Opposing forces in the middle of September Central Powers Allies Military operations , one of the leaders of the Greek National Defence Army, interrogates Bulgarian prisoners of war. On 30 May 1918, the Allies launched an offensive on the heavily fortified
Skra salient, commencing the
battle of Skra-di-Legen. The battle marked the first significant Greek action for the Allied side. Utilizing the cover of heavy artillery, a Franco-
Hellenic force made a rapid push into the enemy trenches, conquering Skra and the surrounding system of fortifications. Greek casualties amounted to 434–440 killed in action, 154–164 missing in action and 1,974–2,220 wounded, while France lost approximately 150 men killed or injured. A total of 1,782 soldiers of the Central Powers became prisoners of war, including a small number of German engineers and artillery specialists that served in Bulgarian units; considerable amounts of military equipment also fell into Allied hands. The plan for a Bulgarian counteroffensive against Skra remained unfulfilled as Bulgarian soldiers refused to participate in the operation. Both the Greek and the French press used the opportunity to laud the efforts of the Greek army, favourably influencing the Greek mobilization. The fall of Skra prompted Bulgarian prime minister
Vasil Radoslavov to resign on 21 June 1918.
Aleksandar Malinov, who assumed office immediately afterwards, pursued secret negotiations with Britain, offering to withdraw Bulgaria from the war with the condition that Bulgaria fully retain eastern Macedonia. However, British prime minister
David Lloyd George rejected the proposal, assuring the Greek ambassador in London
Ioannis Gennadius that Britain would not act against Greek interests. in Thessaloniki. With the German spring offensive threatening France, Guillaumat was recalled to
Paris and replaced by General
Franchet d'Espèrey. Although d'Espèrey urged an attack on the Bulgarian army, the French government refused to allow an offensive unless all the countries agreed. General Guillaumat, no longer needed in France, travelled from
London to
Rome, trying to win approval for an attack. Finally, in September 1918, an agreement was reached, allowing d'Espèrey to launch his grand offensive. The Allied forces were now large, despite the Russian exit from the war due to the
Treaty of Brest-Litovsk in March 1918. Greece and its army (nine divisions) were fully committed to the Entente, while 6,000 Czech and Slovak former prisoners of war held on the
Italian front were re-armed, reorganized, and transferred to the Macedonian front to fight for the Allies. The Bulgarians had also increased their army during 1917, leading both sides to have roughly equal military power battalions vs. battalions and ten German battalions). However, as 1918 progressed, it was clear that the Allies had the momentum the Central Powers lacked.
Russian defeat had yielded no meaningful benefit to the Central Powers. The Ottoman Empire faced a progressive loss of Arab lands. In Austria-Hungary, non-German and non-Hungarian parts of the multinational empire grew more openly restive. On the
Western Front, intense German spring offensives had not defeated France, and American deployment was increasingly effective, with US forces operating under independent command from June 1918. Though Bulgaria was not at war with the United States, German victory over the United States appeared conceptually infeasible. Finally, and most importantly for Bulgaria, although almost all of its
territorial war aims were already achieved, because World War I was not merely a third
Balkan War, Bulgaria could not quit. Alongside its partners, Bulgaria continued to suffer high casualties and civilian privation, including food shortages, seemingly to achieve the unrealized objectives of its allies. As a constitutional monarchy, Bulgaria depended on the consent of its people to keep fighting while stress and discontent with the war grew. An unintentional result of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk which ended the war with Russia and the
Treaty of Bucharest which ended the war with Romania was to undermine morale in the Austrian Imperial and Royal Army. Besides for the peace treaties, Serbia had been defeated in 1915 and Italy had been almost defeated in 1917, meaning that most of the Austrian war aims had already achieved, and from the Austrian point of view, there was no more point in continuing the war. However, the Austro-Hungarian Empire was very much the junior partner in its alliance with Germany, and under strong German pressure Austria-Hungary had to continue the war, which caused serious morale problems in the Imperial and Royal Army by 1918. Within the Imperial and Royal Army, Germany was cursed as the "secret enemy" that had bullied the Austro-Hungarian Empire into continuing the war in order to achieve German war aims. The preparatory artillery bombardment of Bulgarian and Central Powers positions for the
Battle of Dobro Pole began on 14 September. The following day, the French and Serbians attacked and captured their objective. On 18 September, the Greeks and the British attacked but were stopped with heavy losses by the Bulgarians in the
Battle of Doiran. The Franco-Serbian army continued advancing vigorously, and the next day, some Bulgarian units started surrendering positions without a fight, and the Bulgarian command ordered a retreat. In the
official British government history of the Macedonian campaign,
Cyril Falls wrote a detailed analysis of the situation of the Bulgarian forces and the situation of the front. Although a breakthrough was achieved at Dobro Pole and the Allied forces continued their advance, the Bulgarian army was not routed and managed an orderly retreat. By 29 September (a day before Bulgaria exited World War I), Skopje fell, but a Bulgarian and German force had been ordered to try and retake it the next day; the number of Bulgarian prisoners-of-war in allied hands around that day was only Another major factor contributed to the Bulgarian request for an armistice. A mass of retreating Bulgarian mutineers had converged on the railway centre of
Radomir in Bulgaria, from the capital city of
Sofia. On 27 September, leaders of the
Bulgarian Agrarian National Union took control of these troops and proclaimed the overthrow of the monarchy and a Bulgarian republic. About rebellious troops threatened Sofia the next day. Under those chaotic circumstances, a Bulgarian delegation arrived in Thessaloniki to request an armistice. On 29 September, the Bulgarians were granted the
Armistice of Salonica by General d'Espèrey, ending their war. The Macedonian front ended at noon on 30 September 1918 when the ceasefire came into effect. The Soldiers' Uprising was finally put down by 2 October. German Emperor
Wilhelm II, in his telegram to Bulgarian King
Ferdinand I, stated: "Disgraceful! 62,000 Serbs decided the war!" On 29 September 1918, the
German Supreme Army Command informed Wilhelm II and the
Imperial Chancellor Count
Georg von Hertling, that the military situation facing Germany was hopeless. Ferdinand I abdicated and went into exile on 3 October. The British army headed east towards the European side of the Ottoman Empire as the French and Serbian forces continued north and
liberated Serbia, Albania and Montenegro. The British army neared
Constantinople, and with no Ottoman forces capable of stopping it, the Ottoman government asked for an armistice (the
Armistice of Mudros) on 26 October;
Enver Pasha and his partners had fled several days earlier to Berlin. The Serbo-French army recaptured Serbia and overran several weak German divisions that tried to block its advance near
Niš. On 3 November, Austria-Hungary was forced to sign an armistice on the Italian front ending the war there. On 10 November, d'Espèrey's army crossed the
Danube river and was poised to enter the heartland of
Hungary. At the request of the French General, Count
Mihály Károlyi, leading the Hungarian government, came to Belgrade and signed another armistice, the
Armistice of Belgrade. ==Memorials==