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East Front
Summary In the late summer of 1914, the ancient monarchies of
Austria, Russia and Germany plunged their countries into a world war which
engulfed Europe in one of the bloodiest conflicts in history. The Eastern Front
of that great war had a profound impact on the remainder of the 20th century,
even though the Western Front with its British, French and American combatants
achieved somewhat greater fame. The statistics for the Eastern war are grim.
More than three-million men died in the fighting, more than nine-million men
were wounded, and every major country which participated lost its form of
government. One of them, Russia, collapsed so completely and catastrophically
that the ensuing consequences still resonate in today's world. It was into this
conflict that the soldiers of 1914 marched, with an eagerness and confidence
which has not since been repeated.
"When [such a] mass suffers enormous losses ;
when they feel, as they will feel, that other and less costly means of
achieving the same end might have been adopted, what will become of their
morale?" Henderson
Introduction The Russian Army of World War One has
become notorious for its reputation as a large, ill-equipped force, yet in
1914, Russia's Imperial Troops were actually well trained and equipped. The
real problem with the Russian Army lay in its inadequate transportation
infrastructure, which was not able to supply and maintain Russian field
formations at wartime establishments. As far as equipment was concerned, the
average Russian soldier in the 1st and 2nd Line had sidearms, rifles and
machine guns equal to his German counterparts, and probably superior to the
Austrians. The standard Russian Field Guns, the 76.2 mm and 122 mm, were robust
enough to be used in World War Two and still be in reserve units in the 1980's.
Because of the many logistical disadvantages under which they labored,
the Russian Army High Command had maintained a lively pre-war debate over what
action would be taken in case of war with Germany. By 1910 it was decided to
launch major offensive operations immediately upon the outbreak of any war.
This decision clearly catered to the "spirit of the offensive" which then
pervaded European military thought, and in pursuit of this doctrine, most
Russian fortress units were deactivated. The age-old Russian strategy of
defense-in-depth supported by counteroffensives was cast aside in favor of the
latest trends. This was to exact a brutal toll in Russian lives, which in turn
helped to spur later unrest.
The Austro-Hungarian Army of 1914 had been
starved of proper equipment and resources throughout the pre-war period. It was
also composed of an increasingly nationalistic soldiery, three-quarters of whom
were from Slavic recruiting districts. The reluctance of these troops to follow
Austrian officers into combat against their Russian brethren became a major
liability, especially after the enormous losses suffered during the first year
of war. The main German armies in the East operated with characteristic
Teutonic efficiency. Indeed it was here that their troops enjoyed the luxury of
fighting the battles of maneuver for which they had been trained. The Russian
front also saw the rise of the great German "artillery virtuosos" of the war,
men such as Lieutenant Colonel Georg Bruchmüller. Lieutenant Colonel
Bruchmüller was capable of orchestrating artillery firepower with
ferocious efficiency, but more importantly he undertook aggressive training
measures to assure near perfect coordination between the artillery and infantry
branches of the army.

The Start of War The Eastern half of the Great War
began on August 17, 1914, when Russian General Pavel Rennenkampf's First Army
invaded Eastern Prussia in a full scale offensive (marked 1 on the map).
Two days later, General Alexander Samsonov's Second Army attacked around the
right flank of the German Eighth Army commanded by General Friedrich von
Prittwitz (marked 2). This was achieved despite the fact that Second
Army was fighting at two-thirds strength due to the slow Russian mobilization.
Prittwitz, who was certain that he could not hold against the two armies facing
him, informed high command that he intended to withdraw to the Vistula River,
abandoning most of East Prussia including Königsberg. He was immediately
relieved of duty and replaced by Field Marshal Paul von Hindenburg and his new
Chief-of-Staff, Erich Ludendorf. Along with the staff at East Prussian Army
Headquarters, they planned a counteroffensive against the Russians. By August
27 they had already laid the plans and fallen on Samsonov's weak Army, taking
it in both flanks in a near perfect double envelopment (marked 3). The
Battle of Tannenberg ended by August 30 when Samsonov's entire command
disintegrated at a cost of 92,000 captured and tens of thousands of other
casualties. Within a week, German forces under General August Mackensen
defeated Rennenkampf at the Battle of Masurian Lakes, where the Russians lost
another 100,000 casualties (also marked 3). As in previous wars,
inadequate logistic support hampered Russian movement and supply. Now, against
an industrialized opponent, these shortcomings quickly assumed catastrophic
proportions.
In the south of Poland, Austrian Chief-of-Staff Conrad von
Hoetzendorf launched his own attack northward toward Warsaw (marked 4).
The Russians however, had concentrated four fully supplied armies opposite the
39 Divisions of Austrian troops, and on August 30 they opened their offensive
(marked 5). By the third week in September, Hoetzendorf ordered a
general retreat. and the province of Galicia was abandoned by the Austrians at
a cost of over 130,000 casualties! The year ended with limited attacks toward
Warsaw by Mackensen and Russian probing assaults into the Carpathian passes.
While the winter of 1914-15 still had its grip on Europe, von
Hoetzendorf appealed to the Germans to support an offensive which he hoped
would force the Russians away from the crests of the Carpathian Mountains.
After some debate, the German senior command agreed on a thrust deep into
Russian lines out of East Prussia. The resulting "winter war" inflicted another
190,000 casualties on the Russians, but petered out when the Austrian forces to
the south utterly failed to dislodged the Russians. They instead suffered
another embarrassing defeat, and even lost control of Dukla Pass, a prime route
onto the Hungarian plains. Only severe weather and their unfortunate supply
situation prevented the Russians from cracking into the core of the Dual
Monarchy's empire.
By May of 1915, the Germans took over command of the
Eastern Front and used many of their units to support the increasingly
fragmented Austrian formations. Their next offensive came on May 1, with a
sharp attack on the Russian lines at Gorlice. This offensive penetrated more
than two-hundred miles in two weeks (marked 1 on the map) and triggered
the collapse of the entire Russian Southern Front. German and Austrian
formations pushed northward in another thrust toward Warsaw (marked 2),
capturing it in August. In September, General Max von Gallwitz' new Twelfth
Army attacked into the Courland (marked 3) toward Riga. As the entire
Russian front line fell apart, the Russian strongholds of Novo-Georgiesk and
Brest-Litovsk both fell to the Germans. Only at the end of September did
Russian resolve harden enough to allow a new line to form. Shortly after this,
Russian Tsar Nicholas intervened and assumed personal command of the army, a
decision which would have grave consequences. The territory captured by the
Central Powers to date (shaded light yellow) included all of Poland, Lithuania
and Latvia. Two million Russian troops were lost during the course of the year,
half of them prisoners. The Central powers of Germany and Austria-Hungary lost
a total of nearly one-million, another grim highlight of this theater's impact
on the war.
 Above: Austrian
Chief-of-Staff Conrad von Hoetzendorf. The increasing alienation between the
Austrian and German high commands caused some German officers to cynically
state "we are shackled to a corpse." |
The next major offensive was undertaken by Russian General
Alexi Brusilov. His preparations were far superior to those undertaken by
previous senior officers, and for the first time during the war Russian units
were trained to employ shock troops followed up by mutually supporting open
order formations. Western Allied aid and Russian production had also replaced
all of the equipment losses from the previous year, although the competing egos
of fellow commanders and the still inefficient supply system placed a dead hand
on any spectacular successes. By June of 1916, Brusilov's four armies, the
Eighth, Eleventh, Seventh and Ninth, were poised along the Galician border
facing the Austrian Army. On the 4th the Russians attacked and immediately
penetrated deep into Austrian positions, capturing 13,000 prisoners on the
first day (marked 1 on the map). By the time the offensive was two
months old, the entire Austro-Hungarian Empire was in danger of falling.
Romania then entered the war on the side of the allies, but greedily invaded
Transylvania instead of preparing an adequate defense. This mistake gave the
Germans the opening they needed, and the ensuing counter-offensive achieved the
total collapse of Romania to the Central Powers. Germany and Austria gained
control of vast coal and wheat fields, although they also added over 200 miles
of front to their lines. Brusilov was urged by St. Petersburg to
continue his summer gains even though the Russians had suffered horrible
casualties in the process of attaining their goals. In September the offensive
was continued, but without the same elegance as earlier, causing casualties to
again climb toward the one-million mark. The offensive finally wound down after
the seizure of Bukovina and Galicia (shaded in yellow). These accomplishments
brought Russia just as many casualties as their defeats of the previous year,
and discipline began to slide downward. To make matters worse, Russian industry
proved unable to continue manufacturing new equipment in sufficient quantities
to replace such staggering losses, especially in small arms and ammunition. All
of this may have been inevitable given the trend of the war at that point. In
late 1916, several nations across Europe began to suffer from mutinies and
revolts as troops became disillusioned with the profligate loss of life. As the
bad news at home mounted, Russia slowly edged toward open revolt and the dual
monarchy of Austria-Hungary edged toward complete dissolution.
By 1917, the Russian Army's officer corps was increasingly
demoralized by the poor progress of the fighting. Though grossly outnumbered,
the Germans had proven to be dangerous and cunning opponents, and the Russian
royal family's unfortunate intervention in affairs did not improve anything.
The repeated catastrophes suffered by Russian field armies squelched what
patriotism had existed three years earlier, slowly allowing the entire
governing system to fall apart. By March of that year, some Army units began
ignoring their orders, a situation made worse as growing Communist rebel groups
exaggerated reports of minor events such as the revolt of a Russian Guard depot
formation at Petrograd (this famous mutiny was carried out by trainees and
depot troops, not by fully trained Imperial Guardsmen). After the Tsar
abdicated his throne that same month, a provisional government was formed with
Alexander Kerensky at its head. He made a short-lived attempt to uphold Allied
obligations by putting General Brusilov in command of another offensive against
the German Southern Army in Galicia. But despite his best efforts, Brusilov's
1917 offensive only cleared a few mutinous Austrian formations out of the way
before running into the brick wall of German general's Hoffman and Hutier, who
first held off, then counter-attacked the hesitant Russian troops. This was the
last straw for the Imperial Russian Army, which virtually disintegrated as open
civil war swept like a wave across Russia.
As the Communist revolt
accelerated, both sides of the civil war continued sporadic negotiations with
Germany. The Germans, who continued making territorial gains (marked 2),
eventually began aiding the pro-Tsarist White Russian forces, attempting to
stem the very revolt they had helped to foster. However the damage to the
Russian infrastructure was too great, and the "White" Russians were eventually
forced from power by the "Red" Communists. The treaty of Brest-Litovsk was
finally concluded with the new Bolshevik government on March 3, 1918, stripping
their country of all provinces west of the Ukraine. That treaty was annulled by
the Armistice of November 11, and the new government in Moscow eventually
re-established its presence in all of the previously held lands. Ironically,
one of the lasting actions by the Bolsheviks was the attempted indoctrination
of German prisoners-of-war. Many of these troops were eventually transferred to
the Western Front which was still raging in 1918, but some of them were
virtually useless as soldiers. When the war ended, they returned to Germany,
where many threw themselves into the post-war revolution then tearing at
Germany's social fabric. The opposing fascists eventually gained control of the
country and added further tragic chapters to the history of Russia and Eastern
Europe.
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