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Megargee, Geoffrey P. Inside Hitler's High Command. Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 2000.
ISBN 0-7006-1015-4 Geoffrey Megargee's outstanding new book opens with a review of the establishment and evolution of what was originally the Prussian General Staff, and wastes no time providing quotable material:
In the last quarter of the nineteenth century...the saying went, Europe contained five perfect institutions: the Roman Curia, the British Parliament, the Russian ballet, the French opera, and the Prussian General Staff. Similarly, Megargee wastes no time making it clear that, whatever the level of perfection of the other four institutions, the Prussian General Staff was over-rated. Another passage from the opening pages makes a point which will prove very important later in the book.
As was true for the Germans' strengths, their officer training and education system mirrored and promoted their weaknesses, especially the narrowness of their vision. As the General Staff evolved, the debate over intellect and character existed in parallel with another debate over the nature of the education that officers should receive. Originally that education was broad in scope.... By the end of the century, however, the Germans had opted for a narrower selection of practical, technical studies: tactics, staff duties, and military history dominated the curriculum. Even the course terminology reflected the change in the school's mission: the term "art of war" (Kriegskunst) disappeared and "science of war" (Kriegswissenschaft) took its place. By the end of the nineteenth century the school's goal was to turn out technical specialists.
Although the path to war and the actual campaigns form a background from which the account cannot be separated, Megargee creates not an operational history but rather an examination of the structure, culture, and ideas of the German High Commandthe Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (OKW; Armed Forces High Command or Armed Forces Command Staff), and the Oberkommando des Heeres (OKH; Army High Command or General Staff of the Army). In doing so, he demonstrates again and againin an iconoclastic but restrained, scholarly fashionthat the high command was infinitely fallible, especially as it disintegrated under the pressure of a total war of global dimensions for which its officers had never been trained.
On May 2, 1935, Blomberg ordered Fritsch to start planning for an invasion of Czechoslovakia (code name Schulung or Training). Beck responded with a memo to Fritsch the next day, in which he condemned the higher military leadership for even proposing such a plan; he maintained that an invasion of Czechoslovakia would be folly, given the present state of Germany's army and the certainty that an attack would bring in other European powers. Such an act of desperation, he wrote, would lead to a situation in which the military leadership would lose the trust of the country and the soldiers, and both contemporaries and history would damn the men who led it. In a cover letter to Fritsch, he added that he would submit his resignation if Blomberg intended to go ahead with practical war preparations.
Megargee also assesses the struggle by old-line Army leaders to preserve the predominance of their service and undercut the power of inter-service organizations in general and the embryonic Armed Forces Office (soon to become the OKW) in particular despite the "disloyal" Army officers such as Wilhelm Keitel, Alfred Jodl, Kurt Zeitzler, and Walter Warlimont who worked diligently for a true joint command structure.
The Munich Agreement was not the only unpleasant surprise that the crisis forced Halder to confront. He also discovered, in the course of preparing the plan for the invasion, that Hitler would not restrict himself to issuing political and strategic guidance. After Hitler first heard the plan that Halder and his staff had prepared, he decided that the operational concept was flawed. His wish to have Brauchitsch and Halder change the plans, which he made known to them through Keitel, met with a flat rejection at first. Finally Hitler ordered them to report to him. He tried to explain the error of their ways, but when they still refused to abandon their point of view he abruptly ordered them to change the dispositions; then he dismissed them. Halder was badly shaken. The OKH, which had long since lost any say in strategy, could no longer pretend even to have sole control of operations.
Although the OKW was designed to be Hitler's own strategic planning headquarters, the Fuehrer assigned to OKH the task of initial planning for the invasion of Poland. Most German officers, including Halder, were pleased at the prospect.
The first [example] occurred after the 3d and 4th Armies met in the corridor between Pomerania and East Prussia on September 3. At this point General Fedor von Bock, commander of Army Group North, wanted to transfer the bulk of his 4th Army to the east for a wide drive around Warsaw. He argued that this move would prevent the Poles from retreating and regrouping in that area. The OKH refused; it wanted to keep forces in Poland as far west as possible, in case the British and French attacked. This decision shows that the system was functioning properly: the OKH considered the views of a subordinate commander but kept the broader situation in mind and acted within its proper sphere of authority. Unlike the invasion of Poland, Hitler assigned responsibility for the invasion of Norway to OKW. This can be denoted as the beginning of the road toward serious inter-departmental problems.
At no time, however, had the OKW's intended mission included operational planning. The Luftwaffe and the navy had no intention of turning over that power to the OKW, and Goering and Raeder had the political clout to keep the OKW out of their spheres. The army had no such influential figure, and so the OKW was able to take over a General Staff function. This fact introduced the possibility that the OKW-OKH rivalry would take on a whole new aspect, as the two became parallel operational headquarters. For the time being, that problem would retreat into the background, only to reappear later. Megargee is relatively brief as he discusses these early victories, the planning for the invasion of France (including the decision to alter the strategic vision and attack with panzers through the Ardennes), and the triumph in the west in 1940. On the other hand, he explores the nitty-gritty of the OKH and OKW organizational structure, their working procedures, and even key revisions to "The Handbook for General Staff Duty in War" publication. He goes deeply into the inner workings not only of the formal structure of the high command, but also the informal mechanisms by which certain key officers could be excluded from decision-making, treated simply as glorified secretaries, and learn about critical developments only secondhand. These kinds of short circuits could be exacerbated by Hitler's working style.
Hitler often made decisions on the spot, either during his briefings or in separate meetings on special military problems. He would express these decisions through verbal orders that, during this early phase of the war, were often vague. Different listeners interpreted them in different waysand usually to their own advantage. Moreover, Hitler did not always care to whom he directed his orders. Rather than work with the person or agency that normally handled a specific function, the Fuehrer would simply give a task to whomever was handy. The results were often chaotic, as individuals and organizations, sometimes with competing interests, attempted to sort out what Hitler really wanted. The only mitigating circumstance at this stage was that Hitler's intrusions into the military sphere were still not as common or as serious as they would become.
It's important to note, however, thatalthough he certainly plays a major rolethis book is not about Hitler. When Hitler is on stage, Megargee strives to present a balanced portrait. For example, regarding Hitler's fear about his left flank during the 1940 thrust through the Ardennes and the resultant row with Halder and Brauchitsch, it is shown that Hitler was far from alone in these concerns and that in fact there was a considerable gap between the "progressives" and the "old school" about how the tactical situation should be handled.
One remarkable point about the gradual shift in command responsibilities is that, at this stage, no one seemed to care or even to notice. Many officers criticized these developments later on, but at the time they apparently said nothing. The OKW and OKH records contain no comments at all on the command changes; nor does Halder's journal. Given the chagrin that the chief of the General Staff felt at the creation of the OKW theater in Norway, one would expect him to react strongly to these additional changes, had he thought them of any consequence. The vague and apparently temporary nature of the new command relationships may explain the lack of concern on everyone's part. The army still had an intact chain of command in the occupied west as well as strong links with the other theaters. With Barbarossa gearing up, perhaps the OKH saw some logic in letting OKW handle the "quiet" areas. After all, nearly everyone thought the campaign in the east would end quickly, after which the OKH expected to pick up the reins in the west again for the final confrontation with Great Britain. Warlimont later stated that the OKW theaters were considered "exceptions to the rule" until 1942. In fact this is a case in which hindsight can lead to false conclusions; at this early stage of the war, the problems engendered by the split in the command system were more potential than real.
Nevertheless, the organization of the high command was leading to situations where the OKH and OKW squabbled about transfers of divisions, transport, and other resources between their private theaters.
To begin at the top: Hitler's style of command, and especially the so-called Fuehrerprinzip, or leader principle, was beginning to have insidious effects on the command system. According to the Fuehrerprinzip, every commander held sole responsibility for decisions within his command, and he was also duty-bound to obey every order he received from his superior commander. The Fuehrer himself stood, of course, at the top of this hierarchy; his will was quite literally law. Every senior commander (and more junior commanders, too, as the war went on) knew that Hitler had the power to issue or change any order. More and more often they began to appeal to him directly, as Guderian did on December 20, and his personal style was such that he allowed such behavior, even though it clearly violated the chain of command. From this period, although it was not apparent to everyone at the time, Germany's prospects declined rapidly and Megargee's book moves at a similarly accelerated pace. In September 1942 Hitler replaced Halder with Zeitzler. The new Chief of Staff of the OKH promptly set out to infuse the General Staff with National Socialist zeal. At the same time Hitler shuffled other leaders, ordered some reorganization at the high command, and for a time simultaneously held four levels of command: head of state, commander-in-chief of the armed forces, commander-in-chief of the Army, and commander of Army Group B, the latter at a distance of some 800 miles. With these changes, and Zietzler's narrow focus on the Russian Front to the exclusion of all else, came the final split. Henceforth, OKH paid almost no heed to any other front, while OKW assumed full control over every front except the Russian.
From that point forward two factors would dominate the Germans' war effort: an inexorable strategic squeeze as their enemies gained strength, and conflict within their own command apparatus. The relative importance of these two factors to the overall situation is something that must remain in the foreground. Barring some absolute miracle, the Germans could not longer win the war. From that standpoint, then, the command apparatus was completely irrelevant. No matter how well or poorly organized it was, it could not change the situation in any fundamental sense. Its organization, evolution and performance during the remainder of the war remains of interest, however, for two reasons. First, they provide a window into the National Socialist state; an examination of the high command will reveal the growing power of the Nazi Party. And second, the performance of the high command, although it could not affect the basic outcome of the war, is an essential element in explaining the war's nature and length after 1942. As Allied material superiority increasingly made itself felt, the lack of German resources caused greater and greater competition between OKH and OKW for their own purposes. Some of these disputes, despite their deadly seriousness, were laughable.
In late February, for instance, the commander in chief west, Rundstedt, complained to the OKW that the General Staff had ordered a division to move out for the east on April 3; he said that the unit was not yet ready for combat in Russia. The Armed Forces Command Staff then reminded the General Staff that, in accordance with the Fuehrer's policy, only the Command Staff could determine departure dates for units in the OKW theaters. Finally the problem went to Hitler, after which the OKW notified the General Staff that the division would be available on April 4one day later than the General Staff's original target date. Such were the quarrels that were taking up an increasing amount of the staffs' time. After the bomb plot of July 1944, Zeitzler was replaced by Heinz Guderian. Megargee has stern words for him.
Guderian presented himself after the war as a military genius and a staunch opponent of Hitler; he was perhaps the most successful of the Wehrmacht's former leaders at creating an anti-Nazi image for himself. His memoirs (recent editions of which are readily available in German bookstores) and other postwar writings are full of righteous indignation at the role that Hitler and the OKW played in the last months of the war. He wrote that he accepted this latest assignment because "I was ordered to," and because he would have thought himself a coward if he had not tried to save all the innocent civilians and brave soldiers in eastern Germany from the Russians. There is barely a hint in any of his writings that Guderian might ever have been attracted to Nazism, while he implies again and again that he could have saved Germany if only Hitler and the OKW had listened to him. In fact the new chief of the General Staff was one of the Fuehrer's most ardent admirers, even if the two did not always agree on military matters. Furthermore, Guderian shared the same strategic myopia, the same callous determination to fight to the last, as the other members of the high command.
Megargee goes on to quote Guderian's own words, and to chart his actions, which paint a radically different picture than the general's own popular memoirs.
The next 1a was Lieutenant Colonel Ulrich de Maiziere, whose story sums up the status of the General Staff in the last weeks of the war. He was not quite thirty-three years old when he took up his post, and yet for the last two weeks of his tenure (April 10-24, 1945), he was the de facto chief of the Operations Branch. In an interview in 1996 he emphasized that he would not have been qualified for that post as it had existed earlier; he was not experienced enough to plan major operations. De Maiziere was extremely busy, but his role was almost clerical. The Operations Branch collated the situation reports and updated the maps as always. Hitler reviewed the reports in his briefings and made his decisions, which de Maiziere would record and issue as orders. Beyond a very narrow technical realm, then, his qualifications, like those of the men above him, were largely irrelevant.
All this amounted to what Megargee calls "...planning impossible movements of nonexistent troops into imaginary positions." De Maiziere went so far as to place a quote from a film in his office: "It is not my place to think about the senselessness of the tasks that are assigned to me."
The Second World War is now sixty years behind us. The ranks of those who remember it thin daily; few indeed survive who experienced it at the policy-making level. Already the literature is the only reliable guide to its history, and here the record is spotty. The myth persists of a supremely talented, if politically naive and ambitious, German officer corps being led unwittingly into war and defeat by a ruthless dictator, a megalomaniac with no understanding of the military art. Clearly that myth has little basis in fact. Germany's senior military leaders supported the rise of an authoritarian government whose policies they expected would lead to a war of aggression. Weaknesses in their professional culture and ideas contributed to serious flaws in their strategy and operations. They made strategic decisions, independently and in support of Hitler's, that started a war that Germany had little chance of winning, and they continued it long past the point when the futility of the effort should have been obvious. They willingly gave up their authority over all but the most mechanistic tasks. Their intelligence, personnel, and logistical systems were too weak to support their broader operational goals, which fact they never recognized. The strengths of their staff systems and tactics, combined with a shared ideology and their enemies' greater initial weakness, were all that allowed them to get as far as they did. As those advantages weakened or disappeared, the Germans' advances turned inevitably into retreats. Thus, although Hitler does remain central to the story of the German high command, we can now place him in the proper context, at the center of a flawed system that supported him almost unconditionally.
This is a first-class study of the German high command, packed with fresh nuances, new perspectives, and invigorating insights. At the end of the book, the Roman Curia, the British Parliament, the Russian ballet, and the French opera might remain standing, but the German General Staff has been demolished as much by Megargee's methodical investigation as by the Allied assaults.
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Reviewed 20 August 2000
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