Berlin Conference (November 2–6, 1917)
Strategy meeting during World War I / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Berlin Conference, held from November 2 to 6, 1917, consisted of a series of meetings between German and Prussian ministers, followed by meetings between German and Austro-Hungarian representatives. The conference was held in Berlin just a few days before the outbreak of the October Revolution. At the same time, the antagonisms between Chancellor Georg Michaelis, supported by State Secretary Richard von Kühlmann, on the one hand, and the military, mainly the Dioscuri, Paul von Hindenburg and Erich Ludendorff, on the other, reached a climax, prompting the military to call for the Chancellor's resignation, formalizing their disagreements over the program for internal reform of the Reich.[Note 1][Note 2] These differences between political and military leaders also had at stake the definition of a new program of war aims for the Reich, and the concessions the Germans would be prepared to make to their allies, principally the Dual Monarchy, exhausted by more than three years of conflict, but hostile to any excessive reinforcement of German control over Central and Eastern Europe.
Date | November 2–6, 1917 (1917-11-02 – 1917-11-06) |
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Location | German Empire, Berlin |
Type | Strategic meeting |
Outcome | Upholding the provisions of the Kreuznach Conference of May 17-18, 1917 |