Europe - June
1944
June
1944 was a
major turning point of World War II, particularly in
Europe. Although
the initiative had been seized from the Germans some months before,
so far the western Allies had been unable to mass sufficient men and
material to risk an attack in northern Europe. But by mid-1944 early
mobilization of manpower and resources in America was beginning to
pay off. Millions of American men had been trained, equipped, and
welded into fighting and service units.
American industrial
production had reached its wartime peak late in 1943. While there
were still critical shortages in landing craft, for instance
production problems were largely solved, and the Battle of the
Atlantic had been won. Ever increasing streams of su- pplies from
the
United States were reaching anti-Axis fighting forces throughout
the
world. By the beginning of June 1944, the United States and Great
Britain had accumulated, in the British Isles, the
largest number of
men and the greatest amount of material ever assembled to launch
and
sustain an amphibious attack.
Strategic bombing of Germany
was reaching its peak. In May1943 the Combined Chiefs of Staff had
given high priority to a Com- bined Bomber Offensive to be waged by the
Royal Air Force and the U.S. Army Air Forces. By late summer 1943
Allied bombers were conducting round-the-clock bombardment of German
industry and communications. In general, British planes bombed by
night and American planes bombed by day. Whereas an air raid by 200
planes had been considered large in June 1943, the average strike a
year later contained 1,000 heavy bombers.
Invasion
Planning
Although 100 miles of rough
water separated England from the Normandy coast, strategists
determined to make the cross-Channel attack on the beaches east of
the Cherbourg Peninsula. Early objectives of the
operation were the deep-water ports at Cherbourg and at Brest in
Brittany. Three months
before
D-day, a
strategic air campaign was
inaugurated to pave the way for invasion by restricting
the enemy's
ability to shift reserves. French and Belgian railways were
crippled,
bridges demolished in northwestern France, and enemy airfields within
a 130-mile radius of the landing beaches put under heavy attack.
Special attention was given to isolating the part of
northwestern
France bounded roughly by the Seine and Loire Rivers.
The Allies also
put into effect a de- ception plan to lead the Germans to believe
that
landings would take place farther north along the Pas de
Calais.
Opposed to the Allies was the
so-called Army Group B
of the German Army, consisting of the Seventh Army in Normandy and
Brittany, the Fifteenth Army in the Pas de Calais and Flanders, and
the LXXXVIII Corps in Holland—all under command of Field Marshal
Erwin Rommel. Commander of all German forces in western Europe was
Field Marshal von Rundstedt who, in addition to Group B. also had at
his disposal Group G composed of the First and Nineteenth Armies. In
all, Von Rundstedt commanded approximately fifty infantry and ten
Panzer divisions in France and the Low Countries.
O.K.
we'll go !
The
Invasion of Normandy (Operation
OVERLORD)
The attack on the beaches of
Normandy was
scheduled for the morning of 5 June1944. Although much of the
invasion fleet was already at sea, stormy weather forced a
postponement of the landings. After day long weather briefings
General Eisenhower made the decision to attack the next morning 6
June.
At 0200 that morning one British
and two American
airborne divisions were dropped behind the beaches in order to secure
routes
of egress from the beaches for the seaborne forces. After an
intensive air and naval bombardment, assault waves of troops began
landing at 0630. More than 5,000 ships and 4,000 ship-to-shore craft
were employed in the landings. British forces on the left flank and
U.S. forces on the right had comparatively easy going, but U.S.
forces in the center (Omaha Beach met determined opposition.
Nevertheless, by nightfall of the first day, large contingents of
three British, one Canadian, and three American infantry divisions,
plus three airborne divisions, had a firm foothold on Hitler's
"fortress Europe." By 9 June the allies were ashore with over
6ooo vehicles and 300 tanks!
The
Normandy Campaign
During the weeks
that followed
the landings, the Germans fiercely resisted
Allied advances in the
hedgerows of Normandy. Cherbourg fell three weeks after the landings,
but the port had been destroyed and time-consuming repairs were
required before
it could be used to relieve the Allied supply
problem. Meanwhile, Allied forces had been deepening the beachhead.
By the end of June the most forward positions were about 20 miles
inland. The buildup of Allied forces was swift, despite the lack of
ports, an by
1 July almost a million men, more than a half-million
tons of supplies, and 177,000 vehicles had been landed. By this time
General Bradley's U.S. First Army comprised 4 corps with 11 infantry
and 2 armored divisions. British strength was about the same.
Ed.Note:The 82nd
Engineer
combat
Battalion entered the war on D-Day plus 10 (June 16th)
and was assigned to support the 29th Infantry
Division
At the end of June, British forces made an
attempt to break into the open country near Caen. Heavy bombers were
used in close support to facilitate this breakout, but the
destruction they wrought served to impede rather than to assist the
British ground forces and German armored units blocked an advance in
that sector. General Montgomery now adopted the strategy of
attracting German armor to the British sector while American units
continued to attack in the vicinity of St. Lo . The City of St. Lo
was captured on
July 18th.
The
Breakout
Operation
COBRA
Cobras was initially set for 24 July but was aborted when all
ground units had not reached their objectives. The recall did not reach
all planes and bombs were accidently dropped on American troops.
The next day, 25 July, a
massive air bombardment was coordi- ated with an attack by ground
troops that achieved a distinct penetration of German lines. General
Patton's U.S. Third Army poured through this breach in the direction
of Brittany with the object of securing the much-needed ports in that
area. Tragedy struck, once again, as some smoke markers drifted back
over American lines and more troops were hit by friendly
fire.
The Allied strategic plan was to take over Breton ports
and then to secure a lodgment area as far east as the Seine River, to
provide ample room for air and supply bases. It was then intended to
advance into Germany on a broad front. The principal thrust east was
to be north of the Ardennes Forest
in Belgium with General
Montgomery's British 21st Army Group. A subsidiary thrust by
General
Bradley's newly formed U.S. 12th Army Group, comprising the U.S.
First and Third Armies, was to be made south of the Ardennes.
This
northern route was chosen because it led directly into the Ruhr area
where Germany's industrial power was concentrated.
The Allied
strategic plan underwent considerable modification early in August to
seize upon the advantages of the breakout and exploit the principle
of maneuver. When the Germans counter-attacked with the intention of
restoring a stable front and cutting
off U.S. forces moving toward
Brittany, they unwittingly offered the Allies an opportunity to
encircle them. British forces on the
left moved toward Falaise and
U.S. troops to the right executed a wide circling maneuver toward
Argentan, roughly halfway be- tween St. Lo and Paris. Caught in a
giant
pocket, the Germans nevertheless extricated many troops before the
Argentan-Falaise gap was closed on 20 August, though losing more than
70,000. Meanwhile, other First Army units, swinging around the
Argentan pocket, raced, in a northeasterly direction, toward the
Seine River. On the First Army’s right flank, General Patton's
Third Army also circled eastward, crossed the Seine, encircling and
destroying Germans who had escaped the Argentan-Falaise pocket. The
Germans lost almost all of two field armies in Normandy. Up to
this time the attack had been directed south, away from the beach. Just
west of the Argentan pocket, the city of Vire became the pivot point as
British and American forces began a swing eastward toward Paris
and the Seine River.
At
the Seine
Originally it had been intended to
by-pass Paris in order to spare the city from heavy fighting, but,
with the crossing of the Seine, fighting broke out in the city
between French patriots and Germans stationed there. Lest the
uprising be defeated, a column of
U.S. and Free French troops were
deflected toward Paris, entering the city on 25 August 1944. General
Eisenhower now altered
his original plan, abandoning the idea of
stopping at the Seine and instituting instead a determined pursuit of
the enemy toward Germany. Because the ports of Cherbourg and Brest
now were too far west to support the accelerated movement, the new
plans involved capture of Channel parts and especially of Antwerp,
the best port in Europe. Exploiting the new situation, General
Eisenhower now reinforced the British by sending the U.S. First Army
close alongside the 21st Army Group toward Aachen in a drive toward
Antwerp. Only the U.S. Third Army continued east on the subsidiary
axis south of the Ardennes.
Cherbourg remained the only major
port supplying Allied forces in northern France, and advances to the
east had been so rapid
that the supply services simply could not keep
up. The drive eastward began to grind to a halt for lack of supplies,
chiefly gasoline. The British took Le Havre and several Channel ports
and on 4 September 1944 they captured Antwerp, its port intact. But
Antwerp could not yet be used to relieve a growing logistical crisis
because the Germans denied access to the sea by retaining control of
the Schelde Estuary. The newly activated U.S. Ninth Army (Lt. Gen.
William H. Simpson commanding) in Brittany took Brest late in
September, but the port had been completely destroyed, and in any
event its location so far from the scene of action precluded its
usefulness in solving logistical problems.
The
Southern Landings
Invasion of Southern
France
(Operation DRAGOON).
With the release of shipping and landing
craft from OVERLORD, it
became possible to stage the long-planned
invasion of southern France, the so-called Operation DRAGOON. While
the battle of Argentan-Falaise pocket was still raging, on 15 August
1944, Lt.
Gen. Alexander Patch's U.S. Seventh Army invaded the
Mediterranean shores of France southwest of Cannes. The attacking
force comprised contingents of three U.S. infantry divisions plus an
airborne task force and French commandos, and it was assisted by Free
French forces after the landing had been made.
Basic
objectives were to prevent the reinforcement of German forces in
Normandy with troops from southern France and to provide the Allies a
supplementary line of communications through Mediterranean
ports.
Resistance was comparatively light. Advances north were
rapid, and by 11 September patrols from the southern and northern
Allied forces met near Dijon. On 15 September the U.S. 6th Army Group
became operational under command of Lt. Gen. Jacob L. Devers and,
with the U.S. Seventh Army and the First French Army, passed from
control of Allied Force Headquarters to the
control of Supreme
Headquarters, Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF). Thereafter forces
from the south continued toward Germany in contact with the U.S.
Third Army.
At the
West Wall (Germany)
On the western front
logistical problems had become acute by the autumn of 1944. Although
the U.S. First Army under Lt. Gen. Courtney H. Hodges had penetrated
the so-called West Wall in several places, lack of supplies prevented
exploitation of the
breaks. Bad weather, terrain that restricted
maneuver, and the dense fortifications along the German border
combined to create obstacles of major proportions.
To two of
General Eisenhower's subordinate commanders, Montgomery and Patton,
Eisenhower's decision to advance into Germany on a broad front seemed
like a mistake in light of the logistical limitations. Each wanted
all resources put behind his part of the front to support one major
drive into Germany, in the hope that German disorganization could be
exploited to produce capitulation. The debate continued through the
late summer and into the fall of 1944, but General Eisenhower, with by
the advice of his logisticians, stuck to his original plan
of advancing with all armies abreast, though with greater emphasis in
the north.
Because
of the logistical crisis, General Eisenhower
assigned first priority, in the autumn of 1944, to clearing the
seaward approaches to Antwerp. At the same time he decided to make a
bold stroke in an effort to exploit German disorganization before
logistical problems brought the Allied offensive to a full stop.
Eisenhower authorized the employment of the First Allied Airborne
Army (one British, two U.S. airborne divisions under Lt. Gen. Lewis
H. Brereton) in support of the British Second Army. They were to
attempt to get across the three major water obstacles in the
Netherlands (the Maas, Waal, and Lower Rhine), to outflank the West
Wall, and to put the British in position for a subsequent drive into
Germany along the relatively open north German plain.
The
airborne attack was called Operation MARKET; the corollary ground
attack, Operation GARDEN. Complete surprise was achieved by the
airdrop, which took place on 17 September 1944, but the Germans were
not as disorganized as had been hoped. Unexpectedly strong resistance
limited the gains to a 50-mile salient into Holland—far short of
the objective of securing a workable bridgehead across the
Rhine.
Following Operation MARKET-GARDEN, British forces
concentrated on opening the approaches to Antwerp, but it was
November 16 before the way was cleared for the first Allied ship
to
enter the port.
The
Rhineland
Meanwhile, a supreme effort on the part
of the supply services had improved the logistical situation, and in
early November United States forces launched a major offensive in an
attempt to reach the Rhine. Bad weather, natural and artificial
defenses along the German border, and a resourceful defense on the
part of German troops limited gains. By mid-December, the U.S. First
and Ninth Armies had reached the Roer River east of Aachen, some 22
miles inside Germany, and the U.S. Third and Seventh Armies had
reached the West Wall along the Saar River northeast of Metz. But
except in the Seventh Army section, they were still a long way from
the Rhine
Troops move up to block the
German "Bulge" penetration
December 1944 |
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The Generals confer in Germany
Bradley -
Eisenhower - Patton |
The
German counter-offensive
Battle
of the Bulge.
In
December 1944 Adolph Hitler directed an ambitious counteroffensive
with the object of regaining the initiative in the west and
compelling the Allies to settle for a negotiated peace. Hitler's
generals were opposed to the plan, but the Fuhrer's will prevailed
and the counteroffensive was launched on 16 December by some 30
German divisions against Allied lines in the Ardennes region. Allied
defenses there had been thinned to provide troops for the autumn
defensive. Hitler's intention was to drive through Antwerp and cut
off and annihilate the British 21st Army Group and the U.S. First and
Ninth Armies north of the Ardennes.
Aided
by stormy weather which
grounded Allied planes and restricted observation, the Germans
achieved surprise and made rapid gains at first, but firm resistance
by various isolated units provided time for the U.S. First and Ninth
Armies to shift against the northern flank of the penetration, for
the British to send reserves to secure the line to the Meuse, and for
Patton's Third Army to
hit the salient from the south. Denied vital
roads and hampered by air attack when the weather cleared, the German
attack resulted only in a large bulge in the Allied lines which did
not even extend to the Meuse River, the Germans' first objective. The
Americans suffered some 75,000 casualties in the Battle of the Bulge,
but the Germans lost 80,000 to l00,000. German strength had been
irredeemably impaired. By the end of January 1945, American units had
retaken all ground they had lost, and the defeat of Germany was
clearly only a matter of time. In the east the Red Army had opened a
winter offensive that was to carry, eventually, to and beyond
Berlin.
At the
Rhine
Exhausted by the over-ambitious
counter-offensive and further weakened by transfers of troops to meet
the new Soviet threat in
the east, German forces in the west could no
longer halt a new Allied drive to the Rhine on a broad front. On 7
March 1945
elements of the U.S. 9th Armored Division seized an
opportunity to cross a bridge at Remagen which the Germans had somehow
left undestroyed, and Allied forces gained a firm
foothold at last on the eastern bank of the Rhine. Two weeks later
troops of the U.S. Third Army to the south of Remagen staged a
surprise crossing of the Rhine in assault boats.
At the
same
time, in the north, British and American troops crossed the Rhine in
an operation involving an airborne assault almost as large as
Operation MARKET. During the last week of March both the U.S. Seventh
and First French Armies crossed the Rhine. The stage was set for the
final act.
Central
Europe
In the northern reaches, following the Rhine
crossings in March 1945, the Allies fanned out with massive columns
of armor and motor-borne infantry and soon were making spectacular
advances. Resistance was staunch at some points, but Allied strength
was by this time overwhelming. The U.S. Ninth and First Armies, with
the help of the new U.S. Fifteenth Army, encircled the Ruhr and took
more than 325,000 prisoners. Allied forces in the north and center
made rapid advances against slight opposition, and by mid-April had
reached the Elbe and Mulde Rivers where they waited for the
approaching Red Army. In the south other Allied columns penetrated
into Czechoslovakia and Austria. The German military machine became
completely disorganized and whole- sale surrenders took place.
Up to
this time the objective of American and British forces was
to reach
Berlin. Most commanders were making plans for the
final push.
After
crossing the Elbe River, the last major obstacle before the German
capital, Allied forces were ordered to hold their
positions. Since
the Soviets had reached the outskirts of Berlin, and to avoid
further
allied casualities, Eisenhower decided
to wait for the Soviet link up.
The
Soviets
In the east the Soviets began their final
drive on Berlin on 17 April. By 25 April the Red Army had completely
encircled Berlin,
and on the same day advance elements of the Soviet
forces came in contact with American troops at Torgau on the Elbe
River. Fierce street fighting broke out in Berlin. Hitler committed
suicide on 30 April, and what remained of the German garrison in
Berlin surrendered two days later. Mussolini had been killed by
Italian partisans on 28 April 1945 while attempting to escape into
Switzerland. The European partners of the Tripartite Pact had been
defeated.
Mission
Accomplished
In the 11 months since D-Day the
Allied armies had covered some 475 to 700 miles from the beaches of
Normandy. As the war ended the 900 mile Allied front included 91
Divisions, several brigades, and cavalry units. (61 Divisions were
American). Supporting the ground troops the allies had over 28,000
combat aircraft, of which, half were American.
On 8
May 1945
General Eisenhower conducted formal unconditional surrender
ceremonies in a schoolhouse in Rehims France, not only ending the
European campaign which had lasted for 336 days, but bringing to a
close the six year World War which Adolf
Hitler had initiated in May
1939 .
The cost of the war had been staggering. From D-Day to
the war’s end nearly five and one-half million troops had entered
the European continent. Casualties reached over three quarters of
a million, with American losses totaling 568,628 including
135,576 killed in action.
As the fighting in Europe ceased, the
United States and it’s Allies could now turn their full attention
to the defeat of Japan, the occupation of Hitler's Third Reich, and
the rebuilding of the War ravaged countries of Europe.
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