7; THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE Invasion of Europe Started withSicily Gerian Territory in Europe Shrinks To NothinAg i Less lau Two Years (Continued from Page 4) - ly bloody battles were fought in beat- ing the Germans back from one Italy . *. hedgerow and sunken road to the The Allies invasion of Europe really next. Cherbourg, the Allies' first began with the attack on Sicily by major port in France, was taken by Gen. Eisenhower's British and Amer- American troops on June 27 just three ican forces on July 10, 1943. Fifteen weeks after D-Day after a bitter fight. days later Mussolini was ousted in Then, American, Canadian and Rome-the first serious break in the Allied troops liberated France in Axis structure. one of the swiftest campaigns on Striking swiftly on Sept. 3, after record. They did it from a beach- completion of a 38-day campaign in head--one of the most unusual of Sicily, Gen. Montgomery's troops in- military feats. vaded the toe of Italy. The fifth While still depending on beach in- Army of Gen. Mark W. Clark landed stallations for a flow of supplies, Lt. at Salerno below Naples and after a Gen. Omar N. Bradley struck out on blood battle with the Germans, estab- July 25 for the great objectives of the lished a beachhead six days later, invasion. Bradley's U.S. First Army almost simultaneously with an- broke through at. St. Lo and began nouncement of the surrender of the throwing armored hooks westward government of Marshal Pietro Badog- toward the Normandy coast which lio which had succeeded Mussolini. repeatedly trapped large numbers of The first of the big three in the Axis German troops. had been knocked out of the war. Taking. command of a new U.S. Through a bitter winter campaign, Third Army, Lt. Gen. George S. Pat- the Americans and their allies made ton began a sensational sprint south- but slow progress from Naples, fought ward through Avranches into Brit- the bloody battle of Cassino, estab- tany, sent roaming columns speeding lished the beachhead at Anzio below westward and southward to Brest at Rome and finally on May 11 launched the' tip of Brittany, St. Nazaire, Lor- the offensive which carried them to lent, Nantes and across the Loire, Rome on June 4. The Palazzo Venezia then turned his main forces eastward where Mussolini's balcony stands was in a stabbing offensive which seemed turned into a museum. aimed straight at Paris. Out-generaled, out-numbered and a 1 1 t i and Canadians had led him to believe that the main attack would be deliv- ered. Here Von Kluge held on, despite Patton's spectacular penetrations toward Paris, in the apparent de- lusion that as long as the Caen anchor positions held the Allies would rot venture far inland. From the Mortain area he had mounted his fiercest armored counterattack to- ward Avranches in the mistaken be- lief that he could split the Allied armies and bring them to disaster. Suddenly all these German forces were threatened with entrapment. The attacks by Montgomery and the newly created First Canadian Army under Lt. Gen. D.D.G. Crerar became an anvil upon which Patton and Lt. Gen. Courtney H. Hodges of the U.S. First Army beat the German 7th Army to pieces. Dragged into the German disaster were a newly organized German 5th tank army and a substantial part of the 15th army charged with the de- fense of the rocket coast and the re- mainder of northern France. By Aug. 21 Gen. Montgomery was able to proclaim that the bulk of German forces in northwestern France had met with "definite, com- plete, decisive" defeat and that the end of the war was in sight. The strategy. if successful, would have paved the way for a possible Bianking of the northern end of the Siegfried Line, but Field Marshal Sir Bernard L. Montgomery was un- able to drive the 50 miles to Arn- hem in time to exploit the position gained by the British First Airborne division. After eight days of heavy lighting from their encircled position, the airborne "red devils" were forced to withdraw across the Noder Rhine. Already Patton's forces were plun- ging south of Paris and across the Seine northwest of Paris to carry out even more audacious plans. The underground in Paris rose in battle. The city of light and symbol of liberty in thz western world was liberated on Aug. 25, just a month after the break-through at St. Lo, by French and American troops en- tering the city. On Aug. 15 the army of France under Gen. Jean de Lattry de Tas- signy and the U.S. 7th Army under Lt.-Gen. Alexander M. Patch invaded southern France from the Mediter ranean in a huge and skillfully co- ordinated action which speedily won control of the whole coast. The Ger- mans began a precipitate withdrawal from all southern France, but by the first of September the German 19th Army was fighting for its life up the Rhone Valley where it had been in~. tercepted by fast armored columns slicing across the French Alps. While Allied forces in the north and south neared a junction, the Ameri- can First and Third Armies began a series of amazing dashes toward the Rhine. Old battlefields along the Marne, the Aisne, the Oise, were reached and passed with bewildering rapidity. The Americans hurtled in a single day the Meuse-Argonne batt- tleground where their fathers fought for sixbloody weeks in 1918. Belgium was invaded Sept. 2. Lt.-Gen. Sir Miles C. Dempsey's British Second Army tanks made an astounding march of more than 200 miles in four days, roaring through the Belgian capital of Brussels, the big fort of Antwerp, and into the Netherlands. On Sept. 6, just three months after the invasion and on the 44th day of the offensive which had begun at St. Lo, and with more than 400,000 asualties inflicted upon the Ger- nans who had lost 25 divisions and ,I, ( K' ~ 2' N. f_-._ 2~ t An- MAN, I ,: . _«.T_- \\ . Jj,, __ ; . : ,. . - t,,_, / _ 'r4 . probably was the greatest of them all in power and effectiveness. Marshal Ivan Konev led off with a smash from his Vistula bridgehead toward Krakow, toppled that strong- hold of ancient Polish kings and con- tinued at a 13-mile-a-day clip into Germany's industrial Silesia to break across the Oder River, most import- ant natural defense line in the east- ern Reich. Marshal Gregory Zhukov hit with similar power, toppled Warsaw, the blackened and ruined Polish capital which had stood up under so many months of Soviet attack, and sped on through western Poland. While Berlin thus became directly menaced, two other Soviet armies closed on East Prussia and began an amazingly swift overruning of that proud and rich old Junker strong- hold. On Feb. 4, 1945 the day Marshal Stalin met President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill at Yalta in the Crimea Conference, the flash of Soviet cannon could be seen in Ber- lin. Russian soldiers could see Amer- ican planes banking for bomb runs over the German capital. On Feb. 8, Marshal Montgomery began an attack toward the Emmer- ich crossing of the Rhine near the Holland border, and on Feb. 23 the U.S. First and Ninth Armies along the Roer, which had been such a bloody obstacle, opened the long- awaited offensive for the Rhineland. Events Move Swiftly Spectacular events followed in spectacular order. The First Army seized Cologne on March 6. The next day the Ninth Armored Division captured a bridge at Remagen before it could be destroyed, and seized a bridgehead on the east side of the Rhine. The same day Patton's Third Army made a 32-mile break-through and reached the Rhine above Cob- lenz, then with the U.S. Seventh Army began a whirlwind drive to capture ,the Saar and Palatinate German prisoners surrendered faster than they could be counted. Five German armies had been de- stroyed as fighting units and the Reich robbed of its third most pro- ductive industrial region, the Saar. As the Allies closed up to the Rhine from Holland to Switzerland they discovered one reason for the Ger- man defeat. Photographic interpre- tation of. the results of Allied air raids had, if anything, underestimat- ed the damage. Large cities were found with scarcely 100 habitable houses. The population was resigned to defeat, dully submissive to Allied orders. Final Heave Begun It was in this moment of German ruin and desolation that the British and American Allies launched their great blow-the final heave to end the wax that had been forecast by Prime Minister Churchill. The crossing of the Rhine in force began in the Third Army sector be- low Mainz on the night of March 22 when Patton put his veterans across. Next night, the British Second Army began the large-scale attack north of the Ruhr in and near Wesel, fol- lowed a few hours later on the morn- ing of the 24th by the Ninth Army. Russian armies were only a little over 300 miles distant-about the length of Pennsylvania. Elements of the first Allied air- borne army were landed in the Ger- man rear by 1,500 planes and gliders on split-minute schedule. Ten thou- sand planes supported the operation. Landing boats 60 feet long capable of carrying a tank or 60 men were brought up to the river on huge trail- ers in one of the engineering achieve- ments of the war. Sailors, who had practiced their part on the rivers of Holland through the winter, manned them. The British and United States Navies thus were in action 250 miles from the nearest ocean. End of War Seen In 48 hours it was clear that, al- though Hitler might try to prolong the war by scattered or guerrilla fighting, organized nationwide resis- tance could be expected to evaporate rapidly. The defenses on the Rhine bank were quickly overcome and the Brit- ish Second, American Ninth, U.S. First and U.S. Third Armies quickly broke through for deep gains. Im- portant points were seized intact over such strategic river defense lines as the Issel and the Main. Patton's illustrious Fourth Armored Division raced 40 miles in a day. With the crossing of the Rhine, the storied river of German folklore, the German god of militarism en- tered its twilight in a glare of blood. The ruin is so monstrous that it may even satisfy the. Wagner-loving Hitler's gloomy craving for the cata- clysmic. The cycle will be complete if all this teaches the German people to love peace. Awl- Invasion ... Two days after the first fall of an axis capital, the greatest amphibious invasion force of all time touched land in Normandy. The D-Day for which American factories had been turning out weapons since Dec. 7, 1941, had dawned. Untried American divisions quickly proved they could beat Hitler's best veterans. Despite the strength of the Germans' Atlantic wall, the inivasion stuck. The results were not long showing in Berlin. Second Battle of France The first 49 days after Gen. Eisen- hower's forces landed in Normandy were spent in securing, enlarging and building up the beachhead. Extreme- overwhelmed by superior equip- ment, fire power and air power, the Germans seemed poweiless in the face of lightning moves such as they themselves had employed so successfully to conquer France in 1940. Chartres, 55 miles southwest of Paris, Patton suddenly unmasked his real intent and wheeled northward toward the Seine. Field Marshal Gen. Guenther Von Kluge, German commander in the west, had stripped the defenses of Brittany, and drained divisions from the 15th Army north of the Seine to Bolster his defenses in the rugged territory below Caen on the Allied left flank, where the ferocity and de- termination of Marshal Sir Bernard L. Montgomery's British Second Army I i .'Ii THE MOTHER 1WHO WAITS ... 1his war will not end till her boy conks home. Let us not zest on our labors. 719 North University C " 1 suffered heavy casualties to at least 18 others. Gen. Eisenhower proclaim- ed the Battle of Germany about to begin. His armies already had probed German soil, the liberation of France and Belgium was all but complete, the freeing of the Netherlands not far off. Battle of Siegfried Line The men around General Patton believed that, if they had received enough gasoline to keep their spear- heads in motion four more days, they would have rolled completely through the Siegfried Line and then could have driven straight to Berlin. It proved impossiale, however, to move up sufficient supplies through hub-deep and broken-down commu- nication lines to keep pace with the fast-moving spearheads. Patrols penetrated the Siegfried Line and entered Metz on the Mo- selle, but had to retreat for lack of support. When Patton's supplies caught up with him, the Germans had re-entered Metz and spread a- long the Moselle. Progress thence- forth was slow and costly. Lt.-Gen. Courtney H lodges' U.S. First Army, which had spread swiftly across Belgium, trapping & destroyin. a huge p ocket of Ger- mans at Mons, entered Germany below Aachen Sept. 13 after pre- liminary probings in the area of Trier. Hodges penetrated to the outskirts of Aachen and drove a narrow hole through the concrete and steel works of the Siegfried Line in the first 7 days, and when he too lacked the supplies and force to exploit his gains, the Allies turned their atten- tion to gaining a large supply port. The First Canadian and British Second Armies began the costly cam- paign to root out the Nazis south of the Waal in Holland and free the mouth of the Schelde to permit sup- ply convoys to enter the relatively undamaged harbor of Antwerp. On Sept. 17 there opened a huge ground and air attack in which the First Allied Airborne Army went into ac- tion and parachute troops were drop- ped at Nimagen and Arnhem in an attempt to seize the bridges across the Waal and Neder branches of the lower Rhine. The campaign to clear the Ger- mans from south of the Waal in Ilolland lasted to Nov. 6 and cost the British and Canatdianis 4,0'00 casualties. Two days later, Eisenhower began his November offensive which was in- tended to hammer the Germans everywhere until they were compelled to give way somewhere. General Patton's army went into action below Metz first. In quick succession the U. S. Seventh and First French ar- mies to the south, and the U. S. First and Ninth armies went on the offensive, with some help from the British Second army at the extreme northern end. The French pushed through the Belfort Gap near the Swiss' border, the Seventh army broke through to Strasbourg at Saverne and Patton made sensational gains and captured Metz, an old Roman fortified city which never before in modern times had been taken by assault. The Ninth army had broken the permanent works of the Siegfried Line above Aachen, and that city had fallen Oct. 20 after an 11-day at- tack and siege. The First and Ninth armies now began some of their bloodiest battling through the pillboxes and "community diggings" hurriedly thrown up behind the Sieg- fried Line. Every village was fortified and every position tenaciously held. The slaughter was heavy in the Iurtgen Forest southeast of Aach- en, but at length the Allied battle line was drawn up to the Roer, 20 miles west of Cologne. man generals and others involved in that unsuccessful plot had en- abled the Nazi party to strengthen its hold more than ever in the deter- mination to fight on to the bitter end, and the high hopes of July for an early end to the war faded. Even the August breakthrough of the Russians into the Calati Gap in Romania and the falling away of Germany's satellites one by one did not affect German morale in the disastrous way as in 1918. The Russians entered Bucharest on Aug. 31 after a revolution in Romania, entered Sofia Sept. 16 after forcing Bulgaria to end the war, com- pelled Finland to sign an armistice and turn against the Germans Sept. 19, took Belgrade Oct. 19 with the aid of Yugoslav partisans and reached the edge of Budapest in Hungary in the first week of November. British and Greeks drove the Germans out of Greece in October and Albanians reclaimed their capital of Tirana. Battle of IIe ilge . . Then, Dec. 16, Field -Marshal Karl von Rundstedt, the German commander in the west, launched his surfrise offensive into the Ardenne along the path of the 1940 German breakthrough. Von Rundstedt threw three armies against a sector lightly held by Amer- ican rest troops with the minimum objective of throwing Eisenhower's winter offensive off schedule and per- haps with the maximum objective of reaching Antwerp and trapping the Allied armies in the north. He prob- ably hoped to paralyze Eisenhower's forces so that they would not be able to strike in the winter when Marshal Stalin's Russians were expected to mount another offensive in Poland. The blow involved American troops in their greatest battle since Gettys- burg in the Civil War. Thousands were trapped and overrun and Amer- ican casualties mounted to more than 50,000. But trapped American units fought back valiantly, held off and delayed the German offensive, and with the aid of some British divisions prevent- ed a breakthrough across the Meuse or at Sedan. Especially valiant were the stands at St. Vith and encircled Bastogne where Brig. Gen. Anthony McAu- liffs, commander of the 101st Air- borne Division, made the short but historic reply, "Nuts," when served with a demand to surrender his surrounded forces. Reacting promptly, Patton's Third army moved up and attacked in force on the south flank of the 50-mile deep German salient six days after von Rundstedt opened his drive. Field Marshal Montgomery took charge on the northern side of the salient. At the end of a month the Allies virtually had erased the salient and large forces of Germans were in hur- ried withdrawal, perhaps to meet the dire peril posed by the Russian offensive in the East. Battle in the East... On Jan. 12, 1945, Stalin began his fourth great winter offensive. It t When every Mother's son or daughter Your sweetheart, Father, or Brother comes home. nal Lig ht of Democracy i, .I And the Etert UNITED IN VICTORY glows over the world.. . THEN VICTORY IS OURS! Until then BUY MORE BONDS! And help the boys in the Pacific to come home sooner. -Marshall's& itham 's DRUG STORES I _ _ _ _ _ _ ____ SALUTE THE VICTORS i.N E U ROP EJ SUPPORT THE FIGHTERS IN THE PACIFIC ' A SALUTE TO OUR PARTNERS IN FREEDOM! PARTNERS IN FREEDOM! Today, mnore than ever, the free United Nations i