World War I and Its Aftermath
Before the Armistice
European powers struggled to adapt to the brutality of modern war. Until the spring of 1917, the Allies possessed few effective defensive measures against submarine attacks. German submarines sank more than a thousand ships by the time the United States entered the war. The rapid addition of American naval escorts to the British surface fleet and the establishment of a convoy system countered much of the effect of German submarines.
Shipping and military losses
declined rapidly, just as the American army arrived in Europe in large
numbers. Although much of the equipment still needed to make the
transatlantic passage, the physical presence of the army proved a fatal
blow to German war plans.16
In July 1917, after one last
disastrous offensive against the Germans, the Russian army
disintegrated. The tsarist regime collapsed and in November 1917
Vladimir Lenin's Bolshevik party came to power. Russia soon surrendered
to German demands and exited the war, freeing Germany to finally fight
the one-front war it had desired since 1914. The German military quickly
shifted hundreds of thousands of soldiers from the eastern theater in
preparation for a new series of offensives planned for the following
year in France.17
In March 1918, Germany launched the
Kaiserschlacht (Spring Offensive), a series of five major attacks. By
the middle of July 1918, each and every one had failed to break through
the Western Front. On August 8, 1918, two million men of the American
Expeditionary Forces joined British and French armies in a series of
successful counteroffensives that pushed the disintegrating German lines
back across France. German general Erich Ludendorff referred to the
launch of the counteroffensive as the "black day of the German army".
The German offensive gamble exhausted Germany's faltering military
effort. Defeat was inevitable. Kaiser Wilhelm II abdicated at the
request of the German military leaders and the new democratic government
agreed to an armistice (cease-fire) on November 11, 1918. German
military forces withdrew from France and Belgium and returned to a
Germany teetering on the brink of chaos.18
By the end of the war,
more than 4.7 million American men had served in all branches of the
military: four million in the army, six hundred thousand in the navy,
and about eighty thousand in the Marine Corps. The United States lost
over one hundred thousand men (fifty-three thousand died in battle, and
even more from disease). Their terrible sacrifice, however, paled before
the Europeans'. After four years of brutal stalemate, France had
suffered almost a million and a half military dead and Germany even
more. Both nations lost about 4 percent of their population to the war.
And death was not done.19