German Invasion of Poland 1939 — Part 1

Nobody quite understands what is   happening. In London, the phone rings in Downing  Street. In Berlin, Adolf Hitler is already awake.   He has been planning this morning for months.  In a thousand Polish towns and villages along a   frontier stretching 1,900 km from the Baltic coast  in the north to the Carpathian Mountains in the   south, the same thing is happening simultaneously.  German bombs are falling. German tanks are moving.  

And the Second World War, the conflict that will  kill 70 million people and reshape the entire   world, has begun. Not with a declaration. Not  with a warning. In the darkness, before breakfast,   while most of Europe is still asleep. To  understand why German bombs are falling on   Poland this September morning, you need to go back  just a few years.

 Not decades, not generations,   just a few years. In 1933, Adolf Hitler came to  power in Germany, a country humiliated by defeat   in the First World War, crushed by the economic  terms of the Versail Treaty, desperate for someone   who promised to restore what had been lost. Hitler  promised exactly that. And he delivered.

 At first,   the economy recovered, the military was rebuilt,  lost territories were reclaimed one by one.   Austria in 1938, Czechoslovakia’s Sudatan land  the same year, then the rest of Czechoslovakia in   1939. Each time Britain and France protested,  each time they did nothing. Hitler drew a   simple conclusion from this pattern. The Western  democracies would not fight.

 Poland was different   for one reason. It had a formal military guarantee  from Britain and France. If Germany attacked, they   would declare war. Hitler didn’t believe them. He  had made one other move before giving the order   to attack.

 In August 1939, just one week before  the invasion, his foreign minister, Ribentrop,   flew to Moscow and signed a non-aggression pact  with Stalin. The two men who hated each other   most in the world had made a deal. Germany would  take Western Poland. The Soviet Union would take   the East. Poland, the country being divided, was  not consulted. With his eastern flank secured,   Hitler gave the order. Fall vice case white.  The invasion of Poland.

 1 and a2 million German   soldiers, 2,700 tanks, 2,000 aircraft against  a Polish army that was brave, determined,   and facing the most modern military force on  birth with weapons and tactics that belonged to   a different era. What happened next lasted 35 days  and changed the world forever. At Wester Plate,   the first shells from the Schleswick Holstein  have turned the Polish barracks into rubble.  

Major Henrik Sukarsski, commander of the garrison,  crawls through the smoke to assess what is left of   his defenses. He has 182 men. He has food for  7 days. He has orders to hold for 12 hours,   just long enough to signal to Poland and the world  that the country will resist. 12 hours. That is   all anyone expects of them.

 Sakarsski looks at  what the German shells have done to his position   in the first 60 seconds of the war. He looks at  the Schleswick Holstein sitting 400 m offshore,   its guns already reloading. He looks at the  German infantry beginning to move toward the   perimeter through the trees and he gives the  order to fight. Meanwhile, 500 km to the south,   the men of the German 10th Army are crossing  the Polish border in the pre-dawn darkness near   the city of Cheshova.

 Among them are the tanks  of the first Panzer Division, the leading edge   of a new kind of warfare that the world has  never seen before. These are not the slow,   heavily armored machines of the First World War.  These are fast, coordinated, radio equipped units   that work together with aircraft overhead and  motorized infantry alongside. They don’t stop   at obstacles. They go around them. They don’t  wait for orders from headquarters.

 They move   on their own initiative faster than the enemy  can respond. The Poles defending the border   have never faced anything like this. The border  guards of the Polish Border Protection Corps,   the Corpus Okroni Pogranicha, are the first to  encounter the German advance. These are not elite   troops.

 They are lightly armed men spread thinly  along a frontier that stretches for hundreds of   kilome. Their job in peace time is to prevent  smuggling and illegal crossings. Now they are the   first line of defense against the most powerful  military force in Europe. They fight anyway. In   dozens of small engagements along the frontier,  Polish border guards hold their positions against   overwhelming odds, buying hours, sometimes just  minutes, for the units behind them to organize.  

Most of them die where they stand. In the skies  above, the situation is equally desperate. The   Polish Air Force, the Lnitzvo, has approximately  400 combat aircraft. They are outnumbered 4 to1 by   the Luftvafa. Their planes, the PZL P11 fighters  that form the backbone of Polish air defenses,   are already obsolete.

 They are slower than the  German bombers they are trying to intercept,   let alone the German fighters escorting them.  But the Polish pilots are extraordinary. Captain   Miacheslav Medwitzki, commander of the 111th  Fighter Squadron, is airborne within minutes of   the first German crossing. He and his pilots climb  into skies already thick with German aircraft and   begin fighting with everything they have. The odds  are impossible. They attack anyway.

 And in Warsaw,   the bombs are already falling. The Luftvafa’s  bombing campaign against the Polish capital   begins in the first hours of September 1st. The  targets are military airfields, railway junctions,   military depots. But in a city of 1.3 million  people, bombs do not always find their intended   targets. Civilians run through the streets as  explosions walk across the city.

 Buildings that   stood for centuries collapse in seconds. Fires  start in residential neighborhoods. The air fills   with dust and smoke. And the sound of aircraft  engines that never seem to stop. A city that woke   up that morning in peace time is ending the day in  ruins. And it is only the first day.

The Invasion of Poland

 By the end of   the first day, the situation for Poland is already  critical. But Poland is not broken. Not yet.   Across the entire length of the front, from  the Baltic coast to the Carpathian Mountains,   Polish soldiers are fighting with a ferocity  that surprises even their German attackers.   These are not men who have given up.

 These are  men who understand exactly what is at stake,   their country, their families, their entire way  of life, and who have decided that if they are   going to lose, they will make the Germans pay for  every kilometer. At Westerplot, Major Sukarski’s   82 men are still holding. The Germans have  thrown everything at them. Naval gunfire from   the Schlesvig Holstein. Bombing runs by Junker’s  Ju87 Stooka dive bombers.

 The screaming aircraft   that have become the symbol of German air power.  Infantry assaults through the trees and across the   open grounds surrounding the garrison. Every  assault is repelled. The Germans attacking   Westerplot are not poorly trained conscripts.  They are SSH Heimler Danzic, experienced,   welle equipped troops who expected to overwhelm  the Polish position in a matter of hours.

 Instead,   they are being stopped by men armed with rifles,  machine guns, and an unwillingness to quit that   defies military logic. The 12 hours Sukarski  was asked to hold have come and gone. He keeps   fighting. Further south along the main line of  the German advance, something is happening that   will become one of the most misunderstood episodes  of the entire Polish campaign.

 The charge of the   cavalry. The image that much of the world would  later carry of the Polish military in 1939 is   of cavalry. Men on horseback charging German  tanks with sabers drawn. It is an image that   became shorthand for hopeless backwardness. for  a country so antiquated it didn’t understand what   century it was fighting in. It is also largely a  myth.

 The Polish cavalry, the Briada Cavalieri,   were not the obsolete relics of a previous era  that German propaganda would later portray them   as. They were highly mobile infantry who used  horses for transportation, not for charging   machine guns. They were trained to dismount and  fight on foot, to move faster than any motorized   unit through difficult terrain, to strike and  disappear before the enemy could respond.

 They   were by any objective measure among the finestlike  infantry in Europe. On September 1st, near the   town of Croanti in the Pomeranian corridor,  a squadron of the 18th Pomeranian Oolons,   Polish cavalry, encountered a German infantry unit  resting in a forest clearing. Their commander,   Colonel Kazimmier Masttoellair’s made a decision.

  He ordered a charge not against tanks, against   infantry in the open in exactly the situation  cavalry had been designed for. The charge worked.   The German infantry scattered in panic. And then  German armored cars emerged from the treeine and   opened fire. The squadron took heavy casualties.  Colonel Master was killed. The Italian and German   journalists who arrived shortly afterward saw  the bodies of Polish cavalry and German tanks   in the same field and drew a conclusion that fit  perfectly with the story Germany wanted to tell.  

The Poles had charged tanks with sabers. It was  not what happened, but the image stuck. Meanwhile,   the Polish army loads, one of the main defensive  formations positioned to protect the industrial   heartland of central Poland, is facing the full  weight of the German 8th and 10th armies. General   Ulius Ruml commands the army Luge. He is a capable  officer dealing with an impossible situation.

 His   forces are spread across a front too wide to  defend properly. Facing German armored units   that don’t fight the way any previous enemy  has fought. The German tanks don’t stop at the   Polish defensive lines. They go around them. They  penetrate deep behind Polish positions, cutting   supply lines, surrounding units that thought  they were defending against a frontal assault,   appearing where nobody expected them to be.

 Ruml’s  forces are not being defeated in pitched battle,   they are being made irrelevant. By the time Polish  units understand where the German spearheads   actually are, the situation has already changed.  By the time orders arrive from headquarters,   the orders are already out of date. By  the time reinforcements are dispatched,   the gap they were meant to fill has moved.

 The  Polish army is fighting hard, but it is fighting   a war that has already moved on without it. And on  the third day of the invasion, news arrives that   changes the psychological picture entirely.  Warsaw is being evacuated, not the military,   the government. Polish President Ignasi Moschitzky  and the cabinet are leaving the capital and moving   southeast toward the Romanian border. The decision  is militarily sound.

 Keeping the government mobile   and out of German reach is strategically correct.  But for the soldiers fighting on the front lines,   the news lands like a punch. If the government  is leaving Warsaw, what exactly are they fighting   for? The answer for most of them is the same  answer it has always been. Poland. Not the   government, not the politicians, not the borders  drawn by Versailles, the country itself, the   language, the people, the thing that had survived  123 years of partition and would survive this,   too. They keep fighting. By September 7th, 1 week  into the invasion, the shape of the catastrophe  

is becoming clear. Not to the outside world,  not yet. The newspapers in London and Paris   are still reporting that Poland is holding, that  the front is stabilizing, that the German advance   is being slowed. It isn’t. The German Fourth  Panzer Division has reached the outskirts of   Warsaw.

 One week from the German border to the  gates of the Polish capital, a distance that   military planners on both sides had assumed would  take weeks to covered in 7 days. The men of the   fourth Panzer Division are not stopping to admire  their progress. Their commander, General George   Hans Reinhardt, pushes them forward. The orders  are clear. Get to Warsaw. Get inside. End this   quickly. But Warsaw is not going to fall quietly.

  The civilians of the city, those who haven’t fled,   are already building barricades, digging trenches  in the parks, passing sandbags handto hand along   lines that stretch for city blocks. Men who  have never held a rifle are being handed rifles.   Women are carrying ammunition. Children are  delivering messages between defensive positions.   A city of 1.3 million people is preparing to  fight.

The Invasion of Poland

 The fourth Panzer Division hits the   Warsaw defenses on September 8th. What happens  next shocks the German commanders. The attack   fails. Polish artillery positioned carefully in  the streets and buildings of the city’s western   suburbs opens fire on the advancing German armor  with devastating accuracy. Anti-tank guns that the   Germans didn’t know were there destroy vehicle  after vehicle.

 Infantry in prepared positions   in the apartment buildings along the main approach  roads pour fire onto the German columns from above   and from the sides. General Reinhardt pulls his  division back. Information Warsaw has held for   now, but the news from the rest of the country  is uniformly bad. In the north, the German third   army driving south from East Prussia has broken  through the Polish Mlin Army and is threatening   to encircle the entire Polish force defending  the corridor to the Baltic.

 In the south, the   German 14th Army is pushing through the Carpathian  Mountains faster than anyone thought possible,   threatening to outflank the entire Polish southern  defensive line. And in the center, the place where   the Polish high command had concentrated its  strongest forces, the situation is collapsing   in a way that is almost impossible to comprehend  in real time.

 General Tados Coutrea commands the   Polish army Posnon. Approximately 230,000 men  positioned in the Posnon region in western Poland.   For the first week of the war, his army has been  sitting largely intact. The German advance has   gone around him. The Blitz Creek driving east so  fast that the army Posnon has been bypassed, left   behind, rendered temporarily irrelevant by the  speed of the German movement.

 Cutraba looks at his   maps. He sees something extraordinary. The German  forces driving east have left their northern flank   exposed. The eighth army moving toward Warsaw  is stretched thin, moving fast, not expecting   an attack from the side. Cutraba proposes a  counterattack. His superiors authorize it.   On September 9th, 8 days into the invasion, the  army Posnon turns south and strikes the exposed   flank of the German 8th army on the Bzora River.  The Germans are caught completely offg guard.  

For two days, the battle of the Bazura goes in  Poland’s favor. Polish infantry and cavalry push   the German units back. Prisoners are taken. Ground  is recaptured. For the first and only time in the   entire campaign, a major Polish offensive achieves  real tactical success.

 In Berlin, the news causes   momentary alarm. German high command rushes  reinforcements to the Bazora. Luftvafa units are   redirected from other parts of the front. The full  weight of German air power descends on the army   posnan. Hundreds of aircraft attacking the Polish  columns in the open on roads crossing rivers with   no effective air defense to protect them.

 General  Cutraba’s counterattack, brilliant in conception,   devastating in its initial execution, is  slowly ground down by the sheer weight   of German firepower. But his men keep fighting.  For 10 days, the battle of the Bazora continues.   The largest battle of the entire Polish campaign.  The army Posnan fights not because it can win,   but because fighting is the only alternative  to surrender.

 And these men are not ready to   surrender. Some units break through towards  Warsaw. Most don’t. Meanwhile, at Wester Plata,   something remarkable is still happening. Major  Sucharsski and his 182 men are on day seven. They   were asked to hold for 12 hours. They have held  for 7 days. The garrison is a ruin. The barracks   are destroyed.

 The defenders are exhausted, many  of them wounded, surviving on dwindling food and   ammunition in positions that have been pounded  continuously by naval gunfire, dive bombers, and   infantry assaults. On September 7th, Sucharsski  makes his decision. He has done what he was   asked to do. He has done far more than what was  asked of him. Further resistance will accomplish   nothing except the deaths of the men still  capable of fighting. He raises the white flag.

The German commander who accepts the surrender,   Lieutenant General Abberheart is so impressed  by the defense of Wester Plata that he allows   Sucharsski to keep his ceremonial sword.  It is a gesture almost without precedent   in the German conduct of the Polish campaign.  A small dignity in the middle of a catastrophe.

As Sucharsski and his surviving men march  into captivity, the German soldiers lining   the road do something unexpected.  They stand at attention. 182 men,   7 days against everything the German military  could bring against them. It is not enough to   change the outcome of the campaign. Nothing at  this point can change the outcome of the campaign.

But it means something to the polls watching, to  the world that will eventually hear the story,   to the idea, stubborn, costly, sometimes  seemingly suicidal, that some things   are worth fighting for regardless of  the odds. Poland is losing this war. But Poland has not stopped fighting. And it  won’t. Not today. Not for the next 6 years.

September 7th, 1939. One week of war. And  the picture that emerges from that first week   tells two stories simultaneously. Stories that  contradict each other and yet are both completely   true. The first story is military. Germany is  winning comprehensively, devastatingly. The   Blitzkrieg has worked exactly as designed.

 Polish  defensive lines that were supposed to hold for   weeks have been penetrated in days. The Polish  air force, outgunned and outnumbered from the   first hour, is being systematically destroyed  on the ground and in the air. Supply lines are   cut. Communications between Polish units are  breaking down. The high command is losing the   ability to coordinate a coherent response to an  enemy that moves faster than any army in history.  

By any objective military assessment, the campaign  is already decided. Poland cannot win this war.   The second story is human and it is something else  entirely. At Westerplot, 182 men held for 7 days   against everything the German military could bring  against them and marched into captivity with their   heads up and their commander sword at his side.

  On the Buzzer River, General Cutraba turned his   army into the flank of a force that was supposed  to be unstoppable and for 10 days made the Germans   genuinely afraid. In the skies over Poland,  pilots flying obsolete aircraft that were slower   than the bombers they were trying to intercept  kept climbing into the fight every single day.   In Warsaw, civilians who had never been soldiers  picked up rifles and started building barricades   before anyone asked them to. These are not the  actions of a country that has given up.

 These   are the actions of a country that understands  something very clearly. Losing a battle is not the   same as losing a war. And losing a war is not the  same as losing everything. In London and Paris,   the governments that guaranteed Poland’s  security are finally moving. On September 3rd,   2 days after the invasion began, Britain  and France declared war on Germany.  

The declaration changes very little on the  ground in Poland right now. No British soldiers   are crossing the channel. No French tanks are  rolling toward the German border. The phony war,   the strange static standoff on the Western Front  is beginning. But the declaration means something   larger.

 It means that what started on September  1st on a narrow peninsula near Danzi is no longer   just Poland’s war. It is the world’s war. And it  is only just beginning. Next, the second week of   the Polish campaign. Soviet tanks cross the  eastern border. Poland finds itself fighting   on two fronts simultaneously and the fate of an  entire nation is decided in the ruins of its own   capital. If this story moved you, share it.

 Leave  a comment with what you think about the defense   of Westerplat, one of the most extraordinary  stands in military history. And subscribe. We   are telling the story of the Second World War from  the very beginning. Every battle, every decision,   every human being who lived through it. The  next part is already coming. Don’t miss it.

 

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