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Officers..The Bridge at Remagen



 
 
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  #1  
Old February 26th 04, 07:26 PM
ArtKramr
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Default Officers..The Bridge at Remagen

When the troops of the 9th armored division reached the bridge at Remaagen on
March 7th they stopped undecided what to do. General William Hoge saw the
bridge standing aand ordered it to be taken with the East end of the bridge
secured. Lt. Karl Timmermann led the charge takig the bridge and setting up a
perimeter line of skernishers on the Eastern side.

When ordered to take the bridge troops obeyed the commands of their officers
instantly and obediently. No debates. No second opinions. Just immediate
action. It is how wars are won.


Arthur Kramer
344th BG 494th BS
England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany
Visit my WW II B-26 website at:
http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer

  #2  
Old February 26th 04, 07:36 PM
Kevin Brooks
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Default


"ArtKramr" wrote in message
...
When the troops of the 9th armored division reached the bridge at Remaagen

on
March 7th they stopped undecided what to do. General William Hoge saw the
bridge standing aand ordered it to be taken with the East end of the

bridge
secured. Lt. Karl Timmermann led the charge takig the bridge and setting

up a
perimeter line of skernishers on the Eastern side.

When ordered to take the bridge troops obeyed the commands of their

officers
instantly and obediently. No debates. No second opinions. Just immediate
action. It is how wars are won.


And no higher orders from those above Hoge to carry out the maneuver--he
acted in accordance with his higher commander's intent. You just don't get
it, do you?

Brooks



Arthur Kramer



  #4  
Old February 26th 04, 08:23 PM
Dave Holford
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Default



ArtKramr wrote:


But that was after the fact. No debates on the spot.



You speak with authority - you were there?

Dave
  #5  
Old February 26th 04, 08:19 PM
Ed Majden
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"ArtKramr"
When ordered to take the bridge troops obeyed the commands of their

officers
instantly and obediently. No debates. No second opinions. Just immediate
action. It is how wars are won.


Art:
I have been following this discussion for sometime and think I should
jump in. Blind obedience of a direct command by an officer is sometimes NOT
the wisest choice! I site the event of March 16, 1968, the Mylai massacre!
Officers can be dead wrong at times! At the German War Crimes trials the
defence of saying, "I was ordered to do this", did not work.
Ed


  #7  
Old February 26th 04, 08:53 PM
Ed Majden
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----- Original Message -----
From: "ArtKramr"

We can always give isolated examples that prove the exception. But in an

army
when the exception is the rule, we end up with a mob where everyone is in
business for themselves. Not a good way to go to war.

Unfortunately there are many examples! If an officer has the confidence
of his men and he has respect for the troops he commands in most cases his
orders will be followed without question. Just because a guy has bars on
his shoulders does not necessarily mean he is a good leader or for that
matter a knowledgeable one. In the British forces rank often came from
class distinction not whether you deserved the position. Remember Dieppe or
Hong Kong!

With respect:
Ed


  #9  
Old February 26th 04, 11:48 PM
Jim Doyle
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"Ed Majden" wrote in message
news:W0t%b.621339$X%5.404706@pd7tw2no...

----- Original Message -----
From: "ArtKramr"

We can always give isolated examples that prove the exception. But in an

army
when the exception is the rule, we end up with a mob where everyone is

in
business for themselves. Not a good way to go to war.

Unfortunately there are many examples! If an officer has the

confidence
of his men and he has respect for the troops he commands in most cases his
orders will be followed without question. Just because a guy has bars on
his shoulders does not necessarily mean he is a good leader or for that
matter a knowledgeable one. In the British forces rank often came from
class distinction not whether you deserved the position. Remember Dieppe

or
Hong Kong!

Hang on Ed, surly you can't pin Dieppe on British ineptitude - being an
Allied venture, it needed Allied ratification. If anything it was a Canadian
effort (something like 5,000 Canadian troops), the only British employed
were a number of commandos, IIRC about the same number of US Rangers were
also used. Plus what on earth did the Brits do to Hong Kong except turn it
into the prosperous place of commerce and business it is now?!
Can't argue with your stating that often British officers were born to it.
John E Johnson (sp?), the wartime spitfire ace, had his initial pre-war
pilot application turned down since he stumbled in the interview having been
ask for which hunt he rode! I can guarantee this is not the case any longer.

With respect:


Genuinely likewise,

Jim D

Ed




  #10  
Old February 27th 04, 01:10 AM
Ed Majden
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"Jim Doyle"
Hang on Ed, surly you can't pin Dieppe on British ineptitude - being an
Allied venture, it needed Allied ratification. If anything it was a

Canadian
effort (something like 5,000 Canadian troops), the only British employed
were a number of commandos, IIRC about the same number of US Rangers were
also used. Plus what on earth did the Brits do to Hong Kong except turn it
into the prosperous place of commerce and business it is now?!
Can't argue with your stating that often British officers were born to


I'm not necessarily blaming the Brits for Dieppe except for Montbatten's
involvement. Canadian officers were just itching to get into action. The
whole plan was just stupid. Promised support did not materialize and the
numbers were not near enough for an effective assault. That's why Ike
didn't listen to the Russian's demand for a second front until the allies
were ready. As for Hong Kong, I'm talking about the stupid Canadian
decision to send a poorly equipped and poorly trained battalion into a place
they had no chance of winning. I don't think they even delayed the Japanese
victory at Hong Kong. It was a lost cause from the start. This was probably
much a political decision but the Generals must have agreed to it. People
killed and maimed for nothing with no hope of success. Just a plain stupid
loss of life. This was a decision by politicians and high ranking officers
not the grunts who suffered and died!
Ed


 




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