When we think of World War I we usually think of the endless battles in trenches. It is true that much of the war was fought from armies facing off in trenches but for the first month and a half of the war the armies moved very fast and fighting was moving through the villages, countryside and cities of Europe. In fact when Germany invaded France again in World War II using the infamous blitzkrieg tactics and panzers (tanks) it did not move significant faster than the German invasion of World War I.
Speed was essential to the German invasion in the Battle of
the Frontiers (See "Why Belgium"). But just as Germany had the Schlieffen Plan, France had a plan of its own. It was known as "Plan
XVII." While not as detailed as the Schlieffen Plan it was the guiding
force behind the French army for the first few weeks of the war. Plan XVII was
to be a reaction to a war with Germany, it called for a rapid mobilization of
the French army and to have it quickly positioned on the border with Belgium
and Germany. With most of the Army position on the border with Germany (the
exact opposite of the German Schlieffen Plan).
France was not caught off
guard by a German invasion through Belgium, in fact the French army was
expecting it (French spies had even acquired some (but not all) of German plans
before the war). The French plan was to take advantage of the weakly protected
German border. France could invade Germany, retaking its lost territory along
the border and turn north moving up though Germany into Belgium. The Germany
army would then be trapped in Belgium unable to move past the Belgian
fortresses when supported by a combined French and Belgian army. With the main
French army south of them and a combined Belgian and French army to the west. Being
attack on two sides at once German army would be crushed and the war would be
over in a matter of weeks, months at the most.
In many ways the Germans and the
French had the same plan: bypass the main enemy force, turn around and it
attack from behind or the side. When war broke the race was on, France trying
to rush east and Germany trying to rush west. Both sides were confident of
victory and both would fail to encircle the other. But the German assault would
initially be much more successful. Pushing through Belgium and deep into
France. The French armies initially were successful in entering into German
territory and forcing back the German army. But within a few days the German
army counter attacked and the French invasion of Germany started to fall apart.
The primary reason that the French
invasion failed and the German invasion succeeded was the German army was
better prepared for a modern war than the French army. The last major wars to
be fought in Europe prior to World War One were fought in the 1870's. These
wars were fought with weapons and equipment not all that different from the
American Civil War. No nation on earth had much experience fighting against an
enemy who had machine guns, heavy artillery, telephones, telegraphs, airplanes
and railroads. The European military minds had nothing but past experience and intuition
(with a heavy dose of guesswork) on how a modern army should function. For example
at the start of the war none of the nations involved issued metal helmets to
their troops. Troops were issued hats or caps, even the famous spiked helm of
the German army was actually made of polished leather and was intended to be more
decorative then offer any real protection.
The German army put its faith in
it massive industrial capacity. It built an army around the use of heavy artillery
and machine guns. All of the major European armies had both artillery and machine
guns in abundance, but they used them differently then Germany. They did not concentrate
them one place but tended to spread them out over large areas. Germany would
gather its artillery and machine guns into specific locations were they could
have a decisive impact.
France put its faith in the speed
and fighting spirit of its men. It was the French belief that the army with
greatest confidence and fighting spirit would win, and that the best defense
was a good offence. This philosophy seemed sound in theory, but would prove disastrous.
For example on the onset of the
war British troops wore dark khaki, the German troops wore dark green or grey,
Austro-Hungarian troops wore grey-blue or green and the Russian troops wore green or brown. But the
French dismissed the use of dark colors that could provide some camouflage. The
French army went to war in much the same uniforms it had in the nineteenth century.
Infantry wore bright red caps with a red shirt and trousers, covered by a brilliant
blue overcoat with large decorative buttons. The cavalry wore polished steel
breastplate and leather helmets with great plumes. There had been those in the
French army that wanted to modernize the uniforms but this idea was met with
great resistance as the French uniform was seen as symbol of national pride. Despite
the resistance the French army was in the process of replacing these older uniform.
But there would be months of war before
the new uniforms reached the troops. It was believed that men in drab uniforms
would not have the same confidence as a man in a dashing traditional uniform
and camouflage would only encourage men to take cover when they should be on
the attack. Even the new modern uniforms reflected this thinking. They were
colored blue-grey, so a man would blend into the sky of the horizon but would
be of little use hiding in foliage or trenches.
Another shortcoming of the French
army was the philosophy of "always attack." In the Battle of the Frontiers
French troops heading into battle were only issue a small number of machine guns and
only lighter artillery. The idea being that heavy machine guns (at this time machine
guns usually required two or three men to carry and fire them) and artillery
would slow the troops down too much. In the French philosophy it was speed and
not firepower that would carry the day. As it turned out this was not be the
case. Additionally this philosophy was problematic because if an initial French
attack failed the French troops were poorly equipped and trained for how to
deal with a counter attack. The philosophy of "always attack" did not
hold up on modern battlefield where battles would rage for weeks (as opposed to
days in 19th century wars) and consist of a series of attacks and counter
attacks.
Finally the French army suffered
from the same problem that all the nations fighting the war suffered. All the
troops, officers and generals had been trained in the thinking of warfare in
the 19th century. The world had never seen a conflict like World War One and no
nation was truly prepared for it. An example of this thinking is that troops in
World War One did not fight in small teams like soldiers today. They fought like in the
American Civil War in groups of one hundred or even more. By 1914 troops did
not generally march in lines in battle but they did move in large groups in
combat that were easily seen and fired upon.
Now let us look at the factors of
the German and French army to see why the French invasion of Germany failed.
Imagine this hypothetical (but historically
likely) scenario of a battle between German and French forces. A French force
of one thousand troops are advancing into Germany. A scout reports that the
about one hundred German troops are in a position at the top of a nearby hill
with no artillery. Conventional wisdom of the military training at the time
would be for the French to rush and attack (taking advantage of their numerical
superiority) the German troops on hill before they could be reinforced or haul artillery
into position. This was how battles in the 19th century were fought and won; speed,
aggression and bravery.
But this was 1914. The hundred
German troops on the top of the hill had ten machine guns. In 1914 most infantry
carried bolt-action single shot rifles. A well trained solider could fire 30
aimed shots in minute. A World War One machine gunner could fire 400 to 600
shot in a minute. Both the rifles the machine guns could hit a target at the range
at 1000 yards. The advancing French troops would rush forward in a great mass
with their easily seen brightly colored uniforms. They would need to run though
1000 yards (ten football fields) of fire, facing about over 6000 bullets being
fired at them every minute. As if that was not bad enough the German commander
on the hill had a telephone. Though there was no artillery on the hill, there
was a German artillery battery a few miles away (far out of sight). The
telephone had wire laid down the hill to a communication post with runners to
carry a messages. In a matter of minutes the German artillery battery, who
could not even see the French troops, could fire their guns at the positions
the German commander on the hill relayed to them (Something impossible only a few decades earlier). Facing a hail of bullets and artillery
shells raining down on them the French troop would be massacred before they
could hope to reach the hill.
This scenario played out over and
over during the Battle of the Frontiers, with every nation involved being on the
losing side of it at times. It was not uncommon for thousands to soldiers to die every
day. For example August 22, 1914 was (and still is) the deadliest day in French
army history. In that 24 hour period approximately 27,000 French soldiers died. It was these kind of losses that resulted in
the iconic trench warfare that World War One would become infamous for. The trenches
came as a necessity to prevent these types of horrendous losses and it was
these same trenches that would deadlock the conflict between France and Great Britain
against Germany for the next four years.
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