HomeOmar Nelson Bradley: America's GI General 1893-1981 (American Military Experience)
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Omar Nelson Bradley: America's GI General 1893-1981 (American Military Experience)

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About this book

When Omar Nelson Bradley began his military career more than a century ago the army rode horses into combat and had less than 200 000 men. No one had heard of mustard gas. At the height of his career Bradley (known as Brad and The GIs General) led 1.23 million men as commander of 12 Army Group in the Western Front to bring an end to World War II. Omar Nelson Bradley was the youngest and last of nine men to earn five-star rank and the only army officer so honored after World War II. This new biography by Steven L. Ossad gives an account of Bradleys formative years his decorated career and his postwar life. Bradleys decisions shaped the five Northwest European Campaigns from the D-Day landings to VE Day. As the man who successfully led more Americans in battle than any other in our history his long-term importance would seem assured. Yet his name is not discussed often in the classrooms of either civilian or military academies either as a fount of tactical or operational lessons learned or a source of inspiration for leadership exercised at Corps Army Group Army Chief or Joint Chiefs of Staff levels. The Bradley image was tailor-made for the quintessential homespun American heroic ideal and was considered by many to be a simple humble country boy who rose to the pinnacle of power through honesty hard work loyalty and virtuous behavior. Even though his classmates in both high school and at West Point made remarks about his looks and Bradley was always self-conscious about smiling because of an accident involving his teeth he went on to command 12 Army Group the largest body of American fighting men under a single general. Bradleys postwar career as administrator of the original GI Bill and first Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff during the Korean War ensures his legacy. These latter contributions as much as Bradleys demonstrable World War II leadership shaped U.S. history and culture in decisive dramatic and previously unexamined ways. Drawing on primary sources such as those at West Point Army War College and Imperial War Museum this book focuses on key decisions often through the eyes of eyewitness and diarist British liaison officer Major Thomas Bigland. The challenges our nation faces sound familiar to his problems: fighting ideologically-driven enemies across the globe coordinating global strategy with allies and providing care and benefits for our veterans.