Stormtroopers! — 10 Facts About Germany’s Elite Assault Soldiers of WW1

German stormtroopers in action on the Western Front. (Image source: WikiCommons)
German stormtroopers in action on the Western Front. (Image source: WikiCommons)

“The attackers weren’t ordinary German infantrymen, they were the Kaiser’s elite sturmtruppen or ‘stormtroopers’ — handpicked men, specially trained and armed to the teeth.”

THE KAISER’S 1918 ‘Spring Offensive’ on the Western Front, codenamed Operation Michael, was the early 20th Century equivalent of “Shock and Awe”.

Shortly after 4 a.m. on March 21, more than 6,500 German heavy guns and 3,500 mortars unleashed one of the most devastating artillery bombardments in the history of warfare — all of it concentrated on a tiny 150-square-mile patch of the Allied lines along the Somme.

In less than five hours, nearly 3.5 million shells had shattered British command posts and gun batteries, while salvo after salvo of deadly chlorine and mustard gas rained down on the trenches.

As the violent cannonade abruptly ended, the shellshocked Tommies manned the parapets and watched in dismay as enemy infantry suddenly charged out of the smoke. The attackers were no ordinary German soldiers, they were the Kaiser’s elite sturmtruppen or “stormtroopers” — handpicked men, heavily armed and specially trained for close combat.

Within minutes, the invaders overwhelmed the Allied defenders at key points and were already racing through the openings to sow chaos behind the lines. Their assault had cleared the way for a half-million regular German soldiers who would soon be pouring through the gaps along the 40-kilometre front like water through a rain grate. By morning’s end, British and French forces were falling back in disarray; after nearly four years of war, victory for the Kaiser suddenly seemed tantalizingly within reach.

And while the Spring Offensive eventually fizzled, the stormtroopers’ onslaught staggered the Allies. What’s more, this new style of fighting had effectively rewritten the book on infantry tactics. In fact, armies to this day still use their techniques on the battlefield.

The rise of Germany’s stormtroopers is perhaps one of the most fascinating stories of World War One. Here are some of the highlights.

German stormtroopers -- the first 'modern' combat soldiers.
German stormtroopers — the first ‘modern’ combat soldiers.

They were the first ‘Blitzkriegers’

Stormtroopers were notorious for their radical Hutier infiltration tactics — named for Oskar von Hutier, the visionary German general that championed their aggressive combat style. Forceful, sophisticated, even surgical, this revolutionary approach to trench warfare was a clear departure from the unimaginative and costly practice of using sustained, sector-wide barrages followed by frontal assaults by massed infantry. Stormtrooper attacks typically began with quick and incredibly violent artillery bombardments on narrow segments of the enemy trenches. Then came rapid onslaughts across No Man’s Land by squads of heavily armed commandos. The fast-and-furious assaults would target only those areas that had been softened up by the shelling. Just like the Nazi Blitzkrieg of World War Two, stormtroopers would roll over the defenders at key points, bypassing concentrations of Allied troops, and then speed into the rear areas to confuse and paralyze the enemy. Only then were the regular infantry sent forward to widen the gaps in the front, mop up resistance and secure captured territory.

History's first submachine gun, the MP-18, was used in the Spring Offensive.
History’s first submachine gun, the MP-18, was used in the Spring Offensive.

They carried advanced weaponry

While stormtroopers were considered ‘light infantry,’ each was equipped with a small arsenal of weaponry. Although many eschewed the standard Gewehr 98 rifle in favour of shortened cavalry carbines, the raiders’ chief weapon was the hand grenade — they carried sandbags full of them into action. NCOs and officers armed themselves with rapid-fire pistols like the Mauser C-96 or the P08 Luger outfitted with shoulder stocks and high capacity magazines. Support teams using Danish Madsen LMGs  and even captured British Lewis guns helped cover advancing squads. Some units were known to rely on even heavier ordnance: flamethrowers, trench mortars and even sawed-off 7.62 cm artillery pieces carried or rolled into No Man’s Land by the assault teams.

German stormtroopers advancing from No Man's Land, 1918.
German stormtroopers advancing from No Man’s Land, 1918.

The concept emerged during the war’s first year

The first stormtroopers were from the Calsow Assault Detachment, a pioneer outfit with Germany’s Eighth Army. Established in March 1915, its role was to eradicate enemy bunkers and machine gun nests using portable 37 mm artillery pieces. Oddly, this novel concept was never battle tested; the unit was decimated after being rushed to the Western Front to help stem an Allied offensive. An army captain named Willy Rohr later took command of the battered detachment and spent the rest of the year modifying the group’s tactics.

German troops charge past the body of a fallen French soldier.
German troops charge past the body of a fallen French soldier.

Germany wanted whole Stormtrooper battalions

After a successful demonstration to the German crown prince and General Ludendorff, the high command warmed to the concept. In 1916, the top brass ordered every corps on the Western Front to scour its ranks for the fittest and bravest to man experimental assault teams. By the end of the year, 30 German divisions had established battalions of shock troops. Even the navy had formed a detachment. The units became known as “storm men,” “raiding troops” and even “hunting commandos.” Eventually, the term sturmtruppen or stormtrooper took hold.

A stormtrooper hurls a grenade at an Allied trench.
A stormtrooper hurls a grenade at an Allied trench.

They were combat veterans

The first major stormtrooper offensive of the war took place in the opening days of the disastrous Verdun offensive of 1916. The following year, German assault units would punch through Italian lines at the Battle of Caporetto and would even retake ground captured by Allied tanks at the Battle of Cambrai. The results of these early forays were so encouraging that stormtroopers became a key element in the 1918 Spring Offensive or Kaiserschlacht (Kaiser’s Battle).

A German stormtrooper with an MP-18 machine pistol.
A German stormtrooper with an MP-18 machine pistol.

They were treated like ‘rock stars’

Right from the start, the stormtroopers were considered the elite of the German army… and they knew it. Celebrated in the national press for their dash and daring, stormtroopers were lavished with plentiful rations and comfortable living conditions. Assault teams rarely if ever manned the trenches like their rank and file comrades. In fact, they were brought up to the front just prior to an action and were whisked to the rear when operations were complete. Unlike ordinary ground-pounders, stormtroopers travelled by truck to save their strength for combat. Veteran raiders flouted regulations and modified their uniforms as they saw fit, adding camouflage and leather patches on the knees and elbows, a practice that raised eyebrows among the spit-and-polish brass. Although the units were spared much of the horror and drudgery of trench warfare, they were expected to face certain death without hesitation when called upon. Not surprisingly, casualties among stormtrooper battalions were shockingly high.

German troops training.
German troops training.

They were relentlessly trained

Because of their fast-moving style of fighting, stormtroopers needed to be in peak physical shape at all times. And in addition to a punishing fitness regimen, they also trained rigorously for battle, refining their tactics endlessly in mock assaults using live ammunition. When planning for an operation, the teams received detailed briefings, unlike their trench-dwelling counterparts. Stormtroopers were given intricate maps and aerial photography of their specific objectives and even rehearsed their assaults on life-sized replicas of their targets.

The stormtroopers as an icon for the horror of World War One, as seen through the eyes of Otto Dix.
The stormtrooper as an emblem of the hell of World War One, as seen through the eyes of Otto Dix.

They changed war forever

Stormtrooper fighting techniques revolutionized modern warfare. The battalions pioneered many of the small-unit tactics that are still in use on battlefields to this day. Assault detachments were also the first German soldiers to be equipped with the distinctive stahlhelm steel helmets. Up that point the Kaiser’s soldiers wore the thin and largely useless spiked pickelhaubes. They dabbled in now-ubiquitous body armour and were also the first soldiers to use submachine guns in combat, the MP-18.

Allied troops assault across No Man's Land. (Image source: WikiCommons)
Allied ‘shock troops’ storm No Man’s Land. (Image source: WikiCommons)

Other armies’ copied the Stormtroopers

Germany wasn’t the only army to apply stormtrooper tactics in World War One. A French commander named André Laffargue penned a widely read essay on assault teams in early as 1915. The following year, the Russians used concentrated artillery and precision infantry assaults to punch through Austrian lines at the Brusilov Offensive in Galicia. The attack nearly broke the Central Powers in the east. The British army famously used both Canadian and Australian shock troops all along the Western Front with great success. Italy’s Arditi performed a similar function and Austria Hungary formed its own stormtrooper detachments known as Jagdkommandos.

Hitler appropriate the name 'stormtrooper' for his elite Nazi paramilitary force. (Image source: German Federal Archive)
Hitler appropriated the name ‘stormtrooper’ for his elite Nazi paramilitary force. (Image source: German Federal Archive)

Their legend lived on after 1918

After the armistice, the fascination with stormtroopers lived on. Their battlefield successes fed into a popular post-war narrative in Germany that maintained the empire could have won the war were it not for defeatists on the home front. The stormtrooper mystique would go on to inspire the paramilitary Friekorps of Weimar Germany and more famously the die hard Brown shirts of Adolf Hitler’s SA or Sturmabteilung. In fact, the term “stormtrooper” itself would become indelibly associated with the Nazi Party, eventually overshadowing the remarkable accomplishments of the Sturmtruppen of the First World War.

Sources
Drury, Ian. “German Stormtrooper 1914-18”. Osprey Publishing, 1995.
http://www.westernfrontassociation.com/great-war-on-land/germany-allies/817-genesisstorm-troops.html
http://www.globeatwar.com/media-gallery/detail/51/111
http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/german_spring_offensive_of_1918.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Michael
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infiltration_tactics
http://chronicle.com/blognetwork/edgeofthewest/2009/03/27/stormtrooper-tactics/

12 thoughts on “Stormtroopers! — 10 Facts About Germany’s Elite Assault Soldiers of WW1

  1. It’s amazing to meet such this site . I support and appreciated about this for describing the ” The Stormtroopers of the Steel”..Thank you. my email:moonaungtour@gmail.com

  2. The French had adopted small unit tactics as early as 1915 in light of their heavy losses during the first six months of war. Still the Germans perfected small unit tactics but on battlefields dominated by artillery casualties were still going to be high.

  3. Foot soldiers are foot soldiers no matter what their nationality and in WW1 they all were similarly vulnerable and limited as to how far they could advance on foot. The real breakthrough and pioneering of all arms warfare was done by the British, Canadian and Australian forces who used tanks, armoured transport, aircraft and artillery together by 1918 to tear conventional German forces apart while minimumising their own losses. Americans need to widen their studies and find out who really did what instead of remaining stuck only on what the Germans did, hell they didn’t even believe in the effectiveness of tanks back then.

  4. On a point of detail the ‘allies’ in the First World War were the Germans and the Austro-Hungarians. The Italians were also part of what was called the Triple Alliance but they changed sides . The British, French and Russians. (who were knocked out of the war by 1918) were the Entente, an informal understanding which was not actually an alliance.

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