Pyrrhic Victory: French Strategy and Operations in the Great War

Portada
Harvard University Press, 31 mar 2008 - 592 páginas

As the driving force behind the Allied effort in World War I, France willingly shouldered the heaviest burden. In this masterful book, Robert Doughty explains how and why France assumed this role and offers new insights into French strategy and operational methods.

French leaders, favoring a multi-front strategy, believed the Allies could maintain pressure on several fronts around the periphery of the German, Austrian, and Ottoman empires and eventually break the enemy's defenses. But France did not have sufficient resources to push the Germans back from the Western Front and attack elsewhere. The offensives they launched proved costly, and their tactical and operational methods ranged from remarkably effective to disastrously ineffective.

Using extensive archival research, Doughty explains why France pursued a multi-front strategy and why it launched numerous operations as part of that strategy. He also casts new light on France's efforts to develop successful weapons and methods and the attempts to use them in operations.

An unparalleled work in French or English literature on the war, Pyrrhic Victory is destined to become the standard account of the French army in the Great War.

 

Índice

Introduction
1
1 The Transformation of the French Army
4
2 The War of Movement 1914
46
3 Siege Warfare 19141915
105
4 An Offensive StrategyMayOctober 1915
153
5 The Search for Strategic Alternatives 19151916
203
6 A Strategy of Attrition 1916
250
7 A Strategy of Decisive Battle Early 1917
311
9 Responding to a German Offensive Spring 1918
405
10 A Strategy of Opportunism
461
The Misery of Victory
508
Abbreviations
519
Notes
521
Essay on Sources
565
Index
572
Página de créditos

8 A Strategy of Healing and Defense Late 1917
355

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