Ike the Warrior ( | Volume: 69, Issue: 6)

Ike the Warrior

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Authors: Gen. S. L. A. Marshall

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| Volume 70, Issue 3

Ike the Warrior, by BRIGADIER GENERAL S. L. A. MARSHALL

The following commentary on Eisenhower's generalship was submitted by Brigadier General S. L. A. Marshall, the eminent military critic and Chief Historian on the European Theater during 1944-45 when Eisenhower was Supreme Commander.

I am disturbed that with the passing years General Eisenhower’s work and achievement as the director of Allied fighting forces in the European Theater has become no better understood by his own countrymen. In any company, to name him among the great battlefield captains is to invite skepticism. The fact is almost no one thinks of him that way. People take it for granted that his role was that of the Great Peacemaker, a veritable diplomat among generals, who needed only a ready smile and a firm handshake to resolve conflicting counsels and get governments to agree.
Yet from Operation Torch onward, his hand was directly in the design for battle—and he never knew defeat.
The plan that won Normandy was Eisenhower's own. He saw more surely than all others what had to be done, and be-cause he stood his ground, the great invasion succeeded gloriously. Who now remembers that the lesser plan, which he was charged to execute, had already won approval from the Allied heads of government and the Combined Chiefs of Staff? By insisting that the invasion front be broadened and the force strengthened, he averted disaster. We who had the task of analyzing and recapitulating the strategies and tactics of World War II in Europe saw it plain as a pikestaff that his intervention in this matter was decisive.
It was his command practice to let his subordinates reap public credit that they might follow him more loyally. How-ever generous, that tends to fuzz up history. Even the late General Walter Bedell Smith, his Chief of Staff and alter ego, did not dig to the root of that story in his book concerned with defining Eisenhower as a strategist (Eisenhower's Six Great Decisions). Alas, the historians have dug no deeper. So let us have at it.
In 1943 Eisenhower commanded in the Mediterranean. Normandy planning went on in the London headquarters of COSSAC (Chief of Staff, Supreme Allied Command) under the capable guidance of British Lieutenant General Sir Frederick E. Morgan. Sir Freddie was confident that an Allied expedition against France could defeat Hitler. But he had grave doubt of the commander designate—General Sir Alan Brooke. For many reasons, the planning already pointed toward Normandy. Sir Alan, though a doughty soldier, looked askance at that. When France was falling in 1940, he had brought the last British troops out through the Cotentin Peninsula's compartmented boscage, and the thought of going back to that maze chilled him. His gloom made Churchill no less wary.
When Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson visited England in the spring of 1943, Morgan confided his misgivings about Brooke. On returning to Washington, Stimson convinced President Roosevelt that an American must command the invasion. Stimson's own nominee