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American Airpower Comes of Age: General Henry H. "Hap" Arnold's World War II Diaries (review)
Author(s) -
Phillip S. Meilinger
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
the journal of military history
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1543-7795
pISSN - 0899-3718
DOI - 10.1353/jmh.2003.0055
Subject(s) - world war ii , history , archaeology
personalities and they help explain a number of the campaign’s early failures. He pulls no punches regarding rivalries among leaders and he has some refreshingly frank comments about Anglo-American mutual disdain. The Tunisian campaign brought forth many changes of strategy and much replacement of commanders, matters that Atkinson handles judiciously, placing blame among many, as well as on inexperience and confusing chains of command. He excels in sensitive coverage of events—for example, animating the formulaic “heavy casualties” with vivid pictures of hopeless attacks, senseless slaughter, and the agony of dying men. While unquestionably well informed on global grand strategy, Atkinson minimizes war problems as viewed from Washington or London. At the Casablanca Conference he depicts Eisenhower, tired and unsure of himself, vying with the well-prepared British chiefs over objectives and means, but presents little on Churchill and Roosevelt who, after a meeting, “blessed the agreement and returned to their cocktails” (p. 289). But his conclusions on Casablanca, while brief (pp. 297–99), convey the essence of the new American-British relationship and the leaders’ uncertainties—“the compromises at Anfa had been greased with ambiguity.” Atkinson is not trying to cover everything that happened in North Africa—the book is essentially an accolade to the American army and its commanders, evolving from untried and naïve in November 1942 to hardened, blooded veterans six months later. “No soldier in Africa had changed more—grown more—than Eisenhower” (p. 533). “Troops had learned the importance of terrain, of combined arms, of aggressive patrolling, of stealth, of massed armor. They now knew what it was like to be bombed, shelled, and machine-gunned and fight on” (p. 537). This is a fascinating work which any reader can enjoy, and professional historians will find perusal of it eminently worth their while.

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