(Classified)

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Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP75-00001R000400410012-6
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RIPPUB
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K
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
November 16, 2016
Document Release Date: 
March 27, 2000
Sequence Number: 
12
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Publication Date: 
June 22, 1954
Content Type: 
MAGAZINE
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TI-S REPORTER JUNE 22, 1954 STATINTL Approved For Release 2000/05/05: CIA-RDP75-0000 General Truscott, Seagoing Cavalryman CPYRGHT Coitr,IAND EMISSIONS: A PERSONAL .STORY, by Lieutenant General L. K. Truscott, Jr. Dutton.. 7.50. THE MARINLS will clo some head- shaking when they read this story of a horse cavalryman who was the senior American "observer" (an in- adequate word) during the Dieppe raid, a key commander and a suc- cessful one in the seaborne assaults in North Africa, Sicily, Anzio, and Southern France. In April, 1942, Colonel Truscott was commanding a cavalry regiment on the Mexican border when he was ordered to report to Washington. There he discovered that he was to go to Lord Mountbatten's Combined Operations Headquarters, which was responsible for amphibious training in Britain, as the head of a group of American officers. When Truscott re- ported to Eisenhower, then a major general and head of the Army's Oper- ations Division, he raised the ques- tion of his inexperience-he had been in a small boat on salt water only wice in his life-and received the cirmy's traditional answer: "You can learn, can't you?" Truscott, as he went up the ladder, commanding in turn the 3rd Infan- try Division, the VI Corps, and the Fifth -Army, often found himself over officers ,.who had long been his sen- iors. He pays tribute to their com- plete loyalty. In our peculiar U.S. Army tradition, Truscott was never -iven the four stars of an army com- rnander's normal rank. K)f Patton and Clark his book, as the subtitle indicates, is "a personal story," told with honesty uncl with more frankness than might )e expected. As the author says in a orevvord, it was done "without pro- essional assistance." Some paragraphs ire extraordinarily illuminating. In -lie case of General Patton, for ex- rmple, there is a brief description of one incident that shows Patton fitting perfectly into General Eisenhower's description: "His emotional range was very great and lie lived at either one end or the other of it." Faced with a delay in the controversial am- phibious outflanking movement at Brolo, on the north coast of Sicily, Patton stormed into Truscott's 3rd Division command post. "'God- dammit, Lucian, what's the matter with you? Are you afraid to fight?' I bristled right back: 'General, you know that's ridiculous and insulting. You have ordered the operation and it is now loading. If you don't think I can carry out orders, you can give the Division to anyone you please. But I will tell you one thing, you will not find anyone who can carry out orders which they do not ap- prove as well as I can.' General Pat- ton changed instantly, the anger all gone. Throwing his arm about my shoulder lie said: 'Dammit, Lucian, I know that. Come on, let's have a drink-of your liquor.' " General Mark Clark, who was often Truscott's immediate com- mander, gets credit for making every effort to support subordinates in their tasks, and for being an unusu- ally able executive and administra- tor, but he comes off rather poorly on other counts. "His concern for personal publicity was his greatest weakness," says Truscott. When Rome fell, Truscott "received orders to report to General Clark on Capi- toline Hill . . ." He complied, but the meeting turned out to be nothing but a speechmaking ceremony. "I was anxious to get oul of this postur- ing and on with the war," he writes. Months later, when Bologna fell, another of Clark's liberation celebra- tions fell flat. "Clark led a procession of jeeps . . . on a tour of downtown streets. What we were to accomplish, I do not know. There were few Bolognese around and these did not seem overly enthusiastic ... ," Trus- cOtt reports with evident satisfaction. The differences of opinion between the two commanders is even more marked in tactical matters than in personal appraisals, particularly in regard to the Anzio and Rapido River operations. Of one of General Clark's plans for an attack out of the Anzio beachhead, Truscott says flatly: "A worse plan would be dif- ficult to conceive." Truscott and other senior officers reacted so un- favorably to this particular plan that "Our pessimism was not without effect," and it was abandoned. Of the controversial attempt of the 36th Infantry Division to cross the Rapido River a few weeks later, Truscott says he told Clark under what condi- tions he believed a crossing would be possible and that these condi- tions had not been fulfilled. The attempt was a costly failure. The Muffed Opportunity More emphatically, lie charges that Clark's turning of the main effort of the attack out of the Anzio beach- head away from the Valmontone Gap prevented the destruction of the Ger- man Tenth Army: "There has never been any doubt in my mind that had General Clark held loyally to Gen- eral Alexander's instructions, had he not changed the direction of my at- tack to the northwest on May 26th, the strategic objective of Anzio would have been accomplished in full. To be first in Rome was poor compensation for this lost opportu- nity." Anzio, says Truscott, was nevertheless worth the cost. Strangely, out of the book there emerges a sense of similarity between Patton and Truscott. Very different in appearance, manner, and ap- proach, they had one common char- acteristic to which everything else had to give way. Each, as far as his part of it was concerned, was going to win the war. tune 22, 1954 Approved For Release 2000/05/05: CIA-RDP75-00001 R000400410012-6 Approved For Release 2000/05/05: CIA-RDP7!C.R?lR3M10040041 nn12-6 Field Marshal Kesselring, Flying Artilleryman AL NEWMAN KESSELRING-A SOLDIER'S RECORD, by Field Marshal Albert Kesselring. William. Mor- row. $5. had come close to being pushed I nto kly ON MARCH 7, 1945, advance ele- ments of the 9th Armored Divi- sion of First U.S. Army crossed the Rhine on a partially destroyed bridge at Remagen. The last great barrier to victory on the Western Front was breached. Although it took three weeks of heavy fighting for First Army to establish a bridge- head from which the climactic of- fensive could be mounted and for the other Allied armies to close up to the Rhine in, strength and push their first elements across, the out- come was never in doubt. On March 8, Adolf Hitler sum- moned Field Marshal Albert Kessel- ring from his post in charge of the Italian Front to make him Com- mander in Chief West in place of the aged Gerd von Rundstedt. On the Allied side in North Eu- rope many asked: "Who is this Kes- selring? How good is he? And what possessed him to take over this hope- less mess?" Even in North Europe a few peo- ple knew the answers to the first two. Colonel Benjamin A. ("Monk") Dick- son, First Army G-2, who had been General Omar Bradley's G-2 at II Corps in Sicily twenty-one months earlier, remembered Kesselring's ma- neuvers well: the extraordinary de- fense by inferior numbers anchored on both sides of Mount Etna and the north and east coasts of the island; the skillful bridge and cliff-road dem- olitions; the step-by-step fighting withdrawal to Messina; the evacua- tion of surviving German forces across the Strait of Messina to the Italian mainland with the loss of hardly a man. On the U.S. Seventh Army's Palat- inate Front there were entire divi- sions that had good cause to recall Kesselring. The 36th, whose Texans had gone ashore at Paestum on the Gulf of Salerno September 9, 1943, the sea by forces mustered qui from nowhere by a German mander already harassed by the ud- > den defection of his Italian a1 one day earlier. The 45th and 3rd Divisions, rushed to the assistance of the 36th at Salerno, had even sharper memories of Anzio early the following year. The 3rd, landing in the rear of an unsuspecting enemy, soon found itself in contact with German forces which, as General Lucian Truscot.t, then commanding the 3rd, puts it in his excellent Com- mand Missions, just couldn't have been where they were: "I suppose that arm chair strategists will al- ways labor under the delusion that there was a 'fleeting opportunity' at Anzio during which some Napo- leonic figure would have . . . gal- loped on into Rome.... On January 24 [two days after the landing] ... We were in contact with German detachments with tanks and self- propelled artillery everywhere along the [beachhead] front." What's Wrong with Fascism? The German commander was Kes- selring. The whole flawless defense of the Italian Peninsula was his plan -the location of line after line of fortifications and switch positions anchored firmly on terrain features and the exaction of the last drop of Allied blood for each defense line. It was adroit. It was witty. There could be no question of Kesselring's talent. He was probably the ablest of Hitler's high commanders-abler even than Rommel, whose tempera- ment hampered his relations with both superiors and subordinates. The answer to the third question- why Kesselring consented to take command of the tatters of the Ger- man Western Front two months to the day before the final surrender- has remained unanswered until pub- lication of his extraordinary book. For it shows Kesselring as one of the rarest men who ever lived-a man who never asked a question, even of himself. Temperamentally at least, Kesselring must be rated forces of a dictatorship. Joining a Bavarian artillery regi- ment in 1903, young Kesselring served with various South German units as a junior officer during the First World War. After defeat, lie set quietly to work, along with other promising survivors, to get ready for the next war. In 1933, he was trans- ferred to the air branch. Kesselring records his conversation with Lieu- tenant General Freiherr von Ham- merstein on that occasion as follows: "'Has Stumpfl told you about your future employment?' 'Yes.' " 'Well, are you satisfied with it?' "When I said no and proceeded to summarize my reasons he cut me short with: 'You are a soldier and have to obey orders.' " And that was that, but the trans- fer was the making of Kesselring, for he became one of the first gen- erals to see war in three dimensions.; As an air commander and then a commander of combined forces be saw the war on more fronts than any other high-ranking officer. In the same year Kcsseliing jailed the Luftfahrt, Hitler cane to ppwer. "Until 1933," writes the Field Mar- shal, "I avoided all personal contact with the [Nazis].... It was not until the end of October 1933, when as an executive in the Li&tEab,rt_Min.istry I was able to appreciate theme 'iod- ical qualities of the re im t I gained more favoura e 'S_ TO THIS DAY, Kesselring he whatever that he served ster. As a Luftwaffe brass hat` all over Germany in his pe. aircraft year after year and saw a concentration camp. Or did, he fails to mention it. 38 Approved For Release 2000/05/05: CIA-RDP75-00001 R00040041TOP1 &,ORTER CPYRGHT