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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page discussion of how the Treaty of Versailles, enacted after World War 1 was, in actuality, an assurance of an outbreak of another world war. The author discusses the terms of the treaty and the fact that it was drafted by the victors not the losers. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPversa2.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Many scholars have contended that World War I did not achieve what it was
intended to achieve. That war did not make the world safe for democracy as President Woodrow Wilson had contended it would do nor was it the war to end
all wars. In addition World War I had a number of other societal retributions which extended well beyond the end of the war itself. The world was left
tremendously unstable, an instability which reflected itself domestically as well as politically. One of the primary factors in that instability was the Versallies Treaty. Signed on June 28,
1919, the Treaty of Versailles comprised an agreement between Germany and the allied countries who had participated in World War I. The agreement was far from perfect, however, and
in effect served to insure that another world war would soon erupt. The first flaw that was apparent in the Versailles Treaty was
the fact that not all of the countries it affected participated in the formulation of the treaty. Russia, for example, declined participation and Germany was prohibited from participating because
she was the defeated power. Instead, the so-called "big four", the United States, France, England, and Italy dominated the negotiations leading up to the Treaty. Watt (2001) notes
that the primary victors of the war drafted the treaty, and that even the original Council of Ten (two representatives each from France, Italy, Japan, Great Britain, and the United
States): "was gradually whittled down to a Council of Four and then, for a time,
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