TOCarroll
Posts: 215
Joined: 3/28/2005 From: College Station, Texas Status: offline
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I HAVE read "Panzer Battles", as well as "Lost Victories", "The German Genarals Talk (and talk, and talk...)", Von Luck's Memoriors, and darn near every book written by an influental German WW2 Tank General that is available in english. "Leading from the front" (a la Rommel) certainly had its disadvantages, including being out of communications with Operations, making bad decisions based on incomplete information (from being out of communications with operations ), and just plain bad decisions with no one to advise you (see: Dash To The Wire). Certainly Rommels method was not perfect, but it worked well (in general). Nowdays, with improved comms, GPS, computers and the like, it would be outmoded. In WW2, I would use the analogy of an expert quarterback calling audibles. He is "on the field" and Rommel certainly had an intuitative feel for both the battlefield, his opponents, and their weaknesses. Probably the best example is one of his worst decisions, the "Dash To The Wire". Rommel thought he was still facing Cunningham, who indeed wanted to retreat back into Eqypt. In fact, Cunningham was releived, and replaced by the THEATER Commander, "The Auk". This is the same General who stopped Rommel at First Alimen. Had Cunningham remained in command (or Ritchie, later) things may have turned out differently. (I do NOT mean the Germans could have won, but the African Campaign might have lasted a hell of a lot longer. Rommel had his weaknesses. He could be arrogant, delusional (capturing the oilfields), he passed the buck on many mistakes (firing officers for his mistakes), and tended to ignore logistics. However, he adopted a style of command that played to his strengths. His elnisted men adored him, his troops were trained to a razor sharp edge, and he had an astonishingly quick, intuitative grasp of a very fluid situation. Particularly since he lacked General Staff training, and had to pick up armor tactics and command skills on the fly, I would certainly rate him at least #2 (behind Guderian) in command of an Armored Division, or (small) Corps. In love for his family, troops, and country (no matter how despicable the government he served), I would rate him way abover Guderian, who served on the "Court of Honor" which expelled men from the army so that they could be tried by the "Peoples Court" for their part in the "Bomb Plot" of July 20. As a Panzer General, I would give Rommel 5 stars. AND he was smarter than Rundstedt on defending France against invasion.
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"Ideological conviction will trump logistics, numbers, and firepower every time" J. Stalin, 1936-1941...A. Hitler, 1933-1945. W. Churchill (very rarely, and usually in North Africa). F. D. Roosvelt (smart enough to let the generals run the war).
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