HINDENBURG BLAMES HIS COMMANDERS.
Router's Telegrams. LONDON, April 13. (Received April 14, at 1.20 a.m.) The Daily Telegraph's Rotterdam correspondent states that Marshal von Hindenburg, alarmed that the British had thrown back his much-vaunted line, hastened to the western front and stayed there two days. He attributes the disaster to the divisional generals, and refuses to admit that he underestimated British prowess.
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Otago Daily Times, Issue 16978, 14 April 1917, Page 7
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62HINDENBURG BLAMES HIS COMMANDERS. Otago Daily Times, Issue 16978, 14 April 1917, Page 7
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