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  • Key players in WWI: the politicians

    Agence France Presse
    February 7, 2014 Friday 3:26 AM GMT


    Key players in WWI: the politicians

    PARIS, Feb 07 2014

    Here are pen profiles of the key political figures in World War I.

    Britain

    - David Lloyd George (1853-1945): A pacifist finance minister, George
    rallied behind the war effort first as minister of munitions in 1915,
    becoming war minister then prime minister the following year. He is
    credited with creating the civil infrastructure to support the war,
    and for unifying the Allied military command in 1917. He was a key
    figure at the Paris Peace Conference of 1919.

    - Horatio Herbert Kitchener (1850-1916): Became British war minister
    in 1914. Known as an effective organiser, Kitchener managed to quickly
    raise a massive volunteer army, building the force from 170,000 to 1.3
    million by 1915. He was killed a year later when the ship he was on
    struck a mine off the coast of Scotland.

    - Winston Churchill (1874-1965): At the forefront of British politics
    for 50 years, and a resolute and much admired leader during and after
    World War II, Churchill was made First Lord of the Admiralty in 1911.

    In late 1914 he realised that no breakthrough was in the offing on the
    Western Front, and tried to advance against Turkish troops in the
    Dardanelles in February 1915. The Gallipoli Campaign ended in disaster
    and he was forced to resign.

    Churchill served for a time on the Western Front before returning to
    Britain where he was minister of munitions, then war secretary between
    1917 and 1922.

    France

    - Raymond Poincare (1860-1934): A conservative French prime minister
    and president noted for strong anti-German positions, he advocated
    moving further into Germany before signing the Armistice. Said to be
    cold and unimaginative, he came from the Lorraine region claimed by
    both France and Germany. His 1914 call for a "Sacred Union" of
    political figures struck a deep chord, and he was a highly respected
    figure after the war.

    - Georges Clemenceau (1841-1929): One of those who did not answer the
    call for a "Sacred Union" in support of the war, Clemenceau was much
    disliked by Poincare, who was nonetheless forced to appoint him prime
    minister in 1917. Nicknamed "The Tiger", Clemenceau had strong popular
    backing owing in part to his front-line visits. He was one of the main
    architects of the Versaillles Treaty in 1919.

    Germany

    - Kaiser Wilhelm II (1859-1941): Last king of Prussia and German
    emperor who led his country to war in 1914. The grandson of Britain's
    Queen Victoria, Wilhelm ascended to the German throne in 1888 and
    forced the resignation of chancellor Otto von Bismarck.

    With support from conservative factions, Wilhelm put Germany on an
    expansionist, colonialist path. He broke traditional alliances with
    Russia and drew closer to Austria-Hungary and Italy. He was obliged to
    abdicate on November 9, 1918, and went into exile in The Netherlands.

    Austria-Hungary

    - Franz Joseph (1830-1916): The emperor of Austria and king of
    Hungary, he launched hostilities in World War I by declaring war on
    Serbia on July 28, 1914, a month after the assassination of his nephew
    and heir Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo. A member of the Habsburg family
    and widower of the famous Empress Sisi, he was the senior European
    sovereign in 1914. He ascended to the Austrian throne after the 1848
    revolution and ruled as an absolute monarch before being forced to
    adopt a more liberal policy. He died during the war, in November 1916.

    - Charles I (1887-1922): The last of the Habsburg emperors, Charles I
    became heir to the throne of the Austro-Hungarian empire on June 28,
    1914, following the assassination of his uncle Franz Ferdinand. He was
    made emperor in November 1916 and crowned apostolic king of Hungary a
    month later.

    He was beatified by Pope John Paul II in 2004 for his commitment to
    peace, but this caused controversy in Austria, where Charles I is
    remembered for authorising the use of mustard gas during World War I.

    - Archduke Franz Ferdinand (1863-1914), heir to the Austro-Hungarian
    throne whose assassination is considered the spark that ignited World
    War I. He was a Slavophile who favoured a federation to replace the
    Austro-Hungarian Empire. He was murdered with his wife Sophie in
    Sarajevo on June 28, 1914, by a Serbian nationalist.

    United States

    - Thomas Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924): US president who negotiated the
    Versailles Treaty ending World War I based on his "Fourteen Points"
    and creating the League of Nations. He was however unable to get the
    US Senate to ratify membership. Wilson initially tried to keep the
    United States out of the war but changed his mind when a German U-boat
    campaign sank US ships crossing the Atlantic. He was awarded the Nobel
    Peace Prize in 1920.

    Russia

    - Tsar Nicholas II of Russia (1868-1918): The last Russian tsar, he
    approved Russia's entry into World War I in August 1914. The Imperial
    Army's severe casualties -- some 3.3 million -- are often cited as a
    leading cause of the fall of the Romanov dynasty.

    Earlier Nicholas II led his country into a disastrous 1904-05 war with
    Japan. As the first Russian revolution erupted, the tsar was forced to
    abdicate in March 1917 and he and his family were executed by
    Bolsheviks on July 17, 1918.

    - Leon Trotsky (1879-1940): A founder of the Russian revolution, he
    declared his opposition to global conflict in 1914. After the October
    Revolution, he became the de facto foreign minister and sought to stop
    the war without signing a peace treaty. Trotsky hoped the revolution
    would spread to Germany, but advances by German troops forced him to
    adopt Lenin's position and sign the Brest-Litovsk treaty in March
    1918. Trotsky then reorganised the Red Army.

    - Vladimir Lenin (1870-1924): Born Vladimir Ilich Ulyanov. A Russian
    revolutionary who lived mostly abroad during the war, before returning
    home in February 1917.

    He convinced fellow Bolsheviks to revolt in October 1917, and became
    head of the Council of People's Commissars, mercilessly crushing any
    opposition. He was the driving force in Russia for the Brest-Litovsk
    Treaty.

    Serbia

    - Peter I of Serbia (1844-1921): Joined the Foreign Legion in 1870
    under the name of Pierre Kara. He ascended to the throne in 1903, but
    chose to retire due to ill health in June 1914. Peter I passed royal
    prerogatives to his son, Crown Prince Alexander, who directed Serbian
    military operations during World War I.

    - Gavrilo Princip (1894-1918): The assassin of Archduke Franz
    Ferdinand in Sarajevo on June 28, 1914, the event that sparked World
    War I. He was a Serbian nationalist student from Bosnia-Herzegovina,
    which at the time was under Austro-Hungarian domination.

    Considered a hero in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia and later in the
    Yugoslavia of former strongman Tito, Princip died of tuberculosis in
    prison in April 1918.

    Belgium

    - Albert I of Belgium (1875-1934): Belgian king who succeeded his
    uncle Leopold II in 1909. Albert took an active role in the war
    alongside France, Britain and Russia on both the military and
    diplomatic fronts, earning the nickname "The Knight King". A keen
    mountaineer, Albert died in a climbing accident.

    Turkey

    - Mustapha Kemal (1881-1938): Also known as Ataturk, he was considered
    the father of modern Turkey. Victor of the Gallipoli campaign in 1915,
    he led a nationalist movement that fiercely opposed the Treaty of
    Sevres signed in August 1920 between the Allies and the Ottoman
    Empire. He then commanded an army that reconquered Armenia and
    Kurdistan and drove the Greeks out of Asia Minor.

    - Enver Pacha (1881-1922): A leader of the 1908 Young Turk Revolution,
    he became a member of the military triumvirate and war minister in
    1913, and the architect of the Ottoman-German alliance forged soon
    after the outbreak of the war. In April 1915 he authorised the
    deportation of Ottoman Armenians, and he is considered a key figure
    behind the Armenian and Assyrian genocides. He fled to Germany at the
    end of the war and was sentenced to death in absentia. He tried to
    return to Turkey in 1920 but was prevented by Kemal.

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