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How far is it correct to say that the First World War was fought essentially for the preservation of balance of power?

While the preservation of the balance of power was a significant factor for the First World War (1914-1918), the war’s causes were complex and multi-dimensional.

Arguments Supporting Balance of Power as the Cause

Alliance System

Europe was divided into two rival alliance blocs – Triple Alliance (Germany, Austria-Hungary, Italy) and Triple Entente (France, Russia, Britain).

These alliances were designed to maintain equilibrium, but ultimately drew all major powers into a local conflict.

German Challenge to British Hegemony

Germany’s rapid industrialisation and naval expansion (Tirpitz Plan) directly challenged British naval supremacy.

The Anglo-German naval race (Dreadnought competition) was a classic balance of power struggle.

British Shift from Splendid Isolation – Britain abandoned isolation to prevent German continental dominance. Eg- Entente Cordiale (1904).

Franco-Russian Alliance – France allied Russia to strategically contain rising German influence.

Austrian-Russian Rivalry in the Balkans

Both powers sought to fill the vacuum left by the declining Ottoman Empire.

Austria-Hungary’s annexation of Bosnia (1908) and Russia’s Pan-Slavist support for Serbia threatened the balance in Southeast Europe.

French Revanchism – France sought to recover Alsace-Lorraine lost to Germany in 1871 and restore European balance by containing German power.

Arguments Against – Other Significant Causes

Imperialism and Colonial Rivalries – Competition for colonies in Africa and Asia created tensions. Eg- Moroccan Crises (1905, 1911) between France and Germany.

Nationalism

Pan-Slavism, Pan-Germanism, and irredentist movements created explosive pressures.

Eg- Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand by a Serbian nationalist triggered the war

Militarism

Arms race and glorification of military power created a culture of war readiness.

Schlieffen Plan (Germany) and Plan XVII (France) assumed war was inevitable and planned for quick victory.

Economic Rivalries – Competition for markets, raw materials, and trade routes between industrial powers. Eg- Berlin-Baghdad Railway threatened British interests in the Middle East.

Failure of Diplomacy – Absence of effective international mechanisms for conflict resolution (no UN or League of Nations yet).

Secret Diplomacy – Confidential treaties created mistrust and rigid alliance commitments across Europe.

Press and Propaganda – Nationalist media inflamed public opinion and war hysteria.

The First World War demonstrated that the balance of power system, without mechanisms for peaceful resolution of disputes, is inherently unstable – a lesson that led to the creation of the League of Nations and later the United Nations.

Geography

Climatology