Battle of the Bulge Anniversary

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BASTOGNE, Belgium – U.S. veterans laid wreaths at ceremonies across southern Belgium and Luxembourg on Thursday, marking the 60th anniversary of the start of the Battle of the Bulge, in which U.S. forces defeated Nazi Germany’s last bid to reverse the rapid advance of Allied forces toward Berlin.

The commemorations marking World War II’s largest land battle in which U.S. troops participated were held at memorials and cemeteries across the hilly and wooded Ardennes region that formed the battlefield that bitterly cold winter of 1944.

In the battle, more than a million troops – 600,000 Germans, 500,000 Americans and 55,000 Britons – fought in the snow from Dec. 16, 1944, to Jan. 25, 1945.

Night vigils were held at several places along the serpentine front, and there was a brief memorial service at the Mardasson Memorial near Bastogne, the town that was surrounded by Germans whose offensive created a “bulge” around the town and threatened to cut it off.

Erected in 1950, the memorial is a vast star-shaped monument that stands 40 feet tall and honors the memory of killed and wounded U.S. soldiers or those who disappeared during the offensive. U.S. troops suffered 80,000 casualties, including 19,000 deaths.

On Saturday, it will be the venue of the main commemoration ceremony attended by King Albert II of Belgium and Dennis Hastert, speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives.

Ahead of the event, U.S. Ambassador Tom Korologos said the Battle of the Ardennes represented a “living message.”

“It is as relevant for our youth as for the veterans who fought. That message is that freedom must be continually defended against forces that seek to subvert it,” he added, “whether against a totalitarian state in 1944 that sought to destroy democracy in the name of a repugnant philosophy, or against global terrorism today that seeks to destroy Western ideas.”

The Mardasson memorial bears the names of Army units that participated in the action.

Bastogne is central to the commemoration events. Several roads converged at the town in 1944, making it critical to blocking the German advance.

Today, a parade of 300 World War II-era military vehicles will move through the town’s narrow streets, passing by the town square named for Anthony MacAuliffe, the acting commander of the 101st Airborne whose paratroopers repulsed repeated attacks. On Dec. 22, 1944, MacAuliffe was given two hours to surrender by the Germans or face “total annihilation.” His famous reply – which stumped the Germans – was “Nuts!”
 
My father was in the Battle of the Bulge. On Christmas Eve he spent the night in a barn sleeping next to a cow for warmth. I don’t know how any of those men survived it. God bless them all.
 
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