THE GREAT WAR
Tribute to Haig’s Genius WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN London, June 2.< “If Field-Marshal Earl Haig had been in supreme command of the Allies on the Western front from 1914, the' war might have ended in 1917,” suggests Sir Perry Robinson, who was the London “Times’ ” correspondent during -the war, writing in the “Nineteenth Century Review.” Sir Perry declares that it was Earl Haig’s plan that ended the war in 1918. Without Haig’s advice Marshal Foeh would have allowed the fighting to go on through the summer of 1919, and the writer asks whether it is not time that the world was made to realise that the essential features of the plan were far more Haig’s than Foch’s. “Whatever vision or genius they contained were Haig’s contribution to com- ’ paratively crude proposals,” Sir Perry declares. He added that if Earl Haig had commanded all the armies on the Western front from the start of the war, the Nivelle fiasco of 1917 would not have occurred; there would not have been any French mutiny or deterioration of morale which put out the French Army as a fighting force for the whole of 1917, and made it unreliable for the remainder of the war; and the German attack of 1918 would have found the front fully manned and ready. Earl Haig changed Foeh’s plans by refusing to make a frontal attack on the impregnable Royes-Chaulnes lines • in August, 1918, thereby converting Foch’s series of local attacks into a farseeing plan for breaking the German resistance,” says the writer. Sir Perry also declares that the French were sluggish iq the final advance, their transport was inferior, food insufficient, and treatment of the wounded shocking. He severely criticises British politicians, whom he accuses of haying been jealous of Haig.
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Dominion, Volume 23, Issue 221, 14 June 1930, Page 11
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297THE GREAT WAR Dominion, Volume 23, Issue 221, 14 June 1930, Page 11
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