World War 1 Imperialism

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The Great War, The Great Depression, and World War II are all deeply connected. The underlying problems that lead to World War I were never solved, and the problems that arose because of the war. World War I set into effect things that caused both the Great Depression, World War II, and the Cold War as well. There are two ideologies that were mainly responsible for shaping Europe into the state that it was in to start World War I. The first ideology that had an important impact on Europe leading up to World War I was imperialism. Imperialism is when a country takes control of another country by some means that allows it to use it as a captive market, exploiting it’s economic system. Economic imperialism was the type of imperialism that …show more content…

In fact, it caused a lot more. The economic and political situation in Russia had been under a lot of stress during World War I. Soldiers didn’t have guns; they were ordered to pick up guns off of the dead soldiers that were already on the battlefield. Russia hadn’t had their agricultural revolution yet, and there wasn’t enough food for everyone in the country. The population of Russia was dissatisfied with the conditions in Russia, leading to the Russian Revolution. During the intervention of the Russian Civil War by the Allied Powers, Russia gained a distrust of western civilization that they would hold through the Cold War and continue to hold …show more content…

Germany was paying Britain and France while loaning money from the United States. When Germany became unable to repay the loans to the United States, the banks in the US started to fail. This caused the Great Depression which affected countries around the world. It’s clear by now that World War I is already connected to the Russian Revolution and the Great Depression. The Great Depression caused a lot of change around the world. In Japan, they solved their economic problems not with the Keynesian style of counter-cyclical spending, but with militarism. The poor economic conditions in Japan lead Japan to turn to more radical politics, which converted Japan from a liberal government to a militaristic one. The militarism in Japan lead to the attack on Pearl Harbor, which while it didn’t cause World War II, it provoked the United States enough to drive them to enter the war, which was really

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