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TH 505-GREAT CAMPAIGNS: THE VON SCHLIEFFEN PLAN
LESSON OBJECTIVES:
505.1 Analyze the Von Schieffen Plan
505.11 Asses logistics deficiencies in the Von Schlieffen Plan
In the VS Plan, insufficient logistics planning was one of a number of surprising
weaknesses that reflected institutional biases which the reform movement did not recognize
or was unable to overcome. German planning was flawed in two respects: First, it assume
that the war in France would be short; second, it failed to adequately consider the
difficulties of supporting such a large force over such long lines of communications.
Planning for a short war of maneuver, the Germans were ill-prepared to transport the large
quantities of ammunition and artillery required for set-piece battles. While the rail
system within Germany was marginally sufficient to keep supplies flowing to the frontiers,
the railroads along the invasion route were grossly inadequate. Until additional miles of
rack were constructed by German pioneers, supplies would have to be transloaded from rail
terminuses onto wagons or the occasional lorry and moved many miles along roads whose poor
quality was only made worse by the troops which had advanced over them. The momentum
required for a successful german envelopment simply could not be sustained.
505.12 Relate how the VS Plan was consistent with the ideas of Clausewitz and
Jomini.
Clausewitz: Domestic politics played a role in the miscalculation
and failure of the VS Plan. Failing to appreciate the closely integrated relationship
between the government and the military was key to Clausewitz's theory of war, the German
General Staff considered its options completely divorced from political concerns. The
German General Staff essentially developed the Plan independent of government oversight.
If the nascent German government did share that view, it was unsuccessful in subordinating
German military planning to political policy.
Jomini: Schlieffen clearly recognized that Germany's army was its
center of gravity, and that the Plan's success depended upon keeping it concentrated and
in motion using the Jomanian concept of interior lines. He also recognized that the French
center of gravities were her armies and her capital, Paris. Encirclement of the French
armies combined with the occupation of Paris would deal the French physical and
psychological blows from which they were unlikely to recover, particularly with the memory
of the Franco-Prussian War still etched in their minds. The tremendous physical expanse of
Russia suggests that its army was the sole center of gravity which the Germans could
reasonably affect. Schlieffen also seemed to adequately consider the Jomini's concept of
decisive at both the strategic and operational levels. Strategically, he recognized that
he could decisively defeat the French by massing his forces against the least well
defended portion of the French frontier - that opposite neutral Belgium. The frontier
opposite neutral Luxembourg was comparatively lightly defended, but the geography was not
suitable for the conducting of large scale attacks. Operationally, Schlieffen recognized
the importance of key road and rail hubs such as Liege and bridges spanning the rivers
along his line of advance, and securing them were primarily objectives for specified
forces.
505.2 Comprehend the relationship between military objectives and how they support
national objectives by reviewing wars, campaigns, and operations with a concentration on
conflict termination.
505.21 Explain how and why the Schlieffen Plan failed to adequately consider
international relationships prior to WW I.
It is apparent that the German General Staff did not adequately consider international
politics in its formulation. First, it did not believe the German violation of Belgian
neutrality would result in that country taking up arms to contest their movements. Belgian
defense of key mobility nodes such as Liege greatly slowed the initial German advance. The
Germans also miscalculated the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) in calculations of the
force necessary to complete the envelopment. The unexpected addition of the BEF to French
forces deployed to the area under Plan XVII, coupled with von Moltke "the
Younger's" pruning attack forces to buttress German defensive positions drastically
reduced the Germans chance for success.
The leadership element also played a role in the Plan's failure. Stronger political leadership (along the lines of that provided by Bismarck might have precluded the development of a Plan so fraught with international land mines, but once the Plan was developed, a stronger leader than von Moltke "the Younger" might have had the foresight and strength of will to execute it successfully in its original form.