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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #60197 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/60197)
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-Project Gutenberg's The Attack in Trench Warfare, by André Laffargue
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Attack in Trench Warfare
- Impressions and Reflections of a Company Commander
-
-Author: André Laffargue
-
-Release Date: August 30, 2019 [EBook #60197]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ATTACK IN TRENCH WARFARE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Richard Tonsing, Brian Coe, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- The Attack in Trench Warfare
-
- Impressions and Reflections of a Company Commander
-
-
- _By_
-
- CAPT. ANDRÉ LAFFARGUE
- _153d Infantry, French Army_
-
-
- Translated for the
- INFANTRY JOURNAL
- by an Officer of Infantry
-
- Washington:
- THE UNITED STATES INFANTRY ASSOCIATION
- 1916
-
-
-
-
- Copyright, 1916
-
- U. S. INFANTRY ASSOCIATION
-
-
- NATIONAL CAPITAL PRESS, INC., WASHINGTON, D. C.
-
-
-
-
- INTRODUCTION.
-
-
-It is probable that no book on any military topic published since the
-outbreak of the present war has excited an interest and comment in
-European military circles equal to that produced by the publication of
-Captain Laffargue’s _Etude sur l’attaque dans la période actuelle de la
-guerre_. It is, in fact, the first publication from the pen of a
-military man dealing with the general and detailed aspects of the
-tactics of the attack in trench warfare that has come to our attention.
-
-The methods of training of infantry units for this class of warfare and
-the degree of careful preparation necessary for the attainment of any
-measure of success are among the most important features of Captain
-Laffargue’s study. The comparison which he makes between the conduct in
-battle of two regiments of very different quality, brings out very
-clearly the difference between real infantry and the cannon-fodder
-variety which is too often considered adequate for war purposes.
-
-The fact that this study was so highly thought of by General Joffre that
-he caused it to be published to the French Army before it was given out
-for general publication, speaks for its excellence more eloquently than
-any commendation which could otherwise be bestowed upon it.
-
- G. A. LYNCH, _Captain, Infantry_.
- Editor of the INFANTRY JOURNAL.
-
-
-
-
- THE ATTACK IN TRENCH WARFARE.
-
- Impressions and Reflections of a Company Commander.[1]
-
- By Captain André Laffargue, 153d Infantry (French).
-
-
-
-
- I.
- CHARACTER OF THE PRESENT ATTACK.
-
-
-The attack at the present period has become one of siege warfare. We
-must accept it as it is, study it, tax our wits to find special means to
-prepare effectively for it and to orient the instruction of troops
-entirely with this in view.
-
-The attack on all points of our front consists in breaking through
-several lines of defense upon a depth of about three kilometres and in
-preventing the enemy from holding on further back on new lines already
-prepared or merely improvized.
-
-The attack is therefore an immense, unlimited, simultaneous assault on
-all points of the front of attack, furiously pushed straight to the
-front until all the enemy’s defenses are broken through.
-
-_The characteristic of this attack is that it is not progressive but is
-an assault of a single rush; it must be accomplished in one day as
-otherwise the enemy reforms, and the defense, with terrible engines of
-sudden destruction, will later recover its supremacy over the attack,
-which cannot quickly enough regain the mastery of this consuming fire._
-The whole series of frightful defenses cannot be nibbled at
-successively; they must be swallowed whole at one stroke with one
-decision.
-
-Therefore, the fight is an unlimited assault. In order to attempt the
-assault, what is necessary?
-
-Assaulting troops—and all troops are far from being assaulting troops.
-
-An overwhelming superiority of fire all the time and not only at the
-moment of assault.
-
-The possibility of rushing forth from a line of shelter a short distance
-from the enemy, a condition equally to be sought for in any other phase
-of the combat.
-
-In order that the assault may be unlimited, the sacrifice being resolved
-upon, it must be pushed through to a finish and the enemy drowned under
-successive waves, _calculating, however, that infantry units disappear
-in the furnace of fire like handfuls of straw_.
-
-Is it possible to pierce the enemy’s lines? I firmly believe so since
-the 9th of May[2]. But before that, this hypothesis seemed to me a mad
-temerity. I had taken part in the Battle of Nancy and in the Battle of
-Ypres where it appears that the Germans, after a terrifying deluge of
-heavy projectiles during interminable days, tried to break through us,
-which I certainly did not think possible, seeing the paltry and easily
-shattered efforts of their infantry. In considering the forces put into
-action which did not succeed in making us yield a foot, I believed in
-the inviolability of the lines of defense. On the 9th of May, by a
-single dash, our first wave submerged in one hour all the enemy’s
-first-line defenses to a depth of several kilometres.
-
-The assault is extremely murderous; it is an implacable struggle in
-which one or the other must fall and in which the engines of combat not
-destroyed beforehand often make terrible havoc in the ranks of
-unprotected assaulting troops.
-
-He who risks his life and does not wish to die but to succeed, becomes
-at times ingenious. That is why I, who was part of the human canister
-for more than nine months, have set about to consider the means of
-saving the inestimable existence of so many humble comrades, or at least
-to figure out how the sacrifice of their lives may result in victory.
-
-
-
-
- II.
- PREPARATION OF THE ATTACK.
-
-
- FORMS OF THE GERMAN DEFENSIVE ORGANIZATIONS.
-
-The German defensive organizations, as well as I have been able to
-establish, appear to be in general as follows:[3]
-
-1. A continuous line of trenches over the whole front, comprising on a
-limited depth two or three trenches, joined by numerous communicating
-trenches (_boyaux_), and separated by 100 to 300 metres, each one often
-protected by a wire entanglement.
-
-2. Centers of resistance, comprising large villages, woods, or immense
-field works, consisting of a network of trenches which are very strongly
-organized and in which machine guns under cupolas as well as pieces of
-artillery are mounted.
-
-Such are, for example, the Labyrinth and _Ouvrages Blancs_ of Neuville.
-These centers of resistance are separated by intervals of 800 to 1,500
-metres; they mutually flank each other, and their intervals are
-generally guarded by closed works.
-
-3. A second line of defense, which is not always continuous.
-
-
- PREPARATION BY THE ARTILLERY.
-
-In order to attack with minimum loss, the infantry-requires that the
-artillery in its preparation carry through the following program:
-
-(_a_) _Destroy the wire entanglements._
-
-(_b_) _Neutralize or destroy the defenders of the trenches._
-
-(_c_) _Prevent the artillery from coming into action._
-
-(_d_) _Prevent the bringing up of reserves._
-
-(_e_) _Destroy the machine guns as soon as they reveal their positions._
-
-
- (_a_) _Destruction of the Wire Entanglement._
-
-The 75 produces sufficient breaches in the wire entanglements for the
-infantry to get through; in order to accomplish this, each piece remains
-laid on the same point of the entanglement. But the infantry should not
-expect the complete and continuous destruction of the entanglement: that
-would require too many projectiles.
-
-
-(_b_) _Neutralization or Destruction of the Defenders of the Trenches._
-
-The Germans, whenever they can, dig very deep and well protected
-shelters, in the interior of which they crowd themselves. The 75 has no
-effect on these shelters, and the infantry of the attack, who are
-delighted to see the parapets, the sand bags, planks, posts, etc., fly
-into the air as if pulverized by the ripping detonations, are stupefied
-on finding themselves greeted by a heavy fire as soon as they start out
-of their trenches. In consequence of this, the infantry is convinced
-that whenever the enemy has been able to construct deep shelters, an
-assault is certain massacre, in spite of the prodigious expenditure of
-75’s, unless other and more powerful means of destruction have been
-employed.
-
-The aerial torpedo, on the contrary, seems to produce terrifying effects
-on the defenders of the trenches; it has also considerable destructive
-effect. This power is not always sufficient to break in the shelter
-caverns, but it completely knocks to pieces the firing trenches,
-produces cave-ins, blocks the openings of the shelters, and thus walls
-in the occupants. By its formidable explosion, the extraordinary effects
-of its blast, and the concussion that it induces in the ground, it
-annihilates all energy in the defenders, who at every instant think
-their last minute has come.
-
-In the sector of attack of my company on the 9th of May, a portion of
-the trenches in front of the 3d and 4th Sections was severely pounded by
-the fire of the 75 and especially by the aerial torpedoes, while the
-remainder of the trenches in front of the 1st and 2d Sections suffered
-only from the preparation by the 75. The difference was remarkable.
-While the 1st and 2d Sections, hardly out of their parallel, saw the
-enemy rise up and melted away under his suddenly opened rifle fire, and
-especially under that of a machine gun, the 4th Section reached the
-German trench, crossed it without hindrance, and continued on its way.
-As for the 3d Section, it had been received by only a few shots and had
-crossed the first trench in one rush, when it received some shots in the
-back. Returning to the rear, the men found several dozen Germans
-crouching in the deep shelters, absolutely all in and crying for mercy.
-The cannonade had ceased, and in spite of the violent fusillade cracking
-outside announcing an attack, they had not budged. Only a few had the
-courage to shoot in the back from an opening the French soldiers who
-passed close by.
-
-Conversations with numerous infantry officers have definitely convinced
-me that the heaviest bombardment by 75’s alone is ineffective against
-trenches organized during a long period. The heavy artillery has too
-much dispersion, while the aerial torpedo, besides its considerable
-destructive and demoralizing effects, is very accurate.
-
-Thus the preparation on the zone of the first trenches may be made
-largely by means of aerial torpedoes. But it is necessary that the
-torpedo guns be placed close together in a continuous line (at least one
-to every 100 metres of trenches) and that each one have its zone clearly
-defined.
-
-At Arras, these guns were not very numerous, and their preparation was
-consequently only partial; in trying to pound several lines of trenches
-at the same time, large spaces remained outside the effects of their
-action, while certain corners were entirely demolished.
-
-In the artillery depots, very numerous gun crews should be organized
-beforehand for the torpedo guns, and not date only from the day before
-and be at their first try out, as at Arras.
-
-The aerial torpedo, terrorizing the defenders in the interior of their
-shelters, already neutralizes them in part; but the best plan of
-eliminating the enemy is to destroy him. In order to destroy him, it is
-necessary to force him to expose himself, to oblige him to come out to
-become the prey of the iron hail. For this there are several means:
-
-Have the infantry advance during the preparation by the artillery;
-
-Simulate the attack;
-
-Finally a third method that can be transferred from the domain of fox
-hunting to that of the war with Germany: smoke him out.
-
-The first plan is not applicable from first trenches as they are too
-near the enemy; we shall speak of this again.
-
-In order to simulate an attack, interrupt the artillery fire suddenly
-and _open rifle fire with a great deal of shouting_; the enemy hurries
-out immediately to his combat positions; after several minutes’ waiting,
-a violent rafale of 75. This is what we did from time to time when we
-wished to make the Germans come out into their trenches so that we could
-demolish some of them by artillery fire. At Arras, there was a brusque
-interruption of artillery fire for ten minutes, but it was an absolute
-and impressive silence. The Germans were not misled by it, and when the
-interruption for the real attack came with its fusillade and noise, they
-manned their trenches to meet it.
-
-As a third scheme _we have suffocating grenades and cartridges_, which
-irritate the eyes and produce tears and render the neighborhood of the
-spot where they fall untenable for several minutes. We could also have
-projectiles of larger dimensions, containing materials giving off heavy,
-suffocating gas. Thus this gas would creep over the ground, fall into
-the bottom of the trenches, and enter the shelters, driving out the
-occupants, who would then come under the fire of the high-explosive
-shells. This gas, being, moreover, only suffocating, would afterwards
-have the advantage of not incommoding our soldiers in their trench or
-during the attack.
-
-While the heavy artillery may be replaced very advantageously by
-torpedoes for the preparation on the continuous line of trenches, it may
-be employed effectively against the centers of resistance, where its
-more concentrated effects will not produce the simply superficial
-disorganization of the 75, which leaves the cupolas of the machine guns
-intact.
-
-The most important part to destroy in the centers of resistance _are the
-edges_, for the attack breaks through easily enough in the intermediate
-spaces but immediately comes under flanking fire. Moreover, a center of
-resistance whose borders are disorganized, becomes a harmless island,
-the attack of which by main strength would be terribly costly; for
-instance, the Labyrinth, Neuville-Saint-Vaast, Carency, which were
-passed by in less than an hour by groups arriving at the Cemetery of
-Neuville, at the La Folie Woods, and at the first houses of Souchez.
-_Therefore try especially to neutralize the borders_ by concentrating on
-them the fire of batteries suitably placed with a view to following the
-attack on the intervals. If one could put a _veil over the centers of
-resistance_ to isolate them and obstruct the view of the flanking works,
-the problem would be partly solved. It would then be necessary to have
-projectiles giving off large quantities of heavy smoke, which would
-spread out over the ground and dissipate very slowly.
-
-The intermediate works in the intervals are easy to take because of
-their small dimensions. On the 9th of May, they were generally found
-knocked to pieces.
-
-
- (_c_) _Preparation against Artillery._
-
-_The infantry urgently demands that the hostile artillery be put out of
-action before the attack._ If the enemy artillery gets into action, the
-troops, crowded into the trenches, _boyaux_,[4] and parallels, have to
-suffer a painful bombardment, which causes losses and obliges everyone
-to hunt cover—an inauspicious attitude for troops which will have
-shortly to rush forward. Communications become difficult, the telephonic
-connections are broken, everyone gets nervous and perturbed. On the
-attack proper, artillery fire has an extraordinary disturbing effect;
-the bullets of the rifles and machine guns cause disorder by the sudden
-and serious losses they occasion, but the shells spread confusion almost
-solely by the sight and the crash of explosions. On the 9th of May, we
-hardly received any shells at all, not one during the attack itself, and
-this contributed in a large degree to the magnificent _élan_ of the
-first attacking waves.
-
-At Langemarck on the contrary, in a night attack on the trenches on the
-4th of December, the unsilenced hostile artillery bombarded our trenches
-of departure, and I had my second section dispersed through being
-saluted by a rafale of shrapnel that had put the chief of section and
-the file closers, _hors de combat_.
-
-In order to silence the hostile artillery, it seems that, knowing the
-probable emplacement of the batteries, it would be necessary suddenly
-and without warning to let loose on them a deluge of fire. The personnel
-of these batteries not being continually at their firing positions, this
-sudden tempest would surprise them and keep them inside their shelters.
-In the midst of the confusion, the fire of the batteries which try to
-get into action is much disturbed, impeded, and frequently interrupted.
-On the 9th of May, the hostile artillery must have been completely
-surprised and literally stupefied during the whole morning, for they
-abandoned their infantry. Only a few pieces fired some hasty shots.
-
-In order to render the emplacements of the batteries completely
-untenable, they might be overwhelmed with shells giving off clouds of
-smoke and also asphyxiating shells; by this means the cannoneers would
-be obliged to quit their pieces or serve them under extremely difficult
-conditions.
-
-The aviators hovering over the hostile lines could complete the
-preparation by indicating by means of luminous balls to the batteries on
-watch the hostile batteries not yet silenced or which have come into
-action.
-
-
- (_d_) _Preparation against Reinforcements and Reserves._
-
-In the second and third trenches, the garrison does not generally occupy
-its firing positions; it is obliged to get to them in case of attack. As
-long as the artillery preparation lasts, it does not budge from the
-shelters; but as soon as the artillery ceases its fire, the garrison
-hastily mans the positions. It is necessary then for the artillery to
-extend its fire to the second and third lines and to continue this fire
-while the infantry rushes the first line. The approach trenches and
-their junctions should especially be swept. This has, moreover, the
-advantage of keeping crouched in their holes the defenders of the first
-line, who are not reassured by sensing the compact sheaves of the
-terrible explosive passing close over their heads. The preparation on
-the second line of defense is absolutely identical.
-
-It is next necessary to cut the battlefield in two and isolate the zone
-of the first and second lines of defence, constantly manned by the
-troops near their combat positions, from the zone of cantonment. It is a
-matter of establishing an insuperable barrier. A barrier solely of
-ordinary shell fire is extremely expensive. The Germans have more simply
-solved the question by establishing a barrier of asphyxiating gas. They
-have employed this extremely effective scheme, it seems, at Bagatelle in
-the Argonne, on the 30th of June and the 1st and 2d of July.
-
-The bombardment of the cantonment by long-range heavy guns throws
-disorder among the troops who are at rest. Suddenly surprised in the
-most profound quietude, the alarm causes all the more flurry and
-demoralization. Obliged to follow roads sprinkled here and there with
-fragments, they thus arrive diminished in number on the field of battle.
-
-
- (_e_) _Destruction of Machine Guns._
-
-The weapon which inflicts the heaviest losses on infantry is the machine
-gun, which uncovers itself suddenly and in a few seconds lays out the
-assailants by ranks. It is therefore absolutely necessary to destroy
-them before the attack or have the means of putting them out of action
-as soon as they disclose themselves.
-
-During the days which precede the attack, a minute study of the hostile
-trenches should be made by the infantry officers who have to attack
-them, in concert with the artillery officers who pound the same
-trenches; their study should bear especially upon the emplacements of
-the hostile machine guns.
-
-The machine-gun emplacements are recognized in the continuous trenches
-by the low horizontal loopholes much larger than ordinary loopholes.
-They are generally quite easily recognized. Occasionally the machine
-guns are in a little separate work which is quite characteristic.
-
-Even when they cannot be directly observed, machine-gun emplacements
-should be pre-supposed in locations such as the following:
-
-1. In a re-entrant in the line.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-2. On the second line, particularly when it presents an elevated
-position permitting a tier of fire over the first line.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-3. Squarely in front to obtain a flanking fire; in this case, they are
-found in a small _boyau_ (branch trench) which leaves the principal
-trench, and it is very difficult to see them from the front.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Thus, in front of La Targette, in studying the position in profile and
-having moved considerably toward the right for that purpose, I
-discovered a machine-gun emplacement which completely enfiladed the
-front of the German trenches for 600 metres.
-
-One generally believes he recognizes a very large number of machine-gun
-emplacements; but it is infinitely better to mark the position of too
-many than to overlook one of them; moreover, the Germans have in their
-defensive organization an unsuspected number of them.
-
-_Means of Destroying the Machine Guns._—_Machine Guns of the
-Trenches._—In the course of preparation by artillery, a very distinct
-part of the program is reserved for the destruction of the machine-gun
-nests. The destruction of the machine guns should not be commenced as
-soon as they have been located, that is to say, often several days
-before the final preparations, for the enemy would have ample time to
-shift them. The 75 is employed to destroy the machine guns.
-Unfortunately, on account of the dispersion, it does not perfectly
-fulfil its rôle; its shots often fall to one side and a great number of
-them are often necessary to find exactly the small space that holds the
-machine gun.
-
-I recollect that before the attack of May 9, I fretted with impatience
-and went continually to find the artillery observer, as I saw an
-accursed rectangular loophole obstinately remain intact up to the end.
-When we started forward, fire burst out from this loophole, and two
-sections were wiped out.
-
-To destroy these machine guns, there would be needed not only cannon
-placed at 1,500 metres, which have many other tasks, but cannon placed
-in the trench itself. The _mountain 80_ seems to realize the desired
-conditions of effectiveness and mobility. Hidden in the trench before
-the preparation, it unmasks itself during that operation; it takes under
-direct fire like a rifle all the machine-gun shelters successively,
-occupying itself with those alone and not leaving them until they are
-all completely out of action.
-
-_Destruction of Machine Guns that may be set up outside the
-Trenches._—On the 9th of May, the survivors of my company and of the
-adjoining company, about eighty men, arrived at 11 o’clock[5] about 200
-metres from the cemetery of Neuville-Saint-Vaast. The cemetery being
-unoccupied, the field of battle seemed void of Germans. In the distance,
-the batteries were fleeing. Two machine guns remained in the mill; this
-was the only resistance over an immense space, but it was sufficient.
-Impossible for my men to advance; we signal the fact with difficulty to
-the artillery, which from this time on is under open field conditions;
-it opens fire a long time afterwards and mistakes the objective. Then
-before the eyes of our furious men, abandoned by all because they were
-too far to the front, the cemetery fills up with Germans. Four hours
-afterwards, the 146th appears on the field and is mowed down by the
-machine guns; the next day the 229th succeeds it; new repetition with a
-slight and extremely costly advance.
-
-With these machine guns revealing themselves thus without our being able
-to foresee their emplacement, and taking up positions to stop our
-progress in a region no longer familiar to us, we must have the means of
-suppressing them instantly. The field artillery is too far away;
-communication hardly exists after passing beyond the extremity of the
-telephone lines. The question is of the greatest importance and merits
-study. It would be absolutely necessary that the first waves of attack
-be followed, after the taking of the first lines of trenches, by light
-guns, the 37 for example, drawn by their cannoneers. These independent
-crews would be all eyes and ears to discover the machine guns and
-destroy them immediately. There are enough officers or noncommissioned
-officers of artillery to command them intelligently.
-
-
-
-
- III.
- FORM OF ATTACK.[6]
-
-
-To create a complete gap, it is necessary:
-
-(_a_) _To take the first line of the hostile defense (zone of the first
-trenches and centers of resistance)_;
-
-(_b_) _To take the second line of defense_;
-
-(_c_) _To prevent the enemy from reestablishing a barrier by the aid of
-reinforcements brought up in haste beyond the zone already fortified._
-
-To overcome successively these difficulties, one must have:
-
-(_a_) A first line of attack composed of several waves of assault with
-(as an element of preparation) a formidable artillery (field, heavy, and
-torpedo guns) minutely regulated.
-
-(_b_) A second line of attack as strong as the first, except perhaps in
-front of the centers of resistance, sent straight to the front all in
-one piece exactly like the first line. The same precise and effective
-artillery preparation is not here present, but it is compensated for by
-groups of light guns and machine guns destined rapidly to destroy all
-resistance. Accompanying batteries (_batteries d’accompagnement_) start
-as soon as the first trenches are taken.
-
-(_c_) A reserve without initial assignment, destined to reinforce any
-point and conquer any irreducible or hindering resistance. This reserve
-is entirely at the disposition of the superior commander, while the
-first and second lines are no longer in his hands after they are in
-their parallel of departure. On the 9th of May, this reserve was made up
-of the troops which should have normally composed the second line of
-attack, which did not exist. This explains the disastrous delay of its
-engagement, which was furthermore very hesitating, because it tried to
-maneuver before having broken through and waited for the mêlée to clear
-away in order to maneuver.
-
-(_d_) Cavalry, auto-cannon, auto-machine guns, battalions of infantry on
-automobiles with pioneer crews to clear the roads.—Large units, ready to
-commence new combats, capable of being brought up within two or three
-hours.—_Do not, after the hole has been pierced, depend any longer upon
-the regiments who made it._
-
-
- RÔLE OF THE FIRST LINE.[7]
-
-
- _Its Method of Action._
-
-The first line is composed of two or three waves. The features of the
-assault vary according to the distance to be crossed in getting at the
-enemy.
-
-_Distance Less than 100 Metres._—The first wave, composed of entire
-companies in line, the men at half-pace interval, rushes to the assault
-without pause as soon as the artillery fire ceases. It should endeavor
-to reach the enemy before he can get out of his shelters. It does not
-generally have to fire, except perhaps at the last moment in order to
-cross the entanglement if the enemy opens fire (see second case).
-
-_Distance Greater than 100 Metres._—Attack by waves of companies, in
-which those in front are divided into two parts:
-
-1. A line of skirmishers at 5 paces, formed either by one section
-deployed or by groups of skirmishers furnished by each section (calm and
-resolute men).
-
-2. Fifty metres behind comes the line of attack, men in one rank, elbow
-to elbow or at one pace; the company and section[8] commanders in front
-of the line; four metres behind the line of attack, the rank formed by
-the file closers.
-
-In this case, one cannot count on surprising the enemy; he will open a
-more or less violent fire, especially during the crossing of the wire
-entanglement. It is very illusory to imagine that any company is stoical
-enough to allow itself to be fired on at point blank without replying
-when it distinctly sees the enemy; it will be necessary to open fire,
-and this will throw the assaulting line into disorder.
-
-The thin line of skirmishers is intended to give this protection by fire
-in order that the line of attack may keep its elbow-to-elbow formation
-without firing until almost the last.
-
-At Neuville-Saint-Vaast, I was obliged personally to act as a
-skirmisher, and I have since then strongly felt that something was
-lacking in our line of attack. We arrived at the first entanglement at
-80 metres from the enemy without firing, but there on account of the
-violence of the adverse fire, our fusillade broke out. I myself recall
-that I marched straight ahead under the protection of my rifle. Every
-time a “flat cap” raised up and aimed at me, I threw the rifle to my
-shoulder rapidly; my shot came near enough to make him duck; I profited
-by this short respite to advance into the wire or dash ahead some 20
-metres, always watching and firing whenever a “flat cap” reappeared.
-Thus, emptying the magazine on the march, I was able to mount the
-parapet of the German trench without having permitted the enemy to fire
-a single aimed shot at me. If the man who marches unprotected in the
-spaces swept by bullets scorns the danger, the one who is sheltered is
-inclined to exaggerate toward the side of protection, and the men who
-are in the trenches when the bullets pass cannot keep from instinctively
-ducking. It is a sensation which the attack should take advantage of.
-
-The skirmishers should be calm and resolute men, and good shots (often
-old reserve soldiers, well seasoned and less susceptible of losing their
-nerve and intent upon preserving their own lives).
-
-They should each march upon a particular point of the hostile trench and
-watch it closely. They open fire only when they get the order from the
-company commander marching between the two echelons.
-
-This manner of making the assault strongly resembles that brought out by
-De Wet in “Three Years of War.” It is the individual assault where each
-soldier shows himself as a real fighter.
-
-_The March on the Line of Attack._—Each echelon starts out successively
-at a single bound and moves at a walk (even in cadence, if it were
-possible). It is curious to observe how much this pace conduces to cold
-resolution and fierce scorn of the adversary. At Neuville, _all units
-instinctively started at a walk_. Afterwards take the double time at
-slow cadence, in order to maintain the cohesion; make several rushes, if
-necessary, of 80 to 100 metres. They should not be multiplied, at the
-risk of breaking the _élan_.
-
-When a great effort has been made to scorn the fire of the adversary, it
-should not be destroyed by a change to an attitude signifying fear.
-
-At 60 metres from the enemy, break into charge.
-
-_The Alignment._—To march in line is a capital point, the importance of
-which one must have experienced in tragic moments to tell how prodigious
-is its influence. Moreover, the march in line is as old as war itself.
-The alignment holds each in his place, carries along those who hesitate,
-holds back the enthusiasts, and gives to everyone the warm and
-irresistible feeling of mutual confidence. At Neuville, we marched at
-first at a walk, then at a slow double time, aligned as on parade. I
-constantly heard behind me through the rattling of the machine guns, the
-epic, splendid shout of supreme encouragement running all along the
-line, “Keep in line! Keep in line!” down to the humble reservist, C—,
-who in spite of the bullets making gaps all about in the ranks, kept all
-of his young and agitated comrades on the line.
-
-Thus rushing like a wall, we were irresistible.
-
-_Crossing the Wire Entanglements._—From the moment the entanglement is
-reached, the period of charge and individual combat begins. The men can
-no longer be kept from firing; each one tries to protect himself with
-his own rifle.
-
-At Neuville, we arrived at a first entanglement at 80 metres from the
-trenches almost in line and without firing. At the entanglement we lay
-down, and fire was opened; each one crossed the entanglement
-individually, lay down on the other side, and recommenced firing. The
-line reformed without interruption of fire. I then wished to cease
-firing in order to charge, but they did not hear me. Then I stood up,
-ran alone toward the enemy, and seeing me thus, the company immediately
-arose and dashed across the second entanglement.
-
-_Taking the Other Trenches._—The first trench taken, it should be
-cleaned out, not a man capable of doing harm should be left behind; it
-will not do to leave to others, for instance to the grenadiers, the task
-of destroying those who can still harm us. At Neuville, we crossed the
-first trench in one rush and marched on without stopping; it was then
-that we were shot at from behind and obliged to turn back to massacre
-them all.
-
-The first trench conquered, the line should be reformed lying down ten
-metres beyond the trench. Each man arriving on this new line should open
-fire against the defenders of the second trench. When the line is
-reformed, it should start the attack again as before.
-
-The following trenches are crossed without interruption, always
-advancing.
-
-For the first wave, _there is no limit_; let it go through as far as
-possible. On the 9th of May, the first line ran without stopping as far
-as the cemetery of Neuville, La Folie Woods, and the first houses of
-Souchez.
-
-The second wave should start forward at the moment the first line
-reaches the hostile trenches. If it starts sooner, it will unite with
-the first at the entanglement and be involved in the fight for the first
-trench; it will be broken up prematurely, and from the moment that it is
-no longer a separate mass, it cannot be considered as a reinforcement.
-
-While the first wave drives straight ahead, and can do nothing against
-the surprises of the enemy, the second and third waves, warned by what
-happens to the first, can thus take certain precautions without
-diminishing their _élan_, such as obliquing the sections that would be
-exposed to the fire of machine guns not yet out of action.
-
-The reinforcement by successive waves of entire companies leads to a
-vexatious mixture of units. It is necessary that the surviving officers
-and noncommissioned officers group around them men of their own company
-but not miscellaneous units.
-
-
- _Instruction of the First Line._
-
-The assault being the most severe phase of the combat, it is necessary,
-in order to face it and push it through, that the will of each
-individual be transformed largely by habits and reflexes. Therefore,
-hold each day an assault exercise over ground which resembles in detail
-that over which the real assault will have to be made.
-
-The points which should be borne in mind are as follows:
-
-_The Alignment._—Be particularly strict on this question; its extreme
-importance is recognized. See that the line is extremely well dressed
-during the execution of the rushes.
-
-_The Charge._—The company, kept in line, is thus led to a short distance
-from the enemy and there released. Then all together along the whole
-line, lower the bayonets to the height of the waist; this has an
-extremely impressive effect.
-
-The charge should be frenzied and furious, and this the men should well
-understand.
-
-_The File Closers._—The file closers should form a rank four metres
-behind the line, repeating the commands, watching especially the
-alignment, and maintaining each man in his place by calling to him by
-name. One can hardly realize the effectiveness of these personal
-observations in the midst of the bullets. We have no file closers; our
-noncommissioned officers have a general tendency to run out in front
-like the bravest soldiers to get into the individual fight, forgetting
-their men; their training and duties as file closers should receive
-constant attention during the exercises in the assault.
-
-_Taking the Next Trenches._—_Pursuit over Free Ground._—Generally in
-assaulting exercises, everything stops after the first trench is taken;
-everyone is out of breath, and only a few men here and there, generally
-noncommissioned officers, try to push on shouting, but soon, being
-absolutely alone, they have to lie down panting and spent. This is what
-always happens in our battalion exercises.
-
-The exercise means nothing unless there is impressed on the mind of
-everyone the deep-rooted idea of routing all the defenders in one sweep.
-Each man should know that after having crossed the first trench, he
-should go on a few paces, lie down, open fire on the hostile groups who
-occupy the second trench, then get ready to start forward as before, and
-charge again with the same vigor in spite of fatigue.
-
-We always did this in our exercises, and it was done the same way on the
-9th of May. I know men who were shot in the back by German wounded after
-having crossed the first trench to reform beyond it as had been
-prescribed. In spite of frightful gaps, a line of men kneeling was,
-however, reformed beyond the conquered trench and by its fire drove the
-defenders of the second trench back into their holes.
-
-As long as there remains a trench to conquer, _prohibit absolutely all
-advance through the boyaux_ (communicating trenches); always reform in
-line. But the trenches having been taken, the zone of open ground is
-reached where the enemy will try to reestablish some resistance here and
-there; it will be necessary to advance with more precaution _and to try
-and creep through inside his lines and throw him into disorder by
-surprise_. Form in each section patrols, each one having at least one
-noncommissioned officer; they should be trained to start out
-spontaneously as soon as the defenses of the enemy have been passed, and
-to spread out in front of the company, trying to creep through the
-_boyaux_ to get possession of important points without being seen. These
-patrols, equipped with revolvers and grenades, should be practised in
-exercises involving combats in _boyaux_.
-
-_Skirmish Formation._—In close combat, men fight much more by shooting
-at point blank and very often from the hip than with the bayonet. The
-man should therefore be trained to use his rifle in close fighting.
-
-First teach him to watch that part of the parapet and the loopholes on
-which he marches in order to forestall the shots of the enemy; then to
-aim rapidly, throwing the piece to the shoulder to get the first shot at
-the enemy who is aiming at him; begin by bringing up the piece and
-aiming slowly, and then increase the rapidity of movement; the man
-should observe each time where his line of sight strikes. He should have
-his magazine filled for hand-to-hand fighting and know how to refill it
-lying down or while running. Thanks to this precaution, after having
-emptied my magazine at the first entanglement, I was able to hold my own
-with full magazine against three Germans who got in my way.
-
-
- RÔLE OF THE SECOND LINE, THE “REINFORCEMENTS.”[9]
-
-
- _Its Method of Action._
-
-The most important question concerning the penetration of the enemy’s
-line is perhaps the action of the reinforcements (_renforts_), and as
-that action has always fallen short, we have never been able to attain
-the victory which has seemed so nearly within our reach.
-
-The inertia of the second line and its expenditure without effect arise
-from two causes.
-
-To take the first trenches is a task relatively easy; the artillery
-preparation is minutely regulated; the terrain is well known, and the
-attack is therefore free and open and is pushed through without
-reservation. But when the first lines have been crossed, one enters
-thenceforth into the domain of the unknown, one is on the lookout for
-ambushes and apprehends an unexpected trap at each step; this
-disquietude slows up the march and quickly transforms into a surprise
-the least activity of the enemy. A resistance which starts up suddenly
-intimidates and paralyses the second line immediately, because the fear
-of the enemy leads to exaggeration of his strength and the mental
-disturbance prevents locating and estimating him rapidly. In addition,
-the reinforcements have during long hours of waiting been subjected to a
-very demoralizing artillery fire.
-
-All these causes so influence the second line that when it goes into
-action, it attacks without spirit and soon stops.
-
-The second cause arises, as I have previously mentioned, from a faulty
-conception of the action of the second line.
-
-In place of having a second line of attack analogous to the first,
-coming into the fight in one body and marching straight on to the
-assigned objectives, the superior commander uses these troops as
-reinforcements, which he throws in at the point where he judges their
-employment necessary. _Now it is impossible for this commander to see
-clearly in the mêlée, he must wait a long time for the situation to
-unravel, and as it is necessary for him to be properly informed to send
-in his reinforcements opportunely, they always arrive too late._ Having
-generally received orders which are ill defined and not having been able
-to prepare beforehand for the rôle that falls to them, their attitude is
-necessarily weak and hesitating.[10]
-
-It is absolutely necessary to keep pushing on in a brutal, preconceived,
-and almost unintelligent manner until the last link is broken, otherwise
-hostile reinforcements will suddenly arrive and shatter the supreme
-effort.
-
-_Choice of Troops for the Second Line._—This line being subject to the
-severe trial of bombardment and of the rifle fire directed on the first
-line sweeping the ground behind, and being obliged to act with as much
-decision as the troops of the first line, it should be particularly well
-officered and be composed of troops of excellent spirit; now it often
-happens that less reliable troops are placed in this line, and far from
-pushing the first line forward, they stop short of it.
-
-_Location of the Troops of the Second Line. The Moment for Putting Them
-in Action._—During the preparation, the troops of the second line await
-their turn in the shelters which open into the approach _boyaux_. It
-would be very advantageous if they could be placed as close as possible
-to the parallel of departure[11] in order to profit from the more or
-less complete protection against hostile artillery fire which comes from
-being close to the hostile trenches; but in general this will not be
-possible, except where the German and French trenches are separated by a
-considerable distance; in this case, there will be enough space between
-the parallel of departure and the old trench to install several support
-trenches.
-
-When the first line has entirely departed, the units of the second line
-take their place in the parallel of departure and form there. _While not
-waiting there too long, it is absolutely necessary that the second-line
-troops entirely separate their effort from the effort of the troops
-preceding them._ They should start forward when the latter have almost
-taken the first zone of defense. A premature departure would mix their
-action with that of the first waves, and they would be absorbed in the
-same combat. Thus prematurely consumed and broken up, they would be
-incapable of continuing their action and would add nothing to the effort
-of the preceding troops.
-
-_Taking the Formation for Combat._—The units of the second line should
-take their combat formation from the parallel of departure and from
-there be oriented on a well fixed objective; in fact, they risk coming
-unexpectedly under fire and should be ready for it at any time. There
-is, moreover, a reason of a moral order for it, which has been very
-often tested out. When taking the formation for combat, that is to say,
-when getting ready to fight the enemy before even having seen him, it
-seems that each one becomes imbued with a cold and silent resolution,
-which is alone irresistible. Taking formation under the pressure of
-danger, however, seems more like a check, and there comes out of it a
-demoralizing sensation of sudden fear and disorder.
-
-_Formation._—The conditions which the formation should fulfil are the
-following: to be supple in order to adapt itself immediately to the
-exigencies of the situation; to be as invulnerable as possible so that
-it may escape the effects of a sudden destructive fire.
-
-For a company, the formation seems to be that of two lines about 150
-metres apart, the skirmishers three or four paces apart, the company
-commander marching between the two lines so that he can see what the
-first line sees without being entirely involved in its combat.
-
-The march has been generally conducted in small columns at deploying
-intervals, as it seems that this formation is the more supple and
-permits of a better utilization of the terrain. This is true only in
-time of peace, but in war one must deploy a long time before the bullets
-arrive.
-
-_March and Use of Ground._—Each company marches _at a walk_ straight
-toward its objective and _in line_ as long as it is not subjected to
-direct fire; it thus avoids the irregularities which arise from the
-anxiety to make use of the ground, when from now on, only one anxiety
-should prevail, that of routing the enemy.
-
-There is generally a tendency to try to make use of the hostile _boyaux_
-and trenches as lines of advance. Even if they should permit approach by
-surprise and without loss, they divide up the company and break the
-formations for attack; furthermore an extraordinary difficulty is
-experienced in leaving them when the bullets whistle and the moment
-comes for getting out on the open field.
-
-I shall always remember Fonquevillers, where I persisted in following
-with my company a narrow approach which brought me near the enemy, and I
-know that we had much trouble in leaving it. I have often thought since
-that it would have been preferable to take a combat position in a hollow
-road a little further to the rear parallel to the enemy’s front, at 400
-metres.
-
-_Combat of Units of the Second Line._—The units of the first line,
-having made their effort, have been finally stopped on the whole front
-by a series of resistances. The troops of the second line have received
-as their mission only the two following objects:
-
-To master a well-defined zone up to a certain point;
-
-To master the borders of a center of resistance on the flank of troops
-that have pushed into the intervals.
-
-Eventually they may at certain points receive the order to throw back a
-counter-offensive and to pursue.
-
-When the troops of the second line arrive in the proximity of the troops
-of the first line who have been stopped, there should be no idea of
-maneuvering nor of consultation, but as in the case of the first enemy
-trench, they must carry through _the assault without hesitation_.
-
-Two cases are presented according to the distance that separates the
-fractions of the halted first line from the hostile resistance:
-
-1. Distance less than 200 metres:
-
-If the stopped first line can maintain itself at the limit of its
-progression, it is generally not in an open field. Its line will serve
-as a parallel of departure for the units of the second line. These units
-at first try to reach the line of shelter where they will be formed.
-Their assaulting formation results from the march formation, and the
-waves will be composed of half companies.
-
-The first wave rushes out of cover at the double to at least half the
-distance and opens fire; fire being opened, the second wave rushes _in
-line_ and carries along the first.
-
-Here the firing cannot be prevented, as artillery support, now faulty,
-has to be replaced by rifle fire, to which is joined the fire of machine
-guns and light cannon, which alone can make possible so fearful an
-assault.
-
-2. Distance more than 200 metres—Progression and Assault:
-
-The new difficulty is to build up at assaulting distance from the enemy
-a line of assault in a sort of parallel of departure.
-
-To arrive at assaulting distance, advance by thin lines formed by
-halving the skirmish lines already deployed; these lines, at least 100
-metres apart, advance successively by alternate rushes, then unite on
-the line designated as the starting point for the assault.
-
-A natural parallel of departure may exist or may partially exist, or it
-may not exist at all. In the second case, the line of shelters must be
-adapted, and in the third case it must be created in order to be able to
-stay a few moments at a short distance from the enemy without being
-destroyed. To facilitate this extremely difficult and dangerous
-construction, it is a good thing to have each man fill a sand bag at the
-last shelter and put in some stones, which, while not bulky, stop the
-bullets. Each man makes his rushes with his sand bag, which protects him
-partially during the halts. Having reached the line fixed upon for the
-parallel, this sand bag serves him as a cover, which he has only to
-complete rapidly. Each man then enlarges his shelter so as to
-accommodate near comrades.
-
-The first wave, reformed at the assaulting distance, makes the assault
-as before. At times, the losses and the confusion of units may lead to
-an assault by entire companies.
-
-The second and third waves follow and imitate the movements of the
-first.
-
-
- _Machine Guns and Light Cannon._
-
-The artillery can only give the second line a support which is often
-partial and not very effective; its action must be replaced at whatever
-cost by other means, such as machine guns for sweeping the hostile
-firing line and light cannon to instantly destroy the hostile machine
-guns.
-
-_Location of the Machine-Gun and Gun Crews during the Assault._—These
-detachments follow the last waves of the first line, and they therefore
-are not directly taken under fire and can profit by the indications of
-the fight of the first line and so be in a way to act effectively when
-the second line comes into action.
-
-_Machine Guns._—The machine gun is an element of attack and the most
-terrible arm of close fighting. However, it is employed in the attack
-only to man the positions taken or to support the infantry elements from
-a distance. This is nonsense: to give it such a rôle, one could never
-have trembled with rage and impotence at a few paces from the enemy,
-whom he could not get at.
-
-The machine gun should be pushed as far as possible in front of the
-halted line of fire. If it remains behind or abreast of the fighting
-line, its field of fire is generally blocked or masked by the slightest
-movement; in advance of the line, it will enable the infantry line to
-advance for some time under the cover of its fire; it is the tooth of
-the attack. It can move forward, its crew of a few men can creep along
-the smallest pathway, and a shell hole is sufficient for its shelter; in
-the skirmish chain a whole ditch is necessary. Will it lack ammunition,
-having only the boxes that the gun crew carries sometimes incomplete?
-No, for it has only to fire on rare occasions, for example, at the
-moment of assault. If it is taken, what does that matter—we will take
-ten from the enemy. The problem would be much simplified _with a few
-automatic rifles_.
-
-_Light Cannon._—We have spoken of the rôle of light cannon in the
-paragraph relating to the destruction of machine guns.
-
-
- _Instruction of Units of the Second Line._
-
-This instruction proposes to create the reflex of immediately attacking
-all resistance that appears and of developing presence of mind by
-inventing sudden incidents requiring the taking of a rapid decision. In
-a word, to add a spirit of prompt decision in the troops of the second
-line to the irresistible _élan_ which one tries to develop in all
-assaulting troops.
-
-The troops of the second line when facing a resistance should have only
-one idea: to assault as soon as possible and for that purpose to try to
-bring about the two following conditions:
-
-_To create a sort of parallel of departure at assaulting distance_;
-
-_To obtain superiority of fire by all means at their disposal._
-
-We will study by means of examples the two preceding cases cited. Troops
-of the second line should know them by heart, because all cases resemble
-them more or less.
-
-_First Case._—We reach the first line, halted under cover at 150 metres
-from the enemy; this is a case of organizing a long-distance assault.
-
-Attention should be focussed on the following points:
-
-1. Reestablishment of Order and Calm.
-
-The line of cover is an extemporized parallel, the men are crowded into
-uncomfortable positions, several units are mixed. These are conditions
-likely to create disorder, the worst enemy of the assault. Think well as
-long as you are under cover because amid the bullets you march straight
-ahead without thinking. Transmit simple indications from man to man and
-orders to the chiefs of section by note.
-
-Have all cease firing except the best shots; firing unnerves and
-distracts the noncommissioned officers and soldiers. On the contrary,
-silence is at once a mark of order; it impresses the men who collect
-themselves and make the appeal for a supreme resolution to their inner
-selves.
-
-2. Gaining Superiority of Fire.
-
-It can be obtained in the two following ways:
-
-The execution of an intense fire by the whole line;
-
-The execution of a slow, deadly, and precise fire by the best shots,
-well concealed.
-
-The men are under cover, consequently it is possible to avoid the first
-plan, which is noisy and not particularly effective but which
-circumstances beyond our control sometimes make necessary.
-
-The best shots are designated by the chiefs of section. They construct
-masks in front of themselves, behind which they fire obliquely, that is
-to say, under excellent conditions of security and calm. They locate an
-adversary, keep aiming at him and firing each time that he appears, and
-they go successively from right to left. This method is very effective;
-the enemy does not dare to fire any more, and it soon seems as if his
-trench were empty.
-
-In addition if possible, get a small group to the front or on the flank,
-who will protect a forward movement by their fire.
-
-3. Execution of the Assault.
-
-“The first and second sections will move out under command of Lieutenant
-X and will make a rush of 80 metres. Open fire after the rush.”
-
-The movement should be simultaneous and without warning to the enemy;
-the following suggestions are made:
-
-“Prepare to rush, look toward Lieutenant X, hide your bayonets.”
-
-The movement having been executed by the first echelon and fire opened,
-the second echelon rushes in its turn, aligned at a quick pace, then at
-double time, and carries along the first.
-
-From the moment of the charge, each man rushes on the enemy and fires if
-necessary.
-
-_Second Case._—The units of the first line have been stopped at more
-than 200 metres from the enemy, say at 500 metres.
-
-Move forward, executing short, rapid rushes without firing, in thin
-lines which are united at assaulting distance from the enemy.
-
-The formation of successive lines for rushing is extremely simple. The
-company having arrived at a sheltered line beyond which extends an open
-space, the company commander commands:
-
-“In thin lines by half section, at 100 metres distance by short rushes:
-1st and 3d Sections, forward.”
-
-He personally goes out with the first line to select the emplacement
-where he will halt it.
-
-Each of the 1st and 3d Sections sends out two squads (1, 3, 9, 11). The
-men immediately take 6 pace intervals. This forms the first line, which
-is followed by a second, and so on, the rushes of each line alternating
-with those of the preceding one.
-
-The construction of the parallel of departure is accomplished as has
-been indicated above.
-
-
- _Instruction of the Machine-Gun Sections._
-
-The machine-gun sections should participate in the exercises with the
-infantry. They should be accustomed to grasp the idea of the situation
-rapidly and to replace the fire of the attacking infantry either by
-taking a position in rear or on the flanks which will permit them to
-fire up to the end of the action without being hindered by the movement
-to the front, or by going squarely out in advance of the halted line.
-
-This last case should be particularly studied; the Germans have shown it
-to us, and it is therefore possible; I know that it is very effective
-(25th of August at Crevic).
-
-Therefore train them to get used to picking out cover, however
-insignificant, as a position for a machine gun and to utilize the ground
-skilfully and rush rapidly with the matériel in order to make themselves
-invisible or indiscernible;
-
-To arrange shelter rapidly, to create a mask in front, and arrange for
-oblique fire, in order that the personnel may not be rapidly destroyed;
-
-To keep still and try to be forgotten until the moment of assault.
-
-The crews of the light guns should be attached to the infantry and learn
-to cooperate with it instead of being independent.
-
-
- _Exercises to Develop the Spirit of Decision in the Second Line._
-
-In front of any resistance whatever, the units of the second line should
-have but two ideas:
-
-To take positions rapidly for the assault;
-
-To assault.
-
-The dispositions for the assault are:
-
-The creation or adaptation of a line of a shelter at assaulting
-distance;
-
-The rapid gaining of superiority of fire.
-
-All the work of maneuver is reduced to the realization of these two
-ideas. It is a question of applying in slightly varying circumstances
-the two classic studies above indicated, and one should know them
-perfectly.
-
-To develop presence of mind in the noncommissioned officers and
-suppleness in the organization, situations analogous to those formerly
-used on the drill ground such as, “Cavalry to the right—in rear” should
-be devised.
-
-Choose a parallel of departure and have the troops of the second line
-take their formation and march on the objectives designated in advance.
-Suddenly call out, “Enemy resistance on such a line, our first elements
-are stopped at such a point ... hostile machine guns in such a region.”
-Then everybody, infantry, machine guns, light canon, instantly take up
-their dispositions.
-
-By representing the enemy and having him fire blank cartridges, one
-becomes accustomed to making rapid reconnaissance of resistances.
-
-
-
-
- IV.
- PREPARATION OF THE TROOPS FOR PENETRATION.
-
-
-The battle of today, since the last evolution of the war, is only a
-succession of assaults. The assault being the hardest and most murderous
-phase of the combat, before which the attack generally breaks down, we
-should only undertake it with assaulting troops. All troops are far from
-being assaulting troops; they need a well established cohesion and a
-special training.
-
-In nine months of campaign, I have only twice had a company really
-capable of delivering the assault: that of the active regiment, which
-was eager to charge at whatever cost at Morhange, and that of
-Neuville-Saint-Vaast, toward which during the assault, I turned but
-twice—when we started and when I fell.
-
-
- THE COHESION.
-
-In order that an organization may be capable of reaching the enemy, it
-is necessary for each man to be thoroughly convinced that his neighbor
-will march at his side and not abandon him; he should not have to turn
-around to see whether his comrade is coming. This requires a solidly
-established cohesion. Cohesion is very difficult to obtain with the
-continual renewal of men and noncommissioned officers; to cement it
-well, the men must have lived long together and have borne the same
-hardships during which are strengthened the sentiments of solidarity and
-affection which create in the company invisible bonds, stronger than all
-discipline and the only ones capable of resisting the fierce egoism of
-the battlefield.
-
-The company must also have been tried out by experiences severe enough
-for everyone to be able to estimate what his leaders and neighbors are
-worth under circumstances where borrowed masks fall off. Thus habit,
-friendship, and confidence make no difference in the appearance of a
-company; it is the battle alone that unveils these qualities in their
-full staunchness and value.
-
-The company of the 9th of May had been in existence at least four
-months, that is, the last considerable reinforcements had been present
-about four months. We had indeed received newer recruits, but they were
-not sufficient to change the spirit of the company. We had lived in the
-Belgian trench where the material side of the situation could not have
-been more miserable. Without having suffered serious losses, we had been
-at times very roughly used, so that all the men had an idea of the
-trials of war.
-
-Thus trench life is an excellent school for cohesion, but a company
-which moves forward directly from trench life would not be capable of
-attacking as we should like. Trench life is deteriorating and destroys
-in the mind of the man the idea that he belongs to a unit, to an
-organization. It should be completed by a period of exercises.
-
-During the period of exercises, the work should be toward cohesion by
-establishing an exact discipline, difficult to obtain in the trenches,
-by punctually requiring the marks of respect, and by paying close
-attention to the uniform and personal appearance. All these details have
-a prime moral importance; nothing is more demoralizing for the soldier
-than to see around him his comrades badly dressed and negligent in their
-duty; he evidently finds at times that this is more convenient but at
-heart he lacks confidence because he well knows that in this troop of
-Bohemians, without faith or order, everyone will go his own way in the
-moment of danger. The daily aspect of a company, carefully uniformed and
-well disciplined, gives him, on the contrary, a feeling of reassurance
-and confidence.
-
- “... Mais par un prompt renfort
- Nous nous vîmes trois mille en arrivant au port
- Tant à nous voir marcher en _si bel équipage_
- Les plus épouvantés reprenaient de courage.”
-
-This is what our battalion commander often quoted to us.
-
-Combat exercises by entire units, close-order drill, and passing in
-review which should always close an exercise session, contribute to
-develop the sentiment, which becomes blunted in the trenches, that the
-soldier belongs to a unit, compact and articulate.
-
-The trench produces cohesion in the _small group_, the period of
-exercise the _cohesion in the organization_.
-
-
- THE OFFENSIVE SPIRIT.
-
-In order to rush headlong at the enemy out in the open, where at any
-moment shot and shell may do its worst, one must have an exuberance of
-energy. This increase of courage exists only among troops who have for a
-long time been able to accumulate reserves of moral force. A unit that
-has recently made a bloody effort is incapable of delivering a _furious
-and unlimited assault_, such as we wish for. It might with trouble take
-a line of trenches and there hastily take cover. The supply of energy is
-used up quickly and comes back very slowly; the memory of the terrible
-dangers must be dulled. In a combat, the expenditure of energy is at
-once physical and nervous, but rather nervous than physical. Now the
-mistake is often made of thinking that an organization is in fighting
-condition when it has again taken on a good appearance and seems in
-excellent form. A few nights of sleep and a few days of good food are
-sufficient to restore the physique, but the nerve cells are reformed
-with all the slowness that is characteristic of them. How many times,
-some days after bloody fights which have left me weak and emaciated,
-have I found myself in a state of flourishing health almost shameful for
-a soldier, and felt at the same time a faltering courage at heart!
-
-To try to attack with troops already dejected or insufficiently
-recovered is to march to meet a certain and bloody defeat. It is
-sufficient to see the troops with which the attempts to break through at
-Neuville in the month of June were made and their result, known in
-advance by the discouraged officers. The almost destroyed regiments that
-had made the magnificent attacks of May 9 and had occupied the conquered
-ground under the worst bombardments until the 25th, had been reorganized
-with dispirited officers and noncommissioned officers, and were the
-sorriest soldiers that one could see—men recalled after having been
-formerly rejected, incompletely instructed, and of rather mediocre
-spirit. The few survivors of the splendid days of May, instead of being
-exalted by the memory of these exploits, had retained the memory of the
-massacre which had left them almost alone among their former officers
-and two hundred comrades. Two weeks rest and a new attack with the
-painful result which covered the famous regiments with unmerited shame;
-companies hesitating to leave their trenches, officers obliged to drive
-their men, the slaughter of abandoned noncommissioned officers.
-
-Therefore do not attack except with troops that have not made a bloody
-effort for a long time and who have been able to recuperate their supply
-of energy.
-
-The second condition under which troops attack without thought of
-sparing themselves is when they truly feel that the action in which they
-are going to engage is worth the immense sacrifice of life. Each man
-down to the most humble feels conscious that his existence is of
-inestimable value, that it represents many efforts, many troubles, and
-many affections. The infantry soldier has so many and many occasions to
-die that he only gives himself up to it on real occasions, and this calm
-and conscientious self-denial which irritates those who would like to
-find the troops ever responsive to their orders is of a supreme
-grandeur. When one has seen the death and suffering of the soldier at
-close range, one ties to him as to one’s self and does not expose him
-for every whim. The soldier understands this thoroughly, and when he is
-told that it is “_pour la Patrie_,” he then goes in for all he is worth,
-and so it is that the chief who has not stormed and fumed in vain is
-rewarded for his wisdom.
-
-The coming of the generals who know how to talk to the men who will meet
-their death with simplicity and conviction, has a profound and decisive
-influence on the open-hearted mass of infantrymen. Handling soldiers was
-formerly the greatest accomplishment of commanders, who did not confine
-themselves to the brief and abstract formulas of their orders. _Today as
-formerly, the word of the great chief, rational and assured, is graven
-in ineffaceable letters in the hearts of the combatants._ Beyond the
-chief, the soldier clearly sees his native country, whose supreme will
-still claims the sacrifice, and in himself he feels his courage harden.
-
-Toward the 15th of April, returning from Belgium, our regiment passed in
-review before General F—, our former Corps Commander, who assembled the
-officers and said to them: “We are going to attempt another
-maneuver ..., the waiting has come to an end, we are going after them
-..., we have today cannon and ammunition in abundance, we will crush
-their shelters, we will destroy their machine guns.... Then the infantry
-will be launched and will crush them; after the first ones, there will
-be others ..., then others ...; if we do not succeed, we shall have no
-one to blame but ourselves.” These words sank into the hearts of the
-company officers, and they repeated them with conviction to their
-soldiers, and the latter heard them so well that they surpassed all that
-could have been expected; they are not the ones whom General F— might
-blame.
-
-Thus the troops see clearly the object, but the moral preparation would
-be insufficient if the man felt himself incapable of accomplishing it.
-Each day the officers should instil in the troops the idea of the effort
-and show them how it may be realized; there are even questions
-concerning the instinct of preservation that it is well to bring into
-play. Thus instead of fearing the ordeal, the man little by little gets
-accustomed to the idea of facing it.
-
-It remains now to complete and exalt the offensive spirit by an intense
-period of appropriate exercises. Trench life has a tendency to kill the
-offensive spirit of the troops. They think only of protecting
-themselves, they are always under cover, they circulate in the _boyaux_,
-and all this creates a horror of the open ground. Daily experiences,
-such as not being able to show one’s head without running the risk of
-receiving a bullet in the face, create a very acute sensation of danger.
-They dare no longer stir, and to attack the terrible trenches of the
-enemy which one cannot look at even for a second seems a mad and
-irrealizable project. The service in the trenches creates terror of the
-hostile trench.
-
-
- _The Man Must Be Put into Forward Movement_
-
-Make him run, jump, and rush in the open spaces; let him get intoxicated
-with air and movement; the attitude creates the mentality. As soon as he
-has lost the habit of hanging his head and hunching his back, he has
-also lost his exaggerated prudence and the fear of unsheltered spaces.
-
-At the cantonments at Fiefs and Berles, where we passed a fortnight
-before the 9th of May, the afternoons were entirely given up to sport.
-We organized “field days” in the woods, obstacle races, and the men,
-recruits and old reservists, galloped through these spring days with
-absolutely unbounded animation. To give the men the habit of moving
-without anxiety over open ground where the bullets whistled, I took
-advantage of the nights when we were working on saps and parallels to
-make them march in patrols a short distance in front of the lines. If I
-saw that the workmen were thinking of crouching down, I made them stand
-up for a while; as for me, I fortified myself by walking up and down in
-front of the working party.
-
-We wished for an irresistible assault and therefore tried to inculcate
-in the men the instinct of hand-to-hand fighting, at which they
-ordinarily hesitate with the result that the close combat is stopped for
-days and months at a few score metres from the enemy. We had bayonet
-fencing, but it was a demoniacal fencing, the fencing of the chargers of
-Froeschwiller.
-
-The fencing exercises, carried out by the company to prepare for the
-attack, were as follows: first, a brief review of the movements, then
-immediately fencing on the run; the men were formed at a few paces
-intervals and then started on a run; it was “Halt! Thrust! Thrust
-again!” They started again, climbed the embankments, lunged and relunged
-furiously; they got winded, so much the worse.... “Right face!” and
-everyone ran to the right, descended the slope stabbing and stabbing
-again, getting excited and feverish, the officers and sergeants
-galloping more furiously than the rest.
-
-Afterwards fencing with the dummy. We had stuffed sacks full of straw
-and made them smaller each day to make a smaller target and oblige the
-men to be more accurate in their thrusts.
-
-Each man attacked the dummy individually, shouting with all the frenzy
-of which his imagination was capable, and those who attacked the best,
-with the greatest _élan_, went over it again to show their comrades how
-to do it. It was no play, they knew enough of the Germans to believe
-them in front of them, and I recall that among those from Gascony,
-Toulouse, and Provence, who formed the basis of the company, some
-shouted with frenzy, “Piquo, Piquo!”
-
-In order to give more movement, the exercise against the dummy was
-arranged in the following manner:
-
-In a quite tangled wood, we established obstacles by cutting down bushes
-over a course of 80 metres. Then here and there we placed the dummies.
-Thus on a fairly short course the man was obliged to run, jump, bend
-down, attack, and this in every manner, for we placed the dummies in
-such a way that the man had to combine his attack with right face, left
-face, face to the rear, or with crossing an obstacle. This exercise
-particularly interested the men, and as we measured the time taken by
-each one to run the course, in a few days it had developed in an
-astonishing manner their agility and suppleness, and gave nerve to those
-who had none. I know that as concerns myself the knowledge of having
-covered the course in the shortest time, in addition to other
-experiences, contributed greatly to developing my confidence in my vigor
-and my good legs, which were the most precious of my offensive qualities
-on the 9th of May.
-
-Afterwards we attacked in groups and then passed to charges by section.
-Here we sought, while giving the greatest impulsion and fury possible,
-to maintain cohesion and give to each one the confidence of the touch of
-elbows, and to the enemy the terrifying impression of a wall that
-nothing could stop. We marched at charging pace,[12] aligned, with a
-lengthened and furious step—not restrained and without conviction—up to
-50 metres; then we charged, lowering the bayonets in a single movement
-to the height of the waist.
-
-We were working to get the charge of the skirmishers and Zouaves at
-Froeschwiller; now we have had it with loss of the majority of our
-officers over three successive trenches on two kilometres of a single
-rush to the cemetery of Neuville-Saint-Vaast.
-
-
-
-
- V.
- MATERIAL PREPARATION OF THE TROOPS.
-
-
-The fight does not consist in getting killed but in getting out of it by
-thrashing the enemy. Therefore do not go at it in a hurly-burly fashion;
-one should be careless only about the inevitable fatality over which one
-can have no influence. Let us prepare our business down to the slightest
-details in order to conquer and live.
-
-
- KNOWLEDGE OF THE GROUND.
-
-
- _Maps._
-
-Before the attack, the physiognomy of the terrain and of the enemy’s
-defenses should be well impressed on the memory. The position should be
-known not only from the front but in profile. This study is of the
-greatest importance, particularly _for the troops of the second line_,
-because the greatest cause of stoppage in an offensive against a
-fortified position is the incomplete knowledge of the position. One is
-afraid, in advancing, of falling into an ambush. The company commanders,
-particularly those of the first line, should indicate to their chiefs of
-section the successive points of direction for their sections, so that
-each one will be aware of the obstacles he will have to cross. The men
-should likewise know the ground well. I used to require them to study
-the future sector of attack, giving them the principal points to watch
-when they went on guard in the trench.
-
-If on the 4th of December we had known the terrain of attack before the
-night engagement instead of not having the slightest notion of it, we
-would not have awaited the dawn at the first German trench for fear of
-falling into a wasps’ nest, and we should have taken not only the second
-but the third trench and made many prisoners.
-
-Very detailed maps are distributed before the attack to company
-commanders and to chiefs of section, but one should try to complete them
-oneself by attentive and repeated observation of one’s sector. Before
-the attack of the 9th of May, I had recopied for each noncommissioned
-officer the part of my map concerning the zone of attack of the company,
-entering on it all known information.
-
-
- _Matériel._
-
-Real superiority over the enemy is obtained by superiority of weapons;
-courage cannot make up for destruction, one must tax one’s brain to
-furnish the men with matériel which may be useful to them.
-
-_Grenades._—Every grenadier or member of a patrol should carry five
-grenades; each man should have one, not to throw himself but so that it
-may be possible to get a certain number of them together in case of
-need. If a fight with grenades is foreseen in a region cut up with
-trenches or _boyaux_ or in a town, the supply should be increased.
-
-Furnish suffocating grenades, especially to patrols going into _boyaux_.
-
-Familiarize everyone a long time beforehand, if possible, with the
-handling of the different grenades. On the 8th of May, I sent 5
-kilometres for suffocating grenades, which I had just heard of, in order
-to be acquainted with the effects of this useful weapon. Have hooks
-prepared, fixed to the left wrist, for the purpose of lighting the
-friction grenades by hand.
-
-Revolvers and knives are indispensable for the fight in the _boyaux_.
-
-Have individual sand bags to establish a rapid barrier in the _boyaux_
-or to build up a line of cover such as we have before described.
-
-Also the Filloux apparatus, with the use of which the men should be
-familiar.
-
-_Equipment._—Keep the lightened knapsack, which will be of service
-against a possible bombardment of the conquered position (lesson of
-Langemark, December 4). Fold the blanket on the inside of the knapsack
-to form a padding against fragments.
-
-
-
-
- VI.
- DEVELOPMENT AND PHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ATTACK.[13]
-
-
- ACTION OF THE FIRST LINE OF ATTACK.
-
-The artillery preparation, roaring on the horizon like a furious storm,
-ceases sharply, and a tragic silence falls over the field of battle. The
-infantry leaves its parallels in a single movement, at a walk,
-magnificently aligned, crowned with the scintillation of thousands of
-bayonets. Then the hostile trenches burst out suddenly with fire, the
-fusillade rattles immediately, madly, dominated by the pitiless rattling
-of the machine guns. The wave of assailants thins out, entire units
-disappear, mowed down. Some lie down and advance no further, while
-others, better commanded, march ahead in spite of all. Some, more
-favored, find themselves in places where the artillery preparation has
-cleared the enemy out. They reach the first trench, and hand-to-hand
-fighting commences.
-
-The second wave arrives in its turn, avoids the zone of destruction,
-plunges into the parts where the resistance has weakened, and thus the
-first trench, split up into enveloped sections, is definitely submerged
-by the second wave. They form beyond the captured trench and start
-forward again; but it is a disorganized combat by groups in the midst of
-shots and bullets which cross each other in every direction. The second
-trench is assaulted, certain parts are conquered through which the flood
-of assailants spreads out while desperate groups resist stubbornly in
-some redoubts.
-
-Now in the first line of attack, there is no more order, the dead cover
-the ground passed over, here mowed down by ranks, there hung in clusters
-on the wire entanglements, or forming a crown on top of the parapets, or
-sown here and there by the scattering of the hand-to-hand fights; the
-wounded flow back in numbers to the rear, isolated soldiers are
-scattered in all corners for the most diverse reasons; even
-organizations are stopped in the conquered trenches by their chiefs who
-find that they have done enough and that it is high time to get out of
-the trouble. But beyond this immense dispersion, some heroic groups,
-weak nuclei of many companies, led by ardent leaders, make their way
-further into the hostile territory. They suddenly appear, urged into a
-gallop over the trenches; magnified ten times by the imagination of the
-enemy who loses his head, they run beyond into the open fields,
-receiving some shots here and there but surprised at the emptiness of
-the field of battle. Behind them, the combat of extermination continues
-in places, but nothing follows, only some groups of stragglers and
-wounded are returning. Then these foremost parties feel their weakness
-and count their numbers; the emptiness, the silence, the invisible
-resistance impress them, they scent the ambush and soon stop.
-
-In front of the centers of resistance, the fight is hard and murderous;
-they have taken one or two trenches, carried the first houses, but the
-organizations are dissolved in the interminable individual fighting in
-the _boyaux_ or ruins; here the progress has been inappreciable in spite
-of enormous losses.
-
-Thus the first line has made its effort; in the centers of resistance,
-it has scarcely gotten a good hold on the exterior borders; in the
-intervals, on the contrary, it has expanded widely like a wave which had
-broken through a dike at one point. But it has been stopped, out of
-breath, in front of the second line of defense, whose resistance is
-organizing, or it has been nailed to its place by flanking fire from the
-still unconquered centers of resistance; it is composed from now on of
-weak groups of real fighters, just strong enough to mark out here and
-there the limits of the conquered ground, and of a multitude of isolated
-individuals and entire units which are scattered over the whole zone of
-attack.
-
-This has all lasted perhaps less than an hour.
-
-
- ACTION OF THE SECOND LINE OF ATTACK.
-
-With the enemy all is disorder, the batteries flee at a gallop before
-the tide which has carried away all the obstacles prepared long ago and
-judged impregnable; all confidence disappears; the adversary, feeling
-his resistance giving way around him, no longer dares to hold out
-desperately, from now on the least thing induces him to turn tail.
-However, at some points reserves have come up, have manned their
-positions of the second line, and have attempted some timid offensive
-returns. Machine guns, rapidly brought up, are installed and fire with
-utmost rapidity to prevent access to the undefended zones and to gain
-time. The tottering resistance tries to hold on; now, one more great
-brutal push along the whole front like the attack of the first line, and
-then will come a total rout.
-
-It is then that the second line appears; starting out in its turn from
-the parallel, it advances by immense and successive waves of thin lines,
-calm and unshakable among the rafales of shells and random bullets.
-
-Already numerous detachments of machine guns and light cannon have
-preceded it. Creeping through, following up the first line, they have
-been able to unravel the situation and to discern the points where the
-resistance tries to hold out and which must be immediately swept. The
-light cannon orient themselves directly on the rattling of the machine
-guns, which they endeavor to overwhelm with a shower of their small
-shells.
-
-The “accompanying batteries” have started as soon as the first trenches
-are taken and are soon oriented by the signals of the special _agents de
-liaison_, artillerists who follow the infantry. The remainder of the
-artillery cuts off the approaches by a barrier of asphyxiating shells
-and carries its fire on to the second line, marked out according to the
-directing plan.
-
-Thus the second line arrives close up to the advanced elements of the
-first line under cover of sufficient fire. The second line pushes
-straight to the front on the objectives fixed long before and which
-should claim its whole attention.
-
-Certain of the units have a mission to blind the centers of resistance
-by finishing up the conquest of their exterior borders, while the great
-majority are absorbed in the intervals, instead of halting and
-exhausting themselves by playing the enemy’s game in his inextricable
-points of support.
-
-To quote an expression of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” modifying it
-slightly: a center of resistance is a filter into which one can pour
-battalions and regiments, and it will yield only a few drops.
-
-The organizations passing through the intervals arrive in front of the
-second line of defense, which is not generally occupied continuously.
-They run against lively and sudden resistances, or _else encounter empty
-spaces through which they boldly penetrate_, pushing straight on always
-to the front without being intimidated by the silence or distracted by
-the resistance on the right or left. The units stopped rapidly organize
-the assault and attack by main force like the first waves of the attack
-without trying to maneuver, a temptation of weakness and indecision.
-Here again there is hesitation: units held up by only a semblance of
-resistance or trying to avoid it; others, having approached to
-assaulting distance, dig in and dare not go forward openly into a
-supreme charge; others are turned away from their objective to get into
-another combat, which absorbs them.
-
-However, the second line of hostile defense finds itself in its turn
-disabled; broken in and considerably passed by in certain localities,
-vigorously assailed on all points where a resistance is hastily
-improvized, it is soon split up into islands and surrounded on all
-sides.
-
-The points of support, as in the case of the first trench, are left to
-one side and merely isolated by the capture of their borders.
-
-
- ACTION OF THE RESERVES.
-
-We are now nearly in open ground; we must still definitely clear away
-the last resistance to which the hostile reinforcements now coming up in
-haste would cling and soon convert into an insuperable barrier if we
-give them a few hours’ respite.
-
-It is for this purpose that we employ the reserves.
-
-Informed by officers of _liaison_, who are not afraid to traverse the
-battlefield to find out how things are going on and who do not abandon
-the troops to their own resources until tardy reports come in, the
-superior commander directs his reserves to the precise points where they
-are most needed.
-
-Thus the last resistances, which the second attacking line, occupied
-with marching straight ahead, was not able to encircle, are definitely
-shattered by the reserves.
-
-
- _Exploitation of the Success._
-
-Finally, we have arrived in the zone of open country, the gigantic
-assault of 5 or 6 kilometres is ended. Now it will be the surprise, the
-rapidity of movements, the skill of maneuver which will gradually
-produce panic.
-
-The enemy, pushed back, overthrown, broken through in the intervals
-between the points of support where he tries to hold on, will soon no
-longer find a position where he dare make a stand; he will be
-irresistibly drawn into the rout as the menacing cry “the French!”
-re-echoes in an infinitely increasing volume.
-
-But it will then no longer be a question of breaking through, we must
-rest after the assault.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- DISPOSITIONS OF THE ATTACKING TROOPS ON THE FRONT OF A DIVISION.
-
- Pl. I
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- EXAMPLE OF A GERMAN DEFENSIVE ORGANIZATION.
-
- Pl. II
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- ACTION OF THE FIRST LINE OF ATTACK.
-
- Pl. III
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- ACTION OF THE SECOND LINE OF ATTACK.
-
- Pl. IV
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- ACTION OF RESERVE BATTALIONS. _Zone Definitely Cleared._
-
- Pl. V
-]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- Etude sur l’attaque dans la période actuelle de la guerre—Impressions
- et réflexions d’un commandant de compagnie; Paris, Librairie Blon,
- 1916. Communicated to the French Army by the Commander-in-Chief.
- Translated for the INFANTRY JOURNAL by an officer of infantry.
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- The great French offensive on Neuville-Saint-Vaast north of
- Arras.—TRANSLATOR.
-
-Footnote 3:
-
- See Plate II at end of this article.
-
-Footnote 4:
-
- Communicating trenches.
-
-Footnote 5:
-
- The assault commenced at 10 o’clock.—TRANSLATOR.
-
-Footnote 6:
-
- See Plate I at end of this article.
-
-Footnote 7:
-
- See Plate III at end of this article.
-
-Footnote 8:
-
- The French company has four sections, but no platoons except for
- administration.—TRANSLATOR.
-
-Footnote 9:
-
- The word reinforcement (_renforts_) is defective for designating the
- second line, but it is the current and popular word that is used among
- the troops to designate whatever comes after the first line of
- attack.—See Plate IV at end of this article.
-
-Footnote 10:
-
- The author’s language may not be clear, but the point he wishes to
- bring out is that the first line of attack, consisting of several
- waves, will be entirely occupied in taking the first zone of defense;
- then and not until this is almost accomplished will the second line,
- complete in itself, like the first line assault over the same ground,
- each unit as in the first line having a pre-arranged objective; this
- second line not to be used by the superior commander for any but the
- preconceived program. Behind this second line are held as reserve
- other bodies of troops under the direct orders of the superior
- commander for employment against any resistance that the first and
- second lines have failed to take. Behind all this are the general
- reserves, several hours in rear, ready to march through the breach to
- the pursuit and to new battlefields beyond.—TRANSLATOR.
-
-Footnote 11:
-
- When an attack is planned, numerous saps are run out to the front from
- the main firing trenches. The night before the attack, a parallel is
- broken out connecting the sap heads, and this parallel is amply
- provided with short ladders. Just before the artillery preparation is
- to cease, this parallel is filled with the companies detailed for the
- assault, and as the artillery ceases, the waves rush in succession up
- the ladders and to the front. Thus the name parallel of departure. Of
- course, to provide for the successive waves, not only the parallel,
- but the saps and the main trenches are filled with men who move up
- into the parallel as fast as room is made.—TRANSLATOR.
-
-Footnote 12:
-
- Thirty inches, 140 per minute.—TRANSLATOR.
-
-Footnote 13:
-
- See Plates at end of this article.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
-
-
- 1. Silently corrected typographical errors and variations in spelling.
- 2. Retained anachronistic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings as
- printed.
- 3. Enclosed italics font in _underscores_.
-
-
-
-
-
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-<pre>
-
-Project Gutenberg's The Attack in Trench Warfare, by André Laffargue
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Attack in Trench Warfare
- Impressions and Reflections of a Company Commander
-
-Author: André Laffargue
-
-Release Date: August 30, 2019 [EBook #60197]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ATTACK IN TRENCH WARFARE ***
-
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-</pre>
-
-
-<div class='tnotes covernote'>
-
-<p class='c000'><b>Transcriber’s Note:</b></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='titlepage'>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c001'>The Attack in Trench Warfare<br /> <br /> <span class='xlarge'>Impressions and Reflections of a Company Commander</span></h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><em>By</em></div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='large'>CAPT. ANDRÉ LAFFARGUE</span></div>
- <div><em>153d Infantry, French Army</em></div>
- <div class='c002'><span class='small'>Translated for the</span></div>
- <div>INFANTRY JOURNAL</div>
- <div><span class='small'>by an Officer of Infantry</span></div>
- <div class='c003'>Washington:</div>
- <div><span class='sc'>The United States Infantry Association</span></div>
- <div>1916</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>Copyright, 1916</div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='sc'>U. S. Infantry Association</span></div>
- <div class='c002'><span class='xxsmall'>NATIONAL CAPITAL PRESS, INC., WASHINGTON, D. C.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>INTRODUCTION.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>It is probable that no book on any military topic published
-since the outbreak of the present war has excited an interest and
-comment in European military circles equal to that produced by
-the publication of Captain Laffargue’s <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Etude sur l’attaque dans la
-période actuelle de la guerre</span></i>. It is, in fact, the first publication
-from the pen of a military man dealing with the general and
-detailed aspects of the tactics of the attack in trench warfare that
-has come to our attention.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The methods of training of infantry units for this class of
-warfare and the degree of careful preparation necessary for the
-attainment of any measure of success are among the most
-important features of Captain Laffargue’s study. The comparison
-which he makes between the conduct in battle of
-two regiments of very different quality, brings out very clearly
-the difference between real infantry and the cannon-fodder
-variety which is too often considered adequate for war purposes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The fact that this study was so highly thought of by General
-Joffre that he caused it to be published to the French Army before
-it was given out for general publication, speaks for its excellence
-more eloquently than any commendation which could otherwise
-be bestowed upon it.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>G. A. Lynch</span>, <em>Captain, Infantry</em>.</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Editor of the <span class='sc'>Infantry Journal</span>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span></div>
-<div class='section ph1'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>THE ATTACK IN TRENCH WARFARE.</div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='xlarge'>Impressions and Reflections of a Company Commander.<a id='r1' /><a href='#f1' class='c008'><sup>[1]</sup></a></span></div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='large'>By Captain André Laffargue, 153d Infantry (French).</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'>I.<br /> <span class='large'><span class='sc'>Character of the Present Attack.</span></span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c009'>The attack at the present period has become one of siege
-warfare. We must accept it as it is, study it, tax our wits
-to find special means to prepare effectively for it and to
-orient the instruction of troops entirely with this in view.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The attack on all points of our front consists in breaking through
-several lines of defense upon a depth of about three kilometres
-and in preventing the enemy from holding on further back on new
-lines already prepared or merely improvized.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The attack is therefore an immense, unlimited, simultaneous
-assault on all points of the front of attack, furiously pushed straight
-to the front until all the enemy’s defenses are broken through.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>The characteristic of this attack is that it is not progressive but is
-an assault of a single rush; it must be accomplished in one day as
-otherwise the enemy reforms, and the defense, with terrible engines of
-sudden destruction, will later recover its supremacy over the attack,
-which cannot quickly enough regain the mastery of this consuming
-fire.</em>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>The whole series of frightful defenses cannot be nibbled at successively;
-they must be swallowed whole at one stroke with one
-decision.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Therefore, the fight is an unlimited assault. In order to attempt
-the assault, what is necessary?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Assaulting troops—and all troops are far from being assaulting
-troops.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>An overwhelming superiority of fire all the time and not only
-at the moment of assault.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The possibility of rushing forth from a line of shelter a short
-distance from the enemy, a condition equally to be sought for in
-any other phase of the combat.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In order that the assault may be unlimited, the sacrifice being
-resolved upon, it must be pushed through to a finish and the
-enemy drowned under successive waves, <em>calculating, however, that
-infantry units disappear in the furnace of fire like handfuls of straw</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Is it possible to pierce the enemy’s lines? I firmly believe so
-since the 9th of May<a id='r2' /><a href='#f2' class='c008'><sup>[2]</sup></a>. But before that, this hypothesis seemed
-to me a mad temerity. I had taken part in the Battle of Nancy
-and in the Battle of Ypres where it appears that the Germans,
-after a terrifying deluge of heavy projectiles during interminable
-days, tried to break through us, which I certainly did not think
-possible, seeing the paltry and easily shattered efforts of their
-infantry. In considering the forces put into action which did not
-succeed in making us yield a foot, I believed in the inviolability
-of the lines of defense. On the 9th of May, by a single dash, our
-first wave submerged in one hour all the enemy’s first-line defenses
-to a depth of several kilometres.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The assault is extremely murderous; it is an implacable struggle
-in which one or the other must fall and in which the engines of
-combat not destroyed beforehand often make terrible havoc in
-the ranks of unprotected assaulting troops.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He who risks his life and does not wish to die but to succeed,
-becomes at times ingenious. That is why I, who was part of the
-human canister for more than nine months, have set about to
-consider the means of saving the inestimable existence of so many
-humble comrades, or at least to figure out how the sacrifice of their
-lives may result in victory.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>II.<br /> <span class='large'><span class='sc'>Preparation of the Attack.</span></span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>FORMS OF THE GERMAN DEFENSIVE ORGANIZATIONS.</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>The German defensive organizations, as well as I have been
-able to establish, appear to be in general as follows:<a id='r3' /><a href='#f3' class='c008'><sup>[3]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>1. A continuous line of trenches over the whole front, comprising
-on a limited depth two or three trenches, joined by numerous
-communicating trenches (<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">boyaux</span></i>), and separated by 100 to 300
-metres, each one often protected by a wire entanglement.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>2. Centers of resistance, comprising large villages, woods, or
-immense field works, consisting of a network of trenches which are
-very strongly organized and in which machine guns under cupolas
-as well as pieces of artillery are mounted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Such are, for example, the Labyrinth and <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Ouvrages Blancs</span></i> of
-Neuville. These centers of resistance are separated by intervals
-of 800 to 1,500 metres; they mutually flank each other, and their
-intervals are generally guarded by closed works.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>3. A second line of defense, which is not always continuous.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>PREPARATION BY THE ARTILLERY.</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>In order to attack with minimum loss, the infantry-requires
-that the artillery in its preparation carry through the following
-program:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>(<em>a</em>) <em>Destroy the wire entanglements.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>(<em>b</em>) <em>Neutralize or destroy the defenders of the trenches.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>(<em>c</em>) <em>Prevent the artillery from coming into action.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>(<em>d</em>) <em>Prevent the bringing up of reserves.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>(<em>e</em>) <em>Destroy the machine guns as soon as they reveal their positions.</em></p>
-
-<h4 class='c012'>(<em>a</em>) <em>Destruction of the Wire Entanglement.</em></h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>The 75 produces sufficient breaches in the wire entanglements
-for the infantry to get through; in order to accomplish this, each
-piece remains laid on the same point of the entanglement. But the
-infantry should not expect the complete and continuous destruction
-of the entanglement: that would require too many projectiles.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c012'>(<em>b</em>) <em>Neutralization or Destruction of the Defenders of the Trenches.</em></h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Germans, whenever they can, dig very deep and well protected
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>shelters, in the interior of which they crowd themselves.
-The 75 has no effect on these shelters, and the infantry of the attack,
-who are delighted to see the parapets, the sand bags, planks,
-posts, etc., fly into the air as if pulverized by the ripping detonations,
-are stupefied on finding themselves greeted by a heavy fire
-as soon as they start out of their trenches. In consequence of
-this, the infantry is convinced that whenever the enemy has been
-able to construct deep shelters, an assault is certain massacre, in
-spite of the prodigious expenditure of 75’s, unless other and more
-powerful means of destruction have been employed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The aerial torpedo, on the contrary, seems to produce terrifying
-effects on the defenders of the trenches; it has also considerable
-destructive effect. This power is not always sufficient to break in
-the shelter caverns, but it completely knocks to pieces the firing
-trenches, produces cave-ins, blocks the openings of the shelters,
-and thus walls in the occupants. By its formidable explosion, the
-extraordinary effects of its blast, and the concussion that it induces
-in the ground, it annihilates all energy in the defenders, who at
-every instant think their last minute has come.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the sector of attack of my company on the 9th of May, a
-portion of the trenches in front of the 3d and 4th Sections was
-severely pounded by the fire of the 75 and especially by the aerial
-torpedoes, while the remainder of the trenches in front of the 1st
-and 2d Sections suffered only from the preparation by the 75.
-The difference was remarkable. While the 1st and 2d Sections,
-hardly out of their parallel, saw the enemy rise up and melted
-away under his suddenly opened rifle fire, and especially under
-that of a machine gun, the 4th Section reached the German trench,
-crossed it without hindrance, and continued on its way. As for
-the 3d Section, it had been received by only a few shots and had
-crossed the first trench in one rush, when it received some shots in
-the back. Returning to the rear, the men found several dozen
-Germans crouching in the deep shelters, absolutely all in and crying
-for mercy. The cannonade had ceased, and in spite of the violent
-fusillade cracking outside announcing an attack, they had not
-budged. Only a few had the courage to shoot in the back from
-an opening the French soldiers who passed close by.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Conversations with numerous infantry officers have definitely
-convinced me that the heaviest bombardment by 75’s alone is
-ineffective against trenches organized during a long period. The
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>heavy artillery has too much dispersion, while the aerial torpedo,
-besides its considerable destructive and demoralizing effects, is
-very accurate.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus the preparation on the zone of the first trenches may be
-made largely by means of aerial torpedoes. But it is necessary
-that the torpedo guns be placed close together in a continuous
-line (at least one to every 100 metres of trenches) and that each
-one have its zone clearly defined.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At Arras, these guns were not very numerous, and their preparation
-was consequently only partial; in trying to pound several lines
-of trenches at the same time, large spaces remained outside the
-effects of their action, while certain corners were entirely
-demolished.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the artillery depots, very numerous gun crews should be
-organized beforehand for the torpedo guns, and not date only
-from the day before and be at their first try out, as at Arras.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The aerial torpedo, terrorizing the defenders in the interior of
-their shelters, already neutralizes them in part; but the best plan
-of eliminating the enemy is to destroy him. In order to destroy
-him, it is necessary to force him to expose himself, to oblige him
-to come out to become the prey of the iron hail. For this there
-are several means:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Have the infantry advance during the preparation by the
-artillery;</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Simulate the attack;</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Finally a third method that can be transferred from the domain
-of fox hunting to that of the war with Germany: smoke him out.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The first plan is not applicable from first trenches as they are
-too near the enemy; we shall speak of this again.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In order to simulate an attack, interrupt the artillery fire
-suddenly and <em>open rifle fire with a great deal of shouting</em>; the enemy
-hurries out immediately to his combat positions; after several
-minutes’ waiting, a violent rafale of 75. This is what we did from
-time to time when we wished to make the Germans come out into
-their trenches so that we could demolish some of them by artillery
-fire. At Arras, there was a brusque interruption of artillery fire
-for ten minutes, but it was an absolute and impressive silence.
-The Germans were not misled by it, and when the interruption for
-the real attack came with its fusillade and noise, they manned
-their trenches to meet it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>As a third scheme <em>we have suffocating grenades and cartridges</em>,
-which irritate the eyes and produce tears and render the neighborhood
-of the spot where they fall untenable for several minutes.
-We could also have projectiles of larger dimensions, containing
-materials giving off heavy, suffocating gas. Thus this gas would
-creep over the ground, fall into the bottom of the trenches, and
-enter the shelters, driving out the occupants, who would then
-come under the fire of the high-explosive shells. This gas, being,
-moreover, only suffocating, would afterwards have the advantage
-of not incommoding our soldiers in their trench or during the
-attack.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>While the heavy artillery may be replaced very advantageously
-by torpedoes for the preparation on the continuous line of trenches,
-it may be employed effectively against the centers of resistance,
-where its more concentrated effects will not produce the simply
-superficial disorganization of the 75, which leaves the cupolas of the
-machine guns intact.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The most important part to destroy in the centers of resistance
-<em>are the edges</em>, for the attack breaks through easily enough in the
-intermediate spaces but immediately comes under flanking fire.
-Moreover, a center of resistance whose borders are disorganized, becomes
-a harmless island, the attack of which by main strength
-would be terribly costly; for instance, the Labyrinth, Neuville-Saint-Vaast,
-Carency, which were passed by in less than an hour
-by groups arriving at the Cemetery of Neuville, at the La Folie
-Woods, and at the first houses of Souchez. <em>Therefore try especially
-to neutralize the borders</em> by concentrating on them the fire of batteries
-suitably placed with a view to following the attack on the
-intervals. If one could put a <em>veil over the centers of resistance</em>
-to isolate them and obstruct the view of the flanking works, the
-problem would be partly solved. It would then be necessary
-to have projectiles giving off large quantities of heavy smoke, which
-would spread out over the ground and dissipate very slowly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The intermediate works in the intervals are easy to take because
-of their small dimensions. On the 9th of May, they were generally
-found knocked to pieces.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c012'>(<em>c</em>) <em>Preparation against Artillery.</em></h4>
-
-<p class='c011'><em>The infantry urgently demands that the hostile artillery be put
-out of action before the attack.</em> If the enemy artillery gets into
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>action, the troops, crowded into the trenches, <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">boyaux</span></i>,<a id='r4' /><a href='#f4' class='c008'><sup>[4]</sup></a> and parallels,
-have to suffer a painful bombardment, which causes losses and
-obliges everyone to hunt cover—an inauspicious attitude for
-troops which will have shortly to rush forward. Communications
-become difficult, the telephonic connections are broken, everyone
-gets nervous and perturbed. On the attack proper, artillery fire
-has an extraordinary disturbing effect; the bullets of the rifles
-and machine guns cause disorder by the sudden and serious losses
-they occasion, but the shells spread confusion almost solely by the
-sight and the crash of explosions. On the 9th of May, we hardly
-received any shells at all, not one during the attack itself, and this
-contributed in a large degree to the magnificent <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">élan</span></i> of the first
-attacking waves.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At Langemarck on the contrary, in a night attack on the
-trenches on the 4th of December, the unsilenced hostile artillery
-bombarded our trenches of departure, and I had my second
-section dispersed through being saluted by a rafale of shrapnel
-that had put the chief of section and the file closers, <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">hors de
-combat</span></i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In order to silence the hostile artillery, it seems that, knowing
-the probable emplacement of the batteries, it would be necessary
-suddenly and without warning to let loose on them a deluge of
-fire. The personnel of these batteries not being continually at
-their firing positions, this sudden tempest would surprise them and
-keep them inside their shelters. In the midst of the confusion,
-the fire of the batteries which try to get into action is much disturbed,
-impeded, and frequently interrupted. On the 9th of May,
-the hostile artillery must have been completely surprised and
-literally stupefied during the whole morning, for they abandoned
-their infantry. Only a few pieces fired some hasty shots.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In order to render the emplacements of the batteries completely
-untenable, they might be overwhelmed with shells giving off
-clouds of smoke and also asphyxiating shells; by this means the
-cannoneers would be obliged to quit their pieces or serve them
-under extremely difficult conditions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The aviators hovering over the hostile lines could complete the
-preparation by indicating by means of luminous balls to the
-batteries on watch the hostile batteries not yet silenced or which
-have come into action.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>
- <h4 class='c012'>(<em>d</em>) <em>Preparation against Reinforcements and Reserves.</em></h4>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>In the second and third trenches, the garrison does not generally
-occupy its firing positions; it is obliged to get to them in case of
-attack. As long as the artillery preparation lasts, it does not budge
-from the shelters; but as soon as the artillery ceases its fire, the
-garrison hastily mans the positions. It is necessary then for the
-artillery to extend its fire to the second and third lines and to continue
-this fire while the infantry rushes the first line. The approach
-trenches and their junctions should especially be swept. This
-has, moreover, the advantage of keeping crouched in their holes the
-defenders of the first line, who are not reassured by sensing the
-compact sheaves of the terrible explosive passing close over their
-heads. The preparation on the second line of defense is absolutely
-identical.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is next necessary to cut the battlefield in two and isolate the
-zone of the first and second lines of defence, constantly manned by
-the troops near their combat positions, from the zone of cantonment.
-It is a matter of establishing an insuperable barrier. A
-barrier solely of ordinary shell fire is extremely expensive. The
-Germans have more simply solved the question by establishing a
-barrier of asphyxiating gas. They have employed this extremely
-effective scheme, it seems, at Bagatelle in the Argonne, on the
-30th of June and the 1st and 2d of July.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The bombardment of the cantonment by long-range heavy guns
-throws disorder among the troops who are at rest. Suddenly
-surprised in the most profound quietude, the alarm causes all
-the more flurry and demoralization. Obliged to follow roads
-sprinkled here and there with fragments, they thus arrive diminished
-in number on the field of battle.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c012'>(<em>e</em>) <em>Destruction of Machine Guns.</em></h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>The weapon which inflicts the heaviest losses on infantry is the
-machine gun, which uncovers itself suddenly and in a few seconds
-lays out the assailants by ranks. It is therefore absolutely necessary
-to destroy them before the attack or have the means of putting
-them out of action as soon as they disclose themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>During the days which precede the attack, a minute study of
-the hostile trenches should be made by the infantry officers who
-have to attack them, in concert with the artillery officers who
-pound the same trenches; their study should bear especially upon
-the emplacements of the hostile machine guns.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>The machine-gun emplacements are recognized in the continuous
-trenches by the low horizontal loopholes much larger than
-ordinary loopholes. They are generally quite easily recognized.
-Occasionally the machine guns are in a little separate work which
-is quite characteristic.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Even when they cannot be directly observed, machine-gun
-emplacements should be pre-supposed in locations such as the
-following:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>1. In a re-entrant in the line.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_b_013a.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>2. On the second line, particularly when it presents an elevated
-position permitting a tier of fire over the first line.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_b_013b.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>3. Squarely in front to obtain a flanking fire; in this case, they
-are found in a small <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">boyau</span></i> (branch trench) which leaves the principal
-trench, and it is very difficult to see them from the front.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_b_013c.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus, in front of La Targette, in studying the position in profile
-and having moved considerably toward the right for that purpose,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>I discovered a machine-gun emplacement which completely
-enfiladed the front of the German trenches for 600 metres.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>One generally believes he recognizes a very large number of
-machine-gun emplacements; but it is infinitely better to mark
-the position of too many than to overlook one of them; moreover,
-the Germans have in their defensive organization an unsuspected
-number of them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Means of Destroying the Machine Guns.</em>—<em>Machine Guns of the
-Trenches.</em>—In the course of preparation by artillery, a very distinct
-part of the program is reserved for the destruction of the
-machine-gun nests. The destruction of the machine guns should
-not be commenced as soon as they have been located, that is to
-say, often several days before the final preparations, for the enemy
-would have ample time to shift them. The 75 is employed to
-destroy the machine guns. Unfortunately, on account of the
-dispersion, it does not perfectly fulfil its rôle; its shots often fall to
-one side and a great number of them are often necessary to find
-exactly the small space that holds the machine gun.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>I recollect that before the attack of May 9, I fretted with impatience
-and went continually to find the artillery observer, as I saw
-an accursed rectangular loophole obstinately remain intact up to
-the end. When we started forward, fire burst out from this loophole,
-and two sections were wiped out.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To destroy these machine guns, there would be needed not only
-cannon placed at 1,500 metres, which have many other tasks, but
-cannon placed in the trench itself. The <em>mountain 80</em> seems to
-realize the desired conditions of effectiveness and mobility.
-Hidden in the trench before the preparation, it unmasks itself
-during that operation; it takes under direct fire like a rifle all the
-machine-gun shelters successively, occupying itself with those
-alone and not leaving them until they are all completely out of
-action.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Destruction of Machine Guns that may be set up outside the
-Trenches.</em>—On the 9th of May, the survivors of my company and
-of the adjoining company, about eighty men, arrived at 11 o’clock<a id='r5' /><a href='#f5' class='c008'><sup>[5]</sup></a>
-about 200 metres from the cemetery of Neuville-Saint-Vaast.
-The cemetery being unoccupied, the field of battle seemed void of
-Germans. In the distance, the batteries were fleeing. Two machine
-guns remained in the mill; this was the only resistance over
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>an immense space, but it was sufficient. Impossible for my men
-to advance; we signal the fact with difficulty to the artillery, which
-from this time on is under open field conditions; it opens fire a
-long time afterwards and mistakes the objective. Then before
-the eyes of our furious men, abandoned by all because they were
-too far to the front, the cemetery fills up with Germans. Four
-hours afterwards, the 146th appears on the field and is mowed
-down by the machine guns; the next day the 229th succeeds it;
-new repetition with a slight and extremely costly advance.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With these machine guns revealing themselves thus without
-our being able to foresee their emplacement, and taking up positions
-to stop our progress in a region no longer familiar to us, we
-must have the means of suppressing them instantly. The field
-artillery is too far away; communication hardly exists after
-passing beyond the extremity of the telephone lines. The question
-is of the greatest importance and merits study. It would be
-absolutely necessary that the first waves of attack be followed,
-after the taking of the first lines of trenches, by light guns, the
-37 for example, drawn by their cannoneers. These independent
-crews would be all eyes and ears to discover the machine guns and
-destroy them immediately. There are enough officers or noncommissioned
-officers of artillery to command them intelligently.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'>III.<br /> <span class='large'><span class='sc'>Form of Attack.</span><a id='r6' /><a href='#f6' class='c008'><sup>[6]</sup></a></span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>To create a complete gap, it is necessary:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>(<em>a</em>) <em>To take the first line of the hostile defense (zone of the first
-trenches and centers of resistance)</em>;</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>(<em>b</em>) <em>To take the second line of defense</em>;</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>(<em>c</em>) <em>To prevent the enemy from reestablishing a barrier by the
-aid of reinforcements brought up in haste beyond the zone already
-fortified.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To overcome successively these difficulties, one must have:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>(<em>a</em>) A first line of attack composed of several waves of assault
-with (as an element of preparation) a formidable artillery (field,
-heavy, and torpedo guns) minutely regulated.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>(<em>b</em>) A second line of attack as strong as the first, except perhaps
-in front of the centers of resistance, sent straight to the front all
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>in one piece exactly like the first line. The same precise and
-effective artillery preparation is not here present, but it is compensated
-for by groups of light guns and machine guns destined
-rapidly to destroy all resistance. Accompanying batteries (<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">batteries
-d’accompagnement</span></i>) start as soon as the first trenches are taken.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>(<em>c</em>) A reserve without initial assignment, destined to reinforce
-any point and conquer any irreducible or hindering resistance.
-This reserve is entirely at the disposition of the superior commander,
-while the first and second lines are no longer in his hands
-after they are in their parallel of departure. On the 9th of May,
-this reserve was made up of the troops which should have normally
-composed the second line of attack, which did not exist. This
-explains the disastrous delay of its engagement, which was furthermore
-very hesitating, because it tried to maneuver before having
-broken through and waited for the mêlée to clear away in order to
-maneuver.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>(<em>d</em>) Cavalry, auto-cannon, auto-machine guns, battalions of
-infantry on automobiles with pioneer crews to clear the roads.—Large
-units, ready to commence new combats, capable of being
-brought up within two or three hours.—<em>Do not, after the hole has
-been pierced, depend any longer upon the regiments who made it.</em></p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>RÔLE OF THE FIRST LINE.<a id='r7' /><a href='#f7' class='c008'><sup>[7]</sup></a></h3>
-
-<h4 class='c012'><em>Its Method of Action.</em></h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>The first line is composed of two or three waves. The features
-of the assault vary according to the distance to be crossed in
-getting at the enemy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Distance Less than 100 Metres.</em>—The first wave, composed of
-entire companies in line, the men at half-pace interval, rushes
-to the assault without pause as soon as the artillery fire ceases.
-It should endeavor to reach the enemy before he can get out of his
-shelters. It does not generally have to fire, except perhaps at the
-last moment in order to cross the entanglement if the enemy opens
-fire (see second case).</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Distance Greater than 100 Metres.</em>—Attack by waves of companies,
-in which those in front are divided into two parts:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>1. A line of skirmishers at 5 paces, formed either by one section
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>deployed or by groups of skirmishers furnished by each section
-(calm and resolute men).</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>2. Fifty metres behind comes the line of attack, men in one rank,
-elbow to elbow or at one pace; the company and section<a id='r8' /><a href='#f8' class='c008'><sup>[8]</sup></a> commanders
-in front of the line; four metres behind the line of attack,
-the rank formed by the file closers.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In this case, one cannot count on surprising the enemy; he will
-open a more or less violent fire, especially during the crossing of
-the wire entanglement. It is very illusory to imagine that any
-company is stoical enough to allow itself to be fired on at point
-blank without replying when it distinctly sees the enemy; it will
-be necessary to open fire, and this will throw the assaulting line
-into disorder.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The thin line of skirmishers is intended to give this protection
-by fire in order that the line of attack may keep its elbow-to-elbow
-formation without firing until almost the last.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At Neuville-Saint-Vaast, I was obliged personally to act as
-a skirmisher, and I have since then strongly felt that something was
-lacking in our line of attack. We arrived at the first entanglement
-at 80 metres from the enemy without firing, but there on
-account of the violence of the adverse fire, our fusillade broke out.
-I myself recall that I marched straight ahead under the protection
-of my rifle. Every time a “flat cap” raised up and aimed at me,
-I threw the rifle to my shoulder rapidly; my shot came near enough
-to make him duck; I profited by this short respite to advance into
-the wire or dash ahead some 20 metres, always watching and
-firing whenever a “flat cap” reappeared. Thus, emptying the
-magazine on the march, I was able to mount the parapet of the
-German trench without having permitted the enemy to fire a
-single aimed shot at me. If the man who marches unprotected
-in the spaces swept by bullets scorns the danger, the one who is
-sheltered is inclined to exaggerate toward the side of protection,
-and the men who are in the trenches when the bullets pass cannot
-keep from instinctively ducking. It is a sensation which the
-attack should take advantage of.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The skirmishers should be calm and resolute men, and good shots
-(often old reserve soldiers, well seasoned and less susceptible
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>of losing their nerve and intent upon preserving their own lives).</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They should each march upon a particular point of the hostile
-trench and watch it closely. They open fire only when they get the
-order from the company commander marching between the two
-echelons.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This manner of making the assault strongly resembles that
-brought out by De Wet in “Three Years of War.” It is the individual
-assault where each soldier shows himself as a real fighter.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>The March on the Line of Attack.</em>—Each echelon starts out successively
-at a single bound and moves at a walk (even in cadence,
-if it were possible). It is curious to observe how much this pace
-conduces to cold resolution and fierce scorn of the adversary.
-At Neuville, <em>all units instinctively started at a walk</em>. Afterwards
-take the double time at slow cadence, in order to maintain the
-cohesion; make several rushes, if necessary, of 80 to 100 metres.
-They should not be multiplied, at the risk of breaking the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">élan</span></i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When a great effort has been made to scorn the fire of the
-adversary, it should not be destroyed by a change to an attitude
-signifying fear.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At 60 metres from the enemy, break into charge.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>The Alignment.</em>—To march in line is a capital point, the importance
-of which one must have experienced in tragic moments
-to tell how prodigious is its influence. Moreover, the march in
-line is as old as war itself. The alignment holds each in his
-place, carries along those who hesitate, holds back the enthusiasts,
-and gives to everyone the warm and irresistible feeling of mutual
-confidence. At Neuville, we marched at first at a walk, then
-at a slow double time, aligned as on parade. I constantly heard
-behind me through the rattling of the machine guns, the epic,
-splendid shout of supreme encouragement running all along the
-line, “Keep in line! Keep in line!” down to the humble
-reservist, C—, who in spite of the bullets making gaps all about in
-the ranks, kept all of his young and agitated comrades on the
-line.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus rushing like a wall, we were irresistible.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Crossing the Wire Entanglements.</em>—From the moment the entanglement
-is reached, the period of charge and individual combat
-begins. The men can no longer be kept from firing; each one
-tries to protect himself with his own rifle.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At Neuville, we arrived at a first entanglement at 80 metres
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>from the trenches almost in line and without firing. At the
-entanglement we lay down, and fire was opened; each one crossed
-the entanglement individually, lay down on the other side, and
-recommenced firing. The line reformed without interruption of
-fire. I then wished to cease firing in order to charge, but they
-did not hear me. Then I stood up, ran alone toward the enemy,
-and seeing me thus, the company immediately arose and dashed
-across the second entanglement.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Taking the Other Trenches.</em>—The first trench taken, it should be
-cleaned out, not a man capable of doing harm should be left
-behind; it will not do to leave to others, for instance to the grenadiers,
-the task of destroying those who can still harm us. At
-Neuville, we crossed the first trench in one rush and marched on
-without stopping; it was then that we were shot at from behind
-and obliged to turn back to massacre them all.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The first trench conquered, the line should be reformed lying
-down ten metres beyond the trench. Each man arriving on this
-new line should open fire against the defenders of the second
-trench. When the line is reformed, it should start the attack
-again as before.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The following trenches are crossed without interruption, always
-advancing.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>For the first wave, <em>there is no limit</em>; let it go through as far as
-possible. On the 9th of May, the first line ran without stopping
-as far as the cemetery of Neuville, La Folie Woods, and the first
-houses of Souchez.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The second wave should start forward at the moment the first
-line reaches the hostile trenches. If it starts sooner, it will unite
-with the first at the entanglement and be involved in the fight for
-the first trench; it will be broken up prematurely, and from the
-moment that it is no longer a separate mass, it cannot be considered
-as a reinforcement.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>While the first wave drives straight ahead, and can do nothing
-against the surprises of the enemy, the second and third waves,
-warned by what happens to the first, can thus take certain
-precautions without diminishing their <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">élan</span></i>, such as obliquing the
-sections that would be exposed to the fire of machine guns not
-yet out of action.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The reinforcement by successive waves of entire companies
-leads to a vexatious mixture of units. It is necessary that the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>surviving officers and noncommissioned officers group around
-them men of their own company but not miscellaneous units.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c012'><em>Instruction of the First Line.</em></h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>The assault being the most severe phase of the combat, it is
-necessary, in order to face it and push it through, that the will of
-each individual be transformed largely by habits and reflexes.
-Therefore, hold each day an assault exercise over ground which
-resembles in detail that over which the real assault will have
-to be made.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The points which should be borne in mind are as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>The Alignment.</em>—Be particularly strict on this question; its
-extreme importance is recognized. See that the line is extremely
-well dressed during the execution of the rushes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>The Charge.</em>—The company, kept in line, is thus led to a short
-distance from the enemy and there released. Then all together
-along the whole line, lower the bayonets to the height of the waist;
-this has an extremely impressive effect.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The charge should be frenzied and furious, and this the men
-should well understand.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>The File Closers.</em>—The file closers should form a rank four metres
-behind the line, repeating the commands, watching especially the
-alignment, and maintaining each man in his place by calling to
-him by name. One can hardly realize the effectiveness of these
-personal observations in the midst of the bullets. We have no
-file closers; our noncommissioned officers have a general tendency
-to run out in front like the bravest soldiers to get into the individual
-fight, forgetting their men; their training and duties as file closers
-should receive constant attention during the exercises in the
-assault.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Taking the Next Trenches.</em>—<em>Pursuit over Free Ground.</em>—Generally
-in assaulting exercises, everything stops after the first trench is
-taken; everyone is out of breath, and only a few men here and there,
-generally noncommissioned officers, try to push on shouting, but
-soon, being absolutely alone, they have to lie down panting and
-spent. This is what always happens in our battalion exercises.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The exercise means nothing unless there is impressed on the
-mind of everyone the deep-rooted idea of routing all the defenders
-in one sweep. Each man should know that after having crossed
-the first trench, he should go on a few paces, lie down, open fire
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>on the hostile groups who occupy the second trench, then get
-ready to start forward as before, and charge again with the same
-vigor in spite of fatigue.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We always did this in our exercises, and it was done the same
-way on the 9th of May. I know men who were shot in the back
-by German wounded after having crossed the first trench to reform
-beyond it as had been prescribed. In spite of frightful gaps, a
-line of men kneeling was, however, reformed beyond the conquered
-trench and by its fire drove the defenders of the second trench back
-into their holes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As long as there remains a trench to conquer, <em>prohibit absolutely
-all advance through the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">boyaux</span></em> (communicating trenches); always
-reform in line. But the trenches having been taken, the zone of
-open ground is reached where the enemy will try to reestablish
-some resistance here and there; it will be necessary to advance with
-more precaution <em>and to try and creep through inside his lines and
-throw him into disorder by surprise</em>. Form in each section patrols,
-each one having at least one noncommissioned officer; they should
-be trained to start out spontaneously as soon as the defenses of
-the enemy have been passed, and to spread out in front of the
-company, trying to creep through the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">boyaux</span></i> to get possession of
-important points without being seen. These patrols, equipped
-with revolvers and grenades, should be practised in exercises
-involving combats in <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">boyaux</span></i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Skirmish Formation.</em>—In close combat, men fight much more
-by shooting at point blank and very often from the hip than with
-the bayonet. The man should therefore be trained to use his
-rifle in close fighting.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>First teach him to watch that part of the parapet and the
-loopholes on which he marches in order to forestall the shots of the
-enemy; then to aim rapidly, throwing the piece to the shoulder
-to get the first shot at the enemy who is aiming at him; begin by
-bringing up the piece and aiming slowly, and then increase the
-rapidity of movement; the man should observe each time where
-his line of sight strikes. He should have his magazine filled for
-hand-to-hand fighting and know how to refill it lying down or
-while running. Thanks to this precaution, after having emptied
-my magazine at the first entanglement, I was able to hold my own
-with full magazine against three Germans who got in my way.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>
- <h3 class='c010'>RÔLE OF THE SECOND LINE, THE “REINFORCEMENTS.”<a id='r9' /><a href='#f9' class='c008'><sup>[9]</sup></a></h3>
-</div>
-
-<h4 class='c012'><em>Its Method of Action.</em></h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>The most important question concerning the penetration of the
-enemy’s line is perhaps the action of the reinforcements (<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">renforts</span></i>),
-and as that action has always fallen short, we have never been
-able to attain the victory which has seemed so nearly within our
-reach.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The inertia of the second line and its expenditure without effect
-arise from two causes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To take the first trenches is a task relatively easy; the artillery
-preparation is minutely regulated; the terrain is well known, and
-the attack is therefore free and open and is pushed through
-without reservation. But when the first lines have been crossed,
-one enters thenceforth into the domain of the unknown, one is on
-the lookout for ambushes and apprehends an unexpected trap at
-each step; this disquietude slows up the march and quickly transforms
-into a surprise the least activity of the enemy. A resistance
-which starts up suddenly intimidates and paralyses the second
-line immediately, because the fear of the enemy leads to exaggeration
-of his strength and the mental disturbance prevents locating
-and estimating him rapidly. In addition, the reinforcements have
-during long hours of waiting been subjected to a very demoralizing
-artillery fire.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All these causes so influence the second line that when it goes
-into action, it attacks without spirit and soon stops.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The second cause arises, as I have previously mentioned, from a
-faulty conception of the action of the second line.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In place of having a second line of attack analogous to the first,
-coming into the fight in one body and marching straight on to the
-assigned objectives, the superior commander uses these troops as
-reinforcements, which he throws in at the point where he judges
-their employment necessary. <em>Now it is impossible for this commander
-to see clearly in the mêlée, he must wait a long time for the
-situation to unravel, and as it is necessary for him to be properly
-informed to send in his reinforcements opportunely, they always arrive
-too late.</em> Having generally received orders which are ill defined
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>and not having been able to prepare beforehand for the rôle
-that falls to them, their attitude is necessarily weak and hesitating.<a id='r10' /><a href='#f10' class='c008'><sup>[10]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is absolutely necessary to keep pushing on in a brutal, preconceived,
-and almost unintelligent manner until the last link is
-broken, otherwise hostile reinforcements will suddenly arrive and
-shatter the supreme effort.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Choice of Troops for the Second Line.</em>—This line being subject
-to the severe trial of bombardment and of the rifle fire directed on
-the first line sweeping the ground behind, and being obliged to act
-with as much decision as the troops of the first line, it should be
-particularly well officered and be composed of troops of excellent
-spirit; now it often happens that less reliable troops are placed in
-this line, and far from pushing the first line forward, they stop
-short of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Location of the Troops of the Second Line. The Moment for
-Putting Them in Action.</em>—During the preparation, the troops of the
-second line await their turn in the shelters which open into the
-approach <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">boyaux</span></i>. It would be very advantageous if they could
-be placed as close as possible to the parallel of departure<a id='r11' /><a href='#f11' class='c008'><sup>[11]</sup></a> in
-order to profit from the more or less complete protection against
-hostile artillery fire which comes from being close to the hostile
-trenches; but in general this will not be possible, except where the
-German and French trenches are separated by a considerable distance;
-in this case, there will be enough space between the parallel
-of departure and the old trench to install several support trenches.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>When the first line has entirely departed, the units of the second
-line take their place in the parallel of departure and form there.
-<em>While not waiting there too long, it is absolutely necessary that the
-second-line troops entirely separate their effort from the effort of the
-troops preceding them.</em> They should start forward when the latter
-have almost taken the first zone of defense. A premature departure
-would mix their action with that of the first waves, and
-they would be absorbed in the same combat. Thus prematurely
-consumed and broken up, they would be incapable of continuing
-their action and would add nothing to the effort of the preceding
-troops.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Taking the Formation for Combat.</em>—The units of the second line
-should take their combat formation from the parallel of departure
-and from there be oriented on a well fixed objective; in fact, they
-risk coming unexpectedly under fire and should be ready for it at
-any time. There is, moreover, a reason of a moral order for it,
-which has been very often tested out. When taking the formation
-for combat, that is to say, when getting ready to fight the enemy
-before even having seen him, it seems that each one becomes
-imbued with a cold and silent resolution, which is alone irresistible.
-Taking formation under the pressure of danger, however, seems
-more like a check, and there comes out of it a demoralizing sensation
-of sudden fear and disorder.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Formation.</em>—The conditions which the formation should fulfil
-are the following: to be supple in order to adapt itself immediately
-to the exigencies of the situation; to be as invulnerable as possible
-so that it may escape the effects of a sudden destructive fire.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>For a company, the formation seems to be that of two lines
-about 150 metres apart, the skirmishers three or four paces apart,
-the company commander marching between the two lines so that
-he can see what the first line sees without being entirely involved
-in its combat.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The march has been generally conducted in small columns at
-deploying intervals, as it seems that this formation is the more
-supple and permits of a better utilization of the terrain. This is
-true only in time of peace, but in war one must deploy a long time
-before the bullets arrive.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>March and Use of Ground.</em>—Each company marches <em>at a walk</em>
-straight toward its objective and <em>in line</em> as long as it is not subjected
-to direct fire; it thus avoids the irregularities which arise
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>from the anxiety to make use of the ground, when from now on,
-only one anxiety should prevail, that of routing the enemy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There is generally a tendency to try to make use of the hostile
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">boyaux</span></i> and trenches as lines of advance. Even if they should permit
-approach by surprise and without loss, they divide up the company
-and break the formations for attack; furthermore an extraordinary
-difficulty is experienced in leaving them when the bullets whistle
-and the moment comes for getting out on the open field.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>I shall always remember Fonquevillers, where I persisted in
-following with my company a narrow approach which brought me
-near the enemy, and I know that we had much trouble in leaving it.
-I have often thought since that it would have been preferable to
-take a combat position in a hollow road a little further to the rear
-parallel to the enemy’s front, at 400 metres.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Combat of Units of the Second Line.</em>—The units of the first line,
-having made their effort, have been finally stopped on the whole
-front by a series of resistances. The troops of the second line
-have received as their mission only the two following objects:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To master a well-defined zone up to a certain point;</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To master the borders of a center of resistance on the flank of
-troops that have pushed into the intervals.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Eventually they may at certain points receive the order to
-throw back a counter-offensive and to pursue.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When the troops of the second line arrive in the proximity of
-the troops of the first line who have been stopped, there should
-be no idea of maneuvering nor of consultation, but as in the case
-of the first enemy trench, they must carry through <em>the assault
-without hesitation</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Two cases are presented according to the distance that separates
-the fractions of the halted first line from the hostile resistance:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>1. Distance less than 200 metres:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>If the stopped first line can maintain itself at the limit of its
-progression, it is generally not in an open field. Its line will serve
-as a parallel of departure for the units of the second line. These
-units at first try to reach the line of shelter where they will be
-formed. Their assaulting formation results from the march
-formation, and the waves will be composed of half companies.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The first wave rushes out of cover at the double to at least half
-the distance and opens fire; fire being opened, the second wave
-rushes <em>in line</em> and carries along the first.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>Here the firing cannot be prevented, as artillery support, now
-faulty, has to be replaced by rifle fire, to which is joined the fire
-of machine guns and light cannon, which alone can make possible
-so fearful an assault.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>2. Distance more than 200 metres—Progression and Assault:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The new difficulty is to build up at assaulting distance from the
-enemy a line of assault in a sort of parallel of departure.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To arrive at assaulting distance, advance by thin lines formed by
-halving the skirmish lines already deployed; these lines, at least
-100 metres apart, advance successively by alternate rushes, then
-unite on the line designated as the starting point for the assault.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A natural parallel of departure may exist or may partially
-exist, or it may not exist at all. In the second case, the line of
-shelters must be adapted, and in the third case it must be created
-in order to be able to stay a few moments at a short distance
-from the enemy without being destroyed. To facilitate this
-extremely difficult and dangerous construction, it is a good thing
-to have each man fill a sand bag at the last shelter and put in
-some stones, which, while not bulky, stop the bullets. Each man
-makes his rushes with his sand bag, which protects him partially
-during the halts. Having reached the line fixed upon for the
-parallel, this sand bag serves him as a cover, which he has only
-to complete rapidly. Each man then enlarges his shelter so as
-to accommodate near comrades.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The first wave, reformed at the assaulting distance, makes the
-assault as before. At times, the losses and the confusion of units
-may lead to an assault by entire companies.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The second and third waves follow and imitate the movements
-of the first.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c012'><em>Machine Guns and Light Cannon.</em></h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>The artillery can only give the second line a support which is
-often partial and not very effective; its action must be replaced
-at whatever cost by other means, such as machine guns for sweeping
-the hostile firing line and light cannon to instantly destroy
-the hostile machine guns.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Location of the Machine-Gun and Gun Crews during the Assault.</em>—These
-detachments follow the last waves of the first line, and they
-therefore are not directly taken under fire and can profit by the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>indications of the fight of the first line and so be in a way to act
-effectively when the second line comes into action.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Machine Guns.</em>—The machine gun is an element of attack and
-the most terrible arm of close fighting. However, it is employed
-in the attack only to man the positions taken or to support the
-infantry elements from a distance. This is nonsense: to give it
-such a rôle, one could never have trembled with rage and impotence
-at a few paces from the enemy, whom he could not get at.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The machine gun should be pushed as far as possible in front
-of the halted line of fire. If it remains behind or abreast of the
-fighting line, its field of fire is generally blocked or masked by the
-slightest movement; in advance of the line, it will enable the
-infantry line to advance for some time under the cover of its fire;
-it is the tooth of the attack. It can move forward, its crew of a
-few men can creep along the smallest pathway, and a shell hole
-is sufficient for its shelter; in the skirmish chain a whole ditch is
-necessary. Will it lack ammunition, having only the boxes
-that the gun crew carries sometimes incomplete? No, for it has
-only to fire on rare occasions, for example, at the moment of
-assault. If it is taken, what does that matter—we will take ten
-from the enemy. The problem would be much simplified <em>with a
-few automatic rifles</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Light Cannon.</em>—We have spoken of the rôle of light cannon
-in the paragraph relating to the destruction of machine guns.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c012'><em>Instruction of Units of the Second Line.</em></h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>This instruction proposes to create the reflex of immediately
-attacking all resistance that appears and of developing presence
-of mind by inventing sudden incidents requiring the taking of a
-rapid decision. In a word, to add a spirit of prompt decision in
-the troops of the second line to the irresistible <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">élan</span></i> which one
-tries to develop in all assaulting troops.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The troops of the second line when facing a resistance should
-have only one idea: to assault as soon as possible and for that
-purpose to try to bring about the two following conditions:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>To create a sort of parallel of departure at assaulting distance</em>;</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>To obtain superiority of fire by all means at their disposal.</em></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We will study by means of examples the two preceding cases
-cited. Troops of the second line should know them by heart,
-because all cases resemble them more or less.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span><em>First Case.</em>—We reach the first line, halted under cover at 150
-metres from the enemy; this is a case of organizing a long-distance
-assault.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Attention should be focussed on the following points:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>1. Reestablishment of Order and Calm.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The line of cover is an extemporized parallel, the men are
-crowded into uncomfortable positions, several units are mixed.
-These are conditions likely to create disorder, the worst enemy of
-the assault. Think well as long as you are under cover because
-amid the bullets you march straight ahead without thinking.
-Transmit simple indications from man to man and orders to the
-chiefs of section by note.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Have all cease firing except the best shots; firing unnerves and
-distracts the noncommissioned officers and soldiers. On the
-contrary, silence is at once a mark of order; it impresses the men
-who collect themselves and make the appeal for a supreme resolution
-to their inner selves.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>2. Gaining Superiority of Fire.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It can be obtained in the two following ways:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The execution of an intense fire by the whole line;</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The execution of a slow, deadly, and precise fire by the best
-shots, well concealed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The men are under cover, consequently it is possible to avoid
-the first plan, which is noisy and not particularly effective but
-which circumstances beyond our control sometimes make necessary.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The best shots are designated by the chiefs of section. They
-construct masks in front of themselves, behind which they fire
-obliquely, that is to say, under excellent conditions of security
-and calm. They locate an adversary, keep aiming at him and
-firing each time that he appears, and they go successively from
-right to left. This method is very effective; the enemy does not
-dare to fire any more, and it soon seems as if his trench were empty.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In addition if possible, get a small group to the front or on the
-flank, who will protect a forward movement by their fire.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>3. Execution of the Assault.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The first and second sections will move out under command
-of Lieutenant X and will make a rush of 80 metres. Open fire
-after the rush.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>The movement should be simultaneous and without warning
-to the enemy; the following suggestions are made:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Prepare to rush, look toward Lieutenant X, hide your bayonets.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The movement having been executed by the first echelon and
-fire opened, the second echelon rushes in its turn, aligned at a quick
-pace, then at double time, and carries along the first.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>From the moment of the charge, each man rushes on the enemy
-and fires if necessary.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Second Case.</em>—The units of the first line have been stopped at
-more than 200 metres from the enemy, say at 500 metres.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Move forward, executing short, rapid rushes without firing, in
-thin lines which are united at assaulting distance from the enemy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The formation of successive lines for rushing is extremely
-simple. The company having arrived at a sheltered line beyond
-which extends an open space, the company commander commands:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“In thin lines by half section, at 100 metres distance by short
-rushes: 1st and 3d Sections, forward.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He personally goes out with the first line to select the emplacement
-where he will halt it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Each of the 1st and 3d Sections sends out two squads (1, 3,
-9, 11). The men immediately take 6 pace intervals. This
-forms the first line, which is followed by a second, and so on,
-the rushes of each line alternating with those of the preceding one.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The construction of the parallel of departure is accomplished
-as has been indicated above.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c012'><em>Instruction of the Machine-Gun Sections.</em></h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>The machine-gun sections should participate in the exercises
-with the infantry. They should be accustomed to grasp the idea
-of the situation rapidly and to replace the fire of the attacking
-infantry either by taking a position in rear or on the flanks which
-will permit them to fire up to the end of the action without being
-hindered by the movement to the front, or by going squarely out
-in advance of the halted line.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This last case should be particularly studied; the Germans have
-shown it to us, and it is therefore possible; I know that it is very
-effective (25th of August at Crevic).</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Therefore train them to get used to picking out cover, however
-insignificant, as a position for a machine gun and to utilize the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>ground skilfully and rush rapidly with the matériel in order to
-make themselves invisible or indiscernible;</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To arrange shelter rapidly, to create a mask in front, and arrange
-for oblique fire, in order that the personnel may not be rapidly
-destroyed;</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To keep still and try to be forgotten until the moment of assault.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The crews of the light guns should be attached to the infantry
-and learn to cooperate with it instead of being independent.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c012'><em>Exercises to Develop the Spirit of Decision in the Second Line.</em></h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>In front of any resistance whatever, the units of the second line
-should have but two ideas:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To take positions rapidly for the assault;</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To assault.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The dispositions for the assault are:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The creation or adaptation of a line of a shelter at assaulting
-distance;</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The rapid gaining of superiority of fire.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All the work of maneuver is reduced to the realization of these
-two ideas. It is a question of applying in slightly varying circumstances
-the two classic studies above indicated, and one should
-know them perfectly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To develop presence of mind in the noncommissioned officers
-and suppleness in the organization, situations analogous to those
-formerly used on the drill ground such as, “Cavalry to the right—in
-rear” should be devised.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Choose a parallel of departure and have the troops of the second
-line take their formation and march on the objectives designated
-in advance. Suddenly call out, “Enemy resistance on such a
-line, our first elements are stopped at such a point ... hostile
-machine guns in such a region.” Then everybody, infantry,
-machine guns, light canon, instantly take up their dispositions.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>By representing the enemy and having him fire blank cartridges,
-one becomes accustomed to making rapid reconnaissance of resistances.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'>IV.<br /> <span class='large'><span class='sc'>Preparation of the Troops for Penetration.</span></span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>The battle of today, since the last evolution of the war, is only
-a succession of assaults. The assault being the hardest and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>most murderous phase of the combat, before which the attack
-generally breaks down, we should only undertake it with assaulting
-troops. All troops are far from being assaulting troops; they need
-a well established cohesion and a special training.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In nine months of campaign, I have only twice had a company
-really capable of delivering the assault: that of the active regiment,
-which was eager to charge at whatever cost at Morhange, and
-that of Neuville-Saint-Vaast, toward which during the assault,
-I turned but twice—when we started and when I fell.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>THE COHESION.</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>In order that an organization may be capable of reaching the
-enemy, it is necessary for each man to be thoroughly convinced
-that his neighbor will march at his side and not abandon him;
-he should not have to turn around to see whether his comrade is
-coming. This requires a solidly established cohesion. Cohesion
-is very difficult to obtain with the continual renewal of men and
-noncommissioned officers; to cement it well, the men must have
-lived long together and have borne the same hardships during
-which are strengthened the sentiments of solidarity and affection
-which create in the company invisible bonds, stronger than all
-discipline and the only ones capable of resisting the fierce egoism
-of the battlefield.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The company must also have been tried out by experiences
-severe enough for everyone to be able to estimate what his leaders
-and neighbors are worth under circumstances where borrowed
-masks fall off. Thus habit, friendship, and confidence make no
-difference in the appearance of a company; it is the battle alone
-that unveils these qualities in their full staunchness and value.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The company of the 9th of May had been in existence at least
-four months, that is, the last considerable reinforcements had
-been present about four months. We had indeed received newer
-recruits, but they were not sufficient to change the spirit of the
-company. We had lived in the Belgian trench where the material
-side of the situation could not have been more miserable. Without
-having suffered serious losses, we had been at times very roughly
-used, so that all the men had an idea of the trials of war.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus trench life is an excellent school for cohesion, but a company
-which moves forward directly from trench life would not be
-capable of attacking as we should like. Trench life is deteriorating
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>and destroys in the mind of the man the idea that he belongs to a
-unit, to an organization. It should be completed by a period of
-exercises.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>During the period of exercises, the work should be toward
-cohesion by establishing an exact discipline, difficult to obtain in
-the trenches, by punctually requiring the marks of respect, and
-by paying close attention to the uniform and personal appearance.
-All these details have a prime moral importance; nothing is more
-demoralizing for the soldier than to see around him his comrades
-badly dressed and negligent in their duty; he evidently finds at
-times that this is more convenient but at heart he lacks confidence
-because he well knows that in this troop of Bohemians, without
-faith or order, everyone will go his own way in the moment of
-danger. The daily aspect of a company, carefully uniformed and
-well disciplined, gives him, on the contrary, a feeling of reassurance
-and confidence.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">... Mais par un prompt renfort</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Nous nous vîmes trois mille en arrivant au port</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Tant à nous voir marcher en <em>si bel équipage</em></span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les plus épouvantés reprenaient de courage.</span>”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>This is what our battalion commander often quoted to us.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Combat exercises by entire units, close-order drill, and passing
-in review which should always close an exercise session, contribute
-to develop the sentiment, which becomes blunted in the
-trenches, that the soldier belongs to a unit, compact and articulate.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The trench produces cohesion in the <em>small group</em>, the period of
-exercise the <em>cohesion in the organization</em>.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>THE OFFENSIVE SPIRIT.</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>In order to rush headlong at the enemy out in the open, where
-at any moment shot and shell may do its worst, one must have an
-exuberance of energy. This increase of courage exists only among
-troops who have for a long time been able to accumulate reserves
-of moral force. A unit that has recently made a bloody effort is
-incapable of delivering a <em>furious and unlimited assault</em>, such as we
-wish for. It might with trouble take a line of trenches and there
-hastily take cover. The supply of energy is used up quickly and
-comes back very slowly; the memory of the terrible dangers must be
-dulled. In a combat, the expenditure of energy is at once physical
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>and nervous, but rather nervous than physical. Now the
-mistake is often made of thinking that an organization is in
-fighting condition when it has again taken on a good appearance
-and seems in excellent form. A few nights of sleep and a few days
-of good food are sufficient to restore the physique, but the nerve
-cells are reformed with all the slowness that is characteristic of
-them. How many times, some days after bloody fights which
-have left me weak and emaciated, have I found myself in a state
-of flourishing health almost shameful for a soldier, and felt at the
-same time a faltering courage at heart!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To try to attack with troops already dejected or insufficiently
-recovered is to march to meet a certain and bloody defeat. It is
-sufficient to see the troops with which the attempts to break
-through at Neuville in the month of June were made and their
-result, known in advance by the discouraged officers. The almost
-destroyed regiments that had made the magnificent attacks of
-May 9 and had occupied the conquered ground under the worst
-bombardments until the 25th, had been reorganized with dispirited
-officers and noncommissioned officers, and were the sorriest soldiers
-that one could see—men recalled after having been formerly
-rejected, incompletely instructed, and of rather mediocre spirit.
-The few survivors of the splendid days of May, instead of being
-exalted by the memory of these exploits, had retained the memory
-of the massacre which had left them almost alone among their
-former officers and two hundred comrades. Two weeks rest and
-a new attack with the painful result which covered the famous
-regiments with unmerited shame; companies hesitating to leave
-their trenches, officers obliged to drive their men, the slaughter of
-abandoned noncommissioned officers.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Therefore do not attack except with troops that have not made
-a bloody effort for a long time and who have been able to recuperate
-their supply of energy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The second condition under which troops attack without
-thought of sparing themselves is when they truly feel that the
-action in which they are going to engage is worth the immense
-sacrifice of life. Each man down to the most humble feels conscious
-that his existence is of inestimable value, that it represents
-many efforts, many troubles, and many affections. The infantry
-soldier has so many and many occasions to die that he only gives
-himself up to it on real occasions, and this calm and conscientious
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>self-denial which irritates those who would like to find the troops
-ever responsive to their orders is of a supreme grandeur. When
-one has seen the death and suffering of the soldier at close range, one
-ties to him as to one’s self and does not expose him for every whim.
-The soldier understands this thoroughly, and when he is told that
-it is “<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pour la Patrie</span></i>,” he then goes in for all he is worth, and so it
-is that the chief who has not stormed and fumed in vain is rewarded
-for his wisdom.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The coming of the generals who know how to talk to the men
-who will meet their death with simplicity and conviction, has a
-profound and decisive influence on the open-hearted mass of
-infantrymen. Handling soldiers was formerly the greatest accomplishment
-of commanders, who did not confine themselves to the
-brief and abstract formulas of their orders. <em>Today as formerly,
-the word of the great chief, rational and assured, is graven in
-ineffaceable letters in the hearts of the combatants.</em> Beyond the
-chief, the soldier clearly sees his native country, whose supreme
-will still claims the sacrifice, and in himself he feels his courage
-harden.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Toward the 15th of April, returning from Belgium, our regiment
-passed in review before General F—, our former Corps Commander,
-who assembled the officers and said to them: “We are going to
-attempt another maneuver&nbsp;..., the waiting has come to an end,
-we are going after them ..., we have today cannon and ammunition
-in abundance, we will crush their shelters, we will destroy
-their machine guns.... Then the infantry will be launched and
-will crush them; after the first ones, there will be others ...,
-then others ...; if we do not succeed, we shall have no one to
-blame but ourselves.” These words sank into the hearts of the
-company officers, and they repeated them with conviction to their
-soldiers, and the latter heard them so well that they surpassed all
-that could have been expected; they are not the ones whom
-General F— might blame.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus the troops see clearly the object, but the moral preparation
-would be insufficient if the man felt himself incapable of
-accomplishing it. Each day the officers should instil in the
-troops the idea of the effort and show them how it may be realized;
-there are even questions concerning the instinct of preservation
-that it is well to bring into play. Thus instead of fearing the
-ordeal, the man little by little gets accustomed to the idea of
-facing it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>It remains now to complete and exalt the offensive spirit by an
-intense period of appropriate exercises. Trench life has a tendency
-to kill the offensive spirit of the troops. They think only of protecting
-themselves, they are always under cover, they circulate in the
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">boyaux</span></i>, and all this creates a horror of the open ground. Daily
-experiences, such as not being able to show one’s head without
-running the risk of receiving a bullet in the face, create a very
-acute sensation of danger. They dare no longer stir, and to attack
-the terrible trenches of the enemy which one cannot look at even
-for a second seems a mad and irrealizable project. The service in
-the trenches creates terror of the hostile trench.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c012'><em>The Man Must Be Put into Forward Movement</em></h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>Make him run, jump, and rush in the open spaces; let him get
-intoxicated with air and movement; the attitude creates the
-mentality. As soon as he has lost the habit of hanging his head
-and hunching his back, he has also lost his exaggerated prudence
-and the fear of unsheltered spaces.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At the cantonments at Fiefs and Berles, where we passed a
-fortnight before the 9th of May, the afternoons were entirely
-given up to sport. We organized “field days” in the woods,
-obstacle races, and the men, recruits and old reservists, galloped
-through these spring days with absolutely unbounded animation.
-To give the men the habit of moving without anxiety over open
-ground where the bullets whistled, I took advantage of the nights
-when we were working on saps and parallels to make them march
-in patrols a short distance in front of the lines. If I saw that the
-workmen were thinking of crouching down, I made them stand up
-for a while; as for me, I fortified myself by walking up and down in
-front of the working party.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We wished for an irresistible assault and therefore tried to inculcate
-in the men the instinct of hand-to-hand fighting, at which
-they ordinarily hesitate with the result that the close combat is
-stopped for days and months at a few score metres from the
-enemy. We had bayonet fencing, but it was a demoniacal fencing,
-the fencing of the chargers of Froeschwiller.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The fencing exercises, carried out by the company to prepare
-for the attack, were as follows: first, a brief review of the movements,
-then immediately fencing on the run; the men were formed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>at a few paces intervals and then started on a run; it was “Halt!
-Thrust! Thrust again!” They started again, climbed the embankments,
-lunged and relunged furiously; they got winded, so
-much the worse.... “Right face!” and everyone ran to the
-right, descended the slope stabbing and stabbing again, getting
-excited and feverish, the officers and sergeants galloping more
-furiously than the rest.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Afterwards fencing with the dummy. We had stuffed sacks
-full of straw and made them smaller each day to make a smaller
-target and oblige the men to be more accurate in their thrusts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Each man attacked the dummy individually, shouting with all
-the frenzy of which his imagination was capable, and those who
-attacked the best, with the greatest <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">élan</span></i>, went over it again to
-show their comrades how to do it. It was no play, they knew
-enough of the Germans to believe them in front of them, and I
-recall that among those from Gascony, Toulouse, and Provence,
-who formed the basis of the company, some shouted with frenzy,
-“Piquo, Piquo!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In order to give more movement, the exercise against the
-dummy was arranged in the following manner:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In a quite tangled wood, we established obstacles by cutting down
-bushes over a course of 80 metres. Then here and there we placed
-the dummies. Thus on a fairly short course the man was obliged
-to run, jump, bend down, attack, and this in every manner, for
-we placed the dummies in such a way that the man had to combine
-his attack with right face, left face, face to the rear, or with crossing
-an obstacle. This exercise particularly interested the men, and
-as we measured the time taken by each one to run the course, in a
-few days it had developed in an astonishing manner their agility
-and suppleness, and gave nerve to those who had none. I know
-that as concerns myself the knowledge of having covered the course
-in the shortest time, in addition to other experiences, contributed
-greatly to developing my confidence in my vigor and my good legs,
-which were the most precious of my offensive qualities on the 9th
-of May.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Afterwards we attacked in groups and then passed to charges
-by section. Here we sought, while giving the greatest impulsion
-and fury possible, to maintain cohesion and give to each one the
-confidence of the touch of elbows, and to the enemy the terrifying
-impression of a wall that nothing could stop. We marched at
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>charging pace,<a id='r12' /><a href='#f12' class='c008'><sup>[12]</sup></a> aligned, with a lengthened and furious step—not
-restrained and without conviction—up to 50 metres; then we
-charged, lowering the bayonets in a single movement to the height
-of the waist.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We were working to get the charge of the skirmishers and
-Zouaves at Froeschwiller; now we have had it with loss of the
-majority of our officers over three successive trenches on two
-kilometres of a single rush to the cemetery of Neuville-Saint-Vaast.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'>V.<br /> <span class='large'><span class='sc'>Material Preparation of the Troops.</span></span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>The fight does not consist in getting killed but in getting out of
-it by thrashing the enemy. Therefore do not go at it in a hurly-burly
-fashion; one should be careless only about the inevitable
-fatality over which one can have no influence. Let us prepare
-our business down to the slightest details in order to conquer and
-live.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>KNOWLEDGE OF THE GROUND.</h3>
-
-<h4 class='c012'><em>Maps.</em></h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>Before the attack, the physiognomy of the terrain and of the
-enemy’s defenses should be well impressed on the memory. The
-position should be known not only from the front but in profile.
-This study is of the greatest importance, particularly <em>for the troops
-of the second line</em>, because the greatest cause of stoppage in an
-offensive against a fortified position is the incomplete knowledge
-of the position. One is afraid, in advancing, of falling into an ambush.
-The company commanders, particularly those of the first line,
-should indicate to their chiefs of section the successive points of
-direction for their sections, so that each one will be aware of the
-obstacles he will have to cross. The men should likewise know
-the ground well. I used to require them to study the future
-sector of attack, giving them the principal points to watch when
-they went on guard in the trench.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>If on the 4th of December we had known the terrain of attack
-before the night engagement instead of not having the slightest
-notion of it, we would not have awaited the dawn at the first German
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>trench for fear of falling into a wasps’ nest, and we should
-have taken not only the second but the third trench and made
-many prisoners.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Very detailed maps are distributed before the attack to company
-commanders and to chiefs of section, but one should try to
-complete them oneself by attentive and repeated observation
-of one’s sector. Before the attack of the 9th of May, I had
-recopied for each noncommissioned officer the part of my map
-concerning the zone of attack of the company, entering on it all
-known information.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c012'><i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Matériel.</span></i></h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>Real superiority over the enemy is obtained by superiority of
-weapons; courage cannot make up for destruction, one must tax
-one’s brain to furnish the men with matériel which may be useful
-to them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Grenades.</em>—Every grenadier or member of a patrol should carry
-five grenades; each man should have one, not to throw himself
-but so that it may be possible to get a certain number of them
-together in case of need. If a fight with grenades is foreseen in a
-region cut up with trenches or <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">boyaux</span></i> or in a town, the supply
-should be increased.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Furnish suffocating grenades, especially to patrols going into
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">boyaux</span></i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Familiarize everyone a long time beforehand, if possible, with
-the handling of the different grenades. On the 8th of May, I
-sent 5 kilometres for suffocating grenades, which I had just heard
-of, in order to be acquainted with the effects of this useful weapon.
-Have hooks prepared, fixed to the left wrist, for the purpose of
-lighting the friction grenades by hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Revolvers and knives are indispensable for the fight in the
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">boyaux</span></i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Have individual sand bags to establish a rapid barrier in the
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">boyaux</span></i> or to build up a line of cover such as we have before described.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Also the Filloux apparatus, with the use of which the men should
-be familiar.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><em>Equipment.</em>—Keep the lightened knapsack, which will be of
-service against a possible bombardment of the conquered position
-(lesson of Langemark, December 4). Fold the blanket on the
-inside of the knapsack to form a padding against fragments.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>VI.<br /> <span class='large'><span class='sc'>Development and Physiognomy of the Attack.</span><a id='r13' /><a href='#f13' class='c008'><sup>[13]</sup></a></span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>ACTION OF THE FIRST LINE OF ATTACK.</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>The artillery preparation, roaring on the horizon like a furious
-storm, ceases sharply, and a tragic silence falls over the field of
-battle. The infantry leaves its parallels in a single movement,
-at a walk, magnificently aligned, crowned with the scintillation of
-thousands of bayonets. Then the hostile trenches burst out
-suddenly with fire, the fusillade rattles immediately, madly,
-dominated by the pitiless rattling of the machine guns. The
-wave of assailants thins out, entire units disappear, mowed down.
-Some lie down and advance no further, while others, better commanded,
-march ahead in spite of all. Some, more favored, find
-themselves in places where the artillery preparation has cleared
-the enemy out. They reach the first trench, and hand-to-hand
-fighting commences.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The second wave arrives in its turn, avoids the zone of destruction,
-plunges into the parts where the resistance has weakened,
-and thus the first trench, split up into enveloped sections, is
-definitely submerged by the second wave. They form beyond the
-captured trench and start forward again; but it is a disorganized
-combat by groups in the midst of shots and bullets which cross
-each other in every direction. The second trench is assaulted,
-certain parts are conquered through which the flood of assailants
-spreads out while desperate groups resist stubbornly in some
-redoubts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Now in the first line of attack, there is no more order, the dead
-cover the ground passed over, here mowed down by ranks, there
-hung in clusters on the wire entanglements, or forming a crown
-on top of the parapets, or sown here and there by the scattering
-of the hand-to-hand fights; the wounded flow back in numbers to
-the rear, isolated soldiers are scattered in all corners for the most
-diverse reasons; even organizations are stopped in the conquered
-trenches by their chiefs who find that they have done enough and
-that it is high time to get out of the trouble. But beyond this
-immense dispersion, some heroic groups, weak nuclei of many
-companies, led by ardent leaders, make their way further into the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>hostile territory. They suddenly appear, urged into a gallop over
-the trenches; magnified ten times by the imagination of the
-enemy who loses his head, they run beyond into the open fields,
-receiving some shots here and there but surprised at the emptiness
-of the field of battle. Behind them, the combat of extermination
-continues in places, but nothing follows, only some groups of
-stragglers and wounded are returning. Then these foremost
-parties feel their weakness and count their numbers; the emptiness,
-the silence, the invisible resistance impress them, they scent the
-ambush and soon stop.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In front of the centers of resistance, the fight is hard and murderous;
-they have taken one or two trenches, carried the first
-houses, but the organizations are dissolved in the interminable
-individual fighting in the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">boyaux</span></i> or ruins; here the progress has
-been inappreciable in spite of enormous losses.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus the first line has made its effort; in the centers of resistance,
-it has scarcely gotten a good hold on the exterior borders; in the
-intervals, on the contrary, it has expanded widely like a wave
-which had broken through a dike at one point. But it has been
-stopped, out of breath, in front of the second line of defense,
-whose resistance is organizing, or it has been nailed to its place
-by flanking fire from the still unconquered centers of resistance;
-it is composed from now on of weak groups of real fighters, just
-strong enough to mark out here and there the limits of the conquered
-ground, and of a multitude of isolated individuals and
-entire units which are scattered over the whole zone of attack.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This has all lasted perhaps less than an hour.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>ACTION OF THE SECOND LINE OF ATTACK.</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>With the enemy all is disorder, the batteries flee at a gallop
-before the tide which has carried away all the obstacles prepared
-long ago and judged impregnable; all confidence disappears; the
-adversary, feeling his resistance giving way around him, no
-longer dares to hold out desperately, from now on the least thing
-induces him to turn tail. However, at some points reserves
-have come up, have manned their positions of the second line,
-and have attempted some timid offensive returns. Machine guns,
-rapidly brought up, are installed and fire with utmost rapidity to
-prevent access to the undefended zones and to gain time. The
-tottering resistance tries to hold on; now, one more great brutal
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>push along the whole front like the attack of the first line, and
-then will come a total rout.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is then that the second line appears; starting out in its turn
-from the parallel, it advances by immense and successive waves
-of thin lines, calm and unshakable among the rafales of shells and
-random bullets.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Already numerous detachments of machine guns and light cannon
-have preceded it. Creeping through, following up the first
-line, they have been able to unravel the situation and to discern
-the points where the resistance tries to hold out and which must
-be immediately swept. The light cannon orient themselves
-directly on the rattling of the machine guns, which they endeavor
-to overwhelm with a shower of their small shells.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The “accompanying batteries” have started as soon as the
-first trenches are taken and are soon oriented by the signals of the
-special <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">agents de liaison</span></i>, artillerists who follow the infantry. The
-remainder of the artillery cuts off the approaches by a barrier of
-asphyxiating shells and carries its fire on to the second line, marked
-out according to the directing plan.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus the second line arrives close up to the advanced elements
-of the first line under cover of sufficient fire. The second line
-pushes straight to the front on the objectives fixed long before
-and which should claim its whole attention.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Certain of the units have a mission to blind the centers of
-resistance by finishing up the conquest of their exterior borders,
-while the great majority are absorbed in the intervals, instead of
-halting and exhausting themselves by playing the enemy’s game
-in his inextricable points of support.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To quote an expression of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,”
-modifying it slightly: a center of resistance is a filter into which
-one can pour battalions and regiments, and it will yield only a
-few drops.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The organizations passing through the intervals arrive in front
-of the second line of defense, which is not generally occupied
-continuously. They run against lively and sudden resistances,
-or <em>else encounter empty spaces through which they boldly penetrate</em>,
-pushing straight on always to the front without being intimidated
-by the silence or distracted by the resistance on the right or left.
-The units stopped rapidly organize the assault and attack by main
-force like the first waves of the attack without trying to maneuver,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>a temptation of weakness and indecision. Here again there is
-hesitation: units held up by only a semblance of resistance or
-trying to avoid it; others, having approached to assaulting distance,
-dig in and dare not go forward openly into a supreme charge;
-others are turned away from their objective to get into another
-combat, which absorbs them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>However, the second line of hostile defense finds itself in its
-turn disabled; broken in and considerably passed by in certain
-localities, vigorously assailed on all points where a resistance is
-hastily improvized, it is soon split up into islands and surrounded
-on all sides.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The points of support, as in the case of the first trench, are left
-to one side and merely isolated by the capture of their borders.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c010'>ACTION OF THE RESERVES.</h3>
-
-<p class='c011'>We are now nearly in open ground; we must still definitely clear
-away the last resistance to which the hostile reinforcements now
-coming up in haste would cling and soon convert into an insuperable
-barrier if we give them a few hours’ respite.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is for this purpose that we employ the reserves.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Informed by officers of <em>liaison</em>, who are not afraid to traverse
-the battlefield to find out how things are going on and who do
-not abandon the troops to their own resources until tardy reports
-come in, the superior commander directs his reserves to the precise
-points where they are most needed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus the last resistances, which the second attacking line, occupied
-with marching straight ahead, was not able to encircle, are
-definitely shattered by the reserves.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c012'><em>Exploitation of the Success.</em></h4>
-
-<p class='c011'>Finally, we have arrived in the zone of open country, the gigantic
-assault of 5 or 6 kilometres is ended. Now it will be the surprise,
-the rapidity of movements, the skill of maneuver which
-will gradually produce panic.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The enemy, pushed back, overthrown, broken through in the
-intervals between the points of support where he tries to hold on,
-will soon no longer find a position where he dare make a stand;
-he will be irresistibly drawn into the rout as the menacing cry
-“the French!” re-echoes in an infinitely increasing volume.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But it will then no longer be a question of breaking through, we
-must rest after the assault.</p>
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_c_fig1.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>DISPOSITIONS OF THE ATTACKING TROOPS ON THE FRONT OF A DIVISION.<br /><br /><span class='right'>Pl. I</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_c_fig2.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>EXAMPLE OF A GERMAN DEFENSIVE ORGANIZATION.<br /><br /><span class='right'>Pl. II</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_c_fig3.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>ACTION OF THE FIRST LINE OF ATTACK.<br /><br /><span class='right'>Pl. III</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_c_fig4.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>ACTION OF THE SECOND LINE OF ATTACK.<br /><br /><span class='right'>Pl. IV</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_c_fig5.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>ACTION OF RESERVE BATTALIONS. <em>Zone Definitely Cleared.</em><br /><br /><span class='right'>Pl. V</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c014' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r1'>1</a>. <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Etude sur l’attaque dans la période actuelle de la guerre—Impressions
-et réflexions d’un commandant de compagnie; Paris, Librairie Blon, 1916.</span>
-Communicated to the French Army by the Commander-in-Chief. Translated
-for the <span class='sc'>Infantry Journal</span> by an officer of infantry.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r2'>2</a>. The great French offensive on Neuville-Saint-Vaast north of Arras.—<span class='sc'>Translator.</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r3'>3</a>. See Plate II at end of this article.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r4'>4</a>. Communicating trenches.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f5'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r5'>5</a>. The assault commenced at 10 o’clock.—<span class='sc'>Translator.</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f6'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r6'>6</a>. See Plate I at end of this article.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f7'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r7'>7</a>. See Plate III at end of this article.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f8'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r8'>8</a>. The French company has four sections, but no platoons except for
-administration.—<span class='sc'>Translator.</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f9'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r9'>9</a>. The word reinforcement (<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">renforts</span></i>) is defective for designating the second
-line, but it is the current and popular word that is used among the troops to
-designate whatever comes after the first line of attack.—See Plate IV at end
-of this article.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f10'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r10'>10</a>. The author’s language may not be clear, but the point he wishes to bring
-out is that the first line of attack, consisting of several waves, will be entirely
-occupied in taking the first zone of defense; then and not until this is almost
-accomplished will the second line, complete in itself, like the first line assault
-over the same ground, each unit as in the first line having a pre-arranged
-objective; this second line not to be used by the superior commander for any
-but the preconceived program. Behind this second line are held as reserve
-other bodies of troops under the direct orders of the superior commander for
-employment against any resistance that the first and second lines have failed
-to take. Behind all this are the general reserves, several hours in rear, ready
-to march through the breach to the pursuit and to new battlefields beyond.—<span class='sc'>Translator.</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f11'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r11'>11</a>. When an attack is planned, numerous saps are run out to the front from
-the main firing trenches. The night before the attack, a parallel is broken
-out connecting the sap heads, and this parallel is amply provided with short
-ladders. Just before the artillery preparation is to cease, this parallel is
-filled with the companies detailed for the assault, and as the artillery ceases,
-the waves rush in succession up the ladders and to the front. Thus the name
-parallel of departure. Of course, to provide for the successive waves, not
-only the parallel, but the saps and the main trenches are filled with men who
-move up into the parallel as fast as room is made.—<span class='sc'>Translator.</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f12'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r12'>12</a>. Thirty inches, 140 per minute.—<span class='sc'>Translator.</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f13'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r13'>13</a>. See Plates at end of this article.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='tnotes'>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</h2>
-</div>
- <ol class='ol_1 c002'>
- <li>Silently corrected typographical errors and variations in spelling.
-
- </li>
- <li>Retained anachronistic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings as printed.
- </li>
- </ol>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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