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Full Description
A year before the much-heralded second front was opened at Normandy in 1944, the Allies waged a campaign in Sicily and Italy—an assault that was marked by argument and dissent from beginning to end, highlighting the fundamental differences in strategic thinking between the Americans and the British. Winston Churchill favored scrapping what would become the Normandy invasion entirely, focusing instead on the soft underbelly of Nazi Europe, but American planners summarily rejected any plan that relied solely on a southern option. This is the story of this backwater campaign, a series of battles skillfully staged by the Germans and so botched by the Allies that their victory was achieved only as a result of German exhaustion.
During the hard-fought campaign, the Americans persisted in their suspicion that the British were trying to undermine the effort. For example, the imbroglio over the Benedictine monastery of Monte Cassino and the ineptness of the British assault, led by a commander already discredited by his role in the fall of Crete, would spur the Americans to overreact and destroy the monastery by bombing. This created a major propaganda victory for the Germans. Such incidents convinced both Washington and London that they were working at cross-purposes. Hoyt contends that, as the British argued at the time, Allied efforts would have been better-spent concentrating on the Balkans. The Normandy campaign was expensive, unnecessary, and ultimately lengthened the war.
Contents
Preface
The Allies Prepare
The Axis Defenses of Sicily
Invasion
The Eighth Army's Drive
The Seventh Army's Drive
The Fall of Mussolini
Confusion
Race for Messina
The Surrender of Italy and the Surprise that Wasn't
Unrest at Quadrant
Salerno
The Strategic Trap
A Series of Delaying Actions...
The Advance Is Stopped
The Rapido River Fiasco
Crossing
Anzio
The Attack on Cassino
The Bombing of Monte Cassino
The Germans at Anzio
Spring Offensive
The End of the Gustav Line
Breakthrough
The Fall of Rome
North from Rome
Cracking the Gothic Line
The Center of the Line
Winter Doldrums
To the Bitter End
Bibliographic Essay
Index