Jump to content

Stormtroopers (Imperial Germany): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Cleverboy (talk | contribs)
{{Merge|Shock troops|date=February 2009}} {{Inappropriate tone|date=February 2009}}
No edit summary
 
(555 intermediate revisions by more than 100 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{For|the ''Star Wars'' marines|Stormtrooper (Star Wars)}}
{{Merge|Shock troops|date=February 2009}} {{Inappropriate tone|date=February 2009}}
{{short description|German WWI shock troops}}
{{dablink|This article is about the German troops. For the stormtroopers from the ''Star Wars'' franchise, see [[Imperial stormtrooper]].}}
{{Infobox military unit
{{dablink|For other meanings of stormtrooper see [[Stormtrooper (disambiguation)]].}}
| unit_name = Sturmtruppen
[[Image:Stosstrupp 2.jpg|thumb|right|300px|World War I German Stormtroopers trench raiding.]]
| image = France1918.jpg
The '''Stormtroopers''' (in German '''''Stoßtruppen''''', "shock troops") were specialist military troops which were formed in the last years of [[World War I]] as the German army developed new methods of attacking enemy trenches, called "[[infiltration tactics]]". Men trained in these methods were known in German as ''[[Sturmmann]]'' (correctly "assault man" but usually translated as Stormtrooper), formed into companies of ''[[Sturmtruppen]]'' ("assault troops", more often and less exactly Storm Troops). Other armies have also used the term "assault troops", "[[shock troops]]" or [[fireteam]]s for specialist soldiers who perform the infiltration tasks of stormtroopers.
| image_size =
| caption = A stormtrooper poses with his [[MP 18]] and a [[Luger pistol]] (France, 1918). Note the characteristic [[Stahlhelm]], modified uniform with reinforcement patches on the elbows and knees and [[puttee]]s to replace the boots of 1914.
| dates = 1916–1918
| country = {{flag|German Empire}}
| branch = {{army|German Empire}}
| type = [[Special forces]], [[shock troops]]
| size = 17 [[battalion]]s (as of 1917)<ref name="Gud">{{cite book|author=Gudmundsson, Bruce I.|title=Stormtroop Tactics: Innovation in the German Army, 1914-1918|publisher=Praeger Paperback|year=1995|isbn=0-275-95401-3}}</ref>
| role = Intervene when regular infantry fails, clear the way for infantry on the battlefield, [[special operations]]
| equipment = [[MP 18]], [[Karabiner 98a]], [[Luger pistol]], [[Stahlhelm]], [[Stielhandgranate]]
| colors = Green, Grey
| battles = [[Western Front (World War I)|Western Front of World War I]]
| notable_commanders = [[Ernst Jünger]], [[Willy Rohr]]
}}

'''Stormtroopers''' ({{langx|de|Sturmtruppen}}<ref>{{cite web |title=Stormtrooper |url=https://encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net/article/stormtrooper |website=International Encyclopedia of the First World War (WW1)|access-date=29 May 2020}}</ref> or ''Stoßtruppen''<ref>{{cite web |title=Military Developments of World War I |url=https://encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net/article/military_developments_of_world_war_i |website=International Encyclopedia of the First World War (WW1)|access-date=31 May 2020}}</ref>) were specialist [[infantry]]men of the [[Imperial German Army]]. In the last years of [[World War I]], ''Stoßtruppen'' ("[[Shock troops|shock troopers]]" or "shove troopers") were trained to use [[infiltration tactics]] – part of the Germans' improved method of attack on enemy [[Trench warfare|trenches]].<ref name="Gud"/> The [[German Empire]] entered the war certain that the conflict would be won in the course of great military campaigns, thus relegating results obtained during individual clashes to the background; consequently the best officers, concentrated in the [[German General Staff]], placed their attention on [[maneuver warfare]] and the rational exploitation of railways, rather than concentrating on the conduct of battles. This attitude made a direct contribution to operational victories of Germany in Russia, Romania, Serbia and Italy, but it resulted in failure in the West. Thus the German officers on the Western Front found themselves in need of resolving the static situation caused by [[trench warfare]] on the battlefield.

Two concepts can be identified with the attempt to find a solution to the problem. The first was the belief, mainly held by [[Erich von Falkenhayn]], that tactical action alone, the mere killing of enemy soldiers, was a sufficient means to achieve the strategic goal. The second was the idea, emerging from experience of countless "limited target attacks" and forays into the trenches, that combat had become such a difficult task that operational considerations had to be subordinated to tactical ones. The promoter for this last thesis was [[General of the Infantry (Germany)|General der Infanterie]] [[Erich Ludendorff]] who, having become ''[[de facto]]'' commander of the Imperial German Army after the German defeat at the [[Battle of Verdun]], gave decisive support to the development of assault battalions as a solution to resume maneuver warfare.<ref name="Gud"/>

The creation of these units was the first, and perhaps most innovative, attempt by the German army to break out of the [[impasse]] of trench warfare. With the use of well-trained soldiers, commanded by [[Non-commissioned officer|NCO]]s with autonomous decision-making capacity, an attempt was made to traverse [[no man's land]] and to break through enemy lines in predefined points in order to allow subsequent waves to liquidate the now confused and isolated opponent, opening large gaps in its defensive systems and then resuming [[maneuver warfare]], which would have allowed Germany to win the conflict.


==History==
==History==
===Victor Odlum===
===Prior to World War I===
Ever since the introduction of [[breechloader]]s, there had been a growing realization that the days of [[close order formation|close-order infantry assault]] were coming to an end. For a time, up to the turn of the 19th century, armies tried to circumvent the problem by moving into range in dispersed formations and charging only the last metres, as the French did in the [[Second Italian War of Independence]] (1859), the Prussians in the [[Austro-Prussian War]] (1866), or the Germans against the French in the [[Franco-Prussian War]] (1870–71).
The organization and tactics of "storm troops" and trench raiding parties were developed by [[Victor Odlum]] in the 1st Canadian division in 1915. The Canadian Corps later instructed officers of the French army in these new tactics.<ref>http://www.lermuseum.org/ler/mh/wwi/vimy.html Victor Odlum</ref>

The advent of the machine gun and the adoption of [[Hydraulic recoil mechanism|hydraulic-recoil]] artillery was a further setback for close order. The showing of the [[Boers]] against the British in the [[Second Boer War]] (1899–1902) fanned an enthusiasm for "Boer tactics": open order tactics reliant more on achieving fire superiority and moving quickly when enemy fire was ineffective than on positioning oneself for the final bayonet charge.

===World War I assault tactics===
{{see also|Eingreif division}}

In the first part of the war, the standard assault on a trench line consisted of a lengthy [[barrage (artillery)|artillery barrage]] all along the line, attempting to smash the enemy positions, followed by a rush forward of infantry in massed lines to overwhelm any remaining defenders. This process either failed, or at most gained only a short distance, while incurring enormous casualties, and the armies settled into [[trench warfare]].

===Development of tactics===
[[File:StB5 – Willy Rohr.jpg|thumb|[[Willy Rohr]]|left|244x244px]]
The first experimental pioneer assault unit of the German army formed in the spring of 1915, founded by Major Calsow and later commanded and refined by Hauptmann [[Willy Rohr]]. These methods<ref>Hermann Cron: ''Geschichte des Deutschen Heeres im Welkriege 1914-1918''; Berlin 1937, p. 23</ref> further evolved war tactics originally developed by the Prussians, to form the basis of German infiltration tactics. The troops involved were identified as {{lang|de|Stoßtruppen}} (literally: "thrust-troops"), and the term was translated as "storm troops" in English.

Allied versions of infiltration tactics were first formally proposed by [[French Army]] captain {{Interlanguage link multi|André Laffargue|fr}}.<ref>[http://www.cgsc.edu/carl/resources/csi/csir_13/csir_13.asp CSI Report No. 13: Tactical responses to concentrated artillery: Introduction] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110602111844/http://www.cgsc.edu/carl/resources/csi/csir_13/csir_13.asp |date=2011-06-02 }} ([[Combat Studies Institute]], [[U.S. Army Command and General Staff College]], [[Fort Leavenworth]]).{{US Army}}</ref> In 1915, Laffargue published a pamphlet, "The attack in trench warfare", based upon his experiences in combat that same year. He advocated that the first wave of an attack identify hard-to-defeat defenses but not attack them; subsequent waves would do this. The French published his pamphlet "for information", but did not implement it. The [[British Empire]] armies did not translate the pamphlet, and the [[British Army]] continued to emphasise fire power, although Laffargue's proposals were gradually adopted informally. The U.S. ''Infantry Journal'' published a translation in 1916.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Laffargue|first1=André|title=Study on the attack in the present period of the war: Impressions and reflections of a company commander|journal=Infantry Journal|date=1916|volume=13|issue=2|pages=101–138|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=coo.31924066174388;view=1up;seq=110}}</ref>

The Germans captured copies of Laffargue's pamphlet in 1916, translating and issuing it to units,<ref>[http://www.cgsc.edu/carl/resources/csi/csir_13/csir_13.asp CSI Report No. 13: Tactical responses to concentrated artillery: Ch 2] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110602111844/http://www.cgsc.edu/carl/resources/csi/csir_13/csir_13.asp |date=2011-06-02 }} (Combat Studies Institute, U.S. Army Command and General Staff College, Fort Leavenworth).</ref> but by this point they already had their own, more sophisticated infiltration tactics, over two months before Laffargue's pamphlet was published.<ref>Samuels, Martin ''Doctrine and Dogma, passim''</ref><ref>Samuels, Martin ''Command or Control?, passim''</ref><ref>Stormtroop Tactics, Appendix C and ''passim''</ref><ref>Samuels, Martin ''Doctrine and Dogma, 55''</ref> The distinction between the German and French tactics was that Laffargue recommended using waves of infantry to attack despite the high casualties that would ensue.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://simonjoneshistorian.com/2014/03/05/infiltration-by-close-order-andre-laffargue-and-the-attack-of-9-may-1915/|title=Infiltration by Close Order: André Laffargue and the Attack of 9 May 1915|first=Simon|last=Jones|date=5 March 2014}}</ref>
[[File:German stormtroops training Sedan May 1917 3.jpg|thumb|German stormtroopers training in [[Arrondissement of Sedan|Sedan]], France (1917).]]
Soldiers were trained to consider fire as a means to facilitate movement in progress. Movement would be a call for fire. N. R. McMahon advocated using combined arms in the attack, particularly light machine guns (some six light and two heavy MGs per [[battalion]]) using a decentralised fire control and tactical command system (known as ''[[Auftragstaktik]]'' in German). These methods, suggested in 1909, bore a strong resemblance to the ''Stoßtrupptaktik'' used by the Germans six years later.<ref>{{cite book |author=Samuels, Martin |title=Command or Control? Command, Training and Tactics in the British and German Armies, 1888–1918 |publisher=Frank Cass |location=London |year=1995 |pages=100–101 |isbn=0-7146-4214-2}}</ref>

In February 1917, the British Army issued "Manual SS 143" on the subject. The British made the platoon the basic tactical unit rather than the company as in 1916. The platoon was made up of four sections, [[Lewis Gun]], [[rifle grenade]], [[grenade]], and [[rifle]]. The new organisation allowed the platoon to make best use of the trench-fighting equipment that had arrived in adequate quantities since the beginning of the [[Battle of the Somme]]. They were also supported by sophisticated artillery [[flash spotting]] and [[Sound ranging|sound-ranging]], something the German Army never perfected, instead relying on the aural method with ever more accurate measuring devices.<ref name="Griff">{{cite book |author=Griffith, Paddy |title=Battle Tactics of the Western Front: The British Army's Art of Attack, 1916–18 |publisher=Yale University Press |location=New Haven, Conn |year=1994 |pages=194–195 |isbn=0-300-05910-8}}</ref>


==German stormtroopers==
===Calsow Assault Detachment===
===Calsow Assault Detachment===
The concept of "Stormtroopers" developed from its beginning in March 1915, when a unit known as ''Sturmabteilung Calsow'' (Calsow's Assault Detachment) under [[Major (Germany)|Major]] Calsow was formed by the Eighth army, by orders from the War Ministry, consisting of headquarters, two [[Combat engineering|pioneer]] companies and a 37mm gun (''Sturmkanone'') battery. The unit was to use heavy shields and body armor as protection in attacks.
The concept of "stormtroopers" first appeared in March 1915, when the [[Prussian Ministry of War|Ministry of War]] directed the [[8th Army (German Empire)|Eighth Army]] to form ''Sturmabteilung Calsow'' ("Calsow's Assault Detachment" or SA Calsow). SA Calsow consisted of a headquarters, two [[Combat engineering|pioneer]] companies and a 37mm gun (''Sturmkanone'') battery. The unit was to use heavy shields and [[Personal armor|body armor]] as protection in attacks.


This unit was however never employed in its intended role, instead used to defend against attacks in France. In June, this improper use of the unit had already cost the unit half its manpower, and for this, Major Calsow was relieved, against his protests that it was not his fault that the unit was not used as intended.<ref>Gudmundsson, p.46-47</ref>
However, SA Calsow was never employed in its intended role. Instead it was sent into the line in France as emergency reinforcements during heavy [[Allies of World War I|Allied]] attacks. By June, the unit had already lost half its men. Major Calsow was relieved for this, against his protests that it was not his fault that the unit was not used as intended.<ref name="Gud" />


===Rohr Assault Battalion===
===Rohr Assault Battalion===
[[Image:StB5 – Sturm-Pionier.jpg|thumb|Stormtrooper of the Assault Bataillon Rohr]]
[[Image:France1918.jpg|thumb|right|Soldier of a German assault group with his Bergmann MP18.1 and a Parabellum P08, Northern France, Spring 1918.]] The new commander of the Assault Detachment from September 8 1915 was a [[Hauptmann]] Rohr, previously commander of the Guard Rifle Battalion. The detachment was reinforced with a machinegun platoon, and a flamethrower platoon. The old infantry guns had been shown to be too difficult to move across the battlefield, and a new model was developed based on captured [[7.62x54mmR|Russian 7.62 mm]] fortress guns and issued to the Assault Detachement.<ref>Gudmundsson, p.48</ref><ref>Jäger, p.136</ref><ref>Samuels, p.89</ref>
The new commander of the Assault Detachment from 8 September 1915 was ''[[Hauptmann]]'' (Captain) Willy Rohr, previously commander of the Guard Rifle Battalion. The Assault Detachment was reinforced with a machine gun [[platoon]] and [[flamethrower]] platoon. The old [[infantry support gun]]s had been shown to be too difficult to move across the battlefield, and a new model was developed based on captured Russian [[76 mm divisional gun M1902|76.2mm fortress guns]] and issued to the Assault Detachment.<ref name="Gud" /><ref>{{cite book|author=Jäger, Herbert|title= German Artillery of World War One|publisher=Crowood Press (UK)|year=2001|page=136|isbn=1-86126-403-8}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=Samuels, Martin|title=Command or control? Command, training and tactics in the British and German armies 1888-1918|publisher=Frank Cass|location=London|year=1995|page=89|isbn=0-7146-4214-2}}</ref>


Captain Rohr at first experimented with using the body armor and shields already in the Detachment's inventory, but realized that speed was better protection than armor. The only piece of armor kept was a new model of steel helmet, that would later become the standard in all German units at the end of World War I, and throughout the Second World War.<ref name="Gudmundsson, p.49">Gudmundsson, p.49</ref>
Captain Rohr (later promoted to Major<ref name="Gud" />), at first experimented with the Assault Detachment's body armor and shields, but realized that speed was better protection than armor. The only item of armor kept was the ''[[Stahlhelm#Origin|Stahlhelm]]'', a new model of steel helmet. It later became the standard in all German units by the end of the war, and was used throughout [[World War II]].<ref name="Gud" />


The new tactics developed by Captain Rohr, building much on his own previous experiences from the front, was based on the use of squadsized stormtroops ("''Sturmtruppen''" or "''Stoßtruppen''"), supported by a number of heavy support weapons and artillery that was to be coordinated at the lowest level possible, and rolling up enemy trenches using troops armed with hand grenades. These tactics were
The new tactics developed by Captain Rohr, building much on his own previous experiences from the front, was based on the use of squad sized stormtroops ("''Sturmtruppen''" or "''Stoßtruppen''"), supported by a number of heavy support weapons and [[field artillery]] that was to be coordinated at the lowest level possible and rolling up enemy trenches using troops armed with [[hand grenade]]s. These tactics were tested the first time in October 1915 in a successful assault on a French position in the [[Vosges Mountains]].<ref name="Gud" />
tested the first time in October 1915 in a successful assault on a French position in the [[Vosges Mountains]].<ref name="Gudmundsson, p.49"/>


In December 1915, the Assault Detachment started giving courses to officers and soldiers of other German units, training them in the new assault tactics. Around this time the unit also changed some of its equipment to better fit its new requirements. Lighter footwear was issued, and uniforms reinforced with leather patches on knees and elbows to protect them when crawling. Special bags designed to carry grenades replaced the old belts and ammunition pouches, and the heavy standard rifle was replaced with the lighter carbine previously used by cavalrymen. While continuing to educate other units, the Detachment also participated in many small trench raids and attacks with limited objectives.<ref>Gudmundsson, p.50-51</ref>
In December 1915, the Assault Detachment started training men of other German units in the new assault tactics. Around this time the Assault Detachment also changed some of its equipment to better fit its new requirements. Lighter footwear was issued, and uniforms were reinforced with leather patches on knees and elbows to protect them when crawling. Special bags designed to carry grenades replaced the old belts and ammunition pouches, and the standard [[Gewehr 98]] rifle was replaced with the lighter [[Gewehr 98#Karabiner 98a|Karabiner 98a]] previously used by [[cavalry]]men. The stocked artilleryman's pistol/carbine, the 9mm [[Luger pistol#Lange Pistole 08 (Artillery Luger)|Lange Pistole 08]], was also used in concert with an extended 32-round [[drum magazine]] to increase the close-range firepower of the unit. The long and impractical [[épée]]-style Seitengewehr 98 [[bayonet]] was replaced by shorter models, and supplemented with [[trench knives]], clubs, and other melee weapons. While continuing to train other units, the Assault Detachment also participated in many small [[Trench raiding|trench raids]] and attacks with limited objectives.<ref name="Gud" />


The first major offensive led by the new Assault Detachment was during the first days of the Battle of Verdun in February 1916. Stormtroops from the Assault Detachment was used in the first wave leading some units into the French trenches, attacking seconds after the barrage had lifted. This generally worked very well, even though it worked much better against the first trenchline than against the less well-known enemy rear-area.<ref>Gudmundsson, p.55-72</ref>
The first major offensive led by the new Assault Detachment was the initial German attack at [[Battle of Verdun|Verdun]] in February 1916. Stormtroops were in the first wave, leading some units into the French trenches, attacking seconds after the barrage had lifted. This generally worked very well, even though it worked much better against the first trenchline than against the less well-known enemy rear-area.<ref name="Gud" />


On April 1, 1916, the Assault Detachment was redesignated "Assault Battalion Rohr". Around this time it also increased its size from two to four pioneer companies. At the same time, work began on transforming several Jäger battalions into new Assault Battalions.<ref>Gudmundsson, p.77-78</ref><ref>Cron, p.119</ref>
On 1 April 1916, the Assault Detachment was redesignated "Assault Battalion Rohr". Around this time it was expanded from two to four pioneer companies. At the same time, several [[Jäger (military)|Jäger]] battalions began retraining as new Assault Battalions.<ref name="Gud" /><ref name="Cron">{{cite book|author1=Rogers, Duncan F. |author2=Cron, Hermann |title=Imperial German Army 1914-18: Organisation, Structure, Orders of Battle|publisher=Helion & Company|year=2002|page=119|isbn=1-874622-70-1 }}</ref>


===Tactics at the end of World War I ===
===Hutier and the last German offensive===
[[Image:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-R05148, Westfront, deutscher Soldat crop.jpg|thumb|right|1916 World War I German [[Stormtroopers (Imperial Germany)|stormtrooper]] on the [[Western Front (World War I)|Western Front]] wearing the ''Stahlhelm'']]
With the withdrawal of Russia from World War I, the Germans were able to reinforce the [[Western Front (World War I)|Western Front]] with troops from the [[Eastern Front (World War I)|Eastern Front]]. This allowed them to take units out of the line and train in Hutier tactics (after [[Oskar von Hutier]]) to infiltrate and take trenches.


General [[Oskar von Hutier]], now commanding Eighth Army, became a champion of the new tactics, which became known as [[Infiltration tactics|Hutier tactics]] in Britain and by the allies.
On [[March 21]], [[1918]], Germany launched a major offensive, "[[Operation Michael]]", against Allied forces, using the new methods and tactics. Four successive German offensives followed, that of [[May 27]] and for the first time in 4 years the stalemate of [[trench warfare]] was broken. However the German advance had stalled by July and the Allies began their [[Hundred Days Offensive]].


Hutier suggested an alternative approach, combining some previous and some new attacks in a complex strategy:<ref>Westwell ,I. (2000). ''World War I Day by Day''. {{ISBN|9781840133622}}.</ref>
The stormtroops of the late World War I already resembled those of World War II in some ways, such as being armed with lightweight weapons, stick grenades, and some already sporting ''[[Totenkopf]]'' badges.<ref name="WILL252">''First World War'' - Willmott, H.P., [[Dorling Kindersley]], 2003, Page 252</ref>
# A short artillery bombardment, employing heavy shells mixed with numerous [[Poison gas in World War I|poison gas]] projectiles, to neutralize the enemy front lines, and not try to destroy them.
# Under a [[creeping barrage]], ''Stoßtruppen'' would then move forward, in dispersed order. They would avoid combat whenever possible, infiltrate the Allied defenses at previously identified weak points, and destroy or capture enemy headquarters and artillery strongpoints.
# Next, infantry battalions with extra [[light machine gun]]s, [[Mortar (weapon)|mortars]] and [[flamethrower]]s, would attack on narrow fronts against any Allied strongpoints the shock troops missed. Mortars and field guns would be in place to fire as needed to accelerate the breakthrough.
# In the last stage of the assault, regular infantry would mop up any remaining Allied resistance.


The new assault method had men rushing forward in small groups using whatever cover was available and laying down [[suppressive fire]] for other groups in the same unit as they moved forward. The new tactics, which were intended to achieve tactical surprise, were to attack the weakest parts of an enemy's line, bypass his strongpoints and to abandon the futile attempt to have a grand and detailed plan of operations controlled from afar. Instead, junior leaders could [[Directive control|exercise initiative on the spot]]. Any enemy strong points which had not been overrun by stormtroopers could be attacked by the second echelon troops following the stormtroopers.
==Methods==
The methods developed to assault trenches during World War I before 1918 usually started with
a lengthy artillery [[barrage (artillery)|barrage]] all along the line followed by an assault from massed lines of infantry. Hutier suggested an alternate approach which consisted of these basic steps, combining some previous and some new attacks in a complex strategy:{{Fact|date=August 2008}}
#A short artillery bombardment, featuring heavy shells mixed with numerous poison gas projectiles would concentrate on neutralizing the enemy front lines, but not to destroy them.
#Under a creeping barrage, stormtroopers would move forward and infiltrate the Allied defenses at previously identified weak points. They would avoid combat whenever possible and attempt to destroy or capture enemy headquarters and artillery strongpoints.
#After the shock troops had done their job, German Army units, heavily equipped with light machine guns, mortars and [[flamethrower]]s, would make heavy attacks along narrow fronts against any Allied strongpoints the shock troops missed. When the artillery was in place, officers could direct the fire wherever it was needed to accelerate the breakthrough.
#In the last stage of the assault, regular infantry would mop up any remaining Allied resistance.


===Stormtroopers in 1918===
The new assault methods involved men rushing forwards in small groups using whatever cover was available and laying down covering fire for other groups in the same unit as they moved forwards. The new tactics, which were intended to achieve tactical surprise, were to attack the weakest parts of an enemy's line, bypass his strongpoints and to abandon the futile attempt to have a grand and detailed plan of operations controlled from afar. Instead, junior leaders could exercise initiative on the spot. Any enemy strong points which had not been over-run by stormtroopers could be attacked by second echelon troops following the stormtroopers.

With the withdrawal of Russia, Germany moved troops from the [[Eastern Front (World War I)|Eastern Front]] to reinforce the [[Western Front (World War I)|Western Front]]. This allowed them to take units out of the line for retraining as stormtroopers.

On 21 March 1918, Germany launched [[Operation Michael]], a major offensive, using the new tactics. Four successive German offensives followed and for the first time in four years the stalemate of trench warfare was broken. However, the German advance failed to achieve the complete breakthrough necessary for a decisive result and in July the Allies began their [[Hundred Days Offensive]].<ref name="Griff"/>

====Reasons for the failure of the offensive====
Apart from suffering heavy casualties, several other reasons for the failure of the stormtroops have been suggested.

# The initial attack was against the British section of the front, which was the most strongly held.<ref>Delany, J., The Blitzkrieg campaigns: Germany's "lightning war" strategy in action</ref>
# The leading units were not relieved or rotated out of action and became exhausted.<ref name="Gud" />
# The terrain contained many rivers, towns, forests and canals which slowed the advance.<ref name="Gud" />
# The [[1918 flu pandemic|1918 influenza epidemic]].<ref>''The Myth of the Great War: A New Military History of World War I'', John Mosier, 2002</ref>
# The capture of British stores which contained large quantities of alcohol—"not for lack of German fighting spirit, but on account of the abundance of Scottish drinking spirit!"<ref>Firing Line - Richard Holmes - 1985</ref>

===3rd and 46th Assault Company===
With three infantry battalions, the German 703rd Infantry Battalion, some machine-gun, cavalry, and artillery units, the 3rd Assault Company, and the 46th Assault Company counterattacked the [[Egyptian Expeditionary Force]] during the [[Sinai and Palestine Campaign]]. At the [[First Battle of Amman]], during the [[First Transjordan attack on Amman]] at the end of March 1918, the attackers were forced back to the [[Jordan River]].<ref name="Erickson134">Erickson 2007 p. 134</ref>

===23rd Assault Detachment===
{{quote|The assault troops were organised into combined arms assault detachments ... The assault detachment of the 23rd Infantry Division was composed of one infantry company (about 100 men), one engineer (pioneer) platoon (one officer, four NCOs and thirty men), and seven [[light machine gun]] teams. The officers assigned to the assault detachments were hand–picked from within the division by the division staff. The assault detachment was given a four–week course in German–style stormtrooper tactics, to which the division sent an additional officer and five NCOs. Eventually the assault detachment was expanded into an assault battalion, giving the 23rd Infantry Division additional combat capability.<ref>Erickson 2007 p. 133</ref>}}

===24th Assault Company===
With the 3rd Battalion 145th Infantry Regiment (24th Infantry Division) and the 8th and 9th Cavalry Regiments (3rd Cavalry Division), the 24th Assault Company (24th Infantry Division) pushed the Egyptian Expeditionary Force back from [[Salt, Jordan|Es Salt]] at the end of April 1918 during the [[Second Transjordan attack on Shunet Nimrin and Es Salt]].<ref name="Erickson134"/>

===46th Assault Company===
This assault company remained in reserve at Amman during the attack on Es Salt.<ref name="Erickson134"/>

===Effect on the Weimar Republic===
According to ''Vanguard of Nazism'' by [[Robert G. L. Waite]] and ''Male Fantasies'' by [[Klaus Theweleit]], some of the psychological and social aspects of the Stormtrooper experience found their way into the [[Weimar paramilitary groups|paramilitary wings]] of every [[political party]] during the [[Weimar Republic]], which were largely made up of World War I veterans and younger recruits whom they trained. For example, the formal barrier between officers and enlisted men was largely broken down and replaced by a fierce loyalty. There was also a "brutalization" process owing to the uniquely violent conditions of [[trench warfare]]. Such units included the [[Monarchism|monarchist]] ''[[Stahlhelm, Bund der Frontsoldaten|Stahlhelm]]'', the paramilitary [[Roter Frontkämpferbund]] wing of the [[Communist Party of Germany]], and the ''[[Sturmabteilung]]'', the name of which was commandeered by the [[Nazi Party]] for its own paramilitary wing.

==Austro-Hungarian assault units==
During the winter of 1914–1915, large parts of the [[Eastern Front (World War I)|Eastern Front]] switched to trench warfare. To cope with the new situation many Austro-Hungarian regiments spontaneously formed infantry squads called ''[[Jagdkommando]]s''. These squads were named after the specially trained forces of Russian army formed in 1886 and were used to protect against ambushes, to perform reconnaissance and for low intensity fights in no-man's-land.

Austro-Hungarian High army command (''Armeeoberkommando'', AOK) realised the need for [[special forces]] and decided to draw on German experience. Starting in September–October 1916, about 120 officers and 300 NCOs were trained in the German training area in Beuville (near the village of [[Doncourt-lès-Conflans|Doncourt]]) to be the main cadre of the newly raised Austro-Hungarian army assault battalions. The former ''Jagdkommandos'' were incorporated into these battalions.

==Ottoman stormtroopers==
The formation of a storm battalion was ordered by [[Enver Pasha]], the [[Ottoman Empire]]'s Minister of War, in 1917. In May of that year, a [[Cadre (military)|cadre]] of officers and NCOs were given introductory training in assault techniques at [[Dubliany]] in occupied [[Ukraine]], prior to the establishment of the "Constantinople Assault battalion" on 1 July at [[Maltepe, Istanbul|Maltepe]], close to the capital. The first troops to arrive for training were deemed to be too old and many were barefoot, so more suitable recruits were selected from other units. With the aid of German instructors, the troops were trained in the use of weapons such as flamethrowers, known to the Turks as "hellfire machines", and [[7.58 cm Minenwerfer]] mortars. Ottoman troops had never been issued with steel helmets, so German [[Stahlhelm#Variants|M1916 helmets]] were ordered but with the visors and neck-guards removed because they were thought to make it difficult to hear orders in the field.<ref>{{cite book |last=Grüßhaber |first=Gerhard |date=2018 |title=The "German Spirit" in the Ottoman and Turkish Army, 1908-1938. A history of military knowledge transfer |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vZNdDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA85 |location=Berlin |publisher=De Gruyter Oldenbourg |pages=85–88 |isbn=978-3110552898 }}</ref>

During the [[Middle Eastern theatre of World War I]], especially in [[Sinai and Palestine Campaign]], Ottomans utilized this storm battalion which formed part of the [[Yıldırım Army Group]] using the latest Western Front infiltration tactics and [[close combat]] gear with concentrated fire of artillery and machine guns.<ref>{{Cite book| publisher = History Press| isbn = 9780750966610| last = Hadaway| first = Stuart| title = From Gaza to Jerusalem: The Campaign for Southern Palestine 1917| date = 2015-10-01|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dsSQCgAAQBAJ&q=ottoman+stormtroopers&pg=PR63}}</ref> A notable action by this unit was at the [[Battle of El Burj]] on 1 December 1917, when they dislodged two squadrons of the 3rd [[Australian Light Horse]] from their defensive positions on a ridge, but were halted and isolated when British reinforcements arrived.<ref>{{Cite book| publisher = Yale University Press| isbn = 9780300219456| last = Faulkner| first = Neil| title = Lawrence of Arabia's War: The Arabs, the British and the Remaking of the Middle East in WWI| date = 2016-05-24|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=y64ODAAAQBAJ&pg=PT482}}</ref>


==See also==
==See also==
* ''[[Arditi]]''
*''[[Sturmabteilung]]'' - Nazi paramilitary organization
*[[Close Quarters Battle]]
*[[Melee]]
*[[Assault pioneer]] the Commonwealth equivalent of a Stormtrooper.


==References and notes==
==References==
===Notes===
{{reflist|2}}
{{Reflist}}
* Cron, H: Imperial German Army 1914-18 Organisation, Structure, Orders-of-Battle. Helion & Company, 2002. ISBN 1-874622-80-1. (Originally published as Geschichte des Deutschen Heeres im Weltkriege 1914-1918 in Berlin, 1937)
* Gudmundsson, B I: Stormtroop Tactics : Innovation in the German Army 1914-1918. Praeger Publishers, 1989. ISBN 0-275-95401-3.
* Jäger, H: German Artillery of World War One. The Crowood Press Ltd, 2001. ISBN 1-86126-403-8.
* Samels, M: Command or Control? Command, Training and Tactics in the British and German Armies, 1888-1918. Frank Cass Publishers, 1995. ISBN 0-7146-4214-2


===Bibliography===
== External links ==
{{refbegin}}
* [http://www-cgsc.army.mil/carl/resources/csi/Lupfer/lupfer.asp The Dynamics of Doctrine: The Change in German Tactical Doctrine During the First World War]
* {{cite book |last1=Cron |first1=Hermann |last2=Rogers |first2=Duncan F. |title=Imperial German Army 1914–18: Organisation, Structure, Orders of Battle |publisher=Helion |year=2002 |isbn=1-874622-70-1}}
* {{cite book |title=Ottoman Army Effectiveness in World War I: A Comparative Study |last=Erickson |first=Edward J. |series=Cass: Military History and Policy |number=26 |editor-last1=Gooch |editor-first1=John |editor-first2=Brian |editor-last2=Holden Reid |year=2007 |publisher=Routledge |location=Abingdon |isbn=978-0-203-96456-9}}
* {{cite book |last=Griffith |first=Paddy |title=Battle Tactics of the Western Front: The British Army's Art of Attack, 1916–18 |publisher=Yale University Press |location=New Haven, CT |year=1994 |isbn=0-300-05910-8}}
* {{cite book |last=Jäger |first=Herbert |title=German Artillery of World War One |publisher=Crowood Press |location=Marlborough |year=2001 |isbn=1-86126-403-8}}
* {{cite book |last=Samuels |first=Martin |title=Command or Control? Command, Training and Tactics in the British and German Armies 1888–1918 |publisher=Frank Cass |location=London |year=1995 |isbn=0-7146-4214-2}}
* {{cite book |last=Ortner |first=Christian |title=Storm Troops: Austro-Hungarian Assault Units and Commandos in the First World War |publisher=Militaria Verlag |location=Vienna |year=2006 |isbn=978-3-9501642-8-2}}
{{refend}}


== External links ==
[[Category:Infantry]]
* Lupfer, Timothy T. [https://web.archive.org/web/20070906090124/http://www-cgsc.army.mil/carl/resources/csi/Lupfer/lupfer.asp "The Dynamics of Doctrine: The Change in German Tactical Doctrine During the First World War"]
[[Category:Military units and formations of Germany]]
* Jones, Simon. [http://simonjoneshistorian.wordpress.com/2014/03/05/infiltration-by-close-order-andre-laffargue-and-the-attack-of-9-may-1915/ ''Infiltration by Close Order: André Laffargue and the Attack of 9 May 1915''].
[[Category:Infantry units and formations]]


{{portal bar|Germany}}
[[de:Stoßtrupp]]
[[Category:Army reconnaissance units and formations]]
[[fr:Sturmtruppen]]
[[Category:Combat occupations]]
[[he:חיילי סער]]
[[Category:Infantry units and formations of Germany]]
[[sv:Stosstruppen]]
[[Category:Military units and formations of Germany in World War I]]
[[Category:Special forces units and formations]]
[[Category:Trench warfare]]
[[Category:Types of military forces]]

Latest revision as of 22:54, 29 November 2024

Sturmtruppen
A stormtrooper poses with his MP 18 and a Luger pistol (France, 1918). Note the characteristic Stahlhelm, modified uniform with reinforcement patches on the elbows and knees and puttees to replace the boots of 1914.
Active1916–1918
Country German Empire
Branch Imperial German Army
TypeSpecial forces, shock troops
RoleIntervene when regular infantry fails, clear the way for infantry on the battlefield, special operations
Size17 battalions (as of 1917)[1]
ColorsGreen, Grey
EquipmentMP 18, Karabiner 98a, Luger pistol, Stahlhelm, Stielhandgranate
EngagementsWestern Front of World War I
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Ernst Jünger, Willy Rohr

Stormtroopers (German: Sturmtruppen[2] or Stoßtruppen[3]) were specialist infantrymen of the Imperial German Army. In the last years of World War I, Stoßtruppen ("shock troopers" or "shove troopers") were trained to use infiltration tactics – part of the Germans' improved method of attack on enemy trenches.[1] The German Empire entered the war certain that the conflict would be won in the course of great military campaigns, thus relegating results obtained during individual clashes to the background; consequently the best officers, concentrated in the German General Staff, placed their attention on maneuver warfare and the rational exploitation of railways, rather than concentrating on the conduct of battles. This attitude made a direct contribution to operational victories of Germany in Russia, Romania, Serbia and Italy, but it resulted in failure in the West. Thus the German officers on the Western Front found themselves in need of resolving the static situation caused by trench warfare on the battlefield.

Two concepts can be identified with the attempt to find a solution to the problem. The first was the belief, mainly held by Erich von Falkenhayn, that tactical action alone, the mere killing of enemy soldiers, was a sufficient means to achieve the strategic goal. The second was the idea, emerging from experience of countless "limited target attacks" and forays into the trenches, that combat had become such a difficult task that operational considerations had to be subordinated to tactical ones. The promoter for this last thesis was General der Infanterie Erich Ludendorff who, having become de facto commander of the Imperial German Army after the German defeat at the Battle of Verdun, gave decisive support to the development of assault battalions as a solution to resume maneuver warfare.[1]

The creation of these units was the first, and perhaps most innovative, attempt by the German army to break out of the impasse of trench warfare. With the use of well-trained soldiers, commanded by NCOs with autonomous decision-making capacity, an attempt was made to traverse no man's land and to break through enemy lines in predefined points in order to allow subsequent waves to liquidate the now confused and isolated opponent, opening large gaps in its defensive systems and then resuming maneuver warfare, which would have allowed Germany to win the conflict.

History

[edit]

Prior to World War I

[edit]

Ever since the introduction of breechloaders, there had been a growing realization that the days of close-order infantry assault were coming to an end. For a time, up to the turn of the 19th century, armies tried to circumvent the problem by moving into range in dispersed formations and charging only the last metres, as the French did in the Second Italian War of Independence (1859), the Prussians in the Austro-Prussian War (1866), or the Germans against the French in the Franco-Prussian War (1870–71).

The advent of the machine gun and the adoption of hydraulic-recoil artillery was a further setback for close order. The showing of the Boers against the British in the Second Boer War (1899–1902) fanned an enthusiasm for "Boer tactics": open order tactics reliant more on achieving fire superiority and moving quickly when enemy fire was ineffective than on positioning oneself for the final bayonet charge.

World War I assault tactics

[edit]

In the first part of the war, the standard assault on a trench line consisted of a lengthy artillery barrage all along the line, attempting to smash the enemy positions, followed by a rush forward of infantry in massed lines to overwhelm any remaining defenders. This process either failed, or at most gained only a short distance, while incurring enormous casualties, and the armies settled into trench warfare.

Development of tactics

[edit]
Willy Rohr

The first experimental pioneer assault unit of the German army formed in the spring of 1915, founded by Major Calsow and later commanded and refined by Hauptmann Willy Rohr. These methods[4] further evolved war tactics originally developed by the Prussians, to form the basis of German infiltration tactics. The troops involved were identified as Stoßtruppen (literally: "thrust-troops"), and the term was translated as "storm troops" in English.

Allied versions of infiltration tactics were first formally proposed by French Army captain André Laffargue [fr].[5] In 1915, Laffargue published a pamphlet, "The attack in trench warfare", based upon his experiences in combat that same year. He advocated that the first wave of an attack identify hard-to-defeat defenses but not attack them; subsequent waves would do this. The French published his pamphlet "for information", but did not implement it. The British Empire armies did not translate the pamphlet, and the British Army continued to emphasise fire power, although Laffargue's proposals were gradually adopted informally. The U.S. Infantry Journal published a translation in 1916.[6]

The Germans captured copies of Laffargue's pamphlet in 1916, translating and issuing it to units,[7] but by this point they already had their own, more sophisticated infiltration tactics, over two months before Laffargue's pamphlet was published.[8][9][10][11] The distinction between the German and French tactics was that Laffargue recommended using waves of infantry to attack despite the high casualties that would ensue.[12]

German stormtroopers training in Sedan, France (1917).

Soldiers were trained to consider fire as a means to facilitate movement in progress. Movement would be a call for fire. N. R. McMahon advocated using combined arms in the attack, particularly light machine guns (some six light and two heavy MGs per battalion) using a decentralised fire control and tactical command system (known as Auftragstaktik in German). These methods, suggested in 1909, bore a strong resemblance to the Stoßtrupptaktik used by the Germans six years later.[13]

In February 1917, the British Army issued "Manual SS 143" on the subject. The British made the platoon the basic tactical unit rather than the company as in 1916. The platoon was made up of four sections, Lewis Gun, rifle grenade, grenade, and rifle. The new organisation allowed the platoon to make best use of the trench-fighting equipment that had arrived in adequate quantities since the beginning of the Battle of the Somme. They were also supported by sophisticated artillery flash spotting and sound-ranging, something the German Army never perfected, instead relying on the aural method with ever more accurate measuring devices.[14]

German stormtroopers

[edit]

Calsow Assault Detachment

[edit]

The concept of "stormtroopers" first appeared in March 1915, when the Ministry of War directed the Eighth Army to form Sturmabteilung Calsow ("Calsow's Assault Detachment" or SA Calsow). SA Calsow consisted of a headquarters, two pioneer companies and a 37mm gun (Sturmkanone) battery. The unit was to use heavy shields and body armor as protection in attacks.

However, SA Calsow was never employed in its intended role. Instead it was sent into the line in France as emergency reinforcements during heavy Allied attacks. By June, the unit had already lost half its men. Major Calsow was relieved for this, against his protests that it was not his fault that the unit was not used as intended.[1]

Rohr Assault Battalion

[edit]
Stormtrooper of the Assault Bataillon Rohr

The new commander of the Assault Detachment from 8 September 1915 was Hauptmann (Captain) Willy Rohr, previously commander of the Guard Rifle Battalion. The Assault Detachment was reinforced with a machine gun platoon and flamethrower platoon. The old infantry support guns had been shown to be too difficult to move across the battlefield, and a new model was developed based on captured Russian 76.2mm fortress guns and issued to the Assault Detachment.[1][15][16]

Captain Rohr (later promoted to Major[1]), at first experimented with the Assault Detachment's body armor and shields, but realized that speed was better protection than armor. The only item of armor kept was the Stahlhelm, a new model of steel helmet. It later became the standard in all German units by the end of the war, and was used throughout World War II.[1]

The new tactics developed by Captain Rohr, building much on his own previous experiences from the front, was based on the use of squad sized stormtroops ("Sturmtruppen" or "Stoßtruppen"), supported by a number of heavy support weapons and field artillery that was to be coordinated at the lowest level possible and rolling up enemy trenches using troops armed with hand grenades. These tactics were tested the first time in October 1915 in a successful assault on a French position in the Vosges Mountains.[1]

In December 1915, the Assault Detachment started training men of other German units in the new assault tactics. Around this time the Assault Detachment also changed some of its equipment to better fit its new requirements. Lighter footwear was issued, and uniforms were reinforced with leather patches on knees and elbows to protect them when crawling. Special bags designed to carry grenades replaced the old belts and ammunition pouches, and the standard Gewehr 98 rifle was replaced with the lighter Karabiner 98a previously used by cavalrymen. The stocked artilleryman's pistol/carbine, the 9mm Lange Pistole 08, was also used in concert with an extended 32-round drum magazine to increase the close-range firepower of the unit. The long and impractical épée-style Seitengewehr 98 bayonet was replaced by shorter models, and supplemented with trench knives, clubs, and other melee weapons. While continuing to train other units, the Assault Detachment also participated in many small trench raids and attacks with limited objectives.[1]

The first major offensive led by the new Assault Detachment was the initial German attack at Verdun in February 1916. Stormtroops were in the first wave, leading some units into the French trenches, attacking seconds after the barrage had lifted. This generally worked very well, even though it worked much better against the first trenchline than against the less well-known enemy rear-area.[1]

On 1 April 1916, the Assault Detachment was redesignated "Assault Battalion Rohr". Around this time it was expanded from two to four pioneer companies. At the same time, several Jäger battalions began retraining as new Assault Battalions.[1][17]

Hutier and the last German offensive

[edit]
1916 World War I German stormtrooper on the Western Front wearing the Stahlhelm

General Oskar von Hutier, now commanding Eighth Army, became a champion of the new tactics, which became known as Hutier tactics in Britain and by the allies.

Hutier suggested an alternative approach, combining some previous and some new attacks in a complex strategy:[18]

  1. A short artillery bombardment, employing heavy shells mixed with numerous poison gas projectiles, to neutralize the enemy front lines, and not try to destroy them.
  2. Under a creeping barrage, Stoßtruppen would then move forward, in dispersed order. They would avoid combat whenever possible, infiltrate the Allied defenses at previously identified weak points, and destroy or capture enemy headquarters and artillery strongpoints.
  3. Next, infantry battalions with extra light machine guns, mortars and flamethrowers, would attack on narrow fronts against any Allied strongpoints the shock troops missed. Mortars and field guns would be in place to fire as needed to accelerate the breakthrough.
  4. In the last stage of the assault, regular infantry would mop up any remaining Allied resistance.

The new assault method had men rushing forward in small groups using whatever cover was available and laying down suppressive fire for other groups in the same unit as they moved forward. The new tactics, which were intended to achieve tactical surprise, were to attack the weakest parts of an enemy's line, bypass his strongpoints and to abandon the futile attempt to have a grand and detailed plan of operations controlled from afar. Instead, junior leaders could exercise initiative on the spot. Any enemy strong points which had not been overrun by stormtroopers could be attacked by the second echelon troops following the stormtroopers.

Stormtroopers in 1918

[edit]

With the withdrawal of Russia, Germany moved troops from the Eastern Front to reinforce the Western Front. This allowed them to take units out of the line for retraining as stormtroopers.

On 21 March 1918, Germany launched Operation Michael, a major offensive, using the new tactics. Four successive German offensives followed and for the first time in four years the stalemate of trench warfare was broken. However, the German advance failed to achieve the complete breakthrough necessary for a decisive result and in July the Allies began their Hundred Days Offensive.[14]

Reasons for the failure of the offensive

[edit]

Apart from suffering heavy casualties, several other reasons for the failure of the stormtroops have been suggested.

  1. The initial attack was against the British section of the front, which was the most strongly held.[19]
  2. The leading units were not relieved or rotated out of action and became exhausted.[1]
  3. The terrain contained many rivers, towns, forests and canals which slowed the advance.[1]
  4. The 1918 influenza epidemic.[20]
  5. The capture of British stores which contained large quantities of alcohol—"not for lack of German fighting spirit, but on account of the abundance of Scottish drinking spirit!"[21]

3rd and 46th Assault Company

[edit]

With three infantry battalions, the German 703rd Infantry Battalion, some machine-gun, cavalry, and artillery units, the 3rd Assault Company, and the 46th Assault Company counterattacked the Egyptian Expeditionary Force during the Sinai and Palestine Campaign. At the First Battle of Amman, during the First Transjordan attack on Amman at the end of March 1918, the attackers were forced back to the Jordan River.[22]

23rd Assault Detachment

[edit]

The assault troops were organised into combined arms assault detachments ... The assault detachment of the 23rd Infantry Division was composed of one infantry company (about 100 men), one engineer (pioneer) platoon (one officer, four NCOs and thirty men), and seven light machine gun teams. The officers assigned to the assault detachments were hand–picked from within the division by the division staff. The assault detachment was given a four–week course in German–style stormtrooper tactics, to which the division sent an additional officer and five NCOs. Eventually the assault detachment was expanded into an assault battalion, giving the 23rd Infantry Division additional combat capability.[23]

24th Assault Company

[edit]

With the 3rd Battalion 145th Infantry Regiment (24th Infantry Division) and the 8th and 9th Cavalry Regiments (3rd Cavalry Division), the 24th Assault Company (24th Infantry Division) pushed the Egyptian Expeditionary Force back from Es Salt at the end of April 1918 during the Second Transjordan attack on Shunet Nimrin and Es Salt.[22]

46th Assault Company

[edit]

This assault company remained in reserve at Amman during the attack on Es Salt.[22]

Effect on the Weimar Republic

[edit]

According to Vanguard of Nazism by Robert G. L. Waite and Male Fantasies by Klaus Theweleit, some of the psychological and social aspects of the Stormtrooper experience found their way into the paramilitary wings of every political party during the Weimar Republic, which were largely made up of World War I veterans and younger recruits whom they trained. For example, the formal barrier between officers and enlisted men was largely broken down and replaced by a fierce loyalty. There was also a "brutalization" process owing to the uniquely violent conditions of trench warfare. Such units included the monarchist Stahlhelm, the paramilitary Roter Frontkämpferbund wing of the Communist Party of Germany, and the Sturmabteilung, the name of which was commandeered by the Nazi Party for its own paramilitary wing.

Austro-Hungarian assault units

[edit]

During the winter of 1914–1915, large parts of the Eastern Front switched to trench warfare. To cope with the new situation many Austro-Hungarian regiments spontaneously formed infantry squads called Jagdkommandos. These squads were named after the specially trained forces of Russian army formed in 1886 and were used to protect against ambushes, to perform reconnaissance and for low intensity fights in no-man's-land.

Austro-Hungarian High army command (Armeeoberkommando, AOK) realised the need for special forces and decided to draw on German experience. Starting in September–October 1916, about 120 officers and 300 NCOs were trained in the German training area in Beuville (near the village of Doncourt) to be the main cadre of the newly raised Austro-Hungarian army assault battalions. The former Jagdkommandos were incorporated into these battalions.

Ottoman stormtroopers

[edit]

The formation of a storm battalion was ordered by Enver Pasha, the Ottoman Empire's Minister of War, in 1917. In May of that year, a cadre of officers and NCOs were given introductory training in assault techniques at Dubliany in occupied Ukraine, prior to the establishment of the "Constantinople Assault battalion" on 1 July at Maltepe, close to the capital. The first troops to arrive for training were deemed to be too old and many were barefoot, so more suitable recruits were selected from other units. With the aid of German instructors, the troops were trained in the use of weapons such as flamethrowers, known to the Turks as "hellfire machines", and 7.58 cm Minenwerfer mortars. Ottoman troops had never been issued with steel helmets, so German M1916 helmets were ordered but with the visors and neck-guards removed because they were thought to make it difficult to hear orders in the field.[24]

During the Middle Eastern theatre of World War I, especially in Sinai and Palestine Campaign, Ottomans utilized this storm battalion which formed part of the Yıldırım Army Group using the latest Western Front infiltration tactics and close combat gear with concentrated fire of artillery and machine guns.[25] A notable action by this unit was at the Battle of El Burj on 1 December 1917, when they dislodged two squadrons of the 3rd Australian Light Horse from their defensive positions on a ridge, but were halted and isolated when British reinforcements arrived.[26]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Gudmundsson, Bruce I. (1995). Stormtroop Tactics: Innovation in the German Army, 1914-1918. Praeger Paperback. ISBN 0-275-95401-3.
  2. ^ "Stormtrooper". International Encyclopedia of the First World War (WW1). Retrieved 29 May 2020.
  3. ^ "Military Developments of World War I". International Encyclopedia of the First World War (WW1). Retrieved 31 May 2020.
  4. ^ Hermann Cron: Geschichte des Deutschen Heeres im Welkriege 1914-1918; Berlin 1937, p. 23
  5. ^ CSI Report No. 13: Tactical responses to concentrated artillery: Introduction Archived 2011-06-02 at the Wayback Machine (Combat Studies Institute, U.S. Army Command and General Staff College, Fort Leavenworth).Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Army.
  6. ^ Laffargue, André (1916). "Study on the attack in the present period of the war: Impressions and reflections of a company commander". Infantry Journal. 13 (2): 101–138.
  7. ^ CSI Report No. 13: Tactical responses to concentrated artillery: Ch 2 Archived 2011-06-02 at the Wayback Machine (Combat Studies Institute, U.S. Army Command and General Staff College, Fort Leavenworth).
  8. ^ Samuels, Martin Doctrine and Dogma, passim
  9. ^ Samuels, Martin Command or Control?, passim
  10. ^ Stormtroop Tactics, Appendix C and passim
  11. ^ Samuels, Martin Doctrine and Dogma, 55
  12. ^ Jones, Simon (5 March 2014). "Infiltration by Close Order: André Laffargue and the Attack of 9 May 1915".
  13. ^ Samuels, Martin (1995). Command or Control? Command, Training and Tactics in the British and German Armies, 1888–1918. London: Frank Cass. pp. 100–101. ISBN 0-7146-4214-2.
  14. ^ a b Griffith, Paddy (1994). Battle Tactics of the Western Front: The British Army's Art of Attack, 1916–18. New Haven, Conn: Yale University Press. pp. 194–195. ISBN 0-300-05910-8.
  15. ^ Jäger, Herbert (2001). German Artillery of World War One. Crowood Press (UK). p. 136. ISBN 1-86126-403-8.
  16. ^ Samuels, Martin (1995). Command or control? Command, training and tactics in the British and German armies 1888-1918. London: Frank Cass. p. 89. ISBN 0-7146-4214-2.
  17. ^ Rogers, Duncan F.; Cron, Hermann (2002). Imperial German Army 1914-18: Organisation, Structure, Orders of Battle. Helion & Company. p. 119. ISBN 1-874622-70-1.
  18. ^ Westwell ,I. (2000). World War I Day by Day. ISBN 9781840133622.
  19. ^ Delany, J., The Blitzkrieg campaigns: Germany's "lightning war" strategy in action
  20. ^ The Myth of the Great War: A New Military History of World War I, John Mosier, 2002
  21. ^ Firing Line - Richard Holmes - 1985
  22. ^ a b c Erickson 2007 p. 134
  23. ^ Erickson 2007 p. 133
  24. ^ Grüßhaber, Gerhard (2018). The "German Spirit" in the Ottoman and Turkish Army, 1908-1938. A history of military knowledge transfer. Berlin: De Gruyter Oldenbourg. pp. 85–88. ISBN 978-3110552898.
  25. ^ Hadaway, Stuart (2015-10-01). From Gaza to Jerusalem: The Campaign for Southern Palestine 1917. History Press. ISBN 9780750966610.
  26. ^ Faulkner, Neil (2016-05-24). Lawrence of Arabia's War: The Arabs, the British and the Remaking of the Middle East in WWI. Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300219456.

Bibliography

[edit]
  • Cron, Hermann; Rogers, Duncan F. (2002). Imperial German Army 1914–18: Organisation, Structure, Orders of Battle. Helion. ISBN 1-874622-70-1.
  • Erickson, Edward J. (2007). Gooch, John; Holden Reid, Brian (eds.). Ottoman Army Effectiveness in World War I: A Comparative Study. Cass: Military History and Policy. Abingdon: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-203-96456-9.
  • Griffith, Paddy (1994). Battle Tactics of the Western Front: The British Army's Art of Attack, 1916–18. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-05910-8.
  • Jäger, Herbert (2001). German Artillery of World War One. Marlborough: Crowood Press. ISBN 1-86126-403-8.
  • Samuels, Martin (1995). Command or Control? Command, Training and Tactics in the British and German Armies 1888–1918. London: Frank Cass. ISBN 0-7146-4214-2.
  • Ortner, Christian (2006). Storm Troops: Austro-Hungarian Assault Units and Commandos in the First World War. Vienna: Militaria Verlag. ISBN 978-3-9501642-8-2.
[edit]