![]() ![]() Although many Americans, including Wolenski, are captured, Grey, Pritchard, Kiley and others escape to the River Meuse. Hessler's tanks and infantry storm Ambleve, finally taking the town. Kiley concludes that experienced German troops have been replaced by these men and withdrawn for an offensive, but Pritchard dismisses this as well, rebuking Kiley for "crackpot hunches" and determining to relieve him of duty. A patrol led by First Lieutenant Weaver and Staff Sergeant Duquesne capture some young and obviously inexperienced German soldiers. Hoping to uncover more proof, Kiley visits a US infantry position on the Siegfried Line under command of Major Wolenski. His superiors, General Grey and Colonel Pritchard, dismiss it out of hand: all available intelligence points to Germany not having the resources and manpower to launch another attack. Kiley returns to headquarters where he warns that the Germans are planning one more all-out offensive. Spotting a German staff car the plane buzzes the car and photographs the officer. ![]() He and his pilot, Joe, are flying a reconnaissance mission over the Ardennes forest. Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Kiley is a U.S Army Intelligence officer and former policeman serving in Belgium in December, 1944. ![]()
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