Table of Contents
- 1 What was the broad front strategy?
- 2 Why did Eisenhower choose the broad front approach rather than Montgomery’s narrow thrust?
- 3 Which of the following describe the Red Ball Express?
- 4 Did Montgomery and Eisenhower get along?
- 5 What was the consequence of the Allies decision to not pause at the Seine?
- 6 What was Eisenhower’s post-Normandy strategy?
- 7 Why did Montgomery want to end the war quickly?
- 8 Why was the Ruhr so important to the Allies?
What was the broad front strategy?
Eisenhower made in September 1944 to build up his forces along the Rhine through the whole length of the Western Front, from the North Sea to Switzerland, before launching a final drive into the heart of Germany. It embodied what has come to be known as the “broad-front strategy.”
Why did Eisenhower choose the broad front approach rather than Montgomery’s narrow thrust?
Eisenhower stated his belief that advance on a broad front would soon provoke German forces to collapse. He told Montgomery why a “single thrust” toward Berlin was not going to be accepted. Eisenhower rejected what he considered a “pencil-like” thrust into Germany.
What did Montgomery and Eisenhower disagree about?
Eisenhower and Montgomery had already disagreed over plans for invading Sicily in July 1943. They would subsequently argue over Monty’s tactics in Normandy after D-Day, and over Monty’s claim to credit for the defeat of the Germans at the Battle of the Bulge.
Which of the following describe the Red Ball Express?
Which of the following describe the Red Ball Express? It was a truck convoy system manned primarily by African American troops to support the effort in Northern France in 1944. What was the consequence of the Allies’ decision to not pause at the Seine? It stretched Allied logistical capabilities to their limit.
Did Montgomery and Eisenhower get along?
Eisenhower respected Montgomery’s abilities though, and Monty, in his own fashion, found Eisenhower difficult to dislike. Montgomery even admitted that Eisenhower was the only one who had the personality to get all the Allies to cooperate and win the war.
What was the significance of the Red Ball Express to the Allied war effort in World War II?
The Red Ball Express was a famed truck convoy system that supplied Allied forces moving quickly through Europe after breaking out from the D-Day beaches in Normandy in 1944. To expedite cargo shipment to the front, trucks emblazoned with red balls followed a similarly marked route that was closed to civilian traffic.
What was the consequence of the Allies decision to not pause at the Seine?
What was the consequence of the Allies’ decision to not pause at the Seine? It stretched Allied logistical capabilities to their limit. What helped the Germans to regroup for the Ardennes counteroffensive? How did the Combined Bomber Offensive contribute to Allied victory?
What was Eisenhower’s post-Normandy strategy?
On May 27 Eisenhower affirmed the broad front strategy recommended by his planners. This is the only known document that spelled out SHAEF’s post-Normandy strategy. For Eisenhower, the student of history, the solution was self-evident.
What was Eisenhower’s decision about D-Day All About?
Some of the war’s most contentious debates have sprung from this decision. For his part, Eisenhower stubbornly never wavered in his belief that he had chosen the correct strategy. This is what it was all about. The Normandy campaign ended in late August 1944 in a rout and with the German army in complete disarray.
Why did Montgomery want to end the war quickly?
For all his vanity and at times insufferable insistence on pursuing his own ideas, Montgomery, like Eisenhower, was heartily sick of war and eager to end it quickly. Given the precedent of the independence of the army group commanders, little would have changed with Bradley in command.
Why was the Ruhr so important to the Allies?
These included the capture of the Ruhr in order to cripple Germany’s war-making capability, and the capture of Berlin. The four options presented for an advance to the Ruhr were all variations of a broad Allied advance both north and south of the rugged Ardennes Forest.