Tuesday, 18 March 2014

BLOOD, FIRE AND STEEL, WORLD WAR 1; SPECIAL EDITION ; 29TH JULY 1914. RUSSIA AND THE WEST IN CRISIS

RUSSIA  AND THE WEST TODAY , ORIGIN OF UKRAINIAN CRISIS

  As a preview to this special edition which is meant to mark 100 years since WW1 started, this writing wishes to revisit the present tension between the West and Russia on the issue of Ukraine and the former Soviet Republics in particular. The crisis is a fallout of issues that have created a perception that predates even WW1. The present Eastern Europe is made up of countries that in the 19th century were largely part of and  under the control of the Ottoman Turkish Empire which was virtually in a perpetual state of war with Russia which sought to free the Slav population of Europe from the domination of an Islamic state and  a middle eastern Caliphate.

Russia effectively in the 19th century destroyed the power of the Ottoman caliphate liberating and bringing into fresh subjection to the Russian empire, the majority of the Slav people of Eastern Europe. The Austro- Hungarian empire also rivaled Czarist Russia in wasting the Ottoman Turkish empire and creating a fresh hegemony over Eastern Europe  particularly over the territories of Hungary, Romania and the defunct Yugoslavia. In fact the Crimean war of  1853 was fought by Britain and France to prevent Russia from completely destroying the Ottoman Turks and creating its own hegemony over Europe especially after Russia completely destroyed the Turkish fleet  in the Black Sea seized the Crimea and threatened to completely deny  access to the Black Sea  to the fleets of both France and Great Britain in its bid to completely dominate the Ottoman Turks in the 1850's

Britain, the world's greatest sea power then. felt it couldn't take the Russian intransigence any further and decided to launch a joint sea borne invasion with France to seize the Russian Black sea port of Sevastopol and teach the Russians an unforgettable lesson and also protect the rump of the Ottoman Turkish empire still remaining. In fact the survival of the Ottoman Turkish Empire came to depend on the benevolence of the British Empire which chose to guarantee its independence until WW1 when Ottoman Turkey switched sides and joined sides with the Central Powers against the Triple Entente of France , Russia and Great Britain .

With the commencement of WW1, the Russians were once more given free reign to waste the Ottoman Turks and seize their territories together with the Slav possessions of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Russia's defeat in the hands of Germany changed the game plan as she was forced by the 1917 treaty of Brest-Litovsk to shed all her Eastern European possessions including modern-day Poland and the Ukraine to the victorious Germans in 1917. Germany's defeat in 1918 once more reversed the equation as She was also forced to renounce the Brest-Litovsk treaty and relinquish to Russia all the territory except for Poland she had taken from Tsarist Russia.

The Allies in 1918 only recognized the independence of Poland but not Ukraine . Ukraine was recognised ipso- facto as part and parcel of Russia later the USSR. The post WW1 era could have been the best opportunity for the Allied Powers ,the USA included to guarantee the independence of the Ukraine if it had been important to them , but the issue never even came up as the British and the American government then were more interested in the independence of Poland and the Baltic states. The issue of the Ukraine being an independent state never even surfaced in the crafting of the Versailles  treaty. 

To cap it all in 1940 when the Hitler dictatorship had become a threat to Europe , Joseph Stalin was given a free hand to overrun the independent Baltic states of Estonia , Latvia and Lithuania in his bid to create a buffer between the USSR and Nazi Germany. Interestingly it was Nazi Germany albeit deceitfully that fought for the 'independence' of Ukraine leading to many Ukrainians becoming sympathisers and collaborators of the Nazi regime. The world must not also forget albeit regretfully that many of the Nazi death camps in Eastern Europe were manned by Ukrainian guards including the famous Auschwitz and Sorbibor .Ukrainian units fought actively with the Third Reich and many served in the SS and were involved in atrocities against civilians particularly Jews and other minorities .

The activities of the Ukrainians in actively collaborating with the Third Reich against the Russians was largely responsible for the abominable treatment Stalin meted to almost all Russian POW''s liberated from Nazi Germany, as instances of  collaboration was widespread. Western Ukraine fought on the side of Germany as provinces of Hungary and Romania. Ukraine as a nation for the first time in over 300 years became one  nation when its eastern territories were detached from Romania and Hungary and joined to its eastern province domiciled in the USSR by Joseph Stalin in 1945 after WW2 . The Russians have this basic distrust for the Ukrainian people that has made it difficult for them to concede to their joining NATO and yet remain their immediate neighbor.

This is a long-standing distrust the West must come to understand as forming part of the reason why an INDEPENDENT Ukraine as part of the Western alliance system is completely detestable to the Russian people and not just Putin . It will have to take some time for the Ukrainians to build the trust of the Russian people that they will not connive with foreigners to once more threaten Russia in a future conflict . A Russian diplomat once told me confidentially years ago that the Ukrainian people have a long history of betraying Russia and that is where the problem lies.



WORLD WAR 1

This was the setting when on June 28, 1914, Garvillo Principe, a Serbian nationalist assassinated the Austro-Hungarian Arch Duke and heir apparent Francis Ferdinand alongside his wife Sophie as they drove in a motorcade on a state visit to Sarajevo a province of Serbia.

Though Serbia made serious efforts at re-approachment and conciliation with the Austro-Hungarian government, King Charles II of Austro-Hungary felt that the time was now ripe to teach Serbia a lesson and stop it from meddling in its nation’s internal affairs particularly as it touched on the issue of its treatment of its local Slav population.

Meanwhile, Russia ever protective of the Slav nations made it clear that it would defend Serbia should any conflict arise. The Austro-Hungarian government was determined to crush Serbia and imposed a series of conditions for peace that were designed to humiliate Serbia.

Though Germany initially tried to pacify both sides and settle the dispute peacefully, Russia’s antagonistic attitude towards both Germany and Austro-Hungary created further tensions when the Austro-Hungarians finally chose to invade Serbia.

Soon after this, Russia ordered a mobilization against Austro-Hungary as well as against Germany too. In early August 1914, Germany mobilized against Russia declaring war on both Russia and France her partner in the Triple Entente to whose defense she was committed to by virtue of the treaty obligation. Since the German plan of war involved having to attack France through Belgium, it invaded Belgium on August 4, 1914.

Britain, having no interest in the ensuing conflict except for its commitment to the defense of Belgium whose neutrality Germany had brazenly violated, promptly declared war on Germany. Within a short spell, save for Italy and Turkey all the major powers in Europe were engulfed in the conflict which became known as the Great War. Neither Belgian nor Dutch neutrality was respected by Germany.

The war was initially, generally well received in Europe and both sides expected to win believing that the war would be over in at most six months. Nobody knew that the stage was set for a long conflict (four years) that would turn out to be the most extensive and bloody conflict in European history claiming the lives of more than 20 million combatants and civilians.




       
WORLD WAR I AS IT AFFECTED EUROPE
German Soldiers at the Battle of Ypres
German troops in gas masks man an antiaircraft gun in October 1917 during the Third Battle of Ypres (also known as the Battle of Passendale) in Belgium. The German army first used poison gas at the Second Battle of Ypres, in 1915, during World War I.
Keystone Pressedienst GmbH
Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

The onset of World War I saw the great powers of Europe divided into two rival camps, with the Allied or Entente powers comprising of France, Russia, Great Britain and Italy later to be joined by the United States and Japan. The Central powers comprised Germany, Austro-Hungary, and the Ottoman Turkish Empire.

In order to keep our focus on the war as it affected European history at the turn of the century, we are going to focus on the main battles and turns of direction of the conflict as it progressed, but will reserve most of our observations for the peace moves; particularly the Armistice of November 1918 signed in France, because of its critical role in shaping Europe’s future and its role in preparing grounds for the next conflict to ensue after the Great War of 1914-18.



THE BALANCE OF POWER IN 1914

In 1914 Great Britain had the world’s largest navy and the largest fleet of merchant ships which eventually in the course of the war came to be known as the merchant fleet after it was armed. Credit must be extended to the seamen for the critical role the merchant fleet played in Great Britain’s ability to survive the German submarine net drawn around the country.

Germany had made the opening moves of the war in attacking, France through an incursion into Belgium which brought the United Kingdom into the war on August 4, 1914.

 Germany’s Schlieffen plan of battle produced by its Chief of General Staff Alfred Graf von Schlieffen who was in office between 1891-1905 required that the main thrust of its attack upon France was to bypass the French fortifications along the Franco-German border and to strike France through its border with Belgium.

That required an attack on Belgium that violated Belgian neutrality and drew Great Britain into the war. That attack rapidly overran Belgium leading to the occupation of Brussels by the Germans on August 20, 1914 and soon German troops were pouring into France across the Belgian border and across the French border.

This battle involved over two million German, Belgian and French troops. This continued until September 6, when the French army fought the defensive battle historically known as the first battle of the Marne’s.
German Soldiers on the Way to the Front
German soldiers march through the streets of Berlin on their way to the battlefront at the start of World War I in August 1914. Both the Allies and the Central Powers expected quick victory and greeted the outbreak of war with enthusiasm.
Culver Pictures
Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

 Likewise, the French attempt to enter the province of Lorraine and wrest it back from German control was thwarted when its 19 divisions were driven back by the German 6th and 7tharmies in the battle of Morhangue-Sarrebourg  (August 20th – 22nd).

 This engagement had a telling effect on the capacity of Alfred Von Molten the German Chief of the General to implement the Schlieffen plan whose major plank hinged on outflanking France through an attack across Belgium.

This was done with a view to out flanking the French defenses on the Franco-German border while whittling down the capacity of the French to resist the double envelopment that would eventually ensue when the German army also attacked directly across its border with France.

The weight of the thrust through Belgium was diluted by the diversion of six newly formed (Ersatz) divisions that had been formed to bring pressure to bear on the right wing of the thrust through Belgium and now had to be diverted to stem the French incursion into Alsace Lorraine. The German imperial Princes who commanded the field armies were far more interested in seeking personal glory than in the co-ordination of their joint efforts.

At a time when their two armies were ordered to fall back in the face of the French assault, the two Imperial Princes in willful disobedience to the imperial Headquarters ordered a counter attack by the 5th and 6th armies led by Crown Prince William of Germany and Prince Rupert of Bavaria respectively.

The result was that the French were forced back to their fortified defenses from where they were able to remain in defensive positions while switching forces to stabilize their lines in the face of the German offensive in the first battle of the Marne’s.

 The German offensive through Belgium almost succeeded simply because the Allies greatly under estimated the weight of numbers that the Germans would employ in the flanking move. While the Germans employed over fifty divisions in this move, the Anglo-French- Belgian forces totaled about 37 divisions. Meanwhile in tactical reality, the German armies were better trained, led and motivated.

 The reality of the strength of the German flanking move was soon to hit the Allied field commander, French Field Marshal Joffre. He however reacted with cool and precision in formulating on the spot, a new plan of attack and defense to counter the Schlieffen plan.

In a series of tactical moves that ultimately became a tactical blunder, Helmut Von Moltke, the German Chief of the General staff on sensing that the original plan was not working like it should, decided to improvise a new plan. The original plan had not been faithfully implemented as it was intended because of distractions, re-deployments of armies and refusal of the top commanders to exhibit faith in the plan as it were.


Schlieffen Plan and Actual Troop Movements
During World War I, Germany’s war plan was known as the Schlieffen Plan. The plan called for German armies to invade Belgium and sweep into France, moving south and west to capture Paris before pushing the French armies east toward the German border. When the German armies invaded France in 1914, however, they did not follow the plan and instead drove north and east of Paris. As a result, they did not go far enough west to capture Paris. Failing to carry out the Schlieffen Plan, Germany did not quickly defeat the French, and the war lasted for four more years.
© Microsoft Corporation. All Rights Reserved.
Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

As the French and British commanders began to discern the German battle plan, their ability to deploy and move men to check the German incursions also grew.

The German powerful right wing thrust through Belgium meant to outflank and destroy the Allied armies according to the schflien plan had not been faithfully followed as some units were withdrawn by Moltke and sent to the Eastern front while some were sent to strengthen the attacks of the two Imperial Princes totally uncalled for, that ended up diluting the strength of the armies thrusting through Belgium and leaving them vulnerable to the British and French counter thrusts that ultimately halted the Germans on the Marne River 40 kilometers short of Paris. That notwithstanding, the German armies advanced right close to the French capital and at a point were just 40 miles from Paris by early September 1914.
Taxicabs Bound for the First Battle of the Marne
Taxicabs line up to carry French troops to battle. During the First Battle of the Marne in September 1914, the Allies attacked the German armies and pushed them north and away from Paris. French troops were rushed from Paris to the battle by any available means.
Culver Pictures
Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

In a series of brilliant moves and orderly co-ordination between the French and British armies operating under the norm of British Expeditionary forces, the Allies were able to switch forces, block the path of the advancing forces and actually begin a well co-ordinated counter attack by the beginning of September that caused all the German forces converging on Paris to enter into a general retreat that became known as the first battle of the Marne’s.

Forces involved on the side of the Allies were the French 5th and 6th armies and the entire B.E.F force. This retreat saved Paris and ultimately France. For the rest of the war, Germany could threaten but no longer capture Paris.

The reason for the Allies success in the first battle of the Marne’s stemmed from the utter exhaustion of the German infantry advancing into France from Germany through Belgium into Germany. Many of them had walked over 150 miles on foot as the retreating French had destroyed roads, bridges and rail lines that the Germans could have used to convey their troops.

The Germans were also surprised at the resilience and tenacity of the French under attack and even in retreat. This was evident in the small number of prisoners taken by the German army in its westward advance into Belgium and France. At about this time, the assault of the German 6th and 7th armies across the Franco-German border was halted in a predictable fashion as the French resisted from their entrenched fortifications.

The German attempt at a flanking movement past the French stronghold of Verdun was also halted, and this led to its armies digging in along the banks of the lower Aisne River and the Chemin des Dames Ridge. The subsequent Allied attacks were continuously repelled as it became obvious that the defense seemed to be prevailing over the attack in this war.

The first battles of the Marne’s thus began the process of trench warfare that was to become the dominant trait and character of the First World War. The only option left to the Generals was to try to outflank the opposition, with the result that a network of trenches stretching all the way to the coast of Belgium on the Atlantic west of Ostend materialized as each tried to outpace the other in the race to the sea.

Through Paris was saved from capture after this great battle, granting the French some reprieve, the loss of a big portion of industrialized northern France, where the bulk of the industries, steel and coal mines lay; created a daunting prospect for the French in their pursuit of victory in the war.

Meanwhile, the Germans succeeded in capturing Antwerp on October 10, after a heavy bombardment that began on September 10, 1914. A subsequent Allied effort to outflank the Germans near Ypres through the efforts of the British expeditionary force (B.E.F) was also similarly met with a counter thrust on the path of the Germans on the Belgian lines near the River Aisne.

  The subsequent first battle of the Ypres, October to November 1914 was brought under control only after the opening of the dams on the Ypres River which flooded the path of the advancing Germans and turned Ypres into a muddy flood plain. With the consolidation of the French lines and fortification along the entire line of battle, the war settled into trench warfare. For the next three years the Allies repeatedly tried unsuccessfully to breach the trench lines.

On the Eastern front, the greater distances involved, and the disparity in the abilities and quality of the opposing armies made it more difficult to tie down any side in sustained trench warfare, as the Germans had proven their capability in penetrating the Russian lines whenever they wanted to in major frontal assaults, in spite of their extensive trench lines and defenses.

When the Russian Commander-in Chief Grand Duke Nicholas was pressured into launching an attack against the Central Powers from the East by his French Allies, he ordered two Russian armies to attack East Prussia.  Generals Samsonov and Generals Rennekampf led the Russian 2nd and 1st armies respectively in the onslaught. Although outnumbering the Germans 2-1, the attack lacked proper coordination as both Generals had mutual dislike and disrespect for each other.
Battle of Tannenberg
German soldiers in trenches stand by their machine guns during the Battle of Tannenberg. Germany and Russia fought the battle in August 1914. German troops crushed the Russian army in what became one of the most decisive battles of World War I.
Keystone Pressedienst GmbH
Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

The Germans though inferior in number, read the situation well enough to gamble on the fact that if they concentrated all their forces on the 2ndArmy led by Samsonov, Rennekampt could be trusted not to come to his aid and vice versa. By so doing, the Germans took each Army apart consecutively, completely enveloped each in full scale flanking attacks and decimated each of them in the historic battles of Tannenberg in August 26-30, 1914.

The Russians never quite recovered from this defeat, and the loss of morale involved. At about this time General Paul von Hindenburg was appointed as Supreme Commander over the German armies with Lt. Gen Erich Ludendorff as his Chief of Staff.
German Commanders Hindenburg and Ludendorff
Paul von Hindenburg and Erich Ludendorff played a central role in directing Germany’s military forces during World War I (1914-1918). At German headquarters, from left to right, Hindenburg discusses war plans with German emperor William II and Ludendorff in January 1917.
SuperStock
Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

To achieve these victories on the eastern front, the Germans had had to withdraw two Army Corps (seven divisions) from the Western front and this lessening of pressure helped to facilitate the French defensive victories in the first battle of the Marne.
William II of Germany
When William II became emperor of Germany in 1888, he abandoned Germany’s cautious foreign policy and began competing with other European powers. He announced that Germany would begin to acquire an overseas empire and build up its navy. His actions alarmed both France and Britain. William II is shown here in the uniform of the “Death’s head Hussars,” a cavalry regiment.
Woodfin Camp and Associates, Inc.
Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

 On the Austro-Hungarian front however, the Russians were more successful as the combined attack of the Austro-Hungarian  armies were not only stopped, but a Russian counter attack subsequently developed that was so serious as to require German intervention to prevent defeat for Austro-Hungary.

A fresh Russian effort to invade Prussian Silesia was mounted with the combined strength of seven Armies. The planned offensive was so massive that the word around the media world was that the Russian ‘steam roller’ was on the move, raising Allied hopes of a decisive breakthrough in the East.

The ingenuity of the German High command played off well as both Hindenburg and Ludendorff used the German railway lines to send off an army into Prussian Poland to drive a wedge between the advancing Russian armies; and with the subsequent arrival of four German Army Corps from the Western front, the offensive was halted in front of Warsaw along the Bzar-Rawker (River) lines.
Francis Ferdinand
The assassination of Austrian Archduke Francis Ferdinand and his wife, Czech Countess Sophie Chotek, precipitated World War I. They were killed by Serbian nationalist Gavrilo Princip in Sarajevo, Bosnia, then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
Culver Pictures
Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

The Russian Armies operating in Austro-Hungary were also forced to halt their advance along the Nida and Dunajec Rivers when their supplies ran out. Austro-Hungary’s initial offensive against Serbia launched in early August was brought to a halt by the able Serbian commander and lack of tactical skill by the Austrian officer Corps (August 21-24).

The Serbs launched an offensive of their own, but had to call it off to contain a second Austrian offensive in the west on the Drina River. A third offensive launched by the Austro-Hungarian army broke the deadlock and brought Belgrade under Austrian occupation by November 30, 1914 ; however Belgrade was retaken by the Serbs on December 15, 1914 and the Austrians were forced to retreat.

Germany’s pre-war influence and investments in Ottoman Turkey’s politics paid off when Turkey under the control of the Young Turks declared war against Russia and subsequently Britain and France after ostensible acts of hostilities against the Allies which included Turkish bombardment of the Odessa sea port and the closure of the Dardanelles straits. Russia and the Western Allies declared war on Turkey on November 1 and 3, 1914 respectively.
Soldiers from the Ottoman Empire
Soldiers from the Ottoman Empire march through a town. During World War I the Ottoman Empire joined the Central Powers of Germany and Austria-Hungary in October 1914. The Ottoman Empire fought Russian troops in the Caucasus Mountains and British troops in the area now known as the Middle East.
Imperial War Museum
Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.





Allied and Central Powers of World War I
Countries
Date Entered the War1

Allied Powers
Serbia
July 1914
Russia
August 1914
France
August 1914
Belgium
August 1914
British Empire2
August 1914
Montenegro
August 1914
Japan
August 1914
Italy
May 1915
San Marino
June 1915
Portugal
March 1916
Romania
August 1916
United States
April 1917
Cuba
April 1917
Panama
April 1917
Greece
July 1917
Siam (now Thailand)
July 1917
Liberia
August 1917
China
August 1917
Brazil
October 1917
Guatemala
April 1918
Nicaragua
May 1918
Costa Rica
May 1918
Haiti
July 1918
Honduras
July 1918
Central Powers
Austria-Hungary
July 1914
Germany
August 1914
Ottoman Empire
November 1914
Bulgaria
October 1915
1 Some countries entered the war although they did not send troops.

2 Included self-governing dominions of the British Empire: Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and South Africa.
Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.



THE EUROPEAN WAR AT SEA 1914-1915

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