Kahran Ramsus wrote:
12. Kitchener drowned when his ship was sunk by a German mine, while he was on the way to Russia.
Yes! Kitchener was still very popular when he died, though there was unease in Parliament over the effectiveness of his policies. The Germans denied targeting Kitchener, saying they do not engage in political assassinations.
18. Blitzkrieg?
Yes! The military philosophy of World War I was still heavily influenced by Napoleonic belief in fronts. Essentially, the whole front had to move, and if one part of it got bogged down (which they always do), then the whole front had to halt and wait. The Germans in 1918 created this elite class of "shock troops" who were drugged up so they wouldn't sleep for a week, and just sent into the fray to fight extremely aggressively, and just keep going regardless of where the front was behind them. This penetration of the front proved very successful, with regular army units following behind them to mop up the bypassed harder areas of enemy resistance. The French and British adopted this tactic by wars' end, which explains the sudden burst of mobility in the summer of 1918 that led to victory for the Entente. The West (especialy the French) settled back into older military patterns in the interbellum years, but the Germans developed this idea further, using highly mobile units of armor and light infantry to form "Blitzkrieg".
Good job Kahran! # 18 was probably the hardest question!