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<h2> CHAPTER XIII. RETREAT AFTER A LOST BATTLE </h2>
<p>IN a lost battle the power of an Army is broken, the moral to a greater
degree than the physical. A second battle unless fresh favourable
circumstances come into play, would lead to a complete defeat, perhaps, to
destruction. This is a military axiom. According to the usual course the
retreat is continued up to that point where the equilibrium of forces is
restored, either by reinforcements, or by the protection of strong
fortresses, or by great defensive positions afforded by the country, or by
a separation of the enemy's force. The magnitude of the losses sustained,
the extent of the defeat, but still more the character of the enemy, will
bring nearer or put off the instant of this equilibrium. How many
instances may be found of a beaten Army rallied again at a short distance,
without its circumstances having altered in any way since the battle. The
cause of this may be traced to the moral weakness of the adversary, or to
the preponderance gained in the battle not having been sufficient to make
lasting impression.</p>
<p>To profit by this weakness or mistake of the enemy, not to yield one inch
breadth more than the pressure of circumstances demands, but above all
things, in order to keep up the moral forces to as advantageous a point as
possible, a slow retreat, offering incessant resistance, and bold
courageous counterstrokes, whenever the enemy seeks to gain any excessive
advantages, are absolutely necessary. Retreats of great Generals and of
Armies inured to War have always resembled the retreat of a wounded lion,
such is, undoubtedly, also the best theory.</p>
<p>It is true that at the moment of quitting a dangerous position we have
often seen trifling formalities observed which caused a waste of time, and
were, therefore, attended with danger, whilst in such cases everything
depends on getting out of the place speedily. Practised Generals reckon
this maxim a very important one. But such cases must not be confounded
with a general retreat after a lost battle. Whoever then thinks by a few
rapid marches to gain a start, and more easily to recover a firm standing,
commits a great error. The first movements should be as small as possible,
and it is a maxim in general not to suffer ourselves to be dictated to by
the enemy. This maxim cannot be followed without bloody fighting with the
enemy at our heels, but the gain is worth the sacrifice; without it we get
into an accelerated pace which soon turns into a headlong rush, and costs
merely in stragglers more men than rear-guard combats, and besides that
extinguishes the last remnants of the spirit of resistance.</p>
<p>A strong rear-guard composed of picked troops, commanded by the bravest
General, and supported by the whole Army at critical moments, a careful
utilisation of ground, strong ambuscades wherever the boldness of the
enemy's advance-guard, and the ground, afford opportunity; in short, the
preparation and the system of regular small battles,—these are the
means of following this principle.</p>
<p>The difficulties of a retreat are naturally greater or less according as
the battle has been fought under more or less favourable circumstances,
and according as it has been more or less obstinately contested. The
battle of Jena and La Belle-Alliance show how impossible anything like a
regular retreat may become, if the last man is used up against a powerful
enemy.</p>
<p>Now and again it has been suggested(*) to divide for the purpose of
retreating, therefore to retreat in separate divisions or even
eccentrically. Such a separation as is made merely for convenience, and
along with which concentrated action continues possible and is kept in
view, is not what we now refer to; any other kind is extremely dangerous,
contrary to the nature of the thing, and therefore a great error. Every
lost battle is a principle of weakness and disorganisation; and the first
and immediate desideratum is to concentrate, and in concentration to
recover order, courage, and confidence. The idea of harassing the enemy by
separate corps on both flanks at the moment when he is following up his
victory, is a perfect anomaly; a faint-hearted pedant might be overawed by
his enemy in that manner, and for such a case it may answer; but where we
are not sure of this failing in our opponent it is better let alone. If
the strategic relations after a battle require that we should cover
ourselves right and left by detachments, so much must be done, as from
circumstances is unavoidable, but this fractioning must always be regarded
as an evil, and we are seldom in a state to commence it the day after the
battle itself.</p>
<p>(*) Allusion is here made to the works of Lloyd Bullow and<br/>
others.<br/></p>
<p>If Frederick the Great after the battle of Kollin,(*) and the raising of
the siege of Prague retreated in three columns that was done not out of
choice, but because the position of his forces, and the necessity of
covering Saxony, left him no alternative, Buonaparte after the battle of
Brienne,(**) sent Marmont back to the Aube, whilst he himself passed the
Seine, and turned towards Troyes; but that this did not end in disaster,
was solely owing to the circumstance that the Allies, instead of pursuing
divided their forces in like manner, turning with the one part (Bluecher)
towards the Marne, while with the other (Schwartzenberg), from fear of
being too weak, they advanced with exaggerated caution.</p>
<p>(*) June 19, 1757.<br/>
<br/>
(**) January 30, 1814.<br/></p>
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<h2> CHAPTER XIV. NIGHT FIGHTING </h2>
<p>THE manner of conducting a combat at night, and what concerns the details
of its course, is a tactical subject; we only examine it here so far as in
its totality it appears as a special strategic means.</p>
<p>Fundamentally every night attack is only a more vehement form of surprise.
Now at the first look of the thing such an attack appears quite
pre-eminently advantageous, for we suppose the enemy to be taken by
surprise, the assailant naturally to be prepared for everything which can
happen. What an inequality! Imagination paints to itself a picture of the
most complete confusion on the one side, and on the other side the
assailant only occupied in reaping the fruits of his advantage. Hence the
constant creation of schemes for night attacks by those who have not to
lead them, and have no responsibility, whilst these attacks seldom take
place in reality.</p>
<p>These ideal schemes are all based on the hypothesis that the assailant
knows the arrangements of the defender because they have been made and
announced beforehand, and could not escape notice in his reconnaissances,
and inquiries; that on the other hand, the measures of the assailant,
being only taken at the moment of execution, cannot be known to the enemy.
But the last of these is not always quite the case, and still less is the
first. If we are not so near the enemy as to have him completely under our
eye, as the Austrians had Frederick the Great before the battle of
Hochkirch (1758), then all that we know of his position must always be
imperfect, as it is obtained by reconnaissances, patrols, information from
prisoners, and spies, sources on which no firm reliance can be placed
because intelligence thus obtained is always more or less of an old date,
and the position of the enemy may have been altered in the meantime.
Moreover, with the tactics and mode of encampment of former times it was
much easier than it is now to examine the position of the enemy. A line of
tents is much easier to distinguish than a line of huts or a bivouac; and
an encampment on a line of front, fully and regularly drawn out, also
easier than one of Divisions formed in columns, the mode often used at
present. We may have the ground on which a Division bivouacs in that
manner completely under our eye, and yet not be able to arrive at any
accurate idea.</p>
<p>But the position again is not all that we want to know the measures which
the defender may take in the course of the combat are just as important,
and do not by any means consist in mere random shots. These measures also
make night attacks more difficult in modern Wars than formerly, because
they have in these campaigns an advantage over those already taken. In our
combats the position of the defender is more temporary than definitive,
and on that account the defender is better able to surprise his adversary
with unexpected blows, than he could formerly.(*)</p>
<p>(*) All these difficulties obviously become increased as the<br/>
power of the weapons in use tends to keep the combatants<br/>
further apart.—EDITOR.<br/></p>
<p>Therefore what the assailant knows of the defensive previous to a night
attack, is seldom or never sufficient to supply the want of direct
observation.</p>
<p>But the defender has on his side another small advantage as well, which is
that he is more at home than the assailant, on the ground which forms his
position, and therefore, like the inhabitant of a room, will find his way
about it in the dark with more ease than a stranger. He knows better where
to find each part of his force, and therefore can more readily get at it
than is the case with his adversary.</p>
<p>From this it follows, that the assailant in a combat at night feels the
want of his eyes just as much as the defender, and that therefore, only
particular reasons can make a night attack advisable.</p>
<p>Now these reasons arise mostly in connection with subordinate parts of an
Army, rarely with the Army itself; it follows that a night attack also as
a rule can only take place with secondary combats, and seldom with great
battles.</p>
<p>We may attack a portion of the enemy's Army with a very superior force,
consequently enveloping it with a view either to take the whole, or to
inflict very severe loss on it by an unequal combat, provided that other
circumstances are in our favour. But such a scheme can never succeed
except by a great surprise, because no fractional part of the enemy's Army
would engage in such an unequal combat, but would retire instead. But a
surprise on an important scale except in rare instances in a very close
country, can only be effected at night. If therefore we wish to gain such
an advantage as this from the faulty disposition of a portion of the
enemy's Army, then we must make use of the night, at all events, to finish
the preliminary part even if the combat itself should not open till
towards daybreak. This is therefore what takes place in all the little
enterprises by night against outposts, and other small bodies, the main
point being invariably through superior numbers, and getting round his
position, to entangle him unexpectedly in such a disadvantageous combat,
that he cannot disengage himself without great loss.</p>
<p>The larger the body attacked the more difficult the undertaking, because a
strong force has greater resources within itself to maintain the fight
long enough for help to arrive.</p>
<p>On that account the whole of the enemy's Army can never in ordinary cases
be the object of such an attack for although it has no assistance to
expect from any quarter outside itself, still, it contains within itself
sufficient means of repelling attacks from several sides particularly in
our day, when every one from the commencement is prepared for this very
usual form of attack. Whether the enemy can attack us on several sides
with success depends generally on conditions quite different from that of
its being done unexpectedly; without entering here into the nature of
these conditions, we confine ourselves to observing, that with turning an
enemy, great results, as well as great dangers are connected; that
therefore, if we set aside special circumstances, nothing justifies it but
a great superiority, just such as we should use against a fractional part
of the enemy's Army.</p>
<p>But the turning and surrounding a small fraction of the enemy, and
particularly in the darkness of night, is also more practicable for this
reason, that whatever we stake upon it, and however superior the force
used may be, still probably it constitutes only a limited portion of our
Army, and we can sooner stake that than the whole on the risk of a great
venture. Besides, the greater part or perhaps the whole serves as a
support and rallying-point for the portion risked, which again very much
diminishes the danger of the enterprise.</p>
<p>Not only the risk, but the difficulty of execution as well confines night
enterprises to small bodies. As surprise is the real essence of them so
also stealthy approach is the chief condition of execution: but this is
more easily done with small bodies than with large, and for the columns of
a whole Army is seldom practicable. For this reason such enterprises are
in general only directed against single outposts, and can only be feasible
against greater bodies if they are without sufficient outposts, like
Frederick the Great at Hochkirch.(*) This will happen seldomer in future
to Armies themselves than to minor divisions.</p>
<p>(*) October 14, 1758.<br/></p>
<p>In recent times, when War has been carried on with so much more rapidity
and vigour, it has in consequence often happened that Armies have encamped
very close to each other, without having a very strong system of outposts,
because those circumstances have generally occurred just at the crisis
which precedes a great decision.</p>
<p>But then at such times the readiness for battle on both sides is also more
perfect; on the other hand, in former Wars it was a frequent practice for
armies to take up camps in sight of each other, when they had no other
object but that of mutually holding each other in check, consequently for
a longer period. How often Frederick the Great stood for weeks so near to
the Austrians, that the two might have exchanged cannon shots with each
other.</p>
<p>But these practices, certainly more favourable to night attacks, have been
discontinued in later days; and armies being now no longer in regard to
subsistence and requirements for encampment, such independent bodies
complete in themselves, find it necessary to keep usually a day's march
between themselves and the enemy. If we now keep in view especially the
night attack of an army, it follows that sufficient motives for it can
seldom occur, and that they fall under one or other of the following
classes.</p>
<p>1. An unusual degree of carelessness or audacity which very rarely occurs,
and when it does is compensated for by a great superiority in moral force.</p>
<p>2. A panic in the enemy's army, or generally such a degree of superiority
in moral force on our side, that this is sufficient to supply the place of
guidance in action.</p>
<p>3. Cutting through an enemy's army of superior force, which keeps us
enveloped, because in this all depends on surprise, and the object of
merely making a passage by force, allows a much greater concentration of
forces.</p>
<p>4. Finally, in desperate cases, when our forces have such a disproportion
to the enemy's, that we see no possibility of success, except through
extraordinary daring.</p>
<p>But in all these cases there is still the condition that the enemy's army
is under our eyes, and protected by no advance-guard.</p>
<p>As for the rest, most night combats are so conducted as to end with
daylight, so that only the approach and the first attack are made under
cover of darkness, because the assailant in that manner can better profit
by the consequences of the state of confusion into which he throws his
adversary; and combats of this description which do not commence until
daybreak, in which the night therefore is only made use of to approach,
are not to be counted as night combats.</p>
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