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Title: What Germany Thinks The War as Germans see it 
Author: Thomas F. A. Smith 
Release Date: November 21, 2003 [EBook #10166] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
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GERMANY THINKS *** 
 
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WHAT GERMANY THINKS 
OR THE WAR AS GERMANS SEE IT
By Thomas F.A. Smith, Ph.D. 
Late English Lecturer in the University of Erlangen 
Author of "The Soul of Germany: A Twelve Years' Study of the People 
from Within, 1902-1914" 
1915 
CONTENTS 
CHAPTER 
I 
--THE CAUSES OF THE WAR 
II--ON THE LEASH 
III--THE DOGS LET LOOSE 
IV--MOBILIZATION 
V--WARS AND RUMOURS OF WARS 
VI--THE DÉBÂCLE OF THE SOCIAL DEMOCRATS 
VII--"NECESSITY KNOWS NO LAW" 
VIII--ATROCITIES 
IX--THE NEUTRALITY OF BELGIUM AND GERMANY'S 
ANNEXATION PROPAGANDA 
X--SAIGNER À BLANC 
XI--THE INTELLECTUALS AND THE WAR 
XII--THE LITERATURE OF HATE
XIII--"MAN TO MAN AND STEEL TO STEEL" 
INDEX 
WHAT GERMANY THINKS 
CHAPTER I 
THE CAUSES OF THE WAR 
In many quarters of the world, especially in certain sections of the 
British public, people believed that the German nation was led blindly 
into the World War by an unscrupulous military clique. Now, however, 
there is ample evidence to prove that the entire nation was thoroughly 
well informed of the course which events were taking, and also warned 
as to the catastrophe to which the national course was certainly leading. 
Even to-day, after more than twelve months of devastating warfare, 
there is no unity of opinion in Germany as to who caused the war. 
Some writers accuse France, others England, while many lay the guilt 
at Russia's door. They are only unanimous in charging one or other, or 
all the powers, of the Triple Entente. We shall see that every power 
now at war, with the exception of Germany and Italy, has been held 
responsible for Armageddon, but apparently it has not yet occurred to 
Germans that the bearer of guilt for this year's bloodshed--is Germany 
alone! 
It is true that the conflict between Austria and Serbia forms the starting 
point. Whether or not Serbia was seriously in the wrong is a matter of 
opinion, but it is generally held that Austria dealt with her neighbour 
with too much heat and too little discretion. Austria kindled the flames 
of war, but it was Germany's mission to seize a blazing torch and set 
Europe alight. 
When the text of Austria's ultimatum became known, a very serious 
mood came over Germany. There was not a man who did not realize 
that a great European War loomed on the horizon. A well-organized, 
healthy public opinion could at that period have brought the
governments of the Germanic Powers to recognize their responsibility. 
Had the German Press been unanimous, it might have stopped the 
avalanche. But there were two currents of opinion, the one approving, 
the other condemning Austria for having thrown down the gauntlet to 
Serbia and above all to Russia. 
One paper exulted over the statement that every sentence in Austria's 
ultimatum "was a whip-lash across Serbia's face;" a phrase expressing 
so aptly the great mass of popular opinion. This expression met with 
unstinted approval, for it corresponded with German ideals and 
standards in dealing with an opponent. Yet there was no lack of 
warnings, and very grave ones too. A glance at German newspapers 
will suffice to prove this statement. 
On July 24th, 1914, Krupp's organ, the _Rheinisch-Westfälische 
Zeitung_, contained the following: "The Austro-Hungarian ultimatum 
is nothing but a pretext for war, but this time a dangerous one. It seems 
that we are standing on the verge of an Austro-Serbian war. It is 
possible, very possible, that we shall have to extinguish East-European 
conflagrations with our arms, either because of our treaties or from the 
compulsion of events. But it is a scandal if the Imperial Government 
(Berlin) has not required that such a final offer should be submitted to 
it for approval before its presentation to Serbia. To-day nothing 
remains for us but to declare: 'We are not bound by any alliance to 
support wars let loose by the Hapsburg policy of conquest.'" 
The Post wrote on the same date: "Is that a note? No! it is an ultimatum 
of the sharpest kind. Within twenty-four hours Austria demands an 
answer. A reply? No! but an absolute submission, the utter and 
complete humiliation of Serbia. On former occasions    
    
		
	
	
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