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Secretly, Truman and his staff had wondered whether the attack would change public opinion on use of the bombs on Russia, but it was too soon to tell.

Truman stressed the fact that, however regrettable, the Hofbieber attack gave the Allies an even stronger bargaining position.

Surprisingly, use of the bomb was not mentioned.

There was little debate on military action, as all understood the need to take advantage of the situation, as the bonus of applying more pressure to the clearly weakened enemy would strengthen their own position further.

Ground and air attacks would be ramped up to a high level… an unsustainable level as General Eisenhower advised… but the benefits of exhausting some of the Allied forces would be far outweighed by the pressure placed upon the Soviet Union and the opportunity to bring an early end to hostilities.

It was the terms of a negotiated peace that caused the greater discussion… and the greater disagreement.

As the discussions focussed on the negotiations, and the recommended cease fire lines and future political boundaries, the German and Polish heads of state became more and more agitated, despite the assurances of further negotiations, post cessation of hostilities.

The meeting broke up for lunch, a break called by Truman, who clearly wanted a period of calm to enable Speer, and particularly the Polish President, Władysław Raczkiewicz, to calm down.

After enjoying a hearty spread, the leaders returned to the room, only to discover that the break had done nothing to soften the two leaders’ positions, and that new words, such as treachery, abandonment, and betrayal, figured heavily in their protestations.

It all centred on where the lines would be drawn.

The start negotiating position returned Europe politically to 1938 boundaries, but no one present really expected that to be the end position, and subsequent discussions seemed to end up with Germany minus Prussia at the minimum, and a partitioned and fractured Poland.

As the politicians continued to form their response, the soldiers acted.

1200 hrs, Thursday, 15th August 1946, Eberschutz, Germany.

“Panzer marsch!”

Maybach engines revved, creating a wall of noise, dragging even the least curious civilian to their windows to witness a full-scale panzer attack.

Even the experienced grenadiers of the 78th Sturm Division, responsible for liberating Eberschutz the previous day, watched in awe as the Europa Panzer Brigade ground forward, supported by a wave of aircraft in close support.

The scene was further enhanced as nebelwerfer batteries added their deadly rockets to the attack on Trendelburg.

The Germans were determined to continue to press the Red Army as hard as possible.

Fig # 218 – Soviet initial dispositions, Trendelburg, Germany.

Colonel Von Hardegen observed the plan unfold, his modified Panther G positioned on a small incline that overlooked the first point of contact at Sielen.

Grenadiers from the 14th Sturm-Grenadiere Regiment had smashed into the German village some thirty minutes previously, and quickly overcame the light Soviet resistance. They had also summarily executed the dazed prisoners for the benefit of the villagers, who spoke of the excesses visited upon them by the occupation force.

The lead unit of von Hardegen’s force skewed to the right as planned, securing the flank, should there be any enemy forces of note on the other bank of the River Diemel.

If there was, they were wisely staying quiet, as powerful 75mm and 88mm guns maintained in overwatch.

The remainder of Europa continued northwards, and von Hardegen ordered his headquarters unit to push forward to and past Sielen.

Inwardly, he cursed the absence of any means of crossing the Diemel at Sielen with heavy vehicles, the bridging equipment he needed prioritised elsewhere, except for the one bridging tank he had retained for a crucial task.

The original structure at Sielen had long since been deposited in the water by either the Allied air forces, or Soviet engineers, or both.

The only possible crossing point left was the small wooden bridge over the modest Hungerbach on the southeast edge of Sielen, which carried Route 68 over the water, to join with the 67, the road that lead northeast to Trendelburg.

A replacement bridge had been constructed by Soviet engineers and coerced locals, and was constructed in timber cut from the local forests It had easily succumbed to the attention of Allied aircraft. Although still standing, the repairs affected by the Soviets would not stand the weight of anything of any substance, the bridge itself initially constructed for light vehicles, not to allow the passing of heavy armour.

Another reason that the 14th Sturm-Grenadieres had launched a swift attack, without artillery preparation, was so that his own engineers could assess the likelihood of using Sielen as a crossing point for his panzers.

The initial report was enough to make him switch his attentions elsewhere, and instigate his second plan.

Aerial photographs had revealed the possibility of a surviving bridge, damaged but probably bridgeable, which is why he preserved his only bridge layer for use in Stammen, further up the Hungerbach.

Fig # 219 – Allied order of battle – Trendelburg.

Now leading the advance was his second company, equipped with the new and extremely impressive Jaguar, the very latest vehicle to roll off the production lines from the recovering German industry.

Its 88mm, the same as that which had graced the Tiger II, could dispatch most opponents with relative ease, and in the hands of veterans, such as the men of Europa, it was as lethal a tank weapon as the Allies possessed.

The formation of Jaguars pushed forward, ignoring the light artillery fire that suddenly came their way, manoeuvring almost as if on an exercise.

The ‘exercise’ turned to harsh reality as one artillery shell found an SDKFZ 251 carrying some of Europa’s panzer-grenadiers, spreading the vehicle and men over the German countryside in one bloody moment.

Von Hardegen gripped his binoculars more tightly, knowing he had just seen a dozen men die.

The lead unit increased speed and moved quickly through the choke point caused by the river bend and the two hundred metre high ridgeline to the west.

He waited to see the second phase enacted, and immediately saw the reconnaissance force push out down the riverbank, seeking to secure the positions around the damaged Soviet military bridge at Stammen, something that was key to the success of his plan.

Fig # 220 – Kampfgruppe Strachwitz’s initial attack on Trendelburg.

The other key part, a Churchill VII bridge layer, one of a small unit of special tanks seconded from the 79th Armoured Division, announced its presence as it noisily made its way past the headquarters unit, having been called forward by the recon force commander, who was clearly confident enough that he had secured Stammen’s west bank to bring up Europa’s prize asset.

The Churchill lumbered along slowly, encumbered by the additional weight of the reinforcing metal deemed necessary to make its portable bridge capable of sustaining the passage of the tanks of von Hardegen’s command.

Ahead, the lead Jaguars had been taken under fire by something that seemingly didn’t trouble them.

The lead vehicles halted and sent shells into three locations, two of which yielded secondary explosions.