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RE: Why was Patton so great?

 
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RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/16/2004 7:05:20 PM   
max_h

 

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just because the 352nd was not an elite formation doesn´t make Patton a bad general... actually I think he was one of the better allied generals. keeping the momentum and being able to exploit the enemies weaknesses are essential skills for the blitz style warfare. some argue that he wasn´t the best against "real opposition" - and I don´t argue against it, but it was him who kept the germans on the move. monty on the other hand almost always lost the momentum coz he waited for more and more reinforcements as he never had "enough" support. needless to say, that the enemy used Monty´s buildup time to reinforce themselves...

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RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/16/2004 8:39:30 PM   
Von Rom


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Kevinugly

quote:

BTW, the website you chose for this is a SHOWBIZ website, called "Inside Track", and has links to this:

Sexy Male Journalists? Check Out "Buffooneries"


And links to your favourite Patton sites too. By your definition it doesn't say a lot for them either does it.

quote:

I doubt the fellas that run that website have even opened a book - heheh


Doesn't say a lot for the other book reviews either. The ones of Patton's 'admirers'

quote:

So?

Heheh

You fellas make the 352nd appear as though they couldn't even get outta bed, much less carry a rifle. - heheh

They were placed on the flank to cover the south.

Clearly, NO ONE, especially the Germans, expected Patton to be able to attack from the south


Let's see now, you seem to be admitting that the 352nd was not a good formation. So Patton, obeying orders, attacked a division of poor quality, who were not expecting to be attacked. Wow, breaking through them is some achievement, my hat goes off to Patton and his troops

quote:

When elements of Third Army (which had many GREEN troops, and had been travelling non-stop for 2 days and nights in severe winter weather, without proper sleep, food or rest) attacked to relieve Bastogne, they were attacked by the 352nd (in concealment), the 5th parachute Division, and the elite 1SS Panzer Division.


Have you actually read any books about the 'Bulge'. This is a downright LIE! 1st SS Panzer was in the north, by the time 3rd Army had reached Bastogne KG Peiper (1st SS spearhead containing the armour and the best infantry) had run out of petrol and ammo. This shows how desperate you are becoming if you are going to resort to blatant falsehoods



quote:

And links to your favourite Patton sites too. By your definition it doesn't say a lot for them either does it.


The difference is, I wouldn't use this site as my ONLY reference for how good an author was.

quote:

Let's see now, you seem to be admitting that the 352nd was not a good formation. So Patton, obeying orders, attacked a division of poor quality, who were not expecting to be attacked. Wow, breaking through them is some achievement, my hat goes off to Patton and his troops


They were an average unit of 12,000 soldiers who could fight and shoot. They also fought along side the German 5th Parachute Division.

They were alert, on the attack, and, were fighting from good infantry positions (ie in snow covered forests).

quote:

Have you actually read any books about the 'Bulge'. This is a downright LIE! 1st SS Panzer was in the north, by the time 3rd Army had reached Bastogne KG Peiper (1st SS spearhead containing the armour and the best infantry) had run out of petrol and ammo. This shows how desperate you are becoming if you are going to resort to blatant falsehoods


My dear, dear friend.

Let's see. In this one small section you claim that I have read no books on the Bulge, that I am a liar, and that I must resort to deceit and trickery to establish truth in a matter.

I don't mind debate; and I don't mind kidding around; and I don't mind healthy back-and-forth bantering; heck, I don't even mind having 4 or 5 guys come at me at once. . .

But please do not call me these things.

I will forgive you for this, and chalk it up to over-exuberance and frustration on your part.

I will deal with the soldier quality of Third Army as well as the attacks of the 1SS Panzer in a separate post.

Please take a few minutes, take a few deep breaths, and consider your own level of knowledge about the Battle of the Bulge.

Cheers!

< Message edited by Von Rom -- 7/16/2004 6:44:57 PM >


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RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/16/2004 8:43:06 PM   
Von Rom


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Kevinugly

quote:

ORIGINAL: Von Rom

quote:

No, the fault lies with Patton. His 'one-dimensional' style of warfare just couldn't cope with this kind of battle.


Oh, OK.

If you say so. . .

If people are out to nail Patton - to destroy his reputation - they will only center on every little fault and mistake - whether those faults were initiated by others or not.

Patton could no more have sat still, than Rommel could have. Trench Foot and the terrible weather were causing MORE casualties at Metz than the Germans! Why don't these authors mention this? Patton knew he had to get his men outta there. He called for supplies, but Third Army had to ration ammo, artillery shells, gas, etc. . .

The Allied High Command made the mistakes. By adopting the "Broad Front Strategy", Ike was doing exactly what German leaders wanted him to do - dissipate Allied strength. By withholding supplies from Patton and giving them to Monty, Ike caused two bad situations: Market Garden and Metz.

Why don't you do a detailed search for all of Rommel's mistakes?

Or of the mistakes committed by Paulus at Stalingrad?

Or the terrible blunders of Goering?

Or the ineffectiveness of the Germans at Kursk?

Well, I could go and on. . .



But it would be irrelevant to the discussion unless you want to rate Patton alongside those individuals in the pantheon of 'great' generals.

If you wish to discuss the errors of the Nazi generals then it might be better do start another thread. I thought this one was about Patton.


It's called placing Patton's actions into the proper perspective of larger events.

My references to many, many German Officer mistakes, was to point out that sometimes blunders happen beyond an officer's control.

If this comparison somehow seems misplaced to you, then by all means please start another thread detailing the atrocious blunders committed by the Germans in WW2.

< Message edited by Von Rom -- 7/16/2004 6:45:34 PM >


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RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/16/2004 8:48:25 PM   
Von Rom


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quote:

ORIGINAL: max_h

just because the 352nd was not an elite formation doesn´t make Patton a bad general... actually I think he was one of the better allied generals. keeping the momentum and being able to exploit the enemies weaknesses are essential skills for the blitz style warfare. some argue that he wasn´t the best against "real opposition" - and I don´t argue against it, but it was him who kept the germans on the move. monty on the other hand almost always lost the momentum coz he waited for more and more reinforcements as he never had "enough" support. needless to say, that the enemy used Monty´s buildup time to reinforce themselves...


max_h:

This is probably the most intelligent statement made by Patton's critics to date in this thread.

Have a nice day.

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RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/16/2004 9:04:14 PM   
Von Rom


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Quality of Third Army Units Engaged in the Battle of the Bulge

Much has been made about the quality of German troops faced by elements of Third Army.

In this post I will look at the quality of the three divisions of Third Army that moved north to attack the Germans in the Battle of the Bulge.

Please note that when reading these descriptions, bear in mind that these same units travelled for two days and two nights in freezing winter weather, without the benefit of proper rest and sleep, and without hot food, and then, without resting, were sent into continuous combat over a period of several days against a determined foe that comprised the 352nd VGD, the 5th Parachute Division, the Fuehrer Grenadier Brigade (the younger brother of the elite GrossDeutchland Panzer Division) which had a large body of German armor, and the 79th Volks Grenadier Division, to name only a few units. In later days, more German units would join the fighting.



The 26th Division:

"The 26th Division (Maj. Gen. Willard S. Paul) was full of rifle replacements, mostly inexperienced and lacking recent infantry training. This division had seen its first combat in October and had lost almost 3,000 men during bitter fighting in Lorraine. Withdrawn in early December to take over the Third Army "reinforcement" training program at Metz, the 26th Division had just received 2,585 men as replacements and, on 18 December, was beginning its program (scheduled for thirty days) when the German counteroffensive canceled its role as a training division. The "trainees," men taken from headquarters, antitank sections, and the like, at once were preempted to fill the ranks left gaping by the Lorraine battles. Knowing only that an undefined combat mission lay ahead, the division rolled north to Arlon, completing its move shortly before midnight of the 20th. Not until the next day did General Paul learn that his division was to attack on the early morning of the 22d."




The 35th Division:

"The 35th Division had suffered heavily in the Lorraine battles (for which see Cole, The Lorraine Campaign, ch. XII, passim) and General Gay persuaded Patton not to throw the division into the Ardennes fight until other Third Army divisions in better condition had been committed. The 35th Division, filled with untrained replacements, was attacking without its usual supporting battalion of tanks, for these had been taken away while the division was refitting at Metz.

Sources: The published histories of the division's activities are very good. See Miltonberger and Huston, 134th Infantry Regiment: Combat History of World War II (Washington, n.d.); Combat History of the 137th Infantry Regiment (Baton Rouge, 196); and The 35th Infantry Division in World War II (Atlanta, n.d.).

Here is the Official Site devoted to the 35th Infantry Divison:

http://www.35thinfdivassoc.com/Ardennes/Ardennes-Story-1.shtml



The 4th Armored Division:

"The 4th Armored Division had won a brilliant reputation during the autumn battles in Lorraine. It was a favorite of the Third Army commander; so, when its leader, Maj. Gen. John S. Wood, was returned to the United States for rest and recuperation, General Patton named his own chief of staff as Wood's successor. On 10 December the 4th Armored Division came out of the line after five months of incessant fighting. The last phase of combat, the attack in the Saar mud, had been particularly trying and costly. Replacements, both men and materiel, were not to be had; trained tank crews could not be found in the conventional replacement centers-in fact these specialists no longer were trained in any number in the United States. When the division started for Luxembourg it was short 713 men and 19 officers in the tank and infantry battalions and the cavalry squadron.

"The state of materiel was much poorer, for there was a shortage of medium tanks throughout the European theater. The division could replace only a few of its actual losses and was short twenty-one Shermans when ordered north; worse, ordnance could not exchange worn and battledamaged tanks for new. Tanks issued in the United Kingdom in the spring of 1944 were still operating, many of them after several major repair jobs, and all with mileage records beyond named life expectancy. Some could be run only at medium speed. Others had turrets whose electrical traverse no longer functioned and had to be cranked around by hand. Tracks and motors were worn badly: the 8th Tank Battalion alone had thirty-three tanks drop out because of mechanical failure in the l60mile rush to the Ardennes. But even with battle-weary tanks and a large admixture of green tankers and armored infantry the 4th Armored Division, on its record, could be counted an asset in any operation requiring initiative and battle know-how."


Sources:

The German sources contributing most directly to this chapter are MSS # B-23, 5th Parachute Division, 1 December 1944-12 January 1945 (Generalmajor Ludwig Heilmann); # B-041, 167th Volks Grenadier Division, 24 December 1944-February 1945, Corps Hoecker, 2-10 March 1945 and 59th Infantry Division, 20 March-24 April 1945 (Generalleutnant Hans Hoecker); # B-068, 3d Panzer Grenadier Division, Ardennes (Generalmajor Walter Denkert); # B-151, Fifth Panzer Army, Ardennes Offensive (General der Panzertruppen Hasso von Manteuffel); # B-151a, sequel to MS # B-151 (General der Panzertruppen Hasso von Manteuffel); # B-235, Fifth Panzer Army, 2 November 1944-16 January 1945 (Generalmajor Carl Wagener); # B465, 3d Panzer Grenadier Division, 16-28 December 1944 (Generalmajor Walter Denkert); # B-592, Fuehrer Begleit Brigade, 16 December 1944-26 January 1945 (Generalmajor Otto Remer); # B-701, Army Group B, 15 October 1944-1945 (Col Guenther Reichhelm); # B-799, LXXXIX Corps, 24 January-8 March 1945 (Lt Col Kurt Reschke).

See MSS # A-932 (Gersdorff); B-041 (Hoecker); and B-799 (Reschke).

http://www.army.mil/cmh-pg/default.htm

http://www.35thinfdivassoc.com/Ardennes/Ardennes-Story-1.shtml

< Message edited by Von Rom -- 7/16/2004 7:15:47 PM >


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RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/16/2004 9:24:52 PM   
Von Rom


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This Past will look briefly at determined German Counteratttacks Against the above three Divisions of Third Army


On the afternoon of 29 December, General Manteuffel called his commanders together. Here were the generals who had carried the Bastogne fight thus far and generals of the divisions moving into the area, now including three SS commanders.

Manteuffel, it is related, began the conference with some critical remarks about the original failure to apprehend the importance of Bastogne. He then proceeded to tell the assemblage that the Ardennes offensive, as planned, was at an end, that Bastogne had become the "central problem," and that the German High Command viewed the forthcoming battle as an "opportunity," an opportunity to win a striking victory or at the least to chew up the enemy divisions which would be poured into the fight. The operation would be in three phases: first, close the ring once again around Bastogne; second, push the Americans back to the south; third, with reinforcements now on the way, take Bastogne in a final assault.

Army Group Luettwitz would conduct the fight to restore the German circle with the XXXIX and XLVII Panzer Corps, the first attacking east to west, the second striking west to east. The eastern assault force comprised the under-strength 1st SS Panzer and the 167th Volks Grenadier Divisions; its drive was to be made via Lutrebois toward Assenois.

The attack from the west would be spearheaded by the Fuehrer Begleit advancing over Sibret and hammering the ring closed. The 3d Panzer Grenadier Division was to advance in echelon to the left of Remer's brigade while the remnants of the 26th Volks Grenadier Division and 15th Panzer Grenadier Division screened to the west and north of Bastogne. The timing for the arrival of the incoming reinforcements-the 12th SS Panzer, the 9th SS Panzer, and the 340th Volks Grenadier Divisions-was problematical.

1SS Panzer

The 1st SS Panzer was still licking its wounds after the fight as advance guard of the Sixth Panzer Army, when Model ordered the division to move south, beginning 26 December.

The 167th Volks Grenadier Division (Generalleutnant Hans-Kurt Hoecker), ordered to join the 1st SS Panzer in the attack, was looked upon by Manteuffel and others with more favor. This was a veteran division which had distinguished itself on the Soviet front. The 167th had been refitting and training replacements from the 17th Luftwaffe Feld Division when orders reached its Hungarian casernes to entrain for the west. On 24 December the division arrived at Gerolstein on the Rhine; though some units had to detrain east of the river, Hoecker's command was at full strength when it began the march to Bastogne. A third of the division were veterans of the Russian battles, and in addition there were two hundred picked men who had been officer candidates before the December comb-out.

The 35th Infantry Division (one of Third Army's Divisions) stood directly in the path of the German attack, having gradually turned from a column of regiments to face northeast. The northernmost regiment, the 134th Infantry, had come in from reserve to capture Lutrebois at the request of CCA, 4th Armored, but it had only two battalions in the line. The 137th Infantry was deployed near Villers-la-Bonne-Eau, and on the night of the 29th Companies K and L forced their way into the village, radioing back that they needed bazooka ammunition. (It seems likely that the Americans shared Villers with a company of German Pioneers.) In the south the 320th Infantry had become involved in a bitter fight around a farmstead out-side of Harlange-the German attack would pass obliquely across its front but without impact.

During the night of 29 December the tank column of the 1st SS Panzer moved up along the road linking Tarchamps and Lutremange. The usable road net was very sparse in this sector. Once through Lutremange, however, the German column could deploy in two armored assault forces, one moving through Villers-la-Bonne-Eau, the other angling northwest through Lutrebois. Before dawn the leading tank companies rumbled toward these two villages. At Villers-la-Bonne-Eau Companies K and L, 137th Infantry, came under attack by seven tanks heavily supported by infantry. The panzers moved in close, blasting the stone houses and setting the village ablaze. At 0845 a radio message reached the command post of the 137th asking for the artillery to lay down a barrage of smoke and high explosive, but before the gunners could get a sensing the radio went dead. Only one of the 169 men inside the village got out, Sgt. Webster Phillips, who earlier had run through the rifle fire to warn the reserve company of the battalion west of Villers.

The American use of the combined arms in this action was so outstanding as to merit careful analysis by the professional soldier and student. The 4th Armored Division artillery, for example, simultaneously engaged the 1st SS Panzer in the east and the 3d Panzer Grenadier in the west. Weyland's fighter-bombers from the XIX Tactical Air Command intervened at precisely the right time to blunt the main German armored thrust and set up better targets for engagement by the ground forces. American tanks and tank destroyers cooperated to whipsaw the enemy assault units. The infantry action, as will be seen, had a decisive effect at numerous points in the battle. Two circumstances in particular would color the events of 30 December: because of CCA's earlier interest in Lutrebois, radio and wire communications between the 4th Armored and the 35th Division were unusually good in this sector; although the 35th had started the drive north without the normal attachment of a separate tank battalion, the close proximity of the veteran 4th Armored more than compensated for this lack of an organic tank-killing capability.

The main body of the 1st SS Panzer kampfgruppe appeared an hour or so before noon moving along the Lutremange-Lutrebois road; some twenty-five tanks were counted in all. It took two hours to bring the fighterbombers into the fray, but they arrived just in time to cripple or destroy seven tanks and turn back the bulk of the panzers. Companies I and K still were in their foxholes along the road during the air bombing and would recall that, lacking bazookas, the green soldiers "popped off" at the tanks with their rifles and that some of the German tanks turned aside into the woods. Later the two companies came back across the valley, on orders, and jointed the defense line forming near the chateau.

Thirteen German tanks, which may have debouched from the road before the air attack, reached the woods southwest of Lutrebois, but a 4th Armored artillery observer in a cub plane spotted them and dropped a message to Company B of the 35th Tank Battalion. Lt. John A. Kingsley, the company commander, who had six Sherman tanks and a platoon from the 701st Tank Destroyer Battalion, formed an ambush near a slight ridge that provided his own tanks with hull defilade and waited. The leading German company (or platoon), which had six panzers, happened to see Company A of the 35th as the fog briefly lifted, and turned, with flank exposed, in that direction. The first shot from Kingsley's covert put away the German commander's tank and the other tanks milled about until all had been knocked out. Six more German tanks came along and all were destroyed or disabled. In the meantime the American tank destroyers took on some accompanying assault guns, shot up three of them, and dispersed the neighboring grenadiers.

At the close of day the enemy had taken Lutrebois and Villers-la-BonneEau plus the bag of three American rifle companies, but the eastern counter-attack, like that in the west, had failed. Any future attempts to break through to Assenois and Hompre in this sector would face an alert and coordinated American defense.


I could post more and more about this German counterattack against Third Army, but I think you can see that elements of Third Army were heavily engaged in combat since their arrival at the "Bulge", and were attacked by many German units, including the 1SS Panzer Division.


Sources:

The German sources contributing most directly to this chapter are MSS # B-23, 5th Parachute Division, 1 December 1944-12 January 1945 (Generalmajor Ludwig Heilmann); # B-041, 167th Volks Grenadier Division, 24 December 1944-February 1945, Corps Hoecker, 2-10 March 1945 and 59th Infantry Division, 20 March-24 April 1945 (Generalleutnant Hans Hoecker); # B-068, 3d Panzer Grenadier Division, Ardennes (Generalmajor Walter Denkert); # B-151, Fifth Panzer Army, Ardennes Offensive (General der Panzertruppen Hasso von Manteuffel); # B-151a, sequel to MS # B-151 (General der Panzertruppen Hasso von Manteuffel); # B-235, Fifth Panzer Army, 2 November 1944-16 January 1945 (Generalmajor Carl Wagener); # B465, 3d Panzer Grenadier Division, 16-28 December 1944 (Generalmajor Walter Denkert); # B-592, Fuehrer Begleit Brigade, 16 December 1944-26 January 1945 (Generalmajor Otto Remer); # B-701, Army Group B, 15 October 1944-1945 (Col Guenther Reichhelm); # B-799, LXXXIX Corps, 24 January-8 March 1945 (Lt Col Kurt Reschke).

See MSS # A-932 (Gersdorff); B-041 (Hoecker); and B-799 (Reschke).

http://www.35thinfdivassoc.com/Ardennes/Ardennes-Story-1.shtml

http://www.army.mil/cmh-pg/default.htm

< Message edited by Von Rom -- 7/16/2004 7:30:41 PM >


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RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/16/2004 9:35:28 PM   
Von Rom


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As the two posts above clearly indicate that those who casually dismiss Patton's and Third Army's accomplishments in the Battle of the Bulge, do a great disservice both to him and to these fine fighting men.

Is it any wonder that Patton exclaimed: "God, how I love those men!"

Of Patton's drive in the Battle of the Bulge, General Omar N. Bradley stated it was "one of the most astonishing feats of generalship of our campaign in the west". Patton turned his forces quickly northward at ninety degrees, travelled 100 miles in 48 hours in the worst winter weather to hit the Ardennes in decades, and then engaged the southern flank of the bulge and helped contain the enemy. (Pogue, Forrest C. The Supreme Command. Washington D. C.: Center of Military History, United States Government Printing Office, 1989; p.381.)

The pictures below will give the reader a clear idea of the type of weather and terrain these three divisions of Third Army fought in:










Attachment (3)

< Message edited by Von Rom -- 7/17/2004 4:19:24 AM >


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RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/16/2004 10:00:08 PM   
macgregor


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Simple, he was a good general (i.e. on a par with his german counterparts) because he understood maneuver warfare and earned my respect with his ability to overcome the inferiority of his tanks by lavishly using his artillery and AA units in a direct fire capacity(as did Rommel before him). I share his distaste for protracted campaigns. He was a great general because he was a wealthy, self-absorbed ,nepotistic ,narcistic ,racist , reactionary, conservative, class-conscious aristocrat. Or so I would assume based on the people that I know that think he was so great.

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RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/16/2004 10:10:07 PM   
MG3

 

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quote:

Von Rom...


You overlooked one really important fact in your campaign to put down every archievment of the German staff and their soldiers, make everyone in the Wehrmacht look like and total fool who fights like a jerk from Spielbergs movies who can hardly fire in the right direction...

Should I really tell you? If you think the German Army and it staff were worthless boneheads, their archievments in the early campaigns and in the later stages of the war against a much stronger foe are only easy pickings- then Patton must be no good also. After all he beat the most incompetent army on the planet (at least if someone listen to your agenta), hardly an archievment, isnt it?

Oh BTW- I regart Patton as one of the finest Allied Generals of WW2.

And as a final note: the interpretation of the events and battles of WW2 are very *interesting*.

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RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/16/2004 11:01:13 PM   
EMO

 

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I am enjoying it also and I am learning so much that I want to study General Patton's career in much more detail than before. I have one comment though (and would especially like Von Rom's and Iron Dukes comments on my comment); no general can pick his opponent; he has to play the cards he is dealt, so to speak. I believe there was some criticism of Woolseley and Roberts generalship--accusations that they earned their reputations against inferior opponents but who they fought was out of their control. Rommel faced a British army in North Africa(prior to Torch) that did not grasp the combined arms concept nearly as well as the Germans, whose commanders led from the rear and who refused to use their 90mm Antiaircraft gun in an anti-tank role, though it was actually demonstrated to be effective. Yet, Rommel's military genius is unquestioned. Can we not recognize Patton's achievements in the same manner?

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RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/17/2004 1:09:46 AM   
IronDuke_slith

 

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IronDuke said:
quote:

The other occasion is when they use someone else's words to describe or highlight something, because they agree with it, and know that the point has been made elsewhere, and by quoting rather than just restating the point, they give it extra weight because they prove other historians agree with them. Alternatively, it may be something outside their sphere of influence and they quote it because the historian is a recognised leader in that field. Did you not know this?


Von Rom said:
quote:

Heheh

D'Este was writing a balanced book about Patton. He presented both sides of the arguments. Unlike some authors who inject their opinions willy-nilly, D'Este tries to present both sides' views.

That is why D'Este's book is a superior work. He gives us the opinions of Patton's supporters as well as his critics.

Didn't you know that?


Wrong. When authors do that, they place the for and against critics beside each other so readers can compare the arguments. Look at Pg 634. D'Este does not present the pro-Patton explanation for anything. He merely cites his critics, prefacing the quotes with words of his own:

"Patton's achilles heel, which would be painfully evident later in Lorraine, was that rather than cut his losses, he would attempt to storm his way out of a bad situation in the name of prestige."

D'Este criticises him then goes to quote Carr and Whiting in support of his position. This argument should be over to all but those who will not see.





IronDuke said
quote:

Patton said of the three units he took: "Bradley, my best three divisions are 4th Armoured, the 80th and the 26th." Patton's own words.

The units in 352 Volksgrenadier Divisions Corp were 5th Parachute (which wasn't actually a parachute division anymore as it had been destroyed in Normandy and rebuilt from surplus Luftwaffe ground crew) and 79th Volksgrenadier which certainly wasn't rebuilt from veterans because the previous 79th was destroyed (1 man living to tell the tale). It was formed from the 586th Volksgrenadiers. The sources are Nafziger and Mitcham. The same people I used to illustrate the 352nd contained no combat veterans.

Some of these units actually performed creditably despite their various deficiencies.


Von Rom said:

quote:

Yes they did. They weren't exactly the misfits some might think they were


That depends. If you make operational mistakes, you can allow poor units to look better than they actually are. These units were not Volksturm, but neither were they regular army. Patton should have done better.

quote:

You also forgot to mention the counterattack by the 1st S.S. Panzer “Der Fuhrer” Division which was sent south in an attempt to cut-off Patton's relieving forces fighting outside of Bastogne.


Part of the problem of taking you seriously are the errors. I'm reluctant to point them all out, because I get accused of being nitpicky. However, since I presume you have sources for this, it leaves me with little confidence in your arguments because your sources must be so poor.

Most SS units had titles. 1st SS Panzer Division was actually called "1ST SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler". It grew out of his personal body guard unit.

"Der Fuhrer" in SS Terms referred to the Panzergrenadier Regiment no 4, which fought in 2nd SS Panzer Division Das Reich, a completely different formation.

Liebstandarte (that's 1st SS Panzer) did indeed come south at the very end of December 1944. However, a second feature of your arguments is a lack of perspective (exactly what you accuse me of). SS Liebstandarte had by this time been in action since the beginning of the Bulge. These attacks were carried out by two Kampfgruppes. One made up of around 30-40 tanks and some Panzergrenadiers, the other from what was left of the Divisions Panzergrenadiers. Some of the Divisional Jagdpanzers also seem to have taken part. All in all, the strength was maybe two Battalions worth of Panzergrenadiers and about 50 armoured vehicles. In percentage terms thats about a third of the divisional infantry and a quarter of it's tanks. It's artillery was hamstrung by a lack of ammunition.

Other units did take part, including a new Volksgrenadier division which had just arrived in theatre after a hurried journey from Hungary. It had no heavy weapons. Around a third of i;'s men had seen some action in the east, two thirds hadn't. Large numbers of luftwaffe ground crew had been drafted in to make up the numbers.

Despite these handicaps, the VG did take the attacks initial objectives.

What this has to do with Patton's drive on Bastogne is anyone's guess, as these attack took place in order to drive him back from Bastogne after he arrived.

quote:

In some brutal fighting both sides suffered 16,000 dead with 600 tanks destroyed. Quite the little scrap, eh?


I'd love to see the context of this as I can only conclude you're providing figures from more than just this attack (something else you are often caught doing), or taken the losses from a period between two wide dates. Liebstandarte had less than 50 tanks. Panzer Lehr which took part had a handful of MK IVs. The American 4th Armoured supported the 35th, but didn't have anything like 500+ tanks and certainly didn't commit that many to help. I'm not sure, therefore, where these 600 tanks appeared from, unless you're taking casualties that include other units that joined this engagement later, or fought as the battle moved on. There weren't this many casualties when Liebstandarte collided with the 35th.

quote:

From the history of the 35th Infantry Division:

"We did not know that Hitler had ordered some of his best remaining troops to cut off the Third Army’s relief of Bastogne at all costs. Now across our front from our right came the elite 1st S.S. Panzer “Der Fuhrer” Division, sent down from the German Sixth Army to break us – the 167th Volksgrenadier Division, and the 5th Parachute Division from the Seventh German Army. Fighting see-sawed in and around towns like Lutrebois where we lost two companies of the 134th Regiment, Marvie, where we at last broke through to the 101st Airborne, Surre, Villers La Bonne where the 137th lost companies K and L, cut off and hit by the Germans with flame throwers, the survivors captured and marched into Germany to a prison camp, Boulaide, whose grateful citizens would welcome returning veterans in later years as tour groups, Tarchamps, and Harlange where a single farm, fortified, stopped the 320th Regiment. Frostbite, illness and exhaustion, the freezing waters of the Sure River, waste deep, waded across by the 320th soldiers. Deep snow which slowed attack and bogged down G.I.s who were unable to move fast enough to evade the lethal fire of enemy machine guns, mortars and artillery shells, tree bursts and craters. The fields and woods became graveyards littered with dozens of destroyed tanks and assault guns, half tracks, trucks, equipment, and corpses."

This picture will give readers an idea of what the three Third Army divisions had to march and fight in. Imagine travelling in freezing cold for two days with little sleep or hot food and then, without rest, fight a series of battles:




I see it is here (from the Divisional history) that the error re 1st SS Panzer comes from. The two other formations were not "The best remaining Hitler had" although the Author has at least qualified his remarks as "best remaining" in reference to Liebstandarte.. The elite of the third reich after 5 years and 6 million dead were not quite what they once were.

You're also mixing up stories here in order to improve your point (What I believe is another failing of yours). You tell us this story about the 35th (brave men all, lets not forget where they fought and what they did, although this has limited value in a thread about Patton's operational ability). You then start banging on about third army, forty eight hour marches and no sleep. 35th Division did not take part in Pattons famous about turn and march. It joined those three divisions later, at Bastogne. It joins 3rd Army during the battle, not before.

The conditions you describe were indeed atrocious, but they are irrelevant, in so much as the conditions were the same for the Germans (unless you have discovered the German front line was in a more temparate climate). The conditions were absolutely dreadful, but whilst these illustrate the bravery and strength of the men involved, they do not illustrate much about Patton's operational abilities.


I said:
quote:

This is just frustration for me. Unable to admit you are wrong, you decide instead to change the whole line of argument


You said:

quote:

Where am I wrong when I disagree about the basis of the argument?

Let me put it to you this way:

The whole basis for the supposed early German BliztKreig during the early years is really just a myth isn't it.

The mighty German war machine attacks little Poland, Belgium, Holland, Denmark, etc, and even France really offers up a poorly led and divided Allied force.

Heck, the Germans couldn't even bag hundreds of thousands of Allied soldiers stranded at Dunkirk.

The Germans enjoyed a 3:1 advantage in the Battle of Britain - yet failed miserably.

Even in Russia the German forces surprise-attacked poorly-led, poorly equipped forces with low morale.

What value are these victories? Of what value are Rommel's and Guderian's victories against such weak and inferior troops?

Get my meaning?




I accuse you of changing the basis of the argument every time you are proved wrong, and you then go on to move the thread onto the Battle of Britain. If you right (which you're not), and Guderians victories were always as easy as this, then how can these victories be used to support Patton?

quote:

You bring up the 352nd. But I can easily bring up all these German victories and more and compare the quality of soldiers the Germans fought against.


And this proves what exactly about Patton's victories? This is not tit for tat. You don't win the argument by saying, ah but your general fought inferior opposition as well.

quote:

There's more:

In the Ardennes, the Germans had overwhelming superiority and firepower, and had Bastogne surrounded. And yet, they couldn't capture that little town of Bastogne. What poor generalship and leadership


You do not know this battle at all. In the north, the spearheads of Ist Panzer (Liebstandarte, not Der Fuhrer, that's the other one if you remember) destroyed their own tanks because of lack of fuel. If they couldn't fuel the tanks, how could they supply them with anything else? They pushed this quarter of a million men through a woody, hilly area with few roads. What roads there were were treacherous with ice and snow. They had little petrol (which means driving trucks full of ammo up to the front is difficult) and this often resulted in limited artillery. Many of the formations employed were Volksgrenadier units which had lower complements of heavy weapons and equipment. They had superiority as the battle started, but this was eaten away and by the time of Patton's intervention all gone. Remember, the Luftwaffe took little part in the battle whilst the Allied air force flew thousands of sorties after the weather cleared.

Also, why is failing to take Bastogne poor German generalship. Did McAuliffe and 101st not have something to say about this. (A unit which wasn't under Patton).

quote:

And Rommel's stunning early successes in North Africa were against weak and scattered British forces. Gone were the British and Australian troops who were transferred to Greece. So Rommel's victories and his legend were made against weaker and inferior forces.


His first battles were fought with just a handful of troops. He began his attacks before most of his troops had even arrived in theatre. These inferior forces also eventually beat him. Again, what this has to do with Patton's drive on Bastogne I can only guess at.

quote:

See what I mean?


I don't believe anybody does.

quote:

I wasn't wrong.


Quite the opposite.

quote:

The line of debate brought up was simply the wrong thing to be discussing.


Well who brought it up? I was discussing Patton's drive on Bastogne. In reply we've heard about the 35th Division (which didn't take part), the attack of the Liebstandarte (which took place after it was over) and how bad the conditions were (which were the same for both sides).

quote:

You earlier admitted in your post that these same forces (the German units fighting against Patton) put up quite a fight, so obviously they weren't a bunch of rag-tag misfits as they are being made out to be.


As I said, they performed well, but that doesn't mean Patton should have done badly against them. A better plan of attack against Bastogne would have caused formations of this quality real problems. Particularly the lack of experienced Officers. In situations of retreat, combat experienced officers can mean the difference between orderly fighting withdrawal and rout.

quote:

I brought up the opposing American forces because some were inexperienced, especially the 106th which had just newly arrived on the scene.


As before, irrelevant, I thought 106th was part of 1st Army? What has it's problems got to do with Patton? Much less has it anything to do with Patton's drive on Bastogne.

I said:

quote:

Some of the men facing Patton didn't know how to fight


you said:
quote:

Please. . .

This is embarrassing. . .

Yet, earlier you admitted in your post that these same forces put up quite a fight. You contradict yourself.

Which is it?

Third Army suffered 50,000 casualties. . .

The next thing you'll be saying is that Third Army only faced cardboard cut-outs of German troops, and their casualties resulted from driving into trees.


I said that some didn't know how to fight, being poorly trained ex airplane mechanics thrust into the heart of battle, I said some performed well. These are not mutally exclusive. If some are bad, by definition, some must be better, otherwise I'd have described them as all bad wouldn't I?? By making up arguments for me like this, you embarrass yourself.

quote:

Oh, and don't forget the 1SS Panzer Division when it counterattacked. . .


about 1400 men and 50 tanks, little or no artillery. No, I haven't forgotten

I said:

quote:

Patton thought them his best. 4th Armoured and 80th Inf arrived in Normandy in early August and fought across France, into Lorraine etc. 26th arrived in Early Sept and went into action in early October fighting in october and November before joining the battle in the Ardennes. You can say replacements may have been inexperienced, but the majority had seen combat, in some cases a good deal of combat.


You said:

quote:

What do you think happens when men are killed in battle? or when they are wounded? or when they get ill?

They get GREEN replacements.

Third Army had been fighting in Europe since Aug/44.

They had fought a brutual battle at Metz.

In the Ardennes, they had to travel for two days and nights in terrible winter weather and without rest, and then engage in battle. . .

Try driving your car for two days without proper sleep in a winter storm and see how you feel at the end of it.

Please. . .

You do a terrible disservice to the memory of those brave men.


Your cheapest trick yet, to suggest I'm doing a disservice to the memory of these men. I am discussing Patton's operational abilities, not US Army tactical performance in WWII. Attempting to take a moral high tone in such a heavy handed way is offensive. If that's the way you want it, however...

Replacements are often green, but if you are unable to see the difference between a combat unit absorbing replacements (the US replacement system was very efficient), and units made up of old men and boys (and airplane mechanics, and naval ratings) then I can't help you. All combat units have a certain percentage of replacements. The Division isn't destroyed by this because the replacements have received basic training, and are being absorbed into experienced combat surroundings. They are in the right environment to learn, and will not necessarily destroy the ability of a division to function effectively. If they did, how did Patton manage to get to Bastogne at all?


I said:

quote:

In terms of the Bulge, less so for Patton, because some of the things you cite didn't apply to him, but to elsewhere in the Bulge.


You said:

quote:

I can only shake my head at this type of reasoning, and you wonder why I don't bother to answer some of your posts?

It's just nonsensical. . .

Third Army suffered 50,000 casualties figting the Germans in the Bulge. . .


The nonsense is yours. I thought we were discussing Patton's drive on Bastogne? Also, since casualties prove little about a Generals abilities (only that his men fought hard and bravely) what do casualty figures have to do with it? They can often indicate poor Generalship!!!! You keep taking the argument off track. This section is all about his thrust on Bastogne about which you have said nothing. Instead you talk about how many 3rd Army lost, you talk about SS units appearing out of the snow after he reaches Bastogne. You talk about the 35th which wasn't in the drive and the 106th that didn't even belong to third army. If you're going to change the terms of the argument, let me know beforehand.

I said:

quote:

What the Patton homepage ignores about this battle is that it was completely unnecessary. Think of this. You're facing tough fortified positions, you've limited ammo and gas, the weather is so poor, your soldiers have trenchfoot in massive numbers. The weather is so poor, it's hard for your infantry to move, much less vehicles, and air cover is restricted.


Can I just say, this the following words are your best ever bit: If this thread carries on ten more pages, you will never excel this. To accuse me of twisting facts to suit my argument than come forward with this is quite beyond belief.

quote:

Regarding Metz:

Patton was a mobile warrior as Rommel was.

I'm not saying that everything Patton did was the best.

But this MUST be placed in persepctive of what preceeded it.

As I mentioned previously, the true error resided with the Allied High Command. Patton had shown how fast he could move. With the proper amount of fuel, which you also admit is true, Patton would have taken Metz and then driven onto the Siegfried Line, with a minium of casualties.

Patton would NEVER have sat still under ANY circumstances, and his superiors KNEW it.

Sitting in front of Metz doing NOTHING would have destroyed Third Army morale. Patton knew they had to get out of their situation.

Trench Foot alone was taking a heavy toll - higher casualties in fact than the Germans.

By not giving supplies to Patton, but rather sending them to Monty, the Allied Command caused two bloody situations: Metz and Operation Market Garden
.


Before analysis of this, can I just highlight the important bit.

quote:

Sitting in front of Metz doing NOTHING would have destroyed Third Army morale. Patton knew they had to get out of their situation.




What effect on morale do you think wading day after day through rivers of mud and blood, attacking strong fixed defences without proper artillery or air support had? I cannot believe this has been written.

Are you suggesting that to improve morale, Patton decided to risk their lives in attacks with little or no chance of success???????

Do you think American soldiers were war junkeys who would have have preferred spending their days outside under machine gun fire rather than inside in weather as atrocious as it was. This is one of the most contrived excuses I have ever heard. I can not believe you have suggested this in order to protect your hero. Even if it existed as an excuse at the outset of the battle (which it clearly doesn't) American soldiers would have realised it was all pointless very early on. What effect did continuing have on morale then?????

Also, Why will you not understand? Patton did not have to attack. Bradley told him to stop when it became clear he was going nowhere. He did not have the ammo or supplies to attack. The German defences were too strong in these circumstances. The weather was atrocious and made even infantry movement difficult. Bradley told him when the supplies were turned back on he could swing around Metz and take it from the rear. But no, Patton launches his men into the teeth of fixed defences without proper air or artillery support in atrocious weather. Why? Because he thought they would get bored, otherwise?
I have seen nothing like this in over 500 posts.

If your argument is that Patton hated inactivity, then that is a very bad point for his Generalship. A good General makes the right decisions. A bad one makes the wrong decisions. It was the wrong decision to make an unnecessary attack.

You have previously displayed some appreciation of Rommel. When faced with a poor supply situation, in front of tough enemy defences, this armoured warrior dug in (at Alamein) Patton threw his men forward and beat his head (or rather his men's heads) against the steel of Metz's forts. If you fight off everything else I say, fighting here is not worth it.

This Metz debate, amidst everything we have discussed, illustrates what unblinking acceptance of the Patton legend entails. Think back through what you have told us. In Sicily, they wouldn't listen to him, they allowed the Germans to escape because they wouldn't let him attack. At Falaise, they told him to stop, and he was denied the chance to capture Germans. In Metz they cut off his supplies and he had to attack with one hand behind his back, after the war they conspired together cutting seedy deals to destroy his memory. Time and time again, any of his faults are hidden behind excuses that it was somebody else's fault. This is not history, it is paranoia.

In order to be a Patton fanboy, you have to defend everything he did with excuses that are ever more ludicrous. The real shame for Patton, is that some of his qualities get missed by the fanboys, because they are too busy defending the indefensible. they don't see the bigger picture.

Patton saw at Falaise that after the breakout, the correct direction was towards the Seine. Instead Patton is ordered to Falaise by Bradley. Patton has seen the bigger picture. This is hidden by the Patton legend that sees every Patton supporter jump up and down endlessly about being ordered to stop at Argentan. Argentan was irrelevant. Patton was wrong to think he could have closed the gap, but right to think the Seine was a good place to park third army. What do we spend our time discussing, yup! Patton at Falaise, because the legend demands it. Not Patton the strategist who made the perfectly logical assumption that the Seine was the place to go.

At the Bulge, Patton never wanted to relieve Bastogne. He wanted to attack further east and slice through the shoulder of the Bulge, cutting off every German soldier. Whether this was on is debateable (Strategically, though, Patton had the right idea). However, the battle to Bastogne is mishandled, but do we ever discuss Patton's initial (and intriguing) idea? No, we discuss Bastogne because Patton supporters refuse to accept he can do wrong. You can even make a case in Sicily for circumstances like this. Patton writes in his diary on the eve of the pointless dash to Palermo that he thinks the British are going nowehere. He has recognised what is going to happen. This is good. What is bad is his response. However, because the Patton legend refuses to allow any criticism, Patton supporters are forced to defend a pointless operation. The supreme irony is that in making him a man who can do no wrong, Patton supporters never get to talk about the revealing moments, in which it is clear he had some military acumen.

I said:

quote:

If your examples are all like this, then I would not post them either, as it does your case no good.


you said:

quote:

It's called putting a "bad situation" into perspective.

As for bad situations, what about the poor German performance:

1) In Stalingrad?

2) Before the gates of Moscow in 1941?

3) In the siege of Leningrad?

4) In the failure to bag hundred of thousands of Allied soldiers at Dunkirk?

5) In Rommels' failure to take Egypt?

6) In Goering's failure in the Battle of Britain?

7) In the German failure to capture Bastogne?

In other words, every general or army has bad moments.

But it MUST be placed in perspective of the larger circumstances.


To quote you from earlier in this thread, look waaaaayyyyy up to the top. What do you see? Why was Patton so great? What relevance has this?

Respect and regards,
IronDuke

(in reply to EMO)
Post #: 311
RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/17/2004 1:18:11 AM   
IronDuke_slith

 

Posts: 1595
Joined: 6/30/2002
From: Manchester, UK
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: max_h

just because the 352nd was not an elite formation doesn´t make Patton a bad general... actually I think he was one of the better allied generals. keeping the momentum and being able to exploit the enemies weaknesses are essential skills for the blitz style warfare. some argue that he wasn´t the best against "real opposition" - and I don´t argue against it, but it was him who kept the germans on the move. monty on the other hand almost always lost the momentum coz he waited for more and more reinforcements as he never had "enough" support. needless to say, that the enemy used Monty´s buildup time to reinforce themselves...


As I have said three or four times, he could drive tanks and men hard, he was a good logistitian, he loved to attack, and in an army with more conservative commanders like Montgomery and Bradley, this was the other side of the coin to complement them.

However, you are right, he wasn't the best against real opposition. My argument is that the Patton legend, in a mad dash across history to prove him the best, destroy any chance of real analysis by explaining away every possible fault as the fault of others, and trying to suggest Patton could have won the war on his own. (The infamous, give him the gas and he'll drive into Germany nonsense).

He was average in combat situations, a lot better in open country. This makes him useful, but not one of the war's great commanders (although he is further up the Allied table than the overall table. Indeed, he might be in the top half dozen in the allied table).

As for Monty, it's a trade off. He did wait too long, but when he went, he won. The only operation planned and executed in five minutes was Arnhem, and that came within an hour's drive of succeeding. Patton usually went too early, which was fine if the enemy were in retreat, but not so good if they were solid in defence.

To round it off, he has some personal traits I don't care for as well.

Regards,
IronDuke

(in reply to max_h)
Post #: 312
RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/17/2004 1:19:43 AM   
freeboy

 

Posts: 9088
Joined: 5/16/2004
From: Colorado
Status: offline
quote:


As for Monty, it's a trade off. He did wait too long, but when he went, he won. The only operation planned and executed in five minutes was Arnhem, and that came within an hour's drive of succeeding. Patton usually went too early, which was fine if the enemy were in retreat, but not so good if they were solid in defence


What are you smoking ? Monty didn't win in Normandy, his infamuos I'll be in Caen in 48 hours was a joke, his "planning " and then headlong assaults, like goodwin where tremendously costly in terms of tanks and wouldn't have succeeded there way through anything like a supplied enemy, credit air interdiction here.. and what about those poor british troops anhiliated at Arnhiem? So please let us all into the Monty fanclub sight where his glorious achievments are archived, I am actually interested...

< Message edited by freeboy -- 7/17/2004 7:23:36 AM >

(in reply to IronDuke_slith)
Post #: 313
RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/17/2004 1:34:29 AM   
IronDuke_slith

 

Posts: 1595
Joined: 6/30/2002
From: Manchester, UK
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Von Rom

Quality of Third Army Units Engaged in the Battle of the Bulge

Much has been made about the quality of German troops faced by elements of Third Army.

In this post I will look at the quality of the three divisions of Third Army that moved north to attack the Germans in the Battle of the Bulge.

Please note that when reading these descriptions, bear in mind that these same units travelled for two days and two nights in freezing winter weather, without the benefit of proper rest and sleep, and without hot food, and then, without resting, were sent into continuous combat over a period of several days against a determined foe that comprised the 352nd VGD, the 5th Parachute Division, the Fuehrer Grenadier Brigade (the younger brother of the elite GrossDeutchland Panzer Division) which had a large body of German armor, and the 79th Volks Grenadier Division, to name only a few units. In later days, more German units would join the fighting.



The 26th Division:

"The 26th Division (Maj. Gen. Willard S. Paul) was full of rifle replacements, mostly inexperienced and lacking recent infantry training. This division had seen its first combat in October and had lost almost 3,000 men during bitter fighting in Lorraine. Withdrawn in early December to take over the Third Army "reinforcement" training program at Metz, the 26th Division had just received 2,585 men as replacements and, on 18 December, was beginning its program (scheduled for thirty days) when the German counteroffensive canceled its role as a training division. The "trainees," men taken from headquarters, antitank sections, and the like, at once were preempted to fill the ranks left gaping by the Lorraine battles. Knowing only that an undefined combat mission lay ahead, the division rolled north to Arlon, completing its move shortly before midnight of the 20th. Not until the next day did General Paul learn that his division was to attack on the early morning of the 22d."




The 35th Division:

"The 35th Division had suffered heavily in the Lorraine battles (for which see Cole, The Lorraine Campaign, ch. XII, passim) and General Gay persuaded Patton not to throw the division into the Ardennes fight until other Third Army divisions in better condition had been committed. The 35th Division, filled with untrained replacements, was attacking without its usual supporting battalion of tanks, for these had been taken away while the division was refitting at Metz.

Sources: The published histories of the division's activities are very good. See Miltonberger and Huston, 134th Infantry Regiment: Combat History of World War II (Washington, n.d.); Combat History of the 137th Infantry Regiment (Baton Rouge, 196); and The 35th Infantry Division in World War II (Atlanta, n.d.).

Here is the Official Site devoted to the 35th Infantry Divison:

http://www.35thinfdivassoc.com/Ardennes/Ardennes-Story-1.shtml



The 4th Armored Division:

"The 4th Armored Division had won a brilliant reputation during the autumn battles in Lorraine. It was a favorite of the Third Army commander; so, when its leader, Maj. Gen. John S. Wood, was returned to the United States for rest and recuperation, General Patton named his own chief of staff as Wood's successor. On 10 December the 4th Armored Division came out of the line after five months of incessant fighting. The last phase of combat, the attack in the Saar mud, had been particularly trying and costly. Replacements, both men and materiel, were not to be had; trained tank crews could not be found in the conventional replacement centers-in fact these specialists no longer were trained in any number in the United States. When the division started for Luxembourg it was short 713 men and 19 officers in the tank and infantry battalions and the cavalry squadron.

"The state of materiel was much poorer, for there was a shortage of medium tanks throughout the European theater. The division could replace only a few of its actual losses and was short twenty-one Shermans when ordered north; worse, ordnance could not exchange worn and battledamaged tanks for new. Tanks issued in the United Kingdom in the spring of 1944 were still operating, many of them after several major repair jobs, and all with mileage records beyond named life expectancy. Some could be run only at medium speed. Others had turrets whose electrical traverse no longer functioned and had to be cranked around by hand. Tracks and motors were worn badly: the 8th Tank Battalion alone had thirty-three tanks drop out because of mechanical failure in the l60mile rush to the Ardennes. But even with battle-weary tanks and a large admixture of green tankers and armored infantry the 4th Armored Division, on its record, could be counted an asset in any operation requiring initiative and battle know-how."


Sources:

The German sources contributing most directly to this chapter are MSS # B-23, 5th Parachute Division, 1 December 1944-12 January 1945 (Generalmajor Ludwig Heilmann); # B-041, 167th Volks Grenadier Division, 24 December 1944-February 1945, Corps Hoecker, 2-10 March 1945 and 59th Infantry Division, 20 March-24 April 1945 (Generalleutnant Hans Hoecker); # B-068, 3d Panzer Grenadier Division, Ardennes (Generalmajor Walter Denkert); # B-151, Fifth Panzer Army, Ardennes Offensive (General der Panzertruppen Hasso von Manteuffel); # B-151a, sequel to MS # B-151 (General der Panzertruppen Hasso von Manteuffel); # B-235, Fifth Panzer Army, 2 November 1944-16 January 1945 (Generalmajor Carl Wagener); # B465, 3d Panzer Grenadier Division, 16-28 December 1944 (Generalmajor Walter Denkert); # B-592, Fuehrer Begleit Brigade, 16 December 1944-26 January 1945 (Generalmajor Otto Remer); # B-701, Army Group B, 15 October 1944-1945 (Col Guenther Reichhelm); # B-799, LXXXIX Corps, 24 January-8 March 1945 (Lt Col Kurt Reschke).

See MSS # A-932 (Gersdorff); B-041 (Hoecker); and B-799 (Reschke).

http://www.army.mil/cmh-pg/default.htm

http://www.35thinfdivassoc.com/Ardennes/Ardennes-Story-1.shtml


This is your best post in god knows how many. This thread would have been better from you with more like this.

What I would say is that these divisions were not rebuilt. Veteran men absorbed replacements. The men in the antitank sections that were absorbed would have been combat experienced. If they had not recently served as strict riflemen, they would at least have been under fire.

All that makes me wonder is about the adjectives. It's description of Pattons removal of Wood for "rest and recuperation" is euphemism at it's best. These men still had the edge over aircraft mechanics and Volksgrenadiers. That the drive was slow was Patton's operational plan.

This also clearly shows 4th Armoured was as elite as 3rd Army got. 21 tanks short is not a huge number, as you can see a further 33 were lost for non-combat operational reasons (many of which would have been patched up and sent on), so I would have expected this sort of number to be out under repair even on good days. The average tank strength of a US armoured division in late 44 (light and medium) would have been around 260. (German divisions never topped 170 or so at this time, and Liebstandarte amongst others went into the Bulge with less.)

This is interesting information, but it doesn't hide the weakness of Patton's plan of attack. I would request we move onto that, if you could tell us why attacking along such a wide frontage was required? We've established the German infantry were poor, but perhaps 3rd Army were not at their peak either, lessoning (but not eliminating) their advantage. Now, what about the plan?

Regards,
IronDuke

(See, when your posts are referenced fact-packed information, we get along fine. No wild flights of fantasy here, just sober descriptions from good sources. Go for it!)

(in reply to Von Rom)
Post #: 314
RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/17/2004 1:52:38 AM   
IronDuke_slith

 

Posts: 1595
Joined: 6/30/2002
From: Manchester, UK
Status: offline
quote:

What are you smoking ?


I am about as far away from the Monty fanclub as it can get. I don't smoke, but if you knew me and said this, I'd have to assume you did.

quote:

Monty didn't win in Normandy, his infamuos I'll be in Caen in 48 hours was a joke, his "planning " and then headlong assaults,


The strategic aim in Normandy was for Montgomery to hold the line in the east and allow the Americans to break out in the west. In general, that's how it played. He had many problems. He created a rod for his own back by assigning Caen as a target for the first day. It was 10 miles inland, and never on bearing in mind what stood before Sword beach in the city.

He made more errors in vainly claiming that Caen would be taken every time he attacked, sounding upbeat in communiques to SHAEF when things were actually not really so rosy on the ground, then coming up with excuses everyone could see were excuses when everything failed.

quote:

like goodwin


I think you mean Goodwood.

quote:

where tremendously costly in terms of tanks and wouldn't have succeeded there way through anything like a supplied enemy, credit air interdiction here..


Goodwood was very poorly executed, and very poorly conceived, but it was designed to put the tanks in harms way. Monty was struggling for infantry, and couldn't afford any more infantry heavy attacks like Epsom and Charnwood.

The armoured divisions were fully equipped and he had hundreds of replacement vehicles sat parked just off the beaches or in southern england. He attacked with tanks because he had lots of them. Not the best reason to launch an attack by any means, and the operational plan for Goodwood was poor to further compound the issue.

What didn't help was that Allied arms were not having their finest moment in Normandy. Some British units (most notably 7th Armoured) all but collapsed. Bradley was having more of the same in the drive on St Lo, where American inexperience in combined arms and small unit tactics was costing him dear for every yard gained.

It is simplistic to see everything in terms of Monty. On his right flank stood Panzer Lehr, on his left 21st Panzer. In between stood 12 SS Panzer, 1st SS Panzer etc etc. He was not a particularly imaginative General, but his methods in the face of this and what he perceived as Allied problems at a tactical level were fairly sound. Set piece attacks, lots of artillery and aircraft. He was a relatively average General in a relatively average Allied bunch. He did at least have a method, though, and it eventually won through.

quote:

and what about those poor british troops anhiliated at Arnhiem? So please let us all into the Monty fanclub sight where his glorious achievments are archived, I am actually interested...


It is not being in the Monty fanclub to suggest he was an average General who did his best in difficult circumstances. At Arnhem, the lead Allied tanks were just a few miles undefended drive from Arnhem Bridge when they stopped to wait for infantry support. The plan was hastily thrown together and had several operational flaws (single road up, drop zones too far from the bridges etc) which Monty should have sorted out. He didn't and it counts against him. The basic concept though I always felt very good. It was bold and had it succeeded might well have shortened the war. It failed. Was it worth the gamble. I think it was.

Regards,
IronDuke (not a member of the Monty Fan club)

< Message edited by IronDuke -- 7/17/2004 12:47:17 AM >

(in reply to freeboy)
Post #: 315
RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/17/2004 1:56:25 AM   
IronDuke_slith

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: Von Rom

This Past will look briefly at determined German Counteratttacks Against the above three Divisions of Third Army

........not copied to keep thread shorter.


another better post, but a bit off topic. We know third army soldiers fought well, but the thread is about Patton, and his critics in the Bulge do not criticise the fight of his men, but the operational skills of their general. If Patton handled it well or badly, his men would still have had to fight hard. The question is, how did he do?

regards,
IronDuke

< Message edited by IronDuke -- 7/16/2004 11:57:00 PM >

(in reply to Von Rom)
Post #: 316
RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/17/2004 2:02:52 AM   
IronDuke_slith

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: Von Rom

quote:

ORIGINAL: IronDuke

quote:

ORIGINAL: Von Rom

Regarding The Battle of Metz

When Patton died, an “official history” was agreed upon and corroborated by Bradley, Eisenhower and Montgomery. They blamed each other for various aspects, but in the main part "fudged the truth" about the true cause of each’s largest disasters: Market Garden, Caen, Hurtgen, the Battle of the Bulge, the failure to capture Berlin, the failure to keep all of the armies supplied, the failure to take Prague, the failure to close off the Falaise Gap and seal the fate of the 11 German divisions trapped there; each had an “official” cause, an “official” whipping boy. Documents from each of these episodes were fudged while others were removed, destroyed and tampered with; and the generals corroborated each others stories in their memoirs.

The reason why the generals cooperated so well on this issue was because each of them had made mistakes. Each had committed an atrocious disaster which they felt had to be kept from public knowledge. Only one general, Patton, had never lost thousands of men on a hopelessly mismanaged mission. If a spiteful general were to bring up the Battle of Metz, the Third’s most bloody battle, Patton could counter that there were 3 dead Germans to 1 dead American, even in that desperate battle. And the Battle for Metz would never be investigated because investigation would only uncover the damning evidence of SHAEF’s decision to starve Third Army of supplies, and Com Z’s negligence and wastefulness in keeping the armies supplied.


I've seen this about three times before in this thread. I'll say what I said the last time. It is fantasy to suggest that Monty and Ike and Bradley made a pact in this way. Monty resented Ike, Ike was infuriated by Monty, Bradley felt betrayed by Ike and detested Monty. Monty blamed everone else for everything, he would never have made any kind of pact. Ike became President of the US, yet here is decried as a man hiding his mistakes in a seedy way.

This is from the Pattonhomepage, and yet you present it as some sort of unbiased comment. Where is the evidence? Where were the meetings? Where is the correspondence to show this? The fact is there isn't any, so overactive imaginations seeking to glorify Patton at everybody else's expense make stuff up like this knowing that it is as hard to prove a conspiracy wrong as it is to prove a conspiracy right. You can say what you like, tag it with the word conspiracy, and sit back smugly knowing that people might swallow it because "It's a conspiracy".

Regards in exasperation,
IronDuke


What a big revelation.

If you do not think that these generals modified accounts of their parts in the events of WW2, then you are truly a naive little dove and should not be allowed out at night without proper supervision.

They were looking out for their reputations and how history would judge them.

There was no BIG conspiracy. Only that they slanted things so that they would look good.

It is interesting that Bradley served as the main on-site source for the movie "Patton". Heheh. And Bradley despised Patton. Yup, I am sure there was NO re-write of history there

Plus, you will find different versions of the same events in both of Bradley's books: "A Soldier's Story" and "A General's Story".

Just recently, George Bush's National Guard records were mysteriously lost. . .

Imagine politicians and generals trying to cover up their mistakes.

What next. . .

A sex scandal?


I missed this one. I have previously said that they all hated/disliked each other. That was how I argued this post the last time you posted it. Please refer back there if you like.

You first post:

quote:

When Patton died, an “official history” was agreed upon and corroborated by Bradley, Eisenhower and Montgomery.


then you say

quote:

If you do not think that these generals modified accounts of their parts in the events of WW2, then you are truly a naive little dove and should not be allowed out at night without proper supervision.


and

quote:

There was no BIG conspiracy. Only that they slanted things so that they would look good.


You are now quoting stuff in support of Patton that you go on to deny. All of these Generals had problems with each other, Patton would have done the same, explaining Metz as needed to keep morale up, or (as he did) Hammelburg as a raid intended to keep the enemy off balance.

My argument was that this showed the paucity of the Patton apologists, because they have invented a conspiracy theory to explain criticisms of Patton. Since we have agreed that there was no conspiracy theory, perhaps we don't need to see this quote again...?

regards,
Ironduke

< Message edited by IronDuke -- 7/17/2004 12:05:41 AM >

(in reply to Von Rom)
Post #: 317
RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/17/2004 2:09:58 AM   
IronDuke_slith

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: Von Rom

As the two posts above clearly indicate that those who casually dismiss Patton's and Third Army's accomplishments in the Battle of the Bulge, do a great disservice both to him and to these fine fighting men.


Now you are beginning to offend me. I don't casually dismiss the accomplishments of his men. It is a cheap shot. It may work in your favour, though, because I will cease to take part if it continues, and you can win by default.

I aim everything at Patton. My points about the quality of the German opposition ARE NOT designed to denigrate his men's performance, but the performance of their General who did not marshall them properly. Nothing irritates me more than seeing motives and words erroneously assigned me in order to make you look good. Keep it up, and we can finally call an end to all this.

IronDuke

(in reply to Von Rom)
Post #: 318
RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/17/2004 3:08:02 AM   
IronDuke_slith

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: EMO

I am enjoying it also and I am learning so much that I want to study General Patton's career in much more detail than before. I have one comment though (and would especially like Von Rom's and Iron Dukes comments on my comment); no general can pick his opponent; he has to play the cards he is dealt, so to speak. I believe there was some criticism of Woolseley and Roberts generalship--accusations that they earned their reputations against inferior opponents but who they fought was out of their control. Rommel faced a British army in North Africa(prior to Torch) that did not grasp the combined arms concept nearly as well as the Germans, whose commanders led from the rear and who refused to use their 90mm Antiaircraft gun in an anti-tank role, though it was actually demonstrated to be effective. Yet, Rommel's military genius is unquestioned. Can we not recognize Patton's achievements in the same manner?


A good point, nobody picks opponents. However, I judge on other factors. It wasn't Patton's fault if he faces Volksgrenadiers on the drive to Bastogne, but it his fault if I consider his plan of attack flawed, flawed enough to ensure the drive was a slow one.

Sicily and Normandy are different in this context, because there was no opposition, so the argument really rages over different things.

Metz I consider indefensible, but here I just apply what I think are sound military principles, and decide whether he did the right thing. No supplies, no gas, strong fixed enemy fortification, no imperative to attack, atrocious weather. I think no.

You then look at the peripherals like the slapping, the executed POWs, Hammelburg (especially Hammelburg) and to a little extent his motives.

In situations where troop quality is different, then, you have to judge whether someone did better than average for the circumstances. In early war, it's did the Germans make a meal of something when they were in possession of tactical advantages over all their opponents, or did one of their opponents hold them up longer than you might have expected in the circumstances.

Late war, Allied reputations become difficult to judge as well, because they have overwhelming firepower, and final victory is when not if. You then have the situation in reverse. Yes, Allied Generals always won eventually, but did they win well enough in light of what they faced and what they had at their disposal.
I don't think history sees most Allied leaders all that well (including you know who). I dare say the argument will move to German command shortly reading some of the posts, but a General's reputation is weighed up by seeing what he had, what the enemy had, what he might reasonably have been expected to do in that weather or over that terrain with those men in those circumstances, and then comparing it to what happened.

It's an imperfect science but a lot of fun.


Your comments re Allied Armies are interesting. I'm not convinced the Allied armies ever really completely grasped the combined arms aspect. You certainly see the US (eventually) develop good small unit combined arms in the bocage, but these were short term lessons useless once they broke out. I don't see any Allied General really apply it, though, because I don't think Allied Armies always managed it at the tactical level too well. You can find good examples, but I think a combination of factors prevented it.

The broad front strategy was just about correct for several reasons (not all military by any means).
In these circumstances, though, combined arms operations is a little difficult, because it calls for reinforcing one point at the expense of another (in order to achieve overwhelming operational superiority at point of impact in two or more places, and then deep penetration to gain real estate of shorter penetration to gain prisoners) and this was never going to happen on a broad front strategy. Also, once beyond France, you have all sorts of rivers and forests and cities that make combined arms difficult. The allies also become fixated with several pieces of real estate (Hurtgen, Aachen, Metz) that were best left alone in most cases and you don't make great breakthroughs and encirclements attacking Cities and Forests. That's best done in plains. (The Ardennes is an exception).

cheers,
Ironduke

< Message edited by IronDuke -- 7/17/2004 1:10:31 AM >

(in reply to EMO)
Post #: 319
RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/17/2004 3:42:05 AM   
Ludovic Coval

 

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von Rom,

quote:

This picture will give readers an idea of what the three Third Army divisions had to march and fight in. Imagine travelling in freezing cold for two days with little sleep or hot food and then, without rest, fight a series of battles:


Yet weather was the same for all and 1st Army's units encoutered same conditions but unlike 3rd Army, was facing two PanzerArmee

LC

(in reply to IronDuke_slith)
Post #: 320
RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/17/2004 4:12:56 AM   
Kevinugly

 

Posts: 438
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quote:

ORIGINAL: Von Rom


My dear, dear friend.

Let's see. In this one small section you claim that I have read no books on the Bulge, that I am a liar, and that I must resort to deceit and trickery to establish truth in a matter.

I don't mind debate; and I don't mind kidding around; and I don't mind healthy back-and-forth bantering; heck, I don't even mind having 4 or 5 guys come at me at once. . .

But please do not call me these things.

I will forgive you for this, and chalk it up to over-exuberance and frustration on your part.

I will deal with the soldier quality of Third Army as well as the attacks of the 1SS Panzer in a separate post.

Please take a few minutes, take a few deep breaths, and consider your own level of knowledge about the Battle of the Bulge.

Cheers!


I'm no friend of years kiddo

Let's deal with the 1st SS first.

Abandoning all of their heavy equipment they were withdrawn from La Gleize early in the morning of the 25th December 1944 apparently utterly exhausted. According to my reading ('The Blood Soaked Soil: Battles of the Waffen SS' by Gordon Williamson pp.171-5) some SS troops were redeployed to the area of Bastogne around the 28th. It may well be that some of the Liebstandarte ended up here as part of an ad-hoc battlegroup and these were the men the 35th Division ran into. I looked at the divisional site and read the story - interesting but factually suspect as most of them are. The other I cannot link to so I can't comment on its veracity. But Patton comments on the SS troops the 3rd Army ran into saying "They are colder, weaker and hungrier than we are" (Williamson, p.174). Add to that they were almost certainly out of tanks and heavy artillery (2nd SS Pz Corps was down to 30 tanks on the 25th December and they hadn't been as heavily engaged as 1st Corps) you can see that they hardly deserved the epithet 'elite'. Whatever, the remnants of Liebstandarte were completely withdrawn on 1st January 1945 for a refit prior to their Gotterdamerung in Hungary.

As for the rest, I note that the 'Duke has dealt with most of the rest of your 'comments'.

< Message edited by Kevinugly -- 7/17/2004 2:23:45 AM >


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Post #: 321
RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/17/2004 4:18:34 AM   
Kevinugly

 

Posts: 438
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From: Colchester, UK
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quote:

ORIGINAL: Ludovic Coval

von Rom,

quote:

This picture will give readers an idea of what the three Third Army divisions had to march and fight in. Imagine travelling in freezing cold for two days with little sleep or hot food and then, without rest, fight a series of battles:


Yet weather was the same for all and 1st Army's units encoutered same conditions but unlike 3rd Army, was facing two PanzerArmee

LC


And I think this is the greatest disservice done to the American troops who fought at the Bulge. It was the 1st Army and McCauliffe's men at Bastogne who fought the hardest, suffered the most and inflicted the greatest number of casualties on the Germans. Not, as some would claim, Pattons 3rd Army, or Montgomery, who tried to claim the 'lions share' of the credit for himself.

_____________________________

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(in reply to Ludovic Coval)
Post #: 322
RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/17/2004 6:39:31 AM   
Von Rom


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quote:

ORIGINAL: macgregor

Simple, he was a good general (i.e. on a par with his german counterparts) because he understood maneuver warfare and earned my respect with his ability to overcome the inferiority of his tanks by lavishly using his artillery and AA units in a direct fire capacity(as did Rommel before him). I share his distaste for protracted campaigns. He was a great general because he was a wealthy, self-absorbed ,nepotistic ,narcistic ,racist , reactionary, conservative, class-conscious aristocrat. Or so I would assume based on the people that I know that think he was so great.


macgregor:

On the surface one might think Patton was all those things.

However, to really get to know the man, or any man, one needs to really "get inside their head" so to speak. Really get to understand why he acts the way he does; what motivates him. . .

In other words, one needs to empathize with the person we seek to understand.

There was a reason Patton acted, talked and trained the men the way he did. . .

He was no fool and he wasn't crazy.

He had prepared his entire life to serve his country. He devoted all his energy to turning his men into a tough fighting force.

Patton was also a consumate actor - he would often spend hours in front of a mirror practicing his "War Face". Why? Because he believed a leader needed to be larger-than-life to his men; men who he might one day have to send into battle.

Patton has often been criticized for not caring about his men; that he couldn't care less about his subordinates or casualties. Nothing could be further from the truth. Patton believed you saved mens' lives by fighting furious, but short battles - hitting the enemy so hard they just give up or run. The last thing he believed in was fighting static battles - these cost more lives to fight in the long run. He believed a timid commander who tried to protect lives often wound up costing even more lives. In addition, he believed these static battles sapped a man's will and destroyed his morale.

Patton believed in duty, honour, country.

He loved his men so much that he preferred to be buried in Europe at the head of the fallen soldiers of Third Army.

Cheers!

< Message edited by Von Rom -- 7/17/2004 4:57:30 AM >


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RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/17/2004 6:45:52 AM   
Von Rom


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quote:

ORIGINAL: MG3

quote:

Von Rom...


You overlooked one really important fact in your campaign to put down every archievment of the German staff and their soldiers, make everyone in the Wehrmacht look like and total fool who fights like a jerk from Spielbergs movies who can hardly fire in the right direction...

Should I really tell you? If you think the German Army and it staff were worthless boneheads, their archievments in the early campaigns and in the later stages of the war against a much stronger foe are only easy pickings- then Patton must be no good also. After all he beat the most incompetent army on the planet (at least if someone listen to your agenta), hardly an archievment, isnt it?

Oh BTW- I regart Patton as one of the finest Allied Generals of WW2.

And as a final note: the interpretation of the events and battles of WW2 are very *interesting*.


MG3: Hi

Some people are taking me waaaayyyy too seriously - heheh

My intention is not to make the German military look like boneheads (I know way too much about them to do that).

My intention is this:

Patton's critics only seek the negative (and one-sided view) about him, and only look at the problems he encountered, often taking them out of context, and latching onto many small things to make him look bad, without placing those problems into a larger perpsective.

Therefore, by pointing out problems with the German military, I was merely indicating to Patton's critics what anyone can do to ANY general in WW2, if all they are seeking to do is to destroy a general's reputation by taking things out of context, by not looking at the bigger picture, and by just concentrating and nitpicking on all the small and one-sided issues of that general or military operation.

In other words, what Patton's critics are doing to him, can be done to anyone. . .

Thanks for the comments

Cheers!

_____________________________


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Post #: 324
RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/17/2004 6:56:01 AM   
Von Rom


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quote:

ORIGINAL: EMO

I am enjoying it also and I am learning so much that I want to study General Patton's career in much more detail than before. I have one comment though (and would especially like Von Rom's and Iron Dukes comments on my comment); no general can pick his opponent; he has to play the cards he is dealt, so to speak. I believe there was some criticism of Woolseley and Roberts generalship--accusations that they earned their reputations against inferior opponents but who they fought was out of their control. Rommel faced a British army in North Africa(prior to Torch) that did not grasp the combined arms concept nearly as well as the Germans, whose commanders led from the rear and who refused to use their 90mm Antiaircraft gun in an anti-tank role, though it was actually demonstrated to be effective. Yet, Rommel's military genius is unquestioned. Can we not recognize Patton's achievements in the same manner?



EMO:

Glad you're having fun!

I answered this somewhat in my post above.

Basically, if a person is determined to destroy a general's place in history, it can easily be done. Very easily.

My comments about the German military was an example of this.

Any general can be made to look like an incompetent fool.

I have a three volume biography of Erwin Rommel that I have read several times. I admire the man. Yet, if I didn't like Rommel, I could easily make him look bad.

I think it depends on the approach of the person to his subject: whether the person is fair-minded or whether that person is motivated to destroy a reputation. . .

To fully understand a general such as Patton, we need to understand the full man. But most importantly we need to be fair-minded.

It is interesting that Third Army still exists today. What a proud history and heritage.

If I was going to join the military today, I would join Third Army.

Here's Third Army's Homepage:

http://www.arcent.army.mil/

Cheers!

< Message edited by Von Rom -- 7/17/2004 5:08:17 AM >


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RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/17/2004 7:21:33 AM   
Von Rom


Posts: 1705
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quote:

ORIGINAL: IronDuke

IronDuke said:
quote:

The other occasion is when they use someone else's words to describe or highlight something, because they agree with it, and know that the point has been made elsewhere, and by quoting rather than just restating the point, they give it extra weight because they prove other historians agree with them. Alternatively, it may be something outside their sphere of influence and they quote it because the historian is a recognised leader in that field. Did you not know this?


Von Rom said:
quote:

Heheh

D'Este was writing a balanced book about Patton. He presented both sides of the arguments. Unlike some authors who inject their opinions willy-nilly, D'Este tries to present both sides' views.

That is why D'Este's book is a superior work. He gives us the opinions of Patton's supporters as well as his critics.

Didn't you know that?


Wrong. When authors do that, they place the for and against critics beside each other so readers can compare the arguments. Look at Pg 634. D'Este does not present the pro-Patton explanation for anything. He merely cites his critics, prefacing the quotes with words of his own:

"Patton's achilles heel, which would be painfully evident later in Lorraine, was that rather than cut his losses, he would attempt to storm his way out of a bad situation in the name of prestige."

D'Este criticises him then goes to quote Carr and Whiting in support of his position. This argument should be over to all but those who will not see.





IronDuke said
quote:

Patton said of the three units he took: "Bradley, my best three divisions are 4th Armoured, the 80th and the 26th." Patton's own words.

The units in 352 Volksgrenadier Divisions Corp were 5th Parachute (which wasn't actually a parachute division anymore as it had been destroyed in Normandy and rebuilt from surplus Luftwaffe ground crew) and 79th Volksgrenadier which certainly wasn't rebuilt from veterans because the previous 79th was destroyed (1 man living to tell the tale). It was formed from the 586th Volksgrenadiers. The sources are Nafziger and Mitcham. The same people I used to illustrate the 352nd contained no combat veterans.

Some of these units actually performed creditably despite their various deficiencies.


Von Rom said:

quote:

Yes they did. They weren't exactly the misfits some might think they were


That depends. If you make operational mistakes, you can allow poor units to look better than they actually are. These units were not Volksturm, but neither were they regular army. Patton should have done better.

quote:

You also forgot to mention the counterattack by the 1st S.S. Panzer “Der Fuhrer” Division which was sent south in an attempt to cut-off Patton's relieving forces fighting outside of Bastogne.


Part of the problem of taking you seriously are the errors. I'm reluctant to point them all out, because I get accused of being nitpicky. However, since I presume you have sources for this, it leaves me with little confidence in your arguments because your sources must be so poor.

Most SS units had titles. 1st SS Panzer Division was actually called "1ST SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler". It grew out of his personal body guard unit.

"Der Fuhrer" in SS Terms referred to the Panzergrenadier Regiment no 4, which fought in 2nd SS Panzer Division Das Reich, a completely different formation.

Liebstandarte (that's 1st SS Panzer) did indeed come south at the very end of December 1944. However, a second feature of your arguments is a lack of perspective (exactly what you accuse me of). SS Liebstandarte had by this time been in action since the beginning of the Bulge. These attacks were carried out by two Kampfgruppes. One made up of around 30-40 tanks and some Panzergrenadiers, the other from what was left of the Divisions Panzergrenadiers. Some of the Divisional Jagdpanzers also seem to have taken part. All in all, the strength was maybe two Battalions worth of Panzergrenadiers and about 50 armoured vehicles. In percentage terms thats about a third of the divisional infantry and a quarter of it's tanks. It's artillery was hamstrung by a lack of ammunition.

Other units did take part, including a new Volksgrenadier division which had just arrived in theatre after a hurried journey from Hungary. It had no heavy weapons. Around a third of i;'s men had seen some action in the east, two thirds hadn't. Large numbers of luftwaffe ground crew had been drafted in to make up the numbers.

Despite these handicaps, the VG did take the attacks initial objectives.

What this has to do with Patton's drive on Bastogne is anyone's guess, as these attack took place in order to drive him back from Bastogne after he arrived.

quote:

In some brutal fighting both sides suffered 16,000 dead with 600 tanks destroyed. Quite the little scrap, eh?


I'd love to see the context of this as I can only conclude you're providing figures from more than just this attack (something else you are often caught doing), or taken the losses from a period between two wide dates. Liebstandarte had less than 50 tanks. Panzer Lehr which took part had a handful of MK IVs. The American 4th Armoured supported the 35th, but didn't have anything like 500+ tanks and certainly didn't commit that many to help. I'm not sure, therefore, where these 600 tanks appeared from, unless you're taking casualties that include other units that joined this engagement later, or fought as the battle moved on. There weren't this many casualties when Liebstandarte collided with the 35th.

quote:

From the history of the 35th Infantry Division:

"We did not know that Hitler had ordered some of his best remaining troops to cut off the Third Army’s relief of Bastogne at all costs. Now across our front from our right came the elite 1st S.S. Panzer “Der Fuhrer” Division, sent down from the German Sixth Army to break us – the 167th Volksgrenadier Division, and the 5th Parachute Division from the Seventh German Army. Fighting see-sawed in and around towns like Lutrebois where we lost two companies of the 134th Regiment, Marvie, where we at last broke through to the 101st Airborne, Surre, Villers La Bonne where the 137th lost companies K and L, cut off and hit by the Germans with flame throwers, the survivors captured and marched into Germany to a prison camp, Boulaide, whose grateful citizens would welcome returning veterans in later years as tour groups, Tarchamps, and Harlange where a single farm, fortified, stopped the 320th Regiment. Frostbite, illness and exhaustion, the freezing waters of the Sure River, waste deep, waded across by the 320th soldiers. Deep snow which slowed attack and bogged down G.I.s who were unable to move fast enough to evade the lethal fire of enemy machine guns, mortars and artillery shells, tree bursts and craters. The fields and woods became graveyards littered with dozens of destroyed tanks and assault guns, half tracks, trucks, equipment, and corpses."

This picture will give readers an idea of what the three Third Army divisions had to march and fight in. Imagine travelling in freezing cold for two days with little sleep or hot food and then, without rest, fight a series of battles:




I see it is here (from the Divisional history) that the error re 1st SS Panzer comes from. The two other formations were not "The best remaining Hitler had" although the Author has at least qualified his remarks as "best remaining" in reference to Liebstandarte.. The elite of the third reich after 5 years and 6 million dead were not quite what they once were.

You're also mixing up stories here in order to improve your point (What I believe is another failing of yours). You tell us this story about the 35th (brave men all, lets not forget where they fought and what they did, although this has limited value in a thread about Patton's operational ability). You then start banging on about third army, forty eight hour marches and no sleep. 35th Division did not take part in Pattons famous about turn and march. It joined those three divisions later, at Bastogne. It joins 3rd Army during the battle, not before.

The conditions you describe were indeed atrocious, but they are irrelevant, in so much as the conditions were the same for the Germans (unless you have discovered the German front line was in a more temparate climate). The conditions were absolutely dreadful, but whilst these illustrate the bravery and strength of the men involved, they do not illustrate much about Patton's operational abilities.


I said:
quote:

This is just frustration for me. Unable to admit you are wrong, you decide instead to change the whole line of argument


You said:

quote:

Where am I wrong when I disagree about the basis of the argument?

Let me put it to you this way:

The whole basis for the supposed early German BliztKreig during the early years is really just a myth isn't it.

The mighty German war machine attacks little Poland, Belgium, Holland, Denmark, etc, and even France really offers up a poorly led and divided Allied force.

Heck, the Germans couldn't even bag hundreds of thousands of Allied soldiers stranded at Dunkirk.

The Germans enjoyed a 3:1 advantage in the Battle of Britain - yet failed miserably.

Even in Russia the German forces surprise-attacked poorly-led, poorly equipped forces with low morale.

What value are these victories? Of what value are Rommel's and Guderian's victories against such weak and inferior troops?

Get my meaning?




I accuse you of changing the basis of the argument every time you are proved wrong, and you then go on to move the thread onto the Battle of Britain. If you right (which you're not), and Guderians victories were always as easy as this, then how can these victories be used to support Patton?

quote:

You bring up the 352nd. But I can easily bring up all these German victories and more and compare the quality of soldiers the Germans fought against.


And this proves what exactly about Patton's victories? This is not tit for tat. You don't win the argument by saying, ah but your general fought inferior opposition as well.

quote:

There's more:

In the Ardennes, the Germans had overwhelming superiority and firepower, and had Bastogne surrounded. And yet, they couldn't capture that little town of Bastogne. What poor generalship and leadership


You do not know this battle at all. In the north, the spearheads of Ist Panzer (Liebstandarte, not Der Fuhrer, that's the other one if you remember) destroyed their own tanks because of lack of fuel. If they couldn't fuel the tanks, how could they supply them with anything else? They pushed this quarter of a million men through a woody, hilly area with few roads. What roads there were were treacherous with ice and snow. They had little petrol (which means driving trucks full of ammo up to the front is difficult) and this often resulted in limited artillery. Many of the formations employed were Volksgrenadier units which had lower complements of heavy weapons and equipment. They had superiority as the battle started, but this was eaten away and by the time of Patton's intervention all gone. Remember, the Luftwaffe took little part in the battle whilst the Allied air force flew thousands of sorties after the weather cleared.

Also, why is failing to take Bastogne poor German generalship. Did McAuliffe and 101st not have something to say about this. (A unit which wasn't under Patton).

quote:

And Rommel's stunning early successes in North Africa were against weak and scattered British forces. Gone were the British and Australian troops who were transferred to Greece. So Rommel's victories and his legend were made against weaker and inferior forces.


His first battles were fought with just a handful of troops. He began his attacks before most of his troops had even arrived in theatre. These inferior forces also eventually beat him. Again, what this has to do with Patton's drive on Bastogne I can only guess at.

quote:

See what I mean?


I don't believe anybody does.

quote:

I wasn't wrong.


Quite the opposite.

quote:

The line of debate brought up was simply the wrong thing to be discussing.


Well who brought it up? I was discussing Patton's drive on Bastogne. In reply we've heard about the 35th Division (which didn't take part), the attack of the Liebstandarte (which took place after it was over) and how bad the conditions were (which were the same for both sides).

quote:

You earlier admitted in your post that these same forces (the German units fighting against Patton) put up quite a fight, so obviously they weren't a bunch of rag-tag misfits as they are being made out to be.


As I said, they performed well, but that doesn't mean Patton should have done badly against them. A better plan of attack against Bastogne would have caused formations of this quality real problems. Particularly the lack of experienced Officers. In situations of retreat, combat experienced officers can mean the difference between orderly fighting withdrawal and rout.

quote:

I brought up the opposing American forces because some were inexperienced, especially the 106th which had just newly arrived on the scene.


As before, irrelevant, I thought 106th was part of 1st Army? What has it's problems got to do with Patton? Much less has it anything to do with Patton's drive on Bastogne.

I said:

quote:

Some of the men facing Patton didn't know how to fight


you said:
quote:

Please. . .

This is embarrassing. . .

Yet, earlier you admitted in your post that these same forces put up quite a fight. You contradict yourself.

Which is it?

Third Army suffered 50,000 casualties. . .

The next thing you'll be saying is that Third Army only faced cardboard cut-outs of German troops, and their casualties resulted from driving into trees.


I said that some didn't know how to fight, being poorly trained ex airplane mechanics thrust into the heart of battle, I said some performed well. These are not mutally exclusive. If some are bad, by definition, some must be better, otherwise I'd have described them as all bad wouldn't I?? By making up arguments for me like this, you embarrass yourself.

quote:

Oh, and don't forget the 1SS Panzer Division when it counterattacked. . .


about 1400 men and 50 tanks, little or no artillery. No, I haven't forgotten

I said:

quote:

Patton thought them his best. 4th Armoured and 80th Inf arrived in Normandy in early August and fought across France, into Lorraine etc. 26th arrived in Early Sept and went into action in early October fighting in october and November before joining the battle in the Ardennes. You can say replacements may have been inexperienced, but the majority had seen combat, in some cases a good deal of combat.


You said:

quote:

What do you think happens when men are killed in battle? or when they are wounded? or when they get ill?

They get GREEN replacements.

Third Army had been fighting in Europe since Aug/44.

They had fought a brutual battle at Metz.

In the Ardennes, they had to travel for two days and nights in terrible winter weather and without rest, and then engage in battle. . .

Try driving your car for two days without proper sleep in a winter storm and see how you feel at the end of it.

Please. . .

You do a terrible disservice to the memory of those brave men.


Your cheapest trick yet, to suggest I'm doing a disservice to the memory of these men. I am discussing Patton's operational abilities, not US Army tactical performance in WWII. Attempting to take a moral high tone in such a heavy handed way is offensive. If that's the way you want it, however...

Replacements are often green, but if you are unable to see the difference between a combat unit absorbing replacements (the US replacement system was very efficient), and units made up of old men and boys (and airplane mechanics, and naval ratings) then I can't help you. All combat units have a certain percentage of replacements. The Division isn't destroyed by this because the replacements have received basic training, and are being absorbed into experienced combat surroundings. They are in the right environment to learn, and will not necessarily destroy the ability of a division to function effectively. If they did, how did Patton manage to get to Bastogne at all?


I said:

quote:

In terms of the Bulge, less so for Patton, because some of the things you cite didn't apply to him, but to elsewhere in the Bulge.


You said:

quote:

I can only shake my head at this type of reasoning, and you wonder why I don't bother to answer some of your posts?

It's just nonsensical. . .

Third Army suffered 50,000 casualties figting the Germans in the Bulge. . .


The nonsense is yours. I thought we were discussing Patton's drive on Bastogne? Also, since casualties prove little about a Generals abilities (only that his men fought hard and bravely) what do casualty figures have to do with it? They can often indicate poor Generalship!!!! You keep taking the argument off track. This section is all about his thrust on Bastogne about which you have said nothing. Instead you talk about how many 3rd Army lost, you talk about SS units appearing out of the snow after he reaches Bastogne. You talk about the 35th which wasn't in the drive and the 106th that didn't even belong to third army. If you're going to change the terms of the argument, let me know beforehand.

I said:

quote:

What the Patton homepage ignores about this battle is that it was completely unnecessary. Think of this. You're facing tough fortified positions, you've limited ammo and gas, the weather is so poor, your soldiers have trenchfoot in massive numbers. The weather is so poor, it's hard for your infantry to move, much less vehicles, and air cover is restricted.


Can I just say, this the following words are your best ever bit: If this thread carries on ten more pages, you will never excel this. To accuse me of twisting facts to suit my argument than come forward with this is quite beyond belief.

quote:

Regarding Metz:

Patton was a mobile warrior as Rommel was.

I'm not saying that everything Patton did was the best.

But this MUST be placed in persepctive of what preceeded it.

As I mentioned previously, the true error resided with the Allied High Command. Patton had shown how fast he could move. With the proper amount of fuel, which you also admit is true, Patton would have taken Metz and then driven onto the Siegfried Line, with a minium of casualties.

Patton would NEVER have sat still under ANY circumstances, and his superiors KNEW it.

Sitting in front of Metz doing NOTHING would have destroyed Third Army morale. Patton knew they had to get out of their situation.

Trench Foot alone was taking a heavy toll - higher casualties in fact than the Germans.

By not giving supplies to Patton, but rather sending them to Monty, the Allied Command caused two bloody situations: Metz and Operation Market Garden
.


Before analysis of this, can I just highlight the important bit.

quote:

Sitting in front of Metz doing NOTHING would have destroyed Third Army morale. Patton knew they had to get out of their situation.




What effect on morale do you think wading day after day through rivers of mud and blood, attacking strong fixed defences without proper artillery or air support had? I cannot believe this has been written.

Are you suggesting that to improve morale, Patton decided to risk their lives in attacks with little or no chance of success???????

Do you think American soldiers were war junkeys who would have have preferred spending their days outside under machine gun fire rather than inside in weather as atrocious as it was. This is one of the most contrived excuses I have ever heard. I can not believe you have suggested this in order to protect your hero. Even if it existed as an excuse at the outset of the battle (which it clearly doesn't) American soldiers would have realised it was all pointless very early on. What effect did continuing have on morale then?????

Also, Why will you not understand? Patton did not have to attack. Bradley told him to stop when it became clear he was going nowhere. He did not have the ammo or supplies to attack. The German defences were too strong in these circumstances. The weather was atrocious and made even infantry movement difficult. Bradley told him when the supplies were turned back on he could swing around Metz and take it from the rear. But no, Patton launches his men into the teeth of fixed defences without proper air or artillery support in atrocious weather. Why? Because he thought they would get bored, otherwise?
I have seen nothing like this in over 500 posts.

If your argument is that Patton hated inactivity, then that is a very bad point for his Generalship. A good General makes the right decisions. A bad one makes the wrong decisions. It was the wrong decision to make an unnecessary attack.

You have previously displayed some appreciation of Rommel. When faced with a poor supply situation, in front of tough enemy defences, this armoured warrior dug in (at Alamein) Patton threw his men forward and beat his head (or rather his men's heads) against the steel of Metz's forts. If you fight off everything else I say, fighting here is not worth it.

This Metz debate, amidst everything we have discussed, illustrates what unblinking acceptance of the Patton legend entails. Think back through what you have told us. In Sicily, they wouldn't listen to him, they allowed the Germans to escape because they wouldn't let him attack. At Falaise, they told him to stop, and he was denied the chance to capture Germans. In Metz they cut off his supplies and he had to attack with one hand behind his back, after the war they conspired together cutting seedy deals to destroy his memory. Time and time again, any of his faults are hidden behind excuses that it was somebody else's fault. This is not history, it is paranoia.

In order to be a Patton fanboy, you have to defend everything he did with excuses that are ever more ludicrous. The real shame for Patton, is that some of his qualities get missed by the fanboys, because they are too busy defending the indefensible. they don't see the bigger picture.

Patton saw at Falaise that after the breakout, the correct direction was towards the Seine. Instead Patton is ordered to Falaise by Bradley. Patton has seen the bigger picture. This is hidden by the Patton legend that sees every Patton supporter jump up and down endlessly about being ordered to stop at Argentan. Argentan was irrelevant. Patton was wrong to think he could have closed the gap, but right to think the Seine was a good place to park third army. What do we spend our time discussing, yup! Patton at Falaise, because the legend demands it. Not Patton the strategist who made the perfectly logical assumption that the Seine was the place to go.

At the Bulge, Patton never wanted to relieve Bastogne. He wanted to attack further east and slice through the shoulder of the Bulge, cutting off every German soldier. Whether this was on is debateable (Strategically, though, Patton had the right idea). However, the battle to Bastogne is mishandled, but do we ever discuss Patton's initial (and intriguing) idea? No, we discuss Bastogne because Patton supporters refuse to accept he can do wrong. You can even make a case in Sicily for circumstances like this. Patton writes in his diary on the eve of the pointless dash to Palermo that he thinks the British are going nowehere. He has recognised what is going to happen. This is good. What is bad is his response. However, because the Patton legend refuses to allow any criticism, Patton supporters are forced to defend a pointless operation. The supreme irony is that in making him a man who can do no wrong, Patton supporters never get to talk about the revealing moments, in which it is clear he had some military acumen.

I said:

quote:

If your examples are all like this, then I would not post them either, as it does your case no good.


you said:

quote:

It's called putting a "bad situation" into perspective.

As for bad situations, what about the poor German performance:

1) In Stalingrad?

2) Before the gates of Moscow in 1941?

3) In the siege of Leningrad?

4) In the failure to bag hundred of thousands of Allied soldiers at Dunkirk?

5) In Rommels' failure to take Egypt?

6) In Goering's failure in the Battle of Britain?

7) In the German failure to capture Bastogne?

In other words, every general or army has bad moments.

But it MUST be placed in perspective of the larger circumstances.


To quote you from earlier in this thread, look waaaaayyyyy up to the top. What do you see? Why was Patton so great? What relevance has this?

Respect and regards,
IronDuke


Well, I'm not trying to write a chronological book about the history of the Bulge. Merely indicating that Patton's forces engaged German forces greater than just the 352nd, which you seem to dwell on. . .

Don't you know why I comment on the German military?

Cheers!

_____________________________


(in reply to IronDuke_slith)
Post #: 326
RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/17/2004 7:23:52 AM   
Von Rom


Posts: 1705
Joined: 5/12/2000
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: IronDuke

quote:

ORIGINAL: max_h

just because the 352nd was not an elite formation doesn´t make Patton a bad general... actually I think he was one of the better allied generals. keeping the momentum and being able to exploit the enemies weaknesses are essential skills for the blitz style warfare. some argue that he wasn´t the best against "real opposition" - and I don´t argue against it, but it was him who kept the germans on the move. monty on the other hand almost always lost the momentum coz he waited for more and more reinforcements as he never had "enough" support. needless to say, that the enemy used Monty´s buildup time to reinforce themselves...


As I have said three or four times, he could drive tanks and men hard, he was a good logistitian, he loved to attack, and in an army with more conservative commanders like Montgomery and Bradley, this was the other side of the coin to complement them.

However, you are right, he wasn't the best against real opposition. My argument is that the Patton legend, in a mad dash across history to prove him the best, destroy any chance of real analysis by explaining away every possible fault as the fault of others, and trying to suggest Patton could have won the war on his own. (The infamous, give him the gas and he'll drive into Germany nonsense).

He was average in combat situations, a lot better in open country. This makes him useful, but not one of the war's great commanders (although he is further up the Allied table than the overall table. Indeed, he might be in the top half dozen in the allied table).

As for Monty, it's a trade off. He did wait too long, but when he went, he won. The only operation planned and executed in five minutes was Arnhem, and that came within an hour's drive of succeeding. Patton usually went too early, which was fine if the enemy were in retreat, but not so good if they were solid in defence.

To round it off, he has some personal traits I don't care for as well.

Regards,
IronDuke



Ironduke:

What you are saying about Patton is contrary to what all these Generals have said about him:


German Officers Praise General Patton:

Here are some comments about Patton by high ranking German Officers:

The Germans respected Patton’s strategy and admired its genius, calling him the Allies' "most modern" commander.

1) German Major General Schimpf of the 3rd Paratroop Division called Patton’s campaign in the Palatinate "phenomenal."

2) Rommel wrote that, "We had to wait until the Patton Army in France to see the most astonishing achievements in mobile warfare."

3) Field Marshal von Rundstedt simply called Patton our "best."

4) General Fritz Bayerlain, the able commander of the Panzer Lehr Division and a veteran of North Africa, assesses the escape of Rommel's Panzer Armee Afrika after Alamein: "I do not think General Patton would have let us get away so easily (as Monty had)" (D'Este, p.815).

5) HASSO VON MANTEUFFEL (1897 - 1978) - von Manteuffel became the Commander-in-Chief of 5th Panzer Army and received the rank of General of the Panzer Troops. In December of 1944, Hasso Von Manteuffel was the commander of 5th Panzer Army, which was ordered to drive across the Meuse to Brussels and Antwerp, protecting the flank of 6th Panzer Army. During the Battle of the Bulge, 5th Panzer Army won tremendous victories and almost succeeded in breaking the Allied lines of defence. On December 16, 1970 Manteuffel praised his old adversary, Gen. George S. Patton. In part: "...General Patton was a master of lightning warfare and the best commander in this reference. Evidence of his excellent command and control of an army are the campaign in Sicily, the break-out in Brittany 1944 and during the Battle of the Bulge Dec. 1944..."


Supreme Commander Eisenhower Praises Patton:

1) In his book Crusade in Europe, Eisenhower praises Patton’s mobility in Sicily: "Speed requires training, fitness, confidence, morale, suitable transport, and skillful leadership. Patton employed these tactics relentlessly, and thus not only minimized casualties but shook the whole Italian Government so forcibly that Mussolini toppled from his position in late July."(Eisenhower, Dwight D. Crusade in Europe. New York, N. Y.: Doubleday, 1948; p.176)


2) Also in a letter to Marshall, Eisenhower praised Patton: "His rehabilitation of the II Corps in Tunisia had been 'quickly and magnificiently done,' and his leadership in Sicily was 'close to the best of our classic examples.' Patton thought 'only in terms of attack' and had a 'native shrewdness' about logistics. He was a 'truly aggressive commander' with brains." (Blumenson, Martin. Patton: The Man Behind the Legend 1885-1945. New York, N.Y.: William Morrow and Company Inc., 1985; p.216)


General Bradley Praises Patton:

Of Patton's drive in the Battle of the Bulge, General Omar N. Bradley stated it was "one of the most astonishing feats of generalship of our campaign in the west". Patton turned his forces quickly northward at ninety degrees, travelled 100 miles in 48 hours in the worst winter weather to hit the Ardennes in decades, and then engaged the southern flank of the bulge and helped contain the enemy. (Pogue, Forrest C. The Supreme Command. Washington D. C.: Center of Military History, United States Government Printing Office, 1989; p.381.)

_____________________________


(in reply to IronDuke_slith)
Post #: 327
RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/17/2004 7:25:50 AM   
Von Rom


Posts: 1705
Joined: 5/12/2000
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: IronDuke

quote:

ORIGINAL: Von Rom

Quality of Third Army Units Engaged in the Battle of the Bulge

Much has been made about the quality of German troops faced by elements of Third Army.

In this post I will look at the quality of the three divisions of Third Army that moved north to attack the Germans in the Battle of the Bulge.

Please note that when reading these descriptions, bear in mind that these same units travelled for two days and two nights in freezing winter weather, without the benefit of proper rest and sleep, and without hot food, and then, without resting, were sent into continuous combat over a period of several days against a determined foe that comprised the 352nd VGD, the 5th Parachute Division, the Fuehrer Grenadier Brigade (the younger brother of the elite GrossDeutchland Panzer Division) which had a large body of German armor, and the 79th Volks Grenadier Division, to name only a few units. In later days, more German units would join the fighting.



The 26th Division:

"The 26th Division (Maj. Gen. Willard S. Paul) was full of rifle replacements, mostly inexperienced and lacking recent infantry training. This division had seen its first combat in October and had lost almost 3,000 men during bitter fighting in Lorraine. Withdrawn in early December to take over the Third Army "reinforcement" training program at Metz, the 26th Division had just received 2,585 men as replacements and, on 18 December, was beginning its program (scheduled for thirty days) when the German counteroffensive canceled its role as a training division. The "trainees," men taken from headquarters, antitank sections, and the like, at once were preempted to fill the ranks left gaping by the Lorraine battles. Knowing only that an undefined combat mission lay ahead, the division rolled north to Arlon, completing its move shortly before midnight of the 20th. Not until the next day did General Paul learn that his division was to attack on the early morning of the 22d."




The 35th Division:

"The 35th Division had suffered heavily in the Lorraine battles (for which see Cole, The Lorraine Campaign, ch. XII, passim) and General Gay persuaded Patton not to throw the division into the Ardennes fight until other Third Army divisions in better condition had been committed. The 35th Division, filled with untrained replacements, was attacking without its usual supporting battalion of tanks, for these had been taken away while the division was refitting at Metz.

Sources: The published histories of the division's activities are very good. See Miltonberger and Huston, 134th Infantry Regiment: Combat History of World War II (Washington, n.d.); Combat History of the 137th Infantry Regiment (Baton Rouge, 196); and The 35th Infantry Division in World War II (Atlanta, n.d.).

Here is the Official Site devoted to the 35th Infantry Divison:

http://www.35thinfdivassoc.com/Ardennes/Ardennes-Story-1.shtml



The 4th Armored Division:

"The 4th Armored Division had won a brilliant reputation during the autumn battles in Lorraine. It was a favorite of the Third Army commander; so, when its leader, Maj. Gen. John S. Wood, was returned to the United States for rest and recuperation, General Patton named his own chief of staff as Wood's successor. On 10 December the 4th Armored Division came out of the line after five months of incessant fighting. The last phase of combat, the attack in the Saar mud, had been particularly trying and costly. Replacements, both men and materiel, were not to be had; trained tank crews could not be found in the conventional replacement centers-in fact these specialists no longer were trained in any number in the United States. When the division started for Luxembourg it was short 713 men and 19 officers in the tank and infantry battalions and the cavalry squadron.

"The state of materiel was much poorer, for there was a shortage of medium tanks throughout the European theater. The division could replace only a few of its actual losses and was short twenty-one Shermans when ordered north; worse, ordnance could not exchange worn and battledamaged tanks for new. Tanks issued in the United Kingdom in the spring of 1944 were still operating, many of them after several major repair jobs, and all with mileage records beyond named life expectancy. Some could be run only at medium speed. Others had turrets whose electrical traverse no longer functioned and had to be cranked around by hand. Tracks and motors were worn badly: the 8th Tank Battalion alone had thirty-three tanks drop out because of mechanical failure in the l60mile rush to the Ardennes. But even with battle-weary tanks and a large admixture of green tankers and armored infantry the 4th Armored Division, on its record, could be counted an asset in any operation requiring initiative and battle know-how."


Sources:

The German sources contributing most directly to this chapter are MSS # B-23, 5th Parachute Division, 1 December 1944-12 January 1945 (Generalmajor Ludwig Heilmann); # B-041, 167th Volks Grenadier Division, 24 December 1944-February 1945, Corps Hoecker, 2-10 March 1945 and 59th Infantry Division, 20 March-24 April 1945 (Generalleutnant Hans Hoecker); # B-068, 3d Panzer Grenadier Division, Ardennes (Generalmajor Walter Denkert); # B-151, Fifth Panzer Army, Ardennes Offensive (General der Panzertruppen Hasso von Manteuffel); # B-151a, sequel to MS # B-151 (General der Panzertruppen Hasso von Manteuffel); # B-235, Fifth Panzer Army, 2 November 1944-16 January 1945 (Generalmajor Carl Wagener); # B465, 3d Panzer Grenadier Division, 16-28 December 1944 (Generalmajor Walter Denkert); # B-592, Fuehrer Begleit Brigade, 16 December 1944-26 January 1945 (Generalmajor Otto Remer); # B-701, Army Group B, 15 October 1944-1945 (Col Guenther Reichhelm); # B-799, LXXXIX Corps, 24 January-8 March 1945 (Lt Col Kurt Reschke).

See MSS # A-932 (Gersdorff); B-041 (Hoecker); and B-799 (Reschke).

http://www.army.mil/cmh-pg/default.htm

http://www.35thinfdivassoc.com/Ardennes/Ardennes-Story-1.shtml


This is your best post in god knows how many. This thread would have been better from you with more like this.

What I would say is that these divisions were not rebuilt. Veteran men absorbed replacements. The men in the antitank sections that were absorbed would have been combat experienced. If they had not recently served as strict riflemen, they would at least have been under fire.

All that makes me wonder is about the adjectives. It's description of Pattons removal of Wood for "rest and recuperation" is euphemism at it's best. These men still had the edge over aircraft mechanics and Volksgrenadiers. That the drive was slow was Patton's operational plan.

This also clearly shows 4th Armoured was as elite as 3rd Army got. 21 tanks short is not a huge number, as you can see a further 33 were lost for non-combat operational reasons (many of which would have been patched up and sent on), so I would have expected this sort of number to be out under repair even on good days. The average tank strength of a US armoured division in late 44 (light and medium) would have been around 260. (German divisions never topped 170 or so at this time, and Liebstandarte amongst others went into the Bulge with less.)

This is interesting information, but it doesn't hide the weakness of Patton's plan of attack. I would request we move onto that, if you could tell us why attacking along such a wide frontage was required? We've established the German infantry were poor, but perhaps 3rd Army were not at their peak either, lessoning (but not eliminating) their advantage. Now, what about the plan?

Regards,
IronDuke

(See, when your posts are referenced fact-packed information, we get along fine. No wild flights of fantasy here, just sober descriptions from good sources. Go for it!)


Whatever you say Ironduke.

I'll let the record of these units and the descriptions of these units speak for themselves.

_____________________________


(in reply to IronDuke_slith)
Post #: 328
RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/17/2004 7:30:46 AM   
Von Rom


Posts: 1705
Joined: 5/12/2000
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: IronDuke

quote:

ORIGINAL: Von Rom

This Past will look briefly at determined German Counteratttacks Against the above three Divisions of Third Army

........not copied to keep thread shorter.


another better post, but a bit off topic. We know third army soldiers fought well, but the thread is about Patton, and his critics in the Bulge do not criticise the fight of his men, but the operational skills of their general. If Patton handled it well or badly, his men would still have had to fight hard. The question is, how did he do?

regards,
IronDuke


Perhaps you missed the post by Kevinugly when he called me a liar for mentioning 1SS Panzer showed up to attack Third Army.

That post was for him. . .

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(in reply to IronDuke_slith)
Post #: 329
RE: Why was Patton so great? - 7/17/2004 7:33:59 AM   
Von Rom


Posts: 1705
Joined: 5/12/2000
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Ludovic Coval

von Rom,

quote:

This picture will give readers an idea of what the three Third Army divisions had to march and fight in. Imagine travelling in freezing cold for two days with little sleep or hot food and then, without rest, fight a series of battles:


Yet weather was the same for all and 1st Army's units encoutered same conditions but unlike 3rd Army, was facing two PanzerArmee

LC


Very true - tough for everyone.

It's so easy for us to read about these accounts in our comfy armchairs.

Those men endured so much. . .

Seems incredible.

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(in reply to Ludovic Coval)
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