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The Morocco crisis of 1911 arose out of the dispatch of the German
gunboat Panther to Agadir on July 1. The ostensible ground for this action
was the request of German firms in Agadir for protection in the disordered
state of the country. But inasmuch as there were no German subjects at
Agadir and the port was not open to Europeans, it was clear that the real
motive was a desire to re-open the whole question. The German Government
resented the complete failure of the convention of 1899, and determined
now, by a show of force, to prevent a further French penetration unless
France would negotiate for a final settlement of the problem.
THE GERMAN PURPOSE.
It is highly probable that Germany hoped to break up the Triple Entente.
It is also probable that at the beginning of the affair Germany expected
to obtain part of Morocco for itself, counting upon the known military
weakness of France and the confusion in England produced by the struggle
over the House of Lords to prevent serious opposition.
FIRST STAGE OF NEGOTIATIONS.
The absolute reserve of Sir Edward Grey and his insistence that Great
Britain must be consulted in any arrangements concerning Morocco; the
attitude of Mr. Balfour, who declared that the opposition would support
the Government in its policy; the rally of all shades of French opinion;
these circumstances, and perhaps also some pressure from Russia, apparently
caused the German Government to reconsider. At any rate, as early as July
7, the German ambassador in Paris informed the French Government that
Germany cherished no territorial aspirations in Morocco and would negotiate
for a French protectorate on the basis of "compensation" for
Germany in the French Congo region and the safeguarding of her economic
interests in Morocco. Thus the first stage of the negotiations was safely
passed. But stormy times were still ahead.
GERMAN DEMANDS.
The German terms, as presented on July 15, while containing an offer to
cede the northern part of the Cameroons and Togoland, demanded from France
the whole of the French Congo from the River Sangha to the sea to which
was later added the transfer of France's right to the preemption of the
Belgian Congo. The Germans also showed every disposition to limit the
scope of the French protectorate and to seek for themselves special economic
privileges, in the spirit of the convention of 1909. So great a price
France was not prepared to pay, and she refused the German demand. The
danger lay in a continued French refusal and a continued German insistence.
The dispute would then be thrown back on Morocco.
ENGLISH ACTION: THE MANSION HOUSE SPEECH.
It was to obviate this danger that Great Britain now intervened; she was
pledged to support the policy of France in Morocco and would do so to
the very end; on the other hand, she would not interfere in, and would
heartily support, any reasonable accommodation between France and Germany,
that is, any settlement in Africa which France, acting as a free agent,
was disposed to make. As the German Government had so far made no statement
of its policy to the British Government, Mr. Lloyd George, at the request
of Sir Edward Grey, delivered on July 21 his famous Mansion House speech,
in which he declared that national honor was more precious than peace;
a speech everywhere construed, especially in view of the orator's pacifist
leanings, as a definite warning to Germany that she could not impose an
unreasonable settlement on France. A difficult week followed, in which
certain British naval preparations were made, while the foreign secretary
and the German ambassadors were holding exceedingly stiff conversations.
But the speech had done its work. The Wilhelmstrasse, impressed also,
perhaps, by panicky conditions on the Berlin Bourse, became conciliatory,
giving assurance that designs on Morocco formed no part of its program,
and reaching an agreement with France, in principle, as to the future
settlement.
SECOND STAGE OF NEGOTIATIONS
In spite of all this, little progress was achieved. It was officially
admitted that the situation was " grave and on August 18 the negotiations
were broken off, the German Government taking advantage of a railway strike
in England to revive certain pretensions with respect to Morocco. After
a long consultation with his Government, the French ambassador in Berlin
on September 4 resumed his conversations with the German foreign office.
On the 9th there was a great crash on the Berlin Bourse, also renewed
rumors of military and naval preparations on both sides. But in the end
good sense prevailed. On October 4 the two negotiators initialed a convention
which gave France a protectorate de facto in Morocco, although the term
was not used; in return she pledged herself most explicitly to observe
the principle of the open door.
CONVENTIONS OF NOVEMBER 4, 1911.
The French Government was now willing to discuss the compensation to be
awarded Germany in the Congo. On November 2 it was agreed that Germany
should receive two prongs of French territory which would bring the Cameroons
in touch with the Congo and Ubangi Rivers at Bonga and Mongumba, respectively,
while Germany surrendered the Duck's Beak in the Lake Chad region. The
only difficulty arose over the German demand that France transfer to Germany
her right of preemption to the Belgian Congo; but with the assistance
of the Russian Government a formula was found by which any change in the
status of the Congo was reserved to the decision of the powers signatory
of the Berlin African act of 1885. On November 4, 1911, the Morocco and
Congo conventions were signed in Berlin, a letter from the German foreign
secretary to the French ambassador being annexed, in which Herr von Kinderlen-Waechter
recognized the right of France to erect her protectorate in Morocco.
The settlement was a great triumph for France, secured by the manifestations
of national solidarity at home and the diplomatic assistance of Great
Britain. Many Frenchmen regretted the cession of French territory, but
Morocco was certainly far more valuable than the Congo, and above all
the Republic had scored a distinct victory over the mighty Empire which
had defeated it in 1870-1871. In Germany there was a corresponding discontent,
which manifested itself in bitter, criticisms of the Imperial Government's
diplomacy and in violent outbursts of hatred for Great Britain, whose
intervention was believed to have spoiled the German game. It is also
to be observed that the land which Germany received was valuable chiefly
as the entering wedge for further penetration of the Belgian Congo. Such
designs had long been suspected, and they were proved by a conversation
between the French ambassador in Berlin and the German foreign minister,
Herr von Jagow, in the spring of 1914, in which the latter declared that
Belgium was not in a position to develop, the Congo adequately and ought
"to give it up". If, as has been recently stated by so eminent
a personage as Herr August Thyssen, the German Emperor and his general
staff in the year 1912 decided upon a world war, it is most probable that
the reverse sustained in this diplomatic bout with France and Great Britain
was a decisive factor, for it had been brought home to the war lords of
Berlin that diplomatically the Triple Entente was stronger than the Triple
Alliance. It must also have been clear to them that the sympathy of the
world had been with France in the controversy of 1911.
Source:
Anderson, Frank Maloy and Amos Shartle Hershey, Handbook for the Diplomatic
History of Europe, Asia, and Africa 1870-1914.
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