Title: What did the greatest American WW2 general have to say about the Jews and Germany? Source:
[None] URL Source:[None] Published:Oct 11, 2010 Author:General Patton Post Date:2010-10-11 13:54:25 by Itistoolate Keywords:None Views:669 Comments:38
Ike was an excellent PR man, a gladhander, a paper shuffler but never a field General.
Patton and MacArthur were thinkers, doers, tacticians, strategists, men of action.
When the battle of the Bulge broke out, Ike and Bradley were in London playing cards together, Montgomery was at home.
Patton was at the front lines organizing a relief effort before Ike was aware of the problem.
History is littered with such stories, like with Irish history we had Eamon DeValera sending Michael Collins to do the dirty work with the Anglo-Irish negotiations because he knew full well a full republic would not be attained. Collins ended up dead, while Dev became the longest serving PM in Irish history.
Precisely what De Valera did. At least in an indirect way; fan the flames of Civil War where Collins was an inevitable target. Even perhaps setting him up in the ambush that killed him (De Valera was in the vicinity at the time Collins was shot dead).
Several months after WW2 ended, all General officers were to revert to their permanent rank. That would have made Patton Ikes superior.
Patton had a most unfortunate "accident" and died in the hospital of a heart attack.
When I saw that above in the clip, I did a quick search, the Daily Telegraph even picked up on the story:
Also, the USS LIberty was hit to keep the US from finding out what the Mossad was really upto at the time.
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That attack was authorized by the President of the United States to instigate a war between the United States and Egypt, with Egypt to have taken the blame for the sinking.