Some Future Challenges For South African Mining

The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
B. P. Gilbertson
Organization:
The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
3
File Size:
354 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1994

Abstract

In her wonderful book, 'The Guns of August', historian Barbara Tuchman tells us that the French war plan for 1914 was dedicated entirely to an offensive strategy, not a defensive one. Plan 17, as it was called, concentrated everything on a French advance to the Rhine, leaving the French left virtually unguarded. This strategy could only be justified by the fixed belief that the Germans could not deploy sufficient manpower to extend their invasion around through western Belgium and the low provinces; and this in turn was based on the belief that the Germans would never use reserve troops in the front line. Al evidence to the contrary was ignored. But when the war came, the Germans followed Count Von Schlieffen's plan; they did use reserves in the front line and they did come the long way around on the west. The result- as you know-was a protracted war, with fearful consequences for the rest of our century.
Citation

APA: B. P. Gilbertson  (1994)  Some Future Challenges For South African Mining

MLA: B. P. Gilbertson Some Future Challenges For South African Mining. The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1994.

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