scorched-earth policy

warfare
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scorched-earth policy, the military tactic of destroying everything that enables the enemy to wage war, including crops, livestock, buildings, and infrastructure. A scorched-earth policy may be implemented by an army advancing through enemy territory to punish resistance and reduce enemy capability or by a retreating army to leave nothing of military value to the opposing force.

The term was first used in English in a 1937 report on the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–45) and is believed to be a translation of the Chinese phrase jiāotŭ (zhèngcè), “scorched earth (policy).” During the Japanese invasion of China, withdrawing Chinese burned crops and leveled cities to deny any form of support to advancing Japanese forces.

The use of scorched-earth policy as a military strategy dates back to antiquity. Egyptian and Mesopotamian leaders commonly destroyed the fields and orchards of their enemies, forcing the besieged to choose between capitulation and starvation. During the Peloponnesian War (431–404 bce), Sparta destroyed crops, orchards, and vineyards during its siege of Athens in an attempt to starve the Athenians into submission.

Germany invades Poland, September 1, 1939, using 45 German divisions and aerial attack. By September 20, only Warsaw held out, but final surrender came on September 29.
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The ancient Romans also used scorched-earth policy as a military tactic. Denial to the enemy included the destruction of crops and livestock and, sometimes, the severing or poisoning of water supplies. Julius Caesar, in his battle with the Cadurci during the Gallic Wars (58–50 bce), severed the enemy’s water supply to force their surrender. Scorched-earth policy was also used against the Romans, such as when the Gallic chieftain Vercingetorix in 52 bce ordered that all neighbouring villages and farms be burned to deny advancing Roman forces food and materials. The move only slowed the Romans, and Vercingetorix was forced to retreat to the prepared fortress of Alesia (in east-central France). The fortress fell after a lengthy Roman siege.

Scorched-earth policy was employed during the American Civil War (1861–65). The most notable example is Union Maj. Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman’s March to the Sea, during which Sherman hoped to shatter the Confederacy’s ability and will to fight by destroying its war-making apparatus. This was one of the first efforts in modern warfare to extend the battlefield to the enemy’s infrastructure. Sherman’s primary objective was to capture and neutralize the city of Atlanta, which was a major railroad centre, supply depot, and manufacturing hub. After evacuating most of the remaining civilian population, Sherman’s forces systematically destroyed Atlanta’s military infrastructure, leaving the city in ruins. Moving from Georgia into the Carolinas, Sherman’s forces foraged off the land. As they traveled, anything that could help the Confederacy continue to wage war was destroyed, including railroads, tunnels, communication lines, crops, and livestock. Brutal and uncompromising, the policy proved effective in demoralizing Confederate citizens and soldiers alike.

During World War II (1939–45), scorched-earth policy was employed by both the Allies and the Axis powers. In the early stages of Operation Barbarossa, the German campaign in the Soviet Union, retreating Soviet armies burned or destroyed bridges, railroad cars, crops, and anything else that could be of use to German forces. Entire armament factories were dismantled and transported to safer locations, then reassembled. Germany also engaged in scorched-earth policy. A notable example is the wholesale destruction of the countries conquered during the Balkans-Greece-Crete campaign as German forces retreated from advancing Allied forces in the closing phase of the European War.

On March 19, 1945, as Allied forces closed in on Berlin from all sides, Adolf Hitler issued what was essentially a scorched-earth decree against his own country in an effort to punish what he considered defeatist Germans. Hitler directed the German military, aided by Nazi civilian bureaucrats, to destroy all industrial plants, electrical facilities, railways, ships, waterworks, gasworks, food stores, bridges, communication installations, and more. Horrified Nazi officials and military officers refused to carry out the order.

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Saturation bombing—also known as carpet bombing—is another form of scorched-earth warfare. During World War II, both sides rained bombs on enemy cities in an attempt to eliminate military and industrial sites. Unfortunately, civilian structures, including schools, churches, and homes, were also frequent victims of the overwhelming destruction. This was due in part to the general inaccuracy of strategic bombers of the era. In some cases, however, the terror the bombing created in the civilian populace was itself a military objective. Examples of “terror bombing” include the German bombing of Guernica (April 26, 1937) during the Spanish Civil War, the Blitz (September 7, 1940–May 11, 1941), and the Allied bombing of Dresden (February 13–15, 1945).

Similar strategies were used by the United States during the Korean War (1950–53) and the Vietnam War (1954–75) in an effort to drive the enemy to the negotiating table. The Linebacker II operation (December 1972), carried out by hundreds of U.S. Air Force B-52 heavy bombers against targets in North Vietnam, would be the last major strategic bombing campaign undertaken by the United States. By the time of the Persian Gulf War (1990–91), saturation bombing had been largely abandoned in favour of precision munitions, a transition that was completed by the outbreak of the Iraq War (2003–11).

Russia conducted a scorched-earth campaign during its invasion of Ukraine (2022– ). As was the case in World War II, this was partly a result of technological constraints and partly a reflection of doctrine. Russia used a large portion of its precision munitions (ballistic missiles and cruise missiles) in the early days of the war, and the Russian military was unable to replenish its stocks because of sanctions that severely limited Russia’s ability to import computer chips. Instead, Russian forces relied on artillery to raze entire cities in an effort to dislodge Ukrainian defenders. Russia’s remaining arsenal of missiles was used to strike civilian infrastructure in Ukrainian cities far outside the combat zone. Attacks on Ukraine’s power grid plunged large portions of the country into darkness. Although international legal experts conceded that there was a military value to such strikes, the scale at which they were conducted likely qualified them as a war crime.

In addition, the term scorched-earth policy has been adopted in nonmilitary contexts. In business, a scorched-earth policy is an effort by a company to make itself as unattractive as possible in order to prevent a hostile takeover. A company may do this by liquidating or terminating valuable assets and securities; making agreements to repay debts upon completion of a hostile takeover, forcing the acquiring company to pay off the outstanding debts; or using a “poison pill” tactic, such as enabling shareholders of the target company to purchase discounted shares of the acquiring company if the takeover is successful, thereby reducing the value of the acquiring company’s outstanding shares.

Don Vaughan