Indeed, it is General Erich von Ludendorff during the World War I (and in his 1935 book "Total War") who first reversed the formula of Clausewitz, calling for total war - the complete mobilization of all resources, including policy and social systems, to the winning of war.
There are several reasons for changing concept and recognition of total war in the nineteenth century. The main reason is industrialization. As countries' natural and capital resources grew, it became clear that some forms of conflict demanded more resources than others. For example, if the United States were to subdue a Native American tribe in an extended campaign lasting years, it still took much fewer resources than waging a month of war during the American Civil War. Consequently, the greater cost of warfare became evident. An industrialized nation could distinguish and then choose the intensity of warfare that it wished to engage in.
Additionally, this is the time when warfare was becoming more mechanized. A factory in a city would have more to do with warfare than it did before. The factory itself would become a target, because it contributed to the war effort. It follows as well that the factory's workers would also be targets.
There is no single definition of total war, except that there is general agreement among historians that the First World War and Second World War were both examples. A large number of historians consider the American Civil War to be the earliest example, some consider the wars of German unification the first, and others pick other starting points. Since the concept emerged gradually, however, there is no truly definite answer.
Thus, definitions do vary, but most hold to the spirit offered by Roger Chickering's definition Total War: The German and American Experiences, 1871-1914: "Total war is distinguished by its unprecedented intensity and extent. Theaters of operations span the globe; the scale of battle is practically limitless. Total war is fought heedless of the restraints of morality, custom, or international law, for the combatants are inspired by hatreds born of modern ideologies. Total war requires the mobilization not only of armed forces but also of whole populations. The most crucial determinant of total war is the widespread, indiscriminate, and deliberate inclusion of civilians as legitimate military targets."
Total war also resulted in the mobilization of the home front. Propaganda became a required component of total war in order to boost production and maintain morale. Rationing took place to provide more material for waging war.
Another consequence was the expansion of the peace time military. A navy could not be built overnight, and it had to be large enough to fight any potential enemy. This led to the dreadnought arms race before World War I. To justify the huge expenditure, populations had to become accustomed to thinking of the most likely potential enemy, as an enemy, which helped to foster war hysteria and jingoism. Large standing armies for countries with land borders close to a potential enemy and strong navies for maritime powers were the only way to prevent defeat before the economy could be mobilized.
Total war was widely practiced by the Greeks, as related in the Illiad, by the Romans, as in the destruction of Carthage, and by the Mongols. It was practiced in the Hundred Years War as a matter of policy by the English in France. It sees mention in the Old Testament numerous times and was a feature of several of Timur's campaigns, and in the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland. It was also seen in Xinjiang and Gansu during the Manchu supression of the 19th Century Muslim Rebellion.
"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."
In particular the destruction of the American Bison was an attempt to destroy the food supply of many Plains Indians such as the Sioux and thus destroy their way of life. There were also wholesale slaughters of civilian populations such as at Wounded Knee.
On the other hand slaughtering of Indian civilians had been going on a long time before the civil war, as far back as the Pequot War, King Philip's War, the DeSoto expedition, and Christopher Columbus.
During this conflict both sides tried to deprive each other of the resources to continue the war and it became standard practice to destroy agricultural areas, butcher the population of cities and in general exact a brutal price from captured enemy lands in order to drastically weaken the opposition's war effort. This war truly was total in that civilians on both sides participated to a significant extent in the war effort and in that armies on both sides waged war on the civilian population as well as military forces. In total between 20 and 50 million died in the conflict making it bloodier than the First World War and possibly bloodier than the Second World War as well if the upper end figures are accurate.
One of the features of Total War in Britain was the use of propaganda posters to divert all attention to the War on the home front. Posters were used to influence people's decision on what to eat, what occupations to take (Women were used as nurses and in munitions factories), and to change the attitude of support towards the war effort.
After the failure of the Battle of Neuve Chapelle, the large British offensive in March 1915, the British Commander-in-Chief Field Marshal Sir John French claimed that it failed due to a lack of shells. This led to the Shell Crisis of 1915 which brought down the Liberal British government under the Premiership of H. H. Asquith. He formed a new coalition government dominated by Liberals and appointed 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 the Germans failed to introduce food rationing. German capitulation was hastened in 1918 by the worsening food crises in Germany.
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 and women 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.
Huge 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 for the first time and experience how the other half lived. Many went back to the cities with their social horizons broadened.
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 was the work done by Patrick Blackett's team on the optimum size and speed of convoys and the introduction of bomber streams by the RAF to counter the night fighter defences of the Kammhuber Line.
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 it was too late to help win the war. Germany's armament minister Albert Speer, who assumed office in early 1942, rationalized German war production and eliminated the worst inefficiencies. Under his 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 undermobilized 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 (much of it slave labour) was used to augment German industrial labour which was under pressure by conscription into the Wehrmacht (Armed Forces).
During the battle of Stalingrad, newly-built T-34 tanks were driven - unpainted due to 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 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.
The ruthless movement of national groupings like the Volga German and later the Crimean Tatars (who Stalin thought might be sympathetic to the Germans) was a development of the conventional scorched earth policy. This was a more extreme form of internment, implemented by both the UK government (for Axis aliens and British Nazi sympathisers), and the US government (for Japanese internment in the United States).
The violation of many of the laws of war in the Pacific and Asian Theatres of World War II particularly in the Sino-Japanese conflict, caused wide-scale human misery. Approximately ten million Chinese civilians were killed. Many actions which ignored the laws of war were initiated or at least condoned by the Japanese authorities.
Britain and Germany made a distinct attempt to destroy the other's ability to produce war materials. They did this by the use of strategic bombing campaigns upon each others' industrial centres and high areas of population. When the United States entered the war, it mounted similar campaigns against both Germany and Japan.
Historians and military tacticians are divided on the effectiveness of the strategic bombing campaigns. The campaigns were waged for two reasons: to "break the enemy's will" and to reduce the enemy's war matériel. The British did not crumble under the German Blitz and other air raids early in the war. In Germany, morale collapsed in the face of a campaign far more extensive in effect, scope and duration than that endured by Great Britain. However, the Germans clearly differentiated between morale and conduct. Conduct was more or less unchanged – like in Japan, there were no riots demanding a German surrender, and the countries leadership were not deterred from continuing the war because of their enemies' strategic bombing campaigns. Although German war production continued to rise until late 1944, it is difficult to quantify by how much more it would have risen if the strategic bombing campaign had not occurred. In the case of Japan this analysis is further complicated by the effects of the American naval blockade on the home islands. However conventional strategic bombing was not the war winning strategy that its war time advocates, like Bomber Harris, thought it would be. This was only achieved when atomic weapons were delivered by strategic bombers.
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 powers 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.Ruth Wedgwood Judicial Overreach(PDF) Wall Street Journal November 16, 2004
As the tensions between industrialized nations have diminished, European continental powers have for the first time in 200 years started to question if conscription is still necessary. Many are moving back to the pre-Napoleonic ideas of having small professional armies. This is something which despite the experiences of the first and second world wars is a model which the English speaking nations had never abandoned during peace time, probably because they have never had a common border with a potential enemy with a large standing army. In Admiral Jervis's famous phrase, "I do not say, my Lords, that the French will not come. I say only they will not come by sea".
The cessation of total war has not led to the end of war involving industrial nations, but a shift back to the limited wars of the type fought between the competing European powers for much of the 19th century that could be summed up by the phrase The Great Game. During the Cold War, wars between industrialized nations were fought by proxy over national prestige, tactical strategic advantage or colonial and neocolonial resources. Examples include the Korean War, the Vietnam War and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Since the end of the Cold War, some industrialised countries have been involved in a number of small wars with strictly limited strategic objectives which have motives closer to those of the colonial wars of the 19th century than those of total war; examples include the Australian-led UN intervention in East Timor, the NATO intervention in Kosovo, the internal Russian conflict with Chechnya, and the American-led coalitions which invaded Afghanistan and twice fought the Iraqi regime of Saddam Hussein.
The international capitalism and globalization has seen the rapid deindustrialization of the First World countries. The industrial production escapes from the First world, where wages are high, into underdeveloped countries where labor costs are low. While this development makes perfect economical sense, it makes a disastrous effect on the First World ability to wage prolonged war and sustain the costs and consumption of total war. Deindustrialization means inevitably dire logistical problems as crucial materiel are no more produced in homeland. While the logistics are no problem during the peacetime, any international unrests will leave the First World countries in extremely precarious situation. Most First World countries do not have any more any strategic industry or own fuel, materiel or weapon production. Any situation not solvable by quick use of force and leading in the war of attrition will inevitably lead into economical catastrophe and complete collapse of the country. Any victory on such situation is likely to be a Pyrrhic victory. Hence most of the First World countries have given up conscription and instead stress on air power and well-trained all-volunteer force which has light logistics and which is easily mobilized to dampen the inevitable logistical problems.
Wars by type | Military doctrines
Totaler Krieg | Guerre totale | Totalni rat | Guerra totale | Totale oorlog | 国家総力戦 | Wojna totalna | Тотальная война
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