#CultureofWar and Nazi Germany. A thread about how the culture of war/violence became embedded in regimes long before the Nazis? What was Hitler’s military culture constructed on? (pictures mine unless captioned). ImageImageImage
Impressions of the Garrison state and the Nation in arms appeared long before the Great War. The Kaiser Manoeuvres, a ritual, were central to the projection of military power, and became a major event in the public calendar. Pictures from 1912. ImageImageImageImage
The manoeuvres traversed vast areas of terrain - the public were encouraged to watch, or engage with the troops. As an international event, foreign officials and British officers were sent to report on the ‘show’. ImageImageImageImage
The Kaiser closed the manoeuvres, by leading the final charge and taking the closing salute. The Garrison State/Nation in Arms appeared safe and secure under the Kaiser and army. ImageImageImage
Since 1848 wild game hunting had become the social pursuit of the middle/upper classes and monarchy. The hunt was a platform for elites from different social groups to meet and network. Germany’s growing industrial complex served both the hunt and the military. ImageImageImage
By the 1890s, hunting professionalism was treated as a valuable process in officer development. Shooting, terrain orientation, map reading and hunt tactics underscored military training. Big game hunting was introduced by soldiers serving in the colonies. ImageImageImage
Alongside hunting, Auftragstaktik (mission-command) emerged as a form of delegated leadership and initiative. Senior officers passed a mission to subalterns, with the only proviso to succeed. The hunter-warrior became an iconic symbol within a masculine military culture. Image
In the colonies, the Imperial German Army showed an ability to prosecute rapid manoeuvre operations and perpetrate mass killing. In 1904, in Namibia, the Battle of the Warterberg followed the classical encirclement doctrine based upon Schlieffen’s Cannae doctrine. ImageImageImageImage
A cocktail of war fantasies included images of enemies as noble savages, but racially inferior. Heroic literature was popular reading. Not everything was what it seemed. The noble Oberleutnant, was bailed out of penury in Egypt, by the Kaiser in 1914. ImageImageImageImage
The rise of security warfare. Military operations in the colonies transformed army with a brutal politics of violence. Few recognised at the time that this came from an emerging power within the military occupation system - the Etappen.
The Etappen emerged as a rear-area military complex in the latter days of Franco-Prussian War. This copy from 1902 included an illustration explaining how the process of rear-area occupation and security was intended to function. ImageImage
During the Namibia campaigns, the Etappen served as the structure for pacification. In effect, the railways served as a giant spiders web, restricting the movement of the resistance and using the speed of railway to deploy troops and carry POWs to camps.
In parallel with the home manoeuvres, colonial conflicts, Etappen and Schlieffen plans, the army revised its training doctrines. There was an outpouring of military books and articles about best practice etc. ImageImageImage
2 incidents exposed the Garrison state. 1906, a common criminal turned folk hero when he masqueraded as a German officer. 1913, the Zabern Affair, in Alsace-Lorraine (occupied since 1872) an infantry regiment reacted brutally to political unrest. (Wiki pictures). ImageImage
In August 1914, the Imperial German Army went to war in two parts - the teeth arms and the Etappen. In some places the dual system was efficient. Others were chaotic, with challenging tasks but minimal resources. Multiple front experiences led to the rise of military cliques. ImageImageImage
The army also went to war with extreme notions of the enemy. Fear of the Francs-tireurs in France/Belgium. (Pictures Der Spiegel). In the east, Jews, Slavs and Communists - soon the targets of punitive Etappen security measures (pictures - Lodz and Warsaw). ImageImageImageImage
The hunting classes carried on as before the war, hunting and living in an exclusive world. Cliques in the monarchy, the army leadership and politicians led to quarrels and bumps in the war’s leadership. ImageImageImage
Hunger winter hammered the working classes - soup kitchens, blackmarkets and scrounging. The Army’s home front institutions advised the military dictatorship that civilian society was on the verge of collapse. The clock was ticking. ImageImageImageImage
The increasing shortages in manpower, food and raw materials led to desperate decisions. The hunger winter of 1916/17 forced the army to rely on the Stormtrooper. The military dictatorship began enforcing a harsher brand of army politics across German society. Image
Stormtroopers were trained to infiltrate enemy lines and restore manoeuvre warfare. They introduced a romantic heroism to trench culture. In 1918 the Stormtroopers infiltrated British lines and briefly restored manoeuvre warfare. ImageImageImage
The final offensive in 1918 failed. On 4 November 1918, the Kaiser’s last parade. The Kaiser’s departure left a power vacuum, but no one wanted responsibility for defeat. The army returned and were welcomed. (Stadtarchiv Aachen). ImageImageImageImage
In the turmoil militarism spiralled, cultural memories rehashed by nationalists forging reactionary movements. Ritter von Epp turned into a political soldier - from Colonial officer, war hero, Munich’s saviour, man of the people - Hitler’s sugar daddy. ImageImageImageImage
May 1919 - the Battle of Munich - counter-revolutionaries led by Epp. The Warterberg plan (1904) replayed. An atmosphere of occultism, romantic idealism and the politics of violence spawned military extremism. (Pictures from Munich Sate Museum guidebook 1993). ImageImageImageImage
Post-Versailles Treaty and Weimar, the army and most of its institutions were scattered to the winds. Even the Freikorps movement dissolved. 20s/30s - war fantasies flourished through literature and film. ImageImage
The rise of the sergeant society - the new nation in arms. Nazism was a cult that attracted the scattered remnants of the old military culture. Former front soldiers’ biographies illustrated the transformation from front Stormtroopers into Hitler’s political soldiers. ImageImageImage

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More from @Birdsof79875803

Jan 23
#CultureofWar - Memories of history and public debate - Tom Bower from 1981/3. Bower was able to argue his case in a BBC discussion (1995). An uncomfortable memory at a time of British national nostalgia: (1.00 hour in this link): Image
#CultureofWar - should Britain have saved SS men from deportation to the Soviet Union? The documentary examined the question of collaboration that had stirred public debate since Tolstoy’s publication: ‘Victims of Yalta’ (1977). ImageImage
#CultureofWar - the case of Ivan the Terrible. During the years after Bower’s publication in 1981, the case of Ivan Mykolaiovych Demjanjuk turned and twisted. The balance of historical evidence indicates prosecutions should have continued. Image
Read 4 tweets
Jan 7
My recent publication is about German security doctrines, Nazi military culture and Hitler’s Luftwaffe. It was published September 2021, and endorsed by the leading academics in the field.
The book explains why Hermann Göring planned to incorporate Białowieża Forest (Poland) in the masterplan for a Greater German Reich. The forest lay within the region of Bialystok incorporated into Germany. A map, with thanks to @LivUniPress was included on page 22 of the book.
This book represents the next phase in a body of research that began with the PhD (1997), the first book (2008) and several articles (refer to my @academia page) including the journal of Holocaust and Genocide Studies (2010) @HolocaustMuseum .
Read 19 tweets

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