The
First World War broke out in 1914, and with that, General Evert was appointed to command the
10th Army. And he briefly participated in the
East Prussian Campaign, but after several days, he was replaced by
Lieutenant-General Vasily Flug, and he later replaced the aged General
Zaltsa, after which he took part in the
Invasion of Galicia and the battle at
Vistula River. In mid August 1915, Evert later replaced army chief of staff General
Mikhail Alekseyev as the commander-in-chief of the
Western Front, he was also made adjutant-general later in December of that year. From May to June, Evert and his army fought the
Austro-
German forces at
Opatov and
Lublin. And in September, his forces successfully repelled the Austro-German breakthrough between the cities of
Smorgon and
Dvinsk, for this success, he was awarded the Order of St. George of the 3rd degree in early October. In early March 1916, he commanded an offensive at
Lake Naroch in what is now
Belarus, together with General
Aleksey Kuropatkin. But due to a lack of scouting and artillery support, Russian artilleries were unable to capture the well-fortified German defense, causing the offensive to fail. The French Slavic professor , who arrived in the Russia in February 1916 on the instructions of the Military Propaganda Department at the second department of the General Staff of the French Ministry of Defense, in his memoirs, he negatively assessed the actions of Evert:
Brusilov Offensive According to the directive of the Russian Supreme Command Headquarters in late April 1916, an offensive on the middle of the Western Front was entrusted to Evert. However, with the connivance of the Supreme commander-in-chief Tsar
Nicholas II, the general repeatedly delayed the terms of the offensive when the
Brusilov Offensive occurred in the neighbouring
front. The
offensive originally planned to target
Vilnius, but it was changed to target
Baranovichi (now Baranavichy in Belarus). Despite months of planning, the offensive failed to break through the German defense. General
Aleksei Brusilov, commander-in-chief of the Southwestern Front and the planner of the Brusilov Offensive (which was named after him), gave the following assessment to General Evert: Similar estimates are available in some encyclopaedic sources. In early 1917, General Evert proposed an attack towards Vilnius, but these plans were strongly opposed among other generals, especially General
Vasily Gurko and
Alexander Lukomsky. Under the new plan by Alekseyev, he assigned the task of inflicting a counterattack to the
10th Army.
February Revolution On March 2, 1917, after the revolutionaries took over the government, Alekseyev sent Nicholas II a telegram, urging abdication, General Evert replied Alekseyev that he would give his conclusion after General
Ruzsky and Brusilov answered. Learning their answers, he sent the tsar a telegram, in which referred to the fact that the army "in its present composition ... can not be counted," wrote that "finding no other outcome, unlimitedly devoted to your Majesty, the loyal subject begs Your Majesty, in the name of the salvation of the Motherland and the Dynasty, to make a decision ... as the only one apparently capable of ending the revolution and saving Russia from the horrors of anarchy. " According to the memoirs of General
Ali-Agha Shikhlinsky, after the
February Revolution, one of the members of the
Duma,
Nikolai Shchepkin, who was ordered by the new
minister of war of the newly formed
Russian Republic,
Alexander Guchkov, to go to
Minsk. After Shchepkin's arrival at Minsk, he suggested to high commands to get General Evert removed, so he did. After his removal, he was briefly replaced by General
Vladimir Smirnov, and then Gurko. In March, he was dismissed from service with pensions and a uniform.
Last years and death There is considerable uncertainty about how and when Evert actually died with no clear consensus established from the historical record. One theory is that he was arrested by the
Cheka, and was murdered after being imprisoned in
Mozhaisk (according to the memoirs of
Prince Vladimir Drutskoy-Sokolinsky). Another version is that he was released after being imprisoned by the
Bolsheviks and after that he engaged in beekeeping and died peacefully at the age of 69. The most likely version is that he was killed by the guards on his way to Mozhaisk, and he was buried in a local cemetery there. ==Personal life==