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The Foggy Tank Battle That Shattered a Panzer Force

The Foggy Tank Battle That Shattered a Panzer Force

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Headline Wednesday: The Foggy Tank Battle at Arracourt, Second World War traces a days-long armored clash fought in thick Lorraine fog, where American crews in Shermans and tank destroyers met German Panthers and assault guns at point-blank range. Set among the rolling fields, orchards, and low ridges east of the Moselle, this episode follows the United States Fourth Armored Division as it holds a thin forward screen while German panzer brigades try to smash Patton’s advance. You will hear how that quiet patch of farmland became a critical flank fight for the Lorraine campaign, why so much depended on those crews seeing first in the mist, and how the outcome shaped later operations. Headline Wednesday is the Wednesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, developed by Trackpads dot com.

Across two segments, the episode walks you from the breakout from Normandy to the bottleneck in Lorraine, then down to the level of individual tankers listening for engines in the fog. It breaks down how German columns became lost in the mist, how American crews turned hedgerows and hull-down positions into force multipliers, and how fighter-bombers joined the fight once the weather cleared. You will follow the turning of the battle as ambush skills, radio discipline, and flexible leadership wear down a seemingly stronger panzer force, and then see the aftermath in wrecked tanks and a stalled German counterstroke. It is a tight, narrative guide that works as a refresher for your own reading, study, or informal staff ride preparation on late-war armored combat in the West.

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