Friedmanĭuring most of the eleven months between D-day and V-E day in Europe, the U S Army was carrying on highly successful offensive operations As a consequence, the American soldier was buoyed with success, imbued with the idea that his enemy could not strike him a really heavy counterblow, and sustained by the conviction that the war was nearly won. JonesĬhief, Editorial and Graphics Division, Col. Pattison, Chief of Military History,Ĭhief, Histories Division, Col. Griess, United States Military Academyīrig. August Schomburg, Industrial College of the Armed Forces James A. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C., 20402)įred C. (For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Library of Congress Catalog Number: 65-60001 A list of subseries is appended at the end of this volume. The volumes in the overall series will be closely related and will present a comprehensive account of the activities of the Military Establishment during World War II. This volume, one of the series UNITED STATES ARMY IN WORLD WAR II, is the eighth to be published in the subseries, THE EUROPEAN THEATER OF OPERATIONS. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF MILITARY HISTORY DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY WASHINGTON, D.C., 1965 THE ARDENNES: BATTLE OF THE BULGE by Hugh M. The Third Army Offensive Widening the Bastogne Corridor The Battle Between the Salm and the Our: 24 December-2 January The III Corps' Counterattack Toward Bastogne The XII Corps Attacks the Southern Shoulder & the End of the Defensive Battle, 22 December The 1st SS Panzer Division's Dash Westward, and Operation Grief The Fifth Panzer Army Attacks the 28th Infantry Division Planning the Counteroffensive Details of the Plan
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