The Austro-Hungarian army that marched east & south to confront the Russians & Serbs in the opening campaigns of World War I had a glorious past but a pitiful present. Speaking a mystifying array of languages & lugging outdated weapons, the Austrian troops were hopelessly unprepared for the industrialized warfare that would shortly consume Europe. As prizewinning historian Geoffrey Wawro explains in A Mad Catastrophe, the doomed Austrian conscripts were an unfortunate microcosm of the Austro-Hungarian Empire itself--both equally ripe for destruction. After the assassination of the Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand in June 1914, Germany goaded the Empire into a war with Russia & Serbia. With the Germans massing their forces in the west to engage the French & the British, everything--the course of the war & the fate of empires & alliances from Constantinople to London--hinged on the Habsburgs` ability to crush Serbia & keep the Russians at bay. However, Austria-Hungary had been rotting from within for years, hollowed out by repression, cynicism, & corruption at the highest levels. Commanded by a dying emperor, Franz Joseph I, & a querulous celebrity general, Conrad von Hotzendorf, the Austro-Hungarians managed to bungle everything: their ultimatum to the Serbs, their declarations of war, their mobilization, & the pivotal battles in Galicia & Serbia. By the end of 1914, the Habsburg army lay in ruins & the outcome of the war seemed all but decided. Drawing on deep archival research, Wawro charts the decline of the Empire before the war & reconstructs the great battles in the east & the Balkans in thrilling & tragic detail. A Mad Catastrophe is a riveting account of a neglected face of World War I, revealing how a once-mighty empire collapsed in the trenches of Serbia & the Eastern Front, changing the course of European history.