- Second Battle of the Aisne
:"This article is about the 1917 battle. For other battles of the Aisne see
Battle of the Aisne ."Infobox Military Conflict
conflict=Second Battle of the Aisne
caption=TheWestern Front in 1917
partof=the Western Front ofWorld War I
date=16 April –9 May ,1917
place=Aisne River nearParis ,France
result=Operation failed, German tactical victory
combatant1=flagicon|FranceFrance
combatant2=flagicon|German EmpireGerman Empire
commander1=Robert Nivelle ,Charles Mangin ,François Anthoine ,
Mazel
commander2=Max von BoehnFritz von Below
strength1=1 million, 7,000 guns
strength2=480,000.
casualties1=187,000 casualtiescite book
last = P Simkins, G Jukes, & M Hickey
first =
authorlink =
coauthors =
title = The First World War: The War To End All Wars
publisher = Osprey Publishing
year = 2003
location =
pages = pg. 123
url =
doi =
id =
isbn = 1-84176-738-7]
casualties2=163,000 casualties|The Second Battle of the Aisne (also sometimes called the Third Battle of Champagne), in 1917 was the main action of the French
Nivelle Offensive duringWorld War I . It ended in disaster for both the French army and its commanderRobert Nivelle , destroying his career and sparking widespread mutiny in the army. Nivelle instigated the plan in December 1916 after he replacedJoseph Joffre as Commander-in-Chief of the French army.Background
When he succeeded Joffre as commander of the French army, Nivelle argued that a massive onslaught against the German lines would bring French victory in 48 hours.Strachan, Hew. "The First World War". (New York: Viking, 2003). 243] He believed the Germans were too bloodied from the battles at Verdun and the Somme to offer an effective, sustained defence, especially if it were preceded by a large-scale diversionary attack by the British.
The French War Minister,
Hubert Lyautey , and Chief of Staff General Henri-Philippe Pétain, along with British Commander-in-Chief, Sir Douglas Haig, were all strongly opposed to this plan. In the face of this opposition, Nivelle threatened to resign if the offensive did not go ahead, and the French government found itself in a difficult situation. Nivelle had not yet lost a battle, and he also had the enthusiastic support of British Prime MinisterDavid Lloyd George . Caught between a rock and a hard place, French Prime MinisterAristide Briand decided to support Nivelle, and the war minister resigned in protest.The Nivelle Offensive was conceived as a vast operation, involving around 1.2 million troops Fact|date=May 2007 and 7,000 guns on a broad front between Roye and
Reims . Its primary focus was a massive assault on the German positions along theAisne river.The plan, which had been in development since December 1916, was plagued by delays and information leaks. By the time the offensive began in April 1917, its details were well-known to the Germans, who had ample time to take appropriate defensive measures. Additionally, the German retreat to the
Hindenburg Line had undercut most of the tactical assumptions of the French plan. Despite being forced to advance across relatively unknown ground, at a defensive position carefully chosen by the enemy - about which the French had little reliable intelligence - Nivelle determined to press the attack.Strachan, 246.]Battle
On
16 April 1917 , after a week of diversionary attacks by the British at Arras, nineteen divisions of the French 5th and 6th armies, led by Mazel andCharles Mangin , attacked the German line along an 80 km stretch fromSoissons toReims . An impressive amount of firepower was concentrated on the German lines, but to no avail. Forewarned, the Germans had concentrated about 100 machine guns for every 1000 metres of front; they were also well entrenched, and their positions were deep.Strachan, 247.] Situated on the high ground on the banks of theAisne River , the German 7th army (under von Boehm) had little difficulty holding their positions. On the first day of combat alone, the French suffered over 40,000 casualties and lost 150 tanks. The creeping barrage was also poorly executed and failed to adequately cover the advance [Keegan, John. "The First World War". (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1999). 327.] .On the second day, the French 4th army, led by
François Anthoine , launched an attack east ofReims towardsMoronvilliers .Fritz von Below 's First Army easily repelled this assault.Nivelle continued to order full-scale attacks until
20 April 1917 . Some small gains were made by Mangin to the west ofSoissons and although the assault was scaled back over the next few weeks, by5 May 1917 , a 4 km stretch of theChemin des Dames Ridge had been captured. Incongruously, these smaller, scaled-back attacks proved more successful than the earlier, larger ones.Aftermath
Although often characterized as a dismal failure, the offensive did net gains of as much as seven kilometers. However, it had been announced and billed as a crushing blow to the Germans, and no breakthrough had been achieved. Casualty rates were incredibly high; twenty percent for the entire army by
10 May , and some divisions suffered more than sixty percent.On
3 May the French 2nd Division refused to follow its orders to attack, and thismutiny soon spread throughout the army. Following a final, ineffective four-day assault, theNivelle Offensive was abandoned in disarray on9 May 1917 .While the Germans lost around 40,000, the French suffered over 118,000 casualties. [ from "Numbers, Predictions and War" by Trevor N. Dupuy page 101 ] The politicians and public were stunned by the chain of events in this tragedy of errors and, a week later, on
16 May Nivelle was finally sacked and moved to North Africa. He was replaced by the considerably more cautious Pétain, who made no attempts to commit his forces to large scale offensives. Henceforth the main burden of allied offensive efforts on the Western Front would fall upon British Empire forces and the soon-to-arriveAmerican Expeditionary Force .On
20 May 1917 , GeneralMax von Boehn who had commandedIX Reserve Corps was awarded "Oakleaves" (similar to a "bar") to hisPour le Mérite for "outstanding leadership during the 1917 French Aisne offensive and distinction during the battle of Chemin des Dames". [ [http://www.pourlemerite.org/ Pour le Mérite website] ]Footnotes
References
* Evans, M. M. (2004). Battles of World War I. "Select Editions". ISBN 1-84193-226-4.
* Keegan, John."The First World War". New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1999.
* Strachan, Hew. "The First World War". New York: Viking, 2003.
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