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German spring offensive

German spring offensive, 1918
Part of the Western Front of World War I
Date21 March – 18 July 1918
Location50°00′10″N 02°39′10″E / 50.00278°N 2.65278°E / 50.00278; 2.65278Coordinates: 50°00′10″N 02°39′10″E / 50.00278°N 2.65278°E / 50.00278; 2.65278
Result See aftermath
Territorial
changes
German armies make gains along sections of the Western Front.
Belligerents
 Germany
Commanders and leaders
Casualties and losses
688,341 casualties[1]
  • 433,000[2]
  • 418,374[3]
  • 7,000[4]
  • 5,000[5]
  • Total: 863,374 casualties

The German spring offensive, or Kaiserschlacht ("Kaiser's Battle"), also known as the Ludendorff offensive, was a series of German attacks along the Western Front during the First World War, beginning on 21 March 1918. Following American entry into the war in April 1917, the Germans decided that their only remaining chance of victory was to defeat the Allies before the United States could ship soldiers across the Atlantic and fully deploy its resources. The German Army had gained a temporary advantage in numbers as nearly 50 divisions had been freed by the Russian defeat and withdrawal from the war with the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk.

There were four German offensives, codenamed Michael, Georgette, Gneisenau, and Blücher-Yorck. Michael was the main attack, which was intended to break through the Allied lines, outflank the British forces (which held the front from the Somme River to the English Channel) and defeat the British Army. Once that was achieved, it was hoped that the French would seek armistice terms. The other offensives were subsidiary to Michael and were designed to divert Allied forces from the main offensive effort on the Somme. No clear objective was established before the start of the offensives and once the operations were underway, the targets of the attacks were constantly changed, depending on the tactical situation.

Once they began advancing, the Germans struggled to maintain the momentum, partly due to logistical issues. The fast-moving stormtrooper units could not carry enough food and ammunition to sustain themselves for long, and the army could not move in supplies and reinforcements fast enough to assist them. The Allies concentrated their main forces in the essential areas (the approaches to the Channel Ports and the rail junction of Amiens). Strategically worthless ground, which had been devastated by years of conflict, was left lightly defended. Within a few weeks, the danger of a German breakthrough had passed, though related fighting continued until July.

The German Army made the deepest advances either side had made on the Western Front since 1914. They re-took much ground that they had lost in 1916–17 and took some ground that they had not yet controlled. Despite these apparent successes, they suffered heavy casualties in return for land that was of little strategic value and hard to defend. The offensive failed to deliver a blow that could save Germany from defeat, which has led some historians[who?] to describe it as a pyrrhic victory. In July 1918, the Allies regained their numerical advantage with the arrival of American troops. In August, they used this and improved tactics to launch a counteroffensive. The ensuing Hundred Days Offensive resulted in the Germans losing all of the ground that they had taken in the Spring Offensive, the collapse of the Hindenburg Line, and the capitulation of Germany that November.

German preparations

Strategy

 
Comparative numbers of German and Allied front-line infantry from April to November 1918.[6]

The German High Command—in particular General Erich Ludendorff, the Chief Quartermaster General at Oberste Heeresleitung, the supreme army headquarters—has been criticised by military historians[who?] for the failure to formulate sound and clear strategy. Ludendorff privately conceded that Germany could no longer win a war of attrition, yet he was not ready to give up the German gains in the west and east and was one of the main obstacles to the German government's attempts to reach a settlement with the Western Allies.[7][page needed]

Although Ludendorff was unsure whether the Americans would enter the war in strength, at a meeting of the Chiefs of Staff of the German armies on the Western Front on 11 November 1917, he decided to launch an offensive.[8] The German government and Field Marshal Paul von Hindenburg, nominally the Chief of the General Staff, were not party to the planning process. Eventually it was decided to launch Operation Michael near Saint-Quentin, at the hinge between the French and British armies, and strike north to Arras. The main reason for the choice was tactical expediency. The ground on this sector of the front would dry out much sooner after the winter and spring rains and would therefore be easier to advance across. It was also a line of least resistance as the British and French armies were weak in the sector.

The intention was not to reach the English Channel coast, but to break through the Allied lines and roll up the flank of the British army from the south, pushing it back toward the Channel ports or destroying it if the British chose to stand and fight. Further operations such as Operation Georgette and Operation Mars were designed to strike further north to seize the remaining Allied ports in Belgium and France while diverting Allied forces from Michael. However, these remained only secondary and weaker operations, subordinate to Michael.[9]

The constant changing of operational targets once the offensive was underway gave the impression the German command had no coherent strategic goal. Any capture of an important strategic objective, such as the Channel ports, or the vital railway junction of Amiens, would have occurred more by chance than by design.[10][11][incomplete short citation]

Changes in tactics

The German army had concentrated many of its best troops into stormtrooper units, trained in infiltration tactics to infiltrate and bypass enemy front line units, leaving these strong points to be "mopped-up" by follow-up troops. The stormtrooper tactic was to attack and disrupt enemy headquarters, artillery units and supply depots in the rear areas, as well as to occupy territory rapidly.[12][incomplete short citation] Each major formation "creamed off" its best and fittest soldiers into storm units; several complete divisions were formed from these elite units. This process gave the German army an initial advantage in the attack, but meant that the best formations would suffer disproportionately heavy casualties, while the quality of the remaining formations declined as they were stripped of their best personnel to provide the stormtroops. The Germans also failed to arm their forces with a mobile exploitation force, such as cavalry, to exploit gains quickly. This tactical error meant the infantry had to keep up an exhausting tempo of advance.[13][incomplete short citation] Notwithstanding the effectiveness of the stormtroopers, the following German infantry often made attacks in large traditional waves and suffered heavy casualties.[14][incomplete short citation]

To enable the initial breakthrough, Lieutenant Colonel Georg Bruchmüller,[15] a German artillery officer, developed the Feuerwalze [de], (literally: rolling fire, rolling barrage)[16] an effective and economical creeping barrage scheme.[17] There were three phases: first, a brief bombardment on the enemy's command and communications (headquarters, telephone exchanges, etc.); then, destruction of their artillery; lastly an attack upon the enemy front-line infantry defences. Bombardment would always be brief so as to retain surprise. Bruchmüller's tactics were made possible by the vast numbers of heavy guns—with correspondingly plentiful amounts of ammunition for them—which Germany possessed by 1918.

Allied preparations

Defensive tactics

In their turn, the Allies had developed defences in depth, reducing the proportion of troops in their front line and pulling reserves and supply dumps back beyond German artillery range. This change had been made after experience of the successful German use of defence in depth during 1917.

In theory, the front line was an "outpost zone" (later renamed the "forward zone"), lightly held by snipers, patrols and machine-gun posts only. Behind, out of range of German field artillery, was the "battle zone" where the offensive was to be firmly resisted, and behind that again, out of range of all but the heaviest German guns, was a "rear zone" where reserves were held ready to counter-attack or seal off penetrations. In theory, a British infantry division (with nine infantry battalions) deployed three battalions in the outpost zone, four battalions in the battle zone and two battalions in the rear zone.[18]

This change had not been completely implemented by the Allies. In particular, in the sector held by the British Fifth Army, which they had recently taken over from French units, the defences were incomplete and there were too few troops to hold the complete position in depth. The rear zone existed as outline markings only, and the battle zone consisted of battalion "redoubts" which were not mutually supporting (allowing stormtroopers to penetrate between them).

Operation Michael

On 21 March 1918, the Germans launched a big offensive against the British Fifth Army and the right wing of the British Third Army.

The artillery bombardment began at 4.40am on March 21. The bombardment [hit] targets over an area of 150 square miles [390 km2], the biggest barrage of the entire war. Over 1,100,000 shells were fired in five hours...[19]

 
German A7V tank at Roye on 21 March 1918

The German armies involved were—from north to south—the Seventeenth Army under Otto von Below, the Second Army under Georg von der Marwitz and the Eighteenth Army under Oskar von Hutier, with a Corps (Gruppe Gayl) from the Seventh Army supporting Hutier's attack. Although the British had learned the approximate time and location of the offensive, the weight of the attack and of the preliminary bombardment was an unpleasant surprise. The Germans were also fortunate in that the morning of the attack was foggy, allowing the stormtroopers leading the attack to penetrate deep into the British positions undetected.

By the end of the first day, the British had lost 7,512 dead and 10,000 wounded and the Germans had broken through at several points on the front of the British Fifth Army. After two days the Fifth Army was in full retreat. As they fell back, many of the isolated "redoubts" were left to be surrounded and overwhelmed by the following German infantry. The right wing of Third Army became separated from the retreating Fifth Army, and also retreated to avoid being outflanked.

Ludendorff failed to follow the correct stormtrooper tactics, as described above. His lack of a coherent strategy to accompany the new tactics was expressed in a remark to one of his Army Group commanders, Rupprecht, Crown Prince of Bavaria, in which he stated, "We chop a hole. The rest follows." Ludendorff's dilemma was that the most important parts of the Allied line were also the most strongly held. Much of the German advance was achieved where it was not strategically significant. Because of this, Ludendorff continually exhausted his forces by attacking strongly entrenched British units. At Arras on 28 March, he launched a hastily prepared attack (Operation Mars) against the left wing of the British Third Army, to try to widen the breach in the Allied lines. In this sector, the British defences in depth were complete and fully manned, some of the opening German bombardment hit only empty positions and there was no fog to give cover to the attacking stormtroopers. After a day, the Germans had achieved only minor gains and had suffered heavy casualties. Operation Mars was immediately cancelled.[20]

The German breakthrough had occurred just to the north of the boundary between the French and British armies. The French commander-in-chief, General Pétain, sent reinforcements to the sector too slowly in the opinion of the British commander-in-chief, Field Marshal Haig, and the British government, though the historian Elizabeth Greenhalgh disputes this, arguing that Petain sent the six additional divisions quicker than had been arranged with Haig – in 2 days instead of 4 – and arranging for extra divisions several times – 12 divisions on 23 March and 13 on the 25/26 March – before requests came in from Haig.[21] The Allies reacted by appointing the French General Ferdinand Foch to coordinate all Allied activity in France, and subsequently as commander-in-chief of all Allied forces everywhere.

The success of Operation Michael led German infantry to advance too far from its supply bases and railheads. The stormtrooper units leading the advance carried supplies for only a few days, to avoid being overburdened, and relied on supplies delivered quickly from the rear. The advance was slowed by supply shortages, which gave Allied commanders more time to reinforce the threatened areas and to slow the advance still more.[22] German supply difficulties were made worse by the direction of advance, which crossed the wasteland created during the Battle of the Somme in 1916 and by Operation Alberich, the German retirement to the Hindenburg Line from February to March 1917.[23]

 
Germans passing a captured British trench

After a few days, the German advance began to falter, as the infantry became exhausted and it became increasingly difficult to move artillery and supplies forward to support them. Fresh British and Australian units were moved to the vital rail centre of Amiens and the defence began to stiffen. After fruitless attempts to capture Amiens, Ludendorff called off Operation Michael on 5 April. By the standards of the time, there had been a substantial advance. It was, however, of little value; a Pyrrhic victory in terms of the casualties suffered by the crack troops, as the vital positions of Amiens and Arras remained in Allied hands. The newly-won territory would later be difficult to defend against Allied counter-attacks.

The Allies lost nearly 255,000 men (British, British Empire and French). They also lost 1,300 artillery pieces and 200 tanks.[24] All of this could be replaced, either from French and British factories or from American manpower. German troop losses were 239,000 men, many of them specialist shocktroops (Stoßtruppen) who were irreplaceable.[24] In terms of morale, the initial German jubilation at the successful opening of the offensive soon turned to disappointment, as it became clear that the attack had not achieved decisive results.

Georgette

 
British Lewis gun team on the bank of the Lys canal during Battle of Hazebrouck, 15 April 1918
 
German prisoners being guarded by Australian troops, 23 April 1918.

Michael had drawn British forces to defend Amiens, leaving the rail route through Hazebrouck and the approaches to the Channel ports of Calais, Boulogne and Dunkirk vulnerable. German success here could choke the British into defeat.

The attack started on 9 April after a Feuerwalze. The main attack was made on the open and flat sector defended by the Portuguese Expeditionary Corps. After an entire year spent in the trenches, the Portuguese were tired and had suffered heavy losses. They were being replaced in the front line by fresh British divisions, an operation that was planned to be completed on 9 April, the same day as the Germans attacked the sector. The process of relief in place was poorly organized by the British First Army's command, and the Portuguese 1st Division had been withdrawn to the rear on 6 April, leaving the Portuguese 2nd Division to defend the entire sector alone. They were left with an extensive 7 mi (11 km) front, without natural obstacles which might benefit the defence.

Hit hard by the Feuerwalze bombardment and under the assault of eight German divisions, the Portuguese 2nd Division made a desperate defence, trying to hold their positions, which, however, were rapidly enveloped and overrun by the masses of German forces. The 2nd Division was virtually annihilated, losing more than 7,000 men. The British 40th Division, on the northern flank of the Portuguese, also rapidly collapsed before the attack, opening a gap that further facilitated the envelopment of the Portuguese by the Germans. However, under much less pressure from the Germans and occupying good defensive positions protected by the La Bassée Canal, the British 55th Division on the southern flank of the Portuguese were able to hold much of their position throughout the battle.

The next day, the Germans widened their attack to the north, forcing the defenders of Armentières to withdraw before they were surrounded, and capturing most of the Messines Ridge. By the end of the day, the few British divisions in reserve were hard-pressed to hold a line along the River Lys.

Without French reinforcements, it was feared that the Germans could advance the remaining 15 mi (24 km) to the ports within a week. The commander of the British Expeditionary Force (BEF), Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig, issued an "Order of the Day" on 11 April stating, "With our backs to the wall and believing in the justice of our cause, each one of us must fight on to the end."

However, the German offensive had stalled because of logistical problems and exposed flanks. Counterattacks by British, French and Anzac forces slowed and stopped the German advance. Ludendorff ended Georgette on 29 April.

As with Michael, losses were roughly equal, approximately 110,000 men wounded or killed, each.[25] Again, the strategic results were disappointing for the Germans. Hazebrouck remained in Allied hands and the Germans occupied a vulnerable salient under fire from three sides. The British abandoned the comparatively worthless territory they had captured at vast cost the previous year around Ypres, freeing several divisions to face the German attackers.

Blücher–Yorck

 
French and British troops marching back through Passy-sur-Marne, 29 May 1918.

While Georgette ground to a halt, a new attack on French positions was planned to draw forces further away from the Channel and allow renewed German progress in the north. The strategic objective remained to split the British and the French and gain victory before American forces could make their presence felt on the battlefield. The Americans were originally deployed in the quiet Saint-Mihiel sector in Lorraine where they had their first significant engagement in the defence of Seicheprey on 20 April.[26] After the British had held off the Michael advance on the Somme, the US 1st Division was moved to reinforce the line in that sector in mid-April and launched their first attack of the war on Cantigny on 28 May 1918.[26]

The German attack took place on 27 May, between Soissons and Reims. The sector was partly held by four depleted British divisions which were "resting" after their exertions earlier in the year. In this sector, the defences had not been developed in depth, mainly due to the obstinacy of the commander of the French Sixth Army, General Denis Auguste Duchêne.[27] As a result, the Feuerwalze was very effective and the Allied front, with a few notable exceptions, collapsed. Duchêne's massing of his troops in the forward trenches also meant there were no local reserves to delay the Germans once the front had broken. Despite French and British resistance on the flanks, German troops advanced to the Marne River and Paris seemed a realistic objective. There was a frenzied atmosphere in Paris, which German long-range guns had been shelling since 21 March, with many citizens fleeing and the government drawing up plans to evacuate to Bordeaux.[28]

Yet again, losses were much the same on each side: 127,000 Allied and 130,000 German casualties up to 6 June.[29] German losses were again mainly from the difficult-to-replace assault divisions.

Gneisenau

Although Ludendorff had intended Blücher-Yorck to be a prelude to a decisive offensive (Hagen) to defeat the British forces further north, he made the error of reinforcing merely tactical success by moving reserves from Flanders to the Aisne, whereas Foch and Haig did not overcommit reserves to the Aisne.[30] Ludendorff sought to extend Blücher-Yorck westward with Operation Gneisenau, intending to draw yet more Allied reserves south, widen the German salient and link with the German salient at Amiens.

The French had been warned of this attack (the Battle of Matz (French: Bataille du Matz)) by information from German prisoners, and their defence in depth reduced the impact of the artillery bombardment on 9 June. Nonetheless, the German advance (consisting of 21 divisions attacking over a 23 mi (37 km) front) along the Matz River was impressive, resulting in an advance of 9 miles (14 km) despite fierce French and American resistance. At Compiègne, a sudden French counter-attack on 11 June, by four divisions and 150 tanks (under General Charles Mangin) with no preliminary bombardment, caught the Germans by surprise and halted their advance. Gneisenau was called off the following day.[31]

Losses were approximately 35,000 Allied and 30,000 German.

Last German attack (Marneschutz-Reims/Friedensturm)

Ludendorff now postponed Hagen and launched the German Seventh, First and Third Armies in the Friedensturm (Peace Offensive) of 15 July, a renewed attempt to draw Allied reserves south from Flanders and to expand the salient created by Blücher–Yorck eastwards.[31] An attack east of Rheims was thwarted by the French defence in depth. In many sectors, the Germans, deprived of any surprise as their fuel-starved air force had lost air superiority to the Allies, advanced no further than the French Forward Zone, and nowhere did they break the French Battle (Second) Zone.[32]

Although German troops southwest of Rheims succeeded in crossing the River Marne, the French launched a major offensive of their own on the west side of the salient on 18 July, threatening to cut off the Germans in the salient. Ludendorff had to evacuate most of the Blücher–Yorck salient by 7 August and Hagen was finally cancelled.[33] The initiative had clearly passed to the Allies, who were shortly to begin the Hundred Days Offensive which ended the war.

Aftermath

 
The Kaiser on the way through a communication trench, 4 April 1918

Analysis

The Kaiserschlacht offensives had yielded large territorial gains for the Germans, in First World War terms. However, victory was not achieved and the German armies were severely depleted, exhausted and in exposed positions. The territorial gains were in the form of salients which greatly increased the length of the line that would have to be defended when Allied reinforcements gave the Allies the initiative. In six months, the strength of the German army had fallen from 5.1 million fighting men to 4.2 million.[34] By July, the German superiority of numbers on the Western Front had sunk to 207 divisions to 203 Allied, a negligible lead which would be reversed as more American troops arrived.[31] German manpower was exhausted. The German High Command predicted they would need 200,000 men per month to make good the losses suffered. Returning convalescents could supply 70,000–80,000/month but there were only 300,000 recruits available from the next annual class of eighteen-year-olds.[35] Even worse, they lost most of their best-trained men: stormtrooper tactics had them leading the attacks. Even so, about a million German soldiers remained tied up in the east until the end of the war.

The Allies had been badly hurt but not broken. The lack of a unified high command was partly rectified by the appointment of General Foch to the supreme command, and coordination would improve in later Allied operations.[36] American troops were for the first time also used as independent formations.[37]

Ironically, the offensive's initial success may have hastened Germany's defeat by undermining morale. German leadership had hitherto told their soldiers that food and other supply shortages were comparable on both sides. By breaking into Allied lines, the German soldiers realized that the Allies were in fact much better fed and supplied than they were, and thus that their leaders had been lying to them.[38]

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Churchill, "The World Crisis, Vol. 2", p.963. German casualties from "Reichsarchiv 1918"
  2. ^ Churchill, "The World Crisis, Vol. 2", p.963. French casualties from "Official Returns to the Chamber, March 29, 1922"
  3. ^ Churchill, "The World Crisis, Vol. 2", p.963. British casualties from "Military Effort of the British Empire"
  4. ^ Edmonds, Davies & Maxwell-Hyslop 1995, pp. 147–148, 168.
  5. ^ . www.cndp.fr. Archived from the original on 10 May 2021. Retrieved 2 September 2018.
  6. ^ Leonard P. Ayers, The war with Germany: a statistical summary (1919) p 104 online
  7. ^ Martin Kitchen, The German Offensive of 1918 (2001)
  8. ^ Blaxland, p.25
  9. ^ Middlebrook 1983, pp. 30–34.
  10. ^ Brown 1998, p. 184.
  11. ^ Robson 2007, p. 93.
  12. ^ Simpson 1995, pp. 117–118.
  13. ^ Simpson 1995, p. 124.
  14. ^ Simpson 1995, p. 123.
  15. ^ Bruchmüller biography.
  16. ^ (Anon.) (1918) "Organization of a rolling barrage in the German Army," The Field Artillery Journal (U.S. Army), 8 : 417–421.
  17. ^ Zabecki, 2006, p 56
  18. ^ Blaxland, p.28
  19. ^ "Second battle of the Somme, 21 March-4 April 1918". www.historyofwar.org. Retrieved 2 September 2018.
  20. ^ Blaxland, pp.84-86
  21. ^ Greenhalgh 2004, pp. 771–820.
  22. ^ Brown 1998, p. 184
  23. ^ Middlebrook 1983, pp. 347–348.
  24. ^ a b Marix Evans, p.63
  25. ^ Marix Evans, p.81
  26. ^ a b Richard W. Stewart, ed. (2005). (PDF). Vol. II. Center of Military History, US Army. p. 30. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 September 2020. Retrieved 2 June 2015.
  27. ^ Edmonds 1939, pp. 39–40.
  28. ^ Hart 2008, p.296
  29. ^ Marix Evans, p.105
  30. ^ Hart 2008, p. 294
  31. ^ a b c Hart 2008, p. 298
  32. ^ Hart 2008, p.299
  33. ^ Hart 2008, p.300
  34. ^ Edmonds 1939, p. 306.
  35. ^ Herwig 2014, p. 407.
  36. ^ Baldwin 1962, pp. 141–143
  37. ^ Marshall 1976, p. 57
  38. ^ "Collections: No Man's Land, Part I: The Trench Stalemate". 17 September 2021.

References

Books

  • Baldwin, Hanson (1962). World War I: An Outline History. London: Hutchinson. OCLC 988365.
  • Brown, Ian.(1998) British Logistics on the Western Front: 1914–1919. Praeger Publishers, 1998. ISBN 978-0-275-95894-7
  • Blaxland, Gregory (1981) [1968]. Amiens 1918. War in the Twentieth Century. London: W. H. Allen. ISBN 0-352-30833-8.
  • Edmonds, J. E.; Davies, H. R.; Maxwell-Hyslop, R. G. B. (1995) [1937]. Military Operations France and Belgium: 1918 March–April: Continuation of the German Offensives. History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence. Vol. II (Imperial War Museum & Battery Press ed.). London: Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-89839-223-4.
  • Edmonds, J. E. (1994) [1939]. Military Operations France and Belgium, 1918 May–July: The German Diversion Offensives and the First Allied Counter-Offensive. History of the Great War Based on Official Documents By Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence. Vol. III (Imperial War Museum & Battery Press ed.). London: Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-89839-211-1.
  • Gray, Randal (1991) Kaiserschlacht, 1918: The Final German Offensive, Osprey Campaign Series 11, London: Osprey, ISBN 1-85532-157-2
  • Hart, Peter (2008). 1918: A Very British Victory, Phoenix Books, London. ISBN 978-0-7538-2689-8
  • Herwig, Holger H. (2014). The First World War: Germany and Austria-Hungary 1914–1918. A&C Black. ISBN 9781472508850.
  • Gerhard Hirschfeld, Gerd Krumeich and Irina Renz (2018). 1918. Die Deutschen zwischen Weltkrieg und Revolution, Chr. Links Verlag, Berlin 2018, ISBN 978-3-86153-990-2. (in German)
  • Kitchen, Martin. The German Offensive of 1918 (2001)
  • Marix Evans, Martin (2002) 1918: The Year of Victories, Arcturus Military History Series, London: Arcturus, ISBN 0-572-02838-5
  • Middlebrook, Martin. The Kaiser's Battle: 21 March 1918: The First Day of the German Spring Offensive. Penguin. 1983. ISBN 0-14-017135-5
  • Zabecki, David T. (2006) The German 1918 Offensives. A Case Study in the Operational Level of War, London: Routledge, ISBN 0-415-35600-8

Journals

  • Astore, William J. "The Tragic Pursuit of Total Victory." MHQ: Quarterly Journal of Military History (Autumn 2007) 20#1 pp 64-73.
  • Greenhalgh, E. (July 2004). "Myth and Memory: Sir Douglas Haig and the Imposition of Allied Unified Command in March 1918". The Journal of Military History. 68 (3): 771–820. doi:10.1353/jmh.2004.0112. ISSN 0899-3718. JSTOR 3396728. S2CID 159845369.
  • Phifer, Mike. "The Kaiser's blitz: The Germans launched a massive spring offensive in 1918 spearheaded by elite storm-troop units in a desperate Did to break the stalemate and win the war." Military Heritage (Fall 2020) 22#3 pp 54-63.
  • Terraine, John. "The March Offensive, 1918." History Today (Apr 1968) 18#4 pp 234-24.
  • Kaulisch, Baldur. "Strategie Der Niederlage. Betrachtungen Zur Deutschen Frühjahrsoffensive 1918." ['Strategy of defeat. Observations on the German spring offensive, 1918'] Zeitschrift für Militärgeschichte (1968) 7#6 pp 661-675, in German.

Further reading

  • Pitt, Barrie (2013) [1962]. 1918: The Last Act. Pen & Sword Military Classics. Barnsley, UK: Pen & Sword Military. ISBN 9781783461721. OCLC 885305138.
  • Edmonds, James Edward, History of the Great War, France and Belgium, 1918; The German March Offensive and its Preliminaries, Vol VII, London: MacMillan, 1935

External links

  • Watson, Alexander: German Spring Offensives 1918 , in: 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War.

german, spring, offensive, this, article, about, world, german, offensive, 1918, other, uses, spring, offensive, disambiguation, 1918part, western, front, world, idate21, march, july, 1918locationnorthern, france, west, flanders, belgium50, 00278, 65278, 00278. This article is about the World War I German offensive of 1918 For other uses see Spring offensive disambiguation German spring offensive 1918Part of the Western Front of World War IDate21 March 18 July 1918LocationNorthern France West Flanders Belgium50 00 10 N 02 39 10 E 50 00278 N 2 65278 E 50 00278 2 65278 Coordinates 50 00 10 N 02 39 10 E 50 00278 N 2 65278 E 50 00278 2 65278ResultSee aftermathTerritorialchangesGerman armies make gains along sections of the Western Front Belligerents Germany France British Empire United Kingdom Australia New Zealand Canada South Africa Newfoundland United States Portugal ItalyBelgiumCommanders and leadersPaul von HindenburgErich LudendorffFerdinand FochDouglas HaigPhilippe PetainJohn PershingTamagnini de AbreuAlberico AlbricciKing Albert ICasualties and losses688 341 casualties 1 433 000 2 418 374 3 7 000 4 5 000 5 Total 863 374 casualties The German spring offensive or Kaiserschlacht Kaiser s Battle also known as the Ludendorff offensive was a series of German attacks along the Western Front during the First World War beginning on 21 March 1918 Following American entry into the war in April 1917 the Germans decided that their only remaining chance of victory was to defeat the Allies before the United States could ship soldiers across the Atlantic and fully deploy its resources The German Army had gained a temporary advantage in numbers as nearly 50 divisions had been freed by the Russian defeat and withdrawal from the war with the Treaty of Brest Litovsk There were four German offensives codenamed Michael Georgette Gneisenau and Blucher Yorck Michael was the main attack which was intended to break through the Allied lines outflank the British forces which held the front from the Somme River to the English Channel and defeat the British Army Once that was achieved it was hoped that the French would seek armistice terms The other offensives were subsidiary to Michael and were designed to divert Allied forces from the main offensive effort on the Somme No clear objective was established before the start of the offensives and once the operations were underway the targets of the attacks were constantly changed depending on the tactical situation Once they began advancing the Germans struggled to maintain the momentum partly due to logistical issues The fast moving stormtrooper units could not carry enough food and ammunition to sustain themselves for long and the army could not move in supplies and reinforcements fast enough to assist them The Allies concentrated their main forces in the essential areas the approaches to the Channel Ports and the rail junction of Amiens Strategically worthless ground which had been devastated by years of conflict was left lightly defended Within a few weeks the danger of a German breakthrough had passed though related fighting continued until July The German Army made the deepest advances either side had made on the Western Front since 1914 They re took much ground that they had lost in 1916 17 and took some ground that they had not yet controlled Despite these apparent successes they suffered heavy casualties in return for land that was of little strategic value and hard to defend The offensive failed to deliver a blow that could save Germany from defeat which has led some historians who to describe it as a pyrrhic victory In July 1918 the Allies regained their numerical advantage with the arrival of American troops In August they used this and improved tactics to launch a counteroffensive The ensuing Hundred Days Offensive resulted in the Germans losing all of the ground that they had taken in the Spring Offensive the collapse of the Hindenburg Line and the capitulation of Germany that November Contents 1 German preparations 1 1 Strategy 1 2 Changes in tactics 2 Allied preparations 2 1 Defensive tactics 3 Operation Michael 4 Georgette 5 Blucher Yorck 6 Gneisenau 7 Last German attack Marneschutz Reims Friedensturm 8 Aftermath 8 1 Analysis 9 See also 10 Footnotes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksGerman preparations EditStrategy Edit Comparative numbers of German and Allied front line infantry from April to November 1918 6 The German High Command in particular General Erich Ludendorff the Chief Quartermaster General at Oberste Heeresleitung the supreme army headquarters has been criticised by military historians who for the failure to formulate sound and clear strategy Ludendorff privately conceded that Germany could no longer win a war of attrition yet he was not ready to give up the German gains in the west and east and was one of the main obstacles to the German government s attempts to reach a settlement with the Western Allies 7 page needed Although Ludendorff was unsure whether the Americans would enter the war in strength at a meeting of the Chiefs of Staff of the German armies on the Western Front on 11 November 1917 he decided to launch an offensive 8 The German government and Field Marshal Paul von Hindenburg nominally the Chief of the General Staff were not party to the planning process Eventually it was decided to launch Operation Michael near Saint Quentin at the hinge between the French and British armies and strike north to Arras The main reason for the choice was tactical expediency The ground on this sector of the front would dry out much sooner after the winter and spring rains and would therefore be easier to advance across It was also a line of least resistance as the British and French armies were weak in the sector The intention was not to reach the English Channel coast but to break through the Allied lines and roll up the flank of the British army from the south pushing it back toward the Channel ports or destroying it if the British chose to stand and fight Further operations such as Operation Georgette and Operation Mars were designed to strike further north to seize the remaining Allied ports in Belgium and France while diverting Allied forces from Michael However these remained only secondary and weaker operations subordinate to Michael 9 The constant changing of operational targets once the offensive was underway gave the impression the German command had no coherent strategic goal Any capture of an important strategic objective such as the Channel ports or the vital railway junction of Amiens would have occurred more by chance than by design 10 11 incomplete short citation Changes in tactics Edit The German army had concentrated many of its best troops into stormtrooper units trained in infiltration tactics to infiltrate and bypass enemy front line units leaving these strong points to be mopped up by follow up troops The stormtrooper tactic was to attack and disrupt enemy headquarters artillery units and supply depots in the rear areas as well as to occupy territory rapidly 12 incomplete short citation Each major formation creamed off its best and fittest soldiers into storm units several complete divisions were formed from these elite units This process gave the German army an initial advantage in the attack but meant that the best formations would suffer disproportionately heavy casualties while the quality of the remaining formations declined as they were stripped of their best personnel to provide the stormtroops The Germans also failed to arm their forces with a mobile exploitation force such as cavalry to exploit gains quickly This tactical error meant the infantry had to keep up an exhausting tempo of advance 13 incomplete short citation Notwithstanding the effectiveness of the stormtroopers the following German infantry often made attacks in large traditional waves and suffered heavy casualties 14 incomplete short citation To enable the initial breakthrough Lieutenant Colonel Georg Bruchmuller 15 a German artillery officer developed the Feuerwalze de literally rolling fire rolling barrage 16 an effective and economical creeping barrage scheme 17 There were three phases first a brief bombardment on the enemy s command and communications headquarters telephone exchanges etc then destruction of their artillery lastly an attack upon the enemy front line infantry defences Bombardment would always be brief so as to retain surprise Bruchmuller s tactics were made possible by the vast numbers of heavy guns with correspondingly plentiful amounts of ammunition for them which Germany possessed by 1918 Allied preparations EditDefensive tactics Edit In their turn the Allies had developed defences in depth reducing the proportion of troops in their front line and pulling reserves and supply dumps back beyond German artillery range This change had been made after experience of the successful German use of defence in depth during 1917 In theory the front line was an outpost zone later renamed the forward zone lightly held by snipers patrols and machine gun posts only Behind out of range of German field artillery was the battle zone where the offensive was to be firmly resisted and behind that again out of range of all but the heaviest German guns was a rear zone where reserves were held ready to counter attack or seal off penetrations In theory a British infantry division with nine infantry battalions deployed three battalions in the outpost zone four battalions in the battle zone and two battalions in the rear zone 18 This change had not been completely implemented by the Allies In particular in the sector held by the British Fifth Army which they had recently taken over from French units the defences were incomplete and there were too few troops to hold the complete position in depth The rear zone existed as outline markings only and the battle zone consisted of battalion redoubts which were not mutually supporting allowing stormtroopers to penetrate between them Operation Michael EditMain article Operation Michael On 21 March 1918 the Germans launched a big offensive against the British Fifth Army and the right wing of the British Third Army The artillery bombardment began at 4 40am on March 21 The bombardment hit targets over an area of 150 square miles 390 km2 the biggest barrage of the entire war Over 1 100 000 shells were fired in five hours 19 German A7V tank at Roye on 21 March 1918 The German armies involved were from north to south the Seventeenth Army under Otto von Below the Second Army under Georg von der Marwitz and the Eighteenth Army under Oskar von Hutier with a Corps Gruppe Gayl from the Seventh Army supporting Hutier s attack Although the British had learned the approximate time and location of the offensive the weight of the attack and of the preliminary bombardment was an unpleasant surprise The Germans were also fortunate in that the morning of the attack was foggy allowing the stormtroopers leading the attack to penetrate deep into the British positions undetected By the end of the first day the British had lost 7 512 dead and 10 000 wounded and the Germans had broken through at several points on the front of the British Fifth Army After two days the Fifth Army was in full retreat As they fell back many of the isolated redoubts were left to be surrounded and overwhelmed by the following German infantry The right wing of Third Army became separated from the retreating Fifth Army and also retreated to avoid being outflanked Ludendorff failed to follow the correct stormtrooper tactics as described above His lack of a coherent strategy to accompany the new tactics was expressed in a remark to one of his Army Group commanders Rupprecht Crown Prince of Bavaria in which he stated We chop a hole The rest follows Ludendorff s dilemma was that the most important parts of the Allied line were also the most strongly held Much of the German advance was achieved where it was not strategically significant Because of this Ludendorff continually exhausted his forces by attacking strongly entrenched British units At Arras on 28 March he launched a hastily prepared attack Operation Mars against the left wing of the British Third Army to try to widen the breach in the Allied lines In this sector the British defences in depth were complete and fully manned some of the opening German bombardment hit only empty positions and there was no fog to give cover to the attacking stormtroopers After a day the Germans had achieved only minor gains and had suffered heavy casualties Operation Mars was immediately cancelled 20 The German breakthrough had occurred just to the north of the boundary between the French and British armies The French commander in chief General Petain sent reinforcements to the sector too slowly in the opinion of the British commander in chief Field Marshal Haig and the British government though the historian Elizabeth Greenhalgh disputes this arguing that Petain sent the six additional divisions quicker than had been arranged with Haig in 2 days instead of 4 and arranging for extra divisions several times 12 divisions on 23 March and 13 on the 25 26 March before requests came in from Haig 21 The Allies reacted by appointing the French General Ferdinand Foch to coordinate all Allied activity in France and subsequently as commander in chief of all Allied forces everywhere The success of Operation Michael led German infantry to advance too far from its supply bases and railheads The stormtrooper units leading the advance carried supplies for only a few days to avoid being overburdened and relied on supplies delivered quickly from the rear The advance was slowed by supply shortages which gave Allied commanders more time to reinforce the threatened areas and to slow the advance still more 22 German supply difficulties were made worse by the direction of advance which crossed the wasteland created during the Battle of the Somme in 1916 and by Operation Alberich the German retirement to the Hindenburg Line from February to March 1917 23 Germans passing a captured British trench After a few days the German advance began to falter as the infantry became exhausted and it became increasingly difficult to move artillery and supplies forward to support them Fresh British and Australian units were moved to the vital rail centre of Amiens and the defence began to stiffen After fruitless attempts to capture Amiens Ludendorff called off Operation Michael on 5 April By the standards of the time there had been a substantial advance It was however of little value a Pyrrhic victory in terms of the casualties suffered by the crack troops as the vital positions of Amiens and Arras remained in Allied hands The newly won territory would later be difficult to defend against Allied counter attacks The Allies lost nearly 255 000 men British British Empire and French They also lost 1 300 artillery pieces and 200 tanks 24 All of this could be replaced either from French and British factories or from American manpower German troop losses were 239 000 men many of them specialist shocktroops Stosstruppen who were irreplaceable 24 In terms of morale the initial German jubilation at the successful opening of the offensive soon turned to disappointment as it became clear that the attack had not achieved decisive results Georgette EditMain article Battle of the Lys 1918 British Lewis gun team on the bank of the Lys canal during Battle of Hazebrouck 15 April 1918 German prisoners being guarded by Australian troops 23 April 1918 Michael had drawn British forces to defend Amiens leaving the rail route through Hazebrouck and the approaches to the Channel ports of Calais Boulogne and Dunkirk vulnerable German success here could choke the British into defeat The attack started on 9 April after a Feuerwalze The main attack was made on the open and flat sector defended by the Portuguese Expeditionary Corps After an entire year spent in the trenches the Portuguese were tired and had suffered heavy losses They were being replaced in the front line by fresh British divisions an operation that was planned to be completed on 9 April the same day as the Germans attacked the sector The process of relief in place was poorly organized by the British First Army s command and the Portuguese 1st Division had been withdrawn to the rear on 6 April leaving the Portuguese 2nd Division to defend the entire sector alone They were left with an extensive 7 mi 11 km front without natural obstacles which might benefit the defence Hit hard by the Feuerwalze bombardment and under the assault of eight German divisions the Portuguese 2nd Division made a desperate defence trying to hold their positions which however were rapidly enveloped and overrun by the masses of German forces The 2nd Division was virtually annihilated losing more than 7 000 men The British 40th Division on the northern flank of the Portuguese also rapidly collapsed before the attack opening a gap that further facilitated the envelopment of the Portuguese by the Germans However under much less pressure from the Germans and occupying good defensive positions protected by the La Bassee Canal the British 55th Division on the southern flank of the Portuguese were able to hold much of their position throughout the battle The next day the Germans widened their attack to the north forcing the defenders of Armentieres to withdraw before they were surrounded and capturing most of the Messines Ridge By the end of the day the few British divisions in reserve were hard pressed to hold a line along the River Lys Without French reinforcements it was feared that the Germans could advance the remaining 15 mi 24 km to the ports within a week The commander of the British Expeditionary Force BEF Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig issued an Order of the Day on 11 April stating With our backs to the wall and believing in the justice of our cause each one of us must fight on to the end However the German offensive had stalled because of logistical problems and exposed flanks Counterattacks by British French and Anzac forces slowed and stopped the German advance Ludendorff ended Georgette on 29 April As with Michael losses were roughly equal approximately 110 000 men wounded or killed each 25 Again the strategic results were disappointing for the Germans Hazebrouck remained in Allied hands and the Germans occupied a vulnerable salient under fire from three sides The British abandoned the comparatively worthless territory they had captured at vast cost the previous year around Ypres freeing several divisions to face the German attackers Blucher Yorck Edit French and British troops marching back through Passy sur Marne 29 May 1918 Main article Third Battle of the Aisne While Georgette ground to a halt a new attack on French positions was planned to draw forces further away from the Channel and allow renewed German progress in the north The strategic objective remained to split the British and the French and gain victory before American forces could make their presence felt on the battlefield The Americans were originally deployed in the quiet Saint Mihiel sector in Lorraine where they had their first significant engagement in the defence of Seicheprey on 20 April 26 After the British had held off the Michael advance on the Somme the US 1st Division was moved to reinforce the line in that sector in mid April and launched their first attack of the war on Cantigny on 28 May 1918 26 The German attack took place on 27 May between Soissons and Reims The sector was partly held by four depleted British divisions which were resting after their exertions earlier in the year In this sector the defences had not been developed in depth mainly due to the obstinacy of the commander of the French Sixth Army General Denis Auguste Duchene 27 As a result the Feuerwalze was very effective and the Allied front with a few notable exceptions collapsed Duchene s massing of his troops in the forward trenches also meant there were no local reserves to delay the Germans once the front had broken Despite French and British resistance on the flanks German troops advanced to the Marne River and Paris seemed a realistic objective There was a frenzied atmosphere in Paris which German long range guns had been shelling since 21 March with many citizens fleeing and the government drawing up plans to evacuate to Bordeaux 28 Yet again losses were much the same on each side 127 000 Allied and 130 000 German casualties up to 6 June 29 German losses were again mainly from the difficult to replace assault divisions Gneisenau EditAlthough Ludendorff had intended Blucher Yorck to be a prelude to a decisive offensive Hagen to defeat the British forces further north he made the error of reinforcing merely tactical success by moving reserves from Flanders to the Aisne whereas Foch and Haig did not overcommit reserves to the Aisne 30 Ludendorff sought to extend Blucher Yorck westward with Operation Gneisenau intending to draw yet more Allied reserves south widen the German salient and link with the German salient at Amiens The French had been warned of this attack the Battle of Matz French Bataille du Matz by information from German prisoners and their defence in depth reduced the impact of the artillery bombardment on 9 June Nonetheless the German advance consisting of 21 divisions attacking over a 23 mi 37 km front along the Matz River was impressive resulting in an advance of 9 miles 14 km despite fierce French and American resistance At Compiegne a sudden French counter attack on 11 June by four divisions and 150 tanks under General Charles Mangin with no preliminary bombardment caught the Germans by surprise and halted their advance Gneisenau was called off the following day 31 Losses were approximately 35 000 Allied and 30 000 German Last German attack Marneschutz Reims Friedensturm EditMain article Second Battle of the Marne Ludendorff now postponed Hagen and launched the German Seventh First and Third Armies in the Friedensturm Peace Offensive of 15 July a renewed attempt to draw Allied reserves south from Flanders and to expand the salient created by Blucher Yorck eastwards 31 An attack east of Rheims was thwarted by the French defence in depth In many sectors the Germans deprived of any surprise as their fuel starved air force had lost air superiority to the Allies advanced no further than the French Forward Zone and nowhere did they break the French Battle Second Zone 32 Although German troops southwest of Rheims succeeded in crossing the River Marne the French launched a major offensive of their own on the west side of the salient on 18 July threatening to cut off the Germans in the salient Ludendorff had to evacuate most of the Blucher Yorck salient by 7 August and Hagen was finally cancelled 33 The initiative had clearly passed to the Allies who were shortly to begin the Hundred Days Offensive which ended the war Aftermath Edit The Kaiser on the way through a communication trench 4 April 1918 Analysis Edit The Kaiserschlacht offensives had yielded large territorial gains for the Germans in First World War terms However victory was not achieved and the German armies were severely depleted exhausted and in exposed positions The territorial gains were in the form of salients which greatly increased the length of the line that would have to be defended when Allied reinforcements gave the Allies the initiative In six months the strength of the German army had fallen from 5 1 million fighting men to 4 2 million 34 By July the German superiority of numbers on the Western Front had sunk to 207 divisions to 203 Allied a negligible lead which would be reversed as more American troops arrived 31 German manpower was exhausted The German High Command predicted they would need 200 000 men per month to make good the losses suffered Returning convalescents could supply 70 000 80 000 month but there were only 300 000 recruits available from the next annual class of eighteen year olds 35 Even worse they lost most of their best trained men stormtrooper tactics had them leading the attacks Even so about a million German soldiers remained tied up in the east until the end of the war The Allies had been badly hurt but not broken The lack of a unified high command was partly rectified by the appointment of General Foch to the supreme command and coordination would improve in later Allied operations 36 American troops were for the first time also used as independent formations 37 Ironically the offensive s initial success may have hastened Germany s defeat by undermining morale German leadership had hitherto told their soldiers that food and other supply shortages were comparable on both sides By breaking into Allied lines the German soldiers realized that the Allies were in fact much better fed and supplied than they were and thus that their leaders had been lying to them 38 See also Edit World War I portalJourney s End a play set during the early stages of the offensive Spring Offensive a poem by Wilfred OwenFootnotes Edit Churchill The World Crisis Vol 2 p 963 German casualties from Reichsarchiv 1918 Churchill The World Crisis Vol 2 p 963 French casualties from Official Returns to the Chamber March 29 1922 Churchill The World Crisis Vol 2 p 963 British casualties from Military Effort of the British Empire Edmonds Davies amp Maxwell Hyslop 1995 pp 147 148 168 Le souvenir de la 1ere GM en Champagne Ardenne Le cimetiere italien de Bligny presente par Jean Pierre Husson www cndp fr Archived from the original on 10 May 2021 Retrieved 2 September 2018 Leonard P Ayers The war with Germany a statistical summary 1919 p 104 online Martin Kitchen The German Offensive of 1918 2001 Blaxland p 25 Middlebrook 1983 pp 30 34 Brown 1998 p 184 Robson 2007 p 93 Simpson 1995 pp 117 118 Simpson 1995 p 124 Simpson 1995 p 123 Bruchmuller biography Anon 1918 Organization of a rolling barrage in the German Army The Field Artillery Journal U S Army 8 417 421 Zabecki 2006 p 56 Blaxland p 28 Second battle of the Somme 21 March 4 April 1918 www historyofwar org Retrieved 2 September 2018 Blaxland pp 84 86 Greenhalgh 2004 pp 771 820 Brown 1998 p 184 Middlebrook 1983 pp 347 348 a b Marix Evans p 63 Marix Evans p 81 a b Richard W Stewart ed 2005 American Military History PDF Vol II Center of Military History US Army p 30 Archived from the original PDF on 8 September 2020 Retrieved 2 June 2015 Edmonds 1939 pp 39 40 Hart 2008 p 296 Marix Evans p 105 Hart 2008 p 294 a b c Hart 2008 p 298 Hart 2008 p 299 Hart 2008 p 300 Edmonds 1939 p 306 Herwig 2014 p 407 Baldwin 1962 pp 141 143 Marshall 1976 p 57 Collections No Man s Land Part I The Trench Stalemate 17 September 2021 References EditBooks Baldwin Hanson 1962 World War I An Outline History London Hutchinson OCLC 988365 Brown Ian 1998 British Logistics on the Western Front 1914 1919 Praeger Publishers 1998 ISBN 978 0 275 95894 7 Blaxland Gregory 1981 1968 Amiens 1918 War in the Twentieth Century London W H Allen ISBN 0 352 30833 8 Edmonds J E Davies H R Maxwell Hyslop R G B 1995 1937 Military Operations France and Belgium 1918 March April Continuation of the German Offensives History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence Vol II Imperial War Museum amp Battery Press ed London Macmillan ISBN 978 0 89839 223 4 Edmonds J E 1994 1939 Military Operations France and Belgium 1918 May July The German Diversion Offensives and the First Allied Counter Offensive History of the Great War Based on Official Documents By Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence Vol III Imperial War Museum amp Battery Press ed London Macmillan ISBN 978 0 89839 211 1 Gray Randal 1991 Kaiserschlacht 1918 The Final German Offensive Osprey Campaign Series 11 London Osprey ISBN 1 85532 157 2 Hart Peter 2008 1918 A Very British Victory Phoenix Books London ISBN 978 0 7538 2689 8 Herwig Holger H 2014 The First World War Germany and Austria Hungary 1914 1918 A amp C Black ISBN 9781472508850 Gerhard Hirschfeld Gerd Krumeich and Irina Renz 2018 1918 Die Deutschen zwischen Weltkrieg und Revolution Chr Links Verlag Berlin 2018 ISBN 978 3 86153 990 2 in German Kitchen Martin The German Offensive of 1918 2001 Marix Evans Martin 2002 1918 The Year of Victories Arcturus Military History Series London Arcturus ISBN 0 572 02838 5 Middlebrook Martin The Kaiser s Battle 21 March 1918 The First Day of the German Spring Offensive Penguin 1983 ISBN 0 14 017135 5 Zabecki David T 2006 The German 1918 Offensives A Case Study in the Operational Level of War London Routledge ISBN 0 415 35600 8Journals Astore William J The Tragic Pursuit of Total Victory MHQ Quarterly Journal of Military History Autumn 2007 20 1 pp 64 73 Greenhalgh E July 2004 Myth and Memory Sir Douglas Haig and the Imposition of Allied Unified Command in March 1918 The Journal of Military History 68 3 771 820 doi 10 1353 jmh 2004 0112 ISSN 0899 3718 JSTOR 3396728 S2CID 159845369 Phifer Mike The Kaiser s blitz The Germans launched a massive spring offensive in 1918 spearheaded by elite storm troop units in a desperate Did to break the stalemate and win the war Military Heritage Fall 2020 22 3 pp 54 63 Terraine John The March Offensive 1918 History Today Apr 1968 18 4 pp 234 24 Kaulisch Baldur Strategie Der Niederlage Betrachtungen Zur Deutschen Fruhjahrsoffensive 1918 Strategy of defeat Observations on the German spring offensive 1918 Zeitschrift fur Militargeschichte 1968 7 6 pp 661 675 in German Further reading EditPitt Barrie 2013 1962 1918 The Last Act Pen amp Sword Military Classics Barnsley UK Pen amp Sword Military ISBN 9781783461721 OCLC 885305138 Edmonds James Edward History of the Great War France and Belgium 1918 The German March Offensive and its Preliminaries Vol VII London MacMillan 1935External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kaiserschlacht Watson Alexander German Spring Offensives 1918 in 1914 1918 online International Encyclopedia of the First World War Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title German spring offensive amp 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