The Schlieffen Plan 1914 – The Easy Version
- This represented
Germany’s plan of attack, part of their hidden agenda
- The
plan was created by General Schlieffen ten years before the war (thus the
plan was already outdated)
- The
plan was to prevent Germany
from fighting a war on two fronts at the same time
- The
plan involved the quick capture of Belgium
and France
in the west
- Then Germany would turn to face Russia in
the east and conquer them. This
plan assumed that backward Russia
would take to much time to mobilize it weak army and Germany
would not have to worry about them for at least six weeks
- The
plan involved a swift sweep through Belgium,
sticking close to the coastline of the English channel then encircling Paris, the capital of France
- The
plan failed for several reasons:
- 1. Belgium resisted the German
army instead of remaining neutral – this slowed down the German advance
- 2. Britain
did honour its alliance with France
and Russia and sent
troops and supplies to France
and Belgium
- 3. Russia
mobilized its army much faster than Germany
thought they could and were thus forced to leave ¼ million troops to
defend Berlin
and fight the Russians
- 4. Two young German Generals (Kluck and
Moltke) changed the original plan which reduced its effectiveness, their
army was bogged down ten miles outside of Paris
- 5. The French soldiers fought bravely to
defend their country, surprising the Germans. British soldiers were also helping to
hold the German advance
- 6. Austria
did not defeat Serbia
quickly and asked Germany
for help. The Germans had to offer
soldiers and supplies to Austria
reducing their force on the Western front
- Germany
found itself sandwiched between the British and French on the western
front and the Russians on the eastern front. The war that was supposed to be over by
Christmas was prolonged for four years.