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September 12, 1944. Northern France. General Omar Bradley discovers his fuel depot is empty. 400,000 gallons gone. His logistics officer: "Sir, Third Army trucks took it last night." Bradley whispers: "That son of a bitch." George Patton stole Bradley's fuel allocation to keep his tanks racing toward Germany. Bradley's advance stopped for three days. Eisenhower refused to intervene. The theft worked. Patton reached Germany first. But Bradley never forgave him. Not in 30 years. Not even after Patton died. This video uncovers the fuel theft that changed WW2 — and the feud that outlasted the war itself. 📺 WW2 AFTERMATH Every victory has a cost. Every decision has consequences. True World War 2 stories others simplify. Subscribe for the aftermath history doesn't count. 📚 HISTORICAL ACCURACY & DRAMATIZATION NOTICE While fuel disputes between Bradley and Patton are well-documented, specific dialogue and the 'midnight raid' narrative are dramatized for storytelling purposes based on the documented rivalry and Bradley's memoir accounts of fuel allocation conflicts. This video is based on verified historical records, military archives, and documented accounts. To enhance the narrative experience, some scenes have been dramatized and dialogue has been reconstructed from historical documentation, after-action reports, and witness testimony. Sources consulted: National Archives and Records Administration US Army Historical Division reports Published military histories and memoirs Declassified documents For academic research, please consult primary sources and professional historians.