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The Story of the Legendary General George S. Patton

I've read 48 Hours to Hammelburg, though it's been several decades. There is no leader that I know of who hasn't made mistakes intentional or unintentional. This was a pretty sad state of affairs. One thing I don't remember, it the involvement or not of the 4th Armored Division chain of command. TF Baum was commanded by a Captain, Abe Baum. As far as getting the orders and coordinating for support, what were the actions of his battalion commander, the combat command (what we call a brigade now) commander, the division commander? That an aspect I'd like to revisit.
 
Pure warrior, something sorely lacking in today's Army. You don't make general unless you play politics. Have a one star as a good friend, he is a warrior and I watched him rise through the ranks. Never got another star for that reason, didn't play the political games.
 
I had five uncles on my dad’s side (and others on my mother’s) that served in WW2. One of them was in the 3rd Army under Patton…. Utah Beach thru Dec 45. He was an NCO, and had nothing good to say about Patton. Well after the war ended (and before Patton was killed, of course), he was demoted one rank because Patton observed him driving his truck without wearing his helmet.
Didn’t make sense to my uncle, but I’m sure Patton patted himself on the back that night.

He may have been a good General for the country but not convinced he was a great leader for his men.
That's called discipline, some folks in the military think they are exempt of orders and SOPs.
 
That is so true! He wasn't going to let anyone not follow his orders, didn't matter who! If that same discipline today we might not have had the end of every war we have been involved in since WW2! We let generals in the Pentagon call the shots and not give a hoot about the bloodshed of our soldiers, take my generation, we could have easily won Vietnam a number of times, but at the last minute the bombing and shelling was called off and the troops were left exposed! Seemed like nobody. in country was able to make a decision without pentagon approval!
 
That is so true! He wasn't going to let anyone not follow his orders, didn't matter who! If that same discipline today we might not have had the end of every war we have been involved in since WW2! We let generals in the Pentagon call the shots and not give a hoot about the bloodshed of our soldiers, take my generation, we could have easily won Vietnam a number of times, but at the last minute the bombing and shelling was called off and the troops were left exposed! Seemed like nobody. in country was able to make a decision without pentagon approval!
As a Vietnam vet, I can attest to that. The military was never allowed to prosecute the war the way it should have. There is no doubt that we could have won the war. US forces, whether they were Army, Marines, or Navy ever lost an engagement. During the Tet offensive by the North Vietnamese, we literally destroyed the Viet Cong and they never were an organized fighting force after Tet. The war was run completely from the oval office with LBJ running the show.As far as the politicians were concerned we were not supposed to win the war, but rather to maintain the status quo. The reason I say that is we were not allowed to cross the DMZ and hold territory. And as far as the bombing of North Vietnam goes, it was completely controlled by LBJ while sitting at his desk in the oval office.
 
So, let me make sure I've got this right.

Ike sent Gen (ret) Ridgeway to VN to get an assessment of the situation and upon his return said it would take 500,000 troops committed soonest and meanwhile send in the New Jersey battle group and start shelling Haiphong harbor. Ike said no land war in Asia and maintained the level 500 advisors.

- JFK based on the advice from his best and brightest, increased the "advisors" to 15,000 not including aviation support. The escalation starts.

- LBJ introduced troops into theater, never declared a national emergency to enact stop loss so units went into battle at half-strength. Strength peaked at about 540,000 (Ridgeway was pretty correct in his estimate), but again these came in piece meal. The military hierarchy had no synchronized strategy or ops. It is correct that LBJ picked out bombing targets since the generals went into his office and offered his the opportunity to do so. I would have fired the lot of them, especially Westmoreland.

- Nixon gets elected, puts Gen. Creighton Abrams in charge and the Army attacks into Cambodia and conducts one of the most successful large scale offensives in history. Problem was it should have been done in 1965 not 1970. The purpose of the offense was to push back the enemy to give us breathing room to negotiate for peace and start our withdrawal. The war at this point was unsustainable from a political and public opinion standpoint. Every casualty became fodder in the evening news with no progress to show for it.

So, Ike kept us out, JFK started sneaking us in, LBJ and know nothing generals made this a strategic and operational circus. Nixon and Abrams pushed back and gave us breathing room to withdraw. Winning was effectively off the table in 1966. BTW, we did the same thing in Iraq with the surge having initially invaded with an outnumbered force ill suited for a long campaign.

Final point - the "we didn't lose a single engagement" is a myth. Look up LZ Mary Ann and LZ Albany. Both were slaughters.
 
So, let me make sure I've got this right.

Ike sent Gen (ret) Ridgeway to VN to get an assessment of the situation and upon his return said it would take 500,000 troops committed soonest and meanwhile send in the New Jersey battle group and start shelling Haiphong harbor. Ike said no land war in Asia and maintained the level 500 advisors.

- JFK based on the advice from his best and brightest, increased the "advisors" to 15,000 not including aviation support. The escalation starts.

- LBJ introduced troops into theater, never declared a national emergency to enact stop loss so units went into battle at half-strength. Strength peaked at about 540,000 (Ridgeway was pretty correct in his estimate), but again these came in piece meal. The military hierarchy had no synchronized strategy or ops. It is correct that LBJ picked out bombing targets since the generals went into his office and offered his the opportunity to do so. I would have fired the lot of them, especially Westmoreland.

- Nixon gets elected, puts Gen. Creighton Abrams in charge and the Army attacks into Cambodia and conducts one of the most successful large scale offensives in history. Problem was it should have been done in 1965 not 1970. The purpose of the offense was to push back the enemy to give us breathing room to negotiate for peace and start our withdrawal. The war at this point was unsustainable from a political and public opinion standpoint. Every casualty became fodder in the evening news with no progress to show for it.

So, Ike kept us out, JFK started sneaking us in, LBJ and know nothing generals made this a strategic and operational circus. Nixon and Abrams pushed back and gave us breathing room to withdraw. Winning was effectively off the table in 1966. BTW, we did the same thing in Iraq with the surge having initially invaded with an outnumbered force ill suited for a long campaign.

Final point - the "we didn't lose a single engagement" is a myth. Look up LZ Mary Ann and LZ Albany. Both were slaughters.
Let me rephrase my statement. The U.S. military never lost a set piece battle/ engagement. As far as the battle at LZ Albany goes, it is considered part of the overall battle known as the battle of the Ia Drang Valley which lasted from 11/14/65 through 11/18/65. The troopers of the 2/7 cavalry at LZ Albany were caught flat footed on 11/17/65. Although this action was considered a defeat, overall battle in the IA Drang valley was considered a U.S. victory. Unfortunately, the troopers 2/7 Cavalry did not set-up security when the got to LZ Albany and were regrettably beaten by a larger force of NVA.

Regarding the battle of LZ Mary Ann, it is really FSB Mary Ann. FSB is Fire Support Base and the battle took place on 3/27/71 and was garrisoed by Co. C, 1/46 Inf. of the 196th Light Infantry Brigade, assigned to the 23rd Infantry Div. The FSB had been garrisoned by Co. A of the same unit. Co. C was transferred in from Chu Lai the day of the attack. I never like to disparage any unit unless I have first hand knowledge of events. From what I have read (which is all public), the men of Co. A were a known bunch of dope heads, using everything from marijuana to heroin. Due to the heavy drug use by them, they had let the FSB's defenses go to hell. The VC and NVA had plenty of time to check and find the weaknesses of the FSB. On arrival, Co. C troops started to fix and repair the defenses, but they were hit by the enemy before much had been fixed. Enemy sappers were into the FSB before anyone knew it and caused quite a bit of damage. Also, all but 2 howitzers had been removed from the FSB, along with all their starlight scopes and ground radars. They had all been sent to the rear for maintenance. Considering Co. C was handed a FSB that did not have adequate defenses including no LP's or trip flares and rattle cans in the wire, Co C did an exemplary job at defending FSB Mary Ann. Co C suffered 33 KIA and 83 WIA. Even though it has been counted as a defeat, U.S. troops maintained control of the FSB.


Vietnam was a different type of war. We did not go out and take real estate and then hold it as in prior wars. At the same time, we did not lose FSB Mary Ann. Yes it was over run, but we beat the enemy back and held our Fire Base. Although I was not a grunt in Vietnam, I was on River Patrol Boats (PBR'S) in the Mekong Delta and got into fire fights on a daily basis. Each crew operated 12 hrs. on and 12 hrs. off. I'll call the battle at FSB Mary Ann a victory. I really don't see any difference between FSB Mary Ann and the Battle of the Bulge.
 
So, let me make sure I've got this right.

Ike sent Gen (ret) Ridgeway to VN to get an assessment of the situation and upon his return said it would take 500,000 troops committed soonest and meanwhile send in the New Jersey battle group and start shelling Haiphong harbor. Ike said no land war in Asia and maintained the level 500 advisors.

- JFK based on the advice from his best and brightest, increased the "advisors" to 15,000 not including aviation support. The escalation starts.

- LBJ introduced troops into theater, never declared a national emergency to enact stop loss so units went into battle at half-strength. Strength peaked at about 540,000 (Ridgeway was pretty correct in his estimate), but again these came in piece meal. The military hierarchy had no synchronized strategy or ops. It is correct that LBJ picked out bombing targets since the generals went into his office and offered his the opportunity to do so. I would have fired the lot of them, especially Westmoreland.

- Nixon gets elected, puts Gen. Creighton Abrams in charge and the Army attacks into Cambodia and conducts one of the most successful large scale offensives in history. Problem was it should have been done in 1965 not 1970. The purpose of the offense was to push back the enemy to give us breathing room to negotiate for peace and start our withdrawal. The war at this point was unsustainable from a political and public opinion standpoint. Every casualty became fodder in the evening news with no progress to show for it.

So, Ike kept us out, JFK started sneaking us in, LBJ and know nothing generals made this a strategic and operational circus. Nixon and Abrams pushed back and gave us breathing room to withdraw. Winning was effectively off the table in 1966. BTW, we did the same thing in Iraq with the surge having initially invaded with an outnumbered force ill suited for a long campaign.

Final point - the "we didn't lose a single engagement" is a myth. Look up LZ Mary Ann and LZ Albany. Both were slaughters.
Read some unfiltered history.................................
 
If I remember correctly when I did a paper in school, some of the material I found said that Mr. Scott did a lot of background work before he did the movie to learn about the man. Mr. Scott had indicated that he felt that the U.S. government and the Soviets worked together covertly to get rid of Patton, because of his beliefs about Stalin and Russia in general. Which is why he wanted our boys to push on through to Moscow and all the way to the sea. Could have been an interesting world right now had that happened.
I wholeheartedly agree. Remember that FDR & the OSS (CIA) installed Mao and the communists in China.

Moreover, there were at least two Soviet agents that were high level aides to President Roosevelt. I have no doubt that the OSS was involved in assassinating Gen. Patton.

Patton was popular, well spoken and a clear threat to what FDR was building in China and the further push left in the United States.
 
My father fought under General Patton. He hated Patton but served without hesitation. My father was in North Africa, Sicily, France, Battle of the Bulge and in Germany surrender. He reluctantly threw the farmers wagon and mules off the bridge after Patton shot the mules. My father under Patton became a natural born killer. Tom Lee wore the big red one patch and was very low key how he killed a German with his bare hands when he and the German in the dark jumped in the same foxhole. My dad said in N Africa his troop would find Germans dead in their blankets where the nomads had slit their throats at nights. My dad was in forward reconnist and used M60 because he could carry it. He shot every gun at one time or another 30 or 50 cal, machine guns, on the jeeps or half tracks. He got the army to send him all the capains he had fought in to help me remember and know about war. He was a farm boy and enlisted at 21. At 16 he weighed 300 lbs, in war he was 6"1 and 160 lbs. He never drank after the war. I loved and respected my dad. He was a tough man but was never mean to me. He would wake up at night having completely sweated through his night cloths. He was wounded several times but not fatally.
 
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My father fought under General Patton. He hated Patton but served without hesitation. My father was in North Africa, Sicily, France, Battle of the Bulge and in Germany surrender. He reluctantly threw the farmers wagon and mules off the bridge after Patton shot the mules. My father under Patton became a natural born killer. Tom Lee wore the big red one patch and was very low key how he killed a German with his bare hands when he and the German in the dark jumped in the same foxhole. My dad said in N Africa his troop would find Germans dead in their blankets where the nomads had slit their throats at nights. My dad was in forward reconnist and used M60 because he could carry it. He shot every gun at one time or another 30 or 50 cal, machine guns, on the jeeps or half tracks. He got the army to send him all the capains he had fought in to help me remember and know about war. He was a farm boy and enlisted at 21. At 16 he weighed 300 lbs, in war he was 6"1 and 160 lbs. He never drank after the war. I loved and respected my dad. He was a tough man but was never mean to me. He would wake up at night having completely sweated through his night cloths. He was wounded several times but not fatally. He would not like me writing this because it was just between he and I!
 
My uncle enlisted at age 30. They felt him too old to keep up with the younger troops and assigned him to the motor pool. He was sent to England and at D-Day +10 sent him to France. The others in his outfit called him “Pops” because he was the oldest. When the Battle of the Bulge broke out they sent the lot of them to the front. My uncle was handed a BAR which he carried the reaming days of the war, and in front line duty… not the motor pool.

During the Battle of the Bulge, one in his outfit that he fought alongside wore thick coke-bottle glasses. He kept getting frostbite on his feet and my uncle kept sending him to the rear where he could get medical attention, but they kept sending him back to the front. My uncle kept telling him to go back as he knew he could not fight in his condition, yet they kept returning him to the front. This went on for several days until he was indeed killed.

While on patrol his group started taking fire while walking through the streets of a heavily shelled village. My uncle carried a 40lb pack plus his BAR (not a light rifle), but managed to jump through the window of a shelled home. He fell through the floor and dropped into the cellar. He landed in a squat position and hurt his back. The cellar was very dark but he could see shadows and heard the noise of people moving about. He immediately realized he was not alone. Despite his hurt back he rose to his feet and held his gun out. It was a bluff that paid off. As his eyes adjusted to the dim light he could make out 10 German soldier, now all with their hands held high. It seem they had their guns stripped and were in the middle of cleaning them. He marched all 10 out to his commander who couldn’t believe his eyes. They gave my uncle a medal for this.

During the campaign to blow up bridges leading into Germany they handed my uncle a satchel explosive and ordered (along with several others) to destroy one such bridge. They approached the bridge with caution, using the landscape to hide their approach. As my uncle tells it, there was no warning or indication that they had been compromised, but there was an explosion and he work up in a hospital three days later. He has no idea if the satchel went off, or maybe a mortar round, not a clue. He spent several days more in recovery and then learned they wanted to send him back. He told them, no chance. He says he told them that they could send him to prison if they like but he was not going back. He had watched most of his buddies from the motor pool die, had several close calls himself, and had his fill of killing. They agreed, and sent him home. He was a great man, married, raised a son, and lived as normal a life as he could after the war, but he had “the dreams” that would wake him in terror in the middle of night for years after. he died about 15 years ago at the age of 90 (I think that's right).
 
Patton was capable of any number of intemperate remarks that were in the press and in at least one case, pointedly refuted by BG J.H. "PeeWee" Collier, CG of Combat Command A. in 2AD CG Isaak D. White's report to SHAEF (Eisenhower) on a late war comparison of U.S. vs. German arms and equipment (especially Armor).

"It is my opinion that press reports of statements by high ranking officers to the effect that we have the best equipment in the world do much to discourage the soldier who is using equipment that he knows to be inferior to that of the enemy."

Collier was not a man to mince words. His remarks were part of the digest of the 66th* & 67th Armored Rgts (The film "Fury" follows the 66th AR & was commanded then by the father of my Sqn. CO of 2/11th ACR in Vietnam). The report in it's entirety makes for lamentable reading for those troops who were directly facing German Armor & other equipment in the post-invasion advance across Europe, from uniforms to optics. If you happen to be Armor/Cavalry as I was in a later conflict, it makes for a somber read indeed.
On the lighter side, prior to the Home of Cavalry & Armor being BRAC'ed out of existence I had occasion to visit some old friends & places. The current Patton Museum was opened ~1973 by MG Donn Starry (BG G.S. Patton IV was his deputy at the time). I first visited the museum when it was a WWII wooden structure. Today, you will find a mannequin of GSPIII with a replica of his Colt 1873 & sometimes another in a case. This one is not a replica.
 

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