History of the Second World War (140 page)

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Authors: Basil Henry Liddell Hart

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Viipuri (Viborg), 46, 578
Vilkaviskis, 584
Villers-Bocage, 546
Vilna, 580
Vinnitsa, 570
Visayan Sea, 689
Vistula, River, line of defence on, 27; German forces reach and cross, 29-31; Polish forces trapped E. of, 30-1; Russian drive to, 581-582; Russians held up on, 584; Hitler permits no withdrawal from, or reinforcement of, 664, 666; extrication of forces from, 666; corridor between Warta and, 667
Ventnor radar station, 99
Verdun, 558
Verona, 674
Versailles, Treaty of, 204
Via Emilia (Route 9), 540, 672-3
Vian, Captain (later Admiral Sir) Philip, 55, 379
Victor Emmanuel, King of Italy, 454, 467, 537
Victorious,
H.M.S., 379
Vienna, 537, 539, 680
Vitebsk, 164, 493, 579
Vogelkop Peninsula, 613, 616-17
Volga, River, 247-8, 252, 256
Volkhov, River, 576
Volturno, River, 453, 465, 468-9
Voronezh, 251, 258-9, 263, 480
Voronov, 260
‘Vulcan, Operation’, 427
Vuoksi, River, 47
Vyasma, 167, 241, 483

 

Wadi Akarit defence line, 400, 416; Axis forces withdraw to, 418-19; assault on, 420-2; withdrawal from, 422-3
Wadi Zigzaou, 417
Wainwright, Lieut.-General J. M., 223
Wakde Island, 615-16
Wake Island, 216
Wake-Walker, Rear-Admiral Sir William, 378
Walcheren Island, 560
Waldenburg, Colonel von, 453
Walker, Captain F. J., 389
Walney,
324
Ward, Major-General O., 1st Armored Division of, 415
Warlimont, General Walter, 38-9; on standstill of panzer forces, 82; on British failure to take Tripoli, 118; on Hitler’s ‘hunch’ on Normandy, 548; mentioned, 89
Warsaw, Germans surround and take, 30-1; German army group starts from, 149; Russians approach, 581-2; rise of Polish ‘underground’ in, 582-3; Germans regain control of, 583; mystery of Russian inaction at, 583; Allies drop supplies on, 583n.; falls to Russia, 665-6
Warspite,
H.M.S., 60, 465
Warta, River, 29, 667
Washington
, U.S.S., 362
Washington Conference (1941), 310, 313n.; (1943) 450-1; directive of, on strategic bombing, 599; sets up U.S. bombing force in Britain, 603
Washington Naval Limitation Treaty, 205
Wasp,
U.S.S., 358-60, 384
Waters, Lieut.-Colonel J. K., 324, 338
Wau, New Guinea, 503
Wavell, General (later Field-Marshal) Sir Archibald, C.-in-C., Middle East, 109, 124; harasses Italian troops, 112; reinforcements reach, 112; and Italian defeat, 113; recalls Indian Division, 114; ordered to send force to Greece, 115, 117-18; disbelieves reports of impending German attack, 119, 171; and E. African campaign, 124-6; orders ‘delaying action’, 172; holds Tobruk, 172-3; attempts relief of Tobruk, 174, 176-8; asks for more armour, 175; aims of, for ‘Operation Battleaxe’, 178; does not press for more tank reinforcements, 178n.; on failure of ‘Battleaxe’, 181; replaced in N. Africa by Auchinleck, 184, 367; Supreme Commander, A.B.D.A., 227-8, 234; thinks Japanese skill overrated, 235; told of value of Ceylon to Britain, 237; asks for locomotives for India, 363; reorganises India Command, 364; plans reconquest of Burma, 364-5; Wingate and, 366-7; plans move on Sumatra, 368; Viceroy of India, 515
Wedemeyer, General A. C., 633, 635
Weichs, General M. F. von, 2nd Army of, 134, 245
Wellington, Vickers-Armstrong, 591, 593
Wesel, crossing of Rhine near, 678
West Africa, French, co-operates with Allies, 332
West Africans in British East African Army, 124
Western Approaches, U-boat attacks in, 370; bomber attacks in, 371; convoy escort in, 375, 380; Catalinas force U-boats from, 381; escort groups of, 382
Western Approaches Command, under Noble, 382, 387; under Horton, 387-9
Western Approaches Tactical Unit, 389
Western Dorsal mountains, 405
Western Front (1939), Franco-German frontier of, 31-2, 41; German forces break through, 65, 69-72; French, along Somme and Aisne, 84; (1944) German lack of defences on, 546-9, 558-60, 566; German collapse on, 558, 566-7; German build-up of defences on, 560, 567; stripped to supply forces for Oder, 669, 677.
See also
Ardennes
Western Hemisphere Defence Plan Number 4, 381
Western Naval Task Force, 316, 323
Western Ocean Meeting Point, 382
Western Offensive (1939-40), 65-86; Hitler’s first plan for, 35-6, 38-40; lost plans for, 37-8; Manstein’s plan for, 38-40; likely effects of first plan for, 39-40; (1944-5), 543-67.
See also
Ardennes; ‘Overlord, Operation’
Western Powers, war objects of, 3; appeasement policy of, 6-7; sudden reversal of policy of, 7; in sympathy with German Eastern expansion, 8-9, 14; fail to profit from capture of German plan, 40-1; false confidence of, 41; consider expeditionary force to help Finland, 44-6; plan occupation of Norway, 52, 54-5, 57-9; prevalence of out-of-date ideas in, 66; Pacific strength of (1941), 208-9; lack flexibility of organisation, 261; supplies to Russia from, 392-3, 486; delay exploitation of Mussolini’s overthrow, 450; Badoglio’s difficulties in negotiating with, 451; Italy signs armistice treaty with, 452-3; could have ended war, Sept. 1944, 557-8; disastrous effect of lost opportunity of, 561
Westphal, General S., on Mussolini’s fear of German domination, 436; on conditions in Rome at and after Italy’s capitulation, 453-5; on course Allies should have taken in Italy, 473-4; on course Allies should have taken on Western Front, 566
Wewak, New Guinea, 508, 615, 688
Weygand, General, 74, 76; impossible plan of, 77, 79; new front of, 84; presses for armistice, 85
White Russia, Russian offensive in, 578-81
Whitley, Armstrong-Whitworth, 591, 593
Wilhelmina, Queen of the Netherlands, 37
Wilson, Field-Marshal Sir Henry Maitland, Supreme Commander, Mediterranean, 532-533; and ‘Operation Anvil’, 537-8; sent to Washington, 541; mentioned, 113, 131, 542
Wilson, Sir Horace, 14
Wiltz, 653
Wingate, Major-General Orde, 125, 366-7, 516-17
Winter Line, Italy, 470
Wislok, River, 30
Wisloka, River, 30
Wissant, German radar station at, 98
Witzig, Lieutenant (later Major), 68-9, 336-7
Wolff, General Karl, 674
Women’s Auxiliary Air Force, in radar stations, 99
Wood, General John S., 557
n.
Woodlark Island, 503
World War I, horsed cavalry in, 21; artillery bombardment before attack in, 32; breach of Norway’s neutrality would have been unthinkable in, 53; Allied Balkan Army in, 133; Foch’s strategy in (1918), 481, 492; creation of R.A.F. in, 589; air attacks on London in, 589
Wright, Captain Jerauld, 320n.

 

Yablonica Pass (Tartar Pass), 573, 586
Yalta Conference, 693
Yamaguchi, Rear-Admiral T., 352-3
Yamamoto, Admiral I., and attack on Pearl Harbor, 202, 207, 210, 212; plans capture of Midway, 343, 345; at Battle of Midway, 349-50, 352-3; fleet of, off Solomons, 361; ambushed and shot down, 503
Yamashita, General T., captures Malaya and Singapore, 224, 229; in defence of Philippines, 621-2, 629-30, 689-90
Yamato,
the, 621; at Battle of Midway, 349, 352; near New Guinea, 616; in Battle of Leyte Gulf, 623, 625-7; ‘suicide’ of, 685
Yamethin, 637
Yampol, 572
Yap Island, 621
Yawata, bombing of, 690
Yenangyaung oilfields, 236, 634
Yokoyama, Lieut.-General S., 689
Yorkshire, air raids on, 100
Yorktown,
U.S.S., 346-7, 349-51, 684
Yugo-Slavia,
coup d’etat
in, causes postponement of Russian invasion, 132-4, 152; Axis pact with, 134, 151; German conquest of, 137, 152; Russians reach frontier of, 585; German forces escape from, 585-6; liberation of capital of, 586
Yunnan, China, 364, 516, 634-5

 

Zaafran, 195
Zakharov, General, 579
Zangen, General von, 528
Zaporozhye, 493
Zeitzler, Kurt, 258, 483
Zero (Mitsubishi A6M), 209, 212
Zhitomir, 495, 570
Zhlobin, 493, 579-80
Zhukov, Marshal G., 1941 counteroffensive of, 168; and encirclement of Stalingrad, 255, 260; strategy of, 264; drives West, 572-3; repairs rail communications, 578; ‘1st White Russian front’ of, in 1945 offensive, 665-9; in Berlin, 680
Ziegenberg, 647
Ziegler, General H., 403, 405
Zubza, 519
Zuiho,
the, 361, 627
Zuikaku,
the, 346-50, 359, 627

FURTHER READING IN THE BOOKS OF CAPTAIN SIR BASIL LIDDELL HART

Memoirs
The Liddell Hart Memoirs, 2 vols. (London, Cassell, 1965; New York, Putnam, 1965)

 

The Conduct of War (and general history of wars)
Strategy — The Indirect Approach (London, Faber, latest edition 1954 — enlarged from
The Decisive Wars of History,
1929)
Thoughts on War. 1919-39 (London, Faber, 1944 — contains the collected essence of the author’s military thought)
The Revolution in Warfare (London, Faber, 1946; Yale University Press, 1947)
The Ghost of Napoleon (London, Faber, 1933; Yale University Press, 1933)

 

The Theory of Mechanised War (in particular)
Paris, or The Future of War (London, Kegan, Paul, 1925 — in the Today and Tomorrow’ series; New York, E. P. Dutton & Co., 1925)
The Re-making of Modern Armies (London, John Murray, 1927)
When Britain Goes to War (London, Faber, 1935 — enlarged from
The British Way in Warfare
, 1932; also Penguin, 1942, with additional chapters, and under the original title. In America The British Way in Warfare, New York, Macmillan, 1933)
The Future of Infantry (London, Faber, 1933; Harrisburg, Military Service Publishing Co., 1936)
Dynamic Defence (London, Faber, 1940)
The Current of War (London, Hutchinson, 1941 — in particular Chapters I-VI. The rest of the book is a commentary on the 1939-40 campaign)
The Tanks — The History of The Royal Tank Regiment and its predecessors (etc.) 1914-45, 2 vols. (London, Cassell, 1959; New York, Praeger, 1959)

 

Other Books on the Theory and Future of War
Europe in Arms (London, Faber, 1937)
The Defence of Britain (London, Faber, 1939)
This Expanding War (London, Faber, 1942 — partly a commentary on the 1941-42 campaigns)
Defence of The West (London, Cassell, 1950)
Deterrent or Defence (London, Stevens, 1960)

 

Infantry Tactics
New Methods of Infantry Training (Cambridge, 1918)
Science of Infantry Tactics (Becclcs, Clowes, 1921, 1923, 1926)

 

Historical Biography — with a bearing on future warfare
T. E. Lawrence — In Arabia and After (London, Cape, 1934. In America Colonel Lawrence: The Man Behind the Legend, New York, Dodd, Mead, 1934)
Foch (London, Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1931; also Penguin)
Sherman (London, Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1929. In America Sherman: Soldier, Realist, American, New York, Dodd, Mead, 1929)
Great Captains Unveiled (London, Blackwood, 1927; Boston, Little, Brown, 1928)
A Greater than Napoleon — Scipio Africanus (London, Blackwood, 1926; Boston, Little, Brown, 1927)

 

World War I (1914-18)
A History of the First World War (London, Cassell, 1970. Originally published as
A History of the World War, 1914-1918,
London, Faber, 1934. Enlarged from
The Real War 1914-1918,
London, Faber, 1930; Boston, Little, Brown)

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