CHAPTER I THE OUTBREAK OF WAR Unfair disparagement of the War Office during the war - Difficulties under which it suffered owing to pre-war misconduct of the Government - The army prepared, the Government and the country unprepared - My visit to German districts on the Belgian and Luxemburg frontiers in June 1914 - The German railway preparations - The plan of the Great General Staff indicated by these - The Aldershot Command at exercise - I am summoned to London by General H. Wilson - Informed of contemplated appointment ...
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CHAPTER I THE OUTBREAK OF WAR Unfair disparagement of the War Office during the war - Difficulties under which it suffered owing to pre-war misconduct of the Government - The army prepared, the Government and the country unprepared - My visit to German districts on the Belgian and Luxemburg frontiers in June 1914 - The German railway preparations - The plan of the Great General Staff indicated by these - The Aldershot Command at exercise - I am summoned to London by General H. Wilson - Informed of contemplated appointment to be D.M.O. - The unsatisfactory organization of the Military Operations Directorate - An illustration of this from pre-war days - G.H.Q. rather a nuisance until they proceeded to France - The scare about a hostile maritime descent - Conference at the Admiralty - The depletion of my Directorate to build up G.H.Q. - Inconvenience of this in the case of the section dealing with special Intelligence services - An example of the trouble that arose at the very start - This points to a misunderstanding of the relative importance of the War Office and of G.H.Q. - Sir J. French's responsibility for this, Sir C. Douglas not really responsible - Colonel Dallas enumerates the great numerical resources of Germany - Lord Kitchener's immediate recognition of the realities of the situation - Sir J. French's suggestion that Lord Kitchener should be Commander-in-Chief of the Expeditionary Force indicated misconception of the position of affairs. In a record of experiences during the Great War that were for the most part undergone within the War Office itself, it is impossible to overcome the temptation to draw attention at the start to the unreasonably disparaging attitude towards that institution which has been adopted so generally throughout the country. Nobody will contend that hideous blunders were not committed by some departments of the central administration of the Army in Whitehall during the progress of the struggle. It has to be admitted that considerable sums of money were from time to time wasted-it could hardly be otherwise in such strenuous times. A regrettable lack of foresight was undoubtedly displayed in some particulars. But tremendous difficulties, difficulties for the existence of which the military authorities were nowise to blame, had on the other hand to be overcome-and they were overcome. Nor can the War Office be robbed of its claim to have borne the chief share in performing what was the greatest miracle of all the miracles performed during the course of the contest. Within the space of less than two years the United Kingdom was, mainly by the exertions of the War Office, transformed into a Great Military Power. That achievement covers up many transgressions. It has to be remembered that in this matter the detractors had it all their own way during the struggle. Anybody harbouring a grievance, real or imaginary, was at liberty to air his wrongs, whereas the mouths of soldiers in a position to reply had perforce to remain closed and have to a great extent still to remain closed. The disgruntled had the field pretty well to themselves. Ridiculous stories for which there was not one atom of foundation have gained currency, either because those who knew the truth were precluded by their official status from revealing the facts or because no one took the trouble to contradict the absurdities. Some of these yarns saw the light in the newspapers, and the credulity of the public in accepting everything that happens to appear in the Press is one of the curiosities of the age. Not, however, that many of the criticisms of which the War Office was the subject during the protracted broil were not fully warranted. Some of them were indeed most helpful.
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