On this day in 1917, President
Woodrow Wilson speaks for
two hours before a historic session of Congress to announce that the United States is breaking
diplomatic relations with Germany.
Due to the reintroduction of
the German navy's policy of unlimited submarine warfare, announced two days
earlier by Chancellor Theobald von Bethmann Hollwegg, Wilson announced that his
government had no choice but to cut all diplomatic ties with Germany in order to
uphold the honor and dignity of the United States. Though he maintained that We
do not desire any hostile conflict with the German government, Wilson
nevertheless cautioned that war would follow if Germany followed through on its
threat to sink American ships without warning.
Later that day, Count von
Bernstorff, the German ambassador to the U.S., received a note written by
Secretary of State Robert Lansing stating that The President hasdirected me to
announce to your Excellency that all diplomatic relations between the United
States and the German empire are severed, and that the American Ambassador at
Berlin will be immediately withdrawn, and in accordance with such announcement
to deliver to your Excellency your passports. Bernstorff was guaranteed safe
passage out of the country, but was ordered to leave Washington immediately.
Also in the wake of Wilson's speech, all German cruisers docked in the United
States were seized and the government formally demanded that all American
prisoners being held in Germany be released at once.
On the same day, a German
U-boat sunk the American cargo ship Housatonic off the Scilly Islands,
just southwest of Britain. A British ship rescued the ship's crew, but its
entire cargo of grain was lost.
In Berlin that night, before
learning of the president's speech, German Foreign Secretary Arthur Zimmermann
told U.S. Ambassador James J. Gerard that Everything will be alright. America
will do nothing, for President Wilson is for peace and nothing else. Everything
will go on as before. He was proved wrong the following morning, as news
arrived of the break in relations between America and Germany, a decisive step
towards U.S. entry into the First World War.
Taken from: http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/us-breaks-diplomatic-relations-with-germany
[03.02.2015]
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