Hitler's Last Stand (2018) s02e04 Episode Script

Nazis Strike Back

September 1944. Holland.
Allied forces defend a tenuous position
in a German occupied city.
British airborne troops
try to hold off an enemy tank attack
armed only with a handheld
weapon called a PIAT.
After six rounds, the weapon fails.
The PIAT bomb explodes prematurely,
inside the trough of the weapon.
It's extremely close to his face.
We're talking about a distance like this.
As more German tanks arrive,
it seems more likely
the whole operation has backfired.
On June 6th, 1944,
Allied forces finally
land troops in Normandy
to open the western front.
But Nazi fanatics and diehards
continue to fight ruthlessly for survival.
D-Day was a battle.
The Allies still need to win the war.
September 19th, 1944.
Arnhem, Holland.
Clear!
Major Robert Cain
and his elite unit
of British airborne troops
are 60 miles behind enemy lines.
Dropped into occupied Holland by glider,
they are lightly equipped
but highly trained.
They close in on the town of Arnhem,
which has been under Nazi occupation
for four years.
They are not the first British soldiers
to pass through here.
The rest of Cain's regiment
the South Staffordshires
are somewhere ahead.
Cain has orders to join them in an attack
on German defenses,
on the other side of town.
But it's getting light,
and he needs to find them,
before the Germans find him.
Cain can take no chances.
He is part of a risky and ambitious
operation to help end the war.
In the three months since D-Day,
the Allies had advanced
rapidly through France and Belgium.
In the early days of September
there was this astonishing advance
all the way from the River Seine
right to, into Belgium,
into even the edge of ah Germany
in a matter of days.
It was one of the fastest advances
in the whole of the Second World War.
Allied leadership wants to
capitalize on the chaotic German retreat
and deal a death blow to the Nazi regime.
British general, Bernard Montgomery,
believes he has the best plan.
The main objective
for Operation Market Garden
was to get across the Rhine
at Arnhem, in Holland
and then be able to encircle the Ruhr
from the north.
Operation Market Garden
has two distinct parts.
The "Market" plan calls for nearly
20,000 Allied airborne troops
to be dropped behind enemy lines
to capture and hold a series
of critical bridges in central Holland.
Operation Garden has the British
30th corps on a tank charge
along a Dutch highway
corridor from Belgium.
With bridges secured
by Operation Market,
Operation Garden would split
German defenses to cross the Rhine,
and enter Germany
north of the Siegfried Line.
Montgomery also had
a secret plan in a way
to head straight for Berlin,
thinking that this would give him
command over all
of the Allied ground forces.
If successful,
the war could end by Christmas.
Market Garden
will be the biggest airborne operation
in the whole of history.
Far bigger than the German invasion
of Crete
or any of the other operations
in Sicily or elsewhere.
There are so many troops,
they have to be dropped over multiple
days, by both parachute and glider.
Among the first to land on September 17th
is the Second Parachute Battalion
led by Lieutenant Colonel John Frost.
Born in India during his father's service,
Frost joins the military
and serves in the Middle East,
and returns to Britain
after the war begins.
Frost must make his way
the road bridge over the Rhine at Arnhem.
Colonel Frost
with his second battalion
of the parachute regiment
wasted no time at all.
He set off straight away
and that was the main reason
why they got through.
The Nazis
do not expect an attack
so far behind the front line.
The defense is disorganized.
They do not realize
the Allies target the bridges.
Shoot those Krauts!
Frost managed
to get to the north end of the bridge
by night fall and then concealed
his men as German troops
still crossed over the bridge without
realizing the British had reached it.
But even
with the north end secure,
British attempts to capture
the south end fail.
The Germans respond.
They reinforce the bridge overnight
and encircle the north end.
Frost and his men
are now cut off and surrounded.
The original plan was
for the different parachute battalions
to take up positions really encircling
the whole of the town of Arnhem.
Once Frost had got to the bridge
and they realized
that they were under heavy pressure
with German counterattacks.
The other two battalions
felt they had to get to the bridge
themselves and support him.
So this is why the whole
of the original plan
was more or less forgotten
on that first evening or afternoon
of the 17th of September.
Cain's own regiment
was originally tasked
with protecting the drop zones,
eight miles from Arnhem.
But when Cain and B Company land,
they learn of the change of plan.
They felt that they had to send
every available unit
at that particular moment
to reinforce Frost at the bridge.
Because if the bridge wasn't held
then obviously
the whole of Market Garden would lose
its whole point and collapse.
B Company urgently
needs to locate
the rest of its regiment, and join them.
You're talking from the center
of the landing zones
to Arnhem nearly 12 kilometers.
And Airborne soldiers
need surprise on their side.
When they move
through the outskirts of the city,
Cain hears heavy gunfire
on the heights behind the hospital.
The Germans have had time
to mobilize a response.
As he nears the battleground,
Cain starts seeing German
and British casualties.
He recognizes uniforms
from other regiments among the dead
and continues to press forward.
The Allied planners
had assumed that the German troops
in the area of Arnhem were very weak.
That they'd talked about you know,
old men and, uh, boys.
They knew though
that these two SS Panzer divisions
were deployed somewhere in the area.
But they had been beaten up
in the end of the fighting in Normandy.
That they assumed they weren't going
to represent a major threat.
And the Germans always punished, uh,
shall we say such assumptions.
One Panzer division
contains a battalion
commanded by SS Captain
Hauptstrumfuher Hans Moeller.
Hans Moeller is a Waffen SS veteran
who had already joined the forces
in the 1930s.
He served in the first
SS engineer regiment
that was raised up in 1934.
He initially was an NCO
and in 1940 he was commissioned.
Moeller had escaped
the Falaise Gap in Normandy,
only to lose hundreds
of men in the retreat.
He is no stranger to Arnhem.
Moeller is familiar
with the terrain and with the region,
because he had fought there in 1940,
and now he finds himself
four years later at exactly the same spot.
After arriving back
in Arnhem, the Panzer division
organizes its remaining troops
into alarm units,
Ninety men strong, as a precaution.
Alarmeinheiten translates into alarm units
that are set up specifically
for the task of reacting
and counter attacking
as quickly as possible
in the case of an Allied
airborne operation.
Moeller and the other Panzer
units form Sperrlinie or blocking lines.
A Sperrlinie is a line of defense
that the enemy must not pass.
It's quite often reinforced
with obstacles or mine fields
in order to funnel the enemy attack
and create kill zones.
The blocking lines run
across the west end of Arnhem
from the highroad down to the river.
They should trap Allied airborne troops
and keep them from reaching Arnhem bridge
to reinforce Frost and his men.
Go, go, go!
It is at the far end
of the kill zone
where Major Cain finally locates
his regimental commanding officer,
Lieutenant Colonel Derek McCardie.
By the night of the second day,
the 18th of September.
It is very clear to Derek McCardie
and all of the officers
down near the bridge,
that it was getting extremely difficult
to get to the bridge.
But there was a determination
on the part of them all,
they had to get to the bridge
to Johnny Frost
and relieve those paratroopers
who were holding on.
McCardie expects support
from a unit to the north,
to help them push through the kill zone.
The South Staffs
have already suffered heavy losses.
Cain's timing could not be better
as the Second Staffordshires
prepare to fend off yet another attack.
British Major Robert Cain
is part of a daring airborne operation
to seize the bridges
that cross the lower Rhine River
in Holland.
But Nazi resistance
proves stronger than anticipated.
As highly mobile airborne troops,
they have been dropped in by glider,
the South Staffordshires
are armed with what they can carry.
They have no big anti-tank guns here,
in what the South Staffs call the dell
but they do have PIATs.
PIAT stands for projector
infantry anti-tank.
The PIAT was a very cumbersome weapon
to put it mildly.
It was basically spring loaded.
You need to be incredibly strong,
and also it was a very difficult weapon
to fire standing up.
Fire!
Depending on the sort
of vehicle you were trying to destroy
you really needed to be within 60 meters.
Now that is incredibly close,
especially when if it was a tank
or an armored personnel carrier
and they have machine guns
you were going to be very, very exposed.
So, it required not just strength.
It required bravery, too.
Go, go, go.
Cain draws enemy fire
and fetches ammunition
while a Lieutenant targets the tanks.
As the tanks close to about 100 yards,
they are too far for the PIAT to destroy.
But the South Staffs hold them at bay
for several hours
before running out of bombs.
They are buying time,
hoping for reinforcement.
But German counter attacks
throughout the city
keep Allied troops tied up.
So Cain and the others do their best
to hold the dell.
One stage he sees a German NCO
and some German soldiers
coming up closely towards them.
Clearly not particularly aware
of the positions of the South Staffords
and he orders a Bren Gun to open fire.
He fires on the Germans,
but misses.
Cain proves impatient.
And now you can
tell his frustration.
He grabs the Bren Gun.
Cain opens with deadly fire.
When one of the Germans tries to rise,
Cain loads another magazine,
and empties it.
He kills all of those Germans,
just dispatches them almost,
uh, out of hand.
It is becoming clear,
that no matter how many they kill
more arrive to take their place.
Moving closer to the German border,
also means for the Germans, it's easier
to bring in their reinforcements.
To bring in their supplies.
The Germans must wipe out
the Allied forces in Holland.
We're getting to the Rhine.
It's the last defense line for the Germans
before the Allies
come into the home territory.
SS Captain
Hans Moeller and his men
put up some of the stiffest opposition.
In addition to attacks
from a self-propelled gun
and half-track vehicles
Moeller's men
pummel the South Staffordshires
with Panzerfaust projectiles
and flame throwers.
The Germans are well supplied
with ammunition.
Wave after wave of
Allied soldier is shot down.
We mustn't forget
that in the entire war,
the biggest output of the German war
industry is August 1944.
So all the new kit that had been produced
just a month earlier,
can be brought quickly to the front line,
and is also one of the factors
why the Germans
are able to stabilize the front
in September.
Cain's commanding officer,
Lieutenant Colonel Derek McCardie
faces a desperate decision in his sector.
The rumors certainly
were coming through
that Arnhem Bridge had fallen
and was back in German hands
and therefore any further
attempt might be futile.
McCardie has to consider
the larger operation.
If they cannot get
to the Arnhem road bridge,
maybe they can protect
another potential bridgehead.
The whole point of this
operation is for a link up
with 30 Corps and to get a crossing
over the Rhine
and therefore the establishment
of the perimeter west of Arnhem
at Oosterbeek is a chance
to, ah, still achieve that objective.
McCardie orders his men to withdraw
from their position in the dell.
Go!
Hurry, hurry!
Cain sets a rear guard
to protect their retreat.
The South Staffs bring their wounded
to what they call the monastery
and prepare to pull back.
As they seek shelter,
a German tank blows up
the house next to them.
Get down!
Go, go!
Still determined to fight,
Cain and three others
take cover in a trench and wait.
September 19th, 1944
British Major Robert Cain
and three others occupy a trench
which provides some protection
as they retreat from Arnhem, Holland.
A German tank approaches their position,
not knowing that they are there.
This tank gets really close
and Robert Cain can see
the tank commander out of his turret
with his field glass
and his black gloves
and this extraordinary detail
and there isn't much they can do about it.
The tank is too close.
Firing at this distance is too risky.
Cain sees the tank commander
scanning for targets.
Hoping the tank will pass by,
Cain urges the men to stay down.
But one cannot resist.
He takes a shot at the tank commander,
and betrays their position.
As he says, some bloody fool
opens fire on the tank
to absolutely no effect,
so the tank is going to retaliate.
Before the German commander
even lets off a round,
the other men bolt from the trench.
Go, go!
They are immediately gunned down.
The tank advance continues.
Clearly Robert Cain
is not at the end of his tether,
but he's armed with his pistol thinking,
what on earth can I do with a pistol?
He crawls to the top
of the trench and out
carefully below the line of sight
of the tank commander and his guns.
Cain rolls over and over,
off a ledge and drops 20 feet
into the relative safety
of the hospital yard and passes out.
Some minutes, not very long
where I'm guessing he lay there
thinking I-- what am I--
this is going nowhere.
But of course gathers his senses,
the man that he is,
and manages
to extricate himself and head west
with the rest of his soldiers.
What remains
of the South Staffordshire regiment
joins 11th Battalion
having heard the rest of their unit
was gathering at Den Brink.
Stay low, stay low!
But before commanding officer
Lieutenant Colonel Derek McCardie
can also escape
he too is struck and taken prisoner.
Major Cain is now the most senior active
officer in his battalion.
As Operation Market Garden
enters its third day,
SS Captain Moeller
has gone on the offensive,
determined to eliminate
the Allied airborne threat
in the Dutch city once and for all.
Halt!
At Arnhem, there's a last bridge
of the river Rhine.
So, Moeller knows,
and his men, we must defend,
this is our last line of defense.
Otherwise the gate to Germany is open.
NARRATOR He advances west
from Arnhem, slowly clearing
the airborne troops
out of houses and trenches.
Each house has to be taken individually,
often with fierce hand-to-hand combat.
Entire platoons from both sides
disappear into the urban battlefield.
Because Allied forces
have failed to get reinforcements
to Arnhem bridge to relieve
Lieutenant Colonel John Frost
they now hope to set up a new position
west of Arnhem,
in Oosterbeek.
Perhaps if they hold
on there then 30 Corps
and the rest of the Second British
Army will come up
and will be able to bridge the Rhine there
and continue
and hold that particular bridgehead.
To give airborne troops time
to withdraw to Oosterbeek
Robert Cain is given orders
to take the high ground
overlooking the withdrawal route
known as Den Brink.
It's not particularly high,
but it's high enough
to be a significant feature.
- Understood?
- Yes, sir.
Cain organizes
the remaining 100 men
of his regiment into five small platoons.
He selects two,
to stage an assault on Den Brink.
When they reach the top,
the Germans open with heavy mortar fire.
Cain's men need to dig in to take cover
or face certain death.
They get to work with what they have.
And they find it extremely
difficult to dig in on Den Brink.
They don't have proper
digging tools with them,
just their entrenching tools.
And I suspect a number of men
would've discarded those too,
on their way into Arnhem
and during the fighting
that's taking place that day.
Cain is exposed on the hill,
with no supporting artillery fire.
His platoons suffer many casualties
as shells rain down around them.
After 90 minutes, Cain pulls out.
Come on, move!
To stay would be suicide.
Operation Market Garden is unraveling.
The next day,
news filters through both sides.
After defying German counter attacks
without reinforcement,
Lieutenant Colonel John Frost and more
than 100 others are taken prisoner.
Frost has to surrender
purely because they are out of ammunition,
ah, they're out of food and water,
ah, there are so many wounded
that his doctors
simply can't look after them anymore.
Frost himself was also badly wounded
in the legs
when a mortar bomb explodes very nearby
and is incapable of carrying on.
It is a turning point.
Retaking the Arnhem
Bridge is a major victory
for the Germans.
They have got these important Rhine
crossings again in their hands.
And besides,
capturing a Battalion Commander
is something that the Germans
don't achieve very often
at this stage of the war.
By Thursday September 21st,
Operation Market Garden
is officially a failure.
For Major Cain
and the thousands of remaining
Allied airborne troops,
60 miles behind enemy lines,
their best hope
of getting out of Holland alive
remains the arrival of Allied tanks
and troops from the south.
But they are still days away.
September 21st, 1944.
Nazi soldiers encircle
thousands of Allied troops,
near Arnhem, Holland.
After a failed operation
to capture and secure bridges
crossing the lower Rhine River.
What remains
of the First British Airborne Division
has fallen back
to Oosterbeek, west of Arnhem.
The defense of Oosterbeek,
ah, during the latter part
of Operation Market Garden
was purely a-- a defensive measure.
It was no more than that.
They hope by holding on to the bridgehead
that maybe in the coming days
if 30 Corps came through.
But basically, they could do
no more than just hold on.
30 corps was a force
of British armor
expected to race 64 miles
through occupied Holland.
And consolidate the bridges
in two and a half days.
Entering the fifth day,
resistance to the Allied operation
has proved far greater than expected,
on all fronts.
Now 6,000 German infantry backed by tanks,
surround and close in on the remainder
of the airborne division.
When an enemy
is trapped and encircled,
the Germans call it, it's a kessel.
So it's a cauldron.
So, this is very much a German tactic,
and also on the operational level,
during the Second World War,
to encircle the enemy, to eneinselkessen,
so to encircle him,
to put him into a cauldron.
SS Capt. Hans
Moeller and the Panzer troops
plan to squeeze the airborne division
to death, or surrender.
And at Arnhem, the fighting
as it is particularly ferocious,
the cauldron is called
a witch's cauldron, " en hexen kessel".
A very strong word
for saying something is very, uh, chaotic
and brutal at the same time.
Moeller later describes
occupying the ground floor of a house,
with British airborne troops upstairs.
As the day wears on,
a whiskey bottle appears from above.
The Germans
send up some chocolate in return.
It shows you
that even in this ferocious fighting
there are always moments of ja, humanity,
of sharing the hardships of the war,
and in the next moment
they shoot against each other again.
British Major Robert Cain
and his 40 men
must defend the southeastern sector
of the horseshoe defense,
near a church.
It guards one of the roads
into the perimeter
and also it is next to the River Rhine
and this is extremely important
to hold onto
because they're still hoping
for a link up with 30 Corps
and they had to protect the crossing.
As Major Cain
holds this position,
he spots Panzer troops setting fire
to the laundry house.
It is a scorched earth policy
to punish the Dutch
and flush out Allied troops.
Robert Cain throws a hand grenade,
but he throws it upwards and it hits
a rafter and bounces back towards him.
He threw himself into the burning embers
of the laundry
as a safer place to be than
where his hand grenade was going to land,
and he emerged scorched
but otherwise untouched.
So far behind enemy lines,
airborne troops
rely on relief and resupply.
Operation Market Garden
was planned
to last only three or four days,
by getting on well beyond four days,
and the fighting more or less
24 hours a day,
ah, means
that they were all totally exhausted.
And also, one sees the way
that the rates of battle shock
or of psychological collapse, ah,
start to increase pretty rapidly.
Surrounded by the enemy
and unable to defend their drop zones,
Allied supplies fall out of reach.
The Germans are able to seize
the British airdrop zones.
As a consequence, all the supplies
or 90% of the supplies,
comes into German hands.
And this is of course for the Nazis,
great propaganda material.
So you have got Germans
now with British food,
with British cigarettes.
Within the Oosterbeek perimeter,
things get worse for the civilians
and airborne troops,
as the Germans cut off the water.
Food and ammunition also run out.
Starving and exhausted,
the airborne troops
cannot hold out for much longer.
More equipment arrives on the German side.
The arrival of new tanks
for the Germans
means that they can split now
the Witch's Cauldron into two parts
and the British forces face
now annihilation.
Panzer troops
are ordered to attack Oosterbeek
to finish off the trapped airborne
division holding out in the cauldron.
Once again, Major Robert Cain
finds himself defending their sector
with little more than a PIAT.
All right!
September 1944.
Now into their fifth day
of Operation Market Garden,
the First British Airborne Division
has been trapped
and surrounded
by two German Panzer divisions
at Oosterbeek, Holland.
Major Robert Cain's position
is under attack by tanks.
With only a handheld weapon called a PIAT,
he takes aim at a tank 100 yards away.
As the smoke clears,
he sees that he has damaged the tracks
but he has also alerted
the tank to his position.
Cain fights with the supporting fire
of Bren gunners.
The Bren gunners keep
the German's heads down
and certainly the commanders of the tanks
who like to stick their heads up
because it was much better observation,
kept them inside their turrets.
With Cain's next shot,
the tank is disabled,
and the crew bails out.
Cain approaches the tank,
shouting for the Bren guns
to continue firing.
The German crew is eliminated.
As more tanks approach,
Cain holds his ground.
Robert Cain hits on the idea of firing it.
Firing the PIA
in almost vertical position.
Not anything to do with range,
but to try and drop
the PIAT bombs on top of the German armor,
where the thickness of their armor
is weakest.
But after six rounds,
Cain's PIAT gun misfires.
The PIAT bomb explodes prematurely,
inside the trough of the weapon,
uh, it's extremely close to his face,
when I say extremely close, we're talking
about a distance like this
semi blinds him certainly gives him
a couple of black eyes.
Cain has to be dragged
from the trench
to the regimental aid post.
We know that his fury boiled over.
He issued a stream of obscenities.
I suspect towards the soldiers
who were trying to escort him
out of further danger.
Reload!
As the battle resumes,
Major Cain
brushes off his PIAT bomb injuries
and leaves the aid post,
to return to his trench.
So determined is this man
to be an example
to his soldiers that in about
half an hour, he is back with them.
The battle of attrition
takes its toll.
Robert Cain says this thing
about you call for someone
and they don't answer,
or the answer comes he's had it.
He was killed yesterday or he's wounded.
Or he's a prisoner.
Too often by these last days,
he's calling for men
who are no-- no longer there.
No longer answering the call.
And by the next day
Major Cain has fired so many rounds
that his eardrum bursts.
He stuffs field dressing into his ears,
and continues to fight.
They hold off the Germans
trying to gain ground near the river.
With limited supplies
and under constant counter attack,
it becomes increasingly difficult
for the British to care for their wounded.
A cease fire is negotiated.
It was arranged
for the Germans to take them
and basically to transport them
in most cases back to Appeldorn
rather than in the immediate area.
The wounded were then put on stretchers
and taken away.
During a two hour cease fire,
1,200 wounded Allied soldiers
are taken into German captivity.
For those left behind,
pressure continues to build.
Fifteen new Tiger tanks appear
on the battlefield,
having arrived from Germany
the night of September 23rd.
With the arrival of the Royal Tiger Tanks
their fate was sealed.
Desperation sets in
for the remaining airborne division.
The next day, Cain no longer
has even a PIA
to defend his men or their position.
He uses whatever he can find.
He locates a two-inch mortar.
Not a handheld weapon,
it is usually fired from the ground.
It's not even meant
to be used against tanks.
He's firing the two-inch mortar
at very short range
to try and get these rounds
onto the German armor
and certainly in amongst German infantry.
Anything to thwart
the enemy attacks on their perimeter.
Despite the heroics
of Major Cain and many others
General Urquhart the
commander of the First Airborne
got the message across to General Browning
in Nijmegen, they were out of ammunition.
They could not hold on any longer.
After five days
holding out at Oosterbeek
and eight days from the start
of Operation Market Garden
the order comes for the airborne troops
to abandon their posts.
Oosterbeek, Holland.
In the aftermath
of Operation Market Garden,
Allied airborne troops
can no longer hold a potential bridgehead,
north of the lower Rhine River.
Perhaps the most difficult part
of this operation is about to come
to hold this perimeter,
and to continue to hold it convincingly,
so that the Germans think that
it continues to be a solid perimeter
while as many men as possible
are withdrawn across the Rhine.
The First Airborne
Division is to be evacuated,
across the river, by night.
In preparation, Major Robert Cain
shaves for the first time in a week.
Later, his efforts attract
the notice of Brigadier Philip Hicks,
who notes, there's one officer
at least who's shaved.
But before, Cain remains
on the north side,
to ensure all his men board the vessels,
but when he is ready to evacuate,
there are no boats left
to take him across.
So, Cain and the other stragglers,
locate a damaged assault craft,
and use their rifle butts as paddles.
Their boat leaks badly,
but they make it to the other side,
to safety.
The First Airborne Division
goes in some 12,000 strong,
ah, with the reinforcements,
which arrive later.
By the time the end of the battle comes,
less than 3,000 are evacuated.
Thousands are taken prisoner,
missing, or killed in action.
Market Garden
did not just constitute a massive loss
in terms of Airborne troops
and certain degree, 30 Corps as well.
It was above all the suffering
of the civilians,
having helped the airborne troops
so bravely, so generously.
Thousands of Dutch civilians
are killed
and many more injured in the fighting.
Almost immediately, the Dutch then faced
retribution from the Germans.
They took their revenge
basically by cutting off food
from the major cities
and this led to the Hunger Winter
where at least another 20,000
died from starvation.
After being captured
at the bridge,
Lieutenant Colonel John Frost
spends the rest of the war as a POW.
He is later awarded a bar
to his distinguished service order
for his leadership at Arnhem.
Major Cain earns the Victoria Cross
for his actions throughout the operation.
It is the highest honor for valor
in the British Empire.
He is the only man
to receive the medal at Arnhem,
and live to tell the tale.
His citation reads,
"His coolness and courage
under incessant fire
could not be surpassed".
Nazi propaganda portrays Arnhem
to be a major German victory,
it's actually only partly a victory.
Further south
in Holland, at Nijmegen
the Germans cannot throw back
all the liberating Allied forces.
But for Arnhem,
and this is the crucial bridge,
the Germans achieve a major victory.
And it's the only time in '44, '45
that the Germans destroy
an entire Allied Division.
Montgomery's version
has its own spin.
General Montgomery tried to claim
that Market Garden was a 90% success.
I think that Prince Bernhardt,
the Dutch Commander in Chief,
said, uh, "My country cannot afford
another Montgomery victory, in that case."
Even more scathing
was Air Chief Marshall Tedder
who was Eisenhower's deputy.
Tedder said, "One has even more success
jumping off a cliff
until the last few inches."
After the retreat
from Arnhem and Oosterbeek,
the Allies establish a new front
further south around Nijmegen,
to launch their next offensives
to the German border.
Arnhem itself will only be liberated
by Canadian troops
in April 1945
as the war in Europe rages on
for another seven and a half months.
Captioned by
Visual Data Media Services.
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