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The losses of the US Army in all areas were twice that of every other Allied nation put together.

Each of the US commanders present had known he was paying a price for the slow slog across Germany, but had assumed that his own situation was, on the whole, no different to the other forces in Europe.

McCreery examined the losses besides his own and grimaced.

His British Twenty-First Army Group had lost nearly twenty thousand men across the board, since the winter broke, and the advance could continue.

Alexander’s Italian Group had suffered twelve and a half thousand casualties, and the French eight thousand.

The German Republican Army had suffered the most of all the non-US forces, with thirty-two thousand casualties overall.

Sixty-three thousand US servicemen had become casualties in the same time period, of which just over twenty-three thousand now lay in the earth.

It was Devers that piped up first.

“Sir, the figures you have put before us are accurate?”

“They are.”

“So, in the last three months or so, the US Army in Europe has sustained just under ten percent of the casualties the entire US forces suffered in the period ’41 to ’45?”

Devers went straight to the heart of the matter, earning a few nods from most, and a ‘goddamn’ from Patton.

“Yes, General.”

Eisenhower rose and went to the board, and Hood stepped back to allow his boss full access.

The Allied Commander tapped the bottom line with studied violence.

“Sixty-three thousands of our doughs… let me put that into perspective for you.”

He turned, selecting Bradley for eye contact.

“In the Normandy landings and breakout, the total dead the Allies suffered is calculated as between forty-five and fifty thousand.”

His finger wagged over the assembly.

“And we all knew we were in a gutter fight then, didn’t we?”

Bradley certainly had.

“The US forces alone have sustained approximately 50% of that number of dead since we commenced our attack.”

He left that hanging for a moment.

“So, it is Intelligence’s view… my view… that the Red Army is deliberately targeting US forces, over and above our Allies.”

The men in the room were not unintelligent and needed no more pointers to reach a conclusion.

None the less, Eisenhower supplied it, just in case.

“It’s a political move, for sure. They’re trying to knock us out of the war by using public opinion against us.”

Alexander sought the floor, and Ike motioned that he should speak, using the moment to find and light a cigarette.

“So, by bumping up the resistance to your forces, and inflicting as many losses as possible on your soldier boys, the Russians hope to get the American public to rebel against the war… and make your politicians bring the boys home?”

“Yes, Field Marshal, I believe that is their intention.”

“Is that possible, Sir?”

Eisenhower went to reply, but the exclamation of Lieutenant General Mark Clark beat him to the punch line.

“You’ve seen the demonstrations on the news reels, Sir. You bet your goddamn life it is, Field Marshal!”

Bradley went and grabbed a cup of coffee, starting a minor migration for refreshment.

Returning, he slid one in front of Eisenhower, who acknowledged with a friendly pat on the arm.

The room quietened down again.

“Does the President know, Sir?”

Eisenhower checked his watch.

“General Marshall is presenting him with a copy of that folder as we speak. I have told General Marshall that we will come up with some sort of plan to counter this Soviet ruse, and communicate it to him as soon as possible.”

He took a belt of the strong coffee.

“So, gentlemen, what do we do about this?”

The end result was less than satisfactory, ‘particularly to George’, which was not unexpected.

Increased commitment by the other nations, including the South Americans who were presently less than happy with the Atomic weapons use in the Pacific.

The military sticking point was that offense offered advantages, and many, vociferously led by Patton, believed that attacks should be increased, not curtailed.

Eisenhower countered with the fact that the politicians would probably not see it that way; the American public certainly wouldn’t.

The air war was to be intensified closer in to the front line, giving enemy field formations additional attention to reduce their effectiveness even further.

General Juin, the French Army’s Chief of Staff, had readily agreed that France should shoulder more of the burden, and proudly stated that his country would put more divisions into the line, relieving a number of US units.

Similarly, Generaloberst von Vietinghoff promised more from the ever-increasing German Republican Army.

By the end of proceedings, Eisenhower at least felt he had a plan to present to General Marshall, one that Truman could see would go some way to reducing American casualties in Europe.

Marshall had already mooted that the proposed invasions of Northern China and Siberia would probably be put on hold indefinitely, with a huge effort to supply and rearm Chinese Nationalist forces likely to be proposed instead.

After the meeting had broken up, Ike took a few quiet minutes to himself, draining the last of the coffee pot and finishing his last cigarette.

The board once more drew his eye.

‘Sixty-three thousand… goddamned Russian sonsofbitches…’

He drained the cup and left.

1617 hrs, Sunday, 30th June 1946, Sankt Georgen an der Gusen, Austria.

The attack was carried out by 30 Squadron, SAAF, their B-26C Martin Marauders considered more than capable of dropping the Sankt Georgen Bridge into the flowing waters of the River Gusen.

The Marauders lined up their target, well below their normal bombing height of ten thousand feet, and flew straight in from the west, and straight into a wall of flak, thrown up by a Bulgarian anti-aircraft unit that just happened to be in transit and hiding in the worst possible place for the South African airmen.

Both the second and third aircraft were hit, but pressed on, smoke announcing both their passage and difficulties.

More flak rose up, snatching at the medium bombers, and fourth aircraft simply vanished in a flash, small pieces cascading over the Austrian countryside.

Martin Marauder ‘Ouballie”, coded B-N, the seventh in line, took a shell directly in the port engine.

It did not explode, but caused enough damage to turn the whole engine compartment instantly into a roaring inferno.

Pieces of the engine flew in all directions, one fatally so for the pilot and co-pilot, both of whom had their chests ripped open by the same whirling piece of metal.

‘Ouballie’ rolled left, and lost height rapidly, describing a fiery arc through the midday air. The remaining five crew members screamed out their final seconds, unable to escape from their aircraft, dying instantly as the B-26C slammed into one of the hills that surrounded the picturesque Austrian town, in an area previously known as Gusen-II, part of the Mauthausen concentration camp.

The remainder of 30 Squadron completed their mission.

Three aircraft had been lost, a heavy price to pay for destroying something that the Soviets would probably temporarily rebuild overnight.

The burning wreckage of Marauder B-N warranted a guard detail, and three reluctant soldiers stood sentry over the glowing remains until the following morning, when what they discovered ensured that the sleepy town of Sankt Georgen an der Gusen woke to a very different day.

0727 hrs, Monday, 1st July 1946, site of the wreckage of B-N, Sankt Georgen an der Gusen, Austria.