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Steel Wall at Arnhem - The Destruction of 4 Parachute Brigade 19 September 1944 (Paperback)
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Steel Wall at Arnhem - The Destruction of 4 Parachute Brigade 19 September 1944 (Paperback)
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The deployment of the British 1st Airborne Division somewhere in
Europe prior to the end of the war was indeed a case of 'coins
burning holes in the pockets of SHAEF'. The Allied High Command was
anxious to commit to battle a division that, while it contained
some elite units, was not fully trained, had carried out only one
divisional exercise and contained several officers who were either
unfit or unsuitable for airborne command. On Monday 18 September
1944, the aircraft and gliders carrying the men and equipment of 4
Parachute Brigade took off from airfields in the south of England.
For the first time from its creation in North Africa, the brigade
was going into battle as a unified formation, albeit not fully
trained and far from experienced. Within 24 hours, the Brigade
would cease to exist, having achieved nothing more than the deaths
of good men for no good reason. Despite the fine words of Winston
Churchill that the operation had not been 'in vain' and
Montgomery's '90% successful', there is more logic to be found in
the words of the Great War poet Wilfred Owen when he wrote in his
poem Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori. There were those
commanders who were indeed 'ardent for some desperate glory'. This
is a full account of the brigade and its actions at Arnhem.
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