Showing posts with label Wacht am Rhein. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wacht am Rhein. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 31, 2024

Sunday, December 31, 1944. Unternehmen Nordwind launched Ichi-Go concludes a success.

The Germans launched Operation Northwind (Unternehmen Nordwind), their last major offensive in the West.


The offensive in the Ardennes was designed to support Wacht am Rhine in Belgium.

Northwind is often overlooked in the story of Germany's 1944 effort, in part because it proved a pretty rapid failure.  It was, however, a major effort and designed to thrust German forces behind the Third Army.  It saw Himmler in operational control of a major part of the SS forces dedicated to the action.  1,000 aircraft were dedicated to the effort.

It's worth noting that the Western Allies, here and there, were outright in Germany by this time.  Germany's final offensive was itself launched on French territory the Germans had annexed.

Operation Ichi-Go concluded as a massive success for the Japanese Imperial Army, with huge sections of China having been taken.

Filipino general and guerilla leader Vicente Lim, age 56, a prisoner of war of the Japanese, was murdered along with 50 companions by the Japanese.

Lim had served in the Filipino army as a teenage ammo carrier during the Philippine Insurrection.  In 1910 he became the first Filipino to enter the United States Military Academy.  He served with the Philippine Scouts after graduating in 1914 and retired from the U.S. Army in 1936 so that he could join the new Philippine Army, where he became its senior officer.  He clashed with MacArthur in that role as he felt the building of the Philippine Army was occurring to rapidly for a quality force.  He became a guerilla leader with the fall of the country and was captured in 1944 when an attempt was being made to evacuate him from the islands.

The Soviet backed provisional government of Hungary declared war on Germany.

A Soviet backed provisional government was declared in Poland, with the claim contested by the Polish government in exile in London.

A misdirected RAF Mosquito raid on Oslo killed 78 Norwegian civilians, and 28 Germans.

The Grumman F8F Bearcat entered service.  Be that as it may, it came too late in the war to see combat in the Second World War, with its introduction into that coming during the French Indochina War.

The 100th Bomb Group lost 12 aircraft and 109 men during a mission to Hamburg, Germany. The mission was their lost one with heavy losses.

While it would have been more appropriate to enter it in an item for yesterday, The Saturday Evening Post made New Years Eve its them with a Rockwell illustration of a young sleeping woman in bed and photographs of Willie Gillis, Rockwell's average GI, on the wall behind her in different positions, with Gillis' eyes eagerly looking at her.  The illustration is nearly salacious.

Last edition:

Saturday, December 30, 1944. Reporting on the bomb.

Tuesday, December 24, 2024

Sunday, December 24, 1944. The high water mark of the German offensive.

The highwater mark of Wacht am Rhein was reached at Celles.  By the end of the day, the Germans had exhausted their offensive capabilities.



Gen. Frederick Castle performed the actions that resulted in his winning a posthumous Medal of Honor.
He was air commander and leader of more than 2,000 heavy bombers in a strike against German airfields on 24 December 1944. En route to the target, the failure of 1 engine forced him to relinquish his place at the head of the formation. In order not to endanger friendly troops on the ground below, he refused to jettison his bombs to gain speed maneuverability. His lagging, unescorted aircraft became the target of numerous enemy fighters which ripped the left wing with cannon shells, set the oxygen system afire, and wounded 2 members of the crew. Repeated attacks started fires in 2 engines, leaving the Flying Fortress in imminent danger of exploding. Realizing the hopelessness of the situation, the bail-out order was given. Without regard for his personal safety he gallantly remained alone at the controls to afford all other crewmembers an opportunity to escape. Still another attack exploded gasoline tanks in the right wing, and the bomber plunged earthward, carrying Gen. Castle to his death. His intrepidity and willing sacrifice of his life to save members of the crew were in keeping with the highest traditions of the military service.
Race riots broke out between black and white Marines on Guam.

The U-486 sank the Belgian troopship Léopoldville in the English Channel, killing 763 American soldiers and 56 crew. 

V1s killed 42 in Manchester, England.

Anti German and anti fascist Hungarian politician Endre Kálmán Bajcsy-Zsilinszky was executed.

Today In Wyoming's History: December 24:  1944   All beef products are again being rationed. New quotas are introduced for most other commodities as well.

Last edition:


Sunday, December 22, 2024

Friday, December 22, 1944. "Nuts!".

Bastogne was surrounded.

General Heinrich Freiherr von Lüttwitz, commander of German forces outside of Bastogne, sent a major, a lieutenant and two enlisted men to deliver an ultimatum to US forces.  The ultimatum, delivered to 101st artillery commander, Gen. Anthony McAuliffe, who was in command, read:

To the U.S.A. Commander of the encircled town of Bastogne.

The fortune of war is changing. This time the U.S.A. forces in and near Bastogne have been encircled by strong German armored units. More German armored units have crossed the river Ourthe near Ortheuville, have taken Marche and reached St. Hubert by passing through Hompre-Sibret-Tillet. Libramont is in German hands.

There is only one possibility to save the encircled U.S.A. troops from total annihilation: that is the honorable surrender of the encircled town. In order to think it over a term of two hours will be granted beginning with the presentation of this note.

If this proposal should be rejected one German Artillery Corps and six heavy A. A. Battalions are ready to annihilate the U.S.A. troops in and near Bastogne. The order for firing will be given immediately after this two hours term.

All the serious civilian losses caused by this artillery fire would not correspond with the well-known American humanity.

The German Commander.

McAuliffe read the note, crumpled it up, and muttered, "Aw, nuts" after realizing that the Germans were asking for a U.S. surrender, rather than the other way around. Lieutenant Colonel Harry Kinnard suggested that McAuliffe's response summed up the situation well and  reply was typed and delivered by Colonel Joseph Harper, commanding the 327th Glider Infantry, to the German delegation. It stated:

To the German Commander.

NUTS!

The American Commander.

The German commander was confused by the reply, understandably, and asked Harper what it meant. Harper replied; "In plain English? Go to hell."  McAuliffe himself never used profanity.

Slowed progress caused Guderian to recommend the German offensive in the Ardennes be halted.

Guderian and McAuliffe's assessment was realistic.  While from the outside the American situation appeared desperate, in fact it was not.  The German advance had been massively slowed by American resistance, including by relatively inexperienced troops.  At Bastogne the Germans now faced two airborne divisions which were used to being surrounded.


President Roosevelt signed the Flood Control Act of 1944.

A new provisional government was formed in Hungary.

The People's Army of Vietnam was formed.

Last edition:

Thursday, December 21, 1944. St. Vith taken.

Tuesday, December 17, 2024

Sunday, December 17, 1944. SS murders in Belgium.

 


Soldiers of SS Kampfgruppe Peiper murdered eighty-four U.S. prisoners of war at Malmedy.


Peiper survived the war and a death sentence for war crimes, which was commuted and oddly took up residence in France.  In spite of clear warnings that he should get out, he stayed, and was murdered himself on Bastille Day, 14 July 1976, by French communists who also set fire to his house.

Peiper is also associated with the 1943 Boves Massacre in Italy.

On the same day, eleven 11 African-American prisoners of war were murdered by members of the 1st SS Panzer Division at Wereth, Belgium.


The Germans took Lanzerath Ridge.  U.S. resistance held the Germans up for an entire day.  While the Germans were advancing, things were already going wrong.

Eisenhower released the 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions from reserve and committed them to the Ardennes.  Elements of the 12th Army Group were redeployed as well.

"An anti-tank gun is rapidly put into position in a forward area on the German-Belgium border, to repel a strong German counter attack in the First Army sector. 1st Battalion, 26th Infantry Regiment, 1st Infantry Division, V Corps, First U.S. Army. 17 December, 1944.

The Germans took 9,000 US pows at Ecternach.

The RAF hit Ulm in a nighttime raid for the first time.

The Army's Western Defense Command rescinded orders to incarcerate people of Japanese ancestry from the West coast.

Last edition:

Saturday, December 16, 1944. Wacht am Rhein

Monday, December 16, 2024

Saturday, December 16, 1944. Wacht am Rhein



Today In Wyoming's History: December 161944     German forces launched a surprise attack against Allied forces in Belgium.  The massive surprise attack commenced a three week long battle known to history as The Battle of the Bulge.

The offensive commenced at 05:30 with a massive 90 minute German artillery barrage against Allied troops facing the 6th Panzer Army, which was mistaken by the US as the beginning of a localized attack.  The 5th Panzer Army moved on Bastogne and St. Vith and the 7th towards Luxembourg.

The Germans committed over 400,000 men on day one, against a little over 200,000 Allied troops on that day.

The Germans took Kesternich, Belgium.

The German movement of forces for operations Wacht am Rhein, their offensive, was a massive success, although ultimately the offensive would turn out not to be.  Still, certain real peculiarities existed to Hitler's 1944 western winter offensive.

One was that the Wehrmacht had no clear outcome for the offensive.  While a theoretical one of cutting the Allies off in Belgium existed, there was no plan beyond that.  Moreover, the Wehrmacht estimated that its offensive could only last for a matter of a couple of weeks, by which time mechanical breakdowns would doom it.  Therefore it was a massive late war expenditure of offensive firepower.

Perhaps given that, contrary to the general myth, the Allies never regarded the situation as being as dire as myth would have it. While the situation was bad, the Allies always expected to be able to get the situation in control and regarded it more as a local operation.  Many Allied officers who participated in it were surprised to learn later on how it was reported in the US.

Finally, George S. Patton had already anticipated the German move in a general sort of way, reasoning that the Germans had not attempted a winter offensive since Frederick the Great, and therefore, they would.

I knew one man relatively well who had served as an artilleryman in the battle.  He was a forward observer.  He was able to save his feat as he'd kept his rubber overshoes, saying as a Nebraska farm boy, he'd been taught never to throw anything away.  Men of his unit would built a fire over an artillery shell dump not realizing what it was, and touch the ammunition off, killing them.

As a boy, I recall my father pointing out an old rancher downtown.  He was wearing classic cowboy boots with a doggin (high slopped) heel.  He walked in a very crippled fashion.  My father noted that he'd frozen his feet in the Battle of the Bulge, and then again in the winter of 49, saving cattle.

The Allies prevailed at Mindoro.

Mussolini delivered what would be his last speech and what amounted to his political last will and testament.
Comrades! Dear Comrades of Milan!

I shall dispense with any preamble and enter immediately into the heart of the subject matter of my speech.

Sixteen months after the date of the terrible unconditional surrender imposed and accepted in accordance with the democratic and criminal formula of Casablanca, the evaluation of these events brings us, once again, these questions: Who is guilty of betrayal? Who has suffered or is suffering the consequences of this treachery? Let us be quite clear, it is not a matter of a judgment of historical revision, and much less is it a matter that is in any way justifiable. Some neutralists have attempted to do so, but we categorically reject this in the strongest sense, in addition to the source from which it originates.

Who then are the traitors? The unconditional surrender announced on September 8 was desired by the monarchy, by court circles, by the plutocratic currents of the Italian bourgeoisie, by certain clerical forces—who allied for the occasion with Masonic ones—and by the General Staff which no longer believed in victory and which were headed by Badoglio. As early as May, more precisely on May 15, the ex-King noted in his diary—which has recently come into our possession—that one must "disengage" from the German alliance. Without a shadow of doubt, it was the ex-King who ordered the surrender, and Badoglio who carried it out. But in order to get to September 8, there first had to be a July 25—i.e., the coup d'etat and the regime change.

The justification for the surrender—that is, the impossibility of continuing the war—was denied forty days later, on October 13, when war was declared against Germany. That declaration was no mere symbolic act. From that time on there has been collaboration between Badoglio's Italy and the Allies, carried on behind the lines by labour units; while the fleet, which had been built in its entirety by Fascism, passed completely into the hands of the enemy and immediately began to operate with the enemy fleets. Thus, it was not peace, but rather continuation of the war by means of so-called co-belligerency. It was not peace, but rather the transformation of the entire territory of the nation into one immense battlefield—and that is to say, one immense field of ruins. It was not peace, but rather the now predicted participation of Italian ships and troops in the war against Japan.

From all of this it is clear that those who have suffered the consequences of the betrayal are, first of all, the Italian people. It can be declared that the Italian people did not commit treason toward the German ally. Except for a few isolated instances, the Army units disbanded without offering any resistance to orders coming from the German commands to disarm. Many Army units that were located outside the Fatherland, and many Air Force units, rallied at once to the side of the German forces—and this was true of tens of thousands of men. All the formations of the Militia, except for one battalion in Corsica, went over—every last man of them—to the side of the Germans.

. . . It must be recognized that the betrayals of the Summer of 1944 were even more opprobrious, as Romanians, Bulgarians and Finns, having also ignominiously capitulated, and one of them, the Bulgarians, without having fired a single shot, in a span of 24 hours switched sides and, with all their mobilized forces, began to attack the Germans, who had to make a difficult and bloody retreat.

Now that was a true betrayal in the most repugnant sense of the term!

What transpired in Italy pales in comparison to the betrayal of these other nations.

The Italian people have suffered to such an extent that I do not hesitate to call it superhuman. Moreover, while a portion of the Italian people accepted the surrender as a result of either irresponsibility or exhaustion, another portion lined up immediately alongside Germany.

It is time to tell our Italian, German and Japanese comrades that the contribution made by Republican Italy to the common cause since September 1943—despite the temporary reduction in size of the Republic's territory—has been far greater than is commonly believed.

For obvious reasons, I cannot go into detailed statistics regarding the total contribution made by Italy in both the economic and military sectors. Our collaboration with the Reich, in terms of soldiers and workers, is represented by this figure: 786,000 men as of September 30. This fact is incontrovertible, since it comes from German sources. One should add to this the formerly interned military personnel—that is to say, several hundred thousand men involved in Germany's productive process—and other tens of thousands of Italians who already were in the Reich, where they had gone in recent years as free labourers in the factories and fields. In the face of this evidence, Italians who live in the territory of the Social Republic have the right, once and for all, to raise their heads and demand that their effort be fairly judged in a comradely manner by all members of the Tripartite Pact.

. . . In 1945 Italy's participation in the war will have major developments, through the gradual strengthening of our military organizations, entrusted to the firm faith and proven experience of that brave soldier by the name of Marshal Rodolfo Graziani.

. . . On September 15, 1943, the National Fascist Party became the Republican Fascist Party. At that time there was no shortage of sick and opportunistic elements—or perhaps they were in a state of mental confusion—who wondered if it would not have been wiser to eliminate the word "Fascism," and to place the accent exclusively on the word "Republic". I rejected then, just as I would reject today, that useless and cowardly suggestion.

It would have been both cowardice and an error to lower our banner which had been consecrated by so much blood, and to allow those ideas that are serving today as the password in the intercontinental struggle to circulate almost as though they were contraband.

Thus by continuing to call ourselves Fascists, as we shall always do, and by dedicating ourselves to the cause of Fascism as we have done since 1919 until the present, we have given, in the wake of recent events, a new thrust to action in both the political and the social fields. Actually, more than a new thrust; one might better say, a return to original positions. It is a matter of historical record that prior to 1922 Fascism had republican tendencies, and the reasons why the insurrection of 1922 spared the Monarchy have already been explained.

From the social standpoint, the program of Republican Fascism is but the logical continuation of the program of 1919—of the achievements of the splendid years that took place between the announcement of the Labour Charter and the conquest of the empire. Nature does not operate by leaps; and the economy even less so.

It was necessary first to build a foundation of syndical legislation and corporative bodies before we could take the subsequent step toward socialization. Even at the first meeting of the Council of Ministers on September 27, 1943, I declared that "the Republic would be unitary in the political field and decentralized in the administrative field... and determine the place, function, and responsibility of labour in a truly modern national society."

. . . During the month of October I drafted and revised that document now known in Italian political history as the "Manifesto of Verona", which laid out in several fairly determined points the program—not so much of the Party, but of the Republic. This occurred more precisely on November 15, two months after the reconstitution of the Republican Fascist Party.

The National Assembly of the Republican Fascist Party [i.e. the Congress of Verona] promulgated the Manifesto as an eighteen-point program, after saluting those who died for the Fascist cause, and after reaffirming as a supreme necessity the reorganization of the Armed Forces and the continuation of the war alongside the powers of the Tripartite Pact.

. . . The Manifesto began with the demand to convene the Constituent Assembly, and further defined this Constituent Assembly as "a synthesis of the nation's values".

Now, admittedly, the Constituent Assembly has not been convened. This demand has not been realized so far because it can only be realized once the war is over. I say to you with the utmost sincerity that I found it unsuitable to convene a Constituent Assembly when the territory of the Republic—in light of ongoing military operations—could in no way be considered definitive. It seemed to me premature to create a genuine rule of law in the fullness of all its institutions, when there was no Armed Forces to support it. A State that does not have an Armed Forces is anything but a State.

It was said in the Manifesto that no citizen can be held beyond seven days without a court order from the judicial authorities. This has not always been followed. The reasons are to be found in the plurality of our police authorities and allies, and in the actions of outlaws; the problem has persisted due to the ongoing civil war, which is plagued by reprisals and counter-reprisals. Regarding these incidents, the anti-Fascists have unleashed a wave of propaganda, in the usual fashion, attempting to depict the situation as though every incident were the same. I must declare in the most explicit way that some of the methods that have been used are deeply repugnant to me, even if isolated. The State, as such, can not adopt methods which denigrate it. For centuries we have spoken of the law of retaliation. Well then, it is a law, not an arbitrary personal will.

Mazzini, the uncompromising apostle of the Republican idea, sent a commissioner to Ancona in 1849, in the early days of the Roman Republic, to teach the Jacobins that it was permissible to fight the papalini, but never to go outside the law by killing them or stealing silverware from their homes. Whoever does such things, especially if by chance he is a card-carrying member of the Party, deserves double condemnation.

. . . The Congress of Verona, starting with the eighth point, outlined its position on foreign policy. It was solemnly declared that the essential purpose of the Republic's foreign policy is "the unity, independence and territorial integrity of the Fatherland. The territory in question comprises the maritime and alpine borders marked in nature, as well as the borders consecrated by sacrifice of blood and by history."

Concerning this territorial unity, I refuse—knowing Sicily and our Sicilian brothers—to take seriously the so-called separatist movements of despicable mercenaries financed by the enemy. Perhaps this separatism has another motive: perhaps our Sicilian brothers may want to break away from Bonomi's Italy in order to join up with Republican Italy.

It is my profound conviction that as soon as the struggles are behind us and the phenomenon of criminal outlawry is liquidated, the moral unity of the Italians tomorrow will be infinitely stronger than it was yesterday, because it will have been cemented by exceptional sufferings that have not spared a single family. And when the soul of a people is saved through moral unity, its territorial integrity and its political independence are also saved.

At this point a word should be said about Europe and our conception of it. I shall not linger over the question of what is Europe, of where it begins and where it ends from a geographical standpoint. Nor shall I speculate whether an attempt at unification today would have better success than previous ones. That would lead me too far astray. I shall say here only that the formation of a European community is desirable and perhaps even possible, but I must say very explicitly that we do not feel we are Italians because we are Europeans; rather we feel we are Europeans because we are Italians. The distinction is not just a subtlety; it is fundamental.

Just as the nation is the result of millions of families who possess their own physiognomy even though they also possess a national common denominator, so in the European community every nation must join as a well-defined entity in order to avoid letting the community itself sink into internationalism of a socialist stamp or vegetate into the generic, equivocal cosmopolitanism of Jewish and Masonic stamp.

While some points in the Verona program have been skipped over by a succession of military events, more concrete achievements have been realized in the economic and social field.

Here the innovation has radical aspects. The eleventh, twelfth and thirteenth points of the Manifesto of Verona are fundamental. Set forth in the "Premise for a New Italian Economic Structure," they have found their practical application in the Law on Socialization. The interest aroused throughout the world has been truly great, and today in all quarters—even in that part of Italy dominated and tortured by the Anglo-Americans—every political program contains the demand for socialization.

Workers who at first were somewhat skeptical now understand the importance of it. Its implementation is in progress. Its rhythm would have been faster in other times. But the seed has been sown. Whatever happens, this seed is bound to germinate. It is the inauguration of that which eight years ago, here in Milan before 500,000 cheering people, I prophesied would be the "century of labour," in which the labourer would emerge from the economic and moral status of a wage earner to assume the role of a producer who is personally involved in the development of the nation's economy and prosperity.

Fascist socialization is the logical and rational solution that, on the one hand, avoids the bureaucratization of the economy through State totalitarianism [i.e. Bolshevism] and, on the other, overcomes the individualism of the liberal economic system which, though it proved to be a useful instrument for progress in the early phase of the capitalistic form of economics, is today no longer suitable in the face of new demands of a "social" character in the various national communities.

Through socialization, the best elements drawn from the ranks of the workers will be able to demonstrate their talents. I am determined to continue in this direction.

I have already entrusted two sectors to the various categories of labourers: local administration and food distribution. These sectors, which are very important and especially so under present circumstances, are already completely in the hands of the workers. Now they must show, and I hope that they will show, their specific preparation and their civic consciousness.

As you can see, something has been accomplished during these twelve months, in the midst of incredible and growing difficulties brought about by the objective circumstances of the war and by blind opposition from those elements who have sold out to the enemy.

In very recent days the situation has improved. The fence-sitters, i.e. those who were waiting on the side lines for the Anglo-Americans to come, are in decline. What has happened in Bonomi's Italy has brought them disillusionment. Everything that the Anglo-Americans promised them has turned out to be a miserable propagandistic trick.

I think I am right when I declare that the people of the Po Valley not only do not want the arrival of the Anglo-Saxons; they scorn them. And they do not want to have anything to do with a government which—even though it has Togliatti as a vice-premier—would bring back to the north the reactionary, plutocratic and dynastic forces, of which the latter are already openly enjoying the protection of England.

How ridiculous are those Republicans who oppose the Republic as proclaimed by Mussolini and succumb to the monarchy commissioned by Churchill. Which demonstrates irrefutably that the Savoy monarchy is in the service of Great Britain, not of Italy!

There is no doubt that the fall of Rome is a climatic date in the history of the war. General Alexander himself stated on the eve of the landing in France that it was necessary to have a victory tied to a great name. And there is no greater or more universally known name than Rome. Thus the fall of Rome created an encouraging atmosphere for the Allies.

There was a period when the conquest of Paris and Brussels, coupled with the unconditional surrender of Romania, Finland and Bulgaria, gave rise to a movement of such euphoria that—according to the media—it was believed that the war would be practically over by this Christmas, with the triumphal entry of the Allies into Berlin.

During that period of euphoria many began to mock and undervalue the new German weapons, which are improperly called "secret". Many believed that through the use of such weapons, at some point, by merely pressing a button, the war would abruptly end. Such a misunderstanding is juvenile when it is not malicious. There are no "secret weapons", but only new weapons which, needless to say, are only secret as long as they are not used in combat. That such weapons do exist is well known from the bitter findings of the British . . . thousands of German scientists are working day and night to increase the war potential of Germany.

Meanwhile the German resistance is getting stronger and many illusions cultivated by enemy propaganda have disappeared. There are no cracks in the morale of the German people, who are fully aware that their very physical existence and their future as a race is at stake. There is no hint of rebellion or even unrest among the millions and millions of foreign workers, despite the insistent appeals and proclamations by the American generals. An eloquent indicator of the nation's spirit is the percentage of volunteers, who almost form an entire class of their own. Germany is able to resist and to foil the enemy's plans.

Minimizing the loss of territories, won and kept at the price of blood, is not an intelligent tactic, but the purpose of war is not the conquest or preservation of territories but rather the destruction of enemy forces, i.e. their surrender and therefore the cessation of hostilities.

Now the German Armed Forces are not only not destroyed, but they are in a phase of increasing development and power.

. . . Without exaggerating, it can be observed that the political situation today is not favourable to the Allies.

First of all in America, as in England, there are currents opposed to the demand for unconditional surrender. The formula of Casablanca means the death of millions of young people, since it prolongs the war indefinitely; peoples such as the Germans and the Japanese will never deliver themselves hands and feet tied to the enemy, who openly admit their plans to destroy the Tripartite countries.

One day a Soviet ambassador to Rome, Vladimir Potemkin, said to me: "The First World War bolshevized Russia, the second will bolshevize Europe." This prophecy will not come true, but if it did happen, then the responsibility would fall primarily on Britain.

Politically Albion is already defeated. Russian armies are on the Vistula and the Danube, i.e. they are occupying half of Europe. The Communist parties, i.e. the parties that are being financed by Stalin and which are following his orders, already have partial power in Western countries.

What does "liberation" mean in Belgium, Italy and Greece? They keep using this word in their newspapers. It means misery, despair, civil war.

. . . Churchill wanted a zone of influence reserved for democracy in Western Europe backed by a pact between France, England, Belgium, Holland and Norway, first in an anti-German role and then anti-Russian.

The Stalin-De Gaulle agreements immediately stifled this idea, which had been put forward, under London's instructions, by the Belgian Spaak. The game has failed and Churchill must be biting his hat, thinking of the Russian entry into the Mediterranean and Russian pressure on Iran, and wondering whether the Casablanca policy has not been one of complete failure for "poor old England".

Pressed by the two military giants of East and West, by their insolent voracious cousins across the Atlantic and the inexhaustible Eurasians, Great Britain sees that their game has endangered their imperial future. That the "political" relations of the Allies are not in the best of shape is demonstrated by the grueling preparation of a new conference.

Let me now speak of far and near Japan. What is more than certain, indeed dogmatic, is that the Empire of the Rising Sun will never bend and will fight until victory. In recent months Japanese weapons have been crowned with great successes.

. . . The will and soul of Japan is demonstrated by all the volunteers who give up their lives. Tens of thousands of young people have as their motto: "Every instrument is an enemy ship". And they prove it. Faced with this superhumanly heroic resolve, one can understand the attitude of certain American circles, who are now wondering whether it would have been better for the Americans if Roosevelt had kept the promise he made to the American mothers that no soldier would be sent to fight and die overseas. He lied, as is customary in all democracies.

For us Italians of the Republic, it is a source of pride to have at our side faithful comrades such as the soldiers, sailors and airmen of the Tenno Heika, whose imposing exploits have gained the admiration of the world.

Now I ask you: do not the Italians—healthy Italians, the best, who regard dying for their country as the eternity of life—still have the same determined spirit of self-sacrifice? Has it become extinct? (The crowd shouts: "No! No!") Let me remind you of an event from the last war, of an Italian aviator who, unable to shoot down an enemy aircraft, decided to collide his plane into the enemy's aircraft, killing himself and taking his opponent with him. Do you remember his name? He was a humble sergeant: Arturo Dell'Oro.

In 1935, when England wanted to suffocate us in our sea, I took up the gauntlet and sent well over 400,000 legionaries into Africa, despite the threatening presence of Her Britannic Majesty's Navy, anchored in the ports of the Mediterranean. Then in Italy, at Rome, the death squadrons were formed. I must tell you, in truth, that the first on the list was the Commander of the Air Force. Well then, if tomorrow it became necessary to replenish these death squadrons, if tomorrow it became necessary to show that the blood of the Roman legionaries still flows in our veins, would my appeal to the nation fall on deaf ears? (The crowd responds: "No!")

We intend to defend the Po Valley tooth and nail. (Shouts of "Yes!") We intend that the Po Valley shall remain republican while we wait for all of Italy to become republican. (Enthusiastic shouts of "Yes!" "All!") If the day should ever come when the entire Po Valley is contaminated by the enemy, the destiny of the entire nation will be compromised. But I sense, I see, that tomorrow a form of armed and irresistible organization will arise that will render life practically impossible for the invaders. We should make out of the entire Po Valley a single Athens! (The crowd erupts in unanimous shouts of approval: "Yes! Yes!")

From what I have told you, it is obvious that not only has the enemy coalition not won; it will not win. The monstrous alliance between plutocracy and Bolshevism was able to perpetrate its barbaric war like the execution of an enormous crime, and it has struck crowds of innocent people and destroyed what European civilization created over a span of twenty centuries. But it shall not succeed in destroying with its darkness the eternal spirit that built these monuments.

Our absolute faith in victory rests not on motives of a subjective or sentimental nature, but on positive and determined elements. If we were to doubt our victory, we should have to deny the existence of God who rules the destinies of man according to justice.

When we as soldiers of the Republic re-establish contact with the Italians on the other side of the Apennines, we shall have the pleasant surprise of finding more Fascism there than we left behind. The disillusionment, the misery, the political and moral abjection are exploding not only in the old phrase, "We were better off...," but in the revolts which from Palermo to Catania, and from Otranto to Rome itself, are creeping through every portion of "liberated" Italy.

The Italian people south of the Apennines have their spirits full of burning nostalgia. Enemy oppression on the one hand and the bestial persecution by the Allied Government on the other cannot help but give nourishment to the Fascist movement. It was easy to erase the external symbols; but to suppress the idea is impossible! (The crowd shouts, "Never!")

The six anti-Fascist parties are bustling to proclaim that Fascism is dead, because they sense that it is alive. Millions of Italians are comparing yesterday with today; yesterday, when the banner of the Fatherland was waving from the Alps to Equatorial Somalia, and Italians were one of the most respected peoples on earth.

There is no Italian who does not feel his heart beat faster at the sound of an African name, at the sound of a hymn that accompanied the legions from the Mediterranean to the Red Sea, at the sight of a colonial helmet. There are millions of Italians who from 1929 to 1939 lived through what can be called the epic poetry of the Fatherland. These Italians still exist; they are suffering, and they still believe and are ready to close ranks to resume the march in order to reconquer all that was lost and is today garrisoned between the dunes of Libya and the tropical fruit trees of Ethiopia by thousands and thousands of casualties, the flower of innumerable Italian families who have not forgotten and are unable to forget.

Already the signs signaling this resumption can be seen, especially here in this city of Milan, which is always at the forefront and warlike, and which the enemy has savagely struck but not in the least subdued.

Comrades! Dear Milanese comrades! It is Milan which must give, and shall give, the men, the arms, the will, and the signal of resurgence!

George Marshall was promoted to five star rank, the second American officer to receive that grade, making him junior, in spite of his position.  In many ways, however, Marshall was the greatest man to receive five star rank, and indeed, if overall senior status is considered, second only to George Washington, and more significant than Pershing, who technically outranks him, and on whose staff he served in World War One.


Marshall never held a combat command.

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Thursday, October 24, 2024

Tuesday, October 24, 1944. Leyte Gulf, day two.

It was a major day of naval maneuvering off of Leyte Gulf.


The USS Princeton was hit by kamikazes and so badly damaged that it had to be scuttled.  The Japanese destroyer Wakaba was sunk by aircraft from the USS Franklin.  The Musashi was sunk in the Sibuyan Sea by U.S. aircraft.  T he USS Shark was sunk by Japanese warships.  The USS Darter ran aground in the Palawan Strait and was scuttled.

The Japanese prison ship Arisan Maru was sunk in the South China Sea by an American submarine. Only nine of the 1,781 Allied and civilian prisoners of war survived the sinking.

The 1st Cavalry Division landed on Samar.

Martial law was lifted in Hawaii.

The Soviets prevailed in the Riga Offensive.

The British entered Lamia, Greece.

The China Burma India Theatre was divided into the India-Burma Theater and the China Theater.

Hitler announces his intent to launch an offensive in the Ardennes.

Blood plasma refrigeration unit above was mounted on wheeled machine gun mount by enlisted men serving in France with the 1st Army since D-Day. S/Sgt. Homer N. Shrimplin, of Jelloway, Ohio, and Pvt. Frank Bozoyak, of Bordentown, N.J., are hitching the unit to their truck. 24 October, 1944.

Japanese-American infantrymen attend church services outside their billet in France. 24 October, 1944. 442nd Regimental Combat Team.

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Monday, October 23, 1944. The Largest Naval Battle In History.


Wednesday, September 25, 2024

Monday, September 25, 1944. Withdrawal at Arnhem.

British airborne POWs at Arnhem.  By Bundesarchiv, Bild 183-S73820 / CC-BY-SA 3.0, CC BY-SA 3.0 de, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=5369460

Operation Market Garden failed to achieve its final objective at Arnhem and the British 1st Airborne was ordered to evacuate at night across the Rhine.  Only 2,400 men of the 10,000 that dropped into fight at the city were recovered.  1,100 were killed in the battle.  6.400 were captured.  A few remained hidden in Arnhem with Dutch families.

The battle achieved legendary status with the British nearly immediately, and was memorialized in a 1946 movie featuring many original British combatants entitled Theirs Is The Glory.  In spite of the significant American role, the battle tended to be ignored by American historians until 1974's book A Bridge Too Far by popular historian Cornelius Ryan, which was turned into a major movie in 1977.  

Operation Market Garden has been a matter of enduring controversy in military history circles.  It was an unusually bold plan for Montgomery, but it also emphasized his own forces, with the addition of available American airborne, for what was essentially a very long strike for a roundabout path into Germany based on a narrow advance over a single road, and depending upon all of the bridges that were targeted being taken.  If things had worked perfectly, it's doubtful that it would have brought the war to a conclusion in 1944, as was hoped, as the Germans, after the fall of France, were effectively regrouping for the defense of Germany.

It tends to be portrayed as an overall failure, which in many ways it was.  It did, however, liberate much of the Netherlands, although it helped to create the tactical scenario which gave rise to the German offensive in Belgium in December.  At the same time, however, Wacht am Rhein, which had already been approved, arguably only achieve a wasting of German resources in the final month of the war.  Moreover, if the offensive was a defeat, as some claim, it bears comparison to the treatment of the Battle of Anzio, which was arguably on part with it as a failure but which is not regarded as a defeat, or the delayed taking of Caen.

The British 2nd Army took Helmond and Deurne east of Eindhoven.  The Canadian 3d Division attacked trapped German troops in Calais.

The British urged foreign workers and slave laborers in Germany to rebel.

The Red Army took Haapsalu, Estonia on the Baltic.

Hitler ordered the formation of the Volkssturm, the militia formed of civilian men.

Partisans occupied Banja Luka, Yugoslavia.

Harvard announced that for the first time it would admit women to medical school starting in the fall of 1945.

Claire Poe of Miami Beach appeared on the cover of a Life magazine special issue entitled "A Letter to GI's" because she was attractive in the girl next store sort of way.  She was only 18, which is interesting to Generation Jones members like myself, as she clearly looked much more mature than 18 year old girls did when I was 18.

Life revealed that she'd just entered college with hopes of becoming a math teacher, and was corresponding to a Sergeant in Puerto Rico and an Ensign at Fort Lauderdale.

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Sunday, September 24, 1944. Market Garden reaches the Rhine.