CHAPTER 1 Stuck in the Mud Metz, France November 25, 1944 The weather was atrocious. Valleys were flooded and roads were coated in cloying mud. Every day it rained. But he knew his troops had to keep advancing, whatever the conditions. Berlin was still a long way away. The poor, sodden bastards under his command had to push on as winter closed in and the days grew shorter. Dead Germans lay piled neatly along the rain-lashed road as a mud-splattered dark green jeep drove past. A white-haired man in the jeep, face reddened from cold and wind, had an ivory-handled pistol strapped to his waist.
Three stars were emblazoned on the side of the vehicle and on his polished helmet. Just a couple of weeks ago, on Armistice Day, November 11, he had marked his fifty-ninth birthday. He was the most controversial American general of World War II, George S. Patton, known to some of his more than two hundred fifty thousand men in the Third Army as "Old Blood and Guts." A quarter of a century before, he''d spent his thirty-third birthday in France, at the very end of the war to end all wars, as the Great War had been described. He had earned the Distinguished Service Cross and a Purple Heart while leading the US 1st Provisional Tank Brigade as a lieutenant colonel. "Peace looks possible," he had written to his wife, Beatrice, toward the end of hostilities, "but I rather hope not for I would like to have a few more fights. They are awfully thrilling like steeple chasing only more so.
" Patton had courted Beatrice throughout his time at the US Military Academy at West Point, New York, where he''d had to repeat a year after failing in mathematics. Their marriage in 1910 had drawn high society from across her native Massachusetts and beyond. She would remain utterly devoted to her husband, despite rumors of him having an affair with the daughter of Beatrice''s half sister, let alone the considerable challenges of being married to such a mercurial, hard-driving man. Now George S. Patton-born into privilege and wealth, a superb fencer, the designer of his very own saber, a 1912 Olympics athlete, and a believer in reincarnation-was a three-star general with an entire army and several hundred tanks at his disposal. And he was in a grim mood indeed, that November 25, 1944, as he was driven in his jeep past dead Germans toward the city of Metz. He wanted his troops to see him. He "got out where it is unhealthy oftener than any other general," as he put it, but not too frequently lest he became a nuisance.
Patton knew it was important to be seen heading toward the sound of the guns. George S. Patton had never been considered a shirker from any danger. Ever since he''d first seen action, chasing after the revolutionary Pancho Villa in Mexico in 1916, he''d always been up for the fight. The current Lorraine campaign had been his least successful, bringing heartache and frustration. The Germans themselves would later criticize his tactics, arguing that attacking forts in Lorraine and the city of Metz had been too costly. He should have bypassed them and headed straight for Luxembourg. He was, after all, a master of mobile armored warfare.
But the terrain and weather had not permitted it. Above all, Patton cursed the weather. It explained all of his problems. He was convinced of it. That was why he was "stuck in the mud." If it only won''t rain we will go places. That was what he''d written to his dear wife, Beatrice. If it only won''t rain we will go places.
Allied Supreme Commander Dwight Eisenhower had expected Patton to "carry the ball all the way" and push through Lorraine to Germany. Patton had hoped to declare victory by his birthday, but that had not happened. There had been a desultory party and his staff had presented him with "field expedient" Armored Diesels, cocktails usually containing bourbon or rye but now spiked with any liquor that could be found. And still the rain poured down. Trench foot was rampant. In one division, Patton recalled, there were an extraordinary three thousand cases. It could hardly be avoided when men had to wade across flooded fields up to their waists in muddy water. It didn''t matter how much a soldier dubbed his boots or how many pairs of dry socks he hoarded; everything that dismal November got wet.
Lieutenant Colonel Albin F. Irzyk, one of Patton''s most able tank officers, recalled how Patton''s 4th Armored Division, to which Irzyk belonged, had finally gotten bogged down after thundering across France. "We had traveled 328 miles . in twelve days. We were sixty miles from the German border and another eighty miles to the Rhine River. We''d already gone 328 in twelve days." According to Irzyk, Patton had declared: "We''ll be at the Rhine in ten days." Twenty-seven-year-old Irzyk, commander of the 8th Tank Battalion, was a slim and handsome graduate of the University of Massachusetts and the proud son of Polish immigrants.
He had had no reason to disbelieve Patton, given the 4th Armored''s rapid progress. But then Irzyk recalled, "Patton ran out of gasoline." Or rather it had been taken from him, Patton believed. Eisenhower, Irzyk claimed, had given the British "priority supplies," which were used for Operation Market Garden, an attempt to cross the Rhine in Holland in September, which had ended in disaster. In any case, that fall of 1944, the Third Army had stalled. "Patton, the great offensive weapon," remembered Irzyk, "sat for five weeks as it rained and rained and rained." Patton''s men had slogged on. His tanks had crawled forward, tracks caked in mud.
The air support had done its best. But the Germans had fought hard in retreat, even though "motley and badly equipped"; they had been helped above all by the appalling weather: the heavy fogs, the flooding downpours, the thick blankets of gray cloud cover. Patton''s commanders were now tired, nervy, pushed to the breaking point. Some were doing nothing but fighting the weather. It was one thing to storm across the flat, lush farmland between Brittany and Paris, but quite another to fight through the forests and rugged, hilly countryside of Lorraine and then conduct siege warfare as worn-out units seized the series of thirty-five forts that protected Metz. The rain kept falling. A few days earlier, sodden soldiers from Patton''s Third Army had finally managed to capture some four thousand enemy soldiers, the last holdouts in the city of Metz itself. It was a bitter victory.
The defenders had fought tenaciously from underground chambers and tunnels, and the combat had been up close and costly. Now a dejected Patton arrived in a hospital near the shattered city. Inside the hospital, Patton went over to a soldier, one of the hundreds from his Third Army who had been wounded each day that dark November in the depressing and gruesome fighting, described by Omar Bradley, Patton''s immediate superior, as "a ghastly war of attrition." Had the soldier heard that Metz had finally been taken? The soldier said he had and smiled. Patton, white bushy brows above piercing eyes, smiled back. "Tomorrow, son," said Patton in his high-pitched voice, "the headlines will read, ''Patton Took Metz,'' which you know is a goddam lie. You and your buddies are the ones who actually took Metz." Patton left the hospital and then went to question a captured SS major general, 39-year-old Anton Dunckern, a dedicated Nazi who''d taken part in the infamous Beer Hall Putsch of 1923 in Munich.
Captured by Patton''s troops on November 19, he was the highest-ranking member of the SS to have been seized in Patton''s area of command since November 1942, two long years earlier, when Patton''s war had begun in North Africa. Sentries stood watch over Dunckern. An interpreter was close by. "You can tell this man," the thin-lipped Patton told the interpreter, "that naturally in my position I cannot demean myself to question him, but I can say this, that I have captured a great many German generals, and this is the first one who has been wholly untrue to everything; because he has not only been a Nazi but he is untrue to the Nazis by surrendering." Patton had enormous contempt for members of the SS. He''d fought the Germans in the First World War, in the deserts of North Africa, the mountains of Sicily, and all across France in the second. They were often a formidable enemy. They''d killed nearly ten thousand of his men in the Third Army since August.
He''d kept a careful count. But Hitler''s most fanatical supporters, the SS, notorious for killing civilians and unarmed prisoners and committing other atrocities, were "special sons-of-bitches," as Patton called them. "If he wants to say anything, he can," said Patton, "and I will say that unless he talks pretty well, I will turn him over to the French. They know how to make people talk." Dunckern most likely did not want to be handed over to the French. "I received orders to go in the Metz sector," the German said, "and defend a certain sector there, and the reason I did not perish was that I could not reach my weapons and fight back." Patton was not buying that. "He is a liar!" "There was no possibility to continue fighting," said Dunckern.
"The door was opened and they put a gun on me." Patton was disgusted. "If he wanted to be a good Nazi," said Patton, "he could have died then and there. It would have been a pleasanter death than what he will get now." "It was useless to do anything about it under the circ.