Friday, July 10, 2020

1778 American Revolution: Louis XVI of France declares war on the Kingdom of Great Britain

1778  American Revolution: Louis XVI of France declares war on the Kingdom of Great Britain
Franco-American Alliance, (Feb. 6, 1778), agreement by France to furnish critically needed military aid and loans to the 13 insurgent American colonies, often considered the turning point of the U.S. War of Independence. Resentful over the loss of its North American empire after the French and Indian WarFrance welcomed the opportunity to undermine Britain’s position in the New World.Though maintaining a position of neutrality from 1775 to 1777, France was already secretly furnishing the American colonists with munitions and loans. As early as 1776, the Continental Congress had established a joint diplomatic commission—composed of Benjamin Franklin, Silas Deane, and Arthur Lee—to seek recognition and financial aid from the Bourbon monarchy. The colonists’ victory at the Battle of Saratoga (Oct. 17, 1777) was the show of strength needed to convince France that the revolutionaries would pursue the war to final victory. Hastening to act before the British peace overtures of the Carlisle Commission could tempt the colonists, the French foreign minister, the comte de Vergennes, succeeded in concluding the alliance the following February.

Two treaties were signed. The first, a treaty of amity and commerce, officially recognized the new country and encouraged Franco-American trade. The second provided for a military alliance against Great Britain and also required recognition of absolute independence for the United States as a condition of peace. In addition, peace could be arrived at only by mutual French and U.S. consent. Finally, France renounced all territorial claims in North America east of the Mississippi River and in Bermuda, and it agreed to guarantee whatever U.S. boundaries existed at the war’s end in exchange for U.S. guarantees of French possessions in the West Indies.

The alliance greatly facilitated U.S. independence. The French fleet proceeded to challenge British control of North American waters and, together with troops and arms, proved an indispensable asset in the revolutionaries’ victory at the Siege of Yorktown (1781), which ended the war. Later, however, the treaties proved embarrassing to the United States, threatening to involve the country in the French Revolutionary wars. After several years of strained relations, France and the United States agreed to the Treaty of Morfontaine (Sept. 30, 1800) to abrogate both 1778 treaties.Alliance, in international relations, a formal agreement between two or more states for mutual support in case of war. Contemporary alliances provide for combined action on the part of two or more independent states and are generally defensive in nature, obligating allies to join forces if one or more of them is attacked by another state or coalition. Although alliances may be informal, they are typically formalized by a treaty of alliance, the most critical clauses of which are those that define the casus foederis, or the circumstances under which the treaty obligates an ally to aid a fellow member.Alliances arise from states’ attempts to maintain a balance of power with each other. In a system composed of a number of medium-size countries, such as that in Europe since the Middle Ages, no single state is able to establish a lasting hegemony over all the others, largely because the other states join together in alliances against it. Thus, the repeated attempts by King Louis XIV of France (reigned 1643–1715) to dominate continental Europe led to a coalition in opposition to France and eventually to the War of the Grand Alliance; and the ambitions of Napoleon were similarly thwarted by a series of alliances formed against him.

Although typically associated with the Westphalian states system and the European balance of power, alliances have taken shape on other continents and in other eras. In his classic work Artha-shastra (“The Science of Material Gain”), Kautilya, an adviser to the Indian king Chandragupta (reigned c. 321–c. 297 BCE), argued that in pursuing alliances countries should seek supportand assistance from distant states against the menace of neighbouring ones (according to the logic that the enemy of one’s enemy must be one’s friend). The legacy of colonialism in Africa retarded the development of collective-defense schemes there, but elsewhere in the developing world alliances played a critical role in the evolving regional balance. For example, in the 1865–70 Paraguayan War, the Triple Alliance of Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay devastated Paraguay, reducing its territorial possessions as well as its population by about 60 percent. Until the Cold War in the last half of the 20th century, ideology was not usually a significant factor in the formation of such coalitions. For example, in 1536 Francis I, the Roman Catholic king of France, joined with the Ottoman sultan Süleyman I, who was a Muslim, against the Holy Roman emperor Charles V, another Catholic, because Charles’s possessions almost encircled France. Similarly, in World War II (1939–45) Great Britain and the United States allied themselves with the communist Soviet Union in order to defeat Nazi Germany.A new level of alliance building in Europe was reached in the late 19th century, when enmity between Germany and France polarized Europe into two rival alliances. By 1910 most of the major states of Europe belonged to one or the other of these great opposing alliances: the Central Powers, whose principal members were Germany and Austria-Hungary, and the Allies, composed of France, Russia, and Great Britain. This bipolar system had a destabilizing effect, since conflict between any two members of opposing blocs carried the threat of general war. Eventually, a dispute between Russia and Austria-Hungary in 1914 quickly drew their fellow bloc members into the general conflict that became known as World War I (1914–18). The war’s outcome was effectively decided when the United States abandoned its traditional isolationism and joined the Allied side in 1917 as one of several “Associated Powers.”The Allied victors sought to ensure the postwar peace by forming the League of Nations, which operated as a collective security agreement calling for joint action by all its members to defend any individual member or members against an aggressor. A collective security agreement differs from an alliance in several ways: (1) it is more inclusive in its membership, (2) the target of the agreement is unnamed and can be any potential aggressor, including even one of the signatories, and (3) the object of the agreement is the deterrence of a potential aggressor by the prospect that preponderant power will be organized and brought to bear against it. The League of Nations became demonstrably ineffective by the mid-1930s, however, after its members declined to use force to stop aggressive acts by Japan, Italy, and Germany.

These three countries soon formed the Axis, an offensive alliance that contested for world dominion in World War II with a defensive alliance led by Great Britain, France, China, and, beginning in 1941, the Soviet Union and the United States. With the defeat of the Axis powers in 1945, the victorious Allies formed the United Nations (UN), a worldwide organization devoted to the principles of collective security and international cooperation. The UN coexisted rather ineffectively, however, with the robust military alliances formed by the United States and the Soviet Union along sharp ideological lines after the war. In 1949 the United States and Canada joined with Britain and other western European countries to form the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), and in 1955 the Soviet Union and its central and eastern European satellites formed the Warsaw Pact following West Germany’s accession to NATO. The Cold War rivalry between these two alliances, which also included other treaty organizations established by the United States (e.g., the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization, the Central Treaty Organization, and the ANZUS Pact), ended with the Soviet Union’s collapse and the dissolution of the Warsaw Pact in 1991.

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