THIS DAY IN HISTORY – Germany begins major offensive on the Western Front – 1918

Via History.com

Our casualties not heavy': how British press covered the Battle of the Somme

On March 21, 1918, near the Somme River in France, the German army launches its first major offensive on the Western Front in two years.

At the beginning of 1918, Germany’s position on the battlefields of Europe looked extremely strong. German armies occupied virtually all of Belgium and much of northern France. With Romania, Russia and Serbia out of the war by the end of 1917, conflict in the east was drawing to a close, leaving the Central Powers free to focus on combating the British and French in the west. Indeed, by March 21, 1918, Russia’s exit had allowed Germany to shift no fewer than 44 divisions of men to the Western Front.

German commander Erich Ludendorff saw this as a crucial opportunity to launch a new offensive–he hoped to strike a decisive blow to the Allies and convince them to negotiate for peace before fresh troops from the United States could arrive. In November, he submitted his plan for the offensive that what would become known as Kaiserschlacht, or the kaiser’s battle; Ludendorff code-named the opening operation Michael. Morale in the German army rose in reaction to the planned offensive. Many of the soldiers believed, along with their commanders, that the only way to go home was to push ahead.

Michael began in the early morning hours of March 21, 1918. The attack came as a relative surprise to the Allies, as the Germans had moved quietly into position just days before the bombardment began. From the beginning, it was more intense than anything yet seen on the Western Front. Ludendorff had worked with experts in artillery to create an innovative, lethal ground attack, featuring a quick, intense artillery bombardment followed by the use of various gases, first tear gas, then lethal phosgene and chlorine gases. He also coordinated with the German Air Service or Luftstreitkrafte, to maximize the force of the offensive.

Winston Churchill, at the front at the time as the British minister of munitions, wrote of his experience on March 21: There was a rumble of artillery fire, mostly distant, and the thudding explosions of aeroplane raids. And then, exactly as a pianist runs his hands across a keyboard from treble to bass, there rose in less than one minute the most tremendous cannonade I shall ever hear. It swept around us in a wide curve of red flame

By the end of the first day, German troops had advanced more than four miles and inflicted almost 30,000 British casualties. As panic swept up and down the British lines of command over the next few days, the Germans gained even more territory. By the time the Allies hardened their defense at the end of the month, Ludendorff’s army had crossed the Somme River and broken through enemy lines near the juncture between the British and French trenches. By the time Ludendorff called off the first stage of the offensive in early April, German guns were trained on Paris, and their final, desperate attempt to win World War I was in full swing.

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7 Comments
Boogie
Boogie
March 21, 2023 8:16 am

We fought the wrong enemy.

-George Patten

ryan
ryan
  Boogie
March 21, 2023 9:16 am

It did take him 27 more years to figure that out.

Anthony Aaron
Anthony Aaron
  Boogie
March 22, 2023 6:04 pm

Indeed … we shouldn’t have let the jews bait US into WW1 via the Balfour Declaration …

DS
DS
March 21, 2023 10:23 am

Too bad the war criminal (((churchill))) didn’t get capped by one of those artillery shells he spoke of, then maybe we wouldn’t have fought the wrong enemy 27 years later.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
  DS
March 21, 2023 12:57 pm

I used to think that offing the person who appeared to be the root cause would fix things, but the truth is that tyrants like Lincoln, Churchill, FDR, Bush, Hitler, Stalin, Lenin, Mao, Pol Pot, etc. are the SYMPTOMS of their time and society, NOT aberrations that magically appeared. If it wasn’t them, it would have been someone else, and do you truly believe, having seen what you have seen over your lifetime, that presidents or national leaders truly act of their OWN accord, or in manners that keep them in power or keep their puppetmasters happy?

august
august
  DS
March 21, 2023 1:02 pm

Face the fact: Churchill had some great qualities (mostly oratory), but is vastly over-rated IMHO, as he both presided over the dissolution/collapse of the Empire Upon Which the Sun Never Set, and managed to get a few million young UK subjects killed in the process.

Pat Buchanan’s “Curchill, Hitler and the Unnecessary War” is a very worthwhile read.

During the final pre-war days of 1914, while senior British ministers were simultaneously both massively depressed, and frantically trying to stop the drift to war, Mr. Churchill was practically dancing with glee in the halls of the Admiralty. At yet another chance to ‘build his brand’, and political career.

musket
musket
March 21, 2023 3:35 pm

The Germans advanced so far and so fast that discipline broke down and the soldiers who had poor and minimal rations for quite some time started looting shops of food stuffs that they had not seen since before the war. The wine flowed and the Michael Offensive broke down giving the allies a chance to plug major holes and start a counter offensive. The 8th of August dawned as known as the Black Day of the German Army where the allies drove them back and took many prisoners as they were surrendering faster than the allies could take control of them all.