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If the Triple Entente lost WWI, it is likely that Britain, not France, would have been the most revanchist of the three

If the Triple Entente lost WWI

  • Britain would have been the most revanchist of the three

    Votes: 1 8.3%
  • Russia would have been the most revanchist of the three

    Votes: 5 41.7%
  • France would have been the most revanchist of the three

    Votes: 6 50.0%

  • Total voters
    12

raharris1973

Well-known member
There is a what I think is a "trope" in popular alternate history imaginings and speculations, written into a few different novels, and games or game settings like GURPS alternate earths, where if Germany wins WWI, it inverts Germany and France in the postwar years, France instead of Germany, becomes a right-wing, maybe Fascist, Revanchist power (maybe under DeGaulle, maybe under somebody who was a Fascist/quasi-Fascist politician in real-life), come up with a military doctrinal equivalent of blitzkrieg, I once read it as guerre eclair (yum!) and starts the timeline's alternate WWII.

I guess the thinking behind this is that France and Germany are easily mirror-image inversions of each other other's politics taking turns at revenge, Russia is doing its own weird thing with Socialism/Communism, and Britain is just too democratic, level-headed and cool as a cucumber to ever get reckless and revanchist.

I don't buy it.

Even as an exercise in mirroring France and Germany, Germany quit after losing two wars in a row. Here, France would have lost two wars in a row (Franco-Prussian and WWI), and if you're counting only ones that had a German/Prussian front, three in a row (the Napoleonic Wars, at least the final one).

And only a funhouse mirror can make France as big as Germany in the economy, industry, population, coal energy reserves.

Germany's revanchist drive in OTL (our timeline, real history) came from two sources, yes, rage at being cut down to size, but also confidence it really had been winning, certainly was at the edge of winning, a feeling of power. After a WWI defeat, either early in the war, 1914-ish, the middle, or late, after exhaustion, France may have the rage, but not the underlying confidence and sense of power for a comeback.

Going into the war in 1914 indeed the least was expected out of France out of the Triple Entente powers, both the Russian Empire and Britain were considered more formidable, and both of them could have more plausibly felt the sense of power and entitlement, in addition to anger about defeat, to lead to support for revanchist policies.

But the Russians had internal social divisions a mile long, and followed their WWI losses with a Civil War and famine equally bad. They had a harder time bouncing back and were highly unlikely to produce a Hitler-ish revanchist by the 30s or 40s.

Notably, it was the strongest, and relatively most intact, of the defeat Central Powers, Germany, that had the strongest revanchism and led the revanchist pack.

Britain would have been Germany's opposite number in Entente camp. The most industrial, the most technological, the strongest, the one most accustomed to success and least accustomed to failure abroad. It's true even in a "lost" Great War, Britain would not have been invaded, would not have lost any home island territories at all, and quite probably not lost any colonial territories or protectorates to any of its Central Powers foes. Nor would it be disarmed or compelled to pay indemnities (except perhaps in a disguised form of "payment for upkeep and support of British Empire PoWs until their safe return home"). In that respect Britain would be more fortunate than Germany and have less to rage about.

A German/CP victory in Europe would be recognized as Britain's defeat nonetheless, with defeat measured in other ways. Defeat measured in loss of allies, loss of status, loss of military formidability for having tried to intervene on the continent at great cost and been defeated anyway, loss of naval formidability or the ability of surface seapower or blockade to be decisively war-winning. Defeat measured possibly in having to return some captured German colonies back to Germany. The scale and sense of Britain's defeat would defend on the scale of total battle deaths before the fighting is over, whether the final battles include any actual outs or overrunning of British lines or big pockets of batches of British troops as PoWs out of proportion to the #s of Germans the British hold.

This kind of defeat would lead to questioning the old older, social and class tension, colonial tension, including defiance by oppressed-feeling colonial groups, but also an angry feeling of loss of status among the upper and middle classes and patriots - productive soil for reactionary and revanchist politics.

A drive to compete with, get even with and show up Germany and arrange for harm to Germany would be part and parcel of this reactionary politics in all likelihood, in addition to whomever is labelled "the enemy within". In large countries, there is room for both kinds of enemies, internal and external, and use in having both. Britain can also rebuild its military, naval and industrial capabilities at home and in imperial territories with far less risk of quick German preemption or smothering than Brest-Litovsk'ed Russia, or certainly France, could.

The ability of a victorious WWI Germany to quickly smother a France trying to make a militant revanchist comeback in the decades after French defeat is the least realistic aspect of that concept. Germany, with almost twice the population of France, and the leader in any coalition it is in, not a highly dependent* partner like France, is free, ready, willing and able to stomp on France as soon as it has any "remilitarize the Rhineland" equivalent moment. It won't have to look to an ally, or its budget, like France did to Britain and its credit rating, for a "mother may I?" before acting - and then not act.

*dependent on Britain certainly and any of the USA, Russia, or other eastern allies
 
Britain's empire is untouchable in any plausible Central Powers victory save for some scraps that can be parted with relatively easily, parcels not worth a world war to regain. Democracy, as flawed as it was in the Britain of the 1910s is also much more entrenched in Britain than in either France or Germany, and the monarchy is broadly more popular even if too German for many in a war against Berlin. As it was Britain nearly stayed out of the First World War and had to be dragged into the second with considerable reluctance. Geography also makes this a non-starter. The Channel protects Britain from the Continent, and the empire exists in too many assorted parcels adjacent to too many rivals to make a large-scale conflict untenable. Many alternate history tropes are stupid, but this one is well-founded.
 
Britain's empire is untouchable in any plausible Central Powers victory save for some scraps that can be parted with relatively easily, parcels not worth a world war to regain. Democracy, as flawed as it was in the Britain of the 1910s is also much more entrenched in Britain than in either France or Germany, and the monarchy is broadly more popular even if too German for many in a war against Berlin. As it was Britain nearly stayed out of the First World War and had to be dragged into the second with considerable reluctance. Geography also makes this a non-starter. The Channel protects Britain from the Continent, and the empire exists in too many assorted parcels adjacent to too many rivals to make a large-scale conflict untenable. Many alternate history tropes are stupid, but this one is well-founded.
I didn't hear an affirmative argument *for* France being more revanchist, or revanchist at all. Or Russia either.

So, is your argument simply couldn't/wouldn't be revanchist - and maybe *none* of the Entente countries would be, or that one or the other of the continental Entente powers in a particular order would be more revanchist?
 
There is a what I think is a "trope" in popular alternate history imaginings and speculations, written into a few different novels, and games or game settings like GURPS alternate earths, where if Germany wins WWI, it inverts Germany and France in the postwar years, France instead of Germany, becomes a right-wing, maybe Fascist, Revanchist power (maybe under DeGaulle, maybe under somebody who was a Fascist/quasi-Fascist politician in real-life), come up with a military doctrinal equivalent of blitzkrieg, I once read it as guerre eclair (yum!) and starts the timeline's alternate WWII.

I guess the thinking behind this is that France and Germany are easily mirror-image inversions of each other other's politics taking turns at revenge, Russia is doing its own weird thing with Socialism/Communism, and Britain is just too democratic, level-headed and cool as a cucumber to ever get reckless and revanchist.

I don't buy it.

Even as an exercise in mirroring France and Germany, Germany quit after losing two wars in a row. Here, France would have lost two wars in a row (Franco-Prussian and WWI), and if you're counting only ones that had a German/Prussian front, three in a row (the Napoleonic Wars, at least the final one).

And only a funhouse mirror can make France as big as Germany in the economy, industry, population, coal energy reserves.

Germany's revanchist drive in OTL (our timeline, real history) came from two sources, yes, rage at being cut down to size, but also confidence it really had been winning, certainly was at the edge of winning, a feeling of power. After a WWI defeat, either early in the war, 1914-ish, the middle, or late, after exhaustion, France may have the rage, but not the underlying confidence and sense of power for a comeback.

Going into the war in 1914 indeed the least was expected out of France out of the Triple Entente powers, both the Russian Empire and Britain were considered more formidable, and both of them could have more plausibly felt the sense of power and entitlement, in addition to anger about defeat, to lead to support for revanchist policies.

But the Russians had internal social divisions a mile long, and followed their WWI losses with a Civil War and famine equally bad. They had a harder time bouncing back and were highly unlikely to produce a Hitler-ish revanchist by the 30s or 40s.

Notably, it was the strongest, and relatively most intact, of the defeat Central Powers, Germany, that had the strongest revanchism and led the revanchist pack.

Britain would have been Germany's opposite number in Entente camp. The most industrial, the most technological, the strongest, the one most accustomed to success and least accustomed to failure abroad. It's true even in a "lost" Great War, Britain would not have been invaded, would not have lost any home island territories at all, and quite probably not lost any colonial territories or protectorates to any of its Central Powers foes. Nor would it be disarmed or compelled to pay indemnities (except perhaps in a disguised form of "payment for upkeep and support of British Empire PoWs until their safe return home"). In that respect Britain would be more fortunate than Germany and have less to rage about.

A German/CP victory in Europe would be recognized as Britain's defeat nonetheless, with defeat measured in other ways. Defeat measured in loss of allies, loss of status, loss of military formidability for having tried to intervene on the continent at great cost and been defeated anyway, loss of naval formidability or the ability of surface seapower or blockade to be decisively war-winning. Defeat measured possibly in having to return some captured German colonies back to Germany. The scale and sense of Britain's defeat would defend on the scale of total battle deaths before the fighting is over, whether the final battles include any actual outs or overrunning of British lines or big pockets of batches of British troops as PoWs out of proportion to the #s of Germans the British hold.

This kind of defeat would lead to questioning the old older, social and class tension, colonial tension, including defiance by oppressed-feeling colonial groups, but also an angry feeling of loss of status among the upper and middle classes and patriots - productive soil for reactionary and revanchist politics.

A drive to compete with, get even with and show up Germany and arrange for harm to Germany would be part and parcel of this reactionary politics in all likelihood, in addition to whomever is labelled "the enemy within". In large countries, there is room for both kinds of enemies, internal and external, and use in having both. Britain can also rebuild its military, naval and industrial capabilities at home and in imperial territories with far less risk of quick German preemption or smothering than Brest-Litovsk'ed Russia, or certainly France, could.

The ability of a victorious WWI Germany to quickly smother a France trying to make a militant revanchist comeback in the decades after French defeat is the least realistic aspect of that concept. Germany, with almost twice the population of France, and the leader in any coalition it is in, not a highly dependent* partner like France, is free, ready, willing and able to stomp on France as soon as it has any "remilitarize the Rhineland" equivalent moment. It won't have to look to an ally, or its budget, like France did to Britain and its credit rating, for a "mother may I?" before acting - and then not act.

*dependent on Britain certainly and any of the USA, Russia, or other eastern allies
Britain's parliamentary monarchy insulated it against authoritarian political movements, and its colonial empire would remain virtually intact, so a far-right dictatorship rising to power there is highly unlikely.
Furthermore, Egypt fought wars against Israel in 1956, 1967 and 1973 (the latter two alongside Syria), and lost militarily in all of them. After Sadat signed the Camp David Agreements, he got assassinated by the Muslim Brotherhood, so France giving up on challenging Germany is not 100% certain.
 
I didn't hear an affirmative argument *for* France being more revanchist, or revanchist at all. Or Russia either.

So, is your argument simply couldn't/wouldn't be revanchist - and maybe *none* of the Entente countries would be, or that one or the other of the continental Entente powers in a particular order would be more revanchist?
It's a fair question. I think it's a given that both Petrograd and Paris were considerably revanchist at that time. I'm going to take arrows for this, but Germany was the least revanchist power in Europe in 1914 sans maybe Spain. Now, which would be more so would probably reflect circumstances. How/why/when does Germany win the Great War? Germany was so content with maintenance of what it already had that it lacked clear aims insofar as potential gains from a victory.
 
It's true even in a "lost" Great War, Britain would not have been invaded, would not have lost any home island territories at all
I expect it's conceivable that in this scenario Ireland could potentially have achieved full independence (rather than dominion status) and not had Northern Ireland cut off, if Britain has fewer resources for focusing on the fighting there?
 
I'm going to take arrows for this, but Germany was the least revanchist power in Europe in 1914.
I mean, technically you're not wrong giving what *revanchist* implies, namely an ideology of correcting a past defeat seen as existentially fundamental. On that you'd have certainly much to dig on the Bulgaria, Turkey or in Russia, i.e. countries whose populations recently suffered dramatic wars, defeats and loss of prestige.

Still, Germany was pretty much on the top list of the most aggressive European powers, with a keen sense of being denied a rightful place amongst its elites, although I think we can all agree that Tsarist Russia more than deserved its place there as well when it came to exacerbated ambitions on European politics, with their respective allies (namely Austria-Hungary and France) banking quite on it to ensure their own strategical goals.

As far as Imperial Germany was concerned, until late 1917, the war on the west was on the west in fine targeted against British hegemony, France being essentially as the most powerful British proxy to be militarily and economically dismantled (basically, something closer to WW2 Occupation than inter-war Rhineland), and several provisions in the war prospects were made along this perspective including direct military control of Belgian and French ports of the Channel in prevision of a "second war" against Britain in better conditions.

In this perspective, I agree that France simply wouldn't have the means to be revanchist, neither military or economically : at best you'd see nationalists groups relying even more on Russia as they did IOTL and without any concern about maintaining an European balance that would have just exploded anyway, and not really willing to act on Britain's behalf due to a sense of betrayal, regardless if warranted or not.

I don't see British political and military society blind to this either, and frankly neither the public : I agree with @raharris1973 point there that even if Britain would likely come up particularly fine relatively to France and Russia, it would still be seen as clearly defeated and vulnerable to a German-led European hegemony incarnating most of what London was opposed to geopolitically since two centuries at this point. You will probably have a call for social and political mobilisation, likely with United States, probably (but hard to tell how and with who) whoever rules Russia.

I still think that Russia will end up as the more clearly revanchist country there : even utterly defeated and removed from its most industrialized holdings, even in midst of revolutionary changes, even suffering from political and economical structural backwardness, Russia will remain a demographic, political and eventually still military threat on the East. Even a victorious Germany in WW1 simply couldn't hope to swallow it up and would have an hard time already doing so with Eastern Europe. Contrary to France, Russia would probably maintain full independence, manage to rebuild itself militarily thanks to a Britain and United States that would likely takes France's place as main foreigns contributors to Russian industrialisation (especially if it means funding a "natural" ally against Germany) with actual means and dispositions to go revanchist ITTL.
 
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Does Germany attempt to restore monarchy to France?
Probably not. I expanded a bit about that there, but essentially there was no such plans in case of a German victory, and you'd probably see a push for elections in order to ratify a peace treaty in a legitimate and legal assembly.

It doesn't mean royalistes wouldn't try to seize an opportunity, but their influence would be fairly limited even ITTL, and Action Française fierce anti-germanism would make Germans at best really cautious about them, especially since maurassiens trying to raise trouble against the republic would be more immediate issues for occupiers than not.
 
It's a fair question. I think it's a given that both Petrograd and Paris were considerably revanchist at that time. I'm going to take arrows for this, but Germany was the least revanchist power in Europe in 1914 sans maybe Spain. Now, which would be more so would probably reflect circumstances. How/why/when does Germany win the Great War? Germany was so content with maintenance of what it already had that it lacked clear aims insofar as potential gains from a victory.
For what it's worth, I'm in complete agreement with you about German relative non-revanchism *at the start* of WWI in 1914, and lack of clearly defined or 'go-for-broke' expansionary commitments in the pre-war Bismarckian eras. I'll take the arrows with you! Such colonial expansion as Germany did was opportunistic, speculative, and casual. It succeeded at times. Germany poked around many places without succeeding, which was cited by others as *annoyances*, but its very lack of success was in part a symptom of a lack of commitment to those expansive goals and certainly to (at least purposefully) risking great power war for them. After the start of the war, its war aims were again vague, opportunistic, and security based, aimed at allaying the fears and vulnerabilities felt before the war and exposed by the war itself.
 
As far as Imperial Germany was concerned, until late 1917, the war on the west was on the west in fine targeted against British hegemony, France being essentially as the most powerful British proxy to be militarily and economically dismantled (basically, something closer to WW2 Occupation than inter-war Rhineland), and several provisions in the war prospects were made along this perspective including direct military control of Belgian and French ports of the Channel in prevision of a "second war" against Britain in better conditions.

In this perspective, I agree that France simply wouldn't have the means to be revanchist, neither military or economically : at best you'd see nationalists groups relying even more on Russia as they did IOTL and without any concern about maintaining an European balance that would have just exploded anyway, and not really willing to act on Britain's behalf due to a sense of betrayal, regardless if warranted or not.

I don't see British political and military society blind to this either, and frankly neither the public : I agree with @raharris1973 point there that even if Britain would likely come up particularly fine relatively to France and Russia, it would still be seen as clearly defeated and vulnerable to a German-led European hegemony incarnating most of what London was opposed to geopolitically since two centuries at this point. You will probably have a call for social and political mobilisation, likely with United States, probably (but hard to tell how and with who) whoever rules Russia.
I agree with this part entirely, on France and Britain. Well said!

I still think that Russia will end up as the more clearly revanchist country there : even utterly defeated and removed from its most industrialized holdings, even in midst of revolutionary changes, even suffering from political and economical structural backwardness, Russia will remain a demographic, political and eventually still military threat on the East. Even a victorious Germany in WW1 simply couldn't hope to swallow it up and would have an hard time already doing so with Eastern Europe. Contrary to France, Russia would probably maintain full independence, manage to rebuild itself militarily thanks to a Britain and United States that would likely takes France's place as main foreigns contributors to Russian industrialisation (especially if it means funding a "natural" ally against Germany) with actual means and dispositions to go revanchist ITTL.
Interesting thoughts for consideration. Well-articulated. I will go this far in agreement - Russia will have more space and freedom out from under Germany's thumb and watchful eye than France, at least from four or five years after the end of fighting.
 
I think a lot this depends on when and how victory is achieved. If it's a late victory, then all of the powers are highly indebted. Germany will need to impose a heavy indemnity on an already vulnerable France (debt to GDP ratio of 190% - most of this is loans to the U.S. via the British), it's arguably a worse economic situation than OTL because Germany is more desperate. Uncertainty over repayment could lead to further devaluation of the Franc and hyperinflation in France, or they could come to some agreement, maybe France would be forced to give up all of its overseas colonies to the U.S./Germany or a combination of the two. Perhaps Germany has to seek further political control over France to secure payment. All of this would likely fuel revanchist ideas, although as LS said they're not really in a position to fight back, at least in the short-term until Russia regroups.

On the British Empire, it's right to say that in the short-term it's 'untouchable' to Germany, but the greater risk is the impact of losing the War on local nationalist movements. Russia's loss to Japan in 1905 and Tsushima was a major influence on nationalism across the colonial Empires, the news of Britain losing to Germany will fuel the movements in India and Egypt (and of course Ireland!). I could see a messier situation, and possibly earlier independence if Britain attempts violent repression rather than concessions.

On British politics, I suspect the Unionists will be concerned about 'National Efficiency', i.e. talking about the introduction of national service, tariff reform to fund military expansion, preserving the Empire, while Labour will argue to prioritise social reform at home. I expect that the political atmosphere would be more tense and the more accommodating style of Baldwin OTL would not work as well in this context.
 
The biggest problem for Britain from a Revanchist/pseudo-Fascist perspective here I think is what are they gunning for? Russia and France as losers in WW1 have territories to reclaim on the continent - Ukraine, Poland, Baltic etc for Petrograd and Alsace-Lorraine etc for Paris. What does London have?

Ireland is probably the only territory that could be lost and then demanded back but Britain needs a convincing reason to go to war with Germany again. And even in that circumstance, I suspect a war with Ireland probably remains a war with Ireland, unless you really stretch the scenario to have the Royal Navy absolutely obliterated, I don't see how Germany can challenge Britain at sea, or be a credible full-scale ally to Ireland in a 30s or 40s conflict. The OTL Irish War of Independence was relatively low scale and fought in the context of the tail end of the First World War - a second Anglo-Irish War fought ten or twenty years later would be a totally different beast. The peak British Army deployment in Ireland from 1919-1921 was ~50,000 men. That's absolutely nothing in Continental Warfare terms.

My gut feel is a defeated Britain that radicalises does so not in the direction of European aggression but isolationism and doubling down on the Empire. Europe is, from that perspective, a quagmire, a distraction, a drain on vitality and strength. Desire for revenge on Germany might be strong but Britain lacks the geographical or military capacity to launch a war directly against Germany without French and/or Russian backing. They're not going to invade France, the Low Countries or Scandinavia in any serious situation, and they're not going to be landing Royal Marines in Hamburg for shits and giggles. A radicalised United Kingdom, even a fascist (or pseudo-fascist) United Kingdom is certainly possible but I just don't think they can be the big European threat that Germany or Russia could.

A revanchist Britain just doesn't have many Europeans avenues via which it can pursue its revenge. A focus on retaining the Empire, particularly the "White Dominions" is I think a more likely outcome. If they do get the opportunity to war on Germany, it comes via some other European power (presumably an equally revanchist France or Russia) opening a war with Berlin.
 
As an aside, if a Central Powers victory results in Irish independence, how plausible is a Wittelsbach monarchy being established there?
 
As an aside, if a Central Powers victory results in Irish independence, how plausible is a Wittelsbach monarchy being established there?
Not very. Undoubtedly some idiot in Germany will suggest it but why would the Central Powers want to be stuck with a constant provocation to another war which would be fought entirely on Britain's strongest ground - if they impose a German monarch there will be massive pressure to keep supporting him.
 
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