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Suppose that in 1914, the German army goes through Belgium and the Belgian central government approves, with 75% of the legislature approving of the PM's actions. I mean I assume they had a parliament, but I can't find any reference to one before the 1970s. The King is really sick with a fever, or something that keeps him bedridden. Actually, this might be a 1870s POD, but let's say the change in government happens in 1902 or whatever to keep it simple.

165 Hours after the first German troops board the trains in Belgium, the King gets out of bed and is furious. The next hour, the parliament is dissolved. 168 Hours after the first German troops came in, the king unilaterally issued an ultimatum to all Germans "without visas": Get out my country in 168 hours or be shot on sight as illegal immigrants.

He then holds phone conversations with the German Kaiser, the British monarchy, and the British cabinet. With the Kaiser he says "It's not that I hate you, it's that we're supposed to be neutral. If I have German troops in here, Belgium can be considered a belligerent by Britain if Britain intervenes on the side of France." With the British he says "Look, we really don't want to get in a war and I don't know what my idiot ministers were thinking. I'm telling them to get out now. Please guarantee our neutrality if further violations occur. If you can't guarantee our neutrality, we might end up being forced to throw out lot with the Germans. I don't want a war happening, France winning and then blaming us when we don't have your protection."

The King announces after his "get out" deadline, the Germans can still use Belgium to some extent. They can't bring ANY weapons or ammunition. However they can transport food and horses (yes, horses aren't useful in trench warfare but no one knows this yet) over, if they pay appropriate fees. There will be a line at a visa office. No using the railroads, they would have to walk. The Germans would be able to port over food. However, they can't reinforce their units, for every German that leaves Belgium on a boarder besides the German-Belgian boarder, another must reenter Belgium at the same time. Any reinforcement of German units or the transport of ammunition and weapons would be considered a violation.

Would the British just leave the Belgians to their fate? What would be the likely developments? What would be the likely developments if Willhiem uncharacteristically ordered his men to respect the ultimatum?
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