There are two competitive views of Passchendaele and its
commander, Sir Douglas Haig. One school contends that the battle
was a very costly failure and that Sir Douglas Haig, the architect
of the battle, was a blundering murderer. A second school of
thought argues that Passchendaele was in many ways a success and
that Haig learned much during the campaign and went on to put his
learning to good use during the victorious offensive of 1918. This
study removes some of the blame for the failure from Haig by
examining the involvement of the Royal Navy in the planning and
prosecution of the campaign. Documentary evidence demonstrates that
the actions of the Admiralty were decisive in attracting the
attention of the army to Flanders and in gaining approval for the
battle itself. The Admiralty had a hitherto unknown effect on the
prosecution of the battle. The fact that the British fought the
battle for the wrong reasons and that the army on the coast waited
while soldiers at Passchendaele died raises Passchendaele to an
even higher plane of tragedy.
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