The functions of staff officers in U.S. military history have
been largely ignored by historians who have preferred to focus on
the role of the combat officer. This examination of the career of
General Walter Bedell Smith, Chief of Staff to General Dwight D.
Eisenhower, and his valuable contribution to Allied success,
represents an effort to fill a void in the current historiography
of U.S. participation in Europe in World War II. While specifically
looking at Smith's military career from his entry into the Indiana
National Guard on his sixteenth birthday to his retirement from the
U.S. Army as a four-star general 39 years later, the volume is also
a general investigation of the role of Chief of Staff and a
critical study of the interwar U.S. Army and its participation in
the campaigns of the Mediterranean and Northwest Europe during
World War II. The institutional and attitudinal structure that
produced the generation of American officers that commanded armies
and manned higher headquarters is thoroughly evaluated in this
volume. D.K.R. Crosswell concludes that the normative influences of
the Army's advance schools conditioned the U.S. approach to war in
Europe: Eisenhower and Smith's broad front strategy is seen as a
product of their Leavenworth educations. Smith's relationships with
Eisenhower and George C. Marshall are also seen as important
formative influences.
Despite a paucity of personal papers and no prior book on Smith,
Crosswell had access to a wealth of primary materials in the
Eisenhower Library in Abilene, Kansas and the resources of the
Combat Studies Library at the Command and General Staff College in
Leavenworth, Kansas. Substantial collections of materials at the
federal research facilities in Washington, the U.S. Army Military
History Institute holdings in Carlisle Barracks, Pa., and the
George C. Marshall Library in Lexington, Va., were consulted.
Personal interviews with surviving World War II officers and an
examination of British sources were conducted to give the most
complete picture of Smith to date. "The Chief of Staff" is divided
into four major sections: Bedell Smith and Officership in the U.S.
Army, 1917-1939; The Towering Figure: George C. Marshall; The First
Campaign: The Mediterranean; Northwest Europe, and an epilogue
which covers Smith's post-Army years. The 14 chapters present Smith
as perhaps the best example of the World War II military manager.
He emerges from these pages as a central figure of the period and
his contributions within the Allied sphere proved fundamental to
eventual battlefield success. Seven maps of World War II major
theaters of operation from Morocco to Normandy and
never-before-published archival photographs are included. Military
history and World War II buffs won't want to miss this splendid
read which will also appeal to academic military historians,
libraries and research facilities, as well as current and retired
military officers. The book is ideal supplemental reading for
courses in U.S. military history.
General
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