Author: Afflerbach, Holger (University of Leeds)
Germany
Published on 18 July 2024 by CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS in the United Kingdom as part of 'the Cambridge Military Histories' series.
Paperback | 566 pages, Worked examples or Exercises; 11 Maps; 40 Halftones, black and white
196 x 131 x 39 | 742g
Was the outcome of the First World War on a knife edge? In this major new account of German wartime politics and strategy Holger Afflerbach argues that the outcome of the war was actually in the balance until relatively late in the war. Using new evidence from diaries, letters and memoirs, he fundamentally revises our understanding of German strategy from the decision to go to war and the failure of the western offensive to the radicalisation of Germany's war effort under Hindenburg and Ludendorff and the ultimate collapse of the Central Powers. He uncovers the struggles in wartime Germany between supporters of peace and hardliners who wanted to fight to the finish. He suggests that Germany was not nearly as committed to all-out conquest as previous accounts argue. Numerous German peace advances could have offered the opportunity to end the war before it dragged Europe into the abyss.