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- THE BATTLE OF THE BULGE: Hitlers Ardennes offensive.
-
- In November 1944, things looked pretty dim for the Third Reich
- In the East, the Russians had entered East Prussia and crossed
- German soil and Germany`s depleted Eastern armies were frantically
- battling to stem the Red tide. In the West, the Allies, even
- after the failure at Arnhem were closing up to Germany`s frontiers
- and in some places had crossed them. Hitler desperately needed a
- big and quick strategic/grand tactical victory in that final
- winter of the war - and as such the Ardennes offensive was
- conceived.
-
- After analyzing the situation, Hitler decided to attack in the
- West.His armies would attack out of the Ardennes with Antwerp
- just over 100 miles away, the final objective.
-
- Once he had taken Antwerp,Hitler could not only disrupt the flow of
- supplies to the Allies, but also might destroy all enemy forces north
- of the line Bastogne-Brussels-Antwerp.
-
- The Germans carried out an elaborate deception plan and lulled the
- Allies into a false sense of security on this quite part of the
- front.
- Hitlers fully developed plan specified that Sepp Dietrichs Sixth SS
- Panzer Army would make the main attck.His army was to penetrate
- between Eupen and Stavelot and enable the infantry divisons to advance
- and establish blocking positions. To the South, Manteuffel`s Fifth
- Panzer Army also with three corps would be attacking towards the
- key road junctions of St.Vith and Bastogne. Flank protection in the
- extreme South would be from four infantry divisions of the German
- Seventh army.
-
- In the inital assault, the Germans would be able to achieve a 2 to 1
- superiority in tanks and a 6 to 1 ratio in troop strength at the
- critical points. to assist in the crossing of the Meuse, special
- SS units would infiltrate behind US lines dressed as US servicemen.
-
- At 5:30 am, December 16, the front erupted as the German assault went
- in and the ~Battle of the Bulge` had begun. The cold stillness of the
- night was shattered by reports from 2,000 guns. On a front from
- Monschau to Echternach, german infantrymen moved forward across the
- snow covered ground as Hitler`s attempt to regain the initiative in
- Western Europe began.
-
- At first the Americans were taken by suprise and some German units
- made good advances, however the US 99th infantry division put up a
- fierce resistance to the spearheads of Six panzer Army that the
- vital German timetable began to slow up even on the first day.
-
- At first the Allies did not realise that a major German offensive
- was underway and merely thought that the Germans had launched a
- spoiling attack. However once it became clear to the Allies that
- a major attack was under way Allied reserves started to slowly
- move towards the area.
-
- During the next few days, Major general Robertson, commander of
- the US 99th Division fought what Eisenhower later termed "one
- of the brilliant divisional actions of the war in Europe".While the
- cost was high, the Americams held on to roads vital to the success
- of the German plan. On December 20, Model shifted the main
- German attack to the Fifth Panzer Army.
-
- In other areas there were German breakthroughs. Two regiments of
- US troops holding out in the Schnee Eifel were encircled and
- surrendered to the Germans on December 21 - it was a heavy blow
- to US prestige. At St.Vith, a vital road junction, the Americans
- held out tenaciously denying the Germans control - the Germans took
- the St.Vith road junction on the fifth day of the fighting when
- in fact they had targetted for it to be taken on the second day -
- the offensice was badly falling behind schedule.
-
- While the American General Clarke stubbornly held out at St.Vith,
- Colonel Joachim Peiper had led the armoured spearhead of the 1st
- SS Panzer division through the Losheim gap and deep into the
- American rear area. Finding gasoline, Peiper used American prisoners
- to refuel his tanks then continued the advance westwards. Peiper`s
- advance was slowed by small groups of defenders. he waited to attack
- Stavelot until dark on December 17th and took nearly a day to clear
- the village against determined resistance- the Americans in Stavelot
- fired a huge 124,000 gasoline dump which Peiper nearly captured - the
- Germans were denied vital fuel which the tanks following Peipers
- battle group were relying on. Eventually, US reinforcements stopped
- Joachim Peiper`s drive and he returned to German lines with only
- 800 of his original 2,000 men.
-
- The key town of Bastogne was surrounded by the Germans on the 21st
- December.The defenders of Bastogne, under Brigadier General Anthony
- C.McAuliffe were the 101st Airborne Division , elements of the 10th
- Armoured Division and various artillery, engineer and tank destroyer
- units. The town held out and on the 22nd December, Patton switching
- his offensive away from the Saar area of Germany came towards its
- relief with two divisions. Progress was slow, intially because the
- Germans had learned of Patton`s plan of attack. On that day also,
- McAuliffe is alleged to have replied "NUTS!" to a German request
- to surrender, under the threat to annihilate all the troops in
- Bastogne if the request were not honoured within two hours. Word
- of McAuliffe`s reply soon spread and served to bolster morale at
- a critical time. There spirits received a further boost when cold
- winds began to blow at dusk and the weather started to clear.Allied
- aircraft grounded the previous days by extremely poor weather would
- now be back dominating the skies.
-
- Fighter bombers,medium bombers and transports were all aloft on December
- 23rd. Supplies were dropped to the defenders of Bastogne and bombers
- hit German columns throughout the area. Meanwhile fighters strafed emeny
- targets - however the German 116th and 2nd panzer Divisions continued
- to attack but were stopped on Boxing Day - empty fuel tanks did not
- help as the German armour ground to a halt.On the 26th Bastogne was
- reached by an American relief force from the 4th Armoured Division.
- With the siege of Bastogne broken, Allied spirits rose.
-
- The Germans continued aggressive fighting but both Patton and Montgomery
- were shifting massive Allied reinforcements against the German gains.
- While the Allied commanders wrestled with the problems of positioning
- troops and systematically squeezing out the German salient (The Bulge)
- the German High Command also had crucial decisions to make. Hitler`s
- attention was riveted on the Ardennes. Although his troops had not
- reached the Meuse river, much less Antwerp, he had succeeded in
- disrupting Allied offensive plans. Hitler ordered additional attacks
- on Bastogne. he continued to believe that the capture of Antwerp
- was a possibility. The situation continued to deteriorate however
- and Hitler was forced to face reality. Pessimistic reports continued to
- flow into his HQ. The final attack on Bastogne took place on January
- 3rd and 4th 1945. When it was again repulsed, Field Marshall Model,
- German overall commander in the Ardennes, ordered an SS panzer division
- north to defend against the attacks of the Allied First Army which
- had begun on January 3rd. On the 8th, Hitler authorised a withdrawal
- to the Ourthe River. On January 3rd Montgomerys assault made slow
- progress but by the 28th January , the Bulge was cleared. On Jan 12th
- the Russians had launched a major offensive and the 6th SS Panzer
- Army headed east.
-
- During December and January, the war in the West had taken a sudden
- turn as the Ardennes and Alsace-Lorraine exploded in the fury of close
- and desperate combat. The results were sobering to the Allies but
- disastrous to the Third Reich. By attacking in the Ardennes, Hitler
- had gambled on reaching Antwerp and had lost. Some 100,000 Germans
- had become casualties while the Americans suffered about 81,000.
- British casualties were 1,400. While Allied leaders had functioned
- well with the exception of the intelligence failure over German
- deception plans, the real heroes of the Bulge were the American
- soldiers. The American defence of Elsenborn Ridge,St.Vith,Bastogne,
- and Echternach proved this. Their resourceful defence gave those who
- controlled the mighty Allied war machine the time that was needed
- to shift forces to stop and eventually defeat the assault.
- When the battle ended, the Anglo-American coalition had remained
- intact and 4,000,000 troops in three army groups were poised on
- the border of Germany.
-