In order to be able to effectively rule the Danish region, William divided Denmark into three provinces, namely Jutland, Southern Denmark and Copenhagen, the territory of Jutland is the area of the original Jutland Peninsula from Wajle to the north, the southern Danish province includes the Jutland Peninsula area south of Wajle and the island of Funen, and the province of Copenhagen includes Zealand Island and the Danish islands in the Baltic Sea.
In this way, Prussia occupied more than 40,000 square kilometers of land in the original Danish area, and in order to ensure the smooth transition of these newly occupied areas, William deployed the second, fifth, and ninth divisions on the land of the newly established three provinces, and they also formed a theater of war - Copenhagen theater, and William personally selected a group of more malleable young people in the government to enrich the government institutions in the newly occupied areas.
But in this way, because of the division of the three divisions, Prussia's original three theater forces were weakened to a certain extent, which was absolutely unacceptable for William, after all, it was now 1789, and it was only half a year before the event that swept the whole of Europe and affected most of the world.
Therefore, after thinking about it, William decided that Prussia would expand the strength of three divisions again, and the 13th, 14th, and 15th divisions would be newly formed.
In order to allow the three divisions to form combat effectiveness as soon as possible, William transferred backbone cadres from each division to serve in the newly established three divisions to hold important positions, but in this way, each division began to complain to William because of the decline in the combat effectiveness of the army caused by the transfer of grassroots officers and a group of backbones, which also gave William a big headache.
That's when it happened.
William remembered that the Soviets had a tactic known as the Troop Flow, which was the "stealth force".
During World War II.
In December 1940, the German High Command issued a plan of action for the future of the Soviet Union, which included an appendix to the evaluation of the combat effectiveness of the Soviet Red Army, which was prepared on the basis of materials provided by German intelligence and after comprehensive analysis.
In the appendix, German generals generally believed that although the Soviet Wehrmacht had a huge strength of 182 divisions, the Soviet Union had to keep 41 divisions in the Far East to guard against the Japanese because the Japanese Kwantung Army had millions of troops on the Soviet Far East.
As a result, on the Western Front, the USSR had only 141 divisions at its disposal to fight against Germany.
Therefore, the initial strategic plan of the German army was to destroy or severely damage all 141 divisions of the Soviet army in a short period of time, and then capture Moscow and drink the Mavolga River.
But after the start of the war, the generals of the German army were at a loss, in the early days of the war.
Germany was progressing very smoothly, because the Soviets were taken by surprise, and the entire division and troops of the Soviet army were surrounded and wiped out by the Germans, and even the entire army group was not spared.
But then the German ** team found that the Soviet troops opposite them were not fighting less and less, but fighting more and more.
The confusion of the Germans lies in the fact that they only mechanically calculated the units in the Soviet military establishment sequence, and did not know anything about the existence of the "invisible units" of the Soviet army.
The Red Army of the USSR began to secretly adopt the system of "stealth troops" in the early 30s of the twentieth century.
It's efficient, reliable, and requires little material resources.
This system, which turned one division into two divisions overnight, enabled the Soviet General Staff to fully double the number of divisions in a very short time.
The formation of the force depends mainly on personnel and equipment, with the formation of the command structure being the most critical.
Take, for example, an ordinary Soviet infantry division.
In normal times, this division has two deputy commanders.
One performs daily duties, the other in addition to participating in normal training combat readiness.
There is also a secret title - "Division Commander of the Invisible Force"; There are also two deputy chiefs of staff of the division, one of whom also has a secret title, that is, "the chief of staff of the division of the invisible unit"; And so on, every regiment, every battalion, every company, even down to the small platoon.
It can be seen that each division has another complete set of command structures as a backup.
When war broke out and the infantry division received an order to immediately go to the front, the division took only one deputy commander, that is, the deputy division commander who performed his daily duties, while the other "division commander of the invisible unit" remained at the station.
Similarly, from the regiment to the platoon, the entire division-level reserve command structure remained.
Their secret titles are now made public, and the "Invisible Force" has finally surfaced.
The newly formed division could be replenished by 18,000 reservists in less than 24 hours.
The old units had just been mobilized, and the vacant barracks were soon filled with newly formed troops.
Of course, this newly formed division was certainly inferior to the one that had just left for the front in terms of combat effectiveness, but it was still a division.
The new division commander is a well-trained and experienced officer who has been on the front lines of the army for many years, acting as a replacement for a real combat division commander.
Those officers who served as regimental commanders, battalion commanders and company commanders were also active-duty combat officers, not reservists.
These officers usually deal with active duty soldiers and new weapons and equipment, have participated in rigorous military training and exercises, and have excellent personal military skills and rich management experience.
In addition, all the officers of the newly formed division, from division commander to company commander, have worked together for many years and are very familiar with each other, ensuring the efficient operation of the new command structure.
The reason why this system is thought of is precisely because of the efficiency of this system, before 1789, the battle between European countries often exceeded 50,000 people can be called a war that laid the fortunes of the country, but after entering the nineteenth century, the military strength of the major European powers has increased rapidly, and of course the madman - Napoleon played a positive role in it.
Now the Kingdom of Prussia ruled by William has only twelve divisions in addition to the royal guard and navy and the three divisions that are being planned to be established, but after William's father (that is, Frederick Wilhelm II in history) ascended the throne, the Prussian army expanded rapidly to more than 230,000 people, and the current Prussian national strength is much stronger than another history.
In this way, William felt that it was necessary to implement the system of invisible troops before the turmoil in France swept across Europe, so that the newly expanded Prussian army could quickly build up its combat effectiveness, and would not reduce the original combat effectiveness of each unit by transferring officers.
The wealth of the Danish crown, which Dessau had inadvertently robbed, played the most important role, and this wealth, together with the proceeds of the conquest of Denmark, allowed Wilhelm to pay for the three new divisions without using the Prussian treasury.
The construction of stealth troops was also put on the agenda by William, who planned to extend the stealth troops to the entire Prussian army in the next six months.
Prussia still needed to strengthen its rule over the Danish region, and now Wilhelm's eyes were on the Free City of Hamburg, which had already been found out by the Brandenburg raid last year, and that it was Hamburg that had made things easier for the Danes.
In response, Wilhelm sent a special request to the Holy Roman Diet in Frankfurt to punish Hamburg, although this parliament was only a decoration and had no powers, but in any case, as the nominal ruling body of the Holy Roman Empire, this parliament could still represent justice.
William's request caused an uproar in the Holy Roman Empire, and the Free City of Hamburg, as one of the few free economic cities in the Holy Roman Empire, naturally maintained good commercial relations with most of the princes in the Holy Roman Empire, and Hamburg provided a number of maintenance expenses to the Holy Roman Diet every year, which also made Hamburg a good relationship in the Imperial Parliament.
But Prussia's request was justified after all, and the Prussians had enough evidence to prove that Hamburg was behind the Danish injustice, and Prussia had specially transported a batch of human and material evidence to Frankfurt.
Thus, Prussia's application for action against Hamburg was justified, but Prussia's request was thwarted in Parliament, and most of the deputies rejected the Prussian proposal on the grounds that Prussia had no clear evidence that Hamburg infringed on Prussian interests.
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Despite its strength, Prussia did not give a squander of money to these braggarts every year, as Hamburg did, and the parliamentarians were not willing to do so.
You must know that there are countless princes in the territory of the Holy Roman Empire, and even a guy with only one village in a territory dares to call himself an imperial prince, and the dense knightly territory is all over the entire HRE, so that these small princes have a sense of crisis, especially for several large countries in the empire, these princes are full of vigilance.
After all, if the big fish eat the small fish first, then everything will be logical in the future, and when the time comes, they may also become the small fish.
And behind this opposition there was a lot of support from the Austrians.
That's right, it was the support of the Austrians!
After Prussia's victory in the war against Denmark, Joseph II intermittently sent several waves of envoys to Brandenburg for secret meetings with Wilhelm, and in each meeting the Austrian envoys made territorial claims to Wilhelm in Bohemia, and Wilhelm naturally objected.
At a recent meeting, Wilhelm suggested that if Austria was determined to win with Prussia, then Austria should abandon its support for Hamburg in favor of the Prussians' righteous deeds, so that Wilhelm would return Bohemia to Austria.
The Austrian envoy expressed regret at William's request, saying that although Prussia had somehow heard that the Austrians had deliberately obstructed Prussia's proposal in parliament, Austria was innocent, and that the envoy said that Bohemia was the condition that William had promised Austria in the Danish War had nothing to do with Hamburg, and hoped that Prussia would fulfill its promise as soon as possible.
But Wilhelm had already bitten to death, and either the Austrians supported Prussian sanctions against Hamburg, or Bohemia would remain under Prussian control.
PS: All kinds of begging!
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