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What was Blitzkrieg and Who Created it

23 bytes added, 04:21, 3 July 2019
Development of New Technologies and the Mechanized German Army
Guderian and Ludwig Beck, then chief of the German army, did indeed come into conflict, but not because Beck was an anti-armor traditionalist. Instead, Beck had a broader view of the situation than did Guderian, who was only concerned with the panzerwaffe. Beck was worried that concentrating all of the army’s massive assets like tanks and motorization in a few panzer divisions would reduce the fighting ability of the rest of the military. He wanted to allocate some tanks to the infantry divisions to give them more offensive capability. Guderian resisted this, thinking that it would dilute Germany’s armored strength.<ref>Showalter, ''Hitler’s Panzers'', pp. 45-46; Friesser, The Blitzkrieg Legend, pp. 28-33.</ref> He eventually won this debate, and Germany concentrated her mechanized and motorized assets into a few panzer and light divisions—the rest of the German army remained leg-mobile infantry not much different from their World War I counterparts. This would prove problematic in the long run, but on the eve of war, it gave the Wehrmacht an elite, concentrated fighting force of excellent hitting power, mobility, and flexibility. The panzer divisions would serve as spearheads for the mass army.
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====The Role of Airpower and the Luftwaffe in German Blitzkrieg====

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