The New York Times Current History, A Monthly Magazine / The European War, March 1915
But little has hitherto been published in English describing from original sources how the Balkan States, out of which the world conflict arose, resolved, in Kipling's phrase, to stand up and meet the war. The following documents, taken from authoritative Balkan sources, show for the first time the purely Balkan aspect of the great struggle.
Immediately on receiving official notification of the rupture of diplomatic relations between Austria and Servia, the Turkish Grand Vizier hastened to inform the Diplomatic Corps in Constantinople that Turkey would remain neutral in the conflict. Explaining this official Turkish declaration, the following editorial article appeared early in August in the Ministerial paper, Tasfiri-Efkiar, published in Constantinople:
THE declarations made by the Grand Vizier to the Ambassadors of the powers, in order to reassure them as to the dispositions of Turkey, do not constitute from a legal point of view a declaration of neutrality, according to the stipulations of The Hague Conventions; likewise the Austrian ultimatum to Servia, viewed in the same light, is not tantamount to a declaration of war. In fact, The Hague Conventions demand a formal declaration in both cases. But if the formal declaration of Turkish neutrality cannot be made before she has received an official notification of the existing war, it is nevertheless true that the head of the Government, in his conversations with the Ambassadors, has given them to understand what the opinion of the people is here. And even without this, the efforts of the Turkish Government, the desire, and the policy of Turkey, are so explicit that there is no ground for doubt as to the significance of the declarations of the Grand Vizier.
Turkey has never asked for war, as she always has worked toward avoiding it. But we must not misunderstand the meaning of certain terms. Neutrality does not mean indifference. The present Austro-Servian conflict is to a supreme degree interesting to us. In the first place, one of our erstwhile opponents is fighting against a much stronger enemy. In the natural course of things Servia, which till lately was expressing, in a rather open way, her solidarity as a nation, still provoking us, and Greece will be materially weakened. In the second place, the results of this war may surpass the limits of a conflict between two countries, and in that case our interests will be just as materially affected.
Various
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CURRENT HISTORY
A MONTHLY MAGAZINE
CONTENTS
THE BULGARIAN MENACE.
A PEASANT’S ANSWER.
THE MINISTRY’S POSITION.
STATEMENT TO GREECE.
BULGARIA AND KULTUR.
AFTER FIVE MONTHS’ FIGHTING.
RUSSIAN CONGRATULATIONS.
BULGARIA’S SENTIMENT.
GREECE ACCLAIMS.
Speech From the Throne
[Special Cable to The New York Times.]
Grecian Neutrality Defined
Declaration of Neutrality
General Aspect of the Near East on Aug. 1, 1914.
Going! Going! ——?
The God in the Cart
The Great Illusion
What Punch Thinks Is Awaiting the Kaiser
The Man Behind the Kaiser
Nothing Doing
As Between Friends
Kultur
Homers
“His” Christmas Sabots
“Sire, Your Soup’s Getting Cold”
Chaffing the French Censor
A Substitute for Belgian Blocks
What Italy Thinks of “Guglielmo”
The Mistress of the Sea
The “Prize-Taker”
The Face at the Window
Novel Coastwise Scenery
The Dancers
The English Spider
The Jap-Infested British Lion
The Englishman and His Globe
The German Watch in Kiao-Chau
A HYMN TO BELGIUM
MARNE.
MEUSE.
MEURTHE-ET-MOSELLE.
OISE.
AISNE.
ACTS OF A MILITARY NATURE.
Story of Two Months’ Combat with 2,000,000 Invaders.
[From the Official Bulletin des Armées, Dec. 6, 1914.]
VICTORY OF THE MARNE.
Map of Operations in France During First Four Months of the War
THE RACE FOR THE COAST.
GERMAN OFFENSIVE CHECKED.
A WAR OF SIEGE.
A SERIES OF GERMAN REVERSES.
Disclaimer of Bias Against Germany and Austria
[From The New York Times, Jan. 17, 1915.]
Letter of Prince Joachim
Letter of Rudolf Herzog
Letter of the Duke of Altenburg
Letter of Paul Oskar Höcker
The Place of Tombs
[Special Cable to The New York Times.]
Pen Picture by a Times Correspondent of the Havoc She Wrought
[From The London Times, Oct. 17, 1914. By its Special Correspondent lately in Antwerp.]
[Special Cable to The New York Times.]
[From The London Times, Dec. 8, 1914.]
[From The London Times, Dec. 18, 1914.]
[A British Surgeon, in The London Times, Dec. 22, 1914.]
[From The Hartford Courant, Jan. 14, 1915.]
Showing Progress of Campaigns on All Fronts and Collateral Events from Jan. 7 to and Including Jan. 31, 1915
FOOTNOTES