MilitaryHistoryOnline.com Home   Genealogy   Bookstore   Forums   Search   Newsletter   Contact
Search
Amazon:
Keywords:
MHO Home
MHO Home
 Medieval
 17-18th Century
 19th Century
 American Civil War
 World War I
 World War II
 Korea
 Vietnam

 Write for MHO
 Search MHO
 Civil War Genealogy Database
 Subscribe to Newsletter
 MilitaryHistorySites.com
 Links

WWII Sections
MHO Home
 WWII Home

Mythos Revisited
MHO Home
 WWII Home
  Mythos Revisited Home <<<
    Introduction
    Chapters 1-7
    Chapters 8-9
    Chapter 10
    Chapters 11-12
    Footnotes

WWII Articles
Small Battle: Big Implications
Harris Class APA's
Aerial Defense of East Indies
Why the Bulge Didn't Break
American Forces in WWII
Shadow Warriors
Battle of Surigao Strait
Panzer Brigades
Adolf Eichmann
Interview of a WWII Veteran
Failure and Destruction
Winter Warfare
Operation Rusty: The Gehlen-U.S. Army Connection
Was Hitler right to invade Russia?
Hitler, Germany's Worst General
Surface Actions of World War II
MacArthur's Failures in the Philippines
Japan's Monster Sub
Popski's Private Army
The Soviet Formula for Success
Japan's TA Operation
Hitler Youth: An Effective Organization
After Midway: The Fates of the Warships
Barbarossa: Strategic Miscalculation
The Story of a "Go Devil"
Long Range Desert Group
Island of Death
The Failure of Operation Barbarossa
The Liberation of Czechoslovakia 1945
Only the Admirals were Happy
Bicycle Blitzkrieg - Singapore
Good Grief Sir, We're in Trier!
Barbarossa
Thermopylae, Balaklava and Kokoda
How Hitler Could Have Won
The Battle of Midway
Waffen SS - Birth of the Elite
Nomonhan and Okinawa
Der Bund Deutscher Mädel
Rulers of the World: Hitler Youth
Breakout From the Hedgerows
Yalta
Memories of D-Day
Motivation of the Einsatzgruppen
Pearl Harbor and Midway
Amphibious Assaults during WWII
The 9th SS Panzer Division
The Warsaw Uprising
Sea Lion vs. Overlord
Maginot Line
Pointe du Hoc
Battle of Bastogne
Battle of the Barents Sea
Anzio: The Allies' Greatest Blunder
US Army in WWII
Battle of Mers-el-Kebir
Hitler's Ultra-Secret Adlerhorst
The Wilhelm Gustloff Disaster
The 88th Infantry in Italy
Mythos Revisited
Airlift to China

Thomas E. Nutter Articles
Operation Husky
Mythos Revisited: American Historians and German Fighting Power in WWII

Ads by Google



Mythos revisited: American Historians and German Fighting Power in the Second World War
Mythos revisited: American Historians and German Fighting Power in the Second World War
by Thomas E. Nutter

Introduction
This work endeavors to explore the historiography surrounding a controversial and emotionally charged subject, namely the comparative combat performance of the United States and German armies in the European Theatre in World War II. While the subject has been of interest to soldiers and military historians for over fifty years, and hence would seem to be a likely candidate for reasoned debate, nevertheless it continues to incite strong interest among partisans on both sides. Indeed, in recent years the topic has generated some rather heated work, particularly from those who advocate the view that the United States Army was more than a match for the Wehrmacht in that elusive quality known as "fighting power". One reading the literature on the subject published within the last ten years or so is in fact struck by the aggressively adversarial tone adopted by the authors. One might reasonably inquire why such a stridently partisan tenor has asserted itself in this area of military history.
The answer to this question lies, it may be reasonably argued, not with the performance of the U.S. Army in World War II, but with its experience in the Vietnam War. Anyone who experienced firsthand the passage of the United States through the long period during which that conflict progressed cannot fail to be aware of its profound effect upon nearly every aspect of American life and culture. Although it obviously was not the only historical force at work in the period, nonetheless it can be said to have contributed mightily to a number of significant negative phenomena with which Americans continue to struggle. These include such things as the diminution in value of higher education through grade inflation; the more or less permanent distortion of the American economy resulting from the consistent policies of succeeding presidential administrations in following a "guns and butter" economic policy throughout the course of the conflict; the degradation of moral authority in sexual and social relationships; and, not least of all, disrespect for and suspicion of all things governmental.
Perhaps nowhere were the pernicious effects of the Vietnam War felt more profoundly than in the U.S. military establishment. This can be observed not only in personal memory and the literature devoted to the subject, but also in the experiences of those who served. Delve into the subject with any officer or enlisted man who went through this crucible. You will find not only the horrific recollections common to those who have experienced combat, but also a litany of other horrors not previously associated with military service in the American experience. The examples are many and diverse. In perhaps the ultimate form of military disrespect, American soldiers "fragged" their officers in the combat zone. American soldiers perceived themselves as being pilloried by the American news media. Returning soldiers in uniform were humiliated by their fellow citizens. In the aftermath of the war, indeed even to the time of this writing, so-called "veterans" have debased the experiences of those who actually served by bogus claims not only to veteran status itself, but also to battle honors.
Read more...
* * *
Chapters 1-7
Few subjects have captured the interest of historians and the general public more completely than the history of the conflict in Western Europe between June 1944 and May 1945. In the popular press, in professional journals and on the shelves of bookstores and libraries, stories, articles and books on the subject have proliferated in the last half- century. Nearly every aspect of the last year of war between Nazi Germany and its western enemies has been examined and reexamined, from the commanders and private soldiers who fought, to the weapons, vehicles and aircraft they employed, and the clothes and equipment they wore. There are many reasons why this should be so; for many of the survivors of that war, both civilian and military, it was the defining moment in their lives. Similarly, the descendants and other surviving relatives of those Americans and western Europeans who shared the struggle live with its effects still. World War II captivates the interest of yet another group of persons, namely those whose personal connection with it is tenuous, but whose imagination and desire to know compel them to study its every aspect.

The initiation and course of the campaign in Western Europe in the last year of World War II owed much to the influence of the United States, whose entry into the conflict in December 1941 changed the balance of power in favor of the Allies. In spite of the outrage of the American public against Japan for its surprise attack on Pearl Harbor, the country's political and military leadership agreed with their new British allies that Germany represented the greater threat. Although there was agreement on this point, however, there remained serious controversy between the two English-speaking nations over where and when to best strike against Germany. The United States favored an early direct assault at the enemy heartland through Western Europe, while the British advocated a more deliberate and indirect approach through Italy and Southern Europe.

Britain's caution about a premature direct confrontation on land with Germany in Western Europe stemmed from a number of factors, not least of which were a healthy respect for the capacity of the enemy to resist, and a disinclination to become involved in a slugging match that might give rise to casualties on a scale comparable to those suffered in the First World War. Events, as well as English persistence, conspired to favor the pursuit of the indirect approach. The venue in which Britain most directly confronted the power of the German Wehrmacht was North Africa. This area was critical to the survival of the British Empire, not only because of the presence of the Suez Canal, vital to the ability of Britain to supply its home island and maneuver its navy, but also because of its proximity to rich reserves of petroleum in the Middle East. Here the British, Italians and Germans had struggled throughout most of 1941 in a seesaw battle ranging over hundreds of miles of desolate landscape. By early 1942, however, Britain had gained the upper hand and was forcing the Axis troops back into Tunisia. At the prodding of Winston Churchill, who urged that the United States must attack the Germans somewhere in 1942, American forces invaded North Africa in November of that year. By May the western Allies had driven all Axis forces from the continent of Africa.
Read more...
* * *
Chapters 8-9
Peter Mansoor lumps together John Keegan, Max Hastings and John Ellis, contending that they "round out the field of authors who praise the combat effectiveness of the Wehrmacht at the expense of the victors of World War II." Mansoor asserts that Ellis, like his two fellow Englishmen, has swallowed uncritically the alleged contentions of Russell Weigley and Martin van Creveld that the German army was more competent and combat effective than those of its opposition. While Ellis apparently remains unknown to Bonn, Brown and Doubler, nevertheless it is worth dealing, however briefly, with Mansoor's charge.

John Ellis is neither a soldier nor an academic historian, thus differentiating him from the authors whose work is the principal focus of this work. He is, nevertheless, an accomplished author whose works include, among others, The Sharp End of War, a paean to the individual fighting man. As the title Brute Force suggests, however, the book of which Mansoor is so critical takes a broader view of war (in this instance, the Second World War), focusing on the relative ability of the opposing forces to marshal military resources and apply them to their respective foes. As he indicates in his preface, his first major theme is that the stupendous collective industrial potential of the Allies gave them such a preponderance of the means for warmaking---weapons and soldiers---that it was incumbent upon the Axis to force a quick negotiated peace in their favor, and when they did not, their inevitable defeat was assured by the "prosaic arithmetic of natural resources, generating capacity, industrial plant and productivity." His second theme is that in applying this overwhelming force, "American, Russian and British commanders made considerably less than optimum use of the resources at their disposal and in almost every theatre serious mistakes were made." The result was that Allied "commanders seemed unable to impose their will upon the enemy except by slowly and persistently battering him to death with a blunt instrument." These are the lines of argument of which Mansoor is so directly critical, a criticism shared by Bonn, Brown and Doubler, though in the case of the latter three, the criticism is not particularized to Ellis.[88]

It should be observed, as Mansoor does not, that Ellis does not take the view that the Allied victory over the Axis was simply a numbers game. Ellis makes this clear in the preface to his work.

This book, then, is highly critical of Allied operations throughout the war, but I would like to make it quite clear that there is absolutely no intention of casting a slur upon the bravery (or competence) of millions of ordinary men and women, in uniform and out, who gave mightily that Western democracy might survive. If it is easy for me, comfortable at my desk, to pontificate about eventual victory being certain, about such and such an Army moving unconscionably slowly, this Fleet being in the wrong place at the wrong time, that aircrew dying in vain, I do not mean to minimize the suffering or in any way demean the memory of those who perished amidst the nightmare of Huertgen Forest, Cassino, Stalingrad, Okinawa or Imphal, who burnt to death in the skies above Germany, or choked in oil in the freezing Atlantic.

When this commentary is taken into account, along with the fact that Ellis has devoted an entire work to the sacrifices of the ordinary soldier in wartime, it must be plain that Mansoor's complaint is ill founded.[89]
Read more...
* * *
Chapter 10
At the time Michael Doubler published Closing with the Enemy: How GIs Fought the War in Europe, 1944-1945, in 1994, he was a serving Lieutenant Colonel in the United States Army. Doubler characterized his book as having a purpose similar to that of Infantry in Battle , a volume published by the U.S. Army Infantry School at Fort Benning, Georgia in 1934 for the purpose of reintroducing the experience of battle to an officer corps then suffering from a steady decline in active duty veterans of the First World War. Referring to the "drawdown" of the American armed forces in the aftermath of the Cold War, the author draws the reader's attention to the evidently incompatible facts that while soldiers with combat experience would be disappearing from the armed services as a result of the "drawdown", threats from regional powers to the national security of the United States would remain. Doubler's stated purpose, then, is to use military history to stimulate "disciplined thinking" about the challenges of the future battlefield, while promoting "the viewpoint of the veteran" among officers trained in peacetime.(168]

While at some level Doubler may have had in mind the didactic purpose discussed above when he wrote Closing with the Enemy , it is clear that he had another and perhaps more significant motive. This can be seen literally from the very beginning of the book, in the third page of the Introduction, in which Doubler comments as follows:

"The notion that the American army achieved victory in World War II only because of its employment of overwhelming numbers of lavishly supplied troops against an exhausted Wehrmacht is untrue. American combat power had definite limits imposed by constraints on resources and time. The decision to limit the size of the army to ninety divisions, the soldier replacement system, and the organization of some combat formations reduced the army's effectiveness. Inexperience blunted the fighting ability of many units, and some commands had much more difficulty than others in making the transition from novice to veteran. Senior American commanders were adept at operational maneuver and concentrating firepower, but inadequate numbers of combat formations and occasional manpower and logistical shortages hampered operations."

It is no exaggeration, in fact, to say that these themes, much more than "lessons learned", lie at the core of Doubler's work.[169]
Read more...
* * *
Chapters 11-12
A fashionable argument in the past two decades has been that the Allies won World War II only through the sheer weight of materiel they threw at the Wehrmacht in a relatively unskilled manner. This argument is actually a restatement of the theory put forward by German officers to explain their defeat, as evidenced by wartime interrogations and postwar manuscripts prepared by the defeated.[222]

So begins Peter Mansoor's The GI Offensive in Europe. The Triumph of American Infantry Divisions, 1941-1945. The sympathies expressed in this passage infuse Mansoor's work; indeed, it is not too much to say that the evisceration of the "fashionable argument" is the raison d'etre of The GI Offensive in Europe . The present study has already dealt at some length with Mansoor's "analysis" of the purveyors of the "fashionable argument" and their respective works. His "Introduction" lays waste, in a bare two and a half pages, the reputations of S. L. A. Marshall, Trevor N. Dupuy, Russell Weigley, Martin van Creveld, John Keegan, Max Hastings and John Ellis, whom he collectively characterizes as "revisionist historians" [223]

The "Introduction" to Mansoor's work is so informative of the author's thesis that it is worth considering it in some detail. Commenting favorably upon John Sloan Brown's "critique" of Trevor Dupuy and his work, Mansoor highlights Brown's contention that Dupuy's selection of engagements to study "is skewed toward those battles in which the more elite German panzer and panzer grenadier divisions, which constituted only a small percentage of the Wehrmacht, participated. Dupuy thus compared the American army against the cream of the Wehrmacht." Brown's opinion in this regard, which Mansoor obviously shares, raises two interesting questions. First, Brown and Mansoor both take the view that the American GI was qualitatively superior to the German landser; this being the case, it should matter not one whit which German unit (elite or otherwise) is compared to which American unit. Conversely, if Mansoor and Brown believe that the U.S. army is unfairly prejudiced by Dupuy's comparison of it with "elite" German units, then how is it that neither of them takes into account the decrepit condition of the "run of the mill" German formations most often encountered by the Allies in Western Europe in 1944-1945? Similarly, in his brief commentary on Keith Bonn's When the Odds Were Even, Mansoor emphasizes the author's contention that the U.S. Seventh Army prevailed in the Vosges Mountains in the absence of its customary advantages in logistics and close air support "and in terrain and weather conditions that clearly favored a defensive stand by the numerically superior German forces." (emphasis added). Yet, an essential element of the thesis advanced by Mansoor, Bonn, et al is that numerical advantages (whether in terms of ammunition, guns, trucks, tanks or aircraft) were irrelevant to the success of the U.S. army in Western Europe.[224]
Read more...
* * *
Next Page >
* * *


Copyright © 2004 Thomas E. Nutter.

Written by Thomas E. Nutter. If you have questions or comments on this article, please contact Thomas E. Nutter at:
tenutter@gmail.com.

About the author:
Tom Nutter is in his 25th year of practicing domestic and international patent, copyright and trademark law, and is the Managing Partner of an intellectual property law practice in St. Louis, Missouri.  He holds the Masters and Doctorate degrees in diplomatic/military history from the University of Missouri.  His interests include railroad history as well as European and American military history in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries.  He lives in St. Louis with his wife, three children and two German Shepherd dogs, Caesar and Cleopatra. 

Last Modified on: 12/03/2006.

* Views expressed by contributors are their own and do not necessarily represent those of MHO.
© 1999-2008 MilitaryHistoryOnline.com, LLC Contact Brian Williams at: militaryhistoryonline@hotmail.com