From
“Lincoln 365,” by Arnold Kunst
September 12
During the Civil War a quantum leap occurred that changed the way in
which humans conducted war against one another. The spring campaign of 1864
began with Grant and the Army of the Potomac attacking Lee and the Army of
Northern Virginia at a place that came to be called The Wilderness. When that
battle ended [on balance, one could argue that the North had been defeated by
the South yet again] Grant should have followed an unwritten but time-honored
tradition: break off engagement with the enemy to assess and regroup. That is
what had happened throughout history. Virtually all the great battles of the
past - Marathon, Actium, Austerlitz, even Gettysburg – could be summarized as
two blind giants stumbling into and then pummeling each other for a day or two,
and then disengaging. The Battle of Hastings, for example, which decided the
dynastic future of the English throne was done in an afternoon. But when the
Battle of the Wilderness concluded, Grant’s order was “flank to the left.” His
immediate purpose was to position himself between Richmond, the capital of the
Confederacy, and the Army of Northern Virginia, which was charged among other
things with Richmond’s defense. Lee [nickname: “King of Spades”] moved quickly
to take up a defensive position and prevented that from happening. For the rest
of 1864 the two armies grappled with each other zigzagging southward – but did
not disengage. Such a relentless strategy was the beginning of what a later
century would come to call total war.
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