Austro-Hungarian The standing peacetime Austro-Hungarian army had 36,000 officers, including
non-commissioned officers and 414,000 enlisted personnel. During mobilization, this number could be increased to 3,350,000 men of all ranks. The operational army had over 1,420,000 men, while another 600,000 were allocated to support and logistic units (train, munition and supply columns, etc.). The rest (around 1,350,000) were reserve troops available to replace losses and form new units. This vast military power allowed the Austro-Hungarian Army to replace its losses regularly and keep units at their formation strength. According to some sources, there were an average of 150,000 men per month during 1914 sent to replace the losses in the field army. During 1915 these numbers rose to 200,000 per month. According to the official Austrian documents in the period from September until the end of December 1914, some 160,000 replacement troops were sent to the Balkan theatre of war, as well as 82,000 reinforcements as part of newly formed units. The prewar Austro-Hungarian plan to invade Serbia envisioned the concentration of three armies (2nd, 5th and 6th) on Serbia's western and northern borders to envelop and destroy the bulk of the Serbian army. However, with the beginning of the Russian general mobilization, the
Armeeoberkommando (AOK, Austro-Hungarian Supreme Command) decided to move the 2nd army to
Galicia to counter Russian forces. Due to the congestion of railroad lines towards Galicia, the 2nd Army could only start its departure on 18 August, which allowed the AOK to assign some units of the 2nd Army to take part in operations in Serbia before that date. Eventually, the AOK allowed General
Oskar Potiorek to deploy a significant segment of the 2nd army (around four divisions) in fighting against Serbia, which caused a delay in the transport of these troops to the
Russian front for more than a week. Furthermore, the Austro-Hungarian defeats suffered during the first invasion of Serbia forced the AOK to permanently transfer two divisions from the 2nd Army to Potiorek's force. By 12 August, Austria-Hungary had amassed over 500,000 soldiers on Serbian frontiers, including some 380,000 operational troops. However, on 16 August a significant part of the 2nd army was ordered to the Russian front, thus this number fell to some 285,000 active troops, including garrisons. Apart from land forces, Austria-Hungary also deployed its Danube River flotilla of six monitors and six patrol boats. Many Austro-Hungarian soldiers were not of good quality. About one-quarter of them were illiterate, and most of the conscripts from the empire's subject nationalities did not speak or understand German or Hungarian. In addition, most of the soldiers — ethnic Czechs, Slovaks, Poles, Romanians and South Slavs — had linguistic and cultural links with the empire's various enemies.
Serbian The Serbian military command issued orders to mobilize its armed forces on 25 July, and mobilization began the following day. By 30 July, mobilization was completed, and the troops began to be deployed according to the war plan. Deployments were completed by 9 August when the troops had arrived at their designated strategic positions. During mobilization, Serbia raised approximately 450,000 men of three age-defined classes (or bans) called
poziv, which comprised all capable men between the ages of 21 and 45. The operational army consisted of infantry (six of 1st and five of the 2nd ban) and one cavalry division. Aged men of the 3rd ban were organized in 15 infantry regiments with about 45–50,000 men designated for use in rear and line of communications duties. However, some of them were by necessity used as part of the operational army as well, bringing its strength up to around 250,000 men. Serbia was in a much more disadvantageous position when compared with Austria-Hungary concerning human reserves and replacement troops, as its only source of replacements were recruits reaching the age of military enlistment. Their maximum annual number was theoretically around 60,000 and was insufficient to replace the losses of more than 132,000 sustained during operations from August to December 1914. This shortage of military power forced the Serbian army to recruit under and over-aged men to make up for losses in the opening phase of the war. Because of the poor financial state of the Serbian economy and losses in the recent Balkan Wars, the Serbian army lacked much of the modern weaponry and equipment necessary to engage in combat with their larger and wealthier adversaries. Only 180,000 modern rifles were available for the operational army, which meant that the Serbian military lacked between one-quarter to one-third of the rifles necessary to fully equip even their front-line units, let alone reserve forces. Although Serbia tried to remedy this deficit by ordering 120,000 rifles from Russia in 1914, the weapons did not begin to arrive until the second half of August. Only 1st ban troops had complete grey-green M1908 uniforms, with 2nd ban troops often wearing the obsolete dark blue M1896 issue, and the 3rd ban had no proper uniforms at all and were reduced to wearing their civilian clothes with military greatcoats and caps. The Serbian troops did not have service issued boots at all, and the vast majority of them wore everyday footwear made of pig skin called
opanak. Ammunition reserves were also insufficient for sustained field operations as most had been used in the 1912–13 Balkan wars. Artillery ammunition was sparse and only amounted to several hundred shells per unit. Because Serbia lacked a significant domestic military-industrial complex, its army depended entirely on imports of ammunition and arms from France and Russia, which were chronically short of supplies. The inevitable shortages of ammunition later would include a complete lack of artillery ammunition, which peaked during the decisive moments of the Austro-Hungarian invasion.
Comparative strength These figures detail the number of all Austro-Hungarian troops concentrated on the southern (Serbian) theatre of war at the beginning of August 1914 and the resources of the entire Serbian army (however, the number of troops available for the operations on both sides was somewhat less): , October 1914. Serbia's ally Montenegro mustered an army of about 45–50,000 men, with only 14 modern quick-firing field guns, 62 machine guns and some 51 older pieces (some of them antique models from the 1870s). Unlike the Austro-Hungarian and the Serbian armies, the Montenegrin army was a militia type without proper military training or a career officer's corps.
According to Austro-Hungarian military formation, the average war strength of the following units was: • Battalion: 1000 (combatants) • Battery: 196 • Squadron: 180 • Engineer companies: 260
The strength of corresponding Serbian units was similar: • Battalion: 1116 (combatants and non-combatants) • Battery: 169 • Squadron: 130 • Engineer company: 250
Heavy artillery Order of battle Serbian army •
First Army, commanded by general
Petar Bojović; Chief of Staff colonel Božidar Terzić. • Cavalry division, four regiments, Colonel Branko Jovanović • Timok I division, four regiments, General Vladimir Kondić • Timok II division, three regiments • Morava II division, three regiments • Danube II division (Braničevo detachment), six regiments • Army artillery, colonel Božidar Srećković •
Second Army, commanded by general
Stepa Stepanović; Chief of Staff colonel Vojislav Živanović • Morava I division, colonel Ilija Gojković, four regiments • Combined I division, general Mihajlo Rašić, four regiments, regiment commanders Svetislav Mišković, X, X and Dragoljub Uzunmirković • Šumadija I division, four regiments • Danube I division, colonel
Milivoje Anđelković, four regiments • Army artillery, Colonel Vojislav Milojević •
Third Army, commanded by general
Pavle Jurišić Šturm; Chief of Staff colonel Dušan Pešić • Drina I division, four regiments • Drina II division, four regiments, regiment commanders Miloje Jelisijević, X, X and X • Obrenovac detachment, one regiment, two battalions • Jadar Chetnik detachment • Army artillery, colonel Miloš Mihailović • Užice Army, commanded by General Miloš Božanović • Šumadija II division, colonel Dragutin Milutinović, four regiments • Užice brigade, Colonel Ivan Pavlović, two regiments • Chetnik detachments, Lim, Zlatibor, and Gornjak detachments • Army artillery
Austro-Hungarian army August 1914: • Balkan force • 5th Army, commanded by
Liborius Ritter von Frank • 9. infantry division • 21. landwehr infantry division • 36. infantry division •
42. Honvéd (Hungarian home guard) infantry division • 13. infantry brigade • 11. mountain brigade • 104. Landsturm infantry brigade • 13. march brigade • 6th Army, commanded by
Oskar Potiorek • 1. infantry division • 48. infantry division • 18. infantry division • 47. infantry division • 40. Honvéd infantry division • 109. Landsturm infantry brigade • Banat Rayon and Garrisons • 107. Landsturm infantry brigade • sundry units of infantry, cavalry and artillery • Parts of the 2nd Army, commanded by
Eduard von Böhm-Ermolli • 17. infantry division • 34. infantry division • 31. infantry division • 32. infantry division, commanded by
Andreas von Fail-Griessler • 29. infantry division • 7. infantry division • 23.infantry division • 10. cavalry division • 4. march brigade • 7. march brigade • 8. march brigade ==1914==