“Unprecedented is the only word for it. General Marshall has to deal with nine theaters of operations, directing an overseas force scattered over six continents; not battle plans alone, but the equally important business of providing each theater, and clamoring allies as well, with the necessary supplies, assembling these supplies at ports of embarkation, finding the ships and then hurrying them over 56,000 miles of protected communication lines, every mile a gauntlet. On top of this, there are the home front with more than 7,000,000 selectees to be clothed, fed, trained and conditioned and the necessity of close co-ordination with Congress, Navy, State Department and White House: a crushing load, yet General Marshall takes it in his stride… Paraphrasing Napoleon, who said that the humblest soldier carried a marshal’s baton in his knapsack, General Marshall gave out that every man in Uncle Sam’s Army had a star in his pocket.”
More magazine articles about General Marshall can be read here.
George Creel also interviewed General MacArthur in Japan – you can read the interview here.
George Creel was not impressed with FDR –you can read his editorial rantings here
– from Amazon:
American Warlords: How Roosevelt’s High Command Led America to Victory in World War II
KEY WORDS: General George Marshall during WW2,General George Marshall talents and abilities,General George Marshall master of bureaucracies 1943,George Marshall under General John Pershing,General George Marshall as FDR’s Chief of Staff,General George Marshall and Uncle Sam’s Army,general george marshall and US general Thomas T Handy 1943,general george marshall and general Henry hap arnold 1943,general george marshall and major general george strong military inteligence 1943,Field Marshal Sir John Dill and general george marshal 1943,the job of General George Marshall 1939-1945













































