by Walter Scott Dunn, Jr. and Thomas E Johnson foreword by A. C. Wedemeyer
University of Alabama Press, 2009 Paper: 978-0-8173-5547-0 Library of Congress Classification D761.D923 2009 Dewey Decimal Classification 940.54012
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Addresses head-on the central issue of invasion timing in the Allied European strategy of World War II
Second Front Now—1943 addresses head-on the central issue of invasion timing in the Allied European strategy of World War II. The author reconstructs and compares the actual military situations of the several combatants in a detailed and ambitious manner. Drawing on a vast and growing body of American, British, and German memoirs and secondary sources, as well as on newly available archival materials in Washington and London, the author constructs a persuasive case for the feasibility of invasion in 1943.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Walter Scott Dunn Jr. is also the author of Hitler’s Nemesis: The Red Army, 1930–1945 and The Soviet Economy and the Red Army, 1930–1945.
REVIEWS
“Dunn cogently argues that the Allies were capable of launching and sustaining a cross-Channel attack in 1943, but that it was delayed for political reasons. . . . Dunn thoroughly criticizes the Mediterranean strategy as a waste of resources, compares Allied and Nazi units and equipment, and discusses the landing-craft controversy. An important study.”– Library Journal
— -
“The author does present a credible challenge to the widely and possibly erroneously held assumption that an invasion of France in 1943 would have failed. What distinguishes Second Front Now from previous examinations . . . is Dunn’s analysis of Allied and German resources. A significant and provocative work that will be essential reading.”– History: Review of New Books
— -
“Dunn believes that German-occupied France was open to invasion in 1943 if only the Western Allies has the vision, discipline, and audacity to take the gamble. Dunn is particularly effective in comparing potential Allied strength against the weak German defenses in France. . . . [A] provocative and interesting book [that] forces us to rethink the way the war was fought and to assess the effectiveness of the great war leaders.”– St. LouisGlobe-Democrat
— -
“Dunn cogently argues that the Allies were capable of launching and sustaining a cross-Channel attack in 1943, but that it was delayed for political reasons. . . . Dunn thoroughly criticizes the Mediterranean strategy as a waste of resources, compares Allied and Nazi units and equipment, and discusses the landing-craft controversy. An important study.”
—Library Journal— -
“The author does present a credible challenge to the widely and possibly erroneously held assumption that an invasion of France in 1943 would have failed. What distinguishes Second Front Now from previous examinations . . . is Dunn’s analysis of Allied and German resources. A significant and provocative work that will be essential reading.”
—History: Review of New Books
— -
“Dunn believes that German-occupied France was open to invasion in 1943 if only the Western Allies has the vision, discipline, and audacity to take the gamble. Dunn is particularly effective in comparing potential Allied strength against the weak German defenses in France. . . . [A] provocative and interesting book [that] forces us to rethink the way the war was fought and to assess the effectiveness of the great war leaders.”
—St. Louis Globe-Democrat
— -
by Walter Scott Dunn, Jr. and Thomas E Johnson foreword by A. C. Wedemeyer
University of Alabama Press, 2009 Paper: 978-0-8173-5547-0
Addresses head-on the central issue of invasion timing in the Allied European strategy of World War II
Second Front Now—1943 addresses head-on the central issue of invasion timing in the Allied European strategy of World War II. The author reconstructs and compares the actual military situations of the several combatants in a detailed and ambitious manner. Drawing on a vast and growing body of American, British, and German memoirs and secondary sources, as well as on newly available archival materials in Washington and London, the author constructs a persuasive case for the feasibility of invasion in 1943.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Walter Scott Dunn Jr. is also the author of Hitler’s Nemesis: The Red Army, 1930–1945 and The Soviet Economy and the Red Army, 1930–1945.
REVIEWS
“Dunn cogently argues that the Allies were capable of launching and sustaining a cross-Channel attack in 1943, but that it was delayed for political reasons. . . . Dunn thoroughly criticizes the Mediterranean strategy as a waste of resources, compares Allied and Nazi units and equipment, and discusses the landing-craft controversy. An important study.”– Library Journal
— -
“The author does present a credible challenge to the widely and possibly erroneously held assumption that an invasion of France in 1943 would have failed. What distinguishes Second Front Now from previous examinations . . . is Dunn’s analysis of Allied and German resources. A significant and provocative work that will be essential reading.”– History: Review of New Books
— -
“Dunn believes that German-occupied France was open to invasion in 1943 if only the Western Allies has the vision, discipline, and audacity to take the gamble. Dunn is particularly effective in comparing potential Allied strength against the weak German defenses in France. . . . [A] provocative and interesting book [that] forces us to rethink the way the war was fought and to assess the effectiveness of the great war leaders.”– St. LouisGlobe-Democrat
— -
“Dunn cogently argues that the Allies were capable of launching and sustaining a cross-Channel attack in 1943, but that it was delayed for political reasons. . . . Dunn thoroughly criticizes the Mediterranean strategy as a waste of resources, compares Allied and Nazi units and equipment, and discusses the landing-craft controversy. An important study.”
—Library Journal— -
“The author does present a credible challenge to the widely and possibly erroneously held assumption that an invasion of France in 1943 would have failed. What distinguishes Second Front Now from previous examinations . . . is Dunn’s analysis of Allied and German resources. A significant and provocative work that will be essential reading.”
—History: Review of New Books
— -
“Dunn believes that German-occupied France was open to invasion in 1943 if only the Western Allies has the vision, discipline, and audacity to take the gamble. Dunn is particularly effective in comparing potential Allied strength against the weak German defenses in France. . . . [A] provocative and interesting book [that] forces us to rethink the way the war was fought and to assess the effectiveness of the great war leaders.”
—St. Louis Globe-Democrat
— -
TABLE OF CONTENTS
CONTENTS
Tables and Chart
Foreword
Wedemeyer,
A. C.
Preface
1
Strategic Planning, 1941–1942
2
The Diversion to Sicily
3
The Compromise of 1943
4
The Submarine Menace
5
Landing Craft
6
Comparison of Armor
7
Tank Formations
8
The Quality of Training
9
A Comparison of Infantry Divisions
10
Air Superiority
11
The Service Element
12
Intelligance
13
Combat Experience
14
The Allied Order of Battle
15
The German Order of Battle
16
Re-creating German's Army in the West
17
Implications in the Postwar World
Notes
Bibliography
Index
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC