On this day, British Gen.
Bernard Montgomery gives a press conference in which he all but claims complete
credit for saving the Allied cause in the Battle of the Bulge. He was almost
removed from his command because of the resulting American outcry.
On December 16, 1944, the
Germans attempted to push the Allied front line west from northern France to
northwestern Belgium. The Battle of the Bulge (so-called because the Germans,
in pushing through the American defensive line, created a "bulge"
around the area of the Ardennes forest) was the largest battle fought on the
Western front. The German assault came in early morning at the weakest part of
the Allied line, an 80-mile stretch of poorly protected, hilly forest that the
Allies believed was too difficult to traverse, and therefore an unlikely
location for a German offensive. Between the vulnerability of the thin,
isolated American units and the thick fog that prevented Allied air cover from
discovering German movement, the Germans were able to push the Americans into
retreat.
Fresh from commanding the 21st
Army group during the Normandy invasion, and having suffered an awful defeat in
September as his troops attempted to cross the Rhine, Montgomery took temporary
command of the northern shoulder of American and British troops in the
Ardennes. He immediately fell into a familiar pattern, failing to act
spontaneously for fear of not being sufficiently prepared. Montgomery was
afraid to move before the German army had fully exhausted itself, finally making
what American commanders saw as only a belated counterattack against the enemy.
As the weather improved, American air cover raided German targets on the
ground, which proved the turning point in the Allied victory. Monty eventually
cut across northern Germany all the way to the Baltic and accepted the German
surrender in May.
Montgomery had already earned
the ire of many American officers because of his cautiousness in the field,
arrogance off the field, and willingness to disparage his American counterparts.
The last straw was Montgomery's whitewashing of the Battle of the Bulge facts
to assembled reporters in his battlefield headquarters—he made his performance
in the Ardennes sound not only more heroic but decisive, which necessarily
underplayed the Americans' performance. Since the loss of American life in the
battle was tremendous and the surrender of 7,500 members of the 106th Infantry
humiliating, Gen. Omar Bradley complained loudly to Dwight D.
Eisenhower, who passed the complaints on to Churchill.
On January
18, Churchill addressed Parliament and announced in no uncertain terms that the
"Bulge" was an American battle—and an American victory.
Taken from: http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/monty-holds-a-press-conference [07.01.2015]
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