AHC WI 1916 olympic truce

We were in Olympia in 1979 when wife attended International Olympic Committee. There was a plaque stating that there was a truce during the Olympiad. So I googled and found the following http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/Olympics/truce.html

A truce (in Greek, ekecheiria, which literally means "holding of hands") was announced before and during each of the Olympic festivals, to allow visitors to travel safely to Olympia.

The Olympic truce was faithfully observed, for the most part, although the historian Thucydides recounts that the Lacedaemonians were banned from participating in the Games, after they attacked a fortress in Lepreum, a town in Elis, during the truce. The Lacedaemonians complained that the truce had not yet been announced at the time of their attack. But the Eleans fined them two thousand minae, two for each soldier, as the law required.

A mina was equivalent to 100 drachmas, and one drachma was an average worker's daily wage, or the price of a sheep. Thus, the fine was a heavy one, equal to 200,000 drachmas.
 
How could this happen sometimes after 1915?

Could it have resulted in the war ending without victors?

The later is unlikely, but given the quieting down of the southern theatures of the war and the tense internal position in Greece at the time, I can see the later happening at least regionally.

Consider the follow: Greece was still neutral during that year, though the government and popular sentiment were deeply divided between the King and Conservatives in general (Who favored neutrality... though were generally more sympathetic to the Germans and generally ticked off with the Entente) and the Liberal-Nationalist Venazelists who wanted to intervene on the Entente's side as quickly as possible. The British were leaving Gallipoli with their tail tucked between their legs, and Bulgaria and Austria had just put Serbia and Montenegro's military on the run into Albania. Romania, the only other nation is the region, was also still neutral.

Both sides had reasons to want at least a temporary ceasection of hostilities in the region. The Centeral Powers would want to solidify their grasp on Serbia and its railway (Especially if Germany decides they want to arm-up the now freed up Ottoman armies from Gallipoli with modern equipment, German officers, and training so they can provide strength to another front), re-deploy extra Austrian and German troops not needed for the occupation to the Italian and Gallician front, and shore up their diplomatic position with Greece and Romania. The Entente, in contrast, need to get the evacuated Serbian army re-organized, reinforce and resupply Salonika (Which is, at the time, considered the next opportunity for a "decisive breakthrough") and also want to get good will with Romania and Greece (Or, in the later case, lay the groundwork for a potential coup). The Greek Government wants the violence to calm down (To limit the justification for both blatant and covert intervention) and bolster its own prestige to prevent the Venazelists from using the threat of being dragged into the war against Greece's will to bolster their own interventionalist position ("If we're going to be at war anyways, best do it under our own terms"), Romania can get a better idea of just what both sides have to offer it in the bidding war after they've shown their hands, so to speak, in what fronts they prioritize and how much of their army they can keep in the field.

So, let's go with the following: King Constantine calls on the various nation's military leadership in the region (Romanian, Bulgarian, Ottoman, the Austrian and German occupation forces in Serbia, Serebian government-in-exile, and the Five Nation Army in Salonika) to settle for a temporary truce in the region, in the spirit of friendly sport and competition. All sides, seeing the advantages of 'breathing space' and not wanting to alienate the Greeks by dismissing a powerful symbol of their culture should the other side seem to support it, agree to lay low for awhile: maybe even using it as a chance to get in some vacation time for themselves.
 
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