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Mobilization
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==History== ===Roman Republic=== The [[Roman Republic]] was able to mobilize at various times between 6% (81–83 BCE) to as much as 10% (210s BCE) of the total Roman population, in emergencies and for short periods of time.<ref name="LigtNorthwood2008">{{cite book|author1=Luuk de Ligt|author2=S. J. Northwood|title=People, Land, and Politics: Demographic Developments and the Transformation of Roman Italy 300 BC-AD 14|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4toKjuTLOQUC&pg=PA38|year=2008|publisher=BRILL|isbn=978-90-04-17118-3|pages=38–40}}</ref> This included poorly-trained [[militia]]. ===Modern era=== The [[Confederate States of America]] is estimated to have mobilized about 11% of its free population in the [[American Civil War]] (1861–1865).<ref name="LigtNorthwood2008"/> The [[Kingdom of Prussia]] mobilized about 6–7% of its total population in the years 1760 and 1813.<ref name="LigtNorthwood2008"/> The [[Swedish Empire]] mobilized 7.7% in 1709.<ref name="LigtNorthwood2008"/> Armies in the seventeenth century possessed an average of 20,000 men.<ref name="Onorato">Onorato, Massimiliano G., [[Kenneth Scheve]], and [[David Stasavage]]. Technology and the Era of the Mass Army. Thesis. IMT Lucca, Stanford University, and New York University, 2013. Retrieved from https://web.archive.org/web/20150222185518/http://www.politics.as.nyu.edu/docs/IO/5395/mobilization-July-2013.pdf (archived) </ref> A military force of this size requires around 20 tons of food per day, shelter, as well as all the necessary munitions, transportation (typically horses or mules), tools, and representative garments.<ref name="Onorato"/> Without efficient transportation, mobilizing these average-sized forces was extremely costly, time-consuming, and potentially life-threatening.<ref name="Onorato"/> Soldiers could traverse the terrain to get to war fronts, but they had to carry their supplies.<ref name="Onorato"/> Many armies decided to forage for food;<ref name="Onorato"/> however, [[foraging]] restricted movement because it is based on the presumption that the army moves over land possessing significant agricultural production.<ref name="Onorato"/> However, due to new policies (like conscription), greater populations, and greater national wealth, the nineteenth-century army was composed of an average of 100,000 men. For example, in 1812 [[Napoleon]] led an army of 600,000 [[French invasion of Russia|to Moscow]] while feeding off plentiful agricultural products introduced by the turn of the century, such as potatoes.<ref>Vincennes, Archive de l'Armèe de Terre (AAT), 7N848, Gaston Bodart, "Die Starkeverhaltnisse in den bedeutesten Schlachten." Craig, ''The Battle of Königgrätz''.</ref> Despite the advantages of mass armies, mobilizing forces of this magnitude took much more time than it had in the past.<ref name="Howard">Michael Howard, The Franco-Prussian War (1961; London: Granada, 1979), p. 23.</ref> The [[Second Italian War of Independence]] illustrated all of the problems in modern army mobilization. Prussia began to realize the future of mobilizing mass armies when [[Napoleon III]] transported 130,000 soldiers to Italy by [[military railways]] in 1859.<ref name="Howard"/> French caravans that carried the supplies for the French and [[Piedmont]]ese armies were incredibly slow, and the arms inside these caravans were sloppily organized.<ref name="Vincennes_845">Vincennes, AAT, MR 845, Anon., "Précis historique de la campagne d'Italie en 1859." Wolf Schneider von Arno, "Der österreichisch-ungarische Generalstab," (Kriegsarchiv Manuscript), vol. 7, pp. 18, 54, 55.</ref> These armies were in luck, however, in that their Austrian adversaries experienced similar problems with sluggish supply caravans (one of which apparently covered less than three miles per day).<ref name="Vincennes_845"/> Not only did Prussia take note of the problems in transporting supplies to armies, but it also took note of the lack of communication between troops, officers, and generals. Austria's army was primarily composed of [[Slavs]], but it contained many other ethnicities as well.<ref name="DN">D. N., "Über die Truppensprachen unserer Armee," Österreichische Militärische Zeitschrift (ÖMZ) 2 (1862), pp. 365–7.</ref> Austrian military instruction during peacetime utilized nine different languages, accustoming Austrian soldiers to taking orders only in their native language.<ref name="DN"/> Conversely, in an effort to augment the efficacy of the new "[[precision rifle]]" developed by the monarchy, officers were forced to only speak German when giving orders to their men.<ref name="DN"/> Even one Austrian officer commented at [[Battle of Solferino|Solferino]] that his troops could not even comprehend the command, "Halt."<ref name="DN"/> This demonstrates the ''communicative'' problems that arose quickly with the advent of the mass army. ===Mobilization in World War I=== [[Image:Schlieffen Plan.jpg|thumb|Map of the [[Schlieffen Plan]] and planned French counter-offensives]] Intricate plans for mobilization contributed greatly to the beginning of [[World War I]], since in 1914, under the laws and customs of warfare then observed (not to mention the desire to avoid compromising national security), general mobilization of one nation's military forces was invariably considered an [[Casus belli|act of war]] by that country's likely enemies. In 1914, the [[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland|United Kingdom]] was the only [[Europe]]an [[Great Power]] without [[Conscription in the United Kingdom|conscription]]. The other Great Powers ([[Austria-Hungary]], [[Kingdom of Italy|Italy]], [[French Third Republic|France]], [[German Empire|Germany]] and [[Russian Empire|Russia]]) all relied on compulsory military service to supply each of their armies with the millions of men they believed they would need to win a major war. France enacted the "[[Conscription in France|Three Year Law]]" (1913) to extend the service of conscripted soldiers to match the size of the German army, as the French population of 40 million was smaller than the German population of 65 million people.<ref>{{harvp|Keegan|1999}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.tacitus.nu/historical-atlas/population/germany.htm |title=Population of Germany |publisher=Tacitus.nu |date=2008-08-30 |access-date=2014-05-13}}</ref> The [[Anglo-German naval arms race]] began, sparked by the German enactment of the [[German Naval Laws|Second Naval Law]]. Each of the Great Powers could only afford to keep a fraction of these men in uniform in peacetime, the rest were [[military reserve|reservists]] with limited opportunities to train. Maneuvering formations of millions of men with limited military training required intricate plans with no room for error, confusion, or discretion after mobilization began. These plans were prepared under the assumption of [[scenario|worst-case scenarios]]. For example, German military leaders did not plan to mobilize for war with Russia whilst assuming that France would not come to her ally's aid, or vice versa. The [[Schlieffen Plan]] therefore dictated not only mobilization against both powers, but also the order of attack—France would be attacked first regardless of the diplomatic circumstances. To bypass the fortified Franco-German frontier, the German forces were to be ordered to march through [[Belgium]]. Whether or not Russia had committed the first provocation, the German plan agreed to by [[William II, German Emperor|Emperor William II]] called for the attack on Russia to take place only after France was defeated. [[File:Mobilisatiezakboekje van Joseph-Nicolas-François Vandebroek, item 3.jpg|thumb|left|Belgian army mobilisation papers to join a [[Lancers|Lanciers]] regiment]] Similarly, the Russian [[Stavka]]'s war planning assumed that war against either Austria-Hungary or Germany would mean war against the other power. Although the plan allowed flexibility as to whether the main effort would be made against Germany or Austria-Hungary, in either case units would be mobilized on the frontiers of both Powers. On July 28, 1914, [[Tsar Nicholas II]] of Russia (William's cousin) ordered partial mobilization against Austria-Hungary only. While war with Austria-Hungary seemed inevitable, Nicholas [[Willy–Nicky correspondence|engaged in a personal dialogue with the German Emperor]] in an attempt to avoid war with Germany. However, Nicholas was advised that attempts to improvise a partial mobilization would lead to chaos and probable defeat if, as pessimists on the Russian side expected, no amount of diplomacy could convince the Germans to refrain from attacking Russia whilst she was engaged with Germany's ally. On July 29, 1914, the Tsar ordered full mobilization, then changed his mind after receiving a telegram from Kaiser Wilhelm. Partial mobilization was ordered instead. The next day, the Tsar's [[Minister of Foreign Affairs (Russia)|foreign minister]], [[Sergey Sazonov]] once more persuaded Nicholas of the need for general mobilization, and the order was issued that day, July 30. In response, Germany declared war on Russia. Germany mobilized under [[Helmuth Johann Ludwig von Moltke|von Moltke the Younger]]'s revised version of the [[Schlieffen Plan]], which assumed a [[two-front war]] with Russia and France. Like Russia, Germany decided to follow its two-front plans despite the one-front war. Germany declared war on France on August 3, 1914, one day after issuing an ultimatum to Belgium demanding the right of German troops to pass through as part of the planned pincer action of the military. Finally, Britain declared war on Germany for violating Belgian neutrality. Thus the entangling alliances of the [[Triple Alliance (1882)|Triple Alliance]] and the [[Triple Entente]] directed the intricate plans for mobilization. This brought all of the Great Powers of Europe into the Great War without actually utilizing the provisions of either alliance. [[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 146-1994-022-19A, Mobilmachung, Truppentransport mit der Bahn.jpg|thumb|right|German soldiers in a railway [[Passenger car (rail)|car]] on the way to the front in August 1914. The message on the car reads '''Von München über Metz nach Paris'''. (From [[Munich]] via [[Metz]] to [[Paris]]).]] The mobilization was like a holiday for many of the inexperienced soldiers; for example, some Germans wore flowers in the muzzles of their rifles as they marched. Trains brought soldiers to the front lines of battle. The Germans timetabled the movements of 11,000 trains as they brought troops across the [[Rhine River]]. The French mobilized around 7,000 trains for movement. [[Horse]]s were also mobilized [[Horses in World War I|for war]]. The British had 165,000 horses prepared for [[cavalry]], the Austrians 600,000, the Germans 715,000, and the Russians over a million.<ref>{{harvp|Keegan|1999|loc=(footnote points to Bucholz, p. 163) pp. 73–74}}</ref> Britain's [[Dominion]]s including [[Australia]], [[Canada]], [[New Zealand]] and [[Union of South Africa|South Africa]] were compelled to go to war when Britain did. However, it was largely left up to the individual Dominions to recruit and equip forces for the war effort. Canadian, Australian and New Zealand mobilizations all involved the creation of new field forces for overseas service rather than using the existing regimental structures as a framework. In the case of Canada, the Militia Minister, Sir [[Sam Hughes]], created the [[Canadian Expeditionary Force]] by sending telegrams to 226 separate reserve unit commanders asking for volunteers to muster at [[Valcartier]] in Quebec. The field force served separately from the [[Permanent Active Militia|Militia]] (Canada's peacetime army); in 1920 the [[Otter Commission]] was compelled to sort out which units would perpetuate the units that served in the trenches—the CEF or the prewar Militia. A unique solution of perpetuations was instituted, and mobilization during the Second World War did not repeat Sir Sam Hughes' model, which has been described by historians as being more closely akin to ancient Scottish clans assembling for battle than a modern, industrialized nation preparing for war. [[File: Reservists at Gare de L'est, Paris (LOC).jpg|thumb|Photograph shows reservists and crowd at the [[Gare de Paris-Est]], Paris during the beginning of World War I]] "Colonials" served under British command though, perhaps owing to the limited autonomy granted to the Dominions regarding their respective mobilizations, the Dominions eventually compelled the British government to overrule the objections of some British commanders and let the Dominion forces serve together instead of being distributed amongst various British divisions. The "colonials" would go on to be acknowledged by both the British and German high commands as being elite British units. In May 1918, when command of the [[Australian Corps]] passed from [[William Birdwood]] to [[John Monash]], it became the first British Empire formation commanded totally free of British officers. On May 23, 1915, Italy entered World War I on the Allied side. Despite being the weakest of the big four Allied powers, the Italians soon managed to populate its army from 560 to 693 infantry battalions in 1916; the army had grown in size from 1 million to 1.5 million soldiers.<ref>{{harvp|Keegan|1999|p=275}} (note also: field artillery pieces went from 1,788 to 2,068)</ref> On August 17, 1916, [[Kingdom of Romania|Romania]] entered the war on the Allied side, mobilizing an army of 23 divisions. Romania was quickly defeated however by Germany, Austria-Hungary, and [[Kingdom of Bulgaria|Bulgaria]]. Bulgaria went so far as to ultimately mobilize 1.2 million men, more than a quarter of its population of 4.3 million people, a greater share of its population than any other country during the war. The production of supplies gradually increased throughout the war. In Russia, the expansion of industry allowed a 2,000 percent increase in the production of artillery shells – by November 1915, over 1,512,000 artillery shells were being produced per month. In France, a massive mobilization by the female population to work in factories allowed the rate of shell production to reach 100,000 shells a day by 1915.<ref>{{harvp|Keegan|1999|pp=275–276}}</ref> Both sides also began drawing on larger numbers of soldiers. The British Secretary of State for War, [[Horatio Kitchener, 1st Earl Kitchener|Lord Kitchener]], appealed for hundreds of thousands of soldiers, which was met with an enthusiastic response. 30 new British divisions were created. The response by volunteers allowed the British to put off the introduction of conscription until [[Military Service Act 1916|1916]]. New Zealand [[Conscription in New Zealand|followed suit]], with Canada also eventually introducing conscription with the [[Military Service Act (Canada)|Military Service Act]] in 1917. On April 6, 1917, the [[United States]] entered the war on the Allied side. At the entrance, the U.S. only could mobilize its army of 107,641 soldiers, ranked only seventeenth in size worldwide at the time. The [[United States Navy]] quickly mobilized, adding 5 [[dreadnoughts]] to the Allied navy. However, conscription quickly ensued. By March 1918, 318,000 U.S. soldiers had been mobilized to France. Eventually, by October 1918, a force of 2 million U.S. soldiers joined in the war effort.<ref>{{harvp|Keegan|1999|pp=351–353, 372–374}}</ref> ===Mobilization in World War II=== [[File:Hevosia lähdössä talvisotaan.jpg|thumb|[[Finnhorse|Finnish horses]] and carriages requisitioned in the mobilization before the [[Winter War]]]] [[File:Jatkosodan yleinen liikekannallepano julistettu 20.6.1941.jpg|thumb|The general mobilization launch of the [[Continuation War]] was announced on 20 June 1941 in Finland]] [[File:RIAN archive 662757 New recruits during mobilization.jpg|thumb|New recruits during mobilization in Moscow after [[Nazi Germany]] [[Eastern Front (World War II)|invaded the Soviet Union]], 23 June 1941]] [[Second Polish Republic|Poland]] partly mobilized its troops on August 24, 1939, and fully mobilized on August 30, 1939, following the increased confrontations with [[Nazi Germany|Germany]] since [[Anglo-Polish military alliance|March 1939]]. On September 1, 1939 Germany invaded Poland, which prompted both France and Britain to [[British and French declaration of war on Germany|declare war]] on Germany. However, they were slow to mobilize, and by the time Poland had been overrun by the Axis powers, only [[Phoney War|minor operations]] had been carried out by the French at the [[Saar River]]. Canada actually carried out a partial mobilization on August 25, 1939, in anticipation of the growing [[diplomatic crisis]]. On September 1, 1939, the [[Canadian Active Service Force]] (a corps-sized force of two divisions) was mobilized even though war was not declared by Canada until September 10, 1939. Only one division went overseas in December 1939, and the government hoped to follow a "limited liability" war policy. When France was invaded in May 1940, the Canadian government realized that would not be possible and mobilized three additional divisions, beginning their overseas employment in August 1940 with the dispatch of the [[2nd Canadian Division]] (some units of which were deployed to [[Iceland in World War II|Iceland]] and [[Newfoundland and Labrador|Newfoundland]] for garrison duty before moving to the UK). Canada also enacted the [[National Resources Mobilization Act]] in 1940, which among other things compelled men to serve in the military, though conscripts mobilized under the NRMA did not serve overseas until 1944. Conscripts did, however, serve in the [[Aleutian Islands Campaign]] in 1943 though the anticipated Japanese defense never materialized due to the evacuation of the enemy garrison before the landings. Service in the Aleutians was not considered "overseas" as technically the islands were part of North America. The [[Military history of the United Kingdom during World War II|United Kingdom]] mobilized 22% of its total population for direct military service, more than any other nation in the WWII era.<ref name="Axelrod2007">{{cite book|author=Alan Axelrod|title=Encyclopedia of World War II|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LbWFgjW6KX8C&pg=PA399|year=2007|publisher=H W Fowler|isbn=978-0-8160-6022-1|page=399}}</ref> Up to 34 million soldiers served in the [[Red Army]] during World War II, representing the largest military force in world history.<ref>{{Citation | first = ГФ [Krivosheev, GF] | last = Кривошеев | script-title = ru:Россия и СССР в войнах XX века: потери вооруженных сил. Статистическое исследование |trans-title=Russia and the USSR in the wars of the 20th century: losses of the Armed Forces. A Statistical Study | language = ru}}</ref> === Post–World War II === [[Volodymyr Zelenskyy]], the [[President of Ukraine]], signed a decree on February 24, 2022 on the [[2022 Ukrainian mobilization|general mobilization]] of the population in the [[2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine]]. Conscripts and reservists were called up over the next 90 days to "ensure the defense of the state, maintaining combat and mobilization readiness". Men between the ages of 18 and 60 were prohibited from leaving the country.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.dw.com/en/ukraine-president-orders-general-mobilization/a-60908996 | title=Ukraine president orders general mobilization – DW – 02/25/2022 | website=[[Deutsche Welle]] }}</ref> In April 2024, President Zelenskyy signed a new [[Mobilization in Ukraine|mobilization]] law to increase the number of troops.<ref>{{cite news |title='Everyone will fight.' Ukrainian men weigh their options as new draft law comes into effect |url=https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/25/europe/ukraine-draft-law-conscription-intl/index.html |work=CNN |date=25 May 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Mobilization in Ukraine ramps up as new law comes into effect, Zelensky says |url=https://kyivindependent.com/mobilization-in-ukraine-ramps-up-after-law-was-passed-zelensky-says/ |work=The Kyiv Independent |date=31 May 2024}}</ref> He also signed into law a measure lowering Ukraine's army mobilization age from 27 to 25.<ref>{{cite news |title=Ukraine's mobilization law now in force, sparking fears more essential workers will be drafted |url=https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/ukraine-mobilization-law-1.7208625 |work=CBC |date=18 May 2024}}</ref> [[File:Первых призывников из Ялты проводили на службу, 2022, 05.jpg|thumb|Civilians from occupied [[Crimea]] drafted into the Russian army during the [[2022 Russian mobilization]]]] [[Vladimir Putin]], the [[President of Russia]], announced a [[2022 Russian mobilization|partial mobilization on 21 September 2022]] of existing [[reservist]]s, most particularly those that have military experience. According to claims of the [[Defence Minister of Russia|Russian defence minister]] [[Sergei Shoigu]], 300,000 reservists would be mobilized.<ref>{{Cite news |date=2022-09-21 |title='This is not a bluff': Putin mobilises Russia's military and says he will respond to 'nuclear blackmail' if threatened |language=en-AU |work=ABC News |url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-09-21/vladimir-putin-announces-partial-military-mobilisation/101463346 |access-date=2022-09-21}}</ref>
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