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Infantry Attacks

Infantry Attacks (German: Infanterie greift an) is a classic book on military tactics written by Erwin Rommel about his experiences in World War I. At the time of the book's writing in the mid-1930s, Rommel's rank was lieutenant colonel. Rommel had planned to write a successor called Panzer Greift An (in English: Tank Attacks) about tank warfare, and gathered much material during the North Africa Campaign. However, as a result of his perceived involvement in a failed assassination attempt of Adolf Hitler, he was forced to commit suicide before completing this work.

I. 1914 in Belgium and Northern France

Movement War

II. Fights in the Argonne 1915

III. in the High Vosges 1916, movement war in Romania 1916/1917

Position war

IV. , August 1917

Fights in the Southeastern Carpathians

V. Attacking battle at

Tolmein 1917

VI. Pursuit of Tagliamento and Piave

Translations[edit]

Lieutenant Colonel Gustave E. Kidde published in Infantry Journal(1944) an abridged English translation. This edition was titled Infantry Attacks. ATTACKS published in 1979 and translated by J. R. Driscoll was the first unabridged and complete English language translation published in the United States. [1]

Impact[edit]

Infanterie greift an was first published in 1937 and helped to persuade Adolf Hitler to give Rommel high command in World War II, although he was not from an old military family or the Prussian aristocracy, which had traditionally dominated the German officer corps. It was printed in Germany until 1945. By then, about 500,000 copies had been published. The book is still in print, and was most recently published in German in 2015.


The book was also used throughout the West as a resource for infantry tactical movements. General George S. Patton was among the many influential military leaders reported to have read Infantry Attacks.[2]

In popular culture[edit]

In the 1970 film Patton, when it is clear to Patton that he is defeating forces he believes are commanded by Rommel during a tank battle, Patton says to himself, "Rommel, you magnificent bastard, I read your book!" However, in a previous scene in the film, Patton is awoken by his aides with news that an intercepted German radio message reveals that Rommel will attack Patton near El Guettar, Tunisia. Before this, the camera focuses on a book on Patton's nightstand, The Tank in Attack (Panzer greift an), a book which Rommel had planned to write but never completed.