boogada
Posts: 353
Joined: 8/17/2007 From: Germany Status: offline
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Ok lets see... First off I don't agree with SMK that the Germans would have overrun France in the summer of 1914 if the BEF would not have been there fighting with the French. The German advance was massive, but it did not destroy the French army. The army was still intact and thats why it could sucesfully counterattack when the Germans ran out of steam. The Germany might have advanced a little further or faster, but the Schlieffenplan would still not have worked and missed its original strategical goal. There is little doubt though, that the Central powers would have won the war. Without the British army, without the blockade, without the Royal Navy both France and Russia would have surrendered. Not in 1914, but in 1915/16. Italy would most likely not have sided with the Entente too, neither would Romania have... But even if the Entente was no formal alliance and Britain had no obligation to enter the war, they still had an agreement with France to secure the Channel in case of a war, so that the French fleet could mass in the med. Not to mention that they would loose all diplomatic gains they made with France, Belgium, Italy and Russia in the years before. If England does not side with France and Russia in a war, why did those countries agree on colonial issues? Why not continue the race in Africa with France and in Persia with the Russians? Not to mention all the other things that made England join the Entente in the first place. If you like the idea of Great Britain not entering the war, then read Niall Fergusons "The pity of war". His central idea is, that Britain should have stayed out of the conflict. That idea has some good things to offer: No Third Reich, no Hitler, no Second World War, no communist Russia and Britain would have been sucesfull in keeping its Empire together. And a German dominated central Europe would not have been worse than the German dominated European Union we have today... (a very British view that is...) There is a lot in this book that is interesting, but its counterfactual history and I dont agree with most of it.
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