Changing Army Oral 00 Romi
Changing Army Oral 00 Romi
Changing Army Oral 00 Romi
CHANGING
3000020023
AN ARMY
AN ORAL HISTORY OF
GENERAL WILLIAM K DePUY, USA RETIRED
AND
UNITED STATES ARMY CENTER OF MILITARY HISTORY
(
CHANGING
AN ARMY
L.
AN ORAL HISTORY OF
GENERAL WILLIAM E. DePUY, USA RETIRED
P
7
y
v
^
AND
UNITED STATES ARMY CENTER OF MILITARY HISTORY, WASHINGTON,
JAMES CARSON BRECKINRIDGE LIBRARY TRAINING AND EDUCATION CENTER MARINE COiiPS COMBAT DEVELOPMENT COMMAND 9SANTIC0, VA 22134-5050 r-s4s-
D.C.
"""
CMH Pub
70-23
For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office Washington, DC 20402
E.
DePUY
February 1967)
FOREWORD
The
U.S.
Army
E.
General William
technique
in
DePuy's oral history as a convincing example of this relatively new the historian's arsenal. It soon became apparent, however, that the
audience recognized in this interview a larger, more enduring value and utility. Here was an Army leader, a fighter, trainer, and thinker, imparting his wisdom and experience to the officer and NCO corps in his own words. The overwhelming demand from the Army's senior leaders and its school system for copies of the DePuy oral history quickly exhausted the original printing. It gives me great pleasure to publish the first Center of Military History edition of this important document.
The DePuy interview easily fulfilled the Military History Institute's criteria for oral history publications. It concerned a figure immediately recognizable to a large number of Army officers, one who had made a major impact on the development of the Army since World War II, and one whose career had spanned a period of significant change
within the service.
While these considerations remain valid, it seems to me that another element has emerged during the two years that Army leaders have read and discussed the DePuy oral history. Simply put, General DePuy's career demonstrates that one man can make a huge difference in our Army. General DePuy was commissioned from ROTC in 1941 and joined the 20th Infantry in time for the famous Louisiana Maneuvers. Subsequently assigned to the 90th Infantry Division, he trained and prepared with the division for its role in the liberation of Europe. In particular, the division's fight through the hedgerows of Normandy in June and July 1944 provided then Captain DePuy with a profound lesson. He saw soldiers suffer and die because of poor leadership or insufficient training. As a consequence he dedicated himself to the goal of leader development. His subsequent military career bore eloquent testimony to this dedication. Service on the postwar Army Staff involved him in decisions that dramatically affected training, doctrine, force-structure, and policy development. Later service in Vietnam allowed him to apply his years of planning and training in a combat situation. Finally, his assignment as the first commander of TRADOC gave him the opportunity to directly transform the
Army
It
in
luck for
one man
to
and
DePuy blended these ingredients to the profoundly important legacy. My hope is that today's
will
wish to thank the officers who conducted the interviews Brigadier General William J. Mullen III and Colonel Romie L. Brownlee. My appreciation also goes to
Institute,
and
his
staff for
in facilitating
the Center's
new
The views expressed by General DePuy are, of course, his own. His freely expressed opinions do not necessarily represent or reflect approved statements of policy or recognized positions of the U.S. Army or those of the Department of Defense.
WILLIAM
A.
STOFFT
Brigadier General,
USA
VI
"I
-:
Academic Year 1979 Senior Officer Oral History Program, these interviews with General William E. DePuy, US Army, Retired, were conducted at the General's home in Highfield, Virginia, by Lieutenant Colonels Romie L. Brownlee and William J. Mullen III. The two interviewers, both students at the Army War College, had served previously with General DePuy and conducted extensive research on the General's background and professional career
prior to
conducting the three interview sessions. Their pre-interview research included a review of
World War
II
Army
histories
in
monographs
and a review of other US Army Military History Institute senior officer oral histories that touched on the DePuy era. Additionally, news accounts, professional periodicals, and the Military History Institute's archives were also consulted. Finally, both interviewers participated in an oral history workshop prior to conducting the interviews with General DePuy. A native Texan, Les Brownlee graduated from the University of Wyoming and was selected as the Distinguished Honor Graduate of the US Army Ranger School after he was commissioned in the Infantry in 1962. After serving as an airborne infantry company commander in Vietnam during 1965, Colonel Brownlee returned to combat in 1969 as a battalion advisor with the South Vietnamese Airborne Division. Colonel Brownlee served as General DePuy's aide in 1973 while assigned to the US Army Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC). Following his promotion to lieutenant colonel, Colonel Brownlee was selected for battalion command in Germany in 1978. Colonel Brownlee holds a Masters Degree in Business Administration from the University of Alabama. His decorations include the Silver Star with Oak Leaf Cluster, the Legion of Merit, the Bronze Star, and the Purple Heart. He retired from the Army in 1983, and presently lives with his wife, Nancy, and two children, Tracy and John, in Fairfax, Virginia. Colonel Brownlee is currently the National Security Assistant to John W. Warner, United States Senator from the State of
Virginia.
VII
III
is
Plattsburg Barracks,
Infantry
New
York.
and was an
Vietnam War
first
serving there
1962. Returning to
in
in
commanded an
in
infantry
company
commanded by
in
command
commanded
the 1st
Degree
in
International Affairs
from
George Washington
presently
is
University.
Legion of Merit, the Bronze Star, the Soldier's Medal, and the Purple Heart. General Mullen
the Assistant Division
Commander
VIII
. .
CONTENTS
Chapter
I.
Page
to
Normandy
II.
40 68
III.
IV.
The Need
Early
for
War
II
90
102
121
V.
VI.
VII.
VIII.
IX.
Days of the Second Indochina War Introducing Agility: The First Division Washington Transition: 1967-1972 Changing an Army
137
1985
AFTERTHOUGHTS
INDEX
205
MAPS
Number
1
Page
2. 3. 4.
5. 6. 7.
20
21
23
33
34
37
Army's Front
42 48 48
51
8A.
8B.
9.
The
Falaise
Gap
10.
1 1
53
12. 13.
14. 15. 16. 17.
55
59
Regiment Poised
for
its
Advance on Maizieres-les-Metz
60 60
The
62
64
65 69 70
132
of Responsibility
The
Battle of
Metz
18.
19.
"West Wall"
20.
21
22.
The German Counteroffensive in the Ardennes The Ho Chi Minh Trail Corps Tactical Zones and Support Command Areas
1st Infantry Division's
136
Area of Operations
.139
143 145
23. 24.
The
Battle of
Ap Tau O
Operation
ATTLEBORO
IX
ILLUSTRATIONS
Page
Major General William
DePuy Corporal William E. DePuy ROTC Cadet William E. DePuy Second Lieutenant William E. DePuy
E.
ii
2
4
4
6 6
9
13
13
Americans Training in England for Upcoming Invasion of European Continent Diagram of 1944 Infantry Battalion Organization
Diagram of 1944 Headquarters and Headquarters Company of an Infantry Battalion American Troops on a Road March in the English Countryside
15 15 18
in
England
in
Upcoming
Invasion
US
22 26 27 28 29
Hedgerow Scene Typical Hedgerow Defensive Positions Diagram of Typical German Hedgerow Defensive Positions M4A1 Medium Tank with Hedgerow Cutter Major General Samuel T. Williams Major General Raymond S. McLain Major General James A. Van Fleet Impact of World War on Normandy Villages Major General Eugene M. Landrum Addressing the 357th Infantry Regiment Typical German Defensive Positions German 20mm Antitank Gun German 75mm, High Velocity, Self-Propelled Antitank Gun Scenes of Destruction in the Falaise Gap Diagram of German Observation Pillbox Typical German Pillbox The Capture of Maizieres-les-Metz German 88mm "Rhinoceros" Tank Destroyer
II
32
32
32
36 40 43 44 44
50 56
56
61
67
67 73
The 90th Division Crossing the Flooded Moselle River The 2.36-inch Antitank Rocket Launcher or "Bazooka" Typical View of the Dragon's Teeth Along the Siegfried Line A Typical Scene as the 90th Division Crossed the Moselle River for the Second Time Republic P-47 Mustang "Thunderbolts" North American P-51 Mustang Fighter
British
74
75 77
81
83 83 83
Supermarine
Spitfire
83
Division
in
Germany 88
Page
Generals and Others Touring the Salt Mines
89 89 92
II
.
Museum
DePuy Receiving the Distinguished Service Cross Lieutenant Colonel DePuy Receiving One of Three Silver Stars Awarded During World War Major General William G. Weaver
Major General George Bittman Barth
Lieutenant General Orwin C. Talbott
92 98 98
100
100
DePuy During
a Reprieve
from Combat
in
May
1945
101 101
110
A 106mm
Recoilless Rifle
111
113
113
I.
W. Rogers
Forsythe
113
General
Colonel
114
116
of the
DePuy Shown
Briefing the
Commandant
German
116
118 118
Combat
119
120
ACSFOR
Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) Conducting Area Sweeps General DePuy Encouraging Montagnard "Rebels" to Release "Prisoners"
General William C. Westmoreland
Scenes from Operation ATTLEBORO Typical Scenes in the Rung Sat Special Zone Close Air Support
158
158
Fieller
A Typical NAPALM
Eric
Strike
166 166
Nunez Holds
Command Ceremony
167 173
M551 Armored Reconnaissance Assault Vehicle SHERIDAN The M561 1 /4-ton Gama Goat General Paul F. Gorman "How to Fight Manuals"
1
176 176
184
188
194
201
XI
CHAPTER
From North Dakota
to
Normandy
INTERVIEWER:
born
in
General DePuy,
we
fill
will
in
the void
Jamestown, North Dakota. Could you tell us about your boyhood? What were some your hobbies and your favorite subjects in school, even before high school?*
GEN DEPUY:
was an
only child as
was my
father.
My
closest friend
was my
paternal
grandfather who was a Victorian romantic, golfer and hunter. My other companions were books. My father was of French Huguenot descent and my mother's family were Scotch-Irish from Canada. They were splendid parents in every respect. My family ended up in North Dakota because my grandfather was a doctor, and while he and his brother were on their way to the west coast, someone asked them to get off the train to treat an epidemic of some sort might add that my grandfather was, among in Bismarck, and they never got back on the train. other things, "Sitting Bull's" personal physician. Those must have been pretty exciting days. have always regretted that wasn't there. But, anyway, my father was a country banker. When was a young man, Jamestown was a very small town of about 5,000, on the prairie of North Dakota, down in a little valley out of the wind. It was populated almost entirely by Germans and Scandinavians, a few English, and an odd Frenchman; a very conservative kind of a community. It was also a very interesting area. It was a high-risk area plagued by drought, grasshoppers, and occasionally blessed with good crops mostly wheat. Some people made a lot of money, but most did not. In some respects, it still had a rather frontier atmosphere. Other than that, most of us grew up during the Depression, the onset of which out there was in about 1926-27. The agricultural depression came first, and then the crash of '29, so nobody had a lot of money. It's cold where we lived in North Dakota, with short summers and long winters. There was a nearby river where we did a lot of skating. was never particularly fond of school the academic part. have no way of comparing the quality of the schools up there to the quality of the schools elsewhere, but suspect that they were probably pretty good. The literacy rate in the Upper Plains States is perennially the highest in the nation. There was more of a European-type atmosphere there compared to other parts of the country. We did a lot of skating, a little bit of skiing, and a lot of game bird hunting, because there were literally millions of birds up there on the midcontinent
lived with us and
I I
I
flyway.
INTERVIEWER:
direction?
Did anyone
in
reading slanted
in
that
*This interview with General William E. DePuy, US Army, Retired, was conducted by Lieutenant Colonels William J. Mullen and Romie L. Brownlee on 19 March 1979, at General DePuy's home in Highfield, Virginia, as part of the U.S. Army War College/U.S. Army Military History Institute's Senior Officer Oral History Program.
GEN DEPUY:
Well,
my
father
in
was
a lieutenant
in
World War
I.
He
did not
go
to France.
My
any war. His father, my great grandfather, was killed in the Civil War. He was a captain of Michigan Infantry, and was killed at Cold Harbor in Virginia, on the peninsula. They were citizen soldiers, not career professionals. But, as a child, was interested in the history of World War I. read the whole set of books my father had, which was called, The Literary Digest History of World War * It was about 20 volumes and covered the war in great detail. really enjoyed them. The nearest military influence was Company "H" of the 165th Infantry, of the National Guard, in Jamestown.
grandfather never participated
I I
I.
INTERVIEWER: You
what were your
GEN DEPUY:
South Dakota
Well,
in
what
might do
I
is
pick
up that
military thread a
little bit.
moved down
to
1935,
when
was
is
My
and then, went to college, South father had moved from the bank of
bank in Brookings, and joined the National Guard, as did all my friends in those days. We needed the money. It wasn't much money by today's standards, but any money was important in those days. Also, when entered College, ROTC was mandatory. Everybody was in it. The first two years you had to be in it, and then, the second two years were optional. So, you automatically became a private in the ROTC regiment when you started college, and then, was in
Jamestown
to the
*FrancisW. Halsey, comp., The Literary Digest History of the World War (New York: Funk
1919).
same
in
time. Then,
I
made that
choice, and
1940,
liked
we had
to
came to move into senior ROTC in the junior And then, to carry the story on to the end, when choose between the Guard and the ROTC. Most of us dropped
when
it
the choice
very much.
that time
ROTC for obvious reasons. It's better to be a lieutenant. At squad leader, in Company "B", 109th Engineers, 34th Infantry Division. So, the choice between the two was easy to make. didn't distinguish myself academically in any way. didn't do very well in math. was going to be a banker, and follow in the footsteps of my father, which is, guess, not an unusual thing to
out of the Guard and stayed with the
I
was
a corporal, a
do. So,
could find
in
that
little
very many.
also took
some
graduated with a
If it
BS
in
in
got involved
team.
school
We
in
I
was hockey. played a lot of hockey, and we eventually had a little semipro hockey made a little pocket money out of that by playing around in a league that was located
mostly
We
had
played.
job of quarterbacking
I
my
ball
could
let
me
tell
ROTC was like in those days at South who may have influenced you, like the
ROTC.
You mentioned
it.
GEN DEPUY:
Army. One was
Yes,
a
and
a fine officer; he
was
later became a brigadier Armored Division. We also had a man named Ray Harris who was quite portly but kind of ferocious and inspiring. He used to crawl around on the floor of the auditorium teaching us how to crawl. He would turn very red in the face because he really was beyond that. But, the man who inspired everybody was a colonel named James P. Murphy. Murphy was a fatherly kind of fellow with a very entertaining and wide ranging vocabulary with all sorts of little figures of speech that made him amusing to all of us simple chaps out there on the reservation. We loved him, and he inspired us all toward the Army. There's no question that he was a great recruiter and wanted us all to be in the Army. might say that almost entered the Marine Corps instead of the Army, because every year we had only one officer who was taken into the Regular Army. But, we usually had two who went into the Marine Corps. Now, that was rather typical up in the Plains. The Marine Corps recruited very heavily in the Upper Middle West, North Dakota, South Dakota, Iowa, etc. wanted to get the Regular Army commission, but lost out to an individual by the name of Bob Barthell, later a colonel in the Signal Corps. Then, two of us tried for the Marine Corps. The Marines usually selected two except for that particular year when there was only one commission available. Colonel, now retired, Stan Nelson of the Marine Corps got it. We had to go on duty first with the Army, and we were on the Louisiana Maneuvers when the telegram came through saying that he
commander
was heartbroken, but, in retrospect, it's the best see, was very enthusiastic by that time. really
I I
INTERVIEWER:
GEN DEPUY:
changed
was
in
was no
in
choice.
later
Everybody, even the engineering graduates, went into the Infantry. Barthell went
to the Signal Corps.
and
graduate, a
have been a
Chuck Wilson, who retired as a major general, was an engineer went into the Infantry and stayed in the Infantry. He would brilliant magnificent engineer. But, no, there was no choice.
engineer, but he
Is
INTERVIEWER:
that
there anything else that happened during those years, or any other person
of,
who
GEN DEPUY:
I
Not
really.
The
battalion
commanders; was the regimental adjutant in my senior year. was the captain of the Scabbard and Blade, which included a little social hazing. But, anyway, all of the military things appealed to me, and liked them better than did economics and other things. So, it was easy for me to decide
I I
to stay
in
the
Army
pay was
better.
w
;:>.'
i:.';.;^;.;:
:jm
ROTC
General
DePuy as a newly
lieutenant.
commissioned second
INTERVIEWER: Your
reported there?
initial
assignment,
believe,
was
to Fort Leonard
Wood
ROTC,
you
GEN DEPUY:
ROTC, and
in
those days.
It
was assumed
II
that
we were
trained
in
relative to
everybody else
untrained.
in
the World
War
Army,
guess
we
objective standard,
we were
INTERVIEWER:
Fort Leonard
in '41,
you reported to
GEN DEPUY:
we all
think,
and
we
We were divided
rifle
all went to the 20th Infantry, the between the three regiments and
platoons.
at Fort
Benning?
GEN DEPUY:
Yes.
reported
I
in
fall
we went on
the
we walked all the way to hundred five five miles back. We prided ourselves on never losing a man. There were some good things about that Army. Tactically, it was not proficient, but in many soldierly things, it was good. And, I'd say that learned more about
Louisiana Maneuvers.*
was
from
six
months
in
learned
in all
the rest of
my service.
I
commander. He later became a corps commander, Lieutenant General "Shrimp" Milburn. The battalion commanders of the 20th Infantry were World War integrated officers who, generally speaking, were tough and hazing kinds of men. But, they made you do things that are good, liking taking care of the men, and demanding that "nobody drops out," and so, nobody did. The soldiers were sufficiently terrified, so that nobody ever dropped out of that 1,000 mile march unless he went to the hospital. Tactics consisted of getting on line and advancing in rushes it was called extended-order drill. When came back from Louisiana, went to Communications School because had been selected to become the battalion adjutant. In those days, the battalion adjutant was quite a guy because he commanded the headquarters detachment, which was the same as the headquarters company. He was the adjutant, he was the communications officer, he was the pioneer officer, and he had the battalion sergeant major in his detachment, plus a battalion supply sergeant. The first lieutenant did all of that. In fact, he was the battalion staff. There was the battalion commander, the battalion executive officer, a battalion adjutant, and the companies, and that's it. Oh, incidentally, the adjutant was also the intelligence officer, and the S-1, the S-2 and the S-4.
Colonel Milburn
was the
regimental
this,
the
way
organized
no
he certainly was
the battalion
commander
*For a discussion of the 1941 Louisiana Maneuvers see Jean R. Moenk, United States, 1935- 1964 (Fort Monroe: USACONARC, 1964), 47-62.
Infantry
"under
The "old" 2d Cavalry and the "new" 92nd Reconnaissance Company joining forces during the 1941 Louisiana Maneuvers
wanted me
simple
Humphrey
one
thing he thought
really
ought to
learn
was communications.
the rest
was thought
to be
or perhaps unimportant.
Camp
and you trained with that unit for over two years before it deployed to Europe and the European theater in March of '44.* We'd like to know what those two years were like in terms of the effectiveness of the training that the division received. What were the major training problems? Were they similar to those we face today? We have asked ourselves, "What would it be like to have a unit for two years and then take that unit into combat?"
GEN DEPUY:
Benning.
I
which was still in the process of forming up. In those days the regimental communications section had a first lieutenant communications officer and three second lieutenant battalion communications officers, each having little sections which worked with the battalions but belonged to the regiment. Later, the battalions got their own. But, in any event, started out being the communications officer for the 1st Battalion, but belonged to the regiment. After a very short period of time, became the regimental communications officer. And then, became what they called the liaison officer, but was really the assistant regimental S-3, one of several. think by that time was a first lieutenant. Then became the S-3 of the 1st Battalion. went back and forth once or twice as people came in who were senior to me and so on, but, generally, spent my time either as a communications
joined the headquarters
company
of the regiment
officer during
in
that
I
was my viewpoint.
have to say something about the officers
later,
really
who were
I'll
say a
lot
but there
was no apparent
the regiment,
of the battalion
commanders, and maybe two, three, or four others, out of some 135 officers. No one had any experience in war. The regimental commander may have been in France, but in those days my impression was that the name of the game was to "soldier," meaning that there were a lot of little rules a lot of them good rules such as how to take care of your men, and "officers eat last," and such. There also was a lot of "rank hath its privileges" (RHIP), another name for hazing for which today you would be court-martialed. In my opinion, RHIP was an excuse for mediocre officers to take advantage of those junior in rank. At one time RHIP may have made some sense, but by the
time
it
it
was
was
a lot of
hazing.
The regimental commander, for example, when he talked to us, didn't talk about tactics, he talked about movements. have a theory about that. We were motorized by that time, and all the energy and imagination in the division was
tactics.
I
*U.S. Army,
1946).
War
II
(Baton Rouge:
Publishing
Company,
1945).
George Von Roeden, Regimental History of the 357th Infantry (Weiden, Bavaria: Ferdinand N. Buchdruckerei,
in how we could get a regiment mounted up in trucks, move down the road, not and get there on time. We spent months just learning how to do that, whereas, we should have spent months learning how to fight. Perhaps the reason for that was that the division commander, the regimental commander, and the battalion commander were comfortable with a truck movement, but they weren't comfortable with training for combat. In both cases the training
totally
absorbed
get
lost,
was procedural-mechanical.
With the advantage of hindsight it is clear to me now at least part of what was wrong. followed the Army Training Program. The so-called ATP was a time-oriented process. A spent so many hours or days on each subject. For example, 30 hours of field firing, 6 hours on
aid, and 2 weeks on platoon
it
We
unit
first
in
was
it
get
done! Never mind whether or not the troops learned anything. The process completely obscured
If
the product.
a soldier missed
first
aid training he
must make
unit
went through the prescribed ATP. Performance-oriented training was not introduced into the Army until TRADOC did so in the mid-70s. The learning function was obscured and secondary to
the scheduling function.
Few took
We
trained around
Camp
Barkley, Texas.
We went to the Louisiana Maneuvers. We went out Camp Granite. We exercised in the desert, then went to
Fort Dix, and then, on to England. When we were in England, before the Normandy invasion, we were in terrain not unlike that of Normandy, certainly more like Normandy than the desert was like Normandy. But, for some reason or other, we did not take advantage of that. It never seemed to occur to us that we were going to be confronted in Normandy with very poor visibility, and that this would create a control problem and a firepower problem. don't remember any of that being discussed at all. My guess is that that was not really unusual in the expansion army of World War
I
like
to hear your
assessment of
and by that time, had a lot of friends in it. My fellow officers and good friends were wonderfully young, bright, eager fellows trying to do their best. They were wonderful material from which to make an army. But, for some reason, we didn't take full advantage of that. One thing about the 90th Division was that its enlisted soldiers were older. In those days the draft used to go in cycles, and when we were filled, we were filled with older soldiers. They were around 25 years old. We had a lot of them 25 to 30, while some units were filled with soldiers 19 and 20 years old. That was regarded later, as
Well,
I
GEN DEPUY:
I
how good
it
was.
was
loyal to
it,
a problem by
some
people.
don't
know
if it
was or
not.
INTERVIEWER: Were
that
there any specific events or incidents that occurred during your training
in
happened
to stick
through the years, other than what you have already mentioned?
GEN DEPUY:
example,
was always on
things that
we
we made
how
to
make
made it, or you didn't. You either had stragglers, or you didn't. And again, we had truck movements and written orders and communications all of the stuff that goes on above the fighting. Incidentally, this is not unknown in today's Army or anybody's army don't think it was anybody's particular fault; it was at any time. But, think it was worse there. the fact that it was the blind leading the blind.
25-mile march.
You
either
Typical English countryside training scenes as Americans prepare for the upcoming invasion of the European Continent.
which was really well-trained on the combat side was the artillery. The artillery is easier to train because it's very mechanical and mathematical, and they do very well. But, the artillery was good, and although it was an infantry division, it was the infantry battalions, companies, platoons, and squads that thought were poorly trained.*
part of the division
I
INTERVIEWER:
British
I've
got
some
voids that
I'd like
to
fill
in
background
material.
It would seem that the and French experience in France prior to Dunkirk, should have been available to the United States Army. Combat in the Pacific was characterized by small unit actions that would seem to have had some value in terms of lessons that could be taught. And, would suppose that by the time you were in England, there would have been some feedback from the North African campaigns. Was there any attempt to get any of that type of information to you at all?
I
attempt to obtain feedback from the fighting that had been going on?
GEN DEPUY:
back from the marching
fire,
Well, there were after action reports and lessons learned, but not very many, and
do remember one thing though, that was brought and that was marching fire. That became somewhat of a fad, and
I
you analyze it, an effort to maintain fire superiority during the assault. It's not a bad idea, assuming that you put it in the right context. They used marching fire as a method of attack as the sole method of attack. What they should have done, of course, was position the heavy machine guns and light machine guns and even rifle companies, so as to gain total fire superiority with small arms as well as mortars and artillery, and then, during the assault, use marching fire, which would have maintained the fire superiority. It reminds me a great deal of the experiments at the Combat Developments Experimentation Command (CDEC), in 1976.
recall,
as you probably
was,
if
At the time
attacking,
we were
PAR FOX
experiment
in
we
machine gun
was about
machine
gun suppressing and only one moving. The reason was that the fire superiority, as they called it in World War II, we now call it suppression, was maintained. As you know, the problem with infantry is that while you may get fire superiority through suppression, just at the time when you need it the most, during the assault, when the troops all rise up out of their foxholes or from behind a hedgerow and move forward, you lose it. So, the enemy then comes up out of his holes and starts to fire at you, and you lose the suppression. So, marching fire obviously was designed to overcome that problem, but somewhere in the transmission between the lessons learned and our unit, marching fire became the tactic through which you attacked. In other words, we lined up two battalions with two companies up and they went across the line of departure, using marching fire. It might have worked if the enemy was not well dug in, not well camouflaged, and very weak; but, if the enemy was professional, as the Germans usually were, was well-hidden, and was in very good positions, marching fire as often as not, just wasn't sufficient. We marched into their killing zones. We didn't learn about overwatch
suppression
until later in
the war.
*For a discussion of pre-invasion training or lack thereof, see G.A. Harrison, United States
Army
in
World War
II:
USGPO,
1951), 158-197.
10
INTERVIEWER:
live fire?
They included infiltration courses, live fire exercises, and overhead fire, all against The enemy doesn't shoot back, and so, you don't learn a whole lot, and of course, they were normally not done above maybe, platoon level, or company level at the most. Then, once in awhile we would fire the "mad minute" to impress us with our own firepower. However, the M-1 rifle, coupled with the rifle marksmanship program, worked to discourage active firing in combat by the average soldier. He was trained to shoot at and hit a target, but in combat, in the attack, he rarely ever saw a target. So, he was indisposed to shoot. The Germans, on the other hand, used machine pistols which were area weapons. That is, they sprayed the area ahead of them and achieved fire superiority which we now call suppression.
fixed targets.
GEN DEPUY:
INTERVIEWER:
In
seem
when
you would deploy, or did you just train up to a point and then Europe right away after all, and then drop back?*
GEN DEPUY:
ATP, once
at
That's right.
that
we went
Barkley, which was culminated by a trip to the Louisiana Maneuvers. And, at some people came to test us during division exercises. remember they came from a corps commanded by General Daniel Sultan. They were supposed to pronounce whether we were ready or not. They rendered the typical Army report of the time, which said that the
Camp
I.
troops didn't use cover and concealment that they bunched up too much, and that our discipline
on the march was only fair, and things like that. In other words, they said what every report has always said about exercises. Well, then what happened was that we were motorized. So, then we
went after movement by truck. Concurrently, we went through some more ATP training and then we went to the Desert Training Center. So, we went through another ATP cycle at the Desert Training Center. So, would say that we went through two and a half or three ATP
zealously
I
cycles.**
Now,
right
there also
was
a lot of cadreing.
We
through our
command
structure.
we
people, but
we
who were
not bad enough to embarrass us, but not good enough to destroy
INTERVIEWER: During this training were you equipped you had when you finally went to war?
that
GEN DEPUY:
light
Yes, essentially
we
Rifles
we
had
until
*For an explanation of the Mobilization Training Program, and its revision during World War II, see Robert R. Palmer, Bell I. Wiley and William R. Keast, United States Army in World War II: The Procurement and Training of Ground Combat Troops (Washington, USGPO, 1948), 442-455.
**90th Division training at the Desert Training Center
is
discussed
in
11
We had eight heavy water-cooled machine guns. We had 105 millimeter infantry cannon company. The antitank company changed from 37 to 57 millimeter towed guns, and the mortars were always 60mms and 81mms, so we really didn't change weapons during that whole time. However, we did pick up tanks in England, and tank destroyers in France.
machine gun.
howitzers
in
INTERVIEWER:
for
two
years.
were not in a "we're going to war tomorrow" posture. Were people able to go home or were they all kept on base until just before you reported to Fort Dix? Were they allowed to go home on leave?
in
which the troops were being continuously told that when they finished their training, they were going to war. Now, mind you, the soldiers didn't have any dependents anywhere nearby. You know, the soldiers came from all over, and so did the officers. Unless the soldier happened to have lived in the neighborhood, his dependents, if he had any his mother and father in most cases, his wife if he had one were back in New England, or California, or wherever, so they were not a problem. And, we gave leaves. Not too many, but suspect that everybody got a couple of
I
weeks
a year,
officers,
little
their
wives
nearby. But, the government paid no attention to them and there were absolutely no provisions
made
for families.
was
all
You
maybe you could sneak out from time to time. There were some short periods of time in which you were permitted to go on weekends if you had your family nearby. So, taking care of families was not regarded as a problem. It was wartime, and all of the
nearby, and you were an officer,
so-called people problems
we
you
live in
wooden
buildings?
GEN DEPUY:
Camp
At Leonard Wood,
we went
wooden
barracks. At
Barkley, Texas,
we went
into tents,
into
who came
GEN DEPUY:
time
I
No. The
Army
Infantry
and the
The 20th Infantry and the 1st Infantry had been brought down to Leonard Wood from Fort Warren at Cheyenne, Wyoming, where they had been stationed for a long time. Then there was the 63rd which had been cadred out of the 3rd Infantry at Fort Snelling, Minnesota. They were still in the old organization which was very light on staff and very high on command. But, when got down to the 357th Infantry, it was in its World War organization and had a staff at battalion and regiment. However, if I'm not mistaken, the headquarters company commander was also the S-1. There was an S-2, S-3, and S-4, and a separate communications officer by that time. At first the communications officer belonged to the regimental headquarters
was with
II
12
company, but later, he became part of the those little changes took place. (See Figures
battalion's
1
permanent
staff.
can't
remember when
and 2)*
INTERVIEWER: The
The
that
just
was
a training
in
training
me
GEN DEPUY:
training.
It
we did
that.
We also
in
the desert.
was a rather set piece type of thing. By the way, it wasn't bad was very practical. You buttoned them up with small arms fire and then some very
men went up
it
they called
it
it
a pole
charge
stuck
young man. Our tactical training in about hedgerows and their effects on
went off. in fact, in war, it did take care of it. But, it required a good England was perfunctory. do not remember ever hearing
the embrasure, pulled the fuse, and
I
tactics.
RIFLE
RIFLE
RIFLE
HEAVY
COMPANY
COMPANY
COMPANY
WEAPONS COMPANY
BATTALION TRAINS
COMPANY
FROM
SERVICE
FROM
REGIMENTAL MEDICAL
COMPANY
DETACHMENT
Figure
1.
Infantry battalion
BATTALION
CO HQ
BN HQ SEC
COM
PLAT
AM b PIONEER PLAT
ANTITANK
PLAT
PLAT
rm -B
MSG
CEN
SEC
HQ
WIRE SEC
RADIO
PLAT
AND
VISUAL SEC
HQ
^^^ S^^^
57-MM
57
MM
57
MM
company,
Infantry battalion.
USGPO,
1944).
13
rest of the paragraph on which states that not only did the division work on attacking fortified positions and fighting in hedgerows, but it also worked on road marches and obstacle courses. So, if the latter two are included on the same scale as the former two, one gets an idea of what was happening.
in fact,
INTERVIEWER: The
difference may,
training
marches to stay in physical conditioning. We had a lot of trouble finding small arms ranges and grenade ranges. So, we tried to maintain our weapons proficiency and physical condition and do a little bit of tactical training, but in England that was very, very difficult because there wasn't any room. England was ready to sink with American troops. We did go over into Wales and found a training area where we were able to do a little bit of tactical training at about company level. That's the only place we conceivably could have done any work against hedgerows. do remember that the hedgerows, when we got in them in France, were a great surprise to us, and a great problem. They were to
in
we
everybody.
in
1944?
GEN DEPUY:
them
for awhile.
were beginning at about that time, to get the V-1s, or had The V-2s hadn't started. They had been through the Battle
I
some successes in the desert. Except for the V-1s, thought that British morale was pretty good, mean the general civilian morale, was pretty good. They were clearly dumbfounded by being inundated with so many Americans. Remember, they had that marvelous old saying about "overpaid, oversexed and over here". Our guys only made $50.00 a month, think. think it went from $30.00 to $50.00. That was a lot of money, especially if they
of Britain, and they had had
I I I
one time. They might spend up to three months' pay at one time. So, they could be kind of rowdy and, being a mix of everybody that you could find in America, some of them were rougher than others. Now, the British weren't too keen about that. But, they were very keen about having us over there to help in getting the war over with. So, on balance, they tolerated us as individuals and welcomed us as an idea.
spent
it
all
at
INTERVIEWER:
in
the unit.
Earlier,
the requirement to cadre other units, and you talked about the massive shakeup that the division
underwent in England. What is your assessment of the impact on the the other shakeups that occurred just before you went into battle?
GEN
DEPUY:
insignificant
went through approximately three training cycles, and the cadres were compared to wartime losses. So, if you can't take cadreing, you can't go to war. My
all
We
of that
is,
that because
we
didn't
in
who had
confidence
in their
war
we
No
one! So,
we
kept the
know one
But,
We
really
we
also
knew
that
officer in the
we
got to .England.
of three
of
deadwood
two out
14
Marching, marching, and more marching. A typical scene throughout the English countryside as Americans prepared for the upcoming invasion.
felt
Half-tracks lined up awaiting the invasion of the European Continent. Some England was about to sink under the weight of American troops and equipment.
15
battalion
that there
was no tough
lot
who
you have experienced officers who have standards and they expect. Unfortunately, we didn't have such people.
happen,
it
is
INTERVIEWER: With
due to
regard to the leadership failures, the two that you referred to, were they
a lack of technical
competence
or of courage?
you know, the 90th Division was studied for years at Fort Leavenworth as an example of the impact of leadership on unit performance. In this respect the 90th was unusually weak going into the war. It recovered, but in the process, thousands of good men were lost. When General McLain took over after about six or seven weeks of combat he told us that the soldiers of the 90th were just as good as the soldiers in any other division but that they had been poorly led. That was an understatement of monumental proportions. In the first six weeks of the battle in Normandy, the 90th lost 100 percent of its soldiers and 150 percent of its officers. In the rifle companies that translates to losses of between 200 and 400 percent. Those losses compare with the worst of World War I. In this same period two division commanders were relieved. In my regiment one regimental commander was relieved in England and another in Normandy. The one relieved in England returned to the regiment and was killed within two days. Two battalion commanders also were and one ran away and was then relieved. The consequences of all this leadership failure could be predicted. My regiment simply did not perform notwithstanding the heroic efforts and tragic losses among the lower ranking officers and the bewildered troops. Much the same picture applied to the whole division in terms of
relieved,
GEN DEPUY: As
performance.
INTERVIEWER: Where
Reserves?
did the
Army
GEN DEPUY:
unqualified for
The
division
officers.
command
in battle.
The commander who took the regiment to He knew nothing about an it is possible to be.
failed attack.
regiment.
He was
erratic to the
ahead
into a repeat
performance of a
He
will
was
Academy
he was brave
National
was
a Reserve officer
who had
was
a despicable
Illinois
Guard
his character
Normandy. Upon issuing his order for the first attack of the war he went to the aid station, turned himself in and was evacuated. He was pursued by the authorities and reduced to enlisted rank.
16
had
INTERVIEWER:
any spot, be
it
In
Vietnam
vacancy caused by a casualty or commanders were changed, apparently within a short period of time, did the regimental commander have any idea of who to put in, or did it just sort of happen? Did he just sort of reach
a
who was ready to step into by something else. When these battalion
idea about
down and
get lucky?
How did
had severe problems with the regimental commander at the same time. But, were picked we were desperate for good men. The 1st Battalion was taken over by a lieutenant colonel named Ed Hamilton who is still in the Washington area. He was very good and very brave. He lost an eye at Metz. The 2nd Battalion was taken over by a good man named Ward who was wounded and replaced by a school teacher from Sioux Falls, South Dakota, named Ben Rossow, who was also a good man. The 3rd Battalion was taken over by John Mason who later commanded the regiment. He was the regimental S-3 when we went to England and to
better people
GEN DEPUY: We
good man. So, we went from three disasters to three good, but relatively untrained, men. They learned on the job. From then on, things began to look up. Then we brought in a good regimental commander as well. Colonel, later General Bittman Barth took over the regiment after having been the 9th Division's Chief of Staff. He was a lifesaver.
France, and a very
INTERVIEWER: What
part did
you play
in
Normandy?
GEN DEPUY: Obviously not much since was only a captain. But, do have one story perhaps worth telling. In April of 1944, was a regimental assistant S-3. The 90th Division headquarters borrowed me to go to London with "Hanging Sam" Williams and Major Ed Hamilton, the Assistant G-3, on a "secret" mission. It turned out that we were to make the arrangements for all
I
I I
division
on
in
Utah Beach behind the 4th Division, which made the assault landing. Anyhow,
we
arrived
London, stayed
at the
Grosvenor House, and went to the Selfridge Department Store on the edge
where Headquarters, European Theater of Operations, US Army (ETOUSA), was located. The store had been moved out and hundreds of desks, telephones, and US Army people had moved in. In April of 1944, it was sheer pandemonium. We started at the top with a major general and after two frustrating days, had worked our way down to an elderly major of the transportation section of the Quartermaster Corps. His desk was right smack in the middle of the five acres of floor space and indistinguishable from all the rest except for one thing this major, whose name believe was Button, seemed to be the only one who knew anything about where all the ships were, and which ones we might have. say "might" advisedly. As you would expect, "Hanging Sam" lost interest at this point. He wasn't about to deal with a minor player like Button. So, he went off on his own business. We met at night at the Grosvenor. Ed Hamilton then went back to Birmingham, and was left alone at the working level.
of Mayfair, by Marble Arch,
I
I I
*The general
in particular,
is
discussed
in
17
20 Grosvenor Square, London U.S. Headquarters for the European Theater of Operations
The
load
first
step
was
in
lists
To my
and lastly, match the amazement, Button said to me, "Here are all the
lists
I I
May. Which ones do you want?" said didn't have a He said that some ships were much larger and better than others and that because had arrived before the representative of the 2nd Division, might as well take my pick. So did. picked large ships. The 90th had about nine ships in all. The poor old 2nd Division had about 30 because all the big ships had been taken by the 90th by me. What a
ships that
be
English waters
in late
system!
The last step was the most interesting. was taken to see a brigadier of QM-7 in Whitehall. He was the mastermind behind all of the transportation planning. In peacetime he was an executive of Cunard lines. He sent me to see a group of Merchant Marine captains who had been commissioned in the British Army to prepare loading plans. They worked in a basement a block away from Selfridge. For five days joined them around a huge round table on which they had the
I I
and cargo spaces. For each piece of American equipment they had a wooden block prepared to scale length, width, and height which they would place on the drawings and number. It was my job to advise them on the sequence of debarkation and to make sure that a howitzer also had a prime mover, etcetera. Mind you, we only had five days and had
blueprints of the ships' decks
I
only the most general knowledge about the division's plans at the
Normandy end.
In short,
we
To end
this story
it
worked! These
same merchant
certain.
captains, there
remember, were the selfsame chaps who believe, for Sicily, but on that point I'm not so
I
18
There
is
something
classical
it
about
all
their say,
devolves upon
some
"do
it". It's
"works".
the regiment actually land
in
Normandy?
one that General
their ship was sunk. Fortunately, the troops were able to get away was in, was sunk They were supposed to be the first regiment in. They were going to come in on the afternoon of D-Day, and we were to come in the next day or two, which is what we did. [See
Maps
and
2,
They landed
in
was
little
we came
when an advanced recon party got up to the Merderet River, the 82nd had a part of a regiment already across. There was a bridge across the Merderet at the middle of a long causeway. It was a very difficult place to get across, particularly in the daytime. The Germans had some high velocity guns which were sighted on that bridge. was the S-3 of the
across the Merderet River. Well,
I
went up with one or two other people to pick out the attack position across the river. We got across this bridge and picked out an area on the edge of a little cluster of houses by the name of le Motey. Then we took the troops up and across the causeway and into this attack position. We launched our first attack early on the morning of 9 June. By the way, the troops were jittery and opened fire on imaginary snipers while in the attack position. [See map 3, page 23]
1st Battalion. Later in the
afternoon of 8 June,
GEN DEPUY:
No, but
it
didn't
Normandy was a
backs?
foot war.*
INTERVIEWER: What
infantryman?
their
What was
GEN DEPUY:
attack.
The
first
thing
we
These fatigues were fixed up so that if the enemy used mustard gas it wouldn't penetrate. Also, you couldn't sweat through them. So, they were really awful hot and, God, after a few days, you could smell soldiers a mile away. Finally, they decided that there wouldn't be a chemical attack, and we got out of the impregnated clothing it was the greatest relief. It was almost the greatest relief in the war. They carried a blanket and a shelter half, which they didn't need,
Omaha Beach, Omaha Beachhead (6 June-13 June
*For the situation on
see U.S.
1944) Washington:
War Department, Historical Division, American Forces in Action Series: USGPO, 1945). Reprinted by the Battery Press, Inc., 1984.
19
JUNE
944
llllllll
f^
Front LINE
German units
10
MILES
Map
20
21
Landing
at
22
JUNE 1944
Forward
9
10 13
Elements
June June June
Map 3
23
ammunition, grenades and pyrotechnics, extra bazooka ammunition, and lots of extra machine gun ammunition. Every rifleman came in with a little extra which they dropped in the assembly
area, plus mortar
ammunition.
When
they got off the ships, they were loaded because they
we
brought a
lot
of stuff
when
we came
which we dropped in the final assembly area. It became sort of the first reserve of might add that think we still had some of that ammunition when the war was over because, as you know, the infantry in World War didn't shoot much small arms ammuniton, except the machine guns. So, that was about it.
in,
ammunition.
II
INTERVIEWER:
They had K-rations in those days, which looked like a brick, but not the C-rations. C-rations in those days were the next step up. The assault ration was a candy bar. It was a chocolate bar. The artillery ate B-rations. Most of us also carried an escape and evasion kit, and a little map, which everybody later wore as a scarf. They were marvelous silk scarves with a map of
the Cotentin Peninsula on them.
GEN DEPUY:
some other survival equipment. have forgotten everything the kit contained, but there were some halizone tablets, a small compass, a fishhook, and a couple of other things like that, which, of course, nobody used. So, that was what we went
also had
I
We
in
with.
gas masks?
all
month and then the assumption was made that there wouldn't be a gas attack so they turned in the gas masks and the impregnated clothing. There were a few gas scares in Normandy. Sure, it was just smoke, white phosphorus or something like that, but there were several occasions when the troops thought that they were
They kept them during the
first
GEN DEPUY:
INTERVIEWER:
GEN DEPUY:
crossed the
position,
and the
division
GEN DEPUY:
attack.
Yes. Most of
Normandy
to
me
first
We
were
The
regimental plan
was
24
attack with one battalion on each side of the road, and one battalion, the 2nd Battalion,
1st Battalion
in
reserve.
ahead with two companies up and one in The reserve to follow in center of sector. Each of the forward companies lined up two platoons abreast with two squads on line in the most classic formation out of the book. The artillery preparation was fired with the 105mms in fairly close along the hedgrows and the 155mms a little deeper. The
the
left.
was on
We attacked
straight
When
came under very heavy small arms fire and were caught in an any of our troops fired their weapons after the first few minutes. When the attack stopped the Germans threw a heavy barrage of mortar fire into the first and second small fields between the Line of Departure and the forward line of troops. Casualties were very heavy. We had walked into his killing ground. After 30 minutes the lead companies came back to the second hedgerow and that was it. The other battalion had only slightly more success but was also repulsed. An effort to move the reserve company around the left flank resulted in a single file movement up a sunken road into some German machine gun fire which terminated the
the second or third hedgerow they
open
field.
do not
believe that
first
all in all,
a dismal affair.
more days the regiment continued its attack toward Gourbesville. On the 14th of June, at 2020 hours, elements of the 3rd Battalion worked around the right (north) flank and entered the town, but were forced out the next day. By 2240 on the 15th, the 3rd Battalion had recaptured
For five
Gourbesville. This
was
the
first
it
and
soldiers. This
was
much
it
to
show
in
return. Consideration
was
as
replacements but fortunately, that course was rejected and the division eventually pulled
process of seasoning and natural selection.
itself
together through on-the-job training and the slow emergence of fighters and leaders through a
to
work was done on trying to analyze the way the Germans defended. We finally did figure it out. The Germans would assign a squad to a terrain compartment. In other words, one series of hedgerowed fields like checkerboards. The Germans would put about two men on the first hedgerow, usually near the corners. The next hedgerow back would be their main position, and the third hedgerow back would be their reserve position. So, when you started the attack, the first two guys would knock off one or two of the attackers and slow things down. Then you had to go over the top of that hedgerow in the face of the main position. You suffered more casualties, and normally, that ended the attack. [See Diagram, page 28] The troops would straggle back, and you would end up taking just one hedgerow. That was typical. Now, if you happened to carry the second hedgerow, the whole German squad would drop back to the third one. As far as we were concerned, we rarely ever took the third hedgerow. Eventually, what we tried to do was to figure out how to suppress this system with indirect fire. We put the 60mms on the first hedgerow, the 81mms on the second hedgerow, the 105mms on the third hedgerow and the 155mms back on the roads and reserve areas and then we tried to
GEN DEPUY: A
lot of
25
ensure that the attack would have enough impetus to simply carry through the whole thing.
Toward the end of the campaign, we made one or two such attacks successfully.* But, what we finally learned, which is what all seasoned soldiers finally learn, is not to attack them where they are. The way we cracked those positions was simply by finding a hole somewhere around the flank. Find a hole, get through that hole and get in their rear, and then the whole bloody thing would collapse. Then you'd have them in the open. That's the kind of thing wished we had learned during the two years we were training in the United States and during the three months we were training in England. wish someone had told us that simple fact don't attack them where they are strong, but try to find a weak spot and go through the weak spot. Of course all of this was in the field manuals, but for whatever reason, it wasn't transmitted to us, or perhaps more honestly, it didn't sink in. We learned it the hard way and from then on, until the end of the war, all of the good commanders fought their battles by looking for a way around the enemy; they practically never went straight forward. Every time we had to go straight forward, we took high casualties as, indeed, we will in our Army today, if we train our people to take the hill straight on. The thing to do is to go around and behind the enemy, and then they will have to come out.
I I
*For a description of this campaign see U.S. War Department, Historical Division, American Forces St-Lo(7July-19July 1944) Washington: USGPO, 1946. Reprinted by the Battery Press, Inc., 1984.
in
Action Series:
26
&
4fe&
..'
*
:
:-;^---
"
Hedgerow country clearly favored the defender. One never knew for sure just what was on the other side.
27
Typical
positions
in
were
depth.
28
INTERVIEWER:
Did you have tanks with improvised clearing blades on the front?
The rhinoceros. Yes, we had some, but they were only marginally successful simply because the hedgerows were often too thick even for those devices. A lot of the hedgerows were very high; some of them were six, seven, and eight feet high. They even had trees growing on top of them, and if you went down inside of them you would find that it was a mass of roots, great huge roots of great huge trees. No tank was able to get through the big ones. The tanks could get through only the little ones. If the hedgerow was only two or three feet high, then those tanks could go through. The idea was to break through that second and third defensive would say that we had some success in doing that, but it's awfully difficult terrain for tanks. line.
I
GEN DEPUY:
hedgerows.
INTERVIEWER: But, for the trooper, it must have been like scaling a wall. Every time he wanted to move into the field on the other side of the hedgerow, he would have to climb up and over a six
to eight foot hedgerow.
29
GEN DEPUY:
how
felt
and coming down onto a stage out in the complete open, with the enemy just behind the next hedgerow. Now, they didn't want to go across the middle of that field that's the last thing they wanted to do. So, what the troops tried to do, almost always, and almost always with bad results, was to work along the hedgerows that were perpendicular to our front. And, time after time, we would get a platoon caught with all of the soldiers lying head-to-toe along the side of a hedgerow.
INTERVIEWER: Could
don't
mean through
field,
hedgerow and then going through the middle of the field, they would go over the hedgerows at the corners, and then try to go right up along the perpendicular hedgerows. It's human nature to want to be next to something and not to be exposed in the open. So, the Germans would dig right through the hedgerow and have a little hole that they could see and shoot through, and then, they would just fire right down the hedgerow and catch a whole column of soldiers crawling forward.
No.
I'm trying to say
is
GEN DEPUY:
What
INTERVIEWER:
in
They did. They used mortars very, very well. The minute we would cross that first hedgerow, the field would be filled with mortar fire, and if you ever got past that one, the next field also would be filled with mortar fire, as well.
GEN DEPUY:
your hedgerow?
do that very well. You see, one of our training deficiencies was that almost all suppression was done by indirect fire weapons. Very little suppression was done by small arms. Occasionally, we would use our heavy machine guns. People thought first about mortars and artillery, then heavy machine guns, and finally, light machine guns. Really, they didn't think much about using riflemen for suppression. They just thought of using riflemen for maneuvering and sharpshooting. The M-1 rifle was a precision weapon but there were no precision targets. This problem was not confined to the 90th Division. You have read SLAM Marshall and know that even in the 101st only 25 percent of the troopers fired.* And, we only had
didn't
GEN DEPUY: We
in
a battalion. So,
it
didn't
work very
well.
We
didn't
do
direct fire
in
latter part of
the war.
INTERVIEWER:
*Fora discussion of
this
GEN DEPUY: They did occasionally. They did shoot the rocket launchers at the corners once we found out that the corners were where they'd be. And, sometimes that worked. Then, of course, the Germans would try to position themselves so that they were not quite in the corner.
INTERVIEWER:
Did you run into mines? Did the
They would put booby traps out in front of the hedgerows, and then they'd mark the gaps. They didn't mark them so that we could find the gaps, but they'd know where they were. So, there were mines, and there were booby traps. We would lose a lot of people just trying to go over a hedgerow.
GEN DEPUY:
INTERVIEWER: Having
relief
I'd
now
like
who commanded
few days
of the
Normandy campaign.
GEN DEPUY: General Landrum was the second division commander in Normandy and the second to be relieved. You know, really was at a very low level so don't know all of the things that happened, but think his relief stemmed from the fact that the division didn't perform very
I
I
by not performing well. Under the why. circumstances I've described, think you can see think the other regiments did a little better than ours, but don't think they did a whole lot better. That may be unfair for me to say, because wasn't there. So, let me just say that the division certainly didn't achieve its objectives, and it didn't contribute a lot to the winning of the battle in Normandy during the first few weeks. Landrum was not visible to the fighting troops; certainly at battalion level and below, he wasn't felt. The man who was felt was "Hanging" Sam Williams. And, that's a tragic story because "Hanging" Sam was fired. They got the wrong man. "Hanging" Sam Williams was the assistant division commander, and he was with us all the time. He was very helpful and a very brave, and powerful man, as everybody found out later. He had been with the division while it trained in the United States and really was the only man who ever impressed me as being a soldier with experience. He was with my regiment at Beau Coudray where we did very poorly and took a lot of casualties. Apparently, when he went back to the division command post, he was accused of siding with the troops against the division commander. So, he was relieved.
well.
The regiment
that
was
in
INTERVIEWER: Who
relieved
him?
GEN DEPUY:
INTERVIEWER: So, the relief of General Landrum took place around had only taken command of the division around the 12th of June.
it
on 30 July?
Was
it
that late?
That's
if
Landrum had
earlier
than that.
31
GEN DEPUY:
All right.
INTERVIEWER:
about the
In
that fighting
relief of Landrum. Actually, what want to McLain and Landrum. So, just to review the record, there was very fierce fighting in the hedgerows and past the hedgerows. The 1st Battalion of the 357th, was sort of a lost battalion for a couple of days around Beau Coudray and the fighting had reached the point where the engineers were fighting as infantry, and the cooks and drivers were being used as individual replacements. From all accounts, it would seem that the other divisions were having to do the same thing. The 82nd, the 79th, and the 83rd Divisions weren't making much more progress than was the 90th. The fighting went on around the clock. It was just attack, and be attacked, then attack, and be attacked again. think one of the regiments, the 358th, suffered 52 percent casualties in just one attack, the attack on the island. The fighting seems to have been very, very tough. would guess that the attack on the island led to the relief of Landrum. It was about then that somebody must have made the decision to relieve him. But, here's a man who came down, took command of the division and had about six very bad weeks. Point blank, the question would be, did Landrum have a chance to impose himself on the division; did he really have a chance to take charge or was the train going so fast that it was perhaps beyond any man's ability to grab hold of it and do much with it? [See Maps 4 and 5, pages 33 and 34]
I
and again, these are more questions determine are the differences between
GEN DEPUY:
all
Well,
suppose
I
all
of that
is
somewhat
true.
The
in
the campaign
was simply to
in
take
the plans drawn up by the division G-3, Dick Stilwell (one of the finest soldiers
just order the
tell
me
didn't
the
regiments or the battalions, or talk to people and find out what the problems were. So, the
division didn't
do very
well.
As
some good
Van
V-
Major General
Major General
Major General
Samuel
T. Williams
Raymond
S.
McLain
James A. Van
Fleet
32
r"
FIRST
2
ARMY ZONE
July
1944
METERS
ALTFTUCe
IN
L_
10
!:
HI&ih
tso
50
!00
200
L-
12
ules
Map 4
33
Map
34
INTERVIEWER:
believe that
Teddy Roosevelt,
Jr.,
was
command
the
he could be put
GEN DEPUY:
Yes.
guess Bradley
would have been a terrible thing considering the sacrifice of the soldiers and junior officers. It's bad to break up a unit. What you want to do is make it well. Give it leaders. The soldiers are always the same.
I'm glad they didn't.
It
INTERVIEWER: At
on about the 16th
same time that this was going on, you changed of June, when Colonel Barth took command.
the
regimental
commanders
GEN DEPUY:
Sheehy was
Well,
we changed commanders
twice.
that
when John
became the spare colonel. Every division carried a spare colonel. That was interesting because all three regimental commanders knew that there was a guy sitting there waiting. That colonel's job was to just mosey around, stay current, and be ready. So, Sheehy, who had been the regimental commander for a couple of years, was shunted aside by the colonel who then was relieved after a terrifying week of almost total failure. They then sent Sheehy back down to take over his old regiment again. Well, can you imagine anything worse than that? When he came back down to look at his regiment it was decimated. By then was the S-3 of the regiment, because Mason had gone down to take over 3rd Battalion. Colonel Sheehy was in a daze. He just couldn't believe what he found. We were being ordered to make another attack. Colonel Sheehy, with a glazed look in his eye, just walked out of the CP, found his driver, and said, "Drive down the road to Gourbesville." Somebody said, "You can't." But, he told his driver, "Go." To this day, we don't know whether he did that because he was desperate and couldn't stand it any longer, or if he didn't know the situation, or if he was out of his mind, or just what drove him. They just drove down the road right into the Germans. Then Barth arrived. don't remember the exact dates; it all happened very rapidly, within a matter of a
relieved in England, he then
I I
couple of weeks.
INTERVIEWER:
Colonel Sheehy
was only
was
killed.
He came
in
on
was
killed
on the 16th.
GEN
DEPUY:
Right.
You
see, he got
down
enough
to find out
what the
conditions were and issue a couple of orders, and then he drove off into the
enemy
lines.
INTERVIEWER:
seemed
time.
I'd
After Colonel Barth took over, the battle of Beau Coudray took place. That
be very interested
in
you could look at a 1:5,000 or 1:10,000, or even 1:2,500 map, and we had some of those, you would see that the road that led straight south into Periers from St. Jores, went between a swampy area on the east and the Foret de Mont Castre on the west. Between the high hill and the swamp was the village of Beau Coudray, in the vicinity of le Plessis.
Well,
first
GEN DEPUY:
of
all,
if
35
narrow bottleneck. You couldn't go through the swamp, and our boundary didn't let us go through Foret de Mont Castre. What we tried to do was go straight ahead through the town and make a shallow envelopment across a shoulder of the Mont Castre. And, for
So, there
a very
was
however many days it took, we fought to get through the bottleneck on the road to Periers. In all my comments you must understand that was removed two echelons from the company battles. It was a good vantage point but was not personally a part of the endless, bitter, grinding combat at the fighting edge. Had been, would surely not be reporting as am today. [See Map 6, page
I I I I I
37]
Anyway, we went on down into that battle with the 3rd Battalion on the right and the 1st Battalion on the left. The 3rd Battalion managed to get into the town and "K" Company actually got across the main transverse road that went through the town and off to the right, and up to the top of Foret de Mont Castre. The Germans counterattacked; they brought up a bicycle battalion among other things, and brought up some parachute troops, and one of the companies of the 3rd Battalion disappeared. The 1st Battalion was on the left and there wasn't much room. The 2nd
Battalion
was
in
reserve.
Pretty
soon
we committed
it
the
of
come down on Beau Coudray from the west. The battalion got down into this thing we called "ladder," which was an open terraced area, and was stopped maybe 500 yards from the edge
Beau Coudray. The Germans received additional reinforcements and launched another counterattack and this time the 1st Battalion was chopped up. That's when we threw in a can't remember one day from the next, battalion of cooks and bakers over on the extreme left. but the record will show how long the battle lasted. But, the regiment was in very bad shape at the end. It really lost its integrity, and the 1st and 3rd Battalions didn't have the kind of cohesion it
I
The
heavy
toll
on Normandy
villages
36
Map
First
Army's front
37
At this point must say something on behalf of the junior officers and soldiers of my regiment. These poor devils were sent to us through the replacement system and often went into combat without a chance even to meet, much less know, the men with whom they fought. Many died never knowing what it was all about. These are the men to whom we professional soldiers owe a great debt. They were the real heroes. But, we don't even know their names. What a tragedy. The brutality and stupidity of those days have affected all the rest of my professional life.
I
INTERVIEWER: The
166
killed.
GEN DEPUY:
INTERVIEWER: And,
believe
it
is
when
there
were 13
straight days of
exceeded
that.
However, it appears that you certainly Based on your impressions, was that about the most that the soldiers could take?
Well,
know when they went past the breaking point, but can tell you for to mount an offensive action after just a few days of battle. After that, orders may have been issued to attack, but no attacks took place. They may have been leaning forward in the foxhole but the disorganization was sufficiently high and morale was
I
GEN DEPUY:
don't
its ability
sufficiently low,
so that nothing
really
totally
exhausted and
in
was a pervasive feeling of hopelessness. The troops withstood some counterattacks but as far as movement forward, there wasn't any. Once the attack of the 2nd Battalion coming down from the right flank bogged down, that was the end of the unit's offensive capability. do remember vividly how that whole battle ended. We made the terrible mistake of putting the regimental CP in a little town called St. Jores. We were right at a main road junction and on the night just before the Germans withdrew, they fired up their stockpiled ammunition. They had a couple of large caliber guns; don't know how big they were, 150 to 203 millimeters, but anyway, they dumped everything they had on that road junction. We were there all night long, and all night they did it. We were feeling very sorry for ourselves, but the next morning, when we woke up, we discovered the enemy had withdrawn from our front. Typical German doctrine by the way very
daze. There
I
methodical.
INTERVIEWER: In that fight, the regimental history indicates that "Charlie" and "King" Companies repulsed 14 counterattacks accompanied by tanks during the day. Can you describe the kind of tempo that we are talking about in such fights?
my guess is that what they talking about what you We are not three assault guns. maybe, two or were talking about was would visualize as a large tank attack. There might have been a Mark IV tank or two, but in all probability, what happened was that the Germans used some self-propelled 76 millimeter assault guns combined with their airborne infantry. They were better trained and they maneuvered. They
GEN DEPUY:
Well,
38
were professionals. They simply suppressed and moved, suppressed and moved. They gained fire superiority, and then gobbled up chunks of those companies up there, which, by that time, probably were not returning fire.
INTERVIEWER: Now,
would
indicate that the
if
there were 14 attacks, and again, I'm looking at the unit history, that
Germans came
it.
another place to
come
and hit, and then perhaps, went back to figure out again, as opposed to coming in and actually biting off a big piece
in
GEN DEPUY:
talking about,
think that
when
reports are
coming
in
from company
level,
which
is
what we
are
attacks. So,
you have to realize what kind of a report you'll get. All probes are considered to be guess is that of the 14 attacks, five, six, or seven of them were merely the Germans looking for a hole. They were probing for the flanks. And, they were pretty good at that.
my
They probably
let
guns up a
little bit
When
me
tell
you, I'm only talking about 200 or 300 people at the most.
Some
INTERVIEWER:
artillery?
artillery,
but nothing
like
we
had.
Some
mortars,
some
assault guns,
and
arms
lot
of
machine
INTERVIEWER: Was
or
if
this a
If
they had people attacking them would they very quickly mount a counterattack of
try to stop you, or drive
some
weight and
you back?
that they
just
GEN DEPUY:
to hold that
Yes.
little
cork
The reason they were counterattacking at Beau Coudray in a bottle. If you ever saw it on a map, you'll see that it
is is
wanted
an incredible
bottleneck.
Gap?
is
GEN DEPUY:
there,
No.
If
you look
at this
map, there
the Foret de
Mont
Castre,
and
you looked across there, there was a river that went across most and there were these huge, swampy, inundated kinds of areas. When you looked at the terrain there was just one way through. So, the Germans kept counterattacking to hold that bottleneck. The Germans were very doctrinaire about other things, too. They always counterattacked before they withdrew. They fired a lot of artillery. They hit you very hard and then they would withdraw. You could count on that.
attacking straight south. But,
of the way, there
was
hill
or two,
39
CHAPTER
II
INTERVIEWER:
at a pretty
low ebb
What occurred to
Well, let's see, first we went through Beau Coudray, then south. The 358th had the island and then the breakout took place at St. Lo after the carpet bombing. on that episode The people on our left made the breakout. We were on the west side and the 1st Division and others in the V and XIX Corps made the breakthrough near St. Lo. Soon, the whole front collapsed in front of us and we were given orders to move. We were part of the new Third Army. Suddenly, we were moving and we were taking a few prisoners. We didn't have to fight much, and we moved down behind an armored division to Avranches. We did a little fighting near St. Hilaire-du-Harcouet. Then, we broke out with the
GEN DEPUY:
Mans, and then north, toward Argentan.* That was the breakout and, of course, by that time, General McLain was in command. We had confidence in McLain. And, he visited the troops. We saw him often. He knew what troops could do, and he told them that they were okay, but that the division's leadership had been bad. And, he was right!
mission of going
first
to
Mayenne, then
to Le
Major General Eugene M. Landrum addressing the officers of the 357th Infantry Regiment during a lull in the activity.
*For a thorough discussion of the breakthrough see Martin Blumenson, United States Breakout and Pursuit (Washington: USGPO, 1961).
Army
in
World War
II:
40
needs success.
itself.
It
Human
by the time we got to Le up toward the Falaise Gap, toward Argentan and Alencon, we were beginning to feel that we were soldiers. In Normandy the division lacked pride because it had had no successes of which to be proud. Certainly my regiment didn't. The only thing we were proud of
breeds confidence, and confidence breeds more success,
started
was
that
we somehow
in
had stuck
it
you know,
we
took a
perverse pride
we were
I
things up and then circumstances provided victories; the victories provided confidence, and the
confidence
made
it
we needed
for a good division. think that probably happened more than most. [See Map 7, page 42]
dozens of
divisions, but
earlier
that
General
Bradley's
staff
at
one
in.
time
had
up the
division. Instead,
he put McLain
Supposedly,
came in. However, Colonel Barth indicated that to his knowledge, no regimental commanders were relieved, nor were any battalion commanders in his regiment. In fact, he only knew of three battalion commanders being relieved in the entire division. Were you aware of anything happening at that time?
there were 16 field grade officers relieved after McLain
in
our regiment
was
McLain had was, "No executive made an assessment and got rid of those who couldn't take over. And, you are right, by that time we had good men commanding the battalions. Major Ed Hamilton, a real fighter, was commanding the 1st Battalion; Major Ward, a cool, tough customer, led the 2nd Battalion; and John Mason, the best commander in the regiment during the war, had the 3rd Battalion. And, our regimental commander was super. So,
was
transferred.
He was
officers
who
you see,
we
had the makings of a good regiment even before McLain got there.
this
INTERVIEWER: By
CP when
How
did
the
the regimental
GEN DEPUY:
came
he
to
back.
Sheehy
He had never commanded an Buddy Ryder was the S-2. By the way,
have to
rely
a major general
And, that was a wonderful thing. leader, and he understood people very well. But, from a technical and tactical standpoint, from then on did the planning, the drawing of objectives, determining boundaries, coordinating with the artillery, and talking to battalion commanders to get their views before we put out orders. had, in other words, a very marvelous opportunity to be an operations officer for a man who
keep
straight."
I I
me
command, but you're going to have That made us feel good. He was a great
wasn't an operations
officer.
41
Map 7 -
42
INTERVIEWER: Were
Germans
you haven't mentioned already that stuck with you? Are there some things they did that adopt some of your philosophies on defense?
you to
First, was impressed with the positions that was impressed with the skill and the care that they took in finding positions which had cover and natural concealment. They were almost impossible to see and yet, they afforded fields of fires exactly where they needed them in order to stop us. In other words, their fieldcraft was super, and you may remember that in the 1st Division, spent a lot of time on that. My favorite battalion in the 1st Division really was the 1st Battalion, 26th Infantry, because they did more of that than anybody else. George Joulwan and Jim Madden
I
the
really
put
in
fire
what think infantry should do. took that lesson with me to the 8th Infantry, the 30th Infantry, and the 1st Division, to the dismay of some people, but, nonetheless, that was a pet pigeon of mine. And, that's where
that battalion
I
more than
it
precisely
got
it.
German
were
Typical
position.
and very difficult to locate, even when practically right on top of them.
well constructed
At the
the entrance
The second thing that learned was about the depth of German positions. We just had one line. The Germans had a little zone defense so that they had elasticity and resilience. You could not punch through it very easily. They didn't do things in a linear way. They took pieces of terrain and knit them together into a position from which they were able to fire in all sorts of directions. They used the terrain, they used cover and concealment, and they used imagination. In Normandy our people always lined right up on one hedgerow and then down another hedgerow. You know, one
I
line.
And,
if
in
the American
Army
today, you
will find
that that
still
is
43
exactly
it's
the
way
the Germans.
I
guess
their
like
assault
guns or tanks. Only two or three times did see them use a lot of tanks in what we would call a tank attack. But, most of the time, when you ran into German positions, you would run into a mixture of infantry and some kind of tracked fighting vehicles. Sometimes they were only little vehicles with 20 millimeter cannons, often 20 millimeter antiaircraft guns. Whatever they could
find, a self-propelled
their defenses.
88mm, a self-propelled 76mm, or a self-propelled 57mm, they integrated into And, they moved them around a lot. They wouldn't just sit in one place. We'd hear
firing at us,
German 20mm
antitank
gun
German 75mm,
high velocity,
self-propelled antitank
gun
The fourth
thing that
was
absolutely convinced of
pistols.
was
suppression. The
Germans were
come in on us. And, the more they shot, the less our people shot, and dangerous it got, until finally, when all of our people had stopped shooting, we knew the more that the Germans were either going to overrun us, or capture some of our people, or kill our guess came out of people, by getting right on top of us and throwing hand grenades. So,
I I
Normandy having
INTERVIEWER: Was
particular that
44
GEN DEPUY:
soldiers
Well,
certainly
all of the fighting.* If you just left them alone then some 10 percent of the were the ones who actually took the initiative, moved, fired their rifles, threw hand grenades, and so on. The other 90 percent would defend themselves if they had to, but would not do the other things unless an officer or a sergeant directly ordered them to do it, in which case they usually would do it. learned that you couldn't depend on them doing things simply because there was a plan to do it, or because of some generalized order to do it, and this included the junior officers. You had to say, "do this," "do that," "now fire there," "now do this," and "now move there." You would always end up with a good sergeant or a good officer and three or four men doing all of the work. Unfortunately, the rest of them contributed to the casualties. And, to this very day, I'd rather have a 40-man company than a 220-man company, if could pick the 40 men. could. So, what I'm saying is that I'd pick sergeants and officers and a few natural fighters if with came away absolutely impressed the fact that the average man, like nine out of ten, or eight out of ten, does not have an instinct for the battlefield, doesn't relish it, and will not act independently except under direct orders. If they are in a crew they are better. If they are in a tank or with a machine gun, they are better because there is teamwork involved. If an officer orders them to do something eyeball-to-eyeball, most men, even the ones who don't want to do it, have no initiative, and are scared to death, normally will do exactly what he tells them to do. Once,
we moved
into
We got
behind
off from the edge of some woods across an open, snowy field Luxembourg. had "B" Company in the overwatch and "A" Company doing the attack. Just before we were ready to go, a machine gun opened up on us from the rear, back in the woods. You see, we had gone past the Germans. We had slipped through them at night. And, some of them had turned around, came back, and spotted us milling around in the woodline. So, they set up a machine gun and started firing at our backs. didn't want to stop the attack because had the artillery just about ready to go. So, grabbed the first two soldiers could find, didn't know who they were, and said, "You and you, want you to go back and knock out the machine gun right now, because we are going to attack that town. Now, get going." And, they did! They were scared to death, but they did it. They would never have done it if hadn't said, "We have to do it, you have got to do it now go do it!" This means that
to
jump
to seize the
village of Berle,
INTERVIEWER:
men-one mind"
During this time did you start to develop the ideas that
later
or "follow
me and do as do"
I
come
later?
GEN DEPUY:
was to
"Eleven men-one mind" was the articulation of the overwatch concept. The idea
provide a conceptual framework for the operation of a squad. Of course the goal
was
to get
more soldiers involved in the fighting and to reduce the necessity of stopping to explain how the two fire teams were to provide "fire and movement." That came after the war, but the impetus came from the generally poor performance of wartime squads. Often a platoon leader would give
45
mob
or as a
bunch of
individuals.
two mutually supporting teams has taken hold then the question of how to control a fire team arises. The answer is that the team leader leads. He is in front and his team follows on each side in a "V" formation. That is where the "follow me and do as do" came from. By the way, Gideon said the same thing "Observe me and do likewise."*
idea of operating
I
Once the
INTERVIEWER:
came around
in
'66,
and led a platoon with all of the officers following you. that platoon through the brush and showed us the cloverleaf, and how to maintain control
to each battalion
GEN DEPUY:
Yes,
how to move
right!
it
required
Was
was
particularly
noteworthy?
know
it
made
quite an
advance
all
the
way to
the
Mayenne
River.**
GEN DEPUY:
consisted of
Yes, to the
Mayenne
River and on to Le
Mans. As
recall,
in
my regiment,
support
artillery battalion,
we
Artillery Battalion
(155mms)
two elements
II
World War when we had close air support. We had Air Force officers with radios at the head of each column. At Mayenne some engineers did some very brave things and pulled the detonating cords off of the charges on the bridge. In the meantime, we found some fishing boats, some little rafts, and logs, and crossed the river. That was really about the second victory that the regiment had, and it made everyone feel good. There wasn't much to it, frankly, but it made them feel good. Then we moved on toward Le Mans. Our
Weaver was
in
command.
This
was
in
regiment plus the division tank battalion (Task Force Weaver), was the
left
element of
XV
Corps.
Germans. The regimental headquarters had one exciting night when the 1st Battalion under Ed Hamilton, which was leading, went way on ahead. The 3rd Battalion was on a parallel road, and we had the 2nd Battalion in the rear, and mean really in the rear, further in the rear than they should have been. The regimental headquarters,
There were no friendly units on our
left
just
who commanded
the
155mm
battalion,
Bob Salisbury, his S-3, the regimental antitank platoon, and about three jeeps, set up in a little town known as Ste. Suzanne. We stopped there and were trying to communicate with the 3rd
f
DePuy, William
E.
"Eleven
Task Force Weaver see Blumenson, Breakout and Pursuit, 434-437 and
46
which was down south moving towards Le Mans. The 1st Battalion was in a fight up ahead of us, and the 2nd Battalion was nowhere to be seen when a German corps headquarters, together with odds and ends, drove down from the north into the town. [See Maps 8A and 8B, page 48]
Battalion,
The road from the north was a route that the Germans were trying to use to get out of the Falaise Pocket. They didn't know that we had moved as far east as Ste. Suzanne. We positioned the antitank platoon on that road and it shot all night long. Before the night was over, infantry, tanks, and much more came down that road and surrounded little Ste. Suzanne. They put tanks up on top of a hill that looked right down into the town square. By morning we had consolidated our little band in one or two houses in Ste. Suzanne. To our chagrin and embarrassment, we had to call the 1st Battalion back and send back to get the 2nd Battalion moved up. That was one of the regimental experiences. Then, about 20 miles further, toward Le Mans, the 3rd Battalion was pushing a German column ahead of it and approached a point where two roads merged. The 1st Battalion was halfway past the fork when the Germans came up on them from the rear. The 2nd Battalion then came along, so we had a big melee there. This happened to every unit going across France. They all remember those engagements with relish because they were all easy victories and
more confidence,
lost their
awe
became
we went
to Le
Mans, turned north and went up to Alencon, then on to Argentan, and attacked
Germans
GEN DEPUY:
Yes,
we were mounted on
trucks.
GEN DEPUY:
Radio and
visits.
INTERVIEWER:
GEN
vehicle
DEPUY:
we
radios which
The
infantry
were vehicular radios drawing power from the radios were mostly battery powered.
in
the destruction of
Gap and were part of a major German mechanized equipment such as tanks
kills?
and self-propelled gear. I'm curious as to how you achieved your tank
GEN DEPUY:
artillery
Most
of the
kills in
air
and
because the Germans were trying to get out and there were very few roads. Columns
Tor an
overall
this
47
'4
MORTAIN COUNTEROFFENSIVE
Map8A The
Falaise
Gap
AR6ENTAN- FALAISE POCKET
12-16 Auguit
1944
Map8B
48
would get caught on the road by artillery fire because, you see, for several days, we had been sitting on the high ground looking down on the German columns. We weren't permitted to go into the Pocket because of that boundary dispute between the British and the Americans. But, our observers were on the high ground shooting into a bowl. The final bottleneck in the Falaise Pocket was at a little town called Chambois. The 358th Infantry finally put a battalion right in there and absolutely stopped the escape of the German forces. Our tanks and tank destroyers knocked out some tanks at the head of the columns, but the real slaughter, and it was an incredible inferno, was done by the artillery. Oh, and by the fighters. guess it's wrong to say that it was all done by the artillery. P-47s and the British rocket firing Typhoons were also in there all of the time. In fact, they shot at us some too, but they were very
I
effective
Map 9, page 51] There was a main east-west road that was blocked
in
at
columns all headed to the east, right on the road where they tried to pass one another. Then, on each side of the road, in the fields, were clearly discernible additional columns, about ten on each side of the road, so there were about 20 to 25 parallel columns as far as the eye could see. By that mean miles of destroyed vehicles, horses, tanks, and trucks. It was just an incredible sight. And, indeed, if we fight again, and if the Seventh Army and V Corps can hold and prevent a breakthrough, and the Russians get jammed up coming in, and if the Air Force can get at them, there is no doubt in my mind that that's where the killing will occur. Killing comes from heavy
parallel
I
firepower.
was
pretty good.
It
appears that
was a
lot
more
artillery at
than what
we
have today.
That's right, the artillery was good. It was technically very sound; more so than the Germans. It could mass more quickly and had better communications. think the command and control and the fire direction techniques of the American Army were superior to the German
I
GEN DEPUY:
Army.
The Germans
it.
still
make an
artillery battalion
organic to a brigade.
a lot of artillery.
It
Artillery.
we had
it
was
for
we
me
as a battalion
it.
commander
I
anytime
really
needed
If
had a problem
I
could get
it.
Now,
it
all
the time,
but
if
mass
it
really
wanted
a lot of firepower,
was
there.
They could
commander?
GEN DEPUY:
so
it
remember what the date was. must have been about 4 December 1944.
I
can't
It
the Saar,
INTERVIEWER: Would you describe the circumstances command? Was there a wounded battalion commander?
49
Aerial
German men, animals and vehicles were caught and destroyed by American artillery within the Falaise Gap.
The
German
vehicles
in
an unrecognizable mass.
50
August
ooooooooo
tt
Positions aeacheo
r9
August
XXX
TEMPORARY SOUNOARv
1st
90 tm
in
in
the last
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Map 9
51
GEN DEPUY:
No. As
we came up
was
replaced for a
little
in
command
and the fighting between the Moselle and the Saar. Just as the
regiment
with a
came up
was some
huge cave
bank of the
it.
river.
hills
there.
One had
commander found it difficult to lead his battalion during that fighting. remember that the regimental CP was in a little village about a mile and a half short of the river, behind one of these big hills. He simply walked in one night and told the regimental commander that he couldn't take it anymore. Then, as soon as he walked out, the colonel waved his finger at me and said, "Go to the 1st Battalion," And, to this day, don't know exactly what he wanted me to do whether he wanted me to go down and take command or just what he wanted me to do. But, in any event, went down and sent a message back that had taken
of refugees in
I
The
battalion
day and half or two days. So, had a day and a half to get ready to take the battalion across the river. And, it was a battalion that was not full of confidence because the former battalion commander was the sort who said, know it will be tough so we'll try it first with "A" "Well, we have orders to take that hill.
of the battalion.
to cross the river
in
command
I
Company.
in
If
they don't
make
it,
we'll try
that no
"A" Company
the
Army would
ever take a
hill
that way.
Map
10,
page
53]
INTERVIEWER:
wounded and
Colonel
"X" had
taken over. He was with the regiment from about the end of October through mid-February, then
GEN DEPUY:
Well, he
was
relieved
INTERVIEWER:
Colonel Mason.
some
command
rest of
it
under
GEN DEPUY:
Yes.
The
is
a story of leadership
commanders. By the way, we had six division commanders during the same period. Of the regimental commanders, two, Bittman Barth and John Mason, were superb Barth an old regular and Mason a born leader. Sheehy was killed after three days. We have already said enough about the first man who led us into Normandy. Colonel "X" was a strange case. He seldom ventured outside the command post. On operational matters he was simply not involved. He left that entirely up to me and always talked to the battalion commanders before orders were issued. Colonel "X" spent
five regimental
I
we had
map board
towns
black,
and the
fields
Eventually he
was
relieved.
The regiment
arrived to take
command
52
Map
10
53
The company commanders were fine, but they had been spoiled by a very weak battalion commander. One of them was a fellow named George Spaith who took all the way through the rest of the war. Another was a captain named Reckavik, who was killed. In any event, "C" Company was Reckavik's and "A" Company was Spaith's. The "B" Company commander's name was Horner. He later became my S-3. Well, the first thing told them was that they were great guys but that times were going to change and that they were going to do exactly what they were told to do, and that we were going to start functioning as a battalion. said, "You know, I've been aware of what has been going on in this battalion and you know as well as do, that that's not going to work. You know that everybody is going to get killed if we pussyfoot around like that. So, now we are going to go ahead and get to work." Well, we did! Now, it turned out that the Saar operation was a very tough operation one of the toughest of all. But, they all did what they were told to do, and as a battalion, we did what we were told to do. In fact, we were the only battalion in the regiment that did exactly what it was told had the left flank battalion in the division with nothing on my to do at the time of the crossing. left. You see, the 90th and the 95th were side by side when we went across. There was nothing on the left flank of the 90th. We were going to make a corps bridgehead, XX Corps think it was Sam Walker's daddy commanded it and then, we were going to break out and go to Mainz. They were going to shoot an armored division through us. The Siegfried Line ran along the river
I
all.
And, halfway across the flood plain was a up on an embankment; under that embankment there were more pillboxes. Then the flood plain extended further to the woodline and hills beyond. guess from the river to the hills it was a half mile, a quarter of a mile to the railway embankment, and a quarter of a mile to the road
with
of the pillboxes right at the water's edge.
railroad track
I
some
wooded hills. At the road there was another line of pillboxes and back up in the were still more pillboxes and concrete shelters. * [See Map 1 1 woods page 55] So, there were three lines of pillboxes, plus some scattered ones up in the woods. Up on top of the hill, on the left flank, there was a highway intersection, not really a major one but an important one for that area. Well, anyway, my job was to cross the river, get on that hill and block that major road junction on the left flank of the division's bridgehead. My concept of crossing that river is one that reflects my view to this day on how to do things. felt that if we stopped to fight at the river, or at the railroad track, or at the road, then we would never get to where we were going. So, felt that the only way we could ever get through that maze of pillboxes and up on top of that hill was to totally decentralize things down to individual squads. So, in the day and a half that had, personally talked to every company commander and then had the company commanders bring in every platoon leader and squad leader and gave them all the same orders "Get in the boats and cross the river. If you are shot at from the pillbox, go to one side or the other of it. Don't stop and don't go back. Go to the right or go to the left, but go inland and cross the railroad track. Don't stop to fight anybody. When you get to the road, turn right and move south until you come to the end of the woodline. When you get to the
at the foot of the
there
end of the woodline wait until at least a platoon is there and then go up the hill to the road junction and wait. Get yourself set up for defense and wait until we all get there. Then we'll organize. If you
*For an overview of the operation and photographic details concerning the German defenses, see United States Army in World War II: The Lorraine Campaign (Washington: USGPO, 1950, 558-592.
Hugh M.
Cole,
54
DILLINGEN-PACHTEN BRIDGEHEAD
6-19 December
*
1944
Crossing area Advance, 6 December minium Forward positions, evening 19 Dec German defenses. from captured map: """"" Wire m Pillbox
"
iooo
Map
1 1
The 357th
55
one
all
who
is
If
we
all
all
block
only one
fine. But,
two men out of 500. The crossing really was hairy because initially made a horrible mistake. In the little town of Rehlingen, which was right on the near riverbank, infiltrated in a platoon of quad 50s mounted on the back of half-tracks. wanted them there just in case we got stopped in the middle of the river by pillbox fire and weren't able to get across. Well, my mistake was that gave the antiaircraft lieutenant in command of that
Well,
we
got there.
think
we
might have
lost
OBSERVATION TYPE
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MEANWU.THKWCSS>
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RETRACTABLE FlRIJCOFl
12"
STEEL TURRET
'
eTH
FILL
( PORTS-S"STt|L
SLI0IN6
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AMMO STORAOt
Section 'AA*
pillboxes
scAir
i
-o
WO'V
MEMO
SIGFRIf
DRAWING
UNI FORTIFICATIONS
920 mr,R BN
Diagram of a
typical
German
platoon,
when
to
open
I
fire.
actually thought
responsibility to the
platoon
in
there,
commander of the tanks; also had and some .50 caliber machine guns from
I
a tank platoon
and
other words,
had that town loaded with firepower, but what didn't have, was clear responsibility as to whom would decide when to use it. You see my orders were, "Don't open fire unless we're getting heavy fire from the pillboxes on the river." Well, it turned out that heavy fire to me and heavy fire to that lieutenant from the antiaircraft platoon, who never had been on the front-line in his life, was quite
different.
56
What happened
is
we had the boats lined up about 100 yards from the river. The engineers and we had engineer tape leading from the assembly areas to the boats. After
that
river,
and go and do all of those good things that talked about. Well, just about the time the first two companies got to the boats and were picking them up, about two machine pistols fired from the other side of the river and the whole goddamned town of Rehlingen lit up. All the .50 calibers, all the tanks and all the tank destroyers were firing tracers. It lit up the whole Saar River Valley and it woke up every defender
get
in,
was a very inauspicious initiation as a battalion commander. Once we got them shut down and the enemy fire died down a little bit, my S-3, a guy named McAlister, and walked along and went to every boat and every squad. A few of them we had to put into the boats
for
25 miles. So,
it
really
I,
at pistol point.
suppose that
is
o'clock
in
the morning.
It
weather.
You
as ugly as you can imagine. But, and done, they all got there. Everybody got there. They had gone around, over, and between pillboxes. went to the rendezvous place and there were, oh, maybe 50 or 60 guys milling around. found out who they were and said, "Let's go." Now, by the time got up to the road junction, half of the battalion already was there, and within another hour the whole bloody works was there. had every man carry a mine, an antitank mine. We had about 300 antitank mines, and they saved us. We made a big circle around the road junction, and sort of tried to fit the terrain as best we could in the dark, especially on the two roads that came from the enemy's direction. We put minefields across the roads from tree line to tree line and then, even amongst the trees. We also
when
all
was
said
left
to
some mines exposed as a deterrent. There were five come down those roads with armored vehicles of all
(The
or ten occasions
different kinds,
when
the minefield.
We were surrounded.
our right
until later
map on page
55
is
misleading.)
in
The 2nd Battalion didn't come up on fight amongst the pillboxes. Soon, the
troopers began complaining that they couldn't feel their toes anymore.
We
and
weather
The foxholes were filled with water. It sharp engagements every day when the Germans tried
injuries.
in their
rained incessantly
we
the soldiers
water-filled holes.
them through
a couple of
We'd take the soldiers out occasionally, and try to German storage bunkers that were inside our perimeter. We put
the
wounded
finally
in
We
this
Dr.
DeLeo.
In
got loaded with wounded, people with immersion foot, and other people
who
We had several
The
pneumonia cases.
Germans managed to get a few troops inside our perimeter but we were able to take care of that. Once, two German machine gunners slipped through and set up about 10 yards from the battalion command post, which was a fourman bunker. No armored vehicles penetrated. We were able to strip away their infantry and they
fighting there
interesting. Several times the
was
stopped
at the mines.
We
used a
lot
of artillery.
We
artillery
57
through our direct support battalion. The Air Corps' XIX Tactical Air Command (TAC), dropped us some ammo and medical supplies in wing tanks. One pilot couldn't get his tank to drop so when he came in for the third time he brushed it off on a tall pine tree. He flew a P-47 out of Etain,
and we sent him a silver star. Finally, we were given orders to come back across the river. We didn't know it but the Battle of the Bulge had started. Our attack never went further east than that. could have gone forward, but the rest of the attack got all tangled up in the pillboxes behind us and then the river flooded; the Germans had the high ground to the north, and the engineers could never keep a bridge in. Anyway, finally got orders to pull back. got those orders about five o'clock in the afternoon
I
I I
stating that
ferries,
was
was
cross the Saar, and then be refitted and reconstituted. Well, that
whole bloody pillbox full of wounded people and guys who couldn't walk, and had another bunker with, oh, maybe 10 or 15 dead in it. Anyway, decided that would use the same technique to get out of there that had used to get
had
a
I I
in.
We started pulling
out at midnight;
it
was
It
was
raining
which
was good. So, the orders were that each squad was to come to the aid station and pick up one wounded or sick man and take him with them. Their orders were, "Go downhill toward the river.
When
left,
it,
and stay
fight.
in
anybody.
Go
and
stop.
how
to get
you see a lot of houses, then go right in the town, stop. We'll all get together there and
golly,
we
did
it.
We
got every
wounded man
and every man with trench foot out. Never lost a single soul and didn't have a single casualty. There was shooting all over the place and it was as scarey as the devil, but it was so dark that nobody could see enough to engage. It was 2000 meters back to where the buildings were. And, all these fellows, this gaggle of soldiers, went down in the dark and did exactly what they were told to do. And, they all got back again. It was a central idea and totally decentralized execution. So, felt learned another principle which is be very specific as to what you want them to do and if you are, they'll do it. Keep it simple!
I
INTERVIEWER:
was
I
briefed
in
GEN DEPUY:
The town
take
it
was
a place
where we fought
a lot.*
in
the Stars
it
and Stripes
that he ordered us to
anymore. So, we put two battalions in there, the 3rd Battalion, commanded by Colonel Mason, assigned a house to each squad he actually assigned a squad to each house. He gave them a full day to figure out how they were
once and
for
all.
He just
didn't
want
to read about
going to get to their assigned house and what they were going to do once they got there. Well, some of them had it all figured out "Well, Mullen is going to throw a hand grenade in that
window, then Brownlee is going to jump in that window." That was okay; that was good. But, some of the squads hadn't figured out who was going to do what. The companies made them
Tor the 90th
Division Headquarters' perspective, see Cole,
58
plan
it all
little
tell
them,
"Who
goes
first,
who
runs
where,
who
oh,
and who
this attack
jumped
morning.
In five
I
was
We had,
[See
a small battalion.
We
lost
Map
12 below and
Maps
INTERVIEWER: The
Battalion, 357th.
XX CORPS
SITUATION, NOON 6
SEPTEMBER I944
Map
12
The 357th
Infantry
Regiment poised
for
its
advance on Maizieres-les-Metz
59
Map
13
Map
14
60
was made by the 2nd and 3rd Battalions. was the regimental S-3 at That's when Colonel Barth was wounded. In fact, just before the attack Barth was hit by
attack
I
of the
fragment while standing under a concrete ramp which ran up to the Bessemer converter 15, page 62]
read the history,
INTERVIEWER: When
enlisted
made
a note
which
town
of
Maizieres-les-Metz included
man knew
Then
I've
new tactics, limited objectives, calculated, each officer and each and his objectives, four groups of ten each went after the City Hall." got, "above smacks of General DePuy on control and specific guidance."
his job
GEN DEPUY: We
the city
hall
We had
and business
all
and the 3rd which attacked from Herman Goering Reichwerk on the southern two-thirds of the town. And, it was marvelous. We had fought in there
sorts of casualties trying to get that
damn
city hall, or
school building, or
John Mason, the 3rd Battalion commander, later the regimental commander, was the genius who figured it all out. He was going to grab that thing the way it ought to be grabbed, and it was a howling success. But, it was the instructions at the squad level that made the difference. It was totally decentralized in execution and totally centralized in planning. Now, there has got to be a lesson in that somewhere, right?
whatever
was. And,
just fiddled
we
casualties.
By the evening of 30 October 1944, the 357th Infantry Regiment controlled what was left of Maizieres-les-Metz.
61
m
i
111
iiV
I
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C71
Bftft
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CD
El
11
Wit
3"
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n'
cd'
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en
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.,.:,
VS..?!
62
INTERVIEWER:
significant
Right.
to
combat
service support,
is
GEN DEPUY:
see
serious problems.
am
The war was so linear in nature the maintenance and supply people did
that
a
we
didn't have
any
didn't
much
of
it.
We had
In
we
needed.
really ran
INTERVIEWER:
90th located?
was
the
GEN DEPUY:
Well,
when
the Third
Army
we were at
come
in
Metz.
INTERVIEWER: How
no more gas?
did that
just
happened was that the 7th Armored Division had gotten out in front and actually had gotten into Metz just at the time when we ran out of gas. They couldn't get enough strength into Metz to hold it. So, 7th Division came back out, and we, the 90th and the 5th, slid up to the river. There wasn't enough POL for the tanks to go any further. There hardly was enough to move the artillery pieces. So, the Third Army simply had to stop for awhile and let things catch up. The supplies were coming all the way from Normandy. Ammunition and gasoline were being flown into Etain, between Verdun and Metz, by C-47 troop-carrier aircraft. So, we bellied up to the Moselle and stopped. Now, there were still infantry actions on the front, but the Army as a whole, was no longer attempting a big offensive. When it did try, it had two big offensives, one that Abe Abrams and the 4th Armored Division were in down south, east of Nancy, and the one where we went across the Moselle at Koenigsmacker, and then went on to the Saar.* We went north and the 5th went south, and we met behind Metz. The 95th came in and took over at Metz proper. That was in November, but we first came up to the Moselle in early September. [See Maps 16 and 17, pages 64 and 65]
Well,
GEN DEPUY:
what
really
Germans seemed to be able to stymie the advance of the division in this sector from time to time. From reading the division's history, it looks like it was the sort of thing that you were talking about earlier, where they almost seemed to be fighting by using what you later called the active defense. They had all these little
the Third
rolled
INTERVIEWER: As
Army
positions
of thing.
and they'd move from position to position launching brief counterattacks, and that kind Is that a correct description of what the Germans were doing?
Well, across France
GEN DEPUY:
So,
*At
we just
ran into
little
we would
run into a
was concerned. But, being good German soldiers, they fought well. company here, a Kampfgruppe there, a couple tanks here, and an assault
Lieutenant Colonel Creighton William Abrams, Jr., commanded the 37th Tank Battalion, 4th Armored General Abrams, a celebrated World War II Armor officer, later served as the Commander, Military Assistance Command, Vietnam (1968-72), and as Chief of Staff of the Army (1972-74).
this time,
Division.
63
Map
16
64
Map
17
The
Battle of
Metz
65
gun
little
or
two
there. But,
whatever
it it
was
it
meant
that
we would
have a
little
fight.
Normally
we
or outflank
It
just took a
little bit
was very
north and got up to Argentan. There was a serious fight there between Alencon and Argentan. The 2nd French Armored Division was involved in that. And then, we had another big fight in the town of Le Bourg-St. Leonard
serious fighting.
with,
it was the 2nd Panzer Division that was coming out. But, there were some fair, small up there on the southern flank of the pocket, mostly with German units that were trying to move to the west. But, there weren't any large battles. You know, there weren't any real linear, coherent battles across France. There was always an open flank so you could always just move around whatever you ran into.
I
think
fights right
that the
Germans were
like
pretty
good
at using
all
of their vehicles
we
might
in
meaningful?
GEN DEPUY:
assault
Well,
think the
first
was how
weapons
properly.
If
guns and 25 men, they put one assault gun on one side of the road, perhaps on the reverse
infantry
slope firing through a saddle, and put another one behind a stone house, firing across the road.
and had a couple of guys with Panzerfausts up on the road itself, or just off the road in pits or behind houses. Now, here comes the point of an American unit roaring down the road, a couple of jeeps or maybe a tank, and bang, you lost a tank or two. The company commander then decides to maneuver a platoon around and boom, he loses another tank. So, the commander decides to wait for the battalion commander to come up. And, the battalion commander, if he is very imaginative, might say, "All right, while I'm trying to solve this thing, "C" Company go wide around to the right and come up behind this town." Those were the tactics which kept the thing moving. But, sometimes a unit would stay there and fight all day
men and two assault guns. And, that happened all too often. Commanders would too often attack the enemy head-on, whereas if they could just screen that position, just block it with something and find another way around, then they could keep going. Eventually, that is what almost always happened. They found their way around. Some units would find their way around in a matter of minutes and hours; other units couldn't find their way
against 25
whole day fiddling with one of these little things. Now, what one learned from fighting a lot of these things, is an understanding of tactics. The big lesson is not to take him head-on. Anything is better than that. And, you get an understanding of sighting weapons. The Germans were just superior at that. And, to this day, they are very good at it.
around except
after having lost a
INTERVIEWER: About the middle of October, General Van Fleet came in and command of the division from General McLain. assume that there was no change in
I
took over
the quality
of leadership
in
was a
personality change.
66
The German
Panzerfaust 60
different
known
as the Rhinoceros,
effective
GEN DEPUY:
was
Van
Fleet
was
We
was recognized
as a fine fellow,
Fleet got
command
post general.
He
was
wasn't a ripple
when he came
He was a massive man; and, he knew what he was doing. There He didn't change anything. He expected success and he got it!*
*Major General Raymond Stallings McLain, later promoted to lieutenant general, was originally an Oklahoma National Guard officer. He first saw action in World War as a machine gun officer in the Champagne and MeuseArgonne offensives. General McLain left the 90th Division and assumed command of XIX corps. Following World War II, General McLain, National Guard, was commissioned as a brigadier general, Regular Army, by Presidental appointment, the first National Guard officer to be so honored. General James Alvard Van Fleet later served as Commander, III Corps (1945), and as Commander, Eighth Army, Korea (1951-53). Since his retirement in 1953, General Van Fleet occasionally has been recalled to active duty to serve as a special advisor to the President or to the Department of Defense.
I
67
CHAPTER
III
INTERVIEWER:
back
in
So, the division crossed the Moselle and the Saar Rivers, and then had to
in
pull
order to participate
and then went up and crossed the Moselle north of Thionville, or Diedenhofen as the Germans called it. Then we crossed the Saar and conducted that operation which talked about earlier. Next, because of the Battle of the Bulge, we pulled back just before Christmas. It took several days to pull ourselves together, get some replacements and conduct some training, and then we took off and headed north, toward the Bulge. *[See Maps 18 and 19, page 69 and 70]
That's right.
I
GEN DEPUY:
We went to Metz,
INTERVIEWER:
go into Bastogne, we went just between Bastogne and Wiltz, in order to cut the highway between Bastogne and St. Vith, up near the little town of Trois Vierges, or the Three Virgins. As a matter of fact, General Patton gave General Van Fleet a very unusual option. He said, "Here is the southern edge of the Bulge. The 4th Armored has just gotten into Bastogne and here are the divisions on-line." The 26th was in one place, the 4th was way over there, and the 80th was somewhere along there. He said, "You pick the area that you want to attack in. There was a ridge that ran north just to the west of Wiltz, which incidentally had been the location of the 28th Division headquarters in the early fighting. And so, we came up from the south, and attacked with two regiments abreast, the 359th on the right and the 357th on the left, through the 26th Division. Our objective was to destroy German forces in the salient which protruded south and east between Bastogne and Wiltz. Our attack began about four o'clock in the morning. It was mid-winter in that part of Europe, so the days were very short. Anyway, attacked in the dark and got through. had a theory which, think, worked every time. The Germans always defended on the tops of the hills and in the valleys. If you went to the top of the hill, you would find a German position; if you went to the bottom, you would find a German position. But, there was never a defensive position on the hillsides. Every time we made an attack in that area of high forested hills, the whole battalion would go single file. We'd go around the side of the hill and right through the German positions and get behind them. We never had to fire a shot. The Germans would be down on the bottom, or up on the top, so they couldn't see us. There was snow and it was quiet. We'd go right through. We did that three times in that particular fight. So, we didn't have to fight to penetrate. It was something we learned in Normandy don't fight them head-on; find out where they are and go someplace else. Of course, it was even easier at night.
No,
GEN DEPUY:
we
didn't
Hugh M.
and Charles B. MacDonald, A Time of the Battle of the Bulge (New York: William Morrow and Company, Inc., 1985).
USGPO,
1965),
68
THIRD ARMY
LAST PHASE OF LORRAINE OFFENSIVE
3-19 December 1944
___
___
"i/ / /,/ /
Front line, evening 2 December Front line, evening 19 December Maginot line
SXQOVX
O
6
WEST WALL
Map
18
"West Wall"
69
WESTERN
'
FRONT
20 December 1944
Allied front line, 1200, 20 Dec Axis of German counteroffensive
line, 5
September
o
<o
MILES
Map
19
in
the Ardennes
70
INTERVIEWER: That
either
reminds
me
of something else.
It
may
or
may
it
on the forward slope. They obviously were not. As you said, they were on the top or down at the base, and yet, when entered the Army, we were being taught to defend on what was called the military crest of the hill, which is, in fact, the forward slope. Maybe that was a result of the Korean War.
pertains to being located
I
GEN DEPUY:
INTERVIEWER: And,
it still
badly, particularly
if
killed.
Right.
think you
that
happened
in
Europe.
GEN DEPUY:
series of rivers.
we
we
crossed a
very
When we got up between the Prum and the Kyll Rivers, we encountered a One of my company commanders put his "C" Company out in the snow
in
On
and everyplace they dug they made dark doughnuts in there was another ridge. On top of that ridge were some German
on a the snow.
and they waited until the company commander had all of his troopers scattered foxholes on the forward slope, and then, they just started firing with their two assault guns. It was murder. Finally, after they killed and wounded maybe 20 men in that company, the rest of them just got up and bolted out of there and went over to the reverse slope, which is where they belonged in the first place. So, being on a forward slope when the enemy has direct fire weapons, high velocity direct fire weapons, is suicide. And, every time went to Germany, tried to convince Blanchard and the 1st Armored Division, the 3rd Armored Division, and the 3rd Division, at Hohenfels, of that. But, time after time, I'd find them all lined up in exposed, uncamouflaged, half-finished positions right within the sights of a Russian T-62 tank. It's suicide unless they have frontal cover and are camouflaged. A trench is better. You see, a trench is a superior solution to that. And, a lot of people, the North Koreans, the South Koreans, the North Vietnamese, the Russians, and some Germans, use trenches. The Arabs, the Egyptians, the Syrians and the Israelis, sometimes use trenches. Why? Because you don't know where they are when they're in the trenches. When you are trying to shoot at people in a trench line, you have to ask yourself, "What part of a trench line do shoot at?" You can waste a lot of ammunition trying to suppress a trench. But, trying to suppress clearly visible American foxholes or bunkers with high velocity weapons is a Cakewalk. It's suicide to go into battle like that. But, our Army as a
assault guns,
around
in
their
whole, doesn't
know that.
I'm afraid that
INTERVIEWER:
in
are doing
it
what people like myself were taught right after was done on the hills of Korea. That's how people dug
and fought.
71
GEN DEPUY:
any large
direct
They were mostly dug in against mass Chinese infantry assaults. There weren't fire weapons, or only a very few. They weren't using tanks to snipe. So, you could
was
and have been totally invisible from the from the front, and totally camouflaged.
right.
front.
If
even then, they should have had frontal cover They should have been firing at angles, covered
all
of that, then
it
all
INTERVIEWER:
But,
in fact,
they were
little
in
bunkers, which
GEN DEPUY:
positions
it
I
Vietnam. Or,
like
the
were
half
an easy target for a tank gun. So, that's not very good.
compare for us the Saar River crossing with your first crossing Moselle conducted in mid-November shortly after General Van Fleet assumed command division. believe you were confronted not only by the enemy, but also by the elements.*
Please
I
INTERVIEWER:
of the
of the
GEN DEPUY:
Corps wisely decided to forgo a direct assault into the fortifications of Metz and instead envelop from both north and south. The 5th Division crossed south and the 90th
Yes. The
XX
more east
of
around the
fortifications themselves.
The 90th Division crossed north of Thionville near Cattenom, with the 358th Regiment on the right and the 359th on the left. The 357th then came across the center at the village of Koenigsmacker, which was located just where the Maginot line crossed the Moselle from the
northwest to southeast. Thus, the 90th had a single division bridgehead.
Unfortunately, the river
was
at flood stage.
Worse
its
banks.
was flowing at seven to ten miles an was over one half mile wide and a raging
and bring over the armor. But the engineers were unable to keep a bridge in place and the approaches were so far under water that 2Vz ton trucks flooded out. Jeeps were submerged. To make the whole thing even more interesting General Hermann Balck, the German Army recall, Group commander, seeing our difficulties, sent a heavy tank battalion, the 555th
plan, as usual,
The
was
to put
in
a bridge
consisting of King Tiger tanks, against the bridgehead through the 359th Infantry.
As
part of a
Kampfgruppe, the Germans penetrated to the river in the center of the sector and shot up the engineer ferries and partial bridge segments. Through substantial heroics the 359th finally ejected the Kampfgruppe. The 358th finally captured Fort Koenigsmacker which loomed over the bridgehead. A second armored thrust against the bridgehead was also defeated at Distroff by a spirited counterattack by
river
72
its
way down
the ridge
in
was
heavily
combed
All
with the Maginot forts and tunnels and infested with Germans.
in this
was
met.
Somebody
or
some group
The
division
had matured.
It
was no
longer
crossings of
all
was one of his favorite divisions. Just three months earlier the 90th was a candidate for inactivation and disgrace. Under the leadership of McLain and Van Fleet it had found its company and battalion commanders from its own ranks. It had learned how to fight through on-the-job training. That process was long and bloody, but in the last analysis, it was a tribute to the American spirit. It was not a triumph of the
"system".
In
any event, the 90th meet the 5th behind Metz and together,
we proceeded
*e^e
Company
in
L,
shown
73
.':'.'...
:...
./
us
River presented many difficulties operations. for the 90th Division during its crossing
74
INTERVIEWER: Now,
do that?
the
Germans
didn't
have very many Tigers, but guess what they did have
I
it
GEN DEPUY: The 2.36-inch Bazooka could defeat a King Tiger only by a shot into the engine compartment from the rear, which was a difficult thing to do. The 75mm tank gun and 3-inch gun on the tank destroyers could not penetrate the turret or the front of the King Tiger. At short ranges
they could penetrate the side armor.
^Wpp^
03t
a
Jills
3
*3a
or
"Bazooka"
INTERVIEWER: Another problem that you faced inadequate clothing. Could you comment on that?
was
GEN DEPUY:
to the Bulge.
I
we
really
received several
hundred replacements
my
we went up
think they
were
down
in
were, and
we had been
in
we
immersion foot.
We had disastrous losses due to what We got some of those men back, but
lives. By the camp, think there killed, or had immersion had good raincoats. In fact, had
not many.
lot
of
them
lost
toes and others probably had trouble for the rest of their
rest
time
Company back across the Saar and put it into a men left in it. All of the rest were either wounded or
why got hundreds of replacements in one day. We one of those raincoats until very recently a marvelous, rubberized coat that was kind of a greybrown. We wore those over a lot of clothes, over a lot of field jackets, and so on. During November and December that was the typical garb of fighting infantrymen.
I
75
INTERVIEWER: You mentioned earlier about moving the battalion along that hillside. How did you normally move a battalion? Would you normally be leading it like you did on that occasion?
column of companies, a column of platoons, and a column of squads, in a long line, and told them what to do in case we got all scrambled up. The rendezvous was always the objective. The rendezvous shouldn't be back where you started. That way, if something goes all flooey, then everybody proceeds to the objective independently; but, if it doesn't all go flooey, then the best way to go is to move a battalion single file. The company commander of the first company and the platoon leader of the lead platoon would be with me, plus the scouts.
In
GEN DEPUY:
in
INTERVIEWER:
Did you
move
primarily at night?
GEN DEPUY:
lost together.
You
see, that
way,
if
we
got
lost,
we were
all
didn't
GEN DEPUY:
On one
Right.
"Where's
'A'
Company,"
or
"Where's
'B'
Company?"
line
occasion, while going through the Siegfried Line at the end of the Bulge, the
I
broke.
was standing
guys come by
I
in
it
was
it.
snow around, so
just the
first
at
"B" Company, and that was the very point where we had started. So,
The
miles
left
and my little man, "Friday," and found them. They had turned back and had started. A lieutenant had broken the line, turned around, and went back. Then, he got scared and disappeared into the aid stations; we never caught that son-of-abitch. So, grabbed part of that bunch and started for the objective again; but, by this time, it was getting light. Anyway, we started out and it got very light and we came under fire. realized then that we were never going to make it to the objective in the daylight. At night we had just gone right across the open fields. So, there was, had a company and a half on the objective, and myself and a company and a half back at the starting point. Well, the next night we all got back
with
radio operator
my
were
right
back where
we
together.
Still,
the column
is
a
all
good
and attacking. feel you have to do one of two things in a night attack. You either infiltrate to the objective, and for that you have to have control, and single file provides the best control that you can get. Everybody holds on to the guy in front. And, you go in the darkest, worst part of the place, and get there by sneaking. Or, you do what we did in the middle of the night at Maizieres-les-Metz, where every squad knew what the objective was. So, you have the two extremes. One is when you don't want to fight at all, you are just trying to gain a piece of high ground. Then the enemy has a problem because you
attacks that calls for
of those release points
and getting on
76
Typical view of the Dragon's Teeth positioned along the Siegfried Line.
you have to fight, then you have to have centralized planning and decentralized execution. And, every squad leader must look in daylight at what he is going to traverse and seize at night. That means that you are never going to go more than a couple of
have gotten behind him. Or,
if
hundred yards, maybe 1,000 yards at most. So, again, a set piece night attack should be of short range; if you try to do it the way the manual used to prescribe, it's hopeless.
INTERVIEWER:
But, there
still
are people
kind of stuff.
GEN DEPUY:
what
I
know, but
at least,
I
think
it
it's all
now
says
just said
hope
does.*
of the replacements that
all
you received
just before
you moved
Was there
*To analyze how conducting night operations has changed over time, compare Field Service Regulations 100-5, Operations (Washington: USGPO, 1944), 241-246, with Field Manual 100-5, Operations (Washington: USGPO, 1982), 9-15 - 9-16. See Field Manual 7-20, Infantry Battalion (Washington: USGPO, 1944), 135-150, and Field Manual 7-20, The Infantry Battalion (Infantry, Airborne, and Air Assault), (Washington: USGPO, 1984), 4-42 - 4-48. See also, Field Manual 7-10, Rifle Company, Infantry Regiment (Washington: USGPO, 1944), 62-74, and Field Manual 7-10, The Infantry Rifle Company (Infantry, Airborne, Air Assault, Ranger), (Washington: USGPO, 1982), 3-33 - 3-44.
77
up on the Maginot switch position that talked about earlier, so that they could get to know one another. Then, we took every company through an attack sequence. By that time, we had learned one great lesson you either infiltrate or you bypass. The best way to bypass is a wide swing. But, if that is impossible, then you place a high volume of direct fire on him and envelop the position. That is, you go around him. Penetrate by infiltration and bypass. That is what the Germans learned in World War I. In the west we called it von Hutier tactics.*
I
GEN DEPUY:
all in
a defensive position
INTERVIEWER: Remember
treated
if it
it
in
Vietnam
if
if it
sounded
big,
you
we
we
was just
in
something
artillery,
we were to stop,
back,
and then, move forward. It was very frustrating because we could not develop any momentum even when we felt that we could easily handle the situation. The guy on the ground sort of knows best whether or not he can handle the situation.
bring
the
and
GEN DEPUY:
company;
at
it
we had
if
it
was
a
it
if
there
was
also mortar
If
fire,
then
it
was
a battalion;
was just
few
riflemen, then
could be a platoon or
less.
you encountered machine gun and mortar fire, then you ought to go will lose each platoon one at a time.
find out
Under those circumstances, the platoons ought only to probe the area to
where the
enemy
is.
sound principles and thinking the thing through; but, later on, people forgot the key part. They just went with rules such as, "When you hit something, we'll overcome it with fire." As a result, maneuver became very, very slow. People forgot what you were trying to do, which was not to move slowly, but to move securely by knowing what you were up against while still moving as fast as you could.
Well, that
a very sensible rule based on
INTERVIEWER:
was
GEN DEPUY:
That's right.
It
got
all
all
really
wanted
If
to avoid
is in
fight
the
enemy
killing
it.
Now,
If
if
don't
pound bomb
the middle of
go into it if you can avoid then that's what you should do.
to
want
it.
INTERVIEWER:
That's right.
GEN DEPUY:
firing slits,
But,
if
it,
Do something,
but
rifle
and
he'll just
come
in.
Then
you'll try to
evacuate casualties,
*For a discussion on the development of German tactics in World War I, see Graeme C. Wynne, If Germany Attacks: The Battle in Depth in the West, (London: Faber and Faber, Ltd., 1940); reprinted by Greenwood Press, 1976.
78
and
suffer even
more
casualties;
we know
all
about
that.
It's terrible.
try to
come
anything special that you did with your battalion during World
a
War
II
we were told to continue a pursuit at night because our want to lose the momentum. Frankly, in those cases, we just continued at night with the same formation that we had had during the day, which normally was with some tanks up front.
in
a great while
INTERVIEWER: An
area
where
feel that
we
is in
the area of
GEN DEPUY:
enemy
is
think there
the
retreating
already daylight.
mounted attack, again, would say that if it's against serious opposition, meaning an organized enemy position, it seems to me that unless you have overwhelming superiority, you would try to bypass and get way behind it and force the enemy to move the following morning. If you were going to make a deliberate night attack would be because you were going to use some infantry at night to seize a critical piece of terrain that maybe, is occupied by enemy antitank guided missiles, which you want out of the way so that in the morning, when you move ahead with your armor, you're not going to be hit by them.
But, with regard to a night attack, a night
I
it
INTERVIEWER:
GEN DEPUY:
Dismounted
INTERVIEWER: You do
it
to facilitate
to
do
later, right?
*See
4-47
-
Field
Manual
71-2,
The Tank and Mechanized Infantry Battalion Task Force (Washington: USGPO, 1977),
4-51.
79
GEN DEPUY:
once
in
all
in
respect to
mounted
it
action at night
attack or pursuit
may be
we do now,
the daytime.
earlier
about a fellow
who
was a battle going on. While you were an S-3, and later on, when you were a battalion commander, how did you regulate your eating and sleeping? Obviously, you were doing a lot of
planning, and you took a very active role even in the execution part of a lot of things. So, how did you regulate your time? Did you have a schedule that you tried to follow?
would try to be at the critical places at the critical times. War isn't one pellmell, mad fight, anyway, as you know. There are long periods of boredom, interspersed with moments of horror and terror that's what war is. But, there's a lot of waiting time and a lot of coordination time and normally, at night, the fighting dies down unless you have a night attack. When you're a battalion commander, you're really in control because there is nobody out there but you. There's nobody up in the helicopters. None of that. So, you do everything you can. You fight as long as you can, and when you have to have some sleep, you get some sleep. It's just that simple. You have to plan and control each critical operation. So, if you and your guys have to get some sleep, then you just don't take the next step. You've got control of the situation. When you're young and under 30, you can do fairly well. You can go quite a long time without sleep, and you can bounce back with just a little bit. If you're much older than that, then you have a lot of trouble. guess the ArabIsraeli War was an example in which some Israelis fought for about four days without sleep, at the end of which, you know, they were just finished. At the end of WWII my regimental commander was 27 years old; was 25. The other two battalion commanders were 28 and 26.
Well, as far as being the S-3
I
GEN DEPUY:
myself, and
to the
90th,
Second World War, General Weaver, who was the assistant and later commanded the 8th Division, wrote a book about his
it
river
crossing
operation, and mentioned that the preparations for conducting the crossing were very thorough.
How much
of that did he bring with him to the 8th Division from the 90th?*
The main thing to remember about a river crossing is the coordination with the engineers, the coordination between the combat engineers and the assault rifle battalions. We became very good at that. Normally, we had different engineer battalions because we had to use corps engineers. You see, it takes a lot of
I
GEN DEPUY:
we
it takes an engineer battalion to support an an engineer company to take an infantry battalion across, and we had one engineer company on the Saar. That meant two or three echelons or waves per battalion were required. If the river is flowing fast that can cause problems.
at least
*For a discussion of the 8th Division's river crossing preparations see William G. Weaver, Yankee Doodle Town (Ann Arbor: Edwards Brothers, Inc., 1959), 383-418.
Went
to
80
I'll
in
the war,
we
near Koblenz.
in
March
of 1945.
The Moselle
it's
is
it's
very close to
and flows through a chasm. So, it was flowing, oh, six to seven miles an hour. That's fast. That meant that the boats would strike the far bank about a quarter mile downstream. Now, by the time they returned to the near shore, they would be a half mile downstream from the original launching area. But, you wanted to land at a particular place on the far side. So, demanded enough engineers so that could get my entire battalion together on the other side, all at the same place. We started almost a half mile upstream, and finally, we just drifted across diagonally. But, we made it. Now, a few boats drifted on beyond but mostly, we landed where we wanted to land. But, it was very
it
where
spills into
expensive.
put a
company
rifle
do the crossing in a single lift.* In crossing the Saar, after that first schmozola where we lit up the valley and everybody opened fire, the first two companies got across. The boats came back further downstream, and a lot of the engineers abandoned them and wouldn't go across again. So, my guys had to scarf up the boats and drag them up the bank right across from the pillboxes, in the middle of the night. I'd already gone across. My S-3 stayed and he put guys in the boats. They went across and then, just let the boats go; guess some went all the way to the Rhine.
I
'm***,
"-:-.::,..
:,
3ss**
second time.
*For a discussion of the 90th Division's March 1945 Moselle River crossing operation, see Charles B. McDonald, United States Army in World War II: The Last Offensive (Washington: USGPO, 1973), 246-249, 259.
81
was not brilliant. The two Moselle crossings were super, but the Saar crossing, have to admit, was a little hairy. Those engineers had never seen anything like it, that is, being driven into the boats at the point of a pistol. They probably thought they were in with a bunch of madmen. Remember, we were crossing into the Siegfried Line into a line of pillboxes which were manned. But, generally speaking, the engineers were good. They laid out all the tape and had all the boats in the right place. That tape is very important. About a half mile behind the river, at the end of each tape, was a big white placard with a black number on it. So, the first squad went to number one, the second squad went to number two, the third squad to three, and then, the first squad of the next platoon went to number four, and so on. This is very
This particular engineer battalion
I
helpful at night.
INTERVIEWER: Another
is
close
air
air
support.
Was
there anything
how you
or
in
World War
II?
GEN DEPUY:
back then
like
Well, generally,
we
didn't have
any close
air
support.
They
didn't
have a system
There was no tactical air control system. When we first went to Mans, they had Air Force officers in trucks with radios with our two lead battalions. That was the only time in the war that saw that the only time! They talked to the fighters, the P-47s and P-51s, and got them to attack the German tanks and troops that the column ran into. It worked pretty well. In fact, it worked very well. think flights were rotated over the head of the column, more or less, as a result of preplanning, and when they got there the Air Force officers on the ground would pick them up by radio and direct them in on the target. This was Task Force Weaver. We had priority because this was the breakout from Normandy. Another story. Across the Saar, needed some emergency resupply. In order to do that had to call back to my regiment on the other side of the river and have them go to division. Division went all the way back to the XIX TAC, which was a part of the Ninth Air Force working with Third Army. They launched fighters that had ammo and medicine packed in the wing tanks. They flew up to where we were and found the corner of the woods where we had put out a couple of fluorescent panels in the form of a cross. We had asked that they drop it in the corner of the woods, northwest of the panel, and they did. So, that was sort of remote control. But, other than that, don't remember any close air support. The first real use of close air support was in Korea. The Air Force made its money in WWII by armed reconnaissance. It just went out and killed
we have now.
Mayenne and
to Le
everything
it
saw.
Did the
INTERVIEWER:
close
air
support?
GEN DEPUY:
radios
which was closer to close air support than what we had. But, they didn't use Stukas against the Western Allies because Stukas
that could talk to a regiment
82
couldn't survive against our fighters. Stukas could survive against Russian fighters but they
couldn't survive against P-47s, P-51s, Hurricanes, and Spitfires. So, they didn't use them at
against us.
all
INTERVIEWER: Toward
they collapsed,
was
German
in
when
they were
a rout, or
when
the end
pick a place?
British
Supermarine
Spitfire
a mission
83
GEN DEPUY:
Well,
really
don't
know
if
should
try to
do
cohesion of the
Germans disappeared
Now,
that doesn't
mean
was no
so
We
we
that
My memory
of
it
isn't
much
that the
They were
strained
the Third Army ran out of fuel and you bellied up chance to regroup. Then you smashed through them again.
through them
down
We smashed through
we were
never able to continue that drive past the Saar. The Bulge
in
The
real
breakthrough was
the Bulge.
INTERVIEWER:
Again, after the Bulge, you had a breakthrough, you had the
momentum, and
you were rolling. You continued to roll right up until the end of the war and the American Armies were ordered to stop, which, in turn, permitted the Russians to drive on into Berlin. Could the Americans have gone on further, at least as far as the 1st Battalion, 357th Infantry Regiment was
concerned?
GEN DEPUY:
further.
war we were
in
Czechoslovakia. Sure,
we
We were stopped every night at a phase line, but we could have gone on. because there were POW camps out in front of us that were crying to be liberated.
have gone on.
I
was agonizing
Yes,
we
could
It
was just an
effort to
manage
suppose the best tactical training that people ever got without any great jeopardy and just enough casualties to make it exciting and serious, was as a result of the fighting we did from the end of the Battle of the Bulge to the end of the war. There were many actions, all fought at the company and battalion level. We were mounted in trucks and had five tanks and five tank destroyers. Hopefully, the direct support artillery was in range. It was a small self-contained battalion task force. You were expected to pursue the Germans, and you fought a lot of small engagements. Each one was different. The terrain was different, the enemy weapons and strengths were different, and the circumstances were different, but the mission was always the same to go. Now, to me, that's the best training anybody ever got in the world. You can almost tell which people had that experience, particularly the people who were battalion commanders and had enough force to play with, and who had an independent mission in a zone of their own. The company commander was under the control of the battalion commander, right? The regimental commander just assigned zones. So, it was a battalion commander's war at that time. Well, one of the things that had been impressed upon me by that time, was that we weren't getting any direct fire suppression. We just weren't very good at that, and by that time, you see, we were outrunning much of our artillery. We never had more than about one battalion of artillery available because we were moving too fast. So, we no longer tried to suppress only with indirect fire. My heavy weapons company, "D" Company, had six mortars and eight heavy machine guns.
84
was enough so took .50 caliber machine guns from the trains and made a big would attach the three heavy machine gun platoons to a single .50 caliber platoon. Then company. And, every time we would become involved in one of these little battles, wherever it was, I'd put that company in an overwatch position. didn't call it overwatch then. didn't know that word at the time. put it in a base of fire. The commander had eight heavy machine guns, six .50 caliber machine guns, and the light machine guns of that company, and he had the company to protect it and to help move it. So, two companies were my maneuver companies, and one tell you, it really was company was my fire support company, my base of fire company. marvelous. They just overwhelmed anything that we ran up against. My regret is that it took so
I
I'll
and move around him by maneuver. The serious war was really over by the time we got smart. always used to maneuver with the tanks and overwatch with the tank destroyers. If it was a little village, if it was the corner of the woods, if it was a hill with brush on it, whatever or wherever it was, we'd just smother it with fire and get total fire superiority. Then, we'd move around the flank and go get 'em usually from the rear. Almost without
Pin
direct fire
I
exception they'd
all
come
It
figure out
would have loved to command a tank battalion or an armored task force. That's why the mechanized infantry squad, which we were discussing earlier, can be very small, because it can
operate
in
the
fire
If it's
a tank
company with
mech
platoon,
men who
what we've
about 10 or 12 tanks and about four Infantry Fighting Vehicles (IFVs) with automatic
weapons on them that can totally suppress that woodline or those buildings. Now, against Russians don't think that we ought to fight by platoon. We ought to fight at battalion level, which would mean a whole battalion worth of tanks. That would be 30 tanks, and a whole infantry company, maybe 15 IFVs, firing in support of 60 dismounted troops who are going to get close enough to throw hand grenades. And, you're not going to use those 60 guys outside of that fire envelope. You can't, because if you do, they'll get bogged down in some little miserable fire fight. Then you'll have to go and rescue them and get them back out of there while suffering a lot of casualties. So, you don't want to send them deep into the woods; you want to send them right down the woodline so that you can fire right in front of them as they go. That tactic, which is a real Panzer-grenadier tactic, is something that the Germans understand,
I
difficult to
US Army.
It is
an appreciation of heavy
It's
not
in their
bones.
Some
have seen
It's
firing,
15 halftracks
gun
to
the coax and the main gun. There are very few
in those days, also the bow enemy companies, even battalions, that how you have got to engage the enemy if you have
move somewhere. Maneuver supported by heavy firepower that's the ticket. For instance, the enemy is sitting in a village that blocks the route through a valley and you've got to move down that valley. Or, they're in the woods on the side of the valley, and you've got to get them out of there so that you can go down the valley. There are times when even with armored forces somebody has to clean them out. Now, one thing an armored force can do is just
85
go down the valley and suppress as it goes. But, the valley is still closed to supply, POL, ammo and so on. So, somebody has got to go in and clean it out. Toward the end of the war, while going across Germany, watched the 4th Armored Division. We opened up river crossings for the 4th Armored. watched them conduct what they called reconnaissance by fire, but, really, what it was, was suppression. They suppressed everything that looked suspicious and kept on going, whether it was at the edge of the town, or the edge of a woods, a farm house, or two barns anything they thought might give them trouble. They turned everything on it like a hose, and if there was anything in there, this technique would shut it down. Now, that's fighting by using firepower, and that's why at the Combat Development Experimentation Center, two squads suppressing and one moving, was 60 percent better than one suppressing and two moving. What bothers me is that the US Army has been led mostly by light infantry generals like myself, for a long time. Thank goodness for the General Starrys. We always had a few. We had Abe and Polk, and so on, but we've never had a majority. We've always had a heavy majority of light infantry soldiers, and Vietnam produced a lot more. If you look at how many generals we have, and we have quite a few what, maybe 400? bet you that 50 percent of them were light infantry commanders. Well, 40 percent of them at least. They were the ones we were trying to make heavy infantry commanders.*
trucks,
I I
I'll
INTERVIEWER:
commanders.
Well, the
same
is
Most
GEN DEPUY:
Sure.
The
point
is,
you have to
learn,
and
it
takes a
little
one last question. When you finished up in Germany at the end of reflected back on your experiences, what do you recall were your first thoughts as to what your battalion had accomplished and how?
I'd like
to ask
of the
comments
that I've
I
made has
I
them
War
II,
Now, when
means by which Field Artillery forward observers were moved to the next piece of high ground. Once you had a forward observer on a piece of ground, he could call up five to ten battalions of artillery and that meant you had moved combat power to the next observation point more combat power than the light infantry could dispose of. Now, you needed the infantry to do that. You needed the infantry to think that trend has protect them, but the combat power came from this other source, and
across France and Germany.
other words,
battalion
my
was
the
*General Donn A. Starry, USA, Retired. General Starry was commissioned in the Cavalry in 1948, and later commanded the 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment (1970), and V Corps (1976-77). General Starry also served as the Commanding General, TRADOC (1977-81), and Commander in Chief, Readiness Command (1981-83). General Creighton W. Abrams, Jr. See note, page 61. Genera/ James H. Polk, USA, Retired. Commissioned in 1931 in the (1944-45). Later, he Cavalry, General Polk commanded the 3rd Cavalry Group, Mechanized, during World War commanded the 4th Armored Division (1961-62), and V Corps (1965-66). General Polk also served as Commander in Chief, US Army Europe, during the period 1967 to 1971
II
86
you want to be rigorously analytical about what you're really trying to do, it's trying to move combat power forward to destroy the enemy, and the combat power that you are moving forward has been, in the past, mostly artillery, and that is even more true today. The infantry has a lot of ears and a lot of eyeballs. Now, it can call forward even more artillery fire and different kinds of munitions Cannon Launched Guided Projectiles (CLGPs), the Family of Scatterable Mines (FASCAMs),
accelerated ever since.
I
them
all.
But,
if
Dual Purpose Improved Conventional Munitions (DPICMs), high explosive (HE), smoke, and
The infantry is a sensor. It's a sensory organization that works into the fabric of the terrain and the enemy, and can call in all of this firepower including artillery and TAC air that can really do the killing.
illumination,
will
INTERVIEWER: I've got two questions to ask the answers to which will be of benefit historians who read this transcript. First, what happened to the 90th when the war ended?
for the
Japan so it was held over. All the old 90th and it was filled up with the short-termers. They had a point system, so it was filled up with the people who had just come to Europe in the late arriving divisions, and we started to train for Japan. We had a regiment at Grafenwohr. was the G-3 of the division at that time. We were starting all over again, to train those regiments to go to Japan, and then, of course, in August, the war was over. So, came home and the division came home and was disbanded.
Well, the 90th
to
GEN DEPUY:
was supposed
go
to
lot
INTERVIEWER: When
did
division G-3?
GEN DEPUY:
maybe two
like that.
or three months.
INTERVIEWER: My
war. Can you
tell
last
question has to do with the treasure that the 90th found at the end of the
us about that?
GEN DEPUY: The Third Army was headed for Leipzig and Dresden through Thuringia. The First Army was headed for the Elbe. The Ninth Army and others were farther north. So, everybody was headed toward Berlin, Leipzig, Dresden, and the northern half of Germany. think there was a rumor that the Germans were going to create a redoubt near Berchtesgaden. The Third Army was
I
had
just
was looking down into the valley at Eisenach. was just side when was told to stop and pull back. We pulled back
I
and each unit was given an assembly area. My assembly area was at Merkers. So,
going to get
in
was
told,
hell
"You're
new
orders
in
a couple of days."
had a
of a
good
night
we were
and she
there, a
we had
in
woman
had to go out
MPs stopped
her,
said, "I'm
87
and swore at them. And, she said, "Dummkopf Americans! You don't know anything. You're right on top of all the gold of Germany." The next day, the Counter Intelligence Corps found it down there, in this vast salt mine. It was so large we drove jeeps 40 miles an hour through the main tunnels. So, we were kept there for about a week, to guard it and get it out. That was a welcome change. The war was essentially over by this time. Anyway, we guarded it and helped
a kinder,"
up on elevators. All the top generals of the Army Bradley, Eisenhower, Patton everybody can think of, went down on one elevator operated by a German to see it. They went down and played with all the gold. Also, the Germans had all of the art treasures of Berlin stashed
haul
it
I
down
there.
View of the Reichsbank wealth discovered by the 90th Division in the salt mines near Merkers, Germany.
88
General Dwight D. Eisenhower, Supreme Allied Commander, General Omar N. Bradley, Commanding General, 12th Army Group, Major General Manton S. Eddy, Commanding General, XII Corps, Colonel Bernard Bernstein, and others shown touring the salt mines where the German treasure was hidden.
Among
in
the Berlin
Museum.
89
CHAPTER
IV
On World War
like
INTERVIEWER: The
first
question
would
World War
II
some
of those experiences.*
GEN DEPUY: My
hard to overstate
at the
experiences were just part of the larger experience of the 90th Division.
It is
how ineffective that division was at the beginning, and how very effective it was end and how that enormous change related directly to the quality of its leaders. The natural leaders for company and battalion command were there all the time, as they are in any division, but their emergence and selection for key jobs did not occur until McLain and Van Fleet came along. This whole process remains something of a mystery but perhaps the best way to describe it
is in
terms of
its
opposite
first
three
one in the States and two in England and Normandy. There was no apparent effort to evaluate and eliminate poor leaders. It must have been either that the top commanders didn't know a poor leader when they saw one, didn't understand enough about war to provide a basis for evaluation, or were indifferent. In any event, we went to war with a batch of incompetents in charge. That incompetence trickled down and caused the tactical failures have described and the incredible casualties. All this was indelibly stamped on my mind and attitude ever after for both good and bad. want to make it very clear that considered the 90th a very gallant division which started to emerge from the doldrums during the Falaise encirclement, matured during the Moselle and Saar operations, and reached its peak efficiency during the Bulge. also came away from the war with a very strong impression that most of the fighting was done by a very small percentage of the soldiers. But, as you would expect, by and large, the officers and
division
I I I I
commanders
Now,
some
now,
I
privates
a pinch, then, as
I
would
on officers first, sergeants second, and privates third; that is, if didn't know them individually ahead of time. still feel the Army needs a lot more leaders in proportion to followers, particularly now that war is more dangerous, and equipment is more complex. That means smaller
rely
WWII exposed
many reluctant soldiers to enemy fire. and squads means more leaders. Such smaller units
too
would achieve a much higher percentage of active participation in the battle. Another very strong impression that came away with has to do with what Liddell Hart called the indirect approach. mentioned in our last interview, the last thing you want to do is to attack
I
*This
L.
is
conducted
the second interview conducted on 26 March 1979, with General DePuy, USA Retired. This interview was at his home in Highfield, Virginia. The interviewers were Lieutenant Colonels William J. Mullen and Romie
Brownlee.
90
where he wants you to attack him.* In Vietnam we again learned that lesson the hard way. If you choose to attack the enemy head-on, you have to get through the area that he has prepared for you the killing zones, or whatever you want to call them. He has his fires registered, he has his fields of fire cleared, and he has his bunkers or his positions sited to take advantage of you. So, it's almost the height of stupidity to let that happen. Almost anything is preferable to that. Now, in World War II, when we fought the Germans, they were already very much on the decline. Their strength was low. So, usually, it was relatively easy to find a way around or through them at night. That's one of the reasons why toward the end of the war almost all of our units operated a great deal at night. They did that for two reasons. First, it was easier to penetrate, or bypass, or sneak through without being shot at while en route. Then, once you got through and grabbed a piece of ground that was important in that particular area, the other side had to react. Also, as said before, this allowed you to get your artillery observers up on the high ground so that the combat power of the artillery could be brought to bear on the enemy. really believe, based on my experience, that the combat power provided by the artillery, I'm sorry to say, probably represented 90 percent or more of the combat power actually applied against the enemy. That's why say that getting a forward observer to a high piece of ground and protecting him was the most important function that the infantry performed in that war. That's
the
enemy head-on,
or
it's
when
it
is
is
necessary to go straight
fire
on the enemy.
In
and an attack on a narrow front through a favorable and protected piece of terrain like a narrow draw or other covered approach. We went into Berle, Luxembourg, during the Bulge, with A Company in the assault and B Company in overwatch. However, A Company quickly masked the fires of B Company and B Company was not well disposed or instructed. We were in a hurry. It turned out all right and we picked up a reserve company and a German headquarters in Berle, but we didn't do it very well. When General Rommel was a first lieutenant in WWI he developed the overwatch and penetration technique into a fine art. All American commanders should read his account in Infantry Attacks.**
these cases the only solution
very heavy suppressive
tell
some
of your
you fellows know, having fought yourselves, decorations go to the wrong people. The privates, the sergeants, and the lieutenants, who do the real fighting, normally perform where there is nobody around to observe it, or they observe one another; but, they are not the people who write up the citations. So, the colonels and the generals get more decorations than they should. hope they all realize that.
All right. Let
GEN DEPUY:
me say first
of
all
that as
*See B.H.
Liddell Hart,
Little,
ed., revised
(New York:
**See Erwin Rommel, Infantry Attacks. Translated by G.E. Kidde. Washington: Infantry Journal, 1944; reprinted as Attacks, by Athena Press, Inc., in 1979. See also, William E. DePuy, "Reexamining an Old Law 'One-Up and Two Back'?" Army 30 (January 1980), 20-25.
91
Brodenbach.
banks,
the
In this
case,
it
some vineyards, and then, going down and across one of the deep ravines that led down to encountered some German machine gun people. Next, we river. It was there that my S-3 and
I
all
of this
town
I
of Brodenbach. We had a number of was happening from 2 o'clock in the morning until we took the o'clock that same morning. That action didn't justify a decoration,
in
town
One
Silver Star
was
I
for
and Brandscheid shortly after the Battle of the Bulge. Now, although tried to lead my battalion single file, think told you that it got split in the middle and unfortunately, A Company, which was at the tail of the column, wandered off into a little valley in the middle of the Siegfried Line. So, they were in the bottom of a saucer surrounded by pillboxes, which were occupied by Germans. The company commander, who was new, was rather upset and nervous, and he was taking casualties. Anyway, grabbed a tank platoon, which was not my tank platoon. That was
I I
command
I
of the platoon,
and took it over into that little valley and got A Company out. The first tank that climbed on ran over two stacked Teller mines and blew me off of the rear deck. got on a second tank and we exchanged rounds with a German tank at the bottom of the valley. was standing on the back deck, shooting a .50 caliber machine gun at the pillboxes near A Company. Anyhow, we managed
I
to get
Lieutenant Colonel DePuy shown receiving the Distinguished Service Cross from Major General S. LeRoy Irvin,
XII
Lieutenant Colonel
DePuy
shown
Corps Commander.
one of his three Silver Stars awarded during World War II.
receiving
92
was
for
We
enemy heavy tank battalion came through and shot out the bridges at Koenigsmacher. We came down to the Nied River, and the assistant division commander, "Wild Bill" Weaver, was standing up on a hill looking down on the river. We had a battalion that had started down. was still the regimental S-3, and General Weaver said to me, "We better go down and grab that bridge down there." The Nied is a very small river, but nonetheless, it's swampy. So, we really needed a bridge. got in my jeep and went down to catch the battalion and have it move directly over to take the bridge. There was a small hill just on our side of the river, and the battalion went around the right side of the hill, which was away from the river, because that's the way the road went. [See Map
I I
17,
page 65]
I
When was
see the
tail
I
halfway there
so
could
would intercept them, so went around the left side of the hill with my radio operator. When had gotten all the way around the left side of the hill and to the bridge, there wasn't anybody there. The company had yet to come around from the other side of the hill, so went across the bridge into a little town the name of which can't remember. As was standing in the street over there waiting for the company, a couple of German soldiers came out and surrendered. went looking for some more and before was through, had collected quite a few. then decided that had better take them back over to our side of the river. So, started walking back across the bridge with them when our battalion suddenly came around the corner and opened fire on them. They scattered all over the place, but we collected about, oh, 10 or 15 of them. Our company stopped firing and came across the bridge. That was kind of a silly action. But, that was that, and that's enough of war stories.
of the battalion going
right side of the
decided that
I
previously that
it
was
like
really
and not
in
smaller units.
wonder
if
you might
to
expand on that a
do have a personal preference for fighting at battalion level, because really believe that if it's heavy combat involving large forces, then companies, particularly infantry companies, are too fragile. It was my observation that companies sent on independent missions that is, in a separate terrain compartment normally bogged down. Now, also have come to the conclusion more recently, that not only would like to fight at battalion level, but
Yes,
I I
I
GEN DEPUY:
I'd like
to have the battalions be smaller. That's simply to increase the ratio of leaders to followers
me
say. a lot
about
fight.
have a
that,
I
who
by having more officers and more sergeants. So, the associated reason
its
effectiveness.
and
We now are going to have million dollar tanks We need quality in those tanks. It's absolutely
a tank platoon.
ridiculous to
have a
You need
more than
that.
We are
going to have very powerful fighting machines. The Air Force wouldn't
in
anybody
we
93
and support from the rear, whether that's artillery with six or seven kinds of sophisticated ammunition, or attack helicopters, or tactical fighters. They also must use engineers and sometimes air defense weapons. The coordination problems are enormous. But a company commander is alone. He's on his own. Maybe he's got a radio operator with him, but he has to do it all. He could well be under fire, personally, and he just hasn't got the people available to help him.
is
Now,
that
infantry
for firepower
At least a battalion commander has a little staff. He's got an S-3 who is his right-hand man. He's got an exec who can go back to the rear with the S-4 and make sure that the replacements and the
knows as much about the enemy as possible, and he's got a lot of radios, whereas his company commanders have only one or two. He's got officers up to the ranks of captain and major to help him. So, he's in a much better position to coordinate the application of all that combat power and to synchronize the actions of his battalion and all of its supporting elements. If you rely on a company commander to do that, it's almost inevitable that not every time, but most of the time, the company will not develop all that combat power. That's why want to see the Army move that way, toward smaller battalions
get up. He's got an S-2
tries to
ammo
who
see to
it
that he
it.
Right
now
there
is
great resistance to
it.
It's
new
idea.
It
offends peopie. Lieutenant colonels don't want smaller battalions. They don't want
outfit.
to
Company commanders
companies. They don't want to be told that they are too busy to develop the combat power. But,
the fact
is,
all
We've got
the
is
and smaller
in
have to fight so that the battalion commander coordinates the infantry with the tanks, the
air,
the
air
a better position to
anybody else. He has to fight within what call a single terrain compartment. If company over into another valley to operate independently, where he can no longer control it, then that company must have tanks, infantry, and artillery observers, and the company commander must coordinate the combined arms team. But, don't want them to do that very often because if the fighting is serious in the other valley, the company isn't big enough to do it.
I
ROTC training ROTC* describe the program of instruction for the pre-World War
INTERVIEWER:
Recently
we
program. Please
briefly
II
GEN DEPUY:
military history.
Well,
in
recall,
there
was a
little bit
of
There was a
Its
about
how an
officer behaves,
like that.
how you
lot
Privileges,"
and things
There was a
of
Because
liked
we had
it.
were
how
in
to stand up
how to march, and we had the six-week summer camp at Fort Snelling, where the 3rd
to salute,
how
and everybody
Then,
Infantry
was
charge.
It
was
filled
with a
lot
of fine sergeants.
It
didn't
seem
to
me
ROTC
mid and
late
The
Company,
1939).
94
very
much
It
was
all
It
was a squad
That's about
machine gun level, rifle level type of training might go on to say something about the ROTC
Please do.
we
got.
right
now,
if
INTERVIEWER:
GEN DEPUY:
Israeli training
Not without a
lot of
and our general feeling that officer training in our Army was pegged several notches too high, General Gorman and decided that the goal of ROTC plus the basic course should be to qualify all lieutenants for lieutenant's jobs. A lieutenant in the combat arms graduating from ROTC should be between skill levels 2 and 3 in terms of the Skill Qualification Tests. That would mean that in the Armor, for example, he would be qualified as a tank commander. In the Infantry he would be qualified as a squad leader. The basic course which he then attends after graduation, could pick up on that level of expertise and make him a lieutenant platoon leader. Now, think that that's right, and wish that it had been that way back when was in ROTC. never went to a basic
I
ROTC teach
us to be platoon leaders.
give us your significant impressions on
and
tactics?
GEN DEPUY: Well, thought the German machine pistol, which was an area suppression weapon, had great advantages, whereas we were trained for point targets with rifles. So, the Germans, it would seem to me, were ahead of us there. Also, their tank guns and antitank guns were superior to ours. If you'll read the history, you'll find that the Germans were behind the Russians at the beginning, but they then caught up and surpassed everybody at the end of the war, in terms of the size of their antitank and tank guns up to 88 millimeters. Their weapons were manufactured in such a way that they were easier to maintain and they operated better in the mud, in dampness, and in cold weather. You asked a moment ago whether or not we used their equipment or they used ours. We really didn't use their equipment very much because we had such a plentitude of our own, and our supply system was geared to our types of ammunition, and so on. Most units picked up a few German Volkswagens and trucks and things for fun, but not very seriously. might say that we did, in fact, like the German Panzerfausts and that was because our 2.75-inch rockets didn't have the penetration capability of the Panzerfausts. A lot of units did pick up and carry the Panzerfausts with them. [See photo, page 67]
I I
you?
Germans involved a lot of direct fire suppression They didn't have as much indirect fire suppression, as much artillery, as we did, but they had mortars, and direct fire suppression, coupled with a lot of movement. They also did a lot of talking. You could hear the German sergeants, Feldwebels, shouting to their men all
Yes, the infantry tactics of the
GEN DEPUY:
95
that way,
more
If
fire
field."
is
Our fellows
didn't talk
up very much.
you don't
up,
it
going to happen.
the soldiers carried with them into
INTERVIEWER:
I
Last
how
carrying
when
GEN DEPUY:
more
of
think that
carried
to be impressed
isn't
We
more machine gun ammunition of all kinds, because we tried to emphasize direct fire suppression with machine guns. So, we had to carry that. Whenever we went into an area where our tanks couldn't go with us crossing a
undoubtedly
carried a lot
river or
we
in
a forest
we
guess, also,
we
we had
pyrotechnics.
The
better
we
got with
we
used them.
the area of
INTERVIEWER:
S-3.
In
command and
control, please
controlled
how you
Our squads were not well-trained. Sometimes the platoon sergeants would take one element, one good sergeant would take another element, and the platoon leader would take the third element, and that's about the way they operated. Now, this caused me to use companies would give a whole a little bit like the Army tends to use platoons today. In other words,
I
GEN DEPUY:
company a
of the lead
I
rather simple mission, with the objective being located not too far
I
away
"Go take
usually
commanded from
the vicinity
of the orders were issued eyeball-to-eyeball go along with the lead company and when they ran into trouble, I'd have the second company commander right with me, and usually the third company commander overwatching somewhere. then would tell the company that was behind me, exactly where to go, and go with them. In other words, if the first company ran into trouble and dropped down into a base of fire, then I'd go with the next company and, maybe, the tanks. The tank destroyers would be overwatching. So, with one company and the tanks, we would try to go around a flank or try to get behind them. So, it was all a very direct, close type of coordination. Infantry radios didn't work too well, but
all
direct orders.
would
call
had
to.
When we were
I
always
in
column.
because
didn't think
We often
used
artillery
radios for
command and
control because
they were
much
96
INTERVIEWER: As
battalion
same
sorts of things as
you did as
commander?
In all
GEN DEPUY:
was
was done
commanders. But, it wasn't a question of drawing up a plan on paper and carrying it out to them. That never happened. The paper plan, to the extent one existed, consisted only of an overlay.
guess
we
it
and
talking to a battalion
commander and
how
we
commander and
agreeing with
the only
way to
in
how we were going to do So, they had total participation, which is When we were going across France, we occasionally did go on parallel do
it.
routes.
Once
call
a battalion
commander on
it
tell
him to go
someplace
else.
when
it
was
serious fighting,
coordination.
INTERVIEWER: During the Second World War you encountered a number of people who, for one reason or another, were either famous and/or colorful. One such individual that can think of is General Weaver, who was the assistant division commander and later, commander the 8th Division. Please comment on such people who stand out in your mind.
I
GEN DEPUY:
I'll
tall,
I.
thin, rather
worn looking chap, who apparently had been an absolute tiger in World War He was an eccentric. tell you two little stories about Wild Bill. The first one occurred during the Falaise Gap action when he was with another regiment. This regiment went into the town of Le Bourg-St. Leonard, which was just southwest of Chambois, where the cork was finally put into the bottle. Anyway, in the middle of the night, think it was the
I
2nd Panzer
Division, or the
2nd
SS
who
always wore a
nightshirt,
Leonard.
He slapped on
in
his steel
helmet and
that.
his
command
While
remembered
He was an
utterly fearless
man.
it,
and ordered us to take the town. We held the northern third of the residential area, and the entire industrial area, which included a large steel plant. In addition to some very large Bessemer converters, there was a tall water tower. Occasionally, we would sneak our artillery observer up the water tower at night, and then he would set up on our side of the water tower and peek around and adjust artillery fire. Wild Bill came to visit one day and wanted to go up the water tower. He later had a heart attack when he was with the 8th Division, but he obviously was already suffering from heart trouble because he tired very easily. So, he said to me, "Come on, DePuy, we're going to go up on that water tower."
at Maizieres-les-Metz General Patton got tired of reading
about
97
said, "That's a
dumb
Anyway, we
him. So,
started up
was behind
I
caught
his breath.
had to wait there, halfway up, for a thought he wouldn't make it, but he finally did. Like a
we
By
we had
And,
while
if
we were up
there, a
German
assault
gun
fired a
round through
empty water
tank. Well,
you think you've ever heard a large bang-clang and resonating sound, you should hear an armorpiercing round go through an empty water tank. That encouraged us all to leave and we scurried back down. But, anyway, he spent almost all of his time while he was up on the water tank around on the front side where he got a very good view of everything. That gives you some flavor of the man. He was clearly the most colorful and, would say, the most loved old codger we ever had in
I
the division.
Major General
William G.
Major General
Weaver
later
*Major General George B. Barth was commissioned a second lieutenant of Infantry in 1918, and later branch transferred to the Field Artillery. Assignments after World War II included service as Commanding General, 25th Infantry Division Artillery (1950-51), Commanding General, 5th Infantry Division (1952), and Chief, Joint Military
Assistance Group, Greece (1952-55).
98
GEN DEPUY:
before he
was
He was Chief of Staff of the 9th Division Sheehy was killed. He was a marvelous and strong cannot say enough about the integrity, the quality, and the strength of
was an
artilleryman.
in
and
practically
blew
Walter Reed after a long, long time, and then, went on to become a brigadier, and eventually went
He commanded the initial task force of the 24th Divison in Korea. He ended up commanding a division at Indiantown Gap, the 5th Division, think it was. He was a splendid man. You see, he had a regiment in which there was only one other Regular officer, Buddy Ryder. So, the leavening of the professional army was pretty thin. There may have been one or two lieutenants from the Military Academy, but, if so, they went unnoticed among the general herd. Barth was the soul of the Army in the 357th Infantry. He was the rock on which we rebuilt a fighting regiment. It was all because of his strength of character compassion mixed with
to Korea.
I
firmness.
that
we
picked up
in
your
later career,
if
know
time, and
so,
knew General Talbott only in the sense that he was the S-3 of the 359th during most of the time that was the S-3 of the 357th. Then, we both went on to command battalions. So, didn't really know him well at the time; just knew of him. He was clearly a superior officer. Since the war, as you know, General Talbott and have become great friends.
I
I
GEN DEPUY:
We both commanded the 1st Division in Vietnam, and both of us Division Society. We also served together at TRADOC. General
soldier.
1st
was and
is,
a splendid
and as a regimental S-3, saw quite a lot of him. We've been close friends ever since, and have done a lot of things together. He came up and pinned on my lieutenant colonel's leaves in the little town of Binsfeld, in Luxembourg, in the middle of the Battle of the Bulge. He later became G-3 of XXII Corps, commanded by Ernie Harmon, who previously had been the 2nd Armored commander. Of course, from an operational standpoint,
General Stilwell
division G-3,
I
was the
C.
Talbott,
USA
Retired,
was commissioned
second
lieutenant,
Infantry,
in
the
received a Regular commission. During the Battle of the Bulge, he commanded the 1st Battalion, 359th Infantry Regiment. Later assignments included service as Executive Officer to General Lyman L. Lemnitzer while Chief of Staff of the Army, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Commander in
in
Guard
1941,
and a year
later,
Chief,
Division (1968-69);
(1969-73);
Allied Commander, Europe (1959-63); Commanding General, 1st Infantry Commanding General, US Army Infantry Center and Commandant, US Army Infantry School and Deputy Commanding General, US Army Training and Doctrine Command (1973-75).
Stilwell,
General Richard G.
USA
Retired,
II,
World War
was commissioned in the Corps of Engineers in 1938, and later transferred General Stilwell served as the Chief of Staff, US Army Military Assistance
General, 1st
Command, Vietnam
(1963-65);
Commanding
Armored
Division (1967-68);
Commanding
General,
XXIV
Corps (1968-69); and Commander in Chief, United Nations Command, Korea. Since 1981, General as the Deputy Under Secretary for Policy, Department of Defense.
Stilwell
has served
99
Dick Stilwell really ran the 90th Division during the whole time that he
was
fine, great leader, a wise man, and just. He and Dick worked magnificently together. But, under the first two generals, Dick ran the division. Dick had to do it there wasn't anybody else to do it except, perhaps, for "Hanging Sam" Williams
before he
was
unfairly
it
removed.
think
it
was
while
Van
Fleet
was
the division
Dick
left.
Actually,
was Dick
Stilwell
work for him in 1950, and then, over to become J-3, Military Vietnam (MACV), when he became the MACV Chief of Staff. Then, we were together in the Pentagon, again. He is, of course, really a splendid man. A very, very, smart, tough, professional soldier, I'm one of his greatest admirers.
who brought me
brought
me
your tour
in
Is
there
GEN DEPUY:
No, not
really.
When
fillers,
became
was
designated to go to Japan, so
we were filled up
and started to
all
of our
own
regiment at
Grafenwohr
planned to
training
no other
division
used
it.
We
opened
train for
Japan
there.
We
we had
wrote the
programs with the help of the staff and consultations with a lot of people. But, I'll tell you, they bore no resemblance to the training programs that we had had before the war. Our training programs were very practical with lots of live fire and lots of direct fire suppression at all levels.
100
you were the G-3 of the 90th Division. We'd be interested in what your thoughts were regarding a career in the Army. Did you have any thoughts about getting out? What led you to stay in the Army and make it a career?
Well,
II
INTERVIEWER:
came to
a close,
would be an option to stay in. came back to the United States very shortly after our victory over Japan because was a "high point man." There is a small story here. In August of 1945 General Herb Earnest who commanded the 90th Division at the end of the war, took a party of battalion and regimental commanders to Bad Tolz to spend some time with General Patton in a seminar to review lessons learned. was then G-3. General Earnest and stayed with General Patton in his house on the Tegernsee. His aide, Codman, was going home and General Patton asked me if would like to be his aide. was astounded. told him would do whatever he wanted but thought he should know that had orders to Leavenworth. He told me should go to Leavenworth and stay in the Army which is what did.
Well,
I
GEN DEPUY:
I
assumed
that
would get
out.
Lieutenant Colonel
a reprieve
DePuy during
in
from combat
May
1945.
Major DePuy while the S-3, 357th Infantry Regiment, near Metz in October 1944.
101
CHAPTER V
Education Of
you about your impressions of the Command and General Staff College at that particular point in time. You were a combat veteran who had commanded a battalion and had been a S-3 at every level. What did Leavenworth have to teach you in 1945?
I'd like
INTERVIEWER:
to ask
one since everybody there considered himself to be an expert. So, the poor instructors had a very hard time. The classes were very large, 500 in a one room type of thing. But, the fact of the matter is, that learned a lot. learned the right words and terms to explain a lot of things that we had done, but had never taken the trouble to define. The one part where did poorly was the G-3 part, just because thought knew it. did better in the G-1, G-2, and G-4 areas because didn't pretend to know much about them. Now, the course went to was only four months long. It was one of two interim courses; it was the wartime course slightly expanded. It was much like the CAS 3 Course which is now so popular. It was very much a regimental and division level course with a little bit about corps, with a heavy emphasis on operations. There was also a logistics course going on, but it was entirely separate. So, we didn't get much of that, and they didn't get much of ours. Both courses were about the
peculiar
I I I I I I I
GEN DEPUY:
was a
was run by the was just as large and located in the big riding hall. They just had a partition the middle, and half of it was the ground course and the other half was the service course. assumed that was going back to Europe because they weren't Following Leavenworth, went to the Pentagon to see a letting everyone out quite yet. On my way back to Europe, hometown friend of mine, Lieutenant Colonel Chuck Wilson, now a retired major general. He was working for Colonel Michaelis. Mike Michaelis was in the 101st during World War and was now
size in terms of students.
logistics course, called the service course,
same
The
Army down
Service Forces.
It
II
me how
I
felt
me a job. So, didn't go back to Europe. That's the shop of the War Department. George Forsythe was there, Art Collins and a lot of others were also there, and Mike Michaelis was the boss. worked there for a couple of years. During that time was integrated into the Regular Army. It was always an attractive thing to me. Also, the pay was a lot better than teller's pay in my father's bank. In fact, it was $535.00 a month plus allowances. believe bank tellers in South Dakota at that time, were lucky to make $150.00, and that's about where would have started. So, number one, enjoyed the Army and
reason
I
went
*GeneralJohn H. Michaelis, was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Infantry in 1936. During the Korean War he commanded the 27th Infantry Regiment 950-51 Other assignments included service as the Commanding General, US Army, Alaska (1959-62); Commanding General, V Corps (1962-63); Commanding General, Allied Land Forces, Southeastern Europe (1963-66); Commanding General, Fifth Army (1966-69); and Commander in Chief, United Nations Command, US Forces, Korea, and Eighth Army, Korea (1969-72).
(
102
felt
comfortable with
to
it,
and secondly,
really didn't
want
to
go back
to
South Dakota.
I
found
Washington
stay. That's
I
decided to
about
in
worked
in
G-1
how complicated my decision was. of the War Department. My job there was the
off the draft.
All
Volunteer Army.
arrived just
at the time
we went
enlisted
officers, a colonel
I
involved
procurement
was
the
The only one! went up to New York with Major General St. Clair Street from the Air Force. The Air Force was still part of the Army at that time, and he was the head of the recruiting service. went up with him, and he signed a $1,000,000 contract with N.W. Ayers Co., for recruiting advertising. We have the same company today. But, we didn't do very
enlisted volunteer program.
I
We had a very small Army in those days. had a graph right behind my desk and, as recall, needed to recruit about 15,000 men a month in order to meet our requirements, and that graph we on my little chart ran around 12,800 to 13,000, maybe 13,500. Every month we were falling a couple of thousand men short. So, by the time the Korean War came along and Congress reinstituted the draft, we were very much understrength. We tried all sorts of inducements but none of them worked very well. The general atmosphere right after World War was that the war was over, enlisted salaries were very low, and there wasn't anything very glamorous about military
well.
I I
II
service. So,
it
just didn't
work.
with the
inflicted
same
reduction
in
rank that a
lot
of officers suffered
retain
Most of the colonels were reduced. Dick Stilwell reverted back to lieutenant colonel. just happened to be under the wire. was promoted in January of 1945, and believe if had been promoted a month later, would have been reduced back to major, but just missed it.
I I I I I I
GEN DEPUY:
INTERVIEWER: Sir, according to your biographic sketch, the next significant step is your tour at the Army Language School learning Russian but then being posted to Hungary as the assistant
attache.
Is
like
to
tell
us about that?
GEN DEPUY:
because
the
I
Well,
went
I
to the
to study Russian
was
little bit
moment, and thought that that would be a good thing to do. It was and learned it. But, unfortunately, as was about to go to Russia to become assistant attache, all of the American attaches in Hungary were ejected, and was diverted. So, all of my Russian went for naught and Hungarian is an impossible language. never did learn to speak it. It was rather an exciting time in that the Communists were in the process of consolidating their power. Cardinal Mindszenty was in the legation. Laszlo Rajk was arrested and all sorts of things were happening during that time. But, it all culminated when broke my leg while skiing and had to come home. first entered a Hungarian hospital, but they did such a bad job on my leg that had to come back to Munich where the Americans redid it. then came back to Walter Reed and was in Walter Reed when the Korean War broke out. So, there is not much more to be said about that.
I I I I I I I
103
INTERVIEWER: At one
point, though,
GEN DEPUY:
in
in
Hungary
those days.
that because the Hungarians
INTERVIEWER: Was
country?
of the
GEN DEPUY:
hostile to the
Americans
I
at that time,
so there was a high turnover. Personna non grata was the term they used, and
attaches and assistant attaches were ejected from the country.*
INTERVIEWER:
leg.
Well, you
a broken
GEN DEPUY:
of
think
I
if it
Hungary which almost changed the whole pattern game permanently something that did not want. We really were not trained to collect information in a clandestine manner although at the time, Eastern Europe was a boiling pot of clandestine activity. We military chaps were amateurs. But, one day we received a message from Washington to go to Mohacs to report on the Danube bridge which the Germans had dropped in late 1944, as the Russians started their envelopment of Budapest. Some intelligence analyst in Washington was trying to complete the book there was one being complied on each country and there were reports that the bridge was being rebuilt. So, one sunny autumn day in 1949, put on my Air Force fur collared flight jacket no hat civilian trousers and shirt, and stirred up my Hungarian jeep driver a blond crew cut chap in a field jacket with no hat and we drove south to Mohacs. Mohacs, by the way, is the site of the defeat of the Hungarian Army by the Turks. It lies 10 miles or so west of the main highway into Budapest from the southeast, which is the link with Rumania along the north bank of the Danube, and with Belgrade, the capital of Yugoslavia. It is about 75 miles south of Budapest. The trip down was uneventful and the bridge, it turned out, was not being rebuilt. As we returned to the main road leading north to Budapest, we encountered a Russian military convoy proceeding north. It consisted of US jeeps, 2 /2-ton trucks, stake and platform 10-ton trucks, plus artillery and towed antitank guns. The convoy seemingly was endless. So, as we sat there at the road junction, we counted the vehicles and recorded bumper numbers. The march units were closed up but there were gaps between serials. After an hour we became impatient and pulled into a gap. The only identification on our jeep was a small 6 by 8 inch enamel
route as the others.
did have
in
one experience
my life.
It
almost turned
me
on the right base of the windshield. Fortunately, we looked like all of the Russian jeeps in the convoy. Anyway, about 30 miles up the road, the column turned into a huge forested area on
US
flag
(New
*For an overview of the political situation in Hungary during this period, see Paul York: Columbia University Press, 1962), 103-158.
E.
Zinner, Revolution in
Hungary
104
was
in
no way
we
so
we
with the convoy. The delegation on the road looked at us hard but didn't stop us.
Inside the forest the road
swept around
in
a large circle.
We were moving
counterclockwise.
the right, at intervals of perhaps 200 to 300 yards, were parking areas and bivouacs, most of
To them
I
occupied with Russian troops and equipment. After about a mile, the element
turned into one of these areas and
we were
and
a bit
following
we were
nervous
we came up
We could see
behind a Budapest municipal water sprinkler wetting down the no way out except to follow the circular road. It led us by tank parks, artillery
I
kept notes and counted and command posts with lots of radio antennae, etcetera. everything. Lo and behold, we finally came back to the point near the main highway where we had entered. The MPs were still there and we chose not to exit through them so we started our second trip around the cricuit. After more counting and more nervousness we reached the far side of the circle and found a small firebreak road which we followed to the east. It finally took us out of the
forest
In
and
we found
I
led to the
the legation
stayed up most of the night preparing a very voluminous and detailed report.
identified divisions
and regiments. It turned out that we had seen ninety percent of the 17th Guards Mechanized Division moving from the USSR to Hungary in preparation for the invasion of Yugoslavia from the north. In those days we had no satellite photography or other coverage. My report on a scale of A to F for reliability of the source, and 1 to 5 for accuracy of the information, was rated A1 For a short time became the darling of the US intelligence community. It nearly did me in professionally. It nearly sucked me into the intelligence business permanently, but after one tour with the Central Intelligence Agency, was able to squirm out of an assignment to G-2, US Army, Europe (USAREUR), in 1952, and resume my career as a tactical officer with infantry units and staffs.*
those days
. I I
we
INTERVIEWER:
After recovering from leg operations, you put on a cloak and dagger and
Intelligence
went
to
Agency
(CIA).
duties were?
Well, let me say that my leg was really banged up very badly. They had to operate and put in a lot of screws, wrap wire around it and so on. So, was at Walter Reed in June, when the Korean War started, and about September, was able to get around a little bit on crutches in a half-shell cast. really wanted to do something. Dick Stilwell was just starting up an element in the CIA, which had to do with functions such as guerrilla warfare and things like that. It became the active part, not the clandestine intelligence part, of the Agency. So, as my leg slowly
GEN DEPUY:
it
on
was placed
in
charge of China
to the Far East
or not.
I
me
on many, many
trips.
guess that's
in
spend a lot of time around the Thailand, Taiwan, Japan, and Okinawa. It was a very active life and
to say.
I
want
was
to
*For a discussion of the events surrounding Stalin's deployment of troops into Hungary for possible use against Tito, see Duncan Wilson, Tito's Yugoslavia (London: Cambridge University Press, 1979), 60-72.
105
rather exciting.
have to say
in
retrospect, that
it
was not
all
was
enemy. Remember, it wasn't long after the Korean War began when China intervened. So, I'll go this far, we were involved in very active covert operations against China. You asked how felt about sitting out the war in Korea. Well, I'll have to say that was actively employed in government service. When left the Armed Forces Staff College in 1953, even though the war was nearly over, tried very hard to get to Korea. But, instead, they sent me back to Europe for the third time. went back for a fourth time, later. There is just something about Europe; just seemed to go that way.
clearly the
I
INTERVIEWER: Was
previously at
Armed Forces Staff College merely Leavenworth, or was there a different curriculum?
the
a repeat of
was all "joint," and there was a fascinating group of people in that particular class. Fred Weyand was there. He was the best golf player. Jack Norton and George Forsythe were both there, as was Harry Kinnard who was on the faculty. Chesarek was there, and so was Dutch Kerwin.* It was a very relaxed kind of a course. lived in Washington and commuted with Colonel Art Allen and Chesarek, and played golf everyday. have to tell you, didn't get much out of that course; don't think anybody did. It was a six month course. Joint doctrine is so vague because the really important things are done by the
It
I
I I I
GEN DEPUY:
We didn't get
I
except at the
joint
planning
level,
and
Armed Forces
Staff College
course
officers
in
it
in
and people
like that,
who
very shortly
they sent the second team, and so did the Air Force.
INTERVIEWER: Was
sideshow
in
the
Armed Forces
was
it
little
*General Frederick C. Weyand, USA Retired, was commissioned through ROTC at the University of California, in 1938. During World War II, he served in the China-Burma-India Theater. Other assignments included commanding the 25th Infantry Division (1964-67), II Field Force, Vietnam (1967-68), and the US Military Assistance Command, Vietnam (1972-73). General Weyand also served as Chief of Staff of the Army (1974-75). Lieutenant Genera/ John Norton, USA Retired, was commissioned in the Infantry in 1941. During World War II, he commanded a battalion in the 82nd Airborne Division in the European Theater. Other assignments included commanding the 1st Cavalry Division (1966-67), and the Combat Developments Command (1970-73). Lieutenant Genera/ George I. Forsythe, USA Retired, was commissioned in the Infantry in 1939, through ROTC at the University of Montana. During World War II, he served in both the Pacific and the European theaters. Other assignments included commanding the 1st Cavalry
Division (1968-69), and the Combat Developments Command (1969-70). General Forsythe also served as the Project Manager, All-Volunteer Army (1970-72). Lieutenant General Harry W.O. Kinnard, Jr., USA Retired, was he served with the 501st Parachute Infantry Regiment. commissioned in 1939, in the Infantry. During World War Other assignments included commanding the 1 1th Air Assault Division, Test (1963-65), the 1st Cavalry Division (196566), and the Combat Developments Command (1967-69). Genera/ Ferdinand J. Chesarek, USA Retired, was commissioned in the Field Artillery in 1938. During World War he commanded the 28th Field Artillery Battalion in the European Theater (1944-45). Other assignments included commanding the 5th Field Artillery Group (1954), the 4th Logistics Command (1961-62), and the Army Materiel Command (1969-70). Genera/ Walter T. Kerwin, Jr., USA Retired, was commissioned in the Field Artillery in 1939. Duty assignments included commanding the 3rd Armored Division Artillery (1961-63), Field Force, Vietnam (1968-69), the Continental Army Command (1973), and the Forces Command (1973-74). General Kerwin also served as the Vice Chief of Staff of the Army (1974-78).
II II II
106
GEN DEPUY:
Well,
it
don't really
know what
think
in
the
current parlance,
was one
it
were supposed
to get.
INTERVIEWER:
So,
was one
of the holes
in
GEN DEPUY:
Yes.
INTERVIEWER:
1953.
in late
commanded
war
did
in your impressions about the soldiers, the equipment, the state of and how you found this Army compared to the one you had left in 1945. What kind of you believe that we should be preparing for, and how did you go about doing that.
left
the
Armed Forces
Staff College,
at
went
to Europe
of the counterintelligence
branch of G-2,
US Army,
which was a legacy of my Hungarian and CIA experience. This horrified me so much went to the general and told him that didn't want the job. used even stronger language than that. Though he didn't like it very much, he let me out. It just so happened that in V Corps, the lieutenant colonel in the G-3 section who had been conducting the infantry battalion Army Training Tests (ATTs), had been relieved. So, they were looking for someone, and Colonel George Forsythe
I I
recommended me
fine soldier.
He was
and he gave me the job. So, went up to V Corps, specifically picked by Swift to do that job, and for two years was the Assistant G-3 for Training. General, then captain, Bob Fair, by the way, was one of my assistants. For two years in a row tested all of the infantry battalions in the 1st and 4th Divisions, and in the 350th Infantry from Austria. did not test the armored infantry of the 2nd Armored Division. Well, let me tell you,
also an irascible but marvelous sort of a fellow,
I I I I
learned a
lot
doing that.
I
That was probably the best training ever got in the Army. It was very strenuous because each one of those tests lasted for a day and a half. We didn't get any sleep and then, after one day of rest, we would test another battalion. went through a little over 20 battalions each year. watched people do it right, and watched people do it wrong. saw a lot more do it wrong than saw do it right. was struck by the fact that those who had commanded battalions in war were something like five times as good and those who hadn't. blamed a little of that on Leavenworth, because the ones who hadn't commanded in war, more or less took a passive attitude, and waited for voluminous recommendations from their staff. With all of that going on, there was never time enough to move the troops, or to let them dig in, or to do all of the things that they had to do. They were always late, or lost, or mixed-up in one way or another. Now, the guys who previously had commanded battalions, more or less made up their own minds, and the staff ran around behind them and made it work. They gave the troops plenty of time to move and to dig in, which
I I I I I I
I
made
it
two years
was very little didn't know as the good things and the bad
I
107
which was commanded by General Eddleman. They had a battalion of the 8th Infantry stationed all alone in Budingen, which asked to command and got it. When arrived there, it was just as if it was the day after World War II. Nothing had changed. The weapons were the same and the terrain was the same. So, just felt very much at home. As looked at the training of the battalion, which was as good as any of the battalions over there, found that at the squad level it was a shambles, just like my battalion had been in World War II. At the platoon level, it was a little bit better. The company commanders were better. They had good potential. So, decided to spend my time at the bottom. Now, that is when first applied the overwatch at least under that terminology. had an opportunity when was at corps to go over and watch 2nd Armored Division tank training under General Howze.* In my
opinion, General
Howze was
in
the
way he
how
squad since each of them have two operating sections or teams. So, wrote up several little booklets which we used as training manuals and doctrine in that battalion. trained all of the squads and platoons uniformly. personally tested them all. tested every squad three or four times. used to spend days and weeks out there with those squads. knew every squad leader well both his good points and bad points. They got very, very good. The other thing brought with me from World War was that insisted that when the battalion
struck
to train a
rifle
I I
I
me
way
II
was dug
you couldn't see it from the front. All of my colleagues had come from Korea, and they built big forts. When you got out in front, you could see everything. Well, one of the problems that had was that the umpires who came to test me thought was crazy. They didn't understand why hadn't built Korean pillboxes on the military crest or at the bottom of the hill.
in,
I
Instead,
had
my guys behind
rocks, trees
and bushes.
took
of the
is
wouldn't
let
them
made them
Well, to
first
front.
make
when
all
my
first
thing
we
did
was
and
company and
that,
battalion umpire
totally unsatisfactory.
to dig
me
and
said,
commander, we're going to have a little talk." This was very ironic because the fellow testing me, Colonel Claude Baker, was the man who had previously commanded my battalion. had taken over from him, and now he was testing me. But, he was a hell of a good man. He had been in the 5th Regimental Combat Team in Korea and was a terrific fighter. We talked it over, and he agreed one hundred percent with what we were doing. He got all his umpires together and instructed them. They also were skeptical about the overwatch, and bounding, and all of that. Anyhow, we took the test, and we got a low score. We got 80 on a scale of 100. Well, it turned out that when the year was over, 80 was the high score in the corps, but it was a hard way to get
regimental
I
started.
was commissioned in the Cavalry in 1930. During World War II he the Mediterranean Theater (1943-44), and Combat Command A, 1st Armored Division, in Italy (1944-45). Other assignments included command of the 82nd Airborne Division (1958-59), and the XVIII Corps (1961-63), and Eighth Army, Korea (1963-65). He also served as Commander in Chief, United Nations Command, US Forces, Korea, and Eighth Army, Korea (1963-65).
*General Hamilton H. Howze,
the 13th
USA
Retired,
in
commanded
Armored Regiment
108
The point of all this is, that if your squads are well-trained, and you know that they are doing one of three things, then you can visualize how much space they take. And, if the platoons are trained the same way, everything is uniform. Now, there is plenty of room for initiative on the part of the leaders to adapt this to the terrain and to the enemy, but at least you know what it is that they are working with. And, the battalion ran just like a clock. The problem was that it was about a decade or two ahead of its time. That sounds a little egotistical, but that's exactly right, because if you went out and looked at a rifle squad or a platoon today, you would see exactly that. If you looked at the defensive positions, you would see what you knew in Vietnam as the DePuy foxhole, where they all had frontal cover and were all camouflaged. So, that's what happened to the 2nd
Battalion, 8th Infantry.*
INTERVIEWER:
similar in
In
many
respects, please
compare the
GEN DEPUY:
Well, of course,
at the time,
I
it
thought the
was
better.
in
we
I
had
a lot of blacks.
We didn't
fine.
World War
II.
racial
when
in
was
in
War was
was
wartime
mentality
the Army.
of soldiers furnished to
you
its
who do what
training,
they are told. So, back then, there wasn't the concern that the
Army shows
all
for
we
we
spent almost
of our time
training
was done
in
the
I
field; yet,
We didn't
did.
me if thought the soldiers liked any more than wartime soldiers liked it. However, the soldiers responded to pride of unit. They knew they were better trained than the other battalions and took great satisfaction in that. By the way, my company commanders were superb. Only one was a
have any particular problem. You asked
I
it
The others were products of Korea enlisted men promoted to officer. One, Joe Hackett, was the best I've ever had tough, demanding, autocratic, but incredibly effective.
Regular.
GEN DEPUY:
Division,
The 4th
now
Armored
days
we were
and part of the 8th Mechanized sector around Fulda and over to Bad Hersfeld. In those very thin on the ground. There was no German Army. You ran up to get into
Building," Infantry 59
109
HL..,i,'^K&,
hole
mound
or
afforded frontal protection. available, the soldiers placed the spoil in front of the hole in the form of a berm high enough to cover the heads of the occupants from frontal observation or suppression. The soldiers fired at 45 angles from behind this camouflaged frontal cover. If time allowed, camouflaged overhead
,m
e m
cover was added. Interlocking fields of fire covered all the killing zones and the position could not be suppressed by direct fire. One such position at Loc Ninh prepared by the 1st Battalion, 18th Infantry in 1967, caused an
exchange
198 to
1.
ratio of
enemy to
friendly killed of
position depending
upon how much warning you had, and then, you delayed back toward the
That's
all!
Rhine.
battle,
So,
it
was going
to be a platoon
and each platoon had a recoilless rifle. Maybe a platoon would have a section of tanks but normally not. They had their 106mm recoilless rifles on jeeps; they had a machine gun or two, and a 3.5-inch Bazooka or two. They scattered a few mines out across the road, and there would be a mile or two between platoons. That's one of the reasons why concentrated on squad and platoon training, because it was going to be a squad and platoon war.
I
when
necessary,
INTERVIEWER:
Corps for awhile.
After your
at
GEN DEPUY:
colonel,
Yes.
and they
didn't
me
the division,
why
left.
110
106mm
in
mm
f ff
*".:.
'
jiff'
Si* Efi*M
'
'"
"
'
:".
..
ff/'VM
ff
iM
'.
'
..'
-/
:.iff iffff:;
illii
'iff'
Ml
W,
Chief of Staff at
did
Corps. That
was
a holding job
was
and during that time, the most interesting thing couple of big Seventh Army exercises. then came back to
I I
you prepared to return to the United States, you had been on active duty about 15 years or so, and were at mid-career. From a personal point of view, did you see yourself as a man with a future in the Army? In terms of comparison with your contemporaries, how did you size up the situation?
Sir,
INTERVIEWER:
GEN DEPUY:
of the pack.
Well,
I
was
right with
my contemporaries,
but
When
say contemporaries, I'm talking about Chuck Wilson, George Forsythe, Art
111
Collins, and people like that. All of us had been lucky enough to command battalions when we were very young and retain our lieutenant colonel's rank. We were on the forward slope of the "hump" and were all moving along together. We recognized that we were in a fairly advantageous position because we were being promoted to colonel at a reasonably young age, although we had all been lieutenant colonels for about nine years. But, about then, promotions began to move again. So, in those days, my attitude was that was right on par, but on par with a group that was
I
age wise.
were assigned
What went on while you were there? What things were you working on, and what things were you thinking about?
the Pentagon.
there for almost four years.
You were
The reason went to the Chief of Staff's office was because of General Forsythe. George Forsythe was working there, and he needed to find somebody to take his job so he could go down and take command of a battle group in the newly activated 101st Airborne Division. So, he arranged for my immediate transfer to take care of his little problem. When arrived there, found a rather amazing situation. You may not recall, but the Chief of Staff of the Army was Max Taylor, Eisenhower was the President, and massive retaliation was the strategy. The Air Force was riding high. The Army was feeling sorry for itself. Because Ike thought that he knew all about the Army, it was getting short shrift. The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs was Admiral Radford. Admiral Radford, think, despised the Army even more than most admirals. General Westmoreland was the Secretary of the General Staff and the coordination group was the Army's response to the inter-service war. It was formed under Brigadier General Lyle Metheny, a marvelously leathery, former cavalry sergeant. He was both brilliant and combative. He surrounded himself with some bright young colonels, at least that was his idea Mel Coburn, Don Yuell, George Forsythe, a fellow named Pickell, Lieutenant Colonel Grant, and later, Ham Twitchell and others. Their job, without it ever being put into a charter, was to assist the Army in surviving the regime of Eisenhower and Radford, and the era of massive retaliation.*
I I I I
GEN DEPUY:
became very active in trying to influence members of Congress and members of the press. They became a little overactive and went a little bit too far at one point, and some of the papers they had written were exposed to full daylight. So,, they were, to put it kindly, dispersed. Colonel Forsythe went to the 101st, which he wanted to do anyway, but the timing was fortuitous. Yuell went up to the War College, and the others went elsewhere. Anyway, there was some slight embarrassment, and arrived just at that time.. The question then was what would we do? For awhile we wrote learned papers. General Taylor was the leading advocate of the concept of flexible response. He also came up with the Pentomic Division. This was his response to the fact the Army seemed to have been left out of the atomic age and needed to sound and appear very modern. Pentomic was thought to be one way to do that. Actually, think the Pentomic idea has more merit to it than it was ever given credit for having. So, we worked the inter-service beat. Oh, we did all sorts of things. We started the Army
This
little
office
man
for the
Army &
*For an overview of this particular period, see Maxwell D. Taylor, The Uncertain Trumpet (New York: Harper
Brothers, Publishers, 1960).
112
Association.
We
first
When
say "we,"
really
else,
Army (AUSA).
It
was
pretty small.
We
was very instrumental in getting it started, along with Cocklin, Forsythe and others. wrote some speeches. contributed to one of the chapters in General Taylor's book, The
I
air
forces.
We regarded
it
as regrettable that
split
still
make
good argument
We
generally
was
rather an
if
awkward
was
the
said
DCSOPS, and
who was
all
of these matters, he
It
would have
was one of those little groups that is often resented, sometimes does some good, sometimes doesn't do much at all, but often does some things that need to be done which the large formal staffs either don't want to do, can't do, or don't do. That was a rather strange career interlude. By the way, the officer who sat right next to me for two of those four years was Bernie Rogers. He then went over and became General
that he was. So,
a comfortable place to be.
m
.
mm f*
II;
'"''*'::;
= :
Ty
*
*--,
General Bernard W. Rogers
-r
<Hi.m
.
.
General
Maxwell D. Taylor
Taylor, USA Retired, was commissioned in 1922, in the Corps of Engineers. Transferring to the General Taylor commanded the 82nd Airborne Division Artillery (1943-44), in the European Theater during World War II. Other assignments included command of Eighth Army, Korea (1953-54), and Army Forces, Far East (1954-55). General Taylor also served as Chief of Staff of the Army (1955-59). Retiring in 1959, General Taylor was recalled to active duty to serve as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (1962-64). Retiring again in 1964, General Taylor served as Ambassador to South Vietnam (1965), and as Special Consultant to the President (1965-69). general Bernard W. Rogers, USA, was commissioned in the Infantry in 1943. General Rogers has commanded the 5th Infantry Division (1969-70), and Forces Command (1974-76). General Rogers also has served as the Chief of Staff of the Army (1976-79). Since 1979, General Rogers has been the Supreme Allied Commander, Europe.
* General
Maxwell D.
Field Artillery,
113
We noted in one
was
the fact that
GEN DEPUY:
The armored
from
it
in
You had
majors as the principal staff officers, S-1, S-2, S-3, and S-4. So, there wasn't any career
What happened to this captain after he relinquished command of his company while become a colonel? You can't train an Army that way. You need a lieutenant colonel level command for sure, in order to keep them current and give them command experience. So, that was bad. Also, the companies were too large and unwieldy. However, other than that, had fun with it because commanding a battle group was really like commanding my third battalion. It was just a great big battalion. And, having commanded two battalions previously, really like to think that handled the battle group very well. The span of control wasn't too much. have to say that some battle group commanders who had not had a lot of experience with battalions found it
progression.
waiting to
cumbersome.
do
it
through the
command
it
directly like
a battalion.*
XX
HQ
HQ
T
I
-1
,11, ,11.
DIV
HQ
m
.Li.
105-mm How
1 1 1
XX
^T
1
JJL
Comp
1
m
_LL
1
_LL
tt
3&
oo
Admin
See
Field
1958), 6, 8.
114
INTERVIEWER: With
training
you
felt
GEN DEPUY:
Infantry, actually,
it
I
Well, you
may remember
In fact,
that while
commanded
was mechanized.
guess
I
the 30th
was the first mechanized battle group in Europe. So, that we did there into two periods and two different
I
The first period was when again trained all of the rifle platoons in the three types of overwatch and the platoon techniques, dismounted. Incidentally, had some marvelous young fellows there. George Joulwan and Jim Madden were both there, as was Charlie Getz and a number of other chaps who have done rather well. So, anyway, started out again training from the bottom up, and did all sorts of testing of squads, platoons, and companies. Then we were mechanized and were able to operate like armored forces, which liked. But, you have to train very carefully to do that. You've got to have companies that can be underway in five minutes max! mean, the whole company must be moving in the direction that you want it to move, and doing what you want it to do as a result of battle drill type command and control. To this day, most units in our Army can't do that. Generally speaking, the tank battalions do better than the mech battalions. If you have, as did in the 30th Infantry, five maneuver elements and often more than that, with one or two tank companies or sometimes a cavalry troop attached, it is necessary to go to checkpoint-type command and control and mission-type orders. We trained very hard to be able to do that, to be able to call up "Charlie Six" and say, "Move to Checkpoint 55." That's all would have to tell him! Within a matter of a minute or two, I'd get an "on the way," whether he had tanks with him or not. And, he knew what to do when he got to Checkpoint 55. That was part of our Standard Operating Procedures (SOP). You go there, you occupy a battle position, you look around and see what's going on, you contact any friendlies in the area, you sight your company in the direction that you think the enemy is coming from, and you prepare to move again. Now, if wanted him to do more than that, could tell him to go to
subjects.
I I I I I I I
in
a strong point,
could
tell
him,
"Go
to Checkpoint 55
which meant, "Dig in; you are going to be there a long and be prepared to move on order to Checkpoint
was
because you know exactly what they look like on the ground how much space they take and how much time. think it was about a month after we were mechanized, that took the battle group into the field in January, when the ground was frozen,
that
makes
easier
and
from then
We could
go anywhere.
ever
played
we went
right
coming back. Now, the wives didn't like that, but kind you would do if you knew you were going to go to war. The troops were dirty. mean, their clothing was torn and dirty. Also, their vehicles were dirty, but they had learned how to maintain themselves in the field. They were not eating candy bars anymore. They were eating Army food. The replacement system, the maintenance system, the supply system, and the tactical system, were all working in the field.
of training that
I
Army Training Test at Hohenfels, without it was absolutely super training. It was the
115
It
was very
interesting
it,
when we went
all
it
to us.*
the umpires
they were disappointed because the soldiers didn't appear to be "up" for
test.
was
a three or five
hit
mean, this was just day test, and they the high point at the end
I
instead of at the beginning. But, our vehicles were running 90 to 95 percent operational
time.
all
of the
was
interesting
was
commander
of a task force.
and a cavalry squadron. That got to be so interesting that Goodpaster came up and took over. had responsibility for the Meiningen Gap. When we weren't out training the individual elements, we'd take the whole task force out and train up there by Munnerstadt, Neustadt and Konigshofen. So, would say that the 30th was the practical culmination of my experience as an infantry unit commander. felt like was able to put it all together, make it work, and really move it around tactically.
I I I
General
Andrew J. Goodpaster
Colonel DePuy, Commander, 1st Battle Group, 30th Infantry, shown briefing the Commandant of the German Infantry School in 1961
Andrew J. Goodpaster, USA Retired, was commissioned in the Corps of Engineers in 1939. During World General Goodpaster commanded the 48th Engineer Construction Battalion in Italy (1943-44). Other assignments included command of the 8th Infantry Division (1961-62), service as the Director, Joint Staff (1966-67), and a tour as the Commandant, National War College (1967-68). General Goodpaster also served as Commander in Chief, Europe and Supreme Allied Commander, Europe (1969-74). Retiring in 1974, General Goodpaster was recalled
* General
II,
War
Military
Academy (1977-81).
116
INTERVIEWER:
then.
It
felt
very good about the quality of the soldier that you had
War
II
variety?
GEN DEPUY: am
ever had.
I
was
the time
when
the
Army had
it
has
read a book recently that said the Selective Service System rejected
Army
Armed Forces
Army was
the country.
In short,
INTERVIEWER:
Before taking
command
tell
you were
GEN DEPUY:
enjoy the
I'll
it
was
me and
British.
The course
like
the
and was a very high level Commonwealth and the world, and we
I
travelled
friends.
It
around
a lot,
met
a lot of people
who
are
still
was
the most
my life;
In
it
was
INTERVIEWER:
became the Director of Special Warfare in the Office of Operations and Plans (DCSOPS), in the Pentagon. What happened
GEN DEPUY:
Bill
Rosson,
came back there under the auspices of General Division Commander of the 8th Division, and had been
I
in Germany, which is what brought the two of us into close contact.* He was appointed the Special Assistant to the Chief of Staff for Counterinsurgency. Then, within a month after his return from Europe, he sent for me and came back to take the job as Director of Special Warfare. Needless to say, didn't know anything about it. We had some interesting people in there. My deputy was George Blanchard; Bill Bond, who was killed in Vietnam, was there also. But, counterinsurgency was all the rage in Washington because the Kennedys had come into office pledged to "help any friend." The Vietnam War was still at a relatively low level at this time. The Army was trying to find, as were the other services, a role in this new and exciting
I
that.
retrospect,
I
We were
whole
but
I
thing.
War
II,
think
in
some
were not
None
of us
were
guerrilla warfare,
*General William B. Rosson, USA Retired, was commissioned in the Infantry through ROTC at the University of Oregon in 1940. During World War II, General Rosson commanded the 3rd Battalion, 7th Infantry, in the European Theater. Other assignments included command of the 30th Infantry Regiment (1946-47), the 39th Infantry Regiment (1955-56), and Field Force, Vietnam (1967-68). General Rosson also served as Commander in Chief, US Army Pacific (1970-72), and as Commander in Chief, US Southern Command, Panama (1972-75).
I
117
General
George S. Blanchard
fall
were trying to organize Special Forces units around the world a group in Okinawa, a group in Panama, a group in Europe, plus another reserve group or two at Fort Bragg and combine them with other experts in civil affairs, and be ready to do whatever the President said this country was going to do anywhere in the world. The whole thing, of course, eventually was sucked into the maw of Vietnam, but it was an activist philosophy. It was premised on the assumption that if we were smart enough at all those things then we could somehow thwart the efforts of the communists to subvert the Third World through wars of liberation. We thought we could bring up some disadvantaged country in the image of America. Well, now, after all these years, we know better. We have a much more modest view of our capabilities. So, look back on
We
all
national fumbling.
lot
in
the
He
left
became an
came back
man, and counterinsurgency was regarded as a component of flexible response. There was a great deal of confidence in Washington, naive confidence, that we could do anything we set our minds to. What we discovered in Vietnam and
he was, indeed,
first
of
all,
a flexible response
in
Central America
is
is
central
outcome. On the political side we are really amateurs. Our belief in political freedom that is, one-man-one-vote ties our hands in the rough and tumble politics of dictators and communists. The reason left Special Warfare was that was promoted. want to add one thing that just thought of. In 1962, went over to Vietnam with Colonel George Morton to establish the Special Forces headquarters at Nha Trang. The Central Intelligence Agency had taken over a number of Special Forces "A" Detachments and had inaugurated a program up at Ban Me Thuot, with the Rhade tribe of Montagnards. It had worked rather well and the history of Vietnam is that anything that worked well with ten good men, we tried to expand to 10,000 men right away. We thought Special Forces had a role to use its own troops, but we didn't want them to play it under the
I I I I I
to play
Command
in
own game. So, that was the beginning of Vietnam, a command which grew to at least 10,000
its
setting
at
its
up the
In
peak.
of "Operation Switchback,"
118
combat
patrol into
territory.
Vietcong infested
Agency back
in
INTERVIEWER:
Director of
Following your tour as Director of Special Warfare you spent a year as the
Plans and
Programs,
in
Force
Development (ACSFOR).
GEN DEPUY:
was most
job,
Well,
let
me
say that that experience was a very important one to me, and
really
beneficial in
terms of preparing
me to
later
which was also primarily a programming job. The job in ACSFOR was an interesting one. You know, George Blanchard, Fritz Kroesen, and Donn Starry had that same job.* To this day all of us speak the same language and have the same strong feelings about the necessity for what we then called a Force Development Plan. Donn Starry calls it the Battlefield Development Plan, which is simply the Force Development Plan transplanted down to the Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC), because they are no longer doing it up in the Pentagon. Fritz Kroesen understands all of that. Paul Phillips happened to be another one of the people who held the job. So, it's a special little club that we have. Basically, we were trying to do force planning at the departmental level so that weapons development, organization, training, tactics, and resources were all synchronized. It was a big step to take and it was only partially successful. After ten years of existence General Abrams eliminated ACSFOR and the force development function went to DCSOPS where it has
* Genera/ Frederick J. Kroesen, Jr., USA Retired, enlisted in the Army Reserve in 1942, and was called to active duty the following year. General Kroesen was commissioned in 1944, following completion of the Infantry Officer
Candidate School, at Fort Benning, Georgia. During World War II, General Kroesen served with the 254th Infantry Regiment in the European Theater. Other assignments included commanding the 1st Battalion, 187th Airborne Regimental Combat Team, Korea (1953), the 2nd Battalion, 187th Airborne Regimental Combat Team, Japan (195355), the 196th Light Infantry Brigade, Vietnam (1968-69), the 23rd Infantry Division, Vietnam (1971), VII Corps (197576), and Forces Command (1976-78). General Kroesen also served as the Commander in Chief, US Army, Europe and Seventh Army (1979-83).
119
SPECIAL ASSISTANT
ARMY
AVIATION
DOCTRINE,
MATERIEL REQUIREMENTS
ACSFOR
not prospered. So,
TRADOC
has taken over half of the function and the other half of
Staff's
it
is
done by
DCSOPS
Office.
INTERVIEWER: Do you
something
like
now
appropriately placed at
TRADOC,
or should there
still
be
that
in
Army?
because TRADOC is one of several subordinate commands, and the Force Development Plan should have a great deal of executive power. Frankly, it also had difficulty in ACSFOR for the same reason. You had force
Well,
I
GEN DEPUY:
think that
it's
very
difficult for
TRADOC to do
it
development planning
planning up
in
in
ACSFOR,
operational planning
in
DCSOPS, and
the Office of the Vice Chief of Staff. The higher you go, the more power you have.
Programming at the Chief of Staff's level, feeds the budget directly, whereas the Force Development Plan was a supporting document that didn't feed the budget quite as directly, but was used by the staff in formulating their portions of the program. As said, it was difficult to accomplish in ACSFOR. It will be even more difficult to do down in TRADOC, and think it is still an open question about whether or not a reincarnation of it is needed up at the Department of the Army level. The symptoms of the problem are visible in the Army's efforts to cope with the "tank program" and the "force modernization" problem.
I I
120
CHAPTER
Early
VI
INTERVIEWER: At
this point in
to
an active theater,
this
were going on
at that
time.*
was
still in
command
It
He was
was
obviously being
of Staff.
groomed
was
I
a deceptively quiet
atmosphere.
were still very much concerned about the overthrow of the Diem regime and were trying to pick up the pieces. might add that political turmoil continued with a series of almost comic opera coups. Then in the fall of 1964, the Vietcong launched a coordinated effort to topple the Government of Vietnam (GVN) through a series of large battles which we can talk about later. General Westmoreland then assumed command. MACV changed from a staff that originally was very much concerned with advisory duties and the support of the ARVN in terms of training, to a staff that was increasingly concerned with operations. There was still a Military Assistance Advisory Group (MAAG), when arrived, but it then was absorbed within MACV. We soon had about 13 companies of helicopters deployed throughout the country, and we had an Air Force Advisory Detachment with the Vietnamese Air Force (VNAF), some Navy elements, and the Special Forces. Incidentally, the first Ops Center at MACV consisted of one officer and one sergeant who were located in a large closet. It contained a single sideband radio used for communications with the Military Police in Saigon, and some commercial telephones for communications with the corps. That was it. That was the Ops Center. We ran the US effort through the senior corps advisors. They were the subordinate echelons. And, they had operational control of the helicopters unless we took them away. What operational influence we had was generally based upon deciding which battles were the most important, allocating our intra-theater airlift accordingly for moving Vietnamese troops, and
active
when
arrived. People
*For background on the US Army's early involvement in Vietnam see Ronald H. Spector, United States Army in Vietnam: Advice and Support: The Early Years, 1941-1960 (Washington: USGPO, 1983). See also, William E. DePuy, "Vietnam: What We Might Have Done and Why We Didn't Do It," Army 36 (February 1986), 22-25, 28-40.
** General Paul D. Harkins was commissioned in the Cavalry in 1929. During World War II, General Harkins served as the Deputy Chief of Staff, Seventh Army (1943-44) and Third Army (1944-45), in the European Theater. General Harkins also commanded the Military Assistance Command, Vietnam (1962-64). General William C. Westmoreland,
USA Retired, was commissioned in the Field Artillery in 1936. During World War II, General Westmoreland served in the European Theater with the 9th Infantry Division. Other assignments included command of the 187th Regimental Combat Team, in Korea (1952-53), the 101st Airborne Division (1958-60), the XVIII Airborne Corps (1963-64), and the Military Assistance Command, Vietnam (1964-68). General Westmoreland also served as Chief of Staff of the Army
(1968-72).
121
%i?
: '
^H^S:^;B ':"iL;"i;
:
'.
..
assembling helicopters companies wherever the battle was taking place. To indicate what a one-
we kept a Caribou (C-7) out at Tan Son Nhut loaded with hand pumps. These were needed to pump fuel out of 55-gallon drums into helicopters. There was a sergeant whose name think was Smith, who was CINCPUMP. The problem was always the time
horse operation
we were
I
running
If you could refuel rapidly near the battle site, you didn't need as many and vice versa. If decided to move some helicopter companies from the Delta up into the III Corps, we immediately dispatched Sergeant Smith with the hand pumps and we got the tactical airlift to begin flying in 55-gallon drums of fuel. My close friend and constant companion was Brigadier General Thang, the J-3 of the Vietnamese Joint Staff. He controlled ARVN to the extent that there was central control. The corps commanders were political-military feudal lords. it
helicopters
characterized or at least painted a picture showing the Vietnamese wonder if you would comment on your on the verge of losing control. appraisal of the government, and on the effectiveness of its organization?
government
122
government as such. There was a military junta that ran the country. Most of the senior Vietnamese officers, as you know, had served in the French Army. A lot of them had been sergeants. Politically, they were inept. The various efforts at pacification required a cohesive, efficient governmental structure which simply did not exist. Furthermore, corruption was rampant. There was coup after coup, and militarily, defeat after defeat. General Westmoreland indicated in a message that he sent after the battle of Binh Ba, up in Quang Ngai Province, that he gave the Vietnamese government six months to live at most, because they were losing a battalion a day, and a district town a week, something like that. The situation was very critical. That was the assessment in MACV at the time that recommendations and decisions were being made concerning the introduction of US Forces. To coordinate the entire US effort General Taylor, who was then the ambassador, formed a mission council consisting of himself as chairman, General Westmoreland, and the AID, CIA, and USIA heads. Many subcommittees were formed and much paper generated. The J-3 was drawn into this effort might in support of General Westmoreland. This was the beginning a belated beginning add in the integrated pacification effort which finally congealed under Mr. Komer and was placed entirely under MACV. In the beginning there were endless jurisdictional disputes.
Well, there wasn't a Vietnamese
I
GEN DEPUY:
INTERVIEWER: In terms of the ARVN, was there any single thing such as the way they did way they controlled their fires, or the intelligence they had, that you could point at and say, "This is where they need help. If we fix this, then the ARVN will be a lot better."
business, or the
SSSSnSra^*? -
Army of the
seldom equalled the motivation of the VC and NVA. On the technical side, the ARVN was losing the war just the way the French had lost the war, and for many of the same military reasons. They didn't have the mobility to react rapidly to a Viet Cong attack, so the attacks, almost without exception, were successful and the attackers withdrew before any substantial reaction could take place. It was like the French on Route 19
GEN DEPUY:
of the
ARVN
123
when
at
it
Mang Yang
Pass.
The French
if
you look
first
shot
was
moved
casualties
mounted. The Viet Minh were already there in strength.* Now, the same thing was happening to the ARVN in the days just before our rather massive intervention. Even with a few helicopter companies, it wasn't enough to allow the ARVN to react quickly enough. Not only that,
but the
ARVN commanders
become
They expected defeat. They conceded to the enemy superior tactics, superior indoctrination, and superior will power. And, they lost all of the battles they thought they were going to lose, just as most troops will under those conditions. Just to jump ahead and finish this sort of tactical train of thought in every operation fought over there by American forces, and certainly when you and were together in the 1st Division, from the time the first shot was fired in any battle, from that minute on, the combat power ratio turned in our favor. The situation was just the reverse from what had occurred before, because we brought in artillery, we brought in air, and then, we brought in more troops. Now, the ARVN eventually tasted success; it was able to move with our help, and began to achieve victories. There is nothing that helps an Army like victories. The ARVN got fairly confident, and it was winning battles. And then, we vietnamized. So, they again lost their ability to concentrate. The name of the game in a war like that is that the insurgents have the advantage of picking the time and the place to attack. They can decide to fight only when they are going to win. The only antidote for that is to be able to react faster and to put more on the battlefield than they can. By and large, the American Army did that, and, by and large, it won battles. So, when you strip away all of the politics and everything else, that is the
pessimistic.
I
tactical story of
Vietnam.
INTERVIEWER:
In
your
role
as the J-3,
lot
US
agencies that either were present or were coming into Vietnam during that period. Please describe
role
of time.
what was called the Country Team, sometimes labeled the "Mission Council." General Westmoreland was a member; the local heads of the CIA, USIA, and the US Agency for International Development (USAID), were members; and then, there was a political officer representing the State Department. The ambassador was chairman of the group. It met once or twice a week while General Taylor was in Vietnam as the ambassador. It met formally at least once a week. They decided how to coordinate the activities of the various agencies represented. Everything considered, believe they did a pretty good job. To be frank, there was a certain amount of bickering. There was this feeling of which element was really the most important element. They would argue about how big the police force should get under the
Well, as
I I
GEN DEPUY:
how
MACV.
But,
arguments were eventually resolved by reasonable men. The Country Team caused a lot of things to happen long before Komer came along with Civil Operations and Rural Development Support (CORDS). Everybody recognized that there were
of the
*For an account of the battle of Stackpole Co., 1967), 182-225.
Mang Yang
Fall,
Street Without
Joy
124
war going on simultaneously, ranging all the way from the very quiet, subversive war and use of terror down in the hamlets and villages, up to the use of main forces, with everything in between. The political actions of the Vietnamese government, the nature of the economy, prices, the building of roads there was nothing that happened in Vietnam that wasn't relevant to the total outcome. So, the agencies began to reinforce their efforts. Each agency brought in more people and more money, and initiated new activities. The US and the Vietnamese organizations were sort of parallel hierarchies, with the US trying to help at every level. Eventually, we were helping in all of the provinces and districts, at all of the corps and division headquarters, in every department and ministry of the government, at all of the ports and airfields, with the intelligence and police services, and with all of the social welfare services. You believe that by the time of TET, under Komer's "blowtorch" can go on, and on, and on. treatment, that effort was moving along quite well.
several levels of
political
I
INTERVIEWER:
This
sir?
1968.
TET was
would say
that the
wasn't won, the subversive battle wasn't won, and the economic battle wasn't
It
won;
was a stalemate. The enemy couldn't take over South Vietnam and we couldn't defeat the enemy who controlled his casualties by pacing his operations by controlling the tempo. Then TET came along and showed that in that kind of a war, the guerrillas, the enemy, can make a sudden effort and go anywhere, including in the
but, the other side wasn't winning either.
nation's capitol or
in
in
if
and concluded that if the enemy could in Washington, even though we were TET the VC were decisively defeated and never recovered. After TET it was a North Vietnamese war. TET was a military disaster and a political triumph for the other side. The North Vietnamese lost the battle but they won the war as a result of TET, no question about it. It terrified and horrified the people in Washington. Eventually, however, historians will write about the Vietnam War and say, "The kind of things we were doing in Vietnam before TET were right for that kind of war. But, it would have taken a very long time." However, considering the attitude in the US, the effort was too expensive, lasted too long,
the United States
thought of war
in
terms of
losing. So,
struck a deathblow
was too complex, involved too much television, resulted in too much gore, and required too much patience. In short, the American people decided that Vietnam wasn't worth it. The other way to have won the war was General LeMay's concept "Bomb North Vietnam back into the stone age." In retrospect, his solution was more American than the
became too
frustrating,
sophisticated counterinsurgency efforts which couldn't finish the job within the tolerances of the
INTERVIEWER: Concerning the Vietnamese seemed to be some controversy over just how
was going to do, at comment on that?
least as far as the
was going to be, or just what it Vietnamese were concerned. wonder if you would care to
extensive
its
role
125
GEN DEPUY:
in
The police force was, in fact, an army. Most people don't understand that. It was organized into companies and battalions, and was armed just like an army, and it fought just like an army. It had two branches, a special branch which was concerned with intelligence activities, and a combat branch which exploited the intelligence. Well, people who were only casual students of that whole thing, thought that the solution in Vietnam was to do just as the British had done in Malaysia. Well, there were several other factors to consider. One was that we didn't have to call the army a police force. Another consideration was that there was no American "El Supremo" the way there had been when Templar was in Malaysia. A third consideration, and perhaps the most important one, the communist terrorists were Chinese, not Malayans. That really helped in the identification of friend and foe, in the creation of patriotism, and with everything else. But, only mention this because repeatedly, the AID people would bring up experts from Malaysia, including Sir Robert Thompson, and an Australian who worked with the police, Ted Serong, both of whom recommended that we recreate the winning combination that they had had in Malaysia, which meant creating a very large combat police force.** Now, the mission of that combat police force would be indistinguishable from that of the regional forces. The only difference was going to be who commanded it. They wanted to
treaty from having an army.* So, the British
had to create a
command
from Saigon, the way the police field force in Malaysia had been commanded from Kuala Lumpur, whereas we were trying to decentralize the political/police action down to the province and to the district levels. And so, the police field force was simply a jarring note in the great symphony that was going on in Saigon, and those of us in MACV fought it and contained it. We didn't see how we could tolerate it. You can always have a few independent folks floating
it
like
little
around
in
background.
INTERVIEWER:
regional,
in
addition to
all
an area.
GEN DEPUY:
was
very fuzzy.
INTERVIEWER: Another
was
the Vietnamese had with the Montagnards. Would you comment on a long-standing problem, and what was finally worked out?
both
in
terms of
it
being
GEN DEPUY:
Vietnamese are
The Vietnamese word for the Montagnards is "Moi," which means savage. The a proud race, and are very conscious of their long cultural history, and successful
*For an overview of the Malayan insurgency, see Noel Barber, 1948-7960 (New York: Weybrightand Talley, 1972).
**For an overview of Sir Robert Thompson's ideas on dealing with an insurgency, see Robert Thompson, Defeating Communist Insurgency: The Lessons of Malaya and Vietnam (New York: Frederick A. Praeger, Publishers, 1966).
126
military history.
And, they
really
in fact,
they are.
Now,
tribes,
the Americans, on the other hand, have always had a love affair with the Montagnards.
way up
into the
mountains and
lived
and became fascinated with these aborigines. They noted that the Montagnards were pure, simple, mountain folk, and not very guileful. So, we had to like them. Meanwhile, we were having a lot of trouble with the more sophisticated Vietnamese in the lowlands. So, the Americans, from the very beginning, were emotionally linked with the Montagnards against the Vietnamese. And, for that reason, the Vietnamese distrusted the Americans. Well, there were some rather sophisticated Montagnards, one of whom was Y Bham. Y Bham was the hereditary king of all the Montagnards. He was a Rhade who lived in Ban Me Thuot, and was serving as the assistant province chief of Darlac Province at the time of the Montagnard rebellion, the first Montagnard rebellion. He ran off into the forest and the Montagnards attacked a number of Special Forces camps. They left our chaps alone but they killed the Vietnamese Special Forces troops, and threw their bodies into the garbage pits, or otherwise treated them badly. This caused quite a problem for the Americans because the Vietnamese government naturally wished to take severe reprisals against the Montagnards. But, the Montagnards were the darlings of the State Department, and the CIA particularly, didn't want them massacred. Anyhow, had a personal involvement in this situation. was sent up to Ban Me Thuot by "Westy" to take charge of the situation there. The situation was that there were about five Special Forces camps around Ban Me Thuot that had been taken over by the Montagnards.* However, their attempt to take over Ban Me Thuot had failed. The countryside was filled partly with VC and partly with hostile Montagnards. Around the Special Forces camp of Buon Sar Pa, located south of Ban Me Thuot, the Montagnards had seized two district chiefs and a number of other officials and their families, and had them locked up. The government of Vietnam sent two of the Dalat generals up to Ban Me Thuot to take charge of the situation or to take the blame. You may recall that the Dalat generals had been incarcerated at the time that General Khanh took over. He was the little chubby general who smoked Salems all the time. Tran Van Don did not come up. Kim came up, as did the
I I
former
brilliant of them all, and nobody trusted him. Anyway, he came up as the foreign policy advisor. Tan Tat Dinh served as the military advisor. Now, General Lam, an inscrutable Chinese-looking chap, who later commanded Corps, was the 23rd Division commander, and was the MACV player. We had a lot of American advisors in Ban Me Thuot, working with the 23rd Division and assisting
III
Corps commander, Ton Tat Dinh. Although Kim was the most
was
fluent in French,
and got
day and night, we got it all settled in all of the camps officials and Special Forces personnel back, except at Buon Sar Pa. At Buon Sar Pa there was a chap named Y Tlur, who later became a Kit Carson
Well, finally, after a
all
lot
of palavering both
of the remaining
Vietnamese
who was
in Nha Trang, flew in by helicopter to visit his Special Forces personnel, and Y Tlur had him arrested. Then, Colonel Fritz Freund who was the deputy corps advisor at Pleiku, flew in and they also arrested him, but only halfheartedly he kept his weapon. So,
there
we were,
with the
US
commander
*For an overview on the Special Forces working with the Montagnards and on the rebellion, see Francis J. Kelly, U.S. 1961-1971 (Washington: USGPO, 1973).
127
and a lot of other officials and their wives, all locked Khanh flew up and said that he was going to take the place by force and then was going to try the Montagnards for treason. exacted a promise from General Khanh and from Generals Kim, Dinh, and Lam, that they would give me one more day to try and
district chiefs,
somehow
already had made all of the arrangements for a rescue operation morning and had obtained the necessary permission from Saigon. We were going to circle the camp with US A-1s, and have a Special Forces ad hoc battalion loaded in helicopters ready to go in and rescue everyone.
solve this situation.
I
At 11:00 o'clock that night one of the advisors called to say that the 23rd Division was on the move. If the division had attempted to seize the camp it would have resulted in a real massacre, probably of our people as well as everyone else. So, dashed over to General Lam's house at 2:00 o'clock in the morning, and confronted him with the fact that he had promised me as one soldier to another, not to do that. told him that he couldn't do it it was against the honor of a soldier. And, my God, he called it off. Well, the next morning at H Hour, 0900, it was foggy. Finally, at 1000 hours, the fog lifted. We had arranged that as soon as we circled the camp, Fritz Freund, who must say is a brave man, would get Y Tlur to line up all of the Montagnards on parade, a whole battalion of them. Freund, even though technically under arrest, was still carrying his Swedish K, and he thrust it into the hands of Y Tlur and said, "If you're going to kill me, kill me now with my own weapon in front of your troops." Very dramatic. He's a big ham. Since Y Tlur didn't say anything, Freund spun on his heels and went down and clipped the lock off of the prison compound and let all of the prisoners out. We had passed him a pair of clippers through a liaison officer that we had sent into the camp everyday. He then marched the prisoners to the gate while all of the troops still were standing in formation. We then landed some helicopters and the prisoners all got aboard the helicopters and took off.
I
The Montagnard troops and Y Tlur were so astonished that they just stood there, still in their formation, with their mouths hanging open. Then Fritz, not knowing when to let well enough went in. They couldn't alone, said to me, "Come on, give a speech to the troops." So, rousing speech and told them them couldn't understand them, but gave a understand me, and they had made all the right decisions, and so on and so forth. shook their hands, inspected them, congratulated them, and then, wheeled around and went down and got on the helicopter with Fritz and John Speers and flew away. About an hour later, the Vietnamese 23rd Division entered the camp. All was sweetness and light, and nobody got killed. So, anyway, that's the sort of comic opera "Perils of Pauline" stuff, that went on with the Montagnards. They had another incipient rebellion later on, but it was a lesser problem. Now, Y Bham never did come back. He stayed in Cambodia and started a thing called FULRO, which was the Unified Front for the never knew, whether it was Liberation of Oppressed People. We never knew, or at least
I I I I I I
think
it
finally
petered out.
GEN DEPUY:
in
mind.
128
General DePuy preparing to encourage some 400 Montagnard "rebels" at the Buon Sar Pa Special Forces Camp to
release their South Vietnamese and American "prisoners" in September 1964.
INTERVIEWER: At
comment on
this particular
was making
the
US ground
missions that the American units were assigned, and the organizations involved
terms of
whether or not
we
brought
in
to be done.
GEN DEPUY:
This
is
Vietnam War. By structure interacted in each phase of the war. This will take a little time. The first phase of the war was a classic Asian insurgency patterned after the Chinese experience as explained by Mao and after the experience of the Viet Minh in their successful war against the French. It was classic in that it was both a military and political effort at every level. There were
guerrilla
you what believe to be the structure of the mean the organization and objectives of both sides and the way they
tell
I
squads
in
in
in
and military was controlled by Hanoi. From about 1957 until the end of 1964, the main effort was carried by South Vietnamese Communists. The command of South Vietnam was divided into two sectors. The southern half of the country was controlled by the National Liberation Front from a headquarters on the Tay Ninh/Cambodian boundary called COSVN. The effort in the northern half of the country was controlled directly by
in
made by
committee involving
political
The
party, in turn,
Hanoi through
military regions.
By 1960 an echelon of military force above the province level appeared in War Zones C and D. These units were of regimental size and were employed by COSVN. We called them Main Force units. By 1964 the regiments in War Zones C and D combined to form the 9th VC Division. That is the unit, you will recall, that received the bulk of our attention in 1966 and 1967.
It
the
less
was against the insurgency that the US directed its GVN. We only vaguely understood the organization
about
its
it is
and of the Viet Cong in 1960, and knew even essential to an understanding of the war to understand
early efforts in support of the
ARVN
operated.
The higher echelons supported the lower by attacking the popular or regional forces in the hamlets and villages in order to gain dominance over the region so that the guerrilla units could
operate freely and the
stockpiling food
political
On
echelons supported the higher by recruiting for them, by providing intelligence and guides, and by
and ammunition where it would be needed. The whole organization was mutually supporting, both politically and militarily. The best example of the early counterinsurgency effort was an operation launched by General Westmoreland in 1964 called HOP TAG. It was targeted against each echelon of the Viet Cong structure simultaneously. The overall objective was the security of Saigon and the surrounding
area.
Visualize a target on the rifle range. The bull's eye was Saigon proper. In this central area the Vietnamese police and intelligence agencies sought to uncover and eliminate the Viet Cong terrorists, guerrillas, and political cells. We called this function "securing". In the secure inner zone the government would conduct education, information, health, and economic programs to
secure the loyalty and ensure the prosperity of the inhabitants. The
in
GVN
this
have
said.
and the district companies and provincial battalions so that the secure area in the center could be expanded. We called this function "clearing". It was done by the ARVN, and as it progressed, security would be provided by locally recruited and organized popular and regional forces. Of course, one danger to all of this was the intervention of the Viet Cong Main Force regiments which from time to time, would move into the "clearing zone" and destroy ARVN battalions, Regional Force companies or Popular Force platoons. That, of course, would move the whole
the next ring of our target the object
to clear out the Viet
guerrillas
was
Cong
we
elite
effective elements of
ARVN
Main Force
units,
on the
run,
was
Destroy".
It
was
130
word.
South Vietnamese
Hanoi decided
in late
1963 or early
in
'64, to
fall
was about all that the high command, guess the reinforce the Main Force war. They also
affair, this
I
the
of 1964. [See
Map
20,
page
132.]
VC Division, then consisting of two regiments, went Phuoc Tuy Province, and received from NVN trawlers a full array of new weapons AK-47s, RPG-2s, 80mm mortars, 12.5mm antiaircraft machine guns, claymore mines, and etcetera. In December, the 9th occupied the Catholic hamlet of Binh Gia in Phuoc Tuy Province. Then, in rapid succession, they destroyed four battalions including ARVN Rangers and Marines. This action sent shock waves through the GVN, MACV, and the US government. The Main Force offensive utterly destroyed the pacification effort in Phuoc Tuy. No HOP TAC could survive such an incursion. By May of 1965 the 9th VC Division had mounted equally successful attacks against the district town and Special Forces camp at Dong Xoai, and against the capital of Phuoc Long Province, Song Be. ARVN infantry and airborne battalions were wiped out in these
October and November of 1964, the 9th
to the coast of eastern
actions.
In
VC
district
town
ARVN
battalions including a
Ranger
were totally destroyed. It was in this environment that the first deployment of US combat forces occurred. General Westmoreland wanted some US troops to reverse the disintegration of ARVN. He gave them no more than six months unless the US intervened. The first batch of US troops were used as a fire brigade rushing to threatened areas and pursuing the VC Main Forces. That level of effort would have been about right except that as the US troops arrived so too, did the first NVN Army forces. Not only did NVN reinforce the VC Main
battalion,
Forces
for
NVN
VC
but
also, entire NVN divisions began to fight for border areas inside South Vietnam as early as 1965. The battle of the la Drang by the 1st Cavalry was just such a fight involving three NVN regiments. The Marines had a battle in 1965 just south of the DMZ with an entire NVN division. The battles of Khe Sanh and in the A Shau Valley, and those north and west of Kontum, were border wars. General Westmoreland found the game changing under his feet. Washington was almost always one phase behind in its understanding. The media had the same problem, and still has. So, to wrap up this discussion, believe there were five wars, not one. believe they changed over time and in geographic focus:
I I
War #1
War
#
in
1957-64:
An
insurgency of the classic Asian variety, focused on the Delta and on the
was
centered.
1965-71:
war
still
and
focused
War #3 1965-72: Concurrently with War #2, a border war between the NVN Army and the US Army in the Central Highlands and in the northern provinces, especially north of Da Nang. War #4 1965-72: Concurrent with Wars #2 and #3, a retaliatory and interdiction war against
NVN
Air.
War #5
1972-75:
The
outright invasion of
SVN
131
by
NVN
after the
US had
withdrawn.
Map 20 - The Ho
132
Most Americans who served in Vietnam observed or participated in just one or two of these "wars." The press formed its basic opinions during "War #1" and largely ignored the rest. Bill, you and fought mostly in War #2 and perhaps at Loc Ninh and An Loc, in War #3. It is my absolute conviction that US forces fought extremely well in Wars #2, #3, and #4. With
I
respect to
War
#1,
have always
felt
that regular
US Army
ill
suited for
in
They
can, of course, conduct "clearing" operations, and are perfectly suited for "Search and Destroy".
The
and psychological end of the spectrum, the more inappropriate is the use of foreign troops who don't speak the language, and who may well have a negative effect on pacification efforts. Against this background and structure the argument about priorities as between the pacification effort and the big unit war or arguments about the uncounted enemy seem trivial to me.
closer
political
It
background that the various decisions were made about troop engagement. By the time this government began to realize what it was up against for example, there were about 20 NVN Army Divisions in SVN at the end (more divisions than we had in the active US Army). It was too late. Once more we were one or two steps out of phase with reality.
was
deployment and
to the sanctuaries?
DEPUY: At one
brilliant
and operating across the narrow panhandle of Laos, from the west, and interdicting the Ho Chi Minh Trail. We even made some of the coordination necessary to do that. By that time Dick Stilwell was in Thailand. However, that concept wasn't approved. The State Department didn't like that idea. Then, Westy wanted to put them right into Laos astride the Ho Chi Minh Trail. Harry Kinnard, who still see from time to time, and were talking about that just the other day. He told me how he had been directed to plan for that contingency. The division would have gone in about where Lam Son eventually went in toward the end of the war. Too bad they didn't because that trail could have been physically cut. Hell, later it became a pipeline and a highway. It would have been one big battle and it would have required a lot more than one division, but it was the way to go. But, General Westmoreland was not permitted to do it. At that time we were captives of our own emphasis on counterinsurgency which blinded us to the escalating dimensions of the war. We fought continuously to get permission to put recon and targeting teams into Laos and Cambodia. It was like pulling teeth. Ambassador Sullivan in Laos fought us every step of the way. Finally, Nixon started bombing in Cambodia and finally invaded. That caused a firestorm in the US. Neither the public nor the media had the slightest conception of the scope or intensity of the war. We in the military failed miserably in portraying the war for what it was. Of course, there is some question as to whether or not that is a military responsibility.
Division into Thailand,
I I
INTERVIEWER:
Sir,
wonder
if
133
remember much about the details. The idea was to get Montagnards or Nungs who were willing to fight on our side, and put them with US units. Some of them were called Kit Carson Scouts, and some were called Apache Teams.
Well,
I
GEN DEPUY:
can't
GEN DEPUY:
The American AID people and the American mission, the Country Team, were
lot
Vietnamese
government worrying about them, taking care of them, putting up refugee camps, getting rice for them, and so on. wasn't involved directly in that so don't have any useful memories to recount.
I I
the
Navy doing
at this time?
in
The 7th Fleet was certainly involved time what were they doing?
effort
in
GEN DEPUY:
the
In
Navy advisory
was
involved
in
organizing
infiltration
and augmented that effort with their own people. They really thickened it up and made it pretty good. The last big infiltration along the central coast occurred at Vung Ro, in 1965. Later, from time to time, they caught trawlers, and so on, down off the U Minh Forest. The rest of the Navy, the big Navy, of course, was on carriers bombing the North. The Navy also
US Navy came
in
in
the reinforced Main Force war into the Delta. Because of 9th Division operations the
sent troops to reinforce the Delta
in
NVN
also
1968.
INTERVIEWER: What
problems
in
in
building
up
US
forces?
Were
there any
terms of the combat service support structure, or with places to put them, or with the
supply lines?
availability of
The real problems associated with the Vietnam buildup were basing and logistics. The deployment of forces was really determined by those two factors. For a year and a half we went to countless force planning and deployment conferences in Hawaii and in the United States, and drew up an infinite number of alternative force plans, together with the infrastructure plans that went behind them. US Army, Vietnam, under a lot of different people and during those critical times under Jack Norton, was marvelously resilient and never said no when we wanted to
bring
in
GEN DEPUY:
another
unit.
came
up.
the 1st
Map
21,
page 136]
There
we
may be
true of
all
admirals,
don't know, but Admiral Sharp had a deep fear of the dangers associated with land warfare.
He
had a Dien Bien Phu syndrome. He didn't want to put the 1st Cavalry Division very far inland. We wanted to put the unit at Pleiku so that it could operate both north and south, and dominate the
*For a discussion on developing bases and on logistics, see Carroll H. Dunn, Base Development in South Vietnam: 1965-1970 (Washington: USGPO, 1972), and Joseph M. Heiser, Jr., Logistics Support (Washington: USGPO, 1974).
134
and that we would have another Dien Bien Phu. We pointed out to him that we had small detachments of advisors all over the highlands, including a number of them who had been in Pleiku for years. But, he wouldn't let us do it, so we compromised on An Khe, which was halfway between Qui Nhon and Pleiku. went up there myself with a party from the 1st Cavalry and picked the place out. But, it was a lot more difficult to go into An Khe than it would have been to have gone to Pleiku. So, that's just one
high plateau. But, Admiral Sharp said that Pleiku
was too
far inland
example.
We
had a
difficult
time
in
it
was
The
hard to predict what the consumption of gasoline, diesel, and ammunition would be. Generally speaking, though, during the time that
best example of that
I I
was
I
there,
we were
little
thin
on the
in
logistics side.
first
came from
a meeting
Saigon. The
report
tactical intratheater
would go up, and up, and up, whenever we ran an operation. Then, we would work that backlog back down by stopping all major operations. After doing that, we again would be able to move the 173rd or the 101st, or the Vietnamese, and support another operation during which the logistic backlog once again would grow. So, all in all, it was a very fine tuned thing.
135
Note:
Arrows indicate flow of supplies from major support commands to field support commands.
U.S.
QUI
COMMAND
U.S.
COMMAND
COMMAND- SAIGON
NAVAL
ISJ
LOGISTICAL
COMMAND
Corps
tactical zone
boundary
Map 21
136
CHAPTER
VII
Introducing Agility:
The
First Division
INTERVIEWER:
March
MACV
in
By this time you had extensive command experience, particularly at the battalion and battle group levels. You had commanded previously in combat, and you had been able to observe the war in Vietnam for a couple of years. Now you were taking over a large organization. What were your objectives for the division, and
of 1966, as the of the 1st Infantry Division.
commander
your philosophy of
command?*
of
GEN DEPUY:
It
was
I
a period of transition
had a unique opportunity to learn about the organization and tactics of the VC. Also
that period
we
GVN
an Asian
Army would
intervene
guerrillas in the
hamlets and
villages. In the
as the district companies or battalions, and at the top the Main Force regiments and divisions.
late
1964 through
we
helped the
GVN
and
in
the
HOP TAC
(cooperation/coordination),
intelligence agencies
VC
infra-
VC
political organization.
This operation
was
Around and outside the secure center was an area shaped like a doughnut in which the ARVN regular battalions and regiments sought to destroy or chase away the VC guerrillas and local forces. This was called "clearing". The idea was that once the area was cleared, Popular and Regional Forces would be organized at the village and district level to maintain security and the central secure area would be expanded. Thus, pacification would be extended throughout the country. But, the VC Main Forces were organized to defeat this concept. For example, VC provincial battalions like our friends in the Phu Loi battalion or regiments like the 271 and 272 from War Zones C and D, would move in on short campaigns or single battles to tear up the Popular and Regional Forces and defeat the ARVN. They did this often and well. These attacks demoralized the entire GVN civil and military structure, and defeated pacification efforts. Indeed, by late 1964 and early '65 they had nearly won the war. Therefore, the third element of the HOP TAC plan was for the elite units of the ARVN airborne, marines, and rangers to operate outside the doughnut area, and to go after the Main Force VC to destroy or
called "securing."
*For additional information on the 1st Infantry Division during this period see Jimmie E. Wilson, ed., First Infantry Vietnam: July 1965 - April 1967 (Tokyo: Dai Nippon Printing Company, Ltd., 1967), and Brigade Information Office, A Pictorial History of the 2nd Brigade, 1st Infantry Division (Tokyo: Dai Nippon Printing
Division in
Company,
Ltd., 1966).
137
and thus protect the pacification effort. These operations were called "Search and Destroy." tell you all this because the original purpose and mission for US troops was this third mission. All this was not without controversy. The Chief of Staff of the Army thought he was sending the 1st Division to practice counterinsurgency that is, clearing and securing, civic action and Psy Ops. MACV wanted the 1st Division for Search and Destroy. We did not do a good job in MACV in explaining this to incoming divisions. For example, the Marines came in and started securing and clearing and practicing pacification operations under the tutelage of Lieutenant General Krulak, the Marine counterinsurgent. Soon, of course, they were drawn into a brutal Main Force war with the North Vietnamese just south of the DMZ. When the 1st Division came in, it began to patrol its area. It had some very big fights with the 9th VC Division which contested the area. These were single battalion battles on our side like the 1st Battalion, 28th Infantry at Lo Ke and the 2d Battalion, 2d Infantry at Long Xuyen.
to disrupt their operations
I
was my idea to go after the Main Forces wherever they could be found and to go after them with as many battalions as could get into the fight what was later called "pile-on". To do that required a very agile and fast moving division, a division which was, in fact,
It
I
airmobile.
My
it
initial
efforts
were
to create just
such a
division.
took
it
as
my
III
main mission to
minimum
was
essential to
VC Main Forces north of Saigon in the Corps zone. As a keep the 9th VC division entirely out of the populated areas. [See Map
all
the
was
He wanted them to go into Tay Ninh Province, and up to Song Be, and down to Xuan Loc, or Wherever it was likely that the VC/NVA main force entirely agreed, was that the US units were operating at the time. His philosophy, with which units were there to fight the enemy "big boys," the big regiments that were tearing up the ARVN and destroying the pacification effort. knew the difference between what the division was doing and what was expected of it. Now, if you ask me if General Westmoreland told me precisely to do these things, he didn't. But, we had worked together closely for two years. It was clear to me that
bringing
in
US
Commander, US
Military
Assistance Command, Vietnam (MACV), and United States Army, Vietnam (USARV)
138
TAY NINH
1STDIVTA0I
RUNG/ SAT
SPECIAL I ZONE
SAIGON
Map 22
Area of Operations
139
soon as got there, moved the division around a lot. even moved it sometimes when really didn't have very good intelligence on which to base the move. just moved it to get it moving. moved my CP to Phuoc Tuy, then to Tay Ninh, then to An Loc and Quan Loi, and then to Dau Tieng, because wanted the division to be mentally mobile as well as physically mobile. wanted a division that could pile-on. visualized a division commanded from a helicopter in flight. And, looked for people who could do that, and for people who thought that
he wanted
to get cracking. So, as
i I I I
me
way. Also,
duties.
who
way so
that
INTERVIEWER:
people what
infer
from your comments that your philosophy was pretty simple. You were in terms of being the commander, you were going to tell
of them.
was expected
to be folks
who felt
the
same
as
you did about getting on with the job, wherever you put them.
that right?
GEN DEPUY: Yes. wanted people who were flexibly minded, didn't need a lot of instructions, would get cracking, and would get out and do something useful on their own once they were given a general direction. Of course, was also interested, as always have been, in the problems down in the squads and the platoons, because realized that was seeing the same problems occur all over again. They just weren't trained and were stumbling into battles. Mind you, they stumbled into battles under me, too, but wanted to try to help all could in that respect. So, started putting out instructions on overwatches and on finding out where the enemy was by using only a small number of people, but using lots of firepower and frontal parapet foxholes, and things of that nature, which, guess, was really a culmination of everything we've been talking about.
I I I I I I I I I
INTERVIEWER:
command and had a chance to look at the soldiers how did you find their morale and willingness to fight?
like
function
GEN DEPUY:
fine.
everywhere
they were
when you compared division personnel at that time with those of a later period, the division was lucky. It had a lot of good long-term, experienced sergeants. It also had the 1st Division spirit. It would do anything it was asked to do.
They were good as
their leaders. In fact,
was major operation, Operation BIRMINGHAM, in which you had a lot of success. You was a or two really mean fights, the battle of Lo Go being one of them. But,
It
INTERVIEWER:
command
involved
also
in
had one
it
division level
operation
which you had little influence planning. Would you comment on that?
in
in
terms of the
tactical planning, or in
terms of support
exchanged one brigade for another because one brigade didn't do very well. One brigade was slow on the uptake so replaced it with the 2nd Brigade commanded by Ernie Milloy. We hopped all around War Zone C, but we didn't find very much. Then one day a fighter bomber happened to drop a bomb on some 55-gallon fuel drums hidden along the river. So, we went over and searched along the riverbank. Now, it turned out
two brigades
to
Tay Ninh.
140
was along
Cambodia. That whole operation taught us how to operate. The brigade and the battalion commanders then knew that we wanted to conduct a lot of air mobile search operations, how we wanted them to be conducted, and that we were going to be very flexible. The only real concrete accomplishment was that we scarfed up all the supplies that had been stacked along the river, of
which there was a substantial amount. One place had four or five thousand uniforms. remember finding lots of sewing machines. We made a haul in sewing machines. It must have been a
I
quartermaster depot.
INTERVIEWER:
a
Did you have any problems with your logistical support on that operation? Later
whereby every three or four days we could just about count on getting change of fatigues and underwear, and little things like that the things that meant something
to the soldiers.
GEN DEPUY:
division to
Well,
we were
I
just learning.
have to
tell
first
time
ordered the
them except, "We're going. 1st Brigade, go go there." Now, when we went out, the division headquarters commandant and all of the principal staff officers stayed back at base camp, while all of the second team went out with me. That was quite interesting. And, the same thing was true of logistics. The DISCOM stayed back and all of the assistants the assistant
go
into the field,
2nd Brigade, go
quartermaster, the assistant ordnance officer, the assistant transportation officer, the assistant
went
out. Well,
we
turned that
all
around.
team went out and the second team stayed back. But, it was part of the division's work very well that first time because they had never practiced it. It had been home-based logistics, so it took some time to shake that down. By the way, the logisticians were super. The G-4, Gene D'Ambrosio, was and is one of the finest logisticians and soldiers the Army has ever had. Once he knew what we wanted, he and the DISCOM produced miracles.
The
first
INTERVIEWER: Another
into
Go was
discussed
later in
the
all
were up at Lo Go. The two battalions up there were Dick Prillaman's 1st and Bill Hathaway's 2nd Battalion, 16th Infantry. They moved north parallel to the Cambodian border and got in a little fight. Some of the fire they were getting was from across the Ben Go River in Cambodia, so we just fired artillery over there. We fired artillery along the riverbank into Cambodia, and remember that some reporter found out about it and asked me if had authorized it, and replied that had directed it.
Battalion,
GEN DEPUY: We
2nd
Infantry,
that represented a
change to the
rules of
engagement.
141
GEN DEPUY:
Incidentally, there
was no
population there.
It
was
INTERVIEWER: We're
division, only the
not going to cover each and every operation during your time with the
us. Please discuss
VC
them.
GEN DEPUY:
I'd like
to discuss that
in
we fought a
campaign up there against the 9th VC Division, or maybe they were fighting a campaign against us, I'm not sure which it was. In any event, for some reason or another, the 9th VC Division, which had four regiments at that time, including the 101st NVA Regiment, elected to fight a campaign for control of Highway 13 up north of Lai Khe, north of Chon Thanh. There were four big battles which all took place in June and the first two or three days in July of 1966. The first battle was the smallest of them all. Kyle Bowie's 2nd Battalion, 28th Infantry, fought that battle against a battalion up at the Loc Ninh Plantation. No, wait, there was a battle even before that. The first battle was at the railroad tracks between Chon Thanh and An Loc the battle of Ap where Troop "A" of the 1st Squadron, 4th Cavalry, got into a mammoth fight. They Tau were attacked by a whole regiment there, and we threw Herb McChrystal's 2nd Battalion, 18th Infantry, into that fight as a relief force. That particular engagement was a very spectacular one. It involved the entire 272nd Regiment, with all three battalions in line. The VC recon company was the foot of the "L" shaped ambush. There were very heavy casualties on both sides. But, it was a troop against a regiment 135 Americans against 1 ,200 VC. The next battle was Kyle Bowie's at Loc Ninh. Then, there was the battle at what we called Golden Gate, which was located between Loc Ninh and An Loc. This battle involved two VC regiments, the 271st and the 273rd Regiments. The last battle, which we liked the most, although I'm not sure that the 1st Battalion, 2nd Infantry loved it so much, was the battle of the Minh Thanh Road, which again, involved the 272nd
Regiment. [See
143]
The precursor
was
occurred because
we had
told the
An Loc
we were going
up to Loc Ninh and bring some engineer road graders back. And, sure enough, within a couple of days, when we sent the cavalry troop up there, they were attacked by two regiments. So, we thought that if they were going to do that to us, then we'll try to do it to them. So, we told the same Province Chief in the presence of his whole staff that although we had a tough time moving our engineer equipment around the last time, we were going to do it again, only this time we were going to move them down to Minh Thanh and fix up the airfield down there. We told the Province Chief that we were going to send our folks down on such and such day and that we'd like some of
his security
we
did that
and
Anyway, instead of sending one cavalry troop, we really sent two with infantry aboard, which probably was a mistake. We had artillery that we had brought in under other pretenses spotted all around the area. We had Bob Haldane's 1st Battalion, 28th Infantry, lined up at the Dutchman's place getting ready to go. We had Jack Conn's 2nd Battalion, 2nd Infantry, down at Minh Thanh, and John Bard had the 1st of the 18th Infantry all ready to go on the flank of the
142
ambush
site.
So,
we had
GEN DEPUY:
was,
In
would
June and July 1966, we tried to we were able to get one infantry
Ap
was 2-18 under Herb McChrystal. At Loc Ninh we did not reinforce not enough time and too far away. At Golden Gate we brought in 2-18 in two locations plus the 1-28 and 2-2. At Minh Thanh we brought in 1-28, 1-18, 1-16, and 2-2. So, you can see that we were getting better faster and more nimble.
CHON THANH
MICHELIN PLANTATION
en
DAU TIENG
LAI
Ap Tau
1st
for
members
of the
KHE
L
MILES
Map 23 - The
Battle of
Ap Tau
143
INTERVIEWER: would be
I
if
left this
particular chapter
of your career without asking about that marvelous fighting invention, the
"Go-go Chinook."
into a platoon
put a
lot
of
guns
in
answer to the ambush. They gave them to the 1st Division to test. don't think they liked us very much and left. The first time we used them was in the battle at Golden Gate. One of these huge things was hit and fluttered down right in between the two engaged forces. Finally, somehow, while our hearts were in our throats, it lurched back out of there. At the Minh Thanh road, the same thing happened. One got shot down right in the middle of the ambush, right at the most critical point geographically and chronologically. So, they were an interesting embellishment to the proceedings. It was an idea whose time had not yet come. However, the crews of the Go-go birds were incredibly brave and
Birds." This platoon
I
"Go-go
was going
aggressive.
INTERVIEWER: But, was one way of getting a lot of firepower into the action, the way always saw The next operation that was of note was ATTLEBORO.
it
I
at least that's
it.
GEN DEPUY:
rice
Yes,
This
was when
lot
teeth
in
of
patrolling
all
9th
VC
Division
had decided to attack the Soui Da Special Forces camp about that time.
regiments went into attack positions
Two
all
of
the division's
VC
camps
right in the
middle of the
for
all
was
patrolling.
units.
commander of the 1st Battalion, 27th Infantry, Sandy Meloy, was commanding, oh, don't know how many companies, probably nine or ten companies and he had been without sleep for three or four days. It was just an awful thing. Anyhow, General Weyand ordered us to go over there and get involved and take over, which we did. In fact we were already there when he issued the order. We got the 196th out of there and back to their camp at Tay Ninh, where they had to sort themselves out. They had taken a lot of casualties. It was really a tragic thing. We had many small fights and one large battle which occurred when Jack Whitted's 1st Battalion, 28th Infantry, was put down about 300 meters from the VC's main ammo dump. We took out
thousands of rounds of ammunition, weapons, mines, claymores, etcetera. [See
145]
I'd like
Map
24,
page
because some people have been critical about the 1st Division's use of a lot of firepower. would say, and this obviously sounds somewhat defensive, that we fired a lot of ammunition during fights but fired much less ammunition between fights.
to say
fight
up the records and had some charts made before left over there. The 25th Division fired more artillery than the 1st Division fired by a wide margin. But, we got our reputation from the concept that we used when fighting. Let's say that there was a company or a battalion in a clearing and the VC or the NVA were attacking it. The problem, as we analyzed it, was that one of three things was happening in a "doughnut," a doughnut that might be two or three hundred
happened
to look
144
yards
in
depth. The
enemy were
in
withdrawing. But, you never knew which, because you could not see them. The least
reports
So,
we would
take
told
and simply put boxes of fire around the fight and tell them to continue to shoot until we them to stop. Maybe on one side we'd put in air strikes and put in artillery boxes around the rest. So, they fired a tremendous amount of ammuntion during those fights. And, old "Slam"
batteries
Marshall
into
by accident" a VC battalion had walked one of these barrages and was eliminated. Well, that was no accident. It was the only way
in
ATTLEBORO,
in
a jungle fight.
still
is
lot
Anyway, wanted
to get that
in
the record.*
Map 24 Operation
on
with elements of the 196th Infantry Brigade conducting an air mobile assault followed by a search and destroy operation. Although contact with the enemy was initially light and sporadic, before the operation was completed
September
on November 25, it would involve over 22,000 American and allied troops.
ATTLEBORO,
Ambush: The
Battle of
Dau
Tieng
The Battery
145
the
1st
Division
flew
in
work
for
direct
control
of
Operation
rather interesting.
happened
I
to
visit
the
were beginning
battalions,
these contacts.
so they had 15 companies scattered around. They had the two "Wolfhound"
own.
looked at that
map and
hair
listened to
telling
me, and
knew
I
that there
was
a disaster under
in terrible
way. Every
I
went up on
exactly
my
trouble.
didn't
know
what was going on out there, but sensed that they were in terrible trouble. flew home and ordered Colonel Mickey Marks to move his 3rd Brigade headquarters to Dau Tieng. No, told him to send a battalion to Dau Tieng and to be ready to move his headquarters. That's right, that's the first thing did. He sent a battalion and the next day went up again. General Westmoreland's deputy, John Heintges, was up there, and he went back and reported to General Weyand, who was temporarily in command of the Field Force, and told him that there was a disorganized big fight going on up at the Michelin and that he wanted the 1st Division to go up and take over.* had already ordered Mickey to move. also ordered the cavalry to make a night move with the artillery. They moved all the way from Lai Khe down through Saigon, and all the way up Route 1 to Tay Ninh City and then back to Suoi Da that night. There was some confusion in the area but no casualties. wanted some artillery up there and the next morning we moved a lot more in by helicopter. The next day, General Hollingsworth went over and took charge of the Special Forces. They too, were in terrible shape. They had a Nung battalion, a "Mike" or mobile strike force, that had run into one of the VC regiments. The 196th had run into another one. So, Holly took charge of the Special Forces battle, Jack Deane went to the 196th Brigade particularly to Sandy Milloy's fight, and took charge of bringing in the 1st Division. Then we began to pull the 196th out. Eventually, we had most of the 1st Division involved.
I
II
INTERVIEWER:
Did you
recommend
I
the
relief
commander?
GEN DEPUY:
displeased
No,
me
or
me because
was being
well handled.
INTERVIEWER: He was
relieved then?
Perhaps transferred
is
more
correct term.
*Lieutenant General John A. Heintges, USA Retired, was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Infantry in 1936, following graduation from the United States Military Academy. In World War II, General Heintges commanded both an infantry battalion and regiment in the 3rd Infantry Division in the European Theater of Operations. Other assignments included duty as the Commanding General, 5th Infantry Division (1963-64); Commanding General, US Army Infantry Center and Commandant, US Army Infantry School (1964-65); Commanding General, Corps (Group),
I
Korea (1965); Deputy Commander, US Military Assistance General, Eighth US Army, Korea (1969-70).
Command, Vietnam
(1965-67);
146
- v'<">
',,'.''
'.
,
life,
ATTLEBORO
147
INTERVIEWER:
that
think this
is
good
air,
modern warfare
did
control,
the
new
aspect of firepower
and the mobility inherent them and what did you get out of them?
coordination required by tactical
helicopters.
How
you use
Well, guess that the 1st Division, without being organized as an air mobile and without having a large air cavalry squadron, tried to practice what now understand to be the tactical concepts of an air mobile unit. Sometimes people laughed about the 1st Division being the first air mobile division (heavy), and so on. The fact of the matter is, that in the early days in Vietnam, we had more helicopters available operationally from the 1st Aviation Brigade than the 1st Cavalry Division. And, since the 1st Cavalry Division had to maintain its own helicopters, they found it very difficult to lift an entire battalion in one lift. But, you will recall that in the 1st Infantry we did that repeatedly. In fact, there were days when we had 90 lift ships available to the division, plus lots of gunships. That was more air mobility than anybody had before or after, including the 1st Cavalry or the 101st. And, that was true for much of 1966. Well, as we discussed earlier about the French at the Mang Yang Pass, the whole name of the game in Vietnam was to make a contact, and you had to do that with a relatively small unit or you would scare off the enemy. Of course for the small unit that made the initial contact, it was more often than not a nightmare. It often occurred in inaccessible terrain and usually on ground chosen by the other side. So, from then on, the salvation of your own troops, and the success or failure of the operation, depended on how rapidly you could get in combat power. Time was of the essence. We had a rule in the 1st Division that we would not operate one of our infantry battalions outside the range of our own artillery. In order to do that, we often had to position our artillery all around the countryside. was never happy if we had only one battery of artillery in range. really considered that at least two batteries of artillery, firing from two different directions, was the minimum because one battery could also come under attack at the same time. Often we had three, four or five batteries that could fire. And, we tried to get the air in as quickly as possible. think we solved fairly well the problem of being able to fire the artillery and utilize air assets and gunships simultaneously. The heavy ordnance comes from the artillery and the air. The heaviest ordnance is from the air, but when you look at the rate at which they deliver their bombs, it's not any heavier, and sometimes not as heavy, as the artillery in terms of pounds of explosive and lethality, although when the air comes in with Cluster Bombs (CBUs) they are very lethal. So, it
I
GEN DEPUY:
division,
coordinating
to
all
of that.
to
work out the air procedures. You had to have your artillerymen completely indoctrinated and have them positioned in the right place. They had to have their ammunition available at the gun site and be able to shoot fast. You had to have infantry units that could be ordered to move. For example, we might inform a battalion, "We are sending helicopters load when they arrive and then come to this area. I'll tell you what to do when you get here." We had to have infantry that could move just like that. There were several occasions when asked battalions to move without sending them any helicopter lift. They bummed rides here, there, and everywhere. Once told Jack Conn and his 2nd Battalion, 2nd Infantry, to get up to Quan Loi any way he could. We were in a fight and were using all of the helicopters. He arranged to borrow two C-130s from the Air Force and made it from Lai Khe in about four hours. First, it's the mentality; it's a doctrinal understanding of agility and speed. It's
do that you had
I
I
148
and gunships, without having long pauses in which nothing happens. By and large, think we succeeded in doing all of that. People have said our air/mobile operations were too large and we put so many troops in that there was no chance of any contact. think that's a legitimate criticism, and we did some of that. On the other hand, if you are trying to surround something fast, or trying to get in fast, like Al Haig did when he put his entire battalion into Ben Sue in a matter of 30 seconds after they appeared over the trees, then that's okay. There are times when you want to put a lot in. That brings to mind a period during the time when General Abrams was in command and there were very few contacts. It was very difficult to establish contact because the enemy was in Cambodia. And so, they broke down battalions into companies, companies into platoons, and platoons into squads, for the purpose of conducting saturation patrolling. They weren't getting any contact. However, as soon as you start getting large contact, your forces congeal back up to company level as a minimum size, because a company is the smallest element that can take care of itself if you expect heavy contact. So, that takes you back to the profile of activity in Vietnam very high in 1965, '66, and early '67, and very low in late '67 until TET, high in TET and for six months after TET, and then, low again. So, it was a roller coaster. If you talk to people present in one period, they tend not to understand what was going on and to be critical of what happened in another period. This may be a good time to talk about the functioning of the division staff and some of the
air, artillery
I I
my tenure with
Bill
Sam Walker,
Al Haig
Bill
Le Gro was the G-2 and Gene D'Ambrosio the G-4. Ed Kitchens was the
was a super staff, and the ADCs incomparable Jimmy Hollingsworth* were no
Glasgow.
It
*General Sam S. Walker, USA Retired, was commissioned in the Infantry in 1946. During the Korean conflict, General Walker served in the 19th Infantry Regiment, 24th Infantry Division. Other assignments included duty as the Commander (Cdr), 2nd Brigade, 1st Infantry Division (1966); Commanding General (CG), 3rd Infantry Division (197274); Cdr, Berlin Command (1974-75); and CG, Allied Land Forces, Southeastern Europe (1977-78). General Alexander M. Haig, Jr., USA Retired, was commissioned in the Cavalry in 1947. During the Korean conflict, he served as Aidede-Camp to the X Corps CG. Other assignments included duty as the Deputy Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs (1970-73); and Vice Chief of Staff of the Army (1973). After retiring in 1973, General Haig served as the Chief of Staff to the President (1973-74). Recalled to active duty in 1974, General Haig served as Supreme Allied Cdr, Europe (1974-79). Retiring again in 1979, General Haig later served in the Reagan Administration as the Secretary of State (1981-82). General Paul F. Gorman, Jr., USA Retired, was commissioned in the Infantry in 1950. During the Korean conflict, General Gorman served in the 32nd Infantry Regiment, 7th Infantry Division. Subsequent assignments included duty as the Cdr, 1st Brigade, 101st Airborne Division (1970-71); CG, 8th Infantry Division (197779); Assistant to the Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff (1981-83); and Commander in Chief, US Southern Command (1983-84). For a biographic sketch of General Bernard W. Rogers see page 109. General John R. Deane, Jr., USA Retired, was commissioned in the Infantry in 1942. During World War II, General Deane served with the 415th Infantry Regiment, 104th Infantry Division, in the European Theater of Operations. Other assignments included duty as the CG, 173rd Airborne Brigade (1966-67); CG, 82nd Airborne Division (1968-69); Chief of Research, Development and Acquisition (1973-75); and CG, US Army Materiel Development and Readiness Command (DARCOM) (1975-77). General Me/vin Zais, deceased, was commissioned in the Infantry in the US Army Reserve in 1937. During World War II, General Zais commanded the 3rd Battalion, 517th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 17th Airborne Division, in the European Theater of Operations. Subsequent assignments included duty as the CG, 101st Airborne Division (Airmobile) (1968-69); CG, XXIV Corps (1969-70); CG, Third Army (1972-73); and CG, Allied Land Forces, Southeastern Europe (1973-76). Lieutenant General James F. Hollingsworth, USA Retired, was commissioned in the Infantry in 1940. During World War II, General Hollingsworth commanded a company, a battalion, and an armored task force in the 2nd Armored Division, in North Africa and the European Theater of Operations. Other assignments included duty as the CG, Fort Jackson (1969-70); CG, US Army, Alaska (1970-71); CG, Third Regional Assistance Command and Senior Advisor, Military Region 3 (1971-72); and CG, Corps (ROK/US) Group, Korea (1973-76).
I
149
We
based
all
of our operations on
Bill
was
unbeatable.
No matter how
always rose to
source.
Long range
patrols
most likely actions. Signal intelligence sometimes verified such intelligence but often
their
is,
that
enemy was
not
in
We
managed
all
Often
we were
in
surprised, but so
was
he.
We fought several
on Route 13
in its
VC
Division, our
worthy opponent
fall.
the
first
in
summer
Michelin
the
The 9th
of operation that
We
was controversial in that a lot of the units didn't do it, really never heard much from you in terms of night operations, yet division did do involved frequent night movements and a lot of
were
we
night operations
what the
1st Division
GEN DEPUY:
Well,
really,
two things
that
I
you can do at night, one of which is just move without fighting. We discussed that earlier. So, think that perhaps we should have moved some battalions and companies into blocking positions or ambushes at night. But, as far as moving and fighting at night, when you don't know exactly where the enemy is, I'm against it because don't think you can develop any combat power. If
I
moving and disorganized, you are not going to like the However, don't forget how effective our operations were in the Rung Sat, the mangrove
Typical scenes
in
the
150
swamps below Saigon, where the VC tried to mine the ship channels. In the Rung Sat we moved swamps on foot waist deep in water and muck to establish ambushes. The VC moved only by boat. They did not know could not know where we were. At night, as they moved
through the
into our ambushes and be destroyed. We rotated a number of Rung Sat and had spectacular results. The 1st Battalion, 18th Infantry pioneered that technique. There were no big battles, just dozens of successful ambushes. Normally, the battalion in the Rung Sat achieved the best combat results of all the battalions in the
division.
Rung Sat
villages
on
stilts
was at
night.
INTERVIEWER:
them
to attack
you
at night,
which
is
even
better.
GEN DEPUY:
lot
of that.
INTERVIEWER:
In
we did
best.
GEN DEPUY:
units
wanted
to do, to
we found
that
VC
on a sandy
hill
south of Chon
Thanh, because
all
groups of
his outposts.
INTERVIEWER: That's why, as a policy, hammocks waiting for the dark to come.
They
didn't
sit
around
in their
Romans. They always put up a camp. The Romans put up a wall wherever they were; an earthen wall at first. They dug in every night because they operated alone in hostile territory and so did we.
Right.
GEN DEPUY:
So
did the
time went on, what was your appraisal of the technical ability of your small and individual soldiers? I'd like for you to address three things: did you think they could shoot; what did you think of their ability to move, i.e. did they react properly; and, what did you
units
INTERVIEWER: As
think of their
communications
suspect that
capabilities?
GEN DEPUY:
we
did poorly
we
suspect that
in
and the Australians. With respect to the cloverleaf and that type of activity, to the extent it was used and, by the way, know it was used only by some units because saw a lot of examples where it wasn't. remember a patrol in Rufe Lazzell's battalion, the 1st of the 16th Infantry, near Suoi Da, when General Bernie Rogers landed and tried to collect them. There was a platoon that was bumbling through the woods in the old-fashioned way single file and just happened to stop for a rest break in the middle of an ambush. They
to say, the British
I
I
compared
was the end of the day's work. So, they just sat down in the middle of an ambush which made it very easy for the VC. But, they weren't cloverleafing, you can be sure of
decided that that
that.
Nonetheless,
do think that
we had
killing
151
technique. But,
do, and
I
maybe
the wish
is
think
it
As
far
you
talking
about?
think that
INTERVIEWER: Do you
we talked
I
too
much on
GEN DEPUY:
agility of
I'm sure
we
did
and
we
did.
We
I
in
we
think
we
probably paid a
high price for it. That still bothers me. still think our SOIs are too cumbersome. So, we erred on one side. If you followed the current SOIs completely, you didn't have time to fight. What we need to do is come out in the middle. We had Doc Bahnsen working on that at Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC). think he made some progress, but don't know how much.
I
I
terms of support for the deployed battalions, combat service support mainly, were there any unique problems or solutions that stand out in your mind?
In
INTERVIEWER:
answer that question than am. We pretty much left it up to the Division Support Command (DISCOM) and brigade trains to provide what was needed. The critical supplies upon which division operations wholly depended were ammunition and POL POL to move and ammo to fight. We were major users of CH-47 choppers to move both. Our DISCOM was flexible and fast under the directions of our G-4s who were the best in the business. could throw the division around the III Corps area at will and the support would always be there. But, you were at the receiving end, and it always looks different at the other end it never looks as good. What did you think?
GEN DEPUY:
in
a better position to
INTERVIEWER:
One
it
probably saved
I
Whitted's battalion, were the pre-rigged bundles of various types of ammunition standing by.
was down
fast as
it
in
those
it
up as
GEN DEPUY:
too, because
when
It's
ammo there
and
you will, that surrounds your reputation as a the handling of leaders who were found to be incompetent. It's been said that you fired scores of battalion commanders and I'd like you to address that issue. Also, if you would, contrast the handling of unsatisfactory leaders in World War II, with how it was done
major controversy,
if
in
Vietnam.
Well,
GEN DEPUY:
a
guess
fairly well
man
has
made
152
consequence of
a general
life.
weakness
Of course,
in
I
command, then
can't say that
I
there
is
very
little
you can do
change him
who
they are going to be. Now, as for relieving scores of people, based on the paper which you have
just
shown me which
refreshes
officer,
my memory, there was one infantry battalion commander, a who was relieved rather early on. He really should never have been
were three
infantry battalion
I
and three
artillery battalion
commanders relieved. am prepared to admit that it's possible was wrong on some of those. In the case of two of the artillery battalion commanders, the DIVARTY commander relieved them
And, in the case of one of the infantry battalion commanders, it was just plain unwillingness to obey orders and do what he was told to do. In the case of another one, really should have relieved him the first time he failed but gave him another chance, and he killed a lot more people our people. In the case of the third one, think may have acted hastily. So, really, we're not talking about dozens or hundreds, we're talking about a few. And then, there were some division staff people, a G-5, a Provost Marshall, and a PIO, and some others like that. Oh, don't know what they all added up to but would say 10 or 12, something on that order.
and
I
agreed with
his actions. In
one case,
took the
initiative.
INTERVIEWER: Well, as of the end of December 1966, there were 11. Now, in your correspondence we found at least one reference where you declined to accept an officer because
you
felt
believe
it
was an
artilleryman
the ranks of the lieutenant colonels and colonels for a period of time.
happened was that they sent me a list of 24 lieutenant They were from all branches but most of them were slated for battalion command. believe that only accepted two from that list. Now, the reason turned them down is that these were men who had been most of them had been lieutenants in Korea, and hadn't had any kind of experience with combat units since. That's one of the reasons the Army is wise now to select for command. You know, being a commander of a unit is not a right, it's a privilege, a privilege that you've got to earn. You have to train for it. just didn't see any reason why we should train people who had never had a company command, had never been a battalion S-3, and had never been a battalion exec, when we wanted to win a war, and when others were available. So, now you have heard my feelings on that. In World War and specifically in the 90th Division, the problem was that prior to combat there wasn't any effort made to eliminate people who were clearly deficient. As a consequence, we suffered inexcusable and enormous casualties. In the six weeks in Normandy prior to the breakout, the 90th Division lost 100 percent of its soldiers and 150 percent of its officers. In infantry units, where these casualties were almost entirely concentrated, the rates ran at 300 to 400 percent in just six weeks, as you will remember. That's indelibly marked on my mind. told that story to General Johnson when he came out to see me. And, told him that couldn't change; either would have to be removed or would continue to remove officers who thought didn't show much sign of learning their trade, and, at the same time, were getting a lot of people hurt. You can't get a soldier back once he's killed.
Well, the
first
GEN DEPUY:
fill
thing that
colonels to
whole
variety of jobs.
I
II
153
know that's the way wars are frequently fought, but Vietnam didn't have to be fought that way because it was a small war. Besides, we didn't put everybody in it, anyway. We could have put the
I
and kept them longer. We could have saved lives and been more effective that way. Here we had a conflict between using Vietnam to train the Army for the next war, versus trying to win the war in Vietnam. Those were the two conflicting points of view. So, with regard to having six months in command and trying to rotate everybody through, I've always said that that was running the war for the benefit of the officer corps. So, in any event, I'm sure made mistakes on some of the people relieved. But, don't think made very many. think most of them were cut and dried cases of pure ineptitude or malfeasance. acted in every case on behalf of the lives of
good ones
in
who
always paid the price for the actions of weak or incompetent leaders.
probably do the
had to do
it
again,
I'd
same
thing, only
I'd
probably do
it
little
more
cleverly.
INTERVIEWER:
which
is
It
in fact, just
1 1
names on
that letter
a far cry
might be interested to
know
I
that
in
it
the
First
World War,
in
the
first
month
of
was 72 general officers several Army commanders and scores of corps and division commanders. Now, you see what that process was. It was a peacetime army going into war, and when you send an army into war you find that a lot of
believe
people aren't
fit
for war.
They
you want to
fight a war.
have a
people
lot
of
who
are relieved,
who
command
by the time got there, which was in July of 1966, was that the division was really proud of the fact that it was the "Big Red One." There was a good feeling about the division. We had confidence in our leaders. We had
Sir,
INTERVIEWER:
one
marked the
division
confidence that
we had
the stuff
we needed
to fight
and we
felt
was going
it.
ADCs working
that way,
liberal policy
up on your comment about the division going to the aid of somebody. That was a conscious policy that we talked about quite a lot. Now, the people to whom that was really important, were the sergeants and the privates who went out on patrols. Whether they were in the Long Range Reconnaissance Patrols (LRRP), or just in an infantry battalion, they knew that we would, in fact, not only go to help them, but go right away. It was very important for them to know that. And, agree with you, that belief did permeate the division. meet soldiers who remember that. They believed that. It was a great morale builder. To this day, As a matter of fact, during that entire time, we had no men missing in action. We even committed
Well,
I'd like
GEN DEPUY:
to pick
two
do.
it's
You
and to do
would
rather
154
we
outgrowth of our quick reaction type operation. As for being liberal about awards and decorations sure. My God, why not? don't know precisely how many people but perhaps a hundred thousand men from all over this country went
I
through the
they were
in
it
was
in
If
They got
sick,
wounded,
or
something
else
now
them
out.
go home with much. So, all those decorations now are scattered And you know, my guess is that for awhile they hid them away but are Secondly, the 1st Division was lucky in that was a magnet for talented
it
officers.
all
but during
my one
we
Sam
I
who became
general officers.
who were
legion.*
INTERVIEWER: With
there
basic
made
that
was something
load of
commander's packet." This was an awards packet or a awards and decorations, that if one survived as a battalion commander he
called a "battalion
supposedly received
when he
left.
that?
GEN DEPUY:
Well,
if
know about
it.
will
say
this,
though.
He
it,
said,
but for
Third
said that
I
we
feel a
I
commander,
were any good. But, such packet. never heard that expression.
I
company commander for that matter. know they earned it if they we just didn't know about it. However, don't know anything about any
or a
I
INTERVIEWER:
items on uniform.
Right
now the Army is involved in a little What are your thoughts on this subject?
bit
*For biographic sketches of General Rogers, Deane, Zais, Hollingsworth, Gorman, Haig, and Walker, see page 149. Lieutenant General Robert Haldane, USA Retired, was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Infantry in 1947. Prior to entering the United States Military Academy in 1943, General Haldane served in the European Theater of
Operations as an enlisted soldier
Brigade,
1st
Army Air Corps. Other assignments included duty as the Commander, 3rd Commanding General, US Army Training Center, Fort Polk (1974); Commanding General, 5th Infantry Division (Mechanized) (1975); Chief of Staff, US Army, Europe (1979-80); and Chief of Staff, European Command (1980-82). General Richard E. Cavazos, USA Retired, was commissioned a
in
the
Infantry
Division
(1968-69);
second lieutenant
in
the Infantry
in
1951. During the Korean conflict General Cavazos served as a platoon leader
and
company commander in the 65th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Infantry Division. Subsequent assignments included duty as the Commander, 2nd Brigade, 1st Infantry Division (1970-72); Commanding General, 9th Infantry Division (1977-80); Commanding General, Corps (1980-82); and Commanding General, US Army Forces Command (1982-84). Lieutenant General Richard L. Prillaman, USA Retired, was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Armor in 1950. During the Korean conflict, General Prillaman served as a company commander in the 5th Regimental Combat Team. Subsequent assignments included duty as the Commanding General, US Army Training Center and Fort Jackson (1974-77); Commanding General, 2nd Armored Division (1980-82); and Director, Operations, J-3, Organization of the
III
155
GEN DEPUY:
Well,
personally
it's
am
in
all
my
I
personal feeling.
regretted
at the
I
will
say that
when
went down
to Fort Rucker
in their
boots,
any problems with the black berets on the tankers, or the red berets on the airborne, or
If
it
made them
and tougher,
I'd
give
it
to
them anytime.
tactical things that
INTERVIEWER:
If
we
happened in Vietnam. Would you compare squad and platoon level, and discuss some maybe threw out, in Vietnam?
war with World War II, tactically, down at the the principles and techniques that you added, or
GEN DEPUY:
Weil, the
first
in
both cases
is
emplacement; I'm now more convinced than ever that you've got to have frontal cover. Otherwise, you will be suppressed by direct fire, and once you're suppressed by direct fire, the next thing will be hand grenades, and pretty soon, that will be the end of it. So, that was the same for both wars, and will be the same in any future war unless you're fighting from an armored
vehicle of
some sort.
From the offensive point of view, the big difference was between seeking out the enemy force and seeking out terrain. Terrain was less important in Vietnam for two reasons. First, most terrain didn't give you visibility or observation, so it was unimportant from that standpoint. And, it was totally unimportant if it wasn't important to the enemy. So, except for Nui Ba Den and some other big mountains used for radio relays, terrain in Vietnam made no difference. Visibility was what you were looking for, visibility around a defensive position. So, instead of going for terrain and bypassing the enemy, you were forced to fight the enemy. You were forced to do something with him on ground chosen by him. You couldn't pry him out of his position by getting the high ground to his rear, which is what we tried to do in World War II. That led to going right after him, and going right after him led to the things that we talked about earlier. Sometimes, if there were just a few of them, a good dashing charge with a lot of shooting was probably the right thing to do; but, it was awfully hard to tell when that was the right thing to do. If he happened to be in bunkers it was almost suicidal to do that. As you know, preferred that the leading elements not automatically charge the enemy. Attacking the enemy should be done as a result of a decision,
I
do not
like
admit that
if
you had
tigers in
then
it
you had a disaster, it would be a big disaster, but often Vietnam, where you had to go directly after the enemy force and you couldn't attack where the enemy was weak, it raised this other question. So, what tried to emphasize was that when you make contact, make contact with a small force because you're going to make contact in
If
worked,
in
in
the
commander decides
to
do
how
big
After you've made company commander or the he is. Now, we had some rules
156
about
that.
If
rifles, it's
if
probably a platoon;
rifles,
you hear
It is
a mortar,
not smart for a platoon to attack a battalion. You'll just lose the
Bau Bang against Paul Gorman's battalion probe around and find the general configuration of the position, and determine whether it's fortified or not, then report back to the next higher headquarters. That way you don't get so enmeshed that you can't shoot at it, or you can't drop a bomb on it. The best thing to do would be to bring up more force and try to surround it, but don't surround it too tightly; that way you can still bomb it. Now, we often tried to do that. Sometimes we made a real mess of it. Sometimes everything went wrong. By the way, the VC decided not to attack Paul Gorman. They were smart. He was loaded for bear. So, those are the big differences. would say that in fighting Russians, or fighting Germans, or fighting in Europe, it should be a very rare thing when you attack right up the hill into the teeth of the defense. Remember, he has a large advantage just because he's down, camouflaged and waiting, while you're up, exposed and moving. You can't see him but he can see you! So, you don't want to fight under those circumstances if you can avoid it. You'd rather be down and waiting for him to move up. That's why if you get behind him and force him to move, you reverse the whole situation. But, in Vietnam that was very difficult to do. You might get behind him but he'd just sneak off to the flank and disappear.
platoon.
We
should do
like
the Viet
Cong
did at
INTERVIEWER: Many
suggesting.
times
in
Vietnam
we
just
GEN DEPUY:
Well,
we
might as well
talk
believe
it
was
on the 25th of August. Suffice it to say that Bill Mullen's patrol got into the middle of a VC base camp, and then his company went in to rescue the patrol, and his battalion came to reinforce him,
and then,
in
brought
in
other battalions. Paul Gorman's battalion, the 1st of the 26th Infantry,
1st Battalion, 16th Infantry,
came
came
in
all
the
way
across from
tried to
Lai
came
We
lot
tried to get
all
patrol
of
enemy.
It
move was only partially successful. "Goony" Wallace's move was a disaster. Elmer Pendleton was positioned okay, but they didn't go out his way. The 1st of the 2nd Infantry, when came in, was not well in hand. presided over this very gory and unsuccessful operation. The VC made monkeys of us. We had a cavalry troop that was in there. We had an APC sitting partly in the bunkers, and we had people in so close that when Paul and others brought in NAPALM, it burned the map right out of his hand. It was just a long day.
it
I
INTERVIEWER: Well, was, but the way actually unfolded the patrol got into the base camp and hollered for help. We got artillery for them right away and then proceeded to try to reinforce them. When my company got into the base camp mounted on a platoon from the 4th Cavalry, maybe even two platoons, we actually were in a different part of the base camp from where the patrol was at. But, we were in The VC weren't! They had run away to fight
it
it
it.
157
Close
air
support
was
frequently available to
somewhere
else
it.
when
they heard us
come
in.
So,
really,
we owned
the base
I
camp
left
then, or at
least pieces of
but
we
two platoons
the 4th
realized
we
We
got
down
swamp and
man
left in
when when we
We then went back to the base camp and actually, we were in pretty and around our piece of the base camp. But, two things happened. First, from an overall perspective, which proves every point that you've ever tried to make about the things a company commander has to do in the middle of a big scrap, could only tend to first things first. was trying to coordinate a lot of things and was getting no help. The other problem was that the cavalry troop commander on the scene had flipped his lid. It was about his third big fight. didn't recognize it at the time, probably because of being so busy, but we could have gotten a lot more mileage out of those guys. Anyway, there were all kinds of people trying to help but because of all of them trying to talk on the radio at the same time, they were worse than no help at all. And, remember trying to talk to you, personally. thought could get through that way. wanted to tell my division commander that we were in contact with something big. We didn't know what it was, but it was big. And secondly, that we were okay and to go ahead and try the doughnut thing. Well, I'm happy to discover that you tried to do just that. have thought all along that these companies which kept coming in which was nice to see screwed up all of the fire support, and made a bit of a mess of it. While we're on the subject, one of the outcomes of the thing was the NAPALM strike which you referred to earlier. don't know if anyone ever told you what really happened, but watched that pod of NAPALM sail off of the airplane. Now, there was a large tree there and the pod hit that tree and instead of following the flight path of the plane
VC
had come back.
good
control of the
mess
in
why
it
position.
158
GEN DEPUY:Totheleft?
INTERVIEWER:
the things that
I
It
burned the
map
One
of
was always
very proud of
was
that
when
example of close air support, you sprang to the Air Force's defense. Now, I've been told that you actually accepted full responsibility for what happened. At the time, think people were throwing around numbers like 40 who were killed by the NAPALM. A reporter saw it happen and drew the inference that we had killed our own people
word, by the press over
this disasterous
I
with
NAPALM.
don't think
we
killed
anybody.
GEN DEPUY:
Force commander,
came up
Momyer, who was the Seventh Air met him back at the brigade CP. He said
1st Division.
all
I
with that.
any ordnance within 500 yards of the And, he said, "Well, I've been getting
told
him that
we
saw Spike Momyer two days ago and we talked about this incident. So, said, "What can do to help you?" He said, "Well, you've got to get the press off my back." So, went down the next night to Saigon, to what they called the 5:00 o'clock follies, and told all the reporters what had happened, and said that the Air Force dropped their bombs and NAPALM exactly where we had asked them to. If anybody got hurt as a result of that, then we took full responsibility for it. wanted them all to know that and to get off the Air Force's back. told them that if they wanted to get on anybody's back, then to get on ours. So, did that, and that kept the Air Force more or less
I I I
I
of that fight
was
that
two
or three prisoners
were captured.
his information
fires
crescendo so that you could drive the Phu Loi Battalion to the point where they would much
wonder
if
GEN
DEPUY:
Gorman was
Song Be
Phu
the
Loi
little
was marked up with various and sundry pieces of information. It actually contained the wounded and killed on it, and so on. Paul Gorman, who became the G-3 after that battle, was the man who took it on as a personal project with my full and enthusiastic approval to round up the Phu Loi Battalion. He was the brains behind all of that. He was working an agent or two who were supposedly talking to the commander, who was reported to be a great big fellow. Several times Paul thought that the battalion was about to
that plantation house.
The
roster
artillery fire
in
maybe they were smarter than we were. We're back here and
they're
over there.
INTERVIEWER:
First,
earlier
statements
who actually did the fighting in World War would you make that same analysis about Vietnam? Was the percentage about the same, or was better?
about the percentage of people
it
159
GEN DEPUY:
It
was
better but
don't
know the
percentages.
I'd
be
willing to
reasons it was better was because the leadership mixture was higher. We had better company commanders and better sergeants in the earlier part of the war. As said, don't know what the percentage was but my guess is that 50 percent would be very, very good. I'd say that 50 percent would be high. hope they got up to that. "Slam" Marshall measured it in Korea. think that in World War II, it was 25 percent, and in Korea "Slam" thought that it got up to 40 or 50 percent.*
I
INTERVIEWER: know that he told the story about soldiers who didn't fire their rifles but just got down in the holes, and about soldiers who occasionally threw grenades but didn't pull the pins.
I
GEN DEPUY:
over half of the
Well, even
in
the best airborne battalion that went across the Carentan Causeway,
men
INTERVIEWER: Were
that
commander
came as
a surprise? In other
really
expect might
happen
not surprised at the high proficiency of the VC and the NVA, because during my two years as J-3 down at MACV, had already formed a very good opinion of them. guess my biggest surprise, and this was a surprise in which have lots of company, was that the North
I I
Vietnamese and the Viet Cong would continue the war despite the punishment they were taking. guess should have expected that. guess should have studied human nature and the history of Vietnam and of revolutions and should have known it, but didn't. really thought that the kind of pressure they were under would cause them to perhaps knock off the war for awhile, as a minimum, or even give up and go back north. understand that from 1965 to '69 they lost over 600,000 men. But, was completely wrong on that. That was a surprise. guess was surprised a little bit, too, after took over the division, about the difficulty we had thought we were going to hit. They were more in finding the VC. We hit more dry holes than elusive than had expected. They controlled the battle better. They were the ones who usually decided whether or not there would be a fight. They were going to attack Soui Da. They were going to attack Loc Ninh. They were going to attack An Loc. By the way, these were campaign plans, not battle plans. We got around somehow and engaged them, but they could have said no
I
I
any point. think when the American Army looked for them during much of Abe's tour there, and didn't find them, again, they were making all the decisions. That is inherent in such a war. The enemy was smart. He wanted to win, not lose battles. He rarely charged into our killing zones. If he didn't like the odds he withdrew into Cambodia or otherwise evaded us.
at
I
INTERVIEWER: General Marshall, S.L.A. time, how much longer we had to win the
terms of our staying power.
same
in
me
that
*For a discussion concerning the percentage of infantrymen firing their personal weapons in Korea, see S.L.A. Marshall, "Commentary on Infantry Operations and Weapons Usage in Korea," Operations Research Office Report, 0R0-R13: Project DOUGHBOY (Chevy Chase: The John Hopkins University, 1951).
160
GEN DEPUY:
Well,
did.
American
in
people would put up with the war for very long, given television, and given what
the press from the United States. But, the big surprise
to avoid
was reading
was that the VC and N VA were simply able enough direct confrontations that they were able to survive. They metered out their casualties, and when the casualties were getting too high, as for example in 1966 and '67, and then again, during and after TET, they simply backed off and waited. They came back later, under circumstances in which they could afford to sustain more casualties. Now, wish that we had all been smart enough to say in 1965, when we went in, "That's what they are going to do to us." If we had been that smart then maybe we wouldn't have gone in. We did intervene on behalf of a very weak and dubious regime, albeit one better than communism. Still, it was very dubious in terms of political weight and meaning. But, don't remember anybody saying that, do you? Not even the experts, the scholastics, or the academics said that. Oh, there was one who did, Francois
I
I
Sully,
who
French.
now dead. Now, the reason he did is because he had been through before with the He told me and he told others. He said, "You're never going to win it. You're not going to
is
it
be able to find them. You're going to thrash around and you're only going to fight the battles that
He wasn't right in every detail, but he was right in net and sum. What we also didn't anticipate was the massive intervention of the North Vietnamese Army. In 1965 who would have thought that the North Vietnamese would have 23 divisions in South Vietnam by 1975? They even replaced the casualties in VC units at the local level.
they win." Well, he wasn't quite
right.
INTERVIEWER: Sir Robert Thompson said that we came so close to winning that it's really we didn't. When we pulled out, had we just continued to supply the South Vietnamese at a tolerable rate then they would have maintained the struggle, but we didn't. So,
amazing that
they no longer had the
to using.*
artillery
or
lift
capability necessary.
They
didn't
firepower advantages that they had not only learned to use, but that they had grown accustomed
GEN DEPUY: Well, you have to have mobility and firepower in a war like that. In other words, if you want to go back and fight it like the French did, you can, but you will lose. So, we pulled the wherewithal out from under them. Whether they could have done it all alone, even with the resources, just don't know. But, they certainly never had a fair try once we pulled out our tactical
I
support.
Army
in
the
ball
if
game
if
with
all
these
battlefield
was
Now,
on up
in
was
a government,
and
the
Army
could
the
VC
ARVN
GEN DEPUY:
made
it
alone, even
we had
left
The reason hesitate to say that the Vietnamese could have them with about the same mixture the helicopters, aircraft,
I
*Sir Robert
at the
US Army War
161
and artillery is because of the number of divisions that the North Vietnamese eventually committed. think it exceeded the elastic limits of the South Vietnamese. But, we did make a terrible mistake when we cut the legs off from under them. In the larger context think the only to establish way the war could have been won was a defensive line from the South China Sea to the Mekong along Route 9 and physically prevent the North Vietnamese from infiltrating supplies and units to the south. General Westmoreland proposed such a scheme in 1965 and 1966, but he was turned down.
I
INTERVIEWER:
Continuing on with
is
your appraisal of
gruesome way of accounting, but there didn't seem to be any other way to keep track of the progress being made. On the one hand, the intelligence people tried to estimate the size of the enemy force at all levels, from regular or main forces, down through guerrillas. Then they subtracted from that the so-called body count and "Chieu Hois." believe that problems arose with the body count in certain units. You may recall that the Rhodesians deal in body count. Even in Ireland, the British keep track of it. think it's inevitable that people will do that. Now, if units compete for body count, and they inflate them, then that's a corruption of the system. So, think it's inevitable that there will be some kind of counting of enemy casualties, and that automatically brings you into an area of potential abuse.
It is
GEN DEPUY:
INTERVIEWER:
Division?
in
GEN DEPUY:
When was
I
it
later
there
really
wasn't too
much
it
think
that our
in
it.
inflation factor
didn't think
was very
important.
INTERVIEWER:
GEN DEPUY:
No,
did not.
add that that's the way it was perceived down at the battalion level. We were never bugged about body count. Sir, please share with us the prerequisites that you used when you assessed someone's potential to be a battalion or brigade commander?
INTERVIEWER:
I'd like
to
GEN DEPUY:
Well,
think the
first
company commander
*This
or a division
commander,
attention to detail;
is
1979, at his
home
in
Highfield, Virginia.
USA Retired. This interview was conducted on 23 April The interviewers were Lieutenant Colonels William J. Mullen and Romie L.
Brownlee.
162
type
it
may
be,
enemy; being practical; and having a good firm grip on the and at whatever level, from division all the way down to company.
In
unit,
whatever
INTERVIEWER:
constraints
your management of the war as a division commander, were you under any
imposed
in
by
the
Commander,
US
Military
Assistance
Command,
Vietnam
(COMUSMACV),
terms of holding
down
friendly casualties?
GEN DEPUY:
was from the
who came
critical
Phuoc Tuy Province.* agreed with him that it was most unfortunate. But, it in war that was unavoidable if you are going to be aggressive. That balance between aggressiveness and casualties is the agonizing role faced by any commander, whether he is a company commander or a division commander. He must be judged on the longterm averages, think, rather than on any one little episode. With respect to General Johnson, you must understand that he was devoted to the concept of pacification. He liked what he saw in the 25th Division under Fred Weyand. You will recall that the 25th Division was deployed between the Saigon River, which was our southern boundary, and the Oriental River, which came into Saigon from the Parrot's Beak. This area was heavily populated. Weyand was correct in his emphasis on pacification and security. On
suffered
we had
was
the
line, Lai
Khe
of
Cambodian border on the west and north, as far of the 25th Division's AO. regarded it as my job, my mission, to keep the 9th VC Division back in the jungle to engage it continuously, to destroy it if possible, and to keep it out of the populated areas. While commanded the 1st Division we succeeded in that mission completely. The 9th VC Division never penetrated into the populated area during 1966 or early 1967. By the way, this was the tactical purpose of "Search and Destroy" operations.
I I
what we had was went all the way to the east as Song Be. Our AO was ten times the size
civilian
INTERVIEWER:
Later on
in
in
Vietnam was
my
Vietnamese conflict, before the Americans came in, it is understanding that pacification was getting cranked up, but when Diem fell, and a series of
influx of the
became second in importance to the bigger war. During the time of the buildup, when you were commanding the 1st Division, the division had its own pacification effort. Please describe that
effort in
terms of the guidance that you were given, the objectives that you were trying to reach,
who were
involved?**
World War
*General Harold K. Johnson, deceased, was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Infantry, in 1933. Prior to II, General Johnson served with the 57th Infantry, Philippine Scouts. Captured at fall of Bataan in 1942, he participated in the Bataan death march and was imprisoned until 1945. During the Korean conflict, General Johnson commanded the 5th Cavalry and the 8th Cavalry Regiments, 1st Cavalry Division. Subsequent assignments included duty as Commandant, Command and General Staff College (1960-63); Deputy Chief of Staff for Military Operations
(1963-64);
USGPO,
1979).
163
GEN DEPUY:
Cong
force
Let
me answer the
in
its
earlier part of
your question.
involved
in
what
they called the Strategic Hamlet Program, strongly supported by the US, the growth of the Viet
was
still
South Vietnam.
districts.
was down
in
The
were found at the provincial level, although the beginnings of some main force units appeared in War Zones C and D. Then, when Diem was overthrown, the government became disorganized and relatively less effective. The Strategic Hamlet Program was thought to have been a failure, and the emphasis swung to the ARVN, not because someone decided to drop pacification and go to big units but because the opposition organized regiments and divisions and began to beat the hell out of the ARVN. That's why we intervened with US troops. There is a lot of rubbish available on this subject, so beware! For a period from the end of 1964 until 1967, maybe even beyond that, the emphasis was clearly on main forces ours and theirs. Then, our government, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), the Agency for International Development (AID), the Civil Operations and Revolutionary Development Support (CORDS) organization, and the government of Vietnam began to get better organized and were once again able to address pacification. Once again, pacification began to take on an added importance and a larger role. Within the 1st Division area we were in an area that was less populated than were the areas where the divisions in the Delta, or around Saigon, or the 25th Division, or the divisions up in the northern coastal area such as the Americal were located. You will recall that our AO included a lot of jungle and little population; nonetheless, we did recognize that success eventually would depend on the quality of the ARVN, and in our case, on the 5th Division, on the provincial regional forces, on the district and village level, on the popular forces, and on all of the programs that were then being supported. So, in order to work with the Vietnamese, we established an organization under Colonel Bobby Schweitzer, called HELPER the name itself indicating the purpose. This was a way, we hoped, by which we would be able to work with all of those echelons of the Vietnamese, and in return, we could obtain intelligence from them. In that way we would be more effective in supporting them at every level supporting them with military operations, supporting them with civic action, and in supporting their medical, construction, and propaganda efforts, and so on. And, in the case of Colonel Schweitzer, we had the perfect man. He spoke Vietnamese, was the bravest man ever met, was a man of enormous initiative and energy, was wounded a number of times, and had the confidence of the Vietnamese at every level to the extent that they would assign forces to him at his request without his even telling them what he was going to use them for. And, there would be no intelligence leaks of any kind. So, whatever success we had, and think the HELPER Organization had many, in strengthening the Vietnamese and in attacking the enemy's so-called infrastructure, can be credited primarily to Colonel Schweitzer and his men.*
units really
I I
VC
INTERVIEWER: The HELPER Program then, was the result of your own assessment of what was needed as opposed to something that you were directed to do in your area of operations?
*Lieutenant General Robert L. Schweitzer, USA Retired, was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Infantry in 1953. Subsequently, he transferred into the Armor branch. His assignments have included duty as Commander, 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment (1973-74); Director, Office of Defense Policy, National Security Council (1981); and Chairman, Inter-American Defense Board (1983-1986).
164
GEN DEPUY:
created, there
Yes.
We
CORDS was
it,
As
understand
under
General Talbott the 1st Division had the principle mission of supporting the Vietnamese, or
assisting in "Vietnamization" as Secretary Laird called
it.
During
it
just
INTERVIEWER: With regard to Vietnam, the press have been praised or vilified, depending on who you talk to, but there is no question about the fact they had an enormous impact on the outcome of the war. We'd like very much for you to comment on the reporters that you came in
contact with and your feelings as to their objectivity, their expertise, their knowledge of the
subject on which they were reporting, and so forth.
GEN DEPUY:
fine.
I
Well,
who worked
liked
them, and
fair
am
enough, and very brave, and as good as combat like. think the problem was
I
much
as
it
which may not hold water, but it even as early as 1962, '63, or '64, which resulted
this included a lot of
was with the editors back in the United seems to me that something happened
in
States.
have a theory
on,
fairly early
maybe
the intellectual
and
some
of the reporters
somehow
early
was on the
side of the
on and then was repeated again later, with the American public. In other words, see it as two waves. The first wave was amongst the reporters and the intellectuals coming to the conclusion that somehow or another we were guilty of some form of political aggression and were being heavyhanded about it. Conversely, there was a love affair with the idea of the brave freedom fighter in black pajamas making monkeys out of the establishment. Then, that whole thing was repeated when American troops went over. When the American troops first went over, the American people, the man on the street, was told that there was a communist menace, and that we were going over to cope with it. Therefore, at that time, the enemy was the problem. The enemy was evil. Then, through the bombardment of television and articles written by a lot of the intellectuals who had already been through this process earlier with the ARVN, it seems to me that the average American got to the point where he wondered on which side lay the purity of social justice. Now that we know about the aims and activities of the North Vietnamese and their direction of the
effort
all
of this
was nonsense.
INTERVIEWER: About the 1st Division scholarship fund, which was set up for the children of soldiers and officers who were killed in action and became a hallmark of the division, wonder if
I
*Robert W. Komer served in the Directorate of Intelligence and Office of National Estimates, Central Intelligence Agency, during the period 1947 through 1960. Subsequently, Ambassador Komer served as the Senior Staff Member, National Security Council (1961-65), and as Special Assistant to the President (1966-67). Following the completion of his tour as head of CORDS in 1968, he served as the Ambassador to Turkey (1968-69); Advisor to the Secretary of Defense for NATO Affairs (1977-79); and as Undersecretary of Defense for Policy (1979-81).
165
in
it
was
started,
and
GEN DEPUY:
may
Fund started
in
a rather interesting
way. You
recall that there was a sergeant named Nunez, who was a member of the division's Long Range Patrol Company. They went into a jungle area up on the edge of War Zone C, south of what we called the "Red Barn." It was an area in which there was a large base camp used from time to time by one of the regiments in the 9th Division, and during this particular patrol one of the regiments was there. don't remember which one, think it was the 273rd. But, in any event, the patrol ran into a real hornet's nest, and Sergeant Nunez was killed. We put some more troops in there in order to get his body back because there was a point of honor not to leave any of the 1st Division's dead in the hands of the enemy. So, we did that. In fact, we had a substantial fight in the area. Not long after that received a letter from Mrs. Nunez telling me how much her husband had loved the 1st Division, and what a great soldier, husband and father he had been, and that she hoped that her small sons would grow up in his image. She said it much better than that, but that was the message. Well, it was a very touching letter, so published it in the American Traveler, which is the 1st Division's newspaper, with the suggestion that perhaps some of us ought to pitch in some money to take care of Sergeant Nunez's sons and others like him. Well, the morning following publication of the newspaper found on my bunk a letter with quite a lot of money in it. I've forgotten how much, but several hundred dollars, and a little note that just said, "From some anonymous artillerymen." learned later that Colonel, later Brigadier General, Camp, Marlin the DIVARTY commander, had been the ringleader behind it. That was sufficiently encouraging, so we started a fund and began to collect money by any and all means, some fun and some more formal than that. But, in any event, the division commanders who followed me, particularly General Talbott, really did a tremendous job, and the fund eventually rose to about
I I I I
scholarship to Richard
Fieller,
Fieller.
scholarship certificate.
166
$900,000. Right
now
it's
is in
of
young
million
orphans
who
will, in fact,
some
we
INTERVIEWER:
comment,
if
Was
I
GEN DEPUY:
inkling that
Yes, he was. But, have to tell you that at the time didn't have the slightest Woolridge was involved with a number of fellow sergeants in the division in ripping off
I
quite a soldier.
In
World War
II
he was
in
believe it was "K" Company, and his squad leader was Sergeant Major Dobol. Another squad member was Sergeant Major Cannon. Another squad member was Sergeant
who was
killed
in
Infantry
were
in
first
Command
Sergeant Major
the
whole Army and Woolridge, the first Sergeant Major of the Army. Dobol spent 26 years in the 26th Infantry. Now, Woolridge was a fighter. He was big man; he was tough; and he was brave. like to think that he was taken in by slicker parties, but that in no way relieves him of responsibility for what he did. was sufficiently impressed with him as the sergeant major of the division, that recommended him to be the first Sergeant Major of the Army, and he was selected. And then, only later, did it develop that he was involved in all of these things, which was a great tragedy and an occasion, might say, of great sadness on my part, because did like him very much. And, it's been very painful for me ever since; I'm sure it's been more painful for him.
I I I I
I
Major General DePuy and John H. Hay at General DePuy's change of command ceremony.
South Vietnam.
167
CHAPTER
Washington
1967
-
VIM
Transition:
1972
INTERVIEWER:
Defense.
commander
became the
appreciate
it
you would comment on what your duties and responsibilities were, and any recollections that you have concerning significant activities during that time period.
We would
GEN DEPUY:
was
member
of the Office of
bosses were the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the Director of the Joint Staff. That office was started back in the Kennedy Administration when
stylish.
my
counterinsurgency was
named "Brute"
Krulak
was
the
and fascinating man. After being the and went into the newspaper business. He's a very fine, intellectually outstanding man. But, those were the days when the Special Assistant for Counterinsurgency Special Activities (SACSA), was involved in trying to figure out how the military services could do guerrilla warfare, psychological warfare, escape and invasion, and civic action around the world, and special operations the sponsorship for special operations in North Vietnam, was vested in the SACSA. However, when came back from Vietnam, General Earle Wheeler requested that serve as the SACSA. The nature of the job changed considerably because became, in fact, the assistant to the Chairman for Vietnam, in a much broader context than just counterinsurgency or special operations. became an assistant across the board, minus the air war. The air war was the province of the Joint Staff's J-3. For example, when General Wheeler went to Vietnam on that very famous trip right after TET, went with him as the only
incumbent.
a
He was
very articulate,
commander
member
Also,
I
became
member
at
the State Department. The Assistant Secretary of State for the Far East at that time
Bundy and
his principal
deputy was
Phil
Habib,
whom
had known
for
some
fine
man named
Dick Stedman,
who more
Carver. So,
in this
been on a commission to recognize the Joint Staff. The CIA member was George group we had both the civil and military side of the Pentagon represented as
General Victor H. Krulak, USMC Retired, was commissioned a second lieutenant in 1934. During World General Krulak commanded the 2nd Parachute Battalion, 1st Marine Amphibious Corps, in the Pacific Theater of Operations. During the Korean conflict, he served as the Chief of Staff, 1st Marine Division. Subsequent assignments included duty as the Commanding General, Marine Corps Recruit Depot (1959-62); and Commanding General, Fleet Marine Force, Pacific (1964-68). General Earle G. Wheeler, deceased, was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Infantry in 1932. During World War II, General Wheeler served in the 63rd Infantry Division in the European Theater of Operations. Subsequent assignments included duty as the Commander, 351st Infantry Regiment (1951-52); Commanding General, 2nd Armored Division (1958-59); Commanding General, III Corps (1959-60); Chief of Staff of the Army (1962-64); and Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff (1964-68).
* Lieutenant
II,
War
168
Department and the CIA. We also had a member from the White House, Bill Jordan, who is now an ambassador. We met at least once a week on interdepartmental policy represented the Chairman in those meetings. represented him issues concerning Vietnam. personally, and ex officio, the Joint Staff. Although not formally acknowledged, this group tried
I
I
to help their principals in preparing for the Tuesday luncheons with the President whose attendees were the equivalent of the War Cabinet. That was a rather unusual arrangement, one not written into the charter of the Joint Staff or SACSA. While was doing that also supervised the writing of the Westmoreland report, that first report which was really joint by the Commander in Chief, Pacific (CINCPAC), Admiral U.S. Grant Sharp, and Westmoreland. You may recall that it was a chronology, a very factual, straightforward kind of chronology. recruited some people like John Seigle and others, to help with that.* guess the most noteworthy thing that happened during my tour was going to Vietnam with Wheeler just after TET, during which the very controversial question arose as to whether or not General Westmoreland had asked for 206,000 additional troops, and whether TET had been a victory or a defeat. wrote the report for General Wheeler. Incidentally, as an aside, that is one of the reports that was featured in the Pentagon Papers case because Daniel Ellsberg leaked that report, together with the Pentagon Papers. That brought General Gorman and me into the Pentagon Papers trial in Los Angeles. When we came back from our post-TET visit to Vietnam, the President convened a group including General Ridgway, General Taylor, Abe Fortas, Clark Clifford, George Ball, and others. They were given briefings by Habib, Carver and myself as to what happened during TET. They met with the President the following day, and reported to the President that the war appeared to be lost. Well, in my opinion, they had already decided that before they ever came to Washington. They seized upon those parts of the briefing which supported their view and paid very little
I I I I I
must say that the briefings were not encouraging at that time. And, perhaps those of us who gave the briefings were suffering a little bit from the Washington point of view, as opposed to the field point of view, despite the fact that some of us had just been out there.** Walt Rostow, who was the President's National Security advisor, was astounded by this, and the President was furious, and demanded to know who it was who had "poisoned the well?" He was told that there were three people who had poisoned the well Habib, Carver, and DePuy. So, he said that he wanted to talk to these three fellows to determine just what it was that they had said. We went to the White House about two days later, in the afternoon, and Carver and gave the President the same briefing. Habib had wisely left town. The President, it seemed to me, wasn't paying any attention to us; he was making and taking telephone calls. They were taking
attention to the other parts.
However,
in
*William C. Westmoreland, "Report on Operations in South Vietnam: January 1964-June 1968." Report Vietnam (as of 30 June 1968) (Washington: USGPO, 1969), 68-347.
On
the
War
**Extracts of General Wheeler's 27 February 1968, "Report of Chairman, J.C.S., on Situation in Vietnam and Requirements," are contained in Mike Gravel, The Pentagon Papers: The Defense Department History of United States Decisionmaking in Vietnam, Vol. IV (Boston: Deacon Press, 1975), 546-549, and The New York Times, The
MACV
Inc., 1971),
615-621.
169
pictures. Patrick Nugent, who was President Johnson's grandson, was running around the room, and the President would pick him up from time to time and put him on his knee and give him a drink out of a Coke bottle from which the President was drinking. All in all, it was a very disorderly, disconcerting episode almost amusing in a comical sort of way if it hadn't been so important. When we were all finished, the President sort of waved us out of the room by saying, "Well, don't see anything wrong with what you told them." He didn't go on to say, guess, what was implicit, which was that maybe the briefing wasn't the problem maybe we hadn't really "poisoned the well." But, just two days later, the President announced that he would not seek reelection. guess he had made that decision before we briefed him, which may explain his
I
I I
do with perceptions of the war. Well, it was rather shocking to return to Washington and see what the perceptions were. And, there's no doubt that the perception in Washington was a gloomy one, one that pervaded all of the agencies of the government and the press. TET had been a terrible blow to Washington. As said earlier, it seemed as though people in Washington not in the government, but in the press felt that somehow or other, we were the aggressors. We were the evil ones; we were the clumsy ones; and we were the ones who used the big bombs, whereas the other side used persuasion and intellectual means. Therefore, we certainly were bound to lose, and probably ought to lose! That was the impression that had during 1968, 1969, and 1970. Now, don't forget that there were riots and burnings in Washington at that time. Of course, we now know that TET was a military victory for us and represented the virtual demise of the VC. We also know that the North Vietnamese Army was deployed to the south to win the war which could not have been won by the VC alone. However, that was by no means understood in Washington at that time. General Westmoreland tried to tell anyone who would listen that TET was a victory but no one would listen to him. His credibility was destroyed by TET and only history and time will correct that.
to
I I
INTERVIEWER: How was your job as the Special Assistant to the Chairman related to the other job you had when you were in the counterinsurgency business as an Army officer? It sounds like you were doing for the Army what you later did for the Joint Staff.
GEN DEPUY:
Not
really. In
1963 and
'64,
was
involved strictly
in
procedures for counterinsurgency. With Wheeler as the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs, the scope
included the whole war.
INTERVIEWER:
Staff, but
In
terms of organization, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs has that whole Joint
It
he doesn't have an independent brain trust working for him and feeding him advice.
really
appears that he often goes into issues meetings, or goes into see the President, or to the National
Security Council (NSC), and
is
relying
on
his
assessment which he has gained through sitting with body, or that he has picked up through his control of the Joint
people
situation,
an
the corporate
he doesn't
Staff,
who
make
170
sounds like your organization gave him that capability. You were his "in-house" experts on the Vietnam War, and he was getting something separate from what might be coming to him from the Chief of Staff of the Army, or the Chief of Naval Operations.
Chiefs of Staff.
It
GEN DEPUY:
Remember, the Chairman has the entire Joint The J-3 and the J-5 both supported him massively and continuously. Also,
the Chairman has a special group which normally consists of a colonel from each of the
and he also has a lieutenant general assistant. At one time General Goodpaster was that assistant, and at another time George Brown was. He later became Chairman. But, among other things, the Chairman's Special Group was also designed to do just what you are talking about. Now, in the case of Vietnam, they were colonels, and worked with them all the time. was a major general, I'd been in Vietnam, and had been a division commander, so had some
services
I
I
credibility.
The rest of what you say is right. The information he got from the services was of value, but it was different. General Wheeler played an enormously important role. You know, he was Chairman for over four years, and he was very close to the President. The President had confidence in him. He was the only uniformed participant in the "Tuesday Lunch," which
included the Secretary of State, the Secretary of Defense, the Chairman, the Director of CIA,
some
White House Staff, and Walt Rostow. That was the "War Cabinet", and at those Tuesday luncheons decisions were made. General Wheeler was very much a part of that, and he was also the communications link to the War Cabinet for the JCS and the command in Vietnam, although, of course, the CIA had its own sources of information, as did Rostow and the Department of State. Everybody had a line into Vietnam for intelligence. But, the military
of the
intelligence
from 1969 to 1973, you served on the Army Staff as the Assistant Vice Chief of Staff (A/VICE). What did you work on during that time period? What were the major issues, the highlights during your tour, and what do you consider to have been your main
INTERVIEWER:
GEN DEPUY:
Army
Materiel
I
Well,
in
who went
to the
Command (AMC). Let me say a word about why there was an A/VICE, and would like to refer you to an interview with Colonel, now General, Dave Doyle on the functions and background of the A/VICE. There is a very interesting genesis of the A/VICE. It started with Mr. McNamara. When McNamara came into the Pentagon, he brought with him people like Charley Hitch from the University of California, and Alain Enthoven of systems analysis fame. These people brought with them the McNamara Management System, which was the fiveyear defense program, and the system of making changes to that program, and studies as to what those changes should be, and whether or not the changes were going to be cost-effective. All of this caused a revolution in the Pentagon. All of the services were found wanting by Mr. McNamara. All of the services had something like the old General Staff concept where a lieutenant colonel would be assigned to make a study on a subject. If his paper made literal sense,
incidentally,
171
it.
It
probably wasn't a quantified study, but a judgmental study, and that was
Mr.
McNamara was
not happy with the data he got from the Army, either in quantity, or Vance went up to become the Deputy, and Mr. Resor became the Secretary
a special information channel through the Secretary of the
of
the Army, they progressively established within the Office of the Chief of Staff, a small group of
people
who became
Army
to Mr.
McNamara.** This group consisted of some very interesting people like Dave Parker, a fine officer and an engineer major general, now retired, who was the Governor of the Panama Canal Zone during his last assignment. Sam Walker worked in there at one time. Paul Phillips went up and worked there. A fellow named Stockfisch from up in Defense also worked there. Eventually, under Chesarek, this function emerged as the office of the Assistant Vice Chief of Staff. It was comprised of a program shop like the one Max Thurman now has, and his brother had before him, and Herb McChrystal, Jim Baldwin and Paul Phillips had before that. The Management Information Systems Directorate was started by Major General Hank Schrader, an engineer. Also, a special studies group was formed and was headed up at various times by Seigle, Menetrey, Bobby Montague, and "Tick" Bonesteel. Finally, and very importantly, it included a weapons systems analysis shop headed by Dick Trainor. It was a four-legged organization. The most important part was called the Force Planning and Analysis shop, but what it really became was the master program office for the Department of the Army.*** The Director of Management Information Systems tried to standardize and regulate both computer hardware and software for the Army's business systems. For the latter purpose we activated the Army's computer systems command which provided standardized management software for personnel, finance, and logistics.
'General DePuy's comment concerning Dave Doyle's interview refers to Lieutenant General David K. Doyle, then Lieutenant Colonel Doyle, Chief, Staff Management Division, Office of the Assistant Secretary of the General Staff. General Doyle conducted an "end of tour" taped interview with General DePuy concerning his service as the Assistant Vice Chief of Staff, in March 1973. Robert S. McNamara, a top executive with the Ford Motor Company for nearly 20 years, served as the Secretary of Defense during the period 1961-68. Subsequently, he served as president of the World Bank from 1968 to 1981. Charles J. Hitch, an economist and Rhodes Scholar, served as Assistant Secretary of Defense (Comptroller) during the period 1961-65. Alain C. Enthoven, also an economist and Rhodes Scholar, served as Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense (Comptroller) during the period 1961-65, and as Assistant Secretary of Defense (Systems Analysis), during the period 1965-69. For a brief description of the McNamara Management System, see Robert S. McNamara, The Essence of Security: Reflections in Office (New York: Harper & Row, Publishers, 1968), 87-104. A much more complete explanation is contained in Samuel A. Tucker (ed.), A Modern Design for Defense Decision: A McNamara-Hitch-Enthoven Anthology (Washington: Industrial College of the Armed Forces: 1966).
**Cyrus R. Vance, a career lawyer, served as General Counsel for the Department of Defense during the period 1961which he served as the Secretary of the Army from 1962 to 1963. During the period 1964 to 1967, Mr. Vance served as the Deputy Secretary of Defense. Mr. Vance also served as the Secretary of State from 1977 to 1980. Stanley R. Resor, a corporate law specialist, first served as the Under Secretary of the Army in 1965 and then as the Secretary of State from 1965 to 1971. Mr. Resor also served as the US Representative to the Mutual and Balanced Force Reduction Talks (1973-78), and as the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy (1978-79).
62, after
***For a brief overview on the creation of the Assistant Vice Chief of Staff position, see Ferdinand Techniques for Managing Men and Materiel," Army, 17 (October, 1967), 51-52.
J.
Chesarek,
"New
172
The weapons systems group supported the Vice Chief in his role as chairman of the Army's System Acquisition Review Council. It gave him advice independent of the staff. It was, therefore,
thoroughly disliked.
The
interesting thing
is
that
when became
I I
the
and 20 percent for the Vice Chief, General Palmer, and the Chief, General Westmoreland. Four years later, was proud to be able to say that worked about 80 percent of the time for the Chief and the Vice Chief, mostly the Vice Chief, and 20 percent for the Secretary.
Secretary
In
other words, as the office gained stature and confidence, the Secretary
was
willing to put
back
house, through the A/VICE and the Vice Chief, the authority and
staff during the
responsibility
Army
was
using the
A/VICE
came out
the techniques of
program management, and to this day am an ardent and enthusiastic believer in program management as the way to go for any large organization. won't bore you with all of what that means, but it's the antithesis of budget management, and it's the opposite of General Staff
I
management
A/VICE
STUDIES DIRECTORATE
MANAGEMENT
INFORMATION SYSTEMS DIRECTORATE
WEAPONS
SYSTEMS
ANALYSIS DIRECTORATE
Later
became
Jr.,
USA
Retired,
ws commissioned
second lieutenant
in
the Cavalry
in
1936. Branch
transferring to the Infantry, General Palmer served as the Chief of Staff of the 6th Infantry Division
and
later
commanded
the 63rd Infantry Regiment in the Southwest Pacific Theater during World War II. Subsequent assignments included duty as the Chief of Staff, Eighth Army (1962-63); Commanding General XVIII Airborne Corps (1966-67); Commanding General, II Field Force, Vietnam (1967); Vice Chief of Staff of the Army (1968-73); and
Commander
in
Chief, Readiness
Command
(1973-74).
173
We did a
lot in
field,
in
the studies
field.
For example,
OPMS,
more
command, was the brain child of that group. But, basically, through the program system, we managed the Army down from 1.6 million men to 800,000 in four years a traumatic period. Now, you suffered from all of those changes wherever you were at that time, and I'm sure that it seemed disorderly and hectic. On the other hand, what was going on was a demobilization. The Army was cut in half very rapidly, and yet, somehow it survived barely, but it survived. It
survived physically, and think it has now demonstrated that it has rebounded intellectually, and from a morale standpoint. But, it was a very difficult period from a management standpoint. Now, do you want to ask any subsidiary questions?
I
mentioned
in
WHEELS
study.
went on while you were the A/ VICE. Would you please comment on
that?*
GEN DEPUY:
Well,
will
because the
WHEELS
study
was
It
was
part of
men
with a loss of
We were
would fit a small Army. One of the things we went after was the number of wheeled vehicles in the Army. We discovered that there was one wheeled vehicle for every two soldiers in the active Army. That seemed to us to be unnecessarily high and also to be unnecessarily expensive. It also required a tremendous ordnance tail to maintain them. So, we went in and whacked out about 100,000 vehicles. That sounds like a lot, but that only brought us down from 460,000 to 360,000 for an Army of 800,000. And, mind you, in that Army of 800,000, 150,000 were students, transients, patients, and such. So, we still had one vehicle for every two soldiers in units and that included the Chief of Staff of the Army, every clerktypist, every sergeant major, and so on. Anyway, the WHEELS study was very unpopular with the people whose ox was gored. chaired the WHEELS study and my principal ally was Woody Vaughn, the deputy commander of AMC.
Army
INTERVIEWER: At this
A/ VICE what was your
As the
role in the
procurement of
role in
procurement as such. Procurement is a contractual arrangement involving the passing of money to contractors to buy things. But, my role as A/VICE was involved in the decision as to whether or not a particular weapon or piece of equipment would be put into the program or dropped from the program, or whether the size of the buy would be
I
GEN DEPUY:
didn't have
any
adjusted
in
order to
make
the program
fit
the total
amount
of
money we
*For further details on the WHEELS Study, see Vehicles," dated 30 August 1972.
US Army
Materiel
Command
Wheeled
174
like this:
we had
a junior
it was Jim Baldwin, was Roy Thurman, and now it's Max Thurman. They headed a thing we called the "Prince George Riding Club" which was really the Program, Guidance and Review Committee (PGRC). They went over all of these program issues at the major general level. Then we formed a Select Committee or SELCOM, which chaired. It consisted of each of the lieutenant generals of the Army staff, the Deputy Chiefs of Staff for Operations (DCSOPS), Logistics (DCSLOG), Personnel (DCSPER), and so on. This really was where most of the final tough decisions had to be made. What we were confronted with constantly was what we
who was
at another time
it
it
called
decrement exercises.
told that
In
other words,
we needed
billion,
were
we would
personnel.
billion dollars
We
had to find those places took some out of the structure, which meant
so
we
we where we
We
took
some
took
some out of depot maintenance, we took some out of research and development (R&D), we took some out of procurement, and we took some out of the Reserve components. Every decision was unpopular. There was a proponent for everything, and each proponent felt that the decisions taken were a mistake. As the chairman, tried to get and usually did get a consensus, at least on most of the
that
lost
we
some
readiness,
we
tough decisions.
When couldn't, carried it to the Vice Chief of Staff, and the Vice Chief, based on our recommendations, would simply make the decision. Now, another thing that did when we
I I
I
were
in
simply
call in
up
in
my
office
all
night
long and
make hundreds
was very arbitrary, but it had to be! At the time such actions were regarded as high-handed by many people, which led to a certain dissatisfaction with the A/VICE idea on the part of the regular staff agencies. But, it was a way to make the necessary, tough decisions rapidly during a very difficult management period. You mentioned the "Gama Goat," with regard to whether or not was involved in saying, "Go ahead with it." may have been; probably was. also was probably involved in saying go ahead with the M60A2, and with
subtract that, reduce this, scratch that out.
I
I I I
can say
all three of which have been maintenance nightmares. All were three decisions out of 10,000 decisions that we made. They may have been mistakes, but you make lots of mistakes. think if your batting average is anywhere near 80
I
is
that those
was during this time period when the thinking began concerning the reorganization of the Army which eventually resulted in the creation of the Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC) and the Forces Command (FORSCOM). Could you tell us how that started
It
INTERVIEWER:
in it?
GEN DEPUY:
The reason became involved in the reorganization of the Continental Army Command (CONARC), which was the instrument by which TRADOC was born, was during this reduction of the Army, the cutting of the Army in half, we had difficulties with the management of
Yes.
I
175
- SHERIDAN
M561
/4-ton
Gama Goat
176
CONARC. To
was
in
put
it
in
CONARC was
in
program-oriented
command.
was
decade behind
between CONARC and the various operating elements, such as the divisions, corps, the schools, and the training centers, were the Continental Armies. The Continental Armies were 90 percent civilianized, and were run almost entirely by the comptrollers. So, as said, they were budgetdriven, were highly bureaucratized, and were generally unresponsive echelons of management. CONARC divided up money generally in accordance with priorities as they saw them, and then the Continental Armies generally divided up the money to their subordinate elements, and there
the hands of civilians
in
was little visibility over the probable effects during the decision-making process. CONARC didn't know what the money was being spent for in terms of end items or actions. So, General Palmer and had an increasingly difficult time with CONARC, and when we made cuts, as we had to do in adjusting downward the training base and the force structure, all sorts of unexpected things would happen out at some division or at some post, that seemed to make no sense at all. CONARC would ladle out the money and wait for the screams. Some of those screams were
I
Department of the Army level. For example, one time Sixth Army decided to meet lower spending goals by simply firing the entire civilian work force a super "gold watch ploy". Well, needless to say, CONARC was very defensive about this criticism.* In fairness to CONARC, and the many fine officers who commanded it and served it, the size and staffing of that headquarters and its subordinate armies was never adequate to the management and command responsibilities assigned. After all, CONARC ran the whole Army in
intolerable at the
the
US
except for
AMC.
CONARC
received cuts
in
budget and
in staff
while at the
job
after
me
I
CONARC.
turned to
my studies
and Jim Edgar, and gave them be managed. So, the concept was to split CONARC in half, and take the troop part out of it and call it something else. Or, describing it the other way around, pull the schools and training centers out, and then CONARC would be divided into two commands. The next thought which automatically came along was, if you're going to create a separate schools and training command, then why not combine it with the Combat Development Command (CDC)? The interface between the CDC and the school system had always been very important but very difficult to manage. Although there was a Combat Development Agency at each school, it did not belong to the school. Also, doctrine was really the business of the schools, which taught it to the Army. So, the simple framework for the whole reorganization was just that split CONARC in two and combine the CDC with the schools and training center part, and call it something new. and
we
two sharp
lieutenant colonels,
Bill
month
to
come up
with a concept.
CONARC was
*"gold watch ploy" is a term referring to a bureaucratic maneuver by which a subordinate element deals with an unwanted reduction by offering to cut or eliminate that which it knows the higher element would never cut or abolish. The term stems from the ploy of offering to eliminate the gold watch presentation for 20 years of service. Its origin is business rather than military.
177
in
in
officers with
some
was
We
it.
into the
We took
this
approved
had a
We then went to General Westmoreland on Tuesday, and he We went to the Secretary of the Army on Wednesday and he approved Then we delay. We could not get to the Secretary of Defense, Melvin Laird, until Friday, at which
it. it.
time he approved
That
is
is
very close to
it.
In
about a week,
we
to final approval.*
had to do was figure out how we were going to solve all the details. We brought General Kalergis in and made him the head of what was called the STEADFAST Study Group, which was charged with working out the details. But, the decision had already been made. Now, that certainly makes it a lot easier to implement than doing it the other way that is,
we
and then trying to get people to agree, which is something they'll never do. Although I'm prejudiced and subjective about it, really think that (a), it was a very good idea whose time had come; (b), it was a simple idea; and (c), think it has proved itself to have been very good for the Amry. It was hard to argue with. You could argue about the details but couldn't argue about the heart of the issue.**
all
of the details,
INTERVIEWER: When
the concept
it
was
initially
briefed at
CONARC
it
headquarters
as a
how was
it
good move?
They perceived it as having their ox being gored very badly, as did the CDC. Jack Norton was commanding the CDC at the time, and went out and told him what the conclusions think after of the study were. The first reaction was "Okay." But, upon reflection, and
I
GEN DEPUY:
It's
when you
look back.
in
When George
message
Forsythe
all
was
the
commander
of the
CDC, he
formally asked
General Palmer
to have
CONARC
thought he was having a stroke of madness of some sort to suggest such a thing. But, he was
right.
He had the
when we put TRADOC training centers, and Combat Development Command, it was, in part, just a logical outgrowth of Forsythe's proposal. What George had said was that he had no power, no teeth and no assets. His command was simply too small to get things done. Now, Jack Norton really felt the same way. Jack felt that the commander of CDC should be a four-star general. Well, he was later, but only because the job was expanded into something which people felt to be more appropriate. Now, in that respect, at one time it looked as though the TRADOC commander was going to be a lieutenant general. Not because General Abrams didn't want to have a four-star general in there,
time just wasn't
But,
was
a year or
*Melvin R. Laird, a member of the House of Representatives in the 83rd through 90th Congresses, served as Secretary of Defense from 1969 to 1972. Later, he served as Domestic Advisor to the President during 1973-1974.
**For more information on STEADFAST, see James G. Army, 23 (October, 1973), 62-64.
Kalergis, "Purposeful
178
know whether
or not he could
manage
was the fact that when he picked the two commanders, General Kerwin and me, he was somewhat undecided as to which one of us ought to get which command. can see where he would have wondered about that. But, in any event, he made the In retrospect,
Also connected with that
I
decision to send
"Dutch"
to
FORSCOM
and
me
to
it
TRADOC. personally preferred TRADOC, FORSCOM. When they told me that would
I
I
command, they said, "But you probably will be a lieutenant general." told them, "It make any difference to me." then went down and became deputy commander of CON ARC for about three or four months, from March to July of 1973. But, was told before went there that on the 1st of July would become the TRADOC commander.
I
doesn't
INTERVIEWER:
Did they
Well,
"Dutch" knew
I
February, and arrived in March, but he knew it. Well, announced officially, but it had been announced unofficially.*
You
see,
*For an overview on the early months of both FORSCOM and TRADOC, see Walter T. Kerwin, Jr., "In Army Forces Command The Mission is Readiness," Army, 23 (October, 1973), 27-30; and William E. DePuy, "TRADOC: A New Command for an Old Mission," Army, 23 (October, 1973), 31-34.
179
CHAPTER
IX
Changing An Army
INTERVIEWER: When you arrived on the scene at Fort Monroe, which was to become the headquarters of TRADOC, what did you perceive to be the most critical tasks that you needed to tackle, both within your own headquarters, and those things that you wanted to do for the Army
through
TRADOC?
Well, the
GEN DEPUY:
to organize the
TRADOC
ment concepts. Fortunately, from TRADOC's standpoint, the Army echelon, the Continental Armies, were over with FORSCOM, so didn't have to bother with them. So, we decided that it would be direct management from Headquarters, TRADOC, to some 19 operating agencies,
I
which is quite a broad span of control. brought to TRADOC my four years of experience in Program Management at the departmental level and brought people along with me who were able to install that John McGiffert and later, Max Thurman, Max Noah, and people of that caliber.
I
TRADOC was
off the bat
command
had
I
in
the
Army
all
right
because of
We
we
on.
We
visibility
still
over
of our
programs. You
civilized
may
recall that
believe
is
the only
Commandant
of Fort
Commander of the Training Center at Fort Jackson, which laid out in great detail exactly what it was that he was going to do during the year with the money and the other resources that gave him. What that also forced us to do was to decide precisely what we were not going to do. If it wasn't on that piece of paper, then we weren't going to do it! But, if it was on the piece of paper, then he was going to have to do it with the resources provided. So, we negotiated the contract which ensured that we had no misunderstandings. If during the year, had to change the resources available such as pulling money away from one of my commanders, then personally went to see that commander, and we renegotiated his contract. In other words, we both agreed as to what additional things he would not do\ Therefore, there were no surprises, and we didn't do a lot of dumb things. They didn't throw a lot of "gold watches" at me in the hopes that would not take the money away from them. would just say, "I'm going to take the money away from you. Now, we're going to decide what the new
Commandant
or the
I I I
contract
will
say." They
still
still
believe that
it's
good system.
INTERVIEWER:
to do.
Please give an example of the types of things that Fort Benning would contract
GEN DEPUY:
young men
Sure.
One
would contract
in
to
do would be to handle a
certain
number
of
jump out
of airplanes
in
number
of captains
180
in
number
Noncommissioned
System (NCOES) courses. Commanders would contract to spend so much money on the repair and maintenance of facilities. They would contract to support certain peripheral activities in the general area of Fort Benning in support of reserve components, and so on. In short, everything they would have to do during the upcoming year was in the contract in sufficient detail to be binding both on them and on me.
Officer Education
INTERVIEWER:
Development
In
addition to the school and training centers you also took on the
Combat
Command and
How
did
GEN DEPUY:
Well,
all,
the
Combat
Development Agencies already were located at the schools. Although not under the command of the schools, they were involved in matters which really should have been under the jurisdiction of the schools. brought to TRADOC some strong feelings about the way the combat development process had worked, or had not worked, in the past. One of the feelings had was that they spent too much time on very long-range studies like the "Army 1990," or the "Army 2000," which
I I
it
way
that
back
2000,
the
in
close,
and
incidentally, I've
been heavily
criticized for
What
believed
was
some
intellectual process,
was more interested in whether or M-113 personnel carrier, or for the Chaparral-Vulcan. based this belief on the premise that people aren't smart enough to see what we'll need in the year 2000. The reason we aren't smart enough to do that is that the people we ask in 1979, for instance, to look at the shape of the Army
I
what the Army would look like in the year not we needed a replacement for the M-60 tank, or for
the 1979
Army they see out there is simply a reflection of some gimmicks. They'll say, "By then we'll have more lasers, and we may have atomic energy, and we may have this, and we may have that." But, the concept is all based on a 1979 consciousness and information. just don't believe humans can look to the long-range
in
Army
with
weapons requirement process. They used to have things called QMRs or Qualitative Materiel Requirements. This was a little bit like the Army in the year 2000. Somebody was supposed to sit down and visualize the perfect weapon of the
also tried to
future.
it,
you turned
the
first
it
them
to
make
one. Well,
in
anybody
in
TRADOC
CDC who can see further than the scientists or the engineers have already seen. Secondly, the QMRs constituted a hunting license for the scientists and engineers in the labs to spend a lot of money seeking a vague objective. tried to turn that around and said, "We will or the things we would like study the M-60 tank. We will say what is that we don't like about
or
I
it
it,
to
we'll ask
AMC
or
to
tell
certify that
make
the gun
fire farther,
more
armor, obtain longer ranges, improve fuel consumption, or enhance maintenance. They'll write
that
down and
all
true,
it
art.
181
Then,
we'll
will
be a
ROC
I
or a Required Operations
I
Capability."
Now,
wouldn't approve
unless the developer certified that he could do it. That way wasn't giving him a license to and could hold his feet to the fire. Those were the two areas in which tried to bring this very vague intellectual exercise back into the realm of hardware and practicality. By today's mentality am judged to have been in the Stone Age. Time will tell.
steal,
I I I
ROCs
you put together some new organizations to help you do that, like the Logistics Center and the Combined Arms Combat Development Agency (CACDA) at Leavenworth.
I
INTERVIEWER:
know
that
way, these organizations had existed before. There was a Combined Arms Combat Development Agency at Leavenworth, and there was a thing called the Personnel and Logistics Agency at Fort Lee. We took that agency and had it concentrate on logistics only
Well,
in
GEN DEPUY:
and created an Admin Center at Fort Ben Harrison to handle the personnel aspects. So, the Admin Center had finance and the Adjutant General, Leavenworth had all of the combat arms and combat support elements, and the Log Center had all of the combat service support. They were intermediate management echelons. would have to say that all of them have had trouble. They are in a rather awkward middle position between TRADOC and the operating agencies of the schools, and it's been difficult for them to find out exactly how to operate in order to find the
I
left,
at
Leavenworth.
We
went out and became the head of the put good talent out there, and think that they're
I
TRADOC
now
long
fairly well.
But,
it
is
problem
way from
the flagpole
a long
way from
the
TRADOC flagpole, a
way from
the
R&D
to
and from AMC, and from the Department of the Army. get behind the power curve.
flagpole,
INTERVIEWER: Of
TRADOC was
in
bring a
new
you
Army
Training Centers,
the Service
training as
GEN DEPUY:
centers
I
would have
I
to say that
horrified
when first visited the schools and the training by some of the things that found. For example, at the
I I
Engineer School
learn
how
would
couldn't understand
Down
at Fort
was accomplished
in
I
The
was very academic, very intellectual. don't know whose fault it was. it was a fault. There's been a big argument for years about education and training. I'm not sure what all the differences are, but do know that the Army had moved pretty much towards education and away from training. TRADOC is now criticized for going too far towards training.
didn't think
I
Some
people
182
My
conviction
is
it
that
will
TRADOC works,
training,
I
unbalanced towards education, and that as hard as only bring the thing back into balance. As between the two, education and
totally
we were
awful.
They
really
them not to be what they were about to be, but what they eventually might be. And, when they went to the advanced course, they were taught about brigades and battalions instead of about being a company commander. found that to be very interesting. It was part of the philosophy of the Mobilization Army in which everybody got a job one or two grades above where he then stood. But, we don't have a Mobilization Army; we have an 800,000 man Army! That's what we are going to go to war with. Why should we go to war with untrained platoon leaders, untrained company commanders, and untrained battalion commanders, when they have to win the first battle? So, the first thing tried to do was to bring the school system back closer to where the Israeli school system is, which is a training system that trains tank commanders, tank platoon leaders, and tank company commanders at about the time that they are going to discharge those duties. As said, this is controversial, and right now there is a bit of a reaction setting in to all of that. just hope things do not go back to where they were, which was
of the service schools taught
I
I
really
bad.
training centers really upset
Now, the
me.
CONARC
iron
was done
and the
in
first
consequence of
it
was prescribed by CONARC. There was no that was that there was also no feeling of
"It's in
responsibility.
in
No
matter
how dumb
the directive.
It's
what we were told to do." This meant that the major general commanding the training center went around and inspected only to see how well his Center was doing what CONARC had told them to do. The colonels, the lieutenant colonels, and the captains all went around with their eyes glazed over, bored to death. The drill sergeants had taken over. Over time, the drill sergeants will distort even a very clear directive, and find some little aspect of it that was never intended to be important and make that the centerpiece of some training exercise or bit of instruction. Well, it was really bad. The execution was bad, the
the Program of Instruction (POD. We're doing just
concept was bad, the training was bad, the supervision was bad, morale was bad, and motivation
in
trail." don't know comes from, but it refers to driving cattle herds from Texas to Colorado, or from Oregon to Colorado. That was the mentality that pervaded the training centers. The cadre were just getting one bunch of cattle through, and then another bunch of cattle would come along
to be
lot
little
effort
to teach.
was just an
effort to get
what
was
me
"Each of you major generals running a training center is now goes on that's wrong or dumb, stop it, and change it. Do what's smart, and later." told them, "I don't ever want to be told by you or any of your colonels, captains,
say,
totally responsible.
I
If
183
dumb, or that find out is dumb, because you were told to do it. From now on you are going to do only what you think is right." Well, that had quite an impact. Now, one of the impacts that it had was that they all
lieutenant colonels, or sergeants, that you're doing something that's
I
and they thought up all sorts of marvelous new things to do, and marvelous new ways of doing it. Suddenly, they were enthusiastic. They now had a mansized job to do, and they couldn't cover up anymore. In my opinion, it turned the whole situation
started doing things
better,
much
around.
Recently, the
Army
got
all
excited
when
You may be
You
may
trail"
Army pays
too high.
It
results in
type training.
last
I
and biggest part of all of this is the whole philosophy of training. There have to talk about General Gorman, because General Gorman and the others who were with him on the Combat Arms Training Board (CATB) at Fort Benning, brought to TRADOC a new concept of performance-oriented training, which is a systematic way to go about the setting of training objectives through the careful determination of tasks, conditions, and standards. They also brought to training some exciting new technology and procedures. It took me some time, frankly, saw the great benefit and logic of to digest it all myself after came to TRADOC. But, finally, what they were doing and fully supported it. The credit for the concept really has to go to General Gorman and to a number of other people who worked with him, both earlier and later. They are the ones who articulated this concept, and who were the leading proponents of it in the Army.*
I
I
Now, the
General
Paul
F.
Gorman
USA
page 149.
184
INTERVIEWER:
Skill
GEN DEPUY:
ARTEP
performance-
and then, the establishment of standards against which you trained the soldier, and the conditions under which he had to perform the tasks before he was then ready to go on to the next step. You can apply that system would like to to almost any kind of Army training, however complex even tactical training. say that in addition to General Gorman, there was General Seigle who took over CATB, and Bill Hilsman and George Stotser, who also had CATB, and certainly eminent among all of the contributors to the theory, were Frank Hart and Bob Dirmeyer. Now, there are many others, but haven't the time or the memory to name them all. There were a lot of very bright people who became the apostles and disciples of Gorman. Some of them, suppose, were the ones who put it in Gorman's head in the first place and who have carried the ball in what I'm sure is the right direction for the Army.*
oriented training of
kinds. Plus the front-end analysis of the tasks,
I
I I
INTERVIEWER: What
corps?
is
your view on the classic issue of training versus education of the Officer
GEN DEPUY:
have
it
right
because
me
to take
between the cracks when General Abrams eliminated the "Army" echelon because he believed that Army Groups would control the corps and that such Army Groups would be multinational. Well, told General Rogers that would do that but that needed the Army War College as the instrument. That would leave training and doctrinal issues
echelons above corps. That doctrine
fell
I I
*Ma/or General John W. Seigle, USA Retired, was commissioned a second lieutenant of Armor in 1953. In Vietnam he commanded the 1st Squadron, 4th Cavalry, 1st Infantry Division (1967-68). Other assignments included duty as the President, CATB (1972-73); Commander, 2d Armored Cavalry Regiment (1973-74); Deputy Chief of Staff for Training, TRADOC (1977-79); and Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations, USAREUR (1980-82). Lieutenant General William J. Hilsman, USA Retired, was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Signal Corps in 1954. Other assignments included duty as Commander, 144th Signal Battalion, 4th Armored Division (1969-71); President, CATB (1973); Commander, 1st Signal Group (1973-75); Commanding General, The Signal Center and Commandant, The Signal School (1977-80); and Director, Defense Communications Agency (1980-83). Major General George R. Stotser, USA, was commissioned a second lieutenant of Armor in 1956. He commanded the 1st Battalion, 12th Cavalry, 1st Cavalry Division (Airmobile) in 1969. Other assignments have included duty as Commander, 1st Brigade, 1st Armored Division (1974-76); President, CATB (1976-77); and Commander, 2d Armored Division (Forward) (198283). General Stotser is presently serving as Commanding General, 3rd Infantry Division (1985). Colonel Franklin A. Hart, USA Retired, was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Infantry in 1954. In addition to commanding the 4th Battalion, 39th Infantry, 9th Infantry Division in Vietnam (1968-69), he served as a member of the CATB (1972-74); as President, CATB (1974); as Assistant Deputy Chief of Staff for Training (Plans and Projects), TRADOC (1975-79); and as Commander, Army Research Institute of Behavior and Social Sciences (1979-81). Colonel Robert P. Dirmeyer, USA Retired, was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Field Artillery in 1955. Assignments included command of the 2d Battalion, 4th Artillery, 9th Infantry Division, in Vietnam (1968-69); command of the 2d Battalion, 321st Artillery (Airborne), 82d Airborne Division (1970-71); duty as a member of CATB (1972-73); as Chief, Individual Training Branch, TRADOC (1975); and as Chief, Training Management Institute, TRADOC, with duty station at Fort Eustis,
Virginia (1975-77).
185
and corps
at
theaters at Carlisle.
that that
As you can
see, there
Leavenworth, and for corps, armies, army groups, and would have been overlap at the corps level. He thought
made sense but the Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations and Plans (DCSOPS), which controlled the Army War College (AWC), was horrified at the thought that TRADOC might get its hands on his "educational" institution. suppose he thought that Gorman and would send drill
I I
any event, TRADOC did not get the AWC. The void in doctrine is being cobbled together slowly by a conglomerate of DCSOPS, Leavenworth, Carlisle, and the National War College (NWC). As to your original question, suppose that training deals with "how to perform" a task or a group of tasks within a function, such as how to (1) assemble, (2) clean, (3) load, (4) aim, and (5) fire a rifle. The performance test would be whether or not the bullet hit the
sergeants to
Carlisle. In
I
target, with
all
subsumed in the process. Education, on the other perhaps, more than the lower ranks, to put the function
And, the context is almost infinite as tactical and operational dimensions
rifle
at
an enemy
in
combat
to the strategic, political, historical, psychological, and ethical spheres as well. In shorthand,
training tells us
tells
us
TRADOC?
guess
GEN DEPUY:
would say that
Well,
we
system so that
it
had
a larger training as
educational aspect to
that. But, there are
Gorman and
I
and there are those who feel that we should educate officers and train soldiers. think that is wrong. think you should train a man for the job he is going to perform, and then you can educate him so that the intellectual and moral environment in which he pursues his particular job will be enhanced. That way you will have safeguards against stupidity, immorality, illegality, and so on. But, believe you have to train a gunner to shoot. You have to train a squad leader to lead a squad. You have to train a man to be a tank commander. You have to train a man to be a tank platoon leader, and incidentally, he shouldn't be a tank platoon leader unless he first has been trained to be a tank commander because a tank platoon leader is also a tank commander. think you train a company commander. You don't educate him, you train him to use tanks and tank platoons and infantry and antitank guided missiles. You teach him all about those things, about their tactical employment and about the organizations which employ them. Also, you teach him how to train the people inside his organization. believe you train a battalion commander to operate a battalion. You look at a manual for a battalion task force, tank or mech, and think you
those
who
was
a mistake,
like
car
You buy
booklet that
tells
and you get an operator's manual. you how to put it together and
manuals on the combat operations of a platoon, or a company, or a battalion, are, in fact, the operator's manuals, and the lieutenant colonels, or the captains, or the lieutenants, or the sergeants, need to be trained to get the most out of the mechanisms they have inherited.
think that the field
186
Now,
system,
for unit
TRADOC did a
in
lot in
in
in
the
NCO
school
the
Army
commanders.
system. The
Israeli
system
is
almost purely training. They don't have the time or the structure to educate for
some
future war.
start
I
is
effort.
I
think
is
also appropriate
don't think that any other and necessary because of the complexity of modern weapons. approach can cope with the modern battlefield and modern weapons. So, TRADOC moved the pendulum toward the center between education and training by pushing it hard towards training.
We
did that
Not to worry
that education
officers
was stamped
out.
It
was
not.
It
was simply
I
that
up to an equal status with their education. doubt that it absolutely certain that the pendulum will swing back. Performance-oriented training is so demanding that weak sisters will begin to drift away from it and drift back to the warm embrace of vague educational goals instead of specific training tasks. You can bet your farm on it! Now, of course, with combat developments, as indicated earlier, we tried very hard to bring it back to the practical, real world, where people could understand it and do something about it. And, we tried to orient it towards Europe, which is the principal and directed mission of the Army. TRADOC was involved in the process of decision-making during weapon system development through operational test design and then, by taking the test results through analysis, and drawing judgments as to whether or not the system was cost-effective in comparison with its predecessors
I
TRADOC in
it
takes to develop a
to twelve years. But, during this period of time, there are very formalized steps during
were taking ten which the new model is tested and then the test results are analyzed to determine whether or not it is a good idea to proceed further when you compare the new weapon's actual performance against either
tank, a
new
new
new
Some
of these systems
the old
weapon
that
it
is
combat development process was sharpened up considerably, and the leverage of the user through TRADOC was increased. Now, the third area, which really falls in between the first two in a rather awkward way organizationally, is doctrine how to fight. After many experiments and much puzzling over where to put the responsibility, finally put it in a special office called the Tactical Doctrine Office, which was an appendage of my own office. understand that General Starry is going to create a separate staff section, but for the same reason. If you give it over to Combat Developments you have trouble because it gets into an area where a lot of individual weapons systems are being developed. There you don't seem to find the initiative and authority required to take new doctrinal directions. Those new initiatives almost have to come from, and with, the authority of the commander of TRADOC. That's what discovered and that's what General Starry is discovering. wasn't able to get Leavenworth to do it. Although they did a lot of good work, they just didn't seem to be able to do that. If you put it over on the training side of the house you have the same problem. So, Starry is deciding now what decided a long time ago, which is, if you are going to change the doctrine by which the Army fights, which is enormously important and controversial, the higher level commanders must be directly involved. So, after the Arab-Israeli war, and after
without saying a whole
lot
187
new weapons systems, we embarked on updating the doctrine for the fighting elements of the Army. Our aim was to put out 40 or more "How to Fight" manuals, which would tell everyone in the combat and combat support arms how the Army would fight on the modern battlefield at every echelon from the weapons crew up through the division. That effort is about 60 to 70 percent complete now. The first manual was FM 100-5, and all the others in some way or
our examination of
other, are related to, or derived from
FM
100-5.
IlRlttP
"How to FM FM FM
100-5
71-1
Fight" Manuals
Operations
Company Team
71-2
more weapons oriented than any doctrine we have ever had before. It starts with weapons and then goes to the enemy, and then looks for the best solution for applying the weapons against the enemy in accordance with whatever mission you may have, like, for example, the defense of Europe. The doctrine in FM 1005 was influenced greatly not only by weapons but also by the difficult military-political situation facing the German Army. General Abrams and Lieutenant General Hildebrandt, the Inspektur (Chief of Staff) of the German Army, directed me and Lieutenant General von Reichert, the German Army's Vice Chief of Staff, to conduct a series of staff talks to harmonize US and German doctrine, procedures and, if possible, weapons requirements. Very simply, the German problem is that West Germany has very little depth in which to conduct mobile operations. The Germans are
It
was
it
was
evolutionary, but
it's
188
not interested
in
industrial heartland
of the Bundesrepublik which lie just a few miles from the border. Thus, with the German insistence on "Forward Defense," the military-political compromise we reached was to conduct
an "active" (read highly mobile) defense compressed into a band of terrain of perhaps 20, 30 or 40
kilometers from the border. Recently, this concept has
labeled "attrition warfare."*
criticism
US
doctrine
is
much towards
will
and
is
be argued for a
is
TRADOC.
a big testing organization, an analytical organization, a training publications and many other things, but those were the big three training advances in organization, ROTC, technique and in practicality; bringing combat development forward into the world of today's technology and getting it out of the vague distant future, while systematizing TRADOC's involvement in weapons systems acquisition; and then, lastly, updating or publishing a full new set of operating manuals for the Army.
all
Behind
of that
is
INTERVIEWER: One
you
initiated
tell
Would you
into
all
of this?
GEN DEPUY: Yes. Very simply, the new doctrine of the Army or the doctrine which is expressed in FM 100-5 and all of the derivative manuals, very clearly is based around weapons systems.
says that you study the weapons, yours and the enemy's, and then you look for
optimizing the
It
ways of employment of your new weapons and minimizing your vulnerability to his weapons. Now, what we are confronted with is that new weapons are arriving in great numbers, all within a very short period of time. If you believe what the doctrine says, which is that tactics are based on weapons applied against a particular enemy for a particular purpose, then when you get new weapons you have to take a look at your organization and your tactics.** Division 86, which is what they now call it we called it the Division Restructuring Study is an effort to adapt our organization to new weapons which are more lethal and more complex.*** For example, the XM-1 tank, the Infantry Fighting Vehicle (ITV), the Improved Tow Vehicle (ITV), the new air defense weapons, the attack helicopter, advanced tactical fighters, new artillery ammunition, TACFIRE, and other automated control systems, are, in most cases, as complicated or more complicated than World War aircraft, which were all flown by officers. say it is not too great a stretch of the imagination to have only lieutenants in XM-1 tanks. could
II
I
I
John
*These criticisms and an excellent discussion of the evolution of Army doctrine during L. Romjue, From Active Defense to Airland Battle: The Development of (Washington: USGPO, 1984).
**This discussion refers to the 1976 version of
Army
Doctrine,
contained in 1973-1982
FM
100-5.
The
Field
in
1982.
***For an overview of the evolution of Division 86, see John US Army Training and Doctrine Command, 1982).
L.
Romjue,
189
justify that.
would suggest that we put warrant officers in as an immediate solution just to raise the quality of the tank commanders. If we already are having trouble in achieving full performance with the weapons we have today, and maintain that we are having great difficulty in extracting the full potential from our weapons and from our organization, then we have to look for solutions. There are two areas of solution and Division 86 is simply a reflection of that search. The first question we must answer is whether or not we intend to raise the quality of the operators to match the quality of the weapons. We just don't have the last surviving corporal in charge of a XM-1 if you want to exploit the capabilities of the XM-1 any more than the Air Force would put the oldest surviving mechanic in the cockpit of an F-15. The Air Force would never consider it, yet we consider it every day. We even take people out of the orderly room and the mess hall and put them in tanks. The Air Force doesn't do that. In the Army you buy quality by rank. If you can only get so much quality for $400 a month and you need to pay $1500 a month for the kind of quality you need, then what you are talking about is a lieutenant. If you are willing to pay $800 a month then you are talking about a sergeant. So, in the Army you get quality by raising the rank or increasing
I
am
we do
it
right
now. Frankly,
weapons, both tactically and mechanically, the second thing you want to do is simplify the tactical training and maintenance responsibilities of the platoon leaders, company commanders and battalion commanders, to a level where they can cope with it. Right now they can't cope with it. They have too many men to be trained on too many weapons, in too short a time, with too many diversions. We know from testing that the difference between a well-trained crew and an average crew is very great. It can range from 20 to 50 percent of effectiveness, sometimes even more. So, that means you can get more combat effectiveness by increasing the performance of the unit than you ever could by putting new weapons in it. Well, that's what Division 86 is all about an effort to improve performance by improving quality, by increasing the leadership mix, and through simplification by reducing the size of units so that the tactical and technical training comes back down to manageable levels.
of the complexity of these
Now, because
written extensively
in
in
on finding the essence of how the United States is to successfully conduct warfare in the future. wonder if you would outline for us the lessons learned from the Arab-Israeli War of 1973, and what you took from that
of periodicals. All of the
work you
did at
war
that
is
Army.*
GEIM
DEPUY:
if
Well, the
first
War
did
was
springboard,
you
will,
own
doctrine.
Some
of the evidence
coming out
of that
short period of
war was awesome. For example, the losses of equipment that occurred in a time, and the fact that the Israelis ran more tanks through their maintenance
*Among the numerous accounts of the Arab-Israeli conflict of 1973, some of the more readable include: Avraham Adan, On the Banks of the Suez: An Israeli General's Personal Account of the Yom Kippur War (San Rafael: Presidio Press, 1980); Chaim Herzog, The War of Attonement: October, 1973 (Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1975); The Insight Team of the London Sunday Times The Yom Kippur War (Garden City: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1974); and Edgar O'Ballance, No Victor, No Vanquished: The Yom Kippur War (San Rafael: Presidio Press, 1978).
190
number of tanks they possessed at the beginning of the very short war. The lethality and range of weapons and the tremendous importance of well-trained crews and tactical commanders, as evidenced by the performance in certain areas of small numbers of Israelis against large numbers of say, Syrians. It also fed into our training philosophy which discussed earlier the training of a platoon leader, a tank commander, a gunner, and a battalion commander. It helped us argue for more training within the Army establishment. Now, as far as "how to fight" goes, the big lessons applied to the lower echelons: the crew
system than the
total
I
armored force; the mine-clearing techniques; and the assault of fortified positions. There wasn't anything that happened in the Arab-Israeli War that is in conflict with the doctrine which now has been published; but, it would be incorrect to say that the Arab-Israeli War was the sole foundation upon which that doctrine was built. In fact, there are aspects of the
drills
of the Israeli
current
US Army
doctrine which the Israelis do not consider directly applicable to their tactical
one being elasticity or the active defense. They believe that they are perfectly able to on their frontiers and although they had trouble doing so in the Sinai, they essentially defend pulled it off in the Golan region. So, there are differences.
situation,
FM
War
importance of weapons and weapons operators' proficiency and performance. As for the overall
much more from the very unique environment of NATO, which involves a two-to-one or three-to-one enemy superiority, the requirement for forward defense because of the
tactics,
political
dynamics involved,
particularly in
much depth
reserves
in
of terrain to fight
West Germany the fact of the matter is, there isn't on and there isn't much terrain to give away and lastly, as have
I
in
lot
much
larger.
it
moment
doctrine.
we
war goes on
FM
new
starts out
and discusses
weapons
characteristics. Next,
talks at
some
When FM
100-5
was written
it
was just
call
it.
In
classic
breakthrough operation.
has since
become
and that the Russians may well use a broad front attack and what now are called Operational Maneuver Groups (OMGs). It really doesn't change what you have to do, but it does make it more difficult. FM 100-5 says that the first thing you have to do is understand the enemy. You have to understand his weapons and you have to understand his tactics. Also, you have to understand your own weapons, and how to use them to their absolute maximum, and to try to minimize your vulnerability to his weapons. It says that you have to have superior intelligence or information on the enemy if you are outnumbered. You have to have intelligence good enough and soon enough so that you have at least a slight jump on your enemy, something that is very
difficult to
accomplish.
or
As he concentrates, whether
120
little
in
or 30
little
concentrations,
even
concentrations,
you
sensors and
reconnaissance, and your target acquisition systems, at least the general location of his mass and
the direction of his
movement. Then, using your own mobility, you can begin to concentrate To do that you need all of your ground mobility, all
to
of
191
your
of the
TAC
AIR, and
all
the
flexibility of
your
I
artillery, missiles
and rockets.
and clearly, that and corps commanders. The business of getting the Army on the right part of the battlefield and acquiring the intelligence which is needed in order to do that is the job of the generals at division and corps and above. Now, if you have been able to concentrate an adequate force quickly, then perhaps you can stop him and then counterattack to destroy him, and you can accomplish this mission well forward, which, of course, is what the Germans hope will happen.
think correctly
That
concentration
If,
concentration,
on the other hand, there has been some some deception on the enemy's
little
some
hesitation in the
hits
our
small force with a very hard blow, from a very large force, then the doctrine says that
we
have to
trade a
bit of
in
It
describes
stubborn action
trained,
how we can, in fact, fight a very if we are very good at it, very well-
have good control, understand weapons, and use those weapons at their optimum engagement ranges, and then, move so that we are always fighting battles where they are most advantageous to us and least advantageous to the other side. There are many other things that
warfare, and
I
need to be done including the synchronization of maneuver, air defense, fire support, electronic all of the combat service support, through good command and control.
would
like
is
to
end
this discussion
who
feel that
the doctrine of
the
Army
I
battle only
comes
it
to the attacker.
And, they
the
amount
of that.
I
of time, effort,
we now have on
defense.
agree with
it
all
think
it
is
too bad.
don't think
is
a formula for
winning the
not have a
war. At best,
life in
is
NATO, and
call
it,
we do
you ask the Germans why they defended for two and one tell you because the forces were almost equal, half years in and they used the rest of their forces to defeat the Russians. If you ask the Germans why they defended in Russia for two and one half years after their initial attack in World War II, they would
general offensive capability
Europe.
If
War
they would
ratio of forces,
means
of
war dictated
that.
once
me
we were
much on
the defense.
in
replied that
was.
FM
100-5,
we had one
was
the one
who
because he has to defend. The correlation of forces is such that he must. said, "If, on the other hand, you prefer to attack, go back to Chapter 1. It tells you how to do that. But, notice that you are spending all of your time on Chapter 2." So, this causes the Army some moral anguish. It hurts the feelings of soldiers to always be
reasons
I
talking
is
a yearning to attack
and to counterattack.
defensive
Incidentally, the
counterattack to destroy an
fires is
the essence
you need the forces, you need the resources, you need the ammunition, and you need the ability to sustain it. It is my judgment that the man who writes the doctrine doesn't decide how to fight any particular campaign; rather, the man who decides which part of the doctrine he is going to use is the operational commander
of the "active" defense. But, the counteroffensive
to
do
that
192
and he decides
Presently,
it
how he
all
is
whatever theater of war he happens to be in at the time. Haig and Blanchard. At one time it was Pershing, and at another time it was
is
going to fight
in
Eisenhower. They
acted
in
opposing them
and
their mission.*
you had to put your finger on two or three things that between fighting outnumbered and winning and fighting outnumbered and
If
INTERVIEWER:
losing,
what would
they be?
GEN DEPUY:
If
level,
tactical leaders
and company commanders, and the quality of our tank crews, infantry fighting vehicle crews, air defense crews, and helicopter crews, will make the difference. believe that the difference between the good unit and the bad unit is often a factor of four or five, even though they have the same number of men and the same weapons. There is no way that we can get the same degree of improved performance out of some small change in weapons as we
corps, division, brigade, battalion
I
can get through the careful selection of people, the training of people, the selection of leaders,
units.
INTERVIEWER:
the equipment.
I
You're talking now, not only of optimizing the capability of weapons, but of
all
your units.
remember when you discussed Vietnam, you were concerned with the agility of The helicopters were there and all of that, but it was the commander who could think
use that equipment
through
how to successfully
Mobility
is
GEN DEPUY:
any
two armies than it will be by differences between weapons. The difference between the M-60 tank and XM-1 tank, although important, is less important than the difference between high performance units
leadership and troop performance between the
units.
mobility yet
one of the
been directed
at the
been that
it
assumes
we do
not have.
GEN DEPUY:
Really,
it's
don't think the active defense claims that you need a mobility differential
sort
it's
it's
The
enough
for
high
enough
for concentration
because
USA Retired, see note, page 149. General George S. Blanchard, USA second lieutenant in the Infantry in 1944. During World War he served with various infantry regiments in the European Theater of Operations. Subsequent assignments included duty as the Executive to the Secretary of the Army (1964-66); Commanding General, 82nd Airborne Division (1970-72); Commanding General, VII Corps (1973-75); and Commander in Chief, US Army Europe (1975-79).
*For a biographical sketch of General Haig,
Retired,
was commissioned
II
193
moving on the ground. The flexibility in long-range artillery and missiles is good for concentration, and our mobility on the ground, the cross-country mobility of our heavy equipment, is about the same as his. So, that criticism is, think, ill-founded. would say that mental agility is more important than physical mobility. The commander who is thinking ahead, leaning forward, figuratively speaking, issuing warning orders, and having everybody right on the tips of their toes ready to move at an instant's notice to one of three or four different places, and a unit commander who can say, "Follow me," and the unit will go with him and be briefed while moving that's the kind of mobility that we need.
the other guy
is
I
I
INTERVIEWER:
doctrinal points.
and important Would you please mention those that you consider to have been significant
Sir,
lot
of concepts
developments?
World War and say that really was impressed with the fact that we saw the German soldier only on very rare occasions, nor were we able to suppress him very well. So, the first lesson learned was that he was a master at field craft at cover and concealment. Later, when looked at his positions, was impressed by the way he picked positions where his body and his head were protected from frontal fire yet he was able to defend his position no matter what we threw at him. In turn, then, was impressed with our inability to do suppression with indirect fire only. In the early days of the war we didn't use enough direct fire overwatching didn't know that word then for suppression. didn't even know the word "suppression." We used base of fire, but we didn't use enough base of fire and we weren't
I
GEN DEPUY:
think
will just
go
right to
II
it.
also
watched armored
divisions doing
what they
call
reconnaissance by
in fact,
suppression
line
wood
and
just absolutely
with
fire
and received
194
no return
fire.
So,
suppression; that
am not is why
only a believer
I
massive direct fire have been one of the greatest supporters of the Infantry Fighting
in
suppression, but
am
a believer in
it.
utility
My
conviction
to
is
that eight or nine out of ten soldiers off the streets need to be told
battlefield.
specifically
what
do on the
The
battlefield
is
a terrifying place.
It
is
an alien
environment for a normal, gentle, human being; most people are not at
will
lot
all
home on
the battlefield,
and would prefer to be elsewhere. If they have the choice between being active and inactive, they be inactive. Still, most of them will do what they are told to do. That tells me that we need a
of instructions going to the soldiers
die
all
If
happen.
It
will
down and
pretty
I
soon there
will
be no
any kind
no
firing,
no movement, no
initiative,
the attack.
that.
was impressed with the fact that the Germans always were talking a lot during You could hear them all the time issuing instructions such as go there, do this, and do On our side there was very little of that. So, what this tells me is that we need a lot of
nothing.
leadership on the battlefield and that that leadership has to be active. Otherwise,
we
will
not get
in
the battle. We'll end up with only that hardcore 10 percent fighting,
is all
is
we will
get.
is
discovered, which
that
if
we
like
we did
them
the
last
point that
my European
experience
was
futility
head-on through his killing zone where he is Those were the things really picked up there. When went to the 8th Infantry, in the early 1950s, which was my first command after the war, formalized the overwatch which now has become the doctrine of the US Army in the cavalry, the armor, and the infantry. also formalized the use of frontal cover with the foxholes dig in behind the tree, behind the rock, or pile something up in front of you, and fire at an angle. Be able to see forward if you have to, but don't fight straight forward, otherwise you will be subjected to effective frontal suppression by the enemy and you won't be able to defend your position. The next chance had with troops was with the 30th Infantry, which was the first mechanized battle group in the Army. There learned that armored warfare requires different command techniques than does foot warfare, and that you can move faster and that you should exploit that capability. You need to think ahead. Again, most units have more mobility than they can use; so, you have to have mission-type orders, to move by checkpoints, and you have to have people who are trained to move very rapidly. Also, learned a lot more about suppression while moving.
I I
I
and the homicidal aspects of strong. Vietnam bore that out again, as did Korea.
INTERVIEWER:
dissatisfaction?
Sir,
looking
do you
GEN DEPUY:
all
Well, that
if
is
would do
think
of us
would
I
we had known
is
regret that
have
that
I
had
it
to
do over again,
we either know was very good at teaching. In other words, would spend a little bit more time trying to teach people,
then what
I
don't think
think that
if
as opposed to
195
managing or directing them. Now, that is easy to say but maybe it is unrealistic; some officers are very good at teaching while others are not so good. think that might have been able to propagate my ideas more effectively if had been a little more patient with people and spent a little more time with them instead of being in such a bloody hurry. Looking back throughout all of my time in the Army, that's the one great regret have.
I I
INTERVIEWER:
lists
GEN DEPUY:
a letter
in
Well,
don't think
and
told
me that friends of
I
violating a confidence with General Hackett. He wrote me had suggested that might help him, or participate with him, don't think it had a title, but he sent me an outline and the outline
I
am
his
simply provided that the Russians would launch a surprise attack and
a very short period of time.
NATO would
be defeated
in
The purpose
of the
book was
to alert the
told
him that
our
Army
I
really
really didn't
General Hackett wrote back and said that General Benecke of the
Commander
that
it
in
German Army, a former Europe, had had somewhat the same reaction and as a
is
you have read the book you will notice very improbable. He has been criticized for
If
no defeat was inflicted on NATO. felt that a defeat would be bad for the morale of the soldiers and would not inspire the Dutch, the Danes, the Belgians, or the British, to spend more; rather, it would make it all seem even more hopeless. In any event, then did send him some notes
that. But,
I
and suggestions, some of which found their way into the chapter on V Corps. He and his colleagues, whoever they are, then turned it into an exciting battle story. You will notice that the tactics contained in the book are FM 100-5, 71-1 and 71-2 tactics, and that the corps commander becomes the USAREUR commander. That was his idea, not mine, but it was a good one. So, that's the background.
,
INTERVIEWER: One final question. After several Army development program look from the outside?
how does
the
mean that the weapon systems The short answer is frustrating. By that, acquisition process and structure are so enormously complex that industry finds it difficult to cope. The decision-making process is diversified and obscure. From inside it looked orderly and logical. From outside, it looks chaotic. For example, it is true that eventually decisions are made at or near the top by the ASARCS (Army Systems Acquisition Review Council), the DSARCS (Defense Systems Acquisition Review Council), congressional committess, or sometimes, willful
I
GEN DEPUY:
individuals
General Sir John Hackett, The Third World War: August 1985
196
industry
is
shape
and origin of the papers and studies upon which the decision-makers act. After
the decision-
makers are only as smart as the information they have. The information they have is carefully managed and metered by the staff agencies and commands upon which they depend. They are
almost
totally at the
internal
mercy of these information sources which, in turn, are vulnerable to their own is the endemic disease of large bureaucracies. know because
I I
me
When
the development
community launches
new
effort or
proposal,
knows
that
it
must show decisive improvement over the older model with the same
new scout
helicopter, etcetera.
A common
argument is that the old model has reached its technological limits and it is now necessary to start from scratch. The amusing (a cynical choice of words) fact is, that just as soon as the new model is securely lodged in the program and budget, the development community discovers marvelous
ways
You can
new replacement
comparative that
is,
Now,
this
so without jeopardizing
who suddenly saw all kinds of options five years the new product. call your attention to the M48A5 and M60A3
I
was
secure.
In this
case
is
did require a
new
tank.
Another
by the
example
is
the AH-1
D Cobra
helicopter.
The
vulnerability
decision-makers
to
the
information
control
held
development agencies is never higher than when the development agency is pushing its own design against all comers. The development commands compete with industry when they organize around some particular technology and push it through the decision process from an
"insider's" position.
The
materiel
command
agencies are
in
My
advice to the
Army
Materiel
Command
is its
it
is
to disqualify the
development command as an
it
evaluative agency
primary function
when
in
I
has
its
own
The
horse
in
the race.
is
is
its
biases.
kind of
I
"information"
then would be
which the "information" given to the high command in refutation of my charge would come from the accused. Thus, we then would re-enact the venal process one more time. In addition to disqualifying the government's development agencies as evaluators of their competitors one more step is essential. Industry must be afforded open channels to the decision-makers. These by-pass channels are essential to give decision-makers a balanced
in
will
put
its
it
will
bias
its
presentations. But, decision-makers need to hear opposite views and by-side evaluations
when
the
its
Navy owns
its
cahoots with
for
Army fears
enough
government work.
197
INTERVIEWER:
Well,
believe that
sums up what we
GEN DEPUY:
good
luck
and trouble to do
all
of this.
Retirement review
in
198
1985
AFTERTHOUGHTS
When
me
me that this oral history would be had anything to add. Reading back over the manuscript it seemed to that some subjects were not adequately or fairly covered because of the conversational
the director of the Military History Institute informed
if
I
some important
in
five
The
topic on
which
is
tactical doctrine.
have given
has been
vent to
my
concern that "maneuver doctrine" has been oversimplified and that a basically good
in
idea stands
uncritical
it
surrounded.
My
on
exposed
an
article,
"Toward
I
Balanced
Doctrine," contained
here.*
the
November 1984
issue of
Army
magazine, so
second afterthought
I
is
weapons technology.
It
understanding which
perceive
Few
subjects
On
First, let me say that the so-called Congressional Reform Movement has been the source of nonstop rubbish on this subject. Unfortunately, they have apparently convinced a large number of
is
some obvious
argument abruptly to the big lie. No reasonable man favors "runaway" that won't work, costs that cannot be borne, or machinery that demands skills not to be found in the military population. A description of the dark side of the military weapons development program, the worst examples, have been airily ascribed to the whole sincere and difficult search for excellence in the equipment to be provided the US Armed Forces forces faced with formidable opponents worldwide, opponents who do not themselves shrink from high technology. Much of the argument would be ludicrous were it not so dangerous. For example, some of the more feverish reformers yearn for the good old days of "low-tech" when our forces were equipped with P-51 fighters and SHERMAN Tanks. In their time, of course, P-51s and SHERMANS were high-tech. But, the baleful effects do not stop with such limited damage. These same worthies have managed to associate high technology with "attrition warfare". Whole battalions of impressionable minds have signed up for these mental gymnastics, this "disarming"
and moved
their
technology
weapons
concept.
crowd loves maneuver warfare a concept of fighting which demands the highest technology man can design. The very systems of mobility (M1 Abrams tank, M2 Bradley fighting vehicle, M3 Scout vehicle, AH64 Attack helicopter, and UH60 Blackhawk utility helicopter), firepower (smart munitions and long range delivery systems),
At the same time, the
anti high-tech
*William
E.
DePuy, "Toward
in
1984), 18-21.
199
and analysis centers), and C 2 (satellite communications, graphic aids to decision making), upon which a maneuver doctrine utterly depends,
cellular
is
a fair
American science and technology for decisive military purposes. in American lives and treasure? The Army has gone after this objective through the "Concept Based Requirements System". It supposes that the weapons systems acquisition process starts, or should start, with military requirements derived from operational concepts. This puts the conceptual people at the head of the line, that is, in the number one spot in a linear sequence. [See Chart, page 201] This is not a bad concept except for one thing. It doesn't work that way. Operational concepts have never been able to "get out front." If you read them carefully Airland Battle 2000, Army 21, Focus-21, and so on, you will find that they are, in fact, a description of the application of currently understood technology within the mainstream of tactical evolution. Ideas about air mobility followed the helicopter, they did not precede it! Go back and read Gavin's "Cavalry And Don't Mean Horses" in the '50s, in Army magazine.* Deep attack, Follow on Forces Attack, and Assault Breaker, followed the discovery that we could make smart munitions. There are virtually no exceptions to this sequence. The technology comes first and then the applications, applications that are conditioned and constrained by the
real issue is
The
how
to exploit
How
can
we
tactical
It
concepts, follow.
is
important to understand and accept this relationship. But, the thought goes farther. The
between the research community, the developers and the users, is clearly circular. That is, the relationship is interactive and continuously so. As with all circles, there is no point of origin and no end point. Research is not conducted without an awareness of potential applications. Development of those applications is not undertaken in an employment vacuum. Concepts of employment are a synthesis of tactical experience and new technical capabilities. Unfortunately, the circular imperative collides with the linearity of our organizations and procedures, particularly with the rigid temporal linearity of the program and budget process. Every element or link in the chain yearns for the orderly, simple, linear process. The user states a "military" requirement and the research and development community follows orders. How naive! It is the feedback loops between the creators (researchers), applicators (developers), and exploiters (tactical users), that are critical and enormously difficult to achieve. Linearity hates feedback loops. They interrupt the smooth flow of the program and funding process. They embarrass the user who changes his performance specifications. They cause cost overruns and
relationship
change
I
test criteria.
see no easy
way
It
calls for
relationship
me
cite
Mechanized Infantry Combat Vehicle later interrupted and delayed, and cost increases occurred when the users finally realized after testing that the fighting vehicle needed a two-man turret instead of the original one-man version. The change was made. The developer was mad at the user, and Congress was mad at everybody. Yet, it was exactly the right thing to do. This change was the product of a circular, not a linear process.
*James M. Gavin, "Cavalry, Journal, 4 (June 1954), 22-27.
two examples, one good and one bad. The known as the M2 Bradley program was
And
Don't
1954), 18-22;
200
DOCTRINE
BDP
u
ii
HISTORICAL
ORGANIZATION
STUDIES
} -|CONCEPTS|
STUDIES
MAA
-r
TRAINING
THREAT
& WAR
TECHNOLOGY
GAMES
j
it
materiel"]
In
air
and
became apparent through analysis first, whole job. The circular feedback loop cried
STINGER.
Army
Human
beings
enough
to
move
operational concepts
beyond the
will
Remember "fly before buy," independent testing, and independent cost analysis? Well, to date, management has failed. They should start all over again and accept the circular process. After all, it is easier to move on a wheel than a skid. A stone boat was a linear concept.
tried
Management has
to
build
fail-safe
linear
system.
The
think
I
third
and
last
don't
a fair
it
gave the
soldier
NCOs
best of
in
World War
II
in
representation.
You
recall
was
true, but
was
army
To the
my
knowledge,
every
and
my German and
The
rest
In
Israeli
only a few
men
are natural,
aggressive fighters.
leaders
infantry
When
in
go
first.
Normandy
two
to five sets of
company
number
of officers
First,
The
training
never did improve, but as the war went on a few survivors accumulated
luck
and natural cunning. Once the meat grinder of Normandy was broken up, the casualty
201
went down and the reciprocal seasoning rates went up. By the midpoint of the war we had a fair number of smart, tough fighters. Troop performance improved along a parallel path. By the end of the war the 90th was a good division, not brilliant, but good as good as one could expect, and
better than most.
when he
The
first
leaders.
troops, he said,
were
and he was
right.
lies in
first
process.
When
downward
spiral
war
effort. In
was
a killing
machine
of our
own
I
troops!
This leads to the crucial question as to what has been done to avoid a repetition of this process.
am happy
It
is
and training process is light years also miles ahead of the process used during the
the
Army now
selects
its
battalion
and brigade commanders from among its highest The difference in performance, even in peacetime,
higher plateau of effectiveness and the
startling.
Second,
training has
been moved
to a
massive change goes to General Paul Gorman, the Deputy Chief of Staff for Training at TRADOC from 1974 to 1977. To Gorman goes revolutionary the credit for moving from time oriented training "In the next hour we will discuss the platoon in the attack, or the operation of the PRC-77 radio, or the M-1 rifle" to performance based training "At the completion of this demonstration you will be required to place the PRC-77 into operation in the proper manner. If you cannot perform this function you will repeat the
credit for the conceptualization of that
instruction
on an individual basis."
I
until
1975, the
Army
followed the
Army
and so many hours for that. Men and units proceeded through the program whether they learned or not. Frankly, nobody knew. There were few tests and what there were, were subjective. If you could survive the schedule you were presumed to be trained. The heart of the Gorman revolution was that no soldier proceeded to Step 2 until he had demonstrated satisfactory hands-on performance of Step 1. This same procedure was applied to units. The concept led to the soldiers' manuals, Skill Qualification Tests, and the Army Training and Evaluation Program. Gorman was also the conceptualizer of the National Training Center and of advanced simulation and simulator development throughout the Army. My net assessment of the effect of these two vital programs leader selection and performance training is that the performance and battle participation level of the American
to division,
Army
In
has
moved from
the whole
is
rising.
fact,
Army
in
every department
in
is
in
great shape.
The
soldiers,
by every
its
Army and
202
draft.
Officers
are
better
in
trained
and more
carefully
selected
Individual
for
command. NCOs
are
progressively trained
their
own
education system.
performance
as
in
tank
is
gunnery
has never been higher. Unit performance because of such programs as the
in
NTC
is
whole Army
portrayed
in
is
intellectually
engaged
The image
Army
as
know what
a fine
Army
in its
critically
important institution.
not perfect.
It is
sometimes
it
is
solid
will
and a career. The Army has been good to me. It has given me an exciting and satisfying life a purpose and a fulfillment. The common caricature of military life is one of stultifying regimentation, a narrow and confining life, and a numbing boredom. Perhaps we shouldn't let the secret out that this
This brings
to
last
me
my
institution
caricature
is
is, in
My
experience
and opinion,
is
particularly
after
observing
the
great
American
industrial
more degrees of freedom in a military career than one could find outside with rare exceptions. The distinguishing characteristic of a command position AT ANY LEVEL is that the incumbent is ON HIS OWN. If he expects to have his hand held it won't happen. The higher the command the more total is the veil of silence which descends upon the commander. He is given all the elbow room he needs to put the stamp of his own convictions and capabilities on the enterprise over which he presides. He also has enough rope to hang himself should he be inadequate to the challenge. The difference in style and substance between two military commands is as great or greater than that between any two civilian enterprises, and the differences flow from the man in charge. My advice to the serving officer is to think long and hard before jumping into the "Greener Pastures" on the other side of the fence. You are now in the most productive years of your life in the most important business in the country, and you will find few opportunities on the outside to match those which you take for granted in the Army.
establishment at close hand,
that there are
203
INDEX
Abrams, Creighton W. GEN:
Active Defense: 63,192-193
63, 149
Agency for
All
International
Army War
Association of the
US Army (AUSA):
113
ATTLEBORO,
Barth,
98-99
Omar
N.
GEN: 35,41
Camps, US Army
Barkley: 7, 12
Granite: 8
Cavalry Divisions,
1st:
US
133-135, 148
Cavalry Regiments,
4th: 142, 157
US
Agency
(CIA):
105, 118, 123, 126-127, 164
Central Intelligence
(COSVN): 130
Chambois: 49
Civil
177-178, 181
Command and
175-179, 183
DePuy Foxhole:
DePuy, William
childhood:
father of:
1
1,2
of:
1
grandfather
1,2
mother
of:
205
as an
ROTC
Candidate:
2, 4,
as a college student: 3
at Desert Training Center:
10-11
great-grandfather
of:
commander: 52
Hungary: 103
the Central Intelligence Agency: 105
the Chief of Staff's Office: 112
as a division
commander: 137-167
TRADOC
FalaiseGap: 41,47,49
FM
100-5, Operations:
I.
Forsythe, George
Forts,
LTG:
US Army
5,
Benning:
Dix:
182
12
Knox: 183
Leavenworth: 182, 185-187
Leonard Wood:
Snelling: 94
5,
12
202
John GEN: 196 Haig, Alexander M. GEN: 149, 192-193 Hamilton, Edward LTC: 17, 41, 46 Harkins, Paul D. GEN: 121
Hackett, Sir
Harris, Ray: 3
James
F.
HopTac: 137
Infantry Brigades,
US US
196th:
144, 146
Infantry Divisions,
1st:
2d:
18
206
4th:
9th:
108-109
134
34th: 3 80th: 68
90th: 7-8, 16-18, 35, 54, 63, 72-73, 87, 90 95th: 54,72
Infantry Divisions, Viet
9th:
Cong
Vietnamese
142
Infantry Regiments,
1st: 5,
US
12
2d:
3d: 94
8th: 43, 107-109, 195 16th:
18th:
146
138, 142, 144, 157
30th: 43,115-117
63d:
5,
12
358th: 32,40,49
Infantry Regiments, Viet
Cong
271st:
137
K.
GEN: 163
169-170
B., President:
165
Komer, Robert "Blowtorch": 123-125, 165 Korean Syndrome: 71 Landrum, Eugene M. MG: 31-32
Leadership: 16, 35, 52, 54, 57-58, 61, 90, 114, 152-153, 193-194, 202
151
LoGo,
Battle of:
140
3,
Louisiana Maneuvers:
Maizieres-les-Metz: 58
Marshall, S.L. A. BG:
145, 160
207
McLain, Raymond S.
Metz: 68,72-73,84
MG:
202
142
National Guard: 2, 16
Normandy
Invasion:
Jr.,
Palmer, Bruce
Patton, George S.
GEN: GEN:
VC:
138
Pentomic
Division:
112,114
137, 159
Phu
Loi Battalion,
Piburn,
"Pile
Edward MAJ: 3
Tactics":
On
Rogers, Bernard
W. GEN:
ROTC: 94-95
Saar River: 54-57,68,72,80-81,84
Schweitzer, Robert
L.
LTG: 164-165
17
86, 187
32, 99-100, 103, 121, 133
Suzanne: 47
Tactics: 5, 7, 10, 25-26, 30-31, 38-39, 43-45, 66, 68, 71-73, 76, 78-80, 85-87, 91-96, 124, 140,
Orwin C. LTG: 99, 162, 165 Task Force Weaver: 46 Taylor, Maxwell D. GEN: 112, 118, 123-124, 169
Talbott,
Command (TRADOC):
for International
119-120, 175-192
126, 134, 164
United States Air Force (USAF): 159, 190 United States Information
(USMC)
Vietnam: 131
Fleet,
Van
James A. MG:
208
Weyand,
Wheeler,
Frederick C.
Earl G.
17, 31
MG:
4, 102, 111
YBham:
Y-Tlur:
127-128
127-128
209
tS-U.S.
1988 - 221-430
QL 3
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copy
Changing an Army
MCB 5(170/2
(1/97)
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