Read Terror in the Balkans Online
Authors: Ben Shepherd
Tags: #History, #Europe, #Military, #World War II, #Science & Math, #Earth Sciences, #Geography, #Regional
cies, it also conveyed the importance of good character, self-awareness,
and personal responsibility.59 The multiethnic character of the Austro-
Hungarian army, meanwhile, helped its offi cers retain an outlook char-
acterized by open-minded moderation as well as by more reactionary
traits. It would be wrong, therefore, to conclude that a combination of
social and political myopia, narrow technical specialization, and emer-
gent Social Darwinism with all it vicious offshoots was having a uni-
formly nefarious effect upon all offi cers.
Nevertheless, there are many signs that a base of disturbing tenden-
cies was already forming, and on a widespread basis. It would take a new
development, the Great War, to radically harden it.
c h a p t e r 2
Forging a Wartime Mentality
The Impact of World War I
When most of europe went to war in summer 1914, following a
monthlong diplomatic crisis sparked by the assassination of Franz
Ferdinand at the hands of a Bosnian Serb radical, the belief that it would
be a quick, glorious affair was not universal. Certainly, many generals
did not share it. They were cognizant of just how diffi cult the revolution
in defensive fi repower had rendered the business of attack. They were
also cognizant of nations’ capacity to mobilize, fi eld, and equip conscript
armies on a scale so great that it was now infi nitely harder to vanquish
them in one decisive campaign. Moltke was well aware of how protracted,
intense, and perilous to the German Empire’s future the war might well
prove to be.1 Similarly, of the approaching confl agration’s possible impact
upon the Habsburg Empire, Conrad wrote his mistress that “it will be a
hopeless struggle, but nevertheless it must be, because such an ancient
monarchy and such an ancient army cannot perish ingloriously.”2
The Great War and its tumultuous aftermath would provide favor-
able conditions for ruthlessness to fl ourish and for moderation to wither.
The effect should not be exaggerated; the brutalization German and
Austro-Hungarian offi cers underwent did not go unchecked, whether
by the more restrained side of their own mind-set or by the more level-
headed decrees issued by the commands under which they served. And
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Forging a Wartime Mentality
29
the progression from the brutalizing ordeal they underwent during these
years to the mass violence they helped perpetrate during World War II
was not yet inescapable. But the Great War and its aftermath certainly
made that calamitous endpoint much more likely.
Germany’s Schlieffen Plan, devised a decade before war broke out,
envisioned committing the bulk of the German army to the front in the
west, in a lightning sweep through Belgium and northern France. The
Germans would advance on Paris, with the principal aim of encircling
and destroying the French armies in that swift “battle of annihilation”
of which the German General Staff deemed itself the unrivalled master.
Meanwhile, a small force would be stationed in eastern Prussia to hold
off the slower-to-mobilize Russians, until the German armies in the west
could be sent eastward to settle accounts there. With German armies
thus committed elsewhere, the Austro-Hungarian army was left to fi nish
off Serbia and her diminutive neighboring ally, Montenegro.
Franz Ferdinand had been slain by a Bosnian Serb fanatic with the
connivance of pan-Slavic elements in the Serbian army. Desire to avenge
his murder, and to expunge Slavic nationalism from the Balkans, drove
the Austrian urge for a fi nal reckoning with Serbia. Lieutenant General
von Appel, commander of X Austro-Hungarian Army Corps stationed
in Sarajevo, proclaimed on August 10, 1914:
We not only have to win here but also shatter and destroy the Serbo-
Montenegrin army—this is the carrier of Russian ideas and propa-
ganda. Above all we must thoroughly wean them of their megalomania
and arrogance . . . I have forbidden my offi cers under pain of punish-
ment with loss of honor to treat with Serbian offi cers on an equal foot-
ing . . . If they are captured . . . they are to be treated like common
soldiers . . . for an offi cer corps that takes into its midst foreign deserters
like comrades, tolerates regicide, conspires, and (includes) members of
secret societies deserves no other treatment than captured soldiers.3
It was not just the Serbian army the Austrians faced, however,
but also Serbian irregular fi ghters—men who, to Austrian eyes, were
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terror in the balk ans
indistinguishable from the bandits who had inhabited the Balkans’
wild, mountainous regions for centuries. The previous chapter pointed
out that the Austro-Hungarians’ aversion to irregular warfare was only
slightly less intense than that of the Germans. And, though there were
limits to how far they were prepared to go in suppressing such resistance,
Austro-Hungarian troops were ready to employ ferocious brutality when
they encountered it.
It was during their fi rst invasion of Serbia, in August 1914, that the Aus-
trians encountered the highest levels of irregular resistance. Some came
from ethnic Serbian saboteurs (
Komitadjis
) within the empire’s own bor-
ders. Some
Komitadjis
, to the Austrians’ horror, were women—a fore-
runner of the armed women (
Flintenweiber
) whose irregular resistance
during World War II would particularly revolt the German army’s sensi-
bilities. Then, once in Serbia, proliferating stories of the enemy’s subter-
fuge and atrociousness, including reports that Austro-Hungarian soldiers
were being mutilated before they were killed, increased the troops’ fear
and revulsion.4 Austro-Hungarian countermeasures were fi erce in the
extreme. General von Appell ordered his offi cers to make their men aware
of “our
moral and numerical superiority
to the point of fanaticism.”5 He
also proclaimed that the war would be a “punishing hand” for the “fanati-
cal” leaders of Serbia, and that it would serve as “atonement for the coun-
try.”6 In a matter of weeks, around thirty-fi ve hundred Serbian civilians
perished in Austro-Hungarian reprisals.7 Many reprisals, usually in the
form of mass public hangings, were directed against the “treasonous”
border peoples within the empire itself.8
Brutal and excessive though it was, there was a context to this blood-
letting. The Serbs themselves, and other Balkan peoples, had been
guilty of considerably worse during the Balkan Wars of 1912–1913. More-
over, Serbian and Montenegrin troops attacking Sarajevo in August 1914
committed atrocities against Habsburg civilian subjects.9 And the Aus-
trians did not comport themselves as viciously as they might have done.
Though they sometimes threatened to retaliate against Serbian barba-
rism by devastating the country and decimating its population, they
always pulled back from the brink. This was partly out of practicality,
partly because they did not wish to transform the Serbian people into an
avenging horde, and partly because they wanted to retain the moral high
Forging a Wartime Mentality
31
ground in the eyes of domestic and international opinion. This, then,
was never a war of racial extermination, even if ethnic contempt contrib-
uted to it. Rather, it was an old-school imperial-style campaign—albeit
an extremely harsh one—to preserve order.10
Worse was the treatment the Imperial German Army dealt out in its
march through Belgium and northern France during the war’s opening
weeks. Here, German troops overreacted massively to the slightest civil-
ian resistance in the regions of Belgium and northern France through
which they were advancing. Indeed, so edgy were the German troops
that they even blamed cases of friendly fi re on francs-tireurs, and exacted
dreadful retaliation accordingly. Over six thousand French and Belgian
civilians were shot, bayoneted, or burned indiscriminately. This butch-
ery was synthesized with the mass destruction of buildings and prop-
erty. The most infamous instance was the destruction of large parts of
the Belgian university town of Louvain.11
That the Germans lashed out so frequently and ferociously during
the war’s opening weeks was due not just to their embedded hatred of
irregular warfare. It was due also to the fact that the Schlieffen Plan was
deeply fl awed, indeed—it has been widely argued—beyond the German
army’s capabilities.12 Any delay to its completion was bound to frustrate
and alarm both generals and troops. And no delay was bound to incense
them more than delay caused, supposedly or in fact, by civilian resistance.
The German General Staff did not try to clamp down on the troops’
brutality; unsurprisingly, given their traditional view of irregular warfare,
they encouraged it. They also believed it would help forge the obduracy
of spirit they were seeking to instill in their troops in anticipation of an
increasingly likely long war. And just as important to German counterin-
surgency warfare’s future development was the army’s prickly, defensive
reaction to worldwide criticism of the atrocities it had committed. Such
criticism only hardened the army’s already pronounced siege mentality
on the issue and fortifi ed its belief that its actions had been justifi ed.13
The violence also contained a perhaps even more ominous element.
For senior German commanders believed that the French and Belgian
francs-tireurs possessed important attributes in common with some of
the German Empire’s “enemies within.” They were Catholic, working
class, and, like the population of Alsace-Lorraine—provinces France
32
terror in the balk ans
had been forced to cede to Germany in 1871—pro-French.14 How far the
troops themselves were similarly motivated, given that many were them-
selves working class or Catholic, is an entirely different question.15 The
point, however, is that the senior offi cer corps was already advocating a
reprisal policy that fused “security” needs with ideological ones. Target-
ing such groups during the Great War therefore set a sinister precedent.
As with them, so with Communists, Jews, and Sinti and Roma—albeit to
a far more frightful extent—during World War II.
This does not mean that the German army’s brutality in the face of
irregular resistance during World War II was inevitably preprogrammed.
German ferocity towards Belgian and French civilians in 1914 may have
been part of an older tradition. But even with its ideological overtones, it
was still only one precedent for the conduct of later wars. Less uniformly
ferocious, as will be seen, were the Germans’ counterinsurgency oper-
ations in the Ukraine in 1918.16 But developments in later years would
ensure that the Franco-Belgian precedent, with its own roots in the Ger-
man military’s long-standing aversion to irregular warfare, would infl u-
ence the German military considerably during World War II.
It was not only Austrian and German troops who retaliated viciously
against subversion real or imagined. Russian forces horribly maltreated
civilians, particularly Jews, in those border regions of their empire they
deemed of suspect loyalty. They also subjected the population of such
regions to scorched earth actions and mass deportations.17 But the irregu-
lar warfare of 1914 to 1918 would have a signifi cant long-term effect upon the
Austrian and German militaries. For it would harden the equation between
combating insurgents and combating ideological enemies in both militar-
ies’ institutional mind-sets. The line that carried this equation through the
interwar years into the Third Reich would not be continuous, or ineluc-
table.18 But in German counterinsurgency campaigns during World War
II, the equation between armed civilians and ideological enemies would be
resurrected in many offi cers’ minds and shape their methods accordingly.
By autumn 1914 the war was deadlocked, as the combination of defensive
fi repower and mass mobilization checked all attempts to achieve rapid,
Forging a Wartime Mentality
33
decisive victory. Following this came four years of stalemate and slaugh-
ter on all major European battlefronts. The experience marked men in
fundamental ways for decades to come.
Of all the battlefronts on which men fought and died during the Great
War, it is of course the western front in Belgium and northern France
that fi gures most prominently in the Western imagination. Battles like
Verdun, the Somme, and the succession of clashes at Ypres have become
bywords for industrial-scale carnage. It was on the western front that
the greatest number of men perished, in ways refl ecting the new indus-
trialized warfare at its most destructive. Then there were the miserable,
sometimes fatal living conditions soldiers endured day to day.19
But different men responded to the horrors of the western front in dif-
ferent ways. Some, exemplifi ed by Erich Maria Remarque, author of the