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See also: German states-See also: man, for more than See also: thirty years See also: head of the See also: political department of the German See also: Foreign Office
.
Holstein's importanc.2 began with the dismissal of Bismarck in 189o
.
The new chancellor, Caprivi, was ignorant of foreign affairs; and Holstein, as the repository of the Bismarckian tradition, became indispensable
.
This reluctance to emerge into publicity has been ascribed to the See also: part he had played under Bismarck in the See also: Arnim affair, which had made him powerful enemies; it was, however, possibly due to a shrinking from the responsibility of office
.
Yet the weakness of his position See also: lay just in the fact that he was not ultimately responsible
.
He protested against the despatch of the " Kruger telegram," but protested in vain
.
On the other See also: hand, where his ideas were acceptable, he was generally able to realize them
.
Thus it was almost entirely due to him that See also: Germany acquired Kiao-chau and asserted her interests in See also: China, and the acquisition of See also: Samoa was also largely his See also: work
.
If the skill and pertinacity with which Holstein carried through his plans in these matters was learned in the school of Bismarck, he had not acquired Bismarck's faculty for foreseeing their ulterior consequences
.
This is true of his See also: Chinese policy, and true also of his part in the See also: Morocco crisis
.
The emperor See also: William II.'s journey to
See also: Tangier was undertaken on his advice, as a protest against the supposed attempt at the See also: isolation of Germany; but of the later developments of German policy in the Morocco question he did not approve, on the ground that the result would merely be to strengthen the Anglo-French entente; and from the 12th of See also: March 1906 onwards he took no active part in the
See also: matter
.
To the last he believed that the position of Germany would remain unsafe until an understanding had been arrived at with See also: Great Britain, and it was this belief that determined his attitude towards the question of the See also: fleet, " beside which," he wrote in See also: February 1909, " all other questions are of lesser account." His views on this question were summarized in a memorandum of See also: December 1907, of which Herr von See also: Rath gives a resume
.
He objected to the See also: programme of the German See also: Navy See also: League on three See also: main grounds: (I) the See also: ill-feeling likely to be aroused in See also: South Germany, (2) the inevitable dislocation of the finances through the huge additional charges involved, (3) the suspicion of Germany's motives in foreign countries, which would bind Great Britain still closer to See also: France
.
As for the idea that Germany's power would be increased, this—he wrote in reply to a letter from See also: Admiral Galster—was " a See also: simple question of arithmetic "; for how would the See also: sea-power of Germany be relatively increased if for every new German See also: ship Great Britain built two
?
Herr von Holstein retired on the resignation of See also: Prince Billow, and died on the 8th of May 1909
.
See Hermann von Rath, " Erinnerungen an Herrn von Holstein " in the Deutsche Revue for See also: October 1909
.
He is also frequently mentioned passim in Prince Chlodwig See also: Hohenlohe's See also: Memoirs
.
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