+preferred not to help Russia in the negotiations for peace for fear of
+antagonizing the United States and of driving her into British arms,
+although the Emperor excused this refusal by explaining that if this
+secret clause became known, public opinion might consider the treaty an
+aggressive one binding Germany to defend the Russian conquests. Instead,
+he proposed that the previous Article III be made into an extra secret
+article in which the second sentence should read: “It follows from the
+the terms of the first sentence of Article I that Germany will associate
+herself with no action whatever that might imply hostile tendencies to
+Russia.” That clause, wrote the Emperor, would safeguard Russia against
+the repetition of any such congress as that of 1878, whereby she had
+been deprived of her Turkish conquests.
+
+In his accompanying letter to the Czar, for which Count Bülow and Herr
+von Holstein furnished the rough draft, the Emperor urged a quick
+signing of the agreement, adding the extraordinary proposal that Russia
+make some military demonstration on the Persian-Afghan frontier. “Even
+should the forces at your disposal not suffice for a real attack on
+India itself,” he wrote, “they would do for Persia—which has no army—and
+a pressure on the Indian frontier from Persia will do wonders in England
+and have remarkably quieting influence on the hot headed Jingoes in
+London.” He also warned the Czar against Anglo-French ambitions to
+mediate at the desire of Japan.[517]
+
+In St. Petersburg, Count Lamsdorff persuaded the Czar to proceed slowly
+with the negotiations, and, more important still, to consult France
+before concluding any agreement. So on November 23 Nicholas II
+telegraphed the German Emperor to that effect, adding:
+
+
+As long as it is not signed one can make small modifications on the
+text; whereas if allready approved by us both, it will seem as if we
+tried to enforce the treaty on France. In this case a failure might
+easily happen, which I think is neither your wish.[518]
+
+
+The Germans realized that this answer spelled defeat for them; because
+if the treaty became known to the French government that government
+would of course strenuously resist its completion. In fact, the Emperor
+was sure that M. Delcassé would at once publish the news of the proposed
+alliance, that a war cry in England would then burst forth, and that the
+timid Czar would back out. As he aptly expressed it, Count Lamsdorff and
+M. Witte had “spat in the German soup.”[519] On November 26 he replied
+with a refusal to let France know a word of the affair; it would be
+better to drop the whole matter until a more suitable moment, he
+declared. Although disgusted at this display of “cold feet,” as he put
+it, William II showed no especial anger or uneasiness in his answer and
+asked Nicholas II to continue their intimacy as before.[520]
+
+On the receipt of that reply Count Lamsdorff had to persuade his master
+all over again, because the latter was more anxious to make the alliance
+than he was to be considerate of his ally.[521] Certainly his letter of
+October 29 to William II was such as to warrant confidence that he would
+be willing to force the alliance upon France whether she wished it or
+not. Count Lamsdorff argued that the relations of Russia and Germany
+were sufficiently close to hold them together without an alliance. He
+declared that France’s intimacy with Great Britain had not caused her to
+be disloyal to her ally. While he doubted whether she could be won to
+the proposed combination, he urged her right to be consulted beforehand
+and denied that she would disclose the secret. She must be won
+gradually, he said, and not confronted with a _fait accompli_ which
+might force her back upon Great Britain.[522]
+
+It is obvious that Count Lamsdorff sought by this method to quash the
+project or render it harmless. He succeeded only partly in winning over
+his master. In the reply to the Emperor on December 7 Nicholas II once
+more asked permission to obtain the French reaction to the main lines of
+the alliance, even though the original document itself be kept secret
+from her. “In case of a negative answer,” he wrote in conclusion, “the
+second phase of Art. I of the draft of the treaty ought to be left out I
+think.”[523] Thus, even in case Germany refused his request, the Czar
+was still apparently willing to make an alliance with her to the entire
+exclusion of France.
+
+While the Russian government was preparing this answer, the Germans lost
+patience. Prospects for success seemed doubtful if not entirely
+hopeless. The declarations of the French press that the Dual Alliance
+remained as firm as ever and that Germany’s attempts to win Russia had
+failed caused the Chancellor to suspect that news of the negotiations
+had leaked out. Threats to seize the German vessels coaling the Russian
+fleet appeared in the Japanese press; the British government laid
+restrictions upon the shipping of coal to that fleet. In November and
+December Germany began to fear a British attack.[524]
+
+Since October the British press had returned to its campaign of
+calumniation against Germany, seeing a German plot behind every British
+difficulty. In the autumn a redistribution of the British naval forces
+had weakened the Mediterranean fleet and concentrated the main strength
+in home waters. Germany perceived in this rearrangement a tangible proof
+of the new alignment of Great Britain with France and of the growing
+British animosity toward her.[525]
+
+Hence when in November several articles appeared in _Vanity Fair_ and in
+the _Army and Navy Gazette_ proposing that the German fleet be
+“Copenhagened”[526] as useless for any other purpose than to attack
+Great Britain,[527] German public opinion took these threats seriously.
+The Emperor wrote to Count Bülow on November 23 that “the situation
+assumes more and more the aspect of that immediately preceding the Seven
+Years’ War.”[528] The German navy department began hurried measures to
+recall the vessels in foreign waters.[529] Taking a saner view, the
+Chancellor, by means of an interview published in the _Nineteenth
+Century_ for December and a speech in the Reichstag on December 5,
+sought to calm both his own and the British people by an absolute
+disclaimer of the thought of war between the two countries and by a
+denial that in the construction of her fleet Germany intended any
+hostility toward Great Britain.[530] But by December 5 Herr von Holstein
+himself came to credit the possibility of a British attack.[531]
+
+While this situation seemed serious, the Chancellor was more concerned
+by the fact that the completion of the coaling of the Russian fleet
+would soon deprive Germany of her hold over Russia.[532] On December 6
+he instructed the German Ambassador at St. Petersburg to inquire
+peremptorily of the Russian government whether Germany could rely upon
+its full support in case the coaling led to war. The Ambassador was to
+state that if no satisfactory answer were received by the time the
+Russian fleet reached Madagascar the Hamburg-American Line would be
+forbidden to continue its task. This telegram, which was followed on the
+next day by a similar one from the Emperor to Nicholas II,[533] forced
+the negotiations back to the very point from which they had started.
+
+Upon receipt of this message the Czar, highly agitated, immediately
+telegraphed that his letter of the same date (December 7) had evidently
+crossed the other on the way and would explain everything.[534] But when
+that letter arrived, William II demanded that they settle the coaling
+affair by signing a convention concerning it at once.[535] Thus, Germany
+herself destroyed the possibility of continuing the previous
+negotiations and of concluding, perhaps, a defensive alliance with
+Russia alone. The Czar could only acquiesce.[536] On December 12 Count
+Lamsdorff gave written assurance to the German government that Russia
+would make common cause with it in case the coaling led to war.[537]
+
+The promptness with which the Russian government agreed to the German
+demand showed how essential to Russia was the continued coaling of her
+fleet, which within about a week would reach Madagascar. Count Lamsdorff
+felt entirely safe in making the assurance of support, for, as he
+frankly said to the German Ambassador, he did not believe that either
+Great Britain or Japan would let things come to war.[538] Also he
+particularly wished to avoid antagonizing Germany while she was
+permitting a Russian loan of 231,000,000 rubles to be made in
+Berlin.[539] The Minister was elated over the turn which the Russo-
+German negotiations had taken. By changing the basis of discussion from
+that of a defensive alliance to that of a specific agreement limited to
+a definite eventuality, the German government had adopted his own policy
+of close friendship and co-operation without an alliance. His battle
+with both Germany and the Czar was won by the German government itself.
+
+On riper thought the German foreign office perceived that this Russian
+promise did not cover all cases in which war might arise as a result of
+German friendliness. It had no doubt had time since the arrival of the
+Czar’s letter of December 7 in which to appreciate its mistake in
+hastily changing the basis of negotiation. Hence on December 12 it
+instructed Count Alvensleben to propose to the Russian government a
+general defensive agreement. By its terms Russia would be bound to aid
+Germany in case of a conflict arising: first, because of any German act
+of “benevolent neutrality” in favor of Russia during the current war;
+or, second, because of the coaling affair during and after the war. The
+Ambassador was to declare that if Russia did not accept this agreement
+the coaling would be discontinued.[540] What was here proposed amounted
+practically to Articles I and III of the first German treaty draft with
+the parts pertaining to France omitted, and was in keeping with the
+Czar’s letter of December 7.
+
+Since the instructions arrived after Count Lamsdorff had accepted the
+earlier German demand, the exasperated Ambassador consulted his
+government before executing them.[541] Count Bülow then realized that
+the Russian Minister would not receive the proposal favorably and that
+the German government would seem not to know its own desires if it
+persisted in this new demand. Furthermore, on December 18, he was
+assured by Count Metternich that, although a Dogger Bank affair between
+Great Britain and Germany or the passage by Germany of a stronger naval
+law might precipitate a crisis, the British did not seek a war and had
+no intention of starting one.[542] Hence the Chancellor canceled the
+instructions. Instead, he notified the Russian Minister, December 26,
+that “within the limits which care for our own safety prescribes, we
+shall be glad to aid Russia as previously.”[543] The coaling was
+continued without mishap.[544]
+
+On December 21 William II repeated to the Czar his refusal to permit the
+consultation of France about the project of alliance, hoping thereby to
+reopen the discussion.[545] But Nicholas II, in his reply of December
+25, did not mention the matter.[546]
+
+Just at this moment of profound disappointment to the German government
+another outlet seemed to open up. On December 26 it learned that the
+Japanese government was thinking of sending Viscount Aoki to Berlin in
+the next year in order to establish closer contact with it on the
+questions to be considered in the Russo-Japanese negotiations for
+peace.[547] The German government reacted cordially to this project. The
+Emperor William, still unable to comprehend the failure of the Russian
+negotiations, had visions of Germany’s so mediating peace between Russia
+and Japan as to form an agreement _à trois_ with them.[548] Apparently
+without consulting the foreign office he appealed to the Czar on January
+2 “as your faithful friend” for a statement of his plans for the future,
+“so that if possible, I make myself useful to you and be enabled to
+shape the course of my policy.”[549] As Nicholas II ignored this
+request—the third rebuff from Russia within two months—the Emperor
+wanted to cultivate Japan so zealously that Count Bülow had to hold him
+back for fear of antagonizing Russia.[550]
+
+The German government, particularly Herr von Holstein, continued to
+apprehend that France and Great Britain would endeavor to mediate peace
+and form a new quadruple grouping with Russia and Japan by partitioning
+China.[551] To obviate that possibility it had attempted during the past
+months to draw closer to President Roosevelt[552] and to keep check upon
+the Russian views about peace. But since Russia had rebuffed this
+endeavor[553] as well as an alliance, Count Bülow turned late in
+December, 1904, to Japan and the United States in order to escape from
+“the sulking-corner in which not only England but also Russia is seeking
+to hold us.”[554] In January, 1905, the German government intensified
+its campaign to arouse President Roosevelt’s mistrust of Great Britain
+and France. Articles in the semiofficial press in Paris, assertions by
+M. Doumer, president of the French Chamber and intimate friend of M.
+Delcassé, and discreet soundings by French, British, and Russian
+diplomats gave body to the German fears. Count Bülow emphasized to the
+President the menace of this new quadruple alliance to both the United
+States and Germany. At the Count’s suggestion in January Mr. Roosevelt
+obtained from the Powers an assurance of the territorial integrity of
+China during the negotiations for peace.[555] This move brought the
+German government and Mr. Roosevelt into greater intimacy. The latter
+suspected France and Russia, but not Great Britain.[556] He refused to
+believe rumors of a Russo-German agreement, and credited the German
+denials of those reports.[557] With Japan, however, the German
+government was not so successful; hearing those same rumors, the
+Japanese government decided in February not to send Viscount Aoki to
+Berlin.[558]
+
+In the same month the German government tried once more to make an
+agreement with Russia, this time over Austria-Hungary. Torn by national
+conflicts, that empire was not expected to survive the death of the aged
+Emperor Francis Joseph. Count Bülow therefore proposed to the Russian
+Foreign Minister that they sign a public treaty of territorial
+disinterestedness in case of the disruption of the Hapsburg Empire.
+While Count Lamsdorff agreed to make the accord, he stipulated that it
+be kept secret, and left its formulation to the proposer. Thereupon the
+German foreign office, fearing that the existence of a secret Russo-
+German treaty might become known and might make Japan and the United
+States mistrustful of Germany and doubting whether the Russian Minister
+would really conclude the accord, decided to drop the project.[559]
+
+Thus the negotiations between Germany and Russia worked only to the
+detriment of Germany’s international relations. They were in large part
+responsible for the acuteness of British anger at Germany and for the
+collapse of the proposed Aoki mission. And had it not been for President
+Roosevelt’s ignorance of Continental affairs, they would no doubt have
+turned him against Germany. Although protestations of friendship were
+exchanged between the German and Russian rulers and governments, the
+German Emperor and his government were greatly chagrined at their
+failure.[560] They had found the bonds of the Dual Alliance tighter than
+they had expected, and had suffered a rebuff by a Power in the very
+worst straits. Believing that another opportunity to solve Germany’s
+international problems in this way would likely not be offered, the
+German foreign office next attempted the employment of force.
+
+
+[Footnote 481: Both letters, the one by Holstein, the other by Bülow,
+dated July 11 and July 13, respectively, are given in Hammann, _Bilder
+aus der letzten Kaiserzeit_, pp. 33 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 482: It is of course apparent that the German government
+anticipated no immediate success from these British efforts. Signs of
+Anglo-Russian antagonism were too numerous (see _G.P._, Vol. XIX, chap.
+cxxxi).]
+
+[Footnote 483: Dennett, _Roosevelt and the Russo-Japanese War_, p. 36.]
+
+[Footnote 484: _G.P._, Vol. XIX, chap. cxxx, A; Gwynn, _The Letters and
+Friendships of Sir Cecil Spring Rice_, I, 397 f.]
+
+[Footnote 485: Dennett, pp. 36 ff., 42; Sternburg to F. O., Sept. 27,
+1904, _G.P._, XIX, 542, No. 6266.]
+
+[Footnote 486: Bülow to William II, Aug. 31, 1904, _ibid._, 536, No.
+6264.]
+
+[Footnote 487: Bülow to William II, Aug. 31, 1904, _ibid._, 535 ff., No.
+6264; Bülow to Bernstorff, Sept. 1, 1904, _ibid._, 217 f., No. 6051;
+Bernstorff to Bülow, Sept. 6, 1904, _ibid._, 218 ff., No. 6052.
+Eckardstein informed Bülow in August, 1904, of attempts being made by
+Witte to introduce negotiations for peace with Hayashi. Bülow was not in
+favor of an early peace. See Eckardstein, _Lebenserinnerungen und
+politische Denkwürdigkeiten_, III, 76 ff.; Goetz, _Briefe Wilhelms II an
+den Zaren 1894-1914_, p. 341; Dillon, _The Eclipse of Russia_, p. 297;
+memo. by Bülow, Nov. 2, 1904, _G.P._, XIX, 387 f., No. 6167.]
+
+[Footnote 488: Bülow to Sternburg, Sept. 5, 1904, _G.P._, XIX, 541, No.
+6265.]
+
+[Footnote 489: See _ibid._, Nos. 5977, 6259 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 490: Memo. by Bülow, Jan. 16, 1904, _ibid._, 34, No. 5943;
+memo. by Holstein, Dec. 23, 1903, _ibid._, 73 ff., No. 5967.]
+
+[Footnote 491: Bülow to William II, July 15, 1904, _ibid._, 202, No.
+6043. Richthofen opposed the project (memo. by Richthofen, undated
+although probably written early in July, 1904, _ibid._, 194 ff., No.
+6042. This intention did not prevent Bülow from negotiating a commercial
+treaty with Russia in July, 1904, which Witte, Russian minister,
+declared exacted a tribute from Russia “much greater than any war
+indemnity on record” (Bülow to William II, July 15, 1904, _ibid._, 196
+ff., No. 6043; Dillon, pp. 323 ff.; Witte, _Memoirs_, pp. 413 f.).]
+
+[Footnote 492: Radolin to Bülow, Feb. 28, 1904, _G.P._, XIX, 165 ff.,
+No. 6028; Metternich to Bülow, March 14, 1904, _ibid._, 167 ff., No.
+6029; Alvensleben to Bülow, May 11, 1904, _ibid._, 177 ff., No. 6033,
+and following documents.]
+
+[Footnote 493: Nicholas II to William II, June 1, 1904, _ibid._, 181,
+No. 6034.]
+
+[Footnote 494: See their correspondence in Goetz, pp. 337 ff.; also in
+_G.P._, XIX, Nos. 6028 n., 6034, 6035, 6037, 6039, 6056, 6057, 6062 and
+n., 6064 and n., 6073 and n. The Emperor’s letters were dated Feb. 11,
+March 29, June 6, June 12, June 28, July 17, July 23, Aug. 19, Oct. 8,
+Oct. 10; the Czar’s replies were dated June 1, July 20, July 31, Sept.
+28, 1904.]
+
+[Footnote 495: Bernhard Huldermann, _Albert Ballin_ (Berlin, 1922), pp.
+146 ff.; _G.P._, XIX, Nos. 6077 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 496: Bülow to Romberg, Oct. 4, 1904, _G.P._, XIX, 257 ff., No.
+6084.]
+
+[Footnote 497: Romberg to F. O., Oct. 19, 1904, _ibid._, 259, No. 6085.]
+
+[Footnote 498: See above.]
+
+[Footnote 499: Osten-Sacken to Lamsdorff, Oct. 27, 1904,
+_Kriegsschuldfrage_, Nov., 1924, pp. 456 ff.; Savinsky, _Recollections
+of a Russian Diplomat_, p. 97.]
+
+[Footnote 500: William II to Nicholas II, Oct. 27, 1904, _G.P._, XIX,
+303 f., No. 6118. Their correspondence was entirely in English, in the
+use of which they made frequent mistakes. Osten-Sacken reported on Nov.
+4 a conversation with Bülow in which the latter, repeating the remarks
+of Holstein, declared that in case the British government objected to
+the coaling of the Russian ships by the German firm, “we should
+apparently be forced to ask the St. Petersburg cabinet whether we should
+refuse this objection and thus assume the risk of a war with England and
+become your [Russia’s] ally; or would Russia prefer to dispense with . .
+. . the coaling . . . . which in this case we should have to prohibit as
+incompatible with Germany’s neutrality” (_Kriegsschuldfrage_, Nov.,
+1924, p. 463).]
+
+[Footnote 501: Nicholas II to William II, Oct. 29, 1904, _G.P._, XIX,
+305, No. 6119.]
+
+[Footnote 502: Bülow and Holstein were the proponents of the alliance.
+Richthofen and Tirpitz, secretary of the Navy Department, opposed it
+(Alfred von Tirpitz, _Erinnerungen_ [Leipzig, 1920], pp. 143 ff.).]
+
+[Footnote 503: William II to Nicholas II, Oct. 30, 1904, Goetz, pp. 346
+ff.; Bülow to William II, Oct. 30, 1904, _G.P._, XIX, 305, No. 6120, and
+Anlage I and II.]
+
+[Footnote 504: Mühlberg to Tschirschky, Aug. 10, 1904, _G.P._, XIX, 238
+f., No. 6069; Bülow to William II, July 15, 1904, _ibid._, 204, No.
+6043.]
+
+[Footnote 505: Bernstorff to Bülow, Sept. 6, 1904, _ibid._, 220, No.
+6052.]
+
+[Footnote 506: “It is a matter here of a really great and, for the
+onlooking world, wholly unexpected transformation [_Weichenstellung_],”
+wrote Bülow to the Emperor, Nov. 16, 1904 (_ibid._, 312, No. 6125).]
+
+[Footnote 507: See the report from Lamsdorff to the Czar of Holstein’s
+conversation with Osten-Sacken on Oct. 24, and the Czar’s minute to it
+(_Kriegsschuldfrage_, Nov., 1924, pp. 455 f. and n.; cf. Savinsky, p.
+97).]
+
+[Footnote 508: Langer, _Europ. Gespr._, June, 1926, pp. 397 f.; Dennis,
+_Adventures in American Diplomacy_, pp. 354 f.]
+
+[Footnote 509: Hardinge to Lansdowne, Nov. 7, 1904, _B.D._, IV, 35, No.
+26.]
+
+[Footnote 510: A. Savinsky, “Guillaume II et la Russie. Ses Dépêches à
+Nicholas II, 1903-1905,” _Revue des deux mondes_, XII (1922), 790 f.;
+_G.P._, XIX, Nos. 6044 ff.; Savinsky, p. 97. Savinsky was an official in
+the Russian foreign office in the confidence of Lamsdorff, _G.P._, XIX,
+505, editor’s note).]
+
+[Footnote 511: _Ibid._, Vol. XXII, chap. clviii.]
+
+[Footnote 512: Lamsdorff to Osten-Sacken, Nov. 10, 1904,
+_Kreigsschuldfrage_, Nov., 1924, pp. 464 f.; cf. Savinsky, p. 99.]
+
+[Footnote 513: Hardinge to Lansdowne, Oct. 31, Nov. 7, 1904, _B.D._, IV,
+25, No. 24; 34 f., No. 26.]
+
+[Footnote 514: On receipt of that draft the Czar wrote to Lamsdorff:
+“To-day I received the Emperor’s letter with the treaty draft. As I read
+it, I laughed aloud. The content of the three articles touches France
+mostly. The last point concerns the particular object of dissatisfaction
+of the German Government with the British action in the coaling
+operation. This, however, is a private affair of both states. . . . .
+The matter must be considered from all sides, and a more desirable
+counterproposal for us must be composed” (_Kriegsschuldfrage_, Nov.,
+1924, p. 461).]
+
+[Footnote 515: Lamsdorff to Nicholas II, Nov. 4, 1904, _ibid._, pp. 462
+f.]
+
+[Footnote 516: Nicholas II to William II, Nov. 7, 1904, _G.P._, XIX, 310
+ff., No. 6124 and Anlage.]
+
+[Footnote 517: William II to Nicholas II, Nov. 17, 1904, Goetz, pp. 349
+ff.; Savinsky, p. 102; Bülow to William II, Nov. 16, 1904, _G.P._, XIX,
+312 ff., No. 6125 and Anlage. The treaty draft is given in Goetz, pp.
+146 f. See also Alexander Iswolsky, _Recollections of a Foreign
+Minister_ (New York, 1921), pp. 34 f.]
+
+[Footnote 518: Nicholas II to William II, Nov. 23, 1904, _G.P._, XIX,
+317, No. 6126, Anlage; Savinsky, pp. 102 f.]
+
+[Footnote 519: William II to Bülow, Nov. 23, 1904, _G.P._, XIX, 316 f.,
+No. 6126.]
+
+[Footnote 520: Bülow to William II, Nov. 24, 1904, _ibid._, 318 f., No.
+6127 and Anlage; William II to Nicholas II, Nov. 26, 1904,
+_Kriegsschuldfrage_, Nov., 1924, pp. 471 f.; Savinsky, pp. 103 f.]
+
+[Footnote 521: Iswolsky makes an attempt to exonerate the Czar of the
+charge of disloyalty to France, but his argument is not convincing
+(Iswolsky, pp. 27, 36 f.).]
+
+[Footnote 522: Report of Lamsdorff for Nicholas II, Nov. 23, 1904,
+_Kriegsschuldfrage_, Nov., 1924, pp. 473 ff.; Savinsky, _Revue des deux
+mondes_, XII (1922), 789 ff.; Savinsky, pp. 104 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 523: He inclosed a draft of the proposed communication to
+France. See Nicholas II to William II, Dec. 7, 1904, _G.P._, XIX, 322
+ff., No. 6131.]
+
+[Footnote 524: Bülow to William II, Dec. 6, 1904, _ibid._, 263 ff., No.
+6088; _ibid._, chap. cxxxvi.]
+
+[Footnote 525: Metternich to F. O., Oct. 20, 1904, _ibid._, 652, No.
+6349, and following documents; Flotow to Bülow, Oct. 26, 1904, _ibid._,
+286 f., No. 6105 and following documents.]
+
+[Footnote 526: This was the expression used.]
+
+[Footnote 527: Memo. by Metternich for Bülow, Dec. 25, 1904, _ibid._,
+367 ff., No. 6156; report of Marine Attaché Coerper, Jan. 15, 1905,
+_ibid._, 379 f., No. 6161; Lee, _King Edward VII_, II, 329; Admiral Sir
+Edward E. Bradford, _Life of Admiral of the Fleet Sir Arthur Knyvet
+Wilson_ (London, 1923), p. 197.]
+
+[Footnote 528: William II to Bülow, Nov. 23, 1904, _G.P._, XIX, 316 f.,
+No. 6126; Graf Robert Zedlitz-Trützschler, _Zwölf Jahre am deutschen
+Kaiserhof_ (Stuttgart, 1925), pp. 86 f.]
+
+[Footnote 529: On this war scare see _G.P._, Vol. XIX, chap. cxxxvi.]
+
+[Footnote 530: J. L. Bashford, “Great Britain and Germany: A
+Conversation with Count von Bülow, German Chancellor,” _Nineteenth
+Century_, Dec., 1904, pp. 873 ff.; Bülow, _Reden_, II, 123 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 531: Memo. by Holstein, Dec. 5, 1904, _G.P._, XIX, 358 f., No.
+6153.]
+
+[Footnote 532: Bülow to William II, Dec. 6, 1904, _ibid._, 263 ff., No.
+6088.]
+
+[Footnote 533: Bülow to Alvensleben, Dec. 6, 1904, _ibid._, 320 f., No.
+6129; William II to Nicholas II, Dec. 7, 1904, _ibid._, 322, No. 6130.]
+
+[Footnote 534: Savinsky, _Revue des deux mondes_, XII ( 1922), 794 f.;
+Savinsky, p. 107.]
+
+[Footnote 535: William II to Nicholas II, undated, _G.P._, XIX, 325, No.
+6132.]
+
+[Footnote 536: Nicholas II to William II, Dec. 11, 1904, _ibid._, 325
+f., No. 6134.]
+
+[Footnote 537: On December 11 Lamsdorff stated to Alvensleben that as
+soon as the Czar had made a decision he would be ready to agree with
+Germany on the “modality of co-operation” in case of a conflict. On the
+next day in his note to that government he did not mention this matter,
+and as Germany seemed satisfied, he never returned to it. See
+Alvensleben to F. O., Dec. 11 and 12, 1904, _ibid._, 325 ff., Nos. 6134
+ff.; Lamsdorff to Alvensleben, Dec. 13, 1904, _ibid._, 329, No. 6137;
+Savinsky, p. 108.]
+
+[Footnote 538: Alvensleben, to F. O., Dec. 11, 1904, _G.P._, XIX, 325
+f., No. 6134.]
+
+[Footnote 539: M. A. de Wolfe Howe, _George von Lengerke Meyer: His Life
+and Public Services_ (New York, 1920), pp. 121 f.; Schulthess
+(_Europäischer Geschichtskalender 1905_), p. 255.]
+
+[Footnote 540: Bülow to Alvensleben, Dec. 12, 1904, _G.P._, XIX, 326 f.,
+No. 6135; Bülow to Alvensleben, Dec. 21, 1904, _ibid._, 342 f. Nos. 6142
+f.]
+
+[Footnote 541: Editor’s note giving a summary of a dispatch from
+Alvensleben on Dec. 13, 1904, _ibid._, p. 342.]
+
+[Footnote 542: On Dec. 13 Metternich was called to Berlin for
+consultation as to the effect which a Russo-German agreement of any sort
+would have on Anglo-German relations. Schulenburg and Eulenburg, of the
+German embassy in London, also were asked about the attitude of the
+British toward Germany. They all believed that the British would not
+tolerate as much from Germany as they would from Russia. See memo. by
+Bülow, Dec. 16, 1904, _ibid._, 331 f., No. 6139, and editor’s note;
+memo. by Metternich, Dec. 18, 1904, _ibid._, 332 ff., No. 6140;
+Schulenburg to Bülow, Dec. 14, 1904, _ibid._, 359 ff., No. 6154; memo.
+by Eulenburg, Dec. 15, 1904, _ibid._, 366 f., No. 6155; Alfred von
+Tirpitz, _Politische Dokumente_, Band I; _Der Aufbau der deutschen
+Weltmacht_ (Stuttgart and Berlin, 1924), pp. 13 f. A few days later
+Lascelles tried to argue with both Bülow and Holstein that the British
+fear of the German navy was more reasonable than the German fear of the
+British navy. And on Dec. 26 Holstein declared to Lascelles as follows:
+“In the present instance a situation had been created by the action of
+the Press which was fraught with the gravest of all dangers, viz.: that
+of two great nations being involved in war, for if any untoward incident
+had arisen which gave rise to an acrimonious discussion between the two
+Governments it would have been almost impossible to have settled it
+owing to the atmosphere which the Press campaign had created.”
+Nevertheless both parties agreed that Anglo-German relations had become
+easier. See Lascelles to Lansdowne, Dec. 28, 1904, _B.D._, III, 56 ff.,
+No. 65. At about the same time King Edward, Lansdowne, and Balfour all
+branded the German fears of a British attack as foolish; and the British
+condemned them as hypocritical. But the press war continued into January
+as bitterly as before. See Bülow to William II, Dec. 26, 1904, _G.P._,
+XIX, 372 f., No. 6157; and following documents. See also Schulthess
+(1905), p. 3; Newton, _Lord Lansdowne_, pp. 331 f.; Friedrich Thimme,
+“Auswärtige Politik und Hochfinanz: Aus den Papieren Paul H. von
+Schwabach’s,” _Europäische Gespräche_, June, 1929, p. 307.]
+
+[Footnote 543: Bülow to Alvensleben, Dec. 21, 1904, _G.P._, XIX, 342 f.,
+Nos. 6142 f.; Alvensleben to Bülow, Dec. 26, 1904, _ibid._, 343 ff., No.
+6144.]
+
+[Footnote 544: Mühlberg to Tirpitz, Jan. 27, 1905, _ibid._, 265 ff., No.
+6089, and following documents.]
+
+[Footnote 545: William II to Nicholas II, Dec. 21, 1904, _ibid._, 340
+f., No. 6141; also Goetz, p. 354. The letter was written by the foreign
+office.]
+
+[Footnote 546: Nicholas II to William II, Dec. 25, 1904, _G.P._, XIX,
+346, No. 6145.]
+
+[Footnote 547: Memo. by Eckert, Nov. 18, 1904, Received Dec. 26, 1904,
+_ibid._, 395 ff., No. 6176.]
+
+[Footnote 548: Bülow to William II, Dec. 26, 1904, _ibid._, 400 ff., No.
+6178.]
+
+[Footnote 549: William II to Nicholas II, Jan. 2, 1905, _ibid._, 404 f.,
+No. 6180.]
+
+[Footnote 550: William II to Bülow, March 11, 1905, _ibid._, 411, No.
+6187; Bülow to William II, March 11, 1905, _ibid._, 412, No. 6188. On
+Jan. 16, 1905, the Emperor wrote: “The action of Delcassé and Lamsdorff
+is unspeakably treacherous and common. This trio [France, Great Britain,
+and Russia, who he thought desired to divide China] must be opposed by a
+German-American-Japanese league. That must be done quickly and
+energetically. Above all America’s mistrust of France and Russia be
+nourished” (Emperor’s minute to the dispatch from Bülow to William II,
+Jan. 15, 1905, _ibid._, 562, No. 6280).]
+
+[Footnote 551: Memo. by Holstein, Dec. 29, 1904, _ibid._, 551 ff., No.
+6275. The Emperor also suffered from the “nightmare of the coalitions,”
+but his suffering assumed more varied forms. At one moment he feared a
+Franco-Anglo-American-Japanese grouping; at another, an Anglo-Franco-
+Russian grouping; at another, an Anglo-Franco-Russo-Japanese grouping
+(see _ibid._, Nos. 5925, 5945, 6187, 6280).]
+
+[Footnote 552: See _ibid._, chap. cxxxix.]
+
+[Footnote 553: Romberg to Bülow, Dec. 1, 1904, _ibid._, 394 f., No.
+6175.]
+
+[Footnote 554: Bülow to William II, Dec. 26, 1904, _ibid._, 402 f., No.
+6178.]
+
+[Footnote 555: See Dennett, pp. 77 ff., 162, 171 f.; Dennis, pp. 392 f.,
+397; Bülow to William II, Dec. 24, 1904, _G.P._, XIX, 547 ff., No. 6274,
+and following documents.]
+
+[Footnote 556: See, among others, Sternburg to F. O., Feb. 3 and 9,
+1905, _G.P._, XIX, 567 f., No. 6285; 570, No. 6287.]
+
+[Footnote 557: Dennett, pp. 73 ff., 50; Dennis, pp. 367 f., 385 ff. The
+anonymous document which Dennis quotes must have been written some time
+early in 1905, for it refers to events which occurred in January, 1905.]
+
+[Footnote 558: Arco to F. O., Feb. 10, 1905, _G.P._, XIX, 407, No. 6183;
+Arco to Bülow, March 16, 1905, _ibid._, 413 ff. No. 6190.]
+
+[Footnote 559: _Ibid._, Vol. XXII, chap. clix.]
+
+[Footnote 560: Alvensleben to Bülow, Dec. 26, 1904, _ibid._, XIX, 343
+f., No. 6144; William II to Bülow, Dec. 28, 1904, _ibid._, 346 f. No.
+6146; Bülow to Alvensleben, Jan. 1, 1905, _ibid._, 347 f., No. 6147;
+Bülow to William II, Dec. 26, 1904, _ibid._, 400 ff., No. 6178.]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XI
+
+ THE VISIT TO TANGIER
+
+
+Upon the refusal of an alliance by Russia, the German government, in the
+early part of 1905, regarded its international situation and loss of
+prestige with concern. The continued defeats of Russia by Japan in the
+Far East, culminating in that at Mukden, February 23 to March 10, and
+the outbreak of revolution in Russia had for the time neutralized the
+effectiveness of the Dual Alliance. But the Anglo-German animosity
+persisted. On February 2 at Eastleigh, Mr. Arthur Lee, first civil lord
+of the British admiralty, frankly explained the redistribution of the
+fleet as follows:[561]
+
+
+The balance and center of naval power in Europe had been shifted during
+the last few years. They [Great Britain] had not so much to keep their
+eyes upon France and the Mediterranean as they had to look with more
+anxiety, though not fear, towards the North Sea. It was for that reason
+that the Fleets had been distributed to enable them to deal with any
+danger in that direction. . . . . If war should unhappily be declared,
+under existing conditions the British Navy would get its blow in first,
+before the other side had time even to read in the papers that war had
+been declared.
+
+
+The German Emperor regarded those assertions as an “open threat of war”
+by that “vengeance-breathing corsair.”[562] An Anglo-German press war
+ensued. Count Bülow declared to Admiral Tirpitz that he would agree to
+any sum for the German naval law for 1906.[563]
+
+The state of the Triple Alliance also worried the German foreign office;
+Austria-Hungary was in internal turmoil, Italy more unreliable than
+ever. Irredentist troubles, which had flamed up again in the previous
+November,[564] and Balkan rivalries had so antagonized those two allies
+that during 1904 the main military force of Italy had been transferred
+from the French to the Austrian frontier. During the winter, reports of
+a Franco-Italian agreement nullifying the Triple Alliance and of the
+activity of Ambassador Barrère in attempting to foment difficulty
+between Austria and Italy came to the German government.[565] But when,
+toward the end of February, 1905, Count Bülow mentioned these rumors to
+the Italian Ambassador, King Victor Emmanuel and his government both
+formally denied that Italy had made any agreement “that is in
+contradiction with the Triple Alliance or that may diminish the value of
+our obligations toward our allies,” and asserted that M. Prinetti’s
+declarations to France did not “vary, modify, or attenuate the bearing
+or obligations that result from it [the Triple Alliance] for us.”[566]
+
+Although the Chancellor did not believe these asseverations, he
+continued to hold to Italy. As he wrote to the Emperor on March 5 and 9:
+
+
+For times of peace and for all international combinations it is to our
+interest to maintain the façade of the Triple Alliance as intact as
+possible, if only because the Italians, so long as they remain in it,
+will meet with mistrust from hostile sides. In case of complications,
+however, we need have no illusions concerning active Italian co-
+operation. Still, it is an advantage if Italy remains neutral instead of
+siding with France. . . . . The general international situation is so
+tense that we must endeavor to sacrifice as few tricks as possible.
+
+
+Therein was expressed the German policy toward Italy until the latter’s
+final entry into the World War. Upon reading this confession, the
+Emperor, who already feared that King Edward VII was trying to establish
+a Franco-Russo-British alliance, summed up the international position of
+his country as follows: “The Triple Alliance loosened by the antagonism
+of Austria and Italy, Russia unchanged or indifferent toward us, England
+hostile, France revengeful.” As to Italy, he wrote severely to the
+Chancellor: “Your Excellency is easily satisfied. My grandfather and I
+looked upon the co-operation of the Italian army as a matter of course.
+In case of a French attack on us that must be adhered to.”[567]
+
+The diminution in Germany’s prestige was felt most acutely in her
+relationship to France, whose Foreign Minister showed by the dispatch of
+the French mission to Fez in January that he intended to establish
+French control over Morocco without consulting Germany. Hence, after the
+failure of the move toward Russia, the German government began, in
+December, to turn its attention to the Moroccan question. Conveniently
+disregarding its unsettled grievances against the Sultan, it responded
+to certain overtures for a _rapprochement_ from that monarch by quietly
+and unofficially encouraging him to resist the French demands.[568]
+
+This action could the more easily be taken since the Sultan had already
+begun to oppose the French by convoking an assembly of Moroccan notables
+to consider the French proposals for reform. The Sultan selected two men
+from each town, who were moderate conservatives, more or less amenable
+to his influence, hostile to French control but not in principle opposed
+to foreigners or to reforms.[569] Count Bülow, much pleased, advised the
+Sultan about the middle of February to unite with the rebel, Bou-Amama
+[_sic_], and to threaten a holy war in case France tried to prevent the
+meeting of the assembly.[570] Early in February a German warship
+appeared casually in Moroccan waters. A few days later Herr von Holstein
+instructed Herr von Kühlmann, first secretary of the German legation in
+Tangier, to avoid official utterances toward France “until we are more
+certain about the attitude of the Sultan”; for “according as the Sultan
+shows himself firm or yielding, German policy will endeavor as much as
+possible to strengthen his back or will confine itself to defending
+German economic interests.”[571]
+
+The Moroccan government lived up to the German hopes by convening the
+assembly of notables on February 22 and by requiring M. Saint-René
+Taillandier to explain the French program to it. To stiffen the Moroccan
+resistance against France, Herr von Kühlmann suggested that the German
+government send a note to the Sultan manifesting its disapproval of the
+French policy.[572] Before following that suggestion, however, the
+German government endeavored to interest President Roosevelt in the
+Moroccan question.
+
+As Mr. Roosevelt and the German government were co-operating so
+cordially for the preservation of the open door in China, Count Bülow
+sought to extend this effort to Morocco and to involve the United States
+against France and Great Britain, or at least to prepare the President
+for isolated German action on the Moroccan question. On February 25,
+after calling Mr. Roosevelt’s attention to the Franco-Spanish
+monopolistic plans, the Chancellor invited him to unite with Germany in
+advising the Sultan that the calling of the assembly was a correct move
+toward fortifying his government and inaugurating reforms. This action,
+argued the Chancellor, would stop the French advance and make possible a
+peaceful solution of the Moroccan question. Even if the United States
+did not participate, he continued, France would scarcely risk a Moroccan
+war with a silent Germany on her frontier.[573]
+
+Although not interested in Morocco, the President agreed to instruct the
+American representative in Tangier to keep in close touch with his
+German colleague.[574] The answer satisfied the German government, which
+now felt assured of Mr. Roosevelt’s moral support in case Germany took
+action alone. On March 10 the note was sent.
+
+Through this note and the supplementary statements of the German
+representatives in Morocco the German government informed the Sultan
+that, although he must reorganize his country, Germany
+
+
+hopes that the rumors of a prospective change in the existing conditions
+in Morocco—equal rights and freedom for all nations—are unfounded.
+Germany would disapprove of such a change. Germany and the United States
+are favorably inclined toward the maintenance of the present conditions;
+. . . . the attitude of the other Powers is not definitely known. In
+England the Government has bound itself to a certain extent in favor of
+France, even though in the English commercial world a current in favor
+of the maintenance of the independence of Morocco and in favor of equal
+rights of the Powers is present.[575]
+
+
+Germany here showed her strong disapproval of the whole French action
+and sought to augment Moroccan resistance without committing herself to
+any definite policy.
+
+Immediately after the dispatch of the note the German government heard
+that at the opening session of the assembly of notables on February 22
+M. Saint-René Taillandier had claimed to have “the assent of other
+foreign representatives at Tangier” to the French program of
+reform.[576] Considering this a deliberate misrepresentation for the
+purpose of overawing the Moroccans, the German government sought further
+means for blocking French efforts. The Chancellor intimated in the
+Reichstag on March 15 that Germany intended taking steps to defend her
+economic interests in Morocco.[577] Five days later the newspapers
+announced the forthcoming visit of the German Emperor to Tangier.[578]
+
+When Count Bülow saw the strong opposition which this proposed visit
+aroused in the French and English press, he immediately determined to
+put it to a political use.[579] He wrote to the Emperor: “Your Majesty’s
+visit to Tangier will embarrass M. Delcassé, thwart his plans, and be of
+benefit to our economic interests in Morocco.” For, he wrote a few days
+later,
+
+
+apart from the fact that the systematic exclusion of all non-French
+merchants and promoters from Morocco according to the example in Tunis
+would signify an important economic loss for Germany, it is also a want
+of appreciation of our power when M. Delcassé has not considered it
+worth the effort to negotiate with Germany over his Moroccan plans. M.
+Delcassé has completely ignored us in this affair.[580]
+
+
+William II was lukewarm about the project. He had persistently opposed
+interfering in the Moroccan question both for reasons of general policy
+and for lack of interest in Morocco itself. At the insistence of the
+Chancellor he agreed to execute the _coup_; but Count Bülow had to
+employ every means to hold him steady. When the Emperor learned from the
+papers that the natives and the German and British colonies in Morocco
+intended to exploit his visit against the French, he wrote to the
+Chancellor on March 20 as follows: “Telegraph immediately to Tangier
+that it is _highly_ doubtful whether I shall land and that I shall only
+travel incog[nito] as a tourist, that is, no audiences, no
+receptions.”[581] Count Bülow overcame his objections by arguing that
+otherwise M. Delcassé would spread the rumor that the program of
+reception for the Emperor had been curtailed after remonstrances had
+been made in Berlin.[582]
+
+Aside from the communication with President Roosevelt, the German
+government made no diplomatic preparation for this action.[583] Direct
+contact with the French government was cut off as early as March
+22.[584] Two days later the Chancellor issued general orders to play the
+sphinx on the subject of Morocco.[585] A Franco-German press war alone
+revealed the tension of the situation.[586]
+
+With the performance ready to start, the chief actor began to suffer
+from stage fright. Learning of an attempt at Tangier a day or so before
+to assassinate Mr. Harris of the _London Times_, the Emperor telegraphed
+Count Bülow from Lisbon on March 28 as follows: “In Tangier the devil is
+already loose. Yesterday an Englishman almost murdered. I consider the
+affair there as very doubtful.”[587] Furthermore, he learned that at
+Tangier he would have to disembark in an open boat, and that after he
+was in the town he would have to walk through the narrow streets or be
+carried in a sedan or ride some unknown Berber horse. The first two ways
+were decidedly beneath imperial dignity, while the last one, on account
+of the Emperor’s crippled left arm, might be too dangerous. Not only the
+anxious sovereign, but members of his company as well, were inclined to
+advise against the attempt. But Count Tattenbach, former minister at
+Tangier and at the time minister at Lisbon, whom the Emperor had brought
+along from Portugal, and Prince Eulenburg clung to the plan and kept up
+their master’s courage,[588] while from Berlin the Chancellor sent one
+telegram after the other to effect the visit. To the Emperor he
+telegraphed that it would be a “historic act,” that the attention of the
+world was focused on him, that “if the visit . . . . turns out as
+desired, Delcassé with his anti-German policy will stand there as a
+disgraced European,” and that the French Foreign Minister would probably
+then be overthrown by his enemies in France. He agreed with Count
+Tattenbach that since press and people were discussing the matter so
+fully the Emperor could not recede without exposing himself to the
+accusation of cowardice. He likewise sent a telegram of four pages to
+the Emperor on March 26 with instructions about his speeches at Tangier.
+It read in part as follows:
+
+
+Naturally it is not to German interest for the Sultan to be discouraged
+now at the beginning of the French negotiations and to place himself
+under a French protectorate. To oppose this . . . . Your Majesty should
+receive the Sultan’s representative expressly as a representative of a
+sovereign, and should . . . . express the hope that he [the Sultan]
+would soon suppress the rebellion of Bou-Amama. . . . . Your Majesty
+might ask where the rebel Bou-Amama obtains the means for his long
+resistance. If the representative should reply, “Probably from France,”
+Your Majesty might answer, “It is difficult to believe the French
+capable of such baseness.”
+
+. . . . Without saying an unfriendly word about France, Your Majesty
+should ignore her in Morocco, should not mention at all the French
+advance against Morocco, and should honor the French chargé d’affaires
+with . . . . only a silent greeting.
+
+It is improbable that any diplomat will mention France’s Moroccan policy
+to Your Majesty. If that subject should be brought up, Your Majesty
+might reply that the French policy is entirely unknown to you. The case
+is different, however, if the Sultan’s representative at his master’s
+command . . . . asks Your Majesty’s advice. On the reply will depend
+whether the Sultan will continue to defend the independence of Morocco
+or will submit to France. The question whether Your Majesty can risk a
+war with France for the sake of Morocco cannot be considered at all. But
+on the other hand it is more than doubtful whether the present civil
+Government of France . . . . would risk a war with Morocco so long as
+the least possibility exists that Germany might sooner or later
+interfere. Therefore we must for the present leave our goal uncertain.
+We cannot conveniently make an alliance with the Sultan. But if we
+withdraw our moral support entirely from him and destroy all hope, we
+shall relinquish important German interests. Therefore I conceive Your
+Majesty’s reply to the Sultan’s minister somewhat as follows: “It is
+known that I desire no Morocco territory, but that I value equality of
+treatment with other nations in trade and commerce with Morocco. Other
+commercial nations have the same interest. As my view is known, the
+English colony greeted me joyfully today. It is to the interest of the
+Sultan as well as of almost all seafaring and commercial peoples that he
+preserve his independence and therewith freedom to permit them all equal
+rights in his empire. The main strength of every ruler lies in having
+his people back of him at decisive moments. In that case no foreign
+Power will attack him lightly. Therefore the Sultan should make certain
+that the notables whom he has summoned to Fez for advice are of one mind
+with him and should direct his policy in accordance therewith.”
+
+Since it is well known that the Moorish delegates at present assembled
+at Fez are entirely hostile to the Sultan’s conciliation toward France,
+definite advice would herewith be imparted to the Sultan. If the
+representative should ask whether Your Majesty would support the Sultan
+in a war against France, Your Majesty might reply: “In case I promised
+today to support you, you would attack the French at once. But I desire,
+if possible, to maintain peace, although I have a very strong army.
+Therefore I must reserve decision until it really comes to war between
+France and Morocco. I do not expect this event. France will try to see
+how far she can advance with threats. But France knows that her
+situation would be dangerous if she attacked Morocco without having
+assured herself of Germany’s neutrality.”
+
+Next in importance to the conversation with the Sultan’s representative
+is Your Majesty’s reply to a probable short English greeting. . . . .
+There Your Majesty might well stress the common interest in equality for
+all nations. By emphasizing this principle at that place Your Majesty
+will make it half impossible for the English Government in later Franco-
+German discussions about Morocco to place itself on the French side.
+
+Finally, in case Your Majesty has to reply to a question from a non-
+Moroccan source about what attitude Germany would take in case of a
+Franco-Moroccan war, Your Majesty might reply somewhat as follows:
+“Germany has no obligations which would prevent her from being guided in
+that case by her own interests.” This reply sounds disquieting for our
+opponents but binds us to nothing.
+
+
+Thus, Count Bülow instructed the Emperor to encourage the Moroccans in
+their resistance to France, to make France uneasy by his actions and
+words, but not to bind Germany to anything definite.
+
+At the same time, to assure his master’s safety, the Chancellor
+telegraphed to Herr von Kühlmann that German and Spanish secret police
+should be present in abundance, that the visit should perhaps be
+shortened, and that “a horse, guaranteed gentle, which should be
+exercised early in the morning for several hours by some trustworthy
+rider in order to quiet it, would be best and could obviate all
+difficulties as well as any curtailment of the program.”[589] Then, to
+cut off any possibility of retreat, the Chancellor declared on March 29
+to the Reichstag that Germany had no aggressive intentions toward
+Morocco, but that she did aim to defend her economic interests and the
+open door.
+
+
+The speech and attitude of a diplomat . . . . must vary according to
+circumstances [he stated]. The moment suitable . . . . for the
+preservation of our interests I shall choose as I think best. But in
+this case the tendency of the German policy has not changed. Whoever
+seeks a _fait nouveau_ will not find it in the German policy. In the
+same degree as it is attempted to change the international position of
+Morocco or to control the open door in the economic development of the
+land, we must also to a greater degree than before be heedful that our
+economic interests in Morocco remain safe. For this reason we are
+entering into relations with the Sultan of Morocco.[590]
+
+
+When the Emperor’s boat arrived at Tangier early in the morning of March
+31, a stiff east wind made landing impossible.[591] Herr von Kühlmann
+and the captain of one of the French warships stationed in the harbor
+succeeded only with the greatest difficulty in coming aboard. The
+Emperor immediately drew the latter into conversation about the weather
+prospects. It looked as if the “historic act” would not occur. A few
+hours later, however, the wind died down, and General Scholl, a member
+of the Emperor’s party, went ashore to make a tour of inspection. He
+returned with an enthusiastic report of the reception in view from the
+natives, declared the horse to be trustworthy, and said that if one did
+not mind getting wet, one could make the landing. So the Emperor
+intrusted himself to the wind and the waves, the Moroccans, and a Berber
+horse. The landing was made; the horse, which at first shied at the
+splendor of the imperial costume, was quieted; and
+
+
+followed by about twenty attendants all on horseback [according to Herr
+von Schoen’s account], the Emperor entered the town, the narrow streets
+of which, filled with the joyous, noisy masses, permitted only a slow
+advance. The flat roofs of the houses were thickly packed with Moorish,
+Christian, and Jewish women who hailed the Emperor in the most varied
+tones and scattered flowers. Finally the procession arrived at the Soko,
+the open place before the garden of the legation, filled with a
+turbulent sea of human beings who expressed their enthusiasm in
+deafening cries and wild shooting. The confused din was increased still
+more by a military band sent by the Sultan which endeavored in vain to
+drown out the uproar of the people. The restlessness of the horses
+caused me to ask the French officer, apparently leading a command,
+whether he could not stop the wild shooting. He replied dejectedly that
+he had some influence only over the handful of regular troops entrusted
+to his instruction but not the least over the sportively shooting, half-
+wild Kabyle.
+
+
+However, the company reached the legation in safety where the German
+colony, the diplomatic corps, and the representative of the Sultan were
+received.
+
+In the speeches which the excited Emperor delivered, he permitted his
+tongue to become looser than usual. Whereas he had previously been
+opposed to intervention in the Moroccan affair, he now fixed the German
+policy with respect to Morocco more tightly than the Chancellor had
+wished and exposed himself to the criticism of having taken another
+backward monarch under his wing. In reply to the greeting of the
+Sultan’s representative, Abd-el-Melik, the Emperor declared that
+
+
+he . . . . had great interest in the welfare and prosperity of the
+Moroccan Empire, that he visited the Sultan as an independent ruler, and
+that he hoped that under the authority of the Sultan a free Morocco
+would be opened to the peaceful competition of all nations without
+monopoly or exclusion.
+
+
+The Sultan’s representative read to the Emperor a message from his
+master in which the latter stated that
+
+
+he remembered the friendship which had always existed between his
+predecessors and Germany and that he was filled with the wish to
+strengthen and extend those friendly relations in every way. In reply
+the Emperor William expressed his thanks for this cordial message. He
+shared the feelings of the Sultan [he said] and agreed with Abd-el-
+Melik’s assertations concerning the divine power and wisdom which
+directs the fate of peoples. He wished sincerely for the development and
+welfare of the Moroccan Empire for the sake of his subjects and for that
+of the other European nations who traded there, as he hoped, on the
+basis of full equality.
+
+
+The Emperor then decorated Abd-el-Melik and his three companions. Later,
+he said to Abd-el-Melik that
+
+
+his visit to Tangier aimed to assert that German interests in Morocco
+would be protected and preserved. Concerning the best means to achieve
+this, he would enter into direct relations with the Sultan, whom he
+regarded as an independent ruler. The Emperor closed with the remark
+that prudence was necessary in the reforms which the Sultan planned and
+that regard should be paid to the religious feelings of the Moroccan
+people in order to avoid disturbing public order.[592]
+
+
+After the speeches were over, the imperial party hurried back on
+shipboard before some accident should occur or a contrary wind arise.
+Count Bülow was so relieved upon learning that his master was safe on
+board that, as he later confided to the Emperor, he had a “nervous fit
+of tears.”[593] The Emperor himself did not at first realize the great
+political significance of his act. When he met Prince Louis of
+Battenberg at Gibraltar on April 1, he expressed the time-honored
+shibboleth, that “Germany, Great Britain and the United States must make
+common cause and march shoulder to shoulder.”[594] When he received the
+reports from the press several days later, he awoke from his
+illusions.[595] For, although the whole event smacked of a comic opera,
+it none the less threw down the gauntlet to M. Delcassé and French
+policy in Morocco[596] and ushered in a long period of crisis in
+international relations. The echoes which the Emperor’s speeches aroused
+in Europe reverberated like the distant rumblings of cannon.
+
+
+[Footnote 561: Reported in the _London Times_, Feb. 4, 1905. When Lee
+saw how the German press took offense at his words, he published a
+“correct version” of these passages in a somewhat milder form (_ibid._,
+Feb. 7, 1905; _Annual Register, 1905_, pp. 21 f.).]
+
+[Footnote 562: Von Tirpitz, _Politische Dokumente_, I, 14.]
+
+[Footnote 563: _Ibid._, pp. 17 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 564: Monts to Bülow, Nov. 19, 1904, _G.P._, XX, 85 ff., No.
+6423.]
+
+[Footnote 565: Monts to Bülow, Dec. 18, 1904, _ibid._, 88 f. No. 6424;
+report of Military Attaché Chelius to Schlieffen, Dec. 18, 1904,
+_ibid._, 89 ff., No. 6424 Anlage; Metternich to Bülow, Jan. 12, 1905,
+_ibid._, 93, No. 6425. The relation of Italy to France and Germany was
+well shown in the following incident. Shortly after Loubet’s visit to
+Rome, an Italian officer was caught delivering to the French important
+documents dealing with the Italian plan of mobilization. At about the
+same time the Italian chief of staff gave to the German government
+photographs of the French border fortifications (_ibid._, Nos. 6423-24,
+6426).]
+
+[Footnote 566: Bülow to Monts, Feb. 21, 1905, _ibid._, 93 f., No. 6426;
+Monts to F. O., Feb. 25, 1905, _ibid._, 94 f., No. 6427; Bülow to
+William II, March 5, 1905, _ibid._, 95, No. 6428 and Anlage.]
+
+[Footnote 567: Bülow to William II, March 5 and 9, 1905, _ibid._, 95
+ff., Nos. 6428 f., and the Emperor’s minutes.]
+
+[Footnote 568: The German representatives in Morocco unofficially
+assured the Sultan early in February that Germany had a political
+interest in the Moroccan question, that Germany as well as several other
+Powers had not yet taken the question in its existing form into
+consideration, that Germany would not actively support Morocco, but
+that, with a silent Germany on her frontier, France would not attack the
+latter (see _ibid._, Nos. 6538-40, 6544-47, 6550, 6553).]
+
+[Footnote 569: Kühlmann to Bülow, Jan. 29, 1905, _ibid._, 248, No.
+6552.]
+
+[Footnote 570: Bülow to Kühlmann, Feb. 11, 1905, _ibid._, 251 ff., No.
+6554.]
+
+[Footnote 571: Bülow to Kühlmann, Feb. 16, 1905, _ibid._, 255, No. 6556.
+The dispatch was written by Holstein.]
+
+[Footnote 572: Kühlmann to Bülow, Feb. 21, 1905, _ibid._, 255 f., No.
+6557.]
+
+[Footnote 573: Bülow to Kühlmann, Jan. 16, 1905, _ibid._, 245, No. 6547;
+Bülow to Sternburg, Feb. 25, 1905, _ibid._, 256 ff., No. 6558.]
+
+[Footnote 574: Sternburg to F. O., March 9, 1905, _ibid._, 258 f., No.
+6559; Dennett, _Roosevelt and the Russo-Japanese War_, pp. 83 f.]
+
+[Footnote 575: Only a summary of the note is given in _G.P._, XX, 260 n.
+The quotations are taken from this summary and from a telegram from
+Bülow to Kühlmann, March 10, 1905, _ibid._, 260 f., No. 6561.]
+
+[Footnote 576: Report from Vassel, German vice-consul at Fez, Feb. 23,
+1905. According to a second report from him, March 7, the French
+Minister had claimed to have “the approval of his proposals by the
+foreigners” (_ibid._, pp. 255 f. n.; Auswärtiger Amt, _Aktenstücke über
+Marokko, 1905_ [Berlin, 1905], No. 3). The latest communication received
+by the German government from Vassel, before the dispatch of the note of
+March 10, was of Feb. 17. See Kühlmann to Bülow, Feb. 21, 1905, _G.P._,
+XX, 255, No. 6557; Bülow to Kühlmann, March 10, 1905, _ibid._, 260, No.
+6561.]
+
+[Footnote 577: The Chancellor declared as follows: “I understand
+entirely the attention which is given here to the events in and about
+Morocco. I regard it as a duty of the German Government to see that . .
+. . our economic interests in Morocco are not injured. But the present
+moment is unsuitable for further explanations” (Bülow, _Reden_, II, 186
+f.). As a matter of fact, German economic interests ran a very poor
+third behind those of France and Great Britain (_Zeitschrift für
+Kolonialpolitik_, Dec., 1904, pp. 885 ff.).]
+
+[Footnote 578: The information was given out to the _London Standard_,
+_London Times_, and the _Kölnische Zeitung_, at Tangier on March 19. The
+origin of the visit is obscure. Theodor Wolff relates that Kühlmann and
+Hornung, correspondent in Tangier of the _Kölnische Zeitung_, were
+responsible for proposing in February that the Emperor include Tangier
+in his itinerary (Wolff, _Das Vorspiel_, p. 156). The plan for the
+Emperor’s voyage in the Mediterranean submitted to the Chancellor on
+March 13 included a stay of four hours in Tangier (editor’s note,
+_G.P._, XX, 263). Probably Bülow aimed to use this visit politically
+from the start, just as he had intended using the dispatch of a warship
+to Tangier in the previous year. But only after he saw the effect of the
+announcement upon public opinion did he realize the full political
+significance of the visit (cf. _ibid._, pp. 262 ff.). Crozier’s story of
+the origin of this voyage is unsubstantiated by any evidence (_Revue de
+France_, April 1, 1921, pp. 279 f.).]
+
+[Footnote 579: Editor’s note, _G.P._, XX, 263 f.; Bülow to William II,
+March 20, 1905, _ibid._, 262, No. 6563; 264 f., No. 6565.]
+
+[Footnote 580: Bülow to William II, March 20, 1905, _ibid._, 263, No.
+6563; Bülow to William II, March 26, 1905, _ibid._, 274 f., No. 6576. It
+was reported in the German foreign office soon after the Anglo-French
+accord was made that Delcassé had said to some intimate friends: “Je
+viens de rouler Radolin; il ne me reste plus qu’à rouler l’empereur
+d’Allemagne” (Guibert et Ferrette, _Le conflit franco-allemand en 1905_
+[Paris, 1905], p. 83, quoted in Stuart, _French Foreign Policy from
+Fashoda to Serajevo_, p. 136 n.). On Feb. 21, 1907, Lord Sanderson,
+permanent undersecretary of state for foreign affairs, 1894-1906, wrote
+as follows: “M. Delcassé . . . . ignored Germany entirely when he
+commenced operations in Morocco. The action of France and her demands on
+the Sultan were undoubtedly much exaggerated and misrepresented. But in
+addition there is no doubt that M. Delcassé was steadily pursuing a
+series of manœuvres for the purpose of isolating Germany and weakening
+her alliances. The German Gov[ernmen]t and the German nation are
+extremely sensitive about being ignored or neglected in the discussion
+of important questions, and it is not surprising that on this occasion
+they should have been much exasperated, and determined on inflicting on
+France a severe humiliation. That they also wished to separate us from
+France, to prevent the Agreement from developing into an alliance, and
+to obtain any share they could in the eventual development of Morocco is
+no doubt also true. The methods adopted were characteristic of German
+policy, and as on some other occasions they failed” (memo. by Lord
+Sanderson, Feb. 21, 1907, _B.D._, IV, 421). Whether the German
+government knew the exact terms of the Franco-Spanish agreement is a
+question. Tardieu says that it did know them (_La conf. d’Algés_, p.
+156). Hammann has written, “One may assume that it learned the main
+content” (_Zur Vorgeschichte des Weltkrieges_, p. 200). It also
+suspected that the Moroccan accords contained stipulations for the
+exclusion of Germany from any participation in the territorial division
+of Morocco (_ibid._, p. 201). See also the dispatch from Stumm to Bülow,
+Feb. 20, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 191, No. 7024, and the Emperor’s minute
+thereto: “And the rascals [the Spanish government] will not even admit
+what sort of a pact they have made with the devil [France].” See also
+Veit Valentin, _Deutschlands Aussenpolitik von Bismarcks Abgang bis zum
+Ende des Weltkrieges_ (Berlin, 1921), p. 54; report from Madrid, Dec.
+10, 1904, _Zur europ. Politik_, I, 126 f. However, the German government
+did know the terms of the Franco-Spanish agreement of Sept. 1, 1905, so
+Ojeda of the Spanish foreign office admitted to Cartwright of the
+British embassy (Cartwright to Grey, Jan. 22, 1906, _B.D._, III, 233,
+No. 252). The probability is therefore that it also learned in good time
+the terms of the other secret accords. Failure to mention that knowledge
+or even denials of being informed in the documents is not conclusive
+proof that the secret articles were not known to the German foreign
+office.]
+
+[Footnote 581: William II to Bülow, undated, _G.P._, XX, 263, No. 6564.
+The editors of _G.P._ presume the date of this communication to have
+been March 21; but Bülow’s reply to it was dated March 20. See Bülow to
+William II, March 20, 1905, _ibid._, 264, No. 6565. The Emperor had
+dined at the French embassy on March 17 and had said nothing about his
+proposed visit. Furthermore, just before leaving on his trip he made at
+Bremen one of his half-militaristic, half-pacific speeches which did not
+indicate what was to follow (Schulthess, _Europäischer
+Geschichtskalender 1905_, pp. 67 f.; Ludwig, _Wilhelm der Zweite_, p.
+275; Mévil, _De la Paix de Francfort, etc._, pp. 193 ff.).]
+
+[Footnote 582: Bülow to William II, March 20, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 264 f.,
+No. 6565.]
+
+[Footnote 583: The unexpectedness of this action was shown by the
+remarks made on March 21 by Bernstorff, first secretary of the embassy
+in London, to a reporter of the _Daily Chronicle_. He asserted that
+Germany had only economic interests in Morocco over which it ought not
+to be difficult for France and Germany to agree (Bülow to Metternich,
+March 22, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 268 f., and note, No. 6569).]
+
+[Footnote 584: Bülow to Radolin, March 22, 1905, _ibid._, 267 f., No.
+6568; Flotow to F. O., March 23, 1905, _ibid._, 269, No. 6570; Flotow to
+F. O., March 28, 1905, _ibid._, 278, No. 6578; Bülow to Flotow, March
+28, 1905, _ibid._, 278, No. 6579; Mévil, pp. 197 f.]
+
+[Footnote 585: Memo. by Bülow, March 24, 1905, _G.P._, 271, No. 6573.]
+
+[Footnote 586: Mévil, p. 205; _G.P._, XX, 262 f., n. 266 n., Nos. 6570,
+6584, 6590; _Quest. dipl. et. col._, XIX, 442 ff.; Schulthess, _1905_,
+pp. 78 f.]
+
+[Footnote 587: William II to Bülow, March 28, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 279, No.
+6580.]
+
+[Footnote 588: Tattenbach to F. O., March 29, 1905, _ibid._, 283, No.
+6585; Freiherr von Schoen, _Erlebtes. Beiträge zur politischen
+Geschichte der neuesten Zeit_ (Stuttgart and Berlin, 1921), pp. 19 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 589: See his telegrams from March 26 to March 30, 1905,
+_G.P._, XX, 272 ff., Nos. 6574 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 590: Bülow, II, 209 f.]
+
+[Footnote 591: For a description of the visit see Schoen, pp. 19 ff.;
+Schoen to F. O., March 31, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 285 ff., Nos. 6588 ff.;
+Tardieu, pp. 69 f.]
+
+[Footnote 592: The foregoing is the official version of the speeches
+published in the German press (see _Allgemeine Zeitung_ [Munich], April
+4, 1905). There were various versions of the speeches since the Emperor
+spoke extemporaneously. Schoen on March 31 sent to the foreign office a
+report of William II’s assertions as follows: When Count de Chérisey
+attempted to greet the Emperor in the name of Delcassé in such a way as
+to imply a French predominance in Morocco, William II replied sharply
+that his visit “signified that Germany demanded free trade there and
+full equality with other nations.” When the Count admitted this, the
+Emperor remarked that “he would treat directly with the Sultan as a
+peer, as a free ruler of an independent land, that he would know how to
+assert his just claims and expected that these also be respected by
+France.” Those words crushed the Count. To the Sultan’s representative
+the Emperor spoke as follows: “He regarded the Sultan as the ruler of a
+free and independent Empire, subject to no foreign suzerainty. He
+expected for German trade and commerce the same advantages as for all
+other commercial nations. He would always negotiate with the Sultan
+directly. Reforms which the Sultan planned to introduce ought always to
+be executed within the limits of the customs and views of his people and
+without violation of the precepts of the Koran, in honest administration
+and strengthening of peace and order that would make the best impression
+outside. European customs and usages would not be taken over without
+further consideration. Let the Sultan therein listen carefully to the
+counsel of the great ones of his land” (Schoen to F. O., March 31, 1905,
+_G.P._, XX, 286 f., No. 6589. It was also stated in the press, although
+not in the official version of the speeches, that the Emperor replied to
+the greetings from the German colony at Tangier that that colony “could
+rely on the support of the German Government to prevent any obstacle in
+that free country [Morocco] from hindering the success of its efforts in
+favor of the national commerce” (Quoted in _Quest. dipl. et col._, XIX,
+504). Schoen made no mention of this assertion. Cf. Schoen, pp. 20 f.;
+Mévil, pp. 210 ff.; _B.D._, III, 62 f., Nos. 71 f.; 64, No. 74; Prince
+Louis of Battenberg’s report of a conversation with the Emperor, April
+1, 1905, Newton, _Lord Lansdowne_, pp. 333 f.]
+
+[Footnote 593: William II to Bülow, Aug. 11, 1905, _G.P._, XIX, 497, No.
+6237.]
+
+[Footnote 594: Memo. by Prince Louis of Battenberg, April 1, 1905,
+Newton, p. 333.]
+
+[Footnote 595: Schoen, p. 22.]
+
+[Footnote 596: Mévil, p. 210.]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XII
+
+ THE MOROCCAN CRISIS FROM THE VISIT TO TANGIER TO THE FALL OF DELCASSÉ
+
+ I
+
+
+The visit to Tangier, because of its very unexpectedness, did not at
+first alarm the French, who refused to credit the German Emperor with
+hostile intentions.[597] Better-informed personages in Paris, however,
+interpreted the event more accurately. They were asking seriously
+whether war would ensue and were declaring that “no such critical moment
+has occurred since the Schnäbele affair.” The Austrian Ambassador was
+reminded by the Franco-German press war of the days immediately
+preceding the conflict of 1870.[598]
+
+The French government had been warned by both German and British
+representatives of Germany’s interest in Morocco. As early as November,
+1904, Herr von Kühlmann had declared to the French chargé d’affaires at
+Tangier that Germany had expected France to acquaint her with the new
+situation in Morocco created by the Anglo-French and Franco-Spanish
+accords, but that she had since realized that she was being
+“systematically excluded.” “The Imperial Government is ignorant of all
+the accords made over Morocco and does not consider itself bound in any
+way on that question,” he said. The French chargé d’affaires had not
+regarded these remarks as sufficiently significant to report until the
+following February. Upon direct inquiry in Berlin the French government
+had had them corroborated by the German foreign office.[599] On February
+12, 1905, Sir Arthur Nicolson, British ambassador at Madrid, had
+remarked to his French colleague that “the attitude assumed by the
+German Government in response to the petition of their subjects in
+Morocco was an invitation to the French Government to initiate some
+discussion with a view to obtain their concurrence with the provisions
+of the Convention.”[600] M. Delcassé had not heeded this advice. By
+March 22 he had become uneasy over the German policy, about which he was
+so uncertain.[601] He was determined, however, to maintain intact
+France’s accords with the other Powers and her position in Morocco.[602]
+Ascertaining on the eve of the voyage to Tangier that Great Britain,
+Spain, and Italy would hold loyally to their agreements,[603] he
+declared in the Senate on March 31, the same day on which William II
+spoke at Tangier, that
+
+
+nothing in our Moroccan policy, nothing in our execution of the accords
+of April 8 and October 3, 1904, can explain the movements of the German
+press. . . . . You may legitimately hope that in the western basin of
+the Mediterranean . . . . France will succeed, without ignoring any
+right, without injuring any interest, in assuring her future.[604]
+
+
+The semiofficial French press threatened the formation of a new Dual
+Alliance between France and Great Britain supported by Italy and Spain
+in case Germany attempted to gain any special advantages in
+Morocco.[605] At the same time, M. Delcassé instructed M. Saint-René
+Taillandier, who since March 24 had been making substantial progress in
+the negotiations with the Sultan,[606] to warn that monarch against
+following the proposal of the German press for an international
+conference over the Moroccan question.[607] He also informed the Italian
+government, April 12, that France could not entertain such a
+proposal.[608]
+
+The Emperor’s move nevertheless forced M. Delcassé to open negotiations
+with Germany for an understanding regarding Morocco. From March 28 he
+endeavored indirectly to approach the German government.[609] On April 7
+a threatened interpellation in the Chamber forced him to state publicly
+that France was “ready to dissipate any misunderstanding which . . . .
+may still exist.”[610] Under pressure from the French cabinet[611] as
+well as from public opinion M. Delcassé, while dining at the German
+embassy on April 13, repeated that statement directly to Prince Radolin.
+He denied that M. Saint-René Taillandier had ever claimed before the
+Sultan to have a mandate of Europe. He excused his failure to transmit
+the Anglo-French agreement to the German government; and, while
+admitting that the conversation of March 23, 1904, had been unofficial,
+he declared that his intention had been to show special favor to Germany
+by communicating the contents of the accord to her beforehand. He had
+also believed, he said, that freedom of commerce for all nations had
+been completely safeguarded in that agreement and in the one with
+Spain.[612] Immediately thereafter the French government informally
+asked the British government to “help to convince the Emperor that
+German interests were in no way threatened” in Morocco.[613]
+
+To carry out his policy, M. Delcassé needed the loyal support of all
+France. That he did not have. Political jealousy because of his long
+tenure in office, dislike of his secretiveness, enmity between him and
+M. Rouvier (the premier), hostility because of his defending the Russian
+government in the massacre of January 22, 1905[614]—all these forces of
+opposition were now strengthened by the fact that the Foreign Minister
+had blundered and that, aroused by the fear of complications, France
+sought a victim whose sacrifice might dispel the danger. Quickly
+deserting M. Delcassé, the nation pressed him on too rapidly to take the
+initiative with Germany. As time passed with nothing settled, nothing
+known, the French grew more and more alarmed, until on April 19 the
+Chamber denounced the Foreign Minister for having neglected to consult
+Germany, and demanded information. M. Deschanel declared that the
+Foreign Minister should have heeded Germany’s well-known imperialistic
+ambitions by negotiating with that Power about Morocco. “There are not
+lacking in England people who desire to utilize the French power against
+Germany,” he said. “And there are not lacking in Germany people who will
+try to utilize the French power against England. We should not offer
+ourselves to that play.” M. Tournade accused M. Delcassé of having hoped
+that if he “juggled the question with Germany” and confronted her with a
+_fait accompli_, she would venture no opposition. M. de Pressensé,
+charging him with deliberately having avoided an official notification
+to Germany of the Moroccan accords, asserted: “You have not followed an
+exact conception of the interests of France. Your policy is unworthy of
+a great country.” M. Delafosse, sensing the reason for the German action
+in the Anglo-French entente rather than in Morocco, expressed the
+general demand that “it is necessary to ask Germany what she wishes of
+us.” No one, however, believed that Germany would question France’s
+special position in Morocco.
+
+Although not a voice was raised in his behalf, M. Delcassé refused to
+impart any new intelligence in answer to these accusations and demands.
+If M. Rouvier had not come to his rescue, he would have been repudiated
+by all parties. In defending the Foreign Minister M. Rouvier declared
+that not France but Germany had altered her Moroccan policy since the
+previous year, attributing this change to the defeat of France’s
+ally.[615] The initiative toward conversations with Germany, he said,
+had already been made. “We have closed our ear to no proposal,” he
+avowed; “anything which is in harmony with the formula . . . .: to
+safeguard the honor of our country and to maintain peace, . . . . we are
+ready to consider.” He made the retention of M. Delcassé a cabinet
+question, but he assured the Chamber that in the future he would
+supervise the foreign policy.[616]
+
+Upon receiving this check, M. Delcassé would have resigned had it not
+been for the appeals of President Loubet and of MM. Paul Cambon and
+Barrère, both of whom were in Paris at the time.[617] His policy of
+treating with Germany on an equal footing was checkmated. French public
+opinion had forced an almost complete surrender in the face of the
+German menace. It remained to be seen how far M. Rouvier could yield
+before French desire for peace would conflict with French national
+honor.
+
+
+ II
+
+
+The Emperor’s injudicious assertions at Tangier compelled the German
+foreign office to take some positive action in Morocco instead of
+leaving the initiative to the Sultan. Herr von Holstein contended that
+“a retreat would stand on the same level with Olmütz and cause Fashoda
+to be forgotten.”[618] By April 2 the Chancellor decided upon the
+following policy:[619] first, to continue denying any territorial
+ambitions in Morocco; second, to demand economic equality for all
+nations, the open door “in the widest sense”; third, and this he
+considered Germany’s “trump card,” to advocate calling an international
+conference like that at Madrid in 1880 for deliberating upon the entire
+question of Moroccan reform.[620] Of course no separate negotiations
+with France would be considered.
+
+The Chancellor and Herr von Holstein believed that the proposal for a
+conference would give Germany an unassailable position. Protected by the
+appearance of absolute legality and disinterestedness, they hoped to
+break the ententes and accords between France and the other Powers,
+especially Great Britain, or at least to show that Germany could force
+them to submit the results of their agreements to the consideration of a
+general conference.[621] They did not doubt that the proposal would be
+accepted and that the conference would refuse to turn Morocco over to
+France. For, they argued,
+
+
+in case a conference meets, we are already certain of the diplomatic
+support of America in favor of the open door. . . . . Austria will not
+quarrel with us over Morocco . . . . Russia is busy with herself.[622] .
+. . . The English Government—between Roosevelt and those English groups
+which think as the _Morning Post_, _Manchester Guardian_, and Lord
+Rosebery[623]—will not stir. Spain is of no importance, and also has a
+strong party in favor of the _status quo_. We shall certainly be able to
+hold Italy in order, if necessary by a gentle hint that while we settle
+with France, Austria will perhaps settle the irredentist question. . . .
+. If France refuses the conference, she will put herself in the wrong
+toward all the signatory Powers[624] and thereby will give England,
+Spain, and Italy a probably welcome excuse to withdraw.[625]
+
+
+Immediately after the Emperor’s speeches at Tangier, Herr von Holstein
+proposed advocating a conference in the semiofficial press. The
+Chancellor approved; but Herr Hammann, director of the press bureau in
+the foreign office, objected. Inasmuch as the Emperor and the Chancellor
+had both declared that Germany would next communicate directly with the
+Sultan, he argued, this abrupt change would expose German policy to the
+accusation of unsteadiness. He advised preparing public opinion for a
+conference, for, he maintained, the government had “to combat a much
+stronger aversion to a serious conflict with France and England over
+Morocco in the public than in the press.”[626] On April 7 he predicted a
+“press storm” if the menace of war arose.[627] So, for the time a milder
+note was sounded in the press. The grievances against M. Delcassé, who
+was made personally responsible for Germany’s action,[628] the necessity
+for defending the German economic interests in Morocco, and the intimacy
+of German-American relations were emphasized. Little by little the
+proposal for a conference was brought to the fore.[629]
+
+The main basis for the optimism of the German government was its
+friendship with President Roosevelt. Since the early part of the year
+both the British and the German governments had been endeavoring to win
+the President’s support and to arouse his suspicions by accusing each
+other of aggressive intentions.[630] Needing the support of both to
+effect peace between Russia and Japan, Mr. Roosevelt had refused to
+believe the tales of either. He had diagnosed their trouble as a case of
+“jumpy nerves,” and had tried in February and March, 1905, to bring them
+together in a new triple entente.[631] The German government had
+responded favorably to his suggestion; but the British government,
+taxing the President with being hoodwinked by the Emperor, had replied
+that better relations with that hostile Power were scarcely
+possible.[632] This lack of success with Great Britain, combined with
+mistrust of France, caused the President to draw closer to Germany.[633]
+
+On April 3 the German government confidently asked Mr. Roosevelt to lend
+“moral support” for the maintenance of the _status quo_ in Morocco and
+for the peaceful settlement of the Moroccan difficulty by speaking
+“calmly and academically,” particularly to Great Britain, for the equal
+treatment of all Powers in the Sherifian Empire.[634] Ten days later it
+asked the President to speak to Great Britain in favor of an
+international conference on the Moroccan question.[635] Not delaying for
+a definite reply or heeding the signs of the drawing together of Great
+Britain and France,[636] the German government, on April 9, determined
+to send Count Tattenbach to Fez to combat the efforts of the French
+mission and to win the Sultan’s approval of a conference. The Count had
+telegraphed that this move was essential, since the Sultan was a
+weakling, his advisers incompetent and venal, and since the French were
+otherwise likely to gain the acceptance of their plans of reform.[637]
+
+On the same date (April 9) upon which the German government made this
+decision, it began to sound the other Powers concerning a conference.
+Austria-Hungary and Russia could be excluded from consideration although
+both showed disapproval of Germany’s action.[638] When the Spanish
+government was asked on April 12 to support the proposal for a
+conference, the foreign minister, M. Villa-Urrutia, replied that he
+could accept it only if France and Great Britain did so. He suggested
+that the German desires be fulfilled not by a conference but by an
+exchange of notes and declarations between the Powers.[639]
+
+With Italy the German government was more brusque. While reassuring that
+Power that Germany had no intention of becoming a rival in the
+Mediterranean, Count Bülow demanded under threat of breaking the
+alliance that Italy support the German policy in the Moroccan affair.
+But on April 12 the Italian government, evading a definite position,
+urged a direct settlement of the Franco-German discord. Count Monts,
+German ambassador at Rome, reported that only in case Great Britain
+showed coolness toward France might Germany expect any support from her
+ally, who would otherwise endeavor to remain neutral.[640]
+
+Since the German government thought that Great Britain had relinquished
+her Moroccan interests, it intended to ignore her and deal solely with
+France. On April 19 Count Metternich merely explained to Lord Lansdowne
+the German views in the Moroccan affair without asking for any
+expression of opinion. In this conversation he received the impression
+that the British Foreign Minister disapproved of the German action and
+that, against his desire, he could easily be forced to give France
+diplomatic support.[641]
+
+Without waiting for either the British or the American reply, the German
+government, on April 18, responded to M. Delcassé’s offer “to dissipate
+any misunderstanding” with the suggestion that “the simplest and most
+natural means” of settling the question of Moroccan reform would be to
+bring about “an exchange of ideas between all the signatory Powers” of
+the Convention of Madrid.[642] At the same time, through messages to the
+Sultan the Chancellor sought to prevent him from making any decisions
+before the German mission arrived, and he pressed Count Tattenbach to
+hasten his departure for Fez. Count Bülow realized that if the French
+succeeded in gaining the Sultan’s acceptance of their program of
+reforms, the entire German action would be rendered absurd. In fact,
+until Count Tattenbach could persuade the Sultan to issue an invitation
+for a conference, the latter held the fate of Germany’s policy in his
+hands.[643]
+
+
+ III
+
+
+The German Emperor’s visit to Tangier aroused bitter antagonism in Great
+Britain, where government and people believed that Germany had struck as
+much at Great Britain as at France in an effort to break the Entente
+Cordiale. Alarm over a possible German attack upon the British Isles was
+revived.[644] Public feeling was well expressed by King Edward who, on
+April 15, wrote indignantly to Lord Lansdowne:
+
+
+The Tangier incident was the most mischievous and uncalled for event
+which the German Emperor has ever been engaged in since he came to the
+throne. It was also a political theatrical fiasco, and if he thinks he
+has done himself good in the eyes of the world he is very much mistaken.
+He is no more or less than a political “enfant terrible” and one can
+have no faith in any of his assurances. His own pleasure seems to wish
+to set every country by the ears.[645]
+
+
+The Foreign Secretary’s criticism was also severe.
+
+
+I am afraid that we can hardly regard this Tangier ebullition [he wrote,
+on April 9, to Sir Frank Lascelles] as an isolated incident. There can
+be no doubt that the Kaiser was much annoyed by the Anglo-French
+Agreement, and probably even more so by our refusal to vamp up some
+agreement of the same kind with Germany over the Egyptian question.
+
+We shall, I have little doubt, find that the Kaiser avails himself of
+every opportunity to put spokes in our wheels. . . . .[646]
+
+
+This staunch pro-French sentiment was not concealed. Early in April an
+exchange of visits by the British and French fleets was announced for
+the summer. King Edward had an interview with MM. Loubet and Delcassé on
+April 6 while passing through Paris on his way south.[647] In Berlin at
+the same time Sir Frank Lascelles spoke in private “very disapprovingly”
+of the German action, and strongly opposed the idea of a
+conference.[648] And British public opinion, the true guide of the
+foreign policy, gave entire support to France.[649] So although the
+British government admitted that M. Delcassé had blundered in his
+handling of Germany[650] and although it knew that the secret articles
+of the two Moroccan accords were not in keeping with the public ones, it
+felt obliged both by honor and by interest to help France out of her
+difficulty. Its official attitude was expressed by Lord Lansdowne to the
+Ambassador at Berlin as follows:
+
+
+My impression is that the German Government have really no cause for
+complaint either of us or the French in regard to the Morocco part of
+the Agreement. We made no secret of its existence. It dealt exclusively
+with French and British interests in Morocco, and so far as the other
+Powers were concerned, it provided adequate security for their
+interests, and for the integrity of Morocco itself. What else does the
+Kaiser want?[651]
+
+
+Particularly since British policy aimed at preventing Germany from
+obtaining ports anywhere in the colonial world[652] did the British
+government desire to keep that Power out of Morocco. And, while Sir
+Francis Bertie, British ambassador at Paris, reported the French
+government as “solid on Morocco,” he added the ill-omened statement of
+M. Delcassé, that the German government was “turning him out.”[653] Lord
+Lansdowne did not follow up the French suggestion of intervening in
+Berlin in favor of France for fear of doing more harm than good by
+arousing the Emperor’s resentment.[654] But he did send the British
+Minister at Tangier to Fez to offset the effects of the German
+mission.[655] And on April 22 he instructed Sir Francis Bertie as
+follows:
+
+
+It seems not unlikely that German Government may ask for a port on the
+Moorish coast.
+
+You are authorized to inform Minister for Foreign Affairs that we should
+be prepared to join French Government in offering strong opposition to
+such a proposal and to beg that if question is raised French Government
+will afford us a full opportunity to conferring with them as to steps
+which might be taken in order to meet it.
+
+German attitude in this dispute seems to me most unreasonable having
+regard to M. Delcassé’s attitude and we desire to give him all the
+support we can.
+
+
+On April 25 the Ambassador handed M. Delcassé the following _aide-
+memoire_ (dated April 24):
+
+
+The British Government finds that the conduct of Germany in the Moroccan
+question is most unreasonable in view of M. Delcassé’s attitude, and it
+desires to give to His Excellency all the support in its power. It seems
+not improbable that the German Government may ask for a port on the
+Moroccan coast. In that event the British Government would be willing to
+join the French Government in offering strong opposition to such a
+proposal, and it asks M. Delcassé, in case the question is raised, to
+give to the British Government full opportunity to concert with the
+French Government upon the measures which might be taken to meet that
+demand.[656]
+
+
+By inverting the order of the sentences, the Ambassador gave to Lord
+Lansdowne’s communication a force and a meaning which were originally
+lacking. He changed the emphasis from that of helping France to oppose
+the German acquisition of a port to that of helping her to oppose
+Germany in the whole Moroccan question. The one document limited the
+scope of the support and stressed the point of conferring beforehand as
+well as that of offering strong opposition. The other document began
+with a blanket offer of aid, and then used the present instance as one
+example of that offer. Moreover, the statement “to concert with the
+French Government upon the measures which might be taken to meet that
+demand” was stronger than the one used by Lord Lansdowne, “of conferring
+with them as to steps which might be taken in order to meet it.” Sir
+Francis Bertie’s _aide-memoire_ was so colored by his own very pro-
+French feeling that it did not accurately reproduce his chief’s
+proposal.
+
+
+ IV
+
+
+M. Delcassé was “most grateful” for this support. He denied that Germany
+had made any such request, although he remarked that some years ago
+Count Hatzfeldt had approached the British government on the subject. He
+promised to communicate with the latter if he heard of any German
+aspirations for a port and to warn the Sultan against giving any
+concession to Germany.[657] Thus, by virtue of the British offer, the
+French Foreign Minister was able to hold to his policy in spite of
+Germany’s refusal to consider his overture and in spite of his
+unpopularity with the French Parliament. On May 2, he again attempted to
+approach the German government, offering through M. Luzzati, Italian
+minister of finance, to give “any satisfaction desired by Germany in
+order to settle the Moroccan question in a way which would not wound
+French honor too deeply.”[658] At the same time he continued the French
+action at Fez. When on April 26 the Sultan, emboldened by the German
+intervention, requested an international guaranty of the proposed
+Franco-Moroccan agreement over military reforms, M. Delcassé immediately
+refused. “You may declare peremptorily to Ben Sliman,” he instructed the
+French Minister on May 3, “that there can no more be intermediate Powers
+between France and Morocco than there are intermediate countries between
+Morocco and Algeria.”[659]
+
+The Foreign Minister’s policy was disapproved by the French Premier, who
+since April 19 had assumed general control over foreign affairs. Whereas
+M. Delcassé, a skilled diplomat, was secretive, pro-British, and anti-
+German, the inexperienced M. Rouvier, a business man who sought to
+employ business methods in the conduct of foreign relations, suspected
+Great Britain of attempting to use France as a cat’s-paw against
+Germany. Realizing that the British navy “did not have wheels,” M.
+Rouvier favored treating Great Britain and Germany alike.[660] When the
+German government, instead of replying to M. Delcassé’s proposal of
+April 13, prepared to send a mission to Fez and the German newspapers
+advocated an international conference on the Moroccan affair, M. Rouvier
+intervened personally in an effort to reach a settlement.
+
+On April 26, while Prince Radolin’s guest at dinner, the Premier brought
+up the Moroccan question. Protesting that the French really preferred
+the Germans to the English, he intimated that he appreciated Germany’s
+defense of her Moroccan interests, and said: “We will do everything
+possible and will give every desired explanation and satisfaction.”
+Denying that France was seeking to change the _status quo_, he upheld
+her right to suppress the anarchy in Morocco along the Algerian
+frontier. He offered to drop the thirty-year limitation to freedom of
+commerce, which, he added, was in fact already invalidated by the
+existing treaties between Morocco and other states. At the close of the
+conversation he exclaimed passionately: “It is impossible, it would be
+criminal for two states that are intended to agree and to approach each
+other to become embroiled, and especially over Morocco!” The Ambassador
+coldly responded that a collective settlement of the question seemed to
+him the simplest solution.[661]
+
+On the following day M. Rouvier proposed indirectly to Prince Radolin a
+settlement of the Moroccan problem by an exchange of notes between
+France and the other Powers. If the majority of the Powers opposed the
+French program of reform, it would not be carried out. M. Rouvier had no
+objection to Count Tattenbach’s making new commercial treaties with
+Morocco. But he did ask that, in case Germany were satisfied by his
+offer, the Emperor, on his return from the Mediterranean, should
+announce publicly the forthcoming settlement of the Franco-German
+dispute.[662]
+
+When these offers were made, the anxiety of the German government was
+relieved. To be sure, on April 25, Prince Radolin heard from a “usually
+well-informed person just returned from England” that King Edward would,
+on his way home from the South, declare officially to the French
+government that “Great Britain was ready to support the French policy in
+Morocco and the execution of the Anglo-French accord with her whole
+power.”[663] But at the same time the German government learned
+definitely that the Sultan had made no final promises to the French and
+that he had agreed to postpone all decisions until the arrival of Count
+Tattenbach.[664] Equally satisfactory, the answer from Washington
+arrived.
+
+As the President had been absent on a hunting trip in Colorado, he had
+not replied until April 20, when he had explained his policy to Mr.
+Taft, acting secretary of state, as follows:
+
+
+I do not feel that as a Government we should interfere in the Morocco
+matter. We have other fish to fry and we have no real interest in
+Morocco. . . . .
+
+At the same time if I can find out what Germany wants I shall be glad to
+oblige her if possible, and I am sincerely anxious to bring about a
+better state of feeling between England and Germany. Each nation is
+working itself up to a condition of desperate hatred of the other; each
+from sheer fear of the other. The Kaiser is dead sure that England
+intends to attack him. The English Government and a large share of the
+English people are equally sure that Germany intends to attack England.
+Now, in my view this action of Germany in embroiling herself with France
+over Morocco is positive proof that she has not the slightest intention
+of attacking England. . . . . I do not wish to suggest anything whatever
+as to England’s attitude in Morocco, but if we can find out that
+attitude with propriety and inform the Kaiser of it, I shall be glad to
+do so. . . . . If we find that it will make the English suspicious—that
+is, will make them think we are acting as decoy ducks for Germany—why,
+we shall have to drop the business. . . . . I should advise your being
+absolutely frank with both Speck [von Sternburg] and the British people.
+. . . . Remember . . . . that both parties are very suspicious. You
+remember the King’s message to me through Harry White and his earnest
+warning to me that I should remember that England was our real friend
+and that Germany was only a make-believe friend. In just the same way
+the Germans are always insisting that England is really on the point of
+entering into a general coalition which would practically be inimical to
+us—an act which apart from moral considerations I regard the British
+Government as altogether too flabby to venture upon.
+
+
+In a letter to the German Ambassador on the same date, Mr. Roosevelt had
+reiterated that the United States had no direct interest in Morocco, had
+offered to serve as mediator between Germany and Great Britain and to
+advise the British “to arrive at an understanding over Morocco and to
+work in harmony” with Germany.[665]
+
+The German Chancellor regarded this statement as “satisfactory to a high
+degree.”[666] On April 27 he instructed Prince Radolin to uphold the
+project for a collective settlement and to postpone further negotiations
+with the French government until Count Tattenbach could send exact
+information from Fez concerning the actions of the French Minister.[667]
+In other words, he put the French off until the Count could block their
+efforts in Fez and secure the Sultan’s acceptance of a conference.
+Otherwise, he feared, M. Delcassé might try to break the Moroccan
+resistance by intimating to the Sultan that his supposed friend,
+Germany, was now deserting him for a direct understanding with
+France.[668]
+
+This hazardous policy was not approved by either Prince Radolin or Count
+Tattenbach. The former advised his chief to accept M. Delcassé’s offer
+of April 13.[669] The Count also expressed his preference for a direct
+agreement with France. “In my opinion,” he wrote to the Chancellor on
+April 29,
+
+
+the condition for a separate understanding with France would first be
+given if the other Powers reject the idea of a conference and the Sultan
+also acts unreliably and declines to heed our advice and wishes,—as is
+to be expected. In this case we must receive Southern Morocco as our
+sphere of influence. . . . . We must therefore decide whether we wish .
+. . . to fight a long diplomatic battle of doubtful issue against
+France, either through supporting the Sultan with money and weapons or
+through relying upon the conservative, fanatically anti-French party in
+Morocco, or whether we wish to gain through an understanding with France
+a substantial pledge for a large-scale African colonial policy which
+aims at the acquisition of all the French African possessions.[670]
+
+
+The Chancellor’s reply to Count Tattenbach contained the explanation for
+Germany’s proposal of a conference. He wrote:
+
+
+Your last idea guided Germany’s Moroccan policy in the past and under
+proper circumstances can guide it again in the future if you keep the
+future free. For the present, the German policy must be governed by the
+fact that His Majesty the Emperor . . . . declared to the King of Spain
+that he has enough African possessions and wishes no territory in
+Morocco but only the maintenance of commercial freedom. This declaration
+naturally does not bind us forever; but in the year which has passed
+since those remarks, the effect of the Southwest African events has been
+of a nature to increase the antagonism to colonial acquisitions by
+military force as well with His Majesty as with a great part of the
+German people. Even if, therefore, France were inclined to permit us to
+conquer a part of Morocco, we would for the present perhaps not be in a
+position to take advantage of this overture. In reality, we are
+confronted with the alternative either of relinquishing Morocco now to
+France without adequate compensation to Germany or of working for the
+extension of life of the Sherifian Empire in the expectation of a turn
+of events favorable to us. Thus, I perceive your important task to be in
+holding the future free for the profit of German interests. I sum it up
+in stating that you should bring the Sultan to declare that he could
+consider the French demands only if they were advised by a conference of
+all the signatory Powers. The reference to the conference I consider for
+the Sultan the easiest and for us the most favorable form of refusal.
+That the Sultan refuse the French demands is naturally the main
+thing.[671]
+
+
+This frank document furnished the key to the German refusal of the
+French offers and to the persistent demands for a conference. Count
+Bülow’s embarrassment was caused by the Emperor’s renunciations at Vigo
+and even more by the temporary apathy if not antagonism of the German
+people toward further colonial acquisition. Pursuing an objective
+undesired by German public opinion, the Chancellor was still bent on
+acquiring a share in Morocco or compensation elsewhere. To delay and
+postpone, to “hold the future free” until public opinion veered into a
+more chauvinistic channel, to relieve Germany of the restrictions
+imposed by the Emperor’s assertions, Count Bülow thought that a
+conference was the best means. The continuation of the crisis was a
+logical result of this ambition.
+
+On the same day upon which Count Bülow penned this dispatch M. Rouvier
+made another offer. He was led to this move by the increasing excitement
+in France. The lack of response from Germany and the uncertainty about
+her objective, the publication of an article in the _Kreuzzeitung_ on
+April 26 and of one in _Matin_ on the next day hinting at war,[672]
+caused a panic on the Paris stock exchange on April 27.[673] M. Bihourd
+telegraphed on April 28 of the presence of “bellicose counselors” in the
+_entourage_ of the Emperor who would have an excellent opportunity “to
+advocate the present time as propitious for war against France.”[674] So
+in a conversation with Prince Radolin on April 30 M. Rouvier indorsed
+the Emperor’s assertions at Tangier and the principles of the Convention
+of Madrid, except with respect to the Algero-Moroccan frontier. He
+offered to “make an agreement similar to the Anglo-French one, where all
+doubtful points, including Morocco, would be settled.” The Ambassador
+made no reply.[675]
+
+The next day an intermediary explained to Prince Radolin that the
+Premier regarded a conference as hardly acceptable since France had
+engaged herself so fully in the Moroccan affair. M. Rouvier would be
+willing, however, to include in a general settlement such questions as
+those of boundaries in Africa and the Bagdad Railway. In return, the two
+governments should agree upon a mode of adjusting the Moroccan affair
+directly with the Powers. The German government refused the offer.[676]
+
+On May 1 King Edward VII arrived in Paris where he remained for four
+days. Strongly supporting M. Delcassé’s views, he assured the French
+government that Germany would not dare a war; in case of conflict, he
+said, France could rely on British support.[677] To the German
+Ambassador he praised the French for seeking a direct settlement of the
+Moroccan difficulty, abruptly demanding, “Why does not Berlin reply to
+the last French overture?”[678] His interference, however, was of no
+avail. In fact, French public opinion, suspecting the King and British
+press of attempting to estrange France and Germany, was more than ever
+anxious for an agreement with Germany.[679]
+
+Distressed by refusals and silence from the German government and
+fearful of war, M. Rouvier sought to restore connections with Germany by
+sending his friend, M. Betzold, to Berlin to interview Herr von
+Holstein, and by persuading Baron Eckardstein, then living privately in
+England, to lay the French proposals directly before Count Bülow and the
+Emperor at Karlsruhe. These men were to inform the German officials that
+the French cabinet, disapproving of M. Delcassé’s secretiveness, hoped
+to bring about the Minister’s downfall over some domestic difficulty in
+the next three or four weeks. They were to state that while in case of
+war the French Government knew for a certainty that Great Britain would
+interfere in France’s favor, the cabinet, except M. Delcassé, preferred
+not to seek this support. As an inducement for a direct settlement, the
+two emissaries were to offer Germany “a coaling station and eventually
+also a strip of land on the Atlantic coast of Morocco.” They were
+especially to urge the Emperor against making any inflammatory speeches
+on his return from the Mediterranean.[680]
+
+Neither M. Betzold nor Baron Eckardstein had the least success. While
+Herr von Holstein assured M. Betzold on May 2 of Germany’s desire for
+good relations with France, he observed that for the time he saw no
+possibility of making a direct agreement with her. For, even apart from
+Germany’s official declaration in favor of a collective settlement of
+the Moroccan question, the German government did not trust M. Delcassé
+sufficiently to negotiate with France. That Minister’s policy toward
+Germany, he asserted, had been “dishonest,” “hostile,” “insidious,” and
+in this affair “disrespectful.” “Slow tempo, temporary truce, and
+removal of Delcassé would be the next,” he concluded. In Karlsruhe, on
+May 5, Count Bülow rebuffed Baron Eckardstein with the bold assertion:
+“The English inciting does not impress us. In case of a conflict the
+game would be played between Germany and France. . . . . We are in a
+position to await further developments with composure.” The Baron was
+not allowed to see William II at all.[681]
+
+Thus every offer for a direct settlement was refused.[682] Indeed, the
+German government even suggested to M. Rouvier on May 7 that France take
+the initiative in calling a conference, arguing that “the advantage of a
+conference lies in that it can have no positive results. It will neither
+divide Morocco nor check her continuing decay. It will fulfil its object
+in removing the danger of an acute conflict, at the same time holding
+the future open.”[683]
+
+M. Rouvier of course would not consider the suggestion. Nor was he any
+longer so willing to eliminate M. Delcassé. On May 8 he informed the
+German government through M. Betzold that while he had been unable to
+convince the Foreign Minister of the faults of his policy, the latter
+was needed in the work of mediating between Russia and Japan. It might,
+therefore, take weeks or even months to achieve his dismissal. M.
+Rouvier hoped, said M. Betzold, to settle the Moroccan and other
+difficulties with Germany after Count Tattenbach convinced himself of
+the French Minister’s proper conduct at Fez and after M. Delcassé had
+been eliminated.[684]
+
+More unfortunate words could hardly have been chosen. The German
+government was opposed to an early peace between the warring
+Powers,[685] and its mistrust of M. Delcassé was increased by his
+continued justification of his policy. Since French public opinion had
+repudiated the Minister, since M. Rouvier, known to be weak and easily
+influenced, had practically offered the Minister’s head, the German
+government determined to press the frightened and pacifically inclined
+French Premier until the objectionable Foreign Minister was overthrown.
+To that end, on May 16, Prince Radolin announced to M. Rouvier “that the
+prerequisite for the _rapprochement_ desired by him [M. Rouvier] is for
+us [Germany] to have full trust in the foreign policy of France. . . . .
+After what has happened, this trust is lacking.” The Premier replied, “I
+understand you fully. Leave it to me.” But through M. Betzold he urged
+the German government to wait until he could accomplish the act by some
+internal crisis.[686]
+
+Meanwhile, the German government was pressing Spain, Italy, and the
+United States for support. Early in May Herr von Radowitz warned the
+Spanish government against sending a mission to Fez at that time, and
+remarked that “it would be wise for Spain not to intervene in the
+present Moorish difficulties, and that it was to her interest to be on
+friendly terms with Germany, who could be of greater assistance to her
+than any other Power.”[687] At the same time Count Monts in Rome was
+using “menacing language,” hinting at “the possibility of war.”[688] In
+both places this talk made a deep impression.
+
+To President Roosevelt the German government asserted that, although
+certain voices had been raised in France in favor of a conference, Great
+Britain still resisted the project. It asked the President to inform the
+British government that its attitude justified the suspicion that “in
+the accord with France they [the British] had wished to dispose not only
+of English rights but also of the rights of the other signatory Powers.”
+The German government further informed Mr. Roosevelt that if the
+proposal for a conference became hopeless, it would then think of its
+interests alone and would be forced to choose “between the possibility
+of a conflict with France and the consideration of conditions which
+France might perhaps propose to avoid a conflict.”[689]
+
+Criticizing sharply the British hostility to the conference, Mr.
+Roosevelt promised to repeat his advice to the British government to
+settle its differences with Germany. Upon doing so he was again accused
+by the British leaders of being under German influence. He stoutly
+denied this accusation, writing to Senator Lodge, then in England, on
+May 15, as follows:
+
+
+It always amuses me to find that the English think that I am under the
+influence of the Kaiser. The heavy witted creatures do not understand
+that nothing would persuade me to follow the lead of or enter into close
+alliance with a man who is so jumpy, so little capable of continuity of
+action, and therefore, so little capable of being loyal to his friends
+or steadfastly hostile to an enemy. Undoubtedly with Russia weakened
+Germany feels it can be fairly insolent within the borders of Europe. I
+intend to do my best to keep on good terms with Germany, as with all
+other nations, and so far as I can to keep them on good terms with one
+another; and I shall be friendly to the Kaiser as I am friendly to every
+one. But as for his having any special influence with me, the thought is
+absurd.[690]
+
+
+Nevertheless, the British government rejected his advice. On May 19 Mr.
+Roosevelt had to report to Baron Sternburg that “the British Government
+had given him to understand that it did not wish better relations with
+Germany,” and that “it had even hinted broadly to the secretary of state
+that Great Britain could take care of her affairs alone.” He could not
+do more, he said, without exposing himself to an incivility.[691] The
+German government was well pleased with the result, however, for it
+placed Mr. Roosevelt on the German side.
+
+On May 13 Count Tattenbach arrived in Fez. He found that the French
+party was still strong, with some of the Moroccan ministers bought over
+to that side. He accomplished his object with some difficulty. He
+reported immediately that the Sultan himself affirmed the accusation
+against the French Minister of having claimed to enjoy a mandate of
+Europe.[692] A few days later the Count telegraphed that upon his
+arrival the French Minister, under instructions from M. Delcassé, had
+issued a veiled threat of violence against Morocco if the Sultan agreed
+to a conference.[693] Upon receiving these dispatches Count Bülow
+immediately warned M. Rouvier against M. Delcassé’s “stormy and violent
+. . . . Moroccan policy.”[694] As that Minister still remained in
+office, the Chancellor instructed Herr von Miquel, councilor at the
+German embassy in Paris, to inform M. Rouvier amicably but firmly that
+the Foreign Minister would have to go, that Franco-German relations
+would not improve as long as he remained in office. Indeed, if M.
+Delcassé’s anti-German and bellicose policy became known to the German
+people, he was to state, it would have an effect for which Count Bülow
+refused to be responsible. “A change in the present situation is above
+all to be made possible by a change in the direction of the French
+foreign policy.”
+
+When Herr von Miquel carried out these instructions on May 30, the
+Premier realized the necessity for eliminating the Foreign Minister. In
+his despair he cried: “I cannot cause M. Delcassé to fall because
+Germany frowns. I would be reproached always . . . . always.”[695] The
+German pressure, however, did not cease. In a telegram on May 25 Count
+Tattenbach reported French assertions to the Moroccans that in the face
+of the united action of the Mediterranean Powers, “who would never
+suffer an interference by Germany in Mediterranean questions,” Germany
+would desert the Sultan. In sending this report to Rome, on May 31, the
+German Chancellor requested the Italian government to favor publicly the
+collective settlement of the Moroccan question. “No matter what turn
+Moroccan affairs take, Germany will follow up the consequences of the
+advice which His Majesty sent to the Sultan,” he wrote. “Thus the
+possibility that the Sultan will remain isolated in this difficulty need
+not be considered.” The Italian Foreign Minister immediately denied
+France’s right to speak of a common policy of the Mediterranean Powers,
+and, as Count Bülow probably intended, he passed on the German warning
+to the French government.[696]
+
+On May 28 Count Tattenbach telegraphed the Sultan’s official rejection
+of the French proposals and his approval of an international
+conference.[697] Thereupon, through M. Betzold, the Chancellor warned
+the French Premier, June 1, that in as much as the Sultan had accepted
+the German point of view, Germany “would follow up the consequences if
+France continued the policy of intimidation and violence hitherto
+pursued by M. Delcassé.”[698] On June 3 Prince Radolin described the
+situation to M. Dupuy, an intimate friend of M. Rouvier’s, as “very
+serious.”[699] Thus the German government struck blow after blow to
+force an immediate dismissal of the French Foreign Minister.[700]
+
+On the French side, M. Delcassé remained as adamantine as the Germans.
+Fearing an intention on the part of Germany to force his dismissal,
+hearing of Germany’s pressure on Spain and Italy and of bellicose talk
+by the German Ambassador at Rome,[701] he made a bid on May 17 for
+British support. On that date M. Cambon apprised Lord Lansdowne of
+Germany’s endeavor to arouse discord between Great Britain and France
+“all over the world.” Although he did not regard the relations with
+Germany as “profoundly dangerous,” he pictured them as serious enough to
+cause him “much preoccupation.”
+
+Lord Lansdowne wished to lend the pro-British Foreign Minister all
+possible support. Late in April, for the sake of France and the Entente
+Cordiale, he had run the risk of antagonizing President Roosevelt by
+instructing the British Ambassador in Washington not to give him an
+opportunity to mediate between Great Britain and Germany. He realized
+that the President’s interference encouraged Germany and worked to the
+detriment of France and Great Britain. He had therefore denied to the
+President that there was any “subject of dispute” between Great Britain
+and Germany, and had expressed his inability to see “why any
+international complication should be created [over Morocco], unless
+German Gov[ernmen]t is determined to take advantage of what was at most
+a diplomatic oversight in order to make mischief or to disturb the
+_status quo_, e.g. . . . ., by demanding cession of a Moorish
+port.”[702] But Lord Lansdowne also sought to correct any erroneous
+impression which Sir Francis Bertie’s _aide-memoire_ of April 25 may
+have made. Lord Lansdowne said to M. Cambon:
+
+
+The moral . . . . seemed to me to be that our two Governments should
+continue to treat one another with the most absolute confidence, should
+keep one another fully informed of everything which came to their
+knowledge, and should, so far as possible, discuss in advance any
+contingencies by which they might in the course of events find
+themselves confronted. As an instance of our readiness to enter into
+such timely discussions, I reminded H[is] E[xcellency] of the
+communication which had recently been made to the French Gov[ernmen]t by
+you [Sir Francis Bertie] at a moment when an idea prevailed that Germany
+might be on the point of demanding the cession of a Moorish Port.[703]
+
+
+To avoid all misunderstanding this communication was put in writing in
+an exchange of notes between the British Foreign Secretary and M. Cambon
+on May 24-25. When the former perceived that M. Cambon still interpreted
+the British policy in the light of Sir Francis Bertie’s _aide-
+memoire_,[704] he reiterated his correcting statement as follows:
+
+
+I do not know that this account [of their conversation of May 17]
+differs from that which you have given to M. Delcassé, but I am not sure
+that I succeeded in making quite clear to you our desire that there
+should be full and confidential discussion between the two
+Gov[ernmen]ts, not so much in consequence of some acts of unprovoked
+aggression on the part of another Power, as in anticipation of any
+complications to be apprehended during the somewhat anxious period
+through which we are at present passing.[705]
+
+
+At some time in this crisis, the British fleet was commanded to be “in
+readiness to make a descent on the German coast at short notice,”[706]
+and conversations were begun between the French and British military and
+naval officers looking toward active co-operation in case of war.[707]
+
+When news arrived of the Sultan’s proposal for a conference, M. Delcassé
+opposed it vigorously. At his instigation the British government on June
+5 ordered Mr. Lowther, who had just arrived in Fez, to advise the Sultan
+against the idea and to refuse the invitation.[708] The French Minister
+also reported Mr. Taft’s remark that the American government would
+probably not be favorably disposed toward a conference. Thereupon Lord
+Lansdowne on June 5 added his support in trying to convince the American
+government that “the proposal was unsound and should not be
+entertained.”[709] To bring Spain into closer intimacy with the Entente
+Cordiale, the British Foreign Secretary offered early in June to effect
+an understanding with her over the Spanish interests in the
+Mediterranean and elsewhere.[710]
+
+In spite of Lord Lansdowne’s correcting statements about the British
+policy, M. Delcassé apparently continued to interpret the British
+communication of May 17 in the sense of Sir Francis Bertie’s _aide-
+memoire_ of April 25. He was impressed by the practical identity of that
+communication with the political clauses of the Franco-Russian
+alliance.[711] Reassured by the British support and by the adverse
+attitude of the British, Spanish, and American governments toward the
+project of a conference, and believing with the British that Germany was
+bluffing, he was in no mood to recede. M. Rouvier, who was receiving all
+the German threats, took a different view of the situation. With some of
+the other members of the cabinet, he prepared for the retirement of the
+offending Minister.[712] During the visit of the King of Spain to Paris,
+May 30-June 4, little could be done. But by June 3 M. Delcassé’s
+resignation was anticipated in parliamentary circles.[713] On June 5 the
+Chamber was thrown into excitement bordering on panic by the rumor of a
+report from M. Barrère at Rome that if an Anglo-French alliance were
+concluded Germany would attack France.[714] On the same day M. Rouvier
+explained the gravity of the situation to President Loubet;[715] on June
+6 he laid his controversy with M. Delcassé before the cabinet.
+
+At that meeting, although well aware of his isolation, M. Delcassé
+valiantly defended his policy of the past seven years, a policy which he
+declared had been opposed by Germany alone.[716] He claimed that in a
+very recent exchange of notes, one of which he read, France had received
+from Great Britain assurance of support in case of a German attack.
+Asserting the possibility of a formal alliance with Great Britain, he
+urged acceptance of the British offer.[717] He proposed that the French,
+British, and Spanish governments should address identical notes to the
+Sultan declining the conference. He assured the cabinet that Germany
+confronted by this Anglo-French-Spanish opposition with Italy neutral
+would not fight. But M. Rouvier declared that the German government had
+threatened war if France accepted the British offers. Turning to the
+ministers of war and of navy, he asked if France were prepared for that
+contingency. They both replied emphatically “No.” As M. Delcassé was not
+supported by a single minister, he resigned, and M. Rouvier took over
+his position. Before leaving M. Delcassé prophetically warned the
+cabinet that after this abdication before the demands of Germany, that
+Power would become “more insolent and more exacting than ever”; it had
+not opposed his person, he said, but rather the French policy of
+accords. He declared that the cabinet’s pusillanimity would give rise to
+new dangers.[718]
+
+French public opinion was almost unanimous in its approval of M.
+Delcassé’s downfall. This approbation was noted by Herr von Flotow,
+first secretary of the German embassy in Paris, who on June 7 reported
+to his government as follows:
+
+
+The history of the downfall of M. Delcassé shows that without a doubt
+there is a latent under-current in France which wishes . . . . a
+satisfactory understanding with Germany. It is after all significant
+that in the entire press of all parties there is hardly a paper which
+does not censure the anti-German policy of M. Delcassé. The second
+interesting point in the history of the past few days is the fact that
+in spite of the continued and almost importunate offers of English aid,
+. . . . French public opinion has never shown a real inclination to
+accept this support. Wherever one has opportunity here . . . . to
+observe public feeling, one meets the view that England is only
+endeavoring to engage the French power for her differences with Germany,
+and that in case of a crisis France would have to pull the English
+chestnuts out of the German fire.[719]
+
+
+Great Britain was disgusted. The British government had made strenuous
+endeavor to save M. Delcassé, for it was certain of his loyalty to the
+entente, whereas it was dubious of the more pro-German M. Rouvier. It
+had intimated its willingness to oppose by force the German
+aggression;[720] but so far had met with no encouragement.
+
+
+Delcassé’s dismissal or resignation under pressure from the German
+Government [stated Mr. Balfour to King Edward on June 8] displayed a
+weakness on the part of France which indicated that she could not at
+present be counted on as an effective force in international politics.
+She could no longer be trusted not to yield to threats at the crucial
+moment of a negotiation. If, therefore, Germany is really desirous of
+obtaining a port on the coast of Morocco, and if such a proceeding be a
+menace to our interests, it must be to other means than French
+assistance that we must look for our protection.[721]
+
+
+In spite of M. Rouvier’s public assertion, June 6, that his policy
+toward the Anglo-French understanding would remain the same as
+before,[722] the Entente Cordiale had received a hard blow.
+
+While expressing satisfaction that France had repudiated the anti-German
+Minister, the German press, under official guidance,[723] kept its
+discussion of the affair within the bounds of propriety. But German
+obtuseness to the feelings of other nations was manifested when on the
+day of M. Delcassé’s fall the German Emperor made Count Bülow a prince.
+
+Thus, the first period of the crisis was closed. Germany had gained her
+objective in winning the Sultan’s acceptance of the project of a
+conference and in overthrowing M. Delcassé. While playing with war, the
+German government had had no desire to start one, and, gauging correctly
+French sentiment toward M. Delcassé and war, it had achieved success in
+Paris merely by a liberal use of threats. In the Moroccan affair the
+German foreign office had reached the peak of its power. But it had
+aroused so many complications that the crisis continued as acutely as
+before.
+
+
+[Footnote 597: _Quest. dipl. et col._, XIX, 516.]
+
+[Footnote 598: Radolin to F. O., April 9, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 317, No.
+6612; Radolin to Bülow, April 14, 1905, _ibid._, 330 ff., No. 6622.
+After having talked with President Loubet early in April, Edward VII
+wrote to Lansdowne as follows: “President Loubet was most amiable . . .
+. but I could see from his manner that he considers the German conduct
+at Tangier, if not a direct menace to France, at any rate a covert
+insult” (Lee, _King Edward VII_, II, 341). The Schnäbele affair brought
+France and Germany almost to war in 1887.]
+
+[Footnote 599: Kühlmann to Bülow, Nov. 9, 1904, _G.P._, XX, 232 ff., No.
+6536; Chérisey to Delcassé, Feb. 11, 1905, _L.j., 1901-5_, 196, No. 225;
+Delcassé to Bihourd, Feb. 14, 1905, _ibid._, 196 f., No. 226; Bihourd to
+Delcassé, Feb. 15, 1905, _ibid._, 197 f., No. 227; Lowther to Lansdowne,
+April 26, 1905, _B.D._, III, 67, No. 81.]
+
+[Footnote 600: Nicolson to Lansdowne, D. Feb. 12, 1905, R. March 4,
+1905, _B.D._, III, 59, No. 66.]
+
+[Footnote 601: Bertie to Lansdowne, March 22, 1905, _ibid._, 60, No. 67.
+For the uncertainty about the Emperor’s proposed action see Lascelles to
+Lansdowne, March 23, 1905, _ibid._, 61, No. 69; Nicolson to Lansdowne,
+March 23, 1905, _ibid._, 62, No. 70.]
+
+[Footnote 602: Delcassé stated to Bertie, June 10, that “his policy had
+been to be ready to make commercial concessions to Germany if she were
+willing to discuss with the French Government the question of Morocco,
+but not to yield anything politically or territorially” (Bertie to
+Lansdowne, June 10, 1905, _ibid._, 78, No. 96).]
+
+[Footnote 603: Mévil, _De la Paix de Francfort, etc._, pp. 206 f., 231;
+Imperial Foreign Office, _Reports of the Belgian Representatives in
+Berlin, London, and Paris to the Minister of Foreign Affairs in
+Brussels, 1905-1914. European Politics during the Decade before the War
+as Described by the Belgian Diplomatists_ (. . . ., 1915), No. 3
+(hereafter cited as _Belg. Docs., 1905-1914_); _Quest. dipl. et col._,
+XIX, 517; Henry Wickham Steed, _Through Thirty Years, 1892-1922: A
+Personal Narrative_ (London, 1924), I, 229. Delcassé also made strenuous
+efforts during the succeeding weeks to mediate peace between Japan and
+Russia so that the latter Power could resume its obligations as France’s
+ally. See Radolin to F. O., April 27, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 345, No. 6635;
+Lansdowne to MacDonald, April 19, 1905, _B.D._, IV, 76 f., No. 68;
+Dennett, _Roosevelt and the Russo-Japanese War_, pp. 176 f.]
+
+[Footnote 604: _Journal officiel, Debats parlem._ (Sénat, March 31,
+1905), pp. 540 f.]
+
+[Footnote 605: Articles in _Temps_ of April 3, and in the _Dépêche de
+Toulouse_ of April 10. Mévil, the official apologist for Delcassé,
+asserts that the latter article was based on the “best” information (pp.
+218 ff.).]
+
+[Footnote 606: By April 13 the Sultan had expressed his general approval
+of the French proposals, and the details for military reorganization in
+six of the Moroccan towns were ready for final formulation and signature
+(Mévil, p. 200 n.; Vassel to Tattenbach, April 21, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 339
+ff., No. 6631; and the various dispatches from Saint-René Taillandier to
+Delcassé during Feb., March, April, 1905, in _L.j., 1901-5_, Nos.
+228-31, 233, 240, 243, 248, 266).]
+
+[Footnote 607: Delcassé instructed the Minister to make the following
+statement to the Sultan: “We cannot conceive that, changing from the way
+of accords which he [the Sultan] has followed for several years, he will
+decide to assume an attitude which will oblige us to consider strict
+right alone as the basis of our relation with him” (Delcassé to Saint-
+René Taillandier, April 9, 1905, _ibid._, 208, No. 239).]
+
+[Footnote 608: Egerton to Lansdowne, April 12, 1905, _B.D._, III, 66,
+No. 78. The French government was afraid that Spain would not loyally
+uphold their agreement if some other Power intervened in Morocco
+(Nicolson to Lansdowne, Feb. 12, 1905, _ibid._, 59, No. 66). But with M.
+Villa-Urrutia at the foreign office, Spain remained entirely on the
+French side (Nicolson to Lansdowne, April 14, 1905, _ibid._, 66, No.
+79).]
+
+[Footnote 609: On March 22 Bihourd advised Delcassé to “establish by an
+exchange of notes the bearing of the Anglo-French and Franco-Spanish
+accords on the commercial and industrial interests of Germany,” adding
+that “until then we shall remain under the menace, very clearly
+formulated by the German press, of some inopportune surprise” (Bihourd
+to Delcassé, March 22, 1905, _L.j., 1901-5_, 202 f., No. 232). On March
+28 an article by André Tardieu, a journalist with close governmental
+connections, stated that the French Foreign Minister would give
+satisfaction to Germany if she wished it on the subject of Morocco,
+“provided it is a question solely of commercial interests” (Flotow to F.
+O., March 28, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 282 f., No. 6584). On April 4 Billy, a
+press writer in the French foreign office, sounded Theodor Wolff, Paris
+correspondent for the _Berliner Tageblatt_, upon how the German
+government would receive a French overture (_ibid._, p. 305 n.). On
+April 7 Hedeman, London correspondent of _Matin_, talked with Hammann to
+the same effect (memo. by Hammann, April 7, 1905, _ibid._, 310 ff., Nos.
+6608 f.).]
+
+[Footnote 610: Quoted in _Quest. dipl et col._, XIX, 511 f.]
+
+[Footnote 611: Radolin to Bülow, April 14, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 331, No.
+6622.]
+
+[Footnote 612: Radolin to F. O., April 14, 1905, _ibid._, 328 ff., No.
+6621; Radolin to Bülow, April 14, 1905, _ibid._, 330 ff., No. 6622;
+Mévil, pp. 238 ff.; Delcassé to Bihourd, April 14, 1905, _L.j., 1901-5_,
+pp. 211 f., No. 244; Bihourd to Delcassé, April 18 and 25, 1905,
+_ibid._, 214, Nos. 246 f.; memo. by Mühlberg, April 19, 1905, _G.P._,
+XX, 332 f., No. 6623. Saint-René Taillandier’s denial that he had ever
+claimed to have a mandate of Europe must be balanced against the
+Sultan’s personal assertion that he had claimed it. The truth would seem
+to be that the French Minister had sought to make more out of France’s
+international accords over Morocco than the facts justified by speaking
+vaguely and by not clearing up misunderstandings in the Sultan’s mind
+(_L.j., 1901-5_, Nos. 214, 231, 238, 263; _G.P._, XX, Nos. 6621, 6631,
+6658, 6662, 6551 n.; _Aktenstücke über Marokko, 1905_, Nos. 1, 3). Cf.
+the report from the Belgian Minister at Paris, Dec. 19, 1905, _Zur
+europ. Politik_, II, 96.]
+
+[Footnote 613: Lansdowne to Lascelles, April 23, 1905, _B.D._, III, 67,
+No. 80.]
+
+[Footnote 614: Michon, _L’alliance franco-russe 1891-1917_, pp. 117 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 615: As already shown, the Russian defeat at Mukden had
+nothing to do with the change of Germany’s policy.]
+
+[Footnote 616: _Journal officiel. Debats parlem._ (Chambre, April 19,
+1905), pp. 1543 ff. Cf. Bertie’s estimate on April 25: “The general
+feeling in Paris is that the chief object which the German Emperor has
+had in view in his recent proceedings is to show to the French people
+that an understanding with England is of little value to them and that
+they had much better come to an agreement with Germany. To this end ‘il
+fait la guerre à l’Angleterre sur le dos de la France’ and the French
+Public realizing that the Emperor’s wrath is against England for
+enabling France to carry out her Morocco policy and not against France
+for taking advantage of her agreement with England feel that if they
+keep their heads nothing really serious will come of His Majesty’s ill
+temper which they believe is not entirely shared by the German
+Government and still less so by the German people” (Bertie to Lansdowne,
+April 25, 1905, _B.D._, III, 75, No. 93).]
+
+[Footnote 617: Mévil, pp. 257 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 618: Memo. by Holstein, April 4, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 304, No.
+6601. Olmütz signified the humiliation of Prussia by Austria in 1850;
+Fashoda, that of France by Great Britain in 1898.]
+
+[Footnote 619: Memo. by Holstein, April 3, 1905, _ibid._, 297 ff., No.
+6597.]
+
+[Footnote 620: The suggestion of a conference was first made by Kühlmann
+in a dispatch of March 2 (_ibid._, p. 293 n.). On March 27 Bülow still
+thought it possible of execution only in case Great Britain accepted it
+(Bülow to Kühlmann, March 27, 1905, _ibid._, 293 f., No. 6591). After
+the Emperor’s visit, however, he accepted the proposal. In Feb., 1904,
+Lascelles had reported a conversation with Bülow in which the latter had
+opposed calling a conference on the Macedonian question, arguing as
+follows: “A Congress was excellent at the end of a war when both
+belligerents were more or less exhausted and desired peace, but it was a
+most dangerous thing at any other time, and would only accentuate more
+strongly any difference of opinion which might exist and thus cause
+greater complications, unless indeed the Great Powers should have
+decided beforehand exactly what was to be done, and should have appealed
+to the Congress, to give the sanction of Europe to the decisions they
+had already taken” (Lascelles to Lansdowne, Feb. 26, 1904, _B.D._, V,
+72). A year later Bülow had apparently forgotten this very accurate
+judgment. Or possibly he saw no other way out, and faced the facts with
+his usual optimism.]
+
+[Footnote 621: In a memorandum by Hammann on April 7, this statement
+appeared: “Naturally the result would be greater if there followed from
+a conference a breach in the Anglo-French accord over Morocco.” Bülow’s
+minute to that assertion was: “We do not desire that at all, or at least
+we should in no instance show such an aim. We only wish to preserve our
+rights in Morocco” (_ibid._, XX, 312 f., No. 6609; cf. Chirol, _Fifty
+Years in a Changing World_, p. 300).]
+
+[Footnote 622: When the _Nowoje Wremja_ denounced the German action
+Bülow, on March 27, protested strongly to Lamsdorff against this anti-
+German attitude. Russia was expected to remain neutral in this affair,
+he declared (Bülow to Alvensleben, March 27, _G.P._, XX, 277 f., No.
+6577).]
+
+[Footnote 623: Those three had criticized the Anglo-French accord.]
+
+[Footnote 624: The signatory Powers were those which had participated in
+the conference of Madrid in 1880 over Moroccan affairs.]
+
+[Footnote 625: Quoted from a dispatch from Bülow to William II, April 4,
+1905, _ibid._, 303, No. 6599; and from a memo. by Holstein, April 4,
+1905, _ibid._, 304 f., No. 6601.]
+
+[Footnote 626: Memo. by Hammann, April 3, 1905, _ibid._, 300 f., No.
+6598.]
+
+[Footnote 627: Memo. by Hammann, April 7, 1905, _ibid._, 311 f., No.
+6609.]
+
+[Footnote 628: On April 8 Bülow sent Hammann the following instructions
+for directing the press: “All criticism and attacks should, under the
+greatest possible consideration for the French national feeling, be
+directed against the systematically anti-German, insolent, and inept
+policy of Delcassé” (minute by Bülow to a memo. by Hammann, April 7,
+1905, _ibid._, 313, No. 6609). On April 4 he had issued instructions to
+restrain the German press from war with the British press (Mühlberg to
+Metternich, April 4, 1905, _ibid._, 603 and note, No. 6839).]
+
+[Footnote 629: That Holstein wished to turn loose a _Kriegsfanfare_, as
+Hammann later asserted, seems unlikely, for German policy at that time
+was not bellicose. But Holstein did propose to exert great pressure by
+vigorous words and threats, and his program might very likely have had
+the result which Hammann foresaw. On this controversy between the two
+men see Hammann, _Bilder aus der letzten Kaiserzeit_, pp. 35 f.; Otto
+Hammann, _Der neue Kurs. Erinnerungen_ (Berlin, 1918), pp. 104 ff.;
+Hammann, _Zur Vorgeschichte des Weltkrieges_, pp. 210 f.; memo. by
+Holstein, April 3, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 297 ff., No. 6597; memo. by
+Hammann, April 3, 1905, _ibid._, 300 f., No. 6598; memo. by Holstein,
+April 7, 1905, _ibid._, 308 f., No. 6606; memo. by Hammann, April 7,
+1905, _ibid._, 309 f., No. 6607.]
+
+[Footnote 630: Durand to Lansdowne, March, 1905, quoted in Brigadier
+General Sir Percy Sykes, _The Right Honourable Sir Mortimer Durand: A
+Biography_ (London, 1926), p. 280; Spring Rice to Roosevelt, undated
+though written in the first half of Jan., 1905, quoted in Dennett, pp.
+152 f.; Sternburg to Bülow, Feb. 10, 1905, _G.P._, XIX, 573 ff., No.
+6288; Sternburg to F. O., March 7, 1905, _ibid._, 580 f., No. 6293;
+Bülow to Sternburg, Feb. 21, 1905, _ibid._, 576 ff., No. 6290; and
+others in _ibid._, chap. cxxxix; Dennett, pp. 45, 73 ff.; Dennis,
+_Adventures in American Diplomacy_, p. 393; Joseph B. Bishop, _Theodore
+Roosevelt and His Times_ (New York, 1920), I, 378 f., 468 f., 473;
+Gwynn, _The Letters and Friendships of Sir Cecil Spring Rice_, I, 406
+ff., and chap. xiii.]
+
+[Footnote 631: Sternburg to Bülow, Feb. 10, 1905, _G.P._, XIX, 573 f.,
+No. 6288; Sternburg to F. O., March 7, 1905, _ibid._, 580 f., No. 6293.]
+
+[Footnote 632: So Roosevelt asserted to Sternburg. See Sternburg to F.
+O., April 1, 1905, _ibid._, 590, No. 6300; Sykes, p. 280; Dennis, pp.
+397 f.; Gwynn, Vol. I, chap. xiii; Newton, _Lord Lansdowne_, p. 322.]
+
+[Footnote 633: On March 21 Roosevelt declared to Sternburg: “My earnest
+wish is that we use as much as possible the four years which stand
+before me in office to improve the relations between our countries. I
+believe in the German people” (Sternburg to F. O., March 21, 1905,
+_G.P._, XIX, 583, No. 6295).]
+
+[Footnote 634: Bülow to Sternburg, April 3, 1905, _ibid._, 592 ff., No.
+6302; Bishop, I, 468 f.]
+
+[Footnote 635: Bishop, I, 469.]
+
+[Footnote 636: See below.]
+
+[Footnote 637: In the absence of a regular minister at Tangier,
+Tattenbach had remained there after the Emperor’s visit. See Tattenbach
+to F. O., April 7, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 313 f., No. 6610; Bülow to
+Tattenbach, April 9, 1905, _ibid._, 315 f., No. 6611. O’Conor, British
+ambassador at Constantinople, reported to Lansdowne, May 1, 1905, that
+Germany was trying to induce the Sultan to send a mission to Morocco
+with a view to establishing closer relations. The Sultan eventually
+refused. On Feb. 12, 1906, O’Conor was able to state why. The Sultan had
+sent secret emissaries to Morocco, but the Sultan of Morocco became
+suspicious and refused either to send a formal mission to Constantinople
+or to receive one thence. O’Conor also heard that the Sultan had written
+to Abd-el-Aziz recommending the German Emperor as the friend and
+protector of Islam whose advice was well worth following. See O’Conor to
+Grey, Feb. 12, 1906, _B.D._, III, 248, No. 277. Tardieu states that the
+Sultan’s letters to his Moorish colleague were written in Feb.-March,
+1906 (_La Conf. d’Algés_, p. 259 n.). Nothing further is known of this
+affair.]
+
+[Footnote 638: No. 6612; Bülow to Alvensleben, March 27, 1905, _ibid._,
+277 f., No. 6577.]
+
+[Footnote 639: Radowitz to F. O., April 12, 1905, _ibid._, 326 f. and
+note, No. 6619; Mousset, _La politica exterior de España, 1873-1918_, p.
+165.]
+
+[Footnote 640: Bülow to Monts, April 3, 11, 12, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 295
+f., No. 6594; 318 ff., No. 6613; 322 f., No. 6616; Monts to F. O., April
+12, 1905, _ibid._, 324 ff. and notes, Nos. 6617 f. Tittoni, the Italian
+foreign minister, had to feel his way carefully. On April 14 he sounded
+the Spanish government on its attitude, and was informed that Spain
+would remain loyal to her agreement with France and would accept the
+conference only if France and Great Britain did (Nicolson to Lansdowne,
+April 14, 1905, _B.D._, III, 66, No. 79).]
+
+[Footnote 641: Bülow to Metternich, April 11, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 605 ff.,
+No. 6843; Metternich to F. O., April 19, 1905, _ibid._, 608 f., No.
+6845. On April 10, however, Radolin reported a statement by Eckardstein,
+which he himself seemed to think correct, to the effect that “in case of
+a serious Franco-German conflict England would undoubtedly stand
+actively on the French side and would even advance with enthusiasm
+against Germany” (_ibid._, 607 f., No. 6844).]
+
+[Footnote 642: By that answer Bülow aimed to show the French government
+that “we do not consider separate Franco-German negotiations as adequate
+to the situation.” See Radolin to F. O., April 14, 1905, _ibid._, 328
+ff., No. 6621; memo. by Mühlberg, April 19, 1905, _ibid._, 332 f., No.
+6623; Bülow to Tattenbach, April 18, 1905, _ibid._, 333 f. and note, No.
+6624.]
+
+[Footnote 643: Bülow to Tattenbach, April 18, 1905, _ibid._, 333 f., No.
+6624; Tattenbach to F. O., April 21, 1905, _ibid._, 335, No. 6625; Bülow
+to Tattenbach, April 22, 1905, _ibid._, 336 f., No. 6626; Tattenbach to
+F. O., April 23, 1905, _ibid._, 337 f., No. 6627; Bülow to Tattenbach,
+April 24, 1905, _ibid._, 338, No. 6628.]
+
+[Footnote 644: On April 3 Balfour repeated his denial in the House of
+Commons of the likelihood of a German attack.]
+
+[Footnote 645: Lee, II, 340.]
+
+[Footnote 646: Newton, p. 334.]
+
+[Footnote 647: Radolin to F. O., April 6, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 311, No.
+6608.]
+
+[Footnote 648: Mühlberg to Metternich, April 4, 1905, _ibid._, 604, No.
+6840; Metternich to Bülow, April 6, 1905, _ibid._, 604, No. 6841; memo.
+by Hammann, April 7, 1905, _ibid._, 311, No. 6608.]
+
+[Footnote 649: Metternich to Bülow, March 28, April 6, 1905, _ibid._,
+601 ff., Nos. 6837, 6841.]
+
+[Footnote 650: Metternich to Bülow, March 28, 1905, _ibid._, 602, No.
+6837; Kühlmann to Bülow, March 19, 1905, _ibid._, 261 f., No. 6562;
+Lascelles to Lansdowne, March 23, 1905, _B.D._, III, 61, No. 69.]
+
+[Footnote 651: April 9, 1904 (Newton, p. 334).]
+
+[Footnote 652: Viscount Grey of Falloden, _Twenty-five Years, 1892-1916_
+(New York, 1925), I, 115.]
+
+[Footnote 653: Lee, II, 342.]
+
+[Footnote 654: Lansdowne to Lascelles, April 23, 1905, _B.D._, III, 67,
+No. 80; Lansdowne to Bertie, April 24, 1905, _ibid._, p. 73.]
+
+[Footnote 655: Tattenbach to F. O., April 27, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 348, No.
+6639.]
+
+[Footnote 656: Lansdowne to Bertie, April 22, 1905, _B.D._, III, 72 f.,
+No. 90; and following documents; Spender, _Life of Campbell-Bannerman_,
+II, 248; Grey, I, 106 f.]
+
+[Footnote 657: Bertie to Lansdowne, April 25, 1905, _B.D._, III, 74 f.,
+Nos. 92 f.]
+
+[Footnote 658: The offer was so stated by Monts (Monts to F. O., May 2,
+1905, _G.P._, XX, 362, No. 6648).]
+
+[Footnote 659: Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé, April 26, 1905,
+_L.j., 1901-5_, 215, No. 248; Delcassé to Saint-René Taillandier, May 3,
+1905, _ibid._, 217, No. 251; Bourgeois et Pagès, _Les origines et les
+responsabilités de la grande guerre_, p. 309. Ben Sliman was Moroccan
+minister of foreign affairs.]
+
+[Footnote 660: On Rouvier see Mévil, pp. 253 ff.; Victor Bérard, _La
+France et Guillaume II_ (Paris, 1907), p. 296; Radolin to F. O., April
+27, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 345, No. 6635; Radolin to Bülow, May 8, 1905,
+_ibid._, 373 f., No. 6657. Rouvier’s policy was certainly more in
+keeping with French opinion.]
+
+[Footnote 661: Radolin to F. O., April 27, 1905, _ibid._, 344 f., No.
+6635. To Rouvier’s assertion that “France would do everything necessary
+to live on the best terms with Germany” Bülow commented as follows:
+“Then the French Government should cease its efforts to isolate us, to
+break up the Triple Alliance, to incite England against us” (Bülow’s
+minute to the foregoing dispatch).]
+
+[Footnote 662: Radolin to F. O., April 27 and 28, 1905, _ibid._, 346,
+No. 6636; 348 f., No. 6640.]
+
+[Footnote 663: Radolin to Bülow, April 25, 1905, _ibid._, 615, No.
+6847.]
+
+[Footnote 664: Tattenbach to F. O., April 23, 24, 25, 1905, _ibid._, 337
+f., No. 6627; 339, No. 6629; 341, No. 6632; Vassel to Tattenbach, April
+21, 1905, _ibid._, 339 ff., No. 6631.]
+
+[Footnote 665: Bishop, I, 469 ff.; Sternburg to F. O., April 25, 1905,
+_G.P._, XX, 342, No. 6633.]
+
+[Footnote 666: Bülow to Sternburg, April 27, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 342, No.
+6634.]
+
+[Footnote 667: Bülow to Radolin, April 28, 29, 1905, _ibid._, 346 f.,
+No. 6637; 349 f., No. 6641.]
+
+[Footnote 668: Holstein to Mühlberg, April 24, 1905, _ibid._, 339, No.
+6630; Bülow to Sternburg, April 27, 1905, _ibid._, 342 ff., No. 6634.]
+
+[Footnote 669: Radolin to Bülow, April 14, 1905, _ibid._, 330 ff., No.
+6622. Monts also regarded Delcassé’s offer through Luzzati as signifying
+victory for Germany in her Moroccan campaign and as giving the
+opportunity “for a definitive friendly agreement with France” (Monts to
+F. O., May 2, 1905, _ibid._, 362, No. 6648).]
+
+[Footnote 670: Tattenbach had on the previous day talked to Lowther,
+British minister at Tangier, and had found him strongly opposed to a
+conference and in favor of a direct Franco-German settlement (Tattenbach
+to F. O., April 29, 1905, _ibid._, 251 f., No. 6642).]
+
+[Footnote 671: Bülow to Tattenbach, April 30, 1905, _ibid._, 352, No.
+6643.]
+
+[Footnote 672: The article was by Professor Schiemann, who was known to
+be in close touch with the German government (reprinted in Schiemann,
+_Deutschland und die grosse Politik 1905_, pp. 110 f.).]
+
+[Footnote 673: Radolin to F. O., April 27, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 347, No.
+6638; _Quest. dipl. et col._, XIX, 576 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 674: Bihourd to Delcassé, April 28, 1905, _L.j., 1901-5_, 215,
+No. 249.]
+
+[Footnote 675: Rouvier also assured Radolin that “he disapproved of much
+that had happened” and that he himself had taken over the general
+control of foreign affairs. It had cost him some effort to save Delcassé
+in the Chamber, he said, but he had thought it wiser to do so (Radolin
+to Bülow, April 30, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 360 ff., No. 6647).]
+
+[Footnote 676: Radolin to Bülow, May 1, 1905, _ibid._, 355 ff., No.
+6645; Bülow to Radolin, May 1, 1905, _ibid._, 353 f., No. 6644.]
+
+[Footnote 677: Eckardstein was informed to this effect on May 4, 1905,
+by Rouvier’s intimate friend, Armand Levy, a Parisian financier
+(Eckardstein, _Lebenserinnerungen und politische Denkwürdigkeiten_, III,
+106; Lee, II, 342).]
+
+[Footnote 678: Radolin to Bülow, May 1, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 616 f., No.
+6848. The King may have put this question to Radolin at the desire of
+Delcassé, who was complaining of Germany’s lack of response (Bertie to
+Lansdowne, April 27, 1905, _B.D._, III, 68, No. 84). On May 11, 1905,
+Lansdowne wrote to Knollys, King Edward’s private secretary, as follows:
+“The King’s Mediterranean tour left matters in excellent shape so far as
+we are concerned” (Lee, II, 342).]
+
+[Footnote 679: _Belg. Docs., 1905-14_, No. 4.]
+
+[Footnote 680: Wilhelm Betzold was an international financier with wide
+political connections (Eckardstein, I, 243 ff.). The instructions were
+given to Eckardstein, May 4, by Armand Levy, like Betzold, an intimate
+friend of Rouvier, just after an interview between the two and the
+Premier, Levy had made a note of the various points which he now laid
+before Eckardstein, explaining that naturally Rouvier could not speak
+directly to him of these delicate affairs but adding that his statements
+were “rigorously exact” (Eckardstein, III, 100 ff.). Only Eckardstein’s
+account of the interview with Bülow contains anything about the Moroccan
+proposal, but there is no reason to doubt the accuracy of his statement
+(see also Prince Lichnowsky, _My Mission to London, 1912-1914_ [London,
+1918], p. 3).]
+
+[Footnote 681: Memo. by Holstein, May 2, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 357 ff., No.
+6646. Paul von Schwabach’s account of arranging the interview for
+Betzold is given in _Berliner Tageblatt_, March 21, 1922. See also Bülow
+to F. O., May 5 and 6, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 368 ff., Nos. 6652 f.]
+
+[Footnote 682: On May 2 the Chancellor also refused to consider
+Delcassé’s offer through Luzzati; and when a few days later he heard
+that Barrère wished to be sent to Berlin to arrange affairs, he
+immediately advised Rouvier that he would not be received. See Bülow to
+Monts, May 3, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 363 f., No. 6649; Radolin to Holstein,
+May 8, 1905, _ibid._, p. 372 n.; Bülow to Radolin, May 9, 1905, _ibid._,
+372, No. 6656.]
+
+[Footnote 683: Bülow to Radolin, May 4, 1905, _ibid._, 366 f., No. 6650;
+Radolin to F. O., May 8, 1905, _ibid._, 371 f., No. 6655.]
+
+[Footnote 684: The British and the Russian governments were also
+supporting Delcassé. See Radolin to Bülow, May 8, 1905, _ibid._, 373
+ff., No. 6657 f.; Betzold to Eckardstein, May 9, 1905, quoted in
+Eckardstein, III, 204.]
+
+[Footnote 685: Sternburg to F. O., June 2, 1905, _G.P._, XIX, 607, No.
+6311, Bülow’s minute.]
+
+[Footnote 686: Radolin to Bülow, May 13 and 16, 1905, _ibid._, 376 f.,
+No. 6659; 378 f., No. 6661.]
+
+[Footnote 687: So related by the Spanish Foreign Minister to Nicolson
+(Nicolson to Lansdowne, May 5, 1905, _B.D._, III, 70 f., No. 87).
+Although there is no account of the conversation in _G.P._, the language
+is entirely in keeping with German policy. The episode referred to the
+possible departure of Spain’s new minister in Morocco to Fez.]
+
+[Footnote 688: So reported by Egerton to Lansdowne, May 5, 1905,
+_ibid._, 71, No. 88. Cf. Bülow to Monts, May 3, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 363
+f., No. 6649; Bülow to F. O., May 6, 1905, _ibid._, 368, No. 6651.]
+
+[Footnote 689: Bülow to Sternburg, April 27, May 10 and 16, 1905,
+_ibid._, 342 ff., No. 6634; 620 ff., No. 6851; XIX, 600 ff., No. 6306;
+Bishop, I, 469 f.]
+
+[Footnote 690: _Selections from the Correspondence of Theodore Roosevelt
+and Henry Cabot Lodge, 1884-1918_ (New York, 1925), II, 123. See also
+Dennett, pp. 88 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 691: The President’s statements were so formulated by
+Sternburg. See Sternburg to F. O., May 13 and 19, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 622
+f., No. 6852; _ibid._, XIX, 603 f., No. 6308; Dennett, pp. 184 f., 88
+ff., 75 f.]
+
+[Footnote 692: Tattenbach to F. O., May 15, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 379 f.,
+No. 6662.]
+
+[Footnote 693: Tattenbach’s version of the threat was as follows: “The
+French Government would consider it an injury to France’s interests if
+the French proposals for reform were submitted for consideration to the
+signatory Powers. No Power possessed the right to intervene in the
+Moroccan affair, especially in the frontier question. . . . . The French
+Government would continue to watch sharply the affairs in Morocco, and
+reserved the right to act according to circumstances.” See Tattenbach to
+F. O., May 17, 1905, _ibid._, 380, No. 6663. Cf. with the original
+threat quoted above. See also Tattenbach to F. O., May 31, 1905,
+_ibid._, 399 f., No. 6676.]
+
+[Footnote 694: Bülow to Radolin, May 22, 1905, _ibid._, 382 f., No.
+6665.]
+
+[Footnote 695: Miquel was chosen for this work because he was just being
+transferred to St. Petersburg. See Bülow to Radolin, May 30, 1905,
+_ibid._, 388 ff., No. 6669; memo. by Miquel, May 30 and 31, 1905,
+_ibid._, 393 ff., Nos. 6674 f.]
+
+[Footnote 696: Bülow to Monts, May 31, 1905, _ibid._, 390 f., No. 6670,
+and note citing a dispatch from Monts of June 2, 1905; Mévil, p. 272.
+Egerton was informed by Barrère that Monts had said to Tittoni that “if
+the French Minister maintained his threat of military measures against
+the Sultan of Morocco, a German army would cross the French frontier”
+(Egerton to Lansdowne, June 13, 1905, _B.D._, III, 95, No. 122).]
+
+[Footnote 697: Tattenbach to F. O., May 28, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 392, No.
+6672.]
+
+[Footnote 698: Bülow to Radolin, June 1, 1905, _ibid._, 392 f., No.
+6673; Radolin to Bülow, June 11, 1905, _ibid._, 407, No. 6685.]
+
+[Footnote 699: Radolin to F. O., June 3, 1905, _ibid._, 401, No. 6678.]
+
+[Footnote 700: The _Gaulois_ published articles on June 9 and 17, 1905,
+asserting that Prince Henckel von Donnersmarck had also been sent by the
+German government to Paris about June 1 to warn Rouvier that Delcassé
+must be dismissed (Mévil, pp. 273 ff.; Bourgeois et Pagès, p. 310). The
+editors of _G.P._ state that this story is “exaggerated”; Donnersmarck
+was mentioned only once in the documents, they assert—in a dispatch from
+Radolin on June 17, 1905, describing the assertions of Donnersmarck
+given in _Gaulois_ as apocryphal (_G.P._, XX, 390 n.). According to
+Eckardstein, Rouvier declared to him on May 4 that some time previously
+Donnersmarck had asserted to him, apparently at Bülow’s request, that
+there were only two possibilities, a Franco-German alliance or war. On
+the other hand, Eckardstein saw Donnersmarck in Berlin on June 6 and
+found him eager for news from London and Paris (Eckardstein, III, 103
+f., 127 f.). It seems clear that Donnersmarck’s assertions, whatever
+they were, were made on his own responsibility; that, as the editors of
+_G.P._ state, Bülow issued his warnings directly to Rouvier (_G.P._, XX,
+390 n.).]
+
+[Footnote 701: Nicolson to Lansdowne, May 5, 1905, _B.D._, III, 70 f.,
+No. 87; Egerton to Lansdowne, May 5, 1905, _ibid._, 71, No. 88;
+Lansdowne to Bertie, May 3, 1905, _ibid._, 69 f., No. 86.]
+
+[Footnote 702: Durand to Lansdowne, April 26, 1905, _ibid._, 67 f., No.
+82; Lansdowne to Durand, April 27, 1905, _ibid._, 68, No. 83. Durand did
+not follow that line exactly. He left the impression with Roosevelt that
+the Anglo-German opposition was bitter, but that nevertheless Great
+Britain did not want Roosevelt interfering—thus letting the latter think
+that Great Britain was more bellicose than she was (see above). One
+reason for the British government’s slowness about helping Roosevelt
+mediate between Russia and Japan was, no doubt, that it wished to
+exclude all opportunity for the President to mediate between Great
+Britain and Germany. On April 26 Spring Rice asked Roosevelt not to
+support the idea of a conference (Gwynn, I, 469).]
+
+[Footnote 703: Lansdowne added: “I had heard fears expressed that, in
+order to put an end to a state of things which could not fail to be
+highly inconvenient to them, the French Government might be induced to
+purchase the acquiescence of Germany by concessions of a kind which we
+were not likely to regard with favour, in other parts of the world. I
+had myself no such misgivings, and felt convinced that each side might
+continue to rely upon being treated with absolute frankness by the
+other. His Excellency [M. Cambon] expressed his entire concurrence in
+what I had said.” See Lansdowne to Bertie, May 17, 1905, _B.D._, III,
+76, No. 94; Spender, II, 248; _Cambridge History of British Foreign
+Policy_, III, 342 f.]
+
+[Footnote 704: “During our last conversation about Morocco you . . . .
+added that . . . . if circumstances demanded it, if for example we had
+serious reasons to believe in an unjustified aggression on the part of a
+certain Power, the British Government would be entirely ready to concert
+with the French Government on the measures to take” (Cambon to
+Lansdowne, May 24, 1905, _B.D._, III, 77, No. 95, inclosure).]
+
+[Footnote 705: Lansdowne to Cambon, May 25, 1905, _ibid._, 77 f., No.
+95, and inclosure.]
+
+[Footnote 706: Bradford, _Life of Wilson_, p. 199. Nothing more was
+heard of this order, which probably came from Sir John Fisher. Fisher
+was in favor of “Copenhagening” the German fleet and also of landing
+soldiers in North Germany in case of a war (_Memories_; Newton, pp. 334
+f.). In 1922, Lord Sanderson wrote as follows concerning the events of
+this time: “There were no doubt preparations by our military authorities
+for defending Belgium in case of an attack by Germany on France through
+Belgian territory, and these preparations must have been known to the
+French military attaché in London. There was also a good deal of loose
+talk in naval circles and some high quarters of a possible expedition to
+Schleswig in the possible event of war. I do not believe such a measure
+was ever seriously entertained, and I looked upon the report as put
+about for the purpose of a warning” (Sanderson to Temperley, Aug. 17,
+1922, _B.D._, III, 87, No. 105).]
+
+[Footnote 707: Grey, I, 74. The British press supported the French
+loyally for the sake of maintaining the balance of power. See O.
+Eltzbacher, “The Balance of Power in Europe,” _Nineteenth Century and
+After_ (May, 1905); Steed, I, 230 ff. It is difficult to state exactly
+what were the British motives for supporting France so whole-heartedly
+in this crisis. One has to deduce them from acts, for, unlike the
+Germans, the directors of the British policy did not write down their
+reasons. As to King Edward’s view of the international situation,
+especially of the German danger, see Spring Rice to Lansdowne, D. May 7,
+1905, R. May 13, 1905, _B.D._, IV, 77 f., No. 69, and King Edward’s
+minute thereto. On July 10 Spring Rice, in a memo. written after talking
+with Lansdowne, stated that British policy aimed at maintaining the
+balance of power (Gwynn, I, 476).]
+
+[Footnote 708: Tattenbach to F. O., May 31, June 3, 1905, _G.P._, XX,
+399, No. 6676; 400, No. 6677; Metternich to F. O., June 8, 1905,
+_ibid._, 422, No. 6697; Lowther to Lansdowne, D. May 31, 1905, R. June
+3, 1905, _B.D._, III, 88, No. 106; Lansdowne to Bertie, June 1 and 5,
+1905, _ibid._, 88, No. 107; 89, No. 109; Lansdowne to Lowther, June 5,
+1905, _ibid._, 89, No. 108.]
+
+[Footnote 709: Lansdowne to Bertie, June 5, 1905, _ibid._, 89, No. 109;
+Lansdowne to Durand, June 5, 1905, _ibid._, 90, No. 110.]
+
+[Footnote 710: Nicolson to Lansdowne, June 29, 1905, _ibid._, 109, No.
+136. The editors of _B.D._ promise to publish more information about
+this offer in a later volume.]
+
+[Footnote 711: That treaty read in part as follows: “The two Governments
+declare that they will take counsel together upon every question of a
+nature to jeopardize the general peace; in case that peace should be
+threatened with an aggression, the two parties undertake to reach an
+understanding on the measures whose immediate and simultaneous adoption
+would be imposed upon the two Governments by the realization of this
+eventuality.” See _Livre jaune: L’alliance franco-russe_, p. 16, No. 17,
+annexe; Pribram, _The Secret Treaties of Austria-Hungary_, II, 213;
+Bernadotte E. Schmitt, “Triple Alliance and Triple Entente, 1902-1914,”
+_American Historical Review_, XXIX, 459 f.]
+
+[Footnote 712: Thayer, _The Life and Letters of John Hay_, II, 404 f.;
+Eckardstein, III, 115 ff.; Radolin to Bülow, June 11, 1905, _G.P._, XX,
+497 ff., No. 6685; Bertie to Lansdowne, June 10, 1905, _B.D._, III, 78,
+No. 96, recounting a conversation with Delcassé on that date.]
+
+[Footnote 713: Radolin to F. O., June 3, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 400 f., No.
+6678.]
+
+[Footnote 714: Delcassé’s formal denial of the rumor had no effect. See
+Mévil, pp. 284 f.; Flotow to Bülow, June 7, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 406, No.
+6684.]
+
+[Footnote 715: Radolin to Bülow, June 11, 1905, _ibid._, 407 ff., No.
+6685; _Quest. dipl. et col._, XIX, 770.]
+
+[Footnote 716: Delcassé informed Bertie, June 10, that the Spanish
+Foreign Minister “had told him that he thought that Spain, France and
+England, should reply to the Government of Morocco in identic terms
+declining the proposal” (Bertie to Lansdowne, June 10, 1905, _B.D._,
+III, 78, No. 96).]
+
+[Footnote 717: The report spread in 1905 that at the French cabinet
+meeting on June 6 Delcassé had stated that the British government had
+offered an alliance to France. Lansdowne and Sanderson denied to the
+German government that Great Britain had ever done so. See Metternich to
+F. O., June 16, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 630 ff., No. 6858; Metternich to F.
+O., June 28, 1905, _ibid._, 635 ff., No. 6860; see also _B.D._, III, 87,
+No. 105; Metternich to F. O., Oct. 9, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 663 f., No.
+6873. According to Mévil, the official apologist for Delcassé, just
+before the arrival of the King of Spain in Paris on May 30, the British
+government assured Delcassé that “the British military forces were ready
+to march with us [France] against Germany if that Power attacked us.
+Moreover, the principle of defensive co-operation once admitted, the
+English Government declared itself ready to sign in the shortest time an
+accord which would definitely fix that co-operation” (Mévil, p. 268). In
+a letter of March 20, 1922, Delcassé wrote as follows: “From the Entente
+it was possible for us in 1905 to proceed to a formal alliance with
+England. . . . . On June 6th the British offer of assistance had been
+only forty-eight hours in my possession” (quoted in the _London Times_,
+March 27, 1922). In connection with the Grey-Cambon correspondence of
+1912, Poincaré has written: “Thus to make a joint study of the situation
+was the sole engagement which was made [in that correspondence]. In
+communicating to me the result obtained, M. Paul Cambon wrote me that at
+the time of Lord Lansdowne an entente of that kind would have been only
+a beginning. Now, however, it was the last word for the Liberal cabinet.
+The forced resignation of M. Delcassé had perhaps made us lose in 1905,
+stated M. Cambon, the opportunity for a real alliance with England. All
+that we were able to obtain today was this engagement to confer in the
+presence of danger and this hypothetical approval of the programs drawn
+up by the general staff.” See also J. A. Farrer, _England under Edward
+VII_ (London, 1922), pp. 127 f.; Mévil, pp. 269 f.; _G.P._, XX, 632 n.,
+664 n.; Raymond Poincaré, _Au service de la France. Neuf années de
+souvenirs: I. Le lendemain d’Agadir, 1912_ (Paris, 1926), p. 221. Later
+Lansdowne wrote on his dispatch to Bertie of May 17, 1905, as follows:
+“I suppose this was the origin of the offensive and defensive alliance”
+(_B.D._, III, 76, No. 94). His inference is probably correct only in
+part. The exchange of notes between Cambon and Lansdowne was sent to
+Bertie on May 31, 1905, and received by him on June 3. It is not
+apparent whether he communicated that exchange to the French government,
+although the “offer of assistance” which Delcassé has written of as
+having received only forty-eight hours before the cabinet meeting on
+June 6 may have been the notice of this exchange from Bertie. Word to
+Delcassé through the Governor-General of Algeria from King Edward, who
+was then cruising in the Mediterranean, urging the Foreign Minister not
+to resign also strengthened the latter’s hand. The King took that step
+on his own initiative (Newton, p. 342).]
+
+[Footnote 718: On that cabinet meeting see the following: Mévil, pp. 293
+ff.; Pinon, _France et Allemagne_, pp. 164 f.; Radolin to Bülow, June
+11, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 407 ff., No. 6685; Bertie to Lansdowne, June 8,
+1905, _B.D._, III, 91, No. 114; Bertie to Lansdowne, June 10, 1905,
+_ibid._, 78, No. 96, recounting a conversation with Delcassé on that
+date; Wolff, _Das Vorspiel_, pp. 167 ff. Cf. Bertie’s explanation of
+Delcassé’s fall (Bertie to Lansdowne, June 15, 1905, Newton, pp. 341
+f.).]
+
+[Footnote 719: Flotow to Bülow, June 7, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 406, No. 6684;
+625, No. 6854. Cf. the report from the Belgian Minister at Paris to his
+government, June 8, 1905, _Zur europ. Politik_, II, 62 f. See also
+_Quest. dipl. et col._, XIX, 770 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 720: Cf. _Cambridge History of British Foreign Policy_, III,
+341.]
+
+[Footnote 721: Quoted in Lee, II, 344. See also a letter from John Hay,
+who was then in London, to Henry Adams, June 7, 1905, quoted in Thayer,
+II, 405; Bertie to Lansdowne, June 10, 1905, _B.D._, III, 78, No. 96.
+Lansdowne’s reaction is expressed in Newton, p. 341.]
+
+[Footnote 722: Bertie to Lansdowne, June 6, 1905, _B.D._, III, 90, No.
+111.]
+
+[Footnote 723: Bülow’s minute to a dispatch from Flotow, June 5, 1905,
+_G.P._, XX, 403, No. 6681.]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIII
+
+ THE MOROCCAN CRISIS, JUNE 6-JULY 8, 1905
+
+
+The downfall of M. Delcassé was merely an incident in Germany’s drive
+toward a conference. Prince Bülow, believing that the Minister’s
+resignation ended the acute phase of the crisis,[724] immediately
+dispatched a circular note to the signatory Powers[725] informing them
+of Germany’s acceptance of the Sultan’s invitation to a conference and
+asking them also to accept. In this note he argued as follows: Since
+Article XVII of the Convention of Madrid[726] guaranteed to every Power
+the same treatment as the most favored nation, the Moroccan reforms had
+to receive the approval of all the signatory Powers. If the proposal for
+a conference were refused, the legal status of Morocco would remain
+unchanged, for the opposition of one Power alone would suffice to block
+the execution of any reforms proposed. But aside from these legal
+arguments, the conference was the best means of introducing reforms
+without endangering the existing political and commercial interests of
+the signatory Powers by concession of special rights to individual
+states. Moreover, since the Convention of Madrid was a compact between
+the Powers, France would have to obtain their sanction for a special
+position in Morocco. While the details of the French program of Moroccan
+reforms were unknown, it was evident that France sought, in violation of
+Article XVII, to control the land as she did Tunis. Thus, to oppose the
+French action was merely to defend the existing legal status of
+Morocco.[727]
+
+The attitude of the Powers toward this exposé was not at all
+satisfactory to the German government. The Russian, Austrian, Italian,
+Portuguese, and Danish governments evaded a reply, leaving the
+initiative to the French and the British.[728] German relations with
+Spain over the matter were complicated by reports that while M. Villa-
+Urrutia, the Spanish foreign minister, had been in Paris during King
+Alfonso’s visit, he had openly aligned himself with M. Delcassé’s
+policy. After the French Minister’s downfall, the German government
+notified the Spanish government on June 11 that, if M. Villa-Urrutia
+remained in office, Germany would recall her Ambassador for an
+indefinite leave of absence.[729] While waiting for the Minister to be
+overthrown, the German government did not press Spain on the question of
+the conference.
+
+The British attitude was even more adverse. When Count Metternich handed
+the German note to Lord Lansdowne, the latter interpreted it as meaning
+that “the Conference, if it were to meet, would be expected to deal not
+only with the introduction of reforms, but with the maintenance of the
+independence and integrity of Morocco, and the preservation of the open
+door.”[730] The Ambassador’s affirmative reply enhanced Lord Lansdowne’s
+suspicion that Germany was endeavoring to break the Anglo-French
+understanding. While questioning strongly the propriety of a conference,
+the Foreign Secretary gave no definite answer. This note, however, and
+the passing of M. Delcassé caused the British government to recede on
+June 8 from its original refusal of the Sultan’s invitation and to
+postpone its decision until it could consult with France.[731] But on
+June 7, Herr von Flotow reported from Paris a rumor that Great Britain
+had offered to France “an offensive and defensive alliance aimed at
+Germany” which the latter was still considering.[732] Hence, it was
+manifest to the German government that Great Britain was in complete
+opposition to its policy.
+
+President Roosevelt also gave a disappointing reply. On May 25 and 30
+Prince Bülow had told the President that “the decision in the question
+of a conference depended to a great extent upon him.” He maintained that
+if the conference were refused as a result of Great Britain’s pressure
+upon France, Germany would be forced to choose between a war with France
+and perhaps Great Britain and an agreement with the former which would
+serve as a prelude to a strong Continental _bloc_. Declaring that he was
+averse to making the choice, the Chancellor asked Mr. Roosevelt to favor
+the conference to the signatory Powers.[733] But the President replied
+on June 8 that he could hardly participate in a conference without
+exposing himself to the sharpest attacks, since American opinion was
+opposed to interfering in the Moroccan affair and inclined to approve
+reform by one Power.[734]
+
+The attitude of M. Rouvier was equally unsatisfactory to the German
+government. The Premier expressed to the German representative through
+M. Betzold the hope that the fall of M. Delcassé would enable the two
+countries to reach a direct understanding, and promised to show the
+“greatest conciliation” toward Germany.[735] When the German note of
+June 6 arrived, he immediately denied to the Powers the accusations made
+therein.[736] He also instructed M. Saint-René Taillandier to suspend
+action at Fez so as to avoid complications.[737] He endeavored to find
+some way by which Germany could be satisfied, France’s position in
+Morocco be preserved and her agreements with the other Powers be upheld,
+and the humiliating conference be avoided. On June 7 he protested to
+Herr von Flotow that France could hardly accept the conference, which
+French public opinion rejected so completely, and remarked that Great
+Britain, Spain, and Italy would probably refuse it.[738] Herr von Flotow
+replied that Germany would not desert the Sultan. Two days later the
+Premier offered through an intermediary to make a general agreement with
+Germany not only over the Moroccan question but also over others, such
+as those of the Bagdad Railway and far eastern affairs.[739] In a
+conversation with the German Ambassador on June 10, M. Rouvier
+persisted, in spite of threats, in his repugnance to the conference. Why
+go there, he asked Prince Radolin, if Germany refused the reforms in
+Morocco which France considered necessary? In the course of his defense
+of France’s previous Moroccan policy, he said: “If an understanding
+concerning the extension of permissible reforms could previously occur
+with Germany, participation in the conference might be possible.” He was
+so discouraged that he thought seriously of resigning, for, he declared
+to the Prince, he could not defend before the French Chamber the German
+demands as then formulated.[740]
+
+At home Prince Bülow’s policy was encountering disapproval from the
+Emperor William II, then in a pacific mood. Toward the end of May the
+Emperor had rebuked the German Navy League for criticizing the naval
+program as inadequate.[741] On June 3 he had started the movement which
+culminated in the conclusion of the Russo-Japanese War and was co-
+operating with President Roosevelt in that work—an act which Prince
+Bülow would have prevented had he been aware of his master’s
+intentions.[742] Even though the Emperor knew nothing of the French
+offers,[743] he was entirely willing after the fall of M. Delcassé to
+gratify M. Rouvier’s wish for an understanding.[744] At the wedding of
+the German Crown Prince on June 6 he assured the French representative
+that there would be no war over Morocco.[745]
+
+The beginning of Russo-Japanese negotiations for peace had no effect
+upon the German policy, for Russia’s force was broken both by defeat and
+by the rapidly developing revolution.[746] But the attitude of France
+was so uncompromising and that of the other Powers so unfavorable that
+Prince Bülow doubted whether he would succeed in launching the
+conference.[747] He endeavored to do so by a show of boldness coupled
+with real concessions to France.
+
+To bring President Roosevelt back into active participation in the
+affair, Prince Bülow reported to him the rumor of the British offer of
+alliance to France and pictured the possibility of a war with France and
+Great Britain “not because we want too much but because we desire
+nothing.” The Prince added that if this war did occur, a new Triple
+Alliance between France, Great Britain, and Japan, with which Russia
+might also be associated, might be formed. To preclude this event he
+urged the President to advise the Powers in favor of a conference or to
+prevent British participation in a possible Franco-German war brought on
+by French aggression in Morocco. By confronting the President with the
+choice of facing the outbreak of a new war just at the moment when he
+was endeavoring to stop the Russo-Japanese conflict or of supporting the
+proposal for a conference, Prince Bülow obtained the desired result. On
+June 12 Mr. Roosevelt agreed to advise the French government in favor of
+accepting the Sultan’s invitation and against concluding an Anglo-French
+alliance.[748]
+
+At the same time the German government endeavored to restrain Great
+Britain. Herr von Holstein asserted to the British Ambassador that “if
+any one had told him two years ago that a war between England and
+Germany was within the bounds of possibility he would have simply
+laughed, but now things had reached such a point that it could no longer
+be considered impossible.” Both he and the Chancellor cited the
+bitterness of the British press toward Germany and the reported British
+offer of a defensive and offensive alliance to France as proofs. Neither
+of the two German officials believed that Great Britain would attack
+Germany, but they argued that the popular fear of such an aggression in
+their country was more plausible than that of a German invasion in Great
+Britain. In like manner Sir Frank Lascelles credited Germany with
+pacific intentions, but maintained that the British fears were more
+justified than the German. Herr von Holstein assured the Ambassador that
+“the Moroccan question would not lead to any serious complications,” and
+Lord Lansdowne denied that Great Britain wanted war or had offered an
+alliance to France. As neither side believed entirely the pacific
+asseverations of the other, the tension in Anglo-German relations was
+only slightly relaxed.[749]
+
+While making these efforts with the United States and Great Britain,
+Prince Bülow yielded before the French resistance. Although he explained
+away the Emperor’s conciliatory remarks to the French government with a
+threat and although he warned M. Rouvier not to assume M. Delcassé’s
+policy toward Morocco, he repeated his assurances that “the conference
+can have no positive results which would injure the French future.” It
+was “merely a question of etiquette and of delay,” he said, so that
+Germany could hold faith with the Sultan and disengage herself from the
+position into which M. Delcassé had forced her. Instead of demanding
+that all consideration of the Moroccan question be left to the
+conference, the Chancellor offered on June 12 to negotiate over the
+program for that assembly if France would first accept the Sultan’s
+invitation. In addition, he instructed Prince Radolin to state not
+officially, but as his (Radolin’s) personal view, that from the very
+nature of the affair the conference would have to adopt as fundamental
+“for the present no prejudice to the independence of Morocco . . . . and
+. . . . no injury to the prospects of France.” The Ambassador should
+state that the items to be considered by that body, as logical
+deductions from those two points were: police and military reforms, to
+be limited in time and international in character; financial reforms,
+likewise to be internationally executed; and the economic opening of the
+land in accordance with the principle of the open door. He should warn
+M. Rouvier against permitting Algerians to furnish the Moroccan
+pretender with contraband supplies; for if the Sultan should request
+German mediation in this affair, Germany would give it even at the risk
+of grave difficulties.[750]
+
+When the Ambassador carried out these instructions two days later, he
+found M. Rouvier “angry, discouraged, sick” but still defending France’s
+Moroccan policy. Nor did the Ambassador’s remarks change his mood.[751]
+On June 16, in response to the Premier’s request for further
+information, the Ambassador explained unofficially as further logical
+deductions from the two fundamental points: first, that the military
+reforms should be internationally ordered by a division of the mandate
+among the Powers in such a way that France would receive it for the area
+along the Algerian frontier; second, that to give an international
+character to the financial reforms, a state bank should be organized in
+which the capital and management should be divided as equally as
+possible among the banks representing the various Powers.[752] The
+Premier’s apparent relief at these remarks encouraged the German
+government to believe that a solution was near.[753]
+
+In the meantime, in accordance with Germany’s desires, President
+Roosevelt intervened in Paris and London. Notwithstanding his conviction
+that France was in the right, he advised her to avoid a war and help the
+Emperor “save his face” by accepting the conference. He argued that
+British support in case of a conflict would be of little value to
+France, and predicted a French victory at the conference. He promised
+the French government that if the United States participated, he “would
+treat both sides with absolute justice, and would, if necessary, take
+very strong grounds against any attitude of Germany which seemed . . . .
+unjust and unfair.”[754]
+
+In handling Great Britain the President took another line. He suspected
+her of wishing to make trouble. For he was receiving no support from her
+in his mediation between Russia and Japan; he knew that Lord Lansdowne
+was opposed to the conference; and, so far as he could tell from the
+British Ambassador at Washington, Great Britain was anxious for France
+to humiliate Germany by refusing the conference and was willing to face
+the possibility of war. He thought this sagacious on her part, but not
+valorous; she would be assured a victory on sea, while France would have
+to bear the brunt of the battle on land. So he warned Great Britain not
+to put difficulty in the way of a peaceful settlement between France and
+Germany, and otherwise ignored her.[755]
+
+Neither Prince Radolin’s conciliatory remarks nor President Roosevelt’s
+advice won the French Premier to accept the conference. While deeply
+impressed by reports of German threats against France in other
+capitals,[756] he inferred from his conversations with Prince Radolin
+and from an assertion of the German Ambassador in Madrid that if France
+agreed to the conference the German government would then be ready to
+commence discussions with a view to an understanding which would make
+the conference unnecessary.[757] M. Rouvier was also assured of the
+entire support of the British government. On June 16 Lord Lansdowne, in
+approving M. Paul Cambon’s returning to Paris to advise the
+inexperienced Premier,[758] remarked to the Ambassador that he saw
+nothing to be gained
+
+
+by admitting the theoretical necessity of a Conference, except perhaps
+to enable Germany, which had brought about M. Delcassé’s downfall, to
+secure a further success. Our attitude must of course depend upon that
+of the French Government, but if they maintained their refusal, so, most
+certainly, should we.[759]
+
+
+The French note to Germany of June 21 was therefore so composed by M.
+Paul Cambon as to accept the conference in principle while at the same
+time inviting Germany to negotiate further in order to obviate that
+assembly—the position which M. Rouvier had taken for two weeks. Since
+Prince Radolin’s explanations on June 14 and 18 had been made in such an
+unofficial and confidential manner, the Premier did not know whether
+they represented the German view or not, and did not mention them in the
+note.[760] Hence that document of June 21 ran as follows:
+
+
+The Imperial Government will not fail to recognize the inconvenience
+which would result for it as for us from the acceptance of the
+Conference without a previous accord, an accord which would not infringe
+upon those already concluded and which would not harm in any way the
+interests of which the Imperial Government is solicitous. . . . . The
+Government of the Republic is deeply impressed by the double
+consideration that the Conference may be dangerous if it is not preceded
+by an entente, and useless if it follows one. [Nevertheless, the French
+government did not refuse the conference.] It desires solely to know
+what are, in the mind of the Imperial Government, the precise points
+which will be treated at the Conference and the solutions which it will
+offer there.
+
+
+Thus they could arrive at the entente which both governments
+wished.[761]
+
+The Premier acquainted the British and American governments with the
+contents of the note and of the German threats, and asked them to
+recommend this solution to Germany. He emphasized to Mr. Roosevelt
+especially the menace of a German attack. Declaring that the President
+could avert that danger, he urged him to exert influence with the
+Emperor in favor of peace. Mr. Roosevelt immediately agreed to do so in
+energetic terms.[762]
+
+The German reaction was hostile. As the Chancellor realized that the
+crisis had arisen in Franco-German relations, he endeavored by a mixture
+of enticements and threats to bring the impressionable and pacific M.
+Rouvier to accept the German terms.[763] Refusing the French request,
+Prince Bülow warned the Premier on June 21, 22, and 23 against resuming
+M. Delcassé’s policy and against permitting the Algerians to aid the
+Moroccan pretender. While promising the French government “seriously and
+loyally” to work for a result satisfactory to all parties and especially
+for an understanding with France at the conference, the Chancellor
+declared to the French Ambassador: “The situation is serious. With a
+little good will and decision we may emerge from it.” But “one should
+not play with fire”; “it is a dangerous game which might lead further
+than you and I wish.” Threatening to make a defensive alliance with the
+Sultan if French policy forced him to, he refused the overture for
+negotiation and advised a quick acceptance of the conference.[764]
+
+The German policy was not as successful as the Chancellor had expected.
+By June 21 Italy had, in spite of German pressure, accepted the
+conference only conditionally.[765] The British government, loyally
+following the lead of France, fully approved the French note (June
+23).[766] In Spain, although a ministerial crisis on June 20 had
+eliminated M. Villa-Urrutia as Germany had demanded, the new Liberal
+government refused Germany’s request for support; it declared on June 25
+that it would remain loyal to the Franco-Spanish accord.[767]
+Furthermore, it was apparent that M. Rouvier would not accept the German
+demands in their existing form.[768] The Premier was staunchly supported
+by the French press, which was quickly coming to credit Germany with the
+intention not of making friends with France but of teaching her a lesson
+and of setting limits to her foreign policy.[769] More discouraging
+still, on June 24 Baron Sternburg telegraphed the following statement
+from President Roosevelt:
+
+
+The French Government informs me unofficially . . . . that it has ceased
+its opposition to a conference. . . . . It seems as a matter of course
+that a program of the conference would be needed in advance in
+accordance with the usual custom in such cases. I suggest that that be
+arranged between France and Germany. . . . . Let me congratulate the
+Emperor warmly on his diplomatic triumph of the first magnitude.[770]
+
+
+The German government retreated. Replying to the French government on
+June 24,[771] it asserted the right of the other Powers to participate
+in the work of Moroccan reform. It refused to negotiate a program for
+the conference beforehand, but admitted “that France has a very
+legitimate interest in maintaining order in the territory bordering on
+the frontier.” In the verbal explanations made upon the delivery of the
+note, the Chancellor, denying that the conference was intended to
+procure for Germany a “miserable satisfaction for her _amour-propre_” or
+to humiliate France, declared that international reform should be
+attempted in Morocco first. Then if this work broke down, he said, “the
+future is free,” and “in that future, which is perhaps not so distant,
+we shall again be able to become opportunists.” He was profoundly
+surprised, he said, that the French note took no cognizance of the
+overtures made by the German Ambassador. He urged the acceptance of the
+conference so that the two countries might escape from this “perilous
+and dangerous situation” into “a path which leads to appeasement,
+conciliation, and peace.”
+
+The Chancellor also instructed Prince Radolin to inform M. Rouvier that
+if France accepted the conference, Germany would then be willing to work
+out an agreement with her on the bases mentioned previously (June 14 and
+18) for a prospective program to be submitted to the Sultan.[772] If the
+Ambassador thought that M. Rouvier would refuse to accept the conference
+before the program was agreed upon, the Chancellor would permit him to
+propose that the French and German representatives work out a program
+with the Sultan in Fez. If M. Rouvier refused the conference altogether,
+Prince Radolin should warn him that Germany would aid the Sultan against
+any French aggressions. The Ambassador was to tell M. Rouvier that the
+Moroccan government had made offers to Germany which would insure her a
+leading position in that land, but that Germany would refuse them as
+long as the possibility of an accord with France remained.[773]
+
+By June 27 the advantage again shifted to the German side. In Paris the
+more anti-British and pro-German element, led by M. Dupuy, owner of
+_Petit Parisien_ and an intimate friend of M. Rouvier, was gaining
+greater influence. M. Dupuy informed the German Ambassador on June 26
+that M. Rouvier, whom he represented as a rather well-meaning simpleton,
+now regretted having dispatched the French note and that he now sought
+some phrase by which the German and French views could be harmonized and
+the conference accepted. In fact, M. Dupuy stated that he expected the
+French government to make the acceptance in a day or so. Both he and M.
+Betzold said that the Premier still mistrusted Great Britain.[774]
+
+Even more valuable for the German government was Mr. Roosevelt’s change
+in attitude. When the German government explained to Mr. Roosevelt that
+France had not agreed to the conference except under conditions which
+Germany had persistently refused,[775] the President immediately advised
+France on June 26 to accept unconditionally. He stated that the question
+of a program was a minor one, that the important thing was for the
+conference to meet. In answer, the French Ambassador protested that in
+view of the German Emperor’s erratic temperament France could not go to
+the conference
+
+
+without previously having drawn up a program, or at least without an
+understanding, indicating that which we might have reason to expect and
+guaranteeing in particular that solemn international undertakings, which
+have for a long time been public property, should not be brought into
+question.[776]
+
+
+Thereupon Mr. Roosevelt proposed the following compromise: “Let France
+and Germany go into the conference without any programme or agreement;
+but to discuss all questions in regard to Morocco; save of course where
+either is in honor bound by a previous agreement with another
+power.”[777]
+
+In reporting to Baron Sternburg what he had done, the President said
+that if France and Germany agreed upon this or any other compromise, he
+himself would accept the invitation to the conference and would advise
+Great Britain to do likewise. On June 27 he offered to telegraph his
+greetings to the Emperor William II. He also expressed to the British
+Ambassador his strong hope that Great Britain would drop her objections
+to the conference.[778]
+
+The President’s intervention was beneficial to both the French and the
+German governments; it brought them into a frame of mind which permitted
+a compromise. The German government was elated over his action; for even
+though it diminished any hope of breaking the French accords over
+Morocco, it did seem to assure a peaceful issue of the crisis by the
+acceptance of the conference. Hence Prince Bülow telegraphed to
+Washington on June 27 that “if after the acceptance of the conference by
+France we negotiate with the French and differences arise, I shall be
+ready at all times to support before His Majesty the Emperor that
+decision which President Roosevelt recommends as practical and
+fair.”[779]
+
+This success, however, was offset by a report from Baron Eckardstein on
+June 27 that M. Delcassé had received an offer of an offensive and
+defensive alliance from Great Britain, but that M. Rouvier had refused
+to consider it. Within the past ten days, the Baron continued, the
+British government had informed the French Premier “that he could rely
+upon its diplomatic support under all circumstances, but that if he
+wished to make an alliance with England, the English fleet would also
+uphold the French policy in case of necessity.”[780] After frankly
+repeating those statements to Lord Lansdowne on the following day, Count
+Metternich added that “at no moment had the German Government desired to
+fasten a quarrel upon France,” as the British seemed to think. Lord
+Lansdowne replied that “the language attributed to some of the German
+representatives had certainly suggested the idea that it was desired to
+do so.” He then made this important statement:
+
+
+. . . . British diplomatic support was assured to the French by the
+Anglo-French accord. . . . . As a natural result questions which
+concerned that agreement would have been discussed between the two
+Governments and proper ways and means conferred upon to maintain intact
+the individual points of the accord. The question of an alliance with
+France has never been discussed by the British cabinet nor has an
+English alliance ever been offered to France. . . . . However, he would
+not conceal his belief that in the event that Germany “lightheartedly”
+made war upon France, which he considered entirely improbable, it was
+not to be foreseen how far British public opinion would force the
+Government to support France.[781]
+
+
+To this alarming information was added the report from Paris that the
+British were exerting all possible pressure to prevent France from
+accepting the conference.[782] Furthermore, when Prince Radolin carried
+out his instructions, June 27, M. Rouvier continued to refuse the
+conference without a previous understanding. To that end he offered two
+proposals. One, a suggestion which he took from a German newspaper, was
+that the French and German representatives at Fez work out a program in
+co-operation with the Sultan prior to French acceptance of the
+conference. The other was that in providing for the international
+regulation of the police and financial reforms France should be assured
+the right to execute the police reforms along the Algerian frontier
+while nothing definite should be stated about the organization of the
+police in the rest of Morocco. This agreement, M. Rouvier added, could
+become valid as soon as France officially accepted the conference. He
+also desired the recall of the three ministers from Fez so as to prevent
+complications.[783]
+
+As already seen, the Chancellor was willing to accept the first
+proposal, although, fearing that upon further delay the Sultan might
+throw over the project of a conference and undermine the entire German
+policy, he preferred some other solution. Since he mistrusted the
+Sultan, he refused to recall Count Tattenbach from Fez until the
+conference actually met. He also held to his formula of “first
+acceptance, then negotiations”; but to counteract the British pressure
+he retreated further by agreeing on June 28 for the Premier to declare
+publicly that
+
+
+the French Government has dropped its objections to the conference after
+becoming convinced from the declarations of Your Highness [Prince
+Radolin] that Germany would pursue no goals at the conference which
+would stand in opposition to the just interests of France.
+
+
+He refused, however, to permit M. Rouvier to make public anything
+further about the German concessions of June 14 and 18.[784] On the same
+day he declared to M. Bihourd that once the conference met, Germany
+would be freed from her obligations to the Sultan and could follow her
+own interests. Let international reforms first be tried in Morocco, he
+said; if they failed, Germany would have to consult only her own
+interests, among which Morocco occupied “an infinitely small place.” If
+France, in conformity with the views of the British government, refused
+the conference, there would obtain a condition of _la paix armée_. If
+she accepted, there would be “neither victor nor vanquished.”[785]
+
+Learning that the German government regarded Prince Radolin’s assertions
+of June 14 and 18 as official and despairing of any other solution, M.
+Rouvier was more inclined to accept the conference. He justified this
+course to the British chargé d’affaires on June 28 as follows:
+
+
+He [M. Rouvier] considered that under the conditions a conference was
+perhaps the best way of arriving at a satisfactory solution. The Emperor
+had made it a point of personal honour: France would go into it with the
+support of England, Spain, and possibly Italy, whereas Germany would be
+alone; Germany was prepared to admit the preponderance of French
+interests on the Algerian frontier. It was absolutely necessary to
+arrive at some solution as the present situation was excessively
+dangerous. So long as the Conference was not accepted, Germany
+considered that she was entitled to a free hand in Morocco, and she was
+very very [_sic_] active. She would ask for all sorts of concessions,
+ports, cables, etc., and were the Sultan to accede to such demands the
+situation both for France and England would become far more critical.
+Monsieur Rouvier hinted that once the present difficulties had been more
+or less tided over at the Conference, it would be possible to see that
+Germany did not get too much in Morocco.[786]
+
+
+Before approving the proposal for a conference, however, M. Rouvier
+intended to include in the agreement with Germany some mention of
+France’s accords with Great Britain and Spain over Morocco.[787]
+
+While M. Rouvier delayed, the German government grew apprehensive.
+Prince Radolin heard on June 29 that M. Paul Cambon, Sir Francis Bertie,
+and the British government were making every effort to prevent the
+French acceptance, arguing that Germany was endeavoring to nullify the
+Anglo-French agreement. On the next day M. Dupuy informed the Ambassador
+that the British “were sitting powerfully on M. Rouvier’s back” to
+obstruct it and that Sir Francis Bertie was pressing the French Premier
+to make a defensive and offensive alliance with Great Britain. When M.
+Cambon reached Paris on June 30, M. Dupuy thought that there was grave
+danger of M. Rouvier’s being overthrown.[788]
+
+In this situation the German government denied on June 30 to the French
+government that it meant to question the Anglo-French accord. On the
+next day it was prepared to give way still further, but M. Rouvier
+accepted the conference.[789] The Premier proposed that he and the
+German Ambassador make an exchange of notes and sign a declaration
+incorporating the concessions which the German government had made to
+France.[790] M. Rouvier then submitted the bases of the agreement to
+Lord Lansdowne, who approved them.[791] After much bickering over the
+formulation of the agreement, during which a liberal repetition of
+German threats mixed with enticements was made, accord was finally
+reached on July 8.[792]
+
+By that agreement Germany promised to pursue no goal at the conference
+which would compromise the “legitimate interests” of France in Morocco
+or
+
+
+that would be contrary to the rights of France resulting from treaties
+or arrangements and harmonizing with the following principles:
+sovereignty and independence of the Sultan; integrity of his empire;
+economic liberty without any inequality; utility of police and financial
+reforms the introduction of which will be regulated for a short period
+by way of an international accord; recognition of the situation created
+for France with reference to Morocco by the contiguity, over a long
+stretch, of Algeria and the Sherifian empire, by the particular
+relations which result therefrom between the two neighboring countries,
+as well as by the special interest which results therefrom for France
+for order to obtain in the Sherifian empire.
+
+
+The two governments agreed to work out a program for the conference
+which they would submit to the Sultan for acceptance. The French and
+German missions were to be recalled from Fez as soon as the conference
+met. Prince Radolin also stated specifically that the Anglo-French and
+Franco-Spanish agreements remained untouched by this understanding.[793]
+
+The French, British, and German presses greeted this accord with relief
+and with the sincere hope that the crisis was past.[794] The Powers also
+signified their acceptances.[795]
+
+The agreement marked Germany’s first reverse in her Moroccan campaign.
+She had been compelled to recognize France’s special interest in Morocco
+and had failed to nullify the French ententes. Germany could have placed
+herself on the same basis with reference to France that Great Britain
+occupied, both in regard to European and to colonial affairs. Instead,
+however, of weakening the Entente Cordiale, instead of making a valuable
+colonial accord by accepting the French offers, the German government
+had preferred both to keep its promises to the Sultan and to free itself
+from those promises by forcing a conference upon an unwilling world.
+Caught in the toils of its own tangled policy and determined to have a
+share in Morocco even though the German people were uninterested, it had
+refused present offers of colonial gain with the hope of bringing about
+their renewal in the future. Its virtue, not appreciated by any other
+Power, was greater than its common sense.
+
+Although the German government had receded, it had done so only after
+embittering the French nation and arousing it to the united defense of
+its national honor. As Ambassador Jusserand wrote to Mr. Roosevelt on
+July 11:
+
+
+I leave greatly comforted by the news concerning Morocco. The agreement
+arrived at is in substance the one which we had considered and the
+acceptation of which you did so very much to secure. Letters just
+received by me from Paris . . . . confirm what I guessed was the case,
+that is, that there was a point where more yielding would have been
+impossible; everybody in France felt it, and people braced up silently
+in view of possible great events.[796]
+
+
+Germany’s actions had antagonized M. Rouvier and converted him to the
+Entente Cordiale. M. Rouvier remarked to the British chargé d’affaires
+as follows:
+
+
+His Majesty [the German Emperor] had expected a complete climb-down to
+follow upon the change of direction of the Ministry for Foreign Affairs,
+but as His Excellency [M. Rouvier] said, there was no reason because he
+parted with Monsieur Delcassé that he should throw himself “dans les
+bras de l’Empereur et sur son cou.”[797]
+
+
+M. Cambon informed Lord Lansdowne that
+
+
+after all that had happened M. Rouvier was more convinced than ever of
+the necessity of maintaining a close understanding with this country
+[Great Britain]. It was, in his view, essential that the two Governments
+should treat one another with the fullest confidence, and that no
+further steps should be taken without previous discussion between us.
+While holding this opinion, M. Rouvier thought it desirable to proceed
+with caution in dealing with the German Government and thought we should
+avoid parading a desire to run counter to them.
+
+
+These assertions met with Lord Lansdowne’s entire approval, for they
+signified the success of the British struggle to maintain the Entente
+Cordiale and to keep Germany out of Morocco. The Foreign Secretary
+assured M. Cambon that Great Britain had no intention of withdrawing her
+support. But he added: “. . . . The apparent sacrifice of M. Delcassé in
+the face of German pressure had created an unfavourable impression in
+this country, and I therefore thought there was a good deal to be said
+for M. Rouvier’s view that it would be as well to avoid any action
+calculated to bring about fresh complications.”[798] In other words,
+Lord Lansdowne intimated that British public opinion would not be so
+willing to support France as it had been before that display of French
+weakness.
+
+In spite of this remark, signs were not lacking of close intimacy
+between the two countries. On July 12 _Gaulois_ published the
+information that at the cabinet meeting on June 6 M. Delcassé had
+favored an alliance with Great Britain in order to hold Germany in
+check. Without definitely stating so, the article left the impression
+that the Foreign Minister had been certain of an alliance.[799] When the
+French and British fleets exchanged visits in July and August, the press
+compared the visits to that of the Russian fleet to Toulon in 1893 which
+had sealed the Franco-Russian alliance.[800]
+
+The German government was thus furthering that process which it called
+Germany’s encirclement and isolation.
+
+
+[Footnote 724: Bülow to Tattenbach, June 7, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 418 f.,
+No. 6692.]
+
+[Footnote 725: The signatory Powers were as follows: Austria-Hungary,
+Italy, Spain, Great Britain, France, Russia, United States, the
+Netherlands, Portugal, Sweden, Belgium, and Germany.]
+
+[Footnote 726: Art. XVII read as follows: “Le droit au traitement de la
+nation la plus favorisée est reconnu par le Maroc à toutes les
+Puissances representées à la Conférence de Madrid” (Leon Deloncle [ed.],
+_Statut international du Maroc_ [Paris, 1912], p. 51). The French
+refused to accept this interpretation of the Convention of Madrid and of
+Art. XVII. Tardieu replied to the German arguments as follows: “That
+convention aimed to limit at the demand of Morocco the right of
+protection of the legations to certain Moroccan subjects which some
+Powers tended to abuse. It had regulated the exercise of that right,
+determined the conditions of naturalization for the Moroccans, those for
+the acquisition of landed property by foreigners, and had established
+the basis of the agricultural tax. Concerning general policy or
+stipulations about the tariff, not a word. Article XVII, which Germany
+invoked as the charter of international equality in Morocco, applied in
+reality only to the right of protection. . . . . Article XVII is not a
+promise of the Powers among themselves never to touch the diplomatic or
+economic terrain. It is a promise by Morocco never to differentiate
+between them within the limits of 1880 and within those limits alone,
+that is (following the preamble of the convention) in the exercise of
+protection” (Tardieu, _La Conf. d’Algés_, p. 39). Lansdowne also
+challenged the German interpretation. “Any rights which other countries
+may have to most-favoured-nation treatment in Morocco would not . . . .
+preclude the possibility of a privileged position being in certain
+respects accorded to France in her dealings with the Moorish Government.
+Most-favoured-nation treatment is variously interpreted in different
+countries. But no Power has, I believe, ever contended that the
+obligation to give such treatment debars one country from invoking the
+assistance of another in improving its domestic administration, and it
+is obvious that such assistance can be most conveniently and effectually
+given when the Power which affords it is the immediate neighbour of that
+which receives it, nor was there any desire or intention on the part of
+France to deprive other Powers of the rights and privileges to which
+they were justly entitled under Treaty” (Lansdowne to Bertie, July 11,
+1905, _B.D._, III, 117 f., No. 150; cf. Metternich to F. O., June 6,
+1905, _G.P._, XX, 416 f., No. 6690).
+
+The German interpretation was based upon a loose construction of that
+convention while the French interpretation was based upon a strict
+construction. Although from a legal standpoint the French view was
+correct, yet the precedent of an international conference over Moroccan
+affairs, no matter what they were, favored the German argument.
+Moreover, the fact remained that France had tried to change the existing
+status in Morocco without consulting Powers who had as much right to be
+considered as the three with whom she had come to terms.]
+
+[Footnote 727: Bülow to Flotow, June 5, dispatched June 6, 1905, _G.P._,
+413 ff., No. 6687; _L.j., 1901-5_, 230 f., No. 268, annexe.]
+
+[Footnote 728: Alvensleben to F. O., June 7, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 419, No.
+6693; Wedel to F. O., June 6, 1905, _ibid._, 417 f., No. 6691; Monts to
+F. O., June 6, 9, 12, 1905, _ibid._, 415 f., No. 6688; 424 f., No. 6699;
+435 ff., No. 6709; de Bunsen to Lansdowne, June 8, 1905, _B.D._, III, 91
+f., No. 115; Smith to Lansdowne, June 24, 1905, _ibid._, 101, No. 129;
+Lansdowne to Goschen, June 21, 1905, _ibid._, 100, No. 127; Egerton to
+Lansdowne, June 9, 10, 13, 1905, _ibid._, 94 f., Nos. 119 ff.; Hardinge
+to Lansdowne, June 14, 1905, _ibid._, 96, No. 123.]
+
+[Footnote 729: Bülow to Radowitz, June 10, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 425 f., No.
+6701.]
+
+[Footnote 730: Lansdowne to Lascelles, June 8, 1905, _B.D._, III, 92 f.,
+No. 117.]
+
+[Footnote 731: Metternich to F. O., June 6 and 8, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 416
+f., No. 6690; 422 ff., No. 6697 f. King Edward also refused to permit
+the Prince of Wales to attend the wedding of the German Crown Prince on
+June 6 (Lee, _King Edward VII_, II, 335 f.). Lowther had communicated
+the British refusal to the Sultan when on June 8 new instructions
+arrived for him to await further developments. See Lowther to Lansdowne,
+June 9, 1905, _B.D._, III, 94, No. 118; Lansdowne to Lowther, June 8,
+1905, _ibid._, 92, No. 116.]
+
+[Footnote 732: The information came from M. Bunau-Varilla, owner of
+_Matin_ (_G.P._, XX, 623 f., No. 6853).]
+
+[Footnote 733: Bülow to Sternburg, May 25 and 30, 1905, _ibid._, 385 f.,
+Nos. 6667 f.; Bishop, _The Life and Times of Theodore Roosevelt_, I, 470
+f.]
+
+[Footnote 734: Sternburg to Bülow, June 8, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 421, No.
+6696. Durand reported that Roosevelt had said to Sternburg that “so long
+as the French Government object, the United States Government could not
+adhere to the proposal for a Conference of the Powers” (Lansdowne to
+Cambon, June 6, 1905, _B.D._, III, 90 f., No. 112).]
+
+[Footnote 735: Radolin to F. O., June 3, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 402 f., No.
+6680; Flotow to F. O., June 6 and 9, 1905, _ibid._, 404, No. 6682; 425,
+No. 6700. In these negotiations Rouvier leaned on the advice of Révoil,
+who in June without holding any office was given a desk in the foreign
+office (Tardieu, p. 84).]
+
+[Footnote 736: _L.j., 1901-5_, 230, No. 268; 231, No. 269; 233, No.
+271.]
+
+[Footnote 737: Rouvier to Saint-René Taillandier, June 10, 1905,
+_ibid._, 230 f., No. 269.]
+
+[Footnote 738: Flotow to F. O., June 7, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 420, No.
+6694.]
+
+[Footnote 739: Flotow to F. O., June 9, 1905, _ibid._, 425, No. 6700.]
+
+[Footnote 740: Bülow to Radolin, June 10, 1905, _ibid._, 427 f., No.
+6702; Radolin to F. O., June 11, 1905, _ibid._, 430 f., No. 6705;
+Rouvier to Bihourd, June 11, 1905, _L.j., 1901-5_, 232, No. 270.
+Immediately after that interview Rouvier declared to some of his
+friends: “They are putting a knife to my throat. I do not know where
+they wish to drive us” (Wolff, _Das Vorspiel_, pp. 174 f.).]
+
+[Footnote 741: Schulthess, _Europäischer Geschichtskalender 1905_, p.
+92.]
+
+[Footnote 742: Goetz, _Briefe Wilhelms II an den Zaren 1894-1914_, pp.
+370 ff.; _G.P._, XIX, Nos. 6193, 6196 f., 6311 ff., 6318; _B.D._, Vol.
+IV, chap. xxiii, Part. V.]
+
+[Footnote 743: The absence of minutes by him to the dispatches during
+this crisis points to this fact (also see Eckardstein,
+_Lebenserinnerungen und politische Denkwürdigkeiten_, III, 167). The
+Emperor first learned of Rouvier’s offer of a general colonial agreement
+at this time in 1907. His comment was as follows: “If I had known of
+that, I would have accepted it and the whole stupid conference of
+Algeciras would have been avoided” (Brandenburg, _Von Bismarck zum
+Weltkriege_, p. 215).]
+
+[Footnote 744: See the Emperor’s minutes, one of the very few instances
+in which they are to be found, to the dispatch from Radolin to Bülow,
+June 11, 1905 (_G.P._, XX, 409, No. 6685).]
+
+[Footnote 745: On this episode see Eckardstein, II, 139 f.; Zedlitz-
+Trützschler, _Zwölf Jahre am deutschen Kaiserhof_, p. 174; Bülow to
+Radolin, June 10, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 429 f., No. 6704.]
+
+[Footnote 746: This was General Schlieffen’s opinion. Schlieffen
+believed that the condition of the Russian army would grow worse instead
+of better. See Bülow to Schlieffen, June 4, 1905, _ibid._, XIX, 422, No.
+6194; Schlieffen to Bülow, June 10, 1905, _ibid._, 423 f., No. 6195.]
+
+[Footnote 747: Bülow to Tattenbach, June 7, 1905, _ibid._, 418 f., No.
+6692.]
+
+[Footnote 748: Bülow to Sternburg, June 9 and 10, 1905, _ibid._, XX, 421
+f. n.; 626 ff., No. 6856; Bishop, I, 476 f.; Sternburg to F. O., June
+12, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 433 f., No. 6707.]
+
+[Footnote 749: Metternich to Bülow, June 9, 1905, _ibid._, 625 f., No.
+6855; Bülow to Metternich, June 11, 1905, _ibid._, 628 ff., No. 6857;
+Metternich to F. O., June 15 and 16, 1905, _ibid._, 441 f., No. 6712;
+630 ff., No. 6858; Lascelles to Lansdowne, June 12, 1905, _B.D._, III,
+79 ff., Nos. 97 f.; Lansdowne to Lascelles, June 16, 1905, _ibid._, 82
+f., No. 99. See also Newton, _Lord Lansdowne_, pp. 335 f.]
+
+[Footnote 750: Bülow to Radolin, June 12, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 431 ff., No.
+6706. The accusation that Algerians were helping the pretender was made
+by a German army officer who in June returned from the Algerian border.
+Governor Jonnart of Algeria denied it and asserted that the contraband
+came, not from Algeria but from the Riff. Although Jonnart’s statement
+was undoubtedly correct, yet the report came in so handily that the
+German government used it as a weapon of intimidation against France
+(_ibid._, Nos. 6724, 6746; _L.j., 1901-5_, Nos. 275 f., 281, 283 f.).]
+
+[Footnote 751: Radolin to F. O., June 14, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 438 f., No.
+6710.]
+
+[Footnote 752: Bülow to Radolin, June 16, 1905, _ibid._, 439 ff., No.
+6711; Radolin to Rouvier, June 16, 1905, _L.j., 1901-5_, 234 ff., No.
+272.]
+
+[Footnote 753: Bülow to Tattenbach, June 19, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 448 ff.,
+No. 6718.]
+
+[Footnote 754: Sternburg to F. O., June 17, 1905, _ibid._, 442 f., No.
+6713; Bishop, I, 477 f.]
+
+[Footnote 755: On Roosevelt and Great Britain see Bishop, I, 474 f., 481
+ff., 408; Dennett, _Roosevelt and the Russo-Japanese War_, 37 f., 210
+ff.; Sykes, _The Right Honourable Sir Mortimer Durand_, p. 285;
+Sternburg to F. O., June 12, 17, 25, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 433 f., No. 6707;
+442 f., No. 6713; 473 ff., No. 6738; Lansdowne to Durand, June 16, July
+12, 1905, _B.D._, IV, 89, No. 85; 91, No. 87; Spring Rice’s
+correspondence with Roosevelt, June-July, 1905, Gwynn, _The Letters and
+Friendships of Sir Cecil Spring Rice_, I, 472 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 756: Threats by the German ambassadors in Paris, Rome, and
+Madrid (_B.D._, III, 97, No. 126).]
+
+[Footnote 757: Lansdowne to Bertie, June 16, 1905, _ibid._, 96, No. 124;
+Nicolson to Lansdowne, June 17, 1905, _ibid._, 97, No. 125.]
+
+[Footnote 758: Barrère, the two Cambons, and Jusserand, all firmly in
+sympathy with Delcassé’s policy, were holding Rouvier in line. See
+Egerton to Lansdowne, June 13, 1905, _ibid._, 95, No. 122.]
+
+[Footnote 759: Lansdowne to Bertie, June 16, 1905, _ibid._, 96 f., No.
+124. In Rome Egerton was working to hold Italy in line with this policy.
+See Egerton to Lansdowne, June 10, 1905, _ibid._, 94, No. 120.]
+
+[Footnote 760: Radolin to F. O., June 26, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 484, No.
+6745.]
+
+[Footnote 761: Rouvier to Radolin, June 21, 1905, _L.j., 1901-5_, 235
+ff., No. 273; Radolin to F. O., June 21, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 452 f., No.
+6720. The note was composed mainly by Paul Cambon. See Radolin to F. O.,
+June 30, 1905, _ibid._, 494, No. 6752.]
+
+[Footnote 762: Lansdowne to Bertie, June 21, 1905, _B.D._, III, 97 f.,
+No. 126; Metternich to F. O., June 23, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 463 f., No.
+6727; Rouvier to Jusserand, June 23 and 25, 1905, quoted in Bishop, I,
+478 ff. Dennis relates that while in France in May, 1926, he heard a
+story to the effect that Roosevelt had written to the German Emperor at
+this crisis warning him that “it would be a crime against civilization
+for Germany to declare war against France.” Dennis was unable to find
+any such letter, and presumes that the one thought to have contained
+this warning was one from Roosevelt to Sternburg on June 26 [_sic_],
+1905 (Dennis, _Adventures in American Diplomacy_, p. 495). The truth
+seems to be that Roosevelt, who had not been so schooled in diplomacy as
+to choose his words carefully, spoke to Jusserand as if he would use
+such language to the Emperor, and then softened down his words greatly
+when he did write to Sternburg. Cf. Jusserand’s letter to Rouvier on
+June 25, 1905, with Roosevelt’s letter to Sternburg on the same date,
+quoted in Bishop, I, 480 f., 483 ff. Rouvier gave Roosevelt credit for
+his acceptance in principle of the conference. The French Premier also
+asked Eckardstein to intervene again, but the latter refused since he
+was in such bad odor with his government (Eckardstein, III, 147 ff.).]
+
+[Footnote 763: “Rouvier . . . . we know does not wish a conflict with
+us,” . . . . “the Chamber of Deputies wishes above all to avoid war”
+(quoted from a dispatch from Bülow to William II, June 22, 1905, _G.P._,
+XX, 456, No. 6723). “The sooner we make it clear to him [Rouvier] what
+results the French refusal of the conference and the further support of
+the pretender must have, the more we diminish the dangers of the
+situation” (Bülow to Radolin, June 24, 1905, _ibid._, 466, No. 6730).
+That the German government was playing with war but did not intend to
+start one is also evident from a confidential letter from Holstein to
+the editor of the _Kölnische Zeitung_, June 28, 1905, which expresses
+completely the nature of the German policy. “. . . . In brief, I
+consider the danger of war for Germany at the present moment vanishingly
+small. It will be still more diminished if a conviction of our firmness
+prevails. We know now for certain that in the last ministerial council
+Delcassé declared: ‘Germany will not dare to fight, it is all bluff.’
+This doubt about our determination could have led to a conflict if the
+other ministers had shared Delcassé’s views” (reprinted in _Kölnische
+Zeitung_, April 2, 1922).]
+
+[Footnote 764: Radolin to F. O., June 22, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 457 ff., No.
+6724; memo. by Bülow, June 23, 1905, _ibid._, 459 ff., No. 6725; Bülow
+to William II, June 22 and 24, 1905, _ibid._, 455 ff., No. 6723; 464 f.,
+No. 6729; Bülow to Radolin, June 24, 1905, _ibid._, 465 f., No. 6730;
+Bihourd to Rouvier, June 23, 1905, _L.j., 1901-5_, 240 f., No. 277;
+Lansdowne to Lister, June 28, 1905, _B.D._, III, 105 ff., No. 133;
+Whitehead to Lansdowne, June 28, 1905, _ibid._, 108 f., No. 135.]
+
+[Footnote 765: Monts to Bülow, June 21, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 454 f., No.
+6722.]
+
+[Footnote 766: Metternich to F. O., June 23, 1905, _ibid._, 463 f., No.
+6727; Lee, II, 344; Lansdowne to Bertie, June 21, 1905, _B.D._, III, 97
+f., No. 126.]
+
+[Footnote 767: Bülow held out prospects of aiding Spain to acquire
+Tangier and the surrounding territory in case of a future break-up of
+Morocco if Spain would uphold the German policy. The insincerity of the
+statement is proved by a letter from Holstein to Radolin on July 2,
+1905. In regard to the Moroccan affair he wrote: “We need have no
+consideration for the wishes of others, at any rate not for those of
+Spain who has never caused other than anger or embarrassment for us.”
+See Bülow to Radowitz, June 21, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 453 f., No. 6721;
+Radowitz to F. O., June 25, 1905, _ibid._, 473, No. 6737; Holstein to
+Radolin, July 2, 1905, _ibid._, 503, No. 6757.]
+
+[Footnote 768: See Rouvier’s reply to the Prince of Monaco, which the
+latter immediately handed to the German government (William II to Bülow,
+June 24, 1905, _ibid._, 464, No. 6728).]
+
+[Footnote 769: Eckardstein, III, 147 ff.; report from Paris, June 18,
+1905, _Zur europ. Politik_, II, 60; _Bulletin_, June, 1905, pp. 235 ff.
+“There appear to me to be indications that the feeling is growing in
+France that it is necessary to treat the Morocco question in as
+conciliatory a spirit as possible, but that when further demands are
+made by Germany they should be met by a firm refusal. . . . . The
+feeling of resentment against Germany on account of her present action
+is very strong and the spirit of the ‘revanche’ is reawakening; the
+French have pulled themselves together wonderfully after their first
+panic and they now seem prepared to face calmly the contingency of war
+in the future should the pretensions of Germany continue.
+
+“There is I think no doubt that Monsieur Rouvier could at present
+command a very large majority in the Chamber on any question of Foreign
+policy, and his efforts to preserve peace by conciliation so far as
+conciliation can go without loss of dignity, will only enhance his
+position in the eyes of his countrymen, and assure him their unanimous
+support in the event of such a policy being rendered impossible” (Lister
+to Lansdowne, June 28, 1905, _B.D._, III, 107 f., No. 134).]
+
+[Footnote 770: Sternburg to F. O., June 24, 1905, _ibid._, 466 f., No.
+6731; Bishop, I, 482.]
+
+[Footnote 771: The note was dated June 24, but was handed by Bülow to
+Bihourd on June 25 and by Radolin to Rouvier on June 27, 1905. See
+Radolin to Rouvier, June 24, 1905, _L.j., 1901-5_, 242 ff., No. 278;
+Bihourd to Rouvier, June 25, 1905, _ibid._, 244 f., No. 279; Bülow to
+Radolin, June 25 and 26, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 470 f., No. 6734; 472, No.
+6736; Bülow to William II, June 26, 1905, _ibid._, 476 ff., No. 6740.]
+
+[Footnote 772: However, the Sultan and the other Powers should not be
+precluded thereby from proposing other matters for the consideration of
+that body.]
+
+[Footnote 773: Bülow to Radolin, June 25, dispatched June 26, 1905,
+_ibid._, 470 f., No. 6734.]
+
+[Footnote 774: Radolin to F. O., June 25 and 26, 1905, _ibid._, 472, No.
+6735; 479, No. 6741; Radolin to Bülow, June 26, 1905, _ibid._, 483 f.,
+No. 6743.]
+
+[Footnote 775: Bülow to William II, June 25, 1905, _ibid._, 467 ff., No.
+6732; Sternburg to F. O., June 25, 1905, _ibid._, 473 ff., No. 6738;
+Bülow to Sternburg, June 26, 1905, _ibid._, 475 f., No. 6739; Bishop, I,
+483 f.]
+
+[Footnote 776: Bishop, I, 485 f.]
+
+[Footnote 777: Sternburg to F. O., June 26, 27, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 479
+ff., No. 6742 f.; Bishop, I, 485.]
+
+[Footnote 778: Sternburg to F. O., June 27, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 480 f.,
+No. 6743.]
+
+[Footnote 779: Bülow to Sternburg, June 27, 1905, _ibid._, 481, No.
+6744. Sternburg inadvertently changed the wording of that promise to
+read as follows: “The Emperor has requested me [Sternburg] to tell you
+that if during the coming conference differences of opinion should arise
+between France and Germany, he, in every case, will be ready to back up
+the decision which you should consider to be most fair and most
+practical” (Sternburg to Roosevelt, June 28, 1905, quoted in Bishop, I,
+487). The latter promise bound the German government more tightly than
+did the former, and was to cause it embarrassment later.]
+
+[Footnote 780: Metternich to F. O., June 27, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 634 f.,
+No. 6859.]
+
+[Footnote 781: Metternich to F. O., June 28, 1905, _ibid._, 636, No.
+6860; Lansdowne to Whitehead, June 28, 1905, _B.D._, III, 103, No.
+132_a_.]
+
+[Footnote 782: Radolin to F. O., June 26, dispatched June 27, 1905,
+_G.P._, XX, 479, No. 6741.]
+
+[Footnote 783: Radolin to F. O., June 27, dispatched June 28, 1905,
+_ibid._, 485 f., No. 6746.]
+
+[Footnote 784: Bülow to Radolin, June 28, 1905, _ibid._, 487 f., No.
+6748; Bülow to William II, June 28, 1905, _ibid._, 488 ff., No. 6749.]
+
+[Footnote 785: Bülow to Radolin, July 1, 1905, _ibid._, 495 ff., No.
+6753 and Appendix; Holstein to Radolin, June 28, 1905, _ibid._, 490 ff.,
+No. 6750.]
+
+[Footnote 786: Lister to Lansdowne, June 28, 1905, _B.D._, III, 107 f.,
+No. 134.]
+
+[Footnote 787: Lansdowne entirely approved of this suggestion, remarking
+that “it [the Anglo-French declaration] might be usefully cited for the
+purpose of showing that the policy of both France and Great Britain had
+been in favour of maintaining the independence and integrity of Morocco
+and preserving commercial equality” (Lansdowne to Bertie, July 1, 1905,
+_ibid._, 110 f., No. 137). The rancor back of Lansdowne’s statement is
+apparent.]
+
+[Footnote 788: Radolin to F. O., June 29 and 30, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 492
+ff., Nos. 6751 f.; Lee, II, 344.]
+
+[Footnote 789: Bülow to Radolin, July 1, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 495 ff., No.
+6753 and Anlage; Rouvier to Bihourd, July 9, 1905, _L.j., 1901-5_, 249,
+No. 285.]
+
+[Footnote 790: Radolin to Bülow, July 1, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 499, No.
+6754; 501 f., No. 6756; Radolin to F. O., July 1, 1905, _ibid._, 499 f.,
+No. 6755.]
+
+[Footnote 791: Lansdowne to Bertie, July 1, 1905, _B.D._, III, 110 f.,
+No. 137.]
+
+[Footnote 792: On those negotiations see _G.P._, XX, Nos. 6754 ff.;
+Rouvier to Bihourd, July 9, 1905, _L.j., 1901-5_, 249, No. 285.]
+
+[Footnote 793: _L.j., 1901-5_, Nos. 287 f.; _G.P._, XX, Nos. 6767 f.;
+_B.D._, III, 115 f., No. 147.]
+
+[Footnote 794: See Rouvier’s speech in the Chamber on July 10, 1905
+(_Journal officiel. Debats parlem._ [Chambre, July 10, 1905], pp. 2825
+f.). Lansdowne’s speech of acceptance in the House of Lords, July 11,
+1905, 4 Hansard, Vol. CIXL, col. 241. Richthofen to Radolin, July 9,
+1905, _G.P._, XX, 516 f., No. 6769. The German government prohibited
+Jaurès from coming to Berlin to speak before a socialist congress on
+July 9, but as the prohibition was based on internal reasons, it had
+little effect upon Franco-German relations (Schulthess, _1905_, pp. 104
+f.; _L’année politique, 1905_, p. 388).]
+
+[Footnote 795: The French and British governments were particularly
+anxious for Russia and the United States to attend. See Lansdowne to
+Lister, July 6, 1905, _B.D._, III, 114, No. 143; see also _ibid._, Nos.
+149 ff., 154, 159 f., 164.]
+
+[Footnote 796: Quoted in Bishop, I, 488.]
+
+[Footnote 797: Lister to Lansdowne, June 28, 1905, _B.D._, III, 108, No.
+134.]
+
+[Footnote 798: Lansdowne to Bertie, July 12, 1905, _ibid._, 118 f., No.
+152. On June 28 Lowther reported a conversation with Tattenbach in which
+the latter gave him to understand that “what he [Tattenbach] desired the
+Conference should do, would be to bring about an amendment of the Anglo-
+French Convention of April 8th, 1904.” King Edward’s minute to this
+dispatch was, “In plain English—Germany ousts France fr[om] Morocco and
+puts herself in her place!” See Lowther to Lansdowne, D. June 28, 1905,
+R. July 10, 1905, _ibid._, 101 f., No. 191.]
+
+[Footnote 799: Schulthess, _1905_, pp. 217 f.]
+
+[Footnote 800: Lee, II, 344 f.]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIV
+
+ THE MOROCCAN CRISIS, JULY-OCTOBER, 1905
+
+
+After Germany had forced France to lay the Moroccan problem before an
+international conference, M. Rouvier was no longer willing to give
+Germany a share in Morocco. Confident of British support and heartened
+by the friendly assertions of the German officials, he hoped to obtain a
+general mandate from the conference for executing the military, police,
+and financial reforms.[801] Thus resuming the original French policy
+toward Morocco, he took steps to fulfil it by way of that assembly.
+
+Before negotiating with Germany over a program for the conference, M.
+Rouvier obtained the approval of his proposals from Great Britain and
+Spain.[802] He also felt it necessary to affirm and supplement the
+Franco-Spanish agreement of 1904 in accordance with the new situation
+and to make certain of Spain’s loyalty at the conference.
+
+The new government formed in Madrid late in June showed immediately a
+more independent spirit toward France than its predecessor had done.
+Both M. Montero Rios, the premier, and M. Roman, the foreign minister,
+reiterated to the British Ambassador that “the chief aim of their
+foreign policy was to be on specially intimate terms with Great Britain,
+and to strengthen as far as possible the good understanding at present
+existing.” But they established closer contacts with Germany, and
+informed the British and French governments that while Spain would abide
+by the Franco-Spanish Agreement she had not “abnegated her personality,”
+and was free to take any course, in matters outside that agreement, “as
+might be dictated by her interests.” Spanish public opinion reflected
+the same sentiment. Some elements even wished to use the acceptance of
+the conference as an excuse for withdrawing from the Franco-Spanish
+agreement entirely. With the help of the British government and the
+blunders of Germany, that antagonized Spain, M. Rouvier ironed out the
+differences.[803] On September 1 the French and Spanish governments
+signed a secret agreement.[804] Its terms were as follows:
+
+All officers and underofficers charged with the instruction and command
+of the native troops in Larache and Tetouan were to be Spanish, while
+those in Rabat and Casablanca were to be French. The policing of Tangier
+should be intrusted for fifteen years to a Franco-Spanish corps
+commanded by a Frenchman. Contraband traffic in arms should be
+suppressed by France and Spain, individually in certain areas, co-
+operatively in others. The two governments were to work together to the
+end that “the participation in the capital and the works of all public
+enterprises will be offered to subjects of the two nations.” In the
+state bank or in any other institution to be created the presidency
+should be reserved to France, while the degree of participation of Spain
+should be superior to that of any other Power except France.
+
+
+The two Powers engage to observe this accord even in case where the
+stipulations of Article XVII of the Convention of Madrid of 1880 come to
+be extended to all economic and financial questions; they will aid each
+other before the Sultan . . . . to assure the loyal accomplishment of
+all that the present accord stipulates. Moreover, Spain being firmly
+resolved to act in complete accord with France . . . . and France
+proposing to act in the same way with Spain, it is agreed . . . . that
+the two Governments will assist each other and will proceed in common
+accord in the deliberations [at the conference] in that which concerns
+the stipulations of the convention of October 3, 1904, in its broadest
+and most amicable interpretation as well as in that which concerns the
+different objects of the present accord. They engage to extend to each
+other the most complete pacific aid on all questions of a general order
+concerning Morocco in harmony with the cordial and friendly entente
+between them with reference to the affairs of the Sherifian Empire.[805]
+
+
+Both governments were well pleased with the terms. The British
+government also readily approved them. The transaction marked another
+step in drawing the three Powers closer together and in handing Morocco
+over to the charge of France and Spain.[806]
+
+At the same time M. Rouvier began negotiations with the German
+government over the program for the conference. The two were at
+loggerheads from the start, for the German views of what constituted a
+just consideration of France’s interests in Morocco were different from
+those of the French. When, late in June, the Moroccan government offered
+to give various economic contracts to Germany and to appoint a few
+German officers for creating a small Moroccan army, Count Tattenbach was
+enthusiastically in favor of accepting the proposals.[807] Prince Bülow
+refused, and on July 11 instructed the Minister as follows:
+
+
+As for your further deportment in Fez, . . . . keep in mind that you
+will soon have to co-operate with the French representative. We regard
+the concessions offered by the Sultan as desirable, but can accept them
+only if they are not in contradiction to the future decisions of the
+conference. Therefore . . . . delay making a decision about these
+offers. . . . .[808]
+
+
+Nevertheless, the Chancellor planned for the conference to divide the
+police and military mandate in Morocco among the Powers in such a way
+that France would receive the mandate for the frontier region only,
+while Germany would receive it for “the western coastal towns from Rabat
+south . . . . as suitable for a future German sphere of interest.”[809]
+Furthermore, he expected Germany to receive her share of the economic
+advantages in the development of the entire land.[810]
+
+To achieve these ends the German foreign office appointed Count
+Tattenbach as its representative at the conference,[811] even though he
+was highly objectionable to the French. It also instructed Prince
+Radolin on July 10 to inform M. Rouvier either directly or indirectly
+that “the desired understanding would be placed seriously in doubt” if
+he did not exclude M. Delcassé’s followers, such as M. Paul Cambon and
+M. Georges Louis,[812] from influence upon French foreign policy, or if
+he should appoint M. Révoil, former governor of Algeria and a reputed
+Germanophobe, as a delegate to the conference.[813] Prince Radolin was
+also to uphold Tangier as a meeting place for the assembly; for the
+German government believed that the anti-French and pro-German influence
+of the Moroccans would be more strongly exerted there than in some
+European town.[814] When the Ambassador stated his government’s requests
+to MM. Dupuy and Léon, both men begged him “not to put the pistol to M.
+Rouvier’s breast too sharply.” M. Rouvier was having enough difficulty
+with public opinion, they said.[815] The German government asked
+President Roosevelt to support its views about M. Révoil and about
+Tangier, but this time, after consulting the French government, the
+President refused.[816] M. Rouvier chose M. Révoil in spite of German
+opposition. Furthermore, asserting that Tangier was a dangerous hotbed
+of intrigue, he urged the choice of some European town.[817] By the end
+of July the German government was willing to acquiesce, although for
+bargaining purposes it reserved its public consent until later.[818]
+
+It was not M. Rouvier’s determined stand which induced this
+acquiescence, but rather the unexpected signing by the German and
+Russian rulers of the Björkö treaty of alliance on July 24.[819] This
+treaty, which provided for the later association of France in the
+alliance, was signed by both sovereigns under the impression that the
+Franco-German agreement of July 8 had settled the Moroccan affair and
+had cleared the way for a _rapprochement_. In view of this changed
+situation Prince Bülow, on July 31, instructed the foreign office as
+follows:
+
+
+1. We must reserve the possibility of permitting France a free hand in
+Morocco at the moment in which she has to decide about joining the
+Russo-German understanding. A better use of Morocco we could hardly find
+and that would be by far the most favorable close of our Moroccan
+campaign. 2. To attain this we need not relinquish too early our general
+position on the Moroccan question. But the French need not believe that
+our aim was ultimately to set foot in Morocco. It appears to me more
+advisable to permit the Moroccan question to rest for a time rather than
+to hasten it. Pushing or threatening at this moment on account of
+Morocco would only press France still closer to England and at the same
+time cause the Emperor Nicholas to suspect that directly after Björkö he
+is to be forced to choose between us and France.[820]
+
+
+In keeping with this policy, Prince Bülow, Baron Richthofen, and Herr
+von Mühlberg all absented themselves from Berlin during the succeeding
+days, and left Count Pourtales, Prussian minister in Munich, in charge
+of the foreign office. As he was not in touch with the negotiations,
+Herr von Holstein and Dr. Kriege, the legal adviser, directed affairs.
+While the “Grey Eminence” approved the new direction to be given to the
+Moroccan policy,[821] he seemed entirely unable to relinquish a stand
+once taken or to sacrifice details for the achievement of a larger end.
+When his blunders brought him to the point of having to retreat or
+fight, he preferred _Machtpolitik_. Neither he nor his chief realized
+that some form of settlement of the Moroccan affair was necessary to
+allay French and British mistrust, and that their new policy of delay
+would prolong the period of crisis. This was particularly the case since
+the policy continued to lack unity. Herr von Holstein, Dr. Kriege, the
+Emperor, Count Tattenbach—each had his particular addition to make,
+whether it harmonized with the whole or not; and the gracious Prince
+Bülow, successor to Bismarck, accepted all contributions.
+
+The most striking example of this lack of harmony was manifested by
+Count Tattenbach at Fez. Early in August the news spread that the Count
+had been instrumental in persuading the Moroccan government to grant to
+the German firm of Bourgeaud-Hansemann on July 30 a contract for
+building a mole in the harbor of Tangier at the price of 1,300,000
+marks. It was also rumored that he was aiding negotiations between the
+Sultan and a group of German banks for a loan of 10,000,000 marks.[822]
+
+The French press indignantly accused the German government of double-
+dealing. _Le Temps_ noted that Count Tattenbach had been recalled from
+Morocco several years before for a similar indiscretion. Germany had
+accused France, it said, of wishing to make a second Tunis of Morocco;
+but France did not intend to let Germany make a second Turkey of it. It
+asked that Germany again deal severely with Count Tattenbach. M.
+Clémenceau in _L’Aurore_ spoke bluntly in an article entitled “No
+Dupery,” and a few days later, even more strongly in one headed “C’est
+trop.” The press also attacked M. Rouvier for permitting the Germans to
+hoodwink him. If Parliament had been sitting, his position might have
+been precarious.[823]
+
+These criticisms were undeserved. M. Rouvier had made every effort to
+prevent the concessions from being given. Both he and the British
+government had tried to block the negotiations as soon as reports of
+them came through. When the definite fact of the mole concession became
+known, M. Rouvier, supported by Lord Lansdowne, immediately strengthened
+his protests to the German government against Count Tattenbach’s
+actions. He declared that they infringed upon French rights,[824] that
+they were a breach of faith and a violation of the spirit of the accord
+of July 8, that they endangered the success of the conference, the
+harmony of Franco-German relations, and his own position as minister. It
+was not his fault, he said angrily, that Franco-German relations
+continued to be strained. He urged that the project for a loan be
+blocked, or if this were impossible, that the German government agree to
+repayment of the loan with funds from the Moroccan state bank to be
+established. The question whether the German or a French firm had a
+prior right to the contract for the mole, he asserted, should be left in
+abeyance until the conference should regulate the method of granting
+contracts for public works.[825] The Spanish government was equally
+angry at Germany because of Count Tattenbach’s acts. On August 23 M.
+Montero Rios poured out his wrath to the French Ambassador over
+Germany’s trampling on Spanish interests in Morocco. It was generally
+understood, he said, that Northern Morocco was reserved to Spain. Yet,
+he continued indignantly, Germany had acquired concessions in that area
+and had obtained a mortgage on the lands around Tangier.
+
+
+Under all these provocations . . . . Spain had to remain mute [so the
+British ambassador reported his remarks]. France was the mouthpiece of
+the three Powers who were working together to save the situation in
+Morocco and His Excellency [M. Montero Rios] expressed an earnest hope
+that she would not yield all along the line to German pressure and would
+bear in mind what were the modest but real interests of Spain in
+Morocco. Señor Montero Rios concluded . . . . by bringing down his fist
+upon the table and saying, “we shall not forget what Germany has done to
+us on this occasion.”
+
+
+When M. Jules Cambon warned the German Ambassador in Madrid on August 23
+that “it might become necessary for the Powers mainly interested in
+Morocco to insist that all concessions recently obtained should be
+examined by the Conference before they were finally ratified,” M.
+Montero Rios heartily approved and volunteered to speak in like manner
+to Herr von Radowitz.[826]
+
+The German government itself supported the loan in order to strengthen
+its hold over the Sultan and to calm his fears about Germany’s separate
+negotiations with France. The contract for the mole surprised and
+embarrassed Prince Bülow. He reprimanded Count Tattenbach for having
+transgressed his instructions and warned him to abide by them in the
+future.[827] Nevertheless, he upheld both transactions against the
+French complaints. He asserted to M. Rouvier that the negotiations for
+the contract had been under way for several months.[828] He claimed that
+the loan was not a “loan” but a harmless temporary “advance” which could
+be repaid at any time. Repeating the assurances of Germany’s
+disinterestedness in Morocco and of friendship for France, the German
+government refused M. Rouvier’s suggestions for an understanding about
+these two affairs and was unable to comprehend the French
+excitement.[829] As M. Rouvier felt that the facts spoke otherwise, the
+two governments reached an _impasse_ by the first of September.
+
+At the same time the two governments came to a deadlock over the choice
+of a meeting place and the terms of the program for the conference.
+Although M. Rouvier submitted proposals about military and financial
+reforms on July 20 and August 1, respectively,[830] Germany did not
+reply until August 26. The delay was caused by the necessity of
+consulting Count Tattenbach, but the French government and press
+suspected that Germany was uneasy about possible defeat at the
+conference and was therefore putting France off so as to gain
+concessions from the Sultan.[831] In its answer the German government
+accepted the main lines of the French proposal, but refused to permit
+France to settle directly with Morocco the regulation of the police in
+the region of the frontier, and also declined to give way on the choice
+of Tangier as a meeting place. The German government planned for the
+conference to restrict France’s interest in Morocco to this frontier
+region.[832] But, on August 30, M. Rouvier met rejection with rejection.
+To permit the conference to decide upon the reorganization of the
+frontier region would, he wrote in a note to Prince Radolin, mean
+sacrificing an advantage and a right which France had enjoyed for sixty
+years.[833]
+
+On the question of a meeting place M. Rouvier urged the Spanish
+government early in August to propose formally to the Powers that the
+conference be held in Spain. Thereby he would exert pressure on Germany
+to relinquish Tangier. M. Montero Rios was eager to obtain the honor for
+his country, but fearing a rejection of the proposal, he hesitated to
+make it. Under French and British persuasion, however, he dispatched a
+verbal note to France and Germany offering some town in Southwest Spain
+for the conference. As the German government made no reply, M. Montero
+Rios was “deeply hurt” at the “high-handed and discourteous manner” in
+which Germany was treating Spain.[834]
+
+With affairs so confused, the Chancellor interfered. He sent Dr. Rosen,
+the future minister at Tangier, to Paris for direct negotiations. In
+reporting this intention to M. Bihourd on September 4, Prince Bülow
+expressed in general terms his desire for an entente and spoke of the
+mole and the loan as insignificant. But he declared that there was a
+line beyond which “German dignity” would not permit him to go and that
+if this attempt failed “we would be placed again in the situation which
+obtained before the accord of July 8.”[835]
+
+Dr. Rosen, who was entirely unfamiliar with the history of the
+negotiations when he started to Paris, soon concluded that a change of
+policy was necessary. In France he found that both government and people
+were mistrustful, fast becoming embittered, and yet strongly desirous of
+a speedy settlement of the controversy. On September 8 he telegraphed to
+the Chancellor his opinion that the German government had already given
+assurances to France which entitled her to expect that the regulation of
+the frontier region would be excluded from the deliberations of the
+conference, and that to move her from this view would require “the
+speech of cannons” and not “juristic deductions.” He therefore proposed
+to regard this point as lost and to prevent France from spreading her
+influence further into Morocco by obtaining an exact definition of the
+limits of the frontier region. On the choice of a meeting place, he
+advised making concessions after all else was settled; the contract for
+the mole he would handle as a “bagatelle.” He foresaw greater difficulty
+in regard to the loan, which the French considered an act of duplicity;
+but he stated to Prince Bülow that he would endeavor to uphold it even
+though he regarded as untenable the German distinction between a “loan”
+and an “advance.”[836]
+
+Dr. Rosen’s opinion, which Prince Radolin had held for some time, turned
+the scales. “As it appears to me,” wrote the Chancellor to Baron
+Richthofen on September 8, “we need above all to extricate ourselves
+from this Moroccan affair, which has apparently become confused, in such
+a way as to maintain our prestige in the world and to preserve the
+German economic and financial interests intact as much as possible.” He
+accepted Dr. Rosen’s proposals. Germany should yield on the questions of
+the frontier and the meeting place, and France on those of the mole and
+the loan.[837]
+
+The ensuing negotiations, carried on by Dr. Rosen mainly with M. Révoil,
+were replete with dramatic moments.[838] By September 16, the two men
+reached agreement on most of the points. But when Dr. Rosen learned from
+M. Révoil that France expected to obtain at the conference a general
+mandate for the financial and police reforms in the whole of Morocco, he
+made the concession on the frontier question contingent upon an official
+French disclaimer of that intention.[839]
+
+M. Rouvier rejected this demand. He offered several times to compensate
+Germany for her renunciation in Morocco by including other questions in
+the negotiations, such as those of the Bagdad and the Camerun
+railways.[840] Dr. Rosen declined to broaden the basis of the
+negotiations, however, and threatened to break them off (although in
+reality he had no intention of doing so) if the French persisted in
+their denial of his request.[841] When the French press began to attack
+Germany, the Chancellor warned M. Rouvier repeatedly that “if the French
+imagine that they can intimidate us or even publicly humiliate us, they
+are playing a dangerous game which can lead to war.” Conditions were
+much as they had been three months before.[842] Then the sudden
+intervention of M. Witte changed the situation.
+
+Returning from Portsmouth, where he had represented Russia in the
+negotiations for peace with Japan, M. Witte stopped in Paris to arrange
+a loan for Russia. In discussing the project with M. Rouvier, he was
+told that France could not consider the loan until the conflict with
+Germany was settled.[843] Since he was interested in a quick solution of
+the Moroccan difficulty and since he favored a _rapprochement_ between
+Russia, Germany, and France against Great Britain,[844] M. Witte
+discussed matters with his friend Prince Radolin on the morning of
+September 23. Immediately after this conversation M. Witte saw the
+French Premier, and at the latter’s request returned that afternoon to
+urge the French views upon the German Ambassador. M. Rouvier was
+willing, M. Witte said to Prince Radolin, to give verbally the most
+formal declaration that he would not seek a mandate for Western Morocco
+at the conference, but since M. Rouvier believed that French public
+opinion would never accept a written one, he would rather resign than
+give it. Germany was sufficiently protected against that possibility in
+any case, the Premier had argued to M. Witte, by the requirement of
+unanimity in the conference. M. Rouvier had also promised, said M.
+Witte, to co-operate harmoniously with Germany at the assembly. M. Witte
+found a sympathetic listener in Prince Radolin, who was disgusted with
+Dr. Rosen’s policy. When later in the same afternoon the Prince, Dr.
+Rosen, and M. Rouvier met for further discussion, the Ambassador openly
+supported the French side. Hence Dr. Rosen had to yield.[845]
+
+From Paris M. Witte went to Germany. At Berlin on September 25 he
+persuaded the Chancellor to accept M. Rouvier’s views;[846] and at
+Rominten on September 27-28 he was even more successful with the Emperor
+William II, who immediately telegraphed to Prince Bülow as follows:
+
+
+Bring Rosen to reason so that that disgusting quarreling in Paris will
+cease. I am completely fed up on it . . . . [_Ich habe es gründlich
+satt_]. France must now . . . . be shown friendship and be permitted to
+save her face so that she will remain without rancour and will complete
+the turn necessary to bring her into our alliance.[847]
+
+
+As a result of M. Witte’s intervention, the two Powers reached an
+understanding on September 28.[848] They agreed that the program for the
+conference should provide for police reform and the suppression of
+contraband traffic in arms by way of an international accord, except in
+the frontier region where the execution of that action should remain
+“the exclusive affair” of France and Morocco. A Moroccan state bank
+should be created, the Moroccan monetary system be stabilized, and funds
+be advanced for paying the police and for carrying out certain urgent
+public works. Improved methods of collecting the customs and of raising
+revenues should be provided. The Sultan should engage not to alienate
+any public service to the profit of particular interests. The principle
+of adjudication without regard to nationality should be followed in
+giving contracts for the construction of public works. The conference
+should meet at Algeciras in Spain. In a supplementary understanding the
+French government acknowledged the German “loan” to be an “advance”;
+but, while the control of that transaction should remain in German
+hands, the French banks were permitted to furnish one-half the sum
+necessary.[849] The German government also agreed that an investigation
+of the relative rights of the French and German firms to the contract
+for the mole should be made, although it was tacitly understood that the
+German firm would win.[850]
+
+To make doubly sure that, apart from this agreement, France would have
+her hands free at the conference, M. Rouvier made the following
+declaration to the German government:
+
+
+Aside from the agreement to be signed between the two governments, I am
+not bound on any point. I renew my affirmation that I have to the same
+degree as the Imperial Government the desire to avoid all open discord
+between us at the conference and to co-operate in effecting the
+solutions that respect best the interests and _amours propres_, in such
+a way that there will be neither victor nor vanquished. . . . . The
+guarantee for Germany lies in the fact that, since the decisions of the
+conference must be unanimous, her opposition will suffice to prevent the
+general mandate from being given to us.[851]
+
+
+M. Rouvier thereby changed the statement transmitted by M. Witte to
+Prince Radolin that France would not strive for a mandate for Western
+Morocco to a less binding one which would leave France free to seek a
+mandate if she thought that Germany could be coerced into agreeing. This
+ambiguity was to cause trouble later.
+
+The Sultan’s approval of this program was obtained with some difficulty.
+The monarch and his advisers were very diffident about reforms and
+feared what the outcome of the conference might be. They besieged Count
+Tattenbach with questions about the program, wanting to know why Morocco
+had been excluded from the negotiations, what the various clauses in it
+would result in, whether France would after all succeed in her object by
+way of the conference. Count Tattenbach, who was practically unsupported
+by the French Minister, replied that Morocco could not survive without
+reforms, that Germany would defend Morocco’s independence and integrity.
+As none of the Sultan’s advisers would shoulder the risk of approving
+the program to their master, Count Tattenbach had to do so. By October
+22 he succeeded in his work. On December 1 the Sultan issued a circular
+letter inviting the signatory Powers to the conference.[852] The
+invitations were accepted.
+
+On September 29, in reporting the conclusion of the Franco-German
+agreement, Dr. Rosen mentioned to his government for the first time the
+offers which M. Rouvier had made to include in the settlement the
+difficulties over the Bagdad and Camerun railways. Prince Bülow was
+immediately eager to open negotiations.
+
+
+At the present time we must use every opportunity to create solidarity
+of interest between France and us [he instructed the foreign office on
+the next day]. Under the present circumstances every African agreement
+with France is useful to us. Naturally far more useful would be an
+understanding over the Bagdad Railway. We must always take into
+consideration the inclination of the English to come to terms with
+Russia over Asia Minor, whereby we would eventually be placed in the
+dilemma of suffering a defeat on the question of the Bagdad Railway or
+of arousing acute antagonism between Russia and us.
+
+
+But, the Chancellor added, Germany must not show undue eagerness in the
+matter.[853]
+
+When Prince Radolin broached the subject to the French Premier on
+October 18, the latter replied that he had offered “an even more far-
+reaching agreement” at a time when he had hoped to settle the Moroccan
+affair without a conference, but that under the circumstances he would
+consider the project only after the conference.[854] That the Chancellor
+could have expected any other reply showed how little understanding he
+had of the French state of mind.
+
+Prince Bülow manifested the same obtuseness in an interview with M.
+Tardieu of _Le Temps_ on October 3 as a bid for friendlier relations
+with France. Repeating all the German criticisms of the French policy,
+the Chancellor declared:
+
+
+I think that the conference, far from dividing us, ought to contribute
+to a _rapprochement_ between us. For that _rapprochement_, however, one
+condition is necessary: that French public opinion thoroughly recognize
+that the policy of isolating Germany is an object of the past. . . . .
+Today as yesterday, provided your colonial policy respects our
+commercial interests . . . . we will not obstruct you, but in case of
+need will aid you in Morocco and elsewhere.
+
+
+He denied that Germany sought to force upon France an anti-British
+policy and that Germany had any ulterior motives in her friendship with
+Russia. He summed up the international situation as follows:
+
+
+A double system of alliances, both pacific, assures equilibrium in
+Europe. On those alliances we can and must superimpose friendships. You
+are friends with Italy: nothing is better. We are friends of Russia: it
+is perfect. But we must not give to the Franco-Italian _rapprochement_
+an anti-German character or to the Russo-German _rapprochement_ an anti-
+French character.[855]
+
+
+In spite of the Chancellor’s attempt at conciliation, French public
+opinion did not like the “schoolmaster” tone of his remarks and saw
+therein “the proof that the Moroccan incident had been only a pretext to
+intervene in the direction given to France’s foreign policy and to force
+France to modify it.”[856] In fact, not a single French newspaper spoke
+well of the German policy.[857] Rather, _Le Matin_ took occasion on
+October 5 to publish revelations to the effect that at the crucial
+French cabinet meeting of June 6 M. Delcassé had declared that
+
+
+England was ready, whatever might happen, to aid France if the latter
+were the object of an unforeseen and improbable aggression. [It was
+further asserted in the article that] England, in effect, informed the
+Government of the Republic verbally that if France were attacked, she
+was ready to mobilize her fleet, to seize the Kiel Canal, and to land
+100,000 men in Schleswig-Holstein. The French Government was even told
+later that if it so desired, that offer would be made in writing.[858]
+
+
+The reports were denied by M. Delcassé and by the French and British
+governments.[859] But the _London Times_ and the French press believed
+the first part of the revelations, although the _Times_ regarded the
+latter part as gossip.[860]
+
+In Germany these revelations provoked an outburst of indignation. Still
+at odds with King Edward VII, the Emperor wanted to recall Count
+Metternich for an indefinite leave of absence unless the British
+government gave a satisfactory explanation of the disclosures.[861] But
+Prince Bülow knew that the Emperor’s suggestion could not be carried out
+merely on the basis of newspaper talk. In fact, he did not believe that
+the revelations were accurate.[862] Still he seized the opportunity to
+relieve his own position with German public opinion by giving
+instructions for the German press to accept the revelations as true. By
+these means M. Delcassé should be represented as having used the
+Moroccan affair to bring on a war with Germany, while Great Britain
+should be accused of inciting the French to unleash a world-war. The
+press should state that Germany had never thought of attacking France,
+of drawing France to her by force, or of playing France against Great
+Britain. “It is important that the German public understand how grave
+the international situation is, how necessary it is to be armed, and how
+wretched, in view of the seriousness of the world situation, party
+conflicts and the usual Philistine pettifogging appear.” By so using the
+press, the Chancellor wrote, “we embarrass our enemies in England and
+bring advantage to our naval proposals.”[863] Moreover, on October 26,
+when the Emperor dedicated a statue to Field-Marshal Count Moltke, he
+declared: “How we stand in the world you have seen. Therefore, the
+powder dry, the sword sharp, the goal known, the forces braced, and the
+pessimist banished, I drink to our nation in arms.”[864]
+
+Here were the fruits of two months and a half of tedious and irritating
+negotiations. Starting with the assurance that the conference would meet
+and that the reforms would be internationally executed, Germany ended
+with the same assurance, a half-share in a loan of 10,000,000 marks and
+a petty contract for a mole. She began with the intention of winning
+France for the sake of completing a continental alliance with Russia;
+but by her blundering mismanagement of the Moroccan affair she ruined
+any chance for doing so. In June the victorious Germany had confronted a
+France fearful of war and subject to pressure. Since then Germany
+herself had been constantly receding before the determination of a
+united French nation. In June M. Rouvier had endeavored to “save
+France’s face”; by September, Prince Bülow was trying to “save Germany’s
+face.” The tables were turned.
+
+
+[Footnote 801: Rouvier to Bihourd, July 9, 1905, _L.j., 1901-5_, 249,
+No. 285.]
+
+[Footnote 802: It was Lansdowne’s suggestion that Spain be included. See
+Lansdowne to Bertie, July 12 and 13, 1905, _B.D._, III, 118 ff., Nos.
+152 f.; Cambon to Lansdowne, July 20, 1905, _ibid._, 121 f., No. 157;
+Lansdowne to Manneville, July 21, 1905, _ibid._, 122, No. 158.]
+
+[Footnote 803: Nicolson to Lansdowne, D. June 29, 1905, R. July 10,
+1905, D. July 1, 1905, R. July 10, 1905, July 7 and 11, 1905, _ibid._,
+109 f., No. 136; 111 f., No. 138; 114, No. 144; 116, No. 148; Lansdowne
+to Nicolson, July 8, 1905, _ibid._, 114 f., No. 145; Lansdowne to
+Bertie, July 12, 1905, _ibid._, 119, No. 152.]
+
+[Footnote 804: Nothing is known of these negotiations. See Vidal, _La
+politique de l’Espagne au Maroc_, pp. 172 ff.; Mousset, _La politica
+exterior de España 1873-1918_, pp. 162 f.; Tardieu, _Revue des deux
+mondes_, Dec., 1912, p. 640; _La Conf. d’Algés._, pp. 58 ff., 156.]
+
+[Footnote 805: The accord is reprinted in _Archives diplomatiques_, CXX
+(1911), 15 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 806: Lansdowne to Lister, Aug. 30, 1905, _B.D._, III, 131, No.
+173; Cartwright to Lansdowne, Sept. 4 and 7, 1905, _ibid._, 136, No.
+175; 137 f., No. 177; Cambon to Lansdowne, Sept. 6, 1905, _ibid._, 136
+f., No. 176; Lansdowne to Cambon, Sept. 9, 1907, _ibid._, 138, No. 179.]
+
+[Footnote 807: Tattenbach to F. O., June 16, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 444 f.,
+Nos. 6714 f; Tattenbach to F. O., June 23 and 25, 1905, _ibid._, pp. 524
+f. n.]
+
+[Footnote 808: Bülow to Tattenbach, June 19 and 20, 1905, _ibid._, 448
+ff., No. 6718 f.; Bülow to Tattenbach, July 11, 1905, _ibid._, 524 ff.,
+No. 6774.]
+
+[Footnote 809: Tattenbach to F. O., June 25, 1905, _ibid._, p. 525 n.;
+Bülow to Tattenbach, June 19, July 11, 1905, _ibid._, 450, No. 6718; 525
+f., No. 6774.]
+
+[Footnote 810: Tattenbach had visions of persuading the Sultan to
+transfer his residence from Fez to Marrakech where he would be under
+German influence after Morocco was divided, and where Germany could then
+secure the appointment of Germans as the Sultan’s military instructors
+(Tattenbach to F. O., June 25, 1905, _ibid._, p. 525 n.).]
+
+[Footnote 811: Bülow to Tattenbach, July 11, 1905, _ibid._, 524, No.
+6774.]
+
+[Footnote 812: Georges Louis was the political director of the French
+foreign office.]
+
+[Footnote 813: Richthofen to Radolin, July 10, 1905, _ibid._, 521 f.,
+No. 6771; Holstein to Radolin, July 10, 1905, _ibid._, 523, No. 6772.]
+
+[Footnote 814: Mühlberg to Wedel, July 13, 1905, _ibid._, 526 f., No.
+6775; Bülow to William II, Aug. 3, 1905, _ibid._, 537, No. 6786. This
+choice was also desired by the Moroccan government for its own
+convenience (Lowther to Lansdowne, July 24, 1905, _B.D._, III, 123, No.
+161).]
+
+[Footnote 815: Radolin to F. O., July 14, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 527, No.
+6776.]
+
+[Footnote 816: Bussche-Haddenhausen to F. O., July 25 and 30, 1905,
+_ibid._, 528 f., No. 6778; 529, No. 6779; Bishop, _The Life and Times of
+Theodore Roosevelt_, I, 488.]
+
+[Footnote 817: His view was actively supported by the British
+government. Lansdowne to Bertie, July 12, 1905, _B.D._, III, 119, No.
+152; Lansdowne to Lowther, July 28, 1905, _ibid._, 123, No. 163.]
+
+[Footnote 818: Bülow to William II, Aug. 3, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 537, No.
+6786.]
+
+[Footnote 819: See next chapter.]
+
+[Footnote 820: Bülow to F. O., July 31, 1905, _ibid._, 531 f., No. 6782.
+Holstein expressed the same opinion.]
+
+[Footnote 821: Holstein to Bülow, July 26, 1905, _ibid._, XIX, 468 ff.,
+No. 6223.]
+
+[Footnote 822: The loan was proposed to the German banking house,
+Mendelssohn & Co., by an English firm in Tangier, Moses Pariente, in
+April, 1905. A syndicate of German banks, among them the Bleichröder
+group, the Mendelssohn group, the Disconto Gesellschaft, the Berliner
+Handels-Gesellschaft, was formed to make it. The loan, under negotiation
+during the summer and early autumn of 1905, was concluded on Oct. 4,
+1905 (Schulthess, _Europäischer Geschichtskalender 1905_, p. 306). It
+was a purely temporary one to be guaranteed by some of the Sultan’s
+personal property in land, a fact which alarmed the French even more
+because it denoted a possible German design to acquire possession of
+territory in Morocco. On the matters of the mole and loan see the
+following: Chérisey to Rouvier, Aug. 1, 1905, _L.j., 1901-5_, 260, No.
+295; Saint-Aulaire to Rouvier, Aug. 14, 1905, _ibid._, 267 f., No. 304;
+note signed by the French and German representatives, Sept. 28, 1905,
+_ibid._, 307 f., No. 352; Holstein to Radolin, Aug. 14, 1905, _G.P._,
+XX, 540 ff., No. 6789; Pourtales to Radolin, Aug. 19, 1905, _ibid._, 542
+f., No. 6790; _Bulletin_, Aug., 1905, p. 299.]
+
+[Footnote 823: Radolin to Bülow, Aug. 29, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 549 ff.,
+Nos. 6794 f.; Lister to Lansdowne, Aug. 2 and 15, 1905, _B.D._, III,
+126, No. 167; 128 f., No. 170.]
+
+[Footnote 824: A French firm had been surveying and making estimates for
+some months with a view to obtaining that same contract as well as other
+contracts for the improvement of the Moroccan harbors. The French
+claimed that by Art. XXXIII of the contract between the Sultan and the
+French consortium of banks in the previous year the latter had been
+given a priority right to make all future loans to Morocco.]
+
+[Footnote 825: Rouvier to Radolin, July 29, 1905, _L.j., 1901-5_, 254
+f., No. 292, and following documents; Bülow to Radolin, Aug. 3, 1905,
+_G.P._, XX, 533 ff., No. 6784, and following documents; Lansdowne to
+Whitehead, Aug. 1, 1905, _B.D._, III, 125 f., No. 166; Lansdowne to
+Lowther, June 23 and 26, July 19 and 31, 1905, _ibid._, 100, No. 128;
+101, No. 130; 120 f., No. 155; 124 f., No. 165.]
+
+[Footnote 826: So Cambon informed Cartwright (Cartwright to Lansdowne,
+Aug. 24, 1905, _ibid._, 130, No. 172).]
+
+[Footnote 827: Mühlberg to Tattenbach, Aug. 3, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 535 f.,
+No. 6786.]
+
+[Footnote 828: Tattenbach and Kühlmann both supported the contract for
+the mole, which, it was found, the Emperor had also approved. See
+Holstein to Radolin, Aug. 18, 1905, _ibid._, 540, No. 6789; telegram
+from Tattenbach, June 25, 1905, _ibid._, p. 525 n.; Lowther to
+Lansdowne, June 23 and 25, July 19 and 31, 1905, _B.D._, III, 100, No.
+128; 101, No. 130; 120 f., No. 155; 124 f., No. 165.]
+
+[Footnote 829: Bülow to Radolin, Aug. 3, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 533 ff., No.
+6784, and the following documents. Also Bihourd to Rouvier, Aug. 1,
+1905, _L.j., 1901-5_, 260 f., No. 296; note handed by Radolin to the
+French government, Aug. 4, 1905, _ibid._, 262 f., No. 298 and following
+documents.]
+
+[Footnote 830: Rouvier to Radolin, July 20, Aug. 1, 1905, _L.j.,
+1901-5_, 253 f., No. 290; 253 f., No. 294; 256 ff., No. 294; Radolin to
+F. O., July 20, Aug. 2, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 528, No. 6777; 532 f., No.
+6783.]
+
+[Footnote 831: Lister to Lansdowne, Aug. 15, 1905, _B.D._, III, 128, No.
+170.]
+
+[Footnote 832: Bülow to F. O., Aug. 3, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 537 f., No.
+6787; Mühlberg to Tattenbach, Aug. 6, 1905, _ibid._, 538 ff., No. 6788;
+Bülow to Radolin, Aug. 22, dispatched Aug. 24, 1905, _ibid._, 544 ff.,
+No. 6792; Radolin to Rouvier, Aug. 26, 1905, _L.j., 1901-5_, 283 ff.,
+No. 323; memo. by Kriege, Sept. 3, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 554 ff., No. 6798.]
+
+[Footnote 833: Rouvier to Radolin, Aug. 30, 1905, _L.j., 1901-5_, 290
+ff., No. 331; Radolin to Bülow, Aug. 29, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 549 ff., No.
+6794; Radolin to F. O., Aug. 31, 1905, _ibid._, 552 ff., Nos. 6796 f.;
+papers communicated by M. Geoffray, Sept. 1, 1905, _B.D._, III, 131 ff.,
+No. 174. In one matter during August the German government had, to its
+embarrassment, to support France. The Moroccan government seized
+illegally an Algerian subject. With the approval of the Powers, the
+French government demanded and soon obtained his release. See _L.j.,
+1901-5_, Nos. 301 ff.; _G.P._, XX, 552 n.; 559, No. 6801; _B.D._, III,
+138, No. 178.]
+
+[Footnote 834: Cartwright to Lansdowne, Aug. 8 and 24, 1905, _B.D._,
+III, 127 f., No. 169; 130, No. 172; Leon y Castillo, _Mis Tiempos_, II,
+253.]
+
+[Footnote 835: Bülow to Radolin, Sept. 4, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 557, No.
+6799; 558 f., No. 6801; Bihourd to Rouvier, Sept. 4, 1905, _L.j.,
+1901-5_, 297 f., No. 339.]
+
+[Footnote 836: Memo. by Kriege, Sept. 3, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 554 ff., No.
+6798; Bülow to F. O., Sept. 8, 1905, inclosing a telegram from Rosen,
+_ibid._, 559 ff., No. 6802; Radolin to F. O., Sept. 9, 1905, _ibid._,
+563 f., No. 6804. Radowitz acknowledged on Sept. 7 to Jules Cambon that
+Germany would defend the selection of Tangier “only for form’s sake”
+(Cartwright to Lansdowne, Sept. 7, 1905, _B.D._, III, 138, No. 178).]
+
+[Footnote 837: Bülow to F. O., Sept. 8, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 562 f., No.
+6803; Richthofen to Radolin, Sept. 10, 1905, _ibid._, 564 ff., No. 6805;
+Richthofen to Bülow, Sept. 10, 1905, _ibid._, 566 f., No. 6806.]
+
+[Footnote 838: On these negotiations, apart from the references cited
+below, see Bertie to Lansdowne, Sept. 24, 1905, _B.D._, III, 140, No.
+182; Lansdowne to Bertie, Sept. 27, 1905, _ibid._, 140 ff., No. 183.]
+
+[Footnote 839: He demanded an exchange of notes to the following effect:
+“Neither France nor Germany will propose exclusive candidatures to
+execute the military reforms at the conference. It is understood that
+for the execution of the reforms (except in the frontier region) Germany
+and France will remain on a basis of equality.” See Radolin to Bülow,
+Sept. 16, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 568 ff., No. 6808 and following documents;
+Radolin to F. O., Sept. 21, 1905, _ibid._, 577, No. 6817.]
+
+[Footnote 840: Radolin to F. O., Sept. 29, 1905, _ibid._, 593 f., No.
+6833.]
+
+[Footnote 841: Radolin to Bülow, Sept. 16, 1905, _ibid._, 568 ff., No.
+6808.]
+
+[Footnote 842: Bülow to F. O., Sept. 18 and 19, 1905, _ibid._, 571 ff.,
+Nos. 6810 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 843: Witte, _Memoirs_, p. 416.]
+
+[Footnote 844: See below.]
+
+[Footnote 845: Radolin to Bülow, Sept. 23, 1905, _G.P._, XIX, 503 f.,
+No. 6241; Rosen to Bülow, Sept. 22, 1905, _ibid._, 579 ff., No. 6819 and
+following documents; also Witte, pp. 416 ff. Cf. Tardieu, _La Conf.
+d’Algés._, p. 77.]
+
+[Footnote 846: Bülow to William II, Sept. 25, 1905, _G.P._, XIX, 505
+ff., No. 6243.]
+
+[Footnote 847: Bülow to F. O., Sept. 27, 1905, _ibid._, 508, No. 6245;
+William II to Bülow, Sept. 27, 1905, _ibid._, 508 ff., No. 6246; Witte,
+pp. 417 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 848: Witte’s claim in his memoirs to have prevented a Franco-
+German war was hardly justified. Germany did not intend war, but only
+intimidation (Witte, pp. 424 f.).]
+
+[Footnote 849: The German government in turn admitted that this
+“advance” did not place in question the right of preference of the
+French banking consortium to make loans to Morocco.]
+
+[Footnote 850: The accord is given in _L.j., 1901-5_, 307 ff., Nos. 351
+f.; _G.P._, XX, 592, No. 6832; _B.D._, III, 142 ff., No. 184; 146 f.,
+No. 188.]
+
+[Footnote 851: Rouvier to Bihourd, Sept. 25, 1905, _L.j., 1901-5_, 305
+f., Nos. 349 f.; Radolin to F. O., Sept. 26, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 589, No.
+6828; Tardieu, _La Conf. d’Algés._, pp. 44 f. In December, M. Louis told
+Bertie that the German government had replied to Rouvier’s declaration
+by asserting that “though bound by their Agreement, they [Germany]
+reserved to themselves the faculty of supporting in the Conference any
+proposals made by another Government which they might consider good”
+(Bertie to Grey, Dec. 15, 1905, _B.D._, III, 158, No. 195). There is no
+reference to this statement in _G.P._]
+
+[Footnote 852: _L.j., 1901-5_, Nos. 357 f., 362 ff., 367, 313 ff.;
+_G.P._, XXI, Nos. 6889 ff., 6898; _B.D._, III, Nos. 165, 186 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 853: Bülow to F. O., Sept. 30, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 595, No.
+6834; Richthofen to Bülow, Oct. 6, 1905, _ibid._, XXV, 196 f., No. 8622;
+Bülow to F. O., Oct. 7, 1905, _ibid._, 197, No. 8623. It was at this
+time that the question of including France in the alliance made at
+Björkö was coming to the fore (Tardieu, _La Conf. d’Algés._, p. 136).]
+
+[Footnote 854: Radolin to F. O., Oct. 18, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 596 f., No.
+6836.]
+
+[Footnote 855: Quoted in _Quest. dipl. et col._, XX, 497 ff., Radolin to
+F. O., Sept. 29, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 593 f., No. 6833; Bülow to F. O.,
+Sept. 30, 1905, _ibid._, 594 f., No. 6834.]
+
+[Footnote 856: Quoted from the report of the Belgian Minister at Paris
+to his government, Oct. 14, 1905 (_Zur europ. Politik_, II, 72). See
+also the article by De Caix in _Journal des debats_, quoted in _Quest.
+dipl. et col._, XX, 500.]
+
+[Footnote 857: _G.P._, XXI, 16, No. 6901.]
+
+[Footnote 858: Quoted in _Quest. dipl. et col._, XX, 500 f. The
+revelations were made by Stéphane Lauzanne, a journalist. Lauzanne
+denied that he had received his information from Delcassé. He stated
+that he had written the articles three months ago. See Lister to
+Lansdowne, Oct. 11, 1905, _B.D._, III, 83 f., No. 100; Bertie to
+Lansdowne, Oct. 14, 1905, _ibid._, 84, No. 101. His assertions were in
+the main corroborated by two other French journalists, Eugène Lautier
+and Alexandre Ular, in _Figaro_, Oct. 13, 1905, and by Jaurès (_G.P._,
+XX, 666 n.).]
+
+[Footnote 859: _Quest. dipl. et col._, XX, 504; Lascelles to Lansdowne,
+Oct. 15, 16, 20, 1905, _B.D._, III, 84 ff., Nos. 102 ff.; Metternich to
+F. O., Oct. 9, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 663 f., No. 6873.]
+
+[Footnote 860: _Quest. dipl. et col._, XX, 500, 503 f.; Mévil, _De la
+Paix de Francfort, etc._, pp. 269 ff. n.]
+
+[Footnote 861: Bülow to F. O., Oct. 14, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 666, No.
+6876.]
+
+[Footnote 862: Bülow to F. O., Oct. 15, 1905, _ibid._, 667 f., No.
+6877.]
+
+[Footnote 863: Bülow to F. O., Oct. 10 and 12, 1905, _ibid._, 664 f.,
+Nos. 6874 f.]
+
+[Footnote 864: Schulthess, _1905_, p. 127.]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XV
+
+ THE TREATY OF BJÖRKÖ AND ITS ANNULMENT
+
+ I
+
+
+By forcing France in July to submit the Moroccan question to an
+international conference, the German government asserted its power and
+restored its country’s prestige; but it had had to employ means which
+could not often be repeated with impunity. The future of Germany’s
+international position remained uncertain. While the Entente Cordiale
+had become firmer, the Triple Alliance was still unsteady and
+unreliable. King Edward and his nephew, the Emperor William, were having
+one of their numerous quarrels.[865] The German government believed
+positively that in case of a Franco-German war Great Britain would
+actively support France.[866] Although relations with President
+Roosevelt and with Russia remained intimate, these close friendships did
+not give Germany the security and power which she had enjoyed before the
+conclusion of the Entente Cordiale. Then suddenly, out of a clear sky,
+came the possibility of Germany’s becoming master of the situation
+again. The Emperor William and Czar Nicholas arranged a meeting at
+Björkö, and the Emperor requested that a copy of the projected Russo-
+German treaty of the previous autumn be sent to him.
+
+In the latter half of July the Emperor and the Czar were both cruising:
+the one in the Baltic Sea, the other in the Finnish Gulf. As it was the
+hope of both the Chancellor[867] and the Emperor that a meeting with the
+Czar might occur during these cruises, William II suddenly telegraphed
+to his cousin on July 18 that he would shortly pass the entrance to the
+gulf. “Should it give you any pleasure to see me . . . ., I of course am
+always at your disposal.” Nicholas immediately replied: “Delighted with
+your proposal. Would it suit you meet at Bjoerkoe-sund . . . .? . . . .
+Look forward with intense pleasure to seeing you.” Upon receiving this
+answer the Emperor requested Prince Bülow to send him the draft.
+
+The Chancellor, who was at Norderney at the time, forwarded the request
+to Herr von Holstein. While he was dubious about the affair, he wrote to
+Herr von Holstein that the meeting would at least be a useful means of
+keeping in close touch with Russia and finding out something about her
+future foreign and internal policy. Germany could not intervene in favor
+of Russia during the peace negotiations, he stated, but it would be
+advantageous to engage the Czar so far that M. Witte and Count Lamsdorff
+would be unable to prepare for a Franco-Russo-British entente
+immediately after peace was established.[868]
+
+Herr von Holstein’s long replies to the Chancellor were not very
+hopeful. The final draft of the treaty of the previous autumn was
+acceptable, he thought, if the clause added by Russia—“Their entente
+cordiale will also hold in the case of difficulties which may arise at
+the time of the negotiations of peace between Russia and Japan”—were
+omitted. In fact, he was willing to accept a change in Article I making
+the alliance valid in case of an attack by two Powers instead of by one.
+He no longer believed it necessary for Russia and Germany to be in
+complete accord before negotiations with France were begun, because M.
+Rouvier’s cabinet would not “so absolutely oppose Germany’s joining [the
+Dual Alliance] as Delcassé had,” and because, as Russia was more
+dependent upon France for loans than she had been six months previously,
+she would take no step without the latter’s approval. Herr von Holstein
+expected M. Witte, Count Lamsdorff, the mother and wife of the Czar, and
+the French government to oppose the project and to favor an Anglo-Russo-
+French grouping. In his opinion almost the only reason for Russia to
+prefer a German alliance to the other grouping was that it could be
+concluded in time to be of value to Russia in the forthcoming
+negotiations for peace with Japan. Herr von Holstein therefore advised
+that if the treaty were concluded it be published immediately. Fearing
+rejection of the German proposal by Count Lamsdorff and an exploitation
+of the Russian refusal, he wished the Emperor not to take the initiative
+in proposing an alliance, at least until Nicholas II manifested a desire
+to pursue a common policy with Germany. Herr von Holstein’s telegrams
+formed the basis for the instructions sent to the Emperor on July
+22.[869]
+
+The story of Björkö is one of drama and mystery. The two sovereigns
+agreed that their meeting should be kept secret until it occurred; and,
+although the news immediately leaked out in the Russian press, the
+company on the Emperor’s yacht did not know where it was going or for
+what purpose. The rulers met, July 23-24, in Björkö Bay, far away from
+civilization, with only the sea and the forest-clad shore around them.
+The Emperor prepared himself for the interview by lifting up his hands
+and asking God to guide and aid him, or at least not to aid the Czar.
+When his yacht steamed into the bay, the Czar had already arrived. The
+Emperor immediately went on board the “Polar Star.” After a touching
+exchange of embraces the two monarchs withdrew for a long conversation.
+“Willy” found “Nicky” feeling discouraged, forlorn, and friendless
+except for him; and Count Lamsdorff was not there to give him backbone.
+The gathering force of the Russian revolution, the defeat by Japan,
+anger at Great Britain and France, and deep appreciation for the
+friendly attitude of Germany and William II toward him and his country
+during their troubles had prepared this weak monarch to throw himself
+into the arms of the far stronger, confident, and brilliantly seductive
+Emperor. As William II asserted later, the Czar was in a mood to
+subscribe to almost anything.
+
+In the first conversation between the two rulers[870] they both relieved
+themselves of their anger at Great Britain and King Edward VII. Nicholas
+II was particularly enraged at the British, whose unfriendliness toward
+Russia during the current war was fresh in his mind. When he described
+King Edward as “the greatest mischief-maker and most insincere as well
+as the most dangerous intriguer in the world,” the Emperor agreed with
+him heartily. King Edward “has a passion to begin something with every
+Power, to make ‘a little agreement,’” said William. The Czar replied as
+he struck the table with his fist, “Well I can only say, he shall not
+get one from me, and never in my life against Germany or you, my word of
+honor on it.” When they brought up the Moroccan affair, the Czar,
+pleased with the Franco-German agreement, strongly seconded the
+Emperor’s hope that out of that agreement a permanent understanding with
+France might develop. When the Emperor remarked that “in spite of
+English incitements France has absolutely refused to go to war with us
+[Germany], and so has shown that she will no longer fight for the sake
+of the lost provinces,” Nicholas II replied incisively: “Yes that I saw,
+it is quite clear the Alsace-Lorraine question is closed once for all,
+thank God.” As they were going on deck again the Czar once more embraced
+the Emperor and thanked him for coming.[871]
+
+That night the two groups celebrated together until daybreak. During the
+festivities some of the Russian officials in close touch with their
+master spoke openly in favor of a Continental alliance. The Emperor
+therefore concluded that the ground was prepared for his project. Before
+going to breakfast with the Czar and Grand Duke Michael the next
+morning, William II opened his _Losungen der Brüdergemeinde für
+1905_[872] upon the following text: “Each will receive his reward
+according to his work.” So, full of hope, he put a copy of the treaty in
+his pocket and set out. He found the Czar in the same mood as before.
+They spoke of the Anglo-French fraternization, behind which the Emperor
+suspected lay a “little agreement.” The Czar’s head drooped in
+dejection. “That is too bad,” he grieved. “What shall I do in this
+disagreeable situation.” “I felt that the moment had come,” wrote the
+Emperor later to Prince Bülow, in reporting this interview.
+
+
+Since the ally has preserved the policy of the free hand and of
+reinsurance without consulting or informing the Czar [he said to
+Nicholas II], it is quite permissible for him . . . . to do the same.
+How would it be if we also made a little agreement? We discussed one in
+the previous winter, but it failed because of Delcassé and tension with
+France. Now that is all past, we shall be good friends with the French.
+So does not every obstacle fall? “Oh yes to be sure, I remember well,
+but I forgot the contents of it, what a pity I havent got it here.” I
+possess a copy which by chance I have in my pocket. The Czar seized me
+by the arm, drew me into his father’s cabin, and closed all the doors.
+“Show it me please.” The dreamy eyes sparkled. I drew the envelope from
+my pocket, unfolded the sheet on the writing desk of Alexander III
+before the pictures of the Czar’s mother, between photographs from
+Fredensborg and Copenhagen, and laid it before the Czar. He read the
+text once, twice, thrice. . . . . I prayed the dear God to be with us
+and guide the young ruler. It was deathly still; only the sea murmured
+and the sun shone joyfully and clear in the cozy cabin, and directly
+before me lay the Hohenzollern and high in the morning air waved the
+imperial standard. I was just reading the letters on the black cross,
+God with us, when the Czar said, “That is quite excellent. I quite
+agree!” My heart beat so loudly that I could hear it. I pulled myself
+together and said casually, “Should you like to sign it? It would be a
+very nice souvenir of our entrevue.” He read it once more and replied,
+“Yes I will.” I opened the ink-well, extending to him the pen, and he
+wrote with a firm hand “Nicolas.” Then he passed it to me, I signed it,
+and as I arose he, deeply moved, folded me in his arms and said, “I
+thank God and I thank you, it will be of most beneficial consequences
+for my country and Yours; You are Russia’s only real friend in the whole
+world, I have felt that through the whole war and I know it.” Tears of
+joy stood in my eyes—to be sure the sweat poured from my brow and
+back—and I thought of Frederick William III, Queen Louise, Grandfather
+and Nicholas I. Were they near at that moment? At any rate they saw it
+all and were overjoyed.
+
+
+The terms of the treaty were as follows: The Czar and the Emperor, “to
+assure the maintenance of peace in Europe, have agreed upon the
+following articles of a treaty of defensive alliance.” Article I read:
+“In case one of the two Empires is attacked by an European Power, its
+ally will aid it in Europe with all its forces on land and sea.”
+According to Article II, “The high contracting parties engage not to
+conclude a separate peace with a common enemy.” Article III was as
+follows: “The present treaty becomes valid as soon as peace is concluded
+between Russia and Japan and will remain valid until it is denounced a
+year in advance.” By Article IV the Czar agreed “after the coming into
+force of the treaty” to take “the steps necessary to initiate France
+into the accord and to associate herself in it as ally.”[873]
+
+Thus the act was accomplished. How was it possible? The Emperor’s
+explanation was simple and satisfying—God did it.[874] For he was
+present, as were various spirits and shades of dead and departed
+kinsmen. A humble and depressed Czar and an inspired Emperor with his
+_Losungen der Brüdergemeinde_, tears and sighs and embraces, many a
+dainty dish and flask of old wine, many a satisfying outburst of anger
+at absent enemies—no wonder the Björkö treaty was signed!
+
+The Emperor had visions of illimitable possibilities for the alliance.
+On July 27 he wrote to Nicholas II as follows:
+
+
+In times to come it may not be impossible that even Japan may feel
+inclined to join it [the alliance]. This would cool down English self-
+assertion and impertinence, as she is her ally too. The 24th of July
+1905 is a cornerstone in European Politics and turns over a new leaf in
+the history of the world; which will be a chapter of peace and goodwill
+among the great Powers of the European Continent, respecting each other
+in friendship, confidence and in pursuing the general Policy on the
+lines of a community of interests. The moment the news of the new
+“groupement” will have become known in the world, the smaller nations,
+Holland, Belgium, Danmark, Sweden, Norway will all be attracted to this
+new great centre of gravity, by quite natural laws of the attraction of
+smaller bodies by the larger and compacter ones. They will revolve in
+the orbit of the great block of powers (Russia, Germany, France,
+Austria, Italy) and feel confidence in leaning on and revolving around
+this mass. The dual Alliance combining with the Triple Alliance gives a
+Quintupel Alliance, well able to hold all unruly neighbours in order, to
+impose peace even by force, if there should be a power hairbrained
+enough to wish to disturb it.[875]
+
+
+Notwithstanding this optimism, the treaty caused difficulty from the
+start. The absence of a countersignature by the Chancellor was not
+considered serious.[876] But against the advice of Herr von Tschirschky,
+the representative of the foreign office on the cruise, the Emperor had
+without consulting the Chancellor introduced very important changes in
+the draft of the treaty. In the first article he had added the words “en
+Europe,” while he had re-worded the third article so that the alliance
+should not become effective before the conclusion of the Russo-Japanese
+War.[877] Prince Bülow was very dubious about the value of the treaty
+after those changes were made, particularly the change in Article I,
+“because in Europe,” he wrote to Herr von Holstein, “Russia can be of no
+use at all to us against England.” He requested the latter’s advice
+before acting.[878]
+
+Herr von Holstein approved decidedly of the treaty even in its changed
+form, although he regretted that the Emperor had not obtained more while
+the Czar was so pliant. He said that the treaty should be kept
+absolutely secret.[879] Otherwise he feared that Great Britain and
+perhaps also France would seek to prolong the Russo-Japanese War with
+the result that the Czar would be deposed, and that Great Britain, if
+she had aggressive plans, might hurriedly attack Germany before the
+alliance came into operation. He thought that the suspensive clause was
+especially disadvantageous to Germany in that the treaty, if effective
+at once, would have a calming effect upon any bellicose spirit on the
+part of both France and Great Britain. Moreover, he believed that France
+could be brought to join the alliance at the time; whereas if the action
+to bring her in were postponed, she would align herself more closely
+with Great Britain. The inclusion of the phrase “en Europe” he also
+regretted as being advantageous only to Russia.
+
+
+In case of an Anglo-German war, Russia need not advance against India. .
+. . . But even with the best will Russia will not be able to help us in
+Europe. . . . . The only positive value from the changed treaty is the
+assurance that Russia can no longer enter the Quadruple Alliance.[880]
+The circle around Germany can no longer close. That is something. But we
+could have obtained more and we must expect that the publication of this
+treaty will cause little disquietude in England and will not be
+considered as a great success of German diplomacy.[881]
+
+
+The Chancellor regarded the inclusion of the suspensive clause as an
+advantage under the circumstances; but he had grave objections to the
+inclusion of the phrase “en Europe.”[882] When he telegraphed these to
+the Emperor, the latter replied that he had made the change “after ripe
+deliberation” in order to prevent Germany from being obliged to aid
+Russia in Asia. He did not believe possible an attack by Russia on
+India, nor did anyone else, he stated. The advantage from the treaty
+lay, not in the expectation of any active help from Russia in case of a
+war with Great Britain but rather in the assurance that Germany would
+enjoy full freedom and security on her eastern frontier, that she would
+be able to throw all her forces against one front, that is, France,
+instead of against two—“naturally provided France mobilizes to help
+England, which is not impossible.” He and General Moltke looked upon the
+situation in this way:
+
+
+If England declares or otherwise begins war with us, you [the
+Chancellor] must immediately send dispatches to Brussels and Paris with
+a demand to state within six hours whether for or against us. We must
+immediately march into Belgium no matter what the reply. As to France it
+depends upon whether she remains neutral,—which I do not consider
+entirely impossible even if the probability is small;—in that case the
+Russian _casus foederis_ does not enter into effect. If she [France]
+mobilizes, that is a war-threat against us in favor of England, and then
+the Russian regiments must march with ours. . . . . It should eventually
+be considered whether France could not be offered as an enticement for
+good behavior toward us perhaps a part of Belgium as compensation for
+the lost provinces.[883]
+
+
+The Chancellor fully approved the Emperor’s remarks concerning Belgium;
+but neither he nor Herr von Holstein thought that it would be possible
+to permit French neutrality in case of a British attack on Germany.[884]
+Nor was he convinced by the Emperor’s other arguments. He continued to
+regard the inclusion of the phrase “en Europe” as “pernicious.” He
+declared that he could not uphold the treaty before the German people
+unless Russia were bound to give aid in both Asia and Europe, and sought
+ways of bringing about a change to that effect.[885] While he had
+accepted the treaty at first and had congratulated the Emperor upon
+achieving it, and while he had thought that there was plenty of time in
+which to eliminate the objectionable phrase,[886] he suddenly reversed
+his attitude. On August 3 he stated that he could not accept the
+responsibility for the treaty in the present form or for bringing about
+the necessary changes. He therefore offered his resignation.[887]
+
+Knowing that he had his master in a quandary, since German public
+opinion was already complaining about too much imperial initiative in
+foreign affairs, the Chancellor apparently did not expect his
+resignation to be accepted. He continued as before to seek means of
+altering the treaty without ruining it entirely.[888] And, as a matter
+of fact, the Emperor collapsed, agreed to anything, and on August 11
+wrote a hysterical letter to his Chancellor.
+
+
+I thought that I had worked and had accomplished something special for
+you. Then you send me a couple of cold lines and your resignation!!!
+Please excuse me, dear Bülow, from depicting the condition of my soul to
+you. To be so treated by my best, most intimate friend, without giving a
+single plausible reason, has been such a fearful blow to me that I have
+completely collapsed and fear a grave nervous sickness. You say that the
+situation has become so serious because of the treaty with “en Europe”
+that you cannot assume responsibility; before whom? And in the same
+breath you believe that before God you can assume responsibility of
+deserting your Emperor and master to whom you have sworn fidelity, who
+has loaded you with love and honors, your fatherland and, as I believed,
+your truest friend, in the situation regarded by you as critical and
+serious!? No, dear Bülow, that you will not do! We have both been called
+by God and created for each other to work for our dear German
+fatherland. If in your opinion a graver situation has really been made
+by my error—which I do not believe—, it has been done with the best
+intentions. You know me well enough to recognize that. Your person is
+100,000 times more valuable to me and our country than all the treaties
+in the world. I have immediately taken steps with the Czar which shall
+weaken or eliminate those words. Do not forget that you sent me to
+Tangier against my will in order to achieve a success in your Moroccan
+policy. Read my telegrams before the visit to Tangier. You have admitted
+to me yourself that you were so anxious that when you received the
+announcement of my safe departure you had a nervous fit of weeping. For
+your sake because the fatherland needed it I landed, mounted a strange
+horse in spite of my crippled left arm, and the horse nearly caused my
+death—all of which was your affair! I rode through Spanish anarchists
+because you wished it and your policy would profit thereby! and now you
+want abruptly to desert me, when I have done everything—and, as I
+honestly believe, far more—for you, because my situation appears to you
+too serious. Bülow, I have not deserved that of you. No, my friend, you
+remain in office and with me and shall continue to work with me _ad
+majorem Germaniae gloriam_. You plainly owe me that because of my
+service this year. You can and dare not forsake me. Therewith your whole
+policy of this year would be disavowed by you yourself and I blamed
+forever. That I cannot survive. Grant me a few days to rest and collect
+myself before you come, for the nervous excitement caused by your letter
+is too great, I am now unable to argue in quiet. . . . . I appeal to
+your friendship for me, and let us hear no more of your intention to
+resign. Telegraph me “all right” after this letter; then I shall know
+that you will remain! For the morning after the arrival of your
+resignation will find the emperor no longer alive! Think of my poor wife
+and children![889]
+
+
+How were the mighty fallen! The Chancellor had won, and of course
+telegraphed “All right.”
+
+In the meantime various proposals to eliminate the phrase “en
+Europe”[890] were being combated by Herr von Holstein, who feared that
+the opponents of the treaty in Russia, particularly Count Lamsdorff,
+might use such opportunity to propose changes on their side, to annul
+the treaty entirely, or at least to undermine its prestige. He wrote:
+
+
+The treaty even in its present crippled form is still too valuable to
+risk in hazardous play. Its value lies in the crushing effect which it
+will have upon France and in the indirect reaction through France upon
+England. . . . . Through the inclusion of “en Europe” and through the
+introduction of the suspensive article, the value of the treaty is
+lowered 50 per cent. But this 50 per cent remains to us and should not
+be risked.
+
+
+He urged against proposal for a change until time for the treaty to come
+into effect or until the Emperor and the Czar had another meeting.
+Prince Bülow acceded to these views.[891]
+
+
+ II
+
+
+Occurring at a crisis in world-affairs, when the Moroccan difficulty was
+still unsettled, when the Russo-Japanese negotiations for peace were
+about to begin, when the choice of a king by Norway was not yet made,
+the news of the unexpected and secret interview at Björkö caused a furor
+in the diplomatic world and in the press.[892] Especial alarm was shown
+by the British, jealous and mistrustful as they were of Russo-German
+intimacy. The English press suspected the German Emperor of seeking the
+Norwegian crown for a Hohenzollern and of endeavoring to close the
+Baltic Sea to all except the Baltic nations.[893] Sir Francis Bertie,
+British ambassador at Paris, was reported to have remarked that Germany
+seemed to harbor Napoleonic tendencies, which Great Britain would oppose
+as she had the original ones.[894] Mr. Spring Rice, after consulting
+Lord Lansdowne, wrote to President Roosevelt as follows:
+
+
+The most serious aspect of the question is the general balance of power
+in Europe. . . . . Two of the great powers have practically disappeared
+so far as active intervention in European affairs is concerned, Russia
+and Austria. Germany is by far the most powerful of the remaining
+powers, and she has an old feud to settle with France. If France is
+attacked, there is no Russia to help her and the English Army is at
+present practically negligible for a continental campaign. If France is
+forced to accept German hegemony, England remains the only independent
+great power, and we are in much the same position as during the
+Napoleonic wars. We consider it therefore our duty to prepare for
+contingencies.
+
+. . . . Of course, nobody here, except the small body of hot-heads who
+exist everywhere, desires to attack Germany. Our interest in peace is
+supreme and in fact perhaps too dominant. But we all have an
+uncomfortable feeling that always and everywhere we encounter the fixed
+and determined hostility of Germany, and that, when opportunity offers,
+this hostility will take an active form.[895]
+
+
+Late in July, forthcoming British maneuvers in the Baltic Sea were
+suddenly announced in the press without any previous notification to the
+various governments. Following so closely after the meeting at Björkö,
+that announcement had a sinister significance which the Russian and the
+German presses interpreted as a warning to their countries that Great
+Britain was still mistress of the seas and that no change should occur
+against her will. Germany feared a British attack and, without an
+adequate fleet, felt herself defenseless.[896]
+
+The British press denounced these fears as preposterous. In the House of
+Commons, Earl Percy, undersecretary of state for foreign affairs,
+declared on August 3 that “the situation in Europe presented no special
+cause for anxiety” and would present even less cause if certain
+“irresponsible persons were not perpetually attributing to this country
+Machiavellian motives of which we were quite innocent and who were
+always imagining that we could not enter into arrangements with one
+country for mutual convenience without having a hostile intent against
+some other country.”[897] Lord Lansdowne immediately explained to the
+German and Russian governments that the lack of notification had been an
+oversight; he denied that the maneuvers were intended as a demonstration
+in any way.[898]
+
+As neither side wanted trouble, this explanation cleared up the
+difficulty. The press became calmer and the visit of the British fleet
+to Swinemünde and Neufahrwasser, August 27-September 1, was used by both
+the British and the Germans for demonstrations of good will.[899] Yet
+the fact that for the first time in years the British fleet was
+practicing in the Baltic was not without significance. Furthermore, King
+Edward VII was still at odds with the German Emperor. In August and
+September, with the approval of his government, he refused to meet his
+nephew until Franco-German relations improved.[900] And at some time in
+August the British government learned from a member of the German
+Emperor’s party at Björkö that at that meeting William II had seemed
+nervous and preoccupied, that he had been seized by sudden fits of
+talkativeness and of silence, and that he had advocated his ideas of a
+coalition of Germany, Russia, and France to the exclusion of Great
+Britain. Lord Lansdowne’s comment to that information was as follows:
+“The description of the Kaiser’s language and demeanour fills me with
+disquiet. What may not a man in such a frame of mind do next?”[901]
+
+
+ III
+
+
+When the report reached Paris on July 23 that the interview at Björkö
+was to occur, M. Rouvier immediately asked M. Witte, who was in Paris on
+his way to Portsmouth, whether it was true. M. Witte, equally in the
+dark, replied that he did not believe the rumor.[902] When the authentic
+news of the meeting came a few hours later, the French government and
+people were alarmed, for the Czar’s meeting with the German Emperor
+signified a lack of regard for French feeling and seemed to belie M.
+Witte’s assurances of Russia’s devotion to the Dual Alliance.[903]
+Moreover, M. Witte’s private advocacy of closer co-operation between the
+three great Continental Powers against the great naval Powers, that is,
+against France’s friend, Great Britain, no doubt increased the concern
+of the French government.[904]
+
+On July 22 M. Bompard, French ambassador in St. Petersburg, demanded an
+explanation from Count Lamsdorff of the report of the forthcoming
+meeting. The Foreign Minister assured the French government that it was
+a strictly private interview, devoid of any political character.[905]
+Nevertheless, after the meeting occurred the French government continued
+to feel uneasy.[906] Although M. Bompard believed that Count Lamsdorff,
+faithful to the Dual Alliance, hoped that the meeting had had no
+significance, the Ambassador strongly suspected that the Minister had
+again not been consulted beforehand by his master.[907] Believing that
+the Emperor William II was trying through his personal relations with
+the Czar to destroy the Dual Alliance, he feared the results of an
+interview between the two sovereigns. When he learned that some sort of
+document had been signed by the two rulers, he surmised that it was a
+personal agreement of friendship by which they promised not to
+participate in any enterprise directed against the other and to exchange
+any information which came to their knowledge.[908]
+
+Faced by the immense possibilities of the meeting at Björkö, M. Rouvier
+determined to forestall any Russian initiative looking toward a change
+in the Dual Alliance by frankly explaining his foreign policy to the
+Russian ambassador, M. Nelidow. On August 9, the Ambassador reported the
+Minister’s words as follows:
+
+
+The Minister assured me that the basis of his policy must remain the
+alliance with Russia; France needs no other. “Wherein does my policy
+differ from that of my predecessor?” he said to me. “Therein that I wish
+to establish good relations with England and Germany; but we do not
+intend thereby to make a closer agreement with the latter, just as on
+the other hand we do not desire to weaken the understanding already
+existing with England.” Upon my remarking that several newspapers have
+gone so far as to speak of a German alliance, M. Rouvier replied
+emphatically that that would be “absolutely impossible.”[909]
+
+
+
+ IV
+
+
+The Czar, who probably felt guilty about not having consulted his
+Foreign Minister before signing the Björkö treaty, did not tell Count
+Lamsdorff of it until September 12.[910] He probably did so then because
+peace with Japan, signed on September 6 and soon to be officially
+ratified, would bring the Björkö accord into force.[911] Count Lamsdorff
+was horrified at the news. On October 9 he wrote to his friend M.
+Nelidow that the German Emperor had endeavored in the previous year to
+persuade “our poor monarch” to sign a treaty of defensive alliance with
+the obligation for France to join it. He continued:
+
+
+I succeeded in preventing this crude attempt. But during the fateful
+meeting at Björkö, the Emperor William was able with the aid of base
+flattery to convince our dear Emperor that he alone was his true friend
+and his support, and that the only salvation for Russia and for Europe
+lay in a new Triple Alliance which in his opinion France would gladly
+join.
+
+
+After informing M. Nelidow of the treaty signed at Björkö, he went on:
+“There you have the new mess into which we have been plunged after so
+many unusual adventures during the past two years. You can imagine how
+comforting this is.”[912]
+
+From the first Count Lamsdorff was determined to destroy the treaty.
+After comparing it with the terms of the Dual Alliance, he concluded
+that the one was a flagrant violation of the other.[913] In fact, he
+thought that in case of a Franco-German war arising out of the Moroccan
+affair, Russia was bound by this treaty to support Germany against her
+own ally. He wrote to M. Nelidow:
+
+
+From long years of experience I have become convinced that the alliance
+with France is necessary in order to have really good relations with
+Germany. Otherwise we lose our independence; for I know nothing heavier
+than the German yoke. Without sacrificing the most intimate relations
+with Berlin, we have very tactfully repulsed all attempts to compromise
+us.
+
+
+Not only did he expect France to refuse flatly to enter the new
+grouping, but he also considered it bad policy to give up the Dual
+Alliance in favor of a doubtful combination _à trois_. He considered the
+treaty to be altogether in favor of Germany, for she was bound to aid
+Russia only in Europe although Russia had most cause to fear Asiatic
+conflicts. Count Lamsdorff held that this alliance might involve Russia
+in the Anglo-German rivalry and might draw her into a war in which she
+had no interest. Preferring a policy of peace and good will with all
+Powers, he believed that Russia should next settle her difficulties with
+Great Britain, in spite of the fact that the renewal of the Anglo-
+Japanese Alliance in August had angered him. He was determined to
+extricate Russia from this situation with the least possible damage to
+Russo-German relations but above all without a breach in the Dual
+Alliance.[914]
+
+When the Russian Foreign Minister marshaled these arguments before the
+Czar, the latter refused to yield. Without showing much consideration
+for French interest in the matter, Nicholas II replied that the alliance
+would be of benefit to both Russia and France and maintained that the
+latter would join it.[915] Although he was strongly skeptical about this
+possibility, the Foreign Minister was forced to inquire of M. Nelidow on
+September 14 whether or not France would do so.[916]
+
+Without consulting anyone, M. Nelidow replied decidedly no. The Dual
+Alliance, together with the Entente Cordiale, every day becoming more
+intimate, he wrote, formed the foundation of the French foreign policy,
+whereas Franco-German relations were far from satisfactory. This new
+triple alliance, manifestly aimed at Great Britain, might, he continued,
+involve France in a war, which she wished above all to avoid, especially
+a war against Great Britain for the defense of German interests.
+Furthermore, such an alliance would mean the renunciation of all hopes
+of revenge for France. In fact, he thought that the slightest hint in
+favor of a Continental grouping would only shake France’s trust in her
+ally. Nevertheless, he promised to investigate further.[917]
+
+Not convinced by these arguments, the Czar clung to his plan. Just at
+this juncture M. Witte arrived in St. Petersburg with a letter from
+William II which forced a decision about the alliance.
+
+M. Witte’s ideas on foreign policy were confused. Early in May, 1905, he
+spoke of Germany to Mr. Spring Rice in hostile terms. In July,
+immediately before he left St. Petersburg for Portsmouth to negotiate
+peace with Japan, he was upholding among his friends and to the Czar the
+plan that at Portsmouth he should not only make peace but should also
+negotiate an “all-round arrangement” with Japan which Great Britain and
+France should adhere to or at least recognize.[918] A few days later at
+Paris he advocated the formation of a Continental grouping against the
+overseas Powers.[919] The renewal of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance
+increased his antagonism to Great Britain.[920] On his return to Paris
+in September, he refused an invitation from King Edward to visit England
+as well as an offer of British participation in the proposed Russian
+loan, and aided in settling the Moroccan difficulty in order to make
+possible a Franco-German _rapprochement_.[921]
+
+As M. Witte had to pass through Germany on his trip home, the Emperor
+William obtained permission from the Czar for him to stop over and to be
+initiated into the secret of Björkö.[922] After a cordial interview with
+Prince Bülow at Berlin,[923] M. Witte journeyed to Rominten where he
+received an almost royal welcome from the Emperor (September 26). When
+William II informed him of the signing of the alliance at Björkö, the
+Russian statesman, according to the Emperor, wept tears of joy. M. Witte
+proposed that the German and the Russian ambassadors be given
+instructions to co-operate on all possible questions as a means of
+persuading France to enter the new grouping voluntarily and of preparing
+the world for this momentous event. In the meantime, he advised that the
+accord be kept closely secret. He promised to do his part in “using this
+foundation for the construction of a good house.” Overjoyed at his
+success, William II accepted these suggestions. In a letter to the Czar
+carried by M. Witte he made this proposal for the co-operation of their
+foreign representatives:[924] “This common exposal of a common cause,”
+he wrote, “will not fail to impress the world that our relations have
+become closer and thus slowly prepare your Allies the French for the new
+orientation which their policy must take for the entry into our
+treaty.”[925]
+
+In the conversations with M. Witte, who was not shown a copy of the
+treaty itself, the Emperor represented the accord as much less binding
+upon Franco-Russian relations than was really the case.[926] On his
+side, M. Witte, anxious to have the support of William II in regaining
+the good graces of the Czar and harboring some vague ideas about the
+desirability of a Continental grouping, was easily charmed by the
+Emperor into approval of the project. When he reached St. Petersburg,
+September 28, he urged upon the French Ambassador the need of a Dual
+Alliance-German coalition as a reply to the Anglo-Japanese Alliance. M.
+Bompard naturally rejected the idea.[927] When Count Witte (he had just
+been ennobled) protested to him the Emperor William’s love for France
+and his attachment to the Dual Alliance, the Ambassador significantly
+asked, “Does not the Emperor’s love for the Dual Alliance extend so far
+that he wished to join it?”[928] Count Lamsdorff, even less sympathetic,
+showed to Count Witte the actual treaty and wrathfully denounced it. The
+latter began to recover from the social intoxication of his visit to
+Germany and to perceive that the treaty would have to be annulled.[929]
+
+Count Lamsdorff, Count Witte, M. Nelidow, and the Grand Duke Nicholas,
+who was initiated into the secret, all joined forces in persuading the
+Czar. By appealing to their master’s sense of honor and loyalty to the
+alliance made by his revered father, they succeeded in winning the
+unhappy ruler’s consent to a compromise. He acknowledged that the treaty
+of Björkö and the terms of the Dual Alliance were in contradiction, and
+agreed that before the former became operative either Germany should be
+brought to change it in such a way that it would not affect France or
+that the French government should be moved to a scrutiny of the terms of
+the Dual Alliance “in the sense of a more or less close association with
+this defensive Triple Alliance.” Thus, simultaneous attempts were to be
+made to persuade either France or Germany to change the terms of her
+alliance.[930]
+
+It very soon became apparent that the French government would never
+accept the Björkö treaty. When M. Nelidow broached to M. Rouvier on
+October 4 the idea of alliance with Germany which his government claimed
+President Roosevelt also favored, the Premier repeated his former
+assertions on this question. He, in turn, stated his complete approval
+of an Anglo-Russian accord.[931] Again on October 18 the Russian
+Ambassador reported that during a most intimate conversation with M.
+Rouvier he had pressed the arguments in favor of a Continental alliance
+against Great Britain only to receive from the Premier the following
+emphatic reply:
+
+
+We have aggressive intentions toward no one. We have given clear proof
+of our love of peace. Thirty-five years ago after a war unfortunate for
+us two provinces were taken away and we had to pay several billion
+francs for peace. Our nation submitted, and since then we have
+endeavored to avoid any cause for conflict or misunderstanding. To avoid
+difficulties which threatened to come to a head, I recently ventured to
+wound the pride of my country a little. But one cannot demand more of
+us. The nation would not tolerate a closer _rapprochement_ with Germany.
+It cannot forget what it has suffered from her, of which suffering it
+has just been reminded in a careless and purposeless way. An alliance
+with Germany is impossible. The government is obliged to regard the
+feelings of the country.
+
+
+As M. Nelidow commented in his dispatch, this was M. Rouvier’s final
+reaction. It destroyed the possibility of France’s entering a
+Continental alliance so completely that even the Czar had to acknowledge
+the fact.[932]
+
+In the meantime, the Czar’s letter of October 7 to William II arrived in
+Berlin. It read as follows:
+
+
+The great question is to draw France into our new defensive Alliance. .
+. . . But if France were to refuse to join us, then, not only would Art.
+IV drop away, but also the meaning of Art. I would change radically,
+because its obligations in the _present wording_ point at any European
+Power and France too—Russia’s ally. During your stay at Bjorkoe I did
+not have with me the documents signed by my Father. . . . . The first
+steps taken with the object of trying to find out, whether the French
+Government could be induced to join our new treaty, showed us that it is
+a difficult task and that it will take a long time to prepare to bring
+it over of its free will. . . . . Therefore I think that the coming into
+force of the Bjorkoe treaty ought to be _put off until_ we know how
+France will look upon it. In case she absolutely refuses to join our two
+countries, it will be necessary to change the wordings of articles I and
+IV so as to bring them into full accordance with Russia’s obligations
+towards France, since the formation of the Triple Alliance in 1890. I
+shall do my best to get France to join us.[933]
+
+
+Without consulting the Chancellor, William II replied on October 12 with
+a refusal:
+
+
+I fully agree with you, that it will cost time, labour and patience to
+induce France to join us both, but the reasonable people will in future
+make themselves heard and felt! Our Moroccan business is regulated to
+entire satisfaction so that the air is free for better understanding
+between us. Our treaty is a very good base to build upon. We joined
+hands and signed _before God_ who heard our vows! I therefore think that
+the treaty can well come into existence. But if you wish any changes in
+the wording or clauses or provisions for the future or different
+emergencies—as for instance the absolute refusal of France, which is
+improbable—I gladly await any proposal you will think fit to lay before
+me. Till these have been laid before me and are agreed upon, the Treaty
+must be adhered to by us as it is.[934]
+
+
+The Czar, who had expected an acquiescence,[935] was in an unhappy
+plight; no matter which way he turned he would be accused of breaking
+his word. Since France had the prior claim and since the pressure upon
+him in St. Petersburg was pro-French, he wrote to William II on November
+23 that to fulfil with equal loyalty the clauses of the Dual Alliance
+and those of the treaty of Björkö he would have to add the following
+declaration to the latter:
+
+
+In view of the difficulties in the way of an immediate adhesion by the
+French Government to the treaty of defensive alliance signed at Björkoe
+. . . . it is understood that Article I of that act shall not have any
+application in the eventuality of a war with France and that the mutual
+engagements which unite the latter to Russia will be maintained in full
+until the establishment of an accord _à trois_.
+
+
+To soften his refusal the Czar reported that Great Britain was “trying
+hard to get us round for an understanding about Asiatic frontier
+questions”; but he assured William II that he had not “the slightest
+intention of opening negotiations with her.”[936]
+
+This reply destroyed the entire force of the treaty; it spelled the
+failure of Germany’s second effort to ally with Russia. The German
+Emperor and his government were bitterly disappointed. In the answer to
+the Czar on November 28, based upon a memorandum by Herr von Holstein,
+William II did not absolutely say yes or no, but left it to be
+understood that Germany still considered the treaty as binding in spite
+of the Czar’s declaration.[937] On December 2 the Czar refused to accept
+the accord without the proposed declaration.[938] There the matter
+rested.
+
+On January 21, 1906, the Czar wrote to William II that in keeping with
+“the real sense of our Bjorkoe treaty,” he had accepted a proposal of
+President Loubet’s to attach a French general to his person.
+
+
+I think that this courtesy to France will bring her still closer to
+Russia. As long as I can hold her tight she will remain peaceful and
+quiet. It seems to me therefore that the continent’s interests and still
+more so the interests of Germany can only gain from it. And with God’s
+help some day Your right idea of forming a new “triple alliance” will
+become a solid reality.
+
+
+In sending this letter to Prince Bülow on January 23 the Emperor
+wrote:[939]
+
+
+I am sending you herewith another precious, bungling effort from the
+youthful idealist on the Russian throne! The latest phase of the Russo-
+Gallic Alliance borders on the ridiculous, but show’s how in Paris—at
+London’s suggestion?—a counter blow is immediately struck against every
+_rapprochement_ between the two Emperors; every time, the little Czar by
+reason of the “ancient alliance” immediately falls or is won over by
+Lamsdorff. That he speaks on “my” idea of a triple alliance, as if I
+were receiving a special favor thereby, is really more than childish or
+naïve! . . . . And all that is served to me from behind a tear-drenched
+mask of eternal, most intimate friendship! How long will it be until he
+will have an “English general” at his side, naturally only in order to
+realize “my” ideal of world peace, and then a Japanese general to calm
+the oriental peoples, and finally an American general! His Majesty ought
+to be ashamed before his and my ancestors and before me to do such
+things, to write such letters to me, which Lamsdorff has dictated to
+him!
+
+
+Thus the results of Björkö upon Russo-German relations were entirely
+different from those anticipated by the two rulers. By overreaching
+himself, by seeking a too-brilliant success without adequate
+preparation, the German Emperor alienated the Czar, who felt that he had
+played an ignominious rôle.[940] The consequence was that Russia again
+drew nearer to France[941] and began to look with more favor upon
+British overtures. Germany’s effort to restore her dominant position in
+Europe and to prevent the dreaded encirclement by means of a Russian
+alliance resulted, therefore, in preparing the ground for the very act
+which Germany most feared, the formation of an Anglo-Russo-French
+entente.
+
+
+ V
+
+
+The German bid at Björkö for Russia’s friendship and the rumors of what
+had happened there—approaching more and more nearly the truth by
+October[942]—inevitably aroused rival efforts by Great Britain. The
+British policy of obtaining an understanding with Russia was complex.
+Defeat by Japan and revolution within made Russia discouraged and
+powerless, and broke the prestige of the chauvinistic, militaristic
+groups for the time being.[943] To complete the prophylactic work of
+fixing adequate restraints to the Russian expansive energy, Great
+Britain renewed prematurely her alliance with Japan in August, 1905,
+modifying the terms so that the alliance became effective in case of an
+attack by one Power and not only China specifically but also the
+“regions of Eastern Asia and of India” were included within its
+scope.[944] Then the British government hoped that Russia, with no other
+alternative, would make a satisfactory settlement of their Asiatic
+differences.[945]
+
+In the previous May, Sir Charles Hardinge, British ambassador at St.
+Petersburg, had carried King Edward’s most cordial greetings to the
+Russian Foreign Minister. With marked pleasure, Count Lamsdorff had
+replied that the maintenance of peace and good relations with Great
+Britain was _mon culte et ma religion_. Remarking to the Ambassador that
+“interested parties” were trying to stir up discord between their
+countries, the Count said that these endeavors must be frustrated. Count
+Lamsdorff, wrote the Ambassador to his government,
+
+
+thoroughly realized the actual difficulties of the situation, but he was
+full of confidence that at the end of this miserable war both
+Governments would find a means of arriving at a satisfactory arrangement
+of all outstanding differences in the same manner as the Anglo-French
+arrangement had been made.[946]
+
+
+Russia and Japan agreed upon terms of peace on September 5. Three days
+later, Sir Charles Hardinge notified Count Lamsdorff of the new Anglo-
+Japanese Alliance, and assured him most earnestly that it was one of
+national insurance, that Great Britain was absolutely sincere in her
+desire for peace and friendly relations, and that she had no wish “to
+interfere with the legitimate activity of Russia” or “to seek a policy
+of aggrandizement at her expense.” Count Lamsdorff replied that he
+remained convinced of the value of an agreement and repeated that a
+third party was trying to arouse hostility between Great Britain and
+Russia. However, when Sir Charles Hardinge alluded to the possibility of
+resuming the previous negotiations at a future date, the Foreign
+Minister responded “that he was most anxious that they should be brought
+to a successful issue but that they should not be unduly hastened.”[947]
+
+This cool reply to the British sounding was caused partly by the
+pressing need at that time to annul the Björkö treaty, but primarily by
+the Anglo-Japanese Alliance, whose renewal at that moment Russia had not
+expected. Interpreting it as another blow to a state already humiliated
+by defeat, Russian public opinion denounced the treaty.[948] Thinking
+that the Russian animosity would pass, Lord Lansdowne proposed on
+October 3 a way of bringing the two countries closer together.
+
+
+My own feeling was [he said to the Russian ambassador] that it would be
+a mistake to attempt too much, or to allow it to be understood that the
+two countries were on the eve of a comprehensive transaction analogous
+to that which had taken place between France and Great Britain. My idea
+of the procedure to be followed was rather that we should take up in
+detail any outstanding points as to which differences of opinion had
+manifested themselves and endeavour to dispose of these, and that we
+should then pass on to others, if we found that our work proceeded
+successfully.
+
+
+Although the Russian Foreign Minister was gratified at the expression of
+British good will, he replied that
+
+
+he could give no answer of a definite character, but, speaking
+privately, he could say that the Treaty had had a very bad effect and
+had left an unpleasant impression upon the mind of the Emperor, and he
+would recommend our Ambassador, as a friend, not to press for an answer
+as it might be a disagreeable one, nor to open negotiations as to a
+definite treaty between England and Russia as to their interests in
+Asia.
+
+
+Count Benckendorff even remarked that “any arrangement . . . . should
+not be conceived in a spirit of hostility towards Germany”—an
+implication which the British Foreign Secretary repudiated with
+force.[949]
+
+Greatly alarmed at Russian soundings about a Continental coalition
+against Great Britain, the French government in October tried several
+times to bring Russia and Great Britain together, even on any minor
+question.[950] In view of the Russian reserve, no definite proposals
+were made.[951] By October 21, however, the French and British
+governments were certain that the danger of a Russo-German combination
+was past.[952] Shortly thereafter President Roosevelt, to the content of
+those governments, entirely denied that he favored a Continental
+grouping against the Anglo-Japanese Alliance.[953] When King Edward
+learned the truth about the Björkö affair in the autumn, he could with
+some relief describe his nephew, the Emperor William, as “the most
+brilliant failure in history.”[954]
+
+While these conversations were unsuccessful, Sir Charles Hardinge
+thought that “the improvement which has already shown itself in the
+relations between England and Russia only requires careful fostering to
+bear fruit in due season.”[955] To that end it was necessary for the two
+governments to find some opportunity for disinterested co-operation—an
+opportunity which the Conference of Algeciras was to afford—and for
+Russian public opinion to reciprocate the amicable feelings of the
+British so that an Anglo-Russian understanding would be built upon a
+durable basis, like that of the Entente Cordiale. The British press was
+doing its share in bringing about this change of attitude. In fact,
+British public opinion felt more relieved than it had in months. The
+conclusion of the Russo-Japanese War, the renewal of the Anglo-Japanese
+Alliance, the signing of the Franco-German agreement of September 28—all
+cleared the diplomatic atmosphere. The _Matin_ revelations on October 5
+concerning the supposed British offer of alliance to France in the
+previous summer placed Great Britain in a somewhat embarrassing position
+before the world as a disturber of peace. Moreover, it was recognized
+that Anglo-German animosity had almost caused a Russo-German alliance,
+and that, to make a settlement with Russia, Great Britain should restore
+better relations with Germany.[956] So British public opinion was ready
+to be friendly with Russia, and, in part, with Germany. During the
+autumn, sections of the British people, although not the government,
+tried to smooth over the animosities with Germany. A meeting was held in
+London early in December for that purpose at which eminent politicians,
+business men, representatives of the press, clergymen, and others were
+present to further the work.[957] As German public opinion responded to
+these efforts, a general _détente_ set in.[958]
+
+
+[Footnote 865: On these differences see Mühlberg to Metternich, July 18,
+1905, _G.P._, XX, 638, No. 6863 and following documents; Lee, _King
+Edward VII_, II, 334 ff., 346 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 866: Even Lascelles, British ambassador at Berlin, admitted to
+Metternich that “in a Franco-German war in view of the prevailing
+opinion here [in England] England would be actively on the French side.”
+See Metternich to Bülow, July 19 and 22, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 639 f., No.
+6864; 646 ff., No. 6867; Bülow to Metternich, July 22, 1905, _ibid._,
+641 ff., No. 6866.]
+
+[Footnote 867: William II to Bülow, Aug. 11, 1905, _ibid._, XXX, 497,
+No. 6237.]
+
+[Footnote 868: Bülow to F. O., July 20, 1905, _ibid._, 435 f., No. 6206.
+The telegrams between the two rulers were in English.]
+
+[Footnote 869: See the correspondence between Holstein and Bülow, July
+21-24, 1905, _ibid._, 436 ff., Nos. 6203-14. It was Holstein who
+determined the whole policy of the German foreign office on this
+question. Bülow served only as his mouthpiece. Richthofen and
+Metternich, and also General Moltke (who in 1906 became chief of staff),
+were all opposed to the project of alliance, but their opinions were
+either not asked or were disregarded. See Bülow to F. O., Aug. 9, 1905,
+_ibid._, 488, No. 6235; Metternich to Bülow, Oct. 2, 1905, _ibid._, XX,
+659 ff., No. 6871; Eckardstein, _Lebenserinnerungen und politische
+Denkwürdigkeiten_, III, 167.]
+
+[Footnote 870: They conversed in English. In the Emperor’s account of
+the interview he gives the Czar’s statements in that language.]
+
+[Footnote 871: The Czar was also unpleasantly surprised to learn that
+King Edward VII was supporting the candidacy of his son-in-law, Prince
+Carl of Denmark, for the Norwegian throne. Nicholas II favored Prince
+Waldemar, Carl’s younger brother, while the Emperor favored choosing a
+member of the House of Bernadotte. It looked to him, said Nicholas, as
+if Great Britain were endeavoring thereby to get her fingers on Norway
+with the possible purpose of acquiring the port of Christiansund from
+which to block the Skaggerrack. See the references given in the
+succeeding footnote.]
+
+[Footnote 872: “Watchwords of the Common Brethren for 1905.” It was a
+book of proverbs.]
+
+[Footnote 873: There is another account of the meeting written by Bülow
+on Aug. 18 immediately after a talk with the Emperor which does not
+agree in all details with this one written by the Emperor on the day
+after the meeting occurred. The two versions supplement each other. But
+the one of July 25 reproduces better the atmosphere in which the affair
+took place. The other version is as follows: The Czar declared that he
+wished to go hand in hand with the Emperor, his only friend. The latter
+asked why the treaty had not been signed in the previous autumn. The
+reply was that France had opposed it, that he (the Czar) had had to
+maintain the Dual Alliance, and that France and Germany had been
+hostile. The Emperor then said that those relations were better, that he
+wished France and Germany to become friends, that the Moroccan question
+was to be used for that purpose, and that an understanding over it would
+certainly be reached. The Czar replied that if that were the case then
+nothing stood in the way of a Russo-German treaty. The Emperor then
+produced a copy of the treaty and it was signed immediately. See memo.
+by Bülow, Aug. 18, 1905, _G.P._, XIX, 502 f., No. 6240. The other
+accounts of the Björkö interview are as follows: Tschirschky to Bülow,
+July 24, 1905, _ibid._, 454 ff., No. 6218; William II to Bülow, July 25,
+1905, _ibid._, 458 ff., No. 6220; Bülow to F. O., July 24, 1905,
+_ibid._, 452, No. 6215; Witte, _Memoirs_, p. 428; Savinsky, _Revue des
+deux mondes_, XII (1922), 798 f.; Savinsky, _Recollections of a Russian
+Diplomat_, p. 115; Helmuth von Moltke, _Erinnerungen, Briefe, Dokumente,
+1877-1916_ (Stuttgart, 1922), pp. 325 ff. The treaty was countersigned
+by Grand Duke Michael, Tschirschky, and Admiral Birileff, the last two
+apparently without reading it. The Grand Duke was asked to sign it
+because William II feared that Nicholas II might be deposed and Michael
+made czar. Naturally he did not mention his reason.
+
+The Czar wished to consider an agreement guaranteeing to the King of
+Denmark the possession of his territory, so that in case of war Russia
+and Germany would be sure of being able to defend the Baltic Sea north
+of the Belt. A declaration of Danish neutrality would not suffice,
+Nicholas argued to the Emperor, because in case the opponent did not
+respect it and seized the territory as a base of operation, Germany and
+Russia would be in a difficult situation. But the Emperor, who together
+with his government was opposed to touching this important question, put
+Nicholas off with a promise to consider the matter with Bülow.
+
+The Emperor also urged the Czar at this interview to grant to the
+Russian people a habeas corpus act which would guarantee their civil
+liberties, and to call a general council of state to consider the
+question of a constitution.]
+
+[Footnote 874: _G.P._, XIX, 459.]
+
+[Footnote 875: Goetz, _Briefe Wilhelms II an den Zaren 1894-1914_, p.
+374.]
+
+[Footnote 876: Bülow to F. O., July 25, 1905, _G.P._, XIX, 453 f., No.
+6217; Holstein to Bülow, July 25, 1905, _ibid._, 457 f., No. 6219.]
+
+[Footnote 877: Bülow to F. O., July 27, Aug. 9, 1905, _ibid._, 470 f.,
+Nos. 6224 f.; 488 ff., No. 6235.]
+
+[Footnote 878: Bülow to F. O., July 26, 1905, _ibid._, 467 f., No. 6222;
+476 f., No. 6228.]
+
+[Footnote 879: The German government was particularly concerned lest
+Roosevelt become mistrustful on account of this interview and the
+conclusion of an alliance with Russia. It even considered imparting the
+terms of the treaty to him, but in view of the need for secrecy decided
+not to. Instead, on July 28, the Emperor wrote personally to Roosevelt
+making it appear that the interview dealt only with matters pertaining
+to the Russo-Japanese negotiations for peace (Mühlberg to Bussche-
+Haddenhausen, July 28, 1905, _ibid._, 614, No. 6319). On this discussion
+about whether to notify Roosevelt of the accord see _ibid._, Nos. 6203,
+6206-8, 6221, 6223.]
+
+[Footnote 880: He meant the one Germany feared of Russia, France, Great
+Britain, and Japan.]
+
+[Footnote 881: Holstein to Bülow, July 26, 1905, _ibid._, 468 ff., No.
+6223; memo. by Holstein, July 28, 1905, _ibid._, 474 ff., No. 6227.]
+
+[Footnote 882: Bülow to F. O., July 28, Aug. 5, 1905, _ibid._, 476 f.,
+No. 6228; 482 f., No. 6231.]
+
+[Footnote 883: Bülow to F. O., July 30, Aug. 5 and 9, 1905, _ibid._, 477
+ff., No. 6229; 485 ff., No. 6233; 488 ff., No. 6235.]
+
+[Footnote 884: Bülow to William II, July 30, 1905, _ibid._, 477 ff., No.
+6229; Holstein to Bülow, Aug. 5, 1905, _ibid._, 483 f., No. 6232.]
+
+[Footnote 885: Bülow to F. O., Aug. 2, 5, 9, 1905, _ibid._, 481 ff.,
+Nos. 6230 f.; 488 ff., No. 6235.]
+
+[Footnote 886: Bülow to William II, July 24, 27, 1905, _ibid._, 452, No.
+6216; 471 ff., No. 6226; Bülow to F. O., July 27-29, 1905, _ibid._, 471,
+No. 6225; 476 ff., Nos. 6228 f.]
+
+[Footnote 887: It is highly probable that Bülow took this step not so
+much because of defects in the treaty, but rather because the Emperor
+had disregarded his authority by making those important changes without
+consulting him. Under the persuasion of Richthofen he took this course
+in order to uphold his authority and to teach the Emperor a lesson
+(Eckardstein, III, 166; editor’s note in _G.P._, XIX, 481 f., note).]
+
+[Footnote 888: Bülow to F. O., Aug. 5 and 9, 1905, _ibid._, 482 f., No.
+6231; 488 ff., No. 6235.]
+
+[Footnote 889: William II to Bülow, Aug. 11, 1905, _ibid._, 496 ff., No.
+6237.]
+
+[Footnote 890: Bülow to F. O., Aug. 5 and 9, 1905, _ibid._, 482 f., No.
+6231; 485 ff., No. 6233; 488 ff., No. 6235.]
+
+[Footnote 891: Holstein to Bülow, Aug. 5, 6, 14, 1905, _ibid._, 483 f.,
+No. 6232; 487 f., No. 6234; 501, No. 6239; Mühlberg to Bülow, Aug. 10,
+1905, _ibid._, 493 ff., No. 6236; Bülow to F. O., Aug. 12, 1905,
+_ibid._, 498 ff., No. 6238; memo. by Bülow, Aug. 18, 1905, _ibid._, 502
+f., No. 6240.]
+
+[Footnote 892: Meyer to Roosevelt, Aug. 1, 1905, quoted in Howe, _George
+von Lengerke Meyer_, p. 188.]
+
+[Footnote 893: Schulthess, _Europäischer Geschichtskalender 1905_, p.
+195.]
+
+[Footnote 894: Mühlberg to Bülow, Aug. 10, 1905, _G.P._, XIX, 495, No.
+6236.]
+
+[Footnote 895: Memo. by Spring Rice for a letter to Roosevelt, July 10,
+1905, Spring Rice to Mrs. Roosevelt, Aug. 10, 1905, quoted in Gwynn,
+_The Letters and Friendships of Sir Cecil Spring Rice_, I, 476, 484.]
+
+[Footnote 896: Memo. by Mühlberg, Aug. 1, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 648 f., No.
+6868; Mühlberg to William II, Aug. 4, 1905, _ibid._, 649 ff., No. 6869;
+Metternich to Bülow, Aug. 14, 1905, _ibid._, 651 ff., No. 6870. The
+Emperor did not fear an attack at the time, but certainly at some later
+date. He thought that the maneuvers were meant to remind Denmark that
+she was an outpost for Great Britain just as Portugal was and that she
+must not be too familiar with Germany. And with an English princess
+married into the Swedish royal family and King Edward’s son-in-law
+seeking the Norwegian throne, he feared that Norway would also become a
+British satellite (William II to Bülow, July 30, 1905, quoted in a
+dispatch from Bülow to F. O., July 30, 1905, _ibid._, XIX, 477 ff., No.
+6229). Even so sane a person as General Moltke, who in the next year
+became chief of staff, confided to his diary on July 30, 1905: “The
+visit of the Channel Fleet in the Baltic announced by England is to be
+regarded as a demonstration. . . . . The English are inciting in the
+most unbelievable fashion, they are telling the most despicable lies
+about us, and are representing Germany as the evil spirit in the whole
+world. . . . . The future lies dark before us. May Germany have the
+strength to bear difficult times” (Moltke, p. 331).]
+
+[Footnote 897: 4 Hansard, Vol. CLI, cols. 113, 122, 136 ff., 143.]
+
+[Footnote 898: Memo. by Mühlberg, Aug. 1, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 648 f., No.
+6868; Mühlberg to William II, Aug. 4, 1905, _ibid._, 649 ff., No. 6869.
+As a matter of fact, the maneuvers had been planned for some time, and
+to begin with had no political significance. No direct connection
+existed between their inception and the meeting at Björkö, but it is
+very probable that the British government was not at all averse to their
+occurring at the time (cf. Bradford, _Life of Wilson_, p. 200). Wilson
+was in command of the British fleet (see also _G.P._, XIX, 478, editor’s
+note).]
+
+[Footnote 899: Schulthess, _1905_, pp. 109, 113; Bradford, p. 205.]
+
+[Footnote 900: The German government learned of this fact in August but
+not of its approval by the British government. See Metternich to Bülow,
+Aug. 14, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 658, No. 6870; Lee, II, 348, 353. On the
+quarrels of King Edward and his German nephew see Lee, II, 346 ff.;
+_G.P._, 648 ff., Nos. 6868, 6870; Newton, _Lord Lansdowne_, p. 330.]
+
+[Footnote 901: William II to Nicholas II, Aug. 22, 1905, Goetz, p. 377;
+Hardinge to Lansdowne, Aug. 1, 1905, _B.D._, IV, 95 f., No. 91 and
+editor’s note; Newton, pp. 337 f.]
+
+[Footnote 902: Nelidow to Lamsdorff, Aug. 9, 1905, _Kriegsschuldfrage_,
+Nov., 1924, p. 477.]
+
+[Footnote 903: _Zur europ. Politik_, II, 65 f.]
+
+[Footnote 904: Nelidow to Lamsdorff, Aug. 9, Oct. 15, 1905,
+_Kriegsschuldfrage_, Nov., 1924, pp. 477, 491; Radolin to Bülow, July
+25, 1905, _G.P._, XIX, 426 ff., No. 6198; M. Bompard states that Witte
+used the word “alli” (Bompard, “Le traité de Bjoerkoe,” _Revue de
+Paris_, XXV [May 15, 1918], 438).]
+
+[Footnote 905: Bompard, XXV, 432; Witte, p. 415; _Quest. dipl. et col._,
+XX, 174 f.]
+
+[Footnote 906: Nelidow to Lamsdorff, Aug. 9, 1905, _Kriegsschuldfrage_,
+Nov., 1924, p. 477.]
+
+[Footnote 907: Bompard, XXV, 432 f.; Bourgeois et Pagès, _Les origines
+et les responsabilités de la grande guerre_, p. 313.]
+
+[Footnote 908: Bompard, XXV, 424 f. Just when Bompard learned this fact
+is not evident, but apparently he did so soon after the interview. Cf.
+Hardinge to Lansdowne, Aug. 3, 1905, _B.D._, III, 127, No. 168.]
+
+[Footnote 909: Nelidow to Lamsdorff, Aug. 9, 1905, _Kriegsschuldfrage_,
+Nov., 1924, pp. 477 f.]
+
+[Footnote 910: There are various statements about the date upon which
+Lamsdorff learned of the treaty. See Iswolsky, _Recollections of a
+Foreign Minister_, pp. 49 f.; Savinsky, _Revue des deux mondes_, XII
+(1922), 798; A. Nekludow, “Autour de l’entrevue de Bjoerkoe,” _Revue des
+deux mondes_, March 1, 1918, p. 139; Nekludow was a secretary in the
+Russian embassy in Paris in 1905 (Witte, p. 426; Savinsky, p. 114). The
+correct date is given in a dispatch from Lamsdorff to Nelidow on Oct. 9,
+where the Foreign Minister stated that he was first told of the treaty
+by the Czar just before the latter’s departure for Finland on Aug. 30
+(or Sept. 12, according to the new calendar). See _Kriegsschuldfrage_,
+Nov., 1924, p. 487. The Czar excused his delay to Lamsdorff on the
+grounds that he had promised William II to preserve secrecy. See
+_ibid._, p. 487; Savinsky, _Revue des deux mondes_, XII (1922), 798 f.;
+cf. Iswolsky, pp. 49 f.]
+
+[Footnote 911: There is no substantiation in _G.P._ for the assertion by
+Savinsky that the Czar told Lamsdorff that William II had asked him then
+to make known the accord to the French government (Savinsky, _Revue des
+deux mondes_, XII [1922], 799; Savinsky, p. 115).]
+
+[Footnote 912: Savinsky, _Revue des deux mondes_, XII (1922), 799;
+Savinsky, pp. 115 ff.; Iswolsky, pp. 49 f.; Lamsdorff to Nelidow, Oct.
+9, 1905, _Kriegsschuldfrage_, Nov., 1924, pp. 486 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 913: This was certainly the case. Even apart from the fact
+that the military clauses of the Dual Alliance provided for a war
+against Germany, the political clauses as revised in 1899 stated the aim
+of the alliance to be “the maintenance of the general peace and of the
+European balance of power” (Pribram, _The Secret Treaties of Austria-
+Hungary_, II, 206 ff.).]
+
+[Footnote 914: Nekludow, _Revue des deux mondes_, March 1, 1918, pp. 137
+f.; Savinsky, _ibid._, XII (1922), 799 ff.; Witte, p. 425; Savinsky, pp.
+115 ff.; Lamsdorff to Nelidow, Oct. 9, Sept. 28, 1905,
+_Kriegsschuldfrage_, Nov., 1924, pp. 480 f., 486 ff.; Nelidow to
+Lamsdorff, Oct. 5, 1905, _ibid._, p. 483.]
+
+[Footnote 915: Savinsky, _Revue des deux mondes_, XII (1922), 800 ff.;
+Savinsky, pp. 118 ff., 126 f.; Lamsdorff to Nelidow, Oct. 6 and 9, 1905,
+_Kriegsschuldfrage_, Nov., 1924, pp. 485 ff.; Witte, pp. 415 ff.;
+Iswolsky, pp. 44, 49.]
+
+[Footnote 916: Lamsdorff to Nelidow, Sept. 14, 1905,
+_Kriegsschuldfrage_, Nov., 1924, p. 478.]
+
+[Footnote 917: Nelidow to Lamsdorff, Sept. 21, 1905, _ibid._, pp. 479
+f.]
+
+[Footnote 918: Hardinge to Lansdowne, July 25, 1905, _B.D._, IV, 93 f.,
+No. 89; Spring Rice to G. Balfour, July 29, 1905, and Spring Rice to
+Mrs. Roosevelt, Oct. 5, 1905, Gwynn, I, 481 f., 496.]
+
+[Footnote 919: Radolin to Bülow, July 22, 1905, _G.P._, XIX, 426 ff.,
+No. 6198. On July 26 the German government was about to inaugurate a
+press campaign against Witte, thinking that he was pro-British (Bülow to
+F. O., July 26, 1905, _G.P._, XIX, 468, No. 6222).]
+
+[Footnote 920: See Hardinge to Lansdowne, Oct. 4, 1905, _B.D._, IV, 205,
+No. 195.]
+
+[Footnote 921: Witte, pp. 293 f., 416 f.; Dillon, _The Eclipse of
+Russia_, pp. 350 f.; Radolin to Bülow, Sept. 23, 1905, _G.P._, XIX, 503
+f., No. 6241; Witte’s interview in _Le Temps_, reprinted in _Quest.
+dipl. et col._, XX, 439; Nelidow to Lamsdorff, Oct. 15, 1905,
+_Kriegsschuldfrage_, Nov., 1924, p. 491; Lee, II, 307 f.]
+
+[Footnote 922: William II to Bülow, Sept. 25, 1905, _G.P._, XIX, 505,
+No. 6242.]
+
+[Footnote 923: At the Emperor’s request Bülow said nothing to him about
+the Björkö treaty. See Bülow to William II, Sept. 25, 1905, _ibid._, 505
+ff., No. 6243.]
+
+[Footnote 924: On the meeting at Rominten see the following: Witte, pp.
+416 ff.; Iswolsky, pp. 50 ff.; Dillon, pp. 396 f.; Goetz, pp. 379 ff.;
+Bülow to F. O., Sept. 27, 1905, _G.P._, XIX, 507 f., Nos. 6244 f.;
+William II to Bülow, Sept. 27, 1905, _ibid._, 508 ff., No. 6246.]
+
+[Footnote 925: William II to Nicholas II, Sept. 26, 1905, Goetz, pp. 379
+ff.]
+
+[Footnote 926: Bülow instructed the Emperor to that effect. See Bülow to
+William II, Sept. 25, 1905, _G.P._, XIX, 506, No. 6243. See the dispatch
+from the Emperor to Bülow on Sept. 27, 1905, _ibid._, 508 ff., No.
+6246.]
+
+[Footnote 927: Hardinge to Lansdowne, Oct. 1 and 4, 1905, _B.D._, IV,
+202 f., No. 193; 205 f., No. 195.]
+
+[Footnote 928: Bompard, XXV, 441 f.; Bourgeois et Pagès, pp. 318 f.]
+
+[Footnote 929: In his memoirs Witte represented himself the dupe of the
+two rulers; when he read the document itself, he wrote, he was
+horrified. He claimed that he was largely responsible for the annulment
+of the treaty (Witte, pp. 425 ff.; Dillon, pp. 358 ff., 354, 413 f.; cf.
+Savinsky, p. 125). These accounts by him were both of a much later date,
+when he had been out of favor for several years and held a deep grudge
+against his master. Consequently he wanted to paint the latter’s perfidy
+toward France as black as possible. That Witte thought the treaty so
+harmful at the time is difficult to believe. See his letter to
+Eulenburg, Oct. 8, 1905, _G.P._, XIX, 519 f., No. 6250, Anlage; Witte,
+p. 424; Hardinge to Lansdowne, Oct. 1 and 4, 1905, _B.D._, IV, 202 f.,
+No. 193; 205 ff., No. 195; Spring Rice to Mrs. Roosevelt, Oct. 5, 1905,
+Gwynn, I, 496 f.]
+
+[Footnote 930: See the following: Witte, pp. 427 ff.; Iswolsky, pp. 54
+ff.; Savinsky, _Revue des deux mondes_, XII (1922), 801; Dillon, pp. 361
+ff.; Lamsdorff to Nelidow, Oct. 9 and 27, 1905, _Kriegsschuldfrage_,
+Nov., 1924, pp. 487, 495; Bompard, XXV, 422 ff.; Savinsky, pp. 120 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 931: Lamsdorff met with a similar response from Bompard.
+According to the latter, Lamsdorff suggested a combination of Russia,
+France, Germany, and the United States as a counterpoise to the Anglo-
+Japanese Alliance, “in the same manner that the political equilibrium of
+Europe was maintained by the Dual and Triple Alliances.” See Hardinge to
+Lansdowne, Oct. 14, 1905, _B.D._, IV, 211 f., No. 198; Spring Rice to
+Mrs. Roosevelt, Oct. 5 and 15, 1905, Gwynn, I, 497, 501 f.]
+
+[Footnote 932: Nelidow to Lamsdorff, Oct. 5, 15, 18, 1905,
+_Kriegsschuldfrage_, Nov., 1924, pp. 481 f., 489 f.]
+
+[Footnote 933: Nicholas II to William II, Oct. 7, 1905, _G.P._, XIX, 512
+f., No. 6247.]
+
+[Footnote 934: William II to Nicholas II, Oct. 12, 1905, _ibid._, 514,
+No. 6248; William II to Bülow, Oct. 12 and 17, 1905, _ibid._, 515 ff.,
+Nos. 6249 f. The reply to Witte was made by Eulenburg at the same time.
+See Bülow to Eulenburg, Oct. 18, 1905, _ibid._, 520 f., No. 6251;
+Eulenburg to Witte, Oct., 1905, _ibid._, 521, No. 6252. Cf. Bompard,
+XXV, 443 ff. Bülow approved of the line taken by his master, for he
+earnestly desired to continue the negotiations (Bülow to Eulenburg, Oct.
+18, 1905, _G.P._, XIX, 520, No. 6251).]
+
+[Footnote 935: Lamsdorff to Nelidow, Oct. 12, 1905, _Kriegsschuldfrage_,
+Nov., 1924, p. 488.]
+
+[Footnote 936: The letter was delivered by Osten-Sacken, Russian
+ambassador at Berlin, to give it full official character. See _G.P._,
+XIX, 522 ff., No. 6254 and Anlage. The Czar approved this reply as early
+as Nov. 10. Lamsdorff to Osten-Sacken, undated though bearing the date
+of approval by Nicholas II of Nov. 10. See _Kriegsschuldfrage_, Nov.,
+1924, pp. 495 f.; Iswolsky, pp. 55 f.; Bompard, XXV, 443 ff.; Witte, p.
+429; Savinsky, pp. 123 f.]
+
+[Footnote 937: William II to Bülow, Nov. 26, 1905, _G.P._, XIX, 524 f.,
+No. 6255. The Emperor thought that Russia had shown little appreciation
+of German friendship during the recent war, and he declared to Bülow
+that the coalition of Russia, France, and Great Britain was _de facto_
+already existent. In the same letter he stated that Germany alone, since
+Russia refused her aid, must win France to the new project. For the
+reply to the Czar see William II to Nicholas II, Nov. 26 and 28, 1905,
+_ibid._, 526 f., Nos. 6256 f. That the German government continued to
+hold the alliance as valid is seen from a memorandum composed by the
+foreign office for the Emperor just before the latter’s meeting with the
+Czar at Swinemünde, July, 1907 (_ibid._, p. 528 n.).]
+
+[Footnote 938: _Ibid._, 527 f., No. 6528. See also Bompard, XXV, 447;
+Witte, p. 429; Bourgeois et Pagès, p. 313.]
+
+[Footnote 939: Both letters are quoted in _G.P._, XIX, 528 n.]
+
+[Footnote 940: Nekludow, _Revue des deux mondes_, March 1, 1918, pp.
+142, 144. See also the correspondence between the two rulers, Jan. 21
+and 29, 1906, _G.P._, XIX, 528 n.; Goetz, p. 386.]
+
+[Footnote 941: Iswolsky, p. 56.]
+
+[Footnote 942: Hardinge to Lansdowne, Oct. 1, 4, 14, 1905, _B.D._, IV,
+202 f., No. 193; 205 ff., No. 195; 211 f., No. 198; Lansdowne to Bertie,
+Oct. 25, 1905, _ibid._, 217 f., No. 203.]
+
+[Footnote 943: Hardinge to Lansdowne, Sept. 6, 1905, _ibid._, 198 f.,
+No. 191.]
+
+[Footnote 944: _Ibid._, chap. xxiv.]
+
+[Footnote 945: Cf. Bertie to Lansdowne, Sept. 9, 1905, _ibid._, 177, No.
+172_a_; Spring Rice to Mrs. Roosevelt, Oct. 5, 1905, Gwynn, I, 498.]
+
+[Footnote 946: Hardinge to Knollys, May, 1905, Lee, II, 306; Hardinge to
+Lansdowne, May 30, 1905, _B.D._, IV, 195 f., No. 189.]
+
+[Footnote 947: Hardinge to Lansdowne, Sept. 9, 1905, _B.D._, IV, 178 f.,
+No. 172 (_b_); Lansdowne to Hardinge, Sept. 4, 1905, Newton, pp. 327 f.]
+
+[Footnote 948: Hardinge to Lansdowne, Sept. 2, 9, 26, 1905, _B.D._, IV,
+170 f., No. 159; 178 f., No. 172 (_b_); 199 ff., No. 192 and following
+documents.]
+
+[Footnote 949: Lansdowne to Hardinge, Oct. 3 and 5, 1905, _ibid._, 204
+f., No. 194; 207 f., No. 196; Spring Rice to Mrs. Roosevelt, Oct. 15,
+1905, Gwynn, I, 501.]
+
+[Footnote 950: Hardinge to Lansdowne, Oct. 4, 8, 14, 1905, _B.D._, IV,
+205 ff., No. 195; 208 ff., Nos. 197 f.; Lansdowne to Bertie, Oct. 17 and
+25, 1905, _ibid._, 212 f., No. 199; 217 f., No. 203.]
+
+[Footnote 951: See Hardinge to Lansdowne, Oct. 14, 1905, _ibid._, 211
+f., No. 198, Lansdowne’s minute; _ibid._, pp. 521 f.; report from
+London, Oct. 30, 1905, _Zur europ. Politik_, II, No. 22; report from St.
+Petersburg, Nov. 8, 1905, _ibid._, No. 23; Metternich to Bülow, Oct. 22,
+1905, _G.P._, XIX, 663 ff., No. 6360; Metternich to F. O., Nov. 15,
+1905, _ibid._, XXV, No. 8501; Richthofen to Bülow, Oct. 24, 1905,
+_ibid._, XIX, 665, No. 6361; Schoen to Bülow, Jan. 28, 1906, _ibid._,
+XXV, 5 f., No. 8502; Miquel to Bülow, Oct. 24, 1905, _ibid._, XIX, 666
+ff., No. 6362; Nicholas II to William II, Nov. 23, 1905, _ibid._, 523,
+No. 6254. On Oct. 21, 1905, King Edward instructed Hardinge to express
+to the Czar “my earnest desire that the best and most durable relations
+should be established between the two countries, and that all important
+points should be discussed in the most amicable spirit and arranged as
+soon as possible” (Edward VII to Hardinge, quoted in Lee, II, 310). On
+Oct. 12 Lord Sydenham received a letter from Balfour stating that “the
+time is propitious for an understanding with Russia.” Lord Sydenham, a
+member of the Defence Committee, wrote a draft of an agreement with
+Russia and sent it to the Premier, Oct. 20. On Nov. 1 he discussed
+Persian railways with Balfour and Sir Charles Hardinge, and, after
+Balfour had left, he (Sydenham) and Hardinge talked over the draft
+agreement. Hardinge believed that the Russians would accept it (Colonel
+Lord Sydenham, _My Working Life_ [London, 1927], p. 182).]
+
+[Footnote 952: Hardinge to Lansdowne, Oct. 21, 1905, _B.D._, IV, 214,
+No. 201; Metternich to F. O., Nov. 15, 1905, _G.P._, XIX, 521 f., No.
+6253.]
+
+[Footnote 953: Roosevelt to Spring Rice, Nov. 1, 1905, Gwynn, II, 8; G.
+Balfour to Spring Rice, Oct. 25, 1905, _ibid._, I, 503.]
+
+[Footnote 954: Eckardstein, I, 218 f.]
+
+[Footnote 955: Hardinge to Lansdowne, Oct. 24, 1905, _B.D._, IV, 216,
+No. 202.]
+
+[Footnote 956: Metternich to F. O., Nov. 15, 1905, _G.P._, XIX, 521 f.,
+No. 6253; Howe, p. 209.]
+
+[Footnote 957: Report from London, Oct. 23, 1905, _Zur europ. Politik_,
+II, 80 f.; Bernstorff to Bülow, Sept. 8, 1905, _G.P._, XIX, 636 ff., No.
+6340. Party leaders, magazines, newspapers, and various societies in
+England took up the work. The _Times_, however, continued its anti-
+German campaign. In December, Colonel Repington published an article
+therein, warning the public against friendliness with Germany
+(Lieutenant Colonel Charles à Court Repington, _Vestigia_ [London,
+1919], pp. 262 f.). See also E. T. Raymond, _The Life of Lord Rosebery_
+(New York, 1923), p. 211; Spender, _Life of Campbell-Bannerman_, II,
+208; Schulthess, _1905_, pp. 198 ff.; Metternich to Bülow, Oct. 18 and
+22, Nov. 2, Dec. 3 and 20, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 669 ff., Nos. 6879 ff.;
+Spender, _Life, Journalism and Politics_, I, 191 f.]
+
+[Footnote 958: See Metternich to Bülow, Dec. 20, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 690,
+No. 6886.]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVI
+
+ THE PRELIMINARIES TO THE CONFERENCE OF ALGECIRAS
+
+ I. GERMAN PRELIMINARIES TO THE CONFERENCE OF ALGECIRAS
+
+
+After the Björkö treaty had been annulled by the Russian government, the
+Moroccan affair once more held the chief attention of the German foreign
+office. Already important, it became more so; for there was no longer
+any reason for the German government to use the Moroccan affair as a
+means of conciliating France and there was added need for it to justify
+to the German people and to the world the long diplomatic campaign over
+Morocco by checkmating France at the Conference.
+
+
+Our chief object [wrote Prince Bülow on November 23] must be to avoid
+isolation at the conference. If we have the majority or all the other
+Powers against us on a question upon which we have engaged ourselves,
+boldness and threats will be of no use since after all that has
+occurred, our situation would be almost ludicrous.[959]
+
+
+At almost the same moment the French Premier sounded the German
+government as to whether it would agree for France and Spain together to
+receive a police mandate from the Conference.[960] The inclusion of
+Spain, he said, would prevent the concession from appearing one-sided in
+favor of France and would enable the latter to keep her promise not to
+seek a general mandate. He added that Germany might be forced to agree
+to that solution. Replying doubtfully to these overtures, Herr von
+Flotow advised the French government to make the proposal directly in
+Berlin in accordance with diplomatic form. A few days later (November
+30) Herr von Kühlmann reported that M. Vaffier-Pollet, representative of
+the Comité du Maroc in Tangier, and Count de Chérisey, former secretary
+of the French legation in Tangier, had proposed to him in Paris that the
+German and French governments make a secret agreement before the
+Conference to the following effect: The _status quo_ in Morocco should
+be maintained for three or four years, after which, if conditions had
+not improved, Germany should not oppose the bestowal upon France of the
+police mandate for all of Morocco; in return, Germany should be assured
+of the open door and of the right for German capital to participate to
+the extent of 45 per cent in all governmental enterprises in Morocco, of
+territorial compensation in the French Congo region, and of the cession
+of the French right of preference to acquire the Belgian Congo.[961]
+Although M. Rouvier stood behind this offer, the German government did
+not know it and did not reply. It was much disposed to consider the
+overture made through Herr von Flotow; but this fact the French Premier
+could not know, and, misled by the German silence, he never returned to
+the subject.[962]
+
+The German Chancellor’s willingness to negotiate directly with France
+showed that he was beginning to appreciate Germany’s increasingly
+unfavorable position in international relations. He knew that the German
+government faced a hard campaign and that its public opinion, which had
+no particular interest in Morocco and was averse to war, must be
+convinced of the justice of the German cause and aroused to the
+seriousness of the international situation. In the Reichstag on December
+6 the Chancellor therefore warned the nation that while animosities had
+been overcome, new ones were possible, and that the British were
+particularly anti-German. Repeating all the German accusations against
+the French Moroccan policy, he justified at length Germany’s defense of
+her interests. He avowed his strong desire for the maintenance of
+friendly relations with all nations. He assured his hearers that Italy
+remained loyal to the Triple Alliance. But he urged his country to be
+prepared for any emergency.[963] The speech was widely approved.[964]
+
+The Chancellor’s utterances were soon answered by M. Rouvier through the
+publication of a French _Livre jaune_ of over three hundred pages, which
+was supplemented by a speech in the Chamber on December 16.[965]
+Therein, to the satisfaction of the French, the German accusations were
+denied and the national policy of France toward Morocco was
+exonerated.[966] According to the reports of the German representatives
+in Paris in December and January, France was firmly resolved not to
+recede further, and the French government was making military
+preparations.[967]
+
+These manifestations did not augur well for the German government. Nor
+did the terms of the Franco-Spanish agreement of September 1, 1905,
+which it learned of at some time before the Conference opened.[968] The
+knowledge of the terms gave a concrete basis to the mistrust of France’s
+intentions toward Morocco, and stiffened German resistance. On December
+25 the German government envisaged three ways in which the Conference
+might end: first, a provisorium of about three years might be agreed
+upon, at the end of which each Power would recover its freedom of
+action; second, a separate agreement with France might be made, but only
+in case the latter offered suitable terms; third, a general police
+mandate for Western Morocco might be given to France. This last result,
+equivalent to a French victory, the German government was determined not
+to permit, holding a conflict as preferable.[969] In fact, none of these
+solutions was very palatable to the government. But it was determined to
+hold firm,[970] and the instructions to Herr von Radowitz and Count
+Tattenbach, the German delegates at the Conference, were optimistic.
+
+The delegates were to uphold the open door and economic equality for
+all. They should combat the monopoly for making loans to Morocco claimed
+by the French banks. As Germany had already recognized the legitimate
+interests of France by permitting her to regulate the frontier, the
+mandate for police reforms in the west should be given to a number of
+Powers and should be internationally organized for a limited number of
+years. If a division of mandated areas were made, Germany should receive
+her share—one with a port advantageously located for later expansion
+into the interior; however, Germany was ready to agree with the others
+not to draw any advantage for herself from this mandate. All the
+signatory Powers should participate equally in establishing and
+directing the proposed state bank, for which adequate international
+organization and control should be provided. Above all, the delegates
+should not permit themselves to be isolated or to stand alone with
+Morocco. Thus, in general, they were to work for the
+internationalization of Morocco.[971]
+
+Prince Bülow became more and more optimistic as the Conference
+approached.[972] At his urging, the Sultan promised to select carefully
+his delegates to the assembly and to co-operate with the Powers
+there.[973] The Chancellor expected the neutral Powers to support
+Germany against the monopolistic desires of France. He particularly
+courted President Roosevelt; for, although he knew that Mr. White, the
+American delegate, would not be permitted to take the initiative at the
+Conference, the Chancellor thought that the President and his delegate
+would be able, behind the scenes, to exert a powerful influence.[974]
+From Russia, Prince Bülow anticipated no interference. The Austrian
+Foreign Minister stated his government’s readiness to go hand in hand
+with Germany at the Conference.[975] Spanish mistrust and jealousy of
+France with reference to Morocco might be aroused and used.[976] To that
+end the German government prevented the selection of the anti-German M.
+Villa-Urrutia as delegate.[977]
+
+Toward Italy, embarrassed by her situation as Germany’s ally and
+France’s friend through an agreement over Morocco, the Chancellor
+modified his former tactics. He offered to support her as a candidate
+for the general police mandate at the Conference.[978] But the Italian
+government refused. Sending the aged and experienced Marquis Visconti
+Venosta as delegate, it gave him permission to act as he saw fit in
+order to keep his head out of the noose.[979] The German Chancellor
+approved this choice and welcomed the Marquis’ statement that he would
+endeavor to mediate between France and Germany and to bring the
+Conference to a successful conclusion.[980] Prince Bülow planned to
+exploit Italy’s position by laying down a flat _non possumus_ on the
+question of permitting France to receive the mandate for the police,
+with the expectation that the Italian government would then press France
+to accept the German terms in order to prevent a conflict wherein it
+would be forced to choose sides.[981]
+
+The Chancellor instructed Prince Radolin to impress French official
+circles with the fact that Germany would never permit France to obtain a
+general police mandate or a special position in the state bank, that if
+France persisted in refusing to agree to the open door in Morocco, a
+“very critical situation would arise” which “would lead inevitably to a
+grave conflict” between the two states.[982] Prince Bülow was pleased to
+learn that the French people were growing nervous and that M. Rouvier,
+M. Jules Cambon, French ambassador in Madrid, and others were asserting
+France’s wish for a peaceful and satisfactory solution.[983]
+
+The main reason for the Chancellor’s growing optimism was the fact that
+in December a Liberal government had come to power in England and that
+British public opinion was more friendly to Germany. Prince Bülow and
+the Emperor both expected an improvement in Anglo-German relations, and
+exerted their influence in achieving it.[984] The Chancellor did not
+believe that the new Liberal government would stiffen the French
+resistance by holding out the prospect of active aid in case of war as
+the Unionist cabinet had done. He interpreted the overwhelming Liberal
+victory at the elections in January as a clear rejection of chauvinism
+and an equally clear expression by the nation of an earnest desire for
+peace and for further improvement in Anglo-German relations. He learned
+that Edward VII had spoken in favor of a peaceful settlement.[985] Then,
+just after the Conference opened, the King and the Emperor entered into
+personal correspondence once more.[986] The Chancellor therefore
+expected the British government to play the rôle of mediator instead of
+active French partisan, and he endeavored to impress this duty upon
+it.[987] In view of this situation he believed that France would accept
+the German solution of the Moroccan problem.[988]
+
+Although the Chancellor knew that France was improving her defenses, he
+did not anticipate a war.[989] He notified General Moltke, the new chief
+of staff, that he need take no precautionary measures.[990] The Emperor
+also regarded the French fears of war as “ludicrous, bordering on
+insanity.” Late in December he roundly declared to Mr. Werner Beit, a
+friend of Edward VII, and to the Marquis de Laguiche, French military
+attaché in Berlin, that “there is absolutely no cause for any war or for
+any concern about an attack from us,” adding, however, these more
+ominous words:
+
+
+Even if we had the best intentions and were loyal and wished to remain
+peaceful, there would be danger that in case of continued inciting of
+France by London, she [France] might, relying on certain aid from
+England, conduct herself toward us so ill-manneredly and provocatively
+that finally our national honor would come into question, for the sake
+of which we should have to resort to arms; then we would have to strike
+and therewith, through our “illegal attack” on France, give the occasion
+for England’s aid. And it is monstrous perfidy [for England] to work
+toward such.[991]
+
+
+Thus, hopeful for peace but not entirely averse to war, the German
+leaders saw the Conference begin.
+
+
+ II. FRENCH PRELIMINARIES TO THE CONFERENCE OF ALGECIRAS
+
+
+In spite of the failure of his overtures to the German government in
+November, the French Premier assured the _Wilhelmstrasse_ on the eve of
+the Conference that he wished to reach an understanding at that assembly
+on the basis of “no victor, no vanquished.” Nevertheless, both he and
+the French nation were determined to uphold France’s ambitions and
+claims toward Morocco. On January 8, 1906, Prince Radolin wrote that
+there prevailed in France “grave anxiety over the possibility of warlike
+complications. . . . . In press and public it is said that Germany
+wishes war, that France has receded . . . . on all points, but without
+satisfying Germany.” At the Conference, thus Prince Radolin interpreted
+French opinion, “proposals would be made which would be contrary to her
+honor and her traditional policy in Morocco. France must defend herself
+and be prepared for any eventuality. . . . . Germany makes no secret of
+her armaments, and therefore it is imperative for France also to keep
+her powder dry.”[992]
+
+In this state of mind the French Parliament during the latter half of
+1905 investigated French defences and put 200,000,000 francs at the
+disposal of the war Minister for repairing them, particularly on the
+eastern frontier. That work was actively begun; food and munitions were
+brought in; the frontier forces were increased by reserves; drilling and
+trial mobilizations were held.[993] As M. Delcassé had prophesied, M.
+Rouvier returned completely to the international policy of the fallen
+Minister in order to achieve victory at the Conference. The French
+government realized that the opposition of the French and German
+policies was so complete as to make retreat difficult for either party.
+Preparing for the worst, M. Rouvier yet hoped to exert sufficient moral
+pressure on Germany at the Conference to gain a French victory without
+precipitating a war.[994] To that end he supplemented the military
+measures by diplomatic work. He was certain of Russia’s support because,
+aside from the alliance, Russia had urgent need of a French loan, which
+M. Rouvier would not permit until after a satisfactory conclusion of the
+Moroccan affair.[995] Russia’s influence was restricted by the
+revolution and by a lack of interest in Morocco. But a promise from the
+Czar to exercise his personal power with Emperor William II in favor of
+conciliation would be of eminent value, and M. Rouvier sought to obtain
+it.[996] He also wished to have President Roosevelt act similarly at the
+proper moment. This plan was to bear fruit later; but at the time the
+American government replied that it had small concern in the Moroccan
+conference and that, while standing for the open door and exerting its
+influence for peace, it would interfere as little as possible in the
+deliberations. Mr. Root, the secretary of state, told the British
+Ambassador that the American delegate would “avoid any action which
+could tend to weaken Anglo-French entente.”[997] M. Rouvier also
+received “satisfactory assurances” from the Austro-Hungarian government;
+he did not expect opposition from it or from Belgium.[998] Far more
+important was the continuation of British aid, both for its own sake and
+for holding Italy and Spain in line.[999] From the new Liberal
+government that came in early in December, the French Premier was
+immediately assured of diplomatic aid by word and act.
+
+
+ III. BRITISH PRELIMINARIES TO THE CONFERENCE OF ALGECIRAS
+
+
+When internal disputes over the question of tariff reform finally forced
+the resignation of the Unionist government on December 4, the Liberals,
+with Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman as prime minister, entered office. In
+response to the popular demand they were pledged to continue the foreign
+policy of their predecessor, and the presence at the foreign office of
+Sir Edward Grey assured the fulfilment of that pledge. The Foreign
+Secretary was a Liberal Imperialist, a follower of Lord Rosebery. He had
+been one of the rebels against the leadership of Sir Henry Campbell-
+Bannerman, a Gladstonian Liberal, because of the latter’s denunciation
+of the Boer War. Regretting that Lord Rosebery would not enter the
+cabinet, Sir Edward Grey at first refused office unless the Premier
+would accept a peerage and leave the leadership in the House of Commons
+to Mr. Asquith, another Liberal Imperialist. After much persuasion from
+his friends and after the influence of the Liberal Imperialists had been
+increased by the appointment of Mr. Haldane as secretary of war, Sir
+Edward receded from his demand.[1000]
+
+The new Foreign Secretary found the “mud of foreign politics” deeper
+than any he had ever been in; but he was soon steering himself through
+it as nimbly as his predecessors. Although an idealist who hated war, he
+was not afraid of it, for, he wrote to Sir Francis Bertie, January 15,
+1906, “We can protect ourselves . . . . for we are more supreme at sea
+than we have ever been.”[1001] He followed the ways of _Realpolitik_,
+playing the “grand game” of prestige politics in the ordinary way with
+national interest as his ultimate guide. He impressed other men with
+whom he had personal contact as trying to be entirely frank and honest
+and sympathetic. Yet his insularity, his lack of knowledge of the
+Continent, really prevented him from appreciating any other state’s
+point of view. Combining the limitations of a “downright Britisher” with
+high moral and political rectitude, he usually believed that Great
+Britain was in the right and acted accordingly. Then he was unable to
+comprehend why other Powers misinterpreted her policy.[1002]
+
+With regard to Russia, Sir Edward Grey immediately stated to the
+Ambassador his hope for a settlement of the outstanding questions. Count
+Benckendorff thought that negotiations were impossible “while things in
+Russia were in their present condition.” Appreciating this fact, Sir
+Edward Grey answered that “during this inevitable delay, it would be the
+policy of our Government not to do anything which would make the
+resumption of negotiations or a settlement more difficult later
+on.”[1003] In January of the next year, Count Witte, Russian premier,
+proposed to the British government that Czar Nicholas and King
+Edward—diplomats he distrusted as being too slow—should at a personal
+meeting conclude a general agreement in return for which Great Britain
+should make a loan to Russia. The British Ambassador soon showed him the
+impracticability of the idea.[1004] In the same month Count Benckendorff
+talked vaguely and informally with Mr. Spring Rice of the Bosphorus and
+the Dardanelles and of Persia—all to no object, for, as the British
+government perceived, Russia was indifferent to an agreement.[1005] But
+some progress was made toward a _rapprochement_. The two governments co-
+operated on the Cretan and Macedonian questions.[1006] Treating each
+other more frankly,[1007] each refused to take advantage of the other
+early in 1906 by making a loan to Persia.[1008] The British government
+renewed its assurances about Tibet in January.[1009] British bankers
+agreed to participate in a forthcoming loan to Russia.[1010] The Czar
+and King Edward were on cordial terms, the former late in January even
+intimated to his uncle that he would be pleased with a visit from
+him.[1011] And the two governments were in harmony in their policy of
+helping France at Algeciras. So while the work of achieving the entente
+was slow, the British government did not let it cease.
+
+The British Foreign Secretary also continued the previous policy toward
+Germany. He knew very little of that Power, did not understand it,[1012]
+and nursed a deep suspicion of it from his experiences as undersecretary
+of state for foreign affairs from 1892 to 1895. He was determined not to
+let Great Britain fall again into that state of trouble with other
+Powers, which he thought had enabled Germany to treat her so high-
+handedly at that time and to make demands upon her inimical to her
+interests.[1013] His advisers in the foreign office, Sir Charles
+Hardinge and Mr. Eyre Crowe, were of a similar mind, lacking the
+balanced and comprehensive judgment characteristic of Lord Sanderson,
+who after years of service retired from his position as permanent
+undersecretary of state for foreign affairs in January, 1906.[1014]
+
+Sir Edward Grey was now confronted with the same kind of action on the
+part of Germany which had previously angered him. He saw a conference
+approaching at which the new friendship with France would be tested, at
+which it would be either broken or confirmed. He was resolved that if
+possible it should not be broken, though he did not necessarily intend
+that it should become stronger. “It was a matter of interest,” he said
+on August 3, 1914, with reference to this crisis, “to preserve it [the
+Entente] as well as a point of honour to act up to the diplomatic
+obligations contained in it.”[1015] At the time (December 21, 1905) he
+expressed himself more concretely to Sir Arthur Nicolson as follows:
+
+
+The Morocco Conference is going to be difficult if not critical. As far
+as I can discover the Germans will refuse altogether to concede to
+France the special position in Morocco, which we have promised France
+not only to concede to her but to help her by diplomatic methods to
+obtain.
+
+If she can succeed in getting this with our help it will be a great
+success for the Anglo-French _Entente_; if she fails the prestige of the
+_Entente_ will suffer and its vitality will be diminished.
+
+Our main object therefore must be to help France to carry her point at
+the Conference.[1016]
+
+
+Thus for the sake of interest and honor, that invincible pair, Sir
+Edward Grey based British policy upon the matter of prestige. Whereas
+Lord Lansdowne had admitted that the Anglo-French declaration over
+Morocco did not bind Germany, the new British Foreign Secretary was
+determined that Germany should formally recognize France’s preponderant
+position in Morocco. It is to be inferred from his statement that
+Germany had the alternative of accepting France’s monopolization of the
+Sherifian Empire passively or of challenging it and then being forced to
+accept it.
+
+That this ominous feeling was not peculiar to Sir Edward Grey was shown
+early in January by a letter which Lord Ripon, one of the older members
+of the cabinet, wrote to Lord Fitzmaurice, parliamentary undersecretary
+of state for foreign affairs. It read in part as follows:
+
+
+One cannot help being anxious about this Morocco business. I am sorry
+though not surprised to hear that you think the Germans intend to make
+the Conference a failure. That a European war should arise out of the
+matter seems almost impossible, but when one has to deal with a
+potentate like the German Emperor one can feel no real security.[1017]
+
+
+On December 19 Count Metternich gave to Sir Edward Grey a general
+explanation of Germany’s policy on the Moroccan question, expressing the
+hope that the British government would play the part of conciliator at
+the Conference.[1018] The British Minister replied on January 3. The
+Conference filled him with concern, he said. After having studied the
+documents more thoroughly, he had found that Lord Lansdowne had stated
+to Count Metternich “that, in the event of war between Germany and
+France, public feeling in England would be such that, in his opinion, it
+would be impossible for England to remain neutral.” This statement, he
+went on, he made his own; for, while the British government “wanted to
+avoid trouble between Germany and France,” and would not “egg” France on
+at the Conference, yet since the entente was very popular in England he
+“really thought that if there was trouble, we [Great Britain] should be
+involved in it. . . . . It was not a question of the policy of the
+Government,” he told the Ambassador; “what made a nation most likely to
+take part in war was not policy or interest, but sentiment, and if the
+circumstances arose, public feeling in England would be so strong that
+it would be impossible to be neutral.” British opinion, he declared,
+would be moved not by hostility to Germany but by the wish to preserve
+friendship with France. He made an Anglo-German _rapprochement_
+contingent upon a happy outcome of the Conference, an improvement in
+Franco-German relations and the assurance thereby that the Entente
+Cordiale would not be endangered. He spoke frankly, he said, because the
+situation might later become such as to make openness more difficult.
+When Count Metternich reminded him that Lord Lansdowne had qualified his
+statement concerning the possibility of active British aid by the
+further assertion, “in case of an unprovoked attack by Germany upon
+France,” Sir Edward Grey made no reply. But the meaning of his statement
+was clear to the Ambassador, who accepted it as an honest rendition of
+the British position.[1019]
+
+The bluntness of these remarks seemed justified immediately by the
+varying reports about Germany’s intentions which came to the British
+foreign office. The German Emperor was in a friendlier mood although
+angry at the tone of the British press. Baron Richthofen and Herr von
+Radowitz both spoke of a desire for conciliation.[1020] The British
+Consul in Hamburg, however, learned from Herr von Tschirschky of the
+German foreign office on New Year’s Day that “Germany’s policy always
+had been and would be to try to frustrate any coalition between two
+States which might result in damaging Germany’s interests and prestige,
+and Germany would, if she thought that such a coalition was being
+formed, even if its actual results had not been carried into practical
+effect, not hesitate to take such steps as she thought proper to break
+the combination.”[1021] And Prince Bülow’s brother, minister at Berne,
+remarked to his British colleague on December 31:
+
+
+No doubt the sudden intervention of Germany [in Morocco] had not been
+dictated by the desire to safeguard German interests in that region. The
+object had been a higher one. Germany was bound in self-defense to
+emancipate herself from the isolation with which she was threatened.
+First Russia, then Italy, and lastly England had been won over by
+France. The cordon must be broken, and the penultimate defeat of Russia
+had furnished the propitious moment. . . . . He thought that a _détente_
+would make itself felt when once the Conference was over.[1022]
+
+
+It was becoming more and more apparent that Anglo-German antagonism
+would accentuate the difficulties of the Conference. Prince Bülow
+informed the British government on January 11 that he advocated reforms
+on an international basis. Stating that M. Rouvier had promised not to
+seek a general police mandate for France,[1023] the Chancellor made it
+understood that Germany could not accept that solution. In talking to
+the British Ambassador on the next day Herr von Holstein foresaw danger
+since France, relying upon British aid, might, if dissatisfied with the
+results of the Conference, “seek to create a _fait accompli_ by invading
+Morocco. The Sultan would appeal to the Emperor, and war would be the
+result.” Asseverating that France was preparing for war, Herr von
+Holstein said that the danger could be averted if the British government
+would hint to the French that in the event of their invading Morocco it
+was doubtful whether British opinion would approve of supporting France
+by force of arms.
+
+Upon being consulted, Sir Francis Bertie denied that France had any such
+intention, and asserted that
+
+
+any communication to the French Gov[ernmen]t such as the Baron
+[Holstein] suggests would shake the confidence of the French
+Gov[ernmen]t in H[is] M[ajesty’s] present Gov[ernmen]t resulting from
+their assurances as to policy of England (and) might lead France either
+to make concessions to Germany in Morocco injurious to us or bring her
+out of Morocco by concessions elsewhere detrimental to our interests but
+not greatly to those of France.
+
+
+After this Sir Edward Grey telegraphed to Sir Frank Lascelles, January
+15, the following curt response to Herr von Holstein’s suggestion:
+
+
+I hope the result of Morocco conference will prevent the contingency,
+which Herr von Holstein contemplates, from arising. Should it however be
+otherwise we cannot deprecate any action on the part of France which
+comes within the terms of the Anglo-French declarations of April 1904.
+Herr von Holstein should know this.[1024]
+
+
+In these negotiations the British Foreign Secretary tried to impress the
+German government with the fact that Great Britain placed herself
+squarely on the French side. This was one facet of his policy. The other
+had to do with France.
+
+The British government was as eager for France to win at the conference
+as was the French government. To that end Sir Francis Bertie informed M.
+Rouvier on December 22 that his government
+
+
+would loyally act up to the engagements taken by their predecessors and
+. . . . would give to France their unreserved support in the Conference
+on Morocco within the four corners of the Anglo-French Agreement and the
+programme arranged between the French and German Governments; but in
+order to enable them to do so effectively, and to put them in a position
+to act in concert with France, it would be desirable that His Majesty’s
+Government should be made acquainted with the views of the French
+Government on the matters to be discussed, and as to the concessions, if
+any, which might be made for the satisfaction of Germany.
+
+
+The British government, he said, wished to avoid the accusation of being
+more French than the French. Going farther still, the Ambassador assured
+M. Rouvier that his government was in no way associated with the
+friendly manifestations toward Germany then being made in England. While
+the British government wanted friendly relations with Germany, he
+stated, an improvement in those relations “would depend on the attitude
+of the German Government in regard to Morocco and other questions in
+which England was interested.” The cordiality with which M. Rouvier
+agreed to respect this wish showed how conscious both governments were
+of the mutual advantages in loyal co-operation.[1025]
+
+The need therefor was manifested at once in the case of Spain. While
+King Alfonso was regarded as entirely loyal,[1026] M. Moret, the Spanish
+premier who supplanted M. Montero Rios in December, was mistrusted by
+the British and French governments as being too friendly toward Germany
+and uncertain in his attitude toward the Moroccan agreements. Both
+governments knew of German efforts to win Spain, both learned of the
+German Emperor’s offer in November of a military convention to the King
+of Spain, and both learned that at Germany’s request the Spanish
+government had not appointed M. Villa-Urrutia as delegate to the
+Conference.[1027] At the French initiative the two governments late in
+December pressed M. Moret to remain loyal to them. These efforts won
+over the Spanish Premier. He frankly admitted that the Emperor had made
+the offer, but denied that he had ever considered it. He stated that
+Spain would support the French policy during the Conference, and hoped
+that the three Powers would work harmoniously together. And he told the
+French that “it will facilitate his support of them at the Conference if
+they will provide money to quiet the Spanish Opposition.”[1028]
+Nevertheless, the British government suspected that the Duke of
+Almodovar, the Spanish delegate and proposed president of the
+Conference, would be “in the hands of the German Ambassador [Herr von
+Radowitz].” Sir Edward Grey also feared that Spain might, to the
+detriment of British interests, be induced to cede a part of her
+possessions along the north coast of Morocco or elsewhere to
+Germany.[1029] So Spain remained under constant observation and pressure
+by the Entente Cordiale.[1030] The British government put similar
+pressure upon Italy. In informing the Italian Ambassador on December 27
+of the British policy, Sir Edward Grey remarked that the four Powers
+most interested in the Mediterranean were all good friends now and that
+he “hoped we should all come out of the Conference as good friends as we
+went in.” The Italian government protested that it had “not only
+friendship but also an alliance to be considered.” This item Sir Edward
+Grey ignored, and in Rome Sir Edwin Egerton repeatedly asserted that “a
+European political combination did not appear to regard special
+agreements respecting a local question, such as that of Morocco.” This
+veiled threat and curious interpretation of the Triple Alliance were
+valuable aids to M. Barrère in urging Italy to the Anglo-French side.
+The selection as delegates of the Marquis Visconti Venosta, who had made
+the agreement with France in 1900, was regarded as insuring a pro-French
+policy. But the Italian government could make no promises of support,
+and Sir Edward Grey feared that the Marquis might, by trying to play the
+“fine” but “dangerous” rôle of mediator at the Conference, suggest some
+solution which would be altogether unacceptable.[1031]
+
+The Anglo-French co-operation extended to planning the procedure at the
+Conference and to drawing up instructions for the French delegates.
+Every precaution was taken for victory. The British were as sensitive to
+alarms as were the French. About the middle of December both governments
+heard that the proposed Austrian delegate thought it possible to bring
+matters before the Conference not mentioned in the program. M. Rouvier
+took immediate steps in Vienna to prevent that danger.[1032]
+Furthermore, the two governments planned that the less difficult
+problems should be considered first and the police question last. M.
+Rouvier proposed that the published Anglo-French, Anglo-Spanish, and
+Franco-German agreements over Morocco should be laid before the
+Conference, but Sir Edward Grey objected that they might then be
+discussed and questioned by the Powers. The British Foreign Secretary
+thought that “it should appear that the Anglo-French and Franco-Spanish
+Agreements of 1904 were rather intended to give a formal sanction to a
+_de facto_ state of affairs than to create a new situation.” M. Rouvier
+accepted this suggestion. It was also in accordance with a British
+proposal that the French delegate was instructed to refuse to argue the
+matter of France’s right in the Algero-Moroccan frontier region, since
+it might lead to an “embarrassing discussion.”[1033]
+
+The main problem which the British and French governments had to solve
+was that of the police. For, as they learned from Prince Bülow,[1034]
+Germany would propose either that Morocco be divided into sectors, each
+one under the police power of a different state, or that the policing be
+done by a lesser Power disinterested in Morocco. While the first
+solution could be easily rejected, the second one would be more
+difficult for France to combat without exposing herself to the
+accusation of selfishness. If the Conference broke up because of a
+refusal, France would be blamed. At this point the two governments
+received a suggestion from M. Bacheracht, Russian minister at Tangier
+and a delegate at the Conference, to the following effect: “All
+considerations of a political character and all references to ‘special
+interests,’ etc., should not be touched upon in discussion” of the
+police question. The problem should be considered solely from a
+practical point of view, of how to assure protection and safety to the
+foreigners. Clearly that work could be done best by France and Spain,
+who had had experience in handling Mohammedans, who were already
+policing portions of Moroccan soil, and who could employ Mohammedans
+from their North African territories to aid them. The policing might be
+regarded as experimental and temporary so as to mollify German
+opposition. If Germany rejected the plan, she would receive the
+discredit for breaking up the Conference. The British and French
+authorities accepted this proposal at once, for, as MM. Paul and Jules
+Cambon said, it would be “difficult to combat.”[1035]
+
+After this thorough preparatory discussion, M. Rouvier sent the
+following instructions to M. Révoil, a copy of which he also gave to the
+British government: The repression of contraband trade should be
+committed to France and Spain alone. A state bank should be established
+in which French participation in capital and in personnel should be in
+harmony with France’s superior rights in Morocco resulting from the loan
+contract of June, 1904, and from the high percentage of trade
+(approximately 80 per cent) which France together with Great Britain and
+Spain had with that country as compared with that (approximately 10 per
+cent) of Germany. The bank should be under the French legal system and
+its president a Frenchman. Moroccan revenues should be augmented, but
+not merely by an increase in customs duties. The thirty-year limitation
+to commercial freedom might be extended. “In a general manner it is in
+the economic program that we are disposed to accord the most complete
+satisfaction. But you will avoid a definitive acquiescence in those
+solutions until you are certain that the delegates do not aim to adopt
+unacceptable solutions relative to the organization of the police.” This
+question should refer solely to the policing of the coastal towns and
+should not concern the Moroccan army. Any internationalization of the
+police should be refused. The plan of dividing Morocco into sectors
+among the Powers, that of selecting a minor Power to accomplish the
+task, and that of selecting officers from neutral Powers should be
+absolutely refused. The policing should be conferred upon France and
+Spain alone.
+
+
+In case the proposals conforming to our desires on that matter meet with
+insurmountable opposition . . . ., we would consider that, the economic
+questions being regulated according to our views, an accord for the
+maintenance of the _status quo_ in that which concerns the police would
+be an acceptable solution, if that accord respects our rights and
+implies the renunciation by the other contracting parties to all action
+tending to reopen the question with the Sultan without previous
+agreement with us. . . . . In résumé . . . . no one will expect of us an
+adhesion to any solution of a nature to compromise the future of our
+national interests. Under that condition, you will show on all occasions
+our sincere desire to respect the rights of other countries, to open
+Morocco to the free competition of commercial interests, and you will
+affirm at the same time our desire to maintain our rights and interests
+only with the most formal guarantees of the sovereign rights of the
+Sultan, the independence and the established traditions of his
+Empire.[1036]
+
+
+A few days later, with the approval of Spain, M. Rouvier advised the
+French delegate to reject as “absolutely inacceptable” any plan to
+neutralize Morocco.[1037]
+
+These instructions denoted a determination to defeat
+internationalization, by all means to exclude Germany from Morocco, and
+to divide Morocco between France and Spain.
+
+While these negotiations were in progress, the French government was
+sounding Great Britain as to a defensive agreement against Germany.
+Toward the middle of December Major Huguet, French military attaché in
+London, spoke to General Grierson, director of military operations in
+the British war office, about the French fears of a German attack, and
+questioned him about the British organization for war. When he asked
+whether the British general staff had ever considered operations in
+Belgium, General Grierson replied that “as a strategical exercise” he
+had worked out a plan for them last spring.[1038]
+
+On December 28 Major Huguet dined with Colonel Repington, a retired
+officer serving as military correspondent on the _London Times_. The
+conversation turned immediately to the Colonel’s article of the previous
+day, in which he had denounced the attempts being made toward an Anglo-
+German _rapprochement_, expressed anxiety over the international
+situation, and advised full loyalty to France. The two men found
+themselves in entire agreement over the possibility of complications and
+over the need for France and Great Britain to be prepared for co-
+operation in case of a German aggression. Major Huguet said that the
+French embassy was worried because Sir Edward Grey, the new British
+foreign minister, had not renewed the assurances given by his
+predecessor.[1039] Time was pressing, he said, for the Conference of
+Algeciras would open on January 16. He wished that Sir Edward Grey would
+broach the subject at the next diplomatic reception. The French “knew
+that our sympathies were with them,” so Colonel Repington has recorded
+the military attaché’s words, “but they wanted to know what we should do
+in case Germany confronted them with a crisis.”
+
+Colonel Repington immediately communicated the conversation to the
+British Foreign Secretary, who was then electioneering in
+Northumberland. The latter replied on December 30 as follows: “I can
+only say that I have not receded from anything which Lord Lansdowne said
+to the French, and have no hesitation in affirming it.” The Colonel also
+reported Major Huguet’s words to Sir George Clarke, secretary of the
+Defence Committee, and to Lord Esher, a member of that Committee. They
+agreed that in view of the German menace, active steps toward co-
+operation should be taken. As Colonel Repington was a free-lance, they
+suggested that he open unofficial conversations with Major Huguet and
+communicate the results to the British officials. The Colonel prepared a
+set of questions which Major Huguet took to Paris on January 7. These
+questions were considered by M. Rouvier, M. Etienne, minister of war, M.
+Thomson, minister of marine, his naval staff, General Brun, and General
+Brugère. On January 12 a cordial reply was returned to Colonel Repington
+who then imparted it to the Defence Committee.[1040]
+
+When Major Huguet related these incidents to his ambassador, M. Cambon
+was so struck by the fact that British as well as French authorities
+were studying the problem of how quickly the British forces could be
+mobilized for action on the Continent that he went immediately to Paris
+to consult M. Rouvier.[1041] The latter approved of the plan to broach
+Sir Edward Grey for a closer and more definite understanding.
+
+Before returning to London, M. Cambon visited his brother in Madrid.
+There the two prepared the ground for later discussion by a conversation
+with Sir Arthur Nicolson which the latter reported (January 2) as
+follows:
+
+
+They [MM. Cambon] asked me, supposing, as they considered probable, that
+the Conference failed, what did I think would be the consequences? I
+replied that in my opinion it was quite possible that the Sultan would
+then apply to Germany to take in hand the military, financial and police
+administration. They remarked that that would mean war. I said that I
+did not consider that this would necessarily follow; but I did think
+that they would have to take up a very firm attitude at Fez, and prevent
+the Sultan from handing himself over to the Germans.[1042]
+
+
+This alarming forecast, together with the staunch diplomatic support
+which the British government was rendering France, strengthened the
+French authorities in their resolve. When M. Cambon reached London, he
+had a long conversation with Sir Edward Grey on January 10 which the
+latter recorded as follows:
+
+
+M. Cambon said that he did not believe that the German Emperor desired
+war, but that His Majesty was pursuing a very dangerous policy. He had
+succeeded in inciting public opinion and military opinion in Germany,
+and there was a risk that matters might be brought to a point in which a
+pacific issue would be difficult. During the previous discussions on the
+subject of Morocco, Lord Lansdowne had expressed his opinion that the
+British and French Governments should frankly discuss any eventualities
+that might seem possible, and by his instructions your Excellency [Sir
+Francis Bertie, ambassador in Paris] had communicated a Memorandum to M.
+Delcassé to the same effect. It had not been considered necessary at the
+time to discuss the eventuality of war, but it now seemed desirable that
+this eventuality should also be considered.
+
+M. Cambon said that he had spoken to this effect to M. Rouvier, who
+agreed in his view. It was not necessary, nor, indeed, expedient, that
+there should be any formal alliance, but it was of great importance that
+the French Government should know beforehand whether, in the event of
+aggression against France by Germany, Great Britain would be prepared to
+render to France armed assistance.[1043]
+
+
+The British statesman, embarrassed by the question, replied that he
+personally could give the French government no promise of active aid. He
+put the Ambassador off by pointing out that the Prime Minister was away,
+that the members of the cabinet were all electioneering, and that the
+verdict of the elections was doubtful. He said that he could only state
+as his personal opinion that “if France were to be attacked by Germany
+in consequence of a question arising out of the Agreement [of April 8,
+1904] . . . . public opinion in England would be strongly moved in
+favour of France.” When he added that Great Britain earnestly desired
+“that the conference should have a pacific issue favourable to France,”
+M. Cambon replied that “nothing would have a more pacific influence on
+the Emperor of Germany than the conviction that, if Germany attacked
+France, she would find England allied against her.” Sir Edward Grey
+answered that he thought that “the German Emperor did believe this, but
+that it was one thing that this opinion should be held in Germany and
+another that we should give a positive assurance to France on the
+subject.” He could give no assurance, he said, of which he was
+uncertain. He “did not believe that any Minister could, in present
+circumstances, say more than I had done, and, however strong the
+sympathy of Great Britain might be with France in the case of a rupture
+with Germany, the expression which might be given to it and the action
+which might follow must depend largely upon the circumstances in which
+the rupture took place.”[1044]
+
+As Sir Edward Grey thus postponed a definitive answer until after the
+elections, M. Cambon replied that he would repeat his request at that
+time. But he asked that in the meantime the “unofficial communications”
+between the British admiralty and war office and the French naval and
+military attachés “as to what action might advantageously be taken in
+case the two countries found themselves in alliance in such a war” might
+be permitted to continue. “They did not pledge either Government,” he
+said.[1045]
+
+Sir Edward Grey immediately sent a report of this conversation to the
+Prime Minister and to Lord Ripon, and he met his friend, Mr. Haldane, at
+Berwick on January 12 to discuss the matter, particularly the French
+request concerning the military conversations.[1046] He had learned that
+under the Unionist cabinet in the previous year such military and naval
+conversations had taken place, and that at the present time official
+conversations were going on between Admiral Sir John Fisher and the
+French naval attaché while the military conversations were being held
+unofficially between the French military attaché and Colonel Repington.
+When consulted on January 11, General Grierson replied that “if there is
+even a chance of our having to give armed assistance on land to France
+or to take the field on her side in Belgium in consequence of a
+violation of Belgian territory by the Germans, we should have as soon as
+possible informal communication between the military authorities of
+France and/or Belgium and the General Staff.”[1047] Neither Sir Edward
+Grey nor Mr. Haldane saw any reason why these conversations should not
+be carried on officially also. As the former argued:
+
+
+It was quite clear that no Cabinet could undertake any obligation to go
+to war, but the Anglo-French Agreement was popular in Britain. It was
+certain that if Germany forced a quarrel on France upon the very matter
+of that Agreement, the pro-French feeling in Britain would be very
+strong, so strong probably as to justify a British Government in
+intervening on the side of France or even to insist on its doing so. We
+must, therefore, be free to go to the help of France as well as free to
+stand aside. But modern war may be an affair of days. If there were no
+military plans made beforehand we should be unable to come to the
+assistance of France in time, however strongly public opinion in Britain
+might desire it. We should in effect not have preserved our freedom to
+help France, but have cut ourselves off from the possibility of doing
+so, unless we had allowed the British and French staffs to concert plans
+for common action.[1048]
+
+
+The Prime Minister feared the interpretation that would be put upon
+these conversations. “I do not like the stress laid upon joint
+preparations,” he wrote to Lord Ripon on February 2. “It comes very
+close to an honourable undertaking; and it will be known on both sides
+of the Rhine.” However, he considered them to be merely “provisional and
+precautionary measures” not binding the government, “raising no new
+question of policy and therefore within the competence of the War
+Office.” So he agreed to them.[1049] It was definitely understood that
+these military conversations did not bind the governments.[1050] On
+January 17 they were begun between the French military attaché and
+General Grierson and continued uninterrupted between the French and
+British general staffs until the outbreak of the World War.[1051]
+
+The same reasoning applied to Belgium, for both the French and the
+British authorities expected Germany to violate Belgian neutrality in
+order to strike France suddenly from the northeast.[1052] On January 15
+Sir Edward Grey therefore instructed General Grierson to open
+conversations with the Belgian military authorities “as to the manner in
+which, in case of need, British assistance could be most effectually
+afforded to Belgium for the defence of her neutrality. Such
+communications,” he continued, “must be solely provisional and
+noncommittal.”[1053] Colonel Barnardiston, the British military attaché
+in Brussels, broached the subject on January 18 to General Ducarne,
+Belgian chief of staff, remarking that the British Minister would bring
+up the matter with the Belgian Foreign Minister.[1054] After consulting
+the Minister of War, General Ducarne agreed to the conversations.[1055]
+This decision was anticipated by Colonel Barnardiston, who had learned
+that the Belgian military authorities were quietly making preparations
+for instant mobilization.[1056] The Anglo-Belgian negotiations continued
+at least until the end of April.[1057]
+
+These conversations, both military and naval, were kept secret. The
+Anglo-Belgian negotiations were known to only half-a-dozen persons; the
+ones with France were not known to all the members of the British
+cabinet although reports of them leaked out in the press about the
+middle of 1906.[1058] Sir Edward Grey wanted to prevent either these
+conversations or any military or naval action from being regarded as
+provocations. In informing Lord Tweedmouth, first lord of the admiralty,
+of the Anglo-French conversations, he wrote, January 16:
+
+
+Meanwhile the mood of the German Emperor is said to be pacific; the tone
+of German diplomacy is quiet and not aggressive. Any movement of our
+ships which could be interpreted as a threat to Germany would be very
+undesirable at this moment and most unfortunate so long as there is a
+prospect or even a chance that things may go smoothly at the Morocco
+Conference which meets today. I hope therefore that the Admiralty won’t
+plan any special cruises or visits to Foreign ports or unusual movements
+of squadrons without consulting the F[oreign] O[ffice] as to the
+possible political effect.
+
+I assume that the present disposition of the Fleet is satisfactory as
+regards possibilities between Germany and France; if so the quieter we
+keep for the present the better.[1059]
+
+
+With the opening of these conversations a new military problem
+confronted the British which Mr. Haldane, then minister of war, has
+described as follows:
+
+
+It was, how to mobilize and concentrate at a place of assembly to be
+opposite the Belgian frontier, a force calculated as adequate (with the
+assistance of Russian pressure in the East) to make up for the
+inadequacy of the French armies for their great task of defending the
+entire French frontier from Dunkirk down to Belfort, or even further
+south, if Italy should join the Triple Alliance in an attack.[1060]
+
+
+At the time, in January, the Committee of Imperial Defence, although not
+all of its members knew of the military conversations then beginning,
+studied the question. It decided that “four Divisions and a Cavalry
+Division” could be landed at the nearest French port in case of a sudden
+outbreak of hostilities.[1061] The admiralty was prepared “to bar the
+Channel against the German squadrons.”[1062] The Minister of War began a
+thorough reorganization of the army in order to make British aid
+effective at the desired moment in the future.[1063]
+
+Having settled this matter, Sir Edward Grey had the difficult problem of
+how to answer M. Cambon’s question about a formal agreement.[1064] As it
+was inconvenient then to hold a cabinet meeting, Sir Edward Grey talked
+over the reply to be given with the Premier and Mr. Haldane, who were
+both in London after January 26, and asked Sir Francis Bertie to write
+his opinion.[1065]
+
+The Ambassador wrote that France did not desire war at all, but that if
+a conflict did arise over Morocco either then or later she expected
+active British support. He warned his chief that if his answer did not
+assure to France
+
+
+more than a continuance of diplomatic support, or of neutrality in the
+event of a war provoked by Germany, there is serious danger of a
+complete revulsion of feeling on the part of the French Government and
+of public opinion in France. The Government would consider that they had
+been deserted and might, in order to avoid the risks of a war without
+ally, deem it advisable to make great concessions to Germany outside
+Morocco in order to obtain liberty of action in that country.
+
+Such concessions might not be very great sacrifices for France but they
+might well be very detrimental to the interests of the British Empire,
+for, in the temper in which France would then be, it could not be
+expected that she would give them much consideration.[1066]
+
+
+Sir Edward Grey’s personal opinion was that “if France is let in for a
+war with Germany arising out of our agreement with her about Morocco, we
+cannot stand aside, but must take part with France.” While pondering the
+question of an alliance, he saw the great difficulties in making
+one.[1067] He decided to adapt the policy of his predecessor in office
+to the new situation created by M. Cambon’s request. This policy is best
+explained in the long dispatch which Sir Edward Grey wrote to Sir
+Francis Bertie about his interview with the French Ambassador on January
+31:
+
+
+The French Ambassador asked me again to-day whether France would be able
+to count upon the assistance of England in the event of an attack upon
+her by Germany.
+
+I said that I had spoken on the subject to the Prime Minister and
+discussed it with him, and that I had three observations to submit.
+
+In the first place, since the Ambassador had spoken to me a good deal of
+progress has been made. Our military and naval authorities had been in
+communication with the French, and I assumed that all preparations were
+ready, so that, if a crisis arose, no time would have been lost for want
+of a formal engagement.
+
+In the second place, a week or more before Monsieur Cambon had spoken to
+me, I had taken an opportunity of expressing to Count Metternich my
+personal opinion, which I understood Lord Lansdowne had also expressed
+to him as a personal opinion, that, in the event of an attack upon
+France by Germany arising out of our Moroccan Agreement, public feeling
+in England would be so strong that no British Government could remain
+neutral. I urged upon Monsieur Cambon that this, which I had reason to
+know had been correctly reported at Berlin, had produced there the moral
+effect which Monsieur Cambon had urged upon me as being one of the great
+securities of peace and the main reason for a formal engagement between
+England and France with regard to armed co-operation.
+
+In the third place, I pointed out to Monsieur Cambon that at present
+French policy in Morocco, within the four corners of the Declaration
+exchanged between us, was absolutely free, that we did not question it,
+that we suggested no concessions and no alterations in it, that we left
+France a free hand and gave unreservedly our diplomatic support on which
+she could count; but that, should our promise extend beyond diplomatic
+support, and should we take an engagement which might involve us in a
+war, I was sure my colleagues would say that we must from that time be
+consulted with regard to French policy in Morocco, and, if need be, be
+free to press upon the French Government concessions or alterations of
+their policy which might seem to us desirable to avoid a war.
+
+I asked Monsieur Cambon to weigh these considerations in his mind, and
+to consider whether the present situation as regards ourselves and
+France was not so satisfactory that it was unnecessary to alter it by a
+formal declaration as he desired.
+
+
+M. Cambon replied that a war might break out over some Moroccan incident
+so quickly that if it were necessary for the British government “to
+consult, and to wait for manifestations of English public opinion, it
+might be too late to be of use.” He repeated his request for some form
+of verbal assurance. Sir Edward Grey pointed out the difficulties of
+giving this assurance—that it would be a “solemn undertaking,” that it
+would have to be put in writing and submitted to the cabinet and also to
+Parliament. He said that it would constitute the transformation of the
+entente into a defensive alliance, that it could not be given
+unconditionally, and that the conditions “would be difficult to
+describe.” He again asked M. Cambon “whether the force of circumstances
+bringing England and France together was not stronger than any assurance
+in words which could be given at this moment.” He added that German
+pressure “might eventually transform the ‘Entente’ into a defensive
+alliance,” yet at the time he did not think that the change was needed.
+When M. Cambon emphasized the fact that Sir Edward Grey had expressed
+his personal opinion that in case of a German attack upon France, no
+British government could remain neutral, the latter replied that he had
+said this first to Count Metternich and not to him,
+
+
+because, supposing it appeared that I had overestimated the strength of
+feeling of my countrymen, there could be no disappointment in Germany;
+but I could not express so decidedly my personal opinion to France,
+because a personal opinion was not a thing upon which, in so serious a
+matter, a policy could be founded. In speaking to him, therefore, I must
+keep well within the mark. Much depended as to the manner in which the
+war broke out between Germany and France.
+
+
+Sir Edward Grey believed that the British people would be unwilling to
+fight in order to put France into possession of Morocco. But if “it
+appeared that the war was forced upon France by Germany to break up the
+Anglo-French ‘Entente,’ public opinion would undoubtedly be very strong
+on the side of France.” He said, however, that British sentiment was
+much averse to war, and that it was not certain whether this aversion
+would be overcome by the desire to aid France. While he was ready to
+reopen the conversation at any time in the future, he did not think that
+the situation justified such a radical change at that time.[1068] M.
+Cambon appeared to be satisfied with that answer.[1069]
+
+Thus, Sir Edward Grey laid down the policy which he followed until the
+outbreak of the World War. He was open and frank with both France and
+Germany. To the German government he emphasized the probability of
+British intervention in favor of France in case of war. To the French
+government he gave the promise of full diplomatic support; while
+permitting preparations for any emergency, he refused to give to the
+French assurance of active aid in case of war or even to speak as firmly
+on that score as he did to the German government. Instead of binding
+Great Britain and France in an alliance—an act which would have forced
+him to keep a hand on France’s policy toward Morocco and Germany—Sir
+Edward Grey kept British hands free. In giving France sufficient
+assurance to maintain Anglo-French intimacy and co-operation, he
+depended upon the uncertainty of British support in a crisis to hold
+France back. He relied upon the same uncertainty—this time, however,
+that Great Britain might enter a Franco-German conflict—to restrain
+Germany. By this apparently simple but really intricate policy he sought
+to satisfy the needs of British foreign relations.
+
+
+[Footnote 959: Memo. by Bülow, Nov. 23, 1905, _G.P._, XXI, 14 f., No.
+6900.]
+
+[Footnote 960: Rouvier was apparently led astray by William II’s
+instructions to the Prince of Monaco in October to tell Rouvier that “he
+would lay no hindrances whatever in the way of the French policy”
+(Radolin to F. O., Oct. 18, 1905, _ibid._, XX, 596 f. and note, No.
+6836). Rouvier sounded the German embassy first through a third person
+and then unofficially through M. Louis of the foreign office.]
+
+[Footnote 961: Memo. by Mühlberg, Nov. 30, 1905, _ibid._, XXI, 20 ff.,
+No. 6906.]
+
+[Footnote 962: On this episode see _ibid._, Nos. 6901, 6903 ff. The
+editors of _G.P._ assure us that there is no indication in the documents
+that Rouvier followed up the subject (_ibid._, p. 23). Joseph Caillaux
+states that Rouvier was back of the overture made through Vaffier-
+Pollet. He also asserts that in Nov., 1905, Rouvier offered the port of
+Mogador and its hinterland to Germany, but that the latter refused
+(_Agadir, ma politique extérieure_ [Paris, 1919], p. 25). There is no
+reference to this proposal in _G.P._ Caillaux is probably referring to
+the offer made through Eckardstein in May, 1905.]
+
+[Footnote 963: Bülow, _Reden_, II, 250 ff., 272 ff.; see also Hammann,
+_Bilder_, pp. 43 f. At the opening of the Reichstag on Nov. 28 the
+Emperor declared that Germany stood with all Powers in “correct
+relations” and with the most of them in “good and friendly relations”
+(Schulthess _Europäischer Geschichtskalender 1905_, pp. 132 f.).]
+
+[Footnote 964: Report from the Belgian Minister at Berlin, Dec. 2 and
+11, 1905, _Zur europ. Politik_, II, 92 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 965: _Journal officiel. Debats parlem._ (Chambre), pp. 4034
+ff. Rouvier received a vote of confidence of 501 to 51 (_ibid._, p.
+4050).]
+
+[Footnote 966: _Quest. dipl. et col._, XX, 662 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 967: William II to Bülow, Dec. 29, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 693, No.
+6887; Flotow to Bülow, Nov. 23, 1905, _ibid._, XXI, 15 ff., No. 6901;
+Metternich to Bülow, Jan. 4, 1906, _ibid._, 52, No. 6924.]
+
+[Footnote 968: So Ojeda, Spanish undersecretary of state for foreign
+affairs, declared to Cartwright on Jan. 22, 1906 (Cartwright to Grey,
+Jan. 22, 1906, _B.D._, III, 233, No. 252). There is no indication in
+_G.P._ that those terms were known.]
+
+[Footnote 969: Memo. by Mühlberg, Dec. 25, 1905, _G.P._, XXI, 28 f., No.
+6914. It contained the conclusions of a conference by Bülow with
+Richthofen, Mühlberg, and Klehmet.]
+
+[Footnote 970: On Jan. 8 the government published a _Weissbuch_ on
+Morocco of thirty-nine pages substantiating the German accusations
+against the French policy. According to Bülow it was intended to
+supplement the French _Livre jaune_ (_G.P._, XXI, 24 n.). Its appearance
+made a painful impression in France. Rouvier found it “scarcely
+courteous” and hardly indicative of the conciliatory spirit which
+Germany professed to have (report from Paris, Jan. 11, 1906, _Zur europ.
+Politik_, II, 99 f.). It was well received by the German press
+(Lascelles to Grey, Jan. 10, 1906, _B.D._, III, 215 f., No. 235.).]
+
+[Footnote 971: Bülow to Radowitz, Jan. 3, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 38 ff., No.
+6922 and Anlage.]
+
+[Footnote 972: Metternich was very pessimistic about the outcome. See
+Metternich to Bülow, Nov. 2, 1905, _ibid._, XX, 672 ff., No. 6881; Bülow
+to Metternich, Nov. 6, 1905, _ibid._, XIX, 673, No. 6364.]
+
+[Footnote 973: Tattenbach to Bülow, Nov. 4, 1905, _ibid._, XXI, 12, No.
+6898.]
+
+[Footnote 974: Bülow to Sternburg, Oct. 29, 1905, _ibid._, XIX, 641 f.,
+No. 6341 and note; Sternburg to F. O., Nov. 3, 1905, _ibid._, XXI, 9 f.,
+No. 6896; Bülow to Sternburg, Nov. 7, 1905, _ibid._, 11 f., No. 6897;
+memo. by Mühlberg, Dec. 11, 1905, _ibid._, 23 f., No. 6909; Dennis,
+_Adventures in American Diplomacy_, pp. 398 f., 499. Mr. Choate,
+ambassador in London, had been selected as American delegate in August
+(_Roosevelt-Lodge Correspondence_, II, 172 ff.); but the final choice
+rested on Mr. White, ambassador at Rome.]
+
+[Footnote 975: Bülow to Wedel, Dec. 22, 1905, _G.P._, XXI, 27 n.; cf.
+Steed, _Through Thirty Years_, I, 234.]
+
+[Footnote 976: According to a minute by the Emperor William to a
+dispatch from Stumm on Feb. 20, 1906 (the only reference to this
+incident which _G.P._ contains), during the visit of the King of Spain
+to Germany in the previous November the Emperor had “proposed to the
+Spanish King to renew the agreement with his father and a convention
+regarding the common action of our armies! Whereupon the King said that
+he knew nothing of that matter, but would look into it upon his return.”
+Nothing came of the matter. See _G.P._, XXI, 191, No. 7024. See also
+Grey to Bertie, Dec. 20, 1905, _B.D._, III, 160, No. 197; Nicolson to
+Grey, Dec. 26 and 27, 1905, _ibid._, 165, No. 205; 167, No. 208.]
+
+[Footnote 977: Nicolson to Grey, Dec. 14, 1906, _B.D._, III, 150 f., No.
+192.]
+
+[Footnote 978: Bülow to Monts, Jan. 5, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 54, No. 6925.]
+
+[Footnote 979: So expressed by San Giuliano, Italian foreign minister.
+(Monts to Bülow, Jan. 2, 1906, _ibid._, 34 ff., No. 6921).]
+
+[Footnote 980: Bülow to Monts, Jan. 5, 1906, _ibid._, 53 f., No. 6925;
+Monts to Bülow, Jan 6, 1906, _ibid._, 56 ff., No. 6928.]
+
+[Footnote 981: Bülow to Radowitz, Jan. 8, 1906, _ibid._, 59, No. 6929.]
+
+[Footnote 982: Bülow to Radolin, Dec. 29, 1905, _ibid._, 30 f., No.
+6916; memo. by Radolin, Dec. 29, 1905, _ibid._, 31, No. 6917; memo. by
+Bülow, Dec. 30, 1905, _ibid._, 32, No. 6918.]
+
+[Footnote 983: Flotow to F. O., Dec. 20, 1905; _ibid._, 25 f., No. 6911;
+Radolin to F. O., Jan. 8 and 10, 1906, _ibid._, 60 f., No. 6931; 64 f.,
+No. 6934; Radolin to Bülow, Jan. 16, 1906, _ibid._, XX, 697 f., 6888;
+Radowitz to Bülow, Dec. 27, 1905, _ibid._, XXI, 32 f., No. 6919 f.;
+Bülow also remained willing to negotiate directly with the French
+government over the Moroccan affair (Bülow to Radolin, Jan. 16, 1906,
+_ibid._, 67, No. 6936).]
+
+[Footnote 984: Report from Berlin, Dec. 24, 1905, _Zur europ. Politik_,
+II, 97 f.; report from Berlin, Dec. 31, 1905, _Belg. Docs., 1905-14_,
+No. 14; Metternich to Bülow, Nov. 2, Dec. 20, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 672 ff.,
+No. 6881; 685 ff., No. 6886; Bülow, II, 434; Schulthess, _1905_, p. 154.
+The Emperor refused twice to help before Bülow won him over. See Bülow
+to William II, Dec. 3, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 679 ff., No. 6882, and the
+Emperor’s minutes.]
+
+[Footnote 985: So D. M. Wallace, special representative of the _London
+Times_ at the conference, asserted to Radowitz (Radowitz to F. O., Jan.
+21, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 95 n.).]
+
+[Footnote 986: Lee, _King Edward VII_, II, 524 ff.; Edward VII to
+William II, Jan. 23, Feb. 5, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 108 f., No. 6961; 111
+f., No. 6963; William II to Edward VII, Feb. 1, 1906, _ibid._, 110 f.,
+No. 6962.]
+
+[Footnote 987: “If England restricts herself to the diplomatic support
+of the French claims, peace and the permanent open door are assured. But
+as soon as France has reason to count on the armed help of England for
+the conquest of Morocco and for any results therefrom, then both peace
+and the open door will be endangered” (Bülow to Radowitz, Jan. 17, 1906,
+_ibid._, 94, No. 6950). A similar thought was expressed by Bülow to
+Lascelles, Jan. 24, to Sir Edgar Speyer, London banker and friend of
+Grey’s, on Jan. 18, by Metternich to Grey, Dec. 20, Jan. 23, and was
+given out to the press. See _ibid._, 96 ff., Nos. 6953 f.; 106 ff., No.
+6960; 103 ff., No. 6959; _ibid._, XX, 685 ff., No. 6886.]
+
+[Footnote 988: For Bülow’s reasoning see his dispatch to Moltke, Jan.
+24, 1906, _ibid._, XXI, 77 ff., No. 6943.]
+
+[Footnote 989: A report of a partial French mobilization on the eastern
+frontier did alarm Bülow, but it was immediately proved to be untrue
+(_ibid._, 71 ff., Nos. 6937 ff.).]
+
+[Footnote 990: The German government had announced a new navy bill,
+which would have been proposed anyway, and was only hastened because the
+visit of the British fleet to the Baltic and the revelations in _Le
+Matin_ insured it a favorable reception by the German public. Aside from
+that Germany took special pains to avoid leaving the impression that she
+was preparing for a conflict. Moltke, at his own suggestion, postponed
+his visit to Vienna to announce himself as the new chief of staff until
+after the conference closed so as to avoid suspicion. See Moltke to
+Bülow, Jan. 26, 1906, _ibid._, 79 and note, No. 6944. See also Philip
+Fürst zu Eulenburg-Hertefeld, _Aus 50 Jahren. Erinnerungen, Tagebücher,
+und Briefe_ (ed. Johannes Haller; Berlin, 1923), p. 311. Moltke,
+however, did not expect the French to recede, writing to Bülow on
+January 23 as follows: “In my opinion the French now consider further
+concession on the Moroccan question as incompatible with the honor of
+their land, after they have already receded once and have let Delcassé
+fall.
+
+“They fear therefore that as a result of their firm stand the conference
+may not only end without result but may also lead to war. They
+themselves wish no war and do not think of attacking. But they wish to
+be armed against an attack from Germany” (_G.P._, XXI, 75, No. 6942).]
+
+[Footnote 991: William II to Bülow, Dec. 29, 1906, _ibid._, XX, 690 ff.,
+No. 6887. The account of the Emperor’s conversation with Laguiche was
+published in _Le Temps_ on Dec. 28. Richthofen spoke to a similar effect
+to the Belgian minister (_Belg. Docs., 1905-14_, No. 14).]
+
+[Footnote 992: Radolin to Bülow, Jan. 8, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 60 f., No.
+6931; Metternich to Bülow, Jan. 4, 1906, _ibid._, 51 f., No. 6924; _Zur
+europ. Politik_, II, 95 f., 99; Tardieu, _La Conf. d’Algés._, pp. 92 ff.
+See also Bompard’s analysis of the German policy toward France (Spring
+Rice to Grey, Jan. 16, 1906, Gwynn, _The Letters and Friendships of Sir
+Cecil Spring Rice_, II, 58 f.).]
+
+[Footnote 993: According to Moltke, France was making military and
+financial preparations for defensive purposes. “The fortifications on
+the eastern frontier are being strengthened and put in a more defensive
+condition. Their provisions in munitions and food are being replenished.
+The forces of the frontier defence troops are apparently being brought
+approximately to the legal number for peace time by the addition of
+troops from the interior. Moreover, reserves are here and there being
+called up to undergo their legal drilling.
+
+“The training of the troops on the frontier is being furthered in every
+way. Numerous trial mobilizations by the various garrisons and drilling
+of the border troops by day and night are occurring.
+
+“But all these preparations are not to be regarded as preparations for
+an intended mobilization but only as precautionary measures, which are
+easily explained” (Moltke to Bülow, Jan. 23, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 75, No.
+6942).
+
+According to the Belgian Minister at Paris, Jan. 16, 1906, the sum of
+270,000,000 francs was being devoted to the defenses (_Zur europ.
+Politik_, II, 103).]
+
+[Footnote 994: Meyer to Root, Jan. 9, 1906, Dennis, _Adventures in
+American Diplomacy_, p. 498; _Zur europ. Politik_, II, 99 f.]
+
+[Footnote 995: The Russian delegate, Count Cassini, declared that in
+forty years he had never received such positive instructions (Tardieu,
+p. 88; Witte, _Memoirs_, p. 298; Spring Rice to Grey, Jan. 2, 1906,
+_B.D._, III, 204, No. 223). Rouvier repeated the refusal of that loan
+just before the conference (Witte, pp. 295 ff., 429 f.; Nicholas II to
+William II, Jan. 21, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 125 f., and note). Concerning
+that loan Sir Edward Grey wrote to Bertie, Jan. 15, 1906, as follows: “.
+. . . Russia has demanded a loan on improper terms as the price of her
+support [at the conference]” (_B.D._, III, 178, No. 216).]
+
+[Footnote 996: Meyer to Root, Jan. 9, 1906, Dennis, p. 498. Witte
+apparently offered to obtain this promise in return for an immediate
+French loan, but the Czar refused to give it—at least, that was Spring
+Rice’s inference (Spring Rice to Grey, Jan. 16, 1906, Gwynn, II, 57
+f.).]
+
+[Footnote 997: Dennis, pp. 498 f.; Durand to Grey, Jan. 11, 1905,
+_B.D._, III, 217, No. 236.]
+
+[Footnote 998: Bertie to Grey, Dec. 22, 1905; _B.D._, III, 165, No.
+204.]
+
+[Footnote 999: See Rouvier’s assertion to Hardinge on Jan. 15, 1906,
+_ibid._, 227 and inclosure, No. 245.]
+
+[Footnote 1000: Spender, _Life of Campbell-Bannerman_, II, 193 ff.;
+Grey, _Twenty-five Years_, I, 60 ff., Richard Burdon Haldane, _An
+Autobiography_ (London, 1929), pp. 157 ff., 168 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 1001: Grey to Bertie, Jan. 15, 1906, _B.D._, III, 178, No.
+216.]
+
+[Footnote 1002: Cf. Spender, _The Public Life_ (1925), I, 112 ff.;
+Haldane, _An Autobiography_, pp. 215 f.; cf. Hermann Lutz, _Lord Grey
+und der Weltkrieg_ (Berlin, 1927).]
+
+[Footnote 1003: Grey to Spring Rice, Dec. 13, 1905, _B.D._, IV, 218, No.
+204; Grey to Spring Rice, Dec. 22, 1905, Gwynn, II, 53 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1004: Spring Rice to Grey, Jan. 3 and 16, 1906, _B.D._, IV,
+219 f., No. 205; 221, No. 207; and Gwynn, II, 54 f., 57; Spring Rice to
+Knollys, Jan. 3 and 16, 1906, _ibid._, pp. 22, 26.]
+
+[Footnote 1005: Spring Rice to Grey, Jan. 3, 1906, Gwynn, II, 55 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1006: Spring Rice to Grey, Jan. 26, 1906, _B.D._, IV, 222 ff.,
+No. 208; Grey to Spring Rice, Dec. 22, 1905, Gwynn, II, 53 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1007: See Lansdowne to Hardinge, Oct. 20, 1905, _B.D._, IV,
+213 f., No. 200; Hardinge to Grey, Jan. 6, 1906, _ibid._, pp. 622 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1008: _Ibid._, chap. xxvii, Part III. Nicolson suspected that
+Russia acted so loyally because she had no money with which to make the
+loan (Nicolson to Grey, Sept. 12, 1906, _ibid._, 242, No. 228).]
+
+[Footnote 1009: Grey to Spring Rice, Jan. 3, 1906, _ibid._, 323, No.
+304.]
+
+[Footnote 1010: Spring Rice to Grey, Jan. 3, 1906, _ibid._, 220, No.
+205.]
+
+[Footnote 1011: Spring Rice to Grey, Jan. 26, 1906, _ibid._, 223, No.
+208; Lee, II, 564; Spring Rice to Mallet, Jan. 31, 1906, Gwynn, II, 61
+f.]
+
+[Footnote 1012: Haldane, _An Autobiography_, p. 215.]
+
+[Footnote 1013: Grey, I, 100 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1014: Cf. memo. by Crowe, Jan. 1, 1907, _B.D._, III, 397 ff.;
+memo. by Sanderson, Feb. 21, 1907, _ibid._, pp. 420 ff.; Haldane, _An
+Autobiography_, p. 215.]
+
+[Footnote 1015: Grey, I, 100 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1016: _B.D._, III, 162, No. 200.]
+
+[Footnote 1017: Lucien Wolf, _Life of the First Marquess of Ripon_
+(London, 1921), II, 292 f.; see also Spring Rice to Mallet, Jan. 31,
+1906, Gwynn, II, 61.]
+
+[Footnote 1018: Metternich gives the date of the conversation as Dec.
+18. See Grey to Whitehead, Dec. 20, 1905, _B.D._, III, 160 f., No. 198;
+Metternich to Bülow, Dec. 20, 1905, _G.P._, XX, 685 ff., No. 6886.]
+
+[Footnote 1019: On this conversation between Grey and Metternich see the
+following: Grey to Lascelles Jan. 9, 1906, Grey to Campbell-Bannerman,
+Jan. 9, 1906, quoted in Grey, I, 80 ff., 114, and in _B.D._, III, 209
+ff., No. 229; Metternich to Bülow, Jan. 3 and 4, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 45
+ff., Nos. 6923 f. Grey repeated his statement to Metternich on Jan. 10,
+1906. See Metternich to F. O., Jan. 10, 1906, _ibid._, 64, No. 6933. See
+also Bülow to Sternburg, Jan. 24, 1906, quoting a dispatch from
+Metternich, _ibid._, 103 ff., No. 6959. However, Van Grooten, secretary
+of the Belgian ministry in London, reported to his government on Jan. 14
+as follows: “Of late the Minister of Foreign Affairs has repeated at
+various occasions to the different Ambassadors accredited in London that
+Great Britain has engaged herself towards France in the Moroccan
+question and that she will meet her obligations fully even in case of a
+Franco-German war and at all costs. The press and public opinion give
+proof of the same sentiments” (_Belg. Docs., 1905-14_, p. 19). The
+report is exaggerated, but it is significant that it was current.]
+
+[Footnote 1020: Lascelles to Grey, Jan. 3, 1906, _B.D._, III, 206 ff.,
+Nos. 225 f.; Nicolson to Grey, Dec. 22, 1905, _ibid._, 163, No. 203.]
+
+[Footnote 1021: Spender, _Life of Campbell-Bannerman_, II, 257 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1022: Acton to Grey, Dec. 31, 1905, _B.D._, III, 167 f., No.
+209.]
+
+[Footnote 1023: Rouvier denied that he had done so. Notes by Hardinge,
+Jan. 15, 1906, _ibid._, 226 and inclosure, No. 245 (see above).]
+
+[Footnote 1024: On this episode see Lascelles to Grey, D. Jan. 3, R.
+Jan. 6, 1905, D. Jan. 11, R. Jan. 15; dated Jan. 12, D. Jan. 13, R. Jan.
+15, 1906, _ibid._, 207 f., No. 226; 217 ff., Nos. 237 f.; 222 f., Nos.
+240 f.; Grey to Lascelles, Jan. 9 and 15, 1906, _ibid._, 211 f., No.
+230; 225, No. 243; Bertie to Grey, Jan. 14, 1905, _ibid._, 224, No. 242;
+memo. by Holstein, Jan. 18, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 96 f., No. 6953.]
+
+[Footnote 1025: Bertie to Grey, D. Dec. 22, R. Dec. 27, 1905, _B.D._,
+III, 163 ff., No. 204; Grey to Nicolson, Dec. 21, 1905, _ibid._, 162,
+No. 200. “Nous serons biens sûrement avec vous,” Grey stated to Cambon
+(Grey to Bertie, Dec. 20, 1905, _ibid._, 160, No. 197).]
+
+[Footnote 1026: Tardieu, pp. 81 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1027: Nicolson thought that he would have been “an admirable
+selection.” King Edward’s comment to the report of Germany’s veto was,
+“a case of bullying as usual!” See Nicolson to Grey, D. Dec. 14, R. Dec.
+23, 1905, _B.D._, III, 150 f., No. 192.]
+
+[Footnote 1028: Grey to Bertie, Jan. 15, 1906, _ibid._, 178, No. 216.]
+
+[Footnote 1029: Minutes to dispatch from Nicolson to Grey, D. Jan. 5, R.
+Jan. 13, 1906, _ibid._, 209, No. 227.]
+
+[Footnote 1030: Grey stated to the Spanish Ambassador, Jan. 3, 1906, as
+follows: “All the four Powers most directly interested in the
+Mediterranean had made arrangements with each other which were
+satisfactory to themselves and it was most undesirable that they should
+allow these arrangements to be disturbed” (Grey to Nicolson, Jan. 10,
+1906, _ibid._, 215, No. 234). On this Spanish affair see also Grey to
+Bertie, Dec. 20, 1905, _ibid._, 160, No. 197; Grey to Nicolson, Dec. 14,
+20, 21, 1905, _ibid._, 151, No. 193; 161 f., Nos. 199 ff.; Nicolson to
+Grey, Dec. 22, 25, 27, 1905, Jan. 5 and 9, 1906, _ibid._, 163, No. 202;
+165, No. 205; 167, No. 208; 208 f., No. 227; 212, No. 231; Bertie to
+Grey, Dec. 22, 1905, _ibid._, 163 ff., No. 204.]
+
+[Footnote 1031: Grey to Bertie, Jan. 15, 1906, _ibid._, 225, No. 244;
+Grey to Egerton, Dec. 27, 1905, _ibid._, 166, No. 206; Egerton to Grey,
+Dec. 27, 1905, Jan. 9, 1906, _ibid._, 166 f., No. 207; 212 f., No. 232.]
+
+[Footnote 1032: Gorst to Bertie, Dec. 13, 1905, _ibid._, 149 f. and
+inclosure, No. 191; Bertie to Grey, Dec. 15, 1905, _ibid._, 158 f., No.
+195.]
+
+[Footnote 1033: Memo. by Cambon, Jan. 15, 1906, _ibid._, 226, No. 244
+and inclosure; Nicolson to Grey, Jan. 17, 1906, _ibid._, 228 f., No.
+247.]
+
+[Footnote 1034: Lascelles to Grey, D. Jan. 11, R. Jan. 15, 1906,
+_ibid._, 217 ff., No. 237.]
+
+[Footnote 1035: Nicolson to Grey, Jan. 2, 1906, _ibid._, 205 f., No.
+224; Grey to Bertie, Jan. 10, 1906, _ibid._, 213 ff., No. 233. See also
+Bompard’s conversation with Spring Rice as reported by the latter to
+Grey, Jan. 16, 1906, Gwynn, II, 59 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1036: Rouvier to Révoil, Jan. 12, 1906, _B.D._, III, 220 ff.,
+No. 239; Tardieu, pp. 101 ff., 244; Bertie to Grey, Dec. 22, 1905,
+_B.D._, III, 164, No. 204. In talking to Sir Charles Hardinge on Jan. 15
+Rouvier added a third alternative—“a mandate to France, Spain and a
+third Power to study and elaborate a scheme for submission to the
+Powers” (notes by Hardinge, Jan. 15, 1906, _ibid._, 226 f., No. 245 and
+inclosure).]
+
+[Footnote 1037: Cartwright to Grey, Jan. 23, 1906, _ibid._, 233 f., No.
+253.]
+
+[Footnote 1038: Grierson to Sanderson, Jan. 11, 1906; _ibid._, 172, No.
+211.]
+
+[Footnote 1039: This display of doubt about Great Britain’s loyalty was
+one of France’s best means of gaining that Power’s support. See
+Bompard’s assertions as reported by Spring Rice to Knollys, Jan. 31,
+1906, Gwynn, II, 62; also see below.]
+
+[Footnote 1040: The story is given in Lieutenant-Colonel Charles à Court
+Repington, _The First World War, 1914-1918: Personal Experiences_
+(London, 1920), I, 2 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 1041: Général Huguet, _L’intervention militaire britannique en
+1914_ (Paris, 1928), p. 15.]
+
+[Footnote 1042: Nicolson to Grey, Jan. 2, 1906, _B.D._, III, 206, No.
+224.]
+
+[Footnote 1043: Grey to Bertie, Jan. 10, 1906, quoted in Spender, _Life
+of Campbell-Bannerman_, II, 249 ff.; Grey, I, 70 f.; _B.D._, III, 170
+f., No. 210_a_.]
+
+[Footnote 1044: This document is sufficient proof against the accusation
+of the editors of _G.P._ that Grey went further in his assertions to the
+French Ambassador in his first conversation with the latter, and that
+afterward, apparently restrained by the more pacific Premier, he
+qualified his position in the interview of Jan. 31. It is apparent that
+Grey’s statements of Jan. 10 and 31 do not differ in kind or degree,
+except that in the latter the Foreign Secretary expanded the conditions
+which he had already formulated in the earlier interview (see _G.P._,
+XXI, 48 f. note; see also below).]
+
+[Footnote 1045: Grey to Bertie, Jan. 10, 1906, quoted in Grey, I, 70
+ff., in Spender, _Life of Campbell-Bannerman_, II, 249 ff., and in
+_B.D._, III, 170 f., No. 210. Cambon’s account to Rouvier of the
+conversation is given in _ibid._, 173 f., No. 212. Sanderson was present
+at that interview.]
+
+[Footnote 1046: Grey, I, 72, 114; Spender, _Life of Campbell-Bannerman_,
+II, 251 f.; Repington, I, 12 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1047: Grierson to Sanderson, Jan. 11, 1906, _B.D._, III, 172,
+No. 211.]
+
+[Footnote 1048: Grey, I, 72 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1049: “C-B was a fine old Tory in Army matter” (Repington, I,
+13). On this affair see Spender, _Life of Campbell-Bannerman_, II, 253,
+256 f.; Repington, I, 12 f.; Viscount Haldane, _Before the War_ (London,
+1920), p. 184; Grey, I, 70 ff., 83; Haldane, _An Autobiography_, pp. 189
+f.]
+
+[Footnote 1050: Grey, I, 70 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 1051: _Ibid._, pp. 73 f.; Repington, I, 13; _B.D._, III, 169,
+editor’s note, 438 ff. In 1911 Grey wrote to Asquith that he never knew
+anything more of the course of those conversations (Grey, I, 92).]
+
+[Footnote 1052: Sydenham, _My Working Life_, pp. 186 f., 190; Haldane,
+_Before the War_, p. 45; Repington, I, 3. The British based their belief
+on the German construction of obviously unnecessary railroads to the
+Belgian frontier (_Collected Diplomatic Documents Relating to the
+Outbreak of the European War_ [1915], pp. 365 f.).]
+
+[Footnote 1053: Sanderson to Grierson, Jan. 15, 1906, _B.D._, III, 176
+f., No. 214; Grierson to Barnardiston, Jan. 16, 1906, _ibid._, 179, No.
+217_b_.]
+
+[Footnote 1054: In a dispatch to Grierson on Jan. 19 Barnardiston wrote
+that he had told Ducarne at their first meeting that Sir C. Phipps, the
+British minister in Brussels, had already mentioned the matter to the
+Belgian Foreign Minister (_ibid._, III, 188). In some notes by
+Barnardiston deposited in the war office, he stated that Phipps would
+speak to the Belgian Foreign Minister. The Belgian government asserts
+that there is no record of such a communication; rather, that the
+Foreign Minister learned of the military conversations from the Belgian
+Minister of War. There is no report of any conversation on this subject
+between Phipps and the Belgian Minister in the papers in the British
+foreign office, nor is there any record of instructions on it being sent
+to Phipps. On March 17 Barnardiston wrote to Grierson that both the
+Belgian Minister of War and the Minister of Foreign Affairs knew of the
+conversation (editor’s note, _ibid._, p. 203; _Collected Diplomatic
+Documents Relating to the Outbreak of the European War_, p. 355;
+Haldane, _Before the War_, pp. 201 f.). There is no doubt but that the
+conversations were approved by both foreign ministers.]
+
+[Footnote 1055: Barnardiston to Grierson, Jan. 19, 1906, _B.D._, III,
+187 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1056: Barnardiston to Phipps, Jan. 17, 1906, _ibid._, pp. 179
+f.]
+
+[Footnote 1057: On these negotiations see the correspondence between
+Grierson and Barnardiston in _ibid._, pp. 187 ff.; _Collected Diplomatic
+Documents Relating to the Outbreak of the European War_, pp. 350 ff.;
+Haldane, _Before the War_, pp. 201 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 1058: Spender, _Life, Journalism and Politics_, I, 193;
+Haldane, _An Autobiography_, p. 191.]
+
+[Footnote 1059: _B.D._, III, 203.]
+
+[Footnote 1060: Haldane, _Before the War_, pp. 45 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1061: Statement written by Lord Sydenham, July 19, 1927,
+_B.D._, III, 185, No. 221_a_; memo. by Brigadier General Nicholson, Nov.
+6, 1911, _ibid._, pp. 186 f.; Admiral Ottley to First Sea Lord, Jan. 13,
+1906, _ibid._, p. 186; Sydenham, p. 186.]
+
+[Footnote 1062: Memo. by Cambon, Jan. 31, 1906; _B.D._, III, 193, No.
+220_a_.]
+
+[Footnote 1063: Haldane, _Before the War_, chap. iv.]
+
+[Footnote 1064: Grey informed Cambon of the approval of the naval and
+military conversations on Jan. 15, but postponed answering the larger
+question (Grey to Bertie, Jan. 15, 1906, _B.D._, III, 177, No. 215; 225,
+No. 244.)]
+
+[Footnote 1065: Spender, _Life of Campbell-Bannerman_, II, 253, 256 ff.;
+Grey, I, 84. Grey’s omission to consult the entire cabinet has been
+severely criticized. He has admitted in his memoirs that he did wrong.
+See especially Haldane, _An Autobiography_, p. 191; Earl Loreburn, _How
+the War Came_ (London, 1919), pp. 80 f.; cf. Spender, _Life, Journalism
+and Politics_, I, 193.]
+
+[Footnote 1066: Bertie to Grey, D. Jan. 13, R. Jan. 18, 1906, _B.D._,
+III, 174 ff., No. 213.]
+
+[Footnote 1067: Grey to Bertie, Jan. 15, 1906, _ibid._, 177 f., No. 216;
+Grey, I, 75.]
+
+[Footnote 1068: Spender, _Life of Campbell-Bannerman_, II, 253 ff.;
+Grey, II, 76 ff.; _B.D._, III, 180 ff., No. 219. Cambon and Grey
+exchanged memoranda of that conversation. According to Mr. Eyre Crowe,
+senior clerk in the British foreign office, Cambon’s account differed
+from Grey’s on the following points: “(A) The French note alludes to the
+intention of the British Admiralty in case of a conflict with Germany,
+to bar the Channel against the German squadrons. This passage does not
+occur in Sir E. Grey’s draft. . . . . (B) The French note contains no
+allusion to the argument given in the following passage of Sir E. Grey’s
+draft: ‘I did not think people in England would be prepared to fight in
+order to put France in possession of Morocco. They would say that France
+should wait for opportunities and be content to take time, and that it
+was unreasonable to hurry matters to the point of war’” (Crowe’s minute
+to the memo. by Cambon, Jan. 31, 1906, _ibid._, 183 f., No. 220_a_). On
+Feb. 1 Sanderson talked over the two drafts with Cambon, who made some
+changes in his. Sanderson again emphasized the reasons why the British
+government could not give the desired assurance, speaking in part as
+follows: “I told him [Cambon] that I thought that if the Cabinet were to
+give a pledge which would morally bind the country to go to war in
+certain circumstances, and were not to mention this pledge to
+Parliament, and if at the expiration of some months the country suddenly
+found itself pledged to war in consequence of this assurance, the case
+would be one which would justify impeachment, and which might even
+result in that course unless at the time the feeling of the country were
+very strongly in favour of the course to which the Government was
+pledged” (memo. by Sanderson, Feb. 2, 1906, _ibid._, 184 f., No.
+220_b_).]
+
+[Footnote 1069: So thought Sanderson, and Grey’s secretary (Grey, I, 85;
+Spender, _Life of Campbell-Bannerman_, II, 257; memo. by Sanderson, Feb.
+2, 1906, _B.D._, III, 185, No. 220_b_). Grey was absent from the foreign
+office for some time owing to the sudden death of his wife, Feb. 1.]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVII
+
+ THE CONFERENCE OF ALGECIRAS
+
+
+The Conference of Algeciras opened formally on January 16, 1906.[1070]
+The place was badly adapted to such a purpose. It was small,
+inadequately prepared to house and entertain the one hundred and fifty
+delegates, secretaries, and newspaper correspondents who had to remain
+there for over two months and a half. The delegates were quartered at
+one of the two hotels and the journalists at the other. They were thrown
+into constant contact with each other. The place swarmed with newspaper
+correspondents, most of them from France. There were about fifty
+principal ones, not to speak of the minor ones. They saw or heard or
+surmised about everything. They brought public opinion to the door of
+the Conference, and the French particularly were able at times of crisis
+or of important decisions to exercise a marked influence on the course
+of the deliberations.[1071]
+
+Among the delegates there were three important groups, the German, the
+American-Italian-Austrian, and the British-French-Spanish-Russian. The
+representatives of Morocco and the smaller states took practically no
+part in the proceedings. In the first group Herr von Radowitz was a
+nonentity—old, feeble, so elusive and cautious as to be difficult to
+negotiate with. Count Tattenbach was the positive force, described by
+his British colleague as “a rasping, disagreeable man, not
+straightforward or truthful and evidently has to exercise much effort to
+control his temper.”[1072] He made a bad impression on the delegates by
+his blunt aggressiveness. Although he knew the Moroccan problem
+thoroughly, he was unsuited for the delicate negotiations required at
+the Conference. By his personality and methods he injured his country’s
+interests. He was more influential with his government than was Herr von
+Radowitz, but as a rule both men merely carried out orders from Berlin.
+Mr. White (the American delegate), Marquis Visconti Venosta, and Count
+Welsersheimb (the Austrian delegate) acted as mediators. M. Révoil and
+Sir Arthur Nicolson were the leaders of the third group. Both had served
+their respective countries as minister at Tangier. M. Révoil was a
+supple, subtle reasoner, inclined like Herr von Holstein to lose sight
+of his objective in the mazes of his argument. He was oversensitive,
+overcautious, and very mistrustful of Germany. His obstinacy proved in
+the end of advantage to France, but he would have made a number of
+mistakes serious for his country and for the success of the Conference
+if he had not had the advice of Sir Arthur Nicolson. The latter was the
+most astute member taking an active part in the assembly, although he
+played his rôle so quietly that the other delegates, particularly the
+Germans, did not perceive his significance. A true diplomat, he carried
+out the difficult British policy admirably. It was primarily his work
+that the Conference thrashed the fundamental problems through to a
+definite conclusion.
+
+When the Conference was organized, it was decided that the formal
+session should be reserved for ratification of matters already agreed
+upon unanimously in the committee of the whole, composed of all the
+delegates sitting unofficially and engaging in free debate. There was
+also to be a special committee of formulation to draft the propositions
+agreed upon.[1073] Naturally the work was done in these two bodies. More
+important were the direct negotiations between the delegates of France
+and Germany, which after January 25, at the urging of the other
+delegates, were almost constantly in progress.
+
+The basic principles governing the work of the Conference in preparing a
+program of reform for Morocco were laid down by the president, the Duke
+of Almodovar, in his opening speech. After previous agreement with the
+French and German delegates,[1074] he stated that everyone wished
+“reforms based on the triple principle of the sovereignty of the Sultan,
+integrity of his empire, and equality of treatment in matters
+commercial, that is, the open door.” It was not the mission of the
+conference, he said, to work out a complete plan for the administrative
+transformation of Morocco, but rather to “study together the means of
+applying measures which at present appear to be the most urgent and the
+easiest to introduce.”
+
+The Conference, pessimistic at the beginning, took up first the
+questions which could be easily settled. Since these were considered
+primarily from the standpoint of practicality, agreement was soon
+reached on the following: “Regulation concerning the surveillance and
+repression of contraband of arms”; “declaration concerning the better
+collection of taxes and the creation of new revenues”; “regulation
+concerning the customs duties of the empire and the repression of fraud
+and of contraband”; “declaration relating to public services and to
+public works.” The discussion of these matters was unimportant.[1075]
+The troublesome problems were those of the organization of the police
+and the establishment of a state bank. The solution of these would
+determine whether France or Germany should emerge victorious. After the
+initial success on the minor matters, the delegates confronted these two
+questions with more hope.[1076]
+
+Marquis Visconti Venosta and Mr. White first tried to mediate upon the
+basis that Germany should make concessions on the bank, France on the
+police. M. Révoil was willing, being ready, so he privately informed the
+British delegate, to associate Italy with France and Spain on the
+police, but he asked for definite proposals.[1077] At the instigation of
+the other delegates, Herr von Radowitz and M. Révoil began direct
+conversations on these matters on January 25.[1078] Puzzled by so many
+reports of different German projects on the police,[1079] M. Révoil
+assumed the defensive. But on Sir Arthur Nicolson’s advice he laid his
+proposals frankly before the German representatives a few days
+later.[1080] On January 29 M. Regnault, French adviser at the
+Conference, outlined for Count Tattenbach the French plan on the bank as
+follows: The bank should be subject to French law and to the French
+judicial system; the capital should be so divided that France should
+receive 27 per cent, Spain 23 per cent, Great Britain 20 per cent,
+Germany 20 per cent, Italy 10 per cent; an administrative council of ten
+members should be chosen according to nationality by the shareholders; a
+directory should be named by this council; a committee of discount in
+Tangier selected from the resident shareholders should be established
+and a committee of examination should be chosen by the future
+subscribers; the preferential right to make loans held by the French
+banks should continue, but perhaps be relinquished in return for an
+increase in the per cent of capital given to France. M. Regnault
+justified the project on the grounds that “the preponderance of French
+economic interests in Morocco must be given expression therein,” that it
+was a question of maintaining the open door without destroying acquired
+interests, and that “the open door does not signify that those who are
+in the house must leave it.”[1081]
+
+On February 3 M. Révoil proposed to Herr von Radowitz that the mandate
+for the police be given to France and Spain together. “Over its form,
+extension and control all desirable international agreements could be
+made,” he said, so as to prevent any other right from being deduced
+therefrom and to guarantee complete commercial equality. He declared
+that France pursued no special political aims in Morocco, but that she
+must demand protection in proportion to her preponderant material
+interests. He also informed the German delegate indirectly that France
+might agree to the addition of a third Power to control the execution of
+the mandate.[1082]
+
+In the end the German government was to accept practically these terms,
+but at the moment it was averse to making any concessions, believing
+that the Conference, “so far as grouping and general course are
+concerned, is turning out favorably for us.”[1083] Since it regarded the
+bank as more influential in the long run than the police, it rejected
+the French claim to preference for making loans on the grounds that that
+claim violated Article XVII of the Convention of Madrid, and proposed
+the use of the Egyptian mixed codes and the equal division of the
+capital among the Powers. Thus internationalism instead of a French
+preponderant control would be established in the bank.[1084]
+
+On the question of the police, which was the more important, the German
+government offered various plans to prevent France from obtaining
+military control. It endeavored particularly to interest President
+Roosevelt in this problem. In a long dispatch to Washington on January
+20, it laid three different proposals before the President: First, the
+individual Powers might participate on a basis of equality in the
+reorganization of the police by having each one, or at least the more
+important ones, assume a mandate for a certain port. A time limit should
+be set, and the Powers should renounce any idea of giving to their
+occupation a permanent character. For unity of policy the Powers could
+come to a general agreement on various questions like those of arming
+and training. Second, one or several smaller Powers, such as
+Switzerland, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, or Holland might assume the duty.
+(Belgium was excluded as being too liable to French influence.) Third,
+no mandate should be given, but the obligation should be imposed upon
+the Sultan to maintain at certain points police trained and commanded by
+foreign officers. The choice of these officers could either be left to
+the Sultan completely or be confined to certain nationalities, perhaps
+the smaller Powers. The Chancellor offered to accept any other solution
+in harmony with the principle of equality and the open door.[1085] On
+January 24 M. de Lanessan, a French writer, published in the _Siècle_ a
+solution practically identical with No. 3. The article read in part as
+follows:
+
+
+There remains only one admissible solution; to charge the Sultan with
+the policing of his empire while determining the means over which he
+should have control and while instituting an international control over
+the organisation and employment of those means.[1086]
+
+
+The Chancellor immediately seized upon it with greatest favor and
+advocated it to President Roosevelt.
+
+The proposal at once called forth vehement opposition in the French
+press. When Herr von Radowitz mentioned the article to M. Révoil on
+February 3, the latter replied emphatically that in view of the
+incompetence of the Sultan the plan was not acceptable.[1087] Thus the
+issue was joined on the questions of both the bank and the police. In
+this situation, which had been anticipated by both parties, the French
+and German governments sought to win the Powers to their respective
+views.
+
+The German government wished the Austrian, the Italian, and above all
+the American delegates to mediate in favor of its proposals.[1088] When
+on January 23 Baron Sternburg explained to Mr. Root, the American
+secretary of state, the German proposals on the police and asked for the
+American views, Mr. Root replied that the United States could not
+participate in any work of Moroccan police but that he personally
+approved most of proposal No. 3. He said that he would consult the
+President about the question.[1089]
+
+This reply was eminently satisfactory to Prince Bülow, who immediately
+urged the American government to mediate upon the basis of M. de
+Lanessan’s proposals. On January 30 he telegraphed to Washington that
+the Austrian cabinet had instructed its representative at Algeciras to
+that effect, that the Italian Foreign Minister had spoken favorably of
+it, that the Czar had expressed his entire approval of the German
+position on the open door, that therefore the American government would
+run no risk in making such a proposal. The time was ripe for it, he
+stated.[1090] He also sought to influence the President against the
+French proposal on the bank.[1091]
+
+At Algeciras, however, Herr von Radowitz found that the Italian,
+American, and Russian delegates all approved the French proposal of
+February 3 as moderate and practical.[1092] When Count Tattenbach tried
+on February 3 to persuade Sir Arthur Nicolson to desert France and
+support Germany, he met with total failure.[1093] As a result Herr von
+Radowitz again advised his government to compromise.[1094] But in view
+of the apparently favorable attitudes of the Austrian, Italian,
+Spanish,[1095] and American governments toward M. de Lanessan’s
+proposal, Prince Bülow refused.[1096]
+
+Before talking with M. Révoil again, Herr von Radowitz consulted the
+American, Italian, and Austrian delegates concerning the chances of
+success of the German proposal on the police. All three declared that
+France would never accept it, that mediation on the basis of it would be
+futile. They urged Germany to agree to the French plan, with
+modifications, in order to prevent a break-up of the Conference.[1097]
+Sir Donald Mackenzie Wallace, correspondent for the _London Times_, said
+the same.[1098] Furthermore, Baron Sternburg reported on February 8 that
+Mr. Root had promised again that he would consult the President about
+mediating on the German proposal but that he would not undertake any
+move unless assured of a definite result. When the Ambassador had listed
+the Powers in favor of the plan, Mr. Root had asked significantly what
+was the attitude of Great Britain.[1099]
+
+Continuing to rely upon the mediation of the American delegate and to
+hope for the support of the American and Italian delegates, the German
+government instructed Herr von Radowitz on February 9 and 12 to hold to
+plan No. 3 with the two alternatives of choosing the instructors from
+some minor Power or of permitting the Sultan free play in the choice of
+them. In case the three delegates refused to mediate, Herr von Radowitz
+was to talk directly with M. Révoil. If the French delegate refused both
+the German proposals, Herr von Radowitz should request him to offer a
+proposal in keeping with the fundamental principle of the equality of
+all nations in Morocco. If M. Révoil held to his project of February 3,
+Herr von Radowitz should return to proposal No. 1, dividing Morocco into
+sectors each under the charge of a single Power.[1100]
+
+As the three delegates advised Herr von Radowitz to speak directly with
+the French delegate, he did so on February 13. M. Révoil grudgingly
+agreed to transmit the following offer to his government:
+
+
+It is proposed that the conference request the Sultan to undertake the
+organization of the police. He will have the duty of maintaining in the
+places determined upon, a troop of police which will be formed and
+commanded by foreign officers chosen freely by the Sultan. The funds
+necessary to maintain the troops will be placed at the disposal of the
+Sultan by the new state bank. The diplomatic corps at Tangier will
+exercise control over the actions of that organization; a foreign
+officer of one of the secondary Powers will be charged with the
+inspection and will report to the diplomatic corps at Tangier. This
+entire organization will be a tentative one to endure from three to five
+years.[1101]
+
+
+The German stand on the police was meeting with the more or less openly
+expressed disapproval of all the important Powers. Sir Arthur Nicolson
+had taken the French side from the start.[1102] The pro-French attitude
+of Count Cassini, the Russian delegate, was confirmed by Count
+Lamsdorff, who on February 12 expressed to Herr von Schoen, the new
+German ambassador in St. Petersburg, his and the Czar’s entire approval
+of the French proposal on the police and advised the German government
+to accept it.[1103] Even the Austrian government urged the German
+government to compromise. Count Welsersheimb reported that mediation on
+the German project No. 3 was futile; and on February 12 Count
+Goluchowski, Austrian foreign minister, declared to the German
+Ambassador that the German proposal No. 1 was impracticable and
+hopeless. Regarding the situation as “rather serious,” the Austrian
+Foreign Minister stated that “Morocco was not worth a war,” and advised
+that in case of necessity the Conference be permitted to break up
+without result. Count Wedel, German ambassador at Vienna, warned the
+_Wilhelmstrasse_ that because of domestic troubles Austria had no desire
+to become involved in a conflict.[1104]
+
+Although in danger of becoming a minority of one, the German government
+hoped to win its point by a show of determination.[1105] It complained
+vigorously to the new Italian government of the pro-French position
+taken by its delegate, and endeavored to persuade it to support the
+German views.[1106] It sought to exert direct pressure upon M. Rouvier
+by instructing Prince Radolin to inform him that Germany had made
+concessions on the frontier under the expectation that France would
+agree to the German terms with regard to the rest of Morocco. If the
+Conference failed, the Ambassador was to assert, the legal status of
+1880 in Morocco would again obtain. The Ambassador should also state to
+the Premier that if he did not stop the anti-German campaign of the
+French press “we [Germany] must conclude that M. Rouvier has reconciled
+himself to the idea of assuming the responsibility for the results of
+this activity.”[1107] On February 13 the German government, in telegrams
+to Rome, Washington, Vienna, London, and St. Petersburg, declared as
+follows:
+
+
+No reason for a further retreat is evident. The principle of sacrificing
+one’s own interests merely because they block the way for another Power
+could lead to such serious consequences that we consider a disruption of
+the conference as the lesser evil.[1108]
+
+
+That is, if the Powers wished to prevent a break-up of the assembly,
+they should persuade France to show more conciliation, for Germany would
+not recede. A newspaper campaign against the French views on the police
+accompanied these efforts.[1109]
+
+This defiance did not have the effect desired, for it was based upon an
+erroneous conception of the determination of France and the views of the
+Powers. So vehement was the opposition of the French press to the German
+plan, which was of course known in spite of attempts at secrecy, that
+the French government could not have accepted it at all. Nor did M.
+Rouvier have any intention of doing so. The British government, although
+suspecting that Germany meant to make the Conference fail, was ready to
+support the French proposals actively by exerting pressure upon the
+other Powers. On February 14 Sir Edward Grey replied to the defiant
+German manifesto by arguing to Count Metternich in behalf of the French
+views.[1110]
+
+In Russia, Count Lamsdorff, who had at the opening of the Conference
+anticipated a conciliatory policy from Germany, soon became
+disillusioned, and early in February again promised Russia’s entire
+support to France. Several of the delegates suspected that while the
+German representatives realized the necessity of concessions, they were
+not informing their government of the gravity of the situation.[1111] So
+Count Lamsdorff advised the French government that the only way in which
+to make Germany recede was by inducing the other Powers, especially
+Great Britain, the United States, and Italy to aid Russia in exerting
+moral pressure upon her and to show her that she was isolated.[1112] He
+approached the British government with a view to co-operation in favor
+of France. His friendly expressions were most cordially reciprocated by
+Sir Edward Grey.[1113] Furthermore, Mr. White and the French and British
+ambassadors in Washington persuaded President Roosevelt to yield to the
+French arguments concerning the special interest of France in Morocco,
+her unique fitness to execute the reforms, her honest desire to maintain
+the open door. Considering the downfall of M. Delcassé and the
+acceptance of the Conference as great concessions to Germany, Mr.
+Roosevelt thought that the latter should now recede in favor of the more
+practical French proposal about the police. His opinion was confirmed by
+expressions to the same effect from the Italian, Russian, and even the
+Austrian governments. The last two urged him to exert his influence with
+the Emperor for a moderation of the German demands.[1114] The President
+was coming to suspect Germany of wishing to divide Morocco into sectors
+and to regard France as the protector of Morocco’s integrity.[1115] He
+and Mr. Root both thought that Germany, believing herself able to defeat
+both Great Britain and France since Russia was out of the way, was
+playing the “big bully”; and the President had visions of the weak
+German navy’s defeating the British fleet, landing fifty thousand men in
+England, and taking the island from that guileless Power.[1116] Hence
+when M. Jusserand asked the President early in February to intervene
+with the Emperor in favor of the French plan, Mr. Roosevelt agreed to do
+so.[1117]
+
+With the support of Great Britain, Russia, and the United States, the
+French government was almost certain of success. When on February 13 and
+15 Prince Radolin complained about the tone of the French press and
+about the French proposal for the police, the French Premier, denying
+any responsibility for the press, handed the Ambassador the following
+memorandum:
+
+
+. . . . If M. Rouvier agreed last July that the solution of the question
+of the Moroccan police should be international in principle, namely by
+conference, he was not of the opinion that it would be so in execution.
+As to the mandate for the police, at no moment has the French Government
+engaged not to ask for it. . . . . Moreover, it is not a question of
+organizing the police outside of the coastal towns, and it has always
+been understood that the principal object would be to guard the security
+of foreigners. . . . . The proposals ought to be examined at Algeciras,
+France having agreed at the demand of Germany to submit them to the
+conference.[1118]
+
+
+At the same time the French reply to the German proposal of February 13
+was ready. Urged by Marquis Visconti Venosta and others, who feared a
+break-up of the Conference, the French government attempted to harmonize
+the German plan about the police with the French demands. Then Mr. White
+transmitted the project to President Roosevelt, who in turn would
+recommend it to the German government as his own, while M. Révoil would
+reply directly with a more general statement. Although the latter
+despaired of any success, this plan was carried out.[1119] On February
+16 M. Révoil handed the following memorandum to Herr von Radowitz:
+
+
+There is no opposition to the organization of the police in the ports by
+the Sultan, or to the payment of the troops and officers by the Bank of
+State, or to the short duration of that institution, but under the
+condition that the foreign officers chosen by His Sherifian Majesty be
+French and Spanish. The point of the German proposition relative to a
+surveillance of the execution of that organization may be examined if
+the question of the nationality of the officers has been agreed upon as
+indicated above.[1120]
+
+
+On February 19 Mr. Root, declaring to the German Ambassador that
+Germany’s persistence in her plan about the police would break up the
+Conference, proposed the following solution:[1121]
+
+
+1. That the organization and maintenance of police forces in all the
+ports be entrusted to the Sultan, the men and officers to be Moors.
+
+2. That the money to maintain the force be furnished by the proposed
+international bank, the stock of which shall be allotted to all the
+powers in equal shares (except for some small preference claimed by
+France, which he [the President] considers immaterial).
+
+3. That duties of instruction, discipline, pay and assisting in
+management and control be entrusted to French and Spanish officers and
+non-commissioned officers, to be appointed by the Sultan on presentation
+of names by their Legations.
+
+That the senior French and Spanish instructing officers report annually
+to the government of Morocco, and to the government of Italy,[1122] the
+Mediterranean Power, which shall have the right of inspection and
+verification, and to demand further reports in behalf of and for the
+information of the Powers. The expense of such inspection, etc., etc.,
+to be deemed a part of the cost of police maintenance.
+
+4. That full assurances be given by France and Spain, and made
+obligatory upon all their officers who shall be appointed by the Sultan,
+for the open door, both as to trade, equal treatment and opportunity in
+competition for public works and concessions.
+
+
+These terms, which the French government clung to notwithstanding the
+opposition of the French press, were unsatisfactory to the German
+government. At first Prince Bülow refused completely the proposal of
+February 16, and requested the French delegate to make an offer in
+keeping with the fundamental principle of the equality for all nations
+in Morocco.[1123] When the authority of President Roosevelt was added to
+it, however, the Chancellor receded on some points.[1124] He still held
+that the Sultan should be permitted to choose the military instructors
+freely from others besides the French and Spanish nations. But he was
+willing to limit the nations to those participating in the bank, or, in
+case France feared that the Sultan might favor German officers, to at
+least four nationalities. In order to recognize the special rights of
+France in Morocco, he even agreed that the Sultan might place Tangier
+and perhaps some other port under the control of France alone; that in
+the other ports the officers of various nationalities should co-operate.
+Both Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Root realized that this reply would be
+totally unacceptable to France, and they refused the German request to
+mediate on that basis.[1125]
+
+On the question of the bank, the situation was just as bad. Since early
+in February negotiations on it had been neglected in favor of the more
+important problem of the police. But to keep the Conference going, the
+German delegates took it up again on February 19. The next day both
+theirs and the French plans were submitted to the committee of the
+whole. The German plan provided that: an equal division of capital among
+the Powers should be made; the Egyptian mixed codes should be used for
+the bank; a mixed consular court with the addition of a Moroccan
+delegate to try cases involving the bank should be established at
+Tangier; the bank should be supervised by a Conseil de Surveillance
+composed of the diplomatic representatives at Tangier, and managed by a
+Conseil d’Administration composed of two delegates from each national
+group and by a director appointed by the Conseil d’Administration;
+statutes should be drawn up by this latter body and ratified by the
+Conseil de Surveillance; customs duties, perhaps with the deduction of
+the sums necessary for the service of the French loan, should be
+received by the bank; funds for the police organization and for certain
+needed public works should be furnished by the bank, which should also
+be charged with the service of the public debt, especially the French
+loan and the German advance, and should be the financial agent of the
+state and have priority right to make loans; the Conseil de Surveillance
+should have the right to reserve funds necessary for the police
+organization and for the execution of necessary public works independent
+of the Sultan’s power, to fix the budget, and to advise the Sultan in
+deciding on public works.[1126]
+
+The French plan contained the following provisions: the capital should
+be divided into fifteen parts, of which eleven should be subscribed by
+financial groups in Germany, Great Britain, Austria, Belgium, Spain, the
+United States, France, Italy, Holland, Portugal, Russia, and Sweden,
+with no Power having more than one part; the other four were to be given
+to the French group of banks that made the Moroccan loan in 1904 in
+return for relinquishment of the right of preference for making loans to
+Morocco; the bank was to be directed by a Conseil d’Administration of
+fifteen members selected by the shareholders, each chosen from the
+nationality of the subscribing group; a high commissioner selected by
+the Moroccan government should watch over the bank for the Sultan; the
+Conseil d’Administration should select the bank officers and determine
+their powers; an international committee of discount chosen among the
+chief merchants and bankers of Tangier possessing at least twenty-five
+shares should be formed for consultative purposes on credit and
+discount; the bank should be subject to the French law and to the French
+judicial system; the statutes should be drawn up by a committee chosen
+from the various subscribing groups and submitted to the stockholders.
+France wanted the central office of the bank located at Paris, whereas
+Germany preferred Tangier.[1127]
+
+The main points of difference between the two projects related to the
+choice of the central office of the bank, the choice of legislation and
+jurisdiction, the surveillance of the bank, the division of the capital,
+and the right of preference. The one side complained that the other
+project would make the bank into a French institution; the other side
+complained that the opposing project would create, not an economic
+institution, but a political one aimed at France—that it disregarded
+recognized French rights and interests and that it was
+impracticable.[1128] M. Regnault became indignant at the presumption of
+the German proposal; Count Tattenbach answered him in kind.[1129] The
+plans were so divergent that their discussion in committee was postponed
+until March 3 so that time could be given for further direct
+negotiations.[1130]
+
+Thus, discussion on both questions reached a crisis. Fear of imminent
+failure pervaded the Conference. The issue was one of victory or defeat
+in the whole Moroccan episode. To break the deadlock the pro-French
+Powers again exerted moral pressure on the German government to force
+its retreat.[1131]
+
+When the French reply on the police was made to Germany, the Russian
+government approved it to the German authorities. Count Lamsdorff
+declared frankly to Herr von Schoen on February 19 his belief that
+Germany would be isolated in her refusal of the French proposals and
+that if the Conference broke up she would be blamed, particularly in
+Russia, for the continuation of the political and economic tension in
+Europe. If the Björkö ideal were to be realized, he said, France and
+Germany must become friends.[1132]
+
+On February 20, at French request, Count Witte urged the German
+government and Emperor William personally to permit a speedy settlement
+of the Moroccan affair. Until then, he argued, the Continental grouping
+could not be formed nor could Russia obtain the loan which she so
+greatly needed for suppressing the revolution.[1133] The German
+government replied that if Russia wanted the loan quickly, she should
+advise the French government to be more conciliatory.[1134] On February
+23 occurred another conversation between Herr von Schoen and Count
+Lamsdorff, whose assertions the Ambassador reported as follows:
+
+
+It is difficult to understand why we [Germany] defend so obstinately an
+international right on the police question at the Conference which all
+other Powers, in view of the practical solution offered by the French,
+are ready to give up. The pessimistic impression has spread throughout
+the Conference that we aim to frustrate an understanding.
+
+The results of a failure would be incalculable. In France, where
+feelings are already very much excited and M. Rouvier would be accused
+of too great conciliation, a crisis with the downfall of M. Rouvier and
+his replacement by an intransigent person could scarcely be avoided. The
+continued anarchy in Morocco might bring forth bellicose complications
+at any moment, in which case England would certainly enter on France’s
+side while Russia would remain an inactive witness, but at the worst
+would be affected sympathetically. A European war would enkindle new
+revolutionary outbreaks which would also lead to difficult times for
+Germany. But the worst would be that the foundation for the peace
+program agreed upon by the two monarchs would be destroyed. . . . .
+
+
+Denying that the outlook was so pessimistic, Herr von Schoen replied
+that even though the addition of the third Power to the Björkö accord
+might have to be postponed, that treaty would remain valid; whereupon
+Count Lamsdorff answered that the Dual Alliance still held good, that if
+France became involved in a war with Germany, the Björkö accord would
+collapse.[1135]
+
+When this warning had no apparent effect, Count Lamsdorff hesitated to
+use the Czar’s influence with the German Emperor.[1136] But as a final
+effort he had an article published on March 2 in the semiofficial
+journal, _L’Etat russe_, denouncing the German policy at the Conference
+and upholding the French.[1137]
+
+Great Britain also gave her fullest support to the French, not only in
+Algeciras and London, but in the various capitals of the other Powers.
+In upholding the French proposal to Count Metternich on February 19 the
+British Minister repeated his belief that British public opinion would
+point the way to active support of France in case of a war with Germany
+and would thus force the postponement of an Anglo-German
+_rapprochement_. The Ambassador answered that if Germany had to give in
+to every French pretension which arose from the Entente Cordiale in
+order to gain British friendship, he feared that the price was too high.
+The German people would come inevitably to look upon the British as
+their chief enemy. Sir Edward Grey assured him, however, that if the
+Moroccan affair were settled permanently, he would carry out his promise
+to work for a _rapprochement_.[1138] He also kept in close touch with
+the Russian government on Moroccan affairs. While refusing on February
+22 Count Lamsdorff’s suggestion to intervene in Berlin in favor of
+France, he urged Russia to do so.[1139]
+
+The British Foreign Secretary was pessimistic over the outlook for the
+Conference. He was especially desirous for the onus of the disruption
+not to rest upon France. To prevent that he was even willing for the
+Moroccan police to be temporarily organized under the Sultan by officers
+taken from a neutral minor Power with a French officer selected by the
+French government in general control. But he hesitated to suggest this
+solution to France for fear of hurting the Entente Cordiale.[1140] On
+February 20 he recorded his reactions to the situation as follows:
+
+
+If the Conference breaks up without result the situation will be very
+dangerous. Germany will endeavour to establish her influence in Morocco
+at the expense of France. France to counteract this or even simply to
+protect herself and a neighbour from the state of disturbance, which is
+now chronic in Morocco, will be driven to take action in Morocco, which
+Germany may make a _casus belli_.
+
+If there is war between France and Germany it will be very difficult for
+us to keep out of it. The _Entente_ and still more the constant and
+emphatic demonstrations of affection . . . . have created in France a
+belief that we should support her in war. . . . . If this expectation is
+disappointed the French will never forgive us.
+
+There would also I think be a general feeling in every country that we
+had behaved meanly and left France in the lurch. The United States would
+despise us, Russia would not think it worth while to make a friendly
+arrangement with us about Asia, Japan would prepare to re-insure herself
+elsewhere, we should be left without a friend and without the power of
+making a friend and Germany would take some pleasure, after what has
+passed, in exploiting the whole situation to our disadvantage, very
+likely by stirring up trouble through the Sultan of Turkey in Egypt. As
+a minor matter the position of any Foreign Secretary here, who had made
+it an object to maintain the _entente_ with France, would become
+intolerable.
+
+On the other hand the prospect of a European War and of our being
+involved in it is horrible.
+
+I propose therefore, if unpleasant symptoms develop after the Conference
+is over, to tell the French Ambassador that a great effort and if need
+be some sacrifice should in our opinion be made to avoid war. To do this
+we should have to find out what compensation Germany would ask or accept
+as the price of her recognition of the French claims in Morocco. There
+is also a point about Egypt, which might be worked in on our behalf. I
+should myself be in favour of allowing Germany a port or coaling
+station, if that would ensure peace; but it would be necessary to
+consult the Admiralty about this, and to find out whether the French
+would entertain the idea, and if so what port?
+
+The real objection to the course proposed is that the French may think
+it pusillanimous and a poor result of the _Entente_. I should have to
+risk this. I hope the French would recognize that in a war with Germany
+our liabilities would be much less than theirs. We should risk little or
+nothing on land, and at sea we might shut the German fleet up in Kiel
+and keep it there without losing a ship or a man or even firing a shot.
+The French would have a life and death struggle and that expenditure of
+blood and treasure with a doubtful issue. They ought therefore not to
+think it pusillanimous on our part to wish to avoid a war in which our
+danger was so much less than theirs.
+
+I have also a further point of view. The door is being kept open by us
+for a _rapprochement_ with Russia; there is at least a prospect that
+when Russia is re-established we shall find ourselves on good terms with
+her. An _entente_ between Russia, France and ourselves would be
+absolutely secure. If it is necessary to check Germany it could then be
+done. The present is the most unfavourable moment for attempting to
+check her. Is it not a grave mistake, if there must be a quarrel with
+Germany for France or ourselves to let Germany choose the moment, which
+best suits her.
+
+There is a possibility that war may come before these suggestions of
+mine can be developed in diplomacy. If so it will only be because
+Germany has made up her mind that she wants war and intends to have it
+anyhow, which I do not believe is the case. But I think we ought in our
+minds to face the question now, whether we can keep out of war, if war
+breaks out between France and Germany. The more I review the situation
+the more it appears to me that we cannot, without losing our good name
+and our friends and wrecking our policy and position in the world.[1141]
+
+
+Thus Sir Edward Grey intended to do his utmost to preserve peace even at
+the risk of antagonizing France. He desired to postpone the Moroccan
+settlement if necessary until the Anglo-Russian entente could be
+consummated, believing that then France would be in a far stronger
+position with reference to Germany. But if war did arise, he was
+determined to throw his entire influence in favor of active
+participation.[1142]
+
+In Rome, M. Barrère, loyally seconded by Sir Edwin Egerton, endeavored
+to interpret the Franco-Italian accords in such a way as to induce the
+Italian government to take the French side openly in case of a vote at
+the Conference. The Italian government refused. It also refused to
+support Germany, and left matters in the hands of its delegate.[1143]
+
+Similarly, the French and British representatives co-operated to prevent
+Spain, somewhat disgruntled over the Moroccan accords, from refusing to
+live up to its obligations. The Spanish government promised complete
+loyalty. But when it appeared that the conference would fail, the
+Spanish government felt that as host it should endeavor to prevent that
+issue. On February 19 the Duke of Almodovar read to Mr. Révoil a note in
+which he said that for the sake of a settlement Spain was willing to
+accept the following plan as a sort of truce: The police should be
+organized by the Sultan under the control of the diplomatic corps for
+three years; the instructors should be exclusively Moroccan except at
+Tetouan, where they should be Spanish, and at Oudjda, where they should
+be French; France and Spain might renew their claims after the three
+years if they saw fit.[1144]
+
+Horrified at the idea, the Anglo-French combination immediately busied
+itself to bring Spain back into line. At Madrid the British and French
+representatives informed the foreign office that if Spain deserted her
+friends the Anglo-French opposition to the German projects would
+continue anyway. They argued that a break-up of the Conference with the
+maintenance of the Franco-Spanish accords was preferable to the success
+of the Conference through the ruin of those accords, in which lay their
+sole guaranty for the morrow. M. Ojeda, acting minister of foreign
+affairs, acknowledged to the British representative that “he hated
+France and French influence in Morocco, and that he had no confidence in
+and personal dislike for French Ambassador,” but he added that “he would
+act faithfully in accordance with Spain’s engagements, although he
+disliked them.” M. Moret, the Spanish premier, also protested his
+loyalty to the accords. The Duke of Almodovar was instructed to abstain
+in the future from all initiative not previously concerted with his
+French colleague.[1145] To prevent any bad feelings from this episode,
+the British and French governments thanked Spain for her loyalty. Thus
+the danger from Spain was averted.[1146]
+
+M. Rouvier consulted the smaller governments represented at the
+Conference with a view to obtaining their open support in case matters
+were forced to a vote. But they remained neutral.[1147]
+
+The French government, again sustained by Great Britain,[1148] even
+sought to influence Austria in its favor, and with some success. Finding
+Count Goluchowski of the opinion that after France’s concessions on
+February 3 and 16 Germany should show moderation, the French Ambassador
+hinted discreetly that the Foreign Minister speak to the German
+government to that effect.[1149] Count Goluchowski, who on February 14
+had suggested a compromise to the German government very similar to the
+French offer of February 16, urged it to accept the offer and to seek
+compensation in the settlement of the bank question. Both the American
+and the Italian delegates approved it, he argued, and he predicted that
+if the Conference broke up Germany would be blamed.[1150] On February 23
+Emperor Francis Joseph himself intervened. Calling the German Ambassador
+to him, he said that Austria would act with Germany at the Conference,
+but that according to all reports from Algeciras they would be isolated
+in case of a vote. Such an isolation would be unpleasant for both
+Powers, but far graver, he said, was the possibility that out of a
+failure of the Conference might develop a new grouping of the Powers
+separating Russia from the two monarchies and associating her with Great
+Britain and France. He declared that it was necessary to avoid that
+turn.[1151]
+
+The French party at the Conference knew that Germany was isolated, that
+even her ally, Austria, opposed her policy.[1152] On February 26 M.
+Révoil, refusing to make any further proposal, asserted to the German
+delegates: “If the Conference recognizes the utility of new guarantees,
+we will not refuse to examine them. It belongs to the Conference . . . .
+to determine the solution.” In other words, he told Germany that, having
+demanded the Conference, she might permit it to settle the matter.[1153]
+He and Sir Arthur Nicolson were devising some means by which a rupture
+of the Conference should not occur over the bank question and by which
+the responsibility for a rupture should not fall on France and Great
+Britain. The issue on the bank was not as clear cut as on the police,
+and public opinion would not understand why financial differences could
+not be harmonized. So the two men planned to bring the police question
+up first for decision. They did not favor taking a formal vote on that
+matter, as Count Lamsdorff suggested,[1154] for they perceived that the
+American, Italian, Dutch, Belgian, and Swedish delegates would very
+probably not vote. But they intended in some way to make plain to
+Germany the preference of the Conference for the French police proposal.
+Then if Germany remained adamantine, she would receive the blame for the
+break-up of the assembly.[1155]
+
+The opportunity came on March 3. During the discussion of the bank in
+the official session of the Conference, Germany’s views were supported
+solely by Austria and Morocco and were opposed, for the first time, by a
+firm British-French-Spanish-Russian group.[1156] That same day, on the
+motion of Sir Arthur Nicolson and with the aid of the Duke of Almodovar,
+the Conference voted to take up the question of the police on February 5
+instead of that of the bank. The German and Austrian delegates alone
+opposed the motion, even the Italian representative siding openly
+against them.[1157] At the session on March 5 Germany was again
+isolated. Her policy in regard to the police was not even defended by
+Austria, while the French plan was openly approved by Great Britain,
+Russia, Spain, and Portugal.[1158]
+
+All the delegates were pessimistic. As direct negotiations had proved
+futile, M. Révoil and Sir Arthur Nicolson both expected that the
+antagonism would come to a head at the next session and the Conference
+would break up.[1159] Herr von Radowitz reported to his government that
+agreement was impossible if Germany held to her present terms, for
+France would not recede, and that the other representatives, anxious to
+conclude the Conference, were in favor of the French police proposal.
+Even Count Tattenbach thought that his government was too
+obstinate.[1160] In Berlin, however, Herr von Holstein, misjudging the
+French feeling, planned to meet the crisis by disregarding the
+Conference and making a direct temporary agreement with the French
+government. The visit to Berlin of Baron de Courcel, former ambassador
+at Berlin, on February 20-22, afforded him the opportunity to propose
+the following terms: In regard to the police the two governments should
+make a temporary settlement for four or five years; France, in
+consideration of her special interests in Morocco, should be given one
+port to police alone, while officers in equal numbers of the various
+nationalities, including French and German, should co-operate in each of
+the other seven ports; in the bank France should also be given a slight
+advantage. Let France accept this internationalization for the time
+being, he said, and in a few years she and Germany could come to a
+direct permanent settlement of the Moroccan question by which Germany,
+in return for concessions elsewhere, would leave the land entirely to
+France. These concessions he declared to be the utmost that Germany
+would make; she preferred to let the Conference disband rather than
+recede further. Baron de Courcel seemed favorable to the plan; but, on
+March 6, M. Rouvier refused to consider it or any other direct
+negotiations with Germany.[1161] So that channel was definitely closed.
+
+While this effort was being made, Prince Bülow took personal charge of
+all the details concerning the Moroccan affair.[1162] The Chancellor had
+no idea of permitting a disruption of the Conference,[1163] and began to
+consider a proposal suggested by the Austrian delegate on February 26
+for a way out. In its final form this project provided that the
+organization of police in Tangier, Saffi, Rabat, and Tetouan should be
+intrusted to the French; in Mogador, Larache, and Mazagan to the
+Spanish; in Casablanca to the command of a Swiss or Dutch officer with
+powers of inspection over all the police. It further proposed that this
+inspector should report to the diplomatic corps at Tangier, which should
+exercise general control over the reorganization of the police. Herr von
+Radowitz, Count Welsersheimb, and Marquis Visconti Venosta all declared
+this to be the least that the French would accept.[1164] The German
+government endeavored first to have Austria and Italy mediate on the
+basis of the plan outlined to Baron de Courcel;[1165] but on March 4
+Count Goluchowski, the Austrian foreign minister, regarding the step as
+futile, refused to do so. Instead he urged that either Count
+Welsersheimb’s project be accepted _in toto_ or that the selection of
+officers be left to the Sultan with the understanding that he choose
+only French and Spanish ones.[1166] From Italy also came a negative
+response.[1167] When Count Tattenbach himself favored the Austrian plan,
+the Chancellor accepted it on March 6 with the proviso that the
+commander at Casablanca choose his officers from other nationalities
+than French and Spanish, and also that France accede to the German
+demands on the bank. Then the Chancellor sought to obtain a combined
+Austro-Italian mediation for the plan.[1168]
+
+On March 8 Count Welsersheimb’s project and the French plan of February
+16 were formally introduced in the Conference.[1169] On March 10 both
+were referred to the committee for formulation on a motion by Herr von
+Radowitz, who said:
+
+
+It seems to me that accord ought to be reached on the basis of the two
+projects. . . . . That of the French delegation certainly contains
+proposals which deserve the most serious examination. They ought to be
+completed by those of the Austro-Hungarian project.[1170]
+
+
+The Austro-German proposal was a welcome surprise to the Conference,
+which recognized it as a great concession. Sir Arthur Nicolson found
+that “members of the Conference, with the exception of French and
+Spanish, are unanimous in favour of” it. He as well as the other
+delegates did not hesitate to inform M. Révoil frankly of this view. In
+Algeciras, London, and Paris the British government on March 9-10 stated
+to the French authorities that Germany’s concessions “had brought an
+agreement so near that it would not do to let the Conference break up
+now without a settlement.” “I would,” said Sir Arthur Nicolson to M.
+Révoil, “support him [M. Révoil] to the best of my ability in whatever
+course he might take, but I must tell him that in the event of the
+Conference ending in a failure we should be placed in an exceedingly
+false position with all the public feeling of Europe against us.”[1171]
+Sir Edward Grey thought that “Germany has conceded the substance and it
+would be a great pity, if France sacrificed the substance to the
+shadow.”[1172]
+
+M. Révoil, whose views were also valid for the Spanish delegates, was
+totally unwilling to accept the Austrian proposal. He was handicapped by
+the unexpected fall of the French government on March 7 over a minor
+question concerning relations with the church. A week before the French
+Premier would have accepted the Spanish proposal of February 19 as a
+means of last resort.[1173] Now out of power, though remaining at the
+foreign office until the new government was formed, M. Rouvier of course
+could not make concessions even had he so desired. Staunchly supported
+by the French press, which on March 13 published the instructions to M.
+Révoil,[1174] he and the French delegate demanded the following
+modifications in the Austrian plan:
+
+
+The police instructors at Casa Blanca to be, like at the other seven
+ports, French or Spanish.
+
+Distribution of ports to French or Spanish instructors to be a matter
+for agreement between French and Spanish Gov[ernmen]ts. The Inspector
+General to be a subject of neutral state and to have powers of
+inspection at all eight ports without right to command or give orders to
+French and Spanish instructors, and to make his reports to the Sultan of
+Morocco and not to the diplomatic body at Tangier.
+
+
+He also preferred as inspector a Swiss or, even better, a Dane to a
+Dutchman for fear the latter might be too much under German
+influence.[1175]
+
+Both MM. Rouvier and Révoil believed that Germany would recede on these
+points, for on about March 8 the Prince of Monaco arrived in Paris from
+Berlin with a message for M. Rouvier from Prince Bülow to the effect
+that Germany would accept a French and Spanish police “under the most
+discreet control of an officer from a lesser Power.”[1176] The message
+was undoubtedly misleading and the French hope unjustified.[1177] When
+Marquis Visconti Venosta, Mr. White, and Sir Arthur Nicolson, at M.
+Révoil’s request, asked the German delegates March 9, 10, whether they
+would give way, the latter assured them that Germany had spoken her last
+word, that “the establishment of the inspector at a port as instructor
+was a _sine qua non_ condition.”[1178]
+
+M. Révoil was “greatly disappointed” and “a little unstrung.” He told
+Sir Arthur Nicolson that his government would not accept such a
+solution. “He said with much bitterness that the Germans had
+internationalized the finances, and they now intended to introduce the
+principle throughout Morocco. France would leave the Conference having
+yielded everything and gained nothing.” His chief concern was that if
+France were forced to accept the Austrian plan, “the outcry which would
+be raised against it in France might be utilized to weaken the Anglo-
+French understanding.” Sir Arthur Nicolson replied that he “would always
+support him [M. Révoil], but I had given warnings as a friend should.”
+And Sir Arthur added “that he must face the situation as it stood, and
+that there could be no question of breaking down the Conference on that
+point, and at a moment when a favourable end was so nearly
+reached.”[1179]
+
+In Paris, M. Rouvier
+
+
+rather demurred [to the British Ambassador] to the supposition that the
+conference was so favourably impressed by the Austrian scheme. He said
+that France still counted on her side Spain, England, Russia, Portugal,
+and others had only been gained over by the German Delegates having
+persuaded them that Germany would make no further concessions.[1180]
+
+
+Mr. Eyre Crowe was alarmed for the Entente Cordiale; he urged the
+greatest caution in advising France to recede. But Sir Edward Grey on
+March 12 repeated to M. Cambon that in his opinion France “should accept
+the Swiss at Casa Blanca rather than let the Conference break up.”[1181]
+
+As the pressure of the delegates was so strong, M. Révoil and the Duke
+of Almodovar began on March 11 to consider tentatively the plan of
+associating actively a Swiss inspector with the French and Spanish in
+the policing of Tangier.[1182] Nothing could be decided until the new
+French government was formed. Meanwhile, the opposition of views became
+public in the Conference session of March 11 when two matters remaining
+unsolved on the question of the bank were taken up. In a previous
+sitting Sir Arthur Nicolson, in agreement with M. Révoil, had proposed
+that three censors be chosen to oversee the bank. In accepting this
+proposal Herr von Radowitz stipulated that in order to preserve the
+principle of internationality the censors should be chosen by the
+respective governments from the personnel of the banks interested in the
+Moroccan state bank and that a copy of the censors’ reports should be
+sent to the governments of the signatory Powers. The French delegates,
+however, desired that the first censors be selected by the committee
+drawing up the statutes of the bank and should thereafter be chosen by
+co-optation and that their reports should be sent to the council of
+administrators of the bank. The French continued to demand four shares,
+while Germany was willing to concede them only three.[1183] At the
+session on the next day M. Révoil refused the Austrian proposal to give
+the command in Casablanca to an officer of a third Power, but agreed to
+the inspection by one, preferably a Swiss.[1184]
+
+In reporting M. Révoil’s pertinacity to Berlin on March 11, Herr von
+Radowitz stated: “I have been told by all my colleagues, even the
+English, that after our action they would no longer consider justified
+the French adherence to the points declared inacceptable by us and they
+have so expressed themselves to M. Révoil.”[1185] On the next day
+Marquis Visconti Venosta said in confidence to Herr von Radowitz that
+the latter would “not be able to come to an arrangement with M. Révoil
+without a positive intervention of the government at Paris. . . .
+.”[1186] The same day the _Lokalanzeiger_ published an exaggerated
+report from its correspondent at Algeciras in which the “complete
+isolation” of France in the committee was spoken of; Italy, Russia, the
+United States, and even Great Britain, the article read, had put
+themselves on the German side.[1187]
+
+Instead of maintaining a dignified silence while public opinion and the
+persuasion of the Powers compelled France to give way or break up the
+Conference, Prince Bülow tried to increase the pressure by beginning a
+diplomatic and press campaign against France. With German thoroughness
+he overdid the thing. On March 12 he sent telegrams to the German
+ambassadors at Vienna, London, St. Petersburg, Rome, Washington, and
+Paris in which he stated that the generous concessions granted by
+Germany on March 10 had made agreement seem possible. Then all had been
+placed in doubt again by sudden and unexpected opposition from the
+French delegates. The other delegates, including the British, he
+continued, had expressed to Herr von Radowitz and to M. Révoil their
+opinion that France should now recede; and, after repeating Marquis
+Visconti Venosta’s statement, he asked the various governments to
+intervene at Paris “so that the voice of reason will again rule there
+and further opposition be given up.”[1188]
+
+The Russian, Italian, and Austrian governments agreed to advise France
+to accept the Austrian compromise. Sir Edward Grey, whom Count
+Metternich did not ask to intercede in behalf of the plan as he believed
+that the British Minister would refuse, welcomed the German concessions
+but loyally upheld the French proposals.[1189] Mr. Roosevelt
+unexpectedly replied most adversely.
+
+In a letter on March 7 the President advised the Emperor to accept his
+proposal of February 19. He justified his interference by quoting a
+passage from Baron Sternburg’s letter to him on June 28, 1905, to the
+effect that “the Emperor has requested me to tell you that in case,
+during the coming conference, differences of opinion should arise
+between France and Germany, he, in every case, will be ready to back up
+the decision which you should consider to be most fair and most
+practical.” He warned the German government that it would lose “credit”
+and “moral power” in the world if the Conference failed.[1190] In his
+reply on March 12 the Emperor announced his acceptance of the Austrian
+plan, and urged the President to support it.[1191]
+
+Upon receiving that reply Mr. Roosevelt on March 14 denounced the
+Austrian project to Baron Sternburg as “absurd because it favors the
+very ideas the conference has been trying to eliminate namely partition
+and spheres of influence,” and also because it was impracticable. On the
+other hand, “placing French and Spanish officers in the same ports gives
+according to my view a safer guarantee than placing them separately in
+single ports,” he said. In spite of that reply, however, Prince Bülow
+regarded the German position as “at present not at all
+unfavorable.”[1192]
+
+Meanwhile, the French were restoring their front. In Paris a new
+government was formed by M. Sarrien on March 14 with M. Bourgeois at the
+foreign office. M. Bourgeois, with whom Prince Radolin was on cordial
+terms, was known to be a conciliatory statesman interested in
+harmonizing international differences. But he could hardly begin his
+career in office with an unpopular concession on the Moroccan question.
+He renewed M. Révoil’s instructions, refusing to compromise on the
+police in any manner whatever.
+
+It was a bold act. The French government knew that the Russian, Italian,
+British, and Austrian governments disapproved. Several influential
+members of the French Parliament tried to persuade M. Bourgeois that the
+British government, influenced by Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman, would
+withdraw its support from France. The new cabinet was alarmed by the
+British advice to accept a neutral police in Casablanca rather than
+break up the Conference, and some of the ministers suspected that Great
+Britain and Germany were about to come to an arrangement leaving France
+in the lurch. In a French cabinet meeting M. Clémenceau was at first the
+only minister to combat these doubts.[1193]
+
+But the move succeeded. M. Bourgeois quickly repulsed the intervention,
+half-hearted as it was, of the Russian, Italian, and Austrian
+ambassadors in Paris in favor of the Austrian plan; he even gathered
+from his conversation with the Austrian representative that the latter’s
+government would try to persuade Germany to relinquish her stand on the
+policing of Casablanca.[1194] In addition, as soon as the French
+instructions were published, Sir Edward Grey immediately informed the
+French government that Great Britain would “of course” support it.[1195]
+
+When he learned of the French doubts about the continuation of British
+aid, he rather indignantly replied that the French leaders, MM.
+Bourgeois, Etienne, and Clémenceau,
+
+
+should be told that there has never been any question here of
+discontinuing our support to France. We have given it throughout at
+Algeciras and in every capital in Europe where required and shall
+continue this so long as the French wish it and trust us. Cordial co-
+operation with France in all parts of the world remains a cardinal point
+of British policy and in some respects we have carried it further than
+the late Government here were required to do.
+
+Any advice Nicolson has given to Révoil has been on the understanding
+that this support would be continued, and if he has given advice freely
+it has been because of his complete confidence that this was understood
+by his French colleague. The same is true of my conversations with
+Cambon. . . . . The Prime Minister has been cognizant of all I have said
+and has cordially approved of it.
+
+
+Sir Arthur Nicolson denied that either directly or indirectly had he
+ever said to the German delegates that France ought to give way on any
+point.[1196] Sir Edward Grey informed the other governments that the
+British fidelity to France would continue as before. And on March 18 _Le
+Temps_ published the instructions to Sir Arthur Nicolson so that public
+opinion could see how complete that support was.[1197]
+
+If the French leaders intended to bring Great Britain back unreservedly
+into line by expressing these doubts about British support, they
+succeeded. M. Bourgeois could with more assurance inform the German
+Ambassador that France had receded as far as she would. On March 17
+Prince Radolin reported his words as follows:
+
+
+The Minister added that he stood on the defensive, that he supported
+entirely the previous policy of Rouvier and Révoil, . . . . that he had
+agreed in principle with the appointment of a general inspector from
+some lesser state “subject to agreement on details” but that under no
+circumstances would he permit the inspector to exercise a command or a
+collaboration. That is a question of principle, a vital question for
+France and her prestige in Algeria. Moreover in case the conference ends
+without result, the _status quo_ is no disadvantage for France. Germany,
+not France, had demanded the conference. “It is your turn now to speak,
+but not of the police. It is lost effort.”
+
+
+He accused the German government of being responsible for the pressure
+of the other Powers on France. According to instructions, Prince Radolin
+replied in a serious tone but without threat that the steps taken by
+those governments were caused by Germany’s great concessions of March
+10.[1198] But the vote of confidence given without debate to the new
+cabinet by the Chamber on March 19 showed that M. Bourgeois interpreted
+French feeling correctly.[1199]
+
+There were signs at Paris and Algeciras as early as March 17 that
+Austria was seeking some new way out of the deadlock, and that Germany
+might accept the French view about Casablanca.[1200] Before the Austrian
+mediation had time to materialize, however, the renewed intervention of
+the American government turned the scales in favor of France. On March
+16 Prince Bülow had replied to Mr. Roosevelt with arguments showing that
+the Austrian plan would preserve the unity and integrity of Morocco
+whereas the French plan would divide the country into spheres of
+influence.[1201] The President remained unconvinced. Thinking that the
+whole German action was intended to humiliate France, he and American
+public opinion took the French side. While he no longer believed that
+Germany aimed at war with her western neighbor, he and his advisers did
+suspect her of intending by the Austrian proposal to gain a port and a
+sphere of influence in the Mediterranean. Germany’s extreme demands were
+arousing dissatisfaction among the other delegates at Algeciras, he told
+Baron Sternburg, and Austria and Russia had already asked him to advise
+Germany to moderate them. So, while he declared that he would not hold
+out if the other Powers accepted the Austrian plan, he remained hostile
+to it. He threatened to publish the entire correspondence on the subject
+if the Conference failed. Baron Sternburg learned that Mr. Root had said
+privately that Germany’s attitude at the Conference was “petty and
+unworthy of a great nation,” that she was fast losing the confidence of
+the world. In reiterating the American stand, Mr. Root wrote to the
+Ambassador: “If we had sufficient interest in Morocco to make it worth
+our while, we should seriously object, on our own account, to the
+adoption of any such arrangement [as the Austrian plan].”[1202]
+
+With the net drawing tighter around Germany, Prince Bülow notified
+President Roosevelt on March 19 that Germany would accept the American
+plan of having French and Spanish officers in about equal numbers co-
+operate in each of the ports, supervised by a general inspector from
+another nation.[1203] President Roosevelt was jubilant over Germany’s
+acceptance of his plan. He immediately proposed it to the French
+government and asked the British to support him.[1204]
+
+From this side the President met with strenuous opposition. France and
+Spain would have nothing to do with the idea of mixed police, except if
+necessary in Tangier and Casablanca. Complaining of too many
+peacemakers,[1205] Sir Edward Grey supported the Franco-Spanish view.
+Mr. Roosevelt suddenly grew timid and refused to defend his project
+before the Conference.[1206] The German government was therefore forced
+to fall back on Austrian mediation.[1207]
+
+In a private conversation on March 23 Count Welsersheimb informed M.
+Révoil that Germany might sacrifice her demand for a neutral police at
+Casablanca if France would make reciprocal concessions. M. Révoil was
+willing to limit the number of French shares in the bank to three. But
+for the other unsettled problems of determining how much international
+control should be established over the police and bank and how the
+police should be divided among the various ports, the two men failed to
+find a solution. On the first question the German government demanded as
+a _conditio sine qua non_ that the inspector should be made responsible
+to the diplomatic corps at Tangier, which should exercise a general
+supervision over the police. M. Révoil, on the other hand, supported by
+the British and Spanish delegates, desired that the diplomatic corps be
+excluded from intervening in this matter at all. On the question of the
+bank the Germans wanted the various governments and the diplomatic corps
+at Tangier to have some authority over the censors while the French did
+not. As to the division of ports the French formally requested that the
+settlement of this problem and of other details should be left for
+France and Spain to determine later with the Sultan; the Germans
+preferred to have the Conference itself divide the ports between these
+two Powers.[1208]
+
+At that point the Conference again reached a deadlock. With victory in
+view the French, on March 26, refused to give way;[1209] while the
+Germans, who had already made the great concession, sought to save as
+much as they could. They felt compelled to be firmer because the
+publication in _Le Temps_ on March 21 of the very pro-French
+instructions to the Russian delegate at Algeciras, succeeding the
+publication of the French and British instructions, made it appear as if
+the German government were being coerced into retreat.[1210] With one or
+two exceptions, the delegates, anxious to conclude the Conference and
+attributing little importance to these matters, were inclined to think
+that France ought to recede on the question of the responsibility of the
+inspector.[1211] President Roosevelt was once more urging that both
+France and Spain be given a joint mandate and that they accept from the
+Conference a joint responsibility for every port no matter how the ports
+were divided.[1212] After the session on March 26, the mediators again
+set to work. Germany agreed for France and Spain to divide the ports as
+they wished and to submit their decision to the Conference for approval.
+Both Powers made concessions on the question of the control of the bank.
+On the most difficult problem of the responsibility of the police
+inspector, the French, British, Spanish, Russian, and Italian first
+delegates met privately at M. Révoil’s suggestion and worked out a
+formula. Then Mr. White submitted it to the German delegates, and the
+latter accepted it (March 27).[1213] The difficulties were thereby
+settled.
+
+In the meantime trouble, which did not come to the surface, had arisen
+between France and Spain. The Franco-Spanish accord of 1905 had provided
+for the policing of only five ports, whereas the Conference had dealt
+with all eight. France wanted the other three left to her; but Spain
+refused. On March 18 she requested that Tangier be given to her, but the
+French government rejected the suggestion, offering instead to agree
+that Casablanca as well as Tangier should be policed by French and
+Spanish together. This offer was refused by Spain, who on about March 25
+made the additional request that she should be given an extra share in
+the bank by the Conference instead of receiving it later from France
+according to agreement. The French would not accede to this, but by
+March 31 the two Powers decided that the officers should be Spanish in
+Tetouan and Larache, French and Spanish in Casablanca and Tangier, and
+French in the other four ports.[1214]
+
+The Conference accepted this division, together with the following terms
+on the police: They should function for five years; they should be
+inspected at least once a year by a Swiss officer stationed at
+Tangier[1215] who should report to the Sultan; this officer was also
+empowered to make as many special reports as he saw fit; he should
+likewise send a copy of these reports to the dean of the diplomatic
+corps in order that that body might
+
+
+confirm that the Moroccan police is functioning in conformity with the
+decisions taken by the Conference and that it may see whether it
+guarantees in an efficacious manner and in conformity with the treaties
+the security of persons and of the property of foreigners as well as
+that of commercial transactions; . . . . in case of demand before it by
+an interested legation the diplomatic corps may, after advising the
+representatives of the Sultan of its action, request the inspector to
+make an inquiry and draw up a report on the complaint made.
+
+
+On the question of the bank it was stipulated that the censors should be
+chosen with the approval of their governments by the various state banks
+of the countries involved. Instead of using the expression that the
+censors should exercise “the supervision of the administration of the
+Bank in the name of the signatory Powers,” a phrase to which the French
+objected as smacking of internationalization again, the delegates
+substituted the less colorful one that the censors should exercise “the
+supervision of which they are invested by the present Act in that which
+concerns the administration of the bank.”[1216]
+
+Thus, formulas were found. Details were cleared up; minor points
+settled. On April 7 the delegates signed the general act. The Conference
+of Algeciras was ended.[1217]
+
+The conclusions of the Conference were determined by the exigencies of
+international relations and the interests of European Powers, not by the
+needs of Morocco. The less interested Powers had aimed chiefly at
+preserving peace in Europe. France and her satellite, Spain, had been
+concerned with maintaining their interests in Morocco and with
+preventing any other Power from gaining a foothold there. Germany alone
+had endeavored to defend Moroccan rights, and she had done so only
+because that policy had been in accord with her interests. The Moroccan
+delegates had in general been disregarded by the Conference, which
+assumed that the Sultan would under pressure accept its decisions.
+Although the assembly had formally acknowledged the independence and
+integrity of Morocco and the sovereignty of the Sultan, it had shown
+little more regard for them than had the Anglo-French and Franco-Spanish
+agreements of 1904-5. While the open door had been allowed, the French
+and Spanish military control in Morocco assured to those two Powers the
+main economic advantages. In view of the terms of the Franco-Spanish
+accord of 1905, it was certain that those Powers would not preserve
+equality of economic treatment. France and Spain had both fought
+internationalization so effectively that the international supervision
+established was entirely inadequate to command respect. The idea that a
+Power might be charged by the other Powers with the exercise of a
+mandate for the sake of the “backward people” had not as yet been
+seriously considered by any government. In February and March President
+Roosevelt and the German government had discussed the proposal of
+granting to France and Spain a mandate in Morocco “from all the Powers,
+under responsibility to all of them for the maintenance of equal rights
+and opportunities”[1218]—that is, for the advantage of the Western
+Powers not for that of Morocco—but the trouble lay in the absence of any
+existing machinery which would have enabled it to be put into effect.
+
+The reforms provided for were hardly more than a beginning. They were
+unsatisfactory both to the Moroccans and to the French and the Spanish.
+The Moroccan government was surprised at the outcome of the Conference,
+having expected that France would be arraigned before that body as
+before a tribunal. The mass of the Moroccan people remained hostile to
+reform; they were turning their homage more to the pretender and to
+Raisouli. Even those ministers who recognized the necessity for change
+denounced the Conference proposals as benefiting the Europeans and
+European trade in Morocco but not the Moroccan government. “The
+conference has turned Morocco over to the French,” said El Tores, a
+delegate to that assembly, to Dr. Rosen. He thought that either
+acceptance or rejection of the Conference act by the Sultan would be a
+misfortune.[1219] Ben Sliman, the Moroccan foreign minister, was equally
+despondent.
+
+
+He regarded the outlook after the decision of the Conference as simply
+hopeless [so Mr. Lowther reported his assertions]. If the Makhzen
+assented to the Conference’s decision there was an end to the Moorish
+Government, as a Government. The ports were thereby practically handed
+over for ever to the Powers. These were of importance to Europeans and
+of a certain financial value to the Sultan although they were but a
+small part of the country and their populations a mere handful of those
+of the Sultan’s subjects, who, in normal times, had acknowledged His
+Majesty’s rule, and paid taxes. But the decisions of the Conference Ben
+Sliman considered, in practice if not in theory, left the Sultan no
+means or hopes of doing anything to re-establish order and restore
+prosperity to the vast mass of his people, to whose needs at large the
+proposed reforms were totally inadequate and he was deeply disappointed
+with them.
+
+His Excellency would therefore infinitely have preferred the reforms to
+have been so framed that the Powers would have exercised some kind of
+direction, assistance and advice at the Court itself, the influence of
+which would have been, in course of time, felt throughout the country to
+the great advantage of all concerned. As it was, the Makhzen seemed to
+be left in as impotent and ridiculous a position as ever in the eyes of
+its subjects.[1220]
+
+
+Opinion at court was divided upon whether to accept the decisions of the
+Conference or not. When the dean of the diplomatic corps in Tangier
+officially communicated the Conference act to the Sultan, the latter
+tried to delay a decision and to discuss certain points. But on June 18
+he reluctantly signed the act with reservations. All indications pointed
+to the opposition of the Moroccan government to any serious efforts at
+reforms.[1221]
+
+The Conference had made inadequate provisions for coping with Moroccan
+opposition. There could be no half-measures in handling Morocco. Europe
+had to leave her alone entirely or give the mandatory Powers complete
+freedom to “shoot” reforms into the land. The right to police eight
+towns would just suffice to involve France and Spain in a series of
+petty, indecisive clashes with the natives. If they wished to employ
+more military authority, they would have either to obtain the permission
+of the Powers or to risk another international crisis by taking an
+unauthorized initiative. As soon as the execution of the reforms should
+begin, the inadequacy of all this diplomatic activity would become
+evident. The Moroccan problem had not been solved.
+
+
+[Footnote 1070: The Conference opened later than was originally planned,
+the immediate cause being the marriage of the Infanta Maria Theresa,
+sister of King Alfonso, to Prince Ferdinand of Bavaria, on Jan. 12. The
+King of Spain had wanted in December to move the meeting place to
+Madrid, and both the French and German governments had agreed; but as
+the Sultan opposed, the proposal had been dropped. Bülow’s opinion was
+that it made no difference to Germany whether the Conference met at
+Madrid or Algeciras or elsewhere. “It was a mistake that we originally
+settled ourselves on Tangier,” he wrote, Dec. 25, 1905. See _G.P._, XXI,
+25 ff., Nos. 6911, 6913 ff.; _B.D._, III, 160, No. 196; _L.j., 1901-5_,
+No. 368; Ministère des Affaires Etrangères, _Documents diplomatiques.
+Affaires du Maroc, 1906, Protocols et comptes rendus de la Conférence
+d’Algéciras_ (1906), 5, No. 2 (hereafter referred to as _L.j., 1906_).]
+
+[Footnote 1071: Tardieu, _La Conf. d’Algés_, pp. 90 ff., 503 f.;
+Radowitz to F. O., Jan. 17, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 96, No. 6952. Tardieu’s
+book contains almost an official account of the Conference from the
+French side. He was present as representative of _Le Temps_ and had
+access to the fullest information, as his articles showed. His book is
+an excellent example of patriotic historiography carried almost to a
+hysterical extreme, and his interpretations have to be read with the
+greatest caution. Dr. Hammann criticized the work when it appeared in
+1907 in two articles, one in _Grenzboten_, 1907, p. 12, the other in the
+_Kölnische Zeitung_, March 30, 1907 (editor’s note, _G.P._, XXI, 92 f.).
+See also the masterly criticism of French policy by Dickinson, _The
+International Anarchy 1904-1914_, pp. 134 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 1072: Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 5, 1906, _B.D._, III, 243, No.
+268; Tardieu, pp. 85 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1073: Tardieu, pp. 100 ff.; Radowitz to F. O., Jan. 16, 1906,
+_G.P._, XXI, 92 f., No. 6949; Révoil to Rouvier, Jan. 18, 1906, _L.j.,
+1906_, 11, No. 4.]
+
+[Footnote 1074: Radowitz to F. O., Jan. 16, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 92 f.,
+No. 6949; Tardieu, pp. 100 ff.; _L.j., 1906_, pp. 9 f.; Nicolson to
+Grey, Jan. 18, 1906, _B.D._, III, 229, No. 248.]
+
+[Footnote 1075: _L.j., 1906_, 264 ff., No. 37.]
+
+[Footnote 1076: _Ibid._, 5 ff., No. 3, and following documents; Radowitz
+to F. O., Jan. 12, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 91, No. 6947; Bülow to Radowitz,
+Jan. 15, 1906, _ibid._, 92, No. 6948; Radowitz to Bülow, Jan. 26, 1906,
+_ibid._, 119 ff., No. 6967; Tardieu, pp. 100 ff.; Nicolson to Grey, Jan.
+19, 1906, _B.D._, III, 230 f., No. 249.]
+
+[Footnote 1077: Nicolson to Grey, Jan. 21, 1906, _B.D._, III, 231 ff.,
+Nos. 250 f.; Monts to F. O., Jan. 28, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 126, No. 6970;
+Radowitz to F. O., Jan. 31, 1906, _ibid._, 130 f., No. 6975.]
+
+[Footnote 1078: Révoil wished to push matters into the open sessions of
+the Conference as much as possible, where he would have more support
+(Tardieu, pp. 136 ff.; Radowitz to Bülow, Jan. 26, 1906, _G.P._, XXI,
+119 f., No. 6967).]
+
+[Footnote 1079: As seen below, the German government was proposing
+several alternative solutions of that question, and the German delegates
+seem also to have been discussing others on their own initiative. See
+Nicolson to Grey, Jan. 25 and 27, 1906, _B.D._, III, 235, No. 256; 239
+f., Nos. 262 f.; Tardieu, pp. 144 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 1080: Nicolson to Grey, Jan. 24, 25, 26, 1906, _B.D._, III,
+234, No. 254; 235 f., Nos. 256 f.; 236 ff., Nos. 259 f.; 239 f., Nos.
+262 f.; Tardieu, pp. 136 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 1081: Radowitz to F. O., Jan. 29, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 128 ff.,
+No. 6974.; Tardieu, pp. 141 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 1082: Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 3, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 136 f.,
+No. 6980; Tardieu, pp. 148 ff.; Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 4 and 5, 1906,
+_B.D._, III, 242, No. 266; 243 f., No. 268.]
+
+[Footnote 1083: Bülow to Radowitz, Jan. 26, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 114, No.
+6965.]
+
+[Footnote 1084: Bülow to Radowitz, Jan. 30, 1906, _ibid._, 128, No.
+6973; Radowitz to F. O., Jan. 29 and 31, 1906, _ibid._, 128 ff., Nos.
+6974 f.; Bülow to Radowitz, Feb. 2, 1906, _ibid._, 132 ff., No. 6977;
+Tardieu, p. 142.]
+
+[Footnote 1085: Bülow to Sternburg, Jan. 20, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 99 ff.,
+No. 6956; Tardieu, pp. 160 ff. A proposal similar to No. 1 had been made
+to Roosevelt by Bülow earlier in January (Bülow to Sternburg, Jan. 6,
+1906, _G.P._, XXI, 54 f., No. 6926). Bülow also offered to support Italy
+in seeking a general mandate on the police, manifestly in order to
+create antagonism between Italy and France. The offer was rejected and
+was soon dropped by Bülow who feared that Italy might later help France
+penetrate Morocco in return for French aid to Italy in Tripoli. See
+Bülow to Monts, Jan. 5, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 53 f., No. 6925; Bülow to
+Radowitz, Jan. 26, 1906, _ibid._, 114 f., No. 6965; Tardieu, pp. 146 f.
+There is no proof in the published British and German documents of
+Tardieu’s assertion that in January the German government also offered
+to support Spain in seeking this general mandate. See _ibid._, pp. 145,
+155 f. Cf. Cartwright to Grey, Jan. 22, 1906, _B.D._, III, 233, No. 252;
+Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 6, 1906, _ibid._, 244, No. 270.]
+
+[Footnote 1086: Tardieu, p. 146 n.; Bülow to Sternburg, Jan. 27, 1906,
+_G.P._, XXI, 123 ff., No. 6968.]
+
+[Footnote 1087: Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 3, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 136 f.,
+No. 6980; Tardieu, pp. 148 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 1088: The German government did not desire British mediation,
+as it feared that Great Britain might try to pose as the protector of
+France and strengthen the Entente Cordiale (Bülow to Radowitz, Jan. 26,
+1906, _G.P._, XXI, 114 f., No. 6965).]
+
+[Footnote 1089: Sternburg to F. O., Jan. 23, 1906, _ibid._, 102 f., No.
+6958.]
+
+[Footnote 1090: Bülow to Sternburg, Jan. 27, 1906, _ibid._, 123 ff., No.
+6968; 127, No. 6972. On Feb. 3 Goluchowski declared to the German
+Ambassador that Austria would go with her ally on the questions of the
+police and the bank “through thick and thin” (Holstein to Wedel, Feb. 4,
+1906, _ibid._, 137, No. 6981). Dr. Kriege, of the German foreign office,
+was sent on a special mission to Vienna on Feb. 2 to gain the Austrian
+support (memo. by Kriege, Feb. 4, 1906, _ibid._, 137 ff., No. 6982;
+Wedel to F. O., Feb. 5, 1906, _ibid._, 140, No. 6983). A cabinet crisis
+in Italy on Feb. 1 prevented the German government from taking any
+immediate steps to gain Italy’s active support. But Bülow expected
+Visconti Venosta to be willing to mediate. On Feb. 8 a new government
+was formed in Rome under Sonnino (Bülow to Radowitz, Feb. 7, 1906,
+_ibid._, 143 ff., No. 6987).]
+
+[Footnote 1091: Bülow to Sternburg, Feb. 1, 1906, _ibid._, 131, No.
+6976. Bülow also instructed Sternburg to interest the American
+financiers in the Moroccan state bank so that they would press their
+government to oppose the French plan and to favor the German one. At the
+Chancellor’s request, the German banker, Mendelssohn, who was to take
+charge of German interests in the Moroccan bank, endeavored to arouse
+the Dutch, American, and Austrian bankers in the same way. See Bülow to
+Radowitz, Feb. 7, 1906, _ibid._, 145 f., No. 6987; Sternburg to F. O.,
+Feb. 8, 1906, _ibid._, 148, No. 6989.]
+
+[Footnote 1092: Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 5, 1906, _ibid._, 140 f., No.
+6984; Tardieu, pp. 152 f.; Dennis, _Adventures in American Diplomacy_,
+p. 500; Nicolson to Grey, Jan. 27, 1906, _B.D._, III, 239, No. 262.]
+
+[Footnote 1093: Nicolson reported that Tattenbach argued as follows: “He
+observed that situation had completely changed since Conference had been
+agreed upon, and that now _vis-a-vis_ to France I was exactly in the
+same position as the other delegates. He continued that if I urged my
+French colleague to make all required concessions on police question, my
+words would be decisive; while if I declined to say those words, I
+should be practically encouraging my French colleague to resist; and he
+hinted that if the Conference fell through a great deal of the
+responsibility would fall on me.” See Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 4, 1906,
+_B.D._, III, 241, No. 265; 242 f., No. 267; Grey to Nicolson, Feb. 13,
+1906, _ibid._, 251 f., No. 281; Tardieu, pp. 147 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1094: Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 6, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 141 f.,
+No. 6985; Tardieu, pp. 153 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1095: The Spanish undersecretary of state for foreign affairs,
+M. Ojeda, had approved it. See Bülow to Radowitz, Feb. 7, 1906, _G.P._,
+XXI, 145 and note, No. 6987. On the German attempts to win over Spain
+see Cartwright to Grey, Jan. 22, 1906, _B.D._, III, 233, No. 252;
+Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 6, 1906, _ibid._, 244, No. 270.]
+
+[Footnote 1096: Bülow to Radowitz, Feb. 7, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 143 ff.,
+No. 6987.]
+
+[Footnote 1097: Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 9, 10, 1906, _ibid._, 148 f.,
+No. 6990; 155, No. 6996; Dennis, pp. 501 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1098: Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 9, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 151, No.
+6992.]
+
+[Footnote 1099: Sternburg to F. O., Feb. 8, 1906, _ibid._, 147 f., No.
+6989.]
+
+[Footnote 1100: Bülow to Radowitz, Feb. 9, 12, 1906, _ibid._, 149 ff.,
+No. 6991; 155 f., No. 6997; Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 10, 1906, _ibid._,
+155, No. 6996; Tardieu, p. 172.]
+
+[Footnote 1101: Quoted from a memorandum given by Radowitz to Révoil on
+that date. See Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 13, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 162 f.,
+No. 7004; Tardieu, pp. 175 f.; Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 14, 1906, _B.D._,
+III, 253, No. 284.]
+
+[Footnote 1102: Radowitz to Bülow, Jan. 26, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 122, No.
+6967; Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 9, 1906, _ibid._, 151, No. 6992. See the
+documents in _B.D._, III, 227 ff., Nos. 246 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 1103: Schoen to F. O., Feb. 12, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 156 f., No.
+6998; Tardieu, pp. 158 f., 194 ff.; Witte, _Memoirs_, pp. 298 ff.;
+Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 13, 1906, _B.D._, III, 249 f., No. 279.]
+
+[Footnote 1104: Wedel to F. O., Feb. 12 and 14, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 157
+ff., No. 6999; 166 f., No. 7007.]
+
+[Footnote 1105: Holstein to Radolin, Feb. 10, 1906, _ibid._, 152 ff.,
+No. 6994.]
+
+[Footnote 1106: Tardieu, pp. 198 ff.; Bülow to Monts, Feb. 10, 1906,
+_G.P._, XXI, 154, No. 6995.]
+
+[Footnote 1107: Bülow to Radolin, Feb. 7 and 10, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 146
+f., No. 6988; 152, No. 6993. Holstein was the inspirer of these
+dispatches. See Holstein to Radolin, Feb. 10, 1906, _ibid._, 152 ff.,
+No. 6994. On the press war see also Tardieu, pp. 167 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 1108: Bülow to Monts, Feb. 13, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 159 f. and
+note, No. 7000; Tardieu, p. 195. The telegram to Washington, dispatched
+the next day, was not of identical wording with the others but to the
+same effect (Bülow to Sternburg, Feb. 14, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 163 f., No.
+7005).]
+
+[Footnote 1109: Tardieu, pp. 74, 163, 167, 176 f., 196; _G.P._, XXI, 152
+n.]
+
+[Footnote 1110: Grey to Nicolson, Feb. 12, 1906, _B.D_, III, 248 f., No.
+278; Grey to Lascelles, Feb. 14, 1906, _ibid._, 254 f., No. 285;
+Metternich to F. O., Feb. 14, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 164 ff., No. 7006.]
+
+[Footnote 1111: Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 6 and 7, 1906, _B.D._, III, 244,
+No. 269; 245, No. 271; Tardieu, p. 154. The accusation was not
+deserved.]
+
+[Footnote 1112: Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 13, 1906, _B.D._, III, 249 f.,
+No. 279; Spring Rice to Grey, Feb. 13, 1906, _ibid._, 253, No. 283;
+Tardieu, pp. 79 f., 158 ff., 204 f., 246 ff.; Witte, pp. 298 ff.;
+_G.P._, XXI, 125 f. n.; Goetz, _Briefe Wilhelms II an den Zaren
+1894-1914_, pp. 386 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1113: According to Bompard, the Russian government was not
+certain that the Liberal government in London would support France as
+whole-heartedly as its predecessor had done. Grey’s assertions early in
+February reassured it entirely (Spring Rice to Knollys, Jan. 31, 1906,
+and Spring Rice to Grey, Feb. 16, 1906, Gwynn, _The Letters and
+Friendships of Sir Cecil Spring Rice_, II, 62 ff.; Spring Rice to Grey,
+Feb. 7 and 8, 1906, _B.D._, III, 245 f., Nos. 272 f.; Grey to Spring
+Rice, Feb. 8, 1906, _ibid._, 246, No. 274).]
+
+[Footnote 1114: Sternburg to F. O., March 17 and 18, 1906, _G.P._, XXI,
+300 ff., Nos. 7112 f.; Bishop, _The Life and Times of Theodore
+Roosevelt_, I, 489.]
+
+[Footnote 1115: Tardieu, pp. 160 ff.; Bishop, I, 489.]
+
+[Footnote 1116: Roosevelt to Reid, March 1, 1906, quoted in Royal
+Cortissoz, _The Life of Whitelaw Reid_ (New York, 1921), II, 329 f.,
+347; Sternburg to F. O., March 17 and 18, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 300 ff.,
+Nos. 7112 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1117: Tardieu, pp. 161 f.; Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 11, 1906,
+_B.D._, III, 246 ff., Nos. 275 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1118: Radolin to F. O., Feb. 13 and 15, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 160
+f., No. 7001; 171 f., No. 7010; Tardieu, pp. 200 f.; Grey to Bertie,
+Feb. 13, 1906, _B.D._, III, 250 f., No. 280; Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 16,
+1906, _ibid._, 259 f., No. 290.]
+
+[Footnote 1119: Tardieu, pp. 179 f., 249 ff. White was very critical of
+the German tactics in his dispatches to Washington, especially of the
+German attempt to negotiate directly with the Quai d’Orsay while the
+Conference was going on (White to Root, Feb. 11, 1905, Dennis, p. 502
+and note; Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 15, 1906, _B.D._, III, 257 f., No.
+287).]
+
+[Footnote 1120: Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 16, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 172, No.
+7011; Tardieu, p. 181; Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 17, 1906, _B.D._, III, 260
+f., No. 292. Révoil was contemplating an involved, vague reply when he
+talked to Nicolson. At the latter’s advice it was made concise and
+straightforward (Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 15, 1906, _ibid._, 256 ff., No.
+287).]
+
+[Footnote 1121: Root to Sternburg, Feb. 19, 1906, quoted in Bishop, I,
+489 ff., _G.P._, XXI, 181 ff., No. 7019; Tardieu, pp. 249 f., 180.]
+
+[Footnote 1122: Italy had been chosen for obvious reasons, for she was
+bound to France by the accords of 1900 and 1902 and to Germany by the
+Triple Alliance. As such, her choice might be acceptable to both Powers
+(Tardieu, p. 181).]
+
+[Footnote 1123: Bülow to Radowitz, Feb. 19, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 173 f.,
+No. 7013; Tardieu, pp. 187, 249 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 1124: Bülow’s minute to _G.P._, XXI, 183, No. 7019; Sternburg
+to Roosevelt, Feb. 22, 1906, in Bishop, I, 491 ff.; Bülow to Sternburg,
+Feb. 21, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 183 f., No. 7020; Tardieu, p. 250.]
+
+[Footnote 1125: Bülow to Sternburg, Feb. 21, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 183 f.,
+No. 7020; Sternburg to F. O., Feb. 23, 1906, _ibid._, 213, No. 7038.]
+
+[Footnote 1126: The plan was drawn up with the aid of Glasenapp of the
+Deutsche Bank and of Mendelssohn, who was to take over the German shares
+in the bank. See Bülow to Radowitz, Jan. 27, 1906; _ibid._, 115 ff., No.
+6966; _L.j., 1906_, pp. 114 ff.; Tardieu, pp. 186, 221 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 1127: _L.j., 1906_, pp. 117 f.; Tardieu, pp. 184 f., 221 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 1128: _L.j., 1906_, pp. 113 f., 120 ff., 136 ff.; Radowitz to
+F. O., Feb. 20, 22, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 204, No. 7031; 205, No. 7033;
+Tardieu, pp. 186, 221 ff.; Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 20, 1906, _B.D._, III,
+265 f., No. 298.]
+
+[Footnote 1129: Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 19, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 176 f.,
+No. 7015.]
+
+[Footnote 1130: _L.j., 1906_, pp. 113 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 1131: Rouvier suggested to Révoil that the representative of
+France, Germany, Great Britain, the United States, Spain, Russia, Italy,
+and Austria-Hungary meet informally and try to find a solution on the
+police. Nicolson and White opposed the idea as impracticable, and it was
+soon dropped (Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 16, 1906, _B.D._, III, 260, No.
+291).]
+
+[Footnote 1132: Schoen to F. O., Feb. 19, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 178 f., No.
+7017; Tardieu, pp. 194 f., 204 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1133: Tardieu, pp. 246 ff.; Schoen to F. O., Feb. 20, 1906,
+_G.P._, XXI, 192, No. 7025; Eulenburg to William II, Feb. 22, 1906,
+_ibid._, 194, No. 7027 and Anlage, Witte to Eulenburg, Feb. 20, 1906;
+Witte, p. 301.]
+
+[Footnote 1134: Bülow to Schoen, Feb. 21, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 193, No.
+7026; memo. by Bülow, Feb. 23, 1906, _ibid._, 197 f., No. 7028;
+Eulenburg to Witte, Feb. 27, 1906, _ibid._, 202 ff., No. 7030; Tardieu,
+pp. 195, 295.]
+
+[Footnote 1135: Schoen to F. O., Feb. 23, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 211 ff.,
+No. 7037; Witte, p. 301; Spring Rice to Grey, Feb. 24, 1906, _B.D._,
+III, 271 f., No. 308; 273 f., No. 311.]
+
+[Footnote 1136: Spring Rice to Grey, Feb. 28, 1906, _B.D._, III, 279,
+No. 320; Spring Rice to Knollys, March 1, 1906, Gwynn, II, 65 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1137: Tardieu, pp. 247, 249; Schoen to F. O., March 3, 1906,
+_G.P._, XXI, 234 f., No. 7052; Schoen to Bülow, March 4, 1906, _ibid._,
+251 ff., No. 7068. The article so embittered the German government that
+Bülow would not show it directly to the Emperor but informed him of it
+personally so as to take away the sting (see the minutes to the dispatch
+from Schoen to F. O., March 3, 1906, _ibid._, 235, No. 7052).]
+
+[Footnote 1138: A visit of the London City Council to Paris, Feb. 8,
+gave occasion for confirming the Entente Cordiale (_G.P._, XXI, 185 ff.
+and note, No. 7021). Grey also intimated to Metternich that France would
+be willing to eliminate the thirty-year limitation to commercial freedom
+in Morocco as provided for in the Anglo-French accord. See Metternich to
+F. O., Feb. 19 and 20, 1906, _ibid._, 179 ff., No. 7018; 185 ff., Nos.
+7021 f.; Grey to Lascelles, Feb. 19, 1906, _B.D._, III, 263 f., No.
+296.]
+
+[Footnote 1139: Spring Rice to Grey, Feb. 22, 24, 28, 1906, _B.D._, III,
+269, No. 303; 271 f., No. 308; 273 f., No. 311; 278 f., No. 320; Grey to
+Spring Rice, Feb. 20, 22, 1906, _ibid._, 264 f., No. 297; 270, No. 304;
+Grey to Spring Rice, Feb. 19, 1906, Gwynn, II, 65.]
+
+[Footnote 1140: Grey to Nicolson, Feb. 15, 1906, _B.D._, III, 258, No.
+288. Apparently it was not mentioned to the French at all.]
+
+[Footnote 1141: Memo. by Grey, Feb. 20, 1906, _ibid._, 266 f., No. 299.]
+
+[Footnote 1142: Sir Charles Hardinge, permanent undersecretary of state
+for foreign affairs, believed that the way to prevent Germany from
+attacking France because of some French action in Morocco was for Great
+Britain to inform Germany that she is “absolutely ‘solidaire’ with
+France as far as the Moroccan question is concerned.” He feared that if
+Great Britain did leave France in the lurch, “an agreement or alliance
+between France, Germany and Russia in the near future is certain” (memo.
+by Grey, Feb. 20, 1906, and Hardinge’s minute, _ibid._, 266 ff., No.
+299). Mr. Eyre Crowe, senior clerk in the British foreign office, a
+prejudiced, bitter opponent of Germany, suspected that Germany might
+demand and seize a port in Morocco or obtain a lease as she had done at
+Kiaouchau in China. He advised warning the Sultan against Germany. Sir
+Edward Grey regarded the proposal as premature so long as the Conference
+was sitting, but said that the eventualities referred to should be kept
+in mind (minutes to dispatch from Spring Rice to Grey, Feb. 24, 1906,
+_ibid._, 272, No. 308).]
+
+[Footnote 1143: Monts to Bülow, Feb. 13, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 168 f., No.
+7008; Monts to F. O., Feb. 13, 1906, _ibid._, 161 f., No. 7002; Bülow to
+Monts, Feb. 14, 1906, _ibid._, 162 and note, No. 7003; Monts to Bülow,
+Feb. 27, 1906, _ibid._, 230 ff., No. 7050; Monts to Bülow, March 11,
+1906, _ibid._, 286 ff., No. 7103; Monts to Bülow, Feb. 24, 1906,
+_ibid._, 216 f., No. 7043; Tardieu, pp. 198 f., 205 f.; Grey to Egerton,
+Feb. 19, 1906, _B.D._, III, 262, No. 295; Egerton to Grey, March 3,
+1906, _ibid._, 283, No. 325.]
+
+[Footnote 1144: “C’est la pire des solutions,” wrote Tardieu, p. 155 and
+elsewhere. See the conversation between Ojeda and Stumm reported by the
+latter on Feb. 20, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 189 ff., No. 7024; Tardieu, pp.
+155 ff., 199 f.; Cartwright to Grey, Jan. 22 and 26, 1906, _B.D._, III,
+233, No. 252; 236, No. 258.]
+
+[Footnote 1145: Tardieu writes that the instructions were “all that
+France wished” (Tardieu, pp. 207 f., 255).]
+
+[Footnote 1146: Tardieu has a long story about German threats and
+intimidations toward Spain between Feb. 11 and 20. The King of Spain, he
+writes, was angry, but Ojeda listened to the siren voice of Stumm, first
+secretary of the German embassy in Madrid. According to the German
+documents, Stumm had at least two conversations with Ojeda during
+February, one on Feb. 20, trying without success to influence Spain to
+support the German proposals (_G.P._, XXI, 145, 189 ff.). On the Spanish
+proposal see Tardieu, pp. 199 f., 188 ff., 207 ff.; Grey to Cartwright,
+Feb. 19, 1906, _B.D._, III, 262 n., No. 295; 271, No. 307; Cartwright to
+Grey, Feb. 21, 22, 24, 1906, _ibid._, 268 f., No. 301; 270 f., No. 305;
+273, No. 310; Grey to Nicolson, Feb. 22, 1906, _ibid._, 269, No. 302;
+Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 23, 1906, _ibid._, 271, No. 306.]
+
+[Footnote 1147: The Belgian government informed him that its delegate
+had orders to abstain from voting in case of a conflict, and to
+participate actively in the Conference only when the commercial
+interests of Belgium were involved. The Dutch government said that its
+delegate would vote with the majority. Sweden replied that she would
+abstain from voting in case of disagreement (Tardieu, p. 257).]
+
+[Footnote 1148: As Sir Edward Grey knew how interested Austria was in
+keeping Great Britain and Germany friendly, he impressed upon the
+Austrian government, Feb. 26, “how unfortunate” was the German stand on
+the police, and “how impossible it was to improve the relations between
+England and Germany as long as there was this dispute between Germany
+and France about a matter on which we had an Agreement with France which
+was publicly known to the whole world, and which had been the very
+beginning of our friendship with France” (Grey to Goschen, Feb. 26,
+1906, _B.D._, III, 276 f., No. 316).]
+
+[Footnote 1149: Tardieu, pp. 202 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1150: Wedel to F. O., Feb. 14 and 18, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 166
+f., No. 7007; 175 f., No. 7014. To the Italian and American governments
+Goluchowski openly censured the German attitude (Tardieu, p. 203, and
+above; Goschen to Grey, Feb. 24, 1906, _B.D._, III, 273, No. 309).]
+
+[Footnote 1151: Memo. by Bülow, Feb. 24, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 213 f., No.
+7039; Tardieu, pp. 257 ff.; Spring Rice to Grey, Feb. 28, 1906, _B.D._,
+III, 279, No. 320.]
+
+[Footnote 1152: Spring Rice to Grey, Feb. 28, 1906, _ibid._, 278, No.
+318; 279, No. 320.]
+
+[Footnote 1153: Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 26, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 177 f.,
+No. 7016; Tardieu, pp. 187, 266 f.; Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 26, 1906,
+_B.D._, III, 276, No. 315.]
+
+[Footnote 1154: Spring Rice to Grey, Feb. 24, 1906, _B.D._, III, 274,
+No. 311.]
+
+[Footnote 1155: Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 25 and 26, 1906, _ibid._, 274
+ff., Nos. 312 f.; Tardieu, Part III, chap. ii, _passim_, pp. 268 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 1156: Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 21, March 3, 1906, _G.P._, XXI,
+204 f., No. 7032; 233 f., No. 7051; Tardieu, pp. 143 ff., 227, 223 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 1157: Tardieu, pp. 275 ff.; _L.j., 1906_, pp. 159 ff.;
+Radowitz to F. O., March 3 and 9, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 233 f. and note,
+No. 7051; Nicolson to Grey, March 3, 1906, _B.D._, III, 282, No. 323;
+283 f., No. 326. The French press played up that vote as a great
+victory; the German press and government took the opposite view.
+Nevertheless, the German delegates complained to the Italian, Belgian,
+Spanish, and even the Austrian delegates about their actions; and the
+vote undoubtedly helped to accomplish the object of Nicolson and
+Révoil.]
+
+[Footnote 1158: _L.j., 1906_, pp. 168 ff.; Nicolson to Grey, March 7,
+1906, _B.D._, III, 285 ff., No. 330; Tardieu, pp. 283 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 1159: Nicolson to Grey, March 3 and 7, 1906, _B.D._, III, 282
+f., No. 324; 285, No. 328. On March 7 Grey again advised the Spanish
+government to stand firmly with France and Great Britain (Grey to de
+Bunsen, March 7, 1906, _ibid._, 285, No. 329).]
+
+[Footnote 1160: Tardieu states that on March 5 Tattenbach openly said so
+to several of the delegates (p. 291). Bülow also found it necessary to
+bolster up the courage of the German delegates. See memo. by Bülow,
+March 7, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 256, No. 7069. See also Metternich to F. O.,
+Feb. 20, 1906, _ibid._, 188, No. 7023; Radowitz to Bülow, Feb. 26, 1906,
+_ibid._, 217 ff., No. 7044; Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 27, March 5, 1906,
+_ibid._, 226, No. 7048; 243 ff., Nos. 7061 f. King Edward’s visit to
+Paris, March 4-5, at which time he showed special favor to Delcassé, was
+also a significant sign to the Germans (Lee, _King Edward VII_, II, 510;
+Bertie to Grey, March 5, 1906, _B.D._, III, 284, No. 327).]
+
+[Footnote 1161: On this episode see Tardieu, pp. 241 ff., 296; Grey to
+Bertie, Feb. 28, 1906, _B.D._, III, 278, No. 319; Bertie to Grey, March
+5, 1906, _ibid._, 284, No. 327; Nicolson to Grey, March 8, 1906,
+_ibid._, 288, No. 331; memos. by Holstein, Feb. 22, 1906, _G.P._, XXI,
+206 ff., and note, Nos. 7034 f.; Holstein to Radolin, March 4, 1906,
+_ibid._, 237, No. 7055; Radolin to F. O., Feb. 27, March 5 and 6, 1906,
+_ibid._, 225, No. 7047; 240 f., No. 7059; 250 f., No. 7067; Bülow to
+Radolin, March 5, 1906, _ibid._, 240, No. 7058. Courcel spoke to Louis,
+of the French foreign office, about the project on March 5. On the next
+day Rouvier mentioned it to Radolin, only to refuse it. On Holstein’s
+views see also Lascelles to Grey, March 1, 1906, _B.D._, III, 280 f. and
+inclosure, No. 321.]
+
+[Footnote 1162: Hammann, _Bilder_, pp. 37 f.; memo. by Holstein, Feb.
+22, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 208 f., No. 7035; Holstein to Radolin, March 4,
+1906, _ibid._, 237, No. 7055; _ibid._ p. 338, editor’s note.]
+
+[Footnote 1163: See the conversation with Tschirschky on March 16
+recorded by Zedlitz-Trützschler, _Zwölf Jahre am deutschen Kaiserhof_,
+pp. 146 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1164: Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 26, March 8, 1906, _G.P._, XXI,
+233 f., No. 7045; 262 f., No. 7077; _L.j., 1906_, pp. 187 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1165: Bülow to Radowitz, Feb. 28, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 224 f.,
+No. 7046.]
+
+[Footnote 1166: Goluchowski reluctantly agreed to mediate on that basis
+at first, but after learning of the vote of March 3 and after consulting
+Welsersheimb he changed his mind (Wedel to F. O. March 1 and 4, 1906,
+_ibid._, 228 ff., No. 7049; 238 f., No. 7056).]
+
+[Footnote 1167: Monts to Bülow, Feb. 27, 1906, _ibid._, 230 ff., No.
+7050; Radowitz to F. O., March 3, 1906, _ibid._, 235 f., No. 7053.]
+
+[Footnote 1168: Bülow to Radowitz, March 6 and 7, 1906, _ibid._, 245 f.
+and note, No. 7063; Bülow to Wedel, Bülow to Monts, March 6, 1906,
+_ibid._, XXI, 248 f. and note, No. 7065.]
+
+[Footnote 1169: _L.j., 1906_, pp. 183 ff.; Radowitz to F. O., March 8,
+1906, _G.P._, XXI, 261 ff., Nos. 7076 ff., Nicolson to Grey, March 8 and
+9, 1906, _B.D._, III, 288, No. 331; 289 ff., No. 334. Visconti Venosta,
+informed at the last minute of the proposed Austrian mediation, refused
+angrily to co-operate in it. Why he did so is difficult to see. He
+claimed that the Austrian project was not in keeping with the German
+view which he represented. This, however, seems a poor excuse, for he
+had approved the project when it was first suggested. It seems more
+likely that Visconti Venosta was seeking to avoid taking the Austro-
+German side publicly against France. The Austrian government was more
+alarmed at his refusal than was the German government, which consoled
+itself with the fact that the Italian delegate was performing useful
+work under cover. See Wedel to F. O., March 9 and 11, 1906, _G.P._, XXI,
+269, No. 7083; 271 f., No. 7087; Monts to F. O., March 7, 1906, _ibid._,
+257, No. 7070; Radowitz to F. O., March 11, 1906, _ibid._, 272 and note,
+No. 7088.]
+
+[Footnote 1170: _L.j., 1906_, pp. 189 ff.; Radowitz to F. O., March 10,
+1906, _G.P._, XXI, 270, No. 7085; Tardieu, p. 293; Nicolson to Grey,
+March 10, 1906, _B.D._, III, 292 f., No. 337. By these words Radowitz
+did not mean that Germany would accept the French terms, as Tardieu
+imagines (Tardieu, pp. 308 ff., 313).]
+
+[Footnote 1171: Nicolson to Grey, March 9 and 10, 1906, _B.D._, III, 288
+f., No. 332; 294, No. 338; Grey to Bertie, March 9, 1906, _ibid._, 289,
+No. 333; Bertie to Grey, March 10, 1906, _ibid._, 292, No. 336; Radowitz
+to F. O., March 8 and 10, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 261, No. 7075; 264 f., No.
+7079; 269 f., No. 7084; Dennis, p. 503. Cf. Tardieu, pp. 297 f., 308 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1172: Grey to Nicolson, March 10, 1906, _B.D._, III, 292, No.
+335.]
+
+[Footnote 1173: Bertie to Grey, March 2, 1906, _ibid._, 281 f., No.
+322.]
+
+[Footnote 1174: Tardieu, pp. 299 f., 309 f., 321, 328; Grey, _Twenty-
+five Years_, I, 103.]
+
+[Footnote 1175: Nicolson to Grey, March 9, 1906, _B.D._, III, 288 f.,
+No. 322; Bertie to Grey, March 10, 1906, _ibid._, 292, No. 336.]
+
+[Footnote 1176: Radolin to F. O., March 8, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 265 f.,
+No. 7080.]
+
+[Footnote 1177: On March 5, 6, and 7, Bülow showed no inclination to
+accept the French plan, but held firmly to the Austrian one. See Bülow
+to Wedel, March 5 and 6, 1906, _ibid._, 239, No. 7057; 248 f., No. 7065;
+memo. by Bülow, March 7, 1906, _ibid._, 256, No. 7069. He may, however,
+have made this statement to the Prince of Monaco without explaining that
+by “the most discreet control of an officer from a lesser Power” he
+really meant the Austrian plan and did not intend an acceptance of the
+French plan. Tardieu’s assumption that Bülow made the surrender and then
+receded from his concession after the fall of the French government on
+March 7, hoping to exploit this embarrassing situation, is, so far as we
+can tell, devoid of foundation (Tardieu, pp. 293 ff., 314 f.).]
+
+[Footnote 1178: Germany also refused to recede on the police in return
+for French concessions on the bank (Nicolson to Grey, March 10 and 11,
+1906, _B.D._, III, 294 f., Nos. 338 f.).]
+
+[Footnote 1179: Nicolson to Grey, March 11 and 12, 1906, _ibid._, 295
+f., No. 339; 297 ff., Nos. 341 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1180: Bertie to Grey, March 11, 1906, _ibid._, 296 f., No.
+340.]
+
+[Footnote 1181: Crowe’s minutes to the dispatch from Nicolson to Grey,
+March 12, 1906, _ibid._, 299, No. 342; Grey to Nicolson, March 12, 1906,
+_ibid._, 300, No. 344.]
+
+[Footnote 1182: Nicolson to Grey, March 11, 12, 14, 1906, _ibid._, 295,
+No. 339; 298, No. 341; 303, No. 349. Rouvier also approved this plan.
+See Hardinge to Nicolson, March 15, 1906, _ibid._, 305, No. 354.]
+
+[Footnote 1183: The number of censors was later increased to four, one
+each from Great Britain, Spain, France, and Germany. See Radowitz to F.
+O., March 8 and 11, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 263 f., No. 7078; 272 f., No.
+7089; _L.j., 1906_, pp. 152 f., 182, 189 ff.; Tardieu, pp. 291 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1184: Radowitz to F. O., March 12, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 279, No.
+7094.]
+
+[Footnote 1185: Radowitz to F. O., March 11, 1906, _ibid._, 273, No.
+7089.]
+
+[Footnote 1186: Radowitz to F. O., March 12, 1906, _ibid._, 274, No.
+7090.]
+
+[Footnote 1187: Quoted in _ibid._, p. 274 n.; and in Tardieu, p. 316.]
+
+[Footnote 1188: _G.P._, XXI, 274 ff., Nos. 7091 ff.; Tardieu, p. 318;
+Bishop, I, 495 ff. Bülow also sent a condensed telegram to the German
+banker, Mendelssohn, then in St. Petersburg negotiating a loan with
+Witte.]
+
+[Footnote 1189: Schoen to F. O., March 13, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 279 f.,
+No. 7095; Monts to F. O., March 13, 1906, _ibid._, 280 f., No. 7097;
+Wedel to F. O., March 13, 1906, _ibid._, 281 f., No. 7099; Metternich to
+F. O., March 13, 1906, _ibid._, 282 ff., No. 7100; Grey to Lascelles,
+March 13, 1906, _B.D._, III, 301 f., Nos. 347 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1190: Sternburg to F. O., March 7, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 259 ff.,
+No. 7074; Bishop, I, 493 ff.; Tardieu, pp. 251 f., 297.]
+
+[Footnote 1191: Bülow to Sternburg, March 12, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, No.
+7093; Bishop, I, 495 ff.; Tardieu, p. 335. The President’s intervention
+was extremely embarrassing to Bülow, who, after calling Sternburg’s
+attention to the difference between the original wording of the promise
+to Roosevelt sent from Berlin in the previous June and that sent to the
+President by Sternburg, threatened to disavow the Ambassador (_G.P._,
+XXI, 277 f., No. 7093). However, he did not do so.]
+
+[Footnote 1192: Sternburg to F. O., March 14, 1906, _ibid._, 285 f., No.
+7102.]
+
+[Footnote 1193: Bertie to Grey, March 15, 16, 17, 1906, _B.D._, III,
+306, Nos. 355 f.; 307 f., No. 358; 309 f., No. 361; Grey, I, 102 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 1194: Tardieu, pp. 327 f., 343; Radolin to F. O., March 14 and
+15, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 291 f., No. 7104; 295 ff., No. 7107; Bertie to
+Grey, March 16, 1906, _B.D._, III, 307 f., No. 358.]
+
+[Footnote 1195: Grey to Bertie, March 14, 1906, _B.D._, III, 303, No.
+350; 304, No. 352. In private both Sir Edward Grey and Sir Charles
+Hardinge greatly deplored the French refusal. On March 15 the former
+wrote to Sir Francis Bertie as follows: “I think the French made a great
+mistake in not closing at once with the German concession at Algeciras;
+they could have made it appear to be a diplomatic victory for
+themselves. . . . . Even the _Times_ correspondent of Algeciras thinks
+France ought not to break off on such a wretched point as Casa Blanca,
+which I believe is a useless hole. However, if she does, we shall back
+her up” (_ibid._, 304 f., No. 353). And on the same day Sir Charles
+Hardinge wrote to Sir Arthur Nicolson as follows: “. . . . If the
+Conference breaks up over such an absurd point as the Casablanca
+proposal _we_ shall be in a disagreeable position, as I remember well
+your opinion that the French position will not be difficult for Germany
+to undermine in Morocco and we shall then be exposed to any violent
+action which the French may take to retrieve their losses and shall find
+ourselves compelled to support France in a war against Germany. If the
+Conference is broken off I shall not like the outlook. I felt very
+strong about telling Cambon that in our opinion the Austrian proposal
+should be accepted rather than allow the Conference to fall through”
+(_ibid._, 305, No. 354).]
+
+[Footnote 1196: Grey to Bertie, March 15, 1905, _ibid._, 307, No. 357;
+Grey to Nicolson, March 14, 1906, _ibid._, 304, No. 351; Nicolson to
+Grey, March 15, 1906, _ibid._, 304 n., No. 351; Spring Rice to
+Lamsdorff, March 17, 1906, quoted in Grey, I, 107 f.; Tardieu, pp. 311
+f.]
+
+[Footnote 1197: Grey, I, 107 f.; Tardieu, pp. 329 f., 347.]
+
+[Footnote 1198: Radolin to F. O., March 17, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 303 f.,
+No. 7114; Tardieu, pp. 343 f.; Nicolson to Grey, March 18, 1906, _B.D._,
+III, 311, No. 363.]
+
+[Footnote 1199: _Journal officiel. Debats parlem._ (Chambre, March 14
+and 19, 1906), pp. 1290, 1438 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1200: The conversation on March 15 between Bourgeois and the
+Austrian Ambassador also pointed in this direction. See Bertie to Grey,
+March 16, 1906, _B.D._, III, 307 f., No. 358. See also Nicolson to Grey,
+March 17, 18, 21, 1906, _ibid._, 308, No. 359; 310 f., No. 362; 311 f.,
+No. 364; 314 f., No. 368; Grey to Bertie, March 17, 1906, _ibid._, 308
+f., No. 360.]
+
+[Footnote 1201: Bülow to Sternburg, March 16, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 293
+ff., No. 7106.]
+
+[Footnote 1202: Sternburg to F. O., March 17 and 18, 1906, _ibid._, 300
+ff., Nos. 7112 f.; 305 ff., No. 7115; Bishop, I, 497 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 1203: Bülow to Radowitz, March 16, 19, 22, 1906, _G.P._, XXI,
+298 f., No. 7110; 307 ff., No. 7117; 311, No. 7120; Radowitz to F. O.,
+March 17, 18, 21, 1906, _ibid._, 299 f., No. 7111; 306 f., No. 7116; 310
+f., No. 7119; Tardieu, pp. 344 ff.; Bülow to Sternburg, March 19, 1906,
+_G.P._, XXI, 309 f., No. 7118.]
+
+[Footnote 1204: Dennis, pp. 505 f.; Grey to Durand, March 22, 1906,
+_B.D._, III, 317, No. 374.]
+
+[Footnote 1205: Grey to Goschen, March 21, 1906, _B.D._, III, 315 f.,
+No. 371.]
+
+[Footnote 1206: On this episode see Nicolson to Grey, March 19, 21, 23,
+1906, _ibid._, 312 ff., Nos. 365 ff.; 315, No. 370; 318, No. 376; 319
+f., No. 379; Grey to de Bunsen, March 21, 1906, _ibid._, 316, No. 372;
+Bertie to Grey, March 22, 1906, _ibid._, 317 f., No. 375; Grey to
+Durand, March 22 and 23, 1906, _ibid._, 317, No. 374; 318, No. 377;
+Durand to Grey, March 24, 1906, _ibid._, 320 f., Nos. 380 f.; de Bunsen
+to Grey, March 27, 1906, _ibid._, 325 f., No. 385; Tardieu, pp. 385 ff.;
+Sternburg to F. O., March 21 and 22, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 311 f., No.
+7121; 321, No. 7126; Radowitz to F. O., March 21, 1906, _ibid._, 310 f.,
+No. 7119.]
+
+[Footnote 1207: The Austrian government was opposed to trying to mediate
+upon the basis of Roosevelt’s proposal (unsigned and undated memoir
+handed by Szogyeny to the German government, March 23, 1906, _G.P._,
+XXI, 321, No. 7127).]
+
+[Footnote 1208: France could afford to make the concession on the bank
+because she had assured herself of the votes of Italy, Great Britain,
+Spain, Belgium, and the United States, which with her own three votes
+would constitute a majority. On this discussion see Tardieu, pp. 297,
+342, 347 ff.; _L.j., 1906_, pp. 196 ff.; Bülow to Radowitz, March 24,
+1906, _G.P._, XXI, 322 f., No. 7129; Radowitz to F. O., March 16, 23,
+25, 26, 1906, _ibid._, 297, No. 7109; 322, No. 7128; 324 ff., No. 7131;
+326 f., Nos. 7132 f.; Nicolson to Grey, March 23, 1906, _B.D._, III, 319
+f., No. 379.]
+
+[Footnote 1209: Tardieu, pp. 362, 365 ff.; Radowitz to F. O., March 26,
+1906, _G.P._, XXI, Nos. 7132 f.; Nicolson to Grey, March 26, 27, 1906,
+_B.D._, III, 321, No. 382; 322 ff., No. 383.]
+
+[Footnote 1210: This publication, which was another answer to the
+exaggerated article in the _Lokalanzeiger_ on March 12, angered the
+German government. A short time previously Bülow had asked the Russian
+government to use its influence in moderating the anti-German campaign
+of the French press, especially of Tardieu in _Le Temps_. Instead of
+doing so, the Russian government issued this denial that it had ever
+advised France to accept the Austrian police proposal and asserted that
+Russia had never ceased and would not cease from acting toward France as
+a faithful ally. The German government complained to the Russian
+government against its so manifestly taking the French side, and
+threatened to refuse German participation in the forthcoming Russian
+loan. Both Lamsdorff and Witte were impressed by the vigor of the
+complaints, and tried to explain the affair away. Nelidow had endeavored
+to influence Tardieu, they said, and had spoken to him in general terms
+of the instructions which he had just received. To the Ambassador’s
+amazement, he had discovered an entirely false account of these
+instructions published in _Le Temps_. On demanding an explanation from
+Tardieu, the latter said that he had obtained his information in the
+French foreign office. Both ministers as well as the Ambassador
+expressed their regrets over the affair, and Lamsdorff published a
+correct version of the instructions. But as Schoen said, the latter
+version did not change the previous one much. Osten-Sacken weakened the
+Russian explanation by admitting to Tschirschky that Nelidow himself had
+given an “excerpt” of the instructions to the offending journalist. So
+the German government was not appeased by the excuses (see Bülow to
+Schoen, March 22, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 312 f., No. 7122, and following
+documents). As a matter of fact, those instructions were published on
+purpose to impress upon Germany that Russia held to the Dual Alliance
+and did not regard the Björkö accord as binding. See Witte, pp. 298 ff.;
+Iswolsky, _Recollections of a Foreign Minister_, pp. 23 f.; Tardieu, pp.
+330 ff.; Nicolson to Grey, March 21, 1906, _B.D._, III, 315, No. 369;
+Spring Rice to Grey, March 21, 1906, _ibid._, 316 f., No. 373.]
+
+[Footnote 1211: Even the Russian and Spanish delegates considered this
+matter of no importance. See Tardieu, pp. 361 ff.; Radowitz to Bülow,
+March 28, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 330 f., No. 7137.]
+
+[Footnote 1212: Sternburg to F. O., March 24, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 324,
+No. 7130.]
+
+[Footnote 1213: Radowitz to F. O., March 26 and 27, 1906, _ibid._, 326
+ff., Nos. 7132 ff.; Radowitz to Bülow, March 28, 1906, _ibid._, 330 f.,
+No. 7137; Nicolson to Grey, March 27, 1906, _B.D._, 324 f., No. 384;
+Tardieu, pp. 371 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 1214: On these negotiations see Tardieu, pp. 378 ff. Almodovar
+tried to reopen the question of Tangier with the French on April 1 but
+had no success (_ibid._, pp. 394 ff.; see also _L.j., 1906_, p. 239).]
+
+[Footnote 1215: A Swiss was selected at France’s wish because
+Switzerland was so little interested in Morocco. See Nicolson to Grey,
+March 28, 1906, _B.D._, III, 326 f., No. 386.]
+
+[Footnote 1216: Tardieu, pp. 396 ff.; _L.j., 1906_, p. 210; Lee, II,
+362.]
+
+[Footnote 1217: _L.j., 1906_, pp. 196 ff.; Radowitz to F. O., March 27
+and 31, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 328 ff., Nos. 7134 ff.; 331 f., No. 7138;
+Radowitz to Bülow, March 28, 1906, _ibid._, 330 f., No. 7137; Tardieu,
+pp. 396 ff. The final act is found in _L.j., 1906_, pp. 262 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 1218: Bishop, I, 492, 494, 496 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 1219: Rosen to Bülow, May 17, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 601 f., No.
+7276.]
+
+[Footnote 1220: Lowther to Grey, April 22, 1906, _B.D._, III, 338, No.
+402.]
+
+[Footnote 1221: Grey to Nicolson, March 12, 1906, _ibid._, 299 f., No.
+343; Nicolson to Grey, March 13, April 3, 1906, _ibid._, 301, No. 346;
+330, No. 392; Lowther to Grey, April 17 and 22, 1906, _ibid._, 337 ff.,
+Nos. 401 f.; 346 f. and inclosure, No. 412; memo. by Geoffray, Aug. 31,
+1906, _ibid._, 341 ff., No. 405; Tardieu, pp. 425 ff.]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+
+ CONCLUSION
+
+
+The conclusion of the Conference relaxed the tension in Europe and
+cleared the way for a gradual improvement in the relations of the
+Powers. Both sides expressed satisfaction with the results, which,
+according to official interpretation, left behind neither victor nor
+vanquished.[1222] None the less it was evident that Germany had been
+defeated. She had tried to obtain a material interest in Morocco; she
+had endeavored to break the Entente Cordiale and therewith the other
+French ententes; she had sought to disrupt or to modify the Dual
+Alliance. And she had failed in every effort. In attempting to restore
+her dominating position of the time before the formation of the Entente
+Cordiale, Germany had only driven France, Great Britain, and Russia into
+closer intimacy and had furthered the very alignment of the Powers which
+she had feared. By defending an international right which no one else
+valued she had permitted her isolation, except for the support of
+Austria, to be exposed to all the world. At the Conference she had
+forced Russia, Italy, and even the United States reluctantly to take the
+French side. Germany had entirely miscalculated the situation.[1223]
+
+The German statesmen realized that their international position had
+grown more serious. Italy’s meager support at the Conference was further
+proof that Germany could not rely upon that ally.[1224] The increased
+importance of Austria to Germany was tacitly admitted when, on April 13,
+the Emperor William thanked Count Goluchowski for playing the “brilliant
+second” at the Conference and promised him: “You can also be certain of
+similar service from me in a similar case.”[1225] Prince Bülow, whom his
+master had not consulted beforehand, warned him, however, “(1) that our
+relations with Austria have now become more important than ever, since
+that state is our only reliable ally; (2) that we must let our relative
+political isolation be noticed by the Austrians as little as
+possible.”[1226] And in September the Emperor commented sarcastically:
+“Fine prospects! In the future we can count on the Franco-Russian
+Alliance, Anglo-French Entente Cordiale and Anglo-Russian Entente, with
+Spain, Italy, and Portugal as appendages thereto in the second
+line!”[1227]
+
+To counteract this isolation the German government could do little for
+the time being except remain quiet.[1228] It permitted relations with
+Italy to continue as before.[1229] It assumed a “correct but reserved
+attitude toward France.”[1230] It refused to sanction German
+participation in the Russian loan, but otherwise remained on friendly
+terms with that Power.[1231] Its main desire was to reach some kind of
+an understanding with Great Britain so as to share in the entente
+movement.[1232] Anglo-German relations did improve, but the British
+government replied to German soundings that more time should elapse
+before the two governments should attempt any concerted efforts to bring
+their countries closer together.[1233]
+
+German public opinion was dissatisfied with the way in which its foreign
+affairs were being conducted; its alarm over the international situation
+increased as the year progressed. When the debate in the Reichstag on
+that subject, delayed because of the Chancellor’s illness, was held on
+November 14, Herr Bassermann of the National Liberal party remarked as
+follows:
+
+
+Today the Triple Alliance has no further practical utility. The Italian
+press and population lean more and more towards France. Austria has been
+too much praised for this rôle of “brilliant second” which she herself
+declined. The Franco-Russian Alliance remains intact, and the
+disposition of France towards us is less friendly than formerly. The
+explanations at Cronberg between the English and German sovereigns does
+not prevent England from pursuing her old policy of isolating us. We
+live in an era of alliances between other nations. . . . . Our policy
+lacks tranquillity and consistency, and we see brutal hands derange well
+prepared plans.[1234]
+
+
+As these criticisms were widespread, Prince Bülow replied in a long and
+carefully prepared speech. Admitting the deep hostility of France to
+Germany, he expressed the hope that the two nations would live
+peacefully together. As to Anglo-German relations he declared: “A long
+period of misunderstanding lies behind us. The needle of the political
+barometer has happily gone from rain and wind to changing.” He denied
+that any deep antagonisms divided the two countries and that the German
+fleet was a menace to Great Britain. He suggested that time should be
+allowed for the two nations to approach each other. “We have no
+thought,” he said, “of wishing to push ourselves in between France and
+Russia or France and England.” He announced that “for some time
+negotiations between Russia and England have been under way which
+promise that an understanding will be reached over certain Central
+Asiatic regions. . . . .” He added: “We have no reason at all to disturb
+these negotiations or to regard their probable result with mistrustful
+eyes.” But he issued the following warning: “The Entente Cordiale
+without good relations between the Powers and Germany would be a danger
+to European peace. . . . . Such an encirclement is not possible without
+the exercise of a certain pressure. Pressure produces counter-pressure,
+from pressure and counter-pressure explosions may finally arise.” He
+denied that Germany was isolated and testified to the loyalty of her two
+allies; but he declared that Germany was strong enough to defend herself
+alone. Urging the nation not to be uneasy, he said: “More than once we
+have been in situations where the danger of a general grouping against
+us lay nearer than today. . . . . The political world is still agitated
+by a certain excitement which calls for carefulness and prudence, but
+gives no cause for pusillanimity.” He concluded with a vigorous defense
+of his own and the Emperor’s methods of conducting foreign affairs. His
+words were widely applauded, even though they did not assuage German
+fears or stop criticism.[1235]
+
+The satisfaction of the French and British governments with the results
+of the Conference was real. Although France had had to recognize the
+international character of Moroccan reforms, she had practically
+asserted her position in that land. She had also preserved her ententes
+and alliance against Germany’s attacks, and had herself shown a
+determined spirit hitherto lacking in the Third Republic. The British
+government had had no direct interest in the Moroccan crisis except from
+the point of view of general policy, but it was well pleased that the
+Entente Cordiale had stood the test, that it had grown firmer than
+before.[1236]
+
+Out of this crisis the Entente Cordiale emerged as a lasting dynamic
+combination for checking Germany. As Sir Edward Grey remarked to the
+French Ambassador, July 9, 1906, “If we [Great Britain] were called on
+to take sides [between France and Germany], we must take sides with
+France as at Algeciras. As long, however, as Germany kept quiet, there
+was no reason for trouble, and things would go on quietly.”[1237] The
+British Foreign Secretary did not thereby give France a blank check
+against Germany, nor had he done so during the crisis. He had cautioned
+the French that British support would in last analysis depend upon
+public opinion. But as the crisis at the Conference in March had shown,
+he could be forced to take the French side even though he disapproved of
+it.
+
+The Entente Cordiale was so necessary to both Powers and yet so loose in
+form that it acquired a peculiar character. Dependent not upon the
+written word but upon feeling, it had constantly to be kept warm. It
+partook more of the nature of a jealous engagement than of a trustworthy
+and tolerant marriage. Each party was particularly mistrustful of any
+playing by the other with Germany. Still other causes divided them from
+Germany. They regarded the latter’s interference in the Moroccan affair
+as gratuitous and unjustified. “All that is necessary,” wrote Sir Edward
+Grey in May, 1906, “is for the Germans to realize that they have got
+nothing to complain of.”[1238] France and Great Britain feared that
+Germany might attempt another aggression. As the British Foreign
+Secretary stated in June, 1906, implying an accusation in doing so, “The
+Germans do not realize that England has always drifted or deliberately
+gone into opposition to any Power which establishes a hegemony in
+Europe.”[1239] The French and English believed so firmly that German
+diplomacy called for the arousing of discord between Powers at every
+opportunity that they were almost reluctant to have any dealings with
+the _Wilhelmstrasse_. They saw German intrigues everywhere—in Persia, in
+Abyssinia,[1240] in Paris, in London. When the German Ambassador in
+Paris spoke in July of a detente in Anglo-German relations, the French
+and British governments suspected therein an attempt to weaken the
+Entente Cordiale.[1241] Each government, therefore, was cool toward the
+renegade Power. “When one recovers from a year’s sickness,” stated the
+semiofficial _Le Temps_ with reference to Franco-German relations, “the
+convalescence cannot be immediate.”[1242] Sir Edward Grey appeared
+friendlier; in July he described Anglo-German relations as again normal.
+But he refused Germany’s bid for an understanding because public opinion
+was not prepared and especially because France would object. Count
+Metternich remarked to him on July 31 that M. Delcassé’s policy had been
+to encircle Germany and that at present the British and French press
+also asserted that this aim should be accomplished with the help of
+Russia. The Count warned Sir Edward Grey that that dangerous game might
+call forth a situation which would make it necessary for Germany to
+break the circle.
+
+
+A peaceful policy on the other hand is [he said] to extend the hand to
+Germany and to draw her into the circle of the others. . . . . But so
+long as in England the German attempts at _rapprochement_ are repulsed
+through fear of arousing displeasure among the French, it appears to me
+that the policy of creating a balance of power is preferred here to that
+of drawing Germany into the circle of friendship.
+
+
+The Foreign Secretary denied that the policy of agreement with Russia
+was directed in any way against Germany. But when the Ambassador asked
+“Are, openly avowed, friendly relations with Germany compatible with
+England’s friendship with France?” he replied, “That depends on German
+politics.” The Ambassador immediately countered, “No, it rather seems to
+depend on French interpretation of German politics.”[1243] The British
+Foreign Secretary, however, was not to be moved by German criticisms.
+The British as well as the French put Germany on her good behavior.
+
+Notwithstanding Sir Edward Grey’s denial, this mistrust of the Central
+Power was an important inducement for Great Britain and France to
+complete the Entente Cordiale by an entente between Great Britain and
+Russia.[1244] Conditions were more favorable for success than they had
+ever been. The Moroccan affair no longer occupied international
+attention. The domestic situation in Russia was more stable with the
+calling of the Duma. And M. Iswolsky, who succeeded Count Lamsdorff in
+the Russian foreign office in 1906, brought new vigor into the Russian
+policy. As a partisan of an agreement with Great Britain, he took up the
+negotiations, and after an intermittent pursuit of them, brought them to
+completion in the next year.[1245] Thus the work of insuring against
+Germany was continued.
+
+What the entente Powers regarded as insurance, Germany called
+encirclement. Both sides had been playing the game of the balance of
+power. France had tried to abandon this game in the previous year, but
+Germany’s refusal of her offers had driven her back into the play.
+Neither side appreciated the other’s point of view; neither heeded the
+other’s warnings. Each side accused the other of aiming at its defeat,
+of being a menace. Each scoffed at the other’s fears, but each continued
+to arm and to broaden and tighten the policy which each warned the other
+was leading to trouble. Neither side had learned anything from this
+episode except to be more cautious. Neither changed its method.
+
+The motives that caused this crisis still obtained as guiding forces.
+Prestige and national interests were at stake on both sides. Having
+become deeply engaged in the Moroccan affair, Germany, France, and Great
+Britain could not easily back out of it, especially since the Conference
+of Algeciras had given a better sanction than ever to both sides. That
+France and Spain would give Germany opportunities for intervening was,
+in view of the difficulty which they would encounter in reforming
+Morocco, just as certain as that Germany would take advantage of those
+opportunities. The Moroccan problem both in its local and in its
+international aspects left behind plenty of raw material from which
+future conflicts could arise. The crisis was only the first of these
+episodes born of the clashings of mutual fears and ambitions, nurtured
+on hazardous playing with war and on diplomatic blunderings. The road to
+Armageddon lay open.
+
+
+[Footnote 1222: On April 5 Bülow declared in the Reichstag as follows:
+“A time of alarm lies behind us. There were weeks when the thought of
+armed complications occupied our minds. . . . . We wished to show that
+Germany does not let herself be handled as a _quantité negligeable_. . .
+. . We may now look into the future with more calmness. The Conference
+of Algeciras has, I believe, had a result equally satisfactory to
+Germany and France and useful to all nations” (_Reden_, II, 303 ff.). On
+April 12 Bourgeois spoke in the French Chamber in a similar vein: “. . .
+. All the work of the conference has aimed to harmonize the three
+essential conditions of Moroccan reform [the sovereignty of the Sultan,
+the integrity of his empire, and commercial liberty] with the rights and
+the special interests that France has the duty of defending. . . . .
+That result has been obtained, thanks to the reciprocal concessions
+seriously weighed and loyally consented to in terms absolutely honorable
+for all and without the abandonment of the fruits of our country’s past
+efforts, of the dignity of its present situation, or of the safeguards
+of its future. . . . . France has been able to put to the test the
+solidarity of her alliance and friendships to which precious sympathies
+have been joined” (quoted in _L.j., 1906_, pp. 290 ff.). The act was
+accepted by the French Parliament and by the German Reichstag in Dec.,
+1906 (Schulthess, _Europäischer Geschichtskalender 1906_, pp. 219, 328
+ff.; Tardieu, _La Conf. d’Algés_, pp. 415 ff.).]
+
+[Footnote 1223: Cf. Stuart, _French Foreign Policy from Fashoda to
+Serajevo_, pp. 221 ff.; Tardieu, _La France et les alliances_, pp. 239
+ff. Schoen reported that his French colleague, Bompard, had expressed
+his opinion as follows: “What has resulted . . . . from the Conference
+of Algeciras? First, a welding together of France and England which the
+former did not at all wish in this measure. Then an almost complete
+isolation of Germany and probably no small amount of ill-humor among all
+the Powers, who saw themselves compelled to take an open stand on
+questions in which they really had little interest. Finally, apparent
+discord between Russia and Germany. True, the Conference has left behind
+neither victor nor vanquished; Germany has achieved
+internationalization; France, a certain recognition of her special
+position. But the existing sources of friction do not appear to have
+been destroyed, but rather new ones to have been created. . . . . The
+Conference, together with its previous history, has left in the French
+nation a certain mistrust which may not disappear quickly and which will
+for years stand in the way of a genuine friendly _rapprochement_, which
+is desired on both sides and which was so near” (Schoen to Bülow, April
+7, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 341, No. 7144).]
+
+[Footnote 1224: Monts was so disgusted with Italy that he wished the
+terms of the Triple Alliance to be radically modified at the next
+renewal (Monts to Tschirschky, June 8, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 364 ff., No.
+7156). The Austrian Ambassador reported that the German Emperor said
+that “it would give him great satisfaction for us at a suitable moment,
+which in view of the unreliable policy of the kingdom is not impossible,
+to teach the latter [Italy] a wholesome lesson, even by arms” (Pribram,
+_The Secret Treaties of Austria-Hungary_, II, 138).]
+
+[Footnote 1225: Schulthess, _1906_, p. 92.]
+
+[Footnote 1226: Bülow to William II, May 31, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 360, No.
+7154.]
+
+[Footnote 1227: Minute by William II to a dispatch from Miquel to Bülow,
+Sept. 19, 1906, _ibid._, XXV, 23, No. 8518.]
+
+[Footnote 1228: Tschirschky to William II, May 12, 1906, _ibid._, XXI,
+433 f., No. 7184; Bülow to F. O., Aug. 13, 1906, _ibid._, 449, No. 7193.
+The resignation of Holstein from the foreign office in April was also
+considered as significant of a change of policy. On that episode see
+_ibid._, pp. 338 f., editor’s note.]
+
+[Footnote 1229: Bülow to Monts, Nov. 16, 1906, _ibid._, 387 f., No.
+7165, and others in chap. cliv.]
+
+[Footnote 1230: Tschirschky to Metternich, July 7, 1906, _ibid._, 439,
+No. 7188.]
+
+[Footnote 1231: Tschirschky to Metternich, July 7, 1906, _ibid._, 439,
+No. 7188.
+
+10 Schoen to Bülow, May 14, 1906, _ibid._, XXII, 21 ff., No. 7355, and
+other documents in chap. clx. On the question of the loan see the report
+from the Belgian Minister at Berlin, April 11, 1906, _Zur europ.
+Politik_, II, pp. 110 ff.; Witte, _Memoirs_, pp. 304 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 1232: “Our relations with England have for a long time been of
+a very delicate nature. It is the object of my serious care to bring
+about an improvement herein.” See Tschirschky to General von Einem, July
+9, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 440, No. 7190. See also the Emperor’s remark to a
+similar effect in a memorandum by him, Aug. 15, 1906, _ibid._, XXIII,
+84, No. 7815.]
+
+[Footnote 1233: The improvement in Anglo-German relations was manifested
+by visits of German burgomasters in May, of German journalists to
+England in June, by a visit of Edward VII to his nephew at Cronberg in
+August, and by the presence of Mr. Haldane at the German maneuvers later
+in the same month. See Lee, _King Edward VII_, II, 528 ff.; Haldane,
+_Before the War_, pp. 37 ff., 57 ff.; Metternich to Bülow, May 8, 1906,
+_G.P._, XXI, 427 ff., No. 7181; Mühlberg to Radolin, June 27, 1906,
+_ibid._, 437 f., No. 7187; Bülow to F. O., Aug. 13, 1906, _ibid._, 449,
+No. 7193 and following documents; memo. by William II, Aug. 15, 1906,
+_ibid._, XXIII, 84 ff., No. 7815; Tschirschky to Metternich, Sept. 4,
+1906, _ibid._, 86 f., No. 7816. See also the documents in _B.D._, Vol.
+III, chap. xxii; Grey, _Twenty-five Years_, I, 110 ff. During Grey’s
+absence the foreign office at first opposed Haldane’s visit for fear of
+alienating the French (Haldane, _An Autobiography_, p. 202; Spender,
+_Life of Campbell-Bannerman_, II, 260).]
+
+[Footnote 1234: _Stenogr. Berichte_, Reichtag (1906), p. 4238; Tardieu,
+_La France et les alliances_, pp. 243 f.]
+
+[Footnote 1235: Bülow’s speech is given in Bülow, II, 306 ff.; see also
+Hammann, _Bilder aus der letzten Kaiserzeit_, pp. 45 ff.]
+
+[Footnote 1236: Bertie to Grey, April 4, 1906, _B.D._, III, 330 f., No.
+395; Grey to Bertie, April 4, 1906, _ibid._, 331, No. 396; Grey to
+Spring Rice, Feb. 19, 1906, Gwynn, _The Letters and Friendships of Sir
+Cecil Spring Rice_, II, 65.]
+
+[Footnote 1237: Grey to Bertie, July 9, 1906, _B.D._, III, 361, No.
+420.]
+
+[Footnote 1238: Grey’s minute to a dispatch from Lascelles to Grey, May
+24, 1906, _ibid._, 358, No. 416.]
+
+[Footnote 1239: Minute by Grey, June 9, 1906, _ibid._, 359, No. 418.]
+
+[Footnote 1240: _Ibid._, p. 356; IV, 381 f., No. 328.]
+
+[Footnote 1241: The German instructions to Radolin used _detente_.
+Bourgeois used _rapprochement_ in his memorandum of the conversation
+with the German Ambassador. In talking to Grey, Cambon spoke of
+_entente_. There may have been point to this change, for Grey, who was
+sensitive about Anglo-French relations, immediately assured the French
+that Anglo-German relations were not and would not become too intimate,
+and that an entente did not exist. See Grey to Bertie, July 9, 1906,
+_ibid._, III, 361 f., No. 420; Bertie to Grey, July 12, 1906, _ibid._,
+362 f., No. 421; Mühlberg to Radolin, June 27, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 438,
+No. 7187; Tschirschky to Metternich, July 7, 1906, _ibid._, 438 f., No.
+7188.]
+
+[Footnote 1242: Bertie to Grey, March 31, 1906, _B.D._, III, 328, No.
+387.]
+
+[Footnote 1243: Metternich to Bülow, July 31, 1906, _G.P._, XXI, 441
+ff., No. 7191; Grey to Lascelles, July 31, 1906, _B.D._, III, 363 f.,
+No. 422.]
+
+[Footnote 1244: On Feb. 20, 1906, Grey wrote: “The door is being kept
+open by us for a _rapprochement_ with Russia; there is at least a
+prospect that when Russia is re-established we shall find ourselves on
+good terms with her. An _entente_ between Russia, France and ourselves
+would be absolutely secure. If it is necessary to check Germany it could
+then be done” (_B.D._, III, 267, No. 299).]
+
+[Footnote 1245: _Ibid._, Vol. IV, chap. xxv, Part IV; Gwynn, Vol. II,
+chaps. xiv ff.; William L. Langer, “Russia, the Straits Question, and
+the European Powers, 1904-8,” _English History Review_, Jan., 1929; and
+others.]
+
+
+
+
+ INDEX
+
+
+ INDEX
+
+
+ Abarzuza, 118 n.; refuses to sign Franco-Spanish accord, 39-40; and
+ Great Britain, 39
+
+ Abazzia, 144 n.
+
+ Abd-el-Aziz, 3-4, 7, 8, 11, 18, 128-29, 133-34, 184-85, 190-94, 198
+ and n., 199 and n., 206 and n., 208, 214, 216, 223, 249, 252-53, 274,
+ 315, 348 n., 364, 394-96; sends Maclean to London, 17; requests of
+ French government, 17-18; asks German co-operation in 1904, 154;
+ convokes assembly of notables, 183; opposition to France in 1905, 212;
+ accepts Conference conclusions, 396
+
+ Abd-el-Melik, 193-94
+
+ Afghanistan, 66, 82, 96, 98, 114, 170
+
+ Aflalo, 106 n.
+
+ Agadir, 157
+
+ Alfonso XIII, King, 140, 151, 229, 316 n., 330, 348 n.
+
+ Algeciras, 348
+
+ Algeria, 2, 5, 6, 11, 12, 14, 16-18, 133; report of military aid to
+ Moroccan pretender, 241-42 and n.
+
+ Almodovar, Duke of, 37, 38 n., 39, 331, 350, 372, 375, 382, 393
+
+ Alsace-Lorraine, 14, 282
+
+ Alvensleben, Count, 143 n., 174 and n., 175-76
+
+ Anglo-Belgian military conversations in 1906, 341 n., 342
+
+ Anglo-French agreement in 1899, 20-21
+
+ Anglo-French agreement on April 8, 1904, 135, 140-42, 155 n., 156,
+ 196, 199, 340; terms, 102-4; criticism of, 104; British opinion on,
+ 104-6; French opinion on, 106-9
+
+ Anglo-French alliance, 230-31 n.
+
+ Anglo-French arbitration treaty, 87, 94
+
+ Anglo-French military and naval conversations in 1906, 335-37, 339-40
+
+ Anglo-French _rapprochement_, 84-86
+
+ Anglo-German agreements, 66, 69, 71, 150
+
+ Anglo-German alliance negotiations in 1901, 69-77
+
+ Anglo-German arbitration treaty, 150
+
+ Anglo-German conversations on Morocco, 63 n.
+
+ Anglo-German press war, 63, 77, 176 n.
+
+ Anglo-Japanese alliance, 47, 75, 78-79, 82, 83, 99, 299-300, 306-7
+
+ Anglo-Russian relations, 41, 54 and n.; Chinese difficulties, 52;
+ difficulties in 1903, 82-83; attempts at _rapprochement_, 94-98;
+ negotiations for agreement, 110; difficulty over Russian seizure of
+ vessels in 1904, 111; proposed Afghan agreement, 114; _rapprochement_
+ of 1906, 404-5; _see_ Dogger Bank Affair
+
+ Aoki, Viscount, 177, 179-80
+
+ d’Arenberg, Prince, 5
+
+ _Army and Navy Gazette_, 173
+
+ _L’Aurore_, 265
+
+ Austria-Hungary: 143, 358, 361, 373 and n.; compromise proposal in
+ March, 1906, 377-78; seeks to mediate again in March, 1906, 388
+
+ Austro-Italian relations in 1904-5, 181-82
+
+ Austro-Russian agreements, 23, 52, 168
+
+ Ba-Ahmed, grand vizier, 3, 11 n.
+
+ Bacheracht, 333
+
+ Bagdad Railway, 50 n., 56-57, 62, 80, 82, 218, 238, 271, 274-75
+
+ Balance of power, 56, 81 n., 181, 228 n.
+
+ Balearic Islands, 93
+
+ Balfour, Arthur J., 54 and n., 66, 84 n., 105-6, 115 n., 176 n., 208
+ n., 232, 309 n.
+
+ Baltic Sea, 291, 292 and n., 293 and n.
+
+ Baltic Straits, 100
+
+ Banque de Paris et des Pays-Bas, 129-31
+
+ Barclay, Sir Thomas, 44 n., 85
+
+ Barnardiston, Colonel, 341 and n.
+
+ Barrère, 21-23, 25-26, 29-32, 181, 202, 230, 244 n., 332, 371;
+ arguments to Italy for accord in 1901-2, 25; and renewal of Triple
+ Alliance, 25-26; anti-German activity, 145 n.
+
+ Bassermann, 400
+
+ Bebel, 141
+
+ Becker, Jeronimo, 35
+
+ Beit, Werner, 319
+
+ Belgium, 373 n.
+
+ Benckendorff, Count, 95, 97-98, 110, 139 n., 308, 323-24
+
+ Ben Sliman, 15, 129 n., 212, 395
+
+ Bernstorff, Count, 142 n.; interview in _Daily Chronicle_, 166
+
+ Bertie, Sir Francis, 145 n., 197 n., 201 n., 210, 291, 329-30, 343-4;
+ on Italian policy, 33 n.; memo on Chinese situation on March 11, 1901,
+ 67-68; _aide-mémoire_ to France, 210-11
+
+ Betzold, 219 and n., 220 and n., 221, 225, 237, 249, 254
+
+ Bezobrazov, 167
+
+ Bihourd, 137 n., 199 n., 217; warning to Delcassé in 1904, 127 n.
+
+ Billy, 199 n.
+
+ Birileff, Admiral, 285 n.
+
+ Bismarck, 33 n.; system of alliances, 19
+
+ Bizerta, 19
+
+ Björkö meeting, 281-85, 284-85 n.; alarms Europe, 291
+
+ Björkö Treaty, 263, 367-68, 391 n.; terms, 284; annulment, 303-4;
+ results, 305-6
+
+ Boer War, 6, 42, 44, 61, 81
+
+ Bompard, 113, 294-95, 295 n., 300, 302 and n., 360 n., 398 n.
+
+ Bou-Amama, 184, 190
+
+ Bourgeaud-Hansemann, 264 and n.
+
+ Bourgeois, 386, 388 n., 403 n.; renews instructions to Révoil in
+ March, 1906, 385; declaration to Radolin on March 17, 1906, 387;
+ speech in Chamber on April 12, 1906, 397 n.
+
+ Bowles, Gibson, 105
+
+ Boxer Rebellion, 66
+
+ Buchard, 43
+
+ Bülow, Herr von, 328
+
+ Bülow, Count (Prince after June, 1905), 11 and n., 43 n., 47, 57,
+ 61-65, 69 n., 71-73, 78-79, 127 n., 135-44, 147 n., 160 n., 163 n.,
+ 164 and n., 165-67, 170, 172-74, 176 n., 181-82, 188-90, 195, 203 and
+ n., 204 and n., 208 n., 220 n., 234, 251-52, 261-64, 269-72, 274-78,
+ 288, 314 n., 317 n., 333, 348, 354 n., 355 and n., 368 n., 376 n.,
+ 377; and Franco-Italian relations, 27-28; renewal of Triple Alliance
+ in 1902, 27-29; relieves Italy of military obligations, 29; and French
+ overture, 46; policy of free hand, 55-56; rejects Chamberlain’s
+ overture in 1898, 56; character of, 57-60; on Morocco, 63-65; on
+ Anglo-French agreement, 61; on Anglo-German alliance in 1901, 71-72;
+ on German position in 1902, 79; and Spain, 119-20, 152-55; and Morocco
+ in 1904, 140, 148-58; and Italy, 143-44, 146; desires Anglo-German
+ accord in 1904, 148; and Moroccan settlement in 1904, 151-57; on
+ German mistakes, 159; and Roosevelt in 1904, 160; and Russia in 1904,
+ 161-63, 175-77; interview in _Nineteenth Century_ (1904), 173;
+ approaches Japan and United States, 178; proposal to Russia about
+ Austria in 1905, 179; and Morocco in 1905, 181-95; on Italy in 1905,
+ 182; and Sultan in 1905, 184-85; and Roosevelt in 1905, 184-85, 237,
+ 240; Tangier visit, 187, 202-8; instructions to William II on March
+ 26, 1905, 190-91; policy after Tangier visit, 202 and n., 203 and n.,
+ 216-17; on Delcassé in 1905, 213 n., 215; rejects French overtures in
+ 1905, 215, 219-20; and Russo-Japanese peace negotiations, 221; warns
+ Rouvier, 223-25, 246 and n., 271; on Delcassé’s fall, 234; note to
+ Powers in June, 1905, 234-35; on conference, 240; and Great Britain in
+ 1905, 240-41; concessions to France in June, 1905, 241-42; and Spain
+ in 1905, 247 n.; and France in June, 1905, 248-49; instructions to
+ Tattenbach on July 11, 1905, 261; ambitions toward Morocco in July,
+ 1905, 262; Moroccan policy on July 31, 1905, 263-64; and Moroccan
+ concessions in 1905, 267; on Franco-German relations in Sept., 1905,
+ 269-70; desires Franco-German colonial accord in Oct., 1905, 274-75;
+ interview in _Le Temps_ on Oct. 3, 1905, 275-76; and German press in
+ Oct., 1905, 277; Björkö affair, 279-81, 286-91, 299, 303, 305; offers
+ resignation, 289 and n.; on the Conference, 311; optimistic about
+ Conference, 315-16; diplomatic preparations for Conference, 315-19;
+ offer to Italy in Jan., 1906, 316; and Great Britain in Jan., 1906,
+ 318, 328; on American proposal in Feb., 1906, 363-64; accepts Austrian
+ proposal in March, 1906, 377-78; diplomatic campaign against France in
+ March, 1906, 383-84; and Roosevelt in March, 1906, 384 n., 388-89; and
+ Russia in March, 1906, 391 n.; on the international situation in 1906,
+ 398-99; speeches in Reichstag: Dec. 6, 1897, 56 n.; Dec. 11, 1899,
+ 62-63; Jan. 8, 1902, 27-28, 77; April 12 and 14, 1904, 141-42; Dec. 5,
+ 1904, 173; March 15, 1905, 186 and n.; March 29, 1905, 192; Dec. 6,
+ 1905, 313; April 5, 1906, 397 n.; Nov. 14, 1906, 400-401
+
+ Bu-Hamara, 18
+
+ _Bulletin_, 7
+
+ Caillaux, Joseph, 312 n.
+
+ Caix, M. de, 45, 107
+
+ Cambon, Jules, 244 n.; 267, 270 n.; 317, 333
+
+ Cambon, Paul, 46-48, 50, 86 n., 87-94, 96, 98, 117 n., 202, 226-27,
+ 231 n., 244 and n., 254, 257, 262, 333; conversations of, with Grey on
+ Jan. 10 and 31, 1906, 337-39, 338 n., 344-46, 346 n.
+
+ Camerun railways, 271, 274
+
+ Campbell-Bannerman, Sir Henry, 322, 338-39 n., 339-40 and n., 343,
+ 385, 387
+
+ Canevaro, Admiral, 20-21
+
+ Cartwright, 188 n.
+
+ Cassini, Count, 321 n., 358
+
+ Chamberlain, Joseph, 43, 46, 63-66, 63 n., 71, 77, 87 n., 95 n.;
+ speech of, at Leicester, 12, 62; foreign policy of, 53-54; proposals
+ of, to Germany, 54, 55 n., 61-62
+
+ “Chamberlain period,” 53
+
+ Chérisey, Count de, 194 n., 312
+
+ China, 52-53, 66-68, 82, 95-98, 160, 179
+
+ Chirol, Valentine, 73 n.
+
+ Choate, Joseph, 315 n.
+
+ Clarke, Sir George, 336
+
+ Clemenceau, 165, 265, 385-86
+
+ Combes, 8, 107
+
+ Comité de l’Afrique française, 5-7, 132
+
+ Comité du Maroc, 132
+
+ Committee of Imperial Defence, 81, 84, 336, 343
+
+ Conference of Algeciras, chap. xvii; organization of, 350; importance
+ of police and bank questions at, 351; crisis of, 366; sessions of, on
+ March 3 and 5, 1906, 375; the Act of, 393; criticism of work of,
+ 394-96; results of, 397-98
+
+ Conference of Madrid, 1
+
+ Continental war, 53 n.
+
+ Convention of Madrid, 208, 218, 235, 353; Art. XVII of, 234-35;
+ interpretations of, 234-35 n.
+
+ Courcel, Baron de, 376-77 and n.
+
+ Cromer, Lord, 90, 92, 100 n.
+
+ Crowe, Eyre, 325, 346 n., 371 n., 382
+
+ Crozier, Philippe, 84 n., 186 n.
+
+ Currie, 21
+
+ Danzig interview, 45 n., 78
+
+ Dardanelles, 81, 82 n., 111, 161, 324
+
+ Delafosse, 107, 201
+
+ Delcassé, Théophile, 7, 10 n., 11, 12 n., 13 n., 17, 19, 22 n., 23,
+ 34, 37, 45 n., 47 n., 50 and n., 51, 61, 86 n., 87-88, 97, 100 and n.,
+ 104 n., 129, 133, 139, 144 n., 166, 171, 178 and n., 188, 190, 195,
+ 197 n., 198 n., 200-201, 209, 220-21 n., 230-31 n., 257, 276 and n.;
+ career and character of, 8-9; interest of, in Morocco, 9-10; French
+ action in Sahara in 1900, 11; sounds Germany in 1901, 13; and Radolin
+ in 1901, 14; and Moroccan embassy in 1901, 14-15; instructions of, to
+ Saint-René Taillandier in 1901, 15-16; visit of, to Rome, 20; and
+ Italy, 21, 26, 30-31; and Spain, 37-38, 40; overture of, to Great
+ Britain, 41-42, 44-45, 47, 50-51; policy of, toward Great Britain and
+ Germany, 43; conversation of, with Huhn, 43-44; overture of, to
+ Germany, 43-46, 47, 49-50; at St. Petersburg in 1899, 44; and Morocco
+ in 1902, 46, 50; and Anglo-Russian conversations in 1903, 95 and n.;
+ on Russia’s far eastern policy in 1903, 99 n.; surprised by outbreak
+ of Russo-Japanese War, 100-101; anger of, at Great Britain in 1904,
+ 101; Newfoundland question in 1904, 108 and n.; urges Anglo-Russian
+ _rapprochement_ in 1904, 114; policy of, in 1904, 117; and Spain in
+ 1904, 117-25 and n.; conversation of, with Radolin on March 23, 1904,
+ 125-26; and Germany in 1904, 126-27, 154, 187 and n.; policy of, in
+ March, 1905, 197-98; overtures of, to Germany in 1905, 199 and n.,
+ 212; says Germany is “turning him out,” 210; and Moroccan question in
+ 1905, 211-22; warns Sultan in 1905, 223 and n.; adheres to policy,
+ 225; asks British support in May, 1905, 226; opposes conference,
+ 228-30; defends his policy on June 6, 1905, 230-31; resignation of,
+ 231; speeches: Senate in July, 1901, 14; Chamber on July 3, 1902, 31;
+ Chamber on Nov. 23, 1903, 94; Chamber and Senate in Nov.-Dec., 1904,
+ 10 n., 108; Senate on March 31, 1905, 197
+
+ Deloncle, 107
+
+ Dennis, Alfred L. P., 245 n.
+
+ Deschanel, Paul, 5, 200
+
+ Devonshire, Duke of, 54, 63 n.
+
+ Dilke, Sir Charles, 100 n.
+
+ Dogger Bank affair, 108, 112-13, 162, 168
+
+ Donnersmarck, Prince Henckel von, 225 n.
+
+ Doumer, 178
+
+ Dual Alliance, 9-10, 19, 28, 43 n., 47, 83 n., 85, 106, 135-36, 141,
+ 163, 166, 172, 180, 229 and n., 284 n., 286, 297 and n., 298, 300-301,
+ 303, 391 n., 397, 399-400
+
+ Ducarne, General, 341 and n.
+
+ Dupuy, 225, 249, 254, 262
+
+ Durand, Sir Mortimer, 226 n., 243
+
+ Eckardstein, Baron, 63 n., 66, 69, 70 and n., 71-72, 136, 160 n., 207
+ n., 218-19 and nn., 220, 225 n., 245 n.; on British offer of alliance
+ to France, 251
+
+ Edward VII, King, 17, 45, 47 n., 54, 66, 75 and n., 77, 82 n., 84 and
+ n., 86 and n., 87 and n., 97, 100 n., 111 and n., 135, 150-51, 176 n.,
+ 183, 196 n., 208-9, 214, 218, 231 n., 236 n., 257 n., 279, 282, 293,
+ 299, 308-9 n., 309, 318, 324, 330 n., 376 n., 400 n.; conversation of,
+ with Iswolsky in April, 1904, 110
+
+ Egerton, Sir Edwin, 244 n., 331, 371
+
+ Egypt, 88-94, 102-4, 106, 148-49
+
+ Entente Cordiale, 84 n., 102, 117 n., 143, 146, 150, 162, 166, 226,
+ 229, 233, 256-57, 279, 298, 325, 346, 355 n., 368-69, 382, 397, 399,
+ 401-4; negotiation of, 86-94, 99-102
+
+ Esher, Lord, 84-85, 336
+
+ _L’Etat russe_, 368 and n.
+
+ Etienne, 5, 6, 88 n., 336, 386
+
+ Eulenburg, Prince, 176 n., 189
+
+ Fashoda crisis, 7, 41-42, 52
+
+ Fernando Po, 137, 152 and n.
+
+ Fez, 18; threatened by rebels, 4
+
+ _Figaro_, 13 n., 276 n.
+
+ Figuig, 16
+
+ Fisher, Admiral, 100, 115-16, 228 n., 339
+
+ Flotow, 232, 238, 311; reports British offer of alliance to France on
+ June 7, 1905, 236-37
+
+ France, 36-38, 40-51, 67-68, 73-74, 95-97, 99, 104, 276, 384, 390 n.;
+ trade of, with Morocco, 2; and Morocco, 2-18; North African empire, 5;
+ Parliament, 5, 6, 107-8, 128, 199-200, 229-30; Moroccan policy of,
+ 5-6; claims of, to Morocco, 6-7; occupies oases, 11; note of, to
+ Sultan, 12; and Italy, 20-34; fleet of, visits Italy, 23; effort of,
+ to break Triple Alliance, 25; press of, 29, 85-86, 172, 198 and n.,
+ 247, 265, 271, 354, 359-60, 375 n., 380; and Great Britain, 84-94; and
+ Germany, 93-94; international situation in Feb., 1904, 117; and Spain,
+ 118-25; and Morocco in 1904, 128-34; Mission of, to Fez, 183; Tangier
+ visit, 196-202; and Germany in 1905, 196, 211-33, 237-38, 240-57,
+ 261-78; and Spain in 1905, 198 n., 259-61; cabinet of, 199; public
+ opinion of, 199-200, 202, 276, 232; deserts Delcassé, 200, 247-48 n.;
+ fleet visits England in 1905, 209, 258; fear of war in 1905, 217;
+ cabinet meeting on June 6, 1905, 230-31 and n.; note on June 21, 1905,
+ 244-45; and Great Britain in 1905, 256-58; and Björkö, 294-95; efforts
+ to bring Russia and Great Britain together in 1905, 308-9; _Livre
+ jaune_ (1905), 313; preliminaries to Conference, 319-22, 329-40,
+ 343-47; military defense in 1905, 320 and n.; and Spain, 330-31, 372,
+ 392-93; pressure on Italy in Dec., 1905, 331-32; sounds Great Britain
+ about agreement in Jan., 1906, 335; plan for Moroccan police and bank,
+ 351-52, 365-66; seeks Austrian support in Feb., 1906, 373-74; and
+ Great Britain in March, 1906, 385; cabinet and Parliament in March,
+ 1906, 388; opposes Roosevelt’s proposal in March, 1906, 389; satisfied
+ with results of Conference, 401-2; mistrusts Germany in 1906, 402-3
+
+ Francis Joseph I, Emperor, 179, 374
+
+ Franco-German agreement on July 8, 1905, 255
+
+ Franco-German agreement on Sept. 28, 1905, 272-73
+
+ Franco-German détente, 42-43
+
+ Franco-German press war in 1905, 189, 196
+
+ Franco-Italian agreements, 20, 22, 27, 31-32, 182
+
+ Franco-Italian entente, 29, 37, 143
+
+ Franco-Moroccan agreements, 11, 15-17
+
+ Franco-Spanish agreements, 37, 118-25, 188 n., 196, 259-61, 372, 392
+
+ Franco-Spanish negotiations in 1902-3, 37-40, 89
+
+ Franco-Spanish proposed accord in 1902, 38; its failure, 38-40
+
+ Franco-Spanish _rapprochement_, 40
+
+ Galliéni, Joseph, 5
+
+ Gambetta, 8
+
+ _Gaulois_, 225 n., 257
+
+ Gautsch, 18
+
+ Genthe, Dr., 147 n.
+
+ German-American _rapprochement_, 160
+
+ German-Italian military convention, 29, 144
+
+ German Navy League, 239
+
+ Germany, 3, 5, 7, 10-11 and n., 17, 25-28, 36, 47 and n., 51, 81-82,
+ 88 n., 93, 116-17, 119, 122, 125, 171, 254-56, 258, 261, 355 n., 359,
+ 367, 375 n., 381 n., 390-91, 400 n.; trade with Morocco, 2; reply to
+ France in 1901, 13-14; and Delcassé in 1902, 49-50 n.; and Great
+ Britain, 53-80; proposal to Chamberlain in 1900, 64-65; warning to
+ Delcassé in 1900, 65; efforts to maintain _status quo_ in Morocco in
+ 1900, 65; and Japan in 1901, 69; criticism of foreign policy, 79-80;
+ public opinion of, 135, 400; policy of, in 1903-4, 138-39; and Morocco
+ in 1904, 140-42, 154, 157-58, 183 and n.; and Italy in 1904, 143-47;
+ anger at France, 147; contemplates intervening in Morocco in 1904,
+ 147, 148 n.; and Great Britain in 1904, 148-51, 155-57, 173, 176 and
+ n.; secret articles in Anglo-French agreement, 155 and n.; and United
+ States in 1904, 160; and Russia in 1904, 160-80; and Russian alliance
+ in 1904, 166-67; fears British attack, 172-73; fears Quadruple
+ Alliance, 178; international situation in 1905, 181; and Morocco in
+ 1905, 183-95; secret articles of Franco-Spanish agreements, 187 n.,
+ 188 n., 313-14; Tangier visit, 202-8; and Roosevelt in 1905, 205-6;
+ Tattenbach to Fez, 206; and Turkish Sultan, 206 n.; sounds Powers
+ about conference, 206-7; reply of, to Delcassé’s overtures, 207-8;
+ rejects French offers in 1905, 218; and France in 1905, 211-25,
+ 237-56, 261-78; suggests to Rouvier to call conference, 220;
+ determines to overthrow Delcassé, 221; presses the Powers for support,
+ 221; seeks Roosevelt’s support in May, 1905, 222; and Italy in May,
+ 1905, 224; press of, on Delcassé’s downfall, 233; forces Villa-Urrutia
+ from office, 236; reply to France on June 24, 1905, 248-49; criticism
+ of her policy in 1905, 256; presses Rouvier in July, 1905, 262; asks
+ Roosevelt’s aid in July, 1905, 263; Moroccan loan in 1905, 267; and
+ Tattenbach in Aug., 1905, 267; reply to Rouvier in Sept., 1905, 273-74
+ n.; anger at Great Britain in 1905, 277; international situation in
+ July, 1905, 279; and Russia in 1905, 279-91; and Roosevelt about
+ Björkö, 287 n.; press of, angry at Great Britain in 1905, 292; and
+ annulment of Björkö Treaty, 304 and n.; and Moroccan affair in 1905,
+ 311; preliminaries to Conference of Algeciras, 311-19; French
+ overtures in Nov., 1905, 312; international situation in winter of
+ 1905-6, 312-13; Weissbuch in 1906, 314 n.; on conference in Dec.,
+ 1905, 314; instructions to delegates, 314-15; warnings to France in
+ Jan., 1906, 317; improvement in Anglo-German relations in 1906,
+ 317-18; navy bill in 1906, 318 n.; refuses French proposals on police
+ and bank, 352-53; proposals on police, 353-54, 354 n., 357-58; policy
+ of, at Conference in Feb., 1906, 359-60; presses Rouvier in Feb.,
+ 1906, 359; declaration of, to Powers in Feb., 1906, 359; proposal of,
+ on banks, 364-65; defeat of, 397; policy of, after Conference, 399-400
+
+ Gharnet, S. Feddoul, 129, 133
+
+ Giolitti, Giovanni, 144 n., 146 n.
+
+ Glasenapp, 365 n.
+
+ Goluchowski, Count, 143, 355 n., 358, 373-74, 374 n., 378 and n., 398
+
+ Gorst, Sir Eldon, 90
+
+ Gourara, 11
+
+ Great Britain, 2, 3, 5, 10, 13, 14 n., 17, 28, 39 n., 40, 50-56, 104,
+ 209, 276; trade of, with Morocco, 2; and Italy, 19, 33; and Spain over
+ Morocco, 35 n.; antagonism to, 42; international situation of, at
+ close of nineteenth century, 52, 66; and Germany, 60-80; change of
+ policy of, in 1901, 68; seeks aid of Austria and Italy in 1903, 81;
+ policy of, in 1902, 81; and Russia, 81 n., 82 and n., 110-16, 81-102;
+ and France, 81-102, 225-29, 232-33; public opinion of, hostile to
+ Germany, 82, 151, 162, 172-73, 291-92, 309-10, 310 n.; press, 85, 228
+ n.; public opinion of, 135; cabinet crisis of, in 1903, 90; and
+ Russia’s policy in Balkans in 1903, 95-96; fear of Continental
+ coalition in 1904, 100; Parliament, 105-6; fear of German navy in
+ 1904, 114-15; redistribution of naval forces of, 115, 172-73; and
+ Franco-Spanish agreement in 1904, 124; asks Powers to approve
+ Khedivial decree, 148; refuses German proposal for agreement in 1904,
+ 148-49; and Germany, 148-51; fears German attack in 1905, 208 and n.;
+ Tangier visit, 208-11; fleet of, visits France in 1905, 209, 258;
+ prevents Germany from obtaining ports, 210; offers aid to France in
+ April, 1905, 210-11; rejects Roosevelt’s advice in May, 1905, 223;
+ naval preparations in 1905, 228; Anglo-French military and naval
+ conversations in 1905, 228 and n.; and Delcassé’s downfall, 232; and
+ Germany in 1905, 236-37, 240-41, 291-94, 309-10; not supporting
+ Roosevelt in 1905, 243; and Russia, 291-92, 309-10; naval maneuvers
+ of, in the Baltic in 1905, 292-93 and nn.; visit of fleet to German
+ ports in Aug.-Sept., 1905, 293; efforts of, to approach Russia in
+ 1905, 306-10; renewal of Anglo-Japanese Alliance in 1905, 306;
+ preliminaries to Conference, 322-47; promises support to France at the
+ Conference, 329-30; pressure of, on Spain in Dec., 1905, 330-31;
+ pressure of, on Italy in Dec., 1905, 331-32; and Belgium in 1906,
+ 340-41 and n.; supports France in Feb., 1906, 368; pressure of, on
+ Spain in Feb., 1906, 372; favors Austrian proposal in March, 1906,
+ 379; and Germany in 1906, 399-400; satisfied with results of
+ Conference, 401-2
+
+ Grey, Sir Edward, 105, 321 n., 322-23, 327 n., 329, 331 and n., 332,
+ 336-37, 342-43, 343 n., 360 and n., 371 n., 379, 384, 386 and n., 387,
+ 389, 400 n., 403 n.; and Russia, 323-24; and Germany, 324-27;
+ conversations of, with Cambon on Jan. 10 and 31, 1906, 337-39, 338 n.,
+ 344-46, 346 n.; approves military and naval conversations in 1906, 340
+ and n.; instructions of, to Grierson in Jan., 1906, 341; summary of
+ policy of, 347; conversation with Metternich on Feb. 19, 1906, 368-69;
+ and Austria in Feb., 1906, 373 n.; and Spain in March, 1906, 376 n.;
+ advises France to accept Austrian proposal, 382; and Germany in 1906,
+ 402-4; and Russia in 1906, 404 n.
+
+ Grierson, General, 54 n., 335, 339-41
+
+ Guillain, Antoine, 5
+
+ Haldane, Richard, 339-40, 342-43, 400 n.
+
+ Hamburg-American Line, 161, 174
+
+ Hammann, Otto, 74 n., 187 n., 199 n., 203 n., 348 n.; dispute with
+ Holstein, 204 and n.
+
+ Hanotaux, Gabriel, 5
+
+ Hansen, Jules, 45, 46 n.
+
+ Harcourt, Sir William, 54 n.
+
+ Hardinge, Sir Charles, 82 n., 96, 97, 110 n., 112-13, 306-7, 309 and
+ n., 325, 371 n., 386 n.
+
+ Harmsworth, 69 n.
+
+ Harris, W. B., 3
+
+ Hatzfeldt, Count, 54 and n., 63 n., 72
+
+ Hay, John, 131-32 n.
+
+ Hayashi, Count, 160 n.
+
+ Hedeman, 100 n.
+
+ Holland, 373 n.
+
+ Holstein, Herr von, 50 and n., 55 and n., 57, 60, 69, 70 n., 71, 135,
+ 139 n., 146 n., 148, 150, 159, 163 and n., 164 and n., 166, 170, 176
+ n., 178, 184, 202-3, 219-20, 240-41, 264, 304, 328-29, 376; on German
+ position in Dec., 1901, 79; fears British attack in 1904, 173; dispute
+ with Hammann, 204 and n.; letter on June 28, 1905, 246 n.; on alliance
+ with Russia in July, 1905, 280-81 and n.; on Björkö Treaty, 286-87,
+ 290-91; resignation in 1906, 399 n.
+
+ Hornung, 186 n.
+
+ Huguet, Major, 335-36
+
+ Huhn, Arthur von, 43-44
+
+ _L’Imparcial_, 38 n.
+
+ India, 170
+
+ Irredentism, 23, 143, 181
+
+ Iswolsky, Count, 110, 171 n., 404
+
+ Italy, 3, 10-11 and n., 19-34, 42, 50, 101; defeat of, by Abyssinia,
+ 6; international situation of, 19; relations of, with France, 19-20;
+ and Anglo-French agreement in 1899, 21; Moroccan interest of, 22; and
+ Austria, 23; and Triple Alliance, 143-47, 182-83; and Conference, 207
+ and n., 247, 316, 332
+
+ Japan, 67-68; relations of, with Russia in 1903, 82-83; proposal of,
+ to send Aoki to Berlin, 177, 179
+
+ Jaurès, 276 n.; approves French claims to Morocco, 6
+
+ Jonnart, Governor, 133 n., 242 n.
+
+ Jusserand, 244 n., 250, 256, 361
+
+ Khedivial decree, 111, 148-49
+
+ Kiel, naval review in 1904, 150
+
+ _Kölnische Zeitung_, 43
+
+ _Kreuzzeitung_, 217
+
+ Kriege, Dr., 264, 355 n.
+
+ Krueger telegram, 56 n.
+
+ Kühlmann, 184, 186 n., 192, 196, 202 n., 267 n., 312
+
+ Laguiche, Marquis de, 319
+
+ Lamsdorff, Count, 46 n., 95-98, 101, 110, 112, 114, 135, 162, 167-72,
+ 168 n., 174 n., 178 n., 294-95, 302 n., 369; and Germany in 1904,
+ 162-63, 174-79; character and policy of, toward Germany, 167-68; and
+ Germany in 1905, 282, 300-302; reaction of, to Björkö Treaty, 296-97;
+ cordiality of, to Great Britain in May, 1905, 306-7; refuses British
+ overtures in Sept.-Oct., 1905, 307-8; and Germany in 1906, 358, 360,
+ 367-69; co-operation of, with Great Britain, 360; urges Germany to
+ accept French propositions at conference, 360, 367-69, 375, 391 n.
+
+ Lanessan, M. de, 354-56
+
+ Lansdowne, Lord, 13, 21 and n., 46, 48, 50-51, 66 n., 69-78, 75 n.,
+ 96-98, 110-14, 153, 155 and n., 209-10, 218 n., 232 n., 254 and n.,
+ 291, 293, 337, 344; refuses Sultan’s request in 1902, 17; and Spain
+ over Morocco, 39-40; conversation of, with Cambon in 1902, 48-51;
+ character of, 65-66; policy of, toward Germany, 66; and Germany over
+ China, 66 n.; on possibility of Anglo-German Alliance, 75-76; on
+ failure of negotiations for Anglo-German alliance, 78; and France,
+ 87-102; favors agreement with Russia in 1903, 95 and n.; appeals to
+ France to restrain Russia in 1903, 96-97; warns Cambon of possibility
+ of Russo-Japanese war, 98-99; and Russia, 110-16; Anglo-Russian
+ _rapprochement_, in 1904, 114; on German fear of British attack, 115;
+ mediates between France and Spain in 1904, 121-23; on German proposal
+ in 1904, 149; interprets Anglo-French accord, 156; on Anglo-German
+ hostility in 1904, 176 n.; opposed to Conference, 207, 236, 244; on
+ the visit to Tangier, 209; offers aid to France, 210; rejects
+ Roosevelt’s offer to mediate in May, 1905, 226; policy of, toward
+ France in May, 1905, 226-27 and nn.; advises United States against
+ conference, 228-29; offers Mediterranean accord to Spain in June,
+ 1905, 229; denies offer of alliance to France, 230-31 n., 241, 251-52;
+ interpretation of Art. XVII of Convention of Madrid, 234-35 n.;
+ assurance to France in July, 1905, 257; on William II and Björkö, 294
+
+ Lascelles, Sir Frank, 176 n., 202 n., 241, 279; on the German Emperor,
+ 58; on Bülow, 59; on possibility of Anglo-German alliance, 75-76 n.;
+ against idea of a conference, 209
+
+ Lautier, Eugène, 276 n.
+
+ Lauzanne, Stéphane, 276 n.
+
+ League of the Three Emperors, 135, 139 n., 143, 161
+
+ Lee, Arthur, 181 and n.
+
+ Léon, 263
+
+ Leon y Castillo, 13, 35 n., 37-38, 44, 49, 120 n., 123, 152 n.
+
+ Levy, Armand, 218-19 nn.
+
+ Lichnowsky, Prince, 127 n., 147
+
+ Lister, 248 n., 253
+
+ Lodge, Senator, 222
+
+ _Lokalanzeiger_, 383
+
+ London City Council, visit of, to Paris on Feb. 8, 1906, 369 n.
+
+ _London Times_, 3, 106, 186 n., 189, 276-77, 310 n., 386 n.
+
+ Loubet, President, 87, 139, 146, 182 n., 196 n., 201, 209, 230, 305;
+ visit of, to Italy in 1904, 144-45
+
+ Louis, Georges, 262 and n., 273-74 n., 311 n., 377 n.
+
+ Louis of Battenberg, Prince, 195
+
+ Lowther, 216 n., 228, 257 n.
+
+ Luzzati, 145, 212, 220 n.
+
+ Lyauty, General, 133 n.
+
+ Maclean, Kaid Sir Harry, 3, 17, 47
+
+ Mallet, Louis, 95, 150 n.
+
+ _Manchester Guardian_, 203
+
+ Manchuria, 69, 82, 95-96, 98
+
+ Martino, M. de, 24
+
+ _Matin_, 217, 276, 310
+
+ Maura, Gabriel, 118-19
+
+ Mediterranean ententes, 19
+
+ Mendelssohn & Co., 264 n., 265 n., 355-56 n., 365 n., 384 n.
+
+ el-Menebhi, 12, 74, 133
+
+ Metternich, Count, 71, 76-77, 136, 150, 155 and n., 207, 251, 281 n.,
+ 315 n., 344-45; on Anglo-German relations in 1902, 78; warns
+ government in 1904, 156-57; on British danger, 176 and n.; explains
+ German policy to Grey, 326-27; warns Grey in 1906, 403-4
+
+ Mévil, 198 n., 230 n.
+
+ Michael, Grand Duke, 285 n.
+
+ Millet, René, 107-8
+
+ Miquel, Herr von, 244 and n.
+
+ Moltke, General, 281 n., 288, 292 n., 318 and n., 319 and n., 320 n.
+
+ Monson, Sir Edmund, 11, 41, 83 n.; character sketch of Delcassé, 8
+
+ Montero Rios, 259, 266, 268-69
+
+ Montferrand, Count de, 108 n.
+
+ Monts, Count, 145, 207, 222, 398 n.
+
+ Moret, 330-31, 372
+
+ _Morning Post_, 203
+
+ Morocco, 1-18, 2 n., 22-23, 28, 31, 36, 45 and n., 46, 48, 50, 62-65,
+ 63 n., 71, 74 and n., 83, 87-94, 102-5, 107-8, 119-26, 140-42, 147,
+ 154, 157-58, 255, 260, 272-73; loans, 12, 17-18, 264-65 and n.;
+ embassy in Paris, 13-16; embassy in London and Berlin, 16, 73; and
+ France, 128-34, 183-84, 191; offers concessions to Germany in 1905,
+ 261; seizure of Algerian in 1905, 268 n.; criticism of results of
+ Conference, 395-96; results of crisis, 405
+
+ Mühlberg, Herr von, 148 n., 264
+
+ Mukden, 181, 201 n.
+
+ Mulai-el-Hassan, 3
+
+ Mytilene, 26 n.
+
+ Nelidow, 295-96, 298, 302
+
+ Newfoundland, 99, 100 n., 102, 107-8 and n.
+
+ Nicholas, Grand Duke, 301
+
+ Nicholas II, Czar, 45, 98, 138 and n., 161-72, 168 n., 296-306, 321
+ and n., 324, 368; proposes alliance to Germany in 1904, 164; and
+ Germany in 1904, 174-75, 177-78; Björkö meeting, 279-86, 284-85 n.;
+ and Danish question, 285 n.; repudiates Björkö Treaty, 303-4 and n.
+
+ Nicholson, Sir Arthur, 14, 74 n., 197, 324 n., 330 n., 337, 349-51,
+ 356 and n., 358, 374-76, 375 n., 379; favors Austrian proposition,
+ 381-82, 386-87
+
+ _Nineteenth Century_, 173
+
+ Noailles, M. de, 49, 50
+
+ Norway, throne question in 1905, 282-83 n., 291, 292 n.
+
+ _Nowoje Wremja_, 203 n.
+
+ O’Conor, Sir Nicholas, 206 n.
+
+ Ojeda, 188 n., 314 n., 356 n., 372, 373 n.
+
+ Osten-Sacken, Count, 61 n., 163 and n., 391 n.
+
+ Pacific penetration, 7, 8, 14, 18, 74 n., 117, 120, 128-34
+
+ Pallain, 46 n.
+
+ Pan-German League, 140
+
+ Pariente, Moses, 264
+
+ Percy, Earl, 105, 292-93
+
+ Perdicaris, Ion, 131 and n.
+
+ Persia, 66, 82, 98, 170, 324 and n.
+
+ Phipps, Sir Charles, 341 n.
+
+ Plymouth, visit at, of German warships in 1904, 150
+
+ Poincaré, 230-31 n.
+
+ Port Arthur, 54 n.
+
+ Portuguese colonies, 60
+
+ Pourtales, Count, 264
+
+ Pressensé, M. de, 200
+
+ Prince of Monaco, 139, 247 n., 311 n., 380 and n.
+
+ Prinetti, 22, 24-32, 182; speech in Italian Chamber on May 22, 1902,
+ 30; negotiations with France in 1902, 30-31
+
+ Rabat, 92-94, 134
+
+ Radolin, Prince, 46 n., 125 n., 136, 139, 152 n., 155 n., 199, 213-14,
+ 225, 238, 248-49, 254, 362, 387, 403 and n.; disapproves German policy
+ in 1905, 215; warning to Rouvier on May 16, 1905, 221; on public
+ opinion in France in Jan., 1906, 319-20
+
+ Radowitz, Herr von, 137, 153, 221, 267, 270 n., 327, 331, 349, 351,
+ 353, 356-57, 376-78, 382-83
+
+ Raisouli, 131 and n., 132
+
+ Regnault, 351-52, 366
+
+ Repington, Colonel, 335-36, 339
+
+ Reventlow, Count, 141
+
+ Révoil, Paul, 5, 12-13, 238 n., 262-63, 270, 334, 349, 351 and n.,
+ 353, 356-57, 372, 374, 375 n., 376, 380-83, 386, 390, 392; memo. to
+ Radowitz on Feb. 16, 1906, 362-63; opposes Austrian proposal, 379
+
+ Richthofen, Baron, 154, 157, 159, 161 n., 164 n., 264, 281 n., 289 n.,
+ 319 n., 327
+
+ Ripon, Lord, 326, 339-40
+
+ Roman, 259
+
+ Romberg, Baron, 162
+
+ Rominten, 272, 299-300
+
+ Roosevelt, President, 101 n., 115, 178-80, 184-85, 188, 203, 226 and
+ n., 239-40, 245 and n., 248, 287 n., 301, 309, 321, 353-54, 357,
+ 361-62, 392; draws closer to Germany in 1904-5, 160, 205 and n., 206;
+ tries to calm Anglo-German hostility in 1905, 205 and n., 215, 222-23;
+ policy of, on Moroccan conflict on April 20, 1905, 214-15; hesitates
+ about accepting invitation to conference in June, 1905, 237;
+ intervenes in Paris and London in June, 1905, 243; advises France to
+ accept conference in June, 1905, 249-50; beneficial result of his
+ intervention in June, 1905, 250-51; refuses German request in July,
+ 1905, 263; mistrusts Germany in 1906, 361; compromise proposal in
+ 1906, 363-64; opposes Austrian proposal in March, 1906, 384-85,
+ 388-89; proposal in March, 1906, 389
+
+ Root, 321, 355, 357, 361, 363-64, 389
+
+ Rosebery, Lord, 54 n., 106 n., 203, 322
+
+ Rosen, Dr., 274; his proposal for Franco-German accord in Sept., 1905,
+ 269-70 and n.; negotiations in Paris in Sept., 1905, 269-72
+
+ Rothschild, Alfred, 54 n.
+
+ Rouvier, 8, 165, 200, 202, 224, 225 n., 229-31, 243-44 and n., 246 and
+ n., 247 and n., 248 n., 249, 251-54, 256-57, 259-63, 267-69, 271-75,
+ 278, 295, 314 n., 317, 328 n., 330, 332-34, 337, 367, 373, 377 and n.,
+ 381, 382 n.; speech in Chamber on April 17, 1905, 201; foreign policy
+ of, 212 and n.; overtures to Germany, 212-13, 217-19 and nn., 220-21;
+ opposed to conference in June, 1905, 237-38; offers direct agreement
+ to Germany in June, 1905, 238; despair over Germany’s policy in June,
+ 1905, 238-39 and n.; discouraged at German replies in June, 1905, 242;
+ asks Roosevelt’s support in June, 1905, 245; accepts conference, 254;
+ policy of, toward Germany on Morocco in July, 1905, 259; negotiates
+ with Spain in 1905, 259-60; protests to Germany about Moroccan
+ concessions in 1905, 265-66; offers colonial agreement to Germany in
+ Sept., 1905, 271; declaration to Germany in Sept., 1905, 273;
+ statement to Germany in Sept., 1905, 274; refuses to negotiate
+ colonial agreement with Germany in Oct., 1905, 275; alarm over Björkö
+ meeting, 294; on Continental alliance in 1905, 301-2; overtures to
+ Germany in Nov., 1905, 311-12, 311 n.; speech in Chamber on Dec. 16,
+ 1905, 313; determined to uphold French interests in Morocco at the
+ Conference, 319; assumes Delcassé’s policy, 320; diplomatic
+ preparations for Conference, 320-22; instructions to Révoil, 334-35,
+ 335 n.; clings to policy in Feb., 1906, 360; declaration to Germany on
+ Feb. 15, 1906, 362; downfall of, 379-80
+
+ Rudini, Marquis de, 20
+
+ Russia, 23, 36, 39 n., 41, 47 n., 54 n., 67-69, 94-102, 110-16, 117,
+ 323-24, 361; interest of, in the Far East, 10; favors Continental
+ _bloc_ against Great Britain, 42; proposal to Germany in 1899, 61;
+ proposal to Germany in 1902, 79; far eastern aggressions in 1903, 96;
+ anger of, at Great Britain in 1904, 110, 168; Black Sea fleet of, 111;
+ draws closer to Germany in 1904, 139, 161; and Germany in 1904,
+ 160-72; Baltic fleet of, 161-63; divided opinion about alliance with
+ Germany in 1904, 167-68; need of German aid in 1904, 175; negotiates
+ loan in Berlin in 1904-5, 175; revolution, 181; press angry at Great
+ Britain in 1905, 292; anger over renewal of Anglo-Japanese alliance in
+ 1905, 307; loan in 1906, 321 and n., 323-24, 367, 391 n., 399;
+ publication of instructions to Cassini in March, 1906, 391 and n.
+
+ Russo-Chinese agreement, 67
+
+ Russo-German commercial treaty of 1904, 161 n.
+
+ Russo-German negotiations for alliance in 1904, 114; proposed terms,
+ 164-65, 169-70; results of, 179-80
+
+ Russo-Japanese relations, 67-68, 82-83 and n., 96; as affecting
+ British interests, 67-68; and Germany, 67-68; and France, 67-68
+
+ Russo-Japanese War, 100, 110, 117, 139-40, 150, 161, 164-65, 239
+
+ Sagasta, 35 n., 37
+
+ Saint-Aulaire, Count de, 128, 129, 131 n.
+
+ Saint-René Taillandier, 15, 134, 184, 186 and n., 198 and n., 199 and
+ n., 238; prepares mission to Fez in 1904, 133; his instructions, 133
+
+ Salisbury, Lord, 4, 11, 21, 35, 44, 61 n., 62 n., 63 n., refuses
+ Delcassé’s overture, 41-42; policy of, 53; asks co-operation of United
+ States in 1898, 53; proposes agreement to Russia in 1898, 53-54;
+ opposes Anglo-German alliance, 73, 76
+
+ Samoan Islands, 60
+
+ Sanderson, Lord, 73, 108 n., 142 n., 228 n., 230 n.; on German policy,
+ 59; on Delcassé’s anti-German policy, 187 n.
+
+ Sarrien, 385
+
+ Sattler, 141
+
+ Savinsky, 168 n., 296 n.
+
+ Schiemann, 217 n.
+
+ Schlieffen, General, 144, 148, 239 n.
+
+ Schoen, Herr von, 193, 367-68, 391 n.
+
+ Scholl, General, 192
+
+ Schulenburg, Count, 176 n.
+
+ Siam, 47-49, 87, 91, 106
+
+ Siegfried, Jules, 5
+
+ Signatory Powers, 203 and n., 234 and n.
+
+ Silvela, 35-36, 38 n., 39 and n.; article in _La Lectura_, 37
+
+ Sonnino, Baron, 355 n.
+
+ Spain, 3, 5, 10-11 and n., 45, 50, 90 n., 89-93, 118 n., 152-54, 247
+ and n., 266-69; trade with Morocco, 2; defeat of, by United States, 6,
+ 35; anger at Great Britain, 35; internal and international situation,
+ 35; and France, 35-40, 118-25, 259-61; interest in Morocco, 36-37;
+ endeavors to bring about Franco-German _rapprochement_, 37; Cortes,
+ debates in 1904, 118; support from Great Britain in 1904, 119; appeals
+ to Germany for aid in 1904, 119, 122; Franco-Spanish agreement in
+ 1904, 127 and n.; public opinion, 260; anger at Germany in Aug., 1905,
+ 266; compromise proposal in Feb., 1906, 372-73; opposes Austrian
+ proposal in March, 1906, 379; opposes Roosevelt’s proposal in March,
+ 1906, 389; trouble with France in March, 1906, 392-93
+
+ Spain, Queen Mother of, 35 n., 93 n., 118, 137
+
+ “Splendid isolation,” 53
+
+ Spring Rice, Cecil, 101 n., 114 n., 115, 228 n., 291-92, 324
+
+ Sternburg, Baron, 160, 250, 251 n., 355, 384 n., 385
+
+ Straits of Gibraltar, 3
+
+ Stumm, Herr von, 373 n.
+
+ Sultan of Turkey, 28, 206 n.
+
+ Sweden, 373 n.
+
+ Switzerland, 393 n.
+
+ Sydenham, Lord, 309 n.
+
+ Tafilelt, 12
+
+ Taft, 214, 228
+
+ Tangier, 47-48, 65, 88, 120-21, 124, 130-34, 140, 153, 181-89, 186 n.,
+ 190, 196-97, 202, 247 n., 262-63, 270 n.; visit to, 192-95
+
+ Tardieu, André, 187 n., 199 n., 206 n., 234 n., 275, 348 n., 354 n.,
+ 372 n., 373 nn., 376 n., 381 n., 391 n.
+
+ Tattenbach, Count, 189-90, 206 n., 208, 213-15, 216 n., 223-25, 252,
+ 257 n., 261-62 and n., 264-68, 274, 349, 352, 356 and n., 366, 376 and
+ n.; proposal to Bülow on April 29, 1905, 215-16; favors Austrian
+ proposal in 1906, 378
+
+ _Temps, Le_, 13 n., 265, 275, 387, 391 and n., 403
+
+ Teniet-Sassi, 16
+
+ Tibet, 82, 111
+
+ Tidikelt, 11
+
+ Tirpitz, Admiral, 164 n., 181
+
+ Tittoni, 145-46, 207 n., 224-25, and n.
+
+ Tores, El, 395
+
+ Touat, 11, 22, 63, 65
+
+ Tournade, 200
+
+ _Tribuna_, 26
+
+ Triple Alliance, 19-20, 22 n., 23-30, 32-34, 72-73, 75, 76 n., 106,
+ 136, 141, 143-46, 181-83, 213 n., 279, 286, 398 n., 400
+
+ Triple entente, 138
+
+ Tripoli, 21-22, 24, 26, 143
+
+ Tschirschky, Herr von, 285 n., 286, 328, 399 n.
+
+ Tunis, 14, 19
+
+ Tweedmouth, Lord, 342
+
+ Ular, Alexandre, 276 n.
+
+ United States, 43, 50, 53, 62, 95 n., 160, 170, 178, 215
+
+ Vaffier-Pollet, 312 and n.
+
+ Van Grooten, 327 n.
+
+ _Vanity Fair_, 173
+
+ Varley, 131
+
+ Vassel, 186 n.
+
+ Venezuela affair, 82
+
+ Victor Emmanuel II, King, 23, 33 n., 145-46, 182
+
+ Victoria, Queen, 11
+
+ Vigo, 35 n., 127, 140, 151, 217
+
+ Villa-Urrutia, 198 n., 206, 236, 247, 316, 330 and n.
+
+ Visconti-Venosta, Marquis, 22, 23, 316, 332, 349, 351, 362, 377, 378
+ n., 381; policy of, toward France, 20
+
+ Waldeck-Rousseau, 8
+
+ Wallace, D. M., 357
+
+ Wedel, Count, 358
+
+ Welsersheimb, Count, 349, 358, 377-78, 378 n., 390
+
+ _Weltpolitik_, 10, 27-28, 52, 56-58
+
+ White, Henry, 214, 349, 351, 362 and n., 381, 392
+
+ Wiesbaden, 138
+
+ Wilhelmshöhe, 75
+
+ William II, Emperor, 17, 45, 46 n., 55-58, 56 n., 68-69, 75 and n., 93
+ n., 161, 165, 167, 169-74, 181-82, 186 and n., 187-88 and n., 193,
+ 195-96, 198, 201 n., 202, 214, 222, 250, 267 n., 272, 300, 309, 317
+ and n., 318-19, 326; cordiality toward France, 42, 43 and n.; offers
+ alliance to Great Britain, 54; aversion of, to Holstein, 60; visit of,
+ to England in 1899, 61-62; visit of, to England in 1901, 68-69; at
+ Vigo, 127, 151; on Moroccan question, 140; visit to Italy in 1904,
+ 144-45; speeches in May, 1904, 147 and n.; lack of interest in
+ Morocco, 151-52 and n.; opposes intervention in Morocco in 1904, 157;
+ letter to Czar on Oct. 27, 1904, 163; failure of alliance negotiations
+ in 1904, 177-78 and n., 180; and Japan in 1905, 178; speech at Bremen
+ in 1905, 188 n.; opposes Tangier visit, 188-89; speeches at Tangier,
+ 193-94 and n., 195 n.; initiates Russo-Japanese negotiations for
+ peace, 239; opposes Bülow’s policy in June, 1905, 239 and n.; anger
+ of, at Delcassé and Great Britain in Oct., 1905, 277; speech on Oct.
+ 26, 1905, 277; Björkö meeting, 279-85 and n.; advice to Czar in July,
+ 1905, 285 n.; letter to Czar on July 27, 1905, 285-86; changes
+ phrasing of Björkö Treaty, 286, 288; on French and Belgian neutrality
+ in case of Anglo-German war, 288; letter to Bülow on Aug. 11, 1905,
+ 289-90; on British naval maneuvers in the Baltic in 1905, 292 n.; and
+ Witte in 1905, 299 and n.; and Czar in Sept., 1905, 299-300; and Czar
+ on Björkö Treaty, 303-4, 304 n.; disappointment over annulment of
+ Björkö Treaty, 305; speech in Reichstag on Nov. 28, 1905, 313 n.;
+ offer to Spanish King in Nov., 1905, 316 n., 330; protests pacific
+ intentions in Dec., 1905, 318-19; “Brilliant second,” 398; on Italy in
+ 1906, 398 n.; on international situation in 1906, 399
+
+ Windsor, 62
+
+ Witte, Count, 44, 160 n., 161 n., 271-72, 294 and n., 301 n., 321 n.,
+ 324, 367, 384 n., 391 n.; ideas on foreign policy in 1905, 298-99;
+ visit to Rominten in Sept., 1905, 299-300; and annulment of Björkö
+ Treaty, 300-301
+
+ Wolff, Theodor, 127 n., 186 n., 199 n.
+
+ Zanardelli, 24
+
+
+ [ PRINTED ]
+ [IN U·S·A·]
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's note
+
+
+ pg 25, footnote 69, Changed: "military agreement of 1887 beween" to:
+ "between"
+
+ pg 37-38, footnote 111, Changed: "_Diario de la sesiónes de Cortes_"
+ to: "_las sesiones_"
+
+ pg 131-132, footnote 386, Changed: "Saint-René Taillander, May 31,
+ 1904" to: "Taillandier"
+
+ pg 153, Changed: "to let the Spanish percieve that" to: "perceive"
+
+ pg 168, footnote 512, Changed: "_Kreigsschuldfrage_" to:
+ "_Kriegsschuldfrage_"
+
+ pg 187, footnote 580, Changed: "_zum Ende des Welkkrieges_" to:
+ "_Weltkrieges_"
+
+ pg 264, footnote 820, Changed: "Bülow to F. O., July 31, 1903" to:
+ "1905"
+
+ pg 410, Changed: "Bibourd" to: "Bihourd"
+
+ pg 417, [Révoil] Changed: "meno. to Radowitz" to: "memo."
+
+ Minor changes in punctuation have been done silently.
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78609 ***
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+<body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78609 ***</div>
+
+<div class="margins">
+<div class="x-ebookmaker-drop figcenterplate iw1">
+<figure id="cover"><a href="images/cover.jpg"><img alt="[Cover]"
+src="images/cover_thumb.jpg"></a>
+</figure>
+</div>
+
+<div class="page">
+<p class="center spaced15 space-above2">THE FIRST MOROCCAN
+CRISIS<br>
+<span class="less">1904-1906</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="page">
+<p class="center small spaced13 space-above2">THE UNIVERSITY OF
+CHICAGO PRESS<br>
+CHICAGO, ILLINOIS</p>
+
+<hr class="decor width1">
+
+<p class="center"><span class="vsmall">THE BAKER & TAYLOR
+COMPANY</span><br>
+<span class="tiny">NEW YORK</span>
+</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="vsmall">THE CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY
+PRESS</span><br>
+<span class="tiny">LONDON</span>
+</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="vsmall">THE
+MARUZEN-KABUSHIKI-KAISHA</span><br>
+<span class="tiny">TOKYO, OSAKA, KYOTO, FUKUOKA, SENDAI</span>
+</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="vsmall">THE COMMERCIAL PRESS,
+LIMITED</span><br>
+<span class="tiny">SHANGHAI</span>
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap">
+
+<div class="titlepage">
+<h1>THE FIRST<br>
+MOROCCAN CRISIS<br>
+1904-1906</h1>
+
+<p class="center spaced15 space-below2"><span class=
+"sc less">By</span><br>
+EUGENE N. ANDERSON<br>
+<span class="med"><em>The University of Chicago</em></span></p>
+
+<div class="figdecor iwdecor1">
+<figure><img src='images/logo.jpg' alt='[Decoration]'>
+</figure>
+</div>
+
+<p class="publisher">THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS<br>
+CHICAGO, ILLINOIS</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="page">
+<p class="center space-above vsmall">COPYRIGHT 1930 BY THE
+UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO<br>
+ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. PUBLISHED JUNE 1930</p>
+
+<hr class="decor width5">
+
+<p class="center tiny">COMPOSED AND PRINTED BY THE UNIVERSITY OF
+CHICAGO PRESS<br>
+CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, U.S.A.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap">
+
+<div class="page">
+<p class="center spaced17"><span class=
+"letter-spaced">DEDICATED</span><br>
+<span class="less">TO</span><br>
+<span class="letter-spaced">MY MOTHER</span>
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap">
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">[vii]</span><a id=
+"pref"></a>PREFACE</h2>
+
+<p>The fall of Morocco under European control marks the nadir in
+the annals of Islam. The land was the last important Mohammedan
+territory to be taken by the Christians. Thereafter began the
+Islamic revival which is still in course. This volume, however,
+deals not with that subject but with the history of a conflict in
+European diplomacy, referring to Morocco proper only when necessary
+to explain the moves of the Powers.</p>
+
+<p>The Moroccan crisis of 1904-6 contained all those elements that
+were present at the other crises on the road to the great
+war—desire for colonial acquisition, trade and investment
+rivalries, national honor, diplomacy which contained the threat of
+war, the principle of the balance of power, fears, and
+counterfears. The special interest of this episode lies in the fact
+that, as the first of the series, it shows the Powers choosing
+sides and fixing their opinions and policies. It determined the
+mental attitude of the players in the subsequent struggles and gave
+direction and mind, so to speak, to the later events.</p>
+
+<p>In the history of the Moroccan affair from approximately 1898 to
+1906, when the first crisis ended, are mirrored almost all the
+important movements of the Powers with reference to one another.
+The grouping of the Powers around France, the development of
+Anglo-German rivalry, the failure of Germany’s policy of playing
+between Great Britain and the Dual Alliance, Germany’s
+<em>riposte</em> and attempts to restore her position—all are
+either intimately connected with the Moroccan question or can be
+explained in the light of it. The Moroccan problem was the
+political barometer of Europe.</p>
+
+<p>In making this study I have relied chiefly upon the official
+documents contained in <em>Die Grosse Politik der Europäischen
+Kabinette, 1871-1914</em>, in <em>British Documents on the Origins
+of the War, 1898-1914</em>, and in the two <em>Livres jaunes</em>
+concerning the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_viii">[viii]</span>
+Moroccan affair from 1901-1906. The presence of so much new
+material has rendered antiquated most of the older accounts of the
+subject. I have therefore not cited all of this secondary
+literature, preferring to give source references.</p>
+
+<p>In spite of this rich material, there are still obstacles to a
+complete, impartial, and balanced account of this episode. The
+outstanding one is the absence of adequate French documents. The
+French policy has practically to be studied through British or
+German eyes and on the basis of the accomplished fact. The British
+and the German policies are thus treated with more understanding
+and detail. But even here difficulties arise. History cannot be
+written alone on the basis of the official diplomatic documents of
+today. The variety and amount of information which Ranke found
+condensed in the reports of the Venetian ambassadors of the
+sixteenth century is now scattered in a hundred places. The
+improved facilities for communication and transportation have
+limited and specialized the correspondence of governments and their
+foreign representatives. Information is now obtained as well from
+personal interviews, newspapers, and all those means which create
+governmental as well as public opinion. Much of great importance is
+never written down at all. Foreign secretaries often give orders to
+their ambassadors without explaining their reasons. This is
+particularly true of the British, less true of the Germans.
+Moreover, statesmen are at times inclined for reasons of policy to
+write down how they wish a certain event to be viewed, not how they
+actually view it. To check and supplement the official documents,
+therefore, the intimate and more personal information in
+biographies, autobiographies, and memoirs has been especially
+valuable, although neither the number of those works, particularly
+on the French side, nor the material in them is complete.</p>
+
+<p>While international relations were more complex in the pre-war
+days than ever before in history, the study of them is facilitated
+by the fact that diplomacy was still secret, that a relatively few
+individuals guided it. By focusing attention upon these
+individuals,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_ix">[ix]</span> one can
+interpret the motives which consciously or unconsciously determined
+foreign policy. These men sublimated and represented the diplomatic
+mind of the nations. A new actor had also made its appearance in
+their midst, that combination of Proteus and Fata Morgana, public
+opinion; but even it was given tangible shape in the minds of the
+responsible statesmen who had to interpret it and respond to its
+demands. I have tried to test these interpretations by checking
+them against the opinions of contemporaries and by reading in the
+contemporary newspapers, magazines, speeches, and letters.</p>
+
+<p>Diplomatic policies and situations cannot be explained in a
+formula. Statesmen are all more or less opportunists; they usually
+keep several alternatives in mind. To assert that one country is
+bent on war and another on peace, one on revenge and aggression and
+another on defense, is to give an incomplete view. In handling the
+fluid and shifting materials of diplomacy, one must avoid both
+oversimplicity and historical fatalism. Further information will
+probably add or change many details in this study, but I believe
+that the main lines of the history of this crisis are herein
+explained.</p>
+
+<p>I wish especially to express my appreciation to Professor
+Bernadotte E. Schmitt, Professor Ferdinand Schevill, Associate
+Professor Arthur P. Scott, and Associate Professor Louis R.
+Gottschalk—all of the University of Chicago—for much beneficial
+advice and criticism in reading this work in manuscript, and to
+thank my sister, Dr. Jesse May McFadyen, of the University of
+Minnesota, for many hours of help in searching for the right
+phrase.</p>
+
+<p class="right pad-right2"><span class="sc">Eugene N.
+Anderson</span>
+</p>
+
+<p class="less"><span class="sc">Chicago</span>, 1929</p>
+
+<hr class="chap">
+
+<h2>TABLE OF CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<table class="toc">
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr-top"><a href="#c01">I.</a>
+</td>
+<td class="tdl-top hang1 sc">France and Morocco, 1898-1904</td>
+<td class="tdr-bot">1</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr-top"><a href="#c02">II.</a>
+</td>
+<td class="tdl-top hang1 sc">The Franco-Italian Entente,
+1900-1902</td>
+<td class="tdr-bot">19</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr-top"><a href="#c03">III.</a>
+</td>
+<td class="tdl-top hang1 sc">The Franco-Spanish Entente,
+1898-1903</td>
+<td class="tdr-bot">35</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr-top"><a href="#c04">IV.</a>
+</td>
+<td class="tdl-top hang1 sc">Delcassé’s Policy toward Great Britain
+and Germany, 1898-1902</td>
+<td class="tdr-bot">41</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr-top"><a href="#c05">V.</a>
+</td>
+<td class="tdl-top hang1 sc">The Anglo-German Alliance
+Negotiations, 1898-1901</td>
+<td class="tdr-bot">52</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr-top"><a href="#c06">VI.</a>
+</td>
+<td class="tdl-top hang1 sc">The Making of the Entente
+Cordiale</td>
+<td class="tdr-bot">81</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr-top"><a href="#c07">VII.</a>
+</td>
+<td class="tdl-top hang1 sc">Anglo-Russian Relations after the
+Making of the Entente Cordiale</td>
+<td class="tdr-bot">110</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr-top"><a href="#c08">VIII.</a>
+</td>
+<td class="tdl-top hang1 sc">French Policy after the Making of the
+Entente Cordiale</td>
+<td class="tdr-bot">117</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr-top"><a href="#c09">IX.</a>
+</td>
+<td class="tdl-top hang1 sc">Germany and the Entente Cordiale,
+1903-4</td>
+<td class="tdr-bot">135</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr-top"><a href="#c10">X.</a>
+</td>
+<td class="tdl-top hang1 sc">The Negotiations for a Russo-German
+Alliance, 1904</td>
+<td class="tdr-bot">159</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr-top"><a href="#c11">XI.</a>
+</td>
+<td class="tdl-top hang1 sc">The Visit to Tangier</td>
+<td class="tdr-bot">181</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr-top"><a href="#c12">XII.</a>
+</td>
+<td class="tdl-top hang1 sc">The Moroccan Crisis from the Visit to
+Tangier to the Fall of Delcassé</td>
+<td class="tdr-bot">196</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr-top"><a href="#c13">XIII.</a>
+</td>
+<td class="tdl-top hang1 sc">The Moroccan Crisis, June 6-July 8,
+1905</td>
+<td class="tdr-bot">234</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr-top"><a href="#c14">XIV.</a>
+</td>
+<td class="tdl-top hang1 sc">The Moroccan Crisis, July-October,
+1905</td>
+<td class="tdr-bot">259</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr-top"><a href="#c15">XV.</a>
+</td>
+<td class="tdl-top hang1 sc">The Treaty of Björkö and Its
+Annulment</td>
+<td class="tdr-bot">279</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr-top"><a href="#c16">XVI.</a>
+</td>
+<td class="tdl-top hang1 sc">The Preliminaries to the Conference of
+Algeciras</td>
+<td class="tdr-bot">311</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr-top"><a href="#c17">XVII.</a>
+</td>
+<td class="tdl-top hang1 sc">The Conference of Algeciras</td>
+<td class="tdr-bot">348</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr-top"><a href="#c18">XVIII.</a>
+</td>
+<td class="tdl-top hang1 sc">Conclusion</td>
+<td class="tdr-bot">397</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdr sc"><a href="#ind">Index</a>
+</td>
+<td>
+</td>
+<td class="tdr">409</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr class="chap">
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[1]</span><a id=
+"c01"></a>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+<p class="sch2">FRANCE AND MOROCCO, 1898-1904</p>
+
+<h3 class="space-above1">I. THE DECADENT MOROCCO</h3>
+
+<p>Morocco was one of the last of the “backward” countries to be
+taken under control by a European state. It was a historic land
+with a long record of wars against the Christians; but, like many
+another, it had never adapted itself to the course of European
+civilization, and by the end of the nineteenth century had
+consequently become consigned by statesmen interested in colonial
+conquest to the category of “dying states.” Hence it was qualified
+for acquisition, division, or control.</p>
+
+<p>The execution of this work was beset with unusually grave
+difficulties. Several centuries of more or less regular diplomatic
+and commercial relations with European Powers had assured Morocco
+international recognition as a sovereign and independent land.
+Moreover, the rival interests of the Powers there were so firmly
+established and so conflicting that they seemed irreconcilable.
+Down to 1900 these Powers had jealously blocked each other from a
+special position, and, in case of necessity, as in 1880, had
+settled common problems concerning Morocco by means of an
+international conference.<a id="FNanchor_1"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> And while this disunion
+obtained, that country of eight million fanatical and warlike souls
+able to play one potential enemy against the other was secure.</p>
+
+<p>At the opening of the twentieth century Morocco was one of the
+least-known lands of the world. Insecurity of life, absence of
+roads and means of transportation and communication of any but the
+most primitive sort, undeveloped harbors poor by nature, and a
+governmental policy designed to prevent any Power from gaining a
+foothold in the land by the acquisition of property,<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_2">[2]</span> mining or other concessions had
+excluded the “Christian dogs” and maintained Mohammedan
+purity.<a id="FNanchor_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2" class=
+"fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, the country was reputed by Europeans to be rich in
+natural resources, the “pearl of North Africa.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> The
+plains and valleys, if irrigated and cultivated by modern methods,
+would, it was held, produce vast supplies of foodstuffs and would
+become one of the granaries of Europe. Other regions were declared
+to be admirably suited for grazing; while the mountains, those
+bulwarks against the encroachments of the desert, were envisaged as
+teeming with minerals. Popular imagination glorified Morocco into
+another Promised Land.<a id="FNanchor_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4"
+class="fnanchor">[4]</a></p>
+
+<p>However that might be, Europeans were doing very little business
+there. Official French statistics reckoned the total amount of
+foreign trade with Morocco in 1903 as 109,495,888 francs. Of this
+small sum France and Algeria enjoyed 31 per cent; Great Britain,
+41.6 per cent; Germany, 9 per cent; Spain, 8.4 per cent; and the
+other Powers insignificant amounts.<a id="FNanchor_5"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> The contrast between
+economic fact and economic possibility acted as a spur to the
+groups desirous of political acquisition; but the smallness of
+these economic interests and their substantial equality for a
+number of the Powers made it difficult to determine which had the
+dominant claim to develop Morocco.</p>
+
+<p>A conflict of strategic interests added to this
+complication.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[3]</span> Morocco’s
+geographic situation on the Straits of Gibraltar and on the route
+to South Africa, her proximity to the French and Spanish
+possessions in North Africa and to Spain, made the Sherifian Empire
+a land coveted by all Powers with Western Mediterranean interests,
+in particular Great Britain, Germany, France, Spain, and Italy.
+Since each state suspected that any rival would abuse its
+advantages if it gained ascendancy, disagreement over the future of
+Morocco persisted. However, in an era which was coming to be more
+and more dominated by the urge for colonial control, this problem
+would not long remain unsolved. At the close of the century a
+favorable turn in international affairs and an accentuation of the
+chronic state of anarchy in the land itself brought the question to
+the fore.</p>
+
+<p>The period of strong rule in Morocco under Sultan
+Mulai-el-Hassan (1873-94) and the grand vizier, Ba-Ahmed, came to
+an end with the death of the latter in May, 1900, when the young,
+inexperienced, and incompetent sultan, Abd-el-Aziz, assumed
+authority in person. By his preference for foreign goods and
+society he soon not only exhausted his treasury but also estranged
+his subjects. He acquired a fantastic collection in which figured
+cameras, coaches, bicycles, dolls, pianos by the dozen, and animals
+for a menagerie. He amused himself lavishly with his European
+friends. He listened to the advice of his two intimates, Kaid Sir
+Harry Maclean, a former English soldier from Gibraltar who had been
+in Moroccan service for almost two decades, and Mr. W. B. Harris,
+correspondent in Morocco of the <em>London Times</em>; and by
+promulgating a program of fiscal reform sought to replenish his
+resources and reorganize his country in time to prevent the
+intervention of the Powers, particularly of France, and the
+consequent loss of his independence. But, while his intentions were
+good, his actions proved disastrous for himself and his land.<a id=
+"FNanchor_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a>
+Scandalized by the tales of his antics with the
+Christians<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[4]</span> and outraged
+by the new taxes that violated the Koran, the natives revolted in
+1900.<a id="FNanchor_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7" class=
+"fnanchor">[7]</a> The rebellions in the north and northeast
+constituted a double menace since they might lead to attacks on the
+French and Spanish possessions and bring on an intervention of
+those two Powers.<a id="FNanchor_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8"
+class="fnanchor">[8]</a> The Sultan had no money, therefore no
+army; and without an army he could collect no taxes. The rumor
+spread that he had actually turned Christian and sold the land to
+the English. The political and religious ties with his people were
+everywhere breaking.<a id="FNanchor_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9"
+class="fnanchor">[9]</a> By 1903 his precarious authority was
+confined to a few towns; and his capital, Fez, was itself
+threatened by the rebels.<a id="FNanchor_10"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a></p>
+
+<p>As this situation was nothing unusual in Moroccan annals, the
+natives were not greatly disturbed. If events had been permitted to
+take their normal course, a revolution would probably have replaced
+Abd-el-Aziz by some stronger man, and the country would have
+returned to its usual condition of semianarchy. The tragedy for
+Morocco lay in the fact that this disorder gave the opportunity for
+the interested Powers to intervene. The increasing insecurity of
+foreigners and the Sultan’s need for loans foreshadowed the end of
+Moroccan independence. In 1899 Lord Salisbury, British prime
+minister, had declared that Morocco was decaying and might collapse
+at any moment.<a id="FNanchor_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11" class=
+"fnanchor">[11]</a> Politicians elsewhere began to turn their
+attention toward this corner of Africa. Among them the French
+assumed the lead and solved the problem.</p>
+
+<h3><span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[5]</span>II. FRANCE AND THE
+MOROCCAN PROBLEM, 1898-1904</h3>
+
+<p>By the end of the nineteenth century France’s North African
+empire was assuming definitive form. In the 1890’s agreements with
+Great Britain, Germany, and Spain (1900) consolidated France’s
+possession and left only Morocco, a country almost inclosed on the
+land side by French territory, as an object whose acquisition was
+coming to be regarded by Frenchmen as essential to the completion
+of their ambitions in that region.<a id="FNanchor_12"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a></p>
+
+<p>To aid in the achievement of this goal a Comité de l’Afrique
+française had been organized in 1889 to popularize African
+questions with the French people, to exert pressure upon the
+government, and to carry on a unified and consistent activity for
+colonial expansion which the French cabinets could not do. Its
+membership was relatively small—about seventy in all—but very
+select. With the Prince d’Arenberg as its president, it numbered in
+its ranks deputies, senators, military and naval officers,
+officials in the government (although no cabinet members, of
+course), members of the Academy, newspaper editors and owners,
+members of the Institute, members of various geographical
+societies, colonial societies, chambers of commerce—men such as M.
+Gabriel Hanotaux, former minister of foreign affairs; M. Jules
+Siegfried, who resigned temporarily when he became minister of
+commerce in 1893; M. Paul Révoil, governor-general of Algeria;
+General Joseph Galliéni, governor-general of Madagascar; M. Eugène
+Etienne, former undersecretary of state for the colonies and future
+cabinet member; M. Antoine Guillain, vice-president of the Chamber
+for a time and former minister of the colonies; M. Paul Deschanel,
+president of the committee for foreign and colonial affairs in the
+Chamber. Through common membership and close co-operation the
+Comité was assured of the active support of the other colonial,
+geographical, and commercial organizations. The character and
+position of its members in state affairs gave it an undeniably
+great influence<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[6]</span> upon
+the government as well as upon the nation. This influence was
+enhanced by the organization of groups favoring colonial
+acquisition in both the Chamber (1892) and Senate (1898), the
+former of which under the presidency of M. Etienne boasted in 1902
+almost two hundred members.<a id="FNanchor_13"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a></p>
+
+<p>During the 1890’s the French advocated a policy of <em>status
+quo</em> with reference to Morocco. They opposed permitting any
+Power to gain undue influence there or allowing Morocco to reform
+herself. They were suspicious of any individual or collective
+intervention by the Powers, and wanted to hold the future
+completely free. But the defeats of Italy by Abyssinia in 1896 and
+of Spain by the United States in 1898 dampened the ardor of those
+two rivals. Then, when British attention was claimed by the Boer
+War and when the internal disintegration of Morocco increased the
+possibilities of intervention, the proponents of aggression
+demanded that France should act.</p>
+
+<p>Late in 1899 the official publication of the Comité declared
+that the Moroccan question was of paramount importance in French
+foreign policy.<a id="FNanchor_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14"
+class="fnanchor">[14]</a> It promoted the campaign for the
+acquisition of Morocco so successfully that by the end of 1903
+almost all parties in France, including even the Socialists under
+M. Jaurès, had come to consider the French claims to predominance
+in Morocco as superior to those of any other Power.<a id=
+"FNanchor_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a>
+The popular arguments, based largely upon the proximity of Algeria
+to Morocco, ranged from the theory of the “natural frontier” to
+economic and strategic contentions. In Morocco rebellions and
+religious wars could easily start, it was claimed, spreading thence
+over the whole of North Africa and endangering France’s
+possessions. If any other European Power established itself in that
+land, it could utilize the native resources in troubling France. On
+the other hand, by virtue of her experience in handling
+and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span> employing
+Mohammedans, France was better fitted to perform this work of
+civilization than anyone else. These were, of course, the stock
+arguments of all parties advocating the establishment of European
+control over “backward” areas.</p>
+
+<p>The Comité formulated a policy for handling both the internal
+and the international aspects of the question—a policy which M.
+Delcassé, minister of foreign affairs from 1898 to 1905, was
+actually to follow. It was the popular solution, and, for France,
+the only possible one.<a id="FNanchor_16"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> As the Fashoda affair had
+taught the French that the approval of the Powers was necessary for
+the acquisition of colonial territory, the first requisite was to
+make agreements with the interested states, among whom the
+<em>Bulletin</em> included Germany. Moreover, the nature of the
+problem demanded this approach. For Morocco’s international status,
+the interests of the Powers there, the military strength of the
+fanatical population, and the consequent need of having French
+hands completely free from the danger of complications before
+attempting to reform Morocco made this preliminary international
+understanding imperative. The program contained four essential
+points. The sovereignty of the sultan and the independence and
+integrity of his land should be assured. Adequate guaranties for
+the freedom of the straits should be provided. The legitimate
+interests of the Powers, considered to be chiefly economic, should
+be satisfied through the acceptance of the principle of full
+commercial liberty. Lastly, Spain’s territorial claims should be
+satisfied. By this course the Comité and its followers thought to
+dispose of the international aspect.</p>
+
+<p>At the same time Morocco itself had to be won. The
+<em>Bulletin</em> believed that a policy of “pacific penetration”
+carried on through the agency of the sultan would solve this task.
+The sultan was the sole source of authority, religious as well as
+political, that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span> France
+could properly utilize. By working through him she might further
+her own interests and might introduce reforms without provoking the
+natives to war. The sovereignty of the Sultan would not be touched
+nor the independence and integrity of his land be violated. The
+“pacific” aspect would prevent the other Powers from taking offence
+and would satisfy the French people. The “penetrating” aspect would
+give satisfactory reality. It was a masterful combination, with an
+air of superficial plausibility so long as one did not attempt to
+reconcile the phrases “pacific penetration” and “preponderant
+influence” with those of “sovereignty of the sultan” and
+“independence and integrity of the land.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17" class=
+"fnanchor">[17]</a></p>
+
+<p>The French minister of foreign affairs from 1898 to 1905 was, as
+already said, M. Théophile Delcassé. Born in 1852, he was at a very
+impressionable age when the Franco-Prussian War occurred. He became
+so ardent a disciple of Gambetta that he could never speak
+afterward of their friendship without emotion. Journalist, deputy,
+colonial undersecretary, colonial minister—such was the course of
+his rise. Uncommunicative by nature, he avoided Parliament as much
+as possible. He was on intimate terms with M. Waldeck-Rousseau,
+premier from 1899 to 1901; but with the latter’s successors, MM.
+Combes and Rouvier, his relations were cool, and he asserted his
+entire independence in the conduct of his office. In a short and
+caustic sketch, November, 1900, Sir Edmund Monson, British
+ambassador at Paris, wrote of him:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>Delcassé is an unsatisfactory Minister to us diplomatists in
+Paris. He is extremely uncommunicative, not to say secretive.
+Consequently it is very rare that any one of us succeeds in
+extracting information from him. He has plenty of commonplace
+conversation, which flows glibly enough, and he will talk
+eloquently in an academical fashion. But he hardly ever tells one
+anything in the way of political news, and he has an adroit way of
+feigning ignorance which took me in at first, until I convinced
+myself that it was all shamming. He always urges that he is not a
+diplomatist by profession, but he carries the practice of
+subterfuge to an extent which I have hardly ever<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span> met before in a Minister of
+Foreign Affairs. On the other hand, he does not tell lies
+systematically, as X did.<a id="FNanchor_18"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">His long tenure in office and the free scope given
+him by the cabinet and Parliament, both engrossed in internal
+affairs,<a id="FNanchor_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19" class=
+"fnanchor">[19]</a> enabled him to put his own impress upon French
+foreign policy and to give it a positive, constructive content.
+Although a member of radical cabinets that reduced the military and
+naval budgets and neglected the defenses of the land, he openly
+disapproved of that policy and advocated rearing a virile,
+patriotic generation of fighters. He courted and received the
+support of all parties. He took as the sole objective in his
+foreign policy the maintenance and development of French interests,
+and avowed himself an opportunist in his method of diplomacy. He
+was a <em>Realpolitiker</em> at a moment when the French people
+seemed to be turning toward internationalism and pacifism. His
+policy unfolded itself gradually, and, in the absence of adequate
+documentary material, it has to be explained largely upon the basis
+of its accomplishments.<a id="FNanchor_20"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a></p>
+
+<p>The new elements introduced into French policy by this minister
+were associated almost altogether with the Moroccan question. He
+seems from the start to have coveted that country.<a id=
+"FNanchor_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a>
+He thought that since the Dual Alliance was firmly
+established,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span> France
+as well as Russia ought to reap some benefits therefrom. But, as
+Russia was turning her energies more and more to the Far East and
+was thereby weakening the effectiveness of the Alliance, he desired
+some means of re-establishing the equilibrium of forces in Europe.
+Particularly was this necessary since Germany had inaugurated her
+<em>Weltpolitik</em>; for, with German power increasing at so fast
+a pace, France had to seek new friends for the protection of
+herself, her colonies, her interests, and for the realization of
+her ambitions toward Morocco before it was too late.<a id=
+"FNanchor_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a>
+This triple aim of better defense, of increased prestige, and of
+colonial acquisition in Northwest Africa he saw could be realized
+by the settlement of the international aspect of the Moroccan
+question. Italy and Spain as Mediterranean neighbors and Great
+Britain as a formidable colonial rival should be won to the French
+plan by agreements which at the same time should create friendships
+between them and fortify and aggrandize the French position in
+Europe. Moreover, M. Delcassé hoped to reconcile Russia with Great
+Britain, above all to prevent them from actual conflict. And,
+depending upon circumstances, he was apparently willing to treat
+with Germany. A colonial acquisition and a rearrangement in
+international relations were to be achieved together, and the
+Moroccan problem came to signify both.<a id=
+"FNanchor_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23" class=
+"fnanchor">[23]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span>The basis of the
+Franco-Moroccan relations was laid by the treaty of 1845 regulating
+the boundary between Algeria and her western neighbor.<a id=
+"FNanchor_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a>
+However, the frontier remained in part indefinite; border raids
+recurred; the possession of the oases, Touat, Gourara, and
+Tidikelt, discovered after the treaty was made, remained
+unsettled.<a id="FNanchor_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25" class=
+"fnanchor">[25]</a> The consequence was chronic trouble, which
+France tried to eliminate by occupying these oases late in 1899 and
+in 1900 and by beginning to construct railroads toward them.</p>
+
+<p>Alarmed by this activity, the Sultan asked Queen Victoria in the
+autumn of 1900 to obtain assurances from France which would
+tranquilize his fears. Realizing that this would be impossible, the
+British government refused, and Sir Edmund Monson, the British
+ambassador at Paris, merely mentioned the Sultan’s anxieties to the
+French Foreign Minister (October 17).<a id=
+"FNanchor_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a>
+The Italian, Spanish, and German governments also showed some
+concern over this action at Touat.<a id="FNanchor_27"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a> M. Delcassé replied to
+them all with the statement which he had made in the French Senate
+on April 3, that in Africa France would honor all treaties signed
+by her, that she would respect the frontiers of neighboring states,
+and that she had no intention of changing the <em>status quo</em>
+in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span> Mediterranean.
+She was merely occupying territory manifestly belonging to
+her.<a id="FNanchor_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28" class=
+"fnanchor">[28]</a></p>
+
+<p>The number of attacks of the Moroccans upon Algeria increased.
+After several particularly bold raids had occurred early in 1901,
+the French government sent a sharply worded note to the Sultan
+which he interpreted as threatening action against his ancestral
+home, Tafilelt.<a id="FNanchor_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29"
+class="fnanchor">[29]</a> He appealed to the British government for
+protection,<a id="FNanchor_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30" class=
+"fnanchor">[30]</a> and in June and July sent an embassy headed by
+the minister of war, el-Menebhi, to London and Berlin to obtain aid
+against France and to negotiate a loan.<a id=
+"FNanchor_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a>
+As the question of an alliance was then engrossing the attentions
+of both the British and the German governments, neither felt
+inclined to give the Moroccans anything but innocuous advice, and
+this mission was a failure.<a id="FNanchor_32"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a></p>
+
+<p>The dispatch of that embassy just at the time when Anglo-German
+relations were so cordial alarmed the French Foreign
+Minister.<a id="FNanchor_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33" class=
+"fnanchor">[33]</a> Through M. Révoil, governor-general of Algeria,
+he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span> warned the
+Moroccan government against signing any political or commercial
+agreement without French approval, and exacted a promise from a
+Moroccan embassy then in Paris concerning the execution of any
+accord which might be signed.<a id="FNanchor_34"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a> Among the Powers, M.
+Delcassé had little to fear from Spain, with whom he was on
+intimate terms, or from Italy, with whom in the previous December
+he had made an agreement about Morocco.<a id=
+"FNanchor_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a>
+He assured the British government that France had no intention of
+raising “serious questions in Morocco.” The Marquess of Lansdowne,
+British foreign secretary, responded with a frank account of his
+conversations with the Moroccan embassy.<a id=
+"FNanchor_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a>
+It was Germany of whose reactions M. Delcassé was most uncertain.
+In June, through his friend M. Leon y Castillo, the Spanish
+ambassador, he suggested to Prince Radolin, the German ambassador
+in Paris, that if the German government, as the victor in 1870,
+would take the initiative, he would like to discuss various matters
+with a view to arriving at an entente.<a id=
+"FNanchor_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a>
+The German response to the Spanish Ambassador was that before
+Germany could enter into an arrangement with France whereby the
+hostility of a third Power might be incurred the two countries must
+make a mutual guaranty of each other’s territorial integrity. Since
+France would thereby have to guarantee the German
+possession<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span> of
+Alsace-Lorraine, the proposed negotiation was crushed.<a id=
+"FNanchor_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a>
+None the less, in a conversation with Prince Radolin on June 23,
+1901, M. Delcassé made and received an important statement about
+Morocco. When the Ambassador mentioned the discussion in the French
+newspapers of a French protectorate over that land, the Foreign
+Minister replied:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>“If by that word protectorate one means that France, mistress of
+Algeria and Tunis, has and must conserve toward Morocco an unique
+situation [<em>une situation absolument à part</em>], it seems to
+me that it is self-evident [<em>il me semble que c’est l’évidence
+même</em>].” “Nothing is more just, every one takes account of that
+situation [<em>tout le mond se rend compte de cette
+situation</em>],” answered Prince Radolin.<a id=
+"FNanchor_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39" class=
+"fnanchor">[39]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Much or little could be read into either remark; but together
+with the general diplomatic situation they enabled M. Delcassé in
+the Senate on July 5 to declare that</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">if France, mistress of Algeria and through Algeria
+neighbor of Morocco along an immense frontier, is forced to follow
+what occurs there with a singular interest,—our vigilance does not
+aim at other than the tranquillity, prosperity, and integrity of
+the Sherifian empire. . . . .<a id="FNanchor_40"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The presence of an embassy in Paris simultaneously with the one
+in London and Berlin<a id="FNanchor_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41"
+class="fnanchor">[41]</a> gave the French Minister an opportunity
+for taking the first steps toward “pacific penetration.” The
+mission came to Paris to seek an agreement with the French
+government upon a definite boundary line between Algeria and
+Morocco which would assure Moroccan isolation. M. Delcassé,
+however, aimed, by leaving the frontier line indefinite, to utilize
+this geographic proximity as a means of creating a
+community<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span> of
+interests with the Sultan and his people and of familiarizing them
+with things European.</p>
+
+<p>The French Minister succeeded partially in incorporating this
+plan in an agreement with the Moroccan embassy in July, 1901,
+supplementing that of 1845. Drawn “to consolidate the bonds of
+amity existing between them [France and Morocco] and to develop
+their reciprocal good relations,” the treaty provided that the
+boundary should remain uncertain, but that France and Morocco
+should each have the right to set up a line of posts for purposes
+of defense and customs collection in the desert region on soil
+which unquestionably belonged to them. The tribes living in the
+territory between those two lines should be permitted to choose
+which authority they preferred to reside under. Moroccans and
+Algerians could enter that territory freely for commercial or other
+purposes. Moroccan tribes who owned pastures in Algeria could
+continue to use them, and vice versa. For the preservation of
+amicable relations between the two countries each government agreed
+to appoint two commissioners annually to settle future border
+disputes.<a id="FNanchor_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42" class=
+"fnanchor">[42]</a></p>
+
+<p>To Ben Sliman, the leader of the embassy to Paris, M. Delcassé
+offered French friendship and aid, but added a veiled threat of the
+trouble which France would make for Morocco if his offers were not
+accepted. While the French Minister showed a nice regard for
+Moroccan sensitiveness toward innovations, he voiced the
+expectation that when the land should decide to “enter into new
+ways” it would give France the preference for furnishing it with
+the needed resources. In an important dispatch of July 27, 1901, M.
+Delcassé instructed M. Saint-René Taillandier, the French
+representative at Tangier, concerning his future conduct. The
+French Minister was to assure the Sultan of French respect for the
+integrity of his land and for his own sovereignty, to
+affirm<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span> France’s
+desire to give him friendly aid, and to point out the benefit which
+the Sultan, as ruler, might derive therefrom. He was to warn the
+latter against foreign innovations which might imperil the security
+of Algeria.<a id="FNanchor_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43" class=
+"fnanchor">[43]</a> Lastly he was to support all enterprises,
+commercial, industrial, and philanthropic, calculated to increase
+French influence in the land.<a id="FNanchor_44"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a></p>
+
+<p>Thus the French government could note with satisfaction that
+whereas the Moroccan mission to London and Berlin had accomplished
+nothing, the one to Paris had enabled France to feel out the Powers
+on this question, to proclaim publicly her special interests, and
+to begin the actual execution of her program. M. Delcassé was now
+started upon a conscious policy of establishing French predominance
+in the Sherifian Empire.</p>
+
+<p>When the French and Moroccan commissioners appointed to execute
+the agreement of 1901 set to work, they found that its terms were
+impracticable. The assassination of two French captains by
+Moroccans in January, 1902, also showed that if order were ever to
+obtain along the frontier, French power would have to strengthen
+the Sultan’s efforts.<a id="FNanchor_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_45"
+class="fnanchor">[45]</a> The commissioners therefore negotiated in
+April and May, 1902, two further treaties, the content of which was
+much more in harmony with the French objective of loosening the
+boundary instead of tightening it, of providing a complete program
+of military, economic, and political co-operation between the two
+governments as follows: In case of need the two states should
+concert in pacifying and policing the frontier from Teniet-Sassi to
+Figuig, but no guard or customs posts should be established between
+those two points. In lieu of these customs duties, France agreed to
+pay Morocco a lump sum annually. In the other frontier area the two
+governments should establish markets and customs posts at
+specified<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span> points in
+order to develop commerce between Algeria and Morocco.<a id=
+"FNanchor_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_46" class=
+"fnanchor">[46]</a></p>
+
+<p>It became impossible to carry out the commercial clauses of the
+treaty because of anarchy on the Moroccan side of the border. But
+the Sultan made immediate use of the military articles by
+requesting permission of the French government to send Moroccan
+troops and munitions to the frontier by way of Algeria, and by
+asking it in July to furnish military instructors for these troops.
+M. Delcassé readily agreed.<a id="FNanchor_47"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a></p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding these requests, the Sultan was dissatisfied with
+the course of affairs, and in September, 1902, sent Kaid Maclean to
+Europe to seek aid in stemming the tide of the French advance.
+Carrying personal letters from the Sultan to King Edward and to the
+German Emperor, the Kaid went first to London. He proposed to the
+King and to Lord Lansdowne that the integrity of Morocco be
+guaranteed by Great Britain, or, failing that, by Great Britain and
+Germany, for a period of seven years, and that, if at the end of
+this period Morocco had not thoroughly reformed her government and
+developed her natural resources, the guaranty should lapse. He
+proposed also that a Moorish loan be made in England, France, and
+Germany, and that all railway concessions be divided between those
+three countries. The British government approved the method of
+handling the project for a loan and for railroad construction; but,
+as it was already in conversation with the French government over
+the future of Morocco and was disinclined to tie its hands, it
+refused to consider the other measure. Thus the mission was a
+failure.<a id="FNanchor_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_48" class=
+"fnanchor">[48]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span>In 1903 the Sultan
+was in dire straits. While the whole country was more or less in
+rebellion, the main center of danger lay in the northeast near Taza
+where the pretender to the throne, Bu-Hamara, “Father of the
+She-Ass,” had acquired a large following late in 1902. He was in a
+position to attack the French along the border or the Sultan in
+Fez, and did so. His defeat of the Sherifian army endangered Fez
+itself. Even in his capital the Sultan angered his subjects by
+summarily executing the murderers of a British missionary. In this
+plight, he turned to the obliging French for further aid. He
+received permission for his troops and the loyal border tribes to
+seek refuge in Algeria. After M. Delcassé had officially intervened
+in his behalf, he was able to obtain a loan of 7,500,000 francs
+from the French banking-house of Gautsch. By the time the
+Anglo-French agreement of April 8, 1904, was made, the Sultan
+seemed to be falling in line with the French policy of “pacific
+penetration.”<a id="FNanchor_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_49" class=
+"fnanchor">[49]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnotes" id="ftc01">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1"><span class=
+"label">[1]</span></a>This was the Conference of Madrid.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2"><span class=
+"label">[2]</span></a>See among the numerous works on Morocco:
+Albert Salmon, <em>Le Maroc. Son état économique et commercial</em>
+(Paris, 1906); René Pinon, <em>L’empire de la Méditerranée</em>
+(Paris, 1904), p. 96; Eugène Aubin, <em>Morocco of To-Day</em>
+(London, 1906), p. 119.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3"><span class=
+"label">[3]</span></a>Victor Piquet, <em>La colonisation française
+dans l’Afrique du Nord: Algérie, Tunisie, Maroc</em> (Paris, 1912),
+p. 15.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4"><span class=
+"label">[4]</span></a>For typical reactions see Pinon, <em>L’empire
+de la Médit.</em>; M. Aflalo, <em>The Truth about Morocco. An
+Indictment of the Policy of the British Foreign Office with Regard
+to the Anglo-French Agreement</em> (London, 1904); <em>Zwanzig
+Jahre alldeutscher Arbeit und Kämpfe</em> (Leipzig, 1910), pp. 219
+ff. For a more scientific discussion see Piquet, pp. 514 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5"><span class=
+"label">[5]</span></a>The statistics about Morocco are all
+unreliable. They vary according to the persons taking them. The
+Moroccan government took none itself. Those given above are quoted
+in André Tardieu, <em>La conference d’Algésiras. Histoire
+diplomatique de la crise marocaine (15 Janvier-7 Avril, 1906)</em>
+(Paris, 1909), pp. 499 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6"><span class=
+"label">[6]</span></a>On the new sultan see Pinon, <em>L’empire de
+la Médit.</em>, pp. 150 ff.; Aubin, pp. 137 ff., 178; Walter B.
+Harris, <em>Morocco That Was</em> (Edinburgh and London, 1921),
+esp. pp. 65 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7"><span class=
+"label">[7]</span></a>See Aubin, pp. 203 ff.; Auguste Lombard,
+<em>La banque d’état du Maroc</em> (Montpellier, 1911), pp. 14
+ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8"><span class=
+"label">[8]</span></a>On this disorder see Victor Bérard,
+<em>L’affaire marocaine</em> (Paris, 1906), p. 82; Ministère des
+Affaires Etrangères, <em>Documents diplomatiques. Affaires du
+Maroc, 1901-1905</em> (Paris, 1905), Nos. 33 ff., 42 ff., 61 ff.,
+90, 98 ff. (This <em>Livre jaune</em> is hereafter cited as
+<em>L.j., 1901-5</em>.) See also <em>Bulletin du comité de
+l’Afrique française, Supplément</em>, 1901, pp. 193 ff. (This
+magazine is hereafter cited as <em>Bulletin</em>.)</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9"><span class=
+"label">[9]</span></a>Aubin, p. 109.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10"><span class=
+"label">[10]</span></a><em>Ibid.</em>, pp. 320-21.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11"><span class=
+"label">[11]</span></a>Hatzfeldt to Bülow, Feb. 8, 1899, <em>Die
+Grosse Politik der Europäischen Kabinette, 1871-1914. Sammlung der
+diplomatischen Akten des Auswärtigen Amtes</em> (im Auftrage des
+Auswärtigen Amtes herausgegeben von Johannes Lepsius, Albrecht
+Mendelssohn-Bartholdy, Friedrich Thimme; Berlin, 1922-27), XVII,
+295 f., No. 5152 (hereafter cited as <em>G.P.</em>).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12"><span class=
+"label">[12]</span></a>See Pinon, <em>Empire de la Médit.</em>;
+speech by M. Etienne on June 16, 1903, reprinted in <em>Bulletin,
+Supplément</em>, 1903, p. 179.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13"><span class=
+"label">[13]</span></a><em>Bulletin</em>, July, 1902, p. 267.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14"><span class=
+"label">[14]</span></a><em>Ibid.</em>, Dec., 1899, pp. 412,
+429.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15"><span class=
+"label">[15]</span></a>See the debates in the Chamber on this
+subject, Nov., 1903, <em>Journal officiel de la République
+française. Débats parlementaires</em> (Chambre des Députés, Nov.,
+1903); Tardieu, pp. 17 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16"><span class=
+"label">[16]</span></a>See <em>Bulletin</em>, Dec., 1899, pp. 412,
+429; Jan., 1900, p. 2; April, 1900, p. 140; June, 1901, p. 182;
+March, 1902, p. 107; Oct., 1902, pp. 347, 350; Oct., 1903, pp. 301,
+305; Jan., 1904, p. 3, etc. Also speech by M. Etienne, June 16,
+1903, in <em>ibid., Supplément</em>, 1903, p. 179.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17"><span class=
+"label">[17]</span></a>See <em>ibid.</em>, July, 1900, p. 257;
+Aug., 1901, pp. 259 f.; April, 1903, p. 120; Pinon, <em>Empire de
+la Médit.</em>, p. 182.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18"><span class=
+"label">[18]</span></a>Lord Newton, <em>Lord Lansdowne, A
+Biography</em> (London, 1929), p. 209.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19"><span class=
+"label">[19]</span></a>Such as the Dreyfus case, the law of the
+Congregations, the separation of church and state.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20"><span class=
+"label">[20]</span></a>On Delcassé see Christian Schefer, <em>D’une
+guerre à l’autre. Essai sur la politique extérieure de la Troisième
+République (1871-1914)</em> (Paris, 1920), pp. 221 f.; Georges
+Reynald, <em>La diplomatie française. L’œuvre de Delcassé</em>
+(Paris, 1915); René Millet, <em>Notre politique extérieure de 1898
+à 1905</em> (Paris, 1905), p. 2; Robert Dell, <em>My Second
+Country</em> (New York, 1920), p. 176; René Pinon, <em>France et
+Allemagne, 1870-1913</em> (Paris, 1913), pp. 116 ff.; Delcassé’s
+speeches; Monson to Lansdowne, Nov. 15, 1904, <em>British Documents
+on the Origins of the War, 1898-1914</em> (ed. by G. P. Gooch and
+Harold Temperley; London, 1927——), III, 14 f., No. 11 (hereafter
+cited as <em>B.D.</em>).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21"><span class=
+"label">[21]</span></a>See his speeches, <em>Journal officiel,
+Debats parlem.</em>, Sénat, April 3, 1900, pp. 299 f.; Chambre,
+Jan. 21, 1902, quoted in <em>Bulletin, Supplément</em>, 1902, pp.
+46 f.; Chambre, March 11, 1903, <em>Journal officiel, Debats
+parlem.</em>, p. 1356; especially his speech on Nov. 10, 1904, in
+the Chambre, <em>ibid.</em>, pp. 2381, 2386; Sénat, Dec. 7, 1904,
+pp. 1048 ff.; Reynald, p. 11.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22"><span class=
+"label">[22]</span></a>André Mévil, <em>De la Paix de Francfort à
+la Conférence d’Algésiras</em> (Paris, 1909), pp. 117 f. Mévil’s
+book contains the official apology for Delcassé’s work.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23"><span class=
+"label">[23]</span></a>See Mévil, pp. 120 f., and Delcassé’s
+speeches. On Dec. 7, 1904, in the Senate and on Nov. 10, in the
+Chamber, he spoke as follows: “The problem, in effect, was this: to
+establish the preponderance of France in Morocco, thereby to
+augment her power in the Mediterranean, not by alienating but
+rather by conciliating the Powers whose position in the
+Mediterranean brings them to our attention. . . . . In considering
+the positions occupied not only by England, but by Italy and by
+Spain in the Mediterranean, it is evident that if diplomacy
+succeeds in resolving this problem [of Morocco] it will have at one
+blow fortified and aggrandized the situation of France in Europe by
+the friendships which it will have procured and by the
+<em>rapprochements</em> of interests of which it will have been the
+creator.”</p>
+
+<p>He further declared that this had been his conscious policy
+during his six years of residency at the Quai d’Orsay (see
+<em>Journal officiel, Debats parlem.</em>, Sénat, Dec. 7, 1904, pp.
+1048 ff.; Chambre, Nov. 10, 1904, p. 386).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24"><span class=
+"label">[24]</span></a>See Augustin Bernard, <em>Les confins
+algéro-marocaine</em> (Paris, 1911). Treaty given in De Clercq,
+<em>Recueil des traités de la France</em>, pp. 271 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25"><span class=
+"label">[25]</span></a>See various articles in the
+<em>Bulletin</em>; also Pinon, <em>Empire de la Médit.</em>;
+Bérard, <em>L’affaire marocaine</em>; speech of Waldeck-Rousseau in
+the Chamber, July 2, 1900, <em>Journal officiel, Debats
+parlem.</em>, pp. 1739 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26"><span class=
+"label">[26]</span></a>Exactly what the Sultan requested is not
+known. Count Bülow, the German foreign minister, heard in June,
+1900, from an Italian source that the Grand Vizier of Morocco just
+before his death had proposed to Salisbury, the British premier,
+that the Powers guarantee a new boundary to be made between Algeria
+and Morocco, but that the British Minister had refused to consider
+the matter. See Bülow to Tschirschky, June 5, 1900, <em>G.P.</em>,
+XVII, 318, No. 5167. On the Sultan’s proposal of October see Monson
+to Salisbury, Oct. 12, 17, 1900, <em>B.D.</em>, II, 259, Nos. 312
+f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27"><span class=
+"label">[27]</span></a>We have positive evidence that the Spanish
+and German governments did so; and as Italy was then in negotiation
+with France over the question of Morocco (see below), it is safe to
+say that her government did also. See Bülow to Münster, April 27,
+1900, <em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 299 ff., No. 5156; Münster to Hohenlohe,
+May 9, 1900, <em>ibid.</em>, 301 f., No. 5157.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28"><span class=
+"label">[28]</span></a>See <em>Journal officiel, Debats
+parlem.</em>, Sénat, April 3, 1900, p. 299. He also said in private
+that France had no intention of attacking Morocco. Münster to
+Hohenlohe, May 9, 1900, <em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 301 f., No. 5157;
+Monson to Salisbury, Oct. 17, 1900, <em>B.D.</em>, II, 259, No.
+313.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29"><span class=
+"label">[29]</span></a>See Bérard, p. 68; Aubin, p. 178;
+<em>Bulletin</em>, Aug., 1901, p. 279; <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, Nos.
+1, 3, 4, 6. For the note see Révoil to Delcassé, March 23, 1901,
+Révoil to Si Mohamméd Torres and Ben Sliman, March 18,
+<em>ibid.</em>, No. 2 and annexe.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30"><span class=
+"label">[30]</span></a>So the British Minister at Tangier stated to
+his German colleague (Richthofen to Hatzfeldt, April 13, 1901,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 326 f., No. 5173).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31"><span class=
+"label">[31]</span></a>Richthofen to Hatzfeldt, April 13, 20, 1900,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 326 f., No. 5173; 328, No. 5174.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32"><span class=
+"label">[32]</span></a>See Cambon to Delcassé, July 4, 1901,
+<em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 13 ff., No. 19 and annexe; Hatzfeldt to
+foreign office, June 19, 1901, <em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 332 f., No.
+5177 and note; Holstein to Eckardstein, July 8, 1901,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 333, No. 5178; memorandum by Mentzingen concerning
+the conversations between Richthofen and the Moroccan Ambassador,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 334 ff., No. 5179, undated though handed in to the
+foreign office on July 19, 1901; Mühlberg to Mentzingen, July 19,
+1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 336 f., No. 5180; Eckardstein to F. O., July
+29, 1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 338 f., No. 5182.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33"><span class=
+"label">[33]</span></a>On the cordiality of their relations see
+below. Late in 1899 Joseph Chamberlain, the British colonial
+secretary, had made a speech at Leicester advocating an
+Anglo-German-American alliance; an accord over China had been made
+between them in 1900, and the Emperor had in January, 1901, hurried
+to the bedside of the dying Queen Victoria.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34"><span class=
+"label">[34]</span></a>Delcassé to Saint-René Taillandier, July 27,
+1901, <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 20, No. 21. What the promise was is
+not related. Also editor’s note, <em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 332 f., No.
+5177; Eckardstein to F. O., July 29, 1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 338 f.,
+No. 5182; Richthofen to Hatzfeldt, July 5, 1901, <em>ibid.</em>,
+XVIII, 781 f., No. 5872.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35"><span class=
+"label">[35]</span></a>See below.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36"><span class=
+"label">[36]</span></a>Lansdowne to Monson, July 3, 1901,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 261, No. 318; Cambon to Delcassé, July 4, 1901,
+<em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 13 ff., No. 19.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37"><span class=
+"label">[37]</span></a>On these conversations see Radolin to Bülow,
+June 5, 1901, <em>G.P.</em>, XVIII, 772 ff., No. 5868; June 15,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 775 ff., No. 5869; <em>ibid.</em>, 777 f., No.
+5870. Leon y Castillo declared that Delcassé had said to him that
+“he wished for nothing better than to converse with the German
+Ambassador on different points, that he would be very desirous of
+arriving at an entente with him” (<em>ibid.</em>, 775 ff., No.
+5869). At the same time leading articles appeared in <em>Temps</em>
+and <em>Figaro</em>, papers in close touch with the foreign office,
+to the effect that Germany had the opportunity in the Moroccan
+affair to prove her good will toward France (Richthofen to
+Hatzfeldt, July 5, 1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 781, No. 5872).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38"><span class=
+"label">[38]</span></a>Bülow to Radolin, June 19, 1901,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 778 ff., No. 5871; Richthofen to Hatzfeldt, July 5,
+1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 781 f., No. 5872; Mühlberg to Mentzingen,
+July 19, 1901, <em>ibid.</em>, XVII, 336 f., No. 5180.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39"><span class=
+"label">[39]</span></a>Delcassé to Noailles, June 23, 1901,
+<em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 13, No. 18. No account of the conversation
+is given in <em>G.P.</em></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40"><span class=
+"label">[40]</span></a><em>Journal officiel, Debats parlem.</em>,
+Sénat, July 5, 1901, p. 1207.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41"><span class=
+"label">[41]</span></a>The British government might have prevented
+the sending of that mission. See Richthofen to Hatzfeldt, April 20,
+1901, <em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 328, No. 5174. The German Minister at
+Tangier reported that the Sultan had asked Mr. Nicolson, British
+minister there, whether he should also send a mission to Paris and
+St. Petersburg.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42"><span class=
+"label">[42]</span></a>On these negotiations see Révoil to
+Delcassé, April 27, 1901, <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 5, No. 5; Delcassé
+to Martiniére, July 20, 1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 15 ff., No. 20 and
+annexe; Delcassé to Saint-René Taillandier, July 27, 1901,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 18 ff., No. 21; Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé,
+Sept. 19, 1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 22, No. 22.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43"><span class=
+"label">[43]</span></a>Such, for instance, as the recent tax
+reforms.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44"><span class=
+"label">[44]</span></a>Delcassé to Saint-René Taillandier, July 27,
+1901, <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 18 ff., No. 21.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45"><span class=
+"label">[45]</span></a>Révoil to Delcassé, Feb. 22, 1902,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 31, No. 25.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46"><span class=
+"label">[46]</span></a>Révoil to Delcassé, Jan. 18, April 26, May
+17, 1902, <em>ibid.</em>, 26 ff., No. 24; 33 ff., Nos. 27 f.;
+Graham H. Stuart, <em>French Foreign Policy from Fashoda to
+Serajevo (1898-1914)</em> (New York, 1921), p. 144.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47"><span class=
+"label">[47]</span></a>See especially Saint-René Taillandier to
+Delcassé, July 22, Aug. 6, 1902, <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 44 ff.,
+Nos. 29 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48"><span class=
+"label">[48]</span></a>See memo. for Maclean, Oct. 24, 1902, by
+Lansdowne, <em>B.D.</em>, II, 272 f., No. 328; Sir Sidney Lee,
+<em>King Edward VII. A Biography</em> (London, 1925, 1927), II, 220
+f. Apparently Maclean did not go to Berlin at all, although he
+threatened to do so if the British government refused his proposal.
+See Lee, II, 220 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49"><span class=
+"label">[49]</span></a>For instances of this co-operation see
+<em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, Nos. 33, 39, 44-46, 57, 60, 68, 70-72,
+77-79, 81-84, 86, 89, 91-107, 110-11, 119-26, 132; for Delcassé’s
+part in assuring the loan see Delcassé to Saint-René Taillandier,
+Jan. 5, 1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 53 ff., No. 39. The Sultan obtained
+similar loans in Spain and in England.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap">
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span><a id=
+"c02"></a>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+<p class="sch1">THE FRANCO-ITALIAN ENTENTE, 1900-1902</p>
+
+<p>When M. Delcassé assumed office in 1898, the Bismarckian system
+of agreements which had isolated France in Europe had already
+crumbled away. The formation of the Franco-Russian alliance had
+been followed by the lapse in 1896 of the ententes between
+Austria-Hungary, Great Britain, Italy, and Spain for the
+maintenance of the <em>status quo</em> in the Mediterranean.<a id=
+"FNanchor_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a>
+The way was clear for the enterprising French Foreign Minister
+gradually to win the friendship of the last three Powers,
+previously joined in enmity against France. The first of these
+<em>rapprochements</em> to bear fruit was the one with Italy.</p>
+
+<p>During the nineties, Italian dissatisfaction with the foreign
+policy had been steadily growing. Italian leaders complained that
+Italy had suffered from a tariff war with France, that she had been
+unable to restrain France from denouncing Italian treaty rights in
+Tunis or from fortifying Bizerta, that she had failed to secure
+colonial territory in North Africa, especially in Tripoli, and in
+Abyssinia. They regarded the Triple Alliance and the good will of
+Great Britain as inadequate to Italian needs. They asserted that
+their country was the victim of the Triple Alliance, made to suffer
+by France because of membership in it, and not even protected
+against that Power, much less given compensatory benefits for these
+undeserved injuries. The anger directed at Great Britain was hardly
+less than that at Germany and Austria-Hungary.<a id=
+"FNanchor_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_51" class=
+"fnanchor">[51]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span>To meet these
+difficulties, the Marquis de Rudini, premier from 1896 to 1898,
+inaugurated a policy of friendship toward France which his
+successors in office continued. While remaining loyal to her
+alliances, the Marquis said, Italy would henceforth endeavor to
+prevent trouble with other Powers and to restore normal relations
+with France.<a id="FNanchor_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_52" class=
+"fnanchor">[52]</a></p>
+
+<p>In 1896 Italy and France settled their difficulties over Tunis.
+In 1898 a commercial treaty put an end to ten years of tariff
+warfare between them and opened the way to the flow of French
+capital into Italy.<a id="FNanchor_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_53"
+class="fnanchor">[53]</a> In the same year the two countries made a
+settlement of the boundary line between their possessions on the
+Red Sea. So when M. Delcassé visited Rome in 1898, he found that
+both he and the Italian foreign minister, Marquis Visconti Venosta
+(1896-98), thought necessary a durable entente between their two
+countries which would respect the French possession of Tunis and
+the Italian membership in the Triple Alliance; and they agreed that
+the Mediterranean, which had previously divided their states,
+should become the means of their <em>rapprochement</em>.<a id=
+"FNanchor_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a>
+The Italian Minister was overthrown before any further steps could
+be taken; but under his successor, Admiral Canevaro (1898-99), an
+opportunity was offered to initiate the negotiations which finally
+led to the consummation of the entente.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span>In March, 1899,
+France and Great Britain settled the differences growing out of the
+Fashoda affair by an agreement which assigned to the former the
+hinterland of Tripoli. Since Italian leaders regarded the eventual
+possession of Tripoli as vital to the welfare of their state, they
+felt that Italy had been betrayed by her supposed friend, Great
+Britain, and the Italian government appealed to its German ally for
+advice.<a id="FNanchor_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_55" class=
+"fnanchor">[55]</a> The latter remained noncommittal, Lord
+Salisbury equally so.<a id="FNanchor_56"></a><a href="#Footnote_56"
+class="fnanchor">[56]</a> It was France, the supposed enemy, who
+applied balm to the wound. The French ambassador, M. Barrère,
+assured Admiral Canevaro that Italy “need in no way fear that she
+will find France in her path if she should ever have ambitions
+toward Tripoli.” When the Italian Minister asked for a written
+statement to that effect, M. Barrère replied that, although Tripoli
+was Turkish territory, M. Delcassé would “under conditions” attempt
+to find some way in which to satisfy this desire. Those conditions,
+of course, had to do with Italy’s relations to Morocco. The
+materials were thus at hand for an agreement.<a id=
+"FNanchor_57"></a><a href="#Footnote_57" class=
+"fnanchor">[57]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span>The negotiations
+were long drawn out; for, as France had Italy at her mercy, she
+drove a hard bargain. On December 14, 1900, Marquis Visconti
+Venosta, Italian foreign minister (1899-1901), and M. Barrère
+reached a secret agreement.<a id="FNanchor_58"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a> By its terms Italy
+received in writing a purely negative assurance that France
+harbored no designs upon Tripoli. The <em>quid pro quo</em> for
+France was more valuable.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>In that which concerns Morocco particularly, it is agreed . . .
+. that the action of France has for its object to exercise and
+safeguard the rights which result for her from the proximity of her
+territory to that empire. Thus defined, I [Marquis Visconti
+Venosta] have recognized that such action is not in our view of a
+nature to prejudice the interests of Italy as a Mediterranean
+Power. It has been likewise agreed that if there must result
+therefrom a modification of the political or territorial status of
+Morocco, Italy will reserve for herself, as a reciprocal measure,
+the right of eventually developing her influence in the Cyrenaic
+Tripolitaine.<a id="FNanchor_59"></a><a href="#Footnote_59" class=
+"fnanchor">[59]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span>So vague a
+statement could be variously interpreted. M. Barrère thought that
+Italy had given France a free hand in dealing with Morocco so long
+as her action did not modify the political or territorial integrity
+of the land. Marquis Visconti Venosta declared later to the German
+Ambassador that the accord had only permitted France to take
+measures necessary for the defense of her frontier.<a id=
+"FNanchor_60"></a><a href="#Footnote_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a>
+As either meaning could be read into the documents, the future
+course of Franco-Italian relations would determine which one would
+obtain.</p>
+
+<p>The <em>rapprochement</em>, attested by M. Delcassé in the
+French Senate on February 11, 1901, and affirmed by a visit to
+Italian waters of the French fleet in April, had been facilitated
+by a number of circumstances. On the one hand, the Italian
+government was angry with Austria-Hungary for having excluded it,
+in violation of Article VII of their treaty of alliance, from the
+negotiation in 1897 of an agreement with Russia over Balkan
+affairs. Tariff difficulties with both allies were looming up, and
+an occasional irredentist voice was being heard. On the other hand,
+an anticlerical government in France made certain that in the near
+future at least the republic would not attempt to restore Rome to
+the pope. Moreover, King Victor Emmanuel, possibly influenced by
+his Montenegrin wife, leaned decidedly away from his father’s
+policy of strict adherence to the Triple Alliance toward one of
+closer friendship with France, and, if possible, with Russia.<a id=
+"FNanchor_61"></a><a href="#Footnote_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a>
+Italian public opinion was likewise showing itself markedly
+pro-French, a tendency which M. Barrère’s courting of press and
+public helped to develop;<a id="FNanchor_62"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a> and when in 1901 the King
+chose the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span> pro-French
+M. Zanardelli to form a cabinet, the Italians applauded.<a id=
+"FNanchor_63"></a><a href="#Footnote_63" class=
+"fnanchor">[63]</a></p>
+
+<p>The affinity for France of the new cabinet and the greater
+defiance toward Italy’s allies were foreseen from the political
+past of some of its members. M. Zanardelli was a native of the
+Trentino, and would have been foreign minister in 1893 if the
+Austrian government had not objected.<a id=
+"FNanchor_64"></a><a href="#Footnote_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a>
+M. Prinetti, the new foreign minister (1901-3), had spoken
+energetically in 1891 against the renewal of the Triple Alliance.
+M. de Martino, his undersecretary, had asked in the Italian
+Chamber, December, 1899, “how this Triple Alliance is able to serve
+Italy.”<a id="FNanchor_65"></a><a href="#Footnote_65" class=
+"fnanchor">[65]</a> The attitude of these men was soon manifested.
+Toward the end of the year the Premier was making veiled threats of
+a tariff war with his allies;<a id="FNanchor_66"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a> while M. Prinetti,
+ambitious, inflammatory, and unreliable, was engaged in
+negotiations with France which radically transformed the nature of
+Italy’s international obligations.</p>
+
+<p>One of M. Prinetti’s first undertakings was to gain better terms
+for Italy with reference to Tripoli. He proposed to France that
+“each of the two Powers be able freely to develop its sphere of
+influence in the regions Tripoli and Morocco at the moment that it
+judges opportune and without the action of the one of them being
+subordinated to that of the other.”<a id="FNanchor_67"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a> The French government was
+willing to accept his overture for the sake of obtaining a freer
+hand in Morocco; it also saw an opportunity to win an even greater
+advantage. As the Triple Alliance was to be renewed<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span> in 1902, it determined to repeat
+its former endeavor to nullify the clauses in that treaty referring
+to France.<a id="FNanchor_68"></a><a href="#Footnote_68" class=
+"fnanchor">[68]</a></p>
+
+<p>M. Barrère argued the French case to the Italian government as
+follows: Italy had joined the Triple Alliance because of quarrels
+with France about the Mediterranean. As the two countries were now
+friends, with their difficulties already harmonized or capable of
+becoming so, should not their friendship be assured for the future
+by the removal of any aggressive point against France which the
+Triple Alliance might contain? Were the clauses of that treaty
+compatible with Franco-Italian friendship? “The alliance remains
+defensive,” so he summarized his arguments later to his government.
+“But it permits a very broad interpretation of the duties of the
+allies; if France, openly provoked, should declare war, could Italy
+regard this declaration as a defensive step on our part? It is
+doubtful.” So he concluded that “under defensive appearances, the
+Triple Alliance implied an eventually offensive character which
+ought to be eliminated in the interest of our security and of the
+relations of friendship between the two countries.” Above all, the
+French government desired to bring about the suppression of the
+anti-French military conventions or protocols between Italy and her
+allies.<a id="FNanchor_69"></a><a href="#Footnote_69" class=
+"fnanchor">[69]</a></p>
+
+<p>M. Prinetti acknowledged the force of these remarks. In June,
+1901—that is, before Great Britain had turned away from Germany to
+France, and while Austria-Hungary and Italy were still<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span> on passable terms—he made a
+verbal agreement with M. Barrère by which the rights of Italy
+toward Tripoli were put on a par with those of France toward
+Morocco. In return he promised that the renewed treaty of the
+Triple Alliance should contain “nothing hostile” to France.<a id=
+"FNanchor_70"></a><a href="#Footnote_70" class=
+"fnanchor">[70]</a></p>
+
+<p>The problem of adjusting Italy’s alliance obligations to her new
+international situation growing out of the Franco-Italian entente
+was taken up at the end of the year when negotiations for the
+renewal of the Triple Alliance were begun.<a id=
+"FNanchor_71"></a><a href="#Footnote_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a>
+To strengthen Italy’s hand, MM. Prinetti, Delcassé, and Barrère all
+attested publicly in December, 1901, and January, 1902, to the
+complete harmony of Franco-Italian interests in the Mediterranean;
+M. Delcassé referred pointedly to Tripoli and Morocco.<a id=
+"FNanchor_72"></a><a href="#Footnote_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a>
+And the <em>Tribuna</em> gave bold notice, January 2, that “Italy
+counts for something and can with her weight turn the scale one way
+or the other.”<a id="FNanchor_73"></a><a href="#Footnote_73" class=
+"fnanchor">[73]</a> In spite of his promises to France, however, M.
+Prinetti made very feeble efforts to change the Triple Alliance in
+accordance therewith. He said nothing to the German government
+about revising or omitting Articles II, IX, X, and the
+protocol<a id="FNanchor_74"></a><a href="#Footnote_74" class=
+"fnanchor">[74]</a> which Italy herself had had incorporated in the
+treaty.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span> His sole
+proposal to Count Bülow, to whom he repeated his promise to M.
+Barrère, was that an introductory statement, intended for
+publication or for communication to France, should be included
+affirming the purely defensive character of the alliance. Other
+matters concerning Italy and her two allies were of far more
+importance to the Italian Foreign Minister in these negotiations.
+He wanted the allies officially to affirm Italy’s preponderant
+rights in Tripoli; he wished for them to have a more binding
+understanding about the Balkans; above all, he sought to make the
+renewal of the alliance contingent upon the negotiation of tariff
+treaties with Germany and Austria-Hungary favorable to Italy. In
+discussing these questions with the German government he grew
+excited, wept, threatened to resign or not to renew the alliance.
+About those which concerned France he was more or less
+apologetic.<a id="FNanchor_75"></a><a href="#Footnote_75" class=
+"fnanchor">[75]</a></p>
+
+<p>German public opinion regarded the Franco-Italian
+<em>rapprochement</em> with misgivings. But the Chancellor assumed
+a nonchalant attitude, stating in the Reichstag, January 8,
+1902:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>The Triple Alliance still enjoys the best of health. . . . . The
+Triple Alliance is not a society for acquisition but an insurance
+company. It is not offensive but defensive; it is not aggressive
+but peaceful to a high degree. The Triple Alliance does not bar
+good relations between its members and other Powers, and I would
+not consider it proper if even a small part of the German press
+should show any uneasiness over Franco-Italian agreements. In a
+happy marriage the husband must not become jealous if his wife
+dances an innocent extra round with some one else. The main thing
+is that she does not run away from him, and she will not do so if
+she is best situated with him. . . . . The Franco-Italian
+agreements over certain Mediterranean questions do not violate the
+Triple Alliance. . . . . The goals of the present day
+<em>Weltpolitik</em> extend to areas and objects which lie far from
+Germany’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span> boundaries.
+I name in this connection, for example, the north coast of Africa,
+Persia, the Far East.<a id="FNanchor_76"></a><a href="#Footnote_76"
+class="fnanchor">[76]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>That speech, however, did not reflect the Chancellor’s actual
+feeling. He still assumed that, should any important change be made
+in the Mediterranean area, for instance in Morocco, Germany would
+be consulted;<a id="FNanchor_77"></a><a href="#Footnote_77" class=
+"fnanchor">[77]</a> but he relied upon Russia’s retarding
+influence, Great Britain’s hostility, and fear of Germany to
+prevent France from taking action in that land.<a id=
+"FNanchor_78"></a><a href="#Footnote_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a>
+He was dissatisfied with the turn of affairs, and blamed Great
+Britain for having forced Italy into French arms by ignoring her
+interests.<a id="FNanchor_79"></a><a href="#Footnote_79" class=
+"fnanchor">[79]</a> He suspected that the Franco-Italian
+understanding contained more than M. Prinetti admitted.<a id=
+"FNanchor_80"></a><a href="#Footnote_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a>
+He recognized the improvement in Italy’s international relations,
+and realized that her antagonism to Austria would thenceforth
+become sharper, and that her Tripolitan ambitions would be so
+zealous as possibly to cause trouble with Germany’s friend, the
+Turkish Sultan.<a id="FNanchor_81"></a><a href="#Footnote_81"
+class="fnanchor">[81]</a> As to renewing the alliance, which he
+strongly desired, the Chancellor believed that self-interest and
+the known antagonism of Great Britain to the Dual Alliance would
+prevent Italy from changing camps.<a id="FNanchor_82"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a> Under other circumstances
+he might have been willing to make some further concessions to
+Italy in return for the renewal.<a id="FNanchor_83"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a><span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_29">[29]</span> In the previous March he had relieved her
+from any obligations under the German-Italian military convention,
+although permitting the military conversations to continue as
+before.<a id="FNanchor_84"></a><a href="#Footnote_84" class=
+"fnanchor">[84]</a> But the Franco-Italian entente, the lever with
+which M. Prinetti expected to pry loose those concessions, was the
+very cause for Count Bülow’s refusing to permit any change whatever
+in the treaty. As the alliance was already defensive, he said,
+there was no need for an introductory statement to that effect.
+Pointing to the expectation voiced by the French press that
+anti-French clauses would be dropped, he declared that any
+modification would permit the French to draw the desired conclusion
+and thereby to belie the true nature of the alliance. Before he
+would renew the Triple Alliance he demanded of M. Prinetti an
+assurance that Italy had made no agreements with other states which
+could diminish its defensive forces. He even expressed his
+willingness to drop the alliance rather than make any changes in
+it, remarking that Italy’s adherence to it was of no fundamental
+importance. The Chancellor’s adamantine attitude was effective. By
+May, 1902, M. Prinetti agreed to the renewal.<a id=
+"FNanchor_85"></a><a href="#Footnote_85" class=
+"fnanchor">[85]</a></p>
+
+<p>In March, 1902, M. Prinetti had reported to M. Barrère the
+probability of his failure. He had refused to communicate the text
+of the treaty to the Ambassador, but had declared that the
+protocols thereto must be abolished,<a id=
+"FNanchor_86"></a><a href="#Footnote_86" class="fnanchor">[86]</a>
+and that he was ready, so M. Barrère reported, to give France
+“assurances of a nature to leave no doubt in our mind as to the
+character and scope of this document” (the treaty of the Triple
+Alliance).<a id="FNanchor_87"></a><a href="#Footnote_87" class=
+"fnanchor">[87]</a> On May 7, M. Prinetti informed the French
+Ambassador that “it will be necessary<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_30">[30]</span> for us to discuss the future of our relations
+in regard to that treaty.” Under French pressure, he agreed that
+“thenceforth it was in a direct understanding with us [France] that
+he should find the means of fixing the interpretation with regard
+to us which Italy intended to give to her obligations as an ally.”
+He was willing to put this understanding into writing.<a id=
+"FNanchor_88"></a><a href="#Footnote_88" class=
+"fnanchor">[88]</a></p>
+
+<p>Before the proper negotiations were well under way, the actual
+renewal of the alliance forced M. Prinetti to declare in the
+Italian Chamber, May 22, 1902, as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>The Triple Alliance as it is and as it will be, completely and
+uniquely pacific and defensive, will remain in the future what it
+has been for years: the most solid rampart in the cause of peace. .
+. . . The Triple Alliance, containing nothing aggressive, either
+directly or indirectly against France, nothing which menaces her
+surety or tranquillity may not in any manner constitute an obstacle
+to the conservation and development of cordial relations with our
+Latin sister with whom we are and wish to remain friends. . . . .
+And since it has been said that there exists between certain
+Central Powers conventions and protocols adjoined to the Triple
+Alliance which modify its pacific character and would even be
+aggressive toward France, I hereby solemnly declare that there is
+no convention and no protocol of that nature.<a id=
+"FNanchor_89"></a><a href="#Footnote_89" class=
+"fnanchor">[89]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Presumably even prior to this statement, which was repeated in a
+formal note to the French government on June 4, M. Prinetti began
+negotiations with M. Barrère over the written agreement. It was the
+Ambassador’s intention that that agreement</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">would contain the engagement not to attack, not to
+join in any aggression on the part of one or several Powers against
+one of the contracting parties; not to consider as aggressive on
+the part of the contracting Powers the obligation to declare war in
+consequence of a manifest provocation [this was “the capital point”
+of the project, wrote M. Delcassé]; finally to abandon the military
+protocols and other dispositions of the same sort concerning us and
+envisaging war with us. If we are able to arrive at that result
+[wrote M. Barrère to his chief], we shall have obtained all that we
+could hope and desire.<a id="FNanchor_90"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_90" class="fnanchor">[90]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span>The
+negotiations were far enough along to permit M. Delcassé to declare
+in the French Chamber, July 3, as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>The declarations which have thus been made to us [by the Italian
+government] have permitted us to feel assured that the policy of
+Italy by virtue of her alliances is not aimed either directly or
+indirectly against France; that she will not in any case be a
+menace to us, either in a diplomatic form or through protocols or
+in international military stipulations; and that in no case and in
+no form will Italy become either the instrument or the auxiliary of
+an aggression against our country.<a id="FNanchor_91"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_91" class="fnanchor">[91]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>That statement was stronger and more inclusive than the one by
+M. Prinetti on May 22. It indicated the existence of a fuller
+understanding than the public knew of. It caused M. Prinetti some
+embarrassment when the German Ambassador brought up the subject.
+The Foreign Minister declared himself “somewhat astonished” at the
+speech; but after a feeble explanation in which he betrayed
+nothing, he remarked that “so far as he was concerned, he regarded
+the question as settled.”<a id="FNanchor_92"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_92" class="fnanchor">[92]</a></p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the Franco-Italian negotiations continued. On November
+1, in an exchange of notes an understanding was reached by which
+Italy was given a free hand to develop her “sphere of influence” in
+Tripoli, and France the same right with reference to Morocco. Nor
+should the action of the one be necessarily subordinated to that of
+the other. Then followed a clause which M. Delcassé was
+particularly eager to have incorporated:<a id=
+"FNanchor_93"></a><a href="#Footnote_93" class=
+"fnanchor">[93]</a></p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>In case France [Italy] shall be the object of a direct or
+indirect aggression on the part of one or several Powers, Italy
+[France] will preserve a strict neutrality. The same will hold in
+case France [Italy] as a result of direct provocation is forced to
+take, for the defence of her honor or security, the initiative of a
+declaration of war.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">A conditioning clause was added:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>In that eventuality the government of the Republic [the Royal
+government] must communicate beforehand its intention to the Royal
+government<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span> [the
+government of the Republic], so that the latter may verify that it
+is a case of direct provocation . . . . I am authorized to confirm
+to you that there does not exist on the part of Italy [France] and
+that there will not be concluded by her any protocol or military
+disposition of an international contractual order which will be in
+disagreement with the present declarations.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">The Italian government asserted that these
+declarations were in “complete harmony” with its existing
+international engagements. The agreement was to be secret and to
+obtain until the Italian government abrogated it. A supplementary
+statement by M. Prinetti defined the term “direct provocation” to
+mean one which concerned the “direct relations between the Power
+provoking and the Power provoked.”<a id="FNanchor_94"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_94" class="fnanchor">[94]</a></p>
+
+<p>Was this accord compatible with the renewed and unchanged treaty
+of the Triple Alliance? With Article II it could be made to agree.
+Articles IX and X and the protocol it merely nullified but left
+standing.<a id="FNanchor_95"></a><a href="#Footnote_95" class=
+"fnanchor">[95]</a> It broke completely not the letter, but the
+spirit of the alliance. The dishonesty of the Italian Foreign
+Minister lay in three directions; toward the German government by
+permitting it to continue in the belief that the old relations as
+established in their treaty still obtained; toward the French
+government by informing it that this treaty contained nothing
+either directly or indirectly hostile to France, although Articles
+II, IX, X, and XI and the protocol of that treaty had been retained
+without any attempt to abolish them; toward Italy by not clarifying
+the situation.<a id="FNanchor_96"></a><a href="#Footnote_96" class=
+"fnanchor">[96]</a> The matter was so arranged that in the future
+the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span> Italian foreign
+ministers would be able to determine whether or not the agreement
+with France would be abrogated and the clauses of the Triple
+Alliance, temporarily in abeyance, would again be called into
+action. The Italian government was safeguarding its country on both
+sides and giving up none of its securities, although its policy
+looked toward two different international orientations. This was
+the equivocal position between France and the Triple Alliance,
+later between the Triple Entente and the Triple Alliance, which
+Italy was to occupy until she entered the World War.<a id=
+"FNanchor_97"></a><a href="#Footnote_97" class="fnanchor">[97]</a>
+The advantages of it lay in the fact that it gave greater mobility
+to Italian policy, that it caused Great Britain to iron out her
+differences with Italy early in 1902,<a id=
+"FNanchor_98"></a><a href="#Footnote_98" class="fnanchor">[98]</a>
+that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span> it opened up a
+future of closer relations with Russia, and that it assured Italy
+of the future possession of Tripoli.</p>
+
+<p>The French government profited most from these negotiations. M.
+Delcassé had won his initial victory in the execution of his
+policy.<a id="FNanchor_99"></a><a href="#Footnote_99" class=
+"fnanchor">[99]</a> He had, at least for the time being, nullified
+the anti-French clauses of the Triple Alliance and drawn Italy out
+of that group into a middle position.<a id=
+"FNanchor_100"></a><a href="#Footnote_100" class=
+"fnanchor">[100]</a> He had also settled the important question of
+Morocco with the most jealous of the Mediterranean Powers, and had
+begun the process of pulling the Powers away from Germany and
+drawing them around France.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes" id="ftc02">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50"><span class=
+"label">[50]</span></a>Hatzfeldt to Hohenlohe, Feb. 8, 1896,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XI, 99 ff., No. 2664; Alfred Franzis Pribram (ed.),
+<em>The Secret Treaties of Austria-Hungary, 1879-1914</em> (Eng.
+ed. by Archibald Carey Coolidge; Cambridge, 1920-21), I, 124 ff.,
+142 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51"><span class=
+"label">[51]</span></a>For manifestations of this feeling see
+Pribram, II, 104, 106; <em>Memoirs of Francesco Crispi</em> (ed. by
+Thomas Palamenghi-Crispi; trans. by Mary Prichard-Agnetti; London,
+1914), III, 330 ff.; Hohenlohe to Bülow, Feb. 15, 1896,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XI, 230 ff., No. 2766; Bülow to Hohenlohe, Feb. 5,
+1896, <em>ibid.</em>, 89, No. 2657; Bülow to Hohenlohe, Feb. 18,
+1896, <em>ibid.</em>, 89 ff., No. 2658; and in general the
+documents in <em>ibid.</em>, chaps. lxviii, lxix. Currie to
+Lansdowne, Jan. 15, 1902, <em>B.D.</em>, I, 285, No. 355; 286, No.
+356; Currie to Lansdowne, Nov. 27, 1900, Lansdowne to Currie, Dec.
+12, 1900, Newton, <em>Lord Lansdowne</em>, pp. 211 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52"><span class=
+"label">[52]</span></a>Bülow to Hohenlohe, Nov. 26, 1896,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XI, 285 f., No. 2813; Pückler to Hohenlohe, July 19,
+1897, <em>ibid.</em>, 286, No. 2814; Bülow to Hohenlohe, March 17,
+1896, <em>ibid.</em>, 293, No. 2819; Bülow to Hohenlohe, July 22,
+1896, <em>ibid.</em>, 296 ff., No. 2821; Bülow to Hohenlohe, Oct.
+23, 1896, <em>ibid.</em>, 299 f., No. 2823.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53"><span class=
+"label">[53]</span></a><em>Política èstera italiana</em> (1916), p.
+499; André Tardieu, <em>La France et les alliances</em> (Paris,
+1910), pp. 97 ff.; Radolin to Bülow, April 19, 1901, <em>G.P.</em>,
+XVIII, 716, No. 5833; Pinon, <em>Empire de la Médit.</em>, pp. 39,
+44 f., 48.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54"><span class=
+"label">[54]</span></a>Mévil, <em>De la Paix de Francfort à la
+Conférence d’Algésiras</em> (Paris, 1909), p. 121; André Tardieu,
+<em>Questions diplomatiques de l’année, 1904</em> (Paris, 1905), p.
+14.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55"><span class=
+"label">[55]</span></a>Canevaro called it an act of “perfidy,” of
+“dishonesty,” a “sharp slap in the face.” See Saurma to F. O.,
+March 29, 1899, <em>G.P.</em>, XIV, 429, No. 3946; Saurma to F. O.,
+April 1, 1899, <em>ibid.</em>, 429 f., No. 3947; Saurma to
+Hohenlohe, March 29, 1899, <em>ibid.</em>, 430 f., No. 3948;
+Marschall to Hohenlohe, April 14, 1899, <em>ibid.</em>, 434 f., No.
+3952; Bernhard Schwertfeger (ed.), <em>Zur europäischen
+Politik</em> (Berlin, 1919), I, No. 12; Rumbold to Salisbury, March
+31, 1899, <em>B.D.</em>, I, 203, No. 246; Currie to Salisbury,
+April 4, 1899, <em>ibid.</em>, 203, No. 247.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_56"><span class=
+"label">[56]</span></a>Hatzfeldt to Hohenlohe, April 4, 1899,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIV, 432 f., No. 3950; Saurma to F. O., April 28,
+1899, <em>ibid.</em>, 435, No. 3953; Bülow to Romberg, April 29,
+1899, <em>ibid.</em>, 436, No. 3954; Romberg to F. O., April 30,
+1899, <em>ibid.</em>, 436 f., No. 3955; Bülow to Saurma, April 30,
+1899, <em>ibid.</em>, 437, No. 3956; Currie to Salisbury, Nov. 4,
+1898, <em>B.D.</em>, I, 194, No. 236; Currie to Salisbury, April 4,
+1899, <em>ibid.</em>, 204, No. 247; Currie to Salisbury, April 10,
+1899, <em>ibid.</em>, 204 f., Nos. 248 f.; Salisbury to Currie,
+April 25, 1899, <em>ibid.</em>, 206, No. 251; Salisbury to Currie,
+May 13, 1899, <em>ibid.</em>, 207, No. 252; Salisbury to Currie,
+Oct. 12, 1900, <em>ibid.</em>, 282, No. 350. In Sept., 1900,
+Currie, apparently on his own initiative, appealed to his
+government to give the Lateran “some proof of our determination to
+stand by Italy in the event of her being attacked.” Lansdowne
+refused (Newton, pp. 211 ff.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_57"><span class=
+"label">[57]</span></a>Saurma to F. O., April 28, 1899,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIV, 435, No. 3953; Currie to Salisbury, April 4,
+1899, <em>B.D.</em>, I, 204, No. 247. See also Canevaro’s
+declaration in the Italian Senate, April 24, 1899, Senato,
+<em>Discussioni, XX Legislatura</em> (2d sess.), p. 946, quoted by
+G. Salvemini, “La Triple Alliance,” <em>Revue des nationes
+latines</em>, Oct., 1916, p. 250. Also see the interview between
+Delcassé and Ojetta in <em>Giornale d’Italia</em>, Jan. 3, 1902,
+reprinted in the <em>London Times</em>, Jan. 4, 1902.</p>
+
+<p>Italy had formerly thought that she had vital interests in
+Morocco, and her hope to acquire the land had received expression
+in a clause concerning its future in the treaty of the Triple
+Alliance of 1891 (Pribram, I, 150 ff.; Vol. II, chap. iii). But the
+Moroccan vogue had passed; her wishes had become more modest. To be
+sure, the French occupation of Touat caused the Italian government
+in April, 1900, to declare excitedly to its German ally that the
+Moroccan question could become a reef upon which the House of Savoy
+might suffer shipwreck; but, as M. Prinetti later explained, what
+his predecessor in office had feared was that a French occupation
+of Morocco might force Italy to seize Tripoli in order to maintain
+the equilibrium of interests in the Mediterranean (Bülow to
+Münster, April 27, 1900, <em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 300, No. 5156; Bülow
+to Hatzfeldt, May 14, 1900, <em>ibid.</em>, 302 f., No. 5158; Wedel
+to Bülow, Dec. 12, 1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 718, No. 5834).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_58"></a><a href="#FNanchor_58"><span class=
+"label">[58]</span></a>On these negotiations, about which very
+little is known, see Barrère to Delcassé, Jan. 10, 1901, Ministère
+des Affaires Etrangères, <em>Documents diplomatiques. Les accords
+franco-italiens, 1900-1902</em> (Paris, 1919), 1 f., No. 1. (This
+<em>Livre jaune</em> is hereafter cited as <em>L.j., 1900-2</em>.)
+Salvemini, Oct., 1916, p. 249; Wedel to Bülow, March 31, 1901,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XVIII, 712 ff., No. 5831; Metternich to F. O., Dec.
+21, 1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 726 f., No. 5840; Wedel to Bülow, Jan. 5,
+1902, <em>ibid.</em>, 738 f., No. 5845; Wedel to Bülow, Jan. 19,
+1902, <em>ibid.</em>, 747 f., No. 5851; Diplomaticus, “The Shifting
+Foundations of European Peace,” <em>Fortnightly Review</em>,
+LXXVIII (Sept. 1, 1902), 370 f.; Anonymous, “The Marquis of
+Salisbury,” <em>Quarterly Review</em>, CXCVI (Oct., 1902), 664
+ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_59"></a><a href="#FNanchor_59"><span class=
+"label">[59]</span></a>Terms of the accord given in <em>L.j.,
+1900-2</em>, 3 f., No. 1, Annexes I and II. See also Wedel to
+Bülow, Jan. 19, 1902, <em>G.P.</em>, XVIII, 747 ff., No. 5851.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_60"></a><a href="#FNanchor_60"><span class=
+"label">[60]</span></a>Barrère to Delcassé, Jan. 10, 1901,
+<em>L.j., 1900-2</em>, 1 f., No. 1; Wedel to Bülow, Jan. 19, 1902,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XVIII, 747 f., No. 5851.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_61"></a><a href="#FNanchor_61"><span class=
+"label">[61]</span></a>See Bülow to Wedel, Nov. 30, 1900,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XVIII, 502 f., No. 5704. The King made his first
+state visit to St. Petersburg in 1902 (A. Savinsky,
+<em>Recollections of a Russian Diplomat</em> [London, ——], pp. 25
+f.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_62"></a><a href="#FNanchor_62"><span class=
+"label">[62]</span></a>On Barrère’s activity see Currie to
+Salisbury, Jan. 18, 1899, <em>B.D.</em>, I, 281, No. 347; Currie to
+Salisbury, April 24, 1899, <em>ibid.</em>, 205, No. 250; memo. by
+Richthofen, Dec. 17, 1901, <em>G.P.</em>, XVIII, 507 f., No.
+5708.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_63"></a><a href="#FNanchor_63"><span class=
+"label">[63]</span></a>Salvemini, Jan., 1917, p. 12; <em>London
+Times</em>, Dec. 16, 1901, p. 5; <em>G.P.</em>, Vol. XVIII, chap.
+xxii.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_64"></a><a href="#FNanchor_64"><span class=
+"label">[64]</span></a>Salvemini, Jan., 1917, p. 12 f., quoting Un
+Bresciano, “L’intervènto e le pressióni dell Austria nella crisi
+ministeriale de 1893” (<em>Nuova antologia</em>, Oct. 16,
+1915).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_65"></a><a href="#FNanchor_65"><span class=
+"label">[65]</span></a>Salvemini, Jan., 1917, pp. 13 f.; Prinetti’s
+explanation of this speech in the Chamber, June 14, 1901, is quoted
+in <em>Política, èstera italiana</em>, pp. 536 f. See also
+Zanardelli’s interview in the <em>New York World</em>, quoted in
+<em>London Times</em>, March 27, 1901, p. 5.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_66"></a><a href="#FNanchor_66"><span class=
+"label">[66]</span></a>Dispatch of Jan. 24, 1902, <em>Zur europ.
+Politik</em>, I, 91.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_67"></a><a href="#FNanchor_67"><span class=
+"label">[67]</span></a>Barrère to Poincaré, March 10, 1912,
+<em>L.j., 1900-2</em>, 11 ff., No. 11.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_68"></a><a href="#FNanchor_68"><span class=
+"label">[68]</span></a>It had attempted to do this or to break the
+alliance in 1891 and 1896. See <em>G.P.</em>, Vol. XI, chap. lxix;
+<em>ibid.</em>, Vol. VIII, chap. lxv.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_69"></a><a href="#FNanchor_69"><span class=
+"label">[69]</span></a>These arguments are contained in Barrère to
+Poincaré, March 10, 1912, <em>L.j., 1900-2</em>, 11 ff., No. 11.
+One other argument, which, however, M. Barrère probably did not use
+with Prinetti, he formulated as follows: “What is more, nothing
+prevented her [Italy] from going beyond the actual text of the
+treaty, if she should judge that her political interests demanded
+it of her.” See also Salvemini, Feb., 1917, p. 197. The military
+agreement of 1887 between the allies had become known to the French
+government soon after its signing. See Salvemini, Feb., 1917, p.
+198; also Jules Hansen, <em>L’alliance franco-russe</em> (Paris,
+1897), p. 42. In March, 1901, <em>Matin</em> published a version of
+it and demanded its annulment (quoted in the <em>London Times</em>,
+March 27, 1901).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_70"></a><a href="#FNanchor_70"><span class=
+"label">[70]</span></a>According to other reports from the German
+Ambassador in Rome, Prinetti promised “nothing aggressive” (Wedel
+to Bülow, Jan. 5, June 27, 1902, <em>G.P.</em>, XVIII, 512, No.
+5711; 757, No. 5858).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_71"></a><a href="#FNanchor_71"><span class=
+"label">[71]</span></a>See Salvemini, Feb., 1917, p. 197.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_72"></a><a href="#FNanchor_72"><span class=
+"label">[72]</span></a>The occasion for these statements was the
+French occupation of Mytilene, which alarmed Italian public
+opinion. See Prinetti’s speech in the Italian Chamber, Dec. 14,
+1901, Cámera dei Depitatio, <em>Discussioni</em>, p. 6747;
+Delcassé’s interview in <em>Giornale d’Italia</em>, Jan. 3, 1902,
+quoted in the <em>London Times</em>, Jan. 4, 14, 1902; Barrère’s
+speech on Jan. 1, 1902, before the French colony in Rome, quoted in
+<em>ibid.</em>, Jan. 2, 1902; Delcassé’s speech before the French
+Senate, March 20, 1902, <em>Journal officiel, Debats parlem.</em>,
+p. 605.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_73"></a><a href="#FNanchor_73"><span class=
+"label">[73]</span></a><em>London Times</em>, Jan. 4, 1902.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_74"></a><a href="#FNanchor_74"><span class=
+"label">[74]</span></a>Article II of the Triple Alliance read as
+follows: “In case Italy, without direct provocation on her part, is
+attacked by France for any reason whatsoever, the two other
+contracting parties will furnish to the party attacked aid and
+assistance with all their forces. The same obligation is incumbent
+upon Italy in case of an aggression not directly provoked by France
+against Germany.” Articles IX, X, XI, and the protocol provided for
+the maintenance of the <em>status quo</em> in the Cyrenaic,
+Tripoli, Tunis, and Morocco, and, in certain eventualities, for an
+aggressive attack by Italy aided by her allies, upon France. See
+the document given in <em>G.P.</em>, VII, 99 ff., No. 1426.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_75"></a><a href="#FNanchor_75"><span class=
+"label">[75]</span></a>On these negotiations see <em>ibid.</em>,
+Vol. XVIII, chaps. cxxii, cxxv.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_76"></a><a href="#FNanchor_76"><span class=
+"label">[76]</span></a>Bernhard von Bülow, <em>Reden</em> (hrsg.
+von Johannes Penzler; Leipzig, 1903), I, 243 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_77"></a><a href="#FNanchor_77"><span class=
+"label">[77]</span></a>Bülow to Metternich, Dec. 18, 1901,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XVIII, 721, No. 5835.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_78"></a><a href="#FNanchor_78"><span class=
+"label">[78]</span></a>Alvensleben to F. O., Dec. 26, 1901,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 727 f., No. 5841; Bülow to Wedel, Dec. 17, 1901,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 508 ff., No. 5709.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_79"></a><a href="#FNanchor_79"><span class=
+"label">[79]</span></a>Bülow to Metternich, Dec. 18, 1901,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 720 f., No. 5835.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_80"></a><a href="#FNanchor_80"><span class=
+"label">[80]</span></a>Memo. by Bülow, Jan. 12, 1902,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 524, No. 5715; Mühlberg to Bülow, April 25, 1902,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 589, No. 5754; Bülow to F. O., April 26, 1902,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 590 f., No. 5755; Wedel to Bülow, Dec. 26, 1901,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 728 ff., No. 5852; memo. by Holstein, Dec. 31,
+1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 735, No. 5844.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_81"></a><a href="#FNanchor_81"><span class=
+"label">[81]</span></a>Bülow to Wedel, Dec. 17, 1901,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 508 ff., No. 5709.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_82"></a><a href="#FNanchor_82"><span class=
+"label">[82]</span></a>Memo. by Bülow, Jan. 12, 1902,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 523 ff., No. 5715; Wedel to Bülow, April 10, Dec.
+17, 1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 715 f., No. 5832; 723, No. 5836; Bülow to
+Wedel, Dec. 17, 1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 509 f., No. 5709.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_83"></a><a href="#FNanchor_83"><span class=
+"label">[83]</span></a>Bülow to Wedel, Feb. 24, 1902,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 545, No. 5727.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_84"></a><a href="#FNanchor_84"><span class=
+"label">[84]</span></a><em>Ibid.</em>, chap. cxxiv.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_85"></a><a href="#FNanchor_85"><span class=
+"label">[85]</span></a>See the documents in <em>ibid.</em>, chaps.
+cxxii, cxxiv, esp. Nos. 5712, 5727, 5749, 5755.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_86"></a><a href="#FNanchor_86"><span class=
+"label">[86]</span></a>This was easily said since the German
+government had in the previous year released Italy from her
+obligations under the military convention (see above). Prinetti
+made it appear as a special favor yet to be performed.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_87"></a><a href="#FNanchor_87"><span class=
+"label">[87]</span></a>Barrère to Poincaré, March 10, 1912,
+<em>L.j., 1900-2</em>, 12, No. 11.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_88"></a><a href="#FNanchor_88"><span class=
+"label">[88]</span></a>Barrère to Delcassé, May 8, 1902,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 4 f., No. 3; Barrère to Poincaré, March 10, 1912,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 12 f., No. 11.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_89"></a><a href="#FNanchor_89"><span class=
+"label">[89]</span></a>Quoted in Salvemini, July, 1917, p. 321.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_90"></a><a href="#FNanchor_90"><span class=
+"label">[90]</span></a>Barrère to Delcassé, May 8, 1902, <em>L.j.,
+1900-2</em>, 5, No. 3; Delcassé to Barrère, June 18, 1902,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 6, No. 5.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_91"></a><a href="#FNanchor_91"><span class=
+"label">[91]</span></a><em>Journal officiel, Debats parlem.</em>,
+Chambre, July 3, 1902, pp. 444 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_92"></a><a href="#FNanchor_92"><span class=
+"label">[92]</span></a>Wedel to Bülow, July 6, 1902, <em>G.P.</em>,
+XVIII, 758 f., No. 5859.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_93"></a><a href="#FNanchor_93"><span class=
+"label">[93]</span></a>Barrère to Delcassé, May 8, 1902, <em>L.j.,
+1900-2</em>, 4 f., No. 3; Delcassé to Barrère, June 18, 1902,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 6, No. 5.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_94"></a><a href="#FNanchor_94"><span class=
+"label">[94]</span></a>Terms given in <em>ibid.</em>, 7 ff., Nos. 7
+and 8. On July 20 Barrère reported that Prinetti regarded the
+following cases as examples of direct provocation:</p>
+
+<p>“1. The publication of sharpened dispatches [<em>dépêches
+maquillées</em>] by Prince Bismarck in 1870; King William’s refusal
+to receive M. Benedetti.</p>
+
+<p>“2. The Schnaebele incident.”</p>
+
+<p>As examples of indirect provocation, Prinetti cited “Prince
+Hohenzollern’s candidacy to the throne of Spain, and such indirect
+initiative in Far Eastern affairs which do not aim at one of the
+contracting Powers, although that initiative may displease it and
+appear contrary to its direct interest” (Barrère to Delcassé, July
+20, 1902, <em>ibid.</em>, 7, No. 6). The choice of examples is
+significant.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_95"></a><a href="#FNanchor_95"><span class=
+"label">[95]</span></a>See above.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_96"></a><a href="#FNanchor_96"><span class=
+"label">[96]</span></a>For a severer criticism of his actions see
+G. Lowes Dickinson, <em>The International Anarchy, 1904-1914</em>
+(New York, 1926), pp. 94 ff. Dickinson asserts that the Italian
+Minister broke both the letter and the spirit of the Triple
+Alliance. The analogy of this agreement to that of Bismarck’s
+reinsurance treaty with Russia of 1887 was remarked upon by Italian
+statesmen at the time (see Lansdowne to Currie, Dec. 17, 1901,
+<em>B.D.</em>, I, 284, No. 353). Bismarck’s pacific attitude toward
+Russia was well known, however, and he was not responsible for the
+inclusion of the anti-Russian clauses in the Austro-German treaty
+of the Alliance. See Trützschler v. Falkenstein, <em>Bismarck und
+die Kriegsgefahr von 1887</em> (Berlin, 1924), chap. v., and
+<em>G.P.</em>, Vol. V. The Italian government, on the other hand,
+had not only pursued an anti-French policy, but had been
+responsible for including the clauses antagonistic to France in the
+treaty of the Triple Alliance.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_97"></a><a href="#FNanchor_97"><span class=
+"label">[97]</span></a>For analyses of the Italian policy see Rodd
+to Lansdowne, July 9, 1902, <em>B.D.</em>, I, 292 ff., No. 364;
+Bertie to Lansdowne, Oct. 20, 1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 295, No. 366.
+For the German discussion see below. Mr. Bertie in October, 1903,
+formulated his conception of the Italian King’s foreign policy as
+follows: “His aim, I believe, is that Italy should be a link
+between the several Powers of Europe and at the same time remain a
+partner in the Triple Alliance: that France should have hopes of
+drawing Italy away from Austria and Germany, and that those two
+Powers should be made to feel that an understanding between Italy
+and France and perhaps even with Russia also is possible. As to
+England the King probably feels pretty sure that her interests will
+not seriously clash with those of Italy, and he relies on England
+standing in the way of French supremacy in the Mediterranean”
+(Bertie to Lansdowne, Oct. 20, 1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 295, No.
+366).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_98"></a><a href="#FNanchor_98"><span class=
+"label">[98]</span></a>On the renewal of the Anglo-Italian entente
+see Lansdowne to Currie, Dec. 17, 1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 284, No.
+353; Currie to Lansdowne, Jan. 1, 1902, <em>ibid.</em>, 285, No.
+355; Currie to Lansdowne, Jan. 5, 1902, <em>ibid.</em>, 286, No.
+356; Lansdowne to Currie, Feb. 3, 1902, <em>ibid.</em>, 287, No.
+359; Lansdowne to Currie, March 7, 1902, <em>ibid.</em>, 291, No.
+361; Plunkett to Lansdowne, April 10, 1902, <em>ibid.</em>, 291,
+No. 362.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_99"></a><a href="#FNanchor_99"><span class=
+"label">[99]</span></a>This he realized. See <em>L.j., 1900-2</em>,
+4 f., Nos. 2 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_100"></a><a href="#FNanchor_100"><span class=
+"label">[100]</span></a>Cf. Barrère to Poincaré, March 10, 1912,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 13, No. 11.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap">
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span><a id=
+"c03"></a>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+<p class="sch1">THE FRANCO-SPANISH ENTENTE, 1898-1903</p>
+
+<p>The close of the nineteenth century found Spain at one of the
+lowest points in her history. She was disorganized, isolated,
+defeated in 1898 by the United States; her navy was destroyed; her
+colonial empire was shattered. Spain was particularly embittered
+toward Great Britain, whose Premier had openly spoken of “moribund
+nations” with direct reference to her, and whose attitude during
+the recent war had been strongly pro-American.<a id=
+"FNanchor_101"></a><a href="#Footnote_101" class=
+"fnanchor">[101]</a> Fearful that the British might seize a Spanish
+port,<a id="FNanchor_102"></a><a href="#Footnote_102" class=
+"fnanchor">[102]</a> M. Silvela, head of the Conservative
+government, with the approval of the Liberal leaders, early in 1899
+determined upon a change of policy by which Spain would seek to
+bring about a secret defensive alliance with France, Germany, and
+Russia.<a id="FNanchor_103"></a><a href="#Footnote_103" class=
+"fnanchor">[103]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span>The sympathy of
+those Powers had been on the side of Spain during the recent war.
+But when the Premier laid the plan before them,<a id=
+"FNanchor_104"></a><a href="#Footnote_104" class=
+"fnanchor">[104]</a> the German government was encouraging but
+skeptical; the French government, dilatory; the Russian government
+seemed not to favor it and advised Spain instead to hold closely to
+France.<a id="FNanchor_105"></a><a href="#Footnote_105" class=
+"fnanchor">[105]</a> Nevertheless, during the next few years the
+Spanish government continued its effort to realize this program,
+particularly a Franco-German <em>rapprochement</em>.</p>
+
+<p>One of the main objects of this grouping was the defense of
+Spanish interests in Morocco. In spite of Spain’s colonial losses
+in the war of 1898, her concern over the future of that Islamic
+land remained active. Spain claimed a special position with
+reference to it, just as France did. Economic interests, the number
+of her subjects resident in Morocco (larger than that of any other
+foreign nation), geographic proximity, historical attempts at
+conquest, and Spanish pride were all advanced in support of this
+claim. Strategic reasons, reinforced by her actual possession of
+small bits of territory in Northern Morocco, also prompted Spain to
+seek control of at least the northern part of the land and above
+all to prevent that area from falling into the hands of France or
+Great Britain.<a id="FNanchor_106"></a><a href="#Footnote_106"
+class="fnanchor">[106]</a> The Spanish leaders recognized the
+French interests in Morocco and the British right to participate in
+any settlement of the problem of the straits. But, conscious of
+their weakness in dealing with other Powers, they preferred to
+maintain<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span> the
+<em>status quo</em> as long as possible unless the larger
+Continental grouping was consummated.</p>
+
+<p>In 1899 and 1900, when M. Delcassé showed a willingness to
+negotiate an accord over Morocco, the Spanish government evaded the
+overture,<a id="FNanchor_107"></a><a href="#Footnote_107" class=
+"fnanchor">[107]</a> and settled with him only the long standing
+dispute over the boundary of Rio de Oro.<a id=
+"FNanchor_108"></a><a href="#Footnote_108" class=
+"fnanchor">[108]</a> During 1901 events moved faster. In March a
+Liberal ministry under M. Sagasta with the Duke of Almodovar as
+foreign minister came into office. It saw France, unchecked by
+Great Britain, pushing her frontier steadily forward in the desert
+region back of Morocco. So it suspected the existence of a secret
+accord between those two Powers. The British government denied
+it,<a id="FNanchor_109"></a><a href="#Footnote_109" class=
+"fnanchor">[109]</a> but Spain feared that an accord might be made
+to her exclusion and injury. The Franco-Italian entente also
+aroused her alarm. In this uncertainty the Spanish government
+endeavored to use the presence of the Moroccan missions in Europe
+in June and July to bring about a <em>rapprochement</em> between
+France and Germany.<a id="FNanchor_110"></a><a href="#Footnote_110"
+class="fnanchor">[110]</a> The move failed. In August, M. Silvela
+published an article in <em>La Lectura</em> advocating a solution
+of the Moroccan problem by agreement with France. Encouraged by
+this expression and urged on by M. Leon y Castillo, Spanish
+ambassador in Paris, the Spanish government determined to open
+direct negotiations with M. Delcassé on the subject.<a id=
+"FNanchor_111"></a><a href="#Footnote_111" class=
+"fnanchor">[111]</a> And that minister was ready to listen. The
+negotiations<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span>
+progressed slowly, not only because M. Delcassé was disinclined to
+concede to Spain the territory which she desired,<a id=
+"FNanchor_112"></a><a href="#Footnote_112" class=
+"fnanchor">[112]</a> but also because he was treating with Italy
+and, to the disgust of the Spanish Ambassador, with Great Britain
+at the same time.<a id="FNanchor_113"></a><a href="#Footnote_113"
+class="fnanchor">[113]</a> By September, 1902, the main lines of
+the accord were agreed upon. Then came further discussion over
+details; and, after a last effort (October, 1902) by M. Leon y
+Castillo to bring France and Germany together had failed, the
+accord was ready for signing early in December.</p>
+
+<p>By the terms of the agreement Spain was to receive the region of
+the Sus in the south and almost all of the old kingdom of Fez,
+including the capital and Tangier in the north, as her sphere of
+influence, while the rest was to constitute that of France. The two
+governments agreed upon a policy of pacific penetration of the
+land, and the French government promised its diplomatic support to
+Spain in the execution of the treaty.<a id=
+"FNanchor_114"></a><a href="#Footnote_114" class=
+"fnanchor">[114]</a></p>
+
+<p>The failure of this agreement was an accident. On
+December<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span> 1 the Duke
+of Almodovar was called away from Madrid. Before he could return
+and issue instructions to sign the treaty, his government
+unexpectedly fell (December 3).<a id="FNanchor_115"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_115" class="fnanchor">[115]</a> The incoming
+Conservative ministry under M. Silvela with M. Abarzuza at the
+foreign office refused to complete the accord. Although they
+recognized its advantages to Spain, they feared the possible
+attitude of Great Britain and decided to sound her out before
+completing the treaty. Upon doing so they were informed by Lord
+Lansdowne, early in January, 1903, that in case of a break-up of
+Morocco, Spain “would be entitled to a voice in any new
+international arrangements” over that land, but that the British
+government was strongly opposed to any discussion of such an
+eventuality at that moment.<a id="FNanchor_116"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_116" class="fnanchor">[116]</a> In February, 1903, M.
+Abarzuza revealed the nature of the Franco-Spanish negotiations to
+the British Ambassador, and asked for an official British objection
+to it so that he (M. Abarzuza) would be in a firmer position to
+refuse his signature.<a id="FNanchor_117"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_117" class="fnanchor">[117]</a> Lord Lansdowne replied
+as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>We regard it as of the utmost importance that Spain and Great
+Britain should act together in regard to Morocco. . . . . I have
+more than once informed French Ambassador here that we deprecated
+attempts to bring about a virtual partition of Morocco. . . . . We
+should certainly not tolerate an attempt to deal with Morocco
+without regard to British interests.<a id=
+"FNanchor_118"></a><a href="#Footnote_118" class=
+"fnanchor">[118]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span>Thus
+while M. Delcassé was assuring the Spanish government that their
+agreement could be concluded without fear since Great Britain was
+interested only in Tangier,<a id="FNanchor_119"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_119" class="fnanchor">[119]</a> the Spanish Foreign
+Minister was being informed to the contrary by Lord Lansdowne
+himself. As M. Abarzuza did not believe in the possibility of an
+Anglo-French agreement over Morocco, he let the negotiations with
+France fall through.<a id="FNanchor_120"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_120" class="fnanchor">[120]</a></p>
+
+<p>Immediately thereafter, however, arose a report of Anglo-French
+conversations for that very purpose. In alarm the Spanish
+government questioned the British Foreign Secretary and received
+the following assurance: “We are quite willing to enter into an
+agreement with the Spanish Government that neither will commit
+itself to any settlement of Moorish question without previously
+consulting the other.”<a id="FNanchor_121"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_121" class="fnanchor">[121]</a></p>
+
+<p>As it developed later, Spain lost by relying upon Great Britain
+and not concluding this accord. For the British promise was too
+general to be of much value, and after the Anglo-French agreement
+was made, Spain had to accept the territory which the two Powers
+had reserved for her. Her portion was naturally not as large as
+before, nor were the terms as favorable. For France and M.
+Delcassé, on the other hand, it was fortunate that the project
+failed. The resulting agreement would have been strongly opposed by
+the French as too advantageous to Spain.<a id=
+"FNanchor_122"></a><a href="#Footnote_122" class=
+"fnanchor">[122]</a> France obtained better terms by first arriving
+at a settlement with Great Britain. But the <em>rapprochement</em>
+between the two Latin Powers was an actuality, and that had been
+one of M. Delcassé’s main objects.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes" id="ftc03">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_101"></a><a href="#FNanchor_101"><span class=
+"label">[101]</span></a>In 1898 Chamberlain publicly advocated an
+alliance with the United States. See Jerónimo Becker, <em>Historia
+de Marruecos</em> (Madrid, 1915), pp. 414 f.; Wolff to Salisbury,
+May 15, 1898, <em>B.D.</em>, II, 253, No. 300.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_102"></a><a href="#FNanchor_102"><span class=
+"label">[102]</span></a>Early in 1899 Silvela asserted to the
+ambassadors of Germany, France, and Russia that if Great Britain
+and France had gone to war in the previous year, the former had
+intended to occupy Vigo (<em>G.P.</em>, XV, Vol. Nos. 4205-8). When
+this fear was brought to the attention of the British government,
+by an exchange of notes with the Spanish government it denied any
+such intention. See Wolff to Salisbury, March 10, 1899,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 255 f., No. 305; Salisbury to Wolff, March 16,
+1899, <em>ibid.</em>, 256, No. 306; Conde de Romanones, <em>Las
+responsabilidades politicas del antique régimen de 1875 á 1923</em>
+(Madrid, ——), p. 36; Becker, pp. 415 f. The British and Spanish
+governments also found by an exchange of views in January, 1899,
+that they both wished to maintain the <em>status quo</em> in
+Morocco. The Spanish diplomat and historian, Becker, has written
+that they were about to make an agreement to that effect when the
+Liberal government in Spain fell from power (March, 1899) (<em>op.
+cit.</em>, p. 415; Salisbury to Wolff, Jan. 11, 1899,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 255, No. 304).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_103"></a><a href="#FNanchor_103"><span class=
+"label">[103]</span></a>The plan was approved by Sagasta, leader of
+the Liberals, by Leon y Castillo, the Liberal ambassador at Paris,
+and by the Queen Regent. See Alberto Mousset, <em>La politica
+exterior de España, 1873-1918</em> (Madrid, 1918), chap. v;
+Radowitz to Hohenlohe, April 15, 1899, <em>G.P.</em>, XV, 115 ff.,
+No. 4205; Bülow to Radowitz, April 27, 1899, <em>ibid.</em>, 119
+ff., No. 4206; Radowitz to Hohenlohe, May 28, 1899, <em>ibid.</em>,
+125 ff., No. 4210; and others in <em>ibid.</em>, chap. ic. Cf. F.
+de Leon y Castillo, <em>Mis tiempos</em> (Madrid, 1921), II, 255,
+written after the World War.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_104"></a><a href="#FNanchor_104"><span class=
+"label">[104]</span></a>Radowitz to Hohenlohe, May 28, 1899,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XV, 125 ff., No. 4210; Radowitz to Hohenlohe, Aug.
+12, 1899, <em>ibid.</em>, 127 ff., No. 4211.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_105"></a><a href="#FNanchor_105"><span class=
+"label">[105]</span></a>Bülow to Radowitz, April 27, 1899,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 119 ff., No. 4206; Bülow to Radowitz, May 16, 1899,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 124 f., No. 4209; Radowitz to Hohenlohe, Oct. 5,
+1899, <em>ibid.</em>, 130 ff., No. 4214; Tschirschky to Hohenlohe,
+Oct. 24, 1899, <em>ibid.</em>, 133 f., No. 4213; Radowitz to
+Hohenlohe, Feb. 4, 1900, <em>ibid.</em>, 134 f., No. 4214.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_106"></a><a href="#FNanchor_106"><span class=
+"label">[106]</span></a>Romanones, pp. 34 f.; Gabriel Maura, <em>La
+question du Maroc au point de vue espagnol</em> (Paris, 1911), pp.
+1 ff.; Becker, pp. 446 ff., esp. chap. lxi; Pinon, <em>L’empire de
+la Médit.</em>, pp. 123 ff.; Emile Vidal, <em>La politique de
+l’Espagne au Maroc</em> (Montpellier, 1913), pp. 1 ff.; M. Ribera,
+“L’Espagne et la question du Maroc,” <em>Questions diplomatiques et
+coloniales</em>, Jan. 1, 1902, pp. 46 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_107"></a><a href="#FNanchor_107"><span class=
+"label">[107]</span></a>This is asserted by Becker although he does
+not cite his authority. See Becker, pp. 414, 419; Radowitz to
+Hohenlohe, May 10, 1899, <em>G.P.</em>, XV, 123 f., No. 4208;
+Radowitz to Hohenlohe, Oct. 5, 1899, <em>ibid.</em>, 130 ff., No.
+4212; Tschirschky to Hohenlohe, Oct. 23, 1899, <em>ibid.</em>, 133
+f., No. 4213; Münster to Hohenlohe, May 9, 1900, <em>ibid.</em>,
+XVIII, 301 f., No. 5157; Wolff to Salisbury, Oct. 11, 1900,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 258, No. 311; Becker, p. 426; Romanones, p.
+39.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_108"></a><a href="#FNanchor_108"><span class=
+"label">[108]</span></a>Schefer, <em>D’une guerre à l’autre,
+etc.</em>, p. 237; Mousset, pp. 121 ff.; Romanones, p. 38;
+Delcassé’s statement in the French Senate, Feb. 11, 1901,
+<em>Journal officiel, Debats parlem.</em>, p. 295; Leon y Castillo,
+II, 143 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_109"></a><a href="#FNanchor_109"><span class=
+"label">[109]</span></a>Durand to Lansdowne, April 13, 1901,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 259 f., No. 314; Lansdowne to Durand, April 16,
+1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 260, No. 315.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_110"></a><a href="#FNanchor_110"><span class=
+"label">[110]</span></a>See below.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_111"></a><a href="#FNanchor_111"><span class=
+"label">[111]</span></a>Romanones, pp. 40 ff.; Mousset, pp. 132
+ff.; Becker, pp. 425 ff.; Vidal, p. 138; Leon y Castillo, II, 173
+ff., 122 ff. See also a speech of the Duke of Almodovar in the
+Spanish Chamber, June 8, 1904, <em>Diario de las sesiones de
+Cortes, Legislatura de 1903</em> (Congreso de los Diputados), pp.
+4919 ff.; speech by Romanones in the same, June 7, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, p. 4883; Radolin to Bülow, June 15, 1901,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XVIII, 777 f., No. 5870.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_112"></a><a href="#FNanchor_112"><span class=
+"label">[112]</span></a>Romanones, p. 41.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_113"></a><a href="#FNanchor_113"><span class=
+"label">[113]</span></a><em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 343, editor’s note;
+Becker, p. 427.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_114"></a><a href="#FNanchor_114"><span class=
+"label">[114]</span></a>Leon y Castillo was allowed a free hand in
+those negotiations. See Romanones, pp. 41 f.; Becker, pp. 427 f.;
+Mousset, p. 135; speeches by Almodovar and Romanones in the Spanish
+Chamber, June 7, 8, 1904, <em>Sesiones del Congreso,
+Legislatura</em>, pp. 4883, 4944 f., 4917 ff.; exchange of letters
+between Silvela and Almodovar published in <em>L’Imparcial</em>,
+June, 1904, and reprinted in Leon y Castillo, II, 185 ff. The
+result was shown to Silvela early in September, 1902, and received
+his entire approval, “provided one treats of a work of peace and
+concord guaranteed against all suspicion and opposition of friendly
+Powers.” The exact terms of the proposed accord are not known, only
+the main points. See R. Gay de Montella, <em>España ante el
+problema del Mediterráneo</em> (Barcelona, 1917), pp. 40 ff.,
+quoting an article by Leon y Castillo in <em>Mercurio</em>, May 27,
+1917; André Tardieu, “France et Espagne, 1902-1912,” <em>Revue des
+deux mondes</em>, Dec. 1, 1912, pp. 635 f.; Durand to Lansdowne,
+Feb. 14, 1903, <em>B.D.</em>, II, 279, No. 336; Lansdowne to
+Monson, Aug. 5, 1903, April 29, May 13, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 306
+ff., No. 364; III, 33, No. 34; 35, No. 37; Monson to Lansdowne, May
+20, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 37, No. 41; Lansdowne to Egerton, April
+27, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 31 f., No. 32; Leon y Castillo, II, 177
+ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_115"></a><a href="#FNanchor_115"><span class=
+"label">[115]</span></a>Mousset, p. 135; Leon y Castillo, II,
+128.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_116"></a><a href="#FNanchor_116"><span class=
+"label">[116]</span></a>On this question see a speech by Maura,
+minister of foreign affairs, in the Spanish Chamber, June 9, 1904,
+<em>Sesiones del Congreso, Legislatura</em>, p. 4959; Becker, pp.
+429 f.; Tardieu, p. 635; Durand to Lansdowne, Jan. 3, 1903,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 276 f., No. 332; Lansdowne to Durand, Jan. 5,
+1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 277, No. 333; Durand to Lansdowne, Jan. 17,
+1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 278, No. 335; Metternich to F. O., Dec. 31,
+1902, <em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 247 f., No. 5192; Groeben to F. O.,
+Sept. 17, 1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 353 f., No. 5198 and note; Monson
+to Lansdowne, April 22, 1904, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 30, No. 30; Leon
+y Castillo, II, 179 f. There is a story that Silvela tried to
+change the basis of the accord in such a way as also to obtain
+Russian support for Spain against Great Britain and that he was
+willing to enter the anti-British camp. His proposal to spend eight
+hundred million <em>pesetas</em> in the building of a navy pointed
+in this direction; but that there is anything to the tale seems
+doubtful. See Mousset, pp. 137 ff.; Tardieu, pp. 635 f.; Anonymous,
+“Una nouva alleanza,” <em>Nouva antologia</em>, Aug. 1, 1903, pp.
+511.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_117"></a><a href="#FNanchor_117"><span class=
+"label">[117]</span></a>Durand to Lansdowne, Feb. 14, 1903,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 279, No. 336.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_118"></a><a href="#FNanchor_118"><span class=
+"label">[118]</span></a>Lansdowne to Durand, Feb. 16, 21, 1903,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 279 f., No. 337; 280, No. 339.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_119"></a><a href="#FNanchor_119"><span class=
+"label">[119]</span></a>Durand to Lansdowne, Feb. 21, 1903,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 280, No. 338.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_120"></a><a href="#FNanchor_120"><span class=
+"label">[120]</span></a>See Tardieu, p. 635; Leon y Castillo, II,
+179 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_121"></a><a href="#FNanchor_121"><span class=
+"label">[121]</span></a>Durand to Lansdowne, Feb. 21, 1903,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 280, No. 338; Lansdowne to Durand, Feb. 21,
+1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 280, No. 339; Lansdowne to Durand, March 29,
+1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 282, No. 334; Leon y Castillo, II, 180.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_122"></a><a href="#FNanchor_122"><span class=
+"label">[122]</span></a>Maura, p. 88; speeches by Ribot and
+Deschanel in the French Chamber, March 11, Nov. 19, 1903,
+<em>Journal officiel, Debats parlem.</em>, pp. 793, 1111 f.;
+Millet, <em>Notre politique extérieure</em>, pp. 193 ff.; Pinon,
+<em>France et Allemagne</em>, pp. 143 f.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap">
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span><a id=
+"c04"></a>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+<p class="sch1">DELCASSÉ’S POLICY TOWARD GREAT BRITAIN AND GERMANY,
+1898-1902</p>
+
+<p>M. Delcassé assumed office at a most unpropitious time for the
+success of his policy with reference to Great Britain. On September
+1, 1898, he remarked to Sir Edmund Monson, the British ambassador,
+that “he had always . . . . regarded as eminently desirable a
+cordial understanding between England, France, and Russia,” and
+offered his service “in soothing the way both at St. Petersburgh
+and Paris for the attainment of this object.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_123"></a><a href="#Footnote_123" class=
+"fnanchor">[123]</a> From then until March of the next year he
+repeatedly urged Lord Salisbury, British premier and foreign
+minister, to agree to a general understanding on all matters at
+issue, so that Great Britain and France could exchange the old
+relation of hostility for one of friendship.<a id=
+"FNanchor_124"></a><a href="#Footnote_124" class=
+"fnanchor">[124]</a> But in spite of the French Minister’s
+cordiality the Fashoda crisis in the autumn and early winter of
+1898 brought the two countries perilously close to war.<a id=
+"FNanchor_125"></a><a href="#Footnote_125" class=
+"fnanchor">[125]</a> Anglo-Russian difficulties in China and
+elsewhere also remained acute.<a id="FNanchor_126"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_126" class="fnanchor">[126]</a> Furthermore, Lord
+Salisbury replied to M. Delcassé that French ministries were too
+unstable to deal with.<a id="FNanchor_127"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_127" class="fnanchor">[127]</a> Hence, instead of
+improving, relations between the two countries became more
+strained. In the late winter and early spring of 1899, the
+bellicose<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span> stand on
+the Fashoda affair taken by the British government and press
+aroused a general fear in France of a British attack.<a id=
+"FNanchor_128"></a><a href="#Footnote_128" class=
+"fnanchor">[128]</a> By August, the French Foreign Minister
+complained bitterly to the British Ambassador that “the conduct of
+her Majesty’s Government seemed to show a deliberate intention of
+being unfriendly to France in every possible way,” and added that
+“he began to believe that the politicians who argue that there is
+nothing to be done with England are right.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_129"></a><a href="#Footnote_129" class=
+"fnanchor">[129]</a></p>
+
+<p>During the period of the Boer War, the presence of Lord
+Salisbury at the foreign office, the bitter feeling of the French
+against the British, the continued Anglo-Russian trouble in China,
+and the British attempt to align with Germany prevented M. Delcassé
+from obtaining any results.<a id="FNanchor_130"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_130" class="fnanchor">[130]</a> In fact, conditions were
+more favorable for the pursuance of a directly anti-British policy.
+The Russian government wished it, and worked for closer concert
+against Great Britain among the Continental Powers.<a id=
+"FNanchor_131"></a><a href="#Footnote_131" class=
+"fnanchor">[131]</a> The Spanish government had the more
+far-reaching ambition of bringing about a definite Continental
+union against Great Britain.<a id="FNanchor_132"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_132" class="fnanchor">[132]</a> Italy was at odds with
+the latter. The German Emperor and his government had been wooing
+France and making veiled proposals for co-operation since
+1890.<a id="FNanchor_133"></a><a href="#Footnote_133" class=
+"fnanchor">[133]</a> And French feeling<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_43">[43]</span> toward Germany had become more amicable than
+at any time since 1870.</p>
+
+<p>The French Foreign Minister did not deviate from his original
+purpose,<a id="FNanchor_134"></a><a href="#Footnote_134" class=
+"fnanchor">[134]</a> but tried rather to be friendly to both Great
+Britain and Germany, to play between them for the advantage of
+France; and, warned by Mr. Chamberlain’s<a id=
+"FNanchor_135"></a><a href="#Footnote_135" class=
+"fnanchor">[135]</a> open advocacy in November, 1899, of an
+alliance with Germany and the United States and by the signs of an
+Anglo-German <em>rapprochement</em>, he sought to eliminate the
+occasion for this alliance.<a id="FNanchor_136"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_136" class="fnanchor">[136]</a> This policy had been
+foreshadowed during the Fashoda crisis.</p>
+
+<p>In December, 1898, immediately after France had retreated before
+the British demands, M. Delcassé in a conversation with Herr Arthur
+von Huhn, correspondent of the <em>Kölnische
+Zeitung</em>,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span> had
+bitterly denounced the brutal threats of Great Britain against
+France, had expressed his fear that that Power was seeking war in
+order to have an excuse for destroying the French fleet, and had
+proposed a <em>rapprochement</em> with Germany for pursuing a
+common policy against British encroachments and for making colonial
+accords.<a id="FNanchor_137"></a><a href="#Footnote_137" class=
+"fnanchor">[137]</a> Simultaneously with this indirect overture,
+which had never been followed up by either government, the French
+Minister had threatened the British government with the acceptance
+of indirect proposals from Germany for co-operation against it if
+Great Britain did not change her attitude toward France and assent
+to his offer of a general accord.<a id="FNanchor_138"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_138" class="fnanchor">[138]</a></p>
+
+<p>During 1899 M. Delcassé had turned farther away from Great
+Britain and had sought means of holding her in check.<a id=
+"FNanchor_139"></a><a href="#Footnote_139" class=
+"fnanchor">[139]</a> But when the Boer War broke out, he held aloof
+from any movements for intervention, even risked unpopularity by
+publicly denouncing the expressions of rabid anti-British sentiment
+on the part of the French people.<a id="FNanchor_140"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_140" class="fnanchor">[140]</a> Upon the retirement of
+Lord Salisbury from the foreign office in November, 1900, he again
+suggested a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span> general
+understanding to the British government.<a id=
+"FNanchor_141"></a><a href="#Footnote_141" class=
+"fnanchor">[141]</a> He was accused of being Anglophile to the
+detriment of French interests, particularly in Morocco;<a id=
+"FNanchor_142"></a><a href="#Footnote_142" class=
+"fnanchor">[142]</a> for many of the French writers advocated a
+policy of co-operation with Germany for the settlement of colonial
+questions (among which, of course, would be included the Moroccan),
+while Great Britain could not effectively object.<a id=
+"FNanchor_143"></a><a href="#Footnote_143" class=
+"fnanchor">[143]</a> But M. Delcassé was willing merely to occupy
+the Saharan oases back of Algeria during the war and to initiate
+the French policy for the eventual acquisition of the Sherifian
+Empire.</p>
+
+<p>Not that the French Foreign Minister was averse to any accord
+with Germany. As already seen, he made an indirect overture to the
+German government for an agreement while the Moroccan missions were
+in Europe in 1901. Although rebuffed on that occasion, he made
+another attempt in October of the same year at the urging of the
+Spanish and the Russian governments.<a id=
+"FNanchor_144"></a><a href="#Footnote_144" class=
+"fnanchor">[144]</a> At this time M. Jules Hansen, a French agent,
+stated to the German<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span>
+Ambassador in Paris that M. Delcassé had recently expressed to him
+the earnest wish to meet Count Bülow personally. The problem was
+where and how to meet. The French Minister had said that if the
+Count would come secretly and unofficially to Paris, he would greet
+him most heartily and would make a public visit to Berlin in
+return.<a id="FNanchor_145"></a><a href="#Footnote_145" class=
+"fnanchor">[145]</a></p>
+
+<p>Although very much interested, Count Bülow refused to run the
+risk. The time was inopportune, he said; the French government and
+people must first be more solicitous of closer relations with
+Germany.<a id="FNanchor_146"></a><a href="#Footnote_146" class=
+"fnanchor">[146]</a> That reply postponed the matter to the Greek
+calends.</p>
+
+<p>In 1902 M. Delcassé made a concentrated effort to establish the
+French claim to ascendancy in Morocco. His negotiations with Italy,
+which led to the agreement of November of that year, and those with
+Spain, which in December proved abortive, have already been
+considered. Simultaneously therewith, M. Delcassé again endeavored
+to negotiate with Great Britain and, perhaps, with Germany on the
+same question.</p>
+
+<p>On several occasions in January and February, M. Cambon, the
+French ambassador at London, discussed Anglo-French differences,
+including the Moroccan one, with Mr. Chamberlain, British colonial
+minister, and with Lord Lansdowne, British foreign secretary since
+November, 1900. While the British officials showed some interest,
+no progress was made.<a id="FNanchor_147"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_147" class="fnanchor">[147]</a> For after
+the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span> publication of
+the Anglo-Japanese treaty of alliance in February, France was
+forced to declare with her ally that the Dual Alliance extended to
+the Far East.<a id="FNanchor_148"></a><a href="#Footnote_148"
+class="fnanchor">[148]</a> Under pressure from Russia<a id=
+"FNanchor_149"></a><a href="#Footnote_149" class=
+"fnanchor">[149]</a> and with the hope of obtaining support while
+negotiating a treaty with Siam,<a id="FNanchor_150"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_150" class="fnanchor">[150]</a> the French government
+drew closer to Germany.</p>
+
+<p>Late in June the French Ambassador, in asking the German views
+on the Siamese question, remarked to Count Bülow that “the present
+good relations between Germany and France justified the hope that
+France would receive the support [<em>coup d’épaule</em>] of
+Germany in the Siamese affair.”<a id="FNanchor_151"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_151" class="fnanchor">[151]</a> As the German government
+ignored the suggestion, however, and as the French government was
+alarmed at the growing influence of certain Englishmen,
+particularly Kaid Maclean, over the Sultan of Morocco, M. Delcassé
+determined, in spite of probable Russian objection,<a id=
+"FNanchor_152"></a><a href="#Footnote_152" class=
+"fnanchor">[152]</a> to open the Moroccan question with the British
+government.</p>
+
+<p>On July 23, when M. Cambon asked Lord Lansdowne
+about<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span> discussing
+fully the Moroccan problem, the British Minister replied that he
+would be ready to consider it “in the frankest possible
+manner.”<a id="FNanchor_153"></a><a href="#Footnote_153" class=
+"fnanchor">[153]</a> On August 6, therefore, the Ambassador
+officially proposed an accord over the future of Siam and Morocco.
+After a consideration of the former question, the two men took up
+the latter one. While asserting that the French government
+preferred that the Moroccan problem should not become acute, the
+Ambassador desired that the two governments “frankly discuss the
+action which they might be constrained to adopt in the event of
+Morocco passing ‘into liquidation.’” Spain, he explained, could be
+satisfied by a sufficient allowance of hinterland behind her
+coastal possessions; Tangier could be converted into an
+international and open port—for France could not allow it to pass
+into the hands of any European Power; and beyond the Spanish line,
+France would expect “exclusive influence.”</p>
+
+<p>Lord Lansdowne replied that although he listened to the French
+proposal with great interest, yet since Italy, Spain, and Germany
+had also at various times manifested a concern in the Moroccan
+question, he regarded with the “greatest apprehension” any attempt
+to deal prematurely with a liquidation of that land, which “would
+be sure to lead to serious complications.” The Ambassador answered
+that at any rate there could be no harm “in discussing these
+eventualities in good time.” He pointed out that Spain and Germany
+had both failed egregiously in their attempts to establish
+themselves in Morocco, and that at present Germany was “not to the
+front there or elsewhere in the Mediterranean.” But the British
+Foreign Secretary, denying that his government had made any
+difficulties in Morocco for France, postponed further consideration
+of the proposal until after the government holiday.<a id=
+"FNanchor_154"></a><a href="#Footnote_154" class=
+"fnanchor">[154]</a> When in October M. Cambon returned to the
+subject, Lord Lansdowne not only replied that the
+French<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span> terms were
+unsatisfactory, but he also refused to discuss the possibility of a
+liquidation of Morocco.<a id="FNanchor_155"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_155" class="fnanchor">[155]</a></p>
+
+<p>In the meantime, M. Delcassé had been again seeking the
+co-operation of Germany. In September the German government assured
+France of its disinterestedness in Siam, provided German economic
+interests remained uninjured. Although this reply contained no
+mention of the larger request for support made by the French
+Ambassador in June, yet the latter, in expressing the satisfaction
+of his government with the German answer, added that this
+opportunity had been used to emphasize the community of French and
+German interests, and not only in Siam. To this broad hint the
+German government made no response.<a id=
+"FNanchor_156"></a><a href="#Footnote_156" class=
+"fnanchor">[156]</a></p>
+
+<p>In the next month the Spanish Ambassador in Paris reported to
+Prince Radolin that the French Foreign Minister had recently said
+to him:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>I do not believe that Germany wishes to come to an understanding
+with France. . . . . Four years ago it was said to M. de Noailles
+at Berlin that there were points upon which the two countries might
+place themselves in accord. I found the matter so important that I
+immediately took it to the president of the Republic and to the
+premier. I was authorized by them to telegraph to M. de Noailles
+that I was disposed to treat with Germany on all points on which
+the two countries would be able to agree. M. de Noailles reported
+that they had informed him in the <em>Wilhelmstrasse</em> that in
+view of its importance the question deserved to be studied. That
+was four years ago. Since then not a word more has been said on
+that subject. Our ambassador still awaits a response.<a id=
+"FNanchor_157"></a><a href="#Footnote_157" class=
+"fnanchor">[157]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The German government replied to this overture with
+recriminations against the French Minister. It complained that his
+proposals had lacked in concreteness, that France had rejected
+several<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span> German offers
+of co-operation, and it accused M. Delcassé of consistent bias in
+favor of Great Britain.<a id="FNanchor_158"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_158" class="fnanchor">[158]</a></p>
+
+<p>When this reply was passed on to M. Delcassé by the Spanish
+Ambassador late in November, he remarked, “Then M. de Noailles is a
+fool”; thereafter he had no business to transact with the German
+representative.<a id="FNanchor_159"></a><a href="#Footnote_159"
+class="fnanchor">[159]</a></p>
+
+<p>The refusal by both the British and the German governments of
+the French overtures was followed in December by that of the
+Spanish government to sign the agreement over Morocco. So M.
+Delcassé’s campaign of 1902 terminated in failure. At the end of
+the year he reverted to the policy of the <em>status quo</em>, and,
+anxious about the situation in Morocco, proposed to Lord Lansdowne
+that if disorders there should necessitate action “the Powers
+interested should take counsel together as to its nature and scope,
+and should agree that there should be no single-handed intervention
+. . . . on the part of any one Power.” In approving this policy the
+British Minister asked M. Cambon for a further explanation of the
+phrase “interested Powers.” The latter replied that Great Britain,
+France, and Spain were the ones referred to, that Italy had no
+interest in Morocco, and that the French government was solicitous
+of excluding the United States, and, above all, Germany from that
+group. He thought that “it<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_51">[51]</span> would be most desirable that if Germany were
+at any moment to come forward and attempt to assume a conspicuous
+rôle, it should be intimated to her that she had no <em>locus
+standi</em>.” Upon that point Lord Lansdowne refused to commit
+himself.<a id="FNanchor_160"></a><a href="#Footnote_160" class=
+"fnanchor">[160]</a></p>
+
+<p>M. Delcassé had shown a pro-British inclination from the start,
+and it may be that his approaches to Germany had been intended
+primarily to press Great Britain to an agreement. Certainly they
+had been sufficiently vague to be in harmony with the traditional
+French attitude of irreconcilability with the victor of 1870-71.
+But they had also been concrete enough to show the difficulty, if
+not the impossibility, of negotiating with Germany on acceptable
+terms. Whether M. Delcassé was sincere in those overtures cannot be
+said, although he seems to have been. At any rate, despairing of
+Germany, he devoted his full energies in 1903 toward achieving an
+accord with Great Britain, from whom no irredentist problem
+separated France.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes" id="ftc04">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_123"></a><a href="#FNanchor_123"><span class=
+"label">[123]</span></a>Monson to Salisbury, Sept. 1, 1899,
+<em>B.D.</em>, I, 216, No. 262.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_124"></a><a href="#FNanchor_124"><span class=
+"label">[124]</span></a>Monson to Salisbury, Sept. 8, 1898,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 163, No. 188, and other documents in chaps. iv, v.
+Delcassé went so far as to state to Monson on Sept. 28, 1898, that
+“he would much prefer an Anglo-French to a Franco-Russian
+alliance.” See Monson to Salisbury, Sept. 28, 1898, <em>ibid.</em>,
+171, No. 198.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_125"></a><a href="#FNanchor_125"><span class=
+"label">[125]</span></a>Monson to Salisbury, Sept. 22, 1898,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 169, No. 196, and other documents in the same
+chapter.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_126"></a><a href="#FNanchor_126"><span class=
+"label">[126]</span></a>Monson to Salisbury, Sept. 8, 1898,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 37, No. 58; and others in <em>ibid.</em>, chap.
+i.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_127"></a><a href="#FNanchor_127"><span class=
+"label">[127]</span></a>So stated by Paul Cambon in an interview in
+the <em>London Times</em>, Dec. 22, 1920.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_128"></a><a href="#FNanchor_128"><span class=
+"label">[128]</span></a>Monson to Salisbury, Jan. 13, 1899,
+<em>B.D.</em>, I, 199, No. 241.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_129"></a><a href="#FNanchor_129"><span class=
+"label">[129]</span></a>Monson to Salisbury, Aug. 14, 1899,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 212, No. 259. Cambon had in March made similar
+complaints to Salisbury (Salisbury to Monson, March 15, 1899,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 211, No. 257).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_130"></a><a href="#FNanchor_130"><span class=
+"label">[130]</span></a>For expression of French public opinion
+against Great Britain see two articles by Ernst Lavisse in the
+<em>Revue de Paris</em>, Feb. 1, 1899, and Jan. 1, 1900. See also
+Monson to Salisbury, Feb. 3, 1899, <em>B.D.</em>, I, 200 f., No.
+242; Mévil, <em>De la paix de Francfort, etc.</em>, pp. 128 f.; Sir
+Thomas Barclay, <em>Thirty Years; Anglo-French Reminiscences,
+1876-1906</em> (London, 1914), pp. 193 f., 209 f.; J. A. Spender,
+<em>Life, Journalism, and Politics</em> (London, 1927), I, 183 ff.;
+Newton, <em>Lord Lansdowne</em>, p. 209.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_131"></a><a href="#FNanchor_131"><span class=
+"label">[131]</span></a>Romanones, <em>Las responsabilidades
+politicas, etc.</em>, pp. 27, 36; Monson to Salisbury, Oct. 27,
+1899, <em>B.D.</em>, I, 234 f., No. 287; Rumbold to Salisbury, Nov.
+3, 1899, <em>ibid.</em>, 237, No. 291; <em>G.P.</em>, Vol. XV,
+chaps. ic, ci, ciii.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_132"></a><a href="#FNanchor_132"><span class=
+"label">[132]</span></a>See above, chap. iii; also Emil Bourgeois
+et Georges Pagès, <em>Les origines et les responsabilités de la
+grande guerre</em> (Paris, 1922), p. 276.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_133"></a><a href="#FNanchor_133"><span class=
+"label">[133]</span></a>The German Emperor made a special endeavor
+to win France; hence his numerous telegrams of congratulations or
+condolence to French leaders, his toasts and decorations for French
+officers, etc. The French called him the “new Lohengrin.” Both he
+and Bülow made repeated hints to the French representatives for a
+<em>rapprochement</em>; and one of the Emperor’s favorite schemes
+to form a Continental grouping against Great Britain and the United
+States was well known from his frequent references to it. See
+Theodor Wolff, <em>Das Vorspiel</em> (Munich, 1924), pp. 110, 114,
+117, 123 f.; <em>G.P.</em>, Vol. XVIII, Nos. 5860-71; Bourgeois et
+Pagès, pp. 277 ff., 256 f.; William II to Bülow, Oct. 29, 1899,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XV, 406 ff., No. 4394; and the editor’s long note
+thereto, pp. 406 ff. On June 4, 1899, the French Ambassador
+reported a conversation between the French naval attaché, Buchard,
+and the Emperor in which the latter said: “The hour is certainly
+come when the Continent must defend itself against England and
+America, and I think that it is necessary for Germany and France to
+rely upon each other [<em>s’appuient l’une sur l’autre</em>].” And
+Buchard added, “The Emperor is very desirous of establishing good
+relations with you” (Bourgeois et Pagès, p. 279). See also Spring
+Rice to Villiers, April 24, 1900, Stephen Gwynn (ed.), <em>The
+Letters and Friendships of Sir Cecil Spring Rice. A Record</em>
+(Boston and New York, 1929), I, 220.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_134"></a><a href="#FNanchor_134"><span class=
+"label">[134]</span></a>How entirely alien to Delcassé’s mind was
+the idea of a Continental alliance with Germany was shown by the
+fact that in August, 1899, at his instigation the phrase “the
+maintenance of the equilibrium between the forces of Europe” was
+introduced into the Dual Alliance. See Ministère des Affaires
+Etrangères, <em>Documents diplomatiques. L’alliance
+franco-russe</em> (Paris, 1918), pp. 94 f.; Dickinson, <em>The
+International Anarchy, 1904-1914</em> (New York, 1926), p. 108;
+Georges Michon, <em>L’alliance franco-russe, 1891-1917</em> (Paris,
+1927), pp. 87 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_135"></a><a href="#FNanchor_135"><span class=
+"label">[135]</span></a>Chamberlain was Colonial minister in the
+Unionist cabinet.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_136"></a><a href="#FNanchor_136"><span class=
+"label">[136]</span></a>In September, 1898, Delcassé had spoken to
+Monson of the rumors of an “alliance” between Great Britain and
+Germany (Monson to Salisbury, Sept. 8, 1898, <em>B.D.</em>, I, 162,
+No. 187).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_137"></a><a href="#FNanchor_137"><span class=
+"label">[137]</span></a>Memo. by Huhn, Dec. 5, 1898, <em>G.P.</em>,
+XIII, 247 ff., No. 3558.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_138"></a><a href="#FNanchor_138"><span class=
+"label">[138]</span></a>Monson to Salisbury, Oct. 28, 1898,
+<em>B.D.</em>, I, 185, No. 221; Monson to Salisbury, Dec. 9, 1898,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 196, No. 238.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_139"></a><a href="#FNanchor_139"><span class=
+"label">[139]</span></a>Count Witte writes in his <em>Memoirs</em>
+(New York, 1921), p. 178, that when Delcassé came to St. Petersburg
+in August, 1899, he sought means of accomplishing this end, and
+urged the Russian government to push the construction of the
+Orenburg-Tashkent Railway so that in emergency Russia could
+threaten India. Leon y Castillo, Spanish ambassador at Paris and an
+intimate friend of the Minister, likewise stated in round terms to
+Radowitz, German ambassador at Madrid, in May, 1899, that Delcassé
+belonged to the party desirous of a closer understanding with
+Germany (Radowitz to Hohenlohe, May 28, 1899, <em>G.P.</em>, XV,
+125 ff., No. 4210. On the other hand, Sir Thomas Barclay records
+that upon Delcassé’s departure for St. Petersburg in August, 1899,
+the latter said to him that “there was nothing he [Delcassé]
+personally would welcome more warmly than a state of feeling which
+would permit the two Governments [French and British] to negotiate
+a solution of their outstanding difficulties in a friendly
+give-and-take spirit” (Barclay, p. 170).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_140"></a><a href="#FNanchor_140"><span class=
+"label">[140]</span></a>Barclay, pp. 169 f.; Monson to Salisbury,
+Dec. 1, 1899, <em>B.D.</em>, I, 242, No. 300; Monson to Salisbury,
+Nov. 7, 1899, <em>ibid.</em>, 239, No. 294; Wolff to Salisbury,
+June 9, 1900, <em>ibid.</em>, II, 258, No. 210.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_141"></a><a href="#FNanchor_141"><span class=
+"label">[141]</span></a>Lee, <em>King Edward VII</em>, II, 214.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_142"></a><a href="#FNanchor_142"><span class=
+"label">[142]</span></a>According to an anonymous article, “Quatre
+ans de politique extérieure,” <em>Revue politique et
+parlementaire</em>, Oct., 1902, pp. 24 f., 31, on one occasion
+during the Boer War when a deputy asked Delcassé if he did not
+think this an opportune time to settle the Moroccan affair with
+Great Britain, the Minister replied, “How do you wish me to speak
+with the English Government? It is so occupied that it has no time
+to reply.”</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_143"></a><a href="#FNanchor_143"><span class=
+"label">[143]</span></a>Robert de Caix, writing in the
+<em>Bulletin</em>, was one of these. Moreover, in March, 1901, not
+long after the German Emperor’s visit to England, Delcassé took
+advantage of the opportunity offered by the presence of the British
+mission in Paris for announcing the accession of King Edward VII to
+the throne, to let the British know that the French government
+wanted a “good understanding” with them (Lee, II, 14 f.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_144"></a><a href="#FNanchor_144"><span class=
+"label">[144]</span></a>It must be remembered that Delcassé was
+then discussing the Moroccan problem with the Spanish Ambassador,
+who sought to use that question as the means for paving the way to
+the new Continental combination. Moreover, the Czar and the German
+Emperor, together with their foreign ministers, had an interview at
+Danzig in September at which the Russian Minister openly advocated
+a Russo-German alliance. From Danzig the Czar journeyed to France,
+and a short time thereafter occurred Delcassé’s indirect overture
+to Radolin. On the meeting at Danzig see Bülow’s account of the
+conversations on Sept. 12, 14, 1901, in <em>G.P.</em>, XVIII, 28
+ff., Nos. 5393-95; Savinsky, <em>Recollections of a Russian
+Diplomat</em>, pp. 17 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_145"></a><a href="#FNanchor_145"><span class=
+"label">[145]</span></a>The identical project was also proposed to
+Radolin by Pallain, governor of the Banque de France. Hansen also
+remarked that an important Russian personage had told him
+positively that Lamsdorff had spoken to Delcassé of the trip to
+Berlin. The idea seems to have been suggested to the Russian
+Minister by the German Emperor (Radolin to Bülow, Oct. 27, 1901,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 782 ff., No. 5873).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_146"></a><a href="#FNanchor_146"><span class=
+"label">[146]</span></a>Bülow to Radolin, Nov. 6, 1901,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 785, No. 5874.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_147"></a><a href="#FNanchor_147"><span class=
+"label">[147]</span></a>Metternich to F. O., Jan. 30, 1902,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XVII, 342 f., No. 5186; Hermann Freiherr von
+Eckardstein, <em>Lebenserinnerungen und politische
+Denkwürdigkeiten</em> (Leipzig, 1919, 1921), II, 379; Lansdowne to
+Monson, Jan. 22, 1902, <em>B.D.</em>, II, 262 f., No. 320;
+interview with Cambon published in the <em>London Times</em>, Dec.
+22, 1920; Monson to Lansdowne, Feb. 6, 1902, <em>B.D.</em>, I, 274,
+No. 339. Lansdowne was so much interested in the French
+Ambassador’s ideas that the latter wrote him a letter enumerating
+the differences which might be treated. King Edward read the letter
+and declared to Cambon, “It is excellent. You must go on”
+(interview with Cambon published in the <em>London Times</em>, Dec.
+22, 1920).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_148"></a><a href="#FNanchor_148"><span class=
+"label">[148]</span></a>A few days later, however, Delcassé spoke
+in the Chamber so vaguely of this declaration and emphasized so
+strongly France’s pacific intentions that he cast great doubt upon
+its value. See Mévil, pp. 81 f. n.; Tardieu, <em>La France et les
+alliances</em>, pp. 21 f.; see also Newton, pp. 226 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_149"></a><a href="#FNanchor_149"><span class=
+"label">[149]</span></a>Memo. by Bülow of a conversation with the
+French Ambassador, March 20, 1902, <em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 179 f., No.
+5064. In February the Russian government urged the German
+government to enter into an agreement against the new alliance, but
+the offer was refused (<em>ibid.</em>, chap. cx, Part B).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_150"></a><a href="#FNanchor_150"><span class=
+"label">[150]</span></a>On Siamese affairs, an old cause of trouble
+between Great Britain and France, see <em>ibid.</em>, XVIII, 795
+ff., Nos. 5881-83; Schefer, <em>D’une guerre à l’autre, etc.</em>,
+p. 242; <em>Quest. dipl. et col.</em>, Nov. 15, 1902, pp. 577 ff.;
+and others.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_151"></a><a href="#FNanchor_151"><span class=
+"label">[151]</span></a>Richthofen to Metternich, June 30, 1902,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XVIII, 795 f., No. 5881.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_152"></a><a href="#FNanchor_152"><span class=
+"label">[152]</span></a>Memo. by Bülow of a conversation with the
+Russian Ambassador, Feb. 25, 1902, <em>ibid.</em>, XVII, 160 ff.,
+No. 5051; Alvensleben to F. O., Feb. 25, 1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 349,
+No. 5195.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_153"></a><a href="#FNanchor_153"><span class=
+"label">[153]</span></a>Lansdowne to Monson, July 23, 1902,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 263 f., No. 321.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_154"></a><a href="#FNanchor_154"><span class=
+"label">[154]</span></a>Lansdowne to Monson, Aug. 6, 1902,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 264 ff., No. 322.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_155"></a><a href="#FNanchor_155"><span class=
+"label">[155]</span></a>Lansdowne to Monson, Oct. 15, 1902,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 268 ff., No. 325; Newton, pp. 268 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_156"></a><a href="#FNanchor_156"><span class=
+"label">[156]</span></a>Mühlberg to Radolin, Aug. 18, 1902,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XVIII, 795 f., No. 5882; Schlözer to F. O., Sept.
+22, 1902, <em>ibid.</em>, 797, No. 5883.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_157"></a><a href="#FNanchor_157"><span class=
+"label">[157]</span></a>Radolin to Bülow, Oct. 15, 1902,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 797 ff., No. 5884.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_158"></a><a href="#FNanchor_158"><span class=
+"label">[158]</span></a>Richthofen to Radolin, Oct. 23, 1902,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 799 f., No. 5885. These accusations were unfair. In
+the previous June in a dispatch to Metternich, ambassador at
+London, two instances had been mentioned in which the French
+government had tried to secure the co-operation of Germany. The
+editors of <em>G.P.</em> admit that one of these proposals was
+definite; and in August, 1901, Holstein of the German foreign
+office had written that the French government was “not in itself
+irreconcilable.” That admission speaks volumes. Moreover, the
+German reply admitted that the French Ambassador had usually taken
+the initiative in these attempts at co-operation. See Richthofen to
+Metternich, June 30, 1902, <em>ibid.</em>, 795 f., No. 5881;
+Holstein to Bülow, Aug. 8, 1901, <em>ibid.</em>, XVII, 341, No.
+5184.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_159"></a><a href="#FNanchor_159"><span class=
+"label">[159]</span></a>Radolin to Bülow, Dec. 4, 1902,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XVIII, 801, No. 5886. As an explanation for this
+very marked attitude, Delcassé said to a third party that he had
+tried to co-operate with Germany but had been refused (Memo. by
+Klehmet, April 19, 1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 801 f., No. 5887). None
+the less, up to Oct., 1903, the French government continued to
+approve the investment of French capital in the Bagdad Railway
+(memo. by Rosen, Oct. 29, 1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 456 ff., No.
+5274).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_160"></a><a href="#FNanchor_160"><span class=
+"label">[160]</span></a>This conversation occurred on Dec. 31,
+1902. Lansdowne to Monson, Dec. 31, 1902, <em>B.D.</em>, II, 274
+ff., No. 330; Lansdowne to Monson, Dec. 28, 1902, Monson to
+Lansdowne, Dec. 31, 1902, Newton, pp. 269 f.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap">
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span><a id=
+"c05"></a>CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+<p class="sch1">THE ANGLO-GERMAN ALLIANCE NEGOTIATIONS,
+1898-1901</p>
+
+<p>The international position of Great Britain at the end of the
+nineteenth century was uncomfortable. The major Powers were all
+busy in the colonial world more or less in opposition to her
+interests; <em>Weltpolitik</em> was the order of the day; the
+navies of all states were growing rapidly and by combining might be
+able to threaten her maritime supremacy. On the Continent, the
+German Emperor’s courtship of an apparently complaisant France,
+cordial relations between Russia and Germany, an agreement in 1897
+between Russia and Austria-Hungary over Balkan affairs, and a
+growing amity between France and Italy and between France and Spain
+gave evidence of a developing <em>rapprochement</em> between the
+two systems of alliance. Trouble in West Africa with France in 1897
+and early in 1898 made Anglo-French relations acute. Fashoda was on
+the way; so was the Boer War. British markets in China were being
+menaced by Russia, and the British feared that the Russian, French,
+and German governments might co-operate on Chinese affairs to their
+injury. Public opinion demanded that the government defend British
+interests more actively.<a id="FNanchor_161"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_161" class="fnanchor">[161]</a> These were the more
+important of the difficulties confronting the island empire.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span>To dispel these
+dangers, two policies were advocated by members of the Unionist
+cabinet. Lord Salisbury, prime minister and foreign secretary, did
+not believe that a Continental alliance against Great Britain would
+be made.<a id="FNanchor_162"></a><a href="#Footnote_162" class=
+"fnanchor">[162]</a> He clung to the traditional position of
+“splendid isolation,” of making special agreements with the various
+Powers over specific issues. As he realized the inadequacy of this
+policy if Great Britain attempted to expand her influence too
+largely in China, South Africa, and elsewhere, he only
+half-heartedly supported a vigorous program of aggression.<a id=
+"FNanchor_163"></a><a href="#Footnote_163" class=
+"fnanchor">[163]</a> In January, 1898, he proposed to the Russian
+government a general agreement over China and Turkey.<a id=
+"FNanchor_164"></a><a href="#Footnote_164" class=
+"fnanchor">[164]</a> On March 8 he asked the United States
+government to co-operate in maintaining the open door in
+China.<a id="FNanchor_165"></a><a href="#Footnote_165" class=
+"fnanchor">[165]</a> However, he was old, in poor health, and
+inclined to permit Mr. Chamberlain, the colonial secretary, to
+force his hand. In fact, the last five years of his administration
+have been called the “Chamberlain period,” so great was the
+latter’s influence.<a id="FNanchor_166"></a><a href="#Footnote_166"
+class="fnanchor">[166]</a></p>
+
+<p>This “stormy petrel” from Birmingham favored an entirely new
+policy.<a id="FNanchor_167"></a><a href="#Footnote_167" class=
+"fnanchor">[167]</a> Determined to maintain and extend British
+interests in the whole world, he sought to form a corporation for
+directing world-affairs by close co-operation with the United
+States and Germany. He was supported more or less fully by the
+Prince<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span> of Wales (who
+in 1901 became King Edward VII), in the cabinet by Mr. Balfour (who
+in 1902 succeeded Lord Salisbury as prime minister), and by the
+Duke of Devonshire;<a id="FNanchor_168"></a><a href="#Footnote_168"
+class="fnanchor">[168]</a> while his influence with the masses and
+with the business elements seemed to assure him of popular
+approval.</p>
+
+<p>Various difficulties had in recent years arisen between Great
+Britain and Germany. But Mr. Chamberlain thought that in view of
+the German Emperor’s offers of alliance to the British government
+at various times during the 1890’s, one as late as January,
+1898,<a id="FNanchor_169"></a><a href="#Footnote_169" class=
+"fnanchor">[169]</a> the German government would eagerly accept a
+proposal to that effect. When Lord Salisbury’s policy toward Russia
+failed and trouble with Russia<a id="FNanchor_170"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_170" class="fnanchor">[170]</a> and with France<a id=
+"FNanchor_171"></a><a href="#Footnote_171" class=
+"fnanchor">[171]</a> threatened, in March and April, 1898, the
+British Colonial Minister declared to Count Hatzfeldt, the German
+ambassador, that Great Britain would have to relinquish her
+isolation. Under threat of coming to terms with Russia or France if
+his overture were refused, he made an unofficial offer of defensive
+alliance to Germany.<a id="FNanchor_172"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_172" class="fnanchor">[172]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span>Mr. Chamberlain’s
+proposal was coolly received. Count Bülow, the German secretary of
+state for foreign affairs, and his inspirer and guide, Herr von
+Holstein, privy councilor (<em>vortragender Rat</em>) in the
+foreign office, who with occasional interference from the Emperor
+were the directors of the German foreign policy, not only were
+mistrustful of British intentions, but also saw no reason for
+dissatisfaction with the current international position and
+prospects of their state.<a id="FNanchor_173"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_173" class="fnanchor">[173]</a> Besides, this overture
+so increased the power of their situation that they were able to
+lay down a policy of the “free hand” to be followed during the next
+few years. A telegram from Emperor William II to Count Bülow on
+April 10, 1898, together with the latter’s marginal notes, best
+expressed this policy. After stating that Germany had less need of
+a British alliance since Great Britain had turned her attention
+from the Continent to the colonial world, the Emperor wrote:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>If the English need of support direct itself in the future
+toward European affairs also, we could consider it more closely
+than now. Nevertheless, it is<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_56">[56]</span> also of great significance for the present to
+keep the official attitude in England favorable and hopeful toward
+us [Bülow’s comment, “Yes”]. . . . . Through an England friendly to
+us we hold another card in our hand toward Russia. [Bülow’s
+comment, “Very true, we must remain independent between them, be
+the tongue to the wagon, not the pendulum restlessly swinging
+about.”] And we thereby have prospects of gaining colonial and
+commercial advantages from England. [Bülow’s comment, “Also the
+reverse. The calmer relations we have with Russia, the more will
+England treat us with respect, not to say take great care with
+respect to us.”]</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">The Emperor proposed that Count Hatzfeldt be
+instructed not to refuse the overture abruptly, but rather to
+express pleasure at the prospect of a profitable co-operation
+leading toward an alliance. To the Emperor’s remark that the
+pro-German sentiment of the British cabinet would not long remain
+concealed from Russia, Count Bülow wrote, “It does not matter, if
+only the English cannot prove to the Russians and <em>vice
+versa</em> with the evidence in hand that we have played
+falsely.”<a id="FNanchor_174"></a><a href="#Footnote_174" class=
+"fnanchor">[174]</a> In accordance with the Emperor’s suggestion,
+Mr. Chamberlain’s offer was for the time refused.<a id=
+"FNanchor_175"></a><a href="#Footnote_175" class=
+"fnanchor">[175]</a></p>
+
+<p>The German leaders had found the policy by which they hoped to
+carry out their program of <em>Weltpolitik</em>, already so
+resoundingly proclaimed in their speeches and acts.<a id=
+"FNanchor_176"></a><a href="#Footnote_176" class=
+"fnanchor">[176]</a> “I am the balance of power,” declared the
+Emperor in 1901;<a id="FNanchor_177"></a><a href="#Footnote_177"
+class="fnanchor">[177]</a> and by utilizing the advantages of that
+position, he and his advisers hoped to gain colonial concessions
+from the Powers, to construct the Bagdad<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_57">[57]</span> Railway, and to build the German battle
+fleet. It was a policy of finesse and at times of intrigue, one
+nicely suited to Count Bülow’s ingratiating nature, but one full of
+pitfalls. Success depended upon whether Anglo-Russian and
+Anglo-French hostility was temporary or relatively permanent, upon
+whether Mr. Chamberlain was in earnest in declaring that Great
+Britain must abandon her policy of isolation,<a id=
+"FNanchor_178"></a><a href="#Footnote_178" class=
+"fnanchor">[178]</a> upon whether German diplomacy would be
+competent to force concessions from those Powers without driving
+them together. Guided by Emperor William II, Count Bülow, and Herr
+von Holstein, the policy of the “free hand” seemed almost
+foredoomed to failure.</p>
+
+<p>In 1898 the Emperor was thirty-nine years of age, but experience
+had taught him very little caution, moderation, or political
+understanding. He remained the spoiled sovereign of a spoiled
+country; each had risen to power so rapidly as to be unable to take
+this position for granted and not to demand explicit recognition of
+it, and as to be inclined consequently to abuse its power. The
+Emperor’s belief in and practice of his divine right to rule were
+not tempered by any consistent application to his task. While not
+devoid of political intuition, he lacked most of the qualities of a
+statesman. He was brilliant, but erratic and impulsive. In spite of
+his seeming wide knowledge, he was mentally lazy and devoid of
+profundity. Of a highly nervous temperament, he was guided chiefly
+by his emotions. He appeared rigid, severe, and forbidding on state
+occasions, but he loved to relax, to be jocose and sociable. He
+could be cordial and wonderfully amiable and charming, like his
+mother, and again, when his temper was aroused, he could be
+ruthless and crushing. He spoke often and dramatically, and
+traveled as much and as widely as he could. He frequently
+antagonized and angered people unintentionally by his imperious
+obtuseness. Then he would feel aggrieved and abused, for he
+expected all the understanding to come from the other side. One
+could not take him at his word; one had to interpret his meaning
+from his acts and intentions as well. At<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_58">[58]</span> times his words would leave exactly the
+opposite meaning from that which he intended. He once remarked to
+Sir Frank Lascelles, the British ambassador, that “the noodles seem
+to have had a lucid interval,” when upon further conversation it
+developed he had intended thereby to express his great satisfaction
+with the communication from the British government.<a id=
+"FNanchor_179"></a><a href="#Footnote_179" class=
+"fnanchor">[179]</a> He loved to set countries at odds by his
+intrigues and gossip. His jealousy of Great Britain, her empire,
+and her fleet was a cardinal reason both for his being constantly
+attracted to England and for his desiring to become her colonial
+and naval rival. Nevertheless, after twelve years of personal
+contact with the Emperor, Sir Frank Lascelles came to the following
+sane conclusion about him:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>In spite of his habit of twirling his moustache and rattling his
+sabre (I trust that this sentence may be taken in its metaphorical
+and not in its literal sense, for, as a matter of fact, I have
+never either seen him twirl his moustache or heard him rattle his
+sword), which he may think a befitting attitude for the ruler of a
+mighty Empire, he is really animated by the most pacific
+sentiments, and . . . . his great ambition now is that his name
+should be handed down to posterity as that of the German Emperor
+who kept the peace. It would seem that this is the estimate which
+the Emperor has formed of his own character, as in a recent
+conversation with Prince Radolin<a id="FNanchor_180"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_180" class="fnanchor">[180]</a> he said he was at a loss
+to understand how, with his well-known peaceful intentions, he had
+come to be looked upon as a disturbing element—an instance,
+perhaps, of that “inconscience” which M. Herbette<a id=
+"FNanchor_181"></a><a href="#Footnote_181" class=
+"fnanchor">[181]</a> considered a characteristic of the German
+nation, and concluded with the almost pathetic sentence, “Ich bin
+doch kein böser Mensch” [I am really not a bad person].<a id=
+"FNanchor_182"></a><a href="#Footnote_182" class=
+"fnanchor">[182]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The Emperor’s deficiences were in part made up by Count Bülow,
+who had been chosen secretary of state for foreign affairs in 1897
+to execute the program of <em>Weltpolitik</em>. Born in 1849 of an
+old North German family, he had had diplomatic service<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span> at St. Petersburg, Vienna,
+Athens, Paris, Bucharest, and Rome where he had been ambassador
+since 1894. He came to his task at a crucial time in the history of
+Germany’s foreign relations, but he lacked the farsightedness,
+decision, and firmness of character necessary to deal with the
+problems adequately. Although he learned with time, recognized his
+mistakes, and tried to readjust the German foreign policy, he was
+then unable to do so. While his cosmopolitan culture and knowledge
+enabled him to understand other nations better than most Germans
+did, he seemed incapable of using this understanding practically.
+Under him the German policy appeared to demand something for
+nothing, anywhere or everywhere, merely because Germany was so
+strong a Power. In 1907 Lord Sanderson, British permanent
+undersecretary of state for foreign affairs, 1894-1906, a sane,
+sympathetic witness, stigmatized the German method of handling
+foreign affairs as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>The Germans are very tight bargainers, they have earned the
+nickname of “<em>les Juifs de la diplomatie</em>.” The German
+Foreign Office hold to a traditional view of negotiation that one
+of the most effective methods of gaining your point is to show how
+intensely disagreeable you can make yourself if you do not. They
+are surprised that the recollection of these methods should rankle,
+and speaking generally the North Germans combine intense
+susceptibility as regards themselves with a singular inability to
+appreciate the susceptibilities of others.<a id=
+"FNanchor_183"></a><a href="#Footnote_183" class=
+"fnanchor">[183]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">Under Count Bülow, German foreign policy lacked
+direction and stability. It aroused the mistrust of the other
+Powers, who could not comprehend what Germany wanted. The Count was
+abler at extricating himself from difficulties than at avoiding
+them. A confirmed optimist at all times, he was suave and
+reassuring; the French Ambassador complained that he “was a fluent
+speaker but when one came to recall and note down what he had said
+very little came out of it.” Sir Frank Lascelles called him a
+perfect master at expressing vague generalities.<a id=
+"FNanchor_184"></a><a href="#Footnote_184" class=
+"fnanchor">[184]</a> Count Bülow no<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_60">[60]</span> doubt had a difficult time keeping the
+Emperor within bounds and undoing the latter’s mischief, but he was
+by no means an able statesman himself, and he relied for advice
+upon a person whom many considered a psychopath.</p>
+
+<p>Since Prince Bismarck’s dismissal in 1890, Herr von Holstein had
+been a dominant influence in the German foreign office as the
+preserver of the Bismarckian tradition. Strangely secretive, he
+avoided all publicity and all responsible offices, yet he lusted
+after power behind the scenes. He was irascible, morbidly
+suspicious, both timorous and bold, by nature unfit to handle
+foreign affairs. He could not make up his mind to act. He could not
+understand the other government’s viewpoint. He knew few of the
+foreign representatives in Berlin personally, and rarely consulted
+with any of them. He relied for information chiefly upon the
+dispatches and upon newspapers, thus lacking the intimate contact
+with reality which might have balanced his recluse judgment. His
+mobile mind could make two plus two equal three, five, or seven and
+a half, but seldom four. His training under Prince Bismarck had
+taught him that master’s use of threats and force but not his
+caution and comprehensive sagacity. His adroit and intricate
+analysis of diplomatic situations and policies made him a power in
+the foreign office. The Emperor urged his dismissal, but Count
+Bülow clung to him, consulted him on all matters, and generally
+followed his advice.<a id="FNanchor_185"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_185" class="fnanchor">[185]</a></p>
+
+<p>During the next year the German plan worked. On the one hand,
+with troubles coming to a head in China, the Sudan, and South
+Africa, the British government was grudgingly compelled to play the
+German game by agreeing to a division of the Samoan Islands and a
+prospective partition of the Portuguese colonies and<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span> by acknowledging the utility of
+similar accords.<a id="FNanchor_186"></a><a href="#Footnote_186"
+class="fnanchor">[186]</a> On the other hand, an indirect bid for a
+<em>rapprochement</em> by M. Delcassé in December, 1898,<a id=
+"FNanchor_187"></a><a href="#Footnote_187" class=
+"fnanchor">[187]</a> and a proposal from the Russian government in
+1899 for an agreement over Asia Minor<a id=
+"FNanchor_188"></a><a href="#Footnote_188" class=
+"fnanchor">[188]</a> signified equal success, although the German
+government refused both offers. Then when the Boer War began late
+in 1899, Great Britain, surprised by the universal outburst of
+hatred against her on the Continent and apprehensive of German,
+French, and Russian intervention in favor of the Boers, had urgent
+need of Germany’s friendship. Hence the pressing invitation to the
+Emperor William II and his foreign secretary in the autumn of 1899
+to visit England.<a id="FNanchor_189"></a><a href="#Footnote_189"
+class="fnanchor">[189]</a></p>
+
+<p>As Count Bülow cared nothing about the fate of the Boers, the
+visit took place (November 21-24). He and the Emperor were received
+enthusiastically by government, court, and people. The British
+ministers showed anger at France and Russia and a desire for
+co-operation with Germany.<a id="FNanchor_190"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_190" class="fnanchor">[190]</a> Mr. Chamberlain, who
+boldly asserted that the two countries “must sooner or later come
+to a general understanding because we need each other,” repeated
+his wish for a grouping of Germany, the United States, and Great
+Britain.</p>
+
+<p>The German leaders responded as in the previous year
+that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span> more intimate
+relations between the two countries should be prepared for by
+special agreements. The British Colonial Minister, readily
+accepting this program, suggested two subjects for negotiation, the
+Bagdad Railway and Morocco; whereupon it was agreed that he should
+take up the latter question with the German Ambassador in the very
+near future.<a id="FNanchor_191"></a><a href="#Footnote_191" class=
+"fnanchor">[191]</a></p>
+
+<p>The visit to Windsor was apparently a complete success. Both
+governments were highly pleased with the results. The only discord
+in the harmony was the expression of mutual antagonism on the part
+of the English and German press. To counteract this opposition, Mr.
+Chamberlain, at Count Bülow’s suggestion,<a id=
+"FNanchor_192"></a><a href="#Footnote_192" class=
+"fnanchor">[192]</a> openly advocated his project in a speech at
+Leicester on November 30 as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>The same sentiments which bring us into closer sympathy with the
+United States of America may also be evoked to bring us into closer
+sympathy and alliance with the Empire of Germany. . . . . If the
+union between England and America is a powerful factor in the cause
+of peace, a new triple alliance between the Teutonic race and the
+two great branches of the Anglo-Saxon race will be a still more
+potent influence in the future of the world.<a id=
+"FNanchor_193"></a><a href="#Footnote_193" class=
+"fnanchor">[193]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The Colonial Secretary’s act had the very reverse effect of that
+intended, for the German people rejected with vituperation the idea
+of allying with the oppressors of the Boers. The German Foreign
+Minister, ambitious for the chancellorship when the aged Prince
+Hohenlohe should retire, and inclined to follow the dictates of
+public opinion, felt compelled to take cognizance of this feeling.
+Speaking before the Reichstag on December 11, he made a cool
+rejoinder to Mr. Chamberlain’s proposal. In a chauvinistic
+declaration of Germany’s need for colonies and a navy,<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span> he proclaimed: “As for England
+we are gladly willing to live with her in peace and harmony on a
+basis of complete reciprocity. But since our international position
+is at present a favorable one, we must utilize it in order to
+safeguard ourselves for the future.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_194"></a><a href="#Footnote_194" class=
+"fnanchor">[194]</a></p>
+
+<p>Mr. Chamberlain was indignant at this reply, even though the
+German government made special efforts to explain it away.<a id=
+"FNanchor_195"></a><a href="#Footnote_195" class=
+"fnanchor">[195]</a> Hence, as the two presses were at each other’s
+throats and the governments were wrangling over minor troubles
+arising out of the Boer War, he dropped the idea of an alliance,
+presumably also that of a Moroccan accord, at least until the close
+of the war.<a id="FNanchor_196"></a><a href="#Footnote_196" class=
+"fnanchor">[196]</a></p>
+
+<p>In 1900, with the French advance on Touat, the Moroccan question
+became acute. In April the German government for the first time
+weighed carefully its ambitions with reference to Morocco and the
+means for realizing them.<a id="FNanchor_197"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_197" class="fnanchor">[197]</a> Count Bülow held
+that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span> Germany had
+maritime interests of her own in that land, and was no longer
+concerned merely for the sake of Italy, as she had been ten years
+before. He coveted particularly the southern area on the Atlantic
+Coast. A British seizure of Moroccan territory without
+consideration for German interests, he stated, “would within
+Germany greatly weaken and discredit the Government and in its
+foreign relations make any future co-operation with England
+impossible and force us to seek connection with Russia and France
+at almost any price”; while an Anglo-French settlement of the
+question to the exclusion or detriment of Germany “would have
+incalculable results for the further course of German internal and
+external policy.” In either case German foreign policy would be
+forced to take another direction whether the government wished it
+or not; and relations with Great Britain would become more strained
+than ever before. In fact, the German government “could not
+possibly accept either eventuality.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_198"></a><a href="#Footnote_198" class=
+"fnanchor">[198]</a></p>
+
+<p>In these words lies the key to the understanding of Germany’s
+precipitation of the Moroccan crisis in 1905.</p>
+
+<p>To obviate those dangers, the German government preferred an
+agreement with Great Britain. In May, 1900, it proposed to Mr.
+Chamberlain that they negotiate a Moroccan accord. But the Colonial
+Minister, while acknowledging that the only peaceful way to solve
+the Moroccan problem was by an agreement between Great Britain and
+Germany, had become more wary and requested the German government
+to make an official proposal which he could submit to the cabinet.
+He felt sure, he said, that it would be favorably received, and
+promised to support it, provided his well-known desires were given
+due consideration.<a id="FNanchor_199"></a><a href="#Footnote_199"
+class="fnanchor">[199]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span>Fearing a
+rejection, the German government deemed it inadvisable to follow
+Mr. Chamberlain’s suggestion. Nor did Count Bülow warn the British
+government that Germany must participate in any Moroccan
+settlement, since he believed it possible to prevent the Moroccan
+affair from becoming serious until the opportunity for an
+Anglo-German agreement arose.<a id="FNanchor_200"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_200" class="fnanchor">[200]</a> He held that an
+Anglo-French understanding about Morocco was impossible because of
+the conflict of French and British interests over the possession of
+the south shore of the straits. To avert a crisis, he issued a
+discreet warning to M. Delcassé in May, 1900, not to go beyond
+treaty limits in the action against Touat;<a id=
+"FNanchor_201"></a><a href="#Footnote_201" class=
+"fnanchor">[201]</a> he incited the Russian Foreign Minister, who,
+he thought, would be opposed to any Anglo-French agreement or to a
+European disturbance over Morocco, to restrain the French
+Minister;<a id="FNanchor_202"></a><a href="#Footnote_202" class=
+"fnanchor">[202]</a> and he instructed the German representative at
+Tangier to retard the collapse of the Sherifian Empire.<a id=
+"FNanchor_203"></a><a href="#Footnote_203" class=
+"fnanchor">[203]</a> Thereafter the Moroccan question remained in
+abeyance for a time.<a id="FNanchor_204"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_204" class="fnanchor">[204]</a></p>
+
+<p>In November, 1900, Lord Salisbury resigned the secretaryship of
+foreign affairs to Lord Lansdowne. Lord Lansdowne had had a varied
+life. Of high aristocratic and wealthy family, he had entered
+politics as a matter of course and had served as governor-general
+of Canada, viceroy of India, and secretary of state for war. He
+fitted admirably into his new position as foreign secretary, for he
+possessed patience, tact, and the ability to inspire confidence,
+and he assumed responsibility with decision and courage. While he
+entered office with very few preconceptions,<span class="pagenum"
+id="Page_66">[66]</span> he wrote to Sir Frank Lascelles, he did
+believe that “we should use every effort to maintain and, if we
+can, to strengthen the good relations which at present exist
+between the Queen’s Government and that of the Emperor” of
+Germany.<a id="FNanchor_205"></a><a href="#Footnote_205" class=
+"fnanchor">[205]</a> In his foreign policy he sided with the new
+school, already represented by Mr. Balfour and Mr. Chamberlain.
+When King Edward VII gave royal support to this group after his
+accession to the throne in January, 1901, the Victorian policy of
+“splendid isolation” definitely terminated. However, the old
+Marquess of Salisbury remained premier until 1902; and the foreign
+policy eventually adopted was a compromise between the old and the
+new.</p>
+
+<p>The international position of Great Britain remained bad. If
+anything, it had grown worse since 1899; for the Boer War lingered
+on, and France and Russia were endangering important British
+interests, the one by her active policy with reference to Morocco,
+the other by her use of the Boxer Rebellion to extend her power in
+China and by her activity in Persia and Afghanistan.</p>
+
+<p>In the autumn of 1900, the British government had negotiated an
+accord with Germany over China to hold Russia in check.<a id=
+"FNanchor_206"></a><a href="#Footnote_206" class=
+"fnanchor">[206]</a> In January of the next year Mr. Chamberlain,
+after repeating his assertion that Great Britain must ally either
+with Germany and the Triple Alliance or with France and Russia,
+proposed to Baron Eckardstein, first secretary of the German
+embassy in London, that as an introduction to the project for an
+alliance the two governments agree over Morocco. The subject could
+be taken up with Lord Lansdowne, he said, as soon as Lord
+Salisbury, still in feeble health, left for the south.<a id=
+"FNanchor_207"></a><a href="#Footnote_207" class=
+"fnanchor">[207]</a> Before any negotiations were<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span> begun, however, far eastern
+affairs, as more pressing and vital, brought to the fore the
+question of alliance.<a id="FNanchor_208"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_208" class="fnanchor">[208]</a></p>
+
+<p>Early in 1901, reports were spread of a Russo-Chinese agreement
+which would give Russia practically a protectorate in Southern
+Manchuria. The problem which thereupon confronted the British
+government was illuminatingly summed up by Mr. Bertie,
+undersecretary of state for foreign affairs, as follows (March 11,
+1901):</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>Germany has assured Japan that there is no secret understanding
+between Germany and Russia respecting the Far East, and that, in
+the event of a crisis, Germany will observe a benevolent
+neutrality, the effect of which would be to keep the French fleet
+in check.</p>
+
+<p>The Japanese Government ask whether His Majesty’s Government
+have been consulted by Germany, and whether they believe the
+assurances given to Japan; and they further ask: “How far may Japan
+rely upon the support of Great Britain in case Japan finds it
+necessary to approach Russia?”</p>
+
+<p>It is assumed by the Japanese Minister that “approach” in the
+context means “resist,” which is war.</p>
+
+<p>Unless Japan can make sure of neither Germany nor France taking
+an active part on the side of Russia, she will not fight Russia
+over the Manchurian Agreement. If the possession of Corea by Russia
+were at issue, Japan would fight, with or without support, and
+independently of whether France or Germany would remain
+neutral.</p>
+
+<p>If Germany and England, in answer to the Japanese Government’s
+inquiries, deprecated war, and said that if unfortunately war broke
+out between Japan and Russia, it would be the object of England and
+Germany to restrict as much as possible the theatre of it, and they
+would consequently remain neutral, so long as no third Power
+attempted to take a part in it, then I think that such an assurance
+might be sufficient to satisfy Japan that France would not be
+allowed to join with Russia, and that Japan might fight Russia
+single-handed. . . . .</p>
+
+<p>If France were allowed to side with Russia, and they crushed
+Japan, the result might be a renewal of the triple
+understanding—viz., Russia, France, and Germany. Those three Powers
+would become supreme in China, and we should go to the wall.</p>
+
+<p>If Russia alone, or in combination with France, defeated Japan,
+and we came to the rescue to prevent the obliteration of Japan, we
+should incur the lasting enmity of Russia and France, and a
+defeated, and probably ungrateful,<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_68">[68]</span> Japan would not be of much use to us as
+against Russian encroachments.</p>
+
+<p>It has been suggested that if Japan defeated Russia there would
+be grave danger to European interests in the Far East.</p>
+
+<p>A great military and naval Power, with unbounded natural
+resources and an immense population such as Russia, is not likely
+to accept defeat permanently. She would reorganize for a further
+trial of strength, but such a trial might be a long way off, and it
+would be greatly retarded by Japan being allowed to take as the
+spoils of war the Liaotung Peninsula. Its possession by Japan would
+be a guarantee that there would be no reconciliation between Russia
+and Japan. This would be an advantage to England and Europe. The
+yellow danger would be kept in check by Russia and the Russian
+danger by Japan.</p>
+
+<p>If we do nothing to encourage Japan to look upon us as a friend
+and possible ally against Russia and France, we may drive her to a
+policy of despair, in which she may come to some sort of terms with
+Russia. I do not say that it is probable, but it is possible, and
+our interests would greatly suffer if she did.<a id=
+"FNanchor_209"></a><a href="#Footnote_209" class=
+"fnanchor">[209]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Therein lies the deciding reason why the British government
+tried to secure the support of Germany; why it made the alliance
+with Japan when this attempt came to naught; and why it
+subsequently established the entente with France. An agreement with
+Germany, supplemented by one with Japan, would have solved Great
+Britain’s difficulty of defending her colonial interests by
+assuring the maintenance of the balance of power in Europe. Failing
+this, an alliance with Japan and a policy of reconciliation and
+entente with the other Powers furnished the best solution. But in
+any case either alliance or close friendship with a European Power
+was essential.</p>
+
+<p>At the time the prospect of obtaining German aid looked
+favorable. The German Emperor had rushed impetuously to the bedside
+of the dying Queen Victoria late in January, 1901, and had remained
+for her funeral. In his talk with the British officials he had
+denounced Russia for her aggressions in China, had informed them
+that Great Britain needed an alliance, and, in a dinner speech at
+Marlborough House on February 5, had declared:<span class="pagenum"
+id="Page_69">[69]</span> “We ought to form an Anglo-German
+alliance, you to keep the seas while we would be responsible for
+the land.”<a id="FNanchor_210"></a><a href="#Footnote_210" class=
+"fnanchor">[210]</a></p>
+
+<p>Late in January the British government tried to obtain German
+aid against the Russian aggressions in Manchuria by calling into
+action the Anglo-German agreement of the previous year; but the
+German government refused to permit an interpretation of that
+accord which would embroil it with its eastern neighbor.<a id=
+"FNanchor_211"></a><a href="#Footnote_211" class=
+"fnanchor">[211]</a> Instead, it tried to persuade the British
+government to connive at embroiling Russia and Japan in war without
+binding themselves.<a id="FNanchor_212"></a><a href="#Footnote_212"
+class="fnanchor">[212]</a> It assured Japan of the localization of
+that conflict by remarking that Germany would remain neutral and
+would thereby hold France neutral. In March, Lord Lansdowne,
+following up this assertion, asked Baron Eckardstein if Germany
+would undertake to hold France neutral in case of war (March 16).
+In violation of strict orders from Herr von Holstein “not to
+breathe a word of alliance” to the British government,<a id=
+"FNanchor_213"></a><a href="#Footnote_213" class=
+"fnanchor">[213]</a> Baron Eckardstein replied that “if there were
+a defensive alliance between Germany and Great Britain covering all
+eventualities,” Germany would be able to do so.<a id=
+"FNanchor_214"></a><a href="#Footnote_214" class=
+"fnanchor">[214]</a> Two days later Lord Lansdowne declared to the
+Baron that “England now stands at a turning point and must decide
+upon her future policy”; and in accordance with the Baron’s strong
+hint, a defensive alliance was tentatively set forth for
+consideration. By its terms each Power should preserve neutrality
+in case of an attack upon the other by either France or<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span> Russia but should come to its
+aid in case of an attack by those two Powers combined.<a id=
+"FNanchor_215"></a><a href="#Footnote_215" class=
+"fnanchor">[215]</a></p>
+
+<p>Baron Eckardstein reported the proposal as coming from the
+British Minister, and his government looked upon it as a British
+offer. Lord Lansdowne made the Baron responsible for the
+initiative. With the existing evidence, the contradiction cannot be
+cleared up; yet as each government was under the impression that
+the other had taken the first step and was therefore more eager for
+the alliance than was really the case, the negotiations endured
+longer than they might otherwise have done.<a id=
+"FNanchor_216"></a><a href="#Footnote_216" class=
+"fnanchor">[216]</a></p>
+
+<p>In the next two and a half months the course of the negotiations
+was checkered. On March 22, Baron Eckardstein unofficially brought
+up the subject with Lord Lansdowne. During their discussion they
+agreed that it would be best for the <em>casus foederis</em> to
+arise when one of the Powers was attacked by two or more Powers,
+and that the accord should be ratified by the two parliaments. The
+British Secretary declared that the Premier approved “in principle
+of a strictly defined defensive alliance.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_217"></a><a href="#Footnote_217" class=
+"fnanchor">[217]</a> On March 29 they again touched on the matter;
+but owing to Lord Lansdowne’s<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_71">[71]</span> inability to consult his chief, who was ill,
+and owing to a flare-up between the two governments over a minor
+matter connected with the Chinese customs, Baron Eckardstein
+postponed the negotiations.<a id="FNanchor_218"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_218" class="fnanchor">[218]</a> On April 9 he was ready
+to resume the discussion; and for the first time he mentioned to
+the British Minister the indispensable stipulation of his
+government, that Austria-Hungary and Italy must also be included in
+the alliance.<a id="FNanchor_219"></a><a href="#Footnote_219"
+class="fnanchor">[219]</a></p>
+
+<p>From the start the attitude of the German government toward
+these proposals was mistrustful. Since the British government had
+been disinclined to execute the Anglo-German accord of 1898 for a
+future division of the Portuguese Colonies, the German government
+was reluctant to consider even Mr. Chamberlain’s suggestion for an
+accord over Morocco, at least until events permitted its immediate
+execution.<a id="FNanchor_220"></a><a href="#Footnote_220" class=
+"fnanchor">[220]</a> Count Bülow and Herr von Holstein refused to
+believe that the British government would make an alliance so long
+as Lord Salisbury remained in authority. Moreover, they feared that
+if the negotiations failed and became known to France and Russia,
+owing to British perfidy or to Parliament’s rejecting the
+treaty—and either outcome seemed likely to them—Germany would be
+the one to suffer from the wrath of those two Powers while Great
+Britain, protected by the sea, would enjoy greater international
+security than before.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>I am especially mistrustful of this present storm of friendship
+by Chamberlain and comrades [wrote Herr von Holstein to Count
+Metternich] because the threatened understanding with Russia and
+France is such complete fraud. A retreat by England would postpone
+her struggle for existence for a few years, but would then make it
+all the more certain, because the opponents [France and Russia]
+will have been strengthened, while the English will have been
+weakened in power and prestige. A reasonable agreement with
+England, that is, one in which a proper consideration is given to
+the almost certain danger of war to which we should thereby expose
+ourselves, can in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span> my
+opinion first be achieved when the appreciation of her constrained
+position has become more general in England than it is at
+present.<a id="FNanchor_221"></a><a href="#Footnote_221" class=
+"fnanchor">[221]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">Count Bülow, chancellor since the previous October,
+held the same view. In fact, he was even more inclined to preserve
+the policy of the “free hand.” “Facts, sir, facts,” he wrote in
+connection with this question of alliance, and above all he wanted
+facts in the form of colonial acquisitions in Africa.<a id=
+"FNanchor_222"></a><a href="#Footnote_222" class=
+"fnanchor">[222]</a> So while sensible of the power of such an
+alliance, these two would have it only on German terms, an alliance
+between the British Empire, on the one hand, and the Triple
+Alliance, on the other; or, as an alternative formulation, an
+alliance by which Great Britain joined the Triple Alliance.<a id=
+"FNanchor_223"></a><a href="#Footnote_223" class=
+"fnanchor">[223]</a> To obviate all possibility of betrayal, they
+instructed Baron Eckardstein to demand of Lord Lansdowne the
+acceptance of this basic condition before continuing the
+negotiations. Not until then, they declared, should the terms of
+the Triple Alliance be imparted to the British government.<a id=
+"FNanchor_224"></a><a href="#Footnote_224" class=
+"fnanchor">[224]</a></p>
+
+<p>Conversations were resumed in the second half of May. When, on
+May 23, Count Hatzfeldt made clear to Lord Lansdowne the provision
+of his government, an <em>impasse</em> was soon reached. The
+British Foreign Secretary approved the project of alliance in
+principle, but he had never expected much to come of it. Upon
+ascertaining the German condition he foresaw a breakdown when the
+time came to formulate the terms.<a id="FNanchor_225"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_225" class="fnanchor">[225]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>Moreover, Lord
+Salisbury persistently refused to admit that Great Britain needed
+an alliance. He asserted that it would be a bad bargain to join the
+Triple Alliance, for the “liability of having to defend the German
+and the Austrian frontiers against Russia is heavier than that of
+having to defend the British Isles against France.” He opposed any
+secret agreement on the grounds that Parliament had the right to
+decide questions of war and peace; and he continued to favor
+isolation and dependence on public opinion to determine
+governmental policy in a crisis. Nor did he believe that German
+public opinion, so hostile to Great Britain, would accept an
+Anglo-German defensive alliance.<a id="FNanchor_226"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_226" class="fnanchor">[226]</a> Thus while some of the
+members of the cabinet discussed the possible terms of an alliance,
+and Sir Thomas Sanderson, permanent undersecretary of state for
+foreign affairs, even drew up two trial drafts of a treaty, the
+opposition of Lord Salisbury together with the German refusal to
+communicate the terms of the Triple Alliance forced the
+negotiations to a halt in June.<a id="FNanchor_227"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_227" class="fnanchor">[227]</a></p>
+
+<p>The German Chancellor readily accepted this turn of affairs.
+After expressing a desire for a future alliance, he assured the
+British government that Germany would continue the policy of the
+“free hand.”<a id="FNanchor_228"></a><a href="#Footnote_228" class=
+"fnanchor">[228]</a></p>
+
+<p>The visit of the Moroccan embassy to London and Berlin in June
+and July afforded an opportunity to revive the Moroccan question.
+Lord Lansdowne’s uneasiness about the French actions with reference
+to Morocco was not allayed by the French Ambassador’s<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span> assertion to him on July 3 that
+France had no intention of raising that problem.<a id=
+"FNanchor_229"></a><a href="#Footnote_229" class=
+"fnanchor">[229]</a> But nothing was done.<a id=
+"FNanchor_230"></a><a href="#Footnote_230" class=
+"fnanchor">[230]</a></p>
+
+<p>When el-Menebhi, the leader of that embassy, was dismissed in
+disgrace on his return home, the British Foreign Secretary
+expressed the wish to remain in constant touch with the German
+government on the Moroccan question.<a id=
+"FNanchor_231"></a><a href="#Footnote_231" class=
+"fnanchor">[231]</a> Each Power, however, acted separately in
+defending the Moroccan Minister; and the German government looked
+on this as another occasion in which Great Britain was trying to
+employ Germany to defend British interests. The German leaders
+likewise thought that by refusing to make any separate agreements
+with Great Britain they would eventually force the latter to accept
+their terms for an alliance.<a id="FNanchor_232"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_232" class="fnanchor">[232]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span>As soon as the
+negotiations with Germany showed no prospect of success, the
+British government followed up Japan’s offer of an alliance and in
+August began official conversations on that subject.<a id=
+"FNanchor_233"></a><a href="#Footnote_233" class=
+"fnanchor">[233]</a> None the less it continued its efforts to make
+some kind of agreement with Germany. But on August 23, at
+Wilhelmshöhe, a meeting between Emperor William II and King Edward
+VII, which the British leaders hoped would pave the way for an
+understanding, had no result.<a id="FNanchor_234"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_234" class="fnanchor">[234]</a> In November, Lord
+Lansdowne regarded the difficulties in the way of an alliance as
+“at the present moment virtually insuperable,” enumerating some of
+them as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>1. The impossibility of arriving at a definition of the
+<em>casus foederis</em> which would not be either so rigid as to
+greatly hamper our freedom of action or so vague as to deprive the
+alliance of all practical value.</p>
+
+<p>2. The certainty of alienating France and Russia.</p>
+
+<p>3. Complications with the Colonies, which might not at all
+approve of the idea of hanging on to the skirts of the Triple
+Alliance.</p>
+
+<p>4. The risk of entangling ourselves in a policy which might be
+hostile to America. Without knowledge of the German Emperor’s views
+in regard to the United States, this is to my mind a formidable
+obstacle.</p>
+
+<p>5. The difficulty of carrying Parliament with us at a moment
+when the Parliamentary situation is as little satisfactory as it is
+at present.<a id="FNanchor_235"></a><a href="#Footnote_235" class=
+"fnanchor">[235]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span>But,
+he wrote, “the argument that, because we have in the past survived
+in spite of our isolation, we need have no misgivings as to the
+effect of that isolation in the future,” could be pushed too far.
+Besides, since negotiations then in progress for an alliance with
+Japan virtually signified that Great Britain did not wish to remain
+alone, he proposed that the government seek “a much more limited
+understanding with Germany as to our policy in regard to certain
+matters of interest to both Powers”—for instance, they might agree
+to co-operate for the preservation of the territorial <em>status
+quo</em> on the shores of the Mediterranean, the Adriatic, the
+Aegean, and the Black Seas, for the maintenance of the “freedom for
+the commerce and navigation . . . . in the Persian Gulf, and the
+prevention of any territorial acquisitions on its shores by other
+Powers which might interfere with that object.” But only “whenever
+the occasion for it might arise” should the nature of their
+co-operation be determined.<a id="FNanchor_236"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_236" class="fnanchor">[236]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Premier remained vigorously opposed to the project; but Lord
+Lansdowne urged that the German government probably expected him to
+reopen the negotiations, and that if he made this offer, that
+government would be deprived of any grounds for complaining that
+Great Britain “had treated it inconsiderately or brusquely rejected
+its overture.” As he also suspected that “the German Gov’t. (or the
+German Emperor) desire something much more precise and far-reaching
+. . . . and that they would refuse an overture on the above lines,”
+he maintained that the proposal could cause no damage.<a id=
+"FNanchor_237"></a><a href="#Footnote_237" class=
+"fnanchor">[237]</a></p>
+
+<p>On December 19 the British Foreign Minister recalled to Count
+Metternich, the new German ambassador at London, the negotiations
+for an alliance and stated that “while . . . . we<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span> certainly did not regard the
+German proposal with an unfriendly or indifferent eye, I did not
+think that for the moment we could afford to take it up.” Instead
+he suggested that the two governments arrive at “an understanding
+with regard to the policy which they might pursue in reference to
+particular questions or in particular parts of the world in which
+they are alike interested.” Count Metternich expressed surprise
+that the British government had not “jumped at” this “magnificent
+opportunity” to end its isolation, and replied that he did not
+expect his government to favor this restricted proposal. “It was a
+case of the whole or none.”<a id="FNanchor_238"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_238" class="fnanchor">[238]</a></p>
+
+<p>There the matter rested. Lord Lansdowne and King Edward were
+both dissatisfied with Count Metternich’s critical tone;<a id=
+"FNanchor_239"></a><a href="#Footnote_239" class=
+"fnanchor">[239]</a> but they continued to voice their solicitude,
+which the German Emperor and Count Bülow reciprocated, that the two
+governments keep in close touch.<a id="FNanchor_240"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_240" class="fnanchor">[240]</a> However, public opinion
+in both countries remained bitterly hostile, and when in October,
+1901, Mr. Chamberlain spoke disparagingly of the actions of the
+German army in the war of 1870-71, the protest of the German press
+was so vehement that the Chancellor, on January 8, 1902, declared
+in the Reichstag, “let the man go and do not become excited. He
+bites on granite.”<a id="FNanchor_241"></a><a href="#Footnote_241"
+class="fnanchor">[241]</a> The pleasant visit of the Prince of
+Wales to Germany a short time later did not offset the discord
+resulting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span> from this
+war of words.<a id="FNanchor_242"></a><a href="#Footnote_242"
+class="fnanchor">[242]</a> By March, Count Metternich wrote that he
+“wouldn’t give two pence for Anglo-German relations”; while the
+Chancellor admitted that so far as Great Britain was concerned the
+Emperor was Germany’s “best card.”<a id="FNanchor_243"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_243" class="fnanchor">[243]</a> It was a dismal fiasco
+for so momentous a negotiation.</p>
+
+<p>The British government thought that by considering an alliance
+the German leaders had manifested friendly feeling. Lord Lansdowne
+did not believe that the animosity of Germany toward Great Britain
+would last forever or that Germany would “let us ‘go under’ before
+a great European coalition.” “Is it not more likely,” he wrote,
+April 22, 1902, to Sir Frank Lascelles, “that she will stick to her
+rôle of the honest broker, taking advantage, if you like, of our
+difficulties in order to pursue a <em>politique de pourboire</em>
+at our expense, but without pooling her ironclads with those of
+France and Russia?” The Ambassador agreed with him; but after
+talking to the British naval attaché in Berlin he pointed out for
+the first time that the German navy was definitely aimed at Great
+Britain.<a id="FNanchor_244"></a><a href="#Footnote_244" class=
+"fnanchor">[244]</a> The future for Anglo-German relations was
+therefore none too bright for the British government, and British
+public opinion cordially approved when on January 30, 1902, the
+Anglo-Japanese Alliance was concluded.</p>
+
+<p>The German government was not at all alarmed by this failure.
+Its relations with France and Russia were of the best. As a result
+of the Anglo-German intimacy in 1901, M. Delcassé had twice
+endeavored to approach Germany, while in September, during a
+meeting at Danzig of the Russian and German rulers together with
+their foreign ministers, the Russian Minister had asserted that “an
+alliance between Germany and Russia would be the greatest blessing
+and is a goal to be striven for.” The overtures were
+disregarded.<a id="FNanchor_245"></a><a href="#Footnote_245" class=
+"fnanchor">[245]</a> When the Anglo-Japanese Alliance
+was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span> concluded in
+February, 1902, the Russian government urged Germany to enter a
+Continental combination against those Powers; but Count Bülow,
+pleased to see obviated the possibility of an Anglo-Russian
+understanding, bluntly rejected the proposal.<a id=
+"FNanchor_246"></a><a href="#Footnote_246" class=
+"fnanchor">[246]</a> Nor did he believe that, since Russia and
+Great Britain were so decisively at odds, France would dare make an
+accord with the latter.<a id="FNanchor_247"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_247" class="fnanchor">[247]</a> And Herr von Holstein
+wrote on December 31, 1901, that “at the present day Germany with
+her enormous strength on land and sea is a factor which no Power
+that wishes to perform an important act dare leave in its rear
+without having previously come to an understanding with her.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_248"></a><a href="#Footnote_248" class=
+"fnanchor">[248]</a></p>
+
+<p>Thus, the German apostles of <em>Weltpolitik</em> guiding the
+destinies of an acquisitive and chauvinistic nation, refused to
+co-operate with Great Britain, France, or Russia. Apparently they
+did not know what they wanted or how they might utilize their
+favorable situation; for they derived no benefits whatever from any
+of the opportunities offered. An Anglo-German agreement would have
+prevented the formation of the Entente Cordiale and would very
+likely have brought about a settlement of the Moroccan question to
+Germany’s advantage. By cultivating France and encouraging her to
+draw closer, Germany might have come to some agreement with that
+Power through which she could have prevented the later Entente
+Cordiale from becoming so cordial, and through which she might have
+shared in the general improvement of relations between the Powers
+and in the settlement of the Moroccan question. The whole Moroccan
+crisis and many others to follow might thereby have been avoided.
+In a world of shifting friendships, of swiftly changing policies, a
+world demanding resolute and judicious statesmanship, the German
+Chancellor and Herr von Holstein refused to take risks.<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span> Toward the British government
+they had showed themselves too sensitive, suspicious, and
+peremptory in their demands.<a id="FNanchor_249"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_249" class="fnanchor">[249]</a> The French and Russian
+governments they had rebuffed even more brusquely. Deluded by wrong
+preconceptions of international politics and overprudent in their
+negotiations, they believed themselves entirely safe in playing
+their favorite rôle of sphinx and of aligning with no one.<a id=
+"FNanchor_250"></a><a href="#Footnote_250" class=
+"fnanchor">[250]</a> Their naval program alarmed Great Britain;
+their construction of the Bagdad Railway antagonized Russia; their
+Moroccan policy exasperated France. They played against all three
+Powers, and still did not expect them to draw together against a
+common opponent. Instead of alliances or ententes, they reaped
+animosities. By their refusals and their clumsy diplomacy, they
+paved the road for the Anglo-French and the Anglo-Russian ententes.
+And when, a few years later, those Powers came to agreement, the
+German leaders feared that their country was being encircled and
+isolated.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes" id="ftc05">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_161"></a><a href="#FNanchor_161"><span class=
+"label">[161]</span></a>Memo. by Bertie, March 14, 1898,
+<em>B.D.</em>, I, 17 f., No. 24; memo. by Tilley, on relations
+between Russia and Great Britain, 1892-1904, Jan. 14, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 1 ff., No. 1; O’Conor to Salisbury, March 15, 1898,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 20, No. 29; Salisbury to O’Conor, March 24, 1898,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 24 f., No. 38; Monson to Salisbury, Feb. 26, 1898,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 146, No. 172; Monson to Salisbury, March 6, 1898,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 147, No. 173; Monson to Salisbury, May 19, 1898,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 154, No. 179; memo. by Bertie, June 30, 1898,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 54, No. 72; Erich Brandenburg, <em>Von Bismarck zum
+Weltkriege</em> (Berlin, 1924), chaps. iv, v; Sir A. W. Ward and G.
+P. Gooch (eds.), <em>The Cambridge History of British Foreign
+Policy, 1783-1919</em> (Cambridge, 1923), Vol. III, chaps. iii, iv,
+<em>passim</em>; <em>G.P.</em>, Vol. XIV, chap. xci. The British
+were especially concerned over maintaining the open door in China.
+See Alfred L. P. Dennis, <em>Adventures in American Diplomacy,
+1896-1906</em> (New York, 1928), pp. 179, 182 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_162"></a><a href="#FNanchor_162"><span class=
+"label">[162]</span></a>For expressions of this fear see Gwynn,
+<em>The Letters and Friendships of Sir Cecil Spring Rice</em>, I,
+182 f., 225 f., 331 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_163"></a><a href="#FNanchor_163"><span class=
+"label">[163]</span></a>Hatzfeldt to Hohenlohe, April 26, 1898,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIV, 221 ff., No. 3793; dispatches from Hatzfeldt
+recounting conversations with Salisbury, May 12, 15, 1898,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 230 ff., and notes; Hatzfeldt to F. O., May 15,
+1898, <em>ibid.</em>, 233 ff., No. 3797. The best exposition of
+Salisbury’s views is given in a memorandum by him, May 29, 1901,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 68 f., No. 86. See also J. A. Spender, <em>The
+Public Life</em> (New York, 1925), I, 79; Salisbury to Lansdowne,
+April 21, 1897, Newton, <em>Lord Lansdowne, A Biography</em>, pp.
+145 f. On Aug. 30, 1899, Salisbury wrote to Lansdowne that the
+British army would not be needed for a Continental war “in a blue
+moon” (<em>ibid.</em>, p. 157).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_164"></a><a href="#FNanchor_164"><span class=
+"label">[164]</span></a>Salisbury to O’Conor, Jan. 17, 25, 1898,
+<em>B.D.</em>, I, 5, No. 5; 8, No. 9; and others in <em>ibid.</em>,
+chap. i.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_165"></a><a href="#FNanchor_165"><span class=
+"label">[165]</span></a>Dennis, pp. 170 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_166"></a><a href="#FNanchor_166"><span class=
+"label">[166]</span></a>Salisbury was prime minister from 1895 to
+1902.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_167"></a><a href="#FNanchor_167"><span class=
+"label">[167]</span></a>On Chamberlain see Spender, I, 79.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_168"></a><a href="#FNanchor_168"><span class=
+"label">[168]</span></a>Hatzfeldt, German ambassador to London,
+also thought that the Liberal leaders, Lord Rosebery and Sir
+William Harcourt, approved of Chamberlain’s plan. Hatzfeldt to
+Hohenlohe, April 7, 1898, <em>G.P.</em>, XIV, 209 ff., No. 3788.
+See also Gwynn, I, 188, 191.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_169"></a><a href="#FNanchor_169"><span class=
+"label">[169]</span></a>Lieut. Col. Grierson, British military
+attaché at Berlin, reported to the British Ambassador a
+conversation with the Emperor on Jan. 15, 1898, as follows: “He
+[the Emperor] said that for eight years he had striven to be
+friendly with Great Britain to gain her alliance, and to work hand
+in hand with her, but had failed” (Grierson to Lascelles, Jan. 19,
+1898, <em>B.D.</em>, I, 42, No. 62). The Emperor said the same to
+Lascelles on Feb. 1. See Lascelles to Salisbury, Feb. 1, 1898,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 43 f., No. 63; memo. by Tilley on the relations
+between Germany and Great Britain (1892-1904), Jan. 5, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, Appendix, 322 ff.; Brandenburg, chaps. i-iv.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_170"></a><a href="#FNanchor_170"><span class=
+"label">[170]</span></a>Russia had just occupied Port Arthur. In
+speaking to the Russian Ambassador about that act on March 24,
+Balfour declared that the British government regarded it with
+“grave objection,” as a “menace” to the friendship of the two
+countries. See Salisbury to O’Conor, March 24, 1898, <em>B.D.</em>,
+I, 24 f., No. 38.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_171"></a><a href="#FNanchor_171"><span class=
+"label">[171]</span></a>Monson to Salisbury, March 6, 1898,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 147, No. 173. Salisbury tried to obtain the support
+of the United States on Chinese affairs (Dennis, p. 170).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_172"></a><a href="#FNanchor_172"><span class=
+"label">[172]</span></a>It was on March 24 that Hatzfeldt reported
+that Alfred Rothschild had arranged a meeting between him and
+Chamberlain and Balfour. See Hatzfeldt to F. O., March 24, 1898,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIV, 193 f., No. 3779. For reports of the
+conversations between Hatzfeldt and Balfour and Chamberlain see the
+following dispatches: Hatzfeldt to F. O., March 25, 29, April 1,
+1898, <em>ibid.</em>, 195 ff., Nos. 3781, 3782, 3784; Hatzfeldt to
+Hohenlohe, April 26, 1898, <em>ibid.</em>, 221 ff., No. 3793. The
+editors of the <em>British Documents</em> could find “practically
+no evidence” concerning this proposal in the archives of the
+British foreign office, and have stated that Chamberlain apparently
+treated the affair as private (<em>B.D.</em>, Vol. I, Foreword).
+See also the dispatch from Lascelles to Balfour, Aug. 23, 1898,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 101, No. 122. That Chamberlain was uncertain about
+the sort of agreement he wished was evident from the different
+formulations of the proposal which he made. As to the American
+aspect of his plan, Chamberlain was influenced by Ambassador John
+Hay, who supported the idea of an Anglo-American alliance. On May
+13, 1898, at Birmingham the British Minister spoke publicly in
+favor of that alliance (Dennis, pp. 117 f., 122). Nothing of course
+came of the matter. The great affinity for the United States on the
+part of the British government was shown in July, 1898, by its
+indirect warning to Germany not to interfere in the
+Spanish-American War (Gwynn, I, 251, 253). On the Anglo-German
+negotiations for an alliance see Friedrich Meinecke, <em>Geschichte
+des deutsch-englischen Bündnisproblems, 1890-1901</em> (München and
+Berlin, 1927); Eugen Fischer, <em>Holsteins Grosses Nein</em>
+(Berlin, 1925).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_173"></a><a href="#FNanchor_173"><span class=
+"label">[173]</span></a>Holstein thought that the possibility for
+this alliance would first enter “when (1) Russia threatens us; (2)
+England acts less haughty than today.” See Holstein’s minute to a
+dispatch from Hatzfeldt to Hohenlohe, April 26, 1898,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIV, 223, No. 3793. On the German reaction see also
+the dispatch from Bülow to Hatzfeldt, April 3, 1898,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 204 ff., No. 3785, and the following documents.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_174"></a><a href="#FNanchor_174"><span class=
+"label">[174]</span></a>William II to F. O., April 10, 1898,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 217 f., No. 3790.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_175"></a><a href="#FNanchor_175"><span class=
+"label">[175]</span></a>Bülow to Hatzfeldt, April 3, 24, 1898,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 207, No. 3785; 218 ff., No. 3792.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_176"></a><a href="#FNanchor_176"><span class=
+"label">[176]</span></a>In January, 1896, the Emperor had sent the
+famous telegram to President Krueger of the Transvaal which was
+regarded by the British as showing a desire to take the Boers under
+Germany’s wing. On Dec. 6, 1897, Bülow in his first speech before
+the Reichstag as secretary of state for foreign affairs declared:
+“The days are past when the German left to one neighbor the earth,
+to another the sea, and reserved for himself the air. . . . . We do
+not wish to place anyone in the shadow, but we demand also our
+place in the sun” (Bülow, <em>Reden</em>, I, 7 f.). In 1898 the
+first important navy bill was passed by the Reichstag. On September
+23, 1898, the Emperor declared, “Our future lies on the sea” (G. P.
+Gooch, <em>History of Modern Europe, 1878-1919</em> [New York,
+1923], pp. 225 ff.). These were merely a few examples of Germany’s
+changed interests.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_177"></a><a href="#FNanchor_177"><span class=
+"label">[177]</span></a>William II to Bülow, Jan. 29, 1901,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 28, No. 4987.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_178"></a><a href="#FNanchor_178"><span class=
+"label">[178]</span></a>Hatzfeldt to Hohenlohe, April 26, 1898,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 224, No. 3793.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_179"></a><a href="#FNanchor_179"><span class=
+"label">[179]</span></a>The occasion for this remark was the
+conclusion of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance early in 1902 (Lascelles
+to Lansdowne, Feb. 8, 1902, Newton, p. 247).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_180"></a><a href="#FNanchor_180"><span class=
+"label">[180]</span></a>German ambassador at Paris at the time.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_181"></a><a href="#FNanchor_181"><span class=
+"label">[181]</span></a>Formerly French ambassador at Berlin.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_182"></a><a href="#FNanchor_182"><span class=
+"label">[182]</span></a>Extract from “General Report on Germany for
+1906, May 24, 1907,” <em>B.D.</em>, III, 437 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_183"></a><a href="#FNanchor_183"><span class=
+"label">[183]</span></a>Memo. by Sanderson, Feb. 21, 1907,
+<em>ibid.</em>, p. 429.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_184"></a><a href="#FNanchor_184"><span class=
+"label">[184]</span></a>Whitehead to Lansdowne, June 28, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 108 f., No. 135; extract from “General Report on
+Germany for 1906,” <em>ibid.</em>, p. 435.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_185"></a><a href="#FNanchor_185"><span class=
+"label">[185]</span></a>Emil Ludwig, <em>Wilhelm der Zweite</em>
+(Berlin, 1926); G. P. Gooch, “Baron von Holstein,” <em>Cambridge
+Historical Journal</em>, Vol. I; Johannes Haller, <em>Die Ära
+Bülow; eine historisch-politische Studie</em> (Stuttgart and
+Berlin, 1922); Otto Hammann, <em>Bilder aus der letzten
+Kaiserzeit</em> (Berlin, 1922); extract from “General Report on
+Germany for 1906,” <em>op. cit.</em>, III, 434 ff.; Wilhelm
+Spickernagel, <em>Fürst Bülow</em> (Hamburg, 1921); André Tardieu,
+<em>Le Prince de Bülow</em> (Paris, 1909).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_186"></a><a href="#FNanchor_186"><span class=
+"label">[186]</span></a><em>G.P.</em>, Vol. XIV, chaps. xcii, xcvi;
+<em>B.D.</em>, Vol. I, chaps. ii, iii.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_187"></a><a href="#FNanchor_187"><span class=
+"label">[187]</span></a>Memo. by Huhn, Dec. 5, 1898, <em>G.P.</em>,
+XIII, 247 ff., No. 3558. See above.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_188"></a><a href="#FNanchor_188"><span class=
+"label">[188]</span></a>Memo. by Bülow, April 18, 1899,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XIV, 540 f., No. 4017, and the following documents.
+According to a memorandum by Bülow on May 5, 1899, Count
+Osten-Sacken, the Russian ambassador, attempted “in every way” to
+convince him that Germany “should hold in all questions to Russia
+and France and take position against England.” “England is strong
+only because Germany and France do not co-operate,” said the
+Ambassador (<em>ibid.</em>, 546 ff., No. 4020).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_189"></a><a href="#FNanchor_189"><span class=
+"label">[189]</span></a>Hatzfeldt to F. O., Sept. 30, 1899,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XV, 397, No. 4386; Bülow to F. O., Sept. 25, 1899,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 396 f., No. 4385; Monson to Salisbury, Aug. 14,
+1899, <em>B.D.</em>, I, 213, No. 259; Monson to Salisbury, Oct. 1,
+1899, <em>ibid.</em>, 233, No. 285; and other documents in
+<em>ibid.</em>, chap. vii.; Dennis, pp. 125 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_190"></a><a href="#FNanchor_190"><span class=
+"label">[190]</span></a>Salisbury was absent on account of the
+death of his wife, but the officials in the British foreign office
+assured Hatzfeldt that the premier was not at all prejudiced
+against Germany, as the latter supposed. See Hatzfeldt to
+Hohenlohe, Dec. 2, 1899, <em>G.P.</em>, XV, 423, No. 4401; cf.
+Gwynn, I, 351.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_191"></a><a href="#FNanchor_191"><span class=
+"label">[191]</span></a>On this visit see Lee, <em>King Edward
+VII</em>, I, 747; Eckardstein, <em>Lebenserinnerungen und
+politische Denkwürdigkeiten</em>, Vol. II, chaps. iv, v; memo. by
+Bülow, Nov. 24, 1899, <em>G.P.</em>, XV, 413 f., No. 4398;
+Eckardstein to Hatzfeldt, Nov. 30, 1899, <em>ibid.</em>, 421 f.,
+No. 4400; Hatzfeldt to Hohenlohe, Dec. 2, 1899, <em>ibid.</em>, 422
+ff., No. 4401.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_192"></a><a href="#FNanchor_192"><span class=
+"label">[192]</span></a>Eckardstein, II, 107.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_193"></a><a href="#FNanchor_193"><span class=
+"label">[193]</span></a><em>Annual Register</em> (1899), p. 227.
+Salisbury agreed to this act, but warned Chamberlain that Germany
+would very probably disappoint him (Spring Rice to Miss Lascelles,
+April 17, 1902, Gwynn, I, 351).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_194"></a><a href="#FNanchor_194"><span class=
+"label">[194]</span></a>Bülow, I, 88 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_195"></a><a href="#FNanchor_195"><span class=
+"label">[195]</span></a>Eckardstein, II, 126 ff., 133 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_196"></a><a href="#FNanchor_196"><span class=
+"label">[196]</span></a><em>Ibid.</em>, p. 125.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_197"></a><a href="#FNanchor_197"><span class=
+"label">[197]</span></a>On several previous occasions Morocco had
+been the topic of conversation between British and German
+officials. In January, 1897, not to go back any farther, Lord
+Salisbury had sounded the German government on that question, but
+the latter had not been interested (<em>G.P.</em>, XVII, No. 4979
+n.). But when the subject was brought up in a conversation between
+the Premier and Hatzfeldt in February and again in June, 1899, the
+German policy, now launched on its career of <em>Weltpolitik</em>,
+was different. Salisbury stated that in case of the break-up of the
+Sherifian Empire, “Great Britain could not with indifference see
+the Atlantic seaboard pass under any other dominion.” Hatzfeldt
+replied that in his personal opinion his government would approve a
+British acquisition of territory in that land only in case Germany
+received her share; and he added that it would be very desirable to
+exchange views and ideas on the subject whenever action should
+become pressing. Salisbury, however, expressed the wish for the
+<em>status quo</em> to be indefinitely maintained, and refused to
+enter into details. See Hatzfeldt to Bülow, Feb. 8, 1899,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 295 f., No. 5152; Salisbury to Lascelles, June 7,
+1899, <em>B.D.</em>, II, 256 f., No. 307.</p>
+
+<p>A short time before the visit to Windsor in Nov., 1899,
+Chamberlain suggested to Eckardstein that the two governments make
+a secret agreement over Morocco by which the Mediterranean coast
+should be left free for Great Britain while Germany should receive
+far-reaching concessions on the Atlantic seaboard. See Hatzfeldt to
+F. O., <em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 297, No. 5153. Eckardstein also states
+that in Jan., 1901, Chamberlain and Devonshire both told him that
+in 1899 Salisbury had approved the idea of a solution of the
+Moroccan problem with Germany (Eckardstein, II, 359).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_198"></a><a href="#FNanchor_198"><span class=
+"label">[198]</span></a>These remarks by Bülow were chiefly
+contained in his minutes to the dispatches from Hatzfeldt. See
+Bülow to Münster, April 27, 1900, <em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 299 ff., No.
+5156; Hatzfeldt to Hohenlohe, May 1, 1900, <em>ibid.</em>, 303 ff.,
+No. 5159; Hatzfeldt to F. O., May 27, 1900, <em>ibid.</em>, 309
+ff., No. 5162; Bülow to Hatzfeldt, May 29, 1900, <em>ibid.</em>,
+313 f., No. 5165; Hatzfeldt to Hohenlohe, June 1, 1900,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 314 ff., No. 5166.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_199"></a><a href="#FNanchor_199"><span class=
+"label">[199]</span></a>Bülow’s plan was also to associate Italy
+later in the Moroccan settlement. See Bülow to Hatzfeldt, May 14,
+1900, <em>ibid.</em>, 302 f., No. 5158; Hatzfeldt to Hohenlohe, May
+21, 1900, <em>ibid.</em>, 303 ff., No. 5159; Bülow to Hatzfeldt,
+May 23, 1900, <em>ibid.</em>, 308 f., Nos. 5160 f.; Hatzfeldt to F.
+O., May 27, 1900, <em>ibid.</em>, 309 ff., No. 5162.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_200"></a><a href="#FNanchor_200"><span class=
+"label">[200]</span></a>Hatzfeldt to Hohenlohe, May 21, 1900,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 303 ff., No. 5159; Bülow to Hatzfeldt, May 23,
+1900, <em>ibid.</em>, 308, No. 5160; Hatzfeldt to F. O., May 27,
+1900, <em>ibid.</em>, 309 ff., No. 5162; Bülow to Hatzfeldt, May
+28, 1900, <em>ibid.</em>, 311 f., No. 5163; Hatzfeldt to F. O., May
+29, 1900, <em>ibid.</em>, 312 f., No. 5164; Hatzfeldt to Hohenlohe,
+June 1, 1900, <em>ibid.</em>, 314 ff., No. 5166.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_201"></a><a href="#FNanchor_201"><span class=
+"label">[201]</span></a>Bülow to Münster, April 27, 1900,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 299 f., No. 5156; Münster to Hohenlohe, May 9,
+1900, <em>ibid.</em>, 301 f., No. 5157.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_202"></a><a href="#FNanchor_202"><span class=
+"label">[202]</span></a>Bülow to Tschirschky, June 5, 1900,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 318 ff., No. 5167; Bülow to Hatzfeldt, June 13,
+1900, <em>ibid.</em>, 321 ff., No. 5168.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_203"></a><a href="#FNanchor_203"><span class=
+"label">[203]</span></a>Derenthall to Mentzingen, Aug. 2, 1900,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 324, No. 5170.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_204"></a><a href="#FNanchor_204"><span class=
+"label">[204]</span></a>Bülow to Hatzfeldt, June 30, 1900,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 323 ff., No. 5169 and note.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_205"></a><a href="#FNanchor_205"><span class=
+"label">[205]</span></a>Newton, pp. 196 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_206"></a><a href="#FNanchor_206"><span class=
+"label">[206]</span></a><em>G.P.</em>, Vol. XVI, chap. cv;
+<em>B.D.</em>, Vol. II, chap. ix, Part I.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_207"></a><a href="#FNanchor_207"><span class=
+"label">[207]</span></a>Eckardstein, II, 235 ff.; Hatzfeldt to F.
+O., Jan. 18, 1901, <em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 14 ff., No. 4979. In the
+same month Lansdowne expressed to the German government the desire
+to remain in “complete harmony” with it on Chinese affairs. See
+Lascelles to Lansdowne, Jan. 4, 1901, <em>B.D.</em>, II, 20 f., No.
+25; Lascelles to Lansdowne, Jan. 18, 1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 21 f.,
+No. 26.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_208"></a><a href="#FNanchor_208"><span class=
+"label">[208]</span></a>On those far eastern troubles see
+<em>G.P.</em>, Vol. XVI; <em>B.D.</em>, Vol. II, chap. ix.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_209"></a><a href="#FNanchor_209"><span class=
+"label">[209]</span></a><em>B.D.</em>, II, 43, No. 54. On
+Anglo-Russian relations see also Newton, pp. 215 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_210"></a><a href="#FNanchor_210"><span class=
+"label">[210]</span></a>Quoted in Lee, II, 11. This was against
+Bülow’s advice (Bülow to William II, Jan. 21, 1901, <em>G.P.</em>,
+XVII, 20 f., No. 4983). On the Emperor’s visit see Eckardstein to
+F. O., Jan. 29, 1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 23 f., No. 4986; William II
+to Bülow, Jan. 29, 1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 24 ff., No. 4987;
+Lansdowne’s memo., Jan., 1901, Newton, p. 199. The Emperor had been
+given an enthusiastic welcome in England. The Harmsworth press had
+called him “A Friend in Need” (Newton, p. 198).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_211"></a><a href="#FNanchor_211"><span class=
+"label">[211]</span></a>Memo. by Mühlberg, Jan. 28, 1901,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XVI, 286, No. 4785, and following documents.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_212"></a><a href="#FNanchor_212"><span class=
+"label">[212]</span></a>Lansdowne to Lascelles, March 18, 1901,
+Newton, pp. 199 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_213"></a><a href="#FNanchor_213"><span class=
+"label">[213]</span></a>Eckardstein, II, 279.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_214"></a><a href="#FNanchor_214"><span class=
+"label">[214]</span></a>He naturally did not report this statement
+to Berlin (<em>ibid.</em>, pp. 280 f.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_215"></a><a href="#FNanchor_215"><span class=
+"label">[215]</span></a><em>Ibid.</em>, pp. 277 ff.; Eckardstein to
+F. O., March 19, 1901, <em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 41 f., No. 4994;
+Lansdowne to Lascelles, March 18, 1901, <em>B.D.</em>, II, 61, No.
+77; Newton, pp. 199 f. As the Ambassador was ill during most of
+this time, Eckardstein carried on the negotiations.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_216"></a><a href="#FNanchor_216"><span class=
+"label">[216]</span></a>Eckardstein has written in his memoirs that
+in his private correspondence with Holstein he took the latter’s
+peculiarities into account and used expressions that were adapted
+to his “complex mentality.” “For instance, I very often avoided
+using the word <em>alliance</em> and spoke of a <em>defensive
+arrangement</em>; then I emphasized that the whole affair was yet
+in embryo, although in fact the negotiations progressed very
+smoothly and were on the point of conclusion, etc. As soon as the
+negotiations began to run smoothly and lightly, Holstein became
+suspicious, and if the other party were willing to accede to our
+wishes, smelled a rat.” The truth seems to be that for this very
+reason Eckardstein sent home not less but more favorable reports of
+the British desire for an alliance than was really the case, and by
+stretching his instructions to the utmost in his ardent desire to
+ally the two Powers, may have been responsible for the
+contradiction mentioned above (Eckardstein, II, 273).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_217"></a><a href="#FNanchor_217"><span class=
+"label">[217]</span></a>Hatzfeldt to F. O., March 23, 1901,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 46 ff., No. 4997; Eckardstein, II, 321 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_218"></a><a href="#FNanchor_218"><span class=
+"label">[218]</span></a>Lansdowne to Lascelles, March 29, 1901,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 62, No. 79; Eckardstein, II, 326 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_219"></a><a href="#FNanchor_219"><span class=
+"label">[219]</span></a>Lansdowne to Lascelles, April 9, 1901,
+<em>B.D.</em>, 62 f., No. 80; Eckardstein, II, 335.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_220"></a><a href="#FNanchor_220"><span class=
+"label">[220]</span></a>Bülow to Hatzfeldt, Jan. 20, 1901,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 17 f., No. 4981.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_221"></a><a href="#FNanchor_221"><span class=
+"label">[221]</span></a>Holstein to Metternich, Jan. 21, 1901,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 22, No. 4984. Metternich accompanied the Emperor to
+England at that time.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_222"></a><a href="#FNanchor_222"><span class=
+"label">[222]</span></a>See his minutes to the dispatch from
+Holstein to Hatzfeldt, Feb. 11, 1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 37, No. 4989;
+Bülow to Hatzfeldt, Jan. 20, 1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 17 f., No. 4981;
+Bülow to William II, Jan. 21, 1901, 20 f., No. 4983.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_223"></a><a href="#FNanchor_223"><span class=
+"label">[223]</span></a>The two formulations were in no way
+identical, but the negotiations never proceeded far enough to
+permit their being discussed.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_224"></a><a href="#FNanchor_224"><span class=
+"label">[224]</span></a>Bülow to Hatzfeldt, March 24, 1901,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 49, No. 4998; Bülow to Hatzfeldt, May 11, 1901,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 54 ff., No. 5003; Richthofen to Hatzfeldt, May 18,
+1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 60 ff., No. 5007; Richthofen to Hatzfeldt,
+May 20, 1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 64 f., No. 5009; and the following
+documents.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_225"></a><a href="#FNanchor_225"><span class=
+"label">[225]</span></a>Lansdowne to Lascelles, April 13, 1901,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 63, No. 81; Lansdowne to Lascelles, March 18,
+1901, Newton, pp. 199 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_226"></a><a href="#FNanchor_226"><span class=
+"label">[226]</span></a>Memo. by Salisbury, May 29, 1901,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 68 f., No. 86.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_227"></a><a href="#FNanchor_227"><span class=
+"label">[227]</span></a>Memo. by Sanderson, May 27, 1901,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 66 ff., No. 85; Lansdowne to Eckardstein, May 24,
+1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 66, No. 84; Lansdowne to Lascelles, May 30,
+1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 69 ff., No. 87 and inclosures; Hatzfeldt to
+Lansdowne, May 30, 1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 71, No. 88; Hatzfeldt to
+F. O., May 27, 1901, <em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 68 f., No. 5012; and the
+following documents.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_228"></a><a href="#FNanchor_228"><span class=
+"label">[228]</span></a>Lascelles to Lansdowne, Aug. 25, 1901,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 73, No. 90; memo. by Holstein, June 14, 1901,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 83 ff., No. 5019. Late in October, 1901,
+Holstein and Bülow had long talks with Valentine Chirol of the
+<em>London Times</em> to a like effect. See memo. by Holstein, Oct.
+31, Nov. 1, 1901, <em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 101 ff., Nos. 5026 f.; Sir
+Valentine Chirol, <em>Fifty Years in a Changing World</em> (London,
+1927), pp. 288 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_229"></a><a href="#FNanchor_229"><span class=
+"label">[229]</span></a>On April 13, 1901, Lansdowne had written to
+Lascelles: “Things in Morocco look ugly. Do you hear anything?” See
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 64, No. 81; Lansdowne to Monson, July 3, 1901,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 261, No. 318.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_230"></a><a href="#FNanchor_230"><span class=
+"label">[230]</span></a>Eckardstein gives the following story:</p>
+
+<p>Early in July, soon after the arrival of the Moroccan embassy in
+London, Sir Arthur Nicolson, British minister in Morocco, told him
+that France was intriguing in that land for the establishment of a
+protectorate. At Lansdowne’s request he suggested the co-operation
+of Great Britain and Germany for the maintenance of the <em>status
+quo</em> in Morocco. Then he touched upon the subject of a common
+Anglo-German peaceful penetration of that country, which should be
+inaugurated by a commercial treaty with the Sultan. Between the two
+European states an agreement should be made to determine which
+concessions each should receive. He proposed that Germany be given,
+among others, the right of supplying all railway and electrical
+materials and of installing them, and that all further political,
+financial, or economic measures should be carried through by the
+two Powers together. Eckardstein states that he sent a long
+telegram to Berlin in regard to this conversation, but received no
+reply (Eckardstein, II, 357 f.). The editors of <em>G.P.</em>,
+however, found no such telegram (<em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 333 n.), nor
+is there any mention of the proposal in any of the documents
+published by them or by the British. Still the offer may have been
+made, as will be evident later. Hammann, director of the press
+department in the German foreign office at that time, has also
+written that on the dismissal of el-Menebhi, the British government
+proposed common action to the German government, but that it was
+refused (Otto Hammann, <em>Zur Vorgeschichte des Weltkrieges.
+Erinnerungen aus den Jahren 1897-1906</em> [Berlin, 1918], pp. 139
+f.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_231"></a><a href="#FNanchor_231"><span class=
+"label">[231]</span></a>Eckardstein to F. O., July 29, 1901,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 338 f., No. 5182.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_232"></a><a href="#FNanchor_232"><span class=
+"label">[232]</span></a>Memo. by Mühlberg, Aug. 8, 1901,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 339 f., No. 5183; Holstein to Bülow, Aug. 8, 1901,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 341, No. 5184; Bülow to F. O., Aug. 9, 1901,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 341 f., No. 5185.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_233"></a><a href="#FNanchor_233"><span class=
+"label">[233]</span></a><em>B.D.</em>, Vol. II, chap. x; Newton,
+pp. 221 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_234"></a><a href="#FNanchor_234"><span class=
+"label">[234]</span></a>On that meeting see Lee, II, 130 f.;
+Lascelles to Lansdowne, Aug. 25, 1901, <em>B.D.</em>, I, 259, No.
+323; Lascelles to Lansdowne, Aug. 23, 1901, <em>ibid.</em>, II, 73,
+No. 90; memo. by William II, Aug. 23, 1901, <em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 94
+ff., No. 5023. For the meeting Lansdowne gave to King Edward a
+memorandum on the questions which might be brought up. “With regard
+to Morocco,” he wrote, “the policy of the German and British
+Governments would appear to be identical. Both desire the
+maintenance of the <em>status quo</em>, and both would probably
+resent any indignity offered to the Moorish Envoy who lately
+visited, and was received with honours at the German and British
+Courts” (<em>ibid.</em>, 124, No. 5033). By mistake King Edward
+gave a copy of this memorandum to the Emperor, whose government
+responded with a similar communication to the British government.
+The statement about Morocco was as follows: “In Morocco we follow a
+policy of reserve. The Morocco question by itself is not
+sufficiently important for us to justify a policy by which Germany
+might incur the risk of serious international complications”
+(<em>ibid.</em>, 129, No. 5025, Anlage).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_235"></a><a href="#FNanchor_235"><span class=
+"label">[235]</span></a>Memo. by Lansdowne (very secret), Nov. 11,
+1901, <em>B.D.</em>, II, 78, No. 92. Late in July, Lascelles had
+expressed to Eckardstein his personal opinion that an alliance
+between Great Britain and the Triple Alliance was hardly possible,
+that at most one between Great Britain and Germany was all that
+could be expected (Eckardstein to F. O., July 29, 1901,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 91, No. 5021).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_236"></a><a href="#FNanchor_236"><span class=
+"label">[236]</span></a>Memo. by Lansdowne, Nov. 11 and Dec. 4,
+1901, <em>B.D.</em>, II, 76 ff., Nos. 92 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_237"></a><a href="#FNanchor_237"><span class=
+"label">[237]</span></a>Memo. by Lansdowne, Dec. 4, 1901,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 79 f., No. 93, and Salisbury’s minutes.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_238"></a><a href="#FNanchor_238"><span class=
+"label">[238]</span></a>Lansdowne to Lascelles, Dec. 19, 1901,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 80 ff., No. 94; memo. by Metternich, Dec. 28, 1901,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 111 ff., No. 5030.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_239"></a><a href="#FNanchor_239"><span class=
+"label">[239]</span></a>Lee, II, 133 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_240"></a><a href="#FNanchor_240"><span class=
+"label">[240]</span></a>Lascelles to Lansdowne, Jan. 16, 1902,
+<em>B.D.</em>, I, 268, No. 331; Plunkett to Lansdowne, April 11,
+1902, <em>ibid.</em>, 274 f., No. 340; Lascelles to Lansdowne, Jan.
+3, 1902, <em>ibid.</em>, II, 84, No. 95; memo. by Mühlberg, Dec.
+27, 1901, <em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 109 f., No. 5028; William II to
+Edward VII, Dec. 30, 1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 110 f., No. 5029.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_241"></a><a href="#FNanchor_241"><span class=
+"label">[241]</span></a>He was quoting Frederick the Great (Bülow,
+I, 242). See Metternich to Bülow, Nov. 19, 1901, <em>G.P.</em>,
+XVII, 194 f., No. 5073; Bülow to Metternich, Nov. 26, 1901,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 195 ff., No. 5074; Metternich to F. O., Nov. 26,
+1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 197 ff., No. 5075; Buchanan to Lansdowne,
+Nov. 20, 1901, <em>B.D.</em>, I, 263, No. 325; Lansdowne to
+Buchanan, Nov. 26 and Dec. 3, 1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 263, No. 326;
+265, No. 328; Lansdowne to Lascelles, Jan. 14, 1902,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 266 f., Nos. 329 f.; Lascelles to Lansdowne, Jan.
+16, 1902, <em>ibid.</em>, 268 f., No. 332. Cf. Chirol, p. 297;
+Gwynn, I, 350.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_242"></a><a href="#FNanchor_242"><span class=
+"label">[242]</span></a>Lee, II, 138 ff.; <em>B.D.</em>, I, Nos.
+334 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_243"></a><a href="#FNanchor_243"><span class=
+"label">[243]</span></a>Bülow to Metternich, March 13, 1902,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 149 ff., No. 5046.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_244"></a><a href="#FNanchor_244"><span class=
+"label">[244]</span></a>Newton, pp. 247 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_245"></a><a href="#FNanchor_245"><span class=
+"label">[245]</span></a>Bülow to F. O., Sept. 12 and 14, 1901,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XVIII, 28 f., Nos. 5393 f.; memo. by Bülow, Sept.
+14, 1901, <em>ibid.</em>, 29 ff., No. 5395.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_246"></a><a href="#FNanchor_246"><span class=
+"label">[246]</span></a>Alvensleben to F. O., Feb. 19, 1902,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XVII, 156 f., No. 5049; Bülow to Alvensleben, Feb.
+22, 1902, <em>ibid.</em>, 157 ff., No. 5050; memo. by Bülow, Feb.
+25, 1902, <em>ibid.</em>, 160 ff., No. 5051; and the following
+documents.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_247"></a><a href="#FNanchor_247"><span class=
+"label">[247]</span></a>See below.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_248"></a><a href="#FNanchor_248"><span class=
+"label">[248]</span></a>Memo. by Holstein, Dec. 31, 1901,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XVIII, 737, No. 5844.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_249"></a><a href="#FNanchor_249"><span class=
+"label">[249]</span></a>Eckardstein, III, 93.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_250"></a><a href="#FNanchor_250"><span class=
+"label">[250]</span></a>Hammann, <em>Zur Vorgeschichte des
+Weltkrieges</em>, pp. 144 f.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap">
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span><a id=
+"c06"></a>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+<p class="sch2">THE MAKING OF THE ENTENTE CORDIALE</p>
+
+<h3 class="space-above1">I</h3>
+
+<p>The Boer War had revealed to Great Britain the depth of
+antagonism toward her among the European nations and the haphazard
+inadequacy of her defensive preparations. The British government
+had therefore sought the support of Germany and of Japan. But the
+alliance with the second had not compensated for the rebuff from
+the first; and in 1902 the future direction of the British foreign
+policy, particularly with reference to Europe, remained
+undecided.</p>
+
+<p>In February, 1903, Mr. Balfour, who succeeded Lord Salisbury as
+premier in 1902, appointed as a permanent body a Committee of
+Imperial Defence, whose duty, he said, was</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">to survey as a whole the strategical military needs
+of the Empire, to deal with the complicated questions which are all
+essential elements in that general problem, and to revise from time
+to time their own previous decisions, so that the Cabinet shall
+always have at its disposal information upon these important
+points.<a id="FNanchor_251"></a><a href="#Footnote_251" class=
+"fnanchor">[251]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Great Britain also wanted to maintain peace, to settle her
+outstanding international difficulties, and to form ententes. In
+the first part of 1903 the government tried to co-operate with the
+various Powers. In January and February it asked the aid of
+Austria-Hungary and Italy in preventing Russia from sending ships
+of war through the Dardanelles and the Bosphorus. The two states
+refused although both were cordial friends of Great Britain.<a id=
+"FNanchor_252"></a><a href="#Footnote_252" class=
+"fnanchor">[252]</a> Moreover, the British government associated
+itself with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span> Germany
+in the Venezuela affair and expressed its willingness to
+participate in the Bagdad Railway. British public opinion protested
+strenuously, however, for it mistrusted Germany, regarding her as
+so chauvinistic, so hungry for colonies, so bold in her naval
+ambitions as to be not a friend but a rival. Hence the government
+had to settle the one affair as quickly as possible and, in March,
+to recede entirely from its stand on the other.<a id=
+"FNanchor_253"></a><a href="#Footnote_253" class=
+"fnanchor">[253]</a></p>
+
+<p>Anglo-Russian relations were most troublesome. Early in 1903 the
+antagonism of these two Powers became acute all along the line from
+the Bosphorus and the Dardanelles to Persia to Afghanistan to Tibet
+to China. The British government offered in March to negotiate over
+Afghanistan, but Russia refused.<a id="FNanchor_254"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_254" class="fnanchor">[254]</a> Still more pressing for
+Great Britain was the problem which resulted from the
+Anglo-Japanese Alliance. In April, 1903, the renewal of Russian
+activity in Manchuria and its extension into the Yalu Valley caused
+a grave increase of tension between Russia<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_83">[83]</span> and Japan.<a id="FNanchor_255"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_255" class="fnanchor">[255]</a> The revived danger of
+war between those two states brought home to the British government
+the urgent need of assurance that it would not become involved if
+hostilities did ensue. By the terms of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance,
+the <em>casus foederis</em> would arise only in case of an attack
+upon one of the allies by two or more Powers. Manifestly it would
+depend upon France and upon the nature of her obligations as ally
+to Russia whether Great Britain could preserve neutrality in case
+of a conflict.<a id="FNanchor_256"></a><a href="#Footnote_256"
+class="fnanchor">[256]</a> Hence the British government, which in
+the previous year had refused to touch the dangerous Moroccan
+question, now concluded to accept the French proposal for a
+Moroccan accord and to liquidate the various differences with
+France. It would thereby win a friend who could act as mediator
+between Great Britain<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span>
+and Russia and would make certain that a Russo-Japanese war would
+not involve the allies of those Powers.</p>
+
+<p>The way toward France instead of Germany was indicated clearly
+by the drift of British public opinion; for while the animosity
+between the British and German peoples had increased in 1902 and
+1903, the flow of vituperation between the British and French press
+over the Boer War and the Dreyfus case<a id=
+"FNanchor_257"></a><a href="#Footnote_257" class=
+"fnanchor">[257]</a> had practically ceased, and concerted
+movements were on foot to create a popular basis for an “entente
+cordiale.”</p>
+
+<p>Political and business groups took the lead in this work. By
+1903 King Edward, who two years previously had desired an alliance
+with Germany, advocated strongly a <em>rapprochement</em> with
+France. His personal dislike and mistrust of his nephew, William
+II, and of Germany, his wide knowledge of men and of international
+affairs, his sensitiveness to currents of public opinion, caused
+him to incline toward France.<a id="FNanchor_258"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_258" class="fnanchor">[258]</a> His willingness to take
+the initiative in clarifying public opinion and in defending
+British interests enabled him to play an important rôle in
+transforming British foreign relations.<a id=
+"FNanchor_259"></a><a href="#Footnote_259" class=
+"fnanchor">[259]</a> One of his advisers was Lord Esher, a man who
+held no official position but who exerted quiet influence upon
+court, government, and press. Particularly interested in naval and
+military problems, he was instrumental in creating the Committee of
+Imperial Defence, of which he became a permanent<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span> member. Through him the press
+leaders were kept informed about the needs of defense and were
+guided toward friendship with France.<a id=
+"FNanchor_260"></a><a href="#Footnote_260" class=
+"fnanchor">[260]</a> The influence of the business world in the
+same direction was represented by Mr. Thomas Barclay, former
+president of the British Chamber of Commerce in Paris and an active
+worker for the improvement of international relations. In 1901 he
+began a campaign in both France and England for a
+<em>rapprochement</em>, to which during the next two years he
+devoted his entire time and fortune.<a id=
+"FNanchor_261"></a><a href="#Footnote_261" class=
+"fnanchor">[261]</a> In England these efforts had complete
+success.<a id="FNanchor_262"></a><a href="#Footnote_262" class=
+"fnanchor">[262]</a> In France they encountered more difficulty,
+for France had usually been the loser in Anglo-French diplomatic
+battles. However, the <em>revanche</em> anti-German group, the
+socialists and internationalists, and the commercial and business
+elements approved. Then, after the French people at large became
+convinced that Great Britain was not so thoroughly egoistic and
+chauvinistic as they had supposed, and that she really felt
+amicable toward France, they heartily welcomed a
+<em>rapprochement</em> as flattering and beneficial to their
+country.<a id="FNanchor_263"></a><a href="#Footnote_263" class=
+"fnanchor">[263]</a> Nevertheless, they remained skeptical about
+the durability of any entente with their old rival. The French
+press laid down as conditions for one that the Dual Alliance should
+not be weakened thereby and that Great Britain should convince
+France of her serious intentions by treating her equitably in the
+settlement of their colonial differences, particularly<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span> the Moroccan question.<a id=
+"FNanchor_264"></a><a href="#Footnote_264" class=
+"fnanchor">[264]</a> This mistrust was not entirely dispelled for
+several years.</p>
+
+<p>Informal conversations for an agreement were resumed in April,
+1903, between representatives of the two governments.<a id=
+"FNanchor_265"></a><a href="#Footnote_265" class=
+"fnanchor">[265]</a> Then King Edward visited Paris (May 1-5); and,
+although at first he was met with cold silence, his felicity of
+speech and act soon won the French people. As a French Anglophobe
+said to a friend: “I can’t think what has come over the population
+of Paris. The first day they behaved well; the second day, they
+merely displayed interest; but the third day, <em>c’était
+attristant—ils ont acclamé le Roi!</em>”<a id=
+"FNanchor_266"></a><a href="#Footnote_266" class=
+"fnanchor">[266]</a> This visit, so unexpectedly
+successful,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span> created a
+favorable atmosphere for further negotiations.<a id=
+"FNanchor_267"></a><a href="#Footnote_267" class=
+"fnanchor">[267]</a> Later in the month, at M. Cambon’s initiative,
+the project of a treaty of arbitration was taken up.<a id=
+"FNanchor_268"></a><a href="#Footnote_268" class=
+"fnanchor">[268]</a> In July, when President Loubet, accompanied by
+M. Delcassé, returned the King’s visit, the newspapers reported a
+statement by King Edward to the effect that M. Loubet would be more
+heartily welcomed in England than any chief of state had ever been.
+The President was able to speak of the Entente Cordiale as
+established.<a id="FNanchor_269"></a><a href="#Footnote_269" class=
+"fnanchor">[269]</a></p>
+
+<p>During the visit the foreign ministers agreed that the time was
+“in every way propitious for a frank exchange of opinions.” They
+began that long negotiation from which the Entente Cordiale was to
+result. They discussed the question of the fishing rights off the
+coast of Newfoundland, the question of Siam, of the New Hebrides,
+of Sokoto, of the treatment of British firms in French Congo, and
+of Morocco. The French Minister frankly stated that if they could
+come to terms over Morocco, “all other difficulties would
+disappear, or become comparatively easy to deal with.” While
+denying any desire “to get rid of the Sultan or to annex his
+country” or to “force the pace,” he declared that in view of the
+rapidly waning authority of the Sultan, France could not regard
+with indifference the prevalence of chronic disorder in Morocco or
+permit any other Power to undertake the task of regenerating the
+land. What France wished, said M. Delcassé,<span class="pagenum"
+id="Page_88">[88]</span> was a “reasonable assurance that their
+policy would not be obstructed by Great Britain.”</p>
+
+<p>In reply, Lord Lansdowne made three conditions for an accord
+over Morocco. First, British interests in the Mediterranean
+seaboard of Morocco, particularly in Tangier and the neighboring
+coast, must be protected. Second, Spanish ambitions must be fairly
+dealt with. Third, complete equality of economic opportunity in
+Morocco must be assured. M. Delcassé unhesitatingly accepted all
+three stipulations. Then the British Minister proposed that they
+make the settlement a comprehensive one by including the Egyptian
+question. Again the French Minister agreed, provided they reached
+accord “as to the position of France and Morocco.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_270"></a><a href="#Footnote_270" class=
+"fnanchor">[270]</a></p>
+
+<p>A few days later M. Cambon made to the British Minister a more
+detailed statement of the French proposal. Concerning Morocco, he
+said, the two governments could agree that the existing
+constitution <em>au point de vue politique</em> as well as <em>au
+point de vue territorial</em> should be maintained. But the British
+should acknowledge that France “has a peculiar interest in
+maintaining peace within that country, and in assisting the Moorish
+Government to bring about the administrative, economical, and
+financial improvements of which Morocco stands so much in need.”
+The French, in turn, should expressly attest that these
+improvements would not infringe in any way upon the
+principle<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span> of
+commercial liberty. The two governments, continued M. Cambon, might
+co-operate in securing a free passage through the Straits of
+Gibraltar by preventing the erection of any fortifications on the
+southern shore. When Lord Lansdowne raised the objection that Great
+Britain was interested in other parts of the Moorish littoral
+besides that abutting on the straits, the Ambassador readily
+acknowledged this point, and remarked that France wished to prevent
+any Power from establishing itself at any strategic position on the
+Moroccan coast.</p>
+
+<p>As M. Cambon did not mention the Egyptian problem, the British
+Minister immediately stated that its inclusion was an absolute
+condition to any consideration of the Moorish question. The
+Ambassador proposed that they leave Egypt alone for the present;
+but, when this suggestion was refused, he declared that if the
+French government, by acknowledging the permanency of the British
+hold upon that land, extracted this “big thorn from the foot of
+Great Britain,” it would expect <em>une grosse compensation</em>.
+This, he said, “might take the shape of greater liberty of action
+in Morocco—something less remote and conjectural . . . . than she
+[France] had yet asked for.”<a id="FNanchor_271"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_271" class="fnanchor">[271]</a></p>
+
+<p>After this agreement upon the questions to be included in the
+negotiation there remained the other preliminary matter of how to
+deal with Spain. Lord Lansdowne thought that “it would not be
+difficult for us to come to terms with France if Spain were out of
+the way.”<a id="FNanchor_272"></a><a href="#Footnote_272" class=
+"fnanchor">[272]</a> But, bound by the promise of the previous
+March to that Power and more desirous of having weak and decadent
+Spain than powerful France control the south shore of the straits,
+he upheld Spain’s interest in Morocco. M. Cambon declared that his
+government acknowledged this position, mentioning the
+Franco-Spanish negotiations of 1902 as proof. At his suggestion
+they decided on August 5 that a subsequent settlement between
+France and Spain in harmony with the proposed<span class="pagenum"
+id="Page_90">[90]</span> Anglo-French accord be made and be
+communicated to the British government.<a id=
+"FNanchor_273"></a><a href="#Footnote_273" class=
+"fnanchor">[273]</a></p>
+
+<p>The negotiations over these complex problems lasted almost ten
+months. Two months passed before the British answer was ready; for
+the members of the cabinet were on their vacation, a ministerial
+crisis occurred in September as a result of which several
+resigned,<a id="FNanchor_274"></a><a href="#Footnote_274" class=
+"fnanchor">[274]</a> and Lord Cromer, British consul-general and
+agent in Egypt, had to be consulted. This influential official had
+previously received permission to send Sir Eldon Gorst, financial
+adviser to the Egyptian government, to Paris in the autumn in order
+to sound the French government about converting the Egyptian debt
+and abolishing the <em>caisse de la dette</em>. Foreseeing the
+failure of that effort unless the British government made
+concessions in Morocco, Lord Cromer urged it to do so. He realized
+that thereby Morocco would “to all intents and purposes become
+before long a French province”; none the less he supported the
+proposed accord fully to strengthen British control in Egypt, and
+played a major rôle during the negotiations in determining the
+British policy.<a id="FNanchor_275"></a><a href="#Footnote_275"
+class="fnanchor">[275]</a></p>
+
+<p>On October 1 Lord Lansdowne stated to M. Cambon the British
+conditions for an arrangement.<a id="FNanchor_276"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_276" class="fnanchor">[276]</a> He accepted the French
+proposal about Morocco with slight modifications. He suggested that
+France should agree not to erect any military or naval works along
+the Moroccan coast from Algeria to Mazaghan, and that the two
+Powers should engage not to permit any others to do so;<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span> that a certain amount of
+territory in Northern Morocco “should be recognized as destined to
+fall under Spanish influence” and that “in the event of a complete
+collapse of the Sultan’s authority,” Spain should be intrusted with
+the administration of the Moroccan seaboard as far south as
+Mazaghan. However, Spain was to “be precluded from fortifying this
+portion of the coast, and also from alienating it or her existing
+possessions in Morocco to another Power.” As the <em>quid pro
+quo</em> for these concessions to France, the British Minister
+required in Egypt the lifting of the time limit to the British
+occupation and the French sanction of the abolishment of the
+<em>caisse de la dette</em>, the reorganization of the railway
+administration, and the conversion of the Egyptian debt. He also
+requested the consent of the French government to examine at some
+future time proposals abolishing the capitulations in Egypt and
+“tending to assimilate the Egyptian legislative and judicial
+systems to those in force in other civilized countries.” “His
+Majesty’s Government would, on their side,” he continued, “be ready
+to examine, in consultation with the Government of the French
+Republic, similar proposals with regard to Morocco, if at any
+future period France should acquire so predominant a position in
+Morocco as to become outwardly responsible for the good government
+of the country.” The other questions considered in the Minister’s
+reply, those of Newfoundland, Siam, New Hebrides, Nigeria,
+Zanzibar, and Madagascar, were less significant.<a id=
+"FNanchor_277"></a><a href="#Footnote_277" class=
+"fnanchor">[277]</a></p>
+
+<p>With the offers of each party known, the bargaining began. On
+October 27 M. Cambon replied. He was still averse to dealing with
+the Egyptian affair so fully, and declared that the terms offered
+were unequal; for, whereas France received “hopes” alone in
+Morocco, Great Britain would enjoy immediate and concrete benefits
+in Egypt. Moreover, France would have to settle with Spain, and
+might even have to reckon with the pretensions of Germany. So he
+suggested that the proposed changes<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_92">[92]</span> in Egypt be introduced <em>pari passu</em>
+with correlative ones in Morocco. He also objected to giving Spain
+control over any seacoast farther south than the Sebou River. He
+further suggested that Great Britain and France undertake “to
+maintain, save for the consequences of the present accord, the
+territorial <em>status quo</em> within a radius of 500 miles around
+the straits.”<a id="FNanchor_278"></a><a href="#Footnote_278"
+class="fnanchor">[278]</a></p>
+
+<p>When these terms were submitted to Lord Cromer, he was pleased
+with the progress that had been made. “Who would have imagined,
+only a short time ago,” he wrote Lord Lansdowne, November 1, “that
+we should ever have got so far? . . . . We <em>must</em> manage to
+come to terms. . . . . I regard this as by far the most important
+diplomatic affair that we have had in hand for a long time past. .
+. . . <em>We must not fail</em>.” He added that Great Britain was
+asking for much more in Egypt than she offered France in return in
+Morocco. Lord Lansdowne agreed with him; but, he said, the French
+“are extremely anxious to have their position in Morocco
+recognized, and we must turn this feeling to account.” His
+suggestion to Lord Cromer that consideration of the conversion of
+the Egyptian debt be postponed so as to diminish the difficulties
+was not carried into execution.<a id="FNanchor_279"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_279" class="fnanchor">[279]</a></p>
+
+<p>On November 19 Lord Lansdowne replied to M. Cambon that he was
+willing to limit the Spanish and the neutralized portions of the
+Moroccan coast to those between Melilla and Rabat; but he refused
+the French proposal concerning the simultaneous introduction of
+changes in Egypt and Morocco, particularly the change by which the
+“abandonment of financial control by France in Egypt would proceed
+<em>pari passu</em> with the acquisition of financial control by
+France in Morocco.” He likewise wished the French government to
+join Great Britain “in addressing the other Powers for the purpose
+of securing their assent” to the<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_93">[93]</span> suggested British changes in Egypt. And he
+held out for absolute guaranties of full economic liberty in
+Morocco.<a id="FNanchor_280"></a><a href="#Footnote_280" class=
+"fnanchor">[280]</a></p>
+
+<p>In the French response of December 9 M. Cambon reported that his
+government agreed to assist the British government in obtaining the
+assent of the other Powers to the Egyptian changes; but he objected
+strongly to the exclusion of Rabat from the French sphere.
+Moreover, he desired that the period of commercial liberty in
+Morocco be limited to fifteen or twenty years, and that the
+construction and administration of railways and ports there be kept
+under governmental control. In explaining the five-hundred-mile
+proposal, M. Cambon pointed out Germany’s designs upon Morocco
+which had recently been renewed, in all probability under the
+encouragement of Spain. He recalled the Spanish proposal in 1887
+for the assembly of a European conference to discuss the Moroccan
+question, and added:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>It was quite likely that some such proposal might now be
+revived. It was in view of these circumstances that the French
+Government had proposed the maintenance of the <em>status quo</em>
+within a radius of 500 miles from the Straits—a radius which would
+include the Balearic Islands, in which Germany might perhaps desire
+to obtain a footing.<a id="FNanchor_281"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_281" class="fnanchor">[281]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Both Lord Lansdowne and Lord Cromer knew that Germany was
+interested in the fate of Morocco, and they fully anticipated a
+request from her for some territory there, for example, Rabat or
+some other port. They also realized that the French expected Great
+Britain to help in keeping Germany out of Morocco, and Lord Cromer
+gathered from conversations with French officials in Egypt that the
+French would like to embroil Great Britain and Germany, bring about
+an Anglo-Russian agreement, and isolate Germany. As both statesmen
+felt that a demand on the part<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_94">[94]</span> of Germany for a coaling station would be
+very awkward to meet, Lord Lansdowne did nothing to clarify the
+situation beyond refusing M. Cambon’s anti-German project.<a id=
+"FNanchor_282"></a><a href="#Footnote_282" class=
+"fnanchor">[282]</a> He thereby left to the French the possibility
+of forcing Great Britain to aid them in case Germany did try to
+intervene in the Moroccan question.</p>
+
+<p>In reply to M. Cambon on December 11 Lord Lansdowne signified
+his apprehension that if Rabat were not neutralized France might
+later transform it into a torpedo-boat station. The other points
+concerning Morocco he agreed to, except that he extended the limit
+for commercial equality to fifty years.<a id=
+"FNanchor_283"></a><a href="#Footnote_283" class=
+"fnanchor">[283]</a></p>
+
+<p>Thus far the negotiations had proceeded smoothly. The
+Anglo-French arbitration treaty had been signed on October 14.
+Agreement over the two main questions, those of Egypt and of
+Morocco, had practically been reached.<a id=
+"FNanchor_284"></a><a href="#Footnote_284" class=
+"fnanchor">[284]</a> And on November 23 M. Delcassé had been able
+to declare in the French Chamber, with evident reference to Great
+Britain, that “when one speaks today of a Moroccan problem, the
+idea that in the solution the decisive word pertains to France has
+become almost familiar and appears almost natural, even to those
+who in the past would have believed themselves obliged to oppose it
+with the greatest vigor.”<a id="FNanchor_285"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_285" class="fnanchor">[285]</a></p>
+
+<h3>II</h3>
+
+<p>These discussions had been closely connected with another
+diplomatic movement. The Anglo-French <em>rapprochement</em> was
+logically followed by attempts at an Anglo-Russian
+settlement<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span> which in
+turn would have an alleviating effect upon Russo-Japanese
+relations. The British and French governments immediately
+recognized this fact, as did also Count Lamsdorff, Russian foreign
+minister. In July, just after M. Delcassé’s visit to England,
+conversations began, at the instigation of the French Foreign
+Minister,<a id="FNanchor_286"></a><a href="#Footnote_286" class=
+"fnanchor">[286]</a> between Lord Lansdowne and the Russian
+Ambassador. The British Foreign Secretary remarked to Count
+Benckendorff, July 29, as follows: “If Russia would put us in full
+possession of her ideas, and if she would bear in mind that for any
+concessions which she obtained from us we should expect
+corresponding concessions from her, I believe that we might put an
+end to the unfortunate rivalry which had so long prevailed between
+us in China and in the other parts of Asia.” But he declared a few
+days later that until he was “thoroughly satisfied” by Russia,
+especially as to Manchuria, he “must remain observant and
+critical.” The Ambassador, who seemed favorable toward a general
+agreement, left in August for a visit to St. Petersburg, and did
+not see Lord Lansdowne again until November 7.<a id=
+"FNanchor_287"></a><a href="#Footnote_287" class=
+"fnanchor">[287]</a></p>
+
+<p>An understanding along the lines mentioned by Lord Lansdowne
+would have settled both the Anglo-Russian and the Russo-Japanese
+problems. As an inducement to a <em>rapprochement</em> the British
+Foreign Secretary was showing compliance with Russia’s policy in
+the Balkans,</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">even to the extent [wrote on October 26 Sir Louis
+Mallet, précis writer to Lord Lansdowne] of suggesting reforms
+which will give them [Russia] a foothold in the Balkans. H. M. G.
+are therefore committed to a certain extent to a policy of not
+opposing Russia’s advance to Constantinople. At least,<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span> I read it in that light. . . . .
+It’s a chance Russia will never get again of buying off our
+opposition to their advance to Constantinople.<a id=
+"FNanchor_288"></a><a href="#Footnote_288" class=
+"fnanchor">[288]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Russia, however, continued her Asiatic activity, so
+objectionable to Great Britain and Japan. She dallied with the
+Japanese offer of agreement over their Chinese differences while
+she made new demands on China, extended her interests in the Yalu
+Valley and in Seoul itself, and seemed on the way to take
+Korea.<a id="FNanchor_289"></a><a href="#Footnote_289" class=
+"fnanchor">[289]</a> She asserted her right to send agents into
+Afghanistan at will, contrary to the old understanding with Great
+Britain; and on October 5 made a communication to the British
+government on that subject which Sir Charles Hardinge, assistant
+undersecretary of state for foreign affairs, regarded as
+“peremptory in tone, and almost discourteous in its terms.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_290"></a><a href="#Footnote_290" class=
+"fnanchor">[290]</a></p>
+
+<p>In this grave situation Lord Lansdowne besought the help of the
+French government in restraining Russia. On October 26 he expressed
+regret to M. Cambon over the absence of frankness in Anglo-Russian
+intercourse. “Their conduct [the Russian government’s],” he
+complained, “placed us in a very embarrassing position.” The
+pledges which they gave—for example, with respect to the evacuation
+of Manchuria—remained unfulfilled. “We were . . . . told that the
+obstructiveness of the Chinese was to blame. There might be some
+truth in this, but it was impossible to test the truth of the
+assertion unless the Russian Government would really tell us what
+they wanted.” Lord Lansdowne expressed the hope that during Count
+Lamsdorff’s forthcoming visit to Paris (October 29-31) his
+conversations with M.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span>
+Delcassé “might indirectly have an effect upon the attitude of the
+Russian Government towards that of this country.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_291"></a><a href="#Footnote_291" class=
+"fnanchor">[291]</a></p>
+
+<p>M. Delcassé took the hint. Count Lamsdorff agreed with him on
+the value of an arrangement with both Great Britain and with
+Japan.<a id="FNanchor_292"></a><a href="#Footnote_292" class=
+"fnanchor">[292]</a> He also expressed publicly Russia’s
+satisfaction with the Anglo-French and the Franco-Italian
+<em>rapprochements</em>.<a id="FNanchor_293"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_293" class="fnanchor">[293]</a></p>
+
+<p>This intercession had an immediate result. When Count
+Benckendorff returned to London, Lord Lansdowne summed up his
+assertions, November 7, as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>Count Lamsdorff felt strongly that it was of importance that an
+endeavour should be made to remove all sources of misunderstanding
+between the two Governments, and that there should be “a change for
+the better” in our relations. Count Benckendorff was therefore
+instructed to discuss frankly with me the various questions
+outstanding between Great Britain and Russia, with the object of
+arriving at an agreement as to the manner in which they should be
+dealt with. In the meantime, the Russian Government would be
+careful to avoid any action bearing the appearance of hostility to
+this country.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Lord Lansdowne was pleased at this response, for, as he said, he
+“had been seriously concerned at the position into which the two
+Powers were apparently drifting.” The two men then discussed in
+general terms the questions dividing their countries.<a id=
+"FNanchor_294"></a><a href="#Footnote_294" class=
+"fnanchor">[294]</a> On November 17 and 25 they returned to the
+subject, and on November 22 King Edward and Sir Charles Hardinge
+each had an interview with Count Benckendorff. The Count stated
+that “the moment was riper now for a friendly understanding than at
+any time during the past twenty years.” He said that the matters
+for consideration “seemed naturally to group themselves into (1)
+questions concerning China in which Russia had a special interest
+(2) questions concerning India, in which Great Britain had a
+special interest and (3) questions concerning Persia<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span> in which both Powers were
+interested.” But it became clear from these conversations that the
+Ambassador was instructed merely to discuss the problems, that he
+had no definite proposals to make. Nor were the discussions
+satisfactory. The Ambassador could make no statement about Russian
+aims in China. He objected to the division of Persia into spheres
+of influence. He protested strongly against the British expedition
+to Tibet announced in that month. He refused to put anything on
+paper about Afghanistan.</p>
+
+<p>In order to make some headway, Lord Lansdowne made a frank
+exposition of the British desires. On December 11 Count Lamsdorff
+voiced “much satisfaction” with this “ready response.” The British
+Ambassador urged him to make “an early and equally frank expression
+of the views of the Russian Government,” which might “lead to a
+satisfactory understanding.” Count Lamsdorff promised to try to
+reply before February 2, when Parliament was to reassemble. And
+Count Benckendorff planned to go to St. Petersburg early in 1904
+for consultation.<a id="FNanchor_295"></a><a href="#Footnote_295"
+class="fnanchor">[295]</a></p>
+
+<p>Just as Lord Lansdowne had expected, the negotiations did not
+proceed beyond that point; Russia would not limit her Asiatic
+ambitions. She would not accept the British terms, which of course
+included stipulations concerning China satisfactory to Japan, nor
+would she settle with Japan alone. Count Lamsdorff was willing to
+do so; but, as was well known by the other governments, he had no
+control over Russia’s far eastern policy. Since August this policy
+had been directed by the viceroy in the Far East, back of whom
+stood the Czar and the coterie around him interested in Russian
+expansion into Manchuria and Korea. Count Lamsdorff’s hands were
+tied; Russian activity made war with Japan a certainty. Toward the
+end of 1903 this menace grew so ominous that on December 11 Lord
+Lansdowne warned M. Cambon as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span>H. E. [His
+Excellency] was no doubt aware that, under the Agreement with
+Japan, our intervention could only be demanded in case that Power
+were assailed by two others. On the other hand, public opinion here
+might render it extremely difficult for us to remain inactive if
+Russia were to find some pretext for attacking Japan and were to
+endeavour to crush her out of existence.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to me in these circumstances that it was the duty of
+our two Governments, which were, I rejoiced to think, at this
+moment in such friendly relations, to do all in their power to keep
+the peace.<a id="FNanchor_296"></a><a href="#Footnote_296" class=
+"fnanchor">[296]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">The French government reciprocated this wish, and
+let the British government perceive that it would not enter a
+Russo-Japanese war. Early in January the other Powers also asserted
+their intention of remaining neutral.<a id=
+"FNanchor_297"></a><a href="#Footnote_297" class=
+"fnanchor">[297]</a></p>
+
+<p>Having been fully informed about Russo-Japanese relations, the
+British government had recognized the danger of war since July and
+had in consequence not let the negotiations with France lag or
+fail.<a id="FNanchor_298"></a><a href="#Footnote_298" class=
+"fnanchor">[298]</a> But since it now felt reasonably certain of
+not being drawn into the impending struggle, it allowed the
+transactions with France, on January 13, 1904, to come to a
+deadlock over a question hitherto cursorily considered. M. Delcassé
+requested territorial indemnity for the relinquishment of certain
+fishing rights off the coast of Newfoundland; and the British
+government refused to give the amount desired. The difficulty
+imperiled the entire settlement since both sides were so fearful of
+public opinion that they refused to make concessions.<a id=
+"FNanchor_299"></a><a href="#Footnote_299" class=
+"fnanchor">[299]</a> But on February<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_100">[100]</span> 10 the Russo-Japanese War began. Admiral
+Fisher was certain that Japan would be defeated.<a id=
+"FNanchor_300"></a><a href="#Footnote_300" class=
+"fnanchor">[300]</a> Rumors were abroad concerning Russo-German
+negotiations for closing the Baltic Straits,<a id=
+"FNanchor_301"></a><a href="#Footnote_301" class=
+"fnanchor">[301]</a> and some British officials had misgivings that
+a coalition of Russia, France, and Germany might be formed against
+their country.<a id="FNanchor_302"></a><a href="#Footnote_302"
+class="fnanchor">[302]</a> Moreover, the British government feared
+that a Balkan war might break out in the spring.<a id=
+"FNanchor_303"></a><a href="#Footnote_303" class=
+"fnanchor">[303]</a> Under these circumstances the British
+government could not afford to risk alienating France.<a id=
+"FNanchor_304"></a><a href="#Footnote_304" class=
+"fnanchor">[304]</a></p>
+
+<p>M. Delcassé was surprised by the outbreak of the war.<a id=
+"FNanchor_305"></a><a href="#Footnote_305" class=
+"fnanchor">[305]</a> His<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_101">[101]</span> ambition had been for the Anglo-French
+<em>rapprochement</em> to be supplemented by an Anglo-Russian one.
+Then as Italy was also trying to approach Russia, a more or less
+loose grouping of France, Russia, Great Britain, Italy, Spain, and
+Japan would be created.<a id="FNanchor_306"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_306" class="fnanchor">[306]</a> Busy with the
+Anglo-French negotiations, he had been misled by the optimism of
+the Russian government into thinking that war would not
+occur.<a id="FNanchor_307"></a><a href="#Footnote_307" class=
+"fnanchor">[307]</a> He had not appreciated fully the weakness of
+Count Lamsdorff’s position. Not until January, 1904, did he
+perceive the danger and make belated efforts to maintain peace. But
+Great Britain refused to aid him.<a id="FNanchor_308"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_308" class="fnanchor">[308]</a> Immediately after the
+war began he tried again to secure British co-operation in stopping
+it. When the British government again refused, M. Delcassé became
+incensed, for he saw the defeat of his larger program.<a id=
+"FNanchor_309"></a><a href="#Footnote_309" class=
+"fnanchor">[309]</a> His better judgment soon calmed him, however,
+for with France’s ally eliminated from European affairs, he needed
+British co-operation more than ever in order to keep the war from
+spreading<a id="FNanchor_310"></a><a href="#Footnote_310" class=
+"fnanchor">[310]</a> and to offset the increased power of Germany.
+Late in February both parties were therefore ready to
+compromise.<a id="FNanchor_311"></a><a href="#Footnote_311" class=
+"fnanchor">[311]</a> And, after a threat by Lord
+Lansdowne<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span> on March
+31 to break off negotiations when the French Foreign Minister,
+alarmed by French public opinion, attempted to reopen the
+Newfoundland question,<a id="FNanchor_312"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_312" class="fnanchor">[312]</a> the accord was finally
+completed on April 8, 1904.</p>
+
+<p>This agreement consisted of three documents: first, a convention
+which settled the Newfoundland question, modified certain
+boundaries between French and British colonies in Africa, and gave
+the Iles de Los to France; second, a declaration concerning Siam,
+Madagascar, and the New Hebrides; and third, a declaration
+concerning Egypt and Morocco. Only the convention had to be
+submitted to the two parliaments, since it alone provided for
+territorial changes in the existing possessions of the two states.
+While the solution of all these difficulties established the
+Entente Cordiale, the last-named declaration gave to the entente
+its great significance in international affairs; for through it two
+of the old sore spots in Anglo-French diplomacy were healed, and
+the basis for the future co-operation of the two Powers was
+laid.</p>
+
+<p>By the terms of this declaration France relinquished her rights
+and interests in Egypt in favor of Great Britain; Great Britain, in
+favor of France in Morocco. Only the clauses concerning Morocco are
+of interest here. Article II read as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>The Government of the French Republic declare that they have no
+intention of altering the political status of Morocco.</p>
+
+<p>His Britannic Majesty’s Government . . . . recognize that it
+appertains to France . . . . to preserve order in that country, and
+to provide assistance for the purpose of all administrative,
+economic, financial, and military reforms which it may require.</p>
+
+<p>They declare that they will not obstruct the action taken by
+France for this purpose, provided that such action shall leave
+intact the rights which Great Britain, in virtue of Treaties,
+Conventions, and usage, enjoys in Morocco. . . . .</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span>Article IV
+provided for full commercial liberty, which, however, should obtain
+for only thirty years. Each government reserved the right “to see
+that the concessions for roads, railways, ports, etc. [in Morocco
+and Egypt], are only granted on such conditions as will maintain
+intact the authority of the State over these great undertakings of
+public interest.” By Article VII the free passage and
+non-fortification of the south shore of the Straits of Gibraltar
+were assured. According to Article VIII the interests of Spain in
+Morocco were to be respected, and the compact over them to be
+worked out between the Spanish and French governments was to be
+communicated to the British government. Article IX was included at
+the insistence of the British government, which planned thereby to
+enjoy French support in obtaining the acquiescence of the other
+Powers to the proposed changes in Egypt. Although the French
+reluctantly agreed to it, it eventually proved to be of the
+greatest value to them. It read as follows: “The two Governments
+agree to afford to one another their diplomatic support, in order
+to obtain the execution of the clauses of the present Declaration
+regarding Egypt and Morocco.”</p>
+
+<p>Five secret articles supplemented the public agreement. Article
+I was as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>In the event of either Government finding themselves
+constrained, by the force of circumstances, to modify their policy
+in respect to Egypt and Morocco, the engagements which they have
+undertaken towards each other by Articles IV, VI and VII of the
+Declaration of to-day’s date would remain intact.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">Article II was included at the wish of the
+British:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>His Britannic Majesty’s Government have no present intention of
+proposing to the Powers any changes in the system of the
+Capitulations, or in the judicial organization of Egypt.</p>
+
+<p>In the event of their considering it desirable to introduce into
+Egypt reforms tending to assimilate the Egyptian legislative system
+to that in force in other civilized countries, the Government of
+the French Republic will not refuse to entertain any such
+proposals, on the understanding that His Britannic<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span> Majesty’s Government will
+agree to entertain the suggestions that the Government of the
+French Republic may have to make to them with a view of introducing
+similar reforms in Morocco.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">Articles III and IV marked out the portion of
+Morocco which should come within the “sphere of influence” of Spain
+“whenever the Sultan ceases to exercise authority over it,” and
+provided for the validity of the Anglo-French declaration in case
+Spain refused to make an agreement.<a id=
+"FNanchor_313"></a><a href="#Footnote_313" class=
+"fnanchor">[313]</a> Article V concerned the Egyptian debt.</p>
+
+<p>The contradictions in the accord are apparent. The “political
+status” in Morocco was to be preserved, but it would take a
+statesman trained in diplomatic casuistry to explain how this was
+possible with France alone making all the proposed internal
+reforms. Of course, what was meant was that the “international
+status” of the land should be respected. However, the terms of the
+secret articles foresaw a future change even in that; and it can
+hardly be called showing a nice regard for Morocco’s international
+and sovereign independence for two alien Powers to set a time limit
+to the right of commercial liberty in that land. The doctors were
+agreeing upon a division of the patient’s property before they
+began to operate. That Morocco, an independent state, would
+eventually be partitioned into French and Spanish protectorates was
+evident to anyone with an understanding of contemporary political
+practices. To preserve peace and amity between themselves, Great
+Britain and France had simply made a division of spoils at
+Morocco’s expense.<a id="FNanchor_314"></a><a href="#Footnote_314"
+class="fnanchor">[314]</a></p>
+
+<p>The new accord was most cordially welcomed by all parties
+in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span> Great Britain.
+In the House of Commons on June 1, Earl Percy, speaking for the
+government, and Sir Edward Grey, speaking for the opposition, both
+emphasized the need for Great Britain henceforth to follow a policy
+of “administrative concentration and consolidation” of her empire,
+and declared that similar agreements should be made with other
+Powers. Not all troubles with France had been disposed of, said
+Earl Percy, but the chief ones had been, and the others could now
+be more easily settled. As to the terms dealing with Morocco, while
+he admitted that the Sultan had not been consulted beforehand, he
+declared that Morocco needed setting to rights and that France had
+a better claim to execute that work than anyone else. He also
+emphasized the unique quality of the Entente Cordiale.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>The parties pledge themselves not merely to abstain from
+poaching on each other’s preserves but to do all in their power to
+further one another’s interests. We promise to give to one another,
+as friends, advantages which are ordinarily given only to allies,
+and it is as a pledge of friendship rather than as the terms of a
+compromise between jealous and exacting litigants that we ask the
+House to consent to these concessions.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Sir Edward Grey approved of the relinquishment of Morocco to
+France. Together with other speakers, he praised the spirit of the
+agreement, and he expressed the hope that Article IX would enable
+the two nations to draw closer together by increasing the
+“opportunities for the interchange of international courtesies
+between them.”</p>
+
+<p>During the debates Mr. Gibson Bowles declared that the agreement
+amounted to a “partition of three new Polands” (Egypt, Morocco, and
+Siam), “a compact of plunder.” But from a European point of view he
+considered it of “the highest import,” for it signified a “return
+to the . . . . system of the balance of power.” “There are stalking
+through Europe,” he stated, “ambitions which must be curtailed and
+which may be developed to a greater extent than seems at present.
+Against such it is well to raise a visible barrier in England and
+France.” Mr. Balfour, the premier, however, denied that there had
+been “any reversal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span>
+of the traditional policy of our party,” or that anything had been
+done “prejudicial to the interests of Germany or any other
+Power.”</p>
+
+<p>The <em>Times</em> did not agree with him. Its Paris
+correspondent wrote on April 14 as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>The Triple Alliance has long since ceased to be the European
+bogey which it once was. . . . . There is the Dual Alliance, the
+Anglo-French Agreement, and the Franco-Italian
+<em>rapprochement</em>, with benevolent diplomatic neutrality on
+the part of Russia. Now, in the midst of this happy family, the
+Triple Alliance only appears as the ghost of its former self.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">The editorial comment of that paper was in a
+similar tone.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>The days have gone by when the Germans could assume with some
+shadow of plausibility that in the larger questions of
+international politics Great Britain must follow in the wake of the
+Triple Alliance, and that the attitude of France might be ignored.
+There is no alliance between them, but there is a cordial
+understanding which will induce both to discuss all subjects
+affecting them fairly and without jealousy or suspicion, and which,
+combined with the relations in which they stand to Italy, must
+exercise a great influence upon all States, and, it may be, a great
+attraction upon some of them.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Events soon proved that the <em>Times’s</em> estimate of that
+entente was more accurate than that of Mr. Balfour.<a id=
+"FNanchor_315"></a><a href="#Footnote_315" class=
+"fnanchor">[315]</a></p>
+
+<p>Although happily surprised by the conclusion of the Anglo-French
+agreement, French public opinion did not accept the accord as
+whole-heartedly as did the British. Opposition to various parts of
+the settlement was expressed by extremists who regretted the final
+renunciation of French ambitions in Egypt and who thought that
+French interests in Siam and elsewhere had not been adequately
+upheld; by those in the maritime districts of Northern and
+Northwestern France who criticized the terms<span class="pagenum"
+id="Page_107">[107]</span> concerning Newfoundland as disastrous to
+French fishing interests in that region; and more or less openly by
+the enemies of M. Combes, the premier, whose stringent anticlerical
+policy had aroused bitter antagonism among the French. These
+critical forces, however, were more than offset by the elements who
+praised the agreement. “It is equitable, the equilibrium of the
+accord is irreproachable,” wrote M. de Caix. The recognition of
+France’s special interests in Morocco was especially commended by
+almost all parties. The strengthening of France’s international
+position was also acknowledged with satisfaction. In reporting the
+agreement to the Chamber of Deputies on November 3 M. Deloncle
+declared: “We do not wish a . . . . passing entente between our two
+countries. We think . . . . of the formation of accords always more
+intimate and durable, which, loyally executed by both parties, . .
+. . on the basis of reciprocal confidence, will cement the
+community and solidarity of the two countries.” Alliance with
+Russia, friendship with Great Britain, was the popular formula.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, the convention over Newfoundland was accepted by
+the Chamber only on condition that M. Delcassé attempt to reopen
+the question with the British government. Many warned M. Delcassé
+not to trust Great Britain too far, not to permit the entente to
+assume in any way the character of an alliance, and not to involve
+France in the Anglo-German rivalry. In the Chamber on November 8 M.
+Delafosse declared that the accord signified a “detente,” not an
+“entente.” M. René Millet, former governor of Tunis, wrote that the
+arrangement was “a retreat in good order” which “does not justify
+the enthusiasm with which it has been received.” M. Millet found
+insufficient the diplomatic preparation for the French action in
+Morocco.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>It is not possible [he wrote] for France to undertake anything
+without knowing the thoughts of Germany. . . . . Our bad will
+toward the Germans will only render them more imperious, and,
+without declaring war, they will have more than one means of being
+disagreeable to us, especially at<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_108">[108]</span> the time when Russia . . . . is unable to
+help us. . . . . Of all pretensions, the most foolish would be to
+wish to isolate the German Empire, as certain musketeers of the
+press advise.<a id="FNanchor_316"></a><a href="#Footnote_316"
+class="fnanchor">[316]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Alarmed by the criticism of the Newfoundland convention, M.
+Delcassé tried in June and July to obtain some further concessions
+from the British government.<a id="FNanchor_317"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_317" class="fnanchor">[317]</a> Although he had no
+success, he felt compelled during the debates in the French
+Chamber, November 3-10, to promise to reopen negotiations on the
+Newfoundland question. Otherwise, he feared a rejection. This
+meaningless concession, together with the fact that the entente had
+already proved its value by enabling M. Delcassé to mediate between
+Great Britain and Russia in October for a peaceful settlement of
+the Dogger Bank episode,<a id="FNanchor_318"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_318" class="fnanchor">[318]</a> smoothed the path for
+parliamentary approbation. Hence M. Delcassé, in his speech of
+defense, was able to confine himself to generalities. He reviewed
+his achievement of the ententes with Italy, Spain, and Great
+Britain, by which the Moroccan question had been settled in favor
+of France and by which the French position in the world had been
+elevated. He advocated a policy of peace and conciliation, but he
+also declared that France must maintain her defenses.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>And this is what procures for France [he concluded], augmented
+in her credit and prestige, the trust and sympathy of the world.
+The world is convinced to-day that French policy does not seek the
+advantage for France other than in the harmony of French interests
+with the interests of others. And she is happy to affirm that that
+harmony, which no one believes or pretends to believe unrealisable,
+is being realised each day to the benefit of all.</p>
+
+<p>It will be the honor of our democracy to have practiced that
+policy.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span>He
+was roundly applauded, and his achievements were approved by both
+Parliament and people. The accord was ratified in the Chamber by a
+vote of 443 to 105, and in the Senate by one of 215 to 37.<a id=
+"FNanchor_319"></a><a href="#Footnote_319" class=
+"fnanchor">[319]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnotes" id="ftc06">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_251"></a><a href="#FNanchor_251"><span class=
+"label">[251]</span></a>4 Hansard, Vol. CXVIII, col. 1579.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_252"></a><a href="#FNanchor_252"><span class=
+"label">[252]</span></a>See Rodd to Lansdowne, Jan. 9, 1903,
+<em>B.D.</em>, IV, 41 f., No. 32, and following documents. However,
+an extract from <em>Defence Committee Paper 1b</em> (Feb. 11,
+1903), read as follows: “What difference would it make to the
+balance of power in the Mediterranean if Russia were to obtain,
+through possession of Constantinople, free egress from the Black
+Sea through the Dardanelles, these remaining closed, as at present,
+against other Powers?</p>
+
+<p>“The answer to this question unanimously accepted by the
+Committee was that, while Russia would no doubt obtain certain
+naval advantages from the change, it would not fundamentally alter
+the present strategic position in the Mediterranean.”</p>
+
+<p>An extract from <em>Defence Committee Paper 2b</em> of the same
+month read as follows: “It may be stated generally that a Russian
+occupation of the Dardanelles, or an arrangement for enabling
+Russia to freely use the waterway between the Black Sea and the
+Mediterranean, such as her dominating influence can extract from
+Turkey at her pleasure, would not make any marked difference in our
+strategic dispositions as compared with present conditions”
+(<em>B.D.</em>, IV, 59 f.). This opinion was approved on April 22,
+1904, by King Edward and by Sir Charles Hardinge, who had just been
+appointed ambassador at St. Petersburg (Lee, <em>King Edward
+VII</em>, II, 289 f.). It apparently led to a change of policy in
+the autumn of 1903 (see below).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_253"></a><a href="#FNanchor_253"><span class=
+"label">[253]</span></a>Chirol, <em>Fifty Years in a Changing
+World</em>, pp. 276 ff.; <em>G.P.</em>, Vol. XVII, chaps. cxii,
+cxiv, Part A; <em>B.D.</em>, Vol. II, chap. xii. See also Lansdowne
+to Curzon, April 24, 1903, Newton, <em>Lord Lansdowne</em>, p.
+254.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_254"></a><a href="#FNanchor_254"><span class=
+"label">[254]</span></a>See <em>B.D.</em>, IV, 41 ff., Nos. 32 ff.;
+memo. on British policy in Persia, Oct. 31, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>,
+365 ff., No. 321; memo. respecting Russia and Afghanistan, Oct. 14,
+1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 512 ff., No. 465; Newton, pp. 271 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_255"></a><a href="#FNanchor_255"><span class=
+"label">[255]</span></a>The Japanese Foreign Minister, in
+communicating to the British Minister on April 27 the Russian
+demands to China, spoke “with unwonted seriousness” and asserted
+“that he considered the situation exceedingly grave” (MacDonald to
+Lansdowne, April 27, 1903, <em>B.D.</em>, II, 198 ff., No. 226. The
+dispatch was received first on June 2, but there is no reason to
+doubt that the view expressed therein was immediately known to the
+British government since the two governments were in constant
+communication. See Lansdowne to MacDonald, April 29, 1903,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 200 f., No. 228; memo. communicated by Hayashi,
+Japanese minister to London, to Lansdowne, April 27, 1903,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 201 f., No. 228, inclosure; William L. Langer, “Der
+Russisch-Japanische Krieg,” <em>Europäische Gespräche</em>, June,
+1926, pp. 310 ff.; Tyler Dennett, <em>Roosevelt and the
+Russo-Japanese War</em> (New York, 1925), pp. 139 f., 355 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_256"></a><a href="#FNanchor_256"><span class=
+"label">[256]</span></a>When Russo-Japanese relations became
+strained early in 1901, Lansdowne asked Monson whether he thought
+“that France is under any engagement to take part on the side of
+Russia in the event of war, or that without such obligation she
+would attempt to do so” (Lansdowne to Monson, March 8, 1901,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 40, No. 49). Monson replied that he did not know
+whether the Dual Alliance laid down the obligation of military aid
+outside of Europe, and that while the French people showed little
+zeal for far eastern affairs, yet nationalistic hatred against
+Great Britain might be aroused at any time and might make the
+French stand uncertain (Monson to Lansdowne, March 13, 1901,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 44 f., No. 56). The Franco-Russian declaration of
+1902 in reply to the Anglo-Japanese Alliance stated that the Dual
+Alliance was extended to the Far East, although a few days later
+Delcassé cast doubt upon the significance of this engagement. While
+French public opinion was opposed to becoming involved in the Far
+East for the sake of Russia, yet this ambiguity left the French
+position in case of a war in doubt (see above).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_257"></a><a href="#FNanchor_257"><span class=
+"label">[257]</span></a>See Pinon, <em>France et Allemagne</em>,
+pp. 79 f.; Jean Darcy, <em>France et Angleterre. Cent années de
+rivalité coloniale: L’Afrique</em> (Paris, 1904); Barclay,
+<em>Thirty Years: Anglo-French Reminiscences, 1876-1906</em>,
+chaps. xiii-xvi.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_258"></a><a href="#FNanchor_258"><span class=
+"label">[258]</span></a>Philippe Crozier, who in 1903 was French
+minister at Copenhagen, states that to his intimate friends King
+Edward “even foresaw the hypothesis of a positive alliance” with
+France (“L’Autriche et l’avant guerre,” <em>Revue de France</em>,
+April 15, 1921, p. 271).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_259"></a><a href="#FNanchor_259"><span class=
+"label">[259]</span></a>Lee, II; Newton, pp. 292 f. Early in 1915
+Balfour wrote to Lansdowne denying that King Edward was the author
+of the Entente Cordiale. “Now, so far as I remember, during the
+years which you and I were his Ministers, he [King Edward] never
+made an important suggestion of any sort on large questions of
+policy” (Newton, p. 293). This estimate may be true, but it does
+not give the King credit for what he actually did.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_260"></a><a href="#FNanchor_260"><span class=
+"label">[260]</span></a>Spender, <em>Life, Journalism and
+Politics</em>, I, 185 ff. Esher had been furnishing information to
+Spender, who was editor of the <em>Westminster Gazette</em>, a
+Liberal paper, since 1900. Spender denies that the British foreign
+office inspired the newspapers (<em>op. cit.</em>, I, 185).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_261"></a><a href="#FNanchor_261"><span class=
+"label">[261]</span></a>J. L. de Lanessan, <em>Histoire de
+l’entente cordiale franco-anglaise</em> (Paris, 1916), pp. 218 ff.,
+229, 234; Barclay, chaps. xvii-xx.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_262"></a><a href="#FNanchor_262"><span class=
+"label">[262]</span></a>The <em>Times</em>, the Northcliffe Press,
+the Chamberlain Press, the <em>National Review</em>,
+<em>Fortnightly Review</em>, <em>Contemporary Review</em>, the
+Liberals as well as the Conservatives, supported the movement. See
+<em>G.P.</em>, XVII, Nos. 5081-83, 5087-88, 5094, 5026-27; Hammann,
+<em>Zur Vorgeschichte des Weltkrieges</em>, pp. 175 f.; Wolff,
+<em>Das Vorspiel</em>, p. 135; Barclay, pp. 177 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_263"></a><a href="#FNanchor_263"><span class=
+"label">[263]</span></a>See Barclay, chaps. xvii, xx.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_264"></a><a href="#FNanchor_264"><span class=
+"label">[264]</span></a>Reports from the Belgian ministers in Paris
+and London, May 4, 1902, <em>Zur europ. Politik</em>, I, 105 f.
+Impressed with the unanimity of friendliness toward France among
+the British, M. Delcassé expressed to Monson his regret that the
+French did not fully reciprocate this feeling. See Monson to
+Lansdowne, July 24, 1903, <em>B.D.</em>, II, 302 f., No. 361;
+<em>Bulletin</em>, July, 1903, pp. 211 ff.; <em>Quest. dipl. et
+col.</em>, XV, 656 f., XVI, 147; articles from <em>Figaro</em> and
+the <em>Temps</em> quoted in the <em>London Times</em>, May 5,
+1903; article by Etienne in the <em>National Review</em>, July 1,
+1903, esp. p. 748<em>a</em>.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_265"></a><a href="#FNanchor_265"><span class=
+"label">[265]</span></a>So Eckardstein asserts,
+<em>Lebenserinnerungen, etc.</em>, II, 337; cf. Schefer, <em>D’une
+guerre à l’autre, etc.</em>, p. 249.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_266"></a><a href="#FNanchor_266"><span class=
+"label">[266]</span></a>King Edward’s trip was a bold move, for
+Paris was the center of anti-British feeling, and some members of
+the British government were doubtful about its success. But the
+King initiated the visit and took the entire responsibility for it,
+feeling certain that he would be well received. In his first public
+speech, more optimistically than truthfully, he declared: “There
+may have been misunderstandings and causes of dissension in the
+past [between the two countries], but all such differences are, I
+believe, happily removed and forgotten, and I trust that the
+friendship and admiration which we all feel for the French nation
+and their glorious traditions may in the near future develop into a
+sentiment of the warmest affection and attachment between the
+peoples of the two countries. The achievement of this aim is my
+constant desire.” Quoted in the <em>London Times</em>, May 2, 1903,
+M. Paul Cambon’s estimate of the significance of the King’s visit
+is as follows: “Of course, King Edward helped immensely. His visit
+to Paris in the spring of 1903 really made it [the Anglo-French
+entente] possible. . . . .” See interview with Cambon in
+<em>ibid.</em>, Dec. 22, 1920. On the visit see Captain the Hon.
+Sir Seymour Fortescue, <em>Looking Back</em> (London, 1920), pp.
+279 ff.; <em>Quest. dipl. et col.</em>, XV, 656 f.; Lee, II, 221
+ff., 236 ff.; Barclay, p. 218; Viscount Esher, <em>The Influence of
+King Edward and Essays on Other Subjects</em> (London, 1915), pp.
+57 ff.; Pinon, p. 114; Herbert H. Asquith, <em>The Genesis of the
+War</em> (New York, 1923), p. 30; Metternich to Bülow, June 2,
+1903, <em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 590 ff., No. 5376; Crozier, pp. 272 ff.;
+Newton, pp. 275 f., 278 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_267"></a><a href="#FNanchor_267"><span class=
+"label">[267]</span></a>Shortly before this visit Chamberlain
+remarked to Eckardstein: “Here in England the King’s visit to Paris
+is very popular, and if France gives him a good reception then
+everything will go well between us in the future.” See Eckardstein
+to Bülow, May 10, 1903, <em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 568, No. 5369;
+Metternich to Bülow, June 2, 1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 590 ff., No.
+5376.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_268"></a><a href="#FNanchor_268"><span class=
+"label">[268]</span></a>Monson to Lansdowne, Jan. 20, 1902,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 261 f., No. 319; Lansdowne to Monson, May 19,
+1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 289, No. 352; Monson to Lansdowne, May 22,
+1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 290, No. 353; Monson to Lansdowne, May 29,
+1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 290 f., No. 354; Lansdowne to Monson, July
+21, 1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 301 f., No. 360, and inclosures;
+<em>Annual Register</em> (1903), pp. 216 f.; Barclay, pp. 235, 242;
+expressions of public opinion on this project contained in
+<em>Quest. dipl. et col.</em>, July 1 and 15, Aug. 1, Sept. 1 and
+15, 1903.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_269"></a><a href="#FNanchor_269"><span class=
+"label">[269]</span></a>King Edward’s assertion had direct
+reference to the German Emperor, with whom he had never agreed
+(<em>Zur europ. Politik</em>, I, 110; Lee, II, 244 ff.; <em>Quest.
+dipl. et col.</em>, XVI, 147 ff.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_270"></a><a href="#FNanchor_270"><span class=
+"label">[270]</span></a>On this interview see the dispatch from
+Lansdowne to Monson, July 7, 1903, <em>B.D.</em>, II, 294 ff., No.
+357; also Delcassé’s interview in <em>Petit Parisien</em>, April
+10, 1904, reprinted in <em>Quest. dipl. et col.</em>, April 16,
+1904, pp. 616 f. Delcassé’s conversation with Lansdowne had been
+prefaced by the talks between Cambon and Lansdowne during the
+previous year and also by a long talk on July 2, 1903, between
+Lansdowne and Etienne. Etienne had stated one of the reasons for an
+Anglo-French entente as follows (the account is from the hand of
+the British minister): “M. Etienne expressed his belief that the
+most serious menace to the peace of Europe lay in Germany, that a
+good understanding between France and England was the only means of
+holding German designs in check, and that if such an understanding
+could be arrived at, England would find that France would be able
+to exercise a salutary influence over Russia and thereby relieve us
+from many of our troubles with that country” (Lansdowne to Monson,
+July 2, 1903, <em>B.D.</em>, II, 293, No. 356).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_271"></a><a href="#FNanchor_271"><span class=
+"label">[271]</span></a>Lansdowne to de Bunsen, July 15, 1903,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 298, No. 358; Lansdowne to Monson, July 29, Aug. 5,
+1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 304 ff., Nos. 363 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_272"></a><a href="#FNanchor_272"><span class=
+"label">[272]</span></a>Lansdowne to Durand, July 14, 1903, Newton,
+p. 280.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_273"></a><a href="#FNanchor_273"><span class=
+"label">[273]</span></a>Then Lansdowne notified the Spanish
+government of the steps which he had taken and asked for a
+statement of its views on the Moroccan question. Whether Spain
+replied is not evident. See Lansdowne to Monson, Aug. 5, 1903,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 306 f., No. 364; Lansdowne to Durand, Aug. 11,
+1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 309 f., No. 366; Newton, p. 280.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_274"></a><a href="#FNanchor_274"><span class=
+"label">[274]</span></a>J. A. Spender, <em>The Life of the Right
+Hon. Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman</em> (London), Vol. II, chaps.
+xxiii-xxiv.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_275"></a><a href="#FNanchor_275"><span class=
+"label">[275]</span></a>Cromer to Lansdowne, July 17, 1903,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 298 ff., No. 359; memo. by Cromer, Aug. 7, 1903,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 307 ff., No. 365; Newton, pp. 280 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_276"></a><a href="#FNanchor_276"><span class=
+"label">[276]</span></a>Lee, II, 245 f.; Lansdowne to Cambon, Oct.
+1, 1903, <em>B.D.</em>, II, 311 ff., No. 369; 400 n.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_277"></a><a href="#FNanchor_277"><span class=
+"label">[277]</span></a>Lansdowne to Cambon, Oct. 1, 1903,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 311 ff., No. 369.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_278"></a><a href="#FNanchor_278"><span class=
+"label">[278]</span></a>Lansdowne to Monson, Oct. 7, 1903,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 317 f., No. 370; Cambon to Lansdowne, Oct. 26,
+1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 320 ff., No. 373.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_279"></a><a href="#FNanchor_279"><span class=
+"label">[279]</span></a>Cromer to Lansdowne, Nov. 1, 1903,
+Lansdowne to Cromer, Nov. 17, 1903, Newton, pp. 283 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_280"></a><a href="#FNanchor_280"><span class=
+"label">[280]</span></a>Cromer to Lansdowne, Oct. 30, 1903,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 323, No. 374; Lansdowne to Cambon, Nov. 19,
+1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 324 ff., No. 376.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_281"></a><a href="#FNanchor_281"><span class=
+"label">[281]</span></a>The French government, Cambon said, knew
+that “the Queen of Spain during her recent visit to the Continent
+had been in communication with the German Emperor upon the subject
+of Morocco” (Lansdowne to Monson, Dec. 9, 1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 329
+ff., No. 378).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_282"></a><a href="#FNanchor_282"><span class=
+"label">[282]</span></a>Lansdowne to Cromer, Nov. 17, 1903, Cromer
+to Lansdowne, Nov. 27, 1903, Newton, pp. 285 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_283"></a><a href="#FNanchor_283"><span class=
+"label">[283]</span></a>Lansdowne to Monson, Dec. 11, 1903,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 333 f., No. 380. It was evident that in view of
+the monopolistic tendencies of the French, British trade in Morocco
+would practically cease at the end of the time limit (Cromer to
+Lansdowne, Dec. 11, 1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 332 f., No. 379).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_284"></a><a href="#FNanchor_284"><span class=
+"label">[284]</span></a>Lansdowne to Monson, Jan. 13, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 338, No. 384; Cromer to Lansdowne, Dec. 11, 1903,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 332, No. 379.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_285"></a><a href="#FNanchor_285"><span class=
+"label">[285]</span></a>Quoted in <em>Quest. dipl. et col.</em>,
+Dec. 1, 1903, p. 821.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_286"></a><a href="#FNanchor_286"><span class=
+"label">[286]</span></a>Delcassé had received the hint from
+Chamberlain (see next reference).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_287"></a><a href="#FNanchor_287"><span class=
+"label">[287]</span></a>Lansdowne to Scott, July 29, Aug. 12, 1903,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 212 f., Nos. 242 f. In September, Lansdowne
+wrote in a memorandum for the cabinet as follows: “A good
+understanding with France would not improbably be the precursor of
+a better understanding with Russia” (Lee, II, 246). In July,
+Lansdowne also sought the co-operation of the United States in
+checking Russia in the Far East (Dennis, <em>Adventures in American
+Diplomacy</em>, p. 359).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_288"></a><a href="#FNanchor_288"><span class=
+"label">[288]</span></a>Mallet to Spring Rice, Oct. 26, 1903,
+Gwynn, <em>Letters and Friendships of Sir Cecil Spring Rice</em>,
+I, 366 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_289"></a><a href="#FNanchor_289"><span class=
+"label">[289]</span></a>Lansdowne to MacDonald, July 3, 13, 1903,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 206 ff., Nos. 237 f., and the following
+documents. See MacDonald to Lansdowne, Sept. 4, Oct. 1, 1903,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 214 ff., Nos. 246, 248; Alfred von Hedenström,
+<em>Geschichte Russlands von 1878 bis 1918</em> (Stuttgart and
+Berlin, 1922), p. 170; <em>Cambridge History of British Foreign
+Policy</em>, III, 324 f.; Langer, pp. 312 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_290"></a><a href="#FNanchor_290"><span class=
+"label">[290]</span></a><em>B.D.</em>, IV, 621; memo. respecting
+Russia and Afghanistan, Oct. 14, 1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 518 f., No.
+465; memo. on Russo-Afghan relations, Oct. 11, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 519 f., No. 466; Hardinge to Lansdowne, Nov. 22,
+1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 194, No. 181 (<em>b</em>). There was also
+trouble over Tibet and the Persian Gulf (see Newton, p. 287).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_291"></a><a href="#FNanchor_291"><span class=
+"label">[291]</span></a>Lansdowne to Monson, Oct. 26, 1903,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 217 f., No. 250.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_292"></a><a href="#FNanchor_292"><span class=
+"label">[292]</span></a>Lansdowne to Monson, Nov. 4, 1903,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 221 f., No. 257.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_293"></a><a href="#FNanchor_293"><span class=
+"label">[293]</span></a>Spring Rice to Grey, Feb. 12, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, IV, 224, No. 209; Bülow to F. O., Oct. 31, 1903,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XVIII, 853, No. 5918.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_294"></a><a href="#FNanchor_294"><span class=
+"label">[294]</span></a>Lansdowne to Spring Rice, Nov. 7, 1903,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 222 ff., No. 258.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_295"></a><a href="#FNanchor_295"><span class=
+"label">[295]</span></a>Lansdowne to Spring Rice, Nov. 7, 17, 25,
+1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 222 ff., No. 258; IV, 183 ff., Nos. 181 f.;
+306 f., No. 289; Scott to Lansdowne, Dec. 22, 1903, <em>ibid.</em>,
+II, 226, No. 262; Lee, II, 280 f.; Lansdowne to Cromer, Dec. 7,
+1903, Newton, p. 287.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_296"></a><a href="#FNanchor_296"><span class=
+"label">[296]</span></a>Lansdowne to Monson, Dec. 11, 1903,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 224, No. 259.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_297"></a><a href="#FNanchor_297"><span class=
+"label">[297]</span></a>In Dec., 1903, Delcassé informed the
+Japanese Minister in Paris that he did not approve of all of
+Russia’s designs in the Far East (Dennis, p. 385). Hayashi,
+Japanese minister in London, believed as early as Dec. 23 that
+France would remain neutral. See Eckardstein, III, 62, 188; see
+also Metternich to F. O., Jan. 8, 1904, <em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 20 f.,
+No. 5931; memo. by Eckardstein, Jan. 17, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 38
+ff., No. 5945; Langer, p. 317; Bülow to William II, Jan. 12, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 26, No. 5936.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_298"></a><a href="#FNanchor_298"><span class=
+"label">[298]</span></a>Lee, II, 282; Langer, pp. 316 f.; Dennis,
+chap. xiii. However, as late as Nov. 4, 1903, Lansdowne did not
+expect war, nor did Sir Charles Hardinge as late as Dec. 25. By
+Jan. 5, the latter did (Gwynn, I, 391 f.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_299"></a><a href="#FNanchor_299"><span class=
+"label">[299]</span></a>Cambon to Lansdowne, Dec. 27, 1903,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 336, No. 382; and the following documents,
+particularly the dispatch from Lansdowne to Monson, Jan. 18, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 339, No. 386. The British were also surprised to
+learn early in January that Delcassé had kept his colleagues in the
+dark concerning the details of the arrangement, and feared some
+trouble on that account. It seems that as late as March 2 Delcassé
+had not consulted the French Colonial Minister (Lansdowne to
+Cromer, Jan. 5, 1904, Monson to Lansdowne, Jan. 8, 1904, Newton,
+pp. 287 ff.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_300"></a><a href="#FNanchor_300"><span class=
+"label">[300]</span></a><em>Ibid.</em>, p. 307.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_301"></a><a href="#FNanchor_301"><span class=
+"label">[301]</span></a><em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 89 f., editor’s note,
+and the documents in <em>G.P.</em>, Vol. XIX, chap. cxxix; Gwynn,
+I, 391.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_302"></a><a href="#FNanchor_302"><span class=
+"label">[302]</span></a>Spring Rice to Ferguson, Feb. 4, 1904,
+Spring Rice to Roosevelt (no date given, though written in Feb. or
+March, 1904), Gwynn, I, 392 ff.; Sternburg to F. O., March 21,
+1904, <em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 112, No. 5992. See also the dispatch from
+Alvensleben to Bülow, Dec. 20, 1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 18, No. 5929.
+Sir Charles Dilke summed up the danger of the situation as follows:
+“If Germany were to declare war on Japan, Great Britain would be
+forced by her treaty engagement to declare war on Russia and
+Germany; and France, it is understood, to declare war upon Great
+Britain and Japan” (Dilke, “The War in the Far East,” <em>North
+American Review</em>, April, 1904, quoted in Dennett, p. 94).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_303"></a><a href="#FNanchor_303"><span class=
+"label">[303]</span></a>Lansdowne to Monson, Feb. 17, 1904,
+<em>B.D.</em>, V, 67 f., and following documents.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_304"></a><a href="#FNanchor_304"><span class=
+"label">[304]</span></a>Lansdowne to Monson, Feb. 25, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, II, 346, No. 391, and following documents; on March
+1, King Edward wrote to Balfour strongly advising in favor of the
+territorial sacrifice asked by the French on the Newfoundland
+question, for, he wrote, “<em>more than ever now</em> [in italics
+in the original] we must leave no bone of contention between
+ourselves and the French Government” (Lee, II, 248). See also
+Holstein’s keen analysis of the situation on Jan. 23, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 48 ff., No. 5951. Cromer also urged his
+government to make concessions (Newton, p. 289).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_305"></a><a href="#FNanchor_305"><span class=
+"label">[305]</span></a>Tardieu, <em>La France et les
+alliances</em>, p. 23; E. J. Dillon, <em>The Eclipse of Russia</em>
+(New York, 1918), pp. 330 ff.; Eckardstein, III, 57 ff., 187 ff.;
+Crozier, pp. 282 f.; Mévil, <em>De la paix de Francfort, etc.</em>,
+pp. 83 ff.; Radolin to F. O., Feb. 11, 1904, <em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 60
+f., No. 5960.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_306"></a><a href="#FNanchor_306"><span class=
+"label">[306]</span></a>Mévil, p. 82.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_307"></a><a href="#FNanchor_307"><span class=
+"label">[307]</span></a>For an illustration of that optimism see
+Nicholas II to William II, Jan. 24, 1904, <em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 53,
+No. 5952.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_308"></a><a href="#FNanchor_308"><span class=
+"label">[308]</span></a>Lansdowne to Scott, Jan. 19, 1904,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 237, No. 280; Lansdowne to Monson, Jan. 27,
+1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 240, No. 283.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_309"></a><a href="#FNanchor_309"><span class=
+"label">[309]</span></a>In July, 1905, Spring Rice reported to his
+friend Roosevelt a conversation which he had recently had with
+Lansdowne, as follows: “In speaking in general terms of our
+relations with Japan, he [Lansdowne] pointed out that from the very
+first our political interest had been to prevent the war [between
+Russia and Japan] which would not only expose us to great dangers
+of loss in Asia itself, but would seriously imperil our good
+understanding with France. . . . .” Then after explaining why Great
+Britain refused to press Japan to maintain peace, he continued: “As
+a result we all but lost our agreement with France” . . . .
+(Dennett, pp. 213 f.). Cf. Eckardstein to Schwabach, Feb. 10, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 60, No. 5959. Spring Rice’s assertion was no
+doubt exaggerated in order to prove to Roosevelt that Great Britain
+really desired peace between Russia and Japan.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_310"></a><a href="#FNanchor_310"><span class=
+"label">[310]</span></a>See Radolin to Bülow, March 15, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XX, 3 f., No. 6366.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_311"></a><a href="#FNanchor_311"><span class=
+"label">[311]</span></a>See Lansdowne to Monson, March 1, 1904,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 347, No. 393, and following documents.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_312"></a><a href="#FNanchor_312"><span class=
+"label">[312]</span></a>See Monson to Lansdowne, March 30, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 357, No. 405; Lansdowne to Monson, March 30, 31,
+1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 358, No. 406; 359 f., No. 408; Newton, pp.
+289 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_313"></a><a href="#FNanchor_313"><span class=
+"label">[313]</span></a>The first two articles were kept secret at
+Delcassé’s desire; the next two for obvious reasons.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_314"></a><a href="#FNanchor_314"><span class=
+"label">[314]</span></a>Ministère des Affaires Etrangères,
+<em>Documents diplomatiques. Accords conclus, le 8 avril, 1904,
+entre la France et l’Angleterre au sujet du Maroc, de l’Egypte, de
+Terre-Neuve, etc.</em> (Paris, 1904); <em>Parliamentary Papers.
+Declaration between the United Kingdom and France Respecting Egypt
+and Morocco, together with the Secret Articles Signed at the Same
+Time. Signed at London, April 8, 1904</em> (Cd. 5969), Vol. CIII
+(1911); <em>B.D.</em>, II, 373 ff., No. 417. The secret articles
+were first revealed in 1911.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_315"></a><a href="#FNanchor_315"><span class=
+"label">[315]</span></a>On the reaction of the British people to
+the accord see Spender, <em>Life, Journalism and Politics</em>, I,
+188 ff.; <em>London Times</em>, April 12 and 14, 1904;
+<em>Spectator</em>, quoted in Schulthess, <em>Europäischer
+Geschichtskalendar 1904</em>, p. 223. For the debates in the
+British Parliament see 4 Hansard, Vol. CXXXV, cols. 502 ff. Adverse
+opinion was expressed by Lord Rosebery, the <em>Daily
+Chronicle</em>, the <em>Morning Post</em>, and Mr. Aflalo who had
+lived in Morocco and was particularly interested in the fate of the
+land; but their voices were lost in the general applause
+(Metternich to Bülow, April 9, 1904, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 13 f., No.
+6375).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_316"></a><a href="#FNanchor_316"><span class=
+"label">[316]</span></a><em>Bulletin</em>, April, 1904, p. 107:
+Millet, <em>Notre politique extérieure 1898-1905</em>, pp. 168,
+173. Millet was a follower of Hanotaux, Delcassé’s predecessor at
+the foreign office, and a consistent critic of the latter.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_317"></a><a href="#FNanchor_317"><span class=
+"label">[317]</span></a>Count de Montferrand, who in company with
+M. Cambon talked with Sanderson about the Newfoundland question,
+remarked that “if M. Delcassé was not able to inform the French
+Chambers that they had secured this right, the Convention would be
+rejected” (memo. by Sanderson, June 30, 1904, <em>B.D.</em>, III,
+6, No. 5; see <em>ibid.</em>, chap. xvi, Part I).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_318"></a><a href="#FNanchor_318"><span class=
+"label">[318]</span></a>See below.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_319"></a><a href="#FNanchor_319"><span class=
+"label">[319]</span></a>For a summary see the article by
+Louis-Jaray, “L’Accord entre la France et l’Angleterre. L’Opinion
+publique et le rapprochement franco-anglais,” <em>Quest. dipl. et
+col.</em>, XVIII (Nov. 16, 1904), 593 ff. The debates in the
+Chamber, Nov. 3-10, 1904, and in the Senate, Dec. 5-7, 1904, are to
+be found in the <em>Journal officiel, Debats. parlem.</em>
+(Chambre), pp. 2255 ff.; <em>ibid.</em> (Sénat), pp. 1013 ff. See
+also Monson’s reports to Lansdowne, Nov. 9, Dec. 8, 1904,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 11 ff., Nos. 8 ff.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap">
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span><a id=
+"c07"></a>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+
+<p class="sch1">ANGLO-RUSSIAN RELATIONS AFTER THE MAKING OF THE
+ENTENTE CORDIALE</p>
+
+<p>After the Russo-Japanese War began, the British and Russian
+governments decided that for the present nothing further could be
+done toward an understanding.<a id="FNanchor_320"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_320" class="fnanchor">[320]</a> Russian anger was
+directed as much against Great Britain as against Japan for having
+caused the conflict;<a id="FNanchor_321"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_321" class="fnanchor">[321]</a> while Great Britain
+could hardly jeopardize her alliance with Japan by coming to a
+settlement with the latter’s enemy. A few days after the signing of
+the Anglo-French agreement, King Edward tried to revive the
+negotiations in a talk at Copenhagen with M. Iswolski, Russian
+minister at the capital. When Count Benckendorff mentioned the
+King’s conversation to Lord Lansdowne, the latter reiterated his
+former opinion, adding that in the meantime the two governments
+should so handle any differences which might arise as to permit the
+renewal of the discussions for an agreement after the conclusion of
+the war.<a id="FNanchor_322"></a><a href="#Footnote_322" class=
+"fnanchor">[322]</a></p>
+
+<p>This suggestion was acted upon, for, even apart from other
+reasons, Count Lamsdorff wished to hold Great Britain to the
+strictest neutrality during the war with the lure of an
+understanding. The British government assured him of its neutral
+intentions.<a id="FNanchor_323"></a><a href="#Footnote_323" class=
+"fnanchor">[323]</a><span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_111">[111]</span> King Edward cultivated assiduously the
+friendship of the Czar during the next months.<a id=
+"FNanchor_324"></a><a href="#Footnote_324" class=
+"fnanchor">[324]</a> Early in June the British government gave
+reassurances about its policy toward Tibet, in return for which the
+Russian government approved the Khedivial decree putting into
+execution the reforms in Egypt foreseen in the Anglo-French
+declaration.<a id="FNanchor_325"></a><a href="#Footnote_325" class=
+"fnanchor">[325]</a> Fraught with more danger was the possibility
+that Russia might send her Black Sea fleet through the straits.
+Lord Lansdowne warned her that that act “could not be tolerated by
+this country,” that it “might render conflict inevitable.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_326"></a><a href="#Footnote_326" class=
+"fnanchor">[326]</a> So the fleet was never sent. In spite of
+British protests, however, Russia dispatched several vessels
+belonging to the volunteer fleet through the Dardanelles and the
+Bosphorus. When, in July and August, two of these ships seized some
+British merchant vessels suspected of carrying contraband, British
+public opinion demanded that the government defend British
+commerce. When Lord Lansdowne expressed indignation at the
+depredations, the Russian government immediately agreed to a
+conciliatory settlement.<a id="FNanchor_327"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_327" class="fnanchor">[327]</a> In September the Russian
+government objected strongly to the terms of the recent
+Anglo-Tibetan Treaty, but without avail. Being in no position to
+follow up that protest, it had to acquiesce in the British
+action.<a id="FNanchor_328"></a><a href="#Footnote_328" class=
+"fnanchor">[328]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[112]</span>In October the
+two countries came dangerously close to war over the Dogger Bank
+affair. The Russian Baltic fleet, a makeshift, heterogeneous
+collection of vessels, was on its way to the war zone. While
+passing through the North Sea, it shot into a British fishing fleet
+off the Dogger Bank in the night of October 21, sinking one vessel
+and damaging others, killing two men and wounding members of the
+crews. The Russian fleet thought that it had fired at two Japanese
+torpedo boats, and continued its voyage without stopping to see
+what damage it had inflicted. The previous mishandling of British
+merchant ships by the Russians had already so irritated the British
+nation that it became incensed at this latest act. Public opinion
+was bellicose. Sir Charles Hardinge, British ambassador at St.
+Petersburg, described the fleet’s conduct to Count Lamsdorff as “an
+unqualified and brutal outrage.” The British government demanded a
+full investigation, punishment of those culpable, “ample apology
+and complete and prompt reparation as well as security against the
+recurrence of such intolerable incidents.” “The matter is one which
+admits of no delay,” asserted Lord Lansdowne to the Russian
+Ambassador; “if an attempt were made to fence with the question,
+public feeling here would become uncontrollable.” Unless prompt
+action were taken by the Russian government, he continued, “we
+should certainly be obliged to take our own measures for guarding
+against a repetition of these acts.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_329"></a><a href="#Footnote_329" class=
+"fnanchor">[329]</a> The British admiralty mobilized the fleets at
+Portland and at Malta, rushed reinforcements to the fleet at
+Gibraltar, and advised the commander there that “it may become
+necessary for you to stop the Baltic Fleet, by persuasion if
+possible, but by force if necessary.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_330"></a><a href="#Footnote_330" class=
+"fnanchor">[330]</a></p>
+
+<p>This energetic procedure brought immediate results. The Russian
+government agreed quickly to the British demands. With the help of
+French mediation, the crisis passed within a week, and<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_113">[113]</span> the final settlement was left
+to international arbitration. But on October 29 Lord Lansdowne
+warned the Russian Ambassador as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>I owned . . . . that I lived in dread of new troubles arising. .
+. . . It had not been without the greatest difficulty that we had
+avoided a conflict. . . . . I would not, in these circumstances,
+dwell upon the results of a repetition of the North Sea
+incident.</p>
+
+<p>There was however another peril against which it was our duty to
+guard. . . . . If, during its [the Russian fleet’s] long voyage,
+the Russian captains considered themselves justified in the
+wholesale seizure of vessels suspected of carrying contraband,
+public feeling in this country would become uncontrollable.<a id=
+"FNanchor_331"></a><a href="#Footnote_331" class=
+"fnanchor">[331]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">A few days later the British Foreign Secretary
+again warned the Ambassador, somewhat more mildly to be sure,
+against permitting two particularly predatory ships of the
+volunteer fleet which had just been added to the Russian fleet
+itself to prey on neutral commerce.<a id=
+"FNanchor_332"></a><a href="#Footnote_332" class=
+"fnanchor">[332]</a> No more trouble arose.</p>
+
+<p>After events of this kind, an Anglo-Russian
+<em>rapprochement</em> seemed far off. The British and Russian
+presses were at each other’s throats. On December 2 Sir Charles
+Hardinge reported his French colleague’s views as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>He [M. Bompard] impressed upon me that the attitude of His
+Majesty’s Government during the next year when the conditions of
+peace would be under discussion would be decisive of the relations
+between England and Russia for the next twenty five years. Thanks
+to the Japanese war the German Government were only now recovering
+the position which they had lost at the congress of Berlin. If His
+Majesty’s Government continued to maintain the same strained
+relations during the forthcoming year as in the past twelve months
+there would be no prospect of a rapprochement between the two
+countries for another generation. He begged me to remember that the
+many incidents which had occurred had redounded solely to the
+advantage of the German Emperor who now had a position at the
+Russian Court which a year ago would have been regarded as
+impossible.<a id="FNanchor_333"></a><a href="#Footnote_333" class=
+"fnanchor">[333]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[114]</span>In
+the next month M. Delcassé urged upon the British Ambassador the
+desirability of an Anglo-Russian <em>rapprochement</em> and asked
+about the possibility of bringing Italy also into new quadruple
+grouping.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Lansdowne saw no reason why a permanent understanding with
+Russia should be impossible, but he pointed out the difficulty.
+“The Russian diplomatic currency has become debased and
+discredited,” he wrote to the Ambassador at Paris, “and it will not
+be easy to restore it to its face value.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_334"></a><a href="#Footnote_334" class=
+"fnanchor">[334]</a> None the less he hardly needed the French
+warning and advice, for he had already been acting in accordance
+with them. The British government had shown as much consideration
+for Russian feeling in the Dogger Bank affair as circumstances
+permitted. In February of the next year it tried to reach accord on
+the Afghan question, but Count Lamsdorff was too much occupied with
+other matters.<a id="FNanchor_335"></a><a href="#Footnote_335"
+class="fnanchor">[335]</a> Great Britain could well afford to be
+friendly since the Japanese victories were so eminently
+satisfactory to her. Moreover, she wanted no war, for, apart from
+her aversion to war as such, she feared what Germany might do in
+case of one.<a id="FNanchor_336"></a><a href="#Footnote_336" class=
+"fnanchor">[336]</a> Rumors of a Russo-German treaty were already
+abroad and spread rapidly toward the end of 1904.<a id=
+"FNanchor_337"></a><a href="#Footnote_337" class=
+"fnanchor">[337]</a> British public opinion was becoming more
+mistrustful of Germany than of Russia. Having regarded the growing
+German navy, so near at hand in the North Sea, as a distinct menace
+for over a year, it now feared<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_115">[115]</span> that Germany might try a sudden descent
+upon the English coast.<a id="FNanchor_338"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_338" class="fnanchor">[338]</a> The British government
+viewed the situation more sanely, but it appreciated the danger of
+the German navy. As Mr. Spring Rice, first secretary of the British
+embassy in St. Petersburg, had written to his friend, President
+Roosevelt, in the summer of 1904:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>We are trying our best to come to some sort of understanding
+with Russia (when the war is over), so as to put an end to the
+continual régime of panic in India, Persia, etc. The reason we are
+doing so is that with the establishment of a strong German navy on
+our flanks we cannot afford to have a life-and-death struggle in
+Asia and the Far East. Germany is rapidly acquiring a very strong
+position in Russia. . . . . In any case, if we were at war with
+Russia, Germany would either take Russia’s side, or exact very hard
+terms from us for her neutrality. The German fleet has really
+revolutionized politics.<a id="FNanchor_339"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_339" class="fnanchor">[339]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">In August, 1904, Sir John Fisher, first sea lord of
+the British admiralty, had warned the government that “‘instant
+readiness for war’ was imperative, . . . . unless naval reforms
+were ‘ruthless and remorseless, . . . . we may as well pack up and
+hand over to Germany.’”<a id="FNanchor_340"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_340" class="fnanchor">[340]</a> In accordance with his
+recommendation, the British government reorganized and
+redistributed its fleet late in 1904 in such a way as to
+concentrate the main strength in home waters. And at the close of
+the year, when the German statesmen expressed fears of a British
+attack on their country, Lord Lansdowne wrote to Sir Frank
+Lascelles:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>They cannot seriously believe that we are meditating a coup
+against them. Are they perchance meditating one against us and are
+they seeking to justify it in advance? All this talk about one
+driving them to lean towards Russia looks a little like it.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[116]</span>The
+knowledge gained early in 1905, that Germany was making approaches
+not only to Russia and the United States but to Japan as well,
+augmented British mistrust of her policy.<a id=
+"FNanchor_341"></a><a href="#Footnote_341" class=
+"fnanchor">[341]</a></p>
+
+<p>The pressure of events and the insistence of such men as King
+Edward, Admiral Fisher, and others were completing the change of
+policy which Great Britain had been making since 1901. Great
+Britain had abandoned her policy of splendid isolation; she was
+more and more taking an active share in European international
+relations and assuming a definite position in the Continental
+system of alliances.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes" id="ftc07">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_320"></a><a href="#FNanchor_320"><span class=
+"label">[320]</span></a>Lansdowne to Spring Rice, April 22, 1904,
+<em>B.D.</em>, IV, 188 f., No. 183. The breakdown of the
+negotiations as a result of the war had been anticipated early in
+January by Sir Charles Hardinge (Gwynn, <em>The Letters and
+Friendships of Sir Cecil Spring Rice</em>, I, 392).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_321"></a><a href="#FNanchor_321"><span class=
+"label">[321]</span></a>Hardinge to Lansdowne, June 8, 1904,
+<em>B.D.</em>, IV, 194 f., No. 188; Radolin to Bülow, Feb. 28,
+1904, <em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 165 ff., No. 6028, and following
+documents; Lansdowne to Scott, March 4, 1904, <em>B.D.</em>, V, 73;
+Spring Rice to Ferguson, March 2, 1904, Gwynn, I, 403 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_322"></a><a href="#FNanchor_322"><span class=
+"label">[322]</span></a>Lee, <em>King Edward VII</em>, II, 283 ff.;
+Lansdowne to Spring Rice, May 4, 1904, <em>B.D.</em>, IV, 189 f.,
+No. 184, and following documents; Savinsky, <em>Recollections of a
+Russian Diplomat</em>, pp. 90 f.; Crozier, <em>Revue de
+France</em>, April 1, 1921, pp. 275 ff.; Newton, <em>Lord
+Lansdowne</em>, pp. 307 ff.; cf. <em>ibid.</em>, pp. 243 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_323"></a><a href="#FNanchor_323"><span class=
+"label">[323]</span></a>Hardinge to Lansdowne, June 8, 1904,
+<em>B.D.</em>, IV, 194 f., No. 188; Newton, pp. 310 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_324"></a><a href="#FNanchor_324"><span class=
+"label">[324]</span></a>Lee, II, 287 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_325"></a><a href="#FNanchor_325"><span class=
+"label">[325]</span></a>Lansdowne to Spring Rice, May 4, 10, 1904,
+<em>B.D.</em>, IV, 189 f., No. 184; 307 ff., No. 291; Hardinge to
+Lansdowne, May 18, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 190, No. 185; Monson to
+Lansdowne May 27, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 193, No. 186.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_326"></a><a href="#FNanchor_326"><span class=
+"label">[326]</span></a>Lansdowne to Monson, April 29, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, II, 401; Lansdowne to O’Conor, June 7, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, IV, 51, No. 46; Metternich to F. O., Aug. 18, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 240, No. 6070.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_327"></a><a href="#FNanchor_327"><span class=
+"label">[327]</span></a><em>B.D.</em>, Vol. IV, chap. xxiii, Part
+III; <em>G.P.</em>, Vol. XIX, chap. cxxxii; Newton, pp. 313 ff.;
+Gwynn, I, 424 f. King Edward was in favor of showing to Germany,
+whose commerce was also being molested by those ships, a mark of
+friendship by co-operating with her in handling the matter with
+Russia. Lansdowne disapproved the idea (Lee, II, 297 f.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_328"></a><a href="#FNanchor_328"><span class=
+"label">[328]</span></a>Hardinge to Lansdowne, Sept. 23, 1904,
+<em>B.D.</em>, IV, 317, No. 299; Lansdowne to Hardinge, Sept. 27,
+1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 319 f., No. 301.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_329"></a><a href="#FNanchor_329"><span class=
+"label">[329]</span></a>Lansdowne to Hardinge, Oct. 24 and 25,
+1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 6, No. 6; 7 f., No. 8; 10 f., No. 12;
+Hardinge to Lansdowne, Oct. 24, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 7, No. 7.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_330"></a><a href="#FNanchor_330"><span class=
+"label">[330]</span></a>Admiralty to F. O., Oct. 28, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 18 f., No. 19 and inclosures.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_331"></a><a href="#FNanchor_331"><span class=
+"label">[331]</span></a>Lansdowne to Hardinge, Oct. 29, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 23 f., No. 23.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_332"></a><a href="#FNanchor_332"><span class=
+"label">[332]</span></a>Lansdowne to Hardinge, Nov. 3, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 55, No. 52. On the Dogger Bank affair see
+<em>ibid.</em>, chap. xxiii, Part 11; <em>G.P.</em>, Vol. XIX,
+chap. cxxxiv; Lee, II, 301 ff.; Newton, pp. 315 ff.; Gwynn, I, 432
+f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_333"></a><a href="#FNanchor_333"><span class=
+"label">[333]</span></a>Hardinge to Lansdowne, Dec. 2, 1904,
+<em>B.D.</em>, IV, 66 f., No. 58.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_334"></a><a href="#FNanchor_334"><span class=
+"label">[334]</span></a>Newton, pp. 339 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_335"></a><a href="#FNanchor_335"><span class=
+"label">[335]</span></a>Lansdowne to Benckendorff, Feb. 17, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, IV, 520 f., No. 466<em>a</em>; Lansdowne to
+Hardinge, March 8, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 521, No.
+466<em>b</em>.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_336"></a><a href="#FNanchor_336"><span class=
+"label">[336]</span></a>On Nov. 5, 1904, Spring Rice wrote to
+Roosevelt as follows: “Emperor William has got the ear of the
+Emperor here. . . . . It is plain that Germany naturally enough
+wants to see Russia have a free hand in Asia and hopes in exchange
+to have one in Europe; that if England could be engaged in a war
+with Russia which would require her fleet to be absent in the East,
+the German fleet, especially if France would come in, would have a
+good chance for a sudden descent on England” (quoted in Dennett,
+<em>Roosevelt and the Russo-Japanese War</em>, pp. 73 f.; see also
+Gwynn, I, 414 ff., 436, 438 ff.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_337"></a><a href="#FNanchor_337"><span class=
+"label">[337]</span></a>Lascelles to Lansdowne, Sept. 23, 1904,
+<em>B.D.</em>, IV, 4 f., No. 4; Gwynn, I, 427 f.; see also
+below.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_338"></a><a href="#FNanchor_338"><span class=
+"label">[338]</span></a>Bernadotte Everly Schmitt, <em>England and
+Germany, 1740-1914</em> (Princeton, 1916), p. 180; <em>G.P.</em>,
+Vol. XIX, chap. cxxxvi. Balfour denied in the House of Commons that
+an attack was likely or would succeed if it were made. But the
+British fear continued. See 4 Hansard, Vol. CXLII (March 7, 1907),
+col. 595; Vol. CXLVI (May 11, 1905), cols. 72 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_339"></a><a href="#FNanchor_339"><span class=
+"label">[339]</span></a>Dennett, pp. 152 f.; Gwynn, I, 422 f. The
+letter was a reply to one from Roosevelt dated June 13, 1904. The
+approximate date given by Dennett is incorrect.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_340"></a><a href="#FNanchor_340"><span class=
+"label">[340]</span></a>Fisher to Knollys, Aug. 19, 1904, Lee, II,
+328.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_341"></a><a href="#FNanchor_341"><span class=
+"label">[341]</span></a>Newton, p. 332.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap">
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[117]</span><a id=
+"c08"></a>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+
+<p class="sch1">FRENCH POLICY AFTER THE MAKING OF THE ENTENTE
+CORDIALE</p>
+
+<p>As friend of Great Britain and ally of Russia, France was in an
+uneasy situation after the outbreak of the Russo-Japanese War.
+Hostility between those two Powers was increasing. Thereby the
+influence of Germany in St. Petersburg was greatly augmented, and
+Germany was assiduously courting Russia. M. Delcassé had to show
+enough sympathy and give enough help to Russia to prevent Germany
+from usurping France’s position at St. Petersburg and at the same
+time hold to the Anglo-French entente.</p>
+
+<p>The task did not prove to be unduly arduous, for Russia did not
+require much of her ally. M. Delcassé sought to maintain harmony
+between Great Britain and Russia by helping them settle their
+disputes.<a id="FNanchor_342"></a><a href="#Footnote_342" class=
+"fnanchor">[342]</a> He also did what favors he could for Russia,
+such as permitting the Russian Baltic fleet to use French ports on
+the way to the Far East. But otherwise he left Russia to her own
+resources and devoted himself to other tasks.</p>
+
+<p>The Anglo-French accord did not complete M. Delcassé’s work of
+establishing France’s right to preponderance in Morocco and of
+elevating her position in Europe, but it made the completion
+possible. The Foreign Minister still had to negotiate an agreement
+with Spain, to exclude Germany from the Moroccan settlement, and to
+execute the policy of pacific penetration in the<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_118">[118]</span> Sherifian Empire. During the
+succeeding months he was occupied with these problems.</p>
+
+<h3>I. THE FRANCO-SPANISH AGREEMENT, 1904</h3>
+
+<p>When M. Delcassé, in accordance with Article VIII of the
+Anglo-French declaration, proposed to the Spanish government in
+April, 1904, that they negotiate over the Moroccan question, he
+immediately met with difficulty. Relying upon promises by Lord
+Lansdowne and M. Delcassé, the Spanish government had expected to
+be consulted before the conclusion of the bargain. It therefore
+complained because the negotiations had not been conducted <em>à
+trois</em>.<a id="FNanchor_343"></a><a href="#Footnote_343" class=
+"fnanchor">[343]</a> The Spanish Queen Mother branded the act as an
+“unfriendliness” to Spain, and the Marquis del Muni (M. Leon y
+Castillo), Spanish ambassador at Paris, “clinched his fist in his
+pocket” at the two Powers.<a id="FNanchor_344"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_344" class="fnanchor">[344]</a> When the Cortes met, the
+Liberals took occasion on June 6, 7, and 9, to expose the main
+terms of the Franco-Spanish accord of 1902 which the Conservatives
+had refused to sign, and to accuse that party of having
+inadequately upheld Spain’s interests. As the nation remained
+apathetic, M. Maura, the prime minister, had no difficulty
+in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[119]</span> defending his
+government.<a id="FNanchor_345"></a><a href="#Footnote_345" class=
+"fnanchor">[345]</a> Urged by the British government,<a id=
+"FNanchor_346"></a><a href="#Footnote_346" class=
+"fnanchor">[346]</a> he accepted M. Delcassé’s overture.</p>
+
+<p>The course of the negotiations, which began in April, was a
+rocky one. The Spanish accused the French of being too-hard
+bargainers; the French thought that the other party was too prone
+to alarm.<a id="FNanchor_347"></a><a href="#Footnote_347" class=
+"fnanchor">[347]</a> The Spanish government, ignorant of the secret
+articles in the Anglo-French agreement by which the Spanish sphere
+was already limited,<a id="FNanchor_348"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_348" class="fnanchor">[348]</a> demanded the territorial
+terms which had been informally agreed upon in 1902. But M.
+Delcassé refused to give them, for, he asserted, Spain ought to
+bear her part of the sacrifice which France had had to make to
+Great Britain. Aroused by this reply, the Spanish government
+appealed late in April to the German government for an “active
+expression” of “sympathy . . . . at the opportune moment.” Although
+the German Chancellor was eager to give it,<a id=
+"FNanchor_349"></a><a href="#Footnote_349" class=
+"fnanchor">[349]</a> Spain aimed to use this intimacy merely as a
+threat. While continuing the conversations more or less dilatorily
+with Germany, she asked for and relied chiefly upon the support of
+Great Britain to obtain satisfactory terms with France.</p>
+
+<p>Through Lord Lansdowne’s mediation, M. Delcassé agreed in May to
+extend the Spanish sphere of influence in the north from Melilla to
+the mouth of the Moulouya—a particularly sore spot with the Spanish
+since they owned islands just off this coast—and to expand the
+limits of the Spanish sphere in Southern Morocco. The French
+Minister made these concessions dependent upon<span class="pagenum"
+id="Page_120">[120]</span> Spain’s accepting his other conditions,
+and asserted to the Spanish Ambassador that “he was not prepared to
+prolong the discussion of these details, and his offer was <em>à
+prendre ou à laisser</em>.”<a id="FNanchor_350"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_350" class="fnanchor">[350]</a></p>
+
+<p>This bold speech did not impress the Spanish government, which,
+knowing France’s need for an agreement with it, followed Count
+Bülow’s advice of drawing out the negotiations.<a id=
+"FNanchor_351"></a><a href="#Footnote_351" class=
+"fnanchor">[351]</a> Its views differed from those of M. Delcassé
+in that it desired Spanish control in Tangier, full commercial
+liberty throughout Morocco without any time limit, and the
+publication of the agreement—all of which the French Minister
+refused.<a id="FNanchor_352"></a><a href="#Footnote_352" class=
+"fnanchor">[352]</a> However, by the last of June accord was
+virtually reached, when M. Delcassé brought forth a new condition
+to the effect that Spain should be precluded from taking any action
+in her prospective sphere until the <em>status quo</em> in Morocco
+came to an end.<a id="FNanchor_353"></a><a href="#Footnote_353"
+class="fnanchor">[353]</a></p>
+
+<p>M. Delcassé was confronted with the problem of how to maintain a
+unified Franco-Spanish policy in the peaceful penetration of
+Morocco, how to retain the initiative in that work in French hands,
+how to minimize Spain’s rights in Morocco in favor of France.
+Mistrusting Spain’s competence to handle subject peoples, he wished
+to prevent her from taking any action in her sphere that would
+arouse the Moroccans to a war not only against Spain but also
+against France and thus ruin the work of pacific penetration. He
+feared that Spain might precipitate the liquidation of Morocco so
+as to obtain full control of her area. The<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_121">[121]</span> French policy was to postpone that event
+until a suitable occasion, in the meantime undermining Morocco’s
+integrity and independence while pretending to maintain them. He
+was legally within his rights in taking this line toward Spain, and
+was fortified against British intervention in the latter’s favor,
+because secret Article III of the Anglo-French agreement provided
+that the specified area should come within the sphere of influence
+of Spain and be administered by her “whenever the Sultan ceases to
+exercise authority over it.”<a id="FNanchor_354"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_354" class="fnanchor">[354]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Spanish government, protesting that this proposal would
+reduce its position to that of a subprotectorate, demanded the same
+rights in its sphere of influence as France would enjoy in hers. It
+desired particularly that Tangier be policed by Spanish altogether.
+The Spanish Foreign Minister asserted that Spain was averse to
+disturbing the <em>status quo</em> in Morocco, but he and his
+colleagues suspected that France would never acknowledge a change
+in the political status in Morocco and would thus exclude Spain
+from any share in the land. The Spanish Minister declared that he
+“would not sign an agreement which abandoned Spanish rights,” and
+in complaining to the British government he threatened to “appeal
+to the Powers.”</p>
+
+<p>Lord Lansdowne knew that by “Powers” was meant Germany, who was
+just then showing marked interest in helping Spain in the Moroccan
+affair. Wishing to obviate German intervention, he advised the
+Spanish to make concrete proposals to France concerning ways of
+exercising an influence in the proposed Spanish sphere—for
+instance, as to “the construction of railways and other useful
+works.” He also cautioned Spain against undertaking to police
+Tangier. At the same time he urged M. Delcassé to be more
+conciliatory toward Spain so as to avoid the possibility of
+“international difficulties.”<a id="FNanchor_355"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_355" class="fnanchor">[355]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[122]</span>M. Delcassé was
+willing to permit Spanish participation in the economic development
+of Morocco and also to associate Spanish officials with French ones
+in two of the three ports whose customs revenues were to be
+collected as security for the recent French loan. He refused to
+recede on the other points.<a id="FNanchor_356"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_356" class="fnanchor">[356]</a> This reply so excited
+the Spanish that when M. Delcassé proposed a clause whereby Spain
+would be prohibited from alienating the Moroccan territory over
+which she should have control, the Spanish government rejected it
+as beneath its dignity. It offered instead to give France a right
+of preference in case Spain wished to alienate any or all of that
+area. Lord Lansdowne, who did not want France to gain this
+preferential right, persuaded the Spanish to accept the French
+proposal.<a id="FNanchor_357"></a><a href="#Footnote_357" class=
+"fnanchor">[357]</a></p>
+
+<p>The main issue, however, that of Spain’s independence of action
+in her sphere, remained unsolved. In the middle of July, while
+leaving the impression that the cause of difference was the
+question of full commercial freedom, the Spanish government
+informally asked the German government to give Spain a <em>coup
+d’épaule</em> in Paris. As the German government desired a more
+definite proposal, it did not carry out the request.<a id=
+"FNanchor_358"></a><a href="#Footnote_358" class=
+"fnanchor">[358]</a> Nor was much support to be obtained from Great
+Britain. But as both French and British governments knew of
+Germany’s interest in the negotiations, M. Delcassé, in August,
+agreed to restrict Spain’s action for fifteen years only.<a id=
+"FNanchor_359"></a><a href="#Footnote_359" class=
+"fnanchor">[359]</a> The Spanish government rejected that
+concession, but offered to take no action for that period without
+previous accord with France, provided France recognized that she
+“ought to proceed in accord with the Spanish Government in that
+which touches the zone of influence reserved<span class="pagenum"
+id="Page_123">[123]</span> to Spain.” Lord Lansdowne supported this
+proposal. So while M. Delcassé held to his previous stand, he
+agreed that “France would take no steps within the Spanish Sphere
+without giving previous notice to Spain.” Thus, although the
+Marquis del Muni thought that the two parties had reached a
+deadlock, there was in reality no great difference between the two
+demands. On October 3 the agreement was signed.<a id=
+"FNanchor_360"></a><a href="#Footnote_360" class=
+"fnanchor">[360]</a></p>
+
+<p>The accord consisted of a published declaration and of sixteen
+secret articles. The former merely expressed the fact that Spain
+adhered to the Anglo-French declaration of April 8 concerning
+Morocco and Egypt and that Spain and France were in agreement “to
+fix the extension of their rights and guaranty of their interests”
+in Morocco.<a id="FNanchor_361"></a><a href="#Footnote_361" class=
+"fnanchor">[361]</a> The secret articles were of a far different
+caliber. Spain received as her sphere of influence not only the
+area from the Moulouya to Larache in Northern Morocco but also the
+coastal territory and hinterland extending from her possession Rio
+de Oro northward to the Wad Sus, just south of Agadir. The rest of
+Morocco constituted the French sphere (Arts. II, IV, V). Provision
+for a future change was included.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>In case the political state of Morocco and of the Sherifian
+Government are unable to subsist, or if by the feebleness of the
+Government and by its continued impotence to introduce security and
+public order, or for any other cause to be stated in a common
+accord, the maintenance of the <em>status quo</em> becomes
+impossible, Spain will be permitted freely to exercise her action
+in . . . . her sphere of influence [Art. III].</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">Although the same rights of action were permitted
+to Spain in her sphere as to France in hers, yet for a period of
+not over fifteen years from the date of signing the convention
+Spain was prohibited from taking action in her sphere without
+previous understanding with France. The latter, however, could take
+action unrestricted by Spain in the French zone, and could also act
+in the Spanish zone after having notified Spain of her
+intention.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[124]</span> After
+that first period expired and as long as the <em>status quo</em>
+obtained, France could not act in the Spanish zone without previous
+agreement with Spain (Art. II). By Articles VII and VIII Spain
+agreed not to cede or to alienate in any form any of the territory
+assigned to her or to seek the aid of a foreign Power other than
+France in taking any military action in her sphere of influence.
+Article IX preserved “the special character” of Tangier “which the
+presence of the diplomatic corps and the municipal and sanitary
+institutions give it.” Article X ran as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>So long as the actual political status continues, the
+enterprises for public works, railroads, roads, canals . . . .
+shall be executed by such companies as may be formed by French and
+Spanish. In the same manner it will be permissible for French and
+Spanish in Morocco to co-operate for the exploitation of mines,
+quarries, and, in general, of enterprises of an economic
+order.<a id="FNanchor_362"></a><a href="#Footnote_362" class=
+"fnanchor">[362]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The two Powers immediately communicated the agreement to the
+British government, which accepted it.<a id=
+"FNanchor_363"></a><a href="#Footnote_363" class=
+"fnanchor">[363]</a> The Spanish government thanked both British
+and German governments for their aid during the negotiations, and
+briefly informed the latter that by the treaty Tangier had been
+neutralized and complete equality and freedom of commerce and trade
+had been guaranteed.<a id="FNanchor_364"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_364" class="fnanchor">[364]</a></p>
+
+<p>In Spain the agreement, grudgingly approved by the government as
+the best that it could obtain, was shown by the Premier to the
+various party leaders, and received their indorsement.<a id=
+"FNanchor_365"></a><a href="#Footnote_365" class=
+"fnanchor">[365]</a> M. Delcassé informed none of the French
+politicians of the content of the treaty. During the debates in the
+French Parliament on the Anglo-French accord in November and
+December, however,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[125]</span>
+the Franco-Spanish agreement was also accepted on faith.<a id=
+"FNanchor_366"></a><a href="#Footnote_366" class=
+"fnanchor">[366]</a> The convention was a logical extension of the
+accord of April 8. Both agreements anticipated a change in the
+political status of Morocco and made provisions for a future
+division of the land. The one permitted commercial restriction at
+the end of thirty years; the other arranged for a Franco-Spanish
+monopoly of all economic enterprises. Both accords violated the
+principle of the open door. In fact, had the secret articles of the
+two agreements been known, they would have proved that the clauses
+concerning the independence and integrity of Morocco and the
+sovereignty of the sultan were complete shams. In declaring to the
+other Powers that commercial freedom would be absolutely respected,
+M. Delcassé was equivocating and attempting to disarm suspicions
+concerning his real intention of destroying economic freedom in
+Morocco.<a id="FNanchor_367"></a><a href="#Footnote_367" class=
+"fnanchor">[367]</a></p>
+
+<h3>II. DELCASSÉ AND GERMANY, 1904</h3>
+
+<p>It was manifest during the Anglo-French negotiations that the
+French government planned to prevent Germany from gaining any
+foothold in Morocco or the Western Mediterranean.<a id=
+"FNanchor_368"></a><a href="#Footnote_368" class=
+"fnanchor">[368]</a> Fearing that that Power might try to share in
+the Moroccan settlement when the Anglo-French accord became known,
+M. Delcassé endeavored to avoid a discussion of the agreement with
+it.<a id="FNanchor_369"></a><a href="#Footnote_369" class=
+"fnanchor">[369]</a></p>
+
+<p>When, therefore, on March 23, Prince Radolin asked the French
+Minister an “indiscreet question” about the reported<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_126">[126]</span> Anglo-French negotiations, the
+latter replied that they had been going on for some time and would
+probably be successfully concluded. He said that they treated of
+Newfoundland, Egypt, and Morocco (the other questions he did not
+mention); and he explained the terms of the proposed agreement
+concerning the last-named land. “You know already our point of view
+on this subject. . . . . We wish to maintain in Morocco the
+existing political and territorial status; but that status, to
+endure, must manifestly be sustained and improved.” After citing
+the many occasions for intervention of which France had taken no
+advantage, he stated that the Sultan had already requested French
+aid. “It is now a matter of continuing it to him,” he said, and he
+assured the Prince that commercial liberty would be “rigorously and
+entirely respected. . . . . France wishes no special rights in
+Morocco, but it should be her task in the interest of all nations
+trading there to put an end, according to her power, to the anarchy
+in that land.” Moreover, the free passage through the straits
+should be secured by neutralizing their southern shore. As for
+Spain, her “positive interests and legitimate ambitions” in Morocco
+would be amicably treated. He did not mention either the clause
+limiting commercial freedom to thirty years or Article IX assuring
+mutual diplomatic support in the fulfilment of the accord. And of
+course he gave no hint of the existence of the secret
+articles.<a id="FNanchor_370"></a><a href="#Footnote_370" class=
+"fnanchor">[370]</a></p>
+
+<p>This informal and incomplete notification misrepresented the
+true aims of the agreement with respect to Morocco. M. Delcassé
+expected that by avoiding an official notification of the accord to
+the German government and by omitting to request an expression of
+opinion from it he would cause the German government either to
+permit him a diplomatic victory or to take the<span class="pagenum"
+id="Page_127">[127]</span> initiative for a Franco-German
+understanding.<a id="FNanchor_371"></a><a href="#Footnote_371"
+class="fnanchor">[371]</a> He felt safe in his policy,<a id=
+"FNanchor_372"></a><a href="#Footnote_372" class=
+"fnanchor">[372]</a> because France, in addition to her alliance
+with Russia, whose victory over Japan M. Delcassé and the French
+people confidently expected,<a id="FNanchor_373"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_373" class="fnanchor">[373]</a> now enjoyed with her
+ally’s public approval<a id="FNanchor_374"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_374" class="fnanchor">[374]</a> the friendship of Great
+Britain, Italy, and Spain, whereas the Triple Alliance was weakened
+by internal strife. Moreover, the French Minister learned on March
+30<a id="FNanchor_375"></a><a href="#Footnote_375" class=
+"fnanchor">[375]</a> that at Vigo a few days before the Emperor
+William had denied having any territorial interests in Morocco.
+Hence by shunning the word “protectorate” he hoped to avoid the
+responsibility for endeavoring to establish one.<a id=
+"FNanchor_376"></a><a href="#Footnote_376" class=
+"fnanchor">[376]</a> In October his notification of the
+Franco-Spanish agreement to the German government was even more
+perfunctory.<a id="FNanchor_377"></a><a href="#Footnote_377" class=
+"fnanchor">[377]</a></p>
+
+<h3><span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[128]</span>III. “PACIFIC
+PENETRATION,” 1904</h3>
+
+<p>After the signing of the Anglo-French agreement, the French
+Parliament voted 600,000 francs with which to carry on the work of
+pacific penetration in Morocco.<a id="FNanchor_378"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_378" class="fnanchor">[378]</a> The French government
+immediately dispatched a preliminary mission to Fez under Count de
+Saint-Aulaire, first secretary of the legation in Tangier. The
+Count gave the Sultan an exact Arabic translation of the published
+declaration of April 8; and, after setting forth the need for
+progressive reforms in Morocco and the special interest of France
+in executing them, he offered the friendly co-operation of his
+government to that end.<a id="FNanchor_379"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_379" class="fnanchor">[379]</a> Thus, in spite of the
+persistent Moroccan raids across the Algerian border, the Sultan
+was asked to believe that France was once more manifesting her
+patience and good will.<a id="FNanchor_380"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_380" class="fnanchor">[380]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Sultan scarcely knew what line of policy to take toward the
+Anglo-French agreement.<a id="FNanchor_381"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_381" class="fnanchor">[381]</a> His subjects, from the
+religious groups to the merchants of Fez, were all hostile to any
+form of foreign control. Alarmed at the news of the agreement, they
+feared an immediate invasion by the Christians. Suspecting their
+ruler of conniving with the French, they became even more
+rebellious; many denied that he possessed the <em>baraka</em>, the
+divine<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[129]</span> benediction.
+At court the Conservative party, led by Si Feddoul Gharnet, grew
+stronger in its opposition to all French actions and policies. The
+Sultan realized the precariousness of his position, and was very
+anxious about the effects of his acts upon his people. He was
+uneasy and angry at having been ignored in the negotiations over
+his land. Nevertheless, as he did not comprehend the full
+significance of the accord, particularly since the French had
+explained it to him in soothing terms, he soon became calmer. Some
+of his officials were not opposed to the French, as they realized
+that the present conditions could not last and that the French had
+the power to change them. Furthermore, certain practical
+considerations prevented him from closing his ear to the French
+altogether. His ambition was, with the help of Europeans selected
+by himself, so to strengthen his land as to enable it to maintain
+its independence.<a id="FNanchor_382"></a><a href="#Footnote_382"
+class="fnanchor">[382]</a> The Sultan had no funds; the small
+French, English, and Spanish loans of the previous year were
+exhausted, and he could not collect taxes or maintain an army.
+Forced to seek foreign aid, he had begun negotiations with the
+Banque de Paris et des Pays-Bas for a large loan late in January,
+and had besought the help of the French government in obtaining it.
+M. Delcassé had readily promised his support.<a id=
+"FNanchor_383"></a><a href="#Footnote_383" class=
+"fnanchor">[383]</a></p>
+
+<p>In this situation the Sultan neither accepted nor rejected the
+Anglo-French agreement and Count de Saint-Aulaire’s explanation of
+it although he showed favor toward them.<a id=
+"FNanchor_384"></a><a href="#Footnote_384" class=
+"fnanchor">[384]</a> On June 12<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_130">[130]</span> with the aid of the French government he
+concluded the transaction for the loan.</p>
+
+<p>The loan, made by a consortium of eleven French banks headed by
+the Banque de Paris et des Pays-Bas, fulfilled political as well as
+economic purposes, for it was backed by the French government and
+was admirably adapted to the work of pacific penetration. The
+amount was 62,500,000 francs (Art. I), of which 80 per cent was
+actually to be credited to the Sultan (Art. XXIV). The interest was
+set at 5 per cent (Art. III). The loan was to be redeemed within
+thirty-six years, but the schedule of amortization was fixed and
+could not be hastened during the first fifteen years (Arts. IV,
+VII). The loan, guaranteed by the customs duties in all the ports
+of Morocco, was to have preference and priority over all other
+loans which might be similarly guaranteed (Art. XI). Sixty per cent
+of the customs revenues were reserved for the repayment of the
+obligation. If the necessary amount was not obtained thereby, the
+Moroccan government was to make up the deficit (Art. XVII). Two
+million francs were left in the bank at Paris to cover short
+payments; if withdrawn, this amount was to be re-established
+immediately by the Sultan’s government (Art. XXI). The remainder,
+after the Sultan’s outstanding loans were liquidated, was placed at
+the ruler’s disposal to be drawn upon at will (Arts. XXV, XXXV). By
+Article XIV the existing customs treaties and arrangements of
+Morocco with the Powers were guaranteed. Article XXXII prohibited
+the Sultan from using the customs receipts at his disposal to
+guarantee any other loan without a previous agreement with the
+French banks. By Article XXXIII those banks were given the right of
+preference in contracting new loans, coining money, or buying and
+selling gold and silver for Morocco, provided the conditions they
+offered were equal to those offered by others. The collection of
+the customs was to be supervised by a special group of French
+officials under the protection of the French legation. Their
+director should communicate with the Moroccan government through
+the French Minister at Tangier. Furthermore, if the stipulated
+funds were not turned over to the supervisors, the<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_131">[131]</span> agents could appeal to the
+French Minister; and, with his consent and with due notification to
+the Sultan, they could collect the sums themselves. Thus, when by
+the last of July those officials were installed, the control of the
+customs was practically lost to the Sultan.<a id=
+"FNanchor_385"></a><a href="#Footnote_385" class=
+"fnanchor">[385]</a></p>
+
+<p>In May an act of banditry occurred in Morocco which convinced
+public opinion everywhere that reform in that land was immediately
+necessary and which enabled France to take another step in her work
+of penetration. On May 18, Raisouli, a sherif, ex-cattle thief,
+robber and rebel, avenger of wrongs, opponent to Europeans—in
+short, a Moroccan Robin Hood—took prisoner an American citizen, Ion
+Perdicaris, and his English son-in-law, Varley, in their home near
+Tangier. As the price of their release he demanded a large ransom,
+the dismissal and punishment of certain of the Sultan’s loyal
+officials who were his enemies, and his own appointment as pasha
+for the district around Tangier. The Sultan had to accept his
+terms. On June 24, through the good offices of the French
+government, working through some of its Algerian religious leaders
+with followers in Morocco, the release was effected.<a id=
+"FNanchor_386"></a><a href="#Footnote_386" class=
+"fnanchor">[386]</a> But the panic-stricken foreigners in
+Tangier,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[132]</span> fearing
+that Raisouli would continue such lucrative business and that he
+would have imitators, demanded protection.<a id=
+"FNanchor_387"></a><a href="#Footnote_387" class=
+"fnanchor">[387]</a> Thereupon the French government stationed two
+warships in Moroccan waters and secured the appointment of French
+and Algerian officers over the Tangier police.<a id=
+"FNanchor_388"></a><a href="#Footnote_388" class=
+"fnanchor">[388]</a> The work of “pacific penetration” was most
+auspiciously under way.</p>
+
+<p>Private French enterprise did not lag behind that of the
+government. Moroccan towns swarmed with hungry fortune-seekers
+eager to enjoy the opportunities for quick wealth which the opening
+of Morocco was expected to bring. The Comité du Maroc, formed in
+the preceding December from the ranks of the larger Comité de
+l’Afrique française, engaged energetically in directing and
+expanding the work of scientific exploration in the Sherifian
+Empire and of disseminating propaganda in France.<a id=
+"FNanchor_389"></a><a href="#Footnote_389" class=
+"fnanchor">[389]</a> It received the financial support of the chief
+banks, maritime companies, steel works, railway companies, and some
+of the leading newspapers of France.<a id=
+"FNanchor_390"></a><a href="#Footnote_390" class=
+"fnanchor">[390]</a> The list of guests present at a banquet held
+by it on June 15 to enlist public support reads like a French
+<em>Who’s Who</em>.<a id="FNanchor_391"></a><a href="#Footnote_391"
+class="fnanchor">[391]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[133]</span>In the autumn
+and early winter the French government made preparations to send a
+larger mission to Fez under the resident minister, M. Saint-René
+Taillandier, to obtain the Sultan’s approval of the French program
+of reforms. According to M. Delcassé’s instructions on December
+15,<a id="FNanchor_392"></a><a href="#Footnote_392" class=
+"fnanchor">[392]</a> the Minister’s foremost task should be to
+institute police reforms similar to those inaugurated in Tangier,
+first in the towns already in contact with Europeans and then
+gradually in the other areas. In the border region order should be
+preserved by extending the co-operation of the two governments. The
+establishment of a state bank, the construction of means of
+transportation and of communication, the improvement of harbors,
+the support of philanthropic works, the spread of the French
+language, and the settlement of claims for damages inflicted on
+Algeria by Moroccan raiders were the other matters to be taken up.
+It was a comprehensive program, the achievement of which would end
+Moroccan isolation and independence.</p>
+
+<p>The departure of the mission was delayed by the long
+negotiations for an accord with Spain and by the fact that the
+French Chamber did not approve the Moroccan accords until November.
+When the mission was prepared to start in December, the situation
+in Morocco, apparently favorable for France in the spring, had
+become adverse. The natives had grown bolder in their attacks upon
+foreigners, venting their hatred upon them even in Fez. The Sultan
+had begun to show signs of resisting. In September he had disgraced
+the pro-foreign minister el Menebhi and confiscated his property.
+Later in the year he had supplanted his pro-French ministers by
+anti-foreign ones, such as Si Feddoul Gharnet. In December he had
+dismissed all foreign<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_134">[134]</span> employees at Fez and Rabat.<a id=
+"FNanchor_393"></a><a href="#Footnote_393" class=
+"fnanchor">[393]</a> These signs augured trouble for the French.
+While assuming an optimistic manner publicly, M. Saint-René
+Taillandier acknowledged to his chief on December 12 that he might
+“be powerless to make the Sultan accept the minimum of reforms that
+the present state of Morocco demands.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_394"></a><a href="#Footnote_394" class=
+"fnanchor">[394]</a> But as firmness was the best means to “recall
+the Moroccan government to a sense of reality,”<a id=
+"FNanchor_395"></a><a href="#Footnote_395" class=
+"fnanchor">[395]</a> he immediately countered the dismissal of the
+French officers by a sharply worded letter to the Moroccan Foreign
+Minister. After reminding the latter of the <em>acte
+international</em> by which France had “assumed the task of aiding”
+the Makhzen<a id="FNanchor_396"></a><a href="#Footnote_396" class=
+"fnanchor">[396]</a> to reform the land, he stated that the
+Sultan’s co-operation was expected and desired, but that</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">if that co-operation were not forthcoming, France
+would know how to accomplish the work alone. Dangerous counselors
+[he wrote] have led the Sultan astray as to the true state of
+affairs. And in consequence the French Government has decided to
+postpone the departure of the mission, and to recall to Tangier
+from Fez within ten days the French military mission, vice-consul,
+and all French subjects resident there.<a id=
+"FNanchor_397"></a><a href="#Footnote_397" class=
+"fnanchor">[397]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The Sultan’s opposition wilted immediately. The French
+vice-consul at Fez reported that the Makhzen was “ready to welcome
+all French counsels and to accept all the reforms,” that it
+“withdrew all the actions which have offended us.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_398"></a><a href="#Footnote_398" class=
+"fnanchor">[398]</a> But the Sultan’s submission was not so
+complete as it seemed. Although France was the victor in this
+encounter, the conflict had only begun.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes" id="ftc08">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_342"></a><a href="#FNanchor_342"><span class=
+"label">[342]</span></a>On Oct. 28, 1904, at the height of the
+Dogger Bank crisis, Lansdowne reported the following assertion by
+Cambon: “His Excellency [M. Cambon] said that he did not himself
+know precisely what obligations France had undertaken in virtue of
+that understanding [the Dual Alliance]. He did not however believe
+that if there was a collision, France would join Russia against us,
+but if a collision occurred, and particularly if it were brought on
+by unreasonable demands on our part, there would be a
+<em>revirement</em> of public feeling, and the Anglo-French
+<em>entente</em> could not fail to suffer” (Lansdowne to Monson,
+Oct. 28, 1904, <em>B.D.</em>, IV, 22, No. 21).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_343"></a><a href="#FNanchor_343"><span class=
+"label">[343]</span></a>According to a speech in the Spanish Senate
+on March 21, 1904, by M. Abarzuza, who had been a member of
+Silvela’s cabinet from Dec. 6, 1902, to July 20, 1903, both the
+British and the French governments promised Spain in the first half
+of 1903 not to touch the Moroccan question or to make any
+alterations in North Africa without Spain’s previous knowledge and
+acquiescence. The speech is quoted by Becker, <em>Historia de
+Marruecos</em> (Madrid, 1915), pp. 440 f. See above for Lansdowne’s
+promise. The Spanish government did try to participate in the
+Anglo-French negotiations by way of both London and Paris; but it
+was put off with general assurances of friendship by both Lansdowne
+and Delcassé. See Lansdowne to Durand, Aug. 11, 1903,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 309 f., No. 366; Lansdowne to Monson, Jan. 23,
+1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 341, No. 388; Lansdowne to Egerton, April 11,
+1904, III, 25 f., No. 24; Bülow to F. O., Sept. 18, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 354, No. 5199, and the following documents.
+For expression of Spanish public opinion over the Anglo-French
+accord see the <em>London Times</em>, April 11-16, 1904; Gay,
+<em>España ante el problema del mediterráneo</em>, pp. 31 ff.;
+Maura, <em>La Question du Maroc, etc.</em> (Paris, 1911), pp. 32
+f.; Mousset, <em>La politica exterior de España, 1873-1918</em>
+(Madrid, 1918), pp. 149 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_344"></a><a href="#FNanchor_344"><span class=
+"label">[344]</span></a><em>G.P.</em>, XX, 169 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_345"></a><a href="#FNanchor_345"><span class=
+"label">[345]</span></a>The debates in the Cortes are to be found
+in the <em>Diario de las sesiones de Cortes</em>. Congreso de los
+Diputados (<em>Legislatura de 1903</em>), pp. 4883 ff., 4917 ff.,
+4944 ff., 4959 ff. Also see Maura, pp. 85 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_346"></a><a href="#FNanchor_346"><span class=
+"label">[346]</span></a>Lansdowne to Egerton, April 11, 1904,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 25 f., No. 24; Egerton to Lansdowne, April 11,
+1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 26 f., No. 25.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_347"></a><a href="#FNanchor_347"><span class=
+"label">[347]</span></a>Egerton to Lansdowne, May 6, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 34, No. 35.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_348"></a><a href="#FNanchor_348"><span class=
+"label">[348]</span></a>The British government kept these articles
+secret (Lansdowne to Egerton, April 11, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 25
+f., No. 24).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_349"></a><a href="#FNanchor_349"><span class=
+"label">[349]</span></a>Bülow to Radowitz, April 27, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 169 f., No. 6481, and following documents.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_350"></a><a href="#FNanchor_350"><span class=
+"label">[350]</span></a>Lansdowne to Monson, April 20, 1904,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 29, No. 28, and following documents.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_351"></a><a href="#FNanchor_351"><span class=
+"label">[351]</span></a>Bülow to Radowitz, May 22, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 173 f., No. 6484. Bülow repeated his offer of
+aid on May 31. Bülow to Radowitz, May 31, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 175
+f., No. 6487. The Spanish Ambassador at Paris remarked to Monson
+that if Great Britain did not help Spain the latter “would be done
+out of half her rights in that country [Morocco]” (Monson to
+Lansdowne, May 20, 1904, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 37, No. 41).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_352"></a><a href="#FNanchor_352"><span class=
+"label">[352]</span></a>Romanones, <em>Las responsabilidades
+politicas, etc.</em>, pp. 49 ff.; reports from Madrid, June 15 and
+21, 1904, <em>Zur europ. Politik</em>, I, 121; see also
+<em>G.P.</em>, Vol. XX, chap. cxliv.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_353"></a><a href="#FNanchor_353"><span class=
+"label">[353]</span></a>Egerton to Lansdowne, July 1, 1904,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 38, No. 43; Lansdowne to Egerton, July 2, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 38 f., No. 44.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_354"></a><a href="#FNanchor_354"><span class=
+"label">[354]</span></a><em>Ibid.</em>, II, 393 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_355"></a><a href="#FNanchor_355"><span class=
+"label">[355]</span></a>Egerton to Lansdowne, July 1, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, III, 38, No. 43; Lansdowne to Egerton, July 2, 6,
+1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 38, No. 44; 40, No. 46; Lansdowne to Monson,
+July 4, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 40, No. 45; Leon y Castillo, <em>Mis
+tiempos</em>, II, 182 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_356"></a><a href="#FNanchor_356"><span class=
+"label">[356]</span></a>Lansdowne to Monson July 8, 1904,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 41, No. 47.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_357"></a><a href="#FNanchor_357"><span class=
+"label">[357]</span></a>Lansdowne to Monson, July 29, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 42, No. 49; Lansdowne to Egerton, July 29, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 43, No. 50; Egerton to Lansdowne, July 31, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 44, No. 52.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_358"></a><a href="#FNanchor_358"><span class=
+"label">[358]</span></a>Memo. by Richthofen, July 16, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 186 f., No. 6503; and other documents in
+<em>ibid.</em>, Vol. XX, chap. cxliv.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_359"></a><a href="#FNanchor_359"><span class=
+"label">[359]</span></a>At first Delcassé said thirty years.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_360"></a><a href="#FNanchor_360"><span class=
+"label">[360]</span></a>Egerton to Lansdowne, July 31, 1904,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 44, No. 52, and following documents; also Leon
+y Castillo, II, 183 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_361"></a><a href="#FNanchor_361"><span class=
+"label">[361]</span></a><em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 164, No. 187.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_362"></a><a href="#FNanchor_362"><span class=
+"label">[362]</span></a>The text of the agreement, which became
+public in 1909, is to be found in <em>British and Foreign State
+Papers</em>, CII (London, 1913), 432 ff.; and in <em>B.D.</em>,
+III, 49 ff., No. 59.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_363"></a><a href="#FNanchor_363"><span class=
+"label">[363]</span></a>Lansdowne to Adam, Oct. 5, 1904,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 52, No. 60.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_364"></a><a href="#FNanchor_364"><span class=
+"label">[364]</span></a>Radowitz to F. O., Oct. 7, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 191 f., No. 6509.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_365"></a><a href="#FNanchor_365"><span class=
+"label">[365]</span></a>Maura, p. 54; Radowitz to F. O., Oct. 7,
+1904, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 191 f., No. 6509.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_366"></a><a href="#FNanchor_366"><span class=
+"label">[366]</span></a>Maura, p. 78; Tardieu, <em>Questions
+diplomatiques</em>, 1904, pp. 75 ff.; Millet, <em>Notre politique
+extérieure 1898-1905</em>, pp. 179 ff.; and the French debates
+cited above.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_367"></a><a href="#FNanchor_367"><span class=
+"label">[367]</span></a>For an estimate of this accord see Tardieu,
+<em>Revue des deux mondes</em>, Dec. 1, 1912, pp. 637 ff.; Stuart,
+<em>French Foreign Policy from Fashoda to Serajevo (1898-1914)</em>
+(New York, 1921), pp. 154 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_368"></a><a href="#FNanchor_368"><span class=
+"label">[368]</span></a>See, among others, the dispatch from
+Lansdowne to Monson, Dec. 9, 1903, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 332, No.
+378.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_369"></a><a href="#FNanchor_369"><span class=
+"label">[369]</span></a>Lansdowne to Monson, March 11, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, II, 353, No. 398. One day long after signing the
+accord Radolin remarked to Delcassé that he “had heard of an
+apparent treaty with England but had never read the text of it in
+any authentic form.” The Minister replied that he could find it in
+the <em>Livre jaune</em> (letter from Radolin, apparently to
+Holstein, March 25, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 266 n.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_370"></a><a href="#FNanchor_370"><span class=
+"label">[370]</span></a>In repeating these assertions to the German
+government on April 26 the French Ambassador added that “the
+Anglo-French entente was directed against no other Power and in no
+way menaced the German commercial interests.” See Delcassé to
+Bihourd, March 27, 1904, <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 122, No. 142;
+Radolin to Bülow, March 23, 1904, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 5 ff., No.
+6368; Bihourd to Delcassé, April 27, 1904, <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>,
+131, No. 155.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_371"></a><a href="#FNanchor_371"><span class=
+"label">[371]</span></a>See Bertie to Lansdowne, March 22, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 60, No. 67.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_372"></a><a href="#FNanchor_372"><span class=
+"label">[372]</span></a>Bihourd, the French ambassador at Berlin,
+warned Delcassé in April that Germany had not said her last word on
+the Moroccan question and that more complete guaranties of
+commercial liberty should be given to her; but Delcassé disregarded
+the warning. See Bihourd to Delcassé, April 18, 1904, <em>L.j.,
+1901-5</em>, 128, No. 151; Delcassé to Bihourd, April 18, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 129, No. 152; Bihourd to Delcassé, April 21, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 129 f., No. 153; cf. Lee, <em>King Edward VII</em>,
+II, 338.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_373"></a><a href="#FNanchor_373"><span class=
+"label">[373]</span></a>Michon, <em>L’alliance franco-russe,
+1891-1917</em>, pp. 101 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_374"></a><a href="#FNanchor_374"><span class=
+"label">[374]</span></a>Statement made by Nelidow, Russian
+ambassador to Paris, to a reporter of the <em>Temps</em>, reprinted
+in <em>Quest. dipl. et. col.</em>, XVII, 607 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_375"></a><a href="#FNanchor_375"><span class=
+"label">[375]</span></a>Radolin to Bülow, March 30, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 365, No. 5210.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_376"></a><a href="#FNanchor_376"><span class=
+"label">[376]</span></a>There is some evidence, however, that
+Delcassé did make some vague attempts to approach the German
+government on the Moroccan affair in 1904. Bülow, in a dispatch of
+March 22, 1905, stated that if Delcassé should declare that he had
+discussed Moroccan affairs “thoroughly with German diplomats
+passing through” Paris, Radolin was to reply that those
+conversations were only private ones and showed plainly the
+inclination to avoid the official and proper authorities. See Bülow
+to Radolin, March 22, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, XX, 267, No. 6568.
+Theodor Wolff, at that time Paris correspondent of the <em>Berliner
+Tageblatt</em>, also has written that in the spring of 1904
+Delcassé said to Lichnowsky, an official in the German foreign
+office, that they should come to an understanding over Morocco.
+According to Wolff, Holstein became furious at the dispatch from
+Lichnowsky (Wolff, <em>Das Vorspiel</em>, pp. 154 f.; cf. Ludwig,
+<em>Wilhelm der Zweite</em>, p. 342). Lichnowsky may have been the
+person to whom Bülow referred, although, if any such conversation
+occurred, it was not mentioned later by either the French or the
+Germans.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_377"></a><a href="#FNanchor_377"><span class=
+"label">[377]</span></a>The French Ambassador merely left a copy of
+the published declaration and added verbally that the accord in no
+way infringed upon commercial liberty in Morocco. See Richthofen to
+Radowitz, Oct. 7, 1904, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 191, No. 6508; memo. by
+Richthofen for Bülow, Oct. 7, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 230, No. 6534;
+Delcassé to Bihourd, Oct. 6, 1904, <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 164, No.
+187; Bihourd to Delcassé, Oct. 7, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 166, No.
+190; Delcassé to Bihourd, Oct. 8, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 167 f., No.
+193.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_378"></a><a href="#FNanchor_378"><span class=
+"label">[378]</span></a>This was done on a motion by Jaurès, made
+on Nov., 1903, and passed on April 25, 1904 (Tardieu, <em>La Conf.
+d’Algés.</em>, p. 35).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_379"></a><a href="#FNanchor_379"><span class=
+"label">[379]</span></a>Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé, April
+14 and 24, 1904, <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 124, No. 146; 130, No. 154;
+Delcassé to Saint-René Taillandier, April 27, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>,
+131, No. 156; Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé, May 19, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 133, No. 159 and annexe; Lansdowne to Nicolson,
+April 19, 1904, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 28, No. 27.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_380"></a><a href="#FNanchor_380"><span class=
+"label">[380]</span></a><em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, Nos. 148, 157, 158,
+183, 186, 189, 194-98, 202-7.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_381"></a><a href="#FNanchor_381"><span class=
+"label">[381]</span></a>On the Moroccan reaction see report by A.
+Bernard, who was in Morocco at the time, in <em>Bulletin</em>,
+June, 1904, pp. 203 f.; Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé, Jan. 1
+and 24, Feb. 22, April 24, May 19, 1904, <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 119
+ff., Nos. 135, 137, 140, 154, 159.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_382"></a><a href="#FNanchor_382"><span class=
+"label">[382]</span></a>Kühlmann to Bülow, Jan. 31, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 250, No. 6553.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_383"></a><a href="#FNanchor_383"><span class=
+"label">[383]</span></a>Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé, Jan.
+29, 1904, <em>L.j. 1901-5</em>, 119, No. 138.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_384"></a><a href="#FNanchor_384"><span class=
+"label">[384]</span></a>Ben Sliman, Moroccan minister of foreign
+affairs, wrote to Saint-René Taillandier on June 17 as follows:
+“The Sultan . . . . has instructed me to reply to you that he does
+not doubt your favorable sentiments nor those of your Government,
+either the humanity of your actions or the sincerity of your
+counsels. . . . . Your letter is an argument the more in favor of
+the reaffirmation of that conviction and a testimony of your good
+intentions, conforming to the desire of the two countries. This is
+confirmed also by the conversations which we have had with your
+secretary to clarify the difficult points of the accord. . . . . I
+express to you in his [the Sultan’s] name the fullest thanks for
+your happy efforts past and present which, we hope, will
+characterize the conduct of our future relations” (<em>ibid.</em>,
+156 ff., No. 177, annex; Mévil, <em>De la Paix de Francfort,
+etc.</em> [Paris, 1909], pp. 172 f. n.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_385"></a><a href="#FNanchor_385"><span class=
+"label">[385]</span></a>The prominent part played by the French
+government in making this loan is attested as follows: As already
+stated, in January, at the Sultan’s request, Delcassé promised his
+help in making the loan. Furthermore, Saint-Aulaire and his
+interpreter, in Fez at the time, took an active part in bringing
+the negotiation to a satisfactory conclusion, being consulted on
+various points and helping in the formulation of the terms
+(Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé, July 30, 1904, <em>L.j.,
+1901-5</em>, 162 f., No. 184.). The contract was signed and sealed
+by the French Consul at Fez (<em>ibid.</em>, 142 f., No. 170, Annex
+I). And the terms of the loan were such as could never have been
+obtained without the approval of the French government. The
+contract is printed in <em>ibid.</em>, 143 ff., No. 170, Annex II.
+On the instalment of customs officials see the dispatches from
+Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé, July 24, and 30, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 159 ff., Nos. 181, 184; also Tardieu, <em>Questions
+diplomatiques, 1904</em>, pp. 60 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_386"></a><a href="#FNanchor_386"><span class=
+"label">[386]</span></a>On this episode see the various dispatches
+in <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 135 ff., Nos. 160 ff. On Raisouli see
+Rosita Forbes, <em>El Raisuni, the Sultan of the Mountains</em>
+(London, 1924). On June 22, 1904, Secretary of State Hay cabled to
+the American Consul at Tangier, “We want Perdicaris alive or
+Raizuli dead.” See William Roscoe Thayer, <em>The Life and Letters
+of John Hay</em> (Boston and New York, 1915), II, 383; Dennis,
+<em>Adventures in American Diplomacy</em>, pp. 443 ff. Both the
+British and the American governments requested the good offices of
+the French government in effecting the release. Mr. Hay, the
+American secretary of state, gave assurance that if more serious
+action were subsequently necessary in Morocco, it would not take
+place “without a previous exchange of views” with France. Thus he
+acknowledged France’s special position with reference to that
+country. See Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé, May 30, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 137, No. 163; Delcassé to Saint-René Taillandier,
+May 31, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 137, No. 164; Jusserand to Delcassé,
+June 20, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 152, No. 171; Porter to Delcassé,
+June 27, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 155, No. 176; Mévil, pp. 172 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_387"></a><a href="#FNanchor_387"><span class=
+"label">[387]</span></a>Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé, June 2
+and 27, July 2, 1904, <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 137 ff., Nos. 165,
+175, 178.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_388"></a><a href="#FNanchor_388"><span class=
+"label">[388]</span></a>Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé, June 11
+and 27, July 2, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 140 ff., Nos. 168, 175, 178;
+Delcassé to Saint-René Taillandier, July 26, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>,
+160, No. 182; Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé, July 29, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 160 f., No. 183, and annex.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_389"></a><a href="#FNanchor_389"><span class=
+"label">[389]</span></a><em>Bulletin</em>, Dec., 1903, p. 377;
+Jan., 1904, pp. 3 ff.; March, 1904, pp. 76 f.; and others.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_390"></a><a href="#FNanchor_390"><span class=
+"label">[390]</span></a>See the list of the large subscribers in
+<em>ibid.</em>, July, 1904, p. 224.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_391"></a><a href="#FNanchor_391"><span class=
+"label">[391]</span></a>The names of those present, 355 in all, are
+given in <em>Quest. dipl. et col.</em>, XVIII, 62 ff. See also
+<em>Bulletin</em>, June, 1904, p. 185.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_392"></a><a href="#FNanchor_392"><span class=
+"label">[392]</span></a>Delcassé to Saint-René Taillandier, Dec.
+15, 1904, <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 179 ff., No. 209. In October a
+conference had been held in Paris with Jonnart, governor-general of
+Algeria; Gen. Lyauty, commander of the French troops at Ain-Sefra
+in Southern Oran; and Saint-René Taillandier, on the Moroccan
+question (Monson to Lansdowne, Oct. 7, 1904, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 54
+f., No. 63.)</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_393"></a><a href="#FNanchor_393"><span class=
+"label">[393]</span></a><em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, Nos. 199, 210-12,
+215, 218-20, 222-24; <em>B.D.</em>, III, 55, No. 64;
+<em>Bulletin</em>, Sept. and Oct., 1904, pp. 279, 320.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_394"></a><a href="#FNanchor_394"><span class=
+"label">[394]</span></a>Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé, Dec.
+12, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 179, No. 208; Tardieu, <em>Questions
+diplomatiques, 1904</em>, pp. 78 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_395"></a><a href="#FNanchor_395"><span class=
+"label">[395]</span></a>The words are Delcassé’s (Delcassé to
+Saint-René Taillandier, Dec. 20, 1904, <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 186,
+No. 213.)</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_396"></a><a href="#FNanchor_396"><span class=
+"label">[396]</span></a>The term is used to designate the Moroccan
+court and government.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_397"></a><a href="#FNanchor_397"><span class=
+"label">[397]</span></a>Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé, Dec. 19
+and 24, 1904, <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 185 f., No. 212; 186 f., No.
+214.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_398"></a><a href="#FNanchor_398"><span class=
+"label">[398]</span></a>Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé, Dec.
+30, 1904, Jan. 2, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 188 ff., No. 216 f.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap">
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[135]</span><a id=
+"c09"></a>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+
+<p class="sch2">GERMANY AND THE ENTENTE CORDIALE, 1903-4</p>
+
+<h3 class="space-above1">I</h3>
+
+<p>In the early part of 1903, although one of Germany’s allies was
+rent by nationalistic conflicts<a id="FNanchor_399"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_399" class="fnanchor">[399]</a> and the other was no
+longer reliable, and although British and German public opinion
+remained so hostile that the former prevented Anglo-German
+co-operation,<a id="FNanchor_400"></a><a href="#Footnote_400"
+class="fnanchor">[400]</a> Count Bülow and Herr von Holstein were
+untroubled about the international situation. Upon the announcement
+of King Edward’s forthcoming visit to Paris, the latter wrote to
+his chief, on April 2, that an Anglo-French alliance was “music of
+the future,” and that the Franco-Russian alliance was slowly
+breaking under the strain of conflicting interests in the Balkans.
+“We have blocked M. Delcassé’s policy in Turkey as well as in
+Morocco,” he stated. The Chancellor agreed with him.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>Delcassé’s coquetting with England [he wrote] would become
+serious for us only in case he should also succeed in bringing
+about a <em>rapprochement</em> between England and Russia. . . . .
+Otherwise his wooing of England will . . . . strengthen Count
+Lamsdorff in the thought that the former League of the Three
+Emperors is, all things considered, the best combination for
+Russian autocracy. But the present groupings will not change soon,
+and in my opinion, we cannot take things too coolly.<a id=
+"FNanchor_401"></a><a href="#Footnote_401" class=
+"fnanchor">[401]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Soon after King Edward’s visit to Paris the equanimity of the
+German government was somewhat disturbed by a dispatch
+of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[136]</span> May 10 from
+Baron Eckardstein, formerly first secretary of the German embassy
+in London. The Baron expressed his belief that a general
+Anglo-French settlement of colonial differences including that of
+Morocco was under way; and that since the two nations were
+reconciled, it would very likely be concluded. He denied that this
+agreement would cause a breach in the Dual Alliance, as was
+supposed in Germany; rather, he wrote, “a new Triple Alliance is
+being formed, which, although it may assume no written form and
+perhaps may endure only for a number of years, will for a time
+cause us everywhere at least economic and political
+difficulties.”<a id="FNanchor_402"></a><a href="#Footnote_402"
+class="fnanchor">[402]</a></p>
+
+<p>This dispatch was referred by Count Bülow to the German
+ambassadors at St. Petersburg, Paris, and London, and to the first
+secretary of the embassy in London for consideration. Not one of
+these men believed possible an Anglo-Russian settlement or the
+formation of a new Triple Alliance. The Chancellor and Prince
+Radolin, the ambassador at Paris, were both very skeptical about
+the prospects for an Anglo-French agreement; but the German
+representatives in London thought that one might be achieved. Count
+Metternich’s opinion was that Great Britain and France were merely
+negotiating another colonial accord, which he admitted might lead
+to closer co-operation between them, but which need not cause alarm
+so long as Great Britain, already pacifically inclined, enjoyed
+only the fickle friendship of France and was confronted by the
+antagonism of Russia.<a id="FNanchor_403"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_403" class="fnanchor">[403]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[137]</span>In September the
+German government believed that the Anglo-French settlement was
+already far advanced;<a id="FNanchor_404"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_404" class="fnanchor">[404]</a> and, learning from the
+Spanish Queen Mother, who was visiting in Austria, that France and
+Spain were also negotiating over Morocco,<a id=
+"FNanchor_405"></a><a href="#Footnote_405" class=
+"fnanchor">[405]</a> it resolved to intervene. To that end on
+September 24 it instructed Herr von Radowitz, German ambassador at
+Madrid, as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>By virtue of our political international position and especially
+by virtue of the great significance of our economic interests in
+Morocco, we must seek to be considered also in a division of the
+land by obtaining territorial compensation, for example in the
+region of the Sus, or elsewhere in the colonial world, perhaps by
+the cession of Fernando Po. Your Excellency should weigh thoroughly
+the means by which we should best reach that goal, whether through
+direct negotiations with Spain, through breaking the way for
+participation in the negotiations of the most interested states, or
+through proposing a conference.<a id="FNanchor_406"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_406" class="fnanchor">[406]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">Thus the German government, realizing the
+improvement in the diplomatic position of France and the decline in
+its own, was apparently willing to make a division of Morocco with
+Great Britain, France, and Spain.</p>
+
+<p>When Herr von Radowitz immediately unfolded the German desire to
+the Spanish Foreign Minister, the latter, admitting the German
+right to a share, agreed to study the proposal.<a id=
+"FNanchor_407"></a><a href="#Footnote_407" class=
+"fnanchor">[407]</a> After this the conversations appear to have
+ceased.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[138]</span>Simultaneously
+with these efforts, in the autumn of 1903 the German government
+planned by maintaining strict reserve to allow the Franco-Russian
+antagonism about the Balkans and the Russo-Japanese hostility in
+the Far East to grow. It thought that any German leanings toward
+Russia would pull France back into line and cause Japan to recede
+before the danger of a new Continental triple entente.<a id=
+"FNanchor_408"></a><a href="#Footnote_408" class=
+"fnanchor">[408]</a> On the Chancellor’s advice, William II, during
+his meeting with the Czar at Wiesbaden and Wolfsgarten on November
+4-5, 1903, kept Germany’s hands entirely free. Nevertheless, after
+the Czar’s approval of the Anglo-French and the Franco-Italian
+<em>rapprochements</em> was made public late in October, the
+Emperor began to suffer from the “nightmare of the coalitions.”
+During the visit he sought to incite Nicholas II against France and
+Great Britain and to urge him further into far eastern enterprises.
+In his correspondence with the Czar in December and January he
+continued these tactics.<a id="FNanchor_409"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_409" class="fnanchor">[409]</a> Count Bülow
+remonstrated, but the Emperor, haughtily replying that these were
+private letters, advised the Chancellor to mind his own
+business.<a id="FNanchor_410"></a><a href="#Footnote_410" class=
+"fnanchor">[410]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[139]</span>To the
+satisfaction of the German government,<a id=
+"FNanchor_411"></a><a href="#Footnote_411" class=
+"fnanchor">[411]</a> the Russo-Japanese War broke out in February,
+1904. In anger at Great Britain, Russia immediately drew nearer to
+her neighbor;<a id="FNanchor_412"></a><a href="#Footnote_412"
+class="fnanchor">[412]</a> and, with a war in progress, the German
+statesmen planned by a wise manipulation of their power to improve
+their international position and to gain concrete advantages.<a id=
+"FNanchor_413"></a><a href="#Footnote_413" class=
+"fnanchor">[413]</a> For the time, however, they endeavored by
+assuring the British government that Germany would preserve strict
+neutrality to obviate the need for Great Britain to come to terms
+with France, arguing that a neutral Germany would entail a neutral
+France.<a id="FNanchor_414"></a><a href="#Footnote_414" class=
+"fnanchor">[414]</a> Moreover, carrying out a suggestion of the
+Prince of Monaco, the <em>Wilhelmstrasse</em> sought to effect,
+through the mediation of the Italian government, a meeting between
+the Emperor William and President Loubet of France during their
+visits to Italy in March and April.<a id=
+"FNanchor_415"></a><a href="#Footnote_415" class=
+"fnanchor">[415]</a> But on March 23 Prince Radolin surprised his
+government<a id="FNanchor_416"></a><a href="#Footnote_416" class=
+"fnanchor">[416]</a> by reporting a conversation with M. Delcassé
+which showed that the<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_140">[140]</span> Anglo-French agreement was near completion.
+By March 26 it became evident that the French had refused to permit
+the proposed meeting.<a id="FNanchor_417"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_417" class="fnanchor">[417]</a> So Count Bülow
+recommended to the Emperor on March 30 the dispatch of three small
+warships to Tangier as a direct intervention in the Moroccan
+affair. By thus arousing French animosity, Germany would show Great
+Britain that the formation of a Continental <em>bloc</em> was
+impossible, that there was no cause for her to sacrifice her
+interests in Morocco.<a id="FNanchor_418"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_418" class="fnanchor">[418]</a> The Emperor regarded the
+move as “entirely inopportune”; for, he argued, since France, Great
+Britain, and Spain were about to settle the Moroccan question, “a
+one-sided bellicose action by Germany . . . . would undoubtedly
+arouse the suspicion of those Powers, would undermine belief in our
+repeatedly expressed assurance, reiterated to the King of Spain at
+Vigo, that we claim no exclusive rights in Morocco, and would put
+the stamp of duplicity upon our policy.” He suggested that if the
+government wished to take action in Morocco, it should first
+consult those three Powers and secure their co-operation.<a id=
+"FNanchor_419"></a><a href="#Footnote_419" class=
+"fnanchor">[419]</a></p>
+
+<p>Without relinquishing the idea, Count Bülow had to content
+himself for the time with a renewed declaration to the British
+Ambassador on April 6 of neutrality during the Russo-Japanese
+War.<a id="FNanchor_420"></a><a href="#Footnote_420" class=
+"fnanchor">[420]</a> On April 8 the Anglo-French accord was
+signed.</p>
+
+<h3>II</h3>
+
+<p>German public opinion was disquieted by the Anglo-French
+agreement and by the Franco-Italian intimacy. Apart from the
+“lunatic fringe” as represented by the Pan-German
+League,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[141]</span> which
+demanded an immediate seizure of a portion of Morocco,<a id=
+"FNanchor_421"></a><a href="#Footnote_421" class=
+"fnanchor">[421]</a> no one expressed particular concern over the
+loss of that country.<a id="FNanchor_422"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_422" class="fnanchor">[422]</a> The scandals in the
+colonial administration and the costly war with the natives of
+German Southwest and German East Africa had momentarily turned the
+nation against further colonial ventures.<a id=
+"FNanchor_423"></a><a href="#Footnote_423" class=
+"fnanchor">[423]</a> The new international alignments, however,
+were viewed by the nation with some alarm. In the Reichstag on
+April 12 Herr Sattler, a National Liberal and a supporter of the
+government, expressed satisfaction that the Triple Alliance
+remained firm; but, he continued, “one has the feeling that
+otherwise a transformation has occurred in the relations of the
+great Powers which can be of the gravest influence also on German
+relations.” On the next day the Nationalist Count Reventlow
+sarcastically remarked that he could not understand why Germany
+should rejoice since France and Great Britain had settled their
+differences. “If the world is divided, we must assume a somewhat
+different attitude thereto,” he declared; “even in prudent circles
+of our people the course of our foreign policy is being followed
+with national sorrow,” for the government was trying to be
+overcordial to all without gaining anything. Herr Bebel, the Social
+Democratic leader, greeted the Anglo-French settlement on April 14;
+but he also regarded it as weakening the Triple Alliance and
+strengthening the Dual Alliance. Like Count Reventlow, he said that
+Germany’s international position in the last few years had in no
+way improved, acknowledging with regret the increasing antipathy to
+Germany in foreign lands.<a id="FNanchor_424"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_424" class="fnanchor">[424]</a></p>
+
+<p>Count Bülow endeavored to calm the public opinion by declaring
+in the Reichstag, April 12 and 14, that “we have no
+reason<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[142]</span> to suppose
+that the Anglo-French colonial accord is directed at any other
+Power.” To this apparently “amicable understanding . . . . from the
+standpoint of German interests we have nothing to object.” As to
+Morocco, “in the main” Germany had economic interests which “we
+must and shall protect. . . . . We have no cause to fear that these
+. . . . could be disregarded or injured by any Power.” While
+scoffing at the allegation that Germany was isolated, he added: “If
+we keep our sword sharp, we need not fear isolation very much.
+Germany is too strong not to be able to make alliances. Many
+combinations are possible for us.” Denying any thought of waging a
+war over Morocco, he upheld a policy of “prudent quiet and even of
+reserve”; but he concluded with the significant statement that “if
+one wishes to arouse friction in the world, one does not shout it
+from the house-tops. Frederick the Great may now and then have made
+a Machiavellian move in politics, but he previously wrote the
+Anti-Machiavelli.”<a id="FNanchor_425"></a><a href="#Footnote_425"
+class="fnanchor">[425]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Chancellor’s speech expressed only a temporary acquiescence
+in the Anglo-French agreement, an intimation to France and Great
+Britain to consult Germany over Morocco.<a id=
+"FNanchor_426"></a><a href="#Footnote_426" class=
+"fnanchor">[426]</a> The German government liked that accord less
+than the German people did, even though it knew nothing of the
+content of the secret articles. The Emperor feared that now Great
+Britain “would put every consideration for us more and more into
+the background.”<a id="FNanchor_427"></a><a href="#Footnote_427"
+class="fnanchor">[427]</a> And Count Bülow, who knew that the new
+alignment placed Germany in no actual danger,<a id=
+"FNanchor_428"></a><a href="#Footnote_428" class=
+"fnanchor">[428]</a> admitted that “doubtlessly both<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_143">[143]</span> Powers [France and Great
+Britain] win in international influence and in freedom of movement
+by this accord and by their <em>rapprochement</em>, and that the
+drawing force of the Anglo-French Entente on Italy will also be
+strengthened.”<a id="FNanchor_429"></a><a href="#Footnote_429"
+class="fnanchor">[429]</a> The prospective loss of Morocco to
+Germany and the general dissatisfaction within Germany over the
+conduct of her foreign affairs accentuated Count Bülow’s ill will
+toward the new agreement.</p>
+
+<h3>III</h3>
+
+<p>The Chancellor’s prophecy about Italy came true almost
+immediately.</p>
+
+<p>Italy’s policy was, of course, to play between the Triple
+Alliance and France for her own advantage. Italian opinion
+interpreted the Anglo-French <em>rapprochement</em>, following upon
+the Franco-Italian entente, as a setback to Germany, and became
+more independent toward its allies. After Italy’s special interest
+in the future of Tripoli was recognized, the Italian people raised
+the irredentist question in the summer and autumn of 1903. In the
+winter relations with Austria became so tense that war clouds
+loomed up.<a id="FNanchor_430"></a><a href="#Footnote_430" class=
+"fnanchor">[430]</a> Count Goluchowski, the Austrian foreign
+minister, desired to replace the Triple Alliance by the old League
+of the Three Emperors, and declared that if the present relations
+with Italy continued, Austria could not renew the alliance.<a id=
+"FNanchor_431"></a><a href="#Footnote_431" class=
+"fnanchor">[431]</a></p>
+
+<p>Count Bülow succeeded in patching up the raveling fabric
+of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[144]</span> the Triple
+Alliance.<a id="FNanchor_432"></a><a href="#Footnote_432" class=
+"fnanchor">[432]</a> He suspected that Italy had made a reinsurance
+treaty with France after the renewal of the Triple Alliance in
+1902, by which the alliance was nullified in case of a
+Franco-German war.<a id="FNanchor_433"></a><a href="#Footnote_433"
+class="fnanchor">[433]</a> Neither he nor General Schlieffen,
+German chief of staff, expected Italy to support Germany in that
+instance or even to hold inactive the French troops on the Italian
+frontier. None the less, at the request of the Italian chief of
+staff, the Chancellor permitted the German-Italian military
+conversations to continue as before.<a id=
+"FNanchor_434"></a><a href="#Footnote_434" class=
+"fnanchor">[434]</a> He endeavored to preserve at least the outward
+appearance of harmony.<a id="FNanchor_435"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_435" class="fnanchor">[435]</a></p>
+
+<p>But in the spring of 1904 the Triple Alliance almost went on the
+rocks over an intrinsically insignificant affair—whether or not the
+entertainment of the French and of the German chiefs of state, who
+were both to visit Italy at about the same time in March and April,
+should be on a similar scale.</p>
+
+<p>After the Emperor’s visit on March 26-27 had passed off quietly
+enough<a id="FNanchor_436"></a><a href="#Footnote_436" class=
+"fnanchor">[436]</a> the French government sought to expand the
+program of reception for President Loubet in order to demonstrate
+the great popularity of France in Italy,<a id=
+"FNanchor_437"></a><a href="#Footnote_437" class=
+"fnanchor">[437]</a> while the German<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_145">[145]</span> government endeavored to restrict it. Under
+threat of breaking the alliance, the latter forced M. Tittoni, the
+Italian foreign minister, to promise that Italy’s loyalty to the
+Triple Alliance would be warmly mentioned in the toasts.<a id=
+"FNanchor_438"></a><a href="#Footnote_438" class=
+"fnanchor">[438]</a> But when the visit occurred, April 24-28, the
+Italian King, playing his own hand, helped the French to enjoy an
+unbroken triumph.<a id="FNanchor_439"></a><a href="#Footnote_439"
+class="fnanchor">[439]</a> On April 25 and 26 affection for them
+was extravagantly displayed by the Italians while no mention of the
+Triple Alliance was made.<a id="FNanchor_440"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_440" class="fnanchor">[440]</a> In an endeavor to stop
+further exchange of toasts, the German ambassador, Count Monts,
+complained bitterly to M. Luzzati, Italian secretary of the
+treasury, of the pro-French attitude of the King, government, and
+press; of the non-fulfilment of promises; of the King’s ignoring
+him at the festivals; of the failure to mention the alliance in the
+speeches. “My training and instructions prohibit me from using that
+tone toward the <em>Consulta</em> which would correspond with its
+behavior,” he declared. He demanded that no more toasts be
+made.<a id="FNanchor_441"></a><a href="#Footnote_441" class=
+"fnanchor">[441]</a></p>
+
+<p>Doubtless this peremptoriness would have produced the desired
+result if at the crucial moment the German Emperor had not sent a
+telegram of warm thanks for his reception to the Italian government
+and nullified the entire effect of the Ambassador’s<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_146">[146]</span> indignation.<a id=
+"FNanchor_442"></a><a href="#Footnote_442" class=
+"fnanchor">[442]</a> At Naples the King again exchanged toasts with
+M. Loubet without mentioning the alliance.</p>
+
+<p>Although the demands of the German government had been flouted,
+it could not execute its threat; for a dissolution of the Triple
+Alliance, occurring so soon after the conclusion of the Entente
+Cordiale, would have been too great a victory for France. “One
+would say,” wrote Count Bülow, “that our policy since the
+retirement of Bismarck has lost us first the alliance with Russia,
+then good relations with England, and finally the Triple Alliance
+itself.”<a id="FNanchor_443"></a><a href="#Footnote_443" class=
+"fnanchor">[443]</a> So, feigning cool indifference toward the
+renegade ally, he remarked to the Italian Ambassador that as the
+conditions out of which the Triple Alliance had developed no longer
+obtained, Germany had no need of Italy’s aid, nor, he supposed, had
+Italy of Germany’s.<a id="FNanchor_444"></a><a href="#Footnote_444"
+class="fnanchor">[444]</a> Then came apologies. On May 18 M.
+Tittoni declared in the Italian Chamber that “the policy of Italy
+is not one of balancing, which would be unworthy of a great state,
+but one of loyal honesty. The alliance with Germany is not
+incompatible with friendly relations with France.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_445"></a><a href="#Footnote_445" class=
+"fnanchor">[445]</a> Although the German government did not believe
+him, it accepted his excuses. The Triple Alliance resumed its
+precarious course.<a id="FNanchor_446"></a><a href="#Footnote_446"
+class="fnanchor">[446]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[147]</span>As a result of
+this episode, the anger of the German government at France, already
+aroused over the diminution of German influence through the Entente
+Cordiale, was increased. The Emperor, who had tarried near the
+Italian coast in the persistent hope of a chance meeting with M.
+Loubet,<a id="FNanchor_447"></a><a href="#Footnote_447" class=
+"fnanchor">[447]</a> returned home feeling like the poor kinsman
+uninvited to the feast. On May 1, at the opening of the new Rhine
+bridge at Mainz, he gave vent to his chagrin in the following
+warning: “I desire sincerely that peace . . . . be kept. But I am
+convinced that if this bridge should have to be used for more
+serious transports, it would stand the test completely.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_448"></a><a href="#Footnote_448" class=
+"fnanchor">[448]</a></p>
+
+<h3>IV</h3>
+
+<p>“We need a success in our foreign policy,” wrote Prince
+Lichnowsky, councilor in the German foreign office, on April 14,
+“because the Anglo-French understanding as well as the
+Franco-Italian <em>rapprochement</em> is generally considered a
+defeat for us.”<a id="FNanchor_449"></a><a href="#Footnote_449"
+class="fnanchor">[449]</a> The German government immediately took
+steps toward obtaining that success.</p>
+
+<p>To manifest its dissatisfaction at being excluded from the
+Moroccan settlement and to force M. Delcassé to agree with Germany
+on that question, the German government first considered in April
+the project of dispatching a warship to Tangier, ostensibly to
+settle certain grievances against Morocco.<a id=
+"FNanchor_450"></a><a href="#Footnote_450" class=
+"fnanchor">[450]</a> As a precaution,<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_148">[148]</span> General Schlieffen, chief of staff, was
+consulted, April 19, about the possibility of success in case of a
+Franco-German war. Herr von Holstein summed up the General’s reply
+as follows: “In case of the outbreak of a Franco-German war at the
+present, Russia’s participation would be improbable, but England’s
+attitude would be uncertain.”<a id="FNanchor_451"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_451" class="fnanchor">[451]</a></p>
+
+<p>The proposal was not executed at the time,<a id=
+"FNanchor_452"></a><a href="#Footnote_452" class=
+"fnanchor">[452]</a> for Count Bülow had other plans. The first one
+was to test the strength of the Entente Cordiale, to weaken its
+force, and to include Germany among the Powers making ententes by
+endeavoring to negotiate an arbitration treaty and a general
+settlement with Great Britain similar to the Anglo-French ones. If
+accord, even in principle, were reached on Anglo-German
+difficulties, the Chancellor was willing to propose a naval
+agreement. He felt certain that by careful handling he could win
+the Emperor’s approval of the whole transaction.<a id=
+"FNanchor_453"></a><a href="#Footnote_453" class=
+"fnanchor">[453]</a></p>
+
+<p>The opportunity to make the proposal was afforded when about the
+first of May the British government asked the other Powers
+interested in Egypt to approve the changes which France had
+accepted in the declaration of April 8. The German foreign office
+replied that Germany must receive the same guaranty of her rights
+in Egypt that France had received, and proposed to include in the
+negotiations the Anglo-German troubles concerning<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_149">[149]</span> Samoa, Transvaal indemnities,
+and the Canadian preferential tariff.</p>
+
+<p>The British government refused to broaden the basis of
+negotiations, declaring that the Egyptian affair must be settled on
+its own merits. How Lord Lansdowne regarded the German proposal was
+shown in his letter of May 6 to Sir Frank Lascelles.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>The proposal of the German Government to make their concurrence
+in regard to the Khedivial Decree dependent upon an all-round
+settlement [he wrote] . . . . looks to an ordinary observer like a
+great piece of effrontery. . . . . The suggestion that the consent
+of the German Government to a perfectly innocuous arrangement in
+Egypt can only be bought at the price of concessions elsewhere does
+not become more palatable when we find it connected with an
+intimation that Germany is hesitating whether “she shall turn to
+the East or to the West.” This is a veiled threat of which I
+remember Hatzfeldt used to be fond.<a id=
+"FNanchor_454"></a><a href="#Footnote_454" class=
+"fnanchor">[454]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">Pointing out the fact that Germany held only a very
+small per cent of the Egyptian bonds (he said only ¼ per cent),
+that the other Powers had agreed to the Egyptian changes
+unconditionally, and that France had made reciprocal concessions to
+Great Britain in return for the guaranty of her rights in Egypt,
+Lord Lansdowne refused to give Germany the special guaranty which
+she requested.<a id="FNanchor_455"></a><a href="#Footnote_455"
+class="fnanchor">[455]</a></p>
+
+<p>Count Bülow agreed (May 28) to confine the negotiations to Egypt
+alone; but he would not recede from the other demands. For, he
+argued, France had been given large compensation in return for her
+renunciations in Egypt while Germany merely asked an equal
+assurance of her rights and interests in that land, particularly of
+her commercial interests. Thus the two governments reached a
+deadlock. Each felt that it had a just grievance.<a id=
+"FNanchor_456"></a><a href="#Footnote_456" class=
+"fnanchor">[456]</a><span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_150">[150]</span> Herr von Holstein, considering the occasion
+a “test of strength,” thought that if Germany receded, the world
+would perceive that sharp handling was sufficient to vanquish
+her.<a id="FNanchor_457"></a><a href="#Footnote_457" class=
+"fnanchor">[457]</a> Count Metternich reported, however, that the
+British refusal was caused not by any malign designs against
+Germany, but rather by the fact that the government was opposed to
+weakening or endangering the Entente Cordiale by treating Germany
+in the same way as France, and by the fact that it saw no reason
+for making an exception of Germany after the other Powers had
+unconditionally accepted the modifications. Above all, he wrote,
+the British government feared another outburst of vituperation
+against Germany from British public opinion and of indignation
+against the British government itself for permitting Germany again
+to browbeat it.<a id="FNanchor_458"></a><a href="#Footnote_458"
+class="fnanchor">[458]</a> So about the middle of June at the
+Count’s suggestion, a compromise was effected. The British
+government gave Germany a guaranty of its Egyptian interests in
+return for an acceptance of the French obligations in that land.
+The other Powers were to be asked to approve this new
+agreement.<a id="FNanchor_459"></a><a href="#Footnote_459" class=
+"fnanchor">[459]</a></p>
+
+<p>Late in June King Edward enjoyed a pleasant visit as the
+Emperor’s guest at a naval review at Kiel; on July 10, at the
+King’s suggestion, some German warships touched at Plymouth; and on
+July 12 an arbitration treaty was signed between the two Powers.
+Their relations seemed to be improving. At Kiel, Count Bülow once
+more assured the King that Germany intended to guard strict
+neutrality during the Russo-Japanese War; and<span class="pagenum"
+id="Page_151">[151]</span> Edward VII declared that “no special
+agreements were needed between England and Germany since no
+conflict of political interests divided them.” He also stated that
+he wished a settlement with Russia, in fact, that he desired to
+diminish animosities among all Powers; but he added that he had no
+thought thereby of isolating Germany.<a id=
+"FNanchor_460"></a><a href="#Footnote_460" class=
+"fnanchor">[460]</a></p>
+
+<p>In spite of the King’s cordial words, the fact remained that
+Germany was still regarded with marked mistrust and antipathy by
+the British people, while the British government had shown a
+preference, not yet appreciated by Germany, for the friendship of
+France. Germany’s bid to participate in the formation of ententes
+had failed.</p>
+
+<h3>V</h3>
+
+<p>Count Bülow’s second plan was to share in the settlement of the
+Moroccan problem. He had made preparations to that end in the
+previous autumn, but his policy had been repudiated by the German
+Emperor (who personally had no interest in Morocco)<a id=
+"FNanchor_461"></a><a href="#Footnote_461" class=
+"fnanchor">[461]</a> during an interview with the King of Spain at
+Vigo on March 16, 1904. In one of his expansive and oracular moods
+William II advised the youthful King to keep on good terms with
+France and to make his first foreign visit to Paris, to be on his
+guard against Great Britain and her satellite, Portugal, but to
+maintain friendly personal relations with King Edward, and to come
+to an agreement over the future of Morocco with the other nations,
+especially France, interested in North Africa. Germany, he said,
+aimed at no territorial acquisitions in North Africa, but only the
+maintenance of the open door for, among others,
+“railway<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[152]</span>
+concessions, open ports, and importation of manufactured
+articles.”<a id="FNanchor_462"></a><a href="#Footnote_462" class=
+"fnanchor">[462]</a></p>
+
+<p>In spite of the Emperor’s renunciation, Count Bülow did not
+relinquish his ambitions although the difficulty of realizing them
+was enormously increased. The indefiniteness and apparent duplicity
+of the German policy on the Moroccan question were caused by Count
+Bülow’s dilemma of gaining a share in Morocco without violating the
+Emperor’s assertions.</p>
+
+<p>Late in April, 1904, the Chancellor was afforded an opportunity
+to intervene through Spain, whose government asked for Germany’s
+sympathy and “practical proof of it at the opportune moment” during
+the Franco-Spanish negotiations then under way. Count Bülow was
+eager to fish in troubled waters by lending aid, and in his
+optimism went so far as to instruct Herr von Radowitz on April 29
+as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>Port Mahon we leave entirely out of consideration. Primarily
+Fernando Po interests us, for which under circumstances we would
+also pay well. If, moreover, a harbor in West Morocco is
+obtainable, that would be very useful. Perhaps Your Excellency can
+use the prevailing opinion in Spain against the Anglo-French accord
+in this direction.<a id="FNanchor_463"></a><a href="#Footnote_463"
+class="fnanchor">[463]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The Chancellor advised the Spanish government to draw out the
+negotiations; for, he argued, if Great Britain were given time in
+which to recover from her fear that the far eastern entente of 1895
+might be renewed, she would begin to rue her bargain, and would at
+least passively support Spain or acquiesce<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_153">[153]</span> in the latter’s receiving better terms from
+the more powerful France.<a id="FNanchor_464"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_464" class="fnanchor">[464]</a> When the Chancellor
+heard of difficulty between the two negotiating Powers over the
+control of Tangier, he decided to give diplomatic support to Spain
+in obtaining that port and its hinterland provided Great Britain
+was not obliged to aid France diplomatically in acquiring them. In
+other words, he was making it very easy for Great Britain to sin
+against her obligations to France. When the German Ambassador
+sounded Lord Lansdowne early in June, the latter, while not
+objecting, made it evident that he preferred and expected a
+satisfactory settlement directly between the two Powers
+themselves.<a id="FNanchor_465"></a><a href="#Footnote_465" class=
+"fnanchor">[465]</a> By June 10 the German government learned that
+this matter had been arranged, but that trouble had arisen over the
+question of publishing the agreement. Count Bülow immediately urged
+Spain in favor of it.<a id="FNanchor_466"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_466" class="fnanchor">[466]</a> On June 17 Herr von
+Radowitz reported that Spain was insisting upon complete commercial
+freedom in Morocco without the thirty years’ limitation. As this
+was also a sensitive point for Germany Count Bülow on the next day
+instructed the Ambassador to advise Spain strongly to insist upon
+the assurance of the fullest economic freedom even for obtaining
+government contracts and concessions. He left it to Herr von
+Radowitz to determine “whether it would be advantageous for the
+achievement of the German goal to let the Spanish perceive that
+Germany would assume and maintain the same standpoint at the proper
+moment.” “Naturally,” he added for the Ambassador’s personal
+information, “it would be . . . . a great help to us for Spain to
+take the lead.”<a id="FNanchor_467"></a><a href="#Footnote_467"
+class="fnanchor">[467]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[154]</span>By July,
+however, there seemed little prospect of Germany’s profiting from
+the Franco-Spanish negotiations.<a id="FNanchor_468"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_468" class="fnanchor">[468]</a> German grievances
+against Morocco remained unsettled. German firms trading there
+demanded protection against the French monopolistic actions. In
+June, France practically gained control over the Sultan’s finances,
+and she was preparing an important mission to Fez in the autumn.
+Nor did M. Delcassé show any inclination to open negotiations with
+Germany. Already disgruntled at the French Foreign Minister, the
+German government came to feel itself slighted and humiliated by
+his disregard. Its resentment toward him became concentrated upon
+the one grievance which could be best supported in public, that he
+was infringing upon Germany’s economic interests in Morocco. It
+therefore decided to assume a more active policy, and late in July
+held a discussion of ways and means. The government did not follow
+up a hint from the Sultan for co-operation because of its unsettled
+claims against Morocco. Nor could it tender him financial support
+or begin an economic penetration of the land similar to that of
+France because, as Baron Richthofen wrote late in July, “the German
+banks all strike immediately when one mentions Morocco. The German
+Foreign Secretary advised against keeping pace with every act of
+the French in Morocco as too venturesome; while to take the
+initiative directly with the French government by requesting
+guaranties for economic freedom he regarded as both doubtful of
+success and beneath German dignity. So at the Baron’s suggestion a
+“gradual, purely matter-of-fact advance, ignoring as long as
+possible a special position of France,” was decided upon. German
+warships should appear from time to time in Moroccan waters, and
+during one of these visits the grievances against Morocco should be
+settled.<a id="FNanchor_469"></a><a href="#Footnote_469" class=
+"fnanchor">[469]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[155]</span>The uncertain
+international situation also caused the German government to
+proceed warily. On June 3 the Belgian Minister at Berlin had stated
+to the German foreign office that he suspected the presence of a
+secret article in the Anglo-French accord concerning the Rheinish
+frontier. Although believing that the agreement did contain secret
+clauses regarding Egypt, Count Metternich refused to credit this
+suspicion. Upon mentioning the rumor to Lord Lansdowne on June 19,
+he received a full denial that the accord contained any articles
+which concerned European complications.<a id=
+"FNanchor_470"></a><a href="#Footnote_470" class=
+"fnanchor">[470]</a> Nevertheless, the Chancellor realized that
+“any attempt on the part of Germany to interfere in the Moroccan
+question in its present phase can lead to an action with
+far-reaching consequences and therefore deserves special
+precaution.”<a id="FNanchor_471"></a><a href="#Footnote_471" class=
+"fnanchor">[471]</a> For that reason he first sought to learn how
+the British government regarded its obligations to France with
+respect to Morocco.<a id="FNanchor_472"></a><a href="#Footnote_472"
+class="fnanchor">[472]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[156]</span>On August 15
+Count Metternich declared to Lord Lansdowne that “the French effort
+aimed at a monopolization in Morocco. We could not permit this.”
+Asserting that Germany was in no way bound by the Anglo-French
+agreement, he said that Germany’s economic interests in regard to
+governmental concessions and industrial enterprises in Morocco were
+endangered by France. “We could very soon be put in a situation in
+which we should have to protect our commercial interests [in the
+widest sense] against France.” He asked Lord Lansdowne how the
+British government interpreted the last part of Article IV of the
+Anglo-French declaration stating that concessions for roads, etc.,
+in Morocco were to be granted “only on such conditions as will
+maintain intact the authority of the State over these great
+undertakings of public interest,” and Article IX obliging Great
+Britain to lend diplomatic aid to France.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Lansdowne denied that Great Britain had renounced her right
+to share in the concessions in Morocco, but he refused to interpret
+Article IX until a concrete instance arose. He declared that in the
+French agreement</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">we [Great Britain] made no attempt to dispose of
+the rights of other Powers, although we made certain concessions in
+respect of the rights and opportunities to which we were ourselves
+entitled. I could at any rate say that it was not at all probable
+that, if any third Power were to have occasion to uphold its Treaty
+rights, we should use our influence in derogation of them.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Count Metternich inferred from that interview that Lord
+Lansdowne would limit the scope of Article IX, and that in case
+Germany’s actions did not infringe upon the Sultan’s authority
+Germany would be safe in opposing France in Morocco. However, he
+wrote, if Germany sought, for instance, to acquire control of a
+harbor there, Great Britain would support France. He warned his
+government that Great Britain would not connive at blocking the
+French advance in Morocco or endanger her friendship for the sake
+of that land. If a third Power disputed politically the French
+position there, both government and people<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_157">[157]</span> would support France. Within those limits
+Germany could execute her Moroccan policy. But, he continued, “in
+the present international situation, it will be difficult for us to
+arrest the process of France’s establishing herself in
+Morocco.”<a id="FNanchor_473"></a><a href="#Footnote_473" class=
+"fnanchor">[473]</a></p>
+
+<p>Even before receiving Count Metternich’s reply, the Chancellor
+proposed to dispatch an ultimatum to the Sultan demanding under
+threat of a naval demonstration that he satisfy the German claims
+within three months.<a id="FNanchor_474"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_474" class="fnanchor">[474]</a> But the Emperor, who
+remained strongly opposed to active interference in the Moroccan
+affair, refused his consent for the third time, and upset the
+Chancellor’s policy.<a id="FNanchor_475"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_475" class="fnanchor">[475]</a> In September the foreign
+office discussed the plan to seize the Moroccan transport ship and
+even Agadir, but nothing was done.<a id="FNanchor_476"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_476" class="fnanchor">[476]</a> Early in October Baron
+Richthofen suggested that since the Emperor was so averse to
+intervention the government should take up the Moroccan question
+directly with the French government. This project also came to
+naught.<a id="FNanchor_477"></a><a href="#Footnote_477" class=
+"fnanchor">[477]</a></p>
+
+<p>While no action was taken German feeling continued to smolder.
+The noncommittal communication from the French government about the
+agreement with Spain early in October<a id=
+"FNanchor_478"></a><a href="#Footnote_478" class=
+"fnanchor">[478]</a> and the repeated petitions of German firms for
+the defense of their interests in Morocco<a id=
+"FNanchor_479"></a><a href="#Footnote_479" class=
+"fnanchor">[479]</a> augmented the bitterness against France. So
+while the German government itself played the<span class="pagenum"
+id="Page_158">[158]</span> sphinx, it showed its resentment through
+the semiofficial press and through conversations between German and
+French officials in Morocco and elsewhere. By the end of the year
+the Moroccan question was still very much alive. As an influential
+Moor remarked, “Germany has not yet spoken, and so long as that has
+not occurred, we cannot believe that anything definite has been
+decided.”<a id="FNanchor_480"></a><a href="#Footnote_480" class=
+"fnanchor">[480]</a> Before Germany did speak, she endeavored to
+solve her difficulties by an effort to ally with Russia.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes" id="ftc09">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_399"></a><a href="#FNanchor_399"><span class=
+"label">[399]</span></a>See among others Richard Charmatz,
+<em>Österreichs äussere und innere Politik von 1895 bis 1914</em>
+(Leipzig and Berlin, 1918).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_400"></a><a href="#FNanchor_400"><span class=
+"label">[400]</span></a>On the state of British public opinion see
+Eckardstein, <em>Lebenserinnerungen und politische
+Denkwürdigkeiten</em>, II, 397 f.; and the various dispatches from
+Metternich and Eckardstein, <em>G.P.</em>, XVII, Nos. 5046, 5071,
+5094, 5104, 5371, 5375, and others.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_401"></a><a href="#FNanchor_401"><span class=
+"label">[401]</span></a>Holstein to Bülow, March 30, 1903,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 573 n.; memo. by Holstein, April, 1903,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XVIII, 802 ff., No. 5888; Holstein to Bülow, April
+2, 1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 838 f., No. 5910; Bülow to F. O., April 3,
+1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 839 f., No. 5911.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_402"></a><a href="#FNanchor_402"><span class=
+"label">[402]</span></a>An ardent advocate of the proposed
+Anglo-German alliance and a sufferer from the “nightmare of
+coalitions,” Eckardstein had resigned his position in October,
+1902, because he disapproved of the diplomatic method and the
+policy of his foreign office and “saw black ahead” for his country;
+also perhaps because of personal pique at not having been appointed
+ambassador in London upon the death of the aged Count Hatzfeldt
+(Eckardstein, II, 412 f.). For his dispatch to Bülow see
+<em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 567 f., No. 5369; also published with minor
+changes in Eckardstein, II, 425 f. The few changes from the
+original which occur in some of the documents in Eckardstein’s
+memoirs are not of any great importance. On the whole his judgments
+were sound.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_403"></a><a href="#FNanchor_403"><span class=
+"label">[403]</span></a>The dispatches are to be found in
+<em>G.P.</em>, Vol. XVII, chap. cxv. In July, however, the German
+Emperor could not conceal from the French Ambassador his irritation
+at Delcassé’s success in the Anglo-French <em>rapprochement</em>.
+After expressing the wish that French vessels might repeat the
+visit of 1895 to Kiel, he remarked to M. Bihourd, July 16: “‘I know
+well that nothing is to be accomplished with M. Delcassé. The
+advances to England are the work of M. Delcassé and M. Cambon. . .
+. . But the Russians are not content with that and some day they
+will make you. . . . .’ Here a gesture of disappointment, concluded
+M. Bihourd, made clear the prediction” (quoted from a dispatch from
+Bihourd in Bourgeois et Pagès, <em>Les origines et les
+responsabilités de la grande guerre</em>, p. 293).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_404"></a><a href="#FNanchor_404"><span class=
+"label">[404]</span></a>Groeben to F. O., Sept. 17, 1903,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XVII, 353 f., No. 5198; Richthofen to Radowitz,
+Sept. 28, 1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 357 ff., No. 5202.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_405"></a><a href="#FNanchor_405"><span class=
+"label">[405]</span></a>Bülow to F. O., Sept. 18, 1903,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 354, No. 5199; Richthofen to Radowitz, Sept. 24,
+1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 354 ff., No. 5200.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_406"></a><a href="#FNanchor_406"><span class=
+"label">[406]</span></a>Richthofen to Radowitz, Sept. 24, 1903,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 355, No. 5200.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_407"></a><a href="#FNanchor_407"><span class=
+"label">[407]</span></a>Radowitz to F. O., Sept. 29, Oct. 4, 1903,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 359 ff., Nos. 5203, 5205.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_408"></a><a href="#FNanchor_408"><span class=
+"label">[408]</span></a>Radolin to F. O., Oct. 17, 1903,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XVIII, 845 ff., No. 5915; Bülow to William II, Oct.
+19, 1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 847 ff., No. 5916.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_409"></a><a href="#FNanchor_409"><span class=
+"label">[409]</span></a>William II wrote to Nicholas II, Dec. 1,
+1903, as follows: “The visit of the hundred British
+Parliamentary—gentlemen and ladies—to Paris shows how ‘the Crimean
+combination’ is warming to its work. Your ally is making rather
+free with his flirt [with Great Britain]. You should pull him up a
+little.” Again on Jan. 3, 1904, he wrote to the same: “Therefore it
+is evident to every unbiassed mind that Korea must and will be
+Russian. When and how that is nobody’s affair and concerns only you
+and your country.” See Bülow to F. O., Oct. 31, 1903,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 853 f., No. 5918; memo. by Bülow, Nov. 7, 1903,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 70 ff., No. 5422; Walter Goetz (ed.), <em>Briefe
+Wilhelms II an den Zaren, 1894-1914</em> (Berlin, 1920), pp. 330
+ff.; Savinsky, <em>Recollections of a Russian Diplomat</em>, pp. 63
+ff. William II addressed Nicholas in various letters as “Admiral of
+the Pacific” and signed himself “Admiral of the Atlantic.” In spite
+of these words, to hold the Emperor responsible for the
+Russo-Japanese War is to underestimate the force of Russian foreign
+policy.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_410"></a><a href="#FNanchor_410"><span class=
+"label">[410]</span></a>See <em>G.P.</em>, Vol. XIX, chaps.
+cxxviii, cxxix, especially Bülow to William II, Jan. 4, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 87 ff., No. 5972, and the Emperor’s minutes; memo.
+by Bülow, Feb. 14, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 62 f., No. 5961.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_411"></a><a href="#FNanchor_411"><span class=
+"label">[411]</span></a>Bülow to Holstein, Jan. 15, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 33 f., No. 5942; memo. by Eckardstein, Jan. 17,
+1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 38 ff., No. 5945, and the Emperor’s minutes
+thereto.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_412"></a><a href="#FNanchor_412"><span class=
+"label">[412]</span></a>Count Benckendorff, Russian ambassador at
+London, spoke of the Dual Alliance as going to pieces, and there
+was talk among other Russian diplomats of renewing the former
+League of the Three Emperors. See Radolin to Bülow, Feb. 28, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 165 ff., No. 6028; Metternich to Bülow, March 14,
+1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 167 ff., No. 6029; Alvensleben to Bülow,
+March 18, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 172 ff., No. 6030; memo. by
+Holstein, Jan. 16, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 35 ff., No. 5944.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_413"></a><a href="#FNanchor_413"><span class=
+"label">[413]</span></a>“Because of the importance of German
+neutrality we shall perhaps find opportunity to utilize our central
+position in case of further sharpening of the hostility in the same
+way that M. Delcassé intends doing with reference to Morocco,”
+wrote Holstein in a memo. on Jan. 23, 1904 (<em>ibid.</em>, 48 ff.,
+No. 5951). Also see memo. by Holstein, Jan. 16, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 48 ff., No. 5951.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_414"></a><a href="#FNanchor_414"><span class=
+"label">[414]</span></a>Bülow to Metternich, Jan. 9, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 22, No. 5932; Lascelles to Lansdowne, Jan. 8, 1904,
+<em>B.D.</em>, II, 232, No. 273. Bülow later complained that the
+British had offered very weak resistance to the French demands
+(Bülow to Metternich, June 4, 1904, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 28, No.
+6383).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_415"></a><a href="#FNanchor_415"><span class=
+"label">[415]</span></a>Radolin to Bülow, Feb. 4, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 105 f., No. 6431; Bülow to Radolin, Feb. 18, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 106 f., No. 6432, and following documents.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_416"></a><a href="#FNanchor_416"><span class=
+"label">[416]</span></a>For proof that the German government had
+not expected the signing of the accord then see Eckardstein, II,
+426 f.; Otto Hammann, <em>Der misverstandene Bismarck. Zwanzig
+Jahre deutscher Weltpolitik</em> (Berlin, 1921), p. 110.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_417"></a><a href="#FNanchor_417"><span class=
+"label">[417]</span></a>Monts to F. O., March 26, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 116, No. 6439.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_418"></a><a href="#FNanchor_418"><span class=
+"label">[418]</span></a>Although Bülow did not say so, it is
+manifest that this was one of his intentions (Bülow to William II,
+March 30, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 197 ff., No. 6512).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_419"></a><a href="#FNanchor_419"><span class=
+"label">[419]</span></a>Tschirschky to Bülow, April 3, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 199 ff., No. 6513. On the interview at Vigo see
+below.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_420"></a><a href="#FNanchor_420"><span class=
+"label">[420]</span></a>Bülow to Tschirschky, April 3, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 8 f. No. 6370; memo. by Bülow, April 6, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 10 f., No. 6372; Bülow to Tschirschky, April 6,
+1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 201 and note, No. 6514. The last dispatch was
+not sent, for on April 8 the accord was signed.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_421"></a><a href="#FNanchor_421"><span class=
+"label">[421]</span></a><em>Zwanzig Jahre alldeutscher Arbeit und
+Kämpfe</em>, pp. 219, 233, 235, 238 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_422"></a><a href="#FNanchor_422"><span class=
+"label">[422]</span></a>See, for instance, <em>Berliner
+Tageblatt</em>, April 17, 1904; Dr. Th. Schiemann, <em>Deutschland
+und die grosse Politik, 1904</em> (Berlin, 1905), p. 118, and
+others; <em>Grenzboten</em>, June 23, 1904, p. 668.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_423"></a><a href="#FNanchor_423"><span class=
+"label">[423]</span></a>Alfred Zimmerman, <em>Deutsche
+Kolonialpolitik</em> (Berlin, 1914), pp. 241 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_424"></a><a href="#FNanchor_424"><span class=
+"label">[424]</span></a><em>Stenographische Berichte von den
+Behandlungen des Reichstages</em>, CXCIX, 2019, 2053 f., 2058 f.;
+Hammann, <em>Bilder aus der letzten Kaiserzeit</em>, p. 42; reports
+from the Berlin correspondent to the <em>London Times</em>, April
+11 and 16, 1904.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_425"></a><a href="#FNanchor_425"><span class=
+"label">[425]</span></a>Bülow, <em>Reden</em>, II, 74, 84, 90 f.;
+see also Hammann, <em>Bilder aus der letzten Kaiserzeit</em>, pp.
+42 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_426"></a><a href="#FNanchor_426"><span class=
+"label">[426]</span></a>This was Sanderson’s opinion. He was at the
+time British permanent undersecretary of state for foreign affairs.
+See memo. by Sanderson, Feb. 25, 1907, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 421.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_427"></a><a href="#FNanchor_427"><span class=
+"label">[427]</span></a>William II to Bülow, April 19, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 22 ff., No. 6378.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_428"></a><a href="#FNanchor_428"><span class=
+"label">[428]</span></a>From London, Bernstorff, first secretary of
+the embassy, reported that the British were entirely pacific in
+their intentions and inclinations (Bernstorff to Bülow, April 16,
+1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 14 ff., No. 6376). The Emperor considered
+this report “excellent.” Alvensleben also wrote from St. Petersburg
+that Russia was not so well satisfied with the Anglo-French accord
+as French newspapers would have one believe (Alvensleben to Bülow,
+April 15, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 21 f., No. 6377).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_429"></a><a href="#FNanchor_429"><span class=
+"label">[429]</span></a>Bülow to William II, April 20, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 24, No. 6379.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_430"></a><a href="#FNanchor_430"><span class=
+"label">[430]</span></a>On Austro-Italian relations see Wedel to
+Bülow, Sept. 14, 1903, <em>ibid.</em>, XVIII, 621 ff., No. 5779;
+memo. by Bülow, Sept. 20, 1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 624 ff., No. 5780;
+Monts to F. O., <em>ibid.</em>, XX, 47 f., No. 6399; Monts to
+Bülow, April 25, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 54 ff., No. 6404; Monts to
+Bülow, April 30, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 64 ff., No. 6412.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_431"></a><a href="#FNanchor_431"><span class=
+"label">[431]</span></a>Memo. by Bülow of conversation with
+Goluchowski at Vienna, Sept. 20, 1903, <em>ibid.</em>, XVIII, 625
+f., No. 5780; Wedel to Bülow, Oct. 20, 1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 627
+f., No. 5783.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_432"></a><a href="#FNanchor_432"><span class=
+"label">[432]</span></a>An interview between the Italian and the
+Austrian foreign ministers at Abazzia on April 9, 1904, attested to
+this fact. See Wedel to Bülow, April 14, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, XX,
+50 ff., No. 6401; memo. by Bülow, May 9, 1903, <em>ibid.</em>,
+XVIII, 613 ff., No. 5775; Bülow to Monts, June 9, 1903,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 616 ff., No. 5776; and following documents in
+<em>ibid.</em>, chap. cxxii, Anhang.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_433"></a><a href="#FNanchor_433"><span class=
+"label">[433]</span></a>Monts to Bülow, April 30, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XX, 64, No. 6412; memo. by Holstein, March 3, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 37 ff., No. 6388.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_434"></a><a href="#FNanchor_434"><span class=
+"label">[434]</span></a>Chelius to Schlieffen, Dec. 1, 1903,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XVIII, 705 ff., No. 5827; Richthofen to Schlieffen,
+Dec. 11, 1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 707 f., No. 5826; Schlieffen to
+Richthofen, Dec. 14, 1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 708, No. 5829.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_435"></a><a href="#FNanchor_435"><span class=
+"label">[435]</span></a>Memo. by Holstein, March 3, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XX, 37 ff., No. 6388; Monts to F. O., March 7,
+1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 41, No. 6390.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_436"></a><a href="#FNanchor_436"><span class=
+"label">[436]</span></a>Bülow to William II, March 11, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 46, No. 6397; Monts to F. O., March 26, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 47 f., No. 6399; <em>Quest. dipl. et col.</em>,
+April 1, 1904, XVII, 524 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_437"></a><a href="#FNanchor_437"><span class=
+"label">[437]</span></a>Monts to Bülow, April 16, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 53 f., No. 6403. Giovanni Giolitti, who was then
+Italian premier, has written as follows about this visit: “In
+Delcassé I noticed particularly his finesse and ability, as well as
+the insistence with which he attempted to loosen or weaken our
+bonds with Germany, without however putting forward anything at all
+in the nature of a definite proposal” (<em>Memoirs of My Life</em>
+[London, 1923], p. 183). On March 5, 1904, Sir Francis Bertie,
+British ambassador in Rome, wrote to Lansdowne as follows: “M.
+Ba[rrère] does all he can to create friction between Italy and
+Austria to alienate Italy from her partner in the Triplice”
+(<em>B.D.</em>, V, 74). In contrast the British Ambassador in
+Vienna was in April, 1904, reassuring his Italian colleague about
+Austrian intentions in the Balkans now that Russia was in a far
+eastern war (Plunkett to Lansdowne, April 7, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>,
+V, 80, No. 41).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_438"></a><a href="#FNanchor_438"><span class=
+"label">[438]</span></a>Memo. by Holstein, March 3, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 37 ff., No. 6388; Bülow to Monts, March 6, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 39 ff., No. 6389, and following documents.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_439"></a><a href="#FNanchor_439"><span class=
+"label">[439]</span></a>Monts to F. O., March 17, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 45, No. 6396; Bülow to Monts, March 26, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 46 f., No. 6398; Monts to Bülow, April 2, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 48 f., No. 6400; Monts to Bülow, April 16, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 52 f., No. 6402; Monts to Bülow, April 16, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 53 f., No. 6403.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_440"></a><a href="#FNanchor_440"><span class=
+"label">[440]</span></a>Monts to Bülow, April 25, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 54 ff., No. 6404; Monts to F. O., April 26, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 57 f., No. 6405; <em>Quest. dipl. et col.</em>,
+XVII, 688 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_441"></a><a href="#FNanchor_441"><span class=
+"label">[441]</span></a>Monts to Bülow, April 28, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 60 ff., No. 6410.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_442"></a><a href="#FNanchor_442"><span class=
+"label">[442]</span></a>Monts to Bülow, April 29, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 63 f., No. 6411.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_443"></a><a href="#FNanchor_443"><span class=
+"label">[443]</span></a>Bülow’s minutes to a dispatch from Monts,
+May 21, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 78, No. 6419.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_444"></a><a href="#FNanchor_444"><span class=
+"label">[444]</span></a>Holstein advised informing the Italian
+government that the Triple Alliance “practically speaking has had
+its day,” while Monts confined his relations with Tittoni to
+written communications. See Richthofen to Monts, April 28, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 59 f., No. 6409; Bülow to Monts, May 7, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 67 ff., No. 6414; memo. by Holstein, May 12, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 71 f., No. 6416; memo. by Bülow, May 12, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 73 f., No. 6417.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_445"></a><a href="#FNanchor_445"><span class=
+"label">[445]</span></a>Quoted in <em>ibid.</em>, p. 75 nn.;
+Tommaso Tittoni, <em>Italy’s Foreign and Colonial Policy. A
+Selection from the Speeches Delivered in the Italian Parliament by
+Tommaso Tittoni</em> (New York, 1915), pp. 12 f., quoting a speech
+by Tittoni on May 14, 1904.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_446"></a><a href="#FNanchor_446"><span class=
+"label">[446]</span></a>Memo. by Bülow, May 12, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 73 f., No. 6417 and Anlage; Monts to Bülow, May
+12, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 74 ff., No. 6418; and the following
+documents. At a personal meeting on Sept. 27, 1904, Premier
+Giolitti affirmed to Bülow Italy’s loyalty to her alliance and
+promised to show more reserve toward France (memo. by Bülow, Sept.
+28, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 81 ff., No. 6422).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_447"></a><a href="#FNanchor_447"><span class=
+"label">[447]</span></a>The Emperor tarried so long that Bülow
+finally advised him to come home; otherwise he would make himself
+ridiculous. See Monts to F. O., April 17, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>,
+117, No. 6440; Bülow to William II, April 17, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>,
+117 f., No. 6441.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_448"></a><a href="#FNanchor_448"><span class=
+"label">[448]</span></a>The Emperor made similar speeches at
+Karlsruhe, April 28, and at St. Johann-Saar-brücken, May 14
+(Schulthess, <em>Europäischer Geschichtskalender 1904</em>, pp. 76,
+92). At Karlsruhe he declared: “I hope that peace will not be
+disturbed and that the events which we see occurring will have the
+effect of . . . . making our eyes clear, of steeling our courage,
+and of uniting us if it should become necessary to interfere in the
+<em>Weltpolitik</em>.”</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_449"></a><a href="#FNanchor_449"><span class=
+"label">[449]</span></a>Memo. by Lichnowsky, April 13, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 203, No. 6516.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_450"></a><a href="#FNanchor_450"><span class=
+"label">[450]</span></a>Dr. Genthe of the <em>Kölnische
+Zeitung</em> had recently been murdered by some of the Moroccans; a
+native employee of a German firm had been illegally imprisoned; and
+certain indemnities from the Moroccan government had to be
+collected. See Mentzingen to Bülow, April 5 (received April 11),
+1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 202, No. 6515; memo. by Lichnowsky, April 13,
+1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 202 f., No. 6516; memo. by Bruning, April 23,
+1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 203 ff., No. 6517, and Richthofen’s minutes
+thereto.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_451"></a><a href="#FNanchor_451"><span class=
+"label">[451]</span></a>Memo. by Lichnowsky, April 19, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XIX, 174 f., No. 6031; Schlieffen to Bülow, April
+20, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, XX, 175 ff., No. 6032.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_452"></a><a href="#FNanchor_452"><span class=
+"label">[452]</span></a>On May 21, Mühlberg, of the German foreign
+office, telegraphed to Mentzingen, German minister at Tangier, that
+since “a forceful action could be easily misunderstood and lead to
+erroneous conclusions about the German policy,” the ship would not
+be sent (<em>ibid.</em>, 206, No. 6502).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_453"></a><a href="#FNanchor_453"><span class=
+"label">[453]</span></a>Memo. by Holstein, April 19, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 123 f., No. 6443; Bülow to Richthofen, April 19,
+1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 124, No. 6444. All three men approved of the
+idea.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_454"></a><a href="#FNanchor_454"><span class=
+"label">[454]</span></a>Newton, <em>Lord Lansdowne</em>, pp. 329
+f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_455"></a><a href="#FNanchor_455"><span class=
+"label">[455]</span></a>Richthofen to Lascelles, May 4, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 127 f., No. 6446. Whether or not the
+communication was sent in this form is not known. See
+Rücker-Jenisch to F. O., May 18, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 128 f., No.
+6447; Villiers to Lascelles, May 24, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 129 ff.,
+No. 6448; Lascelles to Lansdowne, May 18, 1904, <em>B.D.</em>, III,
+1, No. 1; Lansdowne to Lascelles, May 4, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 18,
+No. 16, and following documents.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_456"></a><a href="#FNanchor_456"><span class=
+"label">[456]</span></a>Memoir handed to Richthofen to Lascelles,
+May 28, 1904, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 132 f., No. 6449; Metternich to F.
+O., June 1, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 147 f., No. 6454.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_457"></a><a href="#FNanchor_457"><span class=
+"label">[457]</span></a>Memo. by Holstein, June 5, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 144 f., No. 6461; William II to Bülow, June 6,
+1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 147 f., No. 6463.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_458"></a><a href="#FNanchor_458"><span class=
+"label">[458]</span></a>Dispatches from Metternich to F. O., June
+2, 3, 4, 8, 9, 1904 (<em>ibid.</em>, 138 ff., Nos. 6455, 6458,
+6460, 6464, 6466). Cf. Mallet to Spring Rice, early summer, 1904
+(Gwynn, <em>The Letters and Friendships of Sir Cecil Spring
+Rice</em>, I, 414). Mallet stated that the British government did
+not want to weaken the advance toward France by a settlement with
+Germany, especially since the Anglo-French accord had not been
+definitely ratified.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_459"></a><a href="#FNanchor_459"><span class=
+"label">[459]</span></a><em>G.P.</em>, XX, 148 ff., Nos. 6464-80;
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 21 ff., Nos. 19-23.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_460"></a><a href="#FNanchor_460"><span class=
+"label">[460]</span></a>Memo. by Bülow, June 26, 29, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 186 ff., Nos. 6038, 6040; memo. by Richthofen
+(undated though probably written about July 4, 1904),
+<em>ibid.</em>, 194 ff., No. 6042; Richthofen to Metternich, June
+20, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, XX, 163, No. 6478; Lee, <em>King Edward
+VII</em>, II, 292 ff. See also MacDonald to Lansdowne, June 23,
+1904, <em>B.D.</em>, IV, 1, No. 1; Lansdowne to MacDonald, June 24,
+1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 2, No. 2.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_461"></a><a href="#FNanchor_461"><span class=
+"label">[461]</span></a>In 1896 the Emperor had shown a decided
+interest in Morocco (<em>G.P.</em>, XI, No. 2820). In the next
+years, however, his attitude had changed. The motive force behind
+the German policy toward Morocco was Bülow.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_462"></a><a href="#FNanchor_462"><span class=
+"label">[462]</span></a>The Emperor thought of buying Fernando Po,
+but said nothing of this to the King. On this incident and the
+Emperor’s attitude toward Morocco see his minutes to Radolin to
+Bülow, Oct. 20, 1903, <em>ibid.</em>, XVII, 362, No. 5206; William
+II to Bülow, March 16, 1904; <em>ibid.</em>, 363, No. 5208;
+Radowitz to Richthofen, March 23, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 364, No.
+5209; Radolin to Bülow, March 30, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 365, No.
+5210. On Oct. 20, 1903, Radolin had reported from Paris a
+conversation with the Spanish Ambassador in which the latter, after
+admitting that France and Spain were well on the way toward an
+accord over Morocco, remarked to him, “I suppose that you have
+nothing to object to our entente.” Radolin replied, “We have only
+commercial interests in those parts, which, however, are of very
+great importance and which we must safeguard” (Radolin to Bülow,
+Oct. 20, 1903, <em>ibid.</em>, 361 f., No. 5206).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_463"></a><a href="#FNanchor_463"><span class=
+"label">[463]</span></a>Bülow to Radowitz, April 29, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XX, 169 f., No. 6481.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_464"></a><a href="#FNanchor_464"><span class=
+"label">[464]</span></a>Bülow to Radowitz, May 22, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 173 f., No. 6484; Bülow to Radowitz, May 25, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 174 f., No. 6486.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_465"></a><a href="#FNanchor_465"><span class=
+"label">[465]</span></a>Bülow to Metternich, May 31, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 176 f., No. 6488; Metternich to F. O., June 1,
+1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 177 f., No. 6489, and following documents;
+also Lansdowne to Lascelles, June 1, 1904, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 53,
+No. 61.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_466"></a><a href="#FNanchor_466"><span class=
+"label">[466]</span></a>Radowitz to F. O., June 10, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 180 f., No. 6494; Bülow to Radowitz, June 16,
+1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 181, No. 6496.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_467"></a><a href="#FNanchor_467"><span class=
+"label">[467]</span></a>Radowitz to F. O., June 17, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 182, No. 6497; Bülow to Radowitz, June 18, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 182 f., No. 6498 and following documents.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_468"></a><a href="#FNanchor_468"><span class=
+"label">[468]</span></a>Radolin to Bülow, July 27, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 216, No. 6524; memo. by Richthofen, July 16, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 186, No. 6503; Radowitz to F. O., July 21, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 188, No. 6504.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_469"></a><a href="#FNanchor_469"><span class=
+"label">[469]</span></a>Bülow to Radolin, July 21, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 210 ff., No. 6523; Radolin to Bülow, July 27, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 215 ff., No. 6524; memo. by Richthofen, July 29,
+1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 217, No. 6525, and Bülow’s minutes. In the
+negotiations with Germany over the acceptance of the Khedivial
+decree, Lansdowne informed Metternich that France had agreed to
+support Great Britain fully if at some future time the latter
+should propose “a revision of the international agreements
+affecting the position of the Powers in Egypt” (Lansdowne to
+Whitehead, June 19, 1904, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 22 f., No. 21). This
+was, of course, the content of one of the secret articles in the
+Anglo-French agreement of April 8, although naturally Lansdowne did
+not say so. Whether the German government inferred therefrom that a
+reciprocal concession had been made by Great Britain to France with
+respect to Morocco is not evident, but it probably did. Lansdowne
+also stated to Metternich on June 1 what the area was which should
+be supervised by Spain, although he spoke only of having emphasized
+this point verbally to the French government and said nothing of a
+secret article to that effect. So far as the documents show, the
+German government does not seem to have recognized the import of
+this statement, although this negative proof is not conclusive
+(Metternich to F. O., June 1, 1904, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 177 f., No.
+6489).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_470"></a><a href="#FNanchor_470"><span class=
+"label">[470]</span></a>Bülow to Metternich, June 4, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 27 f., No. 6383; Metternich to F. O., June 4, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 29 f., Nos. 6384 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_471"></a><a href="#FNanchor_471"><span class=
+"label">[471]</span></a>Bülow to Radolin, July 21, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 210 f., No. 6523. Radolin also warned that if
+“English diplomatic support of France does not signify much, we
+have a free hand, while an Anglo-French resistance could easily
+force us to retreat” (Radolin to Bülow, July 27, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 216 f., No. 6524).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_472"></a><a href="#FNanchor_472"><span class=
+"label">[472]</span></a>Mühlberg to Metternich, Aug. 7, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 217 ff., No. 6526.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_473"></a><a href="#FNanchor_473"><span class=
+"label">[473]</span></a>Metternich to Bülow, Aug. 15, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 219 ff., No. 6527; Lansdowne to Lascelles, Aug. 15,
+1904, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 53 f., No. 62.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_474"></a><a href="#FNanchor_474"><span class=
+"label">[474]</span></a>Metternich’s dispatch was sent on Aug. 18,
+although dated Aug. 15. Bülow approved of the new measures on Aug.
+17. See Mentzingen to Bülow, Aug. 6, 1904, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 222
+f., No. 6528; Mühlberg to Bülow, Aug. 16, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 223
+f., No. 6529; Bülow to Tschirschky, Aug. 17, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>,
+224 f., No. 6530.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_475"></a><a href="#FNanchor_475"><span class=
+"label">[475]</span></a>Mentzingen to F. O., Sept. 13, 18, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 226 ff., Nos. 6532 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_476"></a><a href="#FNanchor_476"><span class=
+"label">[476]</span></a>See editor’s note, <em>ibid.</em>, p. 225;
+also memo. by Richthofen, Oct. 7, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 228, No.
+6534.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_477"></a><a href="#FNanchor_477"><span class=
+"label">[477]</span></a>Memo. by Richthofen, <em>ibid.</em>, 228
+ff., No. 6534.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_478"></a><a href="#FNanchor_478"><span class=
+"label">[478]</span></a>Richthofen to Radowitz, Oct. 7, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 191, No. 6508; memo. by Richthofen for Bülow, Oct.
+7, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 228 ff., No. 6534.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_479"></a><a href="#FNanchor_479"><span class=
+"label">[479]</span></a>Memo. by Kries, Oct. 22, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 231 f., No. 6535.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_480"></a><a href="#FNanchor_480"><span class=
+"label">[480]</span></a>Kühlmann to Bülow, Nov. 9, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 232 ff., No. 6536.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap">
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[159]</span><a id=
+"c10"></a>CHAPTER X</h2>
+
+<p class="sch1">THE NEGOTIATIONS FOR A RUSSO-GERMAN ALLIANCE,
+1904</p>
+
+<p>Early in July, 1904, Herr von Holstein offered his resignation
+because of personal differences with Baron Richthofen. In doing so,
+he stated that the prestige of Germany had diminished during the
+past years “while our opponents and rivals are on the point of
+encircling us”; and as “difficult situations” were to be
+anticipated, he was happy to be relieved of responsibility. Count
+Bülow patched up the quarrel, but his comment to Herr von
+Holstein’s remarks is illuminating:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>Now he [Herr von Holstein] speaks of our shrunken prestige just
+as the Bismarckian press does. But I cannot believe that Holstein,
+like that press, attributes the decline of our authority to the
+dismissal of the great Chancellor. Since that dismissal, from the
+non-renewal of the Russian Reinsurance Treaty and the East Asiatic
+Triple Alliance to the handling of the Moroccan and Egyptian
+questions, from the so-called Urias letter to Vienna to the
+publication of the Swinemünde dispatch, from the turn in 1896
+against England to the Shanghai and Pauncefote difference with that
+Power, nothing of significance has happened in our foreign policy
+without Holstein’s advice.<a id="FNanchor_481"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_481" class="fnanchor">[481]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The results of those errors, so frankly confessed, were
+apparent: the conclusion of the Entente Cordiale, the exclusion of
+Germany from the entente movement and from the Moroccan settlement,
+the British efforts to approach Russia,<a id=
+"FNanchor_482"></a><a href="#Footnote_482" class=
+"fnanchor">[482]</a> animosity between Great Britain and Germany.
+They all caused that attempt at a new orientation of policy which
+in 1900 Count Bülow had threatened in this eventuality.</p>
+
+<p>One of the most favorable aspects of the German foreign
+relations<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[160]</span> was the
+<em>rapprochement</em> with the United States in 1903 and 1904.
+There was cordial friendship between President Roosevelt and Baron
+Sternburg, the German ambassador,<a id="FNanchor_483"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_483" class="fnanchor">[483]</a> and the two governments
+both desired to maintain the integrity of China during the current
+war.<a id="FNanchor_484"></a><a href="#Footnote_484" class=
+"fnanchor">[484]</a> The President mistrusted Russia, about whom he
+could say nothing good, and France in their policy toward China,
+and he met difficulty in trying to co-operate with Great
+Britain.<a id="FNanchor_485"></a><a href="#Footnote_485" class=
+"fnanchor">[485]</a> As he was ambitious to mediate peace between
+Russia and Japan when the time came, he turned to Germany for aid,
+in August expressing the wish “to go hand in hand with Germany in
+East Asia.”<a id="FNanchor_486"></a><a href="#Footnote_486" class=
+"fnanchor">[486]</a> The German government perceived in this
+co-operation a means of protecting its interests in China, of
+issuing from its relative international isolation, and of
+preventing France and Great Britain from mediating peace—an event
+which might enable them to form a triple grouping with Russia or
+even a quadruple combination with Russia and Japan.<a id=
+"FNanchor_487"></a><a href="#Footnote_487" class=
+"fnanchor">[487]</a> Count Bülow therefore cordially responded to
+the President’s invitation,<a id="FNanchor_488"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_488" class="fnanchor">[488]</a> seeking at the same time
+to increase the latter’s suspicion of France and Great
+Britain.<a id="FNanchor_489"></a><a href="#Footnote_489" class=
+"fnanchor">[489]</a></p>
+
+<p>As the German government realized the limitations to this
+intimacy with the United States, it sought a more effective
+association<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[161]</span> in an
+alliance with Russia. In January, 1904, the Chancellor had been
+unconcerned about such an alliance;<a id=
+"FNanchor_490"></a><a href="#Footnote_490" class=
+"fnanchor">[490]</a> but by July he was waiting for the
+“psychological moment” in which to propose a renewal of the former
+“League of the Three Emperors.”<a id="FNanchor_491"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_491" class="fnanchor">[491]</a></p>
+
+<p>The advent of that moment seemed highly probable. Since the
+beginning of the Russo-Japanese War, the Russian people,
+government, and sovereign had drawn closer to Germany.<a id=
+"FNanchor_492"></a><a href="#Footnote_492" class=
+"fnanchor">[492]</a> On June 1, “dearest Nicky” wrote to his cousin
+“Willy” (so they addressed each other), “I know that you feel for
+us in this serious time and it is a comfort to realize that one’s
+<em>real friends</em> think and sympathize with one.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_493"></a><a href="#Footnote_493" class=
+"fnanchor">[493]</a> And “Willy,” in his replies, overflowed with
+affection and advice—advice that varied from directing “Nicky” upon
+how to conduct war to lecturing him on the “piratical” practices of
+his ships, from urging him to send his Black Sea fleet through the
+Dardanelles in spite of British opposition to reporting gossip
+which would antagonize him against Great Britain and France.<a id=
+"FNanchor_494"></a><a href="#Footnote_494" class=
+"fnanchor">[494]</a></p>
+
+<p>In October the opportunity arose for the German move toward an
+alliance. A Russian company had given a contract to the
+Hamburg-American Line to furnish coal for the Russian
+Baltic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[162]</span> fleet which
+was to sail for the war zone about the middle of that month.<a id=
+"FNanchor_495"></a><a href="#Footnote_495" class=
+"fnanchor">[495]</a> As the German firm intended to use mainly
+English coal, it had chartered a number of British ships and had
+given a subcontract to a British firm to aid it in the
+transportation. None the less, on learning of the transaction, the
+British press bitterly attacked Germany for thus violating
+neutrality. In view of this attack Count Bülow on October 4
+instructed Baron Romberg, first secretary of the German embassy in
+St. Petersburg, to make a communication to the Russian government
+as follows: Baron Romberg should state to Count Lamsdorff that this
+press campaign might provoke a war but that the German government
+would not prevent the execution of the coaling contract, that it
+“would run the risk of having the English kindle fire-rockets in
+Japan.” If war did occur with Japan and Great Britain, Germany
+would hold France also responsible; for not only would a large
+element among the French advocate grasping the opportunity for
+revenge against Germany, but also the arousing of the British zeal
+for war would be a direct result of the Entente Cordiale. “So if we
+lose our colonies, trade, merchant marine, and perhaps also a part
+of our war fleet in an unequal battle on the sea . . . . a
+reckoning with France on land would become unavoidable for
+us.”<a id="FNanchor_496"></a><a href="#Footnote_496" class=
+"fnanchor">[496]</a></p>
+
+<p>Count Lamsdorff showed no inclination to respond to this feeler.
+On October 19, while thanking the German government for its
+friendship, he refused to credit either Great Britain or Japan with
+bellicose intentions against Germany. He interrupted Baron Romberg
+to assure him that nothing was to be feared from France; not a word
+did he utter about an alliance.<a id="FNanchor_497"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_497" class="fnanchor">[497]</a></p>
+
+<p>Meantime, the Russian Baltic squadron sailed, and in the night
+of October 21 occurred the Dogger Bank disaster which brought war
+between Great Britain and Russia dangerously<span class="pagenum"
+id="Page_163">[163]</span> close.<a id="FNanchor_498"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_498" class="fnanchor">[498]</a> The “psychological
+moment” had come, reasoned Count Bülow and Herr von Holstein.
+Defeated in the Far East, menaced by revolution, and excited by
+this new danger, Russia should welcome the project of an alliance
+with the strongest military power in Europe. So on October 24 Herr
+von Holstein, who usually held aloof from all ambassadors,
+explained the German proposition to Count Osten-Sacken,<a id=
+"FNanchor_499"></a><a href="#Footnote_499" class=
+"fnanchor">[499]</a> the Russian representative. Three days later
+the Emperor’s influence with the Czar, who was thought to be more
+pliable and more favorably inclined than his Foreign Minister, was
+brought into play. In a letter to Nicholas II the Emperor
+wrote:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>For some time English press has been threatening Germany, on no
+account to allow coals to be sent to your Baltic Fleet now on its
+way out. It is not impossible, that the Japanese and British
+Governments may lodge a joint protest against our coaling your
+ships coupled with a <em>sommation</em> to stop further work. The
+result aimed at by such a threat of war would be absolute
+immobility of your fleet and inability to proceed to its
+destination from want of fuel. This new danger would have to be
+faced in community by Russia and Germany together, who would both
+have to remind your ally France of the obligations she has taken
+over in the treaty of Dual Alliance with you, the <em>casus
+foederis</em>. It is out of the question, that France on such an
+invitation, would try to shirk her implicit duty towards her ally.
+Though Delcassé is an Anglophile <em>énragé</em>, he will be wise
+enough to understand that the British fleet is utterly unable to
+save Paris! In this way a powerful combination of 3 of the
+strongest continental Powers would be formed to attack, whom the
+Anglo-Japanese group would think twice before acting. . . . . My
+news from London say, that the Press and mob make a noise, the
+Admiralty some fuss, but that Government, Court and Society look
+with greatest calm at the event as an unhappy accident, arising
+from to great nervousness.<a id="FNanchor_500"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_500" class="fnanchor">[500]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[164]</span>This broad hint,
+amounting almost to a proposal of alliance itself, was immediately
+effective. The Czar replied two days later:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>As you say . . . . Germany, Russia, and France should at once
+unite upon an arrangement to abolish Anglo-Japanese arrogance and
+insolence. Would you like to lay down and frame the outlines of
+such a treaty and let me know it? As soon as accepted by us France
+is bound to join her ally. This combination has often come to my
+mind. It will mean peace and rest for the world.<a id=
+"FNanchor_501"></a><a href="#Footnote_501" class=
+"fnanchor">[501]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>On the next day a draft of a treaty and a long explanatory
+letter, both composed by the Chancellor and Herr von
+Holstein,<a id="FNanchor_502"></a><a href="#Footnote_502" class=
+"fnanchor">[502]</a> were sent by the Emperor to the Czar. This
+draft, which was intended to test how far the Russian government
+would go, provided for a “defensive alliance . . . . to localize as
+far as possible the Russo-Japanese War.” The first article was the
+most important:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>In case one of the two Empires shall be attacked by a European
+Power, its ally will aid it with all its force on land and sea. The
+two allies, in that case, would make common cause for the purpose
+of recalling to France the obligations which she has assumed by the
+terms of the Franco-Russian treaty of Alliance.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">By the second article neither Power was to conclude
+a separate peace with a common adversary. The third article was
+designed to safeguard Germany in the coaling affair and to continue
+the alliance after the current war was over. It read:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>The engagement of mutual aid is equally valid in case acts
+performed by one of the high contracting parties during the war
+such as the delivery of coal to a belligerent should give place
+after the war to reclamations of a third Power, as pretended
+violations of the right of neutrality.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[165]</span>In
+the letter the Emperor emphasized the defensive and the purely
+European character of the alliance. “It is very essential that
+America should not feel threatened by our agreement,” he wrote. He
+denounced France, “this republic of miserable civilians,” “the
+French radicals, Clemenceau and all the rest of the tag-rag and
+bobtail” for not fulfilling France’s obligations to her ally.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>I positively know that as far back as last December the French
+Finance Minister Rouvier told the Finance Minister of another
+power, France would on no account join in a Russo-Japanese war,
+even though England sided with Japan. To make doubly sure, the
+English have handed Morocco over to France. The certainty, that
+France intends to remain neutral and even to lend her diplomatic
+support to England, is the motive, which gives English policy its
+present unwonted brutal assurance. This unheard of state of things
+will change as soon as France finds herself face to face with the
+necessity of eventually choosing sides. . . . . The radical party .
+. . . abhors war and militarism, while the nationalist party while
+not objecting to war in itself, hates fighting for England and
+against Russia. Thus it will be in the interests of both parties to
+bring pressure to bear on and warn England to keep the peace. The
+main result will be, if you and I stand shoulder to shoulder, that
+France must formally and openly join us, thereby fulfilling her
+treaty-obligations toward Russia. . . . . This consummation once
+reached, I expect to maintain peace and you will be left an
+undisturbed and free hand to deal with Japan. . . . . Of course,
+before we can take any steps in this question and approach France
+that tiresome North Sea incident must first have been brought to a
+close.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">For, he continued, the French foreign office had
+already accepted the British view of the incident, and in case of
+difficulty over this matter, France would choose the British side.
+At the close of his letter the Emperor wrote that only he and Count
+Bülow knew of the project, and that when they had finished the
+draft the Chancellor had said: “May God’s blessings rest upon the
+work of the two monarchs and may the mighty three-Power group,
+Russia, Germany, France, preserve forever the peace of Europe. God
+grant it!”<a id="FNanchor_503"></a><a href="#Footnote_503" class=
+"fnanchor">[503]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[166]</span>The real object
+of this extravagant show of devotion to Russia was of course to
+inveigle her into an alliance. It did not signify a desire for a
+general conflict; the German government appreciated the British
+naval power too keenly for that.<a id="FNanchor_504"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_504" class="fnanchor">[504]</a> Moreover, since it knew
+how averse the Russian government and especially the Czar were to
+an extension of the war, it emphasized the pacifying influence
+which the proposed alliance would exercise. The German leaders
+doubtlessly realized, however, that they were running a big risk,
+since Count Bernstorff, first secretary of the embassy in London,
+had warned them that Great Britain would regard an alliance between
+Germany and Russia, no matter how defensive in character, as an
+aggression directed against the security of the British
+Empire.<a id="FNanchor_505"></a><a href="#Footnote_505" class=
+"fnanchor">[505]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Chancellor and Herr von Holstein considered the risk worth
+while, because, if the alliance could be concluded, they expected
+France, under the combined pressure of Russia and Germany, to enter
+the new grouping. If she did so, they no doubt reasoned, the
+Entente Cordiale would be destroyed, the work of M. Delcassé would
+be blocked, and, instead of Great Britain, Germany would be the
+center of the new combination. France, as the weakest member of the
+firm, would have to take orders from both her partners. In fact,
+the German government openly expressed to the Czar the expectation
+that in case of a war the control over the French army and navy
+would be put into German hands. If France, refusing to enter the
+alliance, elected to range herself with Great Britain and if the
+Russo-German alliance alone were made, the German statesmen
+apparently thought that the Dual Alliance would be broken, France
+would again be at the mercy of the German military power, and the
+possibility of an Anglo-Russian accord would be destroyed. The
+gains, both positive and negative, to be derived by Germany from
+such an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[167]</span> alliance
+would be enormous. Its completion would constitute a far-reaching
+diplomatic revolution.<a id="FNanchor_506"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_506" class="fnanchor">[506]</a></p>
+
+<p>In Russian governmental circles opinion was divided. The Czar,
+who had proposed the alliance without consulting his Foreign
+Minister,<a id="FNanchor_507"></a><a href="#Footnote_507" class=
+"fnanchor">[507]</a> was its staunchest supporter. Weak and
+dependent, he usually agreed with his most recent adviser. His
+imagination, which could be vivid at times, was given freer rein
+because of his indolence. In 1903 he had succumbed to the arguments
+and ambitions of the adventurer, M. Bezobrazov, about Manchuria and
+Korea and had brought on the war with Japan. As the necessary
+European part of that program, M. Bezobrazov had advocated an
+understanding between the Dual and the Triple alliances. This
+aspect had not been achieved, probably owing to Count Lamsdorff’s
+opposition.<a id="FNanchor_508"></a><a href="#Footnote_508" class=
+"fnanchor">[508]</a> But the war was taking a disastrous course for
+Russia, revolution was threatening, and the German Emperor’s
+telegram arrived while the crisis with Great Britain was still
+acute and when Russia, according to the British Ambassador, would
+have welcomed a war with that Power.<a id=
+"FNanchor_509"></a><a href="#Footnote_509" class=
+"fnanchor">[509]</a> The forlorn and troubled Czar returned readily
+to the idea of an alliance when William II suggested it.</p>
+
+<p>Count Lamsdorff was wary of this move from the start. Not a very
+strong personality, he was unable at times to maintain control of
+the foreign policy, yet he was a capable and loyal official who,
+when necessary, spoke frankly to his master. The Czar was actuated
+chiefly by sentiment and emotion; his Minister by shrewd diplomatic
+calculations. Although the one did not grasp<span class="pagenum"
+id="Page_168">[168]</span> the German motives, the other did; and
+the prospect of feeling “the heavy weight . . . . of the iron
+bands” of a German alliance was not to his liking. Count Lamsdorff
+did not believe that Russia needed this alliance as he felt certain
+that Great Britain would not attack her.<a id=
+"FNanchor_510"></a><a href="#Footnote_510" class=
+"fnanchor">[510]</a> Furthermore, the conclusion of an agreement of
+neutrality about Balkan affairs with Austria-Hungary late in
+October relieved his country from danger in that quarter.<a id=
+"FNanchor_511"></a><a href="#Footnote_511" class=
+"fnanchor">[511]</a></p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>On the other hand [he wrote to Count Osten-Sacken], we
+manifestly need the friendship of our powerful neighbor for the
+security of our extensive frontier, for our provisioning with coal
+and other contrabands, etc. All this must be seriously considered
+and we must endeavor not to permit our relations with Berlin to
+deteriorate, although Paris must also not be disregarded. Only
+through the preservation of this balance will Russia succeed in
+obtaining all possible advantages from both sides.<a id=
+"FNanchor_512"></a><a href="#Footnote_512" class=
+"fnanchor">[512]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>When the German draft of the treaty arrived, the Dogger Bank
+crisis was over, but the Russian government remained embittered
+because Great Britain had made special naval preparations and a
+detachment of British cruisers, cleared for action, had followed
+the Russian fleet from Vigo to Tangier.<a id=
+"FNanchor_513"></a><a href="#Footnote_513" class=
+"fnanchor">[513]</a> Still, that was no reason to assume the “iron
+bands” of a German alliance. The Czar and his Foreign Minister
+immediately set to work to make the terms more favorable for
+Russia.<a id="FNanchor_514"></a><a href="#Footnote_514" class=
+"fnanchor">[514]</a> They modified the<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_169">[169]</span> first and third articles.<a id=
+"FNanchor_515"></a><a href="#Footnote_515" class=
+"fnanchor">[515]</a> In the latter, to be kept secret, they
+incorporated a <em>quid pro quo</em> by which Russia should receive
+German support in the Russo-Japanese negotiations for peace. The
+revised first article was the more important. The first sentence
+remained as before; but, instead of stipulating that Russia and
+Germany both advise France to enter the alliance, the second
+sentence was changed to read: “His Majesty the Emperor of all the
+Russias will take the steps necessary to initiate France into this
+accord and to invite her to associate herself in it as ally.” The
+Czar told the Emperor that the revised Article I must stand without
+change.<a id="FNanchor_516"></a><a href="#Footnote_516" class=
+"fnanchor">[516]</a></p>
+
+<p>When the Russian government had been brought to this point, the
+German leaders revealed their real aim. They were, of course,
+obliged to accept the new first article; but the Emperor, in his
+reply to Nicholas II, November 17, made it plain that France would
+have to choose sides, even though, as he frankly wrote, “doubtless
+the French would much prefer any other grouping of Powers to that
+of the Alliance <em>a trois</em> as in 1895.” The chief revisions
+asked by the German government were in the introduction and in
+Article III. The former was changed to read: The Emperor and the
+Czar “for the purpose of assuring the maintenance of peace in
+Europe have agreed on the following articles of a treaty of
+defensive alliance.” According to an entirely new Article III the
+treaty should remain in force until denounced one year in advance;
+however, it was left to the Czar to set any time limit he
+wished.</p>
+
+<p>These revisions transformed the basis of the negotiation. They
+made the alliance a general one to continue after the war. The
+changes were explained on the ground that, in the previous version,
+the treaty had been aimed too openly at Great Britain, and that,
+while this was the case, it was not politic to make the fact too
+evident.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[170]</span>The Russian
+<em>quid pro quo</em> in Article III was also rejected. Germany
+preferred not to help Russia in the negotiations for peace for fear
+of antagonizing the United States and of driving her into British
+arms, although the Emperor excused this refusal by explaining that
+if this secret clause became known, public opinion might consider
+the treaty an aggressive one binding Germany to defend the Russian
+conquests. Instead, he proposed that the previous Article III be
+made into an extra secret article in which the second sentence
+should read: “It follows from the the terms of the first sentence
+of Article I that Germany will associate herself with no action
+whatever that might imply hostile tendencies to Russia.” That
+clause, wrote the Emperor, would safeguard Russia against the
+repetition of any such congress as that of 1878, whereby she had
+been deprived of her Turkish conquests.</p>
+
+<p>In his accompanying letter to the Czar, for which Count Bülow
+and Herr von Holstein furnished the rough draft, the Emperor urged
+a quick signing of the agreement, adding the extraordinary proposal
+that Russia make some military demonstration on the Persian-Afghan
+frontier. “Even should the forces at your disposal not suffice for
+a real attack on India itself,” he wrote, “they would do for
+Persia—which has no army—and a pressure on the Indian frontier from
+Persia will do wonders in England and have remarkably quieting
+influence on the hot headed Jingoes in London.” He also warned the
+Czar against Anglo-French ambitions to mediate at the desire of
+Japan.<a id="FNanchor_517"></a><a href="#Footnote_517" class=
+"fnanchor">[517]</a></p>
+
+<p>In St. Petersburg, Count Lamsdorff persuaded the Czar to proceed
+slowly with the negotiations, and, more important still, to consult
+France before concluding any agreement. So on November 23 Nicholas
+II telegraphed the German Emperor to that effect, adding:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[171]</span>As long as it is
+not signed one can make small modifications on the text; whereas if
+allready approved by us both, it will seem as if we tried to
+enforce the treaty on France. In this case a failure might easily
+happen, which I think is neither your wish.<a id=
+"FNanchor_518"></a><a href="#Footnote_518" class=
+"fnanchor">[518]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The Germans realized that this answer spelled defeat for them;
+because if the treaty became known to the French government that
+government would of course strenuously resist its completion. In
+fact, the Emperor was sure that M. Delcassé would at once publish
+the news of the proposed alliance, that a war cry in England would
+then burst forth, and that the timid Czar would back out. As he
+aptly expressed it, Count Lamsdorff and M. Witte had “spat in the
+German soup.”<a id="FNanchor_519"></a><a href="#Footnote_519"
+class="fnanchor">[519]</a> On November 26 he replied with a refusal
+to let France know a word of the affair; it would be better to drop
+the whole matter until a more suitable moment, he declared.
+Although disgusted at this display of “cold feet,” as he put it,
+William II showed no especial anger or uneasiness in his answer and
+asked Nicholas II to continue their intimacy as before.<a id=
+"FNanchor_520"></a><a href="#Footnote_520" class=
+"fnanchor">[520]</a></p>
+
+<p>On the receipt of that reply Count Lamsdorff had to persuade his
+master all over again, because the latter was more anxious to make
+the alliance than he was to be considerate of his ally.<a id=
+"FNanchor_521"></a><a href="#Footnote_521" class=
+"fnanchor">[521]</a> Certainly his letter of October 29 to William
+II was such as to warrant confidence that he would be willing to
+force the alliance upon France whether she wished it or not. Count
+Lamsdorff argued that the relations of Russia and Germany were
+sufficiently close to hold them together without an alliance. He
+declared that France’s intimacy with Great Britain had not caused
+her to be disloyal to her ally. While he doubted whether she could
+be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[172]</span> won to the
+proposed combination, he urged her right to be consulted beforehand
+and denied that she would disclose the secret. She must be won
+gradually, he said, and not confronted with a <em>fait
+accompli</em> which might force her back upon Great Britain.<a id=
+"FNanchor_522"></a><a href="#Footnote_522" class=
+"fnanchor">[522]</a></p>
+
+<p>It is obvious that Count Lamsdorff sought by this method to
+quash the project or render it harmless. He succeeded only partly
+in winning over his master. In the reply to the Emperor on December
+7 Nicholas II once more asked permission to obtain the French
+reaction to the main lines of the alliance, even though the
+original document itself be kept secret from her. “In case of a
+negative answer,” he wrote in conclusion, “the second phase of Art.
+I of the draft of the treaty ought to be left out I think.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_523"></a><a href="#Footnote_523" class=
+"fnanchor">[523]</a> Thus, even in case Germany refused his
+request, the Czar was still apparently willing to make an alliance
+with her to the entire exclusion of France.</p>
+
+<p>While the Russian government was preparing this answer, the
+Germans lost patience. Prospects for success seemed doubtful if not
+entirely hopeless. The declarations of the French press that the
+Dual Alliance remained as firm as ever and that Germany’s attempts
+to win Russia had failed caused the Chancellor to suspect that news
+of the negotiations had leaked out. Threats to seize the German
+vessels coaling the Russian fleet appeared in the Japanese press;
+the British government laid restrictions upon the shipping of coal
+to that fleet. In November and December Germany began to fear a
+British attack.<a id="FNanchor_524"></a><a href="#Footnote_524"
+class="fnanchor">[524]</a></p>
+
+<p>Since October the British press had returned to its campaign of
+calumniation against Germany, seeing a German plot behind every
+British difficulty. In the autumn a redistribution of the British
+naval forces had weakened the Mediterranean fleet and<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_173">[173]</span> concentrated the main strength
+in home waters. Germany perceived in this rearrangement a tangible
+proof of the new alignment of Great Britain with France and of the
+growing British animosity toward her.<a id=
+"FNanchor_525"></a><a href="#Footnote_525" class=
+"fnanchor">[525]</a></p>
+
+<p>Hence when in November several articles appeared in <em>Vanity
+Fair</em> and in the <em>Army and Navy Gazette</em> proposing that
+the German fleet be “Copenhagened”<a id="FNanchor_526"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_526" class="fnanchor">[526]</a> as useless for any other
+purpose than to attack Great Britain,<a id=
+"FNanchor_527"></a><a href="#Footnote_527" class=
+"fnanchor">[527]</a> German public opinion took these threats
+seriously. The Emperor wrote to Count Bülow on November 23 that
+“the situation assumes more and more the aspect of that immediately
+preceding the Seven Years’ War.”<a id="FNanchor_528"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_528" class="fnanchor">[528]</a> The German navy
+department began hurried measures to recall the vessels in foreign
+waters.<a id="FNanchor_529"></a><a href="#Footnote_529" class=
+"fnanchor">[529]</a> Taking a saner view, the Chancellor, by means
+of an interview published in the <em>Nineteenth Century</em> for
+December and a speech in the Reichstag on December 5, sought to
+calm both his own and the British people by an absolute disclaimer
+of the thought of war between the two countries and by a denial
+that in the construction of her fleet Germany intended any
+hostility toward Great Britain.<a id="FNanchor_530"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_530" class="fnanchor">[530]</a> But by December 5 Herr
+von Holstein himself came to credit the possibility of a British
+attack.<a id="FNanchor_531"></a><a href="#Footnote_531" class=
+"fnanchor">[531]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[174]</span>While this
+situation seemed serious, the Chancellor was more concerned by the
+fact that the completion of the coaling of the Russian fleet would
+soon deprive Germany of her hold over Russia.<a id=
+"FNanchor_532"></a><a href="#Footnote_532" class=
+"fnanchor">[532]</a> On December 6 he instructed the German
+Ambassador at St. Petersburg to inquire peremptorily of the Russian
+government whether Germany could rely upon its full support in case
+the coaling led to war. The Ambassador was to state that if no
+satisfactory answer were received by the time the Russian fleet
+reached Madagascar the Hamburg-American Line would be forbidden to
+continue its task. This telegram, which was followed on the next
+day by a similar one from the Emperor to Nicholas II,<a id=
+"FNanchor_533"></a><a href="#Footnote_533" class=
+"fnanchor">[533]</a> forced the negotiations back to the very point
+from which they had started.</p>
+
+<p>Upon receipt of this message the Czar, highly agitated,
+immediately telegraphed that his letter of the same date (December
+7) had evidently crossed the other on the way and would explain
+everything.<a id="FNanchor_534"></a><a href="#Footnote_534" class=
+"fnanchor">[534]</a> But when that letter arrived, William II
+demanded that they settle the coaling affair by signing a
+convention concerning it at once.<a id="FNanchor_535"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_535" class="fnanchor">[535]</a> Thus, Germany herself
+destroyed the possibility of continuing the previous negotiations
+and of concluding, perhaps, a defensive alliance with Russia alone.
+The Czar could only acquiesce.<a id="FNanchor_536"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_536" class="fnanchor">[536]</a> On December 12 Count
+Lamsdorff gave written assurance to the German government that
+Russia would make common cause with it in case the coaling led to
+war.<a id="FNanchor_537"></a><a href="#Footnote_537" class=
+"fnanchor">[537]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[175]</span>The promptness
+with which the Russian government agreed to the German demand
+showed how essential to Russia was the continued coaling of her
+fleet, which within about a week would reach Madagascar. Count
+Lamsdorff felt entirely safe in making the assurance of support,
+for, as he frankly said to the German Ambassador, he did not
+believe that either Great Britain or Japan would let things come to
+war.<a id="FNanchor_538"></a><a href="#Footnote_538" class=
+"fnanchor">[538]</a> Also he particularly wished to avoid
+antagonizing Germany while she was permitting a Russian loan of
+231,000,000 rubles to be made in Berlin.<a id=
+"FNanchor_539"></a><a href="#Footnote_539" class=
+"fnanchor">[539]</a> The Minister was elated over the turn which
+the Russo-German negotiations had taken. By changing the basis of
+discussion from that of a defensive alliance to that of a specific
+agreement limited to a definite eventuality, the German government
+had adopted his own policy of close friendship and co-operation
+without an alliance. His battle with both Germany and the Czar was
+won by the German government itself.</p>
+
+<p>On riper thought the German foreign office perceived that this
+Russian promise did not cover all cases in which war might arise as
+a result of German friendliness. It had no doubt had time since the
+arrival of the Czar’s letter of December 7 in which to appreciate
+its mistake in hastily changing the basis of negotiation. Hence on
+December 12 it instructed Count Alvensleben to propose to the
+Russian government a general defensive agreement. By its terms
+Russia would be bound to aid Germany in case of a conflict arising:
+first, because of any German act of “benevolent neutrality” in
+favor of Russia during the current war; or, second, because of the
+coaling affair during and after the war. The Ambassador was to
+declare that if Russia did not accept this agreement the coaling
+would be discontinued.<a id="FNanchor_540"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_540" class="fnanchor">[540]</a> What<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_176">[176]</span> was here proposed amounted
+practically to Articles I and III of the first German treaty draft
+with the parts pertaining to France omitted, and was in keeping
+with the Czar’s letter of December 7.</p>
+
+<p>Since the instructions arrived after Count Lamsdorff had
+accepted the earlier German demand, the exasperated Ambassador
+consulted his government before executing them.<a id=
+"FNanchor_541"></a><a href="#Footnote_541" class=
+"fnanchor">[541]</a> Count Bülow then realized that the Russian
+Minister would not receive the proposal favorably and that the
+German government would seem not to know its own desires if it
+persisted in this new demand. Furthermore, on December 18, he was
+assured by Count Metternich that, although a Dogger Bank affair
+between Great Britain and Germany or the passage by Germany of a
+stronger naval law might precipitate a crisis, the British did not
+seek a war and had no intention of starting one.<a id=
+"FNanchor_542"></a><a href="#Footnote_542" class=
+"fnanchor">[542]</a> Hence the Chancellor canceled<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_177">[177]</span> the instructions. Instead, he
+notified the Russian Minister, December 26, that “within the limits
+which care for our own safety prescribes, we shall be glad to aid
+Russia as previously.”<a id="FNanchor_543"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_543" class="fnanchor">[543]</a> The coaling was
+continued without mishap.<a id="FNanchor_544"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_544" class="fnanchor">[544]</a></p>
+
+<p>On December 21 William II repeated to the Czar his refusal to
+permit the consultation of France about the project of alliance,
+hoping thereby to reopen the discussion.<a id=
+"FNanchor_545"></a><a href="#Footnote_545" class=
+"fnanchor">[545]</a> But Nicholas II, in his reply of December 25,
+did not mention the matter.<a id="FNanchor_546"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_546" class="fnanchor">[546]</a></p>
+
+<p>Just at this moment of profound disappointment to the German
+government another outlet seemed to open up. On December 26 it
+learned that the Japanese government was thinking of sending
+Viscount Aoki to Berlin in the next year in order to establish
+closer contact with it on the questions to be considered in the
+Russo-Japanese negotiations for peace.<a id=
+"FNanchor_547"></a><a href="#Footnote_547" class=
+"fnanchor">[547]</a> The German government reacted cordially to
+this project. The Emperor William, still unable to comprehend the
+failure of the Russian negotiations, had visions of Germany’s so
+mediating peace between Russia and Japan as to form an agreement
+<em>à trois</em> with them.<a id="FNanchor_548"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_548" class="fnanchor">[548]</a> Apparently without
+consulting the foreign office he appealed to the Czar on January 2
+“as your faithful friend” for a statement of his plans for the
+future, “so that if possible, I make myself<span class="pagenum"
+id="Page_178">[178]</span> useful to you and be enabled to shape
+the course of my policy.”<a id="FNanchor_549"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_549" class="fnanchor">[549]</a> As Nicholas II ignored
+this request—the third rebuff from Russia within two months—the
+Emperor wanted to cultivate Japan so zealously that Count Bülow had
+to hold him back for fear of antagonizing Russia.<a id=
+"FNanchor_550"></a><a href="#Footnote_550" class=
+"fnanchor">[550]</a></p>
+
+<p>The German government, particularly Herr von Holstein, continued
+to apprehend that France and Great Britain would endeavor to
+mediate peace and form a new quadruple grouping with Russia and
+Japan by partitioning China.<a id="FNanchor_551"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_551" class="fnanchor">[551]</a> To obviate that
+possibility it had attempted during the past months to draw closer
+to President Roosevelt<a id="FNanchor_552"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_552" class="fnanchor">[552]</a> and to keep check upon
+the Russian views about peace. But since Russia had rebuffed this
+endeavor<a id="FNanchor_553"></a><a href="#Footnote_553" class=
+"fnanchor">[553]</a> as well as an alliance, Count Bülow turned
+late in December, 1904, to Japan and the United States in order to
+escape from “the sulking-corner in which not only England but also
+Russia is seeking to hold us.”<a id="FNanchor_554"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_554" class="fnanchor">[554]</a> In January, 1905, the
+German government intensified its campaign to arouse President
+Roosevelt’s mistrust of Great Britain and France. Articles in the
+semiofficial press in Paris, assertions by M. Doumer, president of
+the French Chamber and intimate friend of M. Delcassé, and discreet
+soundings by French, British, and Russian diplomats
+gave<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[179]</span> body to the
+German fears. Count Bülow emphasized to the President the menace of
+this new quadruple alliance to both the United States and Germany.
+At the Count’s suggestion in January Mr. Roosevelt obtained from
+the Powers an assurance of the territorial integrity of China
+during the negotiations for peace.<a id="FNanchor_555"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_555" class="fnanchor">[555]</a> This move brought the
+German government and Mr. Roosevelt into greater intimacy. The
+latter suspected France and Russia, but not Great Britain.<a id=
+"FNanchor_556"></a><a href="#Footnote_556" class=
+"fnanchor">[556]</a> He refused to believe rumors of a Russo-German
+agreement, and credited the German denials of those reports.<a id=
+"FNanchor_557"></a><a href="#Footnote_557" class=
+"fnanchor">[557]</a> With Japan, however, the German government was
+not so successful; hearing those same rumors, the Japanese
+government decided in February not to send Viscount Aoki to
+Berlin.<a id="FNanchor_558"></a><a href="#Footnote_558" class=
+"fnanchor">[558]</a></p>
+
+<p>In the same month the German government tried once more to make
+an agreement with Russia, this time over Austria-Hungary. Torn by
+national conflicts, that empire was not expected to survive the
+death of the aged Emperor Francis Joseph. Count Bülow therefore
+proposed to the Russian Foreign Minister that they sign a public
+treaty of territorial disinterestedness in case of the disruption
+of the Hapsburg Empire. While Count Lamsdorff agreed to make the
+accord, he stipulated that it be kept secret, and left its
+formulation to the proposer. Thereupon the German foreign office,
+fearing that the existence of a secret Russo-German treaty might
+become known and might make Japan and the United States mistrustful
+of Germany and doubting whether the Russian Minister would really
+conclude the accord, decided to drop the project.<a id=
+"FNanchor_559"></a><a href="#Footnote_559" class=
+"fnanchor">[559]</a></p>
+
+<p>Thus the negotiations between Germany and Russia
+worked<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[180]</span> only to the
+detriment of Germany’s international relations. They were in large
+part responsible for the acuteness of British anger at Germany and
+for the collapse of the proposed Aoki mission. And had it not been
+for President Roosevelt’s ignorance of Continental affairs, they
+would no doubt have turned him against Germany. Although
+protestations of friendship were exchanged between the German and
+Russian rulers and governments, the German Emperor and his
+government were greatly chagrined at their failure.<a id=
+"FNanchor_560"></a><a href="#Footnote_560" class=
+"fnanchor">[560]</a> They had found the bonds of the Dual Alliance
+tighter than they had expected, and had suffered a rebuff by a
+Power in the very worst straits. Believing that another opportunity
+to solve Germany’s international problems in this way would likely
+not be offered, the German foreign office next attempted the
+employment of force.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes" id="ftc10">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_481"></a><a href="#FNanchor_481"><span class=
+"label">[481]</span></a>Both letters, the one by Holstein, the
+other by Bülow, dated July 11 and July 13, respectively, are given
+in Hammann, <em>Bilder aus der letzten Kaiserzeit</em>, pp. 33
+ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_482"></a><a href="#FNanchor_482"><span class=
+"label">[482]</span></a>It is of course apparent that the German
+government anticipated no immediate success from these British
+efforts. Signs of Anglo-Russian antagonism were too numerous (see
+<em>G.P.</em>, Vol. XIX, chap. cxxxi).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_483"></a><a href="#FNanchor_483"><span class=
+"label">[483]</span></a>Dennett, <em>Roosevelt and the
+Russo-Japanese War</em>, p. 36.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_484"></a><a href="#FNanchor_484"><span class=
+"label">[484]</span></a><em>G.P.</em>, Vol. XIX, chap. cxxx, A;
+Gwynn, <em>The Letters and Friendships of Sir Cecil Spring
+Rice</em>, I, 397 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_485"></a><a href="#FNanchor_485"><span class=
+"label">[485]</span></a>Dennett, pp. 36 ff., 42; Sternburg to F.
+O., Sept. 27, 1904, <em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 542, No. 6266.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_486"></a><a href="#FNanchor_486"><span class=
+"label">[486]</span></a>Bülow to William II, Aug. 31, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 536, No. 6264.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_487"></a><a href="#FNanchor_487"><span class=
+"label">[487]</span></a>Bülow to William II, Aug. 31, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 535 ff., No. 6264; Bülow to Bernstorff, Sept. 1,
+1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 217 f., No. 6051; Bernstorff to Bülow, Sept.
+6, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 218 ff., No. 6052. Eckardstein informed
+Bülow in August, 1904, of attempts being made by Witte to introduce
+negotiations for peace with Hayashi. Bülow was not in favor of an
+early peace. See Eckardstein, <em>Lebenserinnerungen und politische
+Denkwürdigkeiten</em>, III, 76 ff.; Goetz, <em>Briefe Wilhelms II
+an den Zaren 1894-1914</em>, p. 341; Dillon, <em>The Eclipse of
+Russia</em>, p. 297; memo. by Bülow, Nov. 2, 1904, <em>G.P.</em>,
+XIX, 387 f., No. 6167.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_488"></a><a href="#FNanchor_488"><span class=
+"label">[488]</span></a>Bülow to Sternburg, Sept. 5, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 541, No. 6265.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_489"></a><a href="#FNanchor_489"><span class=
+"label">[489]</span></a>See <em>ibid.</em>, Nos. 5977, 6259 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_490"></a><a href="#FNanchor_490"><span class=
+"label">[490]</span></a>Memo. by Bülow, Jan. 16, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 34, No. 5943; memo. by Holstein, Dec. 23, 1903,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 73 ff., No. 5967.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_491"></a><a href="#FNanchor_491"><span class=
+"label">[491]</span></a>Bülow to William II, July 15, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 202, No. 6043. Richthofen opposed the project
+(memo. by Richthofen, undated although probably written early in
+July, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 194 ff., No. 6042. This intention did
+not prevent Bülow from negotiating a commercial treaty with Russia
+in July, 1904, which Witte, Russian minister, declared exacted a
+tribute from Russia “much greater than any war indemnity on record”
+(Bülow to William II, July 15, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 196 ff., No.
+6043; Dillon, pp. 323 ff.; Witte, <em>Memoirs</em>, pp. 413
+f.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_492"></a><a href="#FNanchor_492"><span class=
+"label">[492]</span></a>Radolin to Bülow, Feb. 28, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 165 ff., No. 6028; Metternich to Bülow, March
+14, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 167 ff., No. 6029; Alvensleben to Bülow,
+May 11, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 177 ff., No. 6033, and following
+documents.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_493"></a><a href="#FNanchor_493"><span class=
+"label">[493]</span></a>Nicholas II to William II, June 1, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 181, No. 6034.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_494"></a><a href="#FNanchor_494"><span class=
+"label">[494]</span></a>See their correspondence in Goetz, pp. 337
+ff.; also in <em>G.P.</em>, XIX, Nos. 6028 n., 6034, 6035, 6037,
+6039, 6056, 6057, 6062 and n., 6064 and n., 6073 and n. The
+Emperor’s letters were dated Feb. 11, March 29, June 6, June 12,
+June 28, July 17, July 23, Aug. 19, Oct. 8, Oct. 10; the Czar’s
+replies were dated June 1, July 20, July 31, Sept. 28, 1904.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_495"></a><a href="#FNanchor_495"><span class=
+"label">[495]</span></a>Bernhard Huldermann, <em>Albert Ballin</em>
+(Berlin, 1922), pp. 146 ff.; <em>G.P.</em>, XIX, Nos. 6077 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_496"></a><a href="#FNanchor_496"><span class=
+"label">[496]</span></a>Bülow to Romberg, Oct. 4, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 257 ff., No. 6084.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_497"></a><a href="#FNanchor_497"><span class=
+"label">[497]</span></a>Romberg to F. O., Oct. 19, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 259, No. 6085.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_498"></a><a href="#FNanchor_498"><span class=
+"label">[498]</span></a>See above.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_499"></a><a href="#FNanchor_499"><span class=
+"label">[499]</span></a>Osten-Sacken to Lamsdorff, Oct. 27, 1904,
+<em>Kriegsschuldfrage</em>, Nov., 1924, pp. 456 ff.; Savinsky,
+<em>Recollections of a Russian Diplomat</em>, p. 97.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_500"></a><a href="#FNanchor_500"><span class=
+"label">[500]</span></a>William II to Nicholas II, Oct. 27, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 303 f., No. 6118. Their correspondence was
+entirely in English, in the use of which they made frequent
+mistakes. Osten-Sacken reported on Nov. 4 a conversation with Bülow
+in which the latter, repeating the remarks of Holstein, declared
+that in case the British government objected to the coaling of the
+Russian ships by the German firm, “we should apparently be forced
+to ask the St. Petersburg cabinet whether we should refuse this
+objection and thus assume the risk of a war with England and become
+your [Russia’s] ally; or would Russia prefer to dispense with . . .
+. the coaling . . . . which in this case we should have to prohibit
+as incompatible with Germany’s neutrality”
+(<em>Kriegsschuldfrage</em>, Nov., 1924, p. 463).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_501"></a><a href="#FNanchor_501"><span class=
+"label">[501]</span></a>Nicholas II to William II, Oct. 29, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 305, No. 6119.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_502"></a><a href="#FNanchor_502"><span class=
+"label">[502]</span></a>Bülow and Holstein were the proponents of
+the alliance. Richthofen and Tirpitz, secretary of the Navy
+Department, opposed it (Alfred von Tirpitz, <em>Erinnerungen</em>
+[Leipzig, 1920], pp. 143 ff.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_503"></a><a href="#FNanchor_503"><span class=
+"label">[503]</span></a>William II to Nicholas II, Oct. 30, 1904,
+Goetz, pp. 346 ff.; Bülow to William II, Oct. 30, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 305, No. 6120, and Anlage I and II.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_504"></a><a href="#FNanchor_504"><span class=
+"label">[504]</span></a>Mühlberg to Tschirschky, Aug. 10, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 238 f., No. 6069; Bülow to William II, July 15,
+1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 204, No. 6043.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_505"></a><a href="#FNanchor_505"><span class=
+"label">[505]</span></a>Bernstorff to Bülow, Sept. 6, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 220, No. 6052.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_506"></a><a href="#FNanchor_506"><span class=
+"label">[506]</span></a>“It is a matter here of a really great and,
+for the onlooking world, wholly unexpected transformation
+[<em>Weichenstellung</em>],” wrote Bülow to the Emperor, Nov. 16,
+1904 (<em>ibid.</em>, 312, No. 6125).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_507"></a><a href="#FNanchor_507"><span class=
+"label">[507]</span></a>See the report from Lamsdorff to the Czar
+of Holstein’s conversation with Osten-Sacken on Oct. 24, and the
+Czar’s minute to it (<em>Kriegsschuldfrage</em>, Nov., 1924, pp.
+455 f. and n.; cf. Savinsky, p. 97).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_508"></a><a href="#FNanchor_508"><span class=
+"label">[508]</span></a>Langer, <em>Europ. Gespr.</em>, June, 1926,
+pp. 397 f.; Dennis, <em>Adventures in American Diplomacy</em>, pp.
+354 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_509"></a><a href="#FNanchor_509"><span class=
+"label">[509]</span></a>Hardinge to Lansdowne, Nov. 7, 1904,
+<em>B.D.</em>, IV, 35, No. 26.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_510"></a><a href="#FNanchor_510"><span class=
+"label">[510]</span></a>A. Savinsky, “Guillaume II et la Russie.
+Ses Dépêches à Nicholas II, 1903-1905,” <em>Revue des deux
+mondes</em>, XII (1922), 790 f.; <em>G.P.</em>, XIX, Nos. 6044 ff.;
+Savinsky, p. 97. Savinsky was an official in the Russian foreign
+office in the confidence of Lamsdorff, <em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 505,
+editor’s note).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_511"></a><a href="#FNanchor_511"><span class=
+"label">[511]</span></a><em>Ibid.</em>, Vol. XXII, chap.
+clviii.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_512"></a><a href="#FNanchor_512"><span class=
+"label">[512]</span></a>Lamsdorff to Osten-Sacken, Nov. 10, 1904,
+<em>Kreigsschuldfrage</em>, Nov., 1924, pp. 464 f.; cf. Savinsky,
+p. 99.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_513"></a><a href="#FNanchor_513"><span class=
+"label">[513]</span></a>Hardinge to Lansdowne, Oct. 31, Nov. 7,
+1904, <em>B.D.</em>, IV, 25, No. 24; 34 f., No. 26.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_514"></a><a href="#FNanchor_514"><span class=
+"label">[514]</span></a>On receipt of that draft the Czar wrote to
+Lamsdorff: “To-day I received the Emperor’s letter with the treaty
+draft. As I read it, I laughed aloud. The content of the three
+articles touches France mostly. The last point concerns the
+particular object of dissatisfaction of the German Government with
+the British action in the coaling operation. This, however, is a
+private affair of both states. . . . . The matter must be
+considered from all sides, and a more desirable counterproposal for
+us must be composed” (<em>Kriegsschuldfrage</em>, Nov., 1924, p.
+461).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_515"></a><a href="#FNanchor_515"><span class=
+"label">[515]</span></a>Lamsdorff to Nicholas II, Nov. 4, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, pp. 462 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_516"></a><a href="#FNanchor_516"><span class=
+"label">[516]</span></a>Nicholas II to William II, Nov. 7, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 310 ff., No. 6124 and Anlage.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_517"></a><a href="#FNanchor_517"><span class=
+"label">[517]</span></a>William II to Nicholas II, Nov. 17, 1904,
+Goetz, pp. 349 ff.; Savinsky, p. 102; Bülow to William II, Nov. 16,
+1904, <em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 312 ff., No. 6125 and Anlage. The treaty
+draft is given in Goetz, pp. 146 f. See also Alexander Iswolsky,
+<em>Recollections of a Foreign Minister</em> (New York, 1921), pp.
+34 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_518"></a><a href="#FNanchor_518"><span class=
+"label">[518]</span></a>Nicholas II to William II, Nov. 23, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 317, No. 6126, Anlage; Savinsky, pp. 102 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_519"></a><a href="#FNanchor_519"><span class=
+"label">[519]</span></a>William II to Bülow, Nov. 23, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 316 f., No. 6126.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_520"></a><a href="#FNanchor_520"><span class=
+"label">[520]</span></a>Bülow to William II, Nov. 24, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 318 f., No. 6127 and Anlage; William II to Nicholas
+II, Nov. 26, 1904, <em>Kriegsschuldfrage</em>, Nov., 1924, pp. 471
+f.; Savinsky, pp. 103 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_521"></a><a href="#FNanchor_521"><span class=
+"label">[521]</span></a>Iswolsky makes an attempt to exonerate the
+Czar of the charge of disloyalty to France, but his argument is not
+convincing (Iswolsky, pp. 27, 36 f.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_522"></a><a href="#FNanchor_522"><span class=
+"label">[522]</span></a>Report of Lamsdorff for Nicholas II, Nov.
+23, 1904, <em>Kriegsschuldfrage</em>, Nov., 1924, pp. 473 ff.;
+Savinsky, <em>Revue des deux mondes</em>, XII (1922), 789 ff.;
+Savinsky, pp. 104 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_523"></a><a href="#FNanchor_523"><span class=
+"label">[523]</span></a>He inclosed a draft of the proposed
+communication to France. See Nicholas II to William II, Dec. 7,
+1904, <em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 322 ff., No. 6131.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_524"></a><a href="#FNanchor_524"><span class=
+"label">[524]</span></a>Bülow to William II, Dec. 6, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 263 ff., No. 6088; <em>ibid.</em>, chap.
+cxxxvi.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_525"></a><a href="#FNanchor_525"><span class=
+"label">[525]</span></a>Metternich to F. O., Oct. 20, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 652, No. 6349, and following documents; Flotow to
+Bülow, Oct. 26, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 286 f., No. 6105 and
+following documents.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_526"></a><a href="#FNanchor_526"><span class=
+"label">[526]</span></a>This was the expression used.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_527"></a><a href="#FNanchor_527"><span class=
+"label">[527]</span></a>Memo. by Metternich for Bülow, Dec. 25,
+1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 367 ff., No. 6156; report of Marine Attaché
+Coerper, Jan. 15, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 379 f., No. 6161; Lee,
+<em>King Edward VII</em>, II, 329; Admiral Sir Edward E. Bradford,
+<em>Life of Admiral of the Fleet Sir Arthur Knyvet Wilson</em>
+(London, 1923), p. 197.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_528"></a><a href="#FNanchor_528"><span class=
+"label">[528]</span></a>William II to Bülow, Nov. 23, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 316 f., No. 6126; Graf Robert
+Zedlitz-Trützschler, <em>Zwölf Jahre am deutschen Kaiserhof</em>
+(Stuttgart, 1925), pp. 86 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_529"></a><a href="#FNanchor_529"><span class=
+"label">[529]</span></a>On this war scare see <em>G.P.</em>, Vol.
+XIX, chap. cxxxvi.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_530"></a><a href="#FNanchor_530"><span class=
+"label">[530]</span></a>J. L. Bashford, “Great Britain and Germany:
+A Conversation with Count von Bülow, German Chancellor,”
+<em>Nineteenth Century</em>, Dec., 1904, pp. 873 ff.; Bülow,
+<em>Reden</em>, II, 123 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_531"></a><a href="#FNanchor_531"><span class=
+"label">[531]</span></a>Memo. by Holstein, Dec. 5, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 358 f., No. 6153.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_532"></a><a href="#FNanchor_532"><span class=
+"label">[532]</span></a>Bülow to William II, Dec. 6, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 263 ff., No. 6088.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_533"></a><a href="#FNanchor_533"><span class=
+"label">[533]</span></a>Bülow to Alvensleben, Dec. 6, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 320 f., No. 6129; William II to Nicholas II, Dec.
+7, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 322, No. 6130.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_534"></a><a href="#FNanchor_534"><span class=
+"label">[534]</span></a>Savinsky, <em>Revue des deux mondes</em>,
+XII ( 1922), 794 f.; Savinsky, p. 107.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_535"></a><a href="#FNanchor_535"><span class=
+"label">[535]</span></a>William II to Nicholas II, undated,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 325, No. 6132.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_536"></a><a href="#FNanchor_536"><span class=
+"label">[536]</span></a>Nicholas II to William II, Dec. 11, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 325 f., No. 6134.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_537"></a><a href="#FNanchor_537"><span class=
+"label">[537]</span></a>On December 11 Lamsdorff stated to
+Alvensleben that as soon as the Czar had made a decision he would
+be ready to agree with Germany on the “modality of co-operation” in
+case of a conflict. On the next day in his note to that government
+he did not mention this matter, and as Germany seemed satisfied, he
+never returned to it. See Alvensleben to F. O., Dec. 11 and 12,
+1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 325 ff., Nos. 6134 ff.; Lamsdorff to
+Alvensleben, Dec. 13, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 329, No. 6137;
+Savinsky, p. 108.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_538"></a><a href="#FNanchor_538"><span class=
+"label">[538]</span></a>Alvensleben, to F. O., Dec. 11, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 325 f., No. 6134.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_539"></a><a href="#FNanchor_539"><span class=
+"label">[539]</span></a>M. A. de Wolfe Howe, <em>George von
+Lengerke Meyer: His Life and Public Services</em> (New York, 1920),
+pp. 121 f.; Schulthess (<em>Europäischer Geschichtskalender
+1905</em>), p. 255.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_540"></a><a href="#FNanchor_540"><span class=
+"label">[540]</span></a>Bülow to Alvensleben, Dec. 12, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 326 f., No. 6135; Bülow to Alvensleben, Dec.
+21, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 342 f. Nos. 6142 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_541"></a><a href="#FNanchor_541"><span class=
+"label">[541]</span></a>Editor’s note giving a summary of a
+dispatch from Alvensleben on Dec. 13, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, p.
+342.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_542"></a><a href="#FNanchor_542"><span class=
+"label">[542]</span></a>On Dec. 13 Metternich was called to Berlin
+for consultation as to the effect which a Russo-German agreement of
+any sort would have on Anglo-German relations. Schulenburg and
+Eulenburg, of the German embassy in London, also were asked about
+the attitude of the British toward Germany. They all believed that
+the British would not tolerate as much from Germany as they would
+from Russia. See memo. by Bülow, Dec. 16, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 331
+f., No. 6139, and editor’s note; memo. by Metternich, Dec. 18,
+1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 332 ff., No. 6140; Schulenburg to Bülow, Dec.
+14, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 359 ff., No. 6154; memo. by Eulenburg,
+Dec. 15, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 366 f., No. 6155; Alfred von
+Tirpitz, <em>Politische Dokumente</em>, Band I; <em>Der Aufbau der
+deutschen Weltmacht</em> (Stuttgart and Berlin, 1924), pp. 13 f. A
+few days later Lascelles tried to argue with both Bülow and
+Holstein that the British fear of the German navy was more
+reasonable than the German fear of the British navy. And on Dec. 26
+Holstein declared to Lascelles as follows: “In the present instance
+a situation had been created by the action of the Press which was
+fraught with the gravest of all dangers, viz.: that of two great
+nations being involved in war, for if any untoward incident had
+arisen which gave rise to an acrimonious discussion between the two
+Governments it would have been almost impossible to have settled it
+owing to the atmosphere which the Press campaign had created.”
+Nevertheless both parties agreed that Anglo-German relations had
+become easier. See Lascelles to Lansdowne, Dec. 28, 1904,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 56 ff., No. 65. At about the same time King
+Edward, Lansdowne, and Balfour all branded the German fears of a
+British attack as foolish; and the British condemned them as
+hypocritical. But the press war continued into January as bitterly
+as before. See Bülow to William II, Dec. 26, 1904, <em>G.P.</em>,
+XIX, 372 f., No. 6157; and following documents. See also Schulthess
+(1905), p. 3; Newton, <em>Lord Lansdowne</em>, pp. 331 f.;
+Friedrich Thimme, “Auswärtige Politik und Hochfinanz: Aus den
+Papieren Paul H. von Schwabach’s,” <em>Europäische Gespräche</em>,
+June, 1929, p. 307.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_543"></a><a href="#FNanchor_543"><span class=
+"label">[543]</span></a>Bülow to Alvensleben, Dec. 21, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 342 f., Nos. 6142 f.; Alvensleben to Bülow,
+Dec. 26, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 343 ff., No. 6144.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_544"></a><a href="#FNanchor_544"><span class=
+"label">[544]</span></a>Mühlberg to Tirpitz, Jan. 27, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 265 ff., No. 6089, and following documents.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_545"></a><a href="#FNanchor_545"><span class=
+"label">[545]</span></a>William II to Nicholas II, Dec. 21, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 340 f., No. 6141; also Goetz, p. 354. The letter
+was written by the foreign office.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_546"></a><a href="#FNanchor_546"><span class=
+"label">[546]</span></a>Nicholas II to William II, Dec. 25, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 346, No. 6145.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_547"></a><a href="#FNanchor_547"><span class=
+"label">[547]</span></a>Memo. by Eckert, Nov. 18, 1904, Received
+Dec. 26, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 395 ff., No. 6176.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_548"></a><a href="#FNanchor_548"><span class=
+"label">[548]</span></a>Bülow to William II, Dec. 26, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 400 ff., No. 6178.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_549"></a><a href="#FNanchor_549"><span class=
+"label">[549]</span></a>William II to Nicholas II, Jan. 2, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 404 f., No. 6180.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_550"></a><a href="#FNanchor_550"><span class=
+"label">[550]</span></a>William II to Bülow, March 11, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 411, No. 6187; Bülow to William II, March 11, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 412, No. 6188. On Jan. 16, 1905, the Emperor wrote:
+“The action of Delcassé and Lamsdorff is unspeakably treacherous
+and common. This trio [France, Great Britain, and Russia, who he
+thought desired to divide China] must be opposed by a
+German-American-Japanese league. That must be done quickly and
+energetically. Above all America’s mistrust of France and Russia be
+nourished” (Emperor’s minute to the dispatch from Bülow to William
+II, Jan. 15, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 562, No. 6280).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_551"></a><a href="#FNanchor_551"><span class=
+"label">[551]</span></a>Memo. by Holstein, Dec. 29, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 551 ff., No. 6275. The Emperor also suffered from
+the “nightmare of the coalitions,” but his suffering assumed more
+varied forms. At one moment he feared a
+Franco-Anglo-American-Japanese grouping; at another, an
+Anglo-Franco-Russian grouping; at another, an
+Anglo-Franco-Russo-Japanese grouping (see <em>ibid.</em>, Nos.
+5925, 5945, 6187, 6280).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_552"></a><a href="#FNanchor_552"><span class=
+"label">[552]</span></a>See <em>ibid.</em>, chap. cxxxix.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_553"></a><a href="#FNanchor_553"><span class=
+"label">[553]</span></a>Romberg to Bülow, Dec. 1, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 394 f., No. 6175.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_554"></a><a href="#FNanchor_554"><span class=
+"label">[554]</span></a>Bülow to William II, Dec. 26, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 402 f., No. 6178.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_555"></a><a href="#FNanchor_555"><span class=
+"label">[555]</span></a>See Dennett, pp. 77 ff., 162, 171 f.;
+Dennis, pp. 392 f., 397; Bülow to William II, Dec. 24, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 547 ff., No. 6274, and following documents.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_556"></a><a href="#FNanchor_556"><span class=
+"label">[556]</span></a>See, among others, Sternburg to F. O., Feb.
+3 and 9, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 567 f., No. 6285; 570, No.
+6287.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_557"></a><a href="#FNanchor_557"><span class=
+"label">[557]</span></a>Dennett, pp. 73 ff., 50; Dennis, pp. 367
+f., 385 ff. The anonymous document which Dennis quotes must have
+been written some time early in 1905, for it refers to events which
+occurred in January, 1905.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_558"></a><a href="#FNanchor_558"><span class=
+"label">[558]</span></a>Arco to F. O., Feb. 10, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 407, No. 6183; Arco to Bülow, March 16, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 413 ff. No. 6190.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_559"></a><a href="#FNanchor_559"><span class=
+"label">[559]</span></a><em>Ibid.</em>, Vol. XXII, chap. clix.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_560"></a><a href="#FNanchor_560"><span class=
+"label">[560]</span></a>Alvensleben to Bülow, Dec. 26, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XIX, 343 f., No. 6144; William II to Bülow, Dec.
+28, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 346 f. No. 6146; Bülow to Alvensleben,
+Jan. 1, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 347 f., No. 6147; Bülow to William
+II, Dec. 26, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 400 ff., No. 6178.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap">
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[181]</span><a id=
+"c11"></a>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+
+<p class="sch1">THE VISIT TO TANGIER</p>
+
+<p>Upon the refusal of an alliance by Russia, the German
+government, in the early part of 1905, regarded its international
+situation and loss of prestige with concern. The continued defeats
+of Russia by Japan in the Far East, culminating in that at Mukden,
+February 23 to March 10, and the outbreak of revolution in Russia
+had for the time neutralized the effectiveness of the Dual
+Alliance. But the Anglo-German animosity persisted. On February 2
+at Eastleigh, Mr. Arthur Lee, first civil lord of the British
+admiralty, frankly explained the redistribution of the fleet as
+follows:<a id="FNanchor_561"></a><a href="#Footnote_561" class=
+"fnanchor">[561]</a></p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>The balance and center of naval power in Europe had been shifted
+during the last few years. They [Great Britain] had not so much to
+keep their eyes upon France and the Mediterranean as they had to
+look with more anxiety, though not fear, towards the North Sea. It
+was for that reason that the Fleets had been distributed to enable
+them to deal with any danger in that direction. . . . . If war
+should unhappily be declared, under existing conditions the British
+Navy would get its blow in first, before the other side had time
+even to read in the papers that war had been declared.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">The German Emperor regarded those assertions as an
+“open threat of war” by that “vengeance-breathing corsair.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_562"></a><a href="#Footnote_562" class=
+"fnanchor">[562]</a> An Anglo-German press war ensued. Count Bülow
+declared to Admiral Tirpitz that he would agree to any sum for the
+German naval law for 1906.<a id="FNanchor_563"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_563" class="fnanchor">[563]</a></p>
+
+<p>The state of the Triple Alliance also worried the German foreign
+office; Austria-Hungary was in internal turmoil, Italy more
+unreliable than ever. Irredentist troubles, which had flamed
+up<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[182]</span> again in the
+previous November,<a id="FNanchor_564"></a><a href="#Footnote_564"
+class="fnanchor">[564]</a> and Balkan rivalries had so antagonized
+those two allies that during 1904 the main military force of Italy
+had been transferred from the French to the Austrian frontier.
+During the winter, reports of a Franco-Italian agreement nullifying
+the Triple Alliance and of the activity of Ambassador Barrère in
+attempting to foment difficulty between Austria and Italy came to
+the German government.<a id="FNanchor_565"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_565" class="fnanchor">[565]</a> But when, toward the end
+of February, 1905, Count Bülow mentioned these rumors to the
+Italian Ambassador, King Victor Emmanuel and his government both
+formally denied that Italy had made any agreement “that is in
+contradiction with the Triple Alliance or that may diminish the
+value of our obligations toward our allies,” and asserted that M.
+Prinetti’s declarations to France did not “vary, modify, or
+attenuate the bearing or obligations that result from it [the
+Triple Alliance] for us.”<a id="FNanchor_566"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_566" class="fnanchor">[566]</a></p>
+
+<p>Although the Chancellor did not believe these asseverations, he
+continued to hold to Italy. As he wrote to the Emperor on March 5
+and 9:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>For times of peace and for all international combinations it is
+to our interest to maintain the façade of the Triple Alliance as
+intact as possible, if only because the Italians, so long as they
+remain in it, will meet with mistrust from hostile sides. In case
+of complications, however, we need have no illusions concerning
+active Italian co-operation. Still, it is an advantage if Italy
+remains neutral instead of siding with France. . . . . The general
+international situation is so tense that we must endeavor to
+sacrifice as few tricks as possible.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind"><span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_183">[183]</span>Therein was expressed the German policy
+toward Italy until the latter’s final entry into the World War.
+Upon reading this confession, the Emperor, who already feared that
+King Edward VII was trying to establish a Franco-Russo-British
+alliance, summed up the international position of his country as
+follows: “The Triple Alliance loosened by the antagonism of Austria
+and Italy, Russia unchanged or indifferent toward us, England
+hostile, France revengeful.” As to Italy, he wrote severely to the
+Chancellor: “Your Excellency is easily satisfied. My grandfather
+and I looked upon the co-operation of the Italian army as a matter
+of course. In case of a French attack on us that must be adhered
+to.”<a id="FNanchor_567"></a><a href="#Footnote_567" class=
+"fnanchor">[567]</a></p>
+
+<p>The diminution in Germany’s prestige was felt most acutely in
+her relationship to France, whose Foreign Minister showed by the
+dispatch of the French mission to Fez in January that he intended
+to establish French control over Morocco without consulting
+Germany. Hence, after the failure of the move toward Russia, the
+German government began, in December, to turn its attention to the
+Moroccan question. Conveniently disregarding its unsettled
+grievances against the Sultan, it responded to certain overtures
+for a <em>rapprochement</em> from that monarch by quietly and
+unofficially encouraging him to resist the French demands.<a id=
+"FNanchor_568"></a><a href="#Footnote_568" class=
+"fnanchor">[568]</a></p>
+
+<p>This action could the more easily be taken since the Sultan had
+already begun to oppose the French by convoking an assembly of
+Moroccan notables to consider the French proposals for reform. The
+Sultan selected two men from each town, who were moderate
+conservatives, more or less amenable to his influence,<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_184">[184]</span> hostile to French control but
+not in principle opposed to foreigners or to reforms.<a id=
+"FNanchor_569"></a><a href="#Footnote_569" class=
+"fnanchor">[569]</a> Count Bülow, much pleased, advised the Sultan
+about the middle of February to unite with the rebel, Bou-Amama
+[<em>sic</em>], and to threaten a holy war in case France tried to
+prevent the meeting of the assembly.<a id=
+"FNanchor_570"></a><a href="#Footnote_570" class=
+"fnanchor">[570]</a> Early in February a German warship appeared
+casually in Moroccan waters. A few days later Herr von Holstein
+instructed Herr von Kühlmann, first secretary of the German
+legation in Tangier, to avoid official utterances toward France
+“until we are more certain about the attitude of the Sultan”; for
+“according as the Sultan shows himself firm or yielding, German
+policy will endeavor as much as possible to strengthen his back or
+will confine itself to defending German economic interests.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_571"></a><a href="#Footnote_571" class=
+"fnanchor">[571]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Moroccan government lived up to the German hopes by
+convening the assembly of notables on February 22 and by requiring
+M. Saint-René Taillandier to explain the French program to it. To
+stiffen the Moroccan resistance against France, Herr von Kühlmann
+suggested that the German government send a note to the Sultan
+manifesting its disapproval of the French policy.<a id=
+"FNanchor_572"></a><a href="#Footnote_572" class=
+"fnanchor">[572]</a> Before following that suggestion, however, the
+German government endeavored to interest President Roosevelt in the
+Moroccan question.</p>
+
+<p>As Mr. Roosevelt and the German government were co-operating so
+cordially for the preservation of the open door in China, Count
+Bülow sought to extend this effort to Morocco and to involve the
+United States against France and Great Britain, or at least to
+prepare the President for isolated German action on the Moroccan
+question. On February 25, after calling Mr. Roosevelt’s attention
+to the Franco-Spanish monopolistic plans, the Chancellor invited
+him to unite with Germany in advising the<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_185">[185]</span> Sultan that the calling of the assembly was
+a correct move toward fortifying his government and inaugurating
+reforms. This action, argued the Chancellor, would stop the French
+advance and make possible a peaceful solution of the Moroccan
+question. Even if the United States did not participate, he
+continued, France would scarcely risk a Moroccan war with a silent
+Germany on her frontier.<a id="FNanchor_573"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_573" class="fnanchor">[573]</a></p>
+
+<p>Although not interested in Morocco, the President agreed to
+instruct the American representative in Tangier to keep in close
+touch with his German colleague.<a id="FNanchor_574"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_574" class="fnanchor">[574]</a> The answer satisfied the
+German government, which now felt assured of Mr. Roosevelt’s moral
+support in case Germany took action alone. On March 10 the note was
+sent.</p>
+
+<p>Through this note and the supplementary statements of the German
+representatives in Morocco the German government informed the
+Sultan that, although he must reorganize his country, Germany</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">hopes that the rumors of a prospective change in
+the existing conditions in Morocco—equal rights and freedom for all
+nations—are unfounded. Germany would disapprove of such a change.
+Germany and the United States are favorably inclined toward the
+maintenance of the present conditions; . . . . the attitude of the
+other Powers is not definitely known. In England the Government has
+bound itself to a certain extent in favor of France, even though in
+the English commercial world a current in favor of the maintenance
+of the independence of Morocco and in favor of equal rights of the
+Powers is present.<a id="FNanchor_575"></a><a href="#Footnote_575"
+class="fnanchor">[575]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">Germany here showed her strong disapproval of the
+whole French action and sought to augment Moroccan resistance
+without committing herself to any definite policy.</p>
+
+<p>Immediately after the dispatch of the note the German
+government<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[186]</span> heard
+that at the opening session of the assembly of notables on February
+22 M. Saint-René Taillandier had claimed to have “the assent of
+other foreign representatives at Tangier” to the French program of
+reform.<a id="FNanchor_576"></a><a href="#Footnote_576" class=
+"fnanchor">[576]</a> Considering this a deliberate
+misrepresentation for the purpose of overawing the Moroccans, the
+German government sought further means for blocking French efforts.
+The Chancellor intimated in the Reichstag on March 15 that Germany
+intended taking steps to defend her economic interests in
+Morocco.<a id="FNanchor_577"></a><a href="#Footnote_577" class=
+"fnanchor">[577]</a> Five days later the newspapers announced the
+forthcoming visit of the German Emperor to Tangier.<a id=
+"FNanchor_578"></a><a href="#Footnote_578" class=
+"fnanchor">[578]</a></p>
+
+<p>When Count Bülow saw the strong opposition which this proposed
+visit aroused in the French and English press, he
+immediately<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[187]</span>
+determined to put it to a political use.<a id=
+"FNanchor_579"></a><a href="#Footnote_579" class=
+"fnanchor">[579]</a> He wrote to the Emperor: “Your Majesty’s visit
+to Tangier will embarrass M. Delcassé, thwart his plans, and be of
+benefit to our economic interests in Morocco.” For, he wrote a few
+days later,</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">apart from the fact that the systematic exclusion
+of all non-French merchants and promoters from Morocco according to
+the example in Tunis would signify an important economic loss for
+Germany, it is also a want of appreciation of our power when M.
+Delcassé has not considered it worth the effort to negotiate with
+Germany over his Moroccan plans. M. Delcassé has completely ignored
+us in this affair.<a id="FNanchor_580"></a><a href="#Footnote_580"
+class="fnanchor">[580]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[188]</span>William II was
+lukewarm about the project. He had persistently opposed interfering
+in the Moroccan question both for reasons of general policy and for
+lack of interest in Morocco itself. At the insistence of the
+Chancellor he agreed to execute the <em>coup</em>; but Count Bülow
+had to employ every means to hold him steady. When the Emperor
+learned from the papers that the natives and the German and British
+colonies in Morocco intended to exploit his visit against the
+French, he wrote to the Chancellor on March 20 as follows:
+“Telegraph immediately to Tangier that it is <em>highly</em>
+doubtful whether I shall land and that I shall only travel
+incog[nito] as a tourist, that is, no audiences, no
+receptions.”<a id="FNanchor_581"></a><a href="#Footnote_581" class=
+"fnanchor">[581]</a> Count Bülow overcame his objections by arguing
+that otherwise M. Delcassé would spread the rumor that the program
+of reception for the Emperor had been curtailed after remonstrances
+had been made in Berlin.<a id="FNanchor_582"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_582" class="fnanchor">[582]</a></p>
+
+<p>Aside from the communication with President Roosevelt, the
+German government made no diplomatic preparation for this
+action.<a id="FNanchor_583"></a><a href="#Footnote_583" class=
+"fnanchor">[583]</a> Direct contact with the French government was
+cut off as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[189]</span> early as
+March 22.<a id="FNanchor_584"></a><a href="#Footnote_584" class=
+"fnanchor">[584]</a> Two days later the Chancellor issued general
+orders to play the sphinx on the subject of Morocco.<a id=
+"FNanchor_585"></a><a href="#Footnote_585" class=
+"fnanchor">[585]</a> A Franco-German press war alone revealed the
+tension of the situation.<a id="FNanchor_586"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_586" class="fnanchor">[586]</a></p>
+
+<p>With the performance ready to start, the chief actor began to
+suffer from stage fright. Learning of an attempt at Tangier a day
+or so before to assassinate Mr. Harris of the <em>London
+Times</em>, the Emperor telegraphed Count Bülow from Lisbon on
+March 28 as follows: “In Tangier the devil is already loose.
+Yesterday an Englishman almost murdered. I consider the affair
+there as very doubtful.”<a id="FNanchor_587"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_587" class="fnanchor">[587]</a> Furthermore, he learned
+that at Tangier he would have to disembark in an open boat, and
+that after he was in the town he would have to walk through the
+narrow streets or be carried in a sedan or ride some unknown Berber
+horse. The first two ways were decidedly beneath imperial dignity,
+while the last one, on account of the Emperor’s crippled left arm,
+might be too dangerous. Not only the anxious sovereign, but members
+of his company as well, were inclined to advise against the
+attempt. But Count Tattenbach, former minister at Tangier and at
+the time minister at Lisbon, whom the Emperor had brought along
+from Portugal, and Prince Eulenburg clung to the plan and kept up
+their master’s courage,<a id="FNanchor_588"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_588" class="fnanchor">[588]</a> while from Berlin the
+Chancellor sent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[190]</span> one
+telegram after the other to effect the visit. To the Emperor he
+telegraphed that it would be a “historic act,” that the attention
+of the world was focused on him, that “if the visit . . . . turns
+out as desired, Delcassé with his anti-German policy will stand
+there as a disgraced European,” and that the French Foreign
+Minister would probably then be overthrown by his enemies in
+France. He agreed with Count Tattenbach that since press and people
+were discussing the matter so fully the Emperor could not recede
+without exposing himself to the accusation of cowardice. He
+likewise sent a telegram of four pages to the Emperor on March 26
+with instructions about his speeches at Tangier. It read in part as
+follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>Naturally it is not to German interest for the Sultan to be
+discouraged now at the beginning of the French negotiations and to
+place himself under a French protectorate. To oppose this . . . .
+Your Majesty should receive the Sultan’s representative expressly
+as a representative of a sovereign, and should . . . . express the
+hope that he [the Sultan] would soon suppress the rebellion of
+Bou-Amama. . . . . Your Majesty might ask where the rebel Bou-Amama
+obtains the means for his long resistance. If the representative
+should reply, “Probably from France,” Your Majesty might answer,
+“It is difficult to believe the French capable of such
+baseness.”</p>
+
+<p>. . . . Without saying an unfriendly word about France, Your
+Majesty should ignore her in Morocco, should not mention at all the
+French advance against Morocco, and should honor the French chargé
+d’affaires with . . . . only a silent greeting.</p>
+
+<p>It is improbable that any diplomat will mention France’s
+Moroccan policy to Your Majesty. If that subject should be brought
+up, Your Majesty might reply that the French policy is entirely
+unknown to you. The case is different, however, if the Sultan’s
+representative at his master’s command . . . . asks Your Majesty’s
+advice. On the reply will depend whether the Sultan will continue
+to defend the independence of Morocco or will submit to France. The
+question whether Your Majesty can risk a war with France for the
+sake of Morocco cannot be considered at all. But on the other hand
+it is more than doubtful whether the present civil Government of
+France . . . . would risk a war with Morocco so long as the least
+possibility exists that Germany might sooner or later interfere.
+Therefore we must for the present leave our goal uncertain. We
+cannot conveniently make an alliance with the Sultan. But if we
+withdraw our moral support entirely from him and
+destroy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[191]</span> all hope,
+we shall relinquish important German interests. Therefore I
+conceive Your Majesty’s reply to the Sultan’s minister somewhat as
+follows: “It is known that I desire no Morocco territory, but that
+I value equality of treatment with other nations in trade and
+commerce with Morocco. Other commercial nations have the same
+interest. As my view is known, the English colony greeted me
+joyfully today. It is to the interest of the Sultan as well as of
+almost all seafaring and commercial peoples that he preserve his
+independence and therewith freedom to permit them all equal rights
+in his empire. The main strength of every ruler lies in having his
+people back of him at decisive moments. In that case no foreign
+Power will attack him lightly. Therefore the Sultan should make
+certain that the notables whom he has summoned to Fez for advice
+are of one mind with him and should direct his policy in accordance
+therewith.”</p>
+
+<p>Since it is well known that the Moorish delegates at present
+assembled at Fez are entirely hostile to the Sultan’s conciliation
+toward France, definite advice would herewith be imparted to the
+Sultan. If the representative should ask whether Your Majesty would
+support the Sultan in a war against France, Your Majesty might
+reply: “In case I promised today to support you, you would attack
+the French at once. But I desire, if possible, to maintain peace,
+although I have a very strong army. Therefore I must reserve
+decision until it really comes to war between France and Morocco. I
+do not expect this event. France will try to see how far she can
+advance with threats. But France knows that her situation would be
+dangerous if she attacked Morocco without having assured herself of
+Germany’s neutrality.”</p>
+
+<p>Next in importance to the conversation with the Sultan’s
+representative is Your Majesty’s reply to a probable short English
+greeting. . . . . There Your Majesty might well stress the common
+interest in equality for all nations. By emphasizing this principle
+at that place Your Majesty will make it half impossible for the
+English Government in later Franco-German discussions about Morocco
+to place itself on the French side.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, in case Your Majesty has to reply to a question from a
+non-Moroccan source about what attitude Germany would take in case
+of a Franco-Moroccan war, Your Majesty might reply somewhat as
+follows: “Germany has no obligations which would prevent her from
+being guided in that case by her own interests.” This reply sounds
+disquieting for our opponents but binds us to nothing.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">Thus, Count Bülow instructed the Emperor to
+encourage the Moroccans in their resistance to France, to make
+France uneasy by his actions and words, but not to bind Germany to
+anything definite.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[192]</span>At the same
+time, to assure his master’s safety, the Chancellor telegraphed to
+Herr von Kühlmann that German and Spanish secret police should be
+present in abundance, that the visit should perhaps be shortened,
+and that “a horse, guaranteed gentle, which should be exercised
+early in the morning for several hours by some trustworthy rider in
+order to quiet it, would be best and could obviate all difficulties
+as well as any curtailment of the program.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_589"></a><a href="#Footnote_589" class=
+"fnanchor">[589]</a> Then, to cut off any possibility of retreat,
+the Chancellor declared on March 29 to the Reichstag that Germany
+had no aggressive intentions toward Morocco, but that she did aim
+to defend her economic interests and the open door.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>The speech and attitude of a diplomat . . . . must vary
+according to circumstances [he stated]. The moment suitable . . . .
+for the preservation of our interests I shall choose as I think
+best. But in this case the tendency of the German policy has not
+changed. Whoever seeks a <em>fait nouveau</em> will not find it in
+the German policy. In the same degree as it is attempted to change
+the international position of Morocco or to control the open door
+in the economic development of the land, we must also to a greater
+degree than before be heedful that our economic interests in
+Morocco remain safe. For this reason we are entering into relations
+with the Sultan of Morocco.<a id="FNanchor_590"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_590" class="fnanchor">[590]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>When the Emperor’s boat arrived at Tangier early in the morning
+of March 31, a stiff east wind made landing impossible.<a id=
+"FNanchor_591"></a><a href="#Footnote_591" class=
+"fnanchor">[591]</a> Herr von Kühlmann and the captain of one of
+the French warships stationed in the harbor succeeded only with the
+greatest difficulty in coming aboard. The Emperor immediately drew
+the latter into conversation about the weather prospects. It looked
+as if the “historic act” would not occur. A few hours later,
+however, the wind died down, and General Scholl, a member of the
+Emperor’s party, went ashore to make a tour of inspection. He
+returned with an enthusiastic report of the reception in view
+from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[193]</span> the natives,
+declared the horse to be trustworthy, and said that if one did not
+mind getting wet, one could make the landing. So the Emperor
+intrusted himself to the wind and the waves, the Moroccans, and a
+Berber horse. The landing was made; the horse, which at first shied
+at the splendor of the imperial costume, was quieted; and</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">followed by about twenty attendants all on
+horseback [according to Herr von Schoen’s account], the Emperor
+entered the town, the narrow streets of which, filled with the
+joyous, noisy masses, permitted only a slow advance. The flat roofs
+of the houses were thickly packed with Moorish, Christian, and
+Jewish women who hailed the Emperor in the most varied tones and
+scattered flowers. Finally the procession arrived at the Soko, the
+open place before the garden of the legation, filled with a
+turbulent sea of human beings who expressed their enthusiasm in
+deafening cries and wild shooting. The confused din was increased
+still more by a military band sent by the Sultan which endeavored
+in vain to drown out the uproar of the people. The restlessness of
+the horses caused me to ask the French officer, apparently leading
+a command, whether he could not stop the wild shooting. He replied
+dejectedly that he had some influence only over the handful of
+regular troops entrusted to his instruction but not the least over
+the sportively shooting, half-wild Kabyle.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">However, the company reached the legation in safety
+where the German colony, the diplomatic corps, and the
+representative of the Sultan were received.</p>
+
+<p>In the speeches which the excited Emperor delivered, he
+permitted his tongue to become looser than usual. Whereas he had
+previously been opposed to intervention in the Moroccan affair, he
+now fixed the German policy with respect to Morocco more tightly
+than the Chancellor had wished and exposed himself to the criticism
+of having taken another backward monarch under his wing. In reply
+to the greeting of the Sultan’s representative, Abd-el-Melik, the
+Emperor declared that</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">he . . . . had great interest in the welfare and
+prosperity of the Moroccan Empire, that he visited the Sultan as an
+independent ruler, and that he hoped that under the authority of
+the Sultan a free Morocco would be opened to the peaceful
+competition of all nations without monopoly or exclusion.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[194]</span>The
+Sultan’s representative read to the Emperor a message from his
+master in which the latter stated that</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">he remembered the friendship which had always
+existed between his predecessors and Germany and that he was filled
+with the wish to strengthen and extend those friendly relations in
+every way. In reply the Emperor William expressed his thanks for
+this cordial message. He shared the feelings of the Sultan [he
+said] and agreed with Abd-el-Melik’s assertations concerning the
+divine power and wisdom which directs the fate of peoples. He
+wished sincerely for the development and welfare of the Moroccan
+Empire for the sake of his subjects and for that of the other
+European nations who traded there, as he hoped, on the basis of
+full equality.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">The Emperor then decorated Abd-el-Melik and his
+three companions. Later, he said to Abd-el-Melik that</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">his visit to Tangier aimed to assert that German
+interests in Morocco would be protected and preserved. Concerning
+the best means to achieve this, he would enter into direct
+relations with the Sultan, whom he regarded as an independent
+ruler. The Emperor closed with the remark that prudence was
+necessary in the reforms which the Sultan planned and that regard
+should be paid to the religious feelings of the Moroccan people in
+order to avoid disturbing public order.<a id=
+"FNanchor_592"></a><a href="#Footnote_592" class=
+"fnanchor">[592]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[195]</span>After the
+speeches were over, the imperial party hurried back on shipboard
+before some accident should occur or a contrary wind arise. Count
+Bülow was so relieved upon learning that his master was safe on
+board that, as he later confided to the Emperor, he had a “nervous
+fit of tears.”<a id="FNanchor_593"></a><a href="#Footnote_593"
+class="fnanchor">[593]</a> The Emperor himself did not at first
+realize the great political significance of his act. When he met
+Prince Louis of Battenberg at Gibraltar on April 1, he expressed
+the time-honored shibboleth, that “Germany, Great Britain and the
+United States must make common cause and march shoulder to
+shoulder.”<a id="FNanchor_594"></a><a href="#Footnote_594" class=
+"fnanchor">[594]</a> When he received the reports from the press
+several days later, he awoke from his illusions.<a id=
+"FNanchor_595"></a><a href="#Footnote_595" class=
+"fnanchor">[595]</a> For, although the whole event smacked of a
+comic opera, it none the less threw down the gauntlet to M.
+Delcassé and French policy in Morocco<a id=
+"FNanchor_596"></a><a href="#Footnote_596" class=
+"fnanchor">[596]</a> and ushered in a long period of crisis in
+international relations. The echoes which the Emperor’s speeches
+aroused in Europe reverberated like the distant rumblings of
+cannon.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes" id="ftc11">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_561"></a><a href="#FNanchor_561"><span class=
+"label">[561]</span></a>Reported in the <em>London Times</em>, Feb.
+4, 1905. When Lee saw how the German press took offense at his
+words, he published a “correct version” of these passages in a
+somewhat milder form (<em>ibid.</em>, Feb. 7, 1905; <em>Annual
+Register, 1905</em>, pp. 21 f.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_562"></a><a href="#FNanchor_562"><span class=
+"label">[562]</span></a>Von Tirpitz, <em>Politische Dokumente</em>,
+I, 14.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_563"></a><a href="#FNanchor_563"><span class=
+"label">[563]</span></a><em>Ibid.</em>, pp. 17 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_564"></a><a href="#FNanchor_564"><span class=
+"label">[564]</span></a>Monts to Bülow, Nov. 19, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 85 ff., No. 6423.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_565"></a><a href="#FNanchor_565"><span class=
+"label">[565]</span></a>Monts to Bülow, Dec. 18, 1904,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 88 f. No. 6424; report of Military Attaché Chelius
+to Schlieffen, Dec. 18, 1904, <em>ibid.</em>, 89 ff., No. 6424
+Anlage; Metternich to Bülow, Jan. 12, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 93, No.
+6425. The relation of Italy to France and Germany was well shown in
+the following incident. Shortly after Loubet’s visit to Rome, an
+Italian officer was caught delivering to the French important
+documents dealing with the Italian plan of mobilization. At about
+the same time the Italian chief of staff gave to the German
+government photographs of the French border fortifications
+(<em>ibid.</em>, Nos. 6423-24, 6426).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_566"></a><a href="#FNanchor_566"><span class=
+"label">[566]</span></a>Bülow to Monts, Feb. 21, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 93 f., No. 6426; Monts to F. O., Feb. 25, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 94 f., No. 6427; Bülow to William II, March 5,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 95, No. 6428 and Anlage.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_567"></a><a href="#FNanchor_567"><span class=
+"label">[567]</span></a>Bülow to William II, March 5 and 9, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 95 ff., Nos. 6428 f., and the Emperor’s
+minutes.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_568"></a><a href="#FNanchor_568"><span class=
+"label">[568]</span></a>The German representatives in Morocco
+unofficially assured the Sultan early in February that Germany had
+a political interest in the Moroccan question, that Germany as well
+as several other Powers had not yet taken the question in its
+existing form into consideration, that Germany would not actively
+support Morocco, but that, with a silent Germany on her frontier,
+France would not attack the latter (see <em>ibid.</em>, Nos.
+6538-40, 6544-47, 6550, 6553).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_569"></a><a href="#FNanchor_569"><span class=
+"label">[569]</span></a>Kühlmann to Bülow, Jan. 29, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 248, No. 6552.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_570"></a><a href="#FNanchor_570"><span class=
+"label">[570]</span></a>Bülow to Kühlmann, Feb. 11, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 251 ff., No. 6554.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_571"></a><a href="#FNanchor_571"><span class=
+"label">[571]</span></a>Bülow to Kühlmann, Feb. 16, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 255, No. 6556. The dispatch was written by
+Holstein.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_572"></a><a href="#FNanchor_572"><span class=
+"label">[572]</span></a>Kühlmann to Bülow, Feb. 21, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 255 f., No. 6557.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_573"></a><a href="#FNanchor_573"><span class=
+"label">[573]</span></a>Bülow to Kühlmann, Jan. 16, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 245, No. 6547; Bülow to Sternburg, Feb. 25, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 256 ff., No. 6558.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_574"></a><a href="#FNanchor_574"><span class=
+"label">[574]</span></a>Sternburg to F. O., March 9, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 258 f., No. 6559; Dennett, <em>Roosevelt and the
+Russo-Japanese War</em>, pp. 83 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_575"></a><a href="#FNanchor_575"><span class=
+"label">[575]</span></a>Only a summary of the note is given in
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 260 n. The quotations are taken from this
+summary and from a telegram from Bülow to Kühlmann, March 10, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 260 f., No. 6561.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_576"></a><a href="#FNanchor_576"><span class=
+"label">[576]</span></a>Report from Vassel, German vice-consul at
+Fez, Feb. 23, 1905. According to a second report from him, March 7,
+the French Minister had claimed to have “the approval of his
+proposals by the foreigners” (<em>ibid.</em>, pp. 255 f. n.;
+Auswärtiger Amt, <em>Aktenstücke über Marokko, 1905</em> [Berlin,
+1905], No. 3). The latest communication received by the German
+government from Vassel, before the dispatch of the note of March
+10, was of Feb. 17. See Kühlmann to Bülow, Feb. 21, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 255, No. 6557; Bülow to Kühlmann, March 10,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 260, No. 6561.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_577"></a><a href="#FNanchor_577"><span class=
+"label">[577]</span></a>The Chancellor declared as follows: “I
+understand entirely the attention which is given here to the events
+in and about Morocco. I regard it as a duty of the German
+Government to see that . . . . our economic interests in Morocco
+are not injured. But the present moment is unsuitable for further
+explanations” (Bülow, <em>Reden</em>, II, 186 f.). As a matter of
+fact, German economic interests ran a very poor third behind those
+of France and Great Britain (<em>Zeitschrift für
+Kolonialpolitik</em>, Dec., 1904, pp. 885 ff.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_578"></a><a href="#FNanchor_578"><span class=
+"label">[578]</span></a>The information was given out to the
+<em>London Standard</em>, <em>London Times</em>, and the
+<em>Kölnische Zeitung</em>, at Tangier on March 19. The origin of
+the visit is obscure. Theodor Wolff relates that Kühlmann and
+Hornung, correspondent in Tangier of the <em>Kölnische
+Zeitung</em>, were responsible for proposing in February that the
+Emperor include Tangier in his itinerary (Wolff, <em>Das
+Vorspiel</em>, p. 156). The plan for the Emperor’s voyage in the
+Mediterranean submitted to the Chancellor on March 13 included a
+stay of four hours in Tangier (editor’s note, <em>G.P.</em>, XX,
+263). Probably Bülow aimed to use this visit politically from the
+start, just as he had intended using the dispatch of a warship to
+Tangier in the previous year. But only after he saw the effect of
+the announcement upon public opinion did he realize the full
+political significance of the visit (cf. <em>ibid.</em>, pp. 262
+ff.). Crozier’s story of the origin of this voyage is
+unsubstantiated by any evidence (<em>Revue de France</em>, April 1,
+1921, pp. 279 f.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_579"></a><a href="#FNanchor_579"><span class=
+"label">[579]</span></a>Editor’s note, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 263 f.;
+Bülow to William II, March 20, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 262, No. 6563;
+264 f., No. 6565.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_580"></a><a href="#FNanchor_580"><span class=
+"label">[580]</span></a>Bülow to William II, March 20, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 263, No. 6563; Bülow to William II, March 26, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 274 f., No. 6576. It was reported in the German
+foreign office soon after the Anglo-French accord was made that
+Delcassé had said to some intimate friends: “Je viens de rouler
+Radolin; il ne me reste plus qu’à rouler l’empereur d’Allemagne”
+(Guibert et Ferrette, <em>Le conflit franco-allemand en 1905</em>
+[Paris, 1905], p. 83, quoted in Stuart, <em>French Foreign Policy
+from Fashoda to Serajevo</em>, p. 136 n.). On Feb. 21, 1907, Lord
+Sanderson, permanent undersecretary of state for foreign affairs,
+1894-1906, wrote as follows: “M. Delcassé . . . . ignored Germany
+entirely when he commenced operations in Morocco. The action of
+France and her demands on the Sultan were undoubtedly much
+exaggerated and misrepresented. But in addition there is no doubt
+that M. Delcassé was steadily pursuing a series of manœuvres for
+the purpose of isolating Germany and weakening her alliances. The
+German Gov[ernmen]t and the German nation are extremely sensitive
+about being ignored or neglected in the discussion of important
+questions, and it is not surprising that on this occasion they
+should have been much exasperated, and determined on inflicting on
+France a severe humiliation. That they also wished to separate us
+from France, to prevent the Agreement from developing into an
+alliance, and to obtain any share they could in the eventual
+development of Morocco is no doubt also true. The methods adopted
+were characteristic of German policy, and as on some other
+occasions they failed” (memo. by Lord Sanderson, Feb. 21, 1907,
+<em>B.D.</em>, IV, 421). Whether the German government knew the
+exact terms of the Franco-Spanish agreement is a question. Tardieu
+says that it did know them (<em>La conf. d’Algés</em>, p. 156).
+Hammann has written, “One may assume that it learned the main
+content” (<em>Zur Vorgeschichte des Weltkrieges</em>, p. 200). It
+also suspected that the Moroccan accords contained stipulations for
+the exclusion of Germany from any participation in the territorial
+division of Morocco (<em>ibid.</em>, p. 201). See also the dispatch
+from Stumm to Bülow, Feb. 20, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 191, No.
+7024, and the Emperor’s minute thereto: “And the rascals [the
+Spanish government] will not even admit what sort of a pact they
+have made with the devil [France].” See also Veit Valentin,
+<em>Deutschlands Aussenpolitik von Bismarcks Abgang bis zum Ende
+des Weltkrieges</em> (Berlin, 1921), p. 54; report from Madrid,
+Dec. 10, 1904, <em>Zur europ. Politik</em>, I, 126 f. However, the
+German government did know the terms of the Franco-Spanish
+agreement of Sept. 1, 1905, so Ojeda of the Spanish foreign office
+admitted to Cartwright of the British embassy (Cartwright to Grey,
+Jan. 22, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 233, No. 252). The probability
+is therefore that it also learned in good time the terms of the
+other secret accords. Failure to mention that knowledge or even
+denials of being informed in the documents is not conclusive proof
+that the secret articles were not known to the German foreign
+office.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_581"></a><a href="#FNanchor_581"><span class=
+"label">[581]</span></a>William II to Bülow, undated,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 263, No. 6564. The editors of <em>G.P.</em>
+presume the date of this communication to have been March 21; but
+Bülow’s reply to it was dated March 20. See Bülow to William II,
+March 20, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 264, No. 6565. The Emperor had
+dined at the French embassy on March 17 and had said nothing about
+his proposed visit. Furthermore, just before leaving on his trip he
+made at Bremen one of his half-militaristic, half-pacific speeches
+which did not indicate what was to follow (Schulthess,
+<em>Europäischer Geschichtskalender 1905</em>, pp. 67 f.; Ludwig,
+<em>Wilhelm der Zweite</em>, p. 275; Mévil, <em>De la Paix de
+Francfort, etc.</em>, pp. 193 ff.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_582"></a><a href="#FNanchor_582"><span class=
+"label">[582]</span></a>Bülow to William II, March 20, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 264 f., No. 6565.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_583"></a><a href="#FNanchor_583"><span class=
+"label">[583]</span></a>The unexpectedness of this action was shown
+by the remarks made on March 21 by Bernstorff, first secretary of
+the embassy in London, to a reporter of the <em>Daily
+Chronicle</em>. He asserted that Germany had only economic
+interests in Morocco over which it ought not to be difficult for
+France and Germany to agree (Bülow to Metternich, March 22, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 268 f., and note, No. 6569).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_584"></a><a href="#FNanchor_584"><span class=
+"label">[584]</span></a>Bülow to Radolin, March 22, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 267 f., No. 6568; Flotow to F. O., March 23, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 269, No. 6570; Flotow to F. O., March 28, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 278, No. 6578; Bülow to Flotow, March 28, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 278, No. 6579; Mévil, pp. 197 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_585"></a><a href="#FNanchor_585"><span class=
+"label">[585]</span></a>Memo. by Bülow, March 24, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, 271, No. 6573.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_586"></a><a href="#FNanchor_586"><span class=
+"label">[586]</span></a>Mévil, p. 205; <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 262 f.,
+n. 266 n., Nos. 6570, 6584, 6590; <em>Quest. dipl. et. col.</em>,
+XIX, 442 ff.; Schulthess, <em>1905</em>, pp. 78 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_587"></a><a href="#FNanchor_587"><span class=
+"label">[587]</span></a>William II to Bülow, March 28, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 279, No. 6580.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_588"></a><a href="#FNanchor_588"><span class=
+"label">[588]</span></a>Tattenbach to F. O., March 29, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 283, No. 6585; Freiherr von Schoen, <em>Erlebtes.
+Beiträge zur politischen Geschichte der neuesten Zeit</em>
+(Stuttgart and Berlin, 1921), pp. 19 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_589"></a><a href="#FNanchor_589"><span class=
+"label">[589]</span></a>See his telegrams from March 26 to March
+30, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 272 ff., Nos. 6574 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_590"></a><a href="#FNanchor_590"><span class=
+"label">[590]</span></a>Bülow, II, 209 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_591"></a><a href="#FNanchor_591"><span class=
+"label">[591]</span></a>For a description of the visit see Schoen,
+pp. 19 ff.; Schoen to F. O., March 31, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 285
+ff., Nos. 6588 ff.; Tardieu, pp. 69 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_592"></a><a href="#FNanchor_592"><span class=
+"label">[592]</span></a>The foregoing is the official version of
+the speeches published in the German press (see <em>Allgemeine
+Zeitung</em> [Munich], April 4, 1905). There were various versions
+of the speeches since the Emperor spoke extemporaneously. Schoen on
+March 31 sent to the foreign office a report of William II’s
+assertions as follows: When Count de Chérisey attempted to greet
+the Emperor in the name of Delcassé in such a way as to imply a
+French predominance in Morocco, William II replied sharply that his
+visit “signified that Germany demanded free trade there and full
+equality with other nations.” When the Count admitted this, the
+Emperor remarked that “he would treat directly with the Sultan as a
+peer, as a free ruler of an independent land, that he would know
+how to assert his just claims and expected that these also be
+respected by France.” Those words crushed the Count. To the
+Sultan’s representative the Emperor spoke as follows: “He regarded
+the Sultan as the ruler of a free and independent Empire, subject
+to no foreign suzerainty. He expected for German trade and commerce
+the same advantages as for all other commercial nations. He would
+always negotiate with the Sultan directly. Reforms which the Sultan
+planned to introduce ought always to be executed within the limits
+of the customs and views of his people and without violation of the
+precepts of the Koran, in honest administration and strengthening
+of peace and order that would make the best impression outside.
+European customs and usages would not be taken over without further
+consideration. Let the Sultan therein listen carefully to the
+counsel of the great ones of his land” (Schoen to F. O., March 31,
+1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 286 f., No. 6589. It was also stated in
+the press, although not in the official version of the speeches,
+that the Emperor replied to the greetings from the German colony at
+Tangier that that colony “could rely on the support of the German
+Government to prevent any obstacle in that free country [Morocco]
+from hindering the success of its efforts in favor of the national
+commerce” (Quoted in <em>Quest. dipl. et col.</em>, XIX, 504).
+Schoen made no mention of this assertion. Cf. Schoen, pp. 20 f.;
+Mévil, pp. 210 ff.; <em>B.D.</em>, III, 62 f., Nos. 71 f.; 64, No.
+74; Prince Louis of Battenberg’s report of a conversation with the
+Emperor, April 1, 1905, Newton, <em>Lord Lansdowne</em>, pp. 333
+f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_593"></a><a href="#FNanchor_593"><span class=
+"label">[593]</span></a>William II to Bülow, Aug. 11, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 497, No. 6237.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_594"></a><a href="#FNanchor_594"><span class=
+"label">[594]</span></a>Memo. by Prince Louis of Battenberg, April
+1, 1905, Newton, p. 333.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_595"></a><a href="#FNanchor_595"><span class=
+"label">[595]</span></a>Schoen, p. 22.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_596"></a><a href="#FNanchor_596"><span class=
+"label">[596]</span></a>Mévil, p. 210.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap">
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[196]</span><a id=
+"c12"></a>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+
+<p class="sch2">THE MOROCCAN CRISIS FROM THE VISIT TO TANGIER TO
+THE FALL OF DELCASSÉ</p>
+
+<h3 class="space-above1">I</h3>
+
+<p>The visit to Tangier, because of its very unexpectedness, did
+not at first alarm the French, who refused to credit the German
+Emperor with hostile intentions.<a id="FNanchor_597"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_597" class="fnanchor">[597]</a> Better-informed
+personages in Paris, however, interpreted the event more
+accurately. They were asking seriously whether war would ensue and
+were declaring that “no such critical moment has occurred since the
+Schnäbele affair.” The Austrian Ambassador was reminded by the
+Franco-German press war of the days immediately preceding the
+conflict of 1870.<a id="FNanchor_598"></a><a href="#Footnote_598"
+class="fnanchor">[598]</a></p>
+
+<p>The French government had been warned by both German and British
+representatives of Germany’s interest in Morocco. As early as
+November, 1904, Herr von Kühlmann had declared to the French chargé
+d’affaires at Tangier that Germany had expected France to acquaint
+her with the new situation in Morocco created by the Anglo-French
+and Franco-Spanish accords, but that she had since realized that
+she was being “systematically excluded.” “The Imperial Government
+is ignorant of all the accords made over Morocco and does not
+consider itself bound in any way on that question,” he said. The
+French chargé d’affaires had not regarded these remarks as
+sufficiently significant to report<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_197">[197]</span> until the following February. Upon direct
+inquiry in Berlin the French government had had them corroborated
+by the German foreign office.<a id="FNanchor_599"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_599" class="fnanchor">[599]</a> On February 12, 1905,
+Sir Arthur Nicolson, British ambassador at Madrid, had remarked to
+his French colleague that “the attitude assumed by the German
+Government in response to the petition of their subjects in Morocco
+was an invitation to the French Government to initiate some
+discussion with a view to obtain their concurrence with the
+provisions of the Convention.”<a id="FNanchor_600"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_600" class="fnanchor">[600]</a> M. Delcassé had not
+heeded this advice. By March 22 he had become uneasy over the
+German policy, about which he was so uncertain.<a id=
+"FNanchor_601"></a><a href="#Footnote_601" class=
+"fnanchor">[601]</a> He was determined, however, to maintain intact
+France’s accords with the other Powers and her position in
+Morocco.<a id="FNanchor_602"></a><a href="#Footnote_602" class=
+"fnanchor">[602]</a> Ascertaining on the eve of the voyage to
+Tangier that Great Britain, Spain, and Italy would hold loyally to
+their agreements,<a id="FNanchor_603"></a><a href="#Footnote_603"
+class="fnanchor">[603]</a> he declared in the Senate on March 31,
+the same day on which William II spoke at Tangier, that</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">nothing in our Moroccan policy, nothing in our
+execution of the accords of April 8 and October 3, 1904, can
+explain the movements of the German<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_198">[198]</span> press. . . . . You may legitimately hope
+that in the western basin of the Mediterranean . . . . France will
+succeed, without ignoring any right, without injuring any interest,
+in assuring her future.<a id="FNanchor_604"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_604" class="fnanchor">[604]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">The semiofficial French press threatened the
+formation of a new Dual Alliance between France and Great Britain
+supported by Italy and Spain in case Germany attempted to gain any
+special advantages in Morocco.<a id="FNanchor_605"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_605" class="fnanchor">[605]</a> At the same time, M.
+Delcassé instructed M. Saint-René Taillandier, who since March 24
+had been making substantial progress in the negotiations with the
+Sultan,<a id="FNanchor_606"></a><a href="#Footnote_606" class=
+"fnanchor">[606]</a> to warn that monarch against following the
+proposal of the German press for an international conference over
+the Moroccan question.<a id="FNanchor_607"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_607" class="fnanchor">[607]</a> He also informed the
+Italian government, April 12, that France could not entertain such
+a proposal.<a id="FNanchor_608"></a><a href="#Footnote_608" class=
+"fnanchor">[608]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Emperor’s move nevertheless forced M. Delcassé to open
+negotiations with Germany for an understanding regarding
+Morocco.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[199]</span> From March
+28 he endeavored indirectly to approach the German
+government.<a id="FNanchor_609"></a><a href="#Footnote_609" class=
+"fnanchor">[609]</a> On April 7 a threatened interpellation in the
+Chamber forced him to state publicly that France was “ready to
+dissipate any misunderstanding which . . . . may still
+exist.”<a id="FNanchor_610"></a><a href="#Footnote_610" class=
+"fnanchor">[610]</a> Under pressure from the French cabinet<a id=
+"FNanchor_611"></a><a href="#Footnote_611" class=
+"fnanchor">[611]</a> as well as from public opinion M. Delcassé,
+while dining at the German embassy on April 13, repeated that
+statement directly to Prince Radolin. He denied that M. Saint-René
+Taillandier had ever claimed before the Sultan to have a mandate of
+Europe. He excused his failure to transmit the Anglo-French
+agreement to the German government; and, while admitting that the
+conversation of March 23, 1904, had been unofficial, he declared
+that his intention had been to show special favor to Germany by
+communicating the contents of the accord to her beforehand. He had
+also believed, he said, that freedom of commerce for all nations
+had been completely safeguarded in that agreement and in the one
+with Spain.<a id="FNanchor_612"></a><a href="#Footnote_612" class=
+"fnanchor">[612]</a> Immediately thereafter the French
+government<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[200]</span>
+informally asked the British government to “help to convince the
+Emperor that German interests were in no way threatened” in
+Morocco.<a id="FNanchor_613"></a><a href="#Footnote_613" class=
+"fnanchor">[613]</a></p>
+
+<p>To carry out his policy, M. Delcassé needed the loyal support of
+all France. That he did not have. Political jealousy because of his
+long tenure in office, dislike of his secretiveness, enmity between
+him and M. Rouvier (the premier), hostility because of his
+defending the Russian government in the massacre of January 22,
+1905<a id="FNanchor_614"></a><a href="#Footnote_614" class=
+"fnanchor">[614]</a>—all these forces of opposition were now
+strengthened by the fact that the Foreign Minister had blundered
+and that, aroused by the fear of complications, France sought a
+victim whose sacrifice might dispel the danger. Quickly deserting
+M. Delcassé, the nation pressed him on too rapidly to take the
+initiative with Germany. As time passed with nothing settled,
+nothing known, the French grew more and more alarmed, until on
+April 19 the Chamber denounced the Foreign Minister for having
+neglected to consult Germany, and demanded information. M.
+Deschanel declared that the Foreign Minister should have heeded
+Germany’s well-known imperialistic ambitions by negotiating with
+that Power about Morocco. “There are not lacking in England people
+who desire to utilize the French power against Germany,” he said.
+“And there are not lacking in Germany people who will try to
+utilize the French power against England. We should not offer
+ourselves to that play.” M. Tournade accused M. Delcassé of having
+hoped that if he “juggled the question with Germany” and confronted
+her with a <em>fait accompli</em>, she would venture no opposition.
+M. de Pressensé, charging him with deliberately having avoided an
+official notification<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_201">[201]</span> to Germany of the Moroccan accords,
+asserted: “You have not followed an exact conception of the
+interests of France. Your policy is unworthy of a great country.”
+M. Delafosse, sensing the reason for the German action in the
+Anglo-French entente rather than in Morocco, expressed the general
+demand that “it is necessary to ask Germany what she wishes of us.”
+No one, however, believed that Germany would question France’s
+special position in Morocco.</p>
+
+<p>Although not a voice was raised in his behalf, M. Delcassé
+refused to impart any new intelligence in answer to these
+accusations and demands. If M. Rouvier had not come to his rescue,
+he would have been repudiated by all parties. In defending the
+Foreign Minister M. Rouvier declared that not France but Germany
+had altered her Moroccan policy since the previous year,
+attributing this change to the defeat of France’s ally.<a id=
+"FNanchor_615"></a><a href="#Footnote_615" class=
+"fnanchor">[615]</a> The initiative toward conversations with
+Germany, he said, had already been made. “We have closed our ear to
+no proposal,” he avowed; “anything which is in harmony with the
+formula . . . .: to safeguard the honor of our country and to
+maintain peace, . . . . we are ready to consider.” He made the
+retention of M. Delcassé a cabinet question, but he assured the
+Chamber that in the future he would supervise the foreign
+policy.<a id="FNanchor_616"></a><a href="#Footnote_616" class=
+"fnanchor">[616]</a></p>
+
+<p>Upon receiving this check, M. Delcassé would have resigned had
+it not been for the appeals of President Loubet and of
+MM.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[202]</span> Paul Cambon and
+Barrère, both of whom were in Paris at the time.<a id=
+"FNanchor_617"></a><a href="#Footnote_617" class=
+"fnanchor">[617]</a> His policy of treating with Germany on an
+equal footing was checkmated. French public opinion had forced an
+almost complete surrender in the face of the German menace. It
+remained to be seen how far M. Rouvier could yield before French
+desire for peace would conflict with French national honor.</p>
+
+<h3>II</h3>
+
+<p>The Emperor’s injudicious assertions at Tangier compelled the
+German foreign office to take some positive action in Morocco
+instead of leaving the initiative to the Sultan. Herr von Holstein
+contended that “a retreat would stand on the same level with Olmütz
+and cause Fashoda to be forgotten.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_618"></a><a href="#Footnote_618" class=
+"fnanchor">[618]</a> By April 2 the Chancellor decided upon the
+following policy:<a id="FNanchor_619"></a><a href="#Footnote_619"
+class="fnanchor">[619]</a> first, to continue denying any
+territorial ambitions in Morocco; second, to demand economic
+equality for all nations, the open door “in the widest sense”;
+third, and this he considered Germany’s “trump card,” to advocate
+calling an international conference like that at Madrid in 1880 for
+deliberating upon the entire question of Moroccan reform.<a id=
+"FNanchor_620"></a><a href="#Footnote_620" class=
+"fnanchor">[620]</a> Of course no separate negotiations with France
+would be considered.</p>
+
+<p>The Chancellor and Herr von Holstein believed that the
+proposal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[203]</span> for a
+conference would give Germany an unassailable position. Protected
+by the appearance of absolute legality and disinterestedness, they
+hoped to break the ententes and accords between France and the
+other Powers, especially Great Britain, or at least to show that
+Germany could force them to submit the results of their agreements
+to the consideration of a general conference.<a id=
+"FNanchor_621"></a><a href="#Footnote_621" class=
+"fnanchor">[621]</a> They did not doubt that the proposal would be
+accepted and that the conference would refuse to turn Morocco over
+to France. For, they argued,</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">in case a conference meets, we are already certain
+of the diplomatic support of America in favor of the open door. . .
+. . Austria will not quarrel with us over Morocco . . . . Russia is
+busy with herself.<a id="FNanchor_622"></a><a href="#Footnote_622"
+class="fnanchor">[622]</a> . . . . The English Government—between
+Roosevelt and those English groups which think as the <em>Morning
+Post</em>, <em>Manchester Guardian</em>, and Lord Rosebery<a id=
+"FNanchor_623"></a><a href="#Footnote_623" class=
+"fnanchor">[623]</a>—will not stir. Spain is of no importance, and
+also has a strong party in favor of the <em>status quo</em>. We
+shall certainly be able to hold Italy in order, if necessary by a
+gentle hint that while we settle with France, Austria will perhaps
+settle the irredentist question. . . . . If France refuses the
+conference, she will put herself in the wrong toward all the
+signatory Powers<a id="FNanchor_624"></a><a href="#Footnote_624"
+class="fnanchor">[624]</a> and thereby will give England, Spain,
+and Italy a probably welcome excuse to withdraw.<a id=
+"FNanchor_625"></a><a href="#Footnote_625" class=
+"fnanchor">[625]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[204]</span>Immediately
+after the Emperor’s speeches at Tangier, Herr von Holstein proposed
+advocating a conference in the semiofficial press. The Chancellor
+approved; but Herr Hammann, director of the press bureau in the
+foreign office, objected. Inasmuch as the Emperor and the
+Chancellor had both declared that Germany would next communicate
+directly with the Sultan, he argued, this abrupt change would
+expose German policy to the accusation of unsteadiness. He advised
+preparing public opinion for a conference, for, he maintained, the
+government had “to combat a much stronger aversion to a serious
+conflict with France and England over Morocco in the public than in
+the press.”<a id="FNanchor_626"></a><a href="#Footnote_626" class=
+"fnanchor">[626]</a> On April 7 he predicted a “press storm” if the
+menace of war arose.<a id="FNanchor_627"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_627" class="fnanchor">[627]</a> So, for the time a
+milder note was sounded in the press. The grievances against M.
+Delcassé, who was made personally responsible for Germany’s
+action,<a id="FNanchor_628"></a><a href="#Footnote_628" class=
+"fnanchor">[628]</a> the necessity for defending the German
+economic interests in Morocco, and the intimacy of German-American
+relations were emphasized. Little by little the proposal for a
+conference was brought to the fore.<a id=
+"FNanchor_629"></a><a href="#Footnote_629" class=
+"fnanchor">[629]</a></p>
+
+<p>The main basis for the optimism of the German
+government<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[205]</span> was its
+friendship with President Roosevelt. Since the early part of the
+year both the British and the German governments had been
+endeavoring to win the President’s support and to arouse his
+suspicions by accusing each other of aggressive intentions.<a id=
+"FNanchor_630"></a><a href="#Footnote_630" class=
+"fnanchor">[630]</a> Needing the support of both to effect peace
+between Russia and Japan, Mr. Roosevelt had refused to believe the
+tales of either. He had diagnosed their trouble as a case of “jumpy
+nerves,” and had tried in February and March, 1905, to bring them
+together in a new triple entente.<a id="FNanchor_631"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_631" class="fnanchor">[631]</a> The German government
+had responded favorably to his suggestion; but the British
+government, taxing the President with being hoodwinked by the
+Emperor, had replied that better relations with that hostile Power
+were scarcely possible.<a id="FNanchor_632"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_632" class="fnanchor">[632]</a> This lack of success
+with Great Britain, combined with mistrust of France, caused the
+President to draw closer to Germany.<a id=
+"FNanchor_633"></a><a href="#Footnote_633" class=
+"fnanchor">[633]</a></p>
+
+<p>On April 3 the German government confidently asked Mr. Roosevelt
+to lend “moral support” for the maintenance of the <em>status
+quo</em> in Morocco and for the peaceful settlement of the Moroccan
+difficulty by speaking “calmly and academically,”
+particularly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[206]</span> to
+Great Britain, for the equal treatment of all Powers in the
+Sherifian Empire.<a id="FNanchor_634"></a><a href="#Footnote_634"
+class="fnanchor">[634]</a> Ten days later it asked the President to
+speak to Great Britain in favor of an international conference on
+the Moroccan question.<a id="FNanchor_635"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_635" class="fnanchor">[635]</a> Not delaying for a
+definite reply or heeding the signs of the drawing together of
+Great Britain and France,<a id="FNanchor_636"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_636" class="fnanchor">[636]</a> the German government,
+on April 9, determined to send Count Tattenbach to Fez to combat
+the efforts of the French mission and to win the Sultan’s approval
+of a conference. The Count had telegraphed that this move was
+essential, since the Sultan was a weakling, his advisers
+incompetent and venal, and since the French were otherwise likely
+to gain the acceptance of their plans of reform.<a id=
+"FNanchor_637"></a><a href="#Footnote_637" class=
+"fnanchor">[637]</a></p>
+
+<p>On the same date (April 9) upon which the German government made
+this decision, it began to sound the other Powers concerning a
+conference. Austria-Hungary and Russia could be excluded from
+consideration although both showed disapproval of Germany’s
+action.<a id="FNanchor_638"></a><a href="#Footnote_638" class=
+"fnanchor">[638]</a> When the Spanish government was asked on April
+12 to support the proposal for a conference, the foreign minister,
+M. Villa-Urrutia, replied that he could accept it only if France
+and Great Britain did so. He suggested that the German<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_207">[207]</span> desires be fulfilled not by a
+conference but by an exchange of notes and declarations between the
+Powers.<a id="FNanchor_639"></a><a href="#Footnote_639" class=
+"fnanchor">[639]</a></p>
+
+<p>With Italy the German government was more brusque. While
+reassuring that Power that Germany had no intention of becoming a
+rival in the Mediterranean, Count Bülow demanded under threat of
+breaking the alliance that Italy support the German policy in the
+Moroccan affair. But on April 12 the Italian government, evading a
+definite position, urged a direct settlement of the Franco-German
+discord. Count Monts, German ambassador at Rome, reported that only
+in case Great Britain showed coolness toward France might Germany
+expect any support from her ally, who would otherwise endeavor to
+remain neutral.<a id="FNanchor_640"></a><a href="#Footnote_640"
+class="fnanchor">[640]</a></p>
+
+<p>Since the German government thought that Great Britain had
+relinquished her Moroccan interests, it intended to ignore her and
+deal solely with France. On April 19 Count Metternich merely
+explained to Lord Lansdowne the German views in the Moroccan affair
+without asking for any expression of opinion. In this conversation
+he received the impression that the British Foreign Minister
+disapproved of the German action and that, against his desire, he
+could easily be forced to give France diplomatic support.<a id=
+"FNanchor_641"></a><a href="#Footnote_641" class=
+"fnanchor">[641]</a></p>
+
+<p>Without waiting for either the British or the American reply,
+the German government, on April 18, responded to M.
+Delcassé’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[208]</span> offer
+“to dissipate any misunderstanding” with the suggestion that “the
+simplest and most natural means” of settling the question of
+Moroccan reform would be to bring about “an exchange of ideas
+between all the signatory Powers” of the Convention of
+Madrid.<a id="FNanchor_642"></a><a href="#Footnote_642" class=
+"fnanchor">[642]</a> At the same time, through messages to the
+Sultan the Chancellor sought to prevent him from making any
+decisions before the German mission arrived, and he pressed Count
+Tattenbach to hasten his departure for Fez. Count Bülow realized
+that if the French succeeded in gaining the Sultan’s acceptance of
+their program of reforms, the entire German action would be
+rendered absurd. In fact, until Count Tattenbach could persuade the
+Sultan to issue an invitation for a conference, the latter held the
+fate of Germany’s policy in his hands.<a id=
+"FNanchor_643"></a><a href="#Footnote_643" class=
+"fnanchor">[643]</a></p>
+
+<h3>III</h3>
+
+<p>The German Emperor’s visit to Tangier aroused bitter antagonism
+in Great Britain, where government and people believed that Germany
+had struck as much at Great Britain as at France in an effort to
+break the Entente Cordiale. Alarm over a possible German attack
+upon the British Isles was revived.<a id=
+"FNanchor_644"></a><a href="#Footnote_644" class=
+"fnanchor">[644]</a> Public feeling was well expressed by King
+Edward who, on April 15, wrote indignantly to Lord Lansdowne:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>The Tangier incident was the most mischievous and uncalled for
+event which the German Emperor has ever been engaged in since he
+came to the throne. It was also a political theatrical fiasco, and
+if he thinks he has done himself good in the eyes of the world he
+is very much mistaken. He is no<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_209">[209]</span> more or less than a political “enfant
+terrible” and one can have no faith in any of his assurances. His
+own pleasure seems to wish to set every country by the ears.<a id=
+"FNanchor_645"></a><a href="#Footnote_645" class=
+"fnanchor">[645]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">The Foreign Secretary’s criticism was also
+severe.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>I am afraid that we can hardly regard this Tangier ebullition
+[he wrote, on April 9, to Sir Frank Lascelles] as an isolated
+incident. There can be no doubt that the Kaiser was much annoyed by
+the Anglo-French Agreement, and probably even more so by our
+refusal to vamp up some agreement of the same kind with Germany
+over the Egyptian question.</p>
+
+<p>We shall, I have little doubt, find that the Kaiser avails
+himself of every opportunity to put spokes in our wheels. . . .
+.<a id="FNanchor_646"></a><a href="#Footnote_646" class=
+"fnanchor">[646]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>This staunch pro-French sentiment was not concealed. Early in
+April an exchange of visits by the British and French fleets was
+announced for the summer. King Edward had an interview with MM.
+Loubet and Delcassé on April 6 while passing through Paris on his
+way south.<a id="FNanchor_647"></a><a href="#Footnote_647" class=
+"fnanchor">[647]</a> In Berlin at the same time Sir Frank Lascelles
+spoke in private “very disapprovingly” of the German action, and
+strongly opposed the idea of a conference.<a id=
+"FNanchor_648"></a><a href="#Footnote_648" class=
+"fnanchor">[648]</a> And British public opinion, the true guide of
+the foreign policy, gave entire support to France.<a id=
+"FNanchor_649"></a><a href="#Footnote_649" class=
+"fnanchor">[649]</a> So although the British government admitted
+that M. Delcassé had blundered in his handling of Germany<a id=
+"FNanchor_650"></a><a href="#Footnote_650" class=
+"fnanchor">[650]</a> and although it knew that the secret articles
+of the two Moroccan accords were not in keeping with the public
+ones, it felt obliged both by honor and by interest to help France
+out of her difficulty. Its official attitude was expressed by Lord
+Lansdowne to the Ambassador at Berlin as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>My impression is that the German Government have really no cause
+for complaint either of us or the French in regard to the Morocco
+part of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[210]</span>
+Agreement. We made no secret of its existence. It dealt exclusively
+with French and British interests in Morocco, and so far as the
+other Powers were concerned, it provided adequate security for
+their interests, and for the integrity of Morocco itself. What else
+does the Kaiser want?<a id="FNanchor_651"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_651" class="fnanchor">[651]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">Particularly since British policy aimed at
+preventing Germany from obtaining ports anywhere in the colonial
+world<a id="FNanchor_652"></a><a href="#Footnote_652" class=
+"fnanchor">[652]</a> did the British government desire to keep that
+Power out of Morocco. And, while Sir Francis Bertie, British
+ambassador at Paris, reported the French government as “solid on
+Morocco,” he added the ill-omened statement of M. Delcassé, that
+the German government was “turning him out.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_653"></a><a href="#Footnote_653" class=
+"fnanchor">[653]</a> Lord Lansdowne did not follow up the French
+suggestion of intervening in Berlin in favor of France for fear of
+doing more harm than good by arousing the Emperor’s
+resentment.<a id="FNanchor_654"></a><a href="#Footnote_654" class=
+"fnanchor">[654]</a> But he did send the British Minister at
+Tangier to Fez to offset the effects of the German mission.<a id=
+"FNanchor_655"></a><a href="#Footnote_655" class=
+"fnanchor">[655]</a> And on April 22 he instructed Sir Francis
+Bertie as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>It seems not unlikely that German Government may ask for a port
+on the Moorish coast.</p>
+
+<p>You are authorized to inform Minister for Foreign Affairs that
+we should be prepared to join French Government in offering strong
+opposition to such a proposal and to beg that if question is raised
+French Government will afford us a full opportunity to conferring
+with them as to steps which might be taken in order to meet it.</p>
+
+<p>German attitude in this dispute seems to me most unreasonable
+having regard to M. Delcassé’s attitude and we desire to give him
+all the support we can.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>On April 25 the Ambassador handed M. Delcassé the following
+<em>aide-memoire</em> (dated April 24):</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>The British Government finds that the conduct of Germany in the
+Moroccan question is most unreasonable in view of M. Delcassé’s
+attitude, and it desires<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_211">[211]</span> to give to His Excellency all the support
+in its power. It seems not improbable that the German Government
+may ask for a port on the Moroccan coast. In that event the British
+Government would be willing to join the French Government in
+offering strong opposition to such a proposal, and it asks M.
+Delcassé, in case the question is raised, to give to the British
+Government full opportunity to concert with the French Government
+upon the measures which might be taken to meet that demand.<a id=
+"FNanchor_656"></a><a href="#Footnote_656" class=
+"fnanchor">[656]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>By inverting the order of the sentences, the Ambassador gave to
+Lord Lansdowne’s communication a force and a meaning which were
+originally lacking. He changed the emphasis from that of helping
+France to oppose the German acquisition of a port to that of
+helping her to oppose Germany in the whole Moroccan question. The
+one document limited the scope of the support and stressed the
+point of conferring beforehand as well as that of offering strong
+opposition. The other document began with a blanket offer of aid,
+and then used the present instance as one example of that offer.
+Moreover, the statement “to concert with the French Government upon
+the measures which might be taken to meet that demand” was stronger
+than the one used by Lord Lansdowne, “of conferring with them as to
+steps which might be taken in order to meet it.” Sir Francis
+Bertie’s <em>aide-memoire</em> was so colored by his own very
+pro-French feeling that it did not accurately reproduce his chief’s
+proposal.</p>
+
+<h3>IV</h3>
+
+<p>M. Delcassé was “most grateful” for this support. He denied that
+Germany had made any such request, although he remarked that some
+years ago Count Hatzfeldt had approached the British government on
+the subject. He promised to communicate with the latter if he heard
+of any German aspirations for a port and to warn the Sultan against
+giving any concession to Germany.<a id="FNanchor_657"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_657" class="fnanchor">[657]</a> Thus, by virtue of the
+British offer, the French Foreign Minister was able to hold to his
+policy in spite of Germany’s refusal<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_212">[212]</span> to consider his overture and in spite of
+his unpopularity with the French Parliament. On May 2, he again
+attempted to approach the German government, offering through M.
+Luzzati, Italian minister of finance, to give “any satisfaction
+desired by Germany in order to settle the Moroccan question in a
+way which would not wound French honor too deeply.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_658"></a><a href="#Footnote_658" class=
+"fnanchor">[658]</a> At the same time he continued the French
+action at Fez. When on April 26 the Sultan, emboldened by the
+German intervention, requested an international guaranty of the
+proposed Franco-Moroccan agreement over military reforms, M.
+Delcassé immediately refused. “You may declare peremptorily to Ben
+Sliman,” he instructed the French Minister on May 3, “that there
+can no more be intermediate Powers between France and Morocco than
+there are intermediate countries between Morocco and
+Algeria.”<a id="FNanchor_659"></a><a href="#Footnote_659" class=
+"fnanchor">[659]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Foreign Minister’s policy was disapproved by the French
+Premier, who since April 19 had assumed general control over
+foreign affairs. Whereas M. Delcassé, a skilled diplomat, was
+secretive, pro-British, and anti-German, the inexperienced M.
+Rouvier, a business man who sought to employ business methods in
+the conduct of foreign relations, suspected Great Britain of
+attempting to use France as a cat’s-paw against Germany. Realizing
+that the British navy “did not have wheels,” M. Rouvier favored
+treating Great Britain and Germany alike.<a id=
+"FNanchor_660"></a><a href="#Footnote_660" class=
+"fnanchor">[660]</a> When the German government, instead of
+replying to M. Delcassé’s proposal of April 13, prepared to send a
+mission to Fez and the German newspapers advocated an international
+conference on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[213]</span>
+Moroccan affair, M. Rouvier intervened personally in an effort to
+reach a settlement.</p>
+
+<p>On April 26, while Prince Radolin’s guest at dinner, the Premier
+brought up the Moroccan question. Protesting that the French really
+preferred the Germans to the English, he intimated that he
+appreciated Germany’s defense of her Moroccan interests, and said:
+“We will do everything possible and will give every desired
+explanation and satisfaction.” Denying that France was seeking to
+change the <em>status quo</em>, he upheld her right to suppress the
+anarchy in Morocco along the Algerian frontier. He offered to drop
+the thirty-year limitation to freedom of commerce, which, he added,
+was in fact already invalidated by the existing treaties between
+Morocco and other states. At the close of the conversation he
+exclaimed passionately: “It is impossible, it would be criminal for
+two states that are intended to agree and to approach each other to
+become embroiled, and especially over Morocco!” The Ambassador
+coldly responded that a collective settlement of the question
+seemed to him the simplest solution.<a id=
+"FNanchor_661"></a><a href="#Footnote_661" class=
+"fnanchor">[661]</a></p>
+
+<p>On the following day M. Rouvier proposed indirectly to Prince
+Radolin a settlement of the Moroccan problem by an exchange of
+notes between France and the other Powers. If the majority of the
+Powers opposed the French program of reform, it would not be
+carried out. M. Rouvier had no objection to Count Tattenbach’s
+making new commercial treaties with Morocco. But he did ask that,
+in case Germany were satisfied by his offer, the Emperor, on his
+return from the Mediterranean, should announce publicly the
+forthcoming settlement of the Franco-German dispute.<a id=
+"FNanchor_662"></a><a href="#Footnote_662" class=
+"fnanchor">[662]</a></p>
+
+<p>When these offers were made, the anxiety of the German
+government<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[214]</span> was
+relieved. To be sure, on April 25, Prince Radolin heard from a
+“usually well-informed person just returned from England” that King
+Edward would, on his way home from the South, declare officially to
+the French government that “Great Britain was ready to support the
+French policy in Morocco and the execution of the Anglo-French
+accord with her whole power.”<a id="FNanchor_663"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_663" class="fnanchor">[663]</a> But at the same time the
+German government learned definitely that the Sultan had made no
+final promises to the French and that he had agreed to postpone all
+decisions until the arrival of Count Tattenbach.<a id=
+"FNanchor_664"></a><a href="#Footnote_664" class=
+"fnanchor">[664]</a> Equally satisfactory, the answer from
+Washington arrived.</p>
+
+<p>As the President had been absent on a hunting trip in Colorado,
+he had not replied until April 20, when he had explained his policy
+to Mr. Taft, acting secretary of state, as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>I do not feel that as a Government we should interfere in the
+Morocco matter. We have other fish to fry and we have no real
+interest in Morocco. . . . .</p>
+
+<p>At the same time if I can find out what Germany wants I shall be
+glad to oblige her if possible, and I am sincerely anxious to bring
+about a better state of feeling between England and Germany. Each
+nation is working itself up to a condition of desperate hatred of
+the other; each from sheer fear of the other. The Kaiser is dead
+sure that England intends to attack him. The English Government and
+a large share of the English people are equally sure that Germany
+intends to attack England. Now, in my view this action of Germany
+in embroiling herself with France over Morocco is positive proof
+that she has not the slightest intention of attacking England. . .
+. . I do not wish to suggest anything whatever as to England’s
+attitude in Morocco, but if we can find out that attitude with
+propriety and inform the Kaiser of it, I shall be glad to do so. .
+. . . If we find that it will make the English suspicious—that is,
+will make them think we are acting as decoy ducks for Germany—why,
+we shall have to drop the business. . . . . I should advise your
+being absolutely frank with both Speck [von Sternburg] and the
+British people. . . . . Remember . . . . that both parties are very
+suspicious. You remember the King’s message to me through Harry
+White and his earnest<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_215">[215]</span> warning to me that I should remember that
+England was our real friend and that Germany was only a
+make-believe friend. In just the same way the Germans are always
+insisting that England is really on the point of entering into a
+general coalition which would practically be inimical to us—an act
+which apart from moral considerations I regard the British
+Government as altogether too flabby to venture upon.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">In a letter to the German Ambassador on the same
+date, Mr. Roosevelt had reiterated that the United States had no
+direct interest in Morocco, had offered to serve as mediator
+between Germany and Great Britain and to advise the British “to
+arrive at an understanding over Morocco and to work in harmony”
+with Germany.<a id="FNanchor_665"></a><a href="#Footnote_665"
+class="fnanchor">[665]</a></p>
+
+<p>The German Chancellor regarded this statement as “satisfactory
+to a high degree.”<a id="FNanchor_666"></a><a href="#Footnote_666"
+class="fnanchor">[666]</a> On April 27 he instructed Prince Radolin
+to uphold the project for a collective settlement and to postpone
+further negotiations with the French government until Count
+Tattenbach could send exact information from Fez concerning the
+actions of the French Minister.<a id="FNanchor_667"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_667" class="fnanchor">[667]</a> In other words, he put
+the French off until the Count could block their efforts in Fez and
+secure the Sultan’s acceptance of a conference. Otherwise, he
+feared, M. Delcassé might try to break the Moroccan resistance by
+intimating to the Sultan that his supposed friend, Germany, was now
+deserting him for a direct understanding with France.<a id=
+"FNanchor_668"></a><a href="#Footnote_668" class=
+"fnanchor">[668]</a></p>
+
+<p>This hazardous policy was not approved by either Prince Radolin
+or Count Tattenbach. The former advised his chief to accept M.
+Delcassé’s offer of April 13.<a id="FNanchor_669"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_669" class="fnanchor">[669]</a> The Count also
+expressed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[216]</span> his
+preference for a direct agreement with France. “In my opinion,” he
+wrote to the Chancellor on April 29,</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">the condition for a separate understanding with
+France would first be given if the other Powers reject the idea of
+a conference and the Sultan also acts unreliably and declines to
+heed our advice and wishes,—as is to be expected. In this case we
+must receive Southern Morocco as our sphere of influence. . . . .
+We must therefore decide whether we wish . . . . to fight a long
+diplomatic battle of doubtful issue against France, either through
+supporting the Sultan with money and weapons or through relying
+upon the conservative, fanatically anti-French party in Morocco, or
+whether we wish to gain through an understanding with France a
+substantial pledge for a large-scale African colonial policy which
+aims at the acquisition of all the French African
+possessions.<a id="FNanchor_670"></a><a href="#Footnote_670" class=
+"fnanchor">[670]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The Chancellor’s reply to Count Tattenbach contained the
+explanation for Germany’s proposal of a conference. He wrote:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>Your last idea guided Germany’s Moroccan policy in the past and
+under proper circumstances can guide it again in the future if you
+keep the future free. For the present, the German policy must be
+governed by the fact that His Majesty the Emperor . . . . declared
+to the King of Spain that he has enough African possessions and
+wishes no territory in Morocco but only the maintenance of
+commercial freedom. This declaration naturally does not bind us
+forever; but in the year which has passed since those remarks, the
+effect of the Southwest African events has been of a nature to
+increase the antagonism to colonial acquisitions by military force
+as well with His Majesty as with a great part of the German people.
+Even if, therefore, France were inclined to permit us to conquer a
+part of Morocco, we would for the present perhaps not be in a
+position to take advantage of this overture. In reality, we are
+confronted with the alternative either of relinquishing Morocco now
+to France without adequate compensation to Germany or of working
+for the extension of life of the Sherifian Empire in the
+expectation of a turn of events favorable to us. Thus, I perceive
+your important task to be in holding the future free for the profit
+of German interests. I sum it up in stating that you should bring
+the Sultan to declare that he could consider the French demands
+only if they were advised by a conference of all the<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_217">[217]</span> signatory Powers. The
+reference to the conference I consider for the Sultan the easiest
+and for us the most favorable form of refusal. That the Sultan
+refuse the French demands is naturally the main thing.<a id=
+"FNanchor_671"></a><a href="#Footnote_671" class=
+"fnanchor">[671]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>This frank document furnished the key to the German refusal of
+the French offers and to the persistent demands for a conference.
+Count Bülow’s embarrassment was caused by the Emperor’s
+renunciations at Vigo and even more by the temporary apathy if not
+antagonism of the German people toward further colonial
+acquisition. Pursuing an objective undesired by German public
+opinion, the Chancellor was still bent on acquiring a share in
+Morocco or compensation elsewhere. To delay and postpone, to “hold
+the future free” until public opinion veered into a more
+chauvinistic channel, to relieve Germany of the restrictions
+imposed by the Emperor’s assertions, Count Bülow thought that a
+conference was the best means. The continuation of the crisis was a
+logical result of this ambition.</p>
+
+<p>On the same day upon which Count Bülow penned this dispatch M.
+Rouvier made another offer. He was led to this move by the
+increasing excitement in France. The lack of response from Germany
+and the uncertainty about her objective, the publication of an
+article in the <em>Kreuzzeitung</em> on April 26 and of one in
+<em>Matin</em> on the next day hinting at war,<a id=
+"FNanchor_672"></a><a href="#Footnote_672" class=
+"fnanchor">[672]</a> caused a panic on the Paris stock exchange on
+April 27.<a id="FNanchor_673"></a><a href="#Footnote_673" class=
+"fnanchor">[673]</a> M. Bihourd telegraphed on April 28 of the
+presence of “bellicose counselors” in the <em>entourage</em> of the
+Emperor who would have an excellent opportunity “to advocate the
+present time as propitious for war against France.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_674"></a><a href="#Footnote_674" class=
+"fnanchor">[674]</a> So in a conversation with Prince Radolin on
+April 30 M. Rouvier indorsed the Emperor’s assertions at Tangier
+and the principles<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[218]</span>
+of the Convention of Madrid, except with respect to the
+Algero-Moroccan frontier. He offered to “make an agreement similar
+to the Anglo-French one, where all doubtful points, including
+Morocco, would be settled.” The Ambassador made no reply.<a id=
+"FNanchor_675"></a><a href="#Footnote_675" class=
+"fnanchor">[675]</a></p>
+
+<p>The next day an intermediary explained to Prince Radolin that
+the Premier regarded a conference as hardly acceptable since France
+had engaged herself so fully in the Moroccan affair. M. Rouvier
+would be willing, however, to include in a general settlement such
+questions as those of boundaries in Africa and the Bagdad Railway.
+In return, the two governments should agree upon a mode of
+adjusting the Moroccan affair directly with the Powers. The German
+government refused the offer.<a id="FNanchor_676"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_676" class="fnanchor">[676]</a></p>
+
+<p>On May 1 King Edward VII arrived in Paris where he remained for
+four days. Strongly supporting M. Delcassé’s views, he assured the
+French government that Germany would not dare a war; in case of
+conflict, he said, France could rely on British support.<a id=
+"FNanchor_677"></a><a href="#Footnote_677" class=
+"fnanchor">[677]</a> To the German Ambassador he praised the French
+for seeking a direct settlement of the Moroccan difficulty,
+abruptly demanding, “Why does not Berlin reply to the last French
+overture?”<a id="FNanchor_678"></a><a href="#Footnote_678" class=
+"fnanchor">[678]</a> His interference, however, was of no avail. In
+fact, French public opinion, suspecting the King and British press
+of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[219]</span> attempting to
+estrange France and Germany, was more than ever anxious for an
+agreement with Germany.<a id="FNanchor_679"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_679" class="fnanchor">[679]</a></p>
+
+<p>Distressed by refusals and silence from the German government
+and fearful of war, M. Rouvier sought to restore connections with
+Germany by sending his friend, M. Betzold, to Berlin to interview
+Herr von Holstein, and by persuading Baron Eckardstein, then living
+privately in England, to lay the French proposals directly before
+Count Bülow and the Emperor at Karlsruhe. These men were to inform
+the German officials that the French cabinet, disapproving of M.
+Delcassé’s secretiveness, hoped to bring about the Minister’s
+downfall over some domestic difficulty in the next three or four
+weeks. They were to state that while in case of war the French
+Government knew for a certainty that Great Britain would interfere
+in France’s favor, the cabinet, except M. Delcassé, preferred not
+to seek this support. As an inducement for a direct settlement, the
+two emissaries were to offer Germany “a coaling station and
+eventually also a strip of land on the Atlantic coast of Morocco.”
+They were especially to urge the Emperor against making any
+inflammatory speeches on his return from the Mediterranean.<a id=
+"FNanchor_680"></a><a href="#Footnote_680" class=
+"fnanchor">[680]</a></p>
+
+<p>Neither M. Betzold nor Baron Eckardstein had the least success.
+While Herr von Holstein assured M. Betzold on May 2 of Germany’s
+desire for good relations with France, he observed that for the
+time he saw no possibility of making a direct agreement with her.
+For, even apart from Germany’s official declaration<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_220">[220]</span> in favor of a collective
+settlement of the Moroccan question, the German government did not
+trust M. Delcassé sufficiently to negotiate with France. That
+Minister’s policy toward Germany, he asserted, had been
+“dishonest,” “hostile,” “insidious,” and in this affair
+“disrespectful.” “Slow tempo, temporary truce, and removal of
+Delcassé would be the next,” he concluded. In Karlsruhe, on May 5,
+Count Bülow rebuffed Baron Eckardstein with the bold assertion:
+“The English inciting does not impress us. In case of a conflict
+the game would be played between Germany and France. . . . . We are
+in a position to await further developments with composure.” The
+Baron was not allowed to see William II at all.<a id=
+"FNanchor_681"></a><a href="#Footnote_681" class=
+"fnanchor">[681]</a></p>
+
+<p>Thus every offer for a direct settlement was refused.<a id=
+"FNanchor_682"></a><a href="#Footnote_682" class=
+"fnanchor">[682]</a> Indeed, the German government even suggested
+to M. Rouvier on May 7 that France take the initiative in calling a
+conference, arguing that “the advantage of a conference lies in
+that it can have no positive results. It will neither divide
+Morocco nor check her continuing decay. It will fulfil its object
+in removing the danger of an acute conflict, at the same time
+holding the future open.”<a id="FNanchor_683"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_683" class="fnanchor">[683]</a></p>
+
+<p>M. Rouvier of course would not consider the suggestion. Nor was
+he any longer so willing to eliminate M. Delcassé. On May 8 he
+informed the German government through M. Betzold that while he had
+been unable to convince the Foreign Minister of the faults of his
+policy, the latter was needed in the work of mediating<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_221">[221]</span> between Russia and Japan. It
+might, therefore, take weeks or even months to achieve his
+dismissal. M. Rouvier hoped, said M. Betzold, to settle the
+Moroccan and other difficulties with Germany after Count Tattenbach
+convinced himself of the French Minister’s proper conduct at Fez
+and after M. Delcassé had been eliminated.<a id=
+"FNanchor_684"></a><a href="#Footnote_684" class=
+"fnanchor">[684]</a></p>
+
+<p>More unfortunate words could hardly have been chosen. The German
+government was opposed to an early peace between the warring
+Powers,<a id="FNanchor_685"></a><a href="#Footnote_685" class=
+"fnanchor">[685]</a> and its mistrust of M. Delcassé was increased
+by his continued justification of his policy. Since French public
+opinion had repudiated the Minister, since M. Rouvier, known to be
+weak and easily influenced, had practically offered the Minister’s
+head, the German government determined to press the frightened and
+pacifically inclined French Premier until the objectionable Foreign
+Minister was overthrown. To that end, on May 16, Prince Radolin
+announced to M. Rouvier “that the prerequisite for the
+<em>rapprochement</em> desired by him [M. Rouvier] is for us
+[Germany] to have full trust in the foreign policy of France. . . .
+. After what has happened, this trust is lacking.” The Premier
+replied, “I understand you fully. Leave it to me.” But through M.
+Betzold he urged the German government to wait until he could
+accomplish the act by some internal crisis.<a id=
+"FNanchor_686"></a><a href="#Footnote_686" class=
+"fnanchor">[686]</a></p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, the German government was pressing Spain, Italy, and
+the United States for support. Early in May Herr von Radowitz
+warned the Spanish government against sending a mission to Fez at
+that time, and remarked that “it would be wise for Spain not to
+intervene in the present Moorish difficulties, and that it was to
+her interest to be on friendly terms with Germany, who<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_222">[222]</span> could be of greater assistance
+to her than any other Power.”<a id="FNanchor_687"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_687" class="fnanchor">[687]</a> At the same time Count
+Monts in Rome was using “menacing language,” hinting at “the
+possibility of war.”<a id="FNanchor_688"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_688" class="fnanchor">[688]</a> In both places this talk
+made a deep impression.</p>
+
+<p>To President Roosevelt the German government asserted that,
+although certain voices had been raised in France in favor of a
+conference, Great Britain still resisted the project. It asked the
+President to inform the British government that its attitude
+justified the suspicion that “in the accord with France they [the
+British] had wished to dispose not only of English rights but also
+of the rights of the other signatory Powers.” The German government
+further informed Mr. Roosevelt that if the proposal for a
+conference became hopeless, it would then think of its interests
+alone and would be forced to choose “between the possibility of a
+conflict with France and the consideration of conditions which
+France might perhaps propose to avoid a conflict.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_689"></a><a href="#Footnote_689" class=
+"fnanchor">[689]</a></p>
+
+<p>Criticizing sharply the British hostility to the conference, Mr.
+Roosevelt promised to repeat his advice to the British government
+to settle its differences with Germany. Upon doing so he was again
+accused by the British leaders of being under German influence. He
+stoutly denied this accusation, writing to Senator Lodge, then in
+England, on May 15, as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>It always amuses me to find that the English think that I am
+under the influence of the Kaiser. The heavy witted creatures do
+not understand that nothing would persuade me to follow the lead of
+or enter into close alliance with a man who is so jumpy, so little
+capable of continuity of action, and therefore, so little capable
+of being loyal to his friends or steadfastly hostile to an enemy.
+Undoubtedly with Russia weakened Germany feels it can
+be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[223]</span> fairly insolent
+within the borders of Europe. I intend to do my best to keep on
+good terms with Germany, as with all other nations, and so far as I
+can to keep them on good terms with one another; and I shall be
+friendly to the Kaiser as I am friendly to every one. But as for
+his having any special influence with me, the thought is
+absurd.<a id="FNanchor_690"></a><a href="#Footnote_690" class=
+"fnanchor">[690]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, the British government rejected his advice. On May
+19 Mr. Roosevelt had to report to Baron Sternburg that “the British
+Government had given him to understand that it did not wish better
+relations with Germany,” and that “it had even hinted broadly to
+the secretary of state that Great Britain could take care of her
+affairs alone.” He could not do more, he said, without exposing
+himself to an incivility.<a id="FNanchor_691"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_691" class="fnanchor">[691]</a> The German government
+was well pleased with the result, however, for it placed Mr.
+Roosevelt on the German side.</p>
+
+<p>On May 13 Count Tattenbach arrived in Fez. He found that the
+French party was still strong, with some of the Moroccan ministers
+bought over to that side. He accomplished his object with some
+difficulty. He reported immediately that the Sultan himself
+affirmed the accusation against the French Minister of having
+claimed to enjoy a mandate of Europe.<a id=
+"FNanchor_692"></a><a href="#Footnote_692" class=
+"fnanchor">[692]</a> A few days later the Count telegraphed that
+upon his arrival the French Minister, under instructions from M.
+Delcassé, had issued a veiled threat of violence against Morocco if
+the Sultan agreed to a conference.<a id="FNanchor_693"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_693" class="fnanchor">[693]</a> Upon receiving these
+dispatches Count Bülow immediately<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_224">[224]</span> warned M. Rouvier against M. Delcassé’s
+“stormy and violent . . . . Moroccan policy.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_694"></a><a href="#Footnote_694" class=
+"fnanchor">[694]</a> As that Minister still remained in office, the
+Chancellor instructed Herr von Miquel, councilor at the German
+embassy in Paris, to inform M. Rouvier amicably but firmly that the
+Foreign Minister would have to go, that Franco-German relations
+would not improve as long as he remained in office. Indeed, if M.
+Delcassé’s anti-German and bellicose policy became known to the
+German people, he was to state, it would have an effect for which
+Count Bülow refused to be responsible. “A change in the present
+situation is above all to be made possible by a change in the
+direction of the French foreign policy.”</p>
+
+<p>When Herr von Miquel carried out these instructions on May 30,
+the Premier realized the necessity for eliminating the Foreign
+Minister. In his despair he cried: “I cannot cause M. Delcassé to
+fall because Germany frowns. I would be reproached always . . . .
+always.”<a id="FNanchor_695"></a><a href="#Footnote_695" class=
+"fnanchor">[695]</a> The German pressure, however, did not cease.
+In a telegram on May 25 Count Tattenbach reported French assertions
+to the Moroccans that in the face of the united action of the
+Mediterranean Powers, “who would never suffer an interference by
+Germany in Mediterranean questions,” Germany would desert the
+Sultan. In sending this report to Rome, on May 31, the German
+Chancellor requested the Italian government to favor publicly the
+collective settlement of the Moroccan question. “No matter what
+turn Moroccan affairs take, Germany will follow up the consequences
+of the advice which His Majesty sent to the Sultan,” he wrote.
+“Thus the possibility that the Sultan will remain isolated in this
+difficulty need not be considered.” The Italian Foreign Minister
+immediately denied France’s right to speak of a common policy of
+the Mediterranean Powers, and,<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_225">[225]</span> as Count Bülow probably intended, he passed
+on the German warning to the French government.<a id=
+"FNanchor_696"></a><a href="#Footnote_696" class=
+"fnanchor">[696]</a></p>
+
+<p>On May 28 Count Tattenbach telegraphed the Sultan’s official
+rejection of the French proposals and his approval of an
+international conference.<a id="FNanchor_697"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_697" class="fnanchor">[697]</a> Thereupon, through M.
+Betzold, the Chancellor warned the French Premier, June 1, that in
+as much as the Sultan had accepted the German point of view,
+Germany “would follow up the consequences if France continued the
+policy of intimidation and violence hitherto pursued by M.
+Delcassé.”<a id="FNanchor_698"></a><a href="#Footnote_698" class=
+"fnanchor">[698]</a> On June 3 Prince Radolin described the
+situation to M. Dupuy, an intimate friend of M. Rouvier’s, as “very
+serious.”<a id="FNanchor_699"></a><a href="#Footnote_699" class=
+"fnanchor">[699]</a> Thus the German government struck blow after
+blow to force an immediate dismissal of the French Foreign
+Minister.<a id="FNanchor_700"></a><a href="#Footnote_700" class=
+"fnanchor">[700]</a></p>
+
+<p>On the French side, M. Delcassé remained as adamantine
+as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[226]</span> the Germans.
+Fearing an intention on the part of Germany to force his dismissal,
+hearing of Germany’s pressure on Spain and Italy and of bellicose
+talk by the German Ambassador at Rome,<a id=
+"FNanchor_701"></a><a href="#Footnote_701" class=
+"fnanchor">[701]</a> he made a bid on May 17 for British support.
+On that date M. Cambon apprised Lord Lansdowne of Germany’s
+endeavor to arouse discord between Great Britain and France “all
+over the world.” Although he did not regard the relations with
+Germany as “profoundly dangerous,” he pictured them as serious
+enough to cause him “much preoccupation.”</p>
+
+<p>Lord Lansdowne wished to lend the pro-British Foreign Minister
+all possible support. Late in April, for the sake of France and the
+Entente Cordiale, he had run the risk of antagonizing President
+Roosevelt by instructing the British Ambassador in Washington not
+to give him an opportunity to mediate between Great Britain and
+Germany. He realized that the President’s interference encouraged
+Germany and worked to the detriment of France and Great Britain. He
+had therefore denied to the President that there was any “subject
+of dispute” between Great Britain and Germany, and had expressed
+his inability to see “why any international complication should be
+created [over Morocco], unless German Gov[ernmen]t is determined to
+take advantage of what was at most a diplomatic oversight in order
+to make mischief or to disturb the <em>status quo</em>, e.g. . . .
+., by demanding cession of a Moorish port.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_702"></a><a href="#Footnote_702" class=
+"fnanchor">[702]</a> But Lord Lansdowne also sought to correct any
+erroneous impression which Sir Francis<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_227">[227]</span> Bertie’s <em>aide-memoire</em> of April 25
+may have made. Lord Lansdowne said to M. Cambon:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>The moral . . . . seemed to me to be that our two Governments
+should continue to treat one another with the most absolute
+confidence, should keep one another fully informed of everything
+which came to their knowledge, and should, so far as possible,
+discuss in advance any contingencies by which they might in the
+course of events find themselves confronted. As an instance of our
+readiness to enter into such timely discussions, I reminded H[is]
+E[xcellency] of the communication which had recently been made to
+the French Gov[ernmen]t by you [Sir Francis Bertie] at a moment
+when an idea prevailed that Germany might be on the point of
+demanding the cession of a Moorish Port.<a id=
+"FNanchor_703"></a><a href="#Footnote_703" class=
+"fnanchor">[703]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">To avoid all misunderstanding this communication
+was put in writing in an exchange of notes between the British
+Foreign Secretary and M. Cambon on May 24-25. When the former
+perceived that M. Cambon still interpreted the British policy in
+the light of Sir Francis Bertie’s <em>aide-memoire</em>,<a id=
+"FNanchor_704"></a><a href="#Footnote_704" class=
+"fnanchor">[704]</a> he reiterated his correcting statement as
+follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>I do not know that this account [of their conversation of May
+17] differs from that which you have given to M. Delcassé, but I am
+not sure that I succeeded in making quite clear to you our desire
+that there should be full and confidential discussion between the
+two Gov[ernmen]ts, not so much in consequence of some acts of
+unprovoked aggression on the part of another Power, as in
+anticipation of any complications to be apprehended during the
+somewhat anxious period through which we are at present
+passing.<a id="FNanchor_705"></a><a href="#Footnote_705" class=
+"fnanchor">[705]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[228]</span>At
+some time in this crisis, the British fleet was commanded to be “in
+readiness to make a descent on the German coast at short
+notice,”<a id="FNanchor_706"></a><a href="#Footnote_706" class=
+"fnanchor">[706]</a> and conversations were begun between the
+French and British military and naval officers looking toward
+active co-operation in case of war.<a id=
+"FNanchor_707"></a><a href="#Footnote_707" class=
+"fnanchor">[707]</a></p>
+
+<p>When news arrived of the Sultan’s proposal for a conference, M.
+Delcassé opposed it vigorously. At his instigation the British
+government on June 5 ordered Mr. Lowther, who had just arrived in
+Fez, to advise the Sultan against the idea and to refuse the
+invitation.<a id="FNanchor_708"></a><a href="#Footnote_708" class=
+"fnanchor">[708]</a> The French Minister also reported Mr. Taft’s
+remark that the American government would probably not be favorably
+disposed toward a conference. Thereupon Lord Lansdowne on June 5
+added his support in trying to convince the<span class="pagenum"
+id="Page_229">[229]</span> American government that “the proposal
+was unsound and should not be entertained.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_709"></a><a href="#Footnote_709" class=
+"fnanchor">[709]</a> To bring Spain into closer intimacy with the
+Entente Cordiale, the British Foreign Secretary offered early in
+June to effect an understanding with her over the Spanish interests
+in the Mediterranean and elsewhere.<a id=
+"FNanchor_710"></a><a href="#Footnote_710" class=
+"fnanchor">[710]</a></p>
+
+<p>In spite of Lord Lansdowne’s correcting statements about the
+British policy, M. Delcassé apparently continued to interpret the
+British communication of May 17 in the sense of Sir Francis
+Bertie’s <em>aide-memoire</em> of April 25. He was impressed by the
+practical identity of that communication with the political clauses
+of the Franco-Russian alliance.<a id="FNanchor_711"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_711" class="fnanchor">[711]</a> Reassured by the British
+support and by the adverse attitude of the British, Spanish, and
+American governments toward the project of a conference, and
+believing with the British that Germany was bluffing, he was in no
+mood to recede. M. Rouvier, who was receiving all the German
+threats, took a different view of the situation. With some of the
+other members of the cabinet, he prepared for the retirement of the
+offending Minister.<a id="FNanchor_712"></a><a href="#Footnote_712"
+class="fnanchor">[712]</a> During the visit of the King of Spain to
+Paris, May 30-June 4, little could be done. But by June 3 M.
+Delcassé’s resignation was anticipated in parliamentary
+circles.<a id="FNanchor_713"></a><a href="#Footnote_713" class=
+"fnanchor">[713]</a> On June 5 the Chamber was thrown into
+excitement<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[230]</span>
+bordering on panic by the rumor of a report from M. Barrère at Rome
+that if an Anglo-French alliance were concluded Germany would
+attack France.<a id="FNanchor_714"></a><a href="#Footnote_714"
+class="fnanchor">[714]</a> On the same day M. Rouvier explained the
+gravity of the situation to President Loubet;<a id=
+"FNanchor_715"></a><a href="#Footnote_715" class=
+"fnanchor">[715]</a> on June 6 he laid his controversy with M.
+Delcassé before the cabinet.</p>
+
+<p>At that meeting, although well aware of his isolation, M.
+Delcassé valiantly defended his policy of the past seven years, a
+policy which he declared had been opposed by Germany alone.<a id=
+"FNanchor_716"></a><a href="#Footnote_716" class=
+"fnanchor">[716]</a> He claimed that in a very recent exchange of
+notes, one of which he read, France had received from Great Britain
+assurance of support in case of a German attack. Asserting the
+possibility of a formal alliance with Great Britain, he urged
+acceptance of the British offer.<a id="FNanchor_717"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_717" class="fnanchor">[717]</a> He proposed that the
+French, British, and Spanish governments should address identical
+notes to the Sultan<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[231]</span>
+declining the conference. He assured the cabinet that Germany
+confronted by this Anglo-French-Spanish opposition with Italy
+neutral would not fight. But M. Rouvier declared that the German
+government had threatened war if France accepted the British
+offers. Turning to the ministers of war and of navy, he asked if
+France were prepared for that contingency. They both replied
+emphatically “No.” As M. Delcassé was not supported by a single
+minister, he resigned, and M. Rouvier took over his position.
+Before leaving M. Delcassé prophetically warned the cabinet that
+after this abdication before the demands of Germany, that Power
+would become “more insolent and more exacting than ever”; it had
+not opposed his person, he said, but rather the French policy of
+accords. He declared that the cabinet’s pusillanimity would give
+rise to new dangers.<a id="FNanchor_718"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_718" class="fnanchor">[718]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[232]</span>French public
+opinion was almost unanimous in its approval of M. Delcassé’s
+downfall. This approbation was noted by Herr von Flotow, first
+secretary of the German embassy in Paris, who on June 7 reported to
+his government as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>The history of the downfall of M. Delcassé shows that without a
+doubt there is a latent under-current in France which wishes . . .
+. a satisfactory understanding with Germany. It is after all
+significant that in the entire press of all parties there is hardly
+a paper which does not censure the anti-German policy of M.
+Delcassé. The second interesting point in the history of the past
+few days is the fact that in spite of the continued and almost
+importunate offers of English aid, . . . . French public opinion
+has never shown a real inclination to accept this support. Wherever
+one has opportunity here . . . . to observe public feeling, one
+meets the view that England is only endeavoring to engage the
+French power for her differences with Germany, and that in case of
+a crisis France would have to pull the English chestnuts out of the
+German fire.<a id="FNanchor_719"></a><a href="#Footnote_719" class=
+"fnanchor">[719]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Great Britain was disgusted. The British government had made
+strenuous endeavor to save M. Delcassé, for it was certain of his
+loyalty to the entente, whereas it was dubious of the more
+pro-German M. Rouvier. It had intimated its willingness to oppose
+by force the German aggression;<a id="FNanchor_720"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_720" class="fnanchor">[720]</a> but so far had met with
+no encouragement.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>Delcassé’s dismissal or resignation under pressure from the
+German Government [stated Mr. Balfour to King Edward on June 8]
+displayed a weakness on the part of France which indicated that she
+could not at present be counted on as an effective force in
+international politics. She could no longer be trusted not to yield
+to threats at the crucial moment of a negotiation. If, therefore,
+Germany is really desirous of obtaining a port on the coast of
+Morocco, and if such a proceeding be a menace to our interests, it
+must be to other means than French assistance that we must look for
+our protection.<a id="FNanchor_721"></a><a href="#Footnote_721"
+class="fnanchor">[721]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[233]</span>In
+spite of M. Rouvier’s public assertion, June 6, that his policy
+toward the Anglo-French understanding would remain the same as
+before,<a id="FNanchor_722"></a><a href="#Footnote_722" class=
+"fnanchor">[722]</a> the Entente Cordiale had received a hard
+blow.</p>
+
+<p>While expressing satisfaction that France had repudiated the
+anti-German Minister, the German press, under official
+guidance,<a id="FNanchor_723"></a><a href="#Footnote_723" class=
+"fnanchor">[723]</a> kept its discussion of the affair within the
+bounds of propriety. But German obtuseness to the feelings of other
+nations was manifested when on the day of M. Delcassé’s fall the
+German Emperor made Count Bülow a prince.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, the first period of the crisis was closed. Germany had
+gained her objective in winning the Sultan’s acceptance of the
+project of a conference and in overthrowing M. Delcassé. While
+playing with war, the German government had had no desire to start
+one, and, gauging correctly French sentiment toward M. Delcassé and
+war, it had achieved success in Paris merely by a liberal use of
+threats. In the Moroccan affair the German foreign office had
+reached the peak of its power. But it had aroused so many
+complications that the crisis continued as acutely as before.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes" id="ftc12">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_597"></a><a href="#FNanchor_597"><span class=
+"label">[597]</span></a><em>Quest. dipl. et col.</em>, XIX,
+516.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_598"></a><a href="#FNanchor_598"><span class=
+"label">[598]</span></a>Radolin to F. O., April 9, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 317, No. 6612; Radolin to Bülow, April 14, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 330 ff., No. 6622. After having talked with
+President Loubet early in April, Edward VII wrote to Lansdowne as
+follows: “President Loubet was most amiable . . . . but I could see
+from his manner that he considers the German conduct at Tangier, if
+not a direct menace to France, at any rate a covert insult” (Lee,
+<em>King Edward VII</em>, II, 341). The Schnäbele affair brought
+France and Germany almost to war in 1887.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_599"></a><a href="#FNanchor_599"><span class=
+"label">[599]</span></a>Kühlmann to Bülow, Nov. 9, 1904,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 232 ff., No. 6536; Chérisey to Delcassé, Feb.
+11, 1905, <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 196, No. 225; Delcassé to Bihourd,
+Feb. 14, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 196 f., No. 226; Bihourd to
+Delcassé, Feb. 15, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 197 f., No. 227; Lowther
+to Lansdowne, April 26, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 67, No. 81.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_600"></a><a href="#FNanchor_600"><span class=
+"label">[600]</span></a>Nicolson to Lansdowne, D. Feb. 12, 1905, R.
+March 4, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 59, No. 66.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_601"></a><a href="#FNanchor_601"><span class=
+"label">[601]</span></a>Bertie to Lansdowne, March 22, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 60, No. 67. For the uncertainty about the Emperor’s
+proposed action see Lascelles to Lansdowne, March 23, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 61, No. 69; Nicolson to Lansdowne, March 23, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 62, No. 70.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_602"></a><a href="#FNanchor_602"><span class=
+"label">[602]</span></a>Delcassé stated to Bertie, June 10, that
+“his policy had been to be ready to make commercial concessions to
+Germany if she were willing to discuss with the French Government
+the question of Morocco, but not to yield anything politically or
+territorially” (Bertie to Lansdowne, June 10, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>,
+78, No. 96).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_603"></a><a href="#FNanchor_603"><span class=
+"label">[603]</span></a>Mévil, <em>De la Paix de Francfort,
+etc.</em>, pp. 206 f., 231; Imperial Foreign Office, <em>Reports of
+the Belgian Representatives in Berlin, London, and Paris to the
+Minister of Foreign Affairs in Brussels, 1905-1914. European
+Politics during the Decade before the War as Described by the
+Belgian Diplomatists</em> (. . . ., 1915), No. 3 (hereafter cited
+as <em>Belg. Docs., 1905-1914</em>); <em>Quest. dipl. et col.</em>,
+XIX, 517; Henry Wickham Steed, <em>Through Thirty Years, 1892-1922:
+A Personal Narrative</em> (London, 1924), I, 229. Delcassé also
+made strenuous efforts during the succeeding weeks to mediate peace
+between Japan and Russia so that the latter Power could resume its
+obligations as France’s ally. See Radolin to F. O., April 27, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 345, No. 6635; Lansdowne to MacDonald, April 19,
+1905, <em>B.D.</em>, IV, 76 f., No. 68; Dennett, <em>Roosevelt and
+the Russo-Japanese War</em>, pp. 176 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_604"></a><a href="#FNanchor_604"><span class=
+"label">[604]</span></a><em>Journal officiel, Debats parlem.</em>
+(Sénat, March 31, 1905), pp. 540 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_605"></a><a href="#FNanchor_605"><span class=
+"label">[605]</span></a>Articles in <em>Temps</em> of April 3, and
+in the <em>Dépêche de Toulouse</em> of April 10. Mévil, the
+official apologist for Delcassé, asserts that the latter article
+was based on the “best” information (pp. 218 ff.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_606"></a><a href="#FNanchor_606"><span class=
+"label">[606]</span></a>By April 13 the Sultan had expressed his
+general approval of the French proposals, and the details for
+military reorganization in six of the Moroccan towns were ready for
+final formulation and signature (Mévil, p. 200 n.; Vassel to
+Tattenbach, April 21, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 339 ff., No. 6631;
+and the various dispatches from Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé
+during Feb., March, April, 1905, in <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, Nos.
+228-31, 233, 240, 243, 248, 266).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_607"></a><a href="#FNanchor_607"><span class=
+"label">[607]</span></a>Delcassé instructed the Minister to make
+the following statement to the Sultan: “We cannot conceive that,
+changing from the way of accords which he [the Sultan] has followed
+for several years, he will decide to assume an attitude which will
+oblige us to consider strict right alone as the basis of our
+relation with him” (Delcassé to Saint-René Taillandier, April 9,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 208, No. 239).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_608"></a><a href="#FNanchor_608"><span class=
+"label">[608]</span></a>Egerton to Lansdowne, April 12, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 66, No. 78. The French government was afraid
+that Spain would not loyally uphold their agreement if some other
+Power intervened in Morocco (Nicolson to Lansdowne, Feb. 12, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 59, No. 66). But with M. Villa-Urrutia at the
+foreign office, Spain remained entirely on the French side
+(Nicolson to Lansdowne, April 14, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 66, No.
+79).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_609"></a><a href="#FNanchor_609"><span class=
+"label">[609]</span></a>On March 22 Bihourd advised Delcassé to
+“establish by an exchange of notes the bearing of the Anglo-French
+and Franco-Spanish accords on the commercial and industrial
+interests of Germany,” adding that “until then we shall remain
+under the menace, very clearly formulated by the German press, of
+some inopportune surprise” (Bihourd to Delcassé, March 22, 1905,
+<em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 202 f., No. 232). On March 28 an article by
+André Tardieu, a journalist with close governmental connections,
+stated that the French Foreign Minister would give satisfaction to
+Germany if she wished it on the subject of Morocco, “provided it is
+a question solely of commercial interests” (Flotow to F. O., March
+28, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 282 f., No. 6584). On April 4 Billy, a
+press writer in the French foreign office, sounded Theodor Wolff,
+Paris correspondent for the <em>Berliner Tageblatt</em>, upon how
+the German government would receive a French overture
+(<em>ibid.</em>, p. 305 n.). On April 7 Hedeman, London
+correspondent of <em>Matin</em>, talked with Hammann to the same
+effect (memo. by Hammann, April 7, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 310 ff.,
+Nos. 6608 f.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_610"></a><a href="#FNanchor_610"><span class=
+"label">[610]</span></a>Quoted in <em>Quest. dipl et col.</em>,
+XIX, 511 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_611"></a><a href="#FNanchor_611"><span class=
+"label">[611]</span></a>Radolin to Bülow, April 14, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 331, No. 6622.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_612"></a><a href="#FNanchor_612"><span class=
+"label">[612]</span></a>Radolin to F. O., April 14, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 328 ff., No. 6621; Radolin to Bülow, April 14,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 330 ff., No. 6622; Mévil, pp. 238 ff.;
+Delcassé to Bihourd, April 14, 1905, <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, pp. 211
+f., No. 244; Bihourd to Delcassé, April 18 and 25, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 214, Nos. 246 f.; memo. by Mühlberg, April 19,
+1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 332 f., No. 6623. Saint-René Taillandier’s
+denial that he had ever claimed to have a mandate of Europe must be
+balanced against the Sultan’s personal assertion that he had
+claimed it. The truth would seem to be that the French Minister had
+sought to make more out of France’s international accords over
+Morocco than the facts justified by speaking vaguely and by not
+clearing up misunderstandings in the Sultan’s mind (<em>L.j.,
+1901-5</em>, Nos. 214, 231, 238, 263; <em>G.P.</em>, XX, Nos. 6621,
+6631, 6658, 6662, 6551 n.; <em>Aktenstücke über Marokko, 1905</em>,
+Nos. 1, 3). Cf. the report from the Belgian Minister at Paris, Dec.
+19, 1905, <em>Zur europ. Politik</em>, II, 96.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_613"></a><a href="#FNanchor_613"><span class=
+"label">[613]</span></a>Lansdowne to Lascelles, April 23, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 67, No. 80.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_614"></a><a href="#FNanchor_614"><span class=
+"label">[614]</span></a>Michon, <em>L’alliance franco-russe
+1891-1917</em>, pp. 117 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_615"></a><a href="#FNanchor_615"><span class=
+"label">[615]</span></a>As already shown, the Russian defeat at
+Mukden had nothing to do with the change of Germany’s policy.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_616"></a><a href="#FNanchor_616"><span class=
+"label">[616]</span></a><em>Journal officiel. Debats parlem.</em>
+(Chambre, April 19, 1905), pp. 1543 ff. Cf. Bertie’s estimate on
+April 25: “The general feeling in Paris is that the chief object
+which the German Emperor has had in view in his recent proceedings
+is to show to the French people that an understanding with England
+is of little value to them and that they had much better come to an
+agreement with Germany. To this end ‘il fait la guerre à
+l’Angleterre sur le dos de la France’ and the French Public
+realizing that the Emperor’s wrath is against England for enabling
+France to carry out her Morocco policy and not against France for
+taking advantage of her agreement with England feel that if they
+keep their heads nothing really serious will come of His Majesty’s
+ill temper which they believe is not entirely shared by the German
+Government and still less so by the German people” (Bertie to
+Lansdowne, April 25, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 75, No. 93).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_617"></a><a href="#FNanchor_617"><span class=
+"label">[617]</span></a>Mévil, pp. 257 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_618"></a><a href="#FNanchor_618"><span class=
+"label">[618]</span></a>Memo. by Holstein, April 4, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 304, No. 6601. Olmütz signified the humiliation
+of Prussia by Austria in 1850; Fashoda, that of France by Great
+Britain in 1898.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_619"></a><a href="#FNanchor_619"><span class=
+"label">[619]</span></a>Memo. by Holstein, April 3, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 297 ff., No. 6597.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_620"></a><a href="#FNanchor_620"><span class=
+"label">[620]</span></a>The suggestion of a conference was first
+made by Kühlmann in a dispatch of March 2 (<em>ibid.</em>, p. 293
+n.). On March 27 Bülow still thought it possible of execution only
+in case Great Britain accepted it (Bülow to Kühlmann, March 27,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 293 f., No. 6591). After the Emperor’s visit,
+however, he accepted the proposal. In Feb., 1904, Lascelles had
+reported a conversation with Bülow in which the latter had opposed
+calling a conference on the Macedonian question, arguing as
+follows: “A Congress was excellent at the end of a war when both
+belligerents were more or less exhausted and desired peace, but it
+was a most dangerous thing at any other time, and would only
+accentuate more strongly any difference of opinion which might
+exist and thus cause greater complications, unless indeed the Great
+Powers should have decided beforehand exactly what was to be done,
+and should have appealed to the Congress, to give the sanction of
+Europe to the decisions they had already taken” (Lascelles to
+Lansdowne, Feb. 26, 1904, <em>B.D.</em>, V, 72). A year later Bülow
+had apparently forgotten this very accurate judgment. Or possibly
+he saw no other way out, and faced the facts with his usual
+optimism.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_621"></a><a href="#FNanchor_621"><span class=
+"label">[621]</span></a>In a memorandum by Hammann on April 7, this
+statement appeared: “Naturally the result would be greater if there
+followed from a conference a breach in the Anglo-French accord over
+Morocco.” Bülow’s minute to that assertion was: “We do not desire
+that at all, or at least we should in no instance show such an aim.
+We only wish to preserve our rights in Morocco” (<em>ibid.</em>,
+XX, 312 f., No. 6609; cf. Chirol, <em>Fifty Years in a Changing
+World</em>, p. 300).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_622"></a><a href="#FNanchor_622"><span class=
+"label">[622]</span></a>When the <em>Nowoje Wremja</em> denounced
+the German action Bülow, on March 27, protested strongly to
+Lamsdorff against this anti-German attitude. Russia was expected to
+remain neutral in this affair, he declared (Bülow to Alvensleben,
+March 27, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 277 f., No. 6577).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_623"></a><a href="#FNanchor_623"><span class=
+"label">[623]</span></a>Those three had criticized the Anglo-French
+accord.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_624"></a><a href="#FNanchor_624"><span class=
+"label">[624]</span></a>The signatory Powers were those which had
+participated in the conference of Madrid in 1880 over Moroccan
+affairs.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_625"></a><a href="#FNanchor_625"><span class=
+"label">[625]</span></a>Quoted from a dispatch from Bülow to
+William II, April 4, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 303, No. 6599; and from
+a memo. by Holstein, April 4, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 304 f., No.
+6601.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_626"></a><a href="#FNanchor_626"><span class=
+"label">[626]</span></a>Memo. by Hammann, April 3, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 300 f., No. 6598.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_627"></a><a href="#FNanchor_627"><span class=
+"label">[627]</span></a>Memo. by Hammann, April 7, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 311 f., No. 6609.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_628"></a><a href="#FNanchor_628"><span class=
+"label">[628]</span></a>On April 8 Bülow sent Hammann the following
+instructions for directing the press: “All criticism and attacks
+should, under the greatest possible consideration for the French
+national feeling, be directed against the systematically
+anti-German, insolent, and inept policy of Delcassé” (minute by
+Bülow to a memo. by Hammann, April 7, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 313,
+No. 6609). On April 4 he had issued instructions to restrain the
+German press from war with the British press (Mühlberg to
+Metternich, April 4, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 603 and note, No.
+6839).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_629"></a><a href="#FNanchor_629"><span class=
+"label">[629]</span></a>That Holstein wished to turn loose a
+<em>Kriegsfanfare</em>, as Hammann later asserted, seems unlikely,
+for German policy at that time was not bellicose. But Holstein did
+propose to exert great pressure by vigorous words and threats, and
+his program might very likely have had the result which Hammann
+foresaw. On this controversy between the two men see Hammann,
+<em>Bilder aus der letzten Kaiserzeit</em>, pp. 35 f.; Otto
+Hammann, <em>Der neue Kurs. Erinnerungen</em> (Berlin, 1918), pp.
+104 ff.; Hammann, <em>Zur Vorgeschichte des Weltkrieges</em>, pp.
+210 f.; memo. by Holstein, April 3, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 297
+ff., No. 6597; memo. by Hammann, April 3, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 300
+f., No. 6598; memo. by Holstein, April 7, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 308
+f., No. 6606; memo. by Hammann, April 7, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 309
+f., No. 6607.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_630"></a><a href="#FNanchor_630"><span class=
+"label">[630]</span></a>Durand to Lansdowne, March, 1905, quoted in
+Brigadier General Sir Percy Sykes, <em>The Right Honourable Sir
+Mortimer Durand: A Biography</em> (London, 1926), p. 280; Spring
+Rice to Roosevelt, undated though written in the first half of
+Jan., 1905, quoted in Dennett, pp. 152 f.; Sternburg to Bülow, Feb.
+10, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 573 ff., No. 6288; Sternburg to F.
+O., March 7, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 580 f., No. 6293; Bülow to
+Sternburg, Feb. 21, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 576 ff., No. 6290; and
+others in <em>ibid.</em>, chap. cxxxix; Dennett, pp. 45, 73 ff.;
+Dennis, <em>Adventures in American Diplomacy</em>, p. 393; Joseph
+B. Bishop, <em>Theodore Roosevelt and His Times</em> (New York,
+1920), I, 378 f., 468 f., 473; Gwynn, <em>The Letters and
+Friendships of Sir Cecil Spring Rice</em>, I, 406 ff., and chap.
+xiii.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_631"></a><a href="#FNanchor_631"><span class=
+"label">[631]</span></a>Sternburg to Bülow, Feb. 10, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 573 f., No. 6288; Sternburg to F. O., March 7,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 580 f., No. 6293.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_632"></a><a href="#FNanchor_632"><span class=
+"label">[632]</span></a>So Roosevelt asserted to Sternburg. See
+Sternburg to F. O., April 1, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 590, No. 6300;
+Sykes, p. 280; Dennis, pp. 397 f.; Gwynn, Vol. I, chap. xiii;
+Newton, <em>Lord Lansdowne</em>, p. 322.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_633"></a><a href="#FNanchor_633"><span class=
+"label">[633]</span></a>On March 21 Roosevelt declared to
+Sternburg: “My earnest wish is that we use as much as possible the
+four years which stand before me in office to improve the relations
+between our countries. I believe in the German people” (Sternburg
+to F. O., March 21, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 583, No. 6295).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_634"></a><a href="#FNanchor_634"><span class=
+"label">[634]</span></a>Bülow to Sternburg, April 3, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 592 ff., No. 6302; Bishop, I, 468 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_635"></a><a href="#FNanchor_635"><span class=
+"label">[635]</span></a>Bishop, I, 469.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_636"></a><a href="#FNanchor_636"><span class=
+"label">[636]</span></a>See below.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_637"></a><a href="#FNanchor_637"><span class=
+"label">[637]</span></a>In the absence of a regular minister at
+Tangier, Tattenbach had remained there after the Emperor’s visit.
+See Tattenbach to F. O., April 7, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 313 f.,
+No. 6610; Bülow to Tattenbach, April 9, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 315
+f., No. 6611. O’Conor, British ambassador at Constantinople,
+reported to Lansdowne, May 1, 1905, that Germany was trying to
+induce the Sultan to send a mission to Morocco with a view to
+establishing closer relations. The Sultan eventually refused. On
+Feb. 12, 1906, O’Conor was able to state why. The Sultan had sent
+secret emissaries to Morocco, but the Sultan of Morocco became
+suspicious and refused either to send a formal mission to
+Constantinople or to receive one thence. O’Conor also heard that
+the Sultan had written to Abd-el-Aziz recommending the German
+Emperor as the friend and protector of Islam whose advice was well
+worth following. See O’Conor to Grey, Feb. 12, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>,
+III, 248, No. 277. Tardieu states that the Sultan’s letters to his
+Moorish colleague were written in Feb.-March, 1906 (<em>La Conf.
+d’Algés</em>, p. 259 n.). Nothing further is known of this
+affair.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_638"></a><a href="#FNanchor_638"><span class=
+"label">[638]</span></a>No. 6612; Bülow to Alvensleben, March 27,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 277 f., No. 6577.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_639"></a><a href="#FNanchor_639"><span class=
+"label">[639]</span></a>Radowitz to F. O., April 12, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 326 f. and note, No. 6619; Mousset, <em>La politica
+exterior de España, 1873-1918</em>, p. 165.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_640"></a><a href="#FNanchor_640"><span class=
+"label">[640]</span></a>Bülow to Monts, April 3, 11, 12, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 295 f., No. 6594; 318 ff., No. 6613; 322 f., No.
+6616; Monts to F. O., April 12, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 324 ff. and
+notes, Nos. 6617 f. Tittoni, the Italian foreign minister, had to
+feel his way carefully. On April 14 he sounded the Spanish
+government on its attitude, and was informed that Spain would
+remain loyal to her agreement with France and would accept the
+conference only if France and Great Britain did (Nicolson to
+Lansdowne, April 14, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 66, No. 79).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_641"></a><a href="#FNanchor_641"><span class=
+"label">[641]</span></a>Bülow to Metternich, April 11, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 605 ff., No. 6843; Metternich to F. O., April
+19, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 608 f., No. 6845. On April 10, however,
+Radolin reported a statement by Eckardstein, which he himself
+seemed to think correct, to the effect that “in case of a serious
+Franco-German conflict England would undoubtedly stand actively on
+the French side and would even advance with enthusiasm against
+Germany” (<em>ibid.</em>, 607 f., No. 6844).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_642"></a><a href="#FNanchor_642"><span class=
+"label">[642]</span></a>By that answer Bülow aimed to show the
+French government that “we do not consider separate Franco-German
+negotiations as adequate to the situation.” See Radolin to F. O.,
+April 14, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 328 ff., No. 6621; memo. by
+Mühlberg, April 19, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 332 f., No. 6623; Bülow
+to Tattenbach, April 18, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 333 f. and note, No.
+6624.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_643"></a><a href="#FNanchor_643"><span class=
+"label">[643]</span></a>Bülow to Tattenbach, April 18, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 333 f., No. 6624; Tattenbach to F. O., April 21,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 335, No. 6625; Bülow to Tattenbach, April 22,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 336 f., No. 6626; Tattenbach to F. O., April
+23, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 337 f., No. 6627; Bülow to Tattenbach,
+April 24, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 338, No. 6628.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_644"></a><a href="#FNanchor_644"><span class=
+"label">[644]</span></a>On April 3 Balfour repeated his denial in
+the House of Commons of the likelihood of a German attack.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_645"></a><a href="#FNanchor_645"><span class=
+"label">[645]</span></a>Lee, II, 340.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_646"></a><a href="#FNanchor_646"><span class=
+"label">[646]</span></a>Newton, p. 334.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_647"></a><a href="#FNanchor_647"><span class=
+"label">[647]</span></a>Radolin to F. O., April 6, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 311, No. 6608.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_648"></a><a href="#FNanchor_648"><span class=
+"label">[648]</span></a>Mühlberg to Metternich, April 4, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 604, No. 6840; Metternich to Bülow, April 6, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 604, No. 6841; memo. by Hammann, April 7, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 311, No. 6608.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_649"></a><a href="#FNanchor_649"><span class=
+"label">[649]</span></a>Metternich to Bülow, March 28, April 6,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 601 ff., Nos. 6837, 6841.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_650"></a><a href="#FNanchor_650"><span class=
+"label">[650]</span></a>Metternich to Bülow, March 28, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 602, No. 6837; Kühlmann to Bülow, March 19, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 261 f., No. 6562; Lascelles to Lansdowne, March 23,
+1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 61, No. 69.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_651"></a><a href="#FNanchor_651"><span class=
+"label">[651]</span></a>April 9, 1904 (Newton, p. 334).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_652"></a><a href="#FNanchor_652"><span class=
+"label">[652]</span></a>Viscount Grey of Falloden, <em>Twenty-five
+Years, 1892-1916</em> (New York, 1925), I, 115.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_653"></a><a href="#FNanchor_653"><span class=
+"label">[653]</span></a>Lee, II, 342.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_654"></a><a href="#FNanchor_654"><span class=
+"label">[654]</span></a>Lansdowne to Lascelles, April 23, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 67, No. 80; Lansdowne to Bertie, April 24,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, p. 73.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_655"></a><a href="#FNanchor_655"><span class=
+"label">[655]</span></a>Tattenbach to F. O., April 27, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 348, No. 6639.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_656"></a><a href="#FNanchor_656"><span class=
+"label">[656]</span></a>Lansdowne to Bertie, April 22, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 72 f., No. 90; and following documents;
+Spender, <em>Life of Campbell-Bannerman</em>, II, 248; Grey, I, 106
+f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_657"></a><a href="#FNanchor_657"><span class=
+"label">[657]</span></a>Bertie to Lansdowne, April 25, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 74 f., Nos. 92 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_658"></a><a href="#FNanchor_658"><span class=
+"label">[658]</span></a>The offer was so stated by Monts (Monts to
+F. O., May 2, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 362, No. 6648).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_659"></a><a href="#FNanchor_659"><span class=
+"label">[659]</span></a>Saint-René Taillandier to Delcassé, April
+26, 1905, <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 215, No. 248; Delcassé to
+Saint-René Taillandier, May 3, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 217, No. 251;
+Bourgeois et Pagès, <em>Les origines et les responsabilités de la
+grande guerre</em>, p. 309. Ben Sliman was Moroccan minister of
+foreign affairs.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_660"></a><a href="#FNanchor_660"><span class=
+"label">[660]</span></a>On Rouvier see Mévil, pp. 253 ff.; Victor
+Bérard, <em>La France et Guillaume II</em> (Paris, 1907), p. 296;
+Radolin to F. O., April 27, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 345, No. 6635;
+Radolin to Bülow, May 8, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 373 f., No. 6657.
+Rouvier’s policy was certainly more in keeping with French
+opinion.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_661"></a><a href="#FNanchor_661"><span class=
+"label">[661]</span></a>Radolin to F. O., April 27, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 344 f., No. 6635. To Rouvier’s assertion that
+“France would do everything necessary to live on the best terms
+with Germany” Bülow commented as follows: “Then the French
+Government should cease its efforts to isolate us, to break up the
+Triple Alliance, to incite England against us” (Bülow’s minute to
+the foregoing dispatch).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_662"></a><a href="#FNanchor_662"><span class=
+"label">[662]</span></a>Radolin to F. O., April 27 and 28, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 346, No. 6636; 348 f., No. 6640.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_663"></a><a href="#FNanchor_663"><span class=
+"label">[663]</span></a>Radolin to Bülow, April 25, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 615, No. 6847.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_664"></a><a href="#FNanchor_664"><span class=
+"label">[664]</span></a>Tattenbach to F. O., April 23, 24, 25,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 337 f., No. 6627; 339, No. 6629; 341, No.
+6632; Vassel to Tattenbach, April 21, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 339
+ff., No. 6631.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_665"></a><a href="#FNanchor_665"><span class=
+"label">[665]</span></a>Bishop, I, 469 ff.; Sternburg to F. O.,
+April 25, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 342, No. 6633.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_666"></a><a href="#FNanchor_666"><span class=
+"label">[666]</span></a>Bülow to Sternburg, April 27, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 342, No. 6634.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_667"></a><a href="#FNanchor_667"><span class=
+"label">[667]</span></a>Bülow to Radolin, April 28, 29, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 346 f., No. 6637; 349 f., No. 6641.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_668"></a><a href="#FNanchor_668"><span class=
+"label">[668]</span></a>Holstein to Mühlberg, April 24, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 339, No. 6630; Bülow to Sternburg, April 27, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 342 ff., No. 6634.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_669"></a><a href="#FNanchor_669"><span class=
+"label">[669]</span></a>Radolin to Bülow, April 14, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 330 ff., No. 6622. Monts also regarded Delcassé’s
+offer through Luzzati as signifying victory for Germany in her
+Moroccan campaign and as giving the opportunity “for a definitive
+friendly agreement with France” (Monts to F. O., May 2, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 362, No. 6648).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_670"></a><a href="#FNanchor_670"><span class=
+"label">[670]</span></a>Tattenbach had on the previous day talked
+to Lowther, British minister at Tangier, and had found him strongly
+opposed to a conference and in favor of a direct Franco-German
+settlement (Tattenbach to F. O., April 29, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>,
+251 f., No. 6642).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_671"></a><a href="#FNanchor_671"><span class=
+"label">[671]</span></a>Bülow to Tattenbach, April 30, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 352, No. 6643.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_672"></a><a href="#FNanchor_672"><span class=
+"label">[672]</span></a>The article was by Professor Schiemann, who
+was known to be in close touch with the German government
+(reprinted in Schiemann, <em>Deutschland und die grosse Politik
+1905</em>, pp. 110 f.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_673"></a><a href="#FNanchor_673"><span class=
+"label">[673]</span></a>Radolin to F. O., April 27, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 347, No. 6638; <em>Quest. dipl. et col.</em>,
+XIX, 576 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_674"></a><a href="#FNanchor_674"><span class=
+"label">[674]</span></a>Bihourd to Delcassé, April 28, 1905,
+<em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 215, No. 249.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_675"></a><a href="#FNanchor_675"><span class=
+"label">[675]</span></a>Rouvier also assured Radolin that “he
+disapproved of much that had happened” and that he himself had
+taken over the general control of foreign affairs. It had cost him
+some effort to save Delcassé in the Chamber, he said, but he had
+thought it wiser to do so (Radolin to Bülow, April 30, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 360 ff., No. 6647).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_676"></a><a href="#FNanchor_676"><span class=
+"label">[676]</span></a>Radolin to Bülow, May 1, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 355 ff., No. 6645; Bülow to Radolin, May 1, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 353 f., No. 6644.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_677"></a><a href="#FNanchor_677"><span class=
+"label">[677]</span></a>Eckardstein was informed to this effect on
+May 4, 1905, by Rouvier’s intimate friend, Armand Levy, a Parisian
+financier (Eckardstein, <em>Lebenserinnerungen und politische
+Denkwürdigkeiten</em>, III, 106; Lee, II, 342).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_678"></a><a href="#FNanchor_678"><span class=
+"label">[678]</span></a>Radolin to Bülow, May 1, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 616 f., No. 6848. The King may have put this
+question to Radolin at the desire of Delcassé, who was complaining
+of Germany’s lack of response (Bertie to Lansdowne, April 27, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 68, No. 84). On May 11, 1905, Lansdowne wrote
+to Knollys, King Edward’s private secretary, as follows: “The
+King’s Mediterranean tour left matters in excellent shape so far as
+we are concerned” (Lee, II, 342).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_679"></a><a href="#FNanchor_679"><span class=
+"label">[679]</span></a><em>Belg. Docs., 1905-14</em>, No. 4.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_680"></a><a href="#FNanchor_680"><span class=
+"label">[680]</span></a>Wilhelm Betzold was an international
+financier with wide political connections (Eckardstein, I, 243
+ff.). The instructions were given to Eckardstein, May 4, by Armand
+Levy, like Betzold, an intimate friend of Rouvier, just after an
+interview between the two and the Premier, Levy had made a note of
+the various points which he now laid before Eckardstein, explaining
+that naturally Rouvier could not speak directly to him of these
+delicate affairs but adding that his statements were “rigorously
+exact” (Eckardstein, III, 100 ff.). Only Eckardstein’s account of
+the interview with Bülow contains anything about the Moroccan
+proposal, but there is no reason to doubt the accuracy of his
+statement (see also Prince Lichnowsky, <em>My Mission to London,
+1912-1914</em> [London, 1918], p. 3).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_681"></a><a href="#FNanchor_681"><span class=
+"label">[681]</span></a>Memo. by Holstein, May 2, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 357 ff., No. 6646. Paul von Schwabach’s account
+of arranging the interview for Betzold is given in <em>Berliner
+Tageblatt</em>, March 21, 1922. See also Bülow to F. O., May 5 and
+6, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 368 ff., Nos. 6652 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_682"></a><a href="#FNanchor_682"><span class=
+"label">[682]</span></a>On May 2 the Chancellor also refused to
+consider Delcassé’s offer through Luzzati; and when a few days
+later he heard that Barrère wished to be sent to Berlin to arrange
+affairs, he immediately advised Rouvier that he would not be
+received. See Bülow to Monts, May 3, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 363
+f., No. 6649; Radolin to Holstein, May 8, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, p.
+372 n.; Bülow to Radolin, May 9, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 372, No.
+6656.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_683"></a><a href="#FNanchor_683"><span class=
+"label">[683]</span></a>Bülow to Radolin, May 4, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 366 f., No. 6650; Radolin to F. O., May 8, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 371 f., No. 6655.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_684"></a><a href="#FNanchor_684"><span class=
+"label">[684]</span></a>The British and the Russian governments
+were also supporting Delcassé. See Radolin to Bülow, May 8, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 373 ff., No. 6657 f.; Betzold to Eckardstein, May
+9, 1905, quoted in Eckardstein, III, 204.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_685"></a><a href="#FNanchor_685"><span class=
+"label">[685]</span></a>Sternburg to F. O., June 2, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 607, No. 6311, Bülow’s minute.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_686"></a><a href="#FNanchor_686"><span class=
+"label">[686]</span></a>Radolin to Bülow, May 13 and 16, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 376 f., No. 6659; 378 f., No. 6661.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_687"></a><a href="#FNanchor_687"><span class=
+"label">[687]</span></a>So related by the Spanish Foreign Minister
+to Nicolson (Nicolson to Lansdowne, May 5, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>,
+III, 70 f., No. 87). Although there is no account of the
+conversation in <em>G.P.</em>, the language is entirely in keeping
+with German policy. The episode referred to the possible departure
+of Spain’s new minister in Morocco to Fez.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_688"></a><a href="#FNanchor_688"><span class=
+"label">[688]</span></a>So reported by Egerton to Lansdowne, May 5,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 71, No. 88. Cf. Bülow to Monts, May 3, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 363 f., No. 6649; Bülow to F. O., May 6, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 368, No. 6651.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_689"></a><a href="#FNanchor_689"><span class=
+"label">[689]</span></a>Bülow to Sternburg, April 27, May 10 and
+16, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 342 ff., No. 6634; 620 ff., No. 6851;
+XIX, 600 ff., No. 6306; Bishop, I, 469 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_690"></a><a href="#FNanchor_690"><span class=
+"label">[690]</span></a><em>Selections from the Correspondence of
+Theodore Roosevelt and Henry Cabot Lodge, 1884-1918</em> (New York,
+1925), II, 123. See also Dennett, pp. 88 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_691"></a><a href="#FNanchor_691"><span class=
+"label">[691]</span></a>The President’s statements were so
+formulated by Sternburg. See Sternburg to F. O., May 13 and 19,
+1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 622 f., No. 6852; <em>ibid.</em>, XIX, 603
+f., No. 6308; Dennett, pp. 184 f., 88 ff., 75 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_692"></a><a href="#FNanchor_692"><span class=
+"label">[692]</span></a>Tattenbach to F. O., May 15, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 379 f., No. 6662.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_693"></a><a href="#FNanchor_693"><span class=
+"label">[693]</span></a>Tattenbach’s version of the threat was as
+follows: “The French Government would consider it an injury to
+France’s interests if the French proposals for reform were
+submitted for consideration to the signatory Powers. No Power
+possessed the right to intervene in the Moroccan affair, especially
+in the frontier question. . . . . The French Government would
+continue to watch sharply the affairs in Morocco, and reserved the
+right to act according to circumstances.” See Tattenbach to F. O.,
+May 17, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 380, No. 6663. Cf. with the original
+threat quoted above. See also Tattenbach to F. O., May 31, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 399 f., No. 6676.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_694"></a><a href="#FNanchor_694"><span class=
+"label">[694]</span></a>Bülow to Radolin, May 22, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 382 f., No. 6665.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_695"></a><a href="#FNanchor_695"><span class=
+"label">[695]</span></a>Miquel was chosen for this work because he
+was just being transferred to St. Petersburg. See Bülow to Radolin,
+May 30, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 388 ff., No. 6669; memo. by Miquel,
+May 30 and 31, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 393 ff., Nos. 6674 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_696"></a><a href="#FNanchor_696"><span class=
+"label">[696]</span></a>Bülow to Monts, May 31, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 390 f., No. 6670, and note citing a dispatch from
+Monts of June 2, 1905; Mévil, p. 272. Egerton was informed by
+Barrère that Monts had said to Tittoni that “if the French Minister
+maintained his threat of military measures against the Sultan of
+Morocco, a German army would cross the French frontier” (Egerton to
+Lansdowne, June 13, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 95, No. 122).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_697"></a><a href="#FNanchor_697"><span class=
+"label">[697]</span></a>Tattenbach to F. O., May 28, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 392, No. 6672.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_698"></a><a href="#FNanchor_698"><span class=
+"label">[698]</span></a>Bülow to Radolin, June 1, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 392 f., No. 6673; Radolin to Bülow, June 11, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 407, No. 6685.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_699"></a><a href="#FNanchor_699"><span class=
+"label">[699]</span></a>Radolin to F. O., June 3, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 401, No. 6678.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_700"></a><a href="#FNanchor_700"><span class=
+"label">[700]</span></a>The <em>Gaulois</em> published articles on
+June 9 and 17, 1905, asserting that Prince Henckel von Donnersmarck
+had also been sent by the German government to Paris about June 1
+to warn Rouvier that Delcassé must be dismissed (Mévil, pp. 273
+ff.; Bourgeois et Pagès, p. 310). The editors of <em>G.P.</em>
+state that this story is “exaggerated”; Donnersmarck was mentioned
+only once in the documents, they assert—in a dispatch from Radolin
+on June 17, 1905, describing the assertions of Donnersmarck given
+in <em>Gaulois</em> as apocryphal (<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 390 n.).
+According to Eckardstein, Rouvier declared to him on May 4 that
+some time previously Donnersmarck had asserted to him, apparently
+at Bülow’s request, that there were only two possibilities, a
+Franco-German alliance or war. On the other hand, Eckardstein saw
+Donnersmarck in Berlin on June 6 and found him eager for news from
+London and Paris (Eckardstein, III, 103 f., 127 f.). It seems clear
+that Donnersmarck’s assertions, whatever they were, were made on
+his own responsibility; that, as the editors of <em>G.P.</em>
+state, Bülow issued his warnings directly to Rouvier
+(<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 390 n.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_701"></a><a href="#FNanchor_701"><span class=
+"label">[701]</span></a>Nicolson to Lansdowne, May 5, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 70 f., No. 87; Egerton to Lansdowne, May 5,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 71, No. 88; Lansdowne to Bertie, May 3, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 69 f., No. 86.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_702"></a><a href="#FNanchor_702"><span class=
+"label">[702]</span></a>Durand to Lansdowne, April 26, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 67 f., No. 82; Lansdowne to Durand, April 27, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 68, No. 83. Durand did not follow that line
+exactly. He left the impression with Roosevelt that the
+Anglo-German opposition was bitter, but that nevertheless Great
+Britain did not want Roosevelt interfering—thus letting the latter
+think that Great Britain was more bellicose than she was (see
+above). One reason for the British government’s slowness about
+helping Roosevelt mediate between Russia and Japan was, no doubt,
+that it wished to exclude all opportunity for the President to
+mediate between Great Britain and Germany. On April 26 Spring Rice
+asked Roosevelt not to support the idea of a conference (Gwynn, I,
+469).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_703"></a><a href="#FNanchor_703"><span class=
+"label">[703]</span></a>Lansdowne added: “I had heard fears
+expressed that, in order to put an end to a state of things which
+could not fail to be highly inconvenient to them, the French
+Government might be induced to purchase the acquiescence of Germany
+by concessions of a kind which we were not likely to regard with
+favour, in other parts of the world. I had myself no such
+misgivings, and felt convinced that each side might continue to
+rely upon being treated with absolute frankness by the other. His
+Excellency [M. Cambon] expressed his entire concurrence in what I
+had said.” See Lansdowne to Bertie, May 17, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>,
+III, 76, No. 94; Spender, II, 248; <em>Cambridge History of British
+Foreign Policy</em>, III, 342 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_704"></a><a href="#FNanchor_704"><span class=
+"label">[704]</span></a>“During our last conversation about Morocco
+you . . . . added that . . . . if circumstances demanded it, if for
+example we had serious reasons to believe in an unjustified
+aggression on the part of a certain Power, the British Government
+would be entirely ready to concert with the French Government on
+the measures to take” (Cambon to Lansdowne, May 24, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 77, No. 95, inclosure).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_705"></a><a href="#FNanchor_705"><span class=
+"label">[705]</span></a>Lansdowne to Cambon, May 25, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 77 f., No. 95, and inclosure.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_706"></a><a href="#FNanchor_706"><span class=
+"label">[706]</span></a>Bradford, <em>Life of Wilson</em>, p. 199.
+Nothing more was heard of this order, which probably came from Sir
+John Fisher. Fisher was in favor of “Copenhagening” the German
+fleet and also of landing soldiers in North Germany in case of a
+war (<em>Memories</em>; Newton, pp. 334 f.). In 1922, Lord
+Sanderson wrote as follows concerning the events of this time:
+“There were no doubt preparations by our military authorities for
+defending Belgium in case of an attack by Germany on France through
+Belgian territory, and these preparations must have been known to
+the French military attaché in London. There was also a good deal
+of loose talk in naval circles and some high quarters of a possible
+expedition to Schleswig in the possible event of war. I do not
+believe such a measure was ever seriously entertained, and I looked
+upon the report as put about for the purpose of a warning”
+(Sanderson to Temperley, Aug. 17, 1922, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 87, No.
+105).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_707"></a><a href="#FNanchor_707"><span class=
+"label">[707]</span></a>Grey, I, 74. The British press supported
+the French loyally for the sake of maintaining the balance of
+power. See O. Eltzbacher, “The Balance of Power in Europe,”
+<em>Nineteenth Century and After</em> (May, 1905); Steed, I, 230
+ff. It is difficult to state exactly what were the British motives
+for supporting France so whole-heartedly in this crisis. One has to
+deduce them from acts, for, unlike the Germans, the directors of
+the British policy did not write down their reasons. As to King
+Edward’s view of the international situation, especially of the
+German danger, see Spring Rice to Lansdowne, D. May 7, 1905, R. May
+13, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, IV, 77 f., No. 69, and King Edward’s
+minute thereto. On July 10 Spring Rice, in a memo. written after
+talking with Lansdowne, stated that British policy aimed at
+maintaining the balance of power (Gwynn, I, 476).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_708"></a><a href="#FNanchor_708"><span class=
+"label">[708]</span></a>Tattenbach to F. O., May 31, June 3, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 399, No. 6676; 400, No. 6677; Metternich to F.
+O., June 8, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 422, No. 6697; Lowther to
+Lansdowne, D. May 31, 1905, R. June 3, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III,
+88, No. 106; Lansdowne to Bertie, June 1 and 5, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 88, No. 107; 89, No. 109; Lansdowne to Lowther,
+June 5, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 89, No. 108.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_709"></a><a href="#FNanchor_709"><span class=
+"label">[709]</span></a>Lansdowne to Bertie, June 5, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 89, No. 109; Lansdowne to Durand, June 5, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 90, No. 110.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_710"></a><a href="#FNanchor_710"><span class=
+"label">[710]</span></a>Nicolson to Lansdowne, June 29, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 109, No. 136. The editors of <em>B.D.</em> promise
+to publish more information about this offer in a later volume.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_711"></a><a href="#FNanchor_711"><span class=
+"label">[711]</span></a>That treaty read in part as follows: “The
+two Governments declare that they will take counsel together upon
+every question of a nature to jeopardize the general peace; in case
+that peace should be threatened with an aggression, the two parties
+undertake to reach an understanding on the measures whose immediate
+and simultaneous adoption would be imposed upon the two Governments
+by the realization of this eventuality.” See <em>Livre jaune:
+L’alliance franco-russe</em>, p. 16, No. 17, annexe; Pribram,
+<em>The Secret Treaties of Austria-Hungary</em>, II, 213;
+Bernadotte E. Schmitt, “Triple Alliance and Triple Entente,
+1902-1914,” <em>American Historical Review</em>, XXIX, 459 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_712"></a><a href="#FNanchor_712"><span class=
+"label">[712]</span></a>Thayer, <em>The Life and Letters of John
+Hay</em>, II, 404 f.; Eckardstein, III, 115 ff.; Radolin to Bülow,
+June 11, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 497 ff., No. 6685; Bertie to
+Lansdowne, June 10, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 78, No. 96,
+recounting a conversation with Delcassé on that date.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_713"></a><a href="#FNanchor_713"><span class=
+"label">[713]</span></a>Radolin to F. O., June 3, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 400 f., No. 6678.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_714"></a><a href="#FNanchor_714"><span class=
+"label">[714]</span></a>Delcassé’s formal denial of the rumor had
+no effect. See Mévil, pp. 284 f.; Flotow to Bülow, June 7, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 406, No. 6684.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_715"></a><a href="#FNanchor_715"><span class=
+"label">[715]</span></a>Radolin to Bülow, June 11, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 407 ff., No. 6685; <em>Quest. dipl. et col.</em>,
+XIX, 770.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_716"></a><a href="#FNanchor_716"><span class=
+"label">[716]</span></a>Delcassé informed Bertie, June 10, that the
+Spanish Foreign Minister “had told him that he thought that Spain,
+France and England, should reply to the Government of Morocco in
+identic terms declining the proposal” (Bertie to Lansdowne, June
+10, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 78, No. 96).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_717"></a><a href="#FNanchor_717"><span class=
+"label">[717]</span></a>The report spread in 1905 that at the
+French cabinet meeting on June 6 Delcassé had stated that the
+British government had offered an alliance to France. Lansdowne and
+Sanderson denied to the German government that Great Britain had
+ever done so. See Metternich to F. O., June 16, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 630 ff., No. 6858; Metternich to F. O., June 28,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 635 ff., No. 6860; see also <em>B.D.</em>,
+III, 87, No. 105; Metternich to F. O., Oct. 9, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>,
+XX, 663 f., No. 6873. According to Mévil, the official apologist
+for Delcassé, just before the arrival of the King of Spain in Paris
+on May 30, the British government assured Delcassé that “the
+British military forces were ready to march with us [France]
+against Germany if that Power attacked us. Moreover, the principle
+of defensive co-operation once admitted, the English Government
+declared itself ready to sign in the shortest time an accord which
+would definitely fix that co-operation” (Mévil, p. 268). In a
+letter of March 20, 1922, Delcassé wrote as follows: “From the
+Entente it was possible for us in 1905 to proceed to a formal
+alliance with England. . . . . On June 6th the British offer of
+assistance had been only forty-eight hours in my possession”
+(quoted in the <em>London Times</em>, March 27, 1922). In
+connection with the Grey-Cambon correspondence of 1912, Poincaré
+has written: “Thus to make a joint study of the situation was the
+sole engagement which was made [in that correspondence]. In
+communicating to me the result obtained, M. Paul Cambon wrote me
+that at the time of Lord Lansdowne an entente of that kind would
+have been only a beginning. Now, however, it was the last word for
+the Liberal cabinet. The forced resignation of M. Delcassé had
+perhaps made us lose in 1905, stated M. Cambon, the opportunity for
+a real alliance with England. All that we were able to obtain today
+was this engagement to confer in the presence of danger and this
+hypothetical approval of the programs drawn up by the general
+staff.” See also J. A. Farrer, <em>England under Edward VII</em>
+(London, 1922), pp. 127 f.; Mévil, pp. 269 f.; <em>G.P.</em>, XX,
+632 n., 664 n.; Raymond Poincaré, <em>Au service de la France. Neuf
+années de souvenirs: I. Le lendemain d’Agadir, 1912</em> (Paris,
+1926), p. 221. Later Lansdowne wrote on his dispatch to Bertie of
+May 17, 1905, as follows: “I suppose this was the origin of the
+offensive and defensive alliance” (<em>B.D.</em>, III, 76, No. 94).
+His inference is probably correct only in part. The exchange of
+notes between Cambon and Lansdowne was sent to Bertie on May 31,
+1905, and received by him on June 3. It is not apparent whether he
+communicated that exchange to the French government, although the
+“offer of assistance” which Delcassé has written of as having
+received only forty-eight hours before the cabinet meeting on June
+6 may have been the notice of this exchange from Bertie. Word to
+Delcassé through the Governor-General of Algeria from King Edward,
+who was then cruising in the Mediterranean, urging the Foreign
+Minister not to resign also strengthened the latter’s hand. The
+King took that step on his own initiative (Newton, p. 342).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_718"></a><a href="#FNanchor_718"><span class=
+"label">[718]</span></a>On that cabinet meeting see the following:
+Mévil, pp. 293 ff.; Pinon, <em>France et Allemagne</em>, pp. 164
+f.; Radolin to Bülow, June 11, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 407 ff.,
+No. 6685; Bertie to Lansdowne, June 8, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III,
+91, No. 114; Bertie to Lansdowne, June 10, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>,
+78, No. 96, recounting a conversation with Delcassé on that date;
+Wolff, <em>Das Vorspiel</em>, pp. 167 ff. Cf. Bertie’s explanation
+of Delcassé’s fall (Bertie to Lansdowne, June 15, 1905, Newton, pp.
+341 f.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_719"></a><a href="#FNanchor_719"><span class=
+"label">[719]</span></a>Flotow to Bülow, June 7, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 406, No. 6684; 625, No. 6854. Cf. the report
+from the Belgian Minister at Paris to his government, June 8, 1905,
+<em>Zur europ. Politik</em>, II, 62 f. See also <em>Quest. dipl. et
+col.</em>, XIX, 770 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_720"></a><a href="#FNanchor_720"><span class=
+"label">[720]</span></a>Cf. <em>Cambridge History of British
+Foreign Policy</em>, III, 341.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_721"></a><a href="#FNanchor_721"><span class=
+"label">[721]</span></a>Quoted in Lee, II, 344. See also a letter
+from John Hay, who was then in London, to Henry Adams, June 7,
+1905, quoted in Thayer, II, 405; Bertie to Lansdowne, June 10,
+1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 78, No. 96. Lansdowne’s reaction is
+expressed in Newton, p. 341.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_722"></a><a href="#FNanchor_722"><span class=
+"label">[722]</span></a>Bertie to Lansdowne, June 6, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 90, No. 111.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_723"></a><a href="#FNanchor_723"><span class=
+"label">[723]</span></a>Bülow’s minute to a dispatch from Flotow,
+June 5, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 403, No. 6681.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap">
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[234]</span><a id=
+"c13"></a>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+
+<p class="sch1">THE MOROCCAN CRISIS, JUNE 6-JULY 8, 1905</p>
+
+<p>The downfall of M. Delcassé was merely an incident in Germany’s
+drive toward a conference. Prince Bülow, believing that the
+Minister’s resignation ended the acute phase of the crisis,<a id=
+"FNanchor_724"></a><a href="#Footnote_724" class=
+"fnanchor">[724]</a> immediately dispatched a circular note to the
+signatory Powers<a id="FNanchor_725"></a><a href="#Footnote_725"
+class="fnanchor">[725]</a> informing them of Germany’s acceptance
+of the Sultan’s invitation to a conference and asking them also to
+accept. In this note he argued as follows: Since Article XVII of
+the Convention of Madrid<a id="FNanchor_726"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_726" class="fnanchor">[726]</a> guaranteed to every
+Power the same treatment as the<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_235">[235]</span> most favored nation, the Moroccan reforms
+had to receive the approval of all the signatory Powers. If the
+proposal for a conference were refused, the legal status of Morocco
+would remain unchanged, for the opposition of one Power alone would
+suffice to block the execution of any reforms proposed. But aside
+from these legal arguments, the conference was the best means of
+introducing reforms without endangering the existing political and
+commercial interests of the signatory Powers by concession of
+special rights to individual states. Moreover, since the Convention
+of Madrid was a compact between the Powers, France would have to
+obtain their sanction for a special position in Morocco. While the
+details of the French program of Moroccan reforms were unknown, it
+was evident that France sought, in violation of Article XVII, to
+control the land as she did Tunis. Thus, to oppose the French
+action was merely to defend the existing legal status of
+Morocco.<a id="FNanchor_727"></a><a href="#Footnote_727" class=
+"fnanchor">[727]</a></p>
+
+<p>The attitude of the Powers toward this exposé was not at all
+satisfactory to the German government. The Russian, Austrian,
+Italian, Portuguese, and Danish governments evaded a reply, leaving
+the initiative to the French and the British.<a id=
+"FNanchor_728"></a><a href="#Footnote_728" class=
+"fnanchor">[728]</a> German relations<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_236">[236]</span> with Spain over the matter were complicated
+by reports that while M. Villa-Urrutia, the Spanish foreign
+minister, had been in Paris during King Alfonso’s visit, he had
+openly aligned himself with M. Delcassé’s policy. After the French
+Minister’s downfall, the German government notified the Spanish
+government on June 11 that, if M. Villa-Urrutia remained in office,
+Germany would recall her Ambassador for an indefinite leave of
+absence.<a id="FNanchor_729"></a><a href="#Footnote_729" class=
+"fnanchor">[729]</a> While waiting for the Minister to be
+overthrown, the German government did not press Spain on the
+question of the conference.</p>
+
+<p>The British attitude was even more adverse. When Count
+Metternich handed the German note to Lord Lansdowne, the latter
+interpreted it as meaning that “the Conference, if it were to meet,
+would be expected to deal not only with the introduction of
+reforms, but with the maintenance of the independence and integrity
+of Morocco, and the preservation of the open door.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_730"></a><a href="#Footnote_730" class=
+"fnanchor">[730]</a> The Ambassador’s affirmative reply enhanced
+Lord Lansdowne’s suspicion that Germany was endeavoring to break
+the Anglo-French understanding. While questioning strongly the
+propriety of a conference, the Foreign Secretary gave no definite
+answer. This note, however, and the passing of M. Delcassé caused
+the British government to recede on June 8 from its original
+refusal of the Sultan’s invitation and to postpone its decision
+until it could consult with France.<a id=
+"FNanchor_731"></a><a href="#Footnote_731" class=
+"fnanchor">[731]</a> But on June 7, Herr von Flotow reported from
+Paris a rumor that Great Britain had offered to France “an
+offensive and defensive alliance aimed at Germany”<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_237">[237]</span> which the latter was still
+considering.<a id="FNanchor_732"></a><a href="#Footnote_732" class=
+"fnanchor">[732]</a> Hence, it was manifest to the German
+government that Great Britain was in complete opposition to its
+policy.</p>
+
+<p>President Roosevelt also gave a disappointing reply. On May 25
+and 30 Prince Bülow had told the President that “the decision in
+the question of a conference depended to a great extent upon him.”
+He maintained that if the conference were refused as a result of
+Great Britain’s pressure upon France, Germany would be forced to
+choose between a war with France and perhaps Great Britain and an
+agreement with the former which would serve as a prelude to a
+strong Continental <em>bloc</em>. Declaring that he was averse to
+making the choice, the Chancellor asked Mr. Roosevelt to favor the
+conference to the signatory Powers.<a id=
+"FNanchor_733"></a><a href="#Footnote_733" class=
+"fnanchor">[733]</a> But the President replied on June 8 that he
+could hardly participate in a conference without exposing himself
+to the sharpest attacks, since American opinion was opposed to
+interfering in the Moroccan affair and inclined to approve reform
+by one Power.<a id="FNanchor_734"></a><a href="#Footnote_734"
+class="fnanchor">[734]</a></p>
+
+<p>The attitude of M. Rouvier was equally unsatisfactory to the
+German government. The Premier expressed to the German
+representative through M. Betzold the hope that the fall of M.
+Delcassé would enable the two countries to reach a direct
+understanding, and promised to show the “greatest
+conciliation”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[238]</span>
+toward Germany.<a id="FNanchor_735"></a><a href="#Footnote_735"
+class="fnanchor">[735]</a> When the German note of June 6 arrived,
+he immediately denied to the Powers the accusations made
+therein.<a id="FNanchor_736"></a><a href="#Footnote_736" class=
+"fnanchor">[736]</a> He also instructed M. Saint-René Taillandier
+to suspend action at Fez so as to avoid complications.<a id=
+"FNanchor_737"></a><a href="#Footnote_737" class=
+"fnanchor">[737]</a> He endeavored to find some way by which
+Germany could be satisfied, France’s position in Morocco be
+preserved and her agreements with the other Powers be upheld, and
+the humiliating conference be avoided. On June 7 he protested to
+Herr von Flotow that France could hardly accept the conference,
+which French public opinion rejected so completely, and remarked
+that Great Britain, Spain, and Italy would probably refuse
+it.<a id="FNanchor_738"></a><a href="#Footnote_738" class=
+"fnanchor">[738]</a> Herr von Flotow replied that Germany would not
+desert the Sultan. Two days later the Premier offered through an
+intermediary to make a general agreement with Germany not only over
+the Moroccan question but also over others, such as those of the
+Bagdad Railway and far eastern affairs.<a id=
+"FNanchor_739"></a><a href="#Footnote_739" class=
+"fnanchor">[739]</a> In a conversation with the German Ambassador
+on June 10, M. Rouvier persisted, in spite of threats, in his
+repugnance to the conference. Why go there, he asked Prince
+Radolin, if Germany refused the reforms in Morocco which France
+considered necessary? In the course of his defense of France’s
+previous Moroccan policy, he said: “If an understanding concerning
+the extension of permissible reforms could previously occur with
+Germany, participation in the conference might be possible.” He was
+so discouraged that he thought seriously of resigning, for, he
+declared to the Prince, he could not defend before the French
+Chamber the German demands as then formulated.<a id=
+"FNanchor_740"></a><a href="#Footnote_740" class=
+"fnanchor">[740]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[239]</span>At home Prince
+Bülow’s policy was encountering disapproval from the Emperor
+William II, then in a pacific mood. Toward the end of May the
+Emperor had rebuked the German Navy League for criticizing the
+naval program as inadequate.<a id="FNanchor_741"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_741" class="fnanchor">[741]</a> On June 3 he had started
+the movement which culminated in the conclusion of the
+Russo-Japanese War and was co-operating with President Roosevelt in
+that work—an act which Prince Bülow would have prevented had he
+been aware of his master’s intentions.<a id=
+"FNanchor_742"></a><a href="#Footnote_742" class=
+"fnanchor">[742]</a> Even though the Emperor knew nothing of the
+French offers,<a id="FNanchor_743"></a><a href="#Footnote_743"
+class="fnanchor">[743]</a> he was entirely willing after the fall
+of M. Delcassé to gratify M. Rouvier’s wish for an
+understanding.<a id="FNanchor_744"></a><a href="#Footnote_744"
+class="fnanchor">[744]</a> At the wedding of the German Crown
+Prince on June 6 he assured the French representative that there
+would be no war over Morocco.<a id="FNanchor_745"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_745" class="fnanchor">[745]</a></p>
+
+<p>The beginning of Russo-Japanese negotiations for peace had no
+effect upon the German policy, for Russia’s force was broken both
+by defeat and by the rapidly developing revolution.<a id=
+"FNanchor_746"></a><a href="#Footnote_746" class=
+"fnanchor">[746]</a> But<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_240">[240]</span> the attitude of France was so
+uncompromising and that of the other Powers so unfavorable that
+Prince Bülow doubted whether he would succeed in launching the
+conference.<a id="FNanchor_747"></a><a href="#Footnote_747" class=
+"fnanchor">[747]</a> He endeavored to do so by a show of boldness
+coupled with real concessions to France.</p>
+
+<p>To bring President Roosevelt back into active participation in
+the affair, Prince Bülow reported to him the rumor of the British
+offer of alliance to France and pictured the possibility of a war
+with France and Great Britain “not because we want too much but
+because we desire nothing.” The Prince added that if this war did
+occur, a new Triple Alliance between France, Great Britain, and
+Japan, with which Russia might also be associated, might be formed.
+To preclude this event he urged the President to advise the Powers
+in favor of a conference or to prevent British participation in a
+possible Franco-German war brought on by French aggression in
+Morocco. By confronting the President with the choice of facing the
+outbreak of a new war just at the moment when he was endeavoring to
+stop the Russo-Japanese conflict or of supporting the proposal for
+a conference, Prince Bülow obtained the desired result. On June 12
+Mr. Roosevelt agreed to advise the French government in favor of
+accepting the Sultan’s invitation and against concluding an
+Anglo-French alliance.<a id="FNanchor_748"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_748" class="fnanchor">[748]</a></p>
+
+<p>At the same time the German government endeavored to restrain
+Great Britain. Herr von Holstein asserted to the British Ambassador
+that “if any one had told him two years ago that a war between
+England and Germany was within the bounds of possibility he would
+have simply laughed, but now things had reached such a point that
+it could no longer be considered impossible.” Both he and the
+Chancellor cited the bitterness of the British press toward Germany
+and the reported British offer of<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_241">[241]</span> a defensive and offensive alliance to
+France as proofs. Neither of the two German officials believed that
+Great Britain would attack Germany, but they argued that the
+popular fear of such an aggression in their country was more
+plausible than that of a German invasion in Great Britain. In like
+manner Sir Frank Lascelles credited Germany with pacific
+intentions, but maintained that the British fears were more
+justified than the German. Herr von Holstein assured the Ambassador
+that “the Moroccan question would not lead to any serious
+complications,” and Lord Lansdowne denied that Great Britain wanted
+war or had offered an alliance to France. As neither side believed
+entirely the pacific asseverations of the other, the tension in
+Anglo-German relations was only slightly relaxed.<a id=
+"FNanchor_749"></a><a href="#Footnote_749" class=
+"fnanchor">[749]</a></p>
+
+<p>While making these efforts with the United States and Great
+Britain, Prince Bülow yielded before the French resistance.
+Although he explained away the Emperor’s conciliatory remarks to
+the French government with a threat and although he warned M.
+Rouvier not to assume M. Delcassé’s policy toward Morocco, he
+repeated his assurances that “the conference can have no positive
+results which would injure the French future.” It was “merely a
+question of etiquette and of delay,” he said, so that Germany could
+hold faith with the Sultan and disengage herself from the position
+into which M. Delcassé had forced her. Instead of demanding that
+all consideration of the Moroccan question be left to the
+conference, the Chancellor offered on June 12 to negotiate over the
+program for that assembly if France would first accept the Sultan’s
+invitation. In addition, he instructed Prince Radolin to state not
+officially, but as his (Radolin’s) personal view, that from the
+very nature of the affair the conference would have to adopt as
+fundamental “for the present no prejudice to the
+independence<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[242]</span> of
+Morocco . . . . and . . . . no injury to the prospects of France.”
+The Ambassador should state that the items to be considered by that
+body, as logical deductions from those two points were: police and
+military reforms, to be limited in time and international in
+character; financial reforms, likewise to be internationally
+executed; and the economic opening of the land in accordance with
+the principle of the open door. He should warn M. Rouvier against
+permitting Algerians to furnish the Moroccan pretender with
+contraband supplies; for if the Sultan should request German
+mediation in this affair, Germany would give it even at the risk of
+grave difficulties.<a id="FNanchor_750"></a><a href="#Footnote_750"
+class="fnanchor">[750]</a></p>
+
+<p>When the Ambassador carried out these instructions two days
+later, he found M. Rouvier “angry, discouraged, sick” but still
+defending France’s Moroccan policy. Nor did the Ambassador’s
+remarks change his mood.<a id="FNanchor_751"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_751" class="fnanchor">[751]</a> On June 16, in response
+to the Premier’s request for further information, the Ambassador
+explained unofficially as further logical deductions from the two
+fundamental points: first, that the military reforms should be
+internationally ordered by a division of the mandate among the
+Powers in such a way that France would receive it for the area
+along the Algerian frontier; second, that to give an international
+character to the financial reforms, a state bank should be
+organized in which the capital and management should be divided as
+equally as possible among the banks representing the various
+Powers.<a id="FNanchor_752"></a><a href="#Footnote_752" class=
+"fnanchor">[752]</a> The Premier’s apparent relief at these remarks
+encouraged<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[243]</span> the
+German government to believe that a solution was near.<a id=
+"FNanchor_753"></a><a href="#Footnote_753" class=
+"fnanchor">[753]</a></p>
+
+<p>In the meantime, in accordance with Germany’s desires, President
+Roosevelt intervened in Paris and London. Notwithstanding his
+conviction that France was in the right, he advised her to avoid a
+war and help the Emperor “save his face” by accepting the
+conference. He argued that British support in case of a conflict
+would be of little value to France, and predicted a French victory
+at the conference. He promised the French government that if the
+United States participated, he “would treat both sides with
+absolute justice, and would, if necessary, take very strong grounds
+against any attitude of Germany which seemed . . . . unjust and
+unfair.”<a id="FNanchor_754"></a><a href="#Footnote_754" class=
+"fnanchor">[754]</a></p>
+
+<p>In handling Great Britain the President took another line. He
+suspected her of wishing to make trouble. For he was receiving no
+support from her in his mediation between Russia and Japan; he knew
+that Lord Lansdowne was opposed to the conference; and, so far as
+he could tell from the British Ambassador at Washington, Great
+Britain was anxious for France to humiliate Germany by refusing the
+conference and was willing to face the possibility of war. He
+thought this sagacious on her part, but not valorous; she would be
+assured a victory on sea, while France would have to bear the brunt
+of the battle on land. So he warned Great Britain not to put
+difficulty in the way of a peaceful settlement between France and
+Germany, and otherwise ignored her.<a id=
+"FNanchor_755"></a><a href="#Footnote_755" class=
+"fnanchor">[755]</a></p>
+
+<p>Neither Prince Radolin’s conciliatory remarks nor President
+Roosevelt’s advice won the French Premier to accept the
+conference.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[244]</span> While
+deeply impressed by reports of German threats against France in
+other capitals,<a id="FNanchor_756"></a><a href="#Footnote_756"
+class="fnanchor">[756]</a> he inferred from his conversations with
+Prince Radolin and from an assertion of the German Ambassador in
+Madrid that if France agreed to the conference the German
+government would then be ready to commence discussions with a view
+to an understanding which would make the conference
+unnecessary.<a id="FNanchor_757"></a><a href="#Footnote_757" class=
+"fnanchor">[757]</a> M. Rouvier was also assured of the entire
+support of the British government. On June 16 Lord Lansdowne, in
+approving M. Paul Cambon’s returning to Paris to advise the
+inexperienced Premier,<a id="FNanchor_758"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_758" class="fnanchor">[758]</a> remarked to the
+Ambassador that he saw nothing to be gained</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">by admitting the theoretical necessity of a
+Conference, except perhaps to enable Germany, which had brought
+about M. Delcassé’s downfall, to secure a further success. Our
+attitude must of course depend upon that of the French Government,
+but if they maintained their refusal, so, most certainly, should
+we.<a id="FNanchor_759"></a><a href="#Footnote_759" class=
+"fnanchor">[759]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The French note to Germany of June 21 was therefore so composed
+by M. Paul Cambon as to accept the conference in principle while at
+the same time inviting Germany to negotiate further in order to
+obviate that assembly—the position which M. Rouvier had taken for
+two weeks. Since Prince Radolin’s explanations on June 14 and 18
+had been made in such an unofficial and confidential manner, the
+Premier did not know whether they represented the German view or
+not, and did not mention them in the note.<a id=
+"FNanchor_760"></a><a href="#Footnote_760" class=
+"fnanchor">[760]</a> Hence that document of June 21 ran as
+follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[245]</span>The Imperial
+Government will not fail to recognize the inconvenience which would
+result for it as for us from the acceptance of the Conference
+without a previous accord, an accord which would not infringe upon
+those already concluded and which would not harm in any way the
+interests of which the Imperial Government is solicitous. . . . .
+The Government of the Republic is deeply impressed by the double
+consideration that the Conference may be dangerous if it is not
+preceded by an entente, and useless if it follows one.
+[Nevertheless, the French government did not refuse the
+conference.] It desires solely to know what are, in the mind of the
+Imperial Government, the precise points which will be treated at
+the Conference and the solutions which it will offer there.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">Thus they could arrive at the entente which both
+governments wished.<a id="FNanchor_761"></a><a href="#Footnote_761"
+class="fnanchor">[761]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Premier acquainted the British and American governments with
+the contents of the note and of the German threats, and asked them
+to recommend this solution to Germany. He emphasized to Mr.
+Roosevelt especially the menace of a German attack. Declaring that
+the President could avert that danger, he urged him to exert
+influence with the Emperor in favor of peace. Mr. Roosevelt
+immediately agreed to do so in energetic terms.<a id=
+"FNanchor_762"></a><a href="#Footnote_762" class=
+"fnanchor">[762]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[246]</span>The German
+reaction was hostile. As the Chancellor realized that the crisis
+had arisen in Franco-German relations, he endeavored by a mixture
+of enticements and threats to bring the impressionable and pacific
+M. Rouvier to accept the German terms.<a id=
+"FNanchor_763"></a><a href="#Footnote_763" class=
+"fnanchor">[763]</a> Refusing the French request, Prince Bülow
+warned the Premier on June 21, 22, and 23 against resuming M.
+Delcassé’s policy and against permitting the Algerians to aid the
+Moroccan pretender. While promising the French government
+“seriously and loyally” to work for a result satisfactory to all
+parties and especially for an understanding with France at the
+conference, the Chancellor declared to the French Ambassador: “The
+situation is serious. With a little good will and decision we may
+emerge from it.” But “one should not play with fire”; “it is a
+dangerous game which might lead further than you and I wish.”
+Threatening to make a defensive alliance with the Sultan if French
+policy forced him to, he refused the overture for negotiation and
+advised a quick acceptance of the conference.<a id=
+"FNanchor_764"></a><a href="#Footnote_764" class=
+"fnanchor">[764]</a></p>
+
+<p>The German policy was not as successful as the Chancellor
+had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[247]</span> expected. By
+June 21 Italy had, in spite of German pressure, accepted the
+conference only conditionally.<a id="FNanchor_765"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_765" class="fnanchor">[765]</a> The British government,
+loyally following the lead of France, fully approved the French
+note (June 23).<a id="FNanchor_766"></a><a href="#Footnote_766"
+class="fnanchor">[766]</a> In Spain, although a ministerial crisis
+on June 20 had eliminated M. Villa-Urrutia as Germany had demanded,
+the new Liberal government refused Germany’s request for support;
+it declared on June 25 that it would remain loyal to the
+Franco-Spanish accord.<a id="FNanchor_767"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_767" class="fnanchor">[767]</a> Furthermore, it was
+apparent that M. Rouvier would not accept the German demands in
+their existing form.<a id="FNanchor_768"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_768" class="fnanchor">[768]</a> The Premier was
+staunchly supported by the French press, which was quickly coming
+to credit Germany with the intention not of making friends with
+France but of teaching her a lesson and of setting limits to her
+foreign policy.<a id="FNanchor_769"></a><a href="#Footnote_769"
+class="fnanchor">[769]</a> More<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_248">[248]</span> discouraging still, on June 24 Baron
+Sternburg telegraphed the following statement from President
+Roosevelt:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>The French Government informs me unofficially . . . . that it
+has ceased its opposition to a conference. . . . . It seems as a
+matter of course that a program of the conference would be needed
+in advance in accordance with the usual custom in such cases. I
+suggest that that be arranged between France and Germany. . . . .
+Let me congratulate the Emperor warmly on his diplomatic triumph of
+the first magnitude.<a id="FNanchor_770"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_770" class="fnanchor">[770]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The German government retreated. Replying to the French
+government on June 24,<a id="FNanchor_771"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_771" class="fnanchor">[771]</a> it asserted the right of
+the other Powers to participate in the work of Moroccan reform. It
+refused to negotiate a program for the conference beforehand, but
+admitted “that France has a very legitimate interest in maintaining
+order in the territory bordering on the frontier.” In the verbal
+explanations made upon the delivery of the note, the Chancellor,
+denying that the conference was intended to procure for Germany a
+“miserable satisfaction for her <em>amour-propre</em>” or to
+humiliate France, declared that international reform should be
+attempted in Morocco first. Then if this work broke down, he said,
+“the future is free,” and “in that future, which is perhaps not so
+distant, we shall again be able to become opportunists.” He was
+profoundly surprised, he said, that the French note took no
+cognizance of the overtures made by the German Ambassador. He urged
+the acceptance of the conference so that the two countries might
+escape from this “perilous and dangerous situation” into “a path
+which leads to appeasement, conciliation, and peace.”</p>
+
+<p>The Chancellor also instructed Prince Radolin to inform
+M.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[249]</span> Rouvier that if
+France accepted the conference, Germany would then be willing to
+work out an agreement with her on the bases mentioned previously
+(June 14 and 18) for a prospective program to be submitted to the
+Sultan.<a id="FNanchor_772"></a><a href="#Footnote_772" class=
+"fnanchor">[772]</a> If the Ambassador thought that M. Rouvier
+would refuse to accept the conference before the program was agreed
+upon, the Chancellor would permit him to propose that the French
+and German representatives work out a program with the Sultan in
+Fez. If M. Rouvier refused the conference altogether, Prince
+Radolin should warn him that Germany would aid the Sultan against
+any French aggressions. The Ambassador was to tell M. Rouvier that
+the Moroccan government had made offers to Germany which would
+insure her a leading position in that land, but that Germany would
+refuse them as long as the possibility of an accord with France
+remained.<a id="FNanchor_773"></a><a href="#Footnote_773" class=
+"fnanchor">[773]</a></p>
+
+<p>By June 27 the advantage again shifted to the German side. In
+Paris the more anti-British and pro-German element, led by M.
+Dupuy, owner of <em>Petit Parisien</em> and an intimate friend of
+M. Rouvier, was gaining greater influence. M. Dupuy informed the
+German Ambassador on June 26 that M. Rouvier, whom he represented
+as a rather well-meaning simpleton, now regretted having dispatched
+the French note and that he now sought some phrase by which the
+German and French views could be harmonized and the conference
+accepted. In fact, M. Dupuy stated that he expected the French
+government to make the acceptance in a day or so. Both he and M.
+Betzold said that the Premier still mistrusted Great Britain.<a id=
+"FNanchor_774"></a><a href="#Footnote_774" class=
+"fnanchor">[774]</a></p>
+
+<p>Even more valuable for the German government was Mr. Roosevelt’s
+change in attitude. When the German government explained to Mr.
+Roosevelt that France had not agreed to the conference except under
+conditions which Germany had persistently<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_250">[250]</span> refused,<a id="FNanchor_775"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_775" class="fnanchor">[775]</a> the President
+immediately advised France on June 26 to accept unconditionally. He
+stated that the question of a program was a minor one, that the
+important thing was for the conference to meet. In answer, the
+French Ambassador protested that in view of the German Emperor’s
+erratic temperament France could not go to the conference</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">without previously having drawn up a program, or at
+least without an understanding, indicating that which we might have
+reason to expect and guaranteeing in particular that solemn
+international undertakings, which have for a long time been public
+property, should not be brought into question.<a id=
+"FNanchor_776"></a><a href="#Footnote_776" class=
+"fnanchor">[776]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">Thereupon Mr. Roosevelt proposed the following
+compromise: “Let France and Germany go into the conference without
+any programme or agreement; but to discuss all questions in regard
+to Morocco; save of course where either is in honor bound by a
+previous agreement with another power.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_777"></a><a href="#Footnote_777" class=
+"fnanchor">[777]</a></p>
+
+<p>In reporting to Baron Sternburg what he had done, the President
+said that if France and Germany agreed upon this or any other
+compromise, he himself would accept the invitation to the
+conference and would advise Great Britain to do likewise. On June
+27 he offered to telegraph his greetings to the Emperor William II.
+He also expressed to the British Ambassador his strong hope that
+Great Britain would drop her objections to the conference.<a id=
+"FNanchor_778"></a><a href="#Footnote_778" class=
+"fnanchor">[778]</a></p>
+
+<p>The President’s intervention was beneficial to both the French
+and the German governments; it brought them into a frame of mind
+which permitted a compromise. The German government was elated over
+his action; for even though it diminished any hope of breaking the
+French accords over Morocco, it did seem to assure a peaceful issue
+of the crisis by the acceptance of the<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_251">[251]</span> conference. Hence Prince Bülow telegraphed
+to Washington on June 27 that “if after the acceptance of the
+conference by France we negotiate with the French and differences
+arise, I shall be ready at all times to support before His Majesty
+the Emperor that decision which President Roosevelt recommends as
+practical and fair.”<a id="FNanchor_779"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_779" class="fnanchor">[779]</a></p>
+
+<p>This success, however, was offset by a report from Baron
+Eckardstein on June 27 that M. Delcassé had received an offer of an
+offensive and defensive alliance from Great Britain, but that M.
+Rouvier had refused to consider it. Within the past ten days, the
+Baron continued, the British government had informed the French
+Premier “that he could rely upon its diplomatic support under all
+circumstances, but that if he wished to make an alliance with
+England, the English fleet would also uphold the French policy in
+case of necessity.”<a id="FNanchor_780"></a><a href="#Footnote_780"
+class="fnanchor">[780]</a> After frankly repeating those statements
+to Lord Lansdowne on the following day, Count Metternich added that
+“at no moment had the German Government desired to fasten a quarrel
+upon France,” as the British seemed to think. Lord Lansdowne
+replied that “the language attributed to some of the German
+representatives had certainly suggested the idea that it was
+desired to do so.” He then made this important statement:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>. . . . British diplomatic support was assured to the French by
+the Anglo-French accord. . . . . As a natural result questions
+which concerned that agreement would have been discussed between
+the two Governments and proper ways and means conferred upon to
+maintain intact the individual points of the accord. The question
+of an alliance with France has never been discussed by the British
+cabinet nor has an English alliance ever been offered<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_252">[252]</span> to France. . . . . However, he
+would not conceal his belief that in the event that Germany
+“lightheartedly” made war upon France, which he considered entirely
+improbable, it was not to be foreseen how far British public
+opinion would force the Government to support France.<a id=
+"FNanchor_781"></a><a href="#Footnote_781" class=
+"fnanchor">[781]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>To this alarming information was added the report from Paris
+that the British were exerting all possible pressure to prevent
+France from accepting the conference.<a id=
+"FNanchor_782"></a><a href="#Footnote_782" class=
+"fnanchor">[782]</a> Furthermore, when Prince Radolin carried out
+his instructions, June 27, M. Rouvier continued to refuse the
+conference without a previous understanding. To that end he offered
+two proposals. One, a suggestion which he took from a German
+newspaper, was that the French and German representatives at Fez
+work out a program in co-operation with the Sultan prior to French
+acceptance of the conference. The other was that in providing for
+the international regulation of the police and financial reforms
+France should be assured the right to execute the police reforms
+along the Algerian frontier while nothing definite should be stated
+about the organization of the police in the rest of Morocco. This
+agreement, M. Rouvier added, could become valid as soon as France
+officially accepted the conference. He also desired the recall of
+the three ministers from Fez so as to prevent complications.<a id=
+"FNanchor_783"></a><a href="#Footnote_783" class=
+"fnanchor">[783]</a></p>
+
+<p>As already seen, the Chancellor was willing to accept the first
+proposal, although, fearing that upon further delay the Sultan
+might throw over the project of a conference and undermine the
+entire German policy, he preferred some other solution. Since he
+mistrusted the Sultan, he refused to recall Count Tattenbach from
+Fez until the conference actually met. He also held to his formula
+of “first acceptance, then negotiations”; but to counteract the
+British pressure he retreated further by agreeing on June 28 for
+the Premier to declare publicly that</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">the French Government has dropped its objections to
+the conference after becoming convinced from the declarations of
+Your Highness [Prince Radolin]<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_253">[253]</span> that Germany would pursue no goals at the
+conference which would stand in opposition to the just interests of
+France.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">He refused, however, to permit M. Rouvier to make
+public anything further about the German concessions of June 14 and
+18.<a id="FNanchor_784"></a><a href="#Footnote_784" class=
+"fnanchor">[784]</a> On the same day he declared to M. Bihourd that
+once the conference met, Germany would be freed from her
+obligations to the Sultan and could follow her own interests. Let
+international reforms first be tried in Morocco, he said; if they
+failed, Germany would have to consult only her own interests, among
+which Morocco occupied “an infinitely small place.” If France, in
+conformity with the views of the British government, refused the
+conference, there would obtain a condition of <em>la paix
+armée</em>. If she accepted, there would be “neither victor nor
+vanquished.”<a id="FNanchor_785"></a><a href="#Footnote_785" class=
+"fnanchor">[785]</a></p>
+
+<p>Learning that the German government regarded Prince Radolin’s
+assertions of June 14 and 18 as official and despairing of any
+other solution, M. Rouvier was more inclined to accept the
+conference. He justified this course to the British chargé
+d’affaires on June 28 as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>He [M. Rouvier] considered that under the conditions a
+conference was perhaps the best way of arriving at a satisfactory
+solution. The Emperor had made it a point of personal honour:
+France would go into it with the support of England, Spain, and
+possibly Italy, whereas Germany would be alone; Germany was
+prepared to admit the preponderance of French interests on the
+Algerian frontier. It was absolutely necessary to arrive at some
+solution as the present situation was excessively dangerous. So
+long as the Conference was not accepted, Germany considered that
+she was entitled to a free hand in Morocco, and she was very very
+[<em>sic</em>] active. She would ask for all sorts of concessions,
+ports, cables, etc., and were the Sultan to accede to such demands
+the situation both for France and England would become far more
+critical. Monsieur Rouvier hinted that once the present
+difficulties had been more or less tided over at the Conference, it
+would be possible to see that Germany did not get too much in
+Morocco.<a id="FNanchor_786"></a><a href="#Footnote_786" class=
+"fnanchor">[786]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind"><span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_254">[254]</span>Before approving the proposal for a
+conference, however, M. Rouvier intended to include in the
+agreement with Germany some mention of France’s accords with Great
+Britain and Spain over Morocco.<a id="FNanchor_787"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_787" class="fnanchor">[787]</a></p>
+
+<p>While M. Rouvier delayed, the German government grew
+apprehensive. Prince Radolin heard on June 29 that M. Paul Cambon,
+Sir Francis Bertie, and the British government were making every
+effort to prevent the French acceptance, arguing that Germany was
+endeavoring to nullify the Anglo-French agreement. On the next day
+M. Dupuy informed the Ambassador that the British “were sitting
+powerfully on M. Rouvier’s back” to obstruct it and that Sir
+Francis Bertie was pressing the French Premier to make a defensive
+and offensive alliance with Great Britain. When M. Cambon reached
+Paris on June 30, M. Dupuy thought that there was grave danger of
+M. Rouvier’s being overthrown.<a id="FNanchor_788"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_788" class="fnanchor">[788]</a></p>
+
+<p>In this situation the German government denied on June 30 to the
+French government that it meant to question the Anglo-French
+accord. On the next day it was prepared to give way still further,
+but M. Rouvier accepted the conference.<a id=
+"FNanchor_789"></a><a href="#Footnote_789" class=
+"fnanchor">[789]</a> The Premier proposed that he and the German
+Ambassador make an exchange of notes and sign a declaration
+incorporating the concessions which the German government had made
+to France.<a id="FNanchor_790"></a><a href="#Footnote_790" class=
+"fnanchor">[790]</a> M. Rouvier then submitted the bases of the
+agreement to Lord Lansdowne, who approved them.<a id=
+"FNanchor_791"></a><a href="#Footnote_791" class=
+"fnanchor">[791]</a> After much bickering over the<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_255">[255]</span> formulation of the agreement,
+during which a liberal repetition of German threats mixed with
+enticements was made, accord was finally reached on July 8.<a id=
+"FNanchor_792"></a><a href="#Footnote_792" class=
+"fnanchor">[792]</a></p>
+
+<p>By that agreement Germany promised to pursue no goal at the
+conference which would compromise the “legitimate interests” of
+France in Morocco or</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">that would be contrary to the rights of France
+resulting from treaties or arrangements and harmonizing with the
+following principles: sovereignty and independence of the Sultan;
+integrity of his empire; economic liberty without any inequality;
+utility of police and financial reforms the introduction of which
+will be regulated for a short period by way of an international
+accord; recognition of the situation created for France with
+reference to Morocco by the contiguity, over a long stretch, of
+Algeria and the Sherifian empire, by the particular relations which
+result therefrom between the two neighboring countries, as well as
+by the special interest which results therefrom for France for
+order to obtain in the Sherifian empire.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">The two governments agreed to work out a program
+for the conference which they would submit to the Sultan for
+acceptance. The French and German missions were to be recalled from
+Fez as soon as the conference met. Prince Radolin also stated
+specifically that the Anglo-French and Franco-Spanish agreements
+remained untouched by this understanding.<a id=
+"FNanchor_793"></a><a href="#Footnote_793" class=
+"fnanchor">[793]</a></p>
+
+<p>The French, British, and German presses greeted this accord with
+relief and with the sincere hope that the crisis was past.<a id=
+"FNanchor_794"></a><a href="#Footnote_794" class=
+"fnanchor">[794]</a> The Powers also signified their
+acceptances.<a id="FNanchor_795"></a><a href="#Footnote_795" class=
+"fnanchor">[795]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[256]</span>The agreement
+marked Germany’s first reverse in her Moroccan campaign. She had
+been compelled to recognize France’s special interest in Morocco
+and had failed to nullify the French ententes. Germany could have
+placed herself on the same basis with reference to France that
+Great Britain occupied, both in regard to European and to colonial
+affairs. Instead, however, of weakening the Entente Cordiale,
+instead of making a valuable colonial accord by accepting the
+French offers, the German government had preferred both to keep its
+promises to the Sultan and to free itself from those promises by
+forcing a conference upon an unwilling world. Caught in the toils
+of its own tangled policy and determined to have a share in Morocco
+even though the German people were uninterested, it had refused
+present offers of colonial gain with the hope of bringing about
+their renewal in the future. Its virtue, not appreciated by any
+other Power, was greater than its common sense.</p>
+
+<p>Although the German government had receded, it had done so only
+after embittering the French nation and arousing it to the united
+defense of its national honor. As Ambassador Jusserand wrote to Mr.
+Roosevelt on July 11:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>I leave greatly comforted by the news concerning Morocco. The
+agreement arrived at is in substance the one which we had
+considered and the acceptation of which you did so very much to
+secure. Letters just received by me from Paris . . . . confirm what
+I guessed was the case, that is, that there was a point where more
+yielding would have been impossible; everybody in France felt it,
+and people braced up silently in view of possible great
+events.<a id="FNanchor_796"></a><a href="#Footnote_796" class=
+"fnanchor">[796]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">Germany’s actions had antagonized M. Rouvier and
+converted him to the Entente Cordiale. M. Rouvier remarked to the
+British chargé d’affaires as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>His Majesty [the German Emperor] had expected a complete
+climb-down to follow upon the change of direction of the Ministry
+for Foreign Affairs, but as His Excellency [M. Rouvier] said, there
+was no reason because he<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_257">[257]</span> parted with Monsieur Delcassé that he
+should throw himself “dans les bras de l’Empereur et sur son
+cou.”<a id="FNanchor_797"></a><a href="#Footnote_797" class=
+"fnanchor">[797]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">M. Cambon informed Lord Lansdowne that</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">after all that had happened M. Rouvier was more
+convinced than ever of the necessity of maintaining a close
+understanding with this country [Great Britain]. It was, in his
+view, essential that the two Governments should treat one another
+with the fullest confidence, and that no further steps should be
+taken without previous discussion between us. While holding this
+opinion, M. Rouvier thought it desirable to proceed with caution in
+dealing with the German Government and thought we should avoid
+parading a desire to run counter to them.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>These assertions met with Lord Lansdowne’s entire approval, for
+they signified the success of the British struggle to maintain the
+Entente Cordiale and to keep Germany out of Morocco. The Foreign
+Secretary assured M. Cambon that Great Britain had no intention of
+withdrawing her support. But he added: “. . . . The apparent
+sacrifice of M. Delcassé in the face of German pressure had created
+an unfavourable impression in this country, and I therefore thought
+there was a good deal to be said for M. Rouvier’s view that it
+would be as well to avoid any action calculated to bring about
+fresh complications.”<a id="FNanchor_798"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_798" class="fnanchor">[798]</a> In other words, Lord
+Lansdowne intimated that British public opinion would not be so
+willing to support France as it had been before that display of
+French weakness.</p>
+
+<p>In spite of this remark, signs were not lacking of close
+intimacy between the two countries. On July 12 <em>Gaulois</em>
+published the information that at the cabinet meeting on June 6 M.
+Delcassé had favored an alliance with Great Britain in order to
+hold Germany in check. Without definitely stating so, the article
+left<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[258]</span> the impression
+that the Foreign Minister had been certain of an alliance.<a id=
+"FNanchor_799"></a><a href="#Footnote_799" class=
+"fnanchor">[799]</a> When the French and British fleets exchanged
+visits in July and August, the press compared the visits to that of
+the Russian fleet to Toulon in 1893 which had sealed the
+Franco-Russian alliance.<a id="FNanchor_800"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_800" class="fnanchor">[800]</a></p>
+
+<p>The German government was thus furthering that process which it
+called Germany’s encirclement and isolation.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes" id="ftc13">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_724"></a><a href="#FNanchor_724"><span class=
+"label">[724]</span></a>Bülow to Tattenbach, June 7, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 418 f., No. 6692.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_725"></a><a href="#FNanchor_725"><span class=
+"label">[725]</span></a>The signatory Powers were as follows:
+Austria-Hungary, Italy, Spain, Great Britain, France, Russia,
+United States, the Netherlands, Portugal, Sweden, Belgium, and
+Germany.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_726"></a><a href="#FNanchor_726"><span class=
+"label">[726]</span></a>Art. XVII read as follows: “Le droit au
+traitement de la nation la plus favorisée est reconnu par le Maroc
+à toutes les Puissances representées à la Conférence de Madrid”
+(Leon Deloncle [ed.], <em>Statut international du Maroc</em>
+[Paris, 1912], p. 51). The French refused to accept this
+interpretation of the Convention of Madrid and of Art. XVII.
+Tardieu replied to the German arguments as follows: “That
+convention aimed to limit at the demand of Morocco the right of
+protection of the legations to certain Moroccan subjects which some
+Powers tended to abuse. It had regulated the exercise of that
+right, determined the conditions of naturalization for the
+Moroccans, those for the acquisition of landed property by
+foreigners, and had established the basis of the agricultural tax.
+Concerning general policy or stipulations about the tariff, not a
+word. Article XVII, which Germany invoked as the charter of
+international equality in Morocco, applied in reality only to the
+right of protection. . . . . Article XVII is not a promise of the
+Powers among themselves never to touch the diplomatic or economic
+terrain. It is a promise by Morocco never to differentiate between
+them within the limits of 1880 and within those limits alone, that
+is (following the preamble of the convention) in the exercise of
+protection” (Tardieu, <em>La Conf. d’Algés</em>, p. 39). Lansdowne
+also challenged the German interpretation. “Any rights which other
+countries may have to most-favoured-nation treatment in Morocco
+would not . . . . preclude the possibility of a privileged position
+being in certain respects accorded to France in her dealings with
+the Moorish Government. Most-favoured-nation treatment is variously
+interpreted in different countries. But no Power has, I believe,
+ever contended that the obligation to give such treatment debars
+one country from invoking the assistance of another in improving
+its domestic administration, and it is obvious that such assistance
+can be most conveniently and effectually given when the Power which
+affords it is the immediate neighbour of that which receives it,
+nor was there any desire or intention on the part of France to
+deprive other Powers of the rights and privileges to which they
+were justly entitled under Treaty” (Lansdowne to Bertie, July 11,
+1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 117 f., No. 150; cf. Metternich to F. O.,
+June 6, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 416 f., No. 6690).</p>
+
+<p>The German interpretation was based upon a loose construction of
+that convention while the French interpretation was based upon a
+strict construction. Although from a legal standpoint the French
+view was correct, yet the precedent of an international conference
+over Moroccan affairs, no matter what they were, favored the German
+argument. Moreover, the fact remained that France had tried to
+change the existing status in Morocco without consulting Powers who
+had as much right to be considered as the three with whom she had
+come to terms.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_727"></a><a href="#FNanchor_727"><span class=
+"label">[727]</span></a>Bülow to Flotow, June 5, dispatched June 6,
+1905, <em>G.P.</em>, 413 ff., No. 6687; <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 230
+f., No. 268, annexe.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_728"></a><a href="#FNanchor_728"><span class=
+"label">[728]</span></a>Alvensleben to F. O., June 7, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 419, No. 6693; Wedel to F. O., June 6, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 417 f., No. 6691; Monts to F. O., June 6, 9, 12,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 415 f., No. 6688; 424 f., No. 6699; 435 ff.,
+No. 6709; de Bunsen to Lansdowne, June 8, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III,
+91 f., No. 115; Smith to Lansdowne, June 24, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>,
+101, No. 129; Lansdowne to Goschen, June 21, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>,
+100, No. 127; Egerton to Lansdowne, June 9, 10, 13, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 94 f., Nos. 119 ff.; Hardinge to Lansdowne, June
+14, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 96, No. 123.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_729"></a><a href="#FNanchor_729"><span class=
+"label">[729]</span></a>Bülow to Radowitz, June 10, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 425 f., No. 6701.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_730"></a><a href="#FNanchor_730"><span class=
+"label">[730]</span></a>Lansdowne to Lascelles, June 8, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 92 f., No. 117.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_731"></a><a href="#FNanchor_731"><span class=
+"label">[731]</span></a>Metternich to F. O., June 6 and 8, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 416 f., No. 6690; 422 ff., No. 6697 f. King
+Edward also refused to permit the Prince of Wales to attend the
+wedding of the German Crown Prince on June 6 (Lee, <em>King Edward
+VII</em>, II, 335 f.). Lowther had communicated the British refusal
+to the Sultan when on June 8 new instructions arrived for him to
+await further developments. See Lowther to Lansdowne, June 9, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 94, No. 118; Lansdowne to Lowther, June 8,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 92, No. 116.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_732"></a><a href="#FNanchor_732"><span class=
+"label">[732]</span></a>The information came from M. Bunau-Varilla,
+owner of <em>Matin</em> (<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 623 f., No. 6853).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_733"></a><a href="#FNanchor_733"><span class=
+"label">[733]</span></a>Bülow to Sternburg, May 25 and 30, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 385 f., Nos. 6667 f.; Bishop, <em>The Life and
+Times of Theodore Roosevelt</em>, I, 470 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_734"></a><a href="#FNanchor_734"><span class=
+"label">[734]</span></a>Sternburg to Bülow, June 8, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 421, No. 6696. Durand reported that Roosevelt
+had said to Sternburg that “so long as the French Government
+object, the United States Government could not adhere to the
+proposal for a Conference of the Powers” (Lansdowne to Cambon, June
+6, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 90 f., No. 112).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_735"></a><a href="#FNanchor_735"><span class=
+"label">[735]</span></a>Radolin to F. O., June 3, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 402 f., No. 6680; Flotow to F. O., June 6 and 9,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 404, No. 6682; 425, No. 6700. In these
+negotiations Rouvier leaned on the advice of Révoil, who in June
+without holding any office was given a desk in the foreign office
+(Tardieu, p. 84).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_736"></a><a href="#FNanchor_736"><span class=
+"label">[736]</span></a><em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 230, No. 268; 231,
+No. 269; 233, No. 271.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_737"></a><a href="#FNanchor_737"><span class=
+"label">[737]</span></a>Rouvier to Saint-René Taillandier, June 10,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 230 f., No. 269.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_738"></a><a href="#FNanchor_738"><span class=
+"label">[738]</span></a>Flotow to F. O., June 7, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 420, No. 6694.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_739"></a><a href="#FNanchor_739"><span class=
+"label">[739]</span></a>Flotow to F. O., June 9, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 425, No. 6700.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_740"></a><a href="#FNanchor_740"><span class=
+"label">[740]</span></a>Bülow to Radolin, June 10, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 427 f., No. 6702; Radolin to F. O., June 11, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 430 f., No. 6705; Rouvier to Bihourd, June 11,
+1905, <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 232, No. 270. Immediately after that
+interview Rouvier declared to some of his friends: “They are
+putting a knife to my throat. I do not know where they wish to
+drive us” (Wolff, <em>Das Vorspiel</em>, pp. 174 f.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_741"></a><a href="#FNanchor_741"><span class=
+"label">[741]</span></a>Schulthess, <em>Europäischer
+Geschichtskalender 1905</em>, p. 92.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_742"></a><a href="#FNanchor_742"><span class=
+"label">[742]</span></a>Goetz, <em>Briefe Wilhelms II an den Zaren
+1894-1914</em>, pp. 370 ff.; <em>G.P.</em>, XIX, Nos. 6193, 6196
+f., 6311 ff., 6318; <em>B.D.</em>, Vol. IV, chap. xxiii, Part.
+V.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_743"></a><a href="#FNanchor_743"><span class=
+"label">[743]</span></a>The absence of minutes by him to the
+dispatches during this crisis points to this fact (also see
+Eckardstein, <em>Lebenserinnerungen und politische
+Denkwürdigkeiten</em>, III, 167). The Emperor first learned of
+Rouvier’s offer of a general colonial agreement at this time in
+1907. His comment was as follows: “If I had known of that, I would
+have accepted it and the whole stupid conference of Algeciras would
+have been avoided” (Brandenburg, <em>Von Bismarck zum
+Weltkriege</em>, p. 215).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_744"></a><a href="#FNanchor_744"><span class=
+"label">[744]</span></a>See the Emperor’s minutes, one of the very
+few instances in which they are to be found, to the dispatch from
+Radolin to Bülow, June 11, 1905 (<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 409, No.
+6685).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_745"></a><a href="#FNanchor_745"><span class=
+"label">[745]</span></a>On this episode see Eckardstein, II, 139
+f.; Zedlitz-Trützschler, <em>Zwölf Jahre am deutschen
+Kaiserhof</em>, p. 174; Bülow to Radolin, June 10, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 429 f., No. 6704.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_746"></a><a href="#FNanchor_746"><span class=
+"label">[746]</span></a>This was General Schlieffen’s opinion.
+Schlieffen believed that the condition of the Russian army would
+grow worse instead of better. See Bülow to Schlieffen, June 4,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, XIX, 422, No. 6194; Schlieffen to Bülow, June
+10, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 423 f., No. 6195.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_747"></a><a href="#FNanchor_747"><span class=
+"label">[747]</span></a>Bülow to Tattenbach, June 7, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 418 f., No. 6692.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_748"></a><a href="#FNanchor_748"><span class=
+"label">[748]</span></a>Bülow to Sternburg, June 9 and 10, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XX, 421 f. n.; 626 ff., No. 6856; Bishop, I, 476
+f.; Sternburg to F. O., June 12, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 433 f.,
+No. 6707.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_749"></a><a href="#FNanchor_749"><span class=
+"label">[749]</span></a>Metternich to Bülow, June 9, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 625 f., No. 6855; Bülow to Metternich, June 11,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 628 ff., No. 6857; Metternich to F. O., June
+15 and 16, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 441 f., No. 6712; 630 ff., No.
+6858; Lascelles to Lansdowne, June 12, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 79
+ff., Nos. 97 f.; Lansdowne to Lascelles, June 16, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 82 f., No. 99. See also Newton, <em>Lord
+Lansdowne</em>, pp. 335 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_750"></a><a href="#FNanchor_750"><span class=
+"label">[750]</span></a>Bülow to Radolin, June 12, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 431 ff., No. 6706. The accusation that Algerians
+were helping the pretender was made by a German army officer who in
+June returned from the Algerian border. Governor Jonnart of Algeria
+denied it and asserted that the contraband came, not from Algeria
+but from the Riff. Although Jonnart’s statement was undoubtedly
+correct, yet the report came in so handily that the German
+government used it as a weapon of intimidation against France
+(<em>ibid.</em>, Nos. 6724, 6746; <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, Nos. 275
+f., 281, 283 f.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_751"></a><a href="#FNanchor_751"><span class=
+"label">[751]</span></a>Radolin to F. O., June 14, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 438 f., No. 6710.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_752"></a><a href="#FNanchor_752"><span class=
+"label">[752]</span></a>Bülow to Radolin, June 16, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 439 ff., No. 6711; Radolin to Rouvier, June 16,
+1905, <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 234 ff., No. 272.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_753"></a><a href="#FNanchor_753"><span class=
+"label">[753]</span></a>Bülow to Tattenbach, June 19, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 448 ff., No. 6718.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_754"></a><a href="#FNanchor_754"><span class=
+"label">[754]</span></a>Sternburg to F. O., June 17, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 442 f., No. 6713; Bishop, I, 477 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_755"></a><a href="#FNanchor_755"><span class=
+"label">[755]</span></a>On Roosevelt and Great Britain see Bishop,
+I, 474 f., 481 ff., 408; Dennett, <em>Roosevelt and the
+Russo-Japanese War</em>, 37 f., 210 ff.; Sykes, <em>The Right
+Honourable Sir Mortimer Durand</em>, p. 285; Sternburg to F. O.,
+June 12, 17, 25, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 433 f., No. 6707; 442 f.,
+No. 6713; 473 ff., No. 6738; Lansdowne to Durand, June 16, July 12,
+1905, <em>B.D.</em>, IV, 89, No. 85; 91, No. 87; Spring Rice’s
+correspondence with Roosevelt, June-July, 1905, Gwynn, <em>The
+Letters and Friendships of Sir Cecil Spring Rice</em>, I, 472
+ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_756"></a><a href="#FNanchor_756"><span class=
+"label">[756]</span></a>Threats by the German ambassadors in Paris,
+Rome, and Madrid (<em>B.D.</em>, III, 97, No. 126).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_757"></a><a href="#FNanchor_757"><span class=
+"label">[757]</span></a>Lansdowne to Bertie, June 16, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 96, No. 124; Nicolson to Lansdowne, June 17, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 97, No. 125.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_758"></a><a href="#FNanchor_758"><span class=
+"label">[758]</span></a>Barrère, the two Cambons, and Jusserand,
+all firmly in sympathy with Delcassé’s policy, were holding Rouvier
+in line. See Egerton to Lansdowne, June 13, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>,
+95, No. 122.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_759"></a><a href="#FNanchor_759"><span class=
+"label">[759]</span></a>Lansdowne to Bertie, June 16, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 96 f., No. 124. In Rome Egerton was working to hold
+Italy in line with this policy. See Egerton to Lansdowne, June 10,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 94, No. 120.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_760"></a><a href="#FNanchor_760"><span class=
+"label">[760]</span></a>Radolin to F. O., June 26, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 484, No. 6745.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_761"></a><a href="#FNanchor_761"><span class=
+"label">[761]</span></a>Rouvier to Radolin, June 21, 1905,
+<em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 235 ff., No. 273; Radolin to F. O., June 21,
+1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 452 f., No. 6720. The note was composed
+mainly by Paul Cambon. See Radolin to F. O., June 30, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 494, No. 6752.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_762"></a><a href="#FNanchor_762"><span class=
+"label">[762]</span></a>Lansdowne to Bertie, June 21, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 97 f., No. 126; Metternich to F. O., June 23,
+1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 463 f., No. 6727; Rouvier to Jusserand,
+June 23 and 25, 1905, quoted in Bishop, I, 478 ff. Dennis relates
+that while in France in May, 1926, he heard a story to the effect
+that Roosevelt had written to the German Emperor at this crisis
+warning him that “it would be a crime against civilization for
+Germany to declare war against France.” Dennis was unable to find
+any such letter, and presumes that the one thought to have
+contained this warning was one from Roosevelt to Sternburg on June
+26 [<em>sic</em>], 1905 (Dennis, <em>Adventures in American
+Diplomacy</em>, p. 495). The truth seems to be that Roosevelt, who
+had not been so schooled in diplomacy as to choose his words
+carefully, spoke to Jusserand as if he would use such language to
+the Emperor, and then softened down his words greatly when he did
+write to Sternburg. Cf. Jusserand’s letter to Rouvier on June 25,
+1905, with Roosevelt’s letter to Sternburg on the same date, quoted
+in Bishop, I, 480 f., 483 ff. Rouvier gave Roosevelt credit for his
+acceptance in principle of the conference. The French Premier also
+asked Eckardstein to intervene again, but the latter refused since
+he was in such bad odor with his government (Eckardstein, III, 147
+ff.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_763"></a><a href="#FNanchor_763"><span class=
+"label">[763]</span></a>“Rouvier . . . . we know does not wish a
+conflict with us,” . . . . “the Chamber of Deputies wishes above
+all to avoid war” (quoted from a dispatch from Bülow to William II,
+June 22, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 456, No. 6723). “The sooner we
+make it clear to him [Rouvier] what results the French refusal of
+the conference and the further support of the pretender must have,
+the more we diminish the dangers of the situation” (Bülow to
+Radolin, June 24, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 466, No. 6730). That the
+German government was playing with war but did not intend to start
+one is also evident from a confidential letter from Holstein to the
+editor of the <em>Kölnische Zeitung</em>, June 28, 1905, which
+expresses completely the nature of the German policy. “. . . . In
+brief, I consider the danger of war for Germany at the present
+moment vanishingly small. It will be still more diminished if a
+conviction of our firmness prevails. We know now for certain that
+in the last ministerial council Delcassé declared: ‘Germany will
+not dare to fight, it is all bluff.’ This doubt about our
+determination could have led to a conflict if the other ministers
+had shared Delcassé’s views” (reprinted in <em>Kölnische
+Zeitung</em>, April 2, 1922).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_764"></a><a href="#FNanchor_764"><span class=
+"label">[764]</span></a>Radolin to F. O., June 22, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 457 ff., No. 6724; memo. by Bülow, June 23,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 459 ff., No. 6725; Bülow to William II, June
+22 and 24, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 455 ff., No. 6723; 464 f., No.
+6729; Bülow to Radolin, June 24, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 465 f., No.
+6730; Bihourd to Rouvier, June 23, 1905, <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 240
+f., No. 277; Lansdowne to Lister, June 28, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>,
+III, 105 ff., No. 133; Whitehead to Lansdowne, June 28, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 108 f., No. 135.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_765"></a><a href="#FNanchor_765"><span class=
+"label">[765]</span></a>Monts to Bülow, June 21, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 454 f., No. 6722.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_766"></a><a href="#FNanchor_766"><span class=
+"label">[766]</span></a>Metternich to F. O., June 23, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 463 f., No. 6727; Lee, II, 344; Lansdowne to
+Bertie, June 21, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 97 f., No. 126.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_767"></a><a href="#FNanchor_767"><span class=
+"label">[767]</span></a>Bülow held out prospects of aiding Spain to
+acquire Tangier and the surrounding territory in case of a future
+break-up of Morocco if Spain would uphold the German policy. The
+insincerity of the statement is proved by a letter from Holstein to
+Radolin on July 2, 1905. In regard to the Moroccan affair he wrote:
+“We need have no consideration for the wishes of others, at any
+rate not for those of Spain who has never caused other than anger
+or embarrassment for us.” See Bülow to Radowitz, June 21, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 453 f., No. 6721; Radowitz to F. O., June 25,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 473, No. 6737; Holstein to Radolin, July 2,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 503, No. 6757.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_768"></a><a href="#FNanchor_768"><span class=
+"label">[768]</span></a>See Rouvier’s reply to the Prince of
+Monaco, which the latter immediately handed to the German
+government (William II to Bülow, June 24, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>,
+464, No. 6728).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_769"></a><a href="#FNanchor_769"><span class=
+"label">[769]</span></a>Eckardstein, III, 147 ff.; report from
+Paris, June 18, 1905, <em>Zur europ. Politik</em>, II, 60;
+<em>Bulletin</em>, June, 1905, pp. 235 ff. “There appear to me to
+be indications that the feeling is growing in France that it is
+necessary to treat the Morocco question in as conciliatory a spirit
+as possible, but that when further demands are made by Germany they
+should be met by a firm refusal. . . . . The feeling of resentment
+against Germany on account of her present action is very strong and
+the spirit of the ‘revanche’ is reawakening; the French have pulled
+themselves together wonderfully after their first panic and they
+now seem prepared to face calmly the contingency of war in the
+future should the pretensions of Germany continue.</p>
+
+<p>“There is I think no doubt that Monsieur Rouvier could at
+present command a very large majority in the Chamber on any
+question of Foreign policy, and his efforts to preserve peace by
+conciliation so far as conciliation can go without loss of dignity,
+will only enhance his position in the eyes of his countrymen, and
+assure him their unanimous support in the event of such a policy
+being rendered impossible” (Lister to Lansdowne, June 28, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 107 f., No. 134).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_770"></a><a href="#FNanchor_770"><span class=
+"label">[770]</span></a>Sternburg to F. O., June 24, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 466 f., No. 6731; Bishop, I, 482.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_771"></a><a href="#FNanchor_771"><span class=
+"label">[771]</span></a>The note was dated June 24, but was handed
+by Bülow to Bihourd on June 25 and by Radolin to Rouvier on June
+27, 1905. See Radolin to Rouvier, June 24, 1905, <em>L.j.,
+1901-5</em>, 242 ff., No. 278; Bihourd to Rouvier, June 25, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 244 f., No. 279; Bülow to Radolin, June 25 and 26,
+1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 470 f., No. 6734; 472, No. 6736; Bülow to
+William II, June 26, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 476 ff., No. 6740.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_772"></a><a href="#FNanchor_772"><span class=
+"label">[772]</span></a>However, the Sultan and the other Powers
+should not be precluded thereby from proposing other matters for
+the consideration of that body.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_773"></a><a href="#FNanchor_773"><span class=
+"label">[773]</span></a>Bülow to Radolin, June 25, dispatched June
+26, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 470 f., No. 6734.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_774"></a><a href="#FNanchor_774"><span class=
+"label">[774]</span></a>Radolin to F. O., June 25 and 26, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 472, No. 6735; 479, No. 6741; Radolin to Bülow,
+June 26, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 483 f., No. 6743.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_775"></a><a href="#FNanchor_775"><span class=
+"label">[775]</span></a>Bülow to William II, June 25, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 467 ff., No. 6732; Sternburg to F. O., June 25,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 473 ff., No. 6738; Bülow to Sternburg, June
+26, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 475 f., No. 6739; Bishop, I, 483 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_776"></a><a href="#FNanchor_776"><span class=
+"label">[776]</span></a>Bishop, I, 485 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_777"></a><a href="#FNanchor_777"><span class=
+"label">[777]</span></a>Sternburg to F. O., June 26, 27, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 479 ff., No. 6742 f.; Bishop, I, 485.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_778"></a><a href="#FNanchor_778"><span class=
+"label">[778]</span></a>Sternburg to F. O., June 27, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 480 f., No. 6743.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_779"></a><a href="#FNanchor_779"><span class=
+"label">[779]</span></a>Bülow to Sternburg, June 27, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 481, No. 6744. Sternburg inadvertently changed the
+wording of that promise to read as follows: “The Emperor has
+requested me [Sternburg] to tell you that if during the coming
+conference differences of opinion should arise between France and
+Germany, he, in every case, will be ready to back up the decision
+which you should consider to be most fair and most practical”
+(Sternburg to Roosevelt, June 28, 1905, quoted in Bishop, I, 487).
+The latter promise bound the German government more tightly than
+did the former, and was to cause it embarrassment later.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_780"></a><a href="#FNanchor_780"><span class=
+"label">[780]</span></a>Metternich to F. O., June 27, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 634 f., No. 6859.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_781"></a><a href="#FNanchor_781"><span class=
+"label">[781]</span></a>Metternich to F. O., June 28, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 636, No. 6860; Lansdowne to Whitehead, June 28,
+1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 103, No. 132<em>a</em>.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_782"></a><a href="#FNanchor_782"><span class=
+"label">[782]</span></a>Radolin to F. O., June 26, dispatched June
+27, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 479, No. 6741.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_783"></a><a href="#FNanchor_783"><span class=
+"label">[783]</span></a>Radolin to F. O., June 27, dispatched June
+28, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 485 f., No. 6746.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_784"></a><a href="#FNanchor_784"><span class=
+"label">[784]</span></a>Bülow to Radolin, June 28, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 487 f., No. 6748; Bülow to William II, June 28,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 488 ff., No. 6749.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_785"></a><a href="#FNanchor_785"><span class=
+"label">[785]</span></a>Bülow to Radolin, July 1, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 495 ff., No. 6753 and Appendix; Holstein to
+Radolin, June 28, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 490 ff., No. 6750.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_786"></a><a href="#FNanchor_786"><span class=
+"label">[786]</span></a>Lister to Lansdowne, June 28, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 107 f., No. 134.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_787"></a><a href="#FNanchor_787"><span class=
+"label">[787]</span></a>Lansdowne entirely approved of this
+suggestion, remarking that “it [the Anglo-French declaration] might
+be usefully cited for the purpose of showing that the policy of
+both France and Great Britain had been in favour of maintaining the
+independence and integrity of Morocco and preserving commercial
+equality” (Lansdowne to Bertie, July 1, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 110
+f., No. 137). The rancor back of Lansdowne’s statement is
+apparent.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_788"></a><a href="#FNanchor_788"><span class=
+"label">[788]</span></a>Radolin to F. O., June 29 and 30, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 492 ff., Nos. 6751 f.; Lee, II, 344.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_789"></a><a href="#FNanchor_789"><span class=
+"label">[789]</span></a>Bülow to Radolin, July 1, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 495 ff., No. 6753 and Anlage; Rouvier to
+Bihourd, July 9, 1905, <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 249, No. 285.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_790"></a><a href="#FNanchor_790"><span class=
+"label">[790]</span></a>Radolin to Bülow, July 1, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 499, No. 6754; 501 f., No. 6756; Radolin to F.
+O., July 1, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 499 f., No. 6755.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_791"></a><a href="#FNanchor_791"><span class=
+"label">[791]</span></a>Lansdowne to Bertie, July 1, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 110 f., No. 137.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_792"></a><a href="#FNanchor_792"><span class=
+"label">[792]</span></a>On those negotiations see <em>G.P.</em>,
+XX, Nos. 6754 ff.; Rouvier to Bihourd, July 9, 1905, <em>L.j.,
+1901-5</em>, 249, No. 285.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_793"></a><a href="#FNanchor_793"><span class=
+"label">[793]</span></a><em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, Nos. 287 f.;
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, Nos. 6767 f.; <em>B.D.</em>, III, 115 f., No.
+147.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_794"></a><a href="#FNanchor_794"><span class=
+"label">[794]</span></a>See Rouvier’s speech in the Chamber on July
+10, 1905 (<em>Journal officiel. Debats parlem.</em> [Chambre, July
+10, 1905], pp. 2825 f.). Lansdowne’s speech of acceptance in the
+House of Lords, July 11, 1905, 4 Hansard, Vol. CIXL, col. 241.
+Richthofen to Radolin, July 9, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 516 f., No.
+6769. The German government prohibited Jaurès from coming to Berlin
+to speak before a socialist congress on July 9, but as the
+prohibition was based on internal reasons, it had little effect
+upon Franco-German relations (Schulthess, <em>1905</em>, pp. 104
+f.; <em>L’année politique, 1905</em>, p. 388).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_795"></a><a href="#FNanchor_795"><span class=
+"label">[795]</span></a>The French and British governments were
+particularly anxious for Russia and the United States to attend.
+See Lansdowne to Lister, July 6, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 114, No.
+143; see also <em>ibid.</em>, Nos. 149 ff., 154, 159 f., 164.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_796"></a><a href="#FNanchor_796"><span class=
+"label">[796]</span></a>Quoted in Bishop, I, 488.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_797"></a><a href="#FNanchor_797"><span class=
+"label">[797]</span></a>Lister to Lansdowne, June 28, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 108, No. 134.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_798"></a><a href="#FNanchor_798"><span class=
+"label">[798]</span></a>Lansdowne to Bertie, July 12, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 118 f., No. 152. On June 28 Lowther reported a
+conversation with Tattenbach in which the latter gave him to
+understand that “what he [Tattenbach] desired the Conference should
+do, would be to bring about an amendment of the Anglo-French
+Convention of April 8th, 1904.” King Edward’s minute to this
+dispatch was, “In plain English—Germany ousts France fr[om] Morocco
+and puts herself in her place!” See Lowther to Lansdowne, D. June
+28, 1905, R. July 10, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 101 f., No. 191.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_799"></a><a href="#FNanchor_799"><span class=
+"label">[799]</span></a>Schulthess, <em>1905</em>, pp. 217 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_800"></a><a href="#FNanchor_800"><span class=
+"label">[800]</span></a>Lee, II, 344 f.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap">
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[259]</span><a id=
+"c14"></a>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+
+<p class="sch1">THE MOROCCAN CRISIS, JULY-OCTOBER, 1905</p>
+
+<p>After Germany had forced France to lay the Moroccan problem
+before an international conference, M. Rouvier was no longer
+willing to give Germany a share in Morocco. Confident of British
+support and heartened by the friendly assertions of the German
+officials, he hoped to obtain a general mandate from the conference
+for executing the military, police, and financial reforms.<a id=
+"FNanchor_801"></a><a href="#Footnote_801" class=
+"fnanchor">[801]</a> Thus resuming the original French policy
+toward Morocco, he took steps to fulfil it by way of that
+assembly.</p>
+
+<p>Before negotiating with Germany over a program for the
+conference, M. Rouvier obtained the approval of his proposals from
+Great Britain and Spain.<a id="FNanchor_802"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_802" class="fnanchor">[802]</a> He also felt it
+necessary to affirm and supplement the Franco-Spanish agreement of
+1904 in accordance with the new situation and to make certain of
+Spain’s loyalty at the conference.</p>
+
+<p>The new government formed in Madrid late in June showed
+immediately a more independent spirit toward France than its
+predecessor had done. Both M. Montero Rios, the premier, and M.
+Roman, the foreign minister, reiterated to the British Ambassador
+that “the chief aim of their foreign policy was to be on specially
+intimate terms with Great Britain, and to strengthen as far as
+possible the good understanding at present existing.” But they
+established closer contacts with Germany, and informed the British
+and French governments that while Spain would abide by the
+Franco-Spanish Agreement she had not “abnegated her personality,”
+and was free to take any course, in matters outside<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_260">[260]</span> that agreement, “as might be
+dictated by her interests.” Spanish public opinion reflected the
+same sentiment. Some elements even wished to use the acceptance of
+the conference as an excuse for withdrawing from the Franco-Spanish
+agreement entirely. With the help of the British government and the
+blunders of Germany, that antagonized Spain, M. Rouvier ironed out
+the differences.<a id="FNanchor_803"></a><a href="#Footnote_803"
+class="fnanchor">[803]</a> On September 1 the French and Spanish
+governments signed a secret agreement.<a id=
+"FNanchor_804"></a><a href="#Footnote_804" class=
+"fnanchor">[804]</a> Its terms were as follows:</p>
+
+<p>All officers and underofficers charged with the instruction and
+command of the native troops in Larache and Tetouan were to be
+Spanish, while those in Rabat and Casablanca were to be French. The
+policing of Tangier should be intrusted for fifteen years to a
+Franco-Spanish corps commanded by a Frenchman. Contraband traffic
+in arms should be suppressed by France and Spain, individually in
+certain areas, co-operatively in others. The two governments were
+to work together to the end that “the participation in the capital
+and the works of all public enterprises will be offered to subjects
+of the two nations.” In the state bank or in any other institution
+to be created the presidency should be reserved to France, while
+the degree of participation of Spain should be superior to that of
+any other Power except France.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>The two Powers engage to observe this accord even in case where
+the stipulations of Article XVII of the Convention of Madrid of
+1880 come to be extended to all economic and financial questions;
+they will aid each other before the Sultan . . . . to assure the
+loyal accomplishment of all that the present accord stipulates.
+Moreover, Spain being firmly resolved to act in complete accord
+with France . . . . and France proposing to act in the same way
+with Spain, it is agreed . . . . that the two Governments
+will<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[261]</span> assist each
+other and will proceed in common accord in the deliberations [at
+the conference] in that which concerns the stipulations of the
+convention of October 3, 1904, in its broadest and most amicable
+interpretation as well as in that which concerns the different
+objects of the present accord. They engage to extend to each other
+the most complete pacific aid on all questions of a general order
+concerning Morocco in harmony with the cordial and friendly entente
+between them with reference to the affairs of the Sherifian
+Empire.<a id="FNanchor_805"></a><a href="#Footnote_805" class=
+"fnanchor">[805]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Both governments were well pleased with the terms. The British
+government also readily approved them. The transaction marked
+another step in drawing the three Powers closer together and in
+handing Morocco over to the charge of France and Spain.<a id=
+"FNanchor_806"></a><a href="#Footnote_806" class=
+"fnanchor">[806]</a></p>
+
+<p>At the same time M. Rouvier began negotiations with the German
+government over the program for the conference. The two were at
+loggerheads from the start, for the German views of what
+constituted a just consideration of France’s interests in Morocco
+were different from those of the French. When, late in June, the
+Moroccan government offered to give various economic contracts to
+Germany and to appoint a few German officers for creating a small
+Moroccan army, Count Tattenbach was enthusiastically in favor of
+accepting the proposals.<a id="FNanchor_807"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_807" class="fnanchor">[807]</a> Prince Bülow refused,
+and on July 11 instructed the Minister as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>As for your further deportment in Fez, . . . . keep in mind that
+you will soon have to co-operate with the French representative. We
+regard the concessions offered by the Sultan as desirable, but can
+accept them only if they are not in contradiction to the future
+decisions of the conference. Therefore . . . . delay making a
+decision about these offers. . . . .<a id=
+"FNanchor_808"></a><a href="#Footnote_808" class=
+"fnanchor">[808]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind"><span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_262">[262]</span>Nevertheless, the Chancellor planned for the
+conference to divide the police and military mandate in Morocco
+among the Powers in such a way that France would receive the
+mandate for the frontier region only, while Germany would receive
+it for “the western coastal towns from Rabat south . . . . as
+suitable for a future German sphere of interest.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_809"></a><a href="#Footnote_809" class=
+"fnanchor">[809]</a> Furthermore, he expected Germany to receive
+her share of the economic advantages in the development of the
+entire land.<a id="FNanchor_810"></a><a href="#Footnote_810" class=
+"fnanchor">[810]</a></p>
+
+<p>To achieve these ends the German foreign office appointed Count
+Tattenbach as its representative at the conference,<a id=
+"FNanchor_811"></a><a href="#Footnote_811" class=
+"fnanchor">[811]</a> even though he was highly objectionable to the
+French. It also instructed Prince Radolin on July 10 to inform M.
+Rouvier either directly or indirectly that “the desired
+understanding would be placed seriously in doubt” if he did not
+exclude M. Delcassé’s followers, such as M. Paul Cambon and M.
+Georges Louis,<a id="FNanchor_812"></a><a href="#Footnote_812"
+class="fnanchor">[812]</a> from influence upon French foreign
+policy, or if he should appoint M. Révoil, former governor of
+Algeria and a reputed Germanophobe, as a delegate to the
+conference.<a id="FNanchor_813"></a><a href="#Footnote_813" class=
+"fnanchor">[813]</a> Prince Radolin was also to uphold Tangier as a
+meeting place for the assembly; for the German government believed
+that the anti-French and pro-German influence of the Moroccans
+would be more strongly exerted there than in some European
+town.<a id="FNanchor_814"></a><a href="#Footnote_814" class=
+"fnanchor">[814]</a> When the Ambassador stated his government’s
+requests to MM. Dupuy and<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_263">[263]</span> Léon, both men begged him “not to put the
+pistol to M. Rouvier’s breast too sharply.” M. Rouvier was having
+enough difficulty with public opinion, they said.<a id=
+"FNanchor_815"></a><a href="#Footnote_815" class=
+"fnanchor">[815]</a> The German government asked President
+Roosevelt to support its views about M. Révoil and about Tangier,
+but this time, after consulting the French government, the
+President refused.<a id="FNanchor_816"></a><a href="#Footnote_816"
+class="fnanchor">[816]</a> M. Rouvier chose M. Révoil in spite of
+German opposition. Furthermore, asserting that Tangier was a
+dangerous hotbed of intrigue, he urged the choice of some European
+town.<a id="FNanchor_817"></a><a href="#Footnote_817" class=
+"fnanchor">[817]</a> By the end of July the German government was
+willing to acquiesce, although for bargaining purposes it reserved
+its public consent until later.<a id="FNanchor_818"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_818" class="fnanchor">[818]</a></p>
+
+<p>It was not M. Rouvier’s determined stand which induced this
+acquiescence, but rather the unexpected signing by the German and
+Russian rulers of the Björkö treaty of alliance on July 24.<a id=
+"FNanchor_819"></a><a href="#Footnote_819" class=
+"fnanchor">[819]</a> This treaty, which provided for the later
+association of France in the alliance, was signed by both
+sovereigns under the impression that the Franco-German agreement of
+July 8 had settled the Moroccan affair and had cleared the way for
+a <em>rapprochement</em>. In view of this changed situation Prince
+Bülow, on July 31, instructed the foreign office as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>1. We must reserve the possibility of permitting France a free
+hand in Morocco at the moment in which she has to decide about
+joining the Russo-German understanding. A better use of Morocco we
+could hardly find and that would be by far the most favorable close
+of our Moroccan campaign. 2. To attain this we need not relinquish
+too early our general position on the Moroccan question. But the
+French need not believe that our aim was ultimately to set foot in
+Morocco. It appears to me more advisable to permit the Moroccan
+question to rest for a time rather than to hasten it. Pushing or
+threatening at this moment on account of Morocco would only
+press<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[264]</span> France still
+closer to England and at the same time cause the Emperor Nicholas
+to suspect that directly after Björkö he is to be forced to choose
+between us and France.<a id="FNanchor_820"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_820" class="fnanchor">[820]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>In keeping with this policy, Prince Bülow, Baron Richthofen, and
+Herr von Mühlberg all absented themselves from Berlin during the
+succeeding days, and left Count Pourtales, Prussian minister in
+Munich, in charge of the foreign office. As he was not in touch
+with the negotiations, Herr von Holstein and Dr. Kriege, the legal
+adviser, directed affairs. While the “Grey Eminence” approved the
+new direction to be given to the Moroccan policy,<a id=
+"FNanchor_821"></a><a href="#Footnote_821" class=
+"fnanchor">[821]</a> he seemed entirely unable to relinquish a
+stand once taken or to sacrifice details for the achievement of a
+larger end. When his blunders brought him to the point of having to
+retreat or fight, he preferred <em>Machtpolitik</em>. Neither he
+nor his chief realized that some form of settlement of the Moroccan
+affair was necessary to allay French and British mistrust, and that
+their new policy of delay would prolong the period of crisis. This
+was particularly the case since the policy continued to lack unity.
+Herr von Holstein, Dr. Kriege, the Emperor, Count Tattenbach—each
+had his particular addition to make, whether it harmonized with the
+whole or not; and the gracious Prince Bülow, successor to Bismarck,
+accepted all contributions.</p>
+
+<p>The most striking example of this lack of harmony was manifested
+by Count Tattenbach at Fez. Early in August the news spread that
+the Count had been instrumental in persuading the Moroccan
+government to grant to the German firm of Bourgeaud-Hansemann on
+July 30 a contract for building a mole in the harbor of Tangier at
+the price of 1,300,000 marks. It was also rumored that he was
+aiding negotiations between the Sultan and a group of German banks
+for a loan of 10,000,000 marks.<a id="FNanchor_822"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_822" class="fnanchor">[822]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[265]</span>The French press
+indignantly accused the German government of double-dealing. <em>Le
+Temps</em> noted that Count Tattenbach had been recalled from
+Morocco several years before for a similar indiscretion. Germany
+had accused France, it said, of wishing to make a second Tunis of
+Morocco; but France did not intend to let Germany make a second
+Turkey of it. It asked that Germany again deal severely with Count
+Tattenbach. M. Clémenceau in <em>L’Aurore</em> spoke bluntly in an
+article entitled “No Dupery,” and a few days later, even more
+strongly in one headed “C’est trop.” The press also attacked M.
+Rouvier for permitting the Germans to hoodwink him. If Parliament
+had been sitting, his position might have been precarious.<a id=
+"FNanchor_823"></a><a href="#Footnote_823" class=
+"fnanchor">[823]</a></p>
+
+<p>These criticisms were undeserved. M. Rouvier had made every
+effort to prevent the concessions from being given. Both he and the
+British government had tried to block the negotiations as soon as
+reports of them came through. When the definite fact of the mole
+concession became known, M. Rouvier, supported by Lord Lansdowne,
+immediately strengthened his protests to the German government
+against Count Tattenbach’s actions. He declared that they infringed
+upon French rights,<a id="FNanchor_824"></a><a href="#Footnote_824"
+class="fnanchor">[824]</a> that they were a breach of faith and a
+violation of the spirit of the accord<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_266">[266]</span> of July 8, that they endangered the success
+of the conference, the harmony of Franco-German relations, and his
+own position as minister. It was not his fault, he said angrily,
+that Franco-German relations continued to be strained. He urged
+that the project for a loan be blocked, or if this were impossible,
+that the German government agree to repayment of the loan with
+funds from the Moroccan state bank to be established. The question
+whether the German or a French firm had a prior right to the
+contract for the mole, he asserted, should be left in abeyance
+until the conference should regulate the method of granting
+contracts for public works.<a id="FNanchor_825"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_825" class="fnanchor">[825]</a> The Spanish government
+was equally angry at Germany because of Count Tattenbach’s acts. On
+August 23 M. Montero Rios poured out his wrath to the French
+Ambassador over Germany’s trampling on Spanish interests in
+Morocco. It was generally understood, he said, that Northern
+Morocco was reserved to Spain. Yet, he continued indignantly,
+Germany had acquired concessions in that area and had obtained a
+mortgage on the lands around Tangier.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>Under all these provocations . . . . Spain had to remain mute
+[so the British ambassador reported his remarks]. France was the
+mouthpiece of the three Powers who were working together to save
+the situation in Morocco and His Excellency [M. Montero Rios]
+expressed an earnest hope that she would not yield all along the
+line to German pressure and would bear in mind what were the modest
+but real interests of Spain in Morocco. Señor Montero Rios
+concluded . . . . by bringing down his fist upon the table and
+saying, “we shall not forget what Germany has done to us on this
+occasion.”</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">When M. Jules Cambon warned the German Ambassador
+in Madrid on August 23 that “it might become necessary for
+the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[267]</span> Powers mainly
+interested in Morocco to insist that all concessions recently
+obtained should be examined by the Conference before they were
+finally ratified,” M. Montero Rios heartily approved and
+volunteered to speak in like manner to Herr von Radowitz.<a id=
+"FNanchor_826"></a><a href="#Footnote_826" class=
+"fnanchor">[826]</a></p>
+
+<p>The German government itself supported the loan in order to
+strengthen its hold over the Sultan and to calm his fears about
+Germany’s separate negotiations with France. The contract for the
+mole surprised and embarrassed Prince Bülow. He reprimanded Count
+Tattenbach for having transgressed his instructions and warned him
+to abide by them in the future.<a id="FNanchor_827"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_827" class="fnanchor">[827]</a> Nevertheless, he upheld
+both transactions against the French complaints. He asserted to M.
+Rouvier that the negotiations for the contract had been under way
+for several months.<a id="FNanchor_828"></a><a href="#Footnote_828"
+class="fnanchor">[828]</a> He claimed that the loan was not a
+“loan” but a harmless temporary “advance” which could be repaid at
+any time. Repeating the assurances of Germany’s disinterestedness
+in Morocco and of friendship for France, the German government
+refused M. Rouvier’s suggestions for an understanding about these
+two affairs and was unable to comprehend the French
+excitement.<a id="FNanchor_829"></a><a href="#Footnote_829" class=
+"fnanchor">[829]</a> As M. Rouvier felt that the facts spoke
+otherwise, the two governments reached an <em>impasse</em> by the
+first of September.</p>
+
+<p>At the same time the two governments came to a deadlock over the
+choice of a meeting place and the terms of the program for the
+conference. Although M. Rouvier submitted proposals<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_268">[268]</span> about military and financial
+reforms on July 20 and August 1, respectively,<a id=
+"FNanchor_830"></a><a href="#Footnote_830" class=
+"fnanchor">[830]</a> Germany did not reply until August 26. The
+delay was caused by the necessity of consulting Count Tattenbach,
+but the French government and press suspected that Germany was
+uneasy about possible defeat at the conference and was therefore
+putting France off so as to gain concessions from the Sultan.<a id=
+"FNanchor_831"></a><a href="#Footnote_831" class=
+"fnanchor">[831]</a> In its answer the German government accepted
+the main lines of the French proposal, but refused to permit France
+to settle directly with Morocco the regulation of the police in the
+region of the frontier, and also declined to give way on the choice
+of Tangier as a meeting place. The German government planned for
+the conference to restrict France’s interest in Morocco to this
+frontier region.<a id="FNanchor_832"></a><a href="#Footnote_832"
+class="fnanchor">[832]</a> But, on August 30, M. Rouvier met
+rejection with rejection. To permit the conference to decide upon
+the reorganization of the frontier region would, he wrote in a note
+to Prince Radolin, mean sacrificing an advantage and a right which
+France had enjoyed for sixty years.<a id=
+"FNanchor_833"></a><a href="#Footnote_833" class=
+"fnanchor">[833]</a></p>
+
+<p>On the question of a meeting place M. Rouvier urged the Spanish
+government early in August to propose formally to the Powers that
+the conference be held in Spain. Thereby he would exert pressure on
+Germany to relinquish Tangier. M. Montero Rios<span class="pagenum"
+id="Page_269">[269]</span> was eager to obtain the honor for his
+country, but fearing a rejection of the proposal, he hesitated to
+make it. Under French and British persuasion, however, he
+dispatched a verbal note to France and Germany offering some town
+in Southwest Spain for the conference. As the German government
+made no reply, M. Montero Rios was “deeply hurt” at the
+“high-handed and discourteous manner” in which Germany was treating
+Spain.<a id="FNanchor_834"></a><a href="#Footnote_834" class=
+"fnanchor">[834]</a></p>
+
+<p>With affairs so confused, the Chancellor interfered. He sent Dr.
+Rosen, the future minister at Tangier, to Paris for direct
+negotiations. In reporting this intention to M. Bihourd on
+September 4, Prince Bülow expressed in general terms his desire for
+an entente and spoke of the mole and the loan as insignificant. But
+he declared that there was a line beyond which “German dignity”
+would not permit him to go and that if this attempt failed “we
+would be placed again in the situation which obtained before the
+accord of July 8.”<a id="FNanchor_835"></a><a href="#Footnote_835"
+class="fnanchor">[835]</a></p>
+
+<p>Dr. Rosen, who was entirely unfamiliar with the history of the
+negotiations when he started to Paris, soon concluded that a change
+of policy was necessary. In France he found that both government
+and people were mistrustful, fast becoming embittered, and yet
+strongly desirous of a speedy settlement of the controversy. On
+September 8 he telegraphed to the Chancellor his opinion that the
+German government had already given assurances to France which
+entitled her to expect that the regulation of the frontier region
+would be excluded from the deliberations of the conference, and
+that to move her from this view would require “the speech of
+cannons” and not “juristic deductions.” He therefore proposed to
+regard this point as lost and to prevent France from spreading her
+influence further into Morocco by obtaining an exact definition of
+the limits of the frontier region. On the choice of a meeting
+place, he advised making<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_270">[270]</span> concessions after all else was settled; the
+contract for the mole he would handle as a “bagatelle.” He foresaw
+greater difficulty in regard to the loan, which the French
+considered an act of duplicity; but he stated to Prince Bülow that
+he would endeavor to uphold it even though he regarded as untenable
+the German distinction between a “loan” and an “advance.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_836"></a><a href="#Footnote_836" class=
+"fnanchor">[836]</a></p>
+
+<p>Dr. Rosen’s opinion, which Prince Radolin had held for some
+time, turned the scales. “As it appears to me,” wrote the
+Chancellor to Baron Richthofen on September 8, “we need above all
+to extricate ourselves from this Moroccan affair, which has
+apparently become confused, in such a way as to maintain our
+prestige in the world and to preserve the German economic and
+financial interests intact as much as possible.” He accepted Dr.
+Rosen’s proposals. Germany should yield on the questions of the
+frontier and the meeting place, and France on those of the mole and
+the loan.<a id="FNanchor_837"></a><a href="#Footnote_837" class=
+"fnanchor">[837]</a></p>
+
+<p>The ensuing negotiations, carried on by Dr. Rosen mainly with M.
+Révoil, were replete with dramatic moments.<a id=
+"FNanchor_838"></a><a href="#Footnote_838" class=
+"fnanchor">[838]</a> By September 16, the two men reached agreement
+on most of the points. But when Dr. Rosen learned from M. Révoil
+that France expected to obtain at the conference a general mandate
+for the financial and police reforms in the whole of Morocco, he
+made the concession on the frontier question contingent upon an
+official French disclaimer of that intention.<a id=
+"FNanchor_839"></a><a href="#Footnote_839" class=
+"fnanchor">[839]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[271]</span>M. Rouvier
+rejected this demand. He offered several times to compensate
+Germany for her renunciation in Morocco by including other
+questions in the negotiations, such as those of the Bagdad and the
+Camerun railways.<a id="FNanchor_840"></a><a href="#Footnote_840"
+class="fnanchor">[840]</a> Dr. Rosen declined to broaden the basis
+of the negotiations, however, and threatened to break them off
+(although in reality he had no intention of doing so) if the French
+persisted in their denial of his request.<a id=
+"FNanchor_841"></a><a href="#Footnote_841" class=
+"fnanchor">[841]</a> When the French press began to attack Germany,
+the Chancellor warned M. Rouvier repeatedly that “if the French
+imagine that they can intimidate us or even publicly humiliate us,
+they are playing a dangerous game which can lead to war.”
+Conditions were much as they had been three months before.<a id=
+"FNanchor_842"></a><a href="#Footnote_842" class=
+"fnanchor">[842]</a> Then the sudden intervention of M. Witte
+changed the situation.</p>
+
+<p>Returning from Portsmouth, where he had represented Russia in
+the negotiations for peace with Japan, M. Witte stopped in Paris to
+arrange a loan for Russia. In discussing the project with M.
+Rouvier, he was told that France could not consider the loan until
+the conflict with Germany was settled.<a id=
+"FNanchor_843"></a><a href="#Footnote_843" class=
+"fnanchor">[843]</a> Since he was interested in a quick solution of
+the Moroccan difficulty and since he favored a
+<em>rapprochement</em> between Russia, Germany, and France against
+Great Britain,<a id="FNanchor_844"></a><a href="#Footnote_844"
+class="fnanchor">[844]</a> M. Witte discussed matters with his
+friend Prince Radolin on the morning of September 23. Immediately
+after this conversation M. Witte saw the French Premier, and at the
+latter’s request returned that afternoon to urge the French views
+upon the German Ambassador. M. Rouvier was willing, M. Witte said
+to Prince Radolin, to give verbally the most formal declaration
+that he would not seek a mandate for<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_272">[272]</span> Western Morocco at the conference, but
+since M. Rouvier believed that French public opinion would never
+accept a written one, he would rather resign than give it. Germany
+was sufficiently protected against that possibility in any case,
+the Premier had argued to M. Witte, by the requirement of unanimity
+in the conference. M. Rouvier had also promised, said M. Witte, to
+co-operate harmoniously with Germany at the assembly. M. Witte
+found a sympathetic listener in Prince Radolin, who was disgusted
+with Dr. Rosen’s policy. When later in the same afternoon the
+Prince, Dr. Rosen, and M. Rouvier met for further discussion, the
+Ambassador openly supported the French side. Hence Dr. Rosen had to
+yield.<a id="FNanchor_845"></a><a href="#Footnote_845" class=
+"fnanchor">[845]</a></p>
+
+<p>From Paris M. Witte went to Germany. At Berlin on September 25
+he persuaded the Chancellor to accept M. Rouvier’s views;<a id=
+"FNanchor_846"></a><a href="#Footnote_846" class=
+"fnanchor">[846]</a> and at Rominten on September 27-28 he was even
+more successful with the Emperor William II, who immediately
+telegraphed to Prince Bülow as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>Bring Rosen to reason so that that disgusting quarreling in
+Paris will cease. I am completely fed up on it . . . . [<em>Ich
+habe es gründlich satt</em>]. France must now . . . . be shown
+friendship and be permitted to save her face so that she will
+remain without rancour and will complete the turn necessary to
+bring her into our alliance.<a id="FNanchor_847"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_847" class="fnanchor">[847]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>As a result of M. Witte’s intervention, the two Powers reached
+an understanding on September 28.<a id="FNanchor_848"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_848" class="fnanchor">[848]</a> They agreed that the
+program for the conference should provide for police reform and the
+suppression of contraband traffic in arms by way of an
+international accord, except in the frontier region where the
+execution of that action should remain “the exclusive affair” of
+France<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[273]</span> and Morocco.
+A Moroccan state bank should be created, the Moroccan monetary
+system be stabilized, and funds be advanced for paying the police
+and for carrying out certain urgent public works. Improved methods
+of collecting the customs and of raising revenues should be
+provided. The Sultan should engage not to alienate any public
+service to the profit of particular interests. The principle of
+adjudication without regard to nationality should be followed in
+giving contracts for the construction of public works. The
+conference should meet at Algeciras in Spain. In a supplementary
+understanding the French government acknowledged the German “loan”
+to be an “advance”; but, while the control of that transaction
+should remain in German hands, the French banks were permitted to
+furnish one-half the sum necessary.<a id=
+"FNanchor_849"></a><a href="#Footnote_849" class=
+"fnanchor">[849]</a> The German government also agreed that an
+investigation of the relative rights of the French and German firms
+to the contract for the mole should be made, although it was
+tacitly understood that the German firm would win.<a id=
+"FNanchor_850"></a><a href="#Footnote_850" class=
+"fnanchor">[850]</a></p>
+
+<p>To make doubly sure that, apart from this agreement, France
+would have her hands free at the conference, M. Rouvier made the
+following declaration to the German government:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>Aside from the agreement to be signed between the two
+governments, I am not bound on any point. I renew my affirmation
+that I have to the same degree as the Imperial Government the
+desire to avoid all open discord between us at the conference and
+to co-operate in effecting the solutions that respect best the
+interests and <em>amours propres</em>, in such a way that there
+will be neither victor nor vanquished. . . . . The guarantee for
+Germany lies in the fact that, since the decisions of the
+conference must be unanimous, her opposition will suffice to
+prevent the general mandate from being given to us.<a id=
+"FNanchor_851"></a><a href="#Footnote_851" class=
+"fnanchor">[851]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[274]</span>M.
+Rouvier thereby changed the statement transmitted by M. Witte to
+Prince Radolin that France would not strive for a mandate for
+Western Morocco to a less binding one which would leave France free
+to seek a mandate if she thought that Germany could be coerced into
+agreeing. This ambiguity was to cause trouble later.</p>
+
+<p>The Sultan’s approval of this program was obtained with some
+difficulty. The monarch and his advisers were very diffident about
+reforms and feared what the outcome of the conference might be.
+They besieged Count Tattenbach with questions about the program,
+wanting to know why Morocco had been excluded from the
+negotiations, what the various clauses in it would result in,
+whether France would after all succeed in her object by way of the
+conference. Count Tattenbach, who was practically unsupported by
+the French Minister, replied that Morocco could not survive without
+reforms, that Germany would defend Morocco’s independence and
+integrity. As none of the Sultan’s advisers would shoulder the risk
+of approving the program to their master, Count Tattenbach had to
+do so. By October 22 he succeeded in his work. On December 1 the
+Sultan issued a circular letter inviting the signatory Powers to
+the conference.<a id="FNanchor_852"></a><a href="#Footnote_852"
+class="fnanchor">[852]</a> The invitations were accepted.</p>
+
+<p>On September 29, in reporting the conclusion of the
+Franco-German agreement, Dr. Rosen mentioned to his government for
+the first time the offers which M. Rouvier had made to include in
+the settlement the difficulties over the Bagdad and Camerun
+railways. Prince Bülow was immediately eager to open
+negotiations.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>At the present time we must use every opportunity to create
+solidarity of interest between France and us [he instructed the
+foreign office on the next day]. Under the present circumstances
+every African agreement with France is useful to us. Naturally far
+more useful would be an understanding over<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_275">[275]</span> the Bagdad Railway. We must always take
+into consideration the inclination of the English to come to terms
+with Russia over Asia Minor, whereby we would eventually be placed
+in the dilemma of suffering a defeat on the question of the Bagdad
+Railway or of arousing acute antagonism between Russia and us.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">But, the Chancellor added, Germany must not show
+undue eagerness in the matter.<a id="FNanchor_853"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_853" class="fnanchor">[853]</a></p>
+
+<p>When Prince Radolin broached the subject to the French Premier
+on October 18, the latter replied that he had offered “an even more
+far-reaching agreement” at a time when he had hoped to settle the
+Moroccan affair without a conference, but that under the
+circumstances he would consider the project only after the
+conference.<a id="FNanchor_854"></a><a href="#Footnote_854" class=
+"fnanchor">[854]</a> That the Chancellor could have expected any
+other reply showed how little understanding he had of the French
+state of mind.</p>
+
+<p>Prince Bülow manifested the same obtuseness in an interview with
+M. Tardieu of <em>Le Temps</em> on October 3 as a bid for
+friendlier relations with France. Repeating all the German
+criticisms of the French policy, the Chancellor declared:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>I think that the conference, far from dividing us, ought to
+contribute to a <em>rapprochement</em> between us. For that
+<em>rapprochement</em>, however, one condition is necessary: that
+French public opinion thoroughly recognize that the policy of
+isolating Germany is an object of the past. . . . . Today as
+yesterday, provided your colonial policy respects our commercial
+interests . . . . we will not obstruct you, but in case of need
+will aid you in Morocco and elsewhere.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">He denied that Germany sought to force upon France
+an anti-British policy and that Germany had any ulterior motives in
+her friendship with Russia. He summed up the international
+situation as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>A double system of alliances, both pacific, assures equilibrium
+in Europe. On those alliances we can and must superimpose
+friendships. You are<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_276">[276]</span> friends with Italy: nothing is better. We
+are friends of Russia: it is perfect. But we must not give to the
+Franco-Italian <em>rapprochement</em> an anti-German character or
+to the Russo-German <em>rapprochement</em> an anti-French
+character.<a id="FNanchor_855"></a><a href="#Footnote_855" class=
+"fnanchor">[855]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>In spite of the Chancellor’s attempt at conciliation, French
+public opinion did not like the “schoolmaster” tone of his remarks
+and saw therein “the proof that the Moroccan incident had been only
+a pretext to intervene in the direction given to France’s foreign
+policy and to force France to modify it.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_856"></a><a href="#Footnote_856" class=
+"fnanchor">[856]</a> In fact, not a single French newspaper spoke
+well of the German policy.<a id="FNanchor_857"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_857" class="fnanchor">[857]</a> Rather, <em>Le
+Matin</em> took occasion on October 5 to publish revelations to the
+effect that at the crucial French cabinet meeting of June 6 M.
+Delcassé had declared that</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">England was ready, whatever might happen, to aid
+France if the latter were the object of an unforeseen and
+improbable aggression. [It was further asserted in the article
+that] England, in effect, informed the Government of the Republic
+verbally that if France were attacked, she was ready to mobilize
+her fleet, to seize the Kiel Canal, and to land 100,000 men in
+Schleswig-Holstein. The French Government was even told later that
+if it so desired, that offer would be made in writing.<a id=
+"FNanchor_858"></a><a href="#Footnote_858" class=
+"fnanchor">[858]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The reports were denied by M. Delcassé and by the French and
+British governments.<a id="FNanchor_859"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_859" class="fnanchor">[859]</a> But the <em>London
+Times</em> and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[277]</span>
+French press believed the first part of the revelations, although
+the <em>Times</em> regarded the latter part as gossip.<a id=
+"FNanchor_860"></a><a href="#Footnote_860" class=
+"fnanchor">[860]</a></p>
+
+<p>In Germany these revelations provoked an outburst of
+indignation. Still at odds with King Edward VII, the Emperor wanted
+to recall Count Metternich for an indefinite leave of absence
+unless the British government gave a satisfactory explanation of
+the disclosures.<a id="FNanchor_861"></a><a href="#Footnote_861"
+class="fnanchor">[861]</a> But Prince Bülow knew that the Emperor’s
+suggestion could not be carried out merely on the basis of
+newspaper talk. In fact, he did not believe that the revelations
+were accurate.<a id="FNanchor_862"></a><a href="#Footnote_862"
+class="fnanchor">[862]</a> Still he seized the opportunity to
+relieve his own position with German public opinion by giving
+instructions for the German press to accept the revelations as
+true. By these means M. Delcassé should be represented as having
+used the Moroccan affair to bring on a war with Germany, while
+Great Britain should be accused of inciting the French to unleash a
+world-war. The press should state that Germany had never thought of
+attacking France, of drawing France to her by force, or of playing
+France against Great Britain. “It is important that the German
+public understand how grave the international situation is, how
+necessary it is to be armed, and how wretched, in view of the
+seriousness of the world situation, party conflicts and the usual
+Philistine pettifogging appear.” By so using the press, the
+Chancellor wrote, “we embarrass our enemies in England and bring
+advantage to our naval proposals.”<a id="FNanchor_863"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_863" class="fnanchor">[863]</a> Moreover, on October 26,
+when the Emperor dedicated a statue to Field-Marshal Count Moltke,
+he declared: “How we stand in the world you have seen. Therefore,
+the powder dry, the sword sharp, the goal known, the forces braced,
+and the pessimist banished, I drink to our nation in arms.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_864"></a><a href="#Footnote_864" class=
+"fnanchor">[864]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[278]</span>Here were the
+fruits of two months and a half of tedious and irritating
+negotiations. Starting with the assurance that the conference would
+meet and that the reforms would be internationally executed,
+Germany ended with the same assurance, a half-share in a loan of
+10,000,000 marks and a petty contract for a mole. She began with
+the intention of winning France for the sake of completing a
+continental alliance with Russia; but by her blundering
+mismanagement of the Moroccan affair she ruined any chance for
+doing so. In June the victorious Germany had confronted a France
+fearful of war and subject to pressure. Since then Germany herself
+had been constantly receding before the determination of a united
+French nation. In June M. Rouvier had endeavored to “save France’s
+face”; by September, Prince Bülow was trying to “save Germany’s
+face.” The tables were turned.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes" id="ftc14">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_801"></a><a href="#FNanchor_801"><span class=
+"label">[801]</span></a>Rouvier to Bihourd, July 9, 1905, <em>L.j.,
+1901-5</em>, 249, No. 285.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_802"></a><a href="#FNanchor_802"><span class=
+"label">[802]</span></a>It was Lansdowne’s suggestion that Spain be
+included. See Lansdowne to Bertie, July 12 and 13, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 118 ff., Nos. 152 f.; Cambon to Lansdowne, July
+20, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 121 f., No. 157; Lansdowne to Manneville,
+July 21, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 122, No. 158.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_803"></a><a href="#FNanchor_803"><span class=
+"label">[803]</span></a>Nicolson to Lansdowne, D. June 29, 1905, R.
+July 10, 1905, D. July 1, 1905, R. July 10, 1905, July 7 and 11,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 109 f., No. 136; 111 f., No. 138; 114, No.
+144; 116, No. 148; Lansdowne to Nicolson, July 8, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 114 f., No. 145; Lansdowne to Bertie, July 12,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 119, No. 152.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_804"></a><a href="#FNanchor_804"><span class=
+"label">[804]</span></a>Nothing is known of these negotiations. See
+Vidal, <em>La politique de l’Espagne au Maroc</em>, pp. 172 ff.;
+Mousset, <em>La politica exterior de España 1873-1918</em>, pp. 162
+f.; Tardieu, <em>Revue des deux mondes</em>, Dec., 1912, p. 640;
+<em>La Conf. d’Algés.</em>, pp. 58 ff., 156.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_805"></a><a href="#FNanchor_805"><span class=
+"label">[805]</span></a>The accord is reprinted in <em>Archives
+diplomatiques</em>, CXX (1911), 15 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_806"></a><a href="#FNanchor_806"><span class=
+"label">[806]</span></a>Lansdowne to Lister, Aug. 30, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 131, No. 173; Cartwright to Lansdowne, Sept. 4
+and 7, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 136, No. 175; 137 f., No. 177; Cambon
+to Lansdowne, Sept. 6, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 136 f., No. 176;
+Lansdowne to Cambon, Sept. 9, 1907, <em>ibid.</em>, 138, No.
+179.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_807"></a><a href="#FNanchor_807"><span class=
+"label">[807]</span></a>Tattenbach to F. O., June 16, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 444 f., Nos. 6714 f; Tattenbach to F. O., June
+23 and 25, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, pp. 524 f. n.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_808"></a><a href="#FNanchor_808"><span class=
+"label">[808]</span></a>Bülow to Tattenbach, June 19 and 20, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 448 ff., No. 6718 f.; Bülow to Tattenbach, July 11,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 524 ff., No. 6774.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_809"></a><a href="#FNanchor_809"><span class=
+"label">[809]</span></a>Tattenbach to F. O., June 25, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, p. 525 n.; Bülow to Tattenbach, June 19, July 11,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 450, No. 6718; 525 f., No. 6774.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_810"></a><a href="#FNanchor_810"><span class=
+"label">[810]</span></a>Tattenbach had visions of persuading the
+Sultan to transfer his residence from Fez to Marrakech where he
+would be under German influence after Morocco was divided, and
+where Germany could then secure the appointment of Germans as the
+Sultan’s military instructors (Tattenbach to F. O., June 25, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, p. 525 n.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_811"></a><a href="#FNanchor_811"><span class=
+"label">[811]</span></a>Bülow to Tattenbach, July 11, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 524, No. 6774.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_812"></a><a href="#FNanchor_812"><span class=
+"label">[812]</span></a>Georges Louis was the political director of
+the French foreign office.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_813"></a><a href="#FNanchor_813"><span class=
+"label">[813]</span></a>Richthofen to Radolin, July 10, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 521 f., No. 6771; Holstein to Radolin, July 10,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 523, No. 6772.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_814"></a><a href="#FNanchor_814"><span class=
+"label">[814]</span></a>Mühlberg to Wedel, July 13, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 526 f., No. 6775; Bülow to William II, Aug. 3,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 537, No. 6786. This choice was also desired
+by the Moroccan government for its own convenience (Lowther to
+Lansdowne, July 24, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 123, No. 161).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_815"></a><a href="#FNanchor_815"><span class=
+"label">[815]</span></a>Radolin to F. O., July 14, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 527, No. 6776.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_816"></a><a href="#FNanchor_816"><span class=
+"label">[816]</span></a>Bussche-Haddenhausen to F. O., July 25 and
+30, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 528 f., No. 6778; 529, No. 6779; Bishop,
+<em>The Life and Times of Theodore Roosevelt</em>, I, 488.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_817"></a><a href="#FNanchor_817"><span class=
+"label">[817]</span></a>His view was actively supported by the
+British government. Lansdowne to Bertie, July 12, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 119, No. 152; Lansdowne to Lowther, July 28,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 123, No. 163.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_818"></a><a href="#FNanchor_818"><span class=
+"label">[818]</span></a>Bülow to William II, Aug. 3, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 537, No. 6786.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_819"></a><a href="#FNanchor_819"><span class=
+"label">[819]</span></a>See <a href="#c15">next chapter.</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_820"></a><a href="#FNanchor_820"><span class=
+"label">[820]</span></a>Bülow to F. O., July 31, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 531 f., No. 6782. Holstein expressed the same
+opinion.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_821"></a><a href="#FNanchor_821"><span class=
+"label">[821]</span></a>Holstein to Bülow, July 26, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XIX, 468 ff., No. 6223.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_822"></a><a href="#FNanchor_822"><span class=
+"label">[822]</span></a>The loan was proposed to the German banking
+house, Mendelssohn & Co., by an English firm in Tangier, Moses
+Pariente, in April, 1905. A syndicate of German banks, among them
+the Bleichröder group, the Mendelssohn group, the Disconto
+Gesellschaft, the Berliner Handels-Gesellschaft, was formed to make
+it. The loan, under negotiation during the summer and early autumn
+of 1905, was concluded on Oct. 4, 1905 (Schulthess,
+<em>Europäischer Geschichtskalender 1905</em>, p. 306). It was a
+purely temporary one to be guaranteed by some of the Sultan’s
+personal property in land, a fact which alarmed the French even
+more because it denoted a possible German design to acquire
+possession of territory in Morocco. On the matters of the mole and
+loan see the following: Chérisey to Rouvier, Aug. 1, 1905,
+<em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 260, No. 295; Saint-Aulaire to Rouvier, Aug.
+14, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 267 f., No. 304; note signed by the
+French and German representatives, Sept. 28, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>,
+307 f., No. 352; Holstein to Radolin, Aug. 14, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>,
+XX, 540 ff., No. 6789; Pourtales to Radolin, Aug. 19, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 542 f., No. 6790; <em>Bulletin</em>, Aug., 1905, p.
+299.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_823"></a><a href="#FNanchor_823"><span class=
+"label">[823]</span></a>Radolin to Bülow, Aug. 29, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 549 ff., Nos. 6794 f.; Lister to Lansdowne, Aug.
+2 and 15, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 126, No. 167; 128 f., No.
+170.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_824"></a><a href="#FNanchor_824"><span class=
+"label">[824]</span></a>A French firm had been surveying and making
+estimates for some months with a view to obtaining that same
+contract as well as other contracts for the improvement of the
+Moroccan harbors. The French claimed that by Art. XXXIII of the
+contract between the Sultan and the French consortium of banks in
+the previous year the latter had been given a priority right to
+make all future loans to Morocco.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_825"></a><a href="#FNanchor_825"><span class=
+"label">[825]</span></a>Rouvier to Radolin, July 29, 1905,
+<em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 254 f., No. 292, and following documents;
+Bülow to Radolin, Aug. 3, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 533 ff., No.
+6784, and following documents; Lansdowne to Whitehead, Aug. 1,
+1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 125 f., No. 166; Lansdowne to Lowther,
+June 23 and 26, July 19 and 31, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 100, No. 128;
+101, No. 130; 120 f., No. 155; 124 f., No. 165.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_826"></a><a href="#FNanchor_826"><span class=
+"label">[826]</span></a>So Cambon informed Cartwright (Cartwright
+to Lansdowne, Aug. 24, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 130, No. 172).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_827"></a><a href="#FNanchor_827"><span class=
+"label">[827]</span></a>Mühlberg to Tattenbach, Aug. 3, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 535 f., No. 6786.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_828"></a><a href="#FNanchor_828"><span class=
+"label">[828]</span></a>Tattenbach and Kühlmann both supported the
+contract for the mole, which, it was found, the Emperor had also
+approved. See Holstein to Radolin, Aug. 18, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>,
+540, No. 6789; telegram from Tattenbach, June 25, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, p. 525 n.; Lowther to Lansdowne, June 23 and 25,
+July 19 and 31, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 100, No. 128; 101, No.
+130; 120 f., No. 155; 124 f., No. 165.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_829"></a><a href="#FNanchor_829"><span class=
+"label">[829]</span></a>Bülow to Radolin, Aug. 3, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 533 ff., No. 6784, and the following documents.
+Also Bihourd to Rouvier, Aug. 1, 1905, <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 260
+f., No. 296; note handed by Radolin to the French government, Aug.
+4, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 262 f., No. 298 and following
+documents.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_830"></a><a href="#FNanchor_830"><span class=
+"label">[830]</span></a>Rouvier to Radolin, July 20, Aug. 1, 1905,
+<em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 253 f., No. 290; 253 f., No. 294; 256 ff.,
+No. 294; Radolin to F. O., July 20, Aug. 2, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>,
+XX, 528, No. 6777; 532 f., No. 6783.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_831"></a><a href="#FNanchor_831"><span class=
+"label">[831]</span></a>Lister to Lansdowne, Aug. 15, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 128, No. 170.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_832"></a><a href="#FNanchor_832"><span class=
+"label">[832]</span></a>Bülow to F. O., Aug. 3, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 537 f., No. 6787; Mühlberg to Tattenbach, Aug.
+6, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 538 ff., No. 6788; Bülow to Radolin, Aug.
+22, dispatched Aug. 24, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 544 ff., No. 6792;
+Radolin to Rouvier, Aug. 26, 1905, <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 283 ff.,
+No. 323; memo. by Kriege, Sept. 3, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 554
+ff., No. 6798.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_833"></a><a href="#FNanchor_833"><span class=
+"label">[833]</span></a>Rouvier to Radolin, Aug. 30, 1905,
+<em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 290 ff., No. 331; Radolin to Bülow, Aug. 29,
+1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 549 ff., No. 6794; Radolin to F. O., Aug.
+31, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 552 ff., Nos. 6796 f.; papers
+communicated by M. Geoffray, Sept. 1, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 131
+ff., No. 174. In one matter during August the German government
+had, to its embarrassment, to support France. The Moroccan
+government seized illegally an Algerian subject. With the approval
+of the Powers, the French government demanded and soon obtained his
+release. See <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, Nos. 301 ff.; <em>G.P.</em>,
+XX, 552 n.; 559, No. 6801; <em>B.D.</em>, III, 138, No. 178.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_834"></a><a href="#FNanchor_834"><span class=
+"label">[834]</span></a>Cartwright to Lansdowne, Aug. 8 and 24,
+1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 127 f., No. 169; 130, No. 172; Leon y
+Castillo, <em>Mis Tiempos</em>, II, 253.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_835"></a><a href="#FNanchor_835"><span class=
+"label">[835]</span></a>Bülow to Radolin, Sept. 4, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 557, No. 6799; 558 f., No. 6801; Bihourd to
+Rouvier, Sept. 4, 1905, <em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 297 f., No. 339.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_836"></a><a href="#FNanchor_836"><span class=
+"label">[836]</span></a>Memo. by Kriege, Sept. 3, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 554 ff., No. 6798; Bülow to F. O., Sept. 8,
+1905, inclosing a telegram from Rosen, <em>ibid.</em>, 559 ff., No.
+6802; Radolin to F. O., Sept. 9, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 563 f., No.
+6804. Radowitz acknowledged on Sept. 7 to Jules Cambon that Germany
+would defend the selection of Tangier “only for form’s sake”
+(Cartwright to Lansdowne, Sept. 7, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 138,
+No. 178).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_837"></a><a href="#FNanchor_837"><span class=
+"label">[837]</span></a>Bülow to F. O., Sept. 8, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 562 f., No. 6803; Richthofen to Radolin, Sept.
+10, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 564 ff., No. 6805; Richthofen to Bülow,
+Sept. 10, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 566 f., No. 6806.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_838"></a><a href="#FNanchor_838"><span class=
+"label">[838]</span></a>On these negotiations, apart from the
+references cited below, see Bertie to Lansdowne, Sept. 24, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 140, No. 182; Lansdowne to Bertie, Sept. 27,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 140 ff., No. 183.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_839"></a><a href="#FNanchor_839"><span class=
+"label">[839]</span></a>He demanded an exchange of notes to the
+following effect: “Neither France nor Germany will propose
+exclusive candidatures to execute the military reforms at the
+conference. It is understood that for the execution of the reforms
+(except in the frontier region) Germany and France will remain on a
+basis of equality.” See Radolin to Bülow, Sept. 16, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 568 ff., No. 6808 and following documents;
+Radolin to F. O., Sept. 21, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 577, No.
+6817.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_840"></a><a href="#FNanchor_840"><span class=
+"label">[840]</span></a>Radolin to F. O., Sept. 29, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 593 f., No. 6833.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_841"></a><a href="#FNanchor_841"><span class=
+"label">[841]</span></a>Radolin to Bülow, Sept. 16, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 568 ff., No. 6808.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_842"></a><a href="#FNanchor_842"><span class=
+"label">[842]</span></a>Bülow to F. O., Sept. 18 and 19, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 571 ff., Nos. 6810 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_843"></a><a href="#FNanchor_843"><span class=
+"label">[843]</span></a>Witte, <em>Memoirs</em>, p. 416.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_844"></a><a href="#FNanchor_844"><span class=
+"label">[844]</span></a>See below.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_845"></a><a href="#FNanchor_845"><span class=
+"label">[845]</span></a>Radolin to Bülow, Sept. 23, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 503 f., No. 6241; Rosen to Bülow, Sept. 22,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 579 ff., No. 6819 and following documents;
+also Witte, pp. 416 ff. Cf. Tardieu, <em>La Conf. d’Algés.</em>, p.
+77.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_846"></a><a href="#FNanchor_846"><span class=
+"label">[846]</span></a>Bülow to William II, Sept. 25, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 505 ff., No. 6243.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_847"></a><a href="#FNanchor_847"><span class=
+"label">[847]</span></a>Bülow to F. O., Sept. 27, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 508, No. 6245; William II to Bülow, Sept. 27, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 508 ff., No. 6246; Witte, pp. 417 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_848"></a><a href="#FNanchor_848"><span class=
+"label">[848]</span></a>Witte’s claim in his memoirs to have
+prevented a Franco-German war was hardly justified. Germany did not
+intend war, but only intimidation (Witte, pp. 424 f.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_849"></a><a href="#FNanchor_849"><span class=
+"label">[849]</span></a>The German government in turn admitted that
+this “advance” did not place in question the right of preference of
+the French banking consortium to make loans to Morocco.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_850"></a><a href="#FNanchor_850"><span class=
+"label">[850]</span></a>The accord is given in <em>L.j.,
+1901-5</em>, 307 ff., Nos. 351 f.; <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 592, No.
+6832; <em>B.D.</em>, III, 142 ff., No. 184; 146 f., No. 188.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_851"></a><a href="#FNanchor_851"><span class=
+"label">[851]</span></a>Rouvier to Bihourd, Sept. 25, 1905,
+<em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, 305 f., Nos. 349 f.; Radolin to F. O., Sept.
+26, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 589, No. 6828; Tardieu, <em>La Conf.
+d’Algés.</em>, pp. 44 f. In December, M. Louis told Bertie that the
+German government had replied to Rouvier’s declaration by asserting
+that “though bound by their Agreement, they [Germany] reserved to
+themselves the faculty of supporting in the Conference any
+proposals made by another Government which they might consider
+good” (Bertie to Grey, Dec. 15, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 158, No.
+195). There is no reference to this statement in <em>G.P.</em></p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_852"></a><a href="#FNanchor_852"><span class=
+"label">[852]</span></a><em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, Nos. 357 f., 362
+ff., 367, 313 ff.; <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, Nos. 6889 ff., 6898;
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, Nos. 165, 186 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_853"></a><a href="#FNanchor_853"><span class=
+"label">[853]</span></a>Bülow to F. O., Sept. 30, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 595, No. 6834; Richthofen to Bülow, Oct. 6,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, XXV, 196 f., No. 8622; Bülow to F. O., Oct.
+7, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 197, No. 8623. It was at this time that
+the question of including France in the alliance made at Björkö was
+coming to the fore (Tardieu, <em>La Conf. d’Algés.</em>, p.
+136).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_854"></a><a href="#FNanchor_854"><span class=
+"label">[854]</span></a>Radolin to F. O., Oct. 18, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 596 f., No. 6836.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_855"></a><a href="#FNanchor_855"><span class=
+"label">[855]</span></a>Quoted in <em>Quest. dipl. et col.</em>,
+XX, 497 ff., Radolin to F. O., Sept. 29, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX,
+593 f., No. 6833; Bülow to F. O., Sept. 30, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>,
+594 f., No. 6834.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_856"></a><a href="#FNanchor_856"><span class=
+"label">[856]</span></a>Quoted from the report of the Belgian
+Minister at Paris to his government, Oct. 14, 1905 (<em>Zur europ.
+Politik</em>, II, 72). See also the article by De Caix in
+<em>Journal des debats</em>, quoted in <em>Quest. dipl. et
+col.</em>, XX, 500.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_857"></a><a href="#FNanchor_857"><span class=
+"label">[857]</span></a><em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 16, No. 6901.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_858"></a><a href="#FNanchor_858"><span class=
+"label">[858]</span></a>Quoted in <em>Quest. dipl. et col.</em>,
+XX, 500 f. The revelations were made by Stéphane Lauzanne, a
+journalist. Lauzanne denied that he had received his information
+from Delcassé. He stated that he had written the articles three
+months ago. See Lister to Lansdowne, Oct. 11, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>,
+III, 83 f., No. 100; Bertie to Lansdowne, Oct. 14, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 84, No. 101. His assertions were in the main
+corroborated by two other French journalists, Eugène Lautier and
+Alexandre Ular, in <em>Figaro</em>, Oct. 13, 1905, and by Jaurès
+(<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 666 n.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_859"></a><a href="#FNanchor_859"><span class=
+"label">[859]</span></a><em>Quest. dipl. et col.</em>, XX, 504;
+Lascelles to Lansdowne, Oct. 15, 16, 20, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III,
+84 ff., Nos. 102 ff.; Metternich to F. O., Oct. 9, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 663 f., No. 6873.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_860"></a><a href="#FNanchor_860"><span class=
+"label">[860]</span></a><em>Quest. dipl. et col.</em>, XX, 500, 503
+f.; Mévil, <em>De la Paix de Francfort, etc.</em>, pp. 269 ff.
+n.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_861"></a><a href="#FNanchor_861"><span class=
+"label">[861]</span></a>Bülow to F. O., Oct. 14, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 666, No. 6876.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_862"></a><a href="#FNanchor_862"><span class=
+"label">[862]</span></a>Bülow to F. O., Oct. 15, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 667 f., No. 6877.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_863"></a><a href="#FNanchor_863"><span class=
+"label">[863]</span></a>Bülow to F. O., Oct. 10 and 12, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 664 f., Nos. 6874 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_864"></a><a href="#FNanchor_864"><span class=
+"label">[864]</span></a>Schulthess, <em>1905</em>, p. 127.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap">
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[279]</span><a id=
+"c15"></a>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+
+<p class="sch2">THE TREATY OF BJÖRKÖ AND ITS ANNULMENT</p>
+
+<h3 class="space-above1">I</h3>
+
+<p>By forcing France in July to submit the Moroccan question to an
+international conference, the German government asserted its power
+and restored its country’s prestige; but it had had to employ means
+which could not often be repeated with impunity. The future of
+Germany’s international position remained uncertain. While the
+Entente Cordiale had become firmer, the Triple Alliance was still
+unsteady and unreliable. King Edward and his nephew, the Emperor
+William, were having one of their numerous quarrels.<a id=
+"FNanchor_865"></a><a href="#Footnote_865" class=
+"fnanchor">[865]</a> The German government believed positively that
+in case of a Franco-German war Great Britain would actively support
+France.<a id="FNanchor_866"></a><a href="#Footnote_866" class=
+"fnanchor">[866]</a> Although relations with President Roosevelt
+and with Russia remained intimate, these close friendships did not
+give Germany the security and power which she had enjoyed before
+the conclusion of the Entente Cordiale. Then suddenly, out of a
+clear sky, came the possibility of Germany’s becoming master of the
+situation again. The Emperor William and Czar Nicholas arranged a
+meeting at Björkö, and the Emperor requested that a copy of the
+projected Russo-German treaty of the previous autumn be sent to
+him.</p>
+
+<p>In the latter half of July the Emperor and the Czar were both
+cruising: the one in the Baltic Sea, the other in the Finnish Gulf.
+As it was the hope of both the Chancellor<a id=
+"FNanchor_867"></a><a href="#Footnote_867" class=
+"fnanchor">[867]</a> and the Emperor that<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_280">[280]</span> a meeting with the Czar might occur during
+these cruises, William II suddenly telegraphed to his cousin on
+July 18 that he would shortly pass the entrance to the gulf.
+“Should it give you any pleasure to see me . . . ., I of course am
+always at your disposal.” Nicholas immediately replied: “Delighted
+with your proposal. Would it suit you meet at Bjoerkoe-sund . . .
+.? . . . . Look forward with intense pleasure to seeing you.” Upon
+receiving this answer the Emperor requested Prince Bülow to send
+him the draft.</p>
+
+<p>The Chancellor, who was at Norderney at the time, forwarded the
+request to Herr von Holstein. While he was dubious about the
+affair, he wrote to Herr von Holstein that the meeting would at
+least be a useful means of keeping in close touch with Russia and
+finding out something about her future foreign and internal policy.
+Germany could not intervene in favor of Russia during the peace
+negotiations, he stated, but it would be advantageous to engage the
+Czar so far that M. Witte and Count Lamsdorff would be unable to
+prepare for a Franco-Russo-British entente immediately after peace
+was established.<a id="FNanchor_868"></a><a href="#Footnote_868"
+class="fnanchor">[868]</a></p>
+
+<p>Herr von Holstein’s long replies to the Chancellor were not very
+hopeful. The final draft of the treaty of the previous autumn was
+acceptable, he thought, if the clause added by Russia—“Their
+entente cordiale will also hold in the case of difficulties which
+may arise at the time of the negotiations of peace between Russia
+and Japan”—were omitted. In fact, he was willing to accept a change
+in Article I making the alliance valid in case of an attack by two
+Powers instead of by one. He no longer believed it necessary for
+Russia and Germany to be in complete accord before negotiations
+with France were begun, because M. Rouvier’s cabinet would not “so
+absolutely oppose Germany’s joining [the Dual Alliance] as Delcassé
+had,” and because, as Russia was more dependent upon France for
+loans than she had been six months previously, she would take no
+step without the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[281]</span>
+latter’s approval. Herr von Holstein expected M. Witte, Count
+Lamsdorff, the mother and wife of the Czar, and the French
+government to oppose the project and to favor an Anglo-Russo-French
+grouping. In his opinion almost the only reason for Russia to
+prefer a German alliance to the other grouping was that it could be
+concluded in time to be of value to Russia in the forthcoming
+negotiations for peace with Japan. Herr von Holstein therefore
+advised that if the treaty were concluded it be published
+immediately. Fearing rejection of the German proposal by Count
+Lamsdorff and an exploitation of the Russian refusal, he wished the
+Emperor not to take the initiative in proposing an alliance, at
+least until Nicholas II manifested a desire to pursue a common
+policy with Germany. Herr von Holstein’s telegrams formed the basis
+for the instructions sent to the Emperor on July 22.<a id=
+"FNanchor_869"></a><a href="#Footnote_869" class=
+"fnanchor">[869]</a></p>
+
+<p>The story of Björkö is one of drama and mystery. The two
+sovereigns agreed that their meeting should be kept secret until it
+occurred; and, although the news immediately leaked out in the
+Russian press, the company on the Emperor’s yacht did not know
+where it was going or for what purpose. The rulers met, July 23-24,
+in Björkö Bay, far away from civilization, with only the sea and
+the forest-clad shore around them. The Emperor prepared himself for
+the interview by lifting up his hands and asking God to guide and
+aid him, or at least not to aid the Czar. When his yacht steamed
+into the bay, the Czar had already arrived. The Emperor immediately
+went on board the “Polar Star.” After a touching exchange of
+embraces the two monarchs withdrew for a long conversation. “Willy”
+found “Nicky” feeling<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_282">[282]</span> discouraged, forlorn, and friendless except
+for him; and Count Lamsdorff was not there to give him backbone.
+The gathering force of the Russian revolution, the defeat by Japan,
+anger at Great Britain and France, and deep appreciation for the
+friendly attitude of Germany and William II toward him and his
+country during their troubles had prepared this weak monarch to
+throw himself into the arms of the far stronger, confident, and
+brilliantly seductive Emperor. As William II asserted later, the
+Czar was in a mood to subscribe to almost anything.</p>
+
+<p>In the first conversation between the two rulers<a id=
+"FNanchor_870"></a><a href="#Footnote_870" class=
+"fnanchor">[870]</a> they both relieved themselves of their anger
+at Great Britain and King Edward VII. Nicholas II was particularly
+enraged at the British, whose unfriendliness toward Russia during
+the current war was fresh in his mind. When he described King
+Edward as “the greatest mischief-maker and most insincere as well
+as the most dangerous intriguer in the world,” the Emperor agreed
+with him heartily. King Edward “has a passion to begin something
+with every Power, to make ‘a little agreement,’” said William. The
+Czar replied as he struck the table with his fist, “Well I can only
+say, he shall not get one from me, and never in my life against
+Germany or you, my word of honor on it.” When they brought up the
+Moroccan affair, the Czar, pleased with the Franco-German
+agreement, strongly seconded the Emperor’s hope that out of that
+agreement a permanent understanding with France might develop. When
+the Emperor remarked that “in spite of English incitements France
+has absolutely refused to go to war with us [Germany], and so has
+shown that she will no longer fight for the sake of the lost
+provinces,” Nicholas II replied incisively: “Yes that I saw, it is
+quite clear the Alsace-Lorraine question is closed once for all,
+thank God.” As they were going on deck again the Czar once more
+embraced the Emperor and thanked him for coming.<a id=
+"FNanchor_871"></a><a href="#Footnote_871" class=
+"fnanchor">[871]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[283]</span>That night the
+two groups celebrated together until daybreak. During the
+festivities some of the Russian officials in close touch with their
+master spoke openly in favor of a Continental alliance. The Emperor
+therefore concluded that the ground was prepared for his project.
+Before going to breakfast with the Czar and Grand Duke Michael the
+next morning, William II opened his <em>Losungen der Brüdergemeinde
+für 1905</em><a id="FNanchor_872"></a><a href="#Footnote_872"
+class="fnanchor">[872]</a> upon the following text: “Each will
+receive his reward according to his work.” So, full of hope, he put
+a copy of the treaty in his pocket and set out. He found the Czar
+in the same mood as before. They spoke of the Anglo-French
+fraternization, behind which the Emperor suspected lay a “little
+agreement.” The Czar’s head drooped in dejection. “That is too
+bad,” he grieved. “What shall I do in this disagreeable situation.”
+“I felt that the moment had come,” wrote the Emperor later to
+Prince Bülow, in reporting this interview.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>Since the ally has preserved the policy of the free hand and of
+reinsurance without consulting or informing the Czar [he said to
+Nicholas II], it is quite permissible for him . . . . to do the
+same. How would it be if we also made a little agreement? We
+discussed one in the previous winter, but it failed because of
+Delcassé and tension with France. Now that is all past, we shall be
+good friends with the French. So does not every obstacle fall? “Oh
+yes to be sure, I remember well, but I forgot the contents of it,
+what a pity I havent got it here.” I possess a copy which by chance
+I have in my pocket. The Czar seized me by the arm, drew me into
+his father’s cabin, and closed all the doors. “Show it me please.”
+The dreamy eyes sparkled. I drew the envelope from my pocket,
+unfolded the sheet on the writing desk of Alexander III before the
+pictures of the Czar’s mother, between photographs from Fredensborg
+and Copenhagen, and laid it before the Czar. He read the text once,
+twice, thrice. . . . . I prayed the dear God to be with us and
+guide the young ruler. It was deathly still; only the sea murmured
+and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[284]</span> sun shone
+joyfully and clear in the cozy cabin, and directly before me lay
+the Hohenzollern and high in the morning air waved the imperial
+standard. I was just reading the letters on the black cross, God
+with us, when the Czar said, “That is quite excellent. I quite
+agree!” My heart beat so loudly that I could hear it. I pulled
+myself together and said casually, “Should you like to sign it? It
+would be a very nice souvenir of our entrevue.” He read it once
+more and replied, “Yes I will.” I opened the ink-well, extending to
+him the pen, and he wrote with a firm hand “Nicolas.” Then he
+passed it to me, I signed it, and as I arose he, deeply moved,
+folded me in his arms and said, “I thank God and I thank you, it
+will be of most beneficial consequences for my country and Yours;
+You are Russia’s only real friend in the whole world, I have felt
+that through the whole war and I know it.” Tears of joy stood in my
+eyes—to be sure the sweat poured from my brow and back—and I
+thought of Frederick William III, Queen Louise, Grandfather and
+Nicholas I. Were they near at that moment? At any rate they saw it
+all and were overjoyed.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The terms of the treaty were as follows: The Czar and the
+Emperor, “to assure the maintenance of peace in Europe, have agreed
+upon the following articles of a treaty of defensive alliance.”
+Article I read: “In case one of the two Empires is attacked by an
+European Power, its ally will aid it in Europe with all its forces
+on land and sea.” According to Article II, “The high contracting
+parties engage not to conclude a separate peace with a common
+enemy.” Article III was as follows: “The present treaty becomes
+valid as soon as peace is concluded between Russia and Japan and
+will remain valid until it is denounced a year in advance.” By
+Article IV the Czar agreed “after the coming into force of the
+treaty” to take “the steps necessary to initiate France into the
+accord and to associate herself in it as ally.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_873"></a><a href="#Footnote_873" class=
+"fnanchor">[873]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[285]</span>Thus the act was
+accomplished. How was it possible? The Emperor’s explanation was
+simple and satisfying—God did it.<a id="FNanchor_874"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_874" class="fnanchor">[874]</a> For he was present, as
+were various spirits and shades of dead and departed kinsmen. A
+humble and depressed Czar and an inspired Emperor with his
+<em>Losungen der Brüdergemeinde</em>, tears and sighs and embraces,
+many a dainty dish and flask of old wine, many a satisfying
+outburst of anger at absent enemies—no wonder the Björkö treaty was
+signed!</p>
+
+<p>The Emperor had visions of illimitable possibilities for the
+alliance. On July 27 he wrote to Nicholas II as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>In times to come it may not be impossible that even Japan may
+feel inclined to join it [the alliance]. This would cool down
+English self-assertion and impertinence, as she is her ally too.
+The 24th of July 1905 is a cornerstone<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_286">[286]</span> in European Politics and turns over a new
+leaf in the history of the world; which will be a chapter of peace
+and goodwill among the great Powers of the European Continent,
+respecting each other in friendship, confidence and in pursuing the
+general Policy on the lines of a community of interests. The moment
+the news of the new “groupement” will have become known in the
+world, the smaller nations, Holland, Belgium, Danmark, Sweden,
+Norway will all be attracted to this new great centre of gravity,
+by quite natural laws of the attraction of smaller bodies by the
+larger and compacter ones. They will revolve in the orbit of the
+great block of powers (Russia, Germany, France, Austria, Italy) and
+feel confidence in leaning on and revolving around this mass. The
+dual Alliance combining with the Triple Alliance gives a Quintupel
+Alliance, well able to hold all unruly neighbours in order, to
+impose peace even by force, if there should be a power hairbrained
+enough to wish to disturb it.<a id="FNanchor_875"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_875" class="fnanchor">[875]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding this optimism, the treaty caused difficulty from
+the start. The absence of a countersignature by the Chancellor was
+not considered serious.<a id="FNanchor_876"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_876" class="fnanchor">[876]</a> But against the advice
+of Herr von Tschirschky, the representative of the foreign office
+on the cruise, the Emperor had without consulting the Chancellor
+introduced very important changes in the draft of the treaty. In
+the first article he had added the words “en Europe,” while he had
+re-worded the third article so that the alliance should not become
+effective before the conclusion of the Russo-Japanese War.<a id=
+"FNanchor_877"></a><a href="#Footnote_877" class=
+"fnanchor">[877]</a> Prince Bülow was very dubious about the value
+of the treaty after those changes were made, particularly the
+change in Article I, “because in Europe,” he wrote to Herr von
+Holstein, “Russia can be of no use at all to us against England.”
+He requested the latter’s advice before acting.<a id=
+"FNanchor_878"></a><a href="#Footnote_878" class=
+"fnanchor">[878]</a></p>
+
+<p>Herr von Holstein approved decidedly of the treaty even in its
+changed form, although he regretted that the Emperor had not
+obtained more while the Czar was so pliant. He said that
+the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[287]</span> treaty should
+be kept absolutely secret.<a id="FNanchor_879"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_879" class="fnanchor">[879]</a> Otherwise he feared that
+Great Britain and perhaps also France would seek to prolong the
+Russo-Japanese War with the result that the Czar would be deposed,
+and that Great Britain, if she had aggressive plans, might
+hurriedly attack Germany before the alliance came into operation.
+He thought that the suspensive clause was especially
+disadvantageous to Germany in that the treaty, if effective at
+once, would have a calming effect upon any bellicose spirit on the
+part of both France and Great Britain. Moreover, he believed that
+France could be brought to join the alliance at the time; whereas
+if the action to bring her in were postponed, she would align
+herself more closely with Great Britain. The inclusion of the
+phrase “en Europe” he also regretted as being advantageous only to
+Russia.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>In case of an Anglo-German war, Russia need not advance against
+India. . . . . But even with the best will Russia will not be able
+to help us in Europe. . . . . The only positive value from the
+changed treaty is the assurance that Russia can no longer enter the
+Quadruple Alliance.<a id="FNanchor_880"></a><a href="#Footnote_880"
+class="fnanchor">[880]</a> The circle around Germany can no longer
+close. That is something. But we could have obtained more and we
+must expect that the publication of this treaty will cause little
+disquietude in England and will not be considered as a great
+success of German diplomacy.<a id="FNanchor_881"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_881" class="fnanchor">[881]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The Chancellor regarded the inclusion of the suspensive clause
+as an advantage under the circumstances; but he had grave
+objections to the inclusion of the phrase “en Europe.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_882"></a><a href="#Footnote_882" class=
+"fnanchor">[882]</a> When he<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_288">[288]</span> telegraphed these to the Emperor, the
+latter replied that he had made the change “after ripe
+deliberation” in order to prevent Germany from being obliged to aid
+Russia in Asia. He did not believe possible an attack by Russia on
+India, nor did anyone else, he stated. The advantage from the
+treaty lay, not in the expectation of any active help from Russia
+in case of a war with Great Britain but rather in the assurance
+that Germany would enjoy full freedom and security on her eastern
+frontier, that she would be able to throw all her forces against
+one front, that is, France, instead of against two—“naturally
+provided France mobilizes to help England, which is not
+impossible.” He and General Moltke looked upon the situation in
+this way:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>If England declares or otherwise begins war with us, you [the
+Chancellor] must immediately send dispatches to Brussels and Paris
+with a demand to state within six hours whether for or against us.
+We must immediately march into Belgium no matter what the reply. As
+to France it depends upon whether she remains neutral,—which I do
+not consider entirely impossible even if the probability is
+small;—in that case the Russian <em>casus foederis</em> does not
+enter into effect. If she [France] mobilizes, that is a war-threat
+against us in favor of England, and then the Russian regiments must
+march with ours. . . . . It should eventually be considered whether
+France could not be offered as an enticement for good behavior
+toward us perhaps a part of Belgium as compensation for the lost
+provinces.<a id="FNanchor_883"></a><a href="#Footnote_883" class=
+"fnanchor">[883]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The Chancellor fully approved the Emperor’s remarks concerning
+Belgium; but neither he nor Herr von Holstein thought that it would
+be possible to permit French neutrality in case of a British attack
+on Germany.<a id="FNanchor_884"></a><a href="#Footnote_884" class=
+"fnanchor">[884]</a> Nor was he convinced by the Emperor’s other
+arguments. He continued to regard the inclusion of the phrase “en
+Europe” as “pernicious.” He declared that he could not uphold the
+treaty before the German people unless Russia were bound to give
+aid in both Asia and Europe, and sought ways of bringing about a
+change to that effect.<a id="FNanchor_885"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_885" class="fnanchor">[885]</a> While<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_289">[289]</span> he had accepted the treaty at
+first and had congratulated the Emperor upon achieving it, and
+while he had thought that there was plenty of time in which to
+eliminate the objectionable phrase,<a id=
+"FNanchor_886"></a><a href="#Footnote_886" class=
+"fnanchor">[886]</a> he suddenly reversed his attitude. On August 3
+he stated that he could not accept the responsibility for the
+treaty in the present form or for bringing about the necessary
+changes. He therefore offered his resignation.<a id=
+"FNanchor_887"></a><a href="#Footnote_887" class=
+"fnanchor">[887]</a></p>
+
+<p>Knowing that he had his master in a quandary, since German
+public opinion was already complaining about too much imperial
+initiative in foreign affairs, the Chancellor apparently did not
+expect his resignation to be accepted. He continued as before to
+seek means of altering the treaty without ruining it
+entirely.<a id="FNanchor_888"></a><a href="#Footnote_888" class=
+"fnanchor">[888]</a> And, as a matter of fact, the Emperor
+collapsed, agreed to anything, and on August 11 wrote a hysterical
+letter to his Chancellor.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>I thought that I had worked and had accomplished something
+special for you. Then you send me a couple of cold lines and your
+resignation!!! Please excuse me, dear Bülow, from depicting the
+condition of my soul to you. To be so treated by my best, most
+intimate friend, without giving a single plausible reason, has been
+such a fearful blow to me that I have completely collapsed and fear
+a grave nervous sickness. You say that the situation has become so
+serious because of the treaty with “en Europe” that you cannot
+assume responsibility; before whom? And in the same breath you
+believe that before God you can assume responsibility of deserting
+your Emperor and master to whom you have sworn fidelity, who has
+loaded you with love and honors, your fatherland and, as I
+believed, your truest friend, in the situation regarded by you as
+critical and serious!? No, dear Bülow, that you will not do! We
+have both been called by God and created for each other to work for
+our dear German fatherland. If in your opinion a graver situation
+has really been made by my error—which I do not believe—, it has
+been done<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[290]</span> with the
+best intentions. You know me well enough to recognize that. Your
+person is 100,000 times more valuable to me and our country than
+all the treaties in the world. I have immediately taken steps with
+the Czar which shall weaken or eliminate those words. Do not forget
+that you sent me to Tangier against my will in order to achieve a
+success in your Moroccan policy. Read my telegrams before the visit
+to Tangier. You have admitted to me yourself that you were so
+anxious that when you received the announcement of my safe
+departure you had a nervous fit of weeping. For your sake because
+the fatherland needed it I landed, mounted a strange horse in spite
+of my crippled left arm, and the horse nearly caused my death—all
+of which was your affair! I rode through Spanish anarchists because
+you wished it and your policy would profit thereby! and now you
+want abruptly to desert me, when I have done everything—and, as I
+honestly believe, far more—for you, because my situation appears to
+you too serious. Bülow, I have not deserved that of you. No, my
+friend, you remain in office and with me and shall continue to work
+with me <em>ad majorem Germaniae gloriam</em>. You plainly owe me
+that because of my service this year. You can and dare not forsake
+me. Therewith your whole policy of this year would be disavowed by
+you yourself and I blamed forever. That I cannot survive. Grant me
+a few days to rest and collect myself before you come, for the
+nervous excitement caused by your letter is too great, I am now
+unable to argue in quiet. . . . . I appeal to your friendship for
+me, and let us hear no more of your intention to resign. Telegraph
+me “all right” after this letter; then I shall know that you will
+remain! For the morning after the arrival of your resignation will
+find the emperor no longer alive! Think of my poor wife and
+children!<a id="FNanchor_889"></a><a href="#Footnote_889" class=
+"fnanchor">[889]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>How were the mighty fallen! The Chancellor had won, and of
+course telegraphed “All right.”</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime various proposals to eliminate the phrase “en
+Europe”<a id="FNanchor_890"></a><a href="#Footnote_890" class=
+"fnanchor">[890]</a> were being combated by Herr von Holstein, who
+feared that the opponents of the treaty in Russia, particularly
+Count Lamsdorff, might use such opportunity to propose changes on
+their side, to annul the treaty entirely, or at least to undermine
+its prestige. He wrote:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>The treaty even in its present crippled form is still too
+valuable to risk in hazardous play. Its value lies in the crushing
+effect which it will have upon France and in the indirect reaction
+through France upon England.<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_291">[291]</span> . . . . Through the inclusion of “en
+Europe” and through the introduction of the suspensive article, the
+value of the treaty is lowered 50 per cent. But this 50 per cent
+remains to us and should not be risked.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">He urged against proposal for a change until time
+for the treaty to come into effect or until the Emperor and the
+Czar had another meeting. Prince Bülow acceded to these
+views.<a id="FNanchor_891"></a><a href="#Footnote_891" class=
+"fnanchor">[891]</a></p>
+
+<h3>II</h3>
+
+<p>Occurring at a crisis in world-affairs, when the Moroccan
+difficulty was still unsettled, when the Russo-Japanese
+negotiations for peace were about to begin, when the choice of a
+king by Norway was not yet made, the news of the unexpected and
+secret interview at Björkö caused a furor in the diplomatic world
+and in the press.<a id="FNanchor_892"></a><a href="#Footnote_892"
+class="fnanchor">[892]</a> Especial alarm was shown by the British,
+jealous and mistrustful as they were of Russo-German intimacy. The
+English press suspected the German Emperor of seeking the Norwegian
+crown for a Hohenzollern and of endeavoring to close the Baltic Sea
+to all except the Baltic nations.<a id="FNanchor_893"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_893" class="fnanchor">[893]</a> Sir Francis Bertie,
+British ambassador at Paris, was reported to have remarked that
+Germany seemed to harbor Napoleonic tendencies, which Great Britain
+would oppose as she had the original ones.<a id=
+"FNanchor_894"></a><a href="#Footnote_894" class=
+"fnanchor">[894]</a> Mr. Spring Rice, after consulting Lord
+Lansdowne, wrote to President Roosevelt as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>The most serious aspect of the question is the general balance
+of power in Europe. . . . . Two of the great powers have
+practically disappeared so far as active intervention in European
+affairs is concerned, Russia and Austria. Germany is by far the
+most powerful of the remaining powers, and she has an old feud to
+settle with France. If France is attacked, there is no Russia to
+help her and the English Army is at present practically
+negligible<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[292]</span> for a
+continental campaign. If France is forced to accept German
+hegemony, England remains the only independent great power, and we
+are in much the same position as during the Napoleonic wars. We
+consider it therefore our duty to prepare for contingencies.</p>
+
+<p>. . . . Of course, nobody here, except the small body of
+hot-heads who exist everywhere, desires to attack Germany. Our
+interest in peace is supreme and in fact perhaps too dominant. But
+we all have an uncomfortable feeling that always and everywhere we
+encounter the fixed and determined hostility of Germany, and that,
+when opportunity offers, this hostility will take an active
+form.<a id="FNanchor_895"></a><a href="#Footnote_895" class=
+"fnanchor">[895]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Late in July, forthcoming British maneuvers in the Baltic Sea
+were suddenly announced in the press without any previous
+notification to the various governments. Following so closely after
+the meeting at Björkö, that announcement had a sinister
+significance which the Russian and the German presses interpreted
+as a warning to their countries that Great Britain was still
+mistress of the seas and that no change should occur against her
+will. Germany feared a British attack and, without an adequate
+fleet, felt herself defenseless.<a id="FNanchor_896"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_896" class="fnanchor">[896]</a></p>
+
+<p>The British press denounced these fears as preposterous. In the
+House of Commons, Earl Percy, undersecretary of state
+for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[293]</span> foreign
+affairs, declared on August 3 that “the situation in Europe
+presented no special cause for anxiety” and would present even less
+cause if certain “irresponsible persons were not perpetually
+attributing to this country Machiavellian motives of which we were
+quite innocent and who were always imagining that we could not
+enter into arrangements with one country for mutual convenience
+without having a hostile intent against some other country.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_897"></a><a href="#Footnote_897" class=
+"fnanchor">[897]</a> Lord Lansdowne immediately explained to the
+German and Russian governments that the lack of notification had
+been an oversight; he denied that the maneuvers were intended as a
+demonstration in any way.<a id="FNanchor_898"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_898" class="fnanchor">[898]</a></p>
+
+<p>As neither side wanted trouble, this explanation cleared up the
+difficulty. The press became calmer and the visit of the British
+fleet to Swinemünde and Neufahrwasser, August 27-September 1, was
+used by both the British and the Germans for demonstrations of good
+will.<a id="FNanchor_899"></a><a href="#Footnote_899" class=
+"fnanchor">[899]</a> Yet the fact that for the first time in years
+the British fleet was practicing in the Baltic was not without
+significance. Furthermore, King Edward VII was still at odds with
+the German Emperor. In August and September, with the approval of
+his government, he refused to meet his nephew until Franco-German
+relations improved.<a id="FNanchor_900"></a><a href="#Footnote_900"
+class="fnanchor">[900]</a> And at some time in August the British
+government learned from a member of the German Emperor’s party at
+Björkö that at that meeting William II<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_294">[294]</span> had seemed nervous and preoccupied, that he
+had been seized by sudden fits of talkativeness and of silence, and
+that he had advocated his ideas of a coalition of Germany, Russia,
+and France to the exclusion of Great Britain. Lord Lansdowne’s
+comment to that information was as follows: “The description of the
+Kaiser’s language and demeanour fills me with disquiet. What may
+not a man in such a frame of mind do next?”<a id=
+"FNanchor_901"></a><a href="#Footnote_901" class=
+"fnanchor">[901]</a></p>
+
+<h3>III</h3>
+
+<p>When the report reached Paris on July 23 that the interview at
+Björkö was to occur, M. Rouvier immediately asked M. Witte, who was
+in Paris on his way to Portsmouth, whether it was true. M. Witte,
+equally in the dark, replied that he did not believe the
+rumor.<a id="FNanchor_902"></a><a href="#Footnote_902" class=
+"fnanchor">[902]</a> When the authentic news of the meeting came a
+few hours later, the French government and people were alarmed, for
+the Czar’s meeting with the German Emperor signified a lack of
+regard for French feeling and seemed to belie M. Witte’s assurances
+of Russia’s devotion to the Dual Alliance.<a id=
+"FNanchor_903"></a><a href="#Footnote_903" class=
+"fnanchor">[903]</a> Moreover, M. Witte’s private advocacy of
+closer co-operation between the three great Continental Powers
+against the great naval Powers, that is, against France’s friend,
+Great Britain, no doubt increased the concern of the French
+government.<a id="FNanchor_904"></a><a href="#Footnote_904" class=
+"fnanchor">[904]</a></p>
+
+<p>On July 22 M. Bompard, French ambassador in St. Petersburg,
+demanded an explanation from Count Lamsdorff of the report of the
+forthcoming meeting. The Foreign Minister assured the French
+government that it was a strictly private interview, devoid of any
+political character.<a id="FNanchor_905"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_905" class="fnanchor">[905]</a> Nevertheless, after
+the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[295]</span> meeting
+occurred the French government continued to feel uneasy.<a id=
+"FNanchor_906"></a><a href="#Footnote_906" class=
+"fnanchor">[906]</a> Although M. Bompard believed that Count
+Lamsdorff, faithful to the Dual Alliance, hoped that the meeting
+had had no significance, the Ambassador strongly suspected that the
+Minister had again not been consulted beforehand by his
+master.<a id="FNanchor_907"></a><a href="#Footnote_907" class=
+"fnanchor">[907]</a> Believing that the Emperor William II was
+trying through his personal relations with the Czar to destroy the
+Dual Alliance, he feared the results of an interview between the
+two sovereigns. When he learned that some sort of document had been
+signed by the two rulers, he surmised that it was a personal
+agreement of friendship by which they promised not to participate
+in any enterprise directed against the other and to exchange any
+information which came to their knowledge.<a id=
+"FNanchor_908"></a><a href="#Footnote_908" class=
+"fnanchor">[908]</a></p>
+
+<p>Faced by the immense possibilities of the meeting at Björkö, M.
+Rouvier determined to forestall any Russian initiative looking
+toward a change in the Dual Alliance by frankly explaining his
+foreign policy to the Russian ambassador, M. Nelidow. On August 9,
+the Ambassador reported the Minister’s words as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>The Minister assured me that the basis of his policy must remain
+the alliance with Russia; France needs no other. “Wherein does my
+policy differ from that of my predecessor?” he said to me. “Therein
+that I wish to establish good relations with England and Germany;
+but we do not intend thereby to make a closer agreement with the
+latter, just as on the other hand we do not desire to weaken the
+understanding already existing with England.” Upon my remarking
+that several newspapers have gone so far as to speak of a German
+alliance, M. Rouvier replied emphatically that that would be
+“absolutely impossible.”<a id="FNanchor_909"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_909" class="fnanchor">[909]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<h3><span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[296]</span>IV</h3>
+
+<p>The Czar, who probably felt guilty about not having consulted
+his Foreign Minister before signing the Björkö treaty, did not tell
+Count Lamsdorff of it until September 12.<a id=
+"FNanchor_910"></a><a href="#Footnote_910" class=
+"fnanchor">[910]</a> He probably did so then because peace with
+Japan, signed on September 6 and soon to be officially ratified,
+would bring the Björkö accord into force.<a id=
+"FNanchor_911"></a><a href="#Footnote_911" class=
+"fnanchor">[911]</a> Count Lamsdorff was horrified at the news. On
+October 9 he wrote to his friend M. Nelidow that the German Emperor
+had endeavored in the previous year to persuade “our poor monarch”
+to sign a treaty of defensive alliance with the obligation for
+France to join it. He continued:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>I succeeded in preventing this crude attempt. But during the
+fateful meeting at Björkö, the Emperor William was able with the
+aid of base flattery to convince our dear Emperor that he alone was
+his true friend and his support, and that the only salvation for
+Russia and for Europe lay in a new Triple Alliance which in his
+opinion France would gladly join.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">After informing M. Nelidow of the treaty signed at
+Björkö, he went on: “There you have the new mess into which we have
+been plunged after so many unusual adventures during the past two
+years. You can imagine how comforting this is.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_912"></a><a href="#Footnote_912" class=
+"fnanchor">[912]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[297]</span>From the first
+Count Lamsdorff was determined to destroy the treaty. After
+comparing it with the terms of the Dual Alliance, he concluded that
+the one was a flagrant violation of the other.<a id=
+"FNanchor_913"></a><a href="#Footnote_913" class=
+"fnanchor">[913]</a> In fact, he thought that in case of a
+Franco-German war arising out of the Moroccan affair, Russia was
+bound by this treaty to support Germany against her own ally. He
+wrote to M. Nelidow:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>From long years of experience I have become convinced that the
+alliance with France is necessary in order to have really good
+relations with Germany. Otherwise we lose our independence; for I
+know nothing heavier than the German yoke. Without sacrificing the
+most intimate relations with Berlin, we have very tactfully
+repulsed all attempts to compromise us.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">Not only did he expect France to refuse flatly to
+enter the new grouping, but he also considered it bad policy to
+give up the Dual Alliance in favor of a doubtful combination <em>à
+trois</em>. He considered the treaty to be altogether in favor of
+Germany, for she was bound to aid Russia only in Europe although
+Russia had most cause to fear Asiatic conflicts. Count Lamsdorff
+held that this alliance might involve Russia in the Anglo-German
+rivalry and might draw her into a war in which she had no interest.
+Preferring a policy of peace and good will with all Powers, he
+believed that Russia should next settle her difficulties with Great
+Britain, in spite of the fact that the renewal of the
+Anglo-Japanese Alliance in August had angered him. He was
+determined to extricate Russia from this situation with the least
+possible damage to Russo-German relations but above all without a
+breach in the Dual Alliance.<a id="FNanchor_914"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_914" class="fnanchor">[914]</a></p>
+
+<p>When the Russian Foreign Minister marshaled these arguments
+before the Czar, the latter refused to yield. Without
+showing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[298]</span> much
+consideration for French interest in the matter, Nicholas II
+replied that the alliance would be of benefit to both Russia and
+France and maintained that the latter would join it.<a id=
+"FNanchor_915"></a><a href="#Footnote_915" class=
+"fnanchor">[915]</a> Although he was strongly skeptical about this
+possibility, the Foreign Minister was forced to inquire of M.
+Nelidow on September 14 whether or not France would do so.<a id=
+"FNanchor_916"></a><a href="#Footnote_916" class=
+"fnanchor">[916]</a></p>
+
+<p>Without consulting anyone, M. Nelidow replied decidedly no. The
+Dual Alliance, together with the Entente Cordiale, every day
+becoming more intimate, he wrote, formed the foundation of the
+French foreign policy, whereas Franco-German relations were far
+from satisfactory. This new triple alliance, manifestly aimed at
+Great Britain, might, he continued, involve France in a war, which
+she wished above all to avoid, especially a war against Great
+Britain for the defense of German interests. Furthermore, such an
+alliance would mean the renunciation of all hopes of revenge for
+France. In fact, he thought that the slightest hint in favor of a
+Continental grouping would only shake France’s trust in her ally.
+Nevertheless, he promised to investigate further.<a id=
+"FNanchor_917"></a><a href="#Footnote_917" class=
+"fnanchor">[917]</a></p>
+
+<p>Not convinced by these arguments, the Czar clung to his plan.
+Just at this juncture M. Witte arrived in St. Petersburg with a
+letter from William II which forced a decision about the
+alliance.</p>
+
+<p>M. Witte’s ideas on foreign policy were confused. Early in May,
+1905, he spoke of Germany to Mr. Spring Rice in hostile terms. In
+July, immediately before he left St. Petersburg for Portsmouth to
+negotiate peace with Japan, he was upholding among his friends and
+to the Czar the plan that at Portsmouth he should not only make
+peace but should also negotiate an “all-round arrangement” with
+Japan which Great Britain and France should adhere to or at least
+recognize.<a id="FNanchor_918"></a><a href="#Footnote_918" class=
+"fnanchor">[918]</a> A few days later at Paris<span class="pagenum"
+id="Page_299">[299]</span> he advocated the formation of a
+Continental grouping against the overseas Powers.<a id=
+"FNanchor_919"></a><a href="#Footnote_919" class=
+"fnanchor">[919]</a> The renewal of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance
+increased his antagonism to Great Britain.<a id=
+"FNanchor_920"></a><a href="#Footnote_920" class=
+"fnanchor">[920]</a> On his return to Paris in September, he
+refused an invitation from King Edward to visit England as well as
+an offer of British participation in the proposed Russian loan, and
+aided in settling the Moroccan difficulty in order to make possible
+a Franco-German <em>rapprochement</em>.<a id=
+"FNanchor_921"></a><a href="#Footnote_921" class=
+"fnanchor">[921]</a></p>
+
+<p>As M. Witte had to pass through Germany on his trip home, the
+Emperor William obtained permission from the Czar for him to stop
+over and to be initiated into the secret of Björkö.<a id=
+"FNanchor_922"></a><a href="#Footnote_922" class=
+"fnanchor">[922]</a> After a cordial interview with Prince Bülow at
+Berlin,<a id="FNanchor_923"></a><a href="#Footnote_923" class=
+"fnanchor">[923]</a> M. Witte journeyed to Rominten where he
+received an almost royal welcome from the Emperor (September 26).
+When William II informed him of the signing of the alliance at
+Björkö, the Russian statesman, according to the Emperor, wept tears
+of joy. M. Witte proposed that the German and the Russian
+ambassadors be given instructions to co-operate on all possible
+questions as a means of persuading France to enter the new grouping
+voluntarily and of preparing the world for this momentous event. In
+the meantime, he advised that the accord be kept closely secret. He
+promised to do his part in “using this foundation for the
+construction of a good house.” Overjoyed at his success, William II
+accepted these suggestions. In a letter to the Czar carried by M.
+Witte he made<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[300]</span> this
+proposal for the co-operation of their foreign
+representatives:<a id="FNanchor_924"></a><a href="#Footnote_924"
+class="fnanchor">[924]</a> “This common exposal of a common cause,”
+he wrote, “will not fail to impress the world that our relations
+have become closer and thus slowly prepare your Allies the French
+for the new orientation which their policy must take for the entry
+into our treaty.”<a id="FNanchor_925"></a><a href="#Footnote_925"
+class="fnanchor">[925]</a></p>
+
+<p>In the conversations with M. Witte, who was not shown a copy of
+the treaty itself, the Emperor represented the accord as much less
+binding upon Franco-Russian relations than was really the
+case.<a id="FNanchor_926"></a><a href="#Footnote_926" class=
+"fnanchor">[926]</a> On his side, M. Witte, anxious to have the
+support of William II in regaining the good graces of the Czar and
+harboring some vague ideas about the desirability of a Continental
+grouping, was easily charmed by the Emperor into approval of the
+project. When he reached St. Petersburg, September 28, he urged
+upon the French Ambassador the need of a Dual Alliance-German
+coalition as a reply to the Anglo-Japanese Alliance. M. Bompard
+naturally rejected the idea.<a id="FNanchor_927"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_927" class="fnanchor">[927]</a> When Count Witte (he had
+just been ennobled) protested to him the Emperor William’s love for
+France and his attachment to the Dual Alliance, the Ambassador
+significantly asked, “Does not the Emperor’s love for the Dual
+Alliance extend so far that he wished to join it?”<a id=
+"FNanchor_928"></a><a href="#Footnote_928" class=
+"fnanchor">[928]</a> Count Lamsdorff, even less sympathetic, showed
+to Count Witte the actual treaty and wrathfully denounced it. The
+latter began to recover from the social intoxication<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_301">[301]</span> of his visit to Germany and to
+perceive that the treaty would have to be annulled.<a id=
+"FNanchor_929"></a><a href="#Footnote_929" class=
+"fnanchor">[929]</a></p>
+
+<p>Count Lamsdorff, Count Witte, M. Nelidow, and the Grand Duke
+Nicholas, who was initiated into the secret, all joined forces in
+persuading the Czar. By appealing to their master’s sense of honor
+and loyalty to the alliance made by his revered father, they
+succeeded in winning the unhappy ruler’s consent to a compromise.
+He acknowledged that the treaty of Björkö and the terms of the Dual
+Alliance were in contradiction, and agreed that before the former
+became operative either Germany should be brought to change it in
+such a way that it would not affect France or that the French
+government should be moved to a scrutiny of the terms of the Dual
+Alliance “in the sense of a more or less close association with
+this defensive Triple Alliance.” Thus, simultaneous attempts were
+to be made to persuade either France or Germany to change the terms
+of her alliance.<a id="FNanchor_930"></a><a href="#Footnote_930"
+class="fnanchor">[930]</a></p>
+
+<p>It very soon became apparent that the French government would
+never accept the Björkö treaty. When M. Nelidow broached to M.
+Rouvier on October 4 the idea of alliance with Germany which his
+government claimed President Roosevelt also favored, the Premier
+repeated his former assertions on this question. He, in turn,
+stated his complete approval of an Anglo-Russian<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_302">[302]</span> accord.<a id=
+"FNanchor_931"></a><a href="#Footnote_931" class=
+"fnanchor">[931]</a> Again on October 18 the Russian Ambassador
+reported that during a most intimate conversation with M. Rouvier
+he had pressed the arguments in favor of a Continental alliance
+against Great Britain only to receive from the Premier the
+following emphatic reply:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>We have aggressive intentions toward no one. We have given clear
+proof of our love of peace. Thirty-five years ago after a war
+unfortunate for us two provinces were taken away and we had to pay
+several billion francs for peace. Our nation submitted, and since
+then we have endeavored to avoid any cause for conflict or
+misunderstanding. To avoid difficulties which threatened to come to
+a head, I recently ventured to wound the pride of my country a
+little. But one cannot demand more of us. The nation would not
+tolerate a closer <em>rapprochement</em> with Germany. It cannot
+forget what it has suffered from her, of which suffering it has
+just been reminded in a careless and purposeless way. An alliance
+with Germany is impossible. The government is obliged to regard the
+feelings of the country.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">As M. Nelidow commented in his dispatch, this was
+M. Rouvier’s final reaction. It destroyed the possibility of
+France’s entering a Continental alliance so completely that even
+the Czar had to acknowledge the fact.<a id=
+"FNanchor_932"></a><a href="#Footnote_932" class=
+"fnanchor">[932]</a></p>
+
+<p>In the meantime, the Czar’s letter of October 7 to William II
+arrived in Berlin. It read as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>The great question is to draw France into our new defensive
+Alliance. . . . . But if France were to refuse to join us, then,
+not only would Art. IV drop away, but also the meaning of Art. I
+would change radically, because its obligations in the <em>present
+wording</em> point at any European Power and France too—Russia’s
+ally. During your stay at Bjorkoe I did not have with me the
+documents signed by my Father. . . . . The first steps taken with
+the object of trying to find out, whether the French Government
+could be induced to join our new treaty, showed us that it is a
+difficult task and that<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_303">[303]</span> it will take a long time to prepare to
+bring it over of its free will. . . . . Therefore I think that the
+coming into force of the Bjorkoe treaty ought to be <em>put off
+until</em> we know how France will look upon it. In case she
+absolutely refuses to join our two countries, it will be necessary
+to change the wordings of articles I and IV so as to bring them
+into full accordance with Russia’s obligations towards France,
+since the formation of the Triple Alliance in 1890. I shall do my
+best to get France to join us.<a id="FNanchor_933"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_933" class="fnanchor">[933]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Without consulting the Chancellor, William II replied on October
+12 with a refusal:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>I fully agree with you, that it will cost time, labour and
+patience to induce France to join us both, but the reasonable
+people will in future make themselves heard and felt! Our Moroccan
+business is regulated to entire satisfaction so that the air is
+free for better understanding between us. Our treaty is a very good
+base to build upon. We joined hands and signed <em>before God</em>
+who heard our vows! I therefore think that the treaty can well come
+into existence. But if you wish any changes in the wording or
+clauses or provisions for the future or different emergencies—as
+for instance the absolute refusal of France, which is improbable—I
+gladly await any proposal you will think fit to lay before me. Till
+these have been laid before me and are agreed upon, the Treaty must
+be adhered to by us as it is.<a id="FNanchor_934"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_934" class="fnanchor">[934]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The Czar, who had expected an acquiescence,<a id=
+"FNanchor_935"></a><a href="#Footnote_935" class=
+"fnanchor">[935]</a> was in an unhappy plight; no matter which way
+he turned he would be accused of breaking his word. Since France
+had the prior claim and since the pressure upon him in St.
+Petersburg was pro-French, he wrote to William II on November 23
+that to fulfil with equal loyalty the clauses of the Dual Alliance
+and those of the treaty of Björkö he would have to add the
+following declaration to the latter:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>In view of the difficulties in the way of an immediate adhesion
+by the French Government to the treaty of defensive alliance signed
+at Björkoe<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[304]</span> . . . .
+it is understood that Article I of that act shall not have any
+application in the eventuality of a war with France and that the
+mutual engagements which unite the latter to Russia will be
+maintained in full until the establishment of an accord <em>à
+trois</em>.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">To soften his refusal the Czar reported that Great
+Britain was “trying hard to get us round for an understanding about
+Asiatic frontier questions”; but he assured William II that he had
+not “the slightest intention of opening negotiations with
+her.”<a id="FNanchor_936"></a><a href="#Footnote_936" class=
+"fnanchor">[936]</a></p>
+
+<p>This reply destroyed the entire force of the treaty; it spelled
+the failure of Germany’s second effort to ally with Russia. The
+German Emperor and his government were bitterly disappointed. In
+the answer to the Czar on November 28, based upon a memorandum by
+Herr von Holstein, William II did not absolutely say yes or no, but
+left it to be understood that Germany still considered the treaty
+as binding in spite of the Czar’s declaration.<a id=
+"FNanchor_937"></a><a href="#Footnote_937" class=
+"fnanchor">[937]</a> On December 2 the Czar refused to accept the
+accord without the proposed declaration.<a id=
+"FNanchor_938"></a><a href="#Footnote_938" class=
+"fnanchor">[938]</a> There the matter rested.</p>
+
+<p>On January 21, 1906, the Czar wrote to William II that in
+keeping with “the real sense of our Bjorkoe treaty,” he had
+accepted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">[305]</span> a proposal
+of President Loubet’s to attach a French general to his person.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>I think that this courtesy to France will bring her still closer
+to Russia. As long as I can hold her tight she will remain peaceful
+and quiet. It seems to me therefore that the continent’s interests
+and still more so the interests of Germany can only gain from it.
+And with God’s help some day Your right idea of forming a new
+“triple alliance” will become a solid reality.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">In sending this letter to Prince Bülow on January
+23 the Emperor wrote:<a id="FNanchor_939"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_939" class="fnanchor">[939]</a></p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>I am sending you herewith another precious, bungling effort from
+the youthful idealist on the Russian throne! The latest phase of
+the Russo-Gallic Alliance borders on the ridiculous, but show’s how
+in Paris—at London’s suggestion?—a counter blow is immediately
+struck against every <em>rapprochement</em> between the two
+Emperors; every time, the little Czar by reason of the “ancient
+alliance” immediately falls or is won over by Lamsdorff. That he
+speaks on “my” idea of a triple alliance, as if I were receiving a
+special favor thereby, is really more than childish or naïve! . . .
+. And all that is served to me from behind a tear-drenched mask of
+eternal, most intimate friendship! How long will it be until he
+will have an “English general” at his side, naturally only in order
+to realize “my” ideal of world peace, and then a Japanese general
+to calm the oriental peoples, and finally an American general! His
+Majesty ought to be ashamed before his and my ancestors and before
+me to do such things, to write such letters to me, which Lamsdorff
+has dictated to him!</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Thus the results of Björkö upon Russo-German relations were
+entirely different from those anticipated by the two rulers. By
+overreaching himself, by seeking a too-brilliant success without
+adequate preparation, the German Emperor alienated the Czar, who
+felt that he had played an ignominious rôle.<a id=
+"FNanchor_940"></a><a href="#Footnote_940" class=
+"fnanchor">[940]</a> The consequence was that Russia again drew
+nearer to France<a id="FNanchor_941"></a><a href="#Footnote_941"
+class="fnanchor">[941]</a> and began to look with more favor upon
+British overtures. Germany’s effort to restore her dominant
+position in Europe and to prevent<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_306">[306]</span> the dreaded encirclement by means of a
+Russian alliance resulted, therefore, in preparing the ground for
+the very act which Germany most feared, the formation of an
+Anglo-Russo-French entente.</p>
+
+<h3>V</h3>
+
+<p>The German bid at Björkö for Russia’s friendship and the rumors
+of what had happened there—approaching more and more nearly the
+truth by October<a id="FNanchor_942"></a><a href="#Footnote_942"
+class="fnanchor">[942]</a>—inevitably aroused rival efforts by
+Great Britain. The British policy of obtaining an understanding
+with Russia was complex. Defeat by Japan and revolution within made
+Russia discouraged and powerless, and broke the prestige of the
+chauvinistic, militaristic groups for the time being.<a id=
+"FNanchor_943"></a><a href="#Footnote_943" class=
+"fnanchor">[943]</a> To complete the prophylactic work of fixing
+adequate restraints to the Russian expansive energy, Great Britain
+renewed prematurely her alliance with Japan in August, 1905,
+modifying the terms so that the alliance became effective in case
+of an attack by one Power and not only China specifically but also
+the “regions of Eastern Asia and of India” were included within its
+scope.<a id="FNanchor_944"></a><a href="#Footnote_944" class=
+"fnanchor">[944]</a> Then the British government hoped that Russia,
+with no other alternative, would make a satisfactory settlement of
+their Asiatic differences.<a id="FNanchor_945"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_945" class="fnanchor">[945]</a></p>
+
+<p>In the previous May, Sir Charles Hardinge, British ambassador at
+St. Petersburg, had carried King Edward’s most cordial greetings to
+the Russian Foreign Minister. With marked pleasure, Count Lamsdorff
+had replied that the maintenance of peace and good relations with
+Great Britain was <em>mon culte et ma religion</em>. Remarking to
+the Ambassador that “interested parties” were trying to stir up
+discord between their countries, the Count<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_307">[307]</span> said that these endeavors must be
+frustrated. Count Lamsdorff, wrote the Ambassador to his
+government,</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">thoroughly realized the actual difficulties of the
+situation, but he was full of confidence that at the end of this
+miserable war both Governments would find a means of arriving at a
+satisfactory arrangement of all outstanding differences in the same
+manner as the Anglo-French arrangement had been made.<a id=
+"FNanchor_946"></a><a href="#Footnote_946" class=
+"fnanchor">[946]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Russia and Japan agreed upon terms of peace on September 5.
+Three days later, Sir Charles Hardinge notified Count Lamsdorff of
+the new Anglo-Japanese Alliance, and assured him most earnestly
+that it was one of national insurance, that Great Britain was
+absolutely sincere in her desire for peace and friendly relations,
+and that she had no wish “to interfere with the legitimate activity
+of Russia” or “to seek a policy of aggrandizement at her expense.”
+Count Lamsdorff replied that he remained convinced of the value of
+an agreement and repeated that a third party was trying to arouse
+hostility between Great Britain and Russia. However, when Sir
+Charles Hardinge alluded to the possibility of resuming the
+previous negotiations at a future date, the Foreign Minister
+responded “that he was most anxious that they should be brought to
+a successful issue but that they should not be unduly
+hastened.”<a id="FNanchor_947"></a><a href="#Footnote_947" class=
+"fnanchor">[947]</a></p>
+
+<p>This cool reply to the British sounding was caused partly by the
+pressing need at that time to annul the Björkö treaty, but
+primarily by the Anglo-Japanese Alliance, whose renewal at that
+moment Russia had not expected. Interpreting it as another blow to
+a state already humiliated by defeat, Russian public opinion
+denounced the treaty.<a id="FNanchor_948"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_948" class="fnanchor">[948]</a> Thinking that the
+Russian animosity would pass, Lord Lansdowne proposed on October 3
+a way of bringing the two countries closer together.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">[308]</span>My own feeling
+was [he said to the Russian ambassador] that it would be a mistake
+to attempt too much, or to allow it to be understood that the two
+countries were on the eve of a comprehensive transaction analogous
+to that which had taken place between France and Great Britain. My
+idea of the procedure to be followed was rather that we should take
+up in detail any outstanding points as to which differences of
+opinion had manifested themselves and endeavour to dispose of
+these, and that we should then pass on to others, if we found that
+our work proceeded successfully.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">Although the Russian Foreign Minister was gratified
+at the expression of British good will, he replied that</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">he could give no answer of a definite character,
+but, speaking privately, he could say that the Treaty had had a
+very bad effect and had left an unpleasant impression upon the mind
+of the Emperor, and he would recommend our Ambassador, as a friend,
+not to press for an answer as it might be a disagreeable one, nor
+to open negotiations as to a definite treaty between England and
+Russia as to their interests in Asia.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">Count Benckendorff even remarked that “any
+arrangement . . . . should not be conceived in a spirit of
+hostility towards Germany”—an implication which the British Foreign
+Secretary repudiated with force.<a id="FNanchor_949"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_949" class="fnanchor">[949]</a></p>
+
+<p>Greatly alarmed at Russian soundings about a Continental
+coalition against Great Britain, the French government in October
+tried several times to bring Russia and Great Britain together,
+even on any minor question.<a id="FNanchor_950"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_950" class="fnanchor">[950]</a> In view of the Russian
+reserve, no definite proposals were made.<a id=
+"FNanchor_951"></a><a href="#Footnote_951" class=
+"fnanchor">[951]</a> By October 21, however, the<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_309">[309]</span> French and British governments
+were certain that the danger of a Russo-German combination was
+past.<a id="FNanchor_952"></a><a href="#Footnote_952" class=
+"fnanchor">[952]</a> Shortly thereafter President Roosevelt, to the
+content of those governments, entirely denied that he favored a
+Continental grouping against the Anglo-Japanese Alliance.<a id=
+"FNanchor_953"></a><a href="#Footnote_953" class=
+"fnanchor">[953]</a> When King Edward learned the truth about the
+Björkö affair in the autumn, he could with some relief describe his
+nephew, the Emperor William, as “the most brilliant failure in
+history.”<a id="FNanchor_954"></a><a href="#Footnote_954" class=
+"fnanchor">[954]</a></p>
+
+<p>While these conversations were unsuccessful, Sir Charles
+Hardinge thought that “the improvement which has already shown
+itself in the relations between England and Russia only requires
+careful fostering to bear fruit in due season.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_955"></a><a href="#Footnote_955" class=
+"fnanchor">[955]</a> To that end it was necessary for the two
+governments to find some opportunity for disinterested
+co-operation—an opportunity which the Conference of Algeciras was
+to afford—and for Russian public opinion to reciprocate the
+amicable feelings of the British so that an Anglo-Russian
+understanding would be built upon a durable basis, like that of the
+Entente Cordiale. The British press was doing its share in bringing
+about this change of attitude. In fact, British public opinion felt
+more relieved than it had in months. The conclusion of the
+Russo-Japanese War, the renewal of the<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_310">[310]</span> Anglo-Japanese Alliance, the signing of the
+Franco-German agreement of September 28—all cleared the diplomatic
+atmosphere. The <em>Matin</em> revelations on October 5 concerning
+the supposed British offer of alliance to France in the previous
+summer placed Great Britain in a somewhat embarrassing position
+before the world as a disturber of peace. Moreover, it was
+recognized that Anglo-German animosity had almost caused a
+Russo-German alliance, and that, to make a settlement with Russia,
+Great Britain should restore better relations with Germany.<a id=
+"FNanchor_956"></a><a href="#Footnote_956" class=
+"fnanchor">[956]</a> So British public opinion was ready to be
+friendly with Russia, and, in part, with Germany. During the
+autumn, sections of the British people, although not the
+government, tried to smooth over the animosities with Germany. A
+meeting was held in London early in December for that purpose at
+which eminent politicians, business men, representatives of the
+press, clergymen, and others were present to further the
+work.<a id="FNanchor_957"></a><a href="#Footnote_957" class=
+"fnanchor">[957]</a> As German public opinion responded to these
+efforts, a general <em>détente</em> set in.<a id=
+"FNanchor_958"></a><a href="#Footnote_958" class=
+"fnanchor">[958]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnotes" id="ftc15">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_865"></a><a href="#FNanchor_865"><span class=
+"label">[865]</span></a>On these differences see Mühlberg to
+Metternich, July 18, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 638, No. 6863 and
+following documents; Lee, <em>King Edward VII</em>, II, 334 ff.,
+346 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_866"></a><a href="#FNanchor_866"><span class=
+"label">[866]</span></a>Even Lascelles, British ambassador at
+Berlin, admitted to Metternich that “in a Franco-German war in view
+of the prevailing opinion here [in England] England would be
+actively on the French side.” See Metternich to Bülow, July 19 and
+22, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 639 f., No. 6864; 646 ff., No. 6867;
+Bülow to Metternich, July 22, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 641 ff., No.
+6866.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_867"></a><a href="#FNanchor_867"><span class=
+"label">[867]</span></a>William II to Bülow, Aug. 11, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XXX, 497, No. 6237.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_868"></a><a href="#FNanchor_868"><span class=
+"label">[868]</span></a>Bülow to F. O., July 20, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 435 f., No. 6206. The telegrams between the two
+rulers were in English.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_869"></a><a href="#FNanchor_869"><span class=
+"label">[869]</span></a>See the correspondence between Holstein and
+Bülow, July 21-24, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 436 ff., Nos. 6203-14. It
+was Holstein who determined the whole policy of the German foreign
+office on this question. Bülow served only as his mouthpiece.
+Richthofen and Metternich, and also General Moltke (who in 1906
+became chief of staff), were all opposed to the project of
+alliance, but their opinions were either not asked or were
+disregarded. See Bülow to F. O., Aug. 9, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 488,
+No. 6235; Metternich to Bülow, Oct. 2, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, XX,
+659 ff., No. 6871; Eckardstein, <em>Lebenserinnerungen und
+politische Denkwürdigkeiten</em>, III, 167.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_870"></a><a href="#FNanchor_870"><span class=
+"label">[870]</span></a>They conversed in English. In the Emperor’s
+account of the interview he gives the Czar’s statements in that
+language.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_871"></a><a href="#FNanchor_871"><span class=
+"label">[871]</span></a>The Czar was also unpleasantly surprised to
+learn that King Edward VII was supporting the candidacy of his
+son-in-law, Prince Carl of Denmark, for the Norwegian throne.
+Nicholas II favored Prince Waldemar, Carl’s younger brother, while
+the Emperor favored choosing a member of the House of Bernadotte.
+It looked to him, said Nicholas, as if Great Britain were
+endeavoring thereby to get her fingers on Norway with the possible
+purpose of acquiring the port of Christiansund from which to block
+the Skaggerrack. See the references given in the succeeding
+footnote.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_872"></a><a href="#FNanchor_872"><span class=
+"label">[872]</span></a>“Watchwords of the Common Brethren for
+1905.” It was a book of proverbs.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_873"></a><a href="#FNanchor_873"><span class=
+"label">[873]</span></a>There is another account of the meeting
+written by Bülow on Aug. 18 immediately after a talk with the
+Emperor which does not agree in all details with this one written
+by the Emperor on the day after the meeting occurred. The two
+versions supplement each other. But the one of July 25 reproduces
+better the atmosphere in which the affair took place. The other
+version is as follows: The Czar declared that he wished to go hand
+in hand with the Emperor, his only friend. The latter asked why the
+treaty had not been signed in the previous autumn. The reply was
+that France had opposed it, that he (the Czar) had had to maintain
+the Dual Alliance, and that France and Germany had been hostile.
+The Emperor then said that those relations were better, that he
+wished France and Germany to become friends, that the Moroccan
+question was to be used for that purpose, and that an understanding
+over it would certainly be reached. The Czar replied that if that
+were the case then nothing stood in the way of a Russo-German
+treaty. The Emperor then produced a copy of the treaty and it was
+signed immediately. See memo. by Bülow, Aug. 18, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 502 f., No. 6240. The other accounts of the
+Björkö interview are as follows: Tschirschky to Bülow, July 24,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 454 ff., No. 6218; William II to Bülow, July
+25, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 458 ff., No. 6220; Bülow to F. O., July
+24, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 452, No. 6215; Witte, <em>Memoirs</em>,
+p. 428; Savinsky, <em>Revue des deux mondes</em>, XII (1922), 798
+f.; Savinsky, <em>Recollections of a Russian Diplomat</em>, p. 115;
+Helmuth von Moltke, <em>Erinnerungen, Briefe, Dokumente,
+1877-1916</em> (Stuttgart, 1922), pp. 325 ff. The treaty was
+countersigned by Grand Duke Michael, Tschirschky, and Admiral
+Birileff, the last two apparently without reading it. The Grand
+Duke was asked to sign it because William II feared that Nicholas
+II might be deposed and Michael made czar. Naturally he did not
+mention his reason.</p>
+
+<p>The Czar wished to consider an agreement guaranteeing to the
+King of Denmark the possession of his territory, so that in case of
+war Russia and Germany would be sure of being able to defend the
+Baltic Sea north of the Belt. A declaration of Danish neutrality
+would not suffice, Nicholas argued to the Emperor, because in case
+the opponent did not respect it and seized the territory as a base
+of operation, Germany and Russia would be in a difficult situation.
+But the Emperor, who together with his government was opposed to
+touching this important question, put Nicholas off with a promise
+to consider the matter with Bülow.</p>
+
+<p>The Emperor also urged the Czar at this interview to grant to
+the Russian people a habeas corpus act which would guarantee their
+civil liberties, and to call a general council of state to consider
+the question of a constitution.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_874"></a><a href="#FNanchor_874"><span class=
+"label">[874]</span></a><em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 459.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_875"></a><a href="#FNanchor_875"><span class=
+"label">[875]</span></a>Goetz, <em>Briefe Wilhelms II an den Zaren
+1894-1914</em>, p. 374.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_876"></a><a href="#FNanchor_876"><span class=
+"label">[876]</span></a>Bülow to F. O., July 25, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 453 f., No. 6217; Holstein to Bülow, July 25,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 457 f., No. 6219.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_877"></a><a href="#FNanchor_877"><span class=
+"label">[877]</span></a>Bülow to F. O., July 27, Aug. 9, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 470 f., Nos. 6224 f.; 488 ff., No. 6235.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_878"></a><a href="#FNanchor_878"><span class=
+"label">[878]</span></a>Bülow to F. O., July 26, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 467 f., No. 6222; 476 f., No. 6228.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_879"></a><a href="#FNanchor_879"><span class=
+"label">[879]</span></a>The German government was particularly
+concerned lest Roosevelt become mistrustful on account of this
+interview and the conclusion of an alliance with Russia. It even
+considered imparting the terms of the treaty to him, but in view of
+the need for secrecy decided not to. Instead, on July 28, the
+Emperor wrote personally to Roosevelt making it appear that the
+interview dealt only with matters pertaining to the Russo-Japanese
+negotiations for peace (Mühlberg to Bussche-Haddenhausen, July 28,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 614, No. 6319). On this discussion about
+whether to notify Roosevelt of the accord see <em>ibid.</em>, Nos.
+6203, 6206-8, 6221, 6223.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_880"></a><a href="#FNanchor_880"><span class=
+"label">[880]</span></a>He meant the one Germany feared of Russia,
+France, Great Britain, and Japan.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_881"></a><a href="#FNanchor_881"><span class=
+"label">[881]</span></a>Holstein to Bülow, July 26, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 468 ff., No. 6223; memo. by Holstein, July 28,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 474 ff., No. 6227.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_882"></a><a href="#FNanchor_882"><span class=
+"label">[882]</span></a>Bülow to F. O., July 28, Aug. 5, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 476 f., No. 6228; 482 f., No. 6231.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_883"></a><a href="#FNanchor_883"><span class=
+"label">[883]</span></a>Bülow to F. O., July 30, Aug. 5 and 9,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 477 ff., No. 6229; 485 ff., No. 6233; 488
+ff., No. 6235.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_884"></a><a href="#FNanchor_884"><span class=
+"label">[884]</span></a>Bülow to William II, July 30, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 477 ff., No. 6229; Holstein to Bülow, Aug. 5, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 483 f., No. 6232.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_885"></a><a href="#FNanchor_885"><span class=
+"label">[885]</span></a>Bülow to F. O., Aug. 2, 5, 9, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 481 ff., Nos. 6230 f.; 488 ff., No. 6235.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_886"></a><a href="#FNanchor_886"><span class=
+"label">[886]</span></a>Bülow to William II, July 24, 27, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 452, No. 6216; 471 ff., No. 6226; Bülow to F. O.,
+July 27-29, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 471, No. 6225; 476 ff., Nos. 6228
+f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_887"></a><a href="#FNanchor_887"><span class=
+"label">[887]</span></a>It is highly probable that Bülow took this
+step not so much because of defects in the treaty, but rather
+because the Emperor had disregarded his authority by making those
+important changes without consulting him. Under the persuasion of
+Richthofen he took this course in order to uphold his authority and
+to teach the Emperor a lesson (Eckardstein, III, 166; editor’s note
+in <em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 481 f., note).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_888"></a><a href="#FNanchor_888"><span class=
+"label">[888]</span></a>Bülow to F. O., Aug. 5 and 9, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 482 f., No. 6231; 488 ff., No. 6235.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_889"></a><a href="#FNanchor_889"><span class=
+"label">[889]</span></a>William II to Bülow, Aug. 11, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 496 ff., No. 6237.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_890"></a><a href="#FNanchor_890"><span class=
+"label">[890]</span></a>Bülow to F. O., Aug. 5 and 9, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 482 f., No. 6231; 485 ff., No. 6233; 488 ff., No.
+6235.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_891"></a><a href="#FNanchor_891"><span class=
+"label">[891]</span></a>Holstein to Bülow, Aug. 5, 6, 14, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 483 f., No. 6232; 487 f., No. 6234; 501, No. 6239;
+Mühlberg to Bülow, Aug. 10, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 493 ff., No.
+6236; Bülow to F. O., Aug. 12, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 498 ff., No.
+6238; memo. by Bülow, Aug. 18, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 502 f., No.
+6240.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_892"></a><a href="#FNanchor_892"><span class=
+"label">[892]</span></a>Meyer to Roosevelt, Aug. 1, 1905, quoted in
+Howe, <em>George von Lengerke Meyer</em>, p. 188.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_893"></a><a href="#FNanchor_893"><span class=
+"label">[893]</span></a>Schulthess, <em>Europäischer
+Geschichtskalender 1905</em>, p. 195.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_894"></a><a href="#FNanchor_894"><span class=
+"label">[894]</span></a>Mühlberg to Bülow, Aug. 10, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 495, No. 6236.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_895"></a><a href="#FNanchor_895"><span class=
+"label">[895]</span></a>Memo. by Spring Rice for a letter to
+Roosevelt, July 10, 1905, Spring Rice to Mrs. Roosevelt, Aug. 10,
+1905, quoted in Gwynn, <em>The Letters and Friendships of Sir Cecil
+Spring Rice</em>, I, 476, 484.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_896"></a><a href="#FNanchor_896"><span class=
+"label">[896]</span></a>Memo. by Mühlberg, Aug. 1, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 648 f., No. 6868; Mühlberg to William II, Aug.
+4, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 649 ff., No. 6869; Metternich to Bülow,
+Aug. 14, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 651 ff., No. 6870. The Emperor did
+not fear an attack at the time, but certainly at some later date.
+He thought that the maneuvers were meant to remind Denmark that she
+was an outpost for Great Britain just as Portugal was and that she
+must not be too familiar with Germany. And with an English princess
+married into the Swedish royal family and King Edward’s son-in-law
+seeking the Norwegian throne, he feared that Norway would also
+become a British satellite (William II to Bülow, July 30, 1905,
+quoted in a dispatch from Bülow to F. O., July 30, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XIX, 477 ff., No. 6229). Even so sane a person as
+General Moltke, who in the next year became chief of staff,
+confided to his diary on July 30, 1905: “The visit of the Channel
+Fleet in the Baltic announced by England is to be regarded as a
+demonstration. . . . . The English are inciting in the most
+unbelievable fashion, they are telling the most despicable lies
+about us, and are representing Germany as the evil spirit in the
+whole world. . . . . The future lies dark before us. May Germany
+have the strength to bear difficult times” (Moltke, p. 331).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_897"></a><a href="#FNanchor_897"><span class=
+"label">[897]</span></a>4 Hansard, Vol. CLI, cols. 113, 122, 136
+ff., 143.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_898"></a><a href="#FNanchor_898"><span class=
+"label">[898]</span></a>Memo. by Mühlberg, Aug. 1, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 648 f., No. 6868; Mühlberg to William II, Aug.
+4, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 649 ff., No. 6869. As a matter of fact,
+the maneuvers had been planned for some time, and to begin with had
+no political significance. No direct connection existed between
+their inception and the meeting at Björkö, but it is very probable
+that the British government was not at all averse to their
+occurring at the time (cf. Bradford, <em>Life of Wilson</em>, p.
+200). Wilson was in command of the British fleet (see also
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 478, editor’s note).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_899"></a><a href="#FNanchor_899"><span class=
+"label">[899]</span></a>Schulthess, <em>1905</em>, pp. 109, 113;
+Bradford, p. 205.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_900"></a><a href="#FNanchor_900"><span class=
+"label">[900]</span></a>The German government learned of this fact
+in August but not of its approval by the British government. See
+Metternich to Bülow, Aug. 14, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 658, No.
+6870; Lee, II, 348, 353. On the quarrels of King Edward and his
+German nephew see Lee, II, 346 ff.; <em>G.P.</em>, 648 ff., Nos.
+6868, 6870; Newton, <em>Lord Lansdowne</em>, p. 330.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_901"></a><a href="#FNanchor_901"><span class=
+"label">[901]</span></a>William II to Nicholas II, Aug. 22, 1905,
+Goetz, p. 377; Hardinge to Lansdowne, Aug. 1, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>,
+IV, 95 f., No. 91 and editor’s note; Newton, pp. 337 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_902"></a><a href="#FNanchor_902"><span class=
+"label">[902]</span></a>Nelidow to Lamsdorff, Aug. 9, 1905,
+<em>Kriegsschuldfrage</em>, Nov., 1924, p. 477.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_903"></a><a href="#FNanchor_903"><span class=
+"label">[903]</span></a><em>Zur europ. Politik</em>, II, 65 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_904"></a><a href="#FNanchor_904"><span class=
+"label">[904]</span></a>Nelidow to Lamsdorff, Aug. 9, Oct. 15,
+1905, <em>Kriegsschuldfrage</em>, Nov., 1924, pp. 477, 491; Radolin
+to Bülow, July 25, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 426 ff., No. 6198; M.
+Bompard states that Witte used the word “alli” (Bompard, “Le traité
+de Bjoerkoe,” <em>Revue de Paris</em>, XXV [May 15, 1918],
+438).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_905"></a><a href="#FNanchor_905"><span class=
+"label">[905]</span></a>Bompard, XXV, 432; Witte, p. 415;
+<em>Quest. dipl. et col.</em>, XX, 174 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_906"></a><a href="#FNanchor_906"><span class=
+"label">[906]</span></a>Nelidow to Lamsdorff, Aug. 9, 1905,
+<em>Kriegsschuldfrage</em>, Nov., 1924, p. 477.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_907"></a><a href="#FNanchor_907"><span class=
+"label">[907]</span></a>Bompard, XXV, 432 f.; Bourgeois et Pagès,
+<em>Les origines et les responsabilités de la grande guerre</em>,
+p. 313.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_908"></a><a href="#FNanchor_908"><span class=
+"label">[908]</span></a>Bompard, XXV, 424 f. Just when Bompard
+learned this fact is not evident, but apparently he did so soon
+after the interview. Cf. Hardinge to Lansdowne, Aug. 3, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 127, No. 168.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_909"></a><a href="#FNanchor_909"><span class=
+"label">[909]</span></a>Nelidow to Lamsdorff, Aug. 9, 1905,
+<em>Kriegsschuldfrage</em>, Nov., 1924, pp. 477 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_910"></a><a href="#FNanchor_910"><span class=
+"label">[910]</span></a>There are various statements about the date
+upon which Lamsdorff learned of the treaty. See Iswolsky,
+<em>Recollections of a Foreign Minister</em>, pp. 49 f.; Savinsky,
+<em>Revue des deux mondes</em>, XII (1922), 798; A. Nekludow,
+“Autour de l’entrevue de Bjoerkoe,” <em>Revue des deux mondes</em>,
+March 1, 1918, p. 139; Nekludow was a secretary in the Russian
+embassy in Paris in 1905 (Witte, p. 426; Savinsky, p. 114). The
+correct date is given in a dispatch from Lamsdorff to Nelidow on
+Oct. 9, where the Foreign Minister stated that he was first told of
+the treaty by the Czar just before the latter’s departure for
+Finland on Aug. 30 (or Sept. 12, according to the new calendar).
+See <em>Kriegsschuldfrage</em>, Nov., 1924, p. 487. The Czar
+excused his delay to Lamsdorff on the grounds that he had promised
+William II to preserve secrecy. See <em>ibid.</em>, p. 487;
+Savinsky, <em>Revue des deux mondes</em>, XII (1922), 798 f.; cf.
+Iswolsky, pp. 49 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_911"></a><a href="#FNanchor_911"><span class=
+"label">[911]</span></a>There is no substantiation in <em>G.P.</em>
+for the assertion by Savinsky that the Czar told Lamsdorff that
+William II had asked him then to make known the accord to the
+French government (Savinsky, <em>Revue des deux mondes</em>, XII
+[1922], 799; Savinsky, p. 115).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_912"></a><a href="#FNanchor_912"><span class=
+"label">[912]</span></a>Savinsky, <em>Revue des deux mondes</em>,
+XII (1922), 799; Savinsky, pp. 115 ff.; Iswolsky, pp. 49 f.;
+Lamsdorff to Nelidow, Oct. 9, 1905, <em>Kriegsschuldfrage</em>,
+Nov., 1924, pp. 486 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_913"></a><a href="#FNanchor_913"><span class=
+"label">[913]</span></a>This was certainly the case. Even apart
+from the fact that the military clauses of the Dual Alliance
+provided for a war against Germany, the political clauses as
+revised in 1899 stated the aim of the alliance to be “the
+maintenance of the general peace and of the European balance of
+power” (Pribram, <em>The Secret Treaties of Austria-Hungary</em>,
+II, 206 ff.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_914"></a><a href="#FNanchor_914"><span class=
+"label">[914]</span></a>Nekludow, <em>Revue des deux mondes</em>,
+March 1, 1918, pp. 137 f.; Savinsky, <em>ibid.</em>, XII (1922),
+799 ff.; Witte, p. 425; Savinsky, pp. 115 ff.; Lamsdorff to
+Nelidow, Oct. 9, Sept. 28, 1905, <em>Kriegsschuldfrage</em>, Nov.,
+1924, pp. 480 f., 486 ff.; Nelidow to Lamsdorff, Oct. 5, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, p. 483.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_915"></a><a href="#FNanchor_915"><span class=
+"label">[915]</span></a>Savinsky, <em>Revue des deux mondes</em>,
+XII (1922), 800 ff.; Savinsky, pp. 118 ff., 126 f.; Lamsdorff to
+Nelidow, Oct. 6 and 9, 1905, <em>Kriegsschuldfrage</em>, Nov.,
+1924, pp. 485 ff.; Witte, pp. 415 ff.; Iswolsky, pp. 44, 49.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_916"></a><a href="#FNanchor_916"><span class=
+"label">[916]</span></a>Lamsdorff to Nelidow, Sept. 14, 1905,
+<em>Kriegsschuldfrage</em>, Nov., 1924, p. 478.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_917"></a><a href="#FNanchor_917"><span class=
+"label">[917]</span></a>Nelidow to Lamsdorff, Sept. 21, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, pp. 479 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_918"></a><a href="#FNanchor_918"><span class=
+"label">[918]</span></a>Hardinge to Lansdowne, July 25, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, IV, 93 f., No. 89; Spring Rice to G. Balfour, July
+29, 1905, and Spring Rice to Mrs. Roosevelt, Oct. 5, 1905, Gwynn,
+I, 481 f., 496.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_919"></a><a href="#FNanchor_919"><span class=
+"label">[919]</span></a>Radolin to Bülow, July 22, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 426 ff., No. 6198. On July 26 the German
+government was about to inaugurate a press campaign against Witte,
+thinking that he was pro-British (Bülow to F. O., July 26, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 468, No. 6222).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_920"></a><a href="#FNanchor_920"><span class=
+"label">[920]</span></a>See Hardinge to Lansdowne, Oct. 4, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, IV, 205, No. 195.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_921"></a><a href="#FNanchor_921"><span class=
+"label">[921]</span></a>Witte, pp. 293 f., 416 f.; Dillon, <em>The
+Eclipse of Russia</em>, pp. 350 f.; Radolin to Bülow, Sept. 23,
+1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 503 f., No. 6241; Witte’s interview in
+<em>Le Temps</em>, reprinted in <em>Quest. dipl. et col.</em>, XX,
+439; Nelidow to Lamsdorff, Oct. 15, 1905,
+<em>Kriegsschuldfrage</em>, Nov., 1924, p. 491; Lee, II, 307 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_922"></a><a href="#FNanchor_922"><span class=
+"label">[922]</span></a>William II to Bülow, Sept. 25, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 505, No. 6242.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_923"></a><a href="#FNanchor_923"><span class=
+"label">[923]</span></a>At the Emperor’s request Bülow said nothing
+to him about the Björkö treaty. See Bülow to William II, Sept. 25,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 505 ff., No. 6243.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_924"></a><a href="#FNanchor_924"><span class=
+"label">[924]</span></a>On the meeting at Rominten see the
+following: Witte, pp. 416 ff.; Iswolsky, pp. 50 ff.; Dillon, pp.
+396 f.; Goetz, pp. 379 ff.; Bülow to F. O., Sept. 27, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 507 f., Nos. 6244 f.; William II to Bülow,
+Sept. 27, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 508 ff., No. 6246.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_925"></a><a href="#FNanchor_925"><span class=
+"label">[925]</span></a>William II to Nicholas II, Sept. 26, 1905,
+Goetz, pp. 379 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_926"></a><a href="#FNanchor_926"><span class=
+"label">[926]</span></a>Bülow instructed the Emperor to that
+effect. See Bülow to William II, Sept. 25, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>,
+XIX, 506, No. 6243. See the dispatch from the Emperor to Bülow on
+Sept. 27, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 508 ff., No. 6246.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_927"></a><a href="#FNanchor_927"><span class=
+"label">[927]</span></a>Hardinge to Lansdowne, Oct. 1 and 4, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, IV, 202 f., No. 193; 205 f., No. 195.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_928"></a><a href="#FNanchor_928"><span class=
+"label">[928]</span></a>Bompard, XXV, 441 f.; Bourgeois et Pagès,
+pp. 318 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_929"></a><a href="#FNanchor_929"><span class=
+"label">[929]</span></a>In his memoirs Witte represented himself
+the dupe of the two rulers; when he read the document itself, he
+wrote, he was horrified. He claimed that he was largely responsible
+for the annulment of the treaty (Witte, pp. 425 ff.; Dillon, pp.
+358 ff., 354, 413 f.; cf. Savinsky, p. 125). These accounts by him
+were both of a much later date, when he had been out of favor for
+several years and held a deep grudge against his master.
+Consequently he wanted to paint the latter’s perfidy toward France
+as black as possible. That Witte thought the treaty so harmful at
+the time is difficult to believe. See his letter to Eulenburg, Oct.
+8, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 519 f., No. 6250, Anlage; Witte, p.
+424; Hardinge to Lansdowne, Oct. 1 and 4, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, IV,
+202 f., No. 193; 205 ff., No. 195; Spring Rice to Mrs. Roosevelt,
+Oct. 5, 1905, Gwynn, I, 496 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_930"></a><a href="#FNanchor_930"><span class=
+"label">[930]</span></a>See the following: Witte, pp. 427 ff.;
+Iswolsky, pp. 54 ff.; Savinsky, <em>Revue des deux mondes</em>, XII
+(1922), 801; Dillon, pp. 361 ff.; Lamsdorff to Nelidow, Oct. 9 and
+27, 1905, <em>Kriegsschuldfrage</em>, Nov., 1924, pp. 487, 495;
+Bompard, XXV, 422 ff.; Savinsky, pp. 120 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_931"></a><a href="#FNanchor_931"><span class=
+"label">[931]</span></a>Lamsdorff met with a similar response from
+Bompard. According to the latter, Lamsdorff suggested a combination
+of Russia, France, Germany, and the United States as a counterpoise
+to the Anglo-Japanese Alliance, “in the same manner that the
+political equilibrium of Europe was maintained by the Dual and
+Triple Alliances.” See Hardinge to Lansdowne, Oct. 14, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, IV, 211 f., No. 198; Spring Rice to Mrs. Roosevelt,
+Oct. 5 and 15, 1905, Gwynn, I, 497, 501 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_932"></a><a href="#FNanchor_932"><span class=
+"label">[932]</span></a>Nelidow to Lamsdorff, Oct. 5, 15, 18, 1905,
+<em>Kriegsschuldfrage</em>, Nov., 1924, pp. 481 f., 489 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_933"></a><a href="#FNanchor_933"><span class=
+"label">[933]</span></a>Nicholas II to William II, Oct. 7, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 512 f., No. 6247.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_934"></a><a href="#FNanchor_934"><span class=
+"label">[934]</span></a>William II to Nicholas II, Oct. 12, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 514, No. 6248; William II to Bülow, Oct. 12 and 17,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 515 ff., Nos. 6249 f. The reply to Witte was
+made by Eulenburg at the same time. See Bülow to Eulenburg, Oct.
+18, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 520 f., No. 6251; Eulenburg to Witte,
+Oct., 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 521, No. 6252. Cf. Bompard, XXV, 443
+ff. Bülow approved of the line taken by his master, for he
+earnestly desired to continue the negotiations (Bülow to Eulenburg,
+Oct. 18, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 520, No. 6251).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_935"></a><a href="#FNanchor_935"><span class=
+"label">[935]</span></a>Lamsdorff to Nelidow, Oct. 12, 1905,
+<em>Kriegsschuldfrage</em>, Nov., 1924, p. 488.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_936"></a><a href="#FNanchor_936"><span class=
+"label">[936]</span></a>The letter was delivered by Osten-Sacken,
+Russian ambassador at Berlin, to give it full official character.
+See <em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 522 ff., No. 6254 and Anlage. The Czar
+approved this reply as early as Nov. 10. Lamsdorff to Osten-Sacken,
+undated though bearing the date of approval by Nicholas II of Nov.
+10. See <em>Kriegsschuldfrage</em>, Nov., 1924, pp. 495 f.;
+Iswolsky, pp. 55 f.; Bompard, XXV, 443 ff.; Witte, p. 429;
+Savinsky, pp. 123 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_937"></a><a href="#FNanchor_937"><span class=
+"label">[937]</span></a>William II to Bülow, Nov. 26, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 524 f., No. 6255. The Emperor thought that
+Russia had shown little appreciation of German friendship during
+the recent war, and he declared to Bülow that the coalition of
+Russia, France, and Great Britain was <em>de facto</em> already
+existent. In the same letter he stated that Germany alone, since
+Russia refused her aid, must win France to the new project. For the
+reply to the Czar see William II to Nicholas II, Nov. 26 and 28,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 526 f., Nos. 6256 f. That the German
+government continued to hold the alliance as valid is seen from a
+memorandum composed by the foreign office for the Emperor just
+before the latter’s meeting with the Czar at Swinemünde, July, 1907
+(<em>ibid.</em>, p. 528 n.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_938"></a><a href="#FNanchor_938"><span class=
+"label">[938]</span></a><em>Ibid.</em>, 527 f., No. 6528. See also
+Bompard, XXV, 447; Witte, p. 429; Bourgeois et Pagès, p. 313.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_939"></a><a href="#FNanchor_939"><span class=
+"label">[939]</span></a>Both letters are quoted in <em>G.P.</em>,
+XIX, 528 n.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_940"></a><a href="#FNanchor_940"><span class=
+"label">[940]</span></a>Nekludow, <em>Revue des deux mondes</em>,
+March 1, 1918, pp. 142, 144. See also the correspondence between
+the two rulers, Jan. 21 and 29, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 528 n.;
+Goetz, p. 386.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_941"></a><a href="#FNanchor_941"><span class=
+"label">[941]</span></a>Iswolsky, p. 56.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_942"></a><a href="#FNanchor_942"><span class=
+"label">[942]</span></a>Hardinge to Lansdowne, Oct. 1, 4, 14, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, IV, 202 f., No. 193; 205 ff., No. 195; 211 f., No.
+198; Lansdowne to Bertie, Oct. 25, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 217 f.,
+No. 203.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_943"></a><a href="#FNanchor_943"><span class=
+"label">[943]</span></a>Hardinge to Lansdowne, Sept. 6, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 198 f., No. 191.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_944"></a><a href="#FNanchor_944"><span class=
+"label">[944]</span></a><em>Ibid.</em>, chap. xxiv.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_945"></a><a href="#FNanchor_945"><span class=
+"label">[945]</span></a>Cf. Bertie to Lansdowne, Sept. 9, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 177, No. 172<em>a</em>; Spring Rice to Mrs.
+Roosevelt, Oct. 5, 1905, Gwynn, I, 498.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_946"></a><a href="#FNanchor_946"><span class=
+"label">[946]</span></a>Hardinge to Knollys, May, 1905, Lee, II,
+306; Hardinge to Lansdowne, May 30, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, IV, 195
+f., No. 189.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_947"></a><a href="#FNanchor_947"><span class=
+"label">[947]</span></a>Hardinge to Lansdowne, Sept. 9, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, IV, 178 f., No. 172 (<em>b</em>); Lansdowne to
+Hardinge, Sept. 4, 1905, Newton, pp. 327 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_948"></a><a href="#FNanchor_948"><span class=
+"label">[948]</span></a>Hardinge to Lansdowne, Sept. 2, 9, 26,
+1905, <em>B.D.</em>, IV, 170 f., No. 159; 178 f., No. 172
+(<em>b</em>); 199 ff., No. 192 and following documents.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_949"></a><a href="#FNanchor_949"><span class=
+"label">[949]</span></a>Lansdowne to Hardinge, Oct. 3 and 5, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 204 f., No. 194; 207 f., No. 196; Spring Rice to
+Mrs. Roosevelt, Oct. 15, 1905, Gwynn, I, 501.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_950"></a><a href="#FNanchor_950"><span class=
+"label">[950]</span></a>Hardinge to Lansdowne, Oct. 4, 8, 14, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, IV, 205 ff., No. 195; 208 ff., Nos. 197 f.;
+Lansdowne to Bertie, Oct. 17 and 25, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 212 f.,
+No. 199; 217 f., No. 203.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_951"></a><a href="#FNanchor_951"><span class=
+"label">[951]</span></a>See Hardinge to Lansdowne, Oct. 14, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 211 f., No. 198, Lansdowne’s minute;
+<em>ibid.</em>, pp. 521 f.; report from London, Oct. 30, 1905,
+<em>Zur europ. Politik</em>, II, No. 22; report from St.
+Petersburg, Nov. 8, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, No. 23; Metternich to
+Bülow, Oct. 22, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 663 ff., No. 6360;
+Metternich to F. O., Nov. 15, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, XXV, No. 8501;
+Richthofen to Bülow, Oct. 24, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, XIX, 665, No.
+6361; Schoen to Bülow, Jan. 28, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, XXV, 5 f.,
+No. 8502; Miquel to Bülow, Oct. 24, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, XIX, 666
+ff., No. 6362; Nicholas II to William II, Nov. 23, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 523, No. 6254. On Oct. 21, 1905, King Edward
+instructed Hardinge to express to the Czar “my earnest desire that
+the best and most durable relations should be established between
+the two countries, and that all important points should be
+discussed in the most amicable spirit and arranged as soon as
+possible” (Edward VII to Hardinge, quoted in Lee, II, 310). On Oct.
+12 Lord Sydenham received a letter from Balfour stating that “the
+time is propitious for an understanding with Russia.” Lord
+Sydenham, a member of the Defence Committee, wrote a draft of an
+agreement with Russia and sent it to the Premier, Oct. 20. On Nov.
+1 he discussed Persian railways with Balfour and Sir Charles
+Hardinge, and, after Balfour had left, he (Sydenham) and Hardinge
+talked over the draft agreement. Hardinge believed that the
+Russians would accept it (Colonel Lord Sydenham, <em>My Working
+Life</em> [London, 1927], p. 182).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_952"></a><a href="#FNanchor_952"><span class=
+"label">[952]</span></a>Hardinge to Lansdowne, Oct. 21, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, IV, 214, No. 201; Metternich to F. O., Nov. 15,
+1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 521 f., No. 6253.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_953"></a><a href="#FNanchor_953"><span class=
+"label">[953]</span></a>Roosevelt to Spring Rice, Nov. 1, 1905,
+Gwynn, II, 8; G. Balfour to Spring Rice, Oct. 25, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, I, 503.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_954"></a><a href="#FNanchor_954"><span class=
+"label">[954]</span></a>Eckardstein, I, 218 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_955"></a><a href="#FNanchor_955"><span class=
+"label">[955]</span></a>Hardinge to Lansdowne, Oct. 24, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, IV, 216, No. 202.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_956"></a><a href="#FNanchor_956"><span class=
+"label">[956]</span></a>Metternich to F. O., Nov. 15, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 521 f., No. 6253; Howe, p. 209.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_957"></a><a href="#FNanchor_957"><span class=
+"label">[957]</span></a>Report from London, Oct. 23, 1905, <em>Zur
+europ. Politik</em>, II, 80 f.; Bernstorff to Bülow, Sept. 8, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XIX, 636 ff., No. 6340. Party leaders, magazines,
+newspapers, and various societies in England took up the work. The
+<em>Times</em>, however, continued its anti-German campaign. In
+December, Colonel Repington published an article therein, warning
+the public against friendliness with Germany (Lieutenant Colonel
+Charles à Court Repington, <em>Vestigia</em> [London, 1919], pp.
+262 f.). See also E. T. Raymond, <em>The Life of Lord Rosebery</em>
+(New York, 1923), p. 211; Spender, <em>Life of
+Campbell-Bannerman</em>, II, 208; Schulthess, <em>1905</em>, pp.
+198 ff.; Metternich to Bülow, Oct. 18 and 22, Nov. 2, Dec. 3 and
+20, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 669 ff., Nos. 6879 ff.; Spender,
+<em>Life, Journalism and Politics</em>, I, 191 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_958"></a><a href="#FNanchor_958"><span class=
+"label">[958]</span></a>See Metternich to Bülow, Dec. 20, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 690, No. 6886.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap">
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">[311]</span><a id=
+"c16"></a>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+
+<p class="sch2">THE PRELIMINARIES TO THE CONFERENCE OF
+ALGECIRAS</p>
+
+<h3 class="space-above1">I. GERMAN PRELIMINARIES TO THE CONFERENCE
+OF ALGECIRAS</h3>
+
+<p>After the Björkö treaty had been annulled by the Russian
+government, the Moroccan affair once more held the chief attention
+of the German foreign office. Already important, it became more so;
+for there was no longer any reason for the German government to use
+the Moroccan affair as a means of conciliating France and there was
+added need for it to justify to the German people and to the world
+the long diplomatic campaign over Morocco by checkmating France at
+the Conference.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>Our chief object [wrote Prince Bülow on November 23] must be to
+avoid isolation at the conference. If we have the majority or all
+the other Powers against us on a question upon which we have
+engaged ourselves, boldness and threats will be of no use since
+after all that has occurred, our situation would be almost
+ludicrous.<a id="FNanchor_959"></a><a href="#Footnote_959" class=
+"fnanchor">[959]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>At almost the same moment the French Premier sounded the German
+government as to whether it would agree for France and Spain
+together to receive a police mandate from the Conference.<a id=
+"FNanchor_960"></a><a href="#Footnote_960" class=
+"fnanchor">[960]</a> The inclusion of Spain, he said, would prevent
+the concession from appearing one-sided in favor of France and
+would enable the latter to keep her promise not to seek a general
+mandate. He added that Germany might be forced to agree to that
+solution. Replying doubtfully to these overtures, Herr von
+Flotow<span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">[312]</span> advised the
+French government to make the proposal directly in Berlin in
+accordance with diplomatic form. A few days later (November 30)
+Herr von Kühlmann reported that M. Vaffier-Pollet, representative
+of the Comité du Maroc in Tangier, and Count de Chérisey, former
+secretary of the French legation in Tangier, had proposed to him in
+Paris that the German and French governments make a secret
+agreement before the Conference to the following effect: The
+<em>status quo</em> in Morocco should be maintained for three or
+four years, after which, if conditions had not improved, Germany
+should not oppose the bestowal upon France of the police mandate
+for all of Morocco; in return, Germany should be assured of the
+open door and of the right for German capital to participate to the
+extent of 45 per cent in all governmental enterprises in Morocco,
+of territorial compensation in the French Congo region, and of the
+cession of the French right of preference to acquire the Belgian
+Congo.<a id="FNanchor_961"></a><a href="#Footnote_961" class=
+"fnanchor">[961]</a> Although M. Rouvier stood behind this offer,
+the German government did not know it and did not reply. It was
+much disposed to consider the overture made through Herr von
+Flotow; but this fact the French Premier could not know, and,
+misled by the German silence, he never returned to the
+subject.<a id="FNanchor_962"></a><a href="#Footnote_962" class=
+"fnanchor">[962]</a></p>
+
+<p>The German Chancellor’s willingness to negotiate directly with
+France showed that he was beginning to appreciate Germany’s
+increasingly unfavorable position in international relations. He
+knew that the German government faced a hard campaign and that its
+public opinion, which had no particular interest in Morocco and was
+averse to war, must be convinced of the<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_313">[313]</span> justice of the German cause and aroused to
+the seriousness of the international situation. In the Reichstag on
+December 6 the Chancellor therefore warned the nation that while
+animosities had been overcome, new ones were possible, and that the
+British were particularly anti-German. Repeating all the German
+accusations against the French Moroccan policy, he justified at
+length Germany’s defense of her interests. He avowed his strong
+desire for the maintenance of friendly relations with all nations.
+He assured his hearers that Italy remained loyal to the Triple
+Alliance. But he urged his country to be prepared for any
+emergency.<a id="FNanchor_963"></a><a href="#Footnote_963" class=
+"fnanchor">[963]</a> The speech was widely approved.<a id=
+"FNanchor_964"></a><a href="#Footnote_964" class=
+"fnanchor">[964]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Chancellor’s utterances were soon answered by M. Rouvier
+through the publication of a French <em>Livre jaune</em> of over
+three hundred pages, which was supplemented by a speech in the
+Chamber on December 16.<a id="FNanchor_965"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_965" class="fnanchor">[965]</a> Therein, to the
+satisfaction of the French, the German accusations were denied and
+the national policy of France toward Morocco was exonerated.<a id=
+"FNanchor_966"></a><a href="#Footnote_966" class=
+"fnanchor">[966]</a> According to the reports of the German
+representatives in Paris in December and January, France was firmly
+resolved not to recede further, and the French government was
+making military preparations.<a id="FNanchor_967"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_967" class="fnanchor">[967]</a></p>
+
+<p>These manifestations did not augur well for the German
+government. Nor did the terms of the Franco-Spanish agreement of
+September 1, 1905, which it learned of at some time before
+the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">[314]</span> Conference
+opened.<a id="FNanchor_968"></a><a href="#Footnote_968" class=
+"fnanchor">[968]</a> The knowledge of the terms gave a concrete
+basis to the mistrust of France’s intentions toward Morocco, and
+stiffened German resistance. On December 25 the German government
+envisaged three ways in which the Conference might end: first, a
+provisorium of about three years might be agreed upon, at the end
+of which each Power would recover its freedom of action; second, a
+separate agreement with France might be made, but only in case the
+latter offered suitable terms; third, a general police mandate for
+Western Morocco might be given to France. This last result,
+equivalent to a French victory, the German government was
+determined not to permit, holding a conflict as preferable.<a id=
+"FNanchor_969"></a><a href="#Footnote_969" class=
+"fnanchor">[969]</a> In fact, none of these solutions was very
+palatable to the government. But it was determined to hold
+firm,<a id="FNanchor_970"></a><a href="#Footnote_970" class=
+"fnanchor">[970]</a> and the instructions to Herr von Radowitz and
+Count Tattenbach, the German delegates at the Conference, were
+optimistic.</p>
+
+<p>The delegates were to uphold the open door and economic equality
+for all. They should combat the monopoly for making loans to
+Morocco claimed by the French banks. As Germany had already
+recognized the legitimate interests of France by permitting her to
+regulate the frontier, the mandate for police reforms in the west
+should be given to a number of Powers and should be internationally
+organized for a limited number of years. If a division of mandated
+areas were made, Germany<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_315">[315]</span> should receive her share—one with a port
+advantageously located for later expansion into the interior;
+however, Germany was ready to agree with the others not to draw any
+advantage for herself from this mandate. All the signatory Powers
+should participate equally in establishing and directing the
+proposed state bank, for which adequate international organization
+and control should be provided. Above all, the delegates should not
+permit themselves to be isolated or to stand alone with Morocco.
+Thus, in general, they were to work for the internationalization of
+Morocco.<a id="FNanchor_971"></a><a href="#Footnote_971" class=
+"fnanchor">[971]</a></p>
+
+<p>Prince Bülow became more and more optimistic as the Conference
+approached.<a id="FNanchor_972"></a><a href="#Footnote_972" class=
+"fnanchor">[972]</a> At his urging, the Sultan promised to select
+carefully his delegates to the assembly and to co-operate with the
+Powers there.<a id="FNanchor_973"></a><a href="#Footnote_973"
+class="fnanchor">[973]</a> The Chancellor expected the neutral
+Powers to support Germany against the monopolistic desires of
+France. He particularly courted President Roosevelt; for, although
+he knew that Mr. White, the American delegate, would not be
+permitted to take the initiative at the Conference, the Chancellor
+thought that the President and his delegate would be able, behind
+the scenes, to exert a powerful influence.<a id=
+"FNanchor_974"></a><a href="#Footnote_974" class=
+"fnanchor">[974]</a> From Russia, Prince Bülow anticipated no
+interference. The Austrian Foreign Minister stated his government’s
+readiness to go hand in hand with Germany at the Conference.<a id=
+"FNanchor_975"></a><a href="#Footnote_975" class=
+"fnanchor">[975]</a> Spanish mistrust<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_316">[316]</span> and jealousy of France with reference to
+Morocco might be aroused and used.<a id="FNanchor_976"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_976" class="fnanchor">[976]</a> To that end the German
+government prevented the selection of the anti-German M.
+Villa-Urrutia as delegate.<a id="FNanchor_977"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_977" class="fnanchor">[977]</a></p>
+
+<p>Toward Italy, embarrassed by her situation as Germany’s ally and
+France’s friend through an agreement over Morocco, the Chancellor
+modified his former tactics. He offered to support her as a
+candidate for the general police mandate at the Conference.<a id=
+"FNanchor_978"></a><a href="#Footnote_978" class=
+"fnanchor">[978]</a> But the Italian government refused. Sending
+the aged and experienced Marquis Visconti Venosta as delegate, it
+gave him permission to act as he saw fit in order to keep his head
+out of the noose.<a id="FNanchor_979"></a><a href="#Footnote_979"
+class="fnanchor">[979]</a> The German Chancellor approved this
+choice and welcomed the Marquis’ statement that he would endeavor
+to mediate between France and Germany and to bring the Conference
+to a successful conclusion.<a id="FNanchor_980"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_980" class="fnanchor">[980]</a> Prince Bülow planned to
+exploit Italy’s position by laying down a flat <em>non
+possumus</em> on the question of permitting France to receive the
+mandate for the police, with the expectation that the Italian
+government would then press France to accept the German terms in
+order to prevent a conflict wherein it would be forced to choose
+sides.<a id="FNanchor_981"></a><a href="#Footnote_981" class=
+"fnanchor">[981]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Chancellor instructed Prince Radolin to impress
+French<span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">[317]</span> official
+circles with the fact that Germany would never permit France to
+obtain a general police mandate or a special position in the state
+bank, that if France persisted in refusing to agree to the open
+door in Morocco, a “very critical situation would arise” which
+“would lead inevitably to a grave conflict” between the two
+states.<a id="FNanchor_982"></a><a href="#Footnote_982" class=
+"fnanchor">[982]</a> Prince Bülow was pleased to learn that the
+French people were growing nervous and that M. Rouvier, M. Jules
+Cambon, French ambassador in Madrid, and others were asserting
+France’s wish for a peaceful and satisfactory solution.<a id=
+"FNanchor_983"></a><a href="#Footnote_983" class=
+"fnanchor">[983]</a></p>
+
+<p>The main reason for the Chancellor’s growing optimism was the
+fact that in December a Liberal government had come to power in
+England and that British public opinion was more friendly to
+Germany. Prince Bülow and the Emperor both expected an improvement
+in Anglo-German relations, and exerted their influence in achieving
+it.<a id="FNanchor_984"></a><a href="#Footnote_984" class=
+"fnanchor">[984]</a> The Chancellor did not believe that the new
+Liberal government would stiffen the French resistance by holding
+out the prospect of active aid in case of war as the Unionist
+cabinet had done. He interpreted the overwhelming Liberal victory
+at the elections in January as a clear rejection of chauvinism and
+an equally clear expression by the nation of an earnest desire for
+peace and for further improvement in<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_318">[318]</span> Anglo-German relations. He learned that
+Edward VII had spoken in favor of a peaceful settlement.<a id=
+"FNanchor_985"></a><a href="#Footnote_985" class=
+"fnanchor">[985]</a> Then, just after the Conference opened, the
+King and the Emperor entered into personal correspondence once
+more.<a id="FNanchor_986"></a><a href="#Footnote_986" class=
+"fnanchor">[986]</a> The Chancellor therefore expected the British
+government to play the rôle of mediator instead of active French
+partisan, and he endeavored to impress this duty upon it.<a id=
+"FNanchor_987"></a><a href="#Footnote_987" class=
+"fnanchor">[987]</a> In view of this situation he believed that
+France would accept the German solution of the Moroccan
+problem.<a id="FNanchor_988"></a><a href="#Footnote_988" class=
+"fnanchor">[988]</a></p>
+
+<p>Although the Chancellor knew that France was improving her
+defenses, he did not anticipate a war.<a id=
+"FNanchor_989"></a><a href="#Footnote_989" class=
+"fnanchor">[989]</a> He notified General Moltke, the new chief of
+staff, that he need take no precautionary measures.<a id=
+"FNanchor_990"></a><a href="#Footnote_990" class=
+"fnanchor">[990]</a> The Emperor also regarded the French fears of
+war<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">[319]</span> as “ludicrous,
+bordering on insanity.” Late in December he roundly declared to Mr.
+Werner Beit, a friend of Edward VII, and to the Marquis de
+Laguiche, French military attaché in Berlin, that “there is
+absolutely no cause for any war or for any concern about an attack
+from us,” adding, however, these more ominous words:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>Even if we had the best intentions and were loyal and wished to
+remain peaceful, there would be danger that in case of continued
+inciting of France by London, she [France] might, relying on
+certain aid from England, conduct herself toward us so
+ill-manneredly and provocatively that finally our national honor
+would come into question, for the sake of which we should have to
+resort to arms; then we would have to strike and therewith, through
+our “illegal attack” on France, give the occasion for England’s
+aid. And it is monstrous perfidy [for England] to work toward
+such.<a id="FNanchor_991"></a><a href="#Footnote_991" class=
+"fnanchor">[991]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">Thus, hopeful for peace but not entirely averse to
+war, the German leaders saw the Conference begin.</p>
+
+<h3>II. FRENCH PRELIMINARIES TO THE CONFERENCE OF ALGECIRAS</h3>
+
+<p>In spite of the failure of his overtures to the German
+government in November, the French Premier assured the
+<em>Wilhelmstrasse</em> on the eve of the Conference that he wished
+to reach an understanding at that assembly on the basis of “no
+victor, no vanquished.” Nevertheless, both he and the French nation
+were determined to uphold France’s ambitions and claims toward
+Morocco. On January 8, 1906, Prince Radolin wrote that
+there<span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">[320]</span> prevailed in
+France “grave anxiety over the possibility of warlike
+complications. . . . . In press and public it is said that Germany
+wishes war, that France has receded . . . . on all points, but
+without satisfying Germany.” At the Conference, thus Prince Radolin
+interpreted French opinion, “proposals would be made which would be
+contrary to her honor and her traditional policy in Morocco. France
+must defend herself and be prepared for any eventuality. . . . .
+Germany makes no secret of her armaments, and therefore it is
+imperative for France also to keep her powder dry.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_992"></a><a href="#Footnote_992" class=
+"fnanchor">[992]</a></p>
+
+<p>In this state of mind the French Parliament during the latter
+half of 1905 investigated French defences and put 200,000,000
+francs at the disposal of the war Minister for repairing them,
+particularly on the eastern frontier. That work was actively begun;
+food and munitions were brought in; the frontier forces were
+increased by reserves; drilling and trial mobilizations were
+held.<a id="FNanchor_993"></a><a href="#Footnote_993" class=
+"fnanchor">[993]</a> As M. Delcassé had prophesied, M. Rouvier
+returned completely to the international policy of the fallen
+Minister in order to achieve victory at the Conference. The French
+government<span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">[321]</span> realized
+that the opposition of the French and German policies was so
+complete as to make retreat difficult for either party. Preparing
+for the worst, M. Rouvier yet hoped to exert sufficient moral
+pressure on Germany at the Conference to gain a French victory
+without precipitating a war.<a id="FNanchor_994"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_994" class="fnanchor">[994]</a> To that end he
+supplemented the military measures by diplomatic work. He was
+certain of Russia’s support because, aside from the alliance,
+Russia had urgent need of a French loan, which M. Rouvier would not
+permit until after a satisfactory conclusion of the Moroccan
+affair.<a id="FNanchor_995"></a><a href="#Footnote_995" class=
+"fnanchor">[995]</a> Russia’s influence was restricted by the
+revolution and by a lack of interest in Morocco. But a promise from
+the Czar to exercise his personal power with Emperor William II in
+favor of conciliation would be of eminent value, and M. Rouvier
+sought to obtain it.<a id="FNanchor_996"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_996" class="fnanchor">[996]</a> He also wished to have
+President Roosevelt act similarly at the proper moment. This plan
+was to bear fruit later; but at the time the American government
+replied that it had small concern in the Moroccan conference and
+that, while standing for the open door and exerting its influence
+for peace, it would interfere as little as possible in the
+deliberations. Mr. Root, the secretary of state, told the British
+Ambassador that the American delegate would “avoid any action which
+could tend to weaken Anglo-French entente.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_997"></a><a href="#Footnote_997" class=
+"fnanchor">[997]</a> M. Rouvier also received<span class="pagenum"
+id="Page_322">[322]</span> “satisfactory assurances” from the
+Austro-Hungarian government; he did not expect opposition from it
+or from Belgium.<a id="FNanchor_998"></a><a href="#Footnote_998"
+class="fnanchor">[998]</a> Far more important was the continuation
+of British aid, both for its own sake and for holding Italy and
+Spain in line.<a id="FNanchor_999"></a><a href="#Footnote_999"
+class="fnanchor">[999]</a> From the new Liberal government that
+came in early in December, the French Premier was immediately
+assured of diplomatic aid by word and act.</p>
+
+<h3>III. BRITISH PRELIMINARIES TO THE CONFERENCE OF ALGECIRAS</h3>
+
+<p>When internal disputes over the question of tariff reform
+finally forced the resignation of the Unionist government on
+December 4, the Liberals, with Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman as
+prime minister, entered office. In response to the popular demand
+they were pledged to continue the foreign policy of their
+predecessor, and the presence at the foreign office of Sir Edward
+Grey assured the fulfilment of that pledge. The Foreign Secretary
+was a Liberal Imperialist, a follower of Lord Rosebery. He had been
+one of the rebels against the leadership of Sir Henry
+Campbell-Bannerman, a Gladstonian Liberal, because of the latter’s
+denunciation of the Boer War. Regretting that Lord Rosebery would
+not enter the cabinet, Sir Edward Grey at first refused office
+unless the Premier would accept a peerage and leave the leadership
+in the House of Commons to Mr. Asquith, another Liberal
+Imperialist. After much persuasion from his friends and after the
+influence of the Liberal Imperialists had been increased by the
+appointment of Mr. Haldane as secretary of war, Sir Edward receded
+from his demand.<a id="FNanchor_1000"></a><a href="#Footnote_1000"
+class="fnanchor">[1000]</a></p>
+
+<p>The new Foreign Secretary found the “mud of foreign politics”
+deeper than any he had ever been in; but he was soon steering
+himself through it as nimbly as his predecessors.
+Although<span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">[323]</span> an
+idealist who hated war, he was not afraid of it, for, he wrote to
+Sir Francis Bertie, January 15, 1906, “We can protect ourselves . .
+. . for we are more supreme at sea than we have ever been.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_1001"></a><a href="#Footnote_1001" class=
+"fnanchor">[1001]</a> He followed the ways of <em>Realpolitik</em>,
+playing the “grand game” of prestige politics in the ordinary way
+with national interest as his ultimate guide. He impressed other
+men with whom he had personal contact as trying to be entirely
+frank and honest and sympathetic. Yet his insularity, his lack of
+knowledge of the Continent, really prevented him from appreciating
+any other state’s point of view. Combining the limitations of a
+“downright Britisher” with high moral and political rectitude, he
+usually believed that Great Britain was in the right and acted
+accordingly. Then he was unable to comprehend why other Powers
+misinterpreted her policy.<a id="FNanchor_1002"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1002" class="fnanchor">[1002]</a></p>
+
+<p>With regard to Russia, Sir Edward Grey immediately stated to the
+Ambassador his hope for a settlement of the outstanding questions.
+Count Benckendorff thought that negotiations were impossible “while
+things in Russia were in their present condition.” Appreciating
+this fact, Sir Edward Grey answered that “during this inevitable
+delay, it would be the policy of our Government not to do anything
+which would make the resumption of negotiations or a settlement
+more difficult later on.”<a id="FNanchor_1003"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1003" class="fnanchor">[1003]</a> In January of the next
+year, Count Witte, Russian premier, proposed to the British
+government that Czar Nicholas and King Edward—diplomats he
+distrusted as being too slow—should at a personal meeting conclude
+a general agreement in return for which Great Britain should make a
+loan to Russia. The British Ambassador soon showed him the
+impracticability of the idea.<a id="FNanchor_1004"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1004" class="fnanchor">[1004]</a> In the
+same<span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">[324]</span> month Count
+Benckendorff talked vaguely and informally with Mr. Spring Rice of
+the Bosphorus and the Dardanelles and of Persia—all to no object,
+for, as the British government perceived, Russia was indifferent to
+an agreement.<a id="FNanchor_1005"></a><a href="#Footnote_1005"
+class="fnanchor">[1005]</a> But some progress was made toward a
+<em>rapprochement</em>. The two governments co-operated on the
+Cretan and Macedonian questions.<a id="FNanchor_1006"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1006" class="fnanchor">[1006]</a> Treating each other
+more frankly,<a id="FNanchor_1007"></a><a href="#Footnote_1007"
+class="fnanchor">[1007]</a> each refused to take advantage of the
+other early in 1906 by making a loan to Persia.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1008"></a><a href="#Footnote_1008" class=
+"fnanchor">[1008]</a> The British government renewed its assurances
+about Tibet in January.<a id="FNanchor_1009"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1009" class="fnanchor">[1009]</a> British bankers agreed
+to participate in a forthcoming loan to Russia.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1010"></a><a href="#Footnote_1010" class=
+"fnanchor">[1010]</a> The Czar and King Edward were on cordial
+terms, the former late in January even intimated to his uncle that
+he would be pleased with a visit from him.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1011"></a><a href="#Footnote_1011" class=
+"fnanchor">[1011]</a> And the two governments were in harmony in
+their policy of helping France at Algeciras. So while the work of
+achieving the entente was slow, the British government did not let
+it cease.</p>
+
+<p>The British Foreign Secretary also continued the previous policy
+toward Germany. He knew very little of that Power, did not
+understand it,<a id="FNanchor_1012"></a><a href="#Footnote_1012"
+class="fnanchor">[1012]</a> and nursed a deep suspicion of it from
+his experiences as undersecretary of state for foreign affairs from
+1892 to 1895. He was determined not to let Great Britain fall again
+into that state of trouble with other Powers, which he thought had
+enabled Germany to treat her so high-handedly at<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_325">[325]</span> that time and to make demands
+upon her inimical to her interests.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1013"></a><a href="#Footnote_1013" class=
+"fnanchor">[1013]</a> His advisers in the foreign office, Sir
+Charles Hardinge and Mr. Eyre Crowe, were of a similar mind,
+lacking the balanced and comprehensive judgment characteristic of
+Lord Sanderson, who after years of service retired from his
+position as permanent undersecretary of state for foreign affairs
+in January, 1906.<a id="FNanchor_1014"></a><a href="#Footnote_1014"
+class="fnanchor">[1014]</a></p>
+
+<p>Sir Edward Grey was now confronted with the same kind of action
+on the part of Germany which had previously angered him. He saw a
+conference approaching at which the new friendship with France
+would be tested, at which it would be either broken or confirmed.
+He was resolved that if possible it should not be broken, though he
+did not necessarily intend that it should become stronger. “It was
+a matter of interest,” he said on August 3, 1914, with reference to
+this crisis, “to preserve it [the Entente] as well as a point of
+honour to act up to the diplomatic obligations contained in
+it.”<a id="FNanchor_1015"></a><a href="#Footnote_1015" class=
+"fnanchor">[1015]</a> At the time (December 21, 1905) he expressed
+himself more concretely to Sir Arthur Nicolson as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>The Morocco Conference is going to be difficult if not critical.
+As far as I can discover the Germans will refuse altogether to
+concede to France the special position in Morocco, which we have
+promised France not only to concede to her but to help her by
+diplomatic methods to obtain.</p>
+
+<p>If she can succeed in getting this with our help it will be a
+great success for the Anglo-French <em>Entente</em>; if she fails
+the prestige of the <em>Entente</em> will suffer and its vitality
+will be diminished.</p>
+
+<p>Our main object therefore must be to help France to carry her
+point at the Conference.<a id="FNanchor_1016"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1016" class="fnanchor">[1016]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Thus for the sake of interest and honor, that invincible pair,
+Sir Edward Grey based British policy upon the matter of prestige.
+Whereas Lord Lansdowne had admitted that the Anglo-French
+declaration over Morocco did not bind Germany, the<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_326">[326]</span> new British Foreign Secretary
+was determined that Germany should formally recognize France’s
+preponderant position in Morocco. It is to be inferred from his
+statement that Germany had the alternative of accepting France’s
+monopolization of the Sherifian Empire passively or of challenging
+it and then being forced to accept it.</p>
+
+<p>That this ominous feeling was not peculiar to Sir Edward Grey
+was shown early in January by a letter which Lord Ripon, one of the
+older members of the cabinet, wrote to Lord Fitzmaurice,
+parliamentary undersecretary of state for foreign affairs. It read
+in part as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>One cannot help being anxious about this Morocco business. I am
+sorry though not surprised to hear that you think the Germans
+intend to make the Conference a failure. That a European war should
+arise out of the matter seems almost impossible, but when one has
+to deal with a potentate like the German Emperor one can feel no
+real security.<a id="FNanchor_1017"></a><a href="#Footnote_1017"
+class="fnanchor">[1017]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>On December 19 Count Metternich gave to Sir Edward Grey a
+general explanation of Germany’s policy on the Moroccan question,
+expressing the hope that the British government would play the part
+of conciliator at the Conference.<a id="FNanchor_1018"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1018" class="fnanchor">[1018]</a> The British Minister
+replied on January 3. The Conference filled him with concern, he
+said. After having studied the documents more thoroughly, he had
+found that Lord Lansdowne had stated to Count Metternich “that, in
+the event of war between Germany and France, public feeling in
+England would be such that, in his opinion, it would be impossible
+for England to remain neutral.” This statement, he went on, he made
+his own; for, while the British government “wanted to avoid trouble
+between Germany and France,” and would not “egg” France on at the
+Conference, yet since the entente was very popular in England he
+“really thought that if there was trouble, we [Great Britain]
+should be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">[327]</span> involved
+in it. . . . . It was not a question of the policy of the
+Government,” he told the Ambassador; “what made a nation most
+likely to take part in war was not policy or interest, but
+sentiment, and if the circumstances arose, public feeling in
+England would be so strong that it would be impossible to be
+neutral.” British opinion, he declared, would be moved not by
+hostility to Germany but by the wish to preserve friendship with
+France. He made an Anglo-German <em>rapprochement</em> contingent
+upon a happy outcome of the Conference, an improvement in
+Franco-German relations and the assurance thereby that the Entente
+Cordiale would not be endangered. He spoke frankly, he said,
+because the situation might later become such as to make openness
+more difficult. When Count Metternich reminded him that Lord
+Lansdowne had qualified his statement concerning the possibility of
+active British aid by the further assertion, “in case of an
+unprovoked attack by Germany upon France,” Sir Edward Grey made no
+reply. But the meaning of his statement was clear to the
+Ambassador, who accepted it as an honest rendition of the British
+position.<a id="FNanchor_1019"></a><a href="#Footnote_1019" class=
+"fnanchor">[1019]</a></p>
+
+<p>The bluntness of these remarks seemed justified immediately by
+the varying reports about Germany’s intentions which came to the
+British foreign office. The German Emperor was in a friendlier mood
+although angry at the tone of the British press. Baron Richthofen
+and Herr von Radowitz both spoke of a desire<span class="pagenum"
+id="Page_328">[328]</span> for conciliation.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1020"></a><a href="#Footnote_1020" class=
+"fnanchor">[1020]</a> The British Consul in Hamburg, however,
+learned from Herr von Tschirschky of the German foreign office on
+New Year’s Day that “Germany’s policy always had been and would be
+to try to frustrate any coalition between two States which might
+result in damaging Germany’s interests and prestige, and Germany
+would, if she thought that such a coalition was being formed, even
+if its actual results had not been carried into practical effect,
+not hesitate to take such steps as she thought proper to break the
+combination.”<a id="FNanchor_1021"></a><a href="#Footnote_1021"
+class="fnanchor">[1021]</a> And Prince Bülow’s brother, minister at
+Berne, remarked to his British colleague on December 31:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>No doubt the sudden intervention of Germany [in Morocco] had not
+been dictated by the desire to safeguard German interests in that
+region. The object had been a higher one. Germany was bound in
+self-defense to emancipate herself from the isolation with which
+she was threatened. First Russia, then Italy, and lastly England
+had been won over by France. The cordon must be broken, and the
+penultimate defeat of Russia had furnished the propitious moment. .
+. . . He thought that a <em>détente</em> would make itself felt
+when once the Conference was over.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1022"></a><a href="#Footnote_1022" class=
+"fnanchor">[1022]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>It was becoming more and more apparent that Anglo-German
+antagonism would accentuate the difficulties of the Conference.
+Prince Bülow informed the British government on January 11 that he
+advocated reforms on an international basis. Stating that M.
+Rouvier had promised not to seek a general police mandate for
+France,<a id="FNanchor_1023"></a><a href="#Footnote_1023" class=
+"fnanchor">[1023]</a> the Chancellor made it understood that
+Germany could not accept that solution. In talking to the British
+Ambassador on the next day Herr von Holstein foresaw danger since
+France, relying upon British aid, might, if dissatisfied with the
+results of the Conference, “seek to create a <em>fait accompli</em>
+by invading Morocco. The Sultan would appeal to the Emperor, and
+war would be the result.” Asseverating that France was<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_329">[329]</span> preparing for war, Herr von
+Holstein said that the danger could be averted if the British
+government would hint to the French that in the event of their
+invading Morocco it was doubtful whether British opinion would
+approve of supporting France by force of arms.</p>
+
+<p>Upon being consulted, Sir Francis Bertie denied that France had
+any such intention, and asserted that</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">any communication to the French Gov[ernmen]t such
+as the Baron [Holstein] suggests would shake the confidence of the
+French Gov[ernmen]t in H[is] M[ajesty’s] present Gov[ernmen]t
+resulting from their assurances as to policy of England (and) might
+lead France either to make concessions to Germany in Morocco
+injurious to us or bring her out of Morocco by concessions
+elsewhere detrimental to our interests but not greatly to those of
+France.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">After this Sir Edward Grey telegraphed to Sir Frank
+Lascelles, January 15, the following curt response to Herr von
+Holstein’s suggestion:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>I hope the result of Morocco conference will prevent the
+contingency, which Herr von Holstein contemplates, from arising.
+Should it however be otherwise we cannot deprecate any action on
+the part of France which comes within the terms of the Anglo-French
+declarations of April 1904. Herr von Holstein should know
+this.<a id="FNanchor_1024"></a><a href="#Footnote_1024" class=
+"fnanchor">[1024]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>In these negotiations the British Foreign Secretary tried to
+impress the German government with the fact that Great Britain
+placed herself squarely on the French side. This was one facet of
+his policy. The other had to do with France.</p>
+
+<p>The British government was as eager for France to win at the
+conference as was the French government. To that end Sir Francis
+Bertie informed M. Rouvier on December 22 that his government</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">would loyally act up to the engagements taken by
+their predecessors and . . . . would give to France their
+unreserved support in the Conference on Morocco within the four
+corners of the Anglo-French Agreement and the<span class="pagenum"
+id="Page_330">[330]</span> programme arranged between the French
+and German Governments; but in order to enable them to do so
+effectively, and to put them in a position to act in concert with
+France, it would be desirable that His Majesty’s Government should
+be made acquainted with the views of the French Government on the
+matters to be discussed, and as to the concessions, if any, which
+might be made for the satisfaction of Germany.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">The British government, he said, wished to avoid
+the accusation of being more French than the French. Going farther
+still, the Ambassador assured M. Rouvier that his government was in
+no way associated with the friendly manifestations toward Germany
+then being made in England. While the British government wanted
+friendly relations with Germany, he stated, an improvement in those
+relations “would depend on the attitude of the German Government in
+regard to Morocco and other questions in which England was
+interested.” The cordiality with which M. Rouvier agreed to respect
+this wish showed how conscious both governments were of the mutual
+advantages in loyal co-operation.<a id="FNanchor_1025"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1025" class="fnanchor">[1025]</a></p>
+
+<p>The need therefor was manifested at once in the case of Spain.
+While King Alfonso was regarded as entirely loyal,<a id=
+"FNanchor_1026"></a><a href="#Footnote_1026" class=
+"fnanchor">[1026]</a> M. Moret, the Spanish premier who supplanted
+M. Montero Rios in December, was mistrusted by the British and
+French governments as being too friendly toward Germany and
+uncertain in his attitude toward the Moroccan agreements. Both
+governments knew of German efforts to win Spain, both learned of
+the German Emperor’s offer in November of a military convention to
+the King of Spain, and both learned that at Germany’s request the
+Spanish government had not appointed M. Villa-Urrutia as delegate
+to the Conference.<a id="FNanchor_1027"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1027" class="fnanchor">[1027]</a> At the French
+initiative the two governments<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_331">[331]</span> late in December pressed M. Moret to remain
+loyal to them. These efforts won over the Spanish Premier. He
+frankly admitted that the Emperor had made the offer, but denied
+that he had ever considered it. He stated that Spain would support
+the French policy during the Conference, and hoped that the three
+Powers would work harmoniously together. And he told the French
+that “it will facilitate his support of them at the Conference if
+they will provide money to quiet the Spanish Opposition.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_1028"></a><a href="#Footnote_1028" class=
+"fnanchor">[1028]</a> Nevertheless, the British government
+suspected that the Duke of Almodovar, the Spanish delegate and
+proposed president of the Conference, would be “in the hands of the
+German Ambassador [Herr von Radowitz].” Sir Edward Grey also feared
+that Spain might, to the detriment of British interests, be induced
+to cede a part of her possessions along the north coast of Morocco
+or elsewhere to Germany.<a id="FNanchor_1029"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1029" class="fnanchor">[1029]</a> So Spain remained
+under constant observation and pressure by the Entente
+Cordiale.<a id="FNanchor_1030"></a><a href="#Footnote_1030" class=
+"fnanchor">[1030]</a> The British government put similar pressure
+upon Italy. In informing the Italian Ambassador on December 27 of
+the British policy, Sir Edward Grey remarked that the four Powers
+most interested in the Mediterranean were all good friends now and
+that he “hoped we should all come out of the Conference as good
+friends as we went in.” The Italian government protested that it
+had “not only friendship but also an alliance to be considered.”
+This item Sir Edward Grey ignored, and in Rome Sir Edwin Egerton
+repeatedly asserted that “a European political
+combination<span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">[332]</span> did not
+appear to regard special agreements respecting a local question,
+such as that of Morocco.” This veiled threat and curious
+interpretation of the Triple Alliance were valuable aids to M.
+Barrère in urging Italy to the Anglo-French side. The selection as
+delegates of the Marquis Visconti Venosta, who had made the
+agreement with France in 1900, was regarded as insuring a
+pro-French policy. But the Italian government could make no
+promises of support, and Sir Edward Grey feared that the Marquis
+might, by trying to play the “fine” but “dangerous” rôle of
+mediator at the Conference, suggest some solution which would be
+altogether unacceptable.<a id="FNanchor_1031"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1031" class="fnanchor">[1031]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Anglo-French co-operation extended to planning the procedure
+at the Conference and to drawing up instructions for the French
+delegates. Every precaution was taken for victory. The British were
+as sensitive to alarms as were the French. About the middle of
+December both governments heard that the proposed Austrian delegate
+thought it possible to bring matters before the Conference not
+mentioned in the program. M. Rouvier took immediate steps in Vienna
+to prevent that danger.<a id="FNanchor_1032"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1032" class="fnanchor">[1032]</a> Furthermore, the two
+governments planned that the less difficult problems should be
+considered first and the police question last. M. Rouvier proposed
+that the published Anglo-French, Anglo-Spanish, and Franco-German
+agreements over Morocco should be laid before the Conference, but
+Sir Edward Grey objected that they might then be discussed and
+questioned by the Powers. The British Foreign Secretary thought
+that “it should appear that the Anglo-French and Franco-Spanish
+Agreements of 1904 were rather intended to give a formal sanction
+to a <em>de facto</em> state of affairs than to create a new
+situation.” M. Rouvier accepted this suggestion. It was also in
+accordance with a British proposal<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_333">[333]</span> that the French delegate was instructed to
+refuse to argue the matter of France’s right in the Algero-Moroccan
+frontier region, since it might lead to an “embarrassing
+discussion.”<a id="FNanchor_1033"></a><a href="#Footnote_1033"
+class="fnanchor">[1033]</a></p>
+
+<p>The main problem which the British and French governments had to
+solve was that of the police. For, as they learned from Prince
+Bülow,<a id="FNanchor_1034"></a><a href="#Footnote_1034" class=
+"fnanchor">[1034]</a> Germany would propose either that Morocco be
+divided into sectors, each one under the police power of a
+different state, or that the policing be done by a lesser Power
+disinterested in Morocco. While the first solution could be easily
+rejected, the second one would be more difficult for France to
+combat without exposing herself to the accusation of selfishness.
+If the Conference broke up because of a refusal, France would be
+blamed. At this point the two governments received a suggestion
+from M. Bacheracht, Russian minister at Tangier and a delegate at
+the Conference, to the following effect: “All considerations of a
+political character and all references to ‘special interests,’
+etc., should not be touched upon in discussion” of the police
+question. The problem should be considered solely from a practical
+point of view, of how to assure protection and safety to the
+foreigners. Clearly that work could be done best by France and
+Spain, who had had experience in handling Mohammedans, who were
+already policing portions of Moroccan soil, and who could employ
+Mohammedans from their North African territories to aid them. The
+policing might be regarded as experimental and temporary so as to
+mollify German opposition. If Germany rejected the plan, she would
+receive the discredit for breaking up the Conference. The British
+and French authorities accepted this proposal at once, for, as MM.
+Paul and Jules Cambon said, it would be “difficult to
+combat.”<a id="FNanchor_1035"></a><a href="#Footnote_1035" class=
+"fnanchor">[1035]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">[334]</span>After this
+thorough preparatory discussion, M. Rouvier sent the following
+instructions to M. Révoil, a copy of which he also gave to the
+British government: The repression of contraband trade should be
+committed to France and Spain alone. A state bank should be
+established in which French participation in capital and in
+personnel should be in harmony with France’s superior rights in
+Morocco resulting from the loan contract of June, 1904, and from
+the high percentage of trade (approximately 80 per cent) which
+France together with Great Britain and Spain had with that country
+as compared with that (approximately 10 per cent) of Germany. The
+bank should be under the French legal system and its president a
+Frenchman. Moroccan revenues should be augmented, but not merely by
+an increase in customs duties. The thirty-year limitation to
+commercial freedom might be extended. “In a general manner it is in
+the economic program that we are disposed to accord the most
+complete satisfaction. But you will avoid a definitive acquiescence
+in those solutions until you are certain that the delegates do not
+aim to adopt unacceptable solutions relative to the organization of
+the police.” This question should refer solely to the policing of
+the coastal towns and should not concern the Moroccan army. Any
+internationalization of the police should be refused. The plan of
+dividing Morocco into sectors among the Powers, that of selecting a
+minor Power to accomplish the task, and that of selecting officers
+from neutral Powers should be absolutely refused. The policing
+should be conferred upon France and Spain alone.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>In case the proposals conforming to our desires on that matter
+meet with insurmountable opposition . . . ., we would consider
+that, the economic questions being regulated according to our
+views, an accord for the maintenance of the <em>status quo</em> in
+that which concerns the police would be an acceptable solution, if
+that accord respects our rights and implies the renunciation by the
+other contracting parties to all action tending to reopen the
+question with the Sultan without previous agreement with us. . . .
+. In résumé . . . . no one will expect of us an adhesion to any
+solution of a nature to compromise the future of our national
+interests. Under that condition, you will show on all occasions our
+sincere desire to respect the rights of other<span class="pagenum"
+id="Page_335">[335]</span> countries, to open Morocco to the free
+competition of commercial interests, and you will affirm at the
+same time our desire to maintain our rights and interests only with
+the most formal guarantees of the sovereign rights of the Sultan,
+the independence and the established traditions of his
+Empire.<a id="FNanchor_1036"></a><a href="#Footnote_1036" class=
+"fnanchor">[1036]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">A few days later, with the approval of Spain, M.
+Rouvier advised the French delegate to reject as “absolutely
+inacceptable” any plan to neutralize Morocco.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1037"></a><a href="#Footnote_1037" class=
+"fnanchor">[1037]</a></p>
+
+<p>These instructions denoted a determination to defeat
+internationalization, by all means to exclude Germany from Morocco,
+and to divide Morocco between France and Spain.</p>
+
+<p>While these negotiations were in progress, the French government
+was sounding Great Britain as to a defensive agreement against
+Germany. Toward the middle of December Major Huguet, French
+military attaché in London, spoke to General Grierson, director of
+military operations in the British war office, about the French
+fears of a German attack, and questioned him about the British
+organization for war. When he asked whether the British general
+staff had ever considered operations in Belgium, General Grierson
+replied that “as a strategical exercise” he had worked out a plan
+for them last spring.<a id="FNanchor_1038"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1038" class="fnanchor">[1038]</a></p>
+
+<p>On December 28 Major Huguet dined with Colonel Repington, a
+retired officer serving as military correspondent on the <em>London
+Times</em>. The conversation turned immediately to the Colonel’s
+article of the previous day, in which he had denounced the attempts
+being made toward an Anglo-German <em>rapprochement</em>, expressed
+anxiety over the international situation, and advised full loyalty
+to France. The two men found themselves in entire agreement over
+the possibility of complications and<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_336">[336]</span> over the need for France and Great Britain
+to be prepared for co-operation in case of a German aggression.
+Major Huguet said that the French embassy was worried because Sir
+Edward Grey, the new British foreign minister, had not renewed the
+assurances given by his predecessor.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1039"></a><a href="#Footnote_1039" class=
+"fnanchor">[1039]</a> Time was pressing, he said, for the
+Conference of Algeciras would open on January 16. He wished that
+Sir Edward Grey would broach the subject at the next diplomatic
+reception. The French “knew that our sympathies were with them,” so
+Colonel Repington has recorded the military attaché’s words, “but
+they wanted to know what we should do in case Germany confronted
+them with a crisis.”</p>
+
+<p>Colonel Repington immediately communicated the conversation to
+the British Foreign Secretary, who was then electioneering in
+Northumberland. The latter replied on December 30 as follows: “I
+can only say that I have not receded from anything which Lord
+Lansdowne said to the French, and have no hesitation in affirming
+it.” The Colonel also reported Major Huguet’s words to Sir George
+Clarke, secretary of the Defence Committee, and to Lord Esher, a
+member of that Committee. They agreed that in view of the German
+menace, active steps toward co-operation should be taken. As
+Colonel Repington was a free-lance, they suggested that he open
+unofficial conversations with Major Huguet and communicate the
+results to the British officials. The Colonel prepared a set of
+questions which Major Huguet took to Paris on January 7. These
+questions were considered by M. Rouvier, M. Etienne, minister of
+war, M. Thomson, minister of marine, his naval staff, General Brun,
+and General Brugère. On January 12 a cordial reply was returned to
+Colonel Repington who then imparted it to the Defence
+Committee.<a id="FNanchor_1040"></a><a href="#Footnote_1040" class=
+"fnanchor">[1040]</a></p>
+
+<p>When Major Huguet related these incidents to his
+ambassador,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">[337]</span> M.
+Cambon was so struck by the fact that British as well as French
+authorities were studying the problem of how quickly the British
+forces could be mobilized for action on the Continent that he went
+immediately to Paris to consult M. Rouvier.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1041"></a><a href="#Footnote_1041" class=
+"fnanchor">[1041]</a> The latter approved of the plan to broach Sir
+Edward Grey for a closer and more definite understanding.</p>
+
+<p>Before returning to London, M. Cambon visited his brother in
+Madrid. There the two prepared the ground for later discussion by a
+conversation with Sir Arthur Nicolson which the latter reported
+(January 2) as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>They [MM. Cambon] asked me, supposing, as they considered
+probable, that the Conference failed, what did I think would be the
+consequences? I replied that in my opinion it was quite possible
+that the Sultan would then apply to Germany to take in hand the
+military, financial and police administration. They remarked that
+that would mean war. I said that I did not consider that this would
+necessarily follow; but I did think that they would have to take up
+a very firm attitude at Fez, and prevent the Sultan from handing
+himself over to the Germans.<a id="FNanchor_1042"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1042" class="fnanchor">[1042]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>This alarming forecast, together with the staunch diplomatic
+support which the British government was rendering France,
+strengthened the French authorities in their resolve. When M.
+Cambon reached London, he had a long conversation with Sir Edward
+Grey on January 10 which the latter recorded as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>M. Cambon said that he did not believe that the German Emperor
+desired war, but that His Majesty was pursuing a very dangerous
+policy. He had succeeded in inciting public opinion and military
+opinion in Germany, and there was a risk that matters might be
+brought to a point in which a pacific issue would be difficult.
+During the previous discussions on the subject of Morocco, Lord
+Lansdowne had expressed his opinion that the British and French
+Governments should frankly discuss any eventualities that might
+seem possible, and by his instructions your Excellency [Sir Francis
+Bertie, ambassador in Paris] had communicated a Memorandum to M.
+Delcassé to the same effect. It had not been considered necessary
+at the time to discuss<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_338">[338]</span> the eventuality of war, but it now seemed
+desirable that this eventuality should also be considered.</p>
+
+<p>M. Cambon said that he had spoken to this effect to M. Rouvier,
+who agreed in his view. It was not necessary, nor, indeed,
+expedient, that there should be any formal alliance, but it was of
+great importance that the French Government should know beforehand
+whether, in the event of aggression against France by Germany,
+Great Britain would be prepared to render to France armed
+assistance.<a id="FNanchor_1043"></a><a href="#Footnote_1043"
+class="fnanchor">[1043]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The British statesman, embarrassed by the question, replied that
+he personally could give the French government no promise of active
+aid. He put the Ambassador off by pointing out that the Prime
+Minister was away, that the members of the cabinet were all
+electioneering, and that the verdict of the elections was doubtful.
+He said that he could only state as his personal opinion that “if
+France were to be attacked by Germany in consequence of a question
+arising out of the Agreement [of April 8, 1904] . . . . public
+opinion in England would be strongly moved in favour of France.”
+When he added that Great Britain earnestly desired “that the
+conference should have a pacific issue favourable to France,” M.
+Cambon replied that “nothing would have a more pacific influence on
+the Emperor of Germany than the conviction that, if Germany
+attacked France, she would find England allied against her.” Sir
+Edward Grey answered that he thought that “the German Emperor did
+believe this, but that it was one thing that this opinion should be
+held in Germany and another that we should give a positive
+assurance to France on the subject.” He could give no assurance, he
+said, of which he was uncertain. He “did not believe that any
+Minister could, in present circumstances, say more than I had done,
+and, however strong the sympathy of Great Britain might be with
+France in the case of a rupture with Germany, the expression which
+might be given to it and the action which might follow must depend
+largely upon the circumstances in which the rupture took
+place.”<a id="FNanchor_1044"></a><a href="#Footnote_1044" class=
+"fnanchor">[1044]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">[339]</span>As Sir Edward
+Grey thus postponed a definitive answer until after the elections,
+M. Cambon replied that he would repeat his request at that time.
+But he asked that in the meantime the “unofficial communications”
+between the British admiralty and war office and the French naval
+and military attachés “as to what action might advantageously be
+taken in case the two countries found themselves in alliance in
+such a war” might be permitted to continue. “They did not pledge
+either Government,” he said.<a id="FNanchor_1045"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1045" class="fnanchor">[1045]</a></p>
+
+<p>Sir Edward Grey immediately sent a report of this conversation
+to the Prime Minister and to Lord Ripon, and he met his friend, Mr.
+Haldane, at Berwick on January 12 to discuss the matter,
+particularly the French request concerning the military
+conversations.<a id="FNanchor_1046"></a><a href="#Footnote_1046"
+class="fnanchor">[1046]</a> He had learned that under the Unionist
+cabinet in the previous year such military and naval conversations
+had taken place, and that at the present time official
+conversations were going on between Admiral Sir John Fisher and the
+French naval attaché while the military conversations were being
+held unofficially between the French military attaché and Colonel
+Repington. When consulted on January 11, General Grierson replied
+that “if there is even a chance of our having to give armed
+assistance on land to France or to take the field on her side in
+Belgium in consequence of a violation of Belgian territory by the
+Germans, we should have as soon as possible informal communication
+between the military authorities of France and/or Belgium and the
+General Staff.”<a id="FNanchor_1047"></a><a href="#Footnote_1047"
+class="fnanchor">[1047]</a> Neither Sir Edward Grey nor<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_340">[340]</span> Mr. Haldane saw any reason why
+these conversations should not be carried on officially also. As
+the former argued:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>It was quite clear that no Cabinet could undertake any
+obligation to go to war, but the Anglo-French Agreement was popular
+in Britain. It was certain that if Germany forced a quarrel on
+France upon the very matter of that Agreement, the pro-French
+feeling in Britain would be very strong, so strong probably as to
+justify a British Government in intervening on the side of France
+or even to insist on its doing so. We must, therefore, be free to
+go to the help of France as well as free to stand aside. But modern
+war may be an affair of days. If there were no military plans made
+beforehand we should be unable to come to the assistance of France
+in time, however strongly public opinion in Britain might desire
+it. We should in effect not have preserved our freedom to help
+France, but have cut ourselves off from the possibility of doing
+so, unless we had allowed the British and French staffs to concert
+plans for common action.<a id="FNanchor_1048"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1048" class="fnanchor">[1048]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">The Prime Minister feared the interpretation that
+would be put upon these conversations. “I do not like the stress
+laid upon joint preparations,” he wrote to Lord Ripon on February
+2. “It comes very close to an honourable undertaking; and it will
+be known on both sides of the Rhine.” However, he considered them
+to be merely “provisional and precautionary measures” not binding
+the government, “raising no new question of policy and therefore
+within the competence of the War Office.” So he agreed to
+them.<a id="FNanchor_1049"></a><a href="#Footnote_1049" class=
+"fnanchor">[1049]</a> It was definitely understood that these
+military conversations did not bind the governments.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1050"></a><a href="#Footnote_1050" class=
+"fnanchor">[1050]</a> On January 17 they were begun between the
+French military attaché and General Grierson and continued
+uninterrupted between the French and British general staffs until
+the outbreak of the World War.<a id="FNanchor_1051"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1051" class="fnanchor">[1051]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">[341]</span>The same
+reasoning applied to Belgium, for both the French and the British
+authorities expected Germany to violate Belgian neutrality in order
+to strike France suddenly from the northeast.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1052"></a><a href="#Footnote_1052" class=
+"fnanchor">[1052]</a> On January 15 Sir Edward Grey therefore
+instructed General Grierson to open conversations with the Belgian
+military authorities “as to the manner in which, in case of need,
+British assistance could be most effectually afforded to Belgium
+for the defence of her neutrality. Such communications,” he
+continued, “must be solely provisional and noncommittal.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_1053"></a><a href="#Footnote_1053" class=
+"fnanchor">[1053]</a> Colonel Barnardiston, the British military
+attaché in Brussels, broached the subject on January 18 to General
+Ducarne, Belgian chief of staff, remarking that the British
+Minister would bring up the matter with the Belgian Foreign
+Minister.<a id="FNanchor_1054"></a><a href="#Footnote_1054" class=
+"fnanchor">[1054]</a> After consulting the Minister of War, General
+Ducarne agreed to the conversations.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1055"></a><a href="#Footnote_1055" class=
+"fnanchor">[1055]</a> This decision was anticipated by Colonel
+Barnardiston, who had learned that the Belgian military authorities
+were quietly making<span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">[342]</span>
+preparations for instant mobilization.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1056"></a><a href="#Footnote_1056" class=
+"fnanchor">[1056]</a> The Anglo-Belgian negotiations continued at
+least until the end of April.<a id="FNanchor_1057"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1057" class="fnanchor">[1057]</a></p>
+
+<p>These conversations, both military and naval, were kept secret.
+The Anglo-Belgian negotiations were known to only half-a-dozen
+persons; the ones with France were not known to all the members of
+the British cabinet although reports of them leaked out in the
+press about the middle of 1906.<a id="FNanchor_1058"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1058" class="fnanchor">[1058]</a> Sir Edward Grey wanted
+to prevent either these conversations or any military or naval
+action from being regarded as provocations. In informing Lord
+Tweedmouth, first lord of the admiralty, of the Anglo-French
+conversations, he wrote, January 16:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>Meanwhile the mood of the German Emperor is said to be pacific;
+the tone of German diplomacy is quiet and not aggressive. Any
+movement of our ships which could be interpreted as a threat to
+Germany would be very undesirable at this moment and most
+unfortunate so long as there is a prospect or even a chance that
+things may go smoothly at the Morocco Conference which meets today.
+I hope therefore that the Admiralty won’t plan any special cruises
+or visits to Foreign ports or unusual movements of squadrons
+without consulting the F[oreign] O[ffice] as to the possible
+political effect.</p>
+
+<p>I assume that the present disposition of the Fleet is
+satisfactory as regards possibilities between Germany and France;
+if so the quieter we keep for the present the better.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1059"></a><a href="#Footnote_1059" class=
+"fnanchor">[1059]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>With the opening of these conversations a new military problem
+confronted the British which Mr. Haldane, then minister of war, has
+described as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>It was, how to mobilize and concentrate at a place of assembly
+to be opposite the Belgian frontier, a force calculated as adequate
+(with the assistance of Russian pressure in the East) to make up
+for the inadequacy of the French armies for their great task of
+defending the entire French frontier from Dunkirk down to Belfort,
+or even further south, if Italy should join the Triple Alliance in
+an attack.<a id="FNanchor_1060"></a><a href="#Footnote_1060" class=
+"fnanchor">[1060]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">[343]</span>At the time, in
+January, the Committee of Imperial Defence, although not all of its
+members knew of the military conversations then beginning, studied
+the question. It decided that “four Divisions and a Cavalry
+Division” could be landed at the nearest French port in case of a
+sudden outbreak of hostilities.<a id="FNanchor_1061"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1061" class="fnanchor">[1061]</a> The admiralty was
+prepared “to bar the Channel against the German squadrons.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_1062"></a><a href="#Footnote_1062" class=
+"fnanchor">[1062]</a> The Minister of War began a thorough
+reorganization of the army in order to make British aid effective
+at the desired moment in the future.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1063"></a><a href="#Footnote_1063" class=
+"fnanchor">[1063]</a></p>
+
+<p>Having settled this matter, Sir Edward Grey had the difficult
+problem of how to answer M. Cambon’s question about a formal
+agreement.<a id="FNanchor_1064"></a><a href="#Footnote_1064" class=
+"fnanchor">[1064]</a> As it was inconvenient then to hold a cabinet
+meeting, Sir Edward Grey talked over the reply to be given with the
+Premier and Mr. Haldane, who were both in London after January 26,
+and asked Sir Francis Bertie to write his opinion.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1065"></a><a href="#Footnote_1065" class=
+"fnanchor">[1065]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Ambassador wrote that France did not desire war at all, but
+that if a conflict did arise over Morocco either then or later she
+expected active British support. He warned his chief that if his
+answer did not assure to France</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">more than a continuance of diplomatic support, or
+of neutrality in the event of a war provoked by Germany, there is
+serious danger of a complete revulsion of feeling on the part of
+the French Government and of public opinion in France. The
+Government would consider that they had been deserted and might, in
+order to avoid the risks of a war without ally, deem it advisable
+to make great concessions to Germany outside Morocco in order to
+obtain liberty of action in that country.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">[344]</span>Such concessions
+might not be very great sacrifices for France but they might well
+be very detrimental to the interests of the British Empire, for, in
+the temper in which France would then be, it could not be expected
+that she would give them much consideration.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1066"></a><a href="#Footnote_1066" class=
+"fnanchor">[1066]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Sir Edward Grey’s personal opinion was that “if France is let in
+for a war with Germany arising out of our agreement with her about
+Morocco, we cannot stand aside, but must take part with France.”
+While pondering the question of an alliance, he saw the great
+difficulties in making one.<a id="FNanchor_1067"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1067" class="fnanchor">[1067]</a> He decided to adapt
+the policy of his predecessor in office to the new situation
+created by M. Cambon’s request. This policy is best explained in
+the long dispatch which Sir Edward Grey wrote to Sir Francis Bertie
+about his interview with the French Ambassador on January 31:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>The French Ambassador asked me again to-day whether France would
+be able to count upon the assistance of England in the event of an
+attack upon her by Germany.</p>
+
+<p>I said that I had spoken on the subject to the Prime Minister
+and discussed it with him, and that I had three observations to
+submit.</p>
+
+<p>In the first place, since the Ambassador had spoken to me a good
+deal of progress has been made. Our military and naval authorities
+had been in communication with the French, and I assumed that all
+preparations were ready, so that, if a crisis arose, no time would
+have been lost for want of a formal engagement.</p>
+
+<p>In the second place, a week or more before Monsieur Cambon had
+spoken to me, I had taken an opportunity of expressing to Count
+Metternich my personal opinion, which I understood Lord Lansdowne
+had also expressed to him as a personal opinion, that, in the event
+of an attack upon France by Germany arising out of our Moroccan
+Agreement, public feeling in England would be so strong that no
+British Government could remain neutral. I urged upon Monsieur
+Cambon that this, which I had reason to know had been correctly
+reported at Berlin, had produced there the moral effect which
+Monsieur Cambon had urged upon me as being one of the great
+securities of peace and the main reason for a formal engagement
+between England and France with regard to armed co-operation.</p>
+
+<p>In the third place, I pointed out to Monsieur Cambon that at
+present French policy in Morocco, within the four corners of the
+Declaration exchanged between us, was absolutely free, that we did
+not question it, that<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_345">[345]</span> we suggested no concessions and no
+alterations in it, that we left France a free hand and gave
+unreservedly our diplomatic support on which she could count; but
+that, should our promise extend beyond diplomatic support, and
+should we take an engagement which might involve us in a war, I was
+sure my colleagues would say that we must from that time be
+consulted with regard to French policy in Morocco, and, if need be,
+be free to press upon the French Government concessions or
+alterations of their policy which might seem to us desirable to
+avoid a war.</p>
+
+<p>I asked Monsieur Cambon to weigh these considerations in his
+mind, and to consider whether the present situation as regards
+ourselves and France was not so satisfactory that it was
+unnecessary to alter it by a formal declaration as he desired.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>M. Cambon replied that a war might break out over some Moroccan
+incident so quickly that if it were necessary for the British
+government “to consult, and to wait for manifestations of English
+public opinion, it might be too late to be of use.” He repeated his
+request for some form of verbal assurance. Sir Edward Grey pointed
+out the difficulties of giving this assurance—that it would be a
+“solemn undertaking,” that it would have to be put in writing and
+submitted to the cabinet and also to Parliament. He said that it
+would constitute the transformation of the entente into a defensive
+alliance, that it could not be given unconditionally, and that the
+conditions “would be difficult to describe.” He again asked M.
+Cambon “whether the force of circumstances bringing England and
+France together was not stronger than any assurance in words which
+could be given at this moment.” He added that German pressure
+“might eventually transform the ‘Entente’ into a defensive
+alliance,” yet at the time he did not think that the change was
+needed. When M. Cambon emphasized the fact that Sir Edward Grey had
+expressed his personal opinion that in case of a German attack upon
+France, no British government could remain neutral, the latter
+replied that he had said this first to Count Metternich and not to
+him,</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">because, supposing it appeared that I had
+overestimated the strength of feeling of my countrymen, there could
+be no disappointment in Germany; but I could not express so
+decidedly my personal opinion to France, because<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_346">[346]</span> a personal opinion was not a
+thing upon which, in so serious a matter, a policy could be
+founded. In speaking to him, therefore, I must keep well within the
+mark. Much depended as to the manner in which the war broke out
+between Germany and France.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">Sir Edward Grey believed that the British people
+would be unwilling to fight in order to put France into possession
+of Morocco. But if “it appeared that the war was forced upon France
+by Germany to break up the Anglo-French ‘Entente,’ public opinion
+would undoubtedly be very strong on the side of France.” He said,
+however, that British sentiment was much averse to war, and that it
+was not certain whether this aversion would be overcome by the
+desire to aid France. While he was ready to reopen the conversation
+at any time in the future, he did not think that the situation
+justified such a radical change at that time.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1068"></a><a href="#Footnote_1068" class=
+"fnanchor">[1068]</a> M. Cambon appeared to be satisfied with that
+answer.<a id="FNanchor_1069"></a><a href="#Footnote_1069" class=
+"fnanchor">[1069]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_347">[347]</span>Thus, Sir Edward
+Grey laid down the policy which he followed until the outbreak of
+the World War. He was open and frank with both France and Germany.
+To the German government he emphasized the probability of British
+intervention in favor of France in case of war. To the French
+government he gave the promise of full diplomatic support; while
+permitting preparations for any emergency, he refused to give to
+the French assurance of active aid in case of war or even to speak
+as firmly on that score as he did to the German government. Instead
+of binding Great Britain and France in an alliance—an act which
+would have forced him to keep a hand on France’s policy toward
+Morocco and Germany—Sir Edward Grey kept British hands free. In
+giving France sufficient assurance to maintain Anglo-French
+intimacy and co-operation, he depended upon the uncertainty of
+British support in a crisis to hold France back. He relied upon the
+same uncertainty—this time, however, that Great Britain might enter
+a Franco-German conflict—to restrain Germany. By this apparently
+simple but really intricate policy he sought to satisfy the needs
+of British foreign relations.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes" id="ftc16">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_959"></a><a href="#FNanchor_959"><span class=
+"label">[959]</span></a>Memo. by Bülow, Nov. 23, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 14 f., No. 6900.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_960"></a><a href="#FNanchor_960"><span class=
+"label">[960]</span></a>Rouvier was apparently led astray by
+William II’s instructions to the Prince of Monaco in October to
+tell Rouvier that “he would lay no hindrances whatever in the way
+of the French policy” (Radolin to F. O., Oct. 18, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XX, 596 f. and note, No. 6836). Rouvier sounded the
+German embassy first through a third person and then unofficially
+through M. Louis of the foreign office.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_961"></a><a href="#FNanchor_961"><span class=
+"label">[961]</span></a>Memo. by Mühlberg, Nov. 30, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XXI, 20 ff., No. 6906.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_962"></a><a href="#FNanchor_962"><span class=
+"label">[962]</span></a>On this episode see <em>ibid.</em>, Nos.
+6901, 6903 ff. The editors of <em>G.P.</em> assure us that there is
+no indication in the documents that Rouvier followed up the subject
+(<em>ibid.</em>, p. 23). Joseph Caillaux states that Rouvier was
+back of the overture made through Vaffier-Pollet. He also asserts
+that in Nov., 1905, Rouvier offered the port of Mogador and its
+hinterland to Germany, but that the latter refused (<em>Agadir, ma
+politique extérieure</em> [Paris, 1919], p. 25). There is no
+reference to this proposal in <em>G.P.</em> Caillaux is probably
+referring to the offer made through Eckardstein in May, 1905.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_963"></a><a href="#FNanchor_963"><span class=
+"label">[963]</span></a>Bülow, <em>Reden</em>, II, 250 ff., 272
+ff.; see also Hammann, <em>Bilder</em>, pp. 43 f. At the opening of
+the Reichstag on Nov. 28 the Emperor declared that Germany stood
+with all Powers in “correct relations” and with the most of them in
+“good and friendly relations” (Schulthess <em>Europäischer
+Geschichtskalender 1905</em>, pp. 132 f.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_964"></a><a href="#FNanchor_964"><span class=
+"label">[964]</span></a>Report from the Belgian Minister at Berlin,
+Dec. 2 and 11, 1905, <em>Zur europ. Politik</em>, II, 92 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_965"></a><a href="#FNanchor_965"><span class=
+"label">[965]</span></a><em>Journal officiel. Debats parlem.</em>
+(Chambre), pp. 4034 ff. Rouvier received a vote of confidence of
+501 to 51 (<em>ibid.</em>, p. 4050).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_966"></a><a href="#FNanchor_966"><span class=
+"label">[966]</span></a><em>Quest. dipl. et col.</em>, XX, 662
+ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_967"></a><a href="#FNanchor_967"><span class=
+"label">[967]</span></a>William II to Bülow, Dec. 29, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XX, 693, No. 6887; Flotow to Bülow, Nov. 23, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XXI, 15 ff., No. 6901; Metternich to Bülow, Jan. 4,
+1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 52, No. 6924.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_968"></a><a href="#FNanchor_968"><span class=
+"label">[968]</span></a>So Ojeda, Spanish undersecretary of state
+for foreign affairs, declared to Cartwright on Jan. 22, 1906
+(Cartwright to Grey, Jan. 22, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 233, No.
+252). There is no indication in <em>G.P.</em> that those terms were
+known.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_969"></a><a href="#FNanchor_969"><span class=
+"label">[969]</span></a>Memo. by Mühlberg, Dec. 25, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 28 f., No. 6914. It contained the conclusions
+of a conference by Bülow with Richthofen, Mühlberg, and
+Klehmet.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_970"></a><a href="#FNanchor_970"><span class=
+"label">[970]</span></a>On Jan. 8 the government published a
+<em>Weissbuch</em> on Morocco of thirty-nine pages substantiating
+the German accusations against the French policy. According to
+Bülow it was intended to supplement the French <em>Livre jaune</em>
+(<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 24 n.). Its appearance made a painful
+impression in France. Rouvier found it “scarcely courteous” and
+hardly indicative of the conciliatory spirit which Germany
+professed to have (report from Paris, Jan. 11, 1906, <em>Zur europ.
+Politik</em>, II, 99 f.). It was well received by the German press
+(Lascelles to Grey, Jan. 10, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 215 f., No.
+235.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_971"></a><a href="#FNanchor_971"><span class=
+"label">[971]</span></a>Bülow to Radowitz, Jan. 3, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 38 ff., No. 6922 and Anlage.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_972"></a><a href="#FNanchor_972"><span class=
+"label">[972]</span></a>Metternich was very pessimistic about the
+outcome. See Metternich to Bülow, Nov. 2, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, XX,
+672 ff., No. 6881; Bülow to Metternich, Nov. 6, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XIX, 673, No. 6364.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_973"></a><a href="#FNanchor_973"><span class=
+"label">[973]</span></a>Tattenbach to Bülow, Nov. 4, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XXI, 12, No. 6898.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_974"></a><a href="#FNanchor_974"><span class=
+"label">[974]</span></a>Bülow to Sternburg, Oct. 29, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XIX, 641 f., No. 6341 and note; Sternburg to F. O.,
+Nov. 3, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, XXI, 9 f., No. 6896; Bülow to
+Sternburg, Nov. 7, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 11 f., No. 6897; memo. by
+Mühlberg, Dec. 11, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 23 f., No. 6909; Dennis,
+<em>Adventures in American Diplomacy</em>, pp. 398 f., 499. Mr.
+Choate, ambassador in London, had been selected as American
+delegate in August (<em>Roosevelt-Lodge Correspondence</em>, II,
+172 ff.); but the final choice rested on Mr. White, ambassador at
+Rome.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_975"></a><a href="#FNanchor_975"><span class=
+"label">[975]</span></a>Bülow to Wedel, Dec. 22, 1905,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 27 n.; cf. Steed, <em>Through Thirty
+Years</em>, I, 234.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_976"></a><a href="#FNanchor_976"><span class=
+"label">[976]</span></a>According to a minute by the Emperor
+William to a dispatch from Stumm on Feb. 20, 1906 (the only
+reference to this incident which <em>G.P.</em> contains), during
+the visit of the King of Spain to Germany in the previous November
+the Emperor had “proposed to the Spanish King to renew the
+agreement with his father and a convention regarding the common
+action of our armies! Whereupon the King said that he knew nothing
+of that matter, but would look into it upon his return.” Nothing
+came of the matter. See <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 191, No. 7024. See also
+Grey to Bertie, Dec. 20, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 160, No. 197;
+Nicolson to Grey, Dec. 26 and 27, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 165, No.
+205; 167, No. 208.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_977"></a><a href="#FNanchor_977"><span class=
+"label">[977]</span></a>Nicolson to Grey, Dec. 14, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 150 f., No. 192.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_978"></a><a href="#FNanchor_978"><span class=
+"label">[978]</span></a>Bülow to Monts, Jan. 5, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 54, No. 6925.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_979"></a><a href="#FNanchor_979"><span class=
+"label">[979]</span></a>So expressed by San Giuliano, Italian
+foreign minister. (Monts to Bülow, Jan. 2, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 34
+ff., No. 6921).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_980"></a><a href="#FNanchor_980"><span class=
+"label">[980]</span></a>Bülow to Monts, Jan. 5, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 53 f., No. 6925; Monts to Bülow, Jan 6, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 56 ff., No. 6928.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_981"></a><a href="#FNanchor_981"><span class=
+"label">[981]</span></a>Bülow to Radowitz, Jan. 8, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 59, No. 6929.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_982"></a><a href="#FNanchor_982"><span class=
+"label">[982]</span></a>Bülow to Radolin, Dec. 29, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 30 f., No. 6916; memo. by Radolin, Dec. 29, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 31, No. 6917; memo. by Bülow, Dec. 30, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 32, No. 6918.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_983"></a><a href="#FNanchor_983"><span class=
+"label">[983]</span></a>Flotow to F. O., Dec. 20, 1905;
+<em>ibid.</em>, 25 f., No. 6911; Radolin to F. O., Jan. 8 and 10,
+1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 60 f., No. 6931; 64 f., No. 6934; Radolin to
+Bülow, Jan. 16, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, XX, 697 f., 6888; Radowitz to
+Bülow, Dec. 27, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, XXI, 32 f., No. 6919 f.;
+Bülow also remained willing to negotiate directly with the French
+government over the Moroccan affair (Bülow to Radolin, Jan. 16,
+1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 67, No. 6936).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_984"></a><a href="#FNanchor_984"><span class=
+"label">[984]</span></a>Report from Berlin, Dec. 24, 1905, <em>Zur
+europ. Politik</em>, II, 97 f.; report from Berlin, Dec. 31, 1905,
+<em>Belg. Docs., 1905-14</em>, No. 14; Metternich to Bülow, Nov. 2,
+Dec. 20, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 672 ff., No. 6881; 685 ff., No.
+6886; Bülow, II, 434; Schulthess, <em>1905</em>, p. 154. The
+Emperor refused twice to help before Bülow won him over. See Bülow
+to William II, Dec. 3, 1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 679 ff., No. 6882,
+and the Emperor’s minutes.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_985"></a><a href="#FNanchor_985"><span class=
+"label">[985]</span></a>So D. M. Wallace, special representative of
+the <em>London Times</em> at the conference, asserted to Radowitz
+(Radowitz to F. O., Jan. 21, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 95 n.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_986"></a><a href="#FNanchor_986"><span class=
+"label">[986]</span></a>Lee, <em>King Edward VII</em>, II, 524 ff.;
+Edward VII to William II, Jan. 23, Feb. 5, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>,
+XXI, 108 f., No. 6961; 111 f., No. 6963; William II to Edward VII,
+Feb. 1, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 110 f., No. 6962.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_987"></a><a href="#FNanchor_987"><span class=
+"label">[987]</span></a>“If England restricts herself to the
+diplomatic support of the French claims, peace and the permanent
+open door are assured. But as soon as France has reason to count on
+the armed help of England for the conquest of Morocco and for any
+results therefrom, then both peace and the open door will be
+endangered” (Bülow to Radowitz, Jan. 17, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 94,
+No. 6950). A similar thought was expressed by Bülow to Lascelles,
+Jan. 24, to Sir Edgar Speyer, London banker and friend of Grey’s,
+on Jan. 18, by Metternich to Grey, Dec. 20, Jan. 23, and was given
+out to the press. See <em>ibid.</em>, 96 ff., Nos. 6953 f.; 106
+ff., No. 6960; 103 ff., No. 6959; <em>ibid.</em>, XX, 685 ff., No.
+6886.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_988"></a><a href="#FNanchor_988"><span class=
+"label">[988]</span></a>For Bülow’s reasoning see his dispatch to
+Moltke, Jan. 24, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, XXI, 77 ff., No. 6943.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_989"></a><a href="#FNanchor_989"><span class=
+"label">[989]</span></a>A report of a partial French mobilization
+on the eastern frontier did alarm Bülow, but it was immediately
+proved to be untrue (<em>ibid.</em>, 71 ff., Nos. 6937 ff.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_990"></a><a href="#FNanchor_990"><span class=
+"label">[990]</span></a>The German government had announced a new
+navy bill, which would have been proposed anyway, and was only
+hastened because the visit of the British fleet to the Baltic and
+the revelations in <em>Le Matin</em> insured it a favorable
+reception by the German public. Aside from that Germany took
+special pains to avoid leaving the impression that she was
+preparing for a conflict. Moltke, at his own suggestion, postponed
+his visit to Vienna to announce himself as the new chief of staff
+until after the conference closed so as to avoid suspicion. See
+Moltke to Bülow, Jan. 26, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 79 and note, No.
+6944. See also Philip Fürst zu Eulenburg-Hertefeld, <em>Aus 50
+Jahren. Erinnerungen, Tagebücher, und Briefe</em> (ed. Johannes
+Haller; Berlin, 1923), p. 311. Moltke, however, did not expect the
+French to recede, writing to Bülow on January 23 as follows: “In my
+opinion the French now consider further concession on the Moroccan
+question as incompatible with the honor of their land, after they
+have already receded once and have let Delcassé fall.</p>
+
+<p>“They fear therefore that as a result of their firm stand the
+conference may not only end without result but may also lead to
+war. They themselves wish no war and do not think of attacking. But
+they wish to be armed against an attack from Germany”
+(<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 75, No. 6942).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_991"></a><a href="#FNanchor_991"><span class=
+"label">[991]</span></a>William II to Bülow, Dec. 29, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XX, 690 ff., No. 6887. The account of the Emperor’s
+conversation with Laguiche was published in <em>Le Temps</em> on
+Dec. 28. Richthofen spoke to a similar effect to the Belgian
+minister (<em>Belg. Docs., 1905-14</em>, No. 14).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_992"></a><a href="#FNanchor_992"><span class=
+"label">[992]</span></a>Radolin to Bülow, Jan. 8, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 60 f., No. 6931; Metternich to Bülow, Jan. 4,
+1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 51 f., No. 6924; <em>Zur europ. Politik</em>,
+II, 95 f., 99; Tardieu, <em>La Conf. d’Algés.</em>, pp. 92 ff. See
+also Bompard’s analysis of the German policy toward France (Spring
+Rice to Grey, Jan. 16, 1906, Gwynn, <em>The Letters and Friendships
+of Sir Cecil Spring Rice</em>, II, 58 f.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_993"></a><a href="#FNanchor_993"><span class=
+"label">[993]</span></a>According to Moltke, France was making
+military and financial preparations for defensive purposes. “The
+fortifications on the eastern frontier are being strengthened and
+put in a more defensive condition. Their provisions in munitions
+and food are being replenished. The forces of the frontier defence
+troops are apparently being brought approximately to the legal
+number for peace time by the addition of troops from the interior.
+Moreover, reserves are here and there being called up to undergo
+their legal drilling.</p>
+
+<p>“The training of the troops on the frontier is being furthered
+in every way. Numerous trial mobilizations by the various garrisons
+and drilling of the border troops by day and night are
+occurring.</p>
+
+<p>“But all these preparations are not to be regarded as
+preparations for an intended mobilization but only as precautionary
+measures, which are easily explained” (Moltke to Bülow, Jan. 23,
+1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 75, No. 6942).</p>
+
+<p>According to the Belgian Minister at Paris, Jan. 16, 1906, the
+sum of 270,000,000 francs was being devoted to the defenses
+(<em>Zur europ. Politik</em>, II, 103).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_994"></a><a href="#FNanchor_994"><span class=
+"label">[994]</span></a>Meyer to Root, Jan. 9, 1906, Dennis,
+<em>Adventures in American Diplomacy</em>, p. 498; <em>Zur europ.
+Politik</em>, II, 99 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_995"></a><a href="#FNanchor_995"><span class=
+"label">[995]</span></a>The Russian delegate, Count Cassini,
+declared that in forty years he had never received such positive
+instructions (Tardieu, p. 88; Witte, <em>Memoirs</em>, p. 298;
+Spring Rice to Grey, Jan. 2, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 204, No.
+223). Rouvier repeated the refusal of that loan just before the
+conference (Witte, pp. 295 ff., 429 f.; Nicholas II to William II,
+Jan. 21, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 125 f., and note). Concerning
+that loan Sir Edward Grey wrote to Bertie, Jan. 15, 1906, as
+follows: “. . . . Russia has demanded a loan on improper terms as
+the price of her support [at the conference]” (<em>B.D.</em>, III,
+178, No. 216).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_996"></a><a href="#FNanchor_996"><span class=
+"label">[996]</span></a>Meyer to Root, Jan. 9, 1906, Dennis, p.
+498. Witte apparently offered to obtain this promise in return for
+an immediate French loan, but the Czar refused to give it—at least,
+that was Spring Rice’s inference (Spring Rice to Grey, Jan. 16,
+1906, Gwynn, II, 57 f.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_997"></a><a href="#FNanchor_997"><span class=
+"label">[997]</span></a>Dennis, pp. 498 f.; Durand to Grey, Jan.
+11, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 217, No. 236.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_998"></a><a href="#FNanchor_998"><span class=
+"label">[998]</span></a>Bertie to Grey, Dec. 22, 1905;
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 165, No. 204.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_999"></a><a href="#FNanchor_999"><span class=
+"label">[999]</span></a>See Rouvier’s assertion to Hardinge on Jan.
+15, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 227 and inclosure, No. 245.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1000"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1000"><span class=
+"label">[1000]</span></a>Spender, <em>Life of
+Campbell-Bannerman</em>, II, 193 ff.; Grey, <em>Twenty-five
+Years</em>, I, 60 ff., Richard Burdon Haldane, <em>An
+Autobiography</em> (London, 1929), pp. 157 ff., 168 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1001"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1001"><span class=
+"label">[1001]</span></a>Grey to Bertie, Jan. 15, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 178, No. 216.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1002"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1002"><span class=
+"label">[1002]</span></a>Cf. Spender, <em>The Public Life</em>
+(1925), I, 112 ff.; Haldane, <em>An Autobiography</em>, pp. 215 f.;
+cf. Hermann Lutz, <em>Lord Grey und der Weltkrieg</em> (Berlin,
+1927).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1003"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1003"><span class=
+"label">[1003]</span></a>Grey to Spring Rice, Dec. 13, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, IV, 218, No. 204; Grey to Spring Rice, Dec. 22,
+1905, Gwynn, II, 53 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1004"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1004"><span class=
+"label">[1004]</span></a>Spring Rice to Grey, Jan. 3 and 16, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, IV, 219 f., No. 205; 221, No. 207; and Gwynn, II, 54
+f., 57; Spring Rice to Knollys, Jan. 3 and 16, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, pp. 22, 26.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1005"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1005"><span class=
+"label">[1005]</span></a>Spring Rice to Grey, Jan. 3, 1906, Gwynn,
+II, 55 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1006"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1006"><span class=
+"label">[1006]</span></a>Spring Rice to Grey, Jan. 26, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, IV, 222 ff., No. 208; Grey to Spring Rice, Dec. 22,
+1905, Gwynn, II, 53 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1007"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1007"><span class=
+"label">[1007]</span></a>See Lansdowne to Hardinge, Oct. 20, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, IV, 213 f., No. 200; Hardinge to Grey, Jan. 6, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, pp. 622 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1008"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1008"><span class=
+"label">[1008]</span></a><em>Ibid.</em>, chap. xxvii, Part III.
+Nicolson suspected that Russia acted so loyally because she had no
+money with which to make the loan (Nicolson to Grey, Sept. 12,
+1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 242, No. 228).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1009"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1009"><span class=
+"label">[1009]</span></a>Grey to Spring Rice, Jan. 3, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 323, No. 304.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1010"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1010"><span class=
+"label">[1010]</span></a>Spring Rice to Grey, Jan. 3, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 220, No. 205.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1011"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1011"><span class=
+"label">[1011]</span></a>Spring Rice to Grey, Jan. 26, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 223, No. 208; Lee, II, 564; Spring Rice to Mallet,
+Jan. 31, 1906, Gwynn, II, 61 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1012"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1012"><span class=
+"label">[1012]</span></a>Haldane, <em>An Autobiography</em>, p.
+215.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1013"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1013"><span class=
+"label">[1013]</span></a>Grey, I, 100 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1014"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1014"><span class=
+"label">[1014]</span></a>Cf. memo. by Crowe, Jan. 1, 1907,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 397 ff.; memo. by Sanderson, Feb. 21, 1907,
+<em>ibid.</em>, pp. 420 ff.; Haldane, <em>An Autobiography</em>, p.
+215.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1015"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1015"><span class=
+"label">[1015]</span></a>Grey, I, 100 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1016"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1016"><span class=
+"label">[1016]</span></a><em>B.D.</em>, III, 162, No. 200.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1017"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1017"><span class=
+"label">[1017]</span></a>Lucien Wolf, <em>Life of the First
+Marquess of Ripon</em> (London, 1921), II, 292 f.; see also Spring
+Rice to Mallet, Jan. 31, 1906, Gwynn, II, 61.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1018"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1018"><span class=
+"label">[1018]</span></a>Metternich gives the date of the
+conversation as Dec. 18. See Grey to Whitehead, Dec. 20, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 160 f., No. 198; Metternich to Bülow, Dec. 20,
+1905, <em>G.P.</em>, XX, 685 ff., No. 6886.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1019"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1019"><span class=
+"label">[1019]</span></a>On this conversation between Grey and
+Metternich see the following: Grey to Lascelles Jan. 9, 1906, Grey
+to Campbell-Bannerman, Jan. 9, 1906, quoted in Grey, I, 80 ff.,
+114, and in <em>B.D.</em>, III, 209 ff., No. 229; Metternich to
+Bülow, Jan. 3 and 4, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 45 ff., Nos. 6923 f.
+Grey repeated his statement to Metternich on Jan. 10, 1906. See
+Metternich to F. O., Jan. 10, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 64, No. 6933.
+See also Bülow to Sternburg, Jan. 24, 1906, quoting a dispatch from
+Metternich, <em>ibid.</em>, 103 ff., No. 6959. However, Van
+Grooten, secretary of the Belgian ministry in London, reported to
+his government on Jan. 14 as follows: “Of late the Minister of
+Foreign Affairs has repeated at various occasions to the different
+Ambassadors accredited in London that Great Britain has engaged
+herself towards France in the Moroccan question and that she will
+meet her obligations fully even in case of a Franco-German war and
+at all costs. The press and public opinion give proof of the same
+sentiments” (<em>Belg. Docs., 1905-14</em>, p. 19). The report is
+exaggerated, but it is significant that it was current.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1020"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1020"><span class=
+"label">[1020]</span></a>Lascelles to Grey, Jan. 3, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 206 ff., Nos. 225 f.; Nicolson to Grey, Dec.
+22, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 163, No. 203.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1021"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1021"><span class=
+"label">[1021]</span></a>Spender, <em>Life of
+Campbell-Bannerman</em>, II, 257 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1022"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1022"><span class=
+"label">[1022]</span></a>Acton to Grey, Dec. 31, 1905,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 167 f., No. 209.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1023"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1023"><span class=
+"label">[1023]</span></a>Rouvier denied that he had done so. Notes
+by Hardinge, Jan. 15, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 226 and inclosure, No.
+245 (see above).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1024"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1024"><span class=
+"label">[1024]</span></a>On this episode see Lascelles to Grey, D.
+Jan. 3, R. Jan. 6, 1905, D. Jan. 11, R. Jan. 15; dated Jan. 12, D.
+Jan. 13, R. Jan. 15, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 207 f., No. 226; 217
+ff., Nos. 237 f.; 222 f., Nos. 240 f.; Grey to Lascelles, Jan. 9
+and 15, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 211 f., No. 230; 225, No. 243; Bertie
+to Grey, Jan. 14, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 224, No. 242; memo. by
+Holstein, Jan. 18, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 96 f., No. 6953.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1025"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1025"><span class=
+"label">[1025]</span></a>Bertie to Grey, D. Dec. 22, R. Dec. 27,
+1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 163 ff., No. 204; Grey to Nicolson, Dec.
+21, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 162, No. 200. “Nous serons biens sûrement
+avec vous,” Grey stated to Cambon (Grey to Bertie, Dec. 20, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 160, No. 197).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1026"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1026"><span class=
+"label">[1026]</span></a>Tardieu, pp. 81 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1027"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1027"><span class=
+"label">[1027]</span></a>Nicolson thought that he would have been
+“an admirable selection.” King Edward’s comment to the report of
+Germany’s veto was, “a case of bullying as usual!” See Nicolson to
+Grey, D. Dec. 14, R. Dec. 23, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 150 f., No.
+192.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1028"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1028"><span class=
+"label">[1028]</span></a>Grey to Bertie, Jan. 15, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 178, No. 216.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1029"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1029"><span class=
+"label">[1029]</span></a>Minutes to dispatch from Nicolson to Grey,
+D. Jan. 5, R. Jan. 13, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 209, No. 227.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1030"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1030"><span class=
+"label">[1030]</span></a>Grey stated to the Spanish Ambassador,
+Jan. 3, 1906, as follows: “All the four Powers most directly
+interested in the Mediterranean had made arrangements with each
+other which were satisfactory to themselves and it was most
+undesirable that they should allow these arrangements to be
+disturbed” (Grey to Nicolson, Jan. 10, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 215,
+No. 234). On this Spanish affair see also Grey to Bertie, Dec. 20,
+1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 160, No. 197; Grey to Nicolson, Dec. 14, 20,
+21, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 151, No. 193; 161 f., Nos. 199 ff.;
+Nicolson to Grey, Dec. 22, 25, 27, 1905, Jan. 5 and 9, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 163, No. 202; 165, No. 205; 167, No. 208; 208 f.,
+No. 227; 212, No. 231; Bertie to Grey, Dec. 22, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 163 ff., No. 204.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1031"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1031"><span class=
+"label">[1031]</span></a>Grey to Bertie, Jan. 15, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 225, No. 244; Grey to Egerton, Dec. 27, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 166, No. 206; Egerton to Grey, Dec. 27, 1905, Jan.
+9, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 166 f., No. 207; 212 f., No. 232.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1032"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1032"><span class=
+"label">[1032]</span></a>Gorst to Bertie, Dec. 13, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 149 f. and inclosure, No. 191; Bertie to Grey, Dec.
+15, 1905, <em>ibid.</em>, 158 f., No. 195.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1033"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1033"><span class=
+"label">[1033]</span></a>Memo. by Cambon, Jan. 15, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 226, No. 244 and inclosure; Nicolson to Grey, Jan.
+17, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 228 f., No. 247.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1034"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1034"><span class=
+"label">[1034]</span></a>Lascelles to Grey, D. Jan. 11, R. Jan. 15,
+1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 217 ff., No. 237.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1035"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1035"><span class=
+"label">[1035]</span></a>Nicolson to Grey, Jan. 2, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 205 f., No. 224; Grey to Bertie, Jan. 10, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 213 ff., No. 233. See also Bompard’s conversation
+with Spring Rice as reported by the latter to Grey, Jan. 16, 1906,
+Gwynn, II, 59 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1036"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1036"><span class=
+"label">[1036]</span></a>Rouvier to Révoil, Jan. 12, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 220 ff., No. 239; Tardieu, pp. 101 ff., 244;
+Bertie to Grey, Dec. 22, 1905, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 164, No. 204. In
+talking to Sir Charles Hardinge on Jan. 15 Rouvier added a third
+alternative—“a mandate to France, Spain and a third Power to study
+and elaborate a scheme for submission to the Powers” (notes by
+Hardinge, Jan. 15, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 226 f., No. 245 and
+inclosure).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1037"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1037"><span class=
+"label">[1037]</span></a>Cartwright to Grey, Jan. 23, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 233 f., No. 253.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1038"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1038"><span class=
+"label">[1038]</span></a>Grierson to Sanderson, Jan. 11, 1906;
+<em>ibid.</em>, 172, No. 211.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1039"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1039"><span class=
+"label">[1039]</span></a>This display of doubt about Great
+Britain’s loyalty was one of France’s best means of gaining that
+Power’s support. See Bompard’s assertions as reported by Spring
+Rice to Knollys, Jan. 31, 1906, Gwynn, II, 62; also see below.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1040"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1040"><span class=
+"label">[1040]</span></a>The story is given in Lieutenant-Colonel
+Charles à Court Repington, <em>The First World War, 1914-1918:
+Personal Experiences</em> (London, 1920), I, 2 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1041"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1041"><span class=
+"label">[1041]</span></a>Général Huguet, <em>L’intervention
+militaire britannique en 1914</em> (Paris, 1928), p. 15.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1042"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1042"><span class=
+"label">[1042]</span></a>Nicolson to Grey, Jan. 2, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 206, No. 224.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1043"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1043"><span class=
+"label">[1043]</span></a>Grey to Bertie, Jan. 10, 1906, quoted in
+Spender, <em>Life of Campbell-Bannerman</em>, II, 249 ff.; Grey, I,
+70 f.; <em>B.D.</em>, III, 170 f., No. 210<em>a</em>.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1044"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1044"><span class=
+"label">[1044]</span></a>This document is sufficient proof against
+the accusation of the editors of <em>G.P.</em> that Grey went
+further in his assertions to the French Ambassador in his first
+conversation with the latter, and that afterward, apparently
+restrained by the more pacific Premier, he qualified his position
+in the interview of Jan. 31. It is apparent that Grey’s statements
+of Jan. 10 and 31 do not differ in kind or degree, except that in
+the latter the Foreign Secretary expanded the conditions which he
+had already formulated in the earlier interview (see <em>G.P.</em>,
+XXI, 48 f. note; see also below).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1045"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1045"><span class=
+"label">[1045]</span></a>Grey to Bertie, Jan. 10, 1906, quoted in
+Grey, I, 70 ff., in Spender, <em>Life of Campbell-Bannerman</em>,
+II, 249 ff., and in <em>B.D.</em>, III, 170 f., No. 210. Cambon’s
+account to Rouvier of the conversation is given in <em>ibid.</em>,
+173 f., No. 212. Sanderson was present at that interview.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1046"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1046"><span class=
+"label">[1046]</span></a>Grey, I, 72, 114; Spender, <em>Life of
+Campbell-Bannerman</em>, II, 251 f.; Repington, I, 12 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1047"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1047"><span class=
+"label">[1047]</span></a>Grierson to Sanderson, Jan. 11, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 172, No. 211.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1048"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1048"><span class=
+"label">[1048]</span></a>Grey, I, 72 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1049"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1049"><span class=
+"label">[1049]</span></a>“C-B was a fine old Tory in Army matter”
+(Repington, I, 13). On this affair see Spender, <em>Life of
+Campbell-Bannerman</em>, II, 253, 256 f.; Repington, I, 12 f.;
+Viscount Haldane, <em>Before the War</em> (London, 1920), p. 184;
+Grey, I, 70 ff., 83; Haldane, <em>An Autobiography</em>, pp. 189
+f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1050"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1050"><span class=
+"label">[1050]</span></a>Grey, I, 70 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1051"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1051"><span class=
+"label">[1051]</span></a><em>Ibid.</em>, pp. 73 f.; Repington, I,
+13; <em>B.D.</em>, III, 169, editor’s note, 438 ff. In 1911 Grey
+wrote to Asquith that he never knew anything more of the course of
+those conversations (Grey, I, 92).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1052"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1052"><span class=
+"label">[1052]</span></a>Sydenham, <em>My Working Life</em>, pp.
+186 f., 190; Haldane, <em>Before the War</em>, p. 45; Repington, I,
+3. The British based their belief on the German construction of
+obviously unnecessary railroads to the Belgian frontier
+(<em>Collected Diplomatic Documents Relating to the Outbreak of the
+European War</em> [1915], pp. 365 f.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1053"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1053"><span class=
+"label">[1053]</span></a>Sanderson to Grierson, Jan. 15, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 176 f., No. 214; Grierson to Barnardiston, Jan.
+16, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 179, No. 217<em>b</em>.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1054"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1054"><span class=
+"label">[1054]</span></a>In a dispatch to Grierson on Jan. 19
+Barnardiston wrote that he had told Ducarne at their first meeting
+that Sir C. Phipps, the British minister in Brussels, had already
+mentioned the matter to the Belgian Foreign Minister
+(<em>ibid.</em>, III, 188). In some notes by Barnardiston deposited
+in the war office, he stated that Phipps would speak to the Belgian
+Foreign Minister. The Belgian government asserts that there is no
+record of such a communication; rather, that the Foreign Minister
+learned of the military conversations from the Belgian Minister of
+War. There is no report of any conversation on this subject between
+Phipps and the Belgian Minister in the papers in the British
+foreign office, nor is there any record of instructions on it being
+sent to Phipps. On March 17 Barnardiston wrote to Grierson that
+both the Belgian Minister of War and the Minister of Foreign
+Affairs knew of the conversation (editor’s note, <em>ibid.</em>, p.
+203; <em>Collected Diplomatic Documents Relating to the Outbreak of
+the European War</em>, p. 355; Haldane, <em>Before the War</em>,
+pp. 201 f.). There is no doubt but that the conversations were
+approved by both foreign ministers.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1055"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1055"><span class=
+"label">[1055]</span></a>Barnardiston to Grierson, Jan. 19, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 187 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1056"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1056"><span class=
+"label">[1056]</span></a>Barnardiston to Phipps, Jan. 17, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, pp. 179 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1057"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1057"><span class=
+"label">[1057]</span></a>On these negotiations see the
+correspondence between Grierson and Barnardiston in <em>ibid.</em>,
+pp. 187 ff.; <em>Collected Diplomatic Documents Relating to the
+Outbreak of the European War</em>, pp. 350 ff.; Haldane, <em>Before
+the War</em>, pp. 201 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1058"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1058"><span class=
+"label">[1058]</span></a>Spender, <em>Life, Journalism and
+Politics</em>, I, 193; Haldane, <em>An Autobiography</em>, p.
+191.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1059"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1059"><span class=
+"label">[1059]</span></a><em>B.D.</em>, III, 203.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1060"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1060"><span class=
+"label">[1060]</span></a>Haldane, <em>Before the War</em>, pp. 45
+f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1061"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1061"><span class=
+"label">[1061]</span></a>Statement written by Lord Sydenham, July
+19, 1927, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 185, No. 221<em>a</em>; memo. by
+Brigadier General Nicholson, Nov. 6, 1911, <em>ibid.</em>, pp. 186
+f.; Admiral Ottley to First Sea Lord, Jan. 13, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, p. 186; Sydenham, p. 186.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1062"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1062"><span class=
+"label">[1062]</span></a>Memo. by Cambon, Jan. 31, 1906;
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 193, No. 220<em>a</em>.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1063"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1063"><span class=
+"label">[1063]</span></a>Haldane, <em>Before the War</em>, chap.
+iv.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1064"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1064"><span class=
+"label">[1064]</span></a>Grey informed Cambon of the approval of
+the naval and military conversations on Jan. 15, but postponed
+answering the larger question (Grey to Bertie, Jan. 15, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 177, No. 215; 225, No. 244.)</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1065"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1065"><span class=
+"label">[1065]</span></a>Spender, <em>Life of
+Campbell-Bannerman</em>, II, 253, 256 ff.; Grey, I, 84. Grey’s
+omission to consult the entire cabinet has been severely
+criticized. He has admitted in his memoirs that he did wrong. See
+especially Haldane, <em>An Autobiography</em>, p. 191; Earl
+Loreburn, <em>How the War Came</em> (London, 1919), pp. 80 f.; cf.
+Spender, <em>Life, Journalism and Politics</em>, I, 193.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1066"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1066"><span class=
+"label">[1066]</span></a>Bertie to Grey, D. Jan. 13, R. Jan. 18,
+1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 174 ff., No. 213.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1067"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1067"><span class=
+"label">[1067]</span></a>Grey to Bertie, Jan. 15, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 177 f., No. 216; Grey, I, 75.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1068"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1068"><span class=
+"label">[1068]</span></a>Spender, <em>Life of
+Campbell-Bannerman</em>, II, 253 ff.; Grey, II, 76 ff.;
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 180 ff., No. 219. Cambon and Grey exchanged
+memoranda of that conversation. According to Mr. Eyre Crowe, senior
+clerk in the British foreign office, Cambon’s account differed from
+Grey’s on the following points: “(A) The French note alludes to the
+intention of the British Admiralty in case of a conflict with
+Germany, to bar the Channel against the German squadrons. This
+passage does not occur in Sir E. Grey’s draft. . . . . (B) The
+French note contains no allusion to the argument given in the
+following passage of Sir E. Grey’s draft: ‘I did not think people
+in England would be prepared to fight in order to put France in
+possession of Morocco. They would say that France should wait for
+opportunities and be content to take time, and that it was
+unreasonable to hurry matters to the point of war’” (Crowe’s minute
+to the memo. by Cambon, Jan. 31, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 183 f., No.
+220<em>a</em>). On Feb. 1 Sanderson talked over the two drafts with
+Cambon, who made some changes in his. Sanderson again emphasized
+the reasons why the British government could not give the desired
+assurance, speaking in part as follows: “I told him [Cambon] that I
+thought that if the Cabinet were to give a pledge which would
+morally bind the country to go to war in certain circumstances, and
+were not to mention this pledge to Parliament, and if at the
+expiration of some months the country suddenly found itself pledged
+to war in consequence of this assurance, the case would be one
+which would justify impeachment, and which might even result in
+that course unless at the time the feeling of the country were very
+strongly in favour of the course to which the Government was
+pledged” (memo. by Sanderson, Feb. 2, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 184 f.,
+No. 220<em>b</em>).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1069"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1069"><span class=
+"label">[1069]</span></a>So thought Sanderson, and Grey’s secretary
+(Grey, I, 85; Spender, <em>Life of Campbell-Bannerman</em>, II,
+257; memo. by Sanderson, Feb. 2, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 185, No.
+220<em>b</em>). Grey was absent from the foreign office for some
+time owing to the sudden death of his wife, Feb. 1.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap">
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum" id="Page_348">[348]</span><a id=
+"c17"></a>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+
+<p class="sch1">THE CONFERENCE OF ALGECIRAS</p>
+
+<p>The Conference of Algeciras opened formally on January 16,
+1906.<a id="FNanchor_1070"></a><a href="#Footnote_1070" class=
+"fnanchor">[1070]</a> The place was badly adapted to such a
+purpose. It was small, inadequately prepared to house and entertain
+the one hundred and fifty delegates, secretaries, and newspaper
+correspondents who had to remain there for over two months and a
+half. The delegates were quartered at one of the two hotels and the
+journalists at the other. They were thrown into constant contact
+with each other. The place swarmed with newspaper correspondents,
+most of them from France. There were about fifty principal ones,
+not to speak of the minor ones. They saw or heard or surmised about
+everything. They brought public opinion to the door of the
+Conference, and the French particularly were able at times of
+crisis or of important decisions to exercise a marked influence on
+the course of the deliberations.<a id="FNanchor_1071"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1071" class="fnanchor">[1071]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_349">[349]</span>Among the
+delegates there were three important groups, the German, the
+American-Italian-Austrian, and the British-French-Spanish-Russian.
+The representatives of Morocco and the smaller states took
+practically no part in the proceedings. In the first group Herr von
+Radowitz was a nonentity—old, feeble, so elusive and cautious as to
+be difficult to negotiate with. Count Tattenbach was the positive
+force, described by his British colleague as “a rasping,
+disagreeable man, not straightforward or truthful and evidently has
+to exercise much effort to control his temper.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_1072"></a><a href="#Footnote_1072" class=
+"fnanchor">[1072]</a> He made a bad impression on the delegates by
+his blunt aggressiveness. Although he knew the Moroccan problem
+thoroughly, he was unsuited for the delicate negotiations required
+at the Conference. By his personality and methods he injured his
+country’s interests. He was more influential with his government
+than was Herr von Radowitz, but as a rule both men merely carried
+out orders from Berlin. Mr. White (the American delegate), Marquis
+Visconti Venosta, and Count Welsersheimb (the Austrian delegate)
+acted as mediators. M. Révoil and Sir Arthur Nicolson were the
+leaders of the third group. Both had served their respective
+countries as minister at Tangier. M. Révoil was a supple, subtle
+reasoner, inclined like Herr von Holstein to lose sight of his
+objective in the mazes of his argument. He was oversensitive,
+overcautious, and very mistrustful of Germany. His obstinacy proved
+in the end of advantage to France, but he would have made a number
+of mistakes serious for his country and for the success of the
+Conference if he had not had the advice of Sir Arthur Nicolson. The
+latter was the most astute member taking an active part in the
+assembly, although he played his rôle so quietly that the other
+delegates, particularly the Germans, did not perceive his
+significance. A true diplomat, he carried out the difficult British
+policy admirably. It was primarily his work that<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_350">[350]</span> the Conference thrashed the
+fundamental problems through to a definite conclusion.</p>
+
+<p>When the Conference was organized, it was decided that the
+formal session should be reserved for ratification of matters
+already agreed upon unanimously in the committee of the whole,
+composed of all the delegates sitting unofficially and engaging in
+free debate. There was also to be a special committee of
+formulation to draft the propositions agreed upon.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1073"></a><a href="#Footnote_1073" class=
+"fnanchor">[1073]</a> Naturally the work was done in these two
+bodies. More important were the direct negotiations between the
+delegates of France and Germany, which after January 25, at the
+urging of the other delegates, were almost constantly in
+progress.</p>
+
+<p>The basic principles governing the work of the Conference in
+preparing a program of reform for Morocco were laid down by the
+president, the Duke of Almodovar, in his opening speech. After
+previous agreement with the French and German delegates,<a id=
+"FNanchor_1074"></a><a href="#Footnote_1074" class=
+"fnanchor">[1074]</a> he stated that everyone wished “reforms based
+on the triple principle of the sovereignty of the Sultan, integrity
+of his empire, and equality of treatment in matters commercial,
+that is, the open door.” It was not the mission of the conference,
+he said, to work out a complete plan for the administrative
+transformation of Morocco, but rather to “study together the means
+of applying measures which at present appear to be the most urgent
+and the easiest to introduce.”</p>
+
+<p>The Conference, pessimistic at the beginning, took up first the
+questions which could be easily settled. Since these were
+considered primarily from the standpoint of practicality, agreement
+was soon reached on the following: “Regulation concerning the
+surveillance and repression of contraband of arms”; “declaration
+concerning the better collection of taxes and the creation of new
+revenues”; “regulation concerning the customs duties of
+the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_351">[351]</span> empire and the
+repression of fraud and of contraband”; “declaration relating to
+public services and to public works.” The discussion of these
+matters was unimportant.<a id="FNanchor_1075"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1075" class="fnanchor">[1075]</a> The troublesome
+problems were those of the organization of the police and the
+establishment of a state bank. The solution of these would
+determine whether France or Germany should emerge victorious. After
+the initial success on the minor matters, the delegates confronted
+these two questions with more hope.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1076"></a><a href="#Footnote_1076" class=
+"fnanchor">[1076]</a></p>
+
+<p>Marquis Visconti Venosta and Mr. White first tried to mediate
+upon the basis that Germany should make concessions on the bank,
+France on the police. M. Révoil was willing, being ready, so he
+privately informed the British delegate, to associate Italy with
+France and Spain on the police, but he asked for definite
+proposals.<a id="FNanchor_1077"></a><a href="#Footnote_1077" class=
+"fnanchor">[1077]</a> At the instigation of the other delegates,
+Herr von Radowitz and M. Révoil began direct conversations on these
+matters on January 25.<a id="FNanchor_1078"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1078" class="fnanchor">[1078]</a> Puzzled by so many
+reports of different German projects on the police,<a id=
+"FNanchor_1079"></a><a href="#Footnote_1079" class=
+"fnanchor">[1079]</a> M. Révoil assumed the defensive. But on Sir
+Arthur Nicolson’s advice he laid his proposals frankly before the
+German representatives a few days later.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1080"></a><a href="#Footnote_1080" class=
+"fnanchor">[1080]</a> On January 29 M. Regnault, French adviser at
+the Conference,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_352">[352]</span>
+outlined for Count Tattenbach the French plan on the bank as
+follows: The bank should be subject to French law and to the French
+judicial system; the capital should be so divided that France
+should receive 27 per cent, Spain 23 per cent, Great Britain 20 per
+cent, Germany 20 per cent, Italy 10 per cent; an administrative
+council of ten members should be chosen according to nationality by
+the shareholders; a directory should be named by this council; a
+committee of discount in Tangier selected from the resident
+shareholders should be established and a committee of examination
+should be chosen by the future subscribers; the preferential right
+to make loans held by the French banks should continue, but perhaps
+be relinquished in return for an increase in the per cent of
+capital given to France. M. Regnault justified the project on the
+grounds that “the preponderance of French economic interests in
+Morocco must be given expression therein,” that it was a question
+of maintaining the open door without destroying acquired interests,
+and that “the open door does not signify that those who are in the
+house must leave it.”<a id="FNanchor_1081"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1081" class="fnanchor">[1081]</a></p>
+
+<p>On February 3 M. Révoil proposed to Herr von Radowitz that the
+mandate for the police be given to France and Spain together. “Over
+its form, extension and control all desirable international
+agreements could be made,” he said, so as to prevent any other
+right from being deduced therefrom and to guarantee complete
+commercial equality. He declared that France pursued no special
+political aims in Morocco, but that she must demand protection in
+proportion to her preponderant material interests. He also informed
+the German delegate indirectly that France might agree to the
+addition of a third Power to control the execution of the
+mandate.<a id="FNanchor_1082"></a><a href="#Footnote_1082" class=
+"fnanchor">[1082]</a></p>
+
+<p>In the end the German government was to accept
+practically<span class="pagenum" id="Page_353">[353]</span> these
+terms, but at the moment it was averse to making any concessions,
+believing that the Conference, “so far as grouping and general
+course are concerned, is turning out favorably for us.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_1083"></a><a href="#Footnote_1083" class=
+"fnanchor">[1083]</a> Since it regarded the bank as more
+influential in the long run than the police, it rejected the French
+claim to preference for making loans on the grounds that that claim
+violated Article XVII of the Convention of Madrid, and proposed the
+use of the Egyptian mixed codes and the equal division of the
+capital among the Powers. Thus internationalism instead of a French
+preponderant control would be established in the bank.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1084"></a><a href="#Footnote_1084" class=
+"fnanchor">[1084]</a></p>
+
+<p>On the question of the police, which was the more important, the
+German government offered various plans to prevent France from
+obtaining military control. It endeavored particularly to interest
+President Roosevelt in this problem. In a long dispatch to
+Washington on January 20, it laid three different proposals before
+the President: First, the individual Powers might participate on a
+basis of equality in the reorganization of the police by having
+each one, or at least the more important ones, assume a mandate for
+a certain port. A time limit should be set, and the Powers should
+renounce any idea of giving to their occupation a permanent
+character. For unity of policy the Powers could come to a general
+agreement on various questions like those of arming and training.
+Second, one or several smaller Powers, such as Switzerland, Norway,
+Sweden, Denmark, or Holland might assume the duty. (Belgium was
+excluded as being too liable to French influence.) Third, no
+mandate should be given, but the obligation should be imposed upon
+the Sultan to maintain at certain points police trained and
+commanded by foreign officers. The choice of these officers could
+either be left to the Sultan completely or be confined to certain
+nationalities, perhaps the smaller Powers. The Chancellor offered
+to accept any other solution<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_354">[354]</span> in harmony with the principle of equality
+and the open door.<a id="FNanchor_1085"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1085" class="fnanchor">[1085]</a> On January 24 M. de
+Lanessan, a French writer, published in the <em>Siècle</em> a
+solution practically identical with No. 3. The article read in part
+as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>There remains only one admissible solution; to charge the Sultan
+with the policing of his empire while determining the means over
+which he should have control and while instituting an international
+control over the organisation and employment of those means.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1086"></a><a href="#Footnote_1086" class=
+"fnanchor">[1086]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">The Chancellor immediately seized upon it with
+greatest favor and advocated it to President Roosevelt.</p>
+
+<p>The proposal at once called forth vehement opposition in the
+French press. When Herr von Radowitz mentioned the article to M.
+Révoil on February 3, the latter replied emphatically that in view
+of the incompetence of the Sultan the plan was not
+acceptable.<a id="FNanchor_1087"></a><a href="#Footnote_1087"
+class="fnanchor">[1087]</a> Thus the issue was joined on the
+questions of both the bank and the police. In this situation, which
+had been anticipated by both parties, the French and German
+governments sought to win the Powers to their respective views.</p>
+
+<p>The German government wished the Austrian, the Italian, and
+above all the American delegates to mediate in favor of its
+proposals.<a id="FNanchor_1088"></a><a href="#Footnote_1088" class=
+"fnanchor">[1088]</a><span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_355">[355]</span> When on January 23 Baron Sternburg
+explained to Mr. Root, the American secretary of state, the German
+proposals on the police and asked for the American views, Mr. Root
+replied that the United States could not participate in any work of
+Moroccan police but that he personally approved most of proposal
+No. 3. He said that he would consult the President about the
+question.<a id="FNanchor_1089"></a><a href="#Footnote_1089" class=
+"fnanchor">[1089]</a></p>
+
+<p>This reply was eminently satisfactory to Prince Bülow, who
+immediately urged the American government to mediate upon the basis
+of M. de Lanessan’s proposals. On January 30 he telegraphed to
+Washington that the Austrian cabinet had instructed its
+representative at Algeciras to that effect, that the Italian
+Foreign Minister had spoken favorably of it, that the Czar had
+expressed his entire approval of the German position on the open
+door, that therefore the American government would run no risk in
+making such a proposal. The time was ripe for it, he stated.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1090"></a><a href="#Footnote_1090" class=
+"fnanchor">[1090]</a> He also sought to influence the President
+against the French proposal on the bank.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1091"></a><a href="#Footnote_1091" class=
+"fnanchor">[1091]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_356">[356]</span>At Algeciras,
+however, Herr von Radowitz found that the Italian, American, and
+Russian delegates all approved the French proposal of February 3 as
+moderate and practical.<a id="FNanchor_1092"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1092" class="fnanchor">[1092]</a> When Count Tattenbach
+tried on February 3 to persuade Sir Arthur Nicolson to desert
+France and support Germany, he met with total failure.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1093"></a><a href="#Footnote_1093" class=
+"fnanchor">[1093]</a> As a result Herr von Radowitz again advised
+his government to compromise.<a id="FNanchor_1094"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1094" class="fnanchor">[1094]</a> But in view of the
+apparently favorable attitudes of the Austrian, Italian,
+Spanish,<a id="FNanchor_1095"></a><a href="#Footnote_1095" class=
+"fnanchor">[1095]</a> and American governments toward M. de
+Lanessan’s proposal, Prince Bülow refused.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1096"></a><a href="#Footnote_1096" class=
+"fnanchor">[1096]</a></p>
+
+<p>Before talking with M. Révoil again, Herr von Radowitz consulted
+the American, Italian, and Austrian delegates concerning the
+chances of success of the German proposal on the police. All three
+declared that France would never accept it, that mediation on the
+basis of it would be futile. They urged Germany to agree to the
+French plan, with modifications, in order to prevent a<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_357">[357]</span> break-up of the
+Conference.<a id="FNanchor_1097"></a><a href="#Footnote_1097"
+class="fnanchor">[1097]</a> Sir Donald Mackenzie Wallace,
+correspondent for the <em>London Times</em>, said the same.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1098"></a><a href="#Footnote_1098" class=
+"fnanchor">[1098]</a> Furthermore, Baron Sternburg reported on
+February 8 that Mr. Root had promised again that he would consult
+the President about mediating on the German proposal but that he
+would not undertake any move unless assured of a definite result.
+When the Ambassador had listed the Powers in favor of the plan, Mr.
+Root had asked significantly what was the attitude of Great
+Britain.<a id="FNanchor_1099"></a><a href="#Footnote_1099" class=
+"fnanchor">[1099]</a></p>
+
+<p>Continuing to rely upon the mediation of the American delegate
+and to hope for the support of the American and Italian delegates,
+the German government instructed Herr von Radowitz on February 9
+and 12 to hold to plan No. 3 with the two alternatives of choosing
+the instructors from some minor Power or of permitting the Sultan
+free play in the choice of them. In case the three delegates
+refused to mediate, Herr von Radowitz was to talk directly with M.
+Révoil. If the French delegate refused both the German proposals,
+Herr von Radowitz should request him to offer a proposal in keeping
+with the fundamental principle of the equality of all nations in
+Morocco. If M. Révoil held to his project of February 3, Herr von
+Radowitz should return to proposal No. 1, dividing Morocco into
+sectors each under the charge of a single Power.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1100"></a><a href="#Footnote_1100" class=
+"fnanchor">[1100]</a></p>
+
+<p>As the three delegates advised Herr von Radowitz to speak
+directly with the French delegate, he did so on February 13. M.
+Révoil grudgingly agreed to transmit the following offer to his
+government:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>It is proposed that the conference request the Sultan to
+undertake the organization of the police. He will have the duty of
+maintaining in the places determined upon, a troop of police which
+will be formed and commanded<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_358">[358]</span> by foreign officers chosen freely by the
+Sultan. The funds necessary to maintain the troops will be placed
+at the disposal of the Sultan by the new state bank. The diplomatic
+corps at Tangier will exercise control over the actions of that
+organization; a foreign officer of one of the secondary Powers will
+be charged with the inspection and will report to the diplomatic
+corps at Tangier. This entire organization will be a tentative one
+to endure from three to five years.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1101"></a><a href="#Footnote_1101" class=
+"fnanchor">[1101]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The German stand on the police was meeting with the more or less
+openly expressed disapproval of all the important Powers. Sir
+Arthur Nicolson had taken the French side from the start.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1102"></a><a href="#Footnote_1102" class=
+"fnanchor">[1102]</a> The pro-French attitude of Count Cassini, the
+Russian delegate, was confirmed by Count Lamsdorff, who on February
+12 expressed to Herr von Schoen, the new German ambassador in St.
+Petersburg, his and the Czar’s entire approval of the French
+proposal on the police and advised the German government to accept
+it.<a id="FNanchor_1103"></a><a href="#Footnote_1103" class=
+"fnanchor">[1103]</a> Even the Austrian government urged the German
+government to compromise. Count Welsersheimb reported that
+mediation on the German project No. 3 was futile; and on February
+12 Count Goluchowski, Austrian foreign minister, declared to the
+German Ambassador that the German proposal No. 1 was impracticable
+and hopeless. Regarding the situation as “rather serious,” the
+Austrian Foreign Minister stated that “Morocco was not worth a
+war,” and advised that in case of necessity the Conference be
+permitted to break up without result. Count Wedel, German
+ambassador at Vienna, warned the <em>Wilhelmstrasse</em> that
+because of domestic troubles Austria had no desire to become
+involved in a conflict.<a id="FNanchor_1104"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1104" class="fnanchor">[1104]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_359">[359]</span>Although in
+danger of becoming a minority of one, the German government hoped
+to win its point by a show of determination.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1105"></a><a href="#Footnote_1105" class=
+"fnanchor">[1105]</a> It complained vigorously to the new Italian
+government of the pro-French position taken by its delegate, and
+endeavored to persuade it to support the German views.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1106"></a><a href="#Footnote_1106" class=
+"fnanchor">[1106]</a> It sought to exert direct pressure upon M.
+Rouvier by instructing Prince Radolin to inform him that Germany
+had made concessions on the frontier under the expectation that
+France would agree to the German terms with regard to the rest of
+Morocco. If the Conference failed, the Ambassador was to assert,
+the legal status of 1880 in Morocco would again obtain. The
+Ambassador should also state to the Premier that if he did not stop
+the anti-German campaign of the French press “we [Germany] must
+conclude that M. Rouvier has reconciled himself to the idea of
+assuming the responsibility for the results of this
+activity.”<a id="FNanchor_1107"></a><a href="#Footnote_1107" class=
+"fnanchor">[1107]</a> On February 13 the German government, in
+telegrams to Rome, Washington, Vienna, London, and St. Petersburg,
+declared as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>No reason for a further retreat is evident. The principle of
+sacrificing one’s own interests merely because they block the way
+for another Power could lead to such serious consequences that we
+consider a disruption of the conference as the lesser evil.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1108"></a><a href="#Footnote_1108" class=
+"fnanchor">[1108]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">That is, if the Powers wished to prevent a break-up
+of the assembly, they should persuade France to show more
+conciliation, for Germany would not recede. A newspaper campaign
+against the French views on the police accompanied these
+efforts.<a id="FNanchor_1109"></a><a href="#Footnote_1109" class=
+"fnanchor">[1109]</a></p>
+
+<p>This defiance did not have the effect desired, for it was
+based<span class="pagenum" id="Page_360">[360]</span> upon an
+erroneous conception of the determination of France and the views
+of the Powers. So vehement was the opposition of the French press
+to the German plan, which was of course known in spite of attempts
+at secrecy, that the French government could not have accepted it
+at all. Nor did M. Rouvier have any intention of doing so. The
+British government, although suspecting that Germany meant to make
+the Conference fail, was ready to support the French proposals
+actively by exerting pressure upon the other Powers. On February 14
+Sir Edward Grey replied to the defiant German manifesto by arguing
+to Count Metternich in behalf of the French views.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1110"></a><a href="#Footnote_1110" class=
+"fnanchor">[1110]</a></p>
+
+<p>In Russia, Count Lamsdorff, who had at the opening of the
+Conference anticipated a conciliatory policy from Germany, soon
+became disillusioned, and early in February again promised Russia’s
+entire support to France. Several of the delegates suspected that
+while the German representatives realized the necessity of
+concessions, they were not informing their government of the
+gravity of the situation.<a id="FNanchor_1111"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1111" class="fnanchor">[1111]</a> So Count Lamsdorff
+advised the French government that the only way in which to make
+Germany recede was by inducing the other Powers, especially Great
+Britain, the United States, and Italy to aid Russia in exerting
+moral pressure upon her and to show her that she was
+isolated.<a id="FNanchor_1112"></a><a href="#Footnote_1112" class=
+"fnanchor">[1112]</a> He approached the British government with a
+view to co-operation in favor of France. His friendly expressions
+were most cordially reciprocated by Sir Edward Grey.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1113"></a><a href="#Footnote_1113" class=
+"fnanchor">[1113]</a> Furthermore, Mr. White<span class="pagenum"
+id="Page_361">[361]</span> and the French and British ambassadors
+in Washington persuaded President Roosevelt to yield to the French
+arguments concerning the special interest of France in Morocco, her
+unique fitness to execute the reforms, her honest desire to
+maintain the open door. Considering the downfall of M. Delcassé and
+the acceptance of the Conference as great concessions to Germany,
+Mr. Roosevelt thought that the latter should now recede in favor of
+the more practical French proposal about the police. His opinion
+was confirmed by expressions to the same effect from the Italian,
+Russian, and even the Austrian governments. The last two urged him
+to exert his influence with the Emperor for a moderation of the
+German demands.<a id="FNanchor_1114"></a><a href="#Footnote_1114"
+class="fnanchor">[1114]</a> The President was coming to suspect
+Germany of wishing to divide Morocco into sectors and to regard
+France as the protector of Morocco’s integrity.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1115"></a><a href="#Footnote_1115" class=
+"fnanchor">[1115]</a> He and Mr. Root both thought that Germany,
+believing herself able to defeat both Great Britain and France
+since Russia was out of the way, was playing the “big bully”; and
+the President had visions of the weak German navy’s defeating the
+British fleet, landing fifty thousand men in England, and taking
+the island from that guileless Power.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1116"></a><a href="#Footnote_1116" class=
+"fnanchor">[1116]</a> Hence when M. Jusserand asked the President
+early in February to intervene with the Emperor in favor of the
+French plan, Mr. Roosevelt agreed to do so.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1117"></a><a href="#Footnote_1117" class=
+"fnanchor">[1117]</a></p>
+
+<p>With the support of Great Britain, Russia, and the United
+States, the French government was almost certain of
+success.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_362">[362]</span> When on
+February 13 and 15 Prince Radolin complained about the tone of the
+French press and about the French proposal for the police, the
+French Premier, denying any responsibility for the press, handed
+the Ambassador the following memorandum:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>. . . . If M. Rouvier agreed last July that the solution of the
+question of the Moroccan police should be international in
+principle, namely by conference, he was not of the opinion that it
+would be so in execution. As to the mandate for the police, at no
+moment has the French Government engaged not to ask for it. . . . .
+Moreover, it is not a question of organizing the police outside of
+the coastal towns, and it has always been understood that the
+principal object would be to guard the security of foreigners. . .
+. . The proposals ought to be examined at Algeciras, France having
+agreed at the demand of Germany to submit them to the
+conference.<a id="FNanchor_1118"></a><a href="#Footnote_1118"
+class="fnanchor">[1118]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>At the same time the French reply to the German proposal of
+February 13 was ready. Urged by Marquis Visconti Venosta and
+others, who feared a break-up of the Conference, the French
+government attempted to harmonize the German plan about the police
+with the French demands. Then Mr. White transmitted the project to
+President Roosevelt, who in turn would recommend it to the German
+government as his own, while M. Révoil would reply directly with a
+more general statement. Although the latter despaired of any
+success, this plan was carried out.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1119"></a><a href="#Footnote_1119" class=
+"fnanchor">[1119]</a> On February 16 M. Révoil handed the following
+memorandum to Herr von Radowitz:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>There is no opposition to the organization of the police in the
+ports by the Sultan, or to the payment of the troops and officers
+by the Bank of State, or to the short duration of that institution,
+but under the condition that the foreign officers chosen by His
+Sherifian Majesty be French and Spanish. The point of the German
+proposition relative to a surveillance of the execution
+of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_363">[363]</span> that
+organization may be examined if the question of the nationality of
+the officers has been agreed upon as indicated above.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1120"></a><a href="#Footnote_1120" class=
+"fnanchor">[1120]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>On February 19 Mr. Root, declaring to the German Ambassador that
+Germany’s persistence in her plan about the police would break up
+the Conference, proposed the following solution:<a id=
+"FNanchor_1121"></a><a href="#Footnote_1121" class=
+"fnanchor">[1121]</a></p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="hang1">1. That the organization and maintenance of police
+forces in all the ports be entrusted to the Sultan, the men and
+officers to be Moors.</p>
+
+<p class="hang1">2. That the money to maintain the force be
+furnished by the proposed international bank, the stock of which
+shall be allotted to all the powers in equal shares (except for
+some small preference claimed by France, which he [the President]
+considers immaterial).</p>
+
+<p class="hang1">3. That duties of instruction, discipline, pay and
+assisting in management and control be entrusted to French and
+Spanish officers and non-commissioned officers, to be appointed by
+the Sultan on presentation of names by their Legations.</p>
+
+<p>That the senior French and Spanish instructing officers report
+annually to the government of Morocco, and to the government of
+Italy,<a id="FNanchor_1122"></a><a href="#Footnote_1122" class=
+"fnanchor">[1122]</a> the Mediterranean Power, which shall have the
+right of inspection and verification, and to demand further reports
+in behalf of and for the information of the Powers. The expense of
+such inspection, etc., etc., to be deemed a part of the cost of
+police maintenance.</p>
+
+<p class="hang1">4. That full assurances be given by France and
+Spain, and made obligatory upon all their officers who shall be
+appointed by the Sultan, for the open door, both as to trade, equal
+treatment and opportunity in competition for public works and
+concessions.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>These terms, which the French government clung to
+notwithstanding the opposition of the French press, were
+unsatisfactory to the German government. At first Prince Bülow
+refused completely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_364">[364]</span>
+the proposal of February 16, and requested the French delegate to
+make an offer in keeping with the fundamental principle of the
+equality for all nations in Morocco.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1123"></a><a href="#Footnote_1123" class=
+"fnanchor">[1123]</a> When the authority of President Roosevelt was
+added to it, however, the Chancellor receded on some points.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1124"></a><a href="#Footnote_1124" class=
+"fnanchor">[1124]</a> He still held that the Sultan should be
+permitted to choose the military instructors freely from others
+besides the French and Spanish nations. But he was willing to limit
+the nations to those participating in the bank, or, in case France
+feared that the Sultan might favor German officers, to at least
+four nationalities. In order to recognize the special rights of
+France in Morocco, he even agreed that the Sultan might place
+Tangier and perhaps some other port under the control of France
+alone; that in the other ports the officers of various
+nationalities should co-operate. Both Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Root
+realized that this reply would be totally unacceptable to France,
+and they refused the German request to mediate on that basis.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1125"></a><a href="#Footnote_1125" class=
+"fnanchor">[1125]</a></p>
+
+<p>On the question of the bank, the situation was just as bad.
+Since early in February negotiations on it had been neglected in
+favor of the more important problem of the police. But to keep the
+Conference going, the German delegates took it up again on February
+19. The next day both theirs and the French plans were submitted to
+the committee of the whole. The German plan provided that: an equal
+division of capital among the Powers should be made; the Egyptian
+mixed codes should be used for the bank; a mixed consular court
+with the addition of a Moroccan delegate to try cases involving the
+bank should be established at Tangier; the bank should be
+supervised by a Conseil de Surveillance composed of the diplomatic
+representatives at Tangier,<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_365">[365]</span> and managed by a Conseil d’Administration
+composed of two delegates from each national group and by a
+director appointed by the Conseil d’Administration; statutes should
+be drawn up by this latter body and ratified by the Conseil de
+Surveillance; customs duties, perhaps with the deduction of the
+sums necessary for the service of the French loan, should be
+received by the bank; funds for the police organization and for
+certain needed public works should be furnished by the bank, which
+should also be charged with the service of the public debt,
+especially the French loan and the German advance, and should be
+the financial agent of the state and have priority right to make
+loans; the Conseil de Surveillance should have the right to reserve
+funds necessary for the police organization and for the execution
+of necessary public works independent of the Sultan’s power, to fix
+the budget, and to advise the Sultan in deciding on public
+works.<a id="FNanchor_1126"></a><a href="#Footnote_1126" class=
+"fnanchor">[1126]</a></p>
+
+<p>The French plan contained the following provisions: the capital
+should be divided into fifteen parts, of which eleven should be
+subscribed by financial groups in Germany, Great Britain, Austria,
+Belgium, Spain, the United States, France, Italy, Holland,
+Portugal, Russia, and Sweden, with no Power having more than one
+part; the other four were to be given to the French group of banks
+that made the Moroccan loan in 1904 in return for relinquishment of
+the right of preference for making loans to Morocco; the bank was
+to be directed by a Conseil d’Administration of fifteen members
+selected by the shareholders, each chosen from the nationality of
+the subscribing group; a high commissioner selected by the Moroccan
+government should watch over the bank for the Sultan; the Conseil
+d’Administration should select the bank officers and determine
+their powers; an international committee of discount chosen among
+the chief merchants and bankers of Tangier possessing at least
+twenty-five<span class="pagenum" id="Page_366">[366]</span> shares
+should be formed for consultative purposes on credit and discount;
+the bank should be subject to the French law and to the French
+judicial system; the statutes should be drawn up by a committee
+chosen from the various subscribing groups and submitted to the
+stockholders. France wanted the central office of the bank located
+at Paris, whereas Germany preferred Tangier.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1127"></a><a href="#Footnote_1127" class=
+"fnanchor">[1127]</a></p>
+
+<p>The main points of difference between the two projects related
+to the choice of the central office of the bank, the choice of
+legislation and jurisdiction, the surveillance of the bank, the
+division of the capital, and the right of preference. The one side
+complained that the other project would make the bank into a French
+institution; the other side complained that the opposing project
+would create, not an economic institution, but a political one
+aimed at France—that it disregarded recognized French rights and
+interests and that it was impracticable.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1128"></a><a href="#Footnote_1128" class=
+"fnanchor">[1128]</a> M. Regnault became indignant at the
+presumption of the German proposal; Count Tattenbach answered him
+in kind.<a id="FNanchor_1129"></a><a href="#Footnote_1129" class=
+"fnanchor">[1129]</a> The plans were so divergent that their
+discussion in committee was postponed until March 3 so that time
+could be given for further direct negotiations.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1130"></a><a href="#Footnote_1130" class=
+"fnanchor">[1130]</a></p>
+
+<p>Thus, discussion on both questions reached a crisis. Fear of
+imminent failure pervaded the Conference. The issue was one of
+victory or defeat in the whole Moroccan episode. To break the
+deadlock the pro-French Powers again exerted moral pressure on the
+German government to force its retreat.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1131"></a><a href="#Footnote_1131" class=
+"fnanchor">[1131]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_367">[367]</span>When the French
+reply on the police was made to Germany, the Russian government
+approved it to the German authorities. Count Lamsdorff declared
+frankly to Herr von Schoen on February 19 his belief that Germany
+would be isolated in her refusal of the French proposals and that
+if the Conference broke up she would be blamed, particularly in
+Russia, for the continuation of the political and economic tension
+in Europe. If the Björkö ideal were to be realized, he said, France
+and Germany must become friends.<a id="FNanchor_1132"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1132" class="fnanchor">[1132]</a></p>
+
+<p>On February 20, at French request, Count Witte urged the German
+government and Emperor William personally to permit a speedy
+settlement of the Moroccan affair. Until then, he argued, the
+Continental grouping could not be formed nor could Russia obtain
+the loan which she so greatly needed for suppressing the
+revolution.<a id="FNanchor_1133"></a><a href="#Footnote_1133"
+class="fnanchor">[1133]</a> The German government replied that if
+Russia wanted the loan quickly, she should advise the French
+government to be more conciliatory.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1134"></a><a href="#Footnote_1134" class=
+"fnanchor">[1134]</a> On February 23 occurred another conversation
+between Herr von Schoen and Count Lamsdorff, whose assertions the
+Ambassador reported as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>It is difficult to understand why we [Germany] defend so
+obstinately an international right on the police question at the
+Conference which all other Powers, in view of the practical
+solution offered by the French, are ready to give up. The
+pessimistic impression has spread throughout the Conference that we
+aim to frustrate an understanding.</p>
+
+<p>The results of a failure would be incalculable. In France, where
+feelings are already very much excited and M. Rouvier would be
+accused of too great conciliation, a crisis with the downfall of M.
+Rouvier and his replacement by an intransigent person could
+scarcely be avoided. The continued anarchy in Morocco might bring
+forth bellicose complications at any moment, in which case England
+would certainly enter on France’s side while<span class="pagenum"
+id="Page_368">[368]</span> Russia would remain an inactive witness,
+but at the worst would be affected sympathetically. A European war
+would enkindle new revolutionary outbreaks which would also lead to
+difficult times for Germany. But the worst would be that the
+foundation for the peace program agreed upon by the two monarchs
+would be destroyed. . . . .</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">Denying that the outlook was so pessimistic, Herr
+von Schoen replied that even though the addition of the third Power
+to the Björkö accord might have to be postponed, that treaty would
+remain valid; whereupon Count Lamsdorff answered that the Dual
+Alliance still held good, that if France became involved in a war
+with Germany, the Björkö accord would collapse.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1135"></a><a href="#Footnote_1135" class=
+"fnanchor">[1135]</a></p>
+
+<p>When this warning had no apparent effect, Count Lamsdorff
+hesitated to use the Czar’s influence with the German
+Emperor.<a id="FNanchor_1136"></a><a href="#Footnote_1136" class=
+"fnanchor">[1136]</a> But as a final effort he had an article
+published on March 2 in the semiofficial journal, <em>L’Etat
+russe</em>, denouncing the German policy at the Conference and
+upholding the French.<a id="FNanchor_1137"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1137" class="fnanchor">[1137]</a></p>
+
+<p>Great Britain also gave her fullest support to the French, not
+only in Algeciras and London, but in the various capitals of the
+other Powers. In upholding the French proposal to Count Metternich
+on February 19 the British Minister repeated his belief that
+British public opinion would point the way to active support of
+France in case of a war with Germany and would thus force the
+postponement of an Anglo-German <em>rapprochement</em>. The
+Ambassador answered that if Germany had to give in to every French
+pretension which arose from the Entente Cordiale in order to gain
+British friendship, he feared that the price was too high. The
+German people would come inevitably to look upon the British as
+their chief enemy. Sir Edward Grey assured him,<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_369">[369]</span> however, that if the Moroccan
+affair were settled permanently, he would carry out his promise to
+work for a <em>rapprochement</em>.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1138"></a><a href="#Footnote_1138" class=
+"fnanchor">[1138]</a> He also kept in close touch with the Russian
+government on Moroccan affairs. While refusing on February 22 Count
+Lamsdorff’s suggestion to intervene in Berlin in favor of France,
+he urged Russia to do so.<a id="FNanchor_1139"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1139" class="fnanchor">[1139]</a></p>
+
+<p>The British Foreign Secretary was pessimistic over the outlook
+for the Conference. He was especially desirous for the onus of the
+disruption not to rest upon France. To prevent that he was even
+willing for the Moroccan police to be temporarily organized under
+the Sultan by officers taken from a neutral minor Power with a
+French officer selected by the French government in general
+control. But he hesitated to suggest this solution to France for
+fear of hurting the Entente Cordiale.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1140"></a><a href="#Footnote_1140" class=
+"fnanchor">[1140]</a> On February 20 he recorded his reactions to
+the situation as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>If the Conference breaks up without result the situation will be
+very dangerous. Germany will endeavour to establish her influence
+in Morocco at the expense of France. France to counteract this or
+even simply to protect herself and a neighbour from the state of
+disturbance, which is now chronic in Morocco, will be driven to
+take action in Morocco, which Germany may make a <em>casus
+belli</em>.</p>
+
+<p>If there is war between France and Germany it will be very
+difficult for us to keep out of it. The <em>Entente</em> and still
+more the constant and emphatic demonstrations of affection . . . .
+have created in France a belief that we should support her in war.
+. . . . If this expectation is disappointed the French will never
+forgive us.</p>
+
+<p>There would also I think be a general feeling in every country
+that we<span class="pagenum" id="Page_370">[370]</span> had behaved
+meanly and left France in the lurch. The United States would
+despise us, Russia would not think it worth while to make a
+friendly arrangement with us about Asia, Japan would prepare to
+re-insure herself elsewhere, we should be left without a friend and
+without the power of making a friend and Germany would take some
+pleasure, after what has passed, in exploiting the whole situation
+to our disadvantage, very likely by stirring up trouble through the
+Sultan of Turkey in Egypt. As a minor matter the position of any
+Foreign Secretary here, who had made it an object to maintain the
+<em>entente</em> with France, would become intolerable.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand the prospect of a European War and of our
+being involved in it is horrible.</p>
+
+<p>I propose therefore, if unpleasant symptoms develop after the
+Conference is over, to tell the French Ambassador that a great
+effort and if need be some sacrifice should in our opinion be made
+to avoid war. To do this we should have to find out what
+compensation Germany would ask or accept as the price of her
+recognition of the French claims in Morocco. There is also a point
+about Egypt, which might be worked in on our behalf. I should
+myself be in favour of allowing Germany a port or coaling station,
+if that would ensure peace; but it would be necessary to consult
+the Admiralty about this, and to find out whether the French would
+entertain the idea, and if so what port?</p>
+
+<p>The real objection to the course proposed is that the French may
+think it pusillanimous and a poor result of the <em>Entente</em>. I
+should have to risk this. I hope the French would recognize that in
+a war with Germany our liabilities would be much less than theirs.
+We should risk little or nothing on land, and at sea we might shut
+the German fleet up in Kiel and keep it there without losing a ship
+or a man or even firing a shot. The French would have a life and
+death struggle and that expenditure of blood and treasure with a
+doubtful issue. They ought therefore not to think it pusillanimous
+on our part to wish to avoid a war in which our danger was so much
+less than theirs.</p>
+
+<p>I have also a further point of view. The door is being kept open
+by us for a <em>rapprochement</em> with Russia; there is at least a
+prospect that when Russia is re-established we shall find ourselves
+on good terms with her. An <em>entente</em> between Russia, France
+and ourselves would be absolutely secure. If it is necessary to
+check Germany it could then be done. The present is the most
+unfavourable moment for attempting to check her. Is it not a grave
+mistake, if there must be a quarrel with Germany for France or
+ourselves to let Germany choose the moment, which best suits
+her.</p>
+
+<p>There is a possibility that war may come before these
+suggestions of mine can be developed in diplomacy. If so it will
+only be because Germany has made up her mind that she wants war and
+intends to have it anyhow, which<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_371">[371]</span> I do not believe is the case. But I think
+we ought in our minds to face the question now, whether we can keep
+out of war, if war breaks out between France and Germany. The more
+I review the situation the more it appears to me that we cannot,
+without losing our good name and our friends and wrecking our
+policy and position in the world.<a id="FNanchor_1141"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1141" class="fnanchor">[1141]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Thus Sir Edward Grey intended to do his utmost to preserve peace
+even at the risk of antagonizing France. He desired to postpone the
+Moroccan settlement if necessary until the Anglo-Russian entente
+could be consummated, believing that then France would be in a far
+stronger position with reference to Germany. But if war did arise,
+he was determined to throw his entire influence in favor of active
+participation.<a id="FNanchor_1142"></a><a href="#Footnote_1142"
+class="fnanchor">[1142]</a></p>
+
+<p>In Rome, M. Barrère, loyally seconded by Sir Edwin Egerton,
+endeavored to interpret the Franco-Italian accords in such a way as
+to induce the Italian government to take the French side openly in
+case of a vote at the Conference. The Italian government refused.
+It also refused to support Germany, and left matters in the hands
+of its delegate.<a id="FNanchor_1143"></a><a href="#Footnote_1143"
+class="fnanchor">[1143]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_372">[372]</span>Similarly, the
+French and British representatives co-operated to prevent Spain,
+somewhat disgruntled over the Moroccan accords, from refusing to
+live up to its obligations. The Spanish government promised
+complete loyalty. But when it appeared that the conference would
+fail, the Spanish government felt that as host it should endeavor
+to prevent that issue. On February 19 the Duke of Almodovar read to
+Mr. Révoil a note in which he said that for the sake of a
+settlement Spain was willing to accept the following plan as a sort
+of truce: The police should be organized by the Sultan under the
+control of the diplomatic corps for three years; the instructors
+should be exclusively Moroccan except at Tetouan, where they should
+be Spanish, and at Oudjda, where they should be French; France and
+Spain might renew their claims after the three years if they saw
+fit.<a id="FNanchor_1144"></a><a href="#Footnote_1144" class=
+"fnanchor">[1144]</a></p>
+
+<p>Horrified at the idea, the Anglo-French combination immediately
+busied itself to bring Spain back into line. At Madrid the British
+and French representatives informed the foreign office that if
+Spain deserted her friends the Anglo-French opposition to the
+German projects would continue anyway. They argued that a break-up
+of the Conference with the maintenance of the Franco-Spanish
+accords was preferable to the success of the Conference through the
+ruin of those accords, in which lay their sole guaranty for the
+morrow. M. Ojeda, acting minister of foreign affairs, acknowledged
+to the British representative that “he hated France and French
+influence in Morocco, and that he had no confidence in and personal
+dislike for French Ambassador,” but he added that “he would act
+faithfully in accordance with Spain’s engagements, although he
+disliked them.” M. Moret, the Spanish premier, also protested his
+loyalty to the accords. The Duke of Almodovar was instructed to
+abstain in the future from all initiative not previously concerted
+with his French colleague.<a id="FNanchor_1145"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1145" class="fnanchor">[1145]</a><span class="pagenum"
+id="Page_373">[373]</span> To prevent any bad feelings from this
+episode, the British and French governments thanked Spain for her
+loyalty. Thus the danger from Spain was averted.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1146"></a><a href="#Footnote_1146" class=
+"fnanchor">[1146]</a></p>
+
+<p>M. Rouvier consulted the smaller governments represented at the
+Conference with a view to obtaining their open support in case
+matters were forced to a vote. But they remained neutral.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1147"></a><a href="#Footnote_1147" class=
+"fnanchor">[1147]</a></p>
+
+<p>The French government, again sustained by Great Britain,<a id=
+"FNanchor_1148"></a><a href="#Footnote_1148" class=
+"fnanchor">[1148]</a> even sought to influence Austria in its
+favor, and with some success. Finding Count Goluchowski of the
+opinion that after France’s concessions on February 3 and 16
+Germany should show moderation, the French Ambassador hinted
+discreetly that the Foreign Minister speak to the German government
+to that effect.<a id="FNanchor_1149"></a><a href="#Footnote_1149"
+class="fnanchor">[1149]</a> Count Goluchowski, who on February 14
+had suggested<span class="pagenum" id="Page_374">[374]</span> a
+compromise to the German government very similar to the French
+offer of February 16, urged it to accept the offer and to seek
+compensation in the settlement of the bank question. Both the
+American and the Italian delegates approved it, he argued, and he
+predicted that if the Conference broke up Germany would be
+blamed.<a id="FNanchor_1150"></a><a href="#Footnote_1150" class=
+"fnanchor">[1150]</a> On February 23 Emperor Francis Joseph himself
+intervened. Calling the German Ambassador to him, he said that
+Austria would act with Germany at the Conference, but that
+according to all reports from Algeciras they would be isolated in
+case of a vote. Such an isolation would be unpleasant for both
+Powers, but far graver, he said, was the possibility that out of a
+failure of the Conference might develop a new grouping of the
+Powers separating Russia from the two monarchies and associating
+her with Great Britain and France. He declared that it was
+necessary to avoid that turn.<a id="FNanchor_1151"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1151" class="fnanchor">[1151]</a></p>
+
+<p>The French party at the Conference knew that Germany was
+isolated, that even her ally, Austria, opposed her policy.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1152"></a><a href="#Footnote_1152" class=
+"fnanchor">[1152]</a> On February 26 M. Révoil, refusing to make
+any further proposal, asserted to the German delegates: “If the
+Conference recognizes the utility of new guarantees, we will not
+refuse to examine them. It belongs to the Conference . . . . to
+determine the solution.” In other words, he told Germany that,
+having demanded the Conference, she might permit it to settle the
+matter.<a id="FNanchor_1153"></a><a href="#Footnote_1153" class=
+"fnanchor">[1153]</a> He and Sir Arthur Nicolson were devising some
+means by which a rupture of the Conference should not occur over
+the bank question and by which the responsibility for a rupture
+should not fall on France and Great Britain. The issue on the bank
+was not as clear<span class="pagenum" id="Page_375">[375]</span>
+cut as on the police, and public opinion would not understand why
+financial differences could not be harmonized. So the two men
+planned to bring the police question up first for decision. They
+did not favor taking a formal vote on that matter, as Count
+Lamsdorff suggested,<a id="FNanchor_1154"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1154" class="fnanchor">[1154]</a> for they perceived
+that the American, Italian, Dutch, Belgian, and Swedish delegates
+would very probably not vote. But they intended in some way to make
+plain to Germany the preference of the Conference for the French
+police proposal. Then if Germany remained adamantine, she would
+receive the blame for the break-up of the assembly.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1155"></a><a href="#Footnote_1155" class=
+"fnanchor">[1155]</a></p>
+
+<p>The opportunity came on March 3. During the discussion of the
+bank in the official session of the Conference, Germany’s views
+were supported solely by Austria and Morocco and were opposed, for
+the first time, by a firm British-French-Spanish-Russian
+group.<a id="FNanchor_1156"></a><a href="#Footnote_1156" class=
+"fnanchor">[1156]</a> That same day, on the motion of Sir Arthur
+Nicolson and with the aid of the Duke of Almodovar, the Conference
+voted to take up the question of the police on February 5 instead
+of that of the bank. The German and Austrian delegates alone
+opposed the motion, even the Italian representative siding openly
+against them.<a id="FNanchor_1157"></a><a href="#Footnote_1157"
+class="fnanchor">[1157]</a> At the session on March 5 Germany was
+again isolated. Her policy in regard to the police was not even
+defended by Austria, while the French plan was openly approved by
+Great Britain, Russia, Spain, and Portugal.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1158"></a><a href="#Footnote_1158" class=
+"fnanchor">[1158]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_376">[376]</span>All the
+delegates were pessimistic. As direct negotiations had proved
+futile, M. Révoil and Sir Arthur Nicolson both expected that the
+antagonism would come to a head at the next session and the
+Conference would break up.<a id="FNanchor_1159"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1159" class="fnanchor">[1159]</a> Herr von Radowitz
+reported to his government that agreement was impossible if Germany
+held to her present terms, for France would not recede, and that
+the other representatives, anxious to conclude the Conference, were
+in favor of the French police proposal. Even Count Tattenbach
+thought that his government was too obstinate.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1160"></a><a href="#Footnote_1160" class=
+"fnanchor">[1160]</a> In Berlin, however, Herr von Holstein,
+misjudging the French feeling, planned to meet the crisis by
+disregarding the Conference and making a direct temporary agreement
+with the French government. The visit to Berlin of Baron de
+Courcel, former ambassador at Berlin, on February 20-22, afforded
+him the opportunity to propose the following terms: In regard to
+the police the two governments should make a temporary settlement
+for four or five years; France, in consideration of her special
+interests in Morocco, should be given one port to police alone,
+while officers in equal numbers of the various nationalities,
+including French and German, should co-operate in each of the other
+seven ports; in the bank France should also be given a slight
+advantage. Let France accept this internationalization for the time
+being, he said, and in a few years she and Germany could come to a
+direct permanent settlement of the Moroccan question by which
+Germany, in return for concessions elsewhere, would leave the land
+entirely to France. These concessions he declared to be the
+utmost<span class="pagenum" id="Page_377">[377]</span> that Germany
+would make; she preferred to let the Conference disband rather than
+recede further. Baron de Courcel seemed favorable to the plan; but,
+on March 6, M. Rouvier refused to consider it or any other direct
+negotiations with Germany.<a id="FNanchor_1161"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1161" class="fnanchor">[1161]</a> So that channel was
+definitely closed.</p>
+
+<p>While this effort was being made, Prince Bülow took personal
+charge of all the details concerning the Moroccan affair.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1162"></a><a href="#Footnote_1162" class=
+"fnanchor">[1162]</a> The Chancellor had no idea of permitting a
+disruption of the Conference,<a id="FNanchor_1163"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1163" class="fnanchor">[1163]</a> and began to consider
+a proposal suggested by the Austrian delegate on February 26 for a
+way out. In its final form this project provided that the
+organization of police in Tangier, Saffi, Rabat, and Tetouan should
+be intrusted to the French; in Mogador, Larache, and Mazagan to the
+Spanish; in Casablanca to the command of a Swiss or Dutch officer
+with powers of inspection over all the police. It further proposed
+that this inspector should report to the diplomatic corps at
+Tangier, which should exercise general control over the
+reorganization of the police. Herr von Radowitz, Count
+Welsersheimb, and Marquis Visconti Venosta all declared this to be
+the least that the French would accept.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1164"></a><a href="#Footnote_1164" class=
+"fnanchor">[1164]</a> The German government endeavored first to
+have Austria and Italy mediate on the basis of the plan
+outlined<span class="pagenum" id="Page_378">[378]</span> to Baron
+de Courcel;<a id="FNanchor_1165"></a><a href="#Footnote_1165"
+class="fnanchor">[1165]</a> but on March 4 Count Goluchowski, the
+Austrian foreign minister, regarding the step as futile, refused to
+do so. Instead he urged that either Count Welsersheimb’s project be
+accepted <em>in toto</em> or that the selection of officers be left
+to the Sultan with the understanding that he choose only French and
+Spanish ones.<a id="FNanchor_1166"></a><a href="#Footnote_1166"
+class="fnanchor">[1166]</a> From Italy also came a negative
+response.<a id="FNanchor_1167"></a><a href="#Footnote_1167" class=
+"fnanchor">[1167]</a> When Count Tattenbach himself favored the
+Austrian plan, the Chancellor accepted it on March 6 with the
+proviso that the commander at Casablanca choose his officers from
+other nationalities than French and Spanish, and also that France
+accede to the German demands on the bank. Then the Chancellor
+sought to obtain a combined Austro-Italian mediation for the
+plan.<a id="FNanchor_1168"></a><a href="#Footnote_1168" class=
+"fnanchor">[1168]</a></p>
+
+<p>On March 8 Count Welsersheimb’s project and the French plan of
+February 16 were formally introduced in the Conference.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1169"></a><a href="#Footnote_1169" class=
+"fnanchor">[1169]</a> On March 10 both were referred to the
+committee for formulation on a motion by Herr von Radowitz, who
+said:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_379">[379]</span>It seems to me
+that accord ought to be reached on the basis of the two projects. .
+. . . That of the French delegation certainly contains proposals
+which deserve the most serious examination. They ought to be
+completed by those of the Austro-Hungarian project.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1170"></a><a href="#Footnote_1170" class=
+"fnanchor">[1170]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The Austro-German proposal was a welcome surprise to the
+Conference, which recognized it as a great concession. Sir Arthur
+Nicolson found that “members of the Conference, with the exception
+of French and Spanish, are unanimous in favour of” it. He as well
+as the other delegates did not hesitate to inform M. Révoil frankly
+of this view. In Algeciras, London, and Paris the British
+government on March 9-10 stated to the French authorities that
+Germany’s concessions “had brought an agreement so near that it
+would not do to let the Conference break up now without a
+settlement.” “I would,” said Sir Arthur Nicolson to M. Révoil,
+“support him [M. Révoil] to the best of my ability in whatever
+course he might take, but I must tell him that in the event of the
+Conference ending in a failure we should be placed in an
+exceedingly false position with all the public feeling of Europe
+against us.”<a id="FNanchor_1171"></a><a href="#Footnote_1171"
+class="fnanchor">[1171]</a> Sir Edward Grey thought that “Germany
+has conceded the substance and it would be a great pity, if France
+sacrificed the substance to the shadow.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_1172"></a><a href="#Footnote_1172" class=
+"fnanchor">[1172]</a></p>
+
+<p>M. Révoil, whose views were also valid for the Spanish
+delegates, was totally unwilling to accept the Austrian proposal.
+He was handicapped by the unexpected fall of the French government
+on March 7 over a minor question concerning relations with the
+church. A week before the French Premier would have accepted the
+Spanish proposal of February 19 as a means of last<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_380">[380]</span> resort.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1173"></a><a href="#Footnote_1173" class=
+"fnanchor">[1173]</a> Now out of power, though remaining at the
+foreign office until the new government was formed, M. Rouvier of
+course could not make concessions even had he so desired. Staunchly
+supported by the French press, which on March 13 published the
+instructions to M. Révoil,<a id="FNanchor_1174"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1174" class="fnanchor">[1174]</a> he and the French
+delegate demanded the following modifications in the Austrian
+plan:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>The police instructors at Casa Blanca to be, like at the other
+seven ports, French or Spanish.</p>
+
+<p>Distribution of ports to French or Spanish instructors to be a
+matter for agreement between French and Spanish Gov[ernmen]ts. The
+Inspector General to be a subject of neutral state and to have
+powers of inspection at all eight ports without right to command or
+give orders to French and Spanish instructors, and to make his
+reports to the Sultan of Morocco and not to the diplomatic body at
+Tangier.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">He also preferred as inspector a Swiss or, even
+better, a Dane to a Dutchman for fear the latter might be too much
+under German influence.<a id="FNanchor_1175"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1175" class="fnanchor">[1175]</a></p>
+
+<p>Both MM. Rouvier and Révoil believed that Germany would recede
+on these points, for on about March 8 the Prince of Monaco arrived
+in Paris from Berlin with a message for M. Rouvier from Prince
+Bülow to the effect that Germany would accept a French and Spanish
+police “under the most discreet control of an officer from a lesser
+Power.”<a id="FNanchor_1176"></a><a href="#Footnote_1176" class=
+"fnanchor">[1176]</a> The message was undoubtedly misleading and
+the French hope unjustified.<a id="FNanchor_1177"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1177" class="fnanchor">[1177]</a> When
+Marquis<span class="pagenum" id="Page_381">[381]</span> Visconti
+Venosta, Mr. White, and Sir Arthur Nicolson, at M. Révoil’s
+request, asked the German delegates March 9, 10, whether they would
+give way, the latter assured them that Germany had spoken her last
+word, that “the establishment of the inspector at a port as
+instructor was a <em>sine qua non</em> condition.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_1178"></a><a href="#Footnote_1178" class=
+"fnanchor">[1178]</a></p>
+
+<p>M. Révoil was “greatly disappointed” and “a little unstrung.” He
+told Sir Arthur Nicolson that his government would not accept such
+a solution. “He said with much bitterness that the Germans had
+internationalized the finances, and they now intended to introduce
+the principle throughout Morocco. France would leave the Conference
+having yielded everything and gained nothing.” His chief concern
+was that if France were forced to accept the Austrian plan, “the
+outcry which would be raised against it in France might be utilized
+to weaken the Anglo-French understanding.” Sir Arthur Nicolson
+replied that he “would always support him [M. Révoil], but I had
+given warnings as a friend should.” And Sir Arthur added “that he
+must face the situation as it stood, and that there could be no
+question of breaking down the Conference on that point, and at a
+moment when a favourable end was so nearly reached.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_1179"></a><a href="#Footnote_1179" class=
+"fnanchor">[1179]</a></p>
+
+<p>In Paris, M. Rouvier</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">rather demurred [to the British Ambassador] to the
+supposition that the conference was so favourably impressed by the
+Austrian scheme. He said that France still counted on her side
+Spain, England, Russia, Portugal, and others had only been gained
+over by the German Delegates having persuaded them that Germany
+would make no further concessions.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1180"></a><a href="#Footnote_1180" class=
+"fnanchor">[1180]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_382">[382]</span>Mr.
+Eyre Crowe was alarmed for the Entente Cordiale; he urged the
+greatest caution in advising France to recede. But Sir Edward Grey
+on March 12 repeated to M. Cambon that in his opinion France
+“should accept the Swiss at Casa Blanca rather than let the
+Conference break up.”<a id="FNanchor_1181"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1181" class="fnanchor">[1181]</a></p>
+
+<p>As the pressure of the delegates was so strong, M. Révoil and
+the Duke of Almodovar began on March 11 to consider tentatively the
+plan of associating actively a Swiss inspector with the French and
+Spanish in the policing of Tangier.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1182"></a><a href="#Footnote_1182" class=
+"fnanchor">[1182]</a> Nothing could be decided until the new French
+government was formed. Meanwhile, the opposition of views became
+public in the Conference session of March 11 when two matters
+remaining unsolved on the question of the bank were taken up. In a
+previous sitting Sir Arthur Nicolson, in agreement with M. Révoil,
+had proposed that three censors be chosen to oversee the bank. In
+accepting this proposal Herr von Radowitz stipulated that in order
+to preserve the principle of internationality the censors should be
+chosen by the respective governments from the personnel of the
+banks interested in the Moroccan state bank and that a copy of the
+censors’ reports should be sent to the governments of the signatory
+Powers. The French delegates, however, desired that the first
+censors be selected by the committee drawing up the statutes of the
+bank and should thereafter be chosen by co-optation and that their
+reports should be sent to the council of administrators of the
+bank. The French continued to demand four shares, while Germany was
+willing to concede them only three.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1183"></a><a href="#Footnote_1183" class=
+"fnanchor">[1183]</a> At the session on the next day M. Révoil
+refused the Austrian<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_383">[383]</span> proposal to give the command in Casablanca
+to an officer of a third Power, but agreed to the inspection by
+one, preferably a Swiss.<a id="FNanchor_1184"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1184" class="fnanchor">[1184]</a></p>
+
+<p>In reporting M. Révoil’s pertinacity to Berlin on March 11, Herr
+von Radowitz stated: “I have been told by all my colleagues, even
+the English, that after our action they would no longer consider
+justified the French adherence to the points declared inacceptable
+by us and they have so expressed themselves to M. Révoil.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_1185"></a><a href="#Footnote_1185" class=
+"fnanchor">[1185]</a> On the next day Marquis Visconti Venosta said
+in confidence to Herr von Radowitz that the latter would “not be
+able to come to an arrangement with M. Révoil without a positive
+intervention of the government at Paris. . . . .”<a id=
+"FNanchor_1186"></a><a href="#Footnote_1186" class=
+"fnanchor">[1186]</a> The same day the <em>Lokalanzeiger</em>
+published an exaggerated report from its correspondent at Algeciras
+in which the “complete isolation” of France in the committee was
+spoken of; Italy, Russia, the United States, and even Great
+Britain, the article read, had put themselves on the German
+side.<a id="FNanchor_1187"></a><a href="#Footnote_1187" class=
+"fnanchor">[1187]</a></p>
+
+<p>Instead of maintaining a dignified silence while public opinion
+and the persuasion of the Powers compelled France to give way or
+break up the Conference, Prince Bülow tried to increase the
+pressure by beginning a diplomatic and press campaign against
+France. With German thoroughness he overdid the thing. On March 12
+he sent telegrams to the German ambassadors at Vienna, London, St.
+Petersburg, Rome, Washington, and Paris in which he stated that the
+generous concessions granted by Germany on March 10 had made
+agreement seem possible. Then all had been placed in doubt again by
+sudden and unexpected opposition from the French delegates. The
+other delegates, including the British, he continued, had expressed
+to Herr von Radowitz and to M. Révoil their opinion that France
+should now recede; and, after repeating Marquis Visconti
+Venosta’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_384">[384]</span>
+statement, he asked the various governments to intervene at Paris
+“so that the voice of reason will again rule there and further
+opposition be given up.”<a id="FNanchor_1188"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1188" class="fnanchor">[1188]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Russian, Italian, and Austrian governments agreed to advise
+France to accept the Austrian compromise. Sir Edward Grey, whom
+Count Metternich did not ask to intercede in behalf of the plan as
+he believed that the British Minister would refuse, welcomed the
+German concessions but loyally upheld the French proposals.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1189"></a><a href="#Footnote_1189" class=
+"fnanchor">[1189]</a> Mr. Roosevelt unexpectedly replied most
+adversely.</p>
+
+<p>In a letter on March 7 the President advised the Emperor to
+accept his proposal of February 19. He justified his interference
+by quoting a passage from Baron Sternburg’s letter to him on June
+28, 1905, to the effect that “the Emperor has requested me to tell
+you that in case, during the coming conference, differences of
+opinion should arise between France and Germany, he, in every case,
+will be ready to back up the decision which you should consider to
+be most fair and most practical.” He warned the German government
+that it would lose “credit” and “moral power” in the world if the
+Conference failed.<a id="FNanchor_1190"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1190" class="fnanchor">[1190]</a> In his reply on March
+12 the Emperor announced his acceptance of the Austrian plan, and
+urged the President to support it.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1191"></a><a href="#Footnote_1191" class=
+"fnanchor">[1191]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_385">[385]</span>Upon receiving
+that reply Mr. Roosevelt on March 14 denounced the Austrian project
+to Baron Sternburg as “absurd because it favors the very ideas the
+conference has been trying to eliminate namely partition and
+spheres of influence,” and also because it was impracticable. On
+the other hand, “placing French and Spanish officers in the same
+ports gives according to my view a safer guarantee than placing
+them separately in single ports,” he said. In spite of that reply,
+however, Prince Bülow regarded the German position as “at present
+not at all unfavorable.”<a id="FNanchor_1192"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1192" class="fnanchor">[1192]</a></p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, the French were restoring their front. In Paris a new
+government was formed by M. Sarrien on March 14 with M. Bourgeois
+at the foreign office. M. Bourgeois, with whom Prince Radolin was
+on cordial terms, was known to be a conciliatory statesman
+interested in harmonizing international differences. But he could
+hardly begin his career in office with an unpopular concession on
+the Moroccan question. He renewed M. Révoil’s instructions,
+refusing to compromise on the police in any manner whatever.</p>
+
+<p>It was a bold act. The French government knew that the Russian,
+Italian, British, and Austrian governments disapproved. Several
+influential members of the French Parliament tried to persuade M.
+Bourgeois that the British government, influenced by Sir Henry
+Campbell-Bannerman, would withdraw its support from France. The new
+cabinet was alarmed by the British advice to accept a neutral
+police in Casablanca rather than break up the Conference, and some
+of the ministers suspected that Great Britain and Germany were
+about to come to an arrangement leaving France in the lurch. In a
+French cabinet meeting M. Clémenceau was at first the only minister
+to combat these doubts.<a id="FNanchor_1193"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1193" class="fnanchor">[1193]</a></p>
+
+<p>But the move succeeded. M. Bourgeois quickly repulsed
+the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_386">[386]</span> intervention,
+half-hearted as it was, of the Russian, Italian, and Austrian
+ambassadors in Paris in favor of the Austrian plan; he even
+gathered from his conversation with the Austrian representative
+that the latter’s government would try to persuade Germany to
+relinquish her stand on the policing of Casablanca.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1194"></a><a href="#Footnote_1194" class=
+"fnanchor">[1194]</a> In addition, as soon as the French
+instructions were published, Sir Edward Grey immediately informed
+the French government that Great Britain would “of course” support
+it.<a id="FNanchor_1195"></a><a href="#Footnote_1195" class=
+"fnanchor">[1195]</a></p>
+
+<p>When he learned of the French doubts about the continuation of
+British aid, he rather indignantly replied that the French leaders,
+MM. Bourgeois, Etienne, and Clémenceau,</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">should be told that there has never been any
+question here of discontinuing our support to France. We have given
+it throughout at Algeciras and in every capital in Europe where
+required and shall continue this so long as the French wish it and
+trust us. Cordial co-operation with France in all parts of the
+world remains a cardinal point of British policy and in some
+respects we have carried it further than the late Government here
+were required to do.</p>
+
+<p>Any advice Nicolson has given to Révoil has been on the
+understanding that this support would be continued, and if he has
+given advice freely it has<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_387">[387]</span> been because of his complete confidence
+that this was understood by his French colleague. The same is true
+of my conversations with Cambon. . . . . The Prime Minister has
+been cognizant of all I have said and has cordially approved of
+it.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">Sir Arthur Nicolson denied that either directly or
+indirectly had he ever said to the German delegates that France
+ought to give way on any point.<a id="FNanchor_1196"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1196" class="fnanchor">[1196]</a> Sir Edward Grey
+informed the other governments that the British fidelity to France
+would continue as before. And on March 18 <em>Le Temps</em>
+published the instructions to Sir Arthur Nicolson so that public
+opinion could see how complete that support was.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1197"></a><a href="#Footnote_1197" class=
+"fnanchor">[1197]</a></p>
+
+<p>If the French leaders intended to bring Great Britain back
+unreservedly into line by expressing these doubts about British
+support, they succeeded. M. Bourgeois could with more assurance
+inform the German Ambassador that France had receded as far as she
+would. On March 17 Prince Radolin reported his words as
+follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>The Minister added that he stood on the defensive, that he
+supported entirely the previous policy of Rouvier and Révoil, . . .
+. that he had agreed in principle with the appointment of a general
+inspector from some lesser state “subject to agreement on details”
+but that under no circumstances would he permit the inspector to
+exercise a command or a collaboration. That is a question of
+principle, a vital question for France and her prestige in Algeria.
+Moreover in case the conference ends without result, the <em>status
+quo</em> is no disadvantage for France. Germany, not France, had
+demanded the conference. “It is your turn now to speak, but not of
+the police. It is lost effort.”</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">He accused the German government of being
+responsible for the pressure of the other Powers on France.
+According to instructions, Prince Radolin replied in a serious tone
+but without threat that the steps taken by those governments were
+caused by Germany’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_388">[388]</span>
+great concessions of March 10.<a id="FNanchor_1198"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1198" class="fnanchor">[1198]</a> But the vote of
+confidence given without debate to the new cabinet by the Chamber
+on March 19 showed that M. Bourgeois interpreted French feeling
+correctly.<a id="FNanchor_1199"></a><a href="#Footnote_1199" class=
+"fnanchor">[1199]</a></p>
+
+<p>There were signs at Paris and Algeciras as early as March 17
+that Austria was seeking some new way out of the deadlock, and that
+Germany might accept the French view about Casablanca.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1200"></a><a href="#Footnote_1200" class=
+"fnanchor">[1200]</a> Before the Austrian mediation had time to
+materialize, however, the renewed intervention of the American
+government turned the scales in favor of France. On March 16 Prince
+Bülow had replied to Mr. Roosevelt with arguments showing that the
+Austrian plan would preserve the unity and integrity of Morocco
+whereas the French plan would divide the country into spheres of
+influence.<a id="FNanchor_1201"></a><a href="#Footnote_1201" class=
+"fnanchor">[1201]</a> The President remained unconvinced. Thinking
+that the whole German action was intended to humiliate France, he
+and American public opinion took the French side. While he no
+longer believed that Germany aimed at war with her western
+neighbor, he and his advisers did suspect her of intending by the
+Austrian proposal to gain a port and a sphere of influence in the
+Mediterranean. Germany’s extreme demands were arousing
+dissatisfaction among the other delegates at Algeciras, he told
+Baron Sternburg, and Austria and Russia had already asked him to
+advise Germany to moderate them. So, while he declared that he
+would not hold out if the other Powers accepted the Austrian plan,
+he remained hostile to it. He threatened to publish the entire
+correspondence on the subject if the Conference failed.<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_389">[389]</span> Baron Sternburg learned that
+Mr. Root had said privately that Germany’s attitude at the
+Conference was “petty and unworthy of a great nation,” that she was
+fast losing the confidence of the world. In reiterating the
+American stand, Mr. Root wrote to the Ambassador: “If we had
+sufficient interest in Morocco to make it worth our while, we
+should seriously object, on our own account, to the adoption of any
+such arrangement [as the Austrian plan].”<a id=
+"FNanchor_1202"></a><a href="#Footnote_1202" class=
+"fnanchor">[1202]</a></p>
+
+<p>With the net drawing tighter around Germany, Prince Bülow
+notified President Roosevelt on March 19 that Germany would accept
+the American plan of having French and Spanish officers in about
+equal numbers co-operate in each of the ports, supervised by a
+general inspector from another nation.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1203"></a><a href="#Footnote_1203" class=
+"fnanchor">[1203]</a> President Roosevelt was jubilant over
+Germany’s acceptance of his plan. He immediately proposed it to the
+French government and asked the British to support him.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1204"></a><a href="#Footnote_1204" class=
+"fnanchor">[1204]</a></p>
+
+<p>From this side the President met with strenuous opposition.
+France and Spain would have nothing to do with the idea of mixed
+police, except if necessary in Tangier and Casablanca. Complaining
+of too many peacemakers,<a id="FNanchor_1205"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1205" class="fnanchor">[1205]</a> Sir Edward Grey
+supported the Franco-Spanish view. Mr. Roosevelt suddenly grew
+timid and refused to defend his project before the
+Conference.<a id="FNanchor_1206"></a><a href="#Footnote_1206"
+class="fnanchor">[1206]</a><span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_390">[390]</span> The German government was therefore forced
+to fall back on Austrian mediation.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1207"></a><a href="#Footnote_1207" class=
+"fnanchor">[1207]</a></p>
+
+<p>In a private conversation on March 23 Count Welsersheimb
+informed M. Révoil that Germany might sacrifice her demand for a
+neutral police at Casablanca if France would make reciprocal
+concessions. M. Révoil was willing to limit the number of French
+shares in the bank to three. But for the other unsettled problems
+of determining how much international control should be established
+over the police and bank and how the police should be divided among
+the various ports, the two men failed to find a solution. On the
+first question the German government demanded as a <em>conditio
+sine qua non</em> that the inspector should be made responsible to
+the diplomatic corps at Tangier, which should exercise a general
+supervision over the police. M. Révoil, on the other hand,
+supported by the British and Spanish delegates, desired that the
+diplomatic corps be excluded from intervening in this matter at
+all. On the question of the bank the Germans wanted the various
+governments and the diplomatic corps at Tangier to have some
+authority over the censors while the French did not. As to the
+division of ports the French formally requested that the settlement
+of this problem and of other details should be left for France and
+Spain to determine later with the Sultan; the Germans preferred to
+have the Conference itself divide the ports between these two
+Powers.<a id="FNanchor_1208"></a><a href="#Footnote_1208" class=
+"fnanchor">[1208]</a></p>
+
+<p>At that point the Conference again reached a deadlock.
+With<span class="pagenum" id="Page_391">[391]</span> victory in
+view the French, on March 26, refused to give way;<a id=
+"FNanchor_1209"></a><a href="#Footnote_1209" class=
+"fnanchor">[1209]</a> while the Germans, who had already made the
+great concession, sought to save as much as they could. They felt
+compelled to be firmer because the publication in <em>Le Temps</em>
+on March 21 of the very pro-French instructions to the Russian
+delegate at Algeciras, succeeding the publication of the French and
+British instructions, made it appear as if the German government
+were being coerced into retreat.<a id="FNanchor_1210"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1210" class="fnanchor">[1210]</a> With one or two
+exceptions, the delegates, anxious to conclude the Conference and
+attributing little importance to these matters, were inclined to
+think that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_392">[392]</span> France
+ought to recede on the question of the responsibility of the
+inspector.<a id="FNanchor_1211"></a><a href="#Footnote_1211" class=
+"fnanchor">[1211]</a> President Roosevelt was once more urging that
+both France and Spain be given a joint mandate and that they accept
+from the Conference a joint responsibility for every port no matter
+how the ports were divided.<a id="FNanchor_1212"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1212" class="fnanchor">[1212]</a> After the session on
+March 26, the mediators again set to work. Germany agreed for
+France and Spain to divide the ports as they wished and to submit
+their decision to the Conference for approval. Both Powers made
+concessions on the question of the control of the bank. On the most
+difficult problem of the responsibility of the police inspector,
+the French, British, Spanish, Russian, and Italian first delegates
+met privately at M. Révoil’s suggestion and worked out a formula.
+Then Mr. White submitted it to the German delegates, and the latter
+accepted it (March 27).<a id="FNanchor_1213"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1213" class="fnanchor">[1213]</a> The difficulties were
+thereby settled.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime trouble, which did not come to the surface, had
+arisen between France and Spain. The Franco-Spanish accord of 1905
+had provided for the policing of only five ports, whereas the
+Conference had dealt with all eight. France wanted the other three
+left to her; but Spain refused. On March 18 she requested that
+Tangier be given to her, but the French government rejected the
+suggestion, offering instead to agree that Casablanca as well as
+Tangier should be policed by French and Spanish together. This
+offer was refused by Spain, who on about March 25 made the
+additional request that she should be given an extra share in the
+bank by the Conference instead of receiving it later from France
+according to agreement. The French would not accede to this, but by
+March 31 the two Powers decided that<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_393">[393]</span> the officers should be Spanish in Tetouan
+and Larache, French and Spanish in Casablanca and Tangier, and
+French in the other four ports.<a id="FNanchor_1214"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1214" class="fnanchor">[1214]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Conference accepted this division, together with the
+following terms on the police: They should function for five years;
+they should be inspected at least once a year by a Swiss officer
+stationed at Tangier<a id="FNanchor_1215"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1215" class="fnanchor">[1215]</a> who should report to
+the Sultan; this officer was also empowered to make as many special
+reports as he saw fit; he should likewise send a copy of these
+reports to the dean of the diplomatic corps in order that that body
+might</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p class="nind">confirm that the Moroccan police is functioning in
+conformity with the decisions taken by the Conference and that it
+may see whether it guarantees in an efficacious manner and in
+conformity with the treaties the security of persons and of the
+property of foreigners as well as that of commercial transactions;
+. . . . in case of demand before it by an interested legation the
+diplomatic corps may, after advising the representatives of the
+Sultan of its action, request the inspector to make an inquiry and
+draw up a report on the complaint made.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">On the question of the bank it was stipulated that
+the censors should be chosen with the approval of their governments
+by the various state banks of the countries involved. Instead of
+using the expression that the censors should exercise “the
+supervision of the administration of the Bank in the name of the
+signatory Powers,” a phrase to which the French objected as
+smacking of internationalization again, the delegates substituted
+the less colorful one that the censors should exercise “the
+supervision of which they are invested by the present Act in that
+which concerns the administration of the bank.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_1216"></a><a href="#Footnote_1216" class=
+"fnanchor">[1216]</a></p>
+
+<p>Thus, formulas were found. Details were cleared up;
+minor<span class="pagenum" id="Page_394">[394]</span> points
+settled. On April 7 the delegates signed the general act. The
+Conference of Algeciras was ended.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1217"></a><a href="#Footnote_1217" class=
+"fnanchor">[1217]</a></p>
+
+<p>The conclusions of the Conference were determined by the
+exigencies of international relations and the interests of European
+Powers, not by the needs of Morocco. The less interested Powers had
+aimed chiefly at preserving peace in Europe. France and her
+satellite, Spain, had been concerned with maintaining their
+interests in Morocco and with preventing any other Power from
+gaining a foothold there. Germany alone had endeavored to defend
+Moroccan rights, and she had done so only because that policy had
+been in accord with her interests. The Moroccan delegates had in
+general been disregarded by the Conference, which assumed that the
+Sultan would under pressure accept its decisions. Although the
+assembly had formally acknowledged the independence and integrity
+of Morocco and the sovereignty of the Sultan, it had shown little
+more regard for them than had the Anglo-French and Franco-Spanish
+agreements of 1904-5. While the open door had been allowed, the
+French and Spanish military control in Morocco assured to those two
+Powers the main economic advantages. In view of the terms of the
+Franco-Spanish accord of 1905, it was certain that those Powers
+would not preserve equality of economic treatment. France and Spain
+had both fought internationalization so effectively that the
+international supervision established was entirely inadequate to
+command respect. The idea that a Power might be charged by the
+other Powers with the exercise of a mandate for the sake of the
+“backward people” had not as yet been seriously considered by any
+government. In February and March President Roosevelt and the
+German government had discussed the proposal of granting to France
+and Spain a mandate in Morocco “from all the Powers, under
+responsibility to all of them for the<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_395">[395]</span> maintenance of equal rights and
+opportunities”<a id="FNanchor_1218"></a><a href="#Footnote_1218"
+class="fnanchor">[1218]</a>—that is, for the advantage of the
+Western Powers not for that of Morocco—but the trouble lay in the
+absence of any existing machinery which would have enabled it to be
+put into effect.</p>
+
+<p>The reforms provided for were hardly more than a beginning. They
+were unsatisfactory both to the Moroccans and to the French and the
+Spanish. The Moroccan government was surprised at the outcome of
+the Conference, having expected that France would be arraigned
+before that body as before a tribunal. The mass of the Moroccan
+people remained hostile to reform; they were turning their homage
+more to the pretender and to Raisouli. Even those ministers who
+recognized the necessity for change denounced the Conference
+proposals as benefiting the Europeans and European trade in Morocco
+but not the Moroccan government. “The conference has turned Morocco
+over to the French,” said El Tores, a delegate to that assembly, to
+Dr. Rosen. He thought that either acceptance or rejection of the
+Conference act by the Sultan would be a misfortune.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1219"></a><a href="#Footnote_1219" class=
+"fnanchor">[1219]</a> Ben Sliman, the Moroccan foreign minister,
+was equally despondent.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>He regarded the outlook after the decision of the Conference as
+simply hopeless [so Mr. Lowther reported his assertions]. If the
+Makhzen assented to the Conference’s decision there was an end to
+the Moorish Government, as a Government. The ports were thereby
+practically handed over for ever to the Powers. These were of
+importance to Europeans and of a certain financial value to the
+Sultan although they were but a small part of the country and their
+populations a mere handful of those of the Sultan’s subjects, who,
+in normal times, had acknowledged His Majesty’s rule, and paid
+taxes. But the decisions of the Conference Ben Sliman considered,
+in practice if not in theory, left the Sultan no means or hopes of
+doing anything to re-establish order and restore prosperity to the
+vast mass of his people, to whose needs at large the proposed
+reforms were totally inadequate and he was deeply disappointed with
+them.</p>
+
+<p>His Excellency would therefore infinitely have preferred the
+reforms to have been so framed that the Powers would have exercised
+some kind of direction, assistance and advice at the Court itself,
+the influence of which<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_396">[396]</span> would have been, in course of time, felt
+throughout the country to the great advantage of all concerned. As
+it was, the Makhzen seemed to be left in as impotent and ridiculous
+a position as ever in the eyes of its subjects.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1220"></a><a href="#Footnote_1220" class=
+"fnanchor">[1220]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Opinion at court was divided upon whether to accept the
+decisions of the Conference or not. When the dean of the diplomatic
+corps in Tangier officially communicated the Conference act to the
+Sultan, the latter tried to delay a decision and to discuss certain
+points. But on June 18 he reluctantly signed the act with
+reservations. All indications pointed to the opposition of the
+Moroccan government to any serious efforts at reforms.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1221"></a><a href="#Footnote_1221" class=
+"fnanchor">[1221]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Conference had made inadequate provisions for coping with
+Moroccan opposition. There could be no half-measures in handling
+Morocco. Europe had to leave her alone entirely or give the
+mandatory Powers complete freedom to “shoot” reforms into the land.
+The right to police eight towns would just suffice to involve
+France and Spain in a series of petty, indecisive clashes with the
+natives. If they wished to employ more military authority, they
+would have either to obtain the permission of the Powers or to risk
+another international crisis by taking an unauthorized initiative.
+As soon as the execution of the reforms should begin, the
+inadequacy of all this diplomatic activity would become evident.
+The Moroccan problem had not been solved.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes" id="ftc17">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1070"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1070"><span class=
+"label">[1070]</span></a>The Conference opened later than was
+originally planned, the immediate cause being the marriage of the
+Infanta Maria Theresa, sister of King Alfonso, to Prince Ferdinand
+of Bavaria, on Jan. 12. The King of Spain had wanted in December to
+move the meeting place to Madrid, and both the French and German
+governments had agreed; but as the Sultan opposed, the proposal had
+been dropped. Bülow’s opinion was that it made no difference to
+Germany whether the Conference met at Madrid or Algeciras or
+elsewhere. “It was a mistake that we originally settled ourselves
+on Tangier,” he wrote, Dec. 25, 1905. See <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 25
+ff., Nos. 6911, 6913 ff.; <em>B.D.</em>, III, 160, No. 196;
+<em>L.j., 1901-5</em>, No. 368; Ministère des Affaires Etrangères,
+<em>Documents diplomatiques. Affaires du Maroc, 1906, Protocols et
+comptes rendus de la Conférence d’Algéciras</em> (1906), 5, No. 2
+(hereafter referred to as <em>L.j., 1906</em>).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1071"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1071"><span class=
+"label">[1071]</span></a>Tardieu, <em>La Conf. d’Algés</em>, pp. 90
+ff., 503 f.; Radowitz to F. O., Jan. 17, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI,
+96, No. 6952. Tardieu’s book contains almost an official account of
+the Conference from the French side. He was present as
+representative of <em>Le Temps</em> and had access to the fullest
+information, as his articles showed. His book is an excellent
+example of patriotic historiography carried almost to a hysterical
+extreme, and his interpretations have to be read with the greatest
+caution. Dr. Hammann criticized the work when it appeared in 1907
+in two articles, one in <em>Grenzboten</em>, 1907, p. 12, the other
+in the <em>Kölnische Zeitung</em>, March 30, 1907 (editor’s note,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 92 f.). See also the masterly criticism of
+French policy by Dickinson, <em>The International Anarchy
+1904-1914</em>, pp. 134 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1072"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1072"><span class=
+"label">[1072]</span></a>Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 5, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 243, No. 268; Tardieu, pp. 85 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1073"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1073"><span class=
+"label">[1073]</span></a>Tardieu, pp. 100 ff.; Radowitz to F. O.,
+Jan. 16, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 92 f., No. 6949; Révoil to
+Rouvier, Jan. 18, 1906, <em>L.j., 1906</em>, 11, No. 4.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1074"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1074"><span class=
+"label">[1074]</span></a>Radowitz to F. O., Jan. 16, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 92 f., No. 6949; Tardieu, pp. 100 ff.;
+<em>L.j., 1906</em>, pp. 9 f.; Nicolson to Grey, Jan. 18, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 229, No. 248.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1075"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1075"><span class=
+"label">[1075]</span></a><em>L.j., 1906</em>, 264 ff., No. 37.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1076"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1076"><span class=
+"label">[1076]</span></a><em>Ibid.</em>, 5 ff., No. 3, and
+following documents; Radowitz to F. O., Jan. 12, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 91, No. 6947; Bülow to Radowitz, Jan. 15, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 92, No. 6948; Radowitz to Bülow, Jan. 26, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 119 ff., No. 6967; Tardieu, pp. 100 ff.; Nicolson
+to Grey, Jan. 19, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 230 f., No. 249.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1077"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1077"><span class=
+"label">[1077]</span></a>Nicolson to Grey, Jan. 21, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 231 ff., Nos. 250 f.; Monts to F. O., Jan. 28,
+1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 126, No. 6970; Radowitz to F. O., Jan.
+31, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 130 f., No. 6975.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1078"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1078"><span class=
+"label">[1078]</span></a>Révoil wished to push matters into the
+open sessions of the Conference as much as possible, where he would
+have more support (Tardieu, pp. 136 ff.; Radowitz to Bülow, Jan.
+26, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 119 f., No. 6967).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1079"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1079"><span class=
+"label">[1079]</span></a>As seen below, the German government was
+proposing several alternative solutions of that question, and the
+German delegates seem also to have been discussing others on their
+own initiative. See Nicolson to Grey, Jan. 25 and 27, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 235, No. 256; 239 f., Nos. 262 f.; Tardieu, pp.
+144 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1080"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1080"><span class=
+"label">[1080]</span></a>Nicolson to Grey, Jan. 24, 25, 26, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 234, No. 254; 235 f., Nos. 256 f.; 236 ff.,
+Nos. 259 f.; 239 f., Nos. 262 f.; Tardieu, pp. 136 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1081"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1081"><span class=
+"label">[1081]</span></a>Radowitz to F. O., Jan. 29, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 128 ff., No. 6974.; Tardieu, pp. 141 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1082"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1082"><span class=
+"label">[1082]</span></a>Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 3, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 136 f., No. 6980; Tardieu, pp. 148 ff.;
+Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 4 and 5, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 242, No.
+266; 243 f., No. 268.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1083"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1083"><span class=
+"label">[1083]</span></a>Bülow to Radowitz, Jan. 26, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 114, No. 6965.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1084"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1084"><span class=
+"label">[1084]</span></a>Bülow to Radowitz, Jan. 30, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 128, No. 6973; Radowitz to F. O., Jan. 29 and 31,
+1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 128 ff., Nos. 6974 f.; Bülow to Radowitz,
+Feb. 2, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 132 ff., No. 6977; Tardieu, p.
+142.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1085"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1085"><span class=
+"label">[1085]</span></a>Bülow to Sternburg, Jan. 20, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 99 ff., No. 6956; Tardieu, pp. 160 ff. A
+proposal similar to No. 1 had been made to Roosevelt by Bülow
+earlier in January (Bülow to Sternburg, Jan. 6, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 54 f., No. 6926). Bülow also offered to support
+Italy in seeking a general mandate on the police, manifestly in
+order to create antagonism between Italy and France. The offer was
+rejected and was soon dropped by Bülow who feared that Italy might
+later help France penetrate Morocco in return for French aid to
+Italy in Tripoli. See Bülow to Monts, Jan. 5, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>,
+XXI, 53 f., No. 6925; Bülow to Radowitz, Jan. 26, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 114 f., No. 6965; Tardieu, pp. 146 f. There is no
+proof in the published British and German documents of Tardieu’s
+assertion that in January the German government also offered to
+support Spain in seeking this general mandate. See <em>ibid.</em>,
+pp. 145, 155 f. Cf. Cartwright to Grey, Jan. 22, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 233, No. 252; Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 6, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 244, No. 270.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1086"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1086"><span class=
+"label">[1086]</span></a>Tardieu, p. 146 n.; Bülow to Sternburg,
+Jan. 27, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 123 ff., No. 6968.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1087"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1087"><span class=
+"label">[1087]</span></a>Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 3, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 136 f., No. 6980; Tardieu, pp. 148 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1088"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1088"><span class=
+"label">[1088]</span></a>The German government did not desire
+British mediation, as it feared that Great Britain might try to
+pose as the protector of France and strengthen the Entente Cordiale
+(Bülow to Radowitz, Jan. 26, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 114 f., No.
+6965).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1089"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1089"><span class=
+"label">[1089]</span></a>Sternburg to F. O., Jan. 23, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 102 f., No. 6958.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1090"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1090"><span class=
+"label">[1090]</span></a>Bülow to Sternburg, Jan. 27, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 123 ff., No. 6968; 127, No. 6972. On Feb. 3
+Goluchowski declared to the German Ambassador that Austria would go
+with her ally on the questions of the police and the bank “through
+thick and thin” (Holstein to Wedel, Feb. 4, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>,
+137, No. 6981). Dr. Kriege, of the German foreign office, was sent
+on a special mission to Vienna on Feb. 2 to gain the Austrian
+support (memo. by Kriege, Feb. 4, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 137 ff.,
+No. 6982; Wedel to F. O., Feb. 5, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 140, No.
+6983). A cabinet crisis in Italy on Feb. 1 prevented the German
+government from taking any immediate steps to gain Italy’s active
+support. But Bülow expected Visconti Venosta to be willing to
+mediate. On Feb. 8 a new government was formed in Rome under
+Sonnino (Bülow to Radowitz, Feb. 7, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 143 ff.,
+No. 6987).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1091"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1091"><span class=
+"label">[1091]</span></a>Bülow to Sternburg, Feb. 1, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 131, No. 6976. Bülow also instructed Sternburg to
+interest the American financiers in the Moroccan state bank so that
+they would press their government to oppose the French plan and to
+favor the German one. At the Chancellor’s request, the German
+banker, Mendelssohn, who was to take charge of German interests in
+the Moroccan bank, endeavored to arouse the Dutch, American, and
+Austrian bankers in the same way. See Bülow to Radowitz, Feb. 7,
+1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 145 f., No. 6987; Sternburg to F. O., Feb. 8,
+1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 148, No. 6989.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1092"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1092"><span class=
+"label">[1092]</span></a>Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 5, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 140 f., No. 6984; Tardieu, pp. 152 f.; Dennis,
+<em>Adventures in American Diplomacy</em>, p. 500; Nicolson to
+Grey, Jan. 27, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 239, No. 262.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1093"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1093"><span class=
+"label">[1093]</span></a>Nicolson reported that Tattenbach argued
+as follows: “He observed that situation had completely changed
+since Conference had been agreed upon, and that now
+<em>vis-a-vis</em> to France I was exactly in the same position as
+the other delegates. He continued that if I urged my French
+colleague to make all required concessions on police question, my
+words would be decisive; while if I declined to say those words, I
+should be practically encouraging my French colleague to resist;
+and he hinted that if the Conference fell through a great deal of
+the responsibility would fall on me.” See Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 4,
+1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 241, No. 265; 242 f., No. 267; Grey to
+Nicolson, Feb. 13, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 251 f., No. 281; Tardieu,
+pp. 147 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1094"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1094"><span class=
+"label">[1094]</span></a>Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 6, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 141 f., No. 6985; Tardieu, pp. 153 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1095"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1095"><span class=
+"label">[1095]</span></a>The Spanish undersecretary of state for
+foreign affairs, M. Ojeda, had approved it. See Bülow to Radowitz,
+Feb. 7, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 145 and note, No. 6987. On the
+German attempts to win over Spain see Cartwright to Grey, Jan. 22,
+1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 233, No. 252; Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 6,
+1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 244, No. 270.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1096"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1096"><span class=
+"label">[1096]</span></a>Bülow to Radowitz, Feb. 7, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 143 ff., No. 6987.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1097"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1097"><span class=
+"label">[1097]</span></a>Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 9, 10, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 148 f., No. 6990; 155, No. 6996; Dennis, pp. 501
+f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1098"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1098"><span class=
+"label">[1098]</span></a>Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 9, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 151, No. 6992.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1099"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1099"><span class=
+"label">[1099]</span></a>Sternburg to F. O., Feb. 8, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 147 f., No. 6989.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1100"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1100"><span class=
+"label">[1100]</span></a>Bülow to Radowitz, Feb. 9, 12, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 149 ff., No. 6991; 155 f., No. 6997; Radowitz to F.
+O., Feb. 10, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 155, No. 6996; Tardieu, p.
+172.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1101"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1101"><span class=
+"label">[1101]</span></a>Quoted from a memorandum given by Radowitz
+to Révoil on that date. See Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 13, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 162 f., No. 7004; Tardieu, pp. 175 f.; Nicolson
+to Grey, Feb. 14, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 253, No. 284.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1102"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1102"><span class=
+"label">[1102]</span></a>Radowitz to Bülow, Jan. 26, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 122, No. 6967; Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 9, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 151, No. 6992. See the documents in <em>B.D.</em>,
+III, 227 ff., Nos. 246 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1103"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1103"><span class=
+"label">[1103]</span></a>Schoen to F. O., Feb. 12, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 156 f., No. 6998; Tardieu, pp. 158 f., 194 ff.;
+Witte, <em>Memoirs</em>, pp. 298 ff.; Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 13,
+1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 249 f., No. 279.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1104"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1104"><span class=
+"label">[1104]</span></a>Wedel to F. O., Feb. 12 and 14, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 157 ff., No. 6999; 166 f., No. 7007.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1105"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1105"><span class=
+"label">[1105]</span></a>Holstein to Radolin, Feb. 10, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 152 ff., No. 6994.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1106"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1106"><span class=
+"label">[1106]</span></a>Tardieu, pp. 198 ff.; Bülow to Monts, Feb.
+10, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 154, No. 6995.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1107"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1107"><span class=
+"label">[1107]</span></a>Bülow to Radolin, Feb. 7 and 10, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 146 f., No. 6988; 152, No. 6993. Holstein was
+the inspirer of these dispatches. See Holstein to Radolin, Feb. 10,
+1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 152 ff., No. 6994. On the press war see also
+Tardieu, pp. 167 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1108"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1108"><span class=
+"label">[1108]</span></a>Bülow to Monts, Feb. 13, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 159 f. and note, No. 7000; Tardieu, p. 195. The
+telegram to Washington, dispatched the next day, was not of
+identical wording with the others but to the same effect (Bülow to
+Sternburg, Feb. 14, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 163 f., No.
+7005).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1109"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1109"><span class=
+"label">[1109]</span></a>Tardieu, pp. 74, 163, 167, 176 f., 196;
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 152 n.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1110"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1110"><span class=
+"label">[1110]</span></a>Grey to Nicolson, Feb. 12, 1906,
+<em>B.D</em>, III, 248 f., No. 278; Grey to Lascelles, Feb. 14,
+1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 254 f., No. 285; Metternich to F. O., Feb.
+14, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 164 ff., No. 7006.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1111"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1111"><span class=
+"label">[1111]</span></a>Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 6 and 7, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 244, No. 269; 245, No. 271; Tardieu, p. 154.
+The accusation was not deserved.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1112"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1112"><span class=
+"label">[1112]</span></a>Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 13, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 249 f., No. 279; Spring Rice to Grey, Feb. 13,
+1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 253, No. 283; Tardieu, pp. 79 f., 158 ff.,
+204 f., 246 ff.; Witte, pp. 298 ff.; <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 125 f. n.;
+Goetz, <em>Briefe Wilhelms II an den Zaren 1894-1914</em>, pp. 386
+f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1113"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1113"><span class=
+"label">[1113]</span></a>According to Bompard, the Russian
+government was not certain that the Liberal government in London
+would support France as whole-heartedly as its predecessor had
+done. Grey’s assertions early in February reassured it entirely
+(Spring Rice to Knollys, Jan. 31, 1906, and Spring Rice to Grey,
+Feb. 16, 1906, Gwynn, <em>The Letters and Friendships of Sir Cecil
+Spring Rice</em>, II, 62 ff.; Spring Rice to Grey, Feb. 7 and 8,
+1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 245 f., Nos. 272 f.; Grey to Spring Rice,
+Feb. 8, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 246, No. 274).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1114"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1114"><span class=
+"label">[1114]</span></a>Sternburg to F. O., March 17 and 18, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 300 ff., Nos. 7112 f.; Bishop, <em>The Life and
+Times of Theodore Roosevelt</em>, I, 489.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1115"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1115"><span class=
+"label">[1115]</span></a>Tardieu, pp. 160 ff.; Bishop, I, 489.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1116"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1116"><span class=
+"label">[1116]</span></a>Roosevelt to Reid, March 1, 1906, quoted
+in Royal Cortissoz, <em>The Life of Whitelaw Reid</em> (New York,
+1921), II, 329 f., 347; Sternburg to F. O., March 17 and 18, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 300 ff., Nos. 7112 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1117"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1117"><span class=
+"label">[1117]</span></a>Tardieu, pp. 161 f.; Nicolson to Grey,
+Feb. 11, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 246 ff., Nos. 275 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1118"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1118"><span class=
+"label">[1118]</span></a>Radolin to F. O., Feb. 13 and 15, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 160 f., No. 7001; 171 f., No. 7010; Tardieu,
+pp. 200 f.; Grey to Bertie, Feb. 13, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 250
+f., No. 280; Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 16, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 259
+f., No. 290.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1119"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1119"><span class=
+"label">[1119]</span></a>Tardieu, pp. 179 f., 249 ff. White was
+very critical of the German tactics in his dispatches to
+Washington, especially of the German attempt to negotiate directly
+with the Quai d’Orsay while the Conference was going on (White to
+Root, Feb. 11, 1905, Dennis, p. 502 and note; Nicolson to Grey,
+Feb. 15, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 257 f., No. 287).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1120"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1120"><span class=
+"label">[1120]</span></a>Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 16, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 172, No. 7011; Tardieu, p. 181; Nicolson to
+Grey, Feb. 17, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 260 f., No. 292. Révoil
+was contemplating an involved, vague reply when he talked to
+Nicolson. At the latter’s advice it was made concise and
+straightforward (Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 15, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>,
+256 ff., No. 287).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1121"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1121"><span class=
+"label">[1121]</span></a>Root to Sternburg, Feb. 19, 1906, quoted
+in Bishop, I, 489 ff., <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 181 ff., No. 7019;
+Tardieu, pp. 249 f., 180.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1122"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1122"><span class=
+"label">[1122]</span></a>Italy had been chosen for obvious reasons,
+for she was bound to France by the accords of 1900 and 1902 and to
+Germany by the Triple Alliance. As such, her choice might be
+acceptable to both Powers (Tardieu, p. 181).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1123"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1123"><span class=
+"label">[1123]</span></a>Bülow to Radowitz, Feb. 19, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 173 f., No. 7013; Tardieu, pp. 187, 249 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1124"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1124"><span class=
+"label">[1124]</span></a>Bülow’s minute to <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 183,
+No. 7019; Sternburg to Roosevelt, Feb. 22, 1906, in Bishop, I, 491
+ff.; Bülow to Sternburg, Feb. 21, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 183 f.,
+No. 7020; Tardieu, p. 250.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1125"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1125"><span class=
+"label">[1125]</span></a>Bülow to Sternburg, Feb. 21, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 183 f., No. 7020; Sternburg to F. O., Feb. 23,
+1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 213, No. 7038.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1126"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1126"><span class=
+"label">[1126]</span></a>The plan was drawn up with the aid of
+Glasenapp of the Deutsche Bank and of Mendelssohn, who was to take
+over the German shares in the bank. See Bülow to Radowitz, Jan. 27,
+1906; <em>ibid.</em>, 115 ff., No. 6966; <em>L.j., 1906</em>, pp.
+114 ff.; Tardieu, pp. 186, 221 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1127"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1127"><span class=
+"label">[1127]</span></a><em>L.j., 1906</em>, pp. 117 f.; Tardieu,
+pp. 184 f., 221 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1128"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1128"><span class=
+"label">[1128]</span></a><em>L.j., 1906</em>, pp. 113 f., 120 ff.,
+136 ff.; Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 20, 22, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI,
+204, No. 7031; 205, No. 7033; Tardieu, pp. 186, 221 ff.; Nicolson
+to Grey, Feb. 20, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 265 f., No. 298.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1129"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1129"><span class=
+"label">[1129]</span></a>Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 19, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 176 f., No. 7015.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1130"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1130"><span class=
+"label">[1130]</span></a><em>L.j., 1906</em>, pp. 113 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1131"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1131"><span class=
+"label">[1131]</span></a>Rouvier suggested to Révoil that the
+representative of France, Germany, Great Britain, the United
+States, Spain, Russia, Italy, and Austria-Hungary meet informally
+and try to find a solution on the police. Nicolson and White
+opposed the idea as impracticable, and it was soon dropped
+(Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 16, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 260, No.
+291).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1132"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1132"><span class=
+"label">[1132]</span></a>Schoen to F. O., Feb. 19, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 178 f., No. 7017; Tardieu, pp. 194 f., 204
+f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1133"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1133"><span class=
+"label">[1133]</span></a>Tardieu, pp. 246 ff.; Schoen to F. O.,
+Feb. 20, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 192, No. 7025; Eulenburg to
+William II, Feb. 22, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 194, No. 7027 and
+Anlage, Witte to Eulenburg, Feb. 20, 1906; Witte, p. 301.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1134"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1134"><span class=
+"label">[1134]</span></a>Bülow to Schoen, Feb. 21, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 193, No. 7026; memo. by Bülow, Feb. 23, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 197 f., No. 7028; Eulenburg to Witte, Feb. 27,
+1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 202 ff., No. 7030; Tardieu, pp. 195, 295.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1135"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1135"><span class=
+"label">[1135]</span></a>Schoen to F. O., Feb. 23, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 211 ff., No. 7037; Witte, p. 301; Spring Rice
+to Grey, Feb. 24, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 271 f., No. 308; 273
+f., No. 311.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1136"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1136"><span class=
+"label">[1136]</span></a>Spring Rice to Grey, Feb. 28, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 279, No. 320; Spring Rice to Knollys, March 1,
+1906, Gwynn, II, 65 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1137"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1137"><span class=
+"label">[1137]</span></a>Tardieu, pp. 247, 249; Schoen to F. O.,
+March 3, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 234 f., No. 7052; Schoen to
+Bülow, March 4, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 251 ff., No. 7068. The
+article so embittered the German government that Bülow would not
+show it directly to the Emperor but informed him of it personally
+so as to take away the sting (see the minutes to the dispatch from
+Schoen to F. O., March 3, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 235, No. 7052).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1138"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1138"><span class=
+"label">[1138]</span></a>A visit of the London City Council to
+Paris, Feb. 8, gave occasion for confirming the Entente Cordiale
+(<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 185 ff. and note, No. 7021). Grey also
+intimated to Metternich that France would be willing to eliminate
+the thirty-year limitation to commercial freedom in Morocco as
+provided for in the Anglo-French accord. See Metternich to F. O.,
+Feb. 19 and 20, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 179 ff., No. 7018; 185 ff.,
+Nos. 7021 f.; Grey to Lascelles, Feb. 19, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III,
+263 f., No. 296.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1139"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1139"><span class=
+"label">[1139]</span></a>Spring Rice to Grey, Feb. 22, 24, 28,
+1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 269, No. 303; 271 f., No. 308; 273 f.,
+No. 311; 278 f., No. 320; Grey to Spring Rice, Feb. 20, 22, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 264 f., No. 297; 270, No. 304; Grey to Spring Rice,
+Feb. 19, 1906, Gwynn, II, 65.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1140"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1140"><span class=
+"label">[1140]</span></a>Grey to Nicolson, Feb. 15, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 258, No. 288. Apparently it was not mentioned
+to the French at all.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1141"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1141"><span class=
+"label">[1141]</span></a>Memo. by Grey, Feb. 20, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 266 f., No. 299.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1142"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1142"><span class=
+"label">[1142]</span></a>Sir Charles Hardinge, permanent
+undersecretary of state for foreign affairs, believed that the way
+to prevent Germany from attacking France because of some French
+action in Morocco was for Great Britain to inform Germany that she
+is “absolutely ‘solidaire’ with France as far as the Moroccan
+question is concerned.” He feared that if Great Britain did leave
+France in the lurch, “an agreement or alliance between France,
+Germany and Russia in the near future is certain” (memo. by Grey,
+Feb. 20, 1906, and Hardinge’s minute, <em>ibid.</em>, 266 ff., No.
+299). Mr. Eyre Crowe, senior clerk in the British foreign office, a
+prejudiced, bitter opponent of Germany, suspected that Germany
+might demand and seize a port in Morocco or obtain a lease as she
+had done at Kiaouchau in China. He advised warning the Sultan
+against Germany. Sir Edward Grey regarded the proposal as premature
+so long as the Conference was sitting, but said that the
+eventualities referred to should be kept in mind (minutes to
+dispatch from Spring Rice to Grey, Feb. 24, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>,
+272, No. 308).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1143"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1143"><span class=
+"label">[1143]</span></a>Monts to Bülow, Feb. 13, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 168 f., No. 7008; Monts to F. O., Feb. 13,
+1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 161 f., No. 7002; Bülow to Monts, Feb. 14,
+1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 162 and note, No. 7003; Monts to Bülow, Feb.
+27, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 230 ff., No. 7050; Monts to Bülow, March
+11, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 286 ff., No. 7103; Monts to Bülow, Feb.
+24, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 216 f., No. 7043; Tardieu, pp. 198 f.,
+205 f.; Grey to Egerton, Feb. 19, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 262,
+No. 295; Egerton to Grey, March 3, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 283, No.
+325.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1144"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1144"><span class=
+"label">[1144]</span></a>“C’est la pire des solutions,” wrote
+Tardieu, p. 155 and elsewhere. See the conversation between Ojeda
+and Stumm reported by the latter on Feb. 20, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>,
+XXI, 189 ff., No. 7024; Tardieu, pp. 155 ff., 199 f.; Cartwright to
+Grey, Jan. 22 and 26, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 233, No. 252; 236,
+No. 258.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1145"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1145"><span class=
+"label">[1145]</span></a>Tardieu writes that the instructions were
+“all that France wished” (Tardieu, pp. 207 f., 255).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1146"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1146"><span class=
+"label">[1146]</span></a>Tardieu has a long story about German
+threats and intimidations toward Spain between Feb. 11 and 20. The
+King of Spain, he writes, was angry, but Ojeda listened to the
+siren voice of Stumm, first secretary of the German embassy in
+Madrid. According to the German documents, Stumm had at least two
+conversations with Ojeda during February, one on Feb. 20, trying
+without success to influence Spain to support the German proposals
+(<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 145, 189 ff.). On the Spanish proposal see
+Tardieu, pp. 199 f., 188 ff., 207 ff.; Grey to Cartwright, Feb. 19,
+1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 262 n., No. 295; 271, No. 307; Cartwright
+to Grey, Feb. 21, 22, 24, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 268 f., No. 301;
+270 f., No. 305; 273, No. 310; Grey to Nicolson, Feb. 22, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 269, No. 302; Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 23, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 271, No. 306.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1147"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1147"><span class=
+"label">[1147]</span></a>The Belgian government informed him that
+its delegate had orders to abstain from voting in case of a
+conflict, and to participate actively in the Conference only when
+the commercial interests of Belgium were involved. The Dutch
+government said that its delegate would vote with the majority.
+Sweden replied that she would abstain from voting in case of
+disagreement (Tardieu, p. 257).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1148"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1148"><span class=
+"label">[1148]</span></a>As Sir Edward Grey knew how interested
+Austria was in keeping Great Britain and Germany friendly, he
+impressed upon the Austrian government, Feb. 26, “how unfortunate”
+was the German stand on the police, and “how impossible it was to
+improve the relations between England and Germany as long as there
+was this dispute between Germany and France about a matter on which
+we had an Agreement with France which was publicly known to the
+whole world, and which had been the very beginning of our
+friendship with France” (Grey to Goschen, Feb. 26, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 276 f., No. 316).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1149"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1149"><span class=
+"label">[1149]</span></a>Tardieu, pp. 202 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1150"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1150"><span class=
+"label">[1150]</span></a>Wedel to F. O., Feb. 14 and 18, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 166 f., No. 7007; 175 f., No. 7014. To the
+Italian and American governments Goluchowski openly censured the
+German attitude (Tardieu, p. 203, and above; Goschen to Grey, Feb.
+24, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 273, No. 309).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1151"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1151"><span class=
+"label">[1151]</span></a>Memo. by Bülow, Feb. 24, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 213 f., No. 7039; Tardieu, pp. 257 ff.; Spring
+Rice to Grey, Feb. 28, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 279, No. 320.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1152"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1152"><span class=
+"label">[1152]</span></a>Spring Rice to Grey, Feb. 28, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 278, No. 318; 279, No. 320.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1153"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1153"><span class=
+"label">[1153]</span></a>Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 26, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 177 f., No. 7016; Tardieu, pp. 187, 266 f.;
+Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 26, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 276, No.
+315.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1154"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1154"><span class=
+"label">[1154]</span></a>Spring Rice to Grey, Feb. 24, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 274, No. 311.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1155"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1155"><span class=
+"label">[1155]</span></a>Nicolson to Grey, Feb. 25 and 26, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 274 ff., Nos. 312 f.; Tardieu, Part III, chap. ii,
+<em>passim</em>, pp. 268 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1156"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1156"><span class=
+"label">[1156]</span></a>Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 21, March 3, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 204 f., No. 7032; 233 f., No. 7051; Tardieu,
+pp. 143 ff., 227, 223 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1157"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1157"><span class=
+"label">[1157]</span></a>Tardieu, pp. 275 ff.; <em>L.j., 1906</em>,
+pp. 159 ff.; Radowitz to F. O., March 3 and 9, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>,
+XXI, 233 f. and note, No. 7051; Nicolson to Grey, March 3, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 282, No. 323; 283 f., No. 326. The French press
+played up that vote as a great victory; the German press and
+government took the opposite view. Nevertheless, the German
+delegates complained to the Italian, Belgian, Spanish, and even the
+Austrian delegates about their actions; and the vote undoubtedly
+helped to accomplish the object of Nicolson and Révoil.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1158"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1158"><span class=
+"label">[1158]</span></a><em>L.j., 1906</em>, pp. 168 ff.; Nicolson
+to Grey, March 7, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 285 ff., No. 330;
+Tardieu, pp. 283 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1159"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1159"><span class=
+"label">[1159]</span></a>Nicolson to Grey, March 3 and 7, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 282 f., No. 324; 285, No. 328. On March 7 Grey
+again advised the Spanish government to stand firmly with France
+and Great Britain (Grey to de Bunsen, March 7, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 285, No. 329).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1160"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1160"><span class=
+"label">[1160]</span></a>Tardieu states that on March 5 Tattenbach
+openly said so to several of the delegates (p. 291). Bülow also
+found it necessary to bolster up the courage of the German
+delegates. See memo. by Bülow, March 7, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI,
+256, No. 7069. See also Metternich to F. O., Feb. 20, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 188, No. 7023; Radowitz to Bülow, Feb. 26, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 217 ff., No. 7044; Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 27,
+March 5, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 226, No. 7048; 243 ff., Nos. 7061 f.
+King Edward’s visit to Paris, March 4-5, at which time he showed
+special favor to Delcassé, was also a significant sign to the
+Germans (Lee, <em>King Edward VII</em>, II, 510; Bertie to Grey,
+March 5, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 284, No. 327).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1161"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1161"><span class=
+"label">[1161]</span></a>On this episode see Tardieu, pp. 241 ff.,
+296; Grey to Bertie, Feb. 28, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 278, No.
+319; Bertie to Grey, March 5, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 284, No. 327;
+Nicolson to Grey, March 8, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 288, No. 331;
+memos. by Holstein, Feb. 22, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 206 ff., and
+note, Nos. 7034 f.; Holstein to Radolin, March 4, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 237, No. 7055; Radolin to F. O., Feb. 27, March 5
+and 6, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 225, No. 7047; 240 f., No. 7059; 250
+f., No. 7067; Bülow to Radolin, March 5, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 240,
+No. 7058. Courcel spoke to Louis, of the French foreign office,
+about the project on March 5. On the next day Rouvier mentioned it
+to Radolin, only to refuse it. On Holstein’s views see also
+Lascelles to Grey, March 1, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 280 f. and
+inclosure, No. 321.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1162"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1162"><span class=
+"label">[1162]</span></a>Hammann, <em>Bilder</em>, pp. 37 f.; memo.
+by Holstein, Feb. 22, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 208 f., No. 7035;
+Holstein to Radolin, March 4, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 237, No. 7055;
+<em>ibid.</em> p. 338, editor’s note.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1163"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1163"><span class=
+"label">[1163]</span></a>See the conversation with Tschirschky on
+March 16 recorded by Zedlitz-Trützschler, <em>Zwölf Jahre am
+deutschen Kaiserhof</em>, pp. 146 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1164"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1164"><span class=
+"label">[1164]</span></a>Radowitz to F. O., Feb. 26, March 8, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 233 f., No. 7045; 262 f., No. 7077; <em>L.j.,
+1906</em>, pp. 187 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1165"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1165"><span class=
+"label">[1165]</span></a>Bülow to Radowitz, Feb. 28, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 224 f., No. 7046.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1166"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1166"><span class=
+"label">[1166]</span></a>Goluchowski reluctantly agreed to mediate
+on that basis at first, but after learning of the vote of March 3
+and after consulting Welsersheimb he changed his mind (Wedel to F.
+O. March 1 and 4, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 228 ff., No. 7049; 238 f.,
+No. 7056).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1167"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1167"><span class=
+"label">[1167]</span></a>Monts to Bülow, Feb. 27, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 230 ff., No. 7050; Radowitz to F. O., March 3,
+1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 235 f., No. 7053.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1168"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1168"><span class=
+"label">[1168]</span></a>Bülow to Radowitz, March 6 and 7, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 245 f. and note, No. 7063; Bülow to Wedel, Bülow to
+Monts, March 6, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, XXI, 248 f. and note, No.
+7065.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1169"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1169"><span class=
+"label">[1169]</span></a><em>L.j., 1906</em>, pp. 183 ff.; Radowitz
+to F. O., March 8, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 261 ff., Nos. 7076
+ff., Nicolson to Grey, March 8 and 9, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III,
+288, No. 331; 289 ff., No. 334. Visconti Venosta, informed at the
+last minute of the proposed Austrian mediation, refused angrily to
+co-operate in it. Why he did so is difficult to see. He claimed
+that the Austrian project was not in keeping with the German view
+which he represented. This, however, seems a poor excuse, for he
+had approved the project when it was first suggested. It seems more
+likely that Visconti Venosta was seeking to avoid taking the
+Austro-German side publicly against France. The Austrian government
+was more alarmed at his refusal than was the German government,
+which consoled itself with the fact that the Italian delegate was
+performing useful work under cover. See Wedel to F. O., March 9 and
+11, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 269, No. 7083; 271 f., No. 7087;
+Monts to F. O., March 7, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 257, No. 7070;
+Radowitz to F. O., March 11, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 272 and note,
+No. 7088.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1170"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1170"><span class=
+"label">[1170]</span></a><em>L.j., 1906</em>, pp. 189 ff.; Radowitz
+to F. O., March 10, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 270, No. 7085;
+Tardieu, p. 293; Nicolson to Grey, March 10, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>,
+III, 292 f., No. 337. By these words Radowitz did not mean that
+Germany would accept the French terms, as Tardieu imagines
+(Tardieu, pp. 308 ff., 313).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1171"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1171"><span class=
+"label">[1171]</span></a>Nicolson to Grey, March 9 and 10, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 288 f., No. 332; 294, No. 338; Grey to Bertie,
+March 9, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 289, No. 333; Bertie to Grey, March
+10, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 292, No. 336; Radowitz to F. O., March 8
+and 10, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 261, No. 7075; 264 f., No. 7079;
+269 f., No. 7084; Dennis, p. 503. Cf. Tardieu, pp. 297 f., 308
+f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1172"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1172"><span class=
+"label">[1172]</span></a>Grey to Nicolson, March 10, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 292, No. 335.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1173"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1173"><span class=
+"label">[1173]</span></a>Bertie to Grey, March 2, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 281 f., No. 322.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1174"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1174"><span class=
+"label">[1174]</span></a>Tardieu, pp. 299 f., 309 f., 321, 328;
+Grey, <em>Twenty-five Years</em>, I, 103.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1175"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1175"><span class=
+"label">[1175]</span></a>Nicolson to Grey, March 9, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 288 f., No. 322; Bertie to Grey, March 10,
+1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 292, No. 336.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1176"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1176"><span class=
+"label">[1176]</span></a>Radolin to F. O., March 8, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 265 f., No. 7080.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1177"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1177"><span class=
+"label">[1177]</span></a>On March 5, 6, and 7, Bülow showed no
+inclination to accept the French plan, but held firmly to the
+Austrian one. See Bülow to Wedel, March 5 and 6, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 239, No. 7057; 248 f., No. 7065; memo. by Bülow,
+March 7, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 256, No. 7069. He may, however, have
+made this statement to the Prince of Monaco without explaining that
+by “the most discreet control of an officer from a lesser Power” he
+really meant the Austrian plan and did not intend an acceptance of
+the French plan. Tardieu’s assumption that Bülow made the surrender
+and then receded from his concession after the fall of the French
+government on March 7, hoping to exploit this embarrassing
+situation, is, so far as we can tell, devoid of foundation
+(Tardieu, pp. 293 ff., 314 f.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1178"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1178"><span class=
+"label">[1178]</span></a>Germany also refused to recede on the
+police in return for French concessions on the bank (Nicolson to
+Grey, March 10 and 11, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 294 f., Nos. 338
+f.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1179"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1179"><span class=
+"label">[1179]</span></a>Nicolson to Grey, March 11 and 12, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 295 f., No. 339; 297 ff., Nos. 341 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1180"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1180"><span class=
+"label">[1180]</span></a>Bertie to Grey, March 11, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 296 f., No. 340.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1181"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1181"><span class=
+"label">[1181]</span></a>Crowe’s minutes to the dispatch from
+Nicolson to Grey, March 12, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 299, No. 342;
+Grey to Nicolson, March 12, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 300, No. 344.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1182"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1182"><span class=
+"label">[1182]</span></a>Nicolson to Grey, March 11, 12, 14, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 295, No. 339; 298, No. 341; 303, No. 349. Rouvier
+also approved this plan. See Hardinge to Nicolson, March 15, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 305, No. 354.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1183"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1183"><span class=
+"label">[1183]</span></a>The number of censors was later increased
+to four, one each from Great Britain, Spain, France, and Germany.
+See Radowitz to F. O., March 8 and 11, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI,
+263 f., No. 7078; 272 f., No. 7089; <em>L.j., 1906</em>, pp. 152
+f., 182, 189 ff.; Tardieu, pp. 291 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1184"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1184"><span class=
+"label">[1184]</span></a>Radowitz to F. O., March 12, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 279, No. 7094.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1185"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1185"><span class=
+"label">[1185]</span></a>Radowitz to F. O., March 11, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 273, No. 7089.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1186"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1186"><span class=
+"label">[1186]</span></a>Radowitz to F. O., March 12, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 274, No. 7090.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1187"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1187"><span class=
+"label">[1187]</span></a>Quoted in <em>ibid.</em>, p. 274 n.; and
+in Tardieu, p. 316.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1188"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1188"><span class=
+"label">[1188]</span></a><em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 274 ff., Nos. 7091
+ff.; Tardieu, p. 318; Bishop, I, 495 ff. Bülow also sent a
+condensed telegram to the German banker, Mendelssohn, then in St.
+Petersburg negotiating a loan with Witte.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1189"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1189"><span class=
+"label">[1189]</span></a>Schoen to F. O., March 13, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 279 f., No. 7095; Monts to F. O., March 13,
+1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 280 f., No. 7097; Wedel to F. O., March 13,
+1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 281 f., No. 7099; Metternich to F. O., March
+13, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 282 ff., No. 7100; Grey to Lascelles,
+March 13, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 301 f., Nos. 347 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1190"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1190"><span class=
+"label">[1190]</span></a>Sternburg to F. O., March 7, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 259 ff., No. 7074; Bishop, I, 493 ff.; Tardieu,
+pp. 251 f., 297.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1191"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1191"><span class=
+"label">[1191]</span></a>Bülow to Sternburg, March 12, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, No. 7093; Bishop, I, 495 ff.; Tardieu, p. 335.
+The President’s intervention was extremely embarrassing to Bülow,
+who, after calling Sternburg’s attention to the difference between
+the original wording of the promise to Roosevelt sent from Berlin
+in the previous June and that sent to the President by Sternburg,
+threatened to disavow the Ambassador (<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 277 f.,
+No. 7093). However, he did not do so.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1192"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1192"><span class=
+"label">[1192]</span></a>Sternburg to F. O., March 14, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 285 f., No. 7102.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1193"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1193"><span class=
+"label">[1193]</span></a>Bertie to Grey, March 15, 16, 17, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 306, Nos. 355 f.; 307 f., No. 358; 309 f., No.
+361; Grey, I, 102 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1194"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1194"><span class=
+"label">[1194]</span></a>Tardieu, pp. 327 f., 343; Radolin to F.
+O., March 14 and 15, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 291 f., No. 7104;
+295 ff., No. 7107; Bertie to Grey, March 16, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>,
+III, 307 f., No. 358.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1195"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1195"><span class=
+"label">[1195]</span></a>Grey to Bertie, March 14, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 303, No. 350; 304, No. 352. In private both Sir
+Edward Grey and Sir Charles Hardinge greatly deplored the French
+refusal. On March 15 the former wrote to Sir Francis Bertie as
+follows: “I think the French made a great mistake in not closing at
+once with the German concession at Algeciras; they could have made
+it appear to be a diplomatic victory for themselves. . . . . Even
+the <em>Times</em> correspondent of Algeciras thinks France ought
+not to break off on such a wretched point as Casa Blanca, which I
+believe is a useless hole. However, if she does, we shall back her
+up” (<em>ibid.</em>, 304 f., No. 353). And on the same day Sir
+Charles Hardinge wrote to Sir Arthur Nicolson as follows: “. . . .
+If the Conference breaks up over such an absurd point as the
+Casablanca proposal <em>we</em> shall be in a disagreeable
+position, as I remember well your opinion that the French position
+will not be difficult for Germany to undermine in Morocco and we
+shall then be exposed to any violent action which the French may
+take to retrieve their losses and shall find ourselves compelled to
+support France in a war against Germany. If the Conference is
+broken off I shall not like the outlook. I felt very strong about
+telling Cambon that in our opinion the Austrian proposal should be
+accepted rather than allow the Conference to fall through”
+(<em>ibid.</em>, 305, No. 354).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1196"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1196"><span class=
+"label">[1196]</span></a>Grey to Bertie, March 15, 1905,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 307, No. 357; Grey to Nicolson, March 14, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 304, No. 351; Nicolson to Grey, March 15, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 304 n., No. 351; Spring Rice to Lamsdorff, March
+17, 1906, quoted in Grey, I, 107 f.; Tardieu, pp. 311 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1197"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1197"><span class=
+"label">[1197]</span></a>Grey, I, 107 f.; Tardieu, pp. 329 f.,
+347.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1198"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1198"><span class=
+"label">[1198]</span></a>Radolin to F. O., March 17, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 303 f., No. 7114; Tardieu, pp. 343 f.; Nicolson
+to Grey, March 18, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 311, No. 363.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1199"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1199"><span class=
+"label">[1199]</span></a><em>Journal officiel. Debats parlem.</em>
+(Chambre, March 14 and 19, 1906), pp. 1290, 1438 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1200"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1200"><span class=
+"label">[1200]</span></a>The conversation on March 15 between
+Bourgeois and the Austrian Ambassador also pointed in this
+direction. See Bertie to Grey, March 16, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III,
+307 f., No. 358. See also Nicolson to Grey, March 17, 18, 21, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 308, No. 359; 310 f., No. 362; 311 f., No. 364; 314
+f., No. 368; Grey to Bertie, March 17, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 308
+f., No. 360.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1201"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1201"><span class=
+"label">[1201]</span></a>Bülow to Sternburg, March 16, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 293 ff., No. 7106.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1202"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1202"><span class=
+"label">[1202]</span></a>Sternburg to F. O., March 17 and 18, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 300 ff., Nos. 7112 f.; 305 ff., No. 7115; Bishop,
+I, 497 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1203"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1203"><span class=
+"label">[1203]</span></a>Bülow to Radowitz, March 16, 19, 22, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 298 f., No. 7110; 307 ff., No. 7117; 311, No.
+7120; Radowitz to F. O., March 17, 18, 21, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>,
+299 f., No. 7111; 306 f., No. 7116; 310 f., No. 7119; Tardieu, pp.
+344 ff.; Bülow to Sternburg, March 19, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI,
+309 f., No. 7118.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1204"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1204"><span class=
+"label">[1204]</span></a>Dennis, pp. 505 f.; Grey to Durand, March
+22, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 317, No. 374.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1205"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1205"><span class=
+"label">[1205]</span></a>Grey to Goschen, March 21, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 315 f., No. 371.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1206"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1206"><span class=
+"label">[1206]</span></a>On this episode see Nicolson to Grey,
+March 19, 21, 23, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 312 ff., Nos. 365 ff.; 315,
+No. 370; 318, No. 376; 319 f., No. 379; Grey to de Bunsen, March
+21, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 316, No. 372; Bertie to Grey, March 22,
+1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 317 f., No. 375; Grey to Durand, March 22 and
+23, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 317, No. 374; 318, No. 377; Durand to
+Grey, March 24, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 320 f., Nos. 380 f.; de
+Bunsen to Grey, March 27, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 325 f., No. 385;
+Tardieu, pp. 385 ff.; Sternburg to F. O., March 21 and 22, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 311 f., No. 7121; 321, No. 7126; Radowitz to F.
+O., March 21, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 310 f., No. 7119.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1207"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1207"><span class=
+"label">[1207]</span></a>The Austrian government was opposed to
+trying to mediate upon the basis of Roosevelt’s proposal (unsigned
+and undated memoir handed by Szogyeny to the German government,
+March 23, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 321, No. 7127).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1208"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1208"><span class=
+"label">[1208]</span></a>France could afford to make the concession
+on the bank because she had assured herself of the votes of Italy,
+Great Britain, Spain, Belgium, and the United States, which with
+her own three votes would constitute a majority. On this discussion
+see Tardieu, pp. 297, 342, 347 ff.; <em>L.j., 1906</em>, pp. 196
+ff.; Bülow to Radowitz, March 24, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 322 f.,
+No. 7129; Radowitz to F. O., March 16, 23, 25, 26, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 297, No. 7109; 322, No. 7128; 324 ff., No. 7131;
+326 f., Nos. 7132 f.; Nicolson to Grey, March 23, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 319 f., No. 379.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1209"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1209"><span class=
+"label">[1209]</span></a>Tardieu, pp. 362, 365 ff.; Radowitz to F.
+O., March 26, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, Nos. 7132 f.; Nicolson to
+Grey, March 26, 27, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 321, No. 382; 322
+ff., No. 383.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1210"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1210"><span class=
+"label">[1210]</span></a>This publication, which was another answer
+to the exaggerated article in the <em>Lokalanzeiger</em> on March
+12, angered the German government. A short time previously Bülow
+had asked the Russian government to use its influence in moderating
+the anti-German campaign of the French press, especially of Tardieu
+in <em>Le Temps</em>. Instead of doing so, the Russian government
+issued this denial that it had ever advised France to accept the
+Austrian police proposal and asserted that Russia had never ceased
+and would not cease from acting toward France as a faithful ally.
+The German government complained to the Russian government against
+its so manifestly taking the French side, and threatened to refuse
+German participation in the forthcoming Russian loan. Both
+Lamsdorff and Witte were impressed by the vigor of the complaints,
+and tried to explain the affair away. Nelidow had endeavored to
+influence Tardieu, they said, and had spoken to him in general
+terms of the instructions which he had just received. To the
+Ambassador’s amazement, he had discovered an entirely false account
+of these instructions published in <em>Le Temps</em>. On demanding
+an explanation from Tardieu, the latter said that he had obtained
+his information in the French foreign office. Both ministers as
+well as the Ambassador expressed their regrets over the affair, and
+Lamsdorff published a correct version of the instructions. But as
+Schoen said, the latter version did not change the previous one
+much. Osten-Sacken weakened the Russian explanation by admitting to
+Tschirschky that Nelidow himself had given an “excerpt” of the
+instructions to the offending journalist. So the German government
+was not appeased by the excuses (see Bülow to Schoen, March 22,
+1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 312 f., No. 7122, and following
+documents). As a matter of fact, those instructions were published
+on purpose to impress upon Germany that Russia held to the Dual
+Alliance and did not regard the Björkö accord as binding. See
+Witte, pp. 298 ff.; Iswolsky, <em>Recollections of a Foreign
+Minister</em>, pp. 23 f.; Tardieu, pp. 330 ff.; Nicolson to Grey,
+March 21, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 315, No. 369; Spring Rice to
+Grey, March 21, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 316 f., No. 373.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1211"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1211"><span class=
+"label">[1211]</span></a>Even the Russian and Spanish delegates
+considered this matter of no importance. See Tardieu, pp. 361 ff.;
+Radowitz to Bülow, March 28, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 330 f., No.
+7137.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1212"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1212"><span class=
+"label">[1212]</span></a>Sternburg to F. O., March 24, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 324, No. 7130.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1213"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1213"><span class=
+"label">[1213]</span></a>Radowitz to F. O., March 26 and 27, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 326 ff., Nos. 7132 ff.; Radowitz to Bülow, March
+28, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 330 f., No. 7137; Nicolson to Grey, March
+27, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, 324 f., No. 384; Tardieu, pp. 371 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1214"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1214"><span class=
+"label">[1214]</span></a>On these negotiations see Tardieu, pp. 378
+ff. Almodovar tried to reopen the question of Tangier with the
+French on April 1 but had no success (<em>ibid.</em>, pp. 394 ff.;
+see also <em>L.j., 1906</em>, p. 239).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1215"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1215"><span class=
+"label">[1215]</span></a>A Swiss was selected at France’s wish
+because Switzerland was so little interested in Morocco. See
+Nicolson to Grey, March 28, 1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 326 f., No.
+386.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1216"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1216"><span class=
+"label">[1216]</span></a>Tardieu, pp. 396 ff.; <em>L.j., 1906</em>,
+p. 210; Lee, II, 362.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1217"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1217"><span class=
+"label">[1217]</span></a><em>L.j., 1906</em>, pp. 196 ff.; Radowitz
+to F. O., March 27 and 31, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 328 ff., Nos.
+7134 ff.; 331 f., No. 7138; Radowitz to Bülow, March 28, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 330 f., No. 7137; Tardieu, pp. 396 ff. The final
+act is found in <em>L.j., 1906</em>, pp. 262 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1218"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1218"><span class=
+"label">[1218]</span></a>Bishop, I, 492, 494, 496 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1219"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1219"><span class=
+"label">[1219]</span></a>Rosen to Bülow, May 17, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 601 f., No. 7276.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1220"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1220"><span class=
+"label">[1220]</span></a>Lowther to Grey, April 22, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 338, No. 402.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1221"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1221"><span class=
+"label">[1221]</span></a>Grey to Nicolson, March 12, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 299 f., No. 343; Nicolson to Grey, March 13, April
+3, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 301, No. 346; 330, No. 392; Lowther to
+Grey, April 17 and 22, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 337 ff., Nos. 401 f.;
+346 f. and inclosure, No. 412; memo. by Geoffray, Aug. 31, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 341 ff., No. 405; Tardieu, pp. 425 ff.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap">
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum" id="Page_397">[397]</span><a id=
+"c18"></a>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
+
+<p class="sch1">CONCLUSION</p>
+
+<p>The conclusion of the Conference relaxed the tension in Europe
+and cleared the way for a gradual improvement in the relations of
+the Powers. Both sides expressed satisfaction with the results,
+which, according to official interpretation, left behind neither
+victor nor vanquished.<a id="FNanchor_1222"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1222" class="fnanchor">[1222]</a> None the less it was
+evident that Germany had been defeated. She had tried to obtain a
+material interest in Morocco; she had endeavored to break the
+Entente Cordiale and therewith the other French ententes; she had
+sought to disrupt or to modify the Dual Alliance. And she had
+failed in every effort. In attempting to restore her dominating
+position of the time before the formation of the Entente Cordiale,
+Germany had only driven France, Great Britain, and Russia into
+closer intimacy and had furthered the very alignment of the Powers
+which she had feared. By defending an international<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_398">[398]</span> right which no one else valued
+she had permitted her isolation, except for the support of Austria,
+to be exposed to all the world. At the Conference she had forced
+Russia, Italy, and even the United States reluctantly to take the
+French side. Germany had entirely miscalculated the
+situation.<a id="FNanchor_1223"></a><a href="#Footnote_1223" class=
+"fnanchor">[1223]</a></p>
+
+<p>The German statesmen realized that their international position
+had grown more serious. Italy’s meager support at the Conference
+was further proof that Germany could not rely upon that ally.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1224"></a><a href="#Footnote_1224" class=
+"fnanchor">[1224]</a> The increased importance of Austria to
+Germany was tacitly admitted when, on April 13, the Emperor William
+thanked Count Goluchowski for playing the “brilliant second” at the
+Conference and promised him: “You can also be certain of similar
+service from me in a similar case.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_1225"></a><a href="#Footnote_1225" class=
+"fnanchor">[1225]</a> Prince Bülow, whom his master had not
+consulted beforehand, warned him, however, “(1) that our relations
+with Austria have now become<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_399">[399]</span> more important than ever, since that state
+is our only reliable ally; (2) that we must let our relative
+political isolation be noticed by the Austrians as little as
+possible.”<a id="FNanchor_1226"></a><a href="#Footnote_1226" class=
+"fnanchor">[1226]</a> And in September the Emperor commented
+sarcastically: “Fine prospects! In the future we can count on the
+Franco-Russian Alliance, Anglo-French Entente Cordiale and
+Anglo-Russian Entente, with Spain, Italy, and Portugal as
+appendages thereto in the second line!”<a id=
+"FNanchor_1227"></a><a href="#Footnote_1227" class=
+"fnanchor">[1227]</a></p>
+
+<p>To counteract this isolation the German government could do
+little for the time being except remain quiet.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1228"></a><a href="#Footnote_1228" class=
+"fnanchor">[1228]</a> It permitted relations with Italy to continue
+as before.<a id="FNanchor_1229"></a><a href="#Footnote_1229" class=
+"fnanchor">[1229]</a> It assumed a “correct but reserved attitude
+toward France.”<a id="FNanchor_1230"></a><a href="#Footnote_1230"
+class="fnanchor">[1230]</a> It refused to sanction German
+participation in the Russian loan, but otherwise remained on
+friendly terms with that Power.<a id="FNanchor_1231"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1231" class="fnanchor">[1231]</a> Its main desire was to
+reach some kind of an understanding with Great Britain so as to
+share in the entente movement.<a id="FNanchor_1232"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1232" class="fnanchor">[1232]</a> Anglo-German relations
+did improve, but the British government replied to German soundings
+that more time should elapse before the two governments<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_400">[400]</span> should attempt any concerted
+efforts to bring their countries closer together.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1233"></a><a href="#Footnote_1233" class=
+"fnanchor">[1233]</a></p>
+
+<p>German public opinion was dissatisfied with the way in which its
+foreign affairs were being conducted; its alarm over the
+international situation increased as the year progressed. When the
+debate in the Reichstag on that subject, delayed because of the
+Chancellor’s illness, was held on November 14, Herr Bassermann of
+the National Liberal party remarked as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>Today the Triple Alliance has no further practical utility. The
+Italian press and population lean more and more towards France.
+Austria has been too much praised for this rôle of “brilliant
+second” which she herself declined. The Franco-Russian Alliance
+remains intact, and the disposition of France towards us is less
+friendly than formerly. The explanations at Cronberg between the
+English and German sovereigns does not prevent England from
+pursuing her old policy of isolating us. We live in an era of
+alliances between other nations. . . . . Our policy lacks
+tranquillity and consistency, and we see brutal hands derange well
+prepared plans.<a id="FNanchor_1234"></a><a href="#Footnote_1234"
+class="fnanchor">[1234]</a></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>As these criticisms were widespread, Prince Bülow replied in a
+long and carefully prepared speech. Admitting the deep hostility of
+France to Germany, he expressed the hope that the two nations would
+live peacefully together. As to Anglo-German relations he declared:
+“A long period of misunderstanding lies behind us. The needle of
+the political barometer has happily gone from rain and wind to
+changing.” He denied that any deep antagonisms<span class="pagenum"
+id="Page_401">[401]</span> divided the two countries and that the
+German fleet was a menace to Great Britain. He suggested that time
+should be allowed for the two nations to approach each other. “We
+have no thought,” he said, “of wishing to push ourselves in between
+France and Russia or France and England.” He announced that “for
+some time negotiations between Russia and England have been under
+way which promise that an understanding will be reached over
+certain Central Asiatic regions. . . . .” He added: “We have no
+reason at all to disturb these negotiations or to regard their
+probable result with mistrustful eyes.” But he issued the following
+warning: “The Entente Cordiale without good relations between the
+Powers and Germany would be a danger to European peace. . . . .
+Such an encirclement is not possible without the exercise of a
+certain pressure. Pressure produces counter-pressure, from pressure
+and counter-pressure explosions may finally arise.” He denied that
+Germany was isolated and testified to the loyalty of her two
+allies; but he declared that Germany was strong enough to defend
+herself alone. Urging the nation not to be uneasy, he said: “More
+than once we have been in situations where the danger of a general
+grouping against us lay nearer than today. . . . . The political
+world is still agitated by a certain excitement which calls for
+carefulness and prudence, but gives no cause for pusillanimity.” He
+concluded with a vigorous defense of his own and the Emperor’s
+methods of conducting foreign affairs. His words were widely
+applauded, even though they did not assuage German fears or stop
+criticism.<a id="FNanchor_1235"></a><a href="#Footnote_1235" class=
+"fnanchor">[1235]</a></p>
+
+<p>The satisfaction of the French and British governments with the
+results of the Conference was real. Although France had had to
+recognize the international character of Moroccan reforms, she had
+practically asserted her position in that land. She had also
+preserved her ententes and alliance against Germany’s attacks, and
+had herself shown a determined spirit hitherto lacking<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_402">[402]</span> in the Third Republic. The
+British government had had no direct interest in the Moroccan
+crisis except from the point of view of general policy, but it was
+well pleased that the Entente Cordiale had stood the test, that it
+had grown firmer than before.<a id="FNanchor_1236"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1236" class="fnanchor">[1236]</a></p>
+
+<p>Out of this crisis the Entente Cordiale emerged as a lasting
+dynamic combination for checking Germany. As Sir Edward Grey
+remarked to the French Ambassador, July 9, 1906, “If we [Great
+Britain] were called on to take sides [between France and Germany],
+we must take sides with France as at Algeciras. As long, however,
+as Germany kept quiet, there was no reason for trouble, and things
+would go on quietly.”<a id="FNanchor_1237"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1237" class="fnanchor">[1237]</a> The British Foreign
+Secretary did not thereby give France a blank check against
+Germany, nor had he done so during the crisis. He had cautioned the
+French that British support would in last analysis depend upon
+public opinion. But as the crisis at the Conference in March had
+shown, he could be forced to take the French side even though he
+disapproved of it.</p>
+
+<p>The Entente Cordiale was so necessary to both Powers and yet so
+loose in form that it acquired a peculiar character. Dependent not
+upon the written word but upon feeling, it had constantly to be
+kept warm. It partook more of the nature of a jealous engagement
+than of a trustworthy and tolerant marriage. Each party was
+particularly mistrustful of any playing by the other with Germany.
+Still other causes divided them from Germany. They regarded the
+latter’s interference in the Moroccan affair as gratuitous and
+unjustified. “All that is necessary,” wrote Sir Edward Grey in May,
+1906, “is for the Germans to realize that they have got nothing to
+complain of.”<a id="FNanchor_1238"></a><a href="#Footnote_1238"
+class="fnanchor">[1238]</a> France and Great Britain feared that
+Germany might attempt another aggression. As the<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_403">[403]</span> British Foreign Secretary
+stated in June, 1906, implying an accusation in doing so, “The
+Germans do not realize that England has always drifted or
+deliberately gone into opposition to any Power which establishes a
+hegemony in Europe.”<a id="FNanchor_1239"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1239" class="fnanchor">[1239]</a> The French and English
+believed so firmly that German diplomacy called for the arousing of
+discord between Powers at every opportunity that they were almost
+reluctant to have any dealings with the <em>Wilhelmstrasse</em>.
+They saw German intrigues everywhere—in Persia, in Abyssinia,<a id=
+"FNanchor_1240"></a><a href="#Footnote_1240" class=
+"fnanchor">[1240]</a> in Paris, in London. When the German
+Ambassador in Paris spoke in July of a detente in Anglo-German
+relations, the French and British governments suspected therein an
+attempt to weaken the Entente Cordiale.<a id=
+"FNanchor_1241"></a><a href="#Footnote_1241" class=
+"fnanchor">[1241]</a> Each government, therefore, was cool toward
+the renegade Power. “When one recovers from a year’s sickness,”
+stated the semiofficial <em>Le Temps</em> with reference to
+Franco-German relations, “the convalescence cannot be
+immediate.”<a id="FNanchor_1242"></a><a href="#Footnote_1242"
+class="fnanchor">[1242]</a> Sir Edward Grey appeared friendlier; in
+July he described Anglo-German relations as again normal. But he
+refused Germany’s bid for an understanding because public opinion
+was not prepared and especially because France would object. Count
+Metternich remarked to him on July 31 that M. Delcassé’s policy had
+been to encircle Germany and that at present the British and French
+press also asserted that this aim should be accomplished with the
+help of Russia. The Count warned Sir Edward Grey that that
+dangerous game<span class="pagenum" id="Page_404">[404]</span>
+might call forth a situation which would make it necessary for
+Germany to break the circle.</p>
+
+<div class="quote">
+<p>A peaceful policy on the other hand is [he said] to extend the
+hand to Germany and to draw her into the circle of the others. . .
+. . But so long as in England the German attempts at
+<em>rapprochement</em> are repulsed through fear of arousing
+displeasure among the French, it appears to me that the policy of
+creating a balance of power is preferred here to that of drawing
+Germany into the circle of friendship.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="nind">The Foreign Secretary denied that the policy of
+agreement with Russia was directed in any way against Germany. But
+when the Ambassador asked “Are, openly avowed, friendly relations
+with Germany compatible with England’s friendship with France?” he
+replied, “That depends on German politics.” The Ambassador
+immediately countered, “No, it rather seems to depend on French
+interpretation of German politics.”<a id=
+"FNanchor_1243"></a><a href="#Footnote_1243" class=
+"fnanchor">[1243]</a> The British Foreign Secretary, however, was
+not to be moved by German criticisms. The British as well as the
+French put Germany on her good behavior.</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding Sir Edward Grey’s denial, this mistrust of the
+Central Power was an important inducement for Great Britain and
+France to complete the Entente Cordiale by an entente between Great
+Britain and Russia.<a id="FNanchor_1244"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1244" class="fnanchor">[1244]</a> Conditions were more
+favorable for success than they had ever been. The Moroccan affair
+no longer occupied international attention. The domestic situation
+in Russia was more stable with the calling of the Duma. And M.
+Iswolsky, who succeeded Count Lamsdorff in the Russian foreign
+office in 1906, brought new vigor into the Russian policy. As a
+partisan of an agreement with Great Britain, he took up the
+negotiations, and after an intermittent pursuit of<span class=
+"pagenum" id="Page_405">[405]</span> them, brought them to
+completion in the next year.<a id="FNanchor_1245"></a><a href=
+"#Footnote_1245" class="fnanchor">[1245]</a> Thus the work of
+insuring against Germany was continued.</p>
+
+<p>What the entente Powers regarded as insurance, Germany called
+encirclement. Both sides had been playing the game of the balance
+of power. France had tried to abandon this game in the previous
+year, but Germany’s refusal of her offers had driven her back into
+the play. Neither side appreciated the other’s point of view;
+neither heeded the other’s warnings. Each side accused the other of
+aiming at its defeat, of being a menace. Each scoffed at the
+other’s fears, but each continued to arm and to broaden and tighten
+the policy which each warned the other was leading to trouble.
+Neither side had learned anything from this episode except to be
+more cautious. Neither changed its method.</p>
+
+<p>The motives that caused this crisis still obtained as guiding
+forces. Prestige and national interests were at stake on both
+sides. Having become deeply engaged in the Moroccan affair,
+Germany, France, and Great Britain could not easily back out of it,
+especially since the Conference of Algeciras had given a better
+sanction than ever to both sides. That France and Spain would give
+Germany opportunities for intervening was, in view of the
+difficulty which they would encounter in reforming Morocco, just as
+certain as that Germany would take advantage of those
+opportunities. The Moroccan problem both in its local and in its
+international aspects left behind plenty of raw material from which
+future conflicts could arise. The crisis was only the first of
+these episodes born of the clashings of mutual fears and ambitions,
+nurtured on hazardous playing with war and on diplomatic
+blunderings. The road to Armageddon lay open.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes" id="ftc18">
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1222"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1222"><span class=
+"label">[1222]</span></a>On April 5 Bülow declared in the Reichstag
+as follows: “A time of alarm lies behind us. There were weeks when
+the thought of armed complications occupied our minds. . . . . We
+wished to show that Germany does not let herself be handled as a
+<em>quantité negligeable</em>. . . . . We may now look into the
+future with more calmness. The Conference of Algeciras has, I
+believe, had a result equally satisfactory to Germany and France
+and useful to all nations” (<em>Reden</em>, II, 303 ff.). On April
+12 Bourgeois spoke in the French Chamber in a similar vein: “. . .
+. All the work of the conference has aimed to harmonize the three
+essential conditions of Moroccan reform [the sovereignty of the
+Sultan, the integrity of his empire, and commercial liberty] with
+the rights and the special interests that France has the duty of
+defending. . . . . That result has been obtained, thanks to the
+reciprocal concessions seriously weighed and loyally consented to
+in terms absolutely honorable for all and without the abandonment
+of the fruits of our country’s past efforts, of the dignity of its
+present situation, or of the safeguards of its future. . . . .
+France has been able to put to the test the solidarity of her
+alliance and friendships to which precious sympathies have been
+joined” (quoted in <em>L.j., 1906</em>, pp. 290 ff.). The act was
+accepted by the French Parliament and by the German Reichstag in
+Dec., 1906 (Schulthess, <em>Europäischer Geschichtskalender
+1906</em>, pp. 219, 328 ff.; Tardieu, <em>La Conf. d’Algés</em>,
+pp. 415 ff.).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1223"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1223"><span class=
+"label">[1223]</span></a>Cf. Stuart, <em>French Foreign Policy from
+Fashoda to Serajevo</em>, pp. 221 ff.; Tardieu, <em>La France et
+les alliances</em>, pp. 239 ff. Schoen reported that his French
+colleague, Bompard, had expressed his opinion as follows: “What has
+resulted . . . . from the Conference of Algeciras? First, a welding
+together of France and England which the former did not at all wish
+in this measure. Then an almost complete isolation of Germany and
+probably no small amount of ill-humor among all the Powers, who saw
+themselves compelled to take an open stand on questions in which
+they really had little interest. Finally, apparent discord between
+Russia and Germany. True, the Conference has left behind neither
+victor nor vanquished; Germany has achieved internationalization;
+France, a certain recognition of her special position. But the
+existing sources of friction do not appear to have been destroyed,
+but rather new ones to have been created. . . . . The Conference,
+together with its previous history, has left in the French nation a
+certain mistrust which may not disappear quickly and which will for
+years stand in the way of a genuine friendly
+<em>rapprochement</em>, which is desired on both sides and which
+was so near” (Schoen to Bülow, April 7, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI,
+341, No. 7144).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1224"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1224"><span class=
+"label">[1224]</span></a>Monts was so disgusted with Italy that he
+wished the terms of the Triple Alliance to be radically modified at
+the next renewal (Monts to Tschirschky, June 8, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 364 ff., No. 7156). The Austrian Ambassador
+reported that the German Emperor said that “it would give him great
+satisfaction for us at a suitable moment, which in view of the
+unreliable policy of the kingdom is not impossible, to teach the
+latter [Italy] a wholesome lesson, even by arms” (Pribram, <em>The
+Secret Treaties of Austria-Hungary</em>, II, 138).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1225"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1225"><span class=
+"label">[1225]</span></a>Schulthess, <em>1906</em>, p. 92.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1226"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1226"><span class=
+"label">[1226]</span></a>Bülow to William II, May 31, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 360, No. 7154.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1227"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1227"><span class=
+"label">[1227]</span></a>Minute by William II to a dispatch from
+Miquel to Bülow, Sept. 19, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, XXV, 23, No.
+8518.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1228"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1228"><span class=
+"label">[1228]</span></a>Tschirschky to William II, May 12, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XXI, 433 f., No. 7184; Bülow to F. O., Aug. 13,
+1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 449, No. 7193. The resignation of Holstein
+from the foreign office in April was also considered as significant
+of a change of policy. On that episode see <em>ibid.</em>, pp. 338
+f., editor’s note.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1229"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1229"><span class=
+"label">[1229]</span></a>Bülow to Monts, Nov. 16, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 387 f., No. 7165, and others in chap. cliv.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1230"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1230"><span class=
+"label">[1230]</span></a>Tschirschky to Metternich, July 7, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 439, No. 7188.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1231"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1231"><span class=
+"label">[1231]</span></a>Tschirschky to Metternich, July 7, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 439, No. 7188. 10 Schoen to Bülow, May 14, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, XXII, 21 ff., No. 7355, and other documents in
+chap. clx. On the question of the loan see the report from the
+Belgian Minister at Berlin, April 11, 1906, <em>Zur europ.
+Politik</em>, II, pp. 110 ff.; Witte, <em>Memoirs</em>, pp. 304
+ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1232"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1232"><span class=
+"label">[1232]</span></a>“Our relations with England have for a
+long time been of a very delicate nature. It is the object of my
+serious care to bring about an improvement herein.” See Tschirschky
+to General von Einem, July 9, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 440, No.
+7190. See also the Emperor’s remark to a similar effect in a
+memorandum by him, Aug. 15, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, XXIII, 84, No.
+7815.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1233"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1233"><span class=
+"label">[1233]</span></a>The improvement in Anglo-German relations
+was manifested by visits of German burgomasters in May, of German
+journalists to England in June, by a visit of Edward VII to his
+nephew at Cronberg in August, and by the presence of Mr. Haldane at
+the German maneuvers later in the same month. See Lee, <em>King
+Edward VII</em>, II, 528 ff.; Haldane, <em>Before the War</em>, pp.
+37 ff., 57 ff.; Metternich to Bülow, May 8, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>,
+XXI, 427 ff., No. 7181; Mühlberg to Radolin, June 27, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 437 f., No. 7187; Bülow to F. O., Aug. 13, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 449, No. 7193 and following documents; memo. by
+William II, Aug. 15, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, XXIII, 84 ff., No. 7815;
+Tschirschky to Metternich, Sept. 4, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 86 f.,
+No. 7816. See also the documents in <em>B.D.</em>, Vol. III, chap.
+xxii; Grey, <em>Twenty-five Years</em>, I, 110 ff. During Grey’s
+absence the foreign office at first opposed Haldane’s visit for
+fear of alienating the French (Haldane, <em>An Autobiography</em>,
+p. 202; Spender, <em>Life of Campbell-Bannerman</em>, II, 260).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1234"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1234"><span class=
+"label">[1234]</span></a><em>Stenogr. Berichte</em>, Reichtag
+(1906), p. 4238; Tardieu, <em>La France et les alliances</em>, pp.
+243 f.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1235"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1235"><span class=
+"label">[1235]</span></a>Bülow’s speech is given in Bülow, II, 306
+ff.; see also Hammann, <em>Bilder aus der letzten Kaiserzeit</em>,
+pp. 45 ff.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1236"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1236"><span class=
+"label">[1236]</span></a>Bertie to Grey, April 4, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 330 f., No. 395; Grey to Bertie, April 4, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 331, No. 396; Grey to Spring Rice, Feb. 19, 1906,
+Gwynn, <em>The Letters and Friendships of Sir Cecil Spring
+Rice</em>, II, 65.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1237"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1237"><span class=
+"label">[1237]</span></a>Grey to Bertie, July 9, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 361, No. 420.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1238"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1238"><span class=
+"label">[1238]</span></a>Grey’s minute to a dispatch from Lascelles
+to Grey, May 24, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 358, No. 416.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1239"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1239"><span class=
+"label">[1239]</span></a>Minute by Grey, June 9, 1906,
+<em>ibid.</em>, 359, No. 418.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1240"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1240"><span class=
+"label">[1240]</span></a><em>Ibid.</em>, p. 356; IV, 381 f., No.
+328.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1241"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1241"><span class=
+"label">[1241]</span></a>The German instructions to Radolin used
+<em>detente</em>. Bourgeois used <em>rapprochement</em> in his
+memorandum of the conversation with the German Ambassador. In
+talking to Grey, Cambon spoke of <em>entente</em>. There may have
+been point to this change, for Grey, who was sensitive about
+Anglo-French relations, immediately assured the French that
+Anglo-German relations were not and would not become too intimate,
+and that an entente did not exist. See Grey to Bertie, July 9,
+1906, <em>ibid.</em>, III, 361 f., No. 420; Bertie to Grey, July
+12, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 362 f., No. 421; Mühlberg to Radolin,
+June 27, 1906, <em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 438, No. 7187; Tschirschky to
+Metternich, July 7, 1906, <em>ibid.</em>, 438 f., No. 7188.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1242"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1242"><span class=
+"label">[1242]</span></a>Bertie to Grey, March 31, 1906,
+<em>B.D.</em>, III, 328, No. 387.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1243"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1243"><span class=
+"label">[1243]</span></a>Metternich to Bülow, July 31, 1906,
+<em>G.P.</em>, XXI, 441 ff., No. 7191; Grey to Lascelles, July 31,
+1906, <em>B.D.</em>, III, 363 f., No. 422.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1244"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1244"><span class=
+"label">[1244]</span></a>On Feb. 20, 1906, Grey wrote: “The door is
+being kept open by us for a <em>rapprochement</em> with Russia;
+there is at least a prospect that when Russia is re-established we
+shall find ourselves on good terms with her. An <em>entente</em>
+between Russia, France and ourselves would be absolutely secure. If
+it is necessary to check Germany it could then be done”
+(<em>B.D.</em>, III, 267, No. 299).</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a id="Footnote_1245"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1245"><span class=
+"label">[1245]</span></a><em>Ibid.</em>, Vol. IV, chap. xxv, Part
+IV; Gwynn, Vol. II, chaps. xiv ff.; William L. Langer, “Russia, the
+Straits Question, and the European Powers, 1904-8,” <em>English
+History Review</em>, Jan., 1929; and others.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap">
+
+<div class="page">
+<p class="center med"><span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_407">[407]</span>INDEX</p>
+</div>
+
+<h2><span class="pagenum" id="Page_409">[409]</span><a id=
+"ind"></a>INDEX</h2>
+
+<ul class="index">
+<li>Abarzuza, <a href="#Page_118">118</a> n.; refuses to sign
+Franco-Spanish accord, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>-40; and Great
+Britain, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
+
+<li>Abazzia, <a href="#Page_144">144</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Abd-el-Aziz, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>-4, <a href=
+"#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_128">128</a>-29, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>-34, <a href=
+"#Page_184">184</a>-85, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>-94, <a href=
+"#Page_198">198</a> and n., <a href="#Page_199">199</a> and n.,
+<a href="#Page_206">206</a> and n., <a href="#Page_208">208</a>,
+<a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_252">252</a>-53, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_315">315</a>, <a href="#Page_348">348</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_364">364</a>, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>-96; sends Maclean
+to London, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>; requests of French
+government, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>-18; asks German co-operation
+in 1904, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>; convokes assembly of
+notables, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>; opposition to France in
+1905, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>; accepts Conference conclusions,
+<a href="#Page_396">396</a></li>
+
+<li>Abd-el-Melik, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>-94</li>
+
+<li>Afghanistan, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_170">170</a></li>
+
+<li>Aflalo, <a href="#Page_106">106</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Agadir, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></li>
+
+<li>Alfonso XIII, King, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_316">316</a> n., <a href="#Page_330">330</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_348">348</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Algeciras, <a href="#Page_348">348</a></li>
+
+<li>Algeria, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>,
+<a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_16">16</a>-18, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>; report of
+military aid to Moroccan pretender, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>-42
+and n.</li>
+
+<li>Almodovar, Duke of, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_38">38</a> n., <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_331">331</a>, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_372">372</a>, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_382">382</a>, <a href="#Page_393">393</a></li>
+
+<li>Alsace-Lorraine, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_282">282</a></li>
+
+<li>Alvensleben, Count, <a href="#Page_143">143</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_174">174</a> and n., <a href="#Page_175">175</a>-76</li>
+
+<li>Anglo-Belgian military conversations in 1906, <a href=
+"#Page_341">341</a> n., <a href="#Page_342">342</a></li>
+
+<li>Anglo-French agreement in 1899, <a href=
+"#Page_20">20</a>-21</li>
+
+<li>Anglo-French agreement on April 8, 1904, <a href=
+"#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>-42, <a href=
+"#Page_155">155</a> n., <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_340">340</a>; terms, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>-4;
+criticism of, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>; British opinion on,
+<a href="#Page_104">104</a>-6; French opinion on, <a href=
+"#Page_106">106</a>-9</li>
+
+<li>Anglo-French alliance, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>-31 n.</li>
+
+<li>Anglo-French arbitration treaty, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>,
+<a href="#Page_94">94</a></li>
+
+<li>Anglo-French military and naval conversations in 1906, <a href=
+"#Page_335">335</a>-37, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>-40</li>
+
+<li>Anglo-French <em>rapprochement</em>, <a href=
+"#Page_84">84</a>-86</li>
+
+<li>Anglo-German agreements, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_150">150</a></li>
+
+<li>Anglo-German alliance negotiations in 1901, <a href=
+"#Page_69">69</a>-77</li>
+
+<li>Anglo-German arbitration treaty, <a href=
+"#Page_150">150</a></li>
+
+<li>Anglo-German conversations on Morocco, <a href=
+"#Page_63">63</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Anglo-German press war, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Anglo-Japanese alliance, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>-79, <a href=
+"#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>-300, <a href=
+"#Page_306">306</a>-7</li>
+
+<li>Anglo-Russian relations, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_54">54</a> and n.; Chinese difficulties, <a href=
+"#Page_52">52</a>; difficulties in 1903, <a href=
+"#Page_82">82</a>-83; attempts at <em>rapprochement</em>, <a href=
+"#Page_94">94</a>-98; negotiations for agreement, <a href=
+"#Page_110">110</a>; difficulty over Russian seizure of vessels in
+1904, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>; proposed Afghan agreement,
+<a href="#Page_114">114</a>; <em>rapprochement</em> of 1906,
+<a href="#Page_404">404</a>-5; <em>see</em> Dogger Bank Affair</li>
+
+<li>Aoki, Viscount, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_179">179</a>-80</li>
+
+<li>d’Arenberg, Prince, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
+
+<li><em>Army and Navy Gazette</em>, <a href=
+"#Page_173">173</a></li>
+
+<li><em>L’Aurore</em>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a></li>
+
+<li>Austria-Hungary: <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_358">358</a>, <a href="#Page_361">361</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_373">373</a> and n.; compromise proposal in March, 1906,
+<a href="#Page_377">377</a>-78; seeks to mediate again in March,
+1906, <a href="#Page_388">388</a></li>
+
+<li>Austro-Italian relations in 1904-5, <a href=
+"#Page_181">181</a>-82</li>
+
+<li>Austro-Russian agreements, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Ba-Ahmed, grand vizier, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>,
+<a href="#Page_11">11</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Bacheracht, <a href="#Page_333">333</a></li>
+
+<li>Bagdad Railway, <a href="#Page_50">50</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_56">56</a>-57, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_271">271</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>-75</li>
+
+<li>Balance of power, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_81">81</a> n., <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_228">228</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Balearic Islands, <a href="#Page_93">93</a></li>
+
+<li>Balfour, Arthur J., <a href="#Page_54">54</a> and n., <a href=
+"#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_105">105</a>-6, <a href="#Page_115">115</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_176">176</a> n., <a href="#Page_208">208</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_232">232</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Baltic Sea, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_292">292</a> and n., <a href="#Page_293">293</a> and n.</li>
+
+<li>Baltic Straits, <a href="#Page_100">100</a></li>
+
+<li>Banque de Paris et des Pays-Bas, <a href=
+"#Page_129">129</a>-31</li>
+
+<li>Barclay, Sir Thomas, <a href="#Page_44">44</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_85">85</a></li>
+
+<li>Barnardiston, Colonel, <a href="#Page_341">341</a> and n.</li>
+
+<li><span class="pagenum" id="Page_410">[410]</span>Barrère,
+<a href="#Page_21">21</a>-23, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>-26,
+<a href="#Page_29">29</a>-32, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_244">244</a> n., <a href="#Page_332">332</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_371">371</a>; arguments to Italy for accord in 1901-2,
+<a href="#Page_25">25</a>; and renewal of Triple Alliance, <a href=
+"#Page_25">25</a>-26; anti-German activity, <a href=
+"#Page_145">145</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Bassermann, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
+
+<li>Bebel, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
+
+<li>Becker, Jeronimo, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
+
+<li>Beit, Werner, <a href="#Page_319">319</a></li>
+
+<li>Belgium, <a href="#Page_373">373</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Benckendorff, Count, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_97">97</a>-98, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_139">139</a> n., <a href="#Page_308">308</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_323">323</a>-24</li>
+
+<li>Ben Sliman, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_129">129</a> n., <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_395">395</a></li>
+
+<li>Bernstorff, Count, <a href="#Page_142">142</a> n.; interview in
+<em>Daily Chronicle</em>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a></li>
+
+<li>Bertie, Sir Francis, <a href="#Page_145">145</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_197">197</a> n., <a href="#Page_201">201</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_329">329</a>-30, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>-4; on Italian
+policy, <a href="#Page_33">33</a> n.; memo on Chinese situation on
+March 11, 1901, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>-68; <em>aide-mémoire</em>
+to France, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>-11</li>
+
+<li>Betzold, <a href="#Page_219">219</a> and n., <a href=
+"#Page_220">220</a> and n., <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a></li>
+
+<li>Bezobrazov, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
+
+<li>Bihourd, <a href="#Page_137">137</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_199">199</a> n., <a href="#Page_217">217</a>; warning to
+Delcassé in 1904, <a href="#Page_127">127</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Billy, <a href="#Page_199">199</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Birileff, Admiral, <a href="#Page_285">285</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Bismarck, <a href="#Page_33">33</a> n.; system of alliances,
+<a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
+
+<li>Bizerta, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
+
+<li>Björkö meeting, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>-85, <a href=
+"#Page_284">284</a>-85 n.; alarms Europe, <a href=
+"#Page_291">291</a></li>
+
+<li>Björkö Treaty, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_367">367</a>-68, <a href="#Page_391">391</a> n.; terms,
+<a href="#Page_284">284</a>; annulment, <a href=
+"#Page_303">303</a>-4; results, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>-6</li>
+
+<li>Boer War, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>,
+<a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_81">81</a></li>
+
+<li>Bompard, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_294">294</a>-95, <a href="#Page_295">295</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_300">300</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a> and n., <a href=
+"#Page_360">360</a> n., <a href="#Page_398">398</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Bou-Amama, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_190">190</a></li>
+
+<li>Bourgeaud-Hansemann, <a href="#Page_264">264</a> and n.</li>
+
+<li>Bourgeois, <a href="#Page_386">386</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_388">388</a> n., <a href="#Page_403">403</a> n.; renews
+instructions to Révoil in March, 1906, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>;
+declaration to Radolin on March 17, 1906, <a href=
+"#Page_387">387</a>; speech in Chamber on April 12, 1906, <a href=
+"#Page_397">397</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Bowles, Gibson, <a href="#Page_105">105</a></li>
+
+<li>Boxer Rebellion, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
+
+<li>Buchard, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
+
+<li>Bülow, Herr von, <a href="#Page_328">328</a></li>
+
+<li>Bülow, Count (Prince after June, 1905), <a href=
+"#Page_11">11</a> and n., <a href="#Page_43">43</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_61">61</a>-65, <a href="#Page_69">69</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_71">71</a>-73, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>-79, <a href=
+"#Page_127">127</a> n., <a href="#Page_135">135</a>-44, <a href=
+"#Page_147">147</a> n., <a href="#Page_160">160</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_163">163</a> n., <a href="#Page_164">164</a> and n.,
+<a href="#Page_165">165</a>-67, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>,
+<a href="#Page_172">172</a>-74, <a href="#Page_176">176</a> n.,
+<a href="#Page_181">181</a>-82, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>-90,
+<a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a> and n.,
+<a href="#Page_204">204</a> and n., <a href="#Page_208">208</a> n.,
+<a href="#Page_220">220</a> n., <a href="#Page_234">234</a>,
+<a href="#Page_251">251</a>-52, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>-64,
+<a href="#Page_269">269</a>-72, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>-78,
+<a href="#Page_288">288</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a> n.,
+<a href="#Page_317">317</a> n., <a href="#Page_333">333</a>,
+<a href="#Page_348">348</a>, <a href="#Page_354">354</a> n.,
+<a href="#Page_355">355</a> and n., <a href="#Page_368">368</a> n.,
+<a href="#Page_376">376</a> n., <a href="#Page_377">377</a>; and
+Franco-Italian relations, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>-28; renewal of
+Triple Alliance in 1902, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>-29; relieves
+Italy of military obligations, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>; and
+French overture, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>; policy of free hand,
+<a href="#Page_55">55</a>-56; rejects Chamberlain’s overture in
+1898, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>; character of, <a href=
+"#Page_57">57</a>-60; on Morocco, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>-65; on
+Anglo-French agreement, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>; on Anglo-German
+alliance in 1901, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>-72; on German position
+in 1902, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>; and Spain, <a href=
+"#Page_119">119</a>-20, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>-55; and Morocco
+in 1904, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_148">148</a>-58; and Italy, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>-44,
+<a href="#Page_146">146</a>; desires Anglo-German accord in 1904,
+<a href="#Page_148">148</a>; and Moroccan settlement in 1904,
+<a href="#Page_151">151</a>-57; on German mistakes, <a href=
+"#Page_159">159</a>; and Roosevelt in 1904, <a href=
+"#Page_160">160</a>; and Russia in 1904, <a href=
+"#Page_161">161</a>-63, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>-77; interview
+in <em>Nineteenth Century</em> (1904), <a href="#Page_173">173</a>;
+approaches Japan and United States, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>;
+proposal to Russia about Austria in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_179">179</a>; and Morocco in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_181">181</a>-95; on Italy in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_182">182</a>; and Sultan in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_184">184</a>-85; and Roosevelt in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_184">184</a>-85, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_240">240</a>; Tangier visit, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>,
+<a href="#Page_202">202</a>-8; instructions to William II on March
+26, 1905, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>-91; policy after Tangier
+visit, <a href="#Page_202">202</a> and n., <a href=
+"#Page_203">203</a> and n., <a href="#Page_216">216</a>-17; on
+Delcassé in 1905, <a href="#Page_213">213</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_215">215</a>; rejects French overtures in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>-20; and
+Russo-Japanese peace negotiations, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>;
+warns Rouvier, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>-25, <a href=
+"#Page_246">246</a> and n., <a href="#Page_271">271</a>; on
+Delcassé’s fall, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>; note to Powers in
+June, 1905, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>-35; on conference, <a href=
+"#Page_240">240</a>; and Great Britain in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_240">240</a>-41; concessions to France in June, 1905,
+<a href="#Page_241">241</a>-42; and Spain in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_247">247</a> n.; and France in June, 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_248">248</a>-49; instructions to Tattenbach on July 11,
+1905, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>; ambitions toward Morocco in
+July, 1905, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>; Moroccan policy on July
+31, 1905, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>-64; and Moroccan concessions
+in 1905, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>; on Franco-German relations in
+Sept., 1905, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>-70; desires Franco-German
+colonial accord in Oct., 1905, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>-75;
+interview in <em>Le Temps</em> on Oct. 3,<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_411">[411]</span> 1905, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>-76; and
+German press in Oct., 1905, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>; Björkö
+affair, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>-81, <a href=
+"#Page_286">286</a>-91, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_303">303</a>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>; offers
+resignation, <a href="#Page_289">289</a> and n.; on the Conference,
+<a href="#Page_311">311</a>; optimistic about Conference, <a href=
+"#Page_315">315</a>-16; diplomatic preparations for Conference,
+<a href="#Page_315">315</a>-19; offer to Italy in Jan., 1906,
+<a href="#Page_316">316</a>; and Great Britain in Jan., 1906,
+<a href="#Page_318">318</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>; on
+American proposal in Feb., 1906, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>-64;
+accepts Austrian proposal in March, 1906, <a href=
+"#Page_377">377</a>-78; diplomatic campaign against France in
+March, 1906, <a href="#Page_383">383</a>-84; and Roosevelt in
+March, 1906, <a href="#Page_384">384</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_388">388</a>-89; and Russia in March, 1906, <a href=
+"#Page_391">391</a> n.; on the international situation in 1906,
+<a href="#Page_398">398</a>-99; speeches in Reichstag: Dec. 6,
+1897, <a href="#Page_56">56</a> n.; Dec. 11, 1899, <a href=
+"#Page_62">62</a>-63; Jan. 8, 1902, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>-28,
+<a href="#Page_77">77</a>; April 12 and 14, 1904, <a href=
+"#Page_141">141</a>-42; Dec. 5, 1904, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>;
+March 15, 1905, <a href="#Page_186">186</a> and n.; March 29, 1905,
+<a href="#Page_192">192</a>; Dec. 6, 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_313">313</a>; April 5, 1906, <a href="#Page_397">397</a> n.;
+Nov. 14, 1906, <a href="#Page_400">400</a>-401</li>
+
+<li>Bu-Hamara, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
+
+<li><em>Bulletin</em>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Caillaux, Joseph, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>
+n.</li>
+
+<li>Caix, M. de, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_107">107</a></li>
+
+<li>Cambon, Jules, <a href="#Page_244">244</a> n.; <a href=
+"#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a> n.; <a href=
+"#Page_317">317</a>, <a href="#Page_333">333</a></li>
+
+<li>Cambon, Paul, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>-48, <a href=
+"#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_87">87</a>-94, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>-27, <a href=
+"#Page_231">231</a> n., <a href="#Page_244">244</a> and n.,
+<a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>; conversations of,
+with Grey on Jan. 10 and 31, 1906, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>-39,
+<a href="#Page_338">338</a> n., <a href="#Page_344">344</a>-46,
+<a href="#Page_346">346</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Camerun railways, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_274">274</a></li>
+
+<li>Campbell-Bannerman, Sir Henry, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>,
+<a href="#Page_338">338</a>-39 n., <a href="#Page_339">339</a>-40
+and n., <a href="#Page_343">343</a>, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>,
+<a href="#Page_387">387</a></li>
+
+<li>Canevaro, Admiral, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>-21</li>
+
+<li>Cartwright, <a href="#Page_188">188</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Cassini, Count, <a href="#Page_321">321</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_358">358</a></li>
+
+<li>Chamberlain, Joseph, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>-66, <a href=
+"#Page_63">63</a> n., <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_95">95</a> n.; speech of, at Leicester, <a href=
+"#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>; foreign policy of,
+<a href="#Page_53">53</a>-54; proposals of, to Germany, <a href=
+"#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_61">61</a>-62</li>
+
+<li>“Chamberlain period,” <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li>
+
+<li>Chérisey, Count de, <a href="#Page_194">194</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_312">312</a></li>
+
+<li>China, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>-53, <a href=
+"#Page_66">66</a>-68, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_95">95</a>-98, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_179">179</a></li>
+
+<li>Chirol, Valentine, <a href="#Page_73">73</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Choate, Joseph, <a href="#Page_315">315</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Clarke, Sir George, <a href="#Page_336">336</a></li>
+
+<li>Clemenceau, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>-86</li>
+
+<li>Combes, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_107">107</a></li>
+
+<li>Comité de l’Afrique française, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>-7,
+<a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
+
+<li>Comité du Maroc, <a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
+
+<li>Committee of Imperial Defence, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>,
+<a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_343">343</a></li>
+
+<li>Conference of Algeciras, <a href="#c17">chap. xvii</a>;
+organization of, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>; importance of police
+and bank questions at, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>; crisis of,
+<a href="#Page_366">366</a>; sessions of, on March 3 and 5, 1906,
+<a href="#Page_375">375</a>; the Act of, <a href=
+"#Page_393">393</a>; criticism of work of, <a href=
+"#Page_394">394</a>-96; results of, <a href=
+"#Page_397">397</a>-98</li>
+
+<li>Conference of Madrid, <a href="#Page_1">1</a></li>
+
+<li>Continental war, <a href="#Page_53">53</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Convention of Madrid, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_353">353</a>; Art. XVII of, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>-35;
+interpretations of, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>-35 n.</li>
+
+<li>Courcel, Baron de, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>-77 and n.</li>
+
+<li>Cromer, Lord, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Crowe, Eyre, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_346">346</a> n., <a href="#Page_371">371</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_382">382</a></li>
+
+<li>Crozier, Philippe, <a href="#Page_84">84</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_186">186</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Currie, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Danzig interview, <a href="#Page_45">45</a> n.,
+<a href="#Page_78">78</a></li>
+
+<li>Dardanelles, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_82">82</a> n., <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a></li>
+
+<li>Delafosse, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_201">201</a></li>
+
+<li>Delcassé, Théophile, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_10">10</a> n., <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_12">12</a> n., <a href="#Page_13">13</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_22">22</a> n., <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_45">45</a> n., <a href="#Page_47">47</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_50">50</a> and n., <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_87">87</a>-88, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_100">100</a> and n., <a href="#Page_104">104</a> n.,
+<a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_178">178</a> and n., <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_197">197</a> n., <a href="#Page_198">198</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_200">200</a>-201, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_220">220</a>-21 n., <a href="#Page_230">230</a>-31 n.,
+<a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a> and n.;
+career and character of, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>-9; interest of, in
+Morocco, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>-10; French action in Sahara in
+1900, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>; sounds Germany in 1901, <a href=
+"#Page_13">13</a>; and Radolin in 1901, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>;
+and Moroccan embassy in 1901, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>-15;
+instructions of, to Saint-René Taillandier in 1901, <a href=
+"#Page_15">15</a>-16; visit of, to Rome, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>;
+and Italy, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>,
+<a href="#Page_30">30</a>-31; and Spain, <a href=
+"#Page_37">37</a>-38, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>; overture of, to
+Great Britain, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>-42, <a href=
+"#Page_44">44</a>-45, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_50">50</a>-51; policy of, toward Great Britain and Germany,
+<a href="#Page_43">43</a>; conversation of, with Huhn, <a href=
+"#Page_43">43</a>-44; overture of, to Germany, <a href=
+"#Page_43">43</a>-46, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_49">49</a>-50; at St. Petersburg in 1899, <a href=
+"#Page_44">44</a>; and Morocco<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_412">[412]</span> in 1902, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>,
+<a href="#Page_50">50</a>; and Anglo-Russian conversations in 1903,
+<a href="#Page_95">95</a> and n.; on Russia’s far eastern policy in
+1903, <a href="#Page_99">99</a> n.; surprised by outbreak of
+Russo-Japanese War, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>-101; anger of, at
+Great Britain in 1904, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>; Newfoundland
+question in 1904, <a href="#Page_108">108</a> and n.; urges
+Anglo-Russian <em>rapprochement</em> in 1904, <a href=
+"#Page_114">114</a>; policy of, in 1904, <a href=
+"#Page_117">117</a>; and Spain in 1904, <a href=
+"#Page_117">117</a>-25 and n.; conversation of, with Radolin on
+March 23, 1904, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>-26; and Germany in
+1904, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>-27, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>,
+<a href="#Page_187">187</a> and n.; policy of, in March, 1905,
+<a href="#Page_197">197</a>-98; overtures of, to Germany in 1905,
+<a href="#Page_199">199</a> and n., <a href="#Page_212">212</a>;
+says Germany is “turning him out,” <a href="#Page_210">210</a>; and
+Moroccan question in 1905, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>-22; warns
+Sultan in 1905, <a href="#Page_223">223</a> and n.; adheres to
+policy, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>; asks British support in May,
+1905, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>; opposes conference, <a href=
+"#Page_228">228</a>-30; defends his policy on June 6, 1905,
+<a href="#Page_230">230</a>-31; resignation of, <a href=
+"#Page_231">231</a>; speeches: Senate in July, 1901, <a href=
+"#Page_14">14</a>; Chamber on July 3, 1902, <a href=
+"#Page_31">31</a>; Chamber on Nov. 23, 1903, <a href=
+"#Page_94">94</a>; Chamber and Senate in Nov.-Dec., 1904, <a href=
+"#Page_10">10</a> n., <a href="#Page_108">108</a>; Senate on March
+31, 1905, <a href="#Page_197">197</a></li>
+
+<li>Deloncle, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
+
+<li>Dennis, Alfred L. P., <a href="#Page_245">245</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Deschanel, Paul, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_200">200</a></li>
+
+<li>Devonshire, Duke of, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_63">63</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Dilke, Sir Charles, <a href="#Page_100">100</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Dogger Bank affair, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_112">112</a>-13, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_168">168</a></li>
+
+<li>Donnersmarck, Prince Henckel von, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>
+n.</li>
+
+<li>Doumer, <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
+
+<li>Dual Alliance, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>-10, <a href=
+"#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_43">43</a> n., <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_83">83</a> n., <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>-36, <a href=
+"#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a> and n., <a href=
+"#Page_284">284</a> n., <a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_297">297</a> and n., <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_300">300</a>-301, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_391">391</a> n., <a href="#Page_397">397</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_399">399</a>-400</li>
+
+<li>Ducarne, General, <a href="#Page_341">341</a> and n.</li>
+
+<li>Dupuy, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_262">262</a></li>
+
+<li>Durand, Sir Mortimer, <a href="#Page_226">226</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_243">243</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Eckardstein, Baron, <a href="#Page_63">63</a> n.,
+<a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_70">70</a> and n., <a href="#Page_71">71</a>-72, <a href=
+"#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_207">207</a> n., <a href="#Page_218">218</a>-19 and nn.,
+<a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a> n.,
+<a href="#Page_245">245</a> n.; on British offer of alliance to
+France, <a href="#Page_251">251</a></li>
+
+<li>Edward VII, King, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_75">75</a> and n., <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_82">82</a> n., <a href="#Page_84">84</a> and n., <a href=
+"#Page_86">86</a> and n., <a href="#Page_87">87</a> and n.,
+<a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_111">111</a> and n., <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_150">150</a>-51, <a href="#Page_176">176</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_208">208</a>-9, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_236">236</a> n., <a href="#Page_257">257</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_293">293</a>, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_308">308</a>-9 n., <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_318">318</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_330">330</a> n., <a href="#Page_376">376</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_400">400</a> n.; conversation of, with Iswolsky in April,
+1904, <a href="#Page_110">110</a></li>
+
+<li>Egerton, Sir Edwin, <a href="#Page_244">244</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_331">331</a>, <a href="#Page_371">371</a></li>
+
+<li>Egypt, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>-94, <a href=
+"#Page_102">102</a>-4, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_148">148</a>-49</li>
+
+<li>Entente Cordiale, <a href="#Page_84">84</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_256">256</a>-57, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_346">346</a>, <a href="#Page_355">355</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_368">368</a>-69, <a href="#Page_382">382</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_397">397</a>, <a href="#Page_399">399</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_401">401</a>-4; negotiation of, <a href=
+"#Page_86">86</a>-94, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>-102</li>
+
+<li>Esher, Lord, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>-85, <a href=
+"#Page_336">336</a></li>
+
+<li><em>L’Etat russe</em>, <a href="#Page_368">368</a> and n.</li>
+
+<li>Etienne, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>,
+<a href="#Page_88">88</a> n., <a href="#Page_336">336</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_386">386</a></li>
+
+<li>Eulenburg, Prince, <a href="#Page_176">176</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_189">189</a></li>
+
+<li>Fashoda crisis, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_41">41</a>-42, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
+
+<li>Fernando Po, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_152">152</a> and n.</li>
+
+<li>Fez, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>; threatened by rebels, <a href=
+"#Page_4">4</a></li>
+
+<li><em>Figaro</em>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_276">276</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Figuig, <a href="#Page_16">16</a></li>
+
+<li>Fisher, Admiral, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_115">115</a>-16, <a href="#Page_228">228</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_339">339</a></li>
+
+<li>Flotow, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>; reports British
+offer of alliance to France on June 7, 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_236">236</a>-37</li>
+
+<li>France, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>-38, <a href=
+"#Page_40">40</a>-51, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>-68, <a href=
+"#Page_73">73</a>-74, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>-97, <a href=
+"#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_390">390</a> n.; trade of, with Morocco, <a href=
+"#Page_2">2</a>; and Morocco, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>-18; North
+African empire, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>; Parliament, <a href=
+"#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_107">107</a>-8, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_199">199</a>-200, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>-30; Moroccan
+policy of, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>-6; claims of, to Morocco,
+<a href="#Page_6">6</a>-7; occupies oases, <a href=
+"#Page_11">11</a>; note of, to Sultan, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>;
+and Italy, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>-34; fleet of, visits Italy,
+<a href="#Page_23">23</a>; effort of, to break Triple Alliance,
+<a href="#Page_25">25</a>; press of, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>,
+<a href="#Page_85">85</a>-86, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_198">198</a> and n., <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_354">354</a>, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>-60, <a href=
+"#Page_375">375</a> n., <a href="#Page_380">380</a>; and Great
+Britain, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>-94; and Germany, <a href=
+"#Page_93">93</a>-94; international situation in Feb., 1904,
+<a href="#Page_117">117</a>; and Spain, <a href=
+"#Page_118">118</a>-25; and Morocco in 1904, <a href=
+"#Page_128">128</a>-34; Mission of, to Fez, <a href=
+"#Page_183">183</a>; Tangier visit, <a href=
+"#Page_196">196</a>-202; and Germany in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>-33, <a href=
+"#Page_237">237</a>-38, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>-57, <a href=
+"#Page_261">261</a>-78; and Spain in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_198">198</a> n., <a href="#Page_259">259</a>-61; cabinet of,
+<a href="#Page_199">199</a>; public opinion of, <a href=
+"#Page_199">199</a>-200, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>; deserts Delcassé,
+<a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>-48 n.;
+fleet visits England in<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_413">[413]</span> 1905, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_258">258</a>; fear of war in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_217">217</a>; cabinet meeting on June 6, 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_230">230</a>-31 and n.; note on June 21, 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_244">244</a>-45; and Great Britain in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_256">256</a>-58; and Björkö, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>-95;
+efforts to bring Russia and Great Britain together in 1905,
+<a href="#Page_308">308</a>-9; <em>Livre jaune</em> (1905),
+<a href="#Page_313">313</a>; preliminaries to Conference, <a href=
+"#Page_319">319</a>-22, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>-40, <a href=
+"#Page_343">343</a>-47; military defense in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_320">320</a> and n.; and Spain, <a href=
+"#Page_330">330</a>-31, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_392">392</a>-93; pressure on Italy in Dec., 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_331">331</a>-32; sounds Great Britain about agreement in
+Jan., 1906, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>; plan for Moroccan police
+and bank, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>-52, <a href=
+"#Page_365">365</a>-66; seeks Austrian support in Feb., 1906,
+<a href="#Page_373">373</a>-74; and Great Britain in March, 1906,
+<a href="#Page_385">385</a>; cabinet and Parliament in March, 1906,
+<a href="#Page_388">388</a>; opposes Roosevelt’s proposal in March,
+1906, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>; satisfied with results of
+Conference, <a href="#Page_401">401</a>-2; mistrusts Germany in
+1906, <a href="#Page_402">402</a>-3</li>
+
+<li>Francis Joseph I, Emperor, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>,
+<a href="#Page_374">374</a></li>
+
+<li>Franco-German agreement on July 8, 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_255">255</a></li>
+
+<li>Franco-German agreement on Sept. 28, 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_272">272</a>-73</li>
+
+<li>Franco-German détente, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>-43</li>
+
+<li>Franco-German press war in 1905, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>,
+<a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
+
+<li>Franco-Italian agreements, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_31">31</a>-32, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
+
+<li>Franco-Italian entente, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li>
+
+<li>Franco-Moroccan agreements, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_15">15</a>-17</li>
+
+<li>Franco-Spanish agreements, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_118">118</a>-25, <a href="#Page_188">188</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>-61, <a href=
+"#Page_372">372</a>, <a href="#Page_392">392</a></li>
+
+<li>Franco-Spanish negotiations in 1902-3, <a href=
+"#Page_37">37</a>-40, <a href="#Page_89">89</a></li>
+
+<li>Franco-Spanish proposed accord in 1902, <a href=
+"#Page_38">38</a>; its failure, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>-40</li>
+
+<li>Franco-Spanish <em>rapprochement</em>, <a href=
+"#Page_40">40</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Galliéni, Joseph, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
+
+<li>Gambetta, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
+
+<li><em>Gaulois</em>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_257">257</a></li>
+
+<li>Gautsch, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
+
+<li>Genthe, Dr., <a href="#Page_147">147</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>German-American <em>rapprochement</em>, <a href=
+"#Page_160">160</a></li>
+
+<li>German-Italian military convention, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>,
+<a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
+
+<li>German Navy League, <a href="#Page_239">239</a></li>
+
+<li>Germany, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>,
+<a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>-11 and n.,
+<a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>-28, <a href=
+"#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a> and n., <a href=
+"#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>-82, <a href=
+"#Page_88">88</a> n., <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_116">116</a>-17, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>-56, <a href=
+"#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_355">355</a> n., <a href="#Page_359">359</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_367">367</a>, <a href="#Page_375">375</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_381">381</a> n., <a href="#Page_390">390</a>-91, <a href=
+"#Page_400">400</a> n.; trade with Morocco, <a href=
+"#Page_2">2</a>; reply to France in 1901, <a href=
+"#Page_13">13</a>-14; and Delcassé in 1902, <a href=
+"#Page_49">49</a>-50 n.; and Great Britain, <a href=
+"#Page_53">53</a>-80; proposal to Chamberlain in 1900, <a href=
+"#Page_64">64</a>-65; warning to Delcassé in 1900, <a href=
+"#Page_65">65</a>; efforts to maintain <em>status quo</em> in
+Morocco in 1900, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>; and Japan in 1901,
+<a href="#Page_69">69</a>; criticism of foreign policy, <a href=
+"#Page_79">79</a>-80; public opinion of, <a href=
+"#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a>; policy of, in
+1903-4, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>-39; and Morocco in 1904,
+<a href="#Page_140">140</a>-42, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>,
+<a href="#Page_157">157</a>-58, <a href="#Page_183">183</a> and n.;
+and Italy in 1904, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>-47; anger at France,
+<a href="#Page_147">147</a>; contemplates intervening in Morocco in
+1904, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a> n.;
+and Great Britain in 1904, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>-51, <a href=
+"#Page_155">155</a>-57, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_176">176</a> and n.; secret articles in Anglo-French
+agreement, <a href="#Page_155">155</a> and n.; and United States in
+1904, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>; and Russia in 1904, <a href=
+"#Page_160">160</a>-80; and Russian alliance in 1904, <a href=
+"#Page_166">166</a>-67; fears British attack, <a href=
+"#Page_172">172</a>-73; fears Quadruple Alliance, <a href=
+"#Page_178">178</a>; international situation in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_181">181</a>; and Morocco in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_183">183</a>-95; secret articles of Franco-Spanish
+agreements, <a href="#Page_187">187</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_188">188</a> n., <a href="#Page_313">313</a>-14; Tangier
+visit, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>-8; and Roosevelt in 1905,
+<a href="#Page_205">205</a>-6; Tattenbach to Fez, <a href=
+"#Page_206">206</a>; and Turkish Sultan, <a href=
+"#Page_206">206</a> n.; sounds Powers about conference, <a href=
+"#Page_206">206</a>-7; reply of, to Delcassé’s overtures, <a href=
+"#Page_207">207</a>-8; rejects French offers in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_218">218</a>; and France in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_211">211</a>-25, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>-56, <a href=
+"#Page_261">261</a>-78; suggests to Rouvier to call conference,
+<a href="#Page_220">220</a>; determines to overthrow Delcassé,
+<a href="#Page_221">221</a>; presses the Powers for support,
+<a href="#Page_221">221</a>; seeks Roosevelt’s support in May,
+1905, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>; and Italy in May, 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_224">224</a>; press of, on Delcassé’s downfall, <a href=
+"#Page_233">233</a>; forces Villa-Urrutia from office, <a href=
+"#Page_236">236</a>; reply to France on June 24, 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_248">248</a>-49; criticism of her policy in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_256">256</a>; presses Rouvier in July, 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_262">262</a>; asks Roosevelt’s aid in July, 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_263">263</a>; Moroccan loan in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_267">267</a>; and Tattenbach in Aug., 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_267">267</a>; reply to Rouvier in Sept., 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_273">273</a>-74 n.; anger at Great Britain in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_277">277</a>; international situation in July, 1905,
+<a href="#Page_279">279</a>; and<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_414">[414]</span> Russia in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_279">279</a>-91; and Roosevelt about Björkö, <a href=
+"#Page_287">287</a> n.; press of, angry at Great Britain in 1905,
+<a href="#Page_292">292</a>; and annulment of Björkö Treaty,
+<a href="#Page_304">304</a> and n.; and Moroccan affair in 1905,
+<a href="#Page_311">311</a>; preliminaries to Conference of
+Algeciras, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>-19; French overtures in
+Nov., 1905, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>; international situation in
+winter of 1905-6, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>-13; Weissbuch in
+1906, <a href="#Page_314">314</a> n.; on conference in Dec., 1905,
+<a href="#Page_314">314</a>; instructions to delegates, <a href=
+"#Page_314">314</a>-15; warnings to France in Jan., 1906, <a href=
+"#Page_317">317</a>; improvement in Anglo-German relations in 1906,
+<a href="#Page_317">317</a>-18; navy bill in 1906, <a href=
+"#Page_318">318</a> n.; refuses French proposals on police and
+bank, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>-53; proposals on police, <a href=
+"#Page_353">353</a>-54, <a href="#Page_354">354</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_357">357</a>-58; policy of, at Conference in Feb., 1906,
+<a href="#Page_359">359</a>-60; presses Rouvier in Feb., 1906,
+<a href="#Page_359">359</a>; declaration of, to Powers in Feb.,
+1906, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>; proposal of, on banks, <a href=
+"#Page_364">364</a>-65; defeat of, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>;
+policy of, after Conference, <a href="#Page_399">399</a>-400</li>
+
+<li>Gharnet, S. Feddoul, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_133">133</a></li>
+
+<li>Giolitti, Giovanni, <a href="#Page_144">144</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_146">146</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Glasenapp, <a href="#Page_365">365</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Goluchowski, Count, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_355">355</a> n., <a href="#Page_358">358</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_373">373</a>-74, <a href="#Page_374">374</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_378">378</a> and n., <a href="#Page_398">398</a></li>
+
+<li>Gorst, Sir Eldon, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></li>
+
+<li>Gourara, <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
+
+<li>Great Britain, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_14">14</a> n., <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>-56, <a href=
+"#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_276">276</a>; trade of, with Morocco, <a href=
+"#Page_2">2</a>; and Italy, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_33">33</a>; and Spain over Morocco, <a href=
+"#Page_35">35</a> n.; antagonism to, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>;
+international situation of, at close of nineteenth century,
+<a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>; and Germany,
+<a href="#Page_60">60</a>-80; change of policy of, in 1901,
+<a href="#Page_68">68</a>; seeks aid of Austria and Italy in 1903,
+<a href="#Page_81">81</a>; policy of, in 1902, <a href=
+"#Page_81">81</a>; and Russia, <a href="#Page_81">81</a> n.,
+<a href="#Page_82">82</a> and n., <a href="#Page_110">110</a>-16,
+<a href="#Page_81">81</a>-102; and France, <a href=
+"#Page_81">81</a>-102, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>-29, <a href=
+"#Page_232">232</a>-33; public opinion of, hostile to Germany,
+<a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>-73, <a href=
+"#Page_291">291</a>-92, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>-10, <a href=
+"#Page_310">310</a> n.; press, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_228">228</a> n.; public opinion of, <a href=
+"#Page_135">135</a>; cabinet crisis of, in 1903, <a href=
+"#Page_90">90</a>; and Russia’s policy in Balkans in 1903, <a href=
+"#Page_95">95</a>-96; fear of Continental coalition in 1904,
+<a href="#Page_100">100</a>; Parliament, <a href=
+"#Page_105">105</a>-6; fear of German navy in 1904, <a href=
+"#Page_114">114</a>-15; redistribution of naval forces of, <a href=
+"#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>-73; and
+Franco-Spanish agreement in 1904, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>; asks
+Powers to approve Khedivial decree, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>;
+refuses German proposal for agreement in 1904, <a href=
+"#Page_148">148</a>-49; and Germany, <a href=
+"#Page_148">148</a>-51; fears German attack in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_208">208</a> and n.; Tangier visit, <a href=
+"#Page_208">208</a>-11; fleet of, visits France in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>; prevents Germany
+from obtaining ports, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>; offers aid to
+France in April, 1905, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>-11; rejects
+Roosevelt’s advice in May, 1905, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>; naval
+preparations in 1905, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>; Anglo-French
+military and naval conversations in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_228">228</a> and n.; and Delcassé’s downfall, <a href=
+"#Page_232">232</a>; and Germany in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_236">236</a>-37, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>-41, <a href=
+"#Page_291">291</a>-94, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>-10; not
+supporting Roosevelt in 1905, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>; and
+Russia, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>-92, <a href=
+"#Page_309">309</a>-10; naval maneuvers of, in the Baltic in 1905,
+<a href="#Page_292">292</a>-93 and nn.; visit of fleet to German
+ports in Aug.-Sept., 1905, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>; efforts of,
+to approach Russia in 1905, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>-10; renewal
+of Anglo-Japanese Alliance in 1905, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>;
+preliminaries to Conference, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>-47;
+promises support to France at the Conference, <a href=
+"#Page_329">329</a>-30; pressure of, on Spain in Dec., 1905,
+<a href="#Page_330">330</a>-31; pressure of, on Italy in Dec.,
+1905, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>-32; and Belgium in 1906, <a href=
+"#Page_340">340</a>-41 and n.; supports France in Feb., 1906,
+<a href="#Page_368">368</a>; pressure of, on Spain in Feb., 1906,
+<a href="#Page_372">372</a>; favors Austrian proposal in March,
+1906, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>; and Germany in 1906, <a href=
+"#Page_399">399</a>-400; satisfied with results of Conference,
+<a href="#Page_401">401</a>-2</li>
+
+<li>Grey, Sir Edward, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_321">321</a> n., <a href="#Page_322">322</a>-23, <a href=
+"#Page_327">327</a> n., <a href="#Page_329">329</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_331">331</a> and n., <a href="#Page_332">332</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_336">336</a>-37, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>-43, <a href=
+"#Page_343">343</a> n., <a href="#Page_360">360</a> and n.,
+<a href="#Page_371">371</a> n., <a href="#Page_379">379</a>,
+<a href="#Page_384">384</a>, <a href="#Page_386">386</a> and n.,
+<a href="#Page_387">387</a>, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_400">400</a> n., <a href="#Page_403">403</a> n.; and Russia,
+<a href="#Page_323">323</a>-24; and Germany, <a href=
+"#Page_324">324</a>-27; conversations of, with Cambon on Jan. 10
+and 31, 1906, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>-39, <a href=
+"#Page_338">338</a> n., <a href="#Page_344">344</a>-46, <a href=
+"#Page_346">346</a> n.; approves military and naval conversations
+in 1906, <a href="#Page_340">340</a> and n.; instructions of, to
+Grierson in Jan., 1906, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>; summary of
+policy of, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>; conversation with
+Metternich on Feb. 19, 1906, <a href="#Page_368">368</a>-69; and
+Austria in Feb., 1906, <a href="#Page_373">373</a> n.; and Spain in
+March, 1906, <a href="#Page_376">376</a> n.; advises France to
+accept Austrian proposal, <a href="#Page_382">382</a>; and Germany
+in 1906, <a href="#Page_402">402</a>-4; and Russia in 1906,
+<a href="#Page_404">404</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Grierson, General, <a href="#Page_54">54</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_335">335</a>, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>-41</li>
+
+<li>Guillain, Antoine, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst"><span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_415">[415]</span>Haldane, Richard, <a href=
+"#Page_339">339</a>-40, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>-43, <a href=
+"#Page_400">400</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Hamburg-American Line, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_174">174</a></li>
+
+<li>Hammann, Otto, <a href="#Page_74">74</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_187">187</a> n., <a href="#Page_199">199</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_203">203</a> n., <a href="#Page_348">348</a> n.; dispute
+with Holstein, <a href="#Page_204">204</a> and n.</li>
+
+<li>Hanotaux, Gabriel, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
+
+<li>Hansen, Jules, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_46">46</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Harcourt, Sir William, <a href="#Page_54">54</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Hardinge, Sir Charles, <a href="#Page_82">82</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_110">110</a> n., <a href="#Page_112">112</a>-13, <a href=
+"#Page_306">306</a>-7, <a href="#Page_309">309</a> and n., <a href=
+"#Page_325">325</a>, <a href="#Page_371">371</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_386">386</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Harmsworth, <a href="#Page_69">69</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Harris, W. B., <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
+
+<li>Hatzfeldt, Count, <a href="#Page_54">54</a> and n., <a href=
+"#Page_63">63</a> n., <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
+
+<li>Hay, John, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>-32 n.</li>
+
+<li>Hayashi, Count, <a href="#Page_160">160</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Hedeman, <a href="#Page_100">100</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Holland, <a href="#Page_373">373</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Holstein, Herr von, <a href="#Page_50">50</a> and n., <a href=
+"#Page_55">55</a> and n., <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_70">70</a> n., <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_146">146</a> n., <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_163">163</a> and n., <a href="#Page_164">164</a> and n.,
+<a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_176">176</a> n., <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>-3, <a href=
+"#Page_219">219</a>-20, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>-41, <a href=
+"#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_328">328</a>-29, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>; on German
+position in Dec., 1901, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>; fears British
+attack in 1904, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>; dispute with Hammann,
+<a href="#Page_204">204</a> and n.; letter on June 28, 1905,
+<a href="#Page_246">246</a> n.; on alliance with Russia in July,
+1905, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>-81 and n.; on Björkö Treaty,
+<a href="#Page_286">286</a>-87, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>-91;
+resignation in 1906, <a href="#Page_399">399</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Hornung, <a href="#Page_186">186</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Huguet, Major, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>-36</li>
+
+<li>Huhn, Arthur von, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>-44</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst"><em>L’Imparcial</em>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>
+n.</li>
+
+<li>India, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
+
+<li>Irredentism, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a></li>
+
+<li>Iswolsky, Count, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_171">171</a> n., <a href="#Page_404">404</a></li>
+
+<li>Italy, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>-11
+and n., <a href="#Page_19">19</a>-34, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>,
+<a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>; defeat of,
+by Abyssinia, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>; international situation of,
+<a href="#Page_19">19</a>; relations of, with France, <a href=
+"#Page_19">19</a>-20; and Anglo-French agreement in 1899, <a href=
+"#Page_21">21</a>; Moroccan interest of, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>;
+and Austria, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>; and Triple Alliance,
+<a href="#Page_143">143</a>-47, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>-83; and
+Conference, <a href="#Page_207">207</a> and n., <a href=
+"#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_332">332</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Japan, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>-68; relations
+of, with Russia in 1903, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>-83; proposal of,
+to send Aoki to Berlin, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_179">179</a></li>
+
+<li>Jaurès, <a href="#Page_276">276</a> n.; approves French claims
+to Morocco, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></li>
+
+<li>Jonnart, Governor, <a href="#Page_133">133</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_242">242</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Jusserand, <a href="#Page_244">244</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_361">361</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Khedivial decree, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>,
+<a href="#Page_148">148</a>-49</li>
+
+<li>Kiel, naval review in 1904, <a href="#Page_150">150</a></li>
+
+<li><em>Kölnische Zeitung</em>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
+
+<li><em>Kreuzzeitung</em>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a></li>
+
+<li>Kriege, Dr., <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_355">355</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Krueger telegram, <a href="#Page_56">56</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Kühlmann, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_186">186</a> n., <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_267">267</a> n., <a href="#Page_312">312</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Laguiche, Marquis de, <a href=
+"#Page_319">319</a></li>
+
+<li>Lamsdorff, Count, <a href="#Page_46">46</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_95">95</a>-98, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>-72, <a href=
+"#Page_168">168</a> n., <a href="#Page_174">174</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_178">178</a> n., <a href="#Page_294">294</a>-95, <a href=
+"#Page_302">302</a> n., <a href="#Page_369">369</a>; and Germany in
+1904, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>-63, <a href=
+"#Page_174">174</a>-79; character and policy of, toward Germany,
+<a href="#Page_167">167</a>-68; and Germany in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_282">282</a>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>-302; reaction of,
+to Björkö Treaty, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>-97; cordiality of, to
+Great Britain in May, 1905, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>-7; refuses
+British overtures in Sept.-Oct., 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_307">307</a>-8; and Germany in 1906, <a href=
+"#Page_358">358</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_367">367</a>-69; co-operation of, with Great Britain,
+<a href="#Page_360">360</a>; urges Germany to accept French
+propositions at conference, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_367">367</a>-69, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_391">391</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Lanessan, M. de, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>-56</li>
+
+<li>Lansdowne, Lord, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_21">21</a> and n., <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>-51, <a href=
+"#Page_66">66</a> n., <a href="#Page_69">69</a>-78, <a href=
+"#Page_75">75</a> n., <a href="#Page_96">96</a>-98, <a href=
+"#Page_110">110</a>-14, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_155">155</a> and n., <a href="#Page_209">209</a>-10,
+<a href="#Page_218">218</a> n., <a href="#Page_232">232</a> n.,
+<a href="#Page_254">254</a> and n., <a href="#Page_291">291</a>,
+<a href="#Page_293">293</a>, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_344">344</a>; refuses Sultan’s request in 1902, <a href=
+"#Page_17">17</a>; and Spain over Morocco, <a href=
+"#Page_39">39</a>-40; conversation of, with Cambon in 1902,
+<a href="#Page_48">48</a>-51; character of, <a href=
+"#Page_65">65</a>-66; policy of, toward Germany, <a href=
+"#Page_66">66</a>; and Germany over China, <a href=
+"#Page_66">66</a> n.; on possibility of Anglo-German Alliance,
+<a href="#Page_75">75</a>-76; on failure of negotiations for
+Anglo-German alliance, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>; and France,
+<a href="#Page_87">87</a>-102; favors agreement with Russia in
+1903, <a href="#Page_95">95</a> and n.; appeals to France to
+restrain Russia in 1903, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>-97; warns Cambon
+of possibility of Russo-Japanese war, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>-99;
+and Russia, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>-16; Anglo-Russian
+<em>rapprochement</em>, in 1904, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>; on
+German fear of British attack, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>;
+mediates between France and<span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_416">[416]</span> Spain in 1904, <a href=
+"#Page_121">121</a>-23; on German proposal in 1904, <a href=
+"#Page_149">149</a>; interprets Anglo-French accord, <a href=
+"#Page_156">156</a>; on Anglo-German hostility in 1904, <a href=
+"#Page_176">176</a> n.; opposed to Conference, <a href=
+"#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_244">244</a>; on the visit to Tangier, <a href=
+"#Page_209">209</a>; offers aid to France, <a href=
+"#Page_210">210</a>; rejects Roosevelt’s offer to mediate in May,
+1905, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>; policy of, toward France in May,
+1905, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>-27 and nn.; advises United States
+against conference, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>-29; offers
+Mediterranean accord to Spain in June, 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_229">229</a>; denies offer of alliance to France, <a href=
+"#Page_230">230</a>-31 n., <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_251">251</a>-52; interpretation of Art. XVII of Convention
+of Madrid, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>-35 n.; assurance to France
+in July, 1905, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>; on William II and
+Björkö, <a href="#Page_294">294</a></li>
+
+<li>Lascelles, Sir Frank, <a href="#Page_176">176</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_202">202</a> n., <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_279">279</a>; on the German Emperor, <a href=
+"#Page_58">58</a>; on Bülow, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>; on
+possibility of Anglo-German alliance, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>-76
+n.; against idea of a conference, <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
+
+<li>Lautier, Eugène, <a href="#Page_276">276</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Lauzanne, Stéphane, <a href="#Page_276">276</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>League of the Three Emperors, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>,
+<a href="#Page_139">139</a> n., <a href="#Page_143">143</a>,
+<a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
+
+<li>Lee, Arthur, <a href="#Page_181">181</a> and n.</li>
+
+<li>Léon, <a href="#Page_263">263</a></li>
+
+<li>Leon y Castillo, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_35">35</a> n., <a href="#Page_37">37</a>-38, <a href=
+"#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_120">120</a> n., <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_152">152</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Levy, Armand, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>-19 nn.</li>
+
+<li>Lichnowsky, Prince, <a href="#Page_127">127</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_147">147</a></li>
+
+<li>Lister, <a href="#Page_248">248</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_253">253</a></li>
+
+<li>Lodge, Senator, <a href="#Page_222">222</a></li>
+
+<li><em>Lokalanzeiger</em>, <a href="#Page_383">383</a></li>
+
+<li>London City Council, visit of, to Paris on Feb. 8, 1906,
+<a href="#Page_369">369</a> n.</li>
+
+<li><em>London Times</em>, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>-77, <a href=
+"#Page_310">310</a> n., <a href="#Page_386">386</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Loubet, President, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_182">182</a> n., <a href="#Page_196">196</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>; visit of, to
+Italy in 1904, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>-45</li>
+
+<li>Louis, Georges, <a href="#Page_262">262</a> and n., <a href=
+"#Page_273">273</a>-74 n., <a href="#Page_311">311</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_377">377</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Louis of Battenberg, Prince, <a href="#Page_195">195</a></li>
+
+<li>Lowther, <a href="#Page_216">216</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Luzzati, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Lyauty, General, <a href="#Page_133">133</a> n.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Maclean, Kaid Sir Harry, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>,
+<a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
+
+<li>Mallet, Louis, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_150">150</a> n.</li>
+
+<li><em>Manchester Guardian</em>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a></li>
+
+<li>Manchuria, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>-96, <a href=
+"#Page_98">98</a></li>
+
+<li>Martino, M. de, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
+
+<li><em>Matin</em>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a></li>
+
+<li>Maura, Gabriel, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>-19</li>
+
+<li>Mediterranean ententes, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
+
+<li>Mendelssohn & Co., <a href="#Page_264">264</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_265">265</a> n., <a href="#Page_355">355</a>-56 n., <a href=
+"#Page_365">365</a> n., <a href="#Page_384">384</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>el-Menebhi, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
+
+<li>Metternich, Count, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_76">76</a>-77, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a> and n., <a href=
+"#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_281">281</a> n., <a href="#Page_315">315</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_344">344</a>-45; on Anglo-German relations in 1902, <a href=
+"#Page_78">78</a>; warns government in 1904, <a href=
+"#Page_156">156</a>-57; on British danger, <a href=
+"#Page_176">176</a> and n.; explains German policy to Grey,
+<a href="#Page_326">326</a>-27; warns Grey in 1906, <a href=
+"#Page_403">403</a>-4</li>
+
+<li>Mévil, <a href="#Page_198">198</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_230">230</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Michael, Grand Duke, <a href="#Page_285">285</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Millet, René, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>-8</li>
+
+<li>Miquel, Herr von, <a href="#Page_244">244</a> and n.</li>
+
+<li>Moltke, General, <a href="#Page_281">281</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_288">288</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_318">318</a> and n., <a href="#Page_319">319</a> and n.,
+<a href="#Page_320">320</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Monson, Sir Edmund, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a> n.; character sketch
+of Delcassé, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
+
+<li>Montero Rios, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_266">266</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>-69</li>
+
+<li>Montferrand, Count de, <a href="#Page_108">108</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Monts, Count, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_398">398</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Moret, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>-31, <a href=
+"#Page_372">372</a></li>
+
+<li><em>Morning Post</em>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a></li>
+
+<li>Morocco, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>-18, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>
+n., <a href="#Page_22">22</a>-23, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>,
+<a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_45">45</a> and n., <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_62">62</a>-65, <a href="#Page_63">63</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a> and n., <a href=
+"#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>-94, <a href=
+"#Page_102">102</a>-5, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>-8, <a href=
+"#Page_119">119</a>-26, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>-42, <a href=
+"#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_157">157</a>-58, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>-73; loans,
+<a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>-18, <a href=
+"#Page_264">264</a>-65 and n.; embassy in Paris, <a href=
+"#Page_13">13</a>-16; embassy in London and Berlin, <a href=
+"#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>; and France, <a href=
+"#Page_128">128</a>-34, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>-84, <a href=
+"#Page_191">191</a>; offers concessions to Germany in 1905,
+<a href="#Page_261">261</a>; seizure of Algerian in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_268">268</a> n.; criticism of results of Conference,
+<a href="#Page_395">395</a>-96; results of crisis, <a href=
+"#Page_405">405</a></li>
+
+<li>Mühlberg, Herr von, <a href="#Page_148">148</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_264">264</a></li>
+
+<li>Mukden, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_201">201</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Mulai-el-Hassan, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
+
+<li>Mytilene, <a href="#Page_26">26</a> n.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst"><span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_417">[417]</span>Nelidow, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>-96,
+<a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a></li>
+
+<li>Newfoundland, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_100">100</a> n., <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_107">107</a>-8 and n.</li>
+
+<li>Nicholas, Grand Duke, <a href="#Page_301">301</a></li>
+
+<li>Nicholas II, Czar, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a> and n., <a href=
+"#Page_161">161</a>-72, <a href="#Page_168">168</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_296">296</a>-306, <a href="#Page_321">321</a> and n.,
+<a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_368">368</a>; proposes
+alliance to Germany in 1904, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>; and
+Germany in 1904, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>-75, <a href=
+"#Page_177">177</a>-78; Björkö meeting, <a href=
+"#Page_279">279</a>-86, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>-85 n.; and
+Danish question, <a href="#Page_285">285</a> n.; repudiates Björkö
+Treaty, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>-4 and n.</li>
+
+<li>Nicholson, Sir Arthur, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_74">74</a> n., <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_324">324</a> n., <a href="#Page_330">330</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_337">337</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>-51, <a href=
+"#Page_356">356</a> and n., <a href="#Page_358">358</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_374">374</a>-76, <a href="#Page_375">375</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_379">379</a>; favors Austrian proposition, <a href=
+"#Page_381">381</a>-82, <a href="#Page_386">386</a>-87</li>
+
+<li><em>Nineteenth Century</em>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a></li>
+
+<li>Noailles, M. de, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_50">50</a></li>
+
+<li>Norway, throne question in 1905, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>-83
+n., <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>
+n.</li>
+
+<li><em>Nowoje Wremja</em>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a> n.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">O’Conor, Sir Nicholas, <a href=
+"#Page_206">206</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Ojeda, <a href="#Page_188">188</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_314">314</a> n., <a href="#Page_356">356</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_372">372</a>, <a href="#Page_373">373</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Osten-Sacken, Count, <a href="#Page_61">61</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_163">163</a> and n., <a href="#Page_391">391</a> n.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Pacific penetration, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>,
+<a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_128">128</a>-34</li>
+
+<li>Pallain, <a href="#Page_46">46</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Pan-German League, <a href="#Page_140">140</a></li>
+
+<li>Pariente, Moses, <a href="#Page_264">264</a></li>
+
+<li>Percy, Earl, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_292">292</a>-93</li>
+
+<li>Perdicaris, Ion, <a href="#Page_131">131</a> and n.</li>
+
+<li>Persia, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>,
+<a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_324">324</a> and n.</li>
+
+<li>Phipps, Sir Charles, <a href="#Page_341">341</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Plymouth, visit at, of German warships in 1904, <a href=
+"#Page_150">150</a></li>
+
+<li>Poincaré, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>-31 n.</li>
+
+<li>Port Arthur, <a href="#Page_54">54</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Portuguese colonies, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
+
+<li>Pourtales, Count, <a href="#Page_264">264</a></li>
+
+<li>Pressensé, M. de, <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
+
+<li>Prince of Monaco, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_247">247</a> n., <a href="#Page_311">311</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_380">380</a> and n.</li>
+
+<li>Prinetti, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_24">24</a>-32, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>; speech in
+Italian Chamber on May 22, 1902, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>;
+negotiations with France in 1902, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>-31</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Rabat, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>-94, <a href=
+"#Page_134">134</a></li>
+
+<li>Radolin, Prince, <a href="#Page_46">46</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_125">125</a> n., <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_155">155</a> n., <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_213">213</a>-14, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>-49, <a href=
+"#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_387">387</a>, <a href="#Page_403">403</a> and n.;
+disapproves German policy in 1905, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>;
+warning to Rouvier on May 16, 1905, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>; on
+public opinion in France in Jan., 1906, <a href=
+"#Page_319">319</a>-20</li>
+
+<li>Radowitz, Herr von, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_327">327</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_349">349</a>, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_353">353</a>, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>-57, <a href=
+"#Page_376">376</a>-78, <a href="#Page_382">382</a>-83</li>
+
+<li>Raisouli, <a href="#Page_131">131</a> and n., <a href=
+"#Page_132">132</a></li>
+
+<li>Regnault, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>-52, <a href=
+"#Page_366">366</a></li>
+
+<li>Repington, Colonel, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>-36, <a href=
+"#Page_339">339</a></li>
+
+<li>Reventlow, Count, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
+
+<li>Révoil, Paul, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_12">12</a>-13, <a href="#Page_238">238</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_262">262</a>-63, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_334">334</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_351">351</a> and n., <a href="#Page_353">353</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_356">356</a>-57, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_374">374</a>, <a href="#Page_375">375</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_376">376</a>, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>-83, <a href=
+"#Page_386">386</a>, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_392">392</a>; memo. to Radowitz on Feb. 16, 1906, <a href=
+"#Page_362">362</a>-63; opposes Austrian proposal, <a href=
+"#Page_379">379</a></li>
+
+<li>Richthofen, Baron, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_161">161</a> n., <a href="#Page_164">164</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_289">289</a> n., <a href="#Page_319">319</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_327">327</a></li>
+
+<li>Ripon, Lord, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_339">339</a>-40</li>
+
+<li>Roman, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
+
+<li>Romberg, Baron, <a href="#Page_162">162</a></li>
+
+<li>Rominten, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_299">299</a>-300</li>
+
+<li>Roosevelt, President, <a href="#Page_101">101</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>-80, <a href=
+"#Page_184">184</a>-85, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a> and n., <a href=
+"#Page_239">239</a>-40, <a href="#Page_245">245</a> and n.,
+<a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a> n.,
+<a href="#Page_301">301</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_321">321</a>, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>-54, <a href=
+"#Page_357">357</a>, <a href="#Page_361">361</a>-62, <a href=
+"#Page_392">392</a>; draws closer to Germany in 1904-5, <a href=
+"#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a> and n., <a href=
+"#Page_206">206</a>; tries to calm Anglo-German hostility in 1905,
+<a href="#Page_205">205</a> and n., <a href="#Page_215">215</a>,
+<a href="#Page_222">222</a>-23; policy of, on Moroccan conflict on
+April 20, 1905, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>-15; hesitates about
+accepting invitation to conference in June, 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_237">237</a>; intervenes in Paris and London in June, 1905,
+<a href="#Page_243">243</a>; advises France to accept conference in
+June, 1905, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>-50; beneficial result of
+his intervention in June, 1905, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>-51;
+refuses German request in July, 1905, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>;
+mistrusts Germany in 1906, <a href="#Page_361">361</a>; compromise
+proposal in 1906, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>-64; opposes Austrian
+proposal in March, 1906, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>-85, <a href=
+"#Page_388">388</a>-89; proposal in March, 1906, <a href=
+"#Page_389">389</a></li>
+
+<li>Root, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>,
+<a href="#Page_357">357</a>, <a href="#Page_361">361</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_363">363</a>-64, <a href="#Page_389">389</a></li>
+
+<li>Rosebery, Lord, <a href="#Page_54">54</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_106">106</a> n., <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_322">322</a></li>
+
+<li><span class="pagenum" id="Page_418">[418]</span>Rosen, Dr.,
+<a href="#Page_274">274</a>; his proposal for Franco-German accord
+in Sept., 1905, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>-70 and n.; negotiations
+in Paris in Sept., 1905, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>-72</li>
+
+<li>Rothschild, Alfred, <a href="#Page_54">54</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Rouvier, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>,
+<a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_229">229</a>-31, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>-44 and n.,
+<a href="#Page_246">246</a> and n., <a href="#Page_247">247</a> and
+n., <a href="#Page_248">248</a> n., <a href="#Page_249">249</a>,
+<a href="#Page_251">251</a>-54, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>-57,
+<a href="#Page_259">259</a>-63, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>-69,
+<a href="#Page_271">271</a>-75, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>,
+<a href="#Page_295">295</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a> n.,
+<a href="#Page_317">317</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a> n.,
+<a href="#Page_330">330</a>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>-34,
+<a href="#Page_337">337</a>, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_373">373</a>, <a href="#Page_377">377</a> and n., <a href=
+"#Page_381">381</a>, <a href="#Page_382">382</a> n.; speech in
+Chamber on April 17, 1905, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>; foreign
+policy of, <a href="#Page_212">212</a> and n.; overtures to
+Germany, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>-13, <a href=
+"#Page_217">217</a>-19 and nn., <a href="#Page_220">220</a>-21;
+opposed to conference in June, 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_237">237</a>-38; offers direct agreement to Germany in June,
+1905, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>; despair over Germany’s policy in
+June, 1905, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>-39 and n.; discouraged at
+German replies in June, 1905, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>; asks
+Roosevelt’s support in June, 1905, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>;
+accepts conference, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>; policy of, toward
+Germany on Morocco in July, 1905, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>;
+negotiates with Spain in 1905, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>-60;
+protests to Germany about Moroccan concessions in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_265">265</a>-66; offers colonial agreement to Germany in
+Sept., 1905, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>; declaration to Germany in
+Sept., 1905, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>; statement to Germany in
+Sept., 1905, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>; refuses to negotiate
+colonial agreement with Germany in Oct., 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_275">275</a>; alarm over Björkö meeting, <a href=
+"#Page_294">294</a>; on Continental alliance in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_301">301</a>-2; overtures to Germany in Nov., 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_311">311</a>-12, <a href="#Page_311">311</a> n.; speech in
+Chamber on Dec. 16, 1905, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>; determined
+to uphold French interests in Morocco at the Conference, <a href=
+"#Page_319">319</a>; assumes Delcassé’s policy, <a href=
+"#Page_320">320</a>; diplomatic preparations for Conference,
+<a href="#Page_320">320</a>-22; instructions to Révoil, <a href=
+"#Page_334">334</a>-35, <a href="#Page_335">335</a> n.; clings to
+policy in Feb., 1906, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>; declaration to
+Germany on Feb. 15, 1906, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>; downfall of,
+<a href="#Page_379">379</a>-80</li>
+
+<li>Rudini, Marquis de, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
+
+<li>Russia, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>,
+<a href="#Page_39">39</a> n., <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_47">47</a> n., <a href="#Page_54">54</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_67">67</a>-69, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>-102, <a href=
+"#Page_110">110</a>-16, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_323">323</a>-24, <a href="#Page_361">361</a>; interest of,
+in the Far East, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>; favors Continental
+<em>bloc</em> against Great Britain, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>;
+proposal to Germany in 1899, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>; proposal to
+Germany in 1902, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>; far eastern aggressions
+in 1903, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>; anger of, at Great Britain in
+1904, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>;
+Black Sea fleet of, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>; draws closer to
+Germany in 1904, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_161">161</a>; and Germany in 1904, <a href=
+"#Page_160">160</a>-72; Baltic fleet of, <a href=
+"#Page_161">161</a>-63; divided opinion about alliance with Germany
+in 1904, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>-68; need of German aid in
+1904, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>; negotiates loan in Berlin in
+1904-5, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>; revolution, <a href=
+"#Page_181">181</a>; press angry at Great Britain in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_292">292</a>; anger over renewal of Anglo-Japanese alliance
+in 1905, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>; loan in 1906, <a href=
+"#Page_321">321</a> and n., <a href="#Page_323">323</a>-24,
+<a href="#Page_367">367</a>, <a href="#Page_391">391</a> n.,
+<a href="#Page_399">399</a>; publication of instructions to Cassini
+in March, 1906, <a href="#Page_391">391</a> and n.</li>
+
+<li>Russo-Chinese agreement, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
+
+<li>Russo-German commercial treaty of 1904, <a href=
+"#Page_161">161</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Russo-German negotiations for alliance in 1904, <a href=
+"#Page_114">114</a>; proposed terms, <a href=
+"#Page_164">164</a>-65, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>-70; results of,
+<a href="#Page_179">179</a>-80</li>
+
+<li>Russo-Japanese relations, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>-68,
+<a href="#Page_82">82</a>-83 and n., <a href="#Page_96">96</a>; as
+affecting British interests, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>-68; and
+Germany, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>-68; and France, <a href=
+"#Page_67">67</a>-68</li>
+
+<li>Russo-Japanese War, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_139">139</a>-40, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>-65, <a href=
+"#Page_239">239</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Sagasta, <a href="#Page_35">35</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_37">37</a></li>
+
+<li>Saint-Aulaire, Count de, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Saint-René Taillandier, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_186">186</a> and n., <a href="#Page_198">198</a> and n.,
+<a href="#Page_199">199</a> and n., <a href="#Page_238">238</a>;
+prepares mission to Fez in 1904, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>; his
+instructions, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
+
+<li>Salisbury, Lord, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_61">61</a> n., <a href="#Page_62">62</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_63">63</a> n., refuses Delcassé’s overture, <a href=
+"#Page_41">41</a>-42; policy of, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>; asks
+co-operation of United States in 1898, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>;
+proposes agreement to Russia in 1898, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>-54;
+opposes Anglo-German alliance, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_76">76</a></li>
+
+<li>Samoan Islands, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
+
+<li>Sanderson, Lord, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_108">108</a> n., <a href="#Page_142">142</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_228">228</a> n., <a href="#Page_230">230</a> n.; on German
+policy, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>; on Delcassé’s anti-German
+policy, <a href="#Page_187">187</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Sarrien, <a href="#Page_385">385</a></li>
+
+<li>Sattler, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
+
+<li>Savinsky, <a href="#Page_168">168</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_296">296</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Schiemann, <a href="#Page_217">217</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Schlieffen, General, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Schoen, Herr von, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_367">367</a>-68, <a href="#Page_391">391</a> n.</li>
+
+<li><span class="pagenum" id="Page_419">[419]</span>Scholl,
+General, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
+
+<li>Schulenburg, Count, <a href="#Page_176">176</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Siam, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>-49, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>,
+<a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a></li>
+
+<li>Siegfried, Jules, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
+
+<li>Signatory Powers, <a href="#Page_203">203</a> and n., <a href=
+"#Page_234">234</a> and n.</li>
+
+<li>Silvela, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>-36, <a href=
+"#Page_38">38</a> n., <a href="#Page_39">39</a> and n.; article in
+<em>La Lectura</em>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li>
+
+<li>Sonnino, Baron, <a href="#Page_355">355</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Spain, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>,
+<a href="#Page_10">10</a>-11 and n., <a href="#Page_45">45</a>,
+<a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_89">89</a>-93, <a href="#Page_118">118</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_152">152</a>-54, <a href="#Page_247">247</a> and n.,
+<a href="#Page_266">266</a>-69; trade with Morocco, <a href=
+"#Page_2">2</a>; defeat of, by United States, <a href=
+"#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>; anger at Great Britain,
+<a href="#Page_35">35</a>; internal and international situation,
+<a href="#Page_35">35</a>; and France, <a href=
+"#Page_35">35</a>-40, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>-25, <a href=
+"#Page_259">259</a>-61; interest in Morocco, <a href=
+"#Page_36">36</a>-37; endeavors to bring about Franco-German
+<em>rapprochement</em>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>; Cortes, debates
+in 1904, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>; support from Great Britain in
+1904, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>; appeals to Germany for aid in
+1904, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>;
+Franco-Spanish agreement in 1904, <a href="#Page_127">127</a> and
+n.; public opinion, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>; anger at Germany
+in Aug., 1905, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>; compromise proposal in
+Feb., 1906, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>-73; opposes Austrian
+proposal in March, 1906, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>; opposes
+Roosevelt’s proposal in March, 1906, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>;
+trouble with France in March, 1906, <a href=
+"#Page_392">392</a>-93</li>
+
+<li>Spain, Queen Mother of, <a href="#Page_35">35</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_93">93</a> n., <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_137">137</a></li>
+
+<li>“Splendid isolation,” <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li>
+
+<li>Spring Rice, Cecil, <a href="#Page_101">101</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_114">114</a> n., <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_228">228</a> n., <a href="#Page_291">291</a>-92, <a href=
+"#Page_324">324</a></li>
+
+<li>Sternburg, Baron, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_355">355</a>, <a href="#Page_384">384</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_385">385</a></li>
+
+<li>Straits of Gibraltar, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
+
+<li>Stumm, Herr von, <a href="#Page_373">373</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Sultan of Turkey, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_206">206</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Sweden, <a href="#Page_373">373</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Switzerland, <a href="#Page_393">393</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Sydenham, Lord, <a href="#Page_309">309</a> n.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Tafilelt, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
+
+<li>Taft, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_228">228</a></li>
+
+<li>Tangier, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>-48, <a href=
+"#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_120">120</a>-21, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_130">130</a>-34, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>-89, <a href=
+"#Page_186">186</a> n., <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_196">196</a>-97, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_247">247</a> n., <a href="#Page_262">262</a>-63, <a href=
+"#Page_270">270</a> n.; visit to, <a href=
+"#Page_192">192</a>-95</li>
+
+<li>Tardieu, André, <a href="#Page_187">187</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_199">199</a> n., <a href="#Page_206">206</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_234">234</a> n., <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_348">348</a> n., <a href="#Page_354">354</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_372">372</a> n., <a href="#Page_373">373</a> nn., <a href=
+"#Page_376">376</a> n., <a href="#Page_381">381</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_391">391</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Tattenbach, Count, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>-90, <a href=
+"#Page_206">206</a> n., <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_213">213</a>-15, <a href="#Page_216">216</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_223">223</a>-25, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_257">257</a> n., <a href="#Page_261">261</a>-62 and n.,
+<a href="#Page_264">264</a>-68, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>,
+<a href="#Page_349">349</a>, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_356">356</a> and n., <a href="#Page_366">366</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_376">376</a> and n.; proposal to Bülow on April 29, 1905,
+<a href="#Page_215">215</a>-16; favors Austrian proposal in 1906,
+<a href="#Page_378">378</a></li>
+
+<li><em>Temps, Le</em>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_387">387</a>, <a href="#Page_391">391</a> and n., <a href=
+"#Page_403">403</a></li>
+
+<li>Teniet-Sassi, <a href="#Page_16">16</a></li>
+
+<li>Tibet, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_111">111</a></li>
+
+<li>Tidikelt, <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
+
+<li>Tirpitz, Admiral, <a href="#Page_164">164</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_181">181</a></li>
+
+<li>Tittoni, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>-46, <a href=
+"#Page_207">207</a> n., <a href="#Page_224">224</a>-25, and n.</li>
+
+<li>Tores, El, <a href="#Page_395">395</a></li>
+
+<li>Touat, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>,
+<a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a></li>
+
+<li>Tournade, <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
+
+<li><em>Tribuna</em>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
+
+<li>Triple Alliance, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>-20, <a href=
+"#Page_22">22</a> n., <a href="#Page_23">23</a>-30, <a href=
+"#Page_32">32</a>-34, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>-73, <a href=
+"#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>-46, <a href=
+"#Page_181">181</a>-83, <a href="#Page_213">213</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_398">398</a> n., <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
+
+<li>Triple entente, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
+
+<li>Tripoli, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>-22, <a href=
+"#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_143">143</a></li>
+
+<li>Tschirschky, Herr von, <a href="#Page_285">285</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_286">286</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_399">399</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Tunis, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_19">19</a></li>
+
+<li>Tweedmouth, Lord, <a href="#Page_342">342</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Ular, Alexandre, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>
+n.</li>
+
+<li>United States, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Vaffier-Pollet, <a href="#Page_312">312</a> and
+n.</li>
+
+<li>Van Grooten, <a href="#Page_327">327</a> n.</li>
+
+<li><em>Vanity Fair</em>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a></li>
+
+<li>Varley, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
+
+<li>Vassel, <a href="#Page_186">186</a> n.</li>
+
+<li>Venezuela affair, <a href="#Page_82">82</a></li>
+
+<li>Victor Emmanuel II, King, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_33">33</a> n., <a href="#Page_145">145</a>-46, <a href=
+"#Page_182">182</a></li>
+
+<li>Victoria, Queen, <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
+
+<li>Vigo, <a href="#Page_35">35</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a></li>
+
+<li>Villa-Urrutia, <a href="#Page_198">198</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_330">330</a> and n.</li>
+
+<li><span class="pagenum" id=
+"Page_420">[420]</span>Visconti-Venosta, Marquis, <a href=
+"#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_316">316</a>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_349">349</a>, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_362">362</a>, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_378">378</a> n., <a href="#Page_381">381</a>; policy of,
+toward France, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Waldeck-Rousseau, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
+
+<li>Wallace, D. M., <a href="#Page_357">357</a></li>
+
+<li>Wedel, Count, <a href="#Page_358">358</a></li>
+
+<li>Welsersheimb, Count, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_358">358</a>, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>-78, <a href=
+"#Page_378">378</a> n., <a href="#Page_390">390</a></li>
+
+<li><em>Weltpolitik</em>, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_27">27</a>-28, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_56">56</a>-58</li>
+
+<li>White, Henry, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_349">349</a>, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_362">362</a> and n., <a href="#Page_381">381</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_392">392</a></li>
+
+<li>Wiesbaden, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
+
+<li>Wilhelmshöhe, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></li>
+
+<li>William II, Emperor, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_55">55</a>-58, <a href="#Page_56">56</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_68">68</a>-69, <a href="#Page_75">75</a> and n., <a href=
+"#Page_93">93</a> n., <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_169">169</a>-74, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>-82, <a href=
+"#Page_186">186</a> and n., <a href="#Page_187">187</a>-88 and n.,
+<a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>-96,
+<a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a> n.,
+<a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_267">267</a> n., <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_300">300</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_317">317</a> and n., <a href="#Page_318">318</a>-19,
+<a href="#Page_326">326</a>; cordiality toward France, <a href=
+"#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a> and n.; offers
+alliance to Great Britain, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>; aversion of,
+to Holstein, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>; visit of, to England in
+1899, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>-62; visit of, to England in 1901,
+<a href="#Page_68">68</a>-69; at Vigo, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>,
+<a href="#Page_151">151</a>; on Moroccan question, <a href=
+"#Page_140">140</a>; visit to Italy in 1904, <a href=
+"#Page_144">144</a>-45; speeches in May, 1904, <a href=
+"#Page_147">147</a> and n.; lack of interest in Morocco, <a href=
+"#Page_151">151</a>-52 and n.; opposes intervention in Morocco in
+1904, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>; letter to Czar on Oct. 27, 1904,
+<a href="#Page_163">163</a>; failure of alliance negotiations in
+1904, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>-78 and n., <a href=
+"#Page_180">180</a>; and Japan in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_178">178</a>; speech at Bremen in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_188">188</a> n.; opposes Tangier visit, <a href=
+"#Page_188">188</a>-89; speeches at Tangier, <a href=
+"#Page_193">193</a>-94 and n., <a href="#Page_195">195</a> n.;
+initiates Russo-Japanese negotiations for peace, <a href=
+"#Page_239">239</a>; opposes Bülow’s policy in June, 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_239">239</a> and n.; anger of, at Delcassé and Great Britain
+in Oct., 1905, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>; speech on Oct. 26,
+1905, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>; Björkö meeting, <a href=
+"#Page_279">279</a>-85 and n.; advice to Czar in July, 1905,
+<a href="#Page_285">285</a> n.; letter to Czar on July 27, 1905,
+<a href="#Page_285">285</a>-86; changes phrasing of Björkö Treaty,
+<a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>; on French
+and Belgian neutrality in case of Anglo-German war, <a href=
+"#Page_288">288</a>; letter to Bülow on Aug. 11, 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_289">289</a>-90; on British naval maneuvers in the Baltic in
+1905, <a href="#Page_292">292</a> n.; and Witte in 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_299">299</a> and n.; and Czar in Sept., 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_299">299</a>-300; and Czar on Björkö Treaty, <a href=
+"#Page_303">303</a>-4, <a href="#Page_304">304</a> n.;
+disappointment over annulment of Björkö Treaty, <a href=
+"#Page_305">305</a>; speech in Reichstag on Nov. 28, 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_313">313</a> n.; offer to Spanish King in Nov., 1905,
+<a href="#Page_316">316</a> n., <a href="#Page_330">330</a>;
+protests pacific intentions in Dec., 1905, <a href=
+"#Page_318">318</a>-19; “Brilliant second,” <a href=
+"#Page_398">398</a>; on Italy in 1906, <a href="#Page_398">398</a>
+n.; on international situation in 1906, <a href=
+"#Page_399">399</a></li>
+
+<li>Windsor, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li>
+
+<li>Witte, Count, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_160">160</a> n., <a href="#Page_161">161</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_271">271</a>-72, <a href="#Page_294">294</a> and n.,
+<a href="#Page_301">301</a> n., <a href="#Page_321">321</a> n.,
+<a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>, <a href=
+"#Page_384">384</a> n., <a href="#Page_391">391</a> n.; ideas on
+foreign policy in 1905, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>-99; visit to
+Rominten in Sept., 1905, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>-300; and
+annulment of Björkö Treaty, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>-301</li>
+
+<li>Wolff, Theodor, <a href="#Page_127">127</a> n., <a href=
+"#Page_186">186</a> n., <a href="#Page_199">199</a> n.</li>
+
+<li class="ifrst">Zanardelli, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<div class="container"><img src='images/decor1.jpg' alt='[' class=
+"decor2" style="">
+<div class="decor2txt">PRINTED<br>
+IN U·S·A·</div>
+<img src='images/decor2.jpg' alt=']' class="decor2">
+</div>
+
+<p class="space-above2 x-ebookmaker-drop">
+</p>
+
+<div class="transnote">
+<h2>Transcriber's note</h2>
+
+<ul>
+<li>pg <a href="#Page_25">25,</a> footnote <a href=
+"#Footnote_69">69,</a> Changed: "military agreement of 1887 beween"
+to: "between"</li>
+
+<li>pg <a href="#Page_37">37</a>-38, footnote <a href=
+"#Footnote_111">111,</a> Changed: "<em>Diario de la sesiónes de
+Cortes</em>" to: "<em>las sesiones</em>"</li>
+
+<li>pg <a href="#Page_131">131</a>-132, footnote <a href=
+"#Footnote_386">386,</a> Changed: "Saint-René Taillander, May 31,
+1904" to: "Taillandier"</li>
+
+<li>pg <a href="#Page_153">153,</a> Changed: "to let the Spanish
+percieve that" to: "perceive"</li>
+
+<li>pg <a href="#Page_168">168,</a> footnote <a href=
+"#Footnote_512">512,</a> Changed: "<em>Kreigsschuldfrage</em>" to:
+"<em>Kriegsschuldfrage</em>"</li>
+
+<li>pg <a href="#Page_187">187,</a> footnote <a href=
+"#Footnote_580">580,</a> Changed: "<em>zum Ende des
+Welkkrieges</em>" to: "<em>Weltkrieges</em>"</li>
+
+<li>pg <a href="#Page_264">264,</a> footnote <a href=
+"#Footnote_820">820,</a> Changed: "Bülow to F. O., July 31, 1903"
+to: "1905"</li>
+
+<li>pg <a href="#Page_410">410,</a> Changed: "Bibourd" to:
+"Bihourd"</li>
+
+<li>pg <a href="#Page_417">417,</a> [Révoil] Changed: "meno. to
+Radowitz" to: "memo."</li>
+
+<li>Minor changes in punctuation have been done silently.</li>
+</ul>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78609 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+This book, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
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+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for eBook #78609
+(https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/78609)