ORIGINAL: freeboy
Could Monty have won ww2 if he could have lit his farts on fire and killed Hitler from afar? we will never know...
WTF,
That line cleansed my sinuses with wine and cost me a keyboard

Moderator: maddog986
ORIGINAL: freeboy
Could Monty have won ww2 if he could have lit his farts on fire and killed Hitler from afar? we will never know...

[/center]ORIGINAL: Joe D.
TwoTribes was mistaken
I don't know who in SHAEF did the planning
For me,ORIGINAL: Andy Mac
I guess it comes down to a simple question if you had to have a commander who would you want in the following circumstances
1. to prepare an army for battle
2. to command a set piece battle
3. to command a pursuit/exploit
4. to have as a subordinate
5. to be your commander
who would you choose ?
My list would be
1. Monty
2. Monty
3. Patton
4. Anyone but Patton or Monty
5. Monty
ORIGINAL: Michael Dorosh
ORIGINAL: Joe D.
TwoTribes was mistaken
Yes, that was my point. What did Montgomery have to do with it? Absolutely nothing. Since when do Field Marshals become responsible for battalion-level signals operations? In other words, why blame Montgomery? It is non-sensical.
I thought John Wayne did this to win WWII in ETO and PTO.[:D]ORIGINAL: Sarge
ORIGINAL: freeboy
Could Monty have won ww2 if he could have lit his farts on fire and killed Hitler from afar? we will never know...
WTF,
That line cleansed my sinuses with wine and cost me a keyboard![]()
[/center]Granted, that most planning is done by the ranks of Major through Colonel. But over all command means overall responsibility. If Market garden had been a victory everyone would be singing Monty's praises as at El Alamein. Therefor, the reverse must hold true and Monty deserves some lumps over Market Garden as does Ike who was breifed and did approve the plan.
This is all basic chain of command stuff that anyone who has served can verify.
The point of posting the SHAEF plan info twice -- the second time w/bold type for emphasis -- was to call attention to the fact that whomever in SHAEF did the "detailed, meticulous" planning of MG, those plans were shared/sent from Ike to Marshall and Monty, who all signed-off on them. Sorry I didn't make this more obvious
If you are familiar with the concept of "chain of command"

Well put![&o]ORIGINAL: Yogi the Great
If you are familiar with the concept of "chain of command"
And would that not also include the concept that the commander is utlimately responsible for the success and/or failure of the plan?
A good supervisor gives credit where credit is due, but also take the blame for failure.
ORIGINAL: Yogi the Great
If you are familiar with the concept of "chain of command"
And would that not also include the concept that the commander is utlimately responsible for the success and/or failure of the plan?
A good supervisor gives credit where credit is due, but also take the blame for failure.
Bologne!ORIGINAL: SireChaos
ORIGINAL: Yogi the Great
If you are familiar with the concept of "chain of command"
And would that not also include the concept that the commander is utlimately responsible for the success and/or failure of the plan?
A good supervisor gives credit where credit is due, but also take the blame for failure.
Aww... not that old "The buck stops here" thing again. This is SO outdated, you know?
Now, take a piece of chalk, go to the blackboard and write 100 times: "It is ALWAYS someone else´s fault - ALWAYS!"
[;)]
ORIGINAL: HansBolter
ORIGINAL: Andy Mac
I guess it comes down to a simple question if you had to have a commander who would you want in the following circumstances
1. to prepare an army for battle
2. to command a set piece battle
3. to command a pursuit/exploit
4. to have as a subordinate
5. to be your commander
who would you choose ?
My list would be
1. Monty
2. Monty
3. Patton
4. Anyone but Patton or Monty
5. Monty
My answers:
1. Patton
2. Monty
3. Patton
4. Bradley
5. Patton
The main reason I pick patton over Monty for number one is that sitting on one's duff while the rear area commandos stockpile supplies for one, althewhile whining for yet more supplies, does not constitute "preparing an army for battle". Preparing them for battle constitutes instilling in them a desire to win. Patton did a much better job of that than Monty.
ORIGINAL: Andy Mac
We will need to agree to disagree on this point [:D][:D]
Monty's training exercises for his men were legendary in rebuilding the morale and professionalism of the Army in England in 41/42, 3rd Div was the best performing British Div in France in 40 when he commanded and he rebuilt shattered morale of the 8th Army and led them to victory - whatever the logistical superiority the army still had to use it and for that they needed leadership he organised them to fight and win. In large degree it was as a trainer of soldiers (and officers) that Monty was at his best.
Now I am not saying Patton was bad at it (far from it - post Kasserine he also rebuilt shattered morale and prepped a green army to beat the enemy at their own game and did it at a speed that surpised a British Army that had taken two or more years to learn lessons the US forces absorbed in months)
I read Monty's opinions of US forces in Sicily and he rated them very highly indeed especially the manouverability which 8th Army lacked I cannot remember which book it was in but he underestimated US forces and by the end of Sicily was a convert. Given that was what 4 months after Kasserine no one can say Patton wasnt good in this area.
I guess I pick Monty because of the impact he had on the forces he took over and the training he instilled and the confidence he built.
Patton was a lot more fire and brimstone which was probably better just before battle but Monty edges it for me in the weeks and months before that for prepping men to fight - but the fact is whichever you pick you don't win without training the weapon and they both won....
ORIGINAL: HansBolter
Dorosh, you come across more and more like a Monty fanboi with every post.
You provide detailed post after detailed post descrying why none of the the things that went wrong with Monty's operations were Monty's fault.
You want evidence of my claim that Patton did a better job of instilling a desire to win in his men.......take a long hard look at the performance of his army.
I have been a wargamer for 34+ years as well as an incorridgible book worm with a decided bent toward military history. My beliefs regarding Patton and Montgomery are NOT based on Hollywood fantasy. Try slinging that mud at something it has a chance of sticking on.
ORIGINAL: HansBolter
ORIGINAL: Andy Mac
We will need to agree to disagree on this point [:D][:D]
Monty's training exercises for his men were legendary in rebuilding the morale and professionalism of the Army in England in 41/42, 3rd Div was the best performing British Div in France in 40 when he commanded and he rebuilt shattered morale of the 8th Army and led them to victory - whatever the logistical superiority the army still had to use it and for that they needed leadership he organised them to fight and win. In large degree it was as a trainer of soldiers (and officers) that Monty was at his best.
Now I am not saying Patton was bad at it (far from it - post Kasserine he also rebuilt shattered morale and prepped a green army to beat the enemy at their own game and did it at a speed that surpised a British Army that had taken two or more years to learn lessons the US forces absorbed in months)
I read Monty's opinions of US forces in Sicily and he rated them very highly indeed especially the manouverability which 8th Army lacked I cannot remember which book it was in but he underestimated US forces and by the end of Sicily was a convert. Given that was what 4 months after Kasserine no one can say Patton wasnt good in this area.
I guess I pick Monty because of the impact he had on the forces he took over and the training he instilled and the confidence he built.
Patton was a lot more fire and brimstone which was probably better just before battle but Monty edges it for me in the weeks and months before that for prepping men to fight - but the fact is whichever you pick you don't win without training the weapon and they both won....
A very fair assessment. I highlighted in bold the sentence you provided that best sums up why I would pick Patton over Monty. He had a penchent for accomplishing in a fraction of the time what other commanders took far, far longer, if ever, to achieve.