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Operation Michael, also known as the German Spring Offensive, was the biggest gain in World War I on the Western Front by any side since 1914.

On March 21 1918 Germany launched a major offensive, "Operation Michael", against British and Commonwealth forces. The German army developed new tactics involving stormtroopers, infantry trained in Hutier tactics (after Oskar von Hutier) to infiltrate and take trenches.

Erich Ludendorff, the German Officer in command wasted his forces by not following the correct tactics, which had been to attack where defenses would easily fold and move past strongly held areas. It was his continual throwing away of his forces attacking strongly cemented British battalions that led to his inability to attain victory, even though he pushed back the French and British lines far.

The Allies reacted by appointing French Field Marshal Ferdinand Foch to coordinate all Allied activity in France, and then as generalissimo of all Allied forces everywhere.

The German offensive moved forward 60 km (30 mi) and pressed the British lines so much that the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) commander, Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig, issued a General Order on April 11 stating "With our backs to the wall and believing in the justice of our cause each one of us must fight on to the end." However, by then, the German offensive had stalled because of logistical problems. Counterattacks by Canadian and ANZAC forces had pushed German forces back.

References

Michael, Operation

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