What if there is no February Revolution in Russia. The grand circumstances are roughly the same as OTL but the presence of loyal troops in the right place, or some better crowd control or food distribution plan in Petrograd heads off the uprising for the moment, and the regime remains in charge at least through the spring and the summer.
What will the Entente be doing differently militarily under these circumstances?
The Russians, while exhausted, seem to have more options by maintaining officer control and not having Soldiers' Soviets forming.
I had heard that the Black Sea Fleet and Caucasus Army were keen to go onto the offensive to build on their successes of 1916. Could the Russians have launched a spring offensive in Anatolia knocking the Ottomans out of the war by the end of the year?
Would the principal effort of 1917 be an attempt to replay Brusilov's successes against the Austrians? (that's what OTL's Kerensky Offensive seemed to be)
With an army that can still shoot its own deserters, what efforts can the Russians make and what military impact will it have on the opposing coalition?