I know that there are a fair number of History Buffs on this forum and so I am hoping that I might get some feedback on a question that has been perplexing me recently.
I have been reading several tomes in the past year about the Origins of WWI. This wasn't inspired by the fact that the war started 100 years ago, but the additional attention that the anniversary has focused on the question has upped the ante.
The War was such a terrible tragedy, and it happened when the world seemed to be moving much closer to what we now refer to as a Global Economy. Surely understanding the causes of the outbreak must have some implications for us today.
Apart from the causes, I puzzle at the German's desire to pursue an active two front war. Fundamentally their strategy was attack aggressively in Western Europe (violating Belgian neutrality in the process, an action which galvinized British entry into the war and factored significantly in US involvement 3 years later), while holding defensive posture in the East against the Russians.
This seems to me to be fundamentally flawed. It would have been possible to do the exact opposite. Once the hostilities between the Austrians (bent on destroying the Serbs) and the Russians (the protector of the Serbs) commenced, and assuming that Germany and France
felt compelled to honor their respective obligations to their treaty partners, the following strategy makes much more sense to me.
The Germans adopt a defensive posture against the French, stationing an increased troop presences in Alsace-Lorraine as a defensive gesture only. This would coincide with a diplomatic initiative aimed at the French and British stating that Germany had no quarrel or aggressive intent with either country.
Simultaneously, the Germans apply most of their aggressive tendencies towards knocking the Russians out early. It would not be necessary to conquer the entire country. They could have pried Poland and parts of Byelorussia and the Ukraine from the Russian and probably caused the toppling of the government (an outcome they may not have welcomed, given the relationship between the Tsar and the Kaiser). The Russians were very weak, with the Romanov dynasty barely surving the 1904-5 Russo Japanese War. Additionally, Russia was almost paralyzed by Labor Strikes in the years leading up to 1914.
One doubts that the French would have mounted a full scale war on the Western Front to come to the aid of their Russian Treaty Partners, and certainly the English would have remained neutral. Once peace was made with the Russians, the Germans could then afford to do an about face and be aggressive in the West, if they so chose. Or they could consolidate their gains in the East, ensure that the Austrians had dealt with the Serbs, and become the clear dominant World Power.
The world would be a very different place today had they chosen this course. Any thoughts?
I have been reading several tomes in the past year about the Origins of WWI. This wasn't inspired by the fact that the war started 100 years ago, but the additional attention that the anniversary has focused on the question has upped the ante.
The War was such a terrible tragedy, and it happened when the world seemed to be moving much closer to what we now refer to as a Global Economy. Surely understanding the causes of the outbreak must have some implications for us today.
Apart from the causes, I puzzle at the German's desire to pursue an active two front war. Fundamentally their strategy was attack aggressively in Western Europe (violating Belgian neutrality in the process, an action which galvinized British entry into the war and factored significantly in US involvement 3 years later), while holding defensive posture in the East against the Russians.
This seems to me to be fundamentally flawed. It would have been possible to do the exact opposite. Once the hostilities between the Austrians (bent on destroying the Serbs) and the Russians (the protector of the Serbs) commenced, and assuming that Germany and France
felt compelled to honor their respective obligations to their treaty partners, the following strategy makes much more sense to me.
The Germans adopt a defensive posture against the French, stationing an increased troop presences in Alsace-Lorraine as a defensive gesture only. This would coincide with a diplomatic initiative aimed at the French and British stating that Germany had no quarrel or aggressive intent with either country.
Simultaneously, the Germans apply most of their aggressive tendencies towards knocking the Russians out early. It would not be necessary to conquer the entire country. They could have pried Poland and parts of Byelorussia and the Ukraine from the Russian and probably caused the toppling of the government (an outcome they may not have welcomed, given the relationship between the Tsar and the Kaiser). The Russians were very weak, with the Romanov dynasty barely surving the 1904-5 Russo Japanese War. Additionally, Russia was almost paralyzed by Labor Strikes in the years leading up to 1914.
One doubts that the French would have mounted a full scale war on the Western Front to come to the aid of their Russian Treaty Partners, and certainly the English would have remained neutral. Once peace was made with the Russians, the Germans could then afford to do an about face and be aggressive in the West, if they so chose. Or they could consolidate their gains in the East, ensure that the Austrians had dealt with the Serbs, and become the clear dominant World Power.
The world would be a very different place today had they chosen this course. Any thoughts?
Comment