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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 largest bloodlettings 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, was destined to achieve the greater fame. The statistics for the Eastern war are grim. Uncountable millions died in the fighting, 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 very well 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 went, 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 1980s.
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 Austrian Army of this period was in its last days of usefulness.
It was composed of an increasingly nationalistic soldiery led
by officers of questionable competence and inadequate experience.
The Austro-Hungarian Empire itself was mostly held together by
its aging Emperor, who reigned over the last vestiges of previous
glory. Compared to their Central German brethren, Austrian troops
were to perform poorly in the upcoming fighting. 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. These men were capable of orchestrating artillery
firepower with ferocious efficiency against poorly prepared Russian
positions. In the first years of the war, this commonly gave assaulting
infantry the confidence needed to push their attacks home. Only
later did attrition and propaganda take its toll.
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 Paul Hoetzendorf
launched his own attack northward toward Warsaw (marked 4). The
Russians however, had secretly 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.
By May of 1915, the Germans had taken
over command of the entire Eastern Front and used many of their
units to support the more fragmented Austrian
formations. Their first counter-offensive of the year 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) 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. The territory
captured by the Central Powers (shaded light yellow) included
all of Poland, Lithuania and Latvia. The new front-line ran from
just south of Riga, south across the Pripet Marshes and down to
the Black Sea. This disaster prompted the Tsar himself to assume
supreme command of the Russian Army, a decision which would have
grave consequences in the years to come.
The next major offensive was undertaken
by Russian General Alexi Brusilov. His four Armies, the Eighth,
Eleventh, Seventh and Ninth, were poised along the Galician border
facing the Austrian Army. In June of 1916, the Russians attacked,
penetrating deep into Austrian positions and taking 13,000 prisoners
on the first day (marked 1). 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 striking into the
Austrian homeland. This mistake gave the Germans time to deploy
troops to the border, 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, completing the conquest of Galicia (shaded in yellow).
These accomplishments brought Russia's war time casualties to
nearly one-million, and discipline began to slide downward. To
make matters worse, Russian industry proved unable to manufacture
new equipment in sufficient quantities to replace losses, especially
in small arms and ammunition. As the 1914 supply stocks were exhausted
and casualties mounted, troop morale plummeted. 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 a massive open revolt.

By 1917, the Russian Army Officer Corps was increasingly demoralized
by the poor progress of the fighting. 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 the growing Communist rebels 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).
As the Communist revolt accelerated, both sides of the civil war
continued sporadic negotiations with Germany. The Germans, who
continued making territorial gains, 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 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
ended up being transferred to the Western Front, then still raging
in 1918, but many 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 Socialists finally gained control
and plunged Europe into a war far broader and more costly than
the one just concluded.