The Ardennes Battlefields: December 1944January 1945
English
By (author): Leo Marriott Simon Forty
Near-complete surprise was achieved thanks to a combination of Allied overconfidence, preoccupation with offensive plans, and poor reconnaissance. The Germans attacked where least expectedthe forested Ardennesa weakly defended section of the Allied line, taking advantage of the weather conditions, which grounded the Allies overwhelmingly superior air forces. The Allied response was magnificent. Initial reverses brought out the best of Eisenhowers armies, which fought with determination and grit against the enemy and the elements. The harsh battles are best summed up by the defense of the northern shoulder around the Elsenborn Ridge, the battle for St. Vith, and in the south the siege of Bastogne, where the towns commander, Gen. McAuliffe, rejected German calls for surrender with the pithy reply: Nuts.
Within ten days the German attack had been nullified. Patton, at the time planning an attack further south, wheeled his Third Army round in a brilliant maneuver that relieved Bastogne and set up a counterattack which would drive the Germans back behind the Rhine. The Ardennes Battlefields includes details of what can be seen on the ground todayhardware, memorials, museums, and cemeteriesusing a mixture of media to provide an overview of the campaign: maps old and new highlight what has survived and what hasnt; then and now photography allows fascinating comparisons with the images taken at the time; aerial photos give another angle to the story. The fifth book by Leo Marriott and Simon Forty provides a different perspective to this crucial battlefield. See more