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Martinjmpr
12-16-2019, 11:26
Dec 16, 1944: Operation "Wacht am Rhein" (Watch on the Rhine) begins.

In the West it became known as the "Battle of the Bulge" and still ranks as the largest land battle in US Military history.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_the_Bulge

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Hitler's intent was to roll back the Allied front line, split the US and British forces, capture the port city of Antwerp, with the notion that this would force the Allies to seek a separate peace with him that would allow him to concentrate his efforts against the Soviet forces that were already approaching the Eastern frontier of Germany.

Germany was able to achieve complete strategic surprise by a combination of excellent radio security, complacency on the part of the Allies (who thought the war was almost over and some were planning on being "home by Christmas") and bad weather that grounded Allied aircraft and nullified one of the biggest advantages the Allies had, complete command of the air.

Despite their initial successes, the German forces were never able to achieve anywhere near the penetrations into the Allied lines that they had expected to, due to stubborn resistance by US forces, the quick reinforcement by the Allies, depleted fuel supplies, and other logistical problems. Furthermore, by Christmas day, the skies cleared and the Allies unleashed a massive aerial assault that mauled exposed German forces. The Allies were also able to resupply surrounded units by air which strengthened their resolve and allowed them to slow down or stop advancing German forces.

In the 6 weeks of the battle, which officially ended at the end of January, 1945, more than 19,000 American soldiers were killed and over 60,000 wounded with over 24,000 missing or captured (including author Kurt Vonnegut.) In terms of casualties, the Battle of the Bulge was the costliest battle for the US during the war. The US bore the brunt of the attack and British losses were considerably lighter. The Germans are estimated to have suffered between 81,000 and 120,000 casualties of which over 12,000 were killed.

It was the last German offensive of the war and depleted the last of Germany's dwindling supplies of ammunition and fuel. After the Bulge organized resistance on the Western front diminished considerably as Germany devoted it's last energies to trying to delay the Soviets in the East.

Gman
12-16-2019, 18:49
Some brutal winter combat with Allied troops that weren't supplied with adequate equipment for the conditions. Some really tough bastards that didn't know 'quit'.

jreifsch80
12-16-2019, 19:21
Last offensive of the war on the western front. The last major offensive of the war by the germans was operation spring awakening in march 1945 in hungary.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Spring_Awakening

iego
12-16-2019, 23:27
I used to sell Avalon Hill games, very early computer games, with names like "Battle of the Bulge."

I never understood quite what they were, but strategy games.

-John

dan512
12-16-2019, 23:38
I had a chance to get to know a gentleman who was there. He was a captain at the time. At one point he turned to give an order when a round impacted the grenade on his hip. He took shrapnel from the round, and I imagine some from the grenade, in the stomach. The guy laid in the snow for three days unconscious until some friendlies were able to get him out.
I got to know him in his 90's... guy was hard as a coffin nail.

Martinjmpr
12-17-2019, 09:14
Thank God Hitler was such a babbling, drug addicted idiot or things could have gone the other way. With England and France literally doing anything to keep Hitler happy until 1940 it made him look like a prophet to those pathetic German folk. With upwards of 7:1 kill ratios on the eastern front (82% of all T34s were destroyed by May 1945) and over 50% loss of transport Germany had a real chance of making a go of it against that sociopath Stalin. Luckily the US, Canada,England, and our other Allies kicked some serious ass and took care of bidness. A second front, an unbeatable Navy, a bombing campaign that hindered the German war effort, and Lend Lease to Russia (15% of all tanks and 500,000 vehicles) to keep them in the game spelled the end for Germany. All this while kicking the hell out of Japan at the same time. America is pretty amazing.

Yup. Absolute command of the air was key as well.

After D-Day the German soldiers even had some dark humor about their lack of an Air Force. They used to say "How do you identify the nationality of an airplane? Well, if it's blue it's British, if it's silver it's American, and if it's invisible it's ours."

If you are at all interested in WWII history I can't recommend Rick Atkinson's "Liberation Trilogy" enough. That is a series of 3 books about the US war effort in Europe. The first book is "An Army at Dawn" about the North Africa campaign (and what a monumental clusterf**k of an operation that was at the beginning), the second is "The Day of Battle" (about the Sicily and Italy campaigns) and the last one is "The Guns at Last Light" about the war in Northwestern Europe from D-Day to VE day. Well written and with a lot of details that tend to get glossed over by many modern historians.

OneGuy67
12-17-2019, 09:43
I was stationed in Germany in the 80's for a couple of years. The German winter cold is something to experience only once and to never forget. Goes right through you and penetrates into your bones. I spent more than a few days freezing in a foxhole during a ReForGer or other training, but I cannot imagine doing it for 6 weeks straight with no break, no heat, no proper winter clothing. Those men were something to be admired.