THE ERRORS OF EFFICIENT GERMANY
The Yankee finding himself, like Mark
Twain’s hero, suddenly transported back to King
Arthur’s Court is landed in a surprising and
unknown world. But one of King Arthur’s
knights brought to life at the court of the present
German Emperor aside from steam, electricity, gun
powder, telegraph and telephones would find the system
as despotic as in the days when the enchanter, Merlin,
wove his spells and the sword Excalibur appeared from
the depths of the magic lake. But while the system
is as royal and as despotic as in King Arthur’s
day, while the king and his military nobles look down
on the merchants and the toilers and the plain people,
no knights ride forth intent upon good deeds, to protect
the poor or avenge the wrongs of the innocent.
It was the cold realists of the General
Staff who battered down the defences of Belgium and
the forts of France, destroyed the monuments of art
and levied a tax of sixty million francs a month upon
a little country deprived of its means to produce wealth,
took the food from the inhabitants, shipped the machinery
and raw material into Germany, deported the men and
insulted the women and drove whole populations from
their homes to work as slaves for the conquerors.
But while they can plan military successes
in the first rush of assault on the chessboard of
Europe they have failed to understand other nations failed
even to learn the lessons of history. They did
not know that in every land, in every walk of life,
there are men who will “reject a bribe and who
will die for an idea.”
Imagine a German Staff officer reporting
in Berlin that over a hundred thousand Alsatians were
armed and organised and that they threatened, unless
certain proposed legislation uniting them, for example,
with Baden, was withdrawn, to resist forcibly any
attempt to incorporate them in that Grand Duchy.
Would not this look to a German officer like real
revolution and nothing else? And when, in addition,
there came news of the landing of arms for the Nationalists
in Ireland and of the organisation of the Nationalist
army, the Germans, without knowledge of the psychology
of other peoples, believed that Great Britain had her
hands full and that the moment had come when they could
go to war and leave Great Britain out of all calculations.
So studying only the German mind, believing that all
peoples in national character are like the Germans,
the Great General Staff, the greatest military aggregation
the world has ever seen, failed lamentably, whenever
the human element became the factor in the situation.
Its military successes have been marvellous; its judgments
of mankind ridiculous. Its errors of judgment
may be arranged as follows:
Error Number One.
Italy was in alliance with Germany
and Austria, although there was no greater hate before
the war than that between Italians and Austrians;
and the Great General Staff believed that Italy would
remain in this unnatural alliance, would fight in order
to give the Germans and the German-Austrians the domination
of Europe. The victory of the Central Empires
would have placed Italy under that Austrian influence
from which in her struggle for freedom under the leadership
of Cavour, Garibaldi and Victor Emanuel she had liberated
herself.
Prince Buelow, who early in his career
romantically married a charming Italian of good family,
was sent to Rome to keep Italy neutral. But he
failed.
Error Number Two.
Germany’s belief that because of the Carson
movement Great
Britain was immobilised and could take no part in
the war.
Error Number Three.
The theory cherished especially in
military circles that because the Japanese army had
been trained by Prussians Japan would join Germany.
Indeed, at the moment when the Japanese were packing
their trunks and preparing to leave their Embassy,
a German crowd with flags and torches was assembled
in front cheering Japan, the latest ally of the Entente.
Error Number Four.
The belief by the General Staff that
the British Colonies would render no assistance to
the mother country.
In the first days after England entered
the war many German statesmen said to me, “Of
course, now Canada will be incorporated in the United
States.” The Germans believed that the practical
thing, for the moment, for the Canadians was to avoid
war, to disavow all their obligations and ties of
blood and permit Britain to be destroyed. The
General Staff thought that because the world did not
have actual proof of the German designs of world conquest,
because that design had not been publicly proclaimed,
that no people or nation would either know or understand
the vast enterprise of conquest on which Prussian
autocracy had embarked.
Error Number Five.
The unexpected resistance of the Belgians.
The German armies were held only a
few days, yet the delay of those few days changed
the fortunes of the world.
Error Number Six.
The splendid stand of France which
was a complete surprise to the Great General Staff.
They believed that France was degenerate, torn by
scandals, and that a sudden assault would land the
German army in Paris. In this connection it was
another great error for the Germans to have sought
Paris, important from a sentimental but not a military
point of view. They might better have occupied
first the north coast of France, and from there could
have conducted the German submarine campaign with deadly
effect.
Error Number Seven.
We have seen what a shell the Russian
Empire was, but in July, 1914, the Great General Staff
believed that Russia was on the edge of a revolution.
Barricades had been erected in the streets of Petrograd
and the Staff believed that the revolution, which
has since divided Russia, was in the making. Instead
of this the Russian Empire lasted for nearly three
years and the Russian troops and generals inflicted
many a hard blow not only on the Austrians but on
the German forces.
Error Number Eight.
Germany was confident that the United
States had been so propagandised, so covered by bribes,
by paid newspapers, that the export of supplies to
the Allies could be prevented. Another error
was the barbarity shown in the sinking of the Lusitania
by which it was sought to terrorise Americans into
withholding from England and France the privileges
of international law, and of the definite treaty of
The Hague in 1907, in which Germany had joined and
which gave to private individuals the right to supply
munitions of war to any belligerent.
Error Number Nine.
Thinking that the Emperor, by posing
as a Mohammedan in the East, could with the aid of
the Turks stir all Mohammedans to a Holy War.
The Germans laboured with the Mohammedan
soldiers captured by them. I saw many fine looking
old Sheiks from the desert entering the Foreign Office
in Berlin. The Eastern world was filled with
German spies. But the Holy War was a failure,
and the hope that the races of Asia and Africa would
rise in favour of Germany was not borne out by events.
The men of the East are wise, the rulers of India
are enlightened and were not silly enough to place
themselves voluntarily under the harsh rule of Prussia.
Error Number Ten.
The belief that President Wilson had
been elected with an absolute mandate to keep the
peace at all costs, the Germans declared for unrestricted
submarine warfare, expecting a craven neutrality from
the United States.