Read Terror in the Balkans Online
Authors: Ben Shepherd
Tags: #History, #Europe, #Military, #World War II, #Science & Math, #Earth Sciences, #Geography, #Regional
Bolshevism also came to be associated, due to the ethnic background
of many leading Bolsheviks, with Jews.103 Major Bothmer, a German offi -
cer stationed in Russia in 1918, vilifi ed the Jews as the source of all Bol-
shevik infection there. His diary ghoulishly detailed how he would “just
love to see a few hundred of these Jew-boys strung up from the walls of
the Kremlin, dying as slowly as possible so as to enhance the effect.”104
But the Great War was nourishing anti-Semitism well before the Revo-
lution. One reason for this was the troops’ encounters with eastern Jews.
This was a people whose alien appearance and customs could affront
even an assimilated German Jew such as Victor Klemperer. Klemperer
described how a visit to a Talmud school in 1918 had “repelled me as if
with fi sts,” for the “swirl of people” in these rooms at prayer or recitation
of holy texts represented for Klemperer “repellent fanaticism . . . No,
I did not belong to these people, even if one proved my blood relation
to them a hundred times over . . . I belonged to Europe, to Germany,
and I thanked my creator that I was a German.”105 Such views were far
from universal; other commentators, such as the Bavarian writer Ludwig
Ganghofer, regarded the eastern Jews much more positively. “In amongst
the farmers you see groups of Jews in their long black dress,” he wrote. “If
50
terror in the balk ans
you need to ask the way or enquire as to some other matter, you are best
off approaching one of these lock wearers; they are pleasant and friendly,
answer knowledgably, (and) almost always speak good German.”106 It is
nevertheless clear that there was widespread contempt towards eastern
Jews within the German army.107
In Germany itself, anti-Semitism within the popular press reared
its head following the fi rst setbacks at the front. Newspapers depicted
Jews as cowards, shirkers, and profi teers, and many on the political right
hoped to exploit such prejudices for political gain.108 Lieutenant Colonel
Max Bauer, a fanatically anti-Semitic offi cer, wrote:
There is a huge sense of outrage at the Jews, and rightly so. If you
are in Berlin and go to the Ministry of Commerce or walk down the
Tauentzienstraße, you could well believe you were in Jerusalem.
Up at the front, by contrast, you hardly ever see any Jews. Virtually
every thinking person is outraged that so few are called up, but noth-
ing is done, because going after the Jews, meaning the capital that
controls the press and the parliament, is impossible.109
In 1916, delusions over the extent of Jewish “shirking” led the Ger-
man army to implement a demeaning “head count” of its Jewish soldiers.
This operation eventually concluded that Jews were after all fulfi lling
their national duty every bit as much as Gentiles. But not before it had
devastated the morale of many loyal, patriotic Jewish soldiers.110
The war strengthened anti-Semitism in Austria-Hungary also. Here
too, the anti-Semitic press fanned long-standing resentments towards
Jews, likewise depicting them as shirkers and black marketeers. One of
the “foundations” for these rumors, as in Germany, was the underrepre-
sentation of Jews among the army’s rank and fi le. The simple explanation
for this, which the rabble-rousers chose to ignore, was that most rank-
and-fi le soldiers were peasants and most peasants were not Jewish.111 In
Vienna, anti-Semitic contempt was exacerbated by an infl ux of Galician
Jewish refugees fl eeing persecution from the Tsar. Their appearance was
very different to that of the empire’s assimilated Jewish population, and
their arrival put immense strain on the capital’s already acute housing
Forging a Wartime Mentality
51
shortage. There was similar resentment towards eastern Jews arriving in
Berlin between 1917 and 1920.112
But there was still no simple straight line between this anti-Semitism,
however abhorrent, and the deadly anti-Semitism that infl uenced the
conduct of German army units in the service of the Nazis a quarter-
century later. Apart from the German army’s shameful anti-Semitic head
count of 1916, the belligerent anti-Semitism that increasingly contami-
nated German society during the Great War did not inform German mil-
itary policy.113 Jewish soldiers serving in the still relatively enlightened
Austro-Hungarian army, meanwhile, were not compelled to suffer any
kind of head count; Conrad, his own anti-Semitism notwithstanding,
opined that “it does not seem appropriate to draw up statistics on the
basis of religious distribution.”114
In any case, the core reason why the Central powers were losing the
war by 1918 was neither the Bolsheviks nor the Jews, but their own mili-
tary and economic weakness. The weakness had been exacerbated by
the increasingly megalomaniac way in which the military dictatorship
running the German government since August 1916 was conducting the
war.115 By 1918, against an Allied coalition vastly strengthened by the
entry of the United States into the war, the Central powers’ defi cien-
cies were mercilessly apparent. The extent of their material privations
became especially clear to soldiers participating in Germany’s desper-
ate fi nal offensives on the western front in the spring and early summer
of that year, when advancing German soldiers stumbled upon veritable
treasure troves of supply in captured Allied trenches.116
By September the German army was fi rmly on the defensive, fi ghting
a doomed struggle against an Allied coalition now enjoying the prospect
of millions of fresh American troops. There is much to be said for the
view that, following the failure of its fi nal offensives, the German army
became stricken with levels of disobedience that amounted to a “covert
military strike.”117 But in reality, considerable though indiscipline was,
its effect was not terminal. For the army’s resistance stiffened, albeit ulti-
mately in vain, as the fi ghting approached German soil.118 In October
52
terror in the balk ans
1918 Major General von Endres, commander of I Bavarian Army Corps,
sought to rally his troops for the fi nal effort:
(The enemy’s) purpose is clear; he wants to bring the war with all
its terror into our beloved Fatherland and bring us to our knees . . .
But he will not succeed . . . No Frenchman, Englishman, American
or Italian will cross our border. If every man does his duty to the
utmost, we will succeed in halting their onslaught and achieve an
honorable peace. The Fatherland is in danger; you can save it!119
Vain though such rallying calls would ultimately prove, the great
majority of German soldiers responded to them as the borders of their
Fatherland were threatened during the weeks before the Armistice. That
they did so would be taken as further proof in interwar military circles
that the Imperial German Army had not been vanquished in the fi eld
at the end of the Great War. Instead, many would claim, the army had
been “stabbed in the back” by defeatist elements at home. This take on
events was at odds with the reality of autumn 1918. For the army, if not
yet actually defeated militarily, could no longer avoid that inevitable
fate—regardless of any temporary stiffening in its resistance or of what
happened at home. But the “stab-in-the-back” myth would endure in
post-1918 Germany nonetheless.
Meanwhile, following peace with Russia, the only remaining battle-
front on which Austro-Hungarian troops remained committed was in
Italy. But by now the Royal-Imperial Army’s fi ghting power was so far
gone that its last ever offensive, on the River Piave in June 1918, came to
naught almost immediately.120 Over the next few months, what remained
of the troops’ discipline, and with it the army itself, disintegrated com-
pletely.121 Attempts to stem the fl ood were in vain. The fact that the new
emperor, Karl I, had relaxed army discipline in a misconceived attempt
to get his subjects to like him more could only hamper such attempts
further.122 By October the 14th Austro-Hungarian Infantry Regiment
was declaring that “the rising instances of desertion . . . give rise to the
suspicion that one of the motives to desert (is the belief) that the general
spirit of conciliation after the war will prevent such offences from being
punished with the full force of the law.”123
Forging a Wartime Mentality
53
When the Armistice fi nally came, such was the German army’s con-
dition that it was at least able to march home in good order. Not so the
miasmic exodus of the Austro-Hungarian army from Italy: “trains over-
crowded, some looking from a distance like swarms of bees . . . Every
train was fully occupied including the roofs, platforms, bumpers, run-
ning-boards, and locomotives. Hundreds of men paid the ultimate price
of their haste to return home in tunnels, on sharp turns, and across low
railway-bridges.”124 The likely traumatizing effect of this spectacular
disintegration upon the offi cers who witnessed it—among whom, by
this time, were nearly all the Austrian-born offi cers examined in this
study125—is easy to imagine. All told, bearing witness either to the com-
plete collapse in morale within the Royal-Imperial Army, or to its severe
albeit less debilitating erosion within the Imperial German Army, is
likely to have increased many former offi cers’ later receptivity to National
Socialism. For National Socialist ideology, they would come to believe,
had a uniquely strengthening effect upon military morale.
Karl abdicated, and a new democratic republic, christened the
Republic of Austria in 1919, was set up. The peace treaties imposed
upon Austria and Hungary after the Great War did not merely reduce
their territory and armed forces to a fraction of their former size. They
also dismembered the entire Austro-Hungarian Empire. Its territory
was distributed to neighboring countries already in existence, such as
Italy and Rumania, or to countries newly formed—Poland; Czechoslo-
vakia; and the Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes. Austria
itself was reduced to a dwarf state a tenth the size of its former empire.
The army’s remnants were organized into a People’s Army, or
Volks-
wehr
. The Volkswehr joined forces with militias to confront not just
unrest within Austria, but also—with a newly formed Frontier Guard—
attempts by some of Austria’s neighbors to nip at its borders and seize
its territory.126
In the popular press and right-wing circles, Jews were scapegoated
for the collapse of Austrian power, as well as for the infl ation that sub-
sequently crippled the postwar Austrian economy. Anti-Semitism was
further buttressed when the loss of Galicia to Poland and the Bukovina
to Rumania sparked a fresh wave of Jews into Vienna. Many staunch
Austrian Catholics, meanwhile, associated Jews with Marxism.127
54
terror in the balk ans
In Germany, the military dictatorship that since 1916 had run the coun-
try to ultimately ruinous effect pinned the blame for defeat upon oth-
ers—Bolsheviks and pacifi sts128 and “cowardly” socialist and liberal
politicians. It was these same politicians for whom the military dictator-
ship made way in autumn 1918, so as to saddle them with the blame for
the humiliating peace treaty that was imminent. The wartime military
leaders believed such action was justifi ed. For they deluded themselves
that it was these groups who had sealed Germany’s doom by sowing the
seeds of defeatism on the German home front while the army in the fi eld
had stood fi rm. The “stab-in-the-back” myth, which denied the military
realities of autumn 1918, would become an article of faith for the political
right in Germany, as it would for many army offi cers, during the years of
republican government that succeeded the imperial regime.129
Many German offi cers, front-liners in particular, found defeat in 1918
and the humiliation heaped upon army and nation in its wake almost
impossible to endure. Consequently, such men regarded the “guilty”
parties—democrats, Bolsheviks, and the Jews whom they synonymized
with both—with an especially noxious loathing. Captain von Selchow,
visiting Berlin days after the Armistice, wrote that “we passed all sorts
of people, the dregs of the city. Jews and deserters—gutter scum, in the
vilest sense of the word—now rule Germany. But as far as the Jews are
concerned, their day will come, and then woe to them!”130
Hatred towards the “enemies of the nation” was transformed into
violence during the so-called “Time of Struggle” that engulfed Ger-
many between 1918 and 1920. During this period numerous far left-wing
groups, most prominently the Bolshevik-inspired Spartakists, sprang up
in cities across Germany in an effort to foment Bolshevik-style revolu-
tion. Berlin, Munich, and the Ruhr were just three of the areas in which
these forces either tried to seize power, or managed to seize it temporar-