Field Marshal
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Erwin Rommel was a complex man: a born leader, brilliant soldier, a
devoted husband and proud father, intelligent, instinctive, brave,
compassionate, vain, egotistical, and arrogant. In France in 1940,
then for two years in North Africa, then finally back in France
again, in Normandy in 1944, he proved himself a master of armored
warfare, running rings around a succession of Allied generals who
never got his measure and could only resort to overwhelming numbers
to bring about his defeat.And yet for all his military genius,
Rommel was also naive, a man who could admire Adolf Hitler at the
same time that he despised the Nazis, dazzled by a Führer whose
successes blinded him to the true nature of the Third Reich. Above
all, he was the quintessential German patriot, who ultimately would
refuse to abandon his moral compass, so that on one pivotal day in
June 1944 he came to understand that he had mistakenly served an
evil man and evil cause. He would still fight for Germany even as
he abandoned his oath of allegiance to the Führer, when he came to
realize that Hitler had morphed into nothing more than an agent of
death and destruction. In the end Erwin Rommel was forced to die by
his own hand, not because, as some would claim, he had dabbled in a
tyrannicidal conspiracy, but because he had committed a far greater
crime - he dared to tell Adolf Hitler the truth.In Field Marshal
historian Daniel Allen Butler not only describes the swirling,
innovative campaigns in which Rommel won his military reputation,
but assesses the temper of the man who in the final reckoning
fought only for his country, with no dark depths beyond.