2:42 | During the Battle of the Bulge, there were German spies dressed in American MP uniforms directing Allied units the wrong way on the roads. Charles Emerson reveals how they could be spotted. After the German surrender, he was waiting in Marseille for a ship to the Philippines to join the Japan invasion force. His morale was low and he was looking for some good news and he got it.
Keywords : Charles Emerson Battle of the Bulge German cold snow Military Police (MP) spy Germany Berlin Russian occupation points Marseille France Philippines Japan atomic bomb
Draftee Charles Emerson went to the 70th Fighter Wing in 1943 and, along with the rest of the support personnel, took a swift ocean liner across the Atlantic to England. The unit's initial mission was to escort and protect Allied bombers but their range did not allow them to continue all the way to the target.
Omaha beach was piled high with supplies of all kind when Charles Emerson waded ashore on the fifth day of the invasion. He was part of the headquarters unit of the 70th Fighter Group, which began operating right away on temporary steel runways just inland. They moved to the outskirts of Paris, then to Belgium, where he saw Buzz Bombs droning overhead.