The 1918 Armistice with Germany: Allied Victory on WWI's Western Front
The armistice that ended the First World War (1914-18) on the Western Front was signed between Germany and the Allies on 11 November 1918. The guns fell silent at 11:00 a.m. that day. The Allies, who included Britain, France, and the United States, had defeated Imperial Germany and its allies, who included Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire.
Around 11 million people were killed in the world's first global conflict. The terms of peace for Germany – decided at the Paris Peace Conference and presented in the Treaty of Versailles – were harsh and included accepting responsibility for starting the war, loss of territories, an obligation to pay reparations, and severe limits on its future armed forces.
Why Did Germany Surrender?
Through the summer of 1918, the Allies on the Western Front made great advances in what became known as the Hundred Days Offensive. Thanks to improved tactics, a better coordination of combined arms (infantry, artillery, and air support), superior equipment, the better use of new technology like tanks, and a large influx of new troops from the United States, the German Army was pushed back, losing most of the territory it had gained in the spring. While the Allies were increasing the number of men at the front, Germany was running out of soldiers in this long war of attrition. The German Army was bashed and demoralised, and it seemed now only a matter of time before the Allies gained total victory.
Within the space of 100 days the Allies took 363,000 German soldiers prisoner (25 per cent of the army in the field) and captured 6,400 guns (50 per cent of all German guns on the Western Front). These numbers show the effectiveness of the Allied strategy and the low morale of the German soldiers.
(Winter, 170)
Germany and its main ally, Austria-Hungary, made their first moves for a surrender by sending word to United States President Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924) at the end of September. The president responded that, for a peace to be agreed, both countries would have to adhere to what became known as Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points, which included the necessity of giving up territory these aggressors had gained during the war. For now, the German government rejected Wilson's terms on the grounds that they seemed to require nothing less than an unconditional surrender. The German generals decided to fight on "with all our strength" (Simkins, 76).
With the Western Front further deteriorating for German forces and the Allied blockade of Germany causing food shortages at home, there was an increase in the instances of discontent within Germany over the continuance of the war. Perhaps as many as 400,000 German civilians died of starvation in 1918. The spirit of revolution against Germany's leadership was spreading, with riots in several cities, a mutiny in the navy at Kiel on 28 October, the army suffering mass desertions, and even a Bavarian Republic being declared on 7 November. Calls for an armistice became ever more urgent. As the historian P. Simkins notes, "the German Army was essentially beaten in the field by November 1918 and would have unquestionably suffered an even more humiliating defeat the following year" (91). By November, Germany was fighting alone now that Bulgaria, Turkey, and Austria-Hungary had all surrendered.
Even the obdurate Kaiser Wilhelm II saw the writing on the wall and abdicated on 9 November, fleeing Germany for the greater safety of the neutral Netherlands. The abdication was formally signed on 28 November, and with the Kaiser's six sons each swearing not to succeed their father, the ruling Hohenzollern dynasty came to an end.
As 1918 reached its close, the Allies were still successfully advancing and so were in a much stronger position to dictate terms than ever before. The new temporary German government was obliged to accept the following:
….the immediate evacuation of all occupied territory, including Alsace-Lorraine, and the occupation of Germany west of the Rhine. All U-boats were to be surrendered and the High Seas Fleet was to be disarmed and interned. Large quantities of arms, equipment and transport were to be surrendered. The treaties of Brest-Litovsk with Russia and of Bucharest with Rumania, which had been dictated by the Germans, were set aside.
(Bruce, 28)
Read More
⇒ The 1918 Armistice with Germany: Allied Victory on WWI's Western Front











