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<h2> CHAPTER XI. THE USE OF THE BATTLE (continued) </h2>
<p>WHATEVER form the conduct of War may take in particular cases, and
whatever we may have to admit in the sequel as necessary respecting it: we
have only to refer to the conception of War to be convinced of what
follows:</p>
<p>1. The destruction of the enemy's military force, is the leading principle
of War, and for the whole chapter of positive action the direct way to the
object.</p>
<p>2. This destruction of the enemy's force, must be principally effected by
means of battle.</p>
<p>3. Only great and general battles can produce great results.</p>
<p>4. The results will be greatest when combats unite themselves in one great
battle.</p>
<p>5. It is only in a great battle that the General-in-Chief commands in
person, and it is in the nature of things, that he should place more
confidence in himself than in his subordinates.</p>
<p>From these truths a double law follows, the parts of which mutually
support each other; namely, that the destruction of the enemy's military
force is to be sought for principally by great battles, and their results;
and that the chief object of great battles must be the destruction of the
enemy's military force.</p>
<p>No doubt the annihilation-principle is to be found more or less in other
means—granted there are instances in which through favourable
circumstances in a minor combat, the destruction of the enemy's forces has
been disproportionately great (Maxen), and on the other hand in a battle,
the taking or holding a single post may be predominant in importance as an
object—but as a general rule it remains a paramount truth, that
battles are only fought with a view to the destruction of the enemy's
Army, and that this destruction can only be effected by their means.</p>
<p>The battle may therefore be regarded as War concentrated, as the centre of
effort of the whole War or campaign. As the sun's rays unite in the focus
of the concave mirror in a perfect image, and in the fulness of their
heat; to the forces and circumstances of War, unite in a focus in the
great battle for one concentrated utmost effort.</p>
<p>The very assemblage of forces in one great whole, which takes place more
or less in all Wars, indicates an intention to strike a decisive blow with
this whole, either voluntarily as assailant, or constrained by the
opposite party as defender. When this great blow does not follow, then
some modifying, and retarding motives have attached themselves to the
original motive of hostility, and have weakened, altered or completely
checked the movement. But also, even in this condition of mutual inaction
which has been the key-note in so many Wars, the idea of a possible battle
serves always for both parties as a point of direction, a distant focus in
the construction of their plans. The more War is War in earnest, the more
it is a venting of animosity and hostility, a mutual struggle to
overpower, so much the more will all activities join deadly contest, and
also the more prominent in importance becomes the battle.</p>
<p>In general, when the object aimed at is of a great and positive nature,
one therefore in which the interests of the enemy are deeply concerned,
the battle offers itself as the most natural means; it is, therefore, also
the best as we shall show more plainly hereafter: and, as a rule, when it
is evaded from aversion to the great decision, punishment follows.</p>
<p>The positive object belong to the offensive, and therefore the battle is
also more particularly his means. But without examining the conception of
offensive and defensive more minutely here, we must still observe that,
even for the defender in most cases, there is no other effectual means
with which to meet the exigencies of his situation, to solve the problem
presented to him.</p>
<p>The battle is the bloodiest way of solution. True, it is not merely
reciprocal slaughter, and its effect is more a killing of the enemy's
courage than of the enemy's soldiers, as we shall see more plainly in the
next chapter—but still blood is always its price, and slaughter its
character as well as name;(*) from this the humanity in the General's mind
recoils with horror.</p>
<p>(*) "Schlacht", from schlachten = to slaughter.<br/></p>
<p>But the soul of the man trembles still more at the thought of the decision
to be given with one single blow. IN ONE POINT of space and time all
action is here pressed together, and at such a moment there is stirred up
within us a dim feeling as if in this narrow space all our forces could
not develop themselves and come into activity, as if we had already gained
much by mere time, although this time owes us nothing at all. This is all
mere illusion, but even as illusion it is something, and the same weakness
which seizes upon the man in every other momentous decision may well be
felt more powerfully by the General, when he must stake interests of such
enormous weight upon one venture.</p>
<p>Thus, then, Statesmen and Generals have at all times endeavoured to avoid
the decisive battle, seeking either to attain their aim without it, or
dropping that aim unperceived. Writers on history and theory have then
busied themselves to discover in some other feature in these campaigns not
only an equivalent for the decision by battle which has been avoided, but
even a higher art. In this way, in the present age, it came very near to
this, that a battle in the economy of War was looked upon as an evil,
rendered necessary through some error committed, a morbid paroxysm to
which a regular prudent system of War would never lead: only those
Generals were to deserve laurels who knew how to carry on War without
spilling blood, and the theory of War—a real business for Brahmins—was
to be specially directed to teaching this.</p>
<p>Contemporary history has destroyed this illusion,(*) but no one can
guarantee that it will not sooner or later reproduce itself, and lead
those at the head of affairs to perversities which please man's weakness,
and therefore have the greater affinity for his nature. Perhaps,
by-and-by, Buonaparte's campaigns and battles will be looked upon as mere
acts of barbarism and stupidity, and we shall once more turn with
satisfaction and confidence to the dress-sword of obsolete and musty
institutions and forms. If theory gives a caution against this, then it
renders a real service to those who listen to its warning voice. MAY WE
SUCCEED IN LENDING A HAND TO THOSE WHO IN OUR DEAR NATIVE LAND ARE CALLED
UPON TO SPEAK WITH AUTHORITY ON THESE MATTERS, THAT WE MAY BE THEIR GUIDE
INTO THIS FIELD OF INQUIRY, AND EXCITE THEM TO MAKE A CANDID EXAMINATION
OF THE SUBJECT.(**)</p>
<p>(*) On the Continent only, it still preserves full vitality<br/>
in the minds of British politicians and pressmen.—EDITOR.<br/>
<br/>
(**) This prayer was abundantly granted—vide the German<br/>
victories of 1870.—EDITOR.<br/></p>
<p>Not only the conception of War but experience also leads us to look for a
great decision only in a great battle. From time immemorial, only great
victories have led to great successes on the offensive side in the
absolute form, on the defensive side in a manner more or less
satisfactory. Even Buonaparte would not have seen the day of Ulm, unique
in its kind, if he had shrunk from shedding blood; it is rather to be
regarded as only a second crop from the victorious events in his preceding
campaigns. It is not only bold, rash, and presumptuous Generals who have
sought to complete their work by the great venture of a decisive battle,
but also fortunate ones as well; and we may rest satisfied with the answer
which they have thus given to this vast question.</p>
<p>Let us not hear of Generals who conquer without bloodshed. If a bloody
slaughter is a horrible sight, then that is a ground for paying more
respect to War, but not for making the sword we wear blunter and blunter
by degrees from feelings of humanity, until some one steps in with one
that is sharp and lops off the arm from our body.</p>
<p>We look upon a great battle as a principal decision, but certainly not as
the only one necessary for a War or a campaign. Instances of a great
battle deciding a whole campaign, have been frequent only in modern times,
those which have decided a whole War, belong to the class of rare
exceptions.</p>
<p>A decision which is brought about by a great battle depends naturally not
on the battle itself, that is on the mass of combatants engaged in it, and
on the intensity of the victory, but also on a number of other relations
between the military forces opposed to each other, and between the States
to which these forces belong. But at the same time that the principal mass
of the force available is brought to the great duel, a great decision is
also brought on, the extent of which may perhaps be foreseen in many
respects, though not in all, and which although not the only one, still is
the FIRST decision, and as such, has an influence on those which succeed.
Therefore a deliberately planned great battle, according to its relations,
is more or less, but always in some degree, to be regarded as the leading
means and central point of the whole system. The more a General takes the
field in the true spirit of War as well as of every contest, with the
feeling and the idea, that is the conviction, that he must and will
conquer, the more he will strive to throw every weight into the scale in
the first battle, hope and strive to win everything by it. Buonaparte
hardly ever entered upon a War without thinking of conquering his enemy at
once in the first battle,(*) and Frederick the Great, although in a more
limited sphere, and with interests of less magnitude at stake, thought the
same when, at the head of a small Army, he sought to disengage his rear
from the Russians or the Federal Imperial Army.</p>
<p>(*) This was Moltke's essential idea in his preparations for<br/>
the War of 1870. See his secret memorandum issued to G.O.C.s<br/>
on May 7. 1870, pointing to a battle on the Upper Saar as<br/>
his primary purpose.—EDITOR.<br/></p>
<p>The decision which is given by the great battle, depends, we have said,
partly on the battle itself, that is on the number of troops engaged, and
partly on the magnitude of the success.</p>
<p>How the General may increase its importance in respect to the first point
is evident in itself and we shall merely observe that according to the
importance of the great battle, the number of cases which are decided
along with it increases, and that therefore Generals who, confident in
themselves have been lovers of great decisions, have always managed to
make use of the greater part of their troops in it without neglecting on
that account essential points elsewhere.</p>
<p>As regards the consequences or speaking more correctly the effectiveness
of a victory, that depends chiefly on four points:</p>
<p>1. On the tactical form adopted as the order of battle.</p>
<p>2. On the nature of the country.</p>
<p>3. On the relative proportions of the three arms.</p>
<p>4. On the relative strength of the two Armies.</p>
<p>A battle with parallel fronts and without any action against a flank will
seldom yield as great success as one in which the defeated Army has been
turned, or compelled to change front more or less. In a broken or hilly
country the successes are likewise smaller, because the power of the blow
is everywhere less.</p>
<p>If the cavalry of the vanquished is equal or superior to that of the
victor, then the effects of the pursuit are diminished, and by that great
part of the results of victory are lost.</p>
<p>Finally it is easy to understand that if superior numbers are on the side
of the conqueror, and he uses his advantage in that respect to turn the
flank of his adversary, or compel him to change front, greater results
will follow than if the conqueror had been weaker in numbers than the
vanquished. The battle of Leuthen may certainly be quoted as a practical
refutation of this principle, but we beg permission for once to say what
we otherwise do not like, NO RULE WITHOUT AN EXCEPTION.</p>
<p>In all these ways, therefore, the Commander has the means of giving his
battle a decisive character; certainly he thus exposes himself to an
increased amount of danger, but his whole line of action is subject to
that dynamic law of the moral world.</p>
<p>There is then nothing in War which can be put in comparison with the great
battle in point of importance, AND THE ACME OF STRATEGIC ABILITY IS
DISPLAYED IN THE PROVISION OF MEANS FOR THIS GREAT EVENT, IN THE SKILFUL
DETERMINATION OF PLACE AND TIME, AND DIRECTION OF TROOPS, AND ITS THE GOOD
USE MADE OF SUCCESS.</p>
<p>But it does not follow from the importance of these things that they must
be of a very complicated and recondite nature; all is here rather simple,
the art of combination by no means great; but there is great need of
quickness in judging of circumstances, need of energy, steady resolution,
a youthful spirit of enterprise—heroic qualities, to which we shall
often have to refer. There is, therefore, but little wanted here of that
which can be taught by books and there is much that, if it can be taught
at all, must come to the General through some other medium than printer's
type.</p>
<p>The impulse towards a great battle, the voluntary, sure progress to it,
must proceed from a feeling of innate power and a clear sense of the
necessity; in other words, it must proceed from inborn courage and from
perceptions sharpened by contact with the higher interests of life.</p>
<p>Great examples are the best teachers, but it is certainly a misfortune if
a cloud of theoretical prejudices comes between, for even the sunbeam is
refracted and tinted by the clouds. To destroy such prejudices, which many
a time rise and spread themselves like a miasma, is an imperative duty of
theory, for the misbegotten offspring of human reason can also be in turn
destroyed by pure reason.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0044" id="link2HCH0044"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XII. STRATEGIC MEANS OF UTILISING VICTORY </h2>
<p>THE more difficult part, viz., that of perfectly preparing the victory, is
a silent service of which the merit belongs to Strategy and yet for which
it is hardly sufficiently commended. It appears brilliant and full of
renown by turning to good account a victory gained.</p>
<p>What may be the special object of a battle, how it is connected with the
whole system of a War, whither the career of victory may lead according to
the nature of circumstances, where its culminating-point lies—all
these are things which we shall not enter upon until hereafter. But under
any conceivable circumstances the fact holds good, that without a pursuit
no victory can have a great effect, and that, however short the career of
victory may be, it must always lead beyond the first steps in pursuit; and
in order to avoid the frequent repetition of this, we shall now dwell for
a moment on this necessary supplement of victory in general.</p>
<p>The pursuit of a beaten Army commences at the moment that Army, giving up
the combat, leaves its position; all previous movements in one direction
and another belong not to that but to the progress of the battle itself.
Usually victory at the moment here described, even if it is certain, is
still as yet small and weak in its proportions, and would not rank as an
event of any great positive advantage if not completed by a pursuit on the
first day. Then it is mostly, as we have before said, that the trophies
which give substance to the victory begin to be gathered up. Of this
pursuit we shall speak in the next place.</p>
<p>Usually both sides come into action with their physical powers
considerably deteriorated, for the movements immediately preceding have
generally the character of very urgent circumstances. The efforts which
the forging out of a great combat costs, complete the exhaustion; from
this it follows that the victorious party is very little less disorganised
and out of his original formation than the vanquished, and therefore
requires time to reform, to collect stragglers, and issue fresh ammunition
to those who are without. All these things place the conqueror himself in
the state of crisis of which we have already spoken. If now the defeated
force is only a detached portion of the enemy's Army, or if it has
otherwise to expect a considerable reinforcement, then the conqueror may
easily run into the obvious danger of having to pay dear for his victory,
and this consideration, in such a case, very soon puts an end to pursuit,
or at least restricts it materially. Even when a strong accession of force
by the enemy is not to be feared, the conqueror finds in the above
circumstances a powerful check to the vivacity of his pursuit. There is no
reason to fear that the victory will be snatched away, but adverse combats
are still possible, and may diminish the advantages which up to the
present have been gained. Moreover, at this moment the whole weight of all
that is sensuous in an Army, its wants and weaknesses, are dependent on
the will of the Commander. All the thousands under his command require
rest and refreshment, and long to see a stop put to toil and danger for
the present; only a few, forming an exception, can see and feel beyond the
present moment, it is only amongst this little number that there is
sufficient mental vigour to think, after what is absolutely necessary at
the moment has been done, upon those results which at such a moment only
appear to the rest as mere embellishments of victory—as a luxury of
triumph. But all these thousands have a voice in the council of the
General, for through the various steps of the military hierarchy these
interests of the sensuous creature have their sure conductor into the
heart of the Commander. He himself, through mental and bodily fatigue, is
more or less weakened in his natural activity, and thus it happens then
that, mostly from these causes, purely incidental to human nature, less is
done than might have been done, and that generally what is done is to be
ascribed entirely to the THIRST FOR GLORY, the energy, indeed also the
HARD-HEARTEDNESS of the General-in-Chief. It is only thus we can explain
the hesitating manner in which many Generals follow up a victory which
superior numbers have given them. The first pursuit of the enemy we limit
in general to the extent of the first day, including the night following
the victory. At the end of that period the necessity of rest ourselves
prescribes a halt in any case.</p>
<p>This first pursuit has different natural degrees.</p>
<p>The first is, if cavalry alone are employed; in that case it amounts
usually more to alarming and watching than to pressing the enemy in
reality, because the smallest obstacle of ground is generally sufficient
to check the pursuit. Useful as cavalry may be against single bodies of
broken demoralised troops, still when opposed to the bulk of the beaten
Army it becomes again only the auxiliary arm, because the troops in
retreat can employ fresh reserves to cover the movement, and, therefore,
at the next trifling obstacle of ground, by combining all arms they can
make a stand with success. The only exception to this is in the case of an
army in actual flight in a complete state of dissolution.</p>
<p>The second degree is, if the pursuit is made by a strong advance-guard
composed of all arms, the greater part consisting naturally of cavalry.
Such a pursuit generally drives the enemy as far as the nearest strong
position for his rear-guard, or the next position affording space for his
Army. Neither can usually be found at once, and, therefore, the pursuit
can be carried further; generally, however, it does not extend beyond the
distance of one or at most a couple of leagues, because otherwise the
advance-guard would not feel itself sufficiently supported. The third and
most vigorous degree is when the victorious Army itself continues to
advance as far as its physical powers can endure. In this case the beaten
Army will generally quit such ordinary positions as a country usually
offers on the mere show of an attack, or of an intention to turn its
flank; and the rear-guard will be still less likely to engage in an
obstinate resistance.</p>
<p>In all three cases the night, if it sets in before the conclusion of the
whole act, usually puts an end to it, and the few instances in which this
has not taken place, and the pursuit has been continued throughout the
night, must be regarded as pursuits in an exceptionally vigorous form.</p>
<p>If we reflect that in fighting by night everything must be, more or less,
abandoned to chance, and that at the conclusion of a battle the regular
cohesion and order of things in an army must inevitably be disturbed, we
may easily conceive the reluctance of both Generals to carrying on their
business under such disadvantageous conditions. If a complete dissolution
of the vanquished Army, or a rare superiority of the victorious Army in
military virtue does not ensure success, everything would in a manner be
given up to fate, which can never be for the interest of any one, even of
the most fool-hardy General. As a rule, therefore, night puts an end to
pursuit, even when the battle has only been decided shortly before
darkness sets in. This allows the conquered either time for rest and to
rally immediately, or, if he retreats during the night it gives him a
march in advance. After this break the conquered is decidedly in a better
condition; much of that which had been thrown into confusion has been
brought again into order, ammunition has been renewed, the whole has been
put into a fresh formation. Whatever further encounter now takes place
with the enemy is a new battle not a continuation of the old, and although
it may be far from promising absolute success, still it is a fresh combat,
and not merely a gathering up of the debris by the victor.</p>
<p>When, therefore, the conqueror can continue the pursuit itself throughout
the night, if only with a strong advance-guard composed of all arms of the
service, the effect of the victory is immensely increased, of this the
battles of Leuthen and La Belle Alliance(*) are examples.</p>
<p>(*) Waterloo.<br/></p>
<p>The whole action of this pursuit is mainly tactical, and we only dwell
upon it here in order to make plain the difference which through it may be
produced in the effect of a victory.</p>
<p>This first pursuit, as far as the nearest stopping-point, belongs as a
right to every conqueror, and is hardly in any way connected with his
further plans and combinations. These may considerably diminish the
positive results of a victory gained with the main body of the Army, but
they cannot make this first use of it impossible; at least cases of that
kind, if conceivable at all, must be so uncommon that they should have no
appreciable influence on theory. And here certainly we must say that the
example afforded by modern Wars opens up quite a new field for energy. In
preceding Wars, resting on a narrower basis, and altogether more
circumscribed in their scope, there were many unnecessary conventional
restrictions in various ways, but particularly in this point. THE
CONCEPTION, HONOUR OF VICTORY seemed to Generals so much by far the chief
thing that they thought the less of the complete destruction of the
enemy's military force, as in point of fact that destruction of force
appeared to them only as one of the many means in War, not by any means as
the principal, much less as the only means; so that they the more readily
put the sword in its sheath the moment the enemy had lowered his. Nothing
seemed more natural to them than to stop the combat as soon as the
decision was obtained, and to regard all further carnage as unnecessary
cruelty. Even if this false philosophy did not determine their resolutions
entirely, still it was a point of view by which representations of the
exhaustion of all powers, and physical impossibility of continuing the
struggle, obtained readier evidence and greater weight. Certainly the
sparing one's own instrument of victory is a vital question if we only
possess this one, and foresee that soon the time may arrive when it will
not be sufficient for all that remains to be done, for every continuation
of the offensive must lead ultimately to complete exhaustion. But this
calculation was still so far false, as the further loss of forces by a
continuance of the pursuit could bear no proportion to that which the
enemy must suffer. That view, therefore, again could only exist because
the military forces were not considered the vital factor. And so we find
that in former Wars real heroes only—such as Charles XII.,
Marlborough, Eugene, Frederick the Great—added a vigorous pursuit to
their victories when they were decisive enough, and that other Generals
usually contented themselves with the possession of the field of battle.
In modern times the greater energy infused into the conduct of Wars
through the greater importance of the circumstances from which they have
proceeded has thrown down these conventional barriers; the pursuit has
become an all-important business for the conqueror; trophies have on that
account multiplied in extent, and if there are cases also in modern
Warfare in which this has not been the case, still they belong to the list
of exceptions, and are to be accounted for by peculiar circumstances.</p>
<p>At Gorschen(*) and Bautzen nothing but the superiority of the allied
cavalry prevented a complete rout, at Gross Beeren and Dennewitz the
ill-will of Bernadotte, the Crown Prince of Sweden; at Laon the enfeebled
personal condition of Bluecher, who was then seventy years old and at the
moment confined to a dark room owing to an injury to his eyes.</p>
<p>(*) Gorschen or Lutzen, May 2, 1813; Gross Beeren and<br/>
Dennewitz, August 22, 1813; Bautzen. May 22, 1913; Laon,<br/>
March 10 1813.<br/></p>
<p>But Borodino is also an illustration to the point here, and we cannot
resist saying a few more words about it, partly because we do not consider
the circumstances are explained simply by attaching blame to Buonaparte,
partly because it might appear as if this, and with it a great number of
similar cases, belonged to that class which we have designated as so
extremely rare, cases in which the general relations seize and fetter the
General at the very beginning of the battle. French authors in particular,
and great admirers of Buonaparte (Vaudancourt, Chambray, Se'gur), have
blamed him decidedly because he did not drive the Russian Army completely
off the field, and use his last reserves to scatter it, because then what
was only a lost battle would have been a complete rout. We should be
obliged to diverge too far to describe circumstantially the mutual
situation of the two Armies; but this much is evident, that when
Buonaparte passed the Niemen with his Army the same corps which afterwards
fought at Borodino numbered 300,000 men, of whom now only 120,000
remained, he might therefore well be apprehensive that he would not have
enough left to march upon Moscow, the point on which everything seemed to
depend. The victory which he had just gained gave him nearly a certainty
of taking that capital, for that the Russians would be in a condition to
fight a second battle within eight days seemed in the highest degree
improbable; and in Moscow he hoped to find peace. No doubt the complete
dispersion of the Russian Army would have made this peace much more
certain; but still the first consideration was to get to Moscow, that is,
to get there with a force with which he should appear dictator over the
capital, and through that over the Empire and the Government. The force
which he brought with him to Moscow was no longer sufficient for that, as
shown in the sequel, but it would have been still less so if, in
scattering the Russian Army, he had scattered his own at the same time.
Buonaparte was thoroughly alive to all this, and in our eyes he stands
completely justified. But on that account this case is still not to be
reckoned amongst those in which, through the general relations, the
General is interdicted from following up his victory, for there never was
in his case any question of mere pursuit. The victory was decided at four
o'clock in the afternoon, but the Russians still occupied the greater part
of the field of battle; they were not yet disposed to give up the ground,
and if the attack had been renewed, they would still have offered a most
determined resistance, which would have undoubtedly ended in their
complete defeat, but would have cost the conqueror much further bloodshed.
We must therefore reckon the Battle of Borodino as amongst battles, like
Bautzen, left unfinished. At Bautzen the vanquished preferred to quit the
field sooner; at Borodino the conqueror preferred to content himself with
a half victory, not because the decision appeared doubtful, but because he
was not rich enough to pay for the whole.</p>
<p>Returning now to our subject, the deduction from our reflections in
relation to the first stage of pursuit is, that the energy thrown into it
chiefly determines the value of the victory; that this pursuit is a second
act of the victory, in many cases more important also than the first, and
that strategy, whilst here approaching tactics to receive from it the
harvest of success, exercises the first act of her authority by demanding
this completion of the victory.</p>
<p>But further, the effects of victory are very seldom found to stop with
this first pursuit; now first begins the real career to which victory lent
velocity. This course is conditioned as we have already said, by other
relations of which it is not yet time to speak. But we must here mention,
what there is of a general character in the pursuit in order to avoid
repetition when the subject occurs again.</p>
<p>In the further stages of pursuit, again, we can distinguish three degrees:
the simple pursuit, a hard pursuit, and a parallel march to intercept.</p>
<p>The simple FOLLOWING or PURSUING causes the enemy to continue his retreat,
until he thinks he can risk another battle. It will therefore in its
effect suffice to exhaust the advantages gained, and besides that, all
that the enemy cannot carry with him, sick, wounded, and disabled from
fatigue, quantities of baggage, and carriages of all kinds, will fall into
our hands, but this mere following does not tend to heighten the disorder
in the enemy's Army, an effect which is produced by the two following
causes.</p>
<p>If, for instance, instead of contenting ourselves with taking up every day
the camp the enemy has just vacated, occupying just as much of the country
as he chooses to abandon, we make our arrangements so as every day to
encroach further, and accordingly with our advance-guard organised for the
purpose, attack his rear-guard every time it attempts to halt, then such a
course will hasten his retreat, and consequently tend to increase his
disorganisation.—This it will principally effect by the character of
continuous flight, which his retreat will thus assume. Nothing has such a
depressing influence on the soldier, as the sound of the enemy's cannon
afresh at the moment when, after a forced march he seeks some rest; if
this excitement is continued from day to day for some time, it may lead to
a complete rout. There lies in it a constant admission of being obliged to
obey the law of the enemy, and of being unfit for any resistance, and the
consciousness of this cannot do otherwise than weaken the moral of an Army
in a high degree. The effect of pressing the enemy in this way attains a
maximum when it drives the enemy to make night marches. If the conqueror
scares away the discomfited opponent at sunset from a camp which has just
been taken up either for the main body of the Army, or for the rear-guard,
the conquered must either make a night march, or alter his position in the
night, retiring further away, which is much the same thing; the victorious
party can on the other hand pass the night in quiet.</p>
<p>The arrangement of marches, and the choice of positions depend in this
case also upon so many other things, especially on the supply of the Army,
on strong natural obstacles in the country, on large towns, &c. &c.,
that it would be ridiculous pedantry to attempt to show by a geometrical
analysis how the pursuer, being able to impose his laws on the retreating
enemy, can compel him to march at night while he takes his rest. But
nevertheless it is true and practicable that marches in pursuit may be so
planned as to have this tendency, and that the efficacy of the pursuit is
very much enchanced thereby. If this is seldom attended to in the
execution, it is because such a procedure is more difficult for the
pursuing Army, than a regular adherence to ordinary marches in the
daytime. To start in good time in the morning, to encamp at mid-day, to
occupy the rest of the day in providing for the ordinary wants of the
Army, and to use the night for repose, is a much more convenient method
than to regulate one's movements exactly according to those of the enemy,
therefore to determine nothing till the last moment, to start on the
march, sometimes in the morning, sometimes in the evening, to be always
for several hours in the presence of the enemy, and exchanging cannon
shots with him, and keeping up skirmishing fire, to plan manoeuvres to
turn him, in short, to make the whole outlay of tactical means which such
a course renders necessary. All that naturally bears with a heavy weight
on the pursuing Army, and in War, where there are so many burdens to be
borne, men are always inclined to strip off those which do not seem
absolutely necessary. These observations are true, whether applied to a
whole Army or as in the more usual case, to a strong advance-guard. For
the reasons just mentioned, this second method of pursuit, this continued
pressing of the enemy pursued is rather a rare occurrence; even Buonaparte
in his Russian campaign, 1812, practised it but little, for the reasons
here apparent, that the difficulties and hardships of this campaign,
already threatened his Army with destruction before it could reach its
object; on the other hand, the French in their other campaigns have
distinguished themselves by their energy in this point also.</p>
<p>Lastly, the third and most effectual form of pursuit is, the parallel
march to the immediate object of the retreat.</p>
<p>Every defeated Army will naturally have behind it, at a greater or less
distance, some point, the attainment of which is the first purpose in
view, whether it be that failing in this its further retreat might be
compromised, as in the case of a defile, or that it is important for the
point itself to reach it before the enemy, as in the case of a great city,
magazines, &c., or, lastly, that the Army at this point will gain new
powers of defence, such as a strong position, or junction with other
corps.</p>
<p>Now if the conqueror directs his march on this point by a lateral road, it
is evident how that may quicken the retreat of the beaten Army in a
destructive manner, convert it into hurry, perhaps into flight.(*) The
conquered has only three ways to counteract this: the first is to throw
himself in front of the enemy, in order by an unexpected attack to gain
that probability of success which is lost to him in general from his
position; this plainly supposes an enterprising bold General, and an
excellent Army, beaten but not utterly defeated; therefore, it can only be
employed by a beaten Army in very few cases.</p>
<p>(*) This point is exceptionally well treated by von<br/>
Bernhardi in his "Cavalry in Future Wars." London: Murray,<br/>
1906.<br/></p>
<p>The second way is hastening the retreat; but this is just what the
conqueror wants, and it easily leads to immoderate efforts on the part of
the troops, by which enormous losses are sustained, in stragglers, broken
guns, and carriages of all kinds.</p>
<p>The third way is to make a detour, and get round the nearest point of
interception, to march with more ease at a greater distance from the
enemy, and thus to render the haste required less damaging. This last way
is the worst of all, it generally turns out like a new debt contracted by
an insolvent debtor, and leads to greater embarrassment. There are cases
in which this course is advisable; others where there is nothing else
left; also instances in which it has been successful; but upon the whole
it is certainly true that its adoption is usually influenced less by a
clear persuasion of its being the surest way of attaining the aim than by
another inadmissible motive—this motive is the dread of encountering
the enemy. Woe to the Commander who gives in to this! However much the
moral of his Army may have deteriorated, and however well founded may be
his apprehensions of being at a disadvantage in any conflict with the
enemy, the evil will only be made worse by too anxiously avoiding every
possible risk of collision. Buonaparte in 1813 would never have brought
over the Rhine with him the 30,000 or 40,000 men who remained after the
battle of Hanau,(*) if he had avoided that battle and tried to pass the
Rhine at Mannheim or Coblenz. It is just by means of small combats
carefully prepared and executed, and in which the defeated army being on
the defensive, has always the assistance of the ground—it is just by
these that the moral strength of the Army can first be resuscitated.</p>
<p>(*) At Hanau (October 30, 1813), the Bavarians some 50,000<br/>
strong threw themselves across the line of Napoleon's<br/>
retreat from Leipsic. By a masterly use of its artillery the<br/>
French tore the Bavarians asunder and marched on over their<br/>
bodies.—EDITOR.<br/></p>
<p>The beneficial effect of the smallest successes is incredible; but with
most Generals the adoption of this plan implies great self-command. The
other way, that of evading all encounter, appears at first so much easier,
that there is a natural preference for its adoption. It is therefore
usually just this system of evasion which best, promotes the view of the
pursuer, and often ends with the complete downfall of the pursued; we
must, however, recollect here that we are speaking of a whole Army, not of
a single Division, which, having been cut off, is seeking to join the main
Army by making a de'tour; in such a case circumstances are different, and
success is not uncommon. But there is one condition requisite to the
success of this race of two Corps for an object, which is that a Division
of the pursuing army should follow by the same road which the pursued has
taken, in order to pick up stragglers, and keep up the impression which
the presence of the enemy never fails to make. Bluecher neglected this in
his, in other respects unexceptionable, pursuit after La Belle Alliance.</p>
<p>Such marches tell upon the pursuer as well as the pursued, and they are
not advisable if the enemy's Army rallies itself upon another considerable
one; if it has a distinguished General at its head, and if its destruction
is not already well prepared. But when this means can be adopted, it acts
also like a great mechanical power. The losses of the beaten Army from
sickness and fatigue are on such a disproportionate scale, the spirit of
the Army is so weakened and lowered by the constant solicitude about
impending ruin, that at last anything like a well organised stand is out
of the question; every day thousands of prisoners fall into the enemy's
hands without striking a blow. In such a season of complete good fortune,
the conqueror need not hesitate about dividing his forces in order to draw
into the vortex of destruction everything within reach of his Army, to cut
off detachments, to take fortresses unprepared for defence, to occupy
large towns, &c. &c. He may do anything until a new state of
things arises, and the more he ventures in this way the longer will it be
before that change will take place. There is no want of examples of
brilliant results from grand decisive victories, and of great and vigorous
pursuits in the wars of Buonaparte. We need only quote Jena 1806,
Ratisbonne 1809, Leipsic 1813, and Belle- Alliance 1815.</p>
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