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#81
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Prince Henry of Prussia: The Rise of the U-Boat http://www.alternatehistory.com/disc...d.php?t=225455 |
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#82
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The numbers also look a little high. Quote:
Germany deserves criticism for not restraining A-H. France and to a lesser extent the UK deserve the same for Russia. Serbian intelligence had been committing before and with the assassinations of the ArchDuke clear acts of war. Quote:
All major European powers were trapped by an alliance system, and they failed to realize that any of a series of small crisis going back to the Boer Wars could have triggered WW1. All powers did too much brinksmanship, too much looking for an edge in a crisis, and not enough trying to build a workable peace structure. WW1 is the story of militaristic powers who started a war that none could win.
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Prince Henry of Prussia: The Rise of the U-Boat http://www.alternatehistory.com/disc...d.php?t=225455 |
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#83
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German militarism was not dead in 1918, unfortunately, and we have famous evidence about that: they thought it proper to infiltrate political parties with their own military intelligence agents (rings a bell?). That alone is damning. But it was thankfully largely killed, once and for all, in 1945, which in my humble opinion shows that it could have been put down in 1918 too, or at the latest by 1922. Unfortunately that didn't happen.
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--- Michele |
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#84
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I am not saying the Germans want to be "fairer" with France, but they are too weak to impose the ToV type terms. Quote:
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As to why the UK will try to save France. Easy, to lessen German domination of Europe which was one of the major goals of the UK during the war. The question is not will the UK try to help France, but "How successful will the UK be at helping France?" Also, It is possible that Germany would remove everything that can be shipped and destroying the rest combine with limited reparations. You are creating a false choice here. Plundering and reparations in a treaty don't always come in a pair. You can do neither, both, one or the other.
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Prince Henry of Prussia: The Rise of the U-Boat http://www.alternatehistory.com/disc...d.php?t=225455 |
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#85
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The format of the UK cabinet discussions show this to be true. If it had been merely a breach of the treaty, the PM would have simply went to the King with information that Germany had invaded Belgium, and the King would have signed the war orders. The fact the UK discussed if to intervene shows it was not a simple issue of the treaty being violated. Even if the Germans had found a loophole in the Treaty, the UK still likely goes to war. Even if German avoid Belgium, the UK may go to war. Quote:
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The numbers vary by source, but the UK war crime total in WW1 is between 250K and 750K civilian dead. To put this in perspective, Germany did 6K in Belgium. The Ottomans are blamed for 600K to 1,500K. The crimes committed by one party to not morally justify the crimes of a second. There are no innocents in this war among the Great Powers.
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Prince Henry of Prussia: The Rise of the U-Boat http://www.alternatehistory.com/disc...d.php?t=225455 |
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#86
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None. Why would they?
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#87
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Oh, wait. A country that can't protect its most vital industrial region is the same as a country which no longer exists as an independent state. This was the primary intended goal of the allies in disarmament, and to say that they were trying to breed peace and mutual understanding from such an arrangement, where they refused to disarm even in the slightest is completely ludicrous. Quote:
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And anyways, numbers: Reparations for Germany in 1920 were equivalent to 132 billion marks, to be paid in installments of 2 billion a year. Reparations for France in 1871 were five billion francs, to be paid in installments of 1 billion a year (and, it's worth noting, installments paid ahead of time. I've primarily made use of this handy inflation calculator to calculate inflation. Because it only does dollars, I calculated the Versailles amount as the rough equivalent of 32 billion dollars at the exchange rates common at the time. The same value of money in 1870 was listed as roughly 24 billion dollars, which however it converts to Francs, is still far greater. Quote:
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July 29 - Russia orders full mobilization (against Germany and A-H) August 1 - Germany DOWs Russia (2 full days after Russia mobilized against her) and mobilizes. August 1 - France orders mobilization August 2 - Germany occupies Luxembourg and demands passage from Belgium (this war, I'll grant, was started by Germany, and was the only war to be clearly started by her) August 4 - Germany invades Belgium following refusal of her ultimatum August 7 - France commences invasion of Germany. They are repulsed within 2 weeks. Quote:
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Also, I would say that the UK, being responsible for the deaths of a half million civilians, hardly has clean hands. Quote:
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And neither France nor Russia (well maybe Belgium, but that's literally the one area Germany was actually guilty in, and which was totally offset by various Entente war crimes) would even in the most harsh peace have been completely dismembered or turned to annexed bits. Seriously, what you described was essentially word for word the Entente policy towards Turkey (the parts of the Ottoman Empire that were mostly Turks). Except with more ethnic cleansing. And this was publicly acclaimed and accepted policy, not the wet dream of the ultra-nationalist minority. Quote:
I would say that A-H should probably be somewhere between Russia and UK. They committed many war crimes in Serbia.
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#88
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Adler |
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#89
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Versailles had a number of issues, the most grievous of which was the total neglect of the situation in Central and Eastern Europe in favor of that in Western Europe beyond vague handwaving generalities. This coupled with the initial weakness of Russia and Germany means that Poland's exploiting this creates the seed of at least *a* future conflict involving Russia, Germany, and Poland. Whether that conflict shows up in 1939-style form, OTOH, is not at all predictable.
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#90
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... (Rhineland, East Germany)Adler |
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#91
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#92
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We started with a claim that Germany needed strong armed forces for its survival. When asked whether the survival of Germany as a country was ever threatened, somebody mentioned Polish and French post-1918 operations. Which is funny in its own right. When further asked whether these operations really had a chance, let alone the intention, of annexing all of Germany or of dismembering it, this even funnier notion of "dismemberment in parts" comes up. Let's get this straight: after the dismemberment of what remained of Czechoslovakia, there was no more a Czechoslovakia on the map. After the second Polish partition, there was not a Poland on the map. After the Anschluss, there was not an Austria on the map. That is dismemberment and that is the contrary of survival. "Partial" dismemberment leaves a Germany on the map. Germany survives. It should be easy to understand, really. In fact, Germany survived in 1918 and survived in 1945, even, unlike the three examples mentioned above. That should be a guideline quite simple to comprehend. Quote:
It wasn't. Could we just friendly accept that it was an off-the-wall, wild-eyed claim and live with that? Thanks.
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--- Michele |
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#93
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#94
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Hitler did not begin rearming or violating treaties against rearming. The Weimar Republic did. Stalin did not begin Soviet ties with Germany for the purposes of Soviet expansion, the Triumvirate of 1922 did. |
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#95
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Had Germany been invaded and occupied entirely by the allies after WW1 and demilitarized, Germany also wouldn't be in danger of invasion either. German interests that didn't conflict with the intent of the occupying forces would be protected by occupying allied armies. What I am saying is that it would have been better if Germany was conquered, totally occupied, with is government and constitution reconstituted under Allied control. The Japanese knew their military lost the war. Too many Germans in 1919 did not know this.
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#96
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Who has the right to alter the constitution of another country? And the interests of the Entente powers were different. France did want to dismember Germany. And they invaded Germany as well. There was simply no security for Germany, especially if you see the interests of France and Poland.
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#97
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Germany/Prussia is unique in that it does this after what is supposed to be a general European settlement after Vienna. The only other country I can think of in Europe launching a general war of agression is in the A/H Sardinian war in the 1850’s.
Quoting the wars of Louis XIV is more than a little misleading as twice (Peace of Ryswick and Peace of Westphalia) the French evacuated Lorraine it gets transferred to the failed franco Polish Candidate in the war of polish succession with the Lorraine Dukes getting Tuscany in return, it devolves to the Kings of France on the death the polish guy and Is agreed to by all parties in exchange largely for French support for the Pragmatic sanction. Alsace is however bought by the French in 1648. You are probably right about Germany and its components fighting fewer wars, but its irrelevant in this context. In 1866, 1871, 1914 Germany had launched major wars on little to no provocation except that it believed it could gain by so doing. The latest of those had resulted in an unprecedented casualty rate and the cause was a deliberate attempt by Germany to impose its will by force. That makes Germany just fuckin dangerous. The fact that other people used to do it as well is irrelevant. Personally I would not claim Versailles was justified for the good and sufficient reason that it failed to stop Germany behaving like a medieval duchy. It took another world war, the destruction of most of Germany, its unconditional surrender, occupation for a decade by the victorious powers, purging of the body politic and their writing of a new constitutional settlement and imposing it, as well as much treasure from the US to do that. In context though Versailles was not a bad effort. Oh and as to the British Blockade - you do realise that blockading food is only made illegal in the 1949 Geneva Conventions and only then in the context of foodstuff for children, nursing mothers and for their exclusive use only. Prior to that its up to the Blockading power to determine the list and by both UK and US law (which are the only two juristictions that practically matter) its entirely legal. If you have any other reasons why the UK blockade was Illegal lets hear them |
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#98
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Let me requote the post for your benefit: Quote:
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And leaving aside the fact that something in the area of forty wars were waged in Europe by Europeans against each other in the 19th century. Though admittedly, a lot of them were waged (by all powers) against rebellions. Quote:
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█████████████ Last edited by Zmflavius; July 10th, 2012 at 04:59 PM.. |
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#99
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Agreed, the interests of the Allies were not all the same. Perhaps France did want to permantly dismember Germany, perhaps not. Frankly, even if this was the French desire, it is unlikely that the US and UK would let them do this. As for Poland, it was not an allied state. Once its border with Germany was established by treaty, Allied occupying forces would protect the border from further Polish demands. |
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#100
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[QUOTE=BlondieBC;6317914]This is an UK crime due the the UK breaking the rules relating to food imports. The Germans were responsible for feeding the population, if the UK followed the rules. But since it was impossible to bring in the need food due to the blockade, German is relieved of moral responsibility for these deaths. They are a stain on the soul of the British Empire.
The numbers also look a little high.[QUOTE] Actually the problem for Germany was that it decided fighting the war was more important than feeding its people. People starved in Germany and occupied areas largely because Germany stripped its agriculture of men, horses and fertiliser to put into the war effort. This wasn't because they were at war and needed it, it was because they mis-judged the allocation of resources. Quote:
Steve |
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