THE FIRST WORLD WAR INVOLVED FEW FULLY DEMOCRATIC countries on either side. In France all adult males had had the vote since 1792 and in Germany since 1871, while in Britain about 60 percent of adult males also had the vote; but in both Germany and the United Kingdom the actual government was still dominated by the old moneyed elite and (especially in Germany’s case) the monarch. Russia and Austria-Hungary were autocracies with only the sketchiest facade of a parliamentary system. Yet even at the time, the war was portrayed in France and the English-speaking countries as a battle in defence of democracy, with the implication that a dark night of tyranny would descend on the world if the other side won. A hundred years later, the same rhetoric is still trotted out every Remembrance Day.
A dark night of tyranny already prevailed over most of the world in 1914, of course, in the sense that almost everybody in the world who was not of European descent was the involuntary subject of some European empire. At the end of the war, some of them got a change of oppressor (the German colonies and the Arabic-speaking parts of the Ottoman empire were all divided up among the victors), but they still had no voice in what happened to them. Different people in some other parts of Africa and Asia might have had a change of rulers if the Central Powers had won, but on the whole it wouldn’t have made much difference to them.
As far as the European countries themselves are concerned, however, the question of whether a German victory would have made a lot of difference rarely gets posed. It is taken for granted that the history of the next few decades really would have been a lot worse if the other side had won the First World War, because that was always the victors’ story, and it was reinforced when the same alliance won the Second World War as well. But it is not actually a self-evident truth, and there is some value in making a brief excursion into “counter-factual” history. Just how different would the world actually have been if Germany had won the war in 1918?
It’s hard to argue that the spring offensives of 1918 could have won the war for Germany even if they had decisively broken through the Allied front and separated the British army from the French. The Allies would have hung on grimly, perhaps with the British army in an enclave on the Channel coast, knowing that the scheduled arrival of more than two million American troops by the end of the year would swing the balance back in their favour. Germany would still have lost in the end: the American declaration of war in 1917 cancelled out the advantage that Germany derived from the Russian exit from the war after the revolution, and Germany was still hugely outmatched both in men and in industrial resources.
It would have been different if Germany had not resumed the campaign of unrestricted U-boat warfare in 1917, knowing full well that the sinking of neutral shipping, including American ships, was almost bound to bring the United States into the war. Admiral Henning von Holzendorff, who wrote the key memorandum in December 1916, claimed that unrestricted submarine warfare would sink 600,000 tons of shipping a month and starve Britain into submission within five months, well before the Americans could act. Holzendorff promised the Kaiser, “not one American will land on the continent.” It was an act of desperation, as the German military authorities could see no other chance for a German victory.
At first the submarine campaign was a great success, with fully a quarter of all British-bound shipping being sunk in March 1917, but the campaign began to fail as soon as the Royal Navy brought back the old system of convoys of merchant vessels escorted by warships (which it had previously resisted) in April. And in the same month, the United States declared war on Germany—which meant that by March 1918 its huge new army had been conscripted and trained and was beginning to enter the trenches in France. In that month there were still only 300,000 American troops in France, but they then began to arrive in Europe at the rate of 10,000 a day, and by August there were 1.3 million American soldiers deployed overseas, with another million due by the end of the year. Germany could not really have won the war in 1918, although many on the Allied side, shocked by the success of the first great German offensive in March, were convinced that it might.
On the other hand, only a two-month delay in Germany’s fatal decision in January 1917 to launch unrestricted U-boat warfare might have caused the decision to go the other way, for in March the revolution in Petrograd overthrew the Tsar and raised the hope (though not yet the accomplished fact) that Russia might leave the war. And if Germany had not decided to gamble everything on the unrestricted U-boat campaign, then the United States would almost certainly not have declared war in 1917. In that case, Germany just might have won the war.
It would not have been a resounding victory, for the opponents were too evenly matched, but with a bit more luck on the German side and a bit worse generalship on the Allied side the Germans could have made a big breach in the Western Front at the point where the British and French armies met. They might then have rolled up the open British flank and driven the empire’s troops back into an enclave based on the Channel ports, while further south the French army tried to stretch out into a thinly manned new front that reached the sea somewhere near the mouth of the Seine. There would have been no march on Paris: the German troops would have been far too exhausted for that, and the breakthrough would only have been achieved at a huge cost in casualties. But the psychological impact of the defeat might still have been enough to make the Allies ask for an armistice, especially since there would have been no Americans coming and the signature of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk in March would have just confirmed that the Russians were out of the war for good. So what would the peace treaty between a (barely) victorious Germany and the remaining Allied powers have looked like?
If it looked anything like the Brest-Litovsk treaty, it would have been a dreadful document. The Bolsheviks, who were still struggling to extend their control over Russia, were helpless in the face of the Germans, and so, to gain time to defeat their internal enemies, the new Soviet regime signed away Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Belarus and Ukraine. That effectively moved Russia’s old imperial border east by 300 to 400 kilometres everywhere except in Ukraine, where it retreated twice as far. The treaty stated that “Germany and Austria-Hungary intend to determine the future fate of these territories in agreement with their populations,” but they were clearly destined to become satellites and client states of Germany and Austria-Hungary.
A 1918 or 1919 peace treaty after a narrow German victory in the west could not have been as severe. Germany’s priority in the west would have been a peace that stabilized the situation and gave it time to assimilate its gains in the east. It urgently needed an end to the British naval blockade, for civilians in Germany were starting to die of malnutrition in significant numbers. Having seen Red revolution in Russia, the collapse of the Italian army and the near-collapse of the French army in the previous twelve months, it would have wanted to end the war quickly before there were mutinies in the German army and revolution in the streets at home. And in any case, the strength of the German army, although it was in a temporarily dominant position, would not have been great enough for Berlin to enforce extreme demands on the Allied powers. The peace treaty, as a result, would have been considerably gentler than the one that the Allies actually imposed on Germany at Versailles.
There would have been no reparations and “war guilt” clause imposed on France and Britain; those were luxuries that Germany’s precarious military superiority would not have allowed it to indulge in. There would probably have been no border changes in Western Europe; the only region really in dispute was Alsace-Lorraine, and Germany owned that already. There would doubtless have been a requirement for the British army to withdraw from France and never return, and limits would have been placed on the future size of the French army, but Germany would not have been able to impose the kind of limits on the size and composition of Britain’s navy that the Treaty of Versailles actually imposed on the German navy. Germany would have got its existing overseas colonies back (they had all been conquered by Britain and France during the war), and perhaps some new ones as compensation for all its trouble. Then everybody would have gone home and lived bitterly ever after.
The bitterness would have been particularly strong in the countries that had “lost” the war. Prime Minister David Lloyd George in Britain, President Georges Clemenceau in France—and, no doubt, Prime Minister Robert Borden in Canada—would have lost power very quickly, but there would have been no collapse of the entire political system of the sort that occurred in Berlin and Vienna in the real 1918.
Two positive things would not have happened in the event of a German victory. There would have been no League of Nations: the idea was almost entirely an American and British one, and only came to fruition because they effectively dominated the peace conference at Versailles. It didn’t succeed, in the end, but it did provide two decades of experience in trying to run an international institution dedicated to the prevention of great-power war that would not have been available in our alternative timeline. And Canada’s de facto independence from Britain would have been delayed by a few years, partly because the alternative peace conference would not have provided an opportunity for Canada to insist on being treated as a sovereign state, and partly because we would have been so frightened of German power that we would have clung tightly to Britain’s skirts for a little longer.
Austria-Hungary would have come out of the war intact, albeit only by the skin of its teeth, and there would have been no splintering of south-central Europe into half a dozen new countries. However, the contending nationalisms that made the Austrian empire so fractious and fragile would not have evaporated, and it is questionable whether it could have overcome its own divisions in the longer term even in the event that it “won” the war. The Ottoman empire would also have survived the war, recovering its conquered provinces in Iraq and Palestine from Britain and perhaps expanding its borders in the Caucasus. But the Arab revolt that the British had sponsored as part of their strategy against Turkey would not have been forgotten. Both of these ramshackle empires would have provided much raw material for confrontations and crises: there was no risk that the future would be boring.
Germany would have had its hands full getting its various new satellite states in the east up and running, and it might also have got involved in helping the Whites against the Reds in the Russian civil war (as Britain and France did in the real history). That, plus the prestige the German military would have enjoyed for saving the country from a catastrophic defeat, would have ensured a high degree of military influence in the German government for the first few years after the war, but such influence does not usually last in a democracy at peace. There is no particular reason to doubt that German politics would have undergone the same evolution towards greater inclusivity and transparency in the few decades after a victory in the First World War that British politics did in the real history of 1918–50.
Neither is there any strong reason to believe that the defeated powers, Britain and France, would have descended into fascism and risked major war again to even the score, as Germany did in the real postwar history. They could easily have indulged in a witch hunt for those responsible for losing the war, but their loss would not have been nearly as traumatic as Germany’s was, and democratic traditions were older and stronger in Britain and France. As for Russia, whether it was the Whites or the Communists who finally won the civil war, Russia would probably have been a dictatorship for at least some decades, and as easily a fascist as a communist one. It would also almost certainly have drifted into a military confrontation with Germany, which would then have gone in search of allies elsewhere. Japan, at the other end of Russia, would have been an obvious candidate if it had not already been allied to Britain. But that is the sort of difficulty that diplomacy exists to overcome, and it’s not inconceivable that Britain, German and Japan could have ended up allied against a fascist or Communist Russia twenty years down the line.
The further you get down the timeline of this alternative history the more difficult it is to stay plausible, because the decision-points multiply and the probabilities get harder to calculate. That doesn’t matter, because the only point of this exercise was to see if the world in which Germany “won” the war would have been immersed in a dark night of tyranny. It would appear not. It would have been a complex, combative, often quite unlovely place, but at worst no worse than the world we inherited from the Allied victory in 1918. It might also have been a world in which the next world war was the customary fifty years or so away, not a mere twenty, as nobody had lost so badly that they would soon be back seeking vengeance. Of course, all this is true because we are not really talking about a decisive German victory of the sort that the Allies finally achieved later in 1918. There was never any possibility of that sort of victory after the failure of the Schlieffen Plan in 1914, and probably not even then. We are talking about a no-score draw masquerading as a German victory, and that might have been a quite acceptable outcome. Although a no-score draw reached after the Christmas truce in 1914 would have been a much better outcome.