Watch, Patton to learn a lot about this.
That battle made a legend of the 101st Airborne and of Patton's rescue of them.. Great gallantry from both.
Another delusional hail Mary by Hitler.
If you kept your nerve, Hitler would usually bail you out with one of his decisions.
And right afterward, the Luftwaffe metaphorically threw itself on the barbed wire, never to recover.
Operation Bodenplatte
I dunno, the larger goal was a good idea, but it did hinge on taking Bastogne. Single point failures in battle plans are often overlooked.
Bodenplatte failed because the Luftwaffe were so afraid of leaks that they failed to tell the flak crews what was coming. It's estimated that 30% of the German losses were to their own AAA because of this.
It has been aptly described as "Hitler's Last Gamble" and had little chance of succeeding. The attack was not made in enough strength, the objective-Antwerp-was much too far away, the Germans weak logistical and transport plan quickly broke down.
To put the offensive in context, it is important to understand what "succeeding" meant to the Germans.
There was the fundamental misconception on Hitler's part that the Alliance was at a breaking point. The goal wasn't so much to "defeat" the Western Allies, but to demonstrate the remaining German strength and maybe convince them to come to terms with Germany and, in the hopes of quite a few Nazi leaders, to join the fight against Bolshevism.
There is an untold story about the Battle of the Bulge, recently revealed in Rick Atkinson's liberation trilogy. The Army steadfastly refused to use its most devastating weapon until faced with possible defeat from the German counterattack. What was it? The revolutionary Pozifuse. The Army feared a dud would fall into German hands and be quickly reverse engineered. The Navy had been using the weapon on anti-aircraft artillery with devastating effect on Japanese aircraft. The Pozifuse increased the hit probability by an order or magnitude. Proximity air burst rendered formerly safe trench emplacements far less safe. Artillery was the key advantage the Allies had in northern Europe. Airdales will dispute this, but we had no effective air launched weapons against heavy armor or dispersed troops. The Pozifuse changed this. German infantry refused to climb out of deep entrenchments for fear of air burst shrapnel. Another little known fact is that Julius and Ethel Rosenberg passed Pozifuse intelligence to the Russians.
I enjoy reading about this stuff now that governments and militaries are beginning to release classified documents. They spent a lot of effort protecting reputations by burying inconvenient stories and making up others.
I was reading the paper and as usual I read the obit's . A gentleman by the name of Frank E Kipp had died and I started reading . He had been at the Battle of the Bulge and survived with severe wounds . I'm sure there's not many of these brave soldiers left , and that's a shame . They put it all on the line knowing there wasn't much of a chance of living . They truly were a big part of the " Greatest Generation ."
.... the US troops who faced the first onslaught, delayed the Germans with tenacious defenses, and made the stand at Bastogne possible.
There is an untold story about the Battle of the Bulge, recently revealed in Rick Atkinson's liberation trilogy. The Army steadfastly refused to use its most devastating weapon until faced with possible defeat from the German counterattack. What was it? The revolutionary Pozifuse. The Army feared a dud would fall into German hands and be quickly reverse engineered. The Navy had been using the weapon on anti-aircraft artillery with devastating effect on Japanese aircraft. The Pozifuse increased the hit probability by an order or magnitude. Proximity air burst rendered formerly safe trench emplacements far less safe. Artillery was the key advantage the Allies had in northern Europe. Airdales will dispute this, but we had no effective air launched weapons against heavy armor or dispersed troops. The Pozifuse changed this. German infantry refused to climb out of deep entrenchments for fear of air burst shrapnel. Another little known fact is that Julius and Ethel Rosenberg passed Pozifuse intelligence to the Russians.
I enjoy reading about this stuff now that governments and militaries are beginning to release classified documents. They spent a lot of effort protecting reputations by burying inconvenient stories and making up others.
There is an untold story about the Battle of the Bulge, recently revealed in Rick Atkinson's liberation trilogy. The Army steadfastly refused to use its most devastating weapon until faced with possible defeat from the German counterattack. What was it? The revolutionary Pozifuse. The Army feared a dud would fall into German hands and be quickly reverse engineered. The Navy had been using the weapon on anti-aircraft artillery with devastating effect on Japanese aircraft. The Pozifuse increased the hit probability by an order or magnitude. Proximity air burst rendered formerly safe trench emplacements far less safe. Artillery was the key advantage the Allies had in northern Europe. Airdales will dispute this, but we had no effective air launched weapons against heavy armor or dispersed troops. The Pozifuse changed this. German infantry refused to climb out of deep entrenchments for fear of air burst shrapnel. Another little known fact is that Julius and Ethel Rosenberg passed Pozifuse intelligence to the Russians.
There seems to be in war, surviving it, then don't talk about it. My stepdad was in Korea never said a word about it. My buddies were in nam don't talk about. I guess things are better left unsaid...