The encouragement and generous support of the Association of the United States Army has been important from the beginning of this enterprise. I particularly thank Gen. (ret.) Gordon R. Sullivan, the association president and former Army chief of staff, Lt. Gen. (ret.) Theodore G. Stroup, Jr., and Lt. Gen. (ret.) Thomas G. Rhame.
   At the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library in Hyde Park, New York, I am grateful to the former director, Cynthia M. Koch, and to supervisory archivist Robert Clark. Likewise, at the Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library in Abilene, Kansas, I appreciate the assistance of archivist Christopher Abrahamson.
   My appreciation again goes to the George C. Marshall Research Library at the Virginia Military Academy in Lexington, Virginia: to Joanne D. Hartog, director of research and scholarly programs; Paul B. Barron, director of the library and archives; Peggy L. Dillard, assistant librarian and archivist; Brian D. Shaw, president of the George C. Marshall Foundation; and, at VMI, Gen. (ret.) J. H. Binford Peay III, the superintendent; Prof. Malcolm “Kip” Muir, Jr.; and Brig. Gen. (ret.) Charles F. Brower IV.
   For a third time I thank the Colonel Robert R. McCormick Research Center at the First Division Museum in Wheaton, Illinois, a division archive without peer. I especially appreciate help from Col. (ret.) Paul H. Herbert, executive director of the Cantigny First Division Foundation, and from Eric Gillespie, director of the research center, and Andrew E. Woods, research historian. I made very good use of the D-Day Archival Collection and other 29th Infantry Division material held by the Maryland Military Historical Society at the Fifth Regiment Armory in Baltimore, Maryland. Thanks to Wayde Minami and especially Joe Balkoski.
   The flourishing National World War II Museum in New Orleans has been a source of encouragement and assistance. Thanks to Gordon H. “Nick” Mueller, the president and CEO, Stephen Watson, Jeremy Collins, Lindsey Barnes, Cindy McCurdy, Tom Czekanski, Stacy Peckham, and Sam Wegner.
   The Combined Arms Research Library at Ft. Leavenworth, Kansas, provided an exceptionally diverse array of materials. Thank you to Edwin B. Burgess, Rusty P. Rafferty, Kathleen M. Buker, and Elizabeth J. Merrifield.
   In the Office of History for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers at Ft. Belvoir, Virginia, I thank Michael J. Brodhead, John Lonnquest, and Matthew T. Pearcy. In the Special Collections and Archives at the U.S. Military Academy Library, West Point, New York, I thank Suzanne M. Christoff, Susan M. Lintelman, Alicia M. Mauldin-Ware, and Valerie Dutdut. Thanks too to Janis Jorgensen, the Heritage Collection manager at the U.S. Naval Institute in Annapolis, Maryland, and to John W. Greco at the Naval History and Heritage Command in Washington, D.C.
   In the United Kingdom, I appreciate help from the staff of the National Archives in Kew. At the Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives at King’s College in London, I thank Kate O’Brien, Frances Pattman, Lianne Smith, and Patricia J. Methven, the director of archive services. Grateful thanks once again to Roderick Suddaby and his staff in the Department of Documents at the Imperial War Museum. In Germany, thanks to Michael Epkenhans and Markus Pöhlmann at the Militärgeschictliches Forschungsamt in Potsdam.
   Thanks to Doug McCabe, in the department of archives and special collections at Ohio University Library in Athens, Ohio, home to the remarkable Cornelius Ryan Collection. I also appreciate the help of Julian M. Pleasants and Diane Fischler in using the Samuel Proctor Oral History Program, in the University of Florida history department. Likewise, I appreciate the help of Cynthia L. Tinker, project coordinator at the Center for the Study of War and Society, University of Tennessee at Knoxville.
   At the York County Heritage Trust in York, Pennsylvania, Lila Fourhman-Shaull, the library and archives director, was especially generous in helping me research the papers of Jacob L. Devers. Thanks to Brig. Gen. (ret.) John W. Nicholson and Martha Sell of the American Battle Monuments Commission, and to Rena Church, director-curator of the Aurora Public Art Commission/ Grand Army of the Republic Museum in Aurora, Illinois.
   Walking the ground is vital for any military historian, and I have visited most of the European battlefields described in this volume, beginning in the mid-1990s, when I served as the Berlin bureau chief of The Washington Post. On several occasions I had the good fortune to study the terrain, at places like the Bulge, the Hürtgen Forest, and Colmar, with professional soldiers. For this I particularly thank Gen. (ret.) Montgomery C. Meigs and Gen. Carter F. Ham, both of whom commanded the U.S. Army in Europe, as well as two former chiefs of Army history, Maj. Gen. (ret.) William A. Stofft and Brig. Gen. (ret.) Harold Nelson, and a team of fine historians: Scott Wheeler, Andrew N. Morris, and Layne Van Arsdale.
   This is the sixth book I have written with the remarkable John Sterling as my editor and close friend; collectively those books total more than 3,700 pages, and John has improved every page. At Henry Holt, and at the publisher’s parent company, Macmillan, I also thank John Sargent, Steve Rubin, Maggie Richards, Pat Eisemann, Katie Kurtzman, Kenn Russell, Meryl Levavi, Emi Ikkanda, Chuck Thompson, Jason Liebman, and Muriel Jorgensen. Jolanta Benal has copyedited all three volumes of the Liberation Trilogy, making each better in ways large and small.
   All sixty-eight maps in the Liberation Trilogy are the work of master cartographer Gene Thorp, who has been a delightful, innovative partner throughout this project. My friend and agent for twenty-seven years, Rafe Sagalyn, helped see me through it all.
   My thanks also goes to Antony Beevor, Ben Bradlee, Tom Brokaw, Steve Coll, Leonard Downie, Jr., Glenn Frankel, Donald E. Graham, Ken Heckler, Fred Hiatt, Robert G. Kaiser, Lewis Libby, David H. Petraeus, Catherine B. Reynolds, Wayne R. Reynolds, Thomas E. Ricks, William B. Schultz, David Von Drehle, Geoffrey Wawro, Gerhard L. Weinberg, Bob Woodward, and fellow scribbler David Maraniss. Particular thanks to Sir Max Hastings and his wife, Penny, for their generous hospitality and friendship.
   Grateful acknowledgment is made of permission to quote various materials: Viscount Montgomery of Alamein for extracts from the writings of his father, Field Marshal Bernard L. Montgomery; Roger Kirk for an oral history with Adm. Alan Goodrich Kirk; Virginia P. Montgomery, for extracts from an unpublished memoir by her father, Robert P. Patterson; Linda Gilmore, for extracts from a memoir by her brother, Richard Henry Byers; George Patton “Pat” Waters, for extracts from prisoner-of-war journals kept by his father, John K. Waters, and for a photograph of Lt. Col. Waters; Margot Taylor for extracts from “And Came Safe Home,” a diary by her father, William Steel Brownlie; Annette Conway for an extract from the “The Man Who Worked on Sunday,” by her father, L. F. Skinner; Mavis Jones for extracts from the papers of her husband, Lt. Col. E. Jones; and Dani Smith for extracts from the diary of her father, J. H. Patterson.
   Also: the Trustees of the Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives, King’s College London, for material from the collections of Capt. B. H. Liddell Hart, Field Marshal Lord Alanbrooke, Maj. Gen. J. B. Churcher, Maj. Gen. Francis de Guingand, Brigadier Sir Geoffrey Hardy-Roberts, Gen. H. L. Ismay, Col. T. G. Lindsay, Brig. J. S. W. Stone, and R. W. W. “Chester” Wilmot. And thanks to the Trustees of the Imperial War Museum, London, for material from the collection of Major E. M. Elliott.
   In instances where current copyright holders could not be located, or where permissions arrived too late to be noted in this edition, I will gladly include acknowledgments in future editions.
   Beyond all others, and far beyond this writer’s powers of expression, I thank my gorgeous wife of thirty-four years, Jane.
   INDEX
   The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.
   Aachen
   capture of
   Cathedral treasures
   QUEEN and
   Abbaye-aux-Hommes
   Abbaye Blanche
   Abbaye d’Ardenne
   Abrams, Lt. Col. Creighton W., 
Jr.
   “Act of Military Surrender”
   Adair, Maj. Gen. Allan H.S.
   Adams, John
   Adlerhorst (Hitler HQ)
   African Americans
   Agincourt, Battle of (1415)
   Agony Grapevine
   AIRMAIL program
   ALBANY, Operation
   Alençon
   Alexander, Field Marshal Sir Harold
   Alexandra, Czarina of Russia
   Allen, Maj. Gen. Terry de la Mesa
   Allied Control Council
   Allied intelligence. See also Ultra
   Allies. See also Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force; and specific countries and individuals
   Anglo-American forces meet Red Army in Germany
   British-American relationship and
   conflicts over Bulge
   conflicts over Strasbourg
   conflicts over strategy
   cost of war in Europe for
   Eisenhower’s leadership style and
   plan for postwar Europe and
   postwar tensions among, and Yalta
   strategic symbiosis of
   Alsace
   NORDWIND and
   ALSOS intelligence unit
   Alvarez, Luis W.
   Ambrose, Stephen E.
   American Legion
   Amiens
   Andrus, Maj. Gen. Clift
   Antonov, Gen. Aleksei I.
   Antwerp
   Bulge and
   Eisenhower vs. Montgomery and campaign for
   ports and
   V-1 and V-2 attacks
   Antwerp X unit
   ANVIL (later DRAGOON)
   Anzio
   Apollo, H.M.S.
   Ardennes
   Bulge and
   German retreat from
   HERBSTNEBEL and
   Argentan
   ARGONAUT. See Yalta Conference
   Arkansas, U.S.S.
   Armed Forces Network
   Army Talks
   Arnhem
   Battle of
   Arnold, Gen. Henry H. “Hap”
   Aron, Robert
   Arthur, Jean
   Article of War No. 64
   Ascension Day Commandos
   Associated Press
   As You Like It (Shakespeare)
   Atlantic Wall
   atomic bomb
   Augusta, U.S.S.
   Auschwitz concentration camp
   Austerlitz, Battle of (1805)
   Austria
   Authie
   Avranches
   Axis
   disintegration of
   Axis Sally
   B-17 Flying Fortresses
   B-24 Liberators
   B-26 Marauders
   B-29 Superfortress
   Babcock, John B.
   Baby Blitz (January–May 1944)
   Baccarat
   Base 901
   Baedeker, Karl
   Balck, Gen. Hermann
   Balkans
   Balkoski, Joseph
   Baltic
   Barnett, U.S.S.
   Barton, Maj. Gen. Raymond O. “Tubby”
   Bastogne
   Battle of
   Baugnez massacre. See also Malmédy massacre
   Baum, Capt. Abraham J. (Task Force Baum)
   Bayerlein, Gen. Fritz
   Bayeux
   fall of
   Bayeux Tapestry
   Bayfield, U.S.S.
   BBC
   Beauvoir, Simone de
   Beckett, Samuel
   Beethoven, Ludwig van
   Belfort Gap
   Belgian resistance
   Belgium
   Bulge and
   civilians in
   liberation of
   Bell for Adano, A (Hersey)
   Belorussia
   Bennett, Ralph
   Bénouville bridge
   Berchtesgaden
   Bergen-Belsen concentration camp
   Berghof (Hitler home)
   Bergman, Ingrid
   Beria, Lavrenty P.
   Berlin
   bombing of
   Eisenhower on
   Eisenhower shifts from, as main objective
   Eisenhower vs. Montgomery and single- vs. multipronged thrust toward
   fall of
   final days of war and
   postwar plan for
   Soviet advance on
   V-E Day and
   Yalta and
   Berlin, Isaiah
   BERLIN plan. See MARKET GARDEN, Operation
   Bernhard, Prince of the Netherlands
   Bernières
   Besançon
   Best
   Béthouart, Gen. Antoine
   Beveland Peninsula
   biological weapons
   Bitburg
   Bittrich, Gen. Wilhelm
   Bizerte
   Black Forest (Schwarzwald)
   black market
   Blake, William
   Blaskowitz, Gen. Johannes
   Blithe Spirit (Coward)
   Blumentritt, Gen. Günther
   BODENPLATTE, Operation (Hangover Raid)
   Bogart, Humphrey
   Boggess, Lt. Charles
   Bohlen, Charles E.
   bombing
   Bulge and
   Caen and
   COBRA and
   CROSSBOW vs. V-1 sites
   D-Day and
   DRAGOON and
   Falaise and
   fratricidal
   of Germany
   MARKET GARDEN and
   OVERLORD and
   “precision”
   Roer and
   St.-Vith and
   Bormann, Martin
   BOSTON, Operation
   Boulogne
   Bourg-Léopold
   Bourguébus Ridge
   Bradley, Gen. Omar N.
   Antwerp and
   awarded fourth star
   Berlin and
   Brereton and
   Brittany and
   Bulge and
   Churchill and
   COBRA and
   concentration camps and
   D-Day and
   Devers and
   Eisenhower and
   Eisenhower shifts main attack to
   Eisenhower vs. Montgomery and
   Falaise Pocket and
   final days of war and
   First Army returned to command of
   Frankfurt advance and
   fuel shortages and
   German surrender and
   heads new 12th Army Group
   Hodges and
   Hürtgen and
   January 1945 position of
   Le Mans and
   liberation of Paris and
   logistics and
   Luxemburg HQ of
   manpower shortages and
   MARKET GARDEN and
   Merkers treasure and
   Metz and
   Montgomery and
   Namur HQ and
   Ninth Army and
   Normandy and
   OVERLORD plan and
   Patch and
   Patton and
   propaganda and
   Pyle and
   QUEEN and
   Rhine crossing and
   Ruhr and
   Ted Roosevelt and
   Victory position of
   winter supplies and
   Brandenberger, Gen. Erich
   Braque, Georges
   Bratge, Capt. Willi
   Braun, Eva
   Braun, Wernher von
   Breedonck prison
   Brenner Pass, Allied forces meet at
   Brereton, Lt. Gen. Lewis H.
   Breskens Pocket
   Brest
   Bridge Too Far, A (Ryan)
   Bright, Sgt. Alton C.
   Britain. See also specific battles, individuals and military units
   Alliance formed by
   Eisenhower honored in
   impact of war on
   manpower shortages
   Britain, Battle of
   “Britain is Now Occupied Territory” (Orwell)
   
British I Airborne Corps
   British 1st Airborne Division
   British I Corps
   British Second Army
   British 3rd Parachute Brigade
   British 3rd Infantry Division
   British 4th Queen’s Own Hussars
   British 6th Airborne Division
   British 7th Armored Division (Desert Rats)
   British VII Corps
   British Eighth Army
   British VIII Corps
   British 11th Armored Division
   British XII Corps
   British 21st Army Group
   advance to Belgium
   advance to Germany
   Antwerp and
   Berlin and
   Bulge and
   casualties and
   German surrender and
   January 1945 position of
   MARKET GARDEN and
   OVERLORD and
   Rhine crossing and
   Ruhr and
   victory position of
   British XXX Corps
   British 43rd Infantry Division
   British 50th Infantry Division
   British 51st Highland Division
   British Air Ministry
   British Bomber Command
   British Coldstream Guards Regiment
   British Commandos
   British Dorsetshire Regiment
   British Empire
   British Foreign Office
   British Grenadier Guards Regiment
   British Guards Armored Division
   British Home Guard
   British Irish Guards Regiment
   British King’s Liverpool Regiment
   British Liberation Army
   British Ministry of Transport
   British Royal Air Force (RAF)
   British Royal Army Pay Corps
   British Royal Artillery
   British Royal Engineers
   British Royal Hampshire Regiment
   British Royal Marine Commandos
   British Royal Marines
   British Royal Navy
   British Royal Signal Corps
   British Royal Warwickshire Regiment
   British Scots Guards Regiment
   British War Office
   British Welsh Guards Regiment
   Brittany
   Brolo landing
   Brooke, Field Marshal Sir Alan
   dwindling of army and
   Eisenhower and
   German surrender and
   Malta and
   Montgomery vs. Eisenhower and
   personality of
   VARSITY PLUNDER and
   on WW II
   Yalta and
   Brooks, Maj. Gen. Edward H.
   Browning, Lt. Gen. Frederick A.M. “Boy”
   Bruce, David K.E.
   
 
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