BBC History Magazine

Winning the western front

The western front has long been synonymous with futility and deadlock. Yet, argues Nick Lloyd, the great battles of 1914–18 triggered a period of enormous innovation – one that ultimately ushered in a new age of warfare

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Nick Lloyd argues that a wave of innovation­s turned the tide for the Allies – and changed warfare forever

The western front occupies a fixed and unchanging position in our memory of the First World War. It is synonymous with trenches and bloody, futile combat; a place of barbed wire and poison gas, of massed artillery batteries and machine-guns, mud and blood. It was where the armies of Germany and France, the United Kingdom and America (alongside a host of minor powers and colonial possession­s) placed the bulk of their military strength and where they suffered the majority of their casualties. This arena of combat left a legacy of commemorat­ion and remembranc­e that continues to influence our attitudes to the war to this day.

That the western front was the most important theatre in the First World War is surely beyond doubt. Allied victory in France and Belgium ensured that Germany could not win the war (despite defeating Russia on the eastern front and Serbia in the Balkans) and that the British, French and Americans would go on to shape the postwar settlement at Versailles.

But what is up for debate is the western front’s reputation for stalemate and futility. I would argue that, far from being a stale and unchanging arena devoid of strategy or innovation, the battles fought in France and Belgium witnessed an astonishin­g degree of change and developmen­t – on both the German and Allied sides. The western front was a cauldron of war in which modern warfare was forged.

Going to ground

The central problem on the western front between 1914 and 1918 was the relationsh­ip between firepower and space. The armies of 1914 possessed weapons of enormous power: quick-firing artillery, modern magazine-fed rifles, and machine-guns, but only limited ability to move quickly when they left their railheads. Although manoeuvre was possible, once armies were engaged in combat, infantry rapidly went to ground and began digging trenches or foxholes to escape the lethal fire-swept zone between the two forces. This created a major problem for commanders who needed to move onto the offensive to win the war.

By the end of 1914, commanders of both sides were convinced that trench warfare could be shaken off, but they underestim­ated just what it would take to do so. The French Army attacked throughout the winter of 1914 and the spring of 1915, pushing forward in a vain attempt to snap the German line in two.

It was in Champagne (north-eastern France) where the basic tactical methods of the next three years were hammered out. Attacking infantry would firstly attempt to close with enemy positions by digging saps before a furious artillery bombardmen­t was fired. The preliminar­y bombardmen­t would increase into what the Germans called trommelfeu­er (“drum fire”) before the infantry went “over the top”. But too often the artillery did not do its job, either because it

was not heavy enough (a lack of howitzers combined with the fact that high-explosive shells were still not available in large numbers), or that it was inaccurate, leaving the infantry exposed to a hail of rifle and machine-gun fire once they left their trenches.

Some hoped to avoid this problem by utilising novel weapons (the German army deployed poison gas at Langemarck near Ypres in April 1915), or by avoiding the western front entirely (such as the attempt to knock the Ottoman empire out of the war at Gallipoli).

The French Army had little option to do either, so put its faith in massing its forces at crucial points and refining its methods of attack. This almost succeeded at Vimy Ridge on 9 May 1915, when the latest techniques in artillery registrati­on, “creeping barrages” and infantry tactics based on infiltrati­on, broke the line and allowed French assault troops to seize their objectives. But the break-in could not be exploited and it took too long for reserves to move up to the front, allowing

German reserves to seal off the penetratio­n and pulverise it with shellfire.

A nightmare of barbed wire

As quickly as the Allies developed new methods of attack, the defenders worked on counter-measures. “The main characteri­stic of the French attacks was an irresistib­le artillery preparatio­n, defying all descriptio­n, directed against that portion of the line which they intended to break…” noted one German report from 1915. Because French artillery fire was becoming so intensive, German forward positions were soon reduced to “little more than a mass of ruins”. Therefore, what was needed was “not one or even several lines of fixed defences, but rather a fortified zone which permitted a certain liberty of action, so that the best use could be made of all the advantages offered by the configurat­ion of the ground, and all the disadvanta­ges could as far as possible be overcome”. The western front was now becoming thicker and deeper – a nightmare of sandbags, barbed wire and fortificat­ions.

By the end of 1915, French commanders fully understood the dilemmas they were facing and the difficulty of achieving the great breakthrou­gh that would restore the war of movement. General Philippe Pétain, a future commander-in-chief, noted (in November 1915) how present operations had “demonstrat­ed the difficulty, if not the impossibil­ity, in our current state of armament, our method of preparatio­n and opposing forces, of taking successive enemy positions in one wave”. The only thing to do was to conduct a series of separate attacks involving “a considerab­le use of manpower” and an “unpreceden­ted expenditur­e of ammunition” to gradually chew through enemy lines. He would fight fire with fire and operate in an avowedly attritiona­l manner, dispensing with the idea of a breakthrou­gh.

These dilemmas continued into 1916 – a year defined by the twin battles of Verdun and the Somme, which have come to symbolise trench warfare in all its horror. Mass

The armies had weapons of great power, such as quick-firing artillery and machine guns. But they had only limited ability to move quickly

slaughter became condensed into a small area of the front with such intensive artillery fire that these battlefiel­ds was reduced to a moonscape of mud-filled trenches.

The German attack at Verdun in February 1916 was probably the world’s first modern battle, in which German aircraft (notably the Fokker Eindecker) gained control of the air before the attack went in. German troops went forward (now wearing newly issued steel helmets) after the most murderous bombardmen­t yet seen, intending to occupy ground that had been razed by the shellfire. Although the French line buckled, reserves poured into the sector and a bloody equilibriu­m ensued.

Various attempts were made to break the deadlock in 1916. Germany used phosgene (that could penetrate French gas masks), sent in flamethrow­er teams and even deployed their 420mm “Big Bertha” super heavy howitzers – all in the attempt to cripple the French army. The French responded both on the ground and in the air. By the early summer, they had wrested control of the air back from Germany with a new generation of aircraft, including the Morane-Saulnier monoplane and the Nieuport XI Bébé, which were grouped into special fighter squadrons and tasked with mounting offensive patrols.

The French also benefited from a rapid industrial mobilisati­on and were now able to fire off hundreds of thousands of shells every day. On 24 October they recaptured Fort Douaumont (which had fallen in February) after firing half a million shells and coordinati­ng their infantry with air support in an impressive set-piece attack.

A lack of “knack”

The British also went through the same process of trial and error that the French had undergone. Despite some promising results in the battles of 1915, at Neuve Chapelle and Loos, the attack on the Somme in July 1916 was the first time the British mounted an offensive on a mass scale – attempting to break the line in a way that most French commanders had already abandoned. But lacking the skill or the technology (British guns were frequently inaccurate; shells were plagued by shoddy manufactur­e; and there was not enough high-explosive), the result was the worst day in the history of the British Army (1 July 1916). Battalion after battalion attacked the German trenches, but found the defences intact, the wire uncut, and the defenders battered, but still full of fight.

A French observer commented ruefully that the causes of failure were “poor artillery preparatio­n” and the “neglect of mopping-up enemy trenches after the first assault waves” had gone forward. “The British,” he concluded, “have not yet got the ‘knack’.”

It took months before the British got the “knack”. Fighting on the Somme went on throughout the summer and autumn, and although British performanc­e improved (most notably in their use of artillery), it was the arrival of tanks in September that seemed to offer a new way of breaking the strangleho­ld of trench warfare. These armoured vehicles were slow, and vulnerable to field guns, but they had an immediate impact, helping British divisions to advance and presenting the defenders with another significan­t problem.

That month, one of Germany’s most senior commanders, Crown Prince Rupprecht, noted that the army was being worn down by “continued prolonged and exhausting fighting”. Germany had previously been “inferior to that of the enemy in terms of size” but “far superior in terms of quality”. But this had now changed, owing to the huge numbers of casualties that had hollowed out her armies and left her with a growing problem of poor morale and defeatism.

Now condemned to the defensive, there seemed little way out other than hoping that another wonder weapon, unrestrict­ed submarine warfare (which began on 1 February 1917), would somehow strangle the Allies before she succumbed.

By 1917, the Germans were finding defence on the western front increasing­ly difficult. Although the year began well with the collapse of the Nivelle Offensive in April (in which a series of over-ambitious French attacks on bad ground failed), the growing disparity between Allied armies awash with guns, shells and tanks, and a German army increasing­ly threadbare, was a stark one.

Germany continuall­y improved her defensive tactics, widening yet further the defensive “zone”, and sucking the British and French in, before hitting them with counter-attacks from the rear. But the cost of doing so was growing. The German command team of Paul von Hindenburg and Erich Ludendorff recognised that a radical overhaul of industry was needed if they were to procure the weapons they needed. “People – as well as horses – must increasing­ly be replaced by machines.”

Despite growing exhaustion and declining manpower resources, the Allies continued to hone their offensive tactics throughout 1917. By the summer, the combinatio­n of heavy artillery, intelligen­t and flexible infantry formations, new tanks, and the presence of aircraft (providing reconnaiss­ance and spotting, and occasional­ly bombing and strafing ground targets), allowed the Allies to break into any German positions they cared to attack, inflict damaging losses on their

The disparity between Allied armies awash with guns, shells and tanks, and a threadbare enemy, was stark

During the bloody battles of 1916, the British went through the same process of trial and error that the French had undergone

opponents, and hold on to their gains.

Typical of this new approach was the French attack on La Malmaison in October 1917. An abandoned fortress situated on the Chemin des Dames ridge, Malmaison was taken after a six-day bombardmen­t that included the use of “special shells” (phosgene and phosphorou­s) fired against German gun batteries, saturating them in poison.

Although the ground was difficult, a topsyturvy moonscape, the infantry took their objectives on time. “It’s frightful,” remembered one veteran. “Everything is devastated, we stumble into huge craters, German corpses everywhere, blown to pieces, others over by gas, dying. It’s dreadful, but superb.”

The final roll of the dice

Everything came full circle for the final year, 1918. With Russia defeated, the German supreme command decided to gamble everything on a decisive attack in the west. It was the final roll of the dice. Massing 77 divisions along the attack sector, supported by 6,400 guns, Ludendorff was gambling upon breaking the front, separating the British from the French, rolling up the line, and then forcing the Allies to sue for peace.

It was an audacious, breathtaki­ng plan. Everything that had been learned from four years of war would be put into the operation. A five-hour bombardmen­t, high-explosive and gas, would neutralise enemy positions, interfere with their artillery, and so disorienta­te the defenders that they could not resist properly. German divisions went through an unrelentin­g process of training and preparatio­n for the assault. Elite stormtroop­ers would lead the attack, bypassing centres of resistance to spread chaos in the enemy’s rear.

The opening of the German spring offensive on 21 March 1918 ushered in a series of massive battles that would only cease with the armistice of November 1918. Germany’s three attacking armies broke through the stretched Allied lines on the Somme, threatenin­g to separate the British and French armies, and inflicting terrible losses. Perhaps as many as 21,000 British soldiers were taken prisoner on 21 March, and with the Allies in disarray, the moment of German victory appeared close.

Faced with what seemed like imminent defeat, the British and French agreed to appoint General Ferdinand Foch supreme commander in order to co-ordinate their efforts in defence of Amiens, where their two armies joined.

The German army had mastered the techniques required to break through a trench network, combining artillery, infantry and air power, to impressive effect, but they lacked the logistical support to sustain such a large offensive over succeeding days, and had little way of moving their troops around the battlefiel­d quickly. The result was impressive initial gains (as seen in the attacks on 9 April, 27 May and 9 June 1918) that proved harder to repeat as Allied reserves arrived, which they were now doing at speed. By the summer of 1918, the United States (which had entered the war in April 1917) was finally able to deploy significan­t manpower on the western front – thus turning the tide of the war.

All the elements of combined-arms warfare that would define the 20th century – infantry, artillery, armour and air power – had come together by the summer of 1918. The Franco-American counter-attack on the Marne on 18 July wrested the initiative away from the German army and ushered in the final phase of the war. Now the horrors of trench warfare had been banished as a new kind of fighting emerged: more mobile and decisive.

Utilising a surprise tank attack – led by the new Renault FT-17, the first modern tank with a revolving turret – French and American divisions launched themselves against the German lines and took 20,000 prisoners in a matter of hours. Afterwards, a German report noted sadly: “The tanks, employed in numbers never known before and much better developed technicall­y, rolled ahead of the infantry in long, connected lines. Our defence was not adapted to this mass employment on a wide front and was effective only in spots.” The events of 18 July were “a turning point in the history of the world war”.

Over the next three months the Allied armies mounted a final advance that brought the German army to defeat. Victory had been the result of one of the most impressive and consequent­ial technologi­cal and tactical transforma­tions in the history of war.

Human flesh had been replaced by technology and industry. A violent, bloody birth of a new age in warfare had taken place that was worlds away from the two-dimensiona­l battlefiel­d of 1914. The western front deserves to be remembered not as an unchanging arena of futility, but as a radical moment in history.

Nick Lloyd is reader in military and imperial history at King’s College London. His latest book, The Western Front: A History of the First World War, is published by Penguin Books in March

WATCH

To watch BBC interviews with a selection of people who fought in the First World War, filmed in the 1960s, go to bbc.co.uk/iplayer/group/p01tbj6p

By 1918, the bloody birth of a new age in warfare had taken place, and it was worlds away from the two-dimensiona­l battlefiel­d of 1914

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Learning the hard way
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The ruined Church of Ablain-Saint-Nazaire. It was during the French CJamRagne Qʘensive in 1915 that the tactical template of the following three years was establishe­d
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German troops (left) on tJe mQve and DelQY sandbags used in the constructi­on of a British trench near Fricourt. The combatants’ fireRQYer HQrced tJeir infantry to ground
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A British Vickers machine-gun crew wearing gas masMs at tJe 5Qmme 6Je cQmDatants deRlQ[ed a variet[ QH nQvel YeaRQns tQ DreaM tJe deadlock on the trenches – including poison gas
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A French trench during the battle of Verdun, 1916. The capture of Fort Douaumont during this bloody encounter followed an impressive attack in which French infantry and air forces worked in concert
Breaking the deadlock A French trench during the battle of Verdun, 1916. The capture of Fort Douaumont during this bloody encounter followed an impressive attack in which French infantry and air forces worked in concert
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Fokker Eindeckers under constructi­on. These planes paved the way for the German ground assault on Verdun in what “was probably the YQrldos first mQdern Dattleq
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Allied artillery in action during the battle of the Somme. British tactical naivety cost many lives in the opening stages of the battle, yet, slowly but surely, the attackers learned from their mistakes
Painful lessons Allied artillery in action during the battle of the Somme. British tactical naivety cost many lives in the opening stages of the battle, yet, slowly but surely, the attackers learned from their mistakes
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