10 Points about Operation Market Garden you should consider

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  • čas přidán 20. 09. 2021
  • 10 Points about Operation Market Garden you should consider
    With special guest R.G. Poulussen
    Part of Arnhem Week on WW2TV
    More Airborne Forces content on WW2TV
    • Airborne Forces
    Today, I am joined by Dutch historian RG Poulussen who is presenting 10 points about Market Garden - although it may actually be 11 or 12 ;-). We discuss James Gavin, the Groesbeek Heights, the road to Uden and the 101st plan, the often overlooked role of Lewis Brereton, Urquhart and various other key parts of the battle. We also talk about the lack of air-support, the need for a second lift and of course the influence of the movie A Bridge Too Far.
    With special guest R.G. Poulussen
    / rgpoulussen - you can order hardback books via DM to RG on Twitter
    Lost at Nijmegen by RG Poulussen
    UK www.amazon.co.uk/Lost-Nijmege...
    USA www.amazon.com/Lost-Nijmegen-...
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Komentáře • 679

  • @kevingetz9262
    @kevingetz9262 Před 2 lety +25

    I have often thought Brereton has escaped criticism for his role in Operation Market Garden. As someone from the States, it’s easy to point fingers at Browning.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety +3

      Sure been nice had Monty shown up for his own operation that he pushed for then ignored as it started coming apart almost immediately.Three miles from the start panzerfaust teams took out 9 shermans blocking the road and stopping the column.General Brian Horrocks and Col. Joe Vandeleur waited for the planes to fly over at 1400 hrs on the 17th.Did they somehow think they would catch up to them when their loads were dropped? After stopping just 4 hrs later.Montgomery owns this disaster

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety +5

      @Kevin Getz
      It was Gavin, not Browning.

    • @garythomas3219
      @garythomas3219 Před rokem +6

      Why Montgomery? It wasn't his operation it was Brereton and Browning,

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před rokem +1

      He admitted it after the War "a bad mistake on my part" is that a little to confusing for you? Would you like the run down from his boss and the rest of SHAEF who were at the September 4th & 10th meetings? If you and Burns put your heads together you'd get a rockpile

    • @garythomas3219
      @garythomas3219 Před rokem

      @@bigwoody4704 how could it be his mistake? He was not involved with the operation. You Americans will be blaming Montgomery for the Hurtgen forest debacle and the Bulge debacle next

  • @dave3156
    @dave3156 Před 2 lety +8

    Paul an extremely interesting program having someone who has done extensive research into this as an unbiased 3rd party. I was surprised to learn the number of mistakes made that led to the failure of this plan, as well as the assessment that it could have succeeded as late as the 19th of September. I am sure I have some preconceived notions as a result of the movie. Discarding the mistakes made by multiple drops and poor decisions by commanders, the one that resonates with me is the failure to take into account the Dutch underground and aerial reconnaissance of the Germain buildup around Arnhem. Very interesting show as usual--thx Paul

  • @foxtrotromeo25
    @foxtrotromeo25 Před 2 lety +13

    Market Garden has always fascinated me. This show was a fantastic voyage through the possible points of failure in the overall operation. I knew about Gavin's reluctance to move on the Waal bridge until The Groesbeek Heights were "secured", but Brereton's role in dictating the number of lifts, lack of coup de main operations and lack of air support (weather notwithstanding) is another eye opener. Excellent show, Paul and RG.

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety +2

      Gavin did send a battalion, led by Warren, to the bridge intermediately. Warren sat around in DePloeg for 3.5 hours, while only 18 guards were on the bridge. Warren was under orders from Lindquist. Gavin was livid when finding out they had not moved to the bridge. When they did send men to the bridge they sent forty men, a patrol. The bridge was so undefended, three stragglers from the patrol captured the guards on the south end of the bridge.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety +1

      You make me larf Irving Burns that has nothing to do with Montgomery not showing up or Horrocks /Vandeleur waiting for the planes to fly over on Sept 17th to start their column forward @ 1400 or the 43rd Wessex getting lost or Vandaluer and his cousin going for a swim and then having champaign with a female reporter or 9 shermans getting taken out by Panzerfaust teams only 2 miles from the start. All well south of Nijmegen and according to you very sound reasons I'm sure for a lightning strike. 🤣

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety +1

      @@bigwoody4704
      Rambo a quiz.
      How many many US 82nd men first approached the Nijmegen bridge, on their *failed* attempt to seize the bridge?
      20 points for the correct answer.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety +1

      Irving Burns remember IKE gave Monty The US 9th Army to make sure there'd be no more Dunkirks,he gave Monty the US 1st Army to make sure there were no more Singapore's. And Freddie was there to make sure Bernard and you would not be sharing the bubble bath - all clear Johnny

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před rokem

      @@bigwoody4704
      *BZZZZT!* Wrong answer.
      Rambo the number of US 82nd men that first approached the Nijmegen bridge, on their failed attempt to seize the bridge, was...
      🍾🎈🎊 *40 men* 🍾🎈🎊
      Zero points Rambo. Zero. Better luck next time.

  • @andymoody8363
    @andymoody8363 Před 2 lety +8

    Interesting point that came out at Warfest was that the planning for Market Garden wasn't one that was integrated with air other than transport. TAF command simply weren't asked to be involved, say what they were capable of doing or included in the overall plan to support the drops and subsequent ground operations. They could certainly provide air to ground support as they had done with great effect in Normandy but simply weren't asked. Maybe that's down to Brereton but it feels a bit simplistic and more due to the rushed and extemporised planning which characterised, and ultimately doomed, MG from the start. Just a thought. Always good lo listen to RG.

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před rokem +7

      Brereton and Williams did not want conflict with the escorting fighter of the transports. Others have said that would not have been a problem.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 3 měsíci +2

      johnny bernard will see you in the channel for your FULL MONTY - right up your alley as you like fairy tales - right?

  • @TheVigilant109
    @TheVigilant109 Před 2 lety +6

    Great show. Valuable insights by RG Poulussen. Thank you

  • @FilipDePreter
    @FilipDePreter Před 2 lety +7

    Great show, most excellent work. Keep up not only the spirit but also the level of quality of shows and your guests.

  • @lau03143
    @lau03143 Před 2 lety +11

    Fantastic as expected from RG. For me, the whole plan is predicated on everything going right. There seems like there was little contingency for error.

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před rokem +7

      If the 82nd had seized Nijmegen bridge, even though the 101st failed to seize the Zon bridge (an error), the operation would have succeeded.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před rokem

      Bullshit, when Carrington's finally got their tardy formations there at 7:10p.m. on the evening of the 20th(3rd day & 24hrs late) and you refer to him as LORD.Monty the mastermind of this debacle doesn't even show up until after the fighting in Arnhem and you call him Field Marshall.And Poullusen was a photographer who couldn't identify and M-1 on twitter.Typical revisionist bullcrap and very late and not in force as Horrocks promised and slappies want to blame one GI General 62 miles from the start.Who just lost i read 89 men KIA & 150 wounded crossing the Waal.This whole debacle.Vandeleur and his cousin stopped and went swimming and drank champagne with a female reporter - Ya GIs fault.I suppose getting your asses kicked out of Norway/Netherlands/Belgium/France/Dunkirk. 4 yrs earlier was the GIs fault to FFS.If they ever got their aristocratic backsides to the Bridge 88s,Tigers,Panzer IVs were waiting for them.British planes missing drop zones - GIs fault - that why you simpletons never understood holding the LZs on the heights
      AGAIN thicko,British cock ups galore below Nijmegen,below Valkeswaard, sitting on their arrogant arses in Belgium at the start.Burns your lies of 13 years don't change history you've already been caught repeatedly altering the texts,so again for the 10th time leave a link with the page number like i do below. No the 9th SS came over before Frost even held the North end of Arnhem Bridge.Meanwhile it's 2:30 p.m. And Horrocks and Vandeleur are starting the column forward after watching the C-47 fly over did they think somehow they would catch up?Then monty forgot to tell Horrocks to put the Bridging equipment in the front.3 miles after the start panzerfaust teams knock out 9 shermans and the column made it a whole 7 miles the 1st day.
      And How come Field Marshall Walter Model & Fallschirmjager General Kurt Student were able to ferry tanks and troops over, rivers and canals under the ever watchfull RAF at Pannerden & other places. While Horrocks/Montgomery could NOT do the same?Not in September, not in October and not in November. Model being an actual Field Marshall conducted a clinic in modern mobile warfare

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před rokem

      *czcams.com/video/pZZMaWxIxrU/video.html* Honest reporting

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 3 měsíci +1

      MONTY GARDEN-th puuf didn't even show uplike an actual Field Marshall- Walter Model

  • @adamwarne1807
    @adamwarne1807 Před 2 lety +5

    Superbly researched and well balanced study! More presentations like this one please!

  • @untermunchkin4380
    @untermunchkin4380 Před rokem +2

    "Air Vice Marshal Hollinghurst, commander of 38 Group, decided upon the distant location of the drop zones, and despite requests from the 1st Airborne Division, he refused to land troops closer to Arnhem. His reasoning was that the closer his aircraft came to Arnhem, the closer they would come to the large anti-aircraft emplacements, which in the event were not in place, at Deelen Airfield. With Transport Command under severe pressure at that stage in the War, ferrying supplies to the front line and bringing back casualties to British hospitals, Hollinghurst, understandably, did not wish to lose any more aircraft than was necessary. The decision, however, ought not have been his to make as it was surely be the job of the air planners to orientate their plan around the requirements of the Airborne troops, not what was most convenient for the Air Forces. The Airborne movement was, however, in its infancy at the time and many errors of judgement, which today seem obvious, were not so clear to its pioneers during the Second World War. Brigadier Hackett describes the planners: 'The airborne movement was very naive. It was very good on getting airborne troops to battle, but they were innocents when it came to fighting the Germans when we arrived. They used to make a beautiful airborne plan and then added the fighting-the-Germans bit afterwards.'" www.pegasusarchive.org/arnhem/depth_reason1.htm.

    • @mikeainsworth4504
      @mikeainsworth4504 Před 3 měsíci

      The linked article does not provide a reference of the comment that it was AOC38Gp who decided on the LZs and DZs. It is surprising that the decision could have been made by one of the two RAF Gp commanders providing aircraft (38Gp with converted bombers and 46Gp with Dakotas) when the RAF contribution (which was largely towing gliders for the initial waves) was relatively minor compared to IX TCC’s who carried all of the parachute elements (US, British, and Polish). If you have a reference for a contemporaneous source, it would be appreciated.

  • @jsfbr
    @jsfbr Před 2 lety +4

    I read General Urquhart's book, among others about Market Garden. It's very well written informative, unbiased and, I'd say, humble. Others I read besides "A Bridge Too Far" include one about the CANLOANS that took part of MG (very interesting) and one written by a glider pilot that was captures at Arnhem but later escaped from war camp along with others. I have Antony Beevor's "Arnhem" on the shelf over the TV, begging me to resume reading it...

    • @imperialcommander639
      @imperialcommander639 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Mate, Urquhart’s book is full of bias, untruths and lies. Page 1 of Chapter 1 if you can’t tell wants wrong with that, then you don’t have a clue

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 3 měsíci

      Beevor is vetted and peer reviewed his D-day Book has over 60 pages of acknowledgements,footnotes and bibliography. Unlike this slappie poulussen than throws crap against the wall and tries passing it off as fact

  • @scottgrimwood8868
    @scottgrimwood8868 Před 2 lety +5

    A excellent and thought provoking show. My only point of contention is using airborne casualty figures as a measure of how hard one unit fought compared to another.

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před 2 lety +6

      Which I said in the show Scott

  • @mammuchan8923
    @mammuchan8923 Před 2 lety +5

    Great show. I love RG’s Twitter account, first time I have seen him online. Gave “A Bridge Too Far” a rewatch after the show and enjoyed it in a new way 😎

  • @mikkoveijalainen7430
    @mikkoveijalainen7430 Před 27 dny

    Thought provoking stuff. A pleasure to watch this discussion.

  • @patm8622
    @patm8622 Před 2 lety +6

    Great show, interesting to see one in a different format

  • @richardbinkhuysen5224
    @richardbinkhuysen5224 Před 16 dny

    In 2008 I put info about a Belgian giving exact data about the Start Line and the amount of Allied Ground troops to the Germans on Sept.11/12 1944 on the Axis Forum.
    That's 5 days before Market-Garden.
    I recently reveiled the second source which was a spy in London that was able to sent more details about the direction towards Lake IJssel and possibly more north to the Northsea on Sept.12 1944 too.
    It was sent via Stockholm.
    So the Germans had 2 independent sources telling the same 5 days before Market-Garden.

  • @markmorgan6179
    @markmorgan6179 Před 2 lety

    Another fascinating programme!

  • @kiwigrunt330
    @kiwigrunt330 Před 2 lety +6

    Given the ferocity of the fighting, the casualty (KIA) numbers actually seem fairly low.

    • @dmbeaster
      @dmbeaster Před 4 měsíci

      The overall troop numbers were modest (around 100 000 on each side), and the fighting only lasted a week.

  • @stewartorr1939
    @stewartorr1939 Před 3 měsíci +3

    I blame Gavin. I am an American. I was in the 82nd, My dad was i the 82nd, and my uncle has a jump with the 505. Not putting priority on the bridge was the reason for failure.

    • @nickdanger3802
      @nickdanger3802 Před 3 měsíci +1

      "The 82nd Airborne Division, however, certainly does not deserve any particular criticism for this as their priorities appear to be a further product of the blind optimism that dogged Operation Market Garden, of which everyone involved was guilty. At Nijmegen, as with everywhere else, the assumption was that resistance would be light and so the main concern of the airborne units was to make the advance of the ground forces as rapid and as uncomplicated as possible, instead of devoting all their attention to primary objectives. Furthermore, it should be understood that the 82nd Airborne Division had by far the most complicated plan of any of the Airborne units involved with Market Garden, their troops being required to capture numerous objectives over a considerable expanse of terrain."
      Pegasus Archive 30. Reasons for Failure page

    • @stewartorr1939
      @stewartorr1939 Před 3 měsíci +3

      I don't blame the 82nd Just gaven The whole operation was about securing bridges. Therefore the bridge should have been priority. I retired as a Maj and attended Combined Arms and Services staff course among others. Loved your presentation @@nickdanger3802

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před 3 měsíci +3

      General Gavin did put priority on securing the Nijmegen highway bridge, but Colonel Lindquist did not interpret his instructions correctly.
      The best analysis I've read on this bridge versus ridge debate is by John C McManus in September Hope - The American Side of a Bridge Too Far (2012), and his veteran's first hand accounts are supported by other witnesses in Phil Nordyke's Put Us Down In Hell - The Combat History of the 508th PIR in WW2 (2012). McManus also briefly refers to the story of PFC Joe Atkins, whose account of securing the southern end of the Nijmegen bridge with two other scouts before having to withdraw when nobody else showed up proves that the 1st Battalion could have taken the bridge without firing a shot on the first evening, as Gavin had instructed. His short story is recorded in full by Zig Boroughs' collection of stories from veterans in The 508th Connection (2013), and also included in the best update on Market Garden by Swedish historian - Christer Bergström's Arnhem 1944: An Epic Battle Revisited vols 1 and 2 (2019, 2020), which also debunks many of the myths from A Bridge Too Far.
      Pegasus Archive online is dated 2001 on the website and doesn't seem to have been updated with the more recent research by any of these researchers.

    • @nickdanger3802
      @nickdanger3802 Před 2 měsíci

      @@stewartorr1939 map Nijmegen day one
      i.pinimg.com/originals/6a/5c/de/6a5cde8f149179bb749b61c2b92bb3e3.jpg

  • @jonrettich-ff4gj
    @jonrettich-ff4gj Před 8 měsíci +2

    I believe the Germans said the panzers would have been gone in two weeks and wasn’t Montgomery made aware of their presence? Weren’t the unweatherized radios a significant problem? Wasn’t the Reichwald chaos extremely nerve wracking to the Americans? I felt badly for Urqueheart he knew nothing about airborn and was in no position to accurately assess the overview. Thirty corps was relegated to one raised road surrounded by ground too wet for armor as I’ve read, keeping them incredibly vulnerable as. .I would have thought a massive suppressing assault on the German flak followed by immediate jumps would have been considered. Didn’t the Germans find the whole plan in a downed glider? The poles seemed to be used as callously as possible including Maczuga. Grim and sad and always interesting. Thank you

  • @johnburns4017
    @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety +2

    I have an old copy of RG Poulussen's excellent book. I am going to buy one for Kindle.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety

      Why so you can misquote that like every other book you have claim to read? Of course hoping no one actually looks it up

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety +1

      @@bigwoody4704
      Rambo a quiz.
      Name the prime US planners of the Market Garden operation?
      20 points for the correct answer.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety

      YAWNING this makes me sleepy. Monty had 4 full yrs to go 30 miles and only when FDR demanded it and the GIs held his hand doing it did the little truant druid stick his toes into the channel.The French were screaming Sacre Bleu,The Gerries were snickering and Stalin and the rest of Europe were like WTF

  • @jonathanmillward1231
    @jonathanmillward1231 Před 2 lety +1

    Great show chaps. Thanks

  • @MrOhdead
    @MrOhdead Před 8 měsíci

    Fantastic, read his book some years ago, seeing this author in interview is fantastic!

  • @morganhale3434
    @morganhale3434 Před 2 lety +12

    As an American I have always thought that the XXX Corps did its part. The demands on British Armour and infantry formations in basically making frontal assaults continuously is quite compelling in the appreciation of unit elan and professionalism. XXX Corps was designed and trained for maneuver warfare, not trench busting of WWI fame.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Před rokem +8

      Indeed. XXX Corps actually carried out the fasted allied advance against German opposition in the entire September 1944 to February 1945 period. 100km in just 3 days.
      Garden suceeded. It was Market that failed.

    • @sean640307
      @sean640307 Před rokem +6

      @@lyndoncmp5751 and prior to Garden, 21AG had traveled 350 miles in four days

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před rokem +3

      Bravo there was nothing in the way until they hit the Scheldt in Southern Holland.And that wasn't opened until after 28th of November. During Operation Market Garden one would say Montgomery appeared helpless but the sad fact is he never appeared at all.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Před rokem +2

      Sean O'Sullivan,
      Yep. After overcoming and destroying the entire German Armored force in France, the densest concentration of German armour ever deployed in WW2.
      British 1st Airborne to XXX Corps:
      "Where have you been? What have you been doing!?"
      XXX Corps to British 1st Airborne :
      "We've been fighting for 3 months solid, ever since D-Day, not just for a few days since last Sunday like you!!"
      😂

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před rokem +2

      Ya by allowing the Gerries to spend their ammo blowing holes in the 500 Allied tanks in/at/around Caen. The RAF/and USAF and Naval guns off shore dealt with the armor lyndon - go tell your tales across the the channel - then duck 🚑

  • @untermunchkin4380
    @untermunchkin4380 Před rokem +1

    On 09/10/1944, General Lewis Hyde Brereton decided to limit the number of lifts to one per day for the entire Market Garden operation. Brereton made this decision on the advice of his senior air commander, Major-General Paul L. Williams, who had commanded the US 9th Troop Carrier Command during Normandy airborne operations. Reputed to accommodate the reasonable wishes of the paratroopers, Williams had deep concerns about his undermanned ground crew being able to refuel, repair battle damage, and perform routine maintenance fast enough to make multiple lifts per day. His ground crew was undermanned because the number of aircraft held by his unit had doubled without a concomitant increase in his ground crew. I am not an armchair general so I am willingly going to defer to Williams’s appraisal of his ground crew’s readiness to handle multiple lifts per day.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Williams was more concerned about exhausting his USAAF personnel rather than the well being of paratroopers dropped behind enemy lines. Brereton, a fellow USAAF man, also cared more about USAAF personnel than his own paratroopers. If a paratrooper had been in command of First Allied Airborne Army this would never have been the case.
      The operation was killed all because Brereton and Williams put the USAAF ahead of FAAA.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 4 měsíci

      Bernard like you was no where around
      Model = Field Marshall
      Monty = Failed Marshmellow
      His clownish command was on display yet again as in Sicily,Italy,Caen and Falaise .An ankle biter passing himself off as a head hunter and in fact a impediment to the war effort no different than MacArthur.That's why he needs so many spin doctors like you to rewrite history so he doesn't look like the fraud he was.

  • @TB-ModelRR
    @TB-ModelRR Před 2 lety +2

    First movie we watched when I arrived at 1/508th. Great stuff!!

  • @timarmstrong8307
    @timarmstrong8307 Před 2 lety +4

    Keep up the great work.

  • @untermunchkin4380
    @untermunchkin4380 Před rokem +1

    Brereton fully understood that ideally all the paratroopers in Market should be dropped into their designated drop zones on the same day and at the same time. According to Cornelius Ryan, it just was not possible: " Apart from gliders, Brereton had no transports of his own. To achieve complete surprise, the ideal plan called for the three and one-half divisions in Market to be delivered to landing zones on the same day at the same hour. But the immense size of the operation ruled out this possibility. There was an acute shortage of both aircraft and gliders; the planes would have to make more than one trip." Boy Browning was present at the meeting in which Brereton announced that the drops would occur on multiple days; indeed he spoke immediately after Brereton. Browning, moreover, knew the details of Manty's plan expectations because Brereton convened the 10 Sept 44 meeting immediately after he left his meeting with Monty. If Monty's plan was predicated on surprise, Browning knew full well that that predicate would not obtain. In fact, Beevor wrote that once Browning complained to Gale about the multi-day drops, Gale forcefully told Browning that he had to resign from the operation. Browning refused.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Před 8 měsíci +1

      I've not heard Gale say that about Browning but Gale said Urquhart should have protested against the RAFs choice of drop and landing zones "to the point of resignation".

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 3 měsíci

      Monty knew this and went ahead anyway.Bernard was in reality a plodding, unimaginative, spotlight grabbing little shit. Who ran away as his plan came apart with in 3 miles from it's start.When you are done cleaning your teeth with your finger try leafing thru pages of a history book.

  • @udeychowdhury2529
    @udeychowdhury2529 Před rokem +2

    RG Poulsson and a certain English gentleman called John Frost both agree on the key mistakes in the battle.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 4 měsíci

      Poullusen wasn't even a historian He was a photographer but he could sell his narrative to the the butthurt followers of Monty who didn't want to hear the truth regarding their hero

  • @jonrogers5765
    @jonrogers5765 Před rokem +3

    You have quickly become my favorite CZcams military history resource/entertainment. You, and your awesome guests, do an amazing job of presenting very detailed studies of a wide range of topics. I am an avid, lifelong, former Army officer, "armchair military historian and have studied Market Garden since I first read "Bridge Too Far" by Ryan when was 12 years old! I would like to suggest an angle I would like to see you and any of your well-versed guests tackle a topic which NEVER seems to be addressed by anyone, not even the TIK CZcams host who has numerous videos on the battle. I would like to see you do a show on why Market Garden was doomed to failure from a strategic/logistical perspective to the point that it should NEVER HAVE BEEN ATTEMPTED! Primary reason being logistical - 2nd Army was in no position to make it successful due to most of it's logistic and support units lagging far behind the start line on the Meuse-Escaut canal. Sure, XXX Corp was given the bulk of the resources, and were poised to make the dash to Arnhem, BUT I have read a few different places that both corps on either side of XXX Corp were virtually stripped of resources to make that possible? I have read that most of VIII & XII Corps, on each side of XXX Corps were practically frozen in place and unable to advance due to all priorities going to XXX Corp. Also, many of their supporting units were still back at the Seine area when Market Garden began. So say XXX Corp succeeded with Garden, and all Market tactical issues were resolved and avoided in a timely manner, just HOW was 2nd Army going to "bounce the Rhine" when the logistics support for the entire front moving forward simply was NOT in place by the 17th? Neither XII or VIII Corp on XXX Corp's flanks made much of contribution to the operation at all. Had they moved up on the flanks, they could have secured the corridor couldn't they have? My point is that I think a hard look at 2nd Army's overall logistical situation goes along way in determining that the operation should have never been tried. Worth addressing in a video if you agree! Thanks, Paul! Keep up the good work!

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před rokem +1

      As with any other idea Jon, if a historian came with such a presentation, I would do it in a heartbeat. I'm not like TIK and some others in that I don't choose subjects for discussion myself (well sometimes I do). Its about giving historians, authors and enthusiasts a platform for their research

    • @jonrogers5765
      @jonrogers5765 Před rokem +1

      @@WW2TV Thanks for the prompt response, Paul! That's what makes what you do so interesting and important. You showcase authors who are dialed in and focused on very specific details on operations as opposed to the plethora of "overall/general" look books out there. Someone should do a bio talk on Lewis Brereton sometime - he had to have been the most "unlucky" US general in high places. HIs air force was destroyed on the ground in the Philllipines largely due to his poor operations decisions. He oversaw the disastrous Ploesti bombing mission, and finally the terrible Market decisions he made as commander of 1St Allied Airborne Army.

  • @jonrogers5765
    @jonrogers5765 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Watched this for about the 10th time again yesterday! I'm an American, but I AGREE that Gavin's performance & decisions at Nijmegen are baffling, particularly why he didn't order the entire 508th to capture the hwy bridge on day 1. Capturing and holding the bridges was the #1 priority over the operation and I see Gavin's 82nd plan for that to be almost just as flawed as 1st Airborne's terrible plan to take the Arnhem bridges. However, I think Browning is as much responsible for the failures at Nijmegen as HE was the overall commander of the airborne component of "Market", as well as he and his hq being onsite at Nijmegen. It amazes me that between Browning & Gavin, the hwy bridge was overlooked as the primary day one objective of 82nd, especially because that failure did not at all fit in with Browning's directive to "seize the bridges with THUNDERCLAP surprise" as is oft quoted. Also, why wasn't there a DZ or LZ on the North side of the Nijmegen bridges that would have assured that "thunderclap surprise". Additionally, this latest viewing of this makes me much more questionable on the 101's plan as well. The whole point of "there really was NO "carpet" of airborne" I had never really thought about. 101's DZ's/LZ's should have been much more spread out to cover their area of objective rather than being as concentrated as they were in the Son area. Why wasn't a regiment dropped immediately South of Eindhoven, and another one dropped farther North in the Veghel/Uden area? I've studied this battle since I was 12 years old, have read most of the books, and had never really thought of that point until seeing this video again. Had 101st secured Eindhoven, bridges and area to the South of the city, XXX Corp would not have had to stop at Valkensward on evening of Day 1 and could have pushed right on through Eindhoven to Son bridge and started the repairs that night, thus pushing the whole timetable up couldn't they have?
    I do DISAGREE with Polussen's suggestion that the plan was "good", and that it could have succeeded though. Too many variables, too many poor decisions, and the whole thing seemed to be based on the overwhelming desire to "get the airborne into action at any cost" mentality. And of course the total under-estimation of German capabilities and ability to rapidly consolidate defenses as they did. Only way this operation would have worked was if there was hardly any German units in the areas concerned not capable of tenacious defense. The decisions that led to the terrible air plan - drop zones far from primary objectives, no "2nd lift", no coup de main ops, over concerned about flak effects....etc... all reflect a very curious mindset that seems to indicate that Allied commanders were largely discounting the Germans as an effective fighting force and there false assumption that the Allied Airborne Army was just going casually seize all these bridge and that 2nd Army was going to just as casually waltz over the Rhine at Arnhem. Why was there not more emphasis placed on alacrity, speed, and dash on the part of both the airborne and the ground forces? Where was Dempsey? Where was Monty? Would have thought that those commanders would have been much more "hands on", at least have been present, during the battle? Anyway, GREAT WORK! I'm sure this won't be the last time I watch it!

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před 7 měsíci +2

      I recommend Phil Nordyke's combat history of the 508th PIR in WW2 - Put Us Down In Hell (2012), and/or John C McManus' September Hope - The American Side of a Bridge Too Far (2012). The answers you're looking for on Nijmegen are in these books, and Nordyke has the backstory on the 508th's CO in Normandy, which is an important element of the story.
      RG Poulussen's Little Sense Of Urgency (2014) has the answer to the 101st drop zones - they were originally intended to drop south of Eindhoven as well, but this was nixed by Brereton (1st Allied Airborne Army) on account of the Flak around Eindhoven, and Taylor refused a drop zone around Uden to link up with the 82nd - so no 'airborne carpet'.

    • @tomasdawe9379
      @tomasdawe9379 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Browning was very quiet during MG it is important to know however that he and Brereton did not see eye-to-eye and he had been threatened by replacement. This may have left him reluctant to criticize his American subordinates.

  • @jwjohnson9547
    @jwjohnson9547 Před 2 lety +9

    Very thought provoking program. Coming in with the expected American bias based on Ryan’s book and another that hangs the blame on the plan from Monty. Now I find blame isn’t as simple as the Redford scene criticizing British XXX Corps for sitting in Nijmegen drinking tea. Good job.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Před 2 lety +8

      Yes always annoying that, considering the Guards Armoured Division were still fighting in Nijmegen (Nijmegen wasn't cleared until the following day) and also had been split up over 20 miles or so assisting the short of men 82nd, including helping prevent the Germans from breaking through at Mook at the same time the river crossings were happening. The 82nd were in desperate need of the help from the Guards Armoured Division here there and everywhere. Of course, without the specific help of the Grenadier Guards Group, the Nijmegen bridge would never even have been taken in the first place. An all important factor that many ignore.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety

      The 82nd was clearing out the city and fending off the attacks on the LZ.Had Monty factored in keeping/holding DZ - perhaps 1st Para isn't over whelmed.Did not matter as they would have been blasted back into the Rhine considering the the men and materiel being rushed in from the near by Ruhr by rail.That was from an actual Field Marshall Walter Model - not the fraud Monty who didn't show up. This debacle should not have been considered let alone launched

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před rokem +5

      @@lyndoncmp5751
      That was all needless if Gavin had not retreated taking *all* of his men out of Nijmegen on d day+1. Nijmegen was reinforced by German 10th SS troops that reached the town by the ferry, moving south over the Nijmegen bridge. The 82nd stayed at the south end of the bridge all night, and even captured the south end guards and their artillery piece for around 30-45 mins. So, if the 508 all stayed in Nijmegen these reinforcing German 10th SS troops would not have entered the town, staying north of the bridge, with only non-combat troops in the town with a few 9th SS recon men.
      The 82nd would have prevented the Germans using the bridge. There was no armour on the island. The 82nd created the situation in Nijmegen town, that delayed XXX Corps with XXX Corps having to put right after.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Před rokem +4

      John Burns
      Yes Gavin does seem to have been overly cautious in Nijmegen. It was indeed Gavins decision to retreat completely from Nijmegen on the 18th.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Před rokem +6

      J W Johnson,
      And Montgomery was overruled in nearly all his ideas for the Market segment. Montgomery preferred:
      1. Double missions flown on day one.
      2. Drops closer to the targets.
      3. Coup de mains on the bridges.
      The air commanders refused in all of the above. Taylor of the 101st even complained about drops north of Son.
      The air commanders got their way (Montgomery did not have the jurisdiction over air forces)...... and look what happened.
      If only Montgomery was allowed to plan and make the decisions for Market. It probably would have worked.
      Eisenhower also should have shut everything down for a week and given all resources to Market Garden. He didn't. Instead he allowed Patton to continue bumbling in the Lorraine and he allowed Hodges to open up his disastrous attack into the Hurtgen Forest.

  • @wienanddrenth7200
    @wienanddrenth7200 Před 5 měsíci +1

    As to shifting more of the tactical air power to support Market Garden, what would the logistical impact have been? Understanding the functional benefits (extra guns/bombs/rockets available in the air), keeping those additional planes flying would also require to shift a whole supply chain (fuel depots, ordnance, ground crews). Let alone that airfields within range to support Market Garden should be able to accommodate the additios.
    Would that have been possible?

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před 5 měsíci +1

      There was plenty of air support available, but it was restricted by weather and deconfliction rules that grounded 2nd TAF while the transport airlifts were in the air. What would have been helpful was notification to 2nd TAF in Belgium when the airlifts were delayed by bad weather in England, so they didn't have to be grounded unnecessarily while the skies were clear over the Netherlands. This was an administrative error by 1st Allied Airborne Army in England. Apart from this, the lack of tactical air support has been exaggerated - it was very active. The German ferry operation at Pannerden, for example, was constantly harassed by air attacks and was forced to be conducted at night or during the bad weather periods.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 4 měsíci

      Monty knew Air support wasn't available in numbers because of Strategic Air bombing of Germany and the lengthy flights from airfields 50 miles west of London plus 261 miles to arnhem made it over 300 miles wouldn't support multiple drops in one day.That and the days were 2hrs less light than the 30 miles flights 30 miles across the channel 3 months earlier -try actual history.Oh Monty didn't have the nuts to show up for this debacle.But the Germans had a real Field Marshall Model directing operations in person

  • @iansinton3110
    @iansinton3110 Před měsícem

    Always wonder if the 4th Brigade hadn't dropped, the two airlanding battalions arriving on day 1 could have joined the advance to the bridge and with their additional strength could of swung the balance to get to the bridge on day 1. The 4th Brigade brought almost nothing to the battle and were virtually wasted in the woods..

  • @Krzysztof.l.Polak.84
    @Krzysztof.l.Polak.84 Před 2 lety +1

    Just noticed at 54:47 that casualties list does not include glider regiments for both US divisions (although if im correct one indeed didn`t make it onto ground during operation) so as 1 SBSpad (Polish). Don’t know how much or if at all it would influence this summary, but it is pretty strange omittment.
    Still, really good video, inciting to read more about the operation 👍🏻

  • @ralphwatt8752
    @ralphwatt8752 Před rokem +9

    No plan survives first contact with the enemy even with the best planning

    • @BrianFoster-ji9fp
      @BrianFoster-ji9fp Před 2 měsíci

      ...so plan to adapt. MG 'planners' didn't. They didn't have time.

  • @Idahoguy10157
    @Idahoguy10157 Před 5 měsíci +3

    The alternative to Market-Garden was getting Antwerp on line as a major allied port. The sea approaches were not taken and secured. The channel swept for mines.

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před 5 měsíci +1

      That old chestnut? I suppose it's Christmas. The whole point of going for the Rhine crossing sooner rather than later was because it would be easier while the Germans were still off balance and constructing their river and canal defence lines in the Netherlands, while Antwerp's port capacity was a necessity for multiple advances into Germany for Eisenhower's broad front policy once they were over the Rhine.
      Eisenhower said after Cornelius Ryan's unfinished and incomplete book A Bridge Too Far was published in 1974 - “I not only approved Market-Garden, I insisted upon it. We needed a bridgehead over the Rhine. If that could be accomplished I was quite willing to wait on all other operations.” (Eisenhower: A Soldier's Life, Carlo D'Este, 2015).
      People need to put the obsession with Antwerp to one side in its proper context and accept that MARKET GARDEN was worth the attempt and only failed by a narrow margin because a bridge was missed at Nijmegen on the first day due to a command failure in one parachute regiment that should have been sorted out in Normandy.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Monty blew his narrow thrust theory to hell and back only chirpy revisionist fanbois can't admit the bigboys Zhukov and IKE finished the Reich.Thanx for tagging along

  • @DD-qw4fz
    @DD-qw4fz Před rokem

    From all ive seen and red id say the biggest issue was, the mindset.
    In the highest ranks the success in Normandy and the liberation of France made everyone drunk on success. "The Germans are finished, and all we are going to fight is old men and children on flak guns, we kill those, roll over with tanks and enter Germany".
    Hnce why the focus was so much on flak , "but once we land its over" hence the drop zones issues.
    On the lower levels it was almost the other way around, there was a shadow of fear of losing the drop zones...
    On the other side, the Germans with their aggressive an effective reactions just confirmed all the fears of the low level commanders.

  • @OldWolflad
    @OldWolflad Před 4 měsíci +4

    Some key points of contention about MG....................
    * Montgomery originally proposed the operation, but Brereton was appointed Commander for Operation MG, with Eisenhower his Supreme Commander. Both could have postponed the operation if they felt it was risky.
    * British air planners wanted 2 drops in a day, and RAF officers still felt that at minimum, there was ample time for a second run using fixed wing aircraft only that could have delivered another 2,000 paratroopers in each zone.
    * Montgomery's staff urged Brereton to allow double drops in the British sector alone, Brereton refused.
    * This resulted in inadequate resources to carry out the critical coup-de-main attacks that Montgomery had recognised and proposed as being absolutely essential to capture them intact. He fully recognised that conventional ground forces would have had great difficulty capturing those vital bridges intact. Hence his notion of a surprise airborne operation using coup de main tactics.
    * Intelligence was not ignored, but the situation evolved in the two weeks prior to the commencement. There was no strong SS Panzer Corps around Arnhem, just around 6,500 recuperating troops from 9th/10th SS Panzer Corps with very few tanks (Bittrich claims just 5 top quality tanks).
    * The greatest oversight was the ability of the 'Blitztransporte' railway system to bring in reserves from Germany (especially Kleve tank depot), Hungary, and Austria.
    * 30 Corps had a subsidiary route available along a fair section of route 69, but not all of it. So there was no dependency entirely on a single route as is often suggested.
    * A bridging depot was situated just 7 miles off the Dutch border and enough equipment had been brought to build bailey bridges over every water course. The longest bailey bridge was built in just over 24 hours during WW2, longer in length than any over the Dutch rivers.
    * If bridges were blown, plans were in place to get troops quickly across via alternative means to continue attacks.
    * Montgomery readily acknowledged that it was difficult for 30 Corps to attack Arnhem across the area known as 'The Island' south of Arnhem due to strategically-located defensive guns on high ground behind the town. To counteract this he proposed one battalion of British paratroopers take the high ground whilst the other two available on Day One were to take one of the bridges.
    * A mini coup-de-main was attempted by British 1st Airborne at Arnhem in jeeps, but they were poorly armed to complete such a task and it was a weak alternative to the proper coup-de-main that Montgomery had originally proposed.
    * Although Frosts battalion of 740 men only took the critical northern end of Arnhem Bridge, they situated themselves in positions to cover both ends from all angles, which was better than fragmenting his already numerically weak force over two points. He explains his reasoning in his autobiography.
    * 2 attempts were made by the Germans to blow up Arnhem Bridge but they were unsuccessful due to the positioning of British guns at the northern end, vindicating Frosts stance that all points were covered. The Germans failed to attach explosives to the areas of the bridge at the southern end necessary to blow it up because they were too vulnerable to British fire.
    * Gavin independently considered that the Reichswald Heights were critical to retain, Browning accepted his reasoning.
    * Gavin admitted this when questioned by the post-war U.S Official enquiry. Both are equally culpable but it was originally Gavin's proposal.
    * 30 Corps were ordered to start only once or 'after' the first paratroopers had passed overhead, the earliest they could start was 1400 hours on 17th. Synchronisation was critical as per Brereton.
    * 30 Corps did in fact carry out night-time fighting, though for the sake of movement along route 69, orders were for tanks to stop in darkness. But Horrocks was an advocate of night-time tank fighting, and in Nijmegen the Grenadier Guards did move across the bridges at 0300 hours on 21st.
    * Gavin was told by 1800 hours on the 17th September by Dutch intelligence and by two of his own Reconnaissance Officers from 505th and 508th PIR, that the Nijmegen Bridge was very weakly held, and that the Reichswald was unable to hold tanks. 30 Corps tanks were supposed to be able to progress straight across upon their arrival at Nijmegen.
    * British Grenadier Guards tanks took the Nijmegen road-bridge on 20th September, not U.S. forces, after infantry and tanks of Grenadier Guards and U.S. 505th PIR won the vital battle at the southern end of Nijmegen road-bridge during two very heavy days of fighting.
    * Official records confirm that the first troop of Grenadier Guards tanks completed their crossing at the northern end of the Nijmegen road-bridge and were fighting along the northern embankment towards the rail-bridge at 1830 hours on the 20th, they did not find any U.S. paratroopers on the road-bridge, only half a mile away towards the rail-bridge.
    * The first U.S. troops reached the road-bridge at 1910 hours and were only officially in control by 1938 hours. The first U.S. troops found Germans in hasty retreat and disorganised according to official U.S 82nd divisional records.
    * Their arrival coincided with the arrival of the second group of British tanks which crossed at 1930 hours. These were 8 x M10s.
    * A coup-de-main of the Nijmegen 'rail-bridge' was undertaken by the heroic U.S. paratroopers of 504th PIR with support from Grenadier Guards tanks at the southern end. The northern end was taken at 1740 hours on 20th September though fighting continued until the following morning when tanks of Grenadier Guards crossed.
    * Once the two Nijmegen Bridges had been taken late on the 20th, both American and British Commanders had orders to consolidate for fear of German counterattack.
    * By the time Nijmegen town and bridges were fully in control at 2200 hours on 20th September, 30 Corps were split over the entire sector. Coldstream Guards were under Gavin's control temporarily and had helped 82nd Division recapture important ground, 43rd Division were split widely over the area having been drawn back to Uden and Veghel in the U.S. 101st sector, which had been breached. Irish Guards had expended 90% of their artillery shells in supporting Gavin's river crossing.
    * Potentially, a small window of opportunity was lost by 30 Corps late on the 20th September, but their delay at Nijmegen was simply because 82nd Division had not taken their key objective.
    * The accusation that 30 Corps were late is a myth, as they arrived at Nijmegen 42 hours (under two full days) from being allowed to commence.
    * This critical delay caused the operation to fail, with the Arnhem Bridge falling at 8pm on 20th September, though fighting went on there until the early hours, and full German control was only assured by 10am on 21st.
    * Exhausted British 30 Corps were entirely disorganised on the 21st September, making little progress, still being pulled in all directions.
    * Some factions of 30 Corps reached Arnhem (Driel) at 8am on 22nd September and stronger elements later that day. But the delay at
    * All Allied troops fought heroically during Op MG, it was decisions made in the heat of battle, but also by strategic commanders, perhaps notably Brereton, that led to its failure.

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před 4 měsíci +1

      * Montgomery and Browning came up with the outline for operation COMET, planned in detail by Browning's I Airborne Corps and Dempsey's 2nd Army. Montgomery cancelled COMET at the last minute on 10 September when he was informed II.SS-Panzerkorps had moved into the Arnhem area and realised the airborne component was not strong enough. He proposed adding the two US divisions to allow the British and Polish airborne to concentrate in one place with their considerable anti-tank assets, but the planning was now necessarily handed over to Brereton because the whole 1st Allied Airborne Army was now involved.
      * Brereton compromised on Browning's double airlift and dawn glider coup de main assaults on the three big bridges (Arnhem, Nijmegen, Grave) planned for COMET due to a lack of night trained navigators in the USAAF Troop Carriers and the glider assaults were therefore considered too risky for broad daylight raids. Browning had advised Dempsey COMET should not go ahead without the glider coup de main assaults, but was unable to protest Brereton's changes because he had already been politically neutralised after protesting Brereton's LINNET II plan. He knew he would be replaced by Matthew Ridgway and US XVIII Airborne Corps if he threatened to resign again.
      * The Kleve tank depot was faulty intelligence and gave rise to the silly rumour 1,000 panzers could be hiding in the Reichswald. The Panzer West depot was actually near Münster. Model was assessed to have less than 100 operational panzers in his entire Heeresgruppe B from Aachen to the North Sea coast, and the September returns actually listed 84 operational panzers - coincidentally the same number as anti-tank guns in the British 1st Airborne Division and Polish Parachute Brigade establishments (68+16). Montgomery had 2,400 tanks in 21st Army Group and the Americans had another 1,500 at Aachen.
      * Not heard of Bittrich claiming 5 tanks, but SS-Panzer-Regiment 9 had three Panthers (possibly off the books) in Arnhem and SS-Panzer-Regiment 10 at Vorden had 16 Panzer IV (in 5.Kompanie) and 4 StuG III G assault guns (in 7.Kompanie) - both divisions were converted from SS-Panzergrenadier divisions and the StuG Abteilung was reorganised to equip 7 and 8.Kompanie of the new Panzer-Regiments. 1st Parachute Battalion did encounter 5 tanks and about 15 half-tracks on the Amsterdamseweg on the first day and this was most likely the three Panthers and two Flakpanzer IV 'Möbelwagen' on hand at Arnhem, and Gräbner's SS-Panzer-Aufklärungs-Abteilung 9 at Beekbergen also had at least 5 armoured cars and about 35 half-tracks. The Mark IV tanks were too heavy for the Pannerden ferry and had to be held back until the Arnhem bridge was retaken, so only the StuGs could be deployed to Nijmegen.
      * The XXX Corps main supply 'Club Route' had a number of 'Heart Route' alternatives using alternative bridge crossings. About 24 bridges were targeted in total by the airborne, with about 10 needed at minimum to get XXX Corps to Arnhem, hence Montgomery's comment the operation was 90% successful. The flanking VIII and XII Corps were also advancing on main supply routes designated 'Spade' and 'Diamond' respectively.
      * Frost's 2nd Parachute Battalion would have a maximum of 613 men according to establishment, some being in the seaborne tail. Figures indicate Frost had 525 going in by air, and the rest of the 740 or so at the bridge were the 1st Parachute Brigade HQ and support elements from Royal Artillery, RASC, Glider Pilots, etc.. Frost's C Company did not reach the bridge, being tasked with the rail bridge as primary objective and the German Ortskommandantur as secondary. C Company from the 3rd Battalion did reach the bridge by following the railway line.
      * It was the Groesbeek heights south of Nijmegen deemed critical to be held, although the bridges were still the primary objectives. Gavin told Cornelius Ryan he toyed with a British request to drop a battalion on the north end of the Nijmegen highway bridge, but eventually dismissed it because of his experience in Sicily, where the 82nd was scattered over wide area and the division was disorganised for days. Instead he opted to instruct 508th CO Colonel Lindquist to send his 1st Battalion directly to the bridge as soon as possible after landing, which he failed to do, despite getting a report in person from Dutch resistance leader Geert van Hees that the Germans had deserted Nijmegen and left only 18 men guarding the highway bridge. Lindquist was a gifted administrator but not a good field officer, which calls into question Gavin's decision to assign the more aggressive and experienced 505th to the Reichswald sector instead of Nijmegen. It seems he calculated the threat of counter-attack from the Reichswald to be greater than that of mission (and therefore operational) failure at Nijmegen. Browning supported Gavin after the war (both Browning and Gavin were impeccably decent men), but Gavin's divisional plan was his responsibility and the problems with Colonel Lindquist and the 508th had already manifested on their first combat operation in Normandy.
      * Gavin was informed by the regimental liasion officers to Division HQ that the 508th were dug-in on the Groesbeek ridge and not moving on the bridge until the DZ was cleared, and the Reichwald was found by 505th patrols to be unoccupied and too dense for tanks to operate. He was as "mad" as the 508th LO had ever seen him and they both immediately went to the 508th CP to get Lindquist moving, but it was too late. The delay allowed 10.SS-Panzer-Division to reinforce the city and its bridges during the first evening and overnight.
      * Horrocks said he had ordered a night advance with tanks on only two occasions during the war and they both paid off, but he said he thought he might be pushing his luck a third time with MARKET GARDEN. He was already unhappy with the operation starting on a Sunday, as in his experience operations starting on a Sunday were rarely successful.

    • @OldWolflad
      @OldWolflad Před 4 měsíci +3

      @@davemac1197 Love posts like this, full of excellent detail. Thanks DaveMac. Just a few points to respond: -
      * German tank strength on 23 August 1944 was reported via a Heeresgruppe D report as totalling 47-53 tanks, 2nd SS Panzer Div had 15 tanks, 12th SS Panzer Div had 12 tanks, 9th SS Panzer Div had 20-25 tanks, but 1st and 10th had no tanks. Situation was fluid. It did not say how many of these were in the Arnhem area.
      * Monty was prepared to postpone Op until 23 September due to supply and strength issues.
      * RAF 541 Squadron I-mint photos of Arnhem via Lieut-General Brian Urquhart only revealed presence of second rate Panzer 3 tanks, these already known about via intelligence likely to belong to Hermann Goering Parachute Panzer Training and Replacement Regiument.
      * The situation did evolve with tanks being brought into Arnhem, but on 17th September Bittrich claimed he only had 5 top rate tanks at Arnhem, of which only 3 were operational and 2 of which were taken out by the British on the 18th.
      * The reason coup-de-mains abandoned is interesting, partly as you say due to the inherent risk of gliders landing in daylight near some objectives, but also due to reduced numbers being landed on day one. Distance from objectives was carefully considered with anti-aircraft guns in mind, but even at some distance, increased numbers landed on day one could have landed up to 2,000 more troops on day one using a second run of fixed wing aircraft only within the day light umbrella window, as wanted by British commanders, meaning that some coup de mains could still have been considered and coordinated.
      * Gavin may have been thoroughly decent, but having previously described Browning as an outstanding General, he later blamed him and said that if he had been in the US Army he would have been summarily dismissed. The official US enquiry seems to have discredited Gavin's account regards verbal orders allegedly given to Lindquist, who denied having received any pre-orders, and furthermore, none of Lieutenant-Colonel Shanley nor Lieutenant-Colonel Warren of 508th, nor Captain Bestebreurtje attached as Dutch Liaison Officer to 82nd Division were aware of any such pre-jump orders given by Gavin. Captain Westover, in charge of the official post-war enquiry, seems to have discredited Gavin here.

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@OldWolflad - I think you mean Heeresgruppe B? 23 August is a little early for Arnhem figures and the September return (I believe 5 September was the returns date) recorded 84 operational panzers in Heeresgruppe B, according to The Army That Got Away - The 15.Armee in the Summer of 1944, by Jack Didden and Maarten Swarts (2022).
      * I have what I think is a satisfactory narrative on the 9 and 10.SS-Panzer-Division tank strengths after pulling together a number of sources. I don't have precise figures on the Hohenstaufen (9.SS-Panzer), but I believe they came out of Normandy with the most tanks and after reaching the Veluwe and the Frundsberg the Achterhoek regions in the Netherlands, a decision was made on sending one division back to Germany for refit and the other refitted in situ. After initially choosing the Frundsberg to be sent back, the Hohenstaufen was chosen instead (I forget the exact reason for the reversal), so the Hohenstaufen was ordered to hand over operational vehicles to the Frundsberg, but some were held back by the administrative subterfuge of removing tracks and guns to render them technically non-operational, out of fear they would not get replacements. So the 3 Panthers and 2 Möbelwagen were retained, and the Mark IV tanks handed over, giving the Frundsberg a total of 16. By 12 October they were down to 6 Mark IV and 3 StuG, but had received 20 brand new Panthers arranged by Model to be delivered direct from the factory, and this fits the 100 de-horsed Panther crewmen SS-Pz.Rgt.9 had in its 'alarm kompanie' acting as infantry. The new tanks were incorporated into SS-Pz.Rgt.10 as the 8.Kompanie, according to Dieter Stenger's combat history of the Frundsberg in Panzers East And West (2017), based on the diary of a family member who was in 6./SS-Pz.Rgt.10 consisting of the logistics train acting as infantry. By 12 October they were down to 15 Panther, which can be accounted for by 5 knocked out in the area of Elst on the Nijmegen 'island' (Betuwe). I'm assuming Bittrich is not counting the 20 vehicles in SS-Pz.Rgt.10 as being sent to Arnhem as these were actually destined for Nijmegen and not used in action against 1st Airborne Division, although the Mark IV tanks had to wait in Arnhem for the bridge to be cleared.
      * I have a source on an armour discussion on the axishistory web forum where someone helpfully listed the armour returns for 10.SS-Panzer (as well as the Heer 9 and 116.Panzer-Divisions) for 5 September, 12 October, and 1 November, so the handover seems to have been completed by 5 September with 16 Mark IV and 4 StuG recorded for the Frundsberg.
      * I also have a German web forum source indicating the Instandsetzung-Zug (maintenance platoon) belonging to at least one of the Panzer Abteilung in the Hohenstaufen was located at the Rosendaelsche Golf Links just north of the official administrative location of SS-Panzer-Regiment 9 in the Saksen-Weimarkazerne in northern Arnhem. It makes sense that the tanks were laagered under trees on the golf course and the RAD (Reich labour service) camp located there would provide suitable accommodations, while the regiment HQ and Werkstatt Kompanie would be logically located in the nearby Dutch army barracks and workshops.
      * A Dutch historical website has a nice article about a resident living in a house on the corner of Callunastraat with Heijenoordseweg who received a knock on the kitchen door on the morning of Friday 15 September. They were SS panzer crewmen asking for any spare milk, explaining that they had removed their tanks from the barracks to avoid potential Allied bombing and hidden them under trees across the road on Heijenoordseweg. So this tells a story of tanks laagered on the golf course and some in the workshops ("under repair") until they were dispersed in western Arnhem. I love it when these little stories at the granular level are dots that start to join up and develop a clear picture.
      * According to Arnhem 1944: An Epic Battle Revisited volumes 1 and 2 by Christer Bergström (2019, 2020), two of the Panthers in western Arnhem were knocked out with a Gammon bomb and PIAT by B Company 3rd Parachute Battalion on 19 (not 18?) September during attempts to reach Frost at the bridge. The third survived to participate in the seige of the Oosterbeek perimeter. I'm currently reading one of my Christmas presents - Leo Heap's Escape From Arnhem (1945) - in which he describes an episode in the Oosterbeek perimeter where a Panther was located in a small wooded area and they decided to go tank hunting with a PIAT, eventually damaging a track and the tank retreated. Unfortunately, Leo is someone who did not believe in giving specific locations so I can't confirm the location of the wood and if the tank was therefore part of Kampfgruppe Harder (SS-Obersturmführer Adolf Harder's SS-Pz.Rgt.9). Some books suggest the Herman Göring training regiment had some Panthers at Oosterbeek, but I can't find any source to confirm they owned anything but older obsolete models (Mark III and early Mark IV), which you're obviously aware of.
      * The two Möbelwagen are rather more well-documented (and photographed) operating on the Dreyenscheweg north of Oosterbeek with Kampfgruppe Spindler, also on the 19 September, against 4th Parachute Brigade.
      * Private James Sims of the 2nd Parachute Battalion mortar platoon in his book Arnhem Spearhead (1977) says that he saw an unending line of Mark IV tanks parked under the trees along a boulevard near the bridge as he was led away into captivity. This would support SS-Pz.Rgt.10 having 16 of them, but also Panzer Kompanie Mielke (attached to Kampfgruppe Knaust) from Bielefeld had a total of 8 Mark IV tanks, but only 2 were committed against Frost with 6 Mark III tanks and both Mark IVs were knocked out, so I think the others were also held back for Nijmegen when the Arnhem bridge was cleared.
      * We know from Heinz Harmel that the Mark IV was too heavy for the ferry operation at Pannerden, but the last two tanks from Kompanie Mielke (a Mark III and a Mark II) were probably passed across the ferry as the lone Panzer II Ausf.b photographed in Hunner Park, Nijmegen after the battle would support this. This tank is also often attributed in photo captions to the Herman Göring Regiment, but they never claimed to own a Mark II, and one is listed for Kompanie Mielke in the Wehrkreis VI returns of equipment sent from Germany to Arnhem. This list was published in Retake Arnhem Bridge - An Illustrated History of the Kampfgruppe Knaust September to October 1944 by Bob Gerritsen and Scott Revell (2010), but I also found the full WK VI report online.
      * Gavin's letter to Captain Westover in 1945 and interview with Cornelius Ryan for A Bridge Too Far in 1967 have since been corroborated in two books published in 2012: September Hope - The American Side of a Bridge Too Far by John C McManus, and Put Us Down In Hell - A Combat History of the 508th PIR in WW2 by Phil Nordyke. Both use first hand accounts of witnesses to the pre-flight briefing in which Gavin instructed Lindquist to send the 1st Battalion directly to the bridge. McManus has the Division G-3 (Operations) Officer Lt Col Jack Norton, and Nordyke has the 508th Liasion Officer Captain Chester 'Chet' Graham. Note: regiment XO Shanley and 1st Battalion CO Warren were not present.
      * Chet Graham also details in Nordyke's Normandy chapters how Lindquist was responsible for earlier bad decision making, partilcularly in an incident involving the combat ineffective original regiment XO, who was court-martialled by Matthew Ridgway and kicked out of the Airborne, and again in an attack on Hill 95 (Saint Catherine near La Haye) over open ground on 4 July 1944, leading to excessive casualties. Gavin wrote a post-war report to the US Army recommending a reversal of the policy of replacing officers who made serious mistakes, arguing that leaving them in place would allow them to learn from their mistakes. It seems Gavin was practicing this policy within his own division as Lindquist remained in command of the 508th until deactivation after the war. There were no serious command failures in the regiment during the Battle of the Bulge. I find Lindquist's response to Westover's questionnaire, printed in RG Poulussen's Lost At Nijmegen (2011), to be disingenuous. He said he wasn't told to move on the bridge after he landed until they were in position (on the Groesbeek ridge) and then was instructed to send the 1st Battalion (after Gavin arrived to chew him out, according to Chet Graham).
      * My impression is that Gavin and Browning were in agreement to take responsibility over the failure at Nijmegen as Gavin did not want to throw a junior officer under the bus. The mistakes made in the divisional plan were Gavin's, and this does explain his subsequent behaviour, twice proposing his own troops be used to make the river assault, despite the XXX Corps default plan (operation BASIL) for this scenario of the Waal bridges still in German hands being an amphibious assault carried out by 43rd (Wessex) Infantry Division with one or two Brigades up (Special Bridging Force - Engineers Under XXX Corps During Operation Market Garden by John Sliz, 2021). I think this was done to avoid public blame for the failure of the operation being laid at the door of the Americans.

    • @OldWolflad
      @OldWolflad Před 4 měsíci +2

      Thanks again Davemac, this is fantastic information that you have regards available tanks, who am I to question that.
      Its interesting the perception of Gavin, who was undoubtedly an excellent General militarily. It was simply his version of events in the post-war enquiry versus what has been claimed subsequently, and his changing attitude towards Browning that for me raises questions regards the validity of his accounts regards MG.
      May I ask, if you don't mind, what you make of Poulussen's books? I think his 2nd book 'Little sense of urgency' is considerably more detailed and brings more to the discussion, something I think Rob himself accepts.
      Thanks again Dave MG@@davemac1197

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@OldWolflad - I don't know that Gavin did have a changing attitude towards Browning after the war - my impression was that Gavin didn't want to throw Lindquist 'under the bus', at least not publicly, but he did give Westover a clear statement and a few hints to Cornelius Ryan (who didn't dig any further) and Browning did what he thought was the decent thing and backed him up.
      Browning was obviously loathe to be critical of the American divisions under his command and made overwhelmingly positive comments about their performance during the operation, which I think are 99% perfectly valid. I think the problems with Lindquist echoes a similar problem most people are already familiar with in Captain Herbert Sobel, the original commander of Easy Company 506th PIR - the famous 'Band of Brothers'. However, there was no Sergeants mutiny in the 508th and Lindquist was never reassigned like Sobel. I do recommend Nordyke's book on the 508th - it reads like the film script that A Bridge Too Far should have been, at least as far as this regiment is concerned, and of course the 508th wasn't in the film at all.
      Some people criticise the 506th for not securing the Son bridge before it was blown, but I don't think they appreciate that the Wilhelmina canal was a prepared defence line, all the remaining bridges were prepared for demolition, and General Kurt Student issued standing orders they were to be blown if threatened, which is what happened at Son and Best. Short of dropping a company directly onto the bridges (both of which were in the middle of heavy Flak positions provided by guns of schwere.Flak-Abteilung 428 removed from Deelen airfield) I don't see how they could have been seized intact. The Germans, the 506th, the Guards and the Royal Engineers, all did text book jobs at Son, so I can find no fault with any of them.
      I think because McManus and Nordyke's witnesses to Gavin's final MARKET briefing were junior officers at the time, and now (in 2012) felt more free to speak out and set the record straight, as the more senior figures involved in this drama had by then passed away. That's not unusual, we gradually get a more clearer picture of events the further away from them we get.
      An open question is how much did Gavin appreciate Lindquist's shortcomings as a field commander? In his interview with Cornelius Ryan (Box 101 Folder 10, Cornelius Ryan Collection, Ohio State University - Notes on meeting with J.M. Gavin, Boston, January 20, 1967), Ryan noted:
      'Gavin and Lindquist had been together in Sicily and Normandy and neither Gavin nor Ridgway, the old commander of the 82nd, trusted him in a fight.
      He did not have a “killer instinct.” In Gavin’s words, “He wouldn’t go for the juggler [jugular].” As an administrative officer he was excellent; his troopers were sharp and snappy and, according to Gavin, “Made great palace guards after the war.”
      Gavin confirms he ordered Lindquist to commit a battalion to the capture of the Nijmegen bridge before the jump. He also confirms he told Lindquist not to go to the bridge by way of the town but to approach it along some mud flats to the east.
      We discussed also objectives. Gavin’s main objectives were the heights at Groesbeek and the Grave bridge; he expected and intelligence confirmed “a helluva reaction from the Reichswald area.” Therefore he had to control the Groesbeek heights. The Grave bridge was essential to the link up with the British 2nd Army. He had three days to capture the Nijmegen bridge and, although he was concerned about it, he felt certain he could get it within three days.
      The British wanted him, he said, to drop a battalion on the northern end of the bridge and take it by coup de main. Gavin toyed with the idea and then discarded it because of his experience in Sicily. There, his units had been scattered and he found himself commanding four or five men on the first day. For days afterward, the division was completely disorganized.'
      Clearly Gavin was speaking with the benefit of hindsight here, but we don't know to what extent. (Was Lindquist even in Sicily? I'm not sure that's correct, unless he went along as an observer - the 508th were still forming in the USA and Nordyke makes no mention of Sicily in Put Us Down In Hell, 2012).
      I have both of Poulussen's books, I think they're both well-researched. Some of the early stuff on planning COMET and the discussions between Montgomery and Eisenhower over logistics is very interesting. The map showing the glider flight paths for the Arnhem and Nijmegen coup de main assaults is very interesting and shows the tugs were not exposed to Flak near the bridges at all. I already had Lost At Nijmegen on Kindle but opted to buy both hard copies from the author directly and he very kindly offered to sign both books for me, which was very nice of him! Lost At Nijmegen obviously focused on that aspect of the operation and was published the year before McManus and Nordyke, so he didn't have the benefit of the first hand accounts in those books - I do recommend them both - and Poulussen came to the conclusion based on documents there was a miscommunication between Gavin and Lindquist, so that was as far as he could go with his research.

  • @morganhale3434
    @morganhale3434 Před 2 lety +4

    I think the blame for failure lies with the USAAF commander of the Strategic Airlift element when he limited the sorties of his aircrews to just one of carrying airborne units on Day 1 of the operations. I do understand that German AA crews would've been prepared, but they were just as prepared for the original jumps because German radar and troops on the coast had alerted the AA units for the first wave, a second wave would've faced just as much of an AA response as the first. Just my opinion.

    • @johnlucas8479
      @johnlucas8479 Před 2 lety +1

      the reason for the single lift was the weather, the forecast fog on the morning of the 17th only cleared by 0900 hours

    • @johnlucas8479
      @johnlucas8479 Před 2 lety +1

      @@thevillaaston7811Why would you continue to plan for 2 lifts on the 17th, when you know that only one lift was feasible after the initial planning. See below why one lift was the final decision, and the reason why one lift was decided was the weather.
      This is from Ritchie, Sebastian; Ritchie, Sebastian. Arnhem: Myth and Reality (p. 195). Maybe you should read the book especially chapter 3.3 Air Lift to get a fully appreciation of issue with planning the Air Lift.
      "On 10 September Browning presented his outline plan to the assembled Allied airborne and troop carrier commanders (as we have seen, 1st Airborne Division were not represented at this meeting). The plan stated that the airlift schedule would be ‘in principle as for Linnet’. (WO 219/4998, Operation Sixteen Outline Plan, 10 September 1944.)
      As so little time was available, decisions were required immediately and, once taken, they had to be adhered to rigidly. So the First Allied Airborne Army planners sprang into action, examining Browning’s outline, the number of aircraft available and the potential combinations of the three airborne divisions that might be infiltrated in any given period with the resources available. Within hours they had become concerned over the prospect of achieving two daylight lifts on the same day:
      “With the shortening of the days at this time of the year, and complications of turn-around, it is believed that future plans should be made on the basis of one lift per day, with all US aircraft available. This will permit an operation to be carried through in spite of a late start due to bad weather, whereas tight schedule plans based on two lifts per day could not be met if early morning weather were bad. (WO 219/4998, memorandum by Lieutenant Colonel Thomas Bartley, 10 September 1944.”
      By 12 September Williams (who had overall command of the airlift) had accepted this advice. At another planning meeting,
      “General Williams pointed out that owing to the reduced number of hours of daylight and increase in distance, it would not be possible to consider more than one lift per day. (WO 219/4998, First Allied Airborne Army memorandum to Brigadier General Ralph Stearley, 12 September 1944.)”
      Williams had a long-standing and deserved reputation for close co-operation with the airborne forces.10 He had commanded the US troop carriers in Husky, Neptune and Dragoon, and was thus one of the most experienced of all the Allied airborne commanders.
      So you see that the starting point in the planning was 2 lifts, but at the end of the day the final decision was that only one lift was doable.
      So were your evidence that 2 lifts were never considered in the planning phrase.

    • @johnlucas8479
      @johnlucas8479 Před 2 lety +1

      @@thevillaaston7811 I read all those accounts, Yes they state that 2 lifts on 17th would have assisted the operation, and they are right only if 2 lifts were practicable and that would depend on the WEATHER.
      But TheVilla Aston none of these account mention was the weather on the 17th.
      Also either Urquhart or Gavin mention in their accounts a request for a second lift.
      Rick Atkinson again Operation Dragoon is mention which did have 2 lifts yet fails to provide any details regarding the time of the 2 lifts which were the 1st lift (Paratroopers) arrive at 0430 the 2nd lift (Gliders) arrived at 1800 hours 13 1/2 hours later. But you know that. Also he ever mention the weather conditions on the 17th. You also know that fog on the morning of the 17th did not clear until 0900. So base on Dragoon the second lift would no take off until 2230 Hours ( assuming the 1st lift takeoff was 0900) arriving at DZ/LZ until 0130 on the 18th. Remember the night 17/18th is moonless so how would the Gliders see were to land? See below about impact of weather.
      Montgomery 21 Army Group weather report for 17th regarding Market Garden "Fog over bases clearing by 1000 hours with moderate amounts of cumulus 3000 ft thereafter good visibility. Light winds. Operation proceeded according to plan.
      The Impact of weather in planning Air Operations
      "Weather and visibility factors. Successful airborne operations in the Second World War were dependent on a number of favourable weather and visibility factors. Weather conditions had to be sufficiently fine to allow aircraft to take off, transit to their objectives, deliver their paratroops or gliders, complete return journeys and land safely. Overcast conditions rendered glider operations all but impossible. Tow-rope breakages were a regular occurrence when tug and glider combinations flew through cloud, either because the glider pilot lost sight of the tug and the two aircraft got out of alignment or because, in assuming the recommended position for bad weather conditions, the glider inadvertently passed through the tug’s slipstream. Operations executed in darkness or half-light had largely proved unsuccessful. Therefore, by September 1944, the majority of air planners within First Allied Airborne Army were convinced that future operations should be conducted in daylight and in the best possible visibility conditions. Obtaining two or more successive days of clear and calm weather across three weather systems (the UK, the North Sea and Continental Europe) in mid-September was always going to be problematic. But, by that time, the planners had been able to observe the way in which adverse weather had caused the postponement of both Linnet and Comet, and had evidently concluded that they were most likely to obtain favourable conditions by avoiding the dawn lifts that had been proposed for both operations. Hence, as the records show, the attraction of scheduling successive lifts slightly later in the morning was not only that they could be flown at full strength but also that they could exploit the best available periods of visibility. The alternative was to mount smaller follow-up lifts using a schedule that was potentially more vulnerable to weather or visibility problems. Such reasoning would have been reinforced by the prevailing weather conditions in the week leading up to Market Garden, which were characterized by early morning fog on every day except the 16th."
      Ritchie, Sebastian; Ritchie, Sebastian. Arnhem: Myth and Reality (p. 199).
      So TheVilla Aston show how to two lifts was doable. You have on the 17th Sept sunrise at 0617 and sunset at 1811 and nautical twilight ended at 19.26 hours. With morning fog clearing by 0900.
      Clearly Williams the most experience airmen with regarding plan airborne operation would have used 2 lifts if it was doable for Market Garden as he did with Dragoon and proposed for Operation Linnet.
      Ask yourself why did he finally decide on a single lift?

    • @johnlucas8479
      @johnlucas8479 Před 2 lety +1

      @@thevillaaston7811
      "If there had been a plan for two lifts on the first day that was only thwarted by weather that defied what was forecast, then Brereton would have been in the clear. But there was no such plan." Your words.
      Clearly you do not understand how planning an air operation works. All air operations plans are depended on the forecast weather conditions on the day.
      Your statement "only thwarted by weather that defied what was forecast." The forecast was for morning fog which was expected to clear by 0900 on the 17th. That means the earliest the lift could take-off would be between 0900 to 1000, reaching the drop/landing zones between 1200 to 1300 hours. With sunset around 1811, how can anyone plan a second lift to occur on the 17th with that weather forecast.
      Your argument would only hold up if the weather forecasts leading up to 17th was for good flying weather with no morning fog expected, but unexpected on the 17th morning fog was present. The decision would have been to postponed the operation just as Operation Comet was postponed on the 8th no to delay the first lift and cancel the 2nd.
      Two lifts was the starting point, the forecast weather condition of morning fog ruled out any possibility of a second lift.
      You and I were no there, so how can you know what was planned and how the final decision was determined. As Williams made the decision for a single lift, was the one who plan 2 lifts for Dragoon, clearly would have a very sound reason for that decision. Brereton only agreed with Williams decision. If anyone should be criticize for the decision its Williams not Brereton.
      As to drop Zone locations at Arnhem, they were decided by the RAF for Operation Comet which Brereton was not involved.

    • @johnlucas8479
      @johnlucas8479 Před 2 lety

      @@thevillaaston7811
      As you final to provided any evidence that 2 lifts was possible but thwarted by the weather this may help to realized, why Williams decided against Two lift due to forecast of expected fog on the 17th
      Planning for 2 lifts the starting point is to 1 determine the earliest time the first lift can take-off based on forecast weather condition (A Hours). This will be depended on the make-up of the lift, for example Transports only, Gliders only or combination of the two. Next is to determine the very latest the 2nd lift can arrive over the DZ/LZ. (B Hours).
      In that time gap the following stage will be undertaken.
      1) Take-off and assembly of the 1st Lift
      2) The flight time from assembly point to the Target DZ/LZ
      3) The time it will take to deliver the troops and equipment
      4) The return flights. (Looking at the time the last planes leave the DZ/LZ to arrive back at base. Last Plane arriving at C Hours
      5) The return around time require to prepare the aircraft for second lift.
      All the aircraft of the lifts will end up into one of 4 groups. Group 1 aircraft with no battle damage, mechanical or electrical issues and are available immediately for 2nd lift. Group 2 planes that suffered battle damage or mechanical or electrical issues that require repairs they are available. Group 3 planes that have return but to the level of damage are written off as total loss. The last group are planes that final to return.
      The earliest the 2nd lift can take-off is D Hours. At D-hour their sufficient aircraft available from Group 1 to make viable second lift.
      Next, we need to calculate the latest take-off time for 2nd lift which would be B hours minus the time required to assembly and fly to DZ/LZ. So E Hours is the calculated take-off time.
      So, if D Hours is earlier than E Hours 2 lifts are doable. The only question does the 2nd Lift take-off at D or E or some point between the two. However, if E Hours is earlier than C Hours only one lift would be possible. As aircraft from the first are still in the air in would not be possible to spot the gliders for the second lift.
      The question is if E Hours is later than C Hours but earlier than D Hours?
      Clearly a single Lift is the obvious answer, but what would be the maximum time gap were a 2lift may be possible if timing can be fine-tuned.
      So TheVilla Aston, the decision whether to go with 1 lift or two would be based on the expected weather conditions and if there sufficient time to incorporate the 2nd Lift.
      Clearly with expectation of morning fog on the 17th, Williams made the decision that only a single lift was possible. For 2 lifts to have a chance, there need to be sufficient light and visibility for a pre dawn take-off.

  • @Est-lj4tq
    @Est-lj4tq Před 4 měsíci +2

    I'd like to know what, on average, was the opinion of people on market-garden before Cornelius Ryans book

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před 4 měsíci +3

      That would be hard to say, because the operation was little known until after the publication of Ryan's classic 1974 book, and the Hollywood film version in 1977 reached an even wider public audience.
      The earliest published book I have on MARKET GARDEN is Cornelius Bauer's The Battle Of Arnhem, first published in Dutch as De Slag By Arnhem in 1963 and in English in 1966. The book is based on the 20 years of research into the battle of Arnhem by Dutch Colonel Theodoor Alexander Boeree, a resident of Ede during the battle, and his main conclusion was to refute the 'betrayal myth' that the plans for the operation were betrayed to the Germans by a Dutch double agent, which apparently many believed at the time. The myth served to explain the rapid response to the operation by II.SS-Panzerkorps, but in fact the airborne attack was a complete surprise to German officers with just a couple of exceptions.
      The quick response was due to the organisation of 'alarm units' for any emergencies, and the II.SS-Panzerkorps HQ in Doetinchem was connected by a direct phone line to the local Luftwaffe air raid observation station in the town, which in turn was part of a communications net linked to the 3.Jagd-Division control bunker 'DIOGENES' near Deelen airfield. SS-Obergruppenführer Wilhelm Bittrich was therefore informed of the airborne landings at Arnhem and Nijmegen by telephone as soon as they were happening and he immediately ordered all alarm units in the Korps to be mobilised within the hour.
      One example of how a myth can persist and be replicated by others for many years is a technical error in German author Wilhem Tieke's In The Firestorm Of The Last Years Of The War - II.SS-Panzerkorps with the 9. and 10.SS-Divisions 'Hohenstaufen' and 'Frundsberg' (1975). Tieke was a member of the 9.SS-Panzer-Division 'Hohenstaufen', so he writes from a position of some authority, although he made an error in asserting that SS-Sturmbannfürer Erwin Franz Rudolf Röstel's SS-Panzerjäger-Abteilung 10 was encountered in the MARKET GARDEN corridor around Valkenswaard in the first two days of the operation, and this has been picked up by Robert Kershaw's pioneering work on the German side of the campaign with his book It Never Snows In September (1990). Kershaw goes further and assumes that the four "assault guns" deployed to Nijmegen by 10.SS-Panzer-Division was a detachment from Röstel's unit, but the (quote unquote) "assault guns" give away the fact this is an error and the vehicles were not from an SS-Panzerjäger-Abteilung.
      Both SS-Panzerjäger-Abteilung 9 and 10 were equipped with 21 x Jagdpanzer IV/L48 tank destroyers. The abteilung for the Hohenstaufen completed training only in time for the withdrawal from Normandy and lost all but two of its vehicles in France and Germany covering the withdrawal of the division, and the remaining two vehicles were 'alarmed' and in early action at Arnhem. The Frundsberg's unit was detached from the division and sent with all 21 vehicles to 7.Armee in Limburg, where it was operating east of Maastricht in the Valkenburg and Kerkrade areas fighting the US 1st Army advancing on Aachen across the German border. This is probably how the unit's location got Valkenburg conflated with Valkenswaard by Tieke. This myth can be found repeated as gospel in many references until finally put to bed by Jack Didden and Maarten Swarts' book Autumn Gale (Herbst Sturm) - Kampfgruppe Chill, schwere Heeres Panzerrjäger-Abteilung 559 and the German recovery in the autumn of 1944 (2013), where the unit responsible for Jagpanthers (1.Kompanie) and StuG IIIGs (2. and 3.Kompanie) in the lower MARKET GARDEN corridor is schwere Heeres Panzerjäger-Abteilung 559. A unit previously responsible for stopping 11th Armoured Division's advance across the Albert canal in Antwerp to cut off the Zuid-Beveland peninsula (if you want to get into that debate, this is also the book to consult).
      The four StuG IIIG assault guns in Nijmegen did belong to 10.SS-Panzer, but they were a hangover from the formation of the Hohenstaufen and Frundsberg divisions as panzergrenadier-divisions until Hitler ordered them converted to panzer-divisions in 1943. The StuG Abteilung was reorganised into the 7. and 8.Kompanie of the new Panzer-Regiments (to make up the numbers in what should be an all-Panzer IV battalion), so the four StuGs at Nijmegen were the last Normandy survivors concentrated in 7./SS-Panzer-Regiment 10 under SS-Obersturmführer Franz Riedel. Confusingly, the commander of 3./Panzerjäger-Abteilung 559 was also called Franz, Oberleutnant Franz Kopka, who survived the war and consulted by Didden and Swarts for Autumn Gale.
      You have to drill down to granular level to get all the dots to join up, and that hasn't really happened until the last 10-12 years in terms of published books.

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před 4 měsíci +3

      Just realised I do have an earlier book, Escape From Arnhem by Leo Heaps (1945). Heaps was a CANLOAN officer (Canadian volunteers loaned to the British Army, which was short of officers) and was a bit of an adventurer. After landing on the Normandy beaches on D-Day with the Dorsetshire Regiment, he was evacuated to England with a minor wound and managed to blag his way into getting attached to 1st Parachute Battalion for the Arnhem operation, despite not having jump wings. The CO, Lt Col David Dobie, didn't know what to do with him so gave him a non-job of collecting any German transport he could find and arranged to meet at the bridge, so by accident he avoided getting wiped out with the rest of the battalion. Instead, he made several attempts to get ammunition supplies to the bridge by Jeep or Universal Carrier, all unsuccessful, but did find General Urquhart in western Arnhem. He was involved in the siege of Oosterbeek as part of the 'Lonsdale Force' of 1st, 3rd, and 11th Parachute, and South Staffords remnants, captured after trying to swim the Rijn, and then escaped from a POW train and evaded to help create the escape lines and organise the Operation Pegasus evacuation as part of Airey Neave's MI-9 organisation. His story is a personal account with a frustrating lack of maps and precise locations and other details, so it doesn't really give a history or view of the operation as such.

    • @Est-lj4tq
      @Est-lj4tq Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@davemac1197 There is an interview with Frost on youtube from 1977 connected to the release of yhe film. You get the impression that he was quite the celebrity already. There is also footage from 1946 and 1949 alreay from ceremony's in honour of the fallen and ofcourse the Film theyre's is glory. Together this would seem to me that the operation was already mythical early on.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 3 měsíci +1

      A Bridge Too Far was so accurate that Montgomery didn't appear in it either

    • @nickdanger3802
      @nickdanger3802 Před 3 měsíci

      Interview with Brereton, Frost and Roy Urquhart
      czcams.com/video/iSeTMmkrDuI/video.html

  • @therealuncleowen2588
    @therealuncleowen2588 Před rokem +7

    Everyone who saw the movie knows that it was the refusal of the XXX Corps tankers to continue up the road to Arnhem after Robert Redford led the 82nd Airborne in heroically capturing the Waal River Bridge that caused the operation to fail. The tankers brewed tea instead of advancing.
    I'm joking, of course. This new research is very interesting.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Před rokem +5

      Yes, the film was nonsense. It was the Grenadier Guards tanks that took the bridge, at dusk and they had orders to stop the Germans taking the bridge back that night.

    • @wbertie2604
      @wbertie2604 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@lyndoncmp5751 another element the movie got wrong further explains this. The Shermans taken out early on were taken out by handheld AT weapons, not PAKs as the initial bombardment destroyed the latter. The risk of further attacks by such weapons meant that continuing without infantry support, which was still mopping up in Nijmegen, was risky. As it was, a couple of Guards tanks did make it to within sight of Arnhem, to the west a bit.
      The other nonsense part of the movie was the radios. The short-range radios in jeeps were fine if a bit hampered by woodland as was expected back then. The units being scattered did mean direction communication to the LZ/DZ to Arnhem wasn't possible. US glider troops dropped in two gliders with some excellent long-range radios but both were damaged on landing. Medium-range radios were available so when artillery units got within range these were used to break up German attacks West of Arnhem by forward observers (I think RA placed with the paratroopers) directing accurate fire onto individual StuGs.

  • @Melrose51653
    @Melrose51653 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Interesting presentation created to provide an objective analysis of the operation that should disturb our long held views. It does however feel like a well disguised attempt to shift blame in a certain way under the guise of finally asking a neutral party.

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před 3 měsíci +2

      You make it sound like WW2TV is out to manipulate people

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před 3 měsíci +4

      Of course, you could always read two American authors who published the year after RG Poulussen's Lost At Nijmegen and therefore couldn't be referenced by him:
      September Hope - The American Side of a Bridge Too Far, John C McManus (2012)
      Put Us Down In Hell - The Combat History of the 508th PIR in WW2, Phil Nordyke (2012)
      They both go a lot further into exploring what went wrong at Nijmegen, and Nordyke's earlier chapters on the 508th in Normandy give you some context and backstory that explains the command problems in the regiment.
      Another neutral (Swedish) historian who researched Cornelius Ryan's unpublished documents and interviews and updates A Bridge Too Far, and also debunks the myths in the Hollywood film:
      Arnhem 1944: An Epic Battle Revisited vols 1 and 2, Christer Bergström (2019, 2020)

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před 3 měsíci +3

      @@davemac1197 I have read all those books

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 měsíci +3

      Melrose, your long held views were clearly wrong. The vid wrenched you out if your comfort zone.

  • @ianprice9563
    @ianprice9563 Před 2 lety +1

    I’ve just watched this one and I’d like to say thank you - it’s very interesting.
    I agree that Gavin’s performance at Nijmegen has to be questioned. (I actually said as much in an essay a year ago as part of my MA.) A couple of things, though. First, Mr Poulussen says that there weren’t many German forces in the Reichswald which is true (initially), but the Allies didn’t know that and we need to limit the 20/20 hindsight advantage. Gavin had no plan to take the Waal bridge - that’s the problem. Gavin did, on occasion, shift the blame, but he also changed his story. Cornelius Ryan was a friend of Gavin’s, so he wrote rather kindly of what happened at Nijmegen. Finally, we don’t seem to have considered Browning who took his HQ into Gavin’s sector, using valuable glider lift (33 gliders, if I recall correctly?) That HQ was not fit for purpose - it was not trained, nor manned, as a warfighting HQ, so the assumption must be that Browning wanted to be there for his own interests. Moreover, even if Gavin accepted the accusation that it was his failure, where was Browning?! Certainly, Gavin made a massive error of judgement, but Browning oversaw the planning - presumably - and accepted Gavin’s plan - presumably. Why did he not push Gavin to take the Waal bridge, instead of agreeing, after the failed attempt to just wait until day four? I am REALLY surprised that Mr Poulussen doesn’t address this issue. Browning has much to answer for.

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před 2 lety +1

      Good points - thanks

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety +1

      -the objective was to cross the Rhine,and the Port of Antwerp was needed for that.All else is bullshit to cover for this failure .Monty and Ike own this debacle - not the soldiers
      The Dutch Army Staff College final exam before the war asked students about how to advance north on just this road. Any student suggesting a direct assault up the road was failed on the spot. Only flanking well to the west was accepted as an answer
      There are some Monty fanboys that attempted to hang this on the 82nd and I mean real slander of dead soldiers.Just to absolve the abrasive little freak of a plan that got pretty much blasted apart all up and down the 70 mile road.Monty the plug ignored directives from SHAEF to open Antwerp on September 4th on the 10th he sprung the idea to grab the bridges - and glory for himself.And IKE foolishly acquiesced to get him to do something - anything.But the rube really wasn't a Field Marshall like Model.The deep water port for supply was desperately needed as it is 499 miles from Cherbourg to Arnhem but sadly monty ignored it.

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před 2 lety +3

      @@bigwoody4704 Much of what you say I agree with, but the initial plan of Montgomery's can be bad AND the execution of it also at fault. Regardless of the big error of how Antwerp was handled, I still think it's fair to say that James Gavin made some errors too, as indeed did many commanders in OMG

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety

      *Even if the 82nd grabbed the bridge the 1st day they couldn't hold it for 3 days until the tardy formations arrived - this debacle should not been considered let alone launched.The 82nd had nothing to do with Monty's poor planning and XXX Corps slow progress or the Germans still between Nijmegen and Arnhem that brought armor the 1st day across the Arnhem Road bridge.Plenty went wrong south of Nijmegen down past Eindoven and well south to Valkenswaard and before there even that guys like Poulussen and Neilands ignore* Monty and IKE own it - there's the problem,so called capable minds should have known better. The 508th Parachute Infantry actually landed with explicit orders, and they were the most demanding of any unit, American or British, in the entire operation. The regiment was stretched paper-thin the minute it landed. The First Battalion was to move 6 miles to the outskirts of south-central Nijmegen, primarily to block the Nijmegen-Groesbeek Road. If the situation then allowed, First Battalion was supposed to send a platoon into Nijmegen to try for the bridge. After sundown First Battalion dispatched a platoon from Company C, which quickly became lost inside the city. Later that night, First Battalion sent Company A and Company B into the city, both of which also became hopelessly lost inside the city, and were thrust into a firefight with elements of both Colonel Henke's defenders, and the arriving 9 SS Panzer Division's armored reconnaissance battalion. *The enemy gets a vote*
      Three companies were hardly making "good progress in capturing the Wall bridge." They were in fact, stopped cold in their tracks. Andthe German attack did overrun and nearly annihilate the 508th Parachute Infantry's Company D which had been left behind to hold the landing zones, and did consist of three full non-local kampfgruppe or 250-300 men each with twenty non-local armored vehicles (Pumas) supported by nearly a non-local regiment of artillery.
      By sunrise they had made no progress toward the bridge when German assaults against the landing zones started.Imagine for one second carring up field machine guns some weighing up to 100 lbs,or mortar tubes,base plates and ammo of 150 lbs then going up/down the heights to the LZs back to the bridges and into the city
      3 miles from the start Panzerfaust teams took out 9 shermans,halting the column - they made it a whole 7 miles the 1st day and didn't start until 2 in the after noon and stopped at 6 with daylight left.Unfortunately your "guest" isn't very thorough and leaves out much appropriate info,he may not be biased but he is far from well informed

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety

      @@WW2TV you ask for his opinion and it's just that,had i known this guy would be interviewed I know quite a few people with archived history that have questions about his shaky presentations.
      Here you go a PHD also who has read archives.BTW intersting none the less and enjoyed over all observations.Picking it up at around 10:50,here would be my immediate response
      *From ARNHEM,by William Buckingham,p46* the shortage of navigators was so acute that only 4 out of 10 C-47 crews used on the D-Day drop included one,usually flying at the head of the serial.The situation didn't improve by September 1944. the key issue was lack of natural illumination, *the 1st airlifts into Normandy involved 900 C-47s and gliders. MARKET envisioned doing the same with around 1,600 flights* with inexperienced and partially trained air crews in the total darkness of a no moon period would have been suicidal. *(Williams insistence on a single lift per day and Brereton's acceptance of it may have been less than ideal,but it was the only realistic option in the prevailing circumstances)* Because of a shortage of navigators on longer flights with much shorter days
      It still rested with Montgomery to adress his battle assessmnets and either adjust or abort.With 700 more flights than D-Day and with over 2 hrs less day light and a moon less nite and longer flights and Strategic Bombing of the Reich was going full tilt.Just way to moving parts not factoring in the interference from an adversary

  • @johnlucas8479
    @johnlucas8479 Před rokem

    Question of Lack of Air Support for Market Garden:
    One point not discussed was the weather condition, from 21 Army Group Reports
    1) During 17th September 550 sorties were flown by 83 Group in support of Ground Troops.
    2) 18th Sept During the whole day the weather was the limiting factor as it was bad over both over airfields and the battle area.
    3) 19th Sept Weather again the limiting factor. Both over airfields and over the battle area it was bad for flying. Only 73 sorties flown.
    4) 20th Sept Bad weather and the maintenance lift of re-supply of 1 British airborne Div kept the number of sorties down to 259 of which 181 were purely fighter operations air cover and sweeps. Tactical reconnaissance produced little value both of bad visibility and the prohibition on flying during airborne drops.
    Buckley, John; Preston-Hough, Peter. Operation Market Garden (Wolverhampton Military Studies) (p. 105)
    One further thing hindered CAS during Operation Market Garden: the weather. The weather turned bad almost immediately. During the entire operation after the initial drop, the weather was generally rainy and very poor for air operations and CAS. The result was that even when calls did come in for support from one group, squadron, etc., it was frequently impossible to fly the mission. Out of ninety-five requests for CAS the RAF received during Operation Market Garden, fifty were unfulfilled due to weather. {John Terraine, A Time for Courage. NY: MacMillan, 1985, p.670}
    Support by Bomber Command and 8th Air Force on the night 16th/17th and 17th.
    Operation Market Garden Now and Then page 90 - 91
    1) Night of D-1 282 RAF Bomber attack various airfields
    2) Day of 17th 872 B-17’s to attack 117 installations mostly AA batteries along troop carrier route. Supported by 147 P-51’s
    3) Other operation attack by 85 Lancaster and 15 Mosquitoes escorted by 5 Spitfires.
    4) Late operation was dispatched 50 Mosquitos, 48 B-25’s and 24 Boston’s of 2nd Tactical airforce
    Clearly weather was a factor during the operation, but on the 17th massive support effort was made by Airforce

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před rokem +1

      You will enjoy the show with Seb Ritchie later this month

  • @larrywinn9090
    @larrywinn9090 Před 2 lety +4

    this was a great interview and adding insight into this battle but if you were to break it down it was a bad narrow minded plan. The operation failed before Monte came up with it. it failed when Eisenhower appointed Gen. Brereton as commander of the 1st allied army and not Browning or Rideway. Also Monte for not being more involved in the planning and the execution of the operation. It is true that Gavin and Browning are at fault during the battle but the planning and the outside support also needs to be blamed and lastly what could have XXX corp done if they arrived in Arnhem with the 9th and 10th SS panzer divisions there waiting for them. the men fought bravely and did all they could and being a yank I admire the 1st Airborne and the 1st Polish Independent Parachute Brigade who fought at Arnhem.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Před 2 lety +1

      XXX Corps could have done little or nothing even if they got to Arnhem. The Germans always controlled the bridge off ramp (as well as 99% of Arnhem itself) and had decent fields of fire against anything crossing the bridge. As well as that, there was a road block on the actual bridge. The wreckage of Grabners SS column was strewn all over it. XXX could not have got past that and would have been sitting ducks if they tried.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety

      From the Germans there
      *It Never Snows in September' Robert J Kershaw - page 221* SS-Colonel Heinz Harmel wondered,even after the war,why the tanks that had rushed the Nijmegen bridge with such 'elan had not continued further.The Allies had certainly missed an opportunity.They might possibly have pushed a battle group into Arnhem itself. *Why did they not drive on to Elst instead of staying in Lent? 'he asked;'at this instant there were no German armoured forces available to block Elst.'It was a lost chance*
      *It never Snows in September' by Robert J.Kershaw,map reference pages 192-193* The German Defense of Nijmegan 17-20 September 1944.The KampfgruppeHenke initially established a line of defense outposts based on the two traffic circles south of the railway and road bridges on 17 September.The 10SS Kampfgruppe Reinhold arrived and established the triangular defense with Euling on the road bridge,Henke and other units defending the approaches of the railway bridge,and his own Kampfgruppe on the home bank in the village of Lent. *A surprise assault river crossing by the U.S. 3/504 combined with a tank assault on the road bridge on 20 September unhinged the defense.The Waal had been secured by 1900.There was nothing further barring the road to Arnhem 17 kilometers to the North*
      *It Never Snows in September' Robert J Kershaw - page 201* SS Captain Carl-Heinz Euling came to a decision "the 1st enemy tank was able to pass over the road bridge during the evening of 20 september,the railway bridge had already fallen
      *it Never Snows in September' Robert J Kershaw - page 215* Heinz Harmel was to be more explicit:The English drank too much tea...! He later remarked *"the 4 tanks who crossed the Bridge made a mistake when they stayed in Lent If they had carried on their advance it would have been all over for us."*
      So the Germans said,as did the GIs it was taken on Sept 20 at 7 PM and if the the Tanks kept on they could have made Arnhem.I left direct quotes up thread from the GIs and the Irish Guards of course Lyndon and Poulussen know better 70+ years later.Sure,right - makes perfect sense
      *the Battle of Arnhem,by Antony Beevor,page 365-66* In fact the fundamental concept of Operation Market Garden defied military logic because it made no allowance for anything to go wrong,nor for the enemy's likely reaction .In short the whole operation ignored the old rule that no plan survives 1st contact with the enemy.Montgomery even blamed the weather not the plan,even asserting the plan was 90% successful because they got 9/10ths of the way to Arnhem

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před rokem +1

      @@lyndoncmp5751
      XXX Corps would have given support to the paras west of Arnhem via fire across the Rhine.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Před rokem +1

      John Burns
      It would have been too late by then. The only option by then was a rescue mission. The Germans were too strong around Arnhem. The RAF couldn't have flattened Arnhem either as the British needed the bridge intact. XXX Corps could never have got across the bridge.

  • @williamkolina3988
    @williamkolina3988 Před 2 lety

    Another home run.most valid point,you made.its easy to sit back and critique . different when shot and she'll is whizzing past you been a big fan of ballentine books for 50+ years.farrar Shockley never talked about lack of air support.I never thought of it either.once again you opened my mind.
    Enough babbling.I thank God for all those brave men in the airborne.the reason market garden wasn't as successful as planned was there were these German guys who still fought hard.lets never forget that

  • @tomasdawe9379
    @tomasdawe9379 Před 7 měsíci

    "Better to be on hand with ten men than absent with ten thousand" Julius Caesar (I think) 18:15

  • @jefferytodd7017
    @jefferytodd7017 Před 2 lety +1

    Operation Market was a bold plan but I think one of the biggest issues is that the paratroopers dropped near Arnhem were dropped over a 3 day period due to lack of planes and bad weather. Sosabowski's Polish force didn't arrive until the 3rd day. Complicating this was the fact that the British were dropped 8 miles from Arnhem.

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před 2 lety

      Agreed

    • @johnlucas8479
      @johnlucas8479 Před 2 lety +1

      @@thevillaaston7811 Not really, the Germans played a key part in stopping Market Garden as well

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety

      @@johnlucas8479
      No the Germans never. They were gifted a time window of *two days* to bring in armour from Germany, because two US para units failed to seize their bridges. In that vital two days they formed a defence and counter attack. If the two US para units had seized their assigned bridges XXX Corps would have been in Arnhem before the Germans knew what had hit them.
      The Germans did not consider that they had some sort of victory. Far from it. A 60 mile salient was rammed between German armies right up to the Rhine in a few days, right on the German border. A buffer was created to protect Antwerp keeping the port from artillery range and counter-attack. V weapons could not operate in that salient, or in NW Holland.

    • @johnlucas8479
      @johnlucas8479 Před 2 lety

      @@johnburns4017 I never said the Germans claim a victory, just their resistance contributed to the failure of Market garden, just as the weather, lack of Aircraft and the terrain.

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety

      @@johnlucas8479
      Market Garden was *not* a failure. The Germans never thought so. German resistance was late. Their resistance was due to the generous time window of *two days* they were gifted because the two US para units never seized their bridges.
      If the two US para units had taken their bridges, German resistance would have been minimal. Their initial resistance was so poor they never immediately reinforced the Nijmegen and Arnhem bridges. The Germans were in disarray. Frosts men took about six hours to get to the Arnhem bridge just walking on it, they were so disorganised. The 82nd would have walked onto the Nijmegen bridge if they bothered to move to it.
      The road from Zon to Arnhem was clear and clear for about 40 hours after the jumps.
      The only stiff resistance would have been, and was, on the Belgian/Dutch border when XXX Corps pushed them out of the way.

  • @morganhale3434
    @morganhale3434 Před 2 lety

    That decision violated Nathan Bedford Forrest's most popular dictum and I'm paraphrasing: "Get there the fastest or first with the most."

  • @colingibson3921
    @colingibson3921 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Brereton was told by Eisenhower after the failure of the American transport pilots during Sicily ( cowardice as some troops called it) during the airborne drops of British gliders. To get his pilots up to par with night flying and navigation. He did nothing of the kind hence the rediculas drops at Normandy . So come market garden, had to be during the daylight hrs. Despite all and any BS excuses.
    And as shown by some exceptional bravery . Retrieved some of the bad taste felt by some of the veterans of Sicily.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 4 měsíci

      um no IKE acquiesced to monty and his shit plan.Even the RAF pointed right at then poof.
      *Sabastian Ritchie's Arnhem Myth and Reality,p.219* "Montgomery went over my head" Air Marshall Conningham recalled after the war. "Month after month he did that; until he had his failure at Arnhem - then they made him listen. He violated all command channels" "Monty's water logged summaries tried to hide glaring weaknesses of a hopelessly flawed plan" - Sabastian Ritchie
      How about Alan Brooke
      *"Triumph in the West, by Arthur Bryant, From the diary of Field Marshal Lord Alan Brooke, entry for 5 October 1944:Page 219" During the whole discussion one fact stood out clearly, that access to Antwerp must be captured with the least possible delay. I feel that Monty's strategy for once is at fault, Instead of carrying out the advance on Arnhem he ought to have made certain of Antwerp in the first place. Admiral Ramsay brought this out as well in the discussion and criticized Monty freely....."*

  • @waynes.3380
    @waynes.3380 Před 8 měsíci +1

    British 6th airborne div. Showed the way to take a bridge with airborne troops. On D-Day.

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Browning planned the same style glider coup de main assaults on the Arnhem, Nijmegen, and Grave bridges for Operation COMET. These got removed by Brereton for MARKET because of the night navigation issues in the USAAF as mentioned in Colin Gibson's comment above.

  • @theeducatedgrunt2087
    @theeducatedgrunt2087 Před 2 lety +1

    Gavins first regiment was the 505. hence maybe the partial bias...

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před 2 lety

      Definitely, and he never warmed to the 508th

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety

      Monty never showed up and XXX Corp was late 7:10 pm on the evening of the 20th.Monty owns it not the Soldiers

  • @morganhale3434
    @morganhale3434 Před 2 lety

    Excellent show, I agree with many points, but really do not disagree with anything said. As for Gavin, nobody is perfect, injuring your back in a jump on Day 1 is huge since I do have a pinched nerve in my back and is not a pleasant thing to experience in peace time, and I've gotten from many US books about our paratroopers in WWII that the US commanders were overly concerned about the landing zones, especially the follow up drops because they were afraid to have US troops drop in daylight directly onto German forces and also for resupply efforts. Lack of focus I think is a good criticism of US involvement in this campaign.

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před 2 lety +2

      I think it is possible to have these constructive debates without slinging mud at anyone. Gavin was a great commander in many ways, but nonetheless it is fair to examine his part on OMG

  • @michaelmulligan0
    @michaelmulligan0 Před rokem +1

    Was Gavin try to protect his men?

  • @GeographyCzar
    @GeographyCzar Před 7 měsíci +5

    Two things I didn’t hear discussed, the role of the Germans in the failure, and the fact that Gavin was tasked with securing Browning’s headquarters position.

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před 7 měsíci +3

      Because it was the 10 points this particular historian wanted to bring up

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Gavin was not "tasked with securing Browning's headquarters position" - both Gavin and Browning's command posts were established in the woods west of Groesbeek in an area secured by the 505th PIR to protect Landing Zone 'N' and the Division from counter-attacks from the Reichswald. Gavin had Ben Vandervoort's 2nd Battalion 505th PIR as division reserve on Hill 81.8 above the CP. The Corps HQ had its own local protection from the Glider Pilot Regiment HQ, and elements of Nos.1 and 2 Flights from 'A' Squadron for the 32 Horsas and 'X' (Independent) Flight for the 6 WACO gliders, who were trained and equipped to operate as light infantry once they hit the ground.
      The exact position of the Corps HQ was on the north side of the Mooksebaan that runs from Groesbeek to Mook, and at the time was in an area of public woodland fenced off by the Germans and used as a Luftwaffe supply dump for aerial bombs and ammunition called Feld-Luftmunitionslager 15/VI (Mook). The main gate at the Mook end of the facility was opposite the 't Zwaantje Inn - now the Herberg Restaurant 't Zwaantje. The dump was guarded by about 200 German troops and most of them evacuated after destroying the dump during the airborne landings, leaving behind a rearguard. It was a machine-gun post from this rearguard that nearly killed General Gavin and his Dutch liaison officer on their way to the Division CP rendezvous.
      The role of the Germans was that they were doing their best to defeat the operation and I would recommend Robert Kershaw's book It Never Snows In September (1990) as a starting point on that topic.

    • @GeographyCzar
      @GeographyCzar Před 5 měsíci

      ⁠@@davemac1197 interesting minutia, but my original comments stand, you did not address them except to misconstrue the first and patronizingly generalize about the second (most likely to distract from your real argument, which is apparently related to my first point). “Secure” does not necessarily mean “provide security for”, it can also mean “acquire.” Gavin was tasked with acquiring the position where Browning would arrive later, was he not? Browning was Gavin’s direct superior, was he not? Gavin and Browning were American and British respectively, correct? If Gavin had failed to seize and maintain control of Browning’s planned HQ area, that would have had political consequences beyond the mere tactical considerations. Not as consequential as failing to seize and control the bridge, but when the host asks, “Why is Gavin so concerned about this?” I feel like I know the answer, but no one says it.

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@GeographyCzar - I think you have it backwards. Why would Gavin divert resouces to secure a position for the Corps headquarters when the most obvious (in my view) and expedient solution was to co-locate the Corps HQ near the Division CP in the centre of the divisional area? They were both located between the 505th and 508th PIRs.

    • @GeographyCzar
      @GeographyCzar Před 5 měsíci

      Oh. Well, since I haven’t heard of that controversy, I guess I can’t address it. I thought the question was why Gavin focused on the Groesbeek Heights instead of the Nijmegen Road Bridge.

  • @MICHALSLAW
    @MICHALSLAW Před rokem +1

    All these people blaming Gavin, the 82nd and Brereton ignore 4 obvious facts: Facts: 1) Poulson's theories rely on him knowing more than Gavin (one of the best most experienced generals of WW2) on 9/18/44; 2) That this was a British plan advanced solely by Monty to Ike; 3) that any serious military person would have known there is no way 2 guarantee capture of all of these bridges & expect no delay; &, finally, 4) the buck stops with Monty who was in overall command of MG. He allowed it to be rushed and his Generals should not be faulted.

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před rokem +1

      They haven't ignored facts, they have interpreted them differently. For decades, pretty much all the blame had been put onto Monty. I, for one, believe we are in a better era of historiography where we can also assess other commanders' roles in Market Garden. If we do that, I think it's clear that Gavin could definitely have done better. Now whether that is hindsight or not, it's still worth studying

    • @MICHALSLAW
      @MICHALSLAW Před rokem

      @@WW2TV I agree that no one should be immune from examination. Mistakes were made by everyone in WW2...the Hurtgen being one of the most egregious. My point is that Poulson is being used to ignore 1000s of books on MG and ignore Monty's blunder (where the buck needs to stop) and attack Gavin and Brereton (notably ignoring British commanders entirely) who were given a massive job with like no time to prepare. I believe it was less than 30 days from inception to drops. For the record, I think all the troops in MG gave 100%. Unlike Poulson I know there was a 1 in a 1,000,000 chance of success. Arnehm was being easily handled by existing panzer division and entire route for 30 corps was being attacked from both sides. Resupply at Arnhem, etc... by Germans was imminent.

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před rokem +2

      @@MICHALSLAW Well I disagree, I think there's a much greater chance of success (better than fifty-fifty) with a few modifications to the plan - the most important being getting all of 1st Airborne there in one left and more airpower over the Nijmegen / Arnhem road. But the bigger disaster I think would have been if 30 Corps had managed to get into the Roer. That would have been a massive disaster with the German strength still there

    • @MICHALSLAW
      @MICHALSLAW Před rokem

      @@WW2TV We can agree to disagree and examine new vantage poinst to view this from which is the best part of your youtube videos. I do agree that modifications to the plan, ala Overlord, wuold have changed success rate considerably to favor Allies. In the event, it was rushed and ad hoc and lacked air cover among others.

    • @johnlucas8479
      @johnlucas8479 Před rokem

      @@WW2TV Paul one of the biggest problems was the lack of aircraft. This is source from Operation Market Garden Now and Them.
      The total number of sorties needed to fly in the entire market force was approximately 3,795. The initial lift was 1,525 aircraft (including 478 towing Gliders and 1,047 transports) which was effectively the entire 9th Troop Carrier Command and RAF 38th and 46th Group, hence the need for the 3 lifts. To fly in the entire 1st British Airborne and the Poles would require 1,035 aircraft (383 Transports and 652 towing Gliders). 101st needed 1,330 and 82nd 1,392 aircraft respectively. I think each divisional Commander would have preferred his entire division arriving in 1 lift. If Gavin could have all 4 regiments available on the 17th the issue regarding delay would not have occurred. He would have an entire regiment available to assault the bridge.
      There are comments that Brereton should have access additional aircraft, the question is from where? 12th Airforce had the 51st TC Wing with 3 groups located in Italy which could possibly provide 152 aircraft, with just 7 days planning could the wing be relocated to England in time. Could the RAF provide additional aircraft?
      As to lack of CAS between Nijmegen and Arnhem, I think the problem of the weather, distance from base and demands from other sectors limited available aircraft to cover that sector.
      "One further thing hindered CAS during Operation Market Garden: the weather. The weather turned bad almost immediately.37 During the entire operation after the initial drop, the weather was generally rainy and very poor for air operations and CAS. The result was that even when calls did come in for support from one group, squadron, etc., it was frequently impossible to fly the mission. Out of ninety-five requests for CAS the RAF received during Operation Market Garden, fifty were unfulfilled due to weather." Source Buckley, John; Preston-Hough, Peter; Operation Market Garden (Wolverhampton Military Studies) (p. 105).
      I feel Brereton get some bad press over think he had no control over, lack of planes and the weather.

  • @byronhuws3890
    @byronhuws3890 Před 2 lety

    TIK has mentioned that it was Browning who ordered Gavin to prioritise defence to an attack from the Reichswald .... Browning had his headquarters with Gavin.

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety +1

      I do not think TIK did. Even if he did, Browning *never* de-prioritised the bridge. TIK says he intended to revisit Market Garden.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety

      Even TIK? he's a bigger peddeler of tripe than yourself if one can imagine

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety

      @@bigwoody4704
      Rambo, a quiz.
      Which US general de-prioritised the Nijmegen bridge.
      20 points for the correct answer.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety

      Ladies and gentlemen... I would like to give you Exhibit A of "why you don't do drugs when you're pregnant" because unfortunately you may spawn something like whatever it was that just responded to my comment

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety

      @@bigwoody4704
      *BZZZZT!* Wrong answer.
      Rambo, the US general that de-prioritised the Nijmegen bridge, was...
      🍾🎊🎈 *General Gavin* 🍾🎊🎈
      Zero points Rambo. Zero. Better luck next time.

  • @peterellis721
    @peterellis721 Před 10 měsíci

    Why is the sound quality so bad?

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před 10 měsíci

      Are you sure it is, 8000 views and no-one else has said so?

  • @johnburns4017
    @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety +3

    The state of play on the 17th, d-day, was that the road from Eindhoven to Arnhem was clear. There was concentrated German forces on the Dutch/Belgian border facing the British on the front line - naturally. There were around 600 non-combat troops in Nijmegen. Then a few scattered about along the road. There was no armour in Arnhem. That was it. If the bridges are secured by paras forming an airborne _carpet_ then just a cruise up the road.
    XXX Corps moved off on H hour on d-day meeting stiffer resistance than they expected. The US official history states they made _remarkable_ progress. The US 101st took 3-4 hours to move about 3 km to the Zon bridge with little opposition. The Germans blew the bridge. If they had done a coup de main or moved faster to the bridge, the 101st would have secured the bridge.
    XXX Corps heard that the bridge ahead was blown so slowed up, getting the Bailey bridge ready. Urgency had gone out of the advance until a bridge was erected.
    XXX Corps were delayed *10-12 hours* at Zon while they themselves ran over a Bailey bridge. In this gift of a time window the Germans were running armour into Arnhem, and the road, which would make matters worse.
    XXX Corps moved out of Zon on D-day plus 2 first light. It took them 2hrs 45 mins to travel 26 miles on that road. It was clear except for some Germans on the road in the gap between the southern 82nd perimeter and the northern 101st's perimeter. The two airborne units were to lay a continuous _carpet_ for XXX Corps to power up. They never met up. *The road was still clear from Zon to Arnhem 40 hours after the first jump.*
    XXX Corps reached Nijmegen about 0820hrs on d-day plus 2, at the planned _expected time,_ making up the delay at Zon. They reached Nijmegen seeing the Germans still on the bridge when arriving. A bridge the 82nd were supposed to have secured for them to speed over.
    If the 101st and 82nd had seized their bridges immediately, XXX Corps would have been at the Arnhem bridge on d-day plus one in the evening. Game, set, and match.
    On arriving at Nijmegen XXX Corps took control, then immediately worked to seize the bridge themselves. This delayed them another *36 hours.* This was now a total delay of nearly *two days.* In this massive and unexpected gift of a time window, the Germans ran armour into Arnhem from Germany overpowering the British paras at Arnhem.
    XXX Corps could only reach the southern end of Arnhem bridge on the Rhine, only yards away from their objective. A bridgehead was precluded because two US airborne units failed to seize their bridges - easy to seize bridges at that, if they had bothered to move with any speed.

    • @johnlucas8479
      @johnlucas8479 Před 2 lety +1

      What rubbish.
      1) XXX Corp only reach Grave on the 19th at 0830 This is from 21 Army Group Report on XXX Corp 19th Sept "0700 hours, the leading brigade was beyond Vechel heading for the Grave bridge, 32 Guards Brigade following close behind, Although 2 HCR reported opposition in Uden 3542, by 0830 hours leading sub-unit of the 2nd Armoured Grenadier Guards had cross the River Maas using the Grave Bridge. By 1400 leading patrol of 2HCR had reach the river Waal, and 5th Guards Armoured brigade was concentrated south of Nijmegen". XXX Corp was at Grave at 0830 NOT Nijmegen.
      2) XXX Corp never reach the southern end of Arnhem Bridge.
      3) XXX Corp only reach Zon at 1900 on the 18th, the bailey bridge was built overnight,
      4) 2 88mm A/T Guns plus a handful of infantry held up XXX Corp at Aalst for 7 hours on the 18th. So on the 18th XXX Corp left Valkenswaard at 0530 reaching Eindhoven at 1800 hours , 6 miles in 12 1/2 Hours.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety

      No it wasn't there was an 88 in Hunnar Park and and Vicktor Graebner's 9thh SS showed up in APC's with mounted MG42s and Half Trcks with mounted 20 MM AA guns.the 82nd had a 3rd of their division and none of their artillery dropped. And the British tanks made it a whole 7 miles still south of Valkenswaard. Still trying to sell your novels Irving Burns?

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety

      @@bigwoody4704
      Rambo, a quiz.
      Name the US paras that were so slow moving to Nijmegen bridge, that they allowed Vicktor Graebner's 9th SS recon unit to reinforce the near undefended bridge?
      20 points for the correct answer.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety

      YAWNING this makes me sleepy. Monty had 4 full yrs to go 30 miles and only when FDR demanded it and the GIs held his hand doing it did Bernard stick his toes into the channel.When you're done cleaning your teeth with your finger - try flipping thru a history Book. or have your handler do it for you. Dweeb it was pointed out a dozen times you got mad at Seth 1422 and Oddball SOK for embarrasing you on how little you think you know.Try one of the other aliases on your account

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety

      @@bigwoody4704
      *BZZZZT!* Wrong answer.
      Rambo the name the US paras that were so slow moving to Nijmegen bridge, that they allowed Vicktor Graebner's 9th SS recon unit to reinforce the near undefended bridge, is the..
      🍾🎈🎊 *82nd* 🍾🎈🎊
      Zero points Rambo. Zero. Better luck next time.

  • @thomasferlauto2348
    @thomasferlauto2348 Před 3 měsíci +3

    General Browning was to recall later: "I personally gave an order to Jim Gavin that, although every effort should be made to effect the capture of the Grave and Nijmegen Bridges as soon as possible, it was essential that he should capture the Groesbeek Ridge and hold it-for . . . painfully obvious reasons . . .. If this ground had been lost to the enemy the operations of the 2nd Army would have been dangerously prejudiced as its advance across the Waal and Neder Rhein would have been immediately outflanked. Even the initial advance of the Guards Armoured Division would have been prejudiced and on them the final outcome of the battle had to depend." Ltr, Browning to Maj Gen G. E. Prier-Palmer, British Joint Services Mission, Washington, D.C., 25 Jan 55, excerpt in OCMH.

    • @thomasferlauto2348
      @thomasferlauto2348 Před 3 měsíci +1

      The possibility of counterattack from this direction took on added credence from the Dutch resistance reports of panzer formations assembling in the Netherlands. 82nd Airborne Division was led to believe that this armor was concentrating in the Reichswald. This information became "a major and pressing element in the pre-drop picture of German forces." Ltr. Winton to OCMH, 8 Mar 54, OCMH; Intelligence Trace No. 5 in Hq, Troop Carrier Forces FO NO.4, 13 Sep 44; 505th Prcht Inf
      AAR.

    • @thomasferlauto2348
      @thomasferlauto2348 Před 3 měsíci

      because of the limitations of the D-Day lift, the question of priority of objectives entered the picture. In anticipation of a heavy fight before the ground column could provide artillery and antitank support, General Gavin allotted a portion of his D-Day lift to a parachute artillery battalion. He also scheduled arrival of the rest of his artillery on D plus 1. This meant that the glider infantry regiment could not arrive until D plus 2, so that for the first two days the 82d would have but three regiments of infantry. If these three parachute infantry regiments tried to take all assigned objectives, they would be spread dangerously thin for holding the objectives in the event enemy armor materialized from the Reichswald.

    • @thomasferlauto2348
      @thomasferlauto2348 Před 3 měsíci

      Siegfried Line Campaign, MacDonald, 1993

    • @desydukuk291
      @desydukuk291 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@thomasferlauto2348 No Dutch resistance report to suggest this. American smoke.

    • @thomasferlauto2348
      @thomasferlauto2348 Před 2 měsíci

      @@desydukuk291 You might be right. I don't know. I am just repeating what was written in the official US Army history of the event. However, I cited in my comment the specific intelligence report dated 13 September 1944 that was apparently relied upon. I have not personally read that cited intelligence report. So, I am just trusting MacDonald that it says what he says it says. However, what cannot be questioned is that for whatever reason the 82d was ordered by Browning to give that ridge top priority and they changed their initial D-Day lift to more artillery and less infantry to deal with the tanks. So, there obviously was some "intelligence" that was effecting decisions. MacDonald and that intelligence report say the information came from Dutch resistance , but who knows, it might have been Nazi misinformation planted to look like information from Dutch resistance.

  • @Lance2023
    @Lance2023 Před 2 lety

    The main objective was to get 30k best soldiers sitting in England into the fight. But not too quickly since it was already agreed us/uk would occupy only half of Germany.

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před 2 lety +3

      You're suggesting that OMG failed because of a pre-arranged deal to let the Russians occupy half of Germany postwar?
      Yep, that's absolute bollox

    • @Lance2023
      @Lance2023 Před 2 lety +1

      MG 70% success 30k into the fight per Ike Map for Germany partition drawn at tehran nov 43. Don't give the Russians land payed for by allied blood per FDR.

    • @nickjung7394
      @nickjung7394 Před rokem

      Montgomery had been ordered to find a way of ending the war as soon as possible! Two main reasons; shortage of manpower, the development of game changing weapons like the V2 and the ME262 (development of these was delayed by the bombing campaign, and it is fortunate that it did).

    • @Lance2023
      @Lance2023 Před rokem +1

      Monty and Patton might not have seen the partition map but Ike had a copy or had seen a copy. Video of US Army Officer who was at Tehran where Stalin accused Churchill of trying to assassinate him. Second he saw a map with strange lines on it which later he realized were the partition lines. Around MG Russians still outside of Warsaw? But winter would slow their advance.

  • @craigfarrar622
    @craigfarrar622 Před 2 lety +1

    This whole Gavin thing really gets me going for some reason The whole thing presupposes that even if the Waalbrug is taken on the first day, that one battalion could hold it without taking the railway bridge and its anti-aircraft guns which could direct fire on it .... and that the Germans wouldn't do anything different than what they did if it was captured....
    Also the battle at Mook is pretty hairy and that is overlooked in this. If they lose the second bridge....
    This whole theory simply seems like a way to scapegoating from people who know the entire German OOB now which commanders then didn't. And it also REALLY lessens the effort that was mounted to ACTUALLY take both the bridges later. I've heard a meme of "what bridge?" being bandied about now. Frustrating.

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před 2 lety +1

      It's a matter of opinions. As we said at the outset, many people have their deeply held views about this. RG has his theory and people can agree or not agree as they believe

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před 2 lety +3

      I think this again comes down to how "protective" people are of their own interpretation of the OMG plan and people having their favourite culprits. As a Brit, we've had to take 7 decades of all the blame being directed at Monty, Browning and 30 Corps. This Dutch historian's conclusion is both the 82nd and 101st had a role to play in the failure. This show encourages all to re-evaluate

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před 2 lety +2

      @Answer Questions Hard to disagree with that, some failed less spectacularly than others and there was excpetional commitment and bravery shown by 1st Airborne especially at Platoon level

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety

      Poullussen is a hack,Monty never showed up to direct his own debacle.Ike screwed up giving him 2nd and 3rd chances after Caen and Falaise.They both should have been sent packing.BAD PLAN
      *ARNHEM,by William Buckingham,p,43-44* the Fact that both US Airborne formations were misused as conventional infantry under British command for a cosiderable amount period after the Failure of MARKET suggests that the concern for US casualties did not figure highly in Montgomery's or Brownings calculations.
      Large scale night landings proved not to be a success and september 17 put Market into a no moon period.Large scale airborne landings were simply not viable in moonless conditions.Both parachutists and glider pilots required a degree of natural illumination in order to judge height ,orientation and degree of descent to avoid landing accidents, with lost/damaged equipment,injuries and probable fatalities
      that tended to run counter to those aims Browning who handed over to Brerton that all 17 Bridges had to be sized with thunderclap surprise.And stressed that time constraints meant any arrangements at this stage had to be binding,before imposing a series of conditions and constraints
      *ARNHEM,by William Buckingham,p46* the shortage of navigators was so acute that only 4 out of 10 C-47 crews used on the D-Day drop included one,usually flying at the head of the serial.The situation didn't improve by September 1944. the key issue was lack of natural illumination, *the 1st airlifts into Normandy involved 900 C-47s and gliders .MARKET envisioned doing the same with around 1,600 flights,with inexperienced and partially trained air crews in the total darkness of a no moon period would have been suicidal* (Williams insistence on a single lift per day and Brereton's acceptance of it may have been less than ideal,but it was the only realistic option in the prevailing circumstances. (Because of a shortage of navigators on longer flights with much shorter days)

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety +1

      @@WW2TV
      People wander into superficial detail losing the plot. The simple *facts* are that if the 101st and 82nd had moved to their bridges immediately they would not have *failed* to seize the bridges, with both being far too slow. If they had taken the bridges the operation would have been a 100% success. It is that simple. *The glaring reason the operation was not a 100% success was clearly down to the failures of the two US para units.* XXX Corps hardly put a foot wrong.
      The two US para units delayed the operation a total of approx 42 hours, nearly two days. In that time the Germans had a vital time window to pour armour into Arnhem from nearby Germany.

  • @BaronVonHobgoblin
    @BaronVonHobgoblin Před 8 měsíci +2

    I am taken aback that more historians haven't bothered compared Operation Market Garden to Operation Lumberjack. Comparing these two operations with similar objectives is probably much more instructive than throwing arm-chair invective at any of the Generals or soldiers associated with Market Garden or posturing "if only" scenerios. For all the ink, new or old, spilled over Market Garden what stands out to me is the fact that no one seems to understand that a bridge is considered, in infantry terms, an obstacle. This means that the whole operation was in actuality a large-scale raid. I define "raid" as any military operation where the objective is not to capture or hold the terrain itself (or an objective sited on that terrain). These raid operations have much more planning considerations than any "regular" capture-hold infantry operation which is why in the modern day these types of operations are generally left up to Special Operations Forces (the 82nd itself something of a "farm team" for potential SOF troops). The fact there were large number of airborne forces and the issue of taking up positions in urban settings muddies the fact that the overall objective was not "regular" in infantry terms. With this in mind the ONLY take away from Market Garden is that to "regularize" a raid is something that requires a great deal of careful consideration, and it is no wonder that such an operation like Market Garden appears to be consigned to the garbage heap of operational history.

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před 5 měsíci

      Operation MARKET was 90% successful in terms of securing 9 out of the minimum 10 in a total of 24 bridges involved in the operation needed to get XXX Corps to Arnhem. Each bridge objective may be considered to be a 'raid' in these terms, in fact the British glider after action reports are called 'raid reports' regardless of the scale of the operation. After reading your comment I find it ironic that the bridge representing the 10% failure in MARKET was the Nijmegen highway bridge, which was the target of 1st Battalion 508th PIR in the 82nd Airborne.
      Many sources written after the war claim the bridge was de-prioritised in favour of the Groesbeek heights - seen as necessary to secure the 82nd Airborne's airhead, but this is only technically correct after the first failed attempt to secure the bridge on D-Day of the operation, when Airborne Corps commander General Browning rejected 82nd CO General Gavin's proposal to make a second attempt on the bridge before armoured support arrived from XXX Corps.
      However, Gavin's divisional plan included an instruction to the CO of the 508th to send his 1st Battalion directly to the bridge as soon as possible after landing, which he subsequently failed to do until a late intrvention by Gavin himself to get him moving, by which time it was too late. The race to reinforce the bridge was won by 10.SS-Panzer-Division. This instruction was confirmed by a letter Gavin wrote to US Army Historical officer Captain Westover (dated 17 July 1945) and again to Cornelius Ryan in his 1967 interview for his book A Bridge Too Far (1974). In 2012, both John McManus in September Hope - The American Side of a Bridge Too Far, and Phil Nordyke in Put Us Down In Hell - A Combat History of the 508th PIR in WW2, have first hand witnesses to the divisional briefing in which Gavin gave that instruction and emphasied that it was important "to get to the bridge as quickly as possible as the bridge was the key to the division's contribution to the success of the operation" (Captain Chet Graham, 508th liaison officer to Division HQ, in Nordyke 2012). McManus also gives a very thorough analysis and rationale for the bridge versus ridge debate for anyone wanting to get into that and nail the post-war myth the bridge was in any way de-prioritised in the planning of the operation.
      Gavin's interview with Cornelius Ryan also contains a claim by Gavin that "The British wanted him, he said, to drop a battalion on the northern end of the bridge and take it by coup de main. Gavin toyed with the idea and then discarded it because of his experience in Sicily. There, his units had been scattered and he found himself commanding four or five men on the first day. For days afterward, the division was completely disorganized" (Box 101 Folder 10, Cornelius Ryan Collection, Ohio State University - Notes on meeting with J.M. Gavin, Boston, January 20, 1967).
      Operation LUMBERJACK (1-7 March 1945) was the US 1st Army's advance to the Rhine in the area of Cologne-Bonn, which was preparation for a Rhine crossing and then a pincer on the Ruhr with Montgomery's 21st Army Group from their own Rhine crossing (Operation Plunder on 23/24 March 1945) to the north. The intent was not to take bridges intact with airborne 'raids' on those objectives - the policy was to force the destruction of the bridges and trap as many Germans on the west bank as possible. When the Remagen bridge was found to be still intact it became a target of opportunity to secure it as a crossing.
      The dictionary defines 'raid' as a surprise attack, so I think MARKET GARDEN (or at least the airborne operation MARKET) was certainly a surprise, whereas I don't think LUMBERJACK qualifies at all, and that's why it doesn't really bear comparison. In fact at Remagen, the surprise was on the American forces when the Germans failed to demolish the bridge.

  • @thatbeme
    @thatbeme Před 2 měsíci +1

    The plan was thrown together too quickly and was too complicated while dependent on all factors working. More planning and continuity actions needed to be planned for.

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Many people don't realise that MARKET GARDEN had about two weeks for planning since it was based on the previous weeks' cancelled operations COMET for the ground objectives and LINNET/LINNET II for the air plan.
      The reason LINNET (Tournai) and the alternative targets for LINNET II (Liege-Maastricht bridges) were both cancelled was because the ground forces had overrun the objectives before the airborne operation could be launched. Browning had in fact threatened to resign over Brereton's LINNET II plan because it had too short notice to print and distribute maps to the airborne troops. So you're damned if you take too long and you're damned if you don't take enough time for planning.
      Montgomery gets criticised for halting XXX Corps on 4 September with 100 Kilometres of fuel still in the tanks after the capture of Antwerp, but if he hadn't there was a danger of using up vital logistics that would be required for the Rhine crossing (COMET/MARKET GARDEN), and it was also the case that he was warned by his administration officer on 11 September that MARKET GARDEN could not be launched until 23 September without more supplies being delivered. Montgomery immediately cabled that warning to Eisenhower and Bedell Smith visited him the next day to promise everything he wanted, which didn't actually materialise, compromising the advance of the flanking VIII and XII Corps during the operation.
      As for it being "too complicated" - that's a common American complaint, but all I can say is welcome to the British Army - if you can't cope, don't pretend to be as capable. Despite all the well-known problems, the British Airborne at Arnhem secured their prime objective and held it for four days. The Americans at Nijmegen failed to move on an undefended bridge until it was reinforced by SS panzer troops.
      On flexibility - the airborne operation targeted about 24 bridges in total, many were 'Heart Route' alternative crossings to the 10 bridges on the main 'Club Route' supply line. The weakest point was the river Waal, the main channel of the Dutch Rhine, because there were only two bridges at Nijmegen for many miles and this was the point of failure on the first day. The 508th PIR had an easy run to the bridge in the first vital hours, but failed to exploit it because of poor field command at the top of the regiment, already exposed in Normandy, and for this the divisional commander must take some responsibility.
      This is why RG Poulussen's book Lost At Nijmegen (2011) correctly identifies the point of failure at Nijmegen, but the following year Phil Nordyke, an 82nd Airborne Division historian with several books written on the division, published his combat history of the 508th - Put Us Down In Hell (2012) - with more detail and many first hand accounts. I thoroughly recommend both.

    • @thatbeme
      @thatbeme Před 2 měsíci +1

      @davemac1197 Thanks. I loved your reply. I see the problem that caused the falure as a British military stuck in the WW1 mod of running straight into machine guns. This came from the old plan of Britsh lining up in a row and marching into a musket volley. The world was learning to fight a new war. Today, the UK has one of the finest trained soldiers in the world. American solders that spend time with British soldiers come back and tell me they are outstanding.

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@thatbeme- thanks for that reply, but I have to say if you read Montgomery's service record in the First World War (just the Wiki page on him is sufficient) you should understand that after experiencing the horrors of trench warfare as a young Lieutenant he was determined to fight the Second World War as a Divisonal commander rising to Army Group commander with the minimum of casualties, and gained a reputation (at least in the UK) of being careful with the lives of the men under his command. The British Airborne Corps commander Browning also has a similar First World War record, awarded a DSO for handing a battalion while also a Lieutenant.
      It's disheartening to see people make comments about these officers being wasteful with the lives of GI's while under their command in MARKET GARDEN, when the worst casualties in both the 101st (the battle at Best for a bridge not requested and already blown) and 82nd Divisions (Waal river assault crossing) were the result of initiatives made by their own divisional commanders and not from the British. I blame Hollywood for much of the mythology, and even Cornelius Ryan's book has many misleading errors of omission.

  • @DD-qw4fz
    @DD-qw4fz Před rokem +1

    Id say the plan wasnt good.
    It was wildly optimistic an relied on the idea Germans couldnt fight at all anymore.
    The margin for error was close to zero and it left almost no way to modify the plan "on the fly".
    Either secure the Hells highway or its a bust.
    Either secure all the bridges or its a bust.
    Either secure all the towns on the path or its a bust.
    And all that with a very short time
    Ppl tend to say "if x was done MG would succeed" or even worse "it was 90% successful"...well the fact most objective were secured in the end and yet the plan STILL FAILED is the crux of the issue, there were no alternatives to salvage the plan.
    Capturing 6 bridges didnt mean anything if you didnt capture the 7th
    Compare that to operation Mercury that is wildly called "the biggest airborne disaster ever"...despite all the issues
    British Ultra , Greek army and civilian resistance, numerous Commonwealth forces fighting hard, the Germans were able to salvage the whole operation by focusing on a single target, Maleme Airfield.
    Ultimately the difference between a bad and good plan is how much you can modify it until you run out of alternative options , the old "no plans survives contact with the enemy" comes to mind.

  • @aon10003
    @aon10003 Před rokem

    Draw acircle around London with the V2s range and you see why they Chosed Arnhem.

    • @johnlucas8479
      @johnlucas8479 Před rokem +2

      Arnhem was the objective for Operation Comet, which was planned for 8th September, the first V2 attack only occurred on the 8th September. So, the decision on Arnhem predated the V2's attacks.

    • @aon10003
      @aon10003 Před rokem

      @@johnlucas8479 They had gotten a V2 that landed in Sweden by July. The Paratroopers also had orders to kill V2technichians if they where POWs. So yes, they knew about the V2.

    • @johnpeate4544
      @johnpeate4544 Před 3 měsíci

      @@johnlucas8479
      From The Military Life and Times of General Sir Miles Dempsey, pages 135-136:
      _However, it was not to be. On 9 September, _*_Montgomery received a signal from London concerning the landing of the first V2 rockets, with a request to 'report most urgently by what approximate date you can rope off' the area from which they were launched. When Dempsey flew up to see him the next day with his plan for Wesel, Montgomery met him at the door to his caravan with the telegram in his hand and said. 'Let us save England.' That decided the question. I don't think Monty had really made up his mind on Arnhem before he got the telegram'_*
      -The Military Life and Times of General Sir Miles Dempsey. Peter Rostron

    • @johnpeate4544
      @johnpeate4544 Před 3 měsíci

      @@johnlucas8479
      From The Military Life and Times of General Sir Miles Dempsey, pages 135-136:
      _However, it was not to be. On 9 September, Montgomery received a signal from London concerning the landing of the first V2 rockets, with a request to 'report most urgently by what approximate date you can rope off' the area from which they were launched. When Dempsey flew up to see him the next day with his plan for Wesel, Montgomery met him at the door to his caravan with the telegram in his hand and said. 'Let us save England.' That decided the question. _*_I don't think Monty had really made up his mind on Arnhem before he got the telegram'_*
      -The Military Life and Times of General Sir Miles Dempsey. Peter Rostron

  • @greggatewood5417
    @greggatewood5417 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I’ve always been perplexed as to why radio communication was so poor. I realize it is 1944, and real miniaturization has not taken place. No transistors yet, but there seems to be a complete lax attitude by the generals on radio operations.

    • @nickdanger3802
      @nickdanger3802 Před 3 měsíci

      PDF Airborne Communications in Operation Market Garden

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 měsíci +1

      The ground has a high iron content. To get radio the area needed cable radio.

  • @johnburns4017
    @johnburns4017 Před rokem +2

    Subsequent books by US authors quoting men who were actually there are useful.
    When Gavin found out the 508th were not moving, he was livid, expecting them to be moving on the bridge, if there was no opposition. The 508th did send a recon patrol. According to Phil Nordyke’s _Put Us Down In Hell (2012)_ three lead scouts of the patrol of 40, were separated making it to the vicinity of south end of the road bridge approaches, not the main steel span. They captured seven of the 18 Germans guards also their 20mm artillery gun guarding the south end of the bridge. They waited about an hour for reinforcements that never arrived, having to withdraw then observed the 9th SS Panzer recon battalion arriving from Arnhem.
    The three scouts that reached the southern end of the Nijmegen bridge about an hour before the 9th SS arrived. Joe Atkins in _The 508th Connection (2013)_ said:
    _"at the bridge, only a few German soldiers were standing around a small artillery weapon... The Germans were so surprised; the six or seven defenders of the bridge gave up without resisting._ *_We held the prisoners at the entrance to the bridge for about an hour._* _It began to get dark and none of our other troops showed up. We decided to pull away from the bridge, knowing we could not hold off a German attack. The German prisoners asked to come with us, but we refused, having no way to guard them. As we were leaving, we could hear heavy equipment approaching the bridge."_
    That was the 9th SS arriving after being gifted a generous time window by the 82nd to reinforce.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před rokem

      Burns your lies of 13 yearsdon't change history you've already been caught repeatedly altering the texts,so again for the 10th time leave a link with the page number like i do below. No the 9th SS came over before Frost even held the North end of Arnhem Bridge.Meanwhile it's 2:30 p.m. And Horrocks and Vandeleur are starting the column forward after watching the C-47 fly over did they think somehow they would catch up?Then monty forgot to tell Horrocks to put the Bridging equipment in the front.3 miles after the start panzerfaust teams knock out 9 shermans and the column made it a whole 7 miles the 1st day.
      And How come Field Marshall Walter Model & Fallschirmjager General Kurt Student were able to ferry tanks and troops over, rivers and canals under the ever watchfull RAF at Pannerden & other places. While Horrocks/Montgomery could NOT do the same?Not in September, not in October and not in November. Model being an actual Field Marshall conducted a clinic in modern mobile warfare
      *Armageddon:The Battle for Germany,By Max Hastings* THE BRITISH LAND dash for Arnhem was commanded by the much loved Brian Horrocks of XXX Corps. *“At the time, we liked Horrocks’s affability and effervescence,” said Captain David Fraser of the Guards Armoured Division. “Later, I came to think that he was a superficial character.”* Horrocks had brought with him from the North African desert a reputation as a driving leader. *Yet from the outset almost everything that could go wrong with XXX Corps’s breakout from their bridgehead on the Meuse-Escaut canal did so. Many of the Germans holding the road had escaped from Belgium with Fifteenth Army, through the gap so disastrously left open by the British beyond Antwerp a fortnight earlier. Horrocks had hoped that his tanks would be in Eindhoven within two hours.Instead, by nightfall they had advanced only seven miles.* Among the German dead, to their alarm they identified men from 9th SS and 10th SS Panzer, General Student’s First Parachute Army and Fifteenth Army. The enemy units defending the road were under strength, sketchily organized and ill equipped, but they included some of the best German fighting soldiers in Holland. As darkness fell, the British halted. *The commanding officer of the Irish Guards later quoted a remark of his divisional chief of staff, who said that evening: “Push on to Eindhoven tomorrow, old boy, but take your time. We’ve lost a bridge.”*
      *As Captain David Fraser recalled "Nevertheless I remember the impressive silhouette of the long bridge across the Maas (Meuse) at Grave. This had been captured by the American airborne troops and took us across the first main water obstacle at about ten o’clock in the morning of 19th September. By then the operation had been running for over forty hours and was already well behind schedule."*
      *apps.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/a406861.pdf*
      Yup an excerpt a gross underestimation of the enemy and a serious misjudgment of the terrain.”
      1 Kirkpatrick later goes on to attempt to explain the intelligence failure by saying, “In the one week between the decision to mount the operation and the attack there was not time to collect additional information on the enemy forces in the area.”
      2 This last statement of his is clearly incorrect based on the Ultra messages, and brings his first statement into question. After the fall of Antwerp to the British Second Army on 4 September 1944, Ultra began to provide a very clear picture of the German forces moving into Holland, the reorganization within their command structure, the repositioning of panzer divisions to Holland, and the fact that the Germans anticipated an Allied attack, possibly with airborne forces, towards either Arnhem or Aachen. The intelligence information was available; whether commanders were adequately warned of the risks to the operation is really the question, as well as whether intelligence failed during this operation
      Even if XXX Corps tankers displayed the same initiative moving down the road as the 82 nd did crossing the Waal OM-G still would have stalled.Antwerp's port of supply wasn't open because Monty ignored warnings by Brooke/Tedder/Ramsey to do so.Gerries would have reorganized North of the Bridge with reinforcements tactfully sent by Model from the near by Ruhr.Would have been Dunkirk II but you like to dabble in delusion *Jim Gavin's decision to secure his drop zones, and re-supply probably prevented the US 82nd Airborne division from duplicating the British 1st Airborne's fate.*

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před rokem +1

      @@bigwoody4704
      Rambo, a quiz.
      The book _The 508th Connection_ described the 508th capturing the German guards on the south end of the Nijmegen bridge on the first day of the operation, then letting them go free. Name the author?
      20 points for the correct answer.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před rokem

      Burns your pants are evidently filled agian - ring the nurses station.

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před rokem +1

      @@bigwoody4704
      *BZZZZZZZT!* Wrong answer.
      Rambo, the name of the American author of the book _The 508th Connection,_ describing the 508th capturing the German guards on the south end of the Nijmegen bridge on the first day of the operation, then letting them go free, is...
      🍾🎈🎊 *Zig Boroughs* 🍾🎈🎊
      Zero points Rambo, zero. Better luck next time.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před rokem

      David Irving Burns,read what Capt.Fraser said Burns - way behind schedule kind of like your social life.11,000 go in 2,100 come,you've failed math more times than you can count

  • @allenkrentz2505
    @allenkrentz2505 Před 2 lety +1

    I Going to give My Opinion, Let's Start w the Plan , I'm going to compare it to the Bulge , MG (market garden) Ground Troops 1 One Road of travel I guess the Dutch don't have to many roads Going N-S. Is there not any other roads going N-S ? Now Battle of the Bulge (BB) Germans multi roads push Rt , 3rd Army Patton did He only go up 1 One Road No Multi Roads this is also using the new evidence of your show how quick he counterattack heading west then north ect.
    Being a NCO E-7 SFC And in combat till You yourself have been in combat there is that thing called (FOG OF WAR) This is very true even for me. I've seen Officers Freeze, NCO Too. What I mean by this is lack of decision-making... good or bad . OK back to the points...
    Only using one thrust one point of entry vs multi points , Yes you could say there was multi points w the airborne yet even you have so called surprise jumps this was during daylight. Everyone knows airborne units is a light infantry unit they can only last so long w/o air and heavy ground support.. armor/artillery .. TIME was / IS the Factor.. there is also the fact "When things go wrong they will" Plan for the worst not the best. Plan objectives take the bridges, Hold the bridges, I guess you forgot about ARTILLERY Hitting the bridges? A US Army M101 artillery piece can hit a target 7 miles away... was that ever considered? Oh that's right Old men and young boys ? Forgetting that the I believe part of the 7th German Army division escaped from the FALAISE POCKET They just disappeared or did they? If Monte or the allies should have remember in the desert was withdrawals then Strong Defense position and or counterattack.... terrain is a lot different from desert to wooded areas, farmland, towns, cities, urban areas... Did they also forget that they had Pattons Fake Army in England to hold a German Group before D Day ? Saying the plan could have worked is hindsight, knowing all the facts NOW . YET YOU WILL NEVER KNOW. Remember Newtown law when every there is a Action there is a Reaction... The same applies to WAR AND CHESS . The overall goal was to get a deep port for Supplies not to go to Berlin was it not? unless you wanted to go down in History of entry of Germany? And by the way Where was Monte? Did he always lead from the back? Oh that's right he was a Corp Commander ..
    Now I'm going in a different direction I hear all this of Who to blame ? The PLAN put together to fast w/o Intelligent Reports did Browning just dismiss the reports , Dutch underground? Scout Planes? Landing of 1st AB so far away from Target and not getting full AB division drop then comes the question of supplies not adapting to goal to the objective holding a LZ so far away from Target? 82AB Browning and Gavin at that location why was Browning there? Did he really have to be there remember he saw int.reports 1000 Tanks where did that come from? And if someone knew WHY Did this Plan even go forward ???? AB going against ARMOR Not to good of odds. 101AB not getting to Bridge did anyone think of artillery destruction of bridge before arrival, Also who in there right mind takes the main plans into battle which these plans was used by German High Comand see no one talks about that only that Germans disregarded them or did they ? The way I understand at first they did till a general of German AB reviewed them said they could be legit . Then we come to the one Road assault this one blows my mind you always have a better chance of a spearhead at multi fronts Not a single front its called FLANKING OUT FLANKING your opponent, covering your flank . Even in the Sicily Campaign didn't Monte insist Patton cover his FLANK ? INSTEAD of dropping off at Palermo .. which I believe Monte was right. That's my opinion. See Multi fronts Not a single Front , Now comes the Leadership The plan slapped together with end a few weeks if that , Browning not passing off Intelligent report to higher up , set Goals Bridges, both sides of Road security, Towns of main road security, for a 60 miles route was there even enough men to achieve this and to HOLD ? No matter what there would always be holes in the line . This causing over runs of position supply problems ect .. now comes to the approval of this Plan MONTE, IKE and CHURCHILL . WAS CHURCHILL pressuring Ike cause of the V2 Rockets problem ? Was Ike looking for that deep port of Antwerp? Monte thinking Germans were done they will just give up or I Monte never been defeated overconfidence.... You decide 🤔
    So I've asked a lot of questions here . Gave you a few things to consider. As a student of war and history, I hope I didn't offend anyone yet I don't care this is MY OPINION and experience... As always when you are on the ground it always falls to manpower , Intelligence , communications, support, supplies, and goals of the operation plus counter offense.

  • @dweb6
    @dweb6 Před 8 měsíci +4

    The attack on the Nijmegen before the 2nd lift was forbidden by browning because of the rumour of forces in the. Reichswald

    • @wbertie2604
      @wbertie2604 Před 4 měsíci +2

      It seems to have been joint between Gavin and Browning from what I've read but the language is a bit open to interpretation

    • @desydukuk291
      @desydukuk291 Před 21 dnem +1

      'merican Gavin was in charge, so yor're inferring he had inferior intellect, no local intelligence (the Dutch disagree), no line of command to control his tactical dispersions, lacked balls, a kid promoted beyond his competence, Gavin killed a British Airborne Division fgs.
      Typical Jan Kees Holywood version comment. Gavin allowed British Airborne Division to die, I will never forgive him.

  • @johnburns4017
    @johnburns4017 Před rokem +4

    *Timeline*
    *Events on the 1st day - D day:*
    ▪ _"At_ *_1328,_* _the 665 men of US 82nd 1st Battalion began to fall from the sky."_ - R Poulussen, Lost at Nijmegen.
    ▪ _"Forty minutes after the drop, around_ *_1410,_* _the 1st Battalion marched off towards their objective, De Ploeg, three miles away."_ - R Poulussen.
    ▪ _"The 82nd were digging in and performing reconn in the area looking for 1,000 tanks in the Reichswald_ - Neillands, R. The Battle for the Rhine 1944.
    ▪ _"Colonel Warren about_ *_1830_* _sent into Nijmegen a patrol consisting of a rifle platoon and the battalion intelligence section. This patrol was to make an aggressive reconnaissance, investigate reports from Dutch civilians that only_ *_eighteen_* _Germans guarded the big bridge"_- US Official history, page 163.
    ▪ _It was not until_ *_1830hrs_* _that he [Warren] was able to send a force into Nijmegen. This force was somewhat small, just one rifle platoon and an intelligence section with a radio - say_ *_forty men._* - Neillands. The Battle for the Rhine 1944.
    ▪ _The 82nd were dug in and preparing to defend their newly constructed regimental command post, which they established at_ *_1825._* _Having dug in at De Ploeg, Warren's battalion wasn't prepared to move towards Nijmegen at all._ - R Poulussen.
    ▪ _Then Colonel Lindquist "was told by General Gavin, around_ *_1900,_* _to move into Nijmegen."_ - R Poulussen.
    ▪Warren sent a patrol of about 40 men to *reconnoiter* the bridge at *1830.* Three strays from the patrol captured seven of the 18 guards and their 20mm cannon who were guarding the south end of the bridge, having to let them go as no reinforcements arrived. The 508th had actually captured the south end of the largely undefended bridge. The three scouts that reached the southern end of the Nijmegen bridge about an hour before the 9th SS arrived. Joe Atkins of the patrol said:
    _"at the bridge, only a few German soldiers were standing around a small artillery weapon... The Germans were so surprised; the six or seven defenders of the bridge gave up without resisting. We held the prisoners at the entrance to the bridge for about an hour. It began to get dark and none of our other troops showed up. We decided to pull away from the bridge, knowing we could not hold off a German attack. The German prisoners asked to come with us, but we refused, having no way to guard them. As we were leaving, we could hear heavy equipment approaching the bridge."_ - The 508th Connection by Zig Boroughs.
    That was the 9th SS arriving at *1930.*
    ▪ _Unfortunately, the patrol's radio failed to function so that Colonel Warren was to get no word from the patrol until the next morning_ - US Official History, page 163.
    ▪ _Once Lindquist told Lieutenant Colonel Warren _*_[at 1900]_*_ that his Battalion was to move, Warren decided to visit the HQ of the Nijmegen Underground first - to see what info the underground had on the Germans at the Nijmegen bridge._ - R Poulussen,
    ▪ _"Although Company A reached the rendezvous point on time, Company B "got lost en route." After waiting until about_ *_2000,_* _Colonel Warren left a guide for Company B and moved through the darkness with Company A toward the edge of the city._ _Some_ *_seven hours after H-Hour, [2030]_* _the first real_ *_move_* _against the Nijmegen bridge began."_ - US Official History, page 163.
    ▪ _As the scouts neared a traffic circle surrounding a landscaped circular park near the center of Nijmegen, the Keizer Karel Plein, from which a mall-like park led northeast toward the Nijmegen bridge, a burst of automatic weapons fire came from the circle. The time was about two hours before midnight._ *_[2200 hrs]_* - US Official History, page 163.
    *D Day plus 1*
    ▪ _In the meantime Colonel Warren had tried to get a new attack moving toward the highway bridge; but this the Germans thwarted just_ *_before dawn_* _with another sharp counterattack._ - US Official History, page 165.
    ▪ _"While the counterattack was in progress, General Gavin arrived at the battalion command post." "General Gavin directed that the battalion "withdraw from close proximity to the bridge and reorganize"." This was to mark the end of this particular attempt to take the Nijmegen bridge"_ - US Official History, page 165.
    ▪ _"A new attack to gain the bridge grew out of an early morning conference between General Gavin and Colonel Lindquist."_ _"At_ *_0745_* _on 18 September, D plus 1, Company G under Capt. Frank J. Novak started toward the bridge."_ - US Official History, page 165.
    ▪ _At around_ *_1100,_* _Warren was ordered to withdraw from Nijmegen completely._ - R Poulussen.
    ▪ _At_ *_1400_* _on 18 September Colonel Mendez ordered Company G to withdraw from Nijmegen_ - US Official History, page 166.
    _"the chance for an easy, speedy capture of the Nijmegen bridge had passed. This was all the more lamentable because in Nijmegen during the afternoon the Germans had had nothing more than the same kind of_ *_"mostly low quality" troops_* _encountered at most other places on D Day."_ - US Official History, page 164.
    The 82nd completely withdrew from Nijmegen town, allowing the Germans to pour the 10th SS infantry, who come over on the ferry, south over the Nijmegen bridge to reinforce the town. This made matters worse when the 82nd and XXX Corps went into the town to clear them out.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před rokem

      Once again johnny you are rearanging the content,you've done it on this board at least twice.What other gems have you mined for us you poltroon?None of the objectives were met
      ♦One would say Montgomery appeared lost & helpless but the sad fact is he never appeared at all
      ♦Monty wasn't there to direct while an actual Field Marshall Model and Air Borne General Student were in fact conducting a clinic on effective modern mobile warfare ♦The V-2s were still being launched
      ♦The massive deep sea port of Antwerp was still closed that was needed for suppliesfor an operation that size
      ♦Over 17,000 crack allied Paras were lost.
      ♦The Dutch people suffered reprisals from the hunger winter in 22,000 of their citizens died of starvation,exposure and disease.
      ♦Many young Dutchmen were sent to work as slave laborers in defense industry in the Reich
      ♦And all of the country's live stock was sent/driven to the Reich as they fell back.
      ♦Allies never made Arnhem much less Berlin as Montgomery boasted
      ♦Monty would not cross the Rhine for 6 more months and that was with the help of Simpson 9th US Army
      ♦Bernard,Prince of the Netherlands said later My country can never again afford the luxury of another Montgomery success
      ♦Lt Gen Browning to Maj Gen G. E. Prier-Palmer, British Joint Services Mission, Washington, D.C., 25 Jan 55, excerpt in OCMH
      "I personally gave an order to Jim Gavin that, although every effort should be made to effect the capture of the Grave and Nijmegen Bridges as soon as possible, it was essential that he should capture the Groesbeek Ridge and hold it-for … painfully obvious reasons …. If this ground had been lost to the enemy the operations of the 2nd Army would have been dangerously prejudiced as its advance across the Waal and Neder Rhein would have been immediately outflanked. Even the initial advance of the Guards Armoured Division would have been prejudiced and on them the final outcome of the battle had to depend."
      if you don't hold you drop zones and the heights you hold nothing.Once again johnny - MONTY GARDEN
      UNITED STATES ARMY IN WORLD WAR II
      The European Theater of Operations
      THE SIEGFRIED LINE CAMPAIGN
      By Charles B. MacDonald
      CENTER OF MILITARY HISTORY
      UNITED STATES ARMY WASHINGTON, D.C., 1993
      *P157*
      *General Browning, was "clear and emphatic" to*
      *the effect that the division was "not to*
      *attempt the seizure of the Nijmegen*
      *Bridge until all other missions had been*
      *successfully accomplished*
      *In his formal order *
      *General Browning stated: "The capture*
      *and retention of the high ground between*
      *Nijmegen and Groesbeck is imperative in*
      *order to accomplish the Division's task."*
      apps.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/a406861.pdf
      Yup an excerpt a gross underestimation of the enemy and a serious misjudgment of the terrain.” 1 Kirkpatrick later goes on to attempt to explain the intelligence failure by saying, “In the one week between the decision to mount the operation and the attack there was not time to collect additional information on the enemy forces in the area.” 2 This last statement of his is clearly incorrect based on the Ultra messages, and brings his first statement into question. After the fall of Antwerp to the British Second Army on 4 September 1944, Ultra began to provide a very clear picture of the German forces moving into Holland, the reorganization within their command structure, the repositioning of panzer divisions to Holland, and the fact that the Germans anticipated an Allied attack, possibly with airborne forces, towards either Arnhem or Aachen. The intelligence information was available; whether commanders were adequately warned of the risks to the operation is really the question, as well as whether intelligence failed during this operation

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před rokem

      @@bigwoody4704
      Rambo, a quiz.
      Name the two bridges the US 82nd and US 101st *failed* to seize putting XXX Corps back two days?
      10 points for each bridge named.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před rokem

      what ailment assails you this week? Is it Ebola Virus,Mad Cow's Disease, diaper rash,Monkey Pox?
      Irving Burns you chronic bed wetter imagine what this Failed Marshmellow Montgomery would say about IKE if he had lost say 200,000 @ Dunkirk or 81,000 @ Singapore or 25-30,000 @ Tobruk but who the hell has losses like that ?

  • @pauladebruijn4202
    @pauladebruijn4202 Před 2 lety +5

    Just the fact that they can see the end of the war coming. I mean Germany is right next door. That can subconsciously effect decision making. Maybe make one a little more cautious. They could be thinking " I might be able to make it through this shit show!" Just a thought. What do you think? Great show guys. Thanks so much!

  • @merc88
    @merc88 Před rokem +1

    Its what happens when you ignore intelligence.

  • @lawrencerogers576
    @lawrencerogers576 Před 2 lety +4

    I have both of Robert’s excellent books. I saw that film once, thought it bubblegum and not watched it since.

  • @jasonsmith5226
    @jasonsmith5226 Před 2 lety +2

    Great analysis,& I think you make a great point,as you usually do...these popular movies do have an impact on our opinions,even for those of us who realize the fallacies. Subconsciously,you can't help but have some of that mythology-or exaggeration deep into your consciousness. But awesome job as usual. I like how you point out the biases we all have. Some of it is nationalism,but also our national media.
    Some of my fellow Americans,act like we single handedly beat the Germans,when the British were going at them,long before us. And the Russians died,killed,& bore far more of the fighting,than America,& Britain combined. Or how important British intelligence was,while US intelligence was pretty overmatched early on. Brits probably had the 2nd best intelligence service on earth,behind Russia,who used their intelligence services against everybody-,friend,or foe. Kinda like how us Americans tend to think we single handedly invented the atomic bomb,but British scientists were very important in the Manhattan project. However, that's also how the Russians stole the bomb eventually, according to my understanding-compromised Brits at Las Alamos. Maybe there were Americans also-Im no expert. But my understanding is they mainly got it through a few key Brits. But the Russians have a tendency to forget there even was a western front,or the contribution the Americans,& British-to a lesser extent-supplied them on the Eastern front. The British tend to ignore the entire empire of help they had,or those from occupied countries,when they were supposedly"alone." The French tend to over rate their role in liberating their country,& highlight the French resistance,while ignoring their many collaborators. And it's often forgotten,that the US,& British,to a lesser degree- had another war going on vs Japan,which Russia didn't have to worry about. This is all my opinion,but every country tends to exaggerate their contributions,& minimize others. Especially since the Cold war basically started before the end of the war,& neither side wanted to credit the other. I know people born in the USSR,who thought as kids-thought they single handedly won everything in WW2. It's not as egregiously dishonest in "Western countries," but we all have our myths,& spin on these things.
    But crediting your allies,(or even enemies),& admitting your own countries mistakes, doesn't take away from "your side," or discredit the memory of those killed. We only learn from history,if it's accurate. And more than 1 thing can be true at the same time-there we're good,& evil people on all sides,& all sides made contributions,but could not have been as effective,without their allies. But I can also believe that the Allied side had basically an overall just cause-but recognize there were scoundrels on our side,& we made mistakes...even war crimes. The Axis cause was basically a lie,& evil...but there were individual people,who did heroic things,& were basically good people on their side. It's easy to judge them all 80 yrs later,but I think the Allies crossed the line,with some of our strategic bombings over occupied Europe,but especially Germany,& Japan. Some of our troops did commit war crimes,but not remotely on the scale of the Axis...or even Russians. But it's easy for us to judge. If you were a Russian soldier,pumped full of communist propaganda about the Germans-some true,some exaggerated,& some not true...& you saw your whole village wiped out by the SS...how would we react? I don't believe I would justify raping 80 yr old German women,but I might justify murdering German POWs...especially SS...who knows? And the American,& British strategic bombing,did hurt the Germans,though it cost way too many civilian lives,& wasn't as effective as they thought it'd be. But we tend to forget...they didn't have satellite guided bombs,computers,drones,etc. The only way to hit a target was really saturating the target. So,I think we do sometimes judge those people too much. But I think some of our bombings did cross the line. Not the atomic bombings though...I think those saved hundreds of thousands of Allied lives,& probably many millions of Japanese lives,as awful & regrettable as they were. Even after 2,some of the Japanese army tried to pull off a coup,to prevent the Emperor from surrendering. But that's a story,or argument for another day. Great job,I didn't know much about Market Garden-as I tend to gravitate to Allied victories,not defeats-lol. But you both educated me a lot.

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks for the long reply. It's all about seeing and hearing different points of view

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety

      jason smith wrote:
      _"Some of my fellow Americans,act like we single handedly beat the Germans,when the British were going at them,long before us. And the Russians died,killed,& bore far more of the fighting,than America,& Britain combined."_
      Jason, you are right in that the US contribution, although huge in the end, is overrated. Britain was clearly key in WW2. Britain fought on every front, being in the war on the first day up to the last - the only country at the surrender of Japan in September 1945 to do so - Britain’s war actually ended in 1946 staying on in Viet Nam using Japanese troops alongside British troops to defeat the Viet Minh, but that is another story.
      Britain was not attacked or attacked anyone, going into WW2 on principle. The Turkish ambassador to the UK stated that the UK can raise 40 million troops from its empire so it will win the war. This was noted by Franco who indirectly said to Hitler he would not win, fearing British occupation of Spanish islands and territory if Spain joined the war. Spain and Turkey stayed out of the war. The Turkish ambassador’s point was given credence when an army of 2.6 million was assembled in India that moved into Burma to wipe out the Japanese.
      From day one the Royal Navy formed a ring around the Axis positioning ships from the Eastern Mediterranean to the Arctic off Norway, blockading the international trade of the Axis. This deprived the Axis of vital human and animal food, oil, rubber, metals, and other vital resources. By 1941 the successful Royal Navy blockade had confined the Italian navy to port due to lack of oil. By the autumn of 1941 Germany's surface fleet was confined to harbour, by the British fleet and the chronic lack of fuel. A potential German invasion from the USSR in the north into the oil rich Middle East entailed expanded British troop deployment to keep the Germans away from the oil fields, until they were defeated at Stalingrad.
      Throughout 1942 British Commonwealth troops were fighting, or seriously expecting to be attacked, in:
      ♦ French North Africa;
      ♦ Libya;
      ♦ Egypt;
      ♦ Cyprus;
      ♦ Syria: where an airborne assault was expected, with preparations to reinforce Turkey if they were attacked;
      ♦ Madagascar: fighting the Vichy French to prevent them from inviting the Japanese in as they had done in Indochina;
      ♦ Iraq;
      ♦ Iran: the British & Soviets invaded Iran in August 1941.
      Those spread-out covering troops were more in combined numbers than were facing Japan and Rommel in North Africa. The British Commonwealth fielded over 100 divisions in 1942 alone, compared to the US total of 88 by the end of the war. The Americans and Soviets were Johnny-come-late in WW2, moreso the Americans. Before the USSR entered the conflict the Royal Navy’s blockade had reduced the Italian and German surface navies to the occasional sorties because of a lack of oil, with the British attacking the Germans and Italians in North Africa, also securing Syria, Iraq, the Levant and ridding the Italians from East Africa.
      The Germans were on the run by the time the USA had boots on the ground against the Axis.
      The Germans had been *stopped:*
      ♦ in the west at the Battle of Britain in 1940;
      ♦ in the east at the Battle of Moscow in 1941. In which Britain provided 40% of the Soviet tanks.
      The Germans were *on the run* after the simultaneous battles in late 1942 of:
      ♦ El Alemein;
      ♦ Stalingrad;
      The Battle of El Alemein culminated in a quarter of a million Axis prisoners taken in Tunisia - more than taken at Stalingrad. Apart from the US Filipino forces that surrendered in early 1942, the US had a couple of divisions in Gaudalcanal after August 1942, and one in New Guinea by November 1942. In 1943 the US managed to get up to six divisions in the Pacific, but still not matching the British or British Indian armies respectively. Until late 1943 the Australian Army alone deployed more ground fighting troops against the Japanese than the USA.
      The Americans never put more ground troops into combat against the Japanese at any point than just the British Indian Army alone, which was 2.6 million strong. The US had nowhere near 2.6 million men on the ground against the Japanese. The Soviets fielded about a million against the Japanese. Most Japanese troops were put out of action by the British and Soviets, not the USA. At the battles of Khohima and Imphal the Japanese suffered their worst defeat in their history up to that point. Then the British set the Eastern and Pacific fleets against the Japanese, not far off in numbers to the US fleet.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety

      Irving Burns you and history have but a fleeting acquaintance. You bent freak no one on YT can match those hallucinations you have with distressing frequency.Left out something.The war for Britain started in1939 when Britain declared war, obviously, when the Royals ran out of other peoples shit to give away like they did with The Munich Agreement in 1938 when they gave away Czechoslovakia. By what right did Britain allow Hitler to take Sudetenland, the border regions of Czechoslovakia and therefore to take the defense possibilities from that nation? Why was Czechoslovakia not in attendance for the Munich Agreement? I know the answer and so do you and it is appeasement to a bully by a coward. How about the ANZACs at the Arcadia Conference while Winston demanded the Aussies/Kiwis keep banging away in Burma while Port Moresby and Rabal were almost captured before the GIs intervened that is .Lets review 1940 British forces "evacuated" from Norway,Netherlands, Belgium and France,Dunkirk 1941 Greece, Crete,Hong Kong and Libya. 1942 Tobruk and Dieppe,Singapore. Monty took 4 years to come across the Channel after getting driven into it. Where was the 40 million man army you bloviate about? Couldn't be to daunting 30 miles - 40 million WTF? Bernard also fought to the last colonial ask the Canadians,Australians,Indians,Kiwis and specially the Irish
      Barrie Rodliffe joined 26 Sept 2013
      Giovanni Pierre joined 28 Sept 2013
      John Peate joined 28 Sept 2013
      John Burns joined 07 Nov 2013
      John Cornell joined 13 Nov 2013
      TheVilla Aston joined 20 Nov 2013

  • @grumpyoldman8661
    @grumpyoldman8661 Před 2 lety +4

    (1) This was a great broadcast, absorbing, but perhaps the interviewer should have made his questions (and particularly his comments) more succinct. His guest was left to sometimes just answer in a sentence and given no time to expand. (2) I for one dislike the movie intensely, although I can see in terms of narrative drama, and acting, plus the re-creation of the battle scenes it is superb. However, I'm bound to say it wasn't (as the director Richard Attenborough claimed) an ant-war movie, but an anti- British one, clearly with American money determining its bias. The American troops are displayed as 'get-up-and-go', the Brits. as sluggish, incompetent, and (apart from the 'Red Devils) almost cowardly. What a film to put up for a Royal Command Premier with the Queen (the Commander-in-Chief of our armed forces) forced - with Prince Philip - to watch. (3) I don't (for one moment) think military historians would have allowed this film to influence their writings on Market Garden; like R.G. Poulussen their interpretations would be shaped by research in the various archives. (4) 5/5 stars for this video, excellent. (UK)

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před 2 lety +2

      That's true enough, RG isn't much of a talker and rather shy, which is why this was a prerecord not live. And also why I did much of the exposition in the interview. I urge you to read his books

    • @grumpyoldman8661
      @grumpyoldman8661 Před 2 lety +1

      @@WW2TV Oh, I understand. So full marks to your then for your exposition. Yes, I did go to Amazon but his book is only in a KINDLE edition. I prefer a hard copy. I am at the moment reading Beevor's "Arnhem". Your broadcast was important for me as an antidote.

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před 2 lety +1

      @@grumpyoldman8661 Send RG a direct message on Twitter and you can order hardback copies direct from him

    • @grumpyoldman8661
      @grumpyoldman8661 Před 2 lety +1

      @@WW2TV I'm not on Twitter. But thanks anyway.

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety

      @@grumpyoldman8661
      Beevor's book is poor.

  • @bradmiller6023
    @bradmiller6023 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I really like this vid!!! My view is that with the planners ignoring the underground reports about having an SS Panzer group in the area. They could not have known that the Germans sent Field Marshal Model out to take over the area, he stopped a retreat through Arnhem he stopped it and in the next 2-3 days set-up a good defense and sent troops back down the road so more german defenders were there to oppose the Americans and British 30.
    If the drops would have happened 4 days before the plan could have been a resounding success.
    As for the German SS Panzer's they had not been completely refitted and replenished and were at the time of Model's arrival preparing to pull back I believe. As far as the SS goes it could have been worse if I understand correctly they only had 20-30 fully operational tanks, what if they had had a full compliment of tanks? The British Para's would not have lasted 2 days.
    Now this is my opinion based on my understanding of the history I have read.
    Now as for Intel Can you point out to me any military command that did not POO-POOed most intel gathered by any groups other than the coast watchers.

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před 3 měsíci +3

      You made several points.
      1. The underground reports were not ignored at all. Montgomery received reports on 9 September that II.SS-Panzerkorps with 9.SS-Panzer-Division 'Hohenstaufen', and presumably its sister unit 10.SS-Panzer-Division 'Frundsberg', had arrived in the eastern Netherlands to refit, so he immediately realised Operation COMET due to embark in the early hours of 10 September was not strong enough to deal with them, and issued the cancellation order at the last minute.
      COMET involved dropping only the British 1st Airborne Division and the Polish Parachute Brigade at Arnhem, Nijmegen, and Grave. Montgomery then proposed an upgraded replacement operation (provisionally called SIXTEEN) to Eisenhower at their scheduled meeting later on 10 September at Brussels airport, by adding the two US Airborne Divisions to seize the bridges between Eindhoven and Nijmegen. This allowed the British division and Polish brigade to concentrate at Arnhem with their superior anti-tank capabilities, where the armoured threat was greatest.
      2. Model's Heeresgruppe B Headquarters moved to Oosterbeek just outside Arnhem and was open by 15 September, just two days before MARKET GARDEN. Code intercepts had revealed that the Heeresgruppe B 'FLIVO' (Luftwaffe Liaison officer) was in Oosterbeek (the Luftwaffe codes were easier to break than the army) and the resistance had identified the Hotel Tafelberg in Oosterbeek hosted an army group commander, so Model was known to be in Oosterbeek. The first orders issued to frustrate MARKET GARDEN came from II.SS-Panzerkorps commander Bittrich, not Model, because his HQ in Doetinchem was linked to a Luftwaffe air raid control centre in the town and this was linked to the Luftwaffe 3.Jagd-Division fighter control bunker 'DIOGENES' at Deelen airfield. Bittrich received a phone call from the Luftwaffe network within an hour of the landings starting and had 'alarm units' alerted to move within another hour. He had already issued orders to reconnoitre Arnhem and Nijmegen before Model arrived at his headquarters and approved the moves already made before formally taking control.
      3. The two SS panzer divisions were severely degraded in the Normandy battles, losing most of their tanks to anti-tank guns in the British infantry divisions around Caen. SS-Panzer-Regiment 9 had three Panthers at Arnhem, and after the 'Hohenstaufen' had handed over their remaining Mark IVs to the 'Frundsberg', SS-Panzer-Regiment 10 had 16 Mark IV (concentrated in 5./SS-Pz.Rgt.10) and 4 StuG IIIG assault guns (concentrated in 7./SS-Pz.Rgt.10) at Vorden. The 'Frundsberg's Panther battalion was still training in Germany, continually robbed of vehicle deliveries to replace losses in units fighting in Normandy. The battalion would not be operational until the 'Nordwind' counter-offensive in January 1945.
      Model was estimated to have less than 100 operational tanks in his entire Heeresgruppe B between Aachen and the North Sea coast - in fact we now know Model's September returns listed 84 operational panzers - facing Montgomery's 21st Army Group with 2,400 and the US 1st Army at Aachen with another 1,500 tanks. Remarkably, 84 is the exact number of anti-tank guns on establishment of British 1st Airborne Division and the Polish Brigade combined (52 x 6-pounders and 16 x 17 pounders in 1st Airborne, and 16 x 6-pounders in the Polish Anti-Tank Squadron).
      4. The British Airborne Divisions had a larger number of anti-tank guns, while their US counterparts had more field artillery in their establishments. They could hold their own against armoured counter-attacks and the Anti-Tank Batteries were briefed to expect heavy armoured counter-attacks from the first day, including Panthers and Tigers, so they received 'sanitised' (unit identifications stripped out) intel to expect front line armoured units to intervene. The armoured response actually came mostly from training units or alarm units sent from Germany and took several days to arrive. The Germans were wary of British anti-tank capabilities and avoided tank losses as much as possible. It's a fallacy that a large armoured force would simply roll over a British infantry unit. Some of the British guns in the Arnhem bridge and Oosterbeek perimeters hardly fired any rounds throughout the battle, because German armoured vehicles avoided their firing lines. British units were forced to surrender only when they ran out of small arms ammunition (and PIAT bombs used to go out and 'stalk' vehicles) to fend off infantry attacks, and the Germans ended up capturing unused stocks of AT gun rounds.
      Another example - when the bridge force of 1st Parachute Brigade were finally overran, British prisoners were led past "a seemingly endless line of Mark IV tanks" (James Sims in Arnhem Spearhead, 1978), and possibly included the Tiger I tanks of Panzer Kompanie 'Hummel', parked under the trees along a boulevard leading to the bridge, because they were held back until the bridge was cleared before being sent south to stop Montgomery's tanks at Nijmegen.
      5. Your final comment on military commands poo-poo'ing intel I don't understand. Much of the Conventional narrative about intelligence regarding MARKET GARDEN is myth, and the main culprit is A Bridge Too Far - the book has errors of ommission and the film is often deliberately misleading to suit the agendas of the filmmakers. The total absence of airborne anti-tank guns in the film was used to convey the false impression that the airborne were helpless against tanks, for example. The intel on Arnhem turned out to be very accurate, even down to the 400 artillery troops in a collection centre at the Wolfheze psychiatric hospital - the reason it was bombed, the 'old men on bicycles and some Hitler Youth' were a local security battalion and SS training battalion known to be based there.
      The greatest unknown was the exact location of the 'Frundsberg' division, something the Dutch resistance had not identified, and this unfortunately had a negative affect on the planning at Nijmegen by 82nd Airborne, which ultimately backfired and led to the main compromise of the operation - another aspect completely ommitted by A Bridge Too Far. The city of Nijmegen was evacuated by the Germans after the landings and the highway bridge guarded by just an NCO and seventeen men until later in the evening when Gräbner's SS-Panzer-Aufklärungs-Abteilung 9 (attached to 10.SS-Panzer) got to the bridge first, having been unloaded from rail flat cars at Beekbergen, tracks and guns refitted to make them administratively 'opertional' again, and then travelled all the way down to Nijmegen to conduct its reconnaissance. If the 508th had sent its 1st Battalion directly to the bridge as Gavin instructed, it would have arrived an hour before the SS panzer troops.

    • @nickdanger3802
      @nickdanger3802 Před 3 měsíci

      1st AB Intel officer
      Conversations with History: Brian Urquhart
      czcams.com/video/dfuJ4W-wqI4/video.html

  • @untermunchkin4380
    @untermunchkin4380 Před rokem +1

    So Horrocks was twiddling his thumbs waiting for Gavin to capture the bridge at Nijmegen. You see, I thought Horrocks was very late to arrive at Nijmegen waiting for the engineers to construct a replacement for the bridge that had been blown up on the Son. Oh wait, the 101st should have prevented that.

    • @wbertie2604
      @wbertie2604 Před 4 měsíci +3

      Horrocks got there barely behind schedule, all credit to those who put the Bailey bridge in, 101st for providing flank security, and XXX Corps for making good progress thereafter. It was really quite impressive but XXX Corps got bogged down in Nijmegen as that wasn't secured itself, let alone the bridge.

  • @bryanwiedeman3154
    @bryanwiedeman3154 Před 2 lety

    Former 2nd Ranger Bn with a combat jump into Rio Hato and later time in a certain SMU, I think the British plan on emphasizing Groesbeek heights to the Americans confused it’s focus.

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety +2

      The British did no such thing.

    • @bryanwiedeman3154
      @bryanwiedeman3154 Před 2 lety

      @@johnburns4017 are you sure occupation of Groesbeck heights weren’t Priority 1# of Boy Browning. I would have to look back at there Warning Order to 82nd Airborne and if not no Leaders noticed there DZ on overlays over distant low priority terrain during final back brief seems impossible.

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety +1

      @@bryanwiedeman3154
      Browning *DID NOT* de-prioritised the bridge.
      _"I personally gave an order to Jim Gavin that, although every effort should be made to effect the capture of the Grave and Nijmegen Bridges_ *_as soon as possible,_* _it was essential that he should capture the Groesbeek Ridge and hold it-for … painfully obvious reasons …. If this ground had been lost to the enemy the operations of the 2nd Army would have been dangerously prejudiced as its advance across the Waal and Neder Rhein would have been immediately outflanked. Even the initial advance of the Guards Armoured Division would have been prejudiced and on them the final outcome of the battle had to depend."_
      - Lt Gen Browning to Maj Gen G. E. Prier-Palmer, British Joint Services Mission, Washington, D.C., 25 Jan 55, excerpt in OCMH.
      Browning said.. _it was essential that he should capture the Groesbeek Ridge and hold it._ He did *not* say it was priority.
      Browning did *not* de-prioritise the bridge, initially neither did Gavin, until he pulled all his men entirely out of Nijmegen after failing to seize the bridge.
      Gavin told Lindquist to go to the bridge, _"without delay"._ Gavin was clearly going for the bridge as a matter of urgency. The problem was the incompetent delay to move to the bridge - that is why the 82nd failed to seize the bridge. *Gavin's command structure failed.*
      _After receiving General Gavin's pre jump orders in regard to the Nijmegen bridge, Colonel Lindquist had earmarked Colonel Warren's battalion as one of two battalions from which he intended to choose one to move to the bridge, depending upon the developing situation._ *_General Gavin's understanding, as recalled later, was that Warren's battalion was to move "without delay after landing."_* _On the other hand, Colonel Lindquist's understanding, also as recalled later, was that no battalion was to go for the bridge until the regiment had secured its other objectives, that is to say, not until he had established defenses protecting his assigned portion of the high ground and the northern part of the division glider landing zone._
      - US Official History
      _Prior to the Holland jump, I sat in a high-level briefing at division headquarters. Colonel Lindquist was told by General Gavin to move to the Nijmegen Bridge as soon as Lindquist thought practical after the jump._ *_Gavin stressed that speed was important._*
      _After we were dropped in Holland, I went to the 508th Regimental CP and asked Colonel Lindquist when he planned to send the 3rd Battalion to the bridge. His answer was, “As soon as the DZ (drop zone) is cleared and secured. Tell General Gavin that.”_
      ..
      _I never saw Gavin so mad. As he climbed into his jeep, he told me to, “Come with me - let’s get him moving.” "On arriving at the 508th Regimental CP, Gavin told Lindquist,_ *_“I told you to move with speed.”_*
      - by Chester E Graham, _liaison officer between the 508th and the 82nd Division Headquarters._
      _As darkness approached, General Gavin ordered Colonel Lindquist_ *_"to delay not a second longer and get the bridge as quickly as possible with Warren's battalion."_*
      - US Official History
      _"I personally directed Colonel Roy E. Lindquist, commanding the 508th Parachute Infantry," General Gavin recalled later, "to commit his first battalion against the Nijmegen bridge_ *_without delay after landing_*
      - US Official History

    • @bryanwiedeman3154
      @bryanwiedeman3154 Před 2 lety +2

      @@johnburns4017 Well put , 90% of your completely accurate post jump actions in my opinion show the diverging focus of the plan as it unfolded. As a paratrooper you need one objective to keep you from expected distractions. Unless the heights were the only safe DZ the initial DZ should have reinforced the mission objective. Pegasus bridge comes to mind and from my first combat jump 1989 into Rio Hato we were briefed not to defend DZ but attack PDF barracks and armored vehicle park with all forces assembled.
      You may be right and I appreciate your knowledge but 77 years later we are still trying to work through the Schwerpunkt of Market Garden…cheers

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety +1

      @@bryanwiedeman3154
      It is working your way through the myth then getting at *facts.*

  • @angloaust1575
    @angloaust1575 Před 4 měsíci

    Maybe d.day should have been
    Launched in holland and belgium rather than france!

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před 4 měsíci

      Those Countries were never really given serious consideration for a landing - for a variety of reasons

  • @fabiosunspot1112
    @fabiosunspot1112 Před rokem

    This is Arnhem we talking about,this isn't some artillery battery on the coast or some water plant being attack by special operations team,they were two panzer division and some were veterans of the eastern front so proper planning was needed.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Před rokem +4

      It was actually the reinforcements that came in from Germany in the following days (unknown to allied or Dutch intelligence) that really made the difference.
      The 3 airborne divisions should have had enough to deal with what was there, yes with different planning.
      The two SS panzer divisions were at less than half strength and didn't have a single available tank between them to muster. They had lost them all in Normandy and didn't receive any new ones until 8 new Panthers arrived in Arnhem on the 20th.

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před rokem +2

      There was *no* armour in the Arnhem area on the jump day. Do a G oogle search on _RAF reconnaissance Arnhem._ The RAF did a study on this. There was only a few old French tanks knocking about, that is why they took along 17-dpr guns knocking them out on d day. The first armour into Arnhem came in from Germany on the evening of d day plus 1 being knocked out by the British paras.

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před rokem +1

      @@lyndoncmp5751 wrote:
      _"and didn't receive any new ones [tanks] until 8 new Panthers arrived in Arnhem on the 20th."_
      By 20th it should have all been over if Gavin had moved onto Nijmegen bridge immediately.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Před rokem +1

      John Burns,
      Yes. Kompanie Mielke was the first German armour sent into Arnhem. Late on the 18th.
      On the 17th it was 200 km east at Bielefeld Germany. It was sent to Arnhem through the night of 17/18th, arriving there late on the 18th. It had Panzer IIIs and IVs.

    • @sean640307
      @sean640307 Před rokem +1

      @@lyndoncmp5751 this is correct. The only tanks in the area where those of PK244 (the obsolete French B2s that had mostly been converted to flamethrower tanks) and those of the local school of armour, comprising six equally obsolete Pzkw IIIs and two early-generation Pzkw IVs. The only unit within either 9th SS Panzer or 10th SS Panzer was the 9th Recon unit, led by Graebner, that was seconded to 10th SS Panzer. As you already know well (but others may not!), It was this unit that was decimated by Frost's men on Arnhem bridge upon their return from Nijmegen.
      The book in my collection titled "German Armor in Arnhem September 1944" by Marcel Zwarts gives a very good insight into what was there and neither 9th SS Panzer nor 10th SS Panzer had any tanks of their own

  • @imperialcommander639
    @imperialcommander639 Před 2 lety +2

    RG Poulussen, renowned for copyright infringement by taking Imperial War Museum photos and videos, to make it his own

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před 2 lety +1

      That situation has been resolved, but in fairness he was here to talk about his book

    • @imperialcommander639
      @imperialcommander639 Před 2 lety +1

      He got caught out and doubled down, a disingenuous trait is a still a disingenuous trait

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety

      @@imperialcommander639 good post

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety

      @@imperialcommander639
      Photos have a time limit on copyright. In 1945 is long way back now.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety

      He was a photographer much like you've been trained in carnival barking

  • @nicholaspatton1742
    @nicholaspatton1742 Před 2 lety +1

    A Bold Move carries risk. For me, the idea that 30 corps would just drive up on a Sunday drive and wave hello and everything's OK, is absolutely ridiculous. Every op was a hopeful fluke but the expectation for 30 corps near impossible, but absolutely critical for victory to be achieved. It only was a bridge too far for XXX corps But that's not their fault.
    Great presentation.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety +1

      It's not gavin's fault either - more like monty - who didn't show

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Před 2 lety +5

      XXX Corps did an incredible near 90km in just 42 hours, despite German anti tank ambush, having to build their own bridge, a single lane road, traffic jams and thousands of Dutch civilians celebrating and holding them up. However this was the fastest allied advance against German opposition in the entire September 1944 to February 1945 period.
      The plan was doomed to fail because of the decisions made by Brereton, Williams and Hollinghurst. The Germans concluded the biggest mistake made by the enemy was dispersed drops and over a number of days. That's all down to the air commanders.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety +1

      *Armageddon:The Battle for Germany,By Max Hastings* Bob Peatling was keeping a diary, to relieve the dreadful boredom. “I am getting fed up with hearing German voices,” he wrote, “and hope to wake up in the morning and hear a British sergeant-major blaspheming at his children in the approved style. This should make quite a historic diary but personally, I would rather stay the quiet stay-at-home lad. There is no noise of any firing whatever. I can’t make it out. *Field-Marshal Montgomery has dropped a clanger at Arnhem*
      -
      Gavin wrote: “Had Ridgway been in command at that moment, we would have been ordered up the road in spite of all our difficulties, to save the men at Arnhem.” *A young British Guards officer told the American that his unit had halted because of enemy fire. The general sat fuming for forty minutes without hearing a shot in the vicinity, nor any sign of energetic British activity. Finally, the corps
      commander abandoned his jeep and walked a mile and a half to Taylor’s CP, without meeting fire. He later described himself as “much dissatisfied with the apathy and lack of aggressiveness of the British forces,”* *a view shared by some British officers. The vital infantry of 43rd (Wessex) Division, following up Guards Armoured, had not yet reached Grave, eight miles to the south*

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety +3

      On 17 Sept, the jump day, the road from Eindhoven to Arnhem was totally clear. There were no ditches or barbed wire around the bridges. The only concentrated German forces were on the Dutch/Belgian border facing the British lines - naturally. XXX Corps did not know the Germans reinforced the area, but when advancing made remarkable progress, as the US official history states, from the start point to Eindhoven.
      The US 101st failed to seize the Zon bridge north of Eindhoven, setting the operation back *12 hours,* allowing German defences to organise. XXX Corps ran over a Bailey bridge. The road was clear from Zon to Nijmegen, with XXX Corps making the 26 miles in *2 hours 45 minutes.* XXX Corps Arrived at Nijmegen expecting to run over the bridge to Arnhem seven miles away, as the road was still clear. But they saw the bridge in German hands as the US 82nd failed to seize it.
      XXX Corps were then forced to seize the bridge themselves. The resulting further *36 hour* delay meant the Germans could run in more tanks from nearby Germany precluding the bridgehead over the Rhine.
      If the 101st and 82nd had not failed to seize their bridges, they were exceptionally late getting to the bridges with minimal opposition, XXX Corps would have been in Arnhem late evening on D-day plus one.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety

      Burns go share your novels with your special needs class or the Poles that got ran thru the shredder .You troubled tosser get help. In case your handler didn't read it to you last time,from a PHD of course to you it means piled,higher and deeper
      - MONTY GARDEN
      *ARNHEM,by William Buckingham,p49* Major General Richard Gale who converted the British Airborne from a small group of Raiders into a conventional parachute brigade in confidence told Major G.G. Norton in the '70s then curator of the Airborne Forces Museum *"that he would rather have resigned his command than execute MARKET as it was foisted on Urquhart".It is unclear if Gale made his views clear to Browning at the time
      *ARNHEM,by William Buckingham,p111 This plan got blasted 3 miles in when Panzerfaust teams took out 9 shermans and continued to collapse on it's self going forward.* Viktor Graebner of 9th SS Panzer had 30 armored halftracks,10 - 8 wheeled armored cars and a number of trucks
      *ARNHEM,by William Buckingham,p145 the Irish Guards were an hour and 11 miles behind when it's tanks rolled into Valkenswaard main square on the night of the 17th* and Horrocks no movement after dark extended this shorfall to 12 hours at a stroke. It remained to be seen if Guards Armored Division would prove capable of moving the following day with sufficient dispatch to make up at least some of the lost time
      *Arnhem,by Willam Buckingham,p.358 LT Brian Wilson of the 3rd Irish Guards recalled patrols of US Paratroopers constantly roaming through his location while "for our part" we just sat in our positions all night* As Heinz Harmel later put it the English stopped for tea ​*the 4 tanks who crossed the Bridge made a mistake staying in Lent,if they carried on their advance it would have been all over for us* A rapid and concentrated relief effort across the lower Rhine never happened because the Irish Guards remained immobile for hours in darkness and beyond as the Guards Armored Division had collectively done since Operation Garden commenced
      *Arnhem,by Willam Buckingham,p.360 The Irish Guards did not try to hard despite the urgency of the situation .Lt-Col John Vandeluer ordered to hold in place after the advance was stopped in the early afternoon* .The clear inference was that the Guards had done enough and it was time for another formation to take over. *Lt Brian Wilson considered this attitude "shameful" that his Division had remained immobile for 18 hrs after the Nijmegen Bridges had been secured. LT John Gorman a commander in the 2nd Irish Guards was equally forthright,we had come all the way from Normandy,taken Brussels fought half way through Holland and crossed the Nijmegen Bridge.Arnhem and those Paratroopers were just up ahead and almost insight of the bloody bridge we were stopped. I never felt so much despair*

  • @bryanwiedeman3154
    @bryanwiedeman3154 Před 2 lety

    Crete vs Arnhem …Hours into no communication General Student had his operations Officer with long range radio to land on a beach west of Maleme airfield to get a situation report vs no attempt from Monty’s command day after day……this is the Operation in a nutshell…

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Před rokem +2

      Monty basically took a back seat and handed it over, well specifically Market, to Brereton and co once they kept overruling him.

  • @Digmen1
    @Digmen1 Před rokem

    I always wonder what would have happened if they had gone for one bridge at a time.
    Take the bridge and move up the road, then consolidate.
    Then do the next bridge and move up etc

  • @jbjones1957
    @jbjones1957 Před 2 lety

    Things that went wrong: 101st at Zon.
    30 Corps at Aalst and no exploitation from Nijmegen Bridge. No night movement.
    82nd at Nijmegen.
    British Airborne: breakdown of command, communications and control. Low priority for railway bridge.
    8 and 12 Corps not providing adequate flank protection.
    There’s many many more.

    • @jbjones1957
      @jbjones1957 Před 2 lety +1

      @@rene5600 the Son bridge should have been captured along with the Bridge at Best and Eindhoven should have liberated on September 17th. That was the plan

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety

      From the Nijmegen bridge? Frost at Arnhem had capitulated by then.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Před 2 lety +1

      XXX Corps at Aalst couldn't get any air support to get rid of the German anti tank guns (actually Flak guns used as anti tank guns). German anti tank guns were a nightmare to pass. They stopped/slowed XXX Corps four times, knocking out a considerable number of tanks in total. Soon after kickoff, at Aalst, at the Nijmegen bridge and at Ressen.

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety +1

      @@lyndoncmp5751
      The Arnhem bridge had already fallen by the time XXX Corps reached Elst. The near *two days* delay created by the *failures* of the two US para units, meant the Germans ran in armour from Germany in that overly generous time window given to them by the 82nd and 101st. Armour into Arnhem and south over the Arnhem bridge to Elst. When XXX Corps arrived at Nijmegen, the road to Arnhem was pretty well clear. If they ran over the Nijmegen bridge they would have relieved the paras on the Arnhem bridge.
      On the 17th (d-day) and 18th the road from Zon all through to Arnhem was pretty well clear. It took XXX Corps only 2 hrs 45 mins to run the 28 miles from Zon to Nijmegen on the morning of the 19th. That is, nearly two days after the jump, the road was still clear. The bridges had no defences like ditches and barbed wire.
      If the 82nd and 101st had seized their bridges in coup de mains, XXX Corps would have been in Arnhem on d-day plus 1 in the late evening. Mission accomplished.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety

      From 1940 on which empire's forces "evacuated" from Norway,Netherlands, Belgium and France-Dunkirk .In 1941 Greece, Crete,Hong Kong and Libya. In 1942 Tobruk and Dieppe,Singapore and couldn't cross it's own 30 mile wide channel for 4 full yrs? Tell your troubled tales to the rest of Europe

  • @Lance2023
    @Lance2023 Před 2 lety

    Oi, you did a whole show on cancelled airborne ops so you know Monty was under heavy pressure to get 30k into the fight or Bradley and Patton would. The main problem was aircraft had to be assembled and couldn't do log. Troops and aircraft idle in England.

  • @Chiller01
    @Chiller01 Před 2 lety

    I’m a little late to this party. I’m not certain the guest is convincing in blaming the failure of the entire operation on Gavin and the 82nd Airborne. Two, maybe 3 things have always bothered me about Operation Market Garden. The first is the brevity of the planning, especially from General Montgomery who was notorious for his methodical some would say ponderous planning. The second is the restriction of XXX Corps to a single in many cases elevated roadway. The success of the entire operation hinged on the rapid advance and relief of the Airborne divisions by this route. It’s not just that it was only a single roadway but that the adjacent terrain was polder country that was too soft to allow deviation of armour off the road and hence prevented any form of maneuver. The third is the medium to long term logistical strategy. At the time of the operation the allies were dependent on supply from Normandy. If Montgomery’s left hook had succeeded were there plans to capture the Scheldt above Antwerp or Rotterdam? The Allied offensive in Autumn of 44 was halted by stretched supply lines. I think I agree with Admiral King that the Scheldt should have been cleared while it was lightly defended in order to establish a closer deep water port. As things played out the eventual clearing of that ground against reinforced German defenders cost too many Canadian and British lives.

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety +1

      Montgomery did not plan Market Garden, two USAAF men did, or was involved in its execution. The road from Eindhoven and Arnhem was clear. The clearing of the Scheldt was delayed by Eisenhower. Supplies were adequate to start the Hurtgen Forest attack. The aim was to to reach the Zuider Zee cutting off the German 15th army, then clear the Scheldt. Two US paratroop units failed to seize their bridges, delaying the operation by two days.

    • @Chiller01
      @Chiller01 Před 2 lety +2

      @@johnburns4017 I’m aware of your anti American rhetoric just as I am aware of Big Woodie’s Anglophobia. I think your exchanges on this platform do a disservice to the brave men who served in that war, my father among them. I choose not to engage with either of you.

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Chiller01
      I am only interested in *facts.* I am not anti American. I have worked for many US companies, also having been all over the USA. You also had not much of a clue about Market Garden by your post. I put you right a little.
      I do not exchange with Rambo. You might have noticed.

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety

      Montgomery never planned or was involved in the execution of Market Garden, only proposing the concept. Eisenhower approved, under-resourcing the operation. Two American Air Force Generals, Brereton, in command of the First Allied Airborne Army, and Williams, USAAF, who were the prime planners, were the prime culprits of why the Market Garden plan was flawed. The Market part was planned by mainly Americans while Garden mainly the British. Nevertheless, despite their failings, the operation failed to be a 100% success by a *whisker.* It was Brereton and Williams who:
      ▪️ Ignored nearly all the Airborne tactics and doctrine that had been established, practised and performed in operations in Sicily, Italy and Normandy;
      ▪️ Who decided that there would be drops spread over three days, losing all surprise, defeating the object of para jumps;
      ▪️ Who decided that there would only be one airlift on the first day, despite there being multiple airlifts on day one on Operation Dragoon weeks previously. The RAF offered to man the US planes for a second lift but were refused;
      ▪️ Who rejected the glider coup-de-main on the bridges that had been so successful on D-Day on the Pegasus bridge and which had been agreed to on the previously planned Operation Comet;
      ▪️ Who chose the drop and landing zones so far from bridges - RAF were partly to blame here by agreeing;
      ▪️ Who would not allow the ground attack fighters to attack the Germans while the escort fighters were protecting the transports and thereby not hindering the German reinforcements. Ground attack fighters were devastating in Normandy, yet rarely seen at Market Garden;
      ▪️ Who rejected drops south of the Wilhelmina Canal that would prevent the capture of the bridges at Son, Best and Eindhoven by the 101st because of "possible flak".
      The job of the Airborne was to capture the bridges with as Brereton said _'thunderclap surprise'._ Only one bridge, at Grave, was planned and executed using Airborne tactics of surprise, speed and aggression - land as close to the objectives as possible and attack the bridge simultaneously from both ends.
      The 101st failed to seize the bridge at Zon, taking around four hours to travel only a few km. This set the operation back around 12 hours as XXX Corps had to run over a Bailey bridge, in this 12 hour window the German were running in reinforcements from Eindhoven to Arnhem. Despite the setback at Zone, if the Nijmegen bridge was seized the operation could still succeed. The 82nd failed to seize the bridge at Nijmegen setting the operation back a further 36 hours, with the Germans given an even longer time window to pour in reinforcements. The time delay was too great to form a bridgehead over the Rhine.
      General Gavin of the 82nd decided to lower the priority of the biggest road bridge in Europe, the Nijmegen road bridge, going against orders compromising the operation. To compound his error, lack of judgment or refusal to carry out an order, he totally ignored the adjacent Nijmegen rail bridge, which the Germans had installed wooden planks between the rails for light vehicles to move on. At the time of the landings by the 82nd there were only 19 Germans guarding both bridges with a few troops in the town. There were no bridge defences such as ditches and barbed wire. This has been confirmed by German archives.
      Gavin sent only two companies of the 508 seven hours after they had landed to capture the bridges. They arrived at 2200, eight hours after being ready to march. Company A moved towards the bridge while Company B got lost. In the interim eight hours the 19 guards had been replaced by Kampfgruppe Henke with 750 men and then a brigade of the 10th SS Panzer Division (infantry) setting up shop in the park adjacent to the south side of the road bridge at 1900 hours, five hours after the jump. The Germans occupied the town, which was good defensive territory being rubble in the centre as the USAAF had previously bombed the town in March 1944 by mistake thinking they were in Germany, killing 800. An easy taking of the bridge had now passed.
      XXX Corps Guards Division's aim was to reach Arnhem at 15.00 on D-Day+2. They arrived at Nijmegen in the morning of D-Day+2, with only 7 miles to go to Arnhem. Expecting to cross the road bridge they found it in German hands with Germans fighting 82nd men at the edge of the town, seeing something seriously had gone wrong. The 82nd had not captured either of the bridges or cleared out the Germans from Nijmegen town itself.
      XXX Corps then had to seize both bridges themselves and clear the Germans from the town, using some 82nd men in clearing the town. What you see in the film 'A Bridge Too Far' is fiction. It was the Grenadier Guards tanks and the Irish Guards infantry who seized the Nijmegen road bridge. If the 82nd had seized the road bridge, immediately on landing, as ordered, XXX Corp's Guards Division would have reached Arnhem well within time relieving the British 1st Airborne men on the north side of Arnhem bridge. The German archives state quite clearly that failure to capture the Nijmegen bridge on d-day was the reason for XXX Corps not making a bridgehead north of the Rhine. A clear failure by General Gavin. The Garden part was a success. XXX Corps hardly put a foot wrong.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety

      Burns behaves like an Ebola Chimp in a Poppy field.He's lied once and that has been continuously

  • @johnburns4017
    @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety

    Paul you mention Gavin being honest if interviewed in the 1950s. Gavin was not honest at any time. He ducked and dived to deflect blame from himself, because of his failure to seize the Nijmegen bridge. A bridge his men could have walked on if they went to it immediately. He obfuscated to the US army historians for sure.
    TIK has a vid on Gavin. This was instigated by Rambo going under the handle, _Clone Warrier._ Rambo was accusing TIK of lying, citing a US airborne document written in 1945/46. It was interesting the way TIK broke down the US documents that were to cover their rear ends in the Nijmegen debacle.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety

      Irving Burns are you that insecure you go from board to board and blatantly lie altering actual text in a pathetic attempt to make yourself look legit throwing shit against a wall hoping to desecrate the image of the GIs you piss ant. He took his board down and he damn well knows why. You stay up to 3:30 in the morning you attempting to ambush any poster getting a word in edge wise.Even creating other accounts to agree with your self on anonymous boards.Brooke and Ramsay both blamed bernard and he later admitted it.TIK used an author that was a photograper with out and educational back ground who doesn't source his work and couldn't identify a M-1 - sounds like you. He also took one board down out of concern for libel.Here's what real men of academia have printed that paul could check himself as oppsed to your unsubstantiated carnival barking
      *Alan Brooks own words*
      *"Triumph in the West, by Arthur Bryant, From the diary of Field Marshal Lord Alanbrooke, entry for 5 October 1944:Page 219"*...*During the whole discussion one fact stood out clearly, that access to Antwerp must be captured with the least possible delay.I feel that Monty's strategy for once is at fault, Instead of carrying out the advance on Arnhem he ought to have made certain of Antwerp in the first place. Ramsay brought this out well in the discussion and criticized Monty freely..."*
      *Air Marshall Tedder*
      *With Prejudice, by Marshal of the Royal Air Force, Lord Tedder, Deputy Supreme Commander AEF, Page 599"* *Eisenhower assumed, as he and I had done all along, that whatever happened Montgomery would concentrate on opening up Antwerp. No one could say that we had not emphasized the point sufficiently by conversation and signal*
      *Max Hastings,Armageddon:The Battle for Germany,1944-45 Freddie de Guingand Monty's Chief of Staff telephoned him saying the operation would be launched too late to exploit German disarray.That XXX Corps push to Arnhem would being made on a narrow front along one road,Monty ignored him*
      *Max Hastings,Armageddon:The Battle for Germany,1944-45* The release of the files from German Signals by Bletchley Park conclusively showed that the 9th & 10th Panzer Divisions were re-fitting in the Arnhem area.With their Recon Battalions intact. *Yet when Bedel-Smith(SHAEF) brought this to Monty's attention "he ridiculed the idea and waved my objections airly aside"*
      *The Eisenhower Papers,volume IV,by Edward Chandler* *By early September Montgomery and other Allied leaders thought the Wehrmacht was finished . *It was this understanding that led Monty to insist on the Market-Garden Operation over the more mundane task of opening the port of Antwerp.He ignored Eisenhower's letter of Sept 4 assigning Antwerp as the primary mission for the Northern Group of Armies*

      *The Guns at Last Light,by Rick Atkinson,page 303* *Even Field Marsahall Brooke* had doubts about Montgomery's priorities *"Antwerp must be captured with the Least possible delay" he wrote in his diary Admiral Ramsey wrote and warned that clearing the Scheldt of mines would take weeks,even after the German defenders were flicked away from the banks of the waterway"Monty made the startling announcement that he would take the Ruhr with out Antwerp this afforded me the cue I needed to lambaste him.......I let fly with all my guns at the faulty strategy we had allowed* *Montgomery would acknowledge as much after the war,conceding "a bad mistake on my part"*

      *From Ardennes 1944,By Sir Antony Beevor,page 14* Sir Bertram Ramsey ,Allied Naval commander-in-chief had told SHAEF and Monty that the Germans could block the Scheldt Estuary with ease.The mistake lay with Monty,who was not interested in the estuary and thought the Canadians could clear it later.
      All very provable if they remove your ankle Monitor at the home perhaps the nurses can take you to a library.Johnny while tou are looking up those look up these
      Barrie Rodliffe joined 26 Sept 2013
      Giovanni Pierre joined 28 Sept 2013
      John Peate joined 28 Sept 2013
      John Burns joined 07 Nov 2013
      John Cornell joined 13 Nov 2013
      TheVilla Aston joined 20 Nov 2013
      Just coincidence I'm sure,of course it is

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety

      @@thevillaaston7811
      Yes, those history comics are fun. They are an insult to proper historians.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety

      Irving Burns stop altering texts to fit your bent narrative.Too bad Bernard didn't show up for his own operation like Walter Model - an actual Field Marshall

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 2 lety

      @@bigwoody4704
      Rambo, a quiz.
      Name the town the US 7th armour failed to seize with the British having to go in to take the town for them?
      20 points for the correct answer.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety

      Ah the Aston Archives so why is monty getting throttled in battles very badly to someone who whacked himself?One would say Montgomery appeared helpless but the sad fact is he never appeared at all along the 70 mile front
      How come Field Marshall Walter Model & Fallschirmjager General Kurt Student were able to ferry tanks and troops over rivers and canals under the ever watchfull RAF at Pannerden,and Horrocks/Montgomery could NOT do the same?Not in September, not in October and not in November
      *Armageddon: the battle for Germany, 1944-45*
      Three distinguished British officers who fought in Holland that winter and later became army commanders believed that the Allied cause could have profited immeasurably from giving a more important role to Patton.
      *Lieutenant Edwin Bramall said* “I wonder if it would have taken so long if Patton or Rommel had been commanding.” *Captain David Fraser* believed that the northern axis of advance was always hopeless, because the terrain made progress so difficult. He suggests: “We might have won in 1944 if Eisenhower had reinforced Patton. Patton was a real doer. There were bigger hills further south, but fewer rivers.”
      *Brigadier Michael Carver* argued that Montgomery’s single thrust could never have worked: “Patton’s army should have been leading the U.S. 12th Army Group.”
      Such speculations can never be tested, but it seems noteworthy that two British officers who later became field-marshals and another who became a senior general believed afterwards that the American front against Germany in the winter of 1944 offered far greater possibilities than that of the British in Holland, for which Montgomery continued to cherish such hopes.

  • @markrunnalls7215
    @markrunnalls7215 Před 2 lety

    Another corker of an interview ,Arnhem like you say its been documented a lot since the film A bridge too far ,how I see it is that the film has many inaccurate areas /parts ,so I think in all fairness in simplistic terms is to say that …
    it was just to much of a bold venture that was extremely high risk ,but like you say the western allies had to be seen to be doing something so Market garden it was ,and would I be right in saying what could have gone wrong ,did .

  • @bigwoody4704
    @bigwoody4704 Před rokem

    Got this from another poster - I still remember a review from when this film was first released: "If you liked WW2, you will like 'A Bridge Too Far" as they both cost about the same!"

  • @dmbeaster
    @dmbeaster Před rokem +1

    This is a bad and biased presentation. Read the 82nd contemporaneous reports of the action, and the orders given to Gavin. This narrative is very unfactual, and contradicts the contemporaneous written record. I do not care that this guy is Dutch. He just chose to ignore the records of the 82nd.
    Brereton made decisions to protect the drop and pilots. But it was simply not possible to drop everyone in one lift, nor possible to do two daylight lifts in one day. Plus he did not have the final say if someone senior wanted it different.
    Gavin absolutely did not think that the Heights should be the top priority. It was orders, and Browning's emphasis, who dropped with Gavin and was his commanding officer. The 82nd reports in writing right after the battle make this crystal clear. The narrative in this video is false and contradicts the written record.
    The Dutch told Gavin's G2 on 9/17 that there had been 3,000 German troops on the Heights who moved out on the morning of the 17th. It's in the 9/17 report. Where they were was unknown. The idea that there were no Germans in the area has always been false.
    There were SS Panzer troops at the Nijmegen bridge within hours, having raced there from Arnhem. The 82nd troops (a battalion) entered Nijmegen but could not get to the bridge due to German troops. The bridge itself was protected by blockhouses and several sites for machine guns.
    The 82nd was not tasked to rush to the Nijmegen bridge. The troops that did go there on the 17th could not get to the bridge due to German troops.
    The Heights were a concern to planners for two reasons. If the Germans have the Heights, they interdict the road and bridge crossing without having to recapture Nijmegen or the bridge. Also, it was known that there were significant forces on the other side of the forest (West Wall troops) - an attack on the salient at the Heights was thought of as a serious risk, and there was serious fighting there. It was why Gavin was instructed that the top priority was the Heights.
    The coup de main at Graves was Gavin's idea and not in the original plan. Maybe it was also suggested by someone junior in the 82nd, but Gavin got the change made.
    The British 1st never captured the Arnhem bridge - they just blocked one side. Even if the XXXth got there by day 3 (by day 2 as planned was impossible without regard to Nijmegen), it gets blown and the whole thing fails anyway. It is doubtful that they could have dashed across the island to Arnhem anyway, and would have had a very difficult fight. The British 1st failed to capture any bridges, which guaranteed failure.
    The Nijmegen bridge would have been blown on the 17th if it was subject to capture.
    Market Garden was a bad plan. Blaming the 82nd is bogus.

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před rokem +1

      Have you read RG's book? Because he lists all his sources

    • @dmbeaster
      @dmbeaster Před rokem +1

      @@WW2TV I did. And reviewed a lot of the notes. It misses a lot of primary source documentation and presents theories squarely at odds with that evidence. Some of the footnotes flatly do not support the claim made in the book. Shoddy.
      The action reports of the 82nd are available online at various locations (can also be purchased inexpensively). Some are referenced, but many are ignored.
      Cornelius Ryan's research archive is also available online at Ohio University, and has a lot of primary source documents. Look at box 100. Folder 03 for daily reports. It hugely contradicts the assertions in the book.
      Frost himself wrote that Browning ordered Gavin to give the Heights priority over the Waal bridge.
      The Germans would have blown the Waal bridge on Day 1 if it was at risk of capture. They did so as to the RR bridge.
      Also, the British 1st took no bridges. There is no reason to believe that XXX would have been able to grab it before it was blown even if they got across the Waal on the 19th instead of the 20th. Frost was only able to block one end, and could do nothing as to the south side.
      The idea that the 82nd wrecked the plan is calumny. The British 1st "failed" even more so, and never secured the Arnhem bridge. That wrecked the plan. But the better point is that the plan was bad, period, rather than scapegoating the 82nd. And if we are going to trash the 82nd, you have to excoriate the British 1st as if failed to accomplish anything. Fair play if we are going to blame failure on paratroopers.

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před rokem +1

      To be fair, we've had decades of all the blame being put on the British for OMG. RG's point of view is different, but at the very least raises some questions. He's also not the only historian to question the 82nd, James Holland, John McManus and others have also examined the division's performance

    • @dmbeaster
      @dmbeaster Před rokem +1

      @@WW2TV By the way, my comments are about this author. Your series are great, and have watched and enjoyed several. Just discovered your work.

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před rokem +1

      @@dmbeaster Thanks and we do try and present different views here - see the show with Paul Ham about the atomic bombs as an example

  • @fabiosunspot1112
    @fabiosunspot1112 Před rokem

    The British guy is defending the landings about the fact that one drop per day had worked in the pass but it failed so the argument is done then...

  • @briancooper2112
    @briancooper2112 Před 8 měsíci +1

    This operation should of never been approved. Montgomery had history of not being a team player, as Patton too. But Patton invaded Germany first and Montgomery was jelous.

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před 8 měsíci +2

      Not quite that simple, in that earlier incarnations of the OMG plan had been considered before Patton was in Germany

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před 5 měsíci +2

      Nonsense. Eisenhower publicy said he "insisted" on the operation after Cornelius Ryan's A Bridge Too Far was published, and the planning for Operation MARKET by US General Brereton's 1st Allied Airborne Army included the removal of Browning's original glider coup de main assaults on the Arnhem, Nijmegen, and Grave bridges, planned for Operation COMET.
      Browning had advised British 2nd Army that COMET should not go ahead without these glider assaults as part of the plan, but after COMET was cancelled he was unable to protest Brereton's changes for the expanded Operation MARKET because he had already been politically neutralised when his threat to resign over Operation LINNET II would have resulted in Brereton accepting his resignation and replace him with US General Matthew Ridgway as his deputy and his US XVIII Airborne Corps HQ for the operation.
      LINNET II was thankfully cancelled before it could be launched unprepared with no maps available for the troops, but Browning was unable to influence MARKET until his Corps HQ was on the ground in the Netherlands.

  • @15halerobert
    @15halerobert Před rokem +1

    just like Montgomery

  • @westpointsnell4167
    @westpointsnell4167 Před 7 měsíci +2

    XXX corps screwed up good ole Monty's plan ..case closed

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před 6 měsíci +1

      I suppose OBL is still hiding in a cave in the Tora Bora region of Afghanistan, because any more recent evidence to the contrary is just a conspiracy theory, right?

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 4 měsíci

      Monty not showing up when he heard the early returns of the wheels coming off of his master plan and started writing excuses almost immediately.Ignoring intel and his usual ww1 pathetic planning.Ya let run awhole column of armor 70 miles up a mostly elevated Dikes with no room for manuever proved a shooting gallery.

  • @riftraft2015
    @riftraft2015 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I was always puzzled as to WHY when John Frost was in the debacle in sicily on premiscole bridge, no radios, no communication with air power, the airborne was wiped out, and a few escaped south back to brit lines.
    Why he turned around allowed his airborne unit to repeat the SAME EXACT mistakes that , under Montys command, had been done in sicily.
    In sicily only several hundred airborne troopers died.
    In Market Garden thousands died.
    Repeating the same exact mistakes. Too many people should have been fully aware of the problems in sicily.
    WHY was this allowed? WHY were airborne officers ignoring sicily, to repeat the same mistakes X 10.
    The commanders from top to bottom are TOTALLY responsible for this IMO.
    They also knew about the german panzer divisions in Arnhem, and ignored it.
    Had the mistakes (radios, air communication, many gliders overloaded and crashing, ) been corrected, i think its still doubtfull that the British airborne could have accomplished the mission.
    They fought a horrendous battle like warrior poets, and died to no avail.
    I think Ike allowed Market Garden to get the northern shoulder , and US 1st Armys northern flank closed up, aka, monty caught up to the solid front.
    Because of the shape of europe, monty had to turn from east, to north east, that left a huge hole in Ikes broad front strategy between 21st group and 1st US Army.. This was only much later addressed by activating US 9th Army under Simpson.
    1st armys SOP was to push east at least 1000 yards per day to keep the germans from digging in. This had US 2nd & 3rd armored past Aachen about a week before Market Garden even launched.
    Market Garden was a great idea if,, big IF, all the problems didnt exist. Radios, drop zones, glider losses, german armor divisions, etc. And many problems could have certainly been prevented.
    I fully agree, it seems the commanders were all chomping at the bit, and totally content to pretend ALL the painfully obvious problems didnt exist.
    Another great deep dive show Paul. Love it.
    Thank you Gentlemen. 😊

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před 9 měsíci +4

      1. The problem with the Primosole bridge Operation 'Fustian' in Sicily was that the drop pattern was a shambles. The US 51st Troop Carrier Wing had refused the RAF's suggestion of using their 'bomber stream' technique to overwhelm the target (protected as it was by Flak) and used their usual V-formation in which they had been trained. The inexperienced pilots panicked when they came under fire and broke formation, and some of them refused to go any further. The commander of the 1st Parachute Battalion, realising that his plane was flying around in circles, even threatened to shoot the crew to make them continue. Some planes had made such maneuvres that their paratroopers were in a heap on the floor of the aircraft and could not jump even if they did reach the DZ. The result was that only the equivalent of two companies landed on the proper zones near the bridge and although paratroopers from 1st Battalion managed to take the bridge, the force was not strong enough to hold it and 1st Parachute Brigade's Brigadier Lathbury ordered a withdrawal. The bridge was later retaken by British infantry arriving overland, as the paratroopers had removed the demolition charges and the Germans were unable to destroy the bridge while it was back in their possession.
      The 51st TCW also misdropped again on the Italian mainland in an operation to drop the 509th PIR at Avellino, with the result that a bridge on the road to Montecorvino could not be secured. This problem with inexperienced US aircrews was to be repeated again on a larger scale in Normandy on D-Day, resulting in a very widely scattered drop pattern with both US Airborne Divisions scattered all over the Cotentin peninsula, with the exception of the 82nd Airborne's 505th PIR, which mostly arrived on the correct zone because they had the most experienced aircrews and pathfinders had marked the correct zone.
      The parachute drop of the 1st Parachute Brigade at Arnhem involved very little flak on the first day and the drop pattern by two groups from 52nd TCW was almost perfect. Lessons learned from Sicily, Italy, and Normandy, were incorporated into Operation 'Market', which was not entirely successful for other reasons. I suggest reading Sebastian Ritchie's book, Arnhem: Myth And Reality: Airborne Warfare, Air Power and the Failure of Operation Market Garden (2011, revised 2019), which does what it says in the title of the book in debunking some of the popular myths and explaining why Market was planned as it was.
      2. The German panzer divisions were not in Arnhem - another popular myth. It was known that II.SS-Panzerkorps, with presumably 9 and 10.SS-Panzer-DIvisions, were in the eastern Netherlands to refit, it was known that both divisions were reduced by the fighting in Normandy to regimental battlegroups with few if any tanks. The presence of these units arriving in the Netherlands on 7/8 September after a long withdrawal through France and Belgium, prompted Operation 'Comet', scheduled for 8 September and postponed by weather to 10 September, was finally cancelled early on 10 September by Montgomery because of the worsening intelligence picture in the Netherlands. It was the reason he proposed upgrading the airborne part of the operation with an additional two divisions, the American units, and 'Market Garden' was to be the new operation.
      The presence of the II.SS-Panzerkorps in the Netherlands was known from 'Ultra' signals intelligence, but the existence of this source was not disclosed below Army Group and Army level headquarters. The Dutch resistance had reported SS troops in the Veluwe and Achterhoek regions (west and east bank respectively of the River Ijssel) and had positively identified vehicles bearing the 'H' for 'Hohenstaufen' (9.SS-Panzer-Division) insignia, as well as a division headquarters at Ruurlo, but not which division. During the planning for 'Market', the exact location of the 10.SS-Panzer-Division 'Frundsberg' was unknown and it was speculated that the Panzerkorps were drawing new tanks from a depot thought to be near Kleve. This was the reason 82nd Airborne Division commander James Gavin was told there may be "a regiment of SS troops" in Nijmegen's Dutch army barracks, and the Reichswald forest between his drop zones and the town of Kleve might be a laager for the panzers.
      This speculation turned out not to be true, the city of Nijmegen and its bridges were undefended on the first afternoon and Gavin was threatened from the Reichswald only by low grade Reserve Army troops. The British 1st Airborne Division and attached Polish Parachute Bridade took a total of 83 anti-tank guns by air to Arnhem, including 16 of the heavy 17-pounders capable of dealing with Panther and Tiger tanks. GenFM Model meanwhile, had exactly 84 panzers reported operational in his entire Heeresgruppe B - from the North Sea to Aachen - facing Montgomery's 21st Army Group with 2,400 tanks and the US 1st Army at Aachen with more. I think context is important.
      3. I'm not aware of gliders in 1st Airborne Division crashing because they were overloaded, some had landing accidents, but loading weight was strictly controlled. I'm familiar with US glider operations for the 82nd Airborne in 'Market', and again, not aware of overloading being an issue. You may be thinking of Normandy, where this was often the case. I recommend Glider Pilots At Arnhem by Mike Peters and Luuk Buist (2009), and Hans den Brok's Market Flights volumes on the US IX Troop Carrier Command in Operation Market Garden (2014-2018).
      4. Radio communications failures is a complex issue and the common myth that the wrong crystals were responsible for the communications failure at Arnhem only applied to the two VHF sets used by teams from the USAAF 306th Fighter Control Squadron for communicating with aircraft. The British radios were all working normally, but the ranges were greatly reduced, and it was learned later that this was because the sandy soil of the glacial moraine in the Veluwe region had a high iron content that affected all radio communications, including German, unless you were virtually within line of sight. The Royal Artillery sets were more powerful than the infantry battalion sets, and although suffering the same reduced range problems, the ranges were sufficient to enable the field artillery in Oosterbeek to support the 1st Parachute Brigade at the bridge for example. Both British and US Airborne used the SCR-536 "handie-talkie", and both forces complained that this equipment was virtually useless.
      It's important that mythology is debunked by proper research, and I would commend you to Swedish historian Christer Bergström's Arnhem 1944: An Epic Battle Revisited vols 1 and 2 (2019, 2020), which uses unpublished documents and interviews in the Cornelius Ryan Collection held at Ohio State University to debunk the myths in A Bridge Too Far and bring more recent research to light. I also commend RG Poulussen's Lost At Nijmegen (2011) and 82nd Airborne historian Phil Nordyke's combat history of the 508th PIR - Put Us Down In Hell (2012) for exposing the real reason 'Market Garden' failed - a regimental command failure, and you should read Nordyke's earlier chapters on Normandy to understand that this was not for the first time.

    • @riftraft2015
      @riftraft2015 Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@davemac1197 . Thank you sir. 👍😁. That answered many questions that always puzzed me about market garden.
      The glider issue was my research looking at their reported numbers. That research was a long time ago, but from memory,, 82nd glider lossed were almost nil, while british losses were at over 50+. The reasons given were all over the map. Too heavy, tow ropes breaking dropping in the channel, wings ripping off in fligh etc, etc.
      The reasons i remember kinda pointed at one thing, overloaded.
      As i never did a deep dive on market garden, and am a market garden historical amateur at best, i Love the info.
      That was awesome. .
      The radio thing from sicily to holland ALWAYS puzzed me.
      Why brit airborne had no communication with air power still is a question tho. That could have made a huge difference. But i still think tossing in two ss panzer divisions plus their supporting elements, still make the sucess outcome doubtful.
      As i said, the British 1st airborne boys , fought like warrior poets.
      Their enemy even thought so.
      👍 SALUTE. 😁

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 4 měsíci

      @@riftraft2015 unfortunatel Dave is a revisioninst who tries to segui his views into the narrative to get the real culprit off of the hook.Monty and his poor planning,previously evidenced in Sicily,Italy - then CAEN that he had 6 months to plan and ran into the sand almost immediately - there is your culprit

  • @davidhoins4588
    @davidhoins4588 Před 8 měsíci +1

    It was a British disaster person over

    • @WW2TV
      @WW2TV  Před 8 měsíci +3

      Err, pardon? Read that back to yourself David