Share This Episode
Our American Stories Lee Habeeb Logo

Stephen Ambrose on D Day: Into the Fire at Normandy

Our American Stories / Lee Habeeb
The Truth Network Radio
November 20, 2025 3:03 am

Stephen Ambrose on D Day: Into the Fire at Normandy

Our American Stories / Lee Habeeb

00:00 / 00:00
On-Demand Podcasts NEW!

This broadcaster has 4367 podcast archives available on-demand.

Broadcaster's Links

Keep up-to-date with this broadcaster on social media and their website.


November 20, 2025 3:03 am

The D-Day invasion was a pivotal moment in World War II, as Allied forces struggled to break through the German defenses in Normandy. The battle was marked by brutal fighting in the hedgerow country, where American troops faced off against German machine guns and mortar fire. Despite the challenges, the Allies persevered, with the help of innovative tactics and the bravery of individual soldiers. The story of D-Day is a testament to the sacrifices made by those who fought for freedom and democracy.

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE:
Connect with Skip Heitzig Podcast Logo
Connect with Skip Heitzig
Skip Heitzig
Truth for Life Podcast Logo
Truth for Life
Alistair Begg
The Christian Worldview Podcast Logo
The Christian Worldview
David Wheaton
Truth for Life Podcast Logo
Truth for Life
Alistair Begg

This is an iHeart Podcast. Then the space hamster flew his hot air balloon all the way to the bottom of the ocean. Where did that story come from? Book? Dream?

Nope, it came from a conversation. Meet Miko Mini Plus, the AI companion that co-creates personalized story adventures with your child in real time. What color was the hamster's cape? And what did he pack for lunch? Unlock your child's imagination.

Discover Miko Mini Plus and the magic of AI exclusively at Costco. Life gets messy. Spills, stains, and kid chaos. But with Anibay, cleaning up is easy. Our sofas are fully machine washable, inside and out, so you never have to stress about messes again.

Made with liquid and stain-resistant fabrics, that means fewer stains and more peace of mind. Designed for real life, our sofas feature changeable fabric covers, allowing you to refresh your style anytime. Need flexibility? Our modular design lets you rearrange your sofa effortlessly. Perfect for cozy apartments or spacious homes.

Plus, they're earth-friendly and built to last. That's why over 200,000 happy customers have made the switch. Get early access to Black Friday pricing right now.

Sofas started just $699. Visit washable sofas.com now and bring home a sofa made for life. That's washable sofas.com. Offers are subject to change and certain restrictions may apply. Hear that?

That's what it sounds like when you plant more trees than you harvest. Work done by thousands of working forest professionals like Adam, a district forest manager who works to protect our forests from fires. Keeping the forest fire-resistant is synonymous with keeping a forest healthy. And we do that through planting more than we harvest and mitigate those risks through active management. It's a long-term commitment.

Visit WorkingForestsInitiative.com to learn more. I turned off news altogether. I hate to say it, but I don't trust much of anything. It's the rage bait. It feels like it's trying to divide people.

If we got clear facts, maybe we could calm down a little. NBC News brings you clear reporting. Let's meet at the facts. Let's move forward from there. NBC News reporting for America.

With Black Friday's Savings at the Home Depot, you can get up to $1,400 off, plus get free delivery on select innovative appliances like GE Profile. Add a touch of ease to your holiday with the all-in-one combo to wash and dry your laundry in one machine and refrigerators with built-in convenient features like the dual-dispense auto-fill water pitcher. Shop Black Friday's Savings on Select GE Profile appliances plus get free delivery now at the Home Depot. Free delivery on appliance purchases of $396 or more. Offer valid 115-123 at U.S.

Olympic Store Online for details. Uh This is Lee Habib, and this is Our American Stories. Stephen Ambrose was one of America's leading biographers and historians. At the core of Ambrose's phenomenal success is his simple but straightforward belief. that history is biography.

and that history is about people. Ambrose passed in 2002. But his epic storytelling accounts can now be heard here at Our American Stories, thanks to those who run his estate. Here's Ambrose with the D-Day Invasion, Part 2. Let's take a listen.

The battle over the next couple of weeks took on a form. That brought great anguish to Eisenhower, and posed great dangers. for the alliance. This was because General Montgomery had in the pre-Overlord planning said that the way this battle is going to go is as follows. We're going in on the left.

That is the closest to the city of Cannes. and thus to the city of Paris. The role of the Americans in this operation would be to protect the right flank of the British forces advancing on Paris. But the Americans felt that he was being Penny wise and pound foolish, that he was saving a few lives now by not attacking. It was going to mean more British lives would be lost later on.

We had the initiative, we had the advantage, we should have driven on, was Patton's attitude, Bradley's attitude. Collins, Eisenhower's. And many of the senior British officers at SHE felt the same way.

Well, with Montgomery held up in front of Kahn. It now fell on the Americans to the right. Under General Bradley, the U.S. First Army. The 4th Infantry, the 29th Infantry, the 1st Infantry Division, and the two airborne divisions, the 82nd and the 101st.

to effect a breakout. from the Normandy Peninsula. This was about as bad a country as there is in the world for fighting an offensive action. Or turning that around, it was just ideal for the defense. This was because.

The Norman countryside is filled with very small fields. Many of them smaller than football fields. Very few of them are bigger. These fields were surrounded by hedges. I don't think of a little hedge in England or a little hedge in front of the house on Main Street in the Middle West of the United States.

These hedges are hedge rows. Where A thousand years and more old. They consisted of piles of earth. as much as six and even feet and even more in height, a couple of meters. Very broad at the base, 2-3 meters.

with trees and shrubs planted on top of them that had been there for centuries and whose roots had made these mounds into almost a cement kind of a barrier. There was one entry into these fields. And one only. That the farmer kept it, had a gate there, and that's he moved his cattle in and closed the gate, and the hedgerows were perfectly. Satisfactory is fences.

Now for the attackers in this kind of a situation, It was just a nightmare. In the very first days, GIs would come to the gate, to the opening, and rush into the field.

Well, the Germans had prepared for this. They had their machine guns at the far end from the gate on each corner with a crisscross fire through the field. They had mortar men behind. who had zeroed in on the field. And they had 88s.

back further to the rear that had also sighted into the field, and they would wait until a bunch of GIs maybe even a platoon in strength, got into that field and then they would call out the fire order and just cut them down. How do you make progress in a situation like this? These German troops may not have been the best. ever fought for Adolf Hitler, but Boy, they sure had good positions to fight from. And they were awfully good on the defensive.

And also, these fields would be strewn with landmines.

Well, one technique that was used was to drive a tank right into the gate. Stop it there. and turn that 75 millimeter barrel onto the two corners and fire white phosphorus shells. Which put the fear of God into everyone. into the corners to take care of the machine guns.

And then drive the trank around in the field, and those would be anti-personnel mines out there that the tank could safely explode without. injuring itself. And take the field that way. But the Germans caught on to that quick enough and would hit that tank when it got into the. field communications.

mainly under buried underground telephone lines.

So that they couldn't be picked up by the eyes. And they'd get on the phone at the fire in the hedgerow and say the tank is just coming into the opening right now. They'd have an 88 a mile or two back who'd zeroed in on that point. and they'd blast it and blast the tank away. The tanks, when they tried to come in from the sides of the gate, that is through the hedgerow itself, would hit that hedgerow and then they'd go up in the air, climbing the hedgerow.

so that at their apex they would have their underbellies exposed to Germans. with handheld anti-tank rockets on the far side. And of course the underbelly of a tank has no armor on it.

So you could Blow it up. with one well-placed shot. The solution to this problem fighting in the hedgerow country on the offensive. Came from enlisted men. And this was a characteristic of the U.S.

Army in the Second World War that I would want to dwell on for a second. In the U.S. Army, Every officer From 2nd Lieutenant on up had a suggestion box. either literally or figuratively outside his door. They didn't do it that way in the German army.

And The suggestion box. And it worked. Time and time and time again, as American kids, privates, corporals, sergeants. would figure out the solution to a tactical problem and suggest it to their immediate superior who would pass it on up the chain of command and tell in the and it got to Bradley himself. And he would okay or veto the idea.

There were lots of them in Normandy. Many of them worked. The most famous was to take those steel rails that had formed the Eight defenses. at Utah and Omaha. They were only six feet long and weld them onto the front of a tank.

with two prongs so that the tank could drive into that hedgerow. and those steel rails would penetrate. And that would keep the tank from going belly up. And the tank then had enough engine power. to drive on through that hedgerow.

And then he could start using his 75 millimeter cannon, the tank captain could. to hit those German machine gun positions with the white phosphorus. and open up other entryways into the hedgerows. With this ingenious device, and as I say, quite a few others, the Americans started to make progress in Normandy. It was still slow.

And expensive because every field had to be fought for. You couldn't bypass any of them. Still, some progress was made almost every day. Nevertheless, the mood in the Allied world was becoming more and more pessimistic. as June gave way to July, And July then began to approach its end.

and Manny still hadn't taken Khan. And on the right flank, Bradley's troops were only inching their way forward. at a cost reminiscent of the battles of the First World War. and people thought of the First World War. And we're afraid.

Afraid of a stalemate. That the Germans would keep the Allies bottled up in Normandy right on through to the coming of fall and even on into winter. Which, along with all the other bad things that would result from such a situation, the loss of morale, the loss of life, the loss of equipment. Stalin would undoubtedly have thought you're not serious about this attack. The so-called second front, he would have said, is doing us no good at all.

Beyond all those things, A stalemate imposed in Normandy lasting into the winter would have given Hitler more time to develop his secret weapon. More time to perfect the diesel submarine.

something on which the Germans had stolen a march on the U.S. and British Navy. Give them time to complete the V-1, the pilotless aircraft, radio-controlled, that could carry bombs. More importantly, give Wernher von Braun and his team More time to develop The medium range rockets. The so-called V2, V stood for Vengeance Weapons.

More time to develop the jet aircraft. where Germany was two years and even more ahead of the Allies in development. And you've been listening to the late, great Stephen Ambrose tell one heck of a story. About the D-Day invasion. By the way, there's a part one.

Go to ouramericanstories.com. Or put in Stephen Ambrose, and you'll see not just the first part of D-Day, the story, but so many countless other terrific stories told by Ambrose, not just about World War II. But so many other things like the Transcontinental Railroad. And my favorite undaunted courage about the Lewis and Clark expedition. And what a story we were hearing now.

We have to remember with history that nobody knew then what was going to happen next. Would our troops be pinned down in Normandy?

Well, Eisenhower didn't know, Marshall didn't know, the men didn't know. And that's why we love to tell these stories, bring you back into the story itself. as it was happening. When we come back, more of the story of D-Day. Here on Our American Story.

Is it good? Shh! You won't believe what my new friend just told me about dinosaurs! Is your child having conversations you never imagined? Are they learning without realizing it?

It's not a tablet. It's not a toy. It's Miko Mini Plus, the AI-powered companion that turns curiosity into endless learning. Hear the future of playtime. Meet the extraordinary Miko Mini Plus.

Only at Costco. There's nothing like sinking into luxury. Anibay sofas combine ultimate comfort and design at an affordable price. AniBay has designed the only fully machine washable sofa from top to bottom. The stain-resistant performance fabric slip covers and cloud-like frame duvet can go straight into your wash.

Perfect for anyone with kids, pets, or anyone who loves an easy-to-clean, spotless sofa. With a modular design and changeable slipcovers, you can customize your sofa to fit any space and style. Whether you need a single chair, love seat, or a luxuriously large sectional, Anibay has you covered. Visit washable sofas.com to upgrade your home.

Sofas start at just $699 and right now, get early access to Black Friday savings, up to 60% off store-wide, with a 30-day money-back guarantee. Shop now at washable.com. Add a little to your life. Offers are subject to change and certain restrictions may apply. Hear that?

That's what it sounds like when you plant more trees than you harvest. Work done by thousands of working forest professionals like Adam, a district forest manager who works to protect our forests from fires. Keeping the forest fire-resistant is synonymous with keeping a forest healthy. And we do that through planting more than we harvest and mitigate those risks through active management. It's a long-term commitment.

Visit WorkingForestsInitiative.com to learn more. Yeah. It's 1972. A young British family is attempting to sail around the world when disaster strikes. Their boat is hit by killer whales and it sinks in seconds.

All they have left is a life raft and each other. This is the true story of the Robertson family and their fight to survive. Hosted by me, Becky Milligan. Listen to Adrift, an Apple original podcast produced by Blanchard House. Follow and listen on Apple podcasts.

Okay. Only 10 more presents to wrap. You're almost at the finish line. But first Make it shining bright. There.

The last one. Enjoy a Coca-Cola for a pause that. refreshes. And we continue with our American stories and with the story of the D-Day invasion. Brought to us by Stephen Ambrose.

Let's pick up. where we last left off. Desperate measures were called for. Eisenhower put great pressure on Monty to attack. You've got to attack.

Monty finally said, give me all the air forces and I will attack. Eisenhower gave him every plane that flew in England. and put him to work in Operation Goodwood toward the end of July in bombing a strip one mile by eight miles in front of Mani's army outside of Khan. This huge bombardment. Was followed by an attack that Monty called off after the first hour because his losses were too heavy.

Again, the argument: Monty saying, I'm holding the German armor in my front, the Americans saying, We put everything we had under this attack and you gained one mile. One mile was gained after the biggest air bombardment the world has ever seen. And the anger at Montgomery boiled and boiled. There were demands on the part of American officers and some British officers that Eisenhower sack Montgomery. Send him home.

Let him go be the governor of Malta. Put them in the House of Lords. Get rid of them. Get somebody that will make this British Army fight. Eisenhower always resisted such pressure.

He recognized something that those who were making the recommendation did not, that Monty was a national hero. that the British press had built him up after the victory at Al Alamein into a general whose stature was the equal of that of Wellington. that to fire Mani in the middle of this battle after the success of D-Day. would be unacceptable to the British government and to the British people. Manny had to stay.

Instead of putting pressure on Manny, much less firing Manny, Eisenhower began putting the pressure on Bradley. Bradley then said, well, We're almost to the edge of the hedgerow country. We're almost out into open wheat fields, places where we can use our tanks. where our mobility can come into play. were the trucks that we've brought over all the way from Detroit.

can become a part of the action. We're almost there. Give me an air bombardment to open up a path in the German defenses and I'll break through.

Well, they'd been down that path once. But decided not with Bradley. Let's try it again.

So towards the End of the campaign. Operation Cobra was laid on. July 28th. Another huge bombardment by B-17s, B-24s, B-25s with the fighter bombers getting in and the fighters coming down to strafe. right in front of the American lines.

This time, Eisenhower ordered the air commanders to keep that bombardment right on the noses of our frontline troops so that once it lifts, they can move into an area that has just been devastated and any German still alive is suffering from concussion so badly that he won't be able to fight.

Well, they laid it on close. They laid it on so close that we took a lot of casualties, including a four-star general, General McNair, who was there to observe. This is the last time Ike used big bombers in a tactical situation like that. Taking casualties from your own planes is a terrible thing. War is awful anyway, but when it's your own guys killing you, it really just is the very bottom.

But it worked. it did blast that hole in the German lines. Colonel Collins was able to break through and take the town of Saint-Lo. And now is the time to bring George Patton in on the game. Patton has been eager, as you might imagine.

Eager doesn't even begin to describe it. To get into this battle.

Now at the beginning of August he brought his third army over. And Patton began to swing down. into France. with the possibility now of going all the way straight through to Paris without opposition.

Now Hitler saw an opportunity. The Americans had a whole army. Out in the open. Germans didn't have the air power to do anything about that, but they sure had a lot more tanks than I could been able to bring afford yet.

Now Hitler directed a He thought, a brilliant counter-stroke. Two. attack the Americans. along the line leading to Mortain to break through with tanks at Mortain to get to the coast and to cut Patton off completely from his supply line. This would reverse the situation.

The Third Army? would be forced to surrender, out of gasoline, out of ammunition, out of food, out of medicine, would have no choice but to surrender. The Germans could re-establish their line in Normandy and impose that stalemate that Hitler counted on to provide him with time to bring the new weapons into play.

Now the German generals weren't happy with this plan, brilliant as it looked on paper. Rommel, incidentally, by now, was no longer in the battle. Rammel had been injured when his car had been shot up. by a Spitfire when it was traveling to his headquarters and it had crashed and he had cracked his skull and had a bad concussion and gone home. to recuperate.

Hitler's relations with his generals by this time. were in disarray, to say the very least of it, because on the 20th of July of 1944, the German conspirators against Hitler had gone into action. Count von Stauffenberg had set off a bomb in Hitler's headquarters designed to eliminate Hitler so that the German generals could take over the German government. And then. What they hoped would happen would be that the Allies would embrace them.

that they could have peace on their western front, and that they could then turn all of their forces to the east. to stop the red tide that was coming in through Poland. They even hoped in their wildest fantasies that the Americans and British would join them. And that you would have the spectacle of a German, American, British, and French army. lining up to stop the advance of the Red Army into Central Europe.

I say fantasy and it really was, but if you think about it, that's basically what NATO is. That's what ultimately happened. It wasn't possible with Hitler's Nazis. The German generals thought, hoped, prayed, dreamed. speculated that it might be possible with a Germany run by the general staff.

There was no way that was going to happen. None of the Allied leaders were prepared to make peace with the German general staff. There was going to have to be a revolution in Germany first. with not only Hitler overthrown, but militarism. discarded and a new democratic Germany could then emerge with whom we could do business and eventually obviously we did as they became The most important European members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.

But nobody was ready for that. in July of 1944.

Well, in any event, the plot against Hitler failed. came that close. It's one of the great what-ifs. of all world history. And it's the damnedest story because Stauffenberg had his bomb in his briefcase and he had set it down on the side of the table leg.

with Hitler right next to it, standing at this briefing table. They were all looking at maps. And Stauffenberg then had excused himself to go out and make a telephone call. But there's why I've got to go make a call back to headquarters. As he left, The officer standing on this side knocked over his briefcase accidentally with his foot, picked it up, and set it down again on the side away from Hitler.

with the big heavy wooden leg between the bomb and Hitler.

So that when the bomb went off, Although Hitler suffered some injuries, he lost hearing in one of his ears, his arm was pretty badly hit. He suffered a bit in the way of internal injuries. He survived. And of course he carried out vengeance against the conspirators. which really included almost all the high-ranking officers in the German army.

although some of them managed to duck and dodge. Rammel didn't. Hitler had deep suspicions about Rommel's involvement in the conspiracy. Actually, although Rommel was informed about it and is prepared to take advantage of it, he had advised against it. Rommel took the position.

that we ought to arrest Hitler and put him on trial. We shouldn't kill him. If we kill him, we're going to make him into a martyr. In Germany, you'll have another stab in the back legend. But was pretty good political thinking on the one side, but on the other side The idea that in a totalitarian state run by people as ruthless and as shrewd and as determined as the Nazis.

that these politically naive generals could get away with arresting Hitler and putting him on trial. That was nonsense. That was never going to happen. And a terrific job on the production, editing, and storytelling by our own Greg Hengler. And a special thanks to the Ambros Estate.

For allowing us to share this audio with you. And by the way, go to Amazon or wherever you get your books. Pick up Band of Brothers. Pick up Undaunted Courage. Pick up, well, just about anything Ambrose ever wrote.

And by the way, what a story he tells. There are two things that were of particular interest. First, that suggestion box where RGIs would put in ideas. And unlike most top down countries, our country well, it's governed from the bottom up. and these good ideas would filter all the way up to a general marshal.

who would then implement some of them. And of course, we hear about that fear of getting pinned down in July, and in comes Patton's army, his third army in July. not just to save the day. But to move us forward to Berlin like no other general in our ranks could have. The story of D-Day here on Our American Stories.

Then the space hamster flew his hot air balloon all the way to the bottom of the ocean. Where did that story come from? Book? Dream? Nope.

It came from a conversation. Meet Miko Mini Plus, the AI companion that co-creates personalized story adventures with your child in real time. What color was the hamster's cape? And what did he pack for lunch? Unlock your child's imagination.

Discover Miko Mini Plus and the magic of AI exclusively at Costco. Ah, greetings for my bath, festive friends. The holidays are overwhelming, but I'm tackling this season with PayPal and making the most of my money, getting 5% cash back when I pay in four. No fees, no interest. I used it to get this portable spa with jets.

Now the bubbles can cling to my sculpted but pruny body. Make the most of your money this holiday with PayPal. Save the offer in the app. N1231, see paypal.com slash promo terms. Point keep your renee for cash and more paying for subject to terms and approval.

PayPal Inc. at MLS 910-457. The Chase Inc. business premiere card is made for people who make things happen, like me. I'm Sam, founder and CEO of Manifest, a product.

Design company that makes everyday products design smarter. I get 2.5% cash back on purchases of $5,000 or more, plus unlimited 2% cash back on all other purchases, which helps us make more smart ideas into a brilliant reality. The Inc. Business Premier Card. Chase your business, make more of what's yours.

Real business owner compensated for their participation. Cards issued by JPMorgan Chase Bank and a member of DIC subject to credit approval terms apply. Um Woo-hoo! What a matchup we got, y'all. This is that classic HBCU vibe.

Non-stop action, the band is rocking and the crowd lick, chants echoing, drum beating, everybody showing that school pride. Game like this? Yeah, it calls for an ice cold Coca-Cola. Ah, crisp and refreshing. That's a game changer right there.

Mmm, yeah. That taste always hits the right note, just like a band at halftime. And just like that, we're back at it. Passionate fans, school colors everywhere, and an ice cold Coca-Cola, that's a winning combo. No matter the sport, no matter the yard, everybody knows.

Fan work is thirsty work, so grab a Coca-Cola and keep that HBCU pride going. I use Shift same Day Delivery to stay connected with my sister during the holidays. She lives across the country. Shift has tons of stores to order from: groceries from Albertsons, crafts from Michael's, even pet supplies from PetSmart. The list goes on.

So when we have long-distance movie nights, I turn to Shift to get face masks, snacks, and everything else we need delivered to her and to me same day. Download the app or visit shift.com. That's shipped.com. This is an iHeart podcast. Um

Get The Truth Mobile App and Listen to your Favorite Station Anytime