The Need for Organisational Resilience Chapter 5
Armoured Division, and shortly after the 9 th Infantry Division. By October 19th 1944, the 9 th Infantry
Division alone suffered 4.500 casualties in the light of stiffening German resistance.
On October 21 st , the 28 th Infantry division, commandeered by Major General Cota , was to relive
the embattled 9 th Infantry Division. When Cota received his orders, he was stunned. In detail, the
orders set out that the his three regiments were to attack three separate objectives: the 109 th Infantry
division to push north towards Hürtgen, the 112 th to carry out the main attack through Vossenack,
cross the Kall river gorge and capture Schmidt with its road intersections. Finally, the 110 th Infantry
division was to drive southwards to prevent the Germans form counterattacking and taking control
over the road networks leading to Schmidt. It was a very similar attack that was unsuccessfully carried
out by the 9 th Infantry Division.
On November 2 nd , the attack was launched with a preparatory 60-minute artillery barrage into the
Hürtgen forest. The three regiments moved towards their objectives, in full view of artillery observers
on the Brandenberg and Bergstein ridge. Well directed artillery shells rained down on the 28 th , and all
three regiments started to have casualties. Well entrenched Germans slowed down the progress
through the thickly forested area of the Hürtgen forest. Deteriorating weather stopped all aerial
support, so much of the fighting was carried out by infantry in close quarters.
At the end of November 2 nd , the Americans paid a terrible blood tool, but captured Vossenack,
Kommerscheidt and Schmidt with a battalion size force in each of these villages. Cota remained most
his time in his divisional headquarters, jubilant at the capture of Schmidt. However, he was oblivious
of the state of his regiments. His troops were exhausted, little or no effort was made to send out
patrols, or to dug-in in anticipation of a counterattack by the Germans. To make matters worse, the
supply route through the Kall Trail came to a standstill. The first M10 tank destroyers, bound to
Kommerscheidt and Schmidt threw their tracks on the narrowly winding Kall trail, or were disabled by
mines. It would remain blocked until November 5 th .
On November 3 rd , the Germans – as expected – would counterattack, with a force of Pzkpfw III,
IV and V (Panthers). The beleaguered American defenders, under constant artillery fire, had not been
supplied with anti-tank guns nor has made any tank or tank destroyer made it to Schmidt. The
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