The Forgotten Battle: Overloon and the Maas Salient, 1944-45

The Forgotten Battle: Overloon and the Maas Salient, 1944-45 image
ISBN-10:

187337643X

ISBN-13:

9781873376430

Edition: First Edition
Released: Jan 01, 1995
Publisher: Sarpedon
Format: Hardcover, 240 pages
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Description:

Certain battles of World War II became famous at the time -- and legendary since -- because a spectacular victory was achieved by one or another of the opposing sides. At Overloon and the Maas Salient, no such strategic laurels can be claimed. This was the other side of World War II in Europe -- a bloody slugging match between equally skilled opponents that comprised the reality of the "broad front" strategy. When the western Allies cracked open Normandy in August 1944, a headlong rush across France took place that promised an early end to the war. The German armies -- defeated, outflanked, disorganized -- fell back as best they could, often without their equipment, and with many of their best men left dead in the fields of Falaise. In mid-September, three full divisions of airborne troops dropped behind the German front in Holland, to seize bridges that would vault Allied armored across the Rhine. But as the front drew nearer to the Third Reich, the Allied High Command slowly came to realize that, by this time, the Germans were no longer retreating. Young German paratroopers -- Fallschirmjager -- formed the backbone of the enemy defense in southern Holland. Companies of Panther tanks, roaming the battle area like feudal forces of a bygone era, lunged against the Allied corridor. Finally, a large German bridgehead over the Maas (Meuse) River remained -- sticking like a thorn into the Allied side. For months, both British and American forces assaulted this "Maas Salient," centered on the Dutch village of Overloon, but could not eliminate it. The Germans responded with a counterstroke: enemy panzers suddenly appeared out of the October morning mist, nearly overrunning the American 7th Armored Division in what amounted to a preview of the Battle of the Bulge. All this time, Dutch civilians watched as the foreign armies swirled back and forth across their land, leaving their houses and towns nothing but smoldering heaps of rubble. The liberation that once seemed so












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