The Globe At War
Historically, Poland by topographical curse, served as either a
battlefield or throughway for more geographically blessed neighbors
fighting for supremacy in Europe. At any given time in history the
French, Germans, Russians, Austrians, Swedes, etc… violated Poland's
sovereignty. A closer look at Poland explains why.

Poland's primary geographical features are the flat plains stretching
across the country. In addition, few natural defensible barriers
guarded 1939 Poland's 1,750-mile length borders. Poland's only
mountain ranges rose in the southeast, the Tatra-Carpathian
Mountains. Although this mountain range reached imposing heights,
nearly 9,000 feet in places; wide passes with well-developed road and
rail infrastructure cut through providing easy passage. In the east, a
series of rivers and the Pripet Marshes provided only marginal
defensible positions; the rivers flowed shallow and slow. Even though
these rivers could flood and widen, in 1939 a long dry summer had left
water levels low and thus made the rivers far easier to ford than
usual. In the west and north, Germany crowded the Polish borders
behind wide, flat plains; perfect terrain for deploying Germany's
mechanized and motorized units.

In spite of Poland's poor geographic position, Poland had several
strengths. By 1939, Poland ranked among the largest, and potentially
most powerful, nations in Central Europe. Poland possessed a
population comparable to France. Poland's army in August 1939
included 30 infantry divisions, 11 cavalry brigades - part of the
centuries old Polish tradition of mounted excellence on the battlefield,
and 2 armored brigades in a mobilized army over one million men
strong. Moreover, this same army had combat tested senior officers;
officers that had most prominently bested Bolshevik armies possessing
overwhelming numerical superiority over the Polish army. Nevertheless
that was a different era and technology had advanced prodigiously
since that time nearly twenty year prior to the eve of Germany's
invasion. Poland did not keep pace, just as other far more
geographically blessed nations failed to modernize their military
establishments- including the U.S. Army as the most prominent
example in 1939. Poland fielded dated equipment, and relied on poor
doctrines; to the point, mounted cavalry still maintained an important
role in her 1939 army. Bravery quickly proved no match for a more
modern German war machine that hardly ranked larger than the Polish
army, with Germany fielding only 39 infantry divisions, 6 Panzer
divisions, 4 light divisions, 3 mountain divisions, and 1 cavalry brigade
against Poland. Contrary to conventional wisdom, Germany would not
steamroll Poland with mass, nor would Poland's military roll over and
die. Poland's fundamental lack of strategic long term planning however
sowed the seeds for Polish defeat. Meanwhile, Poland's German foe
knew exactly what it wanted from Poland.




Map Courtesy of: Department of History, United States Military
Academy
Poland: 1939 - The German Invasion's First Two Weeks