Breakthrough!: Tactics, Technology, and the Search for Victory on the Western Front in World War IThe trench-warfare stalemate of World War I was the virtually inevitable result of new technology and the cultural mindset of the times. The machine gun had made the battlefield unhabitable in the fifty years since the Civil War: it mowed down soldiers at an inconceivable rate. But the elaboration of defensive entrenchments early in World War I changed all that. An uneasy standoff ensued, an impasse that could not be broken though commanders on both sides sacrificed thousands of men in the attempt. Why could they not see that their efforts were doomed? It is possibly the greatest tragedy of this century that literally hundreds of thousands of men were slaughtered in pointless charges against impregnable machine-gun emplacements. The problem, as Professor Johnson clearly demonstrates, was that senior commanders on both sides simply could not imagine any alternative to the frontal assault. They called it l'offensif a l'outrance, the doctrine of offense at all costs, and they sent men to their deaths like savages sacrificing to the gods of tactical theory. It took a new breed of warrior, the adventurous captains and majors who championed technological innovations like tanks and airplanes, to break through the impasse. The author examines each of the major combatants in the Great War and shows how their cultural institutions perpetuated the grim mentality of attrition. Not by accident, the entry of the United States into the fray coincided with the resumption of the tactics of maneuver that finally led to the Allied victory. |
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Before 1914 | 1 |
Anticipated and Choreographed? | 29 |
Laudace toujours laudace | 57 |
Copyright | |
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3e Bureau aerial aircraft American ammunition arms artillery barrage artillery fire assault August batteries battle believed bomb breakthrough Brigade British army Bruchmüller Cambrai Canadian Corps casualties cavalry combat coordination defense Diary divisions effective emplacements enemy enemy's English Estienne field artillery Fifth Army firepower flank Foch force Fourth Army France French German army ground Haig Papers heavy artillery high command infantry infantry attack J. F. C. Fuller Joffre July large numbers Liddell Hart light tanks London Ludendorff machine guns machine-gun nests March Marne Max Hoffmann Maxse Papers meters military mortars observation offensive officers open warfare Pershing Pétain Rawlinson reconnaissance result retreat rifle Rouquerol Royal Flying Corps Russo-Japanese War Schlieffen Schlieffen Plan shells siegecraft soldiers Somme staff stalemate storm troops strong points success Swinton tactics Tank Battalion Tank Corps TCWH trench warfare units Verdun victory weapons Weltkrieg western front
References to this book
British Generalship on the Western Front 1914-1918: Defeat into Victory Simon Robbins No preview available - 2004 |