Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Schlieffen Plan (Encore)
Episode Date: August 26, 2022When the Austro-Hungarian Arch Duke Franz Ferdinand was assassinated, a chain reaction resulted in the First World War. The war was fully anticipated, and one of the belligerent countries, Germany, h...ad a plan in its back pocket ready to go. It was a highly detailed plan, nine years in the marking, which was designed to give them a swift victory. Learn more about the Schlieffen Plan and why it didn’t work on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Darcy Adams Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Search Past Episodes at fathom.fm Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/EverythingEverywhere Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ Everything Everywhere is an Airwave Media podcast." or "Everything Everywhere is part of the Airwave Media podcast network Please contact sales@advertisecast.com to advertise on Everything Everywhere. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hey everyone, this is Gary. Just want to let you know that this week I'm going to be off at a podcasting conference because every so often even I need to take a break.
I've lined up some episodes that statistically I know most of you have never listened to, so they'll all be new to you.
I'll be back again with brand new episodes on August 28th.
When the Austro-Hungarian Archduke Franz Ferdinand was assassinated, it set off a chain reaction resulting in the First World War.
The war was fully anticipated by most countries. And one of the belligerent countries, Germany, had a plan in their backpillar.
pocket ready to go. It was a highly detailed plan nine years in the making, which was designed
to give them a swift victory. Learn more about the Schleifen plan and why it didn't work on this
episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. What if your perceptions about the past were wrong? ThruLine is a
podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone
unnoticed. It effectively turned day into night and how it shaped the world now.
Time travel with us every week on the Thulein podcast from NPR.
One of the most remarkable things about the First World War is that everyone saw it coming.
While no one knew when it would start or what would be the trigger, all the parties involved knew that such a war was eventually going to happen.
The Germans saw the writing on the wall almost a decade before the war started.
Most of the alliances which were put into play for the First World War were developed in the aftermath of the Franco-Prussian War of 1870 and 1870.
During this war, which was really the last major war of the 19th century, Prussia defeated France taking the border territory known as Alsace-Lorraine.
It also indirectly led to the creation of a new country called Germany, which was a union of Prussia, Bavaria, and a few smaller German-speaking states.
France, seeing this new unified Germany, posing an even greater threat than just Prussia, signed a treaty with Russia in 1894, which stipulated that an attack on one country would be an attack on both.
Both countries saw Germany as a threat, and their alliance was used to put Germany in the position of having to fight a two-front war should they choose to be belligerent.
It was this strategic reality that the chief of staff of the German army, field marshal Alfred von Schleifen, had to plan for.
Von Schlefen was the head of the German army from 1891 to 1906.
In late 1905, von Schleifen realized that the world had changed dramatically.
Russia had been soundly defeated in the Russian-Japanese War.
railroads had made the movement of troops easier, and the telegraph and the telephone had made communications faster.
Weapons had improved and had become more lethal.
Von Schlefen felt it was necessary to totally rethink how Germany would fight a war against both France and Russia.
There were several big picture assumptions that Von Schlefen made which went into the development of his plan.
The first was that if a war with France and Russia turned into a war of attrition, Germany would lose.
They simply didn't have the manpower or resources of a combined France and Russia to take them both on simultaneously.
Second, was that Russia's military had been vastly overestimated.
Their defeat at the hands of the Japanese showed their weakness, and they wouldn't soon recover from that defeat.
Von Schlefen estimated that Russia would take at least six weeks to mobilize before they could seriously begin to challenge Germany.
Finally, Von Schleven believed that France's top priority would be retaking Alsace-Lorraine,
and that is where they would put most of their forces.
The incredible thing is, he was proved to be right about all three of these assumptions.
So, what were the implications of these assumptions?
To von Schlefen, the meaning became obvious.
Germany had six weeks from the start of the war to take out France
before they could turn their attention to Russia.
How exactly would they go about taking out France?
That was the whole point of the Schleifen plan.
As von Schlefen figured the main French advance would be at Alsace Lorraine,
he thought the Germans only had to hold the French there along the French-German border.
The rest of the German forces would attempt a gigantic flanking maneuver through Belgium.
He envisioned a line of troops swinging through Belgium like a door with its hinge at the French-German border.
Von Schleafen was adamant that this line that swept through Belgium couldn't be allowed to be flanked.
That is why he thought that the German line had to go all the way to the sea.
He was famous for having said, quote,
When you march into France, let the last man on the right brush the channel with his sleeve, unquote.
The troops going through Belgium would then march into France and swing around Paris,
enveloping the capital, and eventually the majority of the French army near the German border.
The key to this plan was speed and organization.
It all had to be done in six weeks before they had to deal with Russia.
If it could be done quickly enough, Russia might just give up if France was already defeated.
Soon after creating the plan in 1905, Van Schleifen was kicked by a horse and was forced to retire.
He died in 1913, about 18 months before the start of the war.
Supposedly, his last words were,
Remember, keep the right wing very strong.
That's probably not true, but it does reflect the fact that he was thinking about his plan to the very end.
After he retired, his replacement was Helmuth von Molki, who was known as the Younger,
because his uncle was Helmuth von Molke, who was the chief of staff of the Prussian Army for 30.
years. Von Mouki made some changes to Von Schleifen's plan, and he created several variations
on what the conditions might be during the war. This initially included the status of Italy and
Austria as enemies or allies. Mostly, the plan became more and more detailed. It included
exactly which units would go where, at exactly what time. It also made some very important
assumptions about what sort of resistance they would encounter along the way. Austria-Hungary
declared war on Serbia on July 28, 1914.
Germany, who had a treaty with Austria, saw how the dominoes were going to fall,
and preemptively declared war on Russia on August 1st, and France and Belgium on August 3rd.
This is mostly so that they could get a head start on implementing their war plan.
So what happened?
Why didn't the Schlefen plan work if so many of the base assumptions behind it turned out to be true?
There were several reasons.
The biggest reason was that the plan was too rigid.
Once put in motion, it was difficult to impossible to change.
Trains moving equipment and troops had very exact timetables that they had to meet.
Battles, however, never go according to plan.
There needs to be some flexibility in a plan to adapt to conditions on the ground,
and the Schleifen plan totally lacked that.
Second, they didn't anticipate the resistance of the Belgians.
Belgium was neutral before the start of the war,
and Germany basically assumed that they would just walk right through the country.
Specifically, their plan assumed that they would just walk right through the country.
Specifically, their plan assumed that they would take the Belgian city of Leij in two days, and it ended up taking two weeks.
Third, they really didn't plan for the British at all.
You might have noticed that I have not mentioned the British up until this point, and that's because they really didn't factor into any of the German plans.
The British Expeditionary Force in Belgium gummed up the plan as the German door tried to swing through the country.
Finally, some of the German units got flanked by the French, which was a big no-no in the plan.
This resulted in the First Battle of the Marne, which completely ended the German advance,
and caused them to start digging trenches to fortify their position.
From there, the rest was history.
Von Wolke, upon the loss at the Battle of the Marne and the collapse of the Schleifen plan,
reportedly told Kaiser Wilhelm, Sir, we have lost the war.
It took four more bloody years for everything to play out.
He knew that if he couldn't defeat France quickly, there was no way they could win.
They would be stuck in a two-front war of attrition.
The Schlieffen plan also played a part in World War II.
The Nazis used a variation of the Schlefen plan, but this time it worked much better.
Again, the French set up defenses along the German border, this time with the Maginot line.
And again, the Germans swept through Belgium.
This time, the French assumed that the Germans were just running the same play.
But in reality, the Germans were just baiting the French, getting them to come out into Belgium.
Then the German armored units ran through the Ardennes Forest, which absolutely no one
expectant or thought was possible, catching the French from behind.
This time, France fell in 46 days, and the Germans met the six-week goal they had originally
established in the First World War.
The Schlefen plan, at least at a conceptual level, wasn't a bad plan.
As I noted before, the big-pitcher assumptions that von Schleafen made were actually correct.
The biggest problem was in the inflexibility of the plan.
When they encountered obstacles that didn't fit the plan, everything fell apart.
When it fell apart, they were forced into a war in which they knew they would lose over a decade before it ever started.
The associate producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Thor Thompson.
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