Creighton Williams Abrams, Jr. (born September 15, 1914, Springfield, Massachusetts, U.S.—died September 4, 1974, Washington, D.C.) was an American army officer who was one of the most aggressive and effective tank commanders during World War II. He commanded (1968–72) all U.S. forces in Vietnam during the latter stages of the Vietnam War and served as U.S. Army chief of staff (1972–74). He was famous for his battle readiness and for the speed and aggressiveness of his tactics on the battlefield.
Abrams graduated from the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York, in 1936 and was commissioned in the cavalry. After service with the 1st Cavalry Division at Fort Bliss, Texas, he joined the newly created 1st Armored Division and became a captain in 1940. During World War II, as major and then lieutenant colonel, he commanded the 37th Tank Battalion in the 4th Armored Division, participating in the Normandy Invasion and the sweep of Gen. George Patton’s Third Army across western Europe. Abrams was publicly acknowledged by Patton for his mastery of tank warfare, and he personally demonstrated the 37th Tank Battalion’s motto, “Courage conquers.” He led from the front in an M4 Sherman tank that he dubbed Thunderbolt, going so far as to paint the name on his tank’s armour in large letters (he would go through seven Thunderbolts by the end of the war). At the Battle of Arracourt, in September 1944, Abrams participated in one of the largest tank-to-tank engagements of the war; Abrams’s battalion lost 14 Shermans while knocking out 55 German Panther and Tiger tanks and driving back a German counterattack. His most-dramatic action, though, came at Bastogne, Belgium, where the Germans had encircled the 101st Airborne Division during the Battle of the Bulge (December 16, 1944–January 16, 1945). Abrams’s battalion was the first element of the Third Army to break through the siege, on December 26, 1944. For his heroics in these engagements, he was twice awarded the Distinguished Service Cross.
After the war Abrams headed the tactics department of the Armor School at Fort Knox, Kentucky, and served in the occupation of Germany, commanding the 63rd Tank Battalion and, later, the 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment. He was chief of staff of three different corps in Korea (1953–54), and he commanded the 3rd Armored Division in Germany during some of the tensest years of the Cold War (1960–62). In the U.S. he played a prominent role in preparing the army for possible use in the racial integration of universities in the South in the early 1960s.
He next served five years in Vietnam. In April 1967 Abrams, by then a four-star general and vice chief of staff of the army, was named deputy to Gen. William Westmoreland, head of the U.S. Military Assistance Command, Vietnam. On July 2, 1968, after Westmoreland was appointed army chief of staff, Abrams succeeded him as top commander of all U.S. forces in the Vietnam theatre. In this position he implemented the Vietnamization policy of Pres. Richard M. Nixon, overseeing a reduction of U.S. combat troops from more than 500,000 to fewer than 30,000 and also directing an intensive training program for the army of South Vietnam. To give time for Vietnamization to succeed, he was put in charge of the U.S.–South Vietnamese incursions into Cambodia and Laos in 1970–71. In 1972 he succeeded Westmoreland once again, becoming army chief of staff in Washington, D.C. In that role he wrestled with the mounting antimilitary backlash prevalent at the end of the Vietnam War and began to implement the transition to an all-volunteer force.
Abrams died of cancer while in office and was buried at Arlington National Cemetery, Virginia. The U.S. Army’s main battle tank, the M-1 Abrams, was named in his honour.