Posted on 11/11/2018 7:36:41 AM PST by harpygoddess
I have a photo of the Iowa firing a broadside as my screen saver. That class -- the BB60's -- were the most massive battlewagons ever floated. Now, all are retired.
But in their day, they were ... magnificent.
German General Ludendorf and the German high command first requested an armistice on September 29, 1918.
In the month from their request until the armistice on November 11, about half a million men fell, on both sides.
For Americans, President Wilson personally conducted the negotiations and disabused Germans of any ideas about "peace without victory" -- such that by the time it actually came Ludendorf himself opposed the armistice and had to be sacked.
Many allied leaders in 1918, including our General Pershing and French General Foch understood clearly that without total defeat, "peace" for the Germans meant only a 20-year ceasefire before "round two".
That's the reason in 1942 President Roosevelt insisted the only acceptable outcome for "round two" was Unconditional Surrender.
Thank you.
For the past week the museum has been projecting poppies on the north wall and tower in remembrance of the 100th anniversary of the war's end. It's quite a site. Link
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