I read a great series about the Eastern Front in WW1 from the 'Axis' perspective [1] and the use of donkeys and horses was a critical part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and later German armies offence (and later defence) against the Russians.
Their entire front against Russia was eventually reliant on their ability to drag heavy artillery and supplies through the dangerous mountain passes of the Carpathian mountains. An example of what they went through for their country: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/42/Wintersc...
Supply lines are the often unspoken critical pieces of the puzzles for any great war before mid-WW2. Poor logistical planning in their invasion of Russia was also was a major factor in why the Nazi's lost WW2 - which is where Germany really lost the war, the "war of the Atlantic" and later western front with the Americans was just the multi-year delayed wrapping up action where they had very little odds from the beginning.
This second book [2] has a great overview about why the Nazi's had actually lost the war by 1941 (and very obviously by 1942) due to poor logistical planning of Operation Barbarossa, largely due to the strategic planners overconfidence in the German superiority over Slavs after they swept the French/British out of Europe. The next 3yrs were just Hitler's delusions keeping it afloat.
If you think the roads in your town are poorly maintained, take a look at this example of Rasputitsa in the USSR. [1]
Yes, the people in the photographs are trying to pull that car down the road. Yes, that is indeed a road.
Soviet railroad gauges being incompatible with European rail gauges also did little to help German logistics. And later in the war, due to fuel shortages, more and more axis machinery had to be transported by draft-horse.
Agreed, I said mid WW2 because the later half of the war was in Europe where more modern transport supported the supply lines (aircraft and railroad).
But the earlier half was largely a mix of WW1 esque supply logistics using horses and german automobiles struggling over poor Russian roads. The poor logistical planning I alluded to was largely underestimating how poor Russia's infrastructure was and overestimating the capabilities of Germans to overcome them.
Is it actually that rare to hear military histories avoid discussions of supply lines? It seems very common to me. The phrase "an army marches on its stomach" is in the popular imagination, right?
Even post-WWII, discussions of Vietnam usually talk about the Hồ Chí Minh trail, don't they?
EDIT: Actually, there's a more general question I've been wondering: What is a good way to figure out if something is common knowledge or not? I've occasionally found myself assuming something was common knowledge and while "No feigning surprise"[1] is a useful rule to try to follow, it would be better if I had a way to train my intuition to be more accurate about how well-known facts are.
There is an excellent line from Norman Schwarzkopf's book along the lines of:
"When the planning started for the Gulf War, they told me I had to go and I could bring only one other of my officers with me. So I chose what any good general would do: my logistics officer"
By the by and apropos of nothing, 'Camel Corps' is what we used to call certain members of the British diplomatic service who had 'gone native' in the Middle East and Arabian peninsula generally but more specifically to those diplomats who had passed through the Middle East Centre for Arabic Studies school in the Leb (and
Oxford). FO had many Arabists for a time, not so sure nowadays. There was of course a fairly impressive Imperial Camel Corps during WWI comprised of actual camels and mainly Anzacs.
This article in general reminded me of the role camels played in the European exploration of Australia. There is now a reasonably large population of wild, feral camels in Australia[1], and I thought this article might speak of something similar in the US.
However, I'd never heard of the Imperial Camel Corps[2] and am now intrigued to learn more. Thanks for the initial information.
Early in the rebellion the confederates were determined to establish the legitimacy of their secession, which would include respecting property. The camels were the property of the U.S. government.
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Nerds have a wide breadth of interests. You must be new here.
I personally find the possible idea of thousands of camels walking around the southern US and it's implications on warfare interesting. But I may be the minority here. That's what up/downvoting is for...
The following picture is of Dutch peacekeepers on camelback: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camel_cavalry#/media/File:UN_S...
Not to mention the anti-Taliban rebels in Afghanistan... Camel calvary are still alive and well.