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Sarajevo

Page 12

by R W Seaton-Watson


  and this Francis Ferdinand was firmly resolved not to do,

  until that constitution could be brought into line with

  the requirements of the Monarchy as a whole. But even

  he hesitated at the idea of open repudiation, and was glad

  to find a pretext for delay in the undoubted fact that the

  Austrian and Hungarian versions of the compromise of

  1867 conflicted in certain important particulars which

  must be cleared up before an oath could reasonably be

  exacted. The most striking example of this related to

  a Southern Slav problem, for in the one document

  Dalmatia

  is

  assumed

  to

  belong

  to

  Austria

  (which

  was of course its actual de facto position), while in

  the other it is implied to be an integral part of the

  Triune Kingdom and therefore of the Crown of St.

  Stephen. 1

  Francis Ferdinand was not the man to shirk awkward

  facts. He realised that his political aims could only be

  attained through the overthrow of the Dual System, and

  that this must involve him in conflict with the ruling

  caste in Hungary. It was this which led him to seek

  allies

  among

  the

  non-Magyar

  nationalities,

  and

  he

  advocated

  the

  introduction

  of

  universal

  suffrage

  in

  Hungary, not of course because he believed in democratic

  principles, but simply because it was an instrument for

  placing the Magyars in a minority and securing national

  justice all round, and he calculated that the other races

  would gladly purchase this by an endorsement of his

  plans

  for

  constitutional

  reform.

  It

  would

  thus

  be

  possible to superimpose upon the existing Parliaments

  of Vienna and Budapest a central parliament and execu-

  tive for the whole Monarchy, perhaps simply by fusing

  the Delegations and converting them from deliberative

  to legislative bodies. The Archduke boldly reckoned

  l See the Austrian Law of 21 December, 1867, §8, and the Hungarian Art. xxx,

  01 1868 (compromise between Hungary and Croatia), which refers throughout

  and .Croatia, Slavonia and Dalmatia " as one of the two contracting parties,

  and in 65§. expressly insists upon " the reincorporation of Dalmatia."

  86

  with the impossibility of effecting such far-reaching re-

  forms by normal means, and within the limit of six months

  prescribed for the Coronation, and was therefore prepared

  to announce his intentions by a manifesto on accession,

  which would have been virtually equivalent to a coup

  d'etat and have given rise to a constitutional crisis of

  the first magnitude.1 It should be added that Colonel

  Brosch had worked out to the smallest details a plan to

  ensure order in all parts of the Monarchy in the critical

  days following the public proclamation of his intentions.

  He calculated, probably with reason, that if proper

  precautions were taken, Hungary would remain helpless

  and impassive, and this belief he based to a large extent

  upon the precedent of March 1906, when non-Magyar

  troops were massed round the Parliament buildings by

  an unconstitutional government and a Colonel of Militia

  read the decree of dissolution, without a single serious

  act of resistance from the country at large.

  In foreign policy the Archduke also held pronounced

  views, and indeed his projects of internal reform were

  very largely prompted by his desire to strengthen the

  international status and prestige of the Monarchy. His

  Este and Bourbon blood, combined with the ultramontane

  views of himself and his wife and his detestation of

  Freemasonry and Radicalism, rendered him suspicious

  of Italy who, a sure instinct told him, would range her-

  self against Austria-Hungary at the moment of supreme

  crisis in Europe. These doubts lay at the root of his

  interest in the Navy and the problem of Adriatic defence,

  which again has its obvious connections with the Southern

  Slav Question. It was inevitable that Germany should

  bulk largest in his survey of Europe, but the idea of

  Austria-Hungary's

  dependence

  upon

  her

  northern

  ally

  Was distasteful to him, alike from the political and the

  1 A most valuable summary of the considerations which weighed with the

  Archduke is contained in an essay of the late Professor Lammasch, in the Volu me

  entitled Heinrich Lammasch, pp. 77-95 (Vienna, 1922).

  87

  dynastic

  standpoint.

  Viewed

  in

  the

  abstract,

  what

  would have pleased him most would have been a revival

  of the League of the Three Emperors, as a guarantee of

  conservative development in Central and Eastern Europe

  and a bulwark against revolutionary ideas: and Count

  Czernin has pointed out that the Balkan rivalry between

  Vienna and St. Petersburg caused him genuine anxiety. 1

  Hence it is probably a mistake to credit him with bellicose

  tendencies, though undoubtedly there were times when

  his overbearing and explosive nature led him to regard

  war as probable. To Conrad he was generally ready

  to listen, both because of his zeal and military efficiency

  and because they found common ground in their distrust

  of Italy; yet both Conrad himself and Auffenberg, who

  stood in his favour till the winter of 1912, represent him

  as hardly less reluctant to engage upon war than the

  old Emperor himself, and Count Czernin maintains that

  he was by no means as anti-Serb as he has been depicted.·

  This is confirmed by Dr. Danev, to whom Francis

  Ferdinand,

  during

  an

  audience

  granted

  to

  him

  as

  Bulgarian Premier at Budapest during the first Balkan

  war, assumed the whole credit for averting Austria-

  Hungary's intervention against Serbia.4

  Of special interest is Conrad's testimony, fi On the

  repeated opportunities I had of discussing with the Arch-

  duke the need for decisive action against Serbia, I could

  never be quite clear whether the Archduke in his inmost

  heart had decided on warlike action. He dealt with

  all matters bearing on it, discussed concrete prepara-

  tions for war with an interest which suggested that he

  1 Interesting confirmation of this is provided by a conversation with the

  German Military Attaché in Vienna, Count Kageneck, in which the Archduke

  summed up his political confession of faith in the phrase, " Alliance of the Three

  Emperors, with adhesion of England where possible " (mit tunlichstem Anschluss

  Englands).
This is

  quoted

  from

  Kageneck's unpublished report, by

  Montgelas,

  Leitfaden zur Kriegsschuldfrage, p. 54.

  2 In the World War, p. 51.

  3 cf. Auffenberg, op. cit., p. 231; Conrad, op. cit., iii, pp. 353, 597.

  4 Interview of Danev in Trgovinski Vjestnik, reproduced by Neues Wiener

  Tagolatt of 9 July, 1914, See Friedjung, Zeitalter des Imperialismus, ii., p. 269.

  88

  had its execution in view, but yet seemed to me in his

  heart to have no real liking for it." And here he adds

  his impression that Francis Ferdinand was influenced

  against war from the German side and especially from

  the Emperor William.1 Again, Count Kageneck, the

  German Military Attaché, in a report to Berlin, quotes

  the Archduke as describing war with Russia as " posi-

  tively a monstrosity " überhaupt ein Unding) and declar-

  ing that he saw no reason for war with Serbia. * During

  the same critical period a letter of the Archduke to his

  brother-in-law,

  Duke

  Albrecht

  of

  Württemberg, was

  communicated by the latter to Bethmann Hollweg early

  in February and by him to Moltke; in it was a strong

  expression of feeling against war with Serbia, since at

  the

  very

  best

  Austria-Hungary

  would

  only

  acquire

  untrustworthy subjects and " a heap of plum trees."

  Moltke replied that this coincided with previous remarks

  of the Archduke, and that the Chancellor's chief task

  would be "to prevent Austrian follies so far as possible

  — not a pleasant or an easy task! "'

  Interesting confirmation of Francis Ferdinand's atti-

  tude can be found in a conversation between Berchtold,

  Czernin and Conrad on 10 October, 1913, recorded by

  the latter in his memoirs.« On this occasion the military

  Cato urged a policy of action against Serbia and re-

  affirmed the view that he had preached for years, that

  " the Southern Slav and Panserb Question " were

  fundamental for the Monarchy. " But here in Austria,"

  objected Czernin, " one must reckon with Emperor and

  Heir Apparent. They are not for war, and least of all

  the Heir Apparent; he holds stubbornly to peace."

  1 Conrad, op. cit., ii., p. 413.

  2 Kageneck's reports of 17 December, 1912, and 26 February, 1913, cit.,

  Brandenberg, Von Bismarck zum Weltkriege, p. 372.

  3 Quoted from imprinted documents in the German Foreign Office, by Count

  Max Montgelas in his Leitfaden zur Kriegsschuld/rage, p. 52. Moltke's phrase

  throws some light on his correspondence with Conrad in 1914, quoted supra, p. 52.

  4 op cit., hi., pp. 463-4.

  89

  During the same winter Baron Szilassy, before proceed-

  ing to his post at Athens, had an audience with Francis

  Ferdinand and found him " every bit as pacific as his

  Imperial uncle" and anxious for an understanding with

  Russia. He blamed Tisza's nationalist policy for the

  friction with Serbia and Roumania.x

  Of

  the

  Archduke's

  friendly

  attitude

  towards

  the

  Croats there can be no matter of doubt, and it would

  seem probable that he looked upon them both as an asset

  in the struggle against Hungary, and also among the

  Jugoslavs as a counterweight to Belgrade. The fact

  that the Croats were Catholics told much in their favour

  with the Archduke and his clerical advisers, who saw in

  them a weapon for the reconquest of the Balkans from

  Orthodoxy. He rightly resented the short-sighted policy

  which was steadily alienating Croat sentiment from the

  Habsburgs, and on at least two occasions he made violent

  protests to the Emperor against the Cuvaj régime, but

  without any effect. His real aim was to bring about

  Jugoslav unity under the Habsburg sceptre — an aim

  which in certain circumstances might have placed Serbia

  and even the Karagjorgjevic dynasty in the same relation

  to Vienna as that of Bavaria and the Wittelsbach towards

  Berlin. This project has come to be known as " Trialism,"

  but in the Archduke's eyes it was only part of a wider

  whole. For, as Czernin assures us, he also entertained

  the possibility of ceding Transylvania to Roumania, but

  then admitting united Roumania as a vassal state within

  the bounds of the Monarchy. This idea was actually

  discussed between Czernin and Nicholas Filipescu, the

  Conservative patriot statesman, who — perhaps all too

  logically — regarded it as the sole alternative to an

  ultimate life and death conflict between Roumania and

  Austria-Hungary.2 Once more, it is obvious that neither

  idea could have been realised until the obstinate Resistance

  1 Der Untergang der Donau-Monarchie, p. 259.

  2 In the World War, p. 80: Conrad, op. cit., iii., p. 783.'

  90

  of Hungary had been overcome: for the effect would

  inevitably have been to diminish the relative importance

  of the Magyars in the aggrandised Habsburg state.

  A further very vital factor in the Archduke's character

  was the growth of the sinister disease which was sapping

  his strength and which found vent in occasional fits of

  ungovernable rage, bordering for the time being upon

  insanity. The symptoms were most marked at shooting

  parties, when the Archduke fired at everything within

  range, and was an object of general terror. On one

  occasion, brilliant marksman though he was, he shot a

  beater;

  and

  the

  Austrian

  aristocracy

  were

  already

  beginning to be chary of their invitations to him.1

  According to a story repeated to Professor "Masaryk by

  members of his party in the neighbourhood of Konopistë,

  the Archduke's lawyer, when summoned on some legal

  business, was shown into a large unfurnished room, and

  found him sitting on the floor and playing with his

  children. " The Archduke motioned to him to sit like-

  wise on the floor, and on seeing him hesitate, flew into

  a violent passion, abused him roundly and drove him

  from the castle."» Another story which reached me

  from the same source came from the Czech railway

  officials who had charge of the Imperial train. The

  Archduke had visited the German Emperor in Potsdam

  and some incident must have occurred to arouse his

  displeasure: for after the train had started southwards,

  he drew his sword and in his fury hacked at the upholstery

  of his compartment.

  It is not quite certain whether the Archduke realised

  the full gravity of his symptoms, but he undoubtedly

  felt his health to be deteriorating, and burned with

  impatience and anger as he saw his uncle ageing in

  1 During his visit to England in 1913 his reckless shooting and the frantic

  manner in which he
abused his loaders made a strong impression upon a member

  of the British Royal family and led him to inquire (in complete ignorance of the

  facts) whether there was not a strain of madness in the Archduke.

  2 H. W. Steed, Through Thirty Years, i., p. 367.

  91

  impotent negation, and the short time probably available

  for himself slipping away from him, while such vast and

  vital tasks were still untouched. It is certain that the

  Duchess knew the full truth: not long before the end

  she had discussed settlements with the family lawyer

  and had told an intimate friend that her husband might

  be seized with madness or paralysis at almost any time.

  Though the secret was jealously guarded, some of these

  facts could not fail to become known. They amply

  explain the nervousness of the Imperial family, who knew

  that another bronchial attack might at any time prove

  fatal to the old Emperor,1 and saw the prospect of the

  throne being occupied, at a period of latent European

  crisis, by a man of autocratic leanings, committed to a

  vast programme of political adventure, yet liable at any

  moment to lose all balance and control, and influenced

  by an ambitious wife who might in the interests of her

  children persuade him to change the succession and throw

  " Habsburg House Law " to the winds. Disturbing

  possibilities were presented by the fact that the law of

  succession differed in Hungary and Austria, that the

  Magyar nationalists had an obvious motive for widening

  the gulf, and that no legal or constitutional means existed

  for

  preventing

  the

  Archduke's

  succession,

  whatever

  might be the state of his health.2

  Though the full facts remained a jealously-guarded

  secret, the precarious state of the Archduke's health, his

  conflict of opinion with the Emperor and his intention

  of introducing drastic changes on succeeding to the throne,

  gradually became known to wide circles, and took shape

  in rumours of the most contradictory kind. Thus, though

  unable to influence the political development, the figure

  1

  Even in the winter of 1910 Dr. Neusser had assured Colonel Brosch, the

  Archduke's confidant, that the Emperor could only live one or at most two

  years longer, and that his physical condition was one of " from to-day till to-

  orrow." See Heinrich Lammasch, p. 81.

  2

  His granduncle Ferdinand I had reigned from 1835 to 1848, though notoriously

 

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