Monday, April 21, 2008

Fall 1943 - Spring 1944

Following Rommel's pause to regroup in late October, America quickly set to work gathering forces for a counterattack. It was not soon coming. Armor and air were largely wrecked and rapidly being rebuilt while reserves of trained men were practically exhausted whether through injury, death, or capture following the failed campaigns against Rommel and Guderian, or were tied up elsewhere in garrison positions. The lack of troops was due to Garner's refusal to fund more than 8 divisions during his term. Dewey had fought to ramp up training in the early days of his administration but had only managed roughly 50 divisions by 1943.

This limitation of trained soldiers created problems. First there was the necessity of training, these men needed for cadres to prepare the next crop for battle. Second was the issue of keeping parts of the nation secure which led into the third, and most problematic, issue. Many regions, especially the West Coast, were against diverting troops from their borders. Legislators and Governors from California to Washington State lobbied to keep a sizable troop presence following numerous attacks by the Japanese on military installations, such as Ft. Stevens in Oregon, civilian facilities like those at Goleta, CA, or the largely undefended forests of the Pacific Northwest. Only luck had prevented a catastrophe thus far and many feared, should American forces be withdrawn, the Japs would pour across their shores much like they had at Hawaii, a traumatic event still recent in the minds of Americans. Hysteria gripped California worst of all with many believing an invasion was at most only weeks away. Their efforts served to hamper military operations in the country. In the end, Dewey was forced to draw troops from the relatively secure south.

Another problem which was becoming increasingly apparent was a drop in industrial output. The Germans had managed to knock out roughly one third of America's shipyards, one half of steel production, and were close to seizing the manufacturing core of heavy machinery in the country in its entirety. Manpower issues also arose as nearly every white male was pressed into uniform. Women and blacks were becoming the norm in factories and working hours were being extended, sometimes to the point that accidents became a regular occurrence. In the south, there was considerable anger that black men should work in close proximity to white women leading to strained tensions. This was not helped by the perception of southern troops that they were being singled out and shipped north as fodder.

As troops were being moved north for an offensive against Rommel, American plans were largely disrupted by Raeder and Goering's joint air/naval effort in mid-November on the coast of Virginia. Dewey's commanders feared it was the beginning of an amphibious landing meant to open a second front and quickly rerouted troops to the Atlantic shore. Despite this military presence, the Luftwaffe and Kriegsmarine left the naval yards at Newport News in ruins. The Kriegsmarine would remain a constant presence on America's East Coast, sometimes venturing as far south as the Carolinas disrupting American shipping and shelling cities. American commanders would wait until early January before once more planning for an offensive north.

Meanwhile, Goering turned his attention to Washington itself. Aerial bombings became the norm as American leaders debated whether or not to remain in the capital. Some believed the President should withdraw either south or west to safer territory to conduct the war. Dewey would not be swayed. If American citizens were to see him retreat, it would be disastrous for morale. American soldiers were used to ring the city against the expected German approach. They spent months digging fortifications.

To the north, German forces were becoming irritated with guerilla activity in their rear. American and Canadian partisans continually threatened their thinly stretched supply lines throughout the autumn and winter of 1943. What these partisans had not counted on were the brutal methods Heydrich would use to silence them. In one of the darker moments of the Atlantic War, Heydrich had the entire town of Malone, NY executed for aiding and housing partisans responsible for the murder of an SS man. Shock traveled throughout the state. Though many vowed vengeance, partisan activity noticeably dropped in the short term. This was followed by an intense search and seizure of all weapons from civilians in the occupied areas with threats of draconian punishment if any weapons were not registered and turned over to SS authorities. Heydrich also took to starving non-cooperative regions. This was not simply done to punish the locals but also because food stocks were not adequate for the occupied areas. German needs came first, the rest rationed amongst the populace. Many starved to death in the bleak winter of 43.

One shocking development that began in New England was American citizens of German heritage, both born and naturalized, stepping forward to join SS forces as valuable liasion officers. Of course, many of these men had been interned at the beginning of the war as security threats only to be later freed by Wermacht forces. Urged on by Kuhn, the appointed American leader of occupied America, they willingly joined the movement though their numbers were mostly in the hundreds. This "treasonous activity", as well as collaboration among the populace with their German occupiers, served to divide communities as no one knew who to trust.

A major blow for the American effort was also received in early 1944 when the United Kingdom formerly signed an armistice with the Japanese Empire. With their base in India lost, economic setbacks at home, and pressure on the domestic front over losses both territorial and human, PM Wood was forced to sue for terms. Australia would condemn Wood as a traitor for abandoning the war effort. With Britain out of the war and their lifeline to America cut off, many Aussies feared an invasion by Japan was soon to come.

What the Australians did not know was that, for all intents and purposes, Japan was through with the war. With peace achieved following the collapse of Chiang Kai-Shek's forces, Vlassov's truce, and Halifax's armistice, Japan's entire western border was safe. They held hegemony over a large swath of Siberia, China proper, Southwest Asia, and the Pacific as well as had an ally in India. Australia did not have the strength to force them back from New Guinea, and the United States was embroiled in a continental war with Germany. Also, Japan had found its shipping stretched to the limit and its troops too thinly distributed to even think of yet another invasion. There was a large enough problem holding what they now had. There were the aerial and naval attacks on Australia and the United States but these were to put pressure on both governments to sue for peace.

By April 1944, Rommel and Guderian were ready to resume their offenses aimed at meeting in Cincinnati.

SOURCE: Thackeray, Raymond The Eye of the Storm: The Lull in the American Campaign

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