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BATTLE REPORT #16 Fall Gelb:Blitzkrieg 1940

Well, come upon this article while I am researching WW2 stuff as well. I can say this is one nice read but with one MAJOR FLAW only. That is

Blitzkrieg existed as a term after 1939 but an actual Blitzkrieg battle have not fought until 1941 with the invasion of France.

Most historian and military tactician alike agrees that Nazi Germany have been using convention divide and conquer method, couple with Manoeuver warfare to conquer Poland in a little more than a month.

Blitzkrieg, as a military tactics was defined to the use of concentration armoured or speed element to punch through the enemy defensive line, which consist of a 3 to 4 fold attacks using tanks, mechanical infantry, and air/ground supporting element.

What generally defined as a Modern Blitzkrieg attack is a use of concentrated armoured force and punch through the enemy, which will then create a gap and confusion to the enemy line and followed by the supporting mechanized infantry to exploit the gap. Often time then not, the use of mobile artillery and aerial bombardment are required for the armoured to make the initial push. Therefore creating a vacuum within the enemy defence and overwhelm the enemy using the supporting element.

When you look at the situation before and after the invasion of Poland in 1939. You will see first, the armoured spearhead is no where near the concentration that needed to mount a concentrated strike.

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Immediate before German Invasion in 1939.

Of the Divisions deployed in the North/Western Border of Poland. 39 of those are infantry, and majority of those are not mechanized. Only 6 Armoured Division present in the whole region. Separated with 2 Armoured Divs Northwest (XIX Panzer Corps), 3 Divs West (XVI Panzer Corps) and 1 Div Southwest . This layout would require the Armoured to support the infantry for their engagement and most of the work are done with those 39 Infantry Divisions.

If you look at where the troop movement went during the campaign in the next map

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Between Operation, 1- 14 September

What this map tell you is that the XIX corps were tasked to round the enemy back, and possibly a left hook to an overall double envelopment strategy, but when you look closer to the troop movement. There were not much follow up action by the infantry to take advantage of the armoured assault. It is as if the XIX corps are alone in this operation and with only XXI Corps and Wodrig XXVI corps in the vicinity.

While the middle part the XVI Corps were used as an supporting element to the envisioned set piece (Battle of Warsaw) and they neither broke through or exploit any enemy outside the Warsaw area.

To be able to qualify as a Blitzkrieg, the infantry must be the one that is supporting the armoured thrust and you cannot see any resemblance of this tactic with the invasion of Poland. The only thing that invasion of Poland and blitzkrieg have in common is that both ended quite quick in the end, but that was by no mean because of the German's Superior Armour, rather that was because of the polish troop inability to hold their ground.

There are A LOT of similarity between Invasion of Poland and the invasion of Iraq during the first gulf war. Both demonstrate the effectiveness of combine warfare and the ineffectiveness of enemy defences.

The first Blitzkrieg commonly acknowledge within Military historian and by some tactician is the invasion of France and Holland in the 1940 and 1941. But most tactician would not agree, simply because, we think the German force cheated by using paratrooper to do infantry jobs. Paratrooper unlike infantry, have a series of restriction regarding of their deployment. What if the weather does not allow the deployment of paratrooper? Or what if the landscape hindered the paratrooper movement? Remember that is why and how Market Garden in the 1944 failed. So by using paratrooper to occupied the quick gain is a cheat......

Regardless, most tactician think that the very first example of an True Blitzkrieg is during the Russian Campaign. By then the Nazi's Armoured tactics are mature and they have enough force to mount a concentrated armoured strike into Russia, only to be beaten back by the tactical and strategic depth of the Soviet Army. Majority of the reason is either due to Hilter's own stupidity and the other half would contributed to the environment effect of Russian Winter.

Another good example of true blitzkrieg is the allied "Thunder Run" into Baghdad during the 2003 war. That is a classic playbook blitzkrieg tactics
 
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While you are correct that the Poland operation was NOT a blitzkrieg, invasion of France certainly was. Even in Poland the policy of Schwerpunkt was implemented correctly(though it was more of a deep operation on an Armeegruppe level), a Blitzkrieg beta if you say so. On the army level it was a deep operation, but on a local tactical level - each breakthrough was done with a lot of firepower hitting a small part of the front to break the line with all arms support. So locally the blitz was used in Poland as well, albeit not extensively.

But the breakthrough in the Ardennes in May, 1940 and the dash of the armored spearheads towards the Channel with Stukas storming on its flanks was textbook Blitzkrieg. Also check the 8. Panzer's move ...comanded by Rommel....again textbook blitzkrieg.
 
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While you are correct that the Poland operation was NOT a blitzkrieg, invasion of France certainly was. Even in Poland the policy of Schwerpunkt was implemented correctly(though it was more of a deep operation on an Armeegruppe level), a Blitzkrieg beta if you say so. On the army level it was a deep operation, but on a local tactical level - each breakthrough was done with a lot of firepower hitting a small part of the front to break the line with all arms support. So locally the blitz was used in Poland as well, albeit not extensively.

But the breakthrough in the Ardennes in May, 1940 and the dash of the armored spearheads towards the Channel with Stukas storming on its flanks was textbook Blitzkrieg. Also check the 8. Panzer's move ...comanded by Rommel....again textbook blitzkrieg.

Agree and disagree.....

While you can say the invasion of Poland is sort of like a mini-blitzkrieg. But to classified as a true blitzkrieg, one army must be able to launch a Armour strike spearhead unsupported (Except for Air support) and using the supporting element to exploit and initial stun of the strike.

In most of the aforementioned situation you listed, there are a substantial infantry element going in with the armoured column mostly due to the German have not even close to mechanised their infantry during 1940 to 1941. If you use armoured attack and infantry together and you roll you tank further, that is not Blitzkrieg but rather a form of manoeuvre warfare - defeat in detail. You simply use you more mobile element to block their enemy supply route/escape route. But the majority of the fighter will still be in the infantry hand at the end of the day. Or the tank was just chasing their objective themselves, but not according to the overall picture.

Many historian think Battle of France and Battle of Holland are the very first example of Blitzkrieg and me, as an infantry officer, I am more inline with military tactician and I will have to say that Battle of France, Holland, North Africa, are "Sort-of" or "Quasi" Blitzkrieg, but not really Blitzkrieg as the dependence of infantry still high in all those battle.

Not really wanted to go in deep and debate what is blitzkrieg, did that a long time ago while I am still in OCS......
 
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DRAMA IN GERMAN HIGH COMMAND : HITLER BREAKS THE ARMY

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HITLER'S 'PEACE OFFENSIVE' -
Meanwhile,having achieved the destruction of Poland,Hitler changed tack and became a 'peace lover'.In his speech to the Reichstag -

”I have no war aims against Britain and France,” he said. ”My sympathies are with the French poilu(infantryman). What he is fighting for he does not know.” And he called upon the Almighty, ”who now has blessed our arms, to give other peoples
comprehension of how useless this war will be . . . and to cause reflection on the blessings of peace.”

Again on October 6 speech -

''Why should this war in the West be fought? For restoration of Poland? Poland of the Versailles Treaty will never rise again . . . The question of re-establishment of the Polish State is a problem which will not be solved by war in the West but exclusively by Russia and Germany . . . It would be senseless to annihilate millions of men and to destroy property worth millions in order to reconstruct a State which at its very birth was termed an abortion by all those not of Polish extraction.''

However these efforts came to nothing,even the appeasers in france and england had finally had enough of hitler's promises.

Even as they peace feelers were being let out,Hitler prepared to smash the anglo-french.On September 27 he had asked the general staff for beginning planning on an operation against the west(halder's diary,Brauschitsch testimony).He even set a primary date - november 12,1939.
German High command was thrown into a panic
at this who didn't believe they could succeed against the superior and larger french army with much greater preparations,Halder,the chief of staff and Brauschitsch,the C in Chief supported by various other generals attempted to convince him germany wasn't ready.The tanks from poland would need refitting,there was only ammo for 2 weeks of offensive operations etc,etc.Hitler would have none of it and called a general meeting of the top officers on 10 October to impose his will upon them.He began by reading his directive -

TOP SECRET

If it should become apparent in the near future that England, and under England’s leadership, also France, are not willing to make an end of the war, I am determined to act vigorously and aggressively without great delay . . .

Therefore I give the following orders:
1. Preparations are to be made for an attacking operation . . .through the areas of Luxembourg, Belgium and Holland. This attack must be carried out . . . at as early a date as possible.
2. The purpose will be to defeat as strong a part of the French operational army as possible, as well as allies fighting by its side, and at the same time to gain as large an area as possible in Holland, Belgium and northern France as a base for conducting a promising air and sea war against England . . .
I request the Commanders in Chief to give me, as soon as possible, detailed reports of their plans on the basis of this directive and to keep me currently informed.
The memorandum that followed this directive composed by hitler showed an impressive grasp of the problems facing the germans and potential solutions,it is considered one of hitler's best and is proof that hitler wasn't uniformly a military idiot at all.

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Walther Brauschitsch,C-in-C,OKH

''The German war aim is the final military dispatch of the West, that is, the destruction of the power and ability of the Western Powers ever again to be able to oppose the state consolidation and further development of the German people in Europe.''


Time was on the enemy’s side. The Polish victories, were possible because Germany really had only one front.
That situation still held – but for how long?
By no treaty or pact can a lasting neutrality of Soviet Russia be insured with certainty. At present all reasons speak against Russia’s departure from neutrality. In eight months, one year, or even several years, this may be altered. The trifling significance of treaties has been proved on all sides in recent years. The greatest safeguard against any Russian attack lies . . . in a prompt demonstration of German strength.


As for Italy, the ”hope of Italian support for Germany” was dependent largely on whether Mussolini lived and on whether there were further German successes to entice the Duce. Here too time was a factor, as it was with Belgium and Holland, which could be compelled by Britain and France to give up their neutrality – something Germany could not afford to wait for. Even with the United States, ”time is to be viewed as working against Germany.”

Germany’s ”limited food and raw-material basis” would make it difficult to find ”the means for carrying on the war.” The greatest danger, he said, was the vulnerability of the Ruhr. If this heart of German industrial production were hit, it would ”lead
to the collapse of the German war economy and thus of the capacity to resist.”


The chief thing, he said, was to avoid the positional warfare of 1914-18. The armored divisions must be used for the crucial breakthrough.
''They are not to be lost among the maze of endless rows of houses in Belgian towns. It is not necessary for them to attack towns at all, but. . . to maintain the flow of the army’s advance, to prevent fronts from becoming stable by massed drives through identified weakly held positions''.(an astonishingly accurate description of the blitzkrieg style)

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Franz Halder

The conservative generals remained skeptical.Halder notes in his diary 14 october -
Three possibilities: Attack. Wait and see. Fundamental changes.”Here Fundamental changes meaning the removal of hitler.This was to much for Brauschitsch to swallow though as it would be highly difficult to justify such a move to the german people.They decided that none of the three possibilities offered ”prospects of decisive successes.” The only thing to do was to work further on convincing Hitler.

Brauchitsch saw the Fuehrer again on October 17, but his arguments, he told Haider, were without effect. The situation was ”hopeless.” Hitler informed him curtly, as Haider wrote in his diary that day, that ”the British will be ready to talk only after a beating. We must get at them as quickly as possible. Date between November 15 and 20 at the latest.”

October 27.Brauschitsch tried to persuade hitler that the Army would not be ready for a month, not before November 26, Hitler answered that this was ”much too late.” The attack, he ordered, would begin on November 12. Brauchitsch and Haider retired from the meeting feeling battered and defeated. That night they tried to console one another.
”Brauchitsch tired and dejected,” - Halder's diary,October 27.

CONSPIRACY OF ZOSSEN -RESISTANCE IN ARMY HIGH COMMAND

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By early november a desperate brauschitsch and halder were seriously considering a coup attempt,but neither could make up his mind.Haider sent word to two of the chief conspirators, to hold themselves in readiness from November 5 on.Zossen, the headquarters of both the Army Command and the General Staff,became a hotbed of conspiratorial activity.

November 5 was a key date. On that day the movement of troops to their jump-off points opposite Holland, Belgium and Luxembourg was to begin. Also on that day, Brauchitsch had an appointment for a showdown with Hitler. He and Haider had visited the top army commands in the west on November 2 and 3 and fortified themselves with the negative opinions of the field commanders. ”None of the higher headquarters,” Haider confided to his diary, ”thinks theoffensive . . . has any prospect of success.”
Thus amply supplied with arguments from the generals on the Western front as well as his own and Haider’s
and Thomas’, which were assembled in a memorandum, and carrying for good measure a ”countermemorandum,” as Haider calls it, replying to Hitler’s memorandum of October 9, the Commander in Chief of the German Army drove over to the Chancellery in Berlin on November 5 determined to talk the Fuehrer out of his offensive in the West. If Brauchitsch were unsuccessful, he would then join the conspiracy to remove the dictator – or so the conspirators understood.

Brauchitsch, as might have been expected, got nowhere with his memoranda or his reports from the front-line commanders or his own arguments. When he stressed the bad weather in the West at this time of year, Hitler retorted that it was as bad for the enemy as for the Germans and moreover that it might be no better in the spring. Finally in desperation the spineless Army chief informed the Fuehrer that the morale of the troops in the west was similar to that in 1917-18, when there was defeatism, insubordination and even mutiny in the German Army.
At hearing this, Hitler broke into a vicious outburst of rage.
”In what units,”
he demanded to know, ”have there been any cases of lack of discipline? What happened? Where?” He would fly there himself tomorrow. ”What action has been taken by the Army Command?” the Fuehrer shouted. ”How many death sentences have been carried out?” The truth was, Hitler stormed, that ”the Army did not want to fight.”
Enduring the full weight of hitler's fury,Brauschitsch suffered a nervous breakdown and escaped to the HQ at zossen nearby,where in his state he was unable to even properly describe the events to his co-conspirators.The conspiracy was paralyzed for the moment.

On the 7th october,fate intervened to the relief of the german generals.Hitler suddenly postponed the attack for 3 days after recieving weather reports and congestion of railway traffic.Goering,Hitler's right hand man had possibly informed him of the difficulty of employing the luftwaffe(on which hitler placed great stock)in such weather.Also the belgians had sent a secret warning to berlin they knew exactly of the german build up and plans to invade(one of the conspirators in the army intelligence,having passed on the info).After this initial postponement,the date was then continously shifted to late november,with weather given as a formal cause..but also hitler's growing realisation that he needed the co-operation of his generals to actually launch and win his war.

HITLER BREAKS THE ARMY - 'destroy the spirit of Zossen'


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On November 23 Hitler summoned his army chiefs yet again for a final showdown.
He chided the generals for their doubts when he made his ”hard decisions” to leave the League of Nations, decree conscription, occupy the Rhineland, fortify it and seize Austria. ”The number of people who put trust in me,” he said,”was very small.”Having recited his successes he proclaimed himself 'irreplaceable' and a figure of destiny.

The trouble with the German leaders of the past, Hitler said, including Bismarck and Moltke, was ”insufficient hardness. The solution was possible only by attacking a country at a favorable moment.” Failure to realize this brought on the 1914 war ”on several fronts.
''Russia is at present not dangerous. It is weakened by many internal conditions. Moreover, we have the treaty with Russia. Treaties, however, are kept only as long as they serve a purpose. Russia will keep it only as long as Russia herself considers it to be to her benefit . . . Russia still has far-reaching goals, above all the strengthening of her position in the Baltic. We can oppose Russia only when we are free in the West.''
Still,time was working for the enemy. ”The moment is favorable now; in six months it might not be so any more.”

My decision is unchangeable. I shall attack France and England at the most favorable and earliest moment. Breach of the neutrality of Belgium and Holland is of no importance. No one will question that when we have won. We shall not justify the breach of neutrality as idiotically as in 1914.

Fate demands from us no more than from the great men of German history.As long as I live I shall think only of the victory of my people.
I shall shrink from nothing and shall annihilate everyone who is opposed to me . . . I want to annihilate the enemy!

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Not a single german general dared raise his voice.


A while after this speech was over ,hitler sent for Halder,and after keeping him waiting gave him a savage verbal drubbing.First army high command was ridiculed for 'defeatism'.The general staff professionals were 'stiff necked academics'.
A broken Brauschitsch offered to resign,was refused and promptly reminded it was his duty to obey hitler like every soldier.
Turning to halder,Hitler vowed 'to destroy the spirit of Zossen'(by which he meant defeatism in army HQ at Zossen,but halder took as the conspiracy) and 'annihilate whoever stood in his way'.
He further added he would crush any resistance to him from the general staff 'with brutal force'.

This final lesson was too much for halder.He came to his HQ in a panic and burned all incriminating papers to the conspiracy reminding himself of hitler's vow to destroy the spirit of zossen and annihilate all opposition.This meeting signalled the end of the Zossen conspiracy.Neither brauschitsch nor Halder had any strength to further oppose him.All Halder could manage in his diary - ''A day of crisis''.

Adolf hitler,the former austrian corporal had broken his generals forever.This marked the last concrete opposition in the army to hitler until 1944.

NEXT: MANSTEIN PLAN .FALL WESERBUNG
 
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@AUSTERLITZ

Great insight! Superb work as usual :)

I would like to see a Battle Report on a battle that took place in the Pacific. Midway would be a very interesting engagement to analyse
 
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THE WEHRMACHT - THE GERMAN WAR MACHINE

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''An army the likes of which the world has never seen'' -Adolf Hitler,1939
END OF THE IMPERIAL GERMAN ARMY- BIRTH OF THE REICHSWEHR

The victorious allies in 1919 abolished the imperial german army and the great general staff as the kaiser abdicated bringing to an end the short lived second reich(1871-1918).The german empire was replaced by the weimar republic.The allies stipulated the new german armed forces be no more than 100,000 - a police force incapable of grand warfare.This the new german army was the Reichsheer.(reichswehr for armed forces).Having prohibited development of tanks,aircraft and heavy artillery,abolished conscription (main source of building trained manpower) and the german general staff the allies felt confident germany's warmaking potential had been destroyed for a very long time.They were wrong.

'After the armistice, the Reichsheer withdrew into its bases, organized itself, and began preparing for the next
war.
During the Weimar era (1919–33), the army developed and existed apart from the rest of German society. Its Officers’ Corps deliberately separated it and, to a large degree, isolated it from the rest of Germany.
It had its own ideas, legal code, traditions, culture, and manners.As a rule they viewed the Weimar Republic—to which it felt very little loyalty and less subordination—with illconcealed contempt'.The Reichwehr would emerge as a 'state within a state'.

LEGACY OF THE PRUSSIAN MILITARY SYSTEM:

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Frederick the Great - Prussia's Warrior King​

This was not surprising given the history and tradition of the german army.The legacy and military tradition of what would become the wehrmacht dates back to the mid 18th century prussia.It was under Frederick the great that prussia(its aristocracy being the descendants of the teutonic knights) transitioned from a mid level power to one of the great powers of europe.
He established the reputation of the Prussian Army as the best in Europe, based on harsh discipline, obedience,
and the courage of its men
, especially its officers. Under Frederick,it fought the first and second Silesian wars, the Seven Years’ War, and the War of the First Partition of Poland with success expanding his domains.Especially in the 7 yrs war the outnumbered prussian army was able to hold out against the french ,austrian and russian empires with modest british help.At the end of the 18th century the prussian army was considered the best in europe.Militaristic prussia was described as an 'army with a state'.

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Scharnhorst -Father of the German general staff.​

This changed sharply and rapidly.Frederick's successors rested on their laurels while a rejuvenated revolutionary france now defied all europe.The army had stagnated and in 1806 prussia suffered the worst defeat in german history at jena-auerstadt(until stalingrad 1942)when its army was crushed in 2 weeks and the country overrun by the rampaging gallic hordes of napoleon.Under harsh napoleonic peace terms the prussian army was rebuilt by the reformers gneisenau and scharnhorst from 1807-1812.Scharnhorst shifted the emphasis of Prussian military thought and doctrine from a volunteer army obsessed with iron discipline and rigid drill to a conscripted army, stressing technological expertise, operational planning,tactical flexibility, and a highly trained and dedicated professional Officers’ Corps.

Scharnhorst with his assistants Gneisenau and Clausewitz founded the Landwehr(national militia),The general staff and the kriegsakademie(war academy for officer training).Prussia joined all europe against napoleon after the disastrous russian campaign and its new army played vital roles in his defeat at leipzig and waterloo.After the end of the napoleonic wars(where prussia recieved further territory in germany for its contribution)
Prussian Army continued its quiet, steady development under the supervision of the General Staff until it had, in effect, institutionalized the idea of professional military excellence at all levels of the army.

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{Von Clausewitz -Director of the War academy and Prussia's great military theorist.His famed work is On War.}​

General Staff training was especially vigorous. Entrance into the War Academy in Berlin (where the officers of the General Staff were trained) was by competitive examination, and well over three-quarters of the applicants were eliminated at the beginning. Of the 150 officers who succeeded in gaining admission each year, only about 50 completed the course, which was gradually expanded until it was three years long. The survivors were then assigned to the Great General Staff in Berlin for two years of additional training in topographical mapping, map exercises, and war games. Following this assignment, they participated in the annual Staff Ride, under the personal supervision of the
chief of the General Staff.
Finally, the top three or four candidates were chosen these candidates usually spent most of their careers alternating between positions with the Great General Staff (Grosser Generalstab), housed in Berlin, and assignments with the field forces .By the 1860s, the great majority of Prussia’s senior commanders had developed through this process.The king was, of course, still the official supreme commander of the army, but by now his role was largely nominal: the chief of the General Staff was the real leader of the German Army.

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[Helmuth Von Moltke the Elder -Prussia's grim faced military genius is said to have laughed twice in his life.On being told a fortress was impregnable and on hearing the news of the death of his mother-in-law.]​

This new prussian army was unleashed under the astute diplomacy of Bismarck and the military leadership of Von Moltke to devastating effect in the defeat of Denmark(1864),Austria(1866) and shocking the world -France 1871 resulting in the unification of germany and the birth of the second reich.Moltke brought several refinements in the staff system,he also perfected the the technique of 'Kesselschlacht' or a Decisive annihilation battle by strategic envelopment.A large part of blitzkreig was adopted from this concept.(more on this later).Between 1871 and 1914 the german general staff was the most feared military organization on the planet and was widely copied and emulated.

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(Alfred von Schliffen -Mastermind of the 1914 Schliffen plan) & (Von Ludendorff - Germany's premier warlord in WWI)​

In the first world war,the schliffen plan masterminded by former chief of the general staff alfred schliffen brought germany to the edge of victory but was repulsed by the indomitable french.The 4 year brutal trench warfare saw germany's eventual defeat to france and england in a war of attrition(with america joining towards the end).Despite its victory against italy and russia the german empire collapsed on the western front.The subsequent peace treaty of versailles abolished the imperial army and birthed the reichswehr.

NEXT : REICHSWEHR 1919-1933 -PHOENIX FROM THE ASHES.
 
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REICHSWEHR 1919-1933 -PHOENIX FROM THE ASHES

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Hans Von Seeckt - Father of the Wehrmacht
HANS VON SEECKT AND THE REBIRTH OF THE GERMAN ARMY:

The provisions of the versailles treaty were thorough in their quest to emasculate german warmaking potential .Germany was permitted only 4000 officers compared to its pre war 40,000 and its army restricted to 100,000 men.She was forbidden to develop tanks,aircraft,poison gas and artillery pieces above 105 mm.
To eliminate german strategic manpower reserve - conscription was abolished and the reichsheer Privates and NCOs had to enlist for 12 years and officers 25 years.(otherwise the germans could rotate the men annually or biannually-training large numbers over time).
The general staff,war academy and cadet academies were banned.Ammunition supply was restricted to prevent stockpiling.The german fleet was also restricted and no submarines allowed.Germany was not allowed an air force.The german military was subject to regular inspections by the allied war commission.

Hans von seeckt,one of the great german staff officers of ww1 emerged as the new leader of the reichswehr.Since formally reichwehr couldn't have a commander in chief acc to treaty terms,Seeckt set up a apparently harmless administrative office - the army command.It was divided into personnel office,troop office,administrative office and ordnance office.The troop office was a disguised general staff headed by Seeckt,a prussian nobleman and an enigmatic character known in the army as 'The sphinx with a monocle'.Seeckt got to work quickly on finding ways to circumvent the limitations.
Seeckt’s Troop Office was the chief planning agency for the army and consisted of several departments, including T 1 (operations), T 2 (organization), T 3 (statistics and intelligence), T 4 (training), and T 7 (transportation). These departments were further subdivided into office groups (Amtsgruppen), branches (Abteilungen), and sections (Gruppen).The lowest level of the General Staff was the Referat (desk). Each of these subdivisions dealt with various tasks, including a number forbidden by the Treaty of Versailles. Group L of the operations department, for example, handled Germany’s clandestine air forces and kept up with developments in aviation and military aviation.

THE OFFICERKORPS:

"We must become powerful, and as soon as we have power, we will naturally take back everything we have lost"-
Von Seeckt

From 1920-26 Seeckt was virtual dictator of the german armed forces.He used this unique oppurtunity to build up the army in accordance with his own ideas.First he dealt with the problem of his minute army and its very small officer cadre of 4000.He picked these elite 4000 from among 270,000 german officers who had served in the great war.Their selections were based on high professional accomplishments and demonstrated efficiency; intelligence and high standards of educational achievement; ‘‘correctness’’ in both professional and private life; a strong sense of tradition.General Staff officers received preference in selection over non–War Academy graduates, and younger officers were preferred to older ones.
Seeckt and his staff drew their officers from three general categories:
(1) General Staff officers; (2) Hardened veterans; and (3) the junior officer ranks of the pre-1914 Imperial Army.
Almost all of the best leaders of the Wehrmacht in World War Two were men that Seeckt retained in 1919–20.

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Apart from the 4000 retained the annual intake of officers(to replace those retiring and a small unnoticed increase covertly) was very small and the standards extremely high due to the number limit.
Preference went to those under 21 years of age with a higher education. They served 15 months in their regiments as enlisted men and, if still considered suitable,took their Fahnenjunker examination. Prior to World War I, other
officer candidates (those coming straight out of schools or universities) entered the ranks as Fahnenjunkern (officer cadets). They ate in the officers’ mess (but were not allowed to speak unless spoken to) and could
sleep in private accommodations after six weeks’ service. Then they went on to a war school (Kriegschule). The procedures were similar during the Reichswehr era, but the standards were much higher. If the Reichsheer candidate passed his Fahnenjunker exam, he was promoted to Faehnrich (senior officer cadet or officer candidate) and sent to the corporals’ course at the infantry school at Dresden, regardless of his branch.(german air force,armor,navy officers all had infantry training) Then he took the officers’ examination. If he passed, he waspromoted to Oberfaehnrich (roughly equivalent to ensign or senior candidate) and joined the officers’ mess of his regiment.
Seeckt understood the value of military aviation,Overruling the recommendations of his own personnel staff, Seeckt insisted that at least 180 of the officers of the new Reichsheer be former Air Service officers.These would form the core of the future luftwaffe.
Seeckt's motto for the new officers was -
‘‘Great achievements, small display; more reality than appearance’’

ENLISTED MEN AND NCOs:
After the initial selections, the decision on which officers to choose for the regimental and company-level appointments usually fell to the colonel involved. As one might expect, this man almost invariably selected candidates whom he believed to have outstanding leadership potential, largely because it was in his own best interests to do so.
About 400 exceptionally talented NCOs were retained this way.

To man the 100,000 men apart from initial retainments twice a year the recruitment of enlisted men took place. A successful volunteer had to be single, between 17 and 21 years of age, with no criminal record, and in excellent physical condition. The choice concerning who to accept was left to the company, battery, or troop commanders, who functioned as their own recruiting officers. They thus had a great deal of interest in only choosing the best men available.The Reichwehr was designed to be an army capable of extremely rapid expansion,all its men trained to assume command of the unit above their own.Its sergeants were trained to be platoon leaders, its lieutenants were fully qualified as company commanders, and its captains were perfectly capable of commanding battalions. Its field maneuvers,staff study and training problems were the best in the world.

The creme de la creme was the disguised general staff.
By 1933, for example, all officers who reached 10 years service were required to take the Wehrkreis exam, which measured their professional ability. Only those in the top 15 percent were considered for General Staff training. Of those selected, only about a third passed the rigorous course and became General Staff officers. Their training, of course, could not be conducted at the Kriegsakademie (War Academy), which had been closed in March 1920, under the terms of the Treaty of Versailles. Under Seeckt and his successors, it was carried on in the provincial military districts and by special courses . Other than that, however, little had changed. The course was just as rigorous as it had ever been.
Seeckt and his men became experts at hiding stockpiles of equipment and ammunition.The police and paramilitary services were also looked upon as a source of strategic manpower.

DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINE:

''Mass can't manuever,and thus it can't win'' -Von Seeckt.

One week after the dissolution of the General Staff, von Seeckt started a programme to collect and analyse the experiences of the First World War and to create a new military doctrine for the Reichswehr.Seeckt stated:

"It is absolutely necessary to put the experience of the war in a broad light and collect this experience while the impressions won on the battlefield are still fresh and a major portion of the experienced officers are still in leading positions"


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The new programme consisted of 57 committees which would study tactics, regulations, equipment and doctrine.
The output of the committees was to be short, concise studies on the newly gained experiences and in particular -
(a) what new situations arose that had not been considered before;
(b) how effective were pre-war views in dealing with these situations;
(c) what guidelines were developed for new weaponry during the war;
(d) which new problems put forward by the war have not yet found a solution.

This programme covered diverse topics from military justice and questions of troop morale to river crossings, flame throwers and the military weather service. Military leadership was a key focus with seven committees covering different levels and aspects. In order to cover these areas experienced officers were appointed to serve on the committees. These officers were often ex-General Staff but specialist experts were included even if they were not. The T4 section's job was to collect and review the committee outputs and to recommend changes to the committee structure, to military regulations and to doctrinal manuals. Seeing the intense effort being made by the Army, the Air Service within the Troop Office embarked on a similar programme and by mid-1920 the manpower that made up all these committees was over 500 officers.
Whilst all the big nations revised their tactics post-World War I, it is a notable contrast that Germany put its experienced General Staff officers of Captain and above to the task whilst others put juniors of limited experience.

Hans von Seeckt considered the mass armies of 1914 obsolete. They were, he said, unmaneuverable, poorly trained, and far too expensive.The next war, he predicted, would be won by smaller, mobile armies with superior training and equipment. He attached the greatest value to training and also emphasized the importance of mechanization, motorization, and air power.

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Seeckt,a cavalry officer realized that economically the Reichsheer (German Army) was a spent force that could not fight any future war as it had done the last.It couldn't sustain itself in a war of attrition when even the mighty imperial army had failed in such an endeavour.Seeckt had served in the eastern front in WW1 and had participated and masterminded thus not in static trench warfare but highly mobile operations-this influenced his thinking.
To avoid the tremendous losses incurred by the return to medieval siege tactics of 1914—18, he realized that military strategy had to be based on mobility.He had longed to loose the cavalry into the enemy's rear after a breakthrough of the frontline enemy trenches. More perceptively, however, he also saw that such breakthroughs were not easily achieved once the enemy had time to dig in and fortify. He had noted the successes of the Sturmgruppen (storm groups) —dedicated assault forces specializing in mobile attacks — who had made such progress in 1918. What he emphasized was that such breakthroughs had to be supplied, and then resupplied with men, weapons, food and all the other prerequisites of warfare if they were to maintain their momentum.
The essence of his teaching was that 'tactics depend upon co-operation between arms' and that the next war would be one of manoeuvre'.This doctrine of flexibility,mobility and individual initiative was promoted throughout the reichswehr during the seeckt years.The real strength of this new army would lie in its mobility, which would be provided by a large contingent of cavalry, physically well-conditioned infantry and a full complement of motorized or mechanized units, machine guns and artillery.Seeckt's weakness towards cavalry was his one drawback,one which his successors corrected by replacing cavalry with armoured cavalry -the panzer divisions.His philosophy of mobile warfare remained intact.

CHANGES IN ORGANIZATION :
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Seeckt's troop office set about reshaping the new army to fit its treaty constraints and its new doctrinal approach.The 'triangular' infantry division replaced the 'square division', with no brigade level staff and three regiments instead of four. Support forces such as artillery, reconnaissance, transport and signals were all increased and control in many cases pushed down the organisation and decentralized. All of this related to the new manuever warfare doctrine that had been adopted. The Wehrmacht infantry division in 1939 showed very few changes from that outlined in 1921. The cavalry division was similarly reinforced with support arms and armoured cars making it capable of independent operations deep behind enemy lines.
The very limited number of officers forced it to rethink the roles at headquarters and this dovetailed with their doctrine of decision at the front by those who can see the enemy. Correspondingly, despite a Versailles limit of 33 officers in a divisional HQ, the Germans planned to have 30 which was in stark contrast to a US divisional staff of 79. Again, this fitted with a force who would be attacking and making many more decisions outside of the headquarters(that is decentralized decision making by encouraging lower unit initiative) which could therefore be leaner. The Versailles treaty placed no limitations on NCO numbers and by 1922 the Reichswehr had over 50% of enlisted manpower at NCO ranks, leaving only 36,000 privates. The high quality of German soldiers, made possible by the much reduced numbers forced by the treaty, meant that the Reichswehr could employ NCOs at junior officer roles such as platoon leaders. This had two effects, when the Germans rearmed in 1933-34 they could easily promote these NCOs to officers as the army expanded, also it established a tradition of much greater leadership, responsibility and capability below the officer level which fitted with the delegated authority doctrine necessary for bewegungskrieg or the war of movement where use of independent judgement and fast local decision making is necessary.

This increased demand upon NCOs required them to be treated differently in this army than the old Imperial one in order to support them in their efforts. Hence all NCOs were now to have a barracks room of their own and all soldiers were to be much better accommodated and trained than before. In the 1920s, the soldiers were often distributed throughout the country at battalion and regimental size only forming into larger units for occasional exercises. This was part of the Truppenamt's(Troop office) plan to train squads, platoons and companies in the new regulations and doctrines and when ready then combining them in battalion and regimental exercises. These battalion and regimental exercises started to happen in 1924 and the first divisional exercises in 1926. During this time, it was the Truppenamt's role to ensure that old 'trench warfare' and 'positional warfare' tactics did not creep back into use. Cross training regimes were reviewed, long length operational order writing was eliminated, attack styles that took too long to prepare were eliminated. Innovation and flexibility for mobile warfare were stressed over carefully planned methods used in static warfare.

TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT:


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(Dummy tanks used for armor training)​

Seeckt felt the need to establish training bases for the two skill areas he felt would be most needed in a future war: mobile (especially panzer) operations and military aviation. For this reason, he advocated an alliance of convenience with the other outcast nation of Europe: the Soviet Union. Seeckt thought it entirely possible to set up tank and aviation schools in Russia, far from the prying eyes of the Allies. After extended negotiations, he was able to establish a major German flying base at Lipetsk, north of Voronezh, in 1924. It had two runways and a large complex of hangars, repair shops, administrative and living quarters, and service facilities, including a modern hospital.The Reichsheer was thus able to keep abreast of advances in military aviation, to conduct experiments in land-ground communications and close air support, to test new equipment, and to produce skilled pilots, observers, and aerial gunners (who could later train others), as well as technical and support personnel. The fact that the Luftwaffe (the German Air Force) had a trained nucleus of professionals in 1935 was largely due to the efforts Seeckt had made in the early 1920s.
General von Seeckt was also able to secure Soviet agreement to allow the Germans to open a tank school at Kama (near Kazan).

Despite Seeckt's departure from the helm in 1926,until 1933 his philosophy more or less predominated in and prepared the Reichswehr for its coming transformation.The foundation had been laid for the resurgence of the german war machine and the stage was set for the entry of Adolf hitler and the rise of the wehrmacht.

NEXT: 1933-1939 -RISE OF THE WEHRMACHT
 
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RISE OF THE WEHRMACHT

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REARMAMENT AND SECRET EXPANSION:1933-1935.

Secret Expansion of the reichswehr began with hitler's accession to power in 1933.The original plan was modest ,it called for creating 21 infantry divisions from the existing 7- An increase in strength from 100,000 to 300,000 in 5 years by 1938.But hitler was not satisfied and the army was forced to revise its timetable to 1935.Meanwhile hitler continued his double game of false promises of peace.The expansion was carried efficiently.The seven existing infantry divisions were broken up,each of their three infantry regiments serving as the veteran core around which two more recently raised regiments were formed to create the new 3 regiment division.The artillery regiments of the previous7 infantry divisions were distributed in a similar manner with more being raised.A cavalry corps was also raised which would eventually be converted into the first panzer divisions.
By 1935 ,21 full infantry divisions with their artillery compliment had been formed and equipped and the first phase of the expansion had been completed.

OPEN RE-ARMAMENT:1935-1938

Starting late 1938 hitler began to test the waters of european politics.First he declared the existence of the luftwaffe.Then using france's increase of service time length as a pretext announced the repudiation of the armaments clause of the versailles and re-introduced conscription with a one year service period.He declared to foreign correspondents the size of the new german army would be 550,000 and it would 'defend against the belligerence of her war-like neighbours'.He followed this up with a vigorous peace speech at the reichstag and the allies fell for it.
This goal of 36 infantry divisions was achieved by retraining 4 divisions of Land police militia from the recently re-occupied rhineland and raising 11 further divisions by the recently adopted conscription,to add to the existing 21,along with 3 panzer divisions by 1936.(development of panzer arm described later).
Here the german planners faced great difficulty at this rapid expansion.

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Officer shortage -

When Hitler took power on January 30, 1933, Germany had an army of around 4,000 officers and slightly more than 100,000 enlisted men in seven divisions. By the beginning of 1936, the German Army had more than half a million
men. This meant it needed at least 20,000 more commissioned officers, plus 10,000 above that to put the army on
a wartime footing. About 1,500 Reichsheer NCOs were commissioned directly, as were about 2,500 police officers. Another 2,000 or so Imperial Army officers were allowed to return to active duty, and the training time required to produce a second lieutenant was cut from four years to two and a half years. This, coupled with the output of the four
Kriegsschulen (War Schools or Officer Training Schools), increased the number of officers commissioned each year from 180 in 1933 to more than 3,000 by 1937, but demand still far exceeded supply.
Finally, older supplementary officers were reactivated to fill clerical /administrative or department positions.They were still restricted to certain positions and their promotions were slower than regular officers, but, by 1939, they made up more than one-quarter of all officers on active duty.Despite this there was high officer shortage by the end of 1936.

Mobilization of Manpower -

'The last class to be inducted by conscription into the Imperial Army was the class of 1900 (that is, men born in that year).This gave Germany a sizable reserve of men above the age of 35 who already had considerable military training and experience. These were rapidly organized into two paper reserves: the Landwehr (men up to age 45) and the Landsturm (men over age 45). Both groups were required to register and were subject to recall to active duty or mandatory refresher courses under the defense decree of May 21, 1935.'

'The first class subject to Hitler’s draft was that of 1914. It was originally conscripted for one year, but its term was extended to 24 months before the first draftees were discharged. In this way, the army brought in 300,000 men a year for training, except for the classes of 1916, 1917, and 1918, which provided only 250,000 a year—an indirect result of
World War I. When these conscripts were discharged, they were automatically transferred to the Class I Reserve (i.e., the reserve of men who had recently completed active duty)'

'The Class II Reserve was formed by the men of the ‘‘white years’’ of 1901 through 1913, who had not been subjected to the draft when they were young, and who were now untrained and considered too old to draft for two full years. It was planned to call them up for three months each year for three years. Then, after finishing nine months’ training over a three-year period, they were to be transferred to the Class I Reserve. In practice, however, few of the Class II Reservists were fully trained when the war began, because so much of the training establishment had to be used for other purposes that had a higher priority.'

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1937 -The Mobile Divisions
:

No new infantry divisions were activated in 1937.However 3 Corps Headquarters were formed.These would direct germany's mobile divisions.In addition to the already raised 3 panzer divisions(which came under one of these HQs),in 1937, 3 experimental Light divisions(under one HQ) and 4 Motorized Infantry Divisions(another HQ) were formed.

29 Reserve infantry divisions were formed out of the previously mentioned retrained Landwehr and Landsturm militia.The 1st mountain division(Gebirsjaeger) was also raised.

1938-1939 : Overexpansion -

By 1938 through rapid expansion,the quality and homogeneity of the Officers’ Corps had been significantly reduced by the inclusion of police officers, older (formerly inactive) officers, and NCOs, and even these measures had not been enough to meet the rapidly growing demand for officers.Original goal was 7% of the army to be officers.This was first reduced to a minimum 3%.Despite the reduced time required to graduate from the officers’ training courses, and the subsequent reduction in the quality of the new second lieutenants. (This loss of quality was not viewed as a particularly serious problem, however, because the German company-grade officer was still outstanding and his training was greatly superior to any opponent he was likely to face.) By October 1935, active officers totaled only 1.7 percent of the army, and even the addition of the supplementary officers (the E officers) brought this figure only to 2.4 percent.Officers and NCOs became increasingly difficult to replace. It became common to find sergeants commanding platoons,lieutenants commanding companies, and majors directing battalions.Fortunately the superb training sytem of the reichswehr period paid off here.

Material Shortage :

The army was also short on reserves and equipment of every description. In 1937 alone, 45 percent of the army’s material requirements had to be postponed until 1938, and perhaps later. By the end of 1937, the General Staff estimated that the army could not be ready for war until 1943.It was only slowly that these deficiencies were being addressed.A huge aid to the wehrmacht was the huge cache of munitions,war material and tanks along with the famed Skoda industrial plants that fell into its hands in the unoppossed takeover of Czechoslovakia.All these were immediately presssed into service.Without czech tanks there would be no blitzkrieg in 1940.


NEXT: WEHRMACHT COMMAND STRUCTURE
 
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WEHRMACHT COMMAND STRUCTURE

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The Wehrmacht's high command in 1940.Previously the Head of the German army or OKH (Oberkommando Des Heer) along with his Chief of General staff served as the leader of the german armed forces and answered to the president.Hitler concentrated more and more power in his hands gradually.To prevent an army conspiracy he created a parallel command structure.OKH as well as Goering's Luftwaffe and the German navy answered to a higher command designated OKW or Oberkommando Der Wehrmacht.OKW had its own commander-in-chief and chief-of staff - Kietel and Jodl ,both of whom were blindly loyal to hitler and owed their position to his favour.They directly answered to hitler.OKW was responsible for the conduct of german grand strategy acc to the fuhrer's wishes.

Oberkommando der Wehrmacht :

OKW was created in 1938 after the purge of the army generals under trumped up charges.Hitler dissolved the previous war ministry and replaced it with OKW.Nonetheless he made sure all the army chiefs had direct access to him and could circumvent OKW control.Hitler manipulated the bipolar system to keep ultimate decisions in his own hands.Rivalry with the armed services branch commands, mainly with (OKH), prevented the OKW from becoming a unified Joint General Staff in an effective chain of command. However it did coordinate operations among the three services.In practice, the OKW acted as Hitler's personal military staff, translating his ideas into military orders, and issuing them to the three services while having little control over them.

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(The Command structure of OKW itself)
The above diagram represents OKW organization late war,so in 1940 structure was slightly different.The Nazi party guidance staff was absent.OKW until 1944 had an armed forces intelligence branch,but was dissolved by hitler for conspiring against him and put under Himmler.The main four sections were -
The Central Office(WZA) - Dealt primarily with logistics
The Operations Staff Office - Headed by Jodl.the most important office.Dealt with war planning.
The General Office - Miscellaneous affairs ranging from science,pensions, education to POWs.
The Economic Office - Very important branch.Dealt with wartime armaments production,munitions and raw material stockpiles.All important for fighting an industrial war.
The conscription,recruitment and replacement branch was cosmetic.These duties were handled by the OKH in detail.
The Inspector of motor transportation supervised the new mobile mechanized and motorized formations and answered directly to hitler.After 1943 this post was superseded by inspector of panzertroops(guderian) though it remained in existence formally.

Oberkommando des Heeres :

The supreme high command of the german army or land forces - it was the most important german organizational unit for war planning.Its commander until december 1941 was brauschitsch,after that Hitler himself became head of OKH.During the war OKH had the responsibility of strategic planning of Armies and army groups, while the General Staff of the OKH managed operational matters.(campaign plans).During the first years of the world war (til moscow 1941)OKW needed Adolf Hitler's approval for giving orders to OKH.

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(Late war Organizational Structure OKH-click to enlarge)
The above diagram represents a late war structure with Hitler having already replaced brauschitsch as chief of the army.1940 several other sections were absent - note the 3 sections that answered directly to supreme commander hitler above the heads of OKH on the extreme right of the chart -The nazi party ideological guidance staff,the inspector of panzer troops and hitler's own history/propaganda section.

The main functional body of the OKH was divided into 4 main sections -from Left to right on the chart

1.The Army General Staff -
Brain of the german army with a long and proud tradition.Most important branch.Subdivided into six sections - Operations,Field army training,Supply and administration,Intelligence,Organization and Military history.(The organization and development of the general staff will be found in detail in later post).Headed by Franz Halder in 1940.

2.Chiefs of Branches attached to The General Staff -
The Commander-in-Chief of the Army and the Chief of the Army General Staff have at their disposal in wartime a group of general officers representing the various combat arms who serve as the principal advisers on the organization, training, equipment, and tactical employment of their respective arms in the field. They usually have no actual command authority but may issue instructions and suggestions to the troops based on the evaluation of experience in the field. For the publication of technical manuals and the like they collaborate with the inspectorates of their branches in the General Army Office. They may also recommend changes in the organization or equipment of the troops to the Organization Branch of the General Staff (Gen St d H/Org Abt) for forwarding to the inspectorates.Eg.Chief of Infantry,Chief of Artillery,Chief of Signals Troops etc.

3.Army Personnel Office -
This office is independent of both the General Staff and the Home Command and comes under the direct control of the Commander-in-Chief of the Army. It is responsible for all appointments, transfers, promotions, and other matters concerning all types of officers in the German Army. It therefore has been a powerful instrument in exercising control over the officer corps. The order for the promotion of an officer to the rank of colonel or above is issued by Hitler himself on the recommendation of the Personnel Office. In lower ranks it makes the promotions on its own responsibility.
The authority to transfer various types of specialist officers (medical, veterinary, ordnance, motor maintenance, and Special Troop Service) is delegated by the Personnel Office, so far as the lower ranks are concerned, to the technical branches which deal with these services; for the upper ranks, the Personnel Office orders the transfers on the recommendation of the technical branches.While the bulk of the Personnel Office is normally stationed in wartime with the rear echelon of the High Command, each of its branches also has a forward echelon at field headquarters, where the major decisions in personnel matters are made.

4. Chief of army equipment and Replacement Army -
This officer is the wartime deputy of the Commander-in-Chief of the Army charged with all the functions of the Zone of the Interior. These are primarily the conscription, training, and replacement of personnel; the procurement, storage, and issue of equipment; and territorial administration. He controls all the principal offices of the High Command which are left behind as the rear echelon on mobilization, with the exception of the Personnel Office.Divided into 5 sub-sections.
a} General army office - Miscelleneous army matters.
b} Training in Replacement Army - He controls all training conducted within the Replacement Army, using as his representatives the inspectors of arms and services. Through these inspectors he utilizes the facilities of the inspectorates of the corresponding arms and services in the General Army Office for working out the details of training programs and methods, the issuance of directives and manuals, and other paper work. The Chief of Training is not responsible for the specialized training of the medical, veterinary, ordnance, and motor maintenance troops, as this is handled by the inspectorates of these branches in the General Army Office operating under the direct control of their own independent inspectors.
c}
Ordnance Office - This office is responsible for the design, testing, development, and acceptance of all ordnance equipment. It works in very close collaboration with the Ministry of Armament and War Production(under OKW economic office)
d} Army administration Office - Its responsibilities include mainly the procurement of rations, billets, pay, and clothing for the Army on the front.(The supply & administration section of the general staff deals with the actual supply procedure at the front)
e}Inspector General for Officers and NCOs - Responsible for recruitment and training of officers to be supplied to the army.Controls the cadet schools.

Apart from these there were also the Veterinary inspector and Chief medical Inspectors of the army who answered to the army chief.

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Procedure for Campaign Planning:


Hitler after consideration of diplomatic and domestic conditions assigns an objective to chief of OKW(Kietel).He examines the problem in detail with his operations staff(jodl) and issues a directive.The chiefs of the three branches are called to a meeting where the operation is discussed and a commander nominated.After renewed consultation Hitler appoints the commander.Commander is now subordinate directly to his superior high command(OKH if land) as well as OKW(until 1941,OKW can't direct OKH on operational matters without hitler's order).
New commander selects his own staff and prepares -
1.General plan of operation
2.List of material requirements

This is submitted to OKH/OKW for acceptance.Selected units become a task force.Commander of Operation prepares training directive for all the units in task force and a specified training period is allocated for the operation.Meanwhile his staff prepares detailed plans.(For a large land campaign the commander selected is usually the head of OKH then the staff means general staff of the army,or it could be a lower level operation like rommel in afrikakorps or norway operation)If the task force is one of many as is usual in a grand campaign then overall strategic planning is done by OKH general staff and the sub-ordinate task force commanders and their own staff prepare for the planning of the operations in their sectors only with co-ordination of taks forces conducted by OKH headquarters.
A time and date is set for the operation.Commander of Operation goes over all the details with his sub-ordinates.Finally operation begins.

NEXT: GERMAN GENERAL STAFF;THE MILITARY DISTRICTS;RECRUITMENT AND MOBILIZATION;CHAIN OF COMMAND AND ORGANIZATION
 
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THE GERMAN GREAT GENERAL STAFF

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''If we arrrest and shoot every german general staff officer we will have peace for 50 years'' - Winston Churchill

In the late 19th and early 20thcenturies there was a running joke that there existed five perfect institutions in europe(meaning they perform their function exactly as intended) - The french opera house(paris),the british parliament(london),the papal curia(vatican),the russian ballet(st petersburg) and the german great general staff(berlin).
''For Germany's enemies, the Prussian-German General Staff was an object of fear and revulsion, an organization which was considered to represent the kernel of professional militarism in which a selected group of officers worked in monkish isolation on the preparation of war plans.They suspected the German General Staff to be one of those "dark forces," which was weaving the threads of the destiny of nations behind the scenes.''

The German General Staff, originally the Prussian General Staff and officially Great General Staff (Großer Generalstab), was a full-time body at the head of the Prussian army and later, the german army, responsible for the continuous study of all aspects of war, and for drawing up and reviewing plans for mobilization or campaign. It existed unofficially from 1806, and was formally established by law in 1814, the first modern general staff in existence. It was distinguished by the formal selection of its officers by intelligence and merit rather than patronage or wealth, and by the exhaustive and rigorously structured training which its staff officers undertook. Its rise and development gave the German armed forces a decisive strategic advantage over their adversaries for nearly a century and a half.

''Scharnhorst, Gneisenau and Clausewitz created the General Staff and gave this instrument its objective and direction; the great Chiefs of Staff, Moltke and Schlieffen, developed the General Staff to high perfection; their successors Seeckt, Beck and Halder preserved their heritage. They personified the typical General Staff officerwho is the first adviser of his commander, the 'Fuehrergehilfe.'' - General Brandt

DEVELOPMENT OF THE GENERAL STAFF:

CREATION - SCHARNHORST,GNEISENAU AND CLAUSEWITZ

Before the nineteenth century, success on the battlefield was largely the result of the military competence of whichever king was in power. While frederick the great brought success in battle to Prussian arms, his successors did not have his talent, and this led to an inevitable decline in the generalship of the Army. Without competent operational and logistical planning, no amount of individual soldierly discipline or battlefield bravery could save the army from the combination of superior generalship and staff work of a talented adversary.
The need for a trained body of General Staff officers was the result of the increase in the size of the 19th century armies and their organization into separate divisions and corps. For both logistical and strategic reasons these formations usually marched separately and united only to do battle. The complex management of these forces required professionally trained General Staff officers.The country could no longer afford to wait until a war started to gather military staff talent. One carefully selected professional staff would do the work of planning logistics and training the Army in peace as well as in war.
In 1807 prussia was crushed by napoleon in a national humiliation,in the aftermath of this the prussians cleared house. King Frederick william III appointed Scharnhorst, Gneisenau,Stein and several promising young officers to his Military Reorganization Commission.

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(Advice hitler didn't bother to follow in ww2)​

Scharnhorst created the general staff.Himself coming from a humble background and having advanced on merit alone,he wanted to open up all positions within the renewed Prussian Army for scientifically trained officers, without regard to their social background.However, he was realistic enough to realize that it was not possible in Prussia to
do away with a system that continued to select military leaders according to class and birth,and were consequently not trained for their tasks.Scharnhorst wanted to diminish the weakness of this system by providing these army commanders with General Staff officers as their advisers. This, then, served as the decisive root to support the need for a "commander's first adviser,"Although Prussian commanders of forces were still appointed by rigid seniority or royal patronage, each Army, Korps and Division commander had a staff-trained officer assigned as his Adjutant. Scharnhorst intended that they "support incompetent Generals, providing the talents that might otherwise be wanting among leaders and commanders".The unlikely pairing of the erratic but popular Blucher as Commander in Chief with Gneisenau as his Chief of Staff showed this system to its best advantage in the final years of the napoleonic wars.This succesful example institutionalized the general staff officer's role as the commander's first advisor.
That is, to advise their commanders and assume joint responsibility for their actions. This resulted in joint responsibility for commanders' decisions and the exercise of command and control of General Staff chiefs from army corps level upwards. Up to 1938, it was an unwritten law that army corps Chiefs of General Staffs were permitted to enter in the war diaries their opinions when they differed from the responsible commander's decision.

As part of its measures, introductory military schools in Berlin, Königsberg and Breslau, and the Academy for Young Officers (later kriegsakademie), open to all applicants of merit, were founded for the intellectual training of staff officers. In most non-Prussian military academies of the time, the emphasis of the training syllabus was the preparation of junior artillery and engineering officers, not strategic planners and as such this marked an important development.

Scharnhorst died in 1813,but his creation lived on and expanded.One of the early directors of the Kriegsakademie was Clausewitz, a Reformer on the Military Reorganization Commission. From his studies and experiences of the , he provided a syllabus which became the central doctrine from which the staff worked. This standardisation of doctrine (which itself was an attempt to grasp the philosophy underlying warfare, rather than a narrow prescribed set of rules or tactical directives) was one of the distinguishing features of the Prussian General Staff model.

In 1816, the staff organised the Staff into the Eastern (Russia), Southern (Austria) and Western (France and possibly West German states) Divisions, which continually planned for likely and unlikely scenarios. As early as 1843, when Europe had been largely at peace for nearly thirty years and most major nations had no plans for war, observers noted sheaves of orders at the Prussian War Ministry, already made out to cover all foreseeable contingencies and requiring only a signature and a date stamp to be put into effect.

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EXPANSION - MOLTKE

Moltke was chief of the general staff for 31 years.He oversaw a massive expansion of it and 3 succesful wars against denmark,austria and france.These successes elevated the the general staff to an autonomous body on par with the war ministry and independent of it.
Moltke further streamlined the officer selection process.Each year, the Prussian Army's top 120 junior officers were selected by competitive examination to attend the Kriegsakademie. The academic standards at this institution were so high that fewer than half the entrants graduated successfully. From this elite, Moltke selected the best twelve for his personal training as General Staff officers. They attended theoretical studies, annual manoeuvres, "war rides'' (a system of tactical exercises without troops in the field) under Moltke himself, and war games and map exercises.Although these officers subsequently alternated between regimental and staff duties, they could be relied upon to think and act exactly as Moltke had taught them when they became the Chiefs of Staff of major formations. Moltke himself referred to them as the "nervous system" of the Prussian Army.Moltke needed only to issue brief directives to the main formations, leaving the staffs at the subordinate headquarters to implement the details according to the doctrines and methods he had laid down, while the Supreme Commands of his opponents became bogged down in a mountain of paperwork and trivia as they tried to control the entire army from a single overworked headquarters.
''Build railroads ,not fortresses'' - Moltke.

Moltke's wide experience also prompted the General Staff to consider fields of study outside the purely military, and rapidly adapt them to military use. Immediately upon his appointment, he established the Abteilung (section or department) which studied and promoted the development of railway networks within Prussia and incorporated them into its deployment plans. He also formed telegraphic, and other scientific and technical departments within the General Staff and a Historical division, which analysed past and current conflicts and published accounts of them and lessons learned.The General Staff reformed by Moltke was the most effective in Europe, an autonomous institution dedicated solely to the efficient execution of war, unlike in other countries, whose staffs were often fettered by meddling courtiers, parliaments and government officials.

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FIRST WORLD WAR - Deficiencies exposed


Already in Prussia under Moltke, the General Staff had achieved a special political significance. Since 1883, its head (and the commanding generals and commanders-in-chief) had the right of access to the Emperor, and it could therefore effectively make military decisions without the oversight of the Chancellor or the Reichstag. This was one of the seeds of the mass destruction of the First World War, as military planning was not subject to political control.
Thus, the Schlieffen Plan developed into the only war plan and into a kind of dogma, without many of the leading politicians being informed. Nor was the German Navy's high command informed.To an extent, the General Staff became obsessed with perfecting the methods which had gained victory in the late nineteenth century.The Schlieffen Plan committed Germany to an early outright offensive against France while Russia was still mobilising(so as soon as russia mobilized in response to austrian actions in the balkans,germany had to implement the schliffen plan before russia could finish it-thus locking germany into a single solution with no flexibility), and also required an unprovoked invasion of neutral Belgium, to make it possible to rapidly surround and annihilate the French army. The rigidity of the plan, based around a minutely detailed mobilisation schedule and railway timetable, prevented any political moves which might have averted hostilities, as Kaiser discovered on the eve of the war when he considered not invading France in order to avoid Great Britain joining Germany's enemies.

''War is simply a continuation of political intercourse, with the addition of other means .... war in itself does not suspend political intercourse or change it into something entirely different .... war cannot be divorced from political life; and whenever this occurs in our thinking about war, the many links that connect the two elements are destroyed and we are left with something pointless and devoid of sense .... if war is to be fully consonant with political objectives, and policy suited to the means available for war, then unless statesman and soldier are combined in one person, the only sound expedient is to make the commander-in-chief (ie. 'he Chief of the General Staff in the German system) a member of the Cabinet, so that the Cabinet can share in the major aspects of his activities.'' - Von clausewitz.
(Failure to heed this advice cost the general staff dear in WW1)


Additionally, it failed to take adequate account of logistics.Nor had the General Staff, before the war, considered the use of potential allies such as Turkey, or dissident factions within the French, British and Russian empires, to distract or weaken the Allied war effort. "A swift victory over the main armies in the main theatre of war was the German General Staff's solution for all outside difficulties, and absolved them from thinking of war in its wider aspects.",Typical napoleonic thinking though it was the same combination of failure at grand strategy/realpolitik and logistics that had proven to be napoleon's downfall.

The General Staff was divided between the central Großer Generalstab in Berlin and the general staffs of the corps and division HQs. The head of the Großer Generalstab was the "Chief of the General Staff" and was also the technical superior of all general staff officers.The General Staff under Schlieffen, and subsequently under Moltke, did not compensate for logistic flaws nor provide contingencies in case of the failure of their original plan to achieve quick success. Although superior German staff work at division, corps and army level throughout the First World War contributed to their continuous run of successes until very near the end of the war, the German Homefront collapsed under the strain.Thus the German General Staff lost the war of attrition against the allies in part due to logistical/material reasons. Focusing exclusively on military aspects of the war, the General Staff ignored political needs.Sheer military virtuosity cannot compensate for the lack of political direction and national strategic objectives.

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Another serious deficiency of the ww1 era was the excess of the 'chief system'.
In the course of the First World War, the General Staff became the strongest political power in Germany.Supreme Army Command under Field Marshal von Hindenburg and his first General Staff officer,Ludendorff, not only directed the operations at all fronts, but also increasingly determined the political destiny of the German Empire relegating the kaiser and the reichstag to figureheads.
Prussian German General Staff system encourages a powerful adviser to the responsible superior. It was necessary to appoint strong personalities as Chiefs of the General Staff of World War I army commanders of high nobility.They in fact commanded the armies of the princes.
Generals von Falkenhayn and Ludendorff extended the powers of the Chiefs of General Staffs and increasingly dealt directly with them, and not with their responsible commanders. The Supreme Army Command increasingly called the first advisers to account for mistakes in the command and control of major formations, and not the commanders in chief of the army groups and armies.

REICHSWEHR : RESURRECTION.

We have already seen how seeckt resurrected the german army in secret.He further strengthened the training procedure into by far the most difficult in the world.
Every Reichwehr officer had to take part in military district examinations. The best 10 candidates then underwent a 2-year training course for "commander's staff officers" in the group commands.In the third year of training, the officers attended an obligatory training course in Berlin. Applied tactics was regarded as the most important subject of the military district examination. It also included papers on tactical theory, weapons, field craft, engineering and eight general subjects including a foreign language. Three or four problems had to be answered in a period of 6 to 10 hours. They were usually based on the tactics of an infantry regiment reinforced with elements of other arms, and involved the presentation of the regimental commander's estimate of the situation and his orders to follow. Together with his examination results, the character of each candidate was assessed from the annual reports of his superiors.
The process of selection extended throughout the 3 years of training. Of approximately 70, only some 15 went to the third year's course. It ended with a 2-week tactical field exercise which was passed finally by 8 to 10 students. The objective of the program was to train assistants for the senior field commanders and the central command structure, and to produce officers to be advisers, assistants and executors of leaders' decisions. The curriculum was much broader in scope than in the prewar War Academy.


HITLER YEARS :


The years leading upto the war saw a gradual decline in the power of the 'demigods' of the general staff.First the luftwaffe and kriegsmarine created their own general staffs.Then the new OKW general staff emerged as a parallel command structure to the army general staff(OKH).Hitler curtailed the power of the army once he had consolidated his position by purges.Beck,the chief of staff resigned and was succeded by Hlader in 1938,who remained one of the most important german war planners till late 1942 when he was forced to step out,from the on OKW gradually came to eclipse the general staff -both being controlled by hitler who was now supreme commander and army chief.Halder made one significant change to the general staff.With noble commanders no longer an issue after ww1,
Halder, explicitly dropped the joint responsibility of General Staff officers for command and control when the new manual for the General Staff in Wartime was written. He decreed that the commander alone was responsible externally and internally, and that the General Staff officer had to take a share in everything and deal with the problems as if he had to bear the responsibility himself. However, the General Staff officer would only be internally responsible.While the traditional German staff administration and planning was to contribute greatly to the early German successes, many of these triumphs were the result of the initiative of comparatively junior officers who were opposed to the restraint of the General Staff.
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(Von Manstein - a product of the general staff)
ORGANIZATION:

The General Staff was divided between the central Großer Generalstab in Berlin and the general staffs of the corps and division HQs. The head of the Großer Generalstab was the "Chief of the General Staff" and was also the technical superior of all general staff officers.
The field staffs were responsible for operations,mobilization plans,logistics,transportation,exercises and intelligence for their respective divisions and corps and acted on broad objectives set from the great general staff in berlin.

The Chief of the General Staff's chief deputy held the title of Generalquartiermeister. Beneath them were the five Oberquartiermeisters, who supervised the heads of the General Staff departments. The Railroad Department had the largest number of officers assigned, while the Second Department(Operational planning) was the most important.(Some small changes were made during war)

  • Chief of the General Staff
    • Central Department
    • 6th Department: Annual Maneuver
    • Military History Department II: Older wars
  • Oberquartiermeister I
    • 2nd Department: Operations
    • Railroad Department
    • 4th Department: Foreign Fortifications
  • Oberquartiermeister II
    • 3rd Department: France and Great Britain
    • 9th Department: Netherland, Belgium, Switzerland, Spain, Italy
  • Oberquartiermeister III
    • 5th Department: Operational studies
    • 8th Department: Kriegsakademie
  • Oberquartiermeister IV
    • 1st Department: Scandinavia, Russia, Turkey
    • 10th Department: Austria-Hungary,Poland and the Balkans
  • Oberquartiermeister V​
    • Military History Department I: Recent wars
    • Archives and Library
UNIQUE FEATURES :

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Powerful Role of Staff Officer :


He has a dual responsibility; specifically, as is the case in other armies, the General Staff officer relieves his commander from the technical details of staff work.However, in the German system, his main task is to advise his commander in all matters, and he is entitled to the commander's attention. The General Staff officer bears the shared responsibility for the relevance of his advice. Thus the General Staff officer has a position that makes him stand out from the rest of the staff officers. While all staff officers give advice to their senior officers, the General Staff officer additionally provides advice to his commander in all relevant matters. He has the right to urge the commander to make a decision, and the commander must listen to him. The General Staff officer is entitled to articulate diverging opinions. he bears joint responsibility because he is accountable for the relevance of his advice. The first General Staff officer of a major unit or command has an especially elevated position. He actively participates in all stages of command and control. Together with his commander, he evaluates the mission, estimates the situation and develops the decision. After this process it is no longer possible to say who made the individual contributions. The commander alone, however, has the authority to make decisions on his own. Once a decision has been made, the General Staff officer loyally carries out his orders.

''The decision is taken in private, and when the two men come out,there is only one decision. They have amalgamated it; they share one mind with each other. Should the opinions have differed, in the evening of this happy day in a military marriage the two halves will no longer know who gave in.The competence of command and control is based on this fusion of the two personalities. It does not matter if the order bears the commander's signature, or if the Chief of Staff has signed it for the High Command (today 'For the commander') according to our old custom. The commander always issues his orders through his Chief of Staff, and even the most senior subordinate leader must submit himself to his orders without objection, because his orders will always be given on behalf of the supreme commander'' -Von Seeckt
The powerful role of the staff officer in the german system was unique.In anglo-american armies of the era the commander was supreme and staff officers largely concerned themselves with technical and logistical details and had no institutionalized right to give advice.The french system was closest.
But even the French General Staff system does not provide for a jointly responsible adviser.
The general devises and directs his operations with his cosast advisers including one or several tactically trained officers who take up his thoughts and cooperate in the closest way. (In France, these officers are called 'adjoints'.) The Chief of Staff is responsible for feeding resources to the battle. He immediately directs all supply operations and issues orders to the respective agencies.
The adjoints in the French staff system are integrated in the organization of the French commander's Cabinet. They work exclusively for him. They are personal staff officers who supply original ideas to their commanders and fulfill functions which are done within the German General Staff System by the General Staff officers. They are, however, not advisers to their commanders in the German sense.However this powerful role of the staff officer had inherent potential for weakness as well as seen in ww1.

Superior Training Procedures:

The training procedure of the german system was the most extensive and exhaustive in the world as already described.It also followed an open staff system,meaning.After passing the gauntlet and entering actual general staff service an officer was alternated between field staffs with the corps and divisional HQs,academic service with the actual great general staff in berlin and regimental command in districts for practical experience.
The total number of german general staff officer active rarely exceeded 200-300.This small elite cadre just enabled unity of thought and could quickly disseminate new doctrinal practices throughout the army.

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Mission Oriented Command & Control :


''Resolute action is a must in war.... Commanders who merely wait for orders cannot seize favorable opportunities. They must always keep in mind that indecision and the failure to act might be just as fatal as action based on a wrong decision'' - Moltke.
The cornerstone of the German leadership philosophy in peace and war was mission-oriented command and control(Auftragstaktik) keeping in line with Moltke's maxim 'no plan survives contact with the enemy'..It is described thus -
'Mission-oriented command and control is the first and foremost command and control principle in the Army of relevance in war even more than in peace. It affords the subordinate commander freedom of action in the execution of his mission, the extent depending on the type of mission to be accomplished. The superior commander informs his subordinates of his intentions, designates clear objectives and provides the assets required. He gives orders concerning the details of mission execution only for the purpose of coordinating actions serving the same objective. Apart from that, he only intervenes if failure to execute the mission endangers the realization of his intentions. The subordinate commanders can thus act on their own in accordance with the superior commander's intentions; they can immediately react to developments in the situation and exploit favorable opportunities''.
The principle of mission-oriented command and control grants commanders at all levels a maximum of freedom of action and was a major cause for german success at tactical and operational levels particularly in fast flowing mobile warfare against rigid centralized enemies .

NEXT: WEHRKRIES -THE MILITARY DISTRICTS & MANPOWER MOBILIZATION
 
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RECRUITMENT,REPLACEMENT & MOBILIZATION

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(German wartime Military Districts)

REGIONAL ORGANIZATION: WEHRKREISE

Germany had a system of Military districts(Wehrkreis) to relieve field commanders of as much administrative work as possible and to provide a regular flow of trained recruits and supplies to the Field Army. The Field army was separate from the Home Command. The responsibilities of training, conscription, supply, and equipment were entrusted to the Home Command. In peacetime, the Wehrkreis was the home to the Infantry Corps of the same number and all subordinate units of that Corps. The corps commander also commanded the Wehrkreis.

The three branches of the Armed Forces submit to the Armed Forces High Command, their personnel requirements on the 15th of each month for the second month, following. According to the demands and the general replacement situation the various Wehrkreis headquarters then receive orders specifying how many men are to be inducted for each branch of the Armed Forces.. Every unit in the Field Army is affiliated for personnel replacement purposes with a specific unit of the Replacement Training Army, located in its own original Wehrkreis and known as an Ersatz unit. The function of the latter is to induct recruits, to provide for their training, and to see that they are held in readiness to be sent off to the field unit in batches or individually as required.
Each infantry regiment which took to the field at the beginning of the war left behind at its home station a battalion cadre bearing its own number and known as its Ersatz battalion. The primary purpose of this battalion was to receive recruits, train them, and dispatch them as replacements to the field regiment.The replacement training units are subordinate to the local Wehrkreis Headquarters.

Each Military districts is subdivided into local recruiting sub-areas.In all, the efficient wehrkreis regional military district organization ensured that a group of recruits were usually from the same region and thus had greater cohesion and also that the field army only needed to concern itself with frontline military campaigning while the home command dealt with the secondary logistical issues.

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(Organization of an wehrkreis)
MOBILIZATION AND DEPLOYMENT:

Military service was compulsory in germany from 1814-1918.The treaty of versailles forbade conscription but this was resumed in 1935 by hitler.Except for regular personnel in active field duty all german manpower was divided thus -

Reserve I: Those under 35 who have completed their regular period of active service and been discharged
Reserve II: Those under 35 who have had short training.(usually meaning the 'lost classes' -those that would have had military training between 1919-1934 if conscription had been active and later hastily retrained)
Ersatzreserve I: Fit men under 35 who have not been trained.
Ersatzreserve II: Unfit and limited-service men under 35 who have not been trained.
Landwehr I: Trained men between 35 and 45
Landwehr II: Untrained men between 35 and 45
Landsturm I: Trained men between 45 and 55
Landsturm II: Untrained men between 45 and 55


The german mobilization of 1939 was streamlined and drew lessons from the clumsy act of 1914.In 1914 the entire trained male manpower of germany was mobilized in a single week expanding the army from 800,000 to 4 million men and causing massive disruption to german agriculture and industry from which the homefront never fully recovered.The german general staff studied and modified this approach in 1939 and mobilization was carried out in 'waves'.Additionally each man was called up by mail,not by public proclamation calling up classes(meaning eligible males born in a certain year) by which method selective call-ups spared critical personnel in heavy industry and agriculture.

Wave 1 was activated on the first day of mobilization.It consisted of 51 regular professional active divisions.These were the spearhead of the wehrmacht.
Wave 2 was activated on the 3rd day.It consisted of 16 fully trained reserve divisions of Reserve I category.
Wave 3 was activated on the 6th day.Consisted of 21 reserve divisions of Landwehr i category largely.These were mostly word war 1 veterans with a small refresher course.They were generally used for only defensive purposes.
Wave 4 was also activated on day 6.Consisted of 14 partly trained reservists still undergoing training.They mostly amde up the numbers.

In all at the outbreak of war in 1939. 780,000 regular german army was reinforced by 1.1 million reservists.After the first week,the home army took over the responsibility of raising new units and replacing lost personnel in active duty ones through the wehrkreise.Before the french campaign several new units were created to add to this initially mobilized force.

NEXT:CHAIN OF COMMAND - FROM ARMY GROUP TO COMPANY
 
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The Red army however had just been crippled by stalin's mass purges,in the swampy snow conditions the red army soldiers without adequate training or winter equipment were bamboozled and ambushed repeatedly by highly motivated Finnish troops well trained and equipped for such conditions riding in skis and armed with tommy guns (sub machine guns) and by snipers.
Strictly speaking I wouldn't consider the term Tommy Gun synonymous to SMG. In fact, the Finns were equipped with the domestically-designed Suomi KP/-31.

Suomi KP/-31 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Keep it going though, mate. I'm looking forward to an account of the Burma campaign, the battles in North Africa as well as the Battle of the Bulge. :)
 
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WEHRMACHT CHAIN OF COMMAND

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The chain of command of any modern army including the wehrmacht begins with the squad-platoon-company-battalion-regiment-division-corps-army-army group.Below is a graphic representation of the modern us army structure which is very similar ,however wehrmacht used regiment instead of brigadeand the number of personnel per unit differed slightly which we will see.

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(Modern us army-wehrmacht used regiment for brigade)
OVERALL FIELD ORGANIZATION:

Principles of Organization -
The german army's basic principle of organization is the Einheit Principle.That is,standard types of small units with standard organization,training and equipment are the building blocks upon which larger organizations are built.Thus platoons are built on squads,companies on platoons.Battalions on companies.Regiments on battalions and divisions on regiments.And so on.
Second principle is the tactical and administrative self-sufficiency of units.
Third principle is the ease with which a german unit maybe broken up into 2 or more self-sufficient all arms combat groups for specific missions on a temporary basis.An infantry division may allocate one infantry regiment,plus artillery and antitank units9a battalion of light artillery a company of anti tank guns) from its divisional reserve to form a combat group.Once mission is accomplished the assets return to the divisional reserve.

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Army Group-

Above represents the organization of wehrmacht field forces,which is divided in wartime into several army groups(above pic depicts only 1 scenario-number is never fixed).An army group controls several armies and is responsible for a whole theatre of war.It by itself is not a permanent organization,but an HQ of officers directing the battle from the rear and co-ordinating the movements of the armies with only a few security units and signal battalions as its own forces.The armies it commands are permanent administrative entities.Given the scope of an operation an army group may also hold in reserve seperate corps or powerful divisions as an armygroup reserve for exploitation or counterattack which are directly subject to its command and not to any of the subordinate armies.Armygroups in the wehrmacht were led by Field marshals or rarely generals.

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(Types of organizational entities in the wehrmacht)
Example - An example is the german order of battle for france in 1940.(discussed more in detail later)

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Here the wehrmacht forces were divided into 3 armygroups which controlled the armies which in turn commanded the divisions-Divisions being the basic large building block of modern armies and the benchmark of its quantitative strength.

Field Army -

A field army is a large permanent combined-arms military formation(usually under a colonel general) that is both tactically and administratively self-sufficient.It is composed of several (2-5) army corps with each corps commanding (2-7) divisions.Apart from the sub-ordinate corps an army also commands -its own security,supplies and signals personnel.
Plus individual divisions as an army reserve seperate from the corps.Plus additional army level assets allocated from the army high command(GHQ) pool including heavy artillery(seperate from the organic artillery present in every field division),special armoured formations(seperate from individual panzer divisions),engineer troops etc.Germany also had a practice of attatching a luftwaffe air fleet(consisting of fighter and bombers) to an army for close co-operation between the 2 services on and above their common designated battle area.
German Armies were of 2 types -
General armies
Panzer Armies(controlling several corps of predominantly mechanized/armoured elements)

Army level assets allocated from GHQ pool -
For example,An army artillery regiment (Artillery regimental HQ,3 heavy artillery battalions - 2 of 240mm guns,1 of 150 mm guns),plus observer balloon company and a meteorological platoon.
An army engineer regiment(Engineer regimental HQ,2 engineer battalions,4 bridge building battalions)
Plus a mapping company etc.
Army HQ may employ these assets at critical locations requiring special attention or expertise.(a large river crossing operation for ex)

Army headquarters troops -
The army headquarters itself has few security units.For example.
One infantry company.(100-150 men)One anti tank platoon.One armoured car company.

Army Staff -
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The brain of the army.It assists the army commander in communicating and co-ordinating with the corps,operational planning,supplies and administration.The army staff is divided into 5 sections(ignore section 6-introduced late in war for propaganda purposes).

Section I is the most vital called the Generalstaff section.It is staffed exclusively by general staff officers.Divided into -
1.Operations
2.Supply & Administration
3.Intelligence
4.Training
All the chief officers of each branch report directly to the Chief of staff of the army who is also a general staff officer.The chief of staff is second -in-command to the Commander of the army(who may or may not be an officer with generalstaff training) and his first advisor.
The operations officer (Ia)is second-in-command to the chief of staff and acts in his stead in his absence.The logistics officer is Ib and the intelligence officer Ic.(If faced with officer shortage only the Ia and Ib were general staff officers)Id training.
Section II -Routine administration(of rear areas),headed by a general staff officer .If generalstaff personnel shortage otherwise.

Section III - Legal branch with civilian officials

Section IV - Supply,medical,veterinary service representatives.

Section V - Chaplain(priest) service(civilian).

Functionally the army staff were divided into 3 groups.As can be seen below -Tactical Group.Supply and administration group and services group.
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Tactical Group comprises of Operations Officer(Ia) and Intelligence officer (Ic) of section I.
Supply and Administration group comprises Logistics Officer(Ib) of section I and whole of section IV.
Services Group comprises Sections II,III AND V.
The tactical and supply groups are the forward echelon of the army staff(meaning they are situated close to the frontline) while services group is rear echelon(rear area).

Apart from this each army staff has 4 specialist officers - Artillery,Signals,Antitank and Engineer.These act as technical advisors to the army commander in the employment of their respective arms.

Army Corps -

An army corps is a large combined arms military formation of 2 or more divisions grouped for tactical purposes.The first formal corps were used by the french in the napoleonic wars and was rapidly adopted by all european armies.A german army corps had several divisions plus its own permanent staff,corps HQ troops(for security and communication) and corps level assets allocated from GHQ pool.Several corps make up an army.

Corps level assets allocated from GHQ pool.
For example,2 Artillery regiments with their regimental HQs including-
2 Medium artillery battalions(105mm)
4 Medium artilery battalions(150 mm)
4 Heavy artillery battalions(210 mm)
2 artillery observation battalions(fire co-ordination)
Plus Engineer Bridging battalions.
1 infantry battalion(maybe special purpose troops)
1 Heavy antitank battalion
1 Antitank battalion.
(Note corps level asset allocation is very strong compared to army,this is because corps is immediate higher command to division-the basic fighting unit,much closer to the action and requires strong reserve units to react to situations.The antitank battalions especially form a blocking force reserve for any armoured breakthrough from the enemy)

Corps HQ troops
More or less same as army.A few signals and security units.

Corps Staff -
The staff of a german corps designed to assist its commander is headed by a generalstaff officer(chief of staff) who acts as the commander's first advisor.Below him the corps staff is an exact replica of the army staff divided into 5 sections and functionally seperated into tactical group,supply group and services group.The most important staff officer after the chief of staff is again the operations officer (Ia).Corps was generally commanded by a general.

Apart from this a corps staff has 3 specialist officers acting as technical advisors in the branches - Signals ,Antitank troops and Engineers.They are also responsible for field training of the troops in their respective arms and command the corps level assets of their respective branches.

German army corps were of several types -
1.Infantry Corps(consisting of infantry divisions)
2.Panzer Corps(Panzer,motorized or mechanized divisions)
3.Mountain Corps(Mountain divisions largely)
4.Reserve Corps(Reserve/garrison divisions)

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Division -


A division is a large military formation, usually consisting of between 10,000 and 30,000 soldiers(depending on type and organization). In most armies, a division is composed of several regiments or brigades; in turn, several divisions typically make up a corps.A division tends to be the smallest combined arms unit capable of independent ops, this is due to its self-sustaining role as a unit with a range of combat troops and suitable combat support forces, which can be divided into various organic combinations.A division is both a tactical and administrative unit.Commanded by a Generallieutnant or Generaloberst(majorgeneral) in the wehrmacht.A division was composed of several regiments of its corresponding type plus organic combined arms assets and its own staff.
There were several types of wehrmacht divisions -
1.Infantry Division
2.Panzer Division(Armoured)
3.Motorized Division(Infantry in trucks)
4.Mechanized Division/Panzergrenadier Division(infantry in halftracks largely)
5.Gebirsjager Division(mountain division)
6.Light Division(Experimental type combining armoured cars,foot infantry,self propelled artillery and AT)
7.Cavalry division
8.Security Division(Protection of Lines of Communication,anti-partisan warfare)
9.Reserve division(occupation and training)
Organization and strength of these vary greatly and the foremost combat types will be described seperately in detail later.

GHQ doesn't provide any assets at divisional level.Each division has its own organic assets which vary according to division type but usually always contain artillery,antitank,antiaircraft and reconssaince elemnts.
The staff structure is exactly same as in corps and army but there is no chief of staff.The operations officer acts as the chief of staff in wehrmacht divisions.
Also attatched to the divisional staff is a divisional artillery,antitank,signals and engineer officer.They are not only advisors but command the units in field.

NEXT:ADMINISTRATION AND SUPPLY:
GERMAN INFANTRY -DEVELOPMENT.ORGANIZATION.TYPES,EQUIPMENT.TACTICS
 
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ADMINISTRATION AND SUPPLY

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Often overshadowed by the glamour of tactics and technical comparison of weapons,supply and administration are vital to maintainence and survival of an army in the field.Logistics was also often one of the flaws in the german war machine.

On the outbreak of war, all the parts of Europe and its adjacent waters which might be the scene of operations became, from the German point of view, the Theater of War (Kriegsgebiet). Within this area the Germans distinguish between the Theater of Operations and the Zone of the Interior.Since, in the German concept, wars should be conducted as far as possible beyond their own frontiers, the military nomenclature also provides for an intermediate area known as the Zone of Military Administration or Occupied Territory
Much of occupied europe came under the designation of zone of the interior during the course of the war.Its administration was under the command of the Replacement/Home army chief.

REAR AREA ADMINISTRATION:

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The Theater of Operations itself is divided into the Combat Zone and the Communications Zone. The latter may be entirely taken up by the Army Rear Areas.Within the Communications Zone, the Army Group Rear Area (when it exists) is placed under the authority of a Commander of Army Group Rear Area , who has the status of a corps commander and is responsible to the Commander of the Army Group. His main tasks are to provide for the military administration of the area and to protect the security of the lines of communication so that the army group commander can devote himself entirely to combat operations. Similarly, the Army Rear Area is controlled by a Commander of Army Rear Area with the status of a division commander. The rear area commanders have at their disposal security units and police troops and set up various types of administrative headquarters.

LOGISTICS:

The german logistical system was complex and often inefficient(at the grand strategical level),mostly due to political reasons leading to overlap of authority between the powers and responsibilities of competing offices from different organizations.Economic production in Germany is highly centralized and under complete governmental control.The Ministry for Armament and War Production controls production of war material and ammunition; the Ministry for Economic Affairs controls all other industrial production; the Ministry for Food and Agriculture controls food production. Among them these three ministries control production of the supplies for the Wehrmacht.

Regarding the estimate of needs the general staff,on the basis of High Command directives, the detailed estimates of the number or quantity of each article of supply are worked out by the technical branches concerned; they must be adjusted to the industrial, labor, and raw material potentialities of the nation.The three branches of the Armed Forces and the Waffen-SS(which has seperate logistical chain,leading to more confusion) establish their procurement policies on an interservice basis and coordinate the use of railways, canals, and roads for military traffic. In addition, for a number of particularly critical items, the Armed Forces High Command has created special depots which are at its exclusive disposal.

The Army High Command (OKH) has the direct responsibility for a well functioning army supply system. Its wartime supply functions are divided into two distinct phases. The first phase, centering in the Zone of the Interior, is supervised by the Chief of Army Equipment and Commander of the Replacement Army(Home command) and who organizes the procurement of supplies, their storage in suitably placed depots, and their distribution to home and field units. It is his duty to interpret high command directives on an over-all nationwide basis. He determines what proportion of supplies is essential for use by garrison and training units, what amount can be sent to the front, and which areas are in the best position to issue supplies. The second phase, the Field Army (Feldheer) supply system, is controlled by the Chief of Field Army Supply and Administration who administers the sending of requisitions to depots established by the Chief of Army Equipment and the receipt, storage, and distribution of supplies in the field.

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(The messy supply distribution system of the german army,large number of competing agencies create inefficiency.Note chief of army equipment is head of home army.Corps area means wehrkreis.)​

Supply Chain -


After acceptance at the factories, the flow of equipment and ammunition to field and home units may take a number of routes:
By way of equipment and ammunition depots.
By way of equipment parks.
Direct from the factory.
Through SS depots.
Through special Armed Forces High Command (OKW) depots.

1.Army Equipment Depots The agencies responsible for most of the storage, issue, and repair of equipment and for the storage, issue, and salvaging of ammunition belong to a separate branch of the Army, the Ordnance Branch.Army Equipment Depots controlled by the Ordnance Headquarters, handle weapons, tanks, tank spare parts, motor transport, assault boats, radio apparatus, anti-gas equipment, bridge materials, special clothing, concrete mixers, and manuals, as well as many other articles. They do not furnish ammunition, fuel, rations, clothing (other than special types), medical and veterinary equipment, horses, or most types of individual equipment.
Army Ammunition Depots are the main German centers for the storage and issue of ammunition. Frequently they concentrate upon particular types of ammunition

2.The Wehrkries parks complement the equipment depots in the handling of motor transport, engineer equipment, and anti-gas equipment, and form the principal centers for the distribution of horses, veterinary equipment, and medical equipment. Requisitions for repairs reach the parks from both home and field units. Primarily, a park is responsible for servicing its allotted area; usually it also is charged with the supply and maintenance of designated units of the Field Army.There are seperate motor transport and medical parks.

3.There are seperate clothing,fuel depots which directly supply the army.The waffen ss takes its share.(increasing role from 1943)

Supply to Field Army Units :

The supply system of the Field Army is simple and flexible. Its main objective during combat is to replace all supplies used during one day of combat by the beginning of the next day. Rules and regulations are not mandatory; much discretion therefore remains with the supply officers who are encouraged to move supplies as far forward as possible without reloading, to salvage all usable materiel, and to limit expenditure of supplies as far as possible.
Supplies are transported by rail from home depots to army railheads where they are picked up by army supply columns and transported to army dumps and parks. Division supply columns receive rations, fuel, and ammunition at army dumps, and equipment at army parks. They carry the rations, fuel, and ammunition to division distributing points, and the equipment to division collecting points. At these points, supplies are transferred to battalion supply columns and carried to battalion or company supply points where the supplies are turned over to the troops.

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The supply situation is controlled at every stage by the general staff officers of various units headed by the Ib(from army group to division each have their own Ib -as shown earlier in general staff post).When the Ib, acting in the name of his commander, issues supply directives, their execution usually falls to the following:
(1) Arms and Equipment Section
(2) Intendance Section, dealing with rations, clothing, and pay.
(3) Medical Section (IVb).
(4) Veterinary Section (IVc).
(5) Motor Transport Section (V).
(6) Supply Troop Commander, commanding the organic or attached supply troops.

The staff officers concerned with supply in the Field Army and their duties are as follows: (1) At Field Army headquarters, the Chief of Field Army Supply and Administration is directly responsible to the Chief of Staff of the Field Army and constantly is kept informed of the supply situation of the various armies. One of his main functions is forwarding the requirements of the armies to the Chief of Army Equipment. He regulates the evacuation of prisoners and wounded, and the use of communications in the theater of operations. Large stocks of materials, including captured materials and mobile supply trains, are under his control. Important repair centers are also maintained under his control.
At army group headquarters, the Army Group Ib intervenes only when a critical situation requires action, since army groups are not in the normal chain of supply. Normally his most important function is the supervision of security units which safeguard supplies in the communications zones. Units attached to an army group are supplied through the army in whose area they are located.
At army headquarters, the Army Ib administers the collation and forwarding of requisitions, the receipt of supplies from Zone of the Interior depots, the distribution of supplies to lower echelons, and the maintenance of important dumps and repair centers.
At corps headquarters, the Corps Ib, who always has been a link in the chain of requisitioning, although the larger proportion of supplies still pass direct from army dumps to divisions. In addition to handling the supply of organic corps troops, the Corps Ib supervises the distribution of supplies from corps dumps to lower echelons.
At division headquarters, the Division Ib makes his requisition to the Corps Ib on the basis of requisitions and reports from the troop units. He controls the division services of supply and provides a systematic supply of reserves of all kinds for the troops. Like the Army Ib, he is in the normal chain of supply.

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