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... The Germans had hoped to negotiate a peace treaty on the basis of President Wilsons fourteen points. ... Free navigation at sea for all nations in war and peace
3. ... A general association of nations(League of nations) to preserve peace
There was general agreement that independent nation states should be created in central and southeastern Europe, and Turkey should be restricted to her ethnic frontiers (points 10-13). ... They went to Britain and France though technically the administration was given to the League of Nations rather than colonial annexations. ... He wanted a more harsh peace so that Germans will be ruin economically and militarily, and French frontiers would never again be threatened. ...
On January 1919 the peace conference in Paris opened with Clemenceau as the president of the conference. The conference handled first with the foundation of the League of Nations and the peace treaties. ... The treaty was prepared during the Paris peace conference by the national leaders, David Lloyd George of Britain, Georges Clemenceau of France, Woodrow Wilson of the U. ... West Prussia and Posen were given to Poland, Danzig and Saarland went under the control of the League of Nations until 1935. Germany’s Colonies in China, the Pacific and in Africa went to Britain, France, Japan and other Allied nations. ...
The League of Nations:
The League of Nations was founded in 1920 by the necessity for a world peace and world order. ... The Covenant or rules of the League formed part of each of the Peace Treaties. ... It was necessary for open diplomacy and the abolition of the secret treaties that consisted, so that there would be peaceful relations between the countries. President Wilson presented his idea of the fourteen points, at the peace conference in Paris.
The first meeting of the League of Nations was in 1920. Nineteen years later, in 1939, the League had its last meeting. That betrays the fact that the League was not successful. The causation was it failed to prevent aggression and preserve peace. ... Another reason was the fact that the United States were left out from joining, the suspicions for the League reflected general isolation. ... He made a proposal to the twenty seven European members of the League for a federal union. He proposed a pact establishing a European conference within the League Conference within the League of Nations with a permanent political committee and a small secretariat, putting politics before economics in this European community. Many members expressed fears for the integrity of the League. ... and Turkey to the League of Nations. ...
The League of Nations was most effective technical and economic sphere.
Approximate Word count = 2172 Approximate Pages = 8.7 (250 words per page double spaced)
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