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The battle of the generals : the untold story of the Falaise Pocket : the campaign that should have won World War II / Martin Blumenson.

By: Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Publication details: New York : Morrow, c1993.Edition: 1st edDescription: 288 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 0688118372
  • 9780688118372
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 940.54/21 20
LOC classification:
  • D 756.5 B658b 1993
Contents:
The Setting -- The Problem -- The Allied Commanders --The Coalition -- The Struggle for Dominance -- The Invasion Plan The Precipitating Action -- The Germans -- The Crisis in Command -- The July Difficulties -- Cobra -- Bombing -- Breakthrough -- Breakout The Encirclement -- The Mortain Counterattack -- The Canadian Attack -- The Short Hook -- The Stop Order -- The Second Stop Order Chapter -- Closing the Pocket -- The Aftermath -- The Seine River Crossings -- Reflections.
Summary: "According to General Omar Bradley, it was a chance that "comes to a commander once in a century." The opportunity was to surround and destroy the enemy armies opposing the Allies in Normandy. Three months after the Allies invaded France on D-Day, the Germans had stuck their heads into a noose and made themselves vulnerable to encirclement and annihilation in the Falaise Pocket. Had the Allies succeeded in springing the trap at Falaise quickly enough, they would certainly have brought World War II in Western Europe to a triumphant end." "Instead, the Allies failed. Mistakes at the highest military levels, the pursuit of conflicting goals, coalition jealousies, and temperamental discord among the top commanders permitted the Germans to escape." "Trying to ensnare the Germans again at the Seine River, the Allies failed once more. For the same reasons." "In hindsight, the Allied concern with geographical objectives - that is, the liberation of territory - interfered with the aim of defeating the enemy, and thus unnecessarily prolonged the war for another eight months." "Martin Blumenson's new and unsparing look at Generals Eisenhower, Montgomery, and Bradley challenges the conventional treatment of those commanders and of the Normandy campaign itself. An absorbing history and a major addition to the literature of World War II, The Battle of the Generals will change our view of how the war was fought."--BOOK JACKET.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Home library Collection Shelving location Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Libro Libro Biblioteca Juan Bosch Biblioteca Juan Bosch Recursos Regionales Recursos Regionales (2do. Piso) D 756.5 B658b 1993 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 00000071116

Includes bibliographical references (p. [277]-278) and index.

The Setting -- The Problem -- The Allied Commanders --The Coalition -- The Struggle for Dominance -- The Invasion Plan The Precipitating Action -- The Germans -- The Crisis in Command -- The July Difficulties -- Cobra -- Bombing -- Breakthrough -- Breakout The Encirclement -- The Mortain Counterattack -- The Canadian Attack -- The Short Hook -- The Stop Order -- The Second Stop Order Chapter -- Closing the Pocket -- The Aftermath -- The Seine River Crossings -- Reflections.

"According to General Omar Bradley, it was a chance that "comes to a commander once in a century." The opportunity was to surround and destroy the enemy armies opposing the Allies in Normandy. Three months after the Allies invaded France on D-Day, the Germans had stuck their heads into a noose and made themselves vulnerable to encirclement and annihilation in the Falaise Pocket. Had the Allies succeeded in springing the trap at Falaise quickly enough, they would certainly have brought World War II in Western Europe to a triumphant end." "Instead, the Allies failed. Mistakes at the highest military levels, the pursuit of conflicting goals, coalition jealousies, and temperamental discord among the top commanders permitted the Germans to escape." "Trying to ensnare the Germans again at the Seine River, the Allies failed once more. For the same reasons." "In hindsight, the Allied concern with geographical objectives - that is, the liberation of territory - interfered with the aim of defeating the enemy, and thus unnecessarily prolonged the war for another eight months." "Martin Blumenson's new and unsparing look at Generals Eisenhower, Montgomery, and Bradley challenges the conventional treatment of those commanders and of the Normandy campaign itself. An absorbing history and a major addition to the literature of World War II, The Battle of the Generals will change our view of how the war was fought."--BOOK JACKET.

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