“The English generals
are wanting in strategy. We should have no chance if they possessed as much
science as their officers and men had of courage and bravery. They are lions
led by donkeys”.
General Erich Ludendorff.
1 July, 2016. Zero Hour One Hundred Years plus Two. It was the bloodiest day
ever for the British Army. A century ago some 300 kilometres/190 miles to the
south of me the “big push” was underway. Twenty-nine British Army divisions
were advancing across no man’s land in the face of heavy machine gun, mortar,
infantry and artillery fire laid down by seven defending German divisions
across a 50 km/30 mile front. By Zero plus Five the British had taken some
55,000 casualties, of whom 20,000 were dead.
The reason for the Battle of the
Somme was the Battle of Verdun. By 1 July, 1916 the French Army had already been
fighting on the charnel fields of Verdun for 134 days. German commander General
Erich von Falkenhayn reportedly said his aim at Verdun was to bleed France
white. Between February and December 2016 the French Army would suffer up to
540,000 casualties, of whom some 150,000 would be killed.
The French commander-in-chief Marshal
Joffre pleaded with the British to launch a major offensive in the west to ease
the pressure on French lines at Verdun. Crucially, British commander-in-chief
General Sir Douglas Haig believed German forces had suffered sufficient
attrition at Verdun to believe a combined Anglo-French assault on the German
lines would succeed. Haig even believed it might be possible to enact a
complete breakthrough of German defences and commence a rout. The Somme area
was chosen for the offensive because it was where British and French forces
stood alongside each other.
Five days prior to the offensive
the British started an enormous artillery barrage that saw over one million
shells fired at the German defences right up until the commencement of the
advance. The fact that such a barrage could be mounted was proof the British
had overcome the crippling shortage of artillery shells from which the British
Army had suffered since the outbreak of war in August 1914.
The British offensive should have
succeeded, at least on paper. British forces enjoyed more than a three-to-one
superiority in men and materiel. However, the offensive failed. The reasons for
failure are manifold. However, in the
intervening century the myth of the Somme has become overpowering and made it
hard to discern fact from fiction.
The British Army at the Somme included
in its ranks a significant number of Kitchener’s New Army. This was a
newly-formed, ‘green’ (inexperienced) ‘citizen army’, which included the
Sheffield City Battalion, from my own home town, and which fought with
distinction on 1 July at Serre. However,
there were also a large number of battle-hardened British, Australian,
Canadian, New Zealand and other forces committed to the Somme offensive.
Marshal Joffre had promised the
British that the French force on Haig’s right flank would be equal in size to
that that of the British. However, by late June the French Army was simply unable
to put such a force into the line such was the pressure being exerted on them
by Falkenhayn at Verdun.
However, it was not green pal’s battalions or the French that did
for Haig’s Somme offensive. It was Haig himself who doomed the Somme offensive
to failure through bad strategy and over confidence. By committing to a front some 30 km/50 miles
wide the British force was spread far too thinly. The artillery barrage whilst
impressive did nothing like the damage expected to the well-engineered German
trenches and forewarned the enemy as to the scale and location of the
offensive. Cohesion between the British divisions, and communications between
high command and operational commanders was via a rudimentary command chain
that was unable to withstand the confusion of a dynamic offensive after so long
having been committed to a relatively static defence.
By November 18, 1916, when Haig
called off the offensive, the British had gained an area some 12 km/9 miles
deep and some 25 km/20 miles wide, but had suffered 623,907 casualties at a
rate of some 3000 casualties per day. However, German losses also numbered 465,000
casualties. Conscious that the German Army could not suffer such losses again
over the winter of 1916/1917 the Germans engineered the fearsome Hindenburg line behind the Somme battlefield
to which they retreated in February 2017. Crucially, the Somme offensive did
indeed help relieve pressure on the French Army at Verdun.
Lessons were learned from the
failed Somme offensive. In March 1918 Ludendorff launched Operation Michael, a last desperate attempt by the German High
Command to split British and French forces which were being reinforced daily by
the arrival of US forces. German Stormtroopers were unleashed across what had
been the old Somme battlefield. At first the British reeled back but crucially
did not break.
At the Battle of Amiens, which
commenced on 8 August, 1918, on what Ludendorff called the “black day of the
German Army”, an exhausted German force faced a new new All Arms assault by the British. Out of the mist an enormous
artillery barrage was unleashed, but this time British, Australian, Canadian,
Indian and New Zealand forces, supported by American and French forces, and all
under a ‘supreme’ unified command, advanced right behind the barrage employing
new flexible ‘grab and hold’ infantry tactics. The force was also supported by
a large number of tanks and massive air power.
Crucially, the assault took place
over a much narrower front than the Somme offensive enabling the British force to
punch through German lines. The German Army true to its tradition fought
bravely but as an offensive force it was broken at Amiens. German commanders of
a later generation studied the All Arms
Battle very closely, but they gave it another name – Blitzkrieg!
In memory of all the fallen on
all sides at the Battle of the Somme which began one hundred years ago today.
Julian Lindley-French
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