Author Topic: Battle of the Bulge  (Read 630 times)

Offline Krusher

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Battle of the Bulge
« on: December 16, 2004, 01:00:26 PM »
On December 16, 1944, General Bradley came to my headquarters to discuss ways and means of overcoming our acute shortages in infantry replacements. Just as he entered my office, a staff officer came in to report slight penetrations of our lines in the front of General Middleton's VIII Corps and the right of General Gerow's V Corps in the Ardennes region. . . . - Dwight Eisenhower, "Crusade in Europe"

It had started with the dawn: an unexpectedly heavy artillery barrage. How had the retreating Germans managed to mass so many guns? Was this just a local attack, or a feint to distract the attention from a major blow elsewhere?

Soon it became clear that the enemy had massed more than artillery. The Sixth Panzer Army, a mobile reserve that had disappeared from the view of Allied intelligence, reappeared. When the barrage lifted, German armor came pouring out of the woods, headed for the seam between the British and American armies.

Instead of sheltering behind the Siegfried Line, the "retreating" Germans were advancing. Through an only lightly defended 50-mile stretch of the Ardennes.

Allied intelligence had collected reports of a transfer of German troops from the Eastern to the Western front in the fall of 1944, and there was ample evidence that they were being reassembled in the Ardennes, but word never filtered up to headquarters. No one had connected the dots. (Sound familiar?)

The weather wasn't on our side, either. The coldest, snowiest winter in European memory made Allied air superiority irrelevant. The panzers sped on, opening a growing wedge. Allied headquarters was compelled to sacrifice unity of command as the German advance split the British and American armies; Ike had to designate separate commanders for each sector of a crumbling front.

In the heat of battle, confusion reigned. Disguised as American MPs, English-speaking, American-accented Germans were sending relief convoys down the wrong roads, or into murderous ambushes. Just liberated French cities were exposed again, and Paris was jittery. The British press demanded that Eisenhower turn command of the land forces over to Montgomery - or anyone else competent.

Von Runstedt and his staff had taken everything into account except the sheer cussedness of the American resistance. The 7th Armored held onto the crossroads at St. Vith longer than anyone would have imagined possible. And at Bastogne, the key to the battle, the 101st Airborne refused to yield at all, and entered legend.

According to the German battle plan, Bastogne was to be overrun on the second day of the operation; it never was. General Anthony McAuliffe's one-word response to the German commander's surrender terms would become a classic summation of American defiance: "Nuts!"

Forced to split up and go around isolated pockets of American resistance, the German advance slowed. Unlike 1940, there was no breakout. Methodically, the Allied command drew up new defensive lines, then held. And to the South, Patton was turning the whole Third Army on a dime and hurtling to the rescue . . . .

Before it was over, the Battle of the Bulge would involve three German armies, the equivalent of 29 divisions; three American armies, or 31 divisions; and three British divisions augmented by Belgian, Canadian and French troops.

More than a million men would be drawn into the battle. The Germans would lose an estimated 100,000 irreplaceable troops, counting their killed, wounded and captured; the Americans would suffer some 80,000 casualties, including 19,000 killed - that's a rate of 500 a day - and 23,554 captured.

But the Allied forces held. And the war went on, moving across the Rhine and then into the heartland of the enemy. Against all
bitter expectations, the conflict in the European theater would be over in four months.

There's a different kind of war on now, but war itself remains the same brutal experience. And it invokes the same admixture of fear and desperation, bloody miscalculation and incredible heroism, over-confidence and unchanging defeatism.

Much was gained by that decisive victory in the Ardennes 60 years ago, but victory obscures as much as it reveals. How the Battle of the Bulge turned out may seem inevitable now that history has unfolded but, as Wellington was supposed to have said of Waterloo, "it was a damned close-run thing."

The passage of time erodes memory, and we tend to forget the pain, the sacrifices, the mercurial swings of public opinion, the alternating hopes and fears, the daily uncertainty of war . . . and the necessity of endurance.

Sixty years ago at dawn
« Last Edit: December 16, 2004, 01:10:51 PM by Krusher »

Offline Krusher

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« Reply #1 on: December 16, 2004, 01:03:04 PM »
WOW.... pretty amazing numbers considering the events of today.


More than a million men would be drawn into the battle. The Germans would lose an estimated 100,000 irreplaceable troops, counting their killed, wounded and captured; the Americans would suffer some 80,000 casualties, including 19,000 killed - that's a rate of 500 a day - and 23,554 captured.

Offline lasersailor184

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« Reply #2 on: December 16, 2004, 02:13:58 PM »
NUTS!
Punishr - N.D.M. Back in the air.
8.) Lasersailor 73 "Will lead the impending revolution from his keyboard"

Offline indy007

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« Reply #3 on: December 16, 2004, 02:17:29 PM »
Time to throw Band of Brothers: Bastogne & Breaking Point in the DVD player tonight.

Offline Krusher

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« Reply #4 on: December 16, 2004, 03:13:27 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by indy007
Time to throw Band of Brothers: Bastogne & Breaking Point in the DVD player tonight.


I was thinking the same thing :)

Offline StarOfAfrica2

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« Reply #5 on: December 16, 2004, 06:00:38 PM »
My great uncle Charles was there.  He liked to tell amusing stories from the time when he was in the army, but he never would talk about the fighting.  He wouldnt even watch the movies.  He said he made it out of Hell once, he saw no point in going back.

Offline jEEZY

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« Reply #6 on: December 16, 2004, 06:07:02 PM »
All unnecessary had
Patton been allowed to close the falaise gap and rush across the rhine in the late summer/early fall of 1944

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0385720599/qid=1103242003/sr=8-2/ref=sr_8_xs_ap_i2_xgl14/002-9381837-0981642?v=glance&s=books&n=507846

Offline Nefarious

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« Reply #7 on: December 16, 2004, 08:12:39 PM »
My Grandpa Joe, fought with the 80th Infantry Division there.

He was wounded by shrapnel and was taken off the front line due to combat fatigue.
There must also be a flyable computer available for Nefarious to do FSO. So he doesn't keep talking about it for eight and a half hours on Friday night!

Offline Gunslinger

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« Reply #8 on: December 16, 2004, 08:34:55 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by Krusher
I was thinking the same thing :)


Me three! :aok

I like the quote in there that says (paraphrase)

"Pattons tanks claimed to have rescued the 101st airborne in Bastogne who were surrounded.  Troops from the 101st said they never needed a "rescue" to begin with"

Offline Pongo

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« Reply #9 on: December 16, 2004, 09:52:25 PM »
Band of Brothers is the best film ever made.

Offline mosca

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« Reply #10 on: December 16, 2004, 10:03:16 PM »
Hey Pongo, I'm right in the middle of "A Blood Dimmed Tide". Great book, not really about the battle but the stories of the men who fought it, from both sides; their impressions of what was happening in thei little hundred yard square.


Tom

Offline Nefarious

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« Reply #11 on: December 16, 2004, 11:08:49 PM »
I like to post this pic:

There must also be a flyable computer available for Nefarious to do FSO. So he doesn't keep talking about it for eight and a half hours on Friday night!

Offline Sixpence

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Sixty years ago at dawn
« Reply #12 on: December 17, 2004, 12:36:12 AM »
If it were WW2online, 30-40 havocs would have shown up in 3 minutes and took out all the armor.
"My grandaddy always told me, "There are three things that'll put a good man down: Losin' a good woman, eatin' bad possum, or eatin' good possum."" - Holden McGroin

(and I still say he wasn't trying to spell possum!)

Offline Saintaw

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Sixty years ago at dawn
« Reply #13 on: December 17, 2004, 01:08:44 AM »
Lots of celebrations here yesterday (Am less than 50 miles from Bastogne... in the Ardennes area too). Saw a parade of vets in the streets.
Saw
Dirty, nasty furriner.

Offline Krusher

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« Reply #14 on: December 17, 2004, 09:45:20 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by Saintaw
Lots of celebrations here yesterday (Am less than 50 miles from Bastogne... in the Ardennes area too). Saw a parade of vets in the streets.



I hope the weather was better for the celebrations than it was for the real event :)