History, asked by pdharamgurjar, 9 months ago

To what strength was Bismarc foreign policy responsible for World War I​

Answers

Answered by hardikrakholiya21
1

Explanation:

A resurgent France, powerful and allied to another European power haunted Bismarck. The main aims of Bismarck's foreign policy were based around the need to keep France isolated and prevent this from happening. To achieve this aim he needed to keep on good terms with both Austria and Russia.

Bismarck's ultimate goal was to unite the German states into a strong German Empire with Prussia as its core. On September 30, 1862 Bismarck made his famous blood and iron speech, which implied that if Germany was to unify it would be with the use of military force. He hated liberalism, democracy and socialism.

Similar questions