Liberty roads : the American logistics in France and in Germany, 1944-45

Fiche technique

Format : Relié
Nb de pages : 224 pages
Poids : 1655 g
Dimensions : 24cm X 32cm
Date de parution :
ISBN : 978-2-35250-320-0
EAN : 9782352503200

Liberty roads

the American logistics in France and in Germany, 1944-45

de

chez Histoire et collections

Collection(s) : Seconde Guerre mondiale

Paru le | Relié 224 pages

Tout public

39.95 Indisponible

maps by Antonin Collet and Clémence Barbereau | schemes by J.B. and J.M. Mongin | colors profiles by Nicolas Gohin


Quatrième de couverture

Liberty Roads - Red Ball Express

The American logistics in France and in Germany, 1944-45

The Red Ball Express Highway is the nickname given to the supply route opened in August 1944 which stretched from the landing beaches to the American armies launched in an incredible pursuit throughout France. For three months, up to 6,000 trucks drove along this route. It symbolizes the opulence and power of American logistics. However, the generals complain in their memoirs about the lack of gasoline, ammunition and even warm clothing and cigarettes. Patton thought that the rear echelon services led by General Lee had failed in their mission and delayed the end of the war. It is this paradox which led to the writing of this book.

This investigation is more than just a detailed account of the campaign as seen from the rear, it is the first publication to cover in depth the American logistical effort during the Second World War in Europe : operational doctrines, tactics, techniques, equipment....

It takes us from the hushed offices of Washington to the decks of the Liberty Ships, the tops of the overhead cranes at Cherbourg, the steering wheels of the GMC trucks and the drivers' compartments of the Broadway Limited locomotives, in search of a Logistical revolution.

It describes how the Americans abolished the tyranny of distance by succeeding in placing a force of 61 divisions 5,000 kilometers from New York.

It reveals that the final stage of the supply chain, that of the Normandy beaches to the fighting men, had not been properly thought out. We discover that, far from what is commonly believed, the US Army was rationed from the outset on D-Day and that its logistical chain was dislocated from August to November 1944 due to an ill-suited doctrine and administrative quarrelling.

Finally, it was at the cost of formidable expedient means and remarkable innovations in the field that the US Army had become, in the spring of 1945, the only war machine capable of supplying long-term millions of soldiers and thousands of tanks deep within the enemy system.

Biographie

A professor of history, Nicolas Aubin is a World War Two specialist and has contributed, for more than twelve years, to numerous French military history magazines (Tank and Military Vehicles, Tank Zone...)