[Story of the War in South Africa by Alfred T. Mahan]@TWC D-Link bookStory of the War in South Africa CHAPTER V {p 28/47
116.] [Footnote 24: Burleigh, "Natal Campaign," p.
129.] Whatever foundation of truth it may have, the incident irresistibly suggests, though it does not certainly demonstrate, the advantage of adhering to the original plan of advance by the Free State line.
It has been stated that, "On all sides in Germany the opinion is expressed that Kimberley, and even Ladysmith, ought to have been erased as primary factors in the calculations of those responsible for the plan of operations.
A strong British army advancing towards Bloemfontein, and turning neither to the left nor to the right, would have attracted the attention of all the available {p.213} Boer forces, and would indirectly, but none the less speedily, have relieved the pressure on Ladysmith and Kimberley....
War is a hard trade, and must be waged independently of minor considerations and of many human sympathies."[25] Would it not be juster to say, war must be waged in the spirit of fortitude, that endures the strain of even a very great risk, incurred by persisting in a course of action demonstrably correct? [Footnote 25: London _Weekly Times_, December 22, 1899.] Uttered in the week following Magersfontein and Colenso, the opinions just quoted are certainly open to the charge of being wise after the event; nevertheless, it is indisputable that they express a fundamental military truth.
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