MXC- What Churchill Said When Patton Crushed 50,000 Germans at Metz — Germany’s “Impregnable” Fortress

November 1944. European winter. A fortress that had never fallen in 1,600 years stands defiant in the fog. Mets, Germany’s impregnable stronghold. Patton attacks it anyway. Day after day, his tanks vanish into smoke. His infantry is shredded by guns buried under 40 ft of reinforced concrete. Rain turns the fields to mud. The Moselle floods.

Ammo runs low. For the first time since Normandy, Patton’s advance stops. When reports reach London, Winston Churchill delivers a brutal verdict, a line that stuns even his generals. If Patton breaks Mets, he breaks the spine of the German army. 3 weeks later, Patton does the impossible, capturing 50,000 German soldiers and taking the fortress the Kaiser, Napoleon, and the Romans all failed to hold.

This is what Churchill really said when America’s most aggressive commander took on Germany’s strongest fortress and won. September 1944, Lieutenant General George Smith Patton Jr.’s third United States Army had been unstoppable since breaking out from Normandy in August. In just 4 weeks, his forces covered over 400 m, liberated vast territories, and shattered every German defensive position they encountered.

Speed, aggression, and audacity had made Patton legendary. Then he reached Mets. The fortress city sat on the Moselle River in eastern France, technically French territory, but built and fortified by Germans after conquering it in 1870. For 1,600 years, Mets had never fallen to direct assault. The Romans fortified it.

Medieval armies besieged it unsuccessfully. Napoleon captured it only through treachery, not force. And in 1870, after defeating France, Germany transformed Mets into the most heavily fortified position in Western Europe. Between 1870 and 1916, German military engineers constructed 43 interconnected forts in concentric rings around Mets.

These weren’t medieval castles. They were modern fortresses featuring steel reinforced concrete up to 40 ft thick in critical areas, underground barracks, ammunition magazines, artillery batteries, and defensive positions designed to withstand sustained bombardment from the most powerful weapons of the era.

Fort Gryant, 5 mi southwest of the city, exemplified German engineering prowess. Its main batteries featured 150 mm guns that could engage targets miles away. Machine gun positions in armored cupulas provided interlocking fields of fire. Underground tunnels connected multiple defensive positions, allowing defenders to move unseen and emerge where attackers didn’t expect.

Deep moes, barbed wire obstacles, and minefields surrounded the entire complex. When Third Army reached Mets in September 1944, Patton’s intelligence staff assured him the fortifications were undermanned and could be taken quickly. After all, Third Army had overwhelmed every German defensive position since Normandy.

Surely outdated forts, no matter how impressive their construction, couldn’t stop modern American firepower, combined with air superiority and armored mobility. The German defenders knew better. General Otto von Kenobyldorf commanding first army had assembled a composite force. The 462nd Volks Grenadier Division formed the core supplemented by elements of the 17th SS Panzer Grenadier Division, fortress artillery battalions, training regiment troops and stragglers from units shattered during the retreat across France. Total strength perhaps

20,000 25,000 soldiers significantly outnumbered by third army. But Kenobyldorf had something invaluable. Fortifications that multiplied his force’s defensive effectiveness enormously. Each fort essentially transformed a company-sized garrison into a force with the defensive power of a battalion.

The concrete bunkers were impervious to all but the heaviest artillery. The interlocking fields of fire meant attackers faced simultaneous fire from multiple directions and the defenders were fighting for the approaches to Germany itself. They would not retreat. Adolf Hitler personally designated Mets a fortress city withstanding orders that it must be held at all costs.

Surrender without Hitler’s personal approval was forbidden and Hitler would never approve for the German dictator Mets represented more than a military position. It symbolized German determination to defend every inch of territory. Patton’s initial attempts to storm Mets in midepptember were catastrophic failures. Infantry attempting to cross the Moselle River were cut down by machine gun fire from positions they couldn’t see.

Artillery bombardments that had devastated German field defenses across France had minimal effect on Mets’s fortifications. Shells that could destroy bunkers made of sandbags and timber barely scratched concrete and steel designed to withstand sustained bombardment. American tanks, the mobile striking force that had driven third army’s spectacular advance, were useless against fortifications.

Tank guns couldn’t elevate high enough to hit firing positions. The narrow approaches to forts channeled armor into killing zones where German anti-tank weapons destroyed vehicles before they could engage. By late September, Patton’s lightning advance had ground to a complete halt. Making the situation worse, Supreme Commander Dwight Eisenhower had diverted fuel and ammunition to British Field Marshall Montgomery’s Operation Market Garden in the Netherlands.

Third Army was operating on reduced supplies just when facing the most challenging defensive position of the campaign. Patton, who thrived on speed and movement, found himself forced into siege warfare. Slow, methodical, and bloody. September 27th, 1944. Patton decided to make an example of Fort Gryant, the strongest position in Mets’s defensive ring.

A successful assault would break German morale, demonstrate American power, and restore momentum. Intelligence suggested the fort was lightly defended, perhaps a 100 and 200 troops. The reality was catastrophically different. At 2:15 p.m., Na Nander Saturn Tactical Air Commands P47 Thunderbolts attacked Fort Gryant with 1,000 lb bombs and Napal.

The bombing runs were spectacular. Massive explosions that created mushroom clouds visible for miles. But when the smoke cleared, the fort was essentially undamaged. The steel reinforced concrete construction designed by German engineers to withstand World War I’s heaviest artillery absorbed the punishment.

Craters appeared on the surface, but the underground facilities remained intact. Next came artillery. Third army’s 200 narim mo howitzers, the largest available, fired sustained barges. Again, minimal effect. The shells that could demolish buildings and destroy field fortifications barely scratched Fort Dri’s construction. Some rounds penetrated exterior walls, but failed to reach critical internal positions. At 5 p.m.

, infantry from the 11th Infantry Regiment, Fifth Infantry Division, began their assault. Companies E and B advanced toward the fort supported by tank destroyers from the 818th Tank Destroyer Battalion. They walked into a nightmare. German machine guns fired from armored cupilas that American weapons couldn’t penetrate. Mortars dropped from positions the attackers couldn’t locate.

Barbed wire, much of it concealed in tall grass. Entangled soldiers trying to reach the fort’s walls. The tank destroyers designed for mobile warfare against German armor were useless. Their guns couldn’t elevate sufficiently to hit the fort’s firing positions. When they maneuvered for better angles, German anti-tank weapons destroyed three destroyers before the others withdrew.

By nightfall of September 27th, the assault had failed completely. American casualties exceeded 50% in the attacking companies. Ground gained zero. Patton refused to accept failure. I will take Fort Gryant if it takes every man in XX Corps, he declared to his staff. More infantry was committed. Engineers brought Bangalore torpedoes and satchel charges to blow through obstacles.

On October 3rd, a renewed assault finally gained a foothold on the fort’s southwest section, a small area of the roof where soldiers could take cover. For 5 days, American infantry clung to exposed positions on Fort Durant’s roof while German defenders launched counterattacks from underground tunnels. The fighting was surreal and terrifying.

Americans above ground tried to demolish concrete with explosives. Germans below ground emerged through hidden exits to attack from unexpected directions. Communication was nearly impossible. Radios didn’t work in the tunnels. Runners were killed trying to carry messages and artillery support risked hitting American positions.

October 4th brought the crisis point. Captain Jack Jerry, commanding the company at the deepest American penetration, sent a runner with a devastating message. The situation is critical. A couple more barges and another counterattack and we are sunk. We have no men. Our equipment is shot and we just can’t go. The message reached headquarters and confirmed what field commanders already knew.

Fort Driant could not be taken by direct assault with available forces and tactics. Making matters worse, neighboring German forts began directing artillery fire onto American positions at Fort Driant. The interconnected nature of Mets’s defenses meant that assaulting one fort brought fire from multiple others. American soldiers found themselves caught between German defenders emerging from tunnels below and artillery shells falling from surrounding positions.

On October 9th, Patton convened his core and division commanders. The discussion was brutally honest. Over 500 American soldiers, killed, wounded, and missing had been sacrificed at Fort Dryant for no gain. General Leroy Irwin, commanding fifth infantry division, reported his regiments were becoming combat ineffective from casualties and battle fatigue.

Other operations around Mets showed more promise than continuing the Fort Dryant assault. Patton made the hardest decision a commander can make. He ordered the attack abandoned. October 1213, American forces withdrew from Fort Driant under cover of darkness, destroying what they couldn’t evacuate. Engineers detonated 6,000 lbs of explosives to demolish positions and equipment.

The withdrawal was complete by dawn. The failure shocked Third Army to its core. They had been unstoppable since Normandy. Now a single fort, one position among dozens had stopped them for over 2 weeks. October 1944. As Third Army bled before Mets’s fortifications, reports reached London detailing the unprecedented resistance.

British Prime Minister Winston Spencer Churchill, who had been fighting Germany since 1939, studied the situation with the insight of someone who understood both German capabilities and the stakes of the Mets battle. Churchill’s military instincts were legendary. He had served as first lord of the admiral in World War I, had commanded troops in combat, and had spent 5 years of World War II immersed in strategic planning.

When informed that Patton, the general who had raced across France, was now stalled before a fortress city, Churchill recognized the significance immediately. In a meeting with his military chiefs, Churchill made a statement that would define how Allied leadership viewed the Mets campaign. If Patton breaks Mets, he breaks the spine of the German army.

The assessment wasn’t hyperbole. Churchill understood that Mets represented more than a fortress city. It was the psychological lynchpin of German defensive strategy in the west. Mets guarded the approaches to the Sar industrial region, one of Germany’s most important manufacturing centers.

Losing Mets meant Allied armies could pour into Germany’s heartland. But more significantly, Mets had never fallen to direct assault in,600 years. Its capture would devastate German morale while proving that even their strongest defensive positions couldn’t stop Allied forces. Churchill also made a grimmer observation that captured his respect for German fighting capabilities.

You will never know war until you fight Germans. This wasn’t an endorsement of Germany. Churchill had dedicated his life to its defeat, but a professional military assessment. German troops properly positioned and determined remained formidable opponents regardless of overall strategic circumstances. The statement reflected Churchill’s 5-year experience fighting German forces across multiple theaters.

British armies had faced Germans in North Africa where Raml’s Africa Corps demonstrated tactical brilliance despite material inferiority. They had fought in Italy where German defenders turned every mountain and river into a fortress. Churchill knew that German soldiers defending their homeland and positioned in fortifications built over decades would fight with ferocity that made material superiority less decisive.

Churchill’s assessment reached Eisenhower’s headquarters and reinforced the Supreme Commander growing concern about the Met stalemate. Third Army, which should have been driving toward the Rine, was instead locked in siege warfare that negated American advantages in mobility and firepower. The delay gave retreating German forces time to establish defensive lines elsewhere and organized for what would become the Battle of the Bulge Offensive.

In December, Eisenhower authorized additional resources for the Mets campaign. Heavy artillery, including rare 240 mm howitzers, was allocated to XX core. Engineer battalions with specialized demolition expertise were transferred to Third Army. Most importantly, Eisenhower approved a major offensive, Operation Madison, to finally break the Mets stalemate using systematic encirclement rather than frontal assault.

But resources alone wouldn’t crack Mets. Third Army needed new tactics, patience, and a willingness to fight the kind of grinding siege warfare that contradicted everything Patton believed about mobile operations. The question was whether Patton could adapt his aggressive philosophy to the reality of fortress warfare.

Churchill’s words breaks the spine of the German army weren’t just about Mets’s tactical importance. They captured a deeper truth. If American forces could take a fortress that had resisted every assault for 1,600 years, it would prove that German defensive capabilities, no matter how formidable, could not stop Allied victory.

That psychological impact would reverberate throughout German military leadership and soldiers defending other positions. November 8th, 1944. After weeks of preparation, Third Army launched Operation Madison, the coordinated offensive to finally capture Mets using completely different tactics than the failed September assaults. This time there would be no frontal attacks on fortifications.

Instead, double envelopment, encirclement, isolation, and systematic reduction. Major General Walton Walker’s XX Corps attacked with three infantry divisions, the 5th, 90th, and 95th. The plan was elegant in concept but brutally difficult in execution. American forces would bypass major fortifications, cut supply routes into Mets, isolate German garrisons, and forced surrender through starvation and ammunition exhaustion rather than direct assault. The weather was nightmarish.

Constant rain turned roads to rivers of mud. Temperatures dropped near freezing at night. The Moselle River flooded, washing away engineers attempts to construct bridges. Soldiers fought through forests and fields in conditions that made mobile warfare nearly impossible. Tanks bogged down in mud. Supply trucks couldn’t reach forward positions.

Artillery batteries sank into soft ground. But this time, American tactics worked by avoiding fortifications and maneuvering around strong points. Third army negated the defensive advantages that had stopped them in September. German garrisons in outlying forts found themselves cut off from supplies and reinforcements without food, ammunition, or hope of relief.

Morale collapsed. November 16th to 17, American forces completed encirclement of Mets. The city was now an island surrounded by third army units. German commander General Litant Heinrich KD realized his position was hopeless, but couldn’t surrender. Hitler’s orders forbade it. KD hoped for relief from German forces outside the pocket, but no relief was coming.

German armies everywhere were retreating or defending desperately. Mets was on its own. November 18th, 19. American forces breached Mets’s outer defenses and entered the city. Fighting became house-to-house combat through streets German defenders had fortified. Every building became a miniature fortress, every intersection a killing zone.

But American numerical superiority, artillery support, and control of surrounding territory gave them decisive advantages. November 21st, American patrols captured General Litant KD, wounded and hiding in an underground hospital on Eel Shambierre. His capture signaled the collapse of organized resistance.

On November 22nd, the Mets garrison formally surrendered, yielding over 6,000 prisoners immediately, but the forts remained. Fort Dryant, which had repulsed the September assault, still held out with several hundred defenders. So did other major fortifications. For three more weeks, American forces methodically reduced each fort using siege tactics, cutting water and supply lines, directing concentrated artillery fire on specific positions, and waiting for German garrisons to exhaust ammunition and food. December 6th, Fort Driant, the

position that had cost Third Army 500 casualties in September, finally surrendered. Its garrison, starved out of ammunition and abandoned by their high command, emerged from underground positions to surrender. When American officers toured the fort after its capture, they understood why September’s assault had failed.

The fortifications were even more formidable than intelligence had suggested, with multiple layers of defense, hidden positions, and interlocking fields of fire that made direct assault suicidal. By mid December, all major forts around Mets had fallen. The final accounting of German prisoners captured in the Mets fortress and the broader Lraine campaign was staggering.

Over 47,000 soldiers surrendered directly to XX Corps during the Met’s operations with additional prisoners taken by adjacent units, bringing the total Lraine campaign captures to approximately 75,000 German soldiers. The number was significant not just for its size, but for what it represented. These weren’t rear area troops or poorly trained Volk Grenadier divisions.

They included veteran units, fortress artillery specialists, and soldiers who had fought with determination and skill. Their capture removed experienced defenders from German order of battle at a time when Germany desperately needed every trained soldier. December 13th, 1944. As the last German defenders at Mets surrendered, Winston Churchill received reports detailing the campaign’s outcome.

His prediction had proven accurate. Patton had broken Mets and in doing so broken something fundamental in German defensive capabilities. Churchill’s response combined satisfaction with grim acknowledgement of the cost. The Americans have proven they can reduce any defensive position with sufficient determination and resources. He told his military staff.

The subtext was clear. Material superiority when properly applied could overcome even the most formidable defenses but at a price measured in time, casualties, and resources. The Mets campaign statistics told a sobering story. Third Army suffered approximately 29,000 casualties, killed, wounded, and missing during the 3-month Lraine campaign, of which Mets was the centerpiece.

The Fifth Infantry Division alone lost over 7,000 men. Tank losses exceeded 300 vehicles. Artillery ammunition expenditure was massive. The cost of breaking the fortress that had never fallen was measured in blood and steel. But the strategic results validated the price. Over 47,000 German prisoners captured at Mets, plus additional forces destroyed or scattered in the Lraine campaign, represented substantial degradation of German defensive capabilities.

The psychological impact was equally significant. German propaganda had proclaimed Mets impregnable. Its fall demonstrated that no position, regardless of fortifications or historical precedent, could stop Allied forces. Churchill’s statement breaks the spine of the German army, proved prophetic in ways beyond immediate military impact.

Mets’s capture opened the approaches to the SAR industrial region. It positioned Third Army for future offensives into Germany. Most importantly, it shattered the myth that properly fortified positions manned by determined defenders could indefinitely delay Allied victory. For Patton, Mets was the hardest lesson of his career. The general who thrived on speed and mobility, had been forced to fight a grinding siege that contradicted every instinct.

His initial attempts at rapid assault had failed catastrophically. Success came only when he adopted tactics he despised. Patient encirclement, systematic reduction, and willingness to accept that some objectives required time regardless of how aggressively they were pursued. In his diary, Patton wrote, “Metss was harder than anything we faced across France.

The fortifications were more formidable than we knew. The German defenders fought with skill and determination. We won through superior numbers, resources, and eventually better tactics, but it was close.” Eisenhower reflecting on the campaign sent Patton a carefully worded message that combined congratulation with gentle critique.

The capture of Mets demonstrates Third Army’s capability to overcome any defensive position. It also demonstrates the importance of adapting tactics to terrain and enemy capabilities rather than relying solely on aggressive action. British commanders, many of whom had doubted American tactical capabilities, acknowledged that Third Army had accomplished something British forces had never attempted, reducing a major fortress system while simultaneously conducting offensive operations across a wide front. Montgomery himself, never

generous with praise for American operations, admitted, “The Mets campaign showed the Americans can fight sieges as well as mobile battles. They learned quickly and adapted effectively. The broader Allied command structure drew lessons from Mets that would influence operations for the remainder of the war. Fortified positions required specialized tactics, equipment, and above all, patience, speed, and aggression, while valuable in mobile warfare, were insufficient against properly prepared defenses. American forces, having

learned these lessons at Mets, would apply them in future operations against German defensive lines. For Churchill, Mets vindicated his assessment of both American capabilities and German defensive tenacity. Americans had proven they could break any position with sufficient determination. Germans had proven they would fight ferociously even in hopeless situations.

Both lessons shaped Churchill’s understanding of how the final campaigns of the war would unfold. When Germany surrendered in May 1945, historians analyzing the war’s final year consistently identified Mets as a turning point. Not because it was strategically decisive in the way D-Day or Stalenrad were, but because it represented the moment when American forces proved they could overcome any defensive obstacle Germany could construct.

The fortress that had never fallen in 2600 years fell to Third Army in 3 months. Churchill’s words proved true. Breaking Mets broke the spine of German defensive confidence.

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