Showing posts with label war. Show all posts
Showing posts with label war. Show all posts

Saturday, February 14, 2026

Decisive Battles: Frontiers 1914 - Part 7: Discussion and Conclusions.

We've finally reached the end of our long trail through the "Battle of the Frontiers" in August 1914. 


Working backwards from here we looked at the final portion of the "crisis" of mid-to-late August just this past January when we looked at the engagements along the Franco-Belgian frontier between the German right and Anglo-French left.

Before that we had a long lacuna - my fault and I apologize for it - before we discussed the other two engagement areas, the Southeast (where the French attacks into Lorraine were beaten back but the German counterattacks stalled in the Trouée de Charmes) and the Central "Battle of the Ardennes" that was perhaps the single biggest driving force behind the failure of the French Plan XVII and MAR Joffre's grand tactical operations, way back in July of 2025.

In May 2025 we took a side arc to look at SIGINT after taking a dive into the first meeting engagements that were the main event during the second two weeks of August.

February 2025 took us to the mobilization and deployment of the combatant armies during the first week of August. 

In 2024 we broke down the opposing sides' aerial reconnaissance assets in  November and the ground reconnaissance elements in September. We detailed French war planning and German war planning over the summer of 2024, and began with a brief scene-setting discussion of the geopolitical setting of Western Europe at sunrise on 1 AUG 1914.


To cite myself from the first entry in this series, the reason we did all this is because:

 "The origins of this series go back over a decade, to the 2009 piece on the...First Battle of the Marne

In the course of researching and writing that article my attention was drawn to the tactical issues that arose from both combatants' mis- (or lack of) understanding of their opponents. A lot of the "whys" of the Marne ran directly from the failure of strategic and/or tactical reconnaissance.

Neither side really accomplished either of their reconnaissance or security objectives, and the result was the chaotic collision that we call the Marne.

The question that I kept coming back to was...why not?

Was the problem baked into the larger operational or even the strategic planning? 

Was this the result of both sides' failure to anticipate the tactical "facts on the ground" affecting reconnaissance and making plans that assumed conditions that no longer existed?

Or was it technical, the conditions themselves, that had changed beyond the ability of clever plans to account for them? Was the problem that the older means and methods of reconnaissance - horse cavalry and light infantry - and security were just no longer effective in the tactical environment of 1914, and the new techniques - air reconnaissance - un- or under-developed to the point where the commanders didn't receive (or were unable to process) the intelligence?"

Well, now we've looked at the events of August 1914 to a fairly granular level of detail, and we need to discuss what, if anything, they tell us about our hypotheses. 


Were there critical failures - either of the physical reconnaissance activities of the respective armies, or of the interpretation (or lack of interpretation) of the intelligence those activities generated? And did those failures, assuming they occurred, result in combat results that led to the failure of the presumably-war-winning plans of one or both opponents.

Before we can answer that question, we need to take a look at the combat results that appear to show the effects of those reconnaissance or intelligence-analysis failures.

So...

Where can we find combat actions that reflect reconnaissance failures/analysis failures in August 1914?

Starting from bottom to top (in reverse order of the post list we started from), then, I'm going to pull out the following by area: location and (army affected) as the proofs of our hypotheses:

Center: Eastern Belgium (Germany) - Belgian defenses, including the setup of the fortress belt around Liege and their effect on available/practical German axes of attack.

Southeast: Lorraine (France) - Failure of the French 1er and 2eme Armee recon units to detect the German counterstroke that became the defeats of Morhange-Sarrebourg.

Southeast: Lorraine (Germany) - Failure of 6. and 7. Feldarmee to detect the French defenses that resulted in futile bloody attacks on the Charmes gap.

Center: Ardennes (France) - Failure to discover the presence of the three German field armies which resulted in the brutal defeats of 22-23 AUG during the Battle of the Ardennes.

Northwest: Central Belgium/Northern France (Germany) - Failure to find the BEF/western end of the Franco-British MLR in a timely fashion.

Northwest: Northern France (Germany) - Several failures to find (or correctly interpret reports of) Allied defenses at, then movements from, Mons, and the Sambre-Meuse lines, to the Marne.

Let's take a look at each in a bit more detail.


Eastern Belgium (1-16 AUG):
There seems to be some agreement amongst military historians that OHL's timetable for the passage of eastern Belgium around Liege was a bit overoptimistic, but the actual time that the combination of Belgian resistance and German tactical and logistical foul-ups cost the right-wing advance isn't a fixed value.

Showalter (2019) - who's thesis, remember, is that reconnaissance problems in August cost Germany the campaign, at least, if not the war - says that, yes, recon (and operational/movement) problems did hold up the three right-wing field armies, and provides estimates for the delay ranging from two days to 4-5 days to none (citing the German official history that the predicted date of arrival for 1. Feldarmee at Mons was 23 AUG, so right on time).

The other element here is the question of what operational or tactical problems did reconnaissance failures lead to, and how did - or did - they impact the German offensive.

Certainly the failure to find the Belgian field fortifications between the fixed forts around Liege cost the Maasarmee in lives. How that impacted the larger campaign, though? That seems difficult to exaggerate. All the combatants were unprepared for the bloody cost of assaulting dug-in defenses, of which Liege was just the first of many. And when the German infantry finally did overrun the inter-fort defense lines and seize the city center it had little effect, if any, on the fortresses themselves; the heavy siege guns were still required to blow open the steel and concrete and reduce the Liege strongpoints before the right wing maneuver forces could proceed west.

So my thought is that the first of our recon-failure problems didn't have much of a campaign-level (much less war-outcome level) impact. 


Lorraine (14-26 AUG):
I think we can lump both the French failures of mid-August (the "Battle of Lorraine" or Morhange-Sarrebourg) and the German failure at the Charmes Gap in the third week of August (the "Battle of Trouée de Charmes") together.

I also think that we can relegate both to the same sort of "fairly minimal impact" bin we put Liege.

Yes, both the 1er and 2eme Armee, and the 6. and 7. Feldarmee, recon units made some tactically (and in human terms) lethal errors.

Had those errors been avoided? I don't see either making a real operational or strategic difference.

Both French and German offensives in Lorraine were going to be limited by the opposing fortress belts, as well as by the impact of operations elsewhere along the frontier and the tactical realities of 1914 combat. I see the possibility of a decisive French breakthrough around Sarrebourg, or a Bavarian breakout through Trouée de Charmes, as somewhere between unlikely and impossible even had the aviators and cavalrymen on both sides absolutely nailed it.

So, again, ugly in human cost, fairly minimal in the "battles that could have changed history" value.

Meaning we're left with the other three third-week-of-August failures; the German failures find and fix the Anglo-French left in Flanders - both before and after Mons/Charleroi - and the French failure to figure out what was going on in the Ardennes before the horrific collisions of 22-24 AUG.


Flanders (19-24 AUG):
This takes in both the initial failure to find the open left flank of the Anglo-French defenses and the repeated failure to cut off the Allied retreats.

The German recon failures can be attributed to several issues; 1) the tactical mis-employment/poor logistical management of the strategic HKK cavalry units, 2) misdirection of aviation patrols, and 3) poor transmission of, or incorrect analysis of, aerial reconnaissance reports when they did arrive.

We'll discuss this in depth after we go through the scenarios, but the bottom line is OHL's management - from initial deployment to movement orders to logistical support - of the HKKs was generally poor. The cavalry units in the field seem to have tried their best to accomplish their missions (with the caveat that engagements like Waremme and Haelen were a cautionary tale that shouldn't have taken the lives of men and horses to have figured out beforehand) but OHL's overall strategic/grand tactical direction was appalling. 

HKK 1 was useless for most of August, not because of it's (or it's commander's) fault but because OHL's initial deployment was fucked up as a football bat. HKK 2 did better (and was tactically outstanding at Le Cateau) but was still largely wasted through poor command and control from its OHL higher as well as a poor (or lack of) coordination with the field army commands that should have been getting information from the HKK's work.

German aviation seems to have been on top of reconnaissance in the field - the feldfliegerabteilungen were on top of it, anyway, though there was a larger issue with aerial assets that we'll discuss below - but the problem there was, as we discussed, a combination of poorly organized staff work (specifically the lack of a Ic aviation intelligence officer on the corps and field army staff) and an unwillingness of the field army commanders - Kluck and Bulow - to abandon preconceived ideas when presented either with contradicting intelligence or conflicting intelligence when some of the reports supported their convictions regardless of the relative number or value of the report they wanted to be correct.

That said...the larger operational/logistical/time-and-space questions that surround the whole "strong right wing" concept are hard to avoid.

As we discussed back when we talked about First Marne, the real question seems to be whether the entire right wing sweep originally envisioned by Schleiffen was militarily practical.

The lack of usable road axes of advance, and the problem of road-logistical mobility away from the railheads (and the inability of the eisenbahnbautruppen to extend those railheads in real time to keep up with the maneuver units), has been pointed out since 1918 and brings into question whether, even had the German horsemen and fliers quickly found the BEF and identified the open country west of the British, the German right wing could have effectively enveloped the Allied left with enough force to have shattered the defenses and forced a French capitulation.

So...troubling?

Yes.

Decisive?

I'm not convinced.

Let's look at the final scenario.


The Ardennes (14-24 AUG):
This really was the "crisis" of the Battle of the Frontiers. If you can point to one single failure of reconnaissance that impacted the Battle of the Frontiers it's the French failure to find the German 3., 4., and 5.Feldarmee in the Ardennes before the French FLOT was hammered flat.

Mind you, the French failures in the Ardennes are multifarious and cascading, beginning with the poorly directed, seemingly random wanderings of Sordet's cavalry corps.

They include flawed grand tactical and tactical concepts of operations, from GQG down to battalion level. Top-down, rigid, orders-driven command and control and a punitively slow orders-issue-cycle timeline that commonly meant that even when intelligence was received and analyzed in a timely manner the resulting orders were issued hours, or even days, too late. Crude tactics, including a lamentable inability of many French maneuver commanders to understand and conduct combined arms operations.

The overall narrative of the Ardennes is the French offensive bumbling blind into the woods to be surprised and decimated by a German advance that had better intelligence and more rapid, more responsive tactical reactions to the encounter battles of August.

Given the larger operational situation I don't see how Joffre's Plan XVII concept would have resulted in the "breaking the hinge" between the German left and right he envisioned even had French cavalry and aviation recon work been immaculate.

But had his central front armies been better aware of the buzzsaw they were walking into Joffre might have been able to at least stabilize the front lines much closer to the French borders and prevented the loss of so much of the coal- and iron-ore fields and manufacturing capacity in northeastern France that handicapped the French war effort.

So those failures?

Pretty damaging.

Now that we've discussed the where and when, let's talk the "whys".

Performance of the reconnaissance elements in August 1914

Infantry In our look at who was doing the recon work along the Frontiers we quickly dismissed the historically-oldest "recon" units on the ground, the "light infantry" scouts, and I'll stand by that assessment.

While still useful for local tactical recon the riflemen, jagers, and chasseurs/voltigeurs were simply too slow to contribute much more than that. A smart infantry battalion or regiment or brigade commander still had his scouts out, but for doing things like finding BEFs or preventing Ardennes disasters?

Nope. The guys just didn't have the legs anymore.

Cavalry Here we have to separate the "local" cavalry - for the French, and British, the corps and for the Belgian and French the divisional cavalry squadrons - which did just slightly more than the light infantry did, and the "strategic" cavalry; the German HKKs, the French Sordet's 1er Corps de Cavalrie, and (to some extent) the British Cavalry Division.

And here we also have to distinguish between the overall physical/technical constraints to all cavalry operations in 1914, the tactical abilities of the opposing sides' mounted units, and the operational control exerted (or failure to exert) by OHL GQG, and the BEF GHQ.

All cavalry in 1914 suffered from several problems imposed simply by the conditions of warfare at the time.

Scale, for one. The distances the horses were asked to move, and the short time require to move through them, were punitive. "Modern" war meant that human and animal endurance was pushed to, and beyond, their limits. All the "strategic" cavalry commanders, French and German, complained of the losses their units suffered simply from the wear on legs and backs, the loss of horseshoes and lack of fodder, from long march days and distance from - or lack of - resupply sources. 

Several whole days in August were lost because it was a hard choice between stopping operations to rest the horses or pushing ahead and ruining, or killing, them. 

Another was the greatly improved range, accuracy, and lethality, of both direct and indirect, fire of 1914 compared to the last big European wars of the 1860s and 1870s.

Simply stated, in August 1914 a man-sized target that could be seen could be hit, and, if hit, killed or badly wounded in a way that in 1870 would have been a challenge if possible at all. A horse-sized target? Damn near unmissable.

A mounted cavalryman in 1820 or 1870 took a chance scouting out his enemy's infantry position.

In 1914? The chances had become damn near certainties.

Lethal. And that's without even considering artillery.

So the option of cavalrymen "fighting for intelligence"? On foot, maybe. But that meant that once within rifle- or artillery-range of possible enemy main force elements the cavalry's mobility was reduced to a slow foot-pace sneak-and-peek to avoid blundering mounted into someone's machinegun beaten zone.


So both sides had over-optimistic ideas of how effective at reconnaissance their cavalry (and their enemy's cavalry) would be.

That said, there do seem to have been some issues that affected the French and British cavalry differently than the German.

On the operational level, the French GQG and British GHQ seem to have done a very poor job determining the objectives and directing the employment of, and collecting the information from, their mounted units.

We've discussed the futile wanderings of Sordet's troopers. The British cavalry seem to have been poorly used, although the scatterbrained deployment of the Cavalry Division doesn't seem that much more scatterbrained than Field Marshal French's August work in general.

OHL misallocated (as we also discussed) the HKKs initially, leaving the right flank spaces largely vacant and shoving four of the five into areas where they were either hemmed in by vegetation (HKK 1) or simply crowded out by infantry masses (all the others except HKK 2), and then freeing up the one that could have been useful (HKK 1) too late.

Better than GQG, which seemed to forget about Sordet altogether for days at a time. But that's a damn low bar.

At the tactical level the French cavalry, in particular, seems to have performed poorly. This 2020 article reports that in the Ardennes:

"The inability of the French cavalry divisions to obtain an accurate picture of the advance of the German 4th and 5th Armies led to serious mistakes in French operational and tactical planning. Due in great part to IR88’s success at Longlier, the French 4th and 9th Cavalry Divisions were pushed out of the way of XVIII AK and were not able to determine what the Germans were doing, nor hinder their movements. The anonymous author of the FAR (Feldartillerie Regiment) 25 regimental history said that the French cavalry simply would not fight. (italics mine) 
From the smallest patrol up to the level of cavalry corps, the French cavalry avoided combat and when it unexpectedly did meet German forces, such as at Longlier, the French cavalry withdrew. The German cavalry was able to screen the movements of its own forces, while on 21 and 22 August it provided accurate information concerning the French advance."

The British cavalry, at least according to Zuber, was similarly averse to fighting for intelligence (or fighting at all but, then, Zuber...):

"In reconnaissance, counter-reconnaissance and rear-guard operations the British cavalry from 21 to 27 August was utterly ineffectual. Whether the British cavalry was superior fighting dismounted, as Jones contends, is a moot point, because it didn’t fight dismounted, but made a practice of withdrawing before the Germans could make contact.

Before Mons the British Cavalry Division failed to perform its reconnaissance and counter-reconnaissance missions. On 24 August it left the II Corps left flank floating in the air. On 25 August it failed to delay HKK 2 and IV AK. At Le Cateau it failed to provide even local security and, citing exhaustion, did nothing. The British Cavalry Division in August 1914 was an operational liability."

Much as German infantry/artillery tactical doctrine and training seem to have been more effective than the Belgian, British, or French, the Imperial cavalry seems to have been better prepared for August 1914 than their enemies.

(How much of this was, at least in part, owed to the attachment of the jager battalions I'm not sure...but at least some must have been. The German HKK cavalry divisions had in their light battalions a serious direct-fire force multiplier that neither the British nor the French had in August 1914.)

So some of the cavalry reconnaissance difference - both in general capabilities, and in increasing (for the Allies) or decreasing (for the German) the impact of the errors - looks like it was directly related to the organizational, doctrine, and training advantages of the German reiter.


Aviation
This is where I suffer from a source disparity.

Bowden (2017) is a comprehensive source for all fixed-wing-aviation-things German. I have a highly detailed account of what the Fliegertruppen des deutschen Kaiserreiches did, how well (or poorly) they did it, and what impact it had.

I have several fairly decent on-line sources for the Royal Flying Corps. Not nearly as exhaustive, but at least covering the general activities of the British fliers.

I've even got some okay-ish sources for the Belgian air element. 

France?

Nothing. Zero. Zip. Nada. 

Okay, now...here's the thing. As we've discussed, the "most dangerous enemy course of action" for France in August 1914 was the Ardennes offensive/counteroffensive, and we know that particular sector was the least conducive for, and most poorly visible to, aerial reconnaissance.

So it's entirely possible that the Armee de l'Air was busting it's Farman ass over the wooded hills of the Ardennes but it just wasn't helpful in seeing through the canopy.

But given my lack of French sources?

I've got no idea one way or the other.

Here's what I do know, specifically about the German aviation efforts.

Technically the German fliers seem to have been solid, at least as good or better, than their French or British counterparts.

(The caveat being that in August 1914 "aerial reconnaissance" was entirely about reconnaissance; the idea of "security" - that is, denying your enemy's eyes in the sky access to your positions on the ground - was not only impossible in fact but hadn't really even occurred to anyone as a practical concept yet. 

The first "fighter"-type aircraft (that is, specifically designed to attack and destroy other aircraft to deny air recon patrols) first appeared in April 1915, and the first real designed-from-the-ground up "fighter" was the Fokker E.1 in July.

Where German aerial recon issues appeared they seemed to revolve more around a combination of 1) staff organization - specifically the overworked German corps- and field army-level Ic and the lack of an aviation-specific staff pogue - and 2) poor or deliberately obtuse interpretation by the receiving maneuver commanders.

What we know of the French and British leadership's decision-making suggests similar problems there, too.


However. I'm a bit baffled by the absence of one bit of aerial reconnaissance specifically; zeppelins.

Seriously.

When you consider the enormous time and effort OHL and the Imperial Navy put into the England raids - 51 bombing raids over two years involving 84 airships (of which 30 were lost to British fire or mishaps) dropping almost 6,000 bombs - for such meager returns, you have to wonder.

Here was a huge, stable platform, capable of carrying a radio, which (by January 1915, anyway) was capable of overflying the southeastern counties of England.

Yes, the gasbags seem to have had issues with ground fire (we discussed the three that were shot down in August when we talked about aviation assets in 1914) though the England raiders seemed to have significantly less trouble, losing only about four or five out of the thirty-odd to anti-aircraft guns.

You'd think that the combination of stability, loiter time, and radio commo would make an airship, at least one with a respectable operational ceiling, a perfect strategic reconnaissance asset.

Apparently they weren't. Was the problem low ceiling? (that certainly was a problem for Z VI, VII, and VIII) Size and speed? (even at high altitude an airship is a goddamn big, slow target). Observation? (was the "high enough to be safe" also "too high to see tiny stuff on the ground"?)

Whatever the reason, despite having and using them for reconnaissance missions at sea, the Heer had no use for them over the Western Front after the third week of August.

Go figure. 

Conclusions

Criticality: Were there any potential "war-winning" actions/event along the French frontiers in August 1914 that poor reconnaissance (or poor interpretation of/reaction to recon reports) caused one side or the other to fumble? Or "war-losing" moments that poor German recon (since Germany "lost" the war, at least in conventional terms) led to?

We've agreed that of the six occasions where there seem to have been problems with reconnaissance in one form or another two look like they had some larger implications; for France in the Ardennes, and for Germany in Flanders.

So..? 

Ardennes, definitely a huge problem for France; failure to find, and prepare for, the German attacks in the third week of August put paid to any hope - slim as it probably was - of Plan XVII "working" as it was supposed to.

The effect, however, was really less of a 'war-losing disaster" and more of a "forced to give up illusions of a war-winning victory". So troublesome, but not really "critical" to the larger outcome of the war. Gemany didn't lose, or France win, the war in the Ardennes in August 1914.

Flanders, a problem for Germany, yes, though more of a "limited the gains" problem than a "totally changed the outcomes/lost the war" between Mons/Charleroi and the Marne.

And in effect the reconnaissance failures seem likely to have balanced each other out; the French failure in the Ardennes was somewhat offset by the German failures to catch and kill 5er Armee and the BEF. Between them both they set the table for the collision along the Marne in September that effectively stopped the German invasion and started the grind of positional warfare that lasted for the following four years.


Responsibility:
 Why did the recon work that was unsatisfactory - for France in the Ardennes, for Germany in Flanders - fail? Was there an individual, or a branch, or an organization, training, or doctrine responsible?

Let's look at it by reconnaissance asset type. 

Infantry? No, other than poor overall French infantry/artillery training and doctrine. Infantry recon was a purely local task, and doesn't seem to have been involved significantly in either critical failure event.

Cavalry? Yes. To an extent, both in general and specific to one of the combatants.

The physical realities of modern war in 1914 meant that mounted cavalry couldn't possibly as effective at reconnaissance (tho at dismounted security both sides' cavalry was still fairly effective) as it had been, or that the highest levels of command thought it would be. Plans that depended on ground recon by cavalry units were destined to produce less-than-optimal results.

However, the degree to which those results were suboptimal seems to have varied based on national differences in organization, training, doctrine, and leadership. The German cavalry seems to have been better prepared that either the British or French mounted units. We simply don't have enough combat encounters to say anything about the Belgian cavalry.

Aviation? Also sort of yes-and-no. 

The actual flying contingents for which I have good or at least decent information - Germany and Great Britain - appear to have been technically competent and effective in the field to the extent which the state of their fragile and weather-dependent aircraft allowed. For the Belgian fliers, like their cavalry, I simply lack data, and the French fliers are a mystery shrouded in a source-free enigma. 

What was lacking was at the command and staff levels. The organization for collecting, analyzing, and reporting aerial recon information was either rudimentary or, often, so poor that it broke down under combat stress. And the maneuver commanders - the German field army commanders and OHL, the French army commanders and GQG, the British corps commanders and GHQ - often disbelieved, or misinterpreted, or just ignored, the aerial recon stuff.

And, as we've mentioned, the closest to a "one simple war-winning trick" the air recon work seems to have come was the retreat from Mons/Charleroi, where if some of the sources are to be believed, quick and correct analysis of, and operations based on, several reports might have bagged 5re Armee and the BEF.

Might have.

After looking at all these events I'm not really convinced, though, and even less convinced that it was a problem of poor reconnaissance alone rather than a messy collision of the "fog of war", some poor field recon, and equally poor intelligence analyses.

In the end I think the culmination of the battles along the frontiers that August - stalemate and prolonged trench warfare - was likely from the outset.


The vastly increased lethality of both direct and indirect fire, and the increased logistical capacity to sustain it, meant that without a similar increase in tactical mobility (armored vehicles, aircraft) and speed of communication (tactical radio) the ability of any attack to produce a large enough, sustained enough, and damaging enough breakthrough to completely destroy a modern army was diminished to the point of near-nullity, as the Western Front demonstrated for the following four-odd years.

Add to that the problems inherent in the German "strong right wing" plan; van Creveld and  Liddell-Hart weren't wrong. 

The conditions on the ground, and the military technologies, of 1914 meant that it would have required several fortuitous, linked events - a linkage that the "friction" of war (drink!) made something between highly improbable to damn near impossible - going Germany's way to have resulted in the decisive envelopment that the generation of Schleiffen and Moltke had anticipated.

Instead we got the result of the actual August 1914 that set in motion the Western Front of World War 1 and all the changes and consequences that come from it down to our present day.

Among the military changes were several involving "reconnaissance".

Perhaps the single biggest - certainly to the minds of the military planners and commanders of the 1914 generation - of these was the final separation of cavalry and ground reconnaissance, or, indeed, of ground troops in general as the primary element of reconnaissance altogether. Above the purely local tactical level, anyway.

Armies of 1915 and later would still use infantry patrols, and, after the development of practical armored vehicles, light armored/mounted recon units, to learn about nearby enemy positions, strengths, and activities.

But field intelligence above the grand tactical level now meant aerial (and, today, satellite) eyes-on. Which, in turn, meant a progression of reconnaissance and counter-reconnaissance developments; better observation aircraft and tools such as aerial cameras, then counter-reconnaissance aircraft ("pursuit" or "fighter") to keep the enemy's aircraft out, then counter-fighter-fighters - escorts or sweeps - to clear those skies for the recon birds.

Better AAA defenses. Radar. Better aircraft. Better radar. Even better aircraft.

Satellites. Computers. And so on and on.

At least one thing hasn't changed, however.

All the people who led their nations, and armies, into war in the late summer of 1914 believed they could "win". That armed force, military power, would bring material benefits to their nation. Increased wealth. More economic and political power. 

More "happiness", if you will, if by that you mean more of the things that they, and the people of the nations they led, wanted and believed would make their lives better in some form, whether material, emotional, political, or spiritual.

All of them were wrong.

Catastrophically, horrifically, appallingly wrong.

Not just in beginning the years of war they set in immediate train, but in everything that cascaded down from there; the chaotic post-war disasters in eastern and southern Europe that followed the devolution of Austria-Hungary, Germany, and Russia, the inevitability of the brutal Soviet, Nazi, and Italian Fascist dictatorships (and all the other little dictators in places like the Balkans and Spain). Wars, rumors of wars, deaths, starvation, depression and inflation, disease and epidemic, every conceivable human misery.

All of it, all that unhappiness, because the political and military leaders and peoples of that last summer of the Long Peace couldn't not believe that "war works". 

That there were, indeed, "good wars and bad peace".

That hasn't changed a bit.

Every war, every rebellion, every armed conflict ever begun was, and is, begun because the people who began, or will begin, them believed with all their hearts that those wars will "work" and will get them what they think they want.

They have no thoughts of "unintended consequences", although those consequences are inevitable and inescapable and follow every war as surely as night follows the day. 


Perhaps the best exposition of how utterly ruinous their collective delusions were comes from the pen of G. M. Fraser, in the words he puts in the mouth of his character Harry Flashman, from the novel Mister American:

 "Mr. Franklin replied noncommittally, and asked the General what he thought of the war situation. The old man shrugged.

"Contemptible - but of course it always is. We should stay out, and to hell with Belgium. After all, it's stretching things to say we're committed to 'em, and we'd be doing 'em a favor - and the Frogs, too."

"By not protecting them, you mean? I don't quite see that."

"You wouldn't - because like most idiots you think of war as being between states - colored blobs on the map. You think if we can keep Belgium green, or whatever color it is, instead of Prussian blue, then hurrah for everyone. But war ain't between colored blobs - it's between people. You know what people are, I suppose - chaps in trousers, and women in skirts, and kids in small clothes."

The General took a pull at his wine and grimaced. "I wish to God that someone would tell the Hungarians that their wine would be greatly improved if they didn't eat the grapes first. Anyway, imagine yourself a Belgian - in Liege, say. Along come the Prussians and invade you. What about it? A few cars commandeered, a shop or two looted, half a dozen girls knocked up, a provost marshal installed, and the storm's passed. Fierce fighting with the Frogs, who squeal like hell because Britain refuses to help, the Germans reach Paris, peace concluded, and that's that."

"And there you are, getting on with your garden in Liege. But..." - the General wagged a bony finger - "...suppose Britain helps, sends forces to aid little Belgium - and the Frogs - against the Teuton horde? What then? Belgian resistance is stiffened, the Frogs manage to stop the invaders, a hell of a war is waged all over Belgium and northeast France, and after God knows how much slaughter and destruction the Germans are beat - or not, as the case may be. How's Liege doing? I'll tell you - it's a bloody shambles. You're lying mangled in your cabbage patch, your wife's had her legs blown off, your daughters have been raped, and your house is a mass of rubble. You're a lot better off for British intervention, ain't you?" He sat back, grinning sardonically.

(There's a bit more of this discussion, which, if you like, is well worth reading and not just for this bit. It's a fun book in a lot of ways, and worth a look if you can find a copy, long out of print as it is. Anyway, our author has his spokesman conclude...)

He drowned this wistful reminiscence with a hearty gulp of wine, shuddered with distaste, and went on: "I'd also like to remind our jingo-drunk public that they haven't the least notion what a war with modern weapons will be like and the only fellows who can even guess are your American survivors from places like Antietam and Shiloh - that's the only real war that's been in a hundred years."

The General pointed an accusing spoon at Mr. Franklin. "Know how many men went down at Gettysburg? Fifty thousand - and if I hadn't moved damned lively I'd have been one of 'em. Well, how many Gettysburgs d'you think it will take to settle a scrap between the kind of forces under arms in Europe today? I don't know - perhaps a month of it would make everyone cry quits, but knowing the sort of clowns who'll be in command - who are always in command - I take leave to doubt it." 

The ironic part of this little sermon, and what moves it from cynicism to genuine tragedy, is that those in command, in the palaces and the ministries and the field headquarters, were not clowns. They were, for the most part, serious, learned, accomplished, well-intentioned men who genuinely wanted and hoped and tried what they thought was the best for what they thought of as their nations and peoples.

And they were wrong.

Wrong about cavalry. Wrong about aviation. Wrong about reconnaissance. 

Wrong about technology, tactics, strategies, casualties, logistics, politics, economics. Wrong about war, and, through that, wrong about everything that came from it and, through their mistakes and misconceptions then, created so much of what is wrong in our today.


Monday, June 23, 2025

Bomb, bomb, bomb. Bomb, bomb Iran

Friend of the Blog mike wanted a response to the latest U.S. "fucking around in the Middle East", so here goes:

1) Meh.

2) Well...meh IF this is all it is. Dropping ordnance from the low stratosphere is the ultimate in Rich Man's War. Provided your target lacks similar capabilities? You can pretty much stroll away whistling. I don't see this as much, if any, different than bombing Serbs or Libyans, and all the earlier examples of Aerial Gunboat Diplomacy didn't result in any real military escalation. That sucked for the dead and maimed people within the impact areas, but otherwise? Meh.

3) Now...in terms of "the law of war"? This is obviously criminal, the crime of "making aggressive war" for which we hanged the leaders of Germany and Japan. It's technically "unconstitutional" as well, a violation of Congress' explicit war-making power. Which, as we all know, is as dead as the dodo assuming that the GOP majorities could even be bothered to stop fucking with idiocies long enough to bother.

4) Okay. Now...if this ISN'T all it is - that is, if Tubby wasn't just showing his whole idiot ass when he burbeled about "Make Iran Great Again" - and there's a faction in the Fraudulency Aministration that genuinely wants to put GIs in Tehran? Ohfuckno. THAT's beyond insane. This country couldn't do "regime change" in Iraq, a much smaller and less fractious nation, and after fucking around we found out when the Islamic State emerged from the ruins.

5) My opinion on the whole "Israel is the most utterly worthless "U.S. ally" in history" hasn't changed, either, other than this reinforces the whole notion. That kind of pisses me off, since the original Tzahal of the Six Day War was one of my childhood heroes, and the descent of the tough sabras of 1967 into the thugs of the West Bank checkpoints makes me grieve for everyone involved.

6) Jeffrey Lewis has a nice thread on the technical issues with these strikes, as well: https://bsky.app/profile/armscontrolwonk.bsky.social/post/3lsageddlpk2l - well worth a look.

So, to sum up, these things are actually one of the less-harmful (to his own nation) examples of Trumpfuckery. Fairly pointless? Yep. Driven by "addled FOX News grampa" energy? Sure. Possibly relating to the limp-dick performance of his Big Beautiful Birthday Perade? Maybe.

The wild card now is "what happens next?"

If the mullah government falls...then what?

Who or what replaces it? I wouldn't bet that Freedom Will Reign; Iran hasn't had decent governance since the Fifties, if that.

And this whole nonsense frankly just hammers home the lessons of Libya and Ukraine versus North Korea and Israel; if you're a smaller nation and you don't want to kiss the ass of (or get pushed around by) a Great Power?

You NEED fucking nukes. Now. Yesterday. 

So whoever replaces Khameni, unless they really, really want to kiss Trump and Netanyahu's asses, need to speed-run Khameni's nuke program, which is kind of "the opposite" of what this nonsense is supposed to be about. 

But we're going to have to just wait and see "what's next"

Update 6/24: Apparently what's next is "Tubby declares "ceasefire!", and both Israel and Iran reply "WTF, dude?"

There's no upside for Netanyahu to stop belting the mullahs. The IAF has got to be struggling - my understanding is that, for one thing, their aerial tanker fleet is aging and small - but anything that keeps the Israeli public angry and scared keeps his ass out of court/jail.

Iran? I'd sure they'd love to nope out of this. They're getting mauled. But, as I noted above, if they want ANY hope of not becoming the pawn of every nuclear power with a grudge (or a grift) they still HAVE to keep the hope of nuclear retaliation alive.

My guess is that both Iran and Israel will reach a sort of "peace of exhaustion" and Fatso can claim credit for that. But it won't be "peace" in any sense of the term. And what comes after that? I have no idea. 

Wednesday, March 26, 2025

Make stupid wars. Collect stupid prizes


That the Trump Klown Kabinet could fuck up a military wet dream?

Color me shocked by that. Shocked!

One of the most interesting takes on this is Garrett Graff's piece here:  

It sums up the multivariate fuckups, idiocies, and "scandals" (if such a thing can be applied to these shameless nitwits - you have to have the ability to feel shame to be "scandalized", and these garden tools have none) involved in the now-apparently-called "Signalgate" nonsense.

I don't really give a shit. These people have done and will do worse. This is just another Tuesday in Yemen and the worthless Trump 2: Electric Boogaloo Administration. Oh, wait, more dead people? Yawn.

No.

It's what it exposes about the pure, crystalline stupidity that has been the U.S. "policy" in the Middle East, Trumpian and otherwise.

Seriously...what the fuck did these nimrods think a dozen bombs, smart or otherwise, would do in Yemen?

The place has been a clusterfuck since, well...in the modern era? The Sixties, when the place split into two north-south halves and proceeded to indulge in various bloody debates over who should be the boss of whom.

Throw in the usual - corruption, poverty, famine - and you've got the classic Middle Eastern recipe for misery.

So how does hucking a dozen or so kinetic weapons into random apartment buildings "help" with that?

Hint: it doesn't.

This was, apart from the awesome level of bureaucratic incompetence - people on their iPhones in the Kremlin cafeteria, random journos in on the chat, schoolboy emojis - the ultimate in worthlessly performative "war". This was the equivalent of the story in Tony Herbert's Vietnam memoir where he runs down the list of target effects and comes across one labeled "emplacements destroyed" and wonders how you "destroy" a hole by blowing it into a bigger hole.

For a couple of cool million in ordnance, fuel, equipment wear, and personnel costs this nonsense only made the Yemeni rubble bounce. 

I'm sure Elon Musk will get on this "waste" just as soon as he gets done kicking all us "fraudsters" off Social Security.

WASF.

Monday, July 29, 2024

Decisive Battles: Frontiers 1914 - Part 2: Keep The Right Wing Strong

 Last time we looked - very briefly! - at the geopolitical buildup to August 1914. 


The tl:dr version is that:
1) Europe in the waning years of the 19th and the opening of the 20th Centuries was a cross-cutting tangle of alliances meant to reassure the major powers that they wouldn't be isolated in a Great Power war.

2) These included:
a) Germany and Austria-Hungary, a peculiar and one-sided arrangement that seems to have persisted because i) Austria needed German economic and military strength, while ii) Germany needed SOMEbody to be their pals, and the Austrians were that desperate.
b) Italy and the Ottomans were kind of strap-hanging on to the Austro-German alliance, but i) Italy was pretty much the definition of "not really a Power" AND pretty much hated the Austrians, while ii) the Ottomans weren't useful for much of anything in Europe AND were pretty much "The Sick Man" they're conventionally portrayed.
c) On the "other side" were France and Russia, forced into an arranged marriage when Germany dumped Russia and France was looking for help to offset its economic and demographic weakness vis-a-vis Germany.
d) Great Britain wasn't really sold on all this Continental dick-waving, but i) had patched things up with France because of concerns about Kaiser Wilhelm's idiotic Navy fetish, and ii) had an arrangement with Belgium, who, sensibly given the aggro dudebros all around, had declared their absolute neutrality on the whole Franco-German pissing contest.

3) When the political crisis in the Balkans that exploded at the end of June (and, remember, Franz Ferdinand was just the final spark; the problems between Austria-Hungary, Serbia, Russia, the Ottomans, as well as the Balkan minorities within and without the Austrian borders, had been festering for decades) the immediate military concerns of the various powers were (in alphabetical order):

Austria-Hungary: defeating Serbia before the Russians could mobilize and threaten the northern regions of Bohemia and Moravia (in what are now the Czech Republic and Slovakia) and Galicia (in modern Poland):

By ArdadN - Transferred from en.wikipedia to Commons., Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=5867649


France: A German invasion (I know - it was that simple, but not easy...)

Great Britain: Kind of nothing, at first. France versus Germany? Not their problem, tho I'm sure Herb Asquith and Downing Street were giving the HochSeeFlotte the side-eye just in case...

Italy: Not happy to be dragged into a European war by the fucking Austrians (bastardos!) over some damn thing in the Balkans. 

(This eventually led to Italian reneging on their Central Power-alliance commitment, BTW.)

Ottoman Empire: Kind of wanted to slap Russia, but the overall involvement was a fuckup. Turkish  historian Kemal Kaspat summed it up as follows:

“Ottoman entry into the war was not the consequence of careful preparation and long debate in the parliament (which was recessed) and press. It was the result of a hasty decision by a handful of elitist leaders who disregarded democratic procedures, lacked long-range political vision, and fell easy victim to German machinations and their own utopian expectations of recovering the lost territories in the Balkans."

 So, yeah, kind of a fuckup.

Russia: Fulfillment of promises to the Slavic nationalists in the Balkans, as well as a fear of Austro-German attacks from Galicia and East Prussia.

Great Power Chess: Germany Moves First

Of the Powers Germany was in what appeared to be the scariest military position.

Everyone else had a border to worry about, but Germany had two; in the East against Russia, in the West, France.

(Technically so did Austria-Hungary. But the Serbians were feisty, not insane, so they weren't coming at Vienna. Russia? Ohfuckyes.)

The Eastern German border around what is today Poland was 1) open geographically - rivers (and other water bodies like marshes and lakes) were the only real defensible obstacles - and 2) perfect for the "mass effect" of Russian attacks. 

The whole "Russian Steamroller" was a thing for a reason.

German war planning, then, had to either figure out a way to fight a modern, dangerous French Army in the West while simultaneously facing a monster Russian invasion from the East, or...

Strike quickly and decisively on one front, defeat that enemy, then turn to the other side of Germany to beat the other.

Meaning that in the 1914 war chess game Germany was playing white and had to move first.

When you look up at the whole "Eastern border" description you can see why that move also had to be to the West. Russia had bodies and ground to lose and keep fighting; trying to force a Russian "Sedan 1870" was a mug's game. If beat along the border the Russians would just take their lickings and fall back into the vast expanse of western Russia.

France couldn't. Simple distances show why:

So prewar German planning (after the lapse of the Reinsurance Treaty pretty much ensured a two-front war) was based on:
1) German mobilization - both troop formation and rail transport to the forward railheads - running more quickly that either France or Russia's,
2) Fighting delaying actions in East Prussia, while
3) Attacking France and knocking it out of the war ASAP.

But.

How to do this?

Because the French knew what had to happen as well as Germany did, and had the advantage of knowing where it was coming from: the former pieces of France grabbed in 1871, Alsace and Lorraine.


Le système Séré de Rivières

After the debacle of 1870 the French Government formed a committee to develop a defensive barrier to the next foreign (presumably German) invasion. The Wiki entry has a nice summary of this:

"France created the Defence Committee (Comité de défense), which was active between 1872 and 1888, whose mission was to reorganize the defence of the French frontiers and coasts. It was necessary to compensate for the lost territories of the north-east; to modernise old fortifications, which had been shown to be wanting in the last war and to create new fortifications proof against modern weaponry using new and more powerful explosives."

This organization oversaw the creation of the fortifications known as the "Séré de Rivières" system after the engineer officer who ran the committee from 1874 to 1880.

These forts ran the length of France's northern and eastern borders, but were densest (and strongest) in the northeastern corner along the Franco-German frontier:

Note that this wasn't intended as a wall, but more like a sabo dam; separated blocking points with corridors between them that would funnel attackers (the green arrows in the cartoon above) where they could be engaged by the French maneuver forces and defeated.

Now...mind you, by 1914 this system had a big problem, and I do mean BIG...

The development of superheavy artillery like this Krupp 420mm howitzer meant that the forts couldn't defend themselves; typical fortress guns ran in the 75mm to 155mm caliber.

The 155mm 155 "L de Bange" design from 1877 was the heaviest artillery the de Rivieres forts mounted, with a maximum range of about 13,000 meters.

The superheavies' maximums ran from 8-9,000 meters up to 14-20,000, and they were semi-mobile (though slow to emplace and displace) which meant that even when they didn't outrange the fortress batteries they were difficult to hit without forward observation. 

The forts had no such benefits.

Still, even outdated, the de Rivieres forts presented some difficulties to a German assault that depended on speed. The monster cannon meant that even the strongest fortification could be destroyed or taken. But that would take time, and time wasn't on Germany's side.

So we're back to where we were when we talked about sieges. The only ways to crack the walls was over - escalade - through - breaching or treachery - or under - mining. All took too much time or too many lives.

The alternative is obvious when you look at it.

Around.

If you attack where the forts aren't, they can't slow or stop you.

Which is where we meet this guy:

A Man, A Plan, A Strong Right Wing...Schlieffen!

Alfred von Schlieffen (1833-1911) was a Prussian of Prussia, son of a major in the 19th Century Prussian Army. The only unusual part of the junior von Schlieffen story is his choice to skip the more usual cadet school route to a commission for the University of Berlin.

Instead Alfred chose the Einjährig-Freiwilliger ("One-Year Volunteer") option, which the von Schlieffen Wiki entry kind of messes up.

The volunteer system - let's use the common shorthand "EF" for it - was a way for wealthy and/or aristocratic types to shortcut the officer training program. You came in like a regular draftee, but 1) only for one year as opposed to two or three, and 2) paid for everything yourself. The EF Wiki entry is much better at describing this:

"...would opt to serve a one-year term rather than the regular two or three-year conscription term, and who would be allowed a free choice of service branch and unit, but who were obliged to equip and support themselves at their own expense throughout. In today's monetary value this cost might equate to at least 10,000 Euros, which restricted the option to members of the affluent social classes, considered to be "officer material", who hoped to pursue a Reserve-Officer career path."
Instead of the reserves, von Schlieffen was tapped for a regular officer career and started the Kriegsakademie - the Prussian Sandhurst or St. Cyr - in 1858 and was commissioned three years later in the topographic bureau of the Generalstabs, the Prussian General Staff.

A very Prussian officer career followed. War service in 1866 against Austria (including the Battle of Koniggratz, which I should really write up someday) and in France in 1870. 

Advancement through the ranks, although I get the sense that his superiors kind of saw him as a Big Military Brain - Schlieffen got a lot of staff postings under the Prussian (and Imperial German) flagpole - so more staff than troop unit time.

By 1886 he was a two-star Generalmajor, a three-star Generalleutnant by 1888 and in 1891 nicked the top Army job, Chief of the General Staff.

This meant von Schlieffen had tremendous influence on German military policy...but not alone. Ian Senior's 2012 work Invasion 1914 has a good breakdown of the forces in play in the Imperial war planning arena. 

These included Schlieffen as Chief of Staff, but also the Prussian Ministry for War (Preußisches Kriegsministerium), the three-star corps commanders (all 23 of them), and of course the Emperor and the Imperial "War Cabinet".

You need to keep this in mind, because it plays a huge part in the "Schlieffen Plan" story. 

Because there were plans, and then there were budgets, and though Schlieffen could make the former the Minister for War had control of the latter.

So a lot of Schlieffen's "planning" had to do with shaking Reichsmarks out of the Minister and the rest of the Imperial machinery, including the Emperor, the Cabinet, and the Reichstag - all of whom had their own objectives.

Ch-ch-ch-changes

When he set his ass behind the Chief's desk in 1891 Schlieffen inherited a general war plan that (to sum it up briefly) anticipated two fronts, Russia and France, and doped out a quick strike to the East that would catch the Russians still mobilizing and grab some land and cash to use negotiating a favorable peace. 

In the West, though, the de Rivieres forts ruled out an aggressive move. The plans prescribed a defensive fight to pull the French Army out of their fortified lines where they could be counterattacked and defeated.

Schlieffen haaaated this, both because he was an aggro kind of guy and because he wanted to win outright rather than depend on the tricksy machinations of politicians and diplomats. Senior (2012) details his work through the process of changing up the general war plan between 1891 and 1906.

He changed to defense in the East, for all the reasons we've detailed (plus improvements in the Russian defense lines around East Prussia).

Then planned that the attack would come in the West, where the Rhine armies would be heavily weighted-up to include the new superheavy artillery to crack the fort problem. Schlieffen counted on a quick victory there (somehow) and then the efficiency of the German rail system to transfer forces East to hold off the Russian hordes.

But.

The fort problem in the West remained difficult. Senior (2012) explains: "...in 1894 he briefly toyed with the idea of outflanking the fortress belt to the north of Verdun while at the same time pinning down the French center by means of an attack on Nancy, but reluctantly came to the conclusion that he did not have enough men for both tasks...in 1897...he returned to the theme..."

The major problems with these schemes were manpower and movement. One solution was that Schlieffen wanted more maneuver forces, up to seven full Armeekorps. The Minister for War repeated replied not just no but fuck no.

The other issue was the rough and close terrain along the area along the Alsace-Lorraine frontier "north of Verdun"; few or no rail lines; small, narrow roads and not many of those. The area was okay for defense, not so much for a major attack.

That's probably what got Schlieffen thinking that the way to go was around, not through.

Specifically, around France through Luxembourg, Belgium, and (he'll get there) Holland.

This first emerged in the 1899 plan set.

The plan - and these things were called "Aufmarsch" (deployment) plans, more a general set of instructions for the who went where than what a modern GI would consider an "operations order" - called for a big right-wing swing up through Belgium, and Luxembourg. It was still relatively modest but you can see Schlieffen already thinking "big enveloping hook".

So that's where things still stood in 1904.

Then several pieces of news arrived. The French extended the fortress lines to the northwest, past the Franco-German border towards Belgium and Luxembourg. 

Russia, meanwhile, was getting handed its ass by Japan.

That spring Schlieffen mounted up his boys for his semiannual "staff ride" along the Western frontiers. Apparently this was his thing; he'd trot around the prospective engagement areas, throwing out ideas and asking his staff pogues to snipe at them. 

It sounds like it was all very taxing and saddle-sore-ass-wearying, but it was Schlieffen's way of testing his ideas.


The 1904 ride produced Aufmarsch I (West) in 1905; what we think of when we think "Schlieffen Plan";  big sweep - seven full Armies - through Belgium and the dangly bit of southeastern Holland. These heroes would strike west deep into central Belgium then hook back south and east into France to trap the presumed French offensive that would have rammed into the Metz/Rhine region of the Franco-German border.

This was the plan Schlieffen tossed out to his staff in his final staff ride, and invited three staffers to take swings at it. Senior (2012) discusses this ride in detail (p. 32-34), but the tl:dr is that in Schlieffen's mind, anyway, his "big sweep" plan beat the three opponents' rebuttals. It was a war-winner. 

The "final version" emerged as what's called the "GroBe Denkschrift" ("Great Memorandum") distributed after Schlieffen's retirement, in January, 1906.

The basic idea was that a huge portion of the German Army would be committed to the West, leaving the East to a small defensive force to delay the (presumably lagging) Russian advance. 

Then a huge portion of the Western force - 71 of a possible 81 divisions, including a ginormous assembly of Reserve ("Ersatz") Armeekorps to be raised on mobilization - would drive through the Dutch "Maastricht Appendix", Belgium, and Luxembourg, turning the French left and then looping in behind the Franco-German border - ideally west of Paris - to crush the French Army between the swinging German left wing hammer and the German right wing that would  buttressed by the German border fortress belt anvil.


The "conventional narrative" then goes on to detail a series of gradual modifications to Schlieffen's original all-or-nothing left-wing sweep effected under the aegis of Schlieffen's successor, Helmuth Johannes Ludwig Graf von Moltke (usually referred to as "Moltke the Younger"), particularly:

1) Refusal to cross the Dutch border. (Moltke explained that a hostile Holland would close the Rhine ports, "closing Germany's windpipe", as well as possibly opening a debarkation point for British troops),

2) Strengthening the left wing by pulling one right-wing army out to double the size of the left, and then

3) Further weakening the right wing by pulling out more troops to reinforce East Prussia in 1914.

Supposedly these modifications collectively doomed the actual invasion by denuding the German right of enough force to accomplish its mission. Hence the repetition of the apocryphal Schlieffen deathbed admonition "Keep the right wing strong!" and the conventional "wisdom" that the unmodified Schlieffen Plan would have succeeded.

There's a good discussion of this "narrative" tradition in the "Civilization Fanatics Center" blog by someone named "Dachs" out of Russia. 

 (I know nothing about this guy, or his intent in posting the piece. It's still a useful analysis, so, spasiba.)

Apparently the "narrative" appeared in the early post-WW1 period, among historians and military theorists like Basil Liddell-Hart, and was amplified in the aftermath of WW2, principally in a 1958 book by Gerhard Ritter, Schlieffen Plan, Critique of a Myth

The Ritter book centers on a series of previously unpublished drafts of the 1905 memo, and it reflected his take on Imperial German militarism, which "Dachs" summarizes as:

"Schlieffen's militarism precluded any discussion of whether invading Belgium and the Netherlands was morally or legally correct, and instead sent a million men headlong into infamy on the grounds of national interest and winning the war. His uniquely German sense of precision had timed the campaign so exactingly - down to the hour, as Ritter had it - and demanded that France be defeated in forty-two days, so as to turn on Russia before it could mobilize its own armies."

But.

"Dachs" then runs down the subsequent scholarship of the 1914 invasion, including the work of Terence Zuber's 1999 The Schlieffen Plan Reconsidered, which posited that the 1905 drafts Ritter relied on and the supposed "ideal" 1906 Denkschrift "plan" were, in fact; 

"...relics of that omnipresent feature of army politics, a budget debate. Schlieffen wanted more troops and more money to hire them with, so he drew up the "war plan" employing a number of soldiers outlandishly higher than anything the Germans could employ in 1905 in order to demonstrate how kickass the German military could be if the Reichstag would but give it the cash necessary to implement Schlieffen's vision. Explaining it as an actual war plan, Zuber said, made no sense."

Among the other "Schlieffen skeptics" Martin van Creveld's work on the logistical issues which we discussed in the Battle of the Marne piece suggested that:

"...an attack through Belgium simply could not have incorporated the numbers of troops Schlieffen envisioned in Ritter's memo, even in peacetime...van Creveld argued that if Moltke had dispatched more men to the right flank, they would have just been an extra drain on already-overstretched supply lines, and the Germans might have run out of steam even before they reached the Marne."

In conclusion, "Dachs" says: "What does it mean for European diplomacy if Germany's war plan was not always predicated on a war with both Russia and France, or an offensive against France? The Sonderweg and the Griff nach der Weltmacht (NB: two schools of thought regarding the connection between German geopolitical thinking and the resulting aggressive military adventures) have been generally disproven, for various reasons (which I might go into in another history article). But that does not mean there is a dominant interpretation to replace them. So the state of historiography on the period today: many voices, but no chorus."

 


Okay, then...so what? What does all this mean?

So.

The bottom line seems to be that, regardless of the details of operations or the geopolitical intent, the German 1914 war plan called for 1) a defensive posture along the Franco-German border coupled with 2) a big hook through Belgium - with the implied acceptance of that triggering a British declaration of war and a British Expeditionary Force landing on the Channel Coast - to avoid the fortress belt and round the west end of the French (and British) defenses.

The right-wing armies would then "roll up" the Allied defenses from the northwest most quick smart, forcing evacuation of the Verdun/Toul/Epinal/Nancy fortresses and - presumably - capitulation.

To do that, the German reconnaissance elements had to be sure to find that open flank, while the security elements along the French border had to keep the Deuxeme Bureau from spying out weak points in the German defensive lines.

So cooked down to general mission tasks, based on the actual 1914 Aufmarsch, the job(s) of the German reconnaissance and security/counter-reconnaissance elements looked something like this:

1. Due west of the northern start lines - the central Belgian plateau from roughly the fringes of Antwerp to the areas around the French fortress town of Maubeuge - the primary mission was reconnaissance. The commanders of the German First and Second Army needed to know where their enemies were - and, even more importantly, weren't - to ensure the right wing sweep was wide enough to net their catch.

These areas were complicated by the "big-picture/small-picture" range of information needed. The overall German commanders - Moltke and the Emperor and his War Cabinet - needed long-range planning intelligence. Meaning well ahead of the forward infantry strength so those march columns could be routed or re-routed to envelop the Allied troop units.

The individual Army commanders (Kluck with First, Bulow with Second) also needed tactical intelligence, though, in order to figure out their most effective course of action for engaging those Allied units.

Overall, this was the trickiest and most recon-asset-consuming part of the theater.

2. To the southeast - west of Luxembourg, mostly in and around the Argonne Forest - the mission was more complicated. It still had a reconnaissance component, but that was more for the tactical and local needs of Third and Fourth Armies rather than the strategic recon needs of the first two armies. 

And in that area the German cavalry and light infantry would need to screen out French (and/or British) recon teams to prevent the premature discovery of the "hinge" in the German line.

3. Furthest to the southeast - ahead of the Fifth, Sixth, and Seventh Armies along the Franco-German border - the primary task was screening, fighting off French cavalry and their light infantry recon units to mask any potential weak points in the German defenses and keep the anvil together until the hammer could strike.

We're going to get deep in the weeds of "who's doing all this stuff", be before that we're going to look at the Other Side of The Hill; France, and its war plans that all this strong-right-wing-ing was intended to unhinge and knock sideways.

Next: I Got XVII Plans But the Krauts Got One

Wednesday, July 17, 2024

Decisive Battles: Frontiers 1914 - Part 1: How Did We Get Here?

This entry is a bit unusual in the "Battles" series, so let me take a moment to discuss my intentions.


The Beginnings:

The origins of this series go back over a decade, to the 2009 piece on the 1914 First Battle of the Marne

In the course of researching and writing that article my attention was drawn to the tactical issues that arose from both combatants' mis- (or lack of) understanding of their opponents. A lot of the "whys" of the Marne ran directly from the failure of strategic and/or tactical reconnaissance.

To make a long story short (and for the long story the linked Marne piece is worth a look) German operational success required knowing where the left end of the Entente' line ended (in order to envelop it), while the Entente' needed to prevent that and to figure out where and what the German right wing was doing.

Neither side really accomplished either of their reconnaissance or security objectives, and the result was the chaotic collision that we call the Marne.

The question that I kept coming back to was...why not?

Was the problem baked into the larger operational or even the strategic planning? 

Was this the result of both sides' failure to anticipate the tactical "facts on the ground" affecting reconnaissance and making plans that assumed conditions that no longer existed?

Or was it technical, the conditions themselves, that had changed beyond the ability of clever plans to account for them? Was the problem that the older means and methods of reconnaissance - horse cavalry and light infantry - and security were just no longer effective in the tactical environment of 1914, and the new techniques - air reconnaissance - un- or under-developed to the point where the commanders didn't receive (or were unable to process) the intelligence?

Those questions just hung out there, unanswered.

The Sequelae:

So for the following years I kind of kept this curiosity in the vest pocket, as it were. Both because I had other engagements I wanted to explore, and because it seemed like a massive and difficult task to research and write.

Slowly, though, I worked through the other "battles" pieces, to the point where I'm down to a mix of the "sort of peripheral interest topics" - that is, stuff I'm only vaguely interested in discussing, like Manzikert (important historically, fairly boring tactically) or Sekigara (important historically, more about treachery and clan rivalries that actual fighting) - or stuff like this, difficult and time-consuming.

I'm retired now, so the "time" component is kind of peripheral. I have the time if I want to use it for this.

And the difficulty?

Well...I decided to go ahead and tackle it, with the understanding that if I try and write this as a single one-off post it would be insane; I'd be writing it and you'd be reading it during the heat-death of the Universe.

So.

The Plan:

I laid this out in the last post. It's to:

Focus is on the reconnaissance and security aspects of the battle(s); specifically,
1) What were the requirements for intelligence, from tactical up to strategic intelligence, (that is, reconnaissance and counter-reconnaissance) for the opposing sides plans to succeed. Or in simple terms, what did each commander need to know about his opponent (and need to deny his opponent knowledge of) to achieve their operational objectives?,
1a) Which implies at least a brief discussion of the opposing plans and objectives,
2) What resources were available to the commanders to perform these recon and counter-recon tasks?
3) What recon/counter-recon operations were planned to use those assets in ways to accomplish those tasks, and
4) How well did the opposing organizations and commanders at crafting those plans, and carrying them out?

I'm still working up a frame for this. My guess is that it will include:
1a) a post on the general conditions leading up to August 1914
1b) a post on the German Army and the Revised Schlieffen Plan
1c) a post on the French Army and Plan XVII

2) a post on the recon elements of the opposing forces; cavalry and air assets - number, composition, organization, training and doctrine

3) a post on the opening days of the war - from 1 AUG 1914 to about 21 AUG and the performance of the recon/counter-recon elements during the opening phases

4) a post on the actions on the central portions of the front (Battle of the Ardennes), 21-23 AUG

5) a post on the actions to the west (Mons/ Charleroi) during 21-23 AUG, and

6) a post on "The Great Retreat" and the lead-in to First Marne, 24 AUG-5 SEP.

This is Post 1a, then - taking us up to the plans of the opposing forces that kicked off in August 1914.


So...How DID We Get Here?

The Marne post is a good place to start as a tl:dr version of the lead-up to 1914. The diplomatic and political backstory pretty much comes down to:

1. For a huge portion of the late Medieval and early Modern periods France was the major continental European Great Power. The reasons - political, demographic, economic, and military - were many and varied, but the result was that if there was something going on in the European heartland France usually had a finger (or an arm, or it's whole ass) in it.

2) To the east of the Rhine France's monkey business typically ran into one or more of the German states; Austria first, in the 17th Century, then Austria and Prussia in the 18th, then Prussia in the bulk of the 19th.

3) By the late 19th Century France was the bogeyman and rival of the rising German power of Prussia. Otto Bismarck, the architect of German (as opposed to Prussian) nationhood, used that to herd the cats of the multifarious German statelets into a "German Empire" 

4) This process led to war in 1870, and the resulting French debacle - which we discussed back in 2012 with the Battle of Sedan - and punitive diplomatic settlement of the Treaty of Frankfurt left Germany strutting as the Great Power of mittelEuropa and France stuffed with angry, bitter French itching for revenge.

5) This anger produced a series of French diplomatic maneuvers that forged new connections (with imperial Russia) and broke down old enmities (with Great Britain) that shifted the balance of European power and intensified the dangers of a general European war.

6) While the British were largely driven into the Entente by German naval ambitions (Bob Massie's 1991 work Dreadnought is essential for this) the autocratic imperial Russian government was willing to align with egalitarian republican France for several reasons, not all of them military. 

Russian industrialization had been heavily bankrolled by German investment, which had fallen away as German industry, much of it military, absorbed more and more Reichsmarks. Thrifty France had francs to replace those marks.

As part of his diplomatic planning to keep Germany secure Bismarck had doped up something called the "Reinsurance Treaty" with the Russians (needed after problems between Russia and Germany's ally Austria-Hungary over fuckery in the Balkans had broken up the earlier German-Austrian-Russian Dreikaiserbund). 

The treaty - which was kept secret from both the publics and the national legislatures - promised that the two Powers would stay neutral if the other got into a Great Power war (sorta - it was void if Germany attacked France or Russia attacked Austria-Hungary). Still; it secured much of Russia's western borders and kept the two from giving each other the constant side-eye.

When German Emperor Wilhelm II shitcanned Bismarck in 1888 Bismarck's successors didn't bother to renew the Reinsurance Treaty in 1890. This opened up a can of military and diplomatic worms that the Russians dealt with by looking to France for support, especially as things with Austria-Hungary in the Balkans got ever sketchier.

So as the 20th Century opened Europe had congealed into two major Power axes; one around France and Russia along with Britain - the "Triple Entente" - and the other around Germany and Austria-Hungary along with the Ottomans and notionally Italy, notionally the "Triple Alliance" but commonly termed the "Central Powers".

To me the oddest part of the run-up to war was the German attachment to the ramshackle Hapsburg empire. The German ambassador to Vienna summed up the problem: "...is it worth it to attach ourselves...to this state which is almost falling apart and...continue the exhausting work of pulling it along with us..?"

Because the two couldn't have been more unlike; powerful, efficient, militarized Germany, and struggling, haphazard, obsolescent Austria-Hungary. Why did the German government cling to the Austr0-Hungarians?


Strange Bedfellows

The problems with Austria-Hungary as an ally were;
1) It was a mess politically, a patchwork of ethnicity and polities pasted together by Hapsburg dynastic rule, militarily suspect - its army was likewise divided by language and ethnic incomprehension - and the product of generations of defeats by, most recently, the Germans themselves. The government in Vienna was antiquated and inefficient. But...
2) ...the Royal and Imperial ('konigliche und kaiserliche", usually abbreviated as "k.u.k.") regime in Vienna brought with it an ugly quilt of old quarrels and hostilities; with the small states of the Balkans, with Italy (much of which had been Austrian before unification), with the Ottomans, and with Russia.

The single biggest problem was that the k.u.k. was a 15th Century answer to the question of "how should a state be defined?". 

In 1450 saying "By the ruling house" would have been accepted by the ruled - Hungarians and Croats and Slovaks and Poles regardless of from where that house arose, so for the k.u.k. congeries to exist because it had been a Hapsburg county or dukedom or electorship or bishopric for centuries was generally jake with the locals.

In 1914? No. Nationalism had been rising throughout the 19th Century, Czechs wanted to be Czech, Poles Polish, Bosniaks Bosnian, Hungarians Hungarian. The consensus that had kept the Royal and Imperial domains together was fraying.

So why did many German authorities - the Emperor, ministers, diplomats, politicians - persist in trying their rising power to the falling one?

I get the sense that it was mostly a "what we can get" rather than "the best we can get" sort of settling. Here's Tschirschky, the German ambassador from abive, continuing: "But I cannot see any other constellation that could replace the still-existing advantages in an alliance with the Central European power." 

The problem with that was that the Austrians were not truly a particularly advantageous power and definitely not a controllable one. Germany's prewar Chancellor von Bülow said later that the crucial part of the alliance for Germany was: "...letting Austria drag us, against our will, into a world war." 

Which, of course, it did.


Why?

As I've discussed repeatedly, the reasons for the decisions and acts that led to war are so complex and multivariate as to provide material for decades of academic study and volumes of popular prose, as far beyond the scope of this essay. Ambition, distraction, uglification...hubris, mistakes, fear, anger...and that is as nations, peoples, and governments, leaving out the influence of individual character.

But to me the single biggest factor was the failure - on all sides but particularly in Austria-Hungary - to recognize the changes in warfare that had been going on over the preceding century.

The industrialization and mechanization of combat, and the vastly inflated human and material needs that would demand, had made the artisanal warfare of the 19th Century as quaint and useless as a wooden gearbox inside a cuckoo clock. 

All the major combatants underestimated the effects both on their tactics and strategies as well as their economies, but none so disastrously as Austria-Hungary.

The initial confrontation between Serbia and Austria surely looked to the k.u.k hierarchy like the same old damn thing in the Balkans they'd been doing like, well, forever.

But.

When Russia mobilized in support of Serbia - indeed, the very likelihood that Russia would mobilize - that should have given pause to the Austrians. 

A war with Serbia was one thing (albeit one that went shockingly poorly for Austria, a reminder of how badly the k.u.k Generalstab had prepared for the war...), a war with Russia and, by implication, a general European war, was very, very much another.

The Austrians didn't get that. So, regardless of the danger, the combination of treaty obligations, political calculation, "national honor", error, and miscalculation, brought the major combatants to the start line on 1 AUG 1914, and from there across it into war.

And that's where we're going next; into the war plans of the three nations that were going to collide along the Franco-Belgian borders with Germany, beginning with the German scheme we know as the Schlieffen Plan.

Next: Keep the Right Wing Strong.