* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download World War One
Aftermath of World War I wikipedia , lookup
List of World War I memorials and cemeteries in Artois wikipedia , lookup
Economic history of World War I wikipedia , lookup
Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War wikipedia , lookup
United States home front during World War I wikipedia , lookup
Allies of World War I wikipedia , lookup
Technology during World War I wikipedia , lookup
Western Front (World War I) wikipedia , lookup
World War One Kevin J. Benoy Opening Moves • June 28 – Franz Ferdinand and his wife were assassinated. • July 5 – The Austrian ambassador discussed the situation with Kaiser Wilhelm II, resulting in the promise of German backing – the so called “blank cheque.” • July 19 – the Austro-Hungarian ultimatum to the Serbians was prepared – but delayed until the French President left Russia, thus preventing Franco-Russian Coordination. The Opening Moves • July 23 – AustriaHungary presented Serbia with an ultimatum, demanding the right to dismiss Serbian officials and to allow A-H to conduct investigations on Serbian Soil. Opening Moves • July 24, Sazanov, the Russian Foreign Minister, urged mobilization. • July 25, Serbia Mobilized and the. Serbia refused the Austrian ultimatum. • July 26, Britain’s Sir Edward Grey proposed 4 power mediation. Russia sought talks with AustriaHungary. • July 28 – A-H declared war on Serbia. Germany suggested a “halt in Belgrade” Opening Moves • July 29 – the “Willy-Nicky telegrams” begin. • July 30, Russia Mobilized. • July 31, Germany demanded an end to Russian mobilization and demanded that France remain neutral in the event of a GermanRussian war. • August 1, Germany declared war on Russia. Belgium declared neutrality, but mobilized. France Mobilized. Opening Moves • August 2, Germany delivered an ultimatum to Belgium demanding free passage. Germany occupied Luxembourg. Opening Moves • August 3, Germany declared war on France and invaded Belgium. • August 4, Belgium and Britain declared war on Germany. Germany declared war on Belgium. Opening Moves • August 5, AustriaHungary declared war on Russia. • August 6, Serbia declared war on Germany. • August 10, France declared war on AustriaHungary. • August 12, Britain declared war on AustriaHungary. • August 23, Japan declared war on Germany. The German Advance German poster – Jesus blesses German troops advancing to the front. • At first the Germans were successful. The Belgians fell back on their fortresses – but tore up railway tracks as they did so, forcing the Germans to advance on foot. Moving at 50 km a day, they were exhausted. • The German advance also slowed at the Belgian fortresses as Austrian siege cannons were borrowed to break these concrete positions. The German Advance • The French launched Plan 17 – attacking the Germans in Lorraine. • They failed miserably. • British troops soon arrived, deploying on the French left flank. • Holding up well at Mons, in Belgium, they had to withdraw as the French pulled back to the South. The German Advance • As the Germans pushed forward, the flaw in the Schlieffen plan became apparent. As Kluck’s army pushed westward, the weakness of its left flank became more apparent. If he continued westward, past Paris, he would be vulnerable to counterattack and possible destruction. • If he turned before Paris, the Plan might fail. • In early September, the British and French launched a counter-attack in the Marne Valley, forcing Kluck to abandon his westward sweep. • Troops on both sides began to scratch shallow trenches and to pile mounds of earthworks. Trench warfare began. The German Advance • Both sides next attempted a further flanking maneouver. • German and Allied troops raced to swing around the other’s inland concentrations to hold the English Channel Coast. • The Belgians opened sluice gates to flood the land and slow the Germans. • By mid-October, German and British troops ran into eachother at Ypres. • The resulting stalemate resulted in a continuous front from the Channel to the Swiss frontier. The Eastern Front • On August 29, two Russian armies slammed into East Prussia. • When the German front commander suggested a retreat to the Vistula, he was dismissed and replaced by the combination of Ludendorff and Hindenburg. • Knowing the Russian plans because General Samsonov sent telegraph messages “enclair” instead of in code, the Germans set a trap. • In the battles of Tannenberg and the Masurian Lakes, the Russians were annihalated. • 90,000 men were taken prisoner. • Samsonov took his own life. The Eastern Front • The Russians were more successful against the Austro-Hungarians, taking Galicia. • They were only stopped as German troops were diverted to face them. Trenches were dug here too, but huge expanses and poor transportation facilities prevented another Western Front situation from developing. The War at Sea • Unwilling to risk its expensive fleet, the Germans kept their main fleet in port, hoping to nibble away at the larger British forces. • Some German ships were caught at sea. • Goeben and Breslau escaped the Mediterranean and were interned in Turkey. • Emden raided in the Indian Ocean until tracked down and sunk. • Von Spee’s Pacific fleet escaped China, beat a British force off Chile, but was destroyed off the Falkland Islands. The War at Sea • Unable to effectively combat the British surface fleet, the Germans turned to U-boats to blockade Britain. The War at Sea • The British feared losing a major engagement because of its consequences for British trade. • Having broken the German naval code, they could afford to sit back and wait for a battle in which all factors favoured them. • Meanwhile the British surface blockade cut off Germany from imported goods. The German Colonies • All the German colonies faced attack. Most fell quickly. The German Colonies • After overcomming pro-German sentiment in the Boer community, S. Africa attacked and captured German SouthWest Africa. The German Colonies • Japan quickly took German territory in China and also the German islands in the North Pacific Ocean. The German Colonies • Australia took German New Guinea, Nauru and the German Soloman Islands. • New Zealand captured Western Samoa. The German Colonies • The Cameroons held out until 1915, though some resistance was noted as late as February, 1916. The German Colonies • German East Africa held out rather longer. • Askaris (German trained and led African troops) fought well under the leadership of Paul LettowVorbeck. The German Colonies • Though the territory was lost by 1917, German forces fought on, invading Portuguese East Africa in late 1917 and even Northern Rhodesia in 1918. • They did not surrender until November 25, 1918—two weaks after the collapse in Europe. • 12,000 German troops held down 130,000 Allied soldiers. 1915-1916 • By 1915 the Chief of the German General Staff, Falkenhayn, believed that there was little prospect for success in the West. • It was now a war of attrition. • The search was on to find a tactic that might win the war. Side-Shows – The Caucasus • The Ottoman Empire entered the war on the side of the Central Powers at the end of 1914 – logical given the old conflict with Russia. • Turkish troops invaded the Caucasus, attempting to take back land lost to Russia in 1877-78. • Russia called for help and Winston Churchill responded with a proposal for a attack on the Dardanelles. Side Shows - Gallipoli • The Allies felt that the “sick man of Europe” would not hold up against a British attack and that the Dardanelles would be taken and a warm water supply route to Russia established. • Turkey would be forced out of the war and Russian troops freed to fight the Germans and Austro-Hungarians. • Victory would give a morale boost to the Allies. Side Shows - Gallipoli • The attack did not go according to plan – largely because planning was insufficient. • Feb. 19, the outer forts were pounded by naval bombardment. • Marines were landed and they met only light resistance. • Indecision followed. The inner forts were not attacked until March 18. • Incomplete minesweeping led to the loss of 3 major warships. The British admiral did not want to risk more by pressing on. Side Shows - Gallipoli • Land forces were now to be landed, but were not ready. • It took another month before they were landed. • The Turks used the delay to rush in reinforcements. • A German General, Otto Liman von Sanders commanded the Turks. • Heavy and continual Allied losses of British and Anzac (Australian and New Zealand Army Corps) troops occurred, resulting in an Allied withdrawal in December and January, 1916. Side Shows - Mesopotamia • Other Campaigns against the Turks fared poorly too. – An attack from Basra on Baghdad was turned back and the British force surrendered at Kut. – In 1916, Britain had to fend off raids from Palestine into Egypt. – Only the efforts of T.E. Lawrence to foment an Arab revolt against the Turks showed signs of promise. Sideshows – The Balkans • Serbia had initial success in slowing the Austro-Hungarian attack, but the addition of some German troops and the entry of Bulgaria into the war on the side of the Central Powers sealed its fate. • The Entente powers tried to get Greece to enter the war, and even landed troops in Salonika, Greece, in anticipation of it happening. However, the Greeks stayed on the sideline – as did the Allied troops. • Serbia fell in late 1915. Italy Enters the War • Though a member of the Triple Alliance, Italy did not feel obligated to enter the war in 1914. • Lured by the promise of territory, Italy agreed to join the Entente powers when it signed the secret Treaty of London on April 26, 1915. • It declared war on Austria-Hungary on May 23, 1915. The Italian Front – 1915-1916 • In major pushes at the Battles of the Isonzo, the Italians achieved virtually nothing for the loss of 280,000 men in 1915. • In 1916 they lost 500,00, compared to 250,000 AustroHungarian losses. The Western Front – 1915-1916 • To beat the stalemate, the British tried a new tactic at Neuve-Chapelle in March, 1915. • A creeping barrage was used to cut through barbed wire obstacles and destroy forward trenches. • Insufficient supplies of shells and clear notice that an attack was imminent led to failure, but the pattern was now in place for future battles. The Western Front – 1915-1916 • The Germans also tried a new tactic at Ypres, on April 22, 1915. • After waiting for some time for favourable winds, the Germans released 5,700 cylinders of chlorine gas against the French lines. • French colonial troops panicked, but the assault was stopped by troops of the Canadian 1st division. • Both sides would now use this previously banned weapon. The Western Front – 1915-1916 • Allied offensives in May and June resulted in terrible loss of life. • In September, at Loos, 242,000 Allied men were lost against 141,000 German defenders. • The pattern of attackers consistently losing more than defenders, for only minimal gains, was now clearly established. – The weapons of the time – artillery and machine guns, favoured defenders over attackers. – Attackers pushed over broken ground and through obstacles. – As attackers pressed on, they pushed farther from their supplies, while defenders fell back toward their own railheads. The Western Front - Verdun • At Verdun, the French position was difficult, with German forces surrounding them on three sides. • Logic suggested the French pull back to a more defensible position; the historical significance of Verdun prevented this. The French slogan was “Ils ne passeront pas,” – “they shall not pass.” • The Germans sought to make this into a killing ground. The Western Front - Verdun • Hundreds of thousands of Frenchmen entered the meat grinder. • Even the Germans ultimately lost their way, deciding that the battle must be won, whatever the cost. • 315,000 Frenchmen were lost; 281,00 Germans met the same fate. The Western Front – The Somme • Desperate to take pressure off Verdun, the British and French planned a massive attack in the Somme. • Originally 40 French divisions were committed to the attack. By the time the push came in July, 1916, only 5 French divisions accompanied the 25 British. • A full week of artillery bombardment was meant to soften the Germans and cut the barbed wire. Its more telling effect was to give the Germans advance notice of the attack. The Western Front – The Somme • Working up hill over badly broken ground and carrying nearly 30 kg of equipment per man, the Allies faced withering German fire. • The first wave was cut to pieces. The Newfoundland regiment, for example, took 90% casualties. • 20,000 British died on the first day alone. The Western Front – The Somme • 420,000 British, 194,000 French and 440,000 German casualties were registered. • This marked the end of Britain’s all volunteer army. • The battle ended as rain turned the bombshattered landscape into impassable muck in November. • Demand for conscription in Britain and the empire was a necessary consequence. The War at Sea- 1916 • The devastation on the Somme brought demand for action at sea – for both the British and the Germans. • German Admiral Scheer’s tactic of nibbling away at British strength was not working. He now planned to raid British coastal positions to lure British naval forces into a trap. The War at Sea - 1916 • The increase in German messages and British knowledge of the German naval code alerted the British to the German plan. • The British sought to reverse the trap. The War at Sea - 1916 • The battle was ultimately fought off the Danish coast. • The Battle of Jutland revealed the superiority of German gunnery, but even so, the Germans narrowly averted disaster when they turned and barely escaped full contact with the main British battle fleet. The War at Sea - 1916 • Britain lost most heavily: – 3 battle cruisers, 3 cruisers 8 torpedo boats and 6,274 officers and men. • Germany lost: – 1 battleship, 5 torpedo boats and 2,545 officers and men. • However, the Germans could not afford these losses and after Jutland the German high seas fleet returned to port and did not venture out again during the war. The Eastern Front – 1915-1916 • German attacks in 1915 gained considerable territory, but resulted in long supply lines. • Russian supply lines were shortened, but being pushed back so far was demoralizing. • The Tsar sacked his commander in chief and took personal command. This made a bad situation worse. Nicholas lacked military ability and now he was isolated from the capital. The Eastern Front - 1916 • In March, 1916, a new Russian offensive was launched by the Northern Army Group. • Following the pattern established on the Western Front, the attack came after a long bombardment. • It failed, with losses 5-1 in favour of the defenders. The Eastern Front - 1916 • To the South, General Brusilov, commanding the Southern Army Group, attacked at 20 locations without a preliminary bombardment. • Pushing through wherever resistance was weakest, there was great success. • 250,000 Austro-Hungarian troops were captured and much land taken. • The Russian success brought Romania into the war on the side of the Entente. The Eastern Front - 1916 • However, the cost of success was too great. 1 million Russian soldiers were killed. • With limited supplies, too few reserves and communications stretched too thin, the advance could not continue. • By November, 1916, the Central Powers overran Romania. Fatigue & Collapse - 1917 • The great battles of 1916 exhausted all combatants. • Attrition was having its effect, but not so much in producing victory, but bringing several combatants to the point of collapse. • Disappointment over Allied failures in 1916 brought changes in military and civilian leadership. The British government of Asquith was replaced by a coalition led by David Lloyd George. Command of the French army was transferred from Joffre to Nivelle. Collapse in the East • Early 1917 saw the fall of the Tsar. • The Russian army was disintegrating as desertions mounted. • In the cities revolution was brewing. • Nationalists called for freedom. • In trying to return to St. Petersburg from the military headquarters at Mogilev, the Tsar found his way blocked by striking railway workers. • In a last effort to save his country, Nicholas II abdicated, handing power over to the Duma. Collapse in the East • While the Duma struggled to keep Russia in the war, the reality at the front was of unremitting disaster. • Russia’s military was disintegrating. • In July, Lenin’s Bolsheviks struck for power and failed. • Next General Kornilov tried to seize power, causing the Provisional Government to release the Bolsheviks as all were needed to turn back this threat. • In October/November, 1917 Lenin struck again and succeeded in ending the Provisional Government. • Russia formally pulled out of the war with the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk on March 3, 1918. America Enters the War • Unremitting bad news from the East was counterbalanced by good news for the Entente when the USA entered the war on March 18, 1917. • German unrestricted submarine warfare had long angered the Americans. In 1915, the passenger liner Lusitania was sunk, with many Americans on board. Other American merchant ships were also sunk without warning. The USA Enters the War • British code breakers intercepted and translated what came to be known as the “Zimmerman Telegram.” Germany offering an alliance with Mexico against the US. • This was the final straw. Woodrow Wilson’s government entered the war – but it would take considerable time for the Americans to recruit and train large forces. The French Mutiny • The new French commander, Nivelle, planned to use British attacks to draw off German forces prior to a major French push in Champagne. • Ludendorff, the German commander, surprised all when he pulled back to a new prepared line of defense – the Hindenburg Line. Prior to withdrawing, the Germans destroyed and booby-trapped the areas they abandoned. The French Mutiny • Nivelle did not change his plans. • The British assault began on April 9, 1917 in the Battle of Arras (Vimy Ridge was one aspect of this attack). • The main French attack commenced on April 16, but was a fiasco. • Instead of making the planned 6 miles, they took only 600 yards, at tremendous cost. The French Mutiny • Soon 54 French Divisions refused orders to advance. • Desertions were endemic and the French front was in danger of mirroring the Russians in the East. • Nivelle was sacked and the new commander, Petain, promised to call off the offensive if order could be restored. • 100,000 men were court marshalled. • 23,000 were convicted and 432 sentenced to death (though only 55 were officially shot). • Many more were killed when French artillery was targeted on trench mutineers. The French Mutiny and its Aftermath • The failed offensive broke French fighting spirit. Petain was heard to say “we must wait for the Americans and the tanks.” • British General Haig was not as sensible. In the 3rd Battle of Ypres, the British attacked again after a 2 week bombardment. • Between July and October, attacks brought little success. By November 6 the ruins of Passchendale were finally taken. 5 miles were won, but 300,000 men lost. The Tank • On November 20, 1917, the British attacked using a new weapon. • 381 tanks led an attack over ground unbroken by artillery. • A wide gap was punched through the German lines with only 1,500 men lost to 10,000 German casualties. • However, the attack could not be exploited. Soldiers could not keep up with the tanks. Cavalry was vulnerable to German machine gunners. Mechanical breakdown plagued the tanks. • Within 10 days the German reserves recaptured lost ground. The War at Sea - 1917 • In the Spring of 1917 it appeared that U-Boats might achieve what armies could not. • 1 of 4 British merchant ships at sea were sunk. • The answer was found in the formation of convoys. This was an immediate success and the rate of ship losses fell to only 1%. The War at Sea - 1917 • By the end of 1917, the British were sinking German submarines faster than they could be built. • New technology – hydrophones and depth charges – were employed and an old one – minefields – extended. • An attempt to block up the German U-Boat base of Zeebrugge was only a partial success. War in the Air • Planes and airships had been used for spotting duty early in the war. • Technological improvements allowed a wider role for aircraft by 1917. • Bombers were used for the first time by the British against U-Boat bases. • German bombers even raided London. • Dog-fights above the trenches provided diversion for the solders in the trenches, but did little to alter the balance of power on the Western Front. The Middle East - 1917 • British attacks on the Turks continued, but with greater success. – Mesopotamia (modern Iraq) fell. – General Allenby entered Jerusalem before Christmas, 1917. The Italian Front • Italian offenses continued to find no success. • In the 10th Battle of the Isonzo, the AustroHungarians were hardpressed, but German reinforcements saved them. • The Central Powers’ counter-attack was successful and British and French reinforcements needed to prevent Italian collapse. 1918 – Operation Michael • The Russian collapse presented the Germans with a final chance to win the war. • While garrison troops were still needed to hold down territory in the chaos of a fallen Russia, large units could be transferred to the Western Front – before the Americans could arrive in numbers. 1918 – Operation Michael • Ludendorff’s offensive brought collapse in 1/3 of the British front in March, 1918. • In May, the French were pushed back. • However, the Germans lacked the reserves needed to exploit their success and had to pause in June. • American reinforcements arriving at 300,000 a month made this delay deadly. 1918 – Operation Michael • When the attack resumed in July, the German lines of communication were stretched beyond their breaking point. • A French counter-attack in the Champagne, aided by many light tanks, drove the Germans back. 1918 – Operation Michael • A British counter-attack, also supported by tanks, overwhelmed the Germans near the Somme. • After the Battle of Amiens, Ludendorff realized the war could not be won. • By September, the Germans were back behind the Hindenburg line. Argonne Offensive • The Americans lost heavily in their attack on the Argonne. • Inexperienced leaders waited for the mist to lift before attacking. • Soldiers understood little about how to act in the trenches. • 100,000 men were lost. Allied Victory • In 1917 the neutralist Greek king was deposed and Greece joined the Allies. • An Allied push from Salonika was now possible and troops pushed into Serbia and Bulgaria. Allied Victory • On September 26 the Bulgars sued for peace. • On September 29 Bulgaria pulled out of the war. Allied Victory • The autumn of 1918 brought continued trouble for Turkey. – Allenby pushed north from Palestine. – The Arab revolt could not be contained. – The British advance continued in Mesopotamia. • In October, Turkey realized it was defeated. Allied Victory • Allied propaganda – particularly Wilsons 14 Points, which called for national selfdetermination, caused great internal dissent in AustriaHungary. • The Italian success at Vittorio Veneto broke AustroHungarian resistance at a time when mutiny was beginning to break out in the AustroHungarian army. • On November 4, AustriaHungary dropped out of the war and the empire dissolved. Allied Victory • Germany too was in dire straits from September, 1918. • In the last 100 Days Campaign, the Western Front was steadily pushed back. • On October 3-4 the Germans sought peace according to the principles of Wilson’s 14 Points. Allied Victory • Negotiations throughout October made it clear that the Allies would only accept an armistice that made further German resistance impossible. • Revolution and mutiny in the fleet made it abundantly clear that Germany could not fight on. Allied Victory • Kaiser Wilhelm abdicated on November 9, 1918, and fled to neutral Holland to avoid capture by the Allies. Allied Victory • A Social Democratic government hastily established a republic and accepted Allied terms – unable to fight on. • At 11:00 a.m. on November 11, 1918, the guns fell silent.