Read Terror in the Balkans Online
Authors: Ben Shepherd
Tags: #History, #Europe, #Military, #World War II, #Science & Math, #Earth Sciences, #Geography, #Regional
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
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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-
ily, before the new government called in the army and, most notoriously,
the Free Corps—right-wing vigilante groups composed largely of former
soldiers and idealistic university students—to bloodily crush them. The
period also saw army and free corps units take on Polish separatists in
Silesia and Posen.131
Many free corps units themselves were invited by nascent repub-
lican governments in the new Baltic states to provide defense against
Forging a Wartime Mentality
55
Bolshevik Russia. The free corps promptly embarked on a barbaric
rampage through the region. They launched their self-styled crusade
partly to salvage “ancestral” German territory from Bolshevism, partly
for land and booty, and partly out of lust for violence and adventure. It is
worth mentioning that the British government, keen to use the free corps
against the Bolsheviks, gave their campaign its tacit approval.132
The conviction that Germany’s very existence was imperiled by infer-
nal forces from within and without, and the savagery of the struggle
against them, constituted a further seminal moment in the formative
development of many of the men who would hold divisional and other
middle-level fi eld commands within the army twenty years later.133 If
anything, the experience may have been even more signifi cant for offi cers
who would go on to command counterinsurgency units during World
War II. For, even more so than the real or imagined franc-tireur threat
that had confronted German troops in Belgium and northern France
during 1914, the left-wing forces whom army and free corps contingents
faced on the streets of Germany between 1918 and 1920 were not just
an irregular opponent, but an ideological one also. A similar process,
albeit less pronounced, may have taken place among offi cers and soldiers
returning to the less severe but still considerable upheaval within Austria
during these years.134
The years between 1914 and 1920, then, did not just harden and radical-
ize the military and political systems within which German and Austrian
offi cers operated. They also infused offi cers themselves with a harsher,
more obdurate mentality. The forces that forged this mentality came on
many fronts. There were the harsh environments, brutal fi ghting, and
often squalid living conditions on the battlefronts themselves, be it the
industrialized war of the western front, the wild war of the eastern front,
the seesawing carnage of the Italian front, or the serial humiliations the
Austro-Hungarians endured against Serbia. War also saw civilians ruth-
lessly instrumentalized across all battlefronts, whether through reprisal
killings, forced labor, scorched earth, or other means.
And on all battlefronts, albeit to varying degrees, brutality against
enemy soldiers or civilians was colored by culture and ideology. This
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terror in the balk ans
was particularly apparent on the eastern front. It was here that German
and Austrian troops came into contact with groups who, if they were
not already the subject of opprobrium in the run-up to the Great War,
certainly became the subject of it during the war itself—eastern Slavs,
eastern Jews, and Bolsheviks. Finally, the combined effect of all these
forces would coagulate and fl ow into offi cers’ embittered reaction to the
twin traumas of defeat and postwar chaos.
The legacy that resulted was still not enough to ensure that they would
become active and willing agents of National Socialist warfare a quar-
ter of a century later. Quite apart from anything else, the experiences
offi cers underwent during this time were still too varied to make such
a ferocious endpoint inevitable. But this six-year period had certainly
made that outcome more likely. The process was to be completed during
the interwar years and the opening phase of the even more destructive
confl ict that commenced in 1939.
c h a p t e r 3
Bridging Two Hells
The 1920s and 1930s
During the 1920s and early 1930s, neither the German Reichswehr
nor the Austrian
Bundesheer
—the diminished successors to,
respectively, the Imperial German Army and the Austro-Hungarian
Royal-Imperial Army—were ineluctably set on the path that would even-
tually see them commit to the National Socialist cause. But nothing sig-
nifi cant happened during those years to steer them in an ultimately less
disastrous direction. Then, from the mid-1930s onward, the Reichswehr,
then the Bundesheer after it, became ever more entangled with National
Socialism, for the greater part willingly so.1
In Germany the new Weimar Republic, though defended by the army
in its fi rst moment of danger, held little to endear it to the Reichswehr.
Offi cers’ disdain for it was increased by the contempt they themselves
had drawn, as members of the “ruling class,” during the November Rev-
olution that had ushered the republic in. The best most offi cers had to
say about Weimar was that even an unloved democratic republic was
more palatable than a Bolshevik dictatorship.2 And when the republic
had seen fi t to fall back on the soldiers in order to suppress the violent
left-wing threat to its existence, it had been forced to buy the generals’
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support. The price was a promise not to intervene “excessively” in the
Reichswehr’s internal affairs in future.
Thanks to this, the Reichswehr leadership was able to cultivate an
identity separate to, and aloof from, both the German government and
German society. In this cause it turned its truncated size to its advan-
tage; the successor to the old General Staff, the Troops Offi ce, had far
more excuse than its predecessor to be selective in its choice of person-
nel.3 Further, the fact that the government’s hands were tied also enabled
the Troops Offi ce to become experts, albeit only theoretical experts for
the time being, in the business of mass destruction.
More emphasis was placed on intellect than before, but with one pur-
pose in mind. The Troops Offi ce ignored the fundamental strategic rea-
sons why Germany had lost the Great War. Instead, it fi xated itself even
more fi rmly than its predecessor on achieving victory at the operational
and tactical levels.4 The main means of doing so, the Troops Offi ce
believed, was to learn how to harness the new military technologies and
techniques, particularly those relating to air and armored forces, to their
utmost. The fact that both air and armored power were denied to the
Reichswehr by the terms of the Treaty of Versailles was something the
Reichswehr found imaginative ways of circumventing—be it practicing
armored warfare tactics with wooden bicycle-mounted contraptions, or
even furtively visiting the Soviet Union to collaborate clandestinely with
the new Red Army.5 After four years of war followed by crushing defeat,
moreover, the offi cer corps’ mind-set was not just more technocratic than
before. It was also harder, and its threshold for ruthlessness correspond-
ingly lower.6
Offi cers, bar a few fanatics such as those who backed the farcical Kapp
Putsch in 1920,7 did not try to actively undermine the Weimar Repub-
lic during this period. They recognized that, for the moment at least,
it must be tolerated as the only governmental system that could stave
off nationwide chaos. Instead, they immersed themselves collectively in
the business of honing their destructive expertise, and individually in
the business of furthering their careers. Both ambitions, of course, went
hand in hand. The route to success, now more than ever, was to undergo
specialist technical training—and in time, preferably, to impart such
training oneself. Better still would be to attain the kind of appointment
Bridging Two Hells
59
that provided proper expertise in the entire panoply of military plan-