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  • 7/14/2024
For educational purposes

Discover why the last major German offensive of World War Two so nearly succeeded and how heroic defensive actions by American GIs thwarted their plans.

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00:00You
00:30on
00:56the 16th of December
00:581944 the quiet Ardennes region of Belgium erupted to the sound of battle
01:14Over the front line poured a quarter of a million German troops backed up by hundreds of tanks and armored vehicles
01:21The fire from 2,000 artillery pieces supported their ferocious attack
01:28This attack came as a complete surprise to the Allies and in the first few days it almost succeeded
01:51Once the Allies gathered themselves together, the German offensive was doomed to fail.
02:02Shortages in fuel, difficult terrain and supply problems would help ensure the collapse of the
02:07last great German offensive operation in the West. The fact that this mighty force had been
02:14assembled in secrecy left the Allies with a few embarrassing questions to answer and showed that
02:20even as the Allied offense gathered pace, the ultimate defeat of Hitler would not be an easy
02:25task. Since the 6th of June 1944, when the Allies had gained a foothold in Normandy,
02:41they had pushed ever-increasing numbers of men and material through the beachhead. However,
02:48the closer the Allies got to the German border, the stiffer German resistance became,
02:53as the Allies fought intense and costly battles in the areas around Aachen and the Hürtgen Forest.
03:02Soon, the two main Allied lines of advance were moving in different directions.
03:07In between them lay the Ardennes region.
03:11The Allied troops involved in the recent battles at Aachen and the Hürtgen Forest
03:15were sent to this quiet sector to rest and refit. Allied confidence was high,
03:22and there were even hopes that the war was drawing to an end.
03:29After the fighting in Normandy in the summer of 1944, the Allies had really made spectacular
03:36progress. Although it had taken them seven or eight weeks to commence the breakout from the
03:40Normandy bridgehead, the next fortnight or so saw them travel virtually all the way to the German
03:45border. In the process, the German armed forces in Western Europe were largely destroyed,
03:51really no more than scattered remnants, by early September.
03:56The British were in Brussels by September the 3rd, liberated Brussels, and then September the 4th,
04:02they took Antwerp. And it was at that point that the British suffered a logistic crisis,
04:08and the advance ran to a halt. Now, at exactly the same time, the Americans had been advancing,
04:14but on a divergent axis, to the south. Patton's Third Army was on the Meuse by the 1st of September
04:191944, but then he too suffered a logistic crisis.
04:26Hitler did not want to relinquish the initiative to the Allies.
04:29He had to pull something out of this debacle, and as early as August 1944,
04:35he began to lay plans for a counter-stroke.
04:40Hitler felt that a well-executed offensive in the West at this stage
04:43could cause the Allies to rethink their position.
04:48So Hitler is going to attack through the Ardennes, the scene of the great German victory of 1940
04:55against the French. He's going to attack through the Ardennes, recreate the victory of 1940,
05:02and go on and split the Allies. By bringing upon them this surprise defeat,
05:10he hoped that politically that would be the end of the alliance. They would sue for peace,
05:16and he could then turn to the Russians, knowing that he was only fighting a war on our front.
05:21General Alfred Jodl identified the main problems that had to be overcome as
05:26the Allied air superiority, supply difficulties, and the need for secrecy.
05:34To counter the Allied air power, the date for the offensive was planned for late November,
05:39and then moved to mid-December. It was reasoned that the bad weather,
05:44usually prevalent at this time, would severely restrict the overwhelming air power of the Allies.
05:51The question of secrecy was the most critical aspect of the assault.
05:59Access to the plans was restricted to a few choice commanders,
06:04and informing the troops of the plans was left to the last possible moment.
06:10Alongside this, a deception plan was put in place that would, hopefully,
06:15fool the Allied intelligence services. Firstly, Field Marshal von Rundstedt,
06:22noted for his capabilities in defence, was recalled from retirement, and placed in the
06:27position of Commander-in-Chief of the German forces in the West. To the outside world,
06:32he replaced the more aggressive Field Marshal Modell. But Modell continued to work on plans
06:38for the attack. Gerd von Rundstedt was brought in on the 1st of September, 1944,
06:45to act purely as a figurehead, to lull the Allies into a sense of security, to believe that this
06:52old man of 69 couldn't possibly be involved in a major offensive. Von Rundstedt was known to be a
07:00solid defensive general. The Germans conducted deliberate deception. They had, for instance,
07:076th Panzer Army expose itself to Allied aerial reconnaissance in the area of Cologne.
07:16And then, once they knew that the Allies had pictures of 6th Army in Cologne,
07:21they moved it by night to its new jumping-off place for the attack.
07:28The plan itself looked flawless on paper. Hitler planned to push a strong,
07:35armoured lead force down the Armblieb valley, through the Allied-held positions,
07:40and on to Antwerp. By doing this, he hoped to split the Allied front in two.
07:47Antwerp was one of the major ports that the Allies were using to bring supplies in to
07:53Northwest Europe. Supplies were a big problem for the Germans, fighting on two fronts as they were.
08:00So the idea was that if Hitler could cut the Allies off from one of the main sources of supply
08:09that kept their armies going, then perhaps he could fight the Western Allies on more of a one-to-one
08:17basis. It was envisaged that these developments would show the Allies that Germany could snatch
08:24victory from the jaws of defeat.
08:35They got this operation, and Hitler titled it, the whole offensive was called
08:40Wacht am Rhein, which was Watch over the Rhine. So if the Allies were to get note of, or get
08:47information regarding this operation, this offensive, they would simply believe it was
08:50a defensive operation, moving troops about the border to try and prevent the Allies moving into
08:55Germany. If the plan looked good on paper, the reality was that it was far from flawless.
09:03The Ardennes of 1944 contained a very different enemy to that of 1940.
09:13The combined Allied forces that were situated in or around this area had been fighting the Germans
09:18for over five years in many different theatres. They had the confidence of a near inexhaustible
09:25store of supplies, and whereas Hitler had to scrape the barrel to assemble the forces necessary for
09:31the attack, the Allies could rapidly deploy forces to the Ardennes.
09:38In 1940, speed of advance was needed for this type of plan to work.
09:43In 1940, the route used had travelled in a south-westerly direction, and had made good
09:48use of the available roads. This time, the direction of the attack was north-westerly,
09:54and only a few roads were open. The Americans stemmed the flow of traffic by closing key roads,
10:01either temporarily or permanently. This caused traffic build-ups,
10:06and slowed down the advance of the vital armoured units.
10:12In addition, the Germans' resources were really inadequate to the task. Although some of the
10:17forces used by the Germans were very good, and were very well equipped, there were an awful lot
10:21of second-rate personnel. There was also a deficiency in artillery, in ammunition, in fuel.
10:29And the lead elements of this offensive are told that they have to capture their own supplies as
10:35they advance. So here we have an offensive which depends on the ability of the spearheads to
10:41actually capture their own fuel as they advance. These detours to find the lifeblood of the panzers
10:49would help to slow the advance. These delays would not leave much of a time window for the
10:56troops to reach their objectives. The weather was always going to be a problem. Hitler chose
11:03the winter months deliberately, because that was a time when the Allied air forces would be grounded
11:08by the weather. Perhaps what he didn't consider also was the fact that that weather was going to
11:14affect the movement of his troops. At that time of year he could expect snow, and for a heavy
11:2068-tonne Tiger tank to try and move in that weather was absolutely appalling.
11:26When any competent German general who had actually worked with troops in the field
11:32saw this plan, their instant response was, nope, this is not going to work.
11:38The only German generals who accepted this plan were people like Jodl, who were yes-men.
11:46Hitler surrounded himself with yes-men, and his yes-men saw this plan and said, yes, that'll work.
11:51Everybody else said that this plan was not going to work.
11:57It's worth quoting an excerpt from SS Obergruppenführer Sepp Dietrich's interrogation
12:02after the war, as it gives a good indication of the feelings of the generals at the time.
12:08He said, all I had to do was cross the Meuse River, capture Brussels, and then go on and
12:14take the port of Antwerp. All of this in December, January, and February, the worst three months of
12:20the year. Through the Ardennes, where the snow was waist-deep, and where there wasn't room to
12:26deploy four tanks abreast, let alone six armoured divisions. Although Field Marshal von Rundstedt,
12:34the overall commander of German forces in the West, and Field Marshal Modell, the commander
12:40of Army Group B that launched the Ardennes Offensive, disagreed about many things. About
12:44one thing they absolutely did agree, which was that Hitler's plan for an armoured thrust towards
12:49Antwerp was virtually impossible. Both of them believed that the Germans should have a much more
12:54limited objective, an encirclement still, but an encirclement not of all of the British and
12:59Canadian forces in northwest Europe, but simply of the US First Army, which was deployed north of
13:04the Ardennes sector. They believed that if the Germans tried to do this, and that they probably
13:10could do this, they could have beneficial results. Hitler's last gamble was now underway,
13:18but the desperate nature of the situation was already clear to see. On paper, the Germans had
13:25gathered together a strong attacking force spread across three armies. The Sixth Panzer
13:31Army under Dietrich had the northernmost advance route. They were to advance from their forming-up
13:39areas near Dahlem in Germany, and into Belgium around the town of Lozaim. Their objective
13:45was to cross the Meuse River just below Liege and advance into Antwerp.
13:56Alongside the Sixth Panzer Army was the Fifth Panzer Army under the command of Lieutenant-General
14:02Hasso von Manteuffel. Their objective was to move from Prum in Germany and on to Antwerp via Brussels.
14:16The Seventh Army under General Erich Brandenburger had the southernmost route into
14:20Luxembourg. This infantry-only formation were to move from Bitburg in Germany
14:26and engage the US Third Army, with the objective of tying down these forces.
14:37All of these forces were part of Army Group B, commanded by Field Marshal Model.
14:44It totaled over 250,000 men and almost 1,000 tanks and self-propelled guns.
14:51It was to cause the Allies grave concern in the days to come.
14:56The German forces that were used to spearhead the Ardennes Offensive
15:00were of very varied quality. Although the SS and other panzer divisions that were used contained a
15:05cadre of experienced personnel, very large numbers of the personnel in those divisions were
15:11ex-air force or ex-navy personnel. So basically Hitler moved sailors into infantry divisions,
15:18he moved air force personnel into parachute divisions, and he formed a number of Volksgrenadier
15:24divisions, people that had been in other jobs elsewhere or they were young men or older men.
15:32The Germans were able to concentrate their combat power for the Ardennes Offensive
15:39by moving their units as though they were preparing for an Allied offensive,
15:48as though they were preparing a counter-stroke. So when the Allied intelligence analysts
15:55saw a movement of German forces, their preconceived notions were that the Germans are already beaten,
16:03that all they're doing is acting defensively, and therefore when they saw an elite German unit being
16:11brought back up to strength and being moved to face the the Western Allies in France,
16:16they assumed that it was just preparation for the inevitable Allied attacks across the River Rhine.
16:26Facing this imposing lineup was a variety of American units.
16:30The 2nd and 99th Infantry Divisions were part of the US 5 Corps under Major General Gero.
16:37They were positioned opposite the 6th Panzer Army.
16:42Facing Manteuffel in the centre were the 28th and 106th Infantry Divisions
16:47who were part of Major General Troy Middleton's 8th Corps.
16:53In the south, facing Brandenburger's men, were troops from the 9th Armoured and the 4th Infantry
16:59Divisions. Most of these American units had recently been involved in heavy fighting and
17:05were in the area for a rest. These combined units totaled around 83,000 men, backed up
17:13with around 450 tanks and assault guns and around 400 artillery pieces.
17:19They were in a strange country, at a bleak time of year, and many of them were thinking of home
17:25and Christmas. Most of them had already suffered at the hands of the enemy and the last thing they
17:31wanted or needed was to be the subject of an attack of this scale or intensity.
17:40The Ardennes sector was being held by very weak American divisions. One was
17:44totally inexperienced, the 106th, never been in battle before, and the other two, the 28th
17:48Infantry Division and the 4th Infantry Division, had been knocked about up in the Hürtgen Forest.
17:53Then you got the 9th Armoured Division in reserve which, again, was not experienced,
17:57and a cavalry group that was in that area. But they were very thinly spread.
18:04However, unlike the Germans, they had many factors in their favour.
18:10Although initially outnumbered, the Allies had strong forces close by that could be called upon
18:15if needed. These included the battle-tested 3rd Army, under the command of General George Patton.
18:28At this stage, the Allied supply lines had been established,
18:31and the Allied supply lines had been set up.
18:34At this stage, the Allied supply lines had been established, and when the weather permitted,
18:39they had complete domination of the sky. They just needed to delay the Germans in the initial stages
18:46and be patient until the odds swung in their favour.
18:53One other significant danger for the Germans was the Allied ability to feed in extra reserves
18:59from both the North and South. To counter this, an attack by the 12th SS Panzer Corps was planned
19:07to coincide with the assault. But strong rumblings from the Eastern Front led to the cancellation
19:13of this operation. In consequence, the flanks of the German armies in the North would be at
19:19the mercy of British reinforcements under Field Marshal Montgomery.
19:24I think the morale and mood of the Allied forces in North-West Europe in Christmas 1944 or so
19:30was really one of grim determination. Quite clearly, the elation and the optimism of summer 1944,
19:37following the breakout from Normandy, when lots of people thought that the war would be over
19:41within a couple of weeks, even, perhaps, or certainly just a few months, had disappeared.
19:46As the weather got worse, as the rain sleeted down, a sense of ennui begins to grip many
19:52Allied soldiers. It affected the Americans particularly, not quite so much the British,
19:57because one must remember that Britain, and particularly London, was still being hit by
20:01V1s and V2s, and so this was a fairly powerful motivation for the British to press on and at
20:08least try and do as much damage as they possibly could to the Germans. But for a lot of the
20:12Americans, some of them had been away from the United States for more than two years,
20:17and this is, you know, their second, perhaps their third Christmas away from
20:21the folks at home, and there's a real homesickness amongst some of them.
20:28At 5.30am on the morning of the 16th of December,
20:32the German artillery opened fire along the front line, which was approximately 85 miles long.
20:47This intensive barrage lasted less than an hour, and was mainly designed to confuse the enemy and
20:53to disrupt their lines of communication. It was hoped that it would also open gaps in the lines.
21:03The Germans did make significant gains, breaking through and infiltrating some areas.
21:09The now isolated Allied groups were overrun and either killed or taken prisoner.
21:18Some groups resisted, but it was not enough to stem the avalanche of German troops.
21:33Further back in the Allied command positions and headquarters, various commanders tried to gain an
21:38accurate picture of events, but this proved impossible due to the severing of the lines
21:44of communication and the steady capture of the forward positions.
21:50It was several days before the US troops began to surrender,
21:54but when they did, so many of them surrendered that it still holds the embarrassing record
21:59of the biggest surrender of American soldiers in the history of her armed forces.
22:14Crucially, however, the US troops held on to places of strategic importance.
22:19The Elsenborn Ridge in the north, St. Vith in the center, and Bastogne in the south.
22:29The German attack was based on the idea that 6th Panzer Army, weighted as it was with lots of
22:37well-provisioned and well-trained Waffen-SS, were going to be able to hit the Americans.
22:43The Americans would disintegrate and the Germans could then just drive right on through across the
22:49Elsenborn Ridge and drive to the River Meuse. That didn't happen.
22:56What developed from here on was a race to the primary objectives. The Germans knew that time
23:02was not on their side and they must reach the targets quickly.
23:06From the outset, however, things began to go wrong for the German forces.
23:13In the north, the planned parachute drop around Elsenborn Ridge
23:20was made in strong winds and appalling weather.
23:25The Germans had to capture the Elsenborn Ridge very early on. Their ability to actually drive
23:32north and to reach the Meuse depended on securing this ridge, and this was the role of an airborne
23:38operation, and this was an utter and complete failure.
23:43The German paras were under the command of the experienced leader Colonel von der Heiter.
23:49They were dropped over a wide area and were unable to concentrate their efforts.
23:55Also, due to the lack of reconnaissance beforehand, they found that they had dropped
23:59into the positions of the US 1st Infantry and that the Americans were stronger than had been
24:05anticipated. After realizing that they could not meet their objectives, they tried to break
24:11through the American lines in force. After suffering crippling losses, the German paras
24:17retreated and then filtered through the American positions in small groups.
24:24This unit had started with 1,200 men, although less than 350 managed to fight together due to
24:32the dispersal. Less than 100 survivors made it back to their own lines, and von der Heiter was
24:39himself captured. The one success of this small but vital mission was in giving the Allies the
24:48impression they were fighting a far higher number of troops, and consequently they then
24:54committed large numbers of their own men to counter the supposed threat.
25:03If the advance of the 1st SS Panzer Corps had been more rapid,
25:07they could have taken advantage of this development.
25:11As it was, they had run into difficulties of their own. The newly arrived US 99th Division
25:18had defended itself well into the opening stages of the attack.
25:22The vital high ground remained in American hands. The lead force of the 1st SS Panzer Division,
25:29Kampfgruppe Peiper, continued the move to the west towards Honsfeld.
25:35The unit which has to succeed, for 6th SS Panzer Army to succeed, is a Kampfgruppe under the
25:41command of Jochen Peiper. And this unit has just 48 hours to get from its start line and reach the
25:49Meuse. And very, very quickly it begins falling behind schedule. Peiper is used to operating in
25:56the conditions of the Eastern Front. Wide plains, rolling hills. And when Peiper constructs his
26:03march formation, what he does is quite sensibly place his heavy vehicles, his Panzerkampfwagen
26:09Mark 6s, the Tigers and indeed the King Tigers, at the head of the columns. But what he doesn't
26:15calculate on is the fact that the low top speed of the Tiger will actually slow down
26:21the entire column. He was going through little roads over little bridges with these huge tanks,
26:27some of which were 68 tons. And as he progressed, small pockets of American resistance actually were
26:33thrown in in front of him and actually made him divert his route. He had to take several diversions.
26:38Hence Peiper had to start moving into territory that belonged to the central thrust.
26:44South of these actions, the 5th Panzer Army got off to a better start.
26:50Their advance was made against the thinly spread American 28th and 106th Infantry Divisions,
26:56who were not prepared for battle at this stage. The Germans pushed through these groups with ease.
27:03However, some of the American forces slowed the advance and managed to hold a number of
27:09the bridges in the area. At the end of the first day, Manteuffel's men did force crossings over the
27:16Aue River, and they wasted no time in pressing on towards Clervaux. The third thrust of the attack,
27:24Brandenburg's 7th Army, positioned further south, got off to a very poor start due to difficult
27:30terrain and determined American defenders of the US 109th Regiment. This American resistance
27:38and a combination of logistics and other flaws on the Germans' part, for example the fact that
27:42the initial attacks went in under strength, meant that the Germans' effort was really falling apart
27:47very, very quickly. Overall, although difficulties had been encountered, the 17th of December
27:55saw the all-important German Army committed in strength.
28:00However, the American high command was already beginning to move reinforcements to the area.
28:09Among these reinforcements were the 7th and 10th Armoured Divisions, together with the 101st
28:17Airborne Division. This latter unit was ordered to the town of Bastogne, which occupied the most
28:23important road junction in the whole region. It was now a race against time.
28:38In the north, the Germans continued in their efforts to reach the given targets.
28:45The commander of the 1st SS Corps was becoming frustrated at the slow pace of the advance.
28:51He moved the 12th SS Panzer Division, which was engaged in fighting around the Elsenborn Ridge,
28:57and pushed them in behind the 1st SS Panzer Division, who were moving towards the Amblive
29:02River. This was one of the first major mistakes made during the offensive, as it only succeeded
29:09in helping to relieve the pressure on the Americans who were defending the area. The
29:14Americans lost no time in turning this development to their advantage. They strengthened their
29:19positions to such an extent that the Germans found it impossible to take the area.
29:33Little American organizations like infantry platoons were holding out on these narrow
29:49mountain roads in the Ardennes region, and even though they themselves were not in contact with
29:55any higher authority, nobody was ordering them to do what they were doing, they managed to conduct
30:00a defense in depth. And this is very important. The only way you can stop a German armored attack
30:09is by defense in depth. That means you don't try to hold some kind of line of defense, you hold
30:16strong points, and you make the Germans fight for strong points, and if they bypass you then you can
30:22counter-attack. The Americans hadn't planned this kind of defense, it's just the way it worked out.
30:30As the 1st SS Division's advance continued, Kampfgruppe Peiper became involved in a small
30:36firefight near Bauniers. What followed has been the subject of many debates.
30:44What cannot be denied is that around 80 American prisoners of war were shot dead.
30:52The Americans claimed that this was in cold blood. The Germans claimed they were trying to escape.
30:59On the 17th of December, an American patrol came out and they discovered that the bodies of these
31:11American soldiers lying in the snow, clearly the result of a massacre. So here were the Germans,
31:16particularly the Waffen-SS, bringing the standards of war which had become common
31:21on the Eastern Front to the Western Front. And very, very quickly, and this always happens
31:27with immense rapidity in armies, the word went out. My guess is that within three to four hours,
31:34every American soldier in the Ardennes had heard that the Germans were not taking prisoners.
31:41And there are only two things you can do in that situation. One is that you can run, or if you can't
31:46run, then you've got to fight. So Kampfgruppe Peiper and other elements of the Waffen-SS
31:51had inadvertently increased America's fighting power enormously in the Ardennes.
31:58Wasting no time, Kampfgruppe Peiper quickly replenished the fuel tanks of the panzers
32:04and pushed on towards the town of Stavelo and its vital bridge.
32:12Here, however, the advance was held up for a number of hours when they came under attack.
32:17Peiper, who was unsure of the size of the attacking force,
32:20delayed further advances until the following morning.
32:24Stavelo was taken during the 18th of December, and the advance continued towards Trois-Ponts.
32:35Near Trois-Ponts were the bridges that crossed the Salme and Almblieve rivers. As Peiper's men
32:41approached, the American defenders blew the bridges to avoid their use by the Germans.
32:47The only option left open to Peiper was to move his column back. He tried to advance through to
32:55Chennault, where another bridge crossed the Almblieve, but came under attack from American
33:00aircraft. It was at this point that the main advance of the once-mighty 1st SS Panzer Division
33:10ground to a halt.
33:18The last offensive of the war in the West would end for the majority of Peiper's men
33:23in the small village of La Gliese as he ordered his men to set up defences.
33:31The critical fuel factor had played a significant part in the failure of this part of the German
33:36advance. By the time his men had reached La Gliese and the nearby Sturmung,
33:42the fuel tanks of their vehicles had been run almost dry.
33:49Much had been expected of the SS forces, and when news of the decision to stay in La Gliese
33:54reached the German commanders, there was no time to waste. The main emphasis of the offensive
34:00was shifted to the 5th Panzer Army's sector. They were making good use of the favourable terrain
34:06and the poorly prepared defenders of the US 106th Division.
34:11Now, 5th Panzer Army under Manteuffel, this is the Wehrmacht Army, was actually advancing with
34:17the grain of the country. It was using the main roads. And so now we have this situation where
34:235th Panzer Army is actually surging to the west, which is fine, it looks good on a map.
34:29The only problem is it's not where the Germans want to go. The Germans want to go north.
34:34They continued in their race to reach the objectives given,
34:38one of these being the key town of Bastogne.
34:43The town of Bastogne was crucial because three roads converged there,
34:47making it a local centre of communication.
34:51However, they'd been pipped to the post by the US 101st Airborne Division.
34:57These seasoned veterans of Normandy and Operation Market Garden set up all-round defences.
35:04When Manteuffel's men ran into these positions, they found it impossible to break through.
35:11Manteuffel ordered his forces to waste no more time,
35:14and they bypassed the town and continued their advance.
35:18This created a strong pocket of enemy resistance within the German-held positions.
35:26The attempts to eliminate this resistance
35:29would soak up considerable amounts of German men and material.
35:36The initial shock that had hit the Americans was over.
35:39Eisenhower reacted and within 60 hours had got troops moving in
35:43to blunt the offensive, to blunt the bulge.
35:46The northern shoulder and the southern shoulder were pushing in,
35:49and the Germans, within a matter of days really, although the offensive lasted for a month,
35:54within a matter of days it was actually grinding to a halt.
36:01On the 22nd of December, the Germans went to Bastogne carrying a white flag
36:06and the offer of surrender for the Americans.
36:08The garrison commander, General McAuliffe, gave a simple reply.
36:13Nuts.
36:18At the same time, further north,
36:19the Germans had eventually managed to take the town of St. Vith.
36:23This was particularly important because
36:25it was the other key road junction on the Germans' intended route of advance.
36:30They'd been bogged down around this town for days and, as in other areas of the battle,
36:35these delays allowed the Americans to build up defences further back.
36:44On Christmas Eve 1944,
36:46Manteuffel's forces reached an area just west of Selles.
36:51This would become the furthest point reached by the Germans during this offensive.
37:00Christmas Day 1944 saw the besieged town of Bastogne
37:04coming under increasing pressure from the Germans,
37:07but the Allies' massive air superiority meant the garrison could be supplied by air
37:12without fear of German intervention.
37:15The American defenders prepared to fight to the end.
37:20So
37:32elements of Patton's forces were moving closer and on Boxing Day, December the 26th,
37:37they managed to force an opening through the German lines and into Bastogne.
37:43With this relief action, the German situation became increasingly hopeless.
37:51By the last few days of December 1944,
37:53it was clear that the German offensive effort was largely exhausted.
37:56They'd used up large quantities of fuel, most of their ammunition reserves,
38:01and their spearhead formations had been severely attrited
38:04in bitter fighting against American forces.
38:07In addition, they'd failed to open up by far the most important lines of communication
38:12around the Elsenborn Ridge in the north and around Bastogne further to the south.
38:17The Americans had really solidified their positions.
38:20Although they had opened the line of communication through St. Vith,
38:23this in itself was simply not enough to allow the Germans to maintain their momentum.
38:28Furthermore, the weather was changing very much in the Allies' favour.
38:32During the early days of the Ardennes Offensive,
38:35the Germans had just the overcast and the snow that they needed
38:39to protect them from Allied air.
38:44However, starting on the 23rd of December 1944,
38:50the weather over the Ardennes becomes cold and clear,
38:56and the German protection from Allied fighter-bombers,
38:59and indeed heavy bombers, disappears.
39:03The Allied pilots would make their presence known over the battle zone
39:07and would help ensure the defeat of the German forces.
39:11They would achieve this by using very close air support
39:14and interdiction of German movement, especially supply columns,
39:18and by an aerial resupply of encircled US units.
39:28There now unfolded one of the most extraordinary events of the battle.
39:32Another key German unit committed to the offensive was the 150th Panzer Brigade.
39:38This force was under the command of Otto Skorzeny, a daring commando leader.
39:44For the Ardennes Offensive, they were ordered to act deep behind the enemy lines
39:48and cause panic and confusion.
39:52They also had the tasks of capturing vital river crossings
39:55and holding them long enough for the main force to reach them.
40:01They would make use of captured American jeeps and trucks,
40:04together with German tanks adapted to resemble American tank destroyers.
40:09A few individuals actually reached the Meuse River,
40:14but they did not have adequate support and had to abandon this position.
40:20Around the same time, groups of them began to get stopped and arrested
40:24by the Americans, who were growing increasingly suspicious.
40:28The rumours quickly spread that there were Germans operating behind the lines,
40:32posing as friendly forces.
40:34Skorzeny's commando is quite profound,
40:36because it leads to a feeling of something like panic at Eisenhower's headquarters.
40:40The news that Skorzeny has led commandos through the American lines
40:46begins to percolate around the American rear areas.
40:50So, at one level, Skorzeny's commando is not succeeding.
40:54At another, it is having a major effect, psychologically destabilizing.
41:01The psychological effect that this small force had upon the Allies
41:05far outweighed their small numbers.
41:08No-one escaped the paranoia,
41:10and even Eisenhower himself was confined to his headquarters for fear of assassination.
41:19Back in Lugliese, Peiper could see the hopelessness of the situation
41:23and the fear of being killed.
41:25Back in Lugliese, Peiper could see the hopelessness of the situation
41:30as his men were being shelled relentlessly by the American artillery and tanks.
41:35The American determination to defeat this force
41:38resulted in them firing over 58,000 shells into this area during the battle.
41:51Peiper was used to getting out of sticky situations,
41:53as he'd done many times before in Russia and Normandy.
41:57He gave the order that the tanks and half-tracks that were still serviceable
42:01were to be destroyed to prevent their use by the enemy.
42:04They were out of vital fuel, and there was no ammunition.
42:10He left a handful of his men behind to give the impression that they were still battling,
42:14and also to look after around 150 American prisoners they'd captured.
42:19He led a force of 800 survivors and made for German-held lines.
42:27Their attempts were risky, and more than once they became involved in firefights
42:32with American forces that were moving across Peiper's escape route.
42:36They did eventually reach friendly-held positions a few days later.
42:41Peiper had started with 5,000 men,
42:44and these losses in men and machines would be impossible to replace at this stage of the war.
43:00In Manteuffel's sector, the Americans slowly widened the corridor into Bastogne.
43:06The ferocity of the battles increased in intensity,
43:09as this area quickly became the focus of the entire struggle for both sides.
43:15The Americans pushed further reinforcements into the Bastogne area,
43:19including the 4th Armoured Division, the 26th Infantry, and the 80th Infantry Divisions.
43:25The Battle of the Bulge, as the Americans called the battle,
43:28was proving a very hard fight for both sides.
43:45As the Allies were able to push more forces into the area,
43:48they slowly succeeded in pushing the Germans back.
43:51By 2nd January 1945, the front line had been reduced by around 15 kilometres.
43:58It was also around this time that the British made their presence felt.
44:04In the early stages of the offensive, Montgomery had recognised the importance
44:08of the River Meuse to the Germans, and had placed strong British forces
44:12in a defensive position along the northern sector.
44:16He was also given command of some of the American forces.
44:19Eisenhower made a decision which politically could have been very, very dangerous.
44:24He actually appointed Montgomery as senior commander in the north,
44:29and that command actually took on quite a lump of the American army,
44:33and politically, from the American point of view, that could have been a bad move.
44:37But nevertheless, it was a good decision.
44:38Montgomery actually started to tidy up the front.
44:43Although very few British forces were actually involved directly
44:47in resisting the German offensive, the British role does warrant a mention.
44:52Certainly, the allocation of British forces to defend the Meuse river crossings,
44:57which was something that the British decided upon within a couple of days
44:59of the Ardennes offensive beginning, allowed the Americans to free up forces
45:04that could be used to advantage in the battle in the Ardennes itself.
45:08In addition, by putting Montgomery in charge of the American and British forces
45:14on the northern wing of the German penetration,
45:17this created a command and control arrangement that was much better suited
45:21to dealing with the German offensive
45:23than if the Americans had been in charge across the entire sector.
45:29When he felt the time was right,
45:31Montgomery launched a counterattack into the German lines
45:34with the objective of linking with the Americans further south.
45:39This objective was finally reached on January the 4th at the town of La Roche.
45:46This link-up put the river Meuse well and truly out of the reach of the Germans.
45:57Although the frontline German commanders and troops could see the hopelessness
46:01of the situation, Hitler could not.
46:04He ordered the advance to continue and achieve the original objective,
46:09but at this stage it was an increasingly difficult task.
46:16The Allied fighter-bombers rained their deadly blows down on the Germans,
46:21just as they'd done during the Normandy battles.
46:27A glimmer of hope appeared on the horizon for the Germans at the start of January
46:32when the Luftwaffe launched their own attacks.
46:35They committed around 1,000 planes and flew against Allied targets, including airfields.
46:41They managed to destroy around 300 Allied aircraft and damaged 25 Allied airfields.
46:48The cost, however, amounted to 100 aircraft and, more importantly,
46:53experienced pilots who could be ill-afforded.
46:56In total, the Germans lost 170 pilots and 67 were taken prisoner,
47:02so the Luftwaffe raid was ultimately a failure.
47:11Around the middle of January, some of the German units began to be withdrawn from the frontline.
47:17These withdrawals included the 1st SS Panzer Division,
47:21which had suffered badly during the operation.
47:24The remaining German units were placed under even more pressure
47:28due to this weakening of their overall forces.
47:38By the end of January, the front line was back to where it had been
47:42at the start of the German offensive six weeks earlier.
47:46The cost to both sides was high.
47:48The Allies lost around 75,000 men.
47:52The German cost stood at around 120,000 casualties
47:56and losses of considerable numbers of irreplaceable tanks and other vehicles.
48:04Hitler's last throw of the dice had failed.
48:48Thanks for watching!

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