In March 1945, as American forces held the last bridge across the Rhine at Remagen, Nazi Germany turned to one of its most classified weapons: the V-3 supergun. Built into a hillside and stretching over 300 feet, this experimental artillery piece was designed to rain shells on targets nearly 100 miles away using revolutionary multi-stage propulsion technology. Hitler had once planned to use it against London. Now, desperate commanders aimed it at the bridge that could decide the war.
But the V-3 had a fatal flaw.
This is the true story of a weapon so secret that even its own crew barely understood it—a technological marvel that became an engineering disaster. Through declassified reports, Allied intelligence documents, and post-war investigations, we trace the eleven shells fired at Remagen, none of which hit their target. We examine why extreme secrecy, untested technology, and operational desperation combined to create a weapon that ultimately saved Allied lives by failing at the critical moment.
No dramatization. No speculation. Just the documented account of how Nazi Germany's super-weapon became one of history's most expensive misfires.
Based on U.S. Army Ordnance reports, Allied intelligence assessments, and authoritative military histories including Norman Longmate's "V-Weapons: Hitler's Last Gamble" and Ken Hechler's "The Bridge at Remagen."
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