The Peace Negotiations: A Personal Narrative

audiobook

The Peace Negotiations: A Personal Narrative

by Robert Lansing

EN·~8 hours·86 chapters

Chapters

86 total

THE PEACE NEGOTIATIONS - A PERSONAL NARRATIVE - BY ROBERT LANSING - WITH ILLUSTRATIONS - CHRONOLOGY

2:04

CHAPTER I - REASONS FOR WRITING A PERSONAL NARRATIVE

16:54

CHAPTER II - MR. WILSON'S PRESENCE AT THE PEACE CONFERENCE

21:33

CHAPTER III - GENERAL PLAN FOR A LEAGUE OF NATIONS

21:14

"ROBERT LANSING - "THE PRESIDENT

10:10

CHAPTER IV - SUBSTITUTE ARTICLES PROPOSED

0:52

"MY DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:

2:28

"ROBERT LANSING - "THE PRESIDENT

4:59

"A

0:27

"B

0:31

Description

A vivid, first‑person account of the tumultuous months that shaped the post‑war world, this memoir places listeners at the heart of the American delegation in Paris. The narrator, a senior diplomat, walks us through the frantic schedule of meetings, treaties, and secret correspondences that defined the peace process, while also revealing the personal strains of serving a president whose vision increasingly diverged from his own.

Beyond the dry chronology of armistices and signatures, the narrative captures the quiet moments of doubt, the clash of ideals, and the heavy burden of representing a nation on the world stage. Listeners will hear candid reflections on the challenges of advising, the tension behind closed doors, and the moral calculus that guided the push for a lasting settlement. The account offers a rare, intimate glimpse into the diplomatic theater that forged the Treaty of Versailles and set the stage for the modern international order.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~8 hours (494K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2003-12-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Robert Lansing

Robert Lansing

1864–1928

A key American diplomat of the World War I era, this lawyer-turned-statesman served as U.S. Secretary of State under Woodrow Wilson and helped shape major foreign policy debates of the 1910s. His writing reflects a close-up view of international law, diplomacy, and the pressures of wartime government.

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