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قراءة كتاب The Inside Story of the Peace Conference
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The Inside Story of The Peace Conference
by
Dr. E.J. Dillon
HARPER & BROTHERS PUBLISHERS
NEW YORK AND LONDON
Copyright 1920, by Harper & Brothers
Printed in the United States of America
Published February, 1920
To
C.W. BARRON
in memory of interesting conversations
on historic occasions
These pages are inscribed.
CONTENTS
- FOREWORD
- CHAPTER I THE CITY OF THE CONFERENCE
- CHAPTER II SIGNS OF THE TIMES
- CHAPTER III THE DELEGATES
- CHAPTER IV CENSORSHIP AND SECRECY
- CHAPTER V AIMS AND METHODS
- CHAPTER VI THE LESSER STATES
- CHAPTER VII POLAND'S OUTLOOK IN THE FUTURE
- CHAPTER VIII ITALY
- CHAPTER IX JAPAN
- CHAPTER X ATTITUDE TOWARD RUSSIA
- CHAPTER XI BOLSHEVISM
- CHAPTER XII HOW BOLSHEVISM WAS FOSTERED
- CHAPTER XIII SIDELIGHTS ON THE TREATY
- CHAPTER XIV THE TREATY WITH GERMANY
- CHAPTER XV THE TREATY WITH BULGARIA
- CHAPTER XVI THE COVENANT AND MINORITIES
FOREWORD
It is almost superfluous to say that this book does not claim to be a history, however summary, of the Peace Conference, seeing that such a work was made sheer impossible now and forever by the chief delegates themselves when they decided to dispense with records of their conversations and debates. It is only a sketch—a sketch of the problems which the war created or rendered pressing—of the conditions under which they cropped up; of the simplicist ways in which they were conceived by the distinguished politicians who volunteered to solve them; of the delegates' natural limitations and electioneering commitments and of the secret influences by which they were swayed; of the peoples' needs and expectations; of the unwonted procedure adopted by the Conference and of the fateful consequences of its decisions to the world.
In dealing with all those matters I aimed at impartiality, which is an unattainable ideal, but I trust that sincerity and detachment have brought me reasonably close to it. Having no pet theories of my own to champion, my principal standard of judgment is derived from the law of causality and the rules of historical criticism.
The fatal tactical mistake chargeable to the Conference lay in its making the charter of the League of Nations and the treaty of peace with the Central Powers interdependent. For the maxims that underlie the former are irreconcilable with those that should determine the latter, and the efforts to combine them must, among other untoward results, create a sharp opposition between the vital interests of the people of the United States and the apparent or transient interests of their associates. The outcome of this unnatural union will be to damage the cause of stable peace which it was devised to further.
But the surest touchstone by which to test the capacity and the achievements of the world-legislators is their attitude toward Russia in the political domain and toward the labor problem in the economic sphere. And in neither case does their action or inaction appear to have been the outcome of statesman-like ideas, or, indeed, of any higher consideration than that of evading the central issue and transmitting the problem to the League of Nations. The results are manifest to all.
The continuity of human progress depends at bottom upon labor, and it is becoming more and more doubtful whether the civilized races of mankind can be reckoned on to supply it for long on conditions akin to those which have in various forms prevailed ever since the institutions of ancient times and which alone render the present social structure viable. If this forecast should prove correct, the only alternative to a break disastrous in the continuity of civilization is the frank recognition of the principle that certain inferior races are destined to serve the cause of mankind in those capacities for which alone they are qualified and to readjust social institutions to this axiom.
In the meanwhile the Conference which ignored this problem of problems has transformed Europe into a seething mass of mutually hostile states powerless to face the economic competition of their overseas rivals and has set the very elements of society in flux.
E.J. DILLON.
THE INSIDE STORY OF THE PEACE CONFERENCE
I
THE CITY OF THE CONFERENCE
The choice of Paris for the historic Peace Conference was an afterthought. The Anglo-Saxon governments first favored a neutral country as the most appropriate meeting-ground for the world's peace-makers. Holland was mentioned only to be eliminated without discussion, so obvious and decisive were the objections. French Switzerland came next in order, was actually fixed upon, and for a time held the field. Lausanne was the city first suggested and nearly chosen. There was a good deal to be said for it on its own merits, and in its suburb, Ouchy, the treaty had been drawn up which


