Full Description
A military strategy that aims to win by wearing down the enemy’s resources, manpower, and morale rather than by decisive manoeuvre. The Western Front (1914–1918) became the defining example of attritional warfare, where both sides accepted mass casualties in the belief that the enemy would collapse first. The battles of Verdun and the Somme in 1916 were explicitly designed as attritional campaigns, costing over a million casualties between them without producing a decisive result.
Critical Perspective
The attritional logic of the First World War has been used to condemn its commanders as uniquely callous — “lions led by donkeys.” This verdict has been substantially revised by military historians like John Terraine and Gary Sheffield, who argue that attrition was a rational response to the technological conditions of industrialised warfare, and that the British army’s learning curve from 1916 to 1918 represents a genuine military achievement.

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