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- <text id=94TT0737>
- <link 94TO0164>
- <title>
- Jun. 06, 1994: D-Day:Ike's Invasion
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jun. 06, 1994 The Man Who Beat Hitler
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER/D-DAY, Page 36
- Ike's Invasion
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> "Soldiers, Sailors and Airmen of the Allied Expeditionary Force!
- You are about to embark upon the Great Crusade, toward which
- we have striven these many months. The eyes of the world are
- upon you. The hopes and prayers of liberty-loving people everywhere
- march with you..."
- </p>
- <p>-- From Eisenhower's order of the day upon the invasion of Normandy,
- June 6, 1944
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan
- </p>
- <p> Only the Supreme Commander could give the order to attack. The
- vast power of an Allied army 2.5 million strong lay coiled in
- England, ready to spring across the Channel into German-occupied
- France. Some of the more than 5,000 ships accompanied by an
- additional 4,000 small craft of the invasion armada had already
- put to sea. On that June morning in 1944, screaming winds rattled
- the windows of the British naval headquarters near Portsmouth,
- where the D-day commanders were meeting. The rain, as General
- Dwight D. Eisenhower later recalled, lashed down in "horizontal
- streaks." A Royal Air Force meteorologist, however, cautiously
- predicted clearing skies for the next day, June 6. Eisenhower
- conferred with the generals and admirals gathered around him.
- He thought for less than a minute, then stood up. "O.K.," he
- said, "let's go."
- </p>
- <p> Eisenhower stayed behind, alone, as his commanders rushed out
- to transmit the order that commenced Operation Overlord, the
- invasion of Western Europe. His own duty was done for the day.
- He went down to a pier in Portsmouth to watch British soldiers
- board their landing craft. The biggest fleet in history--59
- convoys strung over 100 miles, led by six battleships, 22 cruisers
- and 93 destroyers--set sail toward the beaches of Normandy
- between 60 and 100 miles away.
- </p>
- <p> The general drove to nearby Newbury to say farewell to some
- of the 23,000 Allied paratroopers who would take off before
- midnight to drop behind the Germans' beach defenses. Operation
- Overlord's British air commander, Sir Trafford Leigh-Mallory,
- had warned him repeatedly that the troopers might suffer casualties
- as high as 75%. Eisenhower chatted with men of the U.S. 101st
- Airborne Division, wished them luck and shook hands with their
- commander, Brigadier General Maxwell Taylor. As their C-47 transports
- roared off toward France, the Supreme Commander, who had envisioned
- this moment for more than two years, stood with his staff on
- the roof of a headquarters building and saluted them. When he
- turned away, he had tears in his eyes.
- </p>
- <p> Fifty years later, veterans of the Allied forces who defeated
- Nazi Germany are invading Normandy again to gaze at the beaches
- they stormed, walk the sunken roads they fought over, mourn
- at the military cemeteries, but most of all, celebrate their
- triumph. On the next big anniversary 10 years hence, most of
- these old soldiers--and many of those who lived through the
- cataclysm of World War II--will be gone.
- </p>
- <p> Presidents and generals and ordinary folk will come to pay homage
- in Europe this week, to remember a great battle in a good cause.
- Bill Clinton, who begins an eight-day visit, will meet the leaders
- of the other Allied nations who share credit for the victory
- and dine with Queen Elizabeth II in Portsmouth, then sail on
- an aircraft carrier for a sunrise ceremony off the Normandy
- coast on June 6. Some may question his credibility as Commander
- in Chief of the U.S. armed forces because he avoided military
- service during the Vietnam War. But if past anniversaries of
- the invasion are any indication, the emotion of the moment will
- carry the day. "That war," Clinton told the graduating class
- at the U.S. Naval Academy last week, "marked the turning point
- of our century, when we joined with our Allies to stem a dark
- tide of dictatorship, and to start a flow of democracy and freedom
- that continues to sweep the world." While peace is far from
- universal even in Europe, Western Europe is more prosperous
- and more unified than it has ever been. The cold war proved
- to be only a temporary faltering. The success of the wartime
- alliance gave birth to the United Nations and NATO and made
- America a permanent leader of the global community.
- </p>
- <p> If the war was the century's turning point, the turning point
- of the war was D-day. The Normandy landings might have been
- thrown back if the German command had not been so thoroughly
- surprised or so unusually slow to counterattack. But once the
- Allied forces were successfully ashore, Hitler was doomed, caught
- between armies advancing against him from the west and the Soviet
- east.
- </p>
- <p> After those first tense 24 hours, the Allies knew they had reached
- the beginning of the end. British Prime Minister Winston Churchill,
- whose anxiety about the attack never completely subsided, was
- jubilant. "What a plan!" he raved to Parliament. The Soviet
- dictator, Joseph Stalin, who had been demanding the opening
- of the second front for years, paid tribute: "The history of
- warfare knows no other like undertaking from the point of view
- of its scale, its vast conception and its masterly execution."
- </p>
- <p> That same extraordinary undertaking reverberated into American
- politics, securing the reputation of an indifferent student
- from Kansas as a great military leader and propelling him into
- the White House eight years later. This was Eisenhower's invasion,
- the one he had planned and argued for and believed in wholeheartedly.
- He meant every word of the order of the day he addressed to
- the servicemen he was sending into Hitler's Festung Europa:
- "Soldiers, Sailors and Airmen of the Allied Expeditionary Forces:
- You are about to embark upon the Great Crusade toward which
- we have striven these many months..."
- </p>
- <p> On the morning of June 6, Eisenhower carried in his wallet another
- message he had written, to be issued only if the Allies failed
- to gain a foothold in France. "My decision to attack at this
- time and place was based upon the best information available,"
- it read. "If any blame or fault attaches to the attempt it is
- mine alone." For several hours after the landings began, some
- of the commanders feared that statement might have to be released.
- </p>
- <p> Operation Overlord was the toughest of military propositions:
- an attack by sea against a fortified enemy defense line. The
- very thought gave Churchill nightmares. He told Eisenhower,
- "When I think of the beaches of Normandy choked with the flower
- of American and British youth, and when in my mind's eye I see
- the tides running red with their blood, I have my doubts. I
- have my doubts." The Prime Minister was both right and wrong:
- the scenes of death he envisioned occurred, but the Allies seized
- the beaches and held them.
- </p>
- <p> On June 6, just after midnight, 16,000 paratroopers from the
- U.S. 82nd and 101st Airborne divisions dropped chaotically into
- the dark coastal countryside to protect the western flank of
- the incoming army against counterattacks. Lost in low clouds,
- many of the planes missed their drop sites by miles, but the
- scattered paratroopers, snapping cricket noisemakers to find
- each other, gradually regrouped and moved toward the beach.
- An additional 8,000 men from the British 6th Airborne jumped
- in to guard the eastern flank, catching the Germans guarding
- key bridges by complete surprise.
- </p>
- <p> H-hour on the beaches, code-named Gold, Juno, Sword, Omaha and
- Utah, came at 6:30 a.m. Thousands upon thousands of infantrymen
- packed into 1,500 boxy, flat-bottomed landing craft called Higgins
- boats churned toward shore. The weather had cleared, as predicted,
- but the wind still kicked up heavy waves that made most of the
- troops violently seasick. As the coastline appeared in the gray,
- misty light, the soldiers, each laden with almost 70 lbs. of
- wet battle gear, jumped neck-deep into the waves and scrambled
- ashore.
- </p>
- <p> All battles are remarkable for their chaos: at Normandy the
- deafening noise, sudden explosions, invisible gunfire and jagged
- beach obstacles turned a carefully orchestrated plan into a
- thousand extemporaneous fragments. And still, the plan worked.
- At Gold, Juno and Sword beaches a force drawn mostly from Lieut.
- General Sir Miles Dempsey's British Second Army, and including
- a Canadian division and Free French, Polish and Dutch troops,
- moved steadily onto the sand and into the countryside. On the
- western end at Utah Beach, the U.S. 4th Division waded ashore
- under protective naval fire and linked up with the paratroopers.
- </p>
- <p> But at Omaha, right in the center of the entire front, soldiers
- of the 1st and 29th Infantry divisions walked straight into
- heavy German machine-gun and artillery fire. Bodies piled up
- in the shallows amid wrenching cries for help. Officers struggled
- to rally those pinned down on the beach, but there were only
- four exits through the bluffs along the shore, and they were
- well covered by German guns. As a few Rangers managed to scale
- the heights, Navy ships steamed close along the shore to blast
- the German gun emplacements.
- </p>
- <p> Lieut. General Omar Bradley, commander of the U.S. contingent,
- watched through his binoculars. He feared that "our forces had
- suffered an irreversible catastrophe" and considered holding
- back the reinforcements headed for Omaha. That could have spelled
- disaster for the whole invasion if the Germans had attacked
- Omaha Beach in force. Then at 1:30 p.m. Bradley received a radio
- message that the Americans were inching up the bluffs. Another
- wave of troops rushed in to bolster those on the shore. Said
- Bradley later: "Every man who set foot on Omaha Beach that day
- was a hero."
- </p>
- <p> By nightfall more than 156,000 Allied soldiers--57,000 of
- them Americans--were on the ground in Normandy. The total
- number of killed, wounded and missing was estimated at fewer
- than 5,000. It was a much lower toll than the 75,000 some planners
- feared would become casualties. There might have been far more
- if the Germans--who were without their commander, Field Marshal
- Erwin Rommel, or any air cover--had not waited 10 hours before
- sending the first tanks of the veteran 21st Panzer Division
- into action against the invaders.
- </p>
- <p> It was August before the Allied forces were able to break out
- of Normandy and speed toward Paris. Yet some of Eisenhower's
- trickiest battles were not with the Germans but with British
- military leaders who tried repeatedly to take away his control
- over strategy, troops and supplies. The British complained that
- Eisenhower lacked military finesse in battle, that he was a
- "mass-production general" who thought too much about logistics.
- </p>
- <p> Americans who remember Ike at all tend to recall a do-little
- President or a mangler of sentences at press conferences. Military
- writers sometimes portray Ike the General as a genial and soothing
- Alliance board chairman at best, or at worst a glad-handing
- bumbler. Eisenhower the Supreme Commander was none of those.
- He was a driving, demanding man of terrific energy: up before
- dawn, to bed after midnight, chain-smoking four packs of cigarettes,
- drinking 15 cups of coffee a day. He was a military perfectionist,
- impatient with his subordinates and a peerless, lucid briefer.
- He had a volcanic temper he struggled to control but sometimes
- used as a tool. He was naturally friendly, with a famous grin,
- and he inspired trust. But he was patient only when he had to
- be: to keep peace among the Allies, since he believed the war
- would be won only if the Americans and British worked together.
- </p>
- <p> He made the coalition work, and some of his ablest and most
- loyal deputies were British. But the two top British generals--Sir Bernard Montgomery, who commanded the Allied ground forces
- on D-day, and his boss, Chief of the Imperial General Staff
- Sir Alan Brooke--ridiculed Eisenhower and conspired against
- him, sometimes with Churchill's compliance. Brooke and Montgomery
- argued that Ike was "no real director of thought, plans, energy
- or direction." Montgomery told Brooke: "He knows nothing whatever
- about how to make war or to fight battles. He should be kept
- away from all that business if we want to win this war." But
- Eisenhower brought to his job a modern sense of its management
- responsibilities: how to equip and move millions of men in large-scale
- campaigns that showed a mastery of the mass-production arsenal.
- </p>
- <p> What really lay behind the complaints of Montgomery and Brooke
- was their belief that Britain was the senior partner in the
- Alliance and ought by rights to command its armies, even though
- American troops soon outnumbered their own. Britain's generals
- longed to preserve the waning strength of the Empire and postpone
- America's rise to dominance. But by the end of the war, the
- U.S. had 61 combat divisions--more than 1 million men--in
- Europe; the British, who had been fighting for five years and
- exhausted their reserves, never had more than 20.
- </p>
- <p> Almost from the day America entered the war after the Japanese
- attacked Pearl Harbor in 1941, U.S. military leaders wanted
- to fight Hitler by invading through France. It would be risky,
- but if it succeeded it would open the most direct route across
- Europe into the heart of Germany. Eisenhower was one of the
- earliest and most determined advocates. In March 1942, when
- he was chief of the War Department's Operations Division in
- Washington, he sent a memorandum on strategy to the austere,
- brilliant head of the U.S. Army, General George Marshall. It
- urged that "the principal target for our first major offensive
- should be Germany, to be attacked through Western Europe." Eisenhower
- pointed out that in order to pull together the troops, training,
- transport and weapons for such a huge effort, the British and
- American governments would have to commit themselves formally
- to a cross-Channel attack.
- </p>
- <p> President Franklin Roosevelt approved and in April 1942 dispatched
- Marshall and presidential adviser Harry Hopkins to persuade
- Churchill in London. The great war leader of Britain and his
- generals certainly wanted the U.S. to defeat Germany first,
- before turning to Japan, and did not want to put off the Americans
- by disputing strategy. So the British agreed to the invasion
- of Europe as something they intended to do--only not right
- away. With searing memories of the retreat to Dunkirk in 1940
- and of horrifying losses at the Somme and Passchendaele in World
- War I, the British shrank from binding themselves to another
- all-out effort on the European mainland. They much preferred
- to attack the Germans around the periphery--in the Mediterranean
- and southern Europe.
- </p>
- <p> The eager American warriors were getting ahead of themselves.
- The Allies had neither the troops nor the landing craft needed
- to carry out Operation Sledgehammer or Roundup or the other
- code-named plans to invade France in 1942 or 1943. Yet to boost
- morale and reassure their voters, both Churchill and Roosevelt
- were determined to mount an offensive somewhere against the
- Germans before 1942 ended. They decided to invade North Africa
- to drive out the Italians and the German Afrika Korps, though
- Marshall and Eisenhower opposed the move as a diversion of resources.
- </p>
- <p> Eisenhower, now a lieutenant general based in London, was chosen
- to command Operation Torch, which went ashore in Morocco and
- Algeria in November 1942. His forces then moved into Tunisia
- to link up with Montgomery's Eighth Army, freeing all North
- Africa from the Axis. By the time the U.S. persuaded Churchill
- to undertake a Normandy attack, Eisenhower had commanded two
- more seaborne invasions during 1943: Sicily and mainland Italy.
- They were sideshows in his eyes--and the Italian campaign
- quickly bogged down into a bloody mile-by-mile struggle up the
- peninsula--but they taught him a great deal about the complexities
- of such operations. Equally important, he and Generals Bradley
- and George Patton emerged from the North African and Italian
- battlefields as first-class combat leaders.
- </p>
- <p> On a night of pea-soup fog in January 1944, Eisenhower arrived
- in London as Supreme Commander of the Allied Expeditionary Force
- that would invade the Continent. Roosevelt had decided he simply
- could not spare Chief of Staff Marshall, the man everyone assumed
- would command D-day. Instead the order signed by Britain and
- the U.S. went to Eisenhower: "You will enter the continent of
- Europe and, in conjunction with the other United Nations, undertake
- operations aimed at the heart of Germany and the destruction
- of her armed forces."
- </p>
- <p> Almost immediately, Eisenhower picked up the sounds of criticism.
- He noted in his diary that British columnists were sniping at
- him and talking up their own generals, especially the star of
- North Africa: Montgomery, victor over Germany's General Rommel,
- the Desert Fox. "They don't use the words initiative or boldness
- in talking of me," Eisenhower wrote. "It wearies me to be thought
- of as timid, when I've had to do things that were so risky as
- to be almost crazy. Oh hum."
- </p>
- <p> Under Eisenhower's direction, southern England turned into a
- massive arsenal and a jumping-off point. The Allies built 163
- airfields--from which 12,000 warplanes flew in support of
- Operation Overlord. They stockpiled 2 million tons of weapons
- and supplies, mountains of food and fuel. The Channel ports
- became sprawling tent cities housing tens of thousands of soldiers.
- </p>
- <p> Three weeks before D-day, King George VI, Churchill and the
- British chiefs of staff gave the plan a last review. Eisenhower's
- deputy for ground forces in the invasion was to be British,
- and Churchill had picked Montgomery for the post. As he briefed
- the distinguished gathering, Montgomery tramped across a huge
- relief map of Normandy spread across the floor. He said he intended
- to capture the city of Caen, eight miles from the beaches, on
- the first day. He might even get to Falaise, 32 miles inland.
- He would "crack about and force the battle to swing our way."
- </p>
- <p> That was Montgomery's style: colorful and quotable but imprecise.
- His penchant for old sweaters and big berets helped foster a
- folksy image that made him popular with his troops and the public.
- Behind the image, however, he was a thoroughly professional
- soldier who paid attention to almost nothing but his profession,
- living and eating alone in a trailer in the midst of his army.
- With an ego nearly as large as General Douglas MacArthur's,
- he was good at public relations but bad at human relations.
- </p>
- <p> On D-day Montgomery did not get his troops well inland; in most
- places they advanced only four to six miles along the 60-mile
- beachhead. He did not seize Caen the first day; in fact, he
- did not occupy the whole city until July 20, after it had been
- pounded to rubble by Allied bombing. As men and supplies poured
- across the Channel, Montgomery could not seem to push through
- the German armored divisions blocking the road to Paris. American
- troops farther west were fighting their way very slowly through
- farming country lined with dense hedgerows--tall earth embankments
- complete with trees, shrubs and Germans.
- </p>
- <p> Montgomery was always slow and cautious in mobile fighting,
- but this was a set-piece battle of the sort he was expected
- to win. As he remained at a standstill week after week, Churchill
- was worried that Normandy would turn into a replay of the ghastly
- trench warfare of World War I. Many senior officers, including
- Eisenhower's British deputy, Air Chief Marshal Sir Arthur Tedder,
- thought Montgomery should be either forced to attack or fired.
- Some Americans suspected Montgomery was trying to conserve his
- strength and let U.S. units take the casualties.
- </p>
- <p> Much of the 50-day battle of Normandy was a reinforcement race:
- Could the Germans bring in enough armored divisions to destroy
- the Allied army before it was strong enough to break out of
- the peninsula? By the beginning of July the Allies had landed
- more than 1 million troops, 566,000 tons of supplies and 171,000
- vehicles. Having failed to drive the Allies back into the sea,
- Hitler chose to throw all he had into a decisive fight in Normandy
- rather than withdraw to another defense line along the Seine.
- But when U.S. forces under Bradley did finally surge out of
- the peninsula at the end of July and sweep south and east, 21
- German divisions were outflanked and almost destroyed. Their
- retreat over the Seine became a rout, and the victorious Allies
- reached Paris in a week.
- </p>
- <p> At the end of August, Eisenhower opened a series of discussions
- on future strategy with Montgomery, the British general's Chief
- of Staff, Major General Sir Francis de Guingand, and Bradley.
- The talks turned into a bitter, almost unending debate over
- whether to carry the attack forward on a broad or narrow front.
- The Allied Expeditionary Force was about to drive on into Germany
- right up to the Rhine. After bringing units and equipment back
- up to strength there, Eisenhower said, he would launch a "sustained
- and unremitting advance against the heart of the enemy country."
- </p>
- <p> Montgomery argued that the best approach was to send the bulk
- of the forces north through Belgium and into the Ruhr under
- one commander--himself. "This is a whole-time job for one
- man," he said. He was determined to avoid handing over command
- of the Allied ground forces to Eisenhower, as planned, on Sept.
- 1. In a direct challenge, he told Eisenhower that "to change
- command now would be to prolong the war." He was convinced that
- "one really full-blooded thrust toward Berlin is likely to get
- there and end the German war."
- </p>
- <p> Eisenhower said, "Monty's suggestion is simple: give him everything,
- which is crazy." Roosevelt and Marshall would not have stood
- for an arrangement that left a British general in charge of
- the much larger American forces. Eisenhower did not trust Montgomery
- to carry out the kind of swift, dashing warfare he was promising;
- the British general had shown no flair for it in his slow but
- successful tracking of Rommel across North Africa or his long
- pause in front of Caen. Nor could Eisenhower have shut down
- the hard-charging U.S. First and Third Armies to let the senior
- British general on the Continent claim sole credit for taking
- Berlin.
- </p>
- <p> Yet Eisenhower was always patient and long-suffering with Montgomery,
- the most visible representative of British pride, and resisted
- the temptation to fire him. With support from Roosevelt and
- Marshall, Eisenhower knew he could force Montgomery's ouster,
- but he feared such an intramural brawl would severely damage
- U.S.-British trust. After the war, Montgomery's own chief of
- staff, De Guingand, looked back at the heavy fighting in Germany
- during 1945 and decided that the British could not have made
- it to Berlin, even with U.S. reinforcements. "My conclusion,"
- he wrote, "is that Eisenhower was right."
- </p>
- <p> The Supreme Commander thought a swift, narrow-front drive straight
- into Germany was a bad strategic idea. He was certain it would
- be cut off, counterattacked and defeated. He never even considered
- deviating from his own strategy: an advance to the Rhine along
- a front stretching from Holland to the Swiss border. That way
- the Nazi forces would be defeated west of the Rhine, and the
- Allies would cross into Germany proper with relative ease.
- </p>
- <p> The broad front might be slower, but Eisenhower, the student
- of logistics, could make no other choice. In their race across
- the Seine, the Allied units outran their stocks of gasoline,
- ammunition, spare parts and food. To maintain itself in the
- field, an infantry division required 650 tons of supplies every
- day. The supply planners assumed that they would not have to
- support any U.S. divisions north of the Seine until 120 days
- after D-day. But within 90 days, 16 divisions were 150 miles
- beyond the Seine. Both Montgomery and Bradley had to halt to
- let supplies catch up.
- </p>
- <p> Hitler seized on the Allied hiatus to organize a 24-division
- counteroffensive through Belgium's Ardennes Forest in December--and Eisenhower came into his own as a combat general. He
- issued the orders that cut off the Bulge--a German penetration
- westward into Allied lines 45 miles wide and 65 miles deep--and made certain it would fail. He sent the 101st Airborne to
- hold the key city of Bastogne, put three other divisions into
- the battle and ordered Patton to turn his Third Army 90 degrees
- to the north to cut the advancing Germans' supply lines. The
- German counteroffensive was, Eisenhower said later, "a dangerous
- episode." At the time, the Supreme Commander was unruffled.
- The situation, he told his generals, "is to be regarded as one
- of opportunity for us and not of disaster."
- </p>
- <p> The destruction of Hitler's last reserves in the Battle of the
- Bulge flung open the door to the German heartland, just as Eisenhower
- had planned. "The war was won before the Rhine was crossed,"
- he said later. But his strategic arguments were not over. Churchill
- was suspicious of the Russians and detected the first signs
- of the coming cold war. He told Eisenhower it was important
- to capture Berlin, to symbolize the Allied role in victory over
- Germany and to counter the strength of the Soviet Union. Eisenhower
- felt the city no longer held any military significance. He told
- Montgomery, who was clamoring for the chance to take it, that
- the German capital was "nothing but a geographical location"
- and that "my purpose is to destroy the enemy's forces." Churchill
- disagreed and appealed to Roosevelt, who was ill and about to
- die. Washington said the decision on how best to destroy the
- enemy's forces should be left to the Supreme Commander.
- </p>
- <p> Eisenhower asked Bradley, who would have to lead an advance
- on Berlin, for his views. Bradley advised that taking the city
- might cost an additional 100,000 casualties, which he thought
- "a pretty stiff price to pay for a prestige objective"--especially
- since the heads of the Allied governments had already agreed
- on postwar occupation zones at the Yalta Conference in February
- 1945. Eisenhower told the British and American Chiefs of Staff,
- "I am the first to admit that a war is waged in pursuance of
- political aims," so if the chiefs decided "that the Allied effort
- to take Berlin outweighs purely military considerations," he
- would revise his plans and carry out the operation. Such an
- order never came.
- </p>
- <p> Eisenhower really had no choice in the matter. American generals,
- then and now, are expected to make decisions solely on military
- grounds and leave politics to their civilian chiefs. Bradley
- was right about the occupation zones: U.S. forces captured large
- portions of Czechoslovakia and what later became East Germany
- but reaped no political advantage from it. They simply had to
- pull back 125 miles to get inside their occupation boundaries.
- </p>
- <p> The Germans surrendered to Eisenhower on May 7, 1945, but in
- some ways the war never ended for him. He wrote his memoirs,
- and so did the other generals. A surprising number claimed they
- could have done a better job as Supreme Commander. Eisenhower
- confessed in 1967, "I was annoyed by carping criticism." Not
- that his actions were above criticism, he said, but "as the
- postmortems have gone on, it looked as if we had blundered throughout
- the campaign and had been defeated."
- </p>
- <p> In his old age and retirement, Eisenhower reflected on the fact
- that when he was planning D-day, most of his colleagues thought
- the war would last two more years. His own bet--the end of
- 1944--was four months too optimistic. But he took pride in
- the fact that only "11 months from the day we landed in Normandy,
- the surrender took place."
- </p>
- <p> The perspective from 50 years matches Eisenhower's assessment.
- He may not have handled his crusade in Europe perfectly, because
- nothing in war goes precisely according to plan. But those who
- look back and say he could have defeated Hitler sooner are playing
- games with history and hindsight. In the tumult of battle, with
- colleagues second-guessing him and comrades dying by the hundreds
- every day, Dwight Eisenhower made decisions that won the war
- in Europe and established a peace that prevails today.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-