World War II's Battle of the Bulge
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World War II's Battle of the Bulge

Updated 1641 GMT (0041 HKT) December 29, 2014
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Mid-December 1944 saw the beginning of the six-week Battle of the Bulge on Europe's Western Front. War photographer Robert Capa immersed himself with Allied troops. Here, an American soldier points a gun at a German prisoner of war. Robert Capa/Magnum Photos
German prisoners of war captured by U.S. forces await transfer back from the front. Robert Capa/Magnum Photos
U.S. soldiers scatter across a field during the Battle of the Bulge. The Allies eventually turned back a major German offensive in the Ardennes region of Belgium, Luxembourg and France. Robert Capa/Magnum Photos
U.S. Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, supreme commander of Allied forces in Europe, speaks to the 101st Airborne Division. Robert Capa/Magnum Photos
An American tank burns while transport planes fly overhead during the Battle of the Bulge. Robert Capa/Magnum Photos
The only way Capa would photograph Germans during the war was if they were prisoners. Robert Capa/Magnum Photos
American troops ride on a tank while German POWs are held nearby. Robert Capa/Magnum Photos
An American artillery position during the Battle of the Bulge. The battle was considered finished on January 28, 1945, when the Germans were pushed back to positions they occupied when their offensive began six weeks earlier. Robert Capa/Magnum Photos
More than 100,000 Germans and 67,000 Americans were casualties of the fighting, according to the National WW II Museum. Robert Capa/Magnum Photos
An American soldier walks past a casualty during the Battle of the Bulge. Robert Capa/Magnum Photos
A farmer buries his horse that had been killed during the fierce fighting. Robert Capa/Magnum Photos
An American soldier rests in his foxhole during the Battle of the Bulge. Robert Capa/Magnum Photos