Somme Intelligence: Fourth Army HQ, 1916
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William Langford
William Langford has been employed in printing and publishing for fifty years. His works include five fictional titles, two books on aviation topics, five further titles on the First World War and one covering the actions of the SS Totenkopf Division in the invasion of France in May 1940.
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Somme Intelligence - William Langford
Introduction
The very first recorded intelligence gathering brief in history is available to us in some detail. The 3,500-year-old record contains the following instructions to agents selected to carry out a dangerous fact-finding mission:
Go north from here into the southern part of the land... then into the hill country. Find out what kind of country it is, how many people live there, and how strong they are. Find out whether the land is good or bad and whether the people live in open towns or in fortified cities. Find out whether the soil is fertile and whether the land is wooded.
The commander of the army about to invade needed detailed information, even ordering the spies to bring back samples of produce. See Numbers Chapter 13, verses 18, 19, 20 of the Bible.
So it would be throughout time, whenever men formed into armed camps and warred against each other, accurate information concerning the other’s circumstances would become necessary. In instances where one of the belligerents failed to gather sufficient intelligence about the enemy, or where gathered reports were ignored or down-played, the ordinary foot soldier has paid the price. For example, Saturday 1 July 1916, proved to be the most catastrophic day in the history of the British Army, with over 19,000 men killed and around 35,500 wounded. Added to these were the missing and those taken prisoner, making the mind-numbing total of 57,470 as an estimate. The optimistic attitude of the British generals, the planners of that disaster, caused them to be selective in their assessments of the accumulating intelligence arriving on their desks in the lead up to the offensive. They were well aware that the type of German positions they were assaulting had very deep underground shelters where the defenders were safe against the week-long preparatory bombardment. Further, despite the shelling, there were reports that German barbed wire entanglements still remained unbroken on most sections of the 15-mile-long front. That intelligence was either disregarded or played down. German deserters, and prisoners taken in trench raids, complained to their interrogators of terrible conditions the Germans troops were experiencing because of the shelling. British Fourth Army HQ, tasked with mounting the Somme offensive, would certainly have been encouraged by this sort of report; discounting the known tendency of the rank and file of all nations to be bitter complainers and prone to woefully exaggerating their lot in life. Also, and understandably, some warriors who fall into enemy hands are more than ready to tell their captors what they believe their questioners would prefer to hear.
The last time British forces lost men out-rivalling the figure of those killed in one day in the Battle of the Somme, was during the Wars of the Roses. Following the Battle of Towton, in Yorkshire in 1461, the heralds counted, in round figures, 28,000 dead after nine hours fighting. This of course was a civil war when rival kings fought for the throne of England. Civil wars have a notorious reputation for being especially brutal as those, once neighbours, exact revenge for perceived past grievances and grasp an opportunity to re-open old feuds. Further, it is difficult to know who is the enemy in these circumstances, as even members of the same family could harbour opposing views. Betrayal and ‘turning the coat’ during the fighting in the fifteenth century was commonplace. There can be no question that spies and agents were active gathering intelligence during the Wars of the Roses, but the medieval chronicles do not directly refer to this. However, events during that conflict indicate that clandestine activity was rife. For example, during the Battle of Northampton in 1460, the right wing of the Lancastrian line of defenders under the command of Lord Grey, suddenly laid down their weapons and helped the attacking Yorkists through the barrier of stakes. That betrayal caused the Yorkists to be victorious; the defection having been arranged beforehand through agents. This led to the capture of Lancastrian King Henry VI.
It was that English king’s grandson, Henry VIII, who later defined the role of an appointed chief ‘reconnoitier’ of the army – the ‘Scoutmaster’. The position of Scoutmaster came more to the fore in the English Civil War (1642 to 1651) when both sides fielded an overseer of agents. Enemy troop movements were observed along with the numbers being employed; discipline, logistics, equipment and morale were also noted and reported on. Spies for Oliver Cromwell, under the oversight of the Scoutmaster, were installed in the homes of known Royalists, in the streets and markets and even in the Royalist court when in exile. After the restoration the Scoutmaster designation was changed to that of Quarter Master General.
William Cadogan, 1st Earl Cadogan 1675 – 1726.
At the beginning of the next century an English army under the command of the Duke of Marlborough employed the services of Quarter Master General, William Cadogan. This was against the French in the Wars of the Spanish Succession (1702 to 1713). During the campaign in Europe the Quarter Master General moved ahead of the army and recruited guides to aid with intelligence gathering. Agents were ensconced within the French court and supplied crucial information on the movements and intentions of the French army.
Later in the eighteenth century european nations became embroiled in, what would be termed, the Seven Years War (1756 to 1763). British General Wolf, in his planning to capture Quebec from the French, personally undertook the intelligence work, interrogating deserters, questioning his scouts (known as ‘Rangers’), interpreting intercepted messages and even conducting his own reconnaissance.
Subsequent British failures on the American continent could be attributed, to some degree, to poor intelligence work and resulted in the loss to the Crown of those colonies – War of American Independence (1775 to 1783).
Learning lessons from defeat, the British Army in the Peninsular War (1808 to 1814), shaped-up and the beginnings of military intelligence as is understood in the present day took place. When British general Sir John Moore advanced on Salamanca then withdrew to Corunna, informing him all the while was a locally recruited Peninsula Corps of Guides. Under Arthur Wellesley (later to become the Duke of Wellington) that organization was formally established in 1809. The Corps of Guides began with a complement of six officers and thirty-eight operatives. Numbers increased as French deserters were recruited and Portuguese officers added. The work undertaken was that of interpreting, tactical questioning, reconnaissance, making maps and sketches of terrain and, most importantly, shadowing enemy movements and counting his forces (usually done at river crossings). Agents belonging to the Corps of Guides operated deep within enemy occupied territory. One British officer, Captain Scovell, was successful in decoding intercepted French despatches.
Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington 1769–1852.
Following the defeat of Napoleon at Waterloo there was a decline in the art of intelligence gathering. By that time the Corps of Guides had been disbanded it having been deemed purely a Peninsular requirement for the British Army at that time. Not until the war in the Crimea in 1854 was there a conflict demanding the employment of an intelligence service of the merit of the Corps of Guides.
When Lord Raglan, Commander of the British Army, landed in the Crimea to fight the Russians he was to employ a civilian intelligence gatherer by the name of Calvert. However, his services ended abruptly when the man died of cholera in 1855. Poor administration of the British Army in the Crimea and faulty logistical support is now legendary; inadequate intelligence gleaning was a part of the overall malaise. By the end of that conflict brought about by the capture of Sebastopol in 1856, Britain’s reputation among the European nations had suffered a severe blow.
Up to the end of that century the wars engaged in by the British Army were, in the main, against natives armed with edged weapons. At the outset of the Zulu War, 1879, intelligence was left to a civilian who had produced a detailed manual which contained warnings of what the British would be coming up against. The British, under the command of Lord Chelmsford, treated the intelligence with contempt and suffered a defeat at Isandlwana, following which Chelmsford usefully employed scouts from the Natal Volunteers.
Three years later, with the Egyptian expedition in view, useful information gathering was done by a young Kitchener and a Major Tulloch supposedly engaged on a shooting trip. When the campaign in the Sudan began small intelligence staffs reconnoitered, interrogated captives and controlled agents. Because of his involvement in the earlier intelligence gathering, Kitchener, when he became Commander-in-Chief, made sure that an efficient service was put in place. This proved its worth and employed disinformation to mislead the Khalifa before the Battle of Omdurman in 1898.
Horatio Herbert Kitchener, 1st Earl Kitchener 1850–1916.
For the Boer War in South Africa in 1899 failure to have the correct information available caused disaster in the opening stages. The Commander-in-Chief, Sir George White, had no inkling of the importance of intelligence gathering and was soon besieged at Ladysmith. Out to assist came General Redvers Buller, likewise without the benefit of an intelligence service and was promptly defeated at the Battle of Colenso. Incredibly, the most detailed work on the South African situation existed and was available to the commanders. Major General Sir John Ardagh and his Intelligence Division back in London had, in a published report, identified the possible enemy in that region of Africa and flagged up the purchase of up-to-date Mauser rifles from Germany by the Boer states. The handbook produced by Ardagh’s department gave the number of machine guns, artillery, the amount of munitions and the number of men available to the Boer leaders. It was military incompetence of the highest order not to have consulted this, and taken it into planning strategy when hostilities erupted. The ordinary British soldier suffered the consequences at such battles that took place on the Spion Kop.
Major General Sir John Charles Ardagh 1840–1907.
When Lord Roberts took over, after the removal of Buller following the Colenso disaster, he arrived in South Africa with his own Head of Intelligence, Colonel George Henderson, who formed the Field Intelligence Department FID, developed the operation until it numbered 132 officers and over 2,000 white soldiers plus native scouts. Knowledge of Boer strengths, morale, likely courses of action, weapons and equipment greatly aided British military headquarters. When hostilities ended Henderson firmed up the intelligence operation by writing a manual Field Intelligence, Its Principles and Practices and recommended the forming of an Intelligence Corps. In the light of his experience gained in the field he was able to include in his manual the type of character looked for in intelligence officers:
Lieutenant Colonel David Henderson 1862–1921.
The successful intelligence officer must be cool, courageous, and adroit, patient and imperturbable, discreet and trustworthy. He must understand the handling of troops and have a knowledge of the art of war. He must be able to win the confidence of his general, and to inspire confidence in his subordinates. He must have resolution to continue unceasingly his search for information, even in the most disheartening circumstances and after repeated failures.
He must have endurance to submit silently to criticism, much of which may be based on ignorance or jealousy. And he must be able to deal with men, to approach his source of information with tact and skill, whether such source be a patriotic gentleman or an abandoned traitor.
Field Intelligence by Lieutenant Colonel David Henderson.