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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
An 8 page paper that provides an overview of the foreign policies of France as they impacted European politics as a whole. This paper focuses on the period between 1890-1914, just prior to the onset of World War I. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_Francep.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
(Palmer and Colton 660). At the same time, increasing military readiness appeared to hint as a precursor to war, and though none of the participatory countries, including France, England,
and Germany appeared to desire war. As a result of this focus, the foreign policies determinants of the dominant European countries has significant impact on the international environment
and led to the development of interactions that set the international political scene for World War I. Policies during this time focused on issues of nationalism, the continued prevalence
of French expansionism, and the tenuous relationships between France, Britain and Germany. Political, economic and industrial international policy determinations made by France impacted the process that led to the
First World War (Palmer and Colton 661). French colonial expansion in the late 19th century appeared to be directing the actions of the country as a whole, and the
belief that France would divert its attention form Europe to both Great Britain and to the extended colonizes underscored French exclusion from major political dominance in Europe around 1870 (Palmer
and Colton 661). But Bismarck, recognizing that France could still pose a significant threat against German stability, forged the military alliance between Germany, Austria-Hungary and Italy that was called
the Triple Alliance (Palmer and Colton 662). France, recognizing the possibility of a military threat from the Alliance, reacted by initiating a union between the French Republic and Russia,
and the Franco-Russian Alliance of 1894 was born (Palmer and Colton 662). The alliance between Russia and France appeared tenuous at best, and political perspectives related a fear of the
efficacy of the union, and the repercussions for European interactions as a whole. While the French Republic embraced a seemingly radical ideology, the Russian Empire stood for everything that
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