Cacertian August Offensive
Cacertian August Offensive | |||||||
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Part of the Desopya Campaign of the Divide War | |||||||
HMA Sanreno over the battlefield | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Cacertian Empire | Republic of Syara | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Atanas Endekov Grigori Yaponski Dimitar Pankovski Andrev Brehvez Aleksov Sebastian Matić | |||||||
Strength | |||||||
500,000 troops 500 tanks 12 airships 212 fighters 44 bombers 1,120 guns 12 rail-batteries |
790,000 troops 200 tanks 6 airships 322 fighters 3,265 guns 4 armored trains | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
22,689 killed 64,980 wounded |
47,304 killed 144,612 wounded |
The Cacertian August Offensive, also know as Marik's Battle (Cacertian: La battaglia di Marik) or Defense of Zovahr (Syaran: Одбрана на Зовахр, Odbrana na Zovahr) was the final decisive operation of the Desopya Campaign during the Divide War. It was launched by the Cacertian Empire under the command of General Demetria Marik against the Army of Syaran Republic along the Alekso Line in Makedon. The objective of the offensive was to break through the Alekso Line and reach Zovahr, the capital of the Republic of Syara, under the belief that its capture would compel the Syarans to surrender. The Cacertians began their offensive on 6 August 1918 along a 175 kilometer front, spearheaded by 500 tanks and armored cars which breached the Alekso Line in several sectors. Supported by tanks, railway artillery batteries, airplanes and airships, the Cacertians succeeded in overrunning the Syaran tactical reserves but ran into increased Syaran resistance as their advance continued. Syaran forces, backed by over 3,000 artillery pieces, four armored trains, hundreds of aircraft, airships of their own, and 200 tanks counter-attacked across the front and succeeded in stalling the Cacertian offensive. Marik regrouped her forces on 18 August and made a final push for Zovahr, but Cacertian forces were halted by Syaran defenses near Viserajk and Rijtek. Although they were just 6 kilometers from Zovahr, the exhausted and depleted Cacertian forces were unable to press any further, and Marik called off the operation as Syaran counter-attacks began unfolding.
The offensive was the last major military action of the war. In the weeks that followed the Cacertians gradually withdrew their forces back towards the Desopya Coastal Plain and began pursuing a cessation of hostilities. The Desopya Campaign would end a month later on 22 September, and the war's end would follow in October. The victory over the Cacertian Empire provoked massive celebrations across Syara and would prove instrumental in the formation of Syaran nationalism in the years that followed the Divide War. For Cacerta, Rijtek would become informally known as the "High-Water Mark of the Empire"; the end of the war would become known as the beginning of the end of the Cacertian Empire. Historically the offensive is often seen to foreshadow the technological warfare that would come to dominate conflicts of the 20th Century. The August Offensive featured large scale usage of tanks, aircraft, and artillery, and involved the first instance of armored combat between tanks on the battlefield. The offensive was correspondingly the bloodiest of the entire war; Syaran and Cacertian casualties amounted to nearly 280,000 troops killed or wounded over the course of the fighting.
Background
By the Spring of 1918 the war was beginning to strain the Cacertian Empire. The logistical demands of supporting over half-a-million troops across on the other side of Siduri were consuming almost half of the tonnage of the Royal Navy, along with rapidly emptying the treasury. News of Syaran resistance to the Cacertian invasion was also stirring rebellious sentiments in Knichus and Arkoenn. After more than a year of war however there was little sign of an impending victory, and mounting casualties were beginning to strain public support for the war. However a withdrawal from the conflict, and by extension a concession of defeat, would risk encouraging revolts against the Empire. Following the failure of the Second Wave in April 1918 to break the deadlock, it was clear that victory was still not close at hand.
In June senior leadership of the Empire met in Vichenza to discuss the war's future. It was agreed that allowing the war to continue into 1919 was unacceptable and that a conclusion needed to be reached before the year ended. One final drive on the Syaran capital of Zovahr would be launched, with the assumption that the Republic would be forced to sue for peace with its epicenter in Cacertian hands. How to conduct the offensive provoked disagreement within Cacertian leadership. Army General Demetria Marik proposed the employment of Cacerta's first armored formations, "tanks" backed up by armored cars, to break the deadlock.
Development of tanks by Cacerta had been spearheaded by Marik since 1915, and the outbreak of the Divide War had encouraged further development. By mid-1918 though the first produced tanks were still very much in their infancy; although Marik had insisted on frequent, realistic training to get crews ready to operate them in battle, they were still untested. Mechanical problems were especially prominent; during some testing cycles mechanical breakdowns had crippled more than half the number of tanks employed. Nevertheless, this was one field where the Cacertians did enjoy advantage. Although the Syarans were aware of Cacertian tank progress, their own development of armored vehicles was trudging along slowly.
Marik proposed a combined-arms offensive to be carried out by a third wave of troops, backed up by armored companies of Padova Type 1 Assault Tanks, later expanded to include Type 2 Assault Tanks as well. The tanks would be accompanied by several Guards Rifle Divisions to assist in the breakthrough, and supported by the railway artillery batteries and airships that had arrived in the second wave. The plan was not entirely well received, with criticism focusing heavily on the untested capability of Cacertian tanks and the strength of Syaran defenses. Despite such misgivings, Empress Elianna gave her approval for Marik to carry out the offensive.
Preparations
Marik began preparing her forces for the offensive in July. Assault tanks were transferred from their training grounds in Sarrista and Knichus and boarded onto transports bound for Allamunnika and then Syara. Fresh Guards Rifle Divisions were redeployed from their posts along the borders with Tennai and Xevden and transported by ship through the Sundering Sea; in some cases civilian ocean liners were requisitioned for this purpose. Although Marik attempted to keep the deployments of her forces a secret, moving so many troops and the distinctly shaped Assault Tanks made it ultimately impossible to prevent the Syarans of learning from Marik's intentions. By 20 July most of Marik's tanks and troops had arrived in Desopya, many of them landing at the occupied port of Sena which had been secured earlier in the year.
Marik drew up her forces across the 175 kilometer front. Between air and land forces Marik could amass around 500,000 troops, backed up by 500 tanks and armored cars, more than 1,100 guns, 12 airships, and around 250 aircraft including fighters and bombers. She could also count on 12 railway artillery guns for mobile support, by employing the Syaran's own railroads against them. Marik's ground forces were organized into eight field armies; the 3rd, 4th, 11th, 12th, and 13th under General Orsa Calderara, and the 5th, 6th, and 9th Armies under General Bertino Bassadoar. Bassadoar's armies, which had been fighting since the first wave in 1917, were badly mauled from months of front line action, forcing Marik to strip away forces from Calderara's 3rd and 4th Armies to reinforce them. She deployed the remnants of the 3rd and 4th Armies as operational reserves while forming a six army front grouped into threes; Bassadoar formed the right section with its flanks on the Xhemal River that flowed from Zovahr, while Calderara's three field armies (11th, 12th, and 13th) were oriented towards Patom in the east.
Marik's decision to pursue a more broad front strategy rather than focusing solely Zovahr was based on strategic and logistical realities. By the summer of 1918 the Syarans had become proficient in shifting their reserves across the front line to react to Cacertian breakthroughs. Singularly focused offensives thus would inevitably be contained and counter-attacks in full. Additionally, after a year of war the infrastructure of northern Makedon was in ruin. Despite Cacertian efforts to repairing the damage, the remaining roads and railways simply couldn't support multiple armies operating on a single axis of advance. The drive towards Patom also deprived the Syarans of the option of shuttling all their reserves towards Zovahr; if they did so, they risked the loss of Patom to the Cacertians who could then swing west and strike the exposed Syaran right flank. Such decision making would, ironically, serve as the basis of Syaran military doctrine for decades after.
Marik planned for the initial offensive to be carried out by her rifle divisions with infiltration support from the Grenadier Battalions. This initial assault, supported by artillery fire, would breach the Alekso Line and create holes for which the second echelon could push through. Once the breaches were made, Marik's armored forces, supported by her Guards Rifle Divisions, would exploit the breakthroughs by breaching the main Syaran defenses and pushing through into the Syaran rear echelon. With their lines breached and assault tanks and Guards rifle troops pouring through, the Syarans were be forced to scatter their reserves across the entire front line. Guided by aircraft and airships for reconnaissance and supported by railway batteries for mobile artillery platforms, the Cacertians would then drive south and capture Zovahr and Patom.
Against Marik's forces was Field Marshal Atanas Endekov, commander of all Syaran forces in Makedon. Endekov had under his command nearly 800,000 troops, in addition to over 3,000 guns, over 300 aircraft, and six of his own airships. Four armored trains were also supplied to support the Syaran forces, who were organized into two Army Groups; Yaponksi in the west and Pankovski in the east. Each army was composed of four field armies although in practice most decision making was made at the Corps Level, and as a result are usually emphasized above their respective armies. Yaponski's armies were the Fourth (12th, 16th, 21st Corps), Fifth (17th, 23rd, 25th Corps), Tenth (20th, 22nd, 24th Corps), and Thirteenth (26th, 28th, 30th Corps). Pankovski's armies were the Sixth (27th, 29th, 31st Corps), Seventh (32nd, 34th, 36th Corps), Ninth (33rd, 35th, 37th Corps) and the Fifteenth (38th, 40th, 42nd Corps). All together the Syarans had 72 divisions manning the Alekso Line.
The Alekso Line was not a single line but rather a series of defensive "belts" than ran between the Xhemal and Dazin Rivers. There were four "lines" in total. The first line was a lightly manned series of observation posts and dugouts that were meant to act as an early warning element, ringed with snipers and machine gunners. The second line was more formidable and consisted of several groups of trenches manned with overlapping machine gun nests and mortar pits, with increased fortifications. The third line was the main body and consisted of dug in regiments, pillboxes, hardpoints, overlapping machine guns, and artillery guns positioned for direct and indirect fire. The final fourth line was predominantly for the reserves to man and allowed easy access to reinforcement more forward trenches. Medical centers and ammunition dumps were often located here along with regimental and divisional headquarters.
News of the impending Cacertian offensive had caused the Syarans to rush their production of their own armored vehicles. The Aescaus and Agrius tanks, which had been in development since 1916, were both expedited and dispatched to the front line in early August. Their deployment was largely born out of panic rather than careful deliberation; many of the Syaran crews had only a few hours experience with their machines and the army and corps commanders had little idea on how best to employ them. As a result, the 200 tanks the Syarans had at the beginning of the offensive (123 Agrius and 77 Aescaus) were scattered across the Alekso Line with little reason behind their deployment.