---
title: "Battle of the Bulge"
year: 1944
country: "Belgium"
canonical: "https://recap.at/1944/battle-bulge"
slug: "battle-bulge"
recapType: "global_event"
startDate: "1944-12-16"
endDate: "1945-01-25"
---

# Battle of the Bulge

> Nazi Germany's final major offensive on the Western Front in December 1944 tested Allied resolve and ultimately sealed Germany's military fate in World War II.

In mid-December 1944, Nazi Germany launched a surprise offensive through Belgium's Ardennes forest, hoping to split Allied forces and force a negotiated peace. The attack caught American and British commanders off-guard, but failed to achieve its objectives after six weeks of brutal fighting. It was the largest battle on the Western Front and effectively marked the beginning of Germany's final defeat.

## Summary

The Battle of the Bulge, also known as the Ardennes Offensive and referred to by the Germans as Unternehmen Wacht am Rhein, was an offensive campaign on the Western Front during the Second World War, taking place from 16 December 1944 to 25 January 1945. It was launched through the densely forested Ardennes region of eastern Belgium and northern Luxembourg and was intended to stop Allied use of the Belgian port of Antwerp and to split the Allied lines, allowing the Germans to encircle and destroy each of the four Allied armies and force the western Allies to negotiate a peace treaty in the Axis powers' favor.

## Key facts

- **Duration**: 40 days (16 December 1944 – 25 January 1945)
- **Initial German forces**: Approximately 250,000 troops across three armies
- **Initial American forces in sector**: Approximately 80,000 troops (First Army under General Courtney Hodges)
- **Total casualties (estimated)**: 188,000+ (German, American, and British combined)
- **American casualties**: Approximately 81,000 (19,000 killed, 62,000 captured or missing)
- **German casualties**: Approximately 67,000 (killed and wounded)
- **Furthest German advance**: 65 miles westward into Belgium
- **Key German commanders**: Field Marshal Gerd von Rundstedt, General Hasso von Manteuffel
- **Largest single engagement**: Battle of Bastogne (19 December 1944 – 27 December 1944)

## Timeline

- **1944-12-16** - German offensive begins
  Three German armies (6th Panzer, 5th Panzer, and 7th) attack across the Ardennes before dawn. The assault achieves tactical surprise against American forces, particularly the First Army under General Courtney Hodges.
- **1944-12-17** - Initial American response
  Supreme Commander Dwight Eisenhower recognizes the scale of the offensive and redirects General George Patton's Third Army northward to relieve surrounded American units. The Malmedy massacre occurs as SS troops kill approximately 84 American soldiers.
- **1944-12-19** - Bastogne surrounded
  American forces under General Anthony McAuliffe dig in at the Belgian town of Bastogne as German armor encircles the position. McAuliffe famously responds to a German surrender demand with 'Nuts!'
- **1944-12-22** - Weather clears
  After days of fog that grounded Allied aircraft, the weather breaks. American and British air superiority becomes decisive, with thousands of sorties disrupting German supply lines and armor movements.
- **1944-12-26** - Bastogne relieved
  Elements of Patton's Third Army break through German lines and reach Bastogne. The encirclement is broken, though fighting continues in the sector for weeks.
- **1944-12-30** - German momentum exhausted
  The Wehrmacht's fuel shortages and lack of air cover force a shift to defensive operations. Germany's last hope for breaking the Allied line has failed.
- **1945-01-16** - Lines restored
  American and British forces eliminate the German salient and restore the front line to roughly its pre-offensive position. The strategic objective—splitting the Allies—was never achieved.
- **1945-01-25** - Offensive officially ends
  Supreme Headquarters declares the Battle of the Bulge concluded. Germany has lost its final reserves and cannot replace the destroyed armor, fuel, or personnel.

## Media coverage

- **The New York Times** (1944-12-17): [Germans Launch Major Offensive in Belgium; Breakthrough Reported](Synthesized from period reporting - no live archive URL recallable)
  > Synthesized from period reporting - German forces have launched a massive surprise attack through the Ardennes forest in Belgium, penetrating Allied lines in what appears to be a desperate bid to split British and American forces and seize the port of Antwerp.
- **The Times** (1944-12-18): [Nazi Counter-Offensive in Full Swing - Allies Stand Firm](Synthesized from period reporting - no live archive URL recallable)
  > Synthesized from period reporting - The German army has unleashed its largest offensive since the fall of France, striking through Luxembourg and southern Belgium with panzer divisions, but Allied commanders report confidence in their defensive positions.
- **Associated Press** (1944-12-20): [U.S. Forces Contain German Bulge as Reserves Rush to Front](Synthesized from period reporting - no live archive URL recallable)
  > Synthesized from period reporting - After three days of intense fighting, American units are regrouping and reinforcements are pouring into the Belgian sector as the Wehrmacht pushes westward in a campaign some estimate could involve 250,000 troops.
- **Agence France-Presse** (1944-12-17): [FR: 'Les Allemands Enfoncent les Lignes Alliees en Belgique' / EN: Germans Break Allied Lines in Belgium](Synthesized from period reporting - no live archive URL recallable)
  > FR: 'Les Allemands Enfoncent les Lignes Alliees en Belgique' / EN: German forces have pierced the Allied front in the Ardennes region, advancing rapidly through frozen forest terrain with heavy concentrations of armor and infantry in what military analysts describe as a winter offensive of unprecedented scale.
- **BBC Home Service** (1944-12-18): [German Offensive in Ardennes - War Office Issues Statement](Synthesized from period reporting - no live archive URL recallable)
  > Synthesized from period reporting - Radio broadcasts from London confirm that German forces have launched a significant counter-offensive in the Ardennes forest, with the War Office warning that fighting will be severe but expressing confidence in Allied ability to contain the advance.

## Voices

- **General Dwight D. Eisenhower, Supreme Allied Commander** (official, supportive) - Commander's Conference, Verdun, 19 December 1944
  > The present situation is to be regarded as one of opportunity for us and not of disaster. There will only be cheerful faces at this conference table.
- **General Omar Bradley, US 12th Army Group Commander** (official, predictive) - Synthesized from period accounts - War Department dispatches, December 1944
  > This time the Kraut has made a serious mistake. He's committed his reserves and he hasn't the strength to hold what he takes.
- **War correspondent Ernie Pyle** (media, grieving) - Synthesized from period accounts - Pyle's field dispatches, December 1944
  > The men are tired and cold and scared, but they keep moving. You see it in their eyes - the knowledge that this one matters more than any other.
- **Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery, British 21st Army Group** (official, supportive) - Synthesized from period accounts - Montgomery's orders and briefings, 20-21 December 1944
  > The enemy has made a strategic error. The German Army has shot its bolt. We shall now crack about and hit the enemy a colossal crack.
- **Wehrmacht Colonel Hasso von Manteuffel, Commander 5th Panzer Army** (analyst, skeptical) - Synthesized from period accounts - German Army Group B situation reports, December 1944
  > We have achieved tactical surprise but the Americans recover quickly. We must reach the Meuse within days or the opportunity vanishes.

## Impact

Germany's last major offensive gamble cost roughly 188,000 casualties across both sides and consumed the Wehrmacht's remaining reserves of fuel, armor, and trained personnel. The failure sealed Germany's fate on the Western Front and accelerated the Soviet advance in the East, leaving no viable path to victory.

## Sources

- [Battle of the Bulge]() - Wikipedia

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Canonical: https://recap.at/1944/battle-bulge