The Berlin Conference of March 31, 1917, was a German governmental meeting designed to define a new direction for the Imperial Reich's[nb 1] war aims in Eastern Europe. Called by the Chancellor of the Reich, this meeting brought together members of the civilian government and officials of the Oberste Heeresleitung to establish the principles that should guide Reich policy in response to the political changes occurring in Russia, which had recently undergone the definitive fall of the monarchy. As a major driving force behind the Central Powers the Reich recognized the need for a clear and objective plan moving forward. For the Reich, the Russian Revolution presented a possibility to impose severe peace terms on Russia and approve extreme initiatives.
Berlin Conference (March 31, 1917) Conférence de Berlin (31 mars 1917) | |
---|---|
Genre | Strategy meeting |
Date(s) | 31 March 1917 |
Location(s) | Berlin |
Country | German Empire |
Participants | Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg
Arthur Zimmermann Paul von Hindenburg Erich Ludendorff Max Hoffmann |
Context
editThe Reich and the Russian Revolution
editThe February Revolution halted military operations on the Eastern Front temporarily. However, the Russian provisional government's loyalty to the alliances made with the previous regime required the Reich and its allies to maintain a significant number of divisions on the ground to confront the Russian troops. During March, Arthur Zimmermann, the German Foreign Minister, received fragmented updates on political events in Russia, specifically the monarch's overthrow. The Reich Chancellor, Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg, and the Dioscuri (World War I), Paul von Hindenburg and Erich Ludendorff,[nb 2] became convinced that negotiations for peace with the Russian Provisional Government would commence, assuring the Reich and its allies of a "satisfactory peace." On March 27, the Provisional Government announced its intention to continue the war on the side of the Allies under the leadership of its President, Georgi Lvov.[1]
Although the Russian government remained loyal to the Triple Entente, it lacked the willingness to engage in ambitious military operations due to the revolution and ensuing unrest, which had temporarily rendered the Russian army unable to operate.[2]
Aware of this reality, the Quadruple Alliance military planners promptly redeployed their armies to Italy, the Balkans, and the western front, which had hitherto been engaged in the East.[3]
Pushing back Russia
editSince its inception, the leaders of the German Empire have been confronted with the strategic challenge of waging war on two fronts, against France and Russia.
To mitigate the negative effects of this simultaneous dual confrontation, German diplomats proposed the creation of buffer states along the non-Russian borders of the Tsarist empire. This would provide the Reich and its allies with protection against Russia and enhance its strategic depth.[4][5]
Thus, from the outset of the conflict, Reich Chancellor Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg favored the Reich's control over non-Russian territories in the European part of the Russian Empire. This was ostensibly done to "keep Russia as far away from the German border as possible" and cloaked in the guise of emancipation. Chancellor Bethmann Hollweg and his ministers in September 1914 selected the regions to be controlled at Russia's expense, including Finland, the Baltic states, Poland, and Ukraine up to Rostov-on-Don.[6]
Participants
editReich Chancellor Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg did not physically attend the conference,[7] but it was opened and closed on his behalf by Arthur Zimmermann, State Secretary for Foreign Affairs, and his principal collaborators.[8]
The military command, led by the Dioscuri, Paul von Hindenburg and Erich Ludendorff, and their deputy Max Hoffmann,[7] who was known as the "essential man of the East" and was the main organizer of the Eastern Front, was also in attendance.[nb 3][9]
Discussions
editCivil-military differences
editAlthough the desire to neutralize Russia was acute, the participants were unable to reach a consensus on the feasibility of dispatching additional pacifist agitators to Russia. As of March 27th, multiple trains containing Bolshevik and Menshevik leaders, such as Lenin and Julius Martov, had already departed Switzerland for Russia with the Reich's approval.[10][11][12]
Thus, at this meeting, two factions emerged, with one advocating for the long-term destabilization of Russia and the other favoring its weaker status, ensured by a peace treaty. The military, backed by nationalists and pangermists, aimed to close the Eastern Front without regard for the costs. Meanwhile, the Reich Chancellor, supported by a majority of parties in the Reichstag, sought to initiate negotiations with the new Russian power in order to safeguard the conquered territories in Poland and the Baltic states.[13]
Irreconcilable differences
editIn this context, the differences actually obscured the profound schisms between the pangermanists and nationalists, on one side, and the proponents of a particular realism, on the other, which were exacerbated by the conflict.
Within this context, the military, supported by Pangermanist factions, openly declared their desire for a maximal expansionist agenda, pressuring the Reich and its allies to aim for total victory in the war against their opponents, precisely when such a victory appeared increasingly unlikely.[14]
Bethmann-Hollweg, his advisors, and the majority he relied on in the Reichstag during the hostilities aimed to establish restricted objectives for the conflict. Their objective was to enable a diplomatic resolution, but without attaining complete triumph over the opposing alliance.
Decisions
editNeutralizing Russia
editIn Berlin, the Reich government and their main collaborators aimed to remove Russia from the conflict.
Following Ulrich von Brockdorff-Rantzau's advice, while posted in Denmark, Arthur Zimmermann obtained the Chancellor's authorization not only to encourage pacifist propaganda in Russia but also to facilitate the return of the Bolsheviks. This was done in order to "aggravate the dissensions between moderates and extremists".[nb 4] In this context, German representatives in Switzerland negotiated with Lenin to establish the terms of his return. They guaranteed his political independence from the Reich government and provided subsidies to support his pacifist efforts.[15][16]
In tandem with this subversive action, diplomats convinced the military to refrain from any more large-scale actions on the Russian front to avoid a reaction from the army. The diplomats recommended that the German army multiply small-scale operations. By doing so, they hoped to gradually exhaust the Russian army without inciting a nationalist uprising in Russia. Furthermore, they aimed to strengthen the supporters of a negotiated peace among the members of the new government in Petrograd.[17][18]
Colonial projects
editAt the meeting, the maps of the Baltic States were assessed and the group developed a draft territorial plan for German colonization of Lithuania and the Curonian Spit.[7]
Two projects were formulated, the first proposing extensive programs to remove the Baltic populations and resettle Reich Germans in their place, while the second focused on "soft Germanization" to gradually integrate the Balts into the German population. The civilian population adhered to the Bismarckian tradition, with the explicit goal of assimilating the Poles and Balts in the region into the Reich. In contrast, Ludendorff pursued a colonial and racist agenda that aimed to establish Germanic agricultural communities in the same regions.[19]
At this point in the conflict, the projects were not fully developed and sparked heated discussions between civilians who supported integrating the Baltic populations and the military, particularly Erich Ludendorff, who endorsed extensive expulsions as a precursor to German settlement in the Baltic countries.[20]
Ethnic cleansing
editFor the first time, the German leaders at the gathering conceived of the removal of significant Slavic and Baltic populations as a prerequisite for colonizing the Baltic regions already under the control of the Reich's armies.[nb 5] Erich Ludendorff's expansionist aspirations heavily influenced this agenda, with the added objective of establishing an expulsion timetable.[7]
The participants aimed to Germanize the Baltic region, intending to force out the Baltic and Slav populations from previous regimes in Estonia, Livonia, and Ober Ost following the war's conclusion.[10]
However, the military rejected this proposal. Ludendorff, who was accompanied by many Baltic Germans, advocated for initiating an ambitious colonial program expeditiously. He proposed the mass expulsion of Baltic and Slav populations in a true "ethnic cleansing"[nb 6] fashion as a requirement for Germanization.[21] Furthermore, the First Quartermaster General[nb 7] urged that a timetable be established for these extensive population transfers.[7][21]
Notes
edit- ^ Between the proclamation of the German Empire in 1871 and its dissolution in 1945, the official name of the German state was Deutsches Reich, subsequently referred to by the legal term Reich.
- ^ Inseparable from each other in the eyes of German public opinion, these two soldiers were likened to the Dioscuri of mythology by war propaganda.
- ^ Max Hoffmann was subsequently the main German negotiator of the peace treaties with Russia and Ukraine, signed a year later.
- ^ In the words of Ulrich von Brockdorff-Rantzau's letter to his minister.
- ^ In the words of Fritz Ficher.
- ^ In 1970, when the French translation of Fritz Fischer's book was published, the expression "ethnic cleansing" did not have the same meaning as in 2019.
- ^ Since August 29, 1916, Erich Ludendorff has held the title of First Quartermaster General of the German Army.
References
edit- ^ Fischer 1970, p. 374.
- ^ Lacroix-Riz 1996, p. 28.
- ^ Renouvin 1934, p. 431.
- ^ Renouvin 1934, p. 199.
- ^ Baechler 2012, p. 53.
- ^ Fischer 1970, p. 123.
- ^ a b c d e Lopez and Otkhmezuri 2019, p. 32.
- ^ Fischer 1970, p. 355.
- ^ Laparra and Hesse 2011, p. 336.
- ^ a b Fischer 1970, p. 350.
- ^ Carrère d'Encausse 1998, p. 254-256.
- ^ Service 2000, p. 253-262.
- ^ Fischer 1970, p. 345.
- ^ Fischer 1970, p. 349.
- ^ Fischer 1970, p. 375.
- ^ Fischer 1970, p. 377.
- ^ Fischer 1970, p. 376.
- ^ Renouvin 1934, p. 421.
- ^ Fischer 1970, p. 353.
- ^ Fischer 1970, p. 356.
- ^ a b Fischer 1970, p. 352.
See also
editBibliography
edit- (fr) Christian Baechler, Guerre et extermination à l'Est: Hitler et la conquête de l'espace vital. 1933-1945, Paris, Tallandier, 2012, 524 p. (ISBN 978-2-84734-906-1).
- (fr) Fritz Fischer (trad. Geneviève Migeon and Henri Thiès), Les Buts de guerre de l’Allemagne impériale (1914-1918) ["Griff nach der Weltmacht"], Paris, Éditions de Trévise, 1970, 654 p. (BNF 35255571).
- (fr) Hélène Carrère d'Encausse, Lénine, Fayard, 1998, 684 p. (ISBN 978-2-213-60162-5).
- (fr) Jean-Claude Laparra and Pascal Hesse, L'envers des parades: Le commandement de l'armée allemande: réalités et destins croisés 1914-1918, Paris, 14-18 éditions, 2011, 388 p. (ISBN 978-2-916385-77-8).
- (fr) Jean Lopez and Lasha Otkhmezuri, Barbarossa: 1941. La guerre absolue, Paris, Passés composés, 2019, 957 p. (ISBN 978-2-37933-186-2).
- (fr) Annie Lacroix-Riz, Le Vatican, l'Europe et le Reich de la Première Guerre mondiale à la Guerre Froide (1914-1955), Paris, Armand Colin, coll. « Références » Histoire, 1996 ISBN 978-2-200242-92-3.
- (fr) Pierre Renouvin, La Crise européenne et la Première Guerre mondiale, Paris, Presses universitaires de France, coll. "Peuples et civilisations" (no 19), 1934, 779 p. (BNF 33152114).
- Robert Service, Lenin: a biography, Pan Books, 2000, 561 p. (ISBN 978-0-330-51838-3).
- (fr) Georges-Henri Soutou, L'Or et le sang: Les buts de guerre économiques de la Première Guerre mondiale, Paris, Fayard, 1989, 963 p. (ISBN 2-213-02215-1).