Armageddon (105 page)

Read Armageddon Online

Authors: Max Hastings

Tags: #History, #Fiction, #Non-Fiction, #War

BOOK: Armageddon
8.51Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub


Ils ne payent pas
”: Ibid., p. 610.

“Russians had a stereotype”: Yelena Senyavshaya,
Journal Voenno-Istorichesky Archiv,
no. 2 (26), 2000, p. 116.

“I can’t say we liked”: Ibid.

“Come on, we said”: Ibid., p. 119.

“Lieutenant Valentin Krulik”: AI Valentin Krulik.

“As Major Dmitry Kalafati”: AI Dmitry Kalafati.

“Lieutenant Vladimir Gormin”: AI Vladimir Gormin.

“I was indignant that”: AI Yulia Pozdnyakova.

“Three of our agents”: 1.14.45, RSA Stalin files.

“I do not believe that”: Quoted Walter Isaacson and Evan Thomas,
The Wise Men
(Faber: 1986), p. 244.

“The British would take”: FDR to Stettinius, 3.17.45.

“We spoke very little”: AI Yury Ryakhovsky.

“It was a pity”: AI Pavel Nikiforov.

“Complex feelings of insecurity”: Orlando Figes,
Natasha’s Dance
(Weidenfeld & Nicolson: 2002), p. 63.

“They are aware”: Sebastian, op. cit., p. 618.

“I was filled with”: Milovan Djilas,
Wartime
(Secker & Warburg: 1980), p. 391.

“John Erickson, British”: John Erickson,
The Road to Berlin
(Weidenfeld & Nicolson: 1983), p. 314.

“In those days”: AI W. F. Deedes.

“Normandy had been”: AI Captain “Dim” Robbins.

“We thought: that’s it”: Jackson letter to the author, 8.10.2001.

“we were told that”: AI Captain “Dim” Robbins.

“Everything is going”: George Turner-Cain Diary, LHA.

“A Jerry gives himself”: John M. Thorpe, unpublished MS “A Soldier’s Tale,” G. P. B. Roberts Papers, LHA.

“Dear Mum”: Gow Papers, IWM, Cons. shelf.

“We could not believe our eyes”: Rudolf Lehmann and Ralf Tiemann,
The Leibstandarte, Parts iv/1 and iv/2:
(J. J. Fedorowicz Publishing: 1993), p. 237.

“Well, that’s it then”: AI Fritz van den Broek.

“It was a glorious feeling”: AI Theodore Wempe.

“This period was made up”: Brigadier J. S. W. Stone, MS, LHA.

“As we went across France”: Hansen Papers, box 39a, USAMHI.

“Early victory in”: H. G. Nicholas ed.,
Washington Despatches 1941–45
(Weidenfeld & Nicolson: 1981), p. 418.

“The Allied Control Commission”: F. S. V. Donnison,
Civil Affairs and Military Government: North-West Europe 1944–46
(HMSO: 1961), p. 72.

“Until mid-September”: Pogue, op. cit., p. 189.

“It is at least as likely”: Quoted F. H. Hinsley and others,
British Intelligence in the Second World War,
vol. iii, part 2 (HMSO: 1988), p. 179.

“[It] is tolerably certain”: Ibid.

“Brad believes the Germans”: Hansen Diary, USAMHI.

“The Allies should be”: Second Army, MD.

“Our only hope”: Ibid.

“We were amazed that”: AI Helmut Günther.

“For the thousands locked up”: Von Stemann, unpublished MS, IWM, p. 182.

“and then the war will be over”: Ibid., p. 185.

“It is dreadful to read”: Second Army MD.

“My nerves are bad”: Ibid.

“Today is Sunday”: Ibid.

“Asked whether they still believed”: Ibid.

“a belief that I had”: AI Hans-Otto Polluhmer.

“Eugen Ernst”: AI Stolten.

“An American survey of”: Quoted Omer Bartov,
Hitler’s Army
(Oxford University Press: 1991), p. 144.

“We reached a point where”: Quoted Michael Reynolds,
Men of Steel
(Spellmount: 1999), p. 39.

“We recognized that”: AI Bruno Bochum.

“Throughout August”: Charles Richardson,
Send for Freddie
(Kimber: 1987), p. 164.

“Both Antwerp and Rotterdam”: L. F. Ellis,
Victory in the West,
vol. ii (HMSO: 1968), p. 5.

“Had any indication been given”: G. P. B. Roberts,
From the Desert to the Baltic
(Kimber: 1987), p. 212.

“quite unfit to command troops”: BLM to Commodore William Hayes, quoted Jeffrey Williams,
The Long Left Flank
(Leo Cooper: 1985), p. 22.

“The C-in-C intimated”: Crerar Papers, quoted ibid., p. 35.

“Crerar refused to raise the issue”: Ibid., p. 38.

“a bad mistake—I underestimated”: Field-Marshal the Viscount Montgomery,
Memoirs
(Collins: 1958), p. 297.

“blamed himself specifically”: Richardson, op. cit., p. 161.

“grew steadily more”: Ibid., p. 166.

“Transport, signals and heavy”: Second Army MD.

“My men can eat their belts”: Murray and Millett, op. cit., p. 433.

“In September, 1,400”: David Fletcher,
British Military Transport
(HMSO: 1956), p. 109.

“utter disregard of property”: 1.23.45, NA, RG492–332, box 12.

“In the ten days ending”: PRO, WO106/4348.

“I am being attacked”: Quoted Carlo d’Este,
Patton: A Genius for War
(Harper-Collins: 1995), p. 662.

“The movement naturally produced”: Ronald Ruppenthal,
The Logistical Support of the Armies,
vol. ii (Department of the Army: 1959), p. 31.

“lethargy and smugness”: Ibid., p. 349.

“Lee . . . never ceased”: Ibid., p. 362.

“an efficient little shit”: C. P. Stacey,
A Date with History
(Deneau: 1984), p. 135.

“The difference between him”: Goronwy Rees,
A Bundle of Sensations
(London: 1960), p. 174.

“We had total faith”: AI Roy Dixon.

“I’ve just been sacked”: O’Connor MSS 11/14, LHA.

“A member of Montgomery’s staff”: T. E. B. Howarth private communication to the author. Howarth, one of Montgomery’s liaison officers, edited a collection of personal reminiscences about the field-marshal,
Monty at Close Quarters
(Leo Cooper: 1985). He told me the above story, expressing regret that he had felt obliged to exclude it from the anthology, “because I don’t think the world’s quite ready for it yet.” I am happy to remedy the omission.

“was sowing the seeds”: Lord Tedder,
With Prejudice
(Cassell: 1966), p. 586.

“There was a confusion of”: Richardson, op. cit., p. 163.

“to hustle all”: Harry Butcher,
My Three Years with Eisenhower
(Simon & Schuster: 1946), p. 551.

“Have you not got”: Field-Marshal Lord Alanbrooke,
War Diaries 1939–1945
(Weidenfeld & Nicolson: 2001), p. 226.

“Whatever balls-ups”: AI Field-Marshal Lord Bramall.

“almost with a physical pain”: Ladislas Farago,
Patton: Ordeal and Triumph
(Dell Books: 1979), p. 647.

“I am no Montgomery-lover”: WBS to DDE, 4.1.48, Smith Papers quoted Carlo d’Este,
Eisenhower
(HarperCollins: 2003), p. 581.

“Brad and Patton agree”: Hansen Diary, op. cit.

“The national press is”: Turner-Cain Diary, op. cit.

“My own choice of”: DDE to BLM, 9.20.44, Papers of Field-Marshal Viscount Montgomery.

CHAPTER TWO: THE BRIDGES TO ARNHEM

“No wife or mother”: Winston S. Churchill,
The Second World War,
vol. v,
Closing The Ring
(Cassell: 1952), p. 583.

“Brereton”: Hansen Diary, op. cit.

“I am for the latter”: General James Gavin Diary, box 8, USAMHI.

“This is the end”: AI W. F. Deedes.

“Yet when Bedell-Smith”: Charles B. MacDonald,
The Siegfried Line Campaign
(Office of the Chief of Military History: 1963), p. 122.

“[Browning] unquestionably lacks”: Gavin Diary, op. cit.

“We called it Operation KCB”: AI John Killick.

“It looks very rough”: Gavin Diary, op. cit., 9.12.44.

“De Guingand telephoned”: Richardson, op. cit., p. 164.

“Montgomery’s jealousy of”: AI General Sir David Fraser.

“We feared we’d never”: AI Bob Peatling.

“the biggest and thickest men”: AI Jack Reynolds.

“There is no doubt”: Julius Neave Diary, IWM, 98/23/1.

“we were young”: AI John Killick.

“More than life itself”: Jack Curtis Goldman,
Tales of a Combat Glider Pilot
(privately published: 2000), p. 94.

“We were really happy”: Ibid., p. 97.

“those whom the MO thought”: Trinder MS, IWM, 85/8/1.

“These soldiers were thinking”: I should acknowledge a debt to Robert Kershaw’s excellent study of the German experience at Arnhem,
It Never Snows in September
(Crowood: 1990), for much eyewitness testimony and significant insights into the German tactical conduct of the battle.

“ ‘Idiots!’ we thought”: AI Wolfgang Dombrowski.

“Head for the sound of gunfire!”: AI Erwin Heck.

“They were so beaten”: Quoted Kershaw, op. cit., p. 105.

“Take that fucking”: AI John Killick.

“Peatling returned after an hour”: AI Bob Peatling.

“On Monday morning”: AI Jack Reynolds.

“In some ways”: AI John Killick.

“A tall, lithe figure”: Chester Wilmot,
The Struggle for Europe
(Collins: 1952), p. 470.

“At the time”: AI General Sir David Fraser.

“Captain Karl Godau”: AI Karl Godau.

“Jack Reynolds and his unit”: AI Jack Reynolds.

“There was a lot of toing”: AI Ron Graydon.

“In his lonely attic”: AI Bob Peatling.

“I was amazed by their stupidity”: James Gavin MS, “Beyond the Stars,” p. 91, Gavin Papers, USAMHI.

“Ridgway himself, that very”: Clay Blair,
Ridgway’s Paratroopers
(Dial Press: 1985), p. 341.

“A British tank commander”: Andy Cropper,
Dad’s War
(Anmas Publications: 1995).

“One of the worst sights”: Thorpe MS, op. cit., LHA.

“Very bitter fighting”: Turner-Cain Diary, op. cit., LHA.


Intention:
12 KRRC”: Operation order in possession of Major W. F. Deedes.

“Keep up lads”: N. L. Francis MS, IWM, 88/58/1.

“Brigadier arrived in the p.m.”: Neave Diary, op. cit., 9.25.44, IWM.

“In the years to come”: Quoted
The Brereton Diaries
(William Morrow: 1946), p. 371.

“The soldiers who beat back”: Second Army MD, 12.8.44.

“Private Bob Peatling”: AI Bob Peatling.

“There was considerable”: Wilmot, op. cit., p. 519.

“it is arguable that Eisenhower”: Geoffrey Powell,
The Devil’s Birthday
(Buchan & Enright: 1984), p. 252.

“Sergeant Erwin Heck”: AI Erwin Heck.

“It was pretty dismaying”: AI John Killick.

“Lieutenant Jack Reynolds”: AI Jack Reynolds.

“When Corporal Denis Thomas”: AI Denis Thomas.

“Gavin of the U.S. 82nd”: James Gavin,
On to Berlin
(Viking: 1978), p. 232.

“Air Chief Marshal Sir Arthur Harris”: To the author, 8.4.77.

“The enemy has gained”: British Second Army Intelligence Report.

“the Germans would have”: Freddie de Guingand MS, “Arnhem—A Note for Posterity,” quoted Richardson, op. cit., p. 166.

CHAPTER THREE: THE FRONTIERS OF GERMANY

“The Allied drive lost”: Report of General Board of U.S. Forces in ETO, “Strategy of Campaign in North-West Europe 1944–45,” USAMHI.

“In one of the Moselle bridgeheads at Comy”: NA, RG492–332, box 11.

“We lost time because”: Ibid.

“Every day seems like the day”: Reimers Papers, USAMHI.

“Von Rundstedt’s deployments”: Wilmot, op. cit., p. 482.

“I took a dim view”: NA, RG492–332, box 11.

“Bradley argued that”: Hansen Papers, box 39a, USAMHI.

Other books

Me After You by Hayes, Mindy
Raistlin, mago guerrero by Margaret Weis
The Long Road to Gaia by Timothy Ellis
Musician's Monsoon by Brieanna Robertson
All I Ever Wanted by Vikki Wakefield
Room 13 by Edgar Wallace
Exit Plan by Larry Bond