This lesson contains 40 slides, with text slides and 3 videos.
The Balkans
Germany had made an alliance with Austria-Hungary; though a powerful empire, it had internal problems. It was a large, multi-ethnic state and many peoples wanted to have their own nation state. But the Austrian-Hungarian emperor wanted to increase his influence in the Balkan area. He claimed Bosnia, which made the Serbian population very angry. The nationalists of Serbia dreamed of uniting Bosnia and Serbia together into a big Serbian sovereign state. They already had Russia as their ally. Because of all the tension, the Balkan area was called ‘the powder keg of Europe’. It is not so strange that the direct cause of World War I came from here.
The Schlieffen Plan
German general von Schlieffen knew that his country would face a hard time fighting a two-front war with France and Russia. Because of this, he devised a strategy. According to his plan, the Germans started to built up railways from the Western border towards the Eastern. In case of war he would send his troops to France first, because he expected that the Russians would need weeks, maybe months to prepare their army for war. He predicted that he could defeat the French within a few weeks, because he would surprise them. The German army would evade the strongly defended French-German border by passing through Belgium. He predicted that the Belgians would let the German army pass through so it could invade northern France and head straight for Paris. He also expected that the French would surrender after their capital was lost. The German soldiers would then be put on trains towards the Eastern Front to fight the Russians. The strategy was named after the general and became known as the Schlieffen Plan.