It is often said that the armies and the generals in World War One were not prepared for the effect of then-modern technology on warfare - that is, the way it made defence prevail over offence and turn the war into a long and bloody slogging match. And I do not say that is wrong. But that really reflects on the ability of humans to extrapolate
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On the other hand, I once read a story that showed that under certain circumstances things could be managed more precisely. During WWI, some Italian units were being battered by an Austrian battery they could not locate. Someone had the bright idea of summoning an officer whose name was, I think, Leone. Captain Leone said: "I have seen exactly where that last shot came from, and if you give me a few minutes I'll tell you how to aim your guns." He got out a pencil stub and some sheets of paper and started making calculations; then he handed over the result of the calculations to the battery commander, saying: "aim your guns as these figures specify". Within a few minutes the troublesome Austrians had been silenced. Captain Leone had been a great mathematics professor in one of Italy's leading universities before the war. So perhaps if every regiment had been issued one mathematical genius, the war might have been shorter. 8-)
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The main issue where communications came into play with artillery spotting, was in having the forward observer accompanying the attacking infantry relaying the correction calculations to the heavy artillery units further back. This was symptomatic of the problem of long range communication in general along the front and the delays with getting it to the rear - artillery or general staff. In the absence of wires cut by battle or effective wireless radio, pigeons and runners were still the order of the day.
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