03190nam 22005053 450 991015880170332120230807220242.097817862503601786250365(CKB)3810000000099040(MiAaPQ)EBC4808991(Au-PeEL)EBL4808991(CaPaEBR)ebr11348877(OCoLC)974584244(Perlego)3018032(EXLCZ)99381000000009904020210901d2015 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierOperation Market Garden1st ed.San Francisco :Lucknow Books,2015.©2015.1 online resource (37 pages)Intro -- TABLE OF CONTENTS -- ABSTRACT -- OPERATION MARKET GARDEN: CASE STUDY FOR ANALYZING SENIOR LEADER RESPONSIBILITIES -- Overview of Situation-Western Europe-Early September 1944 -- Overview of Operation MARKET GARDEN -- Field Marshal Montgomery and the Decision to Launch Operation MARKET GARDEN -- Montgomery's First After Action Point. -- Montgomery's Second After Action Point. -- Montgomery's Third After Action Point. -- Montgomery's Fourth After Action Point. -- Actions and Comments by Other Senior Leaders. -- Conclusions.With German forces on the run following the Allied success at Normandy and the breakout and pursuit across France, Allied forces were staged to enter Germany in late summer 1944. Both Field Marshal Montgomery and General Bradley clamored to be given the priority of effort. General Eisenhower chose Montgomery's Operation MARKET GARDEN as the plan for action. It called for airborne forces to open the route for a ground force to move more than sixty miles up a single road, ending up north of the Rhine River near Arnhem, Netherlands. By accomplishing this task, the German Ruhr industrial heartland would be within easy grasp. But the operation failed. The ground force did not make it to the last bridge; it was six more months before Allied forces crossed the Lower Rhine River near Arnhem. Between 17 and 26 September 1944, there were 17, 000 Allied casualties including eighty percent of the 1st Airborne Division (UK). Did senior Allied leaders do enough to resolve issues raised before the operation began? Should it even have been conducted at all? This paper uses primary sources, including diaries, memoirs, and autobiographies, and unit reports, to examine what role senior leaders played in the failure of the operation. Operation Market GardenMilitary campaignsAirborne operations (Military science)Combined operations (Military science)Military campaigns.Airborne operations (Military science)Combined operations (Military science)940.54219218000003Coble Lt.-Col. Elizabeth A1375360MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910158801703321Operation Market Garden3409728UNINA