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  1. 21 de nov. de 2023 · The Schlieffen Plan was named for its creator, Field Marshall Count Alfred von Schlieffen, chief of the German Imperial General Staff from 1891 through 1906.

  2. 15 de jun. de 2020 · World War 1 began with some creative sweeping movements by German troops, but what was their strategy, and how did it turn out?This video covers:1) Why Germa...

    • 7 min
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    • History Blast
  3. 25 de ago. de 2021 · The Schlieffen plan made several assumptions: There would be minimal resistance from Belgium. Russia would take six weeks to mobilise their army. The UK would not get involved.

  4. Schlieffen was very worried about Germany’s position with Russia and France. He was sure that if Germany were to fight a war against Russia and France at the same time, it would not be able to win. Because Europe was dividing into two fronts, he thought that Russia and France were serious enemies. He made the Schlieffen Plan in 1905.

  5. Dieckmann, too, was convinced that the Schlieffen plan was the culmination of Schlieffen’s strategic thought, but the information that his manuscript provides leads to another conclusion. It is interesting to speculate why, at this late date, Wolfgang Foerster directed that an analysis of Schlieffen’s 1891–1905 war planning be written.

  6. 10 de feb. de 1996 · REVIEW OF THE SCHLIEFFEN PLAN . . . All writers have . . . been in accord that Moltke made the left or defensive wing in Alsace and Lorraine stronger than Schlieffen designed, and that he did so at the expense of the right wing, the decisive one, which in swinging round was to sweep the French Armies against the back of their eastern frontier fortresses and against the Swiss frontier.