Stadtschloss
December 14th, 1928
The results from the special elections held to replace the Reichstag delegates who had died in the attack had come in. Unsurprisingly, the socialists from the Dutch territories had taken the worst hits. With their leaders and most of their faction dead, they barely managed to hold as the party - or what was left of it - had squabbled first over leadership, then over campaign management and goals. Most of their seats had instead gone to the conservative Dutch faction lead by ex-Field Marshal Seyffardt or to the social liberals.
Their German partners, the SPD, the largest faction of the Reichstag, had withered the storm very well. After all, they had decades of experience in replacing candidates and a well-oiled party machine that had survived Government prosecution for nearly seven decades before the reforms had put an end to that. They remained the largest faction, bolstered by the recovery of Scheidemann and Müller.
The German conservatives had come out of the election unharmed - they had only lost one member in the blast and he had come from a district that had elected conservatives for as long as it had existed. Though von Westarp had announced that Hugenberg had decided to retire - only a few people knew that Burchardt had given Hugenberg the opportunity to retire or to be shipped of to colonial service - his seat too was held by the conservatives. Hugenberg would not be missed, especially since von Westarp was glad to be back in full control of his party.
All in all, the situation in the Reichstag remained the same as before, with Sänger's coalition of the catholic centrum, the national liberals and the social liberals making gains at the expense of the socialists. However, the socialists had largely voted for Sänger's policies, so commentators usually summarized the election with "same as it ever was".
However, there was one person in the German Empire who feared for his position. That person was Wilhelm II. The conservative leader, von Westarp, had not been very appreciative that Wilhelm had selected Hugenberg over the more senior politician. And while the armed forces remained loyal to the Emperor, that loyalty appeared to be more owned to the position than to the man himself.
Wilhelm of course had not been idle. He had granted private audiences to a lot of people and conferred the House Order of Hohenzollern even more of them. He could of course not approach Sänger directly, but he had conferred the Order of Louise, first class, on the Chancellor's wife while also opening a hand-written correspondence with her. Still, all of that had seemed to amount to little because now, Jakob Burchardt had asked for an audience and the Emperor had found no plausible reason to refuse him.
"Your Imperial Majesty." "Herr Doktor Burchardt. What brings you to me this day?" The two were alone in the audience hall, as requested by Burchardt. "I bring you a message from the Reichskanzler." Burchardt stepped forward and held out a hand-written letter.
Your Imperial Majesty,
May God keep you in good health.
My wife and I thank you for the honour bestowed upon her and sent our greetings. Sadly, the duties of state and the recovery process do not permit me to deliver this message in person. I have to beg your forgiveness and hope that Dr. ing. h.c. Burchardt, Vizekanzler to the German Empire, will be a suitable replacement.
Your Majesty can be assured of my personal and continuing loyalty to the House of Hohenzollern. I have imparted this loyalty on my good friend Jakob Burchardt, who knows what to do should another crisis come into existence.
I thank Your Majesty for displaying clear leadership in the time of crisis. Though there have been rumours circulating in the Reichstag, especially from the socialist factions, that the health of Your Majesty may require your Majesty to step down, I am sure these are only rumors. I pray daily for your Majesty's health. I shall also use my political influence to prevent these rumours from transforming into a vote of censure in the Reichstag. For as long as I am Reichskanzler, nobody shall ever threaten your authority.
Our unity shall lead Germany to greater power still.
Hochachtungsvoll,
Johannes Sänger
The Emperor nodded, feeling relief. He read the message once more and then understanding began to dawn on him. After a short period of weighing his options, he nodded at Burchardt. "Tell the Reichskanzler that I am grateful for his continued loyalty to my House."
Berliner Nachrichten
January 1st 1928
Full report publishes, no clear link to British Government
The American commission published its full report today, stating that while the bomb was of British design and that it seemed as if there were low-level contacts from British Intelligence to the terrorists in Holland, there was no evidence the British Government ordered the attempted assassination.
Spanish claims to Gibraltar put on hold, Vienna conference announces neutrality
The kingdom of Spain announced today that it would withdraw its ultimatum to Britain in its entirety. Any claim to Gibraltar will not be pursued during the course of the Vienna conference, which has been ongoing since September 1st. The Nations partaking in the Vienna conference meanwhile announced in a joint statement that they shall not commit to any war of agression during the course of the conference and that they would stay neutral with regards to any other conflict.
Crown Prince resumes duties
The King of the Netherlands and of the Belgians, Crown Prince Eitel Friedrich, has resumed his official duties with his new years address. The crown prince announced that he and his bride Maria Elisabeth of Spain will wed on March 15th, 1928.
Not Hungarian enough?
Some Hungarian politicians have spoken out against Prince Otto of Hapsburg, stating that both he and his wife were not Hungarian enough to take the throne. The Hungarian assembly is supposed to vote on the issue of granting the Prince dispensation to ascend to the Throne of Hungary earlier than normally allowed under the law...
Navy assumes control of new ships
The two Lexington-class carriers and the six Hamburg-class light cruisers were delivered today to the German Navy. The Spanish Navy commissioned four battleships and two battlecruisers, whereas the French Navy took delivery of the two Lexington-class carriers ordered previously. Chinese crews have also arrived in Germany to take control of the two battlecruisers ordered in Germany. All ships have finished fitting out.
Berlin,
Sicherheitsdienst building
The security services of the German Empire were housed in an unassuming office building next to the General Staff. Originally, the so-called "political" and "intelligence" departments had been run by the local police. One of Sänger's reforms had been to take that power away from the police and amalgamate them into one independent service. Of course, most of the men and women serving had been former police officers who merely had exchanged one coat for another. The secret services had also been strictly federalized, abolishing the secret police forces of the various member states, which had been turned into local offices. There also was the military security service, but that remained under the control of the General Staff, whereas the head of the Sicherheitsdienst reported directly to the Chancellor. The
Sicherheitsdienst consisted of two departments, overseen by a common directorate.
One department, the
Geheimdienst (secret service), only dealt with external affairs. It conducted all espionage operations not run by the military security service and was split into different departments, with each department being responsible for one country.
The
Geheimpolizei (secret police) was responsible for internal affairs, split into five sub-departments, or Abteilungen.
Abteilung A dealt with the classical observation of political enemies within the German Empire. Originally mustering tens of thousands of officers and informants used to fight socialists, it now had the duty of observing radical conservatives.
Abteilung B dealt with counter-espionage. It had largely inherited the well-placed network of Abteilung A and was rumored to have informers in every bar in certain cities.
Abteilung C was not a single department. Rather it was a conglomerate of the various duties that the other departments could or would not handle.
Abteilung D was the enforcement aim of the Internal Affairs department.
Abteilung E dealt with one problem only - the Dutch terrorists. It had carried out this task with great efficiency so far, though the head officers had been sacked after both the assassination of the Dutch Queen and of the bomb blast.
On this day, the Geheimpolizei held the last of its daily meetings, or rather four department heads did. There were two men and one woman in attendance plus two typists. The first men, a tall, aristocratic figure, was Hans Bernd Gisevius, head of the Geheimpolizei. He was an outsider - young for his position, but rumored to be one of the favorites of the Reichskanzler.
Sitting to his right was Louise Smith, head of section B. When she spoke, she did so with an audible British accent, which stemmed from her many years in England. She had married Peter Smith, a worker in the British Admiralty. What Peter had not known was that she was in reality a Geheimdienst Agent and when she had been - upon his influence - invited to work in the Admiralty as a secretary, she had used this position to pass on secret document to the German Embassy for over two decades. Eventually, she had been found out and barely escaped into said embassy. Her husband had not been so lucky. Now, she headed the counter-espionage department after having transferred from the Geheimdienst to the Geheimpolizei.
Sitting opposite her and to the left of Gisevius was Rudolf Meier, head of the enforcement aim, a bald, stout person. His work, especially concerning certain interrogation practices now forbidden under the new constitution, was the subject of many rumours in the department, though nobody knew how much was true or fabrication put out by Meier himself.
Louise Smith was finishing her status report. "...and now for some comedy. Two weeks ago, a ship entered a German port with goods from Afghanistan. When it wanted to sail, the outbound inspection revealed that one crewmember had gone missing. The ship was detained for two days and a search was started. This search proved fruitless and the ship was allowed to sail. A description of the man was taken and handed over to all police department. After all, it is not the first time a foreign crewmember tried to illegally immigrate to this country. Yesterday, during a routine inspection, Berlin police picked him up. He resisted and injured one policemen before he was taken in. When a search revealed he carried coded documents and a large amount of money, we were called in.
Abteilung D has held him since and while he has not confessed, my department is certain he is a spy."
Gisevius interrupted at this point. "You mean to say that whoever is behind this, sent a man with no fake identity, a route of entering the country that was sure to guarantee he would be noticed and coded documents and a large amount of money into Germany?"
Smith nodded. "As I said, comedy. Which also rules out all major European intelligence agencies." "The Afghans? Surely they are not so stupid to use their own citizens?" "Our best guess so far. Either they are indeed that stupid...." "....or they wish him to be picked up. In which case all we'll do is waste resources on him." Smith nodded once more. "Indeed. Though I cannot help but wonder how one man is supposed to do that, given our resources. In any case, I have asked all our agents to keep an eye on any additional Afghan national entering the country." Gisevius stood. "Thank you. Keep me informed."
As soon as he left the room, Meier spoke for the first time since the meeting had started. "My men will try to turn him, though so far he is not responding well to such attempts. Even pointing out that his Government wanted him to be caught and providing him with evidence of it did not do the trick. But he'll talk. The question is what we do with him afterwards - and whether Gisevius should be informed about the option we'll choose."
Smith's eyes became even more colder than they already were. "If I remember correctly, the Afghans crucified the last German spy they caught. Maybe a baptizing is in order?"
**************
Rome,
January 4th, 1928
The finished treaty was a monumental piece of work. Of course, the prepared document now on the table was nothing but a rough summary. The real treaty was over 200 pages long, detailing the various instances to the treaty to avoid any misinterpretation or future problem. Over 200 diplomats of all nations had worked hard to achieve that goal.
It was also true that the signing ceremony was just that - ceremonial. Binding notes of agreement had been exchanged between the nations as soon as the treaty had been finalized. But of course, everybody had felt the need to show to the rest of the world and to their populace that yes, there was going to be peace and no, Europe had not gone insane.
Sänger had flown in late from Vienna, where the much larger Alliance congress was held. It had originally started with 400 delegates, which had by now grown to over 40.000 of them. The German Governement even had to charter whole ocean liners in October to carry over the latest batch from abroad.
He himself had almost recovered completely from the bombing, though he still needed to use a cane and had to sit down after walks. Still, his recovery, which was expected to continue, had been a huge relief for both him and Natasha. Now it was her turn to be looked after as their first child was due in three weeks, though with the Vienna conference in play the looking-after part mainly fell to their families, a fact that dismayed the Reichskanzler.
He desperately hoped he would have finished with the conference in Vienna in order to witness the birth of his first chield, though maybe von Stresemann, who had been the primary negotiator on this treaty, could take over from him. He and Rathenau, who had been negotiating on Sänger's behalf in Vienna at first and had taken a secondary role when the Chancellor had been well enough to take over, were a good team. In any case, now was not the time to dwell on these matters. Seeing as how the doctors had forbidden him from doing any grand speeches while standing, he made a rather small address.
"Your excellencies, honored guests, Ladies and Gentlemen. My previous speakers have already spoken at length about the need for mutual peace and understanding between our great nations. Now the time has come to transform these words into actions for the German Empire. The German Empire desires peace and security on its borders and I feel this treaty achieves these aims. I am especially delighted that the royal marriage and the canal project shall proceed and view it as a mutual level of trust. There are still questions to be answered - the compensation owed to the German Empire and vice versa due to the cancelled arms treaties. But I feel that in mediation, these claims shall be resolved to mutual satisfaction. Indeed, I shall advocate that we instead look to the future. A future of peace and of coexistence."
With that, he signed the treaty on the spot where his name was placed.
Treaty of Rome, January 4th, 1928
Acknowledging the disastrous potential of a European-wide war, all signatories, determined to achieve the mutual goal of peaceful and cordial relations, agree to the following articles:
ARTICLE I: SIGNATORIES
(I) This treaty shall be concluded between the Republic of France, the German Empire, the Kingdom of Spain and the Nation of Portugal (henceforth referred to as The Alliance) and the nations of the Balkan Confederacy, The Egyptian Sultanate, and the Byzantine Empire (henceforth referred to as The Aegean Axis).
(II) The same articles shall also apply to the Blue Sultanate of Sudan, who, while not a member of the Axis, shall be counted as such for the purpose of this treaty.
ARTICLE II: ZONES OF INFLUENCE
(I) All territories and holdings of the Aegean Axis shall be considered their Zone of influence. Any and all claims to that territory by the Alliance shall be hereby considered null and void. The Alliance promises not to interfere in any matter in these territories.
(II) All territories and holdings of the Alliance shall be considered their Zone of influence. Any and all claims to that territory by the Axis shall be hereby considered null and void. The Axis promises not to interfere in any matter in these territories.
(III) Territories and holdings of the signatory states shall be defined as the territory and holdings of the member states at the date of January 1st, 1925 and any territory and holdings they might have acquired up to and including the time of the signing of this treaty.
ARTICLE III: MILITARY DEPLOYMENTS
(I) Both the Alliance and the Axis may deploy military at will to their respective zones of influence. No such deployment shall be construed as a national threat or used as a casus belli against any signatory state.
(II) In the interest of peace, the following level of troops are to be considered maximum:
a) The German/Balkan border and the surrounding military districts may not be garrisoned by more than one (1) million men by either side and not hold more than 1500 aircraft of all sizes by either party. The border is defined as a strip of 25km on both sides
b) The Byzantine/Tuscan border and the surrounding military districts may not be garrisoned by more than two (2) million men by either side and may not hold more than 800 aircraft of all sizes by either party.
c) The Axis recognizes the right of the Alliance to commence fortress building in Libya. However, such fortresses shall not house more than 1 regiment of troops (2500 men) each and must be spaced at least 30 km apart. No more than 100.000 troops total may be stationed in Libya by the Alliance. The only exception to this limitation shall be the port of Tripoli, which may be garrisoned and fortified at will.
d) In return, the Axis promises not to protest the Creation of an Alliance African command and shall not interfere with the creation and maintenance of a Convoy system in the Indian Ocean.
(III) Military limits shall apply to active forces only. However, the movement of military reservists to those areas shall not be allowed if it is an attempt to circumvent this limitation.
(IV) With regards to the Balkan border, both sides may only station nonmotorized infantry forces in the agreed-upon area. No heavy artillery of any kind shall be permitted in the area except for the stationary artillery of border fortifications.
ARTICLE IV: MILITARY COMMISSION
(I) A commission composed of an equal number of officers of both nations shall adjucated any dispute regarding to the above-mentioned commitments. In the case of deadlock, the deciding vote shall fall to the United States ambassador to Berlin or to Constantinople according to seniority.
(II) The commission shall have one thousand (1000) inspectors each of the Alliance and of the Axis at its disposal. Those inspectors shall have the right to inspect any military establishment listed under Article IV (II) to ensure compliance by all nations.
ARTICLE V: REGARDING PREVIOUS TREATIES
(I) The United States of America shall be asked to mediate regarding claims of damages and reimbursement due to the cancellation of the treaties signed before between Alliance states and members of the Aegean Axis.
(II) The treaty regarding a Rhine-Danube canal shall remain in force. Alliance ships may continue to use the Suez canal. Axis travel through Gibraltar and through the Panama canal shall not be impeded in any way.
ARTICLE VI: REGARDING THE BRITISH EMPIRE
(I) The Alliance promises to commit to an attempt at reconciliation.
(II) Any territorial claims by the Alliance shall be resolved through mediation. No British territory shall be invaded, occupied or attacked by the alliance unless in response to a British war of aggression. In case of doubt the commission (Article V) shall investigate and deliver final judgement.
(III) British territory shall be defined as the territory and holdings of the British Empire at the date of January 1st, 1925 and any territory and holdings they might have acquired up to and including the time of the signing of this treaty.
ARTICLE VII: REGARDING THE SOVIET UNION
(I) Both the Alliance and the Axis acknowledge each others vested interest in the security and stability of the Soviet Union, which is one of the most important resource exporters to both the Alliance and the Axis.
(II) No signatory shall invade Soviet territory unless having been attacked first. In case of doubt the commission (Article V) shall investigate and deliver final judgement.
(III) Soviet territory shall be defined as the territory and holdings of the Soviet Union at the date of January 1st, 1925 and any territory and holdings they might have acquired up to and including the time of the signing of this treaty.
ARTICLE VIII: REGARDING THE ROYAL MARRIAGE
The Marriage treaty between the German Empire and the Egyptian Sultanate shall remain in force.
ARTICLE IX: FUTURE DEVELOPMENTS
(I) The validity of this Treaty and the articles made herein shall not be modified nor influenced by any future development.
(II) In the case of a signatory state ceasing to exist, the successor state(s) shall take its place, with the same obligations and rights as the predecessor state.
(III) Shall any other state join either the Alliance and the Axis, the terms of this treaty shall apply to them as well.
Signed,
The Council of Portugal
Alain Dupont, President of the French Republic
Marian I, Queen of Spain etc.
Dr. mult. Johannes Sänger, Reichskanzler
Exarch Ignatius Korolev
Grand Vizier Ikrimah al-Jaffar
Ivo Kosor, Secretary of Foreign Affairs
Watching as the Byzantine envoy followed suit after delivering a short speech, Sänger considered how long this ceremony and the ensuing banquet would take.
Hopefully they will restrain themselves.
A few minutes after the signing, the demobilization process was started.
Berlin
Amtsgericht
January 5th, 1928
The judge of the lower court was about to finish proclaiming the sentence against Baron Ungern von Sternberg. "...it is hereby found that the accused is found guilty of the charge of Insult and Defamation. The accused is hereby fined 60 days of his income. He has the right to appeal to the Landgericht."
Results:
- Treaty of Rome signed, see above for the terms
- Spain announces it shall not pursue any claims during the course of the Vienna conference (and no, the conference itself is not about the Gibraltar or British business)
- All nations partaking in the Vienna conference vow not to start any wars or join any warring party for the course of the conference
- Wilhelm gets a message
- the Afghan spy is caught
- The Baron is found guilty of defamation and insulting Jewish German citizens.