Page:The Myth of a Guilty Nation.djvu/30

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amount spent on new naval construction by England, France and Russia, as compared with Germany, was as follows:

England France Russia Germany
1909 £11,076,551 £ 4,517,766 £ 1,758,487 £10,177,062
1910 £14,755,289 £ 4,977,682 £ 1,424,013 £11,392,856
1911 £15,148,171 £ 5,876,659 £ 3,216,396 £11,710,859
1912 £16,132,558 £ 7,114,876 £ 6,897,580 £11,491,187
1913 £16,883,875 £ 8,893,064 £12,082,516 £11,010,883
1914 £18,676,080 £11,772,862 £13,098,613 £10,316,264

These figures can not be too carefully studied by those who have been led to think that Germany pounced upon a defenceless and unsuspecting Europe like a cat upon a mouse. If it be thought worth while to consider also the period of a few years preceding 1909, one finds that England's superiority in battleships alone was 112 per cent in 1901, and her superiority rose to nearly 200 per cent in 1904; in which year England spent £42,431,000 on her navy, and Germany £11,659,000. Taking the comparative statistics of naval expenditure from 1900, in which year England spent £32,055,000 on her navy, and Germany spent £7,472,000, down to 1914 it is absolutely impossible to make the figures show that Germany enforced upon the other nations of Europe an unwilling competition in naval armament.

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