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Volksgrenadiers in CMBB: Just boys and old men?
12-10-2008, 04:35 AM,
#1
Volksgrenadiers in CMBB: Just boys and old men?
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I was reading the following info about Volksgrenadiers from Wickipedia recently:

"Many prior infantry divisions that had been mauled or destroyed in combat were rebuilt to the new Volksgrenadier standard, and new divisions were raised as well. They were formed out of anything the Replacement Army could get its hands on: boys and elderly men, men previously rejected as physically unfit for service, wounded soldiers returning from hospitals, and transfers from the "jobless" personel of the quickly shrinking Kriegsmarine and Luftwaffe, usually organized around small cadres of hardened veterans."

Has the reality of this been factored in to CMBB? It appears not by looking at the stats. For example, it is possible to buy "crack" volksgrenadiers for QBs the first month they come out in August of '44. Shouldn't it be only possible to get them as conscripts?

Here JasonC posts on the question:

"No, it should not only be possible to get them as conscripts. Their skill levels and combat performance varied enourmously. Yes, a green VG formation should be a common force type in the fall and winter, but there were veterans too. Arguably there was even a formation that rated elite, that was designated VG slightly later. Details below.

First to explain the waves of units that were designated VG. 18 infantry divisions ordered formed in July, and actually available by September 1, were designated VG at the start of September. Another 25 new divisions were ordered formed at the start of September, to appear between October 1 and December. There were also a few redesignations (often during a rebuild, but not always), and later units still (e.g. for the Bulge period), so the VG wave was over 50 divisions, appearing in the last third of 1944. Just knowing that much, you know they aren't all going to be "conscript" quality, but varied.

What were the manpower sources? They varied from unit to unit, but the common expedients being applied at the time were generically "comb outs" of rear area formations, plus acceleration of the following year's recruitment class. The other arms were cannabilized, and civilian economic deferrals canceled.

The Luftwaffe had 1.9 million men on its rolls at the end of the summer, but was beaten in the air. It still maintained a huge Flak park in Germany, over 10,000 heavy guns. But a significant portion of this force was Goering empire building and superfluous once the air war was lost. A portion were formed into FJ divisions, but after the failure of the LW field divisions in 1942-3, the Heer was able to get most of the men designated for ground use from this source formally transfered to the army instead.

The navy had 700,000 men on strength at the end of the summer. The western allies had just isolated or captured many of the u-boat bases in France, and there was of course never any prospect of the surface navy mattering. So large numbers of personnel were transfered from this source, too.

Note that the above comb outs brought in large numbers of perfectly high quality manpower, from the prime age classes, with as good morale and motivation as any other earlier army inductee, etc. They lacked infantry training, and the training time VG divisions got was sometimes as short as 4 or 6 weeks, as units. But these were men who had already all been through the equivalent of "basic" and were used to military routine and subordination etc.

Another important source was the replacement army, the Ersatzheer. Hard as it may be to believe, the replacement army had 2.4 million men at the end of the summer, a quarter of the Wehrmacht's total strength. The reason was the training pipeline. The war was fought with an ongoing flow of troops from induction to front. By shortening the average training period, a portion of the existing manpower strength was effectively squeezed out of the tube into front line strength - at some cost in tactical ability, of course.

Another importance manpower source was returning wounded. Large numbers of Germans had been WIA earlier in the war, and many of these, not actually disabled, were on convolescent leave. They were called back to active service or their recovery periods shortened. The 257 VG division got 40% of its manpower from this source, for example. These men were all veterans, though in some cases physically or psychologically "worn".

Another major source was the young. The next year's induction class, age 17, were conscripted early. This went even deeper in the late fall and winter, with boys of 16 forming significant portions of the VG ranks by the end of the year. Motivation and fitness were actually quite high with these, but they were of course entirely green and their tactical skills were poor. They performed better on defense than when called to attack, since the latter often resulted in rapid pointless loss through excesses of dumb bravery. Green with 25% fanaticism is a better ranking of these, in CM terms, than "conscript".

Comb outs proper meant rear area and service personnel already on strength, sent to the front. These were generally more suited to roles like the artillery or pioneers, but the need for manpower sent many to the infantry as well. Frequently these had morale problems, seeing the change as an undeserved form of punishment, as well as a sign the war was hopeless.

There were also civilian comb outs, created by ending civilian draft exemptions for economically vital personnel. Germany did not draft miners or metal workers for example. As more of these were tapped, the economy topped out, and the peak of German output actually coincides with the decision to mobilize this class. But it was another source of prime age manpower.

It is untrue that the VG were mostly filled out with the old. VS formations did draft the old. Men in their 40s were drafted but mostly into security formations or special fortress battalions - static and expected to face less physical extertion and exposure to the elements than the infantry. Artillery and services also used older age classes. Some did end up in the VG, but most used were not headed there, and the bulk of the VG was not drawn from them. Moreover, as a class these included numerous WW I veterans who were not so low in quality as one might expect.

Cadres also varied. Sometimes a unit had all officers and NCOs consisting of Russian front veterans, who knew each other from service in an old division being rebuilt. Sometimes a VG division was only half strength in NCOs and the lower officers were green.

How did they actually perform? They were generally tough on defense, and maybe one in four gave an excellent account of itself even in offensive roles. Some of the others were green enough that they lost heavily when told to attack. Some examples, which will include my claim above about a unit designated VG that may deserve the "elite" rank.

In Lorraine, Nancy was defended by the 553 VG division. It was isolated in the city by US armor attacks on the flanks, but withdrew across one of those penetrations successfully. In then fought quite well in wooded terrain outside the city.

The 559 VG has more eastern vets than usual in the VG, but its early fights on the approaches to Metz were fiascos. Poor command rather than individual morale was the problem, with subunits frequently bypassed and cut off. This led to some medium sized surrenders (200-500 at a time). Later the division was sent to Nancy to participate in counterattacks in wooded terrain. It was much more successful there, and it took greatly superior force to bleed them to ineffectiveness.

The 19th VG fought for Metz, arguably harder than any other formation but 17th SS. They defended in forts tenaciously, and they used local counterattacks with SP support and a "schnell" panzerjaeger battalion, very effectively.

Another division defending Metz was the 462. It was an ad hoc formation formed to defend the city, that was formally designated VG during the fight. Part of it was composed of static fortress units (a security regiment, a fortress MG battalion) of older men.

But it also had a regiment composed of the students at the army wide NCO school located in Metz. These were picked veterans who were being promoted to sergeant from across the entire army, and the men who trained them were the best instructors in the Heer. They were arguably crack at the start of the battle. They used German doctrine literally, with continual very aggressive local counterattacks, expertly delivered.

Later on most of these men were "graduated" and sent to other units, but the 462 VG's Fusilier battalion kept many of them, including the training cadre. It was at least crack and perhaps elite, by the later portions of the battle for Metz. They were very inventive in mine warfare, very effective in counterattacks, and held the last fort to fall, clear into mid December.

If you examine VG performance in the Bulge, the 18th and 26th VG divisions turned in outstanding performances. The former was mostly drawn from Luftwaffe ground personnel and the latter from navy transfers. Both used clever infiltration tactics to excellent effect.

Another 4 divisions can be found that break in successfully enough but then flounder, using overly expensive tactics and hitting strength rather than weakness - 12VG up north for example, and the whole southern wing (212, 276, and 352). And a third just blunder in poorly delivered frontal attacks and take heavy losses without accomplishing much of anything (326, admittedly trying to attack superior enemy armor, 277, and 62).

This is not a picture consistent with uniform "conscript" ratings. The weakest cases might include small portions that deserve "conscript", but for the most part they are green with or without fanaticism, to regular with some vet for the best cases. There are identifiable outliers that deserve crack as early as September, of regiment size, and that probably deserve elite by November, of battalion size." - JasonC


Are we correct to assume then that VG platoons perform at the same level as any other platoon of like experience level in-game?

"Yes, because CM does not add 'under the hood' modifiers for specific formations or time periods. A regular VG platoon in May '45 will perform the same as a PzGr platoon of June '44. Assuming the same bonuses from HQs and/or terrain, the two will only differ in the firepower rating, and that is due only to the different TO&E." - Kingfish
"Most sorts of diversion in men, children, and other animals, are in imitation of fighting." - Jonathan Swift
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07-13-2009, 04:07 PM,
#2
RE: Volksgrenadiers in CMBB: Just boys and old men?
Volksgrenadiers are often confused with the Volkstrum. Volkstrum are the "cradle to grave" units of ten to 50 year olds with some penal units stirred in. The Volksgrenadiers were combat tested and earned Hitler's blessing for outstanding battlefield performance with the designation as Volksgrenadier Infantry Division. The best of the regular German army infantry.
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07-23-2009, 05:01 PM,
#3
RE: Volksgrenadiers in CMBB: Just boys and old men?
No VG were not the best infantry units in the German army. For propaganda purposes the regime wanted them presented that way, and a few veteran divisions were redesignated VG to give some color to this. But the bulk of them were green formations made in last year of the war by the wide variety of personnel-gathering expedients detailed in the post above. The result was not all conscripts nor especially veteran formations. It was instead a chaos of wide range centered on "green".

It was nothing like what "guards" meant in the Red army, for instance. Nor what "grenadier" had meant in the Napoleonic era (the picked best company in every battalion pooled for critical tasks). The verbiage used made allusions to such things, but the reality never remotely reflected it.
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07-24-2009, 10:15 AM,
#4
RE: Volksgrenadiers in CMBB: Just boys and old men?
Mister 'C',

Evidently your information and classification of the Volksgrenadier infantry: "a chaos of wide range centered on green", is not consistent with U.S. DoD. reports and The U.S. Military Academy History concerning combat with German units in World War 2. Excuse me but I was not there but am only sharing my limited knowledge of references and resources.
Have a nice day.
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07-24-2009, 11:31 AM,
#5
RE: Volksgrenadiers in CMBB: Just boys and old men?
I think that at this point in the war, the Germans were largely building VG divisions from remnants of shattered divisions as a core with the remainder comming from hastily/poorly trained troops. I doubt if they were seen as good combat units on the whole. Now I am sure that ther are some exceptions. It probably also had to do with the weapons that were available as well, a couple of captured AT guns and artillery would not lift my spirits to fight well.
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07-25-2009, 05:32 AM,
#6
RE: Volksgrenadiers in CMBB: Just boys and old men?
Bear, I would suggest checking some German documents concerning this and any subject dealing with German troops. They tend to be more accurate about the real condition of German troops than the US reports that are often based on wartime US intelligent reports which have a tendency to overestimate the German numbers and troop quality.
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09-29-2009, 12:06 PM, (This post was last modified: 09-29-2009, 12:09 PM by JasonC.)
#7
RE: Volksgrenadiers in CMBB: Just boys and old men?
Actually less than half of the VG divisions were formed from cadres of existing divisions that had been destroyed in combat in Russia. About 15 were of that sort. Usually the fighting elements of the division in its earlier, non-VG form had been annihilated, but some staff, command, and supply elements had survived, along with some personnel in hospital or otherwise left out of battle when the division was destroyed. These were redesignated VG if their later rebuild was late enough in the war, pretty much.

But the bulk of the VG were fresh divisions formed in response to the simultaneous collapse of France in the west and white Russia in the east. (A few were ordered in July while those battles were still in progress and were still forming, and redesignated while in the pipeline). This crisis resulted in all of the remaining stops being pulled on the German manpower pool, and in an acceleration of the training cycle to squeeze out more men as rapidly as possible.

Concretely, that meant personnel were swept out of the navy, out of the Luftwaffe ground personnel manning understrength bases in Germany or the huge Flak park defending the country, rear echelon units; it meant draft deferments for work in critical war plant and similar occupations were pulled; it meant the draft class was brought forward a year, a process repeated again at the start of the winter to get enough men for the Bulge; it meant age limits were raised as well, and recuperation times for the previously wounded were cut short.

As a result, you got some units with average age 16 or 17, others with half the men over 40, others filled almost exclusively with former naval personnel, and the like. The cadres for these units were typically understrength in NCOs and officers, often deploying with only half of the TOE positions filled, and many of those with very recent promotions. These formations did go through training - unlike the Volksturm which was a pure conscript militia - but it was deliberately shorter than normal. The TOE then gave them more automatic weapons and more teeth-to-tail, to allow quite modest trench strengths of men so obtained, to hold sections of the line.

Some then gave a good account of themselves anyway, and some were hopelessly inexpert in attack and got lots of men shot rapidly. Wide range, centered on green.

And no, that isn't "the German army". The German army at the time was a layer cake of draft and weapon selectivity. The German SS got first call on everything, but had its own poor relations in the non-German formations. The Luftwaffe ran an infantry army as "FJ" who never parachuted, and poor relations in deep rear area Flak formations. The Heer sent the best to the mobile divisions, the panzer formations especially, who had the best cadres in the whole force and the most rigorous merit and training systems. The older standard infantry divisions were poorer than all of the above, but still had experienced men - to the extent they weren't already dead in Russia. Below even the new forming VG formations there were security divisions of older WW I veterans meant for less strenous work guarding stuff rather than living in the open field continuously, and below even those, the fortress formations expected to man MGs and artillery in nearly static positions. The personnel in those frequently had medical ailments that would have disqualified them for service in any western army. And below all of that in the Heer, the Volksturm, which drafted boys of 14 and men of 80 when the war reached their village.

In that layer cake, the VG occupied a place below the average. And the average quality was falling rapidly, because the veterans of 1940-2 died in 1943 and the first half of 1944.
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