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  1. The result was the Wedemeyer Report in which Wedemeyer stressed the need for intensive United States training of and assistance to the Nationalist armies. Wedemeyer's 1947 report painted a picture of the Chinese Civil War that was both opportune and dire.

  2. Albert Coady Wedemeyer was an American military leader who was the principal author of the 1941 Victory Program, a comprehensive war plan devised for the U.S. entry into World War II.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Jan 15, 2024 · General Albert Coady Wedemeyer (July 9, 1896 – December 17, 1989) was a United States Army commander who served in Asia during World War II from October 1943 to the end of the war. Previously, he was an important member of the War Planning Board which formulated plans for the invasion of Normandy.

  4. Wedemeyer retired from the army in 1951. His memoirs (1958) sharply criticized U.S. and British war policies, arguing that better leadership might have altered a costly struggle in which one set of tyrants—the Nazis and Fascists—were thoroughly defeated, only to facilitate the rise of another—the Communists.

  5. Nov 6, 2015 · As the chief planner for General Marshall, and co-author of the Victory Plan, General Wedemeyer had a truly significant hand in shaping and directing the Allied War effort against the Fascist...

  6. A 1:1 proportion did not reflect the profound transformation of the battlefield caused by improved military technology that allowed Wedemeyer to plan for fewer, but more powerful, divisions to fight the war. 2

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  8. May 25, 2017 · According to the official history, the strategic genius behind the Victory Plan was not a senior Army officer, but the uniquely qualified Major Albert Wedemeyer. For more than six decades, accounts ranging from Wedemeyer's autobiography, Army official history, and various secondary sources maintained a consensus regarding Wedemeyer's unique and ...

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