<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XII</h2>
<h3>THE WAR IN 1918</h3>
<p><b>Failure of German Peace Offensive.</b>—During the
fall of 1917 Germany had started a great discussion of
the terms of the peace which should close the war. In
general the position taken by German spokesmen was
"peace without annexations and without indemnities,"
as proposed by the Russian Bolsheviki. Such talk
was designed to weaken the war spirit of the Allied
peoples, and perhaps to make the German people believe
that they were fighting a war of self-defense. The
time was ripe for a statement of the war aims of Germany's
opponents. This statement, later approved in
general by Allied statesmen, was made by President
Wilson in his address to Congress on January 8, 1918.
It is discussed in detail in Chapter XIV. It was not satisfactory
to Germany's rulers, for they hoped to secure
better terms in a peace of bargains and compromises.</p>
<p><b>Russia Makes a Separate Peace.</b>—Only in Russia
was this German peace offensive a success. In the
last chapter we saw how in the latter part of 1917
the Bolsheviki had gained control of the government of
Russia and had arranged an armistice with the Central
Powers. This meant the stopping of all fighting along
the eastern front and the consequent freeing of many
thousands of German soldiers to fight in the west.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">[Pg 136]<SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>At Brest-Litovsk, a town in Russian Poland which
had been occupied by the troops of the Central Powers,
a meeting of delegates was called to arrange the terms
of peace. The negotiations at this place lasted from
December 23, 1917, to February 10, 1918. The Germans
had determined to keep large portions of Russian
territory. At the conference the German delegates
flatly refused to promise to withdraw their troops from
the occupied parts of Russia after the peace. By
February 10 hope of any settlement that would satisfy
Russia had disappeared and the Bolshevik delegates
left Brest-Litovsk. The war, so far as Russia was
concerned, was at an end, but no treaty of peace had
been signed. The Bolshevik government issued orders
for the complete demobilization of the Russian armies
on all the battle fronts.</p>
<p>Germany, determined to compel Russia to accept her
terms, renewed her military operations on February 18.
The result was that Lenine and Trotzky, the Bolshevik
leaders, were forced to agree to the conditions which
had been laid down by the Central Powers at Brest-Litovsk.
Nevertheless the Germans continued their
advance, with practically no opposition, to within
seventy miles of Petrograd.</p>
<p><b>The Separation of Ukrainia and Finland.</b>—Ukrainia,
the southwestern corner of Russia, is the home of a
Slavic people—the Little Russians—closely akin to
the Russians proper. The people of Finland, in the
extreme northwest, are of a distinctly different race. In
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 137]<SPAN name="Page_137" id="Page_137"></SPAN></span>both these regions there were set up independent governments
which resisted the rule of the Bolsheviki. With
the aid of German
troops the power
of the Bolsheviki in
the new states was
soon destroyed.
Through the setting
up of these
states, particularly
Ukrainia, Germany
hoped to secure
grain supplies, and
to control large iron
and coal deposits.
Dissatisfaction of
the people with
German control,
however, interfered
seriously with the
realizing of such
hopes.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/137.png" width-obs="400" height-obs="595" alt="TREATY OF BREST-LITOVSK States and Provinces taken from Russia" title="" /> <span class="caption">TREATY OF BREST-LITOVSK States and Provinces taken from Russia</span></div>
<p><b>The Peace of Brest-Litovsk.</b>—On March 3 peace
between Russia and the Central Powers was finally
signed at Brest-Litovsk. By the terms of the treaties
Russia was compelled (1) to surrender her western provinces
of Poland, Lithuania, Livonia, Esthonia, and
Courland; (2) to recognize the independence of Ukrainia
and Finland; (3) to cede to Turkey certain important
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 138]<SPAN name="Page_138" id="Page_138"></SPAN></span>districts south of the Caucasus Mountains;<SPAN name="FNanchor_1_5" id="FNanchor_1_5"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_1_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</SPAN> and (4) to
pay a tremendous indemnity. The falsity of the German
talk of "no annexations and no indemnities" was now
evident. Few more disastrous treaties have ever been
forced upon a vanquished nation. It has been estimated
that the treaties of Brest-Litovsk took from Russia
4 per cent of her total area, 26 per cent of her population,
37 per cent of her food stuffs production, 26 per cent of
her railways, 33 per cent of her manufacturing industries,
75 per cent of her coal, and 73 per cent of her iron.</p>
<p><b>Roumania Makes Peace.</b>—Roumania, deserted by
Russia, was forced to make peace in the spring of 1918,
by ceding to her enemies the whole of the Dobrudja and
also about 3000 square miles of territory on her western
frontier. The Central Powers, moreover, were given
control of the vast petroleum fields and the rich wheat
lands of the defeated nation.</p>
<p>A little later, however, the Russian province of
Bessarabia decided to unite itself to Roumania, as
most of its people are of the Roumanian race.</p>
<p><b>The Russian Situation in 1918.</b>—In spite of the
Brest-Litovsk treaties, the Allies continued to regard
Russia as a friendly nation. President Wilson took the
lead in this attitude. It was felt that the Russian people
were sadly in need of assistance, but just how this
should be given was a serious problem.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">[Pg 139]<SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139"></SPAN></span>The question was complicated by the presence in
Russia of a large army of Czecho-Slovaks (check´o-slovaks´).
These soldiers were natives of the northwestern
Slavic provinces of Austria-Hungary. They had been
part of the Austrian army during the victorious Russian
campaigns in Galicia and had been taken prisoners.
The Czecho-Slovaks had always sympathized with the
Allied countries and had fought for Austria unwillingly.
Many, indeed, had later fought as part of the Russian
army. When Russia left the war they feared that they
might be returned to the hated Austrian government.
To avoid this their leaders sought and obtained from
the Bolshevik government permission to travel eastward
through Russia and Siberia to the Pacific. Here
they planned to take ship and after a voyage three
quarters around the globe take their place in the armies
of the Allies. The long journey began. Then the
Bolsheviki, probably acting under German orders, recalled
the permission they had given. The Czecho-Slovaks
went on nevertheless, determined to proceed
even if they had to fight their way. They were opposed
at different points by Bolshevik troops with the assistance
of organized bodies of German and Austrian
prisoners, but the Czecho-Slovaks were victorious. In
fact, with the aid of anti-Bolshevik Russians they seized
control of most of the Siberian railroad, and of parts of
eastern Russia.</p>
<p><b>Allied Intervention in Russia.</b>—At last the Allied
nations and the United States decided that it was
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 140]<SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140"></SPAN></span>time to undertake military intervention in Russia.
This was carried out in two places. Bodies of American
and Japanese troops were landed on the east coast
of Siberia to coöperate with the Czecho-Slovaks. The
latter, thus reënforced, changed their plans for leaving
Russia and decided to fight for the Allied cause where
they were. They were encouraged by the fact that
they were recognized by the Allies and by the United
States as an independent nation.</p>
<p>Another small Allied army was landed on the north
coast of Russia and marched south against the Bolsheviki.
Large parts of Russia north and east of Moscow
declared themselves free of Bolshevik rule. It was
the hope of the Allies that that rule—now marked
by pillage, murder, and famine—would shortly be
overthrown and that a new Russia would rise and take
its place among the democracies of the world.</p>
<p><b>The Western Front.</b>—Early in 1918, after the failure
of the German peace offensive in the west, rumors
came from Germany of preparations for a great military
drive on the western front. The "iron fist" and the
"shining sword" were to break in the doors of those
who opposed a German-made peace. There were good
reasons for such an attack in the spring of 1918. Germany
had withdrawn many troops from the east, where
they were no longer needed to check the Russians.
Further, although a few American troops had reached
France, it was thought that not many could be sent
over before the fall of 1918, and the full weight of
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 141]<SPAN name="Page_141" id="Page_141"></SPAN></span>America's force could not be exerted before the summer
of 1919. It was to Germany's interest to crush France
and England before the power of the American nation
was thrown into the struggle against her.</p>
<p><b>Germany's New Plan of Attack.</b>—The German
military leaders therefore determined to stake everything
upon one grand offensive on the western front
while their own force was numerically superior to
that of the Allies. Their expectation of victory in
what they proudly called the "Kaiser's battle," was
based not only upon the possession of greater numbers,
but also upon the introduction of new methods
of fighting which would overcome the old trench
warfare. The new methods comprised three principal
features.</p>
<p>In the first place, much greater use was made of the
element of surprise. Large masses of men were brought
up near the front by night marches, and in daytime
were hidden from airplane observation by smoke
screens, camouflage of various kinds, and by the shelter
of woodlands. In this way any portion of the
opposing trench line could be subjected to a heavy,
unexpected attack.</p>
<p>Secondly, the advance was prepared for by the use
of big guns in enormous quantities and in new ways.
The number of guns brought into use in this offensive
far exceeded that put into the Verdun offensive of 1916,
which had been looked upon as the extreme of possible
concentration of artillery. The shell fire was now
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 142]<SPAN name="Page_142" id="Page_142"></SPAN></span>to be directed not only against the trenches, but also
far to the rear of the Allied positions. This would
break up roads, railways, and bridges for many miles
behind the trenches and prevent the sending of reinforcements
up to the front. Vast numbers of large
shells containing poisonous "mustard" gas were collected.
These were to be fired from heavy guns and
made to explode far behind the Allied lines. By this
means suffocation might be spread among the reserves,
among motor drivers, and even among the army mules,
and by deranging the transport service make it impossible
to concentrate troops to withstand the German
advance.</p>
<p>In the third place, "shock" troops composed of selected
men from all divisions of the army, were to advance
after the bombardment, in a series of "waves."
When the first wave had reached the limit of its strength
and endurance, it was to be followed up by a second
mass of fresh troops, and this by a third, and so on
until the Allies' defense was completely broken.</p>
<p>By their excess in numbers and by these newly devised
methods of warfare the German leaders hoped to accomplish
three things: (1) to separate the British army
from the French army; (2) to seize the Channel ports
and interrupt by submarines and big guns the transportation
of men and supplies from England to France;
and (3) to capture Paris and compel the French to withdraw
from the war. Let us now see how and why the
Germans failed to secure any one of these three objectives,
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 143]<SPAN name="Page_143" id="Page_143"></SPAN></span>and how the Allied forces resumed the offensive
in the summer of 1918.</p>
<p><b>The German Advance.</b>—Five great drives, conducted
according to the newly devised methods of warfare,
were launched by the Germans between March 21 and
July 15, 1918. The first, continuing from March 21 to
April 1, called the battle of Picardy, was directed at the
point where the British army joined that of the French
near the Somme River. There was at this time no unified
command of all the Allied armies, and the blow fell
unexpectedly upon the British and won much territory
before French assistance could be brought up. Outnumbered
three to one, the British fell back at the point
of greatest retreat to a distance of thirty miles from their
former line. But the extreme tenacity of the British
and the arrival of French troops prevented the Germans
from capturing the important city of Amiens (ah-myăn´),
or reaching the main roads to Paris, or separating the
British and French armies. Learning a needed lesson
from this disaster, the Allied nations agreed to a unified
military command, and appointed as commander-in-chief
the French General Foch (fosh), who had distinguished
himself in the first battle of the Marne in 1914 and elsewhere.
Before this step had been taken General Pershing
had offered his small army of 200,000 Americans to be
used wherever needed by the French and the British.</p>
<p>The second German offensive began on April 9 and
was again directed against the British, this time farther
to the north, in Flanders, between the cities of Ypres
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 144]<SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144"></SPAN></span>and Arras. In ten days the Germans advanced to a
maximum depth of ten miles on a front of thirty miles.
But the British fought most desperately and the German
losses were enormous. At last the advance was
checked and the Channel ports were saved. "Germany
on the march had encountered England at bay"—and
had failed to destroy the heroic British army.</p>
<p>And now came a lull of over a month while the Germans
were reorganizing their forces and preparing for a still
greater blow. Again the element of surprise was employed.
The Allies expected another attack somewhere
in the line from Soissons to the sea, and their reserves
were so disposed as to meet such an attack. But the
German blow was directed against the weakest part of
the Allied line, the stretch from Rheims to Soissons, where
a break might open the road to Paris from the east.
The third drive began on May 27. For over a week the
French were pushed back, fighting valiantly, across land
which had not seen the enemy since September, 1914.
The greatest depth of the German advance was thirty
miles, that is, to within forty-four miles of Paris. The
enemy had once again reached the Marne River and
controlled the main roads from Paris to Verdun and to
the eastern parts of the Allied line.</p>
<p>The fourth drive started a few days later, on June 9,
in a region where an attack was expected. It resulted
in heavy losses to the Germans, who succeeded in pushing
only six miles toward Paris in the region between
Soissons and Montdidier (mawn-dee-dyā´). The advantages
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 145]<SPAN name="Page_145" id="Page_145"></SPAN></span>of a single command had begun to appear.
General Foch could use all the Allied forces where they
were most needed.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN href="images/145.png"><ANTIMG src="images/thumb_145.png" width-obs="500" height-obs="446" alt="WESTERN FRONT" title="" /></SPAN> <span class="caption">WESTERN FRONT</span></div>
<p>The fifth drive opened on July 15 and spread over
a front of one hundred miles east of Soissons. The
Allies were fully prepared, and while falling back a little
at first, the American and French troops soon won back
some of the abandoned territory.</p>
<p><b>The Turning of the Tide.</b>—A glance at a map of the
battle front of July 18 will show that the Germans had
driven three blunt wedges into the Allied lines. These
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 146]<SPAN name="Page_146" id="Page_146"></SPAN></span>positions would prove dangerous to the Germans if ever
the Allies were strong enough to assume the offensive.
And just now the moment came for Foch to strike a
great counter-blow. During the spring and early summer
American troops had been speeded across the
Atlantic until by the Fourth of July over a million men
were in France. On July 18 fresh American and French
troops attacked the Germans in the narrowest of the
wedges along the Marne River and within a few days
compelled the enemy to retreat from this wedge. On
August 8 a British army began a surprise attack on the
middle wedge, and by the use of large numbers of light,
swift tanks succeeded in driving the Germans back for
a distance of over ten miles on a wide front.</p>
<p>The offensive had now passed from the Germans to
the Allies. Under Foch's repeated attacks the enemy
was driven back first at one point and then at another.
He had no time to prepare a counter-drive; he did not
know where the next blow would fall. By the end of
September he had given up nearly all his recent conquests, devastating much of the country as he retired.
In several places also he was forced still farther back,
across the old Hindenburg line. In two days (September
12-13) the Americans and French under the direction
of General Pershing wiped out an old German salient
near Metz, taking 200 square miles of territory and
15,000 prisoners. Altogether, by the end of September,
Foch had taken over a quarter of a million prisoners,
with 3,669 cannon and 23,000 machine guns.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">[Pg 147]<SPAN name="Page_147" id="Page_147"></SPAN></span>It is said that the complete defeat of the German
plans was due primarily to three things: "(1) the dogged
steadfastness of the British and the patient heroism of
the French soldiers and civilians; (2) the brilliant strategy
of General Foch, and the unity of command which
made this effective; (3) the material and moral encouragement
of the American forces, of whom nearly 1,500,000
were in France before the end of August."</p>
<p><b>The War in Italy, the Balkans, and Syria.</b>—The
summer of 1918 witnessed the launching of a great
offensive by the Austrians against the Italian armies
holding the Piave front. It is probable that the chief
purpose of this blow was to draw Allied troops into
Italy from the battle front in Belgium and France.
The Italians, however, proved themselves amply able
to fight their own battle, and the Austrian attempt was
repulsed with tremendous losses.</p>
<p>The autumn of this year saw important happenings
on the Balkan front also. This theater of the war had
been uneventful for a long time. The battle line extended
from the Adriatic Sea to the Ægean, and was
held by a mixed army of Serbians, Greeks, Italians,
British, and French, under the command of General
D'Esperey (des-prā´), with headquarters at Salonica.
Opposed to these troops were armies of Bulgarians
and Austrians, together with a considerable number of
Germans. Encouraged by the German defeats in the
west, which had forced the withdrawal of large numbers
of German troops from eastern Europe, the Allies
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 148]<SPAN name="Page_148" id="Page_148"></SPAN></span>launched a strong offensive on the Balkan front in the
middle of September. Day after day their advance
continued, resulting in the capture of many thousands
of prisoners and the reoccupation of many miles of Albanian
and Serbian territory. The campaign was one of
the most successful of the whole war. Within two weeks
the Bulgarians asked for an armistice, accepted the terms
that were demanded, and on September 30 definitely
withdrew from the war. Their surrender broke the lines
of communication between the Central Powers and
Turkey and at one blow destroyed Teutonic supremacy
in the Balkans. An even more important consequence
was the moral effect on the general public in Germany,
Austria, and Turkey, where it was taken by many as a
sign that surrender of the Central Powers could only
be a question of time.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, events of almost equal importance were
taking place in Palestine and Syria. General Allenby
had taken Jerusalem in December, 1917. In the fall
of 1918 new and important advances were made in this
region, Arab forces east of the Jordan coöperating with
the British armies. By the close of September more
than 50,000 Turkish soldiers and hundreds of guns had
been captured. In October General Allenby's men
took the important cities of Damascus and Aleppo,
and in Mesopotamia also the British began a new advance.
Turkey was already asking for an armistice,
and now accepted terms that were virtually a complete
surrender (October 31).</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">[Pg 149]<SPAN name="Page_149" id="Page_149"></SPAN></span>By this time Austria-Hungary was in the throes of
dissolution; independent republics were being set up by
the Czechs, the Hungarians, the Jugo-Slavs, and even
the German Austrians. These revolutions were hastened
by the overwhelming victory of the Italians in
the second battle of the Piave. Their attack began
October 24 on the mountain front, but soon the Allied
forces under General Diaz (dee´ahss) crossed the river
and cut through the lines of the fleeing Austrians. In
the capture of large numbers of prisoners and guns the
Italians took full vengeance for their defeat of the preceding
year. So hopeless, indeed, was the situation
for the Austrians that they too accepted an armistice
that was practically a surrender (November 4).</p>
<p><b>German Retreat in the West.</b>—After the Germans
had been driven back to their old lines in France, there
was danger that the contest might settle down to the
old form of trench warfare. But the intricate defenses
of the Hindenburg line, in some cases extending to a
depth of ten miles from the front trenches, did not
prove strong enough to withstand the American and
Allied advance. Foch attacked the line from each end
and also in the center. In the north, by October 20,
Belgian and British troops had recaptured all the
Belgian coast, with its submarine bases; and the
British had taken the important cities of Lens and
Lille, the former valuable on account of its coal mines.
In the center British and French troops broke through
to the important points of Cambrai, St. Quentin
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 150]<SPAN name="Page_150" id="Page_150"></SPAN></span>(săn-kahn-tăn´) and Laon (lahn), while farther east the
French and Americans began an advance along the
Meuse River, threatening to attack the German line in
the rear.</p>
<p>By this time it seemed likely that a general retirement
from Belgium and France had been determined
upon by the German leaders. Moreover, the impending
defeat of the German armies led to a new peace
drive by the German government. On October 6
President Wilson received a note from the German
Chancellor asking for an armistice, requesting that
the United States take steps for the restoration of
peace, and stating that the German government accepted
as a basis for peace negotiations the program as
laid down in the President's message to Congress of
January 8, 1918 (Chapter XIV), and in his subsequent
addresses. In the ensuing correspondence several points
are worthy of special notice. President Wilson opposed
any suggestion of an armistice till after the evacuation
of Allied territory, or except as it might be arranged by
the military advisers of the American and Allied powers,
on such terms as would make impossible the renewal
of hostilities by Germany. He also called attention to
the following point in his address of July 4, 1918,—"The
destruction of every arbitrary power anywhere
that can separately, secretly, and of its single choice
disturb the peace of the world, or, if it cannot be presently
destroyed, at the least its reduction to virtual
impotence";—stated that the military autocracy still
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 151]<SPAN name="Page_151" id="Page_151"></SPAN></span>in control of Germany was such a power; and insisted
on dealing only with a new or altered German government
in which the representatives of the people should
be the real rulers.</p>
<p>On November 11, while the German armies in France
and Belgium were being defeated by the Allied and
American forces, envoys from the German government
accepted from General Foch an armistice in terms that
meant virtually the surrender of Germany, and thus
brought hostilities to an end.</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p><b>Suggestions for Study.</b>—1. What is the meaning of camouflage?
of smoke screen? What is a convoy? 2. On a map of
the Western Front locate the five great German drives of 1918,
numbering them from one to five. 3. On a physical map of the
Balkan peninsula find the only good land route from the Danube
to Constantinople, with its branch to Salonica. 4. Collect pictures
showing American soldiers in camps; going to France;
and in France. 5. What were the objects of the 1918 offensive
of the Germans? 6. In what way did the American troops help
besides increasing the number of soldiers fighting the Germans?
7. What is the present condition of the western provinces of
Russia? 8. What was the first important battle in which many
American troops were engaged? 9. Why was the St. Mihiel
salient important: (<i>a</i>) for the Germans to hold; (<i>b</i>) for the
Allies and the United States to win? 10. Explain the importance
of Bulgaria's surrender.</p>
<p><b>References.</b>—<i>War Cyclopedia</i> (C.P.I.); <i>The Study of the
Great War</i> (C.P.I.); McKinley, <i>Collected Materials for the Study
of the War; The Correspondence between the Bolsheviki and the
German Government</i> (C.P.I.); <i>National School Service</i>, Vol. I
(C.P.I.).</p>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum">[Pg 152]<SPAN name="Page_152" id="Page_152"></SPAN></span></p>
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