Showing posts with label world war II. Show all posts
Showing posts with label world war II. Show all posts

Monday, February 22, 2021

His Glory, Your Blood

 You can’t read military history without sympathizing with the common soldier, whether it is the one on your side or the enemy.  War brings out the dark side of man; an example of man’s inhumanity to man.  All wars show the brutality and sheer insanity of the enterprise.  Let’s look at one example: The German invasion of Russia in World War II in 1941 (WW II).  The common theme was the madness of it all.  For the Russians, of course, there was a good reason:  defending themselves from a brutal oppressor.  For the Germans there could be no reason or logic, only depravity.  Let’s put it this way, you own a small house.  You want your neighbor’s house because its four times bigger; you hire a group of hit men (in the case of Germany, its Army) and you go to your neighbor, kill him, and take his property. 

The madness of Adolph Hitler had no bounds.  He wanted to be the master of the world by sacrificing his own people in the process.  All the glory would go to him.   In WW II they called America’s best commander, General George Patton, blood and guts because he used his soldiers to achieve success.  This is debatable, but for another discussion.  With Hitler, though, he invaded, conquered and occupied France, Poland, Austria, Czechoslovakia and many other European countries and did It with some ease.  This probably led him to think of himself as unbeatable. After occupying all these countries, he wanted more, he wanted Russia too.  Russia is the world’s largest country by land size.  To any reasonable person, this would be considered total madness.  A major reason he used for invading Russia was his racism.  Just like his psychosis about Jews, he considered the Russians as sub-human and stupid, uneducated trash.  He wanted to eliminate them like the Jews so he could have more room (lebensraum).  He thought that he and his fellow Germans were a superior race. Hitler's aim was to eliminate all Russians and Jews and  replace them with Germanic people.

 

Failure to learn from history is perhaps the best example of madness, doing the same thing over and over and  expecting a different result.  Napoleon Bonaparte tried to conquer Russia in 1812 and failed miserably.  In this era, France had one of the best militaries in the world.  Of the 500,000 plus army he sent to Russia, only 5,000 survived to return home.  He was crushed militarily and by the winter. Napoleon repeated the same mistakes with England and the rest of Europe, sending men to their deaths just like a football coach sends his players to play the game.  Napoleon met his end at Waterloo, Belgium after his defeat by British and Prussian forces.  In Russia, if you were not killed in battle, the brutal winter weather would kill you.


The German invasion was a sure bet to be a failure.  First for the size of the operation, second for the problems with supplying a three-million-man army for long distances with no adequate roads, rail or air possibilities.  Second, when you have a madman in charge like Hitler, reason, and good military strategy go out the window and good military men who know better were forced to follow commands that would prove to be fatal; and this is what happened.  In the first three months of Operation Barbarossa, the Germans lost more than 500,000 dead.  It is estimated that more than 3,000,000 German soldiers lost their lives in Russia whether by being killed in action or by the weather or by being captured and then either shot to death by the Russians or starved to death, or disease.   The Russians, although they were defending themselves, made some very bad military decisions, sending waves of men into battle against German machine guns where they were all slaughtered.  The Russians, like Hitler, had to follow the madness of their dictator, Josef Stalin.  Russian commanders were beholden to Stalin’s ignorance and sheer incompetence when it came to military matters.  The blind leading the blind.  The Russians, also, were brutal with their own soldiers.  If a Russian soldier was captured and managed to escape, he would be killed upon returning by order of Stalin; punishment for being captured.  If a Russian soldier refused a sure death command, by charging German guns in an open field, for instance, he would be killed by his own commander.

 

The Germans had help in Russia by allies such as Italy, Romania, Hungary and others. The Italians, Romanians and Hungarians each fielded 250,000 soldiers.  All failed measurably.  There was no hope of victory for any of these condemned soldiers.  All was against them.  They were sent there without proper weapons, equipment, clothing, training, officers, means of transportation and so on.  These soldiers were basically condemned to death from the moment they set foot in Russia.  The Russian front was huge, extending more than 1,000 miles wide.  German soldiers were marched into exhaustion, fighting day and night.  The roads were nonexistent and with the bad weather most vehicles were stuck in the mud and failed mechanically.  German soldiers marched to exhaustion.  Their boots were so worn by the march and the bad weather, that many soldiers had to walk bare foot.  They were on constant attack on the ground and by the air.  When all was lost, Hitler would even refuse to let them retreat. 

 

Operation Barbarossa was also significant for the atrocities committed by both sides.  Upon the conquest and occupation of Kiev, for example, the Germans rounded up about 30,000 Russian Jews and shot them to death in open pits.  The Russians where not outdone.  In one case they captured 100 German troops and hung them by their hands, tortured them by lighting a fire under their feet and burned them alive; a horrific way to kill.  As the Spanish philosopher, George Santayana said, those who fail to learn from history are condemned to repeat it.  Here are some good examples proving this proverb.

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 For more detailed reading on this subject see the following books:

1. Kiev-1941, Hitler's Battle for Supremacy in the East, David Stahel, Cambridge University Press, 2012

2. Leningrad, State of Siege, Michael Jones, John Murray Publishers, GB, 2008

3. Stalingrad, Antony Beevor, Penguin Books, 1998


 

 

Sunday, January 3, 2021

The Love of War

 In my last post I wrote about the rape of Belgium by the German war machine in World War I.  I'm now reading another book about the Siege of Leningrad in World War II, again, by the German war machine, no more than 20 years after their colossal defeat in WW I.  The Germans were just as brutal and inhumane as they were in WW I.  The book is called "Leningrad: State of Siege" by Michael Jones, 2008.  You may have heard of what the Germans did to Poland and especially to the Jews in WW II.  A testament to man's inhumanity to man.  Just as they did in Belgium in WW I, when the Germans invaded Russia in 1941, they had a multi-pronged strategy.  Click here for a map. The northern drive took them through the Baltic States which had recently been annexed by the Soviets.  Not having any love for the Russians, the Baltic countries welcomed them reluctantly.  What they did not welcome was the sheer brutality that they brought.  Not wanting to do it themselves, the Germans got the Lithuanians, for example, to round up a thousand Jews and bludgeon them to death in public solely for their religion, while German troops looked on. This was not the worst. Upon encircling Leningrad, they proceeded to starve the city to death.  

Mass murder, cruelty and sheer evil was their calling card. They delighted in targeting helpless civilians.  In one case they targeted a tram full of people and killed all in the tram. After months of not being able to get food, many died of starvation; approximately 20,000 per day died.  In the brutally cold winter, when temperatures got to -30 Celsius, people died where they stopped in the street, unable to take another step.  The Russians military tried to break the siege with troops they had marched on foot to Leningrad until exhaustion.  They ordered these exhausted troops to attack heavily fortified German formations without ammunition, in some cases.  When two Russian commanders, seeing the madness of the strategy, refused the order to attack, they were arrested and shot.  When Stalin was informed, he was happy.  He asked if they were shot in public.

I've often been puzzled by the public fascination with war.  The movies certainly popularized, and in some cases, idealized war.  Nothing could be further from the truth in reality.  Many people have not seen war up close.  I did in Vietnam in 1968-69.  Although I was not an infantry soldier, I saw enough misery of what war brings.  I got my first look at war immediately upon landing at the American Bien Hoa Air Base, not far from Saigon.  As we were landing, you could see the flash of artillery in the distance.  After getting on an Army bus and driving to Saigon right after landing, we were billeted temporarily at the St. George Hotel in the Cholon District of Saigon.  The hotel was full of bullet holes and scarred by war.  Combat was happening all around us.  My first duty was to guard the perimeter of the hotel during the night along with some South Vietnamese soldiers.  The next day we headed to Tan Son Nhat Airport, which had been overrun during the Tet Offensive a few months earlier.  While there we looked at pictures of the death and devastation that had just happened there and in and around Saigon itself.


As ugly and deadly as war is, there is a strange fascination with war by many in the general public.  The bad guys are looked upon as "macho" or "heroic,"John Wayne types, while those who oppose war are looked upon as cowardly.  As an Italian immigrant I have been the butt of some very stupid, idiotic banter related to this.  Example, I'm in a work elevator in Long Beach, California and someone who knows I'm an Italian immigrant says to me: "do you know what the smallest book in the world is?  A list of Italian war heroes."  So, let's see, the people who resisted the war madness of Hitler and Mussolini and did not drink the kool-aid are cowards but those who followed Hitler's murderous evil plan and drank the kool-aid are heroic?  


First of all, I would venture that a person who makes a stupid comment like that has no clue about the history of war in general or Italian history in particular. Do they know that an Italian Army of 250,000 fought in Russia alongside the Germans with half of them perishing? Did they  know that these soldiers were sent to Russia without proper clothing or weapons or fuel? Did they know that the brutal Russian winters killed those who were not killed in action?  Have they ever participated in a war on the Russian steppe in -40 degree weather? Do they know that Napoleon Bonaparte invaded Russia in 1812 with 500,000 troops but only 5,000 survived to return home?  Was he a war hero? Do they know what the Roman Empire was, how long it lasted?  Do they know what happened in WW I and who the participants were?  Do they know the madness of the Germans, starting with the Prussian Empire and what led them to be so war hungry?  They have no idea.  All they know is what they heard some else say.  They're simple parrots.  The madness of war and the ignorance of people can be deadly.  Those who fail to learn from history are condemned to repeat it, as the Spanish philosopher Santayana said.