To the north, units of
the 6th SS Panzer army Kampfgruppe peiper made up of 4,800 and 600
vehicles under the command of Waffen SS Colonel Joshen Peiper had advanced west
into Belgium and at 0700 hours in December 17 had captured a U.S fuel dump at
Bullingen where they paused to refuel before continuing their were sent to
stand in a field on a cross road.
Here while standing, they were machine gunned.
Some of the survivors were able to escape
into the neighboring forest. In all over 84 men were killed. The escaping prisoners
took the news to the Allied lines where the news of the shooting spread like
wildfire, caused consternation and stiffened resistance to the advance.
The Americans subsequently
took revenge in shooting scores of German prisoners particularly the SS
fallschirmjagen (paratroopers) subsequently. The news of the prisoners killing
subsequently stiffened the fighting spirit of the American Soldiers who now
realised that surrendering was no longer a viable option.
The subsequent advance
of sixth Panzer SS army encountered much stiffer resistance as the Germans
approached positions of the US 99th Infantry division who put up a
stiff fight in spite of the fact that the men were green. The prisoner shooting
incident stiffened the fighting spirit of the soldiers and the German advance
began to encounter stiff bottlenecks as the Americans denied them gains at
every road block, villages, hamlets, destroying bridges, fuel dumps and anything
that could aid the German advance.
When the German
advance reached Stavelot, they were far behind schedule as they took 36 hours
to accomplish in 1944 what took them only 9 hours to accomplish in the same
advance in 1940. Eleven black soldiers were also shot by the 1st SS
Division under Kampfgruppe Hungen but due to paucity of evidence, this massacre
went largely unavenged and unpublicized.
Before the battle of
the bulge, black soldiers in the U.S army were not assigned to combat duties
but served only as stevedores, truck drivers and in logistics support. The
paucity of fighting men at the height of the battle persuaded Eisenhower to
release the blacks to combat duties and blacks thereafter could fight in
frontline but at the greater risk of being shot when taken as prisoners by the
racially murderous SS units and it is believed that was the fate that befell
the eleven black soldiers taken prisoners and shot was racially inspired.
Sixth Panzer army’s
assault on Stavelot on December 18th encountered bitter resistance by the American
defenders who were ready to fight to the death, the Malmedy Massacre being at
the back of every soldiers involved in the battle. Peiper unable to breach the
defenses left a small support force and detoured to the bridge at Trois –
Parte, where the retreating American Engineers had already destroyed the
bridge. He subsequently went off to the village of La Gleize and from there to
Stormount where the bridge was blown up in his face.
With his troops
trapped behind the American lines as the Americans recaptured Stavelot on
December 19, the Sixth panzer army decided to pull back to La Gleize to await a
German relief line. With no relief able to penetrate the American lines, on
December 23rd the Germans were forced to escape through the Allied
lines back to Germany thereby abandoning all their vehicles and heavy
equipments and escaping largely on foot.
In St Vith elements of
the US First army’s 7th armored division, including one regiment of
the US 106th Infantry division as well as elements of the US 9th
armored division and the US 28th Infantry division all under the
command of General Bruce C Clarke set up a road block that successfully
resisted the attacks of Manteuffel’s 5th Panzer army and Sepp
Dietrich’s sixth Panzer army; thereby slowing the German advance at critical
points.
Under heavy pressure,
the US forces were ordered to give up St Vith and withdraw to prepared
defensive positions nearby where they were entrenched in a dogged defense. By
December 23rd, with their flanks shattered by the German armored
assaults, the defenders were withdrawn to a point west of the Salk River. Meanwhile
the German attack had fallen behind schedule and was daily losing the momentum
as the American defenses stiffened.
Gen Patton meanwhile ordered to reinforce the defenses of the
1st army and relieve Bastogne had committed three corps of his army
to the operation with the 4th armored division under direct command
to relieve Bastogne.
On December 20th
General Eisenhower detached the US First and Ninth armies from the command of
General Omar N Bradley and placed them under the command of Field Marshal
Bernard Montgomery’s 21st battle group. It was a decision that left
Bradley bitter and resentful even though it was obvious that he had been
struggling to direct his splintered armies from across the northern end of the
Bulge.
By December 21st,
German forces had Bastogne surrounded on all sides and in spite of repeated
attacks could not take the town. With the Americans low on ammunition and medical
supplies, their position was dire.
The German commander now
sent an emissary to induce the commander of the 101st airborne
division Brig General Anthony McAuliffe to surrender. In a moment of irritation
and annoyance he uttered ‘nuts’ which was dutifully transcribed and sent to the
German commander as the reply by his bewildered staff officers.
The American contacts
had to explain the meaning of ‘nuts’ to the German representative as meaning a
categorical no to the German surrender request. The subsequent German artillery
barrage, though heavy and sustained and for many American soldiers, the
heaviest and most sustained they had ever been through, still failed to induce surrender. The
subsequent German attacks, ferocious though they were, were unable to breach
the Bastogne perimeter in spite of the fact that McAuliffe’s command post was
almost overrun at a time.
Meanwhile by the 23rd
of December the clouds had begun to break, enabling the Allied air force to
take to the skies the next day. Thereafter American P-47 Republic fighter
bombers began to hit the German armored and motorized columns and the Germans
began to seek the protection of secondary roads as relief from the air attacks
and to also out flank the American road blocks.
These helped to slowdown and eventually bog
down the German advance which was also increasingly being slowed by fuel
shortages as there were fewer and fewer available fuel dumps as the Allies
either relocated or destroyed the existing fuel dumps as they retreated.
Meanwhile Field
Marshal Montgomery ordered all available British units within the vicinity of
the Meuse River Crossings, whether combat or none combat units to head to the
Meuse bridge crossings and secure them from the impending German attacks and
efforts at crossing the River. Even the British 29th armored Brigade
which had just turned in its tanks for refitting was ordered to take back the
tanks and head to the River crossings alongside XXX corps.
By December 23rd
Allied Air power began to hit the German columns while Bastogne was resupplied
with food, medicine and ammunition. The Allied fighter bombers also began to
hit the German supply trucks with devastating effect. The combined effect of all these was that the
German advance practically ground to a halt a few miles short of the Meuse
River at some points.
With the German supply lines stretched to a
breaking point, Allied fighter bombers harassing the supply trucks, and tanks
beginning to run out of fuel, and the Meuse River crossings effectively held by
Allied troops, the German attack ran out of steam, and the momentum began to
shift in the Allies’ favor.
On December 24th
Hass von Manteuffel viewing the dire strategic situation, sent a message to
Hitler through his military adjutant that all offensive operations be suspended
with a withdrawal back to the West wall. Hitler rejected the advice. Meanwhile
elements of Patton’s Third army namely the 37th tank battalion of
the 4th armored division broke through the German lines and made
contact with American troops in Bastogne at 1650 hours on 26th of
December ending the siege of Bastogne.
By January 1 in a bid to kick start the
offensive that had ground to a halt, the German Luftwaffe sent in hundreds of
planes in a last ditch effort to destroy Allied air power, attacking and
destroying on the ground hundreds of Allied
war planes, over 465 air craft in total. Meanwhile the Luftwaffe sustained over
275 irreplaceable losses some to Allied fighters, but mostly to Allied anti-
air craft guns set up to track and destroy the V – I flying bombs.
On the same day Army
group G launched an operation against the lines of the US Seventh army in the
south code-named Operation Nordwind which seriously damaged the men and
equipments of the 7th Seventh army and forced them to retreat to
defensive positions on the south back of the Mode River on January 21. At a
time Strasbourg was in danger of falling once more to the Germans. It took the
heroic defense of the French units of the 7th army to save the city.
The German attack
finally petered out by January 25th but with a bulge extending
dangerously into the Allied center. The Allies decided to counterattack to
reduce and if possible cut off the Germans caught in the bulge. For this reason
on January 1, Patton’s Third army was ordered to attack the salient from the
south while Montgomery was ordered to cut off the bulge from the north in a
pincer movement designed to trap and capture the German forces in the bulge.
While Patton promptly
initiated his attack on the 1st of January, Montgomery held off his
attacks until January 3 in order to complete his preparations by which time the
German forces sensing the danger began desperately to retreat to escape the
entrapment even without most of their vehicles and heavy equipment. By January
7th, Adolf Hitler finally decided to call off the offensive and withdraw
his force back to their start line. The two tips of the Allied pincer movements
finally closed on January 15th and the battle of the Bulge was
officially over.
Official German losses
including dead, wounded and prisoners of war were over 100,000 while The
Americans sustained over 89,000 casualties including 19,000 confirmed dead with
over 48,000 listed as wounded or missing. The Allies lost over 730 tanks while
The Germans lost over 600 tanks. The fact was that while the Allies could
replace their losses, the Germans could not replace theirs including the 30
reserve divisions that had been held back in Germany to contain the impending Soviet
winter offensive.
When the Soviet armies launched their
offensive on January 12, there were practically no German reserves to stop the
Soviet drive that carried them 300 kilometers all the way from the Vistula
River in Poland to the Elbe River in East Prussia, 60 kilometers or one hour drive
away from Berlin in Early February 1945. Hitler’s gamble had failed opening the road to
Berlin to the Allies and the US First army characteristically led the way.


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