The following document is from the
book "Riviera to the Rhine" by Jeffery J Clarke and Robert Ross
Smith, published in 1993. It is a volume of the Army's official
history of World War Two. The chapter reproduced here is Operation
Northwind, 492-512. Text only has been reproduced with the
permission of the Center for Military History. Numbers in
parentheses are footnotes which are listed at the end of the
narrative.
Chapter
XXVII
Northwind
When the Germans began their Ardennes
offensive on 16 December 1944, the 6th Army Group was preparing for
a new thrust into German territory and making another try at the
Colmar Pocket. At first Devers had hoped that the German focus in
the north would facilitate his own offensives. But this expectation
was quickly dispelled by Eisenhower's decision on the 19th to have
the 6th Group halt all offensive operations and assume a significant
portion of the Third Army's area of responsibility. The subsequent
realignment placed Devers' forces in an awkward position. For the
moment the front of the 6th Army Group remained stable, but
resembled a reverse letter S with its double bulge-a northern one
between Saarbrucken and Strasbourg, with the Haguenau forest and the
town of Lauterbourg at its apex, and a southern one north of
Mulhouse around the city of Colmar. Eisenhower's order froze Patch's
Seventh Army in the upper portion of the reverse S and de Lattre's
First French Army in the lower half. In the north, the U.S. XV Corps
held a narrow alley across the Sarre River valley between
Saarbrucken and Bitche, and the U.S. VI Corps occupied the
Lauterbourg bulge, or salient-a large, rolling plain bounded by the
Franco-German border, with the small Lauter River on the north and
the larger Rhine River on the east. South of Strasbourg, the Colmar
Pocket bowed the front of the First French Army inward, forcing it
to disperse its units in a semicircle around the German held
salient. The French 11 Corps occupied the northern perimeter of the
pocket from the Rhine to the High Vosges, and the French I Corps
held the southern sector above the Belfort Gap. As the army group
slowly made the transition from offensive to defensive operations,
its commanders recognized that their long curving front lines were
particularly unsuited for the new mission.
In mid-December the 6th Army Group
could muster roughly eighteen divisions: two armored and six
infantry in the U.S. Seventh Army and three armored and seven
infantry the French First.(1) Although all were combat effective,
many had been worn thin by the heavy winter campaigning, and others
were still relatively new and untested. Only two of the armored
divisions, the French Ist and 2d, could be considered experienced,
and the U.S. 12th had just recently arrived. In addition, all were
suffering severe shortages in supplies, equipment, and manpower
because of the increased demands of the northern armies and the
still limited logistical support available to the Allied ground
combat forces throughout the theater. A new corps headquarters, the
U.S. XXI, had also recently arrived in the 6th Army Group's area,
but was likewise inexperienced with few supporting forces.
Initially the opposing German forces
were in worse condition. Most of the German Army's better-equipped
and better-manned units were in Field Marshal Walter Model's Army
Group B, which was fighting in the Ardennes; the offensive there had
diverted German supplies, equipment, and manpower away from the
Vosges-Alsace sector. The creation of Army Group Oberrhein on 10
December had further encumbered German operations in the south.(2)
The new headquarters was completely independent of von Rundstedt's
OB West, and its creation had divided command and control of the
German forces that were opposite the 6th Army Group between von
Obstfelder's First Army, under Army Group G and OB West, which was
above the Lauterbourg salient, and Rasp's Nineteenth Army, under
Army Group Oberrhein, which was below it. Altogether these forces
amounted to about twenty divisions, but many were at half strength
and some could field only a few thousand combat troops. Although
Himmler's political influence gradually increased the manpower,
supplies, and materiel available to the upper Rhine front, the
Ardennes battlefield continued to receive the largest share of
German military resources for the moment. Once the main German
offensive began to bog down, however, the eyes of Hitler and OKW
turned south.
Planning
Operation Northwind
(21-27 December 1944)
By 21 December the German high command
had begun to examine its operational alternatives on the
battlefield. The momentum of Amy Group B's attack in the Ardennes
had begun to dissipate, the important road junction at Bastogne was
still in American hands, and pressure on the southern flank of the
German advance was steadily mounting as Patton wheeled his Third
Army north.(3) However, both Hitler and von Rundstedt realized that
the Allies had greatly weakened their southern army group to meet
the Ardennes thrust and believed that a fresh German offensive in
the south could exploit this weakness. At the very least it would
bring some relief to Model's hard-pressed forces in the Ardennes.
Von Rundstedt's staff at OB West
initially proposed an attack north of Saarbrucken by Army Group G
toward Metz, threatening to envelop either Patton's Third Army to
the north or Patch's Seventh in the south. But Hitler and von
Rundstedt quickly concluded that they lacked the resources for such
an ambitious undertaking. Instead Hitler, who had moved his
headquarters from Berlin to Command Post Adlerhorst near Bad Nauheim
in early December in orderto keep a close watch over the entire
campaign, approved an attack south of the Saarbrucken area toward
the Saverne Gap, with the goal of splitting the U.S. Seventh Army
and clearing northern Alsace. If successful, the German high command
intended to launch a second series of attacks from the Sarre valley-Saverne
area toward Luneville, Metz, and the rear of Patton's Third Army,
tentatively code-named Operation ZAHNARZT ("Dentist").(4) Von
Rundstedt ordered General Blaskowitz, who had returned to replace
Balck as the Army Group G commander on 22 December, to begin
planning immediately and authorized the rehabilitation of two mobile
divisions (panzer or panzer grenadier) to form the core of the
attacking force.
In the days that followed, the German
military leaders debated several operational plans. Hitler favored a
main effort southeast of Saarbrucken along the Sarre River valley to
Phalsbourg and the Saverne Gap. The attacking forces could be
concentrated fairly easily using the road and rail net around
Saarbrucken, and the axis of advance was relatively flat with enough
roads to support a rapid armored thrust. But von Rundstedt and
Blaskowitz were uneasy over their shortage of armor and lack of air
support, and argued that the open nature of the Sarre River valley
made it too dangerous for a successful offensive.
Instead, they favored a main effort
farther east, from the Bitche sector in the Vosges, judging that the
heavily forested hills and mountains would offer the attackers cover
from Allied air observation and interdiction during the critical
first phase of the attack. In addition, about half of the large
Maginot Line fortresses around Bitche were still in German hands,
providing cover and concealment for the assembly areas. Although
road communications into the Bitche area and along the projected
Vosges line of advance were more limited, the two generals believed
that swiftly moving infantry could exploit what they suspected was a
weakly defended gap in the American lines between the Seventh Army's
two corps; with their infantry units gradually pushing south to the
Saverne Gap, they could send their mobile panzer reserves into
either the Sarre River valley on the west or the Alsatian plains on
the east.
Both plans had serious disadvantages. A
Sarre River offensive would have to pass through the American
occupied portion of the Maginot Line and would be open to Allied air
attacks during daylight hours. A drive from Bitche through the
Vosges Mountains, on the other hand, would leave the XV Corps and
the bulk of the American armored forces free to counterattack the
western flank of the advance. In addition, both plans assumed
supporting attacks by Army Group Oberrhein to keep the U.S. VI Corps
occupied, actions over which OB West had no control or authority.
On 27 December Hitler, von Rundstedt,
and Blaskowitz approved a rough compromise. Under the operational
control of the First Army, one panzer grenadier and one infantry
division would punch a hole in the American Sarre River valley
defenses, while four refitted infantry divisions would push off from
the Bitche area along a southwest axis of advance through the
Vosges. Blaskowitz would keep his strongest units, the equivalent of
two panzer divisions, in reserve to exploit any breakthrough.
However, on Hitler's instructions, the
reserve units were to remain in the Saarbrucken area in the
expectation that the main effort would develop along the Sarre River
valley. In addition, Blaskowitz's request that units of Army Group
Oberrhein launching supporting attacks be placed under Army Group
G's jurisdiction was disapproved, as was his proposal to delay the
start of the offensive until more troops and materiel could be
assembled. Hitler informed Blaskowitz that Army Group Oberrhein
would launch supporting attacks north and south of Strasbourg, but
only after the main effort down the Sarre River valley corridor had
been successful. He also felt that speed was essential, and he
scheduled the beginning of the First Army's two northern attacks-one
down the Sarre valley and the other through the Low Vosges-for New
Year's Eve 1944. Code-named NORDWIND ("Northwind"), these attacks
would begin the last major German offensive of the European war.
The Defense
of Strasbourg
(26 December 1944-1 January 1945)
In the Allied camp the rapid shift from
offensive to defensive operations had created both military and
political problems for the 6th Army Group.(5) Initially Eisenhower
had directed Devers to cease all offensive operations while the
Ardennes battle remained unresolved and to shorten his own defensive
lines in order to make more forces available for the struggle in the
north. Elaborating on these guidelines on 26 December, he ordered
the 6th Army Group to pull its "main line of defense" back to the
Vosges Mountains, compressing its elongated front and making one
corps headquarters, with one armored and one infantry division,
immediately available for theater reserve. Despite Allied successes
in the Ardennes, Eisenhower judged the final outcome still in doubt;
he had also become alarmed at new intelligence reports pointing to
another German military buildup opposite the Seventh Army. As a
result, he wanted Devers to pull the VI Corps completely out of the
Lauterbourg salient as soon as possible. A meeting between
Eisenhower and Devers the following day in Paris confirmed the
directive and the new Allied intelligence. Devers, however, was
convinced that this second German offensive would most likely come
down the Sarre River valley, well north of the exposed salient, and
did not attach any urgency to the projected withdrawal. In fact, the
6th Army Group commander came Away from the conference impressed
with the need to hold Strasbourg as well as other significant urban
centers in northern Alsace.(6)
On returning to his headquarters on 28
December, General Devers instructed Patch to have the VI Corps
prepare three intermediate withdrawal positions to be occupied only
"in the face of heavy attack," as well as a final defensive line on
the eastern slopes of the Vosges. The first intermediate position
was to follow the trace of the American-held portions of the Maginot
Line just inside the Franco-German border; the second was to lie
between Bitche, Niederbronn, and Bischwiller (on the Falkenstein,
Zintsel, and Moder rivers); and the third would be between Bitche,
Ingwiller, and Strasbourg. A final defensive position would pull the
VI Corps all the way back to the Vosges. But Devers saw no need to
carry out any of these withdrawals until a more specific threat
presented itself and therefore indicated no execution dates for
them. Instead he transferred Leclerc's 2d Armored Division from the
First French Army to the American Seventh to further beef up Patch's
command and make up for the projected loss of an American armored
division to the SHAEF reserve.(7)
General Eisenhower's concern over the
ability of Brooks' VI Corps to hold the exposed Lauterbourg salient
against a determined German attack was understandable. The terrain
occupied by the Seventh Army was difficult to defend. The lower
Vosges mountain range bisected its front, greatly limiting lateral
movement between the XV and VI Corps to several easily interdicted
mountain roads. A German drive southwest, either through the Low
Vosges or along its eastern or western slopes, would threaten the
flanks of both American corps; and if the Saverne Gap area, just
twenty miles inside the American lines, fell, the entire VI Corps
within the Lauterbourg salient would be trapped. The threat of a
complementary German attack from the south by forces from the Colmar
Pocket only made SHAEF more nervous, as did the Allied failure to
predict the Ardennes offensive. Perhaps the Allied high command had
been relying too heavily on ULTRA and other sophisticated sources
and had now simply given up attempting to second-guess German
intentions. Whatever the case, Eisenhower continued to insist that
Devers withdraw his forces from the salient as quickly as possible
and pull his defensive lines all the way back to the eastern slopes
of the Vosges Mountains. The shift would greatly reduce the
defensive responsibilities of the Seventh Army, making it easier to
concentrate forces in the Sarre River valley or, if necessary,
dispatch more reinforcements to the Ardennes.
Once again Devers questioned the wisdom
of Eisenhower's operational guidance. Despite the Supreme
Commander's clear-cut instructions on the matter, the 6th Army Group
chief remained reluctant to make such a major withdrawal without
cause. Patch supported him, regarding it as "a terrifically
difficult proposition to give up a strong defensive position when
you feel confident that you can hold it," and both dragged their
feet in executing the order.(8) The delay finally led to an angry
call by Eisenhower's chief of staff, General Bedell Smith, on New
Year's Day, relaying the Supreme Commander's displeasure over the
Seventh Army's failure to carry out the withdrawal and ordering
Devers to issue the necessary instructions at once.(9) But Devers
had more than one reason to put off the matter. As Patch had pointed
out to him earlier, Eisenhower's more extensive withdrawal concept
would uncover the entire northern Alsatian plains, including the
city of Strasbourg, and would have great political ramifications for
the Allied alliance.
Violent French objections to any hint
of abandoning Strasbourg or northern Alsace without a fight were
predictable. De Gaulle had learned of the withdrawal planning almost
immediately on 28 December; two days later he had General Alphonse
Juin, his chief of staff in the Ministry of National Defense, send a
strong protest to SHAEF, accompanied by an offer of three newly
formed FFI divisions to help defend Strasbourg city if necessary. De
Gaulle personally restated the French position on 1 January 1945,
conceding that it might be necessary to abandon the salient but
demanding that Strasbourg be defended at all costs. Believing Allied
forces could use the city to anchor a defensible east-west line
along the Rhine-Marne Canal, he warned that French forces would
defend Strasbourg "no matter what comes." On the same day he also
sent a direct communication to de Lattre, outlining his stand and
ordering the First French Army commander, "in the eventuality that
the Allied Forces retire from their present positions to the north .
. . to take in hand and assure the defense of Strasbourg." The Free
French leader was prepared to challenge the Allied high command in
order to spare the city an almost certainly vengeful German
reoccupation. Finally, on the night of 2-3 January, Juin had a long
conference with Eisenhower's chief of staff over the matter and
relayed de Gaulle's threat to withdraw the First French Army from
SHAEF control if Strasbourg was abandoned.(10) Simultaneously de
Lattre began making unilateral plans to pull the 3d Algerian
Division out of the High Vosges to defend the city.(11) The
controversy thus threatened to disrupt the entire Allied chain of
command and greatly complicate the Allied response to fresh German
offensive in Alsace.
Preparations
for the Attack
(27-31 December 1944)
As the Allied leaders debated the fate
of Strasbourg, the two contenders prepared for a final struggle in
northern Alsace. Between 27 and 30 December the First Army withdrew
the designated assault divisions from their defensive sectors, which
stretched the fronts of the remaining divisions thin, and attempted
to cover the many gaps with fortress units and a miscellany of odd
formations, especially recently formed Volkssturm militia. While the
signal elements of the departing units remained temporarily in place
to give the impression of normalcy, the German staffs shunted scarce
supplies, equipment, and replacements into anemic units and moved
artillery into supporting positions. Opposite the U.S. XV Corps,
which was defending the Sarre River valley area, General Max Simon's
XIII SS Corps readied NORDWIND's primary assault force, consisting
of the 17th SS Panzer Grenadier ("Gotz von Berlichingen") and the
36th Volksgrenadier Divisions, the 404th and 410th Volks Artillery
Corps, the 20th Volks Werfer (rocket-launcher) Brigade, two armored
flame-thrower companies, two army artillery battalions, and one
observation battalion. In the Bitche area the second attacking force
consisted of General Petersen's XC Corps on the right, or western,
wing, controlling the strengthened 559th and 257th Volksgrenadier
Divisions, and General Hoehne's LXXXIX Corps on the left, or
eastern, wing, with the refitted 361st and 256th Volksgrenadier
Divisions. The Vosges forces were also beefed up by additional
self-propelled and assault guns, supported by two army artillery
battalions and an army engineer battalion, and later reinforced by
the experienced 6th SS Mountain Division as it arrived from the
defunct Finnish front. In reserve, temporarily under the direct
control of Army Group G, lay the XXXIX Panzer Corps, under Lt. Gen.
Karl Decker, with the requipped 21st Panzer and 25th Panzer
Grenadier Divisions-the former with 18 medium (Mark IV) and 31 heavy
(Mark V) Panther tanks, and the latter with 9 medium and 20 heavies,
with about 20 additional Panthers and more assault and
self-propelled guns en route, which had been temporarily delayed by
Allied air attacks on the German transportation network. To further
strengthen the reserve forces and serve as a basis for Operation
ZAHNARZT, OB West began preparations for assembling the 10th SS
Panzer Division, the 7th Parachute Division, and other units behind
the lines of the First Army.(12)
Blaskowitz obviously would have
preferred assembling all of these units first and giving the initial
assault forces more time to train replacements and break in new
equipment. But further delays threatened to end what was clearly a
fleeting tactical opportunity to penetrate the weakened Seventh Army
lines. Not even his "Arrow Flash" convoys-the equivalent of the
American "Red Ball Express"-were able to negotiate the maze of
tangled lines and broken bridges behind the front lines with any
speed. Just prior to the offensive, Blaskowitz thus agreed to
strengthen the attacking 17th SS Panzer Grenadiers with a company of
Panthers (ten heavy tanks) from the 21st Panzers to ensure the
success of the initial assault. By that time he had also received
one company of the 653d Superheavy Antitank Battalion with a few
monstrous seventy-ton, 128-mm.- gunned jagdtigers (turretless
assault guns based on the Mark VI "Royal Tiger" chassis). This gave
him about eighty tanks, mostly heavies, in reserve to exploit any
breakthrough at the beginning of the operation, with more armor on
the way.(13)
On the morning of 28 December
Blaskowitz brought his attacking corps and division commanders to OB
West headquarters at Ziegenberg and then, after a twenty-minute bus
ride, to Hitler's Adlerhorst for a personal pep talk by the Fuhrer.
For most of the participants, it was the first time that they had
ever seen their supreme commander in person. Although physically in
poor condition, Hitler led off with a fifty-minute speech that
showed he had lost none of his personal magnetism. Despite
tremendous sacrifices, he conceded, the Ardennes offensive had
failed. Perhaps no one was to blame. With the Russians threatening
in the east, however, he impressed on them that defeat in the
forthcoming offensive was unthinkable. The Western Allies had to be
stopped and their offensive capabilities so badly damaged that most
of Germany's military strength could be devoted to the eastern front
in the months ahead. To accomplish this the German Army had to keep
the initiative, attacking the Allied forces wherever they were weak
and using speed to avoid being crushed by Allied materiel
superiority. Hitler discussed the details of the forthcoming
operation individually with each commander, continually emphasizing
both its necessity and its possibility for success. To all he
stressed that the objective of NORDWIND was neither terrain nor
prestige, but "manpower . . . the destruction of enemy forces."(14)
Preparations
for the Defense
(19-31 December 1944)
For the American soldiers in the
Seventh Army, the last two weeks of December were also busy as
commanders reoriented their units from offensive to defensive
postures.(15) Between 19 and 26 December, Patch's forces took over
large portions of the Third Army's front, thus allowing Patton to
shift more forces into the Ardennes sector. As a result, the Seventh
Army found itself holding a front of about 126 miles-84 miles from
the Saarbrucken area east to Lauterbourg, and another 42 miles south
along the Rhine-with only six infantry divisions. This worked out to
about twenty miles of front per division, six miles per regiment, or
two per battalion-with the two armored divisions in reserve. Patch
believed he had no choice but to use the Low Vosges as a dividing
line between his two corps and placed his own headquarters at
Saverne, directly behind the middle of his defenses. Expecting the
main German attack down the Sarre River corridor, he concentrated
the bulk of his strength in General Haislip's XV Corps, west of the
Vosges, with three infantry divisions-the 103d, 44th, and 100th-on
line covering about thirty-five miles of total frontage, backed by
the new 12th Armored Division. East of the Vosges, General Brooks'
VI Corps held the upper, open portion of the salient, from Bitche to
Lauterbourg, with the 45th and 79th Divisions, while using the 36th
Division to cover its Rhine River front from Lauterbourg south to
Strasbourg; the 14th Armored Division was his reserve. Although not
enthusiastic about abanoning the Lauterbourg salient, both Devers
and Patch agreed that Brooks should start pulling his forces back at
the first sign of a major German attack.
Even before these dispositions could be
finalized, Devers passed SHAEF's requirements for two divisions down
to the Seventh Army. Although he could ill afford to spare them,
Patch promptly nominated the 36th Infantry and 12th Armored
Divisions for the SHAEF reserve. Their departures left his defensive
lines paper thin. As a partial remedy, Devers brought Leclerc's 2d
Armored Division back and began rushing elements of three new
infantry divisions-the 42d, 63d, and 70th-into the battle area. All
three were untested units that had recently disembarked at Marseille
and arrived at the front with little besides their infantry
regiments. Without waiting for their attached artillery, armor, and
other supporting elements, Patch organized them into task forces,
each consisting of the three infantry regiments and a small command
group led by the designated assistant division commander. Task Force
Linden controlled the 42d Division's regiments, Task Force Harris
those of the 63d, and Task Force Herren, those of the 70th.(16)
These three formations together with Leclerc's armor would have to
fill in the many gaps in the Seventh Army's lines.
With these additions and losses, Patch
reorganized his defenses, initially placing the inexperienced
infantrymen of Task Forces Linden, Harris, and Herren along the
Rhine River front under the VI Corps. He later transferred two of
Task Force Harris' regiments as well-as the entire French 2d Armored
Division north to the Sarre River valley area to bolster Haislip's
XV Corps. In his center, southeast of Bitche, Patch inserted a small
mechanized screening force to cover the Vosges area between
Haislip's 100th Infantry Division in the north and Brooks' 45th
Division in the south. This element, Task Force Hudelson, consisted
of two cavalry squadrons, a detached armored infantry battalion, and
a few supporting detachments. A similar screening force held the
extreme left, or northeastern, flank of the Seventh Army, in the
crease separating the XV Corps from the Third Army's XII Corps. In
reserve was the bulk of the 14th Armored Division in the VI Corps
zone, while the French 2d Armored Division performed the same
function for the XV Corps. The withdrawn 12th Armored and 36th
Infantry Divisions remained uncommitted, but were also in the
Seventh Army's rear area around Sarrebourg and available in an
emergency. Still expecting a major German thrust down the Sarre
River valley but unsure of the location and magnitude of secondary
offensives, Devers moved his own advance headquarters from
Phalsbourg in the Saverne Gap area to Luneville, forty miles to the
rear. Nevertheless, he allowed de Lattre to retain control of the
U.S. 3d Infantry Division in the Colmar Pocket region and even
reinforced it with a regiment from Task Force Harris. The 6th Army
Group commander remained optimistic and still saw no need for a
precipitous withdrawal from the Lauterbourg salient or from anywhere
else. After steadily pushing enemy forces back for the past five
months, Devers and his fellow generals were confident that the
Seventh Army could stop any German attack, and they had no intention
of voluntarily surrendering the ground their troops had painfully
taken during the past several months.
Aware of the impending German
offensive, American infantrymen on line prepared as best they could.
Foxholes and trenches had to be excavated in the frozen earth,
fields of fire planned and cleared, mineficids and other obstacles
constructed, prearranged artillery and mortar barrages plotted, and
telephone lines laid to replace the less-reliable radio
communications systern used in the offense. Slightly to the rear,
staffs and supporting units brought up and stocked supplies -
ammunition, fuel, and food - worked replacements into understrength
units, and prepared contingency plans for all possible aspects of
the coming battle. SHAEF levies on the newly arrived regiments
further exacerbated the shortage of infantry, forcing Patch to begin
converting some of his Army service personnel into foot soldiers and
engineer units into rifle battalions, even before the expected
offensive began. (17) Regardless, the line units continued to mask
their weaknesses by aggressive patrolling against the German lines,
at times conducting raids across the Rhine, gathering information on
enemy preparations, and giving some combat experience to the new
infantry units in the process.
On 29 December, three days before
Hitler had scheduled NORDWIND to begin, specific German intentions
were still unclear to the American defenders. Allied analyses of
enemy rail and road traffic, radio intercepts, prisoner-of-war
reports, and air reconnaissance over the battlefield indicated major
German troop buildups in the Saarbrucken area, beyond the Rhine, and
in the Colmar Pocket. Intelligence at the 6th Army Group
headquarters placed the 21st Panzer Division and the 17th SS and
25th Panzer Grenadier Divisions somewhere in the Zweibruecken area,
about ten miles behind the Sarre River line; American patrols had
identified elements of these units and nine German infantry
divisions on their fronts. The Seventh Army G-2, Colonel Ouinn,
believed that the total strength of opposing German infantry was
equal to about twenty-four or twenty-five American battalions, but
the size of the armored forces was a question mark. He estimated
that the enemy would either launch a major attack with three mobile
divisions down the Sarre River valley or "with forces currently in
contact and in immediate reserve . . . launch a series of limited
objective attacks." The latter alternative, he believed, was the
most likely. (18) The Seventh Army ULTRA officer, Maj. Donald S.
Bussey, disagreed, feeling that current information on the German
order of battle and an analysis of Luftwaffe air reconnaissance
orders pinpointed the Sarre River valley as the major area of
attack. However, ULTRA remained mute on specific German intentions.
(19)
Patch's evaluation of intelligence
estimates was strongly influenced by the tactical situation. In his
judgment, the Sarre River corridor approach still represented the
gravest threat to the Seventh Army; a penetration there could split
his forces and leave the VI Corps stranded on the Alsatian plains.
In fact, the Germans had already signaled a preference for the
region's offensive possibilities with the Panzer Lehr Division's
counterattack back in November; obviously the same route promised
the Germans their best chance of tactical success, especially since
any offensive there could be easily supported from the Saarbrucken
road nets. For these reasons Patch, with Devers' blessing, continued
to build up his forces west of the Low Vosges and, despite continued
SHAEF pressure for a complete VI Corps withdrawal to the Vosges,
planned only a partial and gradual retirement from the Lauterbourg
salient-one that would place the VI Corps' main line of resistance
on an east-west, Bitche-Strasbourg line (as later suggested by de
Gaulle) by 5 January.
As New Year's Day approached, Devers
and Patch increasingly regarded the Sarre River valley as the
principal danger point. On 30 December Devers even authorized Patch
to use elements of the SHAEF-designated reserve units in his area,
the 12th Armored and 36th Infantry Divisions, to establish a
secondary line of defense behind the XV Corps. The following day
Patch ordered the 14th Armored Division, the only reserve in the VI
Corps area, north to Phalsbourg, where it could provide even more
reinforcements for the XV Corps. Clearly the American commanders
expected the main German effort would take place west of the Vosges
and had prepared an appropriate reception.
On New Year's Eve, a Sunday evening,
Patch met with both his corps commanders at Fenetrange, the XV Corps
headquarters, and warned them to expect a major enemy attack during
the early morning hours of New Year's Day. Late afternoon air
reconnaissance had reported German troop movements all across the
northern front.(20) Local festivities for the holiday would have to
be postponed. Haislip's forces, he predicted, would bear the brunt
of the impending offensive, but Patch was confident that his units
were up to the task. Still there was no definite knowledge of
specific German intentions or the scope and size of the predicted
attacks. Inclement weather had curtailed further aerial
reconnaissance, and signal intercepts had revealed little. Outside
the American command post, a new snowfall covered the woods and
forests of the Low Vosges Mountains east of Fenetrange with a
deceptively innocent coating of white, giving little hint of the
coming struggle.
The New
Year's Eve Attacks
(31 December 1944-5 January 1945)
The German First Army launched its
initial attacks on schedule a few hours before New Year's Day, with
Simon's XIII SS Corps pushing south over the Sarre River valley and
Petersen's XC and Hoehne's LXXXIX Corps heading in the same general
direction through the woods of the Low Vosges (Map 34).(21) In both
cases the leading German echelons began to hit the main American
lines about midnight. In the Sarre valley the assault force was met
by determined resistance from the 44th and 100th Infantry Division
troops, who were well dug in and deployed in depth. Expecting the
major attack in this area, Patch and Haislip had jammed the XV Corps
zone with three infantry divisions buttressed by the two regiments
of Task Force Harris and-if the theater reserve units are
counted-two armored and another infantry division in reserve, with a
third armored division arriving. The Germin attack barely made a
dent in the beefed-up Allied line. In some cases the SS troopers
advanced in suicidal open waves, cursing and screaming at the
American infantrymen who refused to be intimidated. The infantry of
the 36th Volksgrenadier did little better. Although Simon's forces
finally managed to poke a narrow hole, about two miles in depth, at
Rimling on the right wing of the 44th Division, the 100th Infantry
Division held firm. In the days that followed the Germans saw their
small advances continuously eroded by repeated counterattacks from
the 44th, 100th, and 63d (TF Harris) Division infantry supported by
elements of the French 2d Armored Division.(22) Allied artillery
and, when the weather broke, Allied air attacks, together with the
bitter cold, also sapped the strength of the attackers.
On 4 January the German high command
formally called off the effort. As General Simon, the attacking
corps commander, caustically observed, the Sarre assault had shown
only that the German soldier still knew how to fight and how to die,
but little else. Blaskowitz, with Hitler and von Rundstedt's
approval, obviously chose not to throw the German armored reserves
into the battle there, as planned, and sought weaker links in the
American lines.
The second attack, launched from the
Bitche area south through the Low Vosges, was more successful.
Believing that the major German effort would be west of the
mountains-or more concerned with the thin VI Corps lines in the
Lauterbourg salient to the east-the American generals had not
expected an enemy drive through such rough terrain, where snowy,
narrow roads bisected rather than paralleled the southward German
axis of advance. The assembly areas of the attacking infantry on New
Year's Eve had been hidden in the Maginot Line bunkers still in
German hands; there had been no pre-attack artillery bombardment to
warn the defenders; and the overcast sky and thick mountain forests
had provided cover for the assault throughout the first day of the
offensive.
On 31 December Task Force Hudelson held
a roughly defined mountain front from the Bitche area on the west to
the vicinity of Neunhoffen on the east. This ad hoc group, commanded
by Col. D. H. Hudelson, consisted of the 94th and 117th Cavalry
Squadrons, with mostly jeeps and light armored cars, and the
half-tracks of the 62d Armored Infantry Battalion, reinforced only
by a tank destroyer company.(23) To screen the area Hudelson had
established a series of strongpoints on the mountain roads that
entered his sector from the east and west, supplementing them with
small patrols and checkpoints. Rather than stopping a determined
attack, his job was to delay and channel it until reinforcements
could arrive. But Hudelson's delaying power proved limited during
the early hours of 1 January. Moving south through the dark forests,
leading elements of the 559th, 257th, 361st, and 256th
Volksgrenadier Divisions easily penetrated the positions of the
small American mechanized force, bypassing strongpoints and
scattering the roadbound armored units as they withdrew and tried to
regroup.(24) Hudelson's local counterattacks were hampered by the
snow-both wheeled and tracked vehicles losing traction on the icy
mountain roads-and were too minor to have any effect on the general
progress of the German offensive. Quickly the various components of
the light mechanized unit found themselves retreating to the east
and west, abandoning many of their snowbound vehicles in the
process.
During the next four days the attacking
infantry divisions pushed south through the Vosges for about ten
miles; but the real contest for control of the vital mountain exits
began almost immediately, as reinforcing American units tried to
keep the German volksgrenadiers bottled up in the Low Vosges
forests. On the western edge of the advance, the U.S. 100th Infantry
Division held firm, strengthening its right shoulder first with an
additional regiment from Task Force Harris (63d Division) and then
with the 36th Division's 141st regiment, which Patch released to
Haislip late on 1 January. Together these units, with an assist from
the 14th Armored Division, channeled the advancing German infantry
away from the Sarre River valley to the south and east.
Across the Vosges, with fewer forces at
his immediate disposal, Brooks was forced to make major changes in
the dispositions of his corps. First he withdrew two inexperienced
infantry regiments of Task Force Herren (70th Division) from the
Rhine front and moved them across the interior of the VI Corps area
to plug up the eastern exits to the Vosges, under the direction of
Frederick's 45th Infantry Division. In the center, blocking the way
to Phalsbourg and Saverne, Brooks and Frederick inserted two
regiments of the 45th Division as well as another on loan from
Wyche's 79th Division; they backfilled the 45th's northern front
with a combat engineer regiment, the 36th C, temporarily converted
to infantry, and backstopped all of these forces with parts of the
14th Armored Division still under VI Corps control. Such complex
switching completely entangled the 45th, 79th, and 70th Division
forces. By 4 January, for example, the 45th Division had crossed its
extended front, from east to west, parts of the 179th and 180th
Infantry (organic to the 45th) and elements of the 276th Infantry
(Task Force Herren) in the Vosges; the 313th Infantry (reinforced
with battalions of the 314th and 315th Infantry, all from the 79th
Division), elements of the 274th and 275th Infantry (Task Force
Herren), and the 157th Infantry (organic) along the eastern exits to
the Vosges; and the 36th C Engineers together with leftovers from
the 179th and 180th Infantry on its regular northern front. Very
quickly Frederick found himself trying to control eight different
regiments, half of which had commanders and staffs that had never
been in combat before. Although these hasty measures contained the
advance of the German infantry divisions at least temporarily, they
left very few troops to defend the Lauterbourg salient farther east.
As American reinforcements met German
attackers, the battle quickly turned into a bitter winter infantry
fight focusing on the towns that lay along the snow-covered mountain
roads. Here at Lemberg, Sarreinsberg, Wildenguth, Wingen, Wimmenau,
Reipertswiller, Mouterhouse, Baerenthal, Philippsbourg, Dambach, and
a host of other tiny Alsatian mountain villages and hamlets, the
Americans finally began to hold their ground. Yet, even before the
four attacking volksgrenadier divisions began to flag, Blaskowitz
and von Obstfelder, the First Army commander, started feeding
elements of the 6th SS Mountain Division ("Nord") into the battle.
The SS division, an experienced unit trained and equipped for
cold-weather warfare, fresh and at full strength, began to deploy-on
the battlefield sometime on 2 January and was soon spearheading a
renewed drive south.(25) Nevertheless, elements of the 45th and 79th
Divisions, reinforced by more battalions from Task Force Herren as
well as units of the 540th Engineers, which also served as infantry,
continued to protect the vital Vosges exits, constantly
counterattacking the now overextended German forces.
At this point Patch decided to move the
entire 103d Infantry Division, now unengaged, from the far
northwestern wing of the XV Corps over to the eastern shoulder of
the German Vosges advance, thus relieving Task Force Herren elements
that had begun to wear thin and beginning his own counteroffensive
against the flanks of the German penetration.(26) On the other side,
the German commanders, to guard against such a threat, had begun to
deploy the 36th Volksgrenadier Division from Simon's XIII SS Corps
in the Sarre area to Hoehne's LXXXIX Corps in the Vosges in order to
strengthen the base of the salient. Hemmed in on three sides,
however, the German offensive through the Low Vosges seemed to be
coming to a complete standstill by the 5th. Brooks had been able to
move his forces over to the Vosges faster than any of the German
commanders had thought possible, and the green troops of Task Force
Herren along with the converted engineers had fought with an
enthusiasm that belied their inexperience. Without possession of the
exits to the Vosges, Hitler refused to commit the mobile reserves,
and as long as the Americans controlled the Savern Gap and the road
networks on either side of the Vosges, they could bring
reinforcements into the area faster than the attackers. With nowhere
to go, NORDWIND was essentially a failure. Blaskowitz and von
Obstfelder, however, still had their uncommitted armor reserves-but
so did Patch and Devers. The struggle was far from over.
Command and
Control
Both German and American post battle
autopsies of the NORDWIND offensive severely criticized the planning
and conduct of the Sarre River valley attack. The XIII SS Corps had
put the assault together hastily, and even the American commanders
were surprised by its poor execution. The division-level leadership
and staff work of the 17th SS Panzer Grenadier Division in
particular proved marginal. The unit was unable even to bring its
armor up to the battle area until the third day because of icy road
conditions and limited engineer support; the German demolition
effort had been too thorough when they had vacated the area in early
December. Artillery support had also been badly coordinated, as had
just about everything else. In fact, during the battles for northern
Alsace the SS division went through about five division commanders,
mostly SS colonels with comparatively little military
experience.(27) Given the means at Blaskowitz's disposal and the
strength of the Allied forces west of the Low Vosges, however,
perhaps the failure of what Hitler hoped would be the main German
effort was inevitable.
The inability of the successful Vosges
attacking forces to break out of the mountain exits was another
matter entirely. Here the divided German command structure on the
Alsatian front clearly contributed heavily to the ultimate lack of
success. Had Army Group Oberrhein launched supporting attacks across
the Rhine at the start of the offensive, Brooks might not have been
able to transfer the three regiments of Task Force Herren from the
Rhine to the Vosges so readily, and at least some of the eastern
mountain exits might have fallen to the advancing volksgrenadiers.
Although Blaskowitz might still have elected not to employ his
panzer reserves through the Vosges, the results would have greatly
increased his options. But as future events would show, Himmler had
his own objectives in mind, and the lack of coordination between
Army Group G and Army Group Oberrhein during NORDWIND and in the
ensuing campaign was remarkable.
The Allied commanders had their own
serious command and control problems. For example, General Leclerc's
extreme reluctance to place his 2d Armored Division under de
Lattre's control was well known. Although publicly emphasizing the
better logistical support available from American corps and army
commands, he privately harbored strong feelings against many senior
officers of the First French Army, whose loyalty to the Allied cause
and the Free French in particular had come relatively late in the
war. The ghost of Marshal Petain's Vichy regime had already begun to
cast its long shadow over France. However, both the Ardennes and
NORDWIND attacks temporarily made the matter academic, as Leclerc's
armor was needed more in the north and, for the moment, was better
employed supporting Patch's thinly spread forces.
The defense of Strasbourg was another
matter and demanded immediate resolution. Devers himself was still
reluctant to pull his entire line back to the Vosges, preferring to
reinforce Brooks with the three proto-infantry divisions, and was
probably content to let de Lattre buck the decision on Strasbourg up
to their political and military superiors. The entire concept of
abandoning all of northern Alsace was fraught with danger. Such a
major withdrawal would have surrendered much of the easily
defensible Rhine front, exposed the northern flank of the French II
Corps above the Colmar Pocket, and placed the entire Saverne Gap
under German artillery fire, while making it highly unlikely that
the Allies could regain the territory in the near future. After
being surprised in the Ardennes, Eisenhower may have simply become
too cautious, overreacting to the smaller threat posed by the
initial NORDWIND assault forces and then unwilling to reverse the
order when the offensive came well to the west of the Lauterbourg
salient.
Eisenhower's decision to press on with
the withdrawal continued to place Devers in a dilemma. On 1 January,
as NORDWIND began, he informed General Touzet du Vigier, a emissary
of Juin, that SHAEF had required the 6th Army Group to fall back to
the Vosges, thus temporarily relinquishing Strasbourg to German
control. Yet, on the same day, he also requested that SHAEF
"clarify" its instructions on the matter. At the time, the VI Corps
had just begun planning for the first phase of the withdrawal,
pulling back from the Bitche-Lauterbourg trace to the Maginot Line,
but had made no concrete preparations for anything further. The
following day, 2 January, de Gaulle reviewed Juin's report, sent
orders confirming de Lattre's responsibility for the defense of the
city, and dispatched Juin to SHAEF headquarters to argue the matter
with Eisenhower's chief of staff. Juin's meeting with General Smith,
related earlier, fully alerted Eisenhower to the weight that the
French political leader gave to the safety of the French city.
Massive reprisals against Strasbourg's citizens by vengeful German
military, paramilitary, or police units were likely, and a belated
defense of the city by French forces bereft of American support
might have severe implications regarding future Franco-American
relations. On the other hand, a decision to surrender Strasbourg to
the Germans out of hand might well have adverse repercussions on de
Gaulle's own political plans, strengthening the Communist leadership
centered in the resistance movement. For these reasons, de Gaulle
asked Churchill and Roosevelt to intervene in the dispute.
Churchill quickly concurred, and at a
SHAEF staff conference held the following day, 3 January, and
attended by Churchill, de Gaulle, Eisenhower, Smith, Juin, and their
assistants, the Allied commander in chief agreed to suspend the
withdrawal. Actually, Eisenhower appears to have reversed the order
just prior to the conference and passed down the change to Brooks.
With the situation in the Ardennes stable and the initial German
NORDWIND attacks confined to the areas above the Lauterbourg
salient, a complete withdrawal was less pressing. Allied unity was
thus preserved, and cooperation between American and French soldiers
in the field remained undisturbed. But events that followed soon
proved that Eisenhower's concern over Brooks' position was not
completely unwarranted.
Footnotes:
1. These included the US 12th
and 14th Armored Divisions and the 36th, 44th, 45th, 79th, 100th,
and 103rd Infantry Divisions in the Seventh Army and the French 1st,
2d (LeClerc) and 5th Armored Divisions, the 1st and 16th Infantry
(a new unit), 3d Algerian, 2d Moroccan, 4th Moroccan Mountain, and
9th Colonial Divisions, and the US 3d Infantry Division in the First
French Army.
2. Army Group Oberrhein ("UpperRhine") controlled
the Nineteenth Army in the Colmar Pocket as well as the
XIV SS Corps and a variety of military and para-military units
east of the Rhine.
3. German planning information is based on von Luttichau,
"German Operations," ch. 27; "Operation Northwind" file, Box 1,
William W. Quinn Papers, MHI; and Paul Rigoulot, "Operation Nordwind:
1-26 janvier 1945" (unpublished MS, ca 1988), pp. 1-70 (copy CMH).
4. For a discussion on ZAHNARZT alternatives, see
von Luttichau, "German Operations" ch. 28, pp. 21-24.
5. Material relating to the defense of Strasbourg is based
primarily on John W. Price, "The Strasbourg Incident" (1967), CMH
MS; and de Lattre, History, pp. 301-13.
6. Devers Diary, 27 Dec. 44.
7. 6th Army Gp LOI 7, 28 Dec 44.
8. Devers Diary, 29 Dec 44.
9. Devers Diary, 1 Jan 45.
10. For an account of the conference, see Ltr, David G. Barr
to Devers, 5 Sep 67 (copy CMH). Barr who was Devers' chief of staff
at the time, was present at the meeting and related that de Gaulle's
threat was communicated by a French draft memo that was somehow
passed on to the American generals toward the end of the session.
11. Vigneras Intervs, pp. 35-36.
12. Von Rundstedt had also considered the 11th Panzer
Division for ZAHNARTZ, but later committed it on 18
January in a minor attack north of the main Alsatian battlefield.
See CMH MS R-91, Magna E. Bauer, "Army Group G, January
1945" (December 1956)
13. Army Group G's constantly changing orders of the
battle and its equipment situation during this period make it
difficult to ascertain the exact number and type of tanks and
assault guns committed. In fact, many units and machines entered the
battle as they arrived at the front. Neither the 6th SS Mountain
Division nor the XXXIX Panzer Corps headquarters, for
example, was available at the start of NORDWIND, both
arriving a or two later. See Rigoulot, "Operation Nordwind," pp.
51-53.
14. Quoted in von Luttichau, "German Operations," ch. 27.
15. For general inforamtion on American actions before and
during NORDWIND, see Hist, 6th Army Gp, pp. 106-58;
Seventh Army Rpt, II chs. 22-23.
16. The task forces were commanded by Brig. Gens. Henry H.
Linden, Frederick M. Harris and Thomas W. Herren. For a detailed
account of the operations of Task Force Herren's 275th Infantry
regiment during NORDWIND, see Donald C. Pence and Eugene J.
Petersen, Ordeal in the Vosges (Sanford, N.C.: Transition
Press, 1981); for the 274th regiment, see Wallace R. Cheves, ed.,
Snow Ridges and Pillboxes (privately published, n.d.) (copy
MHI); and for all three, the 70th Infantry Division official records
for December 1944-January 1945 at the WNRC.
17. The conversion program is discussed in Seventh Army
Diary, pp. 460-61, 465-66.
18. "G-2 History: Seventh Army Operations in Europe," V (1-31
December 44), Box 2, William W. Quinn Papers, MHI.
19. Bussey Interv, 19 Aug 87; Bussey, ULTRA Report; Hinsley
et al., British Intelligence in the Second World War, III,
2, p. 664.
20. Cited in Bussey Interv, 19 Aug 87.
21. This section is based on official U.S. Army records; von
Luttichau, "German Operations," ch. 28, and Rigoulot, "Operation
Nordwind," pp. 71-128.
22. For heroic action in defense of his unit's perimeter on 1
January 1945, Sgt. Charles A. Gillivary, Company I, 71st Infantry,
44th Infantry Division was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor,
as was Tech. Sgt Charles F. Carey, Jr., 379th Infantry, 100th
Infantry Division (posthumously), several days later for action on
the night of 8-9 January 1945, in which he commanded an antitank
platoon near Rimling.
23. The task force was built around CCR of the 14th Armored
Division, with the divisional and corps cavalry squadrons
substituting for the command's organic tank battalion. Also attached
were Company B, 645th Tank Destroyer Battalion; Company B, 83d
Mortar Battalion; Company A, 125th Armored Engineer Battalion; and
1st Battalion, 540th Engineers.
24. No records of Task Force Hudelson survived, and the above
information is based on Seventh Army Historical Officer interview
report, "Task Force Hudelson, 14th Armored Division, 21 December
1944-1 January 1945" (ca. 1945), MHI.
25. The SS division had been fighting on the Finnish front
until the autumn of 1944, when it retreated into northern Norway and
returned to Germany via Oslo and Denmark in November and December.
26. Its place was taken first by a regiment of the 36th
Division and then by the new XXI Corps, which supervised a
miscellaneous collection of units.
27. Rigoulot, "Operation Nordwind," p. 53. On American
evaluations of its performance, see "G-2 History: Seventh Army
Operations in Europe (1-31 Dec. 44)," V, William W. Quinn Papers,
MHI.