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Show Italian Campaign Satisfactory General Dwight D. Eisenhower, Eisen-hower, talking about the war in Italy, says thai the-campaign has well repaid all efforts. He seems to be satisfied that the best has been done under terrible adverse conditions of weather, logistics and terrain. Apparently, the commander of the Allied forces considers that the capture of the port of Naples and the airfields of Foggia represent repre-sent important acquisitions. He feels that the men in the Fifth and Eighth Armies have been fighting superbly and takes much pride in the way the various Allied Al-lied forces have worked together. The General and his assistants are conscious of criticims launched launch-ed by armchair strategists in the United States, who continually inform the world what should be done, with sidelights as to the why and how. The military leaders are dealing deal-ing with an actual campaign which has to be run upon lines which are different from those that succeed only in glowing phrases on a typewriter. |