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- <text id=93HT1402>
- <title>
- Man of Year 1944: Dwight D. Eisenhower
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--Man of the Year
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- January 1, 1945
- Man of the Year
- Dwight D. Eisenhower: "The Fate of the World"
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> The year 1944 was the climactic year of the war against
- Germany. It was not the last year of that war, as many had
- predicted and more had hoped. But it was, beyond all reasonable
- doubt, the last full year.
- </p>
- <p> It was not a year in which the outcome--the question of
- who would win and who would lose--still dangled precariously in
- the balance. The trend of the war had been reversed in 1942 at
- Stalingrad and El Alamein. By early 1944 the U.S. was almost
- fully armed--thanks mainly to the Man of 1943, General George
- Catlett Marshall.
- </p>
- <p> The promise of victory was bright. But the path to victory
- was highly uncertain. And the greatest single element of that
- uncertainty was the success or failure of the Anglo-U.S. invasion
- of western Europe, which Soviet Russia had been demanding since
- 1942, and which Winston Churchill and Franklin Roosevelt now
- proclaimed as necessary and imminent.
- </p>
- <p> About two months before D-day, Eisenhower and his top
- commanders were gathered in a room, beside a sand-table model of
- the target beaches. After the commanders had spoken in turn;
- piecing together the total picture of the operation, Winston
- Churchill stalked on to the platform, clutching his lapels. He
- said: "I have confidence in you, my commanders. The fate of the
- world is in your hands."
- </p>
- <p> This slice of Churchillian rhetoric was not necessarily an
- overstatement. If the invasion failed, the waste of time and
- effort, of men and material, would be incalculable, almost too
- staggering even to contemplate. If it failed, Russia might be so
- discouraged as to seek a separate peace with Hitler. In that
- case, when the western Allies were ready to mount another
- invasion, in 1946 or 1947, they would find three or four hundred
- German divisions manning the Atlantic Wall instead of 60.
- </p>
- <p> To Grips on Land. The purpose of the invasion was not to
- knock out Germany at one blow. If the mere establishment and
- holding of Allied beachheads should discourage the Nazis to the
- point of capitulation, well and good. There were extreme
- optimists (later developments were to prove how extreme they
- were) who hoped for that outcome. But in the realistic battle
- plan, the purpose of the gamble was to bring the forces of the
- western Allies to grips with Nazi Germany on her western land
- approaches. When that purpose was completely achieved, affable,
- incisive, confident "Ike" Eisenhower became the Man of 1944.
- </p>
- <p> A year ago, Eisenhower announced his conviction that Germany
- would be beaten in 1944. "Many persons of the highest technical
- attainments, knowledge and responsibility," said Winston
- Churchill, had shared this feeling. In their extenuation, it
- might be said that none of them knew that Soviet Russia's main
- military effort for the year, on the main highway to Berlin,
- would run its course in six weeks of the summer.
- </p>
- <p> The notable fact about Eisenhower's prediction is not that
- it was wrong, but that it was based on a complete confidence that
- the invasion would succeed. In retrospect, his brilliant success
- made it seem like much less of a gamble than it had seemed before
- June 6.
- </p>
- <p> Another Gamble. As the year drew to a close, the Germans
- found their border invaded and themselves in a position where
- they, in turn, preferred a great gamble to a continued, steady,
- losing retreat. Adolf Hitler had withdrawn into the shadows and
- Heinrich Himmler was Germany's Man of 1944. Himmler had held the
- people and the Army in line while he squeezed them for the last
- ounces of German strength. Field Marshal Karl Rudolf Gerd von
- Rundstedt, the cold, wily Junker who mounted the December
- counteroffensive, was the man of the Hour.
- </p>
- <p> Rundstedt's all-out gamble involved the U.S. forces in their
- gravest and costliest battle of World War II. That savage
- outpouring of German strength showed clearly enough that the Man
- of 1944 was not to be found among the idealistic dreamers and
- crafty politicians who wanted to perform a Caesarean operation on
- a world at war to bring the postwar world to birth ahead of its
- time. Not in three years of war had there been so much mutual
- recrimination among Russia, Britain and the U.S., nor such
- alarming cracks in their solidarity. In these cracks lurked the
- last vestiges of Germany's hope for escape.
- </p>
- <p> The war was still on. The shape of the postwar world still
- hung on the manner of its winning.
- </p>
- <p> Another War. In 1944 there was also war in the Pacific. It
- was a year of great achievement for Admiral Chester William
- Nimitz, top U.S. commander in that theater of tiny land patches
- in vast reaches of water. For the first time, in 1944, Nimitz
- took the offensive, as distinguished from the counteroffensive
- (Guadalcanal, the upper Solomons, the Gilberts). In the
- Marshalls, the Marianas and the Carolines, Nimitz put his
- amphibious forces on the fringe of the Japanese inner empire. For
- the first time the main strength of the Jap fleet was lured to
- battle, and it was badly beaten, leaving the U.S. with at least
- temporary dominance in the western Pacific.
- </p>
- <p> Douglas MacArthur kept his promise to the Philippines. "I
- have returned," he said. But at year's end the total redemption
- of the Philippines still lay ahead.
- </p>
- <p> On the Asiatic mainland it was a year of tragedy for Chiang
- Kai-shek, China's perennial man of the year. The Japs cut his
- country in two. The recall of General Joseph W. Stilwell brought
- down on the Generalissimo's head the most searing criticism he
- had ever suffered from the U.S. But he strove to put new vigor
- into his regime and his war effort. Neither Chiang nor China was
- beaten.
- </p>
- <p> In 1944, the war against Japan stood about where the war
- against Germany stood in 1943. The strategic bombardment of the
- enemy homeland had begun; but the battles with the enemy's major
- land forces were still to come. Soldiers in the Pacific
- complained that their war was neglected by the U.S. press and
- public. Yet the people were only following the cue of the Allied
- leaders; the defeat of Germany had been given priority over the
- defeat of Japan.
- </p>
- <p> Land of the Free. It was the shifting fortunes of war in
- Europe that swung the U.S. alternately into optimism and
- pessimism, and always the pendulum swung too far. When the Allies
- won and held their first foothold in Normandy, the war seemed all
- but over. When the first attempts to break out of the peninsula
- failed, gloom settled down. When the breakout came and the
- Germans were routed, it was in the bag. When the Allies pulled up
- in September, back came the gloom. When Generals Bradley and
- Devers resumed the offensive in November, there were Congressmen
- in Washington who said it might all be over in 30 days.
- Rundstedt's amazing winter offensive brought the thickest gloom
- of the year.
- </p>
- <p> In the midst of war, the U.S. people took time out to elect
- a President. Franklin Roosevelt's claim as Man of the Year was
- mainly that he won a fourth term. But the President had already
- broken the precedent with his third term. And this time he won
- through by the narrowest margin of any election since 1916.
- </p>
- <p> The man who made the deepest emotional dent in the country
- was one who died before his time: Wendell Willkie. Seldom in this
- century had any man been so sincerely and widely mourned. From
- defeat in 1940 to repudiation by his own party in 1944, Willkie
- had grown great in vision, forthrightness and courage, and the
- millions who followed his progress gained a new conception of
- human freedom.
- </p>
- <p> Two other men made their marks on the year, Sidney Hillman
- of the C.I.O. and James Caesar Petrillo of the Musician's Union.
- Whether or not it decided the election, Hillman's Political
- Action Committee brought labor closer to the balance of power in
- national politics than it had ever been before. Petrillo, after
- successfully defying the War Labor Board and the President of the
- U.S., rammed home the revolutionary principle of royalties paid
- by corporations directly to union treasuries.
- </p>
- <p> Changing Aspects. In Europe, there were several men of
- stature whose aspect changed in the shifting light of events. One
- of these was somber, iron-willed Charles de Gaulle. For four
- years he had been the symbol and touchstone of French resistance
- to the Nazi conqueror, but he had lived in the half-light of
- exile. In 1944 he returned in triumph to his free but prostrate
- country. In the liberated countries, he was the only exile who
- went back to a people solidly ranked behind him, and the only man
- who seemed able to control the revolutionary ferments which
- liberation had set astir.
- </p>
- <p> Winston Churchill, Man of 1940, had also been a symbol. In
- Britain's darkest and finest hour, his flaming words and
- dauntless courage had heartened his country to stand alone
- against Hitler at the crest of his Blitzkrieg power. As one of
- the organizers of victory, Churchill had been magnificent. Now,
- in the last weeks of 1944, he was facing--with his usual
- truculence--the heaviest criticism of his World War II career;
- his critics charged him with responsibility for the civil war in
- Greece and for selling out Poland to Russia.
- </p>
- <p> The Runner-Up. Joseph Stalin, Man of 1942, who in that year
- had started to roll the Hitlerites back from the Caucasus
- oilfields, was also beginning to look a little different to many
- Americans in the dawn light of victory--or perhaps more like
- his pre-1941 self. After dealing Hitler one of his two heaviest
- defeats of the year, Stalin's central armies had stopped on the
- Vistula, while those on the flanks pursued secondary aims. Then
- followed the ill-timed martyrdom of General Bor and his heroic
- partisans in Warsaw; the Moscow-sponsored Government at Lublin;
- the methodical destruction of the London Polish Government. At
- Dumbarton Oaks, Russia's diplomats insisted that, in the
- framework of postwar security, no great power (e.g., Russia)
- should be disciplined without its consent.
- </p>
- <p> Any sovereign nation may choose to drug itself with
- suspicion, cynicism, isolation, and history does not deny a great
- man his place because his aims and methods are objectionable.
- "History," someone has said, "is a record of events which ought
- not to have happened." But Joseph Stalin was not the Man of 1944.
- </p>
- <p> Needed: An Eisenhower? In November, 1943, Stalin, Churchill
- and Roosevelt met with considerable fanfare at Teheran. There, it
- seemed, the political and military guidance of the world for 1944
- had been charted. As the year wore on, the luster of Teheran
- began to fade. There was a general cry for another meeting of the
- Big Three--but there was also a demand for an inter-Allied
- political command, modeled on the military structure of the
- Combined Chiefs of Staff in Washington, or on the inter-Allied
- command machinery with which Eisenhower had planned and carried
- out the greatest achievement of the year. The political world
- lacked an Eisenhower.
- </p>
- <p> General Marshall had chosen Eisenhower for his brains,
- imagination and diplomacy when the Chief of Staff sent him first
- to Britain, then to Africa in 1942. In addition to his natural
- ability to get along with people, Eisenhower acquired the knack
- of hitting it off with other nationals, notably the British. In
- Africa his command structure was a complex but smooth-working
- mesh of U.S. and British officers, and he carried the same
- formula back to England when he was chosen to head the invasion.
- Of the six men on his Supreme Command, four were British.
- </p>
- <p> The two Americans were Bradley, who helped Montgomery lay
- out the ground tactics, and Walter Bedell ("Beedle") Smith, a
- bulldog of a man who is perhaps the hardest-working officer in
- the U.S. Army. It was Beedle Smith who coordinated the entire
- invasion planning. TIME Correspondent Charles Wertenbaker called
- him "driving, determined, devoted, and occasionally furious."
- Eisenhower called him the best chief of staff in the world, and
- Monty said quite openly that he would like to steal him.
- </p>
- <p> Always, however, when the agonizing decisions had to be
- made, Ike Eisenhower made them. As all the world now knows, the
- invasion was postponed for one day on account of stormy weather.
- The forecast for June 6 was anything but promising, but another
- postponement would have meant waiting two weeks for favorable
- tides. And that would have involved a grave risk to secrecy and
- morale. The Germans had been led to expect a landing at a later
- date and a point farther east on the coast. Eisenhower gambled on
- the weather for the sake of tactical surprise--and won.
- </p>
- <p> Of Mice & Men. In May, a U.S. correspondent in London had
- observed: "The most brilliantly conceived and thoughtfully worked
- out plans may fail utterly if the weather conditions on D-day and
- several days thereafter should prove unfavorable..."
- </p>
- <p> Hitler had promised his people that he would drive
- Eisenhower off the beaches in nine hours. The Nazis were not even
- trying to drive him off after nine days. And that was the story
- for the rest of the battle of France. Eisenhower was always able
- to take more than Hitler could give.
- </p>
- <p> In the last six months Eisenhower has not visibly aged (he
- is 54), but he gives a subtle impression of having grown bigger
- as a man and as a commander. For lack of exercise, he is slightly
- thicker around the middle and there are often tired lines under
- his snapping blue eyes. But he is very fit, has had no cold all
- winter. Even in times of crisis, he is relaxed, genial and
- confident on the surface--whatever goes on underneath.
- </p>
- <p> Last week the eyes of the U.S. turned with fear and
- questioning on Eisenhower as he faced the gravest setback of his
- career. The invasion was his first great responsibility; this his
- second. But Eisenhower refused to admit that a battle was lost
- while it was still being fought. He proclaimed to his troops:
- </p>
- <p> "The enemy is making his supreme effort to break out of the
- desperate plight into which you forced him by your brilliant
- victories of the summer and fall.
- </p>
- <p> "He is fighting savagely to take back all that you have won
- and is using every treacherous trick to deceive and kill you.
- </p>
- <p> "He is gambling everything, but already in this battle your
- gallantry has done much to foil his plans. In the face of your
- proven bravery and fortitude, he will completely fail.
- </p>
- <p> "But we cannot be content with his mere repulse.
- </p>
- <p> "By rushing out from his fixed defenses the enemy may give
- us the chance to turn his great gamble into his worst defeat. So
- I call upon every man of all the Allies to rise now to new
- heights of courage, of resolution and of effort.
- </p>
- <p> "Let everyone hold before him a single thought--to destroy
- the enemy...
- </p>
- <p> "United in this determination and with unshakable faith in
- the cause for which we fight, we will, with God's help, go
- forward to our greatest victory."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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