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Beale, Peter. The Great Mistake: The Battle for Antwerp and the Beveland Peninsula, September 1944. Stroud, UK: Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2004
ISBN 0-7509-3286-4
Peter Beale has written an informative and idiosyncratic book about a lapse in Allied generalship during the drive from Normandy to the Rhine. In terms of subject matter, there have already been several books about the battle for the Scheldt and how it was necessitated by the initial Allied failure to secure the water approach to Antwerp. (In his account, Cornelius Ryan used the phrase "the great mistake" to describe the failure, thus providing this title.) In terms of approach, Beale's book is something of a novelty, with the author treating the episode almost like a medical problem that needs to be examined from every angle, carefully analyzed, and codified for diagnosing future cases.
When the 11th Armoured Division raced into Antwerp on September 4 it had captured the docks intact, but made no effort to secure the bridges over the Albert Canal, and these were blown up by the time a crossing was attempted two days later, the division then being switched eastwards. The divisional commander, Roberts, had not thought of seizing the bridges immediately he occupied the city, and no one above had thought of giving him orders to do so. It was a multiple lapse by four commanders: from the top [Bernard] Montgomery [at 21st Army Group], then [Miles] Dempsey [at 2nd Army], [Brian] Horrocks [at XXX Corps], and [Pip] Roberts [at 11th Armored Division], four commanders who were normally alert to tactical opportunities. Here are Beale's own words:
The 'Great Mistake', then, was the failure by the Allies to send whatever force could be mustered to seize a crossing over the Albert Canal at Merxem (as the Belgian [Resistance] White Brigade encouraged and implored them to do), and send an armoured column with all possible speed to the isthmus 2 miles west of Woensdrecht. This column would have had to be reinforced promptly to put in place a block to prevent the escape of the 15th Army. But had this been done, and then followed up once again very promptly with more troops, there could have been an opportunity to sweep up the Beveland peninsula during the very short period that existed until the resilient Germans reorganised themselves.
Why did this happen? Beale methodically studies all the evidence. First he quotes German situation reports, comments on those documents, and then reviews resources available to the Germans, including physical resources, organizational systems, and morale. Next Beale turns to "topography, weather, and civilians," again quoting various documents and reports and then commenting on their contents. Perhaps the most important of these factors, it seems the Allied commanders on the spot, notably Pip Roberts of 11th Armored, had no information about the effective Belgian resistance which could have offered valuable assistance with expert knowledge of local conditions.
Intelligence presented to senior commanders at the end of August and the beginning of September was incomplete, inaccurate and incautious. The impression given was that the Germans were in a state of complete chaos, and would be able to offer little systematic resistance before they collapsed entirely. As this Intelligence reinforced the mindset of the commanders, they were persuaded to make unbalanced and uninformed decisions. The Intelligence services have to take significant responsibility for the Great Mistake.
Chapters Eight and Nine respectively deal with Allied strategy and German strategy following the breakout from Normandy, and in that regard the chapters look at issues rather larger than simply the situation at Antwerp. Chapter Ten finally begins an account of the actual operations around Antwerp, mostly taken from unit war diaries and regimental histories. Beale comments that the excerpts make it clear how higher headquarters displayed no urgency in crossing the Albert canal and advancing into the Netherlands while the Germans were too weak and disorganized to resist. The next chapter, the longest in the book, looks at the aftermath of Antwerp through November 1944 with almost thirty pages of discussion about the ramifications of the "great mistake," especially in regard to Operation Market-Garden, clearing the Breskens pocket, the Channel ports, and the Woensdrecht-Beveland-Walcheren operations.
When the command structure changed on 1 September, Montgomery was still in charge of the northern sector of the Allied armies. He was there, and he could make decisions to meet the changing circumstances. After the capture of Antwerp he could have ordered the exploitation north, the crossing of the Albert Canal and the advance to Woensdrecht. Only he can be blamed for the failure to act, and he had complete authority to do so.
Quite different from the kinds of accounts of the campaign written by Moulton, Thompson, Whitaker, etc, Beale has instead practically performed a vivisection on all the salient elements of the "great mistake" committed at Antwerp. He makes especially good use of extracts from war diaries, after action reports, and unit histories, but in every case he comments extensively on those quotes rather then simply tossing them out. While his narrative sometimes wanders a bit (as when he brings Napoleon at Waterloo into the equation) and not everything he examines seems entirely worthy of his efforts, in sum this book proves entertaining and enlightening as well as unusual. A slightly offbeat but very interesting piece of work that should be enjoyed by many readers.
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Reviewed 22 August 2004
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