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Defence Studies
ISSN: 1470-2436 (Print) 1743-9698 (Online) Journal homepage: www.tandfonline.com/journals/fdef20
X. Haig versus Rawlinson – Manoeuvre versus
Attrition: The British Army on the Somme, 1916
Colonel Christopher M. Deverell British Army
To cite this article: Colonel Christopher M. Deverell British Army (2005) X. Haig versus
Rawlinson – Manoeuvre versus Attrition: The British Army on the Somme, 1916, Defence
Studies, 5:1, 124-137, DOI: 10.1080/14702430500097317
To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/14702430500097317
Published online: 24 Jun 2006.
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Defence Studies, Vol. 5, No.1 (March 2005), pp. 124–137
ISSN 1470-2436 (print)/ISSN 1743-9698 (online)
DOI: 10.1080/14702430500097317 © 2005 Taylor & Francis
ARTICLE
 
X. Haig versus Rawlinson – 
Manoeuvre versus Attrition: The 
British Army on the Somme, 1916
 
COLONEL CHRISTOPHER M. DEVERELL, 
BRITISH ARMY
 
Taylor and Francis LtdFDEF109714.sgm10.1080/14702430500097317Defence Studies1470-2436 (print)/0000-0000 (online)Original Article2005Taylor & Francis Group Ltd51000000March 2005COLONEL CHRISTOPHERDEVERELLBritish Army
 
Staff Ride Question: Did Haig try to be too ‘manoeuvrist’ on the First Day
of the Somme? Was Rawlinson’s attritional approach of 14 July better
suited to the capabilities of the BEF? What are the lessons for today’s
commanders?
 
The BEF in July 1916
 
The Consequences of Britain’s pre-war Strategy
 
At least some of the causes of the horrific events of the First Day of the
Somme lie in pre-war British Grand Strategy, at the heart of which was the
quest for competitive advantage through trade and Empire. As far as Britain’s
attitude towards Europe was concerned, the central strategic concept was the
Balance of Power – the notion that Britain’s interests lay in preventing any
one state, or group of states, from dominating the Continent, and in partic-
ular in not allowing the Low Countries and Northern France to fall into
hostile hands. These imperatives manifested themselves in high defence
spending relative to other European powers, the object of which was to
maintain maritime supremacy and a ‘small, regular, Army committed to the
conduct of limited operations in the pursuit of empire’.
 
1
 
As a result, Britain entered World War I with an Army that was potent
for its size, and expeditionary in nature. But it was very much smaller than
that of its major European comparators,
 
2
 
 and therefore much the junior
partner in the Allied Land Component. This initial status as a minority
shareholder would significantly affect how events unfolded on the Western
Front. The Royal Navy was to be of fundamental importance in winning
 
Col. Christopher M. Deverell, British Army.
 
HAIG v. RAWLINSON – MANOEUVRE v. ATTRITION
 
125
the war ‘by enabling Britain to keep open the Atlantic lifeline by which
supplies and…American troops crossed from the New World to the Old’.
 
3
 
But the Army was to pay the price of rapid transition from expeditionary to
continental Army in blood on the fields of Picardy, Flanders and elsewhere.
 
The New Army
 
Credit is due to Lord Kitchener, appointed Secretary of War at the outset of
World War I, for his immediate recognition, against the prevailing ortho-
doxy, that the war would not be short and would demand large numbers of
men. At his behest, Parliament promptly passed a bill to raise 500,000 men
to be formed into 18 new divisions, and the New Army was born.
 
4
 
 The
Territorial Force was also greatly expanded. The evidence suggests that,
understanding the time it would take to create, equip and train a force of the
scale required, Kitchener’s initial force generation plan did not envisage the
British Army becoming the dominant player on the Western Front until
1917, by which time other continental armies would be exhausted. Britain
could then win the war and dictate the peace. Unfortunately, the early
successes of the Central Powers, and the high manpower losses of the other
members of the Entente, forced Kitchener to abandon his initial plan
shortly after its inception. Within months, ‘Kitchener’s Armies’ were being
committed piecemeal almost as soon as they were formed.
As a consequence, the New Armies went to war short of every commod-
ity save patriotic enthusiasm. Historical analysis of the British Army in
World War I is replete with examples of its general lack of preparedness at
the outset. The result of Britain’s massive mobilisation was felt in particular
in the lack of experience of the Army’s commanders. ‘In mid 1916 the five
men who were Army commanders, had, back in 1914, only been in charge
of divisions. Most of the…corps commanders had then led infantry
brigades. And many of the…divisional generals had started the war
commanding battalions.’
 
5
 
 As later sections of this article will show, the fact
that commanders such as Generals Sir Douglas Haig and Sir Henry
Rawlinson had not been tested at the level at which they were to operate was
to have significant consequences on the Somme.
The Army’s lack of experience was by no means the only adverse conse-
quence of Britain’s tardy conversion to total war. In a testament to the
dangers of planning assumptions, Farrar-Hockley reports that: 
The final agreement [between the War Office, the Treasury and the
Foreign Office as to the sort of war which might involve a British
expeditionary force in Europe] foresaw four infantry divisions and
one of cavalry in the field for at least two months during which four
 
126
 
DEFENCE STUDIES
 
major battles would be fought, each lasting three days. Arms,
ammunition, equipment and supplies were stockpiled against this
contingency.
 
6
 
Very considerable efforts were made to recover from this weak starting
position in equipment and stocks, in particular after Lloyd George became
Minister of Munitions in May 1915. However, the capabilities of the BEF
in 1916 did not augur mobility. Without, among other things, radio
communications, responsive all-weather intelligence collection, and mobile
fire support, it was ill-equipped for manoeuvre. In an era of transition
between cavalry and armour, it also lacked an instrument of exploitation in
which all had confidence. But an ability to manoeuvre at the operational
level, highly desirable though it may be, is neither a necessary nor a sufficient
component of the manoeuvrist approach.
The BEF’s weaknesses in mobility and firepower relative to more
modern armies do not therefore suffice to explain its failure to be manoeu-
vrist on the Somme in 1916. After all, the German Army of the day was not
radically more mobile, yet Lind describes World War I German tactics as
‘the basis of modern maneuver warfare’,
 
7
 
 endorsing Liddell Hart’s likening
of German attacks to ‘a torrent bearing down on each successive bank’. In
the same way, other manoeuvre warfare theorists point convincingly to
examples of manoeuvre warfare throughout history from armies that
preceded the BEF of 1916 and were much less potent.
 
8
 
 As we shall see
shortly, why the BEF was not manoeuvrist was more a consequence of
command culture thanof capability.
 
Britain’s Military Strategy in 1916
 
Just as any failure on the Somme cannot be explained by a manoeu-
vrist approach being inconceivable at the time, nor would it be accu-
rate to characterise the battle as the inevitable consequence of those
that preceded it. As Gary Sheffield summarises, in the initial battles at
Mons, Le Cateau, the Marne and elsewhere, ‘through a combination of
being at the right place at the right time, fighting skill and bloody-
minded tenacity, the BEF…played a role out of all proportion to its
size in halting the German onslaught’.
 
9
 
 The subsequent British offen-
sive battles of Neuve Chapelle and Loos, in March and September
1915 respectively, resulted in no ground gained and considerable casu-
alties. However, in early 1916 the BEF was close neither to defeat nor
exhaustion. Instead, to enhance our understanding of the Somme we
need to look closer at how Britain’s military strategy had developed
thus far in the war.
 
HAIG v. RAWLINSON – MANOEUVRE v. ATTRITION
 
127
After the Allies’ lack of success in turning the German’s northern flank
in the Race to the Sea at the outset of the war, subsequent failure on the
other flank at Gallipoli, and heavy French and Russian losses in 1915,
Britain had no choice but to play a large part on the Western Front in 1916
in defence of the Allies’ Centre of Gravity – alliance cohesion. ‘The Plan of
Action Proposed by France to the Coalition’ prior to the Inter-Allied
Military Conference at Chantilly in December 1915, suggested concerted
attacks on the Russian, Franco-British and Italian fronts. Shortly after-
wards, the British Cabinet agreed that ‘France and Flanders will remain the
main theatre of operations’ and that ‘every effort is to be made for carrying
out the offensive operations next spring [1916] in the main theatre of war
in close cooperation with the Allies, and in the greatest possible strength’.
 
10
 
Thus the BEF’s newly appointed Commander-in-Chief was committed
to a major offensive in 1916 on the Western Front. In addition, Kitchener’s
instructions to Haig in December 1915, made it clear to the latter that he
was not at liberty to conduct a campaign of his own choosing. ‘His govern-
ing policy’ should be to ‘achieve…the closest cooperation of French and
British as a united army’.
 
11
 
 As a result, Haig believed that he had broadly to
comply with French wishes over the timing and location of his main attack.
Although initially he envisaged a spring campaign launched from the Ypres
salient, which made strategic sense from a British perspective, not least in
its proximity to the Channel coast, Haig ultimately conformed to the plans
proposed by General Joseph Joffre the French Commander-in-Chief. After
a period of negotiation the two commanders agreed on a simultaneous
Anglo-French offensive astride the Somme, to be initiated in mid 1916.
 
12
 
This ground was chosen for no better reason than it was where British and
French armies met. Furthermore, once the Germans had attacked at
Verdun in February 1916, the timing of the attack was driven by the
requirement to take the pressure off the French.
 
Haig and The Manoeuvrist Approach
 
British Objectives for the Somme Campaign
 
In the words of the Official Historian, ‘the Somme offensive had no strate-
gic object except attrition’.
 
13
 
 In the orders he issued on 16 June 1916, Haig
described the object of British Fourth Army, and part of the British Third
and French Sixth Armies, as ‘relieving the pressure on the French at Verdun
and inflicting loss on the enemy’.
 
14
 
 In light of the analysis that follows, it is
important to recognise that, at one level, Haig’s objectives (and those of the
Allies) were successfully achieved. Faced by successful Russian attacks in
Galicia and the Anglo-French offensive on the Somme, General Erich von
 
128
 
DEFENCE STUDIES
 
Falkenhayn, the de facto German Commander-in-Chief, called a halt to
offensive operations at Verdun on 11 July. It is also true that German casu-
alties on the Somme were acute, and ultimately less easily replaced than
those of the Allies.
 
15
 
 But to characterise the Somme as a success on these
grounds is to ignore the failures of senior British commanders during the
battle. Nor is there evidence to suggest that Allied governments, or even
Haig, would have traded over 600,000 casualties to secure an equivalent
number of German casualties and a few square miles of ground, if they had
been offered this result at the outset of the battle.
 
A Manoeuvrist Design?
 
Setting aside whether or not the battle achieved its aims, is there a sense in
which Haig’s concept for the Somme was designed to be manoeuvrist? In
British doctrine the Manoeuvrist Approach calls for ‘results disproportion-
ately greater than the resources applied’.
 
16
 
 On this ground alone, Haig’s
offensive manifestly fails the manoeuvrist test. But if the plan for the
Somme was attritional at the strategic level, could it be characterised as
manoeuvrist at the operational or higher tactical levels?
If we look hard, we can find elements of Haig’s plan that would be
consistent with a manoeuvrist concept of operations. He certainly desired
to achieve a breakthrough and to exploit success. In his letter to Rawlinson
of 21 June 1916, amplifying his initial order of 16 June, Haig directed that
‘every effort must be made to develop the success to the utmost by firstly
opening a way for our cavalry and then as quickly as possible pushing the
cavalry through to seize Bapaume’. Thereafter, his intention was to roll the
enemy up from the south ‘taking the enemy’s lines in flank and reverse’ and
drive the Germans from the Arras salient. There is also no doubt that Haig
wanted to achieve surprise. For example, he advocated that the battle be
preceded by a ‘hurricane bombardment’ lasting only 5–6 hours.
However, merely desiring breakthrough, exploitation and surprise
does not constitute a manoeuvrist approach. In the first place, Haig
conceded to Rawlinson on length of the bombardment, which was then
planned to last for five days, but ultimately lasted a week because the
weather delayed Z-Day. In similar vein, although there was an attempt at
deceiving the German commanders, this was not a fundamental part of
the plan.
Second, Haig never generated the conditions that would allow the
cavalry to achieve what he hoped of them. The command and control
arrangements for the cavalry under General Sir Hubert Gough are so
opaque that they continue to confuse commentators today. Suffice to say
that ‘as late as 27 June, two days before the proposed attack, Gough
 
HAIG v. RAWLINSON – MANOEUVRE v. ATTRITION
 
129
complained to Haig that he was certain of neither his position, nor his
objectives under Rawlinson’.
 
17
 
 Haig allowed Rawlinson to make and
execute a plan that paid little heed to the cavalry. Indeed, when studying the
evolution of the plan for the Somme, it is possible to draw the conclusion
that even Haig doubted that they would succeed. Perhaps in his subcon-
scious mind the cavalry acted as a sop to compensate for the fact that his sole
objective was attrition and for the absence of operational level objectives.
(The latter point is supported by the fact that the cavalry’s objectives on the
Somme were expressed as a line parallel to the line of departure rather than
a thrust at an angle from it
 
18
 
).
Certainly, there is no sense in which Fourth Army’s concept for the
battle can be seen as a shaping operation designed to enable cavalry break-
through. In the 61 paragraphs of the two plans Rawlinson submitted to
Haig for 1 July, the cavalry is the subject of only one: 
As regards the employment of the cavalry, it appears to me that the best
use we can make of them is immediately after the attack on the line
Grandcourt-Pozieres has been successful,and that they can be of the
greatest assistance in enabling us to reach the further objectives, if we
succeed in inflicting on the enemy a serious state of demoralization.
 
19
 
This was a throw-away line, not a plan. In similar vein, Rawlinson’s Tactical
Notes issued to the Fourth Army in May 1916
 
20
 
 contain headings for
‘Cooperation of Artillery with Infantry’, ‘Aeroplanes’ and ‘Balloon
Communication’, but never mention the cavalry.
Thus the elements of Haig’s plan that might, at first glance, represent a
manoeuvrist approach were no such thing. Furthermore, the case against
Haig being described as manoeuvrist is strengthened still further when one
considers other ways in which the plan for the Somme lacked the
manoeuvrist approach. British Defence Doctrine (BDD) characterises the
manoeuvrist approach as: 
 
One in which shattering
 
 the enemy’s overall cohesion and will to fight,
rather than his materiel, is paramount. Manoeuvre warfare….aims to
apply strength against identified vulnerabilities. Significant features
are momentum and tempo, which in combination lead to shock action
and surprise. Emphasis is on defeat and disruption of the enemy by
taking the initiative and applying constant and unacceptable pressure
at the times and places the enemy least suspects, rather than attempting
to seize and hold ground for its own sake. It calls for an attitude of 
 
mind
in which doing
 
 the unexpected and seeking originality is combined with
a ruthless determination to succeed. … A key characteristic of the
 
130
 
DEFENCE STUDIES
 
manoeuvrist approach is the attacking of the enemy commander’s
decision making process by attempting to get inside his decision
making cycle, …thus achieving superior 
 
operational tempo.
 
21
 
And elsewhere BDD describes Mission Command in terms that make it
clear that some form of decentralised command is an essential corollary to
the manoeuvrist approach. Neither Haig, nor his plan, measure up well to
any of this. There is no evidence of any intention to shatter the enemy’s
cohesion and will. And far from attacking the enemy where he was weak,
‘the British command decided to send its infantry against some of the stron-
gest defences on the Western Front’.
 
22
 
 Of shock action, originality, and
attempts to get inside the enemy’s decision making cycle, there is precious
little sign.
In contrast, the correspondence between Haig’s staff and Rawlinson
concentrates on the ground to be taken, almost to the exclusion of all else.
That neither Haig nor Rawlinson understood tempo can be seen from the
way that the Battle of the Somme was fought: a handful of set-piece major
actions interspersed with a myriad of uncoordinated, ineffective and enor-
mously costly small encounters.
 
23
 
 There is no sign of any guiding hand
seeking to connect actions together to deliver the momentum necessary to
overwhelm the defenders.
As far as command is concerned, the picture is a little more complex.
Haig’s orders for the battle are commendably focused on objectives. But
instructions issued by Haig’s HQ enter into immense detail on how armies
and corps were to fight
 
24
 
. That Haig recognised the need to avoid over
control is not in doubt, but the degree to which he could not resist it is
evident in Instructions to the Fourth and Reserve Armies issued on 2
August 1916. Despite saying in this document that ‘it is not intended that
the initiative of Army Commanders should be curtailed as regards choice of
methods or in undertaking minor operations in furtherance of the general
plan’
 
25
 
, Haig’s Chief of Staff detailed precisely how the attack was to be
progressed. In contrast to the German Army of the time, and no doubt in
part due to its inexperience, the BEF was largely incapable of decentralised
command. Rawlinson’s Tactical Notes even went so far as to warn that ‘all
criticism by subordinates of their superiors, and of orders received from
superior authority, will rebound on the heads of the critics’.
 
26
 
Rawlinson and Attrition
 
So much for Haig being too manoeuvrist on the First Day of the Somme.
But did Rawlinson’s attritional approach, as characterised by the planning
 
HAIG v. RAWLINSON – MANOEUVRE v. ATTRITION
 
131
and execution of operations on 14 July 1916 work better, and was this
approach better suited to the capabilities of the BEF?
 
Rawlinson before the Somme
 
Since I took over command on April 1 1901, we have marched 5,211
miles, and we have halted in 276 camps. The casualties we have
inflicted on the Boers come to 64 killed, and 87 wounded. We have
taken 1,376 prisoners, 3 guns, 1,082 rifles, and 68,600 rounds of
ammunition. There have been no regrettable incidents, and our own
casualties have been 12 killed and 42 wounded.
 
27
 
So said Rawlinson in his farewell to his mounted column in South Africa
in May 1902. This does not sound like a commander wedded to an attri-
tional approach. Yet on the first day of the Battle of the Somme a number
equivalent to half of the British Army of today became casualties in his
Army. To understand this calamity, it is necessary to examine the part
Rawlinson played in the BEF’s campaign leading up to 1 July 1916.
Rawlinson’s first major action, fought as the commander of IV Corps,
was at Neuve Chapelle in March 1915. This battle is worthy of mention
because it provides many uncomfortable parallels with what was later to
happen on the Somme. Haig, who at this stage was commanding First
Army, was Rawlinson’s immediate superior, as at the Somme. Conscious of
the importance of the infantry not outpacing the range of the artillery,
Rawlinson planned a limited attack. In contrast, Haig wanted ‘an operation
of considerable magnitude’ in which success would be exploited by ‘push-
ing forth mounted troops forthwith’.
 
28
 
 Rawlinson captured his objectives
within four hours of H-Hour, but having largely declined to plan for Haig’s
subsequent objective, the follow-on attack on Aubers Ridge failed, and the
battle ended after only three days. Some ground had been gained, but the
BEF’s position had not been significantly enhanced and there were 7,500
casualties in Rawlinson’s IV Corps alone. Shortly thereafter, Rawlinson
reported to Kitchener that: 
 
If we had not tried to
 
 do too much our losses would have been one quar-
ter of what they were and we should have gained just as much ground,
but the idea of pushing through the Cavalry, which has just been
seized hold of by our leaders, all Cavalry Officers, was the origin of
our heavy losses.
 
29
 
Thus Neuve Chapelle helps explain Rawlinson’s subsequent attitude to
the cavalry at the Somme. It also shows Rawlinson failing to comply with
 
132
 
DEFENCE STUDIES
 
his commander’s intent, and Haig failing sufficiently to insist on him doing
so. The point is not that Rawlinson was wrong and Haig right, or vice versa,
but rather that the battle that ensued satisfied neither man’s concept of
operations, just as was later the case at the Somme in 1916. Neuve Chapelle
also sees Haig failing to press Rawlinson forward ahead of the Indian Corps,
when success arguably beckoned, and Haig failing to stop Rawlinson perse-
vering with attacks when success was no longer possible. Haig repeated
these kinds of errors at the Somme.
Neuve Chapelle 
 
should
 
 have told Rawlinson something about the
employment of artillery. After all, he recognised that ‘if the artillery cannot
crush and demoralise the enemy’s infantry by their fire effect, the enterprise
will not succeed’.
 
30
 
 Concentrated as it was on only one short German trench
line of 2,000 yards, the British artillery achieved a massive weight of fire,
and in so doing destroyed many enemy trenches
 
31
 
 and cut the wire entan-
glements that were regularly to prove the infantry’s undoing on the
Somme. Yet Rawlinson does not appearfully to have identified these
lessons, let alone learned them. His artillery fireplans on the Somme only
reached or exceeded the weight of fire employed at Neuve Chapelle once –
on 14 July. It is no coincidence that the latter was the BEF’s most successful
day during the battle.
 
Rawlinson’s Part in the Plan for 1 July 1916
 
In a letter to the King’s Private Secretary in March 1915, Rawlinson
elucidated the essence of the scheme of manoeuvre subsequently identified
as his trademark: 
What we want to do now is what I call, ‘bite and hold’. Bite off a piece
of the enemy’s line, like Neuve Chapelle, and hold it against counter-
attack. The bite can be made without much loss, and if we choose the
right place and make every preparation to put it quickly into a state of
defence, there ought to be no difficulty in holding it against the
enemy’s counter-attacks and inflicting on him at least twice the loss
that we have suffered in making the bite.
 
32
 
Unfortunately, as Rawlinson recognised in a letter to Kitchener soon after,
this approach ‘does not of course result in any decisive victory which could
affect the final outcome of the war and it only very slowly forces the
enemy’s line back towards their own frontiers’. Given the capabilities of the
BEF in 1916, Prior and Wilson may well be right in concluding that this
approach was ‘probably the only successful warfare which lay open to
Britain’
 
33
 
. But if so, they are equally right to point out that: 
 
HAIG v. RAWLINSON – MANOEUVRE v. ATTRITION
 
133
 
First, the men
 
 exercising the highest command over Britain’s forces
were not inclined to fall in with Rawlinson’s (inherently gloomy) line
of reasoning… Second, Rawlinson himself would prove anything but
a single minded advocate for the artillery dominated policy which,
momentarily, he had come to 
 
embrace.
 
34
 
To support the second of Prior and Wilson’s assertions above, we need
only look at the central issue of the objectives on the first day of the Somme.
Following Haig’s initial planning guidance, Rawlinson’s first plan entailed
an attack on a 20,000-yard front to a depth of between 1,000 and 2,000
yards.
 
35
 
 Given the amount of artillery available, the associated fireplan
would have led to a weight of fire in excess of that available at Neuve
Chapelle. Unfortunately, Haig overruled Rawlinson’s muddled and insuf-
ficiently forceful arguments in defence of his plan, doubling the distance to
the first objective, and thereby halving the intensity of the supporting
bombardment. Worse, partly as a consequence of this decision, Fourth
Army’s eventual fireplan did not insist on the use of smoke,
 
36
 
 despite the
latter having been one of the recognised successes of the Battle of Loos, and
paid insufficient attention to counter-battery fire.
 
37
 
But the failure of command goes deeper than this. As Prior and Wilson
point out, on 30 June 1916, the evidence available to Rawlinson indicated
that the British counter-battery programme had failed to subdue the
German artillery and that a considerable proportion of the German dugouts
remained intact.
 
38
 
 Yet despite knowing this, and despite believing that
Haig’s initial objectives were unachievable, and that the cavalry would make
no useful contribution, Rawlinson persisted in sending his men over the
top the next morning. By nightfall, over 50,000 of his Army were casualties,
of whom 15,000 were dead.
 
Fourth Army’s Plan for 14 July 1916
 
Over the period 2–13 July, Rawlinson failed to coordinate a series of chaotic
and separate attacks by his subordinate commanders that resulted in a
further 25,000 casualties in Fourth Army. His next major attack was to take
place on 14 July in the southern third of his area, using two of his corps in
attack, supported by flank attacks by another of his corps and by the French
and Reserve Armies. For this attack, Fourth Army had only two-thirds of
the guns available on 1 July. However, and crucially, much less ambitious
depth objectives meant that the artillery could concentrate its fire on a
greatly reduced amount of enemy trench line, with the result that the three-
day preparatory bombardment achieved a greater intensity even than the
opening fireplan at Neuve Chapelle.
 
39
 
 In another significant innovation, in
 
134
 
DEFENCE STUDIES
 
order to address the existence of 1,500 yards of open ground in front of the
objective, Rawlinson assembled the force in no man’s land at night and
launched a dawn attack. No doubt encouraged by the strong support of his
corps commanders, this time Rawlinson pursued his plan in the face of
strong objections from Haig who advocated a quite different attack and
thought that: 
our troops are not highly trained and disciplined, nor are there many
of the staff experienced in such work, and to move two divisions in
the dark over such a distance, form them up and deliver an attack in
good order and in the right direction at dawn, as proposed, would
hardly be considered possible even in a peace manoeuvre.
 
40
 
Rawlinson’s subsequent attack proved Haig wrong. The artillery destroyed
the wire, concealed the forming up point and suppressed the German
trenches, and the German front line was successfully overrun. If the attack
had concluded at that point, to be succeeded by a series of similar and coor-
dinated actions, it would have demonstrated that ‘bite and hold’ worked and
that Rawlinson well understood the capabilities of the BEF. It might even
have been manoeuvrist.
Unfortunately, this was not what happened. Perhaps in part influenced
by a feeling that he had failed to use the cavalry properly to exploit success
on his right flank on 1 July, Rawlinson’s plan now called for his three cavalry
divisions to break out to a distant line that was not in fact to be secured until
15 September, during the battle in which tanks were to be used for the first
time (at Flers). Attempting to cross ground made slippery by recent rains,
and unbridged trenches, most of the cavalry failed to get to the line of depar-
ture, and those that did were easily dealt with by the Germans.
Despite this failure, it is fair to say that, by the standards of the Battle of
the Somme, Rawlinson’s attack on 14 July was a success, and one that
demonstrated the kind of action to which the BEF of the day was best suited.
That said, in the absence of a coordinated campaign, it was merely a tactical
victory, its achievements quickly dissipated by the slaughter that continued
until Haig’s campaign on the Somme ended in mid-November 1916.
 
Lessons For Today’s Commanders
 
Failure of Command
 
Events leading up to and during the Battle of the Somme show that both
Haig and Rawlinson were fundamentally of an attritionalist mindset. But
Haig’s yearning for the breakthrough that would provide strategic mean-
ing to what he was doing fatally compromised any chance that attrition
 
HAIG v. RAWLINSON – MANOEUVRE v. ATTRITION
 
135
might succeed, and significantly increased the numbers of casualties in his
own force. Conversely, Rawlinson’s failure to insist on pursuing a more
rigorously attritionalist approach significantly compromised his chances
of success. This is the most significant failure of the Battle of the Somme
in 1916.
At its core is inadequate analysis. Neither commander learned the
lessons of events leading up to the Somme, or those of the battle itself.
Neither grasped the consequences of his actions because neither achieved
clarity of intent. It is certainly true that both were significantly constrained
by their own inexperience and that of the tools at their disposal, by the
absence of appropriate doctrine, and by operating in coalition, without the
benefit (that the Germans had) of unity of command on the Western
Front. But, to my mind, even in combination, these constraints do not
excuse what happened on the Sommein 1916. Both Haig and Rawlinson
had a professional and moral duty to estimate the situation and plan much
better than they did, and to execute their plans much better than they
managed.
 
Shortfall in Coordination
 
At a lower level, the Battle of the Somme also represents a shortfall in coor-
dination, albeit that, given how the BEF evolved, this is an altogether more
forgivable failing than that of command described above. After a pre-war
tour of German military establishments, Rawlinson observed: 
 
We live
 
 in watertight compartments, the infantry know nothing about
the artillery, nor the artillery about the infantry, the cavalry nothing
about either. This was in direct contrast to the Germans who were
always working together.
 
41
 
All-arms cooperation had improved by the Battle of the Somme and efforts
had been made to integrate air support. However, it was not until 1918 that
the BEF really developed into an early system of systems. By the end of the
war the ubiquitous use of new artillery techniques (calibration, the use of
meteorological information, flash spotting and sound ranging), and devel-
opments in aerial spotting and photography, were integrated with light and
heavy machine guns, rifle grenades and trench mortars, tanks and armoured
cars, gas, smoke, wireless telegraphy, and the administrative systems to
ensure that all of these things were in the right place at the right time.
It was not just that the quality of technology and manufacture developed
later in the war was absent in 1916, or that the BEF on the Somme wanted
for the volume of weaponry and ammunition subsequently available. What
the BEF in 1916 lacked above all was the synergy to be gained from the
 
136
 
DEFENCE STUDIES
 
coordination of all its constituent parts. Modern forces have recognised the
significance of coordination, but failures of the BEF in 1916, and its
successes in 1918, emphasise the power achieved by maximising integration.
 
NOTES
 
1 Hew Strachan, 
 
The Oxford Illustrated History of the First World War
 
 (Oxford: OUP 1998) p. 79.
2 Gary Sheffield, 
 
The Somme: A New History
 
 (London: Weidenfeld 2003) p.5. ‘In August
[1914] the 100,000 strong British Expeditionary Force (BEF) crossed to the Continent,
where it took its place in the line of battle alongside the sixty-two division French Army.’
3 Sheffield, 
 
Somme
 
 (note 2).
4 By mid-1916, Fourth Army alone numbered 500,000 and the BEF 1.5 million men.
5 Robin Prior and Trevor Wilson, 
 
Command on the Western Front: The Military Career of Sir
Henry Rawlinson, 1914–18
 
 (Oxford: Blackwell 1992) p.138.
6 A.H. Farrar-Hockley, 
 
The Somme
 
 (London: Batsford 1964) p.70.
7 William S. Lind , ‘The Theory and Practice of Maneuver Warfare’ in Richard D. Hooker Jr
(ed.) 
 
Maneuver Warfare: An Anthology
 
 (Novato, CA: Presidio 1993) p.7.
8 Such as the victories of the Thebans at Leuctra in 371BC, Hannibal at Cannae in 216BC,
Genghis Khan in Transoxiana in 1219–20, and Grant at Vicksburg in the American Civil
War.
9 Sheffield (note 2) p.5.
10 Brig.-Gen. Sir James E. Edmonds, 
 
Official History of the Great War: Military Operations France
and Belgium, 1916,
 
 Vol.1 (London: Macmillan 1932) p.10.
11 Edmonds, 
 
1916
 
 (note 10) Appendix 1, p.40. Kitchener’s instructions went on to say to Haig
‘I wish you distinctly to understand that your command is an independent one, and that you
will in no case come under the orders of any Allied General further than the necessary coop-
eration with our Allies referred to above.’ These orders are less clear than they ought to have
been, but Haig’s actions in 1916 suggest that he read them as an instruction to comply
broadly with Joffre’s intent.
12 By the time the battle started the French contribution was much reduced from that origi-
nally intended as a result of France’s requirement to reinforce the defences at Verdun.
13 Edmonds (note 1) p.31.
14 Ibid. Appendix 13, p.86. The British First and Second Armies, together with the balance of
the Third Army were ordered to ‘operate at the same time, with a view to misleading and
wearing out the enemy and preventing him sending reinforcement to the scene of the main
operations’.
15 There is considerable debate about the exact numbers of German casualties, but most
commentators believe that they were of the same order as those of France and Britain –
approximately 600,000.
16 
 
British Defence Doctrine,
 
 2nd edn. (2001) p.3–5.
17 Martin Middlebrook, 
 
The First Day on the Somme
 
 (London: Allen Lane 1971) p.90.
18 Edmonds (note 10) Vol.1, Map 2. The enclosed map was drawn by the Official Historian
after the war, but the fact that the cavalry’s objectives are depicted as a line to be gained is
consistent with how Haig described their task.
19 Edmonds (note 10) App.10, p.82.
20 Ibid. App.18, pp.131–47.
21 
 
British Defence Doctrine
 
 (note 16) p.3–5.
22 Prior and Wilson, 
 
Rawlinson
 
 (note 5) p.169.
23 Ibid. p.205. For example, in the 62 days between the major actions on 15 July and 14
September there were 41 attacks, during which, on average, only 5 per cent of the available
force engaged the enemy, at a cost of 82,000 Fourth Army casualties.
24 Edmonds (note 10) App.16, pp.91–124. This included such details as how many sandbags
were to be carried by each man.
 
HAIG v. RAWLINSON – MANOEUVRE v. ATTRITION
 
137
 
25 Ibid. Vol.2, App.13, p.36.
26 Ibid. Vol.1, App.18, p.132.
27 Prior and Wilson (note 5) p.8.
28 Ibid. p.35.
29 Ibid. p.72.
30 Ibid. p.25.
31 The concept of suppressing or neutralising enemy trenches at the moment of attack, rather
than attempting to destroy them beforehand, did not become common practice until 1917.
32 Prior and Wilson (note 5) p.78.
33 Ibid. p.79.
34 Ibid. p.80.
35 Ibid. p.144. To confuse matters, Rawlinson’s initial plan declared at its outset that the depth
of the attack would be ‘2,000 to 5,000’ yards, but it is clear from the remainder of the docu-
ment that this claim did not reflect his real objectives, which were well short of the German
2nd line of defence.
36 Prior and Wilson (note 5) p.162. Where smoke was used, at the discretion of the local
commander, such as by 56th Division in the diversionary Third Army attack at
Gommecourt, the attack was often successful, (despite in 56th Division’s case, being
preceded by three hours of German shelling because no attempt had been made to conceal
their attack).
37 Prior and Wilson (note 5) p.172. As a consequence of the decision to double the distance to
the first objective, only 128 of the 60-pounders and 40 notoriously inaccurate 4.7-inch guns
were allocated to counter-battery tasks. As a result, on 1 July, the Germans still had 598 field
guns and 246 heavier cannon available.
38 Prior and Wilson (note 5) p.176. Rawlinson also had reason to believe that wire-cutting had
generally been successful. This was an error, which better intelligence processes would have
overcome, but was not an error for which Rawlinson was directly to blame. Intelligence also
over-estimated the degree of damage that had been done to the German trench systems.
39 Prior and Wilson (note 5) p.191 quotes figures of one eighteenth the amount of trench line
to be attacked relative to 1 July and twice the weight of fire of Neuve Chapelle.
40 Prior and Wilson (note 5) p.193.
41 Ibid. p.6.