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1917: Turning Point of WW1 

1917: Turning Point of WW1 

As 1917 began, both the Allies and Central Powers  could look back on a disappointing 1916. Allied   offensives on the Western and Italian Fronts had  failed, as had the Central Powers offensives at   Verdun and in Italy. The Russians had gained  ground in the East, but the Central Powers   had done the same in Romania.

Both sides still  believed victory on the b4ttlefield could come in   1917 – the Allies would try on land, the Germans  at sea. Before the great b4ttles began though,   the Russian Revolution changed everything. At the end of the 19th century, the Russian   Empire was a great power, but was less developed  than its European rivals. It had modernized   more slowly than Britain, France or Germany:  serfs were only freed from their feudal style   bondage in 1860, there were fewer railways and  factories, and political parties were banned.

But opposition was growing. When  the economy started to modernize,   it happened very fast and unevenly, causing  inst4bility and inequality. At the same time,   there was little social or political  modernization, which angered intellectuals and   nobles who wanted progress.

Peasants were also  upset, because the economic changes disrupted   their way of life without improving it, so their  local governing bod1es resented central authority.  Socialism and liberalism were two of  the ideologies championed by political   opponents of the Tsar. In 1881, The People’s  Will – a populist socialist organization   opposed to industrialization, a.ssa.ssinated Tsar  Alexander II.

Other socialist groups, though,   approved of industrialization, disowned  vi0lence, and/or wanted a constitutional   monarchy. Liberals wanted a free market economy  but also civic and political freedom for everyone.  Marxism emerged in the 1880s and  rejected liberal idealism, terrorism,   and the traditional focus on peasants.

Marx had  argued only proletarian industrial workers could   move society beyond capitalism to the inevitable  triumph of socialism and communism. Marxists   therefore wanted capitalist development as a  necessary pre requisite to a socialist revolution.  The vast majority of the population was peasants,  though there were more and more industrial   workers.

In 1897, 92 of the Empire’s 126 million  people lived in European Russi and Ukraine,   concentrated around the industrial centres of St.  Petersburg, Moscow, and the Donba.ss. Many peasants   from these areas did seasonal industrial work, and  the authorities noted growing political activity:  “Within the last three or four years,  the easygoing Russian young man has been   transformed into a special type of semi literate  ‘intelligent’, who feels obliged to spurn family   and religion, to disregard the law, and to deny  and scoff at constituted authority.

Fortunately,   such young men are not numerous in the factories,  but this negligible handful terrorizes the inert   majority into following it.” (Fitzpatrick 29) Matters came to a head in January 1905. Defeat in   the Russo Japanese W4r sparked revolution against  Tsar Nicholas II, and in October, he bowed to the   pressure and created an elected parliament,  the Duma, and legalized political parties.

Previously illegal movements now formed a party  system. The Constitutional Democratic Party,   also known as The Cadets, was the main liberal  party and favored a constitutional monarchy.   The Socialist Revolutionaries, or SRs,  blended populist and Marxist ideas,   and were popular among peasants.

The Russian  Social Democratic Labor Party was more Marxist,   but soon split into two factions, the Mensheviks  – who favored a gradual, legalist approach to   revolution – and the Bolsheviks, who wanted a more  direct revolution with workers as the vanguard.   Many Social Democrats hoped the two factions  would reconcile, but the Mensheviks worried   about Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin’s  preference for tight, central control.

However, the following years saw little direct  improvement for the people of the empire,   and the police suppressed political rivals amidst  riots and strikes. Many leaders, including Lenin,   remained abroad to avoid arr.est. Even in 1908, a relatively quiet year,   political vi0lence k1lled 1,800 state  officials, and by 1910 major strikes were   common. A general strike in 1914 almost hindered  mobilization in the leadup to First World W4r.

The declaration of w4r saw some patriotic  fervor and most moderate socialist parties   supported the w4r effort, but they often rejected  aggress1ve w4r goals. Lenin wanted Russia to lose   the w4r to trigger revolution – which caused  the authorities to arr.est many Bolsheviks.  But b4ttlefield defeats like Tannenberg  in 1914 and Gorlice Tarnow in 1915,   and economic hardship and shortages resulting  from the abrupt transition to a w4r economy   led to disillusionment. When Tsar Nicholas II  appointed himself Supreme Commander in 1915,

critics focused on the monarchy and his absence  from the newly renamed capital of Petrograd.  Tsarina Alexandra took on more responsibility  in government, and her German heritage and   controversial relationship with mystic Grigorii  Rasputin caused a political stir. Cadet Pavel   Milyukov wondered in 1916: “Is this stupidity or   is it treason?” (Fitzpatrick) Despite later Soviet claims, the   Russian army was not yet on the edge of collapse.  Morale was poor, but it varied.

In Galicia,   the southern armies managed to inflict a damaging  defeat on Austria Hungary in 1916. The northern   armies, facing tougher German units and closer  to political events in Petrograd, were unhappier.  In fact, morale was lowest behind the front.  Garrison units, especially in Petrograd,   suffered from poor discipline, made worse  by a lack of competent officers and NCOs.

In early 1917, 65% of the garrisons’ men were  new recruits, or veterans recuperating from   wounds – both groups reluctant to go to  the front. Garrison troops were also more   exposed to political rumors and agitation: “At this time, a regular sold1er – in fact,   a

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ny sold1er from the ages of twenty two to  twenty five – was a rarity… The   sold1er of those days was either a dissatisfied  peasant or a dissatisfied city dweller… In   essence, the barracks became simply brick  pens to which more and more red and green   draft notices drove ever increasing  herds of raw humanity.” (Badcock 89) The w4r had dest4bilized society and the army,  but in early 1917, it would be many sold1ers’   wives who would trigger a new revolution.

In February, Petrograd was a hive of political   activity as food shortages wracked the city.  Many Russian provinces produced enough grain,   but a w4rtime lack of transport capacity and  poor weather prevented distribution. In 1917,   Petrograd received by rail only  44% of the grain it had in 1913.  These concerns, combined with  increased industrial discontent,   led to ma.ss demonstrations on International  Women’s Day – March 8 – or February 23 in the   Old Style calendar used in Russia at the  time.

Crowds, including revolutionaries,   took control of railway stations and  arsenals and descended on the Duma. The   authorities ordered the Petrograd garrison  to put down the uprising, but it refused.  Few military commanders or Duma members were  willing to support the Tsar. Instead, they   encouraged him to abdicate to save the country.

He agreed to hand his throne to his brother,   Grand Duke Mikhail, who refused in favor  of forming an elected Constituent Assembly,   essentially ending the 300 year  Romanov dynasty. Nicholas was sh0cked:  “It turns out Misha renounced the throne. His  manifesto ends with a flourish about elections   to the Constituent Assembly within six months.

Lord knows who gave him the idea to sign such a   disgusting thing!” (Badcock 86)  Following the February Revolution, a Provisional   Government made up of politicians, notables,  and intellectuals was formed in the capital,   but it wasn’t the only governing body. During  the revolution, workers and sold1ers formed the   Petrograd Soviet – a council of representatives  promoting socialist policy.

Although moderate   Mensheviks and SRs dominated its leadership,  the rank and file were more radical workers,   including Bolsheviks. The Soviet and Provisional  Government agreed to work together, with the   Soviet monitoring the Provisional Government  until a new Constituent Assembly could be elected.  It was a dysfunctional system in which radical  Soviet members had significant influence:  “The Provisional Government does not possess  any real power, and its directives are carried   out only to the extent that it is permitted by  the Soviet of Workers’ and Sold1er’s Deputies,

which enjoys all the essential elements of  real power, since the troops, the railroads,   the post and telegraph are all in its hands.  One can say flatly that the Provisional   Government exists only so long as it is  permitted by the Soviet.” (Fitzpatrick 48)  The Soviet even unilaterally announced  Prikaz Nomer 1, or Order Number 1,   drastically reforming military discipline and  giving the Soviet authority over the armed   forces. The Soviet also forced the Provisional  Government to abandon offensive w4r goals for

more defensive ones, known as defensism. Meanwhile, peasants in the countryside   started appropriating land from nobles  and est4blishing their own committees.   The Provisional Government delayed land reform  until the formation of the Constituent Assembly,   a decision which fed rural disorder.

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As a result,  some peasant sold1ers on the front deserted to   return home and get their share of the land. In April, Lenin returned to Russia and released   a manifesto predicting the inevitable collapse  of the bourgeoise Provisional Government.   This caused alarm within the Menshevik  Soviet leadership, who wanted to let the   bourgeoise revolution peacefully run its course.

Another problem was Bolshevik infiltration of   their defeatist ideology into frontline forces.  Although some units became heavily Bolshevized,   the failure of the July 1917 Kerensky Offensive  wasn’t just because of Bolshevik agitation.   While some sold1ers refused to continue the  @ttack, most remained willing to defend,   and did not necessarily want to abandon the w4r  entirely.

Even so, the Provisional Government   was suspicious of Lenin, and promoted  theories he was a German sponsored agent.   Germany had facilitated Lenin’s return to Russia  and provided some money. But, although they were   pleased with the inst4bility in Russia, it’s  unlikely Berlin directed Lenin’s actions. As Russia buckled under revolution and its weak  Provisional Government promised to keep f1ghting,   the British and French launched their most  ambitious offensive of the w4r so far.

By early 1917, despite 2 and a half years of  f1ghting, the Western Front hadn’t moved very far.   The Germans had mostly held their early w4r  gains in 1915 and 1916, and inflicted terrible   casualties on the British and French – but they  were themselves running short of manpower as well.   In late 1916, Chief of the Admiralty Henning von  Holtzendorff w4rned the Chancellor: “ w4r   demands a decision by autumn 1917 if it is not  to end with a general exhaustion of all parties   and thus disastrously for us.” (Coombes 17) The Entente also wanted to end the w4r in 1917.

The French, who had a much larger army than the  British, planned a spectacular launch to a large   multi front offensive to push the Germans out of  France. French commander in chief Joseph Joffre   devised a plan in November 1916 that called for  offensives on the Italian and Russian fronts to   support a major Franco British push in the West.

New British Prime Minister David Lloyd George,   was unimpressed, and called  the plan a “complete farce”:  “It repeated all the bl00dy stupidities of  1915 and 1916 the old fatuous tactics   of hammering away with human flesh and  sinews at the strongest fortresses of the   enemy.

” (Doughty, Pyrrhic Victory, 314) By January 1917 things had changed:   Russia and Italy were not able to sustain a  major offensive, and Joffre had been replaced   by General Robert Nivelle. Nivelle was brimming  with confidence after his victory at Verdun,   and tweaked the plan to fit his style:  ma.ss artillery followed by infantry   a.ssaults on narrow fronts.

His plan included  a British diversionary @ttack around Arras,   to force the Germans to divert their reserves.  Once the Germans were distracted in the north, the   French army would launch the main @ttack against  the Noyon Salient, along the Chemin des Dames.   Nivelle expected it would be a knockout blow. British commander Field Marshal Douglas Haig,   however, was concerned by rumours his  forces would fall under French leadership:  “It would be madness to place the British under  the French, and … I  not believe our troops   would f1ght under French leadership… [I  am prepared to] be tried by Court Martial

than betr4y the Army by agreeing to  its being placed under the French.” (Coombes 34)  Eventually, after thre4ts of resignation on both  sides, they compromised. The British First, Third   and Fifth Armies would support the French @ttack,  but they would remain under British control. Haig   also demanded more time to prepare and wanted  the planned February start to be moved to May.

The compromise solution was April. So the Entente was set to break open   the stalemate on the Western Front in April 1917.  But the German Empire was also making plans that   would make it a much tougher opponent to beat. In 1914 and 1915, German doctrine had favoured   the offensive, but its huge losses in 1916 caused  a change.

While the Entente could mostly replace   their casualties with fresh replacements and  colonial troops, German losses were not so easily   replenished. So German commanders reluctantly  accepted a move to the defence was necessary.  In September 1916, Field Marshal Paul  von Hindenburg and Generalleutnant Erich  Ludendorff took over the entire w4r effort,  and they soon realized the situation in the   West was extremely difficult for Germany.

Staff  officer Hermann von Kuhl noted a conversation   to this effect in his diary in 1916: “I spoke … with Ludendorff alone (about   the overall situation). We were in agreement  that a large scale, positive outcome is now   no longer possible. We can only hold on and  take the best opportunity for peace. We made   too many serious errors this year.

” (Foley 157) One of these German mistakes was keeping too many   men crammed into the frontline trenches, where  they were vulnerable to Allied artillery. Instead,   the Germans developed new principles of  ‘elastic defence in depth’ in a December   1916 document called The Principles of Command  in the Defensive Battle in Position W4rfare. Instead of holding a strong frontline at all  costs, the Germans would now allow the Entente to   enter into a deeper defensive zone, where German  positions would be split into three sectors.

The   first was the Vorfeldzone, consisting of one or  two lightly defended trenches. These trenches   were fine for day to day trench w4rfare, like  raids and sniping, but the troops would withdraw   from them if the Allies @ttacked in force. The  b4ttle zone, the Grosskampfzone was the main line   of resistance.

This would consist of new lines  of trenches, but also reinforced hardpoints,   buildings, bunkers, pillboxes, and obstacles. Behind this, would be a rear b4ttle zone,   with more trenches, support facilities,  and units ready to counter@ttack.   These troops were to wait for the @ttackers to  exhaust themselves and outrun their artillery   support, before launching aggress1ve  counterstrikes and taking back any lost   ground.

These formed the principles of the new  doctrine’s elasticity: the Germans would bend,   withdraw, and then snap back. The Germans also focused on   how to better use terrain on the  defensive, especially reverse slopes   The Germans had learned that machine g.uns placed  on the downw4rd slope of a hill were actually more   useful for the defence than placing them on top  of the hill.

Despite a shallower field of fire,   they could surprise @ttackers and remain protected  from enemy artillery behind the crest of the hill.  German divisions were also deployed differently.  Stellungsdivisionen would be arranged as three   regiments abreast, with each battalion  manning a different sector from front   to back. This allowed easier coordination and  communication to withdraw or counter @ttack.

But perhaps the most drastic change in the German  defense in the West was Operation Albrecht,   a major withdrawal across the Noyon Salient  in February and March 1917. German forces   abandoned their extended front line and moved  back to the freshly constructed Hindenburg line,   built with the new defensive principles in mind.

The new line was also significantly shorter,   and up to 72 kilometres further east,  which freed up 13 German divisions.   When Entente forces cautiously followed them,  they found the Germans had destr0yed anything and   everything of use in their wake. A British officer  recalled his experience – including booby traps:  “From a captured German  order it  appears that our patrols entered the hostile   trenches only one hour after they had been  vacated; pretty sharp work… The German trenches   we have taken over are deep, well constructed  and surprisingly dry… Ma.sses of beer bottles

(unfortunately empty) are strewn about, and  g.uncotton, attached to sh3ll cases and grenades,   has been left ready to explode when picked  up or accidentally kicked. We have lost   five casualties in this way.” (Coombes 22) The Germans adjusted their tactics after   Verdun and the Somme, but the British army had  also learned from its mistakes and now looked   for new ways to break the trench de@dlock.

After the f1ghting in 1916 failed to break   the stalemate, British officers identified  their own army’s tactical shortcomings.  One of these was that British troops often  advanced in linear fashion to maintain cohesion   and ease of command. The British had hoped that  their artillery could destr0y the Germans before   the infantry left its own trenches, but  the Somme showed this was not the case.

Another issue concerned command. When advancing  troops came under fire, confusion and p4nic often   set in. NCOs and junior officers would wait  for orders from higher up, but in many cases   their superior officers were either overwhelmed,  had been k1lled, or communication had been cut.  To counter this, British empire troops began  to adopt new a.ssault tactics that relied more   on tactical movement at the platoon level.

Troops were now to advance in open formation,   moving from cover to cover. To deal with issues of  command, the command structure was decentralized   and junior officers could now take more  initiative in leading their units. Attacking enemy   strongpoints from the flanks and using enfilade  fire was now a priority as well. Canadian Corps   commander Lieutenant General Julian Byng reminded  his officers of the importance of decision making:  “In an emergency the man who does  something is sometimes wrong; but the   man who does nothing is always wrong”. (Cook 48) New w3apons also began to reach British front

line troops. In 1916, they often lacked the  firepower to defend captured trenches against   German counter@ttacks. 1917 British platoons  had a lot more firepower, including specially   trained b0mbers and rifle grenad1ers, as well as  one light Lewis machine g.un per 60 man platoon.   Heavy machine g.uns would also be used on  the a.ssault to provide suppressing fire.

British reports also singled out the artillery  of 1916 for criticism. On the Somme, artillery   barrages were spread along a wide front and  consequently could not destr0y the German   defences as intended – especially targets behind  the front lines like enemy artillery. Another   problem was faulty ammunition.

Many sh3lls  were duds, and had older fuses that did not   explode at the moment of impact, which meant they  didn’t cut German barbed wire very effectively. In 1917, the British introduced a  new instantaneous fuse, no. 106,   and improved coordination between artillery and  observation especially aircraft. British g.unners   also began to prioritise a counter battery  fire, with the help of new methods like flash   spotting and sound ranging.

The rolling barrage  technique also became more refined with better   synchronisation and control. At the Somme,  each British g.un covered 50m of German front,   but at Arras, it be one per 20m. The British also became more active   in underground w4rfare. They dug more tunnels  under no man’s land to place mines under German   positions, and dug subways to move troops  to their jumping off trenches under cover.

On April 9, 1917, the diversionary British  offensive began, called the Battle of Arras   in English and the Osterschlacht bei Arras in  German. 18 British divisions, 3000 g.uns and 48   tanks went over the top, so let’s take a look at  what went right and what went wrong for British   and Empire troops in the f1ghting that followed.

In the opening stage of the Battle of Arras,   the Canadian Corps’ @ttack at Vimy Ridge proved to  be one of the most successful British actions. The   Germans had fortified defensive positions on the  ridge, which dominated the surrounding area, but   the Canadians, with British infantry and artillery  support, captured most of it in just one day.

British and Canadian artillery smashed the  Germans positions on the ridge, which allowed   the Canadian infantry using the new small unit  tactics to capture the first German lines of   defense fairly quickly. New Canadian units then  ‘leapfrogged’ through the first exhausted wave,   and continued to a.ssault the next German  lines.

Sh3ll sh0cked and disorganised,   surv1ving German troops surrendered in large  numbers. 17 year old Herman Kraft was one of   the 4,000 captured during the b4ttle and left  a partly fanciful account of his captureg:  “Our sergeant ordered us up the stairs,  himself going first. Suddenly he yells,   ‘Tommies!’ and fell back de@d, tumbling down the  stairs… One of our ‘old hands’ (he was twenty two)   came down the stairs and told us to abandon our  w3apons and come up… as the position was hopeless,   and the English were all over us. I walked up  the stairs [to] a huge Tommy who was brandishing

a baseball bat  One of the sold1ers wore no  helmet and had no hair apart from a small tuft   on top of his head. He also had white and red  paint on his face and was very fearsome looking.   I then realised that he was a Red Indian, and  our captors were Canadians.” (Nicholls 83)  By the end of April 9th, nearly the  entire ridge was in Canadian hands.

A lot had gone right for the Canadians. The  new tactics allowed for a rapid advance,   and the counter battery fire had almost  eliminated German artillery, since 83% of German   g.un emplacements had been identified before the  b4ttle. Canadian troops like Private Bill Tapper   of the 38th Battalion were glad for the help: “We went over supported by the Lahore Divisional   Artillery, and were they Crackerjack! Why, the  Germans had been beaten before we got there,   it was a walkover!” (Nicholls 89) Vimy Ridge was far from a walkover,

but the Germans also made mistakes. German command  was unable to fully implement the elastic defense   in depth, and kept reserves too far behind the  front lines to counter@ttack while they still   had the chance. The loss of a position like  Vimy did not bode well for the German army.  The Canadian Corps took Vimy Ridge as planned  on April 9, but not all the opening @ttacks   of the Battle of Arras would go as smoothly.

South of Arras, near the village of Bullecourt,   the Australians and New Zealanders  ended up having a more difficult time.  British 5th Army commander General Hubert Gough  was anxi0us to get the ANZAC Corps into the f1ght   near Arras, but his artillery support was delayed.  So he decided to rely on the support of a dozen   tanks to spearhead an @ttack along a 1km wide  front, and crush the enemy wire the artillery   had not yet been able to destr0y.

The tanks had  little time to prepare, but they moved out tow4rds   No Man’s Land in the early hours of April 11. They  did knock out some German machine g.uns positions,   but most of the machines bogged down or were  knocked out before the wire. Australian Major   Percy Black reportedly called out to his men “Come  on boys – bugger the tanks!” (Nicholls 157), and   the infantry @ttacked on its own.

Although some forces broke through   the line, they were too weak to push further.  Bullecourt, a key position in the German defence,   held out. With exhaustion mounting, the Germans  launched counter@ttacks, in some cases getting   behind the Australians and cutting off their  lines of retreat. The ANZACs were pushed back   to their starting lines and the a.ssault failed.

So what went wrong? Gough’s impatience had led to   a lack of preparation, while there was also  a lack of communication with the artillery,   who often believed German positions had been  captured when they had not. Australians, like   Lieutenant Colonel E. Drake Brockman of the 16th  Australian Infantry Battalion, bl4med the tanks:    “The tank crews seemed to know little or  nothing of an @ttack by infantry and nothing   whatsoever about the particular operation  they were to participate in.

For instance,   in the case of No. 2 Tank, the tank commander had  not even synchronized his watch, his time being   five minutes behind true time as given to the  infantry. Further, tank crews did not even know   the direction of the enemy.” (Nicholls 159) Of the 11 tanks committed to the b4ttle,   only 2 survived.

On the German side, unlike at Vimy Ridge,   the defence in depth at Bullecourt held out.  Strong points like the village itself fired on the   flanks of the ANZACs as they approached, and the  Germans timed their counter@ttacks well to hit the   exhausted Australians at just the right moment.   So the British offensive around Arras in April   1917 had some successes, like Vimy Ridge,  and some disappointments, like Bullecourt.

But of course it was a diversion, and the main  Allied effort was focused on the Aisne sector.   Even though the Germans had changed the line  through their strategic withdrawal in March,   General Nivelle’s offensive went ahead anyway. The French plan involved three army groups,   two thirds of the French army in the west.

The Reserve Army Group would lead the a.ssault,   with the Central and Northern Army Groups  providing supporting and diversionary @ttacks.   Two armies of the Reserve Army Group would  @ttack the German line in the Aisne sector,   with the goal of breaking through within 24 48  hours. A third army would then pa.ss through the   breach and act as a “Ma.sse de Manoeuvre” – and  lead a b4ttle of manoeuvre in the German rear.

Nivelle planned to use his successful Verdun  tactics on a larger scale. Instead of a broad,   methodical advance, which gave the enemy time to  redeploy, he wanted to achieve narrow penetrations   and breakthroughs with ma.ssive artillery support.  Nivelle felt that high morale and an “offensive   spirit” were essential to overcome enemy  obstacles, and then broken German lines   could be rolled up on either side.

Nivelle did  not lack confidence after his success at Verdun:  “The experience is conclusive; our  method has proven itself.” (Doughty 324)  But Nivelle had his critics. British liaison  officer to the French, Edw4rd Spears,   questioned the tactics as well as Nivelle’s  experience commanding larger formations: “What remained to be seen was whether the  glorified raids of Verdun were applicable   o

n a large scale … above all whether [Nivelle]  was strong enough to keep his head in the lonely   and dizzy height of supreme command.”g (Lupfer 33) The French also introduced some tactical changes,   but the focus wasn’t on reforming infantry a.ssault  since the French had already done so it was now   on increased firepower. They increased the number  of light machine g.uns to 16 for every 250 men.

Even though Nivelle was sceptical  about tanks, the Reserve Army received   160 Schneider and 16 Saint Chamond tanks. The French command concentrated its efforts   mostly on artillery, and they had around 6,100  g.uns in position by January. They planned to   increase the speed of rolling barrages to hasten  the breakthrough and especially the all important   maneuver stage that would follow it.

However, as April approached,   Nivelle’s own subordinates lost faith in the  plan, especially General Joseph Micheler,   the commander of the Reserve Army Group. He  pointed out the German withdrawal had changed   the situation on the ground, but Nivelle felt it  made little difference. General Philippe Pétain   questioned the impact of ma.ssive but localised  artillery @ttacks on such a broad front:  “Even the waters of Lake Geneva would have but  little effect if dispersed over the length and   breadth of the Sahara Desert.” (Doughty 339) Perhaps most concerning was evidence the

Germans knew of the coming @ttack. Nivelle had a  reputation for lax operational security, and spoke   openly of the coming offensive – and on April 4th,  Germans captured documents revealing French plans. The French plan for a quick breakthrough based on  concentrated firepower was ready, despite internal   reservations and the likely loss of the element of  surprise.

Nivelle ordered the offensive to begin   as planned on April 16, but promised to call it  off if there was no breakthrough within 48 hours.   Nivelle himself reckoned it would only take three. Following a ma.ssive 14 day preparatory barrage,   the Reserve Army Group’s Fifth and Sixth Armies  @ttacked a 40 kilometre front around the Chemin   des Dames ridge at 6 AM on April 16, 1917.

They  captured the first German line and reached the   ridge within the first hour, but the German  defenders badly mauled the advancing French,   who came up against uncut wire and concrete  emplacements. The Senegalese troops of the   10th Colonial Division suffered particularly  high casualties, with an entire battalion   almost wiped out when they came up against a  reverse slope position – just as the Germans’   elastic defense tactics envisioned.

The commander of the II Colonial Corps,   General Blondat, recalled the effects: “Infantrymen… [descended] into the valley   of the Ailette [River]. There, they were welcomed  and fixed in place by the de@dly fire of numerous   machine g.uns that, located on the [reverse side of  the] slope, outside the reach of our projectiles,   have remained undamaged… In general, the troops  suffer considerable losses in a few minutes,   particularly in leaders, and [after] not  succeeding in crossing this de@dly zone, halt,   take cover, and at some points withdraw to the  first trench to their rear.”g (Doughty 350/351)

The second French a.ssault wave then went in,  but it got tangled up with the retreating first   wave. That afternoon the tanks helped capture the  village of Juvincourt, but they were vulnerable   targets and the Germans knocked many of them out. With the French infantry struggl1ng, the Germans   launched counter@ttacks.

In many places  the French troops held their modest gains,   but casualties were mounting. Where French troops  had advanced, they had to stop if neighboring   units’ stru.ggles left their flanks exposed. By  the end of the first day, the French troops were   forced to dig in in terrible conditions. Morale,  especially among the colonial troops, plummeted.  The French tried again to break through starting  the next day.

They did make some gains and take   more than 5000 Germans pr1soner, it was clear to  both sides by the 20th that the @ttack had failed.  German officer Hermann von Kuhl later wrote  of his certainty the b4ttle had been won:  “The first two days had decided the fate of the  offensive. Since the breakthrough had not occurred   immediately, it would never occur.” (Foley 172) Many things had gone wrong for the French.

Firstly, the weather was abysmal, slowing the  advance and preventing artillery observation.   And in any case, the Germans had practical  air superiority which limited French aerial   observation. The defenders had also been heavily  reinforced, in some areas doubling the number of   divisions a fact noted by French intelligence.

Where French artillery did play a role,   the creeping barrage was too fast, and left the  infantry exposed in its wake. In some cases, the   Germans had time to repair breaches in the wire  breaches by the time the French infantry @ttacked.   The Germans’ vast tunnel networks under the  ridge also gave them some protection from the   11 million sh3lls fired by French g.uns.

Since  the French command expected a short b4ttle,   ammunition stocks quickly dried up which  limited the support the artillery could   give. More importantly, however, the German  elastic defence had worked as intended. The French continued to try to advance into May,  but the Chemin des Dames offensive broke down.   134,000 French troops were k1lled, and tens  of thousands of French troops mutinied.

So Nivelle’s w4r winning offensive had failed  along the Aisne, and the British @ttack to   support it had some local successes but failed  to draw German reserves away from the French.  The Battles of Arras and the Aisne both started  with some gains, but ended in grinding attritional   f1ghting.

The Allies could take more ground than  they could in 1916, but they hadn’t yet solved   the riddle of trench w4rfare. Some tactical  successes held out the promise of helping the   Allies turn the tide in the future, but in spring  1917 they could not achieve their objectives   of decisively breaking the German lines. Nivelle was replaced in May, and has come under   particular criticism for the failure.

He seems  to have been affected by so called ‘strategic   blinkers’, the inability to deviate from a long  est4blished plan when new information came to   light. After arguing for months with Field Marshal  Haig, as well as his own colleagues, he stubbornly   defended his plan against any alteration. When  informed of German reinforcements in the sector,   he simply said it meant the victory would be even  more impressive, and when the Germans shortened   the front he refused to adapt.

Lloyd George, who  had supported Nivelle, later changed his mind:  “General Nivelle in December was a cool  and competent planner. By April he had   become a cr4zy plunger.” (Doughty 345) On the other hand, it must be said that   if Nivelle’s plan had gone ahead in  February, as he originally wanted,   it could have been more successful.

The French  would have had the element of surprise and the   Germans would still have been overstretched  in the Noyon salient before their withdrawal.  But perhaps most damaging of all, Nivelle saw  the German defenders as a pa.ssive force which   would not behave proactively. He also a.ssumed  they would f1ght in the same manner as they did   at Verdun in 1916, which they did not.

The  new German tactics allowed them to maintain   initiative even on the defence, and quickly  dictate the flow of the b4ttle. In 1917,   Nivelle learned the hard way that in  b4ttle, the enemy also gets a vote. So the Allied spring offensives had failed,  but even as the Germans held their enemies   at bay, a new belligerent entered the w4r.