Strategic developments General
Erich von Falkenhayn replaced Colonel-General
Helmuth von Moltke the Younger as the Chief of the
German General Staff on 14 September, when the German front in France was being consolidated in Lorraine and on the
Aisne. The open western flank beyond the 1st Army and the danger of attacks from the
National redoubt of Belgium, where the
Siege of Antwerp had begun on 20 August, created a dilemma in which the German positions had to be maintained, when only offensive operations could lead to decisive victory. Appeals for the reinforcement of the
Eastern Front could not be ignored and Falkenhayn cancelled a plan for the 6th Army to break through near
Verdun and ordered that it move across France to the right wing of the German armies. The flank of the 1st Army was at
Compiègne, beyond which there were no German forces until Antwerp. Falkenhayn could reinforce the 1st Army with the 6th Army, send it to Antwerp or divide the army by reinforcing the 1st Army and the Antwerp siege with part of the army, while the rest operated in the area between. Falkenhayn chose to move the 6th Army to
Maubeuge and outflank the Franco-British left wing, withdrawing the 1st,
7th Army and
2nd Army to
La Fère,
Laon and
Reims while the 6th Army was redeploying. The
3rd Army,
4th Army and
5th Army were to defend if the French attacked and attack to the south-west beginning on 18 September. General
Karl von Bülow and Colonel
Gerhard Tappen of the Operations Branch of the (OHL, Supreme Army Command) objected, because the time needed to move the 6th Army, would concede the initiative to the French and recommended an attack by the 1st and 7th armies, with reinforcements from the armies to the east for an offensive from Reims,
Fismes and
Soissons, since the French could redeploy troops on undamaged railways and the risk of separating the 1st and 2nd armies again would be avoided. Falkenhayn cancelled the retirement and ordered the 6th Army to assemble at
St. Quentin. An attack south of Verdun to capture forts on the
Meuse and encircle Verdun from the south and an attack from Soissons to Reims would prevent the French from moving troops to the flanks.
Tactical developments First Battle of the Aisne On 10 September, Joffre ordered the French armies and the
British Expeditionary Force (BEF) to advance and exploit the victory of the Marne. For four days, the armies on the left flank advanced and gathered up German stragglers, wounded and equipment, opposed only by rearguards. From Joffre ordered outflanking manoeuvres by the armies on the left flank but their advance was too slow to catch the Germans. The Germans ended the retirement on 14 September, on high ground on the north bank of the Aisne and began to dig in, which reduced the French advance from to a few local gains. French troops had begun to move westwards from Lorraine on 2 September, using the undamaged railways behind the French front, which were able to move a corps to the left flank in On 17 September, the French Sixth Army attacked from Soissons to
Noyon, at the westernmost point of the French flank, with the XIII and
IV Corps, supported by two divisions of the 6th Group of Reserve Divisions, after which the fighting moved north to
Lassigny and the French dug in around
Nampcel. The German armies attacked from Verdun westwards to Reims and the Aisne on 20 September, cut the main railway from Verdun to Paris and created the
St Mihiel salient at the
Battle of Flirey south of the Verdun fortress zone. The main German effort remained on the western flank, which was revealed to the French by intercepted wireless messages. By 28 September, the Aisne front had stabilised and the BEF began to withdraw on the night of with the first troops arriving in the
Abbeville area on the night of The BEF prepared to commence operations in
Flanders and join with the British forces which had been operating in Belgium since August. ==Prelude==