1 / 11

The War Begins

The War Begins. The Schlieffen Plan. German Objective : Avoid a 2-front war by quickly defeating France before turning toward Russia. The German Army Chief of Staff Alfred von Schlieffen devised a plan that would be able to counter a combined attack from France, Britain and Russia.

kevlyn
Télécharger la présentation

The War Begins

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The War Begins

  2. The Schlieffen Plan German Objective: Avoid a 2-front war by quickly defeating France before turning toward Russia

  3. The German Army Chief of Staff Alfred von Schlieffen devised a plan that would be able to counter a combined attack from France, Britain and Russia. • He knew when war broke France had to be defeated quickly so that Russia and Britain would be unwilling to continue.

  4. What Schlieffen thought: • Russia would take 6 weeks to mobilize its army • Belgium would offer little or no resistance • France could be defeated in 6 weeks • Britain would remain neutral, despite an alliance with Belgium • France was less dangerous than Russia, being beaten by Germany within weeks in 1870 What Schlieffen knew: • Belgium and the Netherlands are flat lands, easy to move an army across • France would concentrate its army along the French-German Border

  5. How do I draw the arrows?

  6. The Schlieffen Plan • Move rapidly against the French while the Russians take a long time to mobilize their army • As the French army massed at the German border, the Germans would sweep across Belgium and The Netherlands • Then turn towards Paris like a claw, falling west of the capital • All this would take six weeks • With France out of the war, Germany could turn to Russia

  7. The Schlieffen Plan How the plan was actually executed

  8. Why did the plan fail? • Germany assumed wrongly that Britain would not object to the invasion of Belgium • Britain used the invasion as a reason to enter the war • Schlieffen died in 1913 – his replacement made changes to his plan • Instead of approaching Paris from the west, they were forced to turn south too soon, meeting the French army along the border

  9. A weaker German right flank was attacked by an effective British Expeditionary Force • Belgium put up a strong resistance • Russia mobilized faster than expected • German troops were moved from the Western front to support the Russian advance

  10. The Result? • The German advance was halted on the Marne River • Both sides “dug in” extensive trench systems protected by artillery and machine guns • Germany found itself trapped on the Western Front, facing the combined armies of France, Britain, and their empires, including Canada • Four years of trench warfare began

  11. Canada Responds • “When the call comes, our answer goes at once, and it goes in the classical language of the British answer to the call of duty: ‘Ready, aye, ready’” • Most of Canada was soon caught up in war fever, with many worrying it would be over before they got there • Although automatically at war when Britain was at war, Canada was able to determine the extent of its participation • An expeditionary force was prepared before the British even requested one

More Related