“The proposal of the Polish Commission that we should place 2,100,000 Germans under the control of a people . . . which has never proved its capacity for stable self-government throughout history must, in my judgment, lead sooner or later to a new war in the East of Europe. . . . I would therefore take as a guiding principle of the peace that as far as is humanly possible the different races should be allocated to their motherlands, and that this human criterion should have precedence over considerations of strategy or economics or communications which can usually be adjusted by other means.”
- British Prime Minister Lloyd George
Count Mihaly Karolyi, the moderate president of what was left of Hungary, questioned Allen Dulles’s friend Hugh Gibson, who reported the bitter remarks to the young coordinator of U.S. intelligence: ‘Why do you go on pretending you are fighting for the rights of small peoples? Why not say frankly, ‘We have won and shall now do with you exactly as we please.
Several threads seem to run through this book that tie together all of the misguided and reckless attempts at partitioning countries with an eye toward the interests of only four countries (America, France, The U.K., and to a lesser extent Italy) in complete disregard to any semblance of history or forethought to their futures.
There is the visage of Woodrow Wilson arriving in Paris with his “Fourteen Points” about autonomy and freedom for small nations but quickly retreating whenever France, Italy, or the U.K. pushed back on any of them, in exchange for support of his beloved League of Nations.
Essentially, Wilson sacrificed everything he promised to the oppressed people of the world for an institution that was dead on arrival. It’s a fitting metaphor for the ego and hubris most leaders brought to Paris with them.
There was also the creating of Israel out of what was Palestine. Which on the surface seems like a good idea providing that the Palestinians would quietly acquiesce to being forcibly removed from their land. As the last one hundred years have shown us however, it was the most dangerous kind of wishful thinking,
This same obliviousness to reality was also seen in how the major powers cut the Middle East into countries where religious minorities were almost certain to be persecuted by religious majorities, ignoring hostilities between religious sects that stretched over centuries. Something that even the greenest diplomat then or now should have realized. Sadly this is something that we have yet to learn even today, even after one hundred years and counting of bloody wars and seemingly endless conflict.
These massive miscalculations by European men with pens, literally crawling on their knees over maps of Europe and the Middle East to shape the world in their own immediate and selfish interests, can almost be forgiven for ignoring the importance of other regions that weren’t immediately relevant to the problem of Germany. Germany (and Austria-Hungary) after all had in the eyes of many not only been the instigator of the war but a threat to soon rearm and create conflict on the continent again.
And yet these “great” men failed miserably here as well, demanding Germany pay exorbitantly punitive reparations that they would have no chance of ever keeping up with, as well as carving up the country and creating new and culturally unsustainable borders around it. The newly created Czechoslovakia for example was ethnically only 51% Czech, 22% German, and a volatile mix of other ethnicities who linguistically, culturally, and historically had no ties to the Czechs.
It was a staggeringly bad decision that almost immediately saw this German population in open rebellion and seeking to reunite with Germany. Something that a frustrated little Austrian housepainter would recognize and barely twenty years later use as a springboard to one of the bloodiest wars the world has ever seen.
Reading these stories and others, I could only shake my head at the tragedy of not one or two bad but isolated decisions (Allen Dulles in Switzerland receiving a phone call from Vladimir Lenin in Switzerland just before he was smuggled out of the country and lost to the West, but choosing to play tennis with a lady friend instead of taking the call. A young busboy who would later be known as Ho Chi Minh walking around Paris trying to talk to the French, Americans, or anyone who will listen about freedom for his people but being ignored, are but two ridiculous but sad examples) but rather decisions so full of hubris and and staggering incompetence that they would continue to reverberate well into the 21st century.
It was a moment where the world truly could have, with humility and an eye to the future instead of a shortsighted view of immediate political and economic interests, began to craft a lasting global peace. More is the pity that this chance was squandered so completely, with such disastrous and lasting consequences.