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In December 1944, during the brutal winter of the Battle of the Bulge, the Allied front in Europe was collapsing under a massive German offensive. Tens of thousands of American soldiers were trapped, surrounded, freezing, and running out of ammunition in the small Belgian town of Bastogne. Military experts believed the situation was nearly impossible to reverse. But one man disagreed. When Allied Supreme Commander Dwight D. Eisenhower asked how quickly a counterattack could be launched, most generals estimated a week or more. Then George S. Patton, the bold and controversial commander of the U.S. Third Army, gave a shocking answer: 48 hours. Soon after, Patton made a phone call to Eisenhower and said four simple words: “I can attack now.” Those four words triggered one of the most remarkable military maneuvers in modern warfare. In freezing conditions, Patton’s Third Army executed a massive 90-degree pivot, moving over 100,000 men and hundreds of tanks through snow and ice to break the German siege of Bastogne. What followed became a defining moment of World War II leadership, strategy, and determination. This documentary explores the real story behind those four words—how preparation, bold decision-making, and relentless speed helped change the course of the war in Western Europe. It’s a story of leadership under pressure, the power of planning ahead, and the soldiers who fought through one of the harshest battles of the war.