Operation Market Garden
There is a reason why airborne assaults like that hasn't been tried afterwards.
Operation Market Garden
There is a reason why airborne assaults like that hasn't been tried afterwards.
How about the Battle of Tsushima?
Well, as do I.
One of the paratroopers when interviewed (watched it yesterday on nat geo) talked about the grievous errors on the commanding side, but adding that they would still have jumped with the information they had today. Quite though guys.
With that said, that's what you get when you create a hero general for public morale, and then actually let the idiot plan major operations.
Isn't that a bit too harsh on Montey?
Not really... The Desert Fox got his behind handed to him by Rommel until the balance of forces were what? 10-1 or so in Montey's favour, before he could win.
After that "strategical victory" he went off to plan this disaster.
Even later he went on to become a complete social pariah and was more or less hidden in a corner.
Montey always was careful in his attacks (except Market Garden of course). The odds were more like 2-1 for Montey in North Africa initially, but that hadn't stopped Rommel from advancing that much. So some credit is due to Monteys handling of the Eight Army. Later on he played his part in the Battle of the Bulge even after the failure of Market Garden.
And that failure was like anything not entirely the fault of the planners, miscommunication, sheer luck amongst other things played its parts.
He wasn't "careful in his attacks", he was a blabbering fool. The epitome of the ill effects when you go for character not wits in the search for officers. The very idea that you dare to call him careful when he dropped thousands of troops on AA guns and elite regiments are evidence enough of carefulness not being the main characteristic of him.
He got his behind handed to him repeatedly in the desert until the power balance were WAY away from 2-1.
His desert victory only came when they had complete air superiority and 3-1 to 10-1 superiority on the ground.
And pretty please do not talk about luck... The more you train, the more luck you have. At least that is what I got taught in the army.
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