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Jarymowycz, Roman Johann. Tank Tactics from Normandy to Lorraine.
Boulder, CO: Lynn Rienner Publishers, 2001.
ISBN 1-55587-950-0
361 pages
Foreword; Acknowledgments; Introduction; tables; charts; diagrams; photos;
Selected Bibliography; Index; About the Book
Appendices: Allied Tanks of World War I; Allied Armored Formations, ETO;
The M4 Sherman Tank; Armored Corps Casualties; Sample of Allied Tank
Casualties by Theater; Tiger versus Allied Armor: Penetration Tables;
Analysis of Allied Tank Casualties in Normandy, 6 June - 10 July
Losing track of all the books published in the last
couple of years about Normandy? It's no wonder, because a steady flow of
such titles has been adding rapidly to the already voluminous literature on
D-Day and the ensuing campaign.
Roman Jarymowycz's book is one of the newest additions.
As with many of the newer titles, his book finds a fresh perspective on
Normandy and looks at aspects of the campaign through a different lens. In
this case, the focus is on tanks, tank doctrine, tank combat, and tank
leadership. While the bulk of the text covers the Normandy campaign,
Jarymowycz also devotes a great deal of attention to inter-war and early
war developments and, to a lesser degree, tank combat after Normandy. As a
Canadian, his viewpoint is a bit different: not only does he pay far more attention to Canadian commanders
and operations, he's also not shy about criticizing his American and
British cousins (although it should be noted that his Canadian colleagues also come in for their fair share of acidic comments).
The book opens with a review of the introduction of the
tank by the Allies late in World War I and traces the evolution of machines
and doctrine afterwards in the Soviet Union, France, Germany, and
especially the United Kingdom, Canada, and the United States. In
particular, Jarymowycz shows the European influences on American and
Canadian thinking. These inter-war developments mostly proceeded as debates
by established arms, notably cavalry, about how they could never be
replaced by tanks. Jarymowycz enlivens the debates by quoting various
commentators, including many of those with the most outlandish and
inaccurate predictions. Surprisingly, George Patton was an early critic of
tanks. Archibald Wavell, on the other hand, offered this thoughtful gem about creating
infantry tanks fast enough to serve in the "breakthrough" role: "Speed is,
unfortunately, a most expensive commodity: alike in battleships, motor
cars, racehorses and women, any comparatively small increase may double the
price of the article."
In the end, those branches of service which resisted
most tended to lose the most.
The creation of the armored force is a melancholy tale
of misplaced
devotion and cantankerous shortsightedness. The U.S. Army chose to fight
World War II with tanks and decided to create a new arm to safeguard the
decision. The cavalry had lost the confidence of the War Department to
conduct modern operations and was savagedreduced from an arm of
influence and power to an impotent afterthought. Initially, the opportunity
to create an armored force that paralleled at least some French advances or
the breakthrough experimentation in Germany and the Soviet Union had been
trusted to the cavalry. Its leadership, instead of embracing and defining
mechanization in the spirit of its traditions chose to defend the status of
the horse. Chaffee's elegant rebuttal, "The tradition of Cavalry is to
fight!" was ignored. The cavalry resolutely defended its roots: "There is
no such thing as Armored Cavalryremove the horse and there is no
cavalry."
That much was true in the US. The cavalry refused tanks,
lost its horses anyway, and simply faded away; at the same time, those in
charge of tank doctrine determined that
tank destroyers would be more important in combat than tanks. In the UK,
the debate
led to two separate armored forces with different tanks, different
doctrine, and different cultures. In Canada, developments mostly followed
the British model, but with the added problem that few senior leaders had
any background or understanding of tanks.
The first hundred pages of the book are not without
value, but mostly they amount to circling and jabbing. Jarymowycz doesn't
really start throwing punches until chapter six when he begins to look at
combat operations rather than the development of doctrine. Not all of his
first blows land cleanly. For example, since this is not a book about the
landings, he reduces Omaha Beach to a single sentence: "D-Day's success was
marred by American stubbornness against using duplex-drive (DD) tanks with
the assault waves and having to pay for it at Omaha Beach." This view seems
totally at odds with the carefully researched material about DD tanks
presented in Omaha Beach
by Adrian Lewis, who relates the arguments between Omar Bradley and Gee
Gerow about DD tanks, and further points out that they were launched in sea
conditions recognized by everyone as beyond their capabilities, so that
almost all sank to the bottom of the Channel and only two reached Omaha
under their own power.
In the same chapter, Jarymowycz foreshadows what's to
come in his book, and it's worth quoting these two pages.
The Normandy campaign may be
summarized as an initial success stymied by
determined panzer counterattacks that created a beachhead stalemate. It was
a series of failed strategic offensives orchestrated by Montgomery to break
out with armored forces, followed by the double envelopment at Falaise that
encircled two German armies and led to the liberation of France and Belgium.
Montgomery's attempts to break out of the beachhead
featured four
strategic offensives: Goodwood, Cobra-Spring, Totalize, and Tractable. The
first was a British-Canadian effort, the remainder U.S.-Canadian. They are
important in that they were to conclude with the first and greatest example
of Western armored competence and completely overshadowed the remaining two
Allied armored operations of the war: Patton's counterstroke against the
German Ardennes offensive and U.S. armored operations in Lorraine. The
Battle of the Bulge (Ardennes) became a series of operational thrusts that
denied Hitler a strategic victory; the Lorraine contests were tactical but
with decisive operational results. Only the Normandy campaign offered tank
commanders the opportunity to demonstrate the validity of armor as an arm
of operational and strategic decision. Further, it pitted an inferior
armored force against a technologically vastly superior force. The scandal
of the European campaign was the inability of Western democracies to
produce armor and, perhaps doctrine, that was at least on a par with that
of their opponents.
For students of armor, among the dozen or so conflicts
sufficiently
documented to provide material for academic reflection, there are five
important examples that ought to considered: (1) Operations Goodwood and
Atlantic, July 1944; (2) Operations Cobra and Spring, July 1944; (3)
Operation Totalize, August 1944; (4) Operation Tractable and Cobra's
pursuit, August 1944; and (5) the Arracourt battles in Lorraine, September
1944. These operations serve to demonstrate both the status quo of Allied
doctrine as well as the cultural and technical differences between the
armies.
Operation Goodwood was the first Allied strategic
offensive (excepting
D-Day) in northwestern Europe and featured the defeat of the entire British
armored force. Atlantic, Goodwood's second act, briefly captured the vital
ground of Verrieres (Bourguebus) Ridge, and despite the promise of a saved
offensive was defeated by a series of German counterattacks.
Operations Cobra and Spring were components of the
second Allied strategic
offensive in Normandy. Cobra was immediately locked up in bocage attrition
warfare that would not end until early August; despite this, it evolved
into an armored success and featured the first German operational
counterstroke of the campaign. Spring was designed to support Cobra but
failed miserably; it provoked a particularly interesting corps level
counterattack by Dietrich's panzer units delivered despite total Allied air
supremacy.
Operation Totalize was the third strategic offensive,
designed to
complement Cobra's success and destroy all German armies west of Paris.
Despite initial total success, Totalize foundered in the face of spirited
armored
counterattacks and a repetition of Western inability to put together a
breakout doctrine at the operational level. Totalize was to painfully
demonstrate how far behind the Soviets the Allies stood in military art.
Operations Tractable and Cobra's pursuit are splendid
examples of Allied
armor at its operational best and strategic worst. Despite inspiring
accomplishments by individual divisions and corps, the dynamic maneuver
and total victory offered by Patton's U.S. Third Army were to be rejected
by the conservative Bradley. Tractable is the only example of a non-U.S.
corps acquiring operational maneuver and features the closing of the
Falaise Gap by the Canadian 4th Armored Division and the Polish 1st Armored
Division, then a unit in the Canadian First Army.
Following that introduction, Jarymowycz begins to swing
away. Bernard Montgomery takes the first punch.
It is a matter of debate whether Gen. Bernard Montgomery
had a strategic
mind. Examination of his activities in Africa and after Normandy suggests
that he liked to dabble beyond the operational art; he was just not good at
it. Montgomery's great success is the set piece battle buttressed by a
considerable superiority in men and material, total air supremacy, and an
embarrassment of artillery. Fighting continues until one side runs out of
men or equipment. This seemed to work in Africa. The breakout, often called
the third El Alamein, featured an almost pathetic inability to use a force
de chasse composed of two armored divisions designed to follow the British
8th Army schwerpunkt and overrun the remnants of the German-Italian army as
it fled to Tripoli. Rommel, the dean of desert warfare, outfoxed
Montgomery. The one "all-Monty" defensive victory over Rommel was at
Medinine [sic], where the Afrika Corps threw itself onto the British
antitank gun line and got some of its own medicine. Montgomery arrived in
Normandy experienced in the ducks-in-a-row offensive....
Not surprisingly, in the debate about Monty's intentions
in Normandy, Jarymowycz comes down squarely on the side claiming Monty
desperately wanted his own Anglo-Canadian forces to conduct the decisive
break-out, and only his continued failure led the field marshal to claim
his true plan all along had been to lure the German panzers into the
British sector so the Yanks could smash through in the west.
The book examines Guy Simonds' Canadian "Operation
Spring" offensive of 25 July. Faulty doctrine doomed Spring, and a timely
German counter-stroke inflicted heavy casualties and drove the Canadians
back. Despite holding considerable British armor in reserve, the Allies
failed to perform the same trick on the advancing panzers, and likewise
failed to extend the offensive. At best, Spring might be considered a
successful holding attack, but it failed in its larger design and in any
event did not force the Germans to commit anything more than local reserves.
Moving on to Operation Cobra, Jarymowycz continues to
punch his way through the top layers of Allied generals, faulty armored
doctrine,
and utter reliance on strategic bombing to open gaps.
Nevertheless, the shock and destruction created in the
German front lines [by the heavy bombers]
was everything Bradley hoped for. In a horrid irony, the advent of Cobra
and the triumph of U.S. armor brought about the death of armor's nemesis,
Leslie McNair. Perhaps because of his complete absence of operational
experience, McNair had gone to great lengths to demonstrate his personal
courage by visiting front-line troops. Wounded once in Tunisia, he again
tempted fate at Cobra's launch, where, had he given Devers the support
requested, there would have been ten U.S. armored divisions breaking out
instead of five. However, there were forty-five tank destroyer battalions
available to Bradleya force equivalent to fifteen armored divisions
except for the drawback of their being incapable of offensive operations.
Relatively few pages are devoted to Cobra before the
author moves on to Operation Totalize, Monty's offensive to support
Patton's mounting success at the far end of the front. Totalize was to be
another mostly Canadian affair, again planned largely by Simonds. The
Canadians gained eight milesthe longest advance of any of Monty's
Normandy offensivesbut performed poorly, failed to follow up on their
initial success, and lost hundreds of tanks. Jarymowycz rates the overall
performance quite poor, compares the Canadian commanders unfavorably to the
American tank commanders who had just conduced Cobra, and calls into
question the determination of the Polish armored division.
Here, as in Operation Tractable, the next offensive
covered, the Allies relied on heavy bombers to burst open the front.
By now the Allied offensive had been totally subverted
by a dangerous
dependence on air power.... Besides being used improperly as super-heavy
artillery, bombers were, despite exaggerated claims, an area weapon.
Bombing radii could vary from 2 to 15 miles.... During Cobra, Totalize, and
Tractable, the USAAC and RAF killed or wounded an impressive number of
senior officers and hundreds of Allied troops. It was big-scale, big-time
fratricide.
The closing, more or less, of the Falaise gap saw Stanislaw Maczek
and the Poles redeem themselves while Monty vacillated, Simonds "finally
caught the scent," and Kitching of Canadian 4th Armored Division was
relieved for unsatisfactory performance. Despite Bradley's "stubborn inactivity" and "petty bitterness,"
Jarymowycz mostly faults Monty for the Allied failure to plug the gap in a timely fashion.
He closes his Normandy chapters with a piece on American
armor in pursuit, closely measuring doctrineor what there was of
itagainst the actual operations conducted by tankers in particular as
they rolled toward Paris and the Seine. The next chapter moves on to
Patton's campaign in Lorraine.
Regarding the strategic situation, Jarymowycz lands more
punches.
The Allies' greatest strategic enemies were supply and
time. Although
landings in southern France opened up more ports, the supply situation
remained critical. The issue was petrol, and Eisenhower gave it to 21st
Army Group. Montgomery responded by not opening the port facilities of
Antwerp, not crossing the Rhine, and doing his best to annihilate SHAEF's
strategic airborne force by dumping three parachute divisions into Arnhem
in the disastrous Operation Market Garden. Given Montgomery's catalog of
operational foul-ups, pompous self-patronage, and snippy attitude,
Eisenhower's sustained faith and forgiveness were both saintly and
militarily naive. His careful nurturing of British political sensitivities
delayed both operational and strategic victory.
The Lorraine battles show Patton in quite a different light than his rapid pursuit after Cobra.
(See also Patton at Bay:
The Lorraine Campaign, September to December 1944 by John Nelson
Rickard.) Jarymowycz also illuminates some interesting tactical situations, especially involving units commanded by "P" Wood,
where, aided by fog, out-numbered Shermans and tank destroyers took a
serious toll of attacking Panthers "...and the results of three
tank destroyers and five M4s lost for forty-three new Panthers, spoke for themselves." While Patton and Manton Eddy stumbled in Lorraine,
at the tactical level American armor performed well. "Although the
Cobra encirclement and Falaise pocket showed the armored force at its operational best, U.S. armor came of age in Lorraine." After Operation Tractable, Simonds sacked Kitching
for poor performance even though Simonds himself was not entirely blameless. After Lorraine, Wood was sacked, although in this
case it seems to have been because Wood had a better grasp of armored
warfare than his corps commander, he out-performed his boss, and proved too
outspoken about the whole situation. (See also Eisenhower's
Lieutenants by Russell Weigley and Patton by Carlo D'Este.)
Jarymowycz devotes the remainder of his analysis to
larger issues. Why were the Allies until 1945 unable to produce a
main battle tank which could stand up to the opposing Tigers and Panthers?
On the American side, much of the blame is heaped directly on McNair and
to a lesser extent Jacob Devers. This is all backed up with tons of statistics about tank
effectiveness, kill ratios, and simple engineering solutions such as the
German command cupola that exacerbated Allied problems in tank-to-tank
combat. Despite the overall combat superiority of German tanks, in the end
Jarymowycz concludes that, more than anything else, technical unreliability crippled the Tigers and Panthers and
was by far the principle cause of panzer losses in maneuver warfare, and
one of the few saving graces for the Allies.
The next chapter compares and contrasts, with accompanying
graphics, Western and Soviet doctrine from strategic offensives to the
conduct of operational combat. Although he does not devote a great deal of
attention to them elsewhere in the book, the Soviets, Jarymowycz observes,
far out-classed everyone when it came to mounting strategic offensives and
utilizing armored forces as strategic weapons.
In his conclusions, the author unleashes a final flurry
of blows. Here are some samples:
The ability of American industry to create a speedy,
mechanically reliable
vehicle was only a partial victory. Selecting the M4 Sherman was a stopgap
solutionthere were supposed to be better tanks down the production line.
The Sherman eventually won its campaigns but at considerable cost to men
and machines. Further, while the staff at Aberdeen Proving Ground was
fiddling with experimental armor, the Armored Force was being subverted
from within. The artillery and infantry generals appointed by Gen. George
Marshall to create the AGF were seduced by the antitank gun, and conducted
a crusade against maneuver warfare. The result was that the Armored Force
did not have a principal tank that could meet the enemy on equal terms
until 1945. In fact, the U.S. Army would not have a main battle tank that
replicated the psychological and technical superiority of the German King
Tiger until it fielded the M1 Abrams in the early 1980s.
Technical shortcomings were not limited to the West. The
German army's
tank development program looked good on paper but it was, in some ways, a
sham. The folks who produced the Volkswagen could not manufacture a main
battle tank able to move on the battlefield without a coterie of mechanics
and spare parts. The Panther and Tiger were deadly killing machines but
absolute mechanical nightmares invented by engineers with a surprising
inability to correct breakdowns. Worse, the tanks arrived latethey
were a
response to Red Army armor. The Russians had fared better: their tanks were
simple. They worked and had big guns. When bigger tanks with bigger armor
and bigger guns were needed, Soviet industry promptly provided them. That
the German Panther and Tiger were generally superior to the T-34 or KV,
when they finally reached the battlefield, is incidental. The Red Army was
not jousting. The Soviet strategic offensive required a mass of armor to
execute deep battle: thousands of long-range tanks that moved quickly and
required only elementary maintenance. The Red Army did brilliantly. Its
accomplishments were nevertheless dismissed in a series of published
apologias by German generals and a Cold War Western military content to
believe that the Soviets achieved success only through crude mass.
Again, on doctrine:
Doctrine development required definition of first
principlesprimarily,
What is a tank? More important, What are tanks? The difference is crucial
to the creation of an armored force. An armored division required a
doctrine integrally distinct from that of an infantry division. This was
interpreted in various ways. The British and French convinced themselves
that there was a requirement for two different types of tanks, infantry
tanks and cavalry tanks. However, by 1945, even Montgomery was convinced
that: "we require one tank which will do both jobs." The definition of
what a tank is was quickly realized in combat: the tank (specifically, an
armored, tracked vehicle mounting a powerful gun) could fight in any
terrain, in any conditions, in any climate, singly or in small groups. The
tank excelled in the attack but was also deadly in the defense. It best
supported the infantry but could fight independently. There was simply
nothing the tank, accepting its utter dependability on petrol, oil, and
logistics, could not do.
The second question of what tanks are (massed armor)
revealed a very
different doctrinal mission. Chedeville's lament that: "the tank is very
delicate" is best applied to the armored division, corps, or tank army.
Massed tanks are not capable of operations in closed terrain or urban areas
and should not attack prepared defenses or fortifications. Massed armor
was reserved exclusively for the breakout and pursuit. Combat doctrine soon
determined that tanks must fight tanks but, specifically, they must
maneuver. Armored corps, conducting operational maneuver can achieve
strategic results; massed armor, maneuvering in deep battle, is therefore a
strategic arm. This was realized in principle by most general staffs, but
only effectively practiced by the German and Soviet high commands.
On lessons learned:
The doctrinal answer was that Fuller, Liddell Hart, and
Hobart were wrong.
Guderian was right, and what the Germans meant all along was not the
supremacy of armor, but of combined arms: a cocktail of armor, armored
infantry, mechanized artillery and armored engineers, all supported by
tactical air attack.
In general, Axis and Allied armies mirrored basic
principles, but the Germans were considered better led. Maneuver was
enthusiastically attempted
and reached competence at corps levels by both sides, although the Germans
(the Rommel effect) were the more creative. The North African experience,
although important preparation for staffs and soldiers, proved to be a
doctrinal detriment to formations training in Europe. British battle
schools and war colleges continued to stress desert tactics: "the defensive
box," "brigade fortress," and the "pivot" were taught to Allied armored
divisions preparing for Normandy, all of which turned out to be a waste of
time. The essence of maneuver warfare was overshadowed by Montgomery's "set
piece battle" and interest in Waterlooesque defensive victories.
And finally:
Normandy has been misinterpreted, and there are many
myths that still
persist. The tactical issue was gunnery and armor. All the Allied armored
offensives in the Caen sector were defeated by long-range tank fire. The
Sherman's inferiority soon led to the "infantry must lead," solution and
some have chided Allied armor commanders for holding back out of respect
for (one might almost say fright) German main battle tanks: "Without
question, the tank arm remained the weakest link in the Anglo-Canadian
order of battle." However, a close study of the great armored battles
(Goodwood, Totalize, Tractable, Cobra, and Arracourt) shows the very
opposite. When ordered to attack, Allied armored divisions led throughout
and regularly demonstrated aggressiveness to the point of recklessness.
These concluding chapters, like the rest of the book, are punctuated with plenty of clear, helpful maps and a series of very nicely executed graphic representations of unit TOEs and comparative strengths, all of the sort too often left out of books these days (and in this case featuring images created on the computer by Jarymowycz).
Tank Tactics ends up being extremely thorough on the Canadians, almost as thorough on the Americans, but less so on the tank forces of other nations, including the Soviets who are outside the bounds of explication but nevertheless ranked very highly by Jarymowycz in his conclusions. He also devotes a great deal of attention to the inter-war development of doctrine when most readers will probably be more interested in his chapters on the actual application of that doctrine. And there are at least a couple of questionable areas, such as the off-hand remark about DD tanks at Omaha Beach. Similarly, when he discusses the 1942 US Army plan for sixty armored divisions and speculates that with eight or ten armored divisions committed to Operation Cobra the "...Rhine might well have been crossed by fall 1944," the author makes no mention of where the additional gasoline, already in short supply at the sharp end, might have come from.
The strengths of the book far outnumber the weaknesses, however, and Tank Tactics definitely deserves to be read and studied.
Available from online booksellers, local bookshops, or
directly from Lynn
Rienner Publishers.
Thanks to Rienner for providing this review copy.
Read and submit feedback
Reviewed 16 September 2001
Copyright © 2001 by Bill Stone
May not be reproduced in any form without written permission of Stone
& Stone
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