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It is often said that the armies and the generals in World War One were not prepared for the effect of then-modern technology on warfare - that is, the way it made defence prevail over offence and turn the war into a long and bloody slogging match. And I do not say that is wrong. But that really reflects on the ability of humans to extrapolate from the past; because they could have seen it coming, if they had been far-sighted enough. We should remember that one of the features of military development in the nineteenth century is the development of the general staff, as a sort of "university" counterpart of the already invented "high school" of the various war schools. Every general who led in the war, with the possible exception of the worse-trained and worse-promoted specimens in the Austrian and Russian armies (where court and aristocracy had roles that the rest of the West had abandoned for over a century), had studied war at a very high level of competence. It was not that they were too ignorant of modern war to see it coming.

And yet. All through the early to middle nineteenth century, beginning with the last few years of the Napoleonic age, every clash between great European powers had tended to produce battles that were frightful slogging matches dominated by artillery and won, if at all, at the price of rivers of blood on both sides: Wagram (1811), Borodino (1812), Waterloo (1815), Navarino (Turkey vs. England, France and Russia, 1827), Sebastopol (Russia vs. Turkey, Britain, France and Sardinia, 1856), Solferino-San Martino (France and Sardinia vs. Austria-Hungary, 1859), Volturno (Garibaldi vs. the king of Naples, 1860), and the whole bloodstained American four years of war - where Jules Verne, of all people, drew attention to the importance and impact of massed artillery. If I understand correctly, even the monstrous Chinese Tai-Ping convulsion of 1858-1868 had a similar character. If war schools had paid attention to the tendency of war between great powers as a whole, they could have extrapolated that the next great war would have been a slogging match between armies tens of millions strong, dominated by artillery and machine guns, and where every assault would have cost unimaginable amounts of lives.

So why was this conclusion not drawn? I should imagine, for two reasons. After 1865, and until the generation that could remember Sebastopol, Solferino and Antietam had died out, wars between great powers practically ceased. Any time that Germany, France, Russia, Britain, Italy or the USA had an issue with each other, they found ways other than war to settle them. And then the last few wars of great powers had been untypical. In 1867, Prussia had overwhelmed Austria-Hungary in a single day at Sadowa (Koeniggraetz), thanks both to the excellence of Prussian staff work and to the appalling indiscipline of the top Austrian officers, who paid no attention to the instructions of their own commander in chief, Benedek, because he was a commoner. (Benedek was then punctually scapegoated for the defeat he could not have avoided; which insured that Austria-Hungary would learn nothing from the awful lesson of Sadowa, and end up being battered in World War One by both Russia and Italy.) Had the Austrians had less feckless leaders, the battle would have been a lot closer - and might well have turned into another slogging match. Then in 1870-71, the Prussians overcame the French, again thanks to brilliant staff work, with comparatively little bloodshed - indeed, in the first clash at Metz, they emulated Napoleon's breathtaking feat of Ulm in 1805 by forcing the surrender of a whole army with no fighting at all. In 1877, the Russians overcame the Turks in a manoeuvred campaign that began on the Danube and ended at the gates of Istanbul (and only stopped because the British had threatened to intervene on Turkey's side). Finally, in 1904-5 Japan stunned the world by handing the Russian Empire the most comprehensive defeat it had suffered by land and sea in three centuries. In all these campaigns, the losing side grossly underrated the victors, and were practically complicit in their own defeat.

So the picture given of the campaigns of 1867, 1870-71, 1876-77, and 1904-05, was grossly misleading in terms of the larger trends of the time. All those campaigns were exceptions. And they tended to be reinforced as (misleading) examples, by a more insidious influence. Between 1865 and 1914, Western armies were not at rest. They scarcely ever faced each other, but each of them was busy, often almost constantly, in colonial campaigns (I count the American Indian wars as colonial campaigns). Indeed, at no time before or since has the West, as a whole, been so militarized and so continuously committed to military expansion. And these campaigns were fought consistently against opponents that were both technologically and organizationally inferior; the defeats occasionally incurred by Western armies, Little Bighorn, Isandhlwana, Adua, were due to underrating the enemy (an inevitable occasional by-product of the enemy being effectively inferior), rather than to the enemy being in any way systematically able to establish its superiority. Isandhlwana was followed by Rorke's Drift. Indeed, the only colonial war where an European power really found itself with its back to the wall was the Indian Mutiny of 1859, when the British found themselves fighting an army they had trained and organized themselves. Western generals were not so stupid as to assimilate these clashes with war on European opponents; but they insidiously tended to build up the habit of thinking of war as a matter of brilliant manoeuvre and strategic resource, the war of Frederick II of Prussia and of Napoleon in 1805; rather than what had actually been brewing in the "dark satanic mills" of the Industrial Revolution - a clash between cannon and machine guns turned out by the million by factories whose like the world had never before seen.

No group of countries ever went to war with a more thoroughly and carefully studied approach to war fighting and its subsidiary features than the European powers in 1914. Every one of them had vast war schools attached to their staff headquarters, where the wars both of the past and of the present were constantly being discussed, analyzed and pondered upon. And no group of countries ever failed more disastrously in understanding the war they were actually called to fight. Both the Germans in their arrogant expectation to be able to overwhelm first France, then Russia, then Italy, by brilliant and audacious coordinated manoeuvering - an expectation that led their strategy again and again, and well into 1918 - and the Allies, led by the French, and committed until well into 1917 to a strategy of great conclusive battles, simply failed to see what lay in front of their eyes. When Russia fell, she fell to internal subversion - a radical revolutionary backed by Germany; otherwise, the republican government of Kerensky was quite willing, and the Russian public quite ready, to fight as far as the Urals. When Germany fell, she fell because she was overwhelmed; after the collapse of Austria and Turkey, she simply lacked the forces to oppose the Italian and Allied forces released by that victory. Decisive victories - the collapse of Russia, the rolling back of the German front throughout the summer and autumn of 1918 - were achieved when the paradigm of the manoeuvred war ending in a single great battle was abandoned. The exceptions were Allenby's conquest of Palestine in 1918, a glorified colonial campaign, and the Italian triumph in October 1918, achieved against an enemy at the end of its strength. And even so these victories were decisive not so much for themselves, as for piling up the pressure against Germany beyond the point where the German public and political leadership felt they could bear it. Meanwhile, ten million people had died; and the horrors of the immediate post-war conflict, were at least as many were to die in Russia, Turkey and elsewhere, were yet to come.

The study of war had failed. It had provided no sensible strategy to survive and win the next war. Why? Possibly because of the inborn optimism of the human heart - the strategists preferred to pay attention to the positive examples of brilliant manoeuvre and decisive battles of annihilation provided by the recent past, than to the darker underlying trends. But there might be a deeper reason.

One of the deeper lessons of the Prussian triumphs of 1867 and 1871 was the immense importance of staff work. Everyone had noticed that, with troops at a roughly equal level of efficiency and courage, the Prussians/Germans had proved infinitely superior in all the functions of command and coordination. In the words of a contemporary military genius, they had consistently got there fastest with the mostest men. And this was the lesson everyone took home. In the decades that followed, every European army set up a staff headquarters on the Prussian-German model, dedicated to studying war at the highest possible level of scientific insight. Now, what this new kind of military organization promised to politicians, citizens, soldiers, was this: if you follow our discipline sufficiently well, you will - like the Prussians in 1867 and 1871 - win wars, bloodily perhaps, but swiftly and decisively. The new doctrine of war is the way to win wars, not by luck or application, but by academic discipline. Since this was the claim that validated their whole work, the high priests of the new science of war could not easily challenge it. The Allies only abandoned the paradigm of the war of manoeuvre and the final battle of annihilation in the last year of war, when Foch put in place the alternative strategy of small, varied, continuous blows at various parts of the front. The Germans, who had invented it, could not abandon it at all; and in the end, it meant their defeat.

EDITED IN I would also add that the German military's unbroken obsession with the doctrine of the decisive battle, which had shaped their whole war-fighting effort from the assault of 1914 to Ludendorff's final gambles, may also have had a pernicious effect on later politics. As everyone knows, the myth of the "undefeated army" was the main leaven of right-wing politics in the post-war Reich, and eventually gave a major boost to the rise of the war veteran Hitler. But the myth of the "undefeated army", looking at it from the point of view of this essay, seems an almost inevitable by-product of the doctrine of the decisive battle. The German generals were defeated without a battle, without an Austerlitz or a Waterloo, without the final denouement that their doctrine led them to expect. From that to feeling that they had not been defeated at all was a very short step indeed; and the Allied negotiators were to find already before Versailles that both military and civilian German leaders were very convinced of that indeed.

Date: 2009-10-17 02:55 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fellmama.livejournal.com
Excellent. I'd add that I think the example of the Boer War may emphasize your point even further. The British complained continually of the Boer's refusal to "fight fair" and abide by the usual rules of engagement. Perhaps in addition to the assumption that the side with the best staff would win, there was also an assumption that conventional war would necessarily be won even more handily.

Date: 2009-10-17 02:34 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] deansteinlage.livejournal.com
A very interesting article.
Now I want to try getting through Von Klauswitz (again).

Date: 2009-10-17 02:40 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fpb.livejournal.com
Klausewitz, of course, was one of the inventors of the General Staff system. He was, IIRC, chief of general staff to the great Prussian commander Bluecher, the joint victor of Waterloo.

Date: 2009-10-17 02:46 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fpb.livejournal.com
I am not sure that is quite to the point. I think that the Boer War stands at the cusp between the age of colonial wars - much of the Boer's war fighting by bands is comparable to, say, the resistance of the Plains Indians to American encroachment - and the newer, modern way of fighting wars through the media, on which I touched in my essay on Vietnam. It was, itself, lost, but its after-effects, especially the British public's guilt at the way the Boers had been broken, ended up working in favour of the Boers, who got a Dominion designed according to their demands and in which they were intended to remain - and remained - dominant. The first war effectively won this way was the Irish war of independence of 1916-21. One has to remember that the purpose of war is one and one alone: to convince the enemy to stop fighting. If it can be done by winning battles, all well and good. If it can be done through the press - even better.

Date: 2011-11-30 05:36 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ihuitl.livejournal.com
I realize this is coming in late, but these are all good points and I would like to add one thing if you will permit and entertain my attempt. I'm partially channeling Keegan at this point, since I read his book on WWI not too long ago.

One of the other issues facing a war of maneuver on the eve of WWI was the lack of proper communication advances. The academics envisioned artillery and infantry in close coordination, with the former supporting the rapid advances of the latter, and most importantly keeping up with them. The problem is, beyond light direct fire field pieces, heavy artillery of the time needed timely correction from forward observers. Wireless for ground use was too large and unwieldy to be utilized by forward units at the time (to say nothing of powering them), so all distance communication was by wired sets, the wires of which which proved vulnerable to enemy artillery and other battlefield factors. As a result, the rapid and timely correction of the fall of shot, and the radio infrastructure to keep up with infantry advances, was nonexistent.

Not only did this delay reports from the front to the headquarters, and orders in the other direction, but it also lead to artillery being used most effectively with pre-designated firing points: namely the enemy trenches and positions for preparing infantry assaults, or else defensive fights. In the end, this seems to have restricted the most powerful and casualty producing weapons to a defensive role, with a limited offensive one that could not sustain its gains easily. Hence, a war of maneuver turned into a war of attrition.

Date: 2011-11-30 08:32 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fpb.livejournal.com
My posts, even those posted six years ago, are always open to comment, especially if intelligent and well informed. Yours is both. I did not quite realize that the massive growth in artillery production due to the industrial revolution was not answered by a similar growth in communication and control technology, so that the guns could only be used in simple and obvious ways, like two dim-witted giants just battering at each other with bigger and bigger clubs. I can tell you that as late as my military service - in the eighties! - I was trained to lay cables and work cable-based field telephones, and that Jack Kirby, who was sent as a scout because he could draw and make useful images of the ground ahead, was often issued with a huge roll of cable to lay phone lines as he went - this was in France in 1944. Practically yesterday.
On the other hand, I once read a story that showed that under certain circumstances things could be managed more precisely. During WWI, some Italian units were being battered by an Austrian battery they could not locate. Someone had the bright idea of summoning an officer whose name was, I think, Leone. Captain Leone said: "I have seen exactly where that last shot came from, and if you give me a few minutes I'll tell you how to aim your guns." He got out a pencil stub and some sheets of paper and started making calculations; then he handed over the result of the calculations to the battery commander, saying: "aim your guns as these figures specify". Within a few minutes the troublesome Austrians had been silenced. Captain Leone had been a great mathematics professor in one of Italy's leading universities before the war. So perhaps if every regiment had been issued one mathematical genius, the war might have been shorter. 8-)

Date: 2011-12-01 03:21 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ihuitl.livejournal.com
Counter battery fire such as CPT Leone's case was easier because the proximity of the spotter to the guns (i.e. more or less embedded with the unit) allowed the gunners to correct their shot immediately, especially if you had someone who could estimate the enemy position with such precision. (The Austo-Italian front is, sadly, often glossed over for many learning about WWI...the western front with its trench warfare garners most of the study).

The main issue where communications came into play with artillery spotting, was in having the forward observer accompanying the attacking infantry relaying the correction calculations to the heavy artillery units further back. This was symptomatic of the problem of long range communication in general along the front and the delays with getting it to the rear - artillery or general staff. In the absence of wires cut by battle or effective wireless radio, pigeons and runners were still the order of the day.

Date: 2014-10-07 07:52 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ravenclaw-eric.livejournal.com
During the Russo-Turkish war you mention, the siege of Plevna was a harbinger of things to come. The Turks defended from trenches and used faster-firing Winchester rifles, and bled the Russians terribly. If they had fought that well elsewhere, the war would not have gone well for Russia, to put it very mildly.

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