[b][size=29][center]Arms race (one of causes of ww1)[/center]
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[url=https://algassania2.mam9.com/wiki/Image:HMS_Dreadnought_1906_H61017.jpg][/url][size=25]
The [/size][url=https://algassania2.mam9.com/wiki/Royal_Navy][u][size=25][color:4988=#0000ff]Royal Navy[/u][/color][/size][/url][size=25]'s [/size][url=https://algassania2.mam9.com/wiki/HMS_Dreadnought][u][size=25][color:4988=#0000ff]HMS Dreadnought[/u][/color][/size][/url][size=25].
The German industrial base had, by 1914, overtaken that of Britain, though Germany did not have the commercial advantages of a large empire. In the years running up to the war a race to possess the strongest navy arose between Britain and Germany, each country building large numbers of dreadnoughts. The naval race between Britain and Germany was intensified by the 1906 launch of [/size][url=https://algassania2.mam9.com/wiki/HMS_Dreadnought_(1906)][u][size=25][color:4988=#0000ff]HMS [i]Dreadnought[/i][/u][/color][/size][/url][size=25], a revolutionary craft whose size and power rendered previous battleships obsolete. Britain also maintained a large naval lead in other areas particularly over Germany and Italy.
[/size][url=https://algassania2.mam9.com/wiki/David_Stevenson_(WW1_historian)][u][size=25][color:4988=#0000ff]David Stevenson[/u][/color][/size][/url][size=25] described the arms race as "a self-reinforcing cycle of heightened military preparedness."[/size][url=https://algassania2.mam9.com/l%20cite_note-7][u][size=25][color:4988=#0000ff][8][/u][/color][/size][/url][size=25] David Herrmann viewed the shipbuilding rivalry as part of a general movement in the direction of war.[/size][url=https://algassania2.mam9.com/l%20cite_note-8][u][size=25][color:4988=#0000ff][9][/u][/color][/size][/url][size=25] The revisionist [/size][url=https://algassania2.mam9.com/wiki/Niall_Ferguson][u][size=25][color:4988=#0000ff]Niall Ferguson[/u][/color][/size][/url][size=25], however, argued Britain's ability to maintain an overall lead signified this was not a factor in the oncoming conflict.[/size][url=https://algassania2.mam9.com/l%20cite_note-Ferguson1999-9][u][size=25][color:4988=#0000ff][10][/u][/color][/size][/url][size=25]
The cost of the arms race was felt in both Britain and Germany. The total arms spending by the six Great Powers (Britain, Germany, France, Russia, Austria-Hungary and Italy) increased by 50% between 1908 and 1913.[/size][url=https://algassania2.mam9.com/l%20cite_note-Fromkin2004-10][u][size=25][color:4988=#0000ff][11][/u][/color][/size][/url][size=25]
H.A[/size]