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Killing Patton
Killing Patton
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Killing Patton: The Strange Death of World War II's Most Audacious General is a book written by Bill O'Reilly and Martin Dugard about the final year of World War II and the death of General George Patton, specifically whether it was an accident or an assassination. The book is the follow-up to Killing Kennedy, Killing Lincoln, and Killing Jesus and was published in September 2014[1][2] through Henry Holt and Company.

Key Information

Disputed theory

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O'Reilly suggests that Patton was poisoned while recovering from the automobile accident he endured on December 8, 1945, on the orders of Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin, ostensibly to prevent him from warning the United States about the imminent danger of the Soviet Union. "I think Stalin killed him," O'Reilly told George Stephanopoulos on the ABC news program This Week.[3]

Media Matters for America reported that several historians found O'Reilly's theory highly implausible. Rick Atkinson, a two-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize, told the progressive news organization that Patton died of complications following "a fender bender." "You've got to look at what Patton's situation was," said Carlo D'Este, the author of Patton: A Genius for War. "He was a quadriplegic, he was going to die anyway, he was totally immobilized, he couldn't move. What is the point of assassinating him and where did Stalin come from anyway? Sure, somebody could have snuck in the hospital, but why would you bother? You need to verify facts. That certainly raises a red flag with me."

Patton's grandson, Robert Patton, also rejected the suggestion of assassination. "The theory is he either died naturally or from a blood clot," he said. "You're paralyzed, and this is what happens."[4]

Reception

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Writing in The Washington Post, Richard Cohen criticized the book's "chaotic structure" and "considerable padding," calling the work a "clunky hagiography." Cohen was especially critical of O'Reilly's "repellent admiration" for Patton in light of his demonstrable anti-Semitism.[5][6] In The New Republic, James Wolcott dismissed the book as O'Reilly's "latest papier-mâché exercise in necrobiography."[7] Patton biographer and documentary filmmaker Robert Orlando described Killing Patton and O'Reilly's "Killing" series as "not about new or penetrating discovery, but the same ol' same ol' only through this greatly successful marketer and his hired writer—a scheduled feeding for an audience already 'on the farm.'"[8]

By contrast, Wes Vernon wrote in The Washington Times that "Killing Patton is rich in blow-by-blow accounts of some of the most significant battles of World War II, as well as of many off-battlefield lives of its primary movers whose personalities virtually come to life in this well-crafted narrative."[9]

Sales

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On his June 24, 2015 segment of The O'Reilly Factor, O'Reilly claimed that Killing Patton was "the bestselling tome ... in 2014." Publishers Weekly subsequently pointed out that according to Nielsen BookScan, Killing Patton "was the fifth bestselling print book of 2014, behind The Fault in Our Stars by John Green, Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Long Haul by Jeff Kinney, and Divergent and Insurgent by Veronica Roth."[10]

Scrapped adaptation

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On November 24, 2015, National Geographic Channel and Scott Free Productions jointly announced the television adaptation of Killing Patton. Anthony Peckham was attached to write the four-hour teleplay.[11] Following O'Reilly's departure from Fox News in April 2017, it was announced the film was still in development with a scheduled release in 2019.[12] However, in June 2017, National Geographic announced the cancellation of the project.[13] The network stated that "It was in development for a couple of years, and it was a difficult project to crack creatively" and that "Like most projects in development, it didn't go the distance, so we passed on it." This is the first of O'Reilly's projects that National Geographic has passed on.[14]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
is a 2014 book co-authored by television host Bill O'Reilly and writer Martin Dugard, published by as the fourth volume in O'Reilly's Killing series of historical narratives. The work interweaves accounts of the final months of the European theater in , emphasizing General George S. Patton's military contributions, with an examination of his death on December 21, 1945, following a low-speed automobile collision near , . The book's central thesis asserts that Patton's demise was not a mere accident but an , allegedly ordered by Soviet Premier and executed through intermediaries, including possibly the U.S. (OSS), to neutralize Patton's outspoken opposition to Soviet expansion and his advocacy for continued warfare against the USSR. This contention draws primarily on postwar claims by former OSS agent Douglas Bazata, who alleged involvement in a plot to incapacitate Patton via the crash, though Bazata provided no corroborating documentation and his account has been contested for inconsistencies. Despite achieving commercial success as a New York Times bestseller, Killing Patton has faced substantial criticism from historians for factual inaccuracies, speculative leaps, and reliance on unverified theories lacking empirical support, with Patton's grandson Robert H. Patton explicitly denouncing the narrative as unfounded. The official U.S. Army investigation concluded the incident resulted from an unfortunate but routine traffic mishap involving a U.S. Army truck, with no evidence of foul play emerging from contemporary medical or forensic records. Critics, including military scholars, argue that the book's portrayal prioritizes dramatic conjecture over rigorous historical analysis, reflecting broader issues in popular histories that amplify fringe interpretations without sufficient validation.

Publication and Background

Authors and Writing Process

Bill O'Reilly and Martin Dugard co-authored Killing Patton: The Strange Death of World War II's Most Audacious General, published on September 23, 2014, by . O'Reilly, a former anchor known for his conservative commentary and bestselling non-fiction, served as the series' lead author, shaping the narrative voice and structure across the "Killing" books, which blend thriller-style storytelling with historical events. Dugard, an experienced adventure and history writer with prior works on expeditions and , contributed specialized expertise in archival and on-site . The writing process for Killing Patton followed the established collaboration model of the series, initiated with in 2011. Dugard handled primary research tasks, including analysis of declassified documents, diaries, and battlefield site visits in to reconstruct events surrounding General George S. Patton's death. This groundwork provided the factual foundation, with integrating it into a chronological, dramatic aimed at accessibility for general readers, often employing present-tense narration to heighten engagement. The duo's method emphasized verifiable sources over speculation in core historical accounts, though the book's controversial thesis on Patton's death drew from interpreted evidence. Critics have questioned the depth of O'Reilly's hands-on writing, suggesting Dugard drafted much of the content while O'Reilly focused on editorial oversight and promotion, a claim echoed in analyses of the series' rapid production pace—five books in five years by 2015. Despite this, both authors are credited equally on the title, and Dugard has affirmed the partnership's value in combining rigor with narrative drive in public discussions. The process prioritized empirical details from military records and eyewitness accounts, aligning with the series' goal of dramatizing "what really happened" without fictional invention.

Release and Series Context

, co-authored by Bill O'Reilly and Martin Dugard, was published on September 23, 2014, by , an imprint of . The hardcover edition debuted at number one on bestseller list for combined print and e-book nonfiction. The book serves as the fourth entry in O'Reilly and Dugard's "Killing" series, which examines the circumstances surrounding the deaths of influential historical figures through narrative-driven historical accounts. Preceding volumes include Killing Lincoln (2011), Killing Kennedy (2012), and Killing Jesus (2013), with subsequent installments such as Killing Reagan (2015) expanding the series to over a dozen titles by 2024. The series has collectively sold millions of copies, blending journalistic research with dramatic storytelling to appeal to broad audiences interested in pivotal events and assassinations. O'Reilly, a former Fox News host, provides the framing narrative, while Dugard contributes extensive on-site research and historical detail.

Content Summary

Coverage of WWII Events

Killing Patton chronicles the European Theater's concluding campaigns from late 1944 onward, centering on General Jr.'s command of the U.S. Third Army amid Allied efforts to defeat . The narrative opens amid the on October 3, 1944, portraying American infantrymen's grueling assaults on fortified positions like Fort Driant near , where German defenses inflicted heavy casualties despite Patton's aggressive tactics. The book details the German Offensive, launched December 16, 1944, as Operation Watch on the Rhine, with deploying 410,000 troops, 1,400 tanks, and 1,600 artillery pieces to pierce weakly held U.S. lines in the Forest and seize . Facing at , the held firm under siege from December 20; Patton orchestrated a swift northward pivot of his Third Army's corps, covering 100 miles in harsh winter conditions to relieve the town on December 26, 1944, a maneuver credited with blunting the offensive by early January 1945. Post-Bulge, the text describes Patton's forces pushing toward the Rhine River, capturing 32,000 Germans at in March 1945 and advancing rapidly into , though Eisenhower reassigned primary Rhine-crossing honors to British Field Marshal on March 23, 1945, relegating Patton to secondary operations despite his army's momentum. Parallel Soviet advances receive coverage, including the Red Army's liberation of Auschwitz on January 27, 1945, and penetration into by April 16, 1945, forcing Hitler's suicide on April 30, 1945, and Germany's on May 8, 1945 (VE Day). The book frames these as hastened by Patton's earlier contributions but critiques Allied command for enabling Soviet dominance in . Strategic diplomacy intersects the military account, with the (February 4–11, 1945) depicted as President conceding Polish and Eastern European spheres to , influencing post-war divisions later addressed at (July 17–August 2, 1945). Earlier context, such as Patton's June 1944 role in deceiving Germans on invasion sites, is invoked to underscore his strategic value prior to the book's primary timeline.

Focus on Patton's Final Months

Following the unconditional surrender of on May 8, 1945, General commanded the U.S. Third Army in the occupation of and parts of , overseeing the disarmament of German forces and initial efforts. Patton advocated retaining experienced German administrators, including former Nazis, to maintain order and expedite reconstruction, arguing that excessive purges would hinder recovery and leave Europe vulnerable to Soviet expansion; he viewed the USSR as the primary postwar threat, likening its policies to those of the Nazis. These positions clashed with Allied policy under General , who enforced strict , leading to Patton's public statements—such as equating Soviet atrocities with Nazi ones and suggesting a potential with Germans against —that drew sharp rebukes from superiors. On October 7, 1945, Eisenhower relieved Patton of Third Army command, reassigning him to the Fifteenth Army, a largely administrative unit tasked with compiling after-action reports rather than operational duties; this demotion stemmed directly from Patton's inflammatory press comments and perceived , though Eisenhower cited it as a reorganization for efficiency. Patton, frustrated and disillusioned, spent his remaining weeks in on personal activities, including boar hunting expeditions near and , where he expressed private regrets over not pushing Third Army further east to confront Soviet forces before the war's end. He confided to aides his belief that the U.S. had "fought the wrong enemy" by defeating while allowing Soviet dominance in , and he contemplated retirement or even resignation to speak freely against what he saw as of . On December 9, 1945, while returning from a hunting trip in his staff near Neckarstadt, , Patton's vehicle collided at low speed with an approaching U.S. driven by Robert L. Furrow; Patton, seated in the back without a seatbelt, was thrown forward, suffering a severe cervical spinal cord injury that left him quadriplegic but initially conscious. Evacuated to the 130th Station Hospital in , he developed complications including and , succumbing on December 21, 1945, at age 60; the official cause was a secondary to the trauma, with no evidence of external wounds or infection at impact. In these months, Patton's isolation from active command amplified his vocal opposition to U.S. policy, including criticism of the Plan's punitive approach to , which he believed would foster communism's spread.

Official Account of Patton's Death

The Automobile Accident

On December 9, 1945, at approximately 11:45 a.m., General George S. Patton Jr. was riding in the back seat of a driven by Horace L. Woodring near the northeast suburbs of , , en route to a hunt with his chief of staff, Major General . The car was traveling on a narrow, two-lane highway amid postwar reconstruction traffic when an oncoming 2.5-ton , driven by Robert L. Thompson, suddenly turned left across their path without signaling. Woodring applied the brakes but could not avoid the collision, which occurred at low speeds of under 20 , resulting in a near 90-degree impact where the truck's right front bumper struck the Cadillac's left front fender and . Patton was thrown forward from the back seat into a steel partition separating the passengers from the driver, sustaining a of the third cervical (C-3) and associated that caused immediate but no initial loss of consciousness. Gay suffered minor lacerations to the face and head from broken glass, while Woodring and Thompson incurred only superficial injuries; the crash appeared minor at the scene, with the Cadillac's damage limited primarily to its front end. Patton initially downplayed his injuries, refusing a and walking briefly to a nearby vehicle before complaining of increasing pain and numbness; he was first taken to a local aid station in Neckarstadt before transfer to the 130th Station Hospital in for evaluation. Eyewitness accounts, including from Woodring and Thompson, described the incident as an accidental maneuver by the , with no of intentional action or external interference, consistent with the chaotic road conditions in occupied at the time. U.S. Army investigators classified it as a routine mishap, attributing fault to the truck's failure to yield, though no criminal charges were filed against Thompson.

Medical Treatment and Cause of Death

Following the automobile accident on December 9, 1945, General George S. Patton Jr. was transported to the 130th Station Hospital in , , where X-rays revealed a fractured C-3 and posterior dislocation of C-4 on C-5, resulting in quadriplegia with below the neck. Initial stabilization involved placing Patton in traction using a halter device with fishhooks inserted into his cheeks to maintain cervical alignment and prevent further damage. Medical management focused on conservative immobilization and supportive care, including and monitoring for secondary complications, as surgical intervention for such cervical injuries was limited in 1945 and not pursued. Patton's wife, Beatrice, visited him during his hospitalization, and physicians noted minor signs of recovery, such as improved sensation in his extremities, leading to plans for encasing him in a body cast for potential transfer to the . However, prolonged immobility from quadriplegia predisposed him to thromboembolic events, with no prophylactic anticoagulation administered, reflecting standard practices of the era that prioritized rest over . Patton died on December 21, 1945, at 5:55 p.m. in the hospital, with the official cause determined as —a blood clot originating from his paralyzed lower body that migrated to the pulmonary arteries, causing congestive and . findings corroborated the as the terminal event, secondary to the spinal injury and resultant stasis in venous circulation.

Investigations and Autopsy Findings

The accident on , 1945, near , , was promptly investigated by Lieutenants John Vanlandingham and of the U.S. 's 818th Company. Their report, prepared with limited interviews of witnesses including Patton's driver, Horace L. Woodring, concluded that the collision occurred when the Army truck, driven by Robert L. Thompson, made a left turn across the path of Patton's without signaling. Thompson was not charged, and the commanding officer of the 818th MP Battalion officially cleared him of responsibility, attributing the incident to an error in judgment rather than negligence or intent. No full-scale formal was convened by higher Army command, and the probe has been characterized by historians as cursory, focusing primarily on immediate scene evidence without extensive forensic analysis. Patton was transported to the 97th General Hospital in Heidelberg, where initial examination by Lieutenant Colonel Paul S. Hill revealed a broken neck, cyanosis, and cold extremities, with X-rays confirming a compression fracture of the third cervical vertebra (C3) and posterior dislocation of the fourth on the fifth (C4 on C5), resulting in quadriplegia. He remained paralyzed from the down for 12 days until his death on December 21, 1945, at 5:55 p.m. The , conducted by Army medical personnel, found no evidence of external trauma inconsistent with the low-speed vehicular impact, such as gunshot wounds or poisoning, and attributed death to and congestive secondary to a originating from immobilization-induced in his paralyzed limbs. The listed these as the proximate causes, with complications directly linked to the spinal injuries sustained in the crash. Medical records documented progressive respiratory distress and heart strain, aligning with standard outcomes for untreated cervical fractures in 1945-era care, where anticoagulation therapies were not routinely applied.

The Book's Assassination Thesis

Proposed Motives

The authors of Killing Patton posit that Soviet leader ordered Patton's assassination primarily due to the general's public advocacy for remilitarizing defeated German forces to confront the immediately after Germany's surrender on May 8, 1945, viewing Patton as a direct threat to Soviet dominance in . Patton's entries and statements from late 1945, such as his May 7 letter to his wife expressing intent to "have to fight the Russians," underscored his belief that the USSR posed a greater peril than had, potentially derailing the agreements that ceded vast territories to Stalin. This stance, the book contends, made Patton a symbolic figurehead for anti-Soviet resistance, risking escalation into a broader conflict that Stalin sought to avoid while consolidating gains like the occupation of , which Patton's Third Army could have preempted but was halted by Dwight D. Eisenhower's orders on May 1, 1945. On the American side, the book suggests motives rooted in military and political expediency, with Eisenhower resenting Patton's insubordination and outspoken critiques of Allied policies, including the aggressive program that Patton opposed as counterproductive, arguing on September 22, 1945, that many Nazis were "no more Nazis than I am." Patton's relief from Third Army command on October 7, 1945, following scandals like the inquiries and his slapping incidents, stemmed partly from Eisenhower's prioritization of maintaining the U.S.-Soviet alliance over Patton's calls for preemptive action against , which could jeopardize Eisenhower's future political aspirations. The authors further imply involvement by U.S. intelligence elements, such as the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), motivated by the need to silence Patton's potential disclosures of Allied intelligence failures or concessions to , drawing on a 1979 confession by OSS operative Douglas Bazata claiming orders from OSS director William Donovan to eliminate Patton as a risk. These motives, per the book, converged in the , where Patton's influence—bolstered by his status as America's most celebrated WWII commander—threatened the fragile with the USSR and internal U.S. command harmony under President Harry Truman's administration, which prioritized over confrontation. The narrative frames the December 9, 1945, Mannheim accident as orchestrated to exploit Patton's vulnerability during his sidelined role inspecting the Fifteenth Army, ensuring his elimination before he could leverage his prestige to sway public or policy opinion against Soviet expansion.

Alleged Methods and Perpetrators

In Killing Patton: The Strange Death of World War II's Most Audacious General, authors Bill O'Reilly and Martin Dugard assert that the automobile collision on December 9, 1945, near , , was deliberately engineered by ramming Patton's limousine with an Army truck driven by Robert L. Thompson, who purportedly braked suddenly without cause, resulting in minimal damage to the truck but severe neck injuries to Patton. The authors question the incident's circumstances, including the lack of significant injuries to other occupants and the truck's unexplained halt, suggesting it was a calculated low-speed impact to simulate an accident while targeting Patton specifically. O'Reilly and Dugard further contend that Patton's death on December 21, 1945, officially attributed to a and complicating his injuries, was instead caused by poisoning administered during his treatment at the 130th Station Hospital in , possibly via contaminated medical supplies or direct intervention to ensure lethality. They cite the rapid deterioration despite initial stability and the absence of a full as indicators of foul play, drawing on declassified documents and witness accounts to imply in the medical process. The alleged perpetrators include Soviet leader as the ultimate orchestrator, motivated by Patton's public advocacy for confronting Soviet forces and remilitarizing Germany against communist expansion. Execution is attributed to (precursor to the ) operatives embedded in occupied Europe, potentially collaborating with elements of the U.S. (OSS); the authors reference OSS agent Douglas Bazata's 1979 claim of staging the crash on orders from OSS director William Donovan, who allegedly received directives linked to Stalin's interests to neutralize Patton's influence. No direct evidence implicates U.S. military leadership like General in the operational details, though the book highlights tensions with Patton as contextual.

Evidence Presented in the Book

The book posits that the December 9, 1945, automobile accident in , , was a deliberate attempt to assassinate Patton, citing the collision's improbable circumstances: Patton's chauffeured 1938 limousine, traveling at approximately 30 miles per hour, was struck head-on by a two-and-a-half-ton U.S. driven by Robert L. Thompson, which veered left into its path despite unobstructed visibility and the Cadillac's right-of-way on a one-way road. Notably, the carried no load, and Thompson received only minor injuries, as did the Cadillac's , while Patton's chief of staff, Hobart Gay, suffered a broken arm, and Patton alone incurred a severe leading to quadriplegia; the authors emphasize the absence of charges against Thompson, the minimal inquiry, and the 's unexplained presence at that location as indicative of orchestration. O'Reilly and Dugard further contend that Patton was subsequently poisoned during his hospitalization at the 130th Station Hospital in , where he initially stabilized with conservative treatment for his spinal injury, only to succumb on , 1945, to what was diagnosed as a and congestive . They argue his abrupt decline—marked by , low blood pressure, and fluid accumulation inconsistent with typical embolism progression—aligns with symptoms of covert administration of toxins like or , potentially via injection or contaminated fluids, which could mimic natural complications; the lack of a comprehensive (only an external examination was performed) and Patton's rapid are presented as facilitating the . Central to the book's evidentiary case is the purported testimony of former OSS agent Douglas Bazata, who allegedly confessed in 1979 to arranging the crash on direct orders from OSS director to "silence" Patton due to his outspoken anti-Soviet stance and potential to derail U.S. post-war alliances. Bazata claimed the initial attempt failed to kill outright, prompting a secondary poisoning by unknown actors using a substance designed to induce embolism-like effects, with Soviet leader Joseph Stalin's influence motivating to eliminate Patton as a threat to agreements; the authors cross-reference this with declassified intelligence indicating U.S. surveillance of Patton, including wiretaps and intercepted communications expressing fears of his "treasonous" views on allying with former Nazis against the USSR. Additional circumstantial elements include reports from U.S. intelligence officer Stephen Skubik, who warned superiors in late 1945 of assassination squads targeting Patton alongside other anti-communist figures, and anomalies in medical records, such as delayed interventions and the hospital commander's reluctance to pursue aggressive diagnostics despite Patton's high profile. The book aggregates these as a pattern of negligence or intent, drawing on primary accounts from Patton's entourage and military dispatches to argue against the official accident narrative.

Evaluation of the Theory

Supporting Arguments from Proponents

Proponents of the assassination theory, including authors Bill O'Reilly and Martin Dugard in their 2014 book Killing Patton, assert that Soviet leader Joseph Stalin ordered Patton's death due to the general's vocal opposition to Soviet influence in post-war Europe and his advocacy for rearming German forces to confront the Red Army. They argue that Patton's criticism of Allied leaders like Franklin D. Roosevelt and Winston Churchill for appeasing Stalin created a direct threat to Soviet objectives at the Potsdam Conference in July 1945, where territorial concessions were made to the USSR. O'Reilly and Dugard cite Patton's diary entries and public statements, such as his May 1945 remark that the Soviets were "bent on world domination," as evidence of motives for elimination by NKVD agents. Regarding the December 9, 1945, automobile accident near , , proponents highlight its suspicious nature, including the low speed of approximately 20-30 mph and the Army truck's unexplained left turn directly into Patton's despite clear visibility. and Dugard, who reportedly examined the site, contend there was no logical reason for the truck's maneuver, suggesting it was deliberate, especially as only Patton and his driver Horace Woodring sustained serious injuries while two others in the vehicle emerged unscathed. They further claim the crash was a staged initial attack, with Patton surviving the impact only to be poisoned during his hospitalization at the 130th Station Hospital in . O'Reilly and Dugard propose that the poisoning occurred via injection or ingestion of a slow-acting administered by Soviet operatives disguised as medical staff, explaining Patton's sudden decline from stable recovery to and death on December 21, 1945. They point to the absence of a full —only an external examination was conducted initially—and inconsistencies in medical records, such as unexplained fluid in Patton's lungs not fully attributable to the neck fracture, as supporting covert intervention. Earlier proponent Robert K. Wilcox, in his 2008 book Target Patton, advances a related but distinct thesis implicating the U.S. (OSS) under William , alleging orders to silence Patton for his resistance to de-Nazification policies and pro-German sentiments that undermined Allied unity against the Soviets. Wilcox relies on the 1992 confession of OSS operative Douglas Bazata, who claimed he attempted to assassinate Patton via a staged accident but failed, after which agents completed the task in the hospital using similar poisoning methods known to Soviet intelligence. Bazata's account, corroborated by his military records and interactions with Donovan, is presented as key evidence of a joint U.S.-Soviet plot to prevent Patton from influencing U.S. policy toward a potential with the USSR.

Criticisms and Empirical Counterevidence

Historians specializing in military history, such as Carlo D'Este, have dismissed the claims in Killing Patton as unsupported by documentation or , arguing that Patton's stemmed directly from injuries in an accidental collision rather than deliberate foul play. On December 9, 1945, near Käfertal, , Patton's struck a U.S. Army truck driven by PFC Horace Woodring after the vehicle unexpectedly pulled into the roadway at low speed (approximately 20-30 mph); Patton, seated in the back without a seatbelt, suffered a fractured C-3 and posterior of C-4 on C-5, resulting in immediate quadriplegia. Medical assessments by attending physicians, including X-rays and clinical observations, confirmed the injuries as the proximal via and on December 21, 1945, with no revealing toxins, additional trauma, or anomalies inconsistent with the crash dynamics. Although no formal was conducted—standard for the era in non-suspicious cases—post-incident inquiries by medical staff and a perfunctory military probe found no signs of on the vehicles or premeditation, with Woodring's testimony aligning with an inadvertent error by an inexperienced driver. Specific allegations in the book, such as OSS operative Douglas Bazata's purported role in ramming the car on orders from William Donovan or injecting , lack corroboration and falter under scrutiny: Bazata's self-reported account emerged decades later without witnesses, documents, or forensic traces, and the —plotting an on an route with mere hours' notice—render it improbable, especially given Donovan's documented respect for Patton. D'Este further notes that post-accident made Patton's survival unlikely regardless, obviating any need for contrived elimination. Broader motives invoked, like silencing Patton's anti-Soviet views, are undermined by his imminent relief from command on December 10, 1945, and scheduled return to the U.S., which neutralized his operational influence without requiring covert action amid Allied tolerance of similar critiques from other officers. The theory's reliance on circumstantial linkages and unverified anecdotes, rather than declassified records or eyewitness affidavits, has led scholars to characterize Killing Patton's as that prioritizes intrigue over causal evidence from the accident's mechanics and medical sequelae.

Comparison to Prior Conspiracy Claims

Conspiracy theories alleging that General George S. Patton's death on December 21, 1945, resulted from rather than the official causes of a low-speed automobile collision on December 9, 1945, followed by , emerged in the years immediately following the event and continued sporadically through the late . Early speculations often centered on motives tied to Patton's outspoken criticism of Allied post-war policies, including his opposition to efforts in and his advocacy for confronting the militarily, which some claimed threatened the agreements or risked renewed conflict. These theories typically implicated U.S. military or intelligence elements seeking to neutralize Patton's influence, or foreign actors like Soviet agents fearing his potential to rally forces against them, though they relied heavily on anecdotal reports and lacked forensic or documentary substantiation. A more structured prior claim appeared in Robert K. Wilcox's 2008 book Target: Patton: The Plot to Assassinate General , which asserted that the collision was a deliberate OSS-orchestrated operation to "silence" Patton, drawing primarily on the 1990s confession of former OSS agent Douglas Bazata. Bazata alleged he fired a low-velocity at Patton's vehicle under orders from OSS director William , staging the crash to break Patton's neck without immediate fatality, with possible Soviet influence via to eliminate Patton as a threat to emerging dynamics; Wilcox supported this with declassified documents, eyewitness inconsistencies in the accident report (such as the truck driver's unexplained low speed and lack of ), and Patton's rapid decline despite initial stability. However, Bazata's account has been critiqued for inconsistencies, including his failure to produce physical evidence and reliance on unverified personal testimony, with skeptics noting it as the weakest pillar of Wilcox's thesis amid broader evidentiary gaps like the absence of an immediate . The assassination thesis in Killing Patton (2014) by Bill O'Reilly and Martin Dugard parallels these earlier narratives in attributing Patton's demise to geopolitical intrigue but shifts emphasis toward direct Soviet culpability under Joseph Stalin, positing the accident as intentional sabotage possibly executed with U.S. intelligence complicity to avert Patton's interference in Soviet expansion plans. Unlike Wilcox's focus on a pre-collision projectile and OSS staging, O'Reilly and Dugard incorporate speculation of post-accident poisoning in the hospital—evidenced by Patton's unexplained embolism despite stable initial injuries and the 1945 decision against autopsy—while reusing motifs like the suspicious truck driver and Patton's anti-Soviet diaries. Both works cite similar circumstantial elements, such as the lack of witnesses to the crash's prelude and Patton's demotion prior to the incident, but Killing Patton amplifies Stalin's personal animus (documented in Soviet records of Patton as a "hysterical general") over Donovan's agency, framing it within broader Allied-Soviet tensions without introducing new primary evidence beyond reinterpreted medical timelines. In comparison to even earlier informal theories, such as those in 1970s-1980s writings suggesting British or U.S. preemptive action against Patton's rumored presidential ambitions or coup potential, Killing Patton represents a popularized synthesis rather than innovation, echoing Soviet-motive speculations while downplaying domestic U.S. agency primacy seen in Wilcox. Proponents of prior claims, including Wilcox, faced dismissal for overreliance on uncollaborated confessions and ignoring empirical counterevidence like the 1945 U.S. investigation concluding accidental collision due to fog and low visibility, a finding upheld in subsequent reviews absent forensic anomalies upon later exhumations of other victims. Thus, Killing Patton's thesis, while achieving wider commercial reach, inherits the speculative core of these predecessors, perpetuating debates rooted in Patton's documented friction with superiors like but without resolving evidentiary deficits through independent verification.

Reception and Analysis

Critical Reviews

Critics praised Killing Patton for its accessible, narrative-driven recounting of World War II's final months and Patton's role, likening it to a thriller that engages general readers with vivid battle descriptions and personal anecdotes. However, professional historians and reviewers widely condemned the book's central thesis as unsubstantiated speculation, arguing it relied on from obscure sources like OSS agent Douglas Bazata and Soviet defector Stephen Skubik without primary evidence or corroboration. Historians such as Carlo D'Este questioned the motive and feasibility, noting Patton was already quadriplegic and dying from accident-related injuries, rendering assassination redundant and improbable. Jonathan W. Jordan emphasized the uncertainty of the low-speed traffic accident as a basis for conspiracy, while and Robert H. Patton affirmed medical consensus that Patton succumbed to and a following the December 9, 1945, crash near , , not poison or foul play. , a analyst, critiqued the theory's reliance on unpredictable elements—like Patton's unscheduled detour and hospital responses—as logistically absurd, and highlighted factual errors, such as misattributing a Pearl Harbor prediction to Patton instead of . The book's portrayal of Patton drew further rebuke for omitting his documented anti-Semitism, including diary entries disparaging Jews and soldiers of Jewish descent, while idealizing him as an unblemished strategic genius capable of single-handedly defeating the Soviets. Reviewers in HistoryNet faulted it for exaggerating Patton's battlefield successes—such as the Lorraine campaign, where his forces stalled against German defenses—and ignoring broader Allied dynamics, relying instead on discredited rumors and secondary gossip over archival records. Skepticism extended to O'Reilly's series credibility, with the Christian Science Monitor citing prior inaccuracies in Killing Lincoln, like erroneous event details, as evidence of a pattern of sensationalism over rigor, prompting institutions like Ford's Theatre to reject stocking those volumes.

Scholarly and Historical Perspectives

Historians and scholars overwhelmingly conclude that General Jr.'s death on December 21, 1945, resulted from injuries sustained in a low-speed automobile accident on December 9, 1945, near , , rather than . Eyewitness accounts, including those from Patton's driver, Horace Woodring, and the truck driver, Robert L. Thompson, describe the Cadillac limousine colliding with the right side of a two-and-a-half-ton Army truck that turned left without signaling, causing Patton's head to strike the partition separating the front and rear seats, resulting in a and subsequent complications such as . Medical examinations at the 130th Station Hospital confirmed these injuries as the direct cause, with no indications of external trauma inconsistent with a vehicular impact. The U.S. Army conducted an initial investigation, which deemed the incident accidental and cleared Thompson of wrongdoing, attributing the crash to poor visibility and the truck's unexpected maneuver; however, no comprehensive formal followed, a point proponents exploit but which lacks substantiation for foul play. Mainstream historical analyses, including those from historians, emphasize the absence of forensic or supporting deliberate action, such as tampering with the vehicle or orchestrated collision, and note that Patton's prior near-misses in motor vehicles align with the hazards of post-war occupied , where roads were rutted and drivers often inexperienced. Scholars like those affiliated with the OSS have scrutinized key pillars, such as claims by former OSS operative Douglas Bazata that he was tasked with assassinating Patton via or staging an , finding them unsubstantiated by records, contradicted by Bazata's own shifting accounts, and unsupported by declassified OSS files showing no such directive from Director William Donovan. While Patton's outspoken criticism of Allied denazification policies, his advocacy for rearming German forces against the , and tensions with superiors like provided speculative motives for theories, empirical review reveals these as hindsight rationalizations rather than causal evidence. Books advancing narratives, including Bill O'Reilly and Martin Dugard's Killing Patton (2014), rely on circumstantial linkages and unverified anecdotes rather than primary documents or physical traces, drawing criticism from analysts for conflating Patton's political frictions with unproven plots. Earlier works, such as Robert K. Wilcox's Target: Patton (2008), recycle Bazata's testimony without corroboration, a pattern historians attribute to the allure of post-war intrigue amid emerging suspicions but dismiss due to failure to meet evidentiary standards like chain-of-custody for alleged poisons or witness collusion proofs. In peer-reviewed and archival scholarship, Patton's death is contextualized within his declining health—evidenced by chronic , recent illnesses, and the accident's low-impact nature consistent with his survival odds dropping due to age (60) and immobility-induced —rather than orchestrated . Theories implicating the OSS, Soviets, or U.S. officials falter against , as the simplest explanation of in a chaotic era aligns with available data, including the truck's routine maintenance logs and absence of indicators in Vehicle Pool records. This consensus persists despite occasional popular media amplification, underscoring a divide where rigorous prioritizes verifiable artifacts over narrative speculation.

Commercial Success

Sales and Rankings

Killing Patton: The Strange Death of World War II's Most Audacious General, published on September 23, 2014, debuted at number one on the Best-Selling Books list, marking the first debut at the top spot for the series at that time. It also ascended to number one on the New York Times Best Sellers list for hardcover nonfiction, appearing on the list for at least 24 weeks through early 2015. According to Nielsen data, the book sold over 160,000 print copies in its first full week of sales ending October 5, 2014, making it the top-selling book overall that week when including e-books and untracked outlets for an estimated total near 250,000 units. Nielsen recorded Killing Patton as the fifth bestselling print book of 2014 in the United States, trailing titles such as The Fault in Our Stars by , Gray Mountain by , The Invention of Wings by , and Sharp Objects by . Author Bill O'Reilly claimed in June 2015 that it was the "bestselling tome" of 2014, but this assertion overlooked Nielsen's rankings and higher-selling young adult and fiction titles. The book's performance contributed to the Killing series' cumulative sales exceeding 6.8 million print copies across all titles by March 2015, per Nielsen .

Broader Impact on O'Reilly's Brand

The publication of Killing Patton in September 2014 reinforced Bill O'Reilly's brand as a prolific and commercially dominant author within the genre, with the book contributing to the "Killing" series' cumulative sales exceeding 20 million copies by 2017. This success positioned O'Reilly as one of the top authors of the decade, leveraging his platform to drive mainstream appeal among conservative readers seeking narrative-driven accounts of historical events. However, the book's endorsement of an unsubstantiated theory—attributing Patton's 1945 death to Soviet agents under Stalin's orders—drew sharp rebukes from historians, who highlighted factual errors and speculative leaps unsupported by primary evidence. Critics across ideological lines, including conservative outlets, argued that such claims exemplified the series' pattern of prioritizing dramatic conjecture over rigorous scholarship, eroding O'Reilly's credibility among professional and academics. For instance, Patton biographers and experts dismissed the conspiracy as recycled fringe theories lacking forensic or documentary corroboration, with one analysis noting O'Reilly's reliance on discredited OSS operative claims without addressing contradictory autopsy records confirming a car and . This backlash amplified perceptions of O'Reilly as a sensationalist entertainer rather than a reliable , particularly as academic institutions and peer-reviewed works consistently upheld the official accident narrative. Despite these critiques, the bolstered O'Reilly's brand among his core audience, who viewed the book as a bold challenge to histories potentially influenced by geopolitical narratives. Sales data underscored this polarization: Killing Patton topped bestseller lists upon release, sustaining O'Reilly's publishing leverage even amid his 2017 departure, though it did not mitigate broader from unrelated scandals. Ultimately, the book's impact highlighted a divide in O'Reilly's public persona—commercial titan for mass-market versus in scholarly discourse—exacerbating skepticism from outlets wary of his blend of fact and conjecture.

Adaptation Attempts

Planned Television Project

In November 2015, announced development of a television adaptation of Killing Patton: The Strange Death of World War II's Most Audacious General, the 2014 book by Bill O'Reilly and Martin Dugard, as the fifth installment in its franchise of scripted telefilms based on O'Reilly's Killing series. The project partnered with , the company founded by Ridley and , which had previously collaborated on successful adaptations like Killing Lincoln (2013) and Killing Jesus (2015), both of which drew strong viewership ratings for the network. The adaptation was initially envisioned as a four-hour focusing on the book's narrative of General George S. Patton's final months, including his December 1945 automobile accident in and the surrounding historical context of post-World War II Europe. Production was slated for a potential 2019 premiere, aligning with the network's strategy to capitalize on the commercial success of prior entries, which had collectively attracted millions of viewers and reinforced O'Reilly's brand in . No casting or directorial attachments were publicly confirmed at the planning stage, though the project aimed to maintain the dramatic reenactment style of earlier films, emphasizing key events such as Patton's conflicts with Allied leadership and theories regarding his death.

Cancellation and Aftermath

National Geographic Channel canceled its planned television movie adaptation of Killing Patton on June 1, 2017, after over 18 months in development. The project, intended as the fourth installment in the network's franchise adapting O'Reilly's "Killing" series—following (2013), (2013), and (2017)—had advanced to script stage with multiple writers hired but failed to produce a viable screenplay. Network executives attributed the cancellation to creative challenges rather than external factors, stating that development efforts concluded without a script meeting production standards. A National Geographic spokesperson emphasized that the decision predated recent controversies involving O'Reilly and was not influenced by his April 19, 2017, departure from Fox News, where he had hosted The O'Reilly Factor for 21 years. O'Reilly's exit followed reports by The New York Times of settlements totaling at least $13 million for sexual harassment claims by multiple women, though O'Reilly maintained the payments were to avoid protracted litigation and denied misconduct. The timing of the cancellation, mere weeks after O'Reilly's firing, fueled speculation of indirect linkage, given National Geographic's ownership by at the time and the broader reputational fallout from the scandals. No production materials beyond early scripts were completed, rendering the project effectively with no surviving footage or . In the aftermath, no revival or alternative adaptation of Killing Patton has materialized, marking the end of National Geographic's collaboration with the "Killing" series on screen. shifted focus to print, continuing the book series with titles like Killing England (2017) and maintaining commercial viability despite diminished television opportunities; the franchise has sold over 18 million copies across 14 volumes as of 2023. The episode underscored vulnerabilities in media tie-ins amid personal scandals, though 's narrative style retained a dedicated readership unbound by broadcast constraints.

References

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