QUESTION IMAGE
Question
this political cartoon appeared in a german magazine in 1919. in what way is the cartoon sympathetic to germany during the treaty of versailles discussions?
- it shows that all countries were equal parties in the discussions.
- it shows that the war was equally destructive to all the countries of europe.
- it shows that germany was being forced against its will to sign the treaty.
- it shows that germany promised never to fight another world war.
Brief Explanations
To determine the correct answer, we analyze each option:
- Option 1: The Treaty of Versailles was not a discussion of equal parties; the Allies (especially France, UK, US) imposed terms on Germany, so this is incorrect.
- Option 2: The war's destruction was not equal (Germany was more blamed and faced harsher terms, and the cartoon's imagery of a guillotine - like setup for Germany implies coercion, not equal destruction), so this is incorrect.
- Option 3: The cartoon (with Germany as a bound figure near a guillotine - like structure, and Allied - like figures) suggests Germany was forced to sign the treaty against its will, which aligns with the historical context of the Treaty of Versailles (Germany was coerced into signing harsh terms).
- Option 4: The treaty focused on punishment/reparations, not a German promise against future wars (that was more related to later events like the Locarno Pact or the Nazi era's violations), so this is incorrect.
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C. It shows that Germany was being forced against its will to sign the treaty.