NOTE: I will be posting
either a soldiers’ quote or soldiers’ article once a month.
On
this date, September 2, 1945, Combat ends in the Pacific Theater: the
Instrument of Surrender of Japan is signed by Japanese Foreign Minister Mamoru
Shigemitsu and accepted aboard the battleship USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay.
To remember this event, I will post an article from Wikipedia called, ‘Total
War’.
Total war
is a war in which a belligerent engages in the complete mobilization of all
available resources and population.
In
the mid-19th century, "total war" was identified by scholars as a
separate class of warfare. In a total war, there is less differentiation
between combatants and civilians than in other conflicts, and sometimes no such
differentiation at all, as nearly every human resource, civilians and soldiers
alike, can be considered to be part of the belligerent effort.
Total
war played a major part in conflicts from the French Revolutionary Wars to
World War II, but has been replaced in the modern era by cheaper, quicker and
more effective policies including guerrilla warfare and the adoption of weapons
of mass destruction.
Etymology
The
phrase can be traced back to the 1935 publication of General Ludendorff’s World
War I memoir Der Totale Krieg ("The Total War"). The
concept is extended by some authors back as far as Clausewitz’s classic work On
War as "absoluter Krieg" (however, the relevant passages have
been interpreted in diverging ways by different authors), and to the French
"guerre à outrance" during the Franco-Prussian War.
USAF
General Curtis LeMay updated the concept for the nuclear age. In 1949, he was
first to propose that a total war in the nuclear age would consist of
delivering the entire nuclear arsenal in a single overwhelming blow, going as
far as "killing a nation".
Early history
During
the Middle Ages, the Mongols in the 13th century practised total war. The
military forces of Genghis Khan slaughtered whole populations and destroyed any
city that resisted:
As an aggressor nation, the ancient Mongols, no less than the modern Nazis, practiced total war against an enemy by organizing all available resources, including military personnel, noncombatant workers, intelligence, transport, money, and provisions.
18th and 19th
centuries
Intertribal
warfare
Author
and historian Mark van de Logt wrote: "Although military historians tend
to reserve the concept of “total war” for conflicts between modern industrial
nations, the term nevertheless most closely approaches the state of affairs
between the Pawnees and the Sioux and Cheyennes. Both sides directed their
actions not solely against warrior-combatants but against the people as a
whole. Noncombatants were legitimate targets. Indeed, the taking of a scalp of
a woman or child was considered honorable because it signified that the scalp
taker had dared to enter the very heart of the enemy's territory."
French Revolutionary
Wars and Napoleonic Wars
The French Revolutionary Wars introduced some of
the first concepts of total war, such as mass conscription. The fledgling
republic found itself threatened by a powerful coalition of European nations.
The only solution, in the eyes of the Jacobin government, was to pour the
entire nation's resources into an unprecedented war effort—this was the advent
of the levée en masse. The following decree of the National Convention on
August 23, 1793 clearly demonstrates the immensity of the French war effort,
when the French front line forces grew to some 800,000 with a total of 1.5
million in all services—the first time an army in excess of a million had been
mobilized in Western history.:
From this moment until such time as its enemies shall have been driven from the soil of the Republic all Frenchmen are in permanent requisition for the services of the armies. The young men shall fight; the married men shall forge arms and transport provisions; the women shall make tents and clothes and shall serve in the hospitals; the children shall turn linen into lint; the old men shall betake themselves to the public squares in order to arouse the courage of the warriors and preach hatred of kings and the unity of the Republic.
The wars merged into the Napoleonic Wars of the
First French Empire from c1803. Over the coming two decades of almost constant
warfare it is estimated that somewhere in the vicinity of five million
died—probably about half of them civilians—and France alone counted nearly a
million (by some sources in excess of a million) deaths.
In the Russian campaign of 1812 the Russians
resorted to destroying infrastructure and agriculture in their retreat in order
to hamper the French and strip them of adequate supplies. In the campaign of
1813 Allied forces in the German theater alone amounted to nearly one million
whilst two years later in the Hundred Days a French decree called for the total
mobilization of some 2.5 million men (though at most a fifth of this was
managed by the time of the French defeat at Waterloo). During the prolonged
Peninsular War from 1808–1814 some 300,000 French troops were kept permanently
occupied by, in addition to several hundred thousand Spanish, Portuguese and
British regulars an enormous and sustained guerrilla insurgency—ultimately
French deaths would amount to 300,000 in the Peninsular War alone.
Taiping Rebellion
The
Taiping Rebellion (1850–1864) was one of the deadliest wars in history, and the
first total war in modern China. About 20 million people died, many due to
disease and famine. It followed the secession of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom
from the Qing Empire. Almost every citizen of the Heavenly Kingdom was given
military training and conscripted into the army to fight against the Imperial
forces.
American Civil War
During
the American Civil War, U.S. Army General Philip
Sheridan's stripping of the Shenandoah Valley, beginning on September 21, 1864
and continuing for two weeks, was considered "total war". Its purpose
was to eliminate food and supplies vital to the South's military operations, as
well as to strike a blow at Southern civilian morale. Sheridan took the
opportunity when he realized opposing forces had become too weak to resist his
army.
Union
Army General William Tecumseh Sherman's 'March to the Sea' in November and
December 1864 destroyed the resources required for the South to make war.
General Ulysses S. Grant and President Abraham Lincoln initially opposed the
plan until Sherman convinced them of its necessity. It was the first instance
of a major industrialized power engaging in an explicit strategy of total war,
and would foreshadow the strategies utilized in conflicts of the 20th century.
Scholars
taking issue with the notion that Sherman was employing "total war"
include Noah Andre Trudeau. Trudeau believes that Sherman's goals and methods
do not meet the definition of total war and to suggest as much is to
"misread Sherman's intentions and to misunderstand the results of what happened."
20th century
World War I
Almost
the whole of Europe mobilized to wage World War I. Young men were removed from
production jobs to serve in military roles, and were replaced on the production
line by women. Rationing occurred on the home fronts. Bulgaria went so far as
to mobilize a quarter of its population or 800,000 people, a greater share of
its population than any other country during the war. One of the features of
Total War in Britain was the use of government propaganda posters to divert all
attention to the war on the home front. Posters were used to influence public
opinion about what to eat and what occupations to take, and to change the
attitude of support towards the war effort. Even the Music Hall was used as
propaganda, with propaganda songs aimed at recruitment.
After
the failure of the Battle of Neuve Chapelle, the large British offensive in
March 1915, the British Commander-in-Chief Field Marshal John French blamed the
lack of progress on insufficient and poor-quality artillery shells. This led to
the Shell Crisis of 1915 which brought down both the Liberal government and
Premiership of H. H. Asquith. He formed a new coalition government dominated by
Liberals and appointed David Lloyd George as Minister of Munitions. It was a recognition
that the whole economy would have to be geared for war if the Allies were to
prevail on the Western Front.
As
young men left the farms for the front, domestic food production in Britain and
Germany fell. In Britain the response was to import more food, which was done
despite the German introduction of unrestricted submarine warfare, and to
introduce rationing. The Royal Navy's blockade of German ports prevented
Germany from importing food and hastened German capitulation by creating a food
crisis in Germany.
World War II
The
Second World War can be considered the quintessential total war of modernity.
The level of national mobilization of resources on all sides of the conflict,
the battlespace being contested, the scale of the armies, navies, and air
forces raised through conscription, the active targeting of civilians (and
civilian property), the general disregard for collateral damage, and the
unrestricted aims of the belligerents marked total war on an unprecedented and
unsurpassed, multicontinental scale.
Shōwa Japan
During
the first part of the Shōwa era, the governments of Imperial Japan launched a
string of policies to promote total war effort against China or occidental
powers and increase industrial production. Among these were the National
Spiritual Mobilization Movement, the Imperial Rule Assistance Association.
The
National Mobilization Law had fifty clauses, which provided for government
controls over civilian organizations (including labor unions), nationalization
of strategic industries, price controls and rationing, and nationalized the
news media. The laws gave the government the authority to use unlimited budgets
to subsidize war production, and to compensate manufacturers for losses caused
by war-time mobilization. Eighteen of the fifty articles outlined penalties for
violators.
To
improve its production, Shōwa Japan used millions of slave labourers and
pressed more than 18 million people in East Asia.
United Kingdom
Before the onset of the Second World War, the
United Kingdom drew on its First World War experience to prepare legislation
that would allow immediate mobilization of the economy for war, should future
hostilities break out.
Rationing of most goods and services was
introduced, not only for consumers but also for manufacturers. This meant that
factories manufacturing products that were irrelevant to the war effort had
more appropriate tasks imposed. All artificial light was subject to legal
blackouts.
Not only were men conscripted into the armed forces
from the beginning of the war (something which had not happened until the
middle of World War I), but women were also conscripted as Land Girls to aid
farmers and the Bevin Boys were conscripted to work down the coal mines.
Enormous casualties were expected in bombing raids,
so children were evacuated from London and other cities en masse to the
countryside for compulsory billeting in households. In the long term this was
one of the most profound and longer-lasting social consequences of the whole
war for Britain. This is because it mixed up children with the adults of other
classes. Not only did the middle and upper classes become familiar with the
urban squalor suffered by working class children from the slums, but the
children got a chance to see animals and the countryside, often for the first
time, and experience rural life.
The use of statistical analysis, by a branch of
science which has become known as Operational Research to influence military
tactics was a departure from anything previously attempted. It was a very
powerful tool but it further dehumanised war particularly when it suggested
strategies which were counter intuitive. Examples where statistical analysis
directly influenced tactics include the work done by Patrick Blackett's team on
the optimum size and speed of convoys and the introduction of bomber streams by
the Royal Air Force to counter the night fighter defences of the Kammhuber
Line.
"..There is another more obvious difference from 1914. The whole of the warring nations are engaged, not only soldiers, but the entire population, men, women and children. The fronts are everywhere to be seen. The trenches are dug in the towns and streets. Every village is fortified. Every road is barred. The front line runs through the factories. The workmen are soldiers with different weapons but the same courage."Winston Churchill on the radio, June 18 ; and House of Commons 20 August 1940
Germany
In contrast, Germany started the war under the
concept of Blitzkrieg. Officially, it did not accept that it was in a total war
until Joseph Goebbels' Sportpalast speech of 18 February 1943. For example,
women were not conscripted into the armed forces or allowed to work in
factories. The Nazi party adhered to the policy that a woman's place was in the
home, and did not change this even as its opponents began moving women into
important roles in production.
The commitment to the doctrine of the short war was
a continuing handicap for the Germans; neither plans nor state of mind were
adjusted to the idea of a long war until the failure of the operation
Barbarossa. A major strategical defeat in the Battle of Moscow forced Albert
Speer, who was appointed as Germany's armament minister in early 1942, to
nationalize German war production and eliminate the worst inefficiencies.
Under Speer's direction a threefold increase in
armament production occurred and did not reach its peak until late 1944. To do
this during the damage caused by the growing strategic Allied bomber offensive,
is an indication of the degree of industrial under-mobilization in the earlier
years. It was because the German economy through most of the war was
substantially under-mobilized that it was resilient under air attack. Civilian
consumption was high during the early years of the war and inventories both in
industry and in consumers' possession were high. These helped cushion the
economy from the effects of bombing.
Plant and machinery were plentiful and incompletely
used, thus it was comparatively easy to substitute unused or partly used machinery
for that which was destroyed. Foreign labour, both slave labour and labour from
neighbouring countries who joined the Anti-Comintern Pact with Germany, was
used to augment German industrial labour which was under pressure by
conscription into the Wehrmacht (Armed Forces).
"I ask you: Do you want total war? If necessary, do you want a war more total and radical than anything that we can even imagine today?"Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels, 18 February 1943, in his Sportpalast speech
Soviet Union
The
Soviet Union (USSR) was a command economy which already had an economic and
legal system allowing the economy and society to be redirected into fighting a
total war. The transportation of factories and whole labour forces east of the
Urals as the Germans advanced across the USSR in 1941 was an impressive feat of
planning. Only those factories which were useful for war production were moved
because of the total war commitment of the Soviet government.
The
Eastern Front of the European Theatre of World War II encompassed the conflict
in central and eastern Europe from June 22, 1941 to May 9, 1945. It was the
largest theatre of war in history in terms of numbers of soldiers, equipment
and casualties and was notorious for its unprecedented ferocity, destruction,
and immense loss of life. The fighting involved millions of German and Soviet
troops along a broad front hundreds of kilometres long. It was by far the deadliest
single theatre of World War II. Scholars now believe that at most 27 million
Soviet citizens died during the war, including some 8.7 million soldiers who
fell in battle against Hitler's armies or died in POW camps. Millions of
civilians died from starvation, exposure, atrocities, and massacres. The Axis
lost over 5 million soldiers in the east as well as many thousands of
civilians.
During
the battle of Stalingrad, newly-built T-34 tanks were driven—unpainted because
of a paint shortage—from the factory floor straight to the front. This came to
symbolise the USSR's commitment to the Great Patriotic War and demonstrated the
government's total war policy.
To
encourage the Russian people to work harder, the communist government,
controlled by Stalin, encouraged the people's love of the Motherland and even
allowed the reopening of Russian Orthodox Churches as it was thought this would
help the war effort.
United States
The United States underwent an unprecedented
mobilization of national resources for the Second World War. Conditions on the
home front were not as strained as they were in the United Kingdom or as
desperate as they were in the Soviet Union, but the United States greatly
curtailed nearly all non-essential activities in its prosecution of the Second
World War and redirected nearly all available national resources to the
conflict, including reaching the point of diminishing returns by late 1944,
where the U.S. military was unable to find any more males of the correct
military age to draft into service.
The strategists of the U.S. military looked abroad
at the storms brewing on the horizon in Europe and Asia, and began quietly
making contingency plans as early as the mid-1930s; new weapons and weapons
platforms were designed, and made ready. Following the outbreak of war in
Europe, and the metastasis of the ongoing aggression in Asia, efforts were
stepped up significantly. The collapse of France and the airborne aggression
directed at Great Britain unsettled the Americans, who had close relations with
both nations, and a peacetime draft was instituted, along with Lend-Lease
programs to aid the British, and covert aid was passed to the Chinese as well.
American public opinion was still opposed to
involvement in the problems of Europe and Asia, however. In 1941, the Soviet
Union became the latest nation to be invaded, and the U.S. gave her aid as
well. American ships began defending aid convoys to the Allied nations against
submarine attacks, and a total trade embargo against the Empire of Japan was
instituted to deny its military the raw materials its factories and military
forces required to continue its offensive actions in China.
In late 1941, Japan's Army-dominated government
decided to seize by military force the strategic resources of South-East Asia
and Indonesia since the Western powers would not give Japan these goods by
trade. Planning for this action included surprise attacks on American and
British forces in Hong Kong, the Philippines, Malaya, and the U.S. naval base
and warships at Pearl Harbor. In response to these attacks, the U.K. and U.S.
declared war on the Empire of Japan the next day. Nazi Germany declared war on
the U.S. a few days later, along with Fascist Italy; the U.S. found itself
fully involved in a second world war.
As the United States began to gear up for a major
war, information and propaganda efforts were set in motion. Civilians
(including children) were encouraged to take part in fat, grease, and scrap
metal collection drives. Many factories making non-essential goods retooled for
war production. Levels of industrial productivity previously unheard of were
attained during the war; multi-thousand-ton convoy ships were routinely built
in a month-and-a-half, and tanks poured out of the former automobile factories.
Within a few years of the U.S. entry into the Second World War, nearly every
man fit for service, between 18 and 30, had been conscripted into the military
"for the duration" of the conflict. Strict systems of rationing of
consumer staples were introduced to redirect productive capacity to war needs.
Previously untouched sections of the nation
mobilized for the war effort. Academics became technocrats; home-makers became
bomb-makers (massive numbers of women worked in heavy industry during the war);
union leaders and businessmen became commanders in the massive armies of
production. The great scientific communities of the United States were
mobilized as never before, and mathematicians, doctors, engineers, and chemists
turned their minds to the problems ahead of them.
By the war's end a multitude of advances had been
made in medicine, physics, engineering, and the other sciences. Even the
theoretical physicists, whose theories were not believed to have military
applications (at the time), were sent far into the Western deserts to work at
the Los Alamos National Laboratory on the Manhattan Project that culminated in
the Trinity nuclear test and changed the course of history.
In the war, the United States lost many soldiers,
but had managed to avoid the extensive level of damage to civilian and
industrial infrastructure that other participants suffered. The U.S. emerged as
one of the two superpowers after the war.
"It's a ticklish sort of job making a thing for a thing-ummy-bobEspecially when you don't know what it's forBut it's the girl that makes the thing that drills the holethat holds the spring that works the thing-ummy-bobthat makes the engines roar.
And it's the girl that makes the thing that holds the oilthat oils the ring that works the thing-ummy-bobthat's going to win the war.""The Thing-Ummy Bob", A British song made popular in the US by Gracie Fields
Unconditional surrender
After
the United States entered World War II, Franklin D. Roosevelt declared at
Casablanca conference to the other Allies and the press that unconditional
surrender was the objective of the war against the Axis Powers of Germany,
Italy, and Japan. Prior to this declaration, the individual regimes of the Axis
Powers could have negotiated an armistice similar to that at the end of World
War I and then a conditional surrender when they perceived that the war was
lost.
The
unconditional surrender of the major Axis powers caused a legal problem at the
post-war Nuremberg Trials, because the trials appeared to be in conflict with
Articles 63 and 64 of the Geneva Convention of 1929. Usually if such trials are
held, they would be held under the auspices of the defeated power's own legal
system as happened with some of the minor Axis powers, for example in the post
World War II Romanian People's Tribunals. To circumvent this, the Allies argued
that the major war criminals were captured after the end of the war, so they
were not prisoners of war and the Geneva Conventions did not cover them.
Further, the collapse of the Axis regimes created a legal condition of total
defeat (debellatio) so the provisions of the 1907 Hague Conventions over
military occupation were not applicable.
"Actually Dresden was a mass of munitions works, an intact government centre, and a key transportation point to the East. It is now none of these things."Air Chief Marshal Arthur Harris, in a memo to the Air Ministry on 29 March 1945:
Postwar era
Since
the end of World War II, no industrial nations have fought such a large,
decisive war. This is likely due to the availability of nuclear weapons, whose
destructive power and quick deployment render a full mobilization of a
country's resources such as in World War II unnecessary. Such weapons are
developed and maintained with relatively modest peacetime defense budgets.
By
the end of the 1950s, the ideological stand-off of the Cold War between the
Western World and the Soviet Union had resulted in thousands of nuclear weapons
being aimed by each side at the other. Strategically, the equal balance of
destructive power possessed by each side situation came to be known as Mutually
Assured Destruction (MAD), considering that a nuclear attack by one superpower
would result in nuclear counter-strike by the other. This would result in
hundreds of millions of deaths in a world where, in words widely attributed to
Nikita Khrushchev, "The living will envy the dead".
During
the Cold War, the two superpowers sought to avoid open conflict between their
respective forces, as both sides recognized that such a clash could very easily
escalate, and quickly involve nuclear weapons. Instead, the superpowers fought
each other through their involvement in proxy wars, military buildups, and diplomatic
standoffs.
In
the case of proxy wars, each superpower supported its respective allies in
conflicts with forces aligned with the other superpower, such as in the Korean
War and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
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