The Monkey Bite
That Changed History
A few weeks ago, we included among our daily content
what we consider the weirdest game variant we’ve ever
had requested: a Byzantine Empire still extant in 1939. Such
a thing was simply not possible without completely altering
Western history; but gamers, they want their purple panzers.
This more extensive variant looks at a far more likely historical
alternative (moreso than the actual outcome), as a variant
for our Third
Reich game.
While the Eastern Roman Empire died an overdue death in
1453, in the 1920s there were Greek nationalist dreamers who
made a pretty serious attempt to revive it. Or at least a
semblance of it; while the Empire’s political system
would remain dead, they hoped to greatly enlarge the Greek
state.
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Alexander I. Killed by a monkey bite.
Yes, really.
The result was a vicious war fought in Anatolia between the
Greek regular army and the Turkish nationalist forces of Mustafa
Kemal, soon to be re-named Ataturk. The Greeks landed at Smyrna
in May 1919 with Allied support, but this disappeared in October
when King Alexander died of sepsis after being bitten by his
pet monkey, and his father, Constantine, resumed the throne.
Constantine had favored the Central Powers during the First
World War and lost his throne in a French-sponsored coup.
Despite the loss of foreign aid, Constantine continued the
war for three more years. Kemal’s “Büyük
Taarraz” offensive in the late summer of 1922 drove
the Greeks out of Anatolia. Peace was finally made in July,
1923 but deep hostility between the two nations remains to
this day.
To fulfill their wildest dreams, the Greeks would have required
a resounding military victory in Anatolia, political harmony
among their own leaders, acceptance of their dreams by the
Bolshevik faction in the Russian Civil War, and cooperation
form the French, British and Italians. Of those six pre-requisites,
they achieved zero. Without the monkey’s bite, all of
them were possible.
Constantine I. Restored by the monkey’s bite.
Romania and Serbia managed to fulfill equally ridiculous claims,
so it’s not completely out of bounds to posit Greek
success under different leadership. It’s certainly no
more odd an outcome than the historical one, with Kemal forging
a united, secular Turkey out of the Ottoman debris. Had something
happened to the Father of Turks even with the monkey’s
bite, this outcome is far more likely than the birth of modern
Turkey.
Greater Greece at its greatest extent would include:
• Western Thrace. The southern coast of Bulgaria, hexes
2922 and 3021 on the Third Reich map. Greece actually acquired
this region.
• The Dodecanese Islands. Taken from Turkey by Italy
in 1912, these consisted of Rhodes (hex 3524) and some smaller
islands in 3324 and 3424 that are not shown at the scale of
Third Reich. Italy agreed to hand these over to Greece following
the First World War, but reneged during the Corfu crisis.
These islands did become part of Greece after the Second World
War.
• Eastern Thrace. The European part of Turkey, including
Constantinople (Istanbul). The Allied powers wavered on this
one; they preferred not to see the Greeks acquire the ancient
capital but were no more eager to give it back to the Turks.
This would have been an enormous coup for any Greek government,
but a Greek annexation of the great city would doubtlessly
have led to rioting and massacre in its streets.
• Ionian Greece. The eastern shore of the Aegean, centered
on the commercial center of Smyra (Izmir). The Greek expulsion
from Smyrna led to widespread massacres by the victorious
Turkish army. On the Third Reich map, this region would include
hexes 3221, 3322, 3323 and 3423.
• Cyprus. Britain took over “administration”
of the island in 1878, and annexed it outright in 1914 when
war broke out with Turkey. The Greeks did not press “enosis,”
or union between Greece and Cyprus, very hard at the time,
but every Greek government since 1820 has cast its eye at
the lovely island. And there was precedent for British gifts
of territory, as the “Seven Isles” including Corfu
had been transferred from Britain to Greece in 1863.
• Crimea. This goal lay only in the eyes of the truly
insane among the Greek leaders. Unfortunately for Greece,
in the early 1920s this definition covered most of them. A
large minority known as “Pontic Greeks” lived
in Crimea and on the northeastern shores of the Black Sea,
numbering over a million at the time. Many of these people
were forcibly expelled in the 1960s and 1970s and settled
in Western Thrace. Two Greek divisions fought alongside the
French interventionists in Ukraine during the Russian Civil
War, and as a reward some in Greece hoped to claim the Crimean
peninsula, on the grounds of the Pontic Greek presence and
its historical standing as breadbasket of ancient Greece.
In early 1921 Budenny’s Konarmiya stormed the Parpach
Isthmus separating the Crimea from the Ukrainian mainland,
and captured the peninsula from the White faction. Would they
have done the same had it been held by Greeks? The Red Army
avoided confrontation with the Romanian army over Bessarabia,
despite the desires of some to fight for all of the old empire.
For the purposes of this variant, we’ll assume the same
policy holds true. The Crimea consists of hexes 3213, 3214,
3314, 3315, 3316 and 3413.
• Northern Epirus. Some Greeks still haven’t given
up on this one, a claim to parts of what today is southern
Albania on ethnic grounds. Albania could not have stood up
to those claims, had Italy allowed them, and since we’ve
already posited Italian connivance in creation of Greater
Greece, this is one of the easier conquests. On the Third
Reich map, this region comprises hex 2724.
Greater Greece would not have been a stable state. It’s
likely that the expulsions of its Turkish minority would have
been carried out as they were in reality. In some of these
areas, Turks would have been the majority. These territories
would increase Greek economic potential, but given the political
weaknesses of such a far-flung empire we’ll assign each
a BRP value and allow them to be conquered individually:
• The Crimea is worth 5 BRP’s with its capital
at Sevastopol. Sevastopol remains a fortress and an objective.
• Cyprus is worth 2 BRP’s with its capital at
Famagusta.
• Rhodes is worth 1 BRP.
• Ionian Greece is worth 6 BRP’s with its capital
at Smyrna (Izmir on the Third Reich map).
• Northern Epirus and Eastern Thrace remain part of
Greece, but Greece’s capital is now Constantinople (Istanbul
on the map) and it is now a shipyard. Athens is no longer
an objective. “Mainland” Greece is now worth 15
BRP’s (so the total Greek BRP level is 29).
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Smyrna in flames, 1922.
The Greek armed forces would need to be greatly expanded to
defend this new empire. This implies military aid on a scale
not granted to any of the other new or expanded states in
the post-war decades, as these countries were expected to
pay for their purchases. The Greeks would likely have acquired
the remnants of both the Russian Black Sea Fleet and the Ottoman
navy, and probably some British and Italian warships as well
(or possibly spoils of war taken from Austria-Hungary and
given to Greece).
The army and air force would also need to expand and be maintained
at levels probably beyond the means of the Greek economy.
As a front-line state bordering the Bolsheviks, Greece would
have been a closer French client, but the Western powers never
supported their “sanitary cordon” minor allies
in the same manner as did NATO during the Cold War.
Given that such a Greek government would be playing on the
Byzantine heritage to lend themselves legitimacy, use the
new counters provided for the Insane
Byzantine Variant. All of them are available At Start,
along with all of the Greek units from the 1939 At Start and
Force Pool lists.
Greater Greece would be a much closer client of the West.
Her diplomatic status is 7 with France, 6 with Britain, 2
with the Soviet Union, 5 with Italy and 3 with Germany. Note
that many of the Greek and Turkish diplomatic modifiers are
no longer operative.
Harsh enforcement of the Treaty of Sevres would have brought
other changes to the former Ottoman Turkey:
• Italy has the colony of Adalia, hexes 3522, 3523,
3621, 3622, 3623, 3722 and 3822. Add a city/minor port called
Antalya in hex 3622; this is the colony’s capital. It
is worth 3 BRP’s. If Adalia is conquered by or assigned
to Turkey, it becomes part of Turkey for the remainder of
the game and cannot be re-established. Turkey’s BRP
value is increased by 2.
• France has the colony of Cicilia, hexes 4120, 4019,
4020, 3920 and 3922. Its capital is Iskenderun, and it is
worth 2 BRP’s. If Cilicia is conquered by or assigned
to Turkey, it becomes part of Turkey for the remainder of
the game and cannot be re-established. Turkey’s BRP
value is increased by 1.
• Hexes 4144, 4213, 4214 and 4314 are part of the Soviet
Union.
• Hexes 4414, 4415, 4416, 4516 and all those in the
unnamed lands around hex 4616 are Kurdistan. Add Mosul in
hex 4616 as the capital of Kurdistan. Kurdistan is worth 6
BRP’s, all of its hexes are mountain, and it has two
1-3 INF (use the Syrian pieces from the Third
Reich Player’s Guide).
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Greatest of Turks.
• Turkey, stripped of so much, is now worth 8 BRP’s.
Ankara remains the capital, but Zonguldak (with its huge coal
mines) is now an objective. Turkey has no navy, its army is
reduced to four 1-3 INF and one 1-4 CAV, and it has no air
units. The Turks retain their special abilities to return
INF units to play, and have their special resistance to surrender.
Betrayed by the West and leaning more to Islam, Turkey’s
diplomatic status is 6 with Germany and 2 with all others.
Granting the Turks the Crimea, Ionian Greece, Adalia or Cilicia
adds 2 to a power’s status with Turkey; granting her
Cyprus or Rhodes is worth 1. |