by Ian Slater
“Yes,” commented the marshal sarcastically, “just like our SPETS units behind NATO lines. Blown off course and in American uniforms!” This got a belly laugh from the cluster of officers pressing in around Kirov, determined to be in the newsreel the Ministry of Propaganda was taking. It was a decisive moment in history — the impending and massive defeat of the American and British armies a certainty, something that one could look back on with one’s grandchildren.
“And this time,” the marshal announced, “we won’t be as stupid as Hitler.” Everyone laughed knowingly, including a young colonel of artillery who really wasn’t sure what the marshal meant. The colonel looked about for someone lower in rank. He saw a major on the marshal’s staff, standing away from the map table, hurriedly signing for receipt of motorcycle-borne field reports. For a headquarters, it struck the colonel as being as hectic as usual — an outsider would think it chaotic — but it was relatively quiet, given the slight radio traffic, all the important orders concerning the imminent attack on the Dortmund-Bielefeld pocket being issued and received, at the marshal’s express order, by motorcycle companies. It struck the colonel as terribly old-fashioned. The colonel waited until the cameraman had finished at the map table, then walked over to the major.
“What does the marshal mean about Hitler?”
Normally the major would have deferred to the colonel, but a headquarters major in effect outranked a field colonel.
“You should recall your antifascist history, Colonel,” the major told him. “In 1939 Hitler pushed the British and the French right to the sea. At Dunkirk. They were trapped. Hitler could have—” The major glanced quickly at a requisition handed to him, scribbled his signature, and continued, “Hitler could have driven them into the sea — annihilated them. But he didn’t.”
“Why not?”
The major shrugged. “The fat man, Goering, wanted glory and persuaded Hitler to let the Luftwaffe bomb the Anglo-French into submission. Air force types always think bombing will do it — like the American LeMay in Vietnam, eh? Anyway, while Hitler halted his armor to let the Luftwaffe have its day, a British armada — everything from destroyers to sailboats — plucked the British and French off the beaches and took them back to England. The marshal won’t halt our armor, Colonel — or our artillery. You’ll be going all the way to Ostend. It’s the nearest port for NATO withdrawal. So you’d better get lots of sleep. Once the offensive begins, there’ll be no stopping.”
* * *
In Munster Town Hall, its walls already scarred and pockmarked by the big long-range Russian guns, Freeman walked past the ruins of what had been the foyer down into the basement headquarters of the Dortmund-Bielefeld pocket, which had once been used to store the city records. With the cacophony of noise, a babble of radio traffic, of motorcycle messengers for the lines that had been cut and for the areas that had been jammed by the enemy, the scene was faintly reminiscent of the blue-versus-red games fought in the hot, stuffy headquarter tents of Fort Hood in Texas.
But there was something new, something he had never experienced before: the smell — not of men and women perspiring in high summer heat or overheated winter quarters, but the vinegary stench of impending defeat, heavy in the air. People were moving so fast that he could see panic was gripping many, only a few officers aware of his presence, perfunctorily saluting. His eyes took in the situation from one glance at the situation board, a long, snaking line of red pins marking the ever-expanding easternmost front of the Dortmund-Bielefeld pocket running north to south, the diagonal crisscrosses of Soviet armor creating a sharklike mouth, its jaws either side of the 250,000 men from the British Army of the Rhine, Bundeswehr, and what was left of the U.S. X Corps trapped inside, the Rhine behind them.
“It’s snowing heavily twenty miles east of us,” said a British brigadier, his face drained, eyes red with fatigue. “Might slow them down a bit, I should think.”
“Who’s commanding their northern sector?” asked Freeman. “Yesov?”
“Believe so, General,” answered the brigadier.
“Believe so or know so?” said Freeman sharply, taking off his gloves and helmet, dropping them in the nearest “IN” tray without once taking his eyes from the map of northern Germany, seeing the northernmost point of the 240-square-mile pocket, still held by the Allies, barely five miles away.
“Yesov,” confirmed the brigadier.
“Marchenko’s stable,” said Freeman, taking out his reading glasses, using the metal case to tap the area sixteen miles northeast of Bielefeld. “What we have to do is kick their asses back here beyond Oeynhausen — across the Weser.”
“May I ask what with, General?” said the brigadier pointedly, fatigue overriding caution.
“With determination, General,” Freeman told the brigadier, “and tanks.”
The brigadier was too tired to bristle at the inference, restricting his utterance to a description of what he called a “devil” of a logistical problem. SPETS commandos had apparently been reported in the area, and the two major fuel depots for the pocket had been blown.
“You mean we’re outta gas?” Freeman said, turning on him.
The brigadier called over his supply officer. “You have the figures on that petrol, Smythe?”
“Yes, sir,” answered the British major. “We’ve enough petrol for our most advanced tanks to run four or five miles out from the perimeter.”
The brigadier looked down at the major’s notes. “You said we had more than that.”
“You’ve lost the depot at Ahlen,” said Freeman, without taking his eyes from the board. “You also have fewer tanks than you had yesterday. Nine hundred approximately.”
The brigadier said nothing, feeling he had been set up by the American to reveal the deficiency of his own intelligence reports. Still, the brigadier was relieved that Freeman was, as the Americans would say, “on the ball.” He was equally resentful of the fact that while elements of the United States, Bundeswehr, and the British Army of the Rhine had been fighting and dying for almost five weeks in various stages of retreat, since the breakthrough at Fulda in the South, no one outside the pocket seemed to know just how punishing this high-tech war of movement had been on the Allied troops. Meanwhile the troops waited, apparently in vain, for NATO’s air forces to be resupplied enough so that they could do more than simply harass the Russian armor.
The war they had thought would be a quick push-button affair wasn’t quick, nor was it push-button. You pushed buttons, all right, but often nothing happened. For all the training in peacetime, the accuracy of laser beams standing in for cannon fire to save the exorbitant cost of live ammunition, there was no substitute for the terrible punishment of a high-explosive shell hitting an M-l ‘s reactive armor packs, which blew up and destroyed the shell but which couldn’t do a thing about the jarring impact that set sensitive electronic and computer circuits awry. Time and again the brigadier had seen high tech fail the retreating troops as the more simple, brutish Russian armor kept on coming, losing more tanks than the Americans, but with a four-to-one advantage, the Russians could absorb it.
“We can’t just sit here,” said Freeman. “Yesov’s a mover. Not the old Zhukov at all. He won’t wait for too much longer before he attacks. He’d prefer a steady buildup of men and materiel before he hits us, but given this snow cover for attack, he won’t wait.”
“Then,” said the brigadier, “he’ll run into our mines.” The British major couldn’t suppress a wry smile at his superior’s ready response. The mine fields beyond the perimeter were ample evidence that the British Army of the Rhine hadn’t exactly been sitting on their derrieres. The brigadier had spread his hand eastward out from the BD pocket, indicating the fan shape of the mine fields.
“He’ll clear,” said Freeman.
“If I may say so, General,” replied the brigadier, “I don’t see how. Oh, certainly — he’ll use his ‘roller’ and ‘flail’ tanks to move ahead, but that’s a slow business at the best of tim
es. In this weather — I grant you he’ll clear here and there, but we’ve got two-man mobile antitank units to close them up again. Even if he gets through, he’ll pay an awful price. I daresay it would give him pause, General — if not stem the assault altogether.”
“You don’t have to justify stopping and seeding mines rather than standing your ground, General,” said Freeman evenly. “It was your decision and I wasn’t here, but if our intelligence reports are right, Yesov has at least a three-to-one, possibly four-to-one, tank advantage. We can gobble up as much of his steel as we like and he’ll still have enough to break through, spread north and south — split our forces in two, then eat them up — just like they did at Fulda. Russkies aren’t shy about repetition, General. If it works once — they’ll do it again.”
Freeman’s knuckles rapped an area on the map ten miles northeast of Hereford. “Reconnaissance has Russian tanks converging on a twenty-mile front about Bielefeld.”
On a tank-to-tank basis, Freeman knew that the M-1s had an edge on the T-90s, for though the Russian tanks had good laser and thermal range finders, the M-1s dug in with a much better defilade angle, or what the GIs called the “angle of dangle.” Freeman also knew the British brigadier had acted correctly, ordering the NATO tanks to dig in under camouflage nets, using the mine fields as a protective moat with mobile platoons of three tanks each, ready to rush any gap through the mile-wide mine field. But if the Russians should somehow break through the mine field on a wider front, the dug-in NATO tanks would quickly find themselves surrounded, and the mobile NATO reserves would be in danger of hitting a NATO tank for every Russian T-90 they missed.
The greatest danger wasn’t only to the men trapped inside the DB pocket, but a rupture through the mines would allow Yesov an end run to the Rhine. “If they cross the Rhine—” began Freeman. He did not need to say anything more, but he did, ordering, “All tanks and APCs to prepare for immediate counterattack. We’ll open the narrow channel through the mine field and break out — hit them with all we’ve got before they roll over us.” Freeman glanced at his watch, then, taking a blue marker pen from below the map, slashed three broad strokes at ten-mile intervals along the eastern side of the DB pocket. “I want them ready to roll at oh four hundred.”
“General,” said the brigadier, “a word—”
“What?” grunted Freeman. A word? He realized the Englishman wanted to speak with him in private.
Walking away from the babble and surging static of the “OPS” table, Freeman, his hands on his hips, waited impatiently for the British brigadier to make his point.
Surely, the brigadier told Freeman, their best hope was to simply keep “dug in,” let the storm slow the Russian advance. The Allies’ best hope, he argued, was to effect a stalemate behind the mine field, to buy time for NATO reinforcements of men and materiel. To hold out a few days— a week even — until what the brigadier flatteringly called “the clear genius of the American air force to resupply by air” would allow a NATO buildup.
Agitated, Freeman turned back to the wall map, thumping it with such violence that some of the blue NATO pins popped to the ground. A Bundeswehr corporal quickly picked them up again, but not before a sudden and noticeable silence ensued, as all operators’ eyes momentarily turned toward Freeman. The brigadier’s jaw was clenched, not in anger so much as in shock, while Freeman’s eyes, far from indicating any embarrassment, swept over every man in the headquarters basement. “Now, you listen to me. This isn’t a command post. This is a goddamned Tower of Babel, and it’s all about how the Russians have got us on the run. Well, we’re going to change that in—” he looked at his watch “—approximately six hours from now. At fourteen hundred hours. We’re going on the attack. Those tanks that run out of gas will siphon fuel from the APCs, those men in the APCs will ride on or behind the tanks. Do what the Russians do — rig up sleds. Prisoner intelligence tells us Ivan’s low on gas, too. Recon flights show they’re carting refueling drums, just as they did in all the prewar maneuvers. That means, gentlemen, his supply line’s overextended. Tell your battalion commanders that I want to see some initiative or tomorrow they won’t be commanders. I’ll break the sons of bitches to sergeants — every goddamned one of ‘em.”
Freeman stopped, but it wasn’t for breath. He wanted to make sure every man in the hut had his eyes fixed on him. They did. “Now I’m gonna tell you something else. It’s the last thing Yesov will expect. Every goddamned tinhorn reporter is telling everyone that the DB pocket is on its last legs.” He turned to the brigadier and the other British officers who had gathered to watch the mad American. “Why, last night even your BBC were telling your own people we’re about to fold. Well, we’re not going to fold.” He snatched up his helmet and gloves, pushing them sharply in front of him to underscore his point. “We are going on the offensive!”
There was silence; even the crackle of the radios seemed to have died. There were no cheers, no “ja!”s from the German officers present, one obersleutnant, lieutenant colonel, commenting to his colleage, “Kindlicher Qtatsch! “—” Nonsense.” Did Freeman, they wondered, really think that this “silly American football pep talk” would have any effect? Would he expect the headquarters company, most of them career officers, to be suddenly filled with elation?
Freeman certainly didn’t expect it. He knew that an order to the top-echelon commanding officers, no matter how forcefully delivered, was not enough to galvanize a dispirited army, and so within minutes he was in his command Hum-vee, its driver peering through the smudge of windshield as the wipers howled, heading through the blanket of softly falling snow to visit individual battalion commanders, Freeman noting the increase in Russian artillery, their distinctive thuds louder than the quieter thump of American artillery. “Cheap gunpowder,” he told his aide, Col. Al Banks. It was almost certainly the softening up before what Freeman believed would be a massive Russian frontal and flank assault. The NATO artillery battalions were firing intermittently, then-supply of ammunition dictating restraint, one that could not help but be noticed by the Russian divisions, boosting their morale even further.
“We have to keep telling our boys,” Freeman shouted over the high-gear whine of the Humvee, “that concentrated fire is far more effective than blanket random fire.” His aide found it difficult to concentrate with the rolling, crunching noise of the creeping barrage coming toward them from the Russian artillery around Bielefeld. The racket made it even more difficult to hear Freeman, who, as usual, insisted on standing up in his Humvee, gripping the top of the windshield, his leather gloves now covered in snow, the general seemingly oblivious to the increasing menace of the enemy’s artillery, the whistle of shot above them and the clouds of cordite, burning rubber, and fuel that, wafting westward, smudged the white curtain of falling snow. Freeman’s expression, beneath the goggles, was one of eager expectation.
“Looks like a kid at a fairground,” grumbled a GI, one of the bedraggled remnants of a reconnaissance patrol making its way back wearily to their battalion headquarters.
“He’s mad,” said one of the loaders in a cluster of 120-millimeter howitzers, the harsh, metallic aspect of the discarded shells now softening, melding into a mound of virginal white as the black spaces between the brass casings filled with snow.
With the Humvee nearing the perimeter, Al Banks heard the splintering of timber and an eruption of black earth only a few hundred yards ahead of them, his eyes, like those of the driver, frantically searching either side of the road for some kind of shelter, the pines of the forest too close together for the Humvee to hide in them. The road turned sharply to the left. Ahead they saw a small bridge had been taken out, one of the bridge’s elegantly carved wooden posts miraculously intact, its dwarf’s face smiling sweetly beneath a hiker’s hat capped with snow.
As the shelling increased, Banks thought that for a moment enemy intelligence must have somehow found out where Freeman was and “bracketed” his position, ordering its artillery to satur
ate the area. The driver, seeing a small forester’s hut in a clearing a hundred yards to the right of the bridge’s ruins, wasted no time in pulling the Humvee off toward it, the other two Humvees, one front and back of the general’s, braking and following.
Approaching the hut, Freeman saw it was unlocked and what he thought was movement inside. He spotted discarded ammo belts and empty cans. He saw the movement again — something orange. Drawing his pistol from the shoulder holster beneath his camouflage jacket, he flicked the safety off and opened the door. Inside the gloom he heard a huffing sound, like someone out of breath, as if they’d been running. Then he saw a blackened face gazing up, terrified, from a pile of Hessian sacks. The soldier, an American, didn’t move; the woman — her green-and-brown-splotched Bundeswehr jacket open, breasts rising and falling rapidly beneath her khaki T-shirt — reached quickly for her trousers, crumpled by her side. Looking first at the soldier as be grunted and rolled off her, she gazed up in terror at the general. Freeman saw the flash of Day-Glo orange, the woman clutching her trousers.
“Sorry… sir…” began the GI, his camouflage greasepaint catching the light from the snow as he scrambled awkwardly to his feet, two feet in one trouser leg, falling and knocking over a pickax and shovel in the corner of the hut.
“Where the hell’s your squad?” asked Freeman.
“Don’t know, sir. We got separated…”
The general holstered his.45. “Well, son, finish up here and get aboard one of our jeeps. We’re going up to the front. You—” He looked across at the German woman”—and your young lady friend can come with us. If that isn’t too inconvenient?”