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Could General Patton Have Prevented the Cold War?
Townhall.com ^ | November 10, 2020 | Kevin Mooney

Posted on 11/10/2020 5:43:42 AM PST by Kaslin

General George S. Patton wanted to keep going!

Instead of halting the American advance and playing nice with Russia at the end of World War II, Patton wanted to stave off future threats. That’s why the American general was poised to have U.S. troops move in and occupy Berlin, Prague, and other parts of Eastern Europe. So why didn’t the allied leadership allow Patton to have his way? And, why was Patton effectively silenced before he could address the American people?

Robert Orlando, a filmmaker, author, entrepreneur and scholar, addresses these questions in a new book titled “The Tragedy of Patton” and an accompanying film titled “Silence Patton.” Although he was vilified in his time, here on this Veteran’s Day, it should now be evident that Patton was prescient in his warnings about the Soviet Union and strategically forward looking.

“Patton is best thought of as the antihero of the Second World War,” Orlando said in an interview. “He could be daring and highly imaginative on the battlefield, but he lacked the tact and diplomatic grace of his contemporaries and this had some real political consequences. But Patton was also the kind of general the allies needed to get the rough work done on the ground. He was outspoken about the conduct of the war and eager to identity the Soviet Union has the next great threat to American democracy. Only a few years after his very suspicious death, Patton’s strategy and vision were vindicated.”

The film opens by reviewing details about the automobile accident that ultimately claimed Patton’s life on a road in Mannheim, Germany on Dec. 9, 1945, seven months after the war ended in Europe. Everyone else involved in the accident walked away, but Patton died before he could go home to America to give his version of events that led to the end of World War II. Orlando steers clear of any conspiracy theories, but does make the point that President Franklin Roosevelt’s administration and America’s top military brass were concerned about what Patton might say about the Soviet threat and how the American public might react to his comments. 

“There would have been people in FDR’s administration who would have detested George Patton,” Paul Kengor, a Grove City College political science professor, and author, says in the film. “There was the fact that Patton thought the Soviets were the threat, or at least the future threat post war. The FDR administration has a bunch of people who were in some cases outright Soviet spies, Soviet sympathizers, dupes who were soft on communism.”

The film also explores the complicated relationship Patton had with Dwight D. Eisenhower, the supreme allied commander. 

“Eisenhower recognizes the value of Patton on the battlefield,” the film’s narrator says. “He’s a master strategist, a determined tactician and a hard driving commander.”

Eisenhower is quoted as saying, “In pursuit and exploitation there is a need for a commander who sees nothing but the necessity of getting ahead. The more he drives his men, the more he will save their lives."

Victor David Hanson, a senior fellow in military history at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University and a professor emeritus of classics at California State University, Fresno, provides insight into Patton’s view of warfare and what needed to be done to transform the American army into a lethal fighting force. 

“Aggressiveness, brutality, killing is not innate in our democratic DNA and we have to learn to be killers. We’ve got to get rid of this whole romance that you get shot in the shoulder and then suddenly, you’re a hero and you get a purple heart. You’re not a hero. You’re only if before you got shot in the shoulder you went out and shot a bunch of Germans or you blew up a panther tank.”

Unlike other generals, Patton was an “aggressive thruster,” Hanson explains. 

But unlike some of the other generals, Patton did not smoothly transition over to diplomatic and political settings, the film explains. 

“The qualities that made Patton successful on the battlefield, unflinching nerve, audacity, fearless candor, were the very ones that made him a nuisance when the fighting was over,” the narrator explains. “Off the battlefield Patton is a liability, he lacks diplomacy and his actions by some accounts are insubordinate.”

At the heart of film, is the question of whether in retrospect Patton was right to preempt Soviet troop moves across Eastern Europe. 

“The Allied troops were within 200 miles of Berlin and were held back from capturing the capital to let Soviet troops move in,” Orlando says. “Patton felt that this made what became known as the Cold War inevitable. He said it often, and loudly enough that he was relieved of his command and silenced. What I’ve found since the film’s release is that Patton’s behavior, character and performance on the battlefield is looked at not through the lens of history, but is retrofit into the standards of today, forgetting that the 1940s were an ugly, challenging time for the Allies and that Patton was uniquely up to the challenge.”

Orlando is the president and director of Nexus Media, a Princeton, New Jersey based filmmaking studio. A complete list of the cast and crew for “Silence Patton” is available here. 

The film explains how Patton was horrified by how Soviet leader Joseph Stalin brutalized German civilians and went to his grave seeing an opportunity to free the people of Eastern Europe. 

There’s one quote from Patton that echoes from the beginning to the end of the film and that resonates into today.

“Tin-soldier politicians in Washington have allowed us to kick the hell out of one bastard [Hitler] and at the same time forced us to help establish a second one [Stalin] as evil or more evil than the first.”

Orlando’s original film “Silence Patton was released by Sony Pictures in 2018, but the book The Tragedy of Patton: A Soldier’s Date with Destiny, explains, “was the product of a lifetime of passion and study for the subject.” The book and the film detail Patton’s warnings about the coming Cold War, but the book takes a deeper dive into Patton’s religious convictions and in the words of Orlando “showcases a man obsessed with fulfilling his military legacy for God, country, and his intense drive and ambition that places him in the pantheon of our greatest generals!”



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: coldwar; georgepatton; history
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To: Bubba Ho-Tep

Correct. I live in Poland and a lot of moaning is over how the UK and hte USA abandoned Poland in 1945, but I’ve told the Poles that there was really no way to liberate Poland in 1945.

Perhaps if the USA went on fighting, then in 1949 or 1950, poland could have been liberated, but not earlier


81 posted on 11/10/2020 10:48:32 AM PST by Cronos
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To: Vaquero

Not true. The US only built 2 nukes during WW. It would have taken 6 months at least build another. All the enriched uranium had already been used up. Truman would never had approved war against the USSR.


82 posted on 11/10/2020 11:12:45 AM PST by DownInFlames (Gals)
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To: Vaquero

Firstly - the US had only 2 nukes - it would have taken months to create more. Secondly, it would have hurt their allies as well.

Mao was going to take over China no matter what


83 posted on 11/10/2020 11:29:21 AM PST by Cronos
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To: DownInFlames; Cronos

I have it on good authority that a third bomb was heading to tinian or more likely have already been there right after Nagasaki. And that two more were being hurriedly being built at the same time.

“. Groves expected to have another “Fat Man” atomic bomb ready for use on August 19, with three more in September and a further three in October;[87] a second Little Boy bomb (using U-235) would not be available until December 1945.[230][231] On August 10, he sent a memorandum to Marshall in which he wrote that “the next bomb ... should be ready for delivery on the first suitable weather after 17 or 18 August.” Marshall endorsed the memo with the hand-written comment, “It is not to be released over Japan without express authority from the President”,[87] something Truman had requested that day. This modified the previous order that the target cities were to be attacked with atomic bombs “as made ready”.[232] There was already discussion in the War Department about conserving the bombs then in production for Operation Downfall, and Marshall suggested to Stimson that the remaining cities on the target list be spared attack with atomic bombs.[233]

Two more Fat Man assemblies were readied, and scheduled to leave Kirtland Field for Tinian on August 11 and 14,[234] and Tibbets was ordered by LeMay to return to Albuquerque, New Mexico, to collect them.[235] At Los Alamos, technicians worked 24 hours straight to cast another plutonium core.[236] Although cast, it still needed to be pressed and coated, which would take until August 16.[237] Therefore, it could have been ready for use on August 19. Unable to reach Marshall, Groves ordered on his own authority on August 13 that the core should not be shipped.[232] “


84 posted on 11/10/2020 12:18:31 PM PST by Vaquero ( Don't pick a fight with an old guy. If he is too old to fight, he'll just kill you.)
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To: ealgeone

Just my worthless opinions, but I’d have to answer your question as “yes”, because the German’s tactics and strategy were so closely related. If the German’s strategy was to quickly defeat the Soviet Union and force it to cede its western territory, then the tactics and resources deployed were not adequate. But German tactics were incredibly effective initially at destroying the enemy and taking vast territory. Strategic requirements for success far outran tactical possibilities.


85 posted on 11/10/2020 1:09:27 PM PST by Chewbarkah
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To: hinckley buzzard
A virtually unreported factor in decision making by 1945 was the war weariness of the American people. It also weighed in the decision to use the atom bomb in Japan rather than a bloody protracted invasion.

My parents told me what life was like during WWII, the entire country sacrificed to support the war effort. Their gas ration was 3 gallons a week. One of her aunts heard nothing from her son for over 3 years.

It's my contention that Truman would have been impeached for not using Fat Man and Little Boy, instead of a land invasion of Japan.

During the planning for a land invasion of Japan, the War Department placed an order for 500,000 Purple Hearts.

That supply has yet to be exhausted.

86 posted on 11/10/2020 1:23:29 PM PST by Night Hides Not (Remember the Alamo! Remember Goliad! Remember Gonzales! Come and Take It!)
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To: DownInFlames
Not true. The US only built 2 nukes during WW.

We built three.

The one detonated at Trinity and the two dropped on Japan.

87 posted on 11/10/2020 1:37:50 PM PST by ealgeone
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To: Kaslin

The US was broke.

The Allies were destroyed.

Japan loomed.

Just because Puzo and Coppola wrote a decent movie doesn’t change the fact we were exhausted. The people would not have put up with it. Period.


88 posted on 11/10/2020 1:40:06 PM PST by Vermont Lt (We have entered "Insanity Week." Act accordingly.)
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To: Red Badger

And it cost them about the same number of troops we lost in the entire French campaign. No thanks.


89 posted on 11/10/2020 1:41:30 PM PST by Vermont Lt (We have entered "Insanity Week." Act accordingly.)
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To: ealgeone

Read “Racing for the Bomb” the US would have had one bomb ready by September-October. If the war had continued into 1946 , probably would have had four or five more.


90 posted on 11/10/2020 1:45:25 PM PST by Reily
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To: buckalfa

After Okinawa, no one wanted to move on Russia. Damn..we let them take over Asia/Korea. We were in no shape to handle them.

Too many people here played Risk in their youth.


91 posted on 11/10/2020 1:46:08 PM PST by Vermont Lt (We have entered "Insanity Week." Act accordingly.)
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To: wildcard_redneck

In August 1945 we had two bombs. And four months before we got more.

The country was bankrupt. We were drafting into the freakin Marines.

There is no way we could have fought a three front war against Japan , and Russia/China with the personnel and materiel we had.

Those suggesting Patton was correct do not think globally or logistically.

Where would we get the EXTRA million men in Europe?


92 posted on 11/10/2020 1:49:46 PM PST by Vermont Lt (We have entered "Insanity Week." Act accordingly.)
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To: zek157

There was more interested in the destruction of Germany (again) than keeping Russia Contained.

We owned the logistics. But not the “will” or the terrain.


93 posted on 11/10/2020 1:52:16 PM PST by Vermont Lt (We have entered "Insanity Week." Act accordingly.)
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To: Ancesthntr

The other side was, of course, that we had just spilled oceans of blood and spent enormous amounts of treasure to free Europe from a horrible tyrant...and the Soviets came in and essentially enslaved many of the very same people (specifically including the Poles, who were the first victims in the war
——————

This quote is gold. We freed “our” allies. The Brits, French, Belgium, western Germany, Holland and Norway ARE America. Toss in Italy and Greece and what was left was Gypsy’s as far as most Americans were concerned. We sacrificed the Poles.

Who in Iowa was going to have his sone die for the Ukraine or Bulgaria?


94 posted on 11/10/2020 1:58:13 PM PST by Vermont Lt (We have entered "Insanity Week." Act accordingly.)
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To: Impy; BillyBoy; NFHale; GOPsterinMA; LS; campaignPete R-CT; AuH2ORepublican; Clemenza; dp0622; ...

*ping*


95 posted on 11/10/2020 2:09:55 PM PST by fieldmarshaldj (DEFEAT THE COUP D'ETAT BY THE STALINAZI DERP STATE !)
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To: Vermont Lt
”There is no way we could have fought a three front war against Japan , and Russia/China with the personnel and materiel we had.”

First of all since Japan was in the middle of invading China and murdering and raping millions of Chinese in Manchuria while the Russians were doing jack $hit to fight Japan and Stalin had a non aggression pact with Japan so I highly doubt the Chinese would have allied with the Soviet Union. In fact the Soviet Union waited to officially declare war on Japan until August 8, 1945 - 2 days after the first atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima. This alone negates your argument.

Also in 1945 between the US Army and Navy America had 70,000 aircraft to the Soviet Unions 18,500. Furthermore the Soviet Union has nowhere near the aircraft manufacturing capability of the US. (source: https://airpower.airforce.gov.au/APDC/media/PDF-Files/Pathfinder/PF119-Worlds-Fourth-Largest-Air-Force.pdf)

Also in August of 1945 we had a Navy that dwarfed that of the Soviet Union:
BATTLESHIPS 23
CARRIERS, FLEET 28
CARRIERS, ESCORT 71
CRUISERS 72
DESTROYERS 377
FRIGATES 361
SUBMARINES 232
MINE WARFARE 586
PATROL 1204 119
AMPHIBIOUS 2547 275
AUXILIARY 1267 406
SURFACE WARSHIPS 833
TOTAL ACTIVE 6768

America would have easily blockaded the Soviet Union and Japan, wiped out whatever navy the Soviet Union had, and the US Army Air Corp and US Navy carrier aircraft would have eventually chewed up Soviet tanks and artillery without needing assistance from the UK, Canada, Australia, or France.

96 posted on 11/10/2020 3:56:27 PM PST by wildcard_redneck (COVID lockdowns are the EstablishmentÂ’s attack on the middle class and our Republic)
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To: Kaslin

IMHO the removal of Patton and later McArthur led to politicians running wars. And we’ve lost ever since. Korea, Vietnam and the Iraq mess.


97 posted on 11/10/2020 4:04:02 PM PST by Fledermaus (FIRE BILL BARR AND RECESS APPOINT RICHARD GRENELL!)
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To: ealgeone

Yes, but there were zero operational at the end of WWII. Again, Truman would never authorize hostilities against the USSR.


98 posted on 11/10/2020 4:35:52 PM PST by DownInFlames (Gals)
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To: Vermont Lt

The lack of will argument is the winner. We simply didn’t want to fight anymore. No idea about the ruskies.


99 posted on 11/10/2020 4:57:58 PM PST by ealgeone
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To: wildcard_redneck

What part of we were bankrupt don’t you comprehend. The bucket was empty. There were no more resources. Hardly any more people.

You seem to think the US was full of flag waving patriots willing to do anything. While that might have been true in 1944, the letters I read from 1945 were anything but enthusiastic.

Starving out Japan would have taken years and millions of lives. It wasn’t necessary.

Starving out Russia would not have happened.

China would have ended up ruling the world.


100 posted on 11/10/2020 6:51:19 PM PST by Vermont Lt (We have entered "Insanity Week." Act accordingly.)
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