Patton’s Other Scandal Was Even Worse Than His Soldier-Slapping
Task Force Baum’s raid ended catastrophically. All tanks and vehicles were lost, and of 314 participants, 32 were killed, and most of the rest were wounded or captured. Only 35 men made it back. The worst part of it was that the mission was totally unnecessary. Patton’s beloved son-in-law, for whom the great general had gotten the beloved sons, brothers, and fathers of many Americans killed or injured, had never been in any danger. Hammelburg was liberated two weeks after the Task Force Baum fiasco.
When Eisenhower found out, he was furious at Patton’s misuse of military personnel and assets for personal reasons, and reprimanded him. In light of his valuable services, however, Eisenhower declined to punish Patton beyond the reprimand. Shortly thereafter, a reporter got wind of the scandal. When the story first broke in a major publication on April 12th, 1945, it would have wrecked Patton under normal circumstances. However, FDR died that same day, and his demise eclipsed all other news. The scandal got little traction, and when Patton died a few months later, the affair was reduced to a mere historic footnote.
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Where Did We Find This Stuff? Here Are Our Sources:
Atkinson, Rick – The Day of Battle: The War in Sicily and Italy, 1943-1944 (2007)
Atomic Heritage Foundation – Curtis LeMay
Canisius College – The Niland Brothers
Coffey, Thomas M. – Iron Eagle: The Turbulent Life of General Curtis LeMay (1986)
Davidson, Phillip – Vietnam at War: The History, 1946-1975 (1988)
Encyclopedia.Com – Drugs and Vietnam
Foreign Policy – Exclusive: The Pentagon Has a Plan to Stop the Zombie Apocalypse. Seriously
History Net – How Gen. George Patton’s Legend Went From Real to Reel
Kamienski, Lucasz – Shooting Up: A Short History of Drugs and War (2016)
Lenoir, Tim, and Caldwell, Luke – The Military-Entertainment Complex (2018)
Los Angeles Times, August 21st, 2011 – The US Military’s Hollywood Connection
Military – These are the Real Brothers Behind ‘Saving Private Ryan’
National WWII Museum – Battle of Midway
NPR, January 2nd, 2012 – What Vietnam Taught Us About Breaking Bad Habits
Ranker – The Oddly Specific Reasons the Military Refused Assistance to 12 Movies
Robb, David L. – Operation Hollywood: How the Pentagon Shapes and Censors the Movies (2004)
Salon – McNamara’s “Moron Corps”
SOF Rep – On This Day in History: The Only Death Sentence For Desertion in WWII is Carried Out
Task Force Baum – The Hammelburg Raid
US Department of Defense – How and Why the DOD Works With Hollywood