We’ve talked a bit about Army training and how the history threads in this series are helping set the stage for the 1941 GHQ Maneuvers, which we will discuss later this year. But we haven’t talked much about changes to Army Doctrine.
During World War I, the US was still very much unprepared for modern war, and that meant “modern” at that time. By World War II, we would be facing a new definition of “modern war”.
Our WWI Doctrine was outdated and we had virtually nonexistent experience in the command of large forces. The coordination of arms and services was largely a matter of theoretical conjecture.
It would take 1½ years from the declaration of war to create a field army capable of mounting an offensive on the Western Front, and even in the final major operation of WWI, the Meuse-Argonne offensive, our amateurism was still painfully obvious. We lost 26,000 soldiers. @USAHEC
There are reasons for this. Our planners were overly optimistic and set unrealistic goals. Our Logistics weren’t great. Our Communications weren’t great.
Tactical commanders resorted to frontal attacks, not quite mastering the use of support weapons. Some division commanders had to be replaced as they were just not up to the task.
George C. Marshall was a Colonel during WWI. He would become the US Army Chief of Staff some 20 years later.
During the Interwar Years, the Army, as a whole, was inadequately funded, much of the force was skeletonized, there was no real increase in, let alone maintenance of, readiness.
The Regular Army and Army National Guard engaged in periodic maneuvers but they were little more than play-acting.
When Germany invaded Poland in September of 1939, the @USArmy ranked 17th in the world. Seventeenth.
We had only three functioning infantry divisions, all at roughly half-strength. Very few tactical units larger than a battalion. The US Army Air Corps had fewer than 20,000 men, and even though there were 62 tactical squadrons in the Air Corps, all the aircraft were obsolete.
There were no corps. No field army headquarters. The National Guard could barely keep their 18 divisions functioning at “maintenance-strength”.
Even though we all know the outcome of the war now, it all seems pretty grim when we consider these facts.
Most of the growth to the US military occurred after the attack on Pearl Harbor, with the official US declaration of war driving that progress. But the rapid expansion we were able to achieve was made possible by the pre-war mobilization efforts we’ve been talking about.
“A reasonable start date to posit for the onset of protective mobilization is 8 September 1939, when President Franklin D. Roosevelt proclaimed a ‘limited national emergency… for the purpose of strengthening our national defense within the limits of peacetime mobilizations’.”
In 1937, the Infantry Chief, Major General George A. Lynch, decided to discard the old Square Division scheme. Used in WWI, Square Divisions were largely focused on trench warfare and basically tailor-made for attrition.
MG Lynch wanted to provide each Infantry company and battalion with weapons sufficient to establish their own base of fire – mortars, machine guns, etc.
Riflemen would secure successive objectives by maneuver and by enfilading enemy strongpoints.
Basically, the soldiers would take advantage of frontal or flanking positions that allowed them to fire at more of the enemy soldiers. They could secure one objective and move on to the next.
In 1939, George C. Marshall would have the @USArmy adopt Triangular Divisions which could better support this new Doctrine.
Triangular Divisions were also borrowed from the Germans – nearly every echelon within the division would now possess maneuver elements and fire support. Our Doctrine and our Army organizational structure were starting to mesh nicely.
Each echelon could establish its own base of fire using both direct and indirect fire support – fix the enemy with one maneuver element, find its flank with a second, and maintain a third in reserve. @PatDonahoeArmy@FortBenning
Triangular Divisions also replaced animals with motorized transport, although Infantry would still often travel on foot.
Artillery Doctrine had evolved since 1918 as well, and the move to a Triangular Division saw accuracy, responsiveness, and flexibility supplant sheer volume as Measures of Effectiveness (MOEs). @USAFAS
In Triangular Divisions, there were three battalions of light Artillery which could be attached to Infantry regiments to create “regimental combat teams”, and a battalion of medium Artillery for general support. @USAFAS
Improvements in communications and advances in techniques of observation and fire direction allowed Field Artillery to decentralize its batteries for maximum responsiveness, while still retaining its ability to mass fires when needed. @USAFAS@USArmyDoctrine
To keep the Triangular Divisions leaner (about 15,000 soldiers), the War Department “streamlined all support and service elements not essential to the Division” and pooled them in reserve at higher echelons until needed. @SCoE_CASCOM@CASCOM_CG
The new Army Doctrine and organization/force structure helped drive procurement and development of many “less glamorous” items that the Army needs, not just weapons and vehicles but things like water purifiers, cooking ranges, and food containers.
In March and April of 1940, the @USArmy assembled and tested IV Corps at @FortBenning, which was the first corps to take the field since 1918. IV Corps was comprised of 1st Division, 5th Division, and 6th Division (all in the new Triangular structure). @1stArmoredDiv
By June of 1940, solid progress was clearly being made, despite nearly 20 years of inadvertent neglect. The Triangular Division had been adopted and tested, and @USArmy commanders were gaining valuable experience in using Triangular Divisions under field conditions.
New and modern equipment were still scarce but MG Walter C. Short, then IV Corps commander, commented at the end of the Spring 1940 maneuvers that the equipment problem would be solved within a year or so, provided Congress continued liberal appropriations.
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Operation Chastise was a night bombing raid carried out by the @RoyalAirForce on the evening of 16 May 1943. This raid is also referred to as the Dambusters Raid because the bombers were targeting several dams in the Ruhr industrial area, in western Germany.
The Möhne Dam, the Sorpe Dam, and the Eder Dam. Destruction would affect hydroelectric power plants as well as the industries depending on the water. There was also potential for flooding cities and nearby areas if the dams were broken.
It seems like it’s about time for a #TankTwitter thread, so today we will talk about the first, largely intact, Tiger I captured by the Allies.
The Tiger I was a heavy tank that provided Hitler’s army with the first armored fighting vehicle to feature a mounted 88mm gun. It was big and scary, and it was expensive, both to build and to maintain, which is partly why only a little over 1300 were built.
On Tuesday we talked about the Battle of Sidi Bou Zid, and that thread also served as a primer for the third episode of the accompanying #WhyWeFight1943 podcast.
“In their January attacks Axis units puzzled Allied commanders by limiting their own advances and abandoning key positions. Soon, however, the enemy displayed more determination.”
On Tuesday, we talked about the secret multi-day trip that President Roosevelt took from the White House on 9 JAN to Casablanca, arriving on 14 JAN, in order to attend a highly classified series of meetings with his British counterpart, Winston Churchill.
This conference involved both FDR and Churchill, and their most trusted senior staff and senior military leaders. During the meetings they established the way forward for the Allies in this war, mapping out “the grand strategy for both the European and the Pacific Theaters.”
George Patton was put in command of the Western Task Force, which sailed from the east coast of the US right to Morocco for Operation Torch. The other two task forces sailed from the UK.
Patton was on the USS Augusta, which was under the command of Admiral Hewitt (next to Patton in the picture). That little pouch on the front of Patton's belt is actually a police handcuff pouch but Patton used it for a compass.
Everyone knows that the United States used two atomic bombs in the Pacific in World War II, and that the US was the only nation in the war to use this new type of weapon. This week we will take a look at the efforts to create these bombs.
The Manhattan Project technically ran from 1942 until 1946, but the American effort itself had actually started in 1939, and we had British counterparts already working on nuclear weapons development by the time the United States jumped on that train.⚛️