Alphen,
Netherlands. 16 December. Seventy years
ago today not far from here deep in the depths of a bitter winter in the snows
of the high Ardennes four German armies including the the 5th Panzer
Army under General von Manteuffel and the 6th Panzer army under SS
General Dietrich launched Operation
Watch on the Rhine. This massive
attack on US forces became known as the Battle of the Bulge. The frankly bizarre strategic aim of the
offensive was to retake Antwerp from the British and Canadians with the aim of
splitting the Allies. The operation was
doomed from the outset as Hitler desperately tried to rekindle his success of
1940 when he had driven tanks through the Ardennes forest against divided
British and French forces.
The
German offensive initially made some progress although never fast enough to
achieve what by any military standards were extremely optimistic objectives,
mainly due to the stout defence of relatively small US formations. Von Manteuffel and his 5th Army
employing new tactics made good use of the poor weather that prevented the
tank-busting Royal Air Force Typhoons and US Army Air Force Mustangs from
striking the 54000 German troops and 345 tanks committed to the offensive,
including the powerful Tiger IIs. German forces were hampered at all times by fuel shortages and the very snows that
the offensive had used as cover. Moreover, by late 1944 German forces in the West were a shadow of their former
selves and the implied link to a new Blitzkrieg was illusory and although the Luftwaffe did launch attacks
it was only at the cost of losing their last capable air force.
The
offensive pivoted on the little Belgian town of Bastogne, the junction of 11
tarmac roads vital if German forces were to make the rapid progress upon which
the entire offensive hinged. The town
was defended by the 101st Airborne Division (Screaming Eagles) and
Combat Command B of the 10th Armored Division. By 21 December German forces had
surrounded Bastogne but were unable to take it due to the determined American defence.
At one point, the officer commanding US forces Brigadier-General Anthony C.
McAuliffe received a note from his German opposite number Lieutenant General
Heinrich Freiherr von Luttwitz seeking his surrender. McAuliffe’s written reply has passed into
military folklore; “Nuts!”
German
forces then attempted to bypass Bastogne but it was by then already too late as
improved weather enabled air attacks to slow their progress. And, although Bastogne faced a series of assaults
by 25 December all the attacking German tanks in the vicinity of the town had
been destroyed. On 26 December elements
of Patton’s 4th Armored Division broke through to relieve the 101st
in Bastogne, although the Screaming Eagles famously suggested that although low
on ammunition, food and medical supplies they did not in fact need relieving.
Critically,
the German offensive stalled before the River Meuse halfway to Antwerp where the
British XXX Corps held the bridges over the Meuse at Dinant, Givet and Namur
using air power and their Tiger-killing Sherman Firefly tanks to marked effect. With General Patton’s Third Army pushing hard
up from the south it became progressively clear to German commanders that they
were in danger of being trapped in a pocket not dissimilar to that which had
effectively destroyed an entire German army at Falaise in Normandy the previous
August.
Initially,
Hitler refused to countenance a withdrawal and in keeping with Germany Army doctrine
repeated counter-attacks and infiltration raids were launched by German
forces. However, in spite of local gains
all these attacks ultimately proved futile and on 7 January, 1945 Hitler
finally gave the order for German forces to withdraw. However, it was not before 25 January
that the Allied line was straightened and the pocket closed.
As
per usual at this time success was not achieved without a good deal of bickering
between US General Patton and British Field Marshal Montgomery as Patton’s
Third Army attacked north from Bastogne and Montgomery came south. There was an interesting footnote to the
Battle of the Bulge. American commanders
accused Montgomery of attempting to claim credit for what in the end was a hard
fought American victory. They had a point
because for every one British soldier committed to the battle there were
between 30 and 40 Americans. However,
von Manteuffel himself said of Montgomery, “The operations of the American
First Army [of which Montgomery had assumed command on 20 December] developed
into a series of individual holding actions.
Montgomery’s contribution to restoring the situation was that he turned
a series of isolated actions into a coherent battle fought according to a clear
and definite plan”.
However,
the Battle of the Bulge was an overwhelmingly American victory and must be
remembered as such. Indeed, “The Bulge” was
the largest and most costly battle US forces fought in World War Two. Over 600,000 US soldiers took part in the
battle of whom some 83,000 were injured and some 19,000 killed. German forces are believed to have lost
killed, wounded or captured between 67,000 and 100,000 personnel. In effect the Battle of the Bulge marks the
end of offensive operations by the Germany Army in the West. On 12 January, 1945 the Soviets launched the
massive Vistula-Oder offensive which committed over 2 million infantry and over
4000 tanks to the battle and marked the beginning of the final destruction of Nazism.
Winston
Churchill said of The Bulge, “This is undoubtedly the greatest American battle
of the war and will, I believe, be regarded as a famous American victory”.
Julian
Lindley-French
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