No, they didn't. That's completely wrong. Sergei Sazonov, Russian foreign minister, urged Serbia to accept the Austrian ultimatum. When it appeared imminent that Serbia wasn't going to, he messaged all of the relevant European powers, asking them to collectively accept an extension of the deadline. In effect, Serbia chose to decline the ultimatum under the assumption that Russia wouldn't abandon its only key ally in the region (which was true), which lead to war with Austria.
How's that completely wrong? Everyone knew Russia would hardly remain idle while A-H was crushing its only potential ally in the Balkans. A-H was playing with fire, and it dragged Germany into the affair hoping that German involvement would dissuade the Russians from attacking.
It was a reckless gamble, which led to a general war. Germany should have told A-H to chill out and settle for partial acceptance of its terms.
By insane troll Entente logic, this means the war is Germany's fault.
I didn't say that.
Also false. The notion that the ultimatum had absurd requests and was just a front to justify an Austrian invasion of Serbia is propaganda that the Entente invented to condemn post-facto the Central Powers. The ultimatum was in fact entirely reasonable, but the Serbs intentionally declined one of the points to start a war with Russia at its back.
Revisionist nonsense. Austria basically demanded that Serbia removed officers from its military/civil administration whose names would be provided by Austria. Serbia accepted everything except this single point.
It's well sourced that Austria actually re-drafted the ultimatum to make it so outrageous that the Serbs would never accept it, and that Germany had actively encouraged this behaviour.
There's also nothing to indicate that Austria-Hungary would have invaded even if Serbia had accepted it, except statements from the General Staff, none of whom had the authority to commence the invasion.
That's a lie, basically everyone in the A-H government (except the PM, ironically) was in favour of war, they were just looking for ways to make it look at least partially legitimate, hence the ultimatum.
How was Austria-Hungary being reckless? Imagine if Barack Obama were assassinated and it was highly evident that the man behind the plot was a significant government minister for some third world country; and the country in question rebuffs any international attempt to investigate the matter. Would the U.S. be reckless for then declaring war on said country?
1. The analogy is wrong and biased (Serbia did accept everything except relinquishing its sovereignty in matters pertaining to sensitive internal affairs)
2. If the said 3rd world country was a under protection of another superpower which was practically guaranteed to go to war to defend it, then HELL YES, it would be totally reckless.
If you want an analogy, here you go: during the Cold war, a Cuban terrorist assassinates the the President-elect before he takes office. The US government demands that Cuba not only hands over all suspected accomplices of this terrorist, but also grants the US the right to dismiss any Cuban official in the government and the military that it deems "hostile to US interests". If Cuba refuses, the US threatens an invasion. The USSR meanwhile makes it crystal clear that if the US invades Cuba, it will mean war with the Warsaw Pact.
Under these circumstances, any sane US president would back down from a military solution. WW3 would simply not be an acceptable price to pay for punishing a small nuisance of a country on its borders.
And where did this manifest during the July Crisis, pray tell?
Are you serious? Germany encouraged A-H's aggressive behaviour the whole time.
France had almost nothing to do with the outbreak of World War I.
Nothing Britain or France did affected the July Crisis in any significant (i.e. possibly altering the outcome of) way.
Their role was limited to the latter part. If France hadn't mobilized and made it clear to Germany that it wouldn't support Russia in its war against Germany/A-H, the Germans would have had no reason to invade it. Conversely, Britain should have made it clear from the beginning that it would defend France.
Oh, my mistake. I took the rest of your post seriously but didn't discover that you were joking until the end.
I was only joking
at the end.