CHAPTER 7
We got the news over the net piecemeal, and then three or four days later we had a formal announcement by a visiting staff officer, his shoes clearly unused to the snow and frozen mud that covered our leaguer and rest area. We formed the usual hollow square and he spoke in the usual public-school whine.
“Gentlemen, the Boche has attacked in numbers through the Ardennes, and our American friends have received rather an unpleasant Christmas present of a lot of tanks and men. Monty has decided that they are either attempting to split us from our friends, or perhaps recapture Antwerp, or both at once. They would appear to be using some of their better units, and unfortunately they chose a slack point to assail. Our man has a close eye on the situation and action will be taken when he has the full gen. I ask you, however, to ready yourselves for the fray. Everything shipshape and Bristol fashion, what?”
Wilf muttered next to my ear. “Don’t think Stan would look quite right with a funnel, lad”
The Major looked round at our weary faces, for that is how I am sure the lads were feeling, for it was how I felt. Rolling up the Germans had been messy and frightening, but it was steady work, and they were usually moving away from us. This was going right back to what we had suffered through in the Summer.
“Any questions, gentlemen?”
One of the lads I didn’t know had his hand up first. The Major pointed his stick at him.
“Yes?”
“Sir, these Ardennes. Aren’t they where Jerry came through in ’40?”
“Absolutely!”
“Then why weren’t they being watched this time round?”
The crisply turned-out officer gave a wry smile. “Well may you ask that question, my man, well may you ask it. For whatever reason, events have taken this course and we can but respond to them as best we can, as we must. Now, the weather has been beastly—“
There was a shout of “We have noticed—sir!” from some hidden man.
“Yes, yes. Rather inclement for you all, I am sure, but it is the effect on our aerial reconnaissance that is crucial for the present. That will mean we will require information about the Boche, his strengths, his deployment and movement, and we will have to acquire it in the old-fashioned way. Gentlemen, when Monty decides his course of action, you will be the eyes and ears of the entire army. We are assembling units back from that little adventure in Holland, but for the moment we will have to use those such as yourselves. All troop leaders remain with me. Dismissed!”
Wilf turned to me again. “Time for a brew?”
“Oh go on then. Get it while we can”
I could feel the double meaning in that one. I spent the next two hours checking every part I could of my weapons, and then helping the other lads stow the ammo. The order to move came early the next morning, as our captain held his own conference with the tank commanders, Bob included.
He was quiet when he came back. “It’s been bloody for the Yanks, boys. Bloody SS is back in the area, and they’ve got some of the new King Tigers as well a lot of Panthers. Monty has decided that we need to keep them away from some bridges, so we’re going to head down by the river and get hull-down as best we can. We’re not on a swan this time; Hussars have got that rubbish passed to them. Oh, one other thing: Jerries are using men dressed as our lot to bugger us about. Traffic signals, bogus Monkeys, that sort of thing. I’ve got hold of two of these for Stanley. Ginge, I’d like you to carry one”
He had two belts holding holsters, and I must have looked a bit puzzled.
“Two of us will be heads out, and getting a Tommy Gun through that hatch will be a right bastard job, so we’ll have these Webleys. Just in case, right?”
He sighed again. “Look, lad, if we get any of these fancy-dress artists they’ll look like MPs, and that means they’ll be close enough to speak to. Neither of your weapons will be able to bear on them, and Wilf can’t fire round corners, can he? Just take it, and try not to get it hooked up on anything important”
We moved off a couple of hours later, and the weight of the big .45 pistol on my belt felt odd. The snow was still coming down, and I had my goggles on as well as Mam’s balaclava helmet, my beret on top as I added my eyes to Bob’s. We reached the river, and Bob dismounted in his usual way to look for a decent place to lie up. As always, he wanted one with not just a decent exit to the rear but with at least one secondary hide to duck back to. I have always felt that the only reason I survived that long was because of his skill and eye for the land. Without him, I would have been dead several times over. As we waited, a jeep came along with a couple of Monkeys, military policemen, and I felt the hairs rise on the back of my neck. That sounds trite, but it was what I actually felt, as they tried to tangle with the wool of my balaclava.
Bob turned to them as they pulled up. “How do, lads”
“Very well, Sergeant. Just need you to resite. Jerry’s changed his line of advance, and you’re needed a couple of miles west of here”
“I’ve heard nowt on the net”
“Oh, there are big problems with radio reception at the moment”
Ernie shook his head sharply at that, pointing to the headset he was wearing while Bob was on his shufty. He tapped the right earpiece and gave me a clear thumbs up. I took out the heavy pistol and used my own thumb to remove the safety and then pulled the hammer back. Keep your finger outside the guard, Gerald…
I kept that hand down as I stood up, then brought it out under cover of the forward hatch cover.
“Where are these boys from, Robert?”
Something must have shown in my voice or expression, because I was never a good actor, and one of them grabbed for his own pistol as I shot him in what turned out to be the throat. Bob was wrestling with the other bastard but my scramble out of the turret turned into farce as the bloody holster caught on the bloody hatch. It was Wilf who was out first, sideways through his hatch and straight into it with a boot to the bastard’s back, then another and I was out and running, ramming the muzzle into the bastard’s face and feeling his teeth break. That was when he stopped struggling, and I began worrying that I had shot a real redcap and not a Jerry.
My target was still twitching, breath rattling in his throat, but he had sprayed so much blood everywhere that he was never going to live. Bob was up now, his opponent still down, my pistol still in his mouth.
“How’d you know, Ginge?”
“Ernie overheard. Net’s fine. Tried to give you a warning, like”
“Aye. That was right clever, lad. Now, take that gun out of his gob, but keep it by his face, close as you like, aye? Oh, and…”
I caught his gaze, and cocked the bloody pistol again. Shit.
Bob turned to our new friend as his own finally shut up and died. “Now then, Sunny Jim, who the fucking hell are you, and while you’re answering that, give me a fucking good reason why we shouldn’t just shoot you now”
Wilf was still breathing hard, clearly furious. “Shoot the bastard now, Ginge!”
Bob’s voice was quieter. “My decisions here, Wilf. Mine alone. Ernie, call up Sunray and get someone down here. Wilf, some rope out of the gash bin. Get this bastard nice and secure, quick as you like”
We trussed him from ankles to chest and left him lying in the snow. He asked one question, after giving us the usual litany of name, rank and number, which were still British. Lying bastard, I thought. His question was whether he could sit up out of the snow, and Bob’s answer was direct.
“Those uniforms you are wearing, those boots on your feet, that jeep, they came from at least two of my chums, two of my comrades, perhaps even two of my pals. I don’t care if you bloody well freeze your fucking bollocks off, because I am having difficulty in not shooting you in the belly and leaving you to bleed to death. So you lie there, quiet as you like, until my boss sends someone down to pick you up”
He turned to Stan. “Harry, twenty yards that way, there’s a big house with a front lawn. Dip in the lawn behind the hedge. Wilf, walk him into it”
Looking down at the dead man, he nodded to me. “That was good work, lad. But I think we need to work out some way of hanging these bloody things in the turret. If that had been you getting out after we got hit, you’d be toast now.”
He looked up and shouted after Wilf.
“Yes you can, lad! You know how we take it!”
The East Riding boys were down in half an hour, and they took both living and dead, using the jeep. When we got back to Stan, Wilf was grinning.
“Look what I found in their shed!”
Four big cans of whitewash and some brushes. Bob laughed out loud. “Nice one, son! We’ll finish this brew and get brushing. Ginge, one job for you, but has to be done”
He looked up the road to where he had fought with the German.
“Shovel some fresh snow over the stains, please”
Comments
I'm learning more and more from this story
I was not aware of the Germans doing this trick. Glad the lads didn't fall for it.
Famously
When the Yanks found out what was going on, they instituted check points. "What's the state capital of X, the name of Mickey's dog?"
General Bradley was held up because he correctly gave the Illinois state capital as Springfield, but the MP who stopped him thought it was Chicago. The scheme was coordinated by Otto Skorzeny, who was an unbelievable character. He managed to avoid being shot as a spy, in the end.
There were numerous mass shootings of prisoners, on both sides. It was not a clean campaign. In particular, there was a perception that any German who wore camouflage clothing was SS, and they were treated accordingly. Corporal Eyres' opinion of them from an earlier chapter was commonly held.
Disguised Tanks
If I remember correctly, during the Battle of the Bulge Germans went as far as camouflaging their armor to look like Allied tanks.
150 SS Panzer Brigade
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panzer_Brigade_150
ADDED LATER:
I see someone explained Operation Greif - ignore my post, then :)
It was actually featured in the
movie, Battle of the Bulge, but I wasn't aware it was that far reaching. While it got a bunch of things wrong it did catch the gist of things. Kelly's Heroes while it more a movie about the Vietnam War than WWII despite when it took place did have great scenes of a German Tiger that looked like a Tiger and of how fearsome they were.
That last bit shows how practical you have to be despite the gruesomeness. On the other hand, that white paint is damn near priceless for recon tank.
Great story!
hugs
Grover
Operation Greif
It was real, and it involved English-speaking troops in both USA and Brit uniforms. It caused an awful lot of confusion, and slowed the Allied response down considerably. Feel for Gerald, though. He has just killed his first man face to face, nearly separated head from shoulders, watched him bleed out in the snow. That's the reality. People argue about the big picture and forget what that did to the little pictures caught up in it.
Otto
For Operation Greif, he had somewhere in the neighborhood of a battalion of Germans running around behind the lines outfitted (mostly) as American and British MP's. They were quite convincing until the Allies determined what was going on and came up with ad-hoc means of Opsec to ferret them out.
Caught Up At Last
I have just read all seven chapters, and they are brilliantly written as usual. What else would I expect from you?
The Battle of the Bulge was, as I understand it, a last gasp effort by the Nazis, and ultimately failed because they ran out of fuel, not that I'm any expert on the details...just that I've read the usual books. That's not to discredit the resistance of the Allied soldiers once they got their act together and understood what was happening.
I've never seen combat and hope I never will, but I've had many friends and acquaintances who have and it's only the odd psychopath who remembers it with any fondness. I lost a grandfather in WW1 and my father-in-law would never talk about his time on the Western Front. I don't imagine it was any different in WW2. However, I do believe it was a war that we had to fight.
Here at home in Australia we have just signed a trade agreement with Japan, coinciding with a visit by the Japanese Prime Minister. Nothing wrong with that per se, but our Prime Minister made a speech saying how honourably the Japanese fought in the war. I don't think the 200,000 or more Chinese killed in Nanking or the prisoners in Changi in Singapore and on the Burma Railway or the Korean comfort women or the men on the death march in the Phillipines and many others who suffered at their hands would share his sentiments. Forgiveness is one thing but forgetfulness is another,
Joanne
Oh dear
That remark from Oz was rather...er... accommodating. I could add the bayoneting of patients on the operating table, or wounded men in their beds, or the herding of Australian nurses into the surf so as to machine gun them, all of which happened in places I have been, to the actual spot, when I lived in Singapore.
I am reminded of the obsession of a former Aussie PM, in chasing markets in Asia by stressing that Australia is an Asian country. "Not so", said the Indian premier, "It's a big chunk of Europe dropped into our middle"
I am assuming that the remarks about honour didn't go down too well at home.
Failure at the Bulge
One of the biggest factor's in the German failure in the battle is that they oould not widen the shoulders of the bulge. Because the American units at the flanks of the battle could not be budged from their positions the Germans were prevented from gaining some important early objectives. This also put the Allies in an excellent position to attack the Germans from their flanks once the Germans ran out of steam. Oh, another factor is the American Military's love of the "King of Battle", Artillery.
Forgiveness is one thing but forgetfulness is another,
Such bullshiting about honourable war conduct by the Axis has been around for years, sadly. But the PM is a jerk! I hope he loses the next election.
One of my first lessons in "don't believe everything you read" was the dust jacket of a book about the Luftwaffe, which had "honourable" somewhere there. As I knew that one of my father's first memories was being strafed by the Luftwaffe when he was four and half years old, in a column of civilian refugees, I felt that something was wrong with that dust jacket.
at Bastone the us general
at Bastone the us general when asked to give up told them NUTS . 101 tough nuts those boys. cut of held the crossroads.They were all brave boys.
A nice song and video about the 101st :)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kJVkE14kjhE
Bastogne is somewhere in the video by those nice boys from Sweden with too long hair :D