Erich von Falkenhayn (born November 11, 1861, near Graudenz, West Prussia—died April 8, 1922, near Potsdam, Germany) was a Prussian minister of war and chief of the imperial German General Staff early in World War I.
Falkenhayn gained military experience as an instructor to the Chinese army and as a member of the Prussian General Staff in the international expedition of 1900 against the Boxers in China. From July 1913 to January 1915 he was Prussian minister of war, in which office he was responsible for the armament and equipment of the German army. Within Germany he greatly improved the system of munitions supply and transportation of troops by rail. He ignored some recommendations of Gen. Helmuth von Moltke, chief of the General Staff, who for that reason considered him responsible for the army’s failure in France in 1914. On September 14, 1914, after the German retreat from the Marne, William II chose Falkenhayn as Moltke’s successor.
Falkenhayn was convinced that the war had to be won in France, chiefly by Germany’s standing on the defensive and exhausting her enemies. He did not believe Russia could be defeated militarily. Thus, he opposed the plan of Field Marshal Paul von Hindenburg and Gen. Erich Ludendorff for an eastern offensive and was reluctant to provide troops for a theatre he believed “gave nothing back.” Instead, he began concentrating resources for an attack on Verdun that he believed would wear out the French army. On August 29, 1916, following a long and unsuccessful German assault on that French fortress-city, Falkenhayn was dismissed as chief of the General Staff by the emperor in favour of the more aggressive Hindenburg.
After leading a German army against Romania for 10 months, Falkenhayn took command of the Central Powers forces (mainly Turkish) in Palestine (July 9, 1917). There he was unable to stop the advance of the British under Gen. Edmund Allenby. Having been succeeded in Palestine by Gen. Otto Liman von Sanders, Falkenhayn commanded an army in Lithuania from March 4, 1918, until the end of the war.