Re: Re: Patton was right
Actually, the relative quality of the German Army vs. the Iraqi Army has virtually nothing to do with this. The issue is speed of advance of the ground attack and the use of overwhelming airpower to blast through elite formations. The rapid advande is designed to prevent an organized resistance and to cut off bypassed troops that can be reduced by follow-on forces. Airpower kills any enemy that tries to dig in and block the advance. Airpower also disrupts resupply and redisposition, and prevents counterattacks on the flanks.
We saw all this in Frank's plan. It is the same plan as Patton's.
Originally posted by Tingkai
IIRC, Montgomery also wanted a narrow front attack. It was Eisenhower who was against this idea.
What worked in 2003 cannot be compared to 1944 simply because any comparison between the German military of '44 and the Iraqi military is absurb. The German military at that time was a battle-hardened group of well-trained (for the most part) and well-led soldiers equipped with relatively comparable technology. The Iraqi army was a poorly trained, poorly led mob with outdated technology.
IIRC, Montgomery also wanted a narrow front attack. It was Eisenhower who was against this idea.
What worked in 2003 cannot be compared to 1944 simply because any comparison between the German military of '44 and the Iraqi military is absurb. The German military at that time was a battle-hardened group of well-trained (for the most part) and well-led soldiers equipped with relatively comparable technology. The Iraqi army was a poorly trained, poorly led mob with outdated technology.
We saw all this in Frank's plan. It is the same plan as Patton's.
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