While the
Grand-Duchy of Luxembourg had been liberated by
U.S. Army forces in September 1944, the German troops pulled back to Germany and took up new defensive positions along the border rivers
Moselle,
Sauer and
Our. As soon as the country was liberated, Luxembourgish resistance members formed a militia across the country and were equipped with arms and ammunition by the United States Army. Often agents would be up on the castle walls observing the German lines through binoculars on the other side of the river. Most of the Luxembourgish
militia took up positions at the German border and occupied the important observation posts along the Rivers Our and Sauer. One of the most important posts was
Vianden Castle from which the Luxembourgers could look deep into German territory and report German troop movements to the
Allied Forces. Vianden Castle was described by one German General as a massive gothic fortress towering over the valley.
First action On the 15th of November, Luxembourgish militia members spotted a German patrol between Wiesen and
Bettel and decided to strike. Five of the eleven German soldiers in the patrol were killed by the Luxembourgers, who suffered no casualties. After this incident the German command decided to recapture the castle of Vianden. The leader of the resistance militia,
Victor Abens, evacuated the civilians of Vianden but nevertheless decided that his 30 militiamen should remain in the town and castle, to defend them. Over the following days, the U.S. Army supported the Luxembourgers in Vianden with weapons and ammunition, before leaving the town. Five American troops and a Belgian who were lost ended up in Vianden and joined the militia, bringing its number to 36. == Battle ==