Again it isn't as if WW1 artillery couldn't have been moved forward if accuracy was the only issue keeping the wire from being damaged by barrages. Instead the issue is that wooden posts and metal wire simply take an artillery pounding too well for such methods of wire clearing to work. Tanks aside, there was no truly good way to deal with wire in WW1.Steelinghades wrote:There are a few advantages ACW and napoleonic artillery has compared to WW1 artillery in this case--well, one advantage--and that is that it's closer to the front compared to later artillery. The majority of artillery during the first world war--not all of it mind--was farther back from the front line compared to earlier artillery.
And yes, it is hard to knock down barbed wire; the best you can hope for against the wire directly is to knock down the posts holding it up. Though A much better tactic in my mind is to aim the artillery right at the area where the barbed wire ends and blast out some craters for infantry to crawl into and cut the wire from relative safety.
The issue is that the ends of each set of wire are your kill zones. This is where your fastest shooters and quick firing guns will be set to kill the men the wire funnels to you. So crater or not, the men set to cut the wire will be in extreme danger just as they would have been in WW1.