The Asian Age

The battle of Arnhem was a risk worth taking

- Mike Jackson By arrangemen­t with the Spectator

In the high summer of 1944 the Allies achieved their major victory in Normandy with the closing of the German pocket centred on Falaise. By the end of August, Paris had been liberated, and the Wehrmacht was apparently in full flight; Brussels fell to the Allies in early September. For many, the end of the war in Europe was in sight — perhaps by Christmas that year.

But Allied success brought serious logistical problems: supplies were still having to be landed on the Normandy beaches and transporte­d forward along increasing­ly distant lines of communicat­ion. This difficulty also exacerbate­d the clash of personalit­ies between Allied senior commanders: General George Patton, with his great offensive spirit, wanted priority given to the Third US Army in order to attack Germany through Metz and the Saar. Britain’s General Bernard Montgomery ( shortly to be Field Marshal), on the other hand, believed that he could defeat Germany by a single thrust from Belgium and Holland into the Ruhr, Germany’s industrial heartland, thereby forcing the enemy to capitulate.

The Supreme Commander, General Dwight Eisenhower, no doubt conscious of the need to maintain Allied harmony, decided not to favour either general but instead adopt a strategy of a broad advance on both the northern and eastern axes, to the frustratio­n of both his subordinat­es. It was at this point that Monty declined to give priority to the opening of the approaches to Antwerp harbour and devised the strategica­lly ambitious plan to conduct an airborne operation to open the route to the Ruhr and beyond. A successful crossing of the Rhine at Arnhem by Monty’s forces required a ground link- up of some 60 miles along a single road bordered by reclaimed marshland, which included the capture of some six more bridges.

The strategy was clear: a rapid entry into Germany, followed by complete Allied victory in Europe. The means comprised the British 1st, and the US 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions; and 30 Corps as the link- up force. The way was the “Airborne carpet” to secure the bridges on the route to Arnhem. The plan — Operation Market Garden — was audacious and potentiall­y decisive, but it ended in failure. Antony Beevor is clear that the primary reason for failure was that the design for battle was foolhardy; indeed, he describes it as “doomed from the start”. If that verdict is true, then Montgomery and General “Boy” Browning, the British commander of the Allied airborne force, bear a heavy burden.

I must declare my viewpoint. I write as a military man who spent most of the first part of his service as an airborne officer. As such, I am immensely proud of the extra- ordinary fighting spirit which epitomised the lst Airborne Division at Arnhem. The question is whether the concomitan­t risk was too great. Beevor counsels against “what ifs”; but in my view the operation very nearly succeeded, and therefore it is worth examining those “what ifs”.

First, the overall priority given to Market Garden in the campaign plan. Much was being risked in this attempt to shorten the war, but I get the impression that at the highest levels it was regarded as a tactical operation rather than a strategic attempt to accelerate German surrender.

Second, the importance of surprise. Operationa­lly, surprise was complete; the German forces in Holland had no idea of Market Garden. But that operationa­l level of surprise was at least partly squandered at the tactical level by the choice of landing zones where both at Arnhem and Nijmegen the Allies were landed too far from their overriding objectives — the bridges. It seems that the extraordin­ary success of the coups de main in the Normandy invasion had already been forgotten. Interestin­gly, Monty writes in his memoir that ‘ I take the blame for this mistake’.

Third, the airlift plan failed to provide the maximum impact by not achieving two lifts on the first day. This dissipated the concentrat­ion of force, one of the fundamenta­l principles of war. Fourth, there has to be a question mark over the determinat­ion of 30 Corps to ‘ thrust northwards… without regard to what is happening on the flank’ ( Montgomery’s memoirs) to achieve link- up, whatever the cost. Fifth, had intelligen­ce reports of two panzer divisions refitting in the Arnhem area been taken more seriously, the need for close- in dropping zones and speed of link- up would have been reinforced. A sense amongst the Allies of buoyant optimism did not help — nor a less than realistic understand­ing of the German ability to react and respond very rapidly.

But I am left with the brave failure that was Market Garden. The price was not only the virtual destructio­n of the British 1st Airborne Division, but a terrible winter of hunger and privation suffered by the Dutch people. Beevor describes the battle and its aftermath with his customary deep understand­ing of the human factor — both of the soldiers who risked everything and of the plight of the Dutch civilians.

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 ??  ?? ARNHEM: THE BATTLE FOR THE BRIDGES, 1944 by Antony Beevor Viking, £ 25
ARNHEM: THE BATTLE FOR THE BRIDGES, 1944 by Antony Beevor Viking, £ 25

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