Spa Conferences (First World War)

The British Hotel in Spa, headquarters of the Oberste Heeresleitung ("Supreme Army Command", OHL) in 1918, the last year of the First World War.

In 1918, several conferences bringing together the leaders of the Imperial Reich[Note 1] sometimes in the presence of Austro-Hungarian representatives , were convened in Spa in Belgium, the seat of the Oberste Heeresleitung (OHL), the supreme command of the Imperial German Army, since his installation in the city at the end of the winter 1918. Governmental, they are all chaired by the German Emperor Wilhelm II, with the assistance of the Reich Chancellor, and co-chaired by the Emperor-King Charles I when he is present. Also bringing together ministerial officials and high-ranking military personnel, both from the Reich and from the dual monarchy, these conferences are supposed, according to the German imperial government, to define the policy pursued by the Reich and its Quadruple[Note 2] allies, particularly in effecting a division of conquests, by the armies of the Central Powers, into territories to be annexed by the Reich and the dual monarchy, while defining within their respective conquests the zones of German and Austro-Hungarian influence.
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