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  2. Oct 14, 2009 · Blitzkrieg—which means “lightning war” in German—had its roots in earlier military strategy, including the influential work of the 19th-century Prussian general Carl von Clausewitz.

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  3. Feb 10, 2021 · Hans von Seeckt was both the architect of the German Wehrmacht and Blitzkrieg tactics used so successfully in World War Two. These victories were so stunning that they gave rise to the myth of German military supremacy—a myth that has persisted to this day.

  4. Oct 8, 2024 · During World War II each blitzkrieg campaign contained a Schwerpunkt that gave it meaning and substance, with doctrines of mobile warfare expounded by British military theorists J.F.C. Fuller and Sir Basil Liddell Hart providing the tactics necessary to translate the theory into action.

  5. In contrast to the defensive outlook of France and Britain at the beginning of the Second World War, Germany adopted a powerful offensive method of warfare known as Blitzkrieg.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BlitzkriegBlitzkrieg - Wikipedia

    The Germans successfully used blitzkrieg tactics in invading Belgium, The Netherlands and France. Despite being common in German and English-language journalism during World War II, the word Blitzkrieg was never used by the Wehrmacht as an official military term except for propaganda. [8]

  7. Beginning in June 1941, this blitzkrieg attack on Russia and its leader Joseph Stalin would ultimately decide the Second World War. In this episode of IWM Stories, John Delaney takes a look at why Operation Barbarossa failed with the help of archive film, photographs and battle maps.

  8. Mar 30, 2011 · On 21 June 1940, early in the second year of World War Two, the French president, Marshall Philippe Pétain, sued for peace with Adolf Hitler's Third Reich. In the course of the negotiations...

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