Between 1992 and 2000, I had many company vehicles (all isuzu) with abs that accumulated 125,000 miles per year. In the same time frame I've had four dodge pickups and durangos purchased new. The only warranty service I ever had performed on any of the dodges involved the shit abs brake systems, none of 'em will stop and all drive like they have a 50% air accumulation in the hydraulics.
None of the sumbitches had brakes worth shit. If I could have disabled all of the abs systems on the dodge trucks when I brought 'em home I would have. The durango we have now is a total pile in the brake department, I've done every "fix" possible to make the pos have something approaching "brakes" that work, can't be done.
Driving the abs shit is like having someone else operate the brake system with about a three second lag time. And once this durango goes away (real soon now), we'll never own anything else with abs (or a computer for that matter).
The dodge abs system is a total disaster in heavy snow/ice unless you have cables on all four tires, and that includes using 4high under extreme snow conditions. The problem is not accelerating/steering in the major slippery stuff we have here, it is stopping! And stopping in heavy snow accumulation coming down from 9k+ft. Passes throughout the western u.s. Must be done in 4l to be able to use engine braking, the abs will put you in the ditch or over the cliff. Our driving conditions throughout the western u.s. Are every bit as "severe" in winter as what you folks have anywhere in europe.
The same driving conditions, (including the addition of a 6,000lb. Trailer on the hitch) with my '73 IH pickup 4x4 with cables/chain hybrids on the front axle (including major serious mud tires) and conventional chains on the front axle of the trailer results, in a no-brainer descent, just keep it pointed straight and go/stop.