Hitler's Last Stand (2018) s02e02 Episode Script
Island of Fire
December, 1944.
When Nazi forces launch a surprise
offensive into Luxembourg
American troops get trapped by a German
tank crew calling for their surrender.
Americans, Americans!
The American
NCO considers his options.
step outside of cover and try and snap off
a shot with a bazooka.
surrender.
Not liking those choices
Showman chooses Door Number Three
Go, go, go. Out. Retreat.
The Back Door.
On June 6th, 1944
Allied forces finally land troops
in Normandy to open the western front.
But Nazi fanatics
and diehards
continue to fight ruthlessly for survival.
D-Day was a battle.
The Allies still need to win the war.
December 15th, 1944.
The Ardennes Forest, Luxembourg.
Two German soldiers
sneak into the town of Clervaux.
The streets are quiet.
Clervaux is a beautiful, charming
Luxembourg town that's held
by the Americans.
It had been for about a couple of months
by December 1944.
It's maybe about six, seven miles
from the advance outpost front lines.
American soldiers
are on leave here.
Have a good night?
The town had not been destroyed
in any fighting to liberate it.
So, it was a good place for GI's to go
and, uh, have a little R&R
and just kind of enjoy themselves
for a couple days.
The German soldiers
make their way through town,
and pick the lock of a pharmacy.
They are forward artillery observers.
Forward artillery observers
are highly trained soldiers,
so what they do
is they position themselves
as close to or inside
the enemy front lines.
They then have to pass
to on their artillery batteries
the coordinates of the main enemy targets.
Once inside,
they set up a radio in a back room.
The Germans now have
an artillery observation position
well behind the American line
and not far from the command post
of US 110th infantry regiment.
The presence of German forward
artillery observers inside Clervaux
is of course an ominous sign.
It means
that trouble is brewing in the east.
Trouble that will catch
the Allies woefully off guard.
Since D-Day, combined Allied forces
have pushed the German
army out of most of France,
Belgium and Luxembourg
back to within Germany's borders.
As part of the US 28th infantry division,
the 110th infantry regiment
now guards a portion of the front
in the Ardennes Forest
between Luxembourg and Germany.
Normally, an American division
would hold a front of four or five miles.
What happens
in the Ardennes is that
the units are very badly stretched out
so for example a 28th was stretched out
almost 30 miles wide
and worse than that
it was three regiments up front.
This means
that in case of German attack,
there's not a full regiment in reserve.
So, it was not only stretched
very thinly
it had no back up force behind it.
This is because Americans
consider this stretch
a "ghost" or "quiet" sector.
The senior US commanders
are under the impression
that the Germans are massing their forces
waiting for the US to attack.
They don't think
that anybody would be crazy enough
to attack through the Ardennes.
But the Allies
mistake Hitler's ambitions.
Instead of digging in for the winter,
he prepares a massive operation
called Wacht am Rhein.
The German objective
for Wacht am Rhein is to re-seize Antwerp
and cut the Allies
off from their most important supply line.
To drive a wedge between
the Americans and the British.
Both in the military sense,
and in a political sense.
If successful,
Hitler believes he can repeat history.
Because the ultimate objective
of the battle of the Ardennes
is the second Dunkirk.
What they're trying to do is separate
the US Army from the British Army,
force the British Army to abandon Europe.
He expects the western Allies
to sue for peace
and Germany can focus
exclusively on the eastern front
to defeat the Soviet Union.
More than 200,000 German soldiers
and hundreds of tanks
move secretly into position.
General Major Meinrad von Lauchert
will lead Hitler's charge from Dasburg
seven-miles east of Clervaux.
Freshly recalled
from regimental command in Russia,
von Lauchert takes control
of 2nd Panzer Division.
Colonel Meinrad von Lauchert
is a very experienced officer.
But he is put in command
of the 2nd Panzer Division
only the day before
the counter offensive kicks off.
So, he has not been involved
in the planning of the operation
in any way.
Indeed, he hasn't had time to consult
even with his regimental commanders.
Von Lauchert's forces
of nearly 13,000 men,
will smash through
the American line quickly
to capture and control the local roads.
The Germans need
hard surfaced roads for their tanks.
Seven of those hard surfaced roads
come together
in that crucial town of Bastogne.
The Germans will then use
those roads to swing north,
to recapture Antwerp.
Operation Watch
on the Rhine in English.
The ambitious plan
is predicated on speed, surprise,
and Hitler's belief that the undermanned
American line will crumble
in the face of adversity.
Hitler still underestimates
the Americans.
They've shown in the past couple
of months that they are quite good
in fighting an offensive war.
But defensively they are weak, yeah?
They are just not stable enough.
They don't understand
what this war is about.
Early on December 16th, 1944.
The first of Colonel von Lauchert's
infantry troops cross the Our River
in boats to slip unseen,
through the enemy line.
In the American sector of the Ardennes,
Private Leroy Scheller
joins B Company's nighttime patrol.
The 110th Infantry of course had just been
through the Hurtgen Forest battle,
had been decimated there.
It's working at anywhere between 50 to 66%
strength or so
and hopefully upward from there,
so man power's a bit of at a premium.
The patrol leaves
their assigned strongpoint of Marnach,
less than five miles from the front.
In the eerie quiet of the night,
they halt as they hear footsteps
And scramble for cover.
A German platoon passes in the darkness.
Instead of depending
on the artillery before the battle starts,
when it's still dark,
these guys are going to go sneaking
through the forest
because they know
that the American defenses are very thin.
Schaller and his patrol
stay hidden in the cold.
Schaller's patrol as I understand
it was not a combat patrol.
You know, basically looking for action.
It was a recon patrol
just to kind of sweep around
and see what was going on.
So you, saw what was going on,
there's some Germans out there
and you could then live
to report that to your superiors.
When the threat passes,
they return to Marnach to warn the others.
Back in Clervaux,
the German artillery observers remain
undiscovered by American forces there.
Earlier they scouted the town
and identified key targets
for the coming barrage.
Forward artillery observers
will be looking for main targets
troop strongholds, uh, tank positions.
They want to bring artillery
down on targets very nearby,
but they don't want
to be blown up themselves.
As Private Schaller
and the others stumble into Marnach
They find one of B Company's officers
to report on their patrol.
Combined with other observations,
it seems like the Germans are mobilizing.
As the minutes pass,
the German artillery observers
break radio silence
to relay key coordinates
to German headquarters.
At around 0530,
members of B Company
in Marnach hear a distant boom
and a torrent
of artillery streams overhead.
The German attack has begun.
December 16th, 1944. Luxembourg.
The German army
launches the opening salvos
of what would come to be known
as the Battle of the Bulge.
American Sergeant JJ Kuhn
watches as artillery streams overhead.
Kuhn's 110th infantry regiment
protects a ten mile stretch of highway
directly across the Our River.
Short of men,
they cannot defend the entire line.
Instead they position companies
at key crossroads along the highway,
Marnach, held by Company B,
protects one of the only paved roads
to Bastogne.
The Germans are trying to launch
a fast-mechanized attack,
to penetrate through the American lines
so they can race to the Meuse River
and then on to Antwerp.
Time is of the essence and in order
to move fast they need good roads.
Days before, Sergeant Kuhn
had noticed signs of a buildup
of Nazi forces
which he tries to share
with his commanding officer,
Colonel Hurley Fuller.
Does he appreciate
the bigger picture of how massive this is
and Hitler's thinking? No, of course not.
But he does understand
that something is different
on the German side of the hill
and that this is going to have
consequences for his B-company
and that's what matters to him,
and so like any good NCO,
he wants to make sure he has the attention
of those above him.
Copy that, sir.
Kuhn's concerns were dismissed.
Now Colonel Fuller,
based two miles west in Clervaux,
awakens to the sound of German artillery
striking near his command post.
He races downstairs
to contact his company commanders.
Come on, boys, I need some reports.
But artillery
has knocked out his phone lines
and radio frequencies are jammed.
Any word here?
Cut off
Nothing, we're not getting through.
Fuller has no way of knowing
the scale of the attack
nor can he call divisional command
for reinforcements.
The communication chain
has been severed up and down.
Fuller desperately needs information
to organize his defenses,
so he sends runners
to establish contact
with his company commanders.
Meanwhile, northeast of Fuller's sector
Sergeant Frank Olsen of the neighboring
112th infantry regiment,
heads into the woods to check in
with his men on guard duty.
Well, the Ardennes is very dark.
Not only woods, but also the time of year,
and of course the fact
that it's a warfront.
It's incredibly dark.
As he moves between foxholes
gunfire breaks out around him.
We got an ambush on our hands!
The forest
is full of German soldiers.
Right!
Olsen must act
and get word to headquarters.
Stay low! Stay low!
He takes his helmet off
because the helmet would silhouette him
as an American even in the dark.
With his helmet
tucked under his arm,
he sprints back to his command post.
And encounters
even more Germans as he runs.
He's bumping into these guys,
one of them even curses at him,
but doesn't notice that he's an American
but he and several others
are able to get out of there,
just by that kind of clumsy stealth.
Incoming!
Olsen breaks free
from the tangle
and reaches the farmhouse command post.
Let's go! Move forward!
Keep firing! Let 'em have it!
When suddenly
the forest is bathed in light.
December 16th, 1944.
Near the Luxembourg-German border.
In the opening hours of what would become
the Battle of the Bulge,
American Sergeant Frank Olsen,
breaks away from a fire fight with German
soldiers outside his command post,
when the night sky turns bright.
The Germans
project powerful searchlights
onto low hanging clouds
so this is a kind of artificial moonlight.
It helps illuminate enemy targets.
The light bouncing off the cloud
is supposed to make objects
visible to German soldiers.
But, there's a problem.
The same applies
to the Americans
and so what they now do
is use this same German
artificial moonlight to take down waves
and waves of German attackers.
Olsen and his men
pick them off with ease.
Keep firing!
Further south,
back in the 110th's portion of the line,
Sergeant JJ Kuhn coordinates B Company
for the defense of Marnach.
In anticipation of a full scale attack,
they place an artillery observer up high
with a view on the action.
Sergeant Kuhn's best weapons
are his artillery observers.
He controls so much of the firepower
that's going to cause casualties.
He's the guy with the big guns.
On the outskirts,
Sergeant Stanley Showman leads his platoon
past burning buildings.
Okay, I need five more guys
on this left side.
Only 19 years old,
he has fought with 110th since Normandy.
OK, go! Now!
Stanley Showman
is a guy who's been in combat.
He is an excellent NCO.
When he hears
that kind of artillery barrage,
he knows an attack has to be coming.
They're not just doing this
for the fun of it.
So he is starting to get ready
for whatever might be coming toward him
and his unit.
They dig in at the edge of town.
Smoke and fog make visibility poor.
All of a sudden
here come these apparitions,
these Germans out of the woods
because the woods border Marnach.
Showman and his platoon open fire.
Let 'em have it.
Initially, the attack
is just a blood bath for the Germans.
As showman engages the German
infantry along the road,
another group emerges out of the forest
on the north edge of town.
Incoming!
Keep firing!
In response, Sergeant Kuhn,
requests artillery support
from regimental headquarters.
Fire!
As the American shots land,
his artillery observer
can call in corrections
to better target the attacking Germans.
What people don't realize
most casualties in World War II
are inflicted by artillery.
Everyone thinks it's rifles
and machine guns and all that, it's not.
The pinpoint fire
devastates the enemy column
But more German soldiers
continue to appear.
Kuhn described it as tragedy,
as an epic waste.
Here were hundreds of Germans
just getting, mowed down.
And why they were attacking
in that fashion,
from a human standpoint,
he thought it was tragic.
The first wave of German
soldiers cannot capture Marnach alone.
Despite the best efforts
of the German infantry,
GIs, small groups of GIs,
are holed up in villages on key roads.
So they need more fire power.
The firepower of tanks
to break through and gain speed again.
But Colonel von Lauchert's
tanks
have still not crossed
the Our River.
They had not completed a key bridge.
And poor planning compounds the problem.
That road
is blocked by the Germans
in the form of a metallic gate.
There is an unlocking device
to move the gate out of the way
but unfortunately the engineers
can't find the keys in time.
In order to preserve
the element of surprise,
they delay blowing up the barrier,
until after the barrage begins.
Finally, German engineers
clear and repair the bridge
but it takes much longer than expected,
and the tanks only begin
to cross in the afternoon.
Keep up the line of fire!
In Marnach, B Company continues
to pick off the German infantry advance.
Although some German soldiers engage
the American strong point,
others begin to push around the village
to the north and south.
They continue toward Clervaux
and the 110th infantry command post,
only two miles away.
Colonel Hurley Fuller is alarmed,
as reports and runners trickle in,
it appears
that the whole front is under attack.
With communication unreliable,
Fuller sends his executive officer,
Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Strickler
to divisional headquarters
to speak with General Norman Cota.
Strickler reports the attacks
across the 110th's front.
General Cota also sends
a message in return.
The 110th must hold the line.
December 16, 1944.
The Ardennes Forest, Luxembourg.
Let 'em have it!
An entire division
of German Colonel Meinrad
von Lauchert's foot soldiers
surrounds the village of Marnach.
Some attack, while others push past,
towards the town of Clervaux.
Although the Americans
are heavily outnumbered
there will be no retreat or surrender.
Fire!
They are to hold at all costs.
That's the kind of thing
you might tend to breeze past
when you look at it an after-action report
or a book or whatever.
As front line soldiers, totally embattled
with the enemy around us,
surrounding us, trying to go through us,
now we're being told,
"You will hold at all costs."
Despite the odds,
B Company of the 110th
defies the German infantry
at a crossroads in Marnach.
When shrapnel
strikes their commanding officer,
he requires surgery and must be evacuated.
Sergeant JJ Kuhn assumes
command duties at B Company headquarters.
Despite his rank as an NCO.
As the German onslaught continues,
members of C Company approach
from the south to provide reinforcement.
But while the Germans have been unable
to break Marnach,
they surround it.
Get down!
And C Company is driven back.
Frustrated and desperate,
B Company puts out a distress call
to US troops in the area
as they run low on mortars.
An officer from D Company
two miles north of their position,
answers the call.
Lieutenant Glen Vannatta,
has a jeep loaded with mortar ammo
and races towards B Company.
They pause on a hill just outside of town,
to assess the German
and American hotspots.
Then his driver takes off at full speed
to dodge the German artillery
and small arms fire.
Your choice.
They break through
and deliver the mortars to B Company.
You are absolute God send, Sir.
Then beat a hasty retreat.
With the support of American artillery
and fresh supplies
Sergeant Kuhn and his men
continue to hold off
the German soldiers
trying to capture Marnach.
But as night falls,
German armor, half tracks and tanks
creep through the darkness
and into town.
The Americans are unprepared.
They basically
have foot soldiers.
They've got small arms.
They've got the odd bazooka.
And they have artillery observation
in Marnach.
B Company is not well equipped
to deal with any kind of real,
you know, powerful tank attack.
Tank!
The momentum shifts.
Nazi forces begin to overrun American
machine gun nests and outer defenses.
Move it. Move!
Sergeant Stanley Showman
and his squad
retreat from their forward position.
And withdraw to a stone building in town.
They watch
as a German half track stops outside.
When the German soldiers dismount,
the Americans
use their cover to open fire.
The Germans are cut down
and the half track retreats.
But before long,
a German tank rumbles down the street.
It stops 20 feet away and fixes its gun,
directly at the Americans.
Americans, Americans!
A German voice
calls for their surrender.
Americans, come out!
Showman's options are limited.
Step outside of cover and try
and snap off a shot with a bazooka.
Surrender.
Showman chooses Door Number Three
Go, go, go. Out. Retreat.
the back door.
Showman and his squad
make it into the woods
as the village of Marnach burns.
The Americans were not crumbling
as German leaders had predicted.
The German command had planned
to be in control of Bastogne
by noon of the second day.
Now as the first day turns into night
we see that the Germans are still battling
for the small village of Marnach,
which is 19 miles east of Bastogne.
The Germans have made it
barely five miles from their own lines.
Marnach should've been taken
by the German infantry.
The fact that they did depend
on the panzers
to finally take those defenses
meant that the plan was failing.
But US forces there
cannot hold out much longer.
The American forward observer
continues to call down
artillery on German positions.
Okay. I need an artillery strike.
His final words on the line
reveal the desperate situation in Marnach.
The last message of this unknown
artillery spotter is,
"Hurry and fire
they're coming up the steps."
The Observer was taking literally the idea
of holding at all costs,
and he did exactly that.
Von Lauchert leaves men
to finish the capture of Marnach,
and spurs the remainder of 2nd Panzer
Clervaux.
In Clervaux,
American Colonel Hurley Fuller
receives reports of tanks in Marnach,
he tries again to send reinforcements
to relieve B Company.
I think Fuller's getting an
appreciation how the scope and scale
of the German offensive and how hard
pressed his regiment is going to be.
Back at Willtz
Cota, he's not quite there yet.
American reinforcements
march toward Marnach.
They hope to ambush
the Germans outside of town,
but as they leave Clervaux
in the early morning,
German troops and tanks already close in.
The Americans are the ones
about to be ambushed.
December 17th, 1944.
Near Clervaux, Luxembourg.
Nazi forces begin the second day
of a daring offensive
to end the war on the western front.
In response,
Colonel Hurley Fuller of the US 110th
sends two infantry companies
a company of Stuart tanks
to relieve Americans
trapped in the nearby village of Marnach.
But they do not get very far
before the they come under attack
themselves.
Let's go! Let's go!
Their efforts fail.
It's like an economy car
smashing with a Mack truck.
They're just overwhelmed
by the power of the German military forces
at this stage.
At company headquarters
in Marnach,
Sergeant JJ Kuhn and the dwindling forces
of B Company and its wounded,
still hold out for rescue
or reinforcement.
When a German tank rams the front door
German soldiers rush in
and force Kuhn and the last of B Company
into surrender.
With the fall of Marnach,
Fuller readies Clervaux
for an imminent attack.
Clervaux has now begun to transition,
a very unhappy transition,
from a rear area headquarters and R&R town
to now the epicenter of the battle.
From his command post
at the Claravallis hotel,
he positions men in the castle
which overlooks the southern approaches
to Clervaux.
German artillery
continues to fall on the Americans.
Fuller still does not realize
that it is being controlled from nearby.
Even as the Americans
move into new defensive positions,
the two German forward observers
can call artillery down in response.
As Fuller's men scramble,
Colonel Meinrad von Lauchert arrives
on the outskirts of town with tanks
and targets the American-occupied castle.
But the thick walls hold
as they had for centuries.
Von Lauchert is frustrated.
In order to get back on schedule,
he must take Clervaux quickly
to secure the roads needed
for the German advance.
But, he does not want
to send his tanks into town.
Von Lauchert
is an experienced officer.
He knows that an urban environment
will negate the tanks
maneuverability and speed
what is worse behind every corner
there can be an Allied tank.
Von Lauchert sends
his infantry troops into the town instead.
They are to scout ahead for American tanks
and clear resistance.
As German soldiers move into Clervaux,
American snipers in the castle take aim.
The Germans
try to disrupt the sniper fire,
but the shells do little damage.
However, with their overwhelming numbers,
German troops bypass the fortress
and fight their way toward
the command post in the Claravallis hotel.
Fuller's 110th has delayed the German push
towards Bastogne for two days.
But his men have paid a heavy price.
Well, the numbers
are the numbers.
Most of these American formations
are outnumbered anywhere from about 2 to 1
to 10 to 1
depending on where we're talking about.
We get help in three hours or something
we might hold out for that,
but that's not really the situation here.
Colonel Fuller
knows he cannot delay much longer.
He calls general Cota
and asks for reinforcements
or permission to fall back
to set up a new defensive line.
Both requests are denied.
Cota is unequivocal, "Hold at all costs".
Nobody comes back.
Fuller throws in his final tanks
against the German attack.
They navigate the narrow roads
towards the castle.
The lead tank rounds a corner,
and heads down a side street.
When the American tanks erupt in flames,
it is the last of Fuller's reserves.
And gives von Lauchert's men
free reign to advance.
The German armor column
can move deeper into Clervaux.
Inexorably closer to, ah, Fuller's
Command Post at the Claravallis Hotel.
Across town,
the command post is already under pressure
from German infantry attacks.
You have guards outside
who are now under fire
and have been driven inside.
You have people trying to figure out
the next course of action,
get out of there or burn papers.
Or round up a new crew to go and fight
this group of Germans we just spotted
or deal with this tank,
scrounge up any weapons you can get.
Get General Cota on the line!
Fuller radios
General Cota an update
and prepares to give his men
the order to withdraw.
Reinforcements now!
Abruptly, a shell rips through
the hotel's first floor,
knocking out the power.
Fuller and what is left of his 110th
are trapped and out of time.
December 17th, 1944.
Clervaux, Luxembourg.
2nd Panzer Division,
led by Colonel Meinrad von Lauchert
has breached the American-held town
of Clervaux,
seven miles into the American line.
Von Lauchert traps Colonel Fuller
and his men in a hotel,
which serves as their command post.
German soldiers storm in,
and fire fights break out in the lobby
and ground floor hallways.
He's had, what is now
kind of a famous conversation
with the 28 Division Chief of Staff,
Colonel Gibney.
And Fuller compares himself
to Colonel Travis at the Alamo saying,
"We're about to be overrun."
Fuller does not feel
the chief of staff and General Cota
appreciate the gravity of the situation.
He returns to the crisis at hand
when an explosion rips into the room,
injuring several men.
Now he's got wounded people
so Fuller becomes this sort of impromptu
medic trying to staunch the bleeding.
He bandages the eyes of a man
blinded by the blast
but others are too far gone.
Gunfire and fighting
continue on the ground floor,
when a member of staff finds a way out.
There's like a fire escape type ladder
that'll lead from one of the top floors
all the way to the ridgeline
provided you don't fall from that ladder
to the street below.
Fuller inches along,
50 feet above the ground below.
Here's this 50-year-old man
trying to hang on
and get across this horizontal ladder,
basically crawl across it
while this wounded blind guy is behind him
trying to hang on.
Fuller and a small group
of soldiers make it across and away.
Let's go!
As they escape into the woods,
the 110th command post falls.
Across town, about 100 US Soldiers
holdout in the ramparts
of the medieval castle.
The Germans pummel the walls and gate
but cannot break through.
They decide on another approach.
They figure out
maybe we ought to fire incendiary rounds
to set the roof of the castle on fire
and maybe that'll flush
the defenders out.
Incoming!
It works.
Fires break out across the castle.
The American commander,
not willing to risk the lives
of the civilians hidden in the cellar,
surrenders.
When Clearvaux falls,
the road to Bastogne opens,
and the Germans hurry forward,
only to be slowed again,
at each cross road.
All along the front, makeshift resistance
continues to harass their advance.
The Germans fight for four days
to reach Bastogne
and create the bulge in the Allied line
that gave a name to the infamous battle.
But the critical delay means
Bastogne can be reinforced
and defended by the Allies.
The battle will rage for five more weeks,
but by failing to take Bastogne early,
the German operation is doomed
almost from the start.
Within a month, the Allies once again
force the Germans
to retreat back to the border.
Of the 3,200 members of the 110th,
only one in seven is not killed,
wounded or captured.
The 110th basically fought
to extinction in the Bastogne corridor.
And in about a three-day period
the regiment was shattered.
Its records, to a great extent, were lost.
Their sacrifice
was not acknowledged.
No medals were awarded
and no regimental honors bestowed.
Later on, when the army hierarchy
was considering
presidential unit citations and whatever
there really wasn't anybody in house
to speak up for the 110th infantry.
Colonel Hurly Fuller,
Sergeant JJ Kuhn,
and Sergeant Stanley Showman
are all captured by the Germans
and serve the rest of the war
in POW camps.
They are liberated in 1945,
and return to the United States.
Once released, Colonel Fuller advocates
for the American 110th.
But he just does
not have the influence.
He does not have the pull, uh,
to get the recognition for his regiment
that he otherwise would've hoped for
and also the fact
that he himself had become a POW
was always going to be a bit
of a sticking point in that regard.
Reasonable or not.
Colonel Meinrad von Lauchert
pushed farther into Allied lines
than almost any other German commander.
Colonel Meinrad von Lauchert
will continue to fight
the Allied troops tooth
and nail with his 2nd Panzer Division
and he will continue
to do so until March, 1945
when he is with his back
against Rhine River.
But by that time
nothing much remains of his crack unit.
Operation Watch on the Rhine,
or Battle of the Bulge
proves costly for both sides.
The German army suffers
about 120,000 casualties.
In the Battle of the Bulge,
the Germans lose their last reserves.
And when the Soviets attack
in a major offensive, in mid-January 1945,
the German front and the east
collapse very quickly.
So, two weeks later, the Soviets
are only 50 miles away from Berlin.
So, the real winner of the Battle
of the Bulge is-- are not the Americans,
it's the Soviets and Stalin.
The western Allies
will need to regroup and resupply
before advancing into Germany.
But, the Germans will now fight
on home turf
and the war in Europe will continue
for four more months.
Captioned by
Visual Data Media Services
When Nazi forces launch a surprise
offensive into Luxembourg
American troops get trapped by a German
tank crew calling for their surrender.
Americans, Americans!
The American
NCO considers his options.
step outside of cover and try and snap off
a shot with a bazooka.
surrender.
Not liking those choices
Showman chooses Door Number Three
Go, go, go. Out. Retreat.
The Back Door.
On June 6th, 1944
Allied forces finally land troops
in Normandy to open the western front.
But Nazi fanatics
and diehards
continue to fight ruthlessly for survival.
D-Day was a battle.
The Allies still need to win the war.
December 15th, 1944.
The Ardennes Forest, Luxembourg.
Two German soldiers
sneak into the town of Clervaux.
The streets are quiet.
Clervaux is a beautiful, charming
Luxembourg town that's held
by the Americans.
It had been for about a couple of months
by December 1944.
It's maybe about six, seven miles
from the advance outpost front lines.
American soldiers
are on leave here.
Have a good night?
The town had not been destroyed
in any fighting to liberate it.
So, it was a good place for GI's to go
and, uh, have a little R&R
and just kind of enjoy themselves
for a couple days.
The German soldiers
make their way through town,
and pick the lock of a pharmacy.
They are forward artillery observers.
Forward artillery observers
are highly trained soldiers,
so what they do
is they position themselves
as close to or inside
the enemy front lines.
They then have to pass
to on their artillery batteries
the coordinates of the main enemy targets.
Once inside,
they set up a radio in a back room.
The Germans now have
an artillery observation position
well behind the American line
and not far from the command post
of US 110th infantry regiment.
The presence of German forward
artillery observers inside Clervaux
is of course an ominous sign.
It means
that trouble is brewing in the east.
Trouble that will catch
the Allies woefully off guard.
Since D-Day, combined Allied forces
have pushed the German
army out of most of France,
Belgium and Luxembourg
back to within Germany's borders.
As part of the US 28th infantry division,
the 110th infantry regiment
now guards a portion of the front
in the Ardennes Forest
between Luxembourg and Germany.
Normally, an American division
would hold a front of four or five miles.
What happens
in the Ardennes is that
the units are very badly stretched out
so for example a 28th was stretched out
almost 30 miles wide
and worse than that
it was three regiments up front.
This means
that in case of German attack,
there's not a full regiment in reserve.
So, it was not only stretched
very thinly
it had no back up force behind it.
This is because Americans
consider this stretch
a "ghost" or "quiet" sector.
The senior US commanders
are under the impression
that the Germans are massing their forces
waiting for the US to attack.
They don't think
that anybody would be crazy enough
to attack through the Ardennes.
But the Allies
mistake Hitler's ambitions.
Instead of digging in for the winter,
he prepares a massive operation
called Wacht am Rhein.
The German objective
for Wacht am Rhein is to re-seize Antwerp
and cut the Allies
off from their most important supply line.
To drive a wedge between
the Americans and the British.
Both in the military sense,
and in a political sense.
If successful,
Hitler believes he can repeat history.
Because the ultimate objective
of the battle of the Ardennes
is the second Dunkirk.
What they're trying to do is separate
the US Army from the British Army,
force the British Army to abandon Europe.
He expects the western Allies
to sue for peace
and Germany can focus
exclusively on the eastern front
to defeat the Soviet Union.
More than 200,000 German soldiers
and hundreds of tanks
move secretly into position.
General Major Meinrad von Lauchert
will lead Hitler's charge from Dasburg
seven-miles east of Clervaux.
Freshly recalled
from regimental command in Russia,
von Lauchert takes control
of 2nd Panzer Division.
Colonel Meinrad von Lauchert
is a very experienced officer.
But he is put in command
of the 2nd Panzer Division
only the day before
the counter offensive kicks off.
So, he has not been involved
in the planning of the operation
in any way.
Indeed, he hasn't had time to consult
even with his regimental commanders.
Von Lauchert's forces
of nearly 13,000 men,
will smash through
the American line quickly
to capture and control the local roads.
The Germans need
hard surfaced roads for their tanks.
Seven of those hard surfaced roads
come together
in that crucial town of Bastogne.
The Germans will then use
those roads to swing north,
to recapture Antwerp.
Operation Watch
on the Rhine in English.
The ambitious plan
is predicated on speed, surprise,
and Hitler's belief that the undermanned
American line will crumble
in the face of adversity.
Hitler still underestimates
the Americans.
They've shown in the past couple
of months that they are quite good
in fighting an offensive war.
But defensively they are weak, yeah?
They are just not stable enough.
They don't understand
what this war is about.
Early on December 16th, 1944.
The first of Colonel von Lauchert's
infantry troops cross the Our River
in boats to slip unseen,
through the enemy line.
In the American sector of the Ardennes,
Private Leroy Scheller
joins B Company's nighttime patrol.
The 110th Infantry of course had just been
through the Hurtgen Forest battle,
had been decimated there.
It's working at anywhere between 50 to 66%
strength or so
and hopefully upward from there,
so man power's a bit of at a premium.
The patrol leaves
their assigned strongpoint of Marnach,
less than five miles from the front.
In the eerie quiet of the night,
they halt as they hear footsteps
And scramble for cover.
A German platoon passes in the darkness.
Instead of depending
on the artillery before the battle starts,
when it's still dark,
these guys are going to go sneaking
through the forest
because they know
that the American defenses are very thin.
Schaller and his patrol
stay hidden in the cold.
Schaller's patrol as I understand
it was not a combat patrol.
You know, basically looking for action.
It was a recon patrol
just to kind of sweep around
and see what was going on.
So you, saw what was going on,
there's some Germans out there
and you could then live
to report that to your superiors.
When the threat passes,
they return to Marnach to warn the others.
Back in Clervaux,
the German artillery observers remain
undiscovered by American forces there.
Earlier they scouted the town
and identified key targets
for the coming barrage.
Forward artillery observers
will be looking for main targets
troop strongholds, uh, tank positions.
They want to bring artillery
down on targets very nearby,
but they don't want
to be blown up themselves.
As Private Schaller
and the others stumble into Marnach
They find one of B Company's officers
to report on their patrol.
Combined with other observations,
it seems like the Germans are mobilizing.
As the minutes pass,
the German artillery observers
break radio silence
to relay key coordinates
to German headquarters.
At around 0530,
members of B Company
in Marnach hear a distant boom
and a torrent
of artillery streams overhead.
The German attack has begun.
December 16th, 1944. Luxembourg.
The German army
launches the opening salvos
of what would come to be known
as the Battle of the Bulge.
American Sergeant JJ Kuhn
watches as artillery streams overhead.
Kuhn's 110th infantry regiment
protects a ten mile stretch of highway
directly across the Our River.
Short of men,
they cannot defend the entire line.
Instead they position companies
at key crossroads along the highway,
Marnach, held by Company B,
protects one of the only paved roads
to Bastogne.
The Germans are trying to launch
a fast-mechanized attack,
to penetrate through the American lines
so they can race to the Meuse River
and then on to Antwerp.
Time is of the essence and in order
to move fast they need good roads.
Days before, Sergeant Kuhn
had noticed signs of a buildup
of Nazi forces
which he tries to share
with his commanding officer,
Colonel Hurley Fuller.
Does he appreciate
the bigger picture of how massive this is
and Hitler's thinking? No, of course not.
But he does understand
that something is different
on the German side of the hill
and that this is going to have
consequences for his B-company
and that's what matters to him,
and so like any good NCO,
he wants to make sure he has the attention
of those above him.
Copy that, sir.
Kuhn's concerns were dismissed.
Now Colonel Fuller,
based two miles west in Clervaux,
awakens to the sound of German artillery
striking near his command post.
He races downstairs
to contact his company commanders.
Come on, boys, I need some reports.
But artillery
has knocked out his phone lines
and radio frequencies are jammed.
Any word here?
Cut off
Nothing, we're not getting through.
Fuller has no way of knowing
the scale of the attack
nor can he call divisional command
for reinforcements.
The communication chain
has been severed up and down.
Fuller desperately needs information
to organize his defenses,
so he sends runners
to establish contact
with his company commanders.
Meanwhile, northeast of Fuller's sector
Sergeant Frank Olsen of the neighboring
112th infantry regiment,
heads into the woods to check in
with his men on guard duty.
Well, the Ardennes is very dark.
Not only woods, but also the time of year,
and of course the fact
that it's a warfront.
It's incredibly dark.
As he moves between foxholes
gunfire breaks out around him.
We got an ambush on our hands!
The forest
is full of German soldiers.
Right!
Olsen must act
and get word to headquarters.
Stay low! Stay low!
He takes his helmet off
because the helmet would silhouette him
as an American even in the dark.
With his helmet
tucked under his arm,
he sprints back to his command post.
And encounters
even more Germans as he runs.
He's bumping into these guys,
one of them even curses at him,
but doesn't notice that he's an American
but he and several others
are able to get out of there,
just by that kind of clumsy stealth.
Incoming!
Olsen breaks free
from the tangle
and reaches the farmhouse command post.
Let's go! Move forward!
Keep firing! Let 'em have it!
When suddenly
the forest is bathed in light.
December 16th, 1944.
Near the Luxembourg-German border.
In the opening hours of what would become
the Battle of the Bulge,
American Sergeant Frank Olsen,
breaks away from a fire fight with German
soldiers outside his command post,
when the night sky turns bright.
The Germans
project powerful searchlights
onto low hanging clouds
so this is a kind of artificial moonlight.
It helps illuminate enemy targets.
The light bouncing off the cloud
is supposed to make objects
visible to German soldiers.
But, there's a problem.
The same applies
to the Americans
and so what they now do
is use this same German
artificial moonlight to take down waves
and waves of German attackers.
Olsen and his men
pick them off with ease.
Keep firing!
Further south,
back in the 110th's portion of the line,
Sergeant JJ Kuhn coordinates B Company
for the defense of Marnach.
In anticipation of a full scale attack,
they place an artillery observer up high
with a view on the action.
Sergeant Kuhn's best weapons
are his artillery observers.
He controls so much of the firepower
that's going to cause casualties.
He's the guy with the big guns.
On the outskirts,
Sergeant Stanley Showman leads his platoon
past burning buildings.
Okay, I need five more guys
on this left side.
Only 19 years old,
he has fought with 110th since Normandy.
OK, go! Now!
Stanley Showman
is a guy who's been in combat.
He is an excellent NCO.
When he hears
that kind of artillery barrage,
he knows an attack has to be coming.
They're not just doing this
for the fun of it.
So he is starting to get ready
for whatever might be coming toward him
and his unit.
They dig in at the edge of town.
Smoke and fog make visibility poor.
All of a sudden
here come these apparitions,
these Germans out of the woods
because the woods border Marnach.
Showman and his platoon open fire.
Let 'em have it.
Initially, the attack
is just a blood bath for the Germans.
As showman engages the German
infantry along the road,
another group emerges out of the forest
on the north edge of town.
Incoming!
Keep firing!
In response, Sergeant Kuhn,
requests artillery support
from regimental headquarters.
Fire!
As the American shots land,
his artillery observer
can call in corrections
to better target the attacking Germans.
What people don't realize
most casualties in World War II
are inflicted by artillery.
Everyone thinks it's rifles
and machine guns and all that, it's not.
The pinpoint fire
devastates the enemy column
But more German soldiers
continue to appear.
Kuhn described it as tragedy,
as an epic waste.
Here were hundreds of Germans
just getting, mowed down.
And why they were attacking
in that fashion,
from a human standpoint,
he thought it was tragic.
The first wave of German
soldiers cannot capture Marnach alone.
Despite the best efforts
of the German infantry,
GIs, small groups of GIs,
are holed up in villages on key roads.
So they need more fire power.
The firepower of tanks
to break through and gain speed again.
But Colonel von Lauchert's
tanks
have still not crossed
the Our River.
They had not completed a key bridge.
And poor planning compounds the problem.
That road
is blocked by the Germans
in the form of a metallic gate.
There is an unlocking device
to move the gate out of the way
but unfortunately the engineers
can't find the keys in time.
In order to preserve
the element of surprise,
they delay blowing up the barrier,
until after the barrage begins.
Finally, German engineers
clear and repair the bridge
but it takes much longer than expected,
and the tanks only begin
to cross in the afternoon.
Keep up the line of fire!
In Marnach, B Company continues
to pick off the German infantry advance.
Although some German soldiers engage
the American strong point,
others begin to push around the village
to the north and south.
They continue toward Clervaux
and the 110th infantry command post,
only two miles away.
Colonel Hurley Fuller is alarmed,
as reports and runners trickle in,
it appears
that the whole front is under attack.
With communication unreliable,
Fuller sends his executive officer,
Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Strickler
to divisional headquarters
to speak with General Norman Cota.
Strickler reports the attacks
across the 110th's front.
General Cota also sends
a message in return.
The 110th must hold the line.
December 16, 1944.
The Ardennes Forest, Luxembourg.
Let 'em have it!
An entire division
of German Colonel Meinrad
von Lauchert's foot soldiers
surrounds the village of Marnach.
Some attack, while others push past,
towards the town of Clervaux.
Although the Americans
are heavily outnumbered
there will be no retreat or surrender.
Fire!
They are to hold at all costs.
That's the kind of thing
you might tend to breeze past
when you look at it an after-action report
or a book or whatever.
As front line soldiers, totally embattled
with the enemy around us,
surrounding us, trying to go through us,
now we're being told,
"You will hold at all costs."
Despite the odds,
B Company of the 110th
defies the German infantry
at a crossroads in Marnach.
When shrapnel
strikes their commanding officer,
he requires surgery and must be evacuated.
Sergeant JJ Kuhn assumes
command duties at B Company headquarters.
Despite his rank as an NCO.
As the German onslaught continues,
members of C Company approach
from the south to provide reinforcement.
But while the Germans have been unable
to break Marnach,
they surround it.
Get down!
And C Company is driven back.
Frustrated and desperate,
B Company puts out a distress call
to US troops in the area
as they run low on mortars.
An officer from D Company
two miles north of their position,
answers the call.
Lieutenant Glen Vannatta,
has a jeep loaded with mortar ammo
and races towards B Company.
They pause on a hill just outside of town,
to assess the German
and American hotspots.
Then his driver takes off at full speed
to dodge the German artillery
and small arms fire.
Your choice.
They break through
and deliver the mortars to B Company.
You are absolute God send, Sir.
Then beat a hasty retreat.
With the support of American artillery
and fresh supplies
Sergeant Kuhn and his men
continue to hold off
the German soldiers
trying to capture Marnach.
But as night falls,
German armor, half tracks and tanks
creep through the darkness
and into town.
The Americans are unprepared.
They basically
have foot soldiers.
They've got small arms.
They've got the odd bazooka.
And they have artillery observation
in Marnach.
B Company is not well equipped
to deal with any kind of real,
you know, powerful tank attack.
Tank!
The momentum shifts.
Nazi forces begin to overrun American
machine gun nests and outer defenses.
Move it. Move!
Sergeant Stanley Showman
and his squad
retreat from their forward position.
And withdraw to a stone building in town.
They watch
as a German half track stops outside.
When the German soldiers dismount,
the Americans
use their cover to open fire.
The Germans are cut down
and the half track retreats.
But before long,
a German tank rumbles down the street.
It stops 20 feet away and fixes its gun,
directly at the Americans.
Americans, Americans!
A German voice
calls for their surrender.
Americans, come out!
Showman's options are limited.
Step outside of cover and try
and snap off a shot with a bazooka.
Surrender.
Showman chooses Door Number Three
Go, go, go. Out. Retreat.
the back door.
Showman and his squad
make it into the woods
as the village of Marnach burns.
The Americans were not crumbling
as German leaders had predicted.
The German command had planned
to be in control of Bastogne
by noon of the second day.
Now as the first day turns into night
we see that the Germans are still battling
for the small village of Marnach,
which is 19 miles east of Bastogne.
The Germans have made it
barely five miles from their own lines.
Marnach should've been taken
by the German infantry.
The fact that they did depend
on the panzers
to finally take those defenses
meant that the plan was failing.
But US forces there
cannot hold out much longer.
The American forward observer
continues to call down
artillery on German positions.
Okay. I need an artillery strike.
His final words on the line
reveal the desperate situation in Marnach.
The last message of this unknown
artillery spotter is,
"Hurry and fire
they're coming up the steps."
The Observer was taking literally the idea
of holding at all costs,
and he did exactly that.
Von Lauchert leaves men
to finish the capture of Marnach,
and spurs the remainder of 2nd Panzer
Clervaux.
In Clervaux,
American Colonel Hurley Fuller
receives reports of tanks in Marnach,
he tries again to send reinforcements
to relieve B Company.
I think Fuller's getting an
appreciation how the scope and scale
of the German offensive and how hard
pressed his regiment is going to be.
Back at Willtz
Cota, he's not quite there yet.
American reinforcements
march toward Marnach.
They hope to ambush
the Germans outside of town,
but as they leave Clervaux
in the early morning,
German troops and tanks already close in.
The Americans are the ones
about to be ambushed.
December 17th, 1944.
Near Clervaux, Luxembourg.
Nazi forces begin the second day
of a daring offensive
to end the war on the western front.
In response,
Colonel Hurley Fuller of the US 110th
sends two infantry companies
a company of Stuart tanks
to relieve Americans
trapped in the nearby village of Marnach.
But they do not get very far
before the they come under attack
themselves.
Let's go! Let's go!
Their efforts fail.
It's like an economy car
smashing with a Mack truck.
They're just overwhelmed
by the power of the German military forces
at this stage.
At company headquarters
in Marnach,
Sergeant JJ Kuhn and the dwindling forces
of B Company and its wounded,
still hold out for rescue
or reinforcement.
When a German tank rams the front door
German soldiers rush in
and force Kuhn and the last of B Company
into surrender.
With the fall of Marnach,
Fuller readies Clervaux
for an imminent attack.
Clervaux has now begun to transition,
a very unhappy transition,
from a rear area headquarters and R&R town
to now the epicenter of the battle.
From his command post
at the Claravallis hotel,
he positions men in the castle
which overlooks the southern approaches
to Clervaux.
German artillery
continues to fall on the Americans.
Fuller still does not realize
that it is being controlled from nearby.
Even as the Americans
move into new defensive positions,
the two German forward observers
can call artillery down in response.
As Fuller's men scramble,
Colonel Meinrad von Lauchert arrives
on the outskirts of town with tanks
and targets the American-occupied castle.
But the thick walls hold
as they had for centuries.
Von Lauchert is frustrated.
In order to get back on schedule,
he must take Clervaux quickly
to secure the roads needed
for the German advance.
But, he does not want
to send his tanks into town.
Von Lauchert
is an experienced officer.
He knows that an urban environment
will negate the tanks
maneuverability and speed
what is worse behind every corner
there can be an Allied tank.
Von Lauchert sends
his infantry troops into the town instead.
They are to scout ahead for American tanks
and clear resistance.
As German soldiers move into Clervaux,
American snipers in the castle take aim.
The Germans
try to disrupt the sniper fire,
but the shells do little damage.
However, with their overwhelming numbers,
German troops bypass the fortress
and fight their way toward
the command post in the Claravallis hotel.
Fuller's 110th has delayed the German push
towards Bastogne for two days.
But his men have paid a heavy price.
Well, the numbers
are the numbers.
Most of these American formations
are outnumbered anywhere from about 2 to 1
to 10 to 1
depending on where we're talking about.
We get help in three hours or something
we might hold out for that,
but that's not really the situation here.
Colonel Fuller
knows he cannot delay much longer.
He calls general Cota
and asks for reinforcements
or permission to fall back
to set up a new defensive line.
Both requests are denied.
Cota is unequivocal, "Hold at all costs".
Nobody comes back.
Fuller throws in his final tanks
against the German attack.
They navigate the narrow roads
towards the castle.
The lead tank rounds a corner,
and heads down a side street.
When the American tanks erupt in flames,
it is the last of Fuller's reserves.
And gives von Lauchert's men
free reign to advance.
The German armor column
can move deeper into Clervaux.
Inexorably closer to, ah, Fuller's
Command Post at the Claravallis Hotel.
Across town,
the command post is already under pressure
from German infantry attacks.
You have guards outside
who are now under fire
and have been driven inside.
You have people trying to figure out
the next course of action,
get out of there or burn papers.
Or round up a new crew to go and fight
this group of Germans we just spotted
or deal with this tank,
scrounge up any weapons you can get.
Get General Cota on the line!
Fuller radios
General Cota an update
and prepares to give his men
the order to withdraw.
Reinforcements now!
Abruptly, a shell rips through
the hotel's first floor,
knocking out the power.
Fuller and what is left of his 110th
are trapped and out of time.
December 17th, 1944.
Clervaux, Luxembourg.
2nd Panzer Division,
led by Colonel Meinrad von Lauchert
has breached the American-held town
of Clervaux,
seven miles into the American line.
Von Lauchert traps Colonel Fuller
and his men in a hotel,
which serves as their command post.
German soldiers storm in,
and fire fights break out in the lobby
and ground floor hallways.
He's had, what is now
kind of a famous conversation
with the 28 Division Chief of Staff,
Colonel Gibney.
And Fuller compares himself
to Colonel Travis at the Alamo saying,
"We're about to be overrun."
Fuller does not feel
the chief of staff and General Cota
appreciate the gravity of the situation.
He returns to the crisis at hand
when an explosion rips into the room,
injuring several men.
Now he's got wounded people
so Fuller becomes this sort of impromptu
medic trying to staunch the bleeding.
He bandages the eyes of a man
blinded by the blast
but others are too far gone.
Gunfire and fighting
continue on the ground floor,
when a member of staff finds a way out.
There's like a fire escape type ladder
that'll lead from one of the top floors
all the way to the ridgeline
provided you don't fall from that ladder
to the street below.
Fuller inches along,
50 feet above the ground below.
Here's this 50-year-old man
trying to hang on
and get across this horizontal ladder,
basically crawl across it
while this wounded blind guy is behind him
trying to hang on.
Fuller and a small group
of soldiers make it across and away.
Let's go!
As they escape into the woods,
the 110th command post falls.
Across town, about 100 US Soldiers
holdout in the ramparts
of the medieval castle.
The Germans pummel the walls and gate
but cannot break through.
They decide on another approach.
They figure out
maybe we ought to fire incendiary rounds
to set the roof of the castle on fire
and maybe that'll flush
the defenders out.
Incoming!
It works.
Fires break out across the castle.
The American commander,
not willing to risk the lives
of the civilians hidden in the cellar,
surrenders.
When Clearvaux falls,
the road to Bastogne opens,
and the Germans hurry forward,
only to be slowed again,
at each cross road.
All along the front, makeshift resistance
continues to harass their advance.
The Germans fight for four days
to reach Bastogne
and create the bulge in the Allied line
that gave a name to the infamous battle.
But the critical delay means
Bastogne can be reinforced
and defended by the Allies.
The battle will rage for five more weeks,
but by failing to take Bastogne early,
the German operation is doomed
almost from the start.
Within a month, the Allies once again
force the Germans
to retreat back to the border.
Of the 3,200 members of the 110th,
only one in seven is not killed,
wounded or captured.
The 110th basically fought
to extinction in the Bastogne corridor.
And in about a three-day period
the regiment was shattered.
Its records, to a great extent, were lost.
Their sacrifice
was not acknowledged.
No medals were awarded
and no regimental honors bestowed.
Later on, when the army hierarchy
was considering
presidential unit citations and whatever
there really wasn't anybody in house
to speak up for the 110th infantry.
Colonel Hurly Fuller,
Sergeant JJ Kuhn,
and Sergeant Stanley Showman
are all captured by the Germans
and serve the rest of the war
in POW camps.
They are liberated in 1945,
and return to the United States.
Once released, Colonel Fuller advocates
for the American 110th.
But he just does
not have the influence.
He does not have the pull, uh,
to get the recognition for his regiment
that he otherwise would've hoped for
and also the fact
that he himself had become a POW
was always going to be a bit
of a sticking point in that regard.
Reasonable or not.
Colonel Meinrad von Lauchert
pushed farther into Allied lines
than almost any other German commander.
Colonel Meinrad von Lauchert
will continue to fight
the Allied troops tooth
and nail with his 2nd Panzer Division
and he will continue
to do so until March, 1945
when he is with his back
against Rhine River.
But by that time
nothing much remains of his crack unit.
Operation Watch on the Rhine,
or Battle of the Bulge
proves costly for both sides.
The German army suffers
about 120,000 casualties.
In the Battle of the Bulge,
the Germans lose their last reserves.
And when the Soviets attack
in a major offensive, in mid-January 1945,
the German front and the east
collapse very quickly.
So, two weeks later, the Soviets
are only 50 miles away from Berlin.
So, the real winner of the Battle
of the Bulge is-- are not the Americans,
it's the Soviets and Stalin.
The western Allies
will need to regroup and resupply
before advancing into Germany.
But, the Germans will now fight
on home turf
and the war in Europe will continue
for four more months.
Captioned by
Visual Data Media Services