Patton and the Battle for Sicily

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1943 Mediterranean theater
A01=Flint Whitlock
Allied coalition warfare
Allied command conflict
Allied invasion 1943
Allied logistics planning
Allied strategic debate
American British rivalry
Anglo-American tensions
army navy coordination
Author_Flint Whitlock
Axis Dunkirk
British Eighth Army
Category=JWCD
Category=NHW
Category=NHWR7
combined Army Navy operations
command
Dwight D. Eisenhower
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_new_release
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
European Theater
German evacuation Sicily
H Kent Hewitt
Italian campaign origins
Italian fascist collapse
Italy
Mediterranean amphibious assault
Mediterranean campaign WWII
Mediterranean in WWII
Mediterranean naval operations
Montgomery
Montgomery rivalry
Mussolini
Mussolini downfall
naval gunfire support
North Africa to Italy
Overlord planning lessons
Patton biography WWII
second front strategy
Soviet pressure strategy
U.S. Army generals
US Army leadership WWII
World War II
WWII command politics
WWII operational lessons

Product details

  • ISBN 9781612516912
  • Dimensions: 152 x 228mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jan 2026
  • Publisher: Naval Institute Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Operation Husky, the combined American and British air and sea invasion of Sicily in July 1943, was one of World War II’s most critical campaigns with General George S. Patton Jr., inarguably America’s most dynamic, courageous, and controversial commander of World War II, at the center. In this new work, author Flint Whitlock covers the history of Operation Husky as it unfolded, with much of the Allied leadership facing internal conflict.

The largest amphibious assault to date came at a crucial moment, and both the planning and execution presented many conflicts for the Allies. Despite the success of Operation Torch in North Africa, the U.S. was still considered not fully tested or trusted by their British partners, and Stalin was clamoring for the Allies to open a second front to take the pressure off his Soviet Union.  

Patton's dreams of martial glory and his all-consuming desire to best his chief Allied rival, General Bernard Montgomery, head of the British Eighth Army, to the ultimate prize—the port of Messina—often clouded his judgment. His primary motivation, however, was to prove to “Monty” and other dismissive British generals that the American soldier was as good, if not better, than his British counterpart.

Using Patton’s personal letters and diaries, Whitlock reveals the scathing opinions he held of Montgomery and almost everyone else in the Allied hierarchy (Eisenhower, Marshall, Clark, Bradley, and Alexander, among others)—even Adm. H. Kent Hewitt, USN, whose Eighth Fleet carried Patton’s troops to the beaches and supported them once on shore. In fact, it was the guns from Hewitt’s warships that halted the fierce German and Italian attacks that nearly threw the Americans back into the sea.

From Tunisia to the landing beaches on the south coast of Sicily to the final fight for Messina, this book chronicles how Husky would prove pivotal for both sides. The operation was criticized by some historians as a wasteful effort by the Allies that squandered valuable troops and resources while allowing many of the Italian and German troops to escape in the battle’s final days—an “Axis Dunkirk.” Here, Whitlock makes the case that Husky caused the downfall of Benito Mussolini and the neutralization of fascist Italy, and opened the second front to help Stalin. Moreover, the fight for Sicily proved the worth of American soldiers and seamen—as well as combined Army-Navy planning and logistics capabilities. Ultimately, lessons learned from Husky would be integrated into the Operation Overlord plan launched against France’s Normandy coast the following year. 
 

Flint Whitlock, a former U.S. Army officer and Vietnam War veteran, is the award-winning author of seventeen books, the majority dealing with World War II. He has appeared on the History Channel and in numerous documentaries, leads battlefield tours, and was editor of WWII Quarterly magazine for twelve years. Notable titles include Desperate Valor: Triumph at Anzio (2018), Given Up for Dead: American POWs in the Nazi Concentration Camp at Berga (2005), and The Fighting First: The Untold Story of the Big Red One on D-Day (2004).

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