The road to the courtroom in Germany was strewn with uncertainty because the Allies were breaking new ground in international law.
When the Allies broke through one line, the Germans would retreat up the peninsular to yet another freshly prepared fortified line.
Another correspondent's article may have tipped off the Japanese to the fact that the Allies had broken their code.
By the time the Allies broke through, casualties numbered more than 54,000 Allied and 20,000 Germans troops.
By the end of the war, the Allies were regularly breaking and reading German naval codes.
So at the end of the War, the Allies broke up the Ottomans.
In May 1944, the Allies broke out of Anzio and took Rome.
When they were reinforced with other troops, the Allies broke through the French lines and forced them to retreat.
The Allies had broken the code, and the message helped the Allied hunter-killer group close in on the submarine.
The Allies had broken through the lines in the area of the 89th Infantry Division on the 13 August.