in action at
Séchault on 29 September 1918 during the Meuse-Argonne Offensive. • At the end of August Marshal Foch had submitted plans to the national commanders for a final offensive along the entire Western Front, with the objective of driving the enemy out of France before winter and ending the war in the spring of 1919. The basis for his optimism was the success of Allied attacks all along the front in August. Furthermore, he pointed out, the Allies already had active operations in progress between the
Moselle and
Meuse, the
Oise and
Aisne, and on the
Somme and
Lys Rivers. Foch acknowledged that the Germans could stave off immediate defeat by an orderly evacuation combined with destruction of materiel and communications. Therefore, the overall aim of the fall offensive would be to prevent a step-by-step enemy retirement. As Foch anticipated, the Germans eventually contributed to the success of his strategy. Their High Command could not bring itself to sacrifice the huge stores collected behind the front lines, and so delayed the withdrawal of its armies. • Foch's great offensive, planned to begin in the last week of September, called for a gigantic pincers movement with the objective of capturing
Aulnoye and
Mézières, the two key junctions in the lateral rail system behind the German front. Loss of either of these junctions would hamper seriously the German withdrawal. Despite grumbling from the English that they lacked the necessary manpower, a chiefly British army was assigned the task of driving toward
Aulnoye. The A.E.F. was designated for the southern arm of the pincers, the thrust on
Mézières. Simultaneously the Belgian-French-British army group in Flanders would drive toward
Ghent, and the French armies in the
Oise-Aisne region would exert pressure all along their front to lend support to the pincers attack. • Pershing decided to strike his heaviest blow in a zone about wide between the Heights of the Meuse on the east and the western edge of the high, rough, and densely wooded
Argonne Forest. This is difficult terrain, broken by a central north–south ridge that dominates the valleys of the
Meuse and
Aire rivers. Three heavily fortified places –
Montfaucon,
Cunel, and
Barricourt – as well as numerous strong points barred the way to penetration of the elaborate German defenses in depth that extended behind the entire front. This fortified system consisted of three main defense lines backed up by a fourth line less well-constructed. Pershing hoped to launch an attack with enough momentum to drive through these lines into the open area beyond, where his troops could then strike at the exposed German flanks and, in a coordinated drive with the
French Fourth Army coming up on the left, could cut the
Sedan-Mézières railroad. • The task of assembling troops in the concentration area between
Verdun and the
Forest of Argonne was complicated by the fact that many American units were currently engaged in the battle of Saint-Mihiel. Some 600,000 Americans had to be moved into the Argonne sector while 220,000 French moved out. Responsibility for solving this tricky logistical problem fell to Col.
George C. Marshall, Assistant Chief of Staff, G-3 (Operations),
First Army. In the ten-day period after St. Mihiel the necessary troop movements were accomplished, but many untried divisions had to be placed in the vanguard of the attacking forces. • On the Meuse-Argonne front where the main American attack w to be made, Pershing disposed three corps side by side, each with three divisions in line and one in corps reserve. In the center was the
V Corps (from right to left the
79th,
37th, and
91st Divisions with the
32d in reserve), which would strike the decisive blow. On the right was the
III Corps (from right to left the
33d,
80th, and
4th Divisions with the 3d in reserve), which would move up the west aide of the Meuse. On the left was the
I Corps (from right to left the
35th,
28th, and
77th Divisions with the
92d in reserve), which would advance parallel to the
French Fourth Army on its left. Eastward across the Meuse the American front extended in direct line some ; this sector was held by two French Corps (IV and II Colonial) and the
American IV Corps in the
Saint-Mihiel sector. Pershing had available to support his offensive nearly 4000 guns, two-thirds manned by American artillerymen; 190 light French tanks, mostly with American personnel; and some 820 aircraft, 600 of them flown by Americans. • The Meuse-Argonne Offensive falls into three phases. During the initial phase (26 September – 3 October), the First Army advanced through most of the southern Meuse-Argonne region, captured enemy strong points, seized the first two German defense lines, and then stalled before the third line. Failure of tank support, a difficult supply situation, and the inexperience of American troops all contributed to checking its advance. • In the second phase (4–31 October), the First Army, after the inexperienced divisions had been replaced by veteran units, slowly ground its way through the third German line. The enemy was forced to throw in reserves, drawn from other parts of the front, thus aiding the Allied advances elsewhere. In the face of a stubborn defense, American gains were limited and casualties were severe, especially as a result of the newly devised enemy tactic of attacking frontline troops with airplanes. First Army air units retaliated with bombing raids which broke up German preparations for counterattacks. By the end of October the enemy had been cleared from the Argonne and First Army troops were through the German main positions. Two notable incidents of this phase of the campaign were the fight of the "Lost Battalion" of the 77th Division (2–7 October), and the feat of CPL (later SGT)
Alvin C. York, who single-handedly killed 15 Germans and captured 132 on 8 October. • In mid-October, the organization of the Second Army was completed, at
Toul in the St. Mihiel sector, to provide means for better control of the lengthening American front and solutions of the diverse tactical problems that it presented. Pershing assumed command of the new army group thus formed. • Before the third and final phase (1–11 November) of the offensive got under way, many of the exhausted divisions of the First Army were replaced, roads were built or repaired, supply was improved, and most Allied units serving with the A.E.F. were withdrawn. On 1 November First Army units began the assault of the now strengthened German fourth line of defense. Penetration was rapid and spectacular. The V Corps in the center advanced about six miles (10 km) the first day, compelling the German units west of the Meuse to withdraw hurriedly. On 4 November the III Corps forced a crossing of the Meuse and advanced northeast toward
Montmédy. Elements of the V Corps occupied the heights opposite Sedan on 7 November, thus finally accomplishing the First Army's chief mission – denial of the Sedan-Mézières railroad to the Germans. Marshal Foch, at this juncture, shifted the First Army left boundary eastward so that the French Fourth Army might capture
Sedan, which had fallen to the Prussians in 1870. American units were closing up along the Meuse and, east of the river, were advancing toward
Montmédy,
Briey, and
Metz, when hostilities ended on 11 November. • General Pershing authorized the results of the Meuse-Argonne Campaign, the greatest battle in American history up to that time, in his Final Report: "Between 26 September and 11 November, 22 American and 4 French divisions, on the front extending from southeast of
Verdun to the Argonne Forest, had engaged and decisively beaten 47 different German divisions, representing 25 percent of the enemy's entire divisional strength on the western front." • "The First Army suffered a loss of about 117,000 combatants (combined killed and wounded). It captured 26,000 prisoners, 847 cannons, 3,000 machineguns, and large quantities of material." More than 1,200,000 Americans had taken part in the 47-day campaign. ==Vittorio Veneto, 24 October – 4 November 1918==