| Lloyd Fredendall |
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| 1883 births | |
| fredendall | |
| 1963 deaths | |
| united states army generals | |
| american people of world war ii | |
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He was once described by General Lucian K. Truscott as, ''"Small in stature, loud and rough in speech, he was outspoken in his opinions and critical of superiors and subordinates alike. He was inclined to jump to conclusions which were not always well founded. He rarely left his command post for personal visits and reconnaissance, yet he was impatient with the recommendations of subordinates more familiar with the terrain and other conditions than he.'' His British commander, Anderson, considered him incompetent well prior to the loss at Kasserine. Fredendall was given to speaking and issuing orders using his own slang, such as calling Infantry units "walking boys" or Artillery "popguns". Instead of using the standard military map grid-based location designators, he would make up confusing codes such as "the place that begins with C". This often led to confusion amongst his subordinates, and precious time was lost attempting to figure out his meaning. Before Kasserine, Fredendall used an engineer company to build a large, dug-in Corps headquarters 70 miles behind the front. General Omar N. Bradley called it "an embarrassment to every American soldier". Fredendall neither visited the front nor considered input from commanders farther forward. He split up units and scattered them widely, often positioning elements too far apart for mutual support or effective employment of Artillery , the strongest US arm. After the Battle Of Kasserine Pass , on March 5, 1943, Eisenhower visited the II Corps headquarters and conferred with Bradley. Eisenhower asked "''What do you think of the command here?"'' Bradley's response was "''It's pretty bad. I've talked to all the division commanders. To a man they've lost confidence in Fredendall as the corps commander''."" On March 6 1943, at Eisenhower's direction, George S. Patton relieved Fredendall. Fredendall spent the rest of WW2 in training assignments in the USA. The American historian (and retired Army officer) Carlo D'Este has described Fredendall as "...one of the most inept senior officers to hold a high command during World War II". US 2nd Armored Division commander Ernest Harmon, in his after action report for the Kasserine battle, called Fredendall "a son of a bitch" and later said he was both a moral and physical coward. CAREER
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