At the beginning of the twentieth-century Europeans lived in peace and progress. Tensions rose between European countries and lead to World War 1. Majority of the war was fought between the Triple Alliance (Germany, Austria- Hungary, and Italy) and the Triple Entente (Great Britain, France, and Russia). There are many factors that lead to the war such as, militarism, alliances, imperialism, and nationalism. Historians and eyewitnesses have described and analyzed the war to identify the cause of World War 1 and who is responsible for it. All of the countries who fought in World War 1 are responsible for all war casualties and damages that occurred due to World War 1. Due to militarism, weapons were built up, tensions grew between nations, and …show more content…
During World War 1 countries like Germany, France and Russia all increased their amount of money spent on weapons(doc1).With more weapons being bought the military needed to be trained with them. As more and more weapons were bought and armies grew, opposing sides grew fearful and tensions increased on both sides. This lead to a competition on both sides to prove which country was stronger. The naval arms race between Great Britain and Germany is one example of this. Germany was the first to create a U-Boat which is a submarine. This introduced a completely different view on sea warfare.The Schlieffen plan was created by the German military to avoid a two-front war. It failed because they miscalculated the amount of time it would have taken for Russia to attack and the time it would have taken to defeat Belgium; this lead to The United States joining the war. This failure didn't stop the German military in their mission to win the war. They created a U-boat which attacked boats underwater similar to a submarine. Germany was not the only country that spent a lot of time and money on their military. Countries like France and Russia continued to increase the amount of money spent on weapons throughout the war( doc1 ).With more weapons being bought the military needed to be trained with them. During the war, both countries valued their military both on the battlegrounds and at