Operation Undertone
Operation Undertone was a major offensive launched by the Western Allies during the final stages of World War II in Europe, conducted from 15 to 25 March 1945 as part of the broader Rhineland Campaign. It involved a coordinated assault by the U.S. Seventh Army under Lieutenant General Alexander M. Patch, the U.S. Third Army under General George S. Patton Jr., and the French First Army, all operating under the Sixth Army Group commanded by Lieutenant General Jacob L. Devers. The primary objective was to destroy German forces west of the Rhine River in the Saar-Palatinate triangle, breach the Siegfried Line (Westwall), and secure the western bank of the Rhine south of the Ruhr industrial area, thereby facilitating further Allied advances into Germany.[1][2] The operation emerged from Supreme Allied Commander General Dwight D. Eisenhower's broad-front strategy to eliminate organized German resistance west of the Rhine following the Ardennes Offensive (Battle of the Bulge). By early March 1945, Allied forces had already captured key dams on the Roer River and reduced the Colmar Pocket, setting the stage for a multi-pronged push. Operation Undertone specifically targeted the weakened German Seventh and First Armies, which were under Army Group G commanded by General of Panzer Troops Heinrich von Vietinghoff and suffered from severe shortages in manpower, fuel, and equipment after months of attrition. The offensive was planned as a pincer movement, with the Seventh Army attacking northward from the Saar region across a 70-mile front and the Third Army thrusting northeast from the Moselle River, while the French First Army provided support on the southern flank to prevent German reinforcements.[2][1] The assault commenced on 15 March 1945 with intense artillery barrages and air support from the Allied Expeditionary Air Force. Allied forces rapidly advanced through German defenses, breaching the Westwall and exploiting breakthroughs in a coordinated effort between the Seventh and Third Armies. On 17 March, Patch adjusted the plan to allow Patton's forces to exploit breakthroughs across part of the Seventh Army's sector, famously declaring, "We are all in the same army," to emphasize unified effort.[2][1][3] Operation Undertone achieved decisive success, resulting in the near-total destruction of the German Seventh Army and over 100,000 prisoners captured. By late March, Allied troops had reached the Rhine, effectively clearing the Saar-Palatinate and isolating the German First Army west of the river. Allied casualties totaled approximately 17,000, including around 1,700 killed, thanks to overwhelming air and artillery superiority and the Germans' depleted state. The operation's outcome enabled subsequent Rhine crossings, such as the Third Army's assault at Oppenheim on 22 March, accelerating the collapse of Nazi Germany and contributing to the war's end in Europe less than two months later.[2][1]Background
Strategic Context
Following the Allied victory in the Battle of the Bulge (December 1944–January 1945), Supreme Allied Commander General Dwight D. Eisenhower reinstated his broad-front strategy to systematically eliminate German forces west of the Rhine River and prevent any regrouping or counteroffensive. This approach emphasized simultaneous advances across multiple sectors by the 21st Army Group in the north and the 12th and 6th Army Groups further south, maintaining unrelenting pressure on the Wehrmacht to accelerate its collapse without risking a narrow thrust that could allow German reinforcements to concentrate. By early February 1945, Eisenhower adjusted priorities by halting the 12th Army Group's offensive in the Eifel region to redirect resources northward, focusing on encircling the Ruhr industrial area and securing Rhine crossings in coordination with Soviet advances in the east.[2] The German defensive posture in the west had deteriorated significantly by early 1945, with Field Marshal Albert Kesselring assuming command as Commander in Chief West on March 10 to coordinate fragmented forces against the Allied onslaught. Army Group G, initially led by Generaloberst Johannes Blaskowitz and responsible for the Saar-Palatinate sector, succeeded by SS-Oberstgruppenführer Paul Hausser at the end of January 1945, was severely overstretched and depleted following heavy casualties in the Alsace counteroffensive (Operation Nordwind) and the Ardennes offensive, leaving it with understrength divisions reliant on the aging Westwall fortifications. These losses, combined with severed supply lines and hundreds of thousands of prisoners captured by Allied forces in preceding months, rendered Army Group G's positions vulnerable to exploitation, as its tenuous connections to neighboring Army Group B collapsed under pressure.[2] In the southern theater, the U.S. Sixth Army Group under Lieutenant General Jacob L. Devers held a critical advantage through control of the Saarbrücken bridgehead, which anchored Allied lines and facilitated potential drives into the Palatinate triangle. This positioning enabled the group to shield the right flank of the 12th Army Group while preparing to shatter German defenses in the Saar-Moselle triangle, complementing broader efforts to clear the Rhine's west bank. The successes of Operations Veritable and Grenade earlier in February had already reduced the German salient north of the Ruhr, setting the stage for synchronized southern advances in the overall Rhine campaign. Harsh winter weather had previously stalled Allied momentum through rain, fog, and snow, limiting air operations and ground mobility from late 1944 into early 1945. However, by mid-March, conditions improved markedly with clearer skies, light rain that aided tank movement without flooding, and warming temperatures, granting the Allies unchallenged air superiority for the first time in months. This allowed tactical air forces, such as the XIX Tactical Air Command, to conduct devastating strikes on German rear areas, supply lines, and reinforcements, amplifying the ground offensive's effectiveness.Preceding Operations
Following the Allied counteroffensive that eliminated the German Ardennes salient in late January 1945, U.S. forces in the Eifel and Saar regions conducted a series of limited advances to improve defensive positions and weaken the Siegfried Line, setting the stage for broader operations along the Rhine.[4] The German Operation Nordwind, launched on New Year's Eve 1944 as a secondary counteroffensive in Alsace to relieve pressure on the Ardennes front, aimed to exploit perceived weaknesses in the U.S. Seventh Army's lines but faltered due to logistical shortages, harsh weather, and stout Allied resistance. Supported initially by the 11th Panzer Division in the Saar-Moselle triangle, the attack forced temporary Seventh Army withdrawals in early January but was contained by mid-month, compelling German forces to retreat under pressure by early February. This failure depleted reserves for Army Group G, reducing the Nineteenth Army to a training command and leaving its remnants to hold a 100-mile Rhine frontage covering the Black Forest, with key units like the 338th Infantry Division redeployed northward.[5][6][7] Concurrently, the French First Army under General Jean de Lattre de Tassigny cleared the Colmar Pocket in Alsace between late January and mid-February 1945, eliminating a 130-mile-deep German salient that had threatened Allied supply lines since Operation Nordwind. Involving intense urban and riverine fighting, this operation secured the Rhine valley from the Swiss border to the German frontier, freeing French divisions such as the 3d Algerian for redeployment to the main offensive axis and stabilizing the Sixth Army Group's southern flank. By 19 March, elements of the French forces had advanced beyond the Lauter River into Germany, enhancing coordination with U.S. units.[5][8][9] In mid-February, the U.S. Seventh Army conducted limited attacks to improve positions along the Siegfried Line, securing high ground and clearing obstacles in preparation for the main offensive, though no major breaches occurred until March.[8] To divert German reserves northward and protect the Seventh Army's flank, Lieutenant General George S. Patton's Third Army conducted diversionary thrusts in early March 1945, crossing the Prüm River and pushing toward the Rhine. Earlier, in early February, VIII Corps' 87th and 90th Infantry Divisions, along with the 6th Armored and 11th Armored Divisions, had breached the Westwall near the Vianden bulge, capturing towns like Brandscheid, reaching the Prüm by 10-12 February, and advancing to the Kyll River by 3-4 March despite delaying actions by German units like the 2nd Panzer and 246th Volksgrenadier Divisions. On 6 March, the 90th established a bridgehead southwest of Gerolstein, while XII Corps' 5th Infantry Division crossed the Kyll near Metterich on 3 March, enabling the 4th Armored Division to surge 44 miles to the Rhine by 7 March and capture over 5,000 prisoners; further, the 10th Armored Division crossed the Prüm on 17 March, advancing eight miles and seizing an intact bridge. These maneuvers drew German attention away from the Saar-Palatinate sector, isolating Army Group G.[10][7][11][12]Planning and Preparation
Objectives and Directives
On 1 March 1945, General Jacob L. Devers, commanding the Sixth Army Group, approved a plan submitted by General Alexander M. Patch of the Seventh Army for Operation Undertone, which envisioned a coordinated assault by three corps attacking abreast along a 75-kilometer front from Saarbrücken, Germany, to a point southeast of Haguenau, France.[8] The primary objective was to clear the Saar-Palatinate triangle of German forces, thereby eliminating the last major enemy-held territory west of the Rhine and facilitating the Allied advance into Germany as part of the broader campaign to reach and cross the river.[8][2] On 8 March 1945, Supreme Allied Commander General Dwight D. Eisenhower issued a directive to the Sixth Army Group, instructing it to clear the Saar-Palatinate triangle and seize bridgeheads over the Rhine between Mainz and Mannheim using forces under Devers' command.[13] This directive emphasized the operation's role in supporting the overall Allied strategy by drawing German reserves southward and securing crossing sites to enable further exploitation east of the Rhine.[8] Eisenhower specified that the main effort would fall to the Seventh Army, with the U.S. Third Army of Lieutenant General George S. Patton's Twelfth Army Group limited initially to diversionary attacks.[8] To ensure synchronization, the plan called for the Third Army to commence diversionary assaults across the Moselle River starting on 13 March 1945, aimed at pinning down German units and protecting the left flank of the Sixth Army Group ahead of the Seventh Army's main assault on 15 March.[8] The French First Army, under General Jean de Lattre de Tassigny, was incorporated to safeguard the southern flank by clearing a narrow strip along the Rhine to Lauterbourg and to exploit any breakthroughs achieved by the Seventh Army.[8] These directives underscored a deliberate, phased approach to maximize pressure on the weakening German defenses in the region.[2]Allied Preparations
The Seventh Army amassed substantial supplies and artillery resources in forward areas, including the Saarbrücken region, to sustain a deliberate set-piece assault against fortified German positions.[8] These efforts involved replenishing ammunition and fuel stocks depleted during prior engagements like the Battle of the Bulge, drawing from secure supply lines through ports such as Antwerp and Marseilles to ensure operational continuity.[14] Allied air forces coordinated extensive support planning, with the XIX and XII Tactical Air Commands tasked to conduct interdiction strikes, close air support, and bombardment of Siegfried Line fortifications in the lead-up to the offensive.[8] This preparation emphasized achieving total aerial superiority, enabling fighter-bombers to target German rear areas and convoys without significant opposition.[15] Intelligence assessments relied on aerial reconnaissance and ground reports to pinpoint vulnerabilities in German defenses, including thinner fortifications in sectors like the Pfalzwald hills and the Moselle triangle.[8] These evaluations informed tactical adjustments, highlighting opportunities for breakthroughs amid the overstretched German lines.[14] The integration of French forces under General Jean de Lattre de Tassigny played a key role, with the First French Army securing the southern flank by eliminating the Colmar Pocket in February 1945 and positioning units to hold the Moder River line while readying for post-assault exploitation.[1] Elements such as the 3rd Algerian Infantry Division and detachments from the 5th French Armored Division reinforced the U.S. VI Corps, ensuring coordinated advances across the 6th Army Group's front.[8] Overall, these measures supported the broader aim of clearing the Palatinate west of the Rhine, positioning Allied forces for a decisive push into Germany.[14]Opposing Forces
Allied Order of Battle
The Allied forces for Operation Undertone were primarily drawn from the U.S. Sixth Army Group under Lieutenant General Jacob L. Devers, which coordinated the main southern thrust, with supporting elements from the Twelfth Army Group under General Omar N. Bradley.[8][16]Seventh Army
The U.S. Seventh Army, commanded by Lieutenant General Alexander M. Patch, formed the core of the offensive, with three corps arrayed abreast to breach the Siegfried Line and advance to the Rhine.[8][14] Patch's role emphasized a coordinated, deliberate assault supported by massive artillery and air preparation to exploit weaknesses in German defenses.[8]- VI Corps (Major General Edward H. Brooks): Positioned on the southern flank, this corps included the 3rd Infantry Division, 36th Infantry Division, 42nd Infantry Division, 45th Infantry Division, and 103rd Infantry Division, along with attached French units.[8][17]
- XV Corps (Major General Wade H. Haislip): Serving as the main effort in the center, it comprised the 44th Infantry Division, 100th Infantry Division, 45th Infantry Division, 12th Armored Division, and 14th Armored Division.[8][17]
- XXI Corps (Major General Frank W. Milburn): On the northern flank adjacent to the Third Army, it featured the 63rd Infantry Division, 70th Infantry Division, and elements of the 106th Infantry Division.[8][18]
French First Army
Under General Jean de Lattre de Tassigny, the French First Army provided detachments to support the Seventh Army's right flank, primarily the 3rd Algerian Infantry Division and a combat group from the 5th Armored Division, operating under VI Corps control to secure the southern sector near the Rhine.[8][19] These units focused on protecting the flank while advancing through the Belfort Gap region.[16]Third Army
From the Twelfth Army Group, General George S. Patton's U.S. Third Army contributed diversionary pressure on the northern boundary to fix German reserves and protect the Seventh Army's left flank.[8][14] Patton directed rapid armored exploitation once breakthroughs occurred, emphasizing speed to disrupt enemy withdrawals.[8]- XX Corps (Major General Walton H. Walker): The primary supporting element, it included the 10th Armored Division, 12th Armored Division, 26th Infantry Division, 65th Infantry Division, 80th Infantry Division, and 94th Infantry Division.[8][18]
German Order of Battle
The German forces opposing Operation Undertone were organized under Army Group G, commanded by SS-Oberstgruppenführer Paul Hausser, which fell under the overall command of Oberbefehlshaber West (OB West) led by Field Marshal Albert Kesselring after March 10, 1945.[8][2] Hausser had assumed command of Army Group G in late January 1945 following his recovery from wounds, inheriting a sector stretched thin after previous withdrawals and transfers.[8] The group included the First Army under General der Infanterie Hermann Foertsch and the Seventh Army under General der Infanterie Hans Felber, with the Nineteenth Army's remnants—having escaped the Colmar Pocket—transferring divisions to bolster the First Army by early March.[2] These armies fielded approximately 85,000 men across the Saar-Palatinate front, though exact figures varied due to ongoing attrition and reinforcements; the Seventh Army alone held about 45,000 troops facing the U.S. Third Army, while the First Army had around 40,000.[2] Key corps within these armies were predominantly understrength, relying on Volksgrenadier divisions with minimal armored support. The First Army controlled the LXXXII Corps (General Friedrich-August von Hahm), LXXXV Corps (General der Infanterie Baptist Kniess), XIII SS Corps (SS-Obergruppenführer Max Simon), and XC Corps (General der Infanterie Erich Petersen), featuring units such as the 11th Panzer Division (about 4,000 men and 25 tanks), 416th Infantry Division, and various Volksgrenadier formations like the 559th (at 60% strength) and 560th.[8][2] The Seventh Army included the LXXX Corps (General Franz Beyer), LXXXIX Corps (General der Infanterie Gustav Höhne), XIII Corps (General Ralph Graf von Oriola), and remnants of LIII Corps (after General Edwin von Rothkirch und Trach's capture), with divisions such as the 2nd Panzer (few operational tanks), 6th SS Mountain (depleted post-counterattacks), 159th Volksgrenadier (two weak regiments), 276th Volksgrenadier (about 400 infantrymen and 10 howitzers), and 326th Volksgrenadier (roughly 280 men).[8][2] Overall, about 75% of the forces were infantry, with severe shortages in fuel, ammunition, and armor—most panzer units had fewer than 20 operational tanks, and gasoline constraints limited mobility.[8] Defensive dispositions centered on the Siegfried Line (Westwall) fortifications, particularly in the Pfälzerwald (Pfalz Forest) and Hardt Forest areas, where deep stream valleys, rugged hills, and concrete pillboxes formed natural barriers supplemented by minefields and anti-tank obstacles.[8] These positions, strongest in the Saar-Palatinate sector, aimed to channel Allied attacks through vulnerable gaps like those at Kaiserslautern and Wissembourg, but the defenses were static due to Hitler's and Kesselring's restrictions on withdrawals, despite Hausser's repeated pleas for reinforcements to avert encirclement.[8][2] This command rigidity, ignoring Hausser's warnings of potential annihilation without additional divisions or flexibility, forced reliance on improvised Kampfgruppen and depleted reserves, exacerbating the imbalance against the Allies' superior numbers and mobility.[8]| Army | Commander | Key Corps | Representative Divisions | Approximate Strength |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| First Army | Gen. Hermann Foertsch | LXXXII (Gen. Hahm), LXXXV (Gen. Kniess), XIII SS (Gen. Simon), XC (Gen. Petersen) | 11th Panzer, 416th Infantry, 559th VG, 560th VG | ~40,000 men |
| Seventh Army | Gen. Hans Felber | LXXX (Gen. Beyer), LXXXIX (Gen. Höhne), XIII (Gen. von Oriola), LIII (remnants) | 2nd Panzer, 6th SS Mountain, 159th VG, 276th VG, 326th VG | ~45,000 men |
Course of the Operation
Initial Assault
Operation Undertone commenced on 15 March 1945, with the U.S. Seventh Army launching a coordinated assault across a 110-kilometer front against the Siegfried Line (also known as the West Wall) in the Saar-Palatinate region.[8] The offensive involved three corps: VI Corps on the right flank, XV Corps in the center as the main effort, and XXI Corps on the left, tasked with breaching the fortified defenses to open the path toward the Rhine River.[18] This initial phase aimed to penetrate the German border fortifications and exploit weaknesses in the enemy's depleted forces.[8] The assault began before dawn, supported by a massive artillery preparation and aerial bombardment that targeted bunkers, pillboxes, and rear-area installations along the Siegfried Line.[8] Units of the XII Tactical Air Command and the Eighth Air Force flew over 600 sorties on the first day, striking key fortifications and communications nodes in areas like Zweibrücken and Kaiserslautern, which significantly disrupted German defensive preparations and destroyed numerous concrete emplacements.[18] Ground artillery from the Seventh Army's divisions added to the barrage, softening the dragon's teeth obstacles and suppressing enemy fire, allowing infantry and armored elements to advance through the initial barriers.[8] In the central sector, XV Corps focused its efforts on the Bitche salient, where the 100th Infantry Division assaulted the fortified town and surrounding positions, reaching its outskirts by the end of 15 March and preparing to clear it the following day amid close-quarters fighting.[18] To the south, the U.S. Third Army's XX Corps conducted a diversionary crossing of the Saar River on 13 March, two days before the main assault, using elements of the 10th Armored and 94th Infantry Divisions to pin down German reserves and prevent reinforcements from shifting north.[8] This feint involved heavy artillery fire from 31 battalions, advancing limited distances but effectively tying down enemy units along the Saar Valley.[8] On the Seventh Army's flanks, VI Corps crossed the Moder River and pushed into the Lower Vosges foothills, while XXI Corps breached defenses near Saarbrücken, encountering minefields and demolished bridges but making steady progress.[14] German forces, primarily under Army Group G, mounted initial stiff resistance through the LXXXV Corps and XIII SS Corps, which held the line with a mix of understrength divisions including the 17th SS Panzer Grenadier Division opposite XV Corps.[8] These units inflicted casualties with prepared positions and counterattacks, but their artillery response was light due to ammunition shortages and prior attrition from earlier campaigns.[18] By 17 March, cracks in the defense became evident as German commanders ordered withdrawals into the main West Wall belt, allowing Allied forces to consolidate gains and widen penetrations without major counteroffensives.[8]Breakthrough and Exploitation
Following the initial assaults that breached the Siegfried Line, Allied forces under the U.S. Seventh Army rapidly exploited the gaps from 18 March 1945 onward, shattering German defenses in the Saar-Palatinate region.[8] The XXI Corps of the Seventh Army achieved a key penetration on 18 March when elements of the 70th Infantry Division captured Saarbrücken after overcoming resistance from the German 25th Panzergrenadier Division, securing the city's industrial areas and opening routes into the Saarland.[8] This breakthrough disrupted German supply lines and forced the XIII SS Corps to withdraw eastward, allowing the 44th Infantry Division to advance rapidly along the Saar River valley.[8] Concurrently, the XV Corps pushed through the rugged Palatinate Forest, where the 100th Infantry Division cleared fortified positions in the Hardt Forest, enabling armored elements to exploit the terrain gaps.[8] By 20 March, the U.S. Third Army's XX Corps had reached and seized Kaiserslautern, a vital communications hub, with the 10th Armored Division outflanking German rearguards and capturing over 1,000 prisoners from fragmented units of the 17th SS Panzergrenadier Division, followed by the 80th Infantry Division.[8] The Third Army's XII Corps, with the 4th Armored Division, exploited breaches by thrusting northeast with tank destroyers and infantry, covering more than 20 miles in a single day and isolating pockets of resistance.[8] Close air support from P-47 Thunderbolt fighter-bombers played a crucial role, strafing retreating German columns on highways and disrupting their cohesion, which prevented organized counterattacks.[8] The U.S. Third Army's XII Corps contributed to the exploitation by extending its earlier Moselle River crossings from 14–16 March, with the 4th Armored Division reaching the Nahe River and threatening to encircle withdrawing German forces from the west.[8] This maneuver forced Army Group G to accelerate its retreat, as the corps' probes northward pinned down the 559th Volksgrenadier Division and exposed flanks along the Rhine tributaries.[8] On the German side, the collapse accelerated after Field Marshal Albert Kesselring authorized a general retreat on 17 March to preserve remnants of Army Group G from total annihilation.[8] By 18–21 March, cohesion evaporated as the 17th SS Panzergrenadier Division was decimated near Hauenstein, losing most of its combat-effective strength in ambushes and artillery barrages, while improvised Kampfgruppen fled without effective command.[8] This disintegration left the Siegfried Line positions untenable, enabling Allied forces to advance unopposed in multiple sectors.[8]Pursuit to the Rhine
Following the breakthroughs achieved in the initial phases of Operation Undertone, Allied forces accelerated their pursuit of retreating German units toward the Rhine River from 22 to 25 March 1945.[8] The U.S. Seventh Army's VI Corps, including the 12th Armored and 42d Infantry Divisions, pushed rapidly eastward, capturing Landau on 22 March and approaching Speyer by nightfall of the same day, just six miles from the city.[8] Elements of the Seventh Army reached the vicinity of Worms and Mannheim by 24 March, securing key positions on the west bank of the Rhine and effectively closing off escape routes for German forces in the Palatinate region.[8] Concurrently, the French First Army under General Jean de Lattre de Tassigny advanced along the southern flank, with the 3d Algerian and 5th Armored Divisions crossing the Lauter River by 19 March and extending their line to the Rhine, thereby protecting the Seventh Army's right and preventing any German reinforcement from the south.[8] A pivotal moment in the pursuit occurred on 22 March when General George S. Patton's U.S. Third Army, operating from the north, linked up with the Seventh Army near Kaiserslautern, completing the encirclement of German Army Group G remnants in the Saar-Palatinate area.[8] This junction, facilitated by the Third Army's 10th Armored Division, which had seized Kaiserslautern two days earlier, allowed for coordinated exploitation and trapped thousands of Germans in a shrinking pocket.[8] Speyer fell shortly after on 23 March, with its Rhine bridge demolished by retreating Germans late that evening, further hampering their withdrawal.[8] The rapid tempo of the advance overwhelmed disorganized German rear guards, as Allied armored columns covered up to 20 miles per day with minimal opposition.[8] German forces, primarily from the First Army under General of Panzer Troops Otto von Knobelsdorff within Army Group G commanded by SS-Oberstgruppenführer Paul Hausser, conducted a hasty evacuation eastward through the Pfälzer Forest, where narrow roads became congested with vehicles and troops.[8][14] Constant interdiction by the XII Tactical Air Command destroyed much of the retreating columns, inflicting heavy attrition and forcing survivors to disperse into the woods.[8] By 23 March, Hitler had authorized a full withdrawal behind the Rhine, but the order came too late to prevent the loss of most heavy equipment.[8] All remaining Rhine bridges in the sector, including those at Germersheim and Maximiliansau, were demolished by 24 March at 1020, with the last intact spans north of Ludwigshafen already destroyed earlier in the week.[8] No major German counterattacks materialized during this phase, as surviving units prioritized consolidating defenses on the east bank of the Rhine rather than contesting the west bank further.[8] By 25 March, Allied forces had secured the entire west bank from the Moselle to the Swiss border, ending organized resistance in the region.[8]Aftermath
Casualties and Losses
During Operation Undertone, the U.S. Seventh Army incurred approximately 12,000 casualties, including nearly 1,000 killed, while its attached French units suffered minimal losses with no specific figures reported.[8] The U.S. Third Army recorded 5,220 total casualties, including 681 killed.[8] Overall Allied casualties thus totaled around 17,000, predominantly among American forces.[18] German losses were far heavier, with the units opposing the Third Army estimated at 113,000 men, including over 68,000 prisoners of war.[8] The Seventh Army and attached French forces captured an additional 22,000 Germans, bringing total prisoners to about 90,000.[8] German First and Seventh Armies lost 75–80% of their infantry strength, rendering them combat-ineffective.[18] Casualties were heaviest during the initial assaults from 15–18 March, where intense fighting against fortified positions in the Siegfried Line and Palatinate Forest inflicted significant personnel losses on both sides before the German defenses collapsed.[8] In the subsequent breakthrough and pursuit phases, Allied losses lightened as German forces fled eastward, abandoning key Siegfried Line outposts and vast supplies of ammunition, fuel, and vehicles that the Allies captured intact.[8] Allied air power contributed to these inflated German losses by interdicting retreats and destroying equipment in the Pfälzerwald.[8]| Side | Total Casualties | Killed | Prisoners Captured |
|---|---|---|---|
| U.S. Seventh Army (incl. French) | ~12,000 | ~1,000 | 22,000 |
| U.S. Third Army | 5,220 | 681 | >68,000 |
| German Forces | ~113,000 (opposing Third Army) | Not specified | ~90,000 total |