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    Savior of Peasant Phill Member Silver Rusher's Avatar
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    Default Best Military Strategy of its Time

    When I say best military strategy, what I mean is the kind of things that were pretty much always used by the nations that employed them, like roman columns etc.

    So what do you think was the best military strategy for its time? (by "for its time" I mean no comparing modern artillery and firearms to roman legions)

    Please elaborate and explain what you think in a lot of detail.
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    dictator by the people Member caesar44's Avatar
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    Thumbs down Re: Best Military Strategy of its Time

    Football (the real one) is a militaristic sport , so WM , 2 defenders , 3 in the middle and 5 attackers !!!
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    Default Re: Best Military Strategy of its Time

    The Blitzkrieg, based on the mongol way of war. The greatest armies in the world fell to both the Mongols and the Germans when they employed this Lightening War strategy.

    I would say the Blitz used by the Germans was the best because it was much more complex than the Mongol version, with tanks and aircraft.

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    Member Member Azi Tohak's Avatar
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    Default Re: Best Military Strategy of its Time

    Frontal charge! It worked so well for Napoleon, why not try it with rifles. Just look at the brilliance of the USA and CSA, or Prussia against the Austro-Hungarians and French.

    And then WWI. Wow... now THAT was some good strategy.

    Wait... this isn't a sarcastic thread? Oh... well... let me see...

    In terms of strategy (not tactics), I rather like the Thematic armies of the Byzantines for keep themselves alive against so many foes. Harrasment worked well... enough.

    The Mongols use of deception and speed is also a brilliant example of how to conduct a war (not a raid). I think that example is the most brillitant strategy of its time. But of course, without Chinese support... they could not have smashed cities as quickly as they did.

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    Shadow Senior Member Kagemusha's Avatar
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    Default Re: Best Military Strategy of its Time

    The Finnish Motti from WWII .Brilliant Strategy how to encircle an attacking enemy who has superior numbers.This clearly shows that attack is the best defence.
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    is not a senior Member Meneldil's Avatar
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    Default Re : Re: Best Military Strategy of its Time

    Quote Originally Posted by PanzerJager
    I would say the Blitz used by the Germans was the best because it was much more complex than the Mongol version, with tanks and aircraft.

    I didn't know Mongols had access to tanks and aircraft though
    And I fail to see how the Blitzkrieg wasbased on the mongol way of war (well, there's the lightening attack factor, but that's about it).

    I also don't have the same vision of the Blitzkrieg. From some books and articles I've read recently (mainly based on Karl-Heinz Frieser's work and researches), the Blitzkrieg success in France and Benelux was quite a miracle.
    Then in Russia the Germans attacked by surprise a totally disorganised and leaderless army.

    (Btw PJ, I once wrote that the SS did not perform better than the common german soldier, and you asked me where I read that. It was also in an article based on this guy's work, and it was indeed about the operations of the Campaign of France, not those who fight in Russia)

    But apart from what I'd call the Blitzkrieg myth (and that's my point of view, based on my own readings), the Blitzkrieg was still more effective than all the strategies involved in 1939, 1940 and 1941 (Russian human waves, French 'all on defense').

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    Alienated Senior Member Member Red Harvest's Avatar
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    Default Re: Best Military Strategy of its Time

    Quote Originally Posted by Silver Rusher
    When I say best military strategy, what I mean is the kind of things that were pretty much always used by the nations that employed them, like roman columns etc.
    Sounds more like you are talking about tactical formations, not strategy. Strategy is the way a war or campaign is conducted.
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    Default Re: Best Military Strategy of its Time

    I didn't know Mongols had access to tanks and aircraft though
    And I fail to see how the Blitzkrieg wasbased on the mongol way of war (well, there's the lightening attack factor, but that's about it).

    I also don't have the same vision of the Blitzkrieg. From some books and articles I've read recently (mainly based on Karl-Heinz Frieser's work and researches), the Blitzkrieg success in France and Benelux was quite a miracle.
    Then in Russia the Germans attacked by surprise a totally disorganised and leaderless army.

    (Btw PJ, I once wrote that the SS did not perform better than the common german soldier, and you asked me where I read that. It was also in an article based on this guy's work, and it was indeed about the operations of the Campaign of France, not those who fight in Russia)

    But apart from what I'd call the Blitzkrieg myth (and that's my point of view, based on my own readings), the Blitzkrieg was still more effective than all the strategies involved in 1939, 1940 and 1941 (Russian human waves, French 'all on defense').
    Fair enough. I would also point out the African campaign as another example of the strength of the Blitz. Also, if you look closely at the russian campaign pre-stalingrad, huge russian armies were surrounded and taken. The Russian army was certainly not the best, but they did have many more tanks and of course men than the Germans yet still lost almost all of their original army to the Blitz.

    The use of combined arms which was the cornerstone of Blitzkrieg was certainly revolutionary and is used by all modern armies. Pre-blitz direct air support was not taken seriously. The other huge element of the Blitz was the idea of a free and mobile armored force which was seen in both Gulf Wars. Before the Blitz I believe France, Britain and Russia had doctrines of infantry support, whereas after the worlds militaries realized how much more effective armored forces were when they were independent intities. And of course the mobile infantry - ie, halftracks and trucks - were new aswell, or at least first used to great effect by the Germans.

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    Senior Member Senior Member Brenus's Avatar
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    Default Re: Best Military Strategy of its Time

    The Best Strategy: Guerrilla war by Du Gesclin against the English in HYW, combined with the construction of castles which annihilated the low bow advantage of the English.
    That is strategy.
    Do not mix with tactic (Blitzkrieg is tactic, not strategy). And it is because the Germans weren’t able to change their tactic (and never even prepared an alternative concept) accordingly with their strategy, they lost the war.
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    Default Re: Best Military Strategy of its Time

    Actually Brenus, saying that the Germans lost the war due to inability to change their tactics is a huge generalisation and quite false too.
    The Germans were pretty much tactically superior most of the war to be honest and first at the end of the war did the Allies reach a tactical effiency of about the same level. But by then Germany had already de facto lost the war and this was more due to the fact that Germany couldn't handle the constant attrition.
    Last edited by AggonyDuck; 08-31-2005 at 21:40.
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    Senior Member Senior Member Brenus's Avatar
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    Default Re: Best Military Strategy of its Time

    saying that the Germans lost the war due to inability to change their tactics is a huge generalisation and quite false too.”;
    Can you described the new tactic developed by the German to re-emplace the Blitzkrieg? Name, if possible. Even in Kursk, the German tried to cut the Red Army from the rears, and to apply the same good tactic. No innovation, no new concept just a bigger scale. In defensive, they used the kessle, in offensive the blitzkrieg (without the means, air superiority).
    The only people who defeated the Red Army when this one was ready came from your country, with the use of the line Mennerheim, light infantry, lot of sub-machinegun (Suomi) and skilled people using properly the terrain.
    Prove me wrong and provide something else than an opinion, I will be happy to consider your facts and analyses.
    Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. Voltaire.

    "I've been in few famous last stands, lad, and they're butcher shops. That's what Blouse's leading you into, mark my words. What'll you lot do then? We've had a few scuffles, but that's not war. Think you'll be man enough to stand, when the metal meets the meat?"
    "You did, sarge", said Polly." You said you were in few last stands."
    "Yeah, lad. But I was holding the metal"
    Sergeant Major Jackrum 10th Light Foot Infantery Regiment "Inns-and-Out"

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    Feeding the Peanut Gallery Senior Member Redleg's Avatar
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    Default Re: Best Military Strategy of its Time

    Like its been pointed out by Gelatinous Cube everyone is primarily discussing tactics.

    A simple way to understand the difference between tactics and Strategy - is tactics is how the army fights - strategy is how the army is to be used.

    For instance - The Island Hopping Campaign by the United States in WW2 is an examble of Strategy. The United States instead of just attacking every Japanese Island - decide that the best course of action in that theater was to attack certain Key Islands that would allow the United States to basically cut off and take out of the war effort other Islands. (By the way this was a brillant strategy in fighting the Japanese in WW2. It allowed for a maximization of effort with the limited resources assigned to the Pacific theather of operations - the European Theather was by plan the primary effort.)

    An examble of tactics is the what the Blitzkrieg was. Same thing for most battle formations used by almost every army in recorded history.
    Last edited by Redleg; 09-01-2005 at 03:12.
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    The Black Senior Member Papewaio's Avatar
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    Default Re: Best Military Strategy of its Time

    Quote Originally Posted by Redleg
    A simple way to understand the difference between tactics and Strategy - is tactics is how the army fights - strategy is how the army is to be used.
    So in Pape's simple terms of sticks.

    Strategy is the how and why of where you are going to send your pointy sticks.

    Including things like logisitics and season.

    So you go to war with America in WWII as the Japanese.
    You decide that you need a quick win against the fleet.
    So you choose to attack Pearl Harbour,

    The choice of using torpedos from planes over submarines is a tactical choice.
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    Scruffy Looking Nerf Herder Member Steppe Merc's Avatar
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    Default Re: Best Military Strategy of its Time

    The best tactic ever would be the classic nomadic retreat used by all steppe nomads from Scythians to Mongolians. When faced with a superior civilzed army, the nomads just retreat into open steppe. They are more mobile and are used to this sort of thing. By using skirmishes, they keep the civilzed army chasing them, until the civilized army either gives up and turns around due to lack of supplies in the steppe, or the nomad army wheels about and destroys the exausted army.

    A similarly devasting tactic is the false retreat. The nomadic army engages the civilzed army. The civilzed army gives chase, often going on for days. The nomads prolonge it as long as possible with skirmishes, false surrenders, until they, with their supperior remount system, can wheel around and devestate the exausted army with fresh horses.

    The nomad's tactics were brilliant and simple, but needed extremely skilled and well drilled warriors to execute. And few civilized armies could compete.

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    Senior Member Senior Member Brenus's Avatar
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    Default Re: Best Military Strategy of its Time

    PzJg, the Kampfgrupp is no more than a reorganisation of different routed units in one fighting bigger unit, combining Luftwaffe unit, different infantry units (SS, Wermarcht) and Kriegmarine and to make it as a fighting unit. It is the Corps d’Armee from Napoleon, modernised. What was really surprising is the speed the Germans succeeded to do it.
    I don’t agree with your analyse about the use of the Blitzkrieg concept by the allies. They allies didn’t plan to cut the German and surrounding them. It happened but it is another concept, it is the concept of the battles of opportunity (developed by the Red Army). Falaise could be a good example of it. You react to the situation and play on the enemy mistakes.
    Market Garden was a success because paratroopers can’t defeat Armoured Division. I tried to explain this many times to friends (paratroopers) but they never get the point. A tank goes faster, had bigger weapons, etc… So Market Garden is an example of how not to use paratroopers and airborne divisions, unless you provide them adequate support.
    Question: Are you sure it was Manstein in command and not Model? For what I know Manstein was dismissed in March 1944.
    And if you study Patton tactic, you will see he was as much flexible as his german counterparts.
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    "I've been in few famous last stands, lad, and they're butcher shops. That's what Blouse's leading you into, mark my words. What'll you lot do then? We've had a few scuffles, but that's not war. Think you'll be man enough to stand, when the metal meets the meat?"
    "You did, sarge", said Polly." You said you were in few last stands."
    "Yeah, lad. But I was holding the metal"
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    Default Re: Best Military Strategy of its Time

    PzJg, the Kampfgrupp is no more than a reorganisation of different routed units in one fighting bigger unit, combining Luftwaffe unit, different infantry units (SS, Wermarcht) and Kriegmarine and to make it as a fighting unit. It is the Corps d’Armee from Napoleon, modernised. What was really surprising is the speed the Germans succeeded to do it.
    You could also say that the Blitz was a Mongol strategy modernised. The point is, the Germans were the first and best at applying combined arms in both the Blitz form and the Kampfgruppe form in a modern war situation. No modern military had that kind of doctrine until the Germans developed it.

    Modern warfare really hasnt progressed much further than what the Germans took it to in a tactical sense. That says a lot.

    I don’t agree with your analyse about the use of the Blitzkrieg concept by the allies. They allies didn’t plan to cut the German and surrounding them. It happened but it is another concept, it is the concept of the battles of opportunity (developed by the Red Army). Falaise could be a good example of it. You react to the situation and play on the enemy mistakes.
    The allies studied and basically copied the German way of war. Look at how both the Russia and the American armies were set up at the begining of the war, and then observe how closely their setups resembled the German one towards the end of the war. Many people take for granted the concepts of direct air support, independent mechanized forces, and elastic defenses - but many of the most basic concepts of modern warfare that are studied today were completely foreign to the allies before they were introduced by the Germans.

    Of course each nation used their advantages - russians being numbers and americans being air power - to put their own spin on the same basic principles.

    Market Garden was a success because paratroopers can’t defeat Armoured Division. I tried to explain this many times to friends (paratroopers) but they never get the point. A tank goes faster, had bigger weapons, etc… So Market Garden is an example of how not to use paratroopers and airborne divisions, unless you provide them adequate support.
    But it was the ability of the Germans to quickly throw together a functioning fighting force out of many weak ones that made that victory possible.

    The planners of Market Garden never intended for the paratroopers to defeat an armored force. They made the false assumption that the attack would confound the Germans long enough for the British armor to relieve the paratroops.

    The kampfgruppe doctrine, learned in Russia, allowed the German command to react to the situation much faster than the Allies anticipated.

    Question: Are you sure it was Manstein in command and not Model? For what I know Manstein was dismissed in March 1944
    I was refering to two different examples of that strategy employed, sorry for the confusion.

    Manstein used it amazingly in Russia, especially in the retaking of Karkov, and it was also used well in the Market Garden operation.

    And if you study Patton tactic, you will see he was as much flexible as his german counterparts.
    It is difficult to study the tactics of the Western allies because there were very few times when they were on somewhat equal terms with the Germans. Most of the time they simply used their vastly greater numbers to overwhelm the Germans with no particular strategies. However, I believe Patton studied the German tactics, especially Rommel's campaigns, very carefully. I can see many similarities between the tactics he employed and those of the Germans.

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    Senior Member Senior Member Brenus's Avatar
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    Default Re: Best Military Strategy of its Time

    I must agree about 80% of what you said.
    However, the concept itself of combining air and ground forces was developed in other nations: France with the Gal Etiennes and Liddell Hart (UK). And an Italian general, I forgot his name.
    What is true is that the Germans refined the concept, and more accurately, used it.
    I personally think, as you know because we debated about that before, that the Red Army made the best of their Armoured Division doctrine, adapted to the level of their conscripts and their technology… Resilient in siege warfare (Stalingrad, Leningrad), good in defensive (shield and sword tactic) in Kursk (Koniev, Zukov), and high manoeuvre ability in East Prussia (Rokosovsky), they were the first one to combine the partnership between tanks and infantry, developing the battle of opportunity concept…
    The modern warfare didn’t evolved because we still use the same weapons, just better technology.
    The number of Russians didn’t win the war. They were more than the Germans even at the beginning of the war (plus this “advantage” didn’t work with the Japanese in Galing Goll, or later in Manchuria).

    In Market Garden, again from memory, I think the German deployed 2 Armoured Division (9th SS, and the Panzer Lehr?) against airborne divisions. They had no chance… Market Garden was a failure of Montgomery and his chief, Eisenhower who was unable to stop Patton and Montgomery to compete, thus the normally prudent English to draw a plan which was against all his principles learned from WW1.

    To study and copy the enemy (and upgrade) is a common thing in war. It was exactly what happened to Napoleon, and to the English against the Boers, when they also tasted the Maxim effect.
    Difficult to study the allies’ tactics because they had several, by the simple fact they were different. The Naval assault was more an US and UK tactic than Russian (except for Crimea, but it is an exception) and the vast development of tanks can be hardly achieved in Western Europe…
    Last edited by Brenus; 09-01-2005 at 23:16.
    Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. Voltaire.

    "I've been in few famous last stands, lad, and they're butcher shops. That's what Blouse's leading you into, mark my words. What'll you lot do then? We've had a few scuffles, but that's not war. Think you'll be man enough to stand, when the metal meets the meat?"
    "You did, sarge", said Polly." You said you were in few last stands."
    "Yeah, lad. But I was holding the metal"
    Sergeant Major Jackrum 10th Light Foot Infantery Regiment "Inns-and-Out"

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    Magister Vitae Senior Member Kraxis's Avatar
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    Default Re: Best Military Strategy of its Time

    About tactics and strategy.

    Well, tactics are broadly (liberal use of the word here) within the range of the weapons. Meaning about 15 km at most. Strategy is how you pursue the goal of the tactical battle. The tactical battle is a foregone conclusion in strategy, thus Blitzkrieg is in fact a strategy. It is strategy when you reform the troops to take the last major crossing of a river behind the enemy, or when you head your advance towards the main industrial area. Blitzkrig could be applied on both scales, the concentration of forces in essence (which was contradictory to the three points of Barbarossa).

    And while the Kampfgruppe was brought out as an ad-hoc unit it eventually became an institution. Commanders were taught how to communicate with the infantry, guns and so on. It was an accepted tactic (the Kampfgruppe was never a strategy as it always reacted to tactical problems, for instance it couldn't be used to effect in operation Bagration).

    But the Germans perfected another tactic that was almost perfect. Elastic Defence. Performed on strategic scale by Manstein and on a tactical scale by many, a good example is the Battle of the Selöw Hights (ultimately a loss though).
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    The Black Senior Member Papewaio's Avatar
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    Default Re: Best Military Strategy of its Time

    Quote Originally Posted by PanzerJager
    You could also say that the Blitz was a Mongol strategy modernised. The point is, the Germans were the first and best at applying combined arms in both the Blitz form and the Kampfgruppe form in a modern war situation. No modern military had that kind of doctrine until the Germans developed it.
    Germans weren't the first to use this combined arms approach with a modern army:

    the true role of infantry was not to expend itself upon heroic physical effort, not to wither away under merciless machine-gun fire, not to impale itself on hostile bayonets, but on the contrary, to advance under the maximum possible protection of the maximum possible array of mechanical resources, in the form of guns, machine-guns, tanks, mortars and aeroplanes; to advance with as little impediment as possible; to be relieved as far as possible of the obligation to fight their way forward.
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    Default Re: Best Military Strategy of its Time

    Ok, who used combined arms first in modern warfare?

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