ECHOES OF WAR 1915-1918 (PART 4)

Dudng the summer months of 1917- 1918 there was a strange quiet on the Eastern front. The downfall of Russia afforded General E Ludendorff, who became the first quartermaster general of the German armies when Field Marshal von Hindenburg assumed the office of chief of the German general staff of the...

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Main Author: G.G.J. Lawrence
Format: Article
Language:Afrikaans
Published: Stellenbosch University 2012-02-01
Series:Scientia Militaria
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scientiamilitaria.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/764
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spelling doaj-ed3f5c82174c4d92b8f6e0c6210e05392020-11-25T01:14:14ZafrStellenbosch UniversityScientia Militaria2224-00202012-02-018410.5787/8-4-764ECHOES OF WAR 1915-1918 (PART 4)G.G.J. LawrenceDudng the summer months of 1917- 1918 there was a strange quiet on the Eastern front. The downfall of Russia afforded General E Ludendorff, who became the first quartermaster general of the German armies when Field Marshal von Hindenburg assumed the office of chief of the German general staff of the armies in the field, the opportunity to deal the Allies in the west a decisive blow. Instead he decided to work to perfect his preparations for his final coup. His plan was based on the highly specialized training of certain units, and was a legitimate conclusion from the German use of 'storm troops'. The first point was the absence of any preliminary massing near the front of attack. Men were brought up by night marches just before zero hour, and secrecy was thus obtained for the assembly. Again, there was no long bombardment to alarm the enemy, and the guns began at the moment when the infantry advanced, the enemy's back areas being confused by a deluge of gas shells. The assault was made by picked troops in open order, or rather in small clusters, carrying light trench mortars and many machine guns, with the field batteries close behind them in support. The actual mode of attack, which the French called 'infiltration: may be likened to a hand, of which the fingertips are shod with steel, and which is pushed into a soft substance. The picked troops at the finger-ends made gaps through which others poured, till each section of the defence found itself outflanked and encircled. A system of flares and rockets enabled the following troops to learn where the picked troops had made the breach, and the artillery came close behind the infantry. The men had unlimifed objectives, and carded iron rations for several days. When one division had reached the end of its strength, another took its place, so that the advance resembled a continuous game of leap-frog.http://scientiamilitaria.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/764South African BrigadeThe downfall of RussiaGerman armiesBrigadier General F S. DawsonCaptain HallackRetreat of the South African BrigadeLieutenant Colonel Young
collection DOAJ
language Afrikaans
format Article
sources DOAJ
author G.G.J. Lawrence
spellingShingle G.G.J. Lawrence
ECHOES OF WAR 1915-1918 (PART 4)
Scientia Militaria
South African Brigade
The downfall of Russia
German armies
Brigadier General F S. Dawson
Captain Hallack
Retreat of the South African Brigade
Lieutenant Colonel Young
author_facet G.G.J. Lawrence
author_sort G.G.J. Lawrence
title ECHOES OF WAR 1915-1918 (PART 4)
title_short ECHOES OF WAR 1915-1918 (PART 4)
title_full ECHOES OF WAR 1915-1918 (PART 4)
title_fullStr ECHOES OF WAR 1915-1918 (PART 4)
title_full_unstemmed ECHOES OF WAR 1915-1918 (PART 4)
title_sort echoes of war 1915-1918 (part 4)
publisher Stellenbosch University
series Scientia Militaria
issn 2224-0020
publishDate 2012-02-01
description Dudng the summer months of 1917- 1918 there was a strange quiet on the Eastern front. The downfall of Russia afforded General E Ludendorff, who became the first quartermaster general of the German armies when Field Marshal von Hindenburg assumed the office of chief of the German general staff of the armies in the field, the opportunity to deal the Allies in the west a decisive blow. Instead he decided to work to perfect his preparations for his final coup. His plan was based on the highly specialized training of certain units, and was a legitimate conclusion from the German use of 'storm troops'. The first point was the absence of any preliminary massing near the front of attack. Men were brought up by night marches just before zero hour, and secrecy was thus obtained for the assembly. Again, there was no long bombardment to alarm the enemy, and the guns began at the moment when the infantry advanced, the enemy's back areas being confused by a deluge of gas shells. The assault was made by picked troops in open order, or rather in small clusters, carrying light trench mortars and many machine guns, with the field batteries close behind them in support. The actual mode of attack, which the French called 'infiltration: may be likened to a hand, of which the fingertips are shod with steel, and which is pushed into a soft substance. The picked troops at the finger-ends made gaps through which others poured, till each section of the defence found itself outflanked and encircled. A system of flares and rockets enabled the following troops to learn where the picked troops had made the breach, and the artillery came close behind the infantry. The men had unlimifed objectives, and carded iron rations for several days. When one division had reached the end of its strength, another took its place, so that the advance resembled a continuous game of leap-frog.
topic South African Brigade
The downfall of Russia
German armies
Brigadier General F S. Dawson
Captain Hallack
Retreat of the South African Brigade
Lieutenant Colonel Young
url http://scientiamilitaria.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/764
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