US 12th Army Group Intel
Posted: Sat Nov 15, 2008 9:32 pm
While ppl are waiting for BftB to be polished, I'd like to post 2 interesting situation maps,
the originals can be viewed on the webpage of the Library of Congress.
12th Army Group situation map 1944, 16th of December, 1200 hrs,
declassified in 1979 (I think):
You can see that 12th Army Group didn't see the German units - which had been redeployed for the operation
in the Ardennes - on their "radars".
While this is a copy of the original situation map, I added some colors to mark 12th Army Group's sub sectors/units:
The blue sector:
8th Corps' left flank was weak, namely the 106th Infantry division - this unit had to dance with the German push towards
St. Vith.
As you can see there was a lot of guesswork involved, as quite a few vital units (SS Pz Divisions etc.) are drawn with a question mark. This is very interesting, as the Germans deployed "ghost" HQs and skeleton units North West of Köln (Cologne) in broad daylight, to disguise the real position of their 6th Panzer Army (i marked the assumed positions with a light blue magnifier and circle).
US recon planes reported these locations, and it seems that these intel reports made it to the situation map on or right before the 16th of December.
US intel then thought that the bulk of the vital units, which were to engage under 6th Panzer Army's command (like 9th SS PzDiv, 1st SS Pz Div, 2nd SS Pz Div, 12th Pz Div), was still North East of Monschau - near Euskirchen - (GREEN magnifier), or even North West of Cologne (BLUE circle), in order to stem a possible US offensive in the Aachen sector.
By then, prior to 16th of December, most of 6th Panzer Army's units had already redeployed to the railway hub at Schleiden and even to another one further South West (Light Blue arrow).
The orange pin I added marks the location of LXVII Korps' field HQ, which had been established on 15th of December.
Most of its units had been deployed at the railway hub at Neuerburg and Prüm, the latter really close to the spearheading units of the US 106th Inf Div, which were occupying a small strip of the westwall. (see 2nd map, Prüm is right above the 26th Volksgrenadierdivision, the build-up pretty much happened in front of US 106th's toes).
While the two units drawn with a question mark (2nd Panzer Division, 560th Inf Division) reflect halfway correct assumptions, some of the Volksgrenadier-divisions (except for the 62nd VG Div and the 18th VG Div) and the FührerBegleitBrigade are nowhere to be seen on this map. The Panzer Lehr Division was assumed to be on R+R near the Saar area (RED magnifier - bottom right), and the 9th Panzer Division was assumed to have joined 10th SS way North of the Aachen sector (north of the light BLUE circle).
Indeed, the US troops must have been surprised, as they did not get to know about the fact that 3 German Armies were deployed in front of their toes - ready to start a thrust with a width of appr. 100 km. [:D]

the originals can be viewed on the webpage of the Library of Congress.
12th Army Group situation map 1944, 16th of December, 1200 hrs,
declassified in 1979 (I think):
You can see that 12th Army Group didn't see the German units - which had been redeployed for the operation
in the Ardennes - on their "radars".
While this is a copy of the original situation map, I added some colors to mark 12th Army Group's sub sectors/units:
The blue sector:
- 1st Army's left flank formed by the US 7th Corps and US 5th Corps
(Monschau area).
- 1st Army's right flank formed by 8th Corps, with only 4 Divisions guarding this large sector,
where one or another division had to cover front sectors of up to 20-30 miles.
8th Corps' left flank was weak, namely the 106th Infantry division - this unit had to dance with the German push towards
St. Vith.
As you can see there was a lot of guesswork involved, as quite a few vital units (SS Pz Divisions etc.) are drawn with a question mark. This is very interesting, as the Germans deployed "ghost" HQs and skeleton units North West of Köln (Cologne) in broad daylight, to disguise the real position of their 6th Panzer Army (i marked the assumed positions with a light blue magnifier and circle).
US recon planes reported these locations, and it seems that these intel reports made it to the situation map on or right before the 16th of December.
US intel then thought that the bulk of the vital units, which were to engage under 6th Panzer Army's command (like 9th SS PzDiv, 1st SS Pz Div, 2nd SS Pz Div, 12th Pz Div), was still North East of Monschau - near Euskirchen - (GREEN magnifier), or even North West of Cologne (BLUE circle), in order to stem a possible US offensive in the Aachen sector.
By then, prior to 16th of December, most of 6th Panzer Army's units had already redeployed to the railway hub at Schleiden and even to another one further South West (Light Blue arrow).
The orange pin I added marks the location of LXVII Korps' field HQ, which had been established on 15th of December.
Most of its units had been deployed at the railway hub at Neuerburg and Prüm, the latter really close to the spearheading units of the US 106th Inf Div, which were occupying a small strip of the westwall. (see 2nd map, Prüm is right above the 26th Volksgrenadierdivision, the build-up pretty much happened in front of US 106th's toes).
While the two units drawn with a question mark (2nd Panzer Division, 560th Inf Division) reflect halfway correct assumptions, some of the Volksgrenadier-divisions (except for the 62nd VG Div and the 18th VG Div) and the FührerBegleitBrigade are nowhere to be seen on this map. The Panzer Lehr Division was assumed to be on R+R near the Saar area (RED magnifier - bottom right), and the 9th Panzer Division was assumed to have joined 10th SS way North of the Aachen sector (north of the light BLUE circle).
Indeed, the US troops must have been surprised, as they did not get to know about the fact that 3 German Armies were deployed in front of their toes - ready to start a thrust with a width of appr. 100 km. [:D]
