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December 17, 1944. Büllingen, Belgium. The most feared SS tank commander in the Wehrmacht picked up a small cardboard box. Inside: chocolate. Cigarettes. Chewing gum. He said nothing. He already knew. Three days later — his entire armored column was abandoned in a burning Belgian village. Not destroyed. Not captured. Just out of gas. And 300 yards from his attack route — three million gallons of American fuel. Sitting in plain sight. He drove right past it. This is not a story about tank battles or heroic generals. This is the forensic audit of Germany's last great offensive — and the logistics system that killed it before a single shot was fired. 📊 Inside this documentary: The fuel math that made the Ardennes offensive impossible before it started 18 American soldiers who stopped Peiper's entire spearhead — for a full day Why Germany was running 1.2 million horses while America ran 400,000 trucks The American major who burned 124,000 gallons of fuel as an anti-tank barrier What a captured U.S. Army prisoner observed inside Peiper's dying pocket at La Gleize The postwar confession: when Manteuffel told American interrogators exactly when Germany lost the war 📚 Sources: U.S. Army after-action reports, McCown intelligence report (December 1944), Manteuffel Foreign Military Studies B-151/B-151A, U.S. First Army records, National Archives. 🔔 Subscribe for more forensic audits of the decisions, systems, and numbers that actually determined the outcome of World War II. #BattleOfTheBulge #WW2 #WWII #Ardennes #KampfgruppePeiper #MilitaryHistory #Documentary #Wehrmacht #Logistics #TigerTank #AmericanArmy #WorldWarII #Panzer #Bastogne #WesternFront