aussiejohn said:
Doppleganger said:
aussiejohn said:
After Patton's success in the pursuit across France, in the Battle of the Bulge, and in the Saar-Moselle Triangle, it is little wonder that in the Germans' view he was the Allied general most to be feared.
http://www.longwood.edu/staff/hardinds/Blitzkrieg.html
Eisenhower said that Patton was “‘indispensable to the war effort—one of the guarantors of our victory’, and later by German Field Marshal Gerd von Rundstedt, what said, ‘Patton was your best’”(2). Everyone involved in the war knew that Patton was the greatest leader in the whole effort. The opposition quivered hearing his name, knowing his swift advancements and harsh fighting styles.
http://www.wowessays.com/dbase/ad1/keb269.shtml
On the Western Allied side yes he was. Don't forget though the Germans also had a
little skirmish going on further east.
2 guys named Konev and Zhukov respectively may have disputed Patton's claim to that title.
He certainly wasn't the greatest leader in the whole effort, unless you are counting just the Western Allies of course. Also remember by the time Patton got there Germany was already defeated for all intents and purposes.
The eastern front was the Germans biggest headache. No doubt.
Zhukov was outstanding in a strategic capacity on the Russian front.
I have read a liitle about Konev. Please tell me why he was an outstanding commander.
I would be interested to know if the Germans on the eastern front were in awe of a particular Russian commander.
MacArthur and Slim should be on the list.
I do believe that Patton was supportive of Montgomery in the idea of the western allies taking Berlin instead of leaving it to the Russians. History shows that Eisenhower rejected it.
Firstly, Zhukov was a good strategist but far from the genius he is considered by many in the West. He had some serious flaws namely a reliance on brute force and an inability to switch tactics or to recognise when a particular plan wasn't working. Perhaps he did so knowing that he could throw superior numbers at the Germans and know that he could replenish his losses whereas the Germans could not. I firmly believe that had Zhukov been a Western or German Marshall he'd have been dismissed in disgrace after the disaster that was Operation Mars.
Konev was quite similar to Zhukov as it happens. A good strategist with an appreciation and understanding of mobile warefare and combine arms tactics. He was in charge of the 2nd largest Soviet Army (2nd Ukrainian Front) after Zhukov's and operationally, there was little to distinguish between them in capability or tactics. Indeed both Zhukov and Konev were fiercely competitive of each other and both constantly vieved for Stalin's favour. There was a race of some sorts to be the first to reach Berlin which Zhukov won.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/war/wwtwo/berlin_03.shtml
Neither Zhukov or Konev, good as they were, should be compared in any way to someone like Erich von Manstein.
Patton was good enough to be a German Panzer Army commander. That's the biggest compliment I can pay him.