Zimmerman Telegram: Difference between revisions

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imported>Richard Jensen
(call it a blunder)
imported>Stephen Ewen
(restoring unexplained revert. The point is to glare a red link on this because we should have an article on it and there is no other good candidate than this article from whcih to have the link.)
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In January 1917 Germany decided on [[unrestricted submarine warfare]] in order to defeat Britain and win World War I. Every since the sinking of the passenger liner ''[[RMS Lusitania]]'' in 1915 Germany had repeatedly promised the United States it would restrain its [[u-boats]]. It knew the new policy meant war with the United States, and in preparation for that war it made overtures to Mexico to join Germany, and perhaps also involve Japan. Mexico, in the midst of [[Mexican Civil War, 1911-1914|its civil war]], was at sword’s point with the U.S., and  Germany had designs on taking over Mexico as its satellite. The U.S. severed diplomatic relations with Germany on February 3, 1917.  
In January 1917 Germany decided on [[unrestricted submarine warfare]] in order to defeat Britain and win World War I. Every since the sinking of the passenger liner ''[[RMS Lusitania]]'' in 1915 Germany had repeatedly promised the United States it would restrain its [[u-boats]]. It knew the new policy meant war with the United States, and in preparation for that war it made overtures to Mexico to join Germany, and perhaps also involve Japan. Mexico, in the midst of [[Mexican Civil War, 1911-1914|its civil war]], was at sword’s point with the U.S., and  Germany had designs on taking over Mexico as its satellite. The U.S. severed diplomatic relations with Germany on February 3, 1917.  


On February 24 the British delivered to the U.S. ambassador in London an intercepted German telegram, dated January 19, sent by German Foreign Secretary [[Arthur Zimmerman]] to the German minister in Mexico City. British naval intelligence had intercepted and partly decoded the telegraphic message, and a British spy in Mexico City bribed the local post office for another copy. Germany admitted the note was genuine.  
On February 24 the British delivered to the U.S. ambassador in London an intercepted German telegram, dated January 19, sent by German Foreign Secretary [[Arthur Zimmerman]] to the German minister in Mexico City. British naval intelligence had intercepted and partly decoded the telegraphic message (see [[Room 40]]), and a British spy in Mexico City bribed the local post office for another copy. Germany admitted the note was genuine.  


The message told the ambassador to tell Mexico that unrestricted submarine warfare would begin on February 1. Assuming that war would soon begin with the U.S., Zimmerman directed the ambassador to arrange a military alliance between Mexico and Germany, and to urge Japan to switch to the German side. Mexico, with German guidance and financing, was to attack the United States on its Southwestern border and recover Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona.  Mexico, realizing its hopeless position next to a much more powerful neighbor, ignored the proposal.  
The message told the ambassador to tell Mexico that unrestricted submarine warfare would begin on February 1. Assuming that war would soon begin with the U.S., Zimmerman directed the ambassador to arrange a military alliance between Mexico and Germany, and to urge Japan to switch to the German side. Mexico, with German guidance and financing, was to attack the United States on its Southwestern border and recover Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona.  Mexico, realizing its hopeless position next to a much more powerful neighbor, ignored the proposal.  

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The Zimmerman telegram, coded (left) and decoded (right).

The Zimmerman Telegram was a 1917 proposal from Germany to Mexico to make war against the United States. It was ignored by Mexico but angered Americans, and hastened U.S. involvement in World War I. It is considered one of the worst blunders in diplomatic history.[1]

In January 1917 Germany decided on unrestricted submarine warfare in order to defeat Britain and win World War I. Every since the sinking of the passenger liner RMS Lusitania in 1915 Germany had repeatedly promised the United States it would restrain its u-boats. It knew the new policy meant war with the United States, and in preparation for that war it made overtures to Mexico to join Germany, and perhaps also involve Japan. Mexico, in the midst of its civil war, was at sword’s point with the U.S., and Germany had designs on taking over Mexico as its satellite. The U.S. severed diplomatic relations with Germany on February 3, 1917.

On February 24 the British delivered to the U.S. ambassador in London an intercepted German telegram, dated January 19, sent by German Foreign Secretary Arthur Zimmerman to the German minister in Mexico City. British naval intelligence had intercepted and partly decoded the telegraphic message (see Room 40), and a British spy in Mexico City bribed the local post office for another copy. Germany admitted the note was genuine.

The message told the ambassador to tell Mexico that unrestricted submarine warfare would begin on February 1. Assuming that war would soon begin with the U.S., Zimmerman directed the ambassador to arrange a military alliance between Mexico and Germany, and to urge Japan to switch to the German side. Mexico, with German guidance and financing, was to attack the United States on its Southwestern border and recover Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona. Mexico, realizing its hopeless position next to a much more powerful neighbor, ignored the proposal.

President Woodrow Wilson released the note to the press on March 1, 1917, causing a firestorm of protest and demands for a declaration of war against Germany.

Bibliography

  • Boghardt, Thomas. "The Zimmermann Telegram: Diplomacy, Intelligence and the American Entry. into World War I." (working paper 2003) online edition
  • Beesly, Patrick. Room 40: British Naval Intelligence, 1914-18. (1982).
  • Freeman, Peter. "The Zimmermann Telegram Revisited: A Reconciliation of the Primary Sources." Cryptologia 30, no. 2 (Apr. 2006): 98-150.
  • Friedman, William F., and Charles J. Mendelsohn. The Zimmermann Telegram of January 16, 1917 and Its Cryptographic Background. Washington: War Department, Office of the Chief Signal Officer, GPO, 1938, reprinted 1976 and 1994
  • Katz, Friedrich. The Secret War in Mexico: Europe, the United States, and the Mexican Revolution. (1981)
  • Link, Arthur S. Wilson: Campaigns for Progressivism and Peace: 1916-1917 (1965), the standard biography online at ACLS e-books
  • Tuchman, Barbara W. The Zimmerman Telegram (1985) excerpt and text search

External links


Notes

  1. Link (1965) 5:346