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Bloody River - The Real Tragedy of the Rapido (Hardcover, Texas A & M University Press ed)
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Bloody River - The Real Tragedy of the Rapido (Hardcover, Texas A & M University Press ed)
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In the shadow of Monte Cassino on January 21-22, 1944, the U.S.
Army's 36th "Texas" Division tried to cross Italy's Rapido River.
The rout of this former National Guard unit from Texas was one of
the worst defeats Americans suffered on the battlefields of World
War II, one that prompted veterans to present charges of
incompetent leadership before Congress. In Bloody River, first
published in 1970, Martin Blumenson presents his view of how the
"personal equation" figured into the debacle. Focusing on the
generals responsible for the ill-fated attack, Blumenson traces key
points in the personal profiles of the diffident 36th Division
commander Fred L. Walker; Gen. Mark "Wayne" Clark, the imperious
commander of American ground forces; and the tactful and tactically
gifted former cavalry officer Gen. Geoffrey T. Keyes, commander of
II Corps and Walker's immediate superior. Walker, serving under the
younger Clark and Keyes, witnessed the destruction of villages and
the exhaustion of the non-Regular Army soldiers in his division.
Blumenson argues that Walker, relatively far down the chain of
command, saw his soldiers' and the civilians' suffering and lost
confidence and respect for his superiors and constantly questioned
their fitness to devise appropriate strategy and tactics. Despite
reports of the severe situation in the Rapido Valley, General
Clark, responsible for ensuring the success of the Anzio landing,
would not cancel the 36th Division's supporting attack across the
Rapido. In two days, the two front-line infantry regiments of the
division suffered severe casualties, as did the attached units of
engineers, quartermaster troops, and artillerymen. Meanwhile,
General Clark's Anzio landing was accomplished with relatively
little resistance. Blumenson argues that Walker's pessimism about
the Rapido attack plan may have permeated his troops and robbed
them of their will to win. This concise survey of the command
situations that led to the Rapido tragedy should be of interest to
all readers who wish to learn the high-priced lessons of war in
affordable and accessible form.
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