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Chapter 9 POPE AND PRESIDENT

Word Count: 1928    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

resolution recorded in the previous volume, had meantime taken a new turn; bu

ly welcome came from the Central Powers, and even there dissentient voices were heard. The Allies' reception of his note was cold, unresponsive, suspicious, and resentful. "As you were," the Pope virtually proposed to

1, 1917, invited their governments to agree on the following points, whic

according to rules and guarantees to be established, in the necessary and sufficient measure for the maintenance of public order in every State; then, taking the place of arms, the institution of arbitration, with its h

insuring, through rules to be also determined, the true freedom and community of the seas, which, on the one hand, wo

d reciprocal conditions, which would be justified by the immense benefit to be derived from disarmament, all the more as one could not understand that such

Therefore, on the part of Germany, there should be total evacuation of Belgium, with guaranties of its entire political, military, and economic independen

f the immense advantages of durable peace with disarmament, the contending parties will examine them in a conciliatory spirit, taking into account, as far as is just and

tive to Armenia, the Balkan States, and the territories forming part of the old Kingdom of Poland, for which, in particular, its noble

ke her place at the peace council table with all her lost colonies restored, exempt from every demand for reparation for the ruin she had wrought, secure in the possession of all her territory, and with the future of Alsace-Lorraine, Trent, Trieste, Poland, R

lly rejected. President Wilson became their spokesman in a note he addressed to the Pontiff on August 27, 1917. While recognizing the Pope's "moving appeal" and the "dignity and force of the humane motives wh

by an irresponsible Government, which, having secretly planned to dominate the world, proceeded to carry the plan out without regard either to the sacred obligations of treaty or the long-established practices and long-cherished principles of international action and honor; which chose its own time for the war; deliver

how that great people came under its control or submitted with temporary zest to the domination of its purpose;

ould make it necessary to create a permanent hostile combination of nations against the German people, who are its instruments; and would result in abandoning the newborn Russia to the intrig

of the German people themselves as the other peoples of the world would be justified in accepting. Without such guaranties treaties of settlement, agreements for disarmament, covenan

e of the purposes of the great

t might flow from them. There was no responsible person to negotiate with. The Vatican was disappointed, the German press greeted the President's answer with

The Austrian emperor favored disarmament and arbitration in a cloud of platitudes. The kaiser accepted the Pope's general aims, but was mute on particularizing the German aims. Both suppressed whatever terms of peace they longed to offer. Sifted down to essentials, and extricating their meaning from a welter of unctuous verbiage, the Teutonic answers merely conveyed an eager desire to reach a peace conference, withholding terms fo

promise she would expect Great Britain faithfully to fulfill; and a promise of the nations to arbitrate in future-a promise Germany would ignore if conditions favored a new war. She saw "the freedom of the seas"

n Secretary, who had also been Viceroy of India and Governor General of Canada. Fearing that the prolongation of the war might lead to "the ruin

Government, Bonar Law and Lord Robert Cecil declared that Lord Lansdowne only spoke his own views. The Government repudiated them, as did the Unionist party. Lord Lansdowne himself was obliged to acknowledge that his proposals were solely his own and that he consulted no one in formulating them. It was realized that

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Contents

Chapter 1 THE FRANCO-BRITISH FORCES VICTORIOUS AT YPRES-GERMANS LOSE GROUND AT LENS Chapter 2 THE FRENCH BREAK THE GERMAN LINES AT VERDUN-CANADIANS GAIN AT LENS Chapter 3 LENS IN RUINS-BRITISH ADVANCE NEAR YPRES Chapter 4 HAIG STRIKES AGAIN AT YPRES-THE FRENCH BREAK THE GERMAN LINES ON THE AISNE Chapter 5 GERMAN RETREAT FROM CHEMIN-DES-DAMES-THE BRITISH ADVANCE TOWARD CAMBRAI Chapter 6 GERMANS GAIN IN THE CAMBRAI AREA-COLD WEATHER HALTS IMPORTANT OPERATIONS Chapter 7 THE NEW ALLY IN COUNCIL Chapter 8 ON THE LORRAINE FRONT Chapter 9 POPE AND PRESIDENT Chapter 10 AMERICA'S WAR AIMS Chapter 11 MOVING THE MILITARY MACHINE
Chapter 12 FLEETS IN THE MAKING
Chapter 13 FOOD AS A WAR FACTOR
Chapter 14 TRANSPORTATION AND FUEL
Chapter 15 THE LAST DAYS OF KERENSKY
Chapter 16 THE BOLSHEVIST REVOLUTION
Chapter 17 THE SIEGE OF THE WINTER PALACE
Chapter 18 THE BOLSHEVIKI AND THEIR LEADERS
Chapter 19 FIRST BOLSHEVIKI PEACE MOVE
Chapter 20 THE PEACE PARLEYS BEGIN
Chapter 21 PUBLICATION OF SECRET TREATIES
Chapter 22 THE PEACE NEGOTIATIONS
Chapter 23 AN ATTEMPTED COUNTER-REVOLUTION
Chapter 24 LEGISLATION BY DECREES
Chapter 25 THE CAPTURE OF MONTE SANTO
Chapter 26 THE STRUGGLE ON THE ISONZO FRONT
Chapter 27 THE AUSTRO-GERMAN OFFENSIVE IN ITALY
Chapter 28 THE ITALIANS AT BAY ON THE PIAVE
Chapter 29 THE PALESTINE CAMPAIGN
Chapter 30 THE FALL OF JERUSALEM
Chapter 31 PALESTINE-ARABIA-MESOPOTAMIA
Chapter 32 THE BALKANS-GREECE AND MACEDONIA
Chapter 33 RUMANIA
Chapter 34 ON THE SEA
Chapter 35 THE WAR IN THE AIR
Chapter 36 PREPARING FOR THE GREAT OFFENSIVE-THE ATTACK MARCH 21-FIRST PHASE OF THE BATTLE
Chapter 37 THE SECOND PHASE OF THE GREAT GERMAN OFFENSIVE
Chapter 38 THE GERMAN OFFENSIVE RENEWED-YPRES THREATENED-THE ALLIES' HEAVY LOSSES
Chapter 39 DAYS FOR THE ALLIES-THE GERMAN OFFENSIVE DECLINES-FRENCH GAIN IN THE RHEIMS REGION-BRITISH VICTORY AT HAMEL
Chapter 40 THE NEW GERMAN DRIVE AROUND RHEIMS-THE NEW BATTLE OF THE MARNE-THE ALLIES LAUNCH A GREAT OFFENSIVE MOVEMENT
Chapter 41 FORCE TO THE UTMOST
Chapter 42 THE AMERICAN LEGIONS
Chapter 43 RAIDING THE NEW FOE
Chapter 44 AMERICA OVER THE TOP
Chapter 45 AT SEICHEPREY AND XIVRAY
Chapter 46 ON THE CHEMIN-DES-DAMES
Chapter 47 BEFORE AMIENS
Chapter 48 CANTIGNY
Chapter 49 AROUND CHTEAU-THIERRY
Chapter 50 A DRIVE BY THE MARINES
Chapter 51 BELLEAU WOOD
Chapter 52 THEIR PRESENCE FELT
Chapter 53 VAUX AND HAMEL
Chapter 54 ACROSS THE MARNE AND BACK
Chapter 55 FORWARD WITH FOCH
Chapter 56 FIGHTING THROUGH FORESTS
Chapter 57 SERGY AND SERINGES
Chapter 58 THE PEACE WITHOUT TREATY
Chapter 59 THE GERMANS RENEW HOSTILITIES WITH RUSSIA
Chapter 60 THE PEACE TREATY THAT WAS SIGNED
Chapter 61 CONTINUED GERMAN AGGRESSION
Chapter 62 JAPANESE TAKE ACTION IN THE EAST
Chapter 63 GERMAN POLICY OF AGGRESSION
Chapter 64 GERMANY'S APPEAL TO CLASS HATREDS
Chapter 65 ASSASSINATION OF THE GERMAN AMBASSADOR
Chapter 66 THE MARCH OF THE CZECHO-SLOVAKS THROUGH SIBERIA
Chapter 67 EXECUTION OF EX-CZAR NICHOLAS
Chapter 68 ITALY REVIVES
Chapter 69 NAVAL WARFARE
Chapter 70 BOMBING AND RECONNOISSANCE
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