Publications:
Inventing the Schlieffen Plan: German War Planning 1871-1914 (
German War
Planning 1891-1914, Sources and Interpretations (Boydell and Brewer, 2004)
The
The Moltke Myth: German War Planning 1857-1871 (University Press of
The
Articles in War in History, History Today, Intelligence and National Security.
Philosophy of
writing military history:
My approach to
military history reflects my career as a professional soldier, all of which was
spent either with troop units or as a tactical instructor, and my training as a
historian at the
I have found that many histories of the German army from 1864 to 1914 are based on old secondary sources that do not meet professional military standards and frequently have a nationalistic, patriotic or political agenda. The myths they have established are satisfying to the layman, but militarily absurd. Many of the most widely accepted books on the German army repeat this “common knowledge,” however militarily unlikely. “Great Generals” are emphasized instead of doctrine and troop training. “Little maps, big arrows” substitute for the painstaking study of plans, orders and tactical combat. Sweeping and unfounded generalizations take the place of attention to detail.
Based on the
standards of German scholarship and professional military judgment, I have
shown in Inventing the Schlieffen Plan that
there never was a “Schlieffen plan” and published the
supporting documents in English translation in German War Planning. In The
Moltke Myth I prove that the elder Moltke was not a great planner and battlefield leader, and
that the Prussians won the wars of 1864, 1866 and 1870/71 because of the
tactical superiority of the German army, particularly the infantry. The
I can promise that my work will never merely repeat
“common knowledge,” that it is thoroughly researched in primary sources
reinforced by professional military standards. There is no deference paid to
patriotic or political myth or the unsupported opinions of important
historians. I seek to establish German military history according to the
standard of Leopold von Ranke: “as it actually was.”
Education:
BA in History,
1970,
MA in History,
1996,
PhD (summa cum
laude), 2001,
Fluent in German and French
Military Service:
1970-1990 infantry officer in the
US Army. Mortar platoon leader (twice), rifle platoon leader, rifle
company executive officer, infantry battalion adjutant, assistant infantry
battalion operations officer, company commander in 3rd Infantry
Division for over three years, including command of B Company, 2nd
Battalion 30th Infantry Regiment (Mech),
assistant infantry division inspector general, tactics and NBC instructor, 3rd
Infantry Division headquarters commandant,
Legion of Merit for counter-intelligence operations.
Contact:
zuber@terencezuber.com