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Book Reviews

The Myth Of Blitzkrieg


by John Mosier

The Blitzkrieg Myth, written by John Mosier, is a disappointment. Mr. Mosier,


an English professor, is hopelessly out of his league when grappling with the
issues of strategy, doctrine, tactics, and technology in the Second World War.
As anyone who is familiar with the literature on the war reads this book, it
will become apparent that Mosier writes simply to provoke rather than inform.
His book is poorly researched, arrogantly dismissive of decades of amassed
knowledge, and woefully incomplete.
It is clear that Mosier has little or no training in the social sciences. I
dislike, generally, history books written by those without this training. Most
journalists, for example, write highly impressionistic military history, with
tendencies to overblow the insignificant but dramatic, while missing the mundane
but crucial. Others with no training in research whatsoever will fare even
worse. Mosier is an amateur historian, and it shows. His use of sources is
deeply flawed: he relies upon a very narrow range of research material, uses
particular sources excessively or inappropriately, and does not have an
appreciation for the development of knowledge over time. Mosier is blithely
unaware of the fact when doing research one must pay most attention to scholarly
works and only carefully use works that are known to be of questionable value.
For example, when writing on the war during 1939-1940, Mosier relies heavily on
Kaufmann and Kaufmann's Hitler's Blitzkrieg Campaigns. This is an engaging but
rather amateur description of Germany's early offensives, and Mosier ignores the
fact that a much better assessment exists: the translated work Germany's Initial
Conquest of Europe, which is part of the semi-official set of volumes from the
German Research Institute for Military History. As another example of his poor
use of sources, in footnote 4 to chapter 7, Mosier relies upon and defends
Suvorov's Icebreaker, arrogantly and too-quickly dismissing the debate the book
has created. Mosier misses the fact that it has been thoroughly debunked by
Glantz (Stumbling Colossus ) and that Erickson's classic (The Road to
Stalingrad) shows that Halder and the rest of the German high command knew the
Russians were in no shape to attack. Finally, that Mosier would mention (on
page 308) James Lucas' War on the Eastern Front as "the best short study" is
astounding. It is nothing but a mish-mash collection of various personal tales
(such as an expose on a assault gun commander), specific combat stories (such as
making an ice bridge on a river, or the exploits of a tank destroyer platoon in
a single battle), and some sparse discussion of specific weapons. Beyond this,
the book contains outdated material, largely I think lifted from the U.S.
military's efforts to use German officers for information about the East front
after the war, about the Soviet army and conditions in Russia. Finally, for
Mosier to label it "the best short study" buries the fact that it is completely
from the German side and therefore can not serve as an overall assessment of the
Eastern Front (I would suggest Glantz and House's When Titans Clashed for a
one-volume study; it is not perfect, but it is still good).
Furthermore, he arrogantly dismisses previous research that he does not agree
with without any assessment of why. In fact, Mosier states on page 292 that
"When works are omitted [from the bibliographic essay] it is because they
contribute little to our understanding of the war, generally because they repeat
what has long been known." Since the number of books discussed in his
bibliographic essay is quite small, this means that Mosier either has a dim view
of almost the entire literature on the Second World War, or that he is badly
read on the subject. My bet is on the latter. His message is quite
problematic, particularly for those who are not as familiar with the literature.
By only including just a few books for each subject, readers might come away
with the impression that there is not much out there worth studying. In this
sense, Mosier does a great disservice to those interested in learning more about
World War II.
Furthermore, as an academic, Mosier should realize that bibliographic essays are
used primarily to obscure the fact that not much research was conducted, and
that so few sources were considered that writing a proper literature review
would be impossible, let alone a research-driven book. His research problems
are so great that I am inclined to disregard Mosier's claims entirely. The
weight of historical scholarship is not with him, nor can he build a case for
why he is right and all the others are wrong.
Mosier's inability to do proper social science is further revealed in his many
exaggerations, his distortion or concealment of facts that run counter to his
arguments, and gross inaccuracies on even simple matters, facts, and events.
For example, Mosier argues that the armored breakthrough in World War II always
failed because defending armies could either shift to react or retreat out of
the way. Mosier "forgets" to mention the Italians at Beda Fomm in February
1941, or the Russians in the Summer and Fall of 1941, or the Germans at
Stalingrad in 1942/1943 and on and on. These armies were completely destroyed
after being cut off by rapid combined arms advances. The rest of his argument
is only partially true, and Mosier knows it, since he qualifies his statement in
some places by adding that occasionally the defenders would have to abandon
their equipment and vehicles in order to avoid an armored thrust. This rings
hollow. An army devoid of weapons, vehicles, and supplies is not effective
until it can be re-equipped, and the territory is has to concede to the attacker
is often (but not always) very important. So his argument that the defeat of
the Belgians, French, and the BEF in Belgium in 1940, or the Germans in Normandy
in the Summer of 1944 were not victories for rapid armored advances is silly.
These armies were decisively defeated, even if they were not utterly destroyed,
and his claims otherwise are exaggerations.
Mosier's penchant for distortion so that the facts fit his argument becomes
clear when he addresses the COBRA breakout in Normandy. He claims that the
breakout was a failure because it went in the "wrong direction" (that it headed
Northwest). A quick look at any map of Normandy, and a brief reference to the
COBRA attacks (I suggest Carafano's fine book After D-Day ) will demonstrate
that Mosier is either unable to read a map or is simply inventing things. His
suggestion that COBRA was therefore a strategic failure is baffling. This is
unsupported by the facts, as well as the vast literature on the battle of
Normandy. Mosier makes a similar statement out the Meuse crossing at Sedan by
the Germans in 1940: according to him, Guderian's crossing and subsequent thrust
across France was a failure because it went the wrong direction. It is true
that the crossing itself, and the move to establish a bridgehead, went from
North to South, as necessitated by geography. Of course, once across at Sedan
(and other places), the Germans went west, then northwest to encircle the entire
Belgian army, the whole of the BEF, and much of the French army as well. Any
army would love to have failures like that!
Mosier also conceals facts and events that do not fit his positions. He ignores
the war on the Eastern Front, only commenting occasionally on it to discuss tank
development. Given that the war against Germany was primarily fought, and won,
on the Eastern Front this is an important omission. It is also convenient for
Mosier: many battles between the Soviets and the Germans were indeed successful
applications of mobile combined arms warfare, resulting in impressive advances
by armored forces. The battles from the launching of Barbarossa until the gates
of Moscow are textbook examples. The Soviets later applied their own theories
to achieve successes of their own, first at Stalingrad (but possibly at Moscow),
then in the Ukraine in 1943-1944, then perhaps most impressively (although
curiously understudied) against Army Group Center in the summer of 1944. It is
true that there were failures on both sides, but Mosier's argument is that the
armored thrust always failed. Ignoring the Eastern Front sweeps contrary
evidence under the rug. Mosier also conceals important information about the
shift in German plans to attack France. Mosier claims there was hardly any
change from the initial plan to the one Manstein finally put in place, aside
from a "change in the direction of maneuver." What Mosier conceals is that the
emphasis of the attack had changed as well, so as to make that "change in
direction" more in line with traditional German encirclement doctrine. He does
note that the composition of Army Groups B and A had shifted but fails to
properly assess why and what that meant. Nearly all the rapid striking power
(the armored divisions) was shifted from B to A so as to allow for a
breakthrough and subsequent encirclement of Allied forces in Belgium and
northern France.
Finally, regarding Mosier's poor research, he makes mistakes on many simple
matters, facts, and events. Many of these mistakes occur in his technical
discussions of tanks. He claims several times, for example, that the U.S. M4
Sherman tank lacked mobility. In fact, the M4 was one of the most mobile and
reliable tanks of the war, particularly if long distance moves are considered,
and especially after the suspension was redesigned. Mosier also raves about the
German 75L48 gun, yet when he discusses the U.S. 76mm gun he simply states that
it was not much of an improvement over the 75mm gun. This may be true, but
Mosier misses the fact that the 76mm gun performed similarly to the German 75L48
gun. When discussing tank size and weight, Mosier errs in his evaluations of
different designs because he largely ignores two critical features: engine
horsepower to weight ratios and ground pressure (these facets of tank
performance are mentioned specifically only once, on page 45). It is entirely
possible to have a very heavy tank that has good mobility because of a powerful
engine and low ground pressure. Mosier even seems to notice this on page 57,
but then later declares late-war German tanks to be failures because of their
weight and size. This is despite the fact that both the Soviet T34/85 and IS-2
tanks had higher ground pressures than the Tiger II. Further, the Tiger II's
metric horsepower to weight ratio is on par with that of the Panzer IV (10.6
hp/ton for the Tiger II and 10.6 hp/ton for the Panzer IVH). Further, ground
pressure was lower (.78 kg/square centimeter for the Tiger II and .89 kg/square
centimeter for the Panzer IVH). Late-war German tanks were not failures simply
because of weight, but because they had poor fuel economy and thus bad range,
bad engines that overheated, and were over engineered in ways that made field
maintenance difficult. Soviet tanks were more successful because they had more
reliable engines, better power to weight ratios, and were simply designed. That
Mosier's knowledge of tank design is confined to the Encyclopedia of German
Tanks of World War II and the like is obvious.
Another problem the author has is that he is unable to distinguish between
strategy and doctrine, or between strategic, operational, and tactical levels of
warfare. Much of Mosier's book focuses on the operational level of war,
although he does not seem to realize this. This confusion causes him to
misinterpret important events in the war. For example, he claims that the
invasion of France in 1940 and the invasion of Russia in 1941 were "broad-front"
strategies. This was not so, if one pays attention to operations and tactics.
Mosier's confusion about strategy and doctrine is also important. What Mosier
should be focusing on is the application of combined arms doctrine. Much has
been written on the integration of tanks into the doctrine of the various
militaries prior to World War II. It is here where Mosier would have found
important information about why the Germans were able to win victories early,
but faced difficulties later (as Germany's enemies became more adept at
conducting combined arms warfare). There is indeed a "blitzkrieg myth" that is
slowly being addressed. Mosier's claim that armored breakthroughs were useless
is incorrect and does not address the myth. The myth that needs to be put to
rest is that the "blitzkrieg" was new doctrine (see, for example, Doughty's
chapter in Lloyd Matthew's book Challenging the United States Symmetrically and
Asymmetrically published by the U.S. Army War College in 1998). It was simply
an application of increased mobility to Germany's existing doctrine, from the
1800s, of encircling and destroying enemy forces. Had Mosier done some digging
on issues of doctrine, he would have found this very quickly. This becomes
especially clear when one realizes just how little the Germans relied on British
armored theorists. Related to this, Mosier should have integrated his
assessment of the German army's effectiveness, which appears at the end of the
book, into his main argument. Much of the reason for why armored breakthroughs
worked or failed turned on each side's ability to perform combined arms warfare.
The Germans, as Mosier notes, started the war with a decided advantage. This
diminished as the war progressed, however, and by 1943-1944 it was the Allies
that were better at combined arms warfare (with the probable exception of
Britain; see Place's Military Training in the British Army, Hart's Clash of
Arms, and French's Raising Churchill's Army).
Related to his inability to see differences between strategy, doctrine,
operations, and tactics, is Mosier's failure to distinguish between strategic
bombing and anti-cohesion (also called network-centric) bombing (see Pape's
Bombing to Win). In fact, Mosier never even identifies anything besides
strategic bombing and close air support. This is surprising, since the most
effective form of airpower in the Second World War was that of anti-cohesion
bombing. More accurately, Allied bombing of transportation networks in France
and Germany, along with attacks on communications, supplies, and disruption of
movement of troops in the theater was a blend of denial (attrition) and
network-centric warfare. This was very effective in reducing the ability of the
German army to fight, much more so that either close air support or strategic
bombing.
Additionally, Mosier's book is hopelessly unfocussed. For one, why is there an
entire chapter devoted to strategic airpower in a book that otherwise is about
ground combat (and is titled The Blitzkrieg Myth)? Mosier has not even grasped
ground combat, and his treatment of strategic airpower is superficial and
redundant to the existing literature. Contrary to "myth busting" Mosier simply
echoes what has been known about strategic bombing for some time (see Bombing to
Win by Pape, or Ross's Strategic Bombing by the United States in World War II:
The Myths and the Facts for two recent examples in a long line of literature).
Additionally, Mosier can not seem to make up his mind about what sort of book he
wants to write: The Blitzkrieg Myth ends up being an unfocussed (and
overly-brief) rehash of some operational failures between 1940 and 1945 rather
than a book that truly addresses the application (successful or otherwise) of
doctrines of mobile, combined arms warfare.
Finally, Mosier stops just (barely!) short of deifying Montgomery. It is quite
probable that Monty was one of the better leaders Britain produced (but I would
choose Slim to be the best). However, he is overrated in the minds of many and
Mosier chooses to ignore many of Montgomery's failures despite the fact that
they offer some confirming evidence for his argument. Once again, this
indicates that Mosier had blinders on when conducting his research: at least he
could have dealt with the controversy over Monty's effectiveness.
The Blitzkrieg Myth is a big disappointment. It is poorly researched, poorly
organized, and poorly argued. Mosier's book makes no contribution to our
understanding of the Second World War. It is surpassed by previous literature,
the bases of the arguments it presents are fundamentally flawed, and its
conclusions are therefore either redundant (in the case of strategic bombing) or
simply wrong (in the case of armored breakthroughs).
In a nutshell: historical research at its rock-bottom worst.

Email me with comments at mlicari@cfu.net


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