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UJUTED STATES ARMY IN WORLD WAR II

The European Theater of Operations

CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

bY

Gordon A. Harrison

CENTER OF MILITARY HISTORY

UiVlTFB STATES ARMY

WASHINGTON, D. C., 1993


Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 51-61669

First Printed 1951-CMH Pub 7-4-l


For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office
Washington, D.C. 20402
UNITED STATES ARMY IN WORLD WAR II
Kent Roberts Greenfield, General Editor

Advisory Committee
James P. Baxter William T. Hutchinson
President, Williams College University of Chicago
Henry S. Commager S. L. A. Marshall
Columbia University Detroit News
Douglas S. Freeman E. Dwight Salmon
Richmond News Leader Amherst College
Pendleton Herring Col. Thomas D. Stamps
Social Science Research Council United States Military Academy
John D. Hicks Charles H. Taylor
University of California Harvard University

Historical Division, SSUSA*


Maj. Gen. Orlando Ward, Chief
Chief Historian Kent Roberts Greenfield
Chief, World War II Group Col. Allison R. Hartman**
Editor-in-Chief Hugh Corbett
Chief Cartographer Wsevolod Aglaimoff

*Redesignated Office of the Chief of Military History, 28 March 1950.


**Succeeded by Col. Thomas J. Sands, 3 March 1950.

...
In
. . . to Those Who Served
Foreword
Cross-Channel Attack is one of approximately a hundred volumes which
the Department of the Army intends to publish regarding its part in World
War II. This particular volume deals with the planning and the difficulties en-
countered incident to the mounting of the largest amphibious assault ever
undertaken in military history. Much of the information it contains has not
heretofore been a matter of public knowledge. For example, light is for the
first time thrown upon the enemy’s conflicting theories of defense against
Allied air superiority and upon his paucity of first-class troops. This informa-
tion is derived from the official records of the Wehrmacht and from signed
statements of German participants. Many of the difficulties encountered in the
planning, as well as in the execution stage of the operation, are here described
to the public for the first time.
Where this history deals with the struggle ashore, it clearly illustrates the
necessity for commanders to adjust their thinking to the means at hand, the
terrain, and the influence of new weapons. It reiterates the indispensability of
constant training in how to get order out of the confusion which is forever
present upon the battlefield. It brings to mind in this connection the means
used by a football team for meeting the problems of overcoming opposition on
the playing field. The plays devised and the techniques used to attain its ends
must be practiced again and again. Frequently it is the loss of effective direc-
tion of small units, incident to the battle’s toll, which makes for failure rather
than success.
Whether the reader approaches the book with the justified pride that he
was a member or supporter of the winning team, or whether he reads to learn,
is a matter for him to decide. The victor tends to prepare to win the next war
with the same means and methods with which he won the last. He forgets the
difficulty of reaching decisions, the planning problems, his faltering, his un-
preparedness. The vanquished is wont to search far afield for new and im-
proved methods, means, and equipment. The accomplishments of those who
fought in this period were indeed great, as were the sacrifices. But from the
national viewpoint it would seem desirable to read this volume with the self-
critical eye of the vanquished as well as with the pride of the victor, an ap-
proach which the thoughtful reader will not find difficult.

ORLANDO WARD
Maj. Gen., U.S.A.
Chief of Military History

Washington, D.C.
1 October 1950
Vii
Introductory Note on the History of
the European Theater of Operations
Chronologically this volume is first in the series narrating the events of
World War II in the European Theater of Operations. It has been preceded
in publication by The Lorraine Campaign, which covers the operations of the
Third Army during the autumn of 1944 and which begins some two months
after the close of the present volume. A co-operative history of the type repre-
sented in this series has distinct advantages but does not lend itself readily to
the production and publication of volumes in proper chronological order.
For this reason each volume will be designated only by title and will remain
unnumbered.
Cross-Channel Attack has been planned and written as the introduction to
the history of those campaigns in 1944 and 1945 which led to the destruction
of the German armies in the west. It provides necessary background for the
study of all the campaigns in the European Theater of Operations. The nar-
rative of operations ends on 1 July 1944, with the Allies firmly established in
Normandy. The concluding chapters show the successful fruition of plans and
preparations reaching back as far as January 1942; but the seizure.of the Nor-
man beaches and the establishment of a lodgment area are only a beginning, a
point of departure for the drive to the Elbe and the Baltic. Although Cross-
Channel Attack includes discussion of certain problems of high command and
logistics, a more complete treatment is accorded these subjects in two volumes
now under preparation in this series: The Supreme Command and Logistical
Support of the Armies.
The author of Cross-Channel Attack, Gordon A. Harrison, a former news-
paper reporter and instructor at Harvard University, holds the Doctor of Phil-
osophy degree from that institution. During the war he served as a historical
officer with the Third Army, taking part in five campaigns. He joined the His-
torical Division, Department of the Army, in 1946.

HUGH M. COLE
Chief, European Section

Washington, D.C.
1 October 1950

...
viii
Preface
This volume, introductory to a series on the European Theater of Opera-
tions, deals with the development of strategy and planning for the attack on
northwest Europe in 1944 and with the first month of operations establishing
Allied armies in France. The first seven chapters (about two-thirds) of the
book are concerned with the prelude to the 6 June assault: the preparations
and discussions of strategy on both the Allied and German sides from 1941 to
1944. The remaining three chapters describe the combat operations of the
First U. S. Army in Normandy from 6 June to 1 July 1944. This apportion-
ment of space was deliberately made with reference to the whole European
Theater Series, and much of the material on plans, the state of German de-
fense, preparatory operations, has strict relevance only when viewed from the
larger perspective.
While attempting to set operations in northwest Europe in the framework
of world-wide strategy, Cross-Channel Attack makes no pretense of telling the
full story of that strategy. Other volumes under preparation by the Historical
Division will focus on the Mediterranean and Pacific and discuss various as-
pects of the higher direction of the war.
It should be pointed out further that this is an American story of an Allied
operation. It is based largely on Department of the Army records, and al-
though these include a large number of British and Combined documents it
has not been possible, nor was it intended, to develop in full the narrative of
British participation. Every effort has been made to avoid a partisan viewpoint
and to present fairly some of the critical problems of the Anglo-American
alliance as they came into and were revealed by the cross-Channel project.
Beyond that there is no attempt to achieve an “Allied” perspective or to
weigh and balance American and British contributions. In the operational
chapters British action has been summarized only when it occurred on the
flank of First U. S. Army and materially affected American operations.
In the narrative of American operations in Chapters VIII-X, the basic
unit treated is the division, although in recording the fragmented battles typi-
cal of fighting in the European theater it often becomes necessary to follow
battalions and even companies and platoons on quasi-independent missions
in order to describe fully what the division as a unit did. The actions are de-
scribed in somewhat less detail than in other volumes of the series chiefly be-
cause the Department of the Army has already published monographs cover-
ing the period. The reader interested in greater detail will find it in [Charles
H. Taylor] Omaha Beachhead (Washington, 1945) and [R. G. Ruppenthal]
Utah Beach to Cherbourg (Washington, 1947). Cross-Channel Attack sum-
marizes these two accounts with occasional corrections, additions, and reinter-
pretations, and with entirely new German material.
ix
In a work based on thousands of cables, memoranda, plans, journal entries,
etc., to have cited the source for every fact would have unduly burdened every
page with redundant footnotes. Documentation is therefore selective, aimed
first at citing authorities for all important or disputed facts and opinions, and
second at providing those curious to know more with an adequate guide to
the primary and secondary source material.
As is the uniform practice throughout this series, German units and head-
quarters are italicized. Exception is made for OKW and OKH which, though
military headquarters, were also constitutional organs of the German state.
German units are translated whenever exact English equivalents exist. The
terms panzer, panzer grenadier, Luftwaffe, and Kampfgruppe, however, have
been retained because they are of such common occurrence that they have
been virtually assimilated at least into military English.
Cross-Channel Attack is in a real sense the product of co-operative enter-
prise. It depends heavily on information collected by army historians in the
field during combat, on preliminary draft narratives by other historians after
combat, on specific assistance given me during the writing and research, and
perhaps most important of all on the privilege (which I have always enjoyed)
of tapping the collective knowledge of colleagues working in related fields.
When the first draft was completed I had to leave the Division temporarily
and the whole burden of editing devolved for some time upon others. I am
particularly grateful to Associate Editor Joseph R. Friedman and to Capt.
Frank Mahin, Capt. James Scoggin, and Mr. Detmar Finke of the Foreign
Studies Section for undertaking much of the onerous burden of checking facts
and footnotes in my absence, and for performing an editing task that often
amounted to collaboration.
It is a pleasure to acknowledge indebtedness to Col. S. L. A. Marshall for
his indispensable series of interviews and manuscript studies of the airborne
operations in Normandy and for his interviews with officers and men of the
1st and 29th Divisions. Other combat interviews to which I am indebted were
conducted by Lt. Col. W. T. Gayle and Capt. R. G. Ruppenthal. Special
thanks are due Captain Ruppenthal and Colonel Taylor for the excellent pre-
liminary studies on UTAH and OMAHA beach mentioned above which I have
used freely. Interviews conducted by Dr. Forrest C. Pogue with some forty
British planners and commanders in the summer of 1946 immeasurably en-
riched the record available to me.
In exploring German sources, besides assistance by the Foreign Studies
Section I received special help from Capt. Benjamin Schwartz. The bulk of
the research in air force records on which the section on the Combined
Bomber Offensive is based was very ably performed by Lt. Col. Charles A.
Warner. The task of locating relevant documents and running down some of
the more elusive facts was made easier and more pleasant by the willing efforts
of many special research assistants and archivists who cannot all be named
here. I appreciate the co-operation of members of the JCS Historical Section,
the Air Forces Historical Section, and the Office of Naval History. I am spe-
X
cially grateful to Mr. Israel Wice and his assistants, to Mr. Royce L. Thomp -
son, and to Miss Alice Miller.
The problems of dealing with an Allied operation largely from American
records were greatly reduced by the generous help of the British Cabinet His-
torical Section under Brigadier H. B. Latham. I must particularly acknowl-
edge the contributions of Lt. Col. H. A. Pollock and Lt. Col. A. E. Warhurst.
Colonel Warhurst, author of the British Historical Section’s preliminary nar-
rative of operations in northwest Europe, has sent me copies of important
documents missing from the files here and has supplied careful briefs of
British action. Useful information was also supplied by the British Admiralty
and the Air Ministry. Col. C. P. Stacey of the Canadian Historical Section
gave me the benefit of his special knowledge. It should be pointed out, how-
ever, that the British and Canadian historians do not concur in many of the
judgments in this book and that they are in no way responsible for the han-
dling of the material, or for errors of fact or presentation.
For making available personal papers and other data I am indebted to the
kindness of Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, Maj. Gen. Ray W. Barker, and Lt.
Gen. Sir Frederick E. Morgan. Other commanders have helped clarify obscure
points and have criticized portions of the manuscript. Footnotes acknowledge
their contributions only in part. The warning must be repeated that their help
in no way implies an endorsement of the use that has been made of it.
Mr. Wsevolod Aglaimoff in the course of planning and laying out the maps
provided me with new fruitful perspectives out of his knowledge and experi-
ence as a military cartographer. Pictures were selected and prepared by Lt.
Col. John Hatlem; aerial photographs were made by him specially for this
volume through the co-operation of the 45th Reconnaissance Squadron,
USAF. Miss Michael Burdett edited the footnotes and, with Mrs. Frances T.
Fritz, copy-edited the entire manuscript. The tremendous job of preparing
the index was carried out by Mr. David Jaffe. Miss Mildred Bucan typed the
manuscript for the printer.
Cross-Channel Attack has been prepared under the general direction of
Dr. Hugh M. Cole, Chief of the European Section, Historical Division. It has
been a happy and rewarding experience to have had Dr. Cole’s discerning
counsel throughout the period of research and writing.

GORDON A. HARRISON

Washington, D.C.
1 October 1950

xi
Contents
Chapter Page
I. THE ROOTS OF STRATEGY . . . _ , . . . . . 1
The Common Ground . . . . . . . . . . 1
General Marshall’s Project . . . . . . , . . 13
“Action in 1942-Not 1943”. , . 21
The Period of Indecision (July-December 1942) . . 32
The Casablanca Conference . . . . . . . . . . 38

II. OUTLINE OVERLORD (JANUARY-JULY 1943) . . . 46


Organization for Planning . . . . . . . 46
Size and Shape of the Attack . . . . , . . . . 54
Landing Craft Requirements . . . . . . . . 59
Allotment of Resources, May 1943 . . . . 63
The COSSAC Plans . . . . . . . . . . . 70

III. OVERLORD IN THE BALANCE (AUGUST-DECEMBER 1943) 83


Strategy Reviewed: The Quebec Conference , . . . . . 83
Landing Craft Again . . . . . . . . . . . . 100
Questions of Command _ . , . . . . . . . . 105
The Cairo-Tehran Conferences . . . . . . . . 117

IV. THE GERMAN ARMY IN FRANCE, 1940-1943 ...... 128


Organization of the West ........... 128
Impact of the Russian and Mediterranean Fronts ..... 140
Rebuilding the Western Defenses ......... I48

V. OVERLORD REVISED ............. 158


U.S. Organization and Training for the Assault, January 1944 158
The ANVIL-OVERLORD Debate ......... 164
The NEPTUNE Plans ............ 173

VI. PRELIMINARY OPERATIONS .......... 198


The French Resistance ............ 198
The Combined Bomber Oflensive ......... 207
The Bombing of French Railroads ......... 217

VII. GERMAN DEFENSE MEASURES, 1944 ....... 231


OKW Policy in I944 ............ 231
Organization for Combat .......... 236
Command and Tactics ........... 242
The Defense on the Eve of Invasion ....... 258
...
Xl,,
Chapter Page
VIII. THE SIXTH OF JUNE ............. 269
The Invasion is Launched ........... 269
The Airborne Assault ............ 278
Hitting the Beaches ............. 300
The D-Day Beachhead ............ 321

IX. THE V CORPS LODGMENT (7-18 JUNE) ....... 336


Securing the Beachheads ............ 336
Junction Between V and VIZ Corps ........ 351
The Caumont Gap ............. 366
Toward St. Lo ............... 376

X. THE CAPTURE OF CHERBOURG (8 JUNE-l JULY) ... 386


Securing the North Flank ........... 386
Attack to Cut the Peninsula ........... 396
Hitler Intervenes .............. 408
Advance to the Cherbourg Landfront ........ 416
The Fall of Cherbourg ............ 422
End of a Phase .............. 438

Appendix
A. DIGEST OF OPERATION OVERLORD ....... 450
B. DIRECTIVE TO SUPREME COMMANDER, ALLIED EXPE-
DITIONARY FORCE ............ 457
C. HITLER DIRECTIVE NO. 40 .......... 459
D. HITLER DIRECTIVE NO. 51 .......... 464
E. CHRONOLOGY OF MAIN PLANNING PAPERS FROM 1
JANUARY 1944 .............. 468
F. COMPARATIVE FIRE POWER OF THE U.S. AND GERMAN
1944-TYPE INFANTRY DIVISIONS ........ 470
G. DIVISIONS AVAILABLE TO GERMANY ON 6 JUNE 1944 471
H. TABLE OF EQUIVALENT RANKS ........ 472
I. RECIPIENTS OF THE DISTINGUISHED SERVICE CROSS 473
J. BASIC MILITARY MAP SYMBOLS ........ 477
GLOSSARY .................. 479
CODE NAMES ................. 485
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE ............. 487
INDEX .................. 495
xiv
Charts
NO. Page
1. Simplified Command and Planning Organization for European Opera-
tions as of May 1942 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
2. German Chain of Command in the West, May 1944 . . . . . . 244
3. Luftwaffe Command in the West . . . . . . . . . . . 245
4. German Naval Command in the West . . . . . . . . . . 245

Maps
1. Situation in Europe, 6 June 1944 ............ 268
2. German Counterattack in the Cotentin .......... 296
3. 4th Infantry Division, 6 June 1944 ........... 305
4. German Counterattack on Carentan, 13 June 1944 ...... 366
5. Caumont Gap, Morning 10 June 1944 .......... 370
6. The la Fiere Bridgehead, 9 June 1944 .......... 397

Maps I-XXIV are in accompanying map envelope

I. Overlord Area.
II. The Final Overlord Plan.
III. Development of the Lodgment.
IV. Sealing Off the Battlefield.
V. Order of Battle OB WEST, 6 June 1944.
VI. Allied Assault Routes, 6 June 1944.
VII. The Airborne Assault, 6 June 1944.
VIII. 101st Airborne Division Drop Pattern, 6 June 1944.
IX. 82d Airborne Division Drop Pattern, 6 June 1944.
X. V Corps D-Day Objectives.
XI. Omaha Beach Assault.
XII. The Second British Army on D Day.
XIII. German Countermeasures, 6 June 1944.
XIV. V Corps, 7-8 June 1944.
xv. VII Corps on D -I- 1.
XVI. Battle for Carentan and Junction of the Beachheads, S-12 June 1944.
XVII. V Corps Advance, 9-13 June 1944.
XVIII. Kampfgruppe Heintz, 6-11 June 1944.
XIX. Toward St. Lo, 14-18 June 1944.
xx. Securing the North Flank, S-14 June 1944.
XXI. Attack to Cut the Peninsula, 10-18 June 1944.
XXII. The Advance North, 19-21 June 1944.
XXIII. The Attack on Cherbourg, 22-26 June 1944.
XXIV. The Advance Inland, 6 June-l July 1944.

xv
Illustrations
Page
President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill ....... 7
General Marshall .......... ....... 14
U.S. Soldiers in Ireland ........ ....... 20
Casablanca Conference ........ ....... 39
General Morgan .......... ....... 50
British Landing Craft on Beach at Dieppe . . . ....... 55
German Submarine Under Aerial Attack ... ....... 85
Quebec Conference ......... ....... 89
General Montgomery ......... ....... 118
Tehran Conference ......... ....... 124
Field Marshal von Rundstedt and General Jodl . ....... 132
German High Command ........ ....... 134
Enemy Coast Artillery ......... ....... 139
Field Marshal Rommel ........ ....... 150
General Eisenhower ......... ....... 159
Invasion Training in England ...... ....... 161
Assault Training .......... ....... 163
Vauville Beach, Spring 1944 ....... ....... 178
Preinvasion Bombing ......... ....... 195
Hitler Leaving Railway Carriage at Compiegne . ....... 199
V-Bomb Over London, June 1944 ..... ....... 216
Bombardment of Marshaling Yards ..... ....... 226
Results of Air Attacks ......... ....... 229
Antilanding Obstacles ......... ....... 251
German Mobile Infantry ........ ....... 255
Captured German Armor ........ ....... 256
Preinvasion Scenes .......... ....... 271
Allied Invasion Chiefs ......... ....... 273
German Field Commanders ....... ....... 277
Parachute Troops .......... ....... 279
Hedgerow Country .......... ....... 285
Merderet River Crossing ........ ....... 294
Crossing the Channel ......... ....... 299
Troops on Utah Beach ........ ....... 303
Aerial View of Utah Beach on D-Day Morning . . ....... 306
Aerial View of Omaha Beach on D Plus 1 . . . ....... 310
Terrain on Omaha Beach ....... ....... 312
Assault Landings, Omaha Beach ...... ....... 314
First Aid on the Beach ........ ....... 316
Rangers Scaling the Cliffs at Pointe du Hoe . ....... 323
Ninth Air Force B-26 Over British Beachhead . . ....... 331
Troops on Utah Beach Under Artillery Fire . . ....... 343
Planes and Gliders Circling Les Forges .... ....... 346
xvi
Page
U.S. Commanders .............. . . 352
St. Come-du-Mont Area ............ . . 354
Carentan Causeway ............... . . 358
Carentan and Hill 30 Area ........... . . 362
Tank Equipped with Hedgerow Cutter ........ . . 385
Crisbecq Fortification ............. . . 389
Azeville Forts ............... . . 391
Quintville ................ . . 394
La Fiere Causeway .............. . . 399
Tank Entering St. Sauveur-le Vicomte ..... : .. . . 405
Ste. Colombe-Nehou Area ............ . . 407
Seine River Bridge at Mantes-Gassicourt Under Bombardment . . 409
Utah Beach During the Build-up .......... . . 424
Omaha Beach During the Build-up ......... . . 425
Artificial Port at Omaha Beach .......... . 427
American Artillery in Action Against Cherbourg ..... . . 433
Fort du Roule ................ . . 435
House-to-House Search in Cherbourg ........ 437
American Infantry Captain with Cherbourg Prisoners . . . . 439

Illustrations are from the following sources:


U.S. Army Photos, pages: 7, 14, 20, 39, 50, 89, 118, 124, 132, 159, 163, 178, 216,251, 256, 271, 273, 277,
285, 303,310, 316, 343,352, 385,405,424,425, 427,433,437,439
U.S. Air Force Photos, pages: 85, 195, 226, 229, 279, 285, 294, 306, 312, 331, 346, 354, 358, 362, 389,
391, 394, 399, 407, 409, 424, 427, 435
U.S. Navy Photos, pages: 161,323
U.S. Coast Guard Photos, pages: 161,299,303,314,425
Captured German Photos, pages: 55,134,139, 150,255
National Archives Photo, page: 199

xvii
The U.S. Army Center of Military History
The Center of Military History prepares and publishes histories as required by
the U.S. Army. It coordinates Army historical matters, including historical proper-
ties, and supervises the Army museum system. It also maintains liaison with public
and private agencies and individuals to stimulate interest and study in the field
of military history. The Center is located at 1099 14th Street, N.W., Washington,
D.C. 20005-3402.

. ..
Xvlll
CHAPTER I

The Roots of Strategy


The Common Ground thus many stories which can be told only
in terms of the planners and directors
OVERLORD, the cross-Channel attack concerned, and the pragmatic organiza-
which hit the German-occupied coast of tions within which they worked.
Normandy on 6 June 1944, was one of the At least a year and a half before the
last and by far the biggest of the series of United States was drawn into the war, the
amphibious operations by which the groundwork for possible Anglo-American
United States and the British Empire military collaboration against the Axis
came to grips with the German-Italian- was being laid. The Navy Department
Japanese Axis in the course of World War took the lead in the summer of 1940 in es-
II. But it was more than just another at- tablishing a permanent observer in Lon-
tack. It was the supreme effort of the don (Rear Adm. Robert L. Ghormley)
Western Allies in Europe-the consum- whose job was specifically to discuss ar-
mation of the grand design to defeat Ger- rangements for naval co-operation in case
many by striking directly at the heart of the United States came into the war, and
Hitler’s Reich. One of the last attacks, it generally to provide a channel for the
was the fruition of some of the first stra- interchange of naval information be-
tegic ideas. tween the two countries.1 Army observers
The principles that eventually shaped also traveled to London during 1940 on
OVERLORD were developed early but their special missions, but the War Depart-
application was discontinuous, inter- ment did not set up a permanent liaison
rupted by diffuse experimentation and body until the spring of 1941. At that
improvisation. Neither ideas nor plan- time Maj. Gen. James E. Chaney, a vet-
ning can be traced along a single line eran of twenty-four years’ experience in
from a clear beginning to the ultimate ac- the Air Corps, was sent to London as a
tion. OVERLORD was an Allied project. Special Army Observer directly respon-
British and American planners worked sible to Gen. George C. Marshall, the
together, but they also worked separately, U. S. Army Chief of Staff. General
particularly in the early years of the war. Chaney’s headquarters became known as
Sometimes their efforts paralleled each SPOBS (Special Observers) . Admiral
other; sometimes they were at cross-pur- Ghormley’s group at the same time was
poses. Within both the American and the reconstituted and he was designated Spe-
British military establishments, further- cial Naval Observer, reporting directly
more, divergent opinions struggled for ac-
1 Administrative History of U.S. Naval Forces in
ceptance. The whole story of planning Europe, 1940-1946, MS, pp. 2ff. Hist Div files. See
and preparing the cross-Channel attack is Bibliographical Note.
2 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

to Admiral Harold R. Stark, the U. S. United States became Great Britain’s ally.
Chief of Naval Operations.2 The agreement known as ABC-1, which
The establishment of Chaney’s and was arrived at in the course of the first of
Ghormley’s groups stemmed from agree- these meetings, was especially important.
ments with the British in early 1941 to ex- Although its decisions were not binding
change military missions in order to in- on either nation and were not officially
sure continuous co-ordination of ideas recognized by President f they
and techniques. The British, as a result were nevertheless accepted by the War
of these agreements, set up in Washing- and Navy Departments as a basis for plan-
ton the Joint Staff Mission, representing ning in the event of U. S. participation in
the British Chiefs of Staff. Heads of the the war.4
Joint Staff Mission were co-ordinate rep- The observer and military mission
resentatives of each of the three service period came to an abrupt end in Decem-
chiefs. Jointly the mission was responsible ber 1941 after the Japanese attacked Pearl
to the British Chiefs of Staff Committee Harbor and Germany declared war on the
as a whole. Originally the United States United States. In January 1942 Anglo-
intended to establish a similar joint mis- American alliance became a fact and the
sion. But in the first place the United British Chiefs of Staff came to Washing-
States had at that time no system of joint ton to reaffirm earlier informal agree-
direction comparable to the British ments on combined strategy and to plan
Chiefs of Staff. In the second place it was the combined conduct of the war. Their
considered that a formally constituted most important achievement was the es-
military mission might lead to political tablishment of permanent machinery for
commitments which, in view of U. S. collaboration: the Combined Chiefs of
neutrality, the government could not ac- Staff. (Chart I) The Combined Chiefs of
cept.3 Staff were defined as consisting of the
The co-ordination provided by the m- British Chiefs of Staff or their representa-
terchange of information through U. S. tives in Washington (the Joint Staff Mis-
observers and the British mission was sup- sion) and the United States opposite
plemented during 1941 by two formal numbers.5 Their duties as finally ap-
Anglo-American military conferences. proved were to formulate and execute,
The first was held in Washington be- under the direction of the heads of the
tween January and March; the second United Nations, policies and plans con-
took place in August on shipboard in the cerning the strategic conduct of the war,
Atlantic. At both conferences principles the broad program of war requirements,
of combined strategy in Europe were dis- the allocation of munitions, and the re-
cussed and tentative agreements reached quirements for transportation.6
on the policy that would govern com- 4 Brief of ABC-I Conversations. Pre-Inv tile 308.
bined conduct of the war when and if the See Bibliographical Note.
5 U.S. ABC-4/CS-4, 14 Jan 42. OPD files, ARCADIA
2 Ibid.; [Henry G. Elliott], The Predecessor Com- Conf Bk.
mands: SPOBS and USAFBI (The Administrative 6 CCS 9/1, War Collaboration Between United Na-
and Logistical History of the ETO: Part I), MS, pp. tions. Approved at CCS 4th Mtg, 10 Feb 42. See Bibli-
23-24. Hist Div files. ographical Note for location and nature of CCS docu-
3 Elliott, The Predecessor Commands. pp. 2. 25. ments.
THE ROOTS OF STRATEGY

CHART 1 .-SIMPLIFIED COMMAND AND PLANNING ORGANIZATION


FOR EUROPEAN OPERATIONS AS OF MAY 1942

The curious definition of the Com- of the Army, Lt. Gen. Henry H. Arnold,
bined Chiefs was compelled by the fact Commanding General of the Army Air
that there was no organization of United Forces and Deputy Chief of Staff for Air,
States Chiefs of Staff at that time equiva- Admiral Harold R. Stark, Chief of Naval
lent to the British Chiefs of Staff Com- Operations, and Admiral Ernest J. King,
mittee. It was primarily to provide “op- Commander in Chief of the U. S. Fleet.
posite numbers” to the British for mem- In March 1942, the offices held by Stark
bership in the combined organization and King were combined under Kings;8
that the U. S. Joint Chiefs of Staff came Stark was sent to London as Commander
into being.7 Initially they consisted of of U. S. Naval Forces in Europe. The
Gen. George C. Marshall, Chief of Staff three Joint Chiefs then corresponded to
7 The only interservice directorate previously ex- of Naval Operations. The Joint Board was primarily
isting was the Joint Board founded 17 July 1903. The concerned with administrative matters and doctrine.
Joint Board, charged with co-ordinating all matters It continued to exist after the establishment of the
of joint interest to the services, consisted in 1942 of Joint Chiefs although its duties and importance
four Navy and four Army members: for the Army, dwindled. It was finally abolished by executive or-
the Chief of Staff, the Deputy Chief of Staff, the der in August 1947.
Deputy Chief of Staff for Air, and the Director of the 8 Admiral King, Annapolis graduate of 1901, served
War Plans Division; for the Navy, the Chief of Naval during World War I as Assistant Chief of Staff to the
Operations, the Assistant Chief of Naval Operations, Commander in Chief, U.S. Atlantic Fleet, winning
the Chief of the Bureau of Naval Aeronautics, and the Navy Cross. In 1937 he moved into the group
the Director of the War Plans Division of the Office controlling broad naval operations and was, suc-
4 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

the British organization, which in 1942 Staff representing the Prime Minister,
included Gen. Sir Alan Brooke, Chief of Winston S. Churchill, in his capacity as
the Imperial General Staff, Admiral Sir Minister of Defence. In July 1942, the
Dudley Pound, First Sea Lord, and Air Joint Chiefs of Staff also acquired a fourth
Chief Marshal Sir Charles Portal, Chief member in Admiral William D. Leahy,
of the Air Staff. The British Chiefs, how- appointed Chief of Staff to President
ever, met with the Americans only at Roosevelt in his capacity as Commander
periodic military-political conferences. In in Chief of the Army and Navy.11
the interim they were represented on the The mechanics of joint and combined
permanent combined body in Washing- direction of the Allied war effort de-
ton by the Joint Staff Mission, the original veloped very slowly although most of the
members of which were Lt. Gen. Sir Col- machinery was established in early 1942.
ville Wemyss, Admiral Sir Charles Little, Just as the Joint Chiefs of Staff themselves
and Air Marshal A. T. Harris.g In addi- were formed to parallel the existing Brit-
tion to the three service members of the ish organization, so they established their
mission, Field Marshal Sir John Dill 10 sat principal subordinate agency, the Joint
as a member of the Combined Chiefs of Planning Staff, along the lines developed
cessively, a member of the General Board of the
Navy, Commander of the U.S. Fleet Patrol Force, was Commander-in-Chief at Aldershot. As Chief of
and, with the rank of admiral, Commander in Chief the Imperial General Staff from May 1940 through
of the Atlantic Fleet. He assumed command of the 1941, he was responsible for the reinforcement of the
U.S. Fleet in December 1941. Admiral Stark, An- British armies in Egypt and the Middle East and for
napolis graduate of 1903, had commanded a destroyer the decision to send British troops to Greece. Pro-
squadron in active service against submarines in the moted to field marshal in December 1941, he was
Mediterranean and the Atlantic in World War I, sent to Washington as Head of the British Joint
later serving on the staff of the Commander, U.S. Staff Mission and senior British member of the Com-
Naval Forces Operating in European Waters. He bined Chiefs of Staff.
was made Chief of the Bureau of Ordnance in 1934 11 Long after the Joint Chiefs of Staff had become
and four years later became Commander, Cruisers, an accepted functioning organization an attempt was
Battle Force. The following year, 1939, he was pro- made to give them a written charter. But it was dis-
moted to full admiral and assumed his post of Chief covered that definitions of authority at such high
of Naval Operations. levels tended to confuse rather than clarify the posi-
9The Joint Staff Mission superseded the earlier tions of responsibility and trust established by inti-
British Military Mission in May 1941. Changes in mate personal relationships. The attempted definition
personnel up to 1944 were: Chief of the British Army was rejected by President Roosevelt, and the corpo-
Staff-Lt. Gen. Sir Colville Wemyss (to March 1942) , rate existence of the Joint Chiefs of Staff continued
Maj. Gen. R. H. Dewing (March-June 1942), Lt. to stem from the Combined Chiefs of Staff charter.
Gen. G. N. Macready; Chief of the British Admiralty Admiral Leahy, Annapolis graduate in the class of
Delegation-Admiral Sir Charles Little (to June 1897, saw active war service against the Spanish Fleet
1942), Admiral Sir Andrew Cunningham (June- in Santiago Harbor, in the Philippine Insurrection,
December 1942)) Admiral Sir Percy Noble; Chief of and in the Boxer Uprising. During World War I, he
the British Air Staff-Air Marshal A. T. Harris (to served aboard ships of the line and also commanded
February 1942)) Air Marshal D. C. S. Evil1 (Febru- a troop transport, winning the Navy Cross. He as-
ary 1942-June 1943)) Air Marshal Sir William Walsh, sumed command of the New Mexico in 1926 and in
10Field Marshal Dill, Sandhurst graduate and Boer 1933 was made Chief of the Bureau of Navigation.
War veteran, was Field Marshal Haig’s Brigadier Four years later (then an admiral) , he became Chief
General, Operations, during the last Hundred Days of Naval Operations. In 1939, retired from the serv-
before the 1918 Armistice. He served on the General ice, he was appointed governor of Puerto Rico. The
Staff in India, was Director of Military Operations following year he went to France as U.S. Ambassador.
and Intelligence in the War Office, commanded two It was from this post that he was recalled to active
divisions in Palestine during the Arab rebellion, and duty by the President in 1942.
THE ROOTS OF STRATEGY 5

by the British. The U. S. Joint Planning bility for establishing and defending the
Staff together with the British Joint U. S. view.
Planners constituted the Combined Staff On the British side, the joint system
Planners, responsible to the Combined had been worked out and was fully opera-
Chiefs of Staff.12 In theory, plans and tive in 1942. The British Joint Planners
studies of U. S. policy and strategy were directly responsible to the British Chiefs
to come up through joint committees to of Staff were throughout the war the chief
be co-ordinated by the Joint Planners and planning body concerned with develop-
then submitted for approval to the Joint ing British strategy. Much of the opera-
Chiefs. If approved, they became the of- tional planning, however, was done by
ficial U. S. view to be placed before the various field commands. Especially im-
Combined Chiefs for acceptance as Allied portant was the Combined Operations
policy. British studies would develop Headquarters, which was headed after
along parallel lines. In case of important September 1941 by Commodore Lord
discrepancies between American and Louis Mountbatten.14 At the time that
British views, the problem might be re- Mountbatten became chief, Combined
ferred by the Combined Chiefs to their Operations was charged with responsi-
planning staff for adjustment. The Com- bility for planning and executing raids
bined Planners, being more of a co-or- against the Continent. It was also pri-
dinating than a working body, seldom marily concerned with all the technical
initiated planning papers. problems of amphibious operations, and
By 1943 the practice of joint and com- in particular with the development of
bined planning closely approximated the landing craft.15 In January 1942 Gen. Sir
theory. But in early 1942 most actual Bernard Paget, commander of the British
planning on the U. S. side was done in the Home Forces (the highest army field com-
War and Navy Departments and co-or- mand in England), was brought into the
dination between the services was effected planning picture by a directive from the
largely outside the formally established Chiefs of Staff to study a cross-Channel at-
joint channels .13 As far as the European tack plan written by the British Joint
war was concerned, the War Department Planners.16 Paget was asked to study this
and particularly the Operations Division 14 Mountbatten, who entered the Royal Navy in
took the initiative in planning and Gen- 1913, served at sea during World War I, for the last
two years as a midshipman. After specializing in com-
eral Marshall assumed personal responsi- munications, he was assigned as Mediterranean Fleet
Wireless Officer in 1931. Then followed assignments
as commander of the Daring, the Wishart, and, in
12Combined Planners named in the original Com- 1939, the Kelly and the 5th Destroyer Flotilla in
bined Chiefs’ charter were: for the U.S., Rear Adm. Mediterranean operations. He came to Combined
R. K. Turner (USN), Brig. Gen. Leonard T. Gerow Operations Headquarters after commanding the Il-
(USA), Capt. R. E. Davison (USN), Col. E. L. lustrious.
Naiden (AC) ; for the British, Capt. C. E. Lambe 15 Paper by Lt. Col. Paddy Corbett, The Evolution
(RN), Lt. Col. G. K. Bourne, Group Capt. S. C. and Development of Amphibious Technique and Ma-
Strafford (RAF). terial, read before British Staff College, Camberly,
13 U.S. planning organization and techniques are England, May 45. Hist Div files.
considered at length in Ray S. Cline, Washington 16 General Paget, winner of the Distinguished Serv-
Command Post: The Operations Division, a volume ice Order and Military Cross in World War I, en-
now under preparation in this series. tered the British Army in 1907. As commander of the
6 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

plan in consultation with the designate other hand, the agencies most directly
Naval and Air Force Commanders-in- concerned with drawing up plans for Eu-
Chief (Admiral Sir Bertram H. Ramsay ropean operations in 1942 were, in the
and Air Marshal Sholto Douglas respec- United States, the Operations Division of
tively). Beginning their association in- the War Department, and, in England,
formally these three became in the course the Combined Commanders. Finally, over
of the first six months of 1942 the nucleus and above all these formally constituted
of a formal planning body, the Combined planning and directing bodies stood
Commanders. Later Mountbatten was of- President Franklin D. Roosevelt and
ficially added to their number and the Prime Minister Winston S. Churchill, the
Commanding General of U. S. Forces in ultimately responsible persons for all
the European Theater was informally in- military decisions, who exerted a direct
cluded among them. The Combined and vital influence on planning that cut
Commanders held their first meeting in athwart all the formal channels of co-op-
May 1942 and thereafter until early 1943 eration.
acted as the chief British planning agency
concerned with the development of plans In the period before the United States
for a cross-Channel attack.17 entered the war, the planning of offensive
To sum up, the informal military rap- operations against Germany was naturally
prochement between the United States desultory and inconclusive. In view of
and Great Britain which began in 1940 British weakness and aloneness on the
culminated in January 1942 with the for- edge of Hitler’s Europe, and in view of
mation of the Combined Chiefs of Staff. America’s jealously preserved isolation,
The Combined Chiefs were a co-ordinat- the interesting thing is that planning took
ing agency at a very high level. The de- place at all. The notion of a British attack
tailed work, not only of drawing up tac- across the Channel could have had little
tical plans but of outlining strategy, reality and no urgency during the days
studying requirements, and testing prin- when the German armies were in the
ciples against resources, was done very flood tide of their initial victories on the
largely by separate U. S. and British Continent. Yet the British Joint Planners
bodies. At the strategy level, the most im- before the end of 1941 had drawn up an
portant in 1942 were the Joint Planning invasion plan. They called it ROUNDUP, a
Staff and the Joint Planners for the Amer- name suitably reflecting the concept of an
icans and the British respectively. On the operation in the final phase of the war
against only token resistance. ROUNDUP
was a plan for an operation with very
18th Division in 1939 in operations in Norway, he small resources and bore little relation to
successfully engineered its evacuation. He was pro- the attack against Normandy in 1944.
moted to lieutenant general and in 1940 was ap-
pointed Chief of General Staff, Home Forces, hold-
Nevertheless it was a beginning and some
ing this position until he assumed command of the of its ideas persisted far into the OVERLORD
Home Forces in 1942. planning period.
17 21 A Gp, Note on the History of Planning for Op-
ROUNDUP was planned to exploit Ger-
erations in Northwest Europe, 30 Dec 43. Hist Div
files. man deterioration. As a condition for the
PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT AND PRIME MINISTER CHURCHILL
8 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

invasian, it was assumed that the Germans enter the conflict. In that event, if the
had abandoned hope for victory, and were United States was drawn into war with
withdrawing their occupation forces to all three Axis members Allied military
concentrate on the defense of the Reich. resources would be scattered and Allied
The purpose of ROUNDUP was to disrupt strategy immensely complicated. A de-
that orderly withdrawal. British forces cision was urgently required as to where
would assault west and east of Le Havre U. S. and British forces should first be con-
on beaches from Deauville to Dieppe. centrated. That decision was taken at the
The object would be initially to conference in early 1941 when the U. S.
dominate an area between Calais and War and Navy Departments agreed with
the Seine 75 to 100 miles deep. The in- the British to defeat Germany first while
vasion forces would then push north, take remaining on the strategic defensive in
Antwerp and proceed into Germany the Pacific.19 For Great Britain geography
across the Meuse River north of Liege. made the choice obligatory. American
Total forces to be used were 61/3 infantry concurrence was dictated by reasons less
divisions, 6 armored divisions, 6 army obvious but scarcely less compelling. Ger-
tank brigades, and supporting troops. many was considered the dominant Axis
Preliminary bombardment to soften the member whose defeat would greatly
coast defenses would require three naval weaken the war-making power of Japan.
vessels, including one capital ship. The Only against Germany could the offensive
diffuse, small-scale landings and the tiny power of both the United States and Great
dimensions of the total force at once Britain be concentrated without uncover-
underlined the basic condition of enemy ing the British Isles. Finally, the United
weakness set for the operations, and re- States, desperately short of shipping,
flected the military poverty of the British could not at first afford long lines of com-
at the time.18 munication. “Time and space factors,”
The 1941 ROUNDUP was not taken very wrote General Marshall in reviewing the
seriously and was never introduced offi- early years of the war, “dictated our
cially into combined discussions. The im- strategy to a considerable degree. To land
mediate concern of both Americans and and maintain American forces in Aus-
British was necessarily with basic strategic tralia required more than twice the ship
principles in the light of which long- tonnage for similar American forces in
range planning and production could be Europe or North Africa.” 20 The decision
undertaken. The first Allied discussions to take the offensive first against Germany
of strategy took place when the war was was reaffirmed at the ARCADIA Conference
still confined to Europe. It was clear, in Washington on 31 December 1941
however, that Japan might at any time after the United States entered the war. It
was reaffirmed without question despite
the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor,
18 JP (41) 1028, 24 Dec 41. CCS files, CCS 381 (3-
23-42) , par. I. This was the final version of the plan. 19 Brief of ABC-1 Conv. See n. 4.
An earlier version, JP (41) 823 (0) Draft, was dated 20 George C. Marshall, Biennial Refiort of the Chief
9 Oct 41; no copy has been located among Dept. of of Staff of the United States Army, July 1, 1941, to
the Army records. June 30,1943 (Washington, 1943)) p. 10.
THE ROOTS OF STRATEGY 9

In the very broadest sense, the ground- change of views in the fall of 1941 called
work for OVERLORD was thus laid. The forth by a Review of Strategy submitted
early combined discussions tried further by the British Chiefs of Staff for Ameri-
to explore ways and means of getting at can consideration. In reply, American
Germany. But offensive plans necessarily joint planners criticized the indirection
remained vague so long as the needs for of the British approach to offensive ac-
defense of the United Kingdom and, after tion. They noted “only minor attention”
Pearl Harbor, of American bases in the in the Review to possible land operations
Pacific absorbed not only all resources on and expressed the opinion that although
hand but the bulk of those immediately in naval and air power “may prevent wars
prospect. from being lost, and by weakening enemy
The conclusion was that direct offen- strength, may greatly contribute to vic-
sive action against Germany was unlikely tory, . . . dependence cannot be placed on
at least until 1943. At the ARCADIA Con- winning important wars by naval and air
ference, the following agreement was forces alone. It should be recognized as
reached: an almost invariable rule,” they added,
In 1942, the methods of wearing down “that wars cannot be finally won without
Germany’s resistance will be . . . ever in- the use of land armies.” 22
creasing air bombardment by British and That point, of course, had not escaped
American forces . . . assistance to Russia’s the British. The first British ROUNDUP
offensive by all available means . . . [and plan was in itself a recognition of the need
operations] the main object [of which] will
be gaining possession of the whole North for ground action on the Continent and
African coast. . . . It does not seem likely specifically admitted that “operations on
that in 1942 any large scale land offensive the Continent will in some form be in-
against Germany, except on the Russian evitable.” 23 Further, in reply to Ameri-
front, will be possible . . . [but] in 1943, can objections to their Review, the Brit-
the way may be clear for a return to the
continent across the Mediterranean, from ish Chiefs of Staff explained that the in-
Turkey into the Balkans, or by landings in direct offensive methods which they had
Western Europe. Such operations will be the listed, including blockade, bombing, and
prelude to the final assault on Germany it- the encouragement of subversive activi-
self .21 ties in German-occupied countries, did
The program thus outlined was to a re- not preclude an eventual large-scale land-
markable degree carried out. But it was ing on the Continent when the time was
not carried out without prolonged and ripe.24
searching re-examination of each step of If there was, at this time, any real dis-
the prelude. In the course of that re-ex- agreement, it was over a question of em-
amination the American and British phasis. Neither operations, nor plans, nor
Chiefs of Staff discovered an important
difference of opinion in their approach to 22Joint Planning Committee Rpt, General Strategy
the problem of defeating Germany. The -Review by the British Chiefs of Staff, 25 Sep 41,
JB 325, ser 729. OPD files.
difference was adumbrated in an ex-
23ROUNDUP Plan cited n. 18.
24 American Liaison (41) 8th Mtg, 21 Nov 41. Navy
21 U.S. ABC-4/CS-1, 31 Dec 41. ARCADIA Conf Bk. Dept files, Ghormley Papers.
10 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

even strategic principles were immedi- to attack northwest Europe armies had
ately at issue. The ARCADIA formula, cited to get across an ugly piece of water called
above, outlined a program to which both the Channel, that this crossing took boats
British and American military leaders and special equipment, that when the
could subscribe without reservation, and troops landed they had to storm fortifica-
it did not contradict anything in either tions and fight a German Army that had
the British Review or the American reply all Europe by the throat. Americans were
to it. The American protest was neverthe- aware of these problems only at second
less significant for the future. It fore- hand and at a distance. They worked from
shadowed an American impatience to get maps. Each perspective, it should be
on with direct offensive action as well as a noted, had a distinct contribution to
belief, held quite ,generally in the U. S. make. If the British saw the tactical prob-
War Department, that the war could most lems more clearly, the Americans were
efficiently be won by husbanding re- enabled to give freer rein to their imagi-
sources for an all-out attack deliberately nation and to arrive at bolder offensive
planned for a fixed future date. American concepts.
impatience was opposed by a British note These views need not necessarily have
of caution; American faith in an offensive been opposed. They were opposed largely
of fixed date was in contrast to British because the strategic problem as it de-
willingness to proceed one step at a time veloped in early combined discussion was
molding a course of action to the turns of not one of developing and carrying out
military fortune. This opposition was by the ideally best plan for defeating Ger-
no means clear in 1941. It is sketched here many. It was rather a problem of tailor-
in order to provide a vantage point for ing an ideal strategy to the changing polit-
the understanding of Anglo-American ical and military shape of a war in which
strategy, and as a guide through a neces- the enemy at first had the initiative. The
sarily condensed and selective account of difference of opinion as to how the tailor-
the debate on how to fight the war against ing should be done was called forth pri-
Germany. marily by the cry for immediate action.
The complex bases for American and That cry was taken up by many voices
British strategic views will appear in the for a number of different reasons. In the
course of the narrative. At the risk of over- first place, it was recognized that the
simplification, however, it may be useful sooner the Allies could wrest the initiative
here to generalize that the prime differ- from the Axis the sooner they could stop
ence between those views derived from dissipating resources to plug holes in the
the fact that the British, close to the scene defense and start concentrating them for
of the war, tended to focus on the diffi- the defeat of the enemy. The combined
culties of assault, and the tactical and Chiefs of Staff discussed at the ARCADIA
logistical problems involved, while the Conference one plan for immediate ac-
Americans, some 3,000 miles away, found tion, called GYMNAST, which looked as
it easier to start with the large view of the though it might have a chance of success
strategic problem. British planners were even when carried out by the relatively
deeply and continuously conscious that tiny forces then available to the United
THE ROOTS OF STRATEGY 11

States and Great Britain.25 GYMNAST, a Europe. Then the Red Army tightened
plan for the invasion of North Africa, was and held in front of Moscow and, when
a highly speculative operation. For success the snows came, struck back. Despite this
it gambled on the nonresistance of the co- success, however, neither American nor
lonial French, and even if successful it was British military leaders were sanguine
doubtful whether it would materially about the ability of the Russians to with-
contribute to the offensive against Ger- stand a new German offensive in 1942.
many except in strategically tightening U. S. planners wrote: “Although Russia’s
the ring around her. What it clearly strength was greatly underestimated by
would do, however, would be to put U. S. military authorities, including the Ger-
ground troops in action against the Ger- mans, a true test of Russia’s capacity to
mans. This consideration was particu- resist the enemy will come this sum-
larly important to President Roosevelt, mer.“28 The outcome of that test, they
who thought that immediate action believed, was the key to the European
would stiffen American morale and have and possibly to the world situation. De-
the reverse effect on the Germans.26 feat of the USSR would enable the Ger-
Strongly championed by both the Presi- mans to dominate the whole of Europe,
dent and the Prime Minister, GYMNAST complete the blockade of England, and
was accepted by the Combined Chiefs of probably force England to capitulate. If
Staff in January 1942. But the more so, then it followed that every possible
pressing need to send immediate rein- effort should be made by the Western
forcements to the Southwest Pacific to Powers to insure that Russia was not de-
check Japanese expansion toward Aus- feated.
tralia forced postponement and at last At the end of February 1942, Brig. Gen.
in March drew from the Combined Plan- Dwight D. Eisenhower, Assistant Chief
ners a declaration that the project had of Staff, War Plans Division, wrote: “The
become academic.27 task of keeping Russia in the war in-
In the meantime, both U. S. and British involves . . . immediate and definite ac-
planners were independently investigat- tion. It is not sufficient to urge upon the
ing the possibility of being forced into Russians the indirect advantages that will
action in 1942 in order to assist the Soviet accrue to them from Allied operations in
Union. When Hitler attacked the USSR distant parts of the world. . . . Russia’s
in June 1941, many observers felt that the problem is to sustain herself during the
Russians would fall before the German coming summer, and she must not be per-
blitz as quickly as had most of the rest of mitted to reach such a precarious position
25 Full treatment of the GYMNAST-TORCH project that she will accept a negotiated peace,
will be found in George F. Howe, Operations in no matter how unfavorable to herself, in
Northwest Africa, a volume now under preparation preference to continuation of the fight.”
in this series.
26 (Marshall) Notes of Meeting at the White House
The two ways of assisting Russia, General
with the President and the British Prime Minister
Presiding-5:00 P.M. (Dictated from rough notes), 28JCS 23, Annex C, 14 Mar 42. This paper is actu-
23 Dec 41. C/S file 384 (Mtgs and Confs) . See Bibli- ally a composite of directives and deployment studies
ographical Note. dating back to 30 January 1942. See Bibliographical
27 CCS 11th Mtg, 10 Mar 42. Note for location and nature of JCS documents.
12 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Eisenhower noted, were Lend-Lease aid of the Seine and Oise Rivers, and of de-
and early operations in the west to draw stroying enemy ground and air forces in
off from the Russian front large portions the general area Calais-Arras-St. Quen-
of the German Army and Air Force. He tin-Soissons-Paris-Deauville. The plan
was dubious whether a sizable ground did not go into operational detail. The
attack from England could be mounted critical problem of landing craft received
soon, but at least, he thought, air opera- little attention beyond a listing of the
tions could be initiated.29 barge requirements and a notation that
The U. S. Joint Planning Staff, study- both Americans and British would have
ing the whole question of U. S. troop de- to construct special craft.30
ployment, went much further. They be- The British Joint Planners had come to
lieved that a considerable land attack the same conclusion as the U. S. War De-
could be launched across the English partment-that the approaching summer
Channel in 1942. Although it would campaign of 1942 in Russia was likely to
have to be done at first largely by British be critical and might require support by
forces, American participation would diversions in the west if Russia was to be
build up rapidly, and the prospect of such kept in the war. On the other hand, the
reinforcement should enable the British British were much more pessimistic about
to mount the attack on a slimmer margin what could be done. The maximum feas-
than would otherwise be possible. On ible operation, they thought, would be a
this basis, the planners outlined what they limited-objective attack-something like
thought would be a possible operation to a large-scale raid-the main purpose of
take place in the summer of 1942 with a which would be to tempt the German Air
D Day between 15 July and 1 August. The Force into a battle of destruction with the
operation was to open with a fifteen-day Royal Air Force under conditions favor-
air attack, the strategic purpose of which able to the latter.31 For that concept,
would be to divert the German Air Force Prime Minister Churchill coined the code
from the east. The immediate tactical name SLEDGEHAMMER, and the Combined
objectives were to establish control of the Commanders were directed to study and
air over the Channel and at least a hun- report on it. They found at once that the
dred kilometers inland between Dun- name was far more aggressive than the
kerque and Abbeville, and to inflict the plan could be. They faced a tactical para-
maximum damage on German military dox. They were asked to strike where
installations and lines of communication. RAF fighters could engage the Luftwaffe
During the air offensive, commandos were on favorable terms. There was only one
to raid the coasts of the Netherlands, Bel- such area, since effective fighter cover
gium, and Normandy. In phase two, be- from British bases extended at that time
ginning about D plus 30, major land only over the beaches between Dun-
forces were to cross the Channel with the kerque and the Somme. This area, called
mission of securing the high ground north
30 JCS 23, App. II, JPS 2/6, 5 Mar 42.
31 Capt M. McLaren, secy to Combined Command-
29 Memo for CofS, 28 Feb 42. (Italics in the origi- ers, Notes on the History of SLEDGEHAMMER, Sep 42.
nal.) OPD files, exec 4, env 35. Hist Div files.
THE ROOTS OF STRATEGY 13

the Pas-de-Calais,32 had the strongest British Chiefs of Staff did not wholly en-
German defenses of any portion of the dorse this analysis, but they did tacitly
French coast. It also had flat beaches un- accept the conclusion that establishment
suitable for British landing craft. The of a permament bridgehead on the Con-
beaches furthermore had too few exits to tinent would probably be impossible in
pass the required number of vehicles in- 1942.35
land to maintain the forces landed. Fi-
nally the ports in the area were too small General Marshall’s Project
to supply a force large enough to hold a The first look at the cross-Channel
bridgehead against the probable scale of project discovered only a host of diffi-
German counterattack. In short, the one culties that seemed all but insuperable.
area where the RAF could supply fighter So long as attention was focused on an
support and achieve the main purpose of attack in 1942 all plans were pervaded
defeating the Luftwaffe was precisely the with the sense that to do anything at all
one area which, from every other point of would be to act in desperation, to accept
view, was unsuitable for assault.33 abnormal military risks for the sake of
The problem seemed insoluble and the avoiding ultimate disaster. If the view
planners first concluded that no cross- in London was more pessimistic than in
Channel operation was possible in 1942 Washington, that was in large part be-
unless the Germans showed signs of col- cause the major risks of action in 1942
lapse. This conclusion, however, was would have to be borne by the British.36
modified by a second report submitted In addition the British, whose mobiliza-
by the Combined Commanders early in tion was already far advanced, were in-
April. Assuming then that they might clined to see operations through the glass
disregard requirements for the security of current resources which, in general,
of the British Isles and that “the main- could be increased in one category only by
tenance problem"34 could be “successfully reduction in another. The United States,
overcome,” they calculated that an inva- on the other hand, even while struggling
sion of the Pas-de-Calais could be carried desperately to build up the stocks needed
out. But, they added, if the Germans for defense in the Pacific, was still con-
countered in force, the beachhead prob- tinuously aware of its huge potential
ably could not be held and, if lost, it was resources. Although it was recognized
doubtful whether the bulk of the men that in 1942 American military power
and equipment could be evacuated. The would only begin to make itself felt,
plans even for that year reflected the
sa The Pas-de-Calais actually was the name of a de-
partment in the center of the coast considered for in- Americans’ basic optimism and recom-
vasion. But the name was used by the planners, and mended risks far greater than the British
will here be used, in the looser sense of the coast line considered accepting.
washed by the Strait of Dover between Dunkerque
and the Somme. 35 McLaren, Notes on SLEDGEHAMMER, cited n. 31.
33 Memo, Brig C. V. McNabb, SLEDGEHAMMER, 17 36 This was freely admitted by General Marshall.
Jul 42. SHAEF G-3 files, Ref Lib Gp D. See Bibli- Draft Memo, Marshall for Roosevelt, The Pacific
ographical Note. Theater versus BOLERO, undtd (sent to the President
34 The British term “maintenance” is generally 6 May). OPD file 381 gen sec. 2, case 62. See Bibli-
equivalent to U.S. “supply.” ographical Note. Cf. below, p. 30.
GENERAL MARSHALL, Chief of Staff United States Army.
THE ROOTS OF STRATEGY

It was in looking further ahead, how- The War Department and General
ever, that the American optimistic view Marshall were convinced that the main
made its chief contribution to strategy. U. S.-British ground offensive should be
Until mid-March, plans for 1942 had been undertaken against northwest Europe.
considered without specific reference to They rejected the Mediterranean areas
long-range objectives. Except for the de- suggested by Roosevelt because commit-
termination to attack in Europe, there ment of U. S. troops there would be
were no specific long-range objectives. strategically defensive. Although the con-
The general principles agreed to at quest of North Africa would break Axis
ARCADIA did not form a concerted plan control of the Mediterranean and prevent
of action. an Axis move through West Africa, the
In March 1942, the Operations Divi- victory would not in itself be decisive and
sion of the War Department (OPD) be- could not be exploited for further de-
gan work on an outline plan for a full- cisive action against Germany.
scale invasion of the European continent The body of General Marshall’s memo-
in 1943. It was to be projected as the basis randum therefore, was concerned with
for the deployment of forces and as a exploring the concept of a cross-Channel
guide for strategy. The need for such a invasion of France. The operation was
guide had become increasingly urgent as, conceived in three phases: a preparatory
despite the shelving of GYMNAST, Presi- phase, the cross-Channel movement and
dent Roosevelt continued to press for im- seizure of bridgeheads between Le Havre
mediate action.37 On 25 March, the Presi- and Boulogne, and, finally, consolidation
dent called the Joint Chiefs of Staff and and expansion of the bridgehead. Logis-
Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson to tics set the earliest possible date for the
the White House to ask advice on future beginning of phase two at 1 April 1943,
offensive operations. Specifically he except under emergency conditions.39
wanted to know whether U. S. troops The preparatory phase would begin at
might profitably be used in Syria, Libya, once with the organization, arming, and
and northwest Africa, as well as in north- overseas movement of the necessary
west Europe. On 2 April, General Mar- forces. During the summer of 194i small
shall gave the President the War Depart- task forces would raid along the entire
ment’s answer embodying OPD’s outline accessible enemy coast line. General
plan for a cross-Channel attack in 1943.38 Marshall attached great value to these
preparatory raiding operations which he
37Cbl, Roosevelt to Churchill, 9 Mar 42. OPD defined as the “establishment of a pre-
file ABC 311.5 (l-30-42) .
38 The first memorandum was submitted by OPD
on 27 March. The last draft bearing a date was pre- original OPD memo is in AAF file 381, War Plans
pared on 2 April. This was revised by General Eisen- Sec. G. See Bibliographical Note. Discussion follow-
hower and the revision constituted the memorandum ing is based on the memorandum plan and its ap-
as finally presented to the British. This final version pendixes.
is undated and titled simply “Operations in Western 39 Actually it was noted that, if only U.S. shipping
Europe.” Additional studies were made after 2 April, was available for U.S. troop and supply build-up, the
an analysis of U.S. troop build-up being dated as, late invasion date would be delayed until late summer.
as 6 April. For the final version and various drafts By 1 April, it was estimated, U.S. shipping could
and appendixes see Pre-Invasion file 308. Copy of the transport only 40 percent of the forces required.
16

liminary active front.” He thought they was to pin down a strategic idea such-
might serve to draw German troops from ciently so that production, training, and
the east and so “be of some help to troop allocations and movement could be
Russia.” They might also be useful for “coordinated to a single end.” There was
deception either in persuading the Ger- time for planning, but none for delaying
mans that no all-out offensive would be the basic decision. For example, it was
attempted or else in keeping them on ten- pointed out that under current produc-
terhooks for fear that any one of the raids tion schedules only 10 percent of the tank
might develop into a full-scale invasion. landing craft required to carry U. S.
Thinking of national morale, a considera- troops in the assault would be available.
tion always important to both the Presi- Only a decision now could insure the re-
dent and the Prime Minister, he noted quired resources in time.
that raiding together with air operations The Marshall Memorandum shifted
would be “of immediate satisfaction to emphasis from 1942 to 1943 while retain-
the public.” But, he added, “what is most ing for 1942 some activity which might
important” is that the raids would “make satisfy political requirements. In the
experienced veterans of the air and event that an operation should be re-
ground units, and. . . offset the tendency quired in 1942 to save the Russians or
toward deterioration in morale which take advantage of sudden German de-
threatens the latter due to prolonged in- terioration, preparations were to be made
activity.“40 to permit a cross-channel’ assault on
The main attack in the spring of 1943 greatly reduced scale in the fall of the
was planned to employ 48 divisions sup- year. The maximum U. S. forces which
ported by 5,800 combat aircraft. Land- couId be on hand for such an assault were
ings would take place between Etretat three and a half divisions, and the opera-
north of Le Havre and Cap Gris Nez with tion would be justified only by prospects
the object of seizing the lower valley of of marked deterioration of the German
the Somme and the high ground forming army in the west.
the watersheds of the Seine-Somme river In the second week in April General
system. Two main assaults were planned, Marshall and Mr. Harry Hopkins, special
on either side of the mouth of the Somme. emissary of President Roosevelt, went to
The bridgeheads would be expanded to London to seek a firm decision from the
the southwest in order to seize Le Havre British Chiefs of Staff on the form, loca-
and the line of the Seine River. Although tion, and timing of the British-American
U. S. planners made use of some detailed main effort. As it turned out, that deci-
data on terrain and estimates of the sion was quickly reached with general
enemy, they did not attempt to examine agreement on the project outlined in the
tactical problems even to the extent that Marshall Memorandum.41 Discussion
British planners had studied them in then shifted to what could be done in
working on SLEDGEHAMMER. The main 1942. General Marshall reported that by
purpose of the Marshall Memorandum
41 British Chiefs of Staff, Comments on General
40 Memo, Operations in Western Europe, cited n. Marshall’s Memorandum, 13 Apr 42, COS (42) 97
38. (0). C/S file 381.
THE ROOTS OF STRATEGY 17

the end of August U. S. reinforcement the operation would have to take place in
of the Pacific, Iceland, and Northern Ire- August at the latest in order to capture a
land garrisons should be complete and the port before the third week in September,
United States could concentrate on pour- when bad weather was likely to prevail
ing troops and supplies into England for over the Channel. Portal thought that
offensive action. He thought two and a during the summer the German Air Force
half infantry divisions, one armored divi- might win a complete victory over the
sion, and 900 U. S. aircraft could be in Russians and so by autumn become a
the United Kingdom by 15 September.42 formidable enemy for the RAF. General
General Brooke, Chief of the Imperial Marshall agreed that an earlier target
General Staff, said his planners counted date would be advisable but felt he could
on landing seven infantry and two ar- not urge it since U. S. troops would not
mored divisions if forced to attack the then be available. He clearly indicated
Continent in 1942, but he frankly did not that his main interest in a 1942 operation
like the prospect. Such a small force could was to provide battle experience for the
not hold against German counterattacks Americans in preparation for 1943. He
and its loss would seriously weaken Eng- was also concerned that, if something
land’s defenses. Also, he was worried were attempted in 1942, it be an opera-
about India and the Middle East, where tion across the Channel in order to avoid
the Japanese and Germans might join dispersion of forces. He did not want the
forces and capture the oil fields in Iran main project-operations on the Conti-
and Iraq on which, he thought, “the nent- reduced to the position of a “resid-
whole of our effort in both theaters de- uary legatee” for whom nothing was left.45
pended.” 43 Against this view, Brooke continued to
Brooke and Air Marshal Portal, Chief stress the danger in the Middle East. He
of Air Staff, also raised objections to the then reversed the American concept that
September date. 44 Brooke believed that SLEDGEHAMMER was a device to save the
Russians. Operations in 1942, he said,
42 COS (42) 23d Mtg (0) , 9 Apr 42. OPD file ABC depended on what success the Germans
381 BOLERO (3-16-42) sec. 5.
43Ibid. General Brooke, a graduate of the Royal
had against the Russians. “‘If they [the
Military Academy, Woolwich, had by 1941 acquired Germans] were successful,” he believed,
the reputation of being Britain’s greatest expert on “we could clearly act less boldly. If, how-
mechanization. For his service in France during
World War, I, he received the Distinguished Service
ever, the Russians held the Germans or
Order with Bar, the Belgian Croix de Guerre, and had an even greater measure of success,
six mentions in dispatches. In the early part of World our object should be to detach air forces
War II, he commanded the British Second Army
from the Russian front.“46 In short, he re-
Corps, his defensive action making possible the
evacuation of Dunkerque. He then organized ‘and World War II, he served on the Air Council and was
trained the British Home Forces in preparation for Air Officer Commanding-in-Chief of the Bomber
the expected Nazi invasion. He was made Chief of Command. He became Chief of Air Staff in October
the Imperial General Staff in 1941, succeeding Field 1940.
Marshal Dill. 45 COS (42) 118th Mtg, 14 Apr 42. OPD file ABC
44Portal, an observer and fighter pilot in World 381 BOLERO (3-16-42) sec. 5.
War I, entered the RAF College in 1922. In the 1930’s 46 War Cabinet Defence Corn, DC (42) 10th Mtg,
he commanded the British forces in Aden and was 14 Apr 42. C/S file 381. On quotation of indirect dis-
Director of Organization, Air Ministry. Early in course, see n. 138.
18 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

jetted the emergency operation and ac- to the United Kingdom during the next
cepted only the operation of opportun- year altered, in the opinion of Lord
ity. 47 The opinion was in notable con- Mountbatten, “the whole picture of com-
trast to the U. S. Army view that a 1942 bined operations against the Continent.
operation would be justified by the need The plans, which we had been at present
for helping Russia in the war so that “an evolving, all fell short in one way or
opportunity would be presented to us of another for lack of essential resources.
defeating Germany next spring.“48 The This would be all changed when the great
point, however, was not argued, and the flow of American forces began, and we
whole problem of a 1942 operation was should be enabled to plan that real return
returned to the planners for further to the Continent, without which we could
study. not hope to bring the war to a successful
General Marshall’s scheme for invasion conclusion.” 50
in 1943, on the other hand, was received The meeting at which Mountbatten
with enthusiasm, qualified only by a note so expressed himself was the concluding
of caution from British planners. The session of the conference with General
planners observed again the two deficien- Marshall. The tone of optimism was
cies which had already crippled plans for echoed by all those present and the whole
a return to the Continent: the lack of meeting was informed with an extra-
landing craft (particularly craft capable ordinary enthusiasm. Mr. Hopkins said
of landing on the flat-gradient French that although American public opinion
beaches) and the lack of long-range would have preferred an offensive against
fighter aircraft. They did not imply, how- Japan, “the American nation was eager
ever, that these deficiencies could not be to join in the fight alongside the British.”
made up during the coming year.49 Mr. Anthony Eden, British Foreign Sec-
For the rest, the British Chiefs of Staff retary, replied in kind. “The plan,” he
and the Prime Minister found nothing considered, “had much more than a
in the plan to quarrel with. The U. S. purely military significance. It was, in
commitment to deliver one million troops fact, the great picture of two English-
speaking countries setting out for the re-
47 Churchill also made this reversal more explicitly demption of Europe.” Forgotten for the
a little later when he wrote: “The launching of
SLEDGEHAMMER should be dependent not on a Russian
moment was the opinion expressed a
failure but on Russian success and consequent month before that the Allies in 1942 were
proved German demoralization in the West.” PM, on the verge of defeat.51 Instead of antic-
Minute for Gen Ismay for CofS Corn, 10 Jun 42, An-
ipating the need for a “sacrifice” opera-
nex to COS (42) 175th Mtg. Copy in Hist Div files.
48 Remark by Col J. E. Hull, U.S. (P) 4th Mtg, 12 tion in order to save a chance to strike in
Apr 42. Pre-Inv file 287 (Combined Operations Con- 1943, the conferees looked forward to
ferences) . A series of meetings was held between sharing in a victory not far off. Churchill
U.S. and British planners in the course of the April
conferences in London. closed the meeting by summing up the
49 Memo, British Staff Planners, Main Considera- complete unanimity of opinion and ad-
tions Affecting The Employment on the Continent ding a prediction that now “the two
in 1943 of the Anglo-American Forces envisaged in
General Marshall’s Paper, undtd. OPD file ABC 381 50War Cabinet Mtg, 14 Apr 42, cited n. 46.
BOLERO (3-16-42) sec. 5. 51 JCS 23, cited n. 28.
THE ROOTS OF STRATEGY 19

nations would march ahead together in a American troops, but the process had be-
noble brotherhood of arms.” gun long before. As a result of the ABC-l
The morrow brought soberer second decisions of early 1941 the War Depart-
thoughts, but the strategic decision, des- ment had drawn up deployment plans to
tined to last less than two months, at least be put into effect if and when America
laid some groundwork for the future. came into the war. One of the provisions
One immediate outcome was the estab- was the MAGNET plan to move U. S.
lishment of machinery to concentrate troops into Iceland in order to relieve
U. S. troops in England. The build-up British garrisons there and to send troops
operation, called BOLERO,52 was to provide to Northern Ireland to establish and de-
a force of about one million men spe- fend air and naval bases for the use of
cifically equipped to carry out an air U. S. forces. In January 1942 the first
offensive in 1942, a major invasion of the contingent of troops under the MAGNET
Continent in 1943, and if agreed on, plan was shipped to Northern Ireland,
a continental operation in conjunction although, as a result of the emergency re-
with the British in 1942. Special planning inforcement of the Southwest Pacific area,
staffs, BOLERO Combined Committees, the shipment had to be cut from a
were set up in Washington and London planned 17,300 to 4,000. Three more
to function under the direction of the shipments arrived in Ireland before the
Combined Planning Staff. The commit- end of May, bringing U. S. ground
tees were not responsible for tactical plan- strength there to more than 32,000, in-
ning but were to proceed on the assump- cluding the 34th Division, the 1st
tion that the invasion would conform to Armored Division, and V Corps head-
the outlines drawn in General Marshall’s quarters.54
memorandum.53 At the same time the U. S. Air Force
The establishment of BOLERO planning was beginning to set up house in the
formalized and intensified the process of British Isles. On 26 January 1942, Gen-
preparing United Kingdom bases for eral Arnold submitted to General Mar-
shall a plan to base 4,648 American
52There was considerable confusion in the early
use of this code name, especially in the War Depart-
planes in the United Kingdom, including
ment where it was taken at first to indicate not only 54 groups of heavy bombers, 10 groups
the build-up but the cross-Channel operation for of medium bombers, and 10 groups of
which the build-up prepared. In the early days the
confusion was symptomatic of a real conceptual
pursuit planes .55 The build-up was be-
identity between the operations. Decisions on the gun at once. Brig. Gen. Ira C. Eaker, with
BOLERO build-up reflected attitudes toward the a portion of his staff, was ordered to Eng-
ROUNDUP attack. Cf. Robert E. Sherwood, Roosevelt
land in January and by the end of Feb-
and Hopkins: An Intimate History (New York,
1948)) p. 569. 54Elliott, The Predecessor Commands, pp. 15, 85-
53 In general the Washington Committee dealt 95. See n. 2.
with basic problems of policy; the London Commit- 55 General Arnold, who had become Chief of the
tee, made up of representatives of various British Air Corps in 1938, was directly responsible for the
supply ministries and representatives of the U.S. expansion of the American aircraft industry and the
Army, handled the more technical details of the plan. inception of the program for civilian training of fly-
See [Herbert French] Supply and Troop Buildup in ing cadets. In 1940 he was made Deputy Chief of
the UK (The Administrative and Logistical History Staff for Air and the following year was given the
of the ETO: Part III), MS. Hist Div files. additional duty of Chief, Army Air Forces.
20 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

U.S. SOLDIERS IN IRELAND

ruary he had established the VIII Bomber The air build-up schedule in the mean-
Command. In June his command was time was altered in a series of conferences
subordinated to the newly arrived Eighth in London in April between General
Air Force under Brig. Gen. Carl Spaatz.56 Arnold and Air Chief Marshal Portal.
The new basic plan, approved in June,
56 General Spaatz, a graduate of West Point in 1914 drastically reduced the heavy bomber
and of Aviation School in 1916, served with the First commitment: instead of 54 groups there
Aero Squadron of the Punitive Expedition into Mex- would be 17. The force would include
ico. During World War I, he flew in combat over St.
Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne, receiving the DSC. In 10 groups of medium bombers and 6 of
1940 he was an official observer of the Battle of Brit- light, 12 groups of pursuit planes, and 8
ain and returned to the United States to take com-
mand, first of the Air Corps Materiel Division and,
later, of the AAF Combat Command. on special duty with the RAF in England in 1941,
Before General Eaker undertook the assignment observing and flying new types of fighters and ob-
of establishing VIII Bomber Command, he had been serving British fighter control methods.
THE ROOTS OF STRATEGY 21

groups of transports, a total of 3,262 air- Of the many circumstances that com-
craft.57 bined to overturn the April agreements,
On 4 July American air crews in six one of the weightiest was the continued
bombers borrowed from the RAF par- inability of planners to see any way out
ticipated in a daylight attack on German of the difficulties posed by SLEDGEHAM-
airfields in the Netherlands. It was not MER. A draft plan for the operation was
until 17 August, however, that the Eighth submitted at the end of April to newly
Air Force carried out its first bombing in appointed British force commanders, Ad-
its own aircraft. By that time the whole miral Ramsay, Air Marshal Sir Trafford
European strategy had been profoundly Leigh-Mallory, and Lt. Gen. Edmond
altered and the build-up, of air and Schreiber. Their report on 4 May was
ground forces in the United Kingdom that with current resources of landing
abruptly ceased to be a first-priority task.58 craft SLEDGEHAMMER was not a sound
operation of war. The British Chiefs of
“Action in 1942 Not 1943” Staff accepted the conclusion but directed
The events between 15 April and the that the plan be kept in readiness in case
end of July 1942 produced, from the German collapse should make it feas-
point of view of the U. S. War Depart- ible.60
ment, a disturbing shift in Allied strategy. In view of the new principle that
The April decision to concentrate on a SLEDGEHAMMER would take place only
build-up in the United Kingdom for a under conditions of marked German de-
cross-Channel invasion in 1943 was sup- terioration, planners now turned away
planted in July by the agreement to ship from the uninviting prospect of a Pas-de-
U. S. and British forces into the Medi- Calais assault. Air cover, they argued,
terranean to invade North Africa. The would be less essential if the Germans
1943 ROUNDUP, approved by acclamation were on the point of collapse and it there-
in April as the first object of combined fore might pay to look farther afield for
strategy in Europe, in July was laid aside an assault area containing a major port.
in favor of extended preparatory and They selected the Cherbourg and Le
peripheral operations designed as prelude Havre areas, preferring the latter because
to a cross-Channel invasion of uncertain it contained more airfields.
date. In General Marshall’s view, this But problems multiplied faster than
meant the dissolution of the strategy solutions. It was discovered that it would
which had seemed so firmly established take twenty-one days to land the six divi-
when he and Harry Hopkins left London sions with available shipping. When
in Apri1.59
not only the strategy agreed upon in April but also
57 Elliott, The Predecessor Commands, pp. 13Off. the fundamental strategic agreements made at
See n. 2. ARCADIA. C/S file TORCH I; cf. Cbl to Eisenhower, 6
58See Wesley F. Craven and James L. Cate, eds., Aug 42, draft in Memo, Handy for Classified MC.
The Army Air Forces in World War II: I, Plans and OPD file 381, ETO, sec. 2. Marshall wrote: “Torch
Early Operations January 1939 to August 1942 (Chi- operation is of necessity a substitution for Roundup
cago, 1948)) pp. 654, 655ff. and not a postponement of the same except for un-
59 See, for instance, his letter to Dill, 17 Aug 42, expected developments.” See below, pp. 29-30.
stating his belief that the July decisions had altered 60 McLaren, Notes on SLEDGEHAMMER, cited n. 31.
22 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Churchill was informed of this obstacle worked near by. Colonel Barker’s group
he replied, as one planner observed, in received copies of all the planning papers
the manner of King Canute: he did not which had been developed up to that time
accept it.61 Investigation should be made, by the British. Almost daily conferences
he continued, into the use of floating were held between Americans and British
piers and other devices to speed the land- and, about once a week, agreed-on papers
ings. This observation, important for the were submitted to the Combined Com-
future, had no immediate issue, for the manders.63
Prime Minister had also put forward and By the middle of June 1942 the plan-
secured War Cabinet approval of a prin- ners had developed a new appreciation
ciple that, in effect, threw out the whole and outline plan for ROUNDUP to be
SLEDGEHAMMER idea. The principle was mounted in the spring of 1943. The plan
that “there should be no substantial land- was accepted by the Combined Com-
ing in France unless we intended to re- manders and submitted to the British
main.“62 All planning to date had con- Chiefs of Staff. It did not go into tactical
cluded that, whatever might be done in details and was limited in scope to the
1942, the establishment of a permanent establishment of bridgeheads including
bridgehead on the Continent was beyond necessary airfields and port areas. The
British resources. approach was cautious and the tactical
While planning for 1942 struggled idea quite different from that which pro-
vainly to solve the unbalanced equation duced OVERLORD. “If our invasion is to
between ends and means, simultaneous succeed,” the planners wrote, “we must
study of a 1943 cross-Channel assault was endeavor to disperse the enemy’s mobile
turning up its share of discouraging diffi- reserves on land and in the air. At the
culties, and drawing conclusions that same time we must avoid such action as
drastically modified the aggressiveness of will allow the enemy to destroy isolated
the Marshall Memorandum. Planning parts of our land forces in detail. It fol-
for ROUNDUP was renewed for the first lows, therefore, that while we must en-
time on an organized combined basis even deavor to launch assaults on as wide a
though arrangements remained informal. front as possible, the size of each assault
Col. Ray W. Barker, who had arrived in and the rate of subsequent development
London about 1 April, was assigned must, if possible, be sufficient to meet the
shortly afterward to head the planning anticipated rate of enemy reinforcement
division of General Chaney’s headquar- in each area. . . .” How to dissipate the
ters, which had been converted from enemy’s defense by a diffuse attack and
SPOBS to United States Army Forces in at the same time be strong at each widely
the British Isles (USAFBI) . Barker set separated point was not fully explained.64
up shop in Grosvenor Square. British The plan to make three “almost” simul-
planners under Brig. Colin McNabb taneous assaults in the Pas-de-Calais and
63 Interv with Gen Barker,WD, 4 Ott 46. See Bibli-
61 Ibid. ographical Note.
62 COS (42), 51st Mtg, 8 Jun 42 (0). SHAEF SGS 64Joint Memo, Combined Commanders for Br
files: cf. McLaren, Notes on SLEDGEHAMMER. The War COS, 17 Jun 42. Pre-Inv file 281, Combined Com-
Cabinet approved the new principle on 11 Jun 1942. manders papers.
THE ROOTS OF STRATEGY 23

on both sides of the Seine would leave a necessary if the undertaking was to have
gap of some 150 miles between the north- “good prospects of success.” In reality,
ern and southern bridgeheads. In addi- however, his concept required resources
tion, subsidiary assaults were to be de- which seemed so far beyond reach that
vised to lead to the early capture of Cher- planners could not regard it seriously.
bourg and the Channel Islands. The plan- They did not alter their view that ROUND-
ners did not go into this problem but UP could go in only against a weakened
merely noted that it was subject to fur- enemy.
ther investigation. The first landings Furthermore, even Churchill’s concept,
would require at least six divisions. “After for all its vigor, remained academic in the
the initial assaults the forces in each area absence of broad, formative decisions.
are built up . . . as a preliminary to fur- Planners, without allotted resources,
ther offensive operations.” No attempt without a target date, and without a com-
was made at the time to foresee these. The mand organization, worked in a school-
Combined Commanders, in forwarding room, trapped in circular arguments and
the plan, told the British Chiefs of Staff unable to make real progress toward pre-
that they believed it was the only possible paring a definite operation of war. Re-
way of effecting a re-entry into France, commendations by the Joint Planning
but even that would not be feasible “un- Staff that commanders be selected at once
less the German morale was deteriorated to carry out the operation and that steps
by the spring of 1943 owing to another be taken to secure the appointment of a
failure to defeat the Russians.” 65 Supreme Allied Commander produced
Churchill was dissatisfied with the no results.67
planners’ caution. He retorted with a The truth was that the general approval
memorandum of his own sketching an of the ROUNDUP idea which General Mar-
operation with “qualities of magnitude, shall had won in April 1942 did not re-
simultaneity and violence,” and involving flect any general conviction that the 1943
six landings by at least ten armored cross-Channel attack was really the best
brigades in the first wave, and the de- way of carrying out Allied strategy in
barkation of 400,000 men in the first Europe. Skepticism remained on both
week. If in fourteen days, he wrote, sides of the Atlantic. In Washington
“700,000 men are ashore if air supremacy President Roosevelt was wavering, and
has been gained, if the enemy is in con- the U. S. Navy was lukewarm. Roosevelt,
siderable confusion, and if we held at least early in May, wondered whether more
four workable ports, we shall have got troops should not be sent out to the
our claws well into the job."66 Churchill’s Pacific to reinforce Australia. Admiral
object in sketching his impression of King thought they should, and wrote that
ROUNDUP in such terms was to give an idea the mounting of BOLERO should not be
of the “scale and spirit” which he felt allowed to interfere with Pacific plans.
He called holding the Japanese “our
basic strategic plan in the Pacific Thea-
65Ibid.
66 Memo, Churchill for Marshall, Operation ROUND-
UP, 15 Jun 42. Hist Div files. 67 McLaren, Notes on sLEDCEHAMMER.
24 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

ter.“68 It was perhaps only a turn of phrase vised. “The necessities of the case call for
but General Marshall felt it necessary to action in 1942-not 1943.“71
remind the President that sustaining The President’s impatience may have
Russia, not holding the Japanese, was the been reinforced by a visit of the Soviet
basic strategy. The proposals to reinforce Foreign Minister, Vyacheslav Molotov, to
Australia would mean cutting in half the Washington at the end of May. Molotov
number of divisions that could be shipped came at the President’s request primarily
to England for a SLEDGEHAMMER opera. to discuss the Murmansk convoys of
Lion. Operations in 1942 from England, Lend-Lease war materials, but it was clear
he pointed out, already depended pri- that he was still more vitally interested in
marily on the British, who would be the opening of a “second front.” On his
accepting risks far graver than any run by way he had stopped off at London to see
the Americans. The British had agreed Churchill, from whom he received only
to BOLERO on the understanding that it deliberately vague promises concerning
was the prime U. S. project. If it was not, the possibility of SLEDCEHAMMER.72 In
BOLERO should be abandoned and the Washington he tried to pin the Amer-
British notified.69 President Roosevelt icans down to a more definite commit-
retreated. He told General Marshall that ment. What the Soviets wanted was an
he had only asked if the Australian rein- operation in 1942 on a large enough scale
forcement could be done and he now to force the Germans to withdraw forty
agreed with him “and Admiral King” divisions from the Russian front. Such an
that it could not. He added: “I do not operation evidently could not be prom-
want ‘BOLERO' slowed down.“70 On the ised. The most that General Marshall
same day, however, he expressed his im- would say was that a second front was in
patience with continued inaction. The preparation, that the Western Allies were
Atlantic theater, he believed, called for trying to create a situation in which a
“very great speed in developing actual second front would be possible. The
operations. I have been disturbed,” he President, however, significantly ex-
wrote, “by American and British naval tended Marshall’s answer and sent word
objections to operations in the European through Molotov to Stalin to expect a
Theater prior to 1943. I regard it as second front in 1942. Roosevelt did not
essential that active operations be con- say where or on what scale.73 Precisely
ducted in 1942.” He realized the diffi- what weight this promise carried in sub-
culties, but ideal conditions could hardly sequent discussion is difficult to assess.
be expected. Expedients must be impro- Probably the promise was of more sig-
nificance as a symptom than as a con-
tributing cause of Roosevelt’s eagerness
68Memo, The Pacific Theater versus BOLERO, cited
n. 36. Proposals to reinforce Australia would have in- 71 Memo, Roosevelt for Secy of War, CofS, Gen
creased ground forces by 25,000 troops, air forces by Arnold, Secy of Navy, Adm King, and Hopkins, 6
100 planes. Another 215 planes were to be sent to the May 42. C/S file 381.
South Pacific. 72 McLaren, Notes on SLEDGEHAMMER.
69 Ibid. 73 Notes on White House Mtg, cited in Sherwood,
‘70 Memo, Roosevelt for Marshall, 6 May 42, OPD Roosevelt and Hopkins, p. 563. The Molotov visit is
file 381, gen sec. 2, case 62. treated at length by Sherwood, pp. 54448.
THE ROOTS OF STRATEGY 25

for immediate action. In any case, other Damocles hanging over plans for Euro-
pressures built up after Molotov left pean operations.
Washington. Between the two North African disas-
June 1942 marked the low ebb of ters, on 18 June, the Prime Minister and
British military fortunes. On the 13th, the British Chiefs of Staff came to Wash-
Generalfeldmarschall Erwin Rommel at ington to discuss the desirability of re-
Knightsbridge in Libya defeated British orienting strategy. Churchill came be-
armored forces in the last of a series of cause he had been greatly alarmed by re-
battles which had started 27 May. The ports from Admiral Mountbatten that the
British army retreated across the Egyptian President was pressing for a 1942 opera-
border to El ‘Alamein. On Sunday, 21 tion.75 It was clear to the War Depart-
June, British and Dominion troops, iso- ment that Churchill’s visit foreboded an
lated in Tobruk by the withdrawal, were eloquent attack on the April commitment
forced to surrender. The rest of the army to BOLERO. Secretary Stimson prepared
dug in at El ‘Alamein for the defense of for the President a strong defense of the
Alexandria. BOLERO idea. He pointed out that all the
That month also marked the opening reasons for adopting BOLERO were still
of the expected new German offensive on valid and that no other operation could
the Russian front. Expected or not, the achieve the same end. No other opera-
event was disheartening. The prevailing tion, furthermore, should be allowed to
opinion among military leaders in Amer- interfere with it. It was of prime impor-
ica and Britain was still that they would tance, he believed, to press unremittingly
be lucky if Russia managed to stay in the forward with BOLERO, not only because it
war through 1942. In London the official was the best plan but because any devia-
estimates of the Russian situation in- tion from it would be taken as “evidence
cluded only two hypotheses: that Russia of doubt and vacillation.“76
had been defeated by October 1942 (hy- At the same time General Marshall
pothesis “A”), or that Russia was still in was again defending the idea before the
th,e war in 1943 “but had suffered heavily Combined Chiefs. At an informal meet-
in manpower and materiel. . . .“74 ing with General Brooke and Field Mar-
The pressure was very great on Allied shal Dill the reasons for having made
leaders to act at once wherever such action BOLERO the main effort were discussed and
promised any fair chance of ,success. The reaffirmed. Marshall’s defense was at the
pressure to act, moreover, coincided with moment completely successful and Gen-
an improved opportunity. Two decisive eral Brooke agreed that BOLERO should
naval victories over the Japanese in May be pushed and that the North African in-
and June (Coral Sea and Midway) had vasion should not be undertaken. The
relieved the immediate threat to Aus- generals further accepted the principle
tralia, and defensive requirements in the 75 See CCS 27th Mtg, 19 Jun 42. Mountbatten had
Pacific were thus no longer a sword of come to Washington earlier in the month, primarily
to discuss the problems of landing craft.
74JIC (92) 193 (Final) , German Strength and Dis- 76 Ltr, 19 Jun 42, cited in Henry L. Stimson and
positions in 1945 under Certain Hypotheses, 21 May McGeorge Bundy, On Active Service in Peace and
42. SHAEF SGS files, Combined Commanders Papers. War (New York, 1948), pp. 420-23.
26 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

that any operations in 1942 would ad- strategy. 81 The final upshot of the White
versely affect operations in 1943, and House meeting was a compromise which
should therefore be contemplated only in left BOLERO the priority task but noted
case of necessity.77 that it was “essential that the U. S. and
On Sunday, 21 June 1942, at the White Great Britain should be prepared to act
House this decision was significantly offensively in 1942.” The President and
modified. Churchill vigorously attacked Prime Minister agreed that “operations
the BOLERO idea and urged GYMNAST, with in France or the Low Countries in 1942
the knowledge (Stimson believed) that would, if successful, yield greater political
“it was the President’s great secret and strategic gains than operations in any
baby.“78 In the midst of the discussions other theater.” Such operations would
at the White House came the dramatic therefore be planned and prepared with
news of the surrender of Tobruk. The all vigor, but if they proved unlikely
news greatly strengthened Churchill’s to succeed, “we must be ready with an
arguments for diverting the Allied effort alternative.” The best alternative was
from BOLERO to North Africa and cor- GYMNAST, which should be “explored
respondingly weakened General Mar- carefully and conscientiously” and plans
shall’s efforts to save what he regarded as completed in detail as soon as possible.82
sound strategy from being upset by po- Although in form these conclusions re-
litical considerations.79 While arguing affirmed the priority of BOLERO in Allied
for BOLERO, however, General Marshall European strategy, against the back-
was deeply conscious of the gravity of the ground of the pessimistic reports of plan-
situation both in Egypt and in southern ners in England they actually yielded pre-
Russia, where German successes “threat- cedence to GYMNAST. This fact became
ened a complete collapse in the Middle increasingly clear as planners engaged in
East.” 80 To meet that threat, Roosevelt the last futile struggle with SLEDGEHAM-
and Marshall agreed to rush reinforce- MER. On 24 June General Eisenhower
ments of planes to the Middle East and arrived in London to take command of
tanks to the British armies in Egypt. Mar- all American forces in Europe, as Com-
shall hoped that these reinforcements manding General ETOUSA (European
would ease the pressure of the immediate Theater of Operations, U. S. Army) . He
emergency without disrupting basic spent a week looking around and then
wrote General Marshall that although a
77 Memo, CCS for information, Minutes of an In- lot of planning had been done at low
formal Meeting . . . held in General Marshall’s Office, levels most of the basic decisions such as,
June 19, 1942. OPD file ABC 381 (3-16-42) sec. 2.
78Stimson and Bundy, On Active Service, p. 425.
for instance, the exact frontage of the
79Notes on War Council Mtg, 22 Jun 42. C/S file, assault had still not been made. He re-
Secy of War Confs, Vol. II. The War Council meeting ported General Paget’s complaint of the
at which General Marshall reported on the White
House meeting was attended by the Secretary of War 81 Notes on War Council Mtg, 29 Jun 42. C/S file,
and Under and Assistant Secretaries as well as by Secy of War Confs, Vol. II.
Generals Arnold, McNair, Somervell, Knudsen, Mc- 82CCS 83/1, Offensive Operations in 1942 and 1943,
Narney, Surles, and Eisenhower. 24 Jan 42, Encloses memorandum by Maj. Gen. Sir
80 Quoted in Sherwood, Roosevelt and Hopkins, p. Hastings Ismay reporting conclusions of a meeting
592. held at the White House on 21 June.
THE ROOTS OF STRATEGY 27

lack of effective organization. Paget told had a preliminary talk with General Mar-
him: “If we could only have the organi- shall. He found the latter’s reaction SO
zation you have here, we could settle these strong that he contemplated cabling a
matters in a morning. As it is we con- warning to his government that to press
stantly go over the same ground and no acceptance of GYMNAST at the expense of
real progress has been made.“83 BOLERO would “drive U. S. A, into saying
Lack of organization was a reflection of ‘We are finished off with West and will go
lack of conviction in high places that out in Pacific.’ ” 87As Admiral King was
existing plans were practicable. A few out of town, official U. S. reaction was de-
days after his letter to Marshall, Eisen- layed. When King returned on 10 July,
hower talked to the Prime Minister and the Joint Chiefs met and General Mar-
found him “quite averse to attempting shall proposed just the step he had evi-
anything in Western Europe. . . . He dently discussed with Dill: turning from
believes it would be slaughter,” Eisen- Europe to undertake an offensive in the
hower noted, “because we are not strong Pacific. Admiral King approved, and re-
enough.” On the other hand, Churchill marked that the British, in his opinion,
was perfectly confident about the north- had never wholeheartedly supported BO-
west Africa operation-a confidence that LERO. Further, he believed, the Japanese
Eisenhower at this time did not share.84 were not going to sit tight much longer
The Prime Minister’s mind was, in but were planning new attacks in the
fact, made up. On 6 July 1942 he pre- South and Southwest Pacific.88 Marshall
sided over a meeting of the British Chiefs and King then sent a joint memorandum
of Staff at which “it was unanimously to the President stating their view that
agreed that operation ‘SLEDGEHAMMER’ of- GYMNAST was indecisive, would prevent a
fered no hope of success, and would SLEDGEHAMMER operation in 1942, and
merely ruin all prospects of ‘ROUNDUP' in curtail or perhaps make impossible
1943.“85 The next step was to inform the ROUNDUP in 1943. They concluded: “If
Americans. This was done by two cables the United States is to engage in any other
on 8 July, one to the Joint Staff Mission operation than forceful, unswerving ad-
in Washington and the other a personal herence to full BOLERO plans, we are def-
message from Churchill to Roosevelt.86 initely of the opinion that we should turn
Both reported the unfeasibility of SLEDCE- to the Pacific and strike decisively against
HAMMER and recommended that the Japan.“89
Americans proceed with planning for The memorandum went to Hyde Park.
GYMNAST, while the British investigate the The next day General Marshall heard
the possibility of attacking Norway rumors that he and King and Harry Hop-
(Operation JUPITER) . Field Marshal Dill kins would be sent to London but he still
had no indication of the President’s views.
83Ltr, Eisenhower to Marshall, 30 Jun 42. OPD
file 381, ETO, sec. I. On 14 July the President telegraphed: “I
84Diary, Office of the Commander in Chief, 5 Jul
42. Cited hereafter as Diary of CinC. See Bibli- 87 Draft Cbl in C/S file 381.
ographical Note. 88JCS 24th Mtg, 10 Jul42.
85McLaren, Notes on SLEDGEHAMMER. 89Memo, King and Marshall for President, 10 Jul
86SeeJCS 24th Mtg, 10 Ju142. 42. C/S file BOLERO.
28 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

have definitely decided to send you, King sion of North Africa, in his view, would
and Harry to London immediately. ...I not achieve the necessary diversion to
want you to know that I do not approve save the Russian armies from collapse.
the Pacific proposal."90 In conversation He cabled his views to General Eisen-
with Marshall the next morning in Wash- hower and asked Eisenhower to prepare a
ington, Roosevelt called the proposal specific plan on how SLEDGEHAMMER
“something of a red herring” and was con- might be carried out.92
cerned lest it appear that “we had pro- It was with these convictions as to the
posed what amounted to abandonment of desperate urgency of SLEDGEHAMMER that
the British.“91 General Marshall did not General Marshall on 16 July left for
think so, but in any case the matter was London. With King and Hopkins, he
dropped. went as a personal representative of the
General Marshall’s vehement defense President with iarge powers to settle
of BOLERO stemmed in part from his feel- strategy. The President’s instructions re-
ing that the world situation was extremely quired that SLEDGEHAMMER be strongly
critical. He was fearful, in particular, of urged as the most important and perhaps
a Russian collapse. The German summer imperative task for 1942. If it were found
offensive toward the Caucasus had broken impossible, then Marshall should review
through the Kharkov front and forced the the world situation with King and Hop-
Russians into a general withdrawal. “The kins and determine “upon another place
present action in the Don Basin,” General for U. S. troops to fight in 1942.“93
Marshall wrote on 13 July, “indicates At the first London meeting, on 20
Russia’s possible inability to halt the July, Churchill outlined his views and set
massed power of Germany and her Allies. the framework for subsequent staff dis-
Considering the distribution of popula- cussions. The first question, he said, was
tion in regard to density and race, the lo- the feasibility of SLEDGEHAMMER. Al-
cation of primary agricultural and indus- though the British had failed to devise a
trial areas, and the railroad and road net satisfactory plan, they would all listen
of Russia, it is evident that unless this sympathetically to any U. S. proposals.
German offensive is soon halted Russian However, he went on to question the
participation in the war will become neg-
ligible in magnitude, with the inevitable 92 Cbl, Marshall to Eisenhower, 13 Jul 42, C/S file
BOLERO.
result of rendering all planning concern- 93 Memo, Roosevelt for Hopkins, Marshall, and
ing ROUNDUP and all BOLERO movements King, Instructions for London Conference,-July
(of ground troops at least) vain.” The 1942, sgd orig in C/S file 381. This memorandum was
drafted by the War Department, but Roosevelt made
emergency for which SLEDGEHAMMER was considerable changes in it, omitting the Pacific
planned was at hand, he believed, and threat, and weakening the War Department’s para-
failure to meet it would doom the chances graph on commitment to ROUNDUP. The War Depart-
ment draft on the latter point read that if SLEXE-
of a cross-Channel attack in 1943. Inva- HAMMER were given up, then the Allies should con-
tinue “our planned activities and present commit-
90Tel, Roosevelt to Marshall, 14 Jul 42. C/S file ments in other areas. We should proceed with ROUND-
DOLERO. UP preparations.” In Roosevelt’s revision, these two
91 Memo, Marshall for King, 15 Jul 42. C/S file sentences were struck out. War Department draft in-
WDCSA 381 War Plans Sec. cluded in Diary of CinC.
THE ROOTS OF STRATEGY 29

urgency of SLEDGEHAMMER. Might it not even a fair chance of tactical success.


be argued that ROUNDUP depended only Eisenhower personally estimated that the
on what the Russians did, and not on chances of a successful landing were one
what the Western Allies might do? He in two and of being able to build up on
wondered whether the ROUNDUP concept the Continent to a force of six divisions
need be confined to an attack on the about one in five. Still, he did point out
western seaboard of France. He then dis- that “if we are convinced that the Russian
cussed the value of invading North Af- Army is now in a desperate situation . . .”
rica and suggested that if the battle for the question of the tactical success or
Egypt went well it might be possible to failure Of SLEDGEHAMMER Was Of little
attack even Sicily or Italy.94 In a written moment, and “the only real test of SLEDGE-
review the next day the Prime Minister HAMMER’S practicability is whether or not
made his own conclusions clear, at least it will appreciably increase the ability of
by implication. There were two main the Russian Army to remain a dangerous
facts to be recognized, he believed: first, threat to the Germans next spring.” He
the immense power of the German mil- admitted that the desperateness of the
itary machine, which even without a de- Russian situation was a matter of pure
feat of Russia could still shift to the de- conjecture, in which there was “consider-
fensive in the east and move fifty or sixty able difference of opinion.” His conclu-
divisions to France; second, the race in sion, therefore, was that SLEDGEHAMMER
the west between attrition of Allied ship- should be kept alive until the first of Sep-
ping and development of Allied air tember when a decision could be made on
power. “It might be true to say,” he wrote, the basis of the Russian situation at that
“that the issue of the war depends on time.96
whether Hitler’s U-boat attack on Allied On the other hand, General Eisen-
tonnage or the increase and application hower strongly recommended against ac-
of Allied air power, reach their full frui- cepting GYMNAST as an alternative to
tion first.” g5 Emphasis on these two facts SLEDGEHAMMER. “GYMNAST,” he Wrote,
as the key to strategy meant postponing “is strategically unsound as an operation
decisive land operations against Germany either to support ROUNDUP or to render
while carrying out a preliminary policy prompt assistance to the Russians. Its ex-
of attrition, chiefly through an increasing ecution now may be a logical alternative
air offensive. to 1943 ROUNDUP,but it is not a logical op-
Although General Marshall was ada- eration to insure execution of ROUNDUP.
mantly opposed to the concept, he found If undertaken now, it should be done on
himself on weak ground in attempting to the theory that the Russian Army is cer-
preserve the sanctity of the ROUNDUP idea tain to be defeated and that, conse-
while carrying out the President’s man- quently, we should take advantage of the
date to take action somewhere in 1942. relatively favorable situation now exist-
General Eisenhower was unable to defend
SLEDGEHAMMER as an Operation offering 96 Memo (prepared by Gen Eisenhower with ad-
vice of Gens Clark and Lee and Col Barker), Con-
94 Combined Staff Conf, 20 Ju142. C/S file 319.1. clusions as to the Practicability of SLEDGEHAMMER,17
95 Memo, 21 Ju142, WP (42) 311. C/S file BOLERO. Ju142. Diary of CinC.
30 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

ing to improve the defensive position that west Coast of Africa at the earliest pos-
will be forced upon us in Europe and sible date before December 1942.” 100
western Asia by a Russian defeat.” 97 Not only did this agreement leave the
Eisenhower’s analysis anticipated in door open for reconsideration but it made
large measure the conclusions of the July clear that the choice was between GYM-
conference. The British Chiefs of Staff NAST and ROUNDUP and that a decision to
were unalterably opposed to SLEDGE- go into North Africa should be made only
HAMMER as an operation without reason- after ROUNDUP was discovered impracti-
able chance of success. Since the SLEDGE- cable. To General Marshall, as to General
HAMMER force would necessarily be Eisenhower, the choice of GYMNAST meant
largely British and under British com- acceptance of a probable Russian defeat,
mand, their opposition was decisive.98 which in turn would prevent Allied in-
Marshall reported to the President the vasion of Western Europe. General Eisen-
failure of his first task. The President re- hower, reviewing the strategic situation
plied, asking for study of GYMNAST as the on the eve of the conference’s decision,
next most desirable operation, and con- admitted that GYMNAST seemed to be the
cluding with a request for “speed in a de- only feasible and strategically valuable
cision.” 99 Even with SLEDGEHAMMER operation open to the Allies in 1942, but
ruled out, General Marshall was still re- he added, “Since it is too much to hope
luctant to commit U. S. strategy irrevoca- that the Russians can continue fighting
bly to the Mediterranean. He therefore unaided, all through 1943, the final effect
arrived at a compromise with the British would be the abandonment of ROUND-
which began with agreement “that no UP." 101 The conclusion agreed to in con-
avoidable reduction in preparation for ference with the British was only slightly
ROUNDUP should be favorably considered less pessimistic. On American insistence,
so long as there remains any reasonable the agreement admitted that “a commit-
possibility of its successful execution be- ment to this operation [GYMNAST] renders
fore July 1943.” That possibility de- ROUNDUP in all probability impracticable
pended on the Russians, and it was fur- of successful execution in 1943 and there-
ther agreed that “if the situation on the fore that we have definitely accepted a de-
Russian front by September 15th indi- fensive, encircling line of action for the
cates such a collapse or weakening of Continental European theater, except as
Russian resistance as to make ROUNDUP to air operations and blockade. . . .” lo2
appear impracticable . . . , the decision The door left open at the conference
should be taken to launch a combined did not remain open long. On 25 July
operation against the North and North- Harry Hopkins cabled Roosevelt urging
an immediate decision in order to avoid
97 Ibid. Italics in original. General Marshall agreed
that SLEDGEHAMMERwas not an operation he would
choose if choice were possible. He believed, however,
100CCS 94, Operations in 1942/3, 24 Jul 42. This
that choice was not possible, that “time was tragic-
paper states the decisions of the London Conference.
ally against us.” Memo for the President, 28 Jul 42.
C/S file 319.1. 101Memo for Marshall, Survey of Strategic Situa-
98 Memo, Marshall for the President, cited n. 97. tion, 23 Jul 42. Diary of CinC.
99Cbl, 23 Jul 42. C/S file 381. 102CCS 94, cited n.
n. 100.
THE ROOTS OF STRATEGY 31

“procrastinations and delays.” 103 The tided on, the supreme commander of all
President made up his mind at once. He operations in the theater would also com-
called in Secretary Stimson and the Joint mand TORCH with a British deputy.‘O’ The
Chiefs of Staff 104 and, without discussion, nationality of the commander for ROUND
read to them his decision to go ahead with UP was not determined. It was laid down,
GYMNAST. He saw no reason why the with- however, that he would not have opera-
drawal of a few troops to the Mediter- tional control of ground forces in the
ranean would prevent ROUNDUP in 1943. United Kingdom, that his function would
He desired action. To Hopkins, Marshall, be training and planning, and that troops
and King, the President cabled, “Tell would “only come under his operational
Prime Minister I am delighted that de- command when the operation was
cision is made.” 105 mounted.” 108
The ambiguity of the “decision” which After a week of uncertainty,109 the
the President welcomed left the military President on the evening of 30 July in-
leaders uncertain as to how definite the formed the Joint Chiefs of Staff that he
commitment to GYMNAST was. But it was wanted to do TORCH but, before he cabled
perfectly clear that the North African the Prime Minister of his decision, he
project now had the inside track for plan- would like an estimate of the earliest
ning and preparation. By agreement, practicable date on which the operation
ROUNDUP planning was to continue under could be launched.110 The next day the
the Combined Commanders and the British Joint Staff Mission was notified of
ETOUSA plans section headed by Gen- the White House decision and cabled it to
eral Barker. A separate U. S. staff would
107 Later changed at British request in order to
be sent to London to work on North maintain appearance of an all-American operation
Africa. Acceptance of the North African and provide continuity of U.S. command in case the
operation was sealed by baptism with a deputy had to take over. [Morton Yarman] TORCH
and the European Theater of Operations (The Ad-
new code name: TORCH.106 It was also de- ministrative and Logistical History of the ETO:
termined that all currently planned op- Part IV), MS, p. 20. Hist Div files.
erations (TORCH, SLEDGEHAMMER, and 108General Marshall speaking at CCS 33d Mtg.
This controverted an earlier (1 July) recommenda-
ROUNDUP) would be under a United tion by the Combined Commanders that the ROUND
States Supreme Commander. Pending the UP supreme commander also be charged with home
formal appointment of such a com- defense of Great Britain. CC (42) 27, Notes on Sys-
tem of Command for Operation ROUNDUP. SHAEF
mander, General Marshall and Admiral SGS files, Combined Commanders Papers.
King directed General Eisenhower to 109At the CCS 34th meeting, 30 July, there was
take immediate control of planning for considerable vagueness expressed as to whether the
TORCH decision had been made. Leahy and Dill “had
TORCH. If and when TORCH was finally de-
the impression” that it had. Admiral King believed
the President and Prime Minister had not yet de-
103Cited in Sherwood, Roosevelt and Hopkins, p. cided to “abandon ROUNDUP in favor of TORCH."
611. 110Memo, Gen W. B. Smith for JCS, Notes of a
104Admira1 Leahy, General Arnold, and General Conference Held at the White House at 8:30 P.M.,
McNarney. July 30, 1942, 1 Aug 42. OPD files, exec 5, item 1,
105 Cbl, 25 Jul 42. C/S file 381; Memo, Gen Deane tab 14. General Smith reported: “The President
for Admiral Willson, 25 Jul 42. C/S file WDCSA 381 stated very definitely that he, as Commander-in-
War Plans Sec. Chief, had made the decision that TORCH would be
106 Agreed at CCS 33d Mtg, 25 Ju142. undertaken at the earliest possible date.”
32 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

the British Chiefs of Staff for relay to Gen- a concentration on Bolero in preparation
eral Eisenhower. General Eisenhower for ROUNDUP in 1943. The July agreement
was to assume the position of Supreme rejected the principle of concentration
Commander pending final decision on a and accepted instead a “defensive, en-
permanent appointment.111 circling line of action.” Regarding those
In London, General Eisenhower took two notions as contradictory, the U. S.
immediate steps to get the operation Chiefs of Staff felt that strategy had been
under way. As no new planning staff had overturned. The British Chiefs of Staff,
arrived from the United States, it became on the other hand, recalled the earlier
necessary to employ American officers al- ARCADIA principles which had empha-
ready in the United Kingdom. That sized preparatory operations (including
meant denuding staffs which had been attacks through the Mediterranean) in
working on Continental planning. Gen- 1942 before the main attack across the
eral Barker, selected as acting G-3 for Channel. The TORCH decision was clearly
TORCH, was one of the first to go. A TORCH not at odds with those principles. Accept-
planning committee was set up on a com- ance of “defensive, encircling action,”
bined basis under Brig. Gen. Alfred W. they believed, meant only recognition of
Gruenther (U. S. A.) , and the chief Brit- the need for a longer prelude to the final
ish planners who had developed ROUNDUP assault. They characterized the U. S. in-
were also absorbed in the new adven- terpretation as heresy and were alarmed
ture.112 lest it take root.114 But that it should take
ROUNDUP planning came virtually to a root was inevitable. For the U. S. Chiefs of
standstill. Staff, under constant pressure to get on
with the war against Japan, any delay and,
The Period of Indecision more particularly, any uncertainty in the
(July-December 1942) mounting of the decisive attack on north-
west Europe inevitably unsettled the
President Roosevelt’s decision to go whole program for waging the war. More-
ahead with TORCH 113 meant the indefinite over, the connection between TORCH and
postponement of ROUNDUP. That much an eventual ROUNDUP was at best indirect.
was clear. It was not clear what effect the If a North African invasion might be re-
decision would have on grand strategy. garded, in the long run, as preparatory to
The April agreements had provided for a cross-Channel attack, the immediate re-
lationship between TORCH and ROUNDUP
111Cb1, JSM to Br COS, 31 JuI 42. OPD files, POD would be competitive. Instead of building
Super BOLERO, exec 1, tab 10; Memo, Marshall for
WD Classified MC, Commander for TORCH, 6 Aug 42, up forces in the United Kingdom, TORCH,
OPD file 381, ETO, sec. 11, case 16. if successful, would concentrate them in
112 Yarman, TORCH, p. 18. See n. 107. the Mediterranean. What then would be
I13 The decision to do TORCH, as has been indicated,
was primarily the President’s, but Churchill had re- the next step?
peatedly taken the initiative in urging it. In April
1944 Churchill declared that he would “personally
assume responsibility before God for the decision to 114 Cbl, Br COS to JSM, 13 Aug 42. Excerpts, sup-
do TORCH." See Ltr, Gen Wedemeyer to Gen Handy, plied by British Cabinet Office Hist Set, are in Hist
13 Apr 44. OPD files, OPD Mist, bk. 18. Div files.
THE ROOTS OF STRATEGY 33

Lack of a long-range plan was particu- TORCH decision forced reconsideration of


larly awkward for the United States in the premises. 116 There began then a series
1942 when mobilization was just getting of attempts to explain what had been de.
started. The Army was in process of for- tided at the London Conference. Neither
mation. Deployment had only just begun. the planners nor the chiefs could agree.
Expanding productive capacity still had What, in particular, was the extent of com-
to be directed in accordance with priori- mitment of ROUNDUP? The British Chiefs
ties established to fit special military of Staff, anxious to have the build-up of
needs at least a year in advance. U. S. U. S. forces in the United Kingdom con-
planners, studying the decisions of the tinue at the maximum rate, wanted to
London Conference, concluded that hold to the assumption that in the spring
while they evidently abrogated the of 1944 operations would be either in
strategy implicit in the Marshall Memo- progress or immediately in prospect on
randum of April they did not formulate the Continent.117 The Joint Chiefs could
any new strategy. not see anything in the July decisions that
Through the summer and fall of 1942, would warrant such an assumption. The
the planners wrestled with the problem of vague promise to consider crossing the
calculating future needs in troops and Channel at some time when “marked de-
materiel. In the weeks immediately pre- terioration in German military strength
ceding the July conference the Combined became apparent and the resources of the
Planning Staff had drawn up two deploy- United Nations, available after meeting
ment papers, defining the basic combined other commitments, so permit” lls seemed
strategy and translating it into terms of to them an invitation to tie up troops and
future commitments of troops and muni- resources in the United Kingdom indefi-
tions in the various theaters of opera- nitely with no assurance that they would
tions.115 The first study assumed that the be used in decisive action. The Joint
present strategic concept was: “To con- Chiefs were in the meantime deeply con-
duct the strategic offensive with maxi- scious of the need to prosecute the war
mum forces in the Atlantic-Western Eu- against Japan. They were in fact again
ropean Theater at the earliest practicable wondering whether they should not re-
date, and to maintain the strategic de- verse their basic strategy. The big issue to
fensive in other theaters, with appropri- be decided, General Marshall argued in
ate forces.” The second study, based on August, was whether the main U. S. effort
this assumption and on its implementa- should be in the Pacific or in the Europe-
tion by the Marshall BOLERO plan, fore- Middle East area.119 The question which
cast that in April 1944 the offensive on President Roosevelt a month earlier, be-
the continent of Europe would be in fore the London Conference, had called a
progress. Neither study had been ap- “red herring” was now, at least, an issue of
proved by the Combined Chiefs when the 116JCS 26th Mtg, 28 Jul 42.
117CCS 97/2, 8 Aug 42. See discussion in CPS
115 CC.5 91, Strategic Policy and Deployment of (Combined Planning Staff) 28th Mtg,7 Aug 42. OPD
United States and British Forces, 7 Jul 42; CCS 97, file ABC 370 (7-2-42).
Strategic Hypothesis for Deployment of Forces in 118ccs 94.
April 1944, 24 Jul 42. 119JCS 28th Mtg, 11 Aug 42.
CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

all seriousness. Discussion of it centered pointed out that, of fifty-four groups of


largely upon the deployment of aircraft. planes allotted to BOLERO-ROUNDUP by the
By the agreement of July the U. S. Marshall Memorandum, only twenty-five
Chiefs of Staff withdrew fifteen groups of remained for the air offensive against
aircraft from allotment to BOLERO with Germany. He believed that under the
the avowed intention of using them in the terms of the July agreements Germany
Pacific. The clause was written into the was still to be considered the first objec-
agreement, General Marshall later ex- tive of Allied strategy and that, therefore,
plained, only in order to remove the no strengthening of the Southwest Pacific
fifteen groups from the realm of com- should be undertaken “until the modified
bined discussion.120 By assigning the BOLERO-TORCH plan has first been com-
groups formally to the Pacific, where by pletely implemented.” 122That modified
common consent strategy was primarily plan, he believed, far from entailing a re-
a U. S. responsibility, the Joint Chiefs re- duction of air build-up in the United
served the right to dispose of them as they Kingdom put the chief burden of main-
saw fit. When the whole question of taining pressure against Germany on the
future deployment was sent to the Joint air forces. The European theater, he be-
Planning Staff, the fate of the fifteen lieved, had become an air theater. He
groups uncovered a wide range of dis- further argued that it was specious to
agreement on basic strategy.121 Naval separate TORCH and the Middle East from
planners wanted the planes shown de- the United Kingdom, since the bomber
ployed chiefly in the South and South- offensive from England in fighting the
west Pacific as of April 1943, thus assum- German Air Force and weakening the
ing a considerable reorientation of strat- German military potential contributed
egy toward increased offensive effort directly to the success of TORCH. The de-
against the Japanese. Specifically they bate between General Arnold and Ad-
recommended deploying aircraft accord- miral King on this subject continued into
ing to the priority TORCH, Middle East, the fall without arriving at any resolu-
South Pacific, Southwest Pacific, United tion.123 Toward the end of October, plan-
Kingdom. Army planners, still insisting ners reviewing the matter found that of
on the primary importance of the whole the fifteen groups three had already been
European area, wanted equal priority for deployed: one to Hawaii, one to the
TORCH, the Middle East, and the United Middle East, three squadrons to the South
Kingdom. They pointed out that the Pacific, and one squadron to Alaska. The
Navy’s deployment schedules would de- remaining twelve groups the Joint Chiefs
lay the arrival of planes in the United then decided should be held in strategic
Kingdom by one to three months. Gen- 122 Memo, Arnold for Marshall, 29 Jul 42. OPD
eral Arnold took up the cudgels to defend file ABC 381 (9-25-41)psec.111.
123See JCS 97 series which contains the gist of the
priority for the European theater. He running argument ‘between General Arnold and Ad-
miral King-For more detailed treatment of this sub-
120 JCS 36th Mtg, 6 Oct 42. ject see W. F. Craven and J. L. Cate, eds., The Army
121 JPS 32d Mtg, 31 Aug 42. OPD file ABC 370 Air Forces in World War II: II, Europe-Torch to
(7-2-42). See also notes on this meeting, 2 Sep 42. Pointblank, August I942 to December 1943 (Chicago,
OPD file ABC 381 (9-25-41) , sec. II. 1949) , pp. 280-82.
THE ROOTS OF STRATEGY 35

reserve.124 They were as far as ever from President. He was considering two possi-
knowing what Anglo-American strategy bilities after the assumed success of
was to be. TORCH: attack into the “underbelly” by
Although the Joint Chiefs did not invasion of Sardinia, Sicily, or even Italy,
agree on how far the BOLERO strategy had and attack on Norway with the idea of
been or should be modified to step up the giving more direct aid to Russia. ROUNDUP,
war in the Pacific, they were clearly press- he understood, was definitely off for 1943,
ing for some modification. Even before but there still remained the possibility of
the TORCH decision, the concept of the an emergency cross-Channel operation
“strategic defensive” in the Pacific had and he believed that all the arguments ad-
been defined to include “limited offensive vanced for SLEDGEHAMMER in 1942 would
operations.” 125That definition was not he be even more valid in 1943-44.127
at once accepted by the Combined Chiefs, President was particularly interested in
but in the middle of August they did exploiting success in the Mediterranean.
agree to a strategic hypothesis 126which In November he proposed to Churchill
for purposes of troop deployment as- that “you with your Chiefs of Staff in
sumed that by April 1944 there would be London and I with the Combined Staff
“an augmentation of forces in the Pacific here make a survey of the possibilities in-
by a readjustment of United States com- cluding forward movement directed
mitments in the European Theater . . . against Sardinia, Sicily, Italy, Greece and
in order to further offensive operations other Balkan Areas, and including the
against Japan.” In context, however, this possibility of obtaining Turkish support
provision remained at least as vague as the for an attack through the Black Sea
earlier agreements. The same hypothesis against Germany’s flank.” I28 This was a
also assumed that in 1944 preparations welcome idea to the Prime Minister, who
would continue for an invasion of the replied now that an attack against Sicily
Continent as well as for deception pur- or Sardinia was an essential step follow-
poses and in order to take advantage of ing the cleaning up of North Africa.129
a “favorable opportunity or emergency.” The idea, however, was anathema to
Finally it was assumed also that North the U. S. War Department. Maj. Gen.
Africa in 1944 would be occupied by the Thomas T. Handy, Assistant Chief of
Allies and “intensified operations” would Staff, OPD, expressed adamant opposi-
be “conducted therefrom.” tion to the British views, toward which
It was to this last assumption that the Roosevelt seemed to be leaning. He be-
British Chiefs of Staff and the Prime lieved that the Mediterranean operations
Minister were giving their principal at- were not logistically feasible, and that in
tention. In September Churchill outlined any case they would not bring an Allied
his conception of future strategy to the
127 Cbl, Eden to Halifax, quoting Cbl, Churchill
124JCS 97/5,26 Ott 42; JCS S9th Mtg, 27 Ott 42. to Roosevelt, 22 Sep 42. C/S file ETO.
125CCS 91, cited n. 115. This paper, however, was 128 Quotation from Cbl, Roosevelt to Churchill, in
never approved by the Combined Chiefs. Cbl, Churchf sevelt, 18 Nov 42, incl in JCS
126CCS 97/3, Strategic Hypothesis as to Deploy- 153, Plans and Operations in the Mediterranean,
ment of Forces in April 1944, 14 Aug 42. Approved at Middle East, and Near East.
CCS 36th Mtg. 129Cbl, Churchill to Roosevelt, cited n. 128.
36 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

force within striking range of Germany. success of the North African operation
He deplored the concept of an emergency would be exploited by air attacks on Ger-
cross-Channel operation. “Under no cir- many and Italy “with the view to destroy-
cumstance,” he said, “can the U. S. agree ing Italian resources and morale and
to concentrate large forces in the U. K. eliminating- her from the war.132 This
there to be immobilized until the hypo- much of the JSSC policy was accepted by
thetical break of German power as en- the Joint Chiefs. However, the commit-
visaged in the British concept.” The only tee’s recommendations for the Pacific,
sound alternatives in his view were which amounted to continuation of the
ROUNDUP as originally planned with a limited operations for defense and the
specific target date, or abandonment of minimum support of China, the Joint
the whole idea of defeating Germany first Chiefs drastically revised after a discus-
and turning to the offensive in the Pa- sion in closed session. The revision greatly
cific.130 enlarged the concept of the strategic de-
In December 1942 Handy’s views were fensive against Japan. The Joint Chiefs
echoed in a new strategic concept drawn declared that in the Pacific limited of-
up by a new committee, the Joint Stra- fensive operations would be carried out
tegic Survey Committee (JSSC) -a body not only to secure Australia, New Zeal-
of three senior officers whose sole job was and, Hawaii, Alaska, and the lines of com-
to maintain a large perspective on the munication but also “‘to maintain the
major problems of combined direction of initiative in the Solomon-Bismarck-East
the war and advise the Joint Chiefs on New Guinea area with a view to control-
matters of policy. 131 The first task of the ling that area and involving Japan in
JSSC was to recommend to the Joint costly counter operations.” In Burma an
Chiefs a course of action for 1943. It was offensive should be undertaken to open
high time that such a course was settled. supply routes to China.133
The North African invasion, launched on When these views were put before the
8 November, met almost immediate suc- Combined Chiefs, the British replied
cess and raised with new urgency the ques- with their first fully developed statement
tion which the July decisions had left of what may be called their peripheral
unanswered: What next? strategy for the defeat of Germany.134
The core of the strategy recommended Germany, they argued, needed a period
by the JSSC was concentration on the of rest and recuperation; Russia was pre-
build-up of a balanced force in the United venting that. The Allies therefore should
Kingdom for a decisive cross-Channel at- do everything possible to assist Russia.
tack before the end of 1943. In the mean- Although Germany had to be reoccupied
time, an air offensive against Germany
would be carried out from England, 132JCS 167, Basic Strategic Concept for 1943, 11
Dec 42.
North Africa, and the Middle East. The 133JCS 167/l, 20 Dee 42. The revision was done in
the JCS 46th meeting. The revised paper, JCS 167/1,
130Memo, Handy for CofS, 8 Nov 42, American- was submitted to the Combined Chiefs of Staff as
British Strategy. C/S file 381. ccs 135.
131 JCS 149/D, Charter of the Joint Strategic Sur- 134 CCS 135/2, American-British Strategy in 1943,
vey Committee, 7 Nov 42. 3 Jan 43.
THE ROOTS OF STRATEGY 37

eventually, the Allies were not yet ready to reopen the Burma Road, but they did
to attack the Continental fortress. “To not want any other expansion of the war
make a fruitless assault before the time is against Japan. The reasons for tackling
ripe would be disastrous to ourselves, of Germany first, they wrote, were still
no assistance to Russia and devastating sound.
to the morale of occupied Europe.” Even Although these views were in direct
a maximum concentration on building opposition to the strategic principles pre-
up for a cross-Channel attack in 1943 viously expressed by the U. S. War De-
would assemble only about twenty-five partment, the Joint Strategic Survey
divisions in the United Kingdom by late Committee found grounds for compro-
summer, as compared to the original es- mise. They believed that the ends sought
timated requirement in the Marshall by the British and the United States were
Memorandum of forty-eight divisions. In the same: that is, to expel the Axis from
contrast to the unattractive prospect of a North Africa, to eliminate Italy, and to
shoestring operation across the Channel, do so by pressure rather than by occupa-
the British Chiefs of Staff sketched the re- tion of the Italian peninsula. They
wards of pursuing operations in the Medi- thought the Combined Chiefs were fur-
terranean. “If we force Italy out of the ther agreed that no large-scale operations
war and the Germans try to maintain should be undertaken against southern
their line in Russia at its present length, Europe with the ultimate view of invad-
we estimate that they will be some 54 di- ing Germany therefrom, and that, on the
visions and 2,200 aircraft short of what other hand, invasion of the Continent
they need on all fronts. . . .” The opera- from the United Kingdom was essential
tions they had immediately in mind were to achieve decisive results. The chief dis-
the invasion of either Sardinia or Sicily. agreements seemed to be on the method
But their plans for the Mediterranean of exerting pressure on Italy and on the
did not stop there. Following Italian col- timing of ROUNDUP. The U. S. Joint
lapse the next step would be the Balkans, Chiefs wanted to force Italy’s surrender
although it was not clear just what action by air bombardment from North African
would be possible in that area. In the bases rather than by continued ground
meantime, while concentrating offensive operations. The difference of opinion on
action in the Mediterranean, the British ROUNDUP the JSSC thought might be due
Chiefs wanted the United States to build to misinterpretation. They criticized the
up an air force of 3,000 heavy and me- British statement that concentration on
dium bombers in England and also con- the build-up for a cross-Channel attack in
tinue to send ground divisions. They be- 1943 would interfere with the build-up
lieved that, without prejudice to other of air forces for the bomber offensive. On
operations, the build-up in the United the contrary, the JSSC believed: “The air
Kingdom could reach twenty-one divi- offensive will of necessity hold precedence
sions by the fall of 1943-a force sufficient over the buildup for the land offensive,
to effect a re-entry into the Continent and continue to do so until the results of
under favorable conditions. As for the the air operations and the deterioration
Pacific the British approved operations of the Axis situation in general can be
38 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

better estimated in relation to prospective entire North African shore would be


land operations.” They concluded that cleared. The Russians were already on
this difference could probably be ad- the offensive after stopping the Germans
justed with the British without setting a in Stalingrad. Generaloberst Friedrich
definite date for ROUNDUP.135 Paulus with more than 250,000 Germans
This was the last formal word on U. S. was encircled and helpless before the
strategy before the meeting of the Com- city; the attempt to relieve him had
bined Chiefs of Staff with Roosevelt and failed. In the meantime the Russians had
Churchill at Casablanca in the second launched two other offensives to clear the
week of January, 1943. In its glossing over Don Basin. In the Pacific, Japanese ex-
of deep differences of opinion and its pansion had definitely been checked. The
ambiguous stand on the cross-Channel in- land and sea battles of Guadalcanal had
vasion, it reflected the lack at this time of both been won, although in January the
a strong united conviction in the U. S. island was still not entirely cleared. In
War and Navy Departments on what U. S. the six months since the dark days of July
strategy should be. General Marshall ad- Allied chances for victory had improved
mitted this when the President asked remarkably throughout the world.
whether it was agreed that they should In the generally brightening picture,
meet the British at Casablanca “united in however, there were still dark spots.
advocating a cross-Channel operation.” Darkest was the German submarine
Marshall replied “that there was not a menace in the Atlantic. Allied shipping
united front on that subject, particularly losses had reached alarming proportions,
among the planners.” Even among the and there was evidence that the German
Chiefs of Staff conviction was not strong. submarine fleet was steadily growing. The
In Marshall’s opinion, they regarded an loss of shipping from all causes up to the
operation across the Channel more favor- end of 1942 exceeded new construction
ably than one in the Mediterranean, “but by about one million tons. During the
the question was still an open one.” 136 year, 1,027 ships were sunk by enemy sub-
marine attack.137 This was a threat of the
The Casablanca Conference first magnitude. Without control of the
seas the great U. S. war potential could not
When the Casablanca Conference even reach the theaters of war; the Allies
opened on 12 January 1943 the Allies for could not undertake the amphibious op-
the first time felt themselves able to erations that were necessary throughout
choose the time and place for carrying the the world in order to get at the enemy. At
war to the enemy. Rommel had been de- the first meeting of the Combined Chiefs
cisively beaten in North Africa. Although of Staff at Casablanca, Gen. Sir Alan
the fighting in Tunisia continued, it was Brooke put the matter bluntly. “The
clearly only a matter of time before the shortage of shipping,” he believed, “was
137 Samuel E. Morison, The Battle of the Atlantic,
135 JCS 167/5, 10 Jan 43. September 1939-May 1943 (History of United States
136Minutes of a Meeting at the White House on Naval Operations in World War II: I) (Boston,
Thursday, 7 January 1943, at 1500. OPD files, POD 1947), p. 410. Over 1,770 ships were lost from all
exec 10, item 45. causea during the year.
CASABLANCA CONFERENCE. Seated: President Roosevelt and Prime Minister
Churchill. Standing, front row, left to right: General Arnold, Admiral King, Gen-
eral Marshall, Admiral Pound, Air Chief Marshal Portal, General Brooke, Field
Marshal Dill, and Admiral Mountbatten.
40 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

a stranglehold on all offensive operations which are necessary to open an effective


and unless we could effectively combat passage through it for military traffic; and,
the U-boat menace we might not be able secondly, using the bases on the African
to win the war."138 shore, to strike at the underbelly of the
The other great weakness in the Allied Axis in effective strength and in the
position was a paucity of resources. De- shortest time.” His opinion in January
spite the large war potential of the United 1943 had not changed; he submitted then
States, the troops, shipping, supplies, and that “this surely remains our obvious im-
material actually on hand at the begin- mediate objective.” 139
ning of 1943 were sufficient only for rela- It was not, however, obvious to Gen-
tively small-scale offensive operations in eral Marshall. He felt that there was a
one theater. The major strategic question danger of fighting the war on a day-to-day
before the Combined Chiefs of Staff at opportunistic basis, of taking a series of
Casablanca was where and when these un-co-ordinated steps promoted by im-
slender resources could be committed to mediate tactical considerations without
make the maximum contribution to the considering the over-all strategy by which
defeat of Germany. The basic issue was the Germans could be defeated most ef-
similar to the problem faced in July: ficiently and in the shortest possible time.
granting that the ultimate aim was to Granted that the victory in Africa opened
strike the decisive blow at Germany the way for exploitation in the Mediter-
across the Channel, could such a blow be ranean, the question still had to be asked
struck in 19431 Put another way the ques- how such exploitation would fit into “the
tion was: if the prospects for a successful main plot.” Unless it could be proved to
ROUNDUP in the summer were dubious, fit somewhere and constitute, moreover,
was it not better to concentrate on the the best means of advancing the plot at
Mediterranean where immediate opera- that time, it should not be undertaken
tions offering a good chance of success no matter how tempting was the prospect
were possible? of an easy military victory.
Churchill had no doubt that this was In answer to General Marshall’s ques-
the correct strategy. In November he had tion, there was one obvious approach.
written the President: “The paramount What else could be done? General Brooke
task before us is first, to conquer the developed the argument from necessity.
African shores of the Mediterranean and He pointed out that, on the Continent,
set up there the navy and air installations Russia was the only Ally with large land
forces in action. Comparing the Russian
138 CCS 55th Mtg, 14 Jan 43. Bound volumes con-
taining the oficial U.S. minutes of the Casablanca effort with the twenty-one divisions that
(SYMBOL) Conference are in the OPD files. A single the Western Allies could hope to land in
copy of the British official minutes is in the SHAEF France in 1943, he urged that “any effort
SGS files. For all combined conferences the U.S. and
British minutes are identical, but the latter include,
of the other Allies must necessarily be so
in addition, the meetings of the British Chiefs of small as to be unimportant in the over-all
Staff at Casablanca. Since none of the minutes were
stenographic, quotations here and throughout the 139 Note by Minister of Defence, 25 Nov 42, WP
text reproduce only secretarial summaries and para- (42) 543, annex to Sd Br COS Casablanca Mtg.
phrases of the speakers’ words. SHAEF SGS file 337/5, British Min of SYMBOL Conf.
THE ROOTS OF STRATEGY 41

picture.” He contended that with limited likely that the relatively small force which
resources the Allies could not expect to the Allies could put on the Continent
engage any considerable portion of the would require the Germans to shift troops
German land forces. The forty-four Ger- to defeat it. For the same reason it was
man divisions estimated to be in western doubtful whether even the German Luft-
Europe, he said, would “overwhelm us on waffe could be brought to decisive battle.
the ground, and perhaps hem us in with In sum, the argument was that ROUNDUP
wire or concrete to such an extent that in 1943 would do no good and would in-
any expansion of the bridgehead would vite disaster.
be extremely difficult.” 140 The argument The Prime Minister continued to
on the relative futility of trying to influ- think of a SLEDGEHAMMER attack against
ence the course of the land battle in Eu- the Continent in 1943, and in order to
rope was lent considerable cogency by make it possible advised planning a Medi-
Molotov’s prior request to General Mar- terranean operation to be accomplished
shall for the commitment in “the second cheaply and quickly after the windup of
front” of sufficient troops to draw off forty the North African campaign.142 The chief
divisions from the Eastern Front.141 This arguments for continuing attacks in the
was ludicrously beyond the capacity of Mediterranean, however, were the im-
the Western Allies at that time. mediate strategic advantages to be gained
Even if a landing on the Continent from them. In the first place, since there
were feasible, it was likely to be much were several plausible objectives in the
more costly than an assault in the Medi- Mediterranean, a skillful use of feints
terranean. The British pointed out that might well force the Germans to disperse
the rail system of France would permit a large number of troops to meet wide-
the simultaneous movement of at least spread threats to Sicily, Corsica, Sardinia,
seven German divisions from the east to the Dodecanese Islands, and the coasts of
reinforce the Atlantic Wall, whereas only Italy and Greece before any operation
one division at a time could be moved was actually launched. In the second
from north to south to meet an Allied at- place, if Italy could be knocked out of the
tack in the Mediterranean. Use of the war (and that in the British view was the
argument also revealed that direct assist- major immediate objective of any action
ance to Russia, the dominant considera- contemplated in the Mediterranean) , the
tion in July, was no longer a primary Germans would not only have to take over
concern. It was further argued that such the defense of Italy but would also have
assistance could not be given. ROUNDUP to assume Italian commitments for de-
preparations could not be completed be- fense of the Balkans. The Prime Minister
fore the middle of August; it was more was also drawn to the possibility of tempt-
likely that the operation could not be ing Turkey into the war. He felt that by
mounted before early autumn. In that clearing the Mediterranean a valuable
case, it would not support the Russian selling point would be gained for negotia-
summer campaign. Finally, it was un- tions with Turkey. If Turkey could be
140 CCS 58th Mtg, 16 Jan 43.
brought in, the British planned to use the
141 See above, p. 24. 1421st Br COS Casablanca Mtg. see n. 138.
42 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

country as a base from which to attack the attack. General Marshall stated the
RomAnian oil fields and open the Black United States point of view in these
Sea route to Russia. They did not con- terms: “It has been the conception of the
template the use of Turkish troops in at- United States Chiefs of Staff that Ger-
tacking outside of Turkey. many must be defeated by a powerful ef-
The British arguments in favor of the fort on the Continent, carrying out the
Mediterranean as the scene for 1943 at- ‘BOLERO’ and ‘ROUNDUP’ plans.” Aid to
tacks were, from a tactical standpoint, Russia was important in order to absorb
convincing enough, but they did not meet German strength, but “any method of ac-
Marshall’s objections that the Mediter- complishing this other than on the Con-
ranean could not be considered the main tinent is a deviation from the basic plan.”
arena for meeting and fighting German He then made it clear that if the Ameri-
military might. The Americans believed cans should agree to Mediterranean op-
and consistently maintained that Ger- erations they would be accepting a tem-
many’s defeat “could only be effected by porary expedient compelled by immedi-
direct military action,” 143and that that ate circumstances. They would not con-
action must be directed against the main sider that they had thereby approved in
body of the German Army in the west. principle any departure from their over-
The British thought Germany might be all strategy. The question, Marshall sub-
defeated primarily by destroying the mitted, was: “To what extent must the
enemy’s will to resist through air attack United Nations adhere to the general
and encirclement. They reasoned that concept and to what extent do they under-
“Germany’s will to fight depended take diversions for the purpose of assist-
largely on her confidence in ultimate ing Russia, improving the tonnage situa-
success.” 144Repeated victories by Russia tion, and maintaining momentum.” That
and the Western Allies, even if on the this distinction should not be missed, he
perimeter of the German Lebensrawm, asked pointedly whether the British
would make Germany “realize that the Chiefs of Staff considered that an attack
prospects were hopeless.” If despite that now against Sicily was a means to an end
realization the Germans still refused to or an end in itself. Did they view it as “a
surrender, then direct attack from the part of an integrated plan to win the war
west would be employed to deal the de- or simply taking advantage of an oppor-
ciding blow. tunity”? 145
The U. S. Chiefs of Staff did not dis- However, having drawn this line be-
count the possibility of a sudden German tween strategy and expediency, the U. S.
collapse. On the whole, however, they Chiefs of Staff then agreed that circum-
held firm to the conviction that neither stances made a Mediterranean operation
the air offensive nor victories in the Medi- expedient. After some discussion the
terranean could so significantly weaken Combined Chiefs decided that, as be-
the German’s will to resist as to justify tween the two possible invasions (Sar-
prolonged delay in mounting the final dinia or Sicily) , Sicily was the more profit-
143Admiral King speaking at CCS 58th Mtg. able attack with the resources available.
144Air Marshal Portal at CCS 58th Mtg. 145 CCS 58th Mtg.
THE ROOTS OF STRATEGY 43

The principal grounds on which the General Marshall told the British Chiefs
Americans conceded the argument were of Staff, in order to forestall another
that they had large numbers of troops in “series of crises,” which had wrecked of-
North Africa which could not be readily fensive plans in the early part of 1942.148
employed outside the Mediterranean and Maintaining pressure, of course, meant
that the Sicilian operation would “effect mounting attacks. Admiral King esti-
an economy of tonnage which is the major mated that the attacks considered neces-
consideration.” 146Even in yielding, how- sary would require roughly double the
ever, General Marshall said that “he was current U. S. forces in the Pacific. There
most anxious not to become committed was a danger, he pointed out, that with-
to interminable operations in the Medi- out a great effort to assist Generalissimo
terranean. He wished Northern France to Chiang Kai-shek China might pull out of
be the scene of the main effort against the war. General Marshall added that
Germany-that had always been his con- helping China carry the fight against
ception.” 147 Japan “might have a most favorable ef-
To this Air Chief Marshal Portal sig- fect on Stalin.” 149 The U. S. Chiefs of
nificantly replied that it was impossible Staff therefore especially recommended
to say where they should stop in the Medi- pushing operations in Burma.
terranean since the object was to knock The British frankly did not like this
out Italy altogether. The difference of new attitude. In general they regarded
opinion had not been resolved. It had the Pacific in much the same light as Gen-
only been temporarily abated for the sake eral Marshall regarded the Mediter-
of arriving at a vital decision to maintain ranean-an invitation to diversions from
the momentum of the war against Ger- the main effort. While admitting in prin-
many. ciple the need for unremitting pressure
The question of how to proceed against against Japan, the British Chiefs of Staff
Germany was posed at Casablanca in the feared it would mean weakening the of-
context of the global war. While devoting fensive against Germany. General Brooke
all possible energy and resources to de- tried to force the issue by stating it as a
feating Germany, it was clear that the problem of reviewing “the correctness of
Allies could not afford simply to turn our basic strategic concept which calls for
their backs on Japan. It has already been the defeat of Germany first.” He believed
pointed out that the U. S. Chiefs of Staff that the Allies could not take on Ger-
since July had veered toward a decision many and Japan at the same time. The
to increase substantially the effort in the Americans denied any intention of alter-
Pacific. They spelled out their new point ing the basic strategy. On the contrary,
of view to the British for the first time at “The whole concept of defeating Ger-
Casablanca. The United States desired many first,” Marshall submitted, “had
to maintain pressure against the Japanese, been jeopardized by the lack of resources
in the Pacific.” He recalled how the
14sMarshall speaking at 2d ANFA Mtg, 18 Jan 43. United States had nearly been forced to
The ANFA meetings were those presided over by the
President and Prime Minister. 1482d ANFA Mtg.
147 CCS 60th Mtg, 18 Jan 43. 149CCS 56th Mtg, 14 Jan 43.
44 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

withdraw from TORCH because of the dan- The Combined Chiefs of Staff then pro-
ger of reducing the slender resources in posed setting up a combined command
the Pacific. “A hand-to-mouth policy such and planning organization to plan for
as this was most uneconomical.” It was small-scale raids, a return to the Conti-
essential to establish a sound position in nent in 1943 under conditions of German
the Pacific. That could not be done simply collapse, a limited operation in 1943 to
by defensive deployment. The Japanese secure a bridgehead on the Continent for
themselves were busy consolidating and later exploitation, and last “an invasion in
would certainly continue their attempts force in 1944.” 153
to advance if they were given a breathing Even though a 1944 ROUNDUP lay far
spell. To forestall them the Allies must ahead in a somewhat clouded future, the
attack. Furthermore it would unduly pro- conference undertook to give preliminary
long the war if the United States waited shape to its ultimate command organiza-
until after the defeat of Germany be- tion. Roosevelt proposed a British su-
fore securing positions from which the preme commander, but on Churchill’s
final offensive against Japan could be suggestion decision was postponed. At the
launched.150 moment the Prime Minister believed it
The British at last yielded the point. was necessary only to select a commander
They had already agreed to operations in to undertake the planning. This com-
Burma to open the road to China. They mander, he agreed, should be British, but
now approved plans to mount both over- he enunciated the principle that “the
land and amphibious attacks against the command of operations should, as a gen-
Japanese in Burma during 1943. They eral rule, be held by an officer of the na-
further agreed to the seizure of Rabaul tion which furnishes the majority of the
and reserved decision on a proposed at- force.” 154 At a later meeting the Com-
tack against Truk. bined Chiefs decided that it would be suf-
Casablanca focused attention on 1943 ficient to select a British Chief of Staff, to-
and concluded with a statement that the gether with “an independent United
operations envisaged in 1943 were de- States-British Staff.” 155 In examining
signed to bring about the defeat of Ger- this proposal the President questioned
many in that year. 151 This was for the rec- whether “sufficient drive would be ap-
ord-but there were reservations. The plied if only a Chief of Staff were ap-
Americans in particular were not san- pointed.” 156 General Brooke thought
guine about the prospects of victory in that “a man with the right qualities . . .
1943. General Arnold asked for a decision could do what was necessary in the early
on what might be done in 1944 so that stages.” 16’ It was left at that-a curiously
production schedules could be planned in vague and inauspicious beginning for the
advance. General Brooke replied that “we
could definitely count on re-entering the 153CCS 169, Organization of Command, Control,
Planning and Training for Cross-Channel Opera-
Continent in 1944 on a large scale."152 tions, 22 Jan 43.
150 CCS 60th Mtg, 18 Jan 43. 154 2d ANFA Mtg.
151CCS155/1, Conduct of the War in 1943. 19 Jan 155CCS 67th Mtg, 22 Jan 43.
43. 166 3d ANFA Mtg, 23 Jan 43.
152 CCS 58th Mtg. 157 Ibid.
THE ROOTS OF STRATEGY 45

staff that would write the OVERLORD plan tion decided upon is the capture of Sicily.
and then become the nucleus of the su- At the same time we shall go on with prepar-
preme headquarters that carried it out. ing forces and assembling landing craft in
England for a thrust across the Channel in
If Casablanca did little to erase the the event that the German strength in France
vagueness surrounding the ultimate decreases, either through withdrawal of her
ground operations in northwest Europe, troops or because of an internal collapse.
it at least arrived at more vigorous deci- . . . The maximum combined air offensive
sions on an air offensive from the United will be conducted against Germany from the
United Kingdom. By this and every other
Kingdom. The Combined Chiefs directed available means, attempts will be made to
the initiation at once of a combined U. S.- undermine Germany’s morale. Every effort
British bomber offensive aimed at “the will be made, political and otherwise, to in-
progressive destruction and dislocation duce Turkey to enter the war in order that
of the German military, industrial, and we may establish air bases there for opera-
tions against Roumania. . . .160
economic system and the undermining of
the morale of the German people to a As an outline of a strategic concept for
point where their capacity for armed re- the guidance of planning, these decisions
sistance is fatally weakened.” 158 were not much clearer than the decisions
Most of the big decisions of the Casa- of July 1942. Certainly the extent of com-
blanca conferences were made during the mitment to an eventual cross-Channel op
first week. General Brooke undertook to eration was no more specific. But in pro-
summarize these for the President and viding for the establishment of a planning
the Prime Minister: staff and in agreeing to push the BOLERO
build-up despite continuing operations in
Measures to be taken to combat the sub-
marine menace are a first charge on the re- the Mediterranean, Casablanca had, in
sources of the United Nations. . . . Our fact, laid the groundwork for OVERLORD.
efforts in defeating Germany will be con- During the next six months, planning
cerned first with efforts to force them to with- and preparations in the United Kingdom
draw ground and air forces from the Russian would of themselves clear much of the
front.159 This will be accomplished by opera-
tions from North Africa by which Southern academic mist from the face of the cross-
Europe, the Dodecanese Islands, Greece, Channel project and convert it from a
Crete, Sardinia, and Sicily will all be threat- map problem into a plan of action for
ened, thus forcing Germany to deploy her which the necessary men and material
forces to meet each threat. The actual opera- were on hand or in prospect. And this
would happen while the debate on strat-
158CC.5 166/1/D, The Bomber Offensive from the
United Kingdom, 21 Jan 43. See below, Ch. VI. egy continued through a series of com-
159As noted above, it does not appear from the promise decisions scarcely firmer than
records that this was actually an important consider- those with which the Casablanca Confer-
ation. The strategic concept underlying Mediter-
ranean operations was the much more general idea ence closed.
of attrition. 160 2d ANFA Mtg.
CHAPTER II

Outline Overlord
(January-July 1943)

Organization for Planning from 2 November 1942 to the end of


January 1943. Then, according to plan,
Several months elapsed before the Casa- with TORCH firmly established, AFHQ
blanca decisions to go ahead with and ETOUSA were formally split. Early
ROUNDUP plans and preparations began to in February Lt. Gen. Frank M. Andrews
bear fruit. In these months the European was named commanding general of ETO-
theater convalesced slowly from the TORCH USA. New theater boundaries gave ETO-
bloodletting, reasserted its independence, USA responsibility for operations in the
and turned again to face northwest Eu- whole of Europe except the Iberian
rope across the English Channel. Peninsula, Italy, and the Balkans.1
Recovery was difficult, for, ever since It was a large theater but, when Gen-
the TORCH decision, the Mediterranean eral Andrews took over, it was occupied
had enjoyed a ruthless priority on all re- by only a handful of the U. S. Army. Be-
sources of war. As already noted, TORCH fore TORCH swept the larder, U. S. forces
had drawn top U. S. and British personnel by the end of September 1942 had built
into what was first a planning group and up in the United Kingdom to about 188,-
later became Allied Force Headquarters 000 men, including one armored and
(AFHQ) , which under Lt. Gen. Dwight three infantry divisions. In the course of
D. Eisenhower carried out the North the next five months, TORCH took three of
African invasion. At the same time Gen- the four divisions, and a total of over
eral Eisenhower retained command of 150,000 troops. Although partially re-
ETOUSA, the headquarters controlling plenished by shipments from the United
U. S. forces in the United Kingdom. De- States, net U. S. strength in Britain had
spite the difficulties of this dual role the fallen to 107,801 by the end of February.
arrangement was preserved in order to This was the low point. The build-up
insure that TORCH might draw at will on thereafter began to recover slowly. How-
American resources in England. When ever, the one division passed over by
Eisenhower moved to the Mediterranean, TORCH, the 29th, remained the only divi-
he appointed an executive deputy theater
commander, Maj. Gen. Russell P. Hartle, 1 See [Robert W. Coakley] Organization and Com-
mand in the ETO (The Administrative and Lo-
to manage theater affairs in the United gistical History of the ETO: Part II), MS, Ch. III.
Kingdom. Hartle served in this capacity Hist Div files.
OUTLINE OVERLORD (JANUARY-JULY 1943) 47

sion in the United Kingdom until the fall supplies to the United Kingdom which
of 1943.2 in September reached almost 240,000
TORCH interfered even more drastically long tons had dropped in February to
with the air corps build-up. The new 20,000 tons. BOLERO shipments began to
Eighth Air Force was only beginning to pick up slowly in March but did not re-
accumulate its striking power when it was gain the September rate until July.
required to form the Twelfth Air Force to In the meantime planning for ROUNDUP
support TORCH. It surrendered to the continued under the aegis of the Com-
Twelfth Air Force about half of its com- bined Commanders. The new combined
plement of aircraft (1,100 planes) and planning staff ordered at Casablanca was
much of its key personnel including its slow in taking shape. The difficulties,
commander, Maj. Gen. Carl Spaatz. Gen- though relatively minor, seemed to re-
eral Eaker, who took command of what quire a large amount of discussion. Casa-
was left, complained that still worse than blanca had been vague about both the
the loss of planes was the loss of priority mission and the form of the new staff.
on organizational equipment, spare parts, The specification that it would function
and replacements of aircraft and per- under a chief of staff to an unnamed su-
sonnel.3 The net result was that U. S. par- preme commander implied that the plan-
ticipation in the bomber offensive against ners could henceforth be regarded as the
Germany was set back eight or nine nucleus of the headquarters that would
months and did not begin to become ef- eventually control the operations. Beyond
fective until the spring of 1943.4 that, Casablanca recalled that a “special
Stock piles of supplies and equipment inter-allied staff” had already been work-
that had been accumulated in the United ing “for some months” on cross-Channel
Kingdom to maintain a cross-Channel op- plans, and suggested that “this special
eration were also drawn into the Medi- planning staff should be adapted to the
terranean, in some cases at a rate even new conditions and strengthened by the
faster than the movement of troops. Thus addition of American personnel. They-
the level of supply of some items actually should work, under the direction of the
declined for the troops that remained in Supreme Commander (or his deputy un-
Britain. In addition monthly delivery of til he is appointed) , in conjunction with
the nucleus of his combined staff in Lon-
2 [Morton Yarman] TORCH and the European
Theater of Operations (The Administrative and don.” 5
Logistical History of the ETO: Part IV), MS, pp. But all this was not much more than
95ff. Hist Div files. Figures on troop strength are a collection of working notes by the Com-
derived from Transportation Corps sources and in-
dicate troops actually carried into and out of the bined Chiefs, reminding themselves in a
United Kingdom. Slight discrepancies exist between general way of the nature of the problem
them and the official troop assignment figures. A they would have to solve later by means
detailed account of troop build-up in the United
Kingdom will be found in R. G. Ruppenthal, Lo-
of a directive actually establishing the or-
gistical Support of the Armies, a volume under prep- ganization they recognized as needed. By
aration in this series.
3 Rpt, Eaker to Arnold, Oct 42, cited in Yarman, 5 CCS 169, Organization of Command, Control,
TORCH, p. 119 Planning and Training for Cross-Channel Opera-
4 See below, Ch. VI. tions, 22 Jan 43.
48 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

the end of February the British Chiefs of rent arrangements for planning by the
Staff had drafted such a directive, but it Combined Commanders were therefore
provided for a predominantly British or- adequate and should be continued.10
ganization, not very different from the Under the circumstances they were re-
Combined Commanders. Addressed to a luctant to spare the necessary senior offi-
British chief of staff for cross-Channel op- cers to form a special staff. Instead they
erations, it directed him to report to the suggested appointing a chief staff officer
British Chiefs of Staff and charged him to the Combined Commanders, to be
temporarily with the command responsi- charged with “co-ordinating and driving
bilities of the supreme commander, pend- forward the plans for cross-Channel op-
ing the latter’s appointment.6 erations this year and next year.” This ap-
This draft, as might have been ex- pointment was actually made, pending
pected, was unsatisfactory to the Ameri- American approval of the other sugges-
cans, who amended it to make the chief tions. General Brooke selected Lt. Gen.
of staff for cross-Channel operations re- Frederick E. Morgan, and the Prime
sponsible to the Combined Chiefs and Minister and the Secretary of State for
limit his responsibility to planning. They War at once approved the nomination.11
added further that the Commanding Gen- The U. S. Chiefs of Staff agreed to Gen-
eral, ETOUSA, should be considered as eral Morgan’s appointment but not to the
the direct representative of the United reduced planning arrangements. The
States Chiefs of Staff and that he should Combined Chiefs consequently turned
be consulted on all plans with respect to again to consideration of the special com-
the employment of United States forces.7 bined staff. The directive of 5 March was
The American amendments were reintroduced for fresh debate, and the
promptly accepted by the British and the month of April witnessed an interchange
new directive was approved by the Com- of proposals and counterproposals. Out
bined Chiefs on 5 March.8 However, the
question of when the new staff should be
(43) 28th Mtg (0), 24 Feb 43. Marshall wrote that,
organized and what planning responsi- because of an urgency in another theater, no ship-
bility it should have was not thereby ping would be available for lifts to the United King-
settled. The British Chiefs of Staff recom- dom in March and April and that the amount of
shipping to be available in May could not be de-
mended delay. They understood that termined. Minutes also reproduce cable (COS (W)
BOLERO build-up plans had been changed 492) from British Chiefs of Staff to Field Marshal
and that few American troops would ac- Dill asking Dill to elucidate the urgency in another
theater and call to the attention of the U.S. Chiefs
tually be present in the United Kingdom of Staff the British belief that such diversion of
during 1943.9 They reasoned that the cur- shipping from BOLERO constituted an abrogation of
Casablanca decisions. All COS documents, hereafter
cited, are located in SHAEF SGS files, unless other-
6 CCS 169/1, 25 Feb 43; cf. Cbl, Andrews to Mar- wise specified. See Bibliographical Note.
shall, 28 Feb 43. SHAEF SGS file 322.011/3.
7 CCS 169/2,2 Mar 43. 10 COS (43) 58th Mtg, 6 Mar 43.
8 CCS 74th Mtg. The directive was issued as CCS 11 COS (43) 63d Mtg, 12 Mar 43. For General
169/3/D. Morgan’s background and experience, see Lt. Gen.
9 COS (43) 105 (0) (Final), 8 Mar 43. Cf. Cbl, Sir Frederick E. Morgan, Overture to Overlord (New
Marshall to Andrews, 22 Feb 43, cited in Min, COS York, 1950), pp. l-28.
OUTLINE OVERLORD (JANUARY-JULY 1943) 49

of this came a revision of planning tasks. the staff should take. On the understand-
The conviction had grown since Casa- ing then that the supreme commander
blanca that no operations against the would be British, General Morgan recom-
Continent, even of limited scale, would be mended a British organization headed by
possible in 1943. The order to plan such a British chief of staff. He asked that the
operations was therefore struck out and chief of staff be invested with “plenary
instead planners were directed to draw powers, temporarily to impersonate the
up a plan to keep the Germans guessing commander-to-be.” This body should be
about Allied intentions during the year.12 the nucleus of an Allied headquarters,
Although this change in mission was and General Morgan advised against the
the only basic alteration made during establishment of any British GHQ. He
more than a month of discussion, one wanted, on the other hand, to have Brit-
issue was raised that revealed an impor- ish, Canadian, and American army head-
tant difference in attitude between the quarters set up as soon as possible. Allied
U. S. and British Chiefs. This was the headquarters would deal directly with the
question of the target date for the 1944 armies until such time as the build-up of
cross-Channel invasion. Casablanca had forces in the United Kingdom warranted
specified only the year: “an invasion in the interpolation of army group head-
force in 1944.” The March 1943 directive quarters. The Allied staff, General Mor-
read: “full-scale invasion in the spring of gan felt, should effect a “complete amal-
1944.” The British struck out “spring” gamation of the British and American
in their first attempt at amending the di- personnel, sub-branches being headed by
rective. The Americans, in their reply, re- American or British officers as found suit-
stored it. The final directive compro- able.” On the other hand it would be de-
mised: “A full scale assault against the sirable to keep British and American ad-
Continent in 1944, as early as possible."13 ministrative affairs separate. He recom-
The Combined Chiefs finally issued a mended a thorough integration of the
directive on 23 April. By that time the various services throughout the echelons
new organization was already well under of command as low as army. Finally he
way. General Morgan had been told in asked for a grant to his own organization
March that, whatever the final arrange- of “the highest possible degree of auton-
ments, the chief responsibility for plan- omy, at least in the operational sphere.“14
ning cross-Channel operations would be In short, what General Morgan had in
his. He was handed a file of planning mind was a compact planning and co-or-
papers and required to make recom- dinating staff which should enjoy the
mendations on the form that he thought maximum freedom in carrying out its
mission of preparing for cross-Channel
operations and which would represent as
12The debate can be followed in CCS 169 series
and in CCS 80th and 81st Mtgs, 16 and 23 April 1943 completely as possible an integration of
respectively, with additional reference to the British
Chiefs of Staff (COS) papers and meetings already
cited. Cf. Interv, F. C. Pogue with Gen Morgan, 8 14 All quotes from Memo, Morgan for Br COS,
Feb 47. Hist Div files. Cross-Channel Operations, 21 Mar 43, Annex to COS
13 CCS 169 series. (43) 148 (0) , 23 Mar 43.
GENERAL MORGAN, chief OVERLORD planner.
OUTLINE OVERLORD (JANUARY-JULY 1943) 51

all services of both nations, combined to gated completely to commanders of army


plan and ultimately to carry out the su- groups.” 16
preme effort of the Allies against Ger- The original COSSAC staff was di-
many. vided into five branches: Army, Navy,
In general the staff established in April Air, Intelligence, and Administration and
1943 conformed to General Morgan’s Logistics. Each branch, except Intelli-
concept. It was christened COSSAC after gence, was headed by two Principal Staff
the initial letters of Morgan’s new title: Officers, British and American. The In-
Chief of Staff to the Supreme Allied Com- telligence branch initially had only a
mander (designate), and its principal single British head. The Principal Staff
staff officers met officially for the first time Officers, in turn, had separate staffs split
on 17 April. General Morgan was not im- vertically by nationality and horizontally
mediately given either the executive into sections devoted to the preparation
power he asked for or quite the untram- of the various plans for which COSSAC
meled direction he requested over “all was responsible. Thus, for example, the
offensive enterprises of whatever kind Army branch headed by a British and an
initiated from the United Kingdom.” 15 American Principal Staff Officer had two
He was, however, granted sufficient power head planners (British and American)
to tackle the task, and his attitude from and under them British and American of-
the beginning was that of an executive ficers in three sections working respec-
rather than a planner. He told his staff at tively on plan OVERLORD, plan RANKIN
their first meeting that they should not (the plan for a return to the Continent
consider themselves planners. “The term, under conditions of German collapse),
‘Planning staff’ has come to have a most and plan COCKADE (threat to hold the
sinister meaning-it implies the produc- maximum number of German forces in
tion of nothing but paper. What we must the west in 1942). In addition there were
contrive to do somehow is to produce not three advisory sections. Naval and Air
only paper; but action.” This would not branches had more or less parallel divi-
be easy in view of COSSAC’s lack of ex- sions. The Intelligence and Administra-
ecutive authority, but despite that Gen- tive branches were subdivided by sea, air,
eral Morgan said: “My idea is that we and land; in the Administrative branch
shall regard ourselves in the first instance these subdivisions were doubled by na-
as primarily a co-ordinating body. . . . We tionality. The Principal Staff Officers
differ from the ordinary planning staff were responsible for co-ordinating all
in that we are. . . the embryo of the future joint problems before presenting them to
Supreme Headquarters Staff.” He wanted COSSAC. Army, Navy, and Air branches
to model his staff on that of Marshal Foch prepared the outline appreciations and
at the end of World War I-“a really small plans. The Intelligence branch was to
body of selected officers who dealt with supply the necessary information about
the major decisions on broad lines, the
day-to-day work of the war being dele- 16 COSSAC (43) 1st Mtg, 17 Apr 43. All COSSAC
documents referred to are located in the collections
of COSSAC papers and minutes of staff conferences
15 Memo, Cross-Channel Operations, cited n. 14. in SHAEF SGS files. See Bibliographical Note.
52 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

the enemy and the Administrative branch It was impossible to keep COSSAC
analyzed the resources called for. The Ad- small. Even though the day-to-day work
ministrative branch was also responsible was in large part delegated to lower head-
for developing administrative and logis- quarters, the co-ordinating functions of
tical plans within the operational frame- COSSAC continued to expand up to the
work. 17 time when it came of age in January 1944
This organization, though fairly satis- as the Supreme Allied Command. Not
factory at first, became cumbersome as only did its planning duties increase to
COSSAC’s duties and American repre- include, for instance, Civil Affairs and
sentation increased, and as the staff took Publicity and Psychological Warfare, but
on more the complexion of a supreme it became imperative to assume the execu-
headquarters. With the appointment to- tive obligations implicit in COSSAC’s re-
ward the end of June of Air Marshal Sir sponsibility for the cross-Channel opera-
Trafford Leigh-Mallory as Air Com- tion. Thus in the fall of 1943 COSSAC
mander-in-chief pro tern, the COSSAC took over the task of co-ordinating raid-
United States and British air staffs were ing and reconnaissance in northwest Eu-
amalgamated into a single staff.18 This rope in order to relate those activities to
process of fusing nationalities into a the ultimate invasion and to the 1943 di-
single combined organization had started version program.20 A little later General
informally earlier. The Intelligence Morgan assumed a similar responsibility
branch had had a single head from the for directing certain aspects of the parti-
beginning. The Administrative branch san and underground movements on the
was integrated very soon after its forma- Continent, so far as these were strate-
tion under Maj. Gen. N. C. D. Brownjohn gically related to the COSSAC plans.21
(British). On 16 July, General Morgan While organization of the COSSAC
decreed that a single Operations branch staff proceeded, the British took steps to
should be formed with sections grouped form their Army, Navy, and Air high com-
functionally but not separated by na- mands for the invasion. The whole frame
tionality. Complete integration of the of the British field command was firmly
combined headquarters, however, did not established in the spring and early sum-
take place until the fall when Maj. Gen. mer, and each of the service headquarters,
Ray Barker, Deputy Chief of Staff, an- preceding similar U. S. organizations by
nounced the abolition of any division several months, became the nucleus of the
along national lines in favor of a purely
functional organization.19 20COS (43) 217th Mtg (0) , 16 Sep 43; COS (43)
624 (0) , 13 Oct 43.
21 COSSAC’s authority included operational con-
17 COSSAC (43) 12 (First Draft), Provisional Or- trol of all underground movements directed from
ganization of COSSAC Staff, 25 May 43. London, the general direction of planning such
18 See below. Leigh-Mallory had an anomalous ap- movements, and the use and co-ordination of in-
pointment to make decisions on air matters without structions on target priorities. See COSSAC (43) 58
prejudice to the Air Commander-in-Chief when (Final), Proposals for Control by COSSAC of SOE/
appointed. See COSSAC 12th Staff Mtg, 26 Jun 43. SO Activities in Northwest Europe, 20 Oct 43.
19 COSSAC (43) 29th Mtg, 8 Oct 43. Barker was ETOUSA concurred by indorsement on 11 Nov 43.
presiding in the absence of Morgan, who was visit- SHAEF G-3 file Ops C, 322.7 II; cf. COS (43) 237th
ing Washington. See below, Ch. III. Mtg (0). 5 Oct 43.
OUTLINE OVERLORD (JANUARY-JULY 1943) 53

eventual command over the combined October when First U. S. Army was es-
invasion forces. 22 tablished in England.
By July the Second British Army, the The British similarly outdistanced the
First Canadian Army, and 21 Army Americans in creating naval and air com-
Group all had functioning headquarters. mands for invasion. On 5 May the British
The 21 Army Group, under command of Admiralty issued a directive to Admiral
General Sir Bernard Paget, took over Sir Charles Little, Commander-in-Chief,
from the Home Defence Command all Portsmouth, appointing him Naval Com-
planning, training, and executive func- mander-in-chief (designate) for the
tions in regard to British expeditionary cross-Channel operations being planned
forces. General Morgan at once estab- by COSSAC. 24 The appointment was in
lished close liaison with Paget’s staff and addition to his normal duties as com-
depended on them thereafter for detailed mander of all British naval forces operat-
information and advice on the employ- ing out of the Portsmouth area. To han-
ment of British ground forces. More than dle his new assignment he was authorized
that, 21 Army Group became the prin- a special planning staff to be known as
cipal advisers on ground tactics and all Naval Staff (X). 25 His Chief of Naval
matters of army interest in the assault. Staff (X), Commodore J. Hughes-Hallett,
This inevitably followed from the lack of who had commanded the naval force at
any parallel U. S. organization. With V Dieppe, became a member of the
Corps still the highest U. S. tactical head- COSSAC staff in May.26
quarters in the United Kingdom, the All U. S. naval forces operating from
U. S. Army participated in COSSAC plan- the United Kingdom were at that time
ning through theater headquarters, ETO- under Admiral Stark, Commander-in-
USA. In fact, since no table of organiza- Chief Naval Forces in Europe. As in the
tion was set up by the War Department case of the U. S. Army, tactical organiza-
for the U. S. half of the COSSAC staff, the tion for the invasion was delayed until
American COSSAC planners functioned the fall when the Twelfth Fleet under
on detached service from the G-5 (plans) Rear Adm. Alan G. Kirk was organized.27
section of ETOUSA. Although both Gen- Stark’s headquarters, therefore, was
eral Andrews and his successor, Lt. Gen.
Jacob L. Devers, 23 took an active part in 24Ltr, H. N. Morrison to Admiral Little. SHAEF
SGS file 322.01 l/2.
the planning, they could not supply an 25 COS (43) 73d Mtg, 12 Apr 43.
organization parallel to the British for 26COSSAC Staff Conf, 1 May 43. SHAEF SGS file
detailed examination of army problems. 337/14. At the beginning of World War II, Hughes-
Hallett was serving as second in command of the
This deficiency was not remedied until Norfolk. In 1940 he became deputy director of Local
22 Information on establishment of British head- Defence at the Admiralty and followed this tour of
quarters from Intervs, F. C. Pogue with Lt Col H. A. duty with appointment as chairman of the Admir-
Pollock (13 Dec 46), Gen Morgan (8 Feb 47), Gen alty’s radar committee. He went to Combined Opera-
Barker (4 Oct 46)) and Gen Paget (6 Feb 47). Hist tions Headquarters in 1942. In August 1943 Commo-
Div files. dore Hughes-Hallett was replaced on the COSSAC
23 General Andrews was killed in an airplane crash staff by Rear Adm. G. E. Creasy.
in Iceland on 3 May 1943. Devers was assigned to the 27 There had never been any question that the
European post after having served as Chief of the British, who supplied the bulk of the naval forces,
Armored Force at Fort Knox since 1941. would have the Allied naval command.
54 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

charged with co-ordinating U. S. prepara- data accumulated through two years of


tions for OVERLORD with ETOUSA and planning for ROUNDUP and through ex-
COSSAC, but had no specific tactical re- perimentation in minor cross-Channel op-
sponsibility. Admiral Stark, in addition erations. The most important practical
to supplying COSSAC with a U. S. naval experience came from the Dieppe raid in
staff, sent liaison officers to Admiral August 1942. 32 The raid carried out
Little’s headquarters and also to the Ply- under joint British and Canadian com-
mouth and Milford Haven Commands mand33 and largely with Canadian troops
which were the bases from which the U. S. -about one thousand British troops and
naval assault forces would sail.28 fifty U. S. Rangers also took part-was
The beginnings of a Royal Air Force originated in Mountbatten’s Combined
organization for support of ground oper- Operations headquarters in order to test
ations on the European continent were amphibious tactics and techniques in a
made in March 1943. Air Marshal Portal large-scale operation. The most ambitious
then proposed the formation of a “Com- attack on the French coast up to that time
posite Group Headquarters” within the had been the raid on St. Nazaire in March
fighter command, both to test ideas for or- 1942. But St. Nazaire was still only a hit-
ganization for Continental operations and and-run commando foray. Dieppe was
to function as a command if a German planned as a miniature invasion, involv-
collapse should require a return to the ing the full use of combined arms and
Continent before detailed preparations mass landings of infantry and armor with
could be made. The composite group, es- the object of seizing a beachhead. Except
tablished on 19 March, grew rapidly into that there was no intention of holding the
a full-scale tactical air force.29 The Tacti- beachhead, Dieppe was drawn as closely
cal Air Force was formally recognized as as possible to the pattern of a full-scale
existing from 1 June with Air Vice Mar- amphibious attack. Specifically it was de-
shal Sir John Henry d’Albiac in com- signed to test the newly developed LCT
mand.30 Again the U. S. parallel organiza- in landing tanks across the beaches and to
tion came late on the scene with the re- find out whether it would be possible to
constitution in England of the Ninth Air take a port by direct frontal assault. It
Force in October.31 would also test naval organization in man-
aging a considerable landing fleet (253
Size and Shape of the Attack ships and craft), and air organization in
When the COSSAC staff began work, gaining air supremacy over the landing
it had a large amount of experience and area and providing support for the
28Administrative History, U.S. Naval Forces in
ground troops.
Europe, MS, pp. 237ff. Hist Div tiles.
29 COS (43) 149 (0), 23 Mar 43; COS (43) 248 32For full account of the Dieppe raid, see Col C.
(0), 10 May 43. Also documents in British Air Min- P. Stacey, The Canadian Army, 1939-1945: An Of-
istry Collection, excerpted by U.S. Air Forces His- ficial Historical Summary (Ottawa, 1948)) pp. 64-86.
torical Unit. 33The Military Force Commander was Maj. Gen.
30D’Albiac was succeeded in January 1944 by Air J. H. Roberts, commander of the 2d Canadian Divi-
Marshal Sir Arthur Coningham. sion. Naval and air force commanders were British,
31For formation of U.S. commands for OVERLORD, Commodore J. Hughes-Hallett and Air Marshal Sir
see below, Ch. V. Trafford Leigh-Mallory respectively.
OUTLINE OVERLORD (JANUARY-JULY 1943) 55

BRITISH LANDING CRAFT ON BEACH AT DIEPPE

The raid was carried out on 19 August eral to have impressed planners with the
1942 as planned. Tactically, it failed. hardness of the enemy’s fortified shell and
Very heavy enemy opposition resulted in the consequent need for concentrating
severe casualties and the planned with- the greatest possible weight in the initial
drawal nine hours after the touchdown assault in order to crack it.
was carried out under difficulties reminis- Whether as a direct result of Dieppe or
cent of Dunkerque. Besides nearly 1,000 not, ROUNDUP planning in the winter of
dead, about 2,000 Canadians were left be- 1942-43 took a new turn. It had hitherto
hind as prisoners. Of 6,100 men embarked been assumed that attacks against the
on the expedition only 2,500 returned, French coast should be widely dispersed
including an estimated 1,000 men who in order to prevent the enemy from con-
never landed. Although the cost was se- centrating on the destruction of any one
vere, the Dieppe raid provided some valu- beachhead. In November 1942, General
able experience both for the tactics of Barker and Maj. Gen. J. A. Sinclair, chief
amphibious operations and specifically British planner, started on another tack.
for the planning for OVERLORD.34 As con- In examining the requirements for a suit-
cerned the latter, Dieppe seems in gen- able assault area for a major operation,
34For the effect of the Dieppe raid on tactical doc- they premised their study on the principle
trine, see below, Ch. V. of concentration. Abandoning the ROUND-
.56 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

UP idea of many separate regimental and the Allied rate of build-up to compete
commando assaults, they assumed one with that of the enemy. From this, other
main landing in an area capable of de- conditions followed. The area had to con-
velopment into a lodgment for the whole tain one major port that could be cap-
Allied invasion force.35 tured quickly. It was also desirable that a
They then analyzed the conditions es- group of ports be close at hand with suffi-
sential for such an area. It first had to be cient combined capacity, when de-
within range of fighter planes based in the veloped, to support the entire force in
United Kingdom in order that air suprem- later phases of the operation. Since there
acy might counterbalance the unusual was no hope of being able to put captured
hazards of a major amphibious assault. At ports into workable condition until about
the time the study was made, fighter cover three months after the landings, it was
extended only over the coast between equally important that the selected as-
Cherbourg and Knocke (in the north- sault area have beaches suitable for pro-
west corner of Belgium) . Further to in- longed maintenance operations. They
sure air supremacy, the area selected had therefore had to be sheltered from the
to contain airfields or sites for airfields prevailing winds in order to insure con-
which could be made available to Allied tinuous operations even in bad weather.
fighters at an early date.36 More important, the beaches had to have
The beach defenses had to be capable sufficient capacity to receive and rapidly
of reduction by naval fire, air bombard- pass inland the required vehicles and sup-
ment, or airborne troops. It was desirable, plies. The critical considerations here
obviously, that the beach defenses be as were not only the size and firmness of the
weak as possible, but the essential thing beaches but also the existence of adequate
was that there should be a reasonable vehicle exits and adequate road nets be-
chance of neutralizing them. This re- hind the beaches.
quirement, in fact, ruled out only small Having established the conditions es-
beaches dominated by well-defended sential to an assault area for a major in-
cliff positions and areas, such as the vasion, Generals Sinclair and Barker then
Netherlands, where the enemy could de- proceeded to examine various coastal
fend by large inundations which the sectors, matching each with the ideal.
Allies had no means of combatting. None fitted. Only one came close-the
The selected assault area must permit sector around Caen. The Netherlands was
ruled out because it was out of the range
35Capt. M. McLaren, Secretary to the Combined of fighter cover, because its beaches were
Commanders, pointed out that the study reversed the
ROUNDUP concept of maximum dispersion in order too exposed and, being backed by sand
to prevent the enemy from concentrating on the dunes, had inadequate exits for vehicular
destruction of any one bridgehead. Memo, Opera- traffic. Finally the Germans could too
tion OVERLORD--Main Appreciation, 12 Dec 42.
SHAEF G-3 file 370-43. easily defend them by flooding. A scarcity
36This and the following four paragraphs are of beaches-and those small and exposed
from CC (42) 108, Selection of Assault Areas in -disqualified Belgium unless enemy re-
a Major Operation in Northwest Europe. A late
draft (5 Feb 43) is in SHAEF SGS file, Combined sistance was comparatively light and good
Commanders Papers. weather could be counted on for at least
OUTLINE OVERLORD (JANUARY-JULY 1943) 57

a week to allow capture of the group of therefore deemed necessary to seize the
ports from Dunkerque to Zeebrugge. Ac- Seine ports or the Breton group in addi-
tually German defenses of the sector were tion. Decision on which group to secure
very strong, and therefore the feasibility would depend on the final objectives of
of invading it would depend on a sub- the operation and the degree of enemy
stantial lowering of enemy morale. The opposition expected. There were objec-
Pas-de-Calais coast, which ROUNDUP plan- tions to both. To take the Seine ports
ners had regarded as the most likely as- would necessitate crossing the river. De-
sault area, was rejected for a major oper- pendence on the Brittany ports, as al-
ation because the beaches were exposed, ready noted, would mean long lines of
strongly defended, and dominated by communications. This risk, planners
high ground on which the enemy had em- thought, would be acceptable only if it
placed artillery. The larger beaches had were considered “essential to build up a
few exits, and the ports in the area had in- large force west of and protected by the
sufficient capacity to maintain a large River Seine.”
force. Inadequate beaches ruled out the This analysis revised during the early
Seine sector as well, except as an area for months of 1943 was at last approved by
subsidiary assault. It was noted that in the Combined Commanders on 1 March
order to use the ports of Le Havre and and constituted the basic appreciation for
Rouen both banks of the Seine would subsequent cross-Channel planning. The
have to be cleared. On the other hand, immediate result was a new outline plan
simultaneous attacks on both sides of the -the final effort of the Combined Com-
Seine could not be mutually supporting manders before they turned over the
and would therefore be subject to defeat planning job to COSSAC. The new plan,
in detail. The Seine sector could be at- SKYSCRAPER, provided simultaneous land-
tacked with a reasonable chance of suc- ings on the Caen and east Cotentin
cess only after a main assault in the Caen beaches with four divisions in the assault
area. Brittany failed to meet any of the and six in the immediate follow-up. It
major requirements except as to port ca- required in addition eighteen Com-
pacity. It was above all too far from Ger- mandos 37for special assault missions and
many and a lodgment there would result four airborne divisions to interfere with
in long lines of communication in the ad- the movement of enemy reserves. After
vance east. the initial beachhead, including Cher-
The process of elimination left only the bourg, had been established, planners as-
Caen sectors and the Cotentin Peninsula. sumed the next move would be to secure
Caen was desirable from every standpoint additional port capacity for the build-up.
except the lack of adequate ports. It was They advised advance toward the Seine
therefore suggested that Caen be made the ports, but thought the capture of Le
area of main attack with a subsidiary at- Havre might well require a new landing
tack on the east coast of the Cotentin to northeast of the port in support of the
insure the early capture of Cherbourg.
37A Commando was a specially trained and
Even Cherbourg, however, could not equipped British unit roughly equivalent in strength
supply a large invasion force, and it was to a U.S. rifle battalion.
58 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

overland attack. Advance would then consider the general principles enunci-
continue northeast to open the port of ated in the plan.40
Antwerp and establish the armies be- Some of the SKYSCRAPER ideas carried
tween the Pas-de-Calais and the Ruhr.38 over into the OVERLORD planning, since
The avowed object of SKYSCRAPER was many of the Combined Commanders’
to provide a gauge of some of the major planners were transferred to the COSSAC
problems to be faced in the cross-Channel staff. On the other hand, rejection of the
invasion. Chief of these was the large re- SKYSCRAPER approach by the British
quirement for resources, especially in Chiefs of Staff emphasized a break in the
landing craft. Planners stated the case un- planning. The idea of pressing for in-
compromisingly. The requirement for creased resources seemed to have been
ten divisions simultaneously loaded was discouraged in advance. In any case a new
an absolute minimum, they said. Even beginning and a new approach were re-
that would enable the Allies to take on quired. General Morgan made this point
only the present enemy force in the west, explicit when he told his staff to consider
estimated to consist of an average of two that much useful data had been collected
coast defense divisions to each hundred but that no plan worthy of the name
miles of assault area. Furthermore the ten- existed. They were to make the maximum
division assault force would suffice only use of previous planning studies in order
if enemy troop movements could be com- to save time, but the problem, Morgan in-
pletely blocked. sisted, should be seen as something new-
SKYSCRAPER set its sights deliberately something to be tackled afresh as though
high. It was an attempt to break the dead- no planning had gone before. He re-
lock which the tangle of interrelated con- turned therefore to first principles and re-
tingencies had imposed on ROUNDUP plan- created the broad strategic frame.41
ning. Planners were pressing now for a The over-all conception he presented
decision. “If we are to plan and prepare was of a major land campaign culminat-
for the invasion of Western Europe ing in the invasion and occupation of
against opposition,” they wrote, “it must Germany with forces totaling possibly a
be on the understanding that the re- hundred divisions. The opening picture
sources considered necessary are fully was of Anglo-Canadian armies concen-
realized and that it is the intention to pro- trated in the southwest, and the main
vide them.” Therefore, they concluded,
“To defer the decision is to decide not to 40 Formal grounds for tabling the paper were that
be ready.” But the sights seem to have COSSAC was about to begin planning for “definite
operations” and that consideration of general prin-
been set too high. The British Chiefs of ciples would therefore be a waste of time. General
Staff argued that the vague notion of “de- Paget, commander of 21 Army Group, and one of the
termined opposition” could not be used Combined Commanders, believed, however, that
the British Chiefs of Staff were generally unfavorable
as a criterion for the number of assault to the plan because of the huge bill for resources.
divisions needed.39 They decided not to His interpretation is persuasive. See Gen Paget, Notes
on the History of Planning for Operations in North-
West Europe, 30 Dec 43. Hist Div files.
38 Abstract from SKYSCRAPER Plan. Hist Div tiles. 41 COSSAC (43) II, Plan for a Full Scale Invasion
39 COS (43) 61st Mtg (0) , 30 Mar 43. of the Continent in 1944, 25 May 43.
OUTLINE OVERLORD (JANUARY-JULY 1943) 59

army waiting in the United States pre- landings should be made was decided at
paring to cross the Atlantic. The need for this time. In large part, these decisions
maximum fighter cover dictated that the depended on the approximate scale of
assault should be made on the left flank, the operation. While General Morgan
opposite the British forces. American was conceiving the broad outlines of the
forces might then be brought into the operation, his staff worked to crystallize
bridgehead and sent westward to take the the concept in terms of landing craft and
ports through which the main American men. This problem brought them right
army from the United States could be dis- back to basic difficulties faced by all the
embarked. Since this plan would involve cross-Channel planners and solved by
tangling administrative lines, it would none of them. How could one calculate
perhaps be better “to contemplate the the size of the assault? What were the de-
Anglo-Canadian bridgehead as the left termining factors? The Combined Com-
flank guard of American assaults to be de- manders had picked a figure of ten divi-
livered further to the west.” In any case sions, four in the assault and six preloaded
the need for opening the Atlantic ports to insure a continuous build-up during
meant that the initial assaults were to be the time the craft used in the assault were
given a westerly rather than an easterly returning or undergoing repairs for sub-
trend.42 sequent trips. All ten divisions were to
The broad perspective led General land on the first four tides-that is, before
Morgan to only one positive conclusion the end of D plus 1.44 But the only basis
as to the choice of an assault area: it must for this requirement was the Combined
be in France. Although both France and Commanders’ feeling that “a return to the
the Low Countries contained sufficient Continent against determined opposi-
deepwater ports to receive the American tion” could not be successful with a
armies, it was not reasonable to suppose smaller force. In rejecting the whole SKY-
that the ports of the Netherlands and SCRAPER idea, the British Chiefs of Staff
Belgium could be opened up by assault- pointed out that one could not estimate
ing forces. “To demand of the armies of the number of divisions needed to over-
the advanced guard that they should cover come “determined opposition.” 45
the use of the group of ports of the Low In fact, however, no better estimate was
Countries is to demand that they should possible. It was obviously absurd to fore-
in effect themselves fight the battle of cast a year in advance the strength and
Germany.” 43 nature of enemy opposition. The only
possibility was to plan on the basis of Ger-
Landing Craft Requirements man dispositions as they existed in the
spring of 1943, assume a normal distribu-
Neither the precise area of the assault
44 SKYSCRAPER Plan; Memo, Gen Barker for Execu-
nor the question of whether one or many tive Planning Section (ETOUSA) , Requirements of
Landing Craft, 9 Mar 43. SHAEF SGS file 560 I.
42 Note that this is the opposite of the SKYSCRAPER 45 COS (43) 61st Mtg (0) , 30 Mar 43. Note that
principle of pushing northeastward in order to main- the British Chiefs of Staff apparently reversed them-
tain the pressure of the attack on Germany. selves on this point at the Washington Conference
43 COSSAC (43) 11, cited n. 41. in May. See below, section following.
CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

tion of reserves, suppose that German to do operations which otherwise might


commanders would take the best possible prove practical.” He asked General
steps for defense, and add hypothetical Handy for a clear statement on U. S. pro-
calculations from logistical tables on the duction and assurance that the United
capacity of the enemy to move in rein- States could provide the necessary craft
forcements from the east. The net calcu- for a cross-Channel attack.47
lation, however, could easily mean noth- It was not easy to supply assurances on
ing, since the number of unknown factors U. S. production of landing craft. In the
was very large and there was ample time first place the whole idea of using specially
for the whole picture to change com- constructed craft in large numbers for
pletely before the Allies were ready to at- amphibious operations was so new that
tack. no generally accepted doctrine had been
The attempt to find how large an as- developed. Thus in the spring of 1943
sault would be required for the job thus Admiral King was reported as saying:
broke down on the impossibility of judg- ‘L apparently now it is felt assaults can-
". . .
ing with any realism the size of the job. not be made without specially designed
The alternative was to calculate how large craft.” At the same time it was suggested
an assault might be practicable with re- that the landing craft bottleneck might
sources likely to be available and then be partly bypassed by larger use of “make-
try to see how an operation of such size shift” craft such as barges and river
might be assured a reasonable chance for “steamers."48
success. In May Commodore Hughes- Except for small personnel boats the
Hallett, chief British naval planner, made U. S. Navy had had no landing craft at
a guess pending lengthy examination. all until 1937 when it experimented un-
He thought landing craft might be pro- successfully with a tank lighter. The first
cured for simultaneous assault by four successful vehicle landing craft was de-
divisions including 16,000 men in ar- veloped by Andrew J. Higgins, a New
mored landing craft and 12,000 vehicles Orleans boatbuilder, but was not ordered
in LST’s and similar ships. A fifth divi- by the Navy until September 1940 and
sion might be preloaded to land within not contracted for in large numbers until
twenty-four hours. 46 But an estimate of spring of 1942. During the first years of
the, availability of craft was almost as the war the majority of naval leaders re-
shaky as an estimate of the need for them. 47 Memo, Landing Craft for Cross-Channel Opera-
Writing to General Handy in April, Gen- tions, 20 Apr 43. SHAEF SGS file 560 I.
eral Barker said: “Provision of landing 48 JCS 71st Mtg, 30 Mar 43, The British planned to
use barges and coasters in the invasion and had
craft . . . constitutes a continuing bottle- pointed out in April that they were busy converting
neck which not only has to be met ma- barges for such use. They did state, however, that al-
terially, but must also be overcome from though miscellaneous vessels might be useful they
ought not to be employed in the first assault. “There
the psychological and political aspects as is no substitute for specialized landing craft in an
well. In other words a shortage . . . can assault against the most heavily defended coastline in
readily be made the excuse for failure the world, despite the fact that the morale of the
German Army may have deteriorated sufficiently to
46 Memo, 1944 Hypothesis, 15 May 43. SHAEF SGS justify an assault on the Continent.” Note by Br
file (1944 Operations) JPS, CPS 63/l, 16 Apr 43.
OUTLINE OVERLORD (JANUARY-JULY 1943) 61

sisted the development of landing craft as dertaken only on a very small scale and
a foolhardy gamble with an untried mostly outside the established shipbuild-
weapon and a waste of resources badly ing industry which was already working
needed for naval construction.49 to capacity in attempting to meet vastly
The initiative in development of large expanded requirements for merchant and
landing craft was left to the British who, naval war vessels. In June 1940 Prime
for obvious reasons, were much more Minister Churchill personally ordered
seriously impressed with the need for such the design and production of the first
craft. British experimentation with landing craft capable of carrying expedi-
specialized landing craft began after tionary forces. Worked out by the Com-
World War I as a result of the invention bined Operations staff within the British
of the tank. Whereas experience had Admiralty, this became the LCT (Land-
seemed to show that personnel could be ing Craft, Tank), designed to carry three
landed on hostile shores by the regular 40-ton tanks and disembark them in three
vessels of the fleet, the tank clearly could and a half feet of water on steep-gradient
be beached only from a special ramp boat. beaches such as those of Scandinavia. The
In 1920 the British produced a tank first LCT was delivered in November
lighter which, with very few changes, be- 1940. Subsequent development of the
came the LCM (1) (Landing Craft, Mech- LCT was comparatively rapid. In De-
anized). Too small to carry the medium cember 1941 orders were placed for the
tanks used in World War II, the LCM (1) fourth model, LCT (4), the first landing
was nevertheless kept in extensive use for craft designed specifically for the shallow-
transporting other vehicles and supplies. gradient beaches of the French coast. It
In 1938 the British at last abandoned the was to be able to carry six medium tanks
theory that special craft were not needed and to be capable of rapid mass produc-
to land troops. In that year they produced tion.51
the prototype of the LCA (Landing Craft, While the LCT-the basic vehicle-car-
Assault), a small wooden armored craft rying landing craft of World War II-
for ship-to-shore movement of assault in- was being perfected, the British also be-
fantry. The first large orders for LCA’s gan experimenting with a much larger
were placed in September 1939, and sub- ocean-going ship capable of discharging
contracted to small boat and yacht firms. vehicles directly across the beach. Three
Engines for both the LCM and LCA came shallow-draft oilers used on Lake Mara-
from the United States.50 caibo in Venezuela were procured and
The LCM and LCA were designed for converted to prototypes of the LST
raiding operations. Production was un- (Landing Ship, Tank) by cutting off

49Lt. Hamilton S. Putnam and Lt. Craig A. Liv- 51 The production lag in the LCT (4) is worth
ingston, Commander-in-Chief Atlantic Fleet, Am- note. When the boat was ordered the United States
phibious Training Command (United States Naval had just come into the war; planners in England had
Administration in World War II), MS, Vol. I, Ch. worked out only the first tentative plan for an
VIII. Navy Dept files. eventual cross-Channel attack. When the first craft
50This and subsequent information on British was delivered in September 1942, the 1942 season for
landing craft production was supplied by the British amphibious operations in the Channel was already
Admiralty. coming to a close.
62 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

the bows, installing bow ramps, and Niagara River at night, missed the turn-
scooping out the insides to accommodate ing into the Erie Canal and, despite warn-
vehicles. Though designed with shallow ings from the shore, sailed serenely toward
draft, neither the converted Maracaibo the falls. By luck he ran aground a few
nor the first model LST proved satis- hundred yards from the brink. He
factory. Improvements were gradually blandly reported afterward that he had
worked out through experimentation and seen the warning lights at the point where
study by both British and American de- he missed the turning but had paid no
signers. The final result was the LST (Z), attention because he could not figure out
an ocean-going ship capable of grounding what they meant.52
and discharging vehicles on the shallow- Lack of experience delayed the pro-
gradient beaches of France. The United gram but did not seriously jeopardize it.
States undertook the entire production A more serious difficulty, and one which
of the LST (2) for both British and persisted throughout the war, since it had
American use. no final answer, was the establishment
In the spring of 1942 the United States of priorities. The material requirements
began a program for the mass-production for landing craft, chiefly steel and marine
of landing craft for the 1943 cross-chan- engines, had to compete with other high-
nel attack as envisaged in the Marshall priority building programs. The con-
Memorandum. The difficulties of ex- struction of a landing craft fleet in 1942
panding a comparatively small landing was completed only by the issuance of
craft fleet into one for major amphibious emergency directives and the creation of
operations were enormous. The Navy, special expediting machinery. When the
which was to co-ordinate the program, immediate emergency passed with the
and many of the shipyards that were to successful landings in North Africa, land-
carry it out were almost wholly lacking in ing craft construction had to give way in
experience. The program was superim- the competition for materials to other
posed on already swollen naval construc- war production which could claim greater
tion schedules. Contracts therefore had urgency. The President’s January list of
to be let to small boatyards and manufac- “must” programs for 1943 omitted land-
turing companies for whom the construc- ing craft. Escort vessels and merchant
tion problems posed were unprecedented. shipping were a more immediate neces-
The LCT’s and LST’s were built on in- sity. The need for escort vessels, in fact,
land waterways and it became necessary was considered so urgent in the early
to find and train crews to sail them to months of 1943 that the machinery which
Atlantic ports. The U. S. Coast Guard, had been set up to expedite production
which formed the Ferry Command in of landing craft was diverted to perform
July, undertook this task with almost no the same function for destroyer escorts.
technically competent personnel. Typical The 1942 landing craft program ended as
of the greenness prevailing to some extent scheduled in February with a record pro-
throughout the landing craft program was duction of 106,146 light displacement
the story of a young Ferry Command 52 Putnam and Livingston, Amphibious Training
skipper who, piloting his craft down the Command, cited n. 49.
OUTLINE OVERLORD (JANUARY-JULY 1943) 63

tons. From then on it declined and in May LST’s,” a Navy spokesman strongly re-
was stabilized at about 60,000 tons commended that no change be made in
monthly. This figure was carried forward current production schedules. “It should
for deliveries during the first half of be remembered that in order to get the
1944.53 present LST’s on time we have to cut
In March 1943 the question of increas- across every single combatant ship pro-
ing the production of landing craft, par- gram and give them over-riding priority
ticularly for a cross-Channel invasion, in every navy yard and in every major
came before the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The civilian ship-building company. We have
British at that time asked the United not and will not for the next 6 -months
States to examine the possibility of in- recover from all the derangements suf-
creasing production, because a shortage fered from the last over-riding Amphibi-
of LCT’s and LST’s was likely to make ous Boat Program. In my opinion any-
a cross-Channel invasion in 1944 difficult. thing approaching a repetition of the
They added that Britain could not do previous program would be disastrous
anything about it since British produc- from a standpoint of all other Naval con-
tion was already proceeding at the max- struction. . . .” 56
imum rate. The British request was met
with some suspicion.54 The Joint Chiefs Allotment of Resources, May 1943
were inclined to question whether the
British were making full use of their own From the point of view of the COSSAC
resources. Admiral King stated flatly that planners in London, the failure to take
any substantial increase in the rate of timely steps to increase landing craft pro-
production of landing craft would cause duction looked at best like shortsighted-
serious delays and conflicts with other ness and at worst like a deliberate attempt
programs. 55The Navy recalled with alarm to sabotage the cross-Channel. invasion.
the dislocation in naval construction Washington, however, had a larger, more
caused by the 1942 landing craft program. difficult perspective. The Joint Chiefs
After noting that the present schedules were concerned not only with a European
for delivery of craft during 1943 and early invasion but with establishing the best
1944 would “in no way near approximate possible balance of forces to carry on the
previous deliveries except in the case of global war. In the spring of 1943 they
53 George E. Mowry, Landing Craft and the WPB were still operating under the Casablanca
(Historical Reports on War Administration: WPB statement of strategy which required that
Special Study No. II), rev. ed. (Washington, 1946). defeat of the German submarine should
pp. 7, 19-21, 25.
54One of the principal American planners noted be a first charge on the resources of the
that lack of landing craft might be one reason for the United Nations. The German submarine
difficulty of launching an invasion in 1944, but, on had not yet been defeated; on the contrary
the other hand, “we have never had tangible indica-
tion that the British intend to launch [a] cross- 56Memo, W. S. Farber for Admiral Home, Bates
Channel operation.” Penciled note on Gen Wede- of Production for Landing Craft, App. A to Min.
meyer’s copy (Copy 4) of CPS 63. Production of JCS 71st Mtg. Rear Adm. Farber was head of the
Landing Craft, 19 Mar 43, incl to JCS 248, 26 Mar Fleet Maintenance Division (December 1946-Oc-
43. P&O Implementing Section files. tober 1943). Vice Adm. Home was Vice Chief of
55JCS 71st Mtg, 30 Mar 43. Naval Operations for Materiel.
64 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

the United Nations in March had lost a were to become pivots of higher strategy.
near record tonnage of shipping.57 Any For the future of cross-Channel opera-
decision to curtail the production of es- tions in particular, the work of the plan-
cort vessels would not therefore have ners in Washington in May was vastly
seemed justified. Requests to increase more significant than the pronounce-
landing craft production were at this time ments of the President and Prime Minis-
extremely vague. No one could say how ter. The repercussions of landing craft
many more LCT’s or LST’s would be re- decisions were to be felt all during the
quired. No one could state categorically following year until Churchill at last
that the current production schedules complained with some bitterness that
would not yield sufficient craft for pro- “the destinies of two great empires . . .
posed operations. It has already been seemed to be tied up in some god-dammed
pointed out that the planners’ estimates things called LST’s whose engines them-
for a cross-Channel invasion had varied selves had to be tickled on by . . . LST
from a five- to a ten-division lift. By May engine experts of which there was a great
the only conclusion reached was General shortage.“59
Morgan’s warning that although require- At the Washington Conference the first
ments of landing craft could not yet be British statement of requirements for a
forecast they would be “large enough . . . 1944 cross-Channel invasion included
to present a very serious problem, which 8,500 landing ships and craft to provide a
has no precedent.” 58 lift for ten divisions simultaneously
It was with this basic uncertainty as to loaded for the assault. American plan-
their needs that the British planners ar- ners, comparing this figure with esti-
rived in Washington in May 1943 to mated production rates, came up with
settle, among other things, the allocation the conclusion that the demand was im-
of resources for 1944 operations in the possible of fulfillment. It was, in fact, so
European theater. The availability of re- far out of line with reality that the U. S.
sources was a planning problem and Chiefs of Staff at once suspected the good
scarcely a whisper of it reached the high faith of the British in proposing it. They
council chambers where the President wondered whether the impossible bill for
and Prime Minister, with the advice of shipping had not been presented to pro-
the Combined Chiefs, sought to mark out vide the British with an excuse for not
world-wide strategy. Yet the whole dis- doing the operation. 60 They ignored the
cussion was colored by the higher level fact that the estimate of ten divisions for
debates on strategy and, in turn, decisions the assault had been arrived at by com-
on landing craft made at planning level bined planners in London and had been
sr History of the Commander-in-Chief Atlantic specifically agreed to by ETOUSA.61 In
Fleet (United States Naval Administration in World
War II), MS, p. 463. Navy Dept files; cf. Samuel E. 59 Quoted in Memo, ASW (J. J. McCloy) for
Morison, The Battle of the Atlantic (History of Marshall, 26 Apr 44. OPD files, mist bk. 18.
United States Naval Operations in World War II: I) 60JCS Mtgs, 14-19 May 43.
(Boston, 1947) , pp. 315, 326, 344, 403. 61 ETOUSA approval noted in Memo, Barker for
58 Memo, Morgan for Br COS, Landing Craft Re- Executive Planning Section (ETOUSA) , Require-
quirements for Cross-Channel Operations, 24 May 43, ments for Landing Craft, 9 Mar 43. SHAEF SGS file
COSSAC (43) 5. 560 I.
OUTLINE OVERLORD (JANUARY-JULY 1943) 65

the context of British arguments at the terranean strategy predisposed the U. S.


Washington Conference for further op- Chiefs of Staff to an acceptance of 1943
erations in the Mediterranean and of production rates as a limiting factor on
their openly expressed doubts as to the the scale of Continental operations in
feasibility of a cross-Channel invasion un- 1944. It became politic to avoid discuss-
less German strength in the west could ing the possibility of increasing landing
be drastically reduced, the suspicion ap- craft production. The issue had to be
peared logical. Admiral King, in par- rescued from the quicksands of hypo-
ticular, was convinced that the British thesis.
had no intention of invading the Conti- It was. British planners arguing for a
nent in the spring of 1944. He thought ten-division assault felt themselves on un-
they would wreck the prospects of ROUND- sure ground. Rear Adm. C. M. Cooke of
UP “on the matter of the number of the U. S. Joint Planning Staff commented
landing craft.” General Marshall, taking that each of the British planning papers
a more temperate and optimistic view, seemed to contain a different assessment
agreed that ROUNDUP in its conception as of landing craft requirements, and that
a ten-division assault must be recognized their original figure of 8,500 had been
as “a logistic impossibility” in the spring “talked down” to 4,000.63 As the British
of 1944.62 Chiefs of Staff had previously admitted,
It was clear, then, that to argue against there were no grounds for defending the
the British concept of continuing attacks arbitrary estimate of ten divisions in the
in the Mediterranean which the Joint assault except a feeling that overwhelm-
Chiefs consistently maintained were in- ing strength would be needed. Since this
capable of decisive results it was neces- was obviously relative and no one could
sary to reduce the size of the contem- foretell what it would be relative to, the
plated cross-Channel invasion to some- argument could not carry much weight.
thing within the range of logistic pos- The Joint Chiefs of Staff instructed
sibility. The Joint Chiefs discussed such their planners to re-examine American
an operation as a “glorified SLEDGEHAM- and British capabilities for supplying
MER" and conceived it as employing some troops and landing craft. The planners
twenty divisions, which meant scaling reported that, assuming two operations
down the number of actual assault divi- in the Mediterranean after the conquest
sions to a logistically reasonable force. of Sicily, landing craft could be made
Thus, their doubts as to the seriousness available in the United Kingdom by the
of British commitment to a Continental spring of 1944 sufficient to lift five divi-
invasion in 1944, whether justified or sions simultaneously, three for the assault
not, helped shape their position that and two for the immediate follow-up.
‘planning should be for an operation They believed a “second follow-up force
possible with the resources which would of two divisions can be floated by landing
certainly be on hand in the spring of craft used in the assault on their first
1944. In other words the search for a turnaround augmented as practicable by
tenable ground to argue against Medi- miscellaneous craft which can be pro-
62JCS 85th Mtg, 19 May 43. 63 Ibid.
66 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

vided in the United Kingdom.’’64 De- ton estimates were based on quite differ-
tailed figures actually revealed a deficit ent assumptions. For instance, while
of lift for 500 vehicles, but this was con- COSSAC allotted 3,000 vehicles to each
sidered small enough to be acceptable assault division to be carried in major
for planning purposes. Troops available landing ships or craft, Washington plan-
in the United Kingdom at the target ners figured 4,380.67
date were estimated to total from twenty- The Washington estimates of the aver-
six to thirty divisions depending on age capacity of the various types of craft
whether cannibalization of four British also differed significantly from COSSAC’s
divisions proved necessary in order to reckoning. 68 These discrepancies are un-
find line of communications troops. derstandable when the nature of the
These planning figures were accepted problem of estimating ship capacities is
without significant debate and it was considered. In the first place a “vehicle”
agreed that General Morgan would be is a flexible term covering everything
ordered to confine his plan to the de- from a 1/4-ton trailer to a tank retriever.
tailed allotment of 4,504 landing ships In actual loading for the operation, for
and craft which planners figured would instance, VII Corps LCT’s carried from
be available.65 In addition to the five three to twenty-eight vehicles, depending
divisions seaborne in the assault, Morgan on the type. In striking an average for
would plan to use two airborne divisions an assault force, much depended on the
for which he was allotted an admittedly exact composition of the force. Further-
inadequate number of transport air- more the average was not likely to obtain
craft.66 when applied to smaller units of the
The whole calculation was necessarily assault which, for tactical reasons, might
based on a number of highly debatable have to be loaded without regard to econ-
assumptions, which had not been agreed omy of space. Thus, the higher the aver-
on by the various planning groups and age capacity for planning purposes, the
which had not been tested by a large- more inflexible the tactical employment
scale amphibious operation against a de- of the force. Until the tactical plan was
fended coast. By May the COSSAC naval known, planning estimates would natur-
staff had adopted a “Standard Method for ally vary according to the planner’s
Forecasting Landing Craft Require- knowledge of, or feeling about, the diffi-
ments.” But this was not used at the culty of the actual operation contem-
Washington Conference. The Washing- plated. Throughout the planning period
it was generally true that the Americans
64 CPS 71, Report by Sub-Committee on Availabil-
ity of Landing Craft for ROUNDHAMMER, 20 May 43. tended to be more optimistic than the
ROUNDHAMMER was the code name used at the Wash- 67 Washington estimated only 2,760 vehicles for
ington Conference for the cross-Channel attack. Con- the follow-up divisions, thus striking an average for
ceived as an operation midway in size between the old the five divisions of 3,730. What are called in the
SLEDGEHAMMER and ROUNDUP, it borrowed part of each text “Washington estimates” are all those of the
code name. subcommittee referred to in note 64.
65 Of these, 3,257 would be supplied by the British; 68 Washington figures: LCT (3) and (4) -15
1,247 by the United States. vehicles: LCT (5) and (6) -12 vehicles; LST-50
66 This was to represent no real problem, however. vehicles. COSSAC figures: LCT (all types) -10 ve-
See below. Ch. V. hicles: LST-60 vehicles.
OUTLINE OVERLORD (JANUARY-JULY 1943) 67

British about the difficulties of the assault Another important factor largely omit-
and hence more willing to push planning ted from reckoning at Washington was
figures upward toward the theoretical the need for close-support craft. The
maximum. The most optimistic Ameri- principal types mounted guns, rockets,
cans were those on this side of the water. or mortars on LCT hulls or similar bot-
One of the greatest weaknesses of the toms. They therefore had to be figured
Washington calculations which fixed into the total production requirements
COSSAC’s resources was that they did for landing craft, even though they pro-
not take into account possible loss or vided no assault lift. The failure to allot
damage to craft in the assault or the time them in anything like adequate numbers,
required for ships to turn around and in fact, forced COSSAC to convert some
come back for the build-up forces. As LCT’s and thus increased the shortage
one of the chief COSSAC planners of landing craft.71
pointed out, the provision of sufficient The net effect of the Washington Con-
landing craft for the assault and first ference decisions was narrowly to restrict
twenty-four hours did not necessarily in- not only the size of the cross-Channel
sure an adequate build-up.69 The build- assault but the degree of flexibility with
up would depend in large part on what which tactical dispositions could be
ships came back from the assault. How planned. As planning progressed it
long would it take them to return, how would become increasingly apparent that
many would be lost, how many damaged, the allocations agreed to by the Com-
how fast could the damaged craft be re- bined Chiefs of Staff in May 1943 were
paired? It would have been impossible wholly inadequate for the job. But for
for the Washington planners to have ar- the moment the figures were accepted
rived at any firm estimates along these without serious demur from any quarter.
lines because the choice of an assault It has already been suggested that this
area had not then been settled and con- ready agreement to mount the cross-
sequently the nature of enemy opposition Channel invasion on a shoestring sprang
could not even be guessed .at nor the at least in part from the context of the
length of the sea voyage determined.70 Washington Conference. American con-
cern with getting a firm decision on a
69Memo, Brig Gen K. McLean (Br Army Ops definite operation with a definite target
Branch), Landing Craft Requirements (Comment
on Memo by Naval Chief of Staff, 15 May), 26 May date led to a willingness to accept an
43. SHAEF SGS file 560 I. operation scaled to resources evidently
70It is interesting, in this connection, that both within the capacities of the Allies. The
Washington and COSSAC planners in May were
contemplating shore-to-shore sailings of the small British were not likely to take serious
assault craft (LCA’s and LCVP’s) . This could have issue. They attached little importance
been feasible only if the force sailed from Dover to to long-range commitments and con-
assault the Pas-de-Calais coast. The longer voyage
to the Caen area could not have been made in rough
Channel weather by LCA-type boats. Commodore Memo, Hughes-Hallett for CCO, Cross-Channel
Hughes-Hallett planned to sail a portion of the Operations: 1944 Hypothesis (Requirements for
LCA’s from Dover and carry the rest on LSI (S) ‘s. LCI (S) ) , 22 May 43. SHAEF SGS file 560 I; cf. CPS
Washington planners did not contemplate carrying 71, App. B, 20 May 43.
any of the smaller craft aboard larger ships. See 71 See below, Ch. III.
68 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

sistently deprecated discussions of stra- Allies could throw against the Continent
tegic principles. They were always more -limitations chiefly due to landing craft
interested in the operation which came but also inherent in the nature of am-
next on the war agenda.72 phibious operations. To ignore these
For the British in May 1943, the would be to risk entering a build-up race
next logical operation was a follow-up in which the Allies could probably never
in the Mediterranean of the invasion of hope to achieve the necessary margin of
Sicily, which was scheduled for July. The superiority. Furthermore, failure to
main project for 1943, they said, was the maintain the momentum of attack in the
elimination of Italy. “The collapse of Mediterranean would cast away an un-
Italy,” said the Prime Minister, “would rivaled opportunity to inflict mortal in-
cause a chill of loneliness over the Ger- jury on Germany and would give her a
man people, and might be the beginning chance to prepare to parry the final blow.
of their doom.” 73 The British Chiefs of “The final blow,” they admitted, “can
Staff contended that Mediterranean oper- only be struck across the Channel; it can-
ations were not only the most important not be delivered from the Mediter-
immediate objective but that they were ranean.” 75 But it was essential to do
also essential in order to create condi- everything possible to exhaust and
tions which would permit the mounting weaken Germany before the blow was
of ROUNDUP in the spring of 1944.74 In struck.
General Brooke’s opinion, without fur- With the conclusion the U. S. Chiefs
ther Mediterranean operations, ROUNDUP of Staff agreed. It was the method they
would not be possible before 1945 or challenged. They did not believe that
1946. In a detailed estimate of the prob- such “minor” operations in the Mediter-
able situation in northwest Europe in ranean as were within the capabilities of
1944, the British planners concluded that the United Nations would draw German
the Allies could not hope to compete forces from Russia even if they resulted
successfully with enemy build-up either in the collapse of Italy. They believed
on the ground or in the air unless the that the main effort against Germany in
enemy’s ability to reinforce his coastal 1943 would have to be made by the
defenses was weakened by forced with- Soviet Union and that the United States
drawals to take over the defense of Italy and Great Britain were incapable of
and Italian commitments in the Balkans. effective intervention. On the other
They pointed out that there were definite hand, the Soviets would probably still
limitations to the weight which the need help in 1944. The Western Allies
72 See, for instance, CCS, 288/2, 29 Jul 43, in which could put themselves in a position to
the British Chiefs of Staff, proposing an agenda for render really effective aid then provided
the Quebec Conference, wanted to “dispense with that they did not dissipate their re-
lengthy discussions on over-all strategic concepts or
global strategy” and talk about specific operations. sources on side shows in 1943.76 Tenta-
73 1st White House Mtg, 12 May 43. OPD files, tively the Americans suggested that a
Min of TRIDENT Conf.
74CCS 87th Mtg, 18 May 43; CCS 234, Defeat of 75 CCS 234.
the Axis Powers in Europe (Elimination of Italy 76 CCS 235, Defeat of Axis Powers in Europe, 18
First), 17 May 43. May 43.
OUTLINE OVERLORD (JANUARY-JULY 1943) 69

limited bridgehead operation against the size and target date for the cross-Channel
Continent might be attempted during operation. The decisions of the confer-
1943. But they did not press the point ence as they affected the plan which COS-
against British objections that the bridge- SAC would soon christen OVERLORD pro-
head would lock up the Allied divisions vided that “forces and equipment”
employed, cause the Germans to concen- should be established in the United
trate in France, and so make later inva- Kingdom “with the object of mounting
sion more difficult. The President ex- an operation with target date 1 May 1944
pressed the gist of the American point of to secure a lodgment on the Continent
view at the first plenary session. He dis- from which further offensive operations
liked the idea of possibly playing into can be carried out.“78 The Combined
German hands by committing large Chiefs agreed to allot five infantry divi-
United Nations armies in Italy where sions for the assault, two infantry divi-
they were in danger of suffering attrition. sions for the initial build-up,79 two air-
On the other hand he agreed with the borne divisions, and an additional twenty
Prime Minister that American and divisions to be available in England for
British forces should not be idle between movement into the lodgment area.
the conclusion of the Sicilian campaign The decision on the target date was
and the spring of 1944.77 made without much debate. The Joint
In the final decision of the conference Chiefs of Staff first proposed 1 April as
the latter consideration prevailed. The the earliest date when suitable weather
debate was resolved more easily than could be expected and as the date that
similar debates at later conferences, be- coincided with the conclusion of the
cause it did not involve an immediate planned bomber offensive designed to
choice between alternative courses of prepare the attack chiefly by knocking
action. The Americans opposed Medi- out German air power.80 General Brooke
terranean operations not in themselves proposed a postponement of one month
but only as they might delay attack on to avoid the spring thaw in Russia and
northwest Europe. The British opposed so permit the Soviet Union to launch a
not the cross-Channel attack but only
the exclusive devotion of resources to it 78 Draft Supplementary Directive to COSSAC, Am-
which would rule out action in the Medi- phibious Operations from the UK, incl B to CCS
250/l, 25 May 43.
terranean. The British feared an im- 79There is some confusion on the term “follow-
mediate opportunity would be thrown UP.” The Washington agreement reads five divi-
away through narrow concentration on sions in the assault and two in the follow-up.
By later usage, however, this is a misnomer. The
the main goal. The Americans feared follow-up as generally used in the planning period
that by taking the immediate opportun- and as consistently used in this book means divisions
ity the chance to pursue the main goal not taking part in the initial assault but preloaded
in craft and shipping to come in immediately be-
might be lost or seriously delayed. hind the assault units. Build-up units are those
The conference was able to straddle landed on subsequent trips by craft already employed
the disagreement. The Joint Chiefs of in the assault and follow-up waves--or more gener-
ally any units which are not actually on board ship
Staff secured a firm commitment on the at the time the assault is mounted.
77 1st White House Mtg, TRIDENT Conf. 80 See below, Ch. VI.
70 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

co-ordinated offensive. This was agreed. addition to the cross-Channel attack


Admiral King even indicated that a still itself, actions to make the Germans be-
later date might be acceptable and he lieve the Allies would invade Europe dur-
commented that target dates were seldom ing 1943, and operations to take place in
met anyway. The Joint Chiefs were case of German collapse.
mainly concerned that some date be fixed
to pin down the commitment to the Cockade
operation and insure a certain urgency in The main objective of the diversionary
the planning and preparation. scheme for 1943, planned under the code
The Joint Chiefs yielded to British name COCKADE, was to pin German forces
arguments so far as to sanction further in the west by encouraging German ex-
operations in the Mediterranean but pectations of an Allied invasion during
only with provisos that strictly limited that year. In addition, by including an
Mediterranean commitments. Each spe- actual amphibious feint, General Mor-
cific operation in the Mediterranean to gan hoped to provoke an air battle that
follow HUSKY (the invasion of Sicily) would contribute to the destruction of
was to be subject to approval by the Com- the German Air Force.
bined Chiefs of Staff. General Eisen- This over-all plan included three sep-
hower, Commander in Chief in North arate operations, each threatening a dif-
Africa, could use for his operations only ferent portion of the enemy-held coast.
the forces already allotted to his theater. The U. S. Army’s allotted portion of the
It was further agreed that four U. S. and plan was Operation WADHAM, embodying
three British combat-experienced divi- a threat to the Brest Peninsula and de-
sions in the Mediterranean would be signed to persuade the Germans into
held in readiness from 1 November on- overestimating the strength of U. S.
ward for transfer to England to take part forces in the United Kingdom.82 The
in the cross-Channel operation.81 This threat was carried out by forces under V
was a particularly important decision in Corps. At the same time British forces
hardening the resolution to turn in 1944 in Scotland simulated preparations for
from the Mediterranean to northwest attack against Norway (Operation TIN-
Europe. DALL). But the heart of COCKADE was
Operation STARKEY 83directed against the
The COSSAC Plans Pas-de-Calais and designed to include, as
an amphibious feint, a landing exercise,
The decisions of the Washington Con- HARLEQUIN. Plagued, as usual, by the
ference were made known to COSSAC shortage of landing craft, COSSAC was
late in May. In the meantime the obliged in the end to halt HARLEQUIN
COSSAC staff had begun developing short of embarkation, but the rest of the
plans for the three operations for which STARKEY plan was carried through, cul-
it was responsible. These included, in
82For additional details on WADHAM see V Cot-PS
History (Paris, 1945), p. 20.
81CCS 242/6, Final Report to the President and 83C0SSAC (43) 4 (Final), Operation ‘Starkey,’
Prime Minister, 25 May 43. 26 Jun 43.
OUTLINE OVERLORD (JANUARY-JULY 1943) 71

minating in minesweeping operations in was not an operational plan at all.85 It


the Channel at the beginning of Septem- was not a blueprint for maneuver. No
ber. field order could have been issued on the
It is peculiarly difficult to assess the basis of it, and no troop dispositions
effects of operations like COCKADE. made. It was a plan for planning, not a
Neither in the routine Allied intelligence plan for action. Its tone was discursive,
reports nor in surviving German records not precise and peremptory. It reflected
is there evidence of specific and overt the fact that it was drawn by a staff in
German reaction. No new troop disposi- the absence of the commander, and it
tions were ordered in expectation of im- made a patent effort to refrain from tying
mediate invasion of France. On the other the commander’s hand, especially in
hand, the German defenders in the west examining the later phases of the opera-
were in some stage of alert during most tion. It was designed to answer the ques-
of 1943 and it is plausible to suppose tion implicit in the May decisions of the
that knowledge of Allied activities con- Combined Chiefs of Staff. Given certain
tributed at least in some measure to their resources, was an operation against the
tenseness. General Morgan, though un- Continent possible in the spring of 1944?
certain as to enemy reaction, believed COSSAC arrived at an answer in Outline
that certain naval activity in the Chan- OVERLORD, first by narrowing down the
nel and the flooding of the lowlands be- problem through rejecting courses of
hind Caen and the Cotentin beaches action that seemed impossible with the
might be “reasonably ascribed” to the given means, and then by outlining cer-
feints.84 Whatever the full effect may tain conclusions as to the size and shape
have been on the enemy, COCKADE had and limiting conditions of a feasible
one clear value for the Allies in provid- operation. Within that outline, details
ing experience for planning the success- were only tentatively sketched in.
ful diversionary activities of 1944. Previous planning had already ob-
served that geography placed rigid limits
Outline Overlord on the operation. Earlier planners con-
The duties of COSSAC in supervising cluded that only two geographically feas-
the execution of COCKADE continued, as ible assault areas existed-the Caen
noted, through the summer of 1943, but region and the Pas-de-Calais. Although
the staff’s chief planning energies were 85 COS (43) 416 (0)) Operation OVERLORD,Report
turned at the beginning of June to the and Appreciation, 30 Jul 43, cited hereafter as Out-
preparation of OVERLORD. Six weeks line OVERLORD. Department of the Army files contain
several copies of the plan. The one used is in SHAEF
later they had written the outline plan. SGS file 381 Ia.
Before examining the details of that The OVERLORD Plan consists of a Digest, three main
plan, it is important to observe its gen- parts: (I, Selection of a Lodgement Area: II, Ap-
preciation and Outline Plan for the Opening Phase
eral character. up to the Capture of Cherbourg; III, The Develop-
Outline OVERLORD, in the strict sense, ment of Operations after the Capture of Cherbourg),
and twenty-four appendixes (with maps) which in-
clude discussions of alternative courses of action and
84 COS (43), 207th Mtg. 4 Sep 43; cf. Morgan, studies of special problems. Digest of the plan is
Overture to Overlord, pp. 100-103. reprinted below as Appendix A.
72 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

the most recent appreciation made at the summed up: “Not only does the strength
end of 1942 had rejected the Pas-de- of the defences demand a weight of
Calais, General Morgan revived the idea. assault which the restricted capacity of
The Pas-de-Calais had certain obvious the beaches cannot admit, but the re-
attractions, inherent chiefly in its prox- strictions imposed by the beaches do not
imity to England. Morgan, though recog- allow a rapid build-up. Further, even
nizing its disadvantages, was reluctant to if assault were practicable, the geography
dismiss it out of hand. He therefore of the area does not permit of the capture
ordered that the British Army opera- of sufficient ports to maintain the force,
tions branch of COSSAC prepare an esti- and the terrain does not allow of the
mate and outline plan for an assault on defence and exploitation of the bridge-
the Pas-de-Calais while the American head by the occupation of successive
branch worked on an operation against natural obstacles.” 87
Caen. Before the end of the month planners
This order was given early in June had ruled out assaults at Le Havre and
1943 and about two weeks later the on the Cotentin Peninsula.88 But with
British planners had delivered their rejection of the Pas-de-Calais, the deci-
answer. They agreed with the earlier sion had actually been made that the
planning conclusion. An attack on the main attack would take place in the
Pas-de-Calais, they said, must be con- vicinity of Caen. (Map I)* Assault land-
sidered strategically unsound.s6 The ings would be confined to three beaches
British appreciation, embodied later in (Lion-sur-Mer-Courseulles, Courseulles-
an appendix to the OVERLORD plan, rein- Arromanches-les Bains, and Colleville-
forced the reasoning of earlier planners. sur-Mer-Vierville-sur-Mer).89 This, Gen-
The COSSAC staff found only four eral Morgan decided, was the maximum
beaches in the Pas-de-Calais suitable for area that could be successfully attacked
assault. These could receive a theoretical with the limited forces at his disposal.
maximum of two assault divisions on He rejected the earlier idea of a simul-
D Day provided no delay were imposed taneous landing on the eastern beaches
by landing obstacles or enemy resistance. of the Cotentin, although he recognized
Since there were no ports in the region its value, and told the British Chiefs of
and the beaches were unsheltered, Staff that he would like such a landing
blocked, and heavily defended, it seemed if he could have craft for an extra assault
obvious that the Allies’ rate of build-up division.90
could not hope to compete with the * Maps numbered in Roman are placed in inverse
order inside the back cover.
enemy’s. The expansion of the beach- 87 Outline OVERLORD, App. C.
head, moreover, to include major ports 88 COSSAC (43) 13th Mtg, 2 Jul 43.
for the subsequent maintenance of the 89 These beaches in the event were the center of
the OVERLORD assault after the operation was ex-
invasion force would require long flank panded from three to five assaulting divisions. The
marches east to Antwerp or southwest to first two beaches were British in both the COSSAC
the Seine ports, both across the whole and the later plan. The last-named (Colleville-
Vierville) was the beach later called OMAHA.
front of the German army. They 90JP (43) 260 (Final), Commentary on Opera-
86 COSSAC (43) 11th Mtg, 19 Jun 43. tion OVERLORD,3 Aug 43. SHAEF SGS file 381 Ia.
OUTLINE OVERLORD (JANUARY-JULY 1943) 73

As it was, the plan was to land two of a large fleet and in order to direct
British divisions over the two eastern effective fire support. This requirement,
beaches in the Caen sector, one U.S. the planners added, was likely to be de-
division over the western beach, and two- cisive, even though, from the Army’s
thirds of one British airborne division in standpoint, an approach to the shore by
the vicinity of Caen.91 In addition, vari- night would be desirable to help pre-
ous subsidiary assaults would be neces- serve surprise up to the last moment.
sary by commandos and parachutists to It was noted that the initial landing
neutralize key enemy coastal batteries, should take place about three hours be-
secure crossings over the River Aure, and fore high water in order that a good-sized
form a defensive flank on the Vire. De- force might be landed on the first tide.
tails of these missions were left for later Calculations to tie in weather, tide, and
planning. hours of daylight would be made only in
D Day was, of course, not selected, but later planning, when the optimum con-
some of the weather and tidal conditions ditions for H Hour were finally settled.
governing its selection were discussed. The choice of the Caen area meant a
Since the target date (Y Day) was 1 May, decision to delay the capture of ports
D Day would fall some time during the needed for the maintenance of a large
month. There were likely to be twenty- invasion force. Cherbourg, even if cap-
three days in May on which the prevail- tured early, would not be adequate to
ing wind force would permit the beach- support the twenty-nine divisions which
ing of landing craft. Quiet spells of four were to be put into the lodgment area.
days or more could be expected twice Throughout the initial phases of the
during the month. 92But forecasting them operation a large proportion of supplies
was another matter. The odds were ten would have to be landed across the in-
to three that a three-day spell of good vasion beaches. General Morgan ac-
weather could be predicted twenty-four cepted the risk of prolonged beach main-
hours in advance. The incidence of suit- tenance because he counted on the com-
able weather for the airborne operation pletion of at least two artificial ports
was still under investigation when the which were then being developed.
plan was issued, and it was simply noted The bold and revolutionary idea of
that this would probably impose still prefabricating ports in England and tow-
narrower limitations on the choice of ing them across the Channel had been
D Day. talked about in 1942, but experimenta-
The question of whether the assault tion did not begin in earnest until the
should take place in daylight or darkness summer of 1943. The essential ingre-
was not definitely decided though it was dients of the artificial ports (which, in
pointed out that the Navy required day- the prevailing fashion of code names,
light in order to control the operations were called MULBERRIES) were the break-
waters to supply sheltered water in which
91Presumably at the same time as the seaborne small craft could ferry supplies to the
landings, although the plan does not make this clear.
92A quiet spell was defined as a period in which beaches, and a floating pier (connected
the maximum wind force was nine knots. by treadway to the beach) at which
74 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

larger vessels could unload directly into mum of armor at their disposal as early
trucks. The solution at last developed as possible. “The normal German sys-
for the breakwater was to combine tem,” COSSAC observed, “is to concen-
sunken ships with the so-called phoenixes trate reserves well forward behind threat-
-hollow, floating concrete caissons about ened sectors, in order to get the maxi-
six stories high. The phoenixes were to mum forces into action on D Day. . . .
be towed across the Channel and then The crux of the operation will be our
sunk, by opening sea cocks, and anchored ability to land forces quickly enough,
in position. The pier was developed as first, to hold the initial German counter-
a floating platform devised so that with attacks, and then to defeat and drive off
the rise and fall of the tide it could slide the large German reserves which will be
up and down on four posts which rested brought in against our bridgehead.” 94
securely on the bottom of the sea.93 The basic problem was to establish
When General Morgan made his plan, and maintain a reasonable margin of
depending on these devices, the MULBER- superiority over the enemy. In this, Gen-
RIES were still on the drawing boards. eral Morgan was handicapped from the
In fact, engineers were still experiment- outset by limitation of resources. The
ing with various breakwater devices and Combined Chiefs of Staff had instructed
the vast concrete phoenixes had not even him to use three divisions in the assault
been ordered. This circumstance again and two in the immediate follow-up and
underlined the tentativeness of COS- had allocated a specific number of land-
SAC’s approach. It was still necessary to ing craft and ships for the simultaneous
assume resources that were not at hand loading of these five divisions. When the
and conditions that could hardly be fore- COSSAC staff tried to match men and
seen. vehicles with allocated shipping and
For this reason, such things as the de- form five naval task forces each to carry
tailed composition of the assault forces one division, they found that a large per-
were left for later planning. It was noted centage of the two follow-up divisions
only that an unusually high proportion could not be tactically loaded and that
of armor and antiaircraft would probably they had more than 1,200 minor landing
be required in the first waves. COSSAC’s craft left over which were not seaworthy
view was that the Allies could count on enough when loaded to make the long
surprise to get them safely ashore and cross-Channel trip to Caen under their
through the first crust of the enemy’s own power.95
defenses. The critical phase of the opera- The fact that overheads such as anti-
tion would be the first battles with the aircraft and special engineer units would
enemy’s reserves. Because enemy coun- have to be landed on D Day and D plus 1,
terattacks could be expected from D Day and that a high proportion of tanks
on, the Allies needed to have the maxi-
94 COSSAC (43) 29, Strategical Background, Cross-
93 [Clifford Jones] NEPTUNE: Training, Mounting, Channel Operation, 1944, 25 Jun 43.
the Artificial Ports (The Administrative and Logis- 95 The leftover craft included 195 LCM (1) ‘s, 376
tical History of the ETO: Part VI), MS, II, 112 ff. LCM (3) ‘s, and 660 LCVP’s. Outline OVERLORD,App.
Hist Div files. 2..
OUTLINE OVERLORD (JANUARY-JULY 1943) 75

would have to be carried in the assault, Bella and the capture of Caen. The cap-
put an additional strain on shipping re- ture of Caen alone was estimated to re-
sources. The net effect was to compel quire a full airborne division. COSSAC’s
reduction of the immediate reinforce- decision was nevertheless to employ
ments for the assault and delay their airborne troops on both missions, with
landing. On D Day only four follow-up the main air landings in the vicinity of
reinforced regiments would be landed Caen. The planners felt that Caen, an im-
instead of two divisions as specified in portant bottleneck in communications
the Combined Chiefs of Staff directive.96 from the hinterland to the beaches, had to
On D plus 1 only one and a third divi- be seized “to avoid defeat in the early
sions could be landed instead of the two stages.” 98
estimated by Washington planners. Fur- General Morgan was always con-
thermore, COSSAC warned that 75 per- scious that the Allies, with such lim-
cent of the vehicles in the D-plus-l build- ited resources in the early stages, could
up divisions would have to be loaded in hope at best for only a slender margin of
ordinary shipping. Not only were there superiority. It was thus essential to do
risks and difficulties in using large ships everything possible to reduce the enemy’s
so early in the operation, but the units capacity to resist. Steps were to be taken
carried in them could not be unloaded in immediately (as of July 1943) to soften
tactical order. It would take twenty-four German resistance by all available means:
hours after they got ashore before they direct sea and air action, psychological,
could be organized and equipped for ac- political, and economic pressures, and
tion. “It should be clearly noted,” the sabotage and deception. This softening
plan warned, “that landing units in this was to constitute the preliminary phase
manner means that the forces ashore on of the operation and was to be systema-
D Day are not reinforced until D plus 2 tized to produce conditions considered es-
with formations operationally available, sential to the success of OVERLORD. During
except to the extent of about a brigade this phase the main effort of the Allied
group [regimental combat team] .” 97 forces would be to reduce German fighter
COSSAC was directed to employ two strength in western Europe, by bombing
airborne divisions in the assault, but the fighter production plants and airfields
allotment of 632 transport aircraft was far and by bringing the German fighter force
short of what was needed. This was not to battle under conditions favorable to
lift enough even for the two missions the Allies. At the same time, “but with-
deemed essential: the capture and neutral- out detriment to the main aim,” the
ization of the coastal batteries at Grand- Allied air offensive would continue the
camp-les Bains and Ouistreham-Riva- progressive destruction and dislocation
of the German military and economic
96 Although the plan stated that the limiting
factor was the capacity of defended beach exits to system and the undermining of the
pass vehicles inland, General Morgan later com- morale of the German people. It was ex-
plained that the weakness of the planned follow-up pected that in these ways the Allies could
was due to shortage of suitable landing craft. COSSAC
(43) 57 (Final), 30 Sep 43. SHAEF SGS file 560 I.
97Outline OVERLORD, Part II, par. 85. 98 Ibid., Part II, par. 96.
76 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

insure themselves of absolute air su- the general lines of the 1943 operation
premacy by D Day. That was set as a con- pointed at the same area and would in-
dition for the operation “since only clude an actual expedition using some of
through air power can we offset the many the small craft which were unsuitable for
and great disabilities inherent in the the main assault. A second diversion
situation confronting the attacking sur- would be mounted from the Mediter-
face forces.” 99 ranean against the south coast of France
In the preparatory phase, beginning an to give the impression of an imminent
undetermined time before D Day, the air major landing there. This was to start
offensive would be intensified and begin with a threat before the Normandy
to hit hard at the enemy’s airfields and landings, but preparations would be
those portions of his transportation sys- made for an actual landing if German
tem within fighter range of the Caen area. forces were withdrawn from southern
Immediately before the assault, air attack France to meet the OVERLORD attack. Both
would focus on rail and road nets directly of these diversions became tremendously
feeding into the battle area. Not until the important in later planning and in the
assault phase itself-a matter of hours be- invasion itself, but in the outline plan
fore the landings-would aircraft attack COSSAC did little more than suggest the
the enemy’s beach defenses. idea.101
Important as it was thought to be to Everything possible should be done be-
make the fullest utilization of Allied air fore the invasion to reduce the enemy’s
power, it was considered still more impor- capacity to resist on the ground and in the
tant to conceal as long as possible the air. But this was a highly theoretical
actual assault area. COSSAC planners be- specification. How much capacity to re-
lieved that it would be possible to pre- sist could safely be left to the enemy? At
serve a high degree of tactical surprise, what point could preparations be said to
for, the staff pointed out, “It was evident be complete and the necessary conditions
from the weakness of the local defenses for the invasion set up? The answer could
that the Germans did not consider it likely not be securely pinned to reality, since it
that we could make an assault in force in was patently impossible to estimate enemy
the Caen sector.”100 All preparations capabilities so far in advance. The best
therefore should studiously avoid calling answer was hypothetical. Rejecting the at-
attention to the assault area. tempt to assess the actual enemy, General
Further to contribute to surprise as well Morgan calculated the maximum enemy
as to reduce enemy strength in the in- which in his opinion the Allies could take
vasion area, two major diversions were to on.
be staged. One would be carried out from Static troops defending the coast line
the United Kingdom: a feint aimed at were not taken into consideration; it
the Pas-de-Calais coast to begin about D
minus 14 and continue during the first 101The diversion against southern France was later
two weeks of the invasion. It was to follow planned as an actual operation under the code name
ANVIL; the feint against the Pas-de-Calais remained
99 COSSAC (43) 29, cited n. 94. a threat, planned and carried out as Operation FORTI-
100 COSSAC (43) , 13th Mtg, 2 Jul 43. TUDE.
OUTLINE OVERLORD (JANUARY-JULY 1943) 77

was assumed that they would be de- as General Barker predicted. Barker had
feated by the landing itself. Having got to explain that the clause did not mean
ashore, the invasion forces would be able, that the operation would have to be can-
it was thought, to withstand counterat- celed if more than twelve enemy divisions
tack by LICO German divisions. A third could be brought to oppose it. COSSAC
German offensive division could be in the meant only that a maximum of twelve di-
area on the assumption that it would have visions could be defeated by the Allied
to be held in reserve for the defense of the ground forces; if there were any more,
Cotentin. By D plus 2 the bridgehead they would have to be reduced by air
could probably hold against attack by two power or other means.103 This interpre-
additional enemy divisions. By D plus 8 tation was accepted, and the conditions
the enemy should not have more than a stood. Later on, however, at the confer-
total of nine offensive divisions in the area ence with the Russians, they were again
if the Allies were to have a reasonable queried when Stalin simply asked: “And
chance of gaining their objectives. The what if there are thirteen divisions?” 104
Germans by that date would have had It was not so much a question as a
time to move all available divisions in needle jab to elicit further assurance of
France and the Low Countries into the the Allies’ firm intention to mount the
bridgehead area, except those pinned operation. As far as General Morgan was
down by diversionary threats to other concerned, it was not his business to settle
areas. It was believed that threats could Allied intentions, but it was his job to de-
keep a maximum of three enemy reserve termine whether OVEKLOKD was feasible.
divisions away from the bridgehead. In Since his own resources were limited by
other words, the total German offensive directive and since no such limitation was
striking force in France and the Low imposed on the enemy, he could not very
Countries on the invasion date should not well return an unqualified verdict. As to
exceed twelve divisions if the invasion the artificial rigidity of the conditions, the
was to succeed. plan itself provided a qualification. “It
These calculations evoked considerable will be realized that the conditions under
criticism. General Barker, Morgan’s which the operation might be successful
deputy, protested the inclusion of any do not depend solely on the nutnerical
conditional clauses in the plan because strength of the reserves available to the
he felt that they would make the plan Germans. The scale of German resistance
harder to sell in Washington. The U. S. will depend on such things as the state of
Joint Chiefs of Staff, he knew, believed the French railways and the strength,
that the British were cool toward the idea quality, and morale of the enemy’s front
of a Continental invasion, and he foresaw line units.” 105
that specifications as to the maximum
enemy forces that could be defeated in 103 JCS 442/l, Operation OVERLORD,6 Aug 43; cf.
France would only reinforce their Marshall’s statement to the same effect at CCS 108th
Mtg, 15 Aug 43.
belief.102 The Joint Chiefs, in fact, reacted 104 1st Plenary Mtg at Tehran, 29 Nov 43. OPD
files, U.S. Min of Euaw.4 Conf.
102 Interv with Gen Barker, 4 Oct 46. Hist Div files. 105 Outline OVERLORD, Part II, par. 118.
78 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

The first objective of the main assault then be up to the Supreme Commander
was to secure a bridgehead including to decide whether ‘the Allies’ next move
Grandcamp, Bayeux, and Caen by the end would be to capture the ports on the
of D Day. Initial follow-up forces consist- Seine or those in Brittany. Although his
ing of two regiments in each sector (Brit- decision would depend on estimates of
ish and American) would land on D Day his own and enemy capabilities at the
and assist assault forces in consolidating time, COSSAC presumed that unless the
this bridgehead. Subsequent expansion of Germans were on the point of collapse
the bridgehead would take the form of the Allies would be compelled to go after
thrusts south and southwest from the the Brittany ports in order to build up a
Caen-Bayeux area to defeat the enemy large striking army with which to force
west of the Orne River, outflank his forces the line of the Seine. To cover the entry
between the Orne and the Dives Rivers, into Brittany it would be necessary to
and finally secure sufficient depth to make drive the retreating Germans eastward in
the turning movement to attack up the order to secure the line of the Eure River
Cotentin toward Cherbourg. These op- from Dreux to Rouen and thence the line
erations would cover the first eight days of the Seine to the sea. This task would be
of the invasion; by that time twelve divi- carried out by British and Canadian
sions would be ashore. During the next armies while the American army was at-
six days, expansion southwestward would tacking Brittany. In these moves, the plan-
continue while a force entered the Co- ners warned, five guiding considerations
tentin with the mission of capturing Cher- should be kept in mind: the vital neces-
bourg by D plus 14. An armored force at sity not to outrun heavily strained com-
the same time would strike southeast to- munications, the importance of early cap-
ward Alencon to cover the opening of air- ture of a group of enemy airfields in the
fields southeast of Caen. Eighteen divi- Dreux-Evreux region and of ground
sions would be ashore on D plus 14 and for the development of airfields in the
the planners estimated that at that time le Mans-Chateaudun area, the value of
“the German forces should have been de- the Seine below Rouen as a complete ob-
cisively beaten.” 106 stacle, the importance of Dreux, Chartres,
After the capture of Cherbourg and the and Orleans as centers of communication,
defeat of German forces west of the Orne and the value of the Coteaux du Perche
River, COSSAC planners believed the as a bastion west of Dreux and Chartres.
enemy would fall back with part of his In this latter phase, culminating on
forces on Brittany for the defense of the about D plus 50 in the occupation of the
ports there and withdraw the rest east of lodgment area proper bounded by the
the Seine for the defense of Paris. It would Loire and Seine Rivers, COSSAC put
great stress on the development of air-
106 Ibid., Part III, par. 44; cf. Commentary on Op-
eration OVERLORD(cited note 90), in which the plan-
fields. By D plus 24, for instance, it was
ners point out that the advance calculated up to D anticipated that twenty-seven Continental
plus 14 was sixty miles as compared with the advance airfields should be in operation, on which
of the right flank of Eighth Army in Sicily of only
thirty miles in three weeks against much less serious
sixty-two squadrons could be based. The
opposition. securing of the lodgment area, planners
OUTLINE OVERLORD (JANUARY-JULY 1943)

figured, would be followed by a long Rankin


period of reorganization and consolida-
tion. The next phase, the primary ob- Outline OVERLORD was finished and sub-
jective of which would be the capture of mitted to the British Chiefs of Staff for
Paris and the Seine ports, was conceived review before COSSAC got around to the
as a major operation which the Germans third task: planning for occupation of the
would resist heavily. Its completion Continent in case of German collapse.
would be followed by another pause of RANKIN, as the collapse operation was
some three months while the enemy was named, proved an exceptionally difficult
cleared out of the whole of France south concept to grasp and translate into a plan
of the Loire and Dijon and the surrender of action. In the first place it was not at all
of the Channel Islands was forced. clear what collapse meant. SLEDGEHAM-
The maneuver thus envisaged an MER and ROUNDUP had both been made
evenly spaced series of battles, evenly op- contingent on a kind of collapse and plan-
posed. The planners blueprinted an op- ners then attempted to define the concept.
eration in which the invading armies They came up with a rather vague notion
struck hard for an initial foothold, built of marked “deterioration of German
up and pushed forward on all fronts to morale,” which seems not to have con-
gain maneuver room, paused, gathering templated any failure of the Nazi govern-
strength for the next push, and so pro- ment or any withdrawal of forces from the
ceeded by bounds, cracking the enemy west. Rather it denoted a general weaken-
lines with separate, massed, and carefully ing of the will to resist (as a result, of
prepared attacks for each new objective. course, of a weakening of the means)-a
The plan did not foresee the battle of at- nebulous idea at best. But nothing more
trition in Normandy nor the breakout specific was then needed. SLEDGEHAMMER
that followed, nor the long-sustained and ROUNDUP both were planned by the
armored drives in pursuit of a broken British as operations involving the maxi-
enemy. mum available Allied forces as if to meet
Crushing defeat of the enemy, sending determined enemy opposition. Plans were
him in headlong and disorganized retreat, then shelved pending some future in-
was a fortune of war which could be telligence estimate which might indicate
hoped for but not planned. Besides, by an enemy situation sufficiently weak to
the terms of his directive, General Mor- give the attacks a reasonable chance of
gan was to plan not the annihilation of success.
the German armies but the establishment OVERLORD, in contrast, was designed
of a lodgment area from which further of- from the beginning as an operation with a
fensive operations could be carried out. specific target date, to go in against full
His attention was thus naturally focused enemy opposition. Such conditions as
on seizing and consolidating ground, cap- were laid down concerning maximum
turing ports and airfields, and building up enemy resistance were conditions to be
an army which could hold its gains and brought about by the Allies during the
prepare to strike for further conquest. period of preparation. They were tactical
80 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

rather than strategic conditions-that is, “Little is to be gained by seeking to define


they affected only the limitation of the the phrase ‘German disintegration’. Quot
number of German troops that could be homines tot sententiae.” Instead he sug-
committed against the lodgment area; gested a flexible plan capable of variation
they did not include any general under- between the extremes of an invasion of
mining of Germany’s military or political the Continent to break through a screen
potential. The possibility of such general of resistance, and a landing against no op-
deterioration, however, remained and, position at all. The first plan prepared
since OVERLORD was being prepared en- should suppose no resistance, since the
tirely without regard for it, it became nec- state of Allied resources would not im-
essary to make separate plans to take ad- mediately permit undertaking an op-
vantage of collapse when and if it oc- posed landing. He recognized the difh-
curred. culty of getting hold of a planning
General Morgan was instructed by the hypothesis. Since the time of the return
Combined Chiefs that his organization could not be predicted, no precise esti-
should provide for “the need to re-enter mate was possible of conditions on either
the Continent with all available forces at side of the Channel. But, he pointed out,
the shortest possible notice in the event “Nebulous though the setting may be,
of a sudden and unexpected collapse of there can be nothing nebulous in the
German resistance. The aim would be to event, which must be characterized by
seize critical political and military centers the utmost speed and precision of move-
in Germany in the shortest possible ment.” The problem was basically similar
time.” 107 Soon after the COSSAC staff to mobilization in peacetime. The solu-
was established General Morgan asked tion consisted, first, in providing ma-
the British Chiefs of Staff for a clarifica- chinery to anticipate the event as far
tion of this directive, because, he said, his ahead as possible and, second, in phasing
main object was given him as “the defeat preparations so that they will “gain or lose
of the German fighting forces in North- momentum as the critical moment is
West Europe,” whereas the directive to judged to be approaching or receding.” 109
prepare for German collapse presupposed The solution at last selected was to
that the enemy had been defeated. He break up the concept of enemy collapse
wanted specifically a restatement of his into three definite degrees of collapse and
major object, a closer definition of the provide three corresponding courses of
phrase “German disintegration,” and action for the Allies. The three conditions
more detail on the “critical political and were case A, which supposed a substantial
military objectives.” 108 weakening of organized resistance in
The reply of the British Chiefs of Staff France and the Low Countries, case B,
was not delivered until 21 June. In the which assumed German withdrawal from
meantime General Morgan changed his the occupied countries, and case C, un-
mind about the need for definition. In a conditional surrender and cessation of
directive to his staff on 22 May, he said:
107 CCS lF9/8/D, 23 Apr 43. 109 COSSAC (43) 9, Plan for Return to the Con-
108 COSSAC (43) 2, 29 Apr 43. tinent in Face of German Disintegration, 22 May 43.
OUTLINE OVERLORD (JANUARY-JULY 1943) 81

organized resistance in northwest Eu- -the only position that would permit the
rope.110 necessary economy of troops-would start
If the deterioration of German military pulling out from the south and southwest.
power in the west was not accompanied by The first port to be vacated would be
surrender or withdrawal, Allied action Bordeaux. But this was too far from where
would depend on the relative strength of the Allies could be deployed against the
German and Anglo-American forces at Germans to be useful as a port of entry.
any given date. Before January 1944, it The landing of substantial military forces
was thought that no assault against or- could be begun only when Cherbourg was
ganized resistance, however weakened, freed, The problem was to get as far east
would be possible. In January and Feb- as possible in order to get as near as pos-
ruary a substantial weakening of the Ger- sible to the final German defense line and
man forces might make possible a limited insure fighter protection from United
bridgehead operation. Since this date Kingdom bases. At the same time landings
would find preparations for OVERLORD far could not be made so far east that they
advanced, the only feasible operation would be under attack by German mobile
would be one that made use of these prep- forces operating in advance of their main
arations. The RANKIN plan thus indicated line of defense. Le Havre and Rouen were
a modification of OVERLORD to secure the ruled out as initial ports of entry because
Cotentin Peninsula if it became desirable the Germans were expected to make a
to set the date forward to January or Feb- preliminary stand at the Seine to protect
ruary. After 1 March a drastic reduction and organize the retreat. Landing at Cher-
in German strength would permit a modi- bourg, forces would be built up in the
fied OVERLORD assault with substantially Cotentin. But this was likely to be a slow
OVERLORD'S objectives. process in view of anticipated demolition
Case A thus involved no special plan- of the port. “There can. . . be no thought
ning difficulty. The problem of following of forcing the SEINE at an early stage, nor
up a German withdrawal from France indeed can any major effort be contem-
was more complicated. If such withdrawal plated at any time to speed the enemy’s
was made, it would be done presumably withdrawal other than by air action.” It
with the idea of strengthening the Ger- was pointed out further that a grave dis-
man position. It could therefore be ex- advantage of landing as far west as Cher-
pected that the maximum obstacles would bourg was “the immense bridging iiabili-
be put in the way of Allied occupation. If ties which the enemy’s Iegacy of large
withdrawal was begun in the winter, scale demolitions” was likely to cause.
Allied landing would have to wait for the The store of Allied bridging equipment
evacuation of a major port, since beach in the United Kingdom was not likely to
maintenance in winter weather was im- prove adequate for such an undertaking
possible on the Channel coasts. The Ger- before 1 January 1944.111
mans seeking to establish a defensive posi- Advance beyond the initial bridgehead
tion at the West Wall (the Siegfried Line) would depend on the rate of enemy with-
110 COSSAC (43) 40 (Final) , Plan RANKIN, 13 Aug
43. 111 Ibid.
82 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

drawal. It could be retarded by delay in ceeded, the only RANKIN operation seri-
the build-up but could not be accelerated. ously considered was that under case C-
When the enemy reached his final de- total collapse accompanied by uncondi-
fensive position, “There must of neces- tional surrender. The plan here involved
sity be a considerable pause while we no purely military considerations, being
build up sufficient forces for an advance a scheme for rapid occupation.113
Eastwards.” 112 Although no RANKIN plan was ever put
The plan throughout was conservative into effect, detailed consideration has
in estimating the time needed to build up been given to the planning because it re-
strength before joining the final battle. veals that the Allied timetable for the war
The conclusion was that German collapse in western Europe was actually much
as envisaged under cases A and B might more dependent on Allied preparations
permit the Allies to return to the Conti- than on the state of the enemy.
nent before May 1944 but that such col- The RANKIN project was kept before
lapse would not materially advance the the planners and periodically re-exam-
time for decisive action. In short, the ined, but its importance as a plan steadily
RANKIN A and B plans offered little mili- dwindled as the OVERLORD target date ap-
tary advantages and the grounds for con- proached and the proliferation of OVER-
sidering them were chiefly that politically LORD plans and preparations focused at-
it might be necessary to press into the oc- tention more and more on the big inva-
cupied countries as soon as the Nazi grip sion.
on them relaxed. 113 The relation of RANKIN c to later occupation
As preparations for OVERLORD pro- plans (ECLIPSE) will be dealt with by F. C. Pogue in
The Supreme Command, a volume now under prep-
112 Ibid. aration in this series.
CHAPTER III

Overlord in the Balance


(August-December 1943)
Strategy Reviewed: marine. By the summer of 1943 that de-
The Quebec Conference feat had all but been accomplished. Sink-
ings of Allied ships would continue, but
When the Combined Chiefs of Staff on a diminishing scale, while the destruc-
parted at Washington in May 1943, they tion of enemy U-boats accelerated. The
left with the sense that many of their de- turning point in the war on U-boats came
cisions had been necessarily tentative and dramatically in the spring of 1943.
would have to be re-examined in the light The Allied counteroffensive began in
of what happened in the next few months a small way in the early months of 1943.
in Russia and in the Mediterranean.1 Although sinkings continued heavy,
Near the end of July the Joint Strategic reaching a peak in March of 141 ships
Survey Committee reviewed the prin- lost, the Germans were also beginning to
cipal developments for the guidance of lose more heavily, and, though the Allies
the Joint Chiefs and found especially were then unaware of it, the German Ad-
noteworthy the “substantial improve- miralty was worried.3 Early in February
ment in the submarine situation and pros- 1943 Grossadmiral Karl Doenitz ex-
pects, satisfactory progress of the bombing pressed alarm at the fact that the Allies
offensive, unforeseen degree of success at- now seemed to have exact knowledge of
tained with HUSKY [the invasion of the disposition and in some cases of the
Sicily], indications of the impending col- number of German U-boats in opera-
lapse of Italy, decision to carry the war to tional areas. At the end of the month he
the mainland of Italy . . . and apparent reported to Hitler that nothing had been
loss of the initiative by the Germans on sunk that month because nothing had
the Eastern Front.” 2 This was actually a been sighted.4 He attributed the failure to
cautious statement of successes which in bad weather and lack of reconnaissance.
two and a half months had definitely But it was not bad weather that destroyed
tipped the balance of military power in
favor of the Allies throughout the world. 3 See Naval Int Div (Br) , History of U-Boat Policy,
At the Casablanca Conference, it will 1939-1945, 26 Feb 43. Navy Dept files. This consists
of translations of extracts from documents in the
be remembered, the Allies had decided files of the U-Boat Division of the German Ad-
that the first charge on their resources miralty.
should be the defeat of the German sub- 4Ibid. Actually the Allies in February lost 83 ships
totaling 420,238 tons. See Commander-in-Chief At-
1 CC.S 95th Mtg, 24 May 43. lantic Fleet (U.S. Naval Administration in World
2 JCS 422/1, QUADRANT, 25 Jul 43. War II) , MS, p. 463. Navy Dept files.
84 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

nineteen U-boats in February and fifteen underwater fleet in May. That month
in March. German U-boat losses soared to 30 per-
For the Germans much worse was to cent of all boats at sea. Admiral Doenitz
come. In March on the suggestion of the told Hitler: “These losses are too high.
Canadian Chief of Naval Staff, American, We must conserve our strength, otherwise
British, and Canadian naval commands we will play into the hands of the enemy.”
held a conference in Washington to re- But as to the cause of the disaster Doenitz
organize the Atlantic convoy system. Up could only speculate. He knew that Brit-
to that time Atlantic convoys had been ish aircraft were using a new microwave
operated on a combined basis with ships radar and suspected that the same device
of all three nations participating. Fric- was employed on Allied surface vessels.
tion and inefficiency resulted. It was de- He knew that, whatever the new device
cided therefore to turn over naval respon- was, it apparently enabled planes and de-
sibility for the North Atlantic entirely to stroyers to hunt out German submarines
the British and Canadians. The United in the dark and in the fog and destroy
States Atlantic Fleet would escort convoys them. He knew also that the submarines
between the eastern seaboard and North had no radar detection set that could warn
Africa, as well as certain special fuel them of the impending attack. In fact, he
convoys. The change, effective at the end said, “We don’t even know on what wave
of April, contributed to the conspicuous length the enemy locates us. Neither do
success of the Allied antisubmarine of- we know whether high frequency or other
fensive beginning in May. A still greater location devices are being employed.
contribution, however, was made by the Everything possible is being done to find
long-range aircraft which the conference out what it is.” Hitler added a dark intui-
recommended be allocated to coastal tive note. Perhaps, he suggested, the new
areas for antisubmarine work. The Com- device involved principles with which the
bined Chiefs of Staff assigned nearly all Germans were not familiar. “The crisis
the aircraft requested (about half from must be overcome by all possible means" 6
British and half from American sources) But it was not overcome. It deepened
and specified that all planes would be and spread. In June, German submarines
equipped with radar and operated by chalked up only nineteen Allied sinkings;
crews specially trained in antisubmarine in August, only three; and in September
warfare. Steps were being taken also to almost all U-boats had been withdrawn
supplement land-based air patrols with from the Atlantic, with the result that the
carrier aircraft. During the winter four U.S. Navy could virtually abolish the
baby flattops were in process of conversion convoy system in coastal waters.7
for Atlantic convoy use. The first was de-
livered in March. In June, three were 6 Berghof Conference, 31 May 43, Office of Naval
Intelligence, Fuehrer Conferences, 1943. Fuehrer Con-
operating in the South Atlantic.5 ferences is a selection of translated documents from
With a better-organized convoy system, German naval archives.
new aircraft, and new detection methods, 7 Independent sailings were authorized for all ships
except those carrying aviation fuel and those slower
the Allies struck hard at the enemy’s than eleven knots. See Commander-in-Chief Atlantic
5 Commander-in-Chief Atlantic Fleet, pp. 481ff. Fleet, p. 581.
GERMAN SUBMARINE UNDER AERIAL ATTACK
86 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

The reckoning at the end of 1943 was tons of bombs dropped.10 In short, the
that three million gross tons of Allied average mission in March involved about
and neutral shipping had been sunk as 106 planes; in May it involved 180. This
compared with more than eight million was still a long way from the June 1944
the year before. 8 But enemy success was peak when the average operation was
much less than even these figures show, undertaken by 1,000 heavy bombers.
for during the year Allied shipyards had Nevertheless the sudden spurt forward in
put fourteen million tons of new shipping the spring of 1943 was a step decisively
on the seas as against only seven million in the direction of bringing crushing air
in 1942. In other words the net loss in power to bear on the enemy’s war ma-
1942 of about a million tons became in chine.
1943 a net gain of almost eleven million. A similar increase in effort by the Brit-
At the same time estimated sinkings of ish Bomber Command at the same time
U-boats increased from 85 in 1942 to 237 was noted by the Chief of Air Staff, Sir
in 1943. Charles Portal. The bomb tonnage
The spring of 1943 marked a sudden dropped on enemy territory during the
intensification of the air war against Ger- second quarter of 1943, he reported, more
many almost as dramatic as the antisub- than doubled the tonnage in the first
marine campaign. After the reduction of quarter. Even after making allowances
U.S. Air Forces in the United Kingdom for weather, this achievement, together
in the fall of 1942 to furnish air support with the accelerated build-up of the
for the North African campaign, Ameri- Eighth Air Force, represented a notable
can air power in Great Britain remained net increase in the pressure of the com-
virtually static until the spring. From De- bined air offensive. It was too early to see
cember 1942 through April 1943, the certain or decisive results, but the promise
Eighth Air Force based in the United of things to come was clear. Air Marshal
Kingdom had just six groups of heavy Portal remarked that already Germany
bombers operational each month. During was being forced into a defensive air
May, the number of groups doubled; in strategy.11
June, thirteen groups were operational, What the Joint Strategic Survey Com-
in July, fifteen, and in August, sixteen mittee referred to as an “unforeseen de-
and three-quarters.9 gree of success attained with HUSKY” was
The build-up was reflected gradually the relatively quick victory in Sicily ac-
in intensified operations. March and May companied by signs of complete Italian
each saw nine operations carried out, but demoralization. The forces of Field Mar-
in March they involved 956 sorties and shal Harold R. Alexander (General Pat-
the dropping of 1,662 tons of bombs. In ton’s U.S. Seventh Army and General
May 1,640 sorties were flown and 2,851 Montgomery’s British Eighth Army) in-
10Bad weather in April reduced operations so
drastically that a comparison of April sorties and
8 Commander-in-Chief Atlantic Fleet, p. 462. bomb tonnage with May figures would be mislead-
9 Figures are from Statistical Summary of Eighth ing. For a detailed account of operations see Craven
Airforce Operations, European Theater, 14 Aug and Cate, The Army Air Forces, II, Ch. 10.
1942-8 May 1945, Hq Eighth Air Force, 10 Jun 45. 11 CCS 109th Mtg, 16 Aug 43.
OVERLORD IN THE BALANCE (AUGUST-DECEMBER 1943) 87

vaded Sicily on 10 July 1943; thirty-nine HUSKY.13 Planning therefore proceeded


days later (on 17 August) organized re- concurrently for all contingencies, and
sistance had ended. The overrunning of decision was deferred. General Marshall
the island had the immediate effect of thought the choice might be made toward
convincing the Italians that their cause the end of July. It was actually about the
was hopeless. On 25 July Mussolini middle of the month that the Combined
was forced out. On 8 September the Chiefs proposed scrapping all their earlier
Italian government formed by Marshal conservative plans in favor of a direct as-
Pietro Badoglio capitulated. The immi- sault on Naples with a view to full-scale
nence of Italian collapse had been ap- exploitation up the peninsula.14
parent to both the Allies and the Germans Before this decision was made, General
some weeks in advance, and both sides Eisenhower had asked that he be given
were hurriedly preparing for the next additional troops to follow up the victory
move. of Sicily. Specifically he asked for the di-
The Germans, believing that there version to the Mediterranean of one
might still be some fight left in the convoy scheduled for the United King-
Italians although their leadership had al- dom. The Combined Chiefs of Staff ap
together broken down, in May had made proved his request though it meant a net
plans for moving Army Group B, under loss to the United Kingdom build-up for
Generalfeldmarschall Erwin Rommel, in- OVERLORD Of 66,000 troops.15
to Italy. The move was accomplished British planners then proposed that
during July and August while a pretense General Eisenhower’s striking power be
of co-operation with the Badoglio govern- still further increased.16 But as their pro-
ment was maintained.12 posal would have reduced the OVERLORD
The prospect of an early Italian col- build-up by another 50,000 troops and
lapse convinced the U.S. Chiefs of Staff might have caused postponement of
that the time had come for bold action. At either OVERLORD or operations in the
the Washington Conference in May and Pacific, the U.S. Chiefs of Staff demurred.
for some weeks subsequently the principal They pointed out that, no matter how
Mediterranean post-HUSKY operations en- important an action in the Mediterranean
visaged were the seizure of Sardinia and might be, it could not substitute for ac-
limited-objective attacks on the toe or tion required in the Pacific or northwest
heel of the mainland. Both the Combined Europe. In advocating the assault on
Chiefs of Staff and General Eisenhower Naples, they said, they had intended a
favored the mainland operations as more bold plan which involved risks, justified,
likely to produce decisive results, but 13 Meetings at Algiers between Churchill, Marshall,
feasibility depended on the progress of Eisenhower, and others, 29 and 31 May 43. Min of
TRIDENT Conf.
14CCS 102d Mtg, 16 Jul 43. The debate during
12 General der Kavallerie Siegfried Westphal, Der July on what to do in the Mediterranean may be fol-
Feldzug in Italien, MS, Ch. IV. Hist Div files. The lowed in the CCS 268 series and in CCS 103d Mtg, 23
story of Italian collapse and surrender is treated in Jul 43, and CCS Spec Mtg, 26 Ju143.
full by H. M. Smyth in The Sicilian Campaign and 15Rpt. Combined Planning Staff, 15 Jul 43, CCS
the Surrender of Italy, a volume now under prepara- 268/2; Msg to Eisenhower, 21 Jul 43, CCS 268/5.
tion in this series. 16 CCS 268/2.
88 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

in their opinion, by the Italian collapse. destruction of the German armies. The
They criticized the British proposal as seesaw campaign in which the Germans
overinsuring the operation at the cost of advanced in the summer and retreated in
prejudicing agreed strategy elsewhere. the winter was over. Henceforth the main
They could not approve the Naples as- German armies in the east would walk in
sault so conceived.17 On this point the only one direction-back toward the
Joint Chiefs of Staff stood fast and on 26 homeland.
July the British yielded.18 The order The war was, of course, not won in Au-
went out to General Eisenhower to plan gust 1943, and it could not have seemed
an attack on Naples with only those re- so. But at least the brightening of Allied
sources already allotted to his theater. prospects was unmistakable. The opti-
These, of course, now included 66,000 mistic might see victory dead ahead; the
more men that had been earmarked for most pessimistic could feel maneuver
the Mediterranean by the Washington room between their backs and the wall.
Conference. It is certain that when the Combined
Pressure on Germany from the west and Chiefs of Staff met at Quebec for another
south by the spring of 1943 was at least of the great plenary conferences they
sufficient to blunt Germany’s offensive faced the future with a new sure knowl-
capabilities in these directions. But from edge of their power. This knowledge in
Germany’s standpoint much worse was turn sharpened the urgency to crystallize
happening in the east. In the two preced- strategy. It was more clearly than ever up
ing summers the Germans had set their to the Allies to determine when and
armies rolling across huge expanses of where the ultimate decision of arms
Russian territory, though the decisive would be sought.
victory on both occasions remained just
beyond their grasp. In July 1943 they The Quebec Conference, which opened
tried again. They massed armor south of on 12 August, had, unlike the earlier
the Russian salient at Kursk. The armor meetings at Casablanca and Washington,
broke through only to be destroyed in no decisions to make on immediate op-
great tank battles in the rear of the Rus- erations in Europe. The next step in the
sian main lines. The Russians waited only Mediterranean, the invasion of Italy in
a week for this situation to develop before the Naples areas, had already been de-
they launched their first major summer cided. This fact cleared the decks for a
offensive with three armies attacking full-dress debate on European strategy.
about fifty German divisions in the vi- Fundamental disagreement between the
cinity of Orel. On 5 August the city fell. U.S. Chiefs of Staff and the British on
More important, the Russians had finally how to defeat Germany had been adum-
and permanently seized the initiative and brated in September 1941, and thereafter
had begun the dogged battle of attrition had underlain all their discussions on
in which the prize was not territory but strategy. But during the first half of 1943
the opposition of strategic principle had
17 CCS 103d Mtg, 23 Ju143.
been blurred because the immediate and
18CCS Spec Mtg, 26 Ju143. pressing issue had always been to decide
O\‘ERLORD IN THE BALANCE (AUGUST-DECEMBER 1943) 89

QUEBEC CONFERENCE. Seated, left to right: Prime Minister Mackenzie King


of Canada, President Roosevelt, and Prime Minister Churchill. Standing: General
Arnold, Air Chief Marshal Portal, General Brooke, Admiral King, Field Marshal
Dill, General Marshall, Admiral Pound, and Admiral Leahy.

whether or not to carry out a specific op- cisive, objectives. The ultimate aim, the
eration in the Mediterranean. Once the British had argued, was to knock Italy out
Allies were committed in North Africa, to of the war. With the invasion of the Ital-
reject exploitation in the Mediterranean ian mainland, the course of action begun
meant to choose idleness for a consider- by TORCH would therefore reach its goal.
able Allied force and to surrender the After the defeat of Italy, continued attacks
clear military advantage of maintaining into the Axis underbelly would require
momentum against the enemy. But at- new tactical and strategic justification.
tacks in the Mediterranean had always With the close of the 1943 summer of-
been conceived as having limited, not de- fensive, furthermore, the old argument in
90 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

favor of Mediterranean ventures as the European war because they were


interim operations designed to maintain closer to the scene, because they had pre-
pressure on the enemy while preparations sided over planning for European opera-
for OVERLORD were completed would no tions almost two years before the Ameri-
longer apply. On the contrary, for the first cans became involved, because they were
time since TORCH, Mediterranean opera- served by a well-developed intelligence
tions and the cross-Channel attack be- system for which the newly arrived Amer-
came clear-cut alternatives competing for icans had no equivalent, and finally be-
consideration as the Allied main effort. cause their own planning staffs were gen-
From every standpoint the Quebec erally more numerous and more experi-
Conference seemed to present both the enced.20 These inequalities evened out
urgent need and an ideal opportunity to only gradually as the U.S. Army grew
seek a firm resolution on future strategy and organized itself in the European and
in Europe. Aware of this, the Joint Chiefs Mediterranean theaters.
of Staff made particularly careful prepara- In the second place, the British Chiefs
tions to present their views. They ana- of Staff were a much more tightly knit or-
lyzed at length the procedure of previous ganization than the U.S. Joint Chiefs.
conferences, the debating techniques of This also was due to a longer familiarity
the British, and even the precise number with the problems of the European war,
of planners required to cope on equal which had permitted them to iron out
terms with British staffs. Quite frankly through long association and discussion
they went to Quebec determined to make both individual and service differences.
their ideas prevail by all the means at their It was more directly due, however, to the
disposal.19 influence of the Prime Minister and the
This was to be, it must again be empha- War Cabinet, who provided a large
sized, a friendly debate between Allies amount of daily guidance in strategic and
seeking the same end. Nevertheless it was political matters. 21Through Lt. Gen. Sir
serious, for each Ally brought to it deep Hastings Ismay, Military Chief of Staff to
and honest convictions. It therefore be- the Minister of Defence, who attended
came a matter of grave importance for most Chiefs of Staff meetings, the mili-
each to find the strongest possible grounds tary and political leaders were kept in
on which to rest his case. The American close contact with each other and welded
ground in earlier conferences had been into a relatively homogeneous directorate
relatively weak. In the first place the Brit-
ish Chiefs of Staff had more readily avail-
20 The British brought a staff of 93 to the Wash-
able and more complete information on
ington Conference in May, and in addition made
considerable use of the Joint Staff Mission and diplo-
matic personnel already in this country. The Amer-
19 Both the Joint Strategic Survey Committee and icans by contrast took only 56 officers to Quebec. See
the Joint War Plans Committee made thorough ex- JPS 189 and various commentaries thereon in OPD
aminations of British techniques of argument and
file ABC 337 (25 May 43).
ways of meeting them. See JPS 189, Preparations for
the Next U.S.-British Staff Conference, 25 May 43; 21 Cf. Winston S. Churchill, The Grand Alliance
JCS 422/l, QUADRANT, 25 Jul 43; Memos and staff (New York, 1950), p. 28; Eisenhower, Crusade in
studies in OPD file ABC 337 (25 May 43) passim Europe, p. 61.
OVERLORD IN THE BALANCE (AUGUST-DECEMBER 1943)

of the total British war effort.22 The unity view of the war or to cheer up his sub-
of British political and military policy ordinates when the outlook was black.24
was further insured by the British system After Dunkerque, when dispatches of
of cabinet responsibility. Churchill, as disaster were piling up in the War Office
Minister of Defence, together with his and men were returning from the Conti-
War Cabinet, was directly answerable to nent stripped of their weapons and often
the House of Commons for military de- of their clothes, when there seemed to be
cisions. It behooved him then to keep in no hope of giving them even rifles with
close touch with his military chiefs and to which to defend their country, the Prime
make certain that he fully understood and Minister wrote: “We are stronger than
approved their decisions, even as to de- ever before. Look how many extra men
tail, in order that he could defend them we have here now. Form Leopard Bri-
later, if necessary. Churchill was per- gades to tear and claw the enemy.” 25
sonally inclined, furthermore, to occupy Churchill’s close personal leadership
himself even more intimately with mili- never amounted to dictatorship. Al-
tary affairs than his position required. As though he generally called the British
a long-time student of tactics he could tune in discussions with the Americans,
contribute substantially at the planning it would be a mistake to assume an iden-
level to the conduct of the war. He at- tity between his views and those of the
tended and took active part in many of British Chiefs of Staff. Similarly it should
the regular Chiefs of Staff Committee be noted that what appeared as “British”
meetings. He intervened constantly in views at the conferences were not neces-
the planning of operations, not only to sarily endorsed by all British military
enunciate principles but to suggest tacti- men. “British” doubts concerning the
cal detail. As already noted, he played a feasibility of OVERLORD, for instance, were
leading role in the development of land- never shared by General Morgan and his
ing craft and the artificial ports. He con- staff.
cerned himself in the details of artillery Despite these differences of opinion, it
and armored tactics.23 remains true that there was a British point
In all these matters he had a lively per- of view on strategy which Churchill and
sonal interest. He sent along to the Army the British Chiefs of Staff consistently
a stream of memoranda containing all maintained. That view favored oppor-
manner of suggestions, some practical, tunistic, peripheral operations aimed
some not. But all had in common a bold initially at the reduction of German
enthusiastic approach designed either to
24This was the interpretation of both General
shock the planners out of what Churchill Barker and General Morgan on the basis of their
always feared was a narrow professional experience on the COSSAC staff. See Intervs, F. C.
Pogue with Barker, 4 Oct 46, and Pogue with Mor-
22 Ismay held this position under Churchill all gan, 8 Feb 47. Hist Div files. It is worth noting in
during the war. Before Churchill became Prime this connection Churchill’s impatience with the
Minister, Ismay was secretary of the Chiefs of Staff stodgy military professional which runs through his
Committee. Interv, F. C. Pogue with Gen Ismay, 17 account of World War I as a kind of leitmotif. See
Dee 46. Hist Div files. esp. Winston S. Churchill, The World Crisis: I915
23See Note by the Minister of Defence, 7 Oct 41, (New York, 1923), pp. 54046.
cited in Churchill, The Grand Alliance, pp. 498-500. 25Interv with Gen Ismay, cited n. 22.
CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

power by indirect attack (by air over effect was to make the Joint Chiefs of Staff
western Europe and by sea, air, and land relatively independent of the President
in the Mediterranean), with the ultimate and State Department in formulating
object of so weakening German defenses strategy. The President, unlike Churchill,
in France that a cross-Channel attack seldom intervened in detailed military
might be launched in the final phases of planning. He tended to make only the
the war against an enemy whose will to re- large decisions as between fully developed
sist was gravely shaken.26 It was never alternative courses of action. He was oc-
clear precisely what degree of deteriora- cupied almost exclusively with large per-
tion this involved and no doubt opinions spectives and the political problems in-
would have differed widely. What was volved in the liberation of occupied
central, however, to British strategy and countries, the employment of United Na-
consistently maintained by its advocates tions 28 forces, and dealings with foreign
was that the date for the final assault governments affected by proposed mili-
across the Channel had to be contingent tary operations. The President generally
and indeterminate. appeared at the Allied conferences as a
On the American side there was rather defender of the strategy worked out by
less unanimity in the direction of the war. the Joint Chiefs of Staff.29 Though ap-
In the first place, traditional American parently reasonably convinced of its
isolationism had made this country wary soundness, he was still in the position of
of political involvement in Europe. The a man who having accepted persuasion
Joint Chiefs of Staff tended therefore to from one quarter was psychologically pre-
develop a purely military perspective that pared to listen to advice from another.
considered political implications chiefly The President, in short, because of his
with an eye to avoiding them. This per- position, his experience and personality,
spective accurately reflected the popular and American opinion, did not create a
obsession with winning t!le war as quickly unified American front comparable to the
and as cheaply as possible-an obsession British front molded and inspired by the
which allowed little room for considera- Prime Minister.30
tion of America’s postwar position.27 One In part, the lack of complete unity in
American views can be traced to the di-
26On the question of possible British political in-
terests in the Mediterranean see below, p. 96, and cf.
Eisenhower, Crusade in Europe, pp. 194, 284; Stim- wrote: “I would never survive even a minor set-back
son and Bundy, On Active Service, p. 447. in Normandy if it were known that substantial
27 The President was always conscious of this popu- troops were diverted to the Balkans.” OPD files, exec
lar feeling. See, for example, Mtg, Roosevelt, Hop- 10, item 71 (Information from the White House).
kins, and JCS on board ship, 19 Nov 43. Dep C/S 28The term “United Nations” to designate the
file 110.00 A 48-41 dr 155. The President said “that Allies was apparently first used by Roosevelt at the
we should not get roped into accepting any European end of 1941. See Sherwood, Roosevelt and Hopkins,
sphere of influence. We do not want to be compelled, p. 458; cf. Ibid., pp. 548-49.
for instance, to maintain United States troops in 29An exception, of course, was the President’s ini-
Yugoslavia.” See also Memo, Col Gailey (OPD) for tiative in pushing the North African operation. See
Gen Handy, Information from the White House, 30 above, Ch. I.
Jun. quoting portions of Cbl, Roosevelt to Churchill, 30Cf. on this point Stimson and Bundy, On Active
29 Jun 44, in reference to the British proposal to Service, pp. 428,439, and Ch. XVII passim; Sherwood,
divert ANVIL resources to the Adriatic. Roosevelt Roosevelt and Hopkins, p. 446.
OVERLORD IN THE BALANCE (AUGUST-DECEMBER 1943) 93

vergent interests of the services. Before tions which had made the cross-Channel
the establishment of the Joint Chiefs of project the best means of seeking a deci-
Staff in 1942, the U.S. Army and Navy sion with Germany had so changed as to
had had little experience in the sort of “cast grave doubt over the ROUNDUP con-
close co-operation now demanded of cept.” The decisive defeat of the German
them. Agreement on joint strategy did armies, they believed, would, if necessary,
not prove too difficult, but day-to-day im- be accomplished by Russia. They ac-
plementation continually revealed dis- cepted the original British idea of a cross-
parities between the Army and Navy Channel operation in the final stages of
points of view. It was not only that the the war, and concluded that, “without
services had different habits of thought prejudice to Pacific and Burma opera-
and organizational jealousies; they were tions, the continuing success and great
split by the geography of the war. The momentum of our Mediterranean opera-
Army’s primary interest was in Europe tions must carry on, at least until after
where the bulk of its forces would be Italy is knocked out of the war.” The de-
used. The Navy had a similar primary cision by the Combined Chiefs of Staff
interest in the Pacific. The naval mem- in May, to withdraw seven divisions from
bers of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admirals the Mediterranean for use in OVERLORD,
Leahy and King, were not opposed to appeared to them unsound, since it would
OVERLORD, nor to the basic strategy of de- remove pressure from Germany, prevent-
feating Germany first. They simply lacked ing a maximum effort in Italy and a pos-
the U.S. Army’s single-minded enthusi- sible opportunistic exploitation of Italian
asm for European projects. On the one collapse through invasion of southern
hand, while there remained any doubt as France. “If Germany chooses to fight in
to whether OVERLORD would be mounted, Italy,” they wrote, “that is the place to
they questioned the wisdom of hoarding fight her. There is, indeed, no doubt but
resources in the United Kingdom and so that the combination of this constant
delaying the day when the all-out offen- wastage of Axis air power [through the
sive in the Pacific could be started.31 On combined bomber offensive] plus the
the other hand, they were more open than elimination of Italy represents the maxi-
the Army to persuasion that OVERLORD mum possible 1943 Anglo-American con-
might be unnecessary. tribution towards the defeat of the Eu-
In July 1943 naval representatives on ropean Axis.”
the Joint War Plans Committee and the The proposals, in short, completely re-
Joint Planners actually proposed shifting versed the American strategic principles
U.S. strategy away from the OVERLORD consistently defended up to that time by
idea.32 They argued that world condi- the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The paper, rep-
resenting “a new trend in U.S. think-
31 For instance, see JCS 83d and 84th Mtgs, 17, 18
May 43; see also above, Ch. I. ing,” went informally to General Mar-
32JPS 231, Adequacy of the TRIDENT Strategy, 26 shall.33 It was considered so seriously that
Jul 43. Colonel Bessell, Army member of the JWPC,
concurred in the memorandum but his concurrence
did not represent War Department opinion. See JCS 33Copy of JPS 231 (with attached buck slip) in
444/l. C/S file 381 II.
CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

when General Barker, deputy COSSAC, sions with the British, U.S. views on Eu-
arrived in Washington with the OVERLORD ropean operations should be the War De-
plan he observed a “weakening” of the partment’s view for which General Mar-
American attitude toward OVERLORD. He shall was the spokesman.36 As European
reported to General Morgan that the matters were the principal and by far the
weakening was induced, “as previously,” most controversial concern of the Com-
by U.S. naval authorities. He thought he bined Chiefs of Staff, General Marshall
had come just in time to strengthen the assumed the chief responsibility for de-
War Department’s hand.34 Actually the fending U.S. strategy in debate with the
War Department planners had not weak- British. To this responsibility Marshall
ened. They had already begun a thor- brought both conviction and diplomatic
oughgoing attack on the naval position skill. He was firm in his belief that the
and had presented a separate analysis of strategy evolved by the War Department
strategy for consideration by the Joint was the correct strategy, yet he was al-
Chiefs of Staff. This returned to the tra- ways willing to attend the possible merits
ditional U.S. view on OVERLORD and re- of rival suggestions. He fought hard for
affirmed the May decisions of the Com- ROUNDUP in July 1942 and lost primarily
bined Chiefs of Staff, especially in regard to the President’s insistence on irnmediate
to the withdrawal of the seven battle- action. Thereafter Marshall rode two
trained divisions from the Mediterranean. horses, struggling to keep tight rein on
Admiral King did not defend the naval Mediterranean commitments in order
planners’ report in the Joint Chiefs’ next that BOLERO could proceed apace. He
meeting on 7 August, and the traditional managed this feat by a series of com-
War Department view was accepted again promises. But, at Quebec, as has been
as U.S. strategy.35 suggested, the roads diverged. It seemed
The flurry of planners’ memoranda at essential to choose between them. For
the end of July 1943 was the Navy’s only
open challenge of General Marshall’s Eu- 36 On the other hand, General Marshall was scru-
ropean strategy. Admiral King himself pulous in letting Admiral King speak first on Pacific
matters.
was apparently content that, in discus- A graduate of the Virginia Military Institute in
1901, Marshall was commissioned in the infantry.
34 Morgan’s notes on telephone conversation with During World War I he was assigned to general staff
Barker, 5 Aug 43. SHAEF SGS file 381 Ia. duty and went overseas with the 1st Division, with
35 The original JWPC paper (JPS 231) , which set which he served at Luneville St. Mihiel, Picardy,
forth the naval point of view, was never presented to and Cantigny. He worked on the plans for the St.
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, but it formed the basis for Mihiel offensive and then became Chief of Opera-
JCS 444, which did reach them. The latter paper is a tions of First Army in the midst of the Meuse-Ar-
slightly toned down version of JPS 231 based on the gonne offensive. In May 1919 Marshall was appointed
same strategic principles. The formula at the 7 aide to General John J. Pershing and held that as-
August meeting was to call for a “reconciling” of the signment for the next five years. In 1936 and again
reports of the Navy planners, JCS 444, and the Army in 1937 he commanded Red Forces in army maneu-
planners’ rejoinder, JCS 444/1. In fact what happened vers. The following year he came to the War De-
was that the Army views were accepted in toto and partment first as Assistant Chief of Staff, War Plans
formed the basis for the U. S. Chiefs of Staff memo- Division, and then as Deputy Chief of Staff. After a
randum submitted to the British at Quebec as CCS two months’ tour as chief of a military mission to
303. See OPD file ABC 381 Europe (5 Aug 43) and Brazil in 1939, he was appointed Chief of Staff of the
ABC 337 (25 May 43). Army.
OVERLORD IN THE BALANCE (AUGUST-DECEMBER 1943) 95

the first time since July 1942 Marshall counting up her resources and matching
accepted the need for a showdown with them against her responsibilities for the
the British and undertook to lead the defense of her own shores and her life
fight. To his colleagues he said: “We lines throughout the world. The deficit
must go into this argument in the spirit in means must have seemed appalling.
of winning. If, after fighting it out on From 1940 on it was obvious to British
that basis, the President and Prime Min- strategists that, if the war was to be won,
ister [decide] that the Mediterranean eventually British armies would have to
strategy should be adopted . . . the deci- return to the Continent. But all their
sion [should] be made firm in order that plans for such an eventuality had to recog-
definite plans could be made with reason- nize that a maximum effort might hurl
able expectation of their being carried about twenty divisions against the Atlan-
out.” 37 tic Wall. Planners in 1941 and 1942 were
Deeply as General Marshall opposed bound to face strategy as primarily a
the Mediterranean strategy, he still pre- problem of what could be done with such
ferred to settle on that rather than face a a relatively small army. Their invariable
series of emergency operations and a gen- conclusion was that nothing could be
erally hand-to-mouth strategy. This oppo- done except under conditions of German
sition between a settled plan and a de- collapse or a very great weakening in
pendence on opportunity was probably German morale. It should not be for-
the most serious difference between the gotten that the ground war in Europe at
American and British points of view-a this time was being fought by massed
rift wider and more difficult to reconcile German and Russian armies of hundreds
than any differences over where and of divisions. How could the scales of this
when the campaigns in Europe were to conflict be tipped by the addition of
be fought. twenty divisions? On the other hand if
The British said in effect, “How can those twenty divisions (the core of an ex-
we tell what we should do six months or peditionary force of about one million
a year hence until we know how we come men) were committed in an unsuccessful
out of next month’s action?” The Amer- enterprise, it was probable that they
icans retorted, “How do we know whether could never be reconstituted. England’s
next month’s action is wise unless we striking power on land would thus be
know where we want to be a year from fruitlessly dissipated. It is not strange
now?” The positions were difficult to rec- then that the strategists looked to the
oncile because ultimately both stemmed fringes of the Continent, outside the area
from the respective resources and experi- where the bulk of the German Army was
ences of the two nations. For a year and engaged. Their best hope for eventual
a half Great Britain stood alone on the success seemed to be to nibble the Nazi
edge of a hostile Europe fearful a good monster down to size. When this might
part of the time of being herself invaded happen no one could foretell. It de-
by the Nazi conquerors. She stood pended partly on Russian success, partly
on their own success. If they could get
87JCS 104th Mtg, 15 Aug 43. away with the first nibble they might try
96 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

a larger bite. Militarily they did not prepared in September 1941 in answer
want rigid plans and long-range target to the President’s request for an estimate
dates. They did not want what General of the Army’s needs for waging war, con-
Brooke later called “a lawyer’s agree- templated an army of 215 divisions.40
ment” to tie their hands.38 They wanted The thought was then that the USSR
maximum freedom to exploit whatever might succumb and that America had to
situation arose and promised the best be ready to take on the German Army
chance of furthering their initial object alone, except for the relatively small con-
of wearing down the German military tributions of Great Britain. After Pearl
power in preparation for the final blow. Harbor the War Department published a
The Mediterranean, because of the weak- Troop Basis calling for an army of more
ness of Italy and because of the unusual than ten million men.41 As the war pro-
number and variety of legitimate mili- gressed Soviet success made a huge U.S.
tary objectives, was an ideal area in field army unnecessary. But the very
which to work out their policy. More- fact that Americans at the beginning con-
over, since the eighteenth century the templated taking on the German Army
Mediterranean had been an area of by themselves and felt it possible is a
British political interest. Military aims clue to their psychology. As U.S. war
and traditional political concern thus power accumulated, Americans became
both focused on the European under- impatient to bring on the decisive trial
belly.39 of strength. It was evident that such a
America came into the war with his- trial could never be made in the Medi-
toric consciousness of her great, unbeaten terranean. Moreover, the attempt to
power. Although she was dangerously nibble away at the German power, the
unprepared, her psychology from the Joint Chiefs of Staff believed, would only
beginning was offensive. Americans were result in attrition of their own strength.
confident they could build huge armies, However great the reservoir of American
navies, and air forces. For example the military power, its application was lim-
War Department “Victory Program,” ited by the logistical difficulties of long
sea communications and the chronic
38 SCAEF 12th Mtg, 27 Mar 44. SHAEF SGS file shortage of shipping. Every division sent
381 I. Brooke was at the time refusing to make com- into the Mediterranean was a division
mitments on the invasion of southern France as a
diversion for OVERLORD (see Ch. V) He said that lost for the main battle. It could not be
“it was not militarily sound to run a war on a law- moved to another theater without ex-
yer’s agreement by making commitments ahead of pending the same amount of shipping as
time, thereby losing the necessary and desired flexi-
bility to meet the ever changing conditions and cir- 40 Joint Board Estimate of United States Over-all
cumstances.” Production Requirements, 11 Sep 41, JB 355, ser 707.
39 See n. 26. It is impossible to assess what force OPD files.
political consideration may have had at any juncture 41 Both of these estimates were primarily for pur-
in the debate, for neither the Prime Minister nor the poses of planning war production and not mobiliza-
British Chiefs ever put a political argument on the tion, but they are nonetheless symptomatic of the
contemporary record. Even at this time (1950) Mr. Army’s expansive thinking. Cf. other estimates in
Churchill apparently still does not defend the Med- early 1942 cited in K. R. Greenfield, R. R. Palmer,
iterranean strategy on political grounds. See Chur- and B. I. Wylie, The Organization of Ground Com-
chill, The Grand Alliance, pp. 660-61. bat Troops (Washington, 1947). p. 198.
OVERLORD IN THE BALANCE (AUGUST-DECEMBER 1943) 97

would be required to send a fresh divi- The differences of strategic concept


sion overseas from the United States.42 were fully recognized by both the U.S.
Its very presence in the Mediterranean and British Chiefs of Staff. At Quebec
sucked in shipping to sustain it and more they were squarely faced in a debate
divisions to reinforce it. The Mediter- brought on by the Joint Chiefs’ submis-
ranean, General Marshall thought, was sion of a paper outlining strategy for the
a vacuum into which American’s great defeat of the Axis in Europe.45 Their
military might could be drawn off until paper called for no action. It was a sim-
there was nothing left with which to deal ple statement of principle, giving “over-
the decisive blow on the Continent.43 riding priority” to OVEKLORD over all
And what if, after committing the other European operations. At first read-
country’s resources to the Mediterranean, ing General Brooke found it for the most
they should be boxed up there, and de- part unexceptionable. He agreed that
stroyed? The Americans could not for- OVERLORD “should constitute the major
get that the Mediterranean was prac- offensive for 1944 and that Italian opera-
tically a closed lake to which Spain held tions should be planned with this con-
the western key. What if the Allied ception as a background.” 46 That agree-
armies, after fighting hard for minor ment, however, was not so positive as it
victories, should be cut off from the sounded. The British view was that the
sources of supply? The possibility did Italian operations were essential steps on
not seem unlikely. Franco was a Fascist the road that led to OVERLORD. Being
who had certain reasons to be grateful essential rather than diversionary, they
to Hitler and might be persuaded at least acquired in British eyes at least an equal
to turn the other way while German importance with the operation for which
armies marched through to Gibraltar. they prepared. The British objected
This fear of being locked up in the Medi- therefore to assigning “over-riding prior-
terranean was never shared by the ity” to the cross-Channel attack. The
British, who had long been accustomed to Joint Chiefs believed that, without such
faith in Gibraltar and diplomatic bul- priority, Mediterranean operations would
warks in the Iberian Peninsula. But it compete successfully for Allied resources
remained a strong factor in American and so perhaps make OVERLORD impos-
hostility to Mediterranean commitments sible when the time came to mount it.
until well into 1943, when it was finally For three days the debate precipitated by
concluded that the Germans no longer that phrase “over-riding priority” raged,
had enough spare divisions to seize the often behind closed doors with no sec-
Iberian Peninsula.44 retaries present.
It was no mere verbal dispute. It
42JCS 293, Limited Operations in the Mediter- tackled head on the issue of whether or
ranean in 1943-44, 7 May 43.
43CCS 83d Mtg, 13 May 43.
44 The fear of a German move through Spain was Rpt, Estimate of the Enemy Situation, 1943-1944,
frequently expressed. See, for instance, JCS 52d and European-Mediterranean Area, 7 May 43.
57th Mtgs, Jan 43; CCS 151/2, 17 Feb 43 and JCS Spec 45 See discussions of the Quebec Conference agenda,
Mtg, 26 Jul 43. Appreciation that such a move was CCS 288 series.
no longer possible was contained in JCS 438/1, JIC 46 CCS 108th Mtg, 15 Aug 43.
98 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

not the Allies should base their strategy ranean Theater will be carried out with
on a single-minded concentration on a the forces allotted at TRIDENT except as
cross-Channel attack in 1944. That there these may be varied by decision of the
should be no doubt of the seriousness of Combined Chiefs of Staff.” 49 Possible
the issue, General Marshall stated the eventualities still were riding high.
American view in strong terms. If the American attempts to crystallize strat-
Allies relied on opportunism, he said, egy were, of course, at bottom merely
they would be “opening a new concept efforts to force the British Chiefs of Staff
which . . . weakened . . . [the] chances into a hard and fast commitment on
of an early victory and rendered neces- OVERLORD. How far they succeeded at
sary a reexamination of . . . [the] basic Quebec is difficult to appraise. General
strategy with a possible readjustment Brooke, when directly challenged as to
towards the Pacific.” 47 The threat had his faith in OVERLORD, replied that he
been used before, and was probably not thought OVERLORD would succeed pro-
taken very seriously. But there was no vided that the conditions of restricted
mistaking the new firmness in the Amer- enemy opposition as laid down in the
ican stand. “The United States Chiefs plans were met. The Prime Minister in
of Staff believe that the acceptance of the course of both plenary sessions under-
this decision [to grant over-riding prior- lined these conditions. If they were still
ity to OVERLORD] must be without con- unfulfilled when the target date became
ditions and without mental reservation. imminent, then he asked that the Com-
They accept the fact that a grave emer- bined Chiefs review the operation. So
gency will always call for appropriate that they would have a second string to
action to meet it. However, long range their bow, he suggested that planning be
decision for the conduct of the war must directed now for an alternative operation
not be dominated by possible eventu- against Norway. In conversation with
alities.” 48 The debate continued. Marshall, on the other hand, Churchill
On 17 August 1943, the Combined said that he “had changed his mind re-
Chiefs at last agreed to a statement of garding OVERLORD and that we should
policy which on the face of it was ac- use every opportunity to further that
ceptance of the American principle, but operation.” 50 He also told General Ismay
the wording was pregnant with mental after the conference that “the thing
reservations, Instead of giving OVERLORD looked good.” 51 He would not, however,
“over-riding priority,” they proclaimed: commit himself on the issue of the rela-
“As between operation OVERLORD and tive priorities of OVERLORD and the Medi-
operations in the Mediterranean, where terranean. In general it may be said that
there is a shortage of resources, available the British Chiefs and the Prime Min-
resources will be distributed with the ister at Quebec endorsed the principle of
main object of insuring the success of a cross-Channel invasion in 1944 but still
OVERLORD. Operations in the Mediter-
49 CCS 303/S, 17 Aug 43. TRIDENT was the code name
47Ibid. for the Washington Conference of May 1943.
48 CCS 303/1, Strategic Concept for the Defeat of 50 JCS 106th Mtg, 16 Aug 43.
the Axis in Europe, 16 Aug 43. 51Interv with Gen Ismay cited n. 22.
OVERLORD IN THE BALANCE (AUGUST-DECEMBER 1943) 99

entertained considerable reservations as about the plan. General Brooke believed


to its feasibility at that date. It would that the invasion should be attempted
take another stormy meeting in the only if the Germans had been “forced to
winter to settle these for good. withdraw a number of their divisions
In the meantime, the reservations were from that area,” 53 and the Prime Min-
less important than the decisions. In ister wondered whether air nourishment
effect the Combined Chiefs at Quebec of the French guerilla forces in the region
abided by their agreements of the Wash- might not constitute an acceptable al-
ington Conference. They resisted sug- ternative. In the absence of a specific
gestions that the seven battle-trained divi- plan and before the Italian venture had
sions ought not to be moved out of the been undertaken, the whole project was
Mediterranean. They approved General evidently highly speculative and the most
Morgan’s OVERLORD plan and ordered that could be decided was to explore the
him to continue plans and preparations. possibilities.
They further suggested that the plan Even the possibilities were admittedly
should be enlarged. The Prime Minister very limited. General Eisenhower was
asked for an increase of the assaulting directed to plan on the basis of resources
forces by at least 25 percent. He also de- already allotted to his theater, and it was
sired a landing on the east coast of the estimated that this would allow him an
Cotentin. General Marshall agreed. Al- amphibious lift for only 27,000 troops
though these recommendations were not and 1,500 vehicles-a lift, in other words,
embodied in a directive, they constituted for about one division. It was further
an authorization to Morgan to overstep noted that “the ships and craft shown do
the limitations imposed on his planning not provide a balanced assault lift. . . .”
by the Washington agreements.52 However inadequate these resources
The OVERLORD planners had also asked might be, the Quebec planners ruled that
for a diversion against southern France to nothing more would be available. “Aug-
prevent the Germans from moving troops mentation is not considered practicable
from the south to meet the main Allied without drawing from OVERLORD.” 64
assault in Normandy. The Quebec con- Despite this ruling, planning would
ferees accepted with very little discussion reveal in the months ahead that augmen-
the desirability of such a diversion and tation was essential, and in consequence
ordered General Eisenhower, then com- the southern France invasion, though
manding general of the North African conceived by the Americans as an in-
theater, to draw up plans for an actual tegral part of OVERLORD, would actually
operation, It was to be timed to coin- become another competitor for scarce re-
cide with OVERLORD and have as its ob-
jective the establishment of a lodgment 53 1st Plenary (Citadel) Mtg, 19 Aug 43. OPD
files, Min of QUADRANT Conf.
in the Toulon-Marseille area with sub- 54CCS 328/1 Directive to General Eisenhower, 27
sequent exploitation northward. The Aug 43, Annex V. The origins and development of
British expressed some tentative doubts the southern France operation will be discussed in
detail by Maj. J. D. T. Hamilton in Southern
52Capt Mansergh (COSSAC Naval Staff), Rpt on France and Alsace, a volume under preparation in
QUADRANT at COSSAC (43) 23d Mtg, 30 Aug 43. this series.
100 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

sources. On the other hand, by providing strength with Germany. Each nation
a means to employ forces already located separately would have been doomed to a
in the Mediterranean in direct support long and possibly futile struggle.
of the attack against northwest Europe, Quebec was as inconclusive as the pre-
it would prove a useful talking point vious meetings had been in attempting
against British advocacy of Balkan ad- an unalterable definition of European
ventures or an increased effort in Italy. strategy. But operation OVERLORD came
For the fate of OVERLORD, the casual through the debates unscathed by any
suggestion to increase its size was prob- serious criticism. OVERLORD was the
ably the most significant product of the weapon. Once forged, it would argue for
Quebec Conference. It set in motion its own use more eloquently than all the
plans and preparations that acquired words in council.
their own momentum, which with the
mere passage of time became increasingly Landing Craft Again
difficult to reverse. This fact underlines
an important characteristic of all the de- General Morgan did not wait for the
bates among the Combined Chiefs of decisions at Quebec to begin a re-exami-
Staff. The debates always prefaced ac- nation of his completed plan with the
tion. Action was required by circum- view to strengthening it. One of his first
stances regardless of whether minds met steps after the plan had been delivered to
or not. There was never any question of the British Chiefs of Staff was to ask his
allowing differences to split the Anglo- naval staff to estimate, first, the number
American alliance. However great was of additional landing craft that would be
the disparity in strategic thinking, the required to load the vehicles of the two
community of basic interests ran deeper. follow-up divisions tactically so that they
The need for common action was more could be used on D plus 1, and, second,
vital than any principle under debate. the number of craft needed to lift an-
Thus, although neither Americans nor other assault division. The figures sup-
British perceptibly yielded their separate plied him on 27 July 1943 almost im-
points of view, practical decisions were mediately became irrelevant.55 Instead
made as if such yielding had taken place. of being able to contemplate a larger
The deadlock of ideas was broken by the assault, Morgan saw his already inade-
practical politics of compromise, en- quate supply of landing craft dwindling
forced by the necessity of continuously away.
acting against the enemy. Of the 653 LCT’s which the Washing-
Compromise, furthermore, was made ton Conference allotted to OVERLORD and
possible, as well as necessary, by the which General Morgan from the out-
equality of the Allies. The realization set complained constituted a bare and
that neither America nor Great Britain dangerous minimum for the task, 44 had
could act alone was implicit in every dis-
cussion and every decision. England’s 55 Memo, Capt Mansergh for COSSAC, Apprecia-
tion of the Effect of the Provision of Extra Landing
base and America’s resources were alike Craft and Shipping for Operation OVERLORD, 27 Jul
indispensable for a decisive trial of 43. SHAEF SGS file (1944 Operations).
OVERLORD IN THE BALANCE (AUGUST-DECEMBER 1943) 101

been taken by the British Navy for net General Morgan rolled up his sleeves
protection duties at Scapa Flow. It was and accepted the invitation with zest. He
possible, though not certain, that some told 21 Army Group, which was particu-
might be released in time to take part in larly concerned over the shortage of sup-
Overlord. Still more serious, a large port craft, that he would take full ad-
number of LCT’s had to be converted vantage of the opportunity offered him
into close-support craft for the assault to expound the subject of landing craft
because the Combined Chiefs had made shortages. “I am aiming,” he said, “to
almost no provision for such craft. Al- give the Chiefs a proper earful.” 57
though the burden of neutralizing the Facts for the earful were supplied by
enemy coastal and beach defenses would his naval staff, which calculated short-
be undertaken by the air forces and ages based solely on current allocations
naval vessels, the heavy preparatory fires and the three-division assault plan. Alto-
would have to be lifted some minutes gether about one-quarter of the 648
before the assault craft actually touched LCT’s planned for the assault lift were,
down. It was never imagined that pre- for various reasons, no longer available.
paratory fire could destroy any significant In addition to the 44 already noted which
proportion of the enemy defenses. The were being used at Scapa Flow, 36 were
most it could do would be to prevent the to be converted to LCT(R)‘s (rocket-
enemy from manning his guns effectively carrying craft), 48 would be armored to
while the bombardment was in progress. carry direct-support high-explosive weap-
It was therefore essential for the assault- ons, and 36 would probably be needed
ing force to keep up neutralizing fire for close support of the U.S. assault divi-
until the last possible moment. That sion. The latter estimate, in reality, was
meant small craft, armored and equipped very low. General Devers, ETOUSA
with guns and rockets, which could commanding general, subsequently cal-
maneuver close to the shore and fire as culated that the American assault divi-
the assault waves rolled in. To perform sion would require 56 support craft of
this vital task, the Washington Confer- the types that used LCT hulls or the
ence allotted OVERLORD just thirteen equivalent. The net deficit Navy plan-
LCG’s (Landing Craft, Gun). Early in ners set at 164 LCT’s as well as 7
August 1943, COSSAC was informed that LCI(L)‘s that had been converted into
only seven of these craft could be deliv- headquarters ships.58
ered in time; the rest would be a month How was this deficit to be made up?
late. General Morgan took the oppor- The U.S. Chiefs of Staff held out little
tunity to raise the whole question of the hope that the craft might come from
inadequacy of the planned close support.
As a result, the British Chiefs of Staff
57Ltr, Morgan (COSSAC) to Maj Gen W. D.
invited him on 12 August to prepare a Morgan (CofS 21 Army Group), 18 Aug 43. SHAEF
detailed report on the shortage of landing SGS file 560 I.
craft “and other naval equipment” for 58 COSSAC (43) 50, Landing Craft for OVERLORD,
10 Sep 43; Memo, Devers for COSSAC, Support Craft
OVERLORD.56
Required per U.S. Assault Division, 15 Oct 43.
56 COS (43) 186th Mtg (0), 12 Aug 43. SHAEF SGS file 560 I.
102 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

American sources. The United States, economical to British authorities. 62 Not


they decided, could not assign additional until later in the fall did the need for
LCT’s to the United Kingdom to replace more craft appear so urgent that the
those diverted from OVERLORD to Scapa Prime Minister intervened to cancel cer-
Flow defense duties.59 The Joint Chiefs tain ship construction in order to make
declared that the United States had never way for an increase of about sixty landing
built any gun-support craft and did not craft for OVERLORD. At the moment, Gen-
intend to.60 On 10 August Admiral King eral Morgan’s request for a revision of
wrote to Admiral Stark: “Production in the whole shipbuilding program was
the U.S. and requirements of other turned down by the British Chiefs of
theaters will permit no advancement of Staff .63
present schedule of BOLERO landing craft The problem of how to make good
to come from the United States mainland. the deficit in landing craft for a three-
The above matters are being studied at division assault had received only a pre-
the present time and you will be informed limiaary examination when word came
when decisions are reached.” 61 The deci- from Quebec that the Prime Minister
sion was reached a few days later to ex- wanted the assault increased to four divi-
plore the possibility of increasing produc- sions.64 The British Chiefs of Staff asked
tion, and Admiral King then said he felt General Morgan to report on that pos-
sure some increase could be achieved. But sibility. By the end of September, COS-
there was considerable doubt whether SAC completed a thorough re-examina-
any increases, even if effected, could be tion. So much debate and hypothesis had
felt in time for OVERLORD. The program by that time clouded the issue that Gen-
of U.S. landing craft production re- eral Morgan undertook to start afresh,
mained for several weeks clouded with recalculate his requirements, and restate
uncertainty. his tactical thinking.
British production offered no better “My original Directive” he began,
hope. The shipbuilding industry in the “placed at my disposal a quantity of
United Kingdom was near the saturation landing craft which bore little or no rela-
point, especially as regards the employ- tion, as to numbers and types, to the
ment of available skilled labor. The actual requirements of the proposed
manufacture of landing craft had already operation.” Now, he continued, it was
been expanded to the point where it was proposed to strengthen the operation,
consuming a quarter of all the steel which he fully conceded needed strength-
worked into new hulls. To increase it ening. But did this mean adding a fourth
further would have involved a host of division to the assault? General Morgan
technical difficulties which seemed un- thought not. He pointed out the danger-
ous weaknesses of the plan as it stood,
59 COS (43) 175th Mtg (0) , 29 Jul 43. weaknesses which were thrust on it by the
60 Memo, Adm Creasy for COSSAC, Provision of
Support Craft-Progress Report, 2 Sep 43. SHAEF 62 Information supplied by the British Admiralty.
SGS file 560 I. 63 COS (43) 566 (0) , Availability of Landing Craft
61 Ltr, King to ComNavEu, 10 Aug 43. SHAEF (Tanks) for OVERLORD, 22 Sep 43.
SGS file 560 I. 64 Cbl cited at COS (43) 209th Mtg (0) , 7 Sep 43.
OVERLORD IN THE BALANCE (AUGUST-DECEMBER 1943) 103

inadequacy of the landing craft allotted. assault struck General Morgan as unwise
“Detailed analysis of the present plan because it would necessitate broadening
shows that while the three assault divi- the assault front. Extension to the east
sions are only barely adequately mounted he believed would bring the assaulting
in craft of suitable types, the immediate troops within range of the Le Havre
follow-up formations are most inade- coastal guns, which were among the most
quately mounted, and there is a danger- formidable in the Atlantic Wall. Ex-
ous gap on D-plus-l day.” A large pro- tension on the right flank of the assault
portion of the follow-up forces being would involve landing on the beaches
mounted in ordinary shipping could not northwest of the Carentan estuary. Re-
be tactically loaded and thus would not versing his previous stand that this would
be operationally available on the far be desirable, General Morgan now noted
shore until twelve hours after landing. that the Germans had already begun
In short most of them were “follow-up” flooding the hinterland of the Cotentin
in name only; they would not be in posi- and that therefore the contemplated
tion immediately to reinforce the assault assault in that area was unsound.
troops. General Morgan therefore rec- The British Chiefs of Staff were not
ommended that, before any considera- impressed with this argument and con-
tion be given to increasing the number tinue to advocate a four-division assault,
of assaulting divisions, all additional the fourth division to be American and
landing craft that could be raked up to be employed against the east Cotentin.
should be put in to strengthen the follow- No suggestions were made as to how the
up and provide a floating reserve. “We evident difficulties might be overcome.66
already have far too high a proportion of However the strengthening of OVER-
our goods in the shop window,” he said. LORD was to be accomplished, there was
“To consider any increase in this pro- general agreement that strengthening
portion without adequate stocking of the was needed, and that this would require
back premises would in my opinion be large new increments of landing craft. In
basically unsound.” 65 the urgent need to find these craft, the
Morgan’s new calculations of craft question of their tactical employment for
needed to permit the landing of two full the moment took a back seat.
divisions in the follow-up for use on In September Donald Nelson, chair-
D plus 1 showed a deficit of 251 LCT’s man of the U.S. War Production Board,
for a three-division assault and 389 for a went to London and talked to General
four-division assault. In addition, for a Morgan and his staff about landing craft
four-division assault there would be a requirements. As a result of his conver-
shortage of more than 150 support craft sations he cabled Charles E. Wilson his
using LCT or equivalent hulls. conviction that LST’s and LCT’s were
Quite apart from this very large land- the “most important single instrument of
ing craft requirement, the four-division war from the point of view of the Euro-

65COS (43) 596 (0), 30 Sep 43. 66COS (43) 236th Mtg,4 Oct 43.
104 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

pean Theater,” and that the require- Time was already short when the ques-
ments for them had been “grossly under- tion of increasing landing craft produc-
stated.” 67 tion was officially raised at Quebec and
Planning adequate supplies of landing Admiral King told the Combined Chiefs
craft, however, was still complicated by of Staff that he was examining the possi-
the competition of other parts of the war bility of building more landing craft by
production program for critical war halting the construction of 110-foot sub-
materials, particularly steel plate and chasers. This, he thought, might result
marine engines. Equally important was in an increase of 25 percent, but the esti-
the competition between landing craft mate was not yet firm.69 On 20 August
and other shipping for priority in the 1943, planners, after tentative studies,
nation’s crowded shipyards. The Navy’s reported that any acceleration in landing
1944 shipbuilding program called for a craft production would probably not be
50 percent increase of tonnage over the felt before 1 April 1944.70
previous year, while the Maritime Com- On 13 September the Chief of Naval
mission’s schedules for merchant ship- Operations submitted a new schedule
building remained about the same as calling for a 35 percent increase in land-
before. To superimpose on this large ing craft production, saying that it “was
shipbuilding commitment an increase in designed to meet the requirements of the
landing craft production schedules re- operations agreed upon in QUADRANT.”
quired a careful scrutiny of strategic The Joint Staff Planners commenting
needs for various types of shipping. Fur- thereon agreed, with qualifications.rl
thermore, if changes were to be made in “Landing craft destined for OVERLORD,”
apportioning materials and facilities, they pointed out, “will arrive in time for
they had to be made long in advance of the operation [that is, craft already al-
anticipated needs since readjustments in lotted] though the complete allotment of
the program required time-time to can- some types from the United States will not
cel contracts’ for one type of vessel and arrive as early as desired by COSSAC.
let contracts for another, time to com- The most critical situation will exist in
plete construction already under way on LCT (5 and 6) ‘s. The only solution (if
one type and initiate construction of the late arrival cannot be accepted) seems
another. A large part of the Navy’s 1944 to be additional withdrawals from the
shipbuilding program consisted of small MEDITERRANEAN. There is no in-
vessels and destroyer escorts which used creased U.S. production in this type of
mostly the same tools, materials, and craft. . . . The QUADRANT decision relative
yards as landing craft.68 to OVERLORD will therefore not be affected

67 Cbl, Nelson to Wilson, 27 Sep 43, cited in George


E. Mowry, Landing Craft and the WPB (Historical 69CCS 111th Mtg, 18 Aug43.
Reports on War Administration: WPB Special Study 70 CCS 314/3, Allocation of Landing Craft (Opera-
No. 11), rev. ed. (Washington, 1946)) p. 29. Wilson tion ovratoau-Vehicle Lift), 20 Aug 43.
was chairman of the Production Executive Commit- 71JCS 462/3, Landing Ships and Craft-Means to
tee, War Production Board. Increase US. Production, 1 Oct 43, with incl, Ltr,
68 Mowry, Landing Craft and the WPB, pp. 33-34, Vice Chief of Naval Operations to Chiefs of Bureaus,
51-52. 13 Sep 43.
OVERLORD IN THE BALANCE (AUGUST-DECEMBER 1943) 105

by the increased production of landing Questions of Command


craft.”
At the end of October 1943 logistical For OVERLORD planners the months fol-
planners had prepared another study lowing Quebec were filled with frustra-
which indicated that landing craft pro- tions. The order to re-examine the
duction could be further increased, but strength of the assault brought them up
no decision was made and the 1 Novem- against the apparently unanswerable
ber production schedules virtually re- question of landing craft availability.
peated the 1 October schedule. In the Still more baffling was the seemingly
meantime General Morgan, visiting simple directive to carry on with plans
Washington, was led to believe that “if and preparations. What did it mean?
sufficiently powerful pressure was applied General Morgan’s original job-the only
at the right spot, U.S. landing craft pro- job for which he had a clear-cut directive
duction . . . [could] in fact be in- -was finished. He had been told to study
creased. . . .” Although he observed that it the possibilities of mounting a cross-
was “extremely difficult to find out just Channel invasion of a certain size at a
exactly whence to have this pressure ap- certain date and say by means of an out-
plied. . . ,” he still hoped to be able to line plan whether such an operation was
“bring matters to a head.“72 In that hope feasible. The verdict had been returned.
he was evidently disappointed. As time To continue planning could mean only
passed and action was postponed the pros- to plan tactically, to fill in the detail of
pects of producing more craft in time for how the operation as outlined could be
OVERLORD faded. carried out. But this was no job for a
Thenceforward procurement of land- small planning group designed as the
ing craft for OVERLORD proceeded on the nucleus for the Supreme Headquarters.
basis of making the most of existing sup- It could be done only by the tactical
ply. The principal methods of stretching headquarters which would have direct
the supply were reallocation from the control of the operation: army group,
Mediterranean theater, a comb-out of army, and corps. The Quebec order,
training facilities in the United States therefore, was actually an order to COS-
and United Kingdom, increase in service- SAC to farm out and co-ordinate tactical
ability rates, and increased loading. All planning. Such a task obviously required
these expedients were fully explored in executive authority. General Morgan
the months following General Eisen- was legally only the chief of a planning
hower’s assumption of the Supreme Com- group, without command functions. He
mand in January 1944, but up to the last was, as he pointed out, a relatively junior
minute the situation remained tight and officer.73 It was out of the question to
threatened to compromise the tactical give him the substance of command, but
dispositions for the assault. he was at length given the shadow. The

72Ltr, Morgan to Barker, 28 Oct 43. Barker Pa- 73 Ltr, Morgan to Hollis (Secy of War Cabinet),
pers. See Bibliographical Note. 2 Sep 43. SHAEF SGS file 322.011/2.
106 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Combined Chiefs of Staff in September ment on principle still left a wide area
made him temporarily responsible for for debate on the detailed organization
“taking the necessary executive action to of the command for specific operations.
implement” the COSSAC plans, pending The COSSAC plan for OVERLORD con-
the appointment of a supreme com- templated the carrying out of a single
mander.74 That this was a stopgap expe- tactical mission by a task force of army
dient scarcely adequate for the situation size and mixed nationality. There was no
was apparent to everyone and to no one question of the need for a single unified
more painfully than to General Morgan command over all ground forces in the
himself. He wrote to General Devers: assault phase. The closest co-ordination
“While I hate the sight of this whole was essential, both because the imme-
business I am completely at a loss to sug- diate objective was the establishment of
gest anything better, short, of course, of a single bridgehead and because the
appointing the great man himself which enemy could be expected to probe out
appears to be utterly impossible.” 75 the boundary between U.S. and British
The quasi command thus conferred on forces and, reasoning that it represented
General Morgan had grave limitations. a point of special weakness, attempt to
Although, with the backing of the Com- drive a wedge into it. There was, on the
bined Chiefs, he could now take “exec- other hand, no question of the necessity
utive action” he could not, on his own, for having both American and British
make command decisions. One command troops take part in the assault.78 Military
decision, in particular, was immediately and political considerations both re-
required if preparations for OVERLORD quired it. The administrative and logis-
were to go forward: what was to be the tical organizations of the U.S. and British
organization of command of the ground armies were so different that to attempt
forces in the assault and in the successive to pass one army through the beachhead
phases thereafter? established and organized by the other
The basic principles of combined com- would have involved critical difficulties.
mand had been outlined in 1942 and Even if these difficulties could have been
agreed to by the Combined Chiefs of Staff accepted, it was still unthinkable that the
in the fall of that year.76 They stemmed first blow of the supreme offensive of the
from the principle approved at the AR-
CADIA Conference that one Allied com- command was embodied first in the Directive to the
mander should have supreme command Supreme Commander in the ABDA Area, ABC-4/5,
in each theater of operations.77 But agree- 10 Jan 42. ARCADIA Conf Bk. The directive assigned
command over “all armed forces, afloat, ashore, and
in the air,” that belonged to the four participating
74Annex I to COS (43) 206th Mtg (0) , 3 Sep 43. powers (Australia, the Netherlands, United King-
75 Ltr, Morgan to Devers, 2 Sep 43. SHAEF SGS dom, and United States).
file 322.01 l/2. 78 In July General Barker had written: “It can be
76 CCS 75/3, System of Command for Combined accepted as an absolute certainty that the PM would
United States-British Operations, 21 Oct 42. not, for one moment, allow the assault to be made
77 The Chiefs of Staff Conference, ABC-4, JSSC 2. wholly by American troops. The same is true with
25 Dec 41. ARCADIA Conf Bk. (Marshall’s words at relation to the U.S. Government. We must be prac-
this meeting are quoted in Sherwood, Roosevelt and tical about this and face facts.” Memo, Barker for
Hopkins, pp. 455-57.) The principle of unity of Morgan, 4 Jul 43. Barker Papers.
OVERLORD IN THE BALANCE (AUGUST-DECEMBER 1943) 107

Western Allies should be struck by the Planning recommendations are one


armies of only one of them. thing; decision another. It was true that
The situation envisaged by OVERLORD the OVERLORD plan had been approved
was actually not very different from that without change by the Combined Chiefs;
existing in the attack on Salerno where a but, when General Morgan pressed for a
British corps was subordinated to an ruling on whether this over-all approval
American army controlling the assault. could be taken to apply to the recom-
Apparently, however, it seemed different, mendations on command, he was told
for the Salerno experience with mixed that the Combined Chiefs had not been
tactical command was conspicuously ab- aware of any “special implications” of
sent from the discussion of the OVERLORD approving the command system, and that
problem.79 in any case details of the plan were sub-
In the OVERLORD plan, COSSAC recom- ject to change by the supreme com-
mended that one U.S. division be em- mander when appointed.82 General Mor-
ployed on the right of the assault, two gan replied that a firm decision was re-
British divisions on the left, and that all quired at once if the operation was to
three be initially under a British army take place on schedule, and he asked the
commander.80 As soon as an American Combined Chiefs to make that decision.83
army was established on the Continent, The British Chiefs of Staff then de-
Allied field command would pass to a cided to accept General Morgan’s pro-
British army group, which would con- posals in the OVERLORD plan as repre-
tinue to exercise operational control un- senting their own point of view, and
til the capture of the Brittany peninsula asked for American comment.84 The
or the establishment of a U.S. army Americans at once began formulating
group in France, whichever occurred counterproposals. They had not agreed
first. Morgan’s reason for recommending on any formal reply to the British, how-
initially a British chain of command was ever, when the whole question was de-
his feeling that it would be easier for flected by the introduction of a new and
British commanders to organize and co- more pressing problem: the need for im-
ordinate an assault from a British base. mediate establishment of an over-all tac-
It is clear, further, that General Morgan tical air command.
wrote the OVERLORD plan under the im- A tentative organization of the British
pression that the supreme commander tactical air forces for support of the in-
would also be British.81 vasion had already been set up under
Air Marshal Sir Trafford Leigh-Mallory,
79 See, however, below (pp. 110-11) for citation of who had been authorized to make plan-
the Salerno experience in a different connection. ning decisions on the use of the combined
80 COS (43) 416 (0) , Operation OVERLORD, Report U.S. and British tactical air forces with-
and Appreciation, 30 Jul 43, Part I, par. 40. SHAEF
SGS file 381 Ia. out prejudice to the later appointment of
81 At the first meeting of the COSSAC staff, 17
April 1943, Morgan announced that Casablanca had 82COS (43) 206th Mtg (0)) 3 Sep 43.
decided the invasion was to be commanded by a 83 COS (43) 525 (0) , Operation “Overlord”-Com-
British supreme commander with an American dep- mand and Control, 11 Sep 43.
uty. 84 COS (43) 217th Mtg (0) , 16 Sep 43.
108 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

another air commander-in-chief.85 At principle applied equally, the Joint


Quebec in August 1943, the Combined Chiefs believed, to the proposed succes-
Chiefs agreed to name Leigh-Mallory sive command of ground forces in the
Commander-in-Chief, AEAF (Allied Ex- assault. To specify the organization of
peditionary Air Force), but delayed command under the supreme com-
writing a directive.86 This action, in mander would be to encroach on his pre-
effect, formalized his authority to make rogative.88
combined planning decisions on air mat- These two negative replies funneled
ters for OVERLORD, but he remained with- the discussions on OVERLORD command
out a combined command. About the into a single debate over the authority of
middle of September Maj. Gen. Lewis H. the supreme commander, as the Com-
Brereton arrived in England from the bined Chiefs began the delicate job of
Middle East with orders to organize a writing a directive for him. When they
U.S. tactical air force in the United King- undertook the task, the identity of the
dom. This became the Ninth Air Force, supreme commander was still unsettled,
formed initially with the headquarters of but it was known at least that he would
the Ninth Air Force from the Middle be an American and there was a strong
East and planes from the Eighth Air Sup- presumption that the choice would be
port Command taken over from General General Marshall. 89 It was therefore a
Eaker’s command. good bet that decisions left to the dis-
In October the British Chiefs of Staff cretion of the supreme commander
pressed for the immediate integration of would in fact reflect American views on
U.S. and British tactical air forces under command.
Leigh-Mallory’s command, and submit- In contrast to the British, the U.S.
ted to the U.S. Chiefs on the 12th a draft Army always insisted on permitting a
directive outlining AEAF powers and field commander the maximum freedom
responsibilities. 87 Their earlier request, and discretionary power in the exercise
meanwhile, for U.S. views on Morgan’s of his command. The Americans be-
command and control recommendations lieved that it was sufficient for the Com-
was still unanswered. On 19 October the bined Chiefs to assign the supreme com-
Joint Chiefs commented on both British mander a mission and leave to his dis-
papers in the same vein. To the pro- cretion all the details of how that mission
posed directive to the Commander-in- should be carried out. They viewed with
Chief, AEAF, they replied, “It is the view alarm the British tendency to extend the
of the United States Chiefs of Staff that control from the highest level down
the issuance by the Chiefs of Staff of through the echelons of command, nar-
directives to subordinates of the Supreme rowly specifying the functions of sub-
Allied Commander is unsound.” This ordinate commanders. When Eisen-

85 COS (43) 138th Mtg (0) , 26 Jun 43. See above, 88 CCS 304/3 and 304/4, 19 Oct 43. All the papers
Ch. II. in the 304 series bear the title as given in note 87 ex-
86 CCS 113th Mtg, 20 Aug 43. cept 304/1 and 304/4. The subject of these latter two
87 CCS 304/2, Directive to the Supreme Allied is “Command and Control for Operation ‘Overlord’.”
Commander for Operation “Overlord,” 12 Oct 43. 89 See below, pp. 112-14.
OVERLORD IN THE BALANCE (AUGUST-DECEMBER 1943) 109

hower heard, after his appointment to General Devers, in the first formal com-
the supreme command of OVERLORD, that mentary on the COSSAC proposals,
the British Chiefs of Staff proposed to argued that both objections could be met
dictate the detailed composition of the by having the assault divisions controlled
tactical air forces under him, he com- by U.S. and British corps commanders
plained not only against the specific pro- whose efforts in turn would be co-ordi-
posal but against what he called the nated under direct command of the
British tendency to freeze organization so supreme commander through an advance
that commanders could not use trusted headquarters. COSSAC replied that the
subordinates in their proper spheres.90 Devers plan was probably unworkable.
The British position seems to have been Supreme Headquarters would not be set
precisely that they were hesitant to trust up for tactical command. It would not
their subordinates. The Prime Minister be organized to control the detail that
wrote: “In practice it is found not suffi- normally flowed through a held army.
cient for a Government to give a General Furthermore it would be impossible for
a directive to beat the enemy and wait the supreme commander to be physically
to see what happens. . . . The General located so that he could exercise field
may well be below the level of his command of the assaulting forces and
task. . . . A definite measure of guidance at the same time carry out his basic
and control is required from the Staffs mission of co-ordinating the whole op-
and from high Government authorities. eration through relations with ETOUSA,
It would not be in accordance with the the air and naval commands, and U.S.
British view that any such element should and British army group headquarters
be ruled out.” 91 and service ministries, all either located
It was against this background of dif- in London or having established liaison
fering conceptions of the basic principles and communication with the capital.92
of command that the specific debates on Despite this criticism, the War De-
OVERLORD command took place between partment continued to advocate some
the Americans and the British. The prin- measure of direct control by the supreme
cipal objections which the Americans ad- commander in the assault. The Devers
vanced to COSSAC’s proposals on succes- plan, however, was modified to restore
sive command in the invasion were, first, an army commander to take direct com-
that they would have subordinated Amer- mand. The War Department believed
ican units of division size and smaller to that the assault army should be Amer-
direct British command in violation of ican, not British, and this view was ap-
the Casablanca declaration, and, second, parently accepted as a basis for discussion
that they seemed to exclude the supreme although it was not at once embodied in
commander from operational control of a written agreement. War Department
the assault and early build-up phases. thinking, reflected in a series of draft

90 Cbl, Eisenhower to Marshall, W8967, 31 Dec 43. 92 Ltr, Devers to Morgan (unsgd) ,4 Sep 43; Memo,
WD Cable log. Comments on General Devers’ Letter on Plan for
91 Minute, 24 Oct 43, Annex II to Min, COS (43) Command and Control of Operation “OVERLORD.”
209th Mtg (0) , 25 Oct 43. SHAEF SGS file 322.011/2.
110 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

memoranda and reports during Septem- There persists here the thought that S.A.C.
ber and October,“” envisaged a command should have some direct connection with the
setup somewhat as follows: the assault army of assault. Now, what this direct con-
ncction is to consist of I cannot for the mo-
would be initially under the Command- ment say. I am completely bogged down for
ing General, First U.S. Army, whose the moment in the differences between our
forces would consist of airborne troops, two languages. It seems that the word “com-
a British corps, U.S. corps, and Canadian mand” has two different meanings in our
two services. All I can get out of General
corps, each to contribute one division to
Marshall is that he has a sensation that he
the assault. “During the period from a should in some way control the assaulting
date prior to the assault to be designated army, although I am quite sure that his con-
by SAC 94 until CG, First U.S. Army re- ception falls far short of what we understand
linquishes the overall command of forces by the term “command”. As far as I can
make out, it also falls far short of the Ameri-
on the continent to British 21st Army
can conception of command. But how to de-
Group, control of operations will be fine it I must confess completely puzzles
exercised directly by SAC to First me. . . .96
Army.” 95 After the first three corps had
built up on the Continent, a British army General Barker, acting head of COS-
headquarters would be established. At SAC in Morgan’s absence, took up the
the same time the Continental field com- problem with his staff in London and
mand would pass to 21 Army Group. The replied at length. He did not feel that
supreme commander’s control of the General Marshall need be apprehensive
operation would then be exercised about the degree of control he could
through army group to U.S. and British exercise over the assaulting army. But
armies. On the arrival of the second the control should be that appropriate to
U.S. army, First U.S. Army Group would a supreme commander, not the control
assume direct command of all American normally exercised by a tactical head-
forces under the supreme Allied com- quarters. General Barker wrote:
mander.
There was no argument about the ar- I think it goes without saying that the as-
rangements thus outlined for the build- sault must be directly commanded by an
up phase. General Morgan, however, was Army Commander. Furthermore, the fact
that an Army Group Commander must per-
still unable to accept the concept of the force take over direct command of the oper-
supreme commander’s direct interven- ation at a fairly early stage, say D plus 5 or 6
tion in the assault. He was, in fact, unable or thereabouts, makes it essential that said
to understand just what was meant. After Army Group Commander should be closely
considerable discussion of the matter in associated with the planning and execution
of the assault, otherwise there is likely to be
Washington during his visit in October, a break in continuity of command, or at least
he wrote: some friction in the change-over as well as in
the planning for the buildup. After all, the
93 OPD file ABC 381 (22-l-43) see. 1. SAC can and would intervene at any time
94 The Supreme Allied Commander. the situation seems to warrant it. The Sa-
95 Draft Memo, Col Roberts (JWPC) for General lerno operation is a good example of the di-
Handy for CofS, 18 Ott 43. OPD file ABC 384 Europe
(5 Aug 43) see. 1a. 96 Ltr, Morgan to Barker, 28 Oct 43. Barker Papers.
OVERLORD IN THE BALANCE (AUGUST-DECEMBER 1943) 111

rect intervention of a Commander-in-Chief posal amounted to giving the supreme


when the operation gets sticky. He would, of commander all responsibility for stra-
courhc, have a senior staff officer from his
tegic bombing. This responsibility, they
staff on liaison with the Army Commander.
You will recall that Alexander and Eisen- felt, should remain with the Combined
hower both intervened in Clark’s battle at Chiefs of Staff. General Marshall ob-
Salerno, and as the result, Eisenhower or- served that “operation POINTBLANK [the
dered the whole weight of the Air and Naval strategic air offensive] is intended as a
forces to concentrate on the battlefield. In preparation for OVERLORD and may now
the assault stage of OVERLORD, it is these two
weapons, the Air and the Navy, that SAC be extended to operations from Italy.
would employ to influence the course of the Thus it is a part of OVERLORD." 100
battle. Our headquarters will have direct Although there was no argument over
telephonic, telegraphic and radio contact SAC’s right to control the strategic
with Army, Army Group and the Air and bomber forces once the invasion had
Naval Headquarters, as well as with our
liaison officers at these headquarters. In con- begun, the British strenuously objected
sequence, the SAC wil be in the closest touch to turning over command before that
with the battle and can intervene quickly date. The furthest they would go at the
should the necessity arise.97 moment was to specify in the draft di-
rective to the Commander-in-Chief,
General Morgan agreed and wrote that AEAF, that the strategic air forces would
he would “make arrangements for [Gen- be “detailed from time to time by the
eral Marshall as SAC] to be able to par- Combined Chiefs of Staff to operate with
ticipate directly in Bradley’s battle when all or part of their effort to meet the
it takes place. What though the planning requirements of the Supreme Com-
must have been through the other system, mander.” 101 They believed that SAC
that is, through the 21 Army Group, I control of the Eighth Air Force and RAF
am myself satisfied that this is the prac- Bomber Command was unsound. Air
tical solution having in view the fact operations were specialized; air channels
that the Commander himself will not be had been organized through four years
present throughout the whole proceed- of war; air operations affected all enemy
ings.” 98 fronts; and, finally, the air offensive al-
American concern with expanding the ready in progress was designed to estab-
authority of SAC took another direction. lish conditions for OVERLORD. This sys-
In the same memorandum in which the tem could not be improved on by putting
Joint Chiefs criticized the COSSAC pro- SAC in command.102 The Joint Chiefs
posed chain of command, they recom- could not accept the argument. What-
mended defining the supreme com-
mander’s sphere of command to include 100 CCS 124th Mtg, 22 Oct 43.
the whole of Germany for purposes of 101CCS 304/7, 4 Nov 43. This is a “split” paper.
conducting air operations99 The British The first five paragraphs of the draft directive in-
closed were agreed on by U.S. and British planners.
at once demurred, saying that the pro- The final paragraphs, dealing with the control of the
strategic air forces, were reported in two versions
97 Ltr, Barker to Morgan, 3 Nov 43. Barker Papers. representing opposing U.S. and British views.
98 Ltr, Morgan to Barker, 8 Nov 43. Barker Papers. 102 Cbl, Br COS to JSM, 10 Nov 43. SHAEF SGS
99 CCS 304/4, 19 Oct 43. file 322.011/2.
112 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

ever the technical objections might be, on the definition of SAC’s authority
they held it was unthinkable that the could not immediately be reached. Con-
supreme commander of any operation sideration of the latter problem, in fact,
should not have absolute command of all was deferred to January.106 In the mean-
forces needed by him to carry out that time at the Cairo Conference in Decem-
operation. “A committee,” said General ber the supreme commander was at last
Marshall, “cannot fight a battle.” 103 appointed. General Eisenhower, then
The upshot of the debate was a tem- commander in chief in the Mediter-
porary deadlock. It was decided then to ranean, was notified of his appointment
put the question aside until it became about the middle of December and ar-
critical. At the moment it was more im- rived in England to take command the
portant to issue a directive to the Com- middle of January. It was another month
mander-in-chief, Allied Expeditionary before the formal directive from the
Air Force, authorizing him to organize the Combined Chiefs was issued to him. But
U.S. and British tactical air forces into a the debate over the directive after his
single command under SAC. The essen- appointment was mainly verbal. The few
tial outlines of this command were agreed substantial issues at stake were settled by
to by the Combined Chiefs of Staff, and, being dropped. In effect the whole direc-
despite U.S. objections to issuing direc- tive was trimmed down to what both
tives to subordinate commanders, they sides could agree to and the settlement of
were embodied in a directive to Air such questions as the control of strategic
Marshal Leigh-Mallory early in Novem- air was left for later discussion in which
ber.104 The AEAF headquarters was the supreme commander’s determination
established as of 15 November, to take of his own requirements would be the
immediate control of the RAF Tactical decisive factor.107
Air Force and the Air Defence of Great The appointment of General Eisen-
Britain. The date at which the Ninth hower ended almost a year of uncertainty
Air Force would pass to AEAF command which kept many of the preparations for
was tentatively set for 15 December.105 invasion in long suspense. When the
Designed first as an appendix to the question of selecting a commander for
directive to the supreme commander, the cross-Channel operations was broached
AEAF directive was issued separately as at the Casablanca Conference, it was
it became apparent that full agreement shelved on the grounds that it was un-
necessary to appoint a commander so
103CC.S 126th Mtg, 5 Nov 43. early in the proceeding. Informally it
104The directive was issued through COSSAC, sav-
ing the letter of SAC’s right to appoint his subordi- was agreed that the commander, when
nates. appointed, would be British. Casa-
105 COS (43) 717 (0) , Formation of an Allied Ex- blanca’s perspective, it will be remem-
peditionary Air Force, 17 Nov 43. Air Defence of
Great Britain replaced Royal Air Force Fighter Com- bered, was confined principally to 1943.
mand. “Despatch by Air Chief Marshal Sir Trafford
Leigh-Mallory” (submitted to the Supreme Allied 106After the paper referred to in note 101 (dtd 4
Commander in November 1944)) Fourth Supplement Nov 43)) the next CCS memorandum on command
to The London Gazette No. 37838,31 December 1946, (CCS 304/8) was dated 6 January 1944.
pp. 37-38. 107For full text of this directive see below, App. B.
OVERLORD IN THE BALANCE (AUGUST-DECEMBER 1943) 113

If a cross-Channel invasion had been at- OVERLORD.111 When President Roosevelt


tempted that year, the British would in- was asked by General Morgan in October
evitably have made by far the greater for confirmation that General Marshall
initial contributions of resources. It was would be given the command, the Presi-
on that basis, and in consideration of the dent replied only that he was still not
fact that General Eisenhower was com- sure.112
manding in the Mediterranean, that the Behind the President’s reluctance to ap-
agreement was made. COSSAC was given point General Marshall to the OVERLORD
to understand immediately after Casa- command was the feeling that no one
blanca that the matter was settled. The could satisfactorily replace him as Chief
Prime Minister informed General Sir of Staff of the Army and member of the
Alan Brooke that he would be appointed Combined Chiefs of Staff.113 In particular
supreme commander as soon as it seemed it was felt that General Marshall had es-
advisable to make a formal appoint- tablished a working relationship with
ment.108 Congress which would be jeopardized by
These arrangements were bringing in a new man whom Congress
settled than they seemed. Churchill, while did not know. There was also a very gen-
agreeing to the choice of a British com- eral sense in the American camp that a
mander, formally enunciated the prin- field command in one theater was not a
ciple that the nation contributing the ma- big enough job for the man who for four
jority of the forces to any combined enter- years had occupied the top position in the
prise should command it. When it became U.S. Army and had taken a leading part
apparent that no cross-Channel opera- in formulating strategy throughout the
tions would be launched during 1943 and world. Partly in an effort to create a job
that for the 1944 operation the United suitable for their Chief of Staff, the Amer-
States would furnish the bulk of the icans at the Cairo Conference suggested
troops and materiel, the Casablanca deci- combining the European and Mediterra-
sion on the high command was changed. nean theaters under a single commander
As early as July 1942 the Prime Minister who would have the direction of all op-
had suggested to President Roosevelt the erations in Europe.114 The suggestion
appointment of General Marshall to
command cross-Channel operations.109 111Ltr, Col Edwards (OPD) to Gen Edwards
(CofS ETOUSA) , 5 Sep 43. Pre-Inv files, Devers
Churchill apparently repeated the recom- Correspondence. Colonel Edwards wrote: “The news-
mendations at Quebec a year later.llO Al- papers have just announced and rather firmly, that
though no agreement was reached, rumors SAC is to be Gen. Marshall and suggest that Gen.
Eisenhower may be C/S [Chief of Staff of the Army].
of Marshall’s appointment leaked tq the This should clear the atmosphere.”
press, and received increasing credence 112Interv with Gen Ismay, cited n. 22.
even from those officially concerned with 113See the account in Katherine T. Marshall, To-
gether: Annals of an Army Wife (Atlanta, 1946) , pp.
69ff.
114CCS 408, Command of British and U.S. Forces
108Interv with Gen Ismay, cited n. 22; cf. Stimson Operating Against Germany, 25 Nov 43; CCS 126th
and Bundy, On Active Service, p. 439. Mtg, 5 Nov 43. During a meeting with the Joint
109 Sherwood, Roosedt and Hopkins, p. 615. Chiefs of Staff on shipboard on the way to Cairo,
110Stimson and Bundy, On Active Service, p. 439. President Roosevelt said that it was his idea “that
114 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

stemmed also from American conviction actual planning for the 1944 operation,”
that a single command over related oper- and finally as part of the scheme to make
ations was more efficient than co-opera- the Germans believe that an attack across
tion between co-ordinate commanders. It the Channel would be made in 1943. Two
was turned down by the British on the months later General Devers further
grounds that a single field command over recommended that a skeleton head-
such disparate operations was unfeasible quarters for a U.S. army group also be
and that the proposal therefore would sent to England.117
only mean the creation of an unnecessary Despite this urging, which was rein-
intermediary between the Combined forced by General Morgan, the War De-
Chiefs of Staff and the theater command- partment did not become convinced of
ers.115 the necessity for an immediate appoint-
Shortly after the British had refused to ment of an army commander until the
entertain the idea of amalgamating the end of August 1943, and insisted then on
Mediterranean and European commands, still further delay in naming an army
President Roosevelt decided that General group commander. 118 The choice of an
Marshall should remain at his post as army commander was unanimous: he was
Chief of Staff, and that General Eisen- to be Lt. Gen. Omar N. Bradley, Ameri-
hower, the next logical choice, should can commander in the battle of Tunisia.119
take command of OVERLORD. His release from the command of II Corps
While principles were being discussed then in Sicily was arranged during the last
on the highest levels, the organization in week in August, and effected on 7 Sep-
the theater of various headquarters that tember. After conferences in Washington,
would assume control of the operation Bradley arrived in the United Kingdom
proceeded. In the early summer the Brit- in October. On the 20th of that month the
ish had constructed the skeleton of their headquarters of the First U. S. Army was
tactical command for OVERLORD, complete at last opened. The headquarters had
with the creation of headquarters of the been activated in the United States dur-
Second British Army, the First Canadian ing September with cadre from the East-
Army, and 21 Army Group. At that time ern Defense Command.120
the highest U.S. ground force command Army group headquarters was to be al-
in the United Kingdom was still V Corps. lowed to develop gradually out of the
In May, General Devers strongly urged theater as the need for it grew. At the time
the War Department to establish a U.S. that General Marshall arranged for the
army headquarters. 116It was required to appointment of General Bradley as army
parallel British organization, to “initiate
117Ltr, Devers to Marshall, 6 Jul 43. Pre-Inv files,
Devers Correspondence.
Marshall should be commander-in-chief against 118 Ltr, Barker to Devers, 30 Aug 43. Pre-Inv files,
Germany commanding all British, U.S., French and Devers Correspondence.
Italian troops.” JCS Mtg, 15 Nov 43. Dep C/S file 119 For Eisenhower’s appraisal of Bradley’s qualili-
110.00 A 48.41 dr 155. cations, see Eisenhower, Crusade in Europe, p. 215.
115 CCS 408/l, 26 Nov 43. 120 See Cbls, Marshall to Eisenhower, No. 5968, 25
116Ltrs, Devers to Marshall, 18 and 19 May 43. Aug 43; No. 6595, 1 Sep 43; No. 6904, 4 Sep 43. WD
Pre-Inv files, Devers Correspondence. Cable log.
OVERLORD IN THE BALANCE (AUGUST-DECEMBER 1943) 115

commander he was still not ready to name appurtenance to ET0 Headquarters.” 124
a commander for army group. General First U. S. Army Group (FUSAG) was
Devers then proposed that a single su- activated on 16 October. Its first assigned
perior U.S. headquarters, a U.S. GHQ, task was operational planning under the
be established to direct both operations direction of ETOUSA. The operational
and administration, following the prece- missions of both FUSAG and First Army
dent of World War I.121 Devers’ proposed were to be assigned later by COSSAC. By
GHQ was to consist of a field headquar- this time, however, it had already been
ters and a rear echelon to handle theater decided that First U. S. Army would com-
functions. It was to be formed gradually mand at least all American troops in the
by doubling the staff sections of ETOUSA assault and that 21 Army Group, chiefly
to constitute forward and rear compo- because it was early on the scene and had
nents. Once the field headquarters moved participated in COSSAC planning, would
to the Continent, the theater functions have over-all ground command in the as-
might be redefined to permit, presum- sault and early build-up phases. In effect,
ably, a greater independence of opera- those decisions meant that the role of
tional and administrative commands. FUSAG would be to take over command
The Devers proposal did not suit Gen- of U. S. troops when two American armies
eral Marshall, who believed that a maxi- had become operational on the Continent,
mum separation of operational and ad- that is to say, after the establishment of
ministrative functions was desirable.122 the initial lodgment area.
On 18 September the War Department It does not appear that the decision
agreed in principle to the establishment giving initial ground command to 21
of a U. S. army group headquarters, and Army Group was ever formally confirmed
planning for it was delegated to General by the Combined Chiefs of Staff. When
Bradley in addition to his duties as army General Morgan returned to London in
commander.123 So strongly did General November after more than a month’s stay
Marshall feel that the new headquarters in Washington, he carried back the in-
should not be burdened with theater re- structions and full confidence of General
sponsibilities that he recommended to Marshall. “He knows exactly what I
General Devers a physical separation of want,” General Marshall told General
army group from ETOUSA. “I desire that Devers in asking the latter for full co-op-
the organization of the Army Group eration with COSSAC.125 It was presum-
Headquarters be initially controlled di- ably in the light of General Marshall’s in-
rectly by Bradley under your supervision structions that General Morgan, shortly
and that it not be merely an offshoot, or after his return, began to draft a directive
to the Commander-in-Chief, 21 Army
Group, which finally fixed the chain of
121Cbl, Devers to Marshall, W4421, 13 Sep 43. WD
Cable log. command for OVERLORD.
122Marshall’s views on command in Europe are
stated in Cbl, Marshall to Devers, R3267, 18 Sep 43; 124Ltr, Marshall to Devers 24 Sep 43. OPD file ABC
Dir to Devers, 24 Sep 43. OPD Mist Exec office file. 381 (22-l-43) sec. 1.
123Cbl, AGWAR to ETOUSA, 18 Sep 43. Pre-Inv 125Cbl, Marshall to Devers, R5583, 11 Nov 43. WD
files, Devers Correspondence. Cable log.
116 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

That directive, issued on 29 November, ices. Mediterranean operations had in ef-


significantly under the letterhead of “Su- fect practiced the doctrine of three co
preme Allied Headquarters,” told the 21 equal commanders, although the opera-
Army Group commander that he would tions themselves were small enough so
be “jointly responsible with the Allied that the “ground commander” was never
Naval Commander-in-Chief and the Air more than the equivalent of an army
Commander-in-Chief, Allied Expedition- group commander. The issue of a ground
ary Air Force, for the planning of the op- commander for OVERLORD was raised in
eration, and, when so ordered, for its exe- intramural discussions in the Operations
cution until such time as the Supreme Division of the War Department in Sep-
Allied Commander allocates an area of re- tember and came before the Joint Chiefs,
sponsibility to the Commanding General, but was shelved there. The concept of a
First Army Group. ” He was also told that ground commander seemed objectionable
operations in the assault phase would be on practical grounds. Since the supreme
carried out by U. S. and British corps commander would be American, it was
under “the unified command of the Com- considered in September that the ground
manding General, First (US) Army,” and commander, if there was one, would also
that “the Commanding General, First have to be American. But, as one officer
(US) Army . . . [would] remain in im- in OPD pointed out, the “ruling factor”
mediate control of land operations until determining in practice the nationality
such time as the forces landed warrant, in of the ground commander would be the
your opinion, the introduction of a sec- availability of a suitable individual to fill
ond army headquarters . . . to take over the position. He observed further that no
a portion of the front.” 126 U. S. commander had the battle experi-
It will be noted that this directive made ence and reputation to challenge the
the commander of 21 Army Group an qualifications of the British generals,
over-all ground commander in the initial Montgomery and Alexander, for the job.
phases co-ordinate in authority to the air The conclusion was obvious: it would be
and naval commanders in chief, but it impolitic of the Americans to suggest the
specifically limited his tenure to the first creation of the job.127
part of the operation. In the earliest at- The command organization for OVER-
tempts at devising a formula for unified LORD, which was at last agreed on in the
combined command, logic and-it might closing months of the year, was retained
be added-the natural rivalry among the in principle after the assault was broad-
services for coequal dignity had seemed ened from a three- to a five-division front.
to demand separate commanders in chief The successive command already estab-
under the supreme commander for all lished was then phased forward. Two
three services, Air Force, Navy, and Army. armies (U. S. and British) were then to
The Casablanca declaration on command make the assault under the direct com-
had provided for three “assistant” su- mand of 21 Army Group. General Mont-
preme commanders for each of the serv- gomery, commander of the army group,
126Ltr, COSSAC to CinC 21 A Gp, Operation 127Ltr, Col Edwards (OPD) to Gen Edwards, 7
‘OVERLORD; 29 Nov 43, COSSAC (43) 76. Sep 43. Pre-Inv files, Devers Correspondence.
GENERAL MONTGOMERY, ground commander of the Allied a.ssault on the
Normandy beaches.
I18 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

was given a de facto ground command for had eleven divisions in the peninsula.
the assault phase-the same kind of uni- They were opposed by nine German divi-
fied command that under the COSSAC sions, which, it was estimated, could be
plan would have been exercised by First reinforced by fifteen more that were lo-
Army.128 cated to the north. At the current rate of
build-up the Allies would have only six-
The Cairo-Tehran Conferences teen to seventeen divisions by the end of
January. There was thus a real possi-
In late October 1943, the Combined bility that the Allies might lose the criti-
Chiefs of Staff began looking forward to cal build-up race and be not only stopped
their next staff conference and the issues but defeated. What General Eisenhower
which they expected to be raised there. feared most of all, however, was that, al-
Most of the indications were that the though he might be able to batter his way
Quebec compromises would be reopened up the peninsula to Rome, his armies
and the debate would go on as before. would arrive on their objective too weak
In proposing an agenda for the confer- to hold it. He could not stand south of
ence, the British Chiefs of Staff empha- Rome because it was important to take
sized their opinion that the most impor- the capital as a symbol of victory in Italy,
tant point for discussion would be a “gen- to capture the airfields north of it, and
eral review of our future strategy in the above all to retain the the initiative at
light of the events which have taken place least until after OVERLORD. Otherwise, the
since QUADRANT." 129 That this meant a Germans would be free to withdraw divi-
further British attempt to shift additional sions from Italy to oppose the Normandy
Allied weight to the Mediterranean had landings and the main purpose of the
already become clear through an ex- Mediterranean campaign would be com-
change of views on the disappointingly promised. General Eisenhower concluded
slow progress in Italy. that he must keep pushing north; to do
On 24 October, General Eisenhower so without fatally exhausting his armies
sent a long cable to the Combined Chiefs he needed landing craft to take advantage
of Staff outlining the situation in Italy.130 “of the enemy’s inherent weakness,” the
It was, he said, much changed since the exposure of his flanks to amphibious en-
Salerno landings, and the change was seri- velopment.
ously and dangerously to the disadvantage After receiving Eisenhower’s report,
of the Allies. At the moment the Allies the British Chiefs of Staff urgently cabled
Washington asking that General Eisen-
128Montgomery, however, never received the for-
ma1 designation of ground commander, and there hower be backed to the full. Specifically
actually remained some confusion, at least on his they wanted delay in the agreed schedules
part, as to the duration of his command over ground for transferring landing craft from the
forces on the Continent. The ground commander
problem will be fully discussed by F. C. Pogue in Mediterranean to OVERLORD. They wanted
The Supreme Command, a volume under prepara- this “even if the 'OVERLORD' programme is
tion in this series. delayed.” 131 For the moment the Joint
129 CCS 125th Mtg, 29 Oct 43.
130 Cbl, Eisenhower to CCS, NAF 486, 24 Oct 43. 131CCS 379, Operations in the Mediterranean, 26
WD Cable log. Oct 43.
OVERLORD IN THE BALANCE (AUGUST-DECEMBER 1943) 119

Chiefs simply replied that the British islands would fall readily into the vacuum
exaggerated the seriousness of the Italian of the general Italian collapse. German
situation and reminded them of their reaction, however, was unexpectedly
agreement to consider that OVERLORD and swift and determined, and Italian assist-
not the Italian battle was the “primary ance to the British, on the other hand,
ground and air effort against Ger- was of even less value than anticipated.
many.” 132But it was clear that strategy As a result, within a few weeks the British
was on the block again. Again a relatively had been ejected from their bridgeheads
minor practical decision, this time involv- with a loss later estimated by the Prime
ing the convoy schedules for moving land- Minister at 5,000 first-class troops.136 Be-
ing craft, raised the large issue of how the fore this happened, in late September, the
war in Europe was to be fought. commanding generals of the Middle East
The landing craft problem was tempo- and Mediterranean theaters had fully ex-
rarily settled by an agreement that Gen- amined the possibilities of reinforcing the
eral Eisenhower might retain, until 15 Aegean attack and saving the forces al-
December, sixty LST’s scheduled for ready committed there. They concluded
transfer to the United Kingdom a month that the only operation which could re-
earlier.133 But no one doubted that the establish the Allied position was the cap-
stopgap settlement was as unreliable as a ture of Rhodes. In view of heavy German
cork in a volcano. In fact, the cable to air activity and the enemy disposition to
General Eisenhower conveying the Com- resist strongly in the area, this operation
bined Chiefs’ decision 134had no sooner was envisaged as requiring a very con-
been drafted than the British representa- siderable contribution of resources from
tives began to argue that General Eisen- the Mediterranean which could be taken
hower had evidently not asked for enough only from the Italian campaign. General
resources, that he should be provided Eisenhower, further, saw in an Aegean of-
with at least a two-divisional amphibious fensive a constant and probably mount-
lift even though he had requested only ing drain on Mediterranean resources
one.135 which would seriously affect his capacity
There were other straws in the wind to prosecute the war in Italy. The other
that pointed to the resumption of the de- commanders concerned agreed and it was
bate on European strategy. Immediately decided to postpone the proposed inva-
after the surrender of Italy in September sion of Rhodes. At the moment the Com-
1943, the British had attempted to pluck bined Chiefs did no more than take note
off the Dodecanese Islands at the entrance of these decisions.137 Since the operation
to the Aegean Sea. They thought that the was “postponed,” however, and not can-
celed, it could be expected to come up
132ccs 379/1, 29 Oct 43. again, particularly since the Prime Minis-
133CCS 379/5, 4 Nov 43. At the Cairo Conference,
the date for transfer of the craft was extended to 15
January 1944. CCS 132d Mtg, 30 Nov 43; Cbl, CCS
to Eisenhower, FAN 281, 1 Dec 43. WD Cable log. 1362d Plenary Mtg at Cairo, 24 Nov 43. OPD files,
134Cbl, CCS to Eisenhower, FAN 271, 5 Nov 43. Min of SEXTANTConf.
WD Cable log. 137 See CCS series 365, Future Operations in the
135 CCS 126th Mtg, 5 Nov 43. Eastern Mediterranean.
120 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

ter had always taken a special interest in avoid annihilation on various parts of the
the eastern Mediterranean. front and in the process fell back as much
One of the arguments for pushing oper- as a hundred miles in the south. By NO-
ations in the eastern Mediterranean was vember the main German armies were
that success in that area might persuade split by the Pripet Marshes; Kiev had
Turkey to enter the war on the side of the fallen; the forces in the Ukraine were
Allies. The project of using diplomatic threatened with encirclement; the Crimea
pressure on Turkey to bring her into the was cut off. Although the German armies
war had been approved in principle by gave no sign of collapse, they were fight-
the Combined Chiefs at Casablanca.138 ing to escape destruction and steadily re-
Since that time various diplomatic over- treating. It seemed impossible that they
tures had been made through the British. could any longer hope for victory. In the
Although Turkey remained coy in the meantime the tempo of the Allied air of-
face of both implied threats and open fensive from Great Britain had stepped
blandishments-threats that without ac- up. There were increasing reports of
tive participation in the struggle against fading morale among enemy prisoners,
the Axis Turkey’s position might be partly induced, it was thought, by letters
weak at the peace table, and direct offers from home describing the devastation
of military assistance if she did come in- rained by Allied planes on German cities.
it still seemed possible at the end of 1943 In London hopes were raised that enemy
that an alliance with Turkey might be disintegration was near, that the closing
achieved. The project was given impetus months of 1918 were about to be re-
by reports that the Soviet Union was es- enacted. There was some feeling that plan
pecially interested in getting direct and RANKIN (the plan for return to the Con-
immediate support from the Mediter- tinent in case of enemy collapse) was
ranean area so as to draw off more Ger- more likely to be executed than OVER-
man strength from the main Eastern LORD.140 If collapse were, in truth, so near,
Front.139 then the strategy of throwing everything
There were thus three post-Quebec de- into the immediate battle in the Medi-
velopments that would tend to supply terranean and so avoiding, perhaps, the
fresh fuel for the British argument for necessity of ever having to strike the big
heavier Mediterranean commitments. To costly cross-Channel blow took on a new
these a fourth consideration, indirect and plausibility.
intangible, but nevertheless important, In the continuing policy discussions
may be added. Red Army successes in the during the weeks before the Cairo Con-
1943 summer offensive had been impres- ference the Joint Chiefs of Staff found
sive. The German armies were backed up only one new consideration important
to the line of the Dnepr. The Russians enough to warrant a possible re-examina-
did not pause. Bridgeheads were thrown tion of their positive commitment to the
across the river. The Germans fought to OVERLORD concept: that was the sugges-
138 See above, Ch. I. 140Ltr, Barker to Morgan, 20 Oct 43. Barker Papers;
139Cbl, Deane to JCS, No. 51.9 Nov 43. WD Cable JCS 533/7 Recommended Line ofAction at Next
log. U.S.-British Staff Conference, 18 Nov 43.
OVERLORD IN THE BALANCE (AUGUST-DECEMBER 1943) 121

tion of a Soviet preference for immediate worth remarking that these assurances
support via the Mediterranean over the were accepted by the Russians and that
stronger but delayed attack on northwest the Russians did not press to have the
Europe.141 If the Russians were actually target date on OVERLORD put forward.
to urge accelerated operations in the Still more remarkable to General Deane
Mediterranean, it would be a complete was their calm acceptance of statements
reversal of their previous stand that they that OVERLORD might have to be de-
wanted a second front, that they wanted layed. Reporting on this to the Joint
it in northwest Europe, and that they did Chiefs of Staff, General Deane said that
not consider Allied attacks in the Medi- it opened up the possibility that the
terranean as a substitute. Yet in Novem- USSR’s attitude on a second front in the
ber it seemed quite possible that the So- west had been altered by recent successes
viet Union might make just this reversal. of the Red Army, that the Russians were
The circumstances are worth examining now laying greater stress on immediate
in some detail. assistance. General Deane’s impression
In October, U.S. and British military was strengthened when Molotov com-
and diplomatic representatives met with plained that Allied pressure in Italy had
the Russians in Moscow to discuss various been insufficient to prevent the Germans
problems of military collaboration.142 from moving divisions to the Eastern
Marshal K. E. Voroshilov put before the Front. Soviet leaders could not under-
conferees three Soviet proposals for has- stand why two nations of the combined
tening the successful conclusion of the resources of the United States and Great
war: (1) preparations by the United Britain could not tie up more than a
States and Great Britain during 1943 to handful of enemy forces.143
insure an invasion of northern France; General Deane was convinced by all
(2) inducements to Turkey to enter the these signs that the Russians were work-
war on the side of the United Nations; ing around to a demand that American
(3) inducements to Sweden to permit the and British armies intensify the campaign
use of air bases for the war against Ger- in Italy or perhaps launch an invasion of
many. In answer to the first proposal Maj. the Balkans. He cabled the Joint Chiefs
Gen. John Russell Deane and General of Staff on 9 November to be prepared
Ismay outlined the conclusions of the for such a demand at the Tehran Con-
Quebec Conference and reassured the ference. He told them that it was quite
Soviets that the decision to mount OVER- likely that Russian enthusiasm for a
LORD was firm. General Deane found it cross-Channel attack had cooled. He be-
lieved the Red Army was now confident
141Min of Mtg, Roosevelt, Hopkins, and JCS, 19
Nov 43, cited n. 27. Cf. below, n. 144. 143General Deane reported in detail to the Joint
142The principal U.S. representatives were Secre- Chiefs of Staff in a series of cables in October and
tary of State Cordell Hull, Ambassador W. Averell November 1943. See esp., Cbls No. 2, 19 Oct; No. 4,21
Harriman, and Maj. Gen. John R. Deane. Deane, Oct; No. 28, 29 Oct; No. 34, 31 Oct; No. 47, 6 Nov;
following the conference, was to establish a U.S. No. 51, 9 Nov. WD Cable log. The story of the con-
military mission to the Soviet Union. The British ference is briefly but accurately told in Deane’s book:
were represented by Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden John R. Deane, The Strange Alliance (New York,
and Gen. Sir Hastings Ismay. 1947). pp. 16ff., 35.
122 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

of its ability to move into Berlin without pendent only on the state of Allied prep-
benefit of the squeeze from the west. arations; they still wanted to wait for a
The prospects of mounting OVERLORD moment of German weakness.146
as planned could not have seemed very Winant’s interpretation of British views
bright to the Joint Chiefs of Staff as they was confirmed in the course of the con-
traveled to Cairo for the first conversa- ference. Early in the proceedings the
tions with the British before the meeting Prime Minister emphasized the British
with the Russians.144 Shortly after their commitment to OVERLORD but begged for
arrival the Joint Chiefs asked Ambassa- some “elasticity” in order to expedite
dor John G. Winant for his impressions of Mediterranean operations.147 The neces-
British thinking so that they might be sary elasticity he thought could be
prepared for the inevitable debate.145 Mr. achieved by delaying OVERLORD about five
Winant began by saying that “he thought or six weeks. Landing craft destined for
the British had no idea of abandoning. .. transfer from the Mediterranean to the
[OVERLORD] but that they did oppose a United Kingdom could be held in the
fixed date for it.” The British, he said, Mediterranean long enough to carry out
were anxious to mount the operation at amphibious assaults behind the German
the right “psychological moment” and lines in Italy and undertake the invasion
they didn’t think that moment could be of Rhodes.
predicted so far ahead of time. British de- The Prime Minister’s views were fur-
feat in the Dodecanese had much upset ther elaborated and formally presented
the Prime Minister and had confirmed by the British Chiefs of Staff the follow-
him in the opinion that the Germans were ing day. 148They proposed the following
still superior to both Great Britain and actions: push the offensive in Italy until
the United States on land. British military the Pisa-Rimini line was reached, nour-
men, Ambassador Winant added, felt that ish guerrilla movements in Yugoslavia,
the Prime Minister’s views on the Dodec- Greece, and Albania, induce Turkey to
anese defeat were “considerably out of enter the war, open the Dardanelles sup-
perspective,” but they agreed in fearing ply route to the Soviet Union, and pro-
the German capacity to build up rapidly mote chaos in the Balkans. They added
on the ground to oppose the OVERLORD that, if these actions meant delaying OVER-
landings, despite Allied superiority in the LORD, then that delay should be accepted.
air. In short, he believed, the British still These proposals, counter to U.S. strat-
doubted that the Allies could attack suc- egy built around the absolute priority of
cessfully at a fixed date which was de- OVERLORD, should have called forth a de-
bate at least as vigorous as that at Que-
144See Mtg, Roosevelt, Hopkins, and JCS, 19 Nov bec. Actually, the Joint Chiefs of Staff
43, cited n. 27. At that meeting Marshall expressed
the opinion that the British might like to “ditch” -promptly accepted the British program as
OVERLORD now in order to go into the Balkans. Roose-
velt thought the Russians might press for an attack 146ibid.
up the Adriatic to the Danube to tie up with Russian 1472d Plenary Mtg, 24 Nov 43.
forces entering Romania. 148CC.3 409, “Overlord” and the Mediterranean, 25
145JCS 127th Mtg, 22 Nov 43. Nov 43.
OVERLORD IN THE BALANCE (AUGUST-DECEMBER 1943) 123

a basis for discussion at the Tehran Con- Powers. He declared first that, as soon as
ference and afterward. The Joint Chiefs’ Germany had been defeated, the Soviet
acquiescence did not mean that they had Union would join with the United States
relaxed their conviction of the transcend- and Great Britain in the offensive against
ing importance of OVERLORD In accepting Japan. Announced casually as though it
British proposals as a basis for discussion were a point well understood, this was ac-
with the Russians, they were underlining tually his first official assurance of Russian
the fact that final decision had to take intentions in the Pacific, and it had, as
into account Soviet views. They did not will be seen, profound effect on Anglo-
thereby agree to argue for the British American strategy. Stalin then took up
stand; they intended only to present it in the Italian front. Allied victories there, he
order to elicit Soviet reaction.149 thought, had been important, but “they
There the matter rested when the pre- are of no further great importance as re-
liminary Cairo conferences broke up and gards the defeat of Germany.” The USSR,
the Combined Chiefs of Staff traveled to he continued, believed that the most suit-
Tehran for the central and critical meet- able point of attack against Germany was
ing with the Russians. The keynote of the northwest France. Thus in a few sentences
Tehran meetings was set by the first he scouted General Deane’s prognostica-
plenary session on 28 November 1943 be- tions of a change in the Soviet attitude.
tween President Roosevelt, Prime Minis- The Americans were pleased, if somewhat
ter Churchill, and Marshal Stalin.150 Be- surprised.
cause the main object of the Tehran Con- The Prime Minister wanted to know
ference was to get the Soviet views on whether operations in the eastern Medi-
strategy as a basis for co-ordinating United terranean to take some weight immedi-
Nations’ policy, it was Marshal Stalin who ately off the USSR would not be accept-
at that first meeting called the tune. He able even though they might mean a delay
wasted no time making clear the Russian of a month or two in mounting OVERLORD.
view. After listening to some preliminary Stalin replied that he did not consider it
oratory by the President and Prime Min- worth while to scatter British and U.S.
ister, he cut short his own introductory re- forces. On the other hand he was very
marks with a blunt “Now let us get down much interested in the suggestion made
to business.” Within a few minutes he by both the President and Mr. Churchill
announced all the major elements of that an invasion of southern France was
USSR strategy as it affected the Western being considered as a diversion for OVER-
149 CCS 131st Mtg, 26 Nov 43. LORD. He did not look on it exactly as a
150 This and the following narrative of the Tehran diversion. Simultaneous attacks from the
(EUREKA) Conference are from the official U.S. min- northwest and south appealed to him as
utes of the meeting, bound with the minutes of the
Cairo (SEXTANT) Conference. OPD files. The records a single pincer attack the pattern of which
kept by the U.S. and British secretaries of the plenary was familiar from many Red Army vic-
political-military meetings at Tehran were not after- tories.
ward co-ordinated. For purposes of the discussion
here, however, the discrepancies are unimportant and
Stalin’s interest in an assault on south-
the U.S. minutes have been used throughout. ern France caught the U.S. and British
TEHRAN CONFERENCE. Left to right: Marshal Stalin, President Roosevelt,
and Prime Minister Churchill.
OVERLORD IN THE BALANCE (AUGUST-DECEMBER 1943) 125

delegations unprepared.151 The President Southern France under favorable weather


and Prime Minister told Stalin that no de- conditions. . . ." 154
tailed examination of the project had yet On the basis of this study and under
been made, but that their staffs would considerable urging by Marshal Stalin,
study it. It was a curious approach, pos- the Americans and British before leaving
sibly calculated to avoid making any firm Tehran committed themselves to mount-
commitment. But it ignored a large ing OVERLORD with a supporting opera-
amount of quite detailed planning work tion against the south of France during
already done for the operation. It ignored May 1944. It was clear that Marshal Stalin
General Eisenhower’s recommendations considered the two operations as a single,
made to the Combined Chiefs of Staff on inseparable military undertaking.
29 October, opposing the operation in This was the Soviet view of what Anglo-
view of inadequate resources.152 Most im- American armies should do to hasten the
portant of all it ignored the fact that the end of the war in Europe. The view was
bulk of the planning staffs had been left hammered in during the conference, as in
in Cairo. The only material on hand at every meeting the Soviet representatives,
Tehran to “start” the study was a copy of abetted by the Americans, sought to pin
the 9 August outline plan which was very down the most unequivocal possible
much out of date.153 It was on the basis agreement on OVERLORD.155 All other
of this old plan that the skeleton planning operations in the Mediterranean Stalin
staff at Tehran drew up a draft memo- waved aside as diversion. “He had no in-
randum for the President’s considera- terest in any . . . [Mediterranean] opera-
tion. Following the August plan, the tions other than those into Southern
memorandum recommended a two-divi- France.” 156He admitted the desirability
sion assault with a build-up to ten divi- of getting Turkey into the war, but
sions. There was, however, no reliable in- doubted that it could be done. In any case
formation as to the resources likely to be he felt that Turkey’s participation was a
available. On the critical matter of land- comparatively unimportant matter. The
ing craft supplies, the memorandum was important point was that he did not wish
necessarily vague; its general conclusion the Western Allies to contemplate any di-
was that there probably would be enough version whatsoever from OVERLORD. OVER-
craft “to move two assault divisions by LORD was the main question, not Turkey
short haul from Corsica and Sardinia to or Rhodes or the Balkans. To make sure
that there would be no wavering in the
preparations for OVERLORD, Marshal Stalin
151 This can readily be deduced from the records
154 Unnumbered Memo, Operation Against South-
and was specifically stated by Colonel (now Brig.
ern France, 29 Nov 43. OPD file ABC 384 Europe (5
Gen.) Bessel in conversation with the author, 5
Aug 43) sec. 9a.
March 1947. It is further confirmed by statements of
155It is clear that the Soviet views had force in the
General Ismay to Dr. F. C. Pogue, in the interview
conference because they were also American views.
cited above, note 22.
For a plausible analysis of President Roosevelt’s role
152Cbl, Eisenhower to CCS, NAF 492, 29 Oct 43. at Tehran see Sherwood, Roosevelt and Hopkins, pp.
WD Cable log. 789ff.
153 JPS 249, Plan for Invasion of Southern France, 156 Plenary Mtg, 29 Nov 43. Statement not reported
9 Aug 43. in British minutes.
126 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

urged that a supreme commander be ap- materially at the expense of that opera-
pointed at once. He felt that the operation tion.” The diversion of a month’s supply
could not progress until someone had of craft from the Pacific would probably
clear and single responsibility for it. Both force the postponement of an operation
Stalin and Churchill emphasized that the planned against Truk, and they suggested
choice was the President’s to make; all that, if that operation could not be de-
agreed that the appointment should be layed, then it would be necessary to make
settled within the next fortnight. up the deficit for it by transferring craft
The air was cleared when the Ameri- from the South Pacific.157
cans and British gathered again at Cairo. Here was the sign of things to come.
The question of postponing OVERLORD in The “numbers racket” of shuffling alloca-
favor of Mediterranean diversions was tions of landing craft around the globe, a
scotched at last. The one big problem half dozen here, a half dozen there, had
that remained alive and would grow begun and it would not end until late in
from now on more robust and obstrep- 1944.
erous was how to carry out the commit- One possible source for more landing
ment to invade southern France (Oper- craft was the cancellation of a proposed
ation ANVIL) at the same time as OVER- amphibious assault (BUCCANEER) against
LORD. In agreeing to ANVIL, the Prime the Andaman Islands, in connection with
Minister had stipulated that the strength operations to open the Burma Road. The
of the assault be not less than the two di- British, who had always felt that offensive
visions which the Tehran staff had indi- action against Japan could wait until after
cated were feasible. But back in Cairo the the defeat of Germany, now took the
Combined Planners looked over the land- initiative in urging cancellation. “It ap-
ing craft figures and reported that there peared,” said Air Marshal Portal, “that
was actually enough lift for only one di- in order to carry out a successful opera-
vision in the assault and two-thirds of a tion in the South of France, other opera-
division in the immediate follow-up. Esti- tions would have to suffer.“168 Specifi-
mating that a two-division assault would cally, he thought, the operation that
require a simultaneous lift for 45,500 men should suffer was BUCCANEER. The Joint
and 7,740 vehicles, planners calculated a Chiefs of Staff were opposed at first, but
probable shortage of lift for 6,500 men after consultation with the President they
and 3,200 vehicles. That deficit might be finally agreed to accept a smaller amphibi-
made good, they reasoned, by diverting ous assault requiring not more than half
from the Pacific one month’s allocation of the lift. The surplus craft could thus be
landing craft-or a total of 26 LST’s and diverted to Europe.159
26 LCT’s-and then taking 5 LCT’s from
OVERLORD. With reference to the latter 157 CCS 424, Amphibious Ope-ations Against the
South of France, 5 Dec 43.
recommendation, the planners noted that 158CCS 133d Mtg, 3 Dec 43.
OVERLORD was already getting 24 more 159This decision and its impact on strategy in
LCT’s than had been counted on at the Burma as well as on U.S.-China relations will be dis-
cussed in full by C. F. Romanus and R. Sunderland
Quebec Conference and that therefore in Command Problems, 1940-1944, a volume under
the diversion of these five craft was “not preparation in this series.
OVERLORD IN THE BALANCE (AUGUST-DECEMBER 1943‘) 127

In the course of the discussion Admiral maximum battle effort.” 161 The word
King expressed alarm over the tendency went around the world: to Cairo, Algiers,
to regard the Pacific area as a pool of re- Tehran, Chungking, Southwest Pacific
sources for the European theater.160 But Area, Fort Shafter (Hawaii), Noumea
in view of the priority of OVERLORD and (New Caledonia), Quarry Heights
ANVIL as the paramount operations of (Canal Zone), Anchorage, and Adak Is-
1944, and the chronic shortage of land- land (Alaska). Every craft saved was
ing craft, it was in fact inevitable to re- precious; wherever it was on the globe
gard any non-European theater of opera- its fate was tied up with the fate of OVER-
tions as potentially a stock pile to be LORD.
raided in order to fatten the ETO. The The net effect of the reallocation of
point was perhaps best made by a cable craft at the Cairo Conference was to give
which General Marshall sent in Decem- OVERLORD an additional 26 LST’s, 24
ber to all theater commanders and de- LCI(L)‘s, and 64 LCT’s above the allo-
fense commands. “The landing craft sit- cations set at Quebec; and to give ANVIL
uation is critical,” General Marshall an additional 41 LST’s, 31 LCI (L)‘s, 3
wired, “and will continue to be so for XAP’s, and 6 LSI(L).162 These were sig-
some time to come. Any possible increase nificant additions but their impressive-
in production is far behind the increas- ness would pale before the increasing de-
ing demand for landing craft. You are di- mands of the big invasion, as continued
rected to make every landing ship and planning brought out the military re-
craft available for and apply them to the alities of the task to be done.
161 Cbl, R6820, 11 Dec 43. WD Cable log.
160 CCS 135th Mtg, 5 Dec 43; JCS 132d Mtg, 28 Nov 162 CCS 428 (rev), Relation of Available Resources
43. to Agreed Operations, 15 Dec 43.
CHAPTER IV

The German Army In France


1940-1943
Organization of the West Rundstedt, Commander in Chief in the
West, was putting the final touches on a
German leaders in the fall of 1943 read long, frank, pessimistic report on the
their newspapers and pored over intel- state of his defenses. The burden of the
ligence reports with special interest. report was that his army was not in any
Crisis in the east had been reached and way prepared to resist the expected Al-
passed; there would be no more massed lied attack. In three years of occupation
German offensives, no decisive victories. little had actually been accomplished to
Crisis in the west was approaching. In make Fortress Europe a military reality.2
October, news of the military conference With the conquest of France in June
in Moscow convinced Hitler and his staff 1940, Hitler believed that he had won
that the opening of the second front was the war.3 He had no plans ready for the
imminent. The conclusion was modified next step. He could not understand why
later as press releases from the Tehran any more victories should be necessary to
Conference were taken to indicate a post- convince Great Britain that it was hope-
ponement of the invasion for perhaps less to prolong the struggle. But Britain’s
two or three months. The best guess then stubbornness, though inexplicable, was
was that the Allies might ‘attack any time clearly a fact. Hitler noted in July that
after February 1944, but probably in the the British Government was apparently
spring. Whatever the exact time sched-
ule, most German leaders had little doubt 2 Beurteilung der Lage Ob. West am 25.X.43, 28
that invasion was close at hand.1 Oct 43 (cited hereafter as Rundstedt Report, 25 Oct
43) , Oberbefehlshaber West (referred to hereafter as
While the Moscow Conference was OB WEST) Ia Nr. 550/43. Oberkommando des
going on, Generalfeldmarschall Gerd von Heel-es (see n. 19), Generalstab des Heeres/Opera-
tionsabteilung (referred to hereafter as OKH/Op.-
1 Oberkomnando der Wehrmacht (see n. 19) / Abt.) , 28 Oct 43. The German term “Oberbefehls-
Wehrmachtfuehrungsstab, Kriegstagebuch (referred haber West,” which may mean either the Com-
to hereafter as OKW/ WFSt, KTB) 1.IX.-31 .XII.43, mander in Chief West or his headquarters, has been
11 Dec 43; cf. MS # B-283 by Blumentritt, OB rendered as “OB WEST” when it refers to the head-
WEST (see n. 2) Chief of Staff, who after the war quarters and as “Commander in Chief West” when
wrote that following the declarations from Moscow it refers to the person.
and Tehran the German commanders knew that 3 See The Private War Journal of Generaloberst
Germany was to be beaten; before that time they Franz Halder, 22 Jul 40 (trans) , MS. Hist Div files.
still hoped for an agreement with the Western Pow- Cited hereafter as Halder Diary. Halder was Chief
ers. See, however, later estimates of Allied intentions of the General Staff of the German Army from 1938
in Ch. VII, below. to September 1942.
THE GERMAN ARMY IN FRANCE, 1940-1943 129

set on fighting to the fmish,4 and he dangers of SEELOEWE, Hitler did not
therefore began serious consideration of like the political implications of conquer-
plans to deliver the coup de grace.5 The ing England by invasion. He saw that the
obvious and most convincing method was defeat of England would be followed by
invasion. disintegration of the British Empire. The
The projected invasion was given the beneficiaries of such a collapse, he
code name SEELOEWE (SEA LION) and thought, would be Japan and the United
Army and Navy planners set to work in States, not Germany. 8 He wanted not the
a race against time to solve the manifold destruction but the surrender of Great
and unfamiliar problems of a large- Britain. To force surrender, he believed
scale amphibious operation. The first it was necessary to deprive the British
big problem was that there were no finally and completely of all hope in ul-
landing craft, and very little shipping of timate victory. They therefore must be
any description. By gathering up all the confronted with a solid political front on
barges from inland waterways at the cost the Continent embracing Spain, Italy,
of paralyzing large sections of industry, and a vanquished Russia.9 Defeat of
the Germans could reckon on barely Russia was particularly important. Hit-
enough shipping space to put an effective ler thought that England drew hope
force ashore in England.6 But towed chiefly from the continued independence
barges at the mercy of the slightest wind- of tile Soviet [Jnion and the United
roughened seas were hardly ideal. The States. By knocking out Russia, the Ger-
perils of improvisation, furthermore, mans would remove one source of hope
would be heightened by the lack of and considerably dim the other; Russia’s
naval protection. The only way to guard defeat would leave Japan strong in the
the convoys seemed to be to mass all Pacific and would probably prevent the
submarines and light surface vessels on LJnited States from becoming an effec-
the North Sea flank and at the same time tive ally of Great Britain in Europe.
mount a diversionary expedition on the “LVith Russia smashed,” Hitler argued,
Atlantic side to draw the British Fleet “Britain’s last hope would be shattered.”
away from the main crossing. The Navy On 31 July 1940 Hitler decided that
was decidedly cool toward the project. Russia’s destruction “must therefore be
Grossadmiral Erich Raeder, the Navy made a part of this struggle [against
Commander in Chief, as early as July England]. “10 He set the spring of 1941
had uncovered so many risks that he as the target date and ordered prepara-
strongly recommended against the opera- tions made for a lightning blow to
tion except as a last resort.7 knock out Russia in not more than five
Hitler agreed. Quite apart from the months.11
The decision to attack Russia resulted
4 Haldcr Diary, 13 Jul 40.
5 Conf, 20 Jun 40, ONI, Fuelzrer Conferences, 1940,
immediately in a reorganization and ex-
Vol. I. 8 Haldcr Diary, 26 Jul 40.
6 Annex 2, Conf, 23 Jul 40, Ibid., Vol. II. It was 9lbid., 31 Jul 40. Planning proceeded fitfully for
planned to land 90,000 men in the first sir days. an alliance with Spain and the seizure of Gibraltar.
7 Confs, 11 Jul 40 and 13 Aug 40, Ibid., Vols. I and 10 Halder Diary, 31 Jul 40.
II. respectively Cf. Halder Diary, 31 JuI 40. 11 Ibid., 17 Aug 40.
130 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

pansion of the Army. The goal set was which it could be ready.14 But readiness
to build up from 143 to 180 divisions.12 even on this date hinged on the ability
As all three of the army groups that de- of Reichsmarschall Hermann Goering’s
feated France, A, B, and C, were to be Luftwaffe to knock out the British Royal
shifted to the Eastern Front by the spring Air Force. In the Battle of Britain Goer-
of 1941, it became necessary to create ing tried and failed as British fighter
a new headquarters to take over the oc- pilots demonstrated skill and courage
cupation of France. This was Army that took heavy toll of the attackers.
Group D, formed during September and There followed a succession of postpone-
October under command of Generalfeld- ments, which gained nothing: the Royal
marschall Erwin von Witzleben. In order Air Force remained unconquered and
to relieve the Army High Command at the weather, the final insuperable ob-
once for exclusive attention to the east, a stacle, only became more stormy and un-
theater commander, Oberbefehlshaber predictable as the season advanced. With
West (Commander in Chief West) was an improvised landing fleet, composed
designated about the same time to take largely of river barges only a third of
charge of all offensive or defensive opera- which were self-propelled, the Germans
tions that might be mounted in the west. needed a relatively long period of almost
Field Marshal Rundstedt, still in com- flat calm.15 Such periods were rare in OC-
mand of Army Group A (the force ear- tober and could not be forecast. By the
marked for SEELOEWE), was concur- middle of October SEELOE WE had been
rently appointed Commander in Chief definitely called off. Preparations were to
West with full command over Army be continued for a landing in the spring
Group A and tactical command over but chiefly as a deception measure to keep
Army Group D and Armed Forces Com- up the pressure on the British.16
mander Netherlands (Wehrmachtbefehls- Rundstedt thus remained in France
haber Niederlande).13 with his Army Group A during the
While these command changes were winter of 1940-41. 17 In April 1941 he
being effected, the German commanders was moved out, and command in the
were rapidly becoming convinced that west passed to von Witzleben, com-
SEELOEWE was not a sound operation mander of Army Group D. Witzleben
of war. The Navy had set the period was left with three armies, the Seventh
20-26 September as the earliest date on and Fifteenth occupying the long coast
line from the Spanish border to Antwerp,
and the First disposed in the interior
12 Memo, Heeresaufbau auf 180 Divisionen, 10 Sep
OKW/Wehrmachtfuehrungsamt, A bteilung with headquarters near Paris.
40,
Landesuerteidigung, Gruppe II, Nr. 1650/40. Trans- The threat of invasion or even of dam-
lation found in German Manpower, MS. Hist Div aging raids by the English against the
files. This is a study by German Military Documents
Section, WD G-2, prepared in 1946 from original 14 Halder Diary, 30 Jul 40.
German records. 15Ibid., 26 Jul 40.
13 Order, Oberbefehlshaber West, 26 Oct 40, Ober- 16 Order, Aufgaben und Gliederung in Westen ab
befehlshaber des Heeres (referred to hereafter as Oktober 1940, 17 Oct 40. Heeresgruppe A, KTB 25.-
0b.d.H.). OKH/Op.Abt., Befehlsbefugnisse 30.V.40- VI.-17.X.40, Anlagen, Teil III.
2.II.42. 17Heeresgruppe A, KTB West, 1.I-13.IV.41.
THE GERMAN ARMY IN FRANCE, 1940-1943 131

Continent in 1941 was so slight as to be teries between Boulogne and Calais em-
negligible. Nevertheless, Witzleben began placed for the shelling of England during
taking certain steps to put his defense in preparations for SEELOE WE, a few other
order. In June, the former Inspector of naval coastal batteries, and some U-boat
Western Fortresses was appointed In- pens. The coastal battery emplacements
spector of Land Fortresses in the West were built for the Navy by Organization
and attached for tactical purposes to Todt, the construction organization
OB WEST. His headquarters was moved formed in 1938 to build the West Wall.
from Metz to Paris near that of Witz- After SEELOEWE was called off, Hitler
leben, and his first task was the inspec- directed Organization Todt to construct
tion of the defenses of the Channel bombproof U-boat pens along the At-
Islands. lantic coast, especially at Brest, Lorient,
The military reason for defending the and St. Nazaire. That project, to protect
Channel Islands was chiefly to protect what Hitler came more and more to
coastal traffic. Hitler, however, attached regard as his principal offensive weapon
to the islands a far greater political im- against the Western Powers, absorbed
portance. He believed the British would most of the labor and materials available
be forced to retake them for the sake of for fortification of the west. When Witz-
prestige. 18 Conversely they were precious leben in September 1941 proposed that
to him as the only British territory the Army begin work on permanent de-
directly under his domination. In mid- fenses, the Army High Command
summer 1941 the 319th Division, rein- (OKH)19 had no construction battalions
forced with machine gun, artillery, anti- to give him and he had to make informal
tank, and antiaircraft units to the strength arrangements with the Navy to borrow
of about 40,000 men, was ordered to the such of their workers as were idle. De-
islands. This garrison comprising some spite the difficulties, Witzleben at the
of the best troops and best equipment end of 1941 ordered the armies, corps,
in the west was to remain on Channel and divisions under him to reconnoiter
guard duty, inactive and useless for the defense sites along the coast and begin
rest of the war. construction.20
Up to the end of 1941 the only Ger- This was the first step toward forti-
man-built fortifications on the French fying the west against eventual Allied
mainland were seven heavy coastal bat- invasion, but without the necessary allot-
ment of labor and materials it could not
18Interpretation of Warlimont (see n. 52) in accomplish much. The actual building
Geschichte des Oberbefehlshaber West, edited by
Generalleutnant Bodo Zimmermann (Ia (G-3) of 19 Oberkommando des Heeres. Until December
OB WEST) This is a million-word manuscript pre- 1941 this was the headquarters and staff for General-
pared in part by Zimmermann, in part by generals feldmarschall Walther von Brauchitsch, Commander
and general staff officers associated with OB WEST, in Chief of the Army. At that time Hitler took direct
OKW, OKL (Oberkommando der Luftwaffe), OKH, command of the Army and OKH was directly sub-
OKM (Oberkommando der Kriegsmarine) , and vari- ordinated to him. In addition it was nominally sub-
ous subordinate commands. It was written under the ordinate for certain purposes to the Oberkommando
auspices of the Historical Division of the U. S. War der Wehrmacht (OKW, Armed Forces High Com-
Department between 1946 and 1948. Cited hereafter mand) .
as MS # T-121 (Zimmermann et al.). 20 MS # T-121 (Zimmermann et al.).
132 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

FIELD MARSHAL VON RUNDSTEDT AND GENERAL JODL. Von Rund-


stedt (left) was Commander in Chief West; General Jodl was chief of Armed
Forces Operational Staff.

of the Atlantic Wall cannot be said to Rundstedt was one of the senior officers
have begun before the spring of 1942. and leading military personalities in
By then the first Russian winter counter- Germany. He had been in charge of
offensive, coupled with American entry early planning for the Polish campaign
into the war, had forced Hitler to reckon of 1939 and had commanded an army
more seriously with prolongation of hos- group in that campaign. In 1940 in France
tilities and the consequent possibility of he again commanded an army group.
major action in the west. After the victory over France, he was
Early in March 1942 Field Marshal placed in charge of planning and prep-
Rundstedt was appointed Commander arations for the invasion of England. On
in Chief West to replace Witzleben.21 the abandonment of that project, Rund-
stedt participated in the first offensive
21 Officer’s Personnel Files, Field Marshal von
Rundstedt. OKH/Heeres-Personalamt, Personalak- against Russia as commander of Army
ten. Witzleben was put in the OKH Fuehrer Reserve, Group South until the end of 1941,
that is, in a pool of officers unassigned but on active when he was relieved because of ill
duty and available for service. Rundstedt’s appoint-
ment as Commander in Chief West was “acting” as health. In March 1942 he reported to
of 8 March and was made permanent on 1 May 1942. Hitler that his health was restored and a
THE GERMAN ARMY IN FRANCE, 1940-1943 133

week later received the command in the Reichsmarschall Hermann Goering and
west. Admiral Raeder, furthermore, remained
Two weeks after Rundstedt’s appoint- outside and above it in personal relation-
ment, Hitler issued his basic order for ship with Hitler. Goering as Reichs-
the defense of the west.22 Sole respon- marschall outranked Keitel who, as chief
sibility for the defense of all German- of all the armed services, should have
occupied territory in the west including been his superior. In addition, Goering
the Netherlands was given to the Com- held a top Cabinet post as Minister of
mander in Chief West, and he, along Aviation which further set him out of
with the commander in Denmark, was reach of OKW. Finally, the Army, wed-
placed directly under the Armed Forces ded to the notion of Germany as a Conti-
High Command (OKW). This ex- nental power, had long opposed unifica-
tended a process begun earlier of split- tion of the services on the basis of equal
ting the theaters of operation between representation and authority.25 The
OKW and OKH, as though they were effect of the Army view together with the
coequal commands. By the beginning of independence of Goering and Raeder
1943 OKW had become directly respon- was to reduce OKW to the position of a
sible for all western theaters (France and second Army staff. As long as it had no
the Low Countries, North Africa and direct responsibility for any one theater
Italy, the Balkans, and Scandinavia) of operations OKW retained a certain
while OKH devoted exclusive attention perspective and capacity to co-ordinate
to the east. The division recognized, in the German war effort, even though the
the first place, that OKH had its hands bulk of its co-ordination had to pass
full with the increasing difficulties of the through Hitler himself. With the split-
war in Russia. It also, in part, reflected ting of the western and eastern theaters,
the fact that the defense of the west par- OKW, for all practical purposes, lost
ticularly called for co-ordination between
the three services.23 strategy was suffering thereby. Annex 8, Conf, 13
Co-ordination was effected, however, Apr 42, ONI, Fuehrer Conferences, 1942. What the
Navy asked for (and apparently got) was not repre-
in name, only. OKW, headed by General- sentation on OKW but a flag officer to provide liaison
feldmarschall Wilhelm Keitel, was no at the Fuehrer Headquarters. This underlined the
true joint staff. Naval and air force mem- fact that such co-ordination between the services as
existed operated on a personal basis through Hitler
bers were relatively junior officers.24 and not through any formal joint organization. Part
22Translation of Fuehrer Directive No. 40 is re- of the Navy’s protest was directed at the very effi-
produced below as Appendix C. cient liaison which Goering had established at the
23 OKW/ WFSG KTB 1 .I.-31 III.43, 2-3 Jan 43; Re- Fuehrer Headquarters for the Luftwaffe, although
capitulation of Fuehrer Directives establishing OKW the Luftwaffe was actually no better represented on
Theaters, 28 May 42, OKW/WFSt, Quartiermeister OKW than the Navy..
im WFSt. Wehrmachtbefehlshaber Suedost (A.O.K. 25 Memo, Standpunkt Heer und OKW, betreffend
12) Taetigkeitsbericht and Anlagen, VI.42. See also Denkschrift des Oberbefehlshaber des Heeres ueber
The German High Command, a study by German Organisation der Wehrmachtfuehrung (7.III.38), 22
Military Documents Section, WD G-2, 1946, MS. Hist Mar 38. OKW file 1866; cf. MS # C-045 (Natzmer
Div files. et al.), a postwar study of the historical evolution of
24See the Navy’s complaint to Hitler on 13 April OKH, which clearly describes the German Army’s
1942 that there was no high-ranking naval officer on opposition to any unification of the services as co-
the Armed Forces High Command (OKW) and that equal participants.
GERMAN HIGH COMMAND. Left to right: Admiral Raeder, Navy; Field
Marshal Keitel, chief of OKW; Hitler; and Reich Marshal Goering, Air Force.
THE GERMAN ARMY IN FRANCE, 1940-1943 135

even that limited power to co-ordinate. France. He decreed that the coast de-
Henceforth the only unity of command fenses should be so organized and troops
in Germany rested in the person of so deployed that any invasion attempted
Hitler, who no longer had adequate ma- could be smashed before the landing or
chinery through which to exercise it.26 immediately thereafter. The main de-
In the various theaters of operations fensive preparations were to be made in
after 1940 no effective machinery was the places most suitable for large enemy
ever established to exercise unified com- landings. Beaches where only small sur-
mand.27 In the west, during an actual prise landings were possible were to be
enemy invasion, the army commanders defended by strong points tied in, if
in the battle areas were to have tactical possible, with the coastal batteries. The
control over the air force and naval units rest of the coast would be patrolled. All
in their sectors. But the failure to give positions were to be designed for de-
OB WEST a supreme command meant fense to the last man of the garrison. All
that co-ordination of the defense rested should be equipped with weapons and
largely on such informal co-operation supplies so that even if overrun by the
and liaison as the local commanders enemy they would not be forced to sur-
might choose to establish. The divided render for lack of means to continue the
command would gravely handicap Ger- fight.28
man preparedness. In the meantime, the Five days after the issuance of this
chief positive result of the new top-level order, Hitler was profoundly shocked by
command organization was to free the the successful British raid on St. Nazaire.
OKW operational staff (the Wehrmacht- The spectacle of British ships, including
fuehrungsstab, WFSt, under General der a destroyer, sailing with impunity up the
Artillerie Alfred Jodl) from responsibil- mouth of the Loire reputedly made him
ity for the war in Russia and so permit furious and focused his attention on the
it to concentrate on the operational needs inadequacies of the French coastal de-
of the west, Italy, the Balkans, and Nor- fenses. The only immediate outcome,
way and Denmark. however, was the relief of Generalleut-
Hitler’s basic order sketched out the nant Karl Hilpert, OB WEST Chief of
tactical doctrine that henceforth gov- Staff. Hilpert was replaced by General-
erned all planning for the defense of major Kurt Zeitzler, who was close to
Hitler, and who afterward became Chief
26 The organizational structure and evolution of of the General Staff of OKH.29
OKW and OKH have been described in great detail Later more sober study of the St. Na-
by committees of German officers working under the
auspices of the Historical Division between 1946 and zaire experience showed even to Hitler
1948. See MSS # T-101, The German Armed Forces that the responsible commanders in
High Command (Winter et al.) and # T-111, The France did not have the resources to deal
German Army High Command (Halder et al.)
27The only instance of a joint staff was Gruppe
XXI, formed in early 1940 by upgrading the XXI 28Fuehrer Directive No. 40. See below, Appendix C.
Corps. Under the command of General der Infanterie 29 Officer’s Personnel Files, Generaloberst Kurt
Nikolaus von Falkenhorst, it was charged with the Zeitzler. OKH/Heeres-Personalamt, Personalakten.
preparation and conduct of the Scandinavian cam- Still later Zeitzler was implicated in the 20 July 1944
paign in 1940. Gruppe XXI, KTB 2O.II.-8.IV.40. conspiracy against Hitler and dismissed.
136 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

with determined enemy forays. While concrete structures designed to be proof


Allied strength was increasing, German against Allied bombing and naval shell-
strength had been gradually weakened to fire.31 Behind this emphasis on fixed de-
nourish the operations against Russia. fenses lay the realization of a grave short-
Admiral Raeder told Hitler bluntly: age of troops. Already in the summer of
“We have no means of repulsing an 1942 Hitler estimated that ten to twelve
enemy attempt.” Even better defenses at more divisions were needed to establish a
St. Nazaire, in the opinion of Raeder, solid defense along the OB WEST coast
would not have stopped a determined line, but reserves to make up this deficit
Allied attack: the only thing that could were not available.
have helped would have been strong As the summer came to an end, pros-
naval forces and adequate air reconnais- pects of victory in Russia were again
sance. Then he ventured a prophecy: “In clouded by the north winds. In the mean-
view of the shortages everywhere and the time the large-scale raid by Canadian
necessity of using numerous makeshift de- troops at Dieppe in the latter part of Au-
fense measures, experience will show that gust, though considered an absolute fail-
there will constantly be new shortcomings ure by the Germans, nevertheless forcibly
in our defenses and new demands made called attention to the increasing threat
upon them.” 30 Despite this accurate fore- of full-scale invasion by the Western
cast of things to come, Hitler was not Powers. On 29 September, Hitler called
then, and never would be, convinced that in Goering, Reich Minister Albert Speer
defense could not be made invulnerable (Chief of Organization Todt), Rund-
if enough concrete and resolution could stedt, Generalleutnant Guenther Blumen-
be poured into it. His retort to the St. tritt (who had relieved Zeitzler as Chief
Nazaire raid was to direct that submarine of Staff OB WEST only a few days be-
bases be so well protected that successful fore), General der Pioniere Alfred Jacob
raids on them thenceforth would be im- (Chief Engineer of OKH), Generalleut-
possible. nant Rudolf Schmetzer (Inspector of
In August 1942 he expanded his no- Land Fortresses for OB WEST), and cer-
tions of a concrete coastal wall. In a con- tain other staff officers for a three-hour
ference with Field Marshal Keitel and conference in the small Cabinet sitting
other high-ranking Army officers he pro- room of the Reich Chancellery.32 The
posed that fortress construction in France Fuehrer began by expressing his confi-
should proceed with “fanatic energy [Fu- dence that Russia would be defeated in
natismus]” during the coming winter. 1943 by a German push in the spring to-
The object must be to build many small ward Mesopotamia in the south. He then
strong points to house from thirty to sev-
enty men each, armed with machine guns 31 Memo, Aktennotiz ueber Fuehrerbesprechung
am 2.VIII.42 im Fuehrerhauptquartier, 3 Aug 42,
and “a few other weapons,” chiefly anti- General der Pioniere und Festungen b.0b.d.H.
tank guns. A continuous belt of interlock- OKH/Op. Abt., Kuestenschutz Kanalkueste 2O.VI.42-
ing fire must be created emanating from 18.V.44.
32 Fuehrerrede zum Ausbau des Atlantik-Walles
am 29.1X.42, 3 Oct 42. OKH/Op. Abt., Kuesten-
30 Conf, 13 Apr 42, ONI, Fuehrer Conferences, 1942. schutz Kanalkueste 2O.VI.42-18.V.44.
THE GERMAN ARMY IN FRANCE, 1940-1943 137

admitted grave concern over the possi- be prepared, furthermore, on the assump-
bility of the creation of a second front in tion that the Allies would enjoy air and
the west. There was no question of capitu- naval supremacy. The crushing weight of
lation, he said, “but I must freely admit Allied bombs and shells, he believed,
. . . that a major landing of the enemy in could be withstood only by concrete. Not
the west would bring us to a generally only that, but massive concrete works, he
critical position.” The gravest present believed, had a psychological as well as a
threat was to Norway, he believed, but physical strength. Hitler pointed out that
ultimately it was France that would be in- the very existence of the West Wall had de-
vaded because such an operation would terred Daladier in 1938 from threatening
require the least amount of shipping ton- military action during the Czechoslovakia
nage. crisis. The West Wall repeated along the
Hitler then went on to analyze the coast would have the same deterrent ef-
Dieppe experience. Even though the fect on the Western Allies. Hitler asked
British field order for the raid, clearly for 15,000 concrete strong points for the
specifying a withdrawal of forces after new “Atlantic Wall” to be defended by
nine hours, was captured and studied by 300,000 men. The goal was an impervi-
the Germans, apparently the German ous, permanent defense ring, Since the
generals involved reported and Hitler be- amount of time available to build it was
lieved that Dieppe was actually a major uncertain, construction was to follow a
landing attempt that failed. On that strict priority. In Hitler’s view, the most
premise he compared the introduction of important job was to protect the U-boat
large-scale amphibious operations at bases. He listed for defense thereafter:
Dieppe to the introduction of the tank at harbors for coastal traffic, harbors suitable
Cambrai in World War I. In both cases, for enemy landings (a reflection of the
he pointed out, the British had failed Dieppe experience), the Channel Islands,
through having planned only the meeting and finally landing places on the open
engagement, leaving the follow-up to the coast. Beaches deemed most likely to be
initiative of the field commanders who used in a major invasion attempt were to
were too timid to exploit their advantage. be fortified first. But, as Hitler pointed
After Cambrai both British and Germans out, since the Navy could not guarantee
drew the false lesson that the tank was that any portion of the coast was safe, the
technically a failure and so “they poured whole would have to be walled up even-
out the baby with the bath.” He warned tually.
now against a false deduction on the Ger- It was an ambitious program. Hitler or-
man side that amphibious operations dered that it be completed by 1 May 1943;
against the coast of France were proved Organization Todt thought it would be
impossible by Dieppe. This time, he said, lucky to get 40 percent finished by that
the British cannot arrive at a similar con- time. At such a rate the defense of the
clusion, simply because they have no al- coast proper, having the lowest priority,
ternative but to try again. became a very long-range program which
The Germans must prepare the strong- would probably not be completed before
est possible defenses. The defenses must the Allies struck. In any case it was fan-
138 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

tastic to suppose that even a first-class mili- the Schelde was most gravely if not
tary power could be strong everywhere uniquely threatened. This estimate, how-
along the entire coast line from the Medi- ever, was based on reasoning, not on in-
terranean to Norway. It followed that de- telligence. It was thought the Allies would
fense preparations would be concentrated strike here because it was close to Ger-
in accordance with estimates of Allied in- many and the Ruhr, and because the short
tentions. But German intelligence serv- Channel crossing would simplify the
ices notably failed to supply reliable in- problems of air support and sea reinforce-
formation about the Western Allies. The ment. Strategically Allied success in this
sparseness of accurate intelligence, the sector would cut off the whole of the Ger-
plethora of rumors, and the natural man forces to the south.
jitteriness of being on the strategic de- The conclusion that the Kanalkueste 34
fensive led to constantly revised guesses was the most likely place for a major land-
that at one time or another pointed out ing, arrived at in the early days of plan-
grave threats to virtually every section of ning the Atlantic Wall, was never seri-
the coast. Division commanders, corps ously shaken by any later information.
commanders, army commanders freely Even when other sectors appeared threat-
contributed predictions that their own ened, the threats were deemed diversion-
sectors had been selected for the enemy ary. Rationalization had a persuasiveness
landings. They were moved sometimes by that the meager reports of fact never had.
logic, more often by desire to compete for Furthermore, once the concrete was
the limited supplies of troops and ma- poured, the original estimate became pe-
teriel. They seldom had any sure knowl- culiarly difficult to alter. During 1942,
edge of what was being brewed across the for instance, four times as much concrete
Channel. Hitler’s intuition was no less was allotted the left corps of Fifteenth
erratic: at various times he picked the Army as to the LXXXIV Corps in Nor-
Gironde, Brittany, the Cotentin, the Pas- mandy and Brittany.35 By May 1943 the
de-Calais, and Norway. In late 1943 a cap- concentration of troops along the Fif-
tured British agent indicated that the teenth Army coast was almost three times
Allies intended to strike in the Nether- as heavy as in Seventh Army-the army
lands.33 He was not believed, and the that would oppose the invasion.36
Netherlands actually remained about the In the summer of that year a new im-
only sector in the west exempt from spe- portance was given to the Pas-de-Calais
cial attention as a threatened area. area. It was here that Hitler planned to
Although the Germans could never be install his Vergeltungs (vengeance) weap-
sure that any sector of the coast was safe, ons, the long-range rockets and pilotless
the necessity for concentrating their own
forces led them to categorize roughly the 34 Term generally coinciding with the sector of
Fifteenth Army. It includes the Pas-de-Calais area
degrees of danger. It was common con- and the Somme-Seine coast.
sensus from the beginning that the sector 35MS # B-234 (Generalleutnant Max Pemsel,
of the Fifteenth Army from the Seine to CofS Seventh Army).
36 Schematische Kriegsgliederung, 1 May 43.
OKH/Op.Abt.; see also Rundstedt Report, 25 Oct
33 OKW/WFSt, KTB 1.IX.-31.XII.43, 31 Oct 43. 43.
ENEMY COAST ARTILLERY in the Pas-de-Calais area. Heavy concrete casemate
under construction (above), and (below) laborers at work on casemate.
140 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

aircraft from which he expected a com- and reiterated the entire inadequacy of
plete reversal of the course of the war. He German preparations for the defense of
believed that the V-weapons would prove France.
so dangerous to England that the Allies, In the spring of 1943 Rundstedt went
whatever their previous plans might have to Berchtesgaden to present his case in
been, would be forced to attack directly to person. But Hitler was still not interested
overrun the launching sites. This esti- in bad news from the west. He was look-
mate, of course, entailed the further con- ing forward to great victories in the east.
clusion that the bulk of the German de- He talked of how two thousand German
fenses should be emplaced to defend the tanks would annihilate at least ninety
rocket sites. In June 1943 Hitler assigned Russian divisions in the new spring of-
construction priority to those portions fensive. Rundstedt, after abrupt dis-
of the Atlantic Wall defending rocket- missal, returned to France and embarked
launching areas.37 on a comprehensive survey of the state of
Although by far the strongest fortified his defenses. It was this survey which re-
portion of the French coast, even the sulted in the detailed report of 25 Oc-
Kanalkueste never became anything like tober. This he forwarded to OKW with a
the impregnable fortress that German special request that it be brought to the
propaganda advertised. Hitler, having personal attention of Hitler.39
ordered the creation of a wall of concrete
and fire which could stop any invasion at Impact of the Russian
the water’s edge, apparently believed that and Mediterranean Fronts
such a wall would be built and paid little
further attention to it. He never saw any Rundstedt said little about the Atlantic
portion of the western fortifications. After Wall. He mentioned delays in naval con-
leaving Paris in triumph in the summer struction due to a faulty priority system
of 1940 he did not set foot on French soil which had only just been straightened
again until a week after the Allied inva- out. But for the most part he was less in-
sion in June 1944. 38 Absorbed with the terested in the state of the permanent de-
struggle against Russia, he scarcely heeded fenses than in the combat value of his
the stream of memoranda in which the troops. The wall, he said, was valuable
Commander in Chief West pointed out for fighting as well as for propaganda,
“but it must not be believed that this wall
37 OKW/WFSt, KTB 1.VII-31.VIII.43, 14 Jul 43, cannot be overcome.” Strongly defended
referring to conference of 28 June. The term, “V-l,” fortifications might be a more or less ef-
recommended by Reich Minister Josef Paul Goebbels
and approved by Hitler, was adopted as “an instru-
ficient means of weakening the attacking
ment of uronaeanda”
I ”
by directive of OKW: “The V enemy by splitting his forces, but victory
used in this designation is . . . to counteract the in the west could be achieved only by
enemy’s usage of this letter (Victory), and the
numeral 1 is to point toward other possible means of
rapidly mounted, strong counterattacks.40
stepping up this type of warfare by remote control In the light of this basic requirement,
against England.” Seekriegsleitung/1.Abt., KTB Rundstedt pointed out how thin his line
I.-30.VI.44, 25 Jun 44.
38 MS # T-121 (Zimmermann et al.). See below, 39 MS # T-121.
Ch. X. 40 Rundstedt Report, 25 Oct 43.
THE GERMAN ARMY IN FRANCE, 1940-1943 141

of defense really was. The average coastal exchanges was regularized. In May the
sector of a single division ranged from 50 Commander in Chief West issued an
miles in the Fifteenth Army sector to 120 order concerning the reconstitution of
miles in the Seventh Army sector and 217 divisions shifted from the Russian front
miles along the Atlantic coast.41 The to France emphasizing speed in re-equip-
coastal divisions, moreover, were almost ping these divisions and the importance
all understrength-a good many had only of maintaining the special toughness
two regiments. Their armament, particu- (Ost-Haerte) of the troops. In the same
larly in antitank weapons and artillery, order Rundstedt warned against allowing
was often inadequate for a maximum de- the troops who had returned from the
fense of their positions. Most serious of east to patronize those troops perma-
all, in Rundstedt’s eyes, was their almost nently stationed in the west. The latter,
total lack of transport. he pointed out, had done their duty and
All these deficiencies were the direct re- it was not their fault that they could not
sult of the drain on the German war econ- be used for fighting in the east.44 In short,
omy to maintain the Russian and Medi- it was made a matter of policy that the
terranean fronts. The opening of the Rus- west should be permanently garrisoned
sian front in 1941 had turned the west only by troops who because of various
into a kind of replacement center. To- disabilities could not be used in the hard
ward the end of that year the Commander fighting in Russia. OKH, in October, pro-
in Chief West was already complaining posed a regular monthly exchange of two
that his troops were being siphoned off divisions between Army Group Center
at a dangerous rate. 42 The complaint was and OB WEST and one division between
futile; the process, in fact, had only just Army Group North and the Norway gar-
begun. From 1942 “the hard-pressed rison. OKH listed ten infantry divisions
Eastern Front always short of forces under OB WEST command which were
looked with envy at the apparently sleep- immediately suitable for exchange with
ing army in the west, and at every crisis the east. At the same time it was proposed
the higher commanders in the east. . . de- not to transfer any mobile divisions (ar-
manded that the reservoir be tapped. In mored and motorized) until spring to
the need of the moment these troops were avoid using them up in winter fighting in
usually conceded.” 43 Russia. But that was like trying to hold
In 1942 the process of east-west troop on to a parasol in a hurricane. A month
later, Hitler ordered the immediate trans-
41 Note that this compared to an average sector on fer of the 6th Panzer Division from the
the Russian front of 32.5 miles to a corps. OKH,
Generalstab des Heeres (cited hereafter as OKH, west to the sector of Stalino-Volchansk.
Gen.St.d.H.) /Orgnnisationsabteilung, KTB Anlagen, In the first eleven months after October
1943. 1942 the east-west exchange system took
42Ltr, OB WEST to OKH/Op.Abt., 19 Dec 41,
OKH/OP.Abt., Gliederung West, Bd. IV, 9.VIII.41-
4.1.42. 44 Grundlegender Befehl des Oberbefehlshabers
43 MS # B-672 (Generalmajor Horst Freiherr West Nr. jr, Aufgaben der Ost-Divisionen, 10 May
Treusch v. Buttlar-Brandenfels (OKW)). This is a 42. OKW/WFSt, 1. Generalstabsojjiizier Heer (re-
commentary on Zimmermann’s preliminary narra- ferred to hereafter as OKW/ WFSt, Op. (H)), Grund-
tive of OB WEST (MS # B-308). Zegende Befehle West 22.X.42-7.V.44.
142 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

twenty-two infantry and six armored or There was no appeasing the hunger of
motorized divisions out of the west. This the Eastern Front. The continual protests
was in addition to a constant weeding out of the Commander in Chief West and
of the best personnel and equipment from even Hitler’s own resolution toward the
divisions considered unsuitable as a whole end of 1943 to halt the weakening of the
for east duty.45 west were alike swept aside by the de-
Thus in 1943, a year of increasing mands for more and more men to halt the
threats of attack from the west, the Ger- tide of Russian victories. The German
man armies in France had not even held Army went into Russia in June 1941 with
their own. General Blumentritt, the OB 3,300,000 men,47 By the spring of 1943,
WEST chief of staff, in September sum- despite every effort to get replacements,
marized the deterioration for the high the eastern army had been reduced by
command. A year ago, he pointed out, the 600,000. Built back up to three million
Atlantic Wall had been garrisoned with for the summer offensive, it suffered an-
twenty-two infantry divisions most of other net reduction of a half million by
which had three regiments. In reserve September. 48 In 1943 alone, the Germans
were six infantry and seven fully mobile, estimated that they had a total of 2,086,-
first-class armored or motorized divisions. 000 casualties in the east, of which 677,-
Now, he continued, in a much more dan- 000 were permanent losses (that is, the
gerous situation, the garrison infantry di- killed and missing, unfit, and one-third of
visions had increased to twenty-seven, but all wounded). 49 The net losses continued
this increase was largely nullified by the to mount so that in the year from July
reduction of most of the divisions to two 1943 through June 1944 the gap between
regiments. In reserve were six armored or
motorized divisions and seven infantry
47This is approximately the same strength as the
divisions, of which three were new organ- maximum build-up of the U.S. Army on the Con-
izations. In other words, though the hold- tinent in 1945.
ing strength remained about constant in 48 OKH, Gen.St.d.H./Organisationsabteilung (re-
ferred to hereafter as OKH/Org. Abt.), KTB An-
numbers the quality had certainly de-
lagen, 1943.
clined; the striking power had decreased 49 Memo, Berechnungsunterlagen fuer Schaubild
slightly in numbers and very substantially “Zugaenge und Abgaenge des Ostheeres vom No-
in mobility.46 vember 42 bis Oktober 43” (Stand 5.XII.43), 14 Dec
43. OKH/Org.Abt., KTB Aniagen 1.XII.-10.XII.43.
German losses (killed, missing, and wounded) from
June 1941 to December 1943 totaled 3,726,000, of
45 Various papers in Austausch Ost-West, l.IX.4.L which 3,513,000were lost on the Eastern Front. Rpt,
28.II.44, OKH/Op.Abt. A total of 28 infantry divi- Personelle blutige Verluste von 22.Juni 1941 his
sions, 4 armored divisions, 2 motorized divisions, and 3I.Dezember 1943, 4 Jan 44. OKH/Generalquartier-
4 smaller units were alerted for service in the east meister, der Heeresarzt, OKH/Org.Abt., Arzt Meld-
after 1 October 1942. ungen, Monatsmeldungen ab l.V11.43. The propor-
46 KW/WFSt, KTB 1.IX.-31.XII.43. For figures tions of wounded to total casualties and of seriously
as of 1 Sep 42, cf. Memo, West-Divisionen, die ab wounded to those returnable to duty were almost
1.10.42 zur Verlegung in den Osten geeignet sind, identical in the U.S. Army. See [John E. Henderson]
1 Sep 42. OKH/Op.Abt., Austausch Ost-West I.IX.- The Procurement and Use of Manpower in the Eu-
42-28.11.44. The panzer and panzer grenadier divi- ropean Theater (The Administrative and Logistical
sions contained substantially more men than the History of the ETO: Part IX), MS, pp. 84-85. Hist
two-regiment infantry divisions. See below, Ch. VII. Div files.
THE GERMAN ARMY IN FRANCE, 1940-1943 143

losses and replacements amounted to for it established a “springboard for a


535,000.50 thrust into the groin of Fortress Europe,
Even these figures do not truly reflect the naturally weak and practically unpre-
the exhaustion of the German Army. Of pared south flank. ” 53 One immediate re-
151 German Army divisions listed in the sult of Allied landings in North Africa on
OKH order of battle for the Russian front 8 November 1942 was to force German oc-
in December 1943, ten panzer and fifty cupation of the whole of France and add
infantry divisions were “fought out” some four hundred miles of Mediter-
(abgekaempft) or, in other words, of ranean coast line to OB WEST’s respon-
negligible combat value. Eleven of the sibilities.
named infantry “divisions” were actually Plans for the occupation of Vichy
only Kampfgruppen. At the same time France were completed in July 1942.
there were twelve full divisions in Italy, Troops were alerted on 7 November, the
while OB WEST had forty-six divisions day before the Allied landings in North
plus two regiments that were operational Africa. Ten divisions under two armies
and another seven divisions in process of (the First and Army Felber) moved across
formation. These figures strikingly re- the Demarcation Line on 11 November
veal the strain exerted by the Russian war: and, without opposition from the French,
the number of divisions in the east which occupied the Spanish border and the
needed replacement and reconstitution Mediterranean coast as far as Toulon. The
was greater than the total number of di- area from there east and as far north as a
uisinns in the two western theaters.51 line between Lyon and the Swiss border
The war in Russia was always the princi- was taken over at the same time by the
pal vacuum into which German resources Italian Fourth Army, which moved in
were sucked and destroyed, but Allied at- with six divisions and three corps head-
tacks on North Africa in November 1942 quarters. In December the units under
and subsequent Allied Mediterranean op- the German First Army withdrew and
erations superimposed an additional First Army responsibility was thereafter
strain which contributed substantially to limited to the Atlantic coast line as far
the weakening of the west. General der north as the Loire River. The Mediter-
Artillerie Walter Warlimont of OKW 52 ranean became the responsibility of Army
concluded after the war that the invasion Felber.54
of North Africa, which came as a com- These arrangements lasted aDout six
plete surprise to Hitler, was actually “de- months. In June 1943 Rundstedt notified
cisive for the whole conduct of the war” General der Infanterie Hans-Gustav Fel-
ber that Italian collapse seemed possible
50 Chart, Gesamt Zu- u. Abgaenge des Feldheeres and he was therefore to prepare to relieve
in der Zeit vom l.VII.43-30.VI.44, 3 Jul 44. OKH/-
Org.Abt., KTB Anlagen, 1944. 53 MS # T-121 (Zimmermann et al.).
51 OKH/Org.Abt., KTB Anlagen, 1.XII.-10.XII.43; 54 Armeeoberkommando 7 (referred to hereafter
OKW/WFSt, KTB 1.IX-3.XII.43, 3 Nov 43. To this as Seventh Army), KTB IX.-X11.42 and Anlagen;
Russian pressure U. S. lend-lease contributed enor- Armeeoberkommando 1 (referred to hereafter as
mously. See Pogue, The Supreme Command. First Army), KTB 1O.VII.-31.XII.42 and Anlagen;
52 Warlimont was deputy chief of the Armed Hoeheres Kommando XXXXV (Armee Felber),
Forces Operations Staff (WFSt) . Korpsbefehle, Ia 22.III.40-29.IX.42.
144 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

the Fourth Army. His local commanders kans. The total number required was not
were to try to get the Italians to continue large, but the added strain was severe. The
fighting on the side of the Germans, but planned 1943 summer offensive in Rus-
those who could not be persuaded were sia (Operation ZITADELLE), becoming
to be disarmed. Labor troops were to be an exhausting defensive action, drew off
formed of those willing to work, and the so many troops that OKW in July could
rest were to be regarded as prisoners of find only twelve divisions available for
war. occupying Italy. 57 All of these were al-
During the campaign in Sicily and ready either in northern Italy or under
through the fall of Mussolini the Fourth OB WEST command. Impoverished by
Army held on in France. But on 10 Au- contributions to the Russian war, OB
gust the Italian supreme command pro- WEST was now to be beggared to nour-
posed withdrawal of the army to defend ish the Mediterranean. Before 1 Septem-
Italy against the expected Allied invasion ber, Rundstedt had given up eight infan-
of the mainland.55 Two days later Felber try and nine panzer divisions to Africa
was relieved by General der Infanterie and Italy and one infantry and one panzer
Georg von Sodenstern. During the next division to the Balkans. These comprised,
few weeks the command in the south was moreover, some of the best-quality troops
renamed the Nineteenth Army and prep- remaining in the west after earlier with-
arations were completed to relieve the drawals for Russia.58
Italians. The relief, which absorbed four Besides forcing direct contributions of
German divisions, was carried out early troops, Allied attacks in Italy weakened
in September. Except for a brief fight at the whole defense system of the west by
the Mount Cenis tunnel by units of the creating invasion threats to southern
Italian 5th Alpini Diuision the relief was France. Although Rundstedt never reck-
peaceful. But in the course of it about 40,- oned with a major landing on his Medi-
000 Italian troops were made prisoner terranean coast, he did count as probable
and sent into the interior of France as a diversionary attack tied in with a large-
labor troops. No more than a handful scale invasion in the northwest. In his Oc-
volunteered to fight beside the Germans.56 tober report he pointed out that the
Southern France was only one of the Rh6ne Valley was a natural invasion route
vacuums created by Italian collapse. As to the north and that the ports of Toulon
soon as collapse seemed imminent the and Marseille would undoubtedly be
Germans made plans to shift troops into tempting to the Allies. General Soden-
the Italian peninsula and into the Bal- stern in August 1943 noted the clear stra-
tegic connection between thrusts from the
55 .4 more likely reason was to get troops for the north and south and recalled that the
defense of Italy against the Germans and particularly
to defend Rome. See Mario Roatta, Otto Milioni di 57 OKW/WFSt, KTB l.VII.-31.VIII.43, 14 Jul 43.
Baionelte (Milan, 1943)) p. 287. 580KW/WFSt, KTB l.IX.-31.X11.43, 11 Sep 43.
56 OKW/WFSt, KTB l.VII.-31.VIII.43, 23-28 Aug Total withdrawals for Russia and the Mediterranean
43; First Army, KTB l.VIl.-30.1X.43 and Anlagen; up to 1 September 1943 were thus 31 infantry and
Armeeoberkommando 19 (referred to hereafter as 16 mobile divisions. The figures given by Rundstedt
Nineteenth Army), KTB ZO.VI.-31.X11.43 and An- in his report as of 1 October 1943 were 36 infantry
lagen. and 17 mobile divisions.
THE GERMAN ARMY IN FRANCE, 1940-1943 145

Rhone Valley had been a historic route tended often to persons who could not
to the upper Rhine for invading armies even speak German. Recruiting was be-
since the wars of Caesar.59 gun also in the occupied territories of
The “three-front” war all but ex- Russia and units formed of the so-called
hausted the normal German manpower Freiwilligen (volunteers). As the pres-
reservoirs. The Germans then turned to sure for more and more men developed,
extraordinary sources to fill up the deci- the Freiwilligen, too, lost more and more
mated ranks of the west army. The prin- of their volunteer character. In the late
cipal last-ditch sources were foreign per- fall of 1941 Hitler authorized the employ-
sonnel (chiefly Russian), young recruits ment of Russian prisoners in the German
of the classes of 1925 and 1926, convales- Army, formalizing a procedure already
cents often with physical disabilities, or- applied by field commanders. The ma-
ganizational overhead, and troops in oc- jority of the Hilfswillige (auxiliaries)
cupied areas comparatively safe from in- were employed as labor troops in war
vasion threats, like Norway and Denmark. areas. Through increasing admixture
Divisions that remained in the west but with these three categories, Volksdeutsche,
had their rosters combed out for replace- Freiwillige, and Hilfswillige, the “racial
ments for eastern service were replen- purity” of the German Army became
ished with men rated less fit for combat. more and more dilute.60 In 1944 the Army
Divisions transferred to the east were re- included as “volunteers” from occupied
placed with new formations, sometimes and allied territories: French, Italians,
with good personnel, more often with a Croatians, Hungarians, Romanians, Poles,
mixture of fit and unfit, experienced and Finns, Estonians, Letts, Lithuanians,
green, German and foreign. North Africans, Negroes, Asiatics, Rus-
In June 194 1 the German Army was en- sians, Ukrainians, Ruthenians, Kazaks,
tirely German and prided itself on its North-Caucasians, Georgians, Azerbai-
“racial purity.” With the opening of the jani, Armenians, Turkomans, Volga-
Russian campaign, German propaganda Tatars, Volga-Finns, Kalmucks, Crimean
began to internationalize German war Tatars, and even Indians.
aims as a crusade against Bolshevism. At TheVolksdeutschen,drawnchieflyfrom
the same time the requirements for men territories which Germany intended to
to administer and defend vast occupied integrate with the Reich, were originally
territories while well over two million classified in four categories according to
men fought in the Russian battlefields the degree of their overt sympathy with
made imperative the opening of almost the Nazi party. The majority were placed
any conceivable additional source of in the third category (Volksliste drei) com-
manpower. “Racial Germans” (Volks- prising racial Germans who despite previ-
deutsche), especially from Poland, were ous integration in the Polish national cul-
given conditional German citizenship ture were deemed amenable to German-
and under this fiction made subject to the ization.61 Volksliste drei persons were
draft. As time went on the fiction was ex-
60 German Manpower. MS cited n. 12.
59 Notes written in August 1943, appended to MS 61 Category I included the active Nazis: II, the
# EL276 (Sodenstern) . passive Nazis who had, however, preserved their
I46 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

given a ten-year probationary citizenship Armenian, Volga-Tatar, Azerbaijanian,


and drafted if of military age. Although Volga-Finn, and miscellaneous Ost bat-
integrated for the most part in the Army talions were brought into the OB WEST
they were forbidden to rise above the rank sector.65 The original ratio of one Ger-
of private first class.62 man for two Ost battalions was consider-
Rundstedt, in October 1943, com- ably modified to the advantage of the Rus-
mented on the lower morale of the Folks- sian theater. Plans at the end of October
deutschen, due, he thought, not to ill will were to exchange thirty-two more Ost
on their part but to the fact that their fam- battalions for twenty-six German battal-
ilies were not being treated like the fami- ions of which OB WEST would furnish
lies of front-line German soldiers. But the twenty and Norway and Denmark the re-
reliability of the Volksdeutschen con- maining six. By May 1944 Seventh Army
cerned him much less than that of the alone had twenty-three Ost battalions of
volunteer Russian combat battalions infantry. 66 This represented about one-
which his command had been forced to sixth of the total number of rifle battal-
accept in the latter part of the year.63 The ions in the Army. In the LXXXZV Corps
original idea back of the formation of the sector in Normandy and Brittany, out of
Ost (east) battalions was to employ anti- forty-two rifle battalions, eight were com-
Red Russian peoples (generally prisoners posed of Osttruppen.
of war) in the crusade against the Soviet Besides recruiting prisoners of war, the
Union. When the third great German Germans added to their military man-
summer offensive soured in 1943 and the power by relaxing physical standards. At
German armies began a retrograde move- the end of 1943 the physical fitness cate-
ment that had all the earmarks of final re- gories were cut down from four to three.
treat, the anti-Bolshevik recruits became The limited service classification was
increasingly unreliable and it was decided abolished and men were to be graded as
to transfer them to the west in exchange fit for service at the front, fit for service
for German troops. In September OKW in Germany, or totally unfit. Those with
ordered the exchange on the basis of two relatively minor ear, stomach, and lung
Ost battalions for one German battal- ailments were to be sent to the front. Con-
ion.64 At that time OKH reported that valescence time was ordered cut down.67
15,800 Osttruppen were trained and that No accurate picture of the physical state
25,000 more would be trained in Novem- of the German Army in the west is pos-
ber and December. During September sible. Physical standards were unquestion-
and October, about forty-five Cossack, ably much lower than in Allied armies.
Georgian, North-Caucausian, Turkoman, But although the majority of troops in the
west were considered unfit for combat in
Germanic spirit; and IV, those hostile to integration
into the German state. See Der Prozess gegen die
Hauptkriegwerbrecher UOTdem Internationalen Mili-
taergerichtshof (Nuremberg, 1947), III, 653. 65 OKH/Op.Abt., Kraefte Westen, Allgemein, Band
62 WD TM-E # 30-451, Military Intelligence Di- III, 24.VII.42-1.XI.43.
vision, The German Replacement Army (Ersatrheer). 66Kriegsgliederung, 18 May 44. Seventh Army,
63 Rundstedt Report, 25 Oct 43. KTB Anlagen 1.I.-30.VI.44.
64 OKW/WFSt, KTB l.ZX.-31.X11.43, 25 Sep 43. 67 OKW/WFSt, KTB 1.IX.-31.XII.43, 5 Dec 43.
THE GERMAN ARMY IN FRANCE, 1940-1943 147

Russia, the cause oE unfitness was often in- armored, and SS) contained excellent
adequate training, lack of transport, and personnel. Though relatively new organ-
lack of equipment rather than the phys- izations, most seem to have been ade-
ical condition of the men. quately trained and equipped by the time
In the lvhole German Army the average of the invasion.70
age in 1944 was 3 1.5 years, four and a half Many of the deficiencies of the German
years older than the average age of the Army in the west at the end of 1943 were
German iVestern Front Army in 1917 and substantially made up in the first six
more than six years older than the U. S. months of 1944; others were chronic and
Army in 1943. Of an Army of 4,270,000 could at best only be patched over with
in December 1943 more than a million makeshift measures. The most serious of
and a half were over 34 years old.68 In the the latter was the lack of manpower and
west the older-age classes as well as a large especially of first-class combat soldiers. It
proportion of the relatively unfit were as- should be remembered, however, that this
signed to the static coastal divisions. Even constituted primarily a strategic weak-
so, repeated raids were made on the static ness. While it affected the strength of the
divisions to sort out their best men for Atlantic Wall defenses both in reducing
east duty. Eventually these divisions ac- the numbers and quality of the coastal
quired a substantial number of the over- garrisons, its real importance was not for
age, the very young (classes of 1925 and the battle of the beaches but for the cam-
1926), men with third-degree frostbite, paign to follow. In naturally strong coastal
Volksdeutsche (which were used up to 8 defenses even a relative handful of sec-
percent of division strength), and Ost- ond-class troops could give good account
truppen. The average age of the 709th of themselves. The drain of the three-
Division which held the east coast of the front war meant above all that there were
Cotentin was thirty-six.69 The fact that no strategic reserves. Losses could not be
one whole division was almost entirely made up. The divisions in the west could
composed of men suffering from stomach not hope for replacement when they were
ailments is dramatic, if somewhat mis- fought out. The defensive crust could be
leading, evidence of the lengths to which thickened and spiked and made very for-
German leaders went to fill up the ranks midable indeed, but only at the expense
of the Army. It is misleading because, in of putting everything forward. The
contrast to the static coastal divisions, the 70 MS # C-024 (Kraemer) This manuscript by
offensive divisions (infantry, parachute, Generalmajor der Waffen-SS Fritz Kraemer, I SS
Panzer Corps chief of staff, represents a minority
judgment among the views of the German generals
68 OKH/Org.Abt., KTB Anlagen, 1943. reporting after the war on their difficulties. It is ac-
69 Oberstleutnant Hoffmann, Bericht Kampfgruppe cepted here because as an admission contrary to in-
von Schlieben 6.-22.VI.44, cited hereafter asHoffmann terest it seems to carry more weight than the gen-
Report. Seventh Army, KTB Anlagen 1.I.-;30.VI.44. erally unspecific assertions of other commanders.
Hoffmann was the commander of the 3d Battalion, The gist of the opposing view was that the troops
919th Regiment, of the 709th Division. After von were not so thoroughly trained as they might have
Schlieben’s forces had been bottled up in Cherbourg been. But this is a relative judgment and it is seldom
in June 1944, Hoffmann escaped by E-boat with clear what standards the commanders had in mind.
orders to report to the Seventh Army. See below, Ch. For a discussion of certain deficiencies in training
X. and equipment, see below, Ch. VII.
148 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

enemy was hollow and he would be shown defenses by the end of December 1943.
so in the later phases of OVERLORD. Reserve panzer divisions should be fully
equipped;72 antitank guns and machine
Rebuilding the Western Defenses guns were to be delivered in quantity to
OB WEST units. It was forbidden to
Rundstedt’s report of 25 October on transfer armored units out of the west
the weakness of the western defenses was without Hitler’s specific approval. OB
read by Hitler; his reply was the issuance WEST would conduct exercises to plan
on 3 November of Fuehrer Directive No. the shift of partly mobile units from por-
51, the second basic order dealing with the tions of the coast not threatened by at-
west.71 The order was, in fact, elicited not tack. The Luftwaffe and Navy were or-
only by Rundstedt’s bill of particulars but dered to strengthen their defenses. Hitler
by the military reverses that the German concluded with an exhortation to maxi-
armies suffered in the east and south in mum effort in preparing for the expected
the course of the year and the growing “decisive struggle in the west.”
conviction that the Allies would soon The order against weakening the west
seek a decision in the west. The bitter and could not, or at least would not, be strictly
costly fighting of the last two and half carried out. On 23 November OB WEST
years against Bolshevism, Hitler wrote, was directed to speed up the reorganiza-
had strained to the utmost German mili- tion of the 60th Panzer Grenadier Divi-
tary capacities. That strain had to be sion for immediate transfer to the east. On
borne, but now while the danger in the 3 December, 10,000 men of the class of
east remained it was outweighed by the 1925 were ordered pruned from divisions
threat from the west where enemy success in the west to be replaced with men who
would strike immediately at the heart of had been previously deferred for occu-
the German war economy. Therefore, pational reasons. At about the same time
there should be no more weakening of the the number of heavy weapons allotted to
west in favor of other theaters. Threat- the west was reduced in favor of the east.
ened portions of the coast line were to be During 1944 the troop transfers would
strengthened by the maximum emplace- continue.73
ment of coastal artillery, fixed antitank These continued transfers, however,
weapons, dug-in tanks, mines, and so on. were in the course of the first half of 1944
At the same time, as security against the more than made up. The failure to ad-
possibility of any enemy eruption through here to the letter of Directive 51 revealed
the coastal crust, the maximum mobile the continuing pressure of the war in the
reserves should be created for rapid east, but more striking was the vigor and
counterattack. success with which the rebuilding of the
The Army would submit a plan to west was undertaken despite that pres-
equip every panzer and panzer grenadier sure. November 1943 thus marked an im-
division with ninety-three Mark IV tanks
or assault guns and with strong antitank 72 See below, Ch. VII, for discussion of various
types of German divisions.
73 OKW/WFSt, KTB 1.IX.-31.XII.43, 23 Nov, 3
71 Translation reproduced below as Appendix D. and 11 Dec 43.
THE GERMAN ARMY IN FRANCE, 1940-1943 149

portant new beginning in German de- formal proposals for the constitution of a
fense preparations in the west. The new reserve army group headquarters under
beginning was signalized in the same Rommel earmarked for commitment
month by the introduction of General- wherever the main Allied invasion should
feldmarschall Erwin Rommel, the famed come. The new headquarters was formed
desert tactician, into the western scene. from the staff of Army Group B less vari-
The circumstances of Rommel’s selec- ous special staff officers and about half of
tion are somewhat confused. Since the the enlisted personnel. The reduced head-
summer of 1943 Rommel had been in quarters thus formed was redesignated
northern Italy at the head of Army Group Army Group for Special Employment,
B-the force that moved in when it be- subordinated directly to OKW and trans-
came clear that the Mussolini partnership ferred temporarily to Munich pending
was on the point of collapse. Meanwhile, the commencement of its new duties.76
operations in Sicily and against the Allied These were outlined in orders of 6 No-
landings in the south were directed by vember. In preparation for his ultimate
Generalfeldmarschall Albert Kesselring combat task Rommel was ordered to make
(OB SUED). At Hitler’s wish, plans had tours of inspection of the coastal defenses
been worked out and orders issued as of the west. He was to inspect first the de-
early as August 1943 for the eventual as- fenses of Denmark and then those of
sumption of command by Rommel over Artois (roughly the Kanalkueste); there-
all German forces in Italy. The intention after he would on order examine the de-
of making Rommel the theater com- fense preparations in the Cotentin, the
mander in Italy was adhered to until the Netherlands, and Brittany. In each case
latter part of October, when, for reasons he was directed to prepare operational
unknown, Hitler changed his mind and studies for the employment of forces in
on the 25th appointed Kesselring in- defense and counterattack. He would ex-
stead.74 This choice in effect left Rommel amine the mobility, concentration, and
and his staff surplus at a time when Hitler combat readiness of all troops, but espe-
and OKW were seeking new means to cially of the reserves. He would determine
strengthen the west against Allied inva- what units might be drawn from un-
sion threats. Hitler himself had long been threatened portions of the coast, from re-
convinced of the desirability of having a serve or school troops, and from home
high command in reserve and he seized units to build a counterattacking force.
this opportunity. 75 Three days after Kes- He would make recommendations on the
selring’s appointment OKW had entered employment of armor in the operational
zones.77
74With the new title of OB SUEDWEST and
Commander, Army Group C. Details of the changes 76OKW/WFSt, KTB l.IX.31.XII.43, 17 Oct 43
in German command in Italy will be found in H. M. et seq. Rommel actually turned over comand in
Smyth, The Sicilian Campaign and the Surrender Italy on 21 November. See Karteiblatt, Heeresgruppe
of Italy, a volume now under preparation in this B. OKH/Org. Abt.
series. 77 Rad, Hitler to OKH, Gen.St.d.H., 6 Nov 43.
75 MS # C069a (Blumentritt); MS # CO69c OKH/Org.Abt., Bd. Chefsache 7.V.43-4.11.44; cf.
(Buttlar-Brandenfels); and MS # C-069d (Zimmer- OKW/ WFSt, KTB l.IX.-31.X11.43, 28 Oct and 6
mann) . Nov 43.
150 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

FIELD MARSHAL ROMMEL (left) inspecting coastal defenses.

Hitler seems to have had a number of tory of the Rommel command in France
reasons for assigning this mission to the suggests that the idea was only scotched,
Rommel staff. He saw it as a means of se- not killed. When Rundstedt was informed
curing effective personal control of the of the new command, OKW was careful
all-important battle with the main forces to point out that it was not intended in
of the Western Allies, and probably was any way as an abridgment of Rundstedt’s
responsible for the suggestion that the authority. On the other hand, it was a
Rommel staff be committed directly recognition of the increasing burden of
under OKW, bypassing the theater com- operational, training, and administrative
mand.78 Although OKW successfully responsibilities that were heaped on OB
argued that the proposal was not feasible WEST in its multiple role as a defense
in view of the smallness of Rommel’s staff command, an occupying force, a training
and the rank and importance of the thea- command, and the base for the V-weapon
ter commanders involved, the later his- war on England. The particular selection
of Rommel undoubtedly had an addi-
78 OKW/ WFSt, KTB 1 .IX.-31.XII.43,28 Oct 43. tional morale motive. For the long-neg-
THE GERMAN ARMY IN FRANCE, 1940-1943 151

lected west garrison troops the appoint- lieved in simple dependence on either al-
ment of a commander with Rommel’s ternative and that, since doctrine was at
reputation in combat was a stimulant and the mercy of limited means, it tended to
a dramatization of the new importance shift in response to the expected avail-
assigned to the west. Finally, the reserve ability of resources. It is extremely diffi-
command, considered in context with Di- cult therefore to line up the commanders
rective 51, expressed a shift in Hitler’s on either side of the argument. But, al-
tactical thinking away from exclusive de- though the line was neither clear nor
pendence on an impregnable wall defense fixed, it was nonetheless real and signifi-
toward the traditional German reliance cant. Since Hitler and Rundstedt at the
on mobile operations.79 Just how far top of the hierarchy never arrived at
Hitler intended to depart from his earlier clear-cut decisions themselves as to the
insistence on a pure fortress defense, in basic tactics, shifting and relatively minor
which each inch of occupied ground was differences of emphasis in the lower com-
to be held to the last man and the last bul- mand resulted in confusion and unwork-
let, is not clear. It is clear and of consider- able compromises particularly in the dis-
able importance that this directive tended position and training of troops. The dis-
in that direction and that it was so inter- cussion of the varying points of view that
preted by Rundstedt. Rundstedt was follows can do no more than suggest the
thereby encouraged to re-examine ways bases of that confusion without attempt-
and means of shaking his army loose ing to describe in full the stand of any one
from the concrete of the Atlantic Wall, commander.
and the question of how the battle for The problem of the defense of the west
France was to be fought was posed again was immensely complex and perhaps in-
with a new urgency. soluble. Hitler, at least after the possi-
German defense preparations in the bility of defeating Russia had faded in
west and the German conduct of opera- 1943, looked forward to the forthcoming
tions in France can be understood only struggle in the west as his last chance to
against the background of disagreement gain a decisive victory. On the other hand,
over tactics among the various command- his obsession with political prestige and
ers involved. In terms of abstract doctrine his consequent reluctance to surrender
the disagreement was basic and clear-cut: ground voluntarily in order to gain stra-
it opposed the notion of linear defense to tegic or tactical advantage committed him
defense in depth, static warfare to mobile to a policy of rigid terrain defense not
operations, the holding of ground to only in France but throughout the occu-
battles of annihilation, the primary de- pied territories. This basic conflict over
pendence on concrete fortifications to the the purpose of defense, whether it was to
primary dependence on armored striking hold ground in perpetuum or gain mili-
power. In practice, however, disagree- tary advantage for victory at arms was
ments were blurred without being recon- never decided. Plans were made, for in-
ciled by the fact that few commanders be- stance, to evacuate Norway and Denmark
in case of an invasion of France. OKW
79 MS # B-672 (Buttlar-Brandenfels) . recommended in late 1943 that the troops
152 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

in Italy be withdrawn to the north to save pendence was to be placed on stopping


divisions for the main battles to be fought the enemy at the line itself, and where re-
in Russia and France.80 Hitler himself, as serves should be located and how em-
already noted, talked in his Directive 51 ployed.
of the ruthless evacuation of coastal areas Hitler believed in 1942 and probably
not under threat of attack to feed the again in 1944 81 that the line could be
main battle area when the time came. But made so strong that the enemy landing at-
when the time did come the evacuation tempt could be smashed at the water’s
was not carried out, probably both be- edge within the first twenty-four hours.
cause Hitler no longer believed it possible Rundstedt concurred that this was the
and because he could not reconcile him- ideal. He pointed out that the experiences
self to the surrender of any portion of his of Dieppe and Sicily both confirmed that
conquests. The policy of rigid defense, the enemy’s weakest moment was at the
meant, in the first instance, an impossible time of landing. While still afloat he
policy of defense for its own sake. would be without cover and have reduced
A certain rigidity of defense in the west, fire power. 82 Later reports on the Salerno
however, was required by purely military landings led to the same conclusion
considerations. It was essential to hold the through the observation that any other de-
Allies at arm’s length from the critical in- fensive course was foredoomed to failure.
dustrial areas of Germany, and it was Generalmajor Viktor Marnitz reported
highly desirable to take advantage of the that at Salerno the German reserves, al-
strong position afforded by the sea bar- though located near the coast (from three
rier. These military arguments in favor to five kilometers inland), had been un-
of a stand at the coast line, however, were able to counterattack across the open ter-
subject to interpretation, and the rigidity rain under heavy Allied naval artillery
they seemed to dictate was only relative. fire.83 Allied air attacks contributed to the
The decision to build an Atlantic Wall difficulties of forming counterattacks.
was the initial admission that the elastic Strong points along the coast had held
defense principles applied so successfully out well but for the most part the Allies
by the Russians in their vast territories had avoided them, landing between them
could not be adopted in the west and that and infiltrating inland to seize transporta-
basically the German armies in the west tion junctions. Allied troops had not been
must stand on a line. There was never any 81 He did not long hold to the principles of coun-
debate over the need for making this line terattack outlined in Directive 51. See MS # B-672
as strong as possible through the construc- (Buttlar-Brandenfels) and below, Ch. VII.
82 Grundlegende Bemerkungen des Oberbefehls-
tion of a system of permanent and field habers West Nr. 27, Auswertung weiterer Erfah-
fortifications. The debate concerned only rungen, 24 Jul 43, and NT. 28 Erfahrungen und
how the line was to be held: what de- Folgerungen aus den Landungsknempfen von Salerno,
25 Dec 43. OKW/WFSt, Up. (H), Westen, Grundle-
gende Bemerkungen 4.V.42-27.X11.43.
80 OKW/WFSt, KTB I.IX.-31.XII.4J, 4 Oct 43. 83 Rpt, Auszug aus Bericht Generalmajor Y. Mar-
This reversed the opinion of a month earlier that, nitz, appended to Grundlegende Bemerkungen des
even if the line in Italy were shortened, the troops Oberbefehlshnbers West Nr. 28, cited n. 82. Marnitz
thereby relieved would have to be used in the Bal- was director of fortress engineer courses at Engineer
kans. Ibid., 8 Sep 43. School I.
THE GERMAN ARMY IN FRANCE, 1940-1943 153

held up by any kind of natural obstacles; interior with a massed armored counter-
on the contrary they had seemed able to attack. The Luftwaffe, he felt, should not
take advantage of all kinds of unfavorable be committed in the battle for the
terrain. General Marnitz’s recommenda- beaches but saved to cover the counter-
tions were to smash the Allied attack be- attack.84 Sodenstern agreed, with an inter-
fore landing by holding the reserves close esting variation which he described in re-
up and withholding coastal artillery fire flections jotted down in the summer of
to the last moment. If some troops got 1943.85 The relative weakness of German
ashore they would be forced to spread out forces, he felt, required that they defend
by stubborn resistance in a number of the coast only long enough to determine
small resistance nests. Any of the enemy the center of gravity of the enemy attack.
forces that pierced the coastal defenses Strategic reserves should be assembled on
should be counterattacked by local re- both sides of the Seine northwest of Paris
serves after they were beyond the range of and on the upper Loire. The area be-
naval guns. tween the Seine and Loire would be the
Rundstedt in forwarding this report battlefield. Since Allied air superiority
concurred in its contents, but in a later would make extensive German troop
communication he made one significant movements impossible, the Allies should
addition. Smash the enemy in his boats, be compelled to maneuver into the area
if possible. If he lands, counterattack im- chosen for the battle by means of switch
mediately with local reserves. But if, de- lines contrived to canalize the Allied at-
spite everything, he still succeeds in get- tack.
ting through the first line of defense, then The notion of gambling everything on
hold him by fire from positions echeloned fully mobile defense with massed counter-
in depth long enough to permit counter- attacks mounted inland was never seri-
attack by corps and army reserves. Coun- ously entertained. Rundstedt seems gen-
terattack by purely local reserves could erally to have conceived of the main battle
be considered part of the concept of static as taking place in the coastal area. He
defense. Riposte by corps and army re- vacillated chiefly in the reliance which he
serves introduced the concept of flexible, wanted to put on mobile counterattack
mobile war, particularly when limited within that area. To make such an attack
means made it impossible to achieve both possible, German forces, of course, had to
an optimum strength on the first line and be able to maneuver freely. Salerno and
an adequate pool of reserves. Sicily had shown that armor could not
General der Panzertruppen Leo Frei- fight successfully within the range of naval
herr Geyr von Schweppenburg, the ar- artillery. Rundstedt pointed out to OKW
mored expert in the west, wanted to push that armor therefore could not influence
the mobile tactics thus adumbrated to the the battle unless German aircraft, espe-
point of falling back entirely from the cially torpedo planes, could interfere with
coast with all mobile units, leaving only
the static defenses to stave off the enemy
84 MS # B-466 (Geyr von Schweppenburg) . Cf.
as long as possible and inflict maximum below, Ch. X.
losses. He wanted to seek a decision in the 85 MS # B-276 (Sodenstern) .
154 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

the firing of Allied warships.86 In addi- There is no question that the Rund-
tion, German mobility obviously de- stedt plan considerably extended the ideas
pended on the quality and quantity of underlying Directive 51. OKW at once
equipment and personnel. In his October objected to the proposal to withdraw en-
report, Rundstedt admitted that the Ger- tire divisions from the unthreatened por-
man divisions in the west had neither the tions of the coast and suggested instead
men nor the machines to fight in open that only regimental Kampfgruppen be
terrain against an enemy so materially pulled out in order not to denude any
strong as the Allies were sure to be. The section of its defenses.88 More basic ob-
conclusion was thus forced that the only jections were raised by Generaloberst
hope of redressing Allied superiority lay Hans von Salmuth, who as commander
in taking the maximum advantage of the of the Fifteenth Army defending the coast
water barrier. That was how the situation which the Germans thought most likely to
looked in October. After the Hitler di- be the scene of the major Allied invasion
rective in the next month, Rundstedt attempt occupied a key position in the
modified his view. If the promise to command hierarchy. Salmuth criticized
strengthen the west meant the provision Rundstedt’s suggestion as contravening
of new troops and more mobile divisions, all the hitherto accepted principles of de-
it might be possible to return to the idea fense in the west. It assumed, he said, that
of mass counterattack. He therefore pro- the Allies would break through the cor-
posed the formation, partly on paper, don defense and would succeed in estab-
partly on the ground, of a central reserve. lishing a bridgehead. If that happened, he
Specifically he suggested earmarking six believed the Allies pouring ashore un-
infantry divisions to be withdrawn after hindered would soon establish a superior-
the Allied landings from coastal zones not ity of force that would be tantamount to
threatened by attack. Made mobile by ve- victory. The central reserves would take
hicles contributed by each of the armies, too long to assemble; it would be delayed
these divisions would be organized under and partially destroyed by Allied air at-
two corps controlled by an army head- tack. It was probable therefore that it
quarters. Existing panzer and panzer could never be committed in mass and
grenadier reserves would be commanded that late and piecemeal commitment
by a reserve panzer corps and the entire would be ineffective. All reserves, Sal-
force put under the special army group muth believed, should be held as close as
headquarters that was being formed possible to the coast and should be under
under Rommel.87 army control. 89The main objection to Sal-
muth’s argument, as Rundstedt pointed
86 Ltr, OB WEST (Ia NT. 696/43) to OKW/WFSt,
26 Nov 43. Seventh Army, KTB Anlagen, Chefsachen army commanders, Vorbereitung fuer den Kampf, 18
Z.III.43-l.VIII.44. Nov 43. OKH/Org.Abt., Bd. Chefsachen 7.V.43-
87 Rad, OB WEST to OKW/WFSt, 14 Nov. 43. Seu- 4.11.44. In place of the reserve panzer corps a special
enth Army, KTB Anlagen, Chefsachen 2.III.43- armored staff was later created. See below, Ch. VII.
l.VIII.44. At the time Rundstedt made this proposal 88 OKW/WFSt, KTB l.ZX.-31.X11.43, 15 Nov 43.
he was not sure of getting the reserve army group 89 Ltr, Salmuth to OB WEST with personal cover-
headquarters. If he did not, he expected to employ ing letter to Rundstedt, 25 Dec 43. Fifteenth Army,
simply an army command. See Order, OB WEST lo KTB Anlagen, Chefsachen 26.X.-27.X11.43.
THE GERMAN ARMY IN FRANCE, 1940-1943 155

out in reply, was that it relied too much were concerned, there should be no with-
on a correct guess as to where the Allies drawal. Each strong point should be
would strike. For Salmuth this was not a fought separately. But this kind of resist-
very grave objection since he was con- ance would only soften up the enemy for
vinced that the Allies would make their the decisive counterattacks. To be de-
main attack in his sector. Rundstedt cisive they must be mounted in force. “No
agreed that the likelihood existed, but dispersion,” said Rundstedt, “no piece-
pointed out that it was by no means a cer- meal commitment and no thin water
tainty.90 soup!” Divisions should be committed in-
To Salmuth’s argument that the cen- tact to hit the flanks of the enemy pene-
tral reserves could not be assembled and trations.92
committed fast enough to be of use in a General der Artillerie Erich Marcks,
decisive mass counterattack, Rundstedt commander of LXXXIV Corps in Nor-
made no reply. His continued advocacy of mandy, was persuaded by the weakness of
such a reserve implied a belief that if vic- his forces to embrace the same tactics. He
tory was to be won the difficulties had to told an inspecting officer from OKW in
be overcome, though precisely how was January 1944 that even a doubling of his
never quite clear. Rundstedt’s conviction, present troop strength would make pos-
shared by most of the commanders in the sible only a thin screen at the coast which
west, was that no matter how strong the could still be torn at any point by the
Atlantic Wall was made it could be enemy. Instead of a wall defense, he there-
broken. The only relevant questions were fore proposed the construction of numer-
what dependence to put on the wall and ous small field fortifications with some
how to divide the available forces between depth whose mission was not to stop the
local and central reserves. The Nine- enemy but to split the attacking forces
teen th Army commander, Sodenstern, and gain time for the bringing up of Ger-
argued that the impossibility of establish- man reserves. He felt that a corps reserve
ing an unbreakable cordon defense viti- of armor and mobile infantry could be
ated the whole concept of the Atlantic built up behind the coast but near enough
Wall since a break-through anywhere to be committed within twenty-four
would make all the fortifications useless.91 hours.93
Rundstedt maintained that a rigid de- OKW generally remained skeptical
fense in a series of strong points held to whether, in view of Allied superiority in
the last could so splinter and weaken the the air and the limited mobility of Ger-
enemy that his penetrations could easily man units, large-scale counterattacks
be cleaned up and the whole invasion at- could be mounted. But, on the whole,
tempt thus be defeated before the enemy’s Jodl and his staff concurred that depth of
superior material force could be concen- defense was desirable. In response to re-
trated and gain momentum. As far as the
troops defending the coastal strong points 92Grundlegender Befehl des Oberbefehlshabers
West NT. 20, Grundsaetre fuer die Fuehrung der
90 Ltr, Rundstedt to Salmuth, 27 Dec 43. Fifteenth Kuestenverteidigung, 18 Dec 42. OKW/WFSt, Op.
Army, KTB Anlagen, Chefsachen 26.X.-27.XII.43. (H), Westen, Grundlegende Befehle 22.X.42-7.V.44.
91 MS # B-276 (Sodenstern) . 93MS # B-672 (Buttlar-Brandenfels) .
156 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

peated pleas by Rundstedt in the summer less subject to interpretation as support-


of 1943 OKW authorized the construc- ing either primarily static or primarily
tion, if practicable, of a secondary posi- mobile defense.96 Since the practical prob-
tion still within the coastal zone.94 In June lem was the allocation of limited time and
1943 the Commander in Chief West or- resources, insufficient for the full develop-
dered local commanders to reconnoiter ment of both fortifications and troop
rear areas for suitable locations for heavy build-up and training, Rundstedt’s pro-
weapons in accordance with their own es- nouncements actually straddled the issue.
timate of the situation and enemy inten- In the closing months of the year the
tions. He also suggested that prepared doctrine of decision by counterattack in
positions for antitank guns and machine force, though qualified and not unchal-
guns would be of considerable impor- lenged, seemed to have achieved general
tance in delaying the enemy troops that acceptance in OB WEST and the appar-
might break through the first line of de- ent endorsement of OKW and Hitler. The
fense. At the moment there was little pos- outline of the battle as sketched by the
sibility of actually starting construction.95 chief of staff of OB WEST, General Blu-
Nothing was started until the end of Octo- mentritt, envisaged the fighting in four
ber, when Rundstedt ordered further main stages: first, the fire fight while the
reconnaissance by corps and armies and Allies were still on the water; second, the
the beginning of field construction. The struggle on the beaches; third, the battles
secondary position was to be built with in the coastal zone between German local
maximum flexibility to include prepared reserves and Allied units that had pene-
switch lines and to take in already estab- trated the main line of resistance; and,
lished airfields, ammunition dumps, and finally, the decisive beachhead battle in
shelters for reserves and staffs. Antiair- which OB WEST would commit large
craft guns would be emplaced for ground motorized units to throw the Allies back
firing and all-around defense. Some 31,- into the sea.97
000 French laborers were initially used In accord with this outline, Rundstedt
on the job. ordered a winter construction program to
At the end of 1943 the discussion of de- step up work on the fortifications with
fense tactics had produced no unequivo- special attention to casemating coastal ar-
cal decision. Rundstedt’s own orders with tillery and antitank guns; at the same
their dual emphasis on holding coastal time, as already noted, he began planning
positions to the last and at the same time for the formation of the central reserve.
building mobile reserves, while in one But the latter plans would go awry chiefly
sense perfectly consistent, were neverthe-
96 Rundstedt could thus find himself in nearly per-
94 Ltrs, OB WEST to OKW/ WFSt, 2 Apr 43 and fect agreement with both Salmuth and Geyr, whose
27 Jun 43. OKH/Op.Abt., Kuestenschutz Kanal- respective tactical concepts were wholly opposed. See
kueste 20.VI.42-18.V.44; OKW/WFSt, KTB l.VII.- MS # B-466 (Geyr von Schweppenburg); cf. MS
31.VIII.43, 11 Jul 43. # B-720 (Generalleutnant Dr. Hans Speidel, CofS,
95 Grundlegende Bemerkungen des Oberbefehls- Army Group B)
Iralw,-s West Nr. 26, 6 Jun 43. OKW/ WFSt, Op. (H), 97 Ltr, CofS, OB WEST, to subordinate armies,
Westen, Grundlegende Bemerkungen 4.V.42-27.XII.- 10 Jan 44. Seventh Army, KTB Anlagen, Chefsachen
43. 2.111.43-l .VII1.44.
THE GERMAN ARMY IN FRANCE, 1940-1943 157

because the man slated to command the moment when the concept of mobile de-
reserves and conduct the battle against fense in the west seemed to enjoy highest
the invaders was to be Field Marshal favor, it was in reality on the point of most
Rommel. There was scarcely a general in complete repudiation by a commander
the German Army less in sympathy with convinced that it was a dangerous
the grandiose scheme of massed counter- fantasy.98
attacks under the bomb sights of virtually
unopposed Allied air fleets. Thus at the 98See below, Ch. VII.
CHAPTER V

Overlord Revised
U.S. Organization and Training ice troops, began in the fall of 1943 and
for the Assault, January 1944 continued from then until D Day at the
average rate of about two divisions a
General Eisenhower arrived in London month.1
on 14 January 1944 to take up his new U.S. corps and army headquarters for
duties as Supreme Commander, Allied the control of the initial phases of the in-
Expeditionary Force. With his arrival, the vasion were already established in the
whole character and tempo of planning United Kingdom and the chain of com-
and preparing for OVERLORD changed. mand was settled. On 23 October 1943,
Gone was the basic uncertainty-the sense First U.S. Army under Lt. Gen. Omar N.
of planning for a more or less probable Bradley took over operational command
contingency in a more or less indefinite of American ground forces in the United
future. OVERLORD was now a definite com- Kingdom.2 At the same time VII Corps,
mitment. A commander at last was which arrived during the month, was as-
charged with responsibility for its success signed to First Army. Over-all ground
and authority to make his arrangements command for the assault phase had been
to insure that success. The twenty weeks given to 21 Army Group. Early in Janu-
that remained before the troops were ary General Paget was replaced as com-
loaded in ships for the fateful thrust manding general by Gen. Sir Bernard L.
across the Channel were weeks of decision Montgomery.3 General Montgomery ar-
when the plans, studies, suggestions, and
acquired experience of the past three 1 As of 1 January there were 749,298 U.S. troops
years were transformed into the working in the United Kingdom including most of eleven
divisions. The divisions, in order of arrival, were:
blueprints of action. 29th, 5th, 101st Airborne, 3d Armored, 28th, 2d, lst,
It was a task of complexity and disturb- 2d Armored, 9th, 82d Airborne, and 8th. The lst, 2d
ing size which at times made commanders Armored, Sth, and 82d Airborne Divisions had been
in combat in the Mediterranean.
despair that it could be accomplished in 2 [Robert W. Coakley] Organization and Com-
time. But for the most part the ground- mand in the ET0 (The Administrative and Lo-
work had been solidly laid. By January gistical History of the ETO: Part II), MS, I, 276-77.
Hist Div files.
there could be no concern over the avail- 3General Montgomery came to this post with a
ability of troops to do the job. Already brilliant record that dated back to World War I, in
about half of the required U.S. combat which he had been awarded the DSO and been men-
tioned six times in dispatches. At the beginning of
divisions were in the United Kingdom World War II he commanded the 3d Division in
and the arrival in time of the remainder France and, after escaping from Dunkerque, took
was assured. The flow of combat divisions, over the 5 Corps. In 1942 and 1943 as commanding
general of the British Eighth Army in Africa, Egypt,
which had been delayed to permit an in- Sicily, and Italy, he achieved renown as the man who
tensive build-up of the air forces and serv- mastered Rommel.
GENERAL EISENHOWER, Supreme Allied Commander.
160 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

rived in England on 2 January 1944. He Stark. But, although this simplified the
had stopped off at Algiers to receive Gen- appearance of the command, the fact re-
eral Eisenhower’s instructions and then at mained complicated. At the same time,
Marrakesh to see the Prime Minister, who Admiral King directed that a task force
was convalescing there from an attack of be formed to control operations and train-
influenza. His chief of staff, Maj. Gen. Sir ing for the cross-Channel assault. This be-
Francis de Guingand, went ahead and on came Task Force 122 under command of
his arrival at once tackled the problem of Rear Adm. Alan G. Kirk.6 Operational
reorganizing the army group staff and re- and administrative command thus re-
placing most of its key personnel with offi- mained divided. Two other important
cers from the British Eighth Army. In ad- subordinate commands were formed
dition he undertook to establish parallel under Twelfth Fleet: the Eleventh Am-
U.S. staffs to convert the British army phibious Force under Rear Adm. John
group into a temporary combined head- L. Hall, and Landing Craft and Bases,
quarters which would function as such as Europe, which was created in the summer
long as U.S. troops were under its com- of 1943 to receive and control the build-
mand.4 up of landing craft for the invasion. The
U. S. naval organization had also be- commander was Rear Adm. John Wilkes.7
come pretty well set by the first of the year, Admiral Stark, as ComNavEu, was re-
after passing through many complicated sponsible for co-ordinating with ETO-
command patterns from the time the first USA and COSSAC all U.S. naval prepara-
IJ.S. naval officers arrived in England as tions for the invasion; as commander of
observers in 1940.5 The end product-the Twelfth Fleet he was the administrative
command for combat-reflected some of chief responsible for providing the task
these past complications. In January Ad- forces under him with facilities for train-
miral Harold R. Stark was still the senior ing and operations. Admiral Kirk’s Task
U.S. naval commander in Europe, with Force 122 controlled the training, prep-
the title of Commander of Naval Forces aration, and operations of all U.S. naval
in Europe (ComNavEu). Until the fall of forces. Under him, Admiral Hall’s
1943 he exercised administrative com- Eleventh Amphibious Force commanded
mand over various task forces sent by the U.S. amphibious forces afloat. Command
Commander in Chief of the U.S. Fleet to of bases and responsibility for support and
operate in European waters. In addition, maintenance of forces afloat rested with
he commanded certain naval administra- Admiral Wilkes.
tive units in the United Kingdom. On 9 The Allied naval command had been
September 1943 Admiral King ordered established for planning purposes on 5
consolidation of all U.S. naval forces in May 1943. On 25 October Admiral Little
Europe under a new command, the was replaced as Commander-in-Chief Al-
Twelfth Fleet, to be headed by Admiral 6 Admiral Kirk had been commander of Amphibi-
ous Force, Atlantic Fleet.
4Interv with de Guingand, 1947. Hist Div files. 7 Hall was former commander of the Eighth Am-
5 Material on naval organization is found in Ad- phibious Force in the Mediterranean. Wilkes from
ministrative History of U.S. Naval Forces in Europe, December 1942 to August 1943 had commanded the
1940-1946, MS, pp. 237-47. Hist Div files. U.S. cruiser Birmingham.
INVASION TRAINING IN ENGLAND. Amphibious exercise off beach (above),
and troops coming ashore from a beached LCZ (L) (below).
162 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

lied Naval Expeditionary Force (ANCXF) bined amphibious doctrine specially


by Admiral Sir Bertram H. Ramsay.8 It adapted to the conditions of the Channel
was not until 1 April, however, that Ad- assault.10 As doctrine and planning de-
miral Ramsay assumed operational con- veloped and the American Army grew in
trol of U.S. naval forces and even then his the United Kingdom, it became impera-
command remained formal until the eve tive to set up an American training center
of the invasion.9 The principal duty of that would both test the new tactical ideas
ANCXF in January was still the prepara- and techniques and apply them in the
tion of an Allied naval plan. training of troops. Negotiations to estab-
Air force organization was settled in lish such a center had begun in late 1942,
January except for the control of strategic but the problems in the way were con-
air. Air Marshal Leigh-Mallory’s AEAF siderable. During the first six months of
headquarters, in addition to directing 1943 there were few trainees and fewer
preliminary operations against the enemy, facilities, as the bulk of U.S. ground
was working on an over-all air plan for troops and landing craft continued to be
the assault. absorbed by the Mediterranean theater.
The training of troops for the assault Moreover, it took time to locate suitable
was never a primary responsibility of the training grounds in the crowded island of
theater. It was assumed that divisions England and to iron out the legal diffi-
would arrive in the United Kingdom culties of taking over hundreds of pieces
fully schooled in their tasks. The cross- of private property, including farmlands
Channel attack, however, posed many and villages. (The area finally selected, in
special technical problems for which solu- fact, was so small that firing exercises were
tions could not be worked out at a dis- narrowly limited.) In April 1943 the As-
tance. The British had been experiment- sault Training Center was activated with
ing with assault tactics and equipment Lt. Col. Paul W. Thompson in command.
since 1940 through the Combined Oper- But it was September before it opened its
ations Headquarters. After April 1942 first training courses at Woolacombe.11
American officers shared in this work and Nearly all the U.S. troops earmarked
an attempt was made to work out a com- for the OVERLORD assault underwent some
training at Colonel Thompson’s center,
8 Ltr, H. N. Morrison to Admiral Ramsay, 4 Nov although the amount and intensity varied.
43. SHAEF SGS file 322 (ANCXF) . Admiral Ramsay
had retired in 1938 after forty-two years in the Royal The 29th and 4th Divisions sent a11their
Navy, the last three of which he had served as Chief regiments through the course. One regi-
of Staff, Home Fleet. At the outbreak of World War ment of the 29th, the 116th Infantry, re-
II in 1939 he was recalled to active duty as Flag
Officer Commanding, Dover. While serving in this turned for a refresher course. Out of the
post he organized the naval forces for the withdrawal 1st Division only the 16th Infantry took
from Dunkerque. Later he helped plan the TORCH the training. But the 1st Division arrived
operation, commanded a task force in the Sicilian
invasion, and became British naval commander in 10 Rpt, History of American Section, Combined
the Mediterranean. Operations Headquarters, 23 Sep 43. Pre-Inv file 289.
9 Ltr, Smith to CinC 21 A Gp, FUSAG, and AEAF, 11 [Clifford Jones] NEPTUNE: Training, Mounting,
6 Apr 43. SHAEF SGS file 322 (ANCXF) . The naval the Artificial Ports (The Administrative and Lo-
command set up was analogous to that of the Allied gistical History of the ETO: Part VI), MS, I, 165,
Expeditionary Air Force. See above, Ch. III. 1688. Hist Div files.
ASSAULT TRAINING. Hitting the beach (above), and training with live am
munition (below).
164 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

in England fully battle-tested through problems still remained to be settled-the


participation in both the North African strength of the assault, for instance, and
and Sicilian assaults. The 82d Airborne whether it should take place by day or
Division, similarly experienced in combat by night.
in Sicily and Italy, did not attend the cen- It was recognized at least as early as
ter. The 101st Airborne Division, how- Casablanca that the only plan worth work-
ever, despite intensive training in the ing on was one drawn by the people who
United States did send two groups (two would ultimately execute it. Hence the
thousand men in all) for special short decision to constitute COSSAC as an
courses in the technique of assaulting embryo of a supreme headquarters. Vari-
fortified positions.12 ous attempts were then made to confer on
Besides carrying out its primary mis- General Morgan a kind of substitute com-
sion of preparing troops for the assaults, mander’s authority. But the device did
the Assault Training Center made a vital not work. After the publication of the
contribution to amphibious doctrine. OVERLORD outline plan in July 1943,
Through experimentation with new COSSAC found it impossible to make any
equipment, combined exercises, close further substantial contribution to OVER-
liaison with the British, and conferences LORD tactical planning for reasons that
on tactics, Colonel Thompson’s staff have been described. General Eisenhower,
learned as well as taught, and their new General Montgomery, and their staffs, as
wisdom not only improved tactical meth- well as the Allied naval and air command-
ods but in many important ways modified ers, found in January that as far as plans
tactical concepts. 13 In January 1944, when were concerned they had to go back and
Eisenhower took command, the special- pick up where COSSAC left off in July.
ized program of the Assault Training They had, however, an accumulated mass
Center was in full swing; one division was of special studies which greatly facilitated
already graduated, another was in train- the problems of revising the master plan
ing. Tactical methods, though still not and preparing detailed unit field orders.
firm in all respects, had at least been ex-
tensively reviewed and tested. The Anvil-Overlord Debate
All the major problems attendant on
the assembling, grouping, and training of It was clear to planners after the
invasion forces had thus been settled. It Quebec Conference that the OVERLORD
required only time and a few minor re- plan, as written by COSSAC in July 1943,
arrangements to ready the troops for the would have to be revised to strengthen the
attack. The status of planning, however, assault. Although COSSAC examined
was much less satisfactory. Despite nearly some of the implications both of adding
three years of study and ten months of to the weight of the attack and of broad-
more or less intensive and specific plan- ening the front, the planners came to no
ning for OVERLORD, many of the basic conclusion. General Morgan could not
have rewritten the plan in any case, since
12 Ibid.,I, 193-96.
13For discussion, see below, The NEPTUNEHans: he still functioned under the May direc-
Organization and Tactics of the Assault Forces. tive of the Combined Chiefs of Staff which
OVERLORD REVISED 165

limited his resources in men and ship- ing craft. The meeting broke up without
ping. He could not secure additional re- decision. In the days following General
sources primarily because he could not Montgomery’s first sweeping protest
exercise the necessary command au- against the narrow restrictions placed on
thority. the original plan, discussion settled down
When COSSAC received the Supreme to suggestions that the planned invasion
Commander and emerged from its plan- front be extended from twenty-five miles
ning staff chrysalis to become the Supreme to about forty miles and that five divisions
Allied Headquarters, its formal written be used in the assau1t.15 The extended
plan for the invasion was still the July out- front was to run from les Dunes de Varre-
line plan. But informally the staff had ville on the east coast of the Cotentin to
long been thinking in terms of a larger Cabourg (east of the Orne River). Two
assault. If landing craft were available, armies should be employed: the First
planners hoped to be able to attack with U.S. Army on the right and the Second
four divisions and have one more division British Army on the left with an inter-
in floating reserve. Still this was only a army boundary approximately at Bay-
hope-not a plan. The process of produc- eux.16
ing a new plan to realize the hope for a General Montgomery insisted that it
strong assault began with the arrival in was essential in order to avoid confusion
London of General Montgomery and of administration and supply that armies
General Eisenhower’s chief of staff, Maj. and corps go in on their own fronts and
Gen. Walter Bedell Smith.14 not through bridgeheads established by
On 3 January 1944 Generals Mont- other units.17 Other reasons for broaden-
gomery and Smith were formally briefed ing the front were that it would be harder
on the COSSAC OVERLORD plan by Brig. for the enemy to define and locate the
Kenneth McLean, the chief COSSAC limits of the attack and conversely easier
Army planner. After the presentation,
General Montgomery criticized the nar- 15Interv, F. C. Pogue with Maj Gen Kenneth R.
row front of the assault and spoke of carry- McLean, 11-13 Mar 47. McLean said flatly that
Montgomery’s decision was to use a five-division
ing out simultaneous assaults in Brittany, front. Compare, however, notes by Lt. Col. H. Main-
around Dieppe, and on the west coast of ward (military assistant to Montgomery) on a meet-
the Cotentin. He also criticized planning ing of Army commanders, 7 January 1944, where
the decision reported was to try for an eight-brigade
figures on the capacity of available land- assault for four divisions each on a two-brigade
front. Naval representatives said that, although eight
14 General Smith at the outbreak of war was serv- brigades were the maximum that could be landed,
ing as Secretary, General Staff of the War Depart- they could be drawn from five divisions rather than
ment. In February 1942 he became secretary to the four, if the Army preferred. Documents in Hist Div
U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff as well as American secre- files.
tary of the Combined Chiefs of Staff. Appointed as 16 Mainward, notes cited n. 15. Bayeux was to be
General Eisenhower’s chief of staff in September inclusive to the U.S. Army.
1942, he served in this position in Allied Force Head- 17 This had been pointed out much earlier as one
quarters until the end of 1943. At that time he be- of the important lessons from TORCH. The Eastern
came SHAEF chief of staff, replacing General Mor- Assault Force G-4 wrote: “It was fundamental to
gan who became deputy chief of staff. General avoid intermingling of British and American Supply
Eisenhower had been ordered to the United States systems.” See Lessons from Operation TORCH, 16 Dec
for consultations and had sent Smith to London. 42. Pre-Inv file 465.
166 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

for the Allies to break out of the initial dent technical objections since the ef-
bridgehead. A wider frontage would give fectiveness of their support and prepara-
the Allies a larger number of vehicle exits tion was directly proportionate to the con-
from the beachhead and so facilitate the centration of the ground attack. Most of
penetration inland and subsequent build- the COSSAC staff, whether or not they
up. Finally a landing west of the Vire agreed with General Montgomery, felt
estuary would facilitate the early capture immense relief that the matter was at last
of Cherbourg, on which General Mont- being brought to a head.21 Planning was
gomery placed even greater stress than on solid ground again and now could
COSSAC, principally because he was sus- move forward. Planners were ordered
picious of the value of the untried artifi- to go ahead with the revised plan to em-
cial ports.18 ploy one airborne and five seaborne
Details of tactical dispositions and ob- divisions in the assault on the assumption
jectives were not examined at this point. that the necessary additional resources in
Even the question of whether to assault shipping and air transport would be forth-
the beaches of the east Cotentin was ap- coming.
parently unsettled. What General Mont- Montgomery and Smith then tackled
gomery did achieve-and what was most the problem of getting the required land-
important at that time to achieve-was to ing craft. The most obvious source was the
press, as a commander, for a decision that Mediterranean theater. But withdrawal
the assault be strengthened. He said in from the Mediterranean would necessi-
effect, “Give me five divisions or get some- tate the cancellation of the ANVIL assault
one else to command.” 19 Of the COSSAC on southern France. One of General
principal staff officers none agreed entirely Eisenhower’s last jobs as Commander in
with Montgomery’s proposals. General Chief of the Mediterranean theater had
Morgan, General McLean, and General been the drafting of a plan for a two- or
Barker had always wanted the greater three-division ANVIL to coincide with
weight in the assault, but still questioned OVERLORD and so constitute a concentric
the soundness of expanding the front. offensive against the enemy forces in
Maj. Gen. Charles A. West, G-3, opposed France.22 That plan, it will be remem-
any expansion, because he believed it bered, was developed during December in
would only spread thin the available compliance with the directive of the Com-
forces.20 The naval and air staffs had evi- bined Chiefs of Staff issued at Cairo after
18 Notes for the Commander-in-Chief’s Meeting the meeting with the Russians.
with the Supreme Commander on Friday 21st Janu- On 5 January General Smith cabled
ary 1944. Copy furnished by British Cabinet Office
Hist Sec. Hist Div files.
General Eisenhower in Washington to
19 Gen McLean’s interpretation. See Interv cited report Montgomery’s argument for a
n. 15. Eisenhower has said that in December 1943,
he instructed both General Montgomery and Gen-
eral Smith to “seek for an intensification of effort to 21 Interv with McLean.
increase troop lift in Overlord. .” Cbl, Eisenhower 22Eisenhower preferred a three-division assault,
to Marshall, 8 Feb 44. SHAEF SGS file 381 I (Over- but made alternative plans to employ only two di-
lord-Anvil) . visions in case the additional resources were not
20Interv with McLean; Interv, F. C. Pogue with available. The three-division plan, actually not feasi-
Gen West, 19 Feb 47. Hist Div files. ble, was dropped from reckoning in the later debate.
OVERLORD REVISED 167

stronger and broader OVERLORD assault.23 needed for the “Montgomery plan” and
“Additional lift,” he said, “can only be the implications of finding them.26 To get
obtained at the expense of ANVIL. . . . the landing craft they estimated it would
Montgomery is insistent on the immedi- be necessary to return half of the two-di-
ate recommendation to abandon ANVIL vision ANVIL lift to the United Kingdom.
except as a threat previously agreed upon In addition the OVERLORD target date
by the COSSAC and AFHQ staffs before would have to be postponed from 1 May
the reinforcement in landing craft was de- to 1 June in order to secure an additional
cided upon at the Cairo Conference.” month’s production, and the number of
Smith added that, although he had re- vehicles per assault division would need
fused to make such a recommendation to be cut to 2,500.27 The broadened as-
without General Eisenhower’s “personal sault front would also increase the fighter
approval,” he nevertheless agreed with it. plane commitment by eight squadrons.
He felt that ANVIL as a one-division threat To lift a complete airborne division in-
would be just as effective as the contem- stead of the two-thirds originally planned
plated three-division assault. In this Gen- would necessitate finding 200 more trans-
eral Morgan and the bulk of the planners port aircraft.28
in England concurred.24 Morgan, like The bill for the principal types of land-
most of the planners, believed the ANVIL ing craft-as always the critical commod-
assault, as planned, was so remote from ity-included an additional 72 LCI (L) ‘s,
the OVERLORD area and from any military 47 LST’s, and 144 LCT’S.29 The bill was
objectives vital to the Germans that the submitted to the Combined Chiefs of
enemy would not find it worth while to Staff by General Eisenhower a week after
divert more than two or three divisions he arrived in London. He was anxious
from the main battle in the north in order that it be met, if possible, without inter-
to cope with it. The same diversion, he fering with ANVIL and indicated his will-
thought, could be achieved by a threat re- ingness to postpone OVERLORD until after
quiring amphibious lift’for only one divi- 1 June even though that meant the loss
sion. Eisenhower agreed that “OVERLORD
26 The “Montgomery plan” was a convenient ap-
must be more broadly based” but he did pellation used by General Morgan and others at the
not think ANVIL as a threat would be as ef- time. See Ltr, Morgan to COSSAC G-4, 13 Jan 44.
fective as the operation itself.25 SHAEF SGS file 800.1 I. It should not be taken to
indicate, however, that the idea of an expanded as-
Pending the outcome of the debate thus sault was uniquely Montgomery’s.
initiated, planners proceeded with an ex- 27 Former calculations had varied, but all exceeded
amination of the additional resources 3,000. See above, Ch. II.
28COSSAC (44) 9, Reply to Joint Planning Staff
23 Cbl, Smith to Eisenhower, 5 Jan 44. Eisenhower Questionnaire (COS (44) 11 (0) ) On Implications
Personal Files. See Bibliographical Note. Montgom- of Proposed Modification of Operation ‘Anvil,’ 8
ery added his personal appeal when he cabled on 10 Jan 44. SHAEF SGS file 370.2/2 I.
January, “Will you hurl yourself into the contest 29 The other requirements: 1 LSH (headquarters
and what we want, get for us.” SHAEF SGS file 560 ship), 6 LSI (L)‘s or APA’s, all carrying a full com-
II. plement of LCA’s or LCVP’s (British and U.S. ship-
24 COSSAC (44) 5, Operation ‘ANVIL,' 6 Jan 44. to-shore ferrying craft respectively), and 64 motor
SHAEF SGS file 370.2/2 I. vehicle cargo ships. These requirements could all
25 Cbl, Eisenhower to Smith, 6 Jan 44. Eisenhower be met with relative ease and therefore do not figure
Personal Files. in the struggle for adequate assault lift.
168 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

of a month of good campaigning weather. Department representative in London


The postponement was seconded by the could say, in reference to the ANVIL-OVER-
British Chiefs of Staff, and agreed to by LORD debate, that he had met the “cus-
the U. S. Joint Chiefs of Staff on 31 Janu- tomary attitude on the part of British
ary. Besides insuring extra landing craft, planners.” He found them maintaining
the later date would increase the chances that OVERLORD was the only operation
of favorable weather on the Russian front “that will pay us dividends,” and that
and thus make it possible for more closely “ANVIL might be an operation in the Mar-
co-ordinated action between the Allies.30 shalls” for all the connection it had with
The ANVIL question was not to be re- OVERLORD.33
solved so easily. On the contrary the issue As the British thus developed increas-
sharpened and the differences of opinion ing hostility to the southern France in-
intensified. In early January 1944 when vasion, the U.S. Chiefs of Staff reaffirmed
the British Chiefs of Staff first debated the an uncompromising stand that ANVIL was
cancellation of ANVIL, both Air Marshal required “to make effective use” of the
Portal, Chief of Air Staff, and Admiral French and U.S. divisions in the Mediter-
Sir Andrew B. Cunningham, First Sea ranean and to draw German divisions
Lord, recommended the mounting of a away from northern France.34 The most
two-division ANVIL as a useful diversion a threat could do, they thought, would be
to OVERLORD..31 On 4 February, the Prime to contain the enemy divisions already
Minister bluntly stated that ANVIL and deployed in the ANVIL area. Furthermore,
OVERLORD were not strategically inter- they recalled that they were committed to
woven because of the great distance (500 the southern France assault by agreement
miles) of rugged country between them with Marshal Stalin at Tehran. In brief,
and the defensive power of modern weap- the U.S. point of view (shared by General
ons. He therefore doubted the value of a Eisenhower) was that ANVIL and OVER-
diversionary landing in southern France, LORD were parts of a single operation, and
regardless of the available resources. The that it was unsound to cancel one part for
Chiefs of Staff had then come to share his the ostensible purpose of strengthening
doubts.32 Less than two weeks later a War the other.
“Judging from the discussion and dif-
ferences of opinion at the present time,”
30Various cables in SHAEF SGS file 381 I (Over-
lord-Anvil) . General Marshall wrote to Eisenhower in
31 COS (44) 5th Mtg (0), 7 Jan 44. SHAEF SGS February, “the British and American
file 370.2/2 I. Admiral Cunningham, who replaced Chiefs of Staff seemed to have completely
Admiral Pound as First Sea Lord in October 1943,
had entered the Royal Navy in 1898 and participated reversed themselves and we have become
in World War I. As Commander-in-Chief, Mediter- Mediterraneanites and they heavily pro-
ranean, between 1939 and 1942, he directed opera-
tions against the Italian Fleet at Taranto and Mata-
pan and evacuated the British Army from Greece. SHAEF SGS file 370.2/2 I; cf. CCS 465/4, Firm
After heading the Admiralty delegation in Washing- Recommendations with Regard to Operations “An-
ton in 1942, Cunningham was made Naval Com- vil” and “Overlord,” 4 Feb 44.
mander-in-chief, Expeditionary Force, North Africa. 33 Cbl, Hull (OPD) to Handy, 15 Feb 44. SHAEF
32 COS (44) 35th Mtg (0), 4 Feb 44 with Annex, SGS file 560 II.
Minute to the Prime Minister from Gen Ismay. 34 CCS 465/3,31 Jan 44.
OVERLORD REVISED 169

OVERLORD. ” 35As Marshall was well aware, and we must do all we can to pin down her
no reversal in opinion had in fact oc- forces and commit them still further. . . .
curred. What had happened was that Al- We have no choice but to prosecute the
lied plans for the battle in Italy had once Italian Campaign with vigor. .. .” 37
again bogged down before unexpectedly The U.S. Joint Chiefs had no quarrel
heavy enemy opposition. The British, in with the determination to prosecute the
asking the cancellation of ANVIL, were Italian campaign. Again the issue was to
thinking at least as much of the need for what extent strategic decisions and plan-
additional resources with which to prose- ning should be suspended to await battle
cute the Italian campaign as they were of developments. General Marshall’s view
diverting landing craft to strengthen was that planning and preparations
OVERLORD. On 22 January, U.S. VI Corps should proceed for ANVIL but that, if by
units had landed at Anzio. The landing April the Allies had still not been able to
behind the enemy lines facing the Fifth establish themselves north of Rome, then
Army was designed to force the Germans ANVIL should be abandoned. If, on the
to pull out and leave the road to Rome other hand, ANVIL were called off at once,
open. Instead of pulling out, the Germans then there would be no possibility of
held the Fifth Army attack at the Gustav mounting it in the spring.38
Line and counterattacked the beachhead. Early in February it became apparent
The beachhead was successfully defended to the Combined Chiefs of Staff that their
but it soon became apparent that no quick differences could not be resolved by ex-
link-up with the main armies was going to change of cables. The U.S. Chiefs of Staff
be possible.36 The British had concluded therefore delegated their authority to
early in February that the Germans meant General Eisenhower to carry on discus-
to fight it out in central Italy and they saw sions with the British and sent to London
this development as altering the Allied Maj. Gen. John E. Hull and Rear Adm.
strategic decisions made at Tehran. They Charles M. Cooke, Jr., with planners from
thought General Alexander, commander the War Department to act as advisers.
of 15 Army Group, controlling the Eisenhower found himself actually on a
ground forces in Italy, would need at middle ground between the War Depart-
least some of the troops earmarked for ment and British staff views. He agreed
ANVIL and that the amphibious lift for one with the War Department’s estimate of
division should be reserved for his use for the importance of the southern France di-
possible new operations similar to the version, but he was closer to the planning
Anzio “end run.” The British Chiefs of difficulties of OVERLORD and therefore
Staff declared: “Germany . . . is now ap- more dubious as to the feasibility of
parently playing our game [of tying up ANVIL.39
German forces in the Mediterranean]
37 CCS 465/4; Minute, Ismay for the Prime Min-
35Cbl, Marshall to Eisenhower, 7 Feb 44. SHAEF ister, cited n. 32.
SGS file 381 I (Overlord-Anvil). 38 Cbl, Hull to Handy, cited n. 33; CCS 465/10, 21
36 The attack toward Cisterna on 28-29 January Feb 44.
failed. Thereafter the Allied forces at Anzio remained 39 See, for instance, Cbl, Eisenhower to Marshall,
on the defensive until May. 6 Feb 44. SHAEF SGS file 381 I (Overlord-Anvil).
170 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

During February the SHAEF staff hicles in the APA’s, using AKA’s (cargo
struggled to devise an acceptable com- ships) in the initial lift, and finding (pre-
promise. The possibility of compromise sumably from new production) an addi-
hinged, in the first instance, on finding tional 27 LCT’s. This plan was subse-
enough landing craft for a five-division quently revised to exchange the 6 AKA’s
OVERLORD assault. Lift for four seaborne with the Mediterranean theater for 20
divisions and one airborne was promised LST’s and 21 LCI (L)‘s, on the grounds
by the War Department. The problem that the large cargo vessels could more
was to get additional lift not only for the easily be used in the calmer southern
fifth assault division but also for four ar- waters. The exchange would still leave an
mored brigades (or the equivalent), five estimated two-division lift for ANVIL al-
regiments of self-propelled field artillery, though it was doubtful whether Gen. Sir
shore groups, air force units, naval per- Henry Maitland Wilson (Commander-in-
sonnel, and two-thirds of a follow-up di- Chief Mediterranean) would accept the
vision which planners figured had to be loss of tactical flexibility which use of the
carried in landing craft, tactically loaded, AKA’s involved.41 The SHAEF compro-
for immediate employment on landing. mise still left a shortage of about fifteen
The rest of the follow-up (one and one- LST’s. General Eisenhower requested al-
third divisions) would be carried in ship- location of at least seven more LST’s from
ping and would therefore not be opera- U.S. production. The remainder of the
tionally available until D plus 2. Assault deficit would have to be made up by in-
forces requiring simultaneous loading creased loading of LST’s on the third tide
consisted of a total of 174,320 men and (morning of D plus 1) and increased
20,018 vehicles. These figures included a seviceability.
large number of nondivisional troops The serviceability rate of landing craft
equivalent in personnel and vehicular -or, in other words, the percentage of
strength to between two and three divi- craft on hand which at any given date
sions40 would be operationally available-was al-
As the result of conferences at Norfolk ways a planning figure to conjure with. So
House (SHEAF headquarters) during narrow were the planning margins that a
the week of 13 February, a compromise difference of 5 percent in the estimates of
shipping plan was worked out. SHAEF serviceability might mean the difference
first proposed to reduce the current plan- between adequate and inadequate lift for
ning allocation by one LSI(H), 48 LST’s, the assault. The serviceability rate was
and 51 LCI(L) ‘s with a resulting loss of contingent chiefly on repair facilities and
lift for 21,560 men and 2,520 vehicles. the stock of spare parts-both of which
This loss would then be made up by over- were critically limited in the United
loading transports (APA’s), carrying ve- Kingdom.42 COSSAC in Outline OVER-

40Various cables between SHAEF and WD 5-9 41Memo by First Sea Lord, Landing Ships and
Feb 44. SHAEF SGS file 560 II. A divisional slice for Craft for “Overlord,” incl to Ltr, Hollis to COSSAC,
the assault at this time was figured at 24,000 men and 21 Feb 44. SHAEF G-3 file GCT 451-94-1 Ops A.
2,500 vehicles (of which 1,450 were organic) . See 42 See, for instance, Cbl, McCloy to Forrestal, 20
CCS 465/T, 8 Feb 44. Apr 44. SHAEF SGS file 560 II.
OVERLORD REVISED 171

LORD had planned on an average service- extremely important that reserve units for
ability rate of 85 percent for all craft and the assault waves be tactically loaded in
90 percent for ships. 43 These figures were craft so that their employment would not
substantially approved at the Quebec be affected by losses or time delays of the
Conference. On advice of U.S. naval plan- LCA (ship-to-shore) craft used in the
ners, however, the rate for U.S. craft was initial assault. By increasing the per-
raised in January to 95 percent for LST’s sonnel lift on the first tide of the assault
and 90 percent for LCT’s. The British in- without any corresponding vehicle in-
sisted on retention of the lower COSSAC crease, the SHAEF proposal either would
figures. SHAEF accepted both estimates land men who could not proceed with
and distinguished in planning between their task until their vehicles arrived, thus
U.S. and British craft, allowing the serv- causing congestion on the beaches, or
iceability rate set by each country.44 would compel half-loaded personnel ships
The SHAEF shipping compromise was to wait offshore, thus exposing both ships
severely criticized by planners of 2 1 Army and men to unjustifiable risks.45
Group, mainly on the grounds that The validity of these objections was
SHAEF considered the problem of pro- fully conceded by General Eisenhower,
viding lift only from a logistical and not but he considered the sacrifices and risks
from a tactical point of view. For example, worth accepting in order to permit the
they pointed out that SHAEF had not simultaneous diversionary attack on
shown separately the Commando-Ranger southern France. Although at first
lift for special assault missions against for- strongly opposed, General Montgomery
tified positions. This separation was im- at last agreed and the proposals were sub-
portant, the army group planners argued, mitted to the British Chiefs of Staff .46The
because there could be no question of Chiefs of Staff disapproved the compro-
loading to full capacity the LSI’s carrying mise on the grounds, first, that it skimped
Commandos, and of course the excess ca- both ANVIL and OVERLORD and, second,
pacity could not be used for lift of other that the slow progress of the Italian cam-
assault troops. The SHAEF proposals, by paign made the possibility of providing
pushing the loading of shipping toward the necessary build-up forces for ANVIL “so
the full theoretical capacity of the vessels, remote as to be negligible.” 47 Employ-
sacrificed flexibility, particularly in that ment, as planned, of ten divisions in
they prevented the preloading in craft of southern France, General Brooke pointed
adequate reserves. Army group thought it out, would leave only twenty divisions to
43 Ltr, Gen Brownjohn to Morgan, 29 Jul 43. 45 Memorandum on Implications of the SHAEF
SHAEF SGS file 800.1 I. Proposal to Reduce the Allocation of Landing Ships
44Special Meeting Held in Room 126, Norfolk and Landing Craft, 17 Feb 44. SHAEF SGS file 381 I
House, 17 Feb 44. SHAEF SGS file 381 I (Overlord- (Overlord-Anvil) .
Anvil) . Both figures actually proved pessimistic. The 46 Montgomery’s opposition was voiced in a letter
assault forces used 4,266 landing ships and craft, inclosing staff comments on the 17 February memo
which represented 99.3 percent of all U.S. vessels on cited in note 45. He reversed himself at SCAEF 5th
hand and 97.6 percent of all English vessels. See Mtg, 18 Feb 44. SHAEF SGC file 381 I (Overlord-
Refmrt by Allied Naval Commander-in-Chief Ex- Anvil) .
peditionary Force on Operation NEPTUNE (London, 47Minute, Ismay to Prime Minister, 19 Feb 44.
1944), I, 8, 128. SHAEF SGS file 381 I (Overlord-Anvil).
172 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

fight the critical battle of Italy and to meet would not take place, became equally con-
“other commitments which might arise vinced that it would be dangerous to al-
in the Mediterranean.” 48 low planning for OVERLORD to continue
Eisenhower left the meeting at which unsettled because of the uncertainty of
this discussion took place, feeling that the getting enough landing craft. On 26 Feb-
chances of carrying out ANVIL were slim.49 ruary, he considered cabling General
Nevertheless he continued to argue for a Marshall “his view that ANVIL was impos-
compromise that would save the southern sible” in order to force a decision to re-
France assault as long as there was any lease ANVIL landing craft for OVERLORD.52
reasonable prospect that it might be Two days later, Generals Wilson and
feasible. On 22 February he reached Alexander in the Mediterranean cabled
agreement with the British that Italy must their concern over the difficulties at
have overriding priority over all present Anzio, stressed the general shortage of
and future operations in the Mediter- LST’s in the theater, and specifically
ranean, but, subject to that priority, al- asked that certain proposed transfers of
ternative plans would be prepared for am- craft to the United Kingdom be held up.53
phibious operations to assist OVERLORD, The British Chiefs of Staff reacted to the
the first alternative being ANVIL on the ap- appeal with a blanket recommendation
proximate scale and date originally that all LST’s then in the Mediterranean
planned. The Commander in Chief Medi- be retained there and that 26 LST’s (with
terranean was to release 20 LST’s and 21 26 LCT’s as deck loads) scheduled for
LCI(L)‘s to OVERLORD in exchange for 6 shipment to the Mediterranean be di-
AKA’s, the craft to sail for the United verted to the United Kingdom.54 This pro-
Kingdom in April. All these arrange- posal was rejected both by General Wil-
ments, finally, would be reviewed on 20 son and by the U.S. Chiefs of Staff.
March. If at that time it was decided that The debate cbntinued; the uncertainty
ANVIL could not be mounted, the lift in continued; and the danger of stinting the
the Mediterranean in excess of that OVERLORD allocation of landing craft be-
needed for one division would be with- came daily more threatening. General
drawn for use in OVERLORD.50 This com- Eisenhower pressed for a decision. Land-
promise was agreed to by the Joint Chiefs ing craft for OvERLoRD were so closely
of Staff, the President, and the Prime Min- figured that the Supreme Commander
ister.51 52SCAEF 6th Mtg, 26 Feb 44. SHAEF SGS file
The decision held only about long 387/11 (Supreme Commander’s Conferences). Gen-
enough to be written down. Eisenhower, eral Smith demurred despite his previous advocacy
that ANVIL be abandoned. Smith said he “felt that
more and more convinced that ANVIL there was little necessity for sending this message
[suggested by Eisenhower], and feared that it woulu
48 COS (44) 53d Mtg (0) , 19 Feb 44. give the impression of changing our minds too
49 Cbl, Eisenhower toMarshall, 19 Feb 44. SHAEF quickly.” Cf. below, n. 55.
SGS file 381 I (Overlord-Anvil). 53 Cbls in SHAEF SGS file 381 I (Overlord-Anvil).
50Cbl, 23 Feb 44, reproduced as CCS 465/ 11,24 Feb 54Cbl, COS to JSM, 29 Feb 44. SHAEF SGS file
44. 381 I (Overlord-Anvil). These were craft which by
51 Cbl, CCS to SHAEF, 26 Feb 44. SHAEF SGS file decision at Cairo were allocated to the Mediter-
381 I (Overlord-Anvil) ; cf. CCS 465/11 and CCS ranean from production previously earmarked for
147th Mtg, 27 Feb 44. the Pacific. See above, Ch. III.
OVERLORD REVISED 173

viewed with deep concern the loss of four On 21 March General Eisenhower rec-
or five LST’s in the United Kingdom and ommended the cancellation of ANVIL as an
Mediterranean during the first few days attack timed to coincide with OVERLORD.57
of March. He pointed out to General This recommendation was accepted and
Marshall that SHAEF had not only estab- the reallocation of landing craft from the
lished minimum landing craft require- Mediterranean was ordered. The Gor-
ments but “went short 15 LST’s in the dian knot, as far as OVERLORD planning
interest of keeping ANVIL alive.” Now it was concerned, was cut. OVERLORD was at
had even less than its minimum require- last assured landing craft in numbers at
ments. “The uncertainty,” he added, “is least adequate for the job to be done, al-
having a marked effect on everyone re- though there would still be few to spare.58
sponsible for planning and executing op-
eration OVERLORD." 55 The Neptune Plans
To the Joint Chiefs of Staff it became
increasingly apparent during March that The firm decision to expand the as-
there would be no break in the battle for saultresulted in the drafting of a new out-
Italy that would permit an advance on line plan: the NEPTUNE Initial Joint Plan,
Rome before the end of the month. published on 1 February 1944 by Gen-
ANVIL was dying. Still there seemed sound era1 Montgomery, Admiral Ramsay, and
strategic reasons for trying to keep it Air Marshall Leigh-Mallory. The Initial
alive. General Marshall did not agree with 57 Cbl, Eisenhower to Marshall, 21 Mar 44. SHAEF
the British that involvement in Italy SGS file 381 I (Overlord-Anvil). Eisenhower said
would necessarily serve the purpose of nothing in this message about a later mounting of
ANVIL. He recommended pressing offensive opera-
holding enemy divisions away from the tions in the Mediterranean “initially in Italy and
OVERLORD battle. He quoted General extending from there into France as rapidly as we
Alexander’s opinion that the Germans, can.” Specifically he suggested that the Supreme
Allied Commander in the Mediterranean theater be
using only six to eight divisions in the directed to assist OVERLORD by containing the maxi-
peninsula, could materially delay him. mum number of enemy forces and to do this by “the
The enemy would still have some ten to highest possible tempo of offensive action.” Mediter-
ranean plans, he suggested, should include “the
fifteen divisions in Italy which he could
mounting of a positive threat against the south of
shift to meet the Allied attack in north- France or the Ligurian coast with provision for tak-
ern France, “not to mention those [divi- ing immediate advantage of FLANKIN [enemy collapse]
conditions should they occur.”
sions] from Southern France and else-
58 The ANVIL problem, however, was far from set-
where.” 56 tled. The U.S. Chiefs of Staff had yielded only on
55 Cbl, Eisenhower to. Marshall, 9 Mar 44. SHAEF the timing; they still wanted the assault mounted
SGS file 381 I (Overlord-Anvil). He added that the at a later date. The British were equally insistent
Italian situation was not developing in a way to in- on outright cancellation. The debate continued un-
crease the likelihood of ANVIL and that the demands til 1 July when the Prime Minister at last conceded
of overlord on the other hand were making it in- the U.S. argument (though he remained uncon-
evitable to draw on ANVIL resources. “This being the vinced) . The southern France invasion, scheduled
case, I think it is the gravest possible mistake to at that time for 15 July, was subsequently postponed
allow demands for ANVIL to militate against the main and at last mounted on 15 August under the code
effort even in the matter of time and certainty of name DRAGOON. Details of the later ANVIL debate will
planning.” be found in F. C. Pogue, The Supreme Command,
56 Cbl, Marshall to Eisenhower, 16 Mar 44. Eisen- and Major J. D. T. Hamilton, Southern France and
hower Personal Files. Alsace, volumes now under preparation in this series
174 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Joint Plan called itself an “executive in- tinual amendment as changes occurred
strument” directing “subordinate plan- at lower levels and as allocations of land-
ning and its implementation.” Extremely ing craft and naval vessels were shifted.
detailed at some points and sketchy at Planning proceeded almost simultane-
others, it reflected its dependence on the ously on all levels. Outline plans for
original Outline OVERLORD as well as on armies, corps, and naval task forces were
subsequent planning by lower tactical prepared early and used as a framework
headquarters for armies and their asso- for the planning of lower echelons. The
ciated naval task forces and tactical air lower echelon plans in turn filled in and
forces. It threw the whole burden of de- modified the army, corps, and task force
tailed ground planning to the armies, plans, which were generally (though not
which were directed to submit outline as- always) issued in final form as field or op-
sault plans before 15 February. These eration orders.
plans were to show regimental frontage In the sections following, no one plan
with objectives, Ranger (Commando) is described. The attempt rather has been
and airborne tasks, provisional lists of to distill out of the’scores of relevant docu-
beach defense targets with timing for fire ments-plans, memoranda, minutes of
support, and the approximate number of meetings, amendments, and similar
men and vehicles to be landed in each sources-the salient points of the tactical
regiment (or brigade) on the first four plan at about army level and to discuss
tides, with the number and types of land- the principal problems that arose in the
ing craft required. They were also to fur- course of the planning from the time of
nish lists, by types of units, of the number General Eisenhower’s assumption of com-
of men and vehicles to be carried in the mand. Detailed plans of divisions and
initial lift, a forecast of operations and lower units will be found in appropriate
tentative build-up priorities from D plus places in the narrative of operations.
1 to D plus 14, and proposals for achieving
the airfield construction program.59 The Enemy 61
The First U.S. Army plan, issued on 25
February, and. the Second British Army Planning during the winter and early
plan, issued on 20 March, together con- spring proceeded on the assumption that
stituted the over-all ground forces plan enemy strength and dispositions would
for OVERLORD, inasmuch as 21 Army remain substantially unchanged before
Group never drew up an army group the target date. The assumption was nec-
plan60 Both the naval and air command- essary in order to have a firm basis for
ers in chief published over-all plans. The planning, but actually it was already clear
naval plan in particular was in exhaustive in February that the enemy was busy
detail and was subject, of course, to con-
61It should be observed that this whole section
59 NEPTUNE Initial Joint Plan by ANCXF, CinC 21 represents the enemy dispositions and preparations
A Gp, and CinC AEAF, pars. 103-104. Pre-Inv file only as known by Allied commanders. It should be
247. compared with Chapters IV and VII and with the
60 FUSA Operations Plan NEPTUNE, 25 Feb 44. 12th operational chapters, VIII through X. Allied in-
A Gp file 370.2; Second British Army, Outline Plan, telligence, on the whole, however, was accurate and
4 Feb 44. Pre-Inv file 631A. complete before the invasion.
OVERLORD REVISED 175

strengthening his defenses in the west. It by D plus 2, and nine by D plus 8, in ad-
was noted that the rotation of offensive dition to the coastal divisions. Allied in-
divisions from rest areas in France to the telligence in May reckoned the enemy
Eastern Front, which had been normal capable of the same maximum build-up
German practice throughout 1943, had on D Day, of six to seven divisions by D
now stopped, although the flow of battle- plus 2, and eleven to fourteen divisions by
worn divisions into the west from Russia D plus 8. The latter calculations were in
continued. The total German strength in equivalent first-class divisions as it was
France and the Low Countries was esti- estimated that the majority of the enemy’s
mated to have climbed from forty to fifty- mobile reserves were neither fully mobile
three divisions by February, and indica- nor up to authorized strength.63
tions were that it might reach sixty by More than half the German divisions
spring. Estimates in May seemed to con- were known to be static or limited em-
firm this prediction.62 But despite the ployment-that is, either immobile de-
enemy build-up of divisional units he still fense divisions or divisions capable only of
had only about twelve reserve divisions, limited offensive action.64 It was con-
and this was precisely the figure set by sidered likely that troops of the static di-
COSSAC in July 1943 as the maximum visions would resist only so long as they
number of offensive divisions that the could fire from protected positions with
Allies could safely take on. Thus the esti- minimum risk to themselves.65 Although
mated addition to Rundstedt’s troop list in May all divisions were believed in the
of some twenty divisions between the process of being strengthened for offen-
summer of 1943 and spring of 1944 did sive use, it was felt that this upgrading
not in itself force any revision of Allied could not be completed in time.66 Fur-
plans or cause any grave Allied concern. thermore it was believed that any im-
The May estimates of German capacity to provement of the static divisions would
build up against the Allied bridgehead be at the expense of at least an equal num-
did not greatly exceed COSSAC’s maxi- ber of nominal attack divisions which were
mum figures. COSSAC had set as a con- understrength and underequipped.67 The
dition for the attack that the enemy conclusion, in short, was that the enemy,
should not be able to withdraw more than suffering from materiel shortages and
fifteen divisions from Russia. In May it transportation difficulties, could not
seemed unlikely that any more divisions 63JIC (44) 210 (0) (Final), Opposition to OVER-
would be moved from the Eastern Front, LORD, 20 May 44. SHAEF SGS files (JIC Papers).
at least in the first few months of OVER- 64 See Ch. VII for discussion of types of German
divisions. “Limited employment” was a G-2 term for
LORD, or that more than thirteen divisions
which there was no German equivalent. It meant
could be diverted from other fronts. simply a unit which in the opinion of the G-2 had
COSSAC’s conditions further included less than full combat value. For classification by the
Germans of their own divisions, see below, Ch. VII,
a maximum enemy build-up in the inva- n. 66.
sion area of three divisions on D Day, five 65 Annex I to FUSA plan cited n. 60.
664th Div FO 1, 15 May 44.
62See e.g., 4th Div FO 1, Annex 2a, 15 May 44. 67 JIC (44) 215 (0)) Periodic Review of Condi-
Division field orders are in the collection of Eu- tions in Europe and Scale of Opposition to ‘OVER-
ropean theater operational records. LORD,’ 25 May 44.
176 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

greatly increase the total offensive strik- either the likelihood of such an attack or
ing power of his troops in France al- the probable timing.69 What was clear
though he might choose either to concen- was that at any time after D plus 3 con-
trate it or to spread it thin. siderable enemy pressure in the form
The German tactics of all-out defense either of a large co-ordinated counterat-
of the coast line were well known. It was tack or of a multiplication of piecemeal
assumed, however, that this did not mean attacks could be expected. The Navy was
literally a main line of resistance at the therefore directed to land the maximum
water’s edge but rather a short stubborn number of operational troops before that
stand in the fortified coastal zone of long date.
enough duration to permit attack divi- The German Army in the west awaited
sions in immediate tactical reserve to attack behind the much-advertised “At-
launch holding counterattacks. These in lancic Wall” into which the enemy since
turn would give time for the massing of 1943 had been pouring a new rumor of
armored reserves for a full-scale counter- impregnability with each bucket of con-
attack designed to drive the Allies back crete. But despite both rumors and con-
into the sea. If this were the German de- crete it was clear to Allied planners that
fense plan, then the location and quality the Atlantic Wall had few of the charac-
of reserves were the critical factors in any teristics of a wall and was probably not
estimate of enemy capabilities. impregnable, provided a sufficient weight
Reserves available to Rundstedt were of fire could be directed against it.70 Of
estimated at ten panzer and panzer gren- prime concern to the Allies were the
adier divisions and fourteen to seven- coastal batteries. Four batteries of 155-
teen attack infantry or parachute divi- mm. guns were identified in First U.S.
sions.ss But of these only about three to Army zone (a total of twenty-two guns),
four panzer and two infantry divisions the most formidable of which was the six-
were considered first quality. It was ex- gun battery at Pointe du Hoe. The Ger-
pected that the enemy would be able to mans had two heavy (240-mm.) coastal
move one panzer and two infantry divi- batteries within range of Allied sea lanes
sions into the invasion area on D Day to and assault areas, one at Le Havre and one
reinforce the defense and mount local (batterie Hamburg) 71 at Fermanville
counterattacks. Further reinforcements east of Cherbourg. The latter, however,
would trickle in during the next two days was little cause for concern. In May
and would probably be committed piece- Allied reconnaissance ascertained that the
meal. By D plus 3 the enemy might have enemy was busy casemating the Ferman-
a total of three panzer, two parachute, ville guns in such a way as to prohibit
and four attack infantry divisions in addi- their being brought to bear against the
tion to his coastal defense troops. These OVERLORD assault. Last-minute intelli-
reinforcements could be organized for
large-scale counterattack by D plus 7. Es- 69QSee, e.g., CCS 454/5, 14 Apr 44.
timates did not agree, however, as to 70 Naval Expeditionary Force Planning Memo-
randa-section I, 26 Dec 43. SHAEF AG file 045.93-Z.
68 CCS 454/6, Review of Conditions in Europe (10 71This battery figured in the ground fighting
May 44)) 17 May 44; cf. JIC paper cited n. 67. later. See below, Ch. X.
OVERLORD REVISED 177

gence reports cheered the enemy on, gave prominent, if necessarily vague, con-
noting that “construction activity [was] sideration to the problem. But detailed
continuing at good pace.” 72 provisions and training for coping with
In fixed emplacements it was estimated the obstacles had to wait until their full
that the enemy had a maximum total of nature and extent became apparent. Al-
seventy-three guns that could fire on the lied reconnaissance watched with special
American attack. It was believed, how- interest the growth of the enemy’s works
ever, that he also had mobile artillery be- in the tidal flats during the late winter
hind the coast. Allied intelligence es- and early spring. 75The growth was rapid.
pecially warned of the enemy’s highly For example, at Quineville (east coast of
mobile 170-mm. gun, which had a range the Cotentin) a double row of tetrahedra
of 32,370 yards. 73 The gun could be so or hedgehogs 2,300 yards long, with
easily handled that German practice was twenty-six feet between obstacles, was laid
to fire not more than two rounds fr.om the in four days.76
same position. Frequent displacement The enemy began placing his obstacles
would, of course, make effective counter- near the high-water mark and then thick-
battery fire almost impossible. All eight ened the bands seaward. There was then
of the 170-mm. guns known’ to be in the some talk among Allied planners of shift-
U.S. invasion zone were bombed out of ing H Hour to coincide with low tide so
positions on the Cotentin during air raids as to allow engineers as much time as
in the middle of May and were thereafter possible to clear the obstacles before the
unlocated.74 tide covered them.77 By the middle of
In the early months of 1944, the Ger- May, however, the obstacles on the inva-
mans were observed to be working hard sion beaches still did not extend below
at strengthening their defenses along the the eight-foot mark above low water.
invasion coast. On 20 February air photo- Planners calculated that, if in the remain-
graphs for the first time revealed antiland- ing days before D Day they were not set
ing obstacles below the high-water mark any lower, the planned touchdown time
on certain French beaches. The discov- three hours before high water would still
ery was no surprise but it was a cause for permit Allied engineers to deal with the
concern. German experimentation with obstacles dry shod. Breaching the ob-
beach obstacles had been reported in the stacles under these conditions was consid-
early months of 1943. At about that time ered feasible, although V Corps had
the British Combined Operations Head-
quarters had begun counterexperimenta-
75 COS (44) 393 (0)) Clearance of Underwater
tion in clearing such obstacles, chiefly in Obstacles, 3 May 44. SHAEF SGS file 800.8; cf. Ltr,
the expectation that they might be faced Eisenhower to Marshall, 6 May 44, in which he lists
in Mediterranean operations. Allied first among the “worst problems of these days” the
problem of how to remove underwater obstacles.
naval planning for ovERLoRD in late 1943 Eisenhower Personal Files.
76FUSA Int Note No. 18, 24 Apr 44. Pre-Inv file
72 NCWTF Int Bull 2, 29 May 44. 631A.
73As compared to an estimated maximum range 77 Memo, Gen Kean (FUSA CofS) , for Gen Brad-
of 25,000 yards for the 155mm. guns. ley, 20 Apr 44. Pre-Inv file 631A. H Hour had been
74NCWTF Int Bull 1,21 May 44. fixed in February at about half-flood.
VAUVILLE BEACH, SPRING 1944, Cotentin Peninsula west coast.
OVERLORD REVISED 179

soberly commented in March that it case, they did not anticipate a deter-
might be “expensive.” 78 mined enemy naval attack in the early
The enemy on the ground, though less stages of the assault.
formidable than his own propaganda re- Estimates of the enemy’s air strength
ported, seemed formidable enough. On varied so widely that they might have
the sea and in the air there was little been drawn from a hat. Certain judg-
question of the Allies’ overwhelming ments, however, seem to have been gen-
superiority. The relatively insignificant erally accepted. The German Air Force
German Navy was not expected to risk had increased slightly in numbers since
any of its large surface warships in attacks the summer of 1943, but the increase,
on Allied convoys in the Channel, though compared to the Allied build-up, was
they might attempt diversionary sorties negligible. It was generally believed that
in the Atlantic against Allied shipping the Luftwaffe would be capable of be-
there. The enemy’s fifty to sixty E-boats tween 1,000 and 1,800 sorties on D Day
(German S-Boote) carrying both mines against OVERLORD, but it was considered
and torpedoes were expected to be the unlikely that the enemy would make
greatest surface menace to the invasion anything like the maximum air effort in
fleet.79 But even these boats would prob- the early stages. Instead, he would prob-
ably attack only at night. The estimated ably try to conserve his aircraft for use
130 ocean-going submarines (over 300 in close support of the expected large-
tons) based in the Bay of Biscay and the scale counterattacks at the end of the first
25 short-range boats in the Baltic had week after D Day.81
never been used in the Channel. It Although Goering was credited with
seemed unlikely that they would take having more than 5,000 aircraft, the
that risk even during the invasion, al- effort which that force could exert and
though they might be concentrated sustain would certainly be considerably
against assemblies of Allied shipping, es- less than its size alone suggested. The
pecially in the western Channel ap- superiority of the Allies would probably
proaches. 80The enemy was known to be prevent the enemy from daylight bomb-
experimenting with midget submarines ing or would make such bombing in-
and human torpedoes. These might be effective and costly if it were attempted.
used close to shore against ships carrying The difficulties which the Germans were
the assault troops, but no one could even known to be experiencing with replace-
guess how many of these craft might be ments in machines and crews would
available by D Day. On the whole, the mean that the front-line air forces, how-
Allies predicted that their chief concern ever impressive, would have little depth.
at sea would be enemy mines. In any Allied bombing of airfields, furthermore,
78 V Corps Breaching Plan, Underwater and Beach
was likely to cause drastic curtailment of
Obstacles,-17 Mar 42, prepared jointly by CG V
Corps and Comdr 1 lth Amph Force. Pre-Inv file 647.
79 NCWTF Int Bull 1, 21 May 44. 81For various estimates see AEAF Over-all Air
80 NEPTUNE Monograph, prepared by Comdr Task Plan, 15 Apr 44. 12th A Gp file 370.2; JIC (44) 210
Force 122, Apr 44. Pre-Inv file 252. (0) , 23 May 44; NCWTF Int Bull 1, 21 May 44.
180 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Luftwaffe efficiency. It was deemed un- 0 b jectives and Terrain


likely that the enemy would be able to
get into the air more than 60 percent of The February revision of the OVERLORD
his nominal front-line force. plan did not affect the final objective of
The German Air Force had been de- the. operation in its later phases. The
feated by the Combined Bomber Offen- analysis of COSSAC and earlier planners
sive in the early months of 1944. This which had led them to select the lodg-
victory the Allies were sure of. The ment area in northwest France bounded
knowledge was the most important in- by the Seine, Eure, and Loire Rivers was
gredient in the final decision to go ahead accepted, as well as the general timing
with OVERLORD. It was not certain, how- and phasing of operations after the cap-
ever, just how dangerous a death agony ture of Cherbourg. It was the assault
the Luftwaffe might still be capable of. phase plan that underwent drastic revi-
Air Marshal Leigh-Mallory said after- sion.
ward that he was always “confident that The three beaches selected by COS-
the German Air Force would constitute SAC 83 had capacity only for three assault
no serious threat to our operations on divisions. New beaches were required
land, sea or in the air.” He did admit, for the expanded attack. Extension of
however, the possibility of a major air the front eastward to include the beach
battle on D Day.82 between Lion-sur-Mer and Ouistreham
The basic assumption behind all Al- was readily accepted. (Map II ) But the
lied estimates of German military power revived proposal to land a fifth division
in the west was that the enemy would northwest of the Vire estuary met re-
make his supreme effort to defeat the in- newed opposition. The debate turned
vasion, hoping thus to achieve a compro- largely on the tactical implications of
mise peace despite his hopeless situation the topography of the NEPTUNE area.
on the Russian front. The principal In the area were five regions with dis-
weakness of the enemy was believed to be tinguishable topographical characteris-
the depreciation of his reserves in men tics-the north Cotentin (rolling uplands
and materiel which would prohibit him north of Valognes), the south Cotentin
from a sustained defense. The Allies (generally flat and well watered), the
were of the opinion that the Germans Bessin (the coastal strip lying between
would stake everything on the initial Isigny and Bayeux), the Bocage (hilly
battle of the beach. The decision to go wooded country extending south of the
ahead with OVERLORD therefore implied Bessin and Cotentin nearly to the base
an estimate that the enemy’s maximum of the Brittany Peninsula), and the rel-
strength was probably insufficient to win atively open Caen country from Bayeux
the battle for the beachheads. east and southeast.84 The three British

82“Despatch by Air Chief Marshal Sir Trafford 88 Lion-sur-Mer - Courseulles - Arromanches, and
Leigh-Mallory” (submitted to the Supreme Allied Colleville-Vierville.
Commander in November 1944)) Fourth Supplement 84 The regional nomenclature here, not entirely
to The London Gazette No. 37838, 31 December 1946, consistent with current French usage, is derived from
pp. 40-41, cited hereafter as Leigh-Mallory, Despatch. NEPTUNE Monograph, pp. 26-31. See n. 80.
OVERLORD REVISED 181

beaches all lay in the east portion of the In both the COSSAC and Montgomery
Bessin and in the Caen country. There plans the task of securing the Bessin fell
was no clear demarcation between the to one U.S. corps, with one division in
Caen country and the Bessin. But where- the assault. Critical topographical fea-
as the Bessin merged to the south with ture of the Bessin was the Aure River,
the Bocage, the Caen country spread which flows out of the Bocage to Bayeux
southeastward into open arable land suit- and then turns west to parallel the coast
able for tank maneuver and, more im- line to Isigny where it joins the Vire
portant, for the development of airfields. near its mouth and empties into the
In both the original COSSAC plan and Channel. The Aure in its lower reaches
the “Montgomery” plan, the securing of between Trevieres and Isigny runs
the Caen country for airfield develop- through a broad, flat, marshy valley
ment was a critical early objective for the which can be flooded by damming the
assaulting forces. British troops were to river. When flooded, the Aure in effect
take Bayeux and Caen on D Day, and makes a peninsula of the coastal sector
push the bridgehead gradually south and between Port-en-Bessin and Isigny. The
southeast. They would then secure air- “peninsula,” varying in width from
field sites and protect the east flank of about a mile and a half at the eastern end
U.S. forces whose primary mission, in to about five miles at the western, is a
both plans, was the capture of Cher- very gently rolling tableland. Most of it
bourg. COSSAC allotted only two Brit- is cut up in the typical Norman pattern
ish divisions to the initial tasks of taking of orchards, hedgerow-enclosed meadows,
Bayeux and Caen. For the same tasks the and patches of trees. Only along the
Montgomery plan would land three divi- coast between Vierville-sur-Mer and St.
sions by sea and in addition put zn air- Laurent is the country relatively open.
borne division (less one brigade) east of Through the “peninsula” runs the main
the beachheads to secure crossings of the lateral road in the invasion area: a sec-
Orne River. In all the planning the vital tion of the principal highway from Paris
importance of the “capture and reten- to Cherbourg. This was the rope which
tion” of Caen and neighboring open alone could tie the five beachheads into
country was underlined.85 On the other one. Early control of it was essential for
land no pre-D-Day plans called for ex- the security of the initial lodgment area.
ploiting the favorable tank terrain at any In the COSSAC plan the Bessin-Caen
phase of the operation for a direct thrust bridgehead would have been expanded
southeast toward Paris. Instead, the Brit- south and southwest deep into the Bocage
ish army would push gradually south and during the first week of the operation.
east of Caen until its left rested approxi- A force would then have broken out
mately on the Touques River and its northwest to sweep up the Cotentin and
right, pivoting on Falaise, swung toward capture Cherbourg. Although this was
Argentan-Alencon.86 deemed a feasible operation, the low
85 See, for instance, Second Br Army/83 Group, 2d marshy bottom lands of the Douve River
TAF, Plan, 20 Mar 44. Pre-lnv file 631A.
86 Montgomery, Brief Summary of Operation static copy with Montgomery’s penciled corrections
“OVERLORD” as Affecting the Army, 7 Apr 44. Photo- in Hist Div files.
182 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

and its tributaries, which stretched nearly some planners felt were not justified.
across the base of the peninsula, would The only previous Allied experience
have made it difficult. Subject to inun- with large-scale airborne operations, in
dation, these almost continuous swamp- Sicily, had not proved a notable success,
lands, traversed by only three main roads, and these had been launched against an
draw an easily defended moat across enemy relatively weak and unprepared.
about five-sixths of the peninsula. The More important, it was pointed out that
only dry corridor is on the west coast- the same water barrier which barred the
a strip 5,000 to 6,000 yards wide between Cotentin from attack from the south
St. Lo-d’ourville and St. Sauveur de could also be used by the enemy to main-
Pierre-Pont, which could easily be held tain a wedge between the Allied bridge-
by a small enemy force. heads on either side of the Vire. It was
The overriding importance of Cher- conceivable then that the enemy might
bourg had therefore led to early con- defeat the landings in detail. F‘inally it
sideration of a simultaneous assault in was argued that the Bessin-Caen attack
the peninsula itself to establish Allied must be the main Allied effort. If it
forces north of the Douve line. Such an failed, success on the Cotentin could
attack became practicable only with the never be exploited. The fifth division,
decision to employ five divisions in the therefore, should be left in floating re-
assault. But even then it had serious dis- serve to insure the success of the main
advantages, chiefly because, in addition landing and not committed in the long-
to the inundations at the base of the shot Cotentin gamble.
peninsula, there was a flooded coastal This argument was presented in a
strip behind the best landing beach on SHAEF planning paper as late as 23
the east coast. Across this flooded area, January 1944. 87 A week later, with the
which was about two miles wide and publication of the Initial Joint Plan, the
extended from the Banes du Grand Vey decision was made that the risks of the
to Quineville, narrow causeways pro- Cotentin assault were worth taking in
vided the only exits from the beach. view of the need to secure the port of
Four such exits led from the beach pro- Cherbourg as early as possible. First U.S.
posed for assault by one U.S. division. Army was to assault on both sides of the
Again the terrain favored the defense. Vire estuary with one regiment of VII
Relatively small German forces could Corps to the north on the beach later
hold these causeways, block Allied egress called UTAH and two regiments of V
from the beaches, and quite possibly de- Corps between Vierville and Colleville
feat the landing at the coast. The pro- on the beach later called OMAHA.88 First
posed solution was to employ an air-
borne division to be dropped before H
87 NEPTUNE-Comparison of Methods of Employ
Hour in the vicinity of Ste. Mere-Eglise ment of Additional Resources. SHAEF G-3 files,
with primary mission of seizing and bundle A-l (Pre-D-Day Planning Papers).
holding the causeways in order to permit 88Beaches UTAH and OMAHA were first designated
X and Y respectively. The final code names were pub-
the seaborne infantry to cross unopposed. lished by First Army in Amendment 1 to FUSA plan,
Even this solution involved risks which 3 Mar 44.
OVERLORD REVISED 183

Army’s main task would be “to capture fore the launching of OVERLORD, high-
Cherbourg as quickly as possible.” 89 level discussions of the use of airborne
For the task of seizing and holding the troops in the operation turned not so
causeways across the flooded strip behind much on the availability of resources as
UTAH Beach, the Initial Joint Plan allot- on how, tactically, the forces should be
ted to First Army one airborne division. employed.
Further planning revealed that the force There was some early skepticism about
was inadequate and raised the larger the capabilities of airborne operations in
problem of how airborne operations conjunctionwithamphibiousassault. The
could best contribute to the success of Dieppe raid commanders recommended
OVERLORD. against dependence on parachutists be-
cause they felt it would be almost im-
Airborne Planning possible to secure a coincidence of
weather and light conditions suitable
General Morgan, it will be recalled, both for air drops and for landing by
had been allotted two airborne divisions sea.91 The development of navigation
to be used in the assault but was given aids, however, greatly reduced this ob-
only 632 transport aircraft. His plan was jection after 1942. On the other hand,
to use two-thirds of one division plus the difficulties encountered in executing
seven to nine battalions in the initial the airborne drop in Sicily gave some ob-
drop on D Day to seize Caen and certain servers new reason for skepticism. In a
river crossings and coastal defenses. But report circulated among commanders
even this force, he calculated, required planning the OVERLORD assault, Com-
372 more planes than he had.90 The Que- bined Operations observers wrote that
bec Conference, considering Outline airborne operations were risky and “un-
OVERLORD, increased the allotment of air due dependence on airborne effort must
transport but found that, even counting only too often lead to disappointment or
the problematical availability of four even disastrous consequences for land
U.S. groups, the total would still fall forces.” 92
short of COSSAC’s requirements. It This conclusion was fortunately not
appears, however, that the real difficulty shared by either General Eisenhower or
as the time for OVERLORD approached was General Marshall. In their view the diffi-
not in finding the necessary aircraft but culties of the airborne operations in
rather in arriving at a conviction that Sicily proved only the error of dispersing
they were needed. In the last weeks be- the effort. Both wanted greater mass in
future drops. Eisenhower recommended
89 Amendment 1, 2 March 1944, to NEPTUNE Initial that all troops should be landed at once,
Joint Plan (see n. 59) added as a second priority rather than in successive waves, and that
task the development of the beachhead south toward
St. Lo “in conformity with the advance of Second larger forces should be employed. Gen-
British Army.” In the light of Second Army’s mis-
sion to protect the left flank of First Army, this made 91 Combined Rpt, The Dieppe Raid, Sep 42, Part
a kind of circular relationship which amounted to V. SHAEF G-3 files, bundle A, item 9.
telling both armies to keep pushing abreast. 92CO Rpt, Lessons Learnt in the Mediterranean,
90 COSSAC (43) 36,28 Jul 43. 14 Oct 43. Pre-Inv file 661.
184 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

era1 Marshall agreed and added his way, by the attachment to each of two
opinion: “The value of airborne forces separate parachute regiments.
in OVERLORD would be immense, and The February revision of the OVERLORD
would enable us to seize quickly and con- plan struck out COSSAC’s use of air-
trol ports which could not otherwise be borne forces in dispersed packets for a
used.” 93 variety of commando objectives. COS-
Airborne commanders were thinking SAC’s plan to take Caen with airborne
along much the same lines. The organiza- troops was also eliminated as unneces-
tion of the airborne division under the sary in view of the additional British
Army Ground Forces’ concept of a light division to be landed by sea. On the
infantry division was ill adapted to its other hand, expansion of the front to the
tactical employment in Europe. Maj. east raised a new tactical requirement-
Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway (commander the need to secure crossings over the
of the 82d Airborne Division), from his Orne River to cover the British left flank.
experience in Sicily, proposed in Decem- This mission could best be accomplished,
ber 1943 a new Table of Organization it was thought, by dropping parachutists
which would have added some eight to on the east bank of the river. On 7 Feb-
nine thousand men, roughly doubling ruary General Eisenhower proposed that
the current size of the division.94 The two divisions be dropped simultaneously
purpose was to make it capable of sus- in the U.S. and British zones “with such
tained ground effort. Although the new depth of means including trained crews
organization fitted the developing con- behind the simultaneous lift to enable
cept of using airborne forces in mass, it a third airborne division to be dropped
was rejected first by Lt. Gen. Lesley J. complete 24 hours later.” 96 To this the
McNair, Chief of the Army Ground British air staff replied flatly that it was
Forces, and later, on re-examination, by impossible because of the lack of trained
the Joint Staff Planners.95 These actions crews.97 Eisenhower for the moment ac-
postponed formal reorganization, but for
European operations they made little 96 COS (44) 140 (0) , Airborne Forces for OVERLORD,
7 Feb 44.
practical difference. The two airborne 97Ibid. The difficulties of training air crews for
divisions scheduled for use in OVERLORD airborne operations were discussed in detail in a
were in fact swelled to something like memorandum by the Chief of Air Staff (COS (44)
135 (0))) 6 Feb 44. An excerpt follows:
the size recommended by General Ridg- “The crew after passing out of the [Operational
Training Unit] O.T.U. (3 months’ course) and be-
ing ‘converted’ to the handling of heavy aircraft by
93 CCS 120th Mtg, 24 Sep 43. Eisenhower’s recom- day and night, require some 30 hours’ basic train-
mendations were made in a letter to Marshall, 17 ing which consists mainly of map reading from low
Jul 43. Eisenhower Personal Files. altitudes. The crew must also receive instruction on
94Cbl, Marshall to Devers, R 6441, 1 Dec 43. WD the use of radio aids to navigation.
Cable log. “When proficient as a crew and familiar with their
95App. to CCS 496,26 Feb 44. The gist of the plan- equipment they begin training with troops, first
ners’ opinion was simply that it seemed “unwise to dropping a few parachutists, then full ‘sticks’ and
make any important changes in our airborne or- thence passing on to tugging gliders.
ganizations until further tests in actual combat have “Finally the very highly organized system of as-
been made.” See Greenfield et al., Organization of sembly, take-off, manoeuvre and approach has to be
Ground Combat Troops, p. 349. learned and Inracticed. Some idea of the skill and
OVERLORD REVISED 185

cepted this verdict because he did not ings and Paris. In recommending this
want to risk interference with the in- scheme, General Marshall called it a true
tensity of the bomber offensive. During vertical envelopment involving a major
February, however, it became apparent strategic threat which the enemy would
that there would be lift and crews enough have to meet by a major revision in his
for a simultaneous landing of one and defense. In effect it would open a new
two-thirds divisions. It was decided to front. He admitted that such an opera-
land the 101st Airborne Division behind tion had never been done before but
UTAH Beach and two British airborne added: “Frankly that reaction makes me
brigades (regiments) of the 6th Airborne tired.” 99 He was anxious that full advan-
Division east of the Orne River.98 First tage be taken of the Allied airborne
Army in the meantime had asked for a potential. He therefore sent the plan
second airborne division to block the St. along to Eisenhower and dispatched a
Lo-d’ourville corridor and prevent en- little War Department mission , of
emy reinforcement of the Cotentin. This “young men” to defend its merits in the
requirement was to be met by dropping theater.
the 82d Airborne Division in the vicinity Eisenhower studied the plan and re-
of St. Sauveur-le Vicomte on the night of jected it. He agreed to the conception
D Day, using the aircraft returned from but not to the timing. “Mass in vertical
the initial operations. envelopments is sound,” he wrote, “but
General Marshall, informed of the air- since this kind of an enveloping force is
borne plans in February, questioned the immobile on the ground, the collaborat-
planners’ apparent conservatism. He felt ing force must be strategically and tac-
that they still contemplated piecemeal tically mobile. So the time for the mass
employment, which he regarded just as vertical envelopment is after the beach-
unsound tactically for airborne as for head has been gained and a striking force
armor. As an alternative he recom- built up.” He went on to draw an anal-
mended a bold plan outlined by General ogy between the proposed airhead and
Arnold. Arnold’s plan briefly called for the Anzio beachhead. The German, he
the establishment on D Day of an airhead reflected, had repeatedly shown that he
in the Evreux-Dreux area which would did not fear what used to be called “stra-
directly threaten the Seine River cross- tegic threat of envelopment.” At Anzio
“the situation was almost a model for the
classical picture of initiating a battle of
practice required may be gained by realizing that destruction. But the German decided
one aircraft with fully loaded glider takes off in the
dark from each airfield every 30 seconds; that over that the thrust could not be immediately
800 aircraft and 440 tows have to arrive at the right translated into mobile tactical action, and
place at the right time after a night flight; and that himself began attacking.” 100 If the Anzio
it is intended to land some 440 gliders in 20-30
minutes at their destination.
“All this training after the O.T.U. stage at present
takes 2 months and is then dependent on weather. 99 Ltr, Marshall to Eisenhower, 10 Feb 44. Eisen-
No cut is possible without risking failure.” hower Personal Files.
98 NEPTUNE Initial Joint Plan, Amendment 1, 2 100 Ltr, Eisenhower to Marshall, 19 Feb 44. Eisen-
Mar 44. hower Personal Files.
186 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

beachhead could not succeed, though Merderet River, and shifting the 101st
nourished from the sea and opposed by zones slightly southward so that both divi-
“inconsequential air resistance and only sions would be committed in the rela-
a total of some 19 enemy divisions in the tively small and easily defensible area be-
whole of Italy,” how much less chance tween the beaches and the Douve and
would the isolated Dreux airhead have in Merderet Rivers. This proposal had to be
the midst of some sixty enemy divisions modified, however, because the area
and dependent on precarious air routes seemed too small for landings by two di-
for supply and reinforcement! 101 visions. The compromise was to drop the
The fact is that even the decision to 82d Airborne Division astride the Mer-
land two U.S. airborne divisions in the deret, two regiments landing west of the
Cotentin was under severe criticism as river with the mission of securing a
unduly risky. The “Air people” antic- bridgehead for exploitation to the west
ipated heavy losses which they felt might at least as far as the Douve.103
result in negligible tactical achievement. Even so, the plan did not look promis-
Toward the end of April, Air Marshal ing. The Sicilian experience had con-
Leigh-Mallory objected so strongly to vinced the British air staff that airborne
the risks involved that a substantial revi- troops should not be routed over heavily
sion of plans was made. There was now defended areas (either enemy or friendly)
transport enough for the simultaneous and that they should not be landed where
dropping of the parachutists of both U.S. they would be immediately faced with
divisions. Leigh-Mallory agreed to this opposition.104 The proposed Cotentin
but insisted that most of the glider land- drops violated both of these precautions.
ings be made at dusk on D Day rather Air Marshal Leigh-Mallory took an in-
than earlier as first planned. He believed creasingly pessimistic view of what he
that they would suffer heavy losses by called “this very speculative operation.”
daylight and that large-scale landings On 29 May he told General Eisenhower
early on D Day would force dispersion of that it was unwise to risk his carrier force,
the parachutists for defense of the land- that casualties were likely to run over 50
ing zones. His objections were sustained percent, and that the results would be so
and the changes made.102 small that the airborne landings could
But this was not the end. Late in May, not be depended on to insure the suc-
when Allied intelligence reported that cess of the UTAH Beach assault. General
the Germans had moved the 91st. Divi- Eisenhower replied that he agreed the
sion into the Cotentin the risks of the air risks were great but that the airborne
borne drops soared. Planners suggested landings were essential to the whole op-
moving the 82d Division drop zones to the eration and that therefore, if the invasion
was to go in, the airborne risks must be
101 Cbl, Eisenhower to Marshall, 10 Mar 44. Eisen- accepted.105
hower Personal Files.
102Memo for SAC, 23 Apr 44. SHAEF SGS file
373/2 I; Airborne-Air Planning Committee 9th Mtg, 103 VII Corps revised FO, 28 May 44.
28 Apr 44. ET0 file 337 (Conferences (Secret) ) , 104 COS (43) 552 (0) , Airborne Forces, 20 Sep 43.
1 AR-16-Dr 1. See Bibliographical Note. 105Ltrs, 29 and 30 May. SHAEF SGS file 373/2 I.
OVERLORD REVISED

Development of the Lodgment fantry should get to Isigny the first day if
possible.109
After VII and V Corps secured foot- Whether or not Isigny was taken, the
holds on either side of the Vire, they were principal concern of V Corps initially
to join up in the ground between the was to secure the tableland north of the
Vire and Taute Rivers. Originally both Aure and be prepared to repel enemy
Carentan and Isigny were listed as D-Day counterattacks. It was believed that junc-
objectives for VII and V Corps respec- tion of the two First Army beachheads
tively. 106 Detailed planning showed this would actually not require either corps
project to be unduly optimistic. Caren- to make a lateral movement in force.
tan was eliminated, and instead thest1 Southward advance especially by V
Airborne Division was ordered simply to Corps, it was thought, would probably
seize crossings of the river and canal force the enemy to pull out of the inter-
north and northeast of the city and be corps zone.110
prepared to take it “as soon as the tactical At the same time that the two corps
situation permits.“107 Plans for the cap- were joining forces between Carentan
ture of Isigny were ambiguous. Although and Isigny, VII Corps would clear the
the city was clearly excluded from the low rolling country of the south Coten-
D-Day objectives listed in the 1st Division tin as far west as the Douve.111 The VII
Field Order of 16 April and from sub- Corps line would then be pushed up
ordinate unit orders issued later, the against the high ground of the north
29th Division on 29 May published a Cotentin, in some places within ten miles
change to its field order which redrew of Cherbourg. This line, running just
the D-Day phase line to include Isigny.108 north and northwest of the arc St. Vaast-
V Corps always viewed the capture of la Hougue-Valognes-St. Sauveur-le Vi-
Isigny as belonging to the first phase of comte, would be reached, it was hoped,
the operations but apparently issued no by D plus 2. The 4th Division, joined
order that it should be taken on D Day. by the 90th and later, if necessary, by the
On 3 June, however, in a command con- 9th, would then make the final push to
ference on board the Force 0 headquar- the port. This final phase through rug-
ters ship, the V Corps commander, Maj. ged country and the fortified hills that
Gen. Leonard T. Gerow, told his sub- completely fenced the landward ap-
ordinate commanders that the 115th In- proaches to Cherbourg was first expected
to take about a week. But after the Ger-
106NEPTUNE Initial Joint Plan, par. 63.
107 101st Abn Div FO 1, 18 May 44.
mans had reinforced the Cotentin the
108 Change reads that the 116th Infantry will “pre-
pare to defend the D-day objective from La Cambe
(excl) west to Isigny (incl) and the eastern banks 1091st Div G-3 Jnl.
of the Vire River north thereof.” This compared to 110General Gerow, Notes on V Corps Plan, undtd.
the second change, 18 May, which gave the 116th Pre-Inv file 670.
Infantry the mission to “prepare to defend the D- 111The revised VII Corps Field Order of 28 May
day phase line from La Cambe (exclusive) west to makes no mention of cutting the peninsula, but
Isigny (exclusive) . . prepare to cross the Aure contemplates an advance to Cherbourg on the
River west of Isigny for an attack on Isigny from Valognes axis with the corps’ left flank resting on
the southeast.” the Douve River.
188 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

date on which the port was expected to erence for future planning, set forth pri-
fall was set back to D plus 15.112 marily so that the men of the beginning
While VII Corps took Cherbourg, V should have some idea of the shape of the
Corps, assisted after D plus 6 by XIX end, so that their thinking might be large
Corps, would push deep into the Bocage and their preparation adequate.
country to establish a line roughly in-
cluding the Lessay-Periers-St. Lo road, The Selection of D Day
the principal lateral communication
south of the Carentan-Caen highway. The general timing of the assault was
VII Corps would then regroup to attack determined, as noted, by the Combined
south and First U.S. Army would ad- Chiefs of Staff, in accordance with con-
vance with three corps abreast to the line siderations of weather, availability of re-
Avranches-Domfront, at the base of the sources, and co-ordination with the Rus-
Brittany peninsula. (Map III) The date sians. The designation of 1 June as the
set for the completion of this advance was target date meant that the actual assault
D plus 20. At that point it was expected would take place as soon as possible after
that the Third U.S. Army would become that date. Selection of the day would be
operational and First U.S. Army Group determined by the conditions required
would take command over it and First for H Hour. H Hour, in turn, would be
Army. The new army group would then chosen to secure an advantageous coin-
clear the Brittany peninsula, using First cidence of light and tidal conditions. But
Army and such forces from Third Army just what those conditions should be was
as necessary. Thereafter both armies not easily formulated.
would face east, Third Army on the The whole experience of the Mediter-
right. The Allied forces together would ranean theater had been with night as-
push to the Seine, securing the final lodg- saults. A considerable body of Army
ment area by about D plus 90 and com- opinion favored continuing the pattern
pleting the initial phase of Operation of surprise landings under cover of dark-
OVERLORD. ness in the attack against the Continent.
The final stages of the operation were OVERLORD, however, introduced new com-
conceived and stated in these broad plications in its unprecedented size and
terms. The outlined scheme of maneu- the fact that it would go in against a
ver and the timetables were not designed heavily defended coast. The possibility
as tactical plans; they were frames of ref- of achieving tactical surprise seemed
slight. Enemy radar would certainly
112This was done at the recommendation of Gen-
eral Bradley. See Ltr, Bradley to 21 A Gp, 26 May pick up the approach of the Allied ar-
44, quoted in Memo for SHAEF G-3,4 Jun 44, Status mada by day or night. A night assault
of Planning, 21 Army Group. SHAEF G-3 file GCT, would impose uncertainty on the enemy
Ops A (21 Army Group General). Build-up sched-
ules were then changed to delay the bringing in of as to Allied strength and intentions,
port repair and operating units and allow additional but in order to attack at night the con-
combat troops to land in the early phase. The 79th voys would have to make the turn toward
Division was attached from Third Army to VII
Corps and was ordered to begin landing on D plus 8. the invasion beaches in daylight. Dark-
See VII Corps revised FO, 28 May 44. ness would interfere with the enemy’s
OVERLORD REVISED 189

shooting, reducing risks to the invasion delivered in daylight, The argument ul-
fleet and in particular covering the as- timately accepted in the determination of
saulting troops from observed small arms H Hour in the Initial Joint Plan was
fire. It was noted, however, that if the admirably set out in an analysis by Lt.
enemy chose to use flares extensively this Gen. John T. Cracker, Commanding
cover might evaporate. Furthermore the General of the British 1 Corps.114 The first
obscurity of night was a double-edged essential, he said, was the development
weapon-or, better, a twofold shield. It of “overwhelming fire support from all
would be quite as effective in preventing sources, air, naval and support craft . . .
the Allies from laying down artillery fires to cover the final stages of the approach
or carrying out aerial bombardment in and to enable us to close the beaches.
preparation for the landings. This was, This requires daylight.” Mediterranean
of course, the crux of the decision on experience, in his view, had shown that
daylight or night landing: could the the effectiveness of naval fire depended
Allies engage successfully in a fire fight on observation and that it had been
with enemy coastal defenders? Should much greater than was previously sup-
they attempt a landing by a power plan posed. At least forty-five minutes of
or by stealth? daylight, he estimated, would be neces-
COSSAC did not decide the question. sary for full use of fire support, and he
Although noting that the requirements concluded that H Hour should be within
of the Navy for light in which to maneu- one hour of first light. This was, in gen-
ver and to deliver observed fire support eral, accepted. Certain adjustments had
were likely to be decisive, the July OVER- to be made, however, to allow for the
LORD plan did not outline a naval bom- other more rigid requirements for H
bardment scheme. There was some Hour: suitable tidal conditions.
doubt whether the ships for adequate The spring tide range on the Nor-
fire support would be available. There mandy Channel coast was about twenty-
was still more doubt whether naval fire one feet, the neap tide range about
could neutralize enemy defenses to an twelve feet. Low tide uncovered at OMAHA
extent that would “reasonably assure the Beach a tidal flat of an average width of
success of an assault without the cover of 300 yards. Assaulting troops attempting
darkness.” 113 to cross this flat would be entirely ex-
Resolution of the problem was to as- posed to enemy small arms, mortar, and
sault soon after first light so that, while artillery fire. The higher the tide, the
maximum use could be made of darkness smaller the tidal flat and the less risk to
in covering the approach, the prepar- the assaulting troops. The landings, how-
atory bombing and naval fire could be ever, had to take place on a rising tide
to permit the vehicle landing craft to
113Memo, Col Partridge and Lt Col Bonesteel for
Gen Bradley, 15 Dec 43. 12th A Gp file 370.03 (In- ground, unload, and withdraw without
vasion) Similar doubts had been expressed at the having to dry out. The questions then
RATTLE Conference, held from 28 June to 2 July to to be answered were: how many vehicles
discuss tactics of the assault. See discussion of Mount-
batten’s Memo on the RATTLE Conference at COS
(43) 155th Mtg (0), 12 Jul 43. 114 Ltr, 14 Dec 43. 12th A Gp file 370.03 (Invasion) .
190 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

should be landed on the first tide and ganized not only for the transport of the
how much time would that require? troops but for their protection in the
There was another difficulty. Outcrop- crossing and their support by naval gun-
pings of rock off the beaches in the fire before and after the landings. In the
British zone would not permit a landing U.S. zone Force U would land the 4th
at low tide. But landings on all beaches Division on UTAH Beach, and Force 0, the
had to be roughly simultaneous to avoid 1st Division on OMAHA. These, together
alerting the enemy before the entire mass with Force B carrying the 29th Division,
of the attack could be applied. The the follow-up for OMAHA Beach, were all
happy mean seemed to be an H Hour under the Western Naval Task Force,
three hours before high water. Since commanded by Admiral Kirk. The three
there was a two-hour stand of high water, British assault divisions, similarly or-
the time thus decided was also only one ganized, came under the Eastern Naval
hour after low tide.115 Task Force commanded by Rear Adm.
To fix rigid conditions of both light Philip Vian.
and tide for D Day would have placed the The assaulting infantry were to be car-
whole invasion unduly at the mercy of ried in transports specially modified for
the weather. The possibility of a day- the purpose. The transports would pro-
to-day postponement in case of bad ceed to lowering positions, eleven miles
weather was provided by allowing a cer- offshore in the U.S. zone and seven miles
tain flexibility in the interval between offshore in the British zone. There the
first light and H Hour. The minimum troops would be unloaded into LCVP’s
daylight period was to be thirty minutes; or LCA’s, each of which carried about
the maximum, an hour and a half. The thirty men. The small craft were to go in
required conditions of light and tide pre- abreast in waves to touch down at regular
vailed during three days each fortnight. intervals along the whole length of the
An additional requirement of moonlight beaches to be assaulted.116
for the airborne drops further narrowed The basic tactical problem of the as-
the choice to three days a month. The sault was to smash through the hard
first possible D Days after the OVERLORD shell of enemy shore defenses. Partial
target date were 5,6, and 7 June. H Hour solution could be found in the normal
on all tbose dates was to be staggered, techniques for attack against a fortified
varying by about an hour from east to position. But amphibious attack intro-
west because of slightly varying tidal and duced a significant and complicating dif-
beach conditions. ference. The assaulting infantry would
have no room to maneuver. They could
Organization and Tactics of the not fall back; they could not, except to a
Assault Forces very limited degree, outflank enemy
strong points. As the Dieppe command-
Each of the five assault divisions was to ers pointed out, even though “an assault
be put ashore by a naval task force or-
116NEPTUNE, Initial Joint Plan, pars. 54-56; cf.
[Charles H. Taylor] Omaha Beachhead (Washing-
115 NEPTUNE, Initial Joint Plan, pars. 58-59. ton, 1945), p. 31.
OVERLORD REVISED 191

may take place on a flank of the main ob- The final conclusions were that smoking
jective, it is in itself a frontal attack. of the hostile shore could not be suffi-
Thus, once the assault is discovered, ciently controlled, that it offered too
there is little room for subtlety. The main many opportunities for fatal mistakes,
necessity is to batter a way through in and that by interfering with observed fire
the shortest possible time.” 117 The essen- it would handicap Allied fire superior-
tial lack of “subtlety” in the first phase ity.121
might be mitigated by flexibility in the An amphibious assault without cover
organization of the assault forces. To of darkness or smoke, and without the
achieve that, the Dieppe commanders flexibility of a large floating reserve, de-
suggested using a minimum assault force pended for success on developing a weight
on the widest practicable front while behind the initial attack that would not
holding out a large floating reserve in only crumble enemy defenses but would
readiness to exploit soft spots. The re- carry the assaulting troops far enough in-
serve, it was suggested, might well consti- land so that follow-up troops could be put
tute half the total force. Instead of staking ashore behind them to consolidate and
everything on a power drive, in short, it then exploit the beachhead. The double
might be possible to “feel your way in.” 118 requirement that the assaulting troops be
General Morgan and some of his staff able to knock out enemy fortifications and
were attracted by this concept, as has been push rapidly inland required a careful
pointed out, but their efforts to apply it balancing of striking power and mobility.
were frustrated chiefly by the shortage of The first proposal was to organize special
landing craft. assault divisions with one or two Ranger-
In the end, little reliance was placed on type battalions, small and lightly
probing for weakness and exploiting it equipped for the special task of reducing
through decisive commitment of reserves. fortifications. The “Ranger” battalions
The assault was considered as a frontal would land first, followed by normal bat-
attack which was unlikely even to have talions. The assault division would go in
the advantage of tactical surprise. The use on a broad front and move fast. It would
of smoke to cover the final run-in to the be strong enough, when reinforced by
shore was seriously considered in July cannon companies and antitank weapons,
1943,119 but later experimentation led to to hold a beachhead maintenance line. Its
its rejection. Trials at the Assault Train- task then would be finished and exploita-
ing Center and in various Allied exercises tion would be undertaken by normal in-
showed that smoke tended to confuse as- fantry divisions of the follow-up.122
sault troops as much as the defenders.120 The notion of a specially organized as-
sault division was retained, but planners
117 Dieppe Rpt, cited n. 91. wished to minimize the structural changes
118Address by Maj Gen Roberts (Dieppe Military
Force Commander), at Assault Training Center, 7 and so facilitate the reconstruction of as-
Jun 43. Adm file 491. See Bibliographical Note.
119Proposed revision of Field Manual 31-5, Land- 121Cf. Commentary on Exercise PIRATE, 12 Oct 43.
ings on a Hostile Shore, 1 Jul 43. Adm file 491. Pre-Inv file 661.
120 Interv with Brig Gen Paul W. Thompson, cited 122Address by Brig Gen Norman D. Cota at As-
in Jones, NEPTUNE, I, 204. sault Training Center Conf, 2 Jun 43. Adm file 491.
192 GROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

sault units for normal infantry tasks once The use of tanks in the assault was a
they were through the enemy’s fortifica- subject of prolonged discussion and ex-
tions. The assault divisions were formed perimentation. In the end, the decision
therefore simply by reducing the over- was to use them not as an armored force
head of a normal infantry division both in but as close-support artillery. Armor’s
men and vehicles and increasing the nor- characteristics of shock and mobility were
mal infantry fire power. While the basic to be disregarded, and no plans were to be
divisional structure remained unchanged, made to use the tanks in exploitation
the rifle companies were organized in as- from the beaches. Tanks were not the
sault teams with special equipment to ideal assault artillery but they seemed the
deal with fortified positions. The platoons best available. Only armored guns had a
of the assault companies were split into chance of survival on the beaches. Tests
two assault sections apiece, each with indicated, moreover, that the tank 75-mm.
twenty-nine men and one officer, the size or 76.2-mm. gun could be used effectively
being determined by the capacity of the in neutralizing or destroying concrete
LGVP. The two assault platoons in each pillboxes by firing into the embrasures.
company included rifle teams, a wire-cut- Tank fire so directed would enable the in-
ting team, a bazooka team, a flame-throw- fantry to cut their way through the wire
ing team, a BAR team, a 60-mm. mortar entanglements of the fortification, ap-
team, and a demolition team. The third proach the pillbox with flame throwers
platoon was similarly organized except and demolition., and destroy it. It was ex-
that it had an 81-mm. instead of a 60-mm. pected that the majority of the tanks
mortar and a heavy machine gun instead would fire from hull down in the water
of a BAR. After the assault, each platoon and would not leave the beach at all dur-
was to be reorganized into a normal rifle ing the assault phase.124
platoon with two rifle squads and a weap- Following closely the beaching of the
ons squad. first tank companies, the leading infantry
The infantry assault troops were to be wave would touch down, clear the
stripped to the barest combat essentials, beaches, and cover the landing of engi-
but their fist was to be mailed. A tank bat- neer demolition teams. The task of the
talion attached to each of the assault regi- engineers-to cut and mark gaps through
ments would lead the attack. A portion of the belts of shore obstacles before these
the tanks were to be carried in on LCT’s were covered by the rising tide-was one
to touch down approximately with the of the most critical in the operation, and
first infantry wave. Another portion were its successful accomplishment demanded
modified for amphibious operation and meticulous adherence to the time sched-
were to be launched about five or six ule. The engineers were to work with
thousand yards off shore and swim in
ahead of the assault waves.123 drive-twin propellers for swimming and the nor.
ma1 track drive for overland. From the duplex drive
123These were M-4 medium tanks equipped with came their common name “DD’s.”
detachable canvas “bloomers”-accordion-pleated 124Assault Training Center, Training Memos,
screens which when raised were capable of floating ASLT-4, 15 Jan 44 and ASLT-I, 1 Mar 44. Adm file
the 32-ton tanks by displacement. They had a duplex 491.
OVERLORD REVISED 193

special naval demolition units and would 3,375 tons of shells.126 Not only were the
have the assistance of tankdozers landed ships allotted completely inadequate for
at this time. the task, but there was considerable doubt
The succeeding assault waves would whether even the optimum number of
consist mostly of infantry and additional bombarding vessels could achieve what
engineers to clear the beaches and mine was demanded of them. COSSAC’s naval
fields inland. The first artillery units staff estimated in the summer of 1943 that
would come in about an hour and a half it would probably be possible to neutral-
after the first landings. The heavy debar- ize (though not destroy) medium and
kation of vehicles across the beaches heavy coastal batteries, if they were not
would start about three hours after H too numerous, but that naval fire support
Hour. By that time the assaulting infan- could not be relied on to deal with beach
try was expected to have the beach exits defenses or unlocated field batteries or
cleared and to have fought their way well provide effective close support for the as-
inland.125 saulting troops. 127 American experience
in the landings at Tarawa seemed to con-
Fire Support firm this pessimism. A full report of the
Tarawa operation was studied in Febru-
The task of smashing through enemy ary by Admiral Ramsay, who observed
beach defenses was to be facilitated as far that naval bombardment had apparently
as possible by naval fire support and air been effective against open emplacements
bombardment. The early pessimism about but not against concrete, “The heaviest
what fire support could accomplish was casualties,” he noted further, “were
never entirely dissipated. A theoretical caused by the failure to neutralize strong
study made early in January 1944 con- points and dug-outs during the period im-
cluded that effective neutralization of mediately before and after the touch-
enemy coastal and beach defenses would down of the assault.” 128
require a naval force of a size that was On the other hand, the experience of
obviously far beyond the range of possi- Dieppe had shown the imperative need
bility. The silencing of fifteen enemy for overwhelming fire support in an at-
coastal batteries, for instance, was esti- tack against a fortified coast.129 One step
mated to require a force of twenty to toward solution of the problem was to in-
twenty-three battleships or cruisers. The crease substantially the naval bombard-
drenching of the assault beaches and neu- ment forces. originally these were all to
tralizing fire on known strong points be British according to an agreement
would take about twenty cruisers and one made at Cairo. In February Admiral
hundred destroyers, on the basis of three- Ramsay assigned one battleship, one
tenths of a pound of high explosive per monitor, seven cruisers, and sixteen de-
square yard of target area, or a total of 126COS (43) 770 (0) ,7 Jan 44.
127 COS (43) 464 (0) , 1.2 Aug 43.
128Ltr, Ramsay to CinC 21 A Gp, Effects of Naval
125For further details of the landing scheme as ap- Bombardment of Heavily Defended Beaches, 18 Feb
plied on OMAHA, see Taylor, Omaha Beachhead, pp. 44. Pre-Inv file 676.
30-33. 129 Comb Rpt, The Dieppe Raid, Part V.
CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

stroyers to the Western Naval Task Force dered ineffective during the critical stages
to provide escort and fire support for of the assault. Attacks by air and sea were
First U.S. Army. 130 It was realized, in the thus planned in a crescendo up to H
light of the tentative fire plan prepared Hour. The first targets were the enemy
by First Army, that this allocation was in- coastal batteries capable of interfering
sufficient, but the British Admiralty re- with the sea approach. Second were the
ported that no additional ships could be beach defenses, the series of enemy resist-
found from British resources. Admiral ance nests, which housed infantry wea-
Ramsay in March therefore requested that pons designed to check the assaulting
U.S. warships be assigned to OVERLORD.131 troops on the beaches. Finally, naval guns
During April and May, three U.S. were to furnish heavy artillery support
battleships, two cruisers, and thirty-four for the infantry advance inland, pending
destroyers arrived in the theater and were the landing of army long-range artil-
assigned to Admiral Kirk’s command. lery.134
Certain British ships were detached, but The project of neutralizing enemy
the net result was a substantial increase coastal batteries began long before D Day.
in the naval forces available to support Allied air forces were assigned missions
First Army. 132Force 0 was allotted two against them during the preparatory
battleships, three light cruisers, nine de- period. At that time only those batteries
stroyers, and three Hunt destroyers were to be attacked which had casemates
(British): Force U was assigned one under construction, for the object was not
battleship, one monitor, three heavy so much to destroy the guns as to arrest or
cruisers, two light cruisers, eight destroy- delay work on the protective covering.135
ers, and one gunboat (Dutch). In addi- Actually in the spring nearly all the im-
tion Admiral Kirk was able to set up a re- portant batteries in the invasion area were
serve fire-support group consisting of one still in the process of being encased in
heavy cruiser, one light cruiser, and concrete. Attacks against them, however,
seventeen destroyers. The reserve group were severely limited on the one hand by
would relieve ships of the other two forces the necessity for concealing from the Ger-
which either were badly damaged or had mans the selected assault areas and on the
depleted their ammunition supply.133 other hand by the tactical air forces’ heavy
The fire support plan, in general, em- prior commitments. 136Security consider-
phasized neutralization rather than de- ations led to the policy of bombing two
struction. It was hoped that, by bringing coastal batteries outside the assault area
a continuous heavy volume of fire to bear for each one bombed inside. Only about
on enemy defenses, they would be ren- 10 percent of the total bomb tonnage
dropped during the preparatory phase
130 FUSA plan, Annex 21,25 Feb 44. (from the middle of April to D Day) was
131Cbl, Eisenhower to Marshall, 20 Mar 44. Eisen-
hower Personal Files; cf. Cbl, Br Admiralty to Br 134Ltr, Gerow to CG, FUSA, Prearranged Naval
Adm Div (JSM) ,28 Mar 44, Annex IV to COS (44) and Air Bombardment Plan, 13 Mar 44. Pre-Inv file
295 (0), 29 Mar 44. 676.
132Amendment No. 1, 1 May 44 to Operation 135AEAF Overall Air Plan, 15 Apr 44. 12th A Gp
NEFTUNE, Naval Orders. 12 A Gp files, dr 89. file 370.2.
133FUSA plan, Annex 12, 21 May 44. 136See below, Ch. VI.
PREINVASION BOMBING of Pointe du Hoe by Ninth Air Force bombers.
196 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

directed against coastal batteries, and only lost, then only half as many bombers
a third of that was expended in the inva- would attack.140 Not until the night of D
sion area.137 minus 1 would bombardment be concen-
First U.S. Army in a series of plans trated in the OVERLORD area without re-
through May spelled out the details gard for deception. Then RAF bombers
of the counterbattery plan as it affected would attack “with maximum operable
the U.S. zone. The battery at Pointe du strength” ten coastal batteries, including
Hoe, consisting of six 155-mm. guns with six in the First Army zone.141 Medium
an estimated range of 25,000 yards, re- bombers would take up the attack against
mained top priority in each phase of the some of these batteries beginning thirty
counterbattery program. It was capable of minutes before H Hour, joined by heavy
firing on lowering positions 138 for both day bombers from H minus 15 to H minus
U.S. assault forces and against landings 5. Four other inland batteries would be
all along the coast from Port-en-Bessin in attacked by fighter bombers from H Hour
the British zone to Taret de Ravenoville to H plus 10. In the meantime naval bom-
north of UTAH Beach. In addition to re- bardment forces would have come within
ceiving a considerable percentage of Al- range. At first light, battleships and heavy
lied bombing and shelling, Pointe du Hoe cruisers would open main battery fire on
was singled out for early capture after H enemy coastal guns.142
Hour by the 2d Ranger Battalion operat- Coincident with the final phases of
ing under V Corps. Besides Pointe du the counterbattery fire beach drenching
Hoe, First Army asked for bombardment would begin with simultaneous bom-
of four other batteries before the night of bardment from sea and air. WhiIe heavy
D minus 3. They were to be attacked dur- bombers of the Eighth Air Force attacked
ing daylight by medium bombers and at thirteen beach defense targets in the
night by heavies of the RAF.139 OMAHA area, medium bombers, beginning
These earliest attacks were naturally thirty minutes before H Hour, would at-
enough concentrated against the heaviest- tack defenses at UTAH.143 But the burden
caliber guns in the assault area. Intensifi- of the task of saturating enemy shore de-
cation of the attacks on enemy defenses as fenses to cover the final run-in of the as-
the hour of assault approached brought sault forces was assigned to the lighter
in numerous smaller batteries and in- ships of the naval bombardment forces
creased the weight of the effort. If by D 140 Ibid.
minus 1 it was estimated that the enemy 141 AEAF Overall Air Plan, cited n. 135.
was no longer in doubt as to the selected 142FUSA plan, Annex 12,27 May 44.
143In early planning it was thought that cratering
assault area, then 50 percent of the avail- of beaches would be an important tactical by-prod-
able heavy day bombers would be put on uct of this bombardment, and troops were briefed to
six batteries in the First U.S. Army sector. expect to find cover in shell and bomb holes. See
proposed revision of Field Manual 31-5, 1 Jul 43.
If it seemed likely that surprise was not Adm file 491. RATTLE Conference, however, assumed
137 Calculations are from statistics in Leigh-Mal- cratering to be an “adverse” effect of bombing from
lory, Despatch, pp. 46-47. the Army point of view. See RATTLE Conf Sd Mtg, 29
138Also called “transport areas.” Jun 43. SHAEF SGS file 337/6. Actually the only
139FUSA plan, Annex 12 (Fire Support) , 2d Rev, significant cratering that took place was at Pointe du
27 May 44. Hoe. See below, Ch. IX.
OVERLORD REVISED 197

-especially the destroyers and support cessive firing positions as it would displace
craft.144 Specific beach targets were mostly forward in normal land combat.148 Doc-
machine gun positions, many having con- trine of Combined Operations was that
crete personnel shelters with some light self-propelled guns should be capable of
artillery pieces. It was not expected, how- direct fire while afloat, and of direct and
ever, that specific targets would be de- indirect fire both from beached craft
stroyed. Ground commanders asked for and from hull down in the water. Accept-
the destruction of only three targets in the ing these theories, U.S. commanders
Port-en-Bessin area; all others were to be planned to supplement their close-sup-
neutralized.145 Much reliance was placed port craft with LCT’s modified to take
on the support craft which could continue two or three medium tanks apiece in posi-
to fire up to H Hour after heavy-caliber tion to fire during the approach to shore,
naval gunfire had to be lifted to targets in- and with normal LCT(5)‘s carrying 105-
land in order to avoid endangering the mm. self-propelled howitzers, also in po-
first waves of troops. Particularly impor- sition to fire while afloat.149
tant were the rocket craft, LCT(R)‘s, Final phase of the fire support plan was
which had performed well in the Medi- the arrangement for naval firing in sup-
terranean.146 port of the Army’s advance inland. To di-
The availability of support craft, how- rect this fire, each of the three assault di-
ever, was always uncertain, and in the end visions (4th, 29th, and 1st) had nine naval
only twenty-three could be assigned to fire support control parties; nine naval
support U.S. landings. U.S. commanders gunfire spotting teams were to drop with
therefore early considered firing divi- the 101st Airborne Division.150 Air ob-
sional artillery from landing craft. Exten- servation was to be furnished by forty air-
sive experiments were conducted by the craft of the British Fleet Air Arm, aug-
British Combined Operations Headquar- mented by one RAF squadron and three
ters in early 1943. In general those proved reconnaissance squadrons, the latter to be
that self-propelled 105-mm. howitzers relieved not later than noon on D Day
could achieve an acceptable accuracy in for return to normal reconnaissance du-
direct fire while afloat at ranges from 10,- ties.151
000 yards. 147 There developed a certain 148Address by Col M. W. Brewster, Chief, Tactics
disposition then to think of artillery in Subsection, at Assault Training Center Conf, 1 Jun
43. Adm file 491.
the assault as moving landward from suc- 149 Western Naval Task Force had nine LCG (L) ‘s
144Light cruisers also participated and the Force armored and equipped with multiple rocket pro-
U plan called for the battleship Nevada and the jectors; sixteen LCT(A) ‘s equipped to carry
heavy cruiser Quinsy to fire their five-inch batteries medium tanks; and six LCT (HE) ‘s, similar to the
at beach targets. See Naval Task Force U, Operations LCT (A) but with less armor protection. There
Order, Annex D, 15 May 44. were also eleven LCF’s mounting AA-guns. Two LCT
145Norfolk House Mtg, 24 Apr 44, to consider the (A)‘s or (HE)‘s were to carry a platoon of tanks
engagement of beach targets in the U.S. First Army between them. The fifth tank could fire rockets if
area. ET0 337 (Conferences (Secret) ) AR-16-Dr 1. desired. FUSA plan, Annex 21; cf. Western Naval
146CO Rpt, Lessons Learnt in the Mediterranean, Task Force, Operation Plan, 21 Apr 44.
14 Oct 43. Pre-Inv file 661. 150 Some of the parties assigned to the 29th Divi-
147Address by Col H. F. G. Langley (COHQ) , at sion would operate with the 2d and 5th Ranger
Assault Training Center Conf, 1 Jun 43: cf. proposed Battalions. FUSA plan, Annex 21.
revision of Field Manual 31-5. Both in Adm file 491. 151AEAF Overall Air Plan, 15 Apr 44.
CHAPTER VI

Preliminary Operations
The French Resistance finally moved into southern France in No-
vember 1942, Resistance leaders were
When the Germans conquered France faced with the problem of bringing some
in the spring of 1940, they sealed their vic- sort of unity out of the anarchy of rival
tory with a symbolic flourish. It was as groups. At that time the northern zone
though by dictating the terms of humili- had six independently organized groups;
ating armistice in the historic railway car- the south had three. Only one organiza-
riage at Compiegne they meant to prove tion, the communist Front National,
not only that France was beaten but that which operated through the Francs
she was helpless even to save her dignity Tireurs et Partisans, extended control
in defeat. So it must have seemed in the over both the northern and southern
railway car and so, too, throughout most zones.2 Between the other groups there
of the country. But there were still a few was virtually no co-ordination. Their sep-
Frenchmen who experienced the fact of arateness was due not only to the fact that
defeat and witnessed the symbol of humil- as clandestine organizations they lacked
iation without accepting the finality of regularized communications; more im-
either. In 1940 they could not have portantly they were divided by differing
seemed very dangerous to the conquerors shades of political opinion. The French
or, for that matter, very potent to them- Resistance cannot be viewed as a simple
selves. Their reaction was spontaneous revolt against the enemy, although oppo-
and personal. Yet they were the seeds sition to the Germans was, of course, al-
which, nourished by arms and Allied or- ways the prime motive. It must be seen
ganizers through four years of occupation, also as a movement aimed, at least by its
grew into an underground army number- leaders, at eventual national independ-
ing about 200,000 men-an army that ence. Whoever controlled the under-
after the Allied landings in June 1944 im- ground would evidently be in the strong-
pressed Allied leaders as having made a est position to control the liberated na-
substantial contribution to the defeat of tion.
the enemy.1 The chief impetus toward national uni-
During the first two years of the occu- fication came from General Charles de
pation, the Resistance movement de- Gaulle’s headquarters in London. Gen-
veloped separately in the occupied and eral de Gaulle began in 1940 the forma-
unoccupied zones. When the Germans tion of a special staff, later known as the
Bureau Central de Renseignements et
1 Diary of CinC, 17 Jun 44; Rpt, Donovan (OSS)
to Marshall, 9 Jul 44. OPD file 336.2, sec. II, cases
29-47. 2 MS # B-035 (Roge) , A History of the FFI.
PRELIMINARY OPERATIONS 199

HITLER LEAVING RAILWAY CARRIAGE AT COMPIEGNE where the Ger-


mans dictated the 1940 peace terms to the French nation.

d’dction (Militaire) (BCRA), charged Georges Bidault included representatives


with the organization, direction, and sup- not only of the main Resistance groups
ply of the Resistance. Contacts between but of the principal political parties as
de Gaulle and the native Resistance were well. Politically the new National Com-
established through agents supplied by mittee recognized General de Gaulle and
the British. The BCRA worked for nearly the London committee as trustees of the
two years (from the summer of 1941 to interests of the French nation and respon-
the spring of 1943) with Resistance lead- sible eventually for founding a French
ers to amalgamate the Resistance groups. government on democratic principles. De
Their work culminated in the formation Gaulle’s personal representative, Jean
of a National Committee (le Conseil Na- Moulin, was selected as political leader of
tional de la Restance) which met for the the Resistance. Militarily the committee
first time in Paris on 27 May 1943. The created an underground army (l'Armee
committee under the presidency of Secrete) under the direct command of
200 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

General Delestrain (known to the under- continue operations in most parts of the
ground as General Vidal). The Army was country.5
elaborately organized on a regional basis Despite their losses, the Resistance
and regional commanders selected. Pri- groups displayed a remarkable resilience,
marily this organization was intended as and reorganization began at once. It is im-
a framework for the ultimate open co-op- possible in short space to describe the
eration of the French underground with many ramifications of the new organiza-
the Allied armies.3 tion. In general it may be said that a nomi-
Much of the success of this first de nal national unity was retained while sab-
Gaullist national organization was il- otage and paramilitary action were con-
lusory, for it is evident that the Gestapo trolled regionally. The Germans con-
was aware of its progress and waited only tinued to make periodic arrests of Resist-
for its completion before striking in June ance leaders, but the new decentralization
1943 with wholesale arrests. De Gaulle’s localized the damage to the movement.
representative died under torture. Gen- Concurrently with the organization of
eral Delestrain was shot. The leadership the Resistance for eventual overt activity,
of the underground army was decimated. both the BCRA and a purely British or-
The national organization was shattered, ganization, the SOE (Special Operations
and Resistance groups throughout the Executive), were concerned with encour-
country suffered heavy losses.4 aging, directing, and supplying immedi-
In the widespread catastrophe, how- ate and continuing sabotage. The SOE
ever, there were some encouraging facts. was formed in November 1940 and made
By tipping their hand in the summer of the responsibility of the Minister of Eco-
1943, apparently in the expectation that nomic Warfare-a responsibility that was
Allied landings were imminent, the Ger- added to the minister’s duties as head of
mans revealed the fatal weaknesses of the a department. The first mission of the
highly centralized underground organi- SOE was to investigate the capabilities of
zation in time to permit the establishment the French Resistance, stimulate passive
of a new system of control before D Day. resistance in French industry working for
Furthermore, although the underground the Germans, and study the possibilities
suffered severe personnel losses both of forming an underground army. As it
among native resisters and among agents, began to work through agents in the field,
a surprisingly small percentage of sup- the goal of encouraging passive resistance
plies was lost and, on the whole, the sup- was gradually supplanted by the more am-
ply reception committees were able to bitious aim of developing French Resist-
ance into a strategic weapon that could be
directed by Allied headquarters against
3 French Forces of the Interior, MS, pp. 9-40. Hist
Div files. This is a 1,500-page history prepared in military objectives in conformity with the
the European Theater Historical Section, under master Allied plan.6
direction of Colonel S. L. A. Marshall, by United
States, French, and British members of the OSS. Cited 5 Memo, SOE, Present Value and Tempo of Re-
hereafter as FFI History. sistance, 9 Oct 43. SHAEF G-3 file 322-7 II, Ops C.
4FFI History, p. 40. 6FFI History, pp. 344-45.
PRELIMINARY OPERATIONS 201

The SOE did not attempt to interfere tiplication of contacts between agents and
directly in the indigenous organization Resistance groups and thus increased un-
of the Resistance. The British were con- necessarily the risk that treachery or in-
tent to deal with the groups as established discretion would compromise a wide-
and confine their efforts to setting up and spread organization. Henceforward the
maintaining communications between aim of the SOE was to create independent
the Resistance and London. The main groups with independent communica-
task at first was to supply the resisters with tions with London. During 1942, seven-
arms and sabotage equipment. Later the teen radio operators, as well as thirty-six
SOE undertook to direct and co-ordinate other agents, were parachuted into France.
Resistance action in accord with the OVER- As communications became relatively se-
LORD plan. cure and continuous, supply missions
The first SOE agents parachuted into were flown in increasing numbers. Addi-
France in the spring of 1941. Among them tional personnel and materiel were also
was a French radio operator, Begue. landed by small boats plying between
Through Begue, contact was made with Gibraltar and the southeast coast. De-
some of the Resistance groups and ar- liveries by sea were especially important
rangements made for the first supply mis- during the winter when bad weather all
sion flown on the night of 7 July 1941. but prevented air drops. The total
Containers packed with explosives, small amount of supplies sent during the year,
arms, flashlights, and a radio were para- however, was very small. In twelve months
chuted to ground organized by members of operation, for instance, only a little
of the Resistance. Location and markings over one ton of explosives was dropped
of the grounds had been previously re- to saboteurs.8
ported to London by Begues radio. This SOE efforts to supply the Resistance
was the first of many “shipments” of arms movements were always handicapped by
to the French underground which would insufficient air transport. In 1942 and
forge out of the will to resist an effective through most of 1943 two squadrons (of
weapon of war. But success was still far approximately twenty aircraft each) were
in the future. The year 1941 ended for employed to carry out SOE missions. The
the SOE in failure. Through treachery SOE continually begged for more aircraft,
most of the British agents in the field were but every plane assigned to it had to be
arrested, including Begue and the slen- diverted from the bomber offensive and
der communications link with London the Resistance seemed like a nebulous
was snapped.7 kind of operation to feed at the expense
The lesson drawn by the SOE from this of dropping bombs on German industry.9
experience was the impracticability of
8 Materials sent during 1942 were as follows: 2,265
canalizing control through a central com- lbs. of explosives; 269 Sten guns; 388 pistols; 856
munications channel. Not only was the incendiaries; 3,424 abrasive products; 630 standard
single communications channel much too charges (clams); 269 cells (food, tobacco, medical
equipment, etc.). FFI History, p. 351.
vulnerable itself but it required the mul- 9 Memo, SIS-SOE/SO Aircraft Requirements, 14
7 Ibid., pp. 347-49. Jan 44. SHAEF SGS file 370.64.
202 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Furthermore, throughout 1943 the SOE scale.” Such an uprising, the committee
program to supply the Balkan guerillas thought, would be desirable from a mili-
had a higher priority than its operations tary standpoint but might be politically
in western Europe. All this meant that, objectionable.12
although from time to time additional Actually there seems little doubt that
planes were available for SOE operations the concept of a national uprising, which
in France, the supply never kept pace with cropped up in discussions of Resistance
the growing demands from the field.10 from time to time, was always unrealistic.
These demands forced repeated ex- A French officer working for the OSS (Of-
amination of what role the Resistance fice of Strategic Services) commented that
could be expected to play in the libera- the “favorite notion” of mass uprisings
tion of France and how much reliance “posited the existence of universal cour-
could be placed on it. Planners tended to age, whereas courage only inspired a few
be cautious. First of all, it was difficult to men-as it has always inspired the few
get any accurate assessment of the actual rather than the many. And the idea of
or potential strength of the movement. mass uprisings implied battling against
Second, there was always a danger that the modern tanks with the stone-throwing
movement might be emasculated by ar- catapults of Caesar’s time.” 13
rests on the eve of invasion. Third, even The decision apparently was that mass
though much had been done to organize uprisings were at least sufficiently unlikely
the various patriot groups, it was certain that no reliance could be placed on them.
that control of their activities would be In February 1944 SHAEF’s conclusion
difficult and incomplete. COSSAC, in was still that Resistance activity must be
drawing up the original OVERLORD plan, regarded as a bonus. 14 In view of this con-
decided to regard Resistance activities as clusion, the project of supplying the Re-
a bonus and to place no reliance on them sistance might have languished, but as a
to accomplish strategic objectives.11 matter of fact it received a strong forward
In criticizing the plan, the British impetus. In the beginning of 1943, the
Chiefs of Staff asked whether a more defi- Germans put into effect a forced labor
nite strategic role might not be assigned draft in France. To escape this draft thou-
to the Resistance. A committee represent- sands of young Frenchmen, particularly
ing Army and SOE discussed the question in central and southern France, broke
and concluded that COSSAC’s appraisal into open rebellion. They formed maquis
was generally fair but “it erred on the side bands in hilly and wooded regions and
of caution and did not emphasize the wide began guerrilla warfare against the Ger-
strategic possibilities.” What the commit- mans and the collaborationist French
tee was thinking of was a national upris- Militia. SOE sent agents to contact these
ing. It believed that the sabotage of Re- maquisards and began dropping arms
sistance groups could not be regarded as 12Progress Rpt, Operation OVERLORD,10 Sep 43.
a strategic weapon unless “backed by a SHAEF G-3 file 322-7 II, Ops C.
general strike or by a rising on a national 13 Rpt, Analysis of the Resikcance Movement, 9
Dec 43. SHAEF G-3 file 370-4-1, Ops C.
10FFI History, pp. 396c-9Gd. 14 Memo, Bull for Morgan, 5 Feb 44. SHAEF SGS
11Outline ovwzorurd Part II, par. 23. file 370.64 I.
PRELIMINARY OPERATIONS 203

and supplies to them.15 The maquis de- supporting the Resistance.18 The State
veloped into an important movement by Department two months later warned the
the fall of 1943. The Prime Minister then Joint Chiefs of Staff that the impression
became interested and in January or- was gaining ground among the French
dered that an additional thirty-five Brit- that, whereas the British were doing
ish aircraft be made available for arming everything possible to arm the French
the maquis groups of southeastern France. patriots, the United States was holding
With this new transport strength, supply back for political reasons.19 Thus in May,
drops in February were increased 173 per- twenty-five more U.S. aircraft were as-
cent.16 Permanent assignments of aircraft signed to Special Operations over the pro-
for SOE use rose steadily thereafter. In tests of Air Marshal Sir Arthur W. Ted-
January, 50 successful sorties were flown; der who, doubting the value of the Re-
in April, 331; in May, 531; and in June, sistance movement, considered the in-
866.17 crease unjustified.20
The increase in the tempo of supply de- Air Marshal Tedder’s doubts were un-
liveries reflected also the beginnings of questionably shared by many in the Al-
American contributions of aircraft. In lied command,21 and the effectiveness of
1943 the OSS began operating through the Resistance as revealed after D Day was
agents in France. The London headquar- very generally regarded with surprise.
ters of SO (Special Operations branch of There had been signs of the capabilities
OSS) collaborated with SOE and grad- of the Resistance to undermine the Ger-
ually amalgamated with the British man military power in France, particu-
agency. The amalgamation was com- larly in the monthly reports which SOE
pleted by January 1944. That month U.S. and later SOE/SO headquarters submit-
planes flew their first successful supply ted to COSSAC and SHAEF from the fall
mission into France. In late February, of 1943 when Special Operations was
however, the chief of Special Operations, placed under the general control of the
Col. Joseph P. Haskell, was still con- OVERLORD command. But the signs were
cerned over the small scale of the Ameri- hard to read. Sabotage consisted of a num-
can contribution. He feared especially ber of more or less un-co-ordinated pin-
the political repercussions on American- pricks chiefly against various war indus-
French relations of allowing the British tries working for the Germans, railroads
to continue carrying the main burden of and canals, and telephone and telegraph

18 Ltr, Haskell to Donovan, 22 Feb 44. SHAEF


15 The first operation took place on 20 March 1943, SGS file 370.64 I.
but supplies were sent on a very meager scale until 19 Cbl, JCS to Eisenhower, 17 Apr 44. SHAEF
the fall of the year. The first agents to the maquis SGS file 370.64 I.
were sent in October. FFI History, pp. 362-63. 20 Memo, Gen Bull for SHAEF CofS, SOS/SO
16 Sixth Monthly Progress Report to SHAEF from Request for Additional Aircraft, 19 Apr 44; Memo,
SOE/SO Hq, London, 7 Mar 44. SHAEF SGS file idem., Allocation of Additional Aircraft for SOE/SO
319.1/10. The planned increase was 300 percent but Missions, 28 Apr 44. SHAEF SGS file 370.64 I.
bad weather interfered with operations. Of 400 21At COS (44) 163d Mtg (0)) 18 May 44, General
sorties attempted during the month only 166 were Smith said that “latest reports” had made the Su-
successful. preme Commander “discount the value of French
17 See SOE/SO Rpts in SHAEF SGS file 319.1/10. underground organizations.”
204 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

systems. It was difficult to add them up cords that during October and November
and see what they amounted to in terms 1943 more than 3,000 attempts were
of damaging the enemy’s total defensive made by patriots to wreck some portion
capabilities in France. of the railway system. In November, 427
The most continuous and probably most of these were successful major operations
effective sabotage was that directed which included 132 derailments.
against the French railroads. Attacks were Despite the impressiveness of these
made to derail German troop and supply figures, there remained some doubt as
trains, to cut tracks, blow bridges, and to the effect of the destruction on Ger-
damage locomotives. Directed by SOE/ man military mobility. Since only a
SO headquarters, railway sabotage was part of the capacity of the French rail-
greatly accelerated in 1944 and tied in to a roads was being utilized directly by the
certain extent with the Allied air offen- German Army, much of the burden of the
sive against enemy transportation.22 Dam- interruptions due to sabotage could be
age done by saboteurs compared favorably and undoubtedly was borne by French
with that inflicted from the air. In the civilian traffic.25 On the other hand,
first three months of 1944 the under- Rundstedt in October 1943 noted with
ground sabotaged 808 locomotives as com- alarm the “rapid increase” in rail sabotage
pared to 387 damaged by air attack. How- which he attributed to the heavy supply
ever, in April and May, air attack was of arms and explosives that the British
stepped up and accounted for the damag- had parachuted to Resistance groups. He
ing of 1,437 locomotives compared to only reported that in September there were
292 put out of action by saboteurs. Be- 534 acts of sabotage against railroads as
tween June 1943 and May 1944 a total compared to a monthly average of 130
of 1,822 locomotives was damaged, 200 during the first half of the year. Although
passenger cars destroyed, 1,500 cars dam- he did not assessthe effect of this sabotage
aged, 2,500 freight cars destroyed and on his general preparedness for invasion,
8,000 damaged. 23 Reliable statistics on he made it clear that it was cause for con-
other forms of railway sabotage are incom- cern, which would become more serious
plete. A report by the Vichy police 24 re- at the time of the Allied assault.26 A meas-
ure of its seriousness was the partial sub-
stitution of German uniformed railway
22See below, section on the Bombing of French
Railroads. workers for employees of the SNCF
23 Rpt, SNCF, Les Resultats de l’Action de la (Societe National des Chemins de Fer).
Restance dans la SNCF, 10 Nov 44, cited in FFI Between February and June 20,000 Ger-
History, pp. 1364ff.
24 This report, captured by the Resistance, reached
London in April 1944. SOE/SO headquarters sig-
nificantly commented on its statistics as follows: “It 25In the spring of 1944 the directors of the SNCF
was already known that railway sabotage was con- were apparently unconvinced of the value of rail
siderable but no suspicion that it had reached the sabotage which they felt was costing the French
scale stated by the police has yet reached London.” more than the Germans. See G-2 Summary of Info,
See Rpt, Appreciation of Report by Minister of In- French Railways, 11 Apr 44. SHAEF G-3 file GCT
terior Vichy, Summary of Acts of Sabotage and Dis- 370-14, ops c.
order in France 25th October-25th November, 14 26 Rundstedt Report, 25 Oct 43. See above, Ch. IV,
Apr 44. SHAEF G-3 file 370-4-1, Ops C. n. 2.
PRELIMINARY OPERATIONS 205

man workers were brought in chiefly to culated to agents in the field, and sabo-
check locomotive sabotage.27 teurs began placing their demolitions. It
As D Day approached, SOE/SO head- soon became apparent that effective road
quarters became more concerned with CO- sabotage would require a large amount
ordinating rail sabotage to relate directly of heavy equipment which could not be
to forthcoming military operations. It delivered in time. Plan Tortue was there-
was not expected that Resistance groups fore converted into a project for blocking
could seriously interfere with the move- enemy road movements through guerrilla
ment of local enemy reserves in the action.29 As such, it contributed to the
bridgehead area. The Germans had in ef- Allied victories after D Day. During
fect quarantined the coastal strip to a the preparation period, however, more
depth of about thirty to forty miles in- emphasis was placed on the rail plan. In
land, and the Normandy Resistance May SOE/SO headquarters reported that
groups, as a result, were weak and scat- 57 1 rail targets were ready for demolition
tered. Work on the fortifications was done and 30 road cuts were prepared.30 In ad-
either by German labor, or by Frenchmen dition to accomplishing the specific acts
carefully checked for loyalty. Any stran- of active sabotage, Resistance leaders
gers were immediately suspect and sub- hoped to complete the disorganization of
ject to arrest. Such organized groups as the French railroads by planned non-co-
did exist were difficult to supply because operation of the railroad trade union and
of the heavy concentration of antiaircraft management. 31 It was estimated that in
guns in the coastal zone. Outside the area, those ways serious dislocation of rail traf-
however, it was thought the Resistance fic in France might be maintained for
might operate effectively to delay the eight to ten days after the Allied landings.
movement of strategic reserves into the Since the date of the invasion could not
battle zone. The Resistance was therefore be given to the Resistance in advance, ar-
directed to prepare demolitions to be rangements were made to order the execu-
blown on order to cut the main trunk tion of sabotage plans by code messages
lines leading into the lodgment area.28 broadcast by the BBC. Organizers were
The plan for cutting the critical mili- instructed to listen to BBC broadcasts on
tary railroads (Plan Vert) was supple- the lst, 2d, 15th, and 16th of each month.
mented by a plan to interfere with road If the invasion was then imminent, they
traffic (Plan Tortue). Both were de- would hear a preparatory code message.
veloped by the BCRA under the general They would then remain on the alert
direction of SOE/SO headquarters. Ap- listening for a confirmatory message “B.”
proved by SHAEF, these plans were cir-
29FFI History, p. 83.
27 OKW/WFSt, KTB Ausarbeitung, Die Entwick- 30 Report from SFHQ, cited n. 28. SOE and SO in
lung im Westen vom 1l.-31.III.44. See below, n. 115. April were amalgamated into a single headquarters
28The Development of Resistance Groups with with the title Special Force Headquarters.
Reference to the Land Fighting in “OVERLORD," 15 31 See Plan Vert, text in FFI History, pp. 175-87.
Feb 44. SHAEF G-3 file 370-14, Ops C; FFI History, The SNCF was generally disposed to co-operate with
pp. 8Off; cf. Ninth Monthly Progress Report to the Allies in passive resistance to the Germans. Re-
SHAEF from SFHQ, London, May 1944, 10 Jun 44. sistance groups found many recruits among the em-
SHAEF SGS file 319.1/10. ployees of the railroads.
206 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Forty-eight hours after message “B,” code maquis and possibly other Resistance
phrases would be broadcast directing that groups might be able to engage some
the various sabotage plans be put into ef- enemy forces in the interior which would
fect. Since each of the plans had been otherwise be employed against the U.S.
drawn on a regional basis and each of the and British armies. The exact military
Resistance regions had separate code ar- employment of the underground obvi-
rangements, it would have been possible ously could not be planned in advance
to localize the sabotage activity in direct since its strength in any given location
support of the landings. It was SHAEF’s could not even be estimated. However,
view, however, that it was preferable to the bonus of having friendly forces be-
obtain the maximum amount of chaos be- hind the enemy’s lines was considered suf-
hind the enemy lines at the moment of ficiently likely and sufficiently valuable
landing, and therefore the signals ac- that extensive preparations were made to
tually used set all sabotage plans in mo- develop and control it. In March 1944,
tion at once.32 This decision reflected SHAEF issued a comprehensive directive
again the reluctance of Allied headquar- to the newly designated Special Force
ters to depend on Resistance activity as a Headquarters on the use of Resistance
precision weapon to be used against groups in support of OVERLORD.34 In late
specific objectives related to the general May and early June headquarters and
plan. staff of the FFI (Forces FrancaGes de
As a matter of fact, the post-D-Day l’Interieur) were established under com-
rail-cutting program of the Resistance mand of Gen. Joseph Pierre Koenig. Koe-
was extraordinarily effective. During nig set up a tripartite staff (French, U.S.,
June a total of 486 rail cuts was reported. British) in London and made plans for
On D plus 1 twenty-six trunk lines were employing the FFI as one component of
unusable, including the main lines be- the Allied armies under the Supreme Al-
tween Avranches and St. Lo, between St. lied Commander.35
Lo and Cherbourg, and between St. Lo But although Koenig became a regu-
and Caen. All were sabotaged with larly constituted military commander his
multiple cuts. Road sabotage achieved at army remained nebulous. Because of the
least one notable success in delaying the danger of compromising the security of
movement of the 2d SS Panzer Division Allied plans, it was impossible even to at-
from the south into the OVERLORD lodg- tempt to organize the FFI for specific mili-
ment area.33 tary missions in advance of D Day. There-
Plans for employing the Resistance in fore, in order to encourage Resistance
action against the enemy after the land- groups to organize themselves for military
ing included not only sabotage but di- action and to get orders to them, three-
rect military action. It was hoped that the man teams (Jedburghs) consisting of one
French and one U.S. or British officer and
32 FFI History, p. 388. German agents broke the 34 SHAEF (44) 25, Operational Directive to SFHQ,
codes. For German reaction, see below, Ch. VIII. 23 Mar 44. SHAEF G-3 file 322-8, Ops C.
33Tenth Monthly Report to SHAEF from SFHQ, 35Ltr, Koenig to Gen Smith, Commandement et
London, June 1944, 10 Jul 44. SHAEF SGS file 319- Organisation des Forces Francaises de l’lnterieur, 9
.1/10; FFI History, p. 1474. See below, Ch. X. Jan 44. SHAEF SGS file 322 (FFI) .
PRELIMINARY OPERATIONS 207

a radio operator were formed to be para- It is impossible to appraise the contri-


chuted in uniform behind enemy lines bution of the Resistance toward soften-
starting shortly before D Day. The sole as- ing the enemy in France before the inva-
signed function of the Jedburghs was to sion. Not only was there no systematic re-
provide communication links with the cording of the facts of their operations,
FFI command. On occasion, however, but there was, in any case, no satisfactory
they were able to supply useful leadership yardstick by which to measure the effec-
for the groups to which they were at- tiveness of an irregular force, whose role
tached. About a hundred Jedburgh teams was strategic rather than tactical. Cer-
were organized and eighty-seven of these tainly the Resistance impaired the Ger-
were operational in France at one time or man military power both materially and
another.36 morally. A fighter with a bee in his
A major handicap of the Resistance for breeches is evidently not at his best. But
military action was its inadequate arma- just how much the bee contributes to his
ment, and especially its lack of heavy defeat is a question to which statistical
weapons. Partly to remedy this, both the method can hardly apply.
Americans and the British organized spe-
cial, heavily armed units to be parachuted The Combined Bomber Offensive
behind the lines after operations began.
They were to be used either independ- Up to the end of 1942, bombing of Ger-
ently on tactical missions or more often to man military targets was carried out with-
stiffen the local Resistance groups. The out any clear-cut directive as to target
American units were called Operational systems, aims, or timing. Although target
Groups and consisted of four officers and priorities had been sketched for the
thirty enlisted men, entirely U.S. person- Eighth Air Force by the theater com-
nel. Eleven of these groups were sent to mander, the task of integrating the oper-
France after D Day, five from England ations of both U.S. and British air forces
and six from North Africa. British equiv- according to a combined plan with a com-
alent units were much larger. These were bined objective was first attempted at
the SAS (Special Air Service) troops whose Casablanca in January 1943.38 The Com-
operations were directed by Lt. Gen. F. bined Chiefs of Staff then agreed to order
A. M. Browning, Commander of Air- U.S. and British strategic air forces based
borne Troops. Comprising almost 2,000 in the United Kingdom to initiate a
men, they included two SAS regiments of “Combined Bomber Offensive” whose
British personnel, two French parachute object would be “the progressive destruc-
battalions, and a Belgian independent tion and dislocation of the German mili-
company. The SAS achieved notable suc-
cess with the well-organized Resistance 38 Ltr, CofS Eighth AF to CG VIII Bomber Com-
mand and VIII Fighter Command, Objectives for
movement in Brittany, and in addition Operations Eighth Air Force, 20 Oct 42; Ltr, Eaker to
was able to carry out useful sabotage of CG ETOUSA, 31 Dec 43, exhibit 2, Report of Lt.
railroads leading to the battle areas.37 Gen. Ira C. Eaker on U.S. Army Air Forces Activi-
ties in United Kingdom Covering Period from Febru-
36FFI History, pp. 364-65. ary 20, 1942 to December 31, 1943 (cited hereafter
37Ibid., pp. 365, 544. as Eaker Rpt). AAF file 520.101A.
208 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

tary, industrial and economic systems, and were to be attacked “subject to the exi-
the undermining of the morale of the gencies of weather and of tactical feasi-
German people to a point where their ca- bility.” 41 They might also be supple-
pacity for armed resistance is fatally weak- mented by “other objectives of great
ened.” 39 importance either from the political or
This dual aim recognized the divergent military point of view.” These “other
doctrines of the American and British air objectives” were not defined, but the two
forces. The Americans believed that, examples given-submarine bases in the
through daylight precision bombing, crit- Bay of Biscay, and the city of Berlin-
ical sections of German industry could be could have been taken to bracket a wide
destroyed so effectively as to dislocate range of targets.
the economic system and paralyze the The Casablanca directive, though for-
German war machine. The British, feel- mally initiating the Combined Bomber
ing that daylight bombing would prove Offensive, did not produce any immedi-
too costly, put their faith in night area ate action. The Eighth Air Force, having
bombing designed to destroy whole crit- depleted its ranks in order to found and
ical industrial and military areas. The nourish the Twelfth Air Force in the
Prime Minister tried at Casablanca to get Mediterranean, remained for about six
the Americans to adopt the British view months desperately short of planes and
on the use of air power and persuade men. It was not until the late spring of
them to use the Eighth Air Force for night 1943 that the air force build-up in the
bombing to reinforce directly the opera- United Kingdom resumed the tempo in-
tions of the RAF. General Eaker and terrupted by the development of the
General Arnold defeated the suggestions, Mediterranean theater, and it was only
and the Casablanca directive recognized then that the Combined Bomber Offen-
the separate operations of the two air sive was implemented by a detailed plan.
forces as two different but complemen- The plan had been in the making
tary contributions to a single task.40 since December 1942 when a Committee
The primary objectives for both air of Operations Analysts was appointed by
forces in the new combined offensive General Arnold to prepare a report “ana-
were: (1) submarine construction yards, lyzing the rate of progressive deteriora-
(2) aircraft industry, (3) transporta- tion that should be anticipated in the
tion, (4) oil plants, (5) other enemy war German war effort as a result of . . . in-
industry. It was provided that these pri- creasing air operations . . . against its sus-
orities might be “varied from time to taining sources.” 42 The committee on 8
time according to developments in the March 1943 reported nineteen enemy
strategical situation.” Further flexibility
was provided in that the targets listed 41 The principal limitation of “tactical feasibility”
was the short range of all combat planes which, aa
long as the air forces were relatively small, largely
39CCS 166/1/D, The Bomber Offensive from the prevented bomb& sorties deep into Germany.
United Kingdom, 21 Jan 43. Approved at CCS 65th 42 Ltr, Arnold to ACofS Management Control, Re-
Mtg, 21 Jan 43. search and Analysis to Fix Earliest Practicable Date
40Eaker Rpt, cited n. 38; cf. Craven and Gate, The for Invasion of Western Europe, 9 Dec 42. AAF file
Army Air Forces, II, 227, 301. 3842-2, Tabs for History.
PRELIMINARY OPERATIONS 209

industrial systems vulnerable to air at- “quite conceivable” that such an increase
tack.43 Endorsed by the Eighth Air Force “could make our daylight bombing un-
and the British Air Ministry, the commit- profitable and perhaps our night bomb-
tee’s findings were embodied in a formal ing too.” 45 The destruction of German
agreed plan which General Eaker sub- fighter aircraft was therefore made an
mitted to the Joint Chiefs of Staff. From “intermediate objective second to none
the nineteen target systems listed by the in priority.” 46
operations analysts, the air forces picked The Joint Chiefs of Staff accepted the
six key enemy industries, including sev- plan outlined by General Eaker, and ap-
enty-six precision targets. The systems se- proved his requests for aircraft and per-
lected for attack were in order of priority: sonnel to carry it out.47 The Combined
submarine construction yards and bases, Chiefs endorsed the plan on 18 May 1943
aircraft industry, ball bearings, oil, syn- at the Washington Conference.48 Finally
thetic rubber and tires, and military the directive to initiate the planned
transport vehicles. Destruction of the offensive was issued on 10 June by Air
seventy-six targets, it was believed, would Marshal Portal, British Chief of Air Staff,
result in elimination of 89 percent of who had strategic direction over com-
the enemy’s submarine industry, 43 per- bined air operations.49 Air Marshal
cent of his fighter aircraft production, Portal interpreted the new plan to mean
65 percent of his bomber production, an all-out offensive against the German
76 percent of the ball bearing industry, 48 fighter air force and directed the Eighth
percent of his refined oil products, 50 per- Air Force to attack air-frame and engine
cent of his synthetic rubber, and all of factories and industries associated with
his tire production. “The cumulative them, as well as aircraft repair depots,
effect,” said General Eaker, “will ‘fatally storage parks, and enemy fighter planes
weaken’ the capacity of the German in the air and on the ground. These at-
people for armed resistance.” 44 tacks were declared of primary impor-
There were initial difficulties, how- tance and the order was that nothing
ever. General Eaker noted that the air should interfere with them. Only when
forces’ ability to carry out the planned 45 Ibid,
program depended on rendering German 46CCS 217, Plan for Combined Bomber Offensive
fighter defenses ineffective. Actually, de- from the United Kingdom, 14 May 43.
47 JCS 77th Mtg, 4 May 43; JPS 174/l, Plan for
spite heavy losses, enemy fighter strength Combined Bomber Offensive from the United King-
in the spring of 1943 was still increasing dom, 2 May 43.
rapidly. If the increase continued at that 48 CCS 87th Mtg, 18 May 43.
49As by agreement at Casablanca, CCS 65th Mtg;
rate, it was expected the Germans would cf. Craven and Cate, The Army Air Forces, II, 304.
have 3,000 fighter aircraft by January The RAF was senior in experience and, at this time,
1944. It was, General Eaker reported, preponderant in numbers. “Strategic direction” was
never clearly defined nor was Air Marshal Portal
ever given any clear-cut directive. In fact, however,
43 Memo for Gen Arnold, Report of Committee he exercised ad hoc command over the strategic air
of Operations Analysts with Respect to Economic forces as agent of the Combined Chiefs. The directive
Targets within the Western Axis, 8 Mar 43. AAF lile of 10 June was issued as a letter by Air Vice Marshal
3842-2, Tabs for History. N. H. Bottomley to Air Force Commanders. Copy
44 JCS Spec Mtg, 29 Apr 43. in Eaker Rpt.
210 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

“tactical and weather conditions” pre- record of accomplishment during the last
vented attacks against enemy fighter half of 1943. Not only were the attacks
plane targets should aircraft be used on the enemy aircraft industry disap-
against what nominally remained the pointingly small, but in general a far
“primary objective”-submarine con- greater effort was devoted to secondary
struction yards and operating bases. targets than to those whose destruction
The new offensive was slow in getting would vitally affect Germany’s ability to
started. Between 1 July and 15 Novem- continue the war. Only four vital indus-
ber the Eighth Air Force dropped 22,667 tries, he said, were attacked and they
tons of bombs, but of these only 1,903 were hit with only 20 percent of the
tons hit the enemy aircraft industry de- total bomb tonnage.52
spite its overriding priority as a target.50 General Eaker believed these strictures
In part, this relatively insignificant effort were unfair. Reporting in December
was due to bad weather during the fall 1943 on the progress of the Combined
and winter months. In part, it was due to Bomber Offensive, Eaker said that, while
the location of most German aircraft only 62 percent of the planned forces for
plants beyond U.S. fighter range, which the offensive had been allotted, 66 per-
made bombing prohibitively costly. TWO cent of the task was already accom-
raids on 17 August against the ball bear- plished.53 Presumably that meant that
ing plants at Schweinfurt and the Messer- 66 percent of the planned targets had
Schmitt fighter aircraft factory at Regens- been hit. But, since the objective of the
burg demonstrated the impracticability offensive was not merely to hit targets
at that time of deep penetrations by but to destroy them and so dislocate Ger-
small forces. Losses on the Schweinfurt man war industry and “fatally weaken”
raid were 36 planes out of 300, or 12 per- enemy morale, the statistics were neither
cent, and on the Regensburg raid 24 a reliable measure of accomplishment
planes out of 174, or almost 14 percent. nor a fair indication of the job remaining
These figures did not include damage. to be done. Although it was reasonably
Repetition of the Schweinfurt raid on 14 certain that the Germans had been hurt
October resulted in losses of more than a by Allied bombing during 1943, it was
quarter of the attacking aircraft.51 Al- not true in December that only one-third
though the importance of individual tar- more bombing on the 1943 scale re-
gets might warrant acceptance of such mained to complete the task outlined by
losses, they were prohibitive if applied the plan for the Combined Bomber
to any large portion of the routine bomb- Offensive.
ing offensive. A more accurate measure of achieve-
While recognizing the difficulties, Gen- ment was difficult to discover. From in-
eral Arnold severely criticized the whole telligence sources, the British Ministry of
Economic Warfare and the Air Ministry
50 Study by ACofAS, The Strategic Aerial Bombard- attempted to estimate the effect of bomb-
ment of Europe, 10 Dec 43. AAF file 2481-2.
51 Hq Eighth Air Force, Target Priorities of the 52 Foreword by Gen Arnold to Study cited n. 50.
Eighth Air Force, 15 May 45. AAF file 520.317A. 53 Eaker Rpt.
PRELIMINARY OPERATIONS 211

ing on the total German war potential. other hand, since relatively few direct
They were optimistic. They thought the attacks were made on fighter production
German war potential had been reduced plants, German fighter strength was in-
by about 10 percent and that a “total creasing despite losses.56 The heavy U.S.
decline of 20% in overall effort may well losses in the Schweinfurt raid in October
be fatal.” The job, in other words, was demonstrated that, despite attrition of
about half done. Still more optimis- German fighters in combat, Allied air
tically the report noted a “very much forces still did not have air superiority
greater decline in some individual in- over more than the fringes of enemy-
dustries (e.g., ball-bearings and rubber), occupied territory.57
which may be near the point where they General Arnold, commenting on the
could cause the collapse of the whole situation at the end of 1943, said: “It is
war machine.” 54 Even if it were assumed difficult to appraise the present struggle
that the intelligence reports on which for air supremacy as representing any-
that estimate was based were entirely thing short of a major turning point in
accurate and complete, the significance the war. What American and Royal Air
of the conclusion still remained as dubi- Force bombers can do to the whole Ger-
ous as a doctor’s pronouncement that his man war machine, once the German
patient was 50 percent dead. Enemy fighting force is rendered impotent,
capacity for, and speed in, convalescence needs no comment. The issue hangs now
was always an unknown factor. on which side first falters, weakens, and
Despite the general optimism in the loses its punishing power.“58 Whether
theater at the end of 1943 over the effects victory in the battle for air supremacy
to date of Allied bombing, it was recog- was regarded as a prelude to decisive stra-
nized that the future hung in the bal- tegic bombing or preparation for OVER-
ance of the still-unsettled battle for air LORD, it was accepted as of paramount
supremacy. By fall, the bombing attacks importance.
had forced the enemy to keep about half With the idea of intensifying the
of his whole force of fighter aircraft in bomber offensive, the Joint Chiefs of
the west. At the same time Eighth Air Staff in November proposed a revision of
Force claims of enemy fighters destroyed the plan to bring it up to date with the
in combat were estimated at 75 percent changed strategic situation. The relative
of current German production.55 On the importance of targets had changed since
Casablanca. Submarine construction, for
54Joint Rpt by Min of Econ Warfare and the Air
Min Int Branch, in Rpt by CofAS and CG U.S. example, was no longer entitled to pri-
Eighth AF on progress made by the RAF and U.S. ority, both because the danger from U-
Eighth AF in Combined Bomber Offensive, 7 Nov boats had been greatly reduced by meas-
43. AAF file 520.318. Ball bearing output was esti-
mated by the Eighth Air Force A-2 to be down to ures to combat them at sea and because
75 percent of preattack levels. See Supplement to in general the bombing of factories and
the Strategic Aerial Bombardment of Europe-Ac-
complishments and Potentialities, 1 Apr 44. AAF file 56 Eaker Rpt.
2481-1. 57 Target Priorities, 15 May 45, cited n. 51.
55ACofAS Study, cited n. 50. 58 Rpt, CG AAF to SW, 4 Jan 44.
212 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

pens had hitherto proved ineffective.59 In October 1943 the U.S. Chiefs of
New air bases had been acquired in Italy Staff had proposed the establishment of
on which strategic bombers could be a strategic air force in the Mediterranean.
based and a new Mediterranean strategic It was observed that the Germans were
air force (the Fifteenth) had been estab- meeting the air offensive from England
lished. It thus became necessary to co- by moving critical industries to the south-
ordinate attacks and target priorities be- east and at the same time establishing a
tween the United Kingdom and Mediter- strong fighter shield in the northwest.62
ranean-based air forces. Finally the OVER- Eighth Air Force losses mounted in
LORD D Day was approaching and time October to a point where General Mar-
to establish the prerequisite air suprem- shall expressed himself as “deeply con-
acy was short.60 cerned” over them.63 It was felt that
After some debate between the U.S. these losses could be reduced if the
and British Chiefs of Staff over the ad- enemy were forced to disperse his fighters
visability of concentrating on the Axis in order to guard against bombing sor-
oil industry, a new directive was issued ties from the Mediterranean. General
by the Combined Chiefs on 13 February Eisenhower was accordingly ordered to
1944. The new directive dropped out regroup the Twelfth Air Force under his
the sytem of primary, secondary, and in- command to form the Twelfth Tactical
termediate objectives. U.S. and British Air Force and the Fifteenth Strategic Air
bomber commands were ordered to ac- Force. The latter, consisting initially
complish the “depletion of the German of six heavy bomber groups and two
air force . . . by all means available.” groups of long-range fighters, would be
Although other objectives were listed, under the general direction of the Com-
the order clearly shifted emphasis away bined Chiefs of Staff and would be em-
from the earlier general aim of dislo- ployed primarily against Combined
cating enemy industry to the specific task Bomber Offensive targets.64 The plan was
of destroying the enemy air. force.61 to build up the Fifteenth Air Force by 31
March 1944 to twenty-one groups of
59During 1943, 41.8 percent of the total Eighth heavy bombers, seven groups of fighters,
Air Force bomb tonnage (21,362 tons) was dropped and one group of reconnaissance air-
on enemy submarine yards and bases. General Eaker craft.65
estimated that the net result of this large expendi-
ture was to prevent 22 out of 200 new submarines 62 JCS 524, Plan to Assure the Most Effective Ex-
from being built. Eaker Rpt. Cf. Memo for CofAS, ploitation of the Combined Bomber Offensive, 9
Evaluation of Results of Strategic Bombardment Oct 43.
Against the Western Axis, 27 Jan 44, Tab 56 of Com- 63 JCS 125th Mtg, 29 Oct 43. Bomber losses in
mittee of Operations Analysts, COA History, MS. October amounted to 9.2 percent of the aircraft en-
AAF files. COA’s conclusion was that though “heavy tering enemy territory. See Statistical Summary of
attacks have been delivered against submarine manu- Eighth Air Force Operations-European Theater, 17
facture and submarine operating bases, the results Aug 194228 May 1945. AAF file 520.308A.
of these attacks have not been at all proportional to 64The Mediterranean theater commander was to
the effort expended.” be allowed to use the units then assigned to the
60 JCS 563, Modifications of Directive for the Twelfth Air Force in support of theater operations
Bomber Offensive, 4 Nov 43. until the base objective north and east of Rome had
61 CCS 166/11, Revised Directive for Combined been secured.
Bomber Offensive, 13 Feb 44. 65 CCS 217/1, 19 Oct 43.
PRELIMINARY OPERATIONS 213

As soon as the Fifteenth Air Force was the whole bomber offensive against Ger-
formed, doubts occurred as to the effec- many.68 The British objections could be
tiveness of the machinery provided for considered only as advice, however, since
co-ordinating attacks from the Mediter- Portal freely granted that organization
ranean and the United Kingdom. Neither of U.S. forces was the exclusive preroga-
the liaison between Fifteenth and Eighth tive of the U.S. Chiefs of Staff. Since the
Air Force headquarters nor the “general U.S. Chiefs of Staff did not consider the
direction” of the Combined Chiefs was advice sound, they proceeded according
thought adequate for the most effective to their original proposals and ordered
exploitation of the whole offensive. The the establishment in England of head-
Joint Chiefs of Staff therefore proposed quarters of the U.S. Strategic Air Forces
a U.S. strategic air command with head- in Europe (USSAFE) 69 under command
quarters in England charged with control of Lt. Gen. Carl Spaatz. At the same time
of all U.S. strategic air operations in the that USSAFE was established, General
European-Mediterranean area.66 Ini- Eaker was transferred to command of the
tially directly under the Combined U.S. Mediterranean air forces and Lt.
Chiefs, the new headquarters would later Gen. James H. Doolittle took over the
be subordinated to the Supreme Allied Eighth Air Force.70
Commander for OVERLORD. The original When General Spaatz arrived in Eng-
conception was that the Strategic Air land in January the Eighth Air Force
Forces should command at first only U.S. was in the midst of its rapid build-up
forces but would, some time before D which had begun in the spring of 1943.
Day, take in RAF Bomber Command and There were then operating (as of 31 De-
constitute a strategic air command under cember 1943) twenty-five groups of
the Supreme Allied Commander parallel heavy bombers plus three squadrons
to t.he tactical organization of the (which in March became a training
AEAF.67 The U.S. proposal, so far as it unit) and eleven groups of fighters.” ‘71
concerned unification of U.S. air forces, Two of the latter groups were equipped
was given to the British Chiefs of Staff with P-38’s which, with additional wing
for comment at the Cairo conference of gasoline tanks, had a range great enough
November 1943. The British objected to accompany bombers deep into Ger-
chiefly on the grounds that the new set- many. The build-up of long-range fight-
up would destroy the close co-ordination ers increased rapidly in the early months
between the Eighth Air Force and RAF
through the British Chief of Air Staff. 68 It was JCS 602 (see n. 66) that was submitted
to the British as CCS 400. British reply is CCS 400/l,
They proposed instead that the authority 26 Nov 43. It may be supposed that British objections
of Air Marshal Portal should be ex- were also connected with their Ioreviouslv , exoressed
I
tended to give him general direction of opposition to subordinating strategic air forces to
SAC.
69 Later redesignated U.S. Strategic Air Forces
66 JCS 602, Integrated Command of U.S. Strategic (USSTAF)
Air Forces in the European-Mediterranean Area, 16 70 Craven and Cate, The Army Air Forces, II, 749-
Nov 43. 56.
67JCS 601, Strategic Air Force Command in Opera- 71 Statistical Summary of Eighth Air Force Opera-
tions Against Germany, 13 Nov 43. tions, cited n. 63.
214 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

of 1944. At the same time belly tanks tactical air force comprising four major
and wing tanks were added to all types commands: the medium bomber, fighter,
of fighters to permit them to escort air service, and troop carrier commands.
bombers at ever extending radii from Lt. Gen. Lewis H. Brereton, commander
their United Kingdom bases. By March of the Ninth Air Force in the Middle
the Eighth Air Force was strong enough East, was ordered to England with his
so that bombing missions were deliber- staff but minus his troops and aircraft.74
ately planned to provoke air battles with On 16 October 1943 the Ninth Air Force
the Luftwaffe. A series of large-scale was reconstituted in England, absorbing
raids on Berlin was inaugurated chiefly the Tactical Command of the Eighth Air
for this purpose, and though the bomber Force. The latter contributed initially
losses at first were fairly heavy (the maxi- four understrength medium bomber
mum was sixty-nine on one raid) enemy groups and several reconnaissance squad-
resistance was at last crushed, and on the rons.75 The new Ninth Air Force grew
final missions over the German capital rapidly during the first six months of
enemy fighters no longer flew to the at- 1944. By 1 June it controlled eighteen
tack.72 The peak of German fighter de- groups of fighters, eleven groups of me-
fense was reached and passed in February dium bombers, fourteen groups of trans-
1944, and even in that month the enemy ports, and two groups of reconnaissance
was not able to inflict losses on U.S. aircraft.76
bombers on a scale large enough to deter The Ninth Air Force was expressly
them from continued operations.73 By constituted to support the OVERLORD
June U.S. bombers had virtually free ground battle and on 15 December 1943,
range of the skies and could bomb stra- as noted, it came under the operational
tegic targets at will. control of Air Marshal Leigh-Mallory’s
While the Eighth Air Force with the
74 General Brereton, Annapolis graduate in the
RAF Bomber Command achieved mas- class of 1911, transferred to the Army after complet-
tery of the air over western Europe, the ing the Naval Academy course and, in World War I,
tactical air forces were being built up to saw Air Corps service. In 1941, after heading the
Third Air Force in Florida, he was sent to the Philip-
exploit this advantage in direct support pine Islands as commander of the American Air
Of OVERLORD. In April 1943 General Forces in the Far East. Early the following year he
Eaker drew up plans to expand the Air was appointed head of the Tenth Air Force in India.
In June 1942 he was transferred to Egypt and as-
Support Command of the Eighth Air sumed command of the Middle East Air Force, which
Force for tactical operations. These in November became the Ninth Air Force including
plans were studied and revised during all U.S. Army Air Force units in the Middle East.
General Brereton was given command of U.S. Army
the summer. The outcome in the fall Forces in the Middle East, in addition to his Air
was a decision to set up a separate U.S. Force post, in late January 1943. He held the two
commands until he and his staff were ordered to
72 Study No. 59 by U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey, England.
Military Analysis Division, The Defeat of the Ger- 75Col William B. Reed (Exec CofS, Ninth AF) ,
man Air Force. AAF file 137.306. The Ninth Air Force in the European Theater of
73 Plan signed by Gen Anderson and transmitted Operations, MS. AAF files.
to Eisenhower and Portal, Plan for the Completion 76 [Lt Col Robert H. George] Ninth Air Force,
of
-. the Combined Bomber Offensive, 5 Mar 44. AAF April to November 1944 (Army Air Forces Historical
files; cf. Diary of CinC, 25 Feb 44. Studies: No. 36), MS, p. 81. AAF files.
PRELIMINARY OPERATIONS 215

AEAF. It was provided, however, that threat to the security of the British Isles
long-range fighters under Ninth Air and OVERLORD preparations.79
Force command would support the Air attacks against the enemy CROSSBOW
Eighth Air Force bomber offensive until launching sites, beginning in December,
OVERLORD began. At the same time the continued until the last of the sites was
medium bombers were to reinforce the captured by the invading forces. Before
attack against the Luftwaffe by raiding D Day the tactical and strategic air forces
enemy coastal airfields and so driving flew more than 30,000 sorties against
enemy fighters inland.77 Such raids were CROSSBOW installations and estimated that
carried out with particular effectiveness they had succeeded in neutralizing
in the spring just before the invasion. eighty-six out of ninety-seven identified
But throughout the winter the medium sites. At least seventy-four other sites,
bombers were largely diverted to attack however, were not detected by Allied
the German V-bomb launching sites, the intelligence before the landings. The
neutralization of which became for a time effectiveness of this program is difficult to
the priority mission of the entire AEAF. estimate. Counterattack against the Ger-
Sites for launching pilotless aircraft man rocket certainly postponed its use
were observed to be under construction and reduced the scale of the eventual at-
in the summer of 1943, especially in the tack on London in June 1944.80
Pas-de-Calais area. By the middle of De- Long before the success of the AEAF
cember photographic reconnaissance had air offensive became apparent, however,
confirmed the existence of sixty-nine the seriousness of the CROSSBOW threat
sites.78 It was then estimated that the was largely discounted. The flurry of
enemy might be able to begin a full-scale alarm in December was within a month
flying-bomb attack against England in replaced by sober estimates which cal-
February. The prospective enemy opera- culated that, on the basis of the most
tion was called CROSSBOW. generous assessments of German produc-
Instructions were issued to the AEAF tion capacity, the flying bombs could not
to bomb all sites that were more than half be produced in quantity sufficient for a
completed. In addition, certain sites were major offensive against London or
assigned to the RAF Bomber Command against staging areas and ports to be used
for night attack. Finally, orders issued for mounting OVERLORD. For example,
on 15 December to the Eighth Air Force intelligence reckoned that the largest
assigned “overriding priority” to attacks conceivable enemy sustained attack on
on CROSSBOW sites whenever weather con- London might mean that the average
ditions over northern France were suit-
able. The decision to divert any portion 79Ibid.; cf. COS (43) 312th Mtg (0) , 22 Dec 43.
of the strategic air forces away from the At this meeting the Chiefs of Staff discussed the pos-
sibility of dispersing OVERLORD shipping to minimize
primary mission of defeating the Luft- the risks from expected CROSSBOW attacks.
waffe was a measure of the seriousness 80“Despatch by Air Chief Marshal Sir Trafford
with which the Allies viewed the enemy Leigh-Mallory” isubmitted to the Supreme Allied
Commander in November 1944)) Fourth Supple-
77 Reed, The Ninth Air Force, cited n. 75. nent to The London Gazette, No. 37838,31 December
78COS (43) 760 (0) ,CROSSOW 17 Dec 43. 1946, pp. 53-54.
V-BOMB OVER LONDON, JUNE 1944. Most of these pilotless aircraft were
launched from the Pas-de-Calais area.
PRELIMINARY OPERATIONS 217

Londoner would be exposed to a rocket concentrated bombing effort close to


bomb explosion within half a mile of D Day which, because of the risk of bad
him once a month.81 Similar calculations weather and the probable pressure of
applied to possible use of the rockets other commitments at that time, could
against an OVERLORD port area resulted not be guaranteed. As an alternative,
in a similar conclusion of probable in- AEAF developed a plan for a three-
effectiveness.82 At least by March 1944, it month bombing attack against thirty-
was clear to SHAEF that German air- three targets in France and Belgium and
craft, with or without pilots, were not thirty-nine in Germany to disrupt rail
going to threaten seriously the success of traffic into the assault area. The new
OVERLORD. plan drafted in the first half of January
drew on an analysis of the Italian rail-
The Bombing of French Railroads bombing experience made by Professor
S. Zuckerman, scientific adviser to AEAF.
With the threat of CROSSBOW waning Zuckerman took the view that the Italian
and the defeat of the Luftwaffe ap- rail transport system had been virtually
parently assured, the Allied command paralyzed through the destruction or iso-
could decide how air supremacy might lation of servicing and repair facilities
be exploited to insure the success of and destruction of locomotives, rolling
OVERLORD. Up to the end of 1943, plan- stock, and track. The paralysis was
ners had never proposed use of the stra- brought about, he considered, by a total
tegic air forces during the preliminary dislocation of the system achieved largely
phase on missions directly connected by attacks on marshaling yards where the
with the ground battle, although it was servicing facilities were concentrated. If
suggested that the heavy bombers might similar destruction was to be accom-
be sent in to attack German defenses plished in northwest Europe, planners
about two weeks before the landings. estimated that it would take at least three
Now the unexpectedly early success of months of concentrated effort and would
the air forces in winning the battle for involve at least part of the strategic air
control of the air opened the possibility forces.83
of committing them sooner in direct pre- Preliminary discussion by the staff of
paration for the assault. AEAF and representatives of SHAEF
In December an Allied intelligence brought forth no serious objection to the
agency had drawn up a short-term rail- plan although Maj. Gen. P. G. White-
bombing plan designed to block seven- foord, SHAEF G-2, expressed his belief
teen selected rail routes immediately be-
fore D Day. This recommendation was 83AAF Evaluation Board, Effectiveness of Air At-
rejected by-Leigh-Mallory on the grounds tack Against Rail Transportation in the Battle of
France, Jun 45. This is a study prepared after the
that to be effective it would require a war by United States air experts in collaboration
with the French railroad authorities (cited hereafter
81 COS (44) 25 (0) , Probable Scale and Effect of as AAF Evaluation Board Study). Copy in AAF file
Attack on London by Pilotless Aircraft, 10 Jan 44. 138.4-37. Cf. Ltr, R. D. Hughes to Maj Gen F. L.
82 COS (44) 107 (0) (Revised), Progress Report Anderson, Report of Conference at Norfolk House,
by the ACAS (Ops) ,2 Feb 44. 14 Jan 44. USSTAF files. See Bibliographical Note.
218 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

that the first seven or eight enemy divi- still very new on the scene and the idea
sions brought into the battle area would of a supreme commander solely respon-
come in by road and that therefore the sible for all final decisions affecting the
rail plan, even if successful, would prob- operation he commanded whether they
ably not affect the battle in the early were primarily air, army, or naval mat-
stages. Despite this objection, the meet- ters had still not been absorbed. SHAEF,
ing decided that the proposed attacks furthermore, had not yet been given con-
and the principle on which they were trol over the strategic air forces. The
based were sound. The number of tar- result was that, while Leigh-Mallory pro-
gets, however, was considered inadequate. ceeded on the assumption that his plan
AEAF therefore revised the plan to in- was in effect and actually assigned rail
clude ninety-three targets, of which four- targets to the Ninth Air Force in Feb-
teen in southern France would be at- ruary 1944 as alternatives to its primary
tacked by the Fifteenth Air Force from missions in support of the Combined
Mediterranean bases. The German tar- Bomber Offensive, SHAEF was only be-
gets were omitted. With these revisions ginning to study the plan. General
AEAF and SHAEF representatives ex- Whitefoord, the day after the meeting,
pressed themselves as satisfied that the reported to the operations staff of Su-
plan represented the “only practicable preme Headquarters that the AEAF plan
method of dealing with the enemy’s rail “may well be worth considering.” 85
communications and that it satisfied Quite different was the reaction at
army requirements.” Attacks were to General Spaatz’s headquarters, USSTAF
begin at once, but would be regarded as (United States Strategic Air Forces). The
a bonus until operations in support of suggestion that any large portion of the
OVERLORD received precedence over the strategic air forces should be diverted
bomber offensive.84 from the bomber offensive and brought
The decision was not as firm as it under control of AEAF for tactical pur-
seemed. The formula with which the poses was regarded as threatening the
meeting concluded was the formula of completion of the vital primary mission
the COSSAC planning days when plans of the strategic air to defeat the Luft-
for air and naval action were drawn up waffe. An intelligence officer, after exam-
by the independent air and naval com- ining the AEAF plan, concluded that it
mands, submitted through the COSSAC would fruitlessly dissipate the striking
machinery for Army approval and, after power, of the strategic air forces. He
such co-ordination, approved. Agree- pointed out, however, that because of
ment that the air plan “satisfied army re- the peculiar command set-up which put
quirements” reflected the habit of mind Leigh-Mallory directly under Eisenhower
of regarding decisions as made by co- the pian would not compete directly for
equal service commanders. SHAEF was favor with the Combined Bomber Offen-
sive. He suggested that if the strategic
84 Allied AF Bombing Committee, 6th Mtg, 24 Jan air forces did not like the plan they
44. USSTAF files. SHAEF representatives were Gen-
eral Whitefoord and General Napier (Movement 85 Memo for Bull, West, and McLean, 25 Jan 44.
and Transportation 05cer) . SHAEF SGS file 373.24 I.
PRELIMINARY OPERATIONS 219

would have to devise an alternative for suggested priority attacks on the German
submission to General Eisenhower. He oil industry, with emphasis on gasoline,
concluded with a recommendation that and secondary attacks on fighter aircraft,
“a quick and decisive effort be made to ball bearing, rubber, and bomber pro-
prevent the Strategic Air Forces being duction. Only as a last resort should
engulfed in the Zuckerman program.” 86 transportation centers in Germany be at-
General Doolittle, new commander of tacked when weather conditions forbade
the Eighth Air Force, when asked for an precise attacks on the primary targets.89
opinion, replied that in no case should This USSTAF proposal, which became
the attack on rail targets by strategic known as the “Oil Plan,” was submitted
bombers be begun until after the Ger- to General Eisenhower and Air Marshal
man Air Force had been decisively Portal on 5 March with request for the
beaten. His operations officer felt that Supreme Commander’s concurrence.
this objective could be accomplished in It will be recalled that, while the tac-
short order “if we are not prematurely tical air forces had been subordinated to
distracted.” He believed further that the the Supreme Commander at the end of
system of rail targets could be hit within 1943, the Combined Chiefs of Staff had
the period D minus 20 to D Day and that been unable to agree on when and how
this would be the most effective time to the strategic air forces should come under
undertake the attack.87 Eisenhower’s control. Although it was
General Spaatz directed that an alter- generally conceded that the Supreme
native plan be prepared “for operations Commander should command all forces
to follow after accomplishment of the (including the strategic air) which he
primary objective of the Combined needed in the actual battle, the British
Bomber Offensive . . . and for operations were opposed to turning over the heavy
of the strategic air forces in the direct bombers to him before that battle. On
support of OVERLORD.” 88 USSTAF ph- 12 February, General Eisenhower re-
ners saw no merits at all in the AEAF ceived his directive from the Combined
plan. “Axis European transportation,” Chiefs of Staff, conspicuously lacking any
they said, “cannot be recommended as a clause on the control of strategic air. At
target system for strategic attack”; it was about the same time the AEAF rail plan
too extensive and would require too long was published and General Spaatz’s op-
to destroy. They estimated that “no position to it developed. All these cir-
military effect would be felt for more cumstances served to give urgency to the
than . . . nine months” after the program settling of the command problem. Gen-
was completed. As an alternative they eral Eisenhower in the latter part of
February 1944 brought the problem to
86Ltr, Lt Col Lowell P. Weicker (Dep Dir Int the Prime Minister. Churchill was at
USSTAF) to Dir Int, Future Plan for Employing
Air Power in the Support of OVERLORD,10 Feb 44. first disposed to adhere to his original
USSTAF files. view that the Bomber Command should
87 Ltr, Gen Anderson (A-3, Eighth AF) to CG remain independent of the Supreme
USSTAF, Force Required Against Railway Targets,
26 Feb 44. AAF Eighth AF files. 89Plan for the Completion of the Combined
88 Dir, 12 Feb 44. Bomber Offensive, 5 Mar 44, cited n. 73.
220 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Commander while co-operating with him understood that the requirements of sup-
in support of OVERLOKD. This was sub- porting OVERLORD would not absorb the
stantially the view advanced by the total effort of the strategic air forces and
British Chiefs of Staff during- the earlier that the use of the balance would be
debate with tile U.S. Joint Clliefs and arranged by Portal and Eisenhower in
was as unacceptable to Eisenhower now accordance with the existing Combined
as it had been then to General Marshall. Chiefs of Staff directive for the Combined
‘Whatever its motive, it seemed to the Bomber Offensive. Supervision of this
Supreme Commander like holding back part of the air operation would be exer-
on what had been agreed on as the Allied cised jointly by Portal and Eisenhower.92
supreme effort in Europe. If the British This agreement, drawn up on 9 March,
insisted on anything less than an all-out was approved on the 17th by the British
commitment to OVERLOKD, Eisenhower Chiefs of Staff and forwarded to Wash-
told the Prime Minister, he lvould ington. The Joint Chiefs accepted all
“simply have to go home.” 90 Churchill the terms except the word “supervision.”
then did not prolong his opposition. He They preferred “command” and said so.
said he would agree to whatever plan Air But, after a “long and complicated” 93
Marshal Portal and Eisenhower together demurral from the British, they compro-
could work out. mised on “direction.” 94
Tile solution drafted by Portal and Eisenhower would assume control
Eisenhower was a proposal to give the when a plan of air support had been
Supreme Commander “responsibility for agreed upon. But agreement promised
supervision of air operations out of to be difficult. Opposition to the AEAF
England of all the forces engaged in the transportation bombing plan gathered
program” in support of OVERLORD, the during March. Various intelligence ex-
responsibility to pass when Portal, “as perts examined the problem and came
executive of the Combined Chiefs of up with unanimous disapproval chiefly
Staff for the execution of POINTBLANK on the grounds that German military
[the Combined Bomber Offensive] ,” and
the Supreme Commander jointly ap-
proved the plan for air support. The both the Army and the Royal Flying Corps. In 1938
Supreme Commander recognized that his he began a tour as Director-General of Research and
Development, Air Ministry. He was Deputy Com-
control of air forces assigned to OVERLORD mander-in-chief of the RAF in the Middle East dur-
and the Combined Bomber Offensive ing the Italian phase of African operations and in
would be subject to intervention by the June 1941 was made Commander-in-Chief, directing
air attacks against Rommel’s troops and enemy ship-
Combined Chiefs of Staff. He also an- ping in the Mediterranean. After a short period with
nounced his intention of designating Air the Air Council as Vice-Chief of Air Staff, he re-
Marshal Tedder, Deputy Supreme Com- turned to the Mediterranean early in 1943 as Com-
mander-in-chief, Mediterranean Air Command.
mander, to supervise “all operations un- 92 Ltr, Portal to Eisenhower, 9 Mar 44. SHAEF
der the control of OVERLORD." 91 It was SGS file 373/l; cf. CCS 520, Control of Strategic
Bombing for “Overlord,” 17 Mar 44.
90Entry 3 Mar 44, Diary of CinC; cf. ibid., Memo 93 Marshall’s words at JCS 154th Mtg, 21 Mar 44.
under date 22 Mar 44. 94 CCS 520 series. Final agreement is CCS 520/2,
91Tedder had served during World War I with 26 Mar 44.
PRELIMINARY OPERATIONS 221

traffic required such a small portion of on a single target system. In favor of


the French rail system that 80 or 90 per- the transportation plan he pointed out
cent of that system would have to be de- the already strained condition of the
stroyed before troop and supply move- French railroads. In view of that, he felt
ments into the assault area could be that rail bombing could delay enemy pre-
affected. They further questioned parations and, more important, it could
whether prolonged attack could even suf- so canalize rail traffic that it could be
ficiently weaken the system to justify the more easily disrupted completely after
expenditure of bombs. Air Marshal D Day.97
Portal was persuaded by their findings As to the first priority of defeating the
that the plan was unsuitable. General Luftwaffe there was no argument. At-
Brooke agreed and, questioning Zucker- tacks on the German Air Force were in-
man’s interpretation of the Italian ex- terpreted further to include attacks on
perience, suggested that rail bombing in ball bearing factories. The debate then
Italy under much more favorable condi- centered on what rail bombing might
tions than would prevail in France had accomplish. Tedder did not claim that
actually been of doubtful value.95 the proposed rail attacks would prevent
Despite all this opposition, the AEAF all German rail traffic, but he did feel
plan won a powerful advocate in Air that, even in the light of intelligence
Marshal Tedder. His advocacy led to estimates, the bombing would have use-
fresh examinations. General Spaatz ob- ful military effect. Portal agreed that
served to General Arnold that since these the efficiency of the enemy rail system
examinations had proved adverse to the could be impaired by bombing but
plan it was hoped by all concerned that thought that the damage could be ab-
“the AEAF plan will be repudiated by sorbed by curtailment of civilian traffic
Tedder of his own accord, thus avoiding and that the German Army would not be
hard feelings.” 96 But Tedder did not affected. War Office and Economic Min-
repudiate the plan, mainly because he istry representatives in general agreed.
did not feel that the alternative oil plan Possibly 30 percent of the present effi-
would have effect on OVERLORD in time. ciency of the enemy railroads could be
At a meeting at the Air Ministry on 25 pared off, they thought, but despite this
March presided over by General Eisen- possibility German military traffic would
hower and attended by all the top airmen still get through. A British economic
concerned in the air support question, adviser added his belief that, although
Tedder outlined his views. The German some food would evidently have to be
Air Force, he felt, should remain the carried for the civilian population, the
priority target, but the residual effort of Germans would be happy to get along
all Allied air forces should be devoted to without French industry.
delaying and disorganizing enemy ground
movements. It was important, he be- 97Memo, 24 Mar 44, SHAEF SGS file 373/l. Fol-
lieved, to concentrate all the air forces lowing account of the meeting is from minutes in
AAF files. Mtg, To Discuss the Bombing Policy in
95COS (44) 93rd Mtg, 21 Mar 44. the Period Before OVERLORD,25 May 44, CAS/misc/Gl
96Cbl, Spaatz to Arnold, 16 Mar 44. USSTAF files. (Final).
222 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

General Eisenhower then cut sharply OVERLORD was passed, but it did not con-
into the core of the question. As he saw stitute an alternative to the rail plan.
it, the first five or six weeks of OVERLORD The decision of the meeting was that no
would be the most critical period, during alternative existed and the rail plan was
which it was essential to take every pos- approved subject only to General Spaatz’s
sible step to insure that Allied troops got examination of whether the Eighth Air
ashore and stayed ashore. “The greatest Force could carry out its portion of it.
contribution that he could imagine the The plan was considered not to affect
air forces making to this aim was that Bomber Command, whose night area
they should hinder enemy movement.” bombing could be expected to have only
He discounted the arguments that the a fortuitous effect on the German trans-
plan would have less than the effect portation system.
claimed for it by AEAF. In default of an At the close of the meeting Portal
alternative it was necessary only that the warned of British Government opposi-
rail bombing have some effect, however tion and asked that the War Cabinet be
small, to justify adopting it. given an opportunity to consider the im-
That the plan would have “some” plications of killing French civilians in
effect was generally admitted and the dis- the proposed attacks.
cussion turned to whether there was any Ever since the plan had been advanced,
acceptable alternative. General Spaatz the War Cabinet had viewed as political
summarized his reasons for preferring dynamite the idea of bombing French
the oil plan already outlined by his staff. and Belgian territory, particularly in at-
Strategic attacks on the enemy rail sys- tacks on marshaling yards which were
tem, he believed, would not affect the generally located close to centers of popu-
course of the initial battle, nor would the lation. Earlier in March the British
attacks be likely to force the German Air Chiefs of Staff had refused Leigh-Mallory
Force to fight. The oil plan, on the other blanket clearance of his rail targets with-
hand, would evoke enemy reaction and out Cabinet approval. Even after Gen-
so lead to attrition of the German eral Eisenhower had declared the plan
fighter air force. It would, furthermore, essential to the military success of OVER-
directly weaken enemy resistance and so LORD, Cabinet approval was still with-
hasten the success of OVERLORD. Spaatz’s held. Estimates of civilian casualties
view, in short, was that nothing the stra- likely to be caused ran as high as 160,000,
tegic air forces could do in the prelim- of which it was thought a quarter might
inary phase would materially affect the be killed.98 The Joint Intelligence Com-
battle of the beaches, and that therefore mittee was invited to prepare an appre-
they should devote their efforts to a plan ciation of French reaction.99 Pending its
which would achieve the maximum long- report, certain targets in relatively un-
range reduction of German armed populated areas were to be cleared in-
strength. 98COS (44) 273 (0), Attacks on Rail Targets in
General Eisenhower did not agree. Enemy Occupied Territory, 19 Mar 44.
99 Issued as JIC (44) 147 (0) (Final), Bombing
The oil plan, he felt, should be consid- Targets in France and the Low Countries in Rela-
ered as soon as the critical phase of tion to Overlord, 15 May 44.
PRELIMINARY OPERATIONS 223

dividually. For about two weeks the that the matter should be dropped.” 105
Cabinet earnestly debated the ques- As a practical matter it, of course, had
tion.100 Their opposition was at last over- been dropped and the transportation
come largely by the firm stand which the bombing program at that point was
British Chiefs of Staff took that the pro- nearing completion.
gram was a military necessity.101 On 18 On 14 April General Eisenhower took
April the Cabinet had cleared all rail over direction of the strategic air forces
targets except two in the Paris area.102 in support of OVERLORD and three days
The Prime Minister however, continued later issued his directive for the trans-
to urge General Eisenhower to consider portation bombing. The over-all mission
alternative targets the bombing of which of destruction of the German military
would not kill more than a hundred and economic system remained un-
Frenchmen per target. Only if study changed. The particular mission of the
proved all other schemes militarily in- strategic air forces was first to deplete the
ferior could he concur that military con- German Air Force and destroy the facil-
siderations must override the political.103 ities serving it, and second, “to destroy
At the end of April General Eisenhower and disrupt the enemy’s rail communica-
directed the suspension of attacks on tions, particularly those affecting the
twenty-seven targets in heavily populated enemy’s movements towards the 'OVER-
districts, including seventeen of the LORD' lodgment area.” 106 Targets in
twenty-four targets originally assigned to eastern France and part of Belgium were
Bomber Command.104 With modifica- allocated to the Eighth Air Force;
tions such as this and a system of warning Bomber Command was to hit western
the civilian population, casualties were France and the area around Paris while
kept down below the most optimistic es- the AEAF concentrated its efforts on
timates. On 16 May the Prime Minister northern France and Belgium. Although
had become reconciled to the program German targets were not included in the
and, vetoing a proposal to call in French plan as approved in April, the Eighth
railway experts to assess the psychblogical Air Force before D Day dropped about
effects of the bombing, he said, “I suggest 5,000 tons on railroad centers in the
Reich and along the Franco-German
100COS (44) 190th Mtg (0), 4 Apr 44. For the border.107 Eisenhower also personally
discussion on bombing of French railroads see, in
addition, COS (44) 258 (0), 10 Mar 44; COS (44) gave Spaatz permission to try out a series
273 (0), 19 Mar; and COS (44) 93rd and 95th Mtgs, of heavy attacks on the German oil in-
21 and 23 Mar respectively. Entries in Diary of CinC, dustry; these were initiated in March and
under dates of 5, 13, and 20 Apr 44, summarize the
salient points accurately. continued along with the rail bombing.
101 Cbl, Smith to Marshall, 17 May 44: Ismay, Min- Attacks against oil targets began to as-
ute to Prime hlinister, 29 Mar 44. SHAEF SGS file sume the proportions of an all-out offen-
373.24 I.
102 Transportation Targets Committee (SHAEF)
2d Mtg, 18 Apr 44. SHAEF SGS file 334, bundle N. 105 Minute, annexed to COS (44) 158th Mtg (0) ,
103Ltr to Eisenhower, 29 Apr 44. SHAEF SGS file 16 May 44.
373.24 I. 106 Dir to IJSSTAF and Bomber Command, 17 Apr
104 Dir to USSTAF. Bomber Command, and AEAF, 44. SHAEF SGS file 373/l.
29 Apr 44. SHAEF SGS file 373.24 I. 107AAF Evaluation Board Study.
224 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

sive about the middle of May, and on 8 Seldom have intelligence estimates
June General Spaatz announced the de- been so wrong. They were wrong pri-
struction of German oil resources as the marily because the method of statistical
primary strategic aim of the U.S. Stra- evaluation took no account of either
tegic Air Forces.108 cumulative or critical damage. A ma-
Bombing of enemy railroads in France chine only 10 percent worn out may still
and Belgium was carried out by all three be incapable of functioning. Similarly,
air forces, and before D Day nearly all destruction of a single cotter pin, an in-
assigned targets had been hit. AEAF re- finitesimal portion of a machine by
ported good results. But outside the weight, nevertheless may precipitate the
AEAF the program was carried on with shattering of the whole mechanism. By
general skepticism. A representative of D Day the Allied air forces, ably assisted
21 Army Group referred to it as “pin- by saboteurs of the French Resistance,
pricking on rail communications.” 109 had knocked cotter pins out of the rail-
The attacks were continued because they roads all over France, and the transporta-
were believed to constitute the best that tion system was on the point of total col-
could be devised and because it was lapse.
hoped they would have some effect. The
hope, however, according to intelligence The Germans had long anticipated that
reports, was sheer delusion. A week be- the Allies would preface their invasion
fore D Day the SHAEF G-2 reported that of the Continent with a widespread at-
the whole rail bombing operation had tack on the Continental rail system.
accomplished nothing of importance. It Rundstedt realized further that without
had failed “so [to] reduce the railway an air force of his own he would be vir-
operating facilities as to impair the tually helpless before such an attack. In-
enemy’s ability to move up reinforce- terference with troop movement and sup-
ments and maintain his forces in the ply was certain to be serious. Lacking
West.” Although the attacks had prob- sufficient motor transport even for its
ably imposed some slight delays and had combat troops, Rundstedt’s army was de-
laid some groundwork for effective tac- pendent almost entirely on the railroads
tical thrusts after the assault, it was still for supply.
estimated that the enemy had three times Certain measures might have been
the rail capacity needed for military taken, both to lessen that dependence
traffic, four times the required number (by decentralization of the supply system,
of cars, eight times the required loco- for instance) and to protect the railroads.
motives, and ten times the required serv- Actually, little was done. The Com-
icing facilities.110 mander in Chief West had to face the
twin facts that France had been used for
108Msg, Spaatz to Doolittle, U-63552, 8 Jun 44, in
Eighth Air Force, Dir Vol 3. AAF files. three years as a grazing ground for the
109AEAF Mtg to discuss bombing targets, 6 May rest of the German military establish-
44. AAF file 505.25-5. ment and that by the time Hitler recog-
110SHAEF G-2, Evaluation of Rail Centre Attacks,
20 May 44. AAF file 505.26-38. These conclusions nized the imperative need for strong de-
were repeated in the report of 31 May. fensive measures in the west there were
PRELIMINARY OPERATIONS 225

no longer any resources with which to Seventh Army had worked out and put
carry them out. into effect this system for Normandy and
The French railroads had already been Brittany by the end of February.112 Up to
weakened before the war by a series of that time no difficulties more serious
financial crises which resulted in econo- than local delays were experienced
mizing on repair facilities and renewal through spasmodic Allied air attacks and
and maintenance expenditures. The cam- sabotage. But in March the co-ordinated
paign of 1940 destroyed 500 way struc- attacks began and the strained transpor-
tures and 1,200 railroad buildings. But tation system showed immediate signs of
this loss was nothing compared to that breakdown. Despite the regulation of
caused by the depredations of the Ger- nonessential traffic, 1,600 trains by the
mans during the occupation. Out of the end of April were backlogged in France,
18,000 locomotives in France, 4,000 were including 600 carrying army supplies. In
removed to Germany, including a large addition, valuable army supplies had
percentage of the heavier types. More been destroyed in attacks on marshaling
than a third of the rolling stock, which yards; other supplies ready for shipment
before the war amounted to 31,000 pas- were held up in warehouses awaiting
senger cars and 480,000 freight cars, was freight cars.113 Seventh Army, during the
also “loaned” to Germany. Personnel of month, got a taste of things to come. In
the SNCF was reduced 20 percent and its sector, two major attacks on le Mans re-
the quality diluted by calling back re- sulted in considerable losses of locomo-
tired employees and increasing the pro- tives and cars and put the yards out of op-
portion of unskilled workers.111 eration for several weeks. Since the begin-
Before Allied bombs began to fall, the ning of 1944 railroads in the army area
SNCF was severely strained and lacked had suffered twenty-five air attacks and
the usual reserve of excess capacity. Under fifty-six reported cases of sabotage. The
constant pressure to increase loading, cumulative effect was to increase the back-
hampered by shortages perhaps most log of trains feeding Normandy and Brit-
crucial in personnel and facilities for re- tany from 30 at the beginning of the
pair, burdened with a cumbersome month to 228 at the end.114
mixed German-French management, and The five to six hundred locomotives de-
plagued with active sabotage and passive stroyed in the OB WEST sector during
resistance on the part of a large number March was nearly double the figure for
of workers and the French management, February. But the acceleration of the
the French railroads were peculiarly sen- tempo of attacks had only begun. OKW
sitive to attack. noted that in March the majority of Allied
In anticipation of transportation diffi-
culties to come, OB WEST on 3 January 112 Sevevth Army, KTB; Taetigkeitsbericht des
Bevollmaechtigten Transport Ofiiziers beim A.0.K.7
ordered the establishment of a strict pri- (referred to hereafter as Seumth Army, Trans. O.),
ority system restricting rail shipments to KTB II-30.V1.44.
the most important military supplies. 113 OB WEST, Oberquartiermeister West (referred
to hereafter as OB WEST, O.Qu.), KTB 1.1.-17.
VIII.44.
111AAF Evaluation Board Study. I14 Seventh Army, Trans. O., KTB l.I.-30.V1.44.
BOMBARDMENT OF MARSHALING YARDS at Busigny in northern France.
PRELIMINARY OPERATIONS 227

air attacks in France were still hitting deteriorated. Military leaves were sus-
Luftwaffe installations. In April the con- pended throughout the west on 25 April
centration shifted dramatically to rail- to relieve the pressure on the railroads.117
roads: there were 249 reported attacks as Additional restriction of nonmilitary traf-
against 93 in March. Sabotage cases at the fic, which achieved a sharp curtailment of
same time increased from 460 to 500.115 rail operations in France, brought a tem-
The first serious military effect was the porary improvement. Seventh Army
curtailment of supplies for the construc- noted that its backlog of trains had been
tion of the Atlantic Wall. In April the reduced from 228 at the end of March to
naval commander in Normandy was al- 120 at the end of April.118 Reduction in
ready complaining about the lack of steel total traffic further cut the losses of equip-
and concrete due to the destruction of ment. But the statistical improvement in-
rail centers. Construction delays, he dicated no solution to the problem.
added, would be inevitable.116 Allied attacks were stepped up in May.
Countermeasures were discussed in a Seventh Army reported “important de-
conference on 15 April between Field struction” during the first week and pre-
Marshal Keitel, Chief of OKW, and the dicted that in case of a landing the enemy
Reich Minister for Rail and Road Com- would be able to disrupt rail traffic com-
munications (Reichsverkehrsminister) pletely, as he had done in Italy. The same
but no really effective measures were conclusion had already led OB WEST to
possible. Fighter protection could not order the formation of truck companies
be increased, since Allied bombing of under centralized control that would pool
vital targets in Germany continued un- all available motor transport for supply in
abated while Luftwaffe fighter strength accordance with the critical tactical needs.
The order was not easy to implement in
115 OKW/WFSt, KTB Ausarbeitung, Der Westen view of critical shortages of motor trans-
l.IV.-16.X11.44, cited hereafter as Der Westen. This
draft War Diary (KTB), like that cited in n. 27, port. On 7 May Seventh Army had worked
was written by Major Percy Schramm, OKW his- out the details of a scheme to motorize
torian, from records and daily notes made at OKW portions of certain infantry divisions in
headquarters. Until the end of 1943 the Diary was
kept chronologically and supplemented by informa- reserve as well as Kampfgruppen of the
tion from participants in the operations. After 1943 coastal defense divisions so that they
the diary was written up at intervals of three months could be employed in mobile fighting.
or more in the form of separate narratives on the
various fronts and the special problems faced by The remainder of all units were to give
OKW. Besides official’ documents, Schramm made up all transportation for the formation of
use of a Merkbuch in which he recorded informal motor companies under corps control-
notes on the situation meetings he attended and
special interviews he held with the Deputy Chief of each company with a capacity of 120 tons.
WFSt, General Warlimont. In view of the destruc- Units in the forward positions would
tion of OKW records ordered in 1945 by General bring their weaponing up to 75 percent
Scherff, the copies of Schramm’s Ausarbeitungen for
1944 represent unique source material for OKW
of authorized allotments and secure three
history. days’ supply of all material needed to
116 Marine Gruppenkommando West, Kriegstage- make them self-sufficient in combat. It
buch (referred to hereafter as Navy Group West,
KTB) ,16.ZV-30.ZV.44. Nat-y Dept files, Tambach Col- 117Der Westen.
lection. 118Seventh Army, Trans.O., KTB l.I.-30.VI.44.
228 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

was reckoned that it would take three of Organization Todt were taken off con-
days for resupply through the centralized struction work on the Atlantic Wall to
transport system.119 try to keep the railroads running. On 8
One German answer to Allied bomb- May OKW approved the withdrawal of an
ings, in short, was an attempt to reduce additional 10,000 men.121 Two weeks later
dependence on the railroads. The other Reich Minister Albert Speer noted after
was an attempt to keep the railroads in a conference with Hitler that the latter
repair. Repair of bomb damage on rail approved his view “that in the west, even
lines and marshaling yards was generally though building operations on the At-
not a difficult or time-consuming process. lantic Wall should be possible, the main
Even after very heavy raids on marshal- duties of the O.T. [Organization Todt]
ing yards, traffic could almost always be should lie in the elimination of difficulties
resumed in a day or two. Evidently, how- in transport, including those in the in-
ever, widespread and constant air attacks terior of France.” 122
could involve a very heavy total expendi- But repairs could not keep pace. To the
ture of man-hours for repair. The cumu- systematic attacks on marshaling yards,
lative strain spread across theater bound- the Allied tactical air forces in May added
aries. By the middle of January, for ex- new damaging attacks on bridges over the
ample, all the rail lines in Italy were Seine, Oise, and Meuse Rivers. These at-
broken and the supply situation became tacks, begun suddenly on 7 May, had not
so serious that two more railway engineer been included in the original transporta-
battalions were requisitioned, one from tion bombing plan because it was believed
Russia and one from the west. At the end on the basis of experience in Italy that the
of March Rundstedt was called on to send weight of bombs required to knock out a
another battalion to Italy. Although the bridge was out of all proportion to the
French railroad system was then already military value of success. The first at-
beginning to suffer from Allied attacks tacks were undertaken experimentally at
the Italian situation was thought to be the urging of 21 Army Group, which had
still worse.120 Rundstedt at the end of little faith in the efficacy of general attacks
March was thus left with about three rail- on rail centers.123 Success was spectacular.
way engineer battalions to supervise re- Bridges were toppled along the whole
pair work on French railroads for mili- length of the Seine from Rouen to
tary use. Laborers were drawn at first Mantes-Gassicourt before D Day at a cost
from the SNCF and from the civilian of only 220 tons of bombs to a bridge. On
population as a whole. But when the co- 26 May, all routes over the Seine north of
ordinated bombings began to take effect Paris were closed to rail traffic and they
in the spring extraordinary measures be- remained closed for the next thirty days
came necessary. Immediately 18,000 men despite German efforts to repair one or
119 Order, Sevenlh Army to subordinate corps and
divisions, Beweglichmachung und Bildung zusaetr- 121 Der Westen.
lichen Transportraumes, 7 May 44. Seventh Army, 122Notes by Reich Minister Albert Speer on Con-
KTB Anlagen II.-3O.VI.44. ference with Hitler on 22, 23 May 44, MS (tram).
120 OKW/WFSt, KTB Ausarbeitung, Die Entwick- AAF files.
lung im Westen vom 1.I.-31.III.44. 123AEAF Mtg, 6 May 44. AAF file 505.25-5.
RESULTS OF AIR ATTACKS on railroad bridges and rolling stock. Bridge ouer
the Seine at Port du Gruuiers (above), and wreckage of military train after aerial
strufing attack (below).
230 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

two of the less completely damaged struc- show 113 locomotives damaged during
tures. German repair operations were the day throughout France.126 General-
kept under observation and whenever a oberst Friedrich Dollmann, commander
bridge seemed on the point of becoming of Seventh Army, told Rommel the new
usable again it was reattacked.124 The SUC- attacks would bring a grave deterioration
cess of the first bridge bombings led to of the already strained transportation sys-
the development of a plan to close off the tem and asked increasing use of motor
lodgment area. The first line of inter- transport. 127 Before D Day 2,700 sorties
diction was set at the line of the Seine and were flown against line targets.
Loire Rivers and a gap section between Transportation bombing before D Day
the rivers. The second line included had a far more profound effect on the
bridges over a number of rivers on a gen- ability of the German Army in the west
eral line from Etaples to Fismes to Cla- to resist invasion than the Allies realized.
mecy and thence along the upper Loire to Statistics were misleading. The number
Orleans. Bridges on the Loire were not to of locomotives destroyed by air attack
be hit until after D Day to avoid defining was actually less than the number await-
the assault area. (Map IV) ing repair from normal deterioration; the
On 21 May, known to the air forces physical destruction done to rail and serv-
as “Chattanooga Day,” fighter-bombers icing facilities was small; rail cuts were
opened attack on line targets, bombing repaired quickly on the important mili-
open track and small stations and strafing tary lines. But despite all these facts,
trains and rail facilities. Seventh Army on which mathematically added up to neg-
that day recorded 50 locomotives de- ligible destruction, rail traffic in France
stroyed in its sector.125 French records actually declined 60 percent between 1
March and 6 June. More significantly, in
124For example, two bridges south of Oisel were
the area most heavily bombed, the Region
attacked and damaged on 10 May. The Germans de- Nerd, three-quarters of the normal traffic
cided to repair one for emergency use. On 6 June the was knocked off the rails. In the Region
railway engineers announced that it was operating.
On that day it was bombed but suffered only light
Ouest (generally in the invasion zone),
damage. The next day Allied planes returned to which was bombed relatively lightly in
finish the job. The attack caused heavy damage, but order to preserve security, traffic declined
the German engineers nevertheless set to work to
repair the bridge and estimated that they could
by only 30 percent, but immediately after
have it in shape again by 2 July. Allied air forces the assault it dropped even lower than in
kept watch and on 29 June when the repairs were the Region Nerd. These results were to
almost finished flew again to the attack. That attack
prove critical in the battle for Nor-
at last finished the agony as three superstructures
fell into the river and the Germans abandoned all mandy.128
thoughts of repair. See Rpts of the 6th Ry Eng Regt,
May-Jun 1944, in OKH Chef des Transportwesens, 126AAF Evaluation Board Study.
General der Eisenbahntruppen, Lagemeldungen 127Seventh Army, KTB 1 .I.-30.VI.44, 23 May 44.
(Ausschnitte) Frankreich, Band la, 1945-44. 128 AAF Evaluation Board Study. Normal traffic
125Seventh Army, Trans.O., KTB II.-30.VI.44. calculated as that of 1943.
CHAPTER VII

German Defense Measures, 1944


OKW Policy in 1944 possible burden on the defense, demand-
ing of it a mobility it did not have and a
German strategy for 1944 rested on the sure knowledge of enemy intentions it
realization that decisive offensives could had no means of acquiring. It was one
no longer be mounted in the east and that thing to decide-as Hitler did with the
the growing strength of the Western issuance of his Directive No. 51-to pre-
Allies made almost certain a major inva- pare the west for the critical battle to
sion attempt before the end of the year. come; it was another to find the means to
Tire prospective invasion of western Eu- carry out those preparations.
rope presented both the gravest danger Regardless of how critical the defense
to the Reich and the most hopeful oppor- of the west was declared, there could be
tunity for turning defeat into victory. If no question of withdrawing forces from
the Allies were not stopped at the land- the hard-pressed eastern armies to rein-
ings, their attack would carry at once into force it. The best that could be hoped for
the heart of Germany; if they were was to hold on to forces already in the
stopped and their beachheads annihi- various occupied territories outside of
lated, it was unlikely that a new attempt Russia and devote to the west the bulk
could be made for a long time to come, of the new resources in men and equip-
and as many as fifty German divisions ment that became available in the months
might thereby be freed for the struggle remaining before the Allies attacked.
against the Soviet Union.1 After Hitler’s November order, OKW
Recognizing the superiority of the Al- drew up a plan providing in detail for the
lied military potential, the Germans knew shift of troops to meet a major Allied in-
that their one chance for defeating the vasion of any one of the western theaters
invasion was to defeat it quickly. It was of operations. If the invasion hit France-
therefore vital that the maximum Ger- the most likely possibility-OKW planned
man force be on the spot to fight the de- to move three infantry divisions from
cisive battle as soon as the Allies attacked. Norway and Denmark, one infantry divi-
To stake everything on a battle whose sion, a Werfer regiment and a corps head-
place and timing would be entirely of the quarters from Italy, and four mobile in-
enemy’s choosing was to put an all but im- fantry or Jaeger divisions and some minor
1 OKW/WFSt, KTB Ausarbeitung, Die OKW
units from the Balkans2 Although these
Kriegsschauplaetze im Rahmen der Gesamtkriegs-
fuehrung ].I.-31.III.44. Cited hereafter as Die OKW 2 Die OKW Kriegsschauplaetze. Werfer regiments
Kriegsschauplaetze. See above, Ch. VI, n. 115. Cf. were equipped with either heavy mortars or rocket
Fuehrer Directive No. 51, 3 Nov 43. Translation in projectors. Jaeger divisions were light infantry divi-
App. D, below. sions.
232 CROSS-CHAIVNEL ATI‘XCK

troop shifts would not amount to evacua- craft for Channel use was ten times as
tion of any occupied area, they would great as the Doenitz staff had previously
mean a considerable concentration of estimated.5 This discovery seemed to con-
force. firm the guess that the Allies were plan-
Such concentration was based on the ning an expedition outside the Channel.
assumption that the Allies would make All these fears seemed to be further
one main attack. In January OKW began confirmed by the Allied landings at
to wonder whether the assumption was Anzio on 22 January. The Anzio beach-
justified. All signs still pointed to an at- head, in the German view, had only a slim
tack across the Channel, probably at its tactical connection with the main Italian
narrowest point, but there were also in- front. General Jodl, Chief of the Armed
dications that such an attack might be Forces Operations Staff, considering it to
preceded or accompanied by other major be an independent, self-sustaining opera-
thrusts. OKW noticed the “astonishing” tion, argued that it might well be the first
emphasis in Allied quarters on prepara- of a series of attacks on the periphery of
tions for a “second front” and reasoned the Continent with the purpose of forcing
that these might be designed to conceal dispersion of German reserves in prepara-
another “main blow” that would not tion for a thrust across the Channel.6 This
strike across the Channel. The “other interpretation drew support from the fact
place” selected might be Portugal or the (which the Germans found “surprising”)
Balkans, but the choice of the latter had that the Allies instead of at once puslling
particular plausibility.3 It seemed un- inland from the Anzio beaches paused for
likely that the large Allied forces in the about a week to consolidate a beachhead,
Mediterranean would be committed in as though the object were not to gain tac-
the slow and costly attempt to push all tical objectives but to attract German
the way up the Italian peninsula.4 The forces. Reasoning thus, Jodl told Hitler
Balkan area offered greater strategic that they now had to reckon with a peri-
prizes and was conveniently at hand. pheral Allied strategy which would prob
Whatever area was threatened OKW ably entail attacks on Portugal, on the
viewed the twin facts of accumulated Al- west and south coasts of France, or in the
lied power in the Mediterranean and Aegean, before the assault on the Kancd
comparative stalemate in Italy as a kind of kueste. With regard to France, it was
strategic unbalance which might be thought that the most likely Allied peri-
solved by another sudden major assault. pheral operations would be simultaneous
German jitteriness on this score was not landings on the Mediterranean and Bis-
calmed by a report at about this time cay coasts to pinch off the Iberian Penin-
from agents in England that the ratio of sula. This threat was taken seriously
Allied seagoing landing ships to landing enough that during February t\\:o new
infantry divisions then being formed were
3Summary, dtd 4 Jan 44, of impressions of senior attached to Nineteenth Army for defense
naval member of the Armed Forces Operations Staff
in Seekriegsleitung/1.abt., KTB I.-31.1./4, 15 Jan 5 Seekriegsleitung/1.abt., KKTB I.-31.1.44, 16 Jan
44; Die OKW K1-iegssrhauplaetze. 44.
4 OKW/WFSt, KTB 1.IX.-31.XII.43, 28 Dec 43. 6 Die OKW Kriegsschauplaetze.
GERMAN DEFENSE MEASURES, 1944 233

of the south coast and the 9th SS Panzer werfer demonstration battalion.8 These
Division was released from OB WEST miscellaneous, partly green units were
and moved south into the Avignon area hardly a substitute for the eight divisions
as army reserve. One new division went (reinforced) which would have gone to
to First Army for defense of the Biscay OB WEST under the old plan. Although
coast and Spanish border.7 OKW did not formally abandon the in-
The most important effect of the new tention of drawing additional reinforce-
appreciation, however, was to unsettle ments from occupied areas not under at-
German plans for the defense. If the Allies tack, as a practical matter the possibility
were going to pursue a policy of many of such reinforcement had by March be-
simultaneous or successive assaults, the come negligible. With the high command
Germans could not afford to weaken sec- admitting the possibility of not one but
tors not immediately under attack in several landings, strategic uncertainty
order to concentrate on one main inva- would evidently delay any possible con-
sion. It would, in fact, be very difficult to centration.9
discover which of many attacks consti- By March 1944, the German western
tuted the major threat. Partly for this defense had thus been weakened by a
reason, and partly because the military growing confusion as to Allied intentions.
situation both in the Mediterranean area This confusion, however, was a relatively
and in Russia was shifting so rapidly dur- small element in the difhculties that mul-
ing the early months of 1944 that any tiplied for the Germans after the end of
plans for the future were subject to al- 1943. Not threats but immediate dangers
most daily changes, OKW in March can- in both the south and east were the prin-
celed its comprehensive defense plans. cipal preoccupations of the German high
Instead, theater commanders were ad- command. For three months after Hitler
vised that troop movements would be or- issued his order that the west was no
dered in detail only at the time they were longer to be weakened in favor of the East-
needed, presumably after a given Allied ern Front, the Germans succeeded gen-
attack had developed into a major action. erally in holding the manpower dikes de-
In addition, a new plan was drawn pro- spite ominous cracks, and rising tides of
viding for a shift of certain units from the Soviet victories. Just before Christmas,
Replacement Army in Germany to any 1943, the Russians launched an offensive
OKW front under heavy attack. OB on the Kiev front which in a few days
WEST by this plan might get one corps drove nearly two hundred miles west; in
headquarters, two reinforced panzer gren- January, Leningrad was relieved by sue-
adier regiments, one reinforced infantry cessful attack against the German Army
demonstration regiment, Kampfgruppen Group North; at the end of the month,
of three infantry regiments which were
8 Die OKW Kriegsschauplaetze. Landesschuetzen
cadre for new divisions, a motorized ar- battalions were security units. Nebelwerfer were
tillery demonstration regiment, five Lan- rocket projectors or chemical mortars.
desschuetzen battalions, and one Nebel- 9 In fact only one division was moved from other
OKW theaters to OB WEST in the first month of the
7 OKW/WFSt, KTB Ausarbeitung, Die Entwick- invasion. This was the 89th Diuision from Norway,
lung im Westen II.-31.111.44. and it was committed on the Kanalkueste.
234 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

much of the German Eighth Army was reserve forces in North Africa, he feared
encircled near Cherkassy; in February, an attack against the Mediterranean coast
the Russians attacked the German Sixth of France. He doubted, furthermore,
Army in the IJkraine in a general offen- whether the 9th SS Panzer Division, even
sive to clear the Dnepr bend. The tempta- if eventually returned to France, could
tion again to corral idle divisions from the make up its losses in Italy, particularly in
west vvas very great. But only one infan- equipment. OB WEST thus survived that
try division was taken from Norway, and crisis. But the loss of the 715th Division,
it was replaced by a unit which, though which because of its unusual mobility had
not completely formed, was roughly been included with the reserve armored
equivalent in combat strength. The west force, was serious enough.11
suffered only minor depredations. In Much worse was to come. In March, the
February, three reinforced regiments be- manpower dikes broke wide open as the
ing formed in Germany and earmarked Soviet Union launched a new offensive,
Ear OKW reserve for the west went east. and at the same time fears increased that
During the same month 3,000 Russian- Hungary was getting ready to pull out of
front soldiers who were suffering from the war. These circumstances forced tem-
frostbite were exchanged for a like num- porary abandonment of the principles of
ber of troops in the west.10 Signs of the Hitler’s Directive No. 5 1. The bulk of the
mounting pressure of the Russian war, troops for the occupation of Hungary
these borrowings still did not constitute (carried out in the latter part of the
important weakening of the west. month) were to be furnished by the Com-
But at the end of January the Anzio mander in Chief Southeast from the Bal-
landings had opened another small crack. kans, and by the Replacement Army, but
The Germans reacted to the Anzio attack OB WEST had to send the Panzer Lehr
in force, not only because they believed Division, a corps headquarters, some air-
it to be the first of a series of major Allied craft, and a few minor units. The plan
amphibious assaults, but because they saw was to return all these units as soon as
the possibility of gaining political prestige Hungary was firmly in German hands.
by wiping out at least one Allied beach- In fact, the occupation took place rapidly
head. In accordance with plans for meet- and smoothly and the bulk of the Hun-
ing a large-scale landing in the southwest, garian Army remained under arms and
the fully motorized 715th Division was continued to fight for the Germans. The
ordered out of France. By 4 February, Panzer Lehr Division thus was actually
however, it was seen that this reinforce- able to come back to France in May. But
ment was not enough to crush the Anzio two divisions from the Replacement
beachhead and General Jodl asked Hitler Army and two of the divisions contrib-
for permission to move in the 9th SS uted by the Commander in Chief South-
Panzer Division, the only fully combat- east were shuttled on to the Russian front
ready armored division in France. Hitler and a third was saved only by a last-min-
refused. With an eye on the large Allied ute appeal to Hitler. The loss indirectly
10Die OKW Kriegsschauplaetre; OKW/WFSt, 11 OKW/WFSt, KTB Ausarbeitung, Die Kaempfe
KTB Ausarbeitung, Osten 1.I.-31.III.44. urn den Brueckenkopf Nettuno 22.1.-31.III.44.
GERMAN DEFENSE MEASURES, 1944 235

affected the west in that it further re- mobile division (the 21st Panzer). The
duced the reserves available to meet the OKW historian has suggested that, had
invasion. the Allies invaded at that time, Rundstedt
With the Russian armies again on the could have offered no effective resist-
move and threatening to collapse the ance 13 This may be an exaggeration, but
whole southern wing of the German de- it is’ true that the end of March 1944
fense, the danger of invasion in the west marked one of the low points of prepared-
for a time dimmed by comparison. The ness in the west and that during the next
Russians attacked on 4 March. On the 9th six weeks, with the Russian front rela-
Uman fell; the Germans evacuated Kher- tively stabilized, the west did much to re-
son and Gayvoron on the 14th. Still the coup its losses. By the middle of May four
Russian armies suffered no check. Before panzer divisions were ready for combat
the end of the month they crossed the (despite deficiencies of equipment) and
Bug, Dnestr, and Pruth Rivers. In Galicia four more were being built up. Toward
they temporarily encircled the German the end of the month Panzer Lehr Divi-
First Panzer Army. The crisis for the Ger- sion returned from Hungary and the Zst
mans was too desperate to permit con- SS Panzer Division from the Eastern
sideration of long-range plans. Reinforce- Front was attached to OB WEST for re-
ments were needed at once and they had building. At the same time the XLVII
to be taken wherever they could be found. Panzer Corps under General der Panzer-
On 10 March the 361st Division was or- truppen Hans Freiherr von Funck, one
dered out of Denmark, and replaced with of the oldest and most experienced ar-
a division of much lower combat value. mored commanders in the German Army,
Two weeks later a similar exchange re- was brought from the east to serve under
moved the 349th Division from France Rundstedt.
and brought as a substitute a new weak Actually the recuperative powers of the
division, the 331st, from the Replacement west under the severe and continuing
Army. At about the same time four divi- strain of supplying transfusions to the
sions under OB WEST (the 326th, 346th, east were remarkable. Between Novem-
348th, and 19th Luftwaffe Field) were ber 1943 and June 1944, the total of com-
ordered to give up all their assault guns, bat divisions under Rundstedt’s com-
initially to strengthen Romanian forces mand increased from forty-six to fifty-
and later to be distributed to various di- eight. The increase was accounted for in
visions along the whole Eastern Front. part by the transfer of fought-out units
The big ax fell on 26 March when the from Russia but in larger part by the
whole II SS Panzer Corps with the 9th formation of new units. In the fall of
and 10th SS Panzer Divisions received 1942 the German Army, already sore-
marching orders to leave France and go pressed for manpower, adopted the policy
to the assistance of the First Panzer of combining training with occupation
Arrny.12 duties. The old combined recruiting and
The departure of the ZZ SS Parzzer training units were split, and the recruit
Corps left OB WEST with only one fully henceforth after induction into a recruit-
12 Die OKW Kriegsschauplnc,tre. 13 Ibid.
236 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

ing unit near his home was sent to an af- from the east as already noted, and by ac-
filiated training unit in the field. In 1943 tivating new divisions out of miscellane-
about two-thirds of these training units ous personnel drawn in part from his own
were located in France, the Low Coun- resources and in part from the Replace-
tries, Denmark, Poland, Lithuania, the ment Army. The effect of all this on the
Soviet Union, and northern Italy. The in- organization and character of the west
fantry and panzer units were organized army must be described in some detail,
into reserve divisions of which twenty-six but in summary it may be said that the
(including four panzer) were formed steady drain of the Eastern Front left to
during 1942 and 1943. Half of these were Rundstedt on the eve of his great battle
stationed in the OB WEST sector. two kinds of units: old divisions which
Though they remained under the com- had lost much of their best personnel and
mander of the Replacement Army and equipment, and new divisions, some of
theoretically retained their primary func- excellent combat value, some only par-
tion of training replacements, in reality tially equipped and partially trained. The
they came to be regarded as low-grade majority of the new divisions were formed
field divisions. Their time was increas- according to streamlined tables of organi-
ingly devoted to garrison duty and on oc- zation designed generally to use the fewest
casion to fighting Resistance forces. In possible men to produce the maximum
order to carry out these duties, they re- fire power.
ceived administrative attachments from
the regular field army. As their opera- Organization for Combat
tional responsibilities expanded and they
began to occupy a permanent place on Between 1939 and 1943 the German
OB WEST’s order of battle, it became im- standard infantry division contained
possible for them to give up personnel for three regiments with a total of nine rifle
filler replacements to regular units. In battalions. Each of the infantry regiments
short they became themselves an integral had, besides its twelve rifle and heavy
part of the field army. In recognition of weapons companies, a 13th (infantry
this fact, most of them were eventually re- howitzer) and 14th (antitank) company.
designated as infantry or armored divi- The division had also an antitank and a
sions. Six of OB WEST’s reserve divi- reconnaissance battalion. Organic artil-
sions, including all three reserve panzer lery consisted of one regiment of one
divisions, had thus been upgraded before medium (150-mm. howitzer) and three
the invasion. Five of the remaining seven light (105-mm. howitzer or gun) bat-
were similarly converted in the summer talions with a total armament of forty-
of 1944; the other two were disbanded.14 eight pieces. German division artillery
Besides converting reserve divisions: was thus roughly equal to that of a U.S.
the Commander in Chief West enlarged division. Chiefly because of the antitank
his army by rehabilitating German units and reconnaissance units, on the other
hand, the division with 17,200 men was
14 WD TM-E #30-451; Military Intelligence Di- substantially larger than its U.S. counter-
vision, The German Replacement Army (Ersatzheer). part.
GERMAN DEFENSE MEASURES, 1944 237

It was also substantially larger than pany, was cut to 140 enlisted men and 2
could be supported by the dwindling sup- officers, as compared with the U.S. com-
ply of manpower after four years of war. pany of 187 enlisted men and 6 officers.
In October 1943 the division was dras- Rifle strength in the German division was
tically overhauled to reduce its size while about 1,200 less than in the American but
maintaining its fire power. Organization the total division fire power was superior.
charts of the new-style division (with About equal in artillery, the German di-
13,656 men) comprising three regiments vision enjoyed a slight preponderance in
of two battalions each had only just been infantry howitzers, and a heavy superior-
published when further slashes were or- ity in automatic weapons.17
dered. The problem (set in January 1944 The 1944 infantry division was set up
by Hitler) was to trim the personnel to as the basic type for new divisions as well
something like 11,000 without affecting as for the reorganization of certain old
the combat strength. Army planners re- formations, as for instance, the Luftwaffe
jected this sleight of hand as impossible field divisions.18 The division which in-
and contented themselves with a further cluded the bulk of Rundstedt’s infantry,
cut from 13,656 to 12,769. Reductions however, the static (bodenstaendige) di-
were made chiefly in supply and overhead, vision, was exempted from reorganization
and the proportion of combat to service unless specifically so ordered. The static
troops was thereby raised to 75-80 per- divisions were formed at the request of
cent. The result was the so-called 1944- Rundstedt in 1942 in order that he would
type infantry division.15 have a nucleus of divisions not subject to
The reduction from nine infantry bat- transfer to the east. Though triangular
talions to six was partly alleviated by the with nine rifle battalions, they were sub-
substitution of a Fuesilier battalion for stantially weaker than the normal old-
the old reconnaissance unit. The Fuesilier type infantry division. They lacked the
battalion, still charged with reconnais- reconnaissance battalion and had only
sance duties, was organized like a rifle bat- three battalions of artillery.19
talion except that one company was Although the static divisions were ex-
equipped with bicycles and the unit had pressly designed as permanent garrison
slightly more horse-drawn vehicles and troops for the west, they were by no means
some motor transport. In practice the safe from the periodic troop collections
Fuesilier battalion came to be reckoned
as a seventh rifle battalion. emphasized small infantry units equipped with maxi-
Besides lopping off three battalions, the mum automatic fire power.
17See App. F, Comparative Fire Power of the U.S.
new division pruned out the rifle squad and German 1944.type Infantry Divisions.
and company while at the same time in- 18 These divisions, of which there were twenty,
creasing the proportion of automatic are not separately discussed since they played no
part in the fighting described in this book. They
weapons. 16The basic unit, the rifle com- were formed of Luftwaffe personnel, remained at first
administratively under the Luftwaffe, and then were
15 OKH/Org.Abt., KTB Anlagen, 1944. integrated into the Army.
16 It should be noted that this process, while forced 19 OKH/Org.Abt., KTB 1.I.-31.VII.42, 31 Jul 42:
by the shortage of manpower, also followed the di- Organisation des Heeres, Band 10 in Befehlshaber
rection of German tactical doctrine which always des Ersatzheeres. Allgerneines Heeresamt.
238 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

for the east. Actually, by the end of 1943, manpower but not accepted as a generally
most of the divisions had lost their third satisfactory solution.
regiments. Attempts in 1943 and early The best infantry units in the 1944 Ger-
1944 to rehabilitate the units and fill man Army were the parachute divisions,
their ranks chiefly with Ost battalions re- administratively under the Luftwaffe but
sulted in virtual abandonment of tables tactically always subordinated to Army
of organization in favor of improvisation command. Until the fall of 1943 German
that reflected both the particular nature airborne forces comprised only one corps
of the coastal assignments and the vicissi- with two parachute divisions. At that time
tudes of the long struggle for manpower Goering proposed and Hitler approved a
and equipment. In total strength and program intended to produce by the end
number and variety of combat units the of 1944 two parachute armies with a total
static divisions bore little resemblance to strength of about 100,000 men. They were
one another. While the 716th Division, to be an elite arm and were put on an
for instance, had six battalions and only equal status with the SS units in recruit-
one regimental headquarters under its ing, armament, equipment, and train-
control on D Day, 20the 709th, occupying ing.22
two and a half times as long a coast line, Of the new parachute units created
had eleven battalions under three regi- during the early months of 1944, OB
men ts. WEST received the 3d and 5th Divisions
Even after the 1944-type division had and the 6th Parachute Regiment (from
been standardized, experimentation con- the 2d Parachute Division).23 Only the
tinued. Certain divisions (notably the separate regiment and the 3d Division
77thand 91st in Seventh Army area) or- were encountered during the fighting de-
ganized their six rifle battalions in two scribed in this volume. Both were first-
regiments. They lacked the fuesilier bat- rate fighting units.
talion and had three instead of four artil- The 3d Parachute Division comprised
lery battalions. 21 In the case of the 77th three regiments of three battalions each
Division this organic lack was partly made and in addition had in each regiment a
up by the attachment of an Ost battery 13th (mortar) company, 14th (antitank)
and a Volga-Tatar rifle battalion. The company, and 15th (engineer) company.
91st Division went into combat with an The mortar company in the 6th Para-
attached parachute regiment. The two- chute Regiment actually contained the
regiment infantry division therefore did nine heavy (1 20-mm.) mortars which the
not operate in T/O form in the invasion tables of organization called for, but in
area, and for the German Army as a whole the 3d Parachute Division weaponing
it may be regarded as experimental and
eccentric, designed further to conserve 22 MS # B-839 (von der Heydte).
23 When its parent 2d Parachute Division was sent
20 Its second regiment was attached to the 352d to Russia in November 1943, the 6th Parachute
Division. See below, Ch. VIII. Regiment was left in Germany to provide cadre for
21Tables of Organization show an antitank com- the 3d Parachute Division. The regiment, while still
pany instead of the normal battalion. The 77th Divi- formally organic to the 2d Parachute Division, was
sion, however, had a two-company antitank battalion reconstituted under the direct command of the First
with 24 guns (75.mm. and 50.mm.). Parachute Army.
GERMAN DEFENSE MEASURES, 1944 239

was miscellaneous,l 100-mm


. The average age of the enlisted men of
mortars and 105.mm. Nebelwerfer.24 The The the 6th Parachute Regiment was 171/2.
parachute division had only one battalion The parachute units were also much bet-
of light artillery (twelve 70.mm. how- ter armed than corresponding army units.
itzers). An order of 12 May 1944 to sub- The rifle companies of the 6th Parachute
stitute an artillery regiment with two Regiment had twice as many light ma-
light battalions and one medium was not chine guns as the infantry division rifle
carried out before the division entered companies. The heavy weapons com-
combat. The same order called for forma- panies with twelve heavy machine guns
tion of a heavy mortar battalion (with and six medium mortars each were also
thirty-six 120.mm. mortars) but this, too, superior in fire power to army units. Chief
was apparently not complied with. Dur- weakness of the parachute troops was one
ing April and May the division was able they shared with the rest of Rundstedt’s
to constitute its antiaircraft battalion army-their lack of motor transport. The
which had, besides light antiaircraft artil- 6th Parachute Regiment, for instance,
lery, twelve 88-mm. guns. The total had only seventy trucks and these com-
ration strength of the division as of 22 prised fifty different models.26
May was 17,420. The strength of the 6th Theoretically, about on a par with the
Parachute Regiment with fifteen com- parachute divisions were the panzer gren-
panies was 3,457. Both were thus con- adier divisions which, by American
siderably larger than the normal corres- standards, were infantry divisions with
ponding infantry units. They were su- organic tank battalions, some armored
perior not only in numbers but in quality. personnel carriers, and some self-pro-
Entirely formed from volunteers, they pelled artillery. The only such division
were composed principally of young men in the west during the invasion period
whose fighting morale was excellent.25 was the 17th SS Panzer Grenadier Divi-
sion (Goetz von Berlichingen). Like all
24 Kriegsgliederung, 18 May 44. Seventh Army, SS divisions it was substantially stronger
KTB Anlagen 1.1.-30.VI.44; cf. MS # B-839 (von der than the corresponding army division. On
Heydte) . Weaponing of the 6th Parachute Regiment
is as given in Seventh Army organization charts. Von the other hand, like so many west divi-
der Heydte’s report differs slightly. He says the regi- sions, its combat strength in fact was much
ment originally had twelve 105-mm. Nebelwerfer, less than it appeared on paper. Its six rifle
but as the manufacture of these was discontinued
they were gradually replaced, partly by 81.mm. battalions were organized in two regi-
mortars and partly by 120.mm. mortars. ments which were supposed to be motor-
25 MS # B839 (von der Heydte). The 6th Para- ized; one battalion was supposed to be ar-
chute Regiment was fully trained in jumping. Each
man had made at least nine jumps, including three mored. In reality four of the battalions
night descents. About three-quarters of the men of had improvised motor transport (partly
the 3d Parachute Division had some jump training Italian), two being equipped with bi-
but this was because the division received trained
paratroopers as cadre. The division itself did not
cycles. The “tank” battalion had thirty-
carry out jump training. MS # B-401 (General der seven assault guns, five less than author-
Fallschirmtruppen Eugen Meindl, CG II Parachute ized. The division had no tanks. Intended
Corps). Apparently neither of the parachute divi-
sions in France was equipped with parachutes. See
MS # B-283 (Blumentritt). 26 MS # B-839 (von der Heydte).
240 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

personnel strength was 18,354, of which talion of Mark V tanks. Each battalion
on 1 June the division actually mustered was supposed to have four companies each
17,321. The antitank battalion, supposed with twenty-two tanks. The fact was
to consist of three companies of self-pro- quite different. Even the 2d Panzer Divi-
pelled guns, had actually only one com- sion, the best prepared of the armored
pany, equipped with nine 75-mm. and divisions on D Day, had less than its au-
three 76.2-mm. guns. The division had a thorized number of the heavier Mark
full armored reconnaissance battalion of Vs.30Each of the divisions had a separate
six companies, and an antiaircraft bat- and slightly different organization which
talion. The latter contained twelve towed in no case conformed to the type. The 1st
88-mm. guns as well as guns of smaller SS Panzer Division, for instance, was sup-
calibers, but lacked almost a fifth of its posed to have 45 assault guns, 21 Mark
personnel.27 III, 101 Mark IV, and 81 Mark V tanks.
To meet the invasion in June, OB It had in fact the full complement of as-
WEST had six army and three SS panzer sault guns but only 88 tanks in all, includ-
divisions. Their strength and organiza- ing 50 IV’s and 38 Vs. The table of or-
tion varied so widely that it is impossible ganization for the 2d SS Panzer Division,
to talk of a type. Personnel strength of the on the other hand, called for 75 assault
army divisions ranged from 12,768 (9th guns of which 33 were on hand on 1 June;
Panzer) to 16,466 (2d Panzer).28 The SS 7 Mark III tanks, none on hand; 57 Mark
divisions, which had six instead of four IV tanks, 44 on hand; and 99 Mark V’s, 25
infantry battalions, varied from 17,590 on hand.31
(9th SS Panzer) 29 to 21,386 (1st SS The army panzer divisions included, in
Panzer). All the panzer divisions were addition to the two regiments (four bat-
thus much larger than their American talions) of infantry and one tank regi-
counterparts, the 1st SS being more than ment, a self-propelled antitank battalion
twice as large. On the other hand they all (armed more often with assault guns), an
had fewer tanks. Here again individual armored reconnaissance battalion, a
variations were enormous. The type or- towed antiaircraft battalion and an artil-
ganizational tables for both army and SS lery regiment with one light self-pro-
divisions called fbr a tank regiment with pelled battalion, one light towed battal-
one battalion of Mark IV and one bat- ion, and one medium towed battalion.
27Status Report, 17th SS Panzer Grenadier Divi- SS divisions had an additional towed
sion “Goetz von Berlichingen,” 1 Jun 44. General- light battalion.
inspekteur der Panzertruppen, Zustandsberichle, SS- The miscellaneous tank armament of
Verbaende VIII.43-V11.44. Substitution of assault
guns (generally 75.mm. guns without turrets, on self- the panzer divisions was typical of the
propelled chassis) for tanks became quite usual in weaponing of nearly all units in the west
the panzer grenadier division. and reflected the long drain on the Ger-
28Overstrength of 296 apparently accounted for bv
an attached “tank” battalion, armed with assault 30 It had 94 Mark IV’s and 67 Mark Vs.
guns. 31Status Reports, 1st SS Panzer Division “Leib-
29 The 9th SS Panzer Division was brought back to standarte Adolf Hitler,” and 2d SS Panzer Division
France during June. See below, Ch. X. The three “Das Reich,” 1 Jun 44. Generalinspekteur der Panzer-
SS panzer divisions under OB WEST on 6 June were truppen, Zustandsberichte, SS-Verbaende VIII.43-
the Ist, 2d and 12th. VII.44.
GERMAN DEFENSE MEASURES, 1944

man war economy of the Russian war and new Tiger tanks continued to go to the
the increasing production difficulties im- east, deliveries to OB WEST of the power-
posed by the accelerating Allied air offen- ful Panther (Mark V) tank were notably
sive. As long as the Russian front was the increased. At the end of April OB WEST
main theater of war and the west was not had 1,608 German-made tanks and assault
immediately threatened, it was natural to guns of which 674 were Mark IV tanks
ship the bulk of the best materiel to the and 514 Mark V’s. The planned total for
east and arm the west as well as possible the end of May was 1,994.34
with what was left. The policy of equip- Against the background of disintegrat-
ping west divisions primarily with cap- ing German war economy, the tank build-
tured materiel was laid down in Dccem- up in the west was a notable achievement
ber 1941 when ten divisions were ordered that strikingly revealed the importance
so equipped. 32The east continued to en- assigned to the forthcoming struggle with
joy priority on new equipment until the the Western Allies. Exponents of the
end of 1943, and although German-made theories of Blitzkrieg, like Generaloberst
tanks and assault guns were shipped to Heinz Guderian, the Inspector General
OB WEST during that time the deliveries of Panzer Troops, believed that without
were often more than outweighed by the a large armored striking force Germany
transfer of armored units. First-class ar- could not hope to return to offensive op-
mored equipment remained a compara- erations essential for ultimate victory. In
tive rarity in divisions assigned to OB late 1943, therefore, Guderian proposed
WEST until 1944. At the end of October and Hitler approved a scheme to form a
1943, for instance, there were in the west ten-division strategic armored reserve
703 tanks, assault guns, and self-propelled while at the same time trying to bring all
88-mm. antitank guns (called “Hor- armored divisions up to strength in equip-
nets”). At the end of December the num- ment. The need, in short, was for new
ber had risen only to 823, the increase tanks in large numbers. But the combined
being largely in the lighter Mark IV tank. pressure of the Allied air offensive and
All the Hornets and Tiger (Mark VI) Russian ground attack was rapidly creat-
tanks had been shipped out to the Rus- ing an economic quagmire in which the
sian front, and the stock of assault guns harder the enemy struggled the deeper he
was considerably decreased. The total of sank. Russian armies were destroying
823, moreover, compared to a planned existing tanks while Allied bombers were
build-up of 1,226. 33The new year brought making it increasingly difficult to pro-
a change. January showed only a slight duce new ones. The Germans tried to find
increase, but thereafter the deliveries to an answer in diverting additional men,
the west were speeded up. Although most materials, and factory space into the man-
ufacture of tanks. One result was to cur-
32 Memo, OKH/Org.Abt. for OKH/Op.Abt., Um-
bewaflnung von Westdiuisionen auf Beutewaflen, 6 tail the production of prime movers and
Dec 41. OKH/Op.Abt., Kraefte Westen, Allgemein, parts. But without prime movers in ade-
Band II, 13.X.41-25.VII.42. quate numbers the German armies in
33 This and the following material on tanks is from
Generalinspekteur der Panzertruppen, Fuehrervor- 34In addition, units in the west still had a con-
tragsnotizen, Band I, 3.IV.43-l.VZ.44. siderable number of French and Russian tanks.
242 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Russia were unable to withdraw their were either static or reserve, suitable
heavy guns or retrieve tanks that were only for limited defense employment.
damaged or out of fuel. Between October There were 24 divisions classified as fit
and December 1943,979 Mark III and IV for duty in the east by reason of their
tanks and 444 assault guns were lost, in relative mobility and high-grade person-
large part because they had to be aban- nel. They included 13 infantry divisions,
doned in retreat. Similarly between July 2 parachute divisions, 5 army panzer di-
and December 2,235 artillery pieces and visions, and 4 SS panzer and panzer gre-
1,692 antitank guns were captured or de- nadier divisions. One panzer division
stroyed. General Guderian at last pointed (the 21st), being still equipped in part
out that there was little sense in produc- with captured materiel, was not consid-
ing more tanks and guns if they were to ered suitable for service in Russia, al-
be thus recklessly sacrificed. though in other respects it was ready for
A still more important by-product of offensive use, and in fact had exceptional
concentrating on tank manufacture at the strength in heavy weapons.35
expense of a balanced production pro- All the infantry divisions were com-
gram was the increasingly serious lack of mitted on or directly behind the coast
spare parts. In June 1943 the Germans under the command of one of the four
had 2,569 operational tanks with 463 in armies or the German Armed Forces
process of repair. In February 1944, only Commander Netherlands.36 The four
1 ,519 tanks remained operational while armies were the First holding the At-
1,534 were under repair. During Feb- lantic coast of France, the Seventh occu-
ruary, moreover, only 145 damaged tanks pying Brittany and most of Normandy,
were actually returned to the front. On the Fifteenth along the Kanalkueste, and
the first of the month, Guderian esti- the Nineteenth defending the French
mated that the tanks and assault guns Mediterranean coast. The Seventh Army,
awaiting repair equaled about nine which was to meet the actual invasion,
months’ new production. At the end of had fourteen infantry (including static)
March, the situation had not improved; divisions under the control of four
the number of operational tanks was still corps.37
decreasing despite accelerated deliveries
of new machines. Command and Tactics
Although the German Army in the It may be that the most serious weak-
west on the eve of its great test was con- ness of the German defense in the west
siderably weaker than planned in equip-
35 MS # B-441 (Generalleutnant Edgar Feuch-
ment, quality, and numbers, it was never- tinger, CG 21st Panzer Division).
theless a force strong enough to hope for 36 Wehrmachtbefehlshaber Niederlande. Equiva-
victory in a battle in which Allied ma- lent in size to a corps command.
37Seventh Army (LXXXIV Corps) also had re-
teriel superiority would be partly coun- sponsibility for defense of the Channel Islands and
teracted by the natural advantages of a commanded the 319th Division stationed there.
coast line defense. (Map V ) Under But, since this division never figured in any of the
fighting and because of Hitler’s orders could not
Rundstedt’s command on 1 June 1944 even be considered as a reserve, it will not be in-
were 58 combat divisions of which 33 cluded in any calculations of Seventh Army’s strength.
GERMAN DEFENSE MEASURES, 1944 243

was not the shortage of men and materiel mixed. The Navy had complete juris-
but the lack of a unified command. While diction before operations on land had
Rundstedt was charged with the entire begun. Afterward, firing on sea targets
responsibility for the defense of France remained a naval responsibility, but at
and the Low Countries, his powers were the moment of enemy landing, in most
far from commensurate with that respon- cases, command of the batteries in the
sibility. He had, in the first place, no beachhead area was to pass to the Army.
command over air and naval units. The Virtually the whole burden of tying in
four air corps that comprised the fighter the important naval batteries to the
and bomber aircraft stationed in the coastal defense was thus shifted to the
west were under command of the Third initiative of local commanders.
Air Force (Generalfeldmarschall Hugo A similar division of command affected
Sperrle), which in turn was directly sub- the employment of the security troops
ordinate to OKL. Similarly Navy Group which as instruments of the occupation
West, which under Admiral Theodor were normally under the two military
Krancke commanded the destroyers, tor- governors (Militaerbefehlshaber), France
pedo boats, and smaller naval vessels and Northern France (including Bel-
based in the ports within Rundstedt’s gium). The military governors were
jurisdiction, was responsible directly to directly subordinated to OKH, but for
OKhl. Rundstedt could issue no orders purposes of repelling invasion their se-
to either Sperrle or Krancke; he could curity troops might be tactically under
only request their co-operation. (Charts OB WEST. In preparation against inva-
2, 3, 4) sion, the Commander in Chief West
Air and naval forces were too small to could only direct that the military gov-
have decisive effect on the battle. From ernors co-operate with the army groups
Rundstedt’s point of view the more im- in matters affecting the latter’s authority
portant limitation of his power was the and undertake to settle any differences
fragmentation of the command over the that might arise between them. Even this
ground forces. Some of this fragmenta- control was limited. Employment of se-
tion was normal and universal in the curity troops could only be ordered by
German military establishment. The the Commander in Chief West “in mat-
Third Air Force had, for instance, be- ters outside the scope of security.” 39
sides command of the flying units, ad- During 1944 OB WEST’s authority
ministrative control over parachute was abridged in special ways. In Novem-
troops and the antiaircraft units that ber 1943, it will be recalled, Field
were under the III Flak Corps.38 Navy Marshal Rommel had taken command of
Group West controlled through regiona the Army Group for Special Em.ploy-
commanders not only ships and shore in- ment, which was charged at first with in-
stallations but most of the coastal artil- 39 Grundlegender Befehl des Oberbefehlshabers
lery, although command of the latter was West Nr. 38, Neuregelung der Befehlsgliederung
im Ob. West-Bereich, 7 May 44, cited hereafter as
38 Tactically and for purposes of supply III Flak OB WEST Grundlegender Befehl Nr. 38. OKW/-
Corps was under the Luftgaukonmando Westjrank- WFSt, Op. (H.), Grundlegende Befehle West 28.18.42-
reich. 7.v.44.
244 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

SUPREME COMMANDER OF THE ARMED FORCES


HITLER

ARMED F”R(.ES
HIGH (.OMMAND

I
NAVY GROUP
r-------------- WEST
Rl’\DSTEDT - -
KRA,YCKP SPERRLE

TI
NAVAL UNlTS FOI’R AIK CORPS

L
SHOKt 1 111 FLAK CORPS 1
INSTALLATIONS
NAVAL COASTAL
BATTERIES

t
MILITAKY I 1RMY GROUP G
GOVERNORS ALA~KfJIt”lT~ PERSO.\AL ACCESS
I
BELGIUM-
FIRS.1 ARMY
N FRAN(.E I ARMED FORC.ES
AND FRANC E NINklEENIH NETHLRLANDS
ARMY I (LXXXVIII <.ORPS:
SE(.URITY
TROOPS LX\‘1 (.OKI’S FIFTEENTH ARMY
(RFS) SEVENTH ARMY
r----------- r----------7
’ 157th DIV ;
(RES) I : PRCHT CORPS :
L _____----- _1 L _____ -_-_-d
.

S’I AFF. PANZER


GROUP W&-l

AHMY GKOI’P G : ARMY GROI!P I


RESFRVES RESERVES
LVIII 1’2 (.OKI’S :
WE%
9th md 1 Irh ’ Zd. 116rh. and 2,s
I’% DIVS PI DIVS
----------- I
: zd SS PZ DIV: :
L --_______ 2 ,

Direct charm of command


I PZ LEHR DIV I
Condirional tackal conrrol of
terrain elemenrs or co-operarmn - - - - - _ _ -- __ _ __ __ __ _

CHARTZ-GERMAN CHAIN OF COMMANDIN THE WEST, MAY 1944


GERMAN DEFENSE MEASURES, 1944 245

III
Miscellaneous Includes Naval Bombers and No unirs. Major units
bomber Air Rcn Units torpedo bombers. Hq merged with comprised 5 and
squadrons. and miscella- II Fighter 123 LongRange
neous bomber Corps in late Rcn Groups and
squadrons. June 1944. 13 Close Rcn
Groups.

4 FIGHTER

Miscellaneous Miscellaneous
day and nighr day and night
hghrer squadrons. fighter squadrons.

CHART S.--LUFTWAFFE COMMANDIN THE WEST

CHARTS.--GERMANNAVALCOMMANDINTHEWEST
246 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

spection of the western defenses and the strengthen the defense. Hitler approved
preparation of plans for counterattack but warned OB WEST that the Rommel
against the main Allied landings wher- headquarters was still to be considered
ever these might take place. Ultimately available for commitment elsewhere.42
the Rommel headquarters was to conduct Rundstedt accepted the condition, and
the main battle against the invading the reconstitution of Army Group B was
forces. About the middle of December, ordered to take effect on 15 January.
Rommel, having completed the first of Rommel’s subordination to OKW was at
his tasks, the inspection of the coastal de- this time canceled.43
fenses .of Denmark, arrived in France His position, however, remained anom-
and began a survey of the Fifteenth Army alous: whereas he had less than full com-
sector. Both he and Rundstedt recognized mand over the armies attached to him, he
at once that it was neither logical nor enjoyed an influence over the whole de-
practical for the Special Army Group to fense of the west which was in some
remain outside the theater chain of com- measure commensurate with Rundstedt’s.
mand.40 Its independence could only be His orders provided that he was to be
a source of friction and inefficiency. On solely responsible for the conduct of
30 December Rundstedt recommended operations (Kampffuehrung), but that in
that it be subordinated to OB WEST as matters not directly affecting this tactical
Army Group B with command of the command OB WEST would continue to
Seventh and Fifteenth Armies and of the deal directly with the armies. Thus on
German Armed Forces of the Nether- questions of defense, training, organiza-
lands. Whether the initial suggestion for tion and equipment, supply, artillery
this change came first from Rommel or matters, communications, and engineer
from Rundstedt, it was clearly in the be- problems, the command channel might
ginning agreeable to both.41 Since the bypass the new army group.44 Rommel
main Allied invasion was likely to strike continued to be the coastal inspector for
somewhere along the Channel coast, it the whole of the west, and although his
made sense to put Rommel in immediate reports henceforth were forwarded
command there in order to familiarize through OB WEST his ability to influ-
him with his task and allow him to take ence coastal defense policies and practices
such steps as he found necessary to did much to blur his subordination to
Rundstedt. Moreover the binding of
40 Ltr, Rundstedt to Salmuth, 27 Dec 43. Fifteenth the Rommel staff to a geographical sec-
Army, KTB Anlagen, Chefsachen 26.X.-27.X11.43;
MS # A-982 (Vizeadmiral Friedrich Roge, Navy 42 Rad, 1 Jan 44, OKW/WFSt, Op. (H.), to OKH/-
liaison officer with Army Group B); MS # C-069b Gen.St.d.H., OB WEST, and Army Group B. OKH/-
(Roge) ; MS # CO69c (Buttlar-Brandenfels) ; MS Org.Abt., Bd. Chefsache 7.V.43-4.II.44. Commitment
# C069e (Warlimont) ; MS # C-069f (Rundstedt). was specifically contemplated in Denmark and Hun-
41The change was logical and there is nothing in gary. In fact, neither contingency materialized. For
the rather fragmentary contemporary record to con- Hungary operation see above, p. 234.
firm the thesis of the OB WEST history (MS # T- 43Rad, 1 Jan 44, cited n. 42; Order, 12 Jan 44,
121) that Rommel was forced on OB WEST from OB WEST, (Ia Nr. 246/44). OKH/Op.Abt., Glied-
above and was unwanted. Cf. MS # C069a (Blum- erung West, Chefsachen, Band VIII, 2.Tei1, 8.I.-21.-
entritt) ; MS # C-069d (Zimmermann) ; MS # C- II.44.
069e (Warlimont) ; MS # C-069f (Rundstedt). 44 Order, 12 Jan 44, cited n. 43.
GERMAN DEFENSE MEASURES, 1944 247

tor was only tentative; the headquarters mander in Chief West in the employment
was thought of still as a reserve command of armor. Geyr was ordered to co-operate
and as such the recommendations of its with and respect the wishes of army
commander carried special if informal group commanders. 47 Actually, however,
weight.45 Finally, and most importantly, Geyr’s ideas on the proper employment
Rommel in common with all German of armor were so completely at variance
field marshals enjoyed at all times the with Rommel’s that co-operation was im-
right of appeal directly to Hitler.46 That possible.
privilege was especially important for the In March 1944, at a meeting of the
west because of the personalities in- senior commanders in the west with
volved. The evidence indicates that Rom- Hitler, Rommel asked for an extension
mel had an energy and strength of con- of his own authority that to all intents
viction that often enabled him to secure would have eliminated Geyr and Rund-
Hitler’s backing, whereas Rundstedt, stedt as well from effective command of
who was disposed whenever possible to the defense forces. Specifically he re-
compromise and allow arguments to go quested that all armored and motorized
by default, seems to have relaxed com- units and all GHQ artillery in the west
mand prerogatives that undoubtedly re- be put directly under his command and
mained formally his. It is possible, of that he also be given some control over
course, that he too came under Rommel’s the First and Nineteenth Armies. The
influence and failed to press acceptance latter two armies, defending the Atlantic
of his own ideas because he was content and Mediterranean coasts of France re-
to allow Rommel to assume the main spectively, were at this time still sub-
burden of responsibility. In any case the ordinated immediately to OB WEST.
clear fact is that after January 1944 Rom- In one sense, Rommel’s request logically
mel was the dominant personality in the arose from his mission. Assigned respon-
west with an influence disproportionate sibility for countering the major Allied
to his formal command authority. invasion attempt, he required control
Rommel’s position, however, was not over all the forces that might be used in
unchallenged. In November 1943 Rund- the defense. It was plausible further-
stedt, thinking in terms of a large-scale more that such control should be turned
counterattack against the main Allied over to him before the battle so that he
landings, created a special staff to control could properly prepare and dispose the
armored units in that attack. The staff, troops to fight the kind of battle he
designated Panzer Group West, was would order. Making a strong bid to
headed by General der Panzertruppen unify defense policies, he asked that the
Leo Freiherr Geyr von Schweppenburg, Humpty-Dumpty command in the west
and was directed to take over at once the be put together again under him. Al-
formation and training of all armored though the method of repair naturally
units in the west and to advise the Com- did not please Rundstedt, his objections

45 OKW/WFSt, KTB Ausarbeitung, Der Westen, 47 Order, 19 Nov 43, OB WEST (Ia Nr. 681/4;13).
cited hereafter
l.IV.-16.X11.44, as Der Westen. Seventh Army, KTB Anlagen, Chefsachen 2.111.43-
46 MS # C-047 (Halder). 1.VIII.44; Order, 12 Jan 44, cited n. 43.
248 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

were unheeded at the March meeting army group headquarters to take com-
and Hitler approved the expansion of mand of the First and Nineteenth
Rommel’s command. Only after a study Armies. Army Group G, formed under
by the operations staff of OKW had sup- Generaloberst Johannes Blaskowitz, took
ported Rundstedt’s later written protest over, besides the two armies, the remain-
did Hitler reverse himself. Even then the ing three panzer divisions in France (the
reversal was not complete. Three panzer 9th, 11th, and 2d SS).50 The reorganiza-
divisions (the 2d, 21st, and 116th) were tion provided a counterbalance for Rom-
assigned to Rommel as Army Group B mel and somewhat simplified the com-
reserves, over which he was to have full mand channels. It probably also ex-
tactical control while Geyr remained re- pressed final recognition of the imprac-
sponsible for their training and organiza- ticability of the reserve high command
tion.48 The patchwork solution solved concept.
nothing. With the establishment of Blaskowitz’s
At the same time four other panzer- headquarters, Rundstedt undertook to
type divisions in OB WEST’s sector (the define his own position. He outlined for
1st SS Panzer, 12th SS Panzer, 17th SS himself what amounted to an over-all
Panzer Grenadier, and Panzer Lehr) ground command in his theater, subject
were set aside as a central mobile reserve to the restrictions already discussed. He
under the direct command of OKW. The announced his intention of granting his
two decisions smacked of a compromise army group commanders the maximum
tending to preserve something of both freedom of action in their own sectors.
Rommel’s and Rundstedt’s tactical He would intervene only when he fun-
ideas.49 The main effect, however, was to damentally disagreed with their policies
deprive the Commander in Chief West or when decisions had to be made affect-
of the means to influence the battle ing the theater as a whole. He promised
directly without transferring those means to confine his directives to passing on
to Rommel. Thus, even such inclusive Hitler’s orders and to specifying policies
authority as was possible in the German that ought to be uniformly carried out
military establishment’was scrupulously by all commands.51
withheld from both high commanders in In fact, during the critical preparatory
the west. months of 1944, general directives were
The final command change before the few either from Rundstedt or Hitler.
invasion was made in May when Rund- Hitler, far away at his headquarters in
stedt ordered the formation of a second
50 OB WEST Grundlegender Befehl Nr. 38, 7 May
44. Blaskowitz’s command was given inferior status
48 Der Westen. as an Armeegruppe instead of the usual Heeres-
49 Rundstedt apparently considered the attach- gruppe, in part because of lack of personnel and
ment of these reserves to OKW purely formal and perhaps also in part as a mark of the relative dis-
made plans to use them under Geyr. Compare, how- favor in which Blaskowitz was held by Hitler.
ever, what happened on D Day (Ch. VIII). Control Oberkommando Armeegruppe G, KTB Nr. I, 26.-
of the three SS divisions had a triple twist: trained IV.-30.VZ.44; Der Westen; MS # T-121 (Zimmer-
and organized under Panzer Group West, tactically mann et al.). See Chart 2, p. 244.
subordinated to OKW, they were for administrative 51 OB WEST Grundlegender Befehl Nr. 38, 7 May
purposes under the SS-Fuehrungshauptant. 44.
GERMAN DEFENSE MEASURES, 1944 249

East Prussia, was so preoccupied with the pleted in three or four months. He was
Russian war that he did not even visit bound therefore to start by examining
the west until after the invasion. Further- his limitations.
more he seems not to have had any clear The experience in North Africa had
and consistent view of tactics himself, and convinced Rommel of the folly of trying
his interventions in the western scene to use massed armor as long as the enemy
resulted more often in decisions of detail enjoyed air superiority. In Africa Rom-
than in definitions of policy. The failure mel commanded some of the best trained
of Hitler to provide consistent guidance and equipped troops that Germany pro-
together with the vague demarcation of duced. In France he was to command an
authority between Rommel and Rund- army that was already crippled in part by
stedt left the west with a vacillating inadequate training, inferior human
leadership. Defense preparations in 1944 material, and lack of mobility. Further-
were increasingly scarred by compromise more, there was still less hope in 1944
as the Commander in Chief West and the than in 1942 that the Luftwaffe could
commander of Army Group B made de- challenge the supremacy of the Allies in
tailed decisions in accordance with diver- the air. To Rommel that meant that
gent aims. mobile operations were impossible in fact
The perspective from which Rommel however desirable they might be in
viewed his task derived in part from his theory. If the German Army could not
experience with desert warfare in North hope to maneuver on anything like terms
Africa and in part from the circum- of equality with the Allies, its only
stances of his new assignment. It is im- chance for a defensive success was to fight
portant to bear in mind that Rommel from the strongest possible natural posi-
came to the west only at the point when tions. The pillboxes, entrenchments,
the battle was about to be fought there, wire, and mines of the Atlantic Wall and
and that he was assigned responsibility the waters of the Channel, in short,
specifically for the conduct of that bat- seemed to Rommel to offer not only the
tle. He had not endured the long waiting best but the only means to offset Allied
period with its periodic alarms. He had superiority in mass and mobility.52
not spent months making plans, calcu- Rommel therefore was led to place an
lating actual but shifting deficiencies exclusive dependence on fortifications
against ideal needs, outlining defense sys- that Rundstedt never advocated and that
tems and strugglin, m to find the means to even Hitler had not contemplated in his
carry them out. The theoretical approach directive of November. The battle for
to tactics-the drafting of the abstractly the west, Rommel believed, would be de-
best plan first, the search for resources cided at the water’s edge, and the decision
second-was ruled out by the nature of would come literally within the first
his mission as well as by the limited time forty-eight hours of the Allied landings.53
at his disposal. He was appointed coastal In accord with that diagnosis, his first
inspector and told to assess defensive aim was to create a defensive belt around
capacities and make his plans accordingly. 52 MS # A-982 (Ruge) .
Whatever he chose to do had to be com- 53Ibid.
250 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

the entire coast (with special concentra- Rommel undertook to stake all fields
tion on the Fifteenth Army sector) ex- suitable for glider landings behind the
tending five or six kilometers inland. coastal zone. The stakes were to be
Within this belt all infantry, artillery, placed close enough together so that
headquarters staffs, and reserves up to gliders could not come down between
division level were to be located in a them. They, too, were to be mined. The
series of resistance nests.54 Between the German estimate was that Allied air-
resistance nests mines and obstacles were borne troops would be used in diver-
to be laid so thickly as to prevent enemy sionary and subsidiary operations, for
penetration. Because of limited time, which Brittany and Normandy were con-
labor, and materials, Rommel concen- sidered the most likely target areas. Rom-
trated on many simple, field-type defenses mel therefore concentrated the erection
rather than on a few complex fortifica- of antiairlanding obstacles in these
tions. He stressed in particular the lay- areas.57
ing of mines. He introduced, further, a The general scheme of obstacle defense
defense device new to the Atlantic Wall: of the Continent was further to be ex-
underwater obstacles designed to wreck tended by mine fields in the Channel.
landing craft.55 In Normandy, hedgehogs Sixteen fields, each about five miles long,
and tetrahedra located inland as tank were put down in the Channel between
obstacles were moved to the beaches Boulogne and Cherbourg from August
suitable for enemy landings. They were 1943 to January 1944. These were to be
supplemented by Belgian Gates and kept renewed as far as possible, but it
stakes slanting seaward. The intention was not believed that they would have
was to cover every possible landing beach much effect on Allied shipping. They
between high- and low-water marks with were therefore to be supplemented by
obstacles staggered to leave no free chan- hasty mine fields laid down by all avail-
nel for even a flat-bottomed boat to reach able vessels immediately before the inva-
shore. Obstacles as far as possible were sion was expected. These fields would be
to be mined. As it was considered most planted without keeping open any
likely that the Allies would land at flood marked lanes for German vessels. From
tide to reduce the amount of open beach Zeebrugge to Granville thirty-six mine
to he crossed under fire, laying of the ob- fields were planned. It was also planned,
stacles began at the high-water line and when invasion seemed imminent, to sow
was extended in belts seaward as mate- mines from the air in British harbors.
rials and labor became available.56 Finally along the French coast shallow-
To complete his hedgehog fortress, water mines were to be laid and a special
- seventy-kilogram concrete mine was de-
54 See below, Ch. VIII, n. 158, for a description of veloped for the purpose.58 In all these
various types of German fortifications.
55 MS # A-982 (Ruge) Underwater obstacles of
this type were first used in 1943 by the Germans in 57 Bericht ueber die Reise des Herrn Oberbefehls-
the west, when preparing the defense of the Danish habers am 17. und 18. Mai 44. Seventh Army, KTB
coast against an attack from the sea. For description Anlagen 1.I.30.VI.44.
of obstacles mentioned in the text, see Glossary. 58 ONI, Fuehrer Conferences, 1944; hfarinegrup-
56MS # A-982 (Ruge) penkommando West, KTB 16.1.-31.1.44.
ANTILANDING OBSTACLES under construction on a French beach (above).
Lower picture chorus Belgian Gate.
252 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

ways Rommel sought to make the ex- in the Barfleur sector.60 The 709th was
pected invasion physically impossible. an old division, but its personnel con-
The Allied force entangled in the spider stantly shifted. The lack of continuous
web of obstacles would be given the adequate training meant that the total
paralyzing sting by the German Army combat fitness of the division steadily
waiting at the water’s edge. deteriorated through the accretion of un-
Rommel’s construction and mine-lay- trained recruits.
ing program called for a very large ex- Still worse was the effect on the new
penditure of labor, and labor was scarce. and reorganized divisions that repre-
It has already been pointed out that sented a large proportion of the German
Organization Todt was employed chiefly striking force in the west. In Seventh
in the major port fortress areas, on V- Army all but one of the nonstatic infantry
weapon sites, and, in the spring of 1944, divisions were organized during 1944.
on railroad maintenance. In the appor- New divisions accounted for six of the
tionment of the remaining labor supply fourteen divisions under the army’s com-
among the armies, Fifteenth Army con- mand. All of these units were burdened
tinued to receive priority. Seventh Army with construction duties. In February
thus had special difficulty in completing Rommel ordered that infantry be used
its defense works. The LXXXIV Corps to lay mines and obstacles. On 25 May
was assigned three engineer battalions in Seventh Army reported to OKH that all
January, two for fortress building and its units were engaged in construction
one for mine laying. In addition, 2,850 projects and that consequently the neces-
men of the former French Labor Service sary training was not being carried out.61
were set to work on a secondary defense The only units specially exempted
line immediately behind the belt of from work on the fortifications were the
coastal resistance points. Pleas for more two parachute divisions. The 3d Para-
construction hands were answered by at- chute Division was brought into Brittany
tachment of two Ost battalions.59 in March and stationed east of Brest. Its
The only other available labor source mission was to complete its organization
was the combat troops. Increasingly dur- and at the same time train for defense
ing 1944 infantrymen were employed in against airborne attack. The 5th Para-
work details on the Atlantic Wall with chute Division moved into the Rennes
consequent serious reduction of combat area between 5 and 14 May with a sim-
training. The reserve battalion of the ilar mission. Both divisions in May were
709th Division, for instance, devoted put under command of the II Parachute
three days a week exclusively to labor Corps which, though subordinated tac-
duty. The time for training in the rest tically to Seventh Army, was administra-
of the week was further reduced by tively and for training purposes under
transport and guard details. During the the Third Air Force. Since the Luftwaffe
first two weeks in May the battalion was was thus responsible for parachute unit
employed full time on the coastal defense
60 Hoffmann Report. Seventh Army, KTB Anlagen
59Seventh Army, KTB 1.I.-30.VI.44, 5. 6, 8, and 1.I.30.VI.44.
16 Jan 44. 61Seventh Army, KTB 1.I.-30.VI.44, 25 May 44.
GERMAN DEFENSE MEASURES, 1944 253

training and, on the other hand, was not exhaust itself in the construction of huge
responsible to army commands anywhere masses of concrete. “As no man in his
in the hierarchy, Reich Marshal Goering senses,” he argued, “would put his head
ordered that the parachute divisions not on an anvil over which the smith’s ham-
be used for construction work except in mer is swung, so no general should mass
providing local security for themselves his troops at the point where the enemy
against airborne attack.62 The 5th Para- is certain to bring the first powerful blow
chute Division had scarcely more than of his superior materiel.” 64 Rommel’s
begun to fill out its ranks when invasion answer, in all likelihood, would have
struck; but the 3d proved one of the best been, first, that there was no practical
prepared of the new units in Seventh alternative, second, that the first Allied
Army. blow at the point of the landings would
The general stinting of training under not be the most powerful but the weakest
the circumstances seems to have been in- since only a small portion of Allied fire
evitable and apparently did not arouse power could then be effective, and, third,
any serious protests at the time.63 Where that the German general in massing his
Rommel’s program met really effective troops in fortified positions was at least
opposition was in his efforts to concen- giving their heads some protection
trate reserves within the coastal zone. If against the smith’s hammer.
it was true that the Germans had to The difference of opinion was essen-
fight on a fortified line, if they could not tially a difference in judgment of what
hope to maneuver freely, and if the crisis was possible. Rommel’s chief of staff
of the battle against the invaders would has testified that Rommel would have
come within the first forty-eight hours, preferred a battle of maneuver had he
then it followed that all forces would be seen any chance of its succeeding.65 Rund-
wasted which were not near enough to stedt, like Sodenstern, was clearly more
the coast to be committed at once against optimistic, perhaps because he had not
the first landings. This deduction was had firsthand experience with the air
the final extension of the doctrine of power of the Western Allies. In any case,
static defense implicit in the original he did not accept Rommel’s thesis and
decision to build the Atlantic Wall. At the influence of OB WEST was exerted
least one high German commander had spasmodically in resisting Rommel’s ef-
predicted the development and had forts to shift the weight of the army for-
warned against it in caustic tones. Soden- ward to the coast, and in trying instead
stern, commanding the Nineteenth Army, to free as many units as possible from
wrote privately in the summer of 1943 of bondage to the rigid defense system.
his fear that German generalship would In practice any plan to introduce flexi-
bility into the defense depended pri-
62Ibid., 20 Feb 44.
63Various commanders since the war have under-
marily on whether units could be made
scored this lack of training as one of the most seri-
ous weaknesses of the defense. The evidence, how-
ever, is inconclusive. See MS # EL234 (Pemsel) ; MS 64Notes written in August 1943, appended to MS
# Et-466 (Geyr); MS # B-784 (Oberstleutnant # B-276 (Sodenstern) .
Friedrich von Criegern, CofS LXXXZV Corps). 65 MSS # B-720 and # C-017 (Speidel).
254 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

mobile and whether they could be or- because of its ability to move rapidly
ganized and equipped to support them- from one place to another.
selves in combat. Through the early For the most part the Germans lacked
months of 1944 Rundstedt struggled to resources even to provide that limited
strengthen and provide some transport mobility for the west army. Rundstedt’s
for the coastal divisions. In the Seventh efforts to restore mobility to his static
Army area he succeeded in forming mo- divisions on the whole failed. A begin-
bile Kampfgruppen (of reinforced regi- ning, for instance, was made to upgrade
ments) from four of the infantry divi- the 709th Division, but the vehicles al-
sions (the 265th, 266th, 275th, and 353d) lotted in March had to be withdrawn in
defending the Brittany coast. In case of May when, as a result of the Allies’ suc-
a major invasion of Normandy, Seventh cessful rail bombing attacks, Seventh
Army had plans to move these Kampf- Army began to scrape together every-
gruppen into the combat zone. In the thing on wheels to form corps transport
Cotentin, the 243d Division was con- companies.68
verted from a static into a nominal at- Rundstedt’s efforts to put wheels un-
tack infantry division.66 It was reorgan- der his army were at least partly offset
ized according to the 1944 type with by Rommel’s concurrent labors to dig in
six infantry battalions. Four battalions every available soldier and gun along the
were to be equipped with bicycles. The coast line. After an inspection trip in
artillery regiment, supply troops, and the LXXXZV Corps sector in February,
antitank battalion were to be motorized. Rommel concluded that reserves were
Reorganization took place in late 1943, held in too great strength too far from the
but the motorization planned to begin coast. In particular, he felt that the 352d
in May 1944 could be carried out only in Division, located near St. Lo, and the
very limited degree.67 243d Division, near la Haye du Puits,
It should be observed in this connec- should be regrouped so that they could
tion that German notions of mobility in be committed in the first hours after an
the west in 1944 hardly corresponded to enemy landing. Seventh Army therefore
American concepts of a motorized army. ordered that the divisional reserves of
A mobile infantry unit in general was the 709th and 716th Divisions (the 795th
one equipped with bicycles, with horse- Georgian Battalion and 642d Ost Bat-
drawn artillery, and a modicum of horse talion respectively) should be committed
and motor transport for supply purposes. at the coast, that the 243d and 352d Divi-
It was called mobile more because of its sions should move slightly northward,69
ability to maintain itself in the field than and that the 352d Artillery Regiment of
the latter division should be emplaced in
66 The Germans classified divisions in four categor- the coastal zone under the control of the
ies, depending on whether they were capable of full
attack, limited attack, full defense, or limited defense
missions. In these categories the degree of mobility 68 Hoffmann Report. Seventh Army, KTB Anlagen
was one of the most important factors. All static di. 1.I.-30.VI.44.
visions were in the third or fourth categories. 69 New assembly areas were: for the 243d Division,
67Karteiblatt, 243d Infantry Division. OKH/Org.- Carentan-MontebourgBricquebec-Lessay; for the
Abt., Karteiblaetter 1943-1945. 352d Division, Bayeux-Trevieres-Isigny-St. Lo.
GERMAN MOBILE INFANTRY equipped with bicycles (above), and animal
transport (below).
CAPTURED GERMAN ARMOR. U.S. troops inspecting Panther (Mark V) tank
(above) and 75-mm. assault gun (below) mounted on Mark IV chassis.
GERMAN DEFENSE MEASURES, 1944 2.57

716th Division.70 Similar reshuffling in lery to bear on the invasion beaches. To


Brittany put the artillery of the 275th and shift all troops into the coastal fortifica-
353d Divisions into static defense posi- tions would be dangerous since concrete
tions.71 The shift forward of the 352d Di- shelters were limited and field work
vision meant in effect that it was no longer might be destroyed by Allied bombing.
in reserve. On 14 March Seventh Army In Brittany and the Cotentin, moreover,
therefore proposed that the division ac- it was necessary to preserve some depth of
tually take over responsibility for the left defense in order to resist probable air-
half of the 716th Division sector. On OB borne landings.73
WEST’s approval, this change was accom- Commitment of all forces at the MLR
plished by 19 March. With the doubling was thus not accepted as a principle. But
of the troops on the coast, the former bat- in practice Rommel continued to shift
talion sectors of the 716th Division be- the weight of his army forward. In April
came regimental sectors. The 726th Regi- the 21st Panzer Division was moved from
ment of the 716th was attached to the Rennes to Caen where its battalions were
352d, less the 2d Battalion which became split on either side of the Orne River and
division reserve for the 716th. One regi- its artillery committed on the coast. The
ment of the 352d plus the Fuesilier Bat- disposition to all intents removed the 21st
talion was held in corps reserve in the vi- Panzer Division as a unit from the pool of
cinity of Bayeux.72 mobile reserves.74 The other two panzer
Hitler, whose ideas, possibly under divisions directly under Rommel’s com-
Rommel’s influence, had undergone some mand were placed in position to reinforce
change since Directive 51, wondered at the Fifteenth Army, one between Rouen
this time whether all units of limited mo- and Paris, the other near Amiens. In May,
bility which were located immediately be- another inspection tour convinced Rom-
hind the coast should not as a matter of mel that movement of units from right to
policy be incorporated in the main line left into the invasion area would be im-
of resistance (MLR), leaving only fully possible. He therefore requested that the
mobile forces as attack reserves. General four divisions in OKW reserve be assem-
Jodl of the OKW pointed out that, ex- bled nearer the coast. Rundstedt entered
cept for three divisions, units were al- an immediate protest with OKW, con-
ready far enough forward for their artil- tending that the move was tantamount to
70 Two battalions of the 352d Artillery Regiment committing the reserves before the battle.
were already ordered committed on the coast on 26 OKW agreed, and Rommel’s proposal
January 1944. See Seventh Army, KTB l.l.-30.VI.44, was turned down.75
26 Jan 44.
71 The 353d Division was the sister division of the
352d, formed at the same time and according to the 73Der Westen.
same tables of organization. As an attack infantry 74 The 21st Panzer Division replaced the 77th Di-
division, it was scheduled for full offensive employ- vision in the Caen area. The 77th was shifted to St.
ment. The 275th Division, a static division, upgraded Malo-St. Brieuc where in turn it retilaced the 346th
in part, would give up a mobile Kampfgruppe if Division. The 346th had been taken out of static
needed for employment outside Brittany. coastal defense positions in the latter part of 1943.
72 Seventh Army, KTB l.I.-30.VI.44, 14, 19 Mar made mobile, and in January 1944 transferred to
44. The reserve regiment was rotated. After 20 May, Fifteenth Army.
it was the 915th. 75Der Westen.
258 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

These four divisions (three panzer and time the Germans made all arrangements
one panzer grenadier) thus saved by to repel a major attack against the Kand-
OKW’s intervention were the only mo- kueste. At the end of 1943 Hitler ordered
bile units in the west on the eve of inva- the assembly of all available forces behind
sion which could properly be designated the front of the Fifteenth Army and the
strategic reserves. Three were located right wing of Seventh Army, but the latter
within easy marching distance of Nor- sector was to be considered much less in
mandy (easy, that is, if the Allied air peril. OB WEST was to release four divi-
forces were discounted); the fourth was sions from coastal sectors of the Seventh,
far away on the Belgium-Netherlands First, and Nineteenth Armies. Of these,
border. the 243d Division, released from Seventh
In summary, the conflict between Rom- Army, was to remain as a reserve division
mel’s and Rundstedt’s theories of defense in the army area. The other three were all
was never resolved definitely in favor of attached to Fifteenth Army. Similarly, of
one or the other and led to compromise four reinforced regiments obtained at this
troop dispositions which on D Day were time from the Replacement Army, three
not suitable for the practice of either went to Fifteenth Army; one was attached
theory. The pool of mobile reserves had to the 709th Division. The latter attach-
been cut down below what would be ment was made because the coastal de-
needed for an effective counterattack in fenses of the 709th Division were thin and
mass; it had been removed from OB enemy attack there was “possible.” 77
WEST’s control, and, as though to insure That possibility, however, was not
finally that it would not be employed in taken very seriously until the end of
force, it had been divided among three April. Since the German intelligence
commands. While the possibility of seek- system had been supplying very little re-
ing a decision by counterattack had thus liable information, estimates of Allied in-
been whittled away, considerable forces tentions continued to be based more on
were still held far enough from the coast logical inference than on fact. Air recon-
so that, if Rommel’s theories were correct, naissance was severely restricted by Allied
they would be unable to reach the battle- air supremacy. Reconnaissance by sea
field in time to influence the action. In could never be depended on. German
short, operational flexibility had been agents in England steadily dwindled and
curtailed without achieving a decisive the work of those remaining was made al-
thickening of the coastal defense. most fruitless by the closing off of the
English coastal areas in April 1944. News
The Defense on the Eve of Invasion filtering through neutral countries, espe-
cially from Portugal and Switzerland, was
The scheduled completion date for the abundant but confusing.78 The difficulty
winter construction program and all besetzten Westgebieten, 3 Nov 43. OKW/WFSt, Op.
troop preparations for meeting the ex- (H.), Grundlegende Befehle West 28.IV.42-7.V.44.
pected invasion was 30 April.76 Up to that 77 OKH/Op.Abt., Gliederung West, Chefsachen,
Band VIII, l.Teil, 11.X11.42-2.1.44, and 2.Tei1, 8.I.-
76 Grundlegender Befehl des Oberbefehlshabers 21 .II.44.
West Nr. 33, Neuregelung des Bauwesens in den 78MS # B-234 (Pemsel)
GERMAN DEFENSE MEASURES, 1944 259

was not that no reliable reports got batteries and radar installations were con-
through, but that they were too few and centrated between Boulogne and Cher-
too spasmodic to allow the formation of bourg, that Allied mine sweeping and
a convincing picture of Allied intentions, mine laying generally blocked off the
particularly since such a picture had to same area, and that the bombing of rail-
compete for acceptance with various pre- roads had interrupted traffic to the Chan-
conceptions. nel coast but had not affected communica-
The best guess was Hitler’s, though tions with the Atlantic area. In short, Ad-
how he arrived at it the records do not miral Krancke felt that all signs pointed
show. While military leaders were nearly to an invasion between Boulogne and
unanimous in predicting invasion in the Cherbourg, probably with the main effort
Pas-de-Calais area, Hitler in March sud- against the Cotentin, the mouth of the
denly decided that the Allies were likely Seine, or the mouth of the Somme.80 This
to land on the Cotentin and Brittany appreciation differed from previous esti-
peninsulas. He believed they would be mates only in lopping off the Pas-de-
tempted by the ease with which defen- Calais sector between Boulogne and Dun-
sible bridgeheads could be established kerque as a possible landing area. The re-
there, but he apparently did not under- sulting difference in emphasis, however,
take any analysis of the possible military was striking, particularly in the singling
advantages.79 out of the Cotentin as threatened by a pas-
The supposition of a special threat to sible major attack. Later reports by Ad-
Normandy and Brittany received some miral Krancke further emphasized this
support a few weeks later from the Navy. threat, particularly from Allied airborne
On 26 April Admiral Krancke, Com- attack.81 Krancke’s view, developed chiefly
mander of Navy Group West, observed during May, was that Le Havre and Cher-
that recent air photographs showed no ac- bourg seemed likely prime objectives for
tivity in the ports of southeast England or the Allied invasion forces. This convic-
the mouth of the Thames, and concluded tion grew as it was seen that Cherbourg
that Cap Gris Nez and the coast northeast and Le Havre alone of the major French
were not threatened by Allied landings. ports had been spared from heavy air at-
The conclusion was reinforced by the tack.
facts that Allied air attacks against coastal Whether Hitler saw and reacted to
these naval estimates or whether he had
79 Seekriegsleitung/l.Abt., KTB 1.-31.III.44, 4 Mar access to other information, in late April
44, and KTB 1.-31.V.44, 3 May 44; Der Westen. his interest in Normandy increased and
German generals, commenting after the war on their
experiences, were unanimous in giving Hitler the he began to insist strongly on the need to
credit for first pointing to the danger of invasion in reinforce the defense there.82 On 6 May
Normandy. In the light of the German Army’s gen-
eral reluctance to admit that Hitler had shown any 80Marinegruppenkommando West, KTB 16.-30.-
military perspicacity at all, the testimony is fairly IV.44, 26 Apr 44; cf. in same KTB Lageuebersicht des
convincing. The generals, who were then unable to Marinegruppenkommandos West, Fuehrungsstab,
see the military advantages of a Cotentin assault as Rueckblick Monat April 1944.
compared to an attack against the Kanalkueste, al- 81Seekriegsleitung/l.Abt., KTB l.-31.V.44, 15 May
leged that Hitler’s choice was sheer intuition. The 44.
records at least do not contradict that interpretation. 82 Der Westen.
260 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Seventh Army was notified by Rommel of south of Carentan at the same time was
Hitler’s concern, and the army ordered instructed to be prepared for action
the deployment of one parachute regi- against airborne troops.83
ment and two separate battalions in the The Cotentin was thus substantially
immediate vicinity of Cherbourg. The reinforced and fully alerted a month be-
parachute regiment selected was the 6th fore the two U.S. airborne divisions were
and it was to be placed in the general dropped there. While expecting airborne
area of Lessay-Periers. The 206th Panzer assault on the Cotentin, however, neither
Battalion, a separate tank battalion Rommel nor Rundstedt reckoned that
equipped with a miscellany of Russian, such assault would form part of the main
French, and German light tanks, was or- Allied effort. Having reinforced the ac-
dered to dig in between Cap de la Hague tual garrison in the peninsula, therefore,
and Cap de Carteret. The Seventh Army they took no further steps to cope with a
Sturm Battalion was sent to la Haye du major landing in the area. On the con-
Puits and later shifted to le Vast, south- trary, a Seventh Army proposal on 5 May
east of Cherbourg. Decision was made at to shift the whole of the LXXIV Corps
the same time to divert to the Cotentin from Brittany to Normandy in case of
the 91st Division, which was then on its large-scale landings in the LXXXIV
way from Germany to Nantes. Orders Corps sector was rejected by Field Mar-
were issued the next day switching the shal Rommel.84 No reserves were moved
trains to the vicinity of la Haye du Puits. nearer the Cotentin, and no plans were
The 91st Division was told that on arrival made to move them in mass in case of at-
it would take over command of the 6th tack.
Parachute Regiment. This movement As for the Navy, having called its op-
was completed on 14 May. On 9 May ponent’s trumps it relaxed under the
Rommel ordered that the 101st Stellungs- curious delusion that the Allies might not
werfer Regiment, released from OB play at all. Krancke’s thesis seems to have
WEST reserve, be committed in the Co- been that unless the invasion were pre-
tentin, split between the east and west ceded by large and devastating attacks on
coasts. On the day that this move was com-
83Seuenth Army, KTB l.l.-30.VI.44, 6, 7, 9, 12
pleted, 12 May, the 17th Machine Gun May 44; Seventh Army, Trans.O., KTB I.I.-30.VI.44,
Battalion (a well-trained unit of young 8 May 44, and Adage 15. The Sturm Battalion was
an irregular Army unit for shock employment. It
men) also completed relief of the 795th
contained about 1,100 men in four companies armed
Georgian Battalion on Cap de la Hague as infantry and had four light field howitzers. The
and the latter battalion, under command (swerfer Regiment wasorganized in the
west in January 1944. It consisted of three mobile
of the 709th Division, was moved on 17 rocket launcher battalions armed either with 210-
May south to Brucheville northeast of mm. rocket launchers or 280.mm./320-mm. launch-
Carentan. Mission of all the major units, ers. The 100th Panzer Replacement Battalion, equip-
ped with a handful of French and Russian light
the 9Ist Division, 6th Parachute Regi- tanks, had very slight combat value. Half of the
ment, andseventh Army Sturm Battalion, 243d Division which occupied inland ports was also
charged with antiairborne defense. See MS # -45
was defense against airborne landings. (Schlieben) .
The 100th Panzer Replacement Battalion 84 Seventh Army KTB l.IJO.VI.44, 2, 5, May 44.
GERMAN DEFENSE MEASURES, 1944 261

the coastal batteries it could not succeed.85 the west that landings could be attempted
He noted on 3 1 May that such attacks had without great risk.87
indeed increased, but they were, he The contrast between Krancke’s opti-
thought, still too limited to insure the suc- mism about enemy intentions and his
cess of landings. Actually, from his point sober accounting of the helplessness of
of view, he was right. Despite his prognos- his own forces in the face of enemy over-
tications about the threat to the Cotentin whelming superiority was the most strik-
he continued to believe that large-scale ing aspect of his last report before the in-
landings would strike the Pas-de-Calais. vasion. His fleet of combat ships was so
Here the coastal batteries were formida- small that it could scarcely be talked
ble. The Allied air attacks had hit them about in terms of a naval force and even
more often than they had hit any other what he did have was for the most part
sector of the coast, and yet the attacks up bottled up in the ports by what he called
to the eve of D Day had eliminated only “regular and almost incessant” Allied air
eight guns. In the Seine-Somme sector sorties. His main offensive units in June
five had been destroyed, and three in Nor- were a flotilla of destroyers (which on 1
mandy. 86 The Navy thus remained con- April had two ships operational),88 two
fident that its artillery could still knock torpedo boats, 89and five flotillas of small
the Allied invasion fleet out of the water motor torpedo boats (S-Boote) with thirty-
-provided of course it sailed where it was one boats operational. In addition he had
expected. That confidence was further a few mine sweepers and patrol craft. Fif-
nourished by the fact that, despite heavy teen of the smaller submarines based in
air attacks on radar stations, the radar French Atlantic ports, though not under
warning system remained virtually intact Krancke’s control, were scheduled to take
as of 31 May. In fine, reviewing the situa- part in resisting the invasion. Midget sub-
tion on 4 June Admiral Krancke was marines and remote-controlled torpedoes
driven to the conclusion that not only was were being developed but they never got
attack not imminent but there was a good into the fight. 90Even this tiny fleet could
chance that observed Allied preparations not operate. Krancke reported thirty Al-
were part of a huge hoax. The mixture of lied air attacks on his naval forces during
bluff and preparation for a later invasion
would keep up, the naval chief thought, 87Lageuebersicht des Marinegruppenkommandos
West, Fuehrungsstab, Rueckblick Monat Mai 1944 in
until German forces were so weakened in Marinegruppenkommando West, KTB 16.-31.V.44,
cited hereafter as Navy Group West, Rueckblick
Monat Mai 1944. Blumentritt, CofS, OB WEST, also
85Marinegruppenkommando West, KTB 16.-3I.- believed the invasion would not come. See MS #
V.44, 22 May 44. T-121 (Zimmermann et al.).
86 Rpt, 12 Jun 44, Admiral Kanalkueste. Seekriegs- 88 Figures not available for a later date. In any
leitung/l .Abt., KTB Anlagen l.-30.VI.44. This, how- case, however, the destroyers were not used against
ever, does not take into account total interference the invasion fleet in the landings.
with the effectiveness of the coastal batteries through 89 He had seven on 1 April, lost three in a brush
destruction of communications and damage to auxili- with Allied destroyers in April and two more in May.
ary facilities. Air attacks in Seventh Army area at Marinegruppenkommando West, KTB I.-15.1V.44,
least were a serious enough threat to uncasemated KTB 16.-30.1V.44, KTB I.-15.V.44, and KTB 16.-
batteries that General Dollmann ordered alternate 31 .v.44.
and dummy positions prepared. 90 Conf, 29 Jun 44, ONI, Fuehrer Conferences, 1944.
262 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

May and added that even in dark nights actually losing ground. The program of
his units got no relief. He predicted an replacing the 1943 mine fields in mid-
enforced reduction of effort and heavy Channel finally had to be abandoned in
losses in the future.91 In the meantime he March 1944 because of lack of mines and
found himself unable to carry out his plan because of Allied radar observation.
for blocking off the invasion coast with Krancke estimated that the deepwater
mine fields. Delivery of all types of mines fields would all be obsolete by mid-June.
had been delayed chiefly by transporta- Some hasty mine fields were laid in the
tion difficulties. Up to the end of April Bay of the Seine during April but their
there were on hand only enough concrete estimated effective life was only five
shallow-water mines to put in two mine weeks. The dearth of materials and ade-
fields in the Dieppe area. quate mine layers continued to disrupt
In May, more mines became available. German plans. Krancke’s conclusion on
But in the meantime the mine-laying fleet the eve of invasion was that mining ac-
had been depleted by Allied attacks, and tivity of E-boats could only provide a
increased Allied air surveillance of the “nonessential” contribution to the Ger-
sea lanes made all German naval activity man defenses.93
difficult. If Admiral Krancke’s forces were help-
less in naval action, they were scarcely
The anticipated mining operations more effective on land, where their as-
[Kranke reported on 4 June] to renew the signed task of casemating coastal batteries
flanking mine fields in the Channel have not
dragged along past the completion date
been carried out. On the way to the rendez-
vous at Le Havre T-24 fell behind because with no end in sight. Hitler had ordered
of damage from [a] mine, “Greif” was sunk in January that all batteries and antitank
by bombs, “Kondor” and “Falke” were dam- guns were to be casemated by 30 April.94
aged by mines, the former seriously. The 6th On that date Admiral Krancke reported
MS-Flotilla [mine layers] likewise on its that of 547 coastal guns 299 had been case-
way to Le Havre to carry out KMA [coastal
mine] operations reached port with only one mated, 145 were under construction; re-
of its six boats, one having been sunk by maining concrete works had not been
torpedoes and the other four having fallen begun. Like all other defense prepara-
out through mine damage, air attack or sea tions, this effort had been concentrated
damage. The laying of KMA mines out of along the Kanalkuesie. In the Pas-de-
Le Havre therefore could not be carried
out.92 Calais and Seine-Somme sectors, 93 of the
132 guns had been casemated. Normandy
In fact during the month only three had 47 guns, 27 of which were under con-
more coastal mine fields could be laid and crete at the end of April. As for the fixed
all these were put down off the Kanal- antitank positions, 16 of the 82 guns had
kueste. The essential mining of waters 93 Navy Group West, Rueckblick Monat Mai 1944.
around the Cotentin could scarcely be Mines swept by the Allies during the crossing on 6
begun. Naval defense preparations were June were presumably among those counted obsolete
by the Germans. Some fresh mines were laid in the
91Navy Group West, Rueckblick Monat Mai 1944. assault area during the night of 6-7 June. See MS
92 Ibid. All ships mentioned in the report were # D-333 (Krancke) and MS # D-334 (Ruge) .
torpedo boats. 94Seventh Army, KTB l.Z.3O.VZ.44, 17 Jan 44.
GERMAN DEFENSE MEASURES, 1944 263

been covered in the Fifteenth Army area. only half complete .97 The corps was par-
The nine guns in the Seventh Army sector ticularly concerned that not even the
were all open.95 fortification of the immediate MLR along
The Army’s construction program, of the water’s edge nor the naval and army
course, suffered along with the Navy’s and coastal batteries were finished. The so-
was far from completion on D Day. Short- called Zweite Stellung, which Rundstedt
age of materials, particularly cement and in late 1943 ordered to be built a few
mines, due both to production and to kilometers in from the coast line in order
transportation difficulties affected all for- to get some depth of defense, had pro-
tification work. The shortage of cement, gressed still more slowly, even though, be-
critical even at the outset of the winter ing largely a system of prepared field po-
construction program, was greatly inten- sitions constructed by the French, it took
sified by the Allies’ all-out rail bombing relatively few priority materials or labor.
offensive. Late in May LXXXZV Corps, In March LXXXZV Corps reported the
for example, received 47 carloads of ce- position 65 percent finished, but the more
ment in three days against a minimum critical fact was that only thirty-one of the
daily need of 240 carloads. Two days after planned eighty-eight resistance nests and
this report was made, the flow of cement strong points were actually fully ready for
to the Seventh Army area stopped alto- defense. In the sector of the 709th Divi-
gether as trains had to be diverted to sion, defending the vital east coast of the
carrying more urgently needed ordinary Cotentin, only one of forty-two planned
freight. During May the cement works in positions was fully prepared. Rommel de-
Cherbourg were forced to shut down for cided in April that the Zweite Stellung
lack of coal. Plans were then made to was wasting time and effort that were
bring up cement by canal to Rouen and vitally needed for reinforcing the main
ship by sea to the Seventh Army area, but line of resistance. He therefore ordered
this was a last-minute solution and could all work discontinued except where the
never be tried out.96 Zweite Stellung lay close to the coast and
On 15 May Seventh Army reported that could be considered part of the primary
its defense preparations were to be con- defense.98 Thus the last chance to secure
sidered complete, its beach obstacles and some depth of defense was lost.
antiairlanding obstacles set, and its troop But the sacrifice of depth did not re-
dispositions made. This was, to say the sult in solidity for the main line. Despite
least, an exaggeration, analagous to a Seventh Army’s report that obstacles on
claim that a bombing program was com- the shore line and in fields suitable for
plete as soon as all targets had been hit. airborne landings were complete by the
In fact, a week later LXXXZV Corps esti- middle of May and needed only deepen-
mated that the construction program was ing, it was precisely that deepening which
95 Status Report, Stand der Verschartungen, Stich-
alone could have made them effective.
tag 30.1V.44, in Marinegruppenkommando West, Rommel’s inspection of the antiairland-
KTB 16.3O.IV.44. ing obstacles on 18 May convinced him
96Seventh Army, Trans.O., KTB l.I.-30.VI.44, 25,
28 May 44, and Anlage 8; Seventh Army KTB l.I.- 97 Seventh Army KTB l.I.JO.VI.44, 15, 22 May 44.
30.VI.44, 23 May 4. 98 Ibid., 13 Apr 44.
264 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

that, far from being complete, they had actually received about ten thousand anti-
only just been begun. Few were mined personnel mines during 1944 and no
and his goal was to have them all mined. Teller mines at all.102
For that purpose he required 13,000 shells Similar incompleteness marked the for-
for Normandy alone.99 As for the shore tifications on D Day. On the east coast of
obstacles, they had been completed only the Cotentin, strong points and resistance
along the high-water mark and a few nests were spaced about 875 yards apart;
yards seaward. Admiral Krancke warned between the Orne and Vire Rivers they
against continued acceptance of earlier were 1,312 yards apart.103 Most of them
estimates that the Allies would land at were field fortifications, sometimes with
high tide. 100 If landings were made near concreted troop shelters and sometimes
low tide they would not be materially embodying concrete gun casemates. Of
hindered by the obstacles already in place. the installations in the 352d Division
This was true but increasing their num- sector only 15 percent were bombproof;
ber was inevitably a slow process. A meas- the remainder were virtually unprotected
ure of the difficulties faced by the German against air attack. 104 The fortifications had
Army was the experience of the 352d Di- no depth whatsoever. According to the
vision, which had to cut stakes for ob- commander of the 716th Division the
stacles by hand in the Foret de Cerisy some forty to fifty fortified resistance centers in
ten or twelve miles inland, haul the wood his sector were beaded along the coast like
by cart to the beach, and drive the stakes, a string of pearls. 105 Generalmajor Horst
again by hand, into the tidal flats.101 Freiherr Treusch von Buttlar-Branden-
Mining of the coastal zone had made fels, OKW operations staff officer, had
considerable progress but was still far warned after his inspection trip of Nor-
short of the goal. In the first six months mandy defenses in January that if the
of 1944 Rommel succeeded in tripling enemy broke through one strong point
the number of mines in the coast defense there would be a gap of three or four
zone. But the five or six million mines kilometers into which he could advance
laid by D Day contrasted with Rommel’s unhindered.los The abandonment of the
own minimum estimate of fifty million Zweite Stellung meant that to a large
needed for continuous defense belts. For degree this condition still prevailed in
the352d Division sector alone ten million J une.
were needed to cover a thirty-mile front Rommel’s inability to complete the At-
to a depth of three miles. The division lantic Wall undoubtedly contributed to
the general ineffectiveness of German re-
99 Bericht ueber die Reise des Hewn Oberbefehls-
habers am 17. und 18. Mai 44. Seventh Army, KTB
sistance to the Allied landings on 6 June.
Anlagen l.Z.-30.VZ.44. For lack of sufficient mines, A stronger wall would have meant a
the artillery shells were to be provided with trip
wires and attached to the antiairlanding stakes. 102Ibid; MS # A-982 (Ruge) .
100An important element in this changed estimate 103MS # B-234 (Pemsel) .
was the observation of British landing exercises in 104MS # B-432 (Ziegelmann).
May. Seekriegsleitung/l.Abt., KTB Z.31.V.44, 7 May 105MS # B-621 (Richter). Generalleutnant Rich-
44. ter commanded the 716th Division at the time of the
101MS # B-432 (Oberstleutnant Fritz Ziegelmann, invasion.
G-3, 352d Division) 108MS # B-672 (Buttlar-Brandenfels).
GERMAN DEFENSE MEASURES, 1944 265

harder crust, and in cracking it the Allies Luftwaffe depended for the most part on
would unquestionably have suffered two fighter types: the Focke-Wulf 190 and
heavier losses. But it also seems likely that the Messerschmitt 109. The attack plane,
such a difference would not have proved the twin-engined Junkers 88, was avail-
decisive. The critical weakness, as Rom- able in such small quantities that the tac-
mel had seen, was the German inability tical air commands were equipped mainly
to maneuver. And the most important with the standard interceptor aircraft.
cause of that was the unchallenged su- Not only did this mean less offensive
premacy of the Allies in the air. The Luft- power in land warfare but, more impor-
waffe had not only been beaten before D tant, it entailed competition between the
Day; it had been all but annihilated. demands for air support and the demands
The story of what happened to Goer- for the defense of Germany against the
ing’s air force. which four years before had ever intensified Combined Bomber Of-
been the world-famed spearhead of blitz- fensive. Thus the Germans faced the same
krieg, cannot here be told in detail. dilemma in the allocation of air forces
Among the causes of its decline there was that they did in the division of their
at least an element of bad judgment. ground troops between the west and east.
Through 1942 Hitler persisted in believ- In both cases the compromise effected be-
ing that the end of the war was just tween the rival claims resulted only in es-
around the corner of the next campaign; tablishing inferiority to the enemy on all
at the same time he refused to recognize fronts. And this, in turn, produced a
the tremendous productive capacity of the spiral of attrition and increasing inferi-
Western Allies, particularly the United ority, spinning inevitably to disaster.
States.107 Although in 1940 the Germans In the beginning of 1944, when it was
had pioneered in the use of specially de- already too late, Reich Minister Albert
veloped attack aircraft for support of Speer tried to halt the spiral by concen-
ground operations, after the end of the trating on fighter production. Under the
French campaign they neglected to de- impetus of the Speer program monthly
velop the tactics further. They turned production of fighters rose steadily in
instead first to creating a bomber fleet to 1944 despite all the Allied air forces could
knock out England and later to producing do to destroy aircraft and ball bearing fac-
fighter forces to protect the homeland. tories. In the three months before D Day
Their efforts on both scores were inade- betiveen seven and eight thousand fighters
quate. In the meantime the development M’ere produced. Since losses continued to
of an Air Force to co-operate with the mount, the net gain was only about a
Army went by the board. In 1944 the thousand planes. But even this gain was
not reflected in a stronger air force. In-
107 Von Rohden, Development and planning in the crease in the number of available aircraft
Germarz Air Furce, Parts l-3. Von Rohden Collec-
tion at the Air Cniversity, Maxwell Field, Alabama. only emphasized the critical shortage of
A microfilm of the material in this collection is in qualified pilots. This in turn resulted pri-
the Library of Congress, Ivashington, D. C. General- marily from a lack of gasoline which com-
major Hans Detleff Herhudt von Rohden was the
director of the Historical Section of the Luftwaffe pelled a progressive shortening of the
High Command during the final years of the war. pilot-training period from about 260
266 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

hours in 1942 to 110 and even in some many. Thus tactically its planes belonged
cases to 50 in 1944.108 The green pilots to the Reich defensive system. In case of
accelerated the deterioration of the Luft- invasion they were to be diverted to inter-
waffe as a whole, since their inexperience cept Allied planes over the invasion area,
increased their own losses and the losses but with bases so far from the scene of op-
of their planes. Moreover the planes erations they were unlikely to be very ef-
themselves, mass produced in haste, were fective, and would not be on hand on D
inferior. During 1943 an average of 500 Day.111
aircraft a month had been lost or dam- Despite the accepted thesis that the first
aged because of mechanical or pilot fail- hours of the landings would be the critical
ures. In February 1944 the losses from period for the defense of France, the Luft-
these causes soared to 1,300, accounting, waffe made no comprehensive plans to be
in short, for about half the month’s on hand in strength during those hours,
new production. This was unusual, but mostly because with its limited supply of
losses through accidents continued to be planes and pilots it could not afford to
as important as losses through enemy ac- hoard reserves in idleness while waiting
tion. In May, for instance, 712 aircraft for the Allies to strike. In December 1943
were destroyed or damaged by the Allies, the II Air Corps was transferred to France
while 656 were lost in flying accidents.109 from Italy to take over control of all the
On D Day there were about 400 fighter fighter aircraft to be used in support of
planes in the west under Third Air the German Army. On D Day, however,
Force.110 But only about half of these were the II Air Corps was still only a headquar-
available to oppose Allied air forces sup- ters without any planes. In case of inva-
porting the invasion. The 400 planes were sion, it was to get ten wings (Geschwader)
grouped under II Fighter Corps and di- from Germany. Actually only about six
vided between two subordinate com- wings arrived, and these trickled in with
mands, the 4th Fighter Division with the result that they could never be em-
headquarters at Metz and the 5th Fighter ployed in a concentrated effort. None
Division located near Paris. The mission were on hand on 6 June. The wings ear-
of the 4th Division was to intercept Allied marked for II Air Corps were then just
heavy bombers entering or leaving Ger- being refitted in Germany. The majority
of the pilots were new graduates of the ac-
108Luftwaffe Historical Section, Beurteilung des
Krieges, 14 Aug 44. Von Rohden Collection. This celerated training programs. Not only did
report was based on observations of a Lt. Col. Alewyn they have no battle experience; they were
who visited the west between 15 and 30 July 1944. barely able to handle their planes. Most of
109Notes for a study on Strength and Losses of the
GAF in the Von Rohden Collection.
them were not familiar with France and
110Notes by Von Rohden from Lagekarten, Third did not know how to read maps. The com-
Air Force, in Von Rohden Collection; Beurteilung mander of the II Air Corps, General-
des Krieges, 14 Aug 44. Cf. German Air Force Order
of Battle charts, 31 May and 10 June 1944, prepared
leutnant Alfred Buelowius, aware of their
by the Air Historical Branch of the Air Ministry, inexperience, proposed that he send
London, from German documents in their possession,
MS. Hist Div files. British figures for 10 June are 111MS # BOl3 (Hentschel) . Generalmajor Karl
just over 400. On 31 May the number of operational A. F. Hentschel was commanding general of the 5th
fighter planes is given as 278. See Chart 3, p. 245. Fighter Division.
GERMAN DEFENSE MEASURES, 1944 267

planes out to guide the reinforcements there. The 50 to 150 planes that did fly to
into the flying fields prepared for them. the attack in the critical hours of the de-
Responsibility for the movement, how- fense could achieve nothing, and the Ger-
ever, rested with the German Home Air man Army faced the massed blows of Al-
Command (Luftflotte Reich) and Buelo- lied combined arms alone.113
wius was not consulted. The result was
113Again reports of the number of planes vary.
that on D Day the units were scattered CofS II Fighter Corps estimated he had only fifty
and lost on their flights from Germany planes. See Survey, 18 Nov 44, Some Aspects of the
and many were forced to make emergency German fighter effort during the initial stages of the
invasion of North-West Europe, Translation No.
landings. Few arrived at their assigned VII/l9 by Air Historical Branch, London. Hist Div
bases.112 files. Von Rohden’s calculations all come out nearer
Thus for one reason or another the 150, based on Luftwaffe Historical Section reports,
especially Ueberblick ueber den Luftkrieg, Karlsbad,
planes that should have been in France on 1944. See notes for a study of Strength and Losses of
6 Tune to shield Rundstedt’s army, against
- the GAF in the Von Rohden Collection. About 1.000
intolerable Allied air supremacy were not planes were brought into France between 6 June
and 7 July but the net gain was only about 250. See
112MS # B-620 (Buelowius). Beurteilung des Krieges, 14 Aug 44.
CHAPTER VIII

The Sixth of June


The Invasion Is Launched Force U (seabome units of the VII
Corps) was marshaled in the Tor Bay area
On 8 May General Eisenhower set D and east of Plymouth; Force O (1st Di-
Day for Y plus 4, or 5 June. The plans vision), in the area of Dorchester; Force
were made (though changes would be in- B (29th Division), near Plymouth and
troduced up to the last minute), the Falmouth; and the early build-up divi-
troops were trained, the preparatory soft- sions, the 9th Infantry and 2d Armored
ening up of the enemy was well under Divisions, near Southampton. Marshaling
way. What remained was to get the men areas for the airborne units were as fol-
on ships and give the order to go. The lows: glider troops in the central counties
vastly complicated process of organizing between London and the Severn River;
and equipping the assault units for em- paratroopers of the 101st Division in the
barkation began in April. It followed in Newbury-Exeter area; paratroopers of
general the pattern worked out in British the 82d Division in the eastern half of
exercises in the fall of 1943 which broke England, north of London.2 (Map VI )
down the mounting into a series of move- About 54,000 men, including the tem-
ments bringing the troops successively porary housekeeping services of the entire
nearer embarkation and at the same time 5th Armored Division, were required to
providing for their equipment and assault establish and maintain installations for
organization. Unless the troops were al- mounting the seabome assault forces
ready stationed near the south coast of alone, and to perform services necessary
England, they were moved first to concen- to make them ready for sailing. To cook
tration areas where they received special their meals, more than 4,500 new army
equipment, waterproofed their vehicles, cooks were trained during the first three
and lost certain administrative overhead months of 1944. To transport them and
considered unessential during the assault. haul their supplies, over 3,800 trucks were
The second move brought them to mar- operated by the Southern Base Section.
shaling areas located close to the embarka- Through the first five months of 1944
tion points. There, final supplies were is- individual and group assault training had
sued for the voyage, maps distributed, continued, supplemented from January
briefing for the operation accomplished, on by large-scale exercises designed to test
and the units broken down into boatloads not only assault techniques but co-ordina-
to await the final move down to the ships.l tion between the joint armies, smoothness
1Information on mounting and training from of staff work in all phases of the opera-
[Clifford Jones] NEPTUNE: Training, Mounting, The tion, and techniques of mounting, mar-
Artificial Ports (The Administrative and Logistical
History of the ETO: Part IV), MS. pp. 275ff. Hist 2 The latter was the principal area of Eighth AF
Div files. installations.
CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

shaling, loading, and unloading. These to nothing.5 The Germans realized that
exercises culminated in two dress re- they had sunk landing craft but guessed
hearsals for the invasion: exercise TIGER that the craft had been participating in
for Force U (VII Corps units) held at an exercise.6 The incident passed with-
the end of April; the series of exercises, out repercussions.
FABIUS, for Force O (1st Division), Force After the TIGER and FABIUS rehearsals
B (29th Division), and British assault the assault troops returned to the mar-
and follow-up forces conducted in the shaling areas to complete their last-
early part of May. minute preparations and to wait. Troops
The assault exercises were held at Slap- of Force U had almost a month of wait-
ton Sands on the coast of Devon south- ing. It was a trying time for the men and
west of Dartmouth under conditions a dangerous time for the fate of the in-
simulating as closely as possible those ex- vasion. Although troops were not briefed
pected in the actual operations. As a re- on operation OVERLORD until the last
sult of the exercises certain minor techni- week in May, the fact that they were con-
cal improvements were made, but the centrated and ready to go and that they
basic organization and the techniques as had just practiced the invasion maneu-
worked out at the Assault Training Cen- ver with the organization actually to be
ter were unchanged. used would have been sufficient informa-
Amid all the simulation there came one tion in the hands of enemy agents to
serious note of war. One of the convoys jeopardize the operation. All troops were
of exercise TIGER was attacked by two therefore sealed in the marshaling areas
German E-boat flotillas totaling nine behind barbed wire and with a host of
boats.3 Losses were heavier than those some 2,000 Counter Intelligence Corps
suffered by Force U during the actual in- men guarding them closely. The whole
vasion. Two LST’s were sunk and one coastal area had been closed to visitors
damaged. About 700 men lost their lives.4 since April. Now, in addition, the camps
The loss of three LST’s to the OVERLORD themselves were isolated from all contact
assault lift was particularly critical in with the surrounding countryside. Cam-
view of the general shortage of landing ouflage discipline was more severely en-
craft. General Eisenhower reported to forced during these weeks than at any
the Combined Chiefs of Staff that the time subsequently during actual opera-
sinkings reduced the reserve of LST’s tions. The German Air Force, though
weak, was believed capable of damaging
3 Marinegruppenkommando West, KTB 16-30.IV. raids against troop concentrations and
44,27 Apr 44.
4 Jones, NEPTUNE, p. 258. Navy figures were 638
port areas. Actually, only one raid of
killed and 89 wounded. See Report by Allied Naval any consequence did occur, when on the
Cdmmander-in-Chief Expeditionary Force on Oper- night of 30 May bombs were dropped in
ation NEPTUNE (London, 1944),I, 33, cited here-
after as ANCXF Report. Jones, historian for engineer 5 Diary of CinC, 28 Apr 44.
units that were chiefly involved in the disaster, gives 6 Marinegruppenkommando West, KTB 16.-JO.-
749 killed, and bases his calculations on after action IV.44, 28 Apr 44. On the basis of a German broad-
reports of the units and detailed casualty break- cast, the ANCXF Report erroneously stated that the
downs. Even so, he feels his figures may be incom- Germans were unaware of the nature of their suc-
plete. cess. ANCXF Report, I, 33.
PREINVASION SCENES. Soldiers in mess line (above) in one of the marshaling
camps in southern England, and (below) men and equipment being loaded on LST’s
at Brixham.
272 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

a camp near Falmouth, causing a few weather on 5 June be overcast and


casualties to an ordnance battalion. The stormy with high winds and a cloud base
enemy continued to miss his opportuni- of 500 feet to zero, but the weather was
ties to disrupt the final preparations. of such a nature that forecasting more
Loading of Force U, Force O, and than twenty-four hours in advance was
Force B began on 30 May, 31 May, and highly undependable. The long period
1 June, respectively, and all troops were of settled conditions was breaking up. It
aboard by 3 June. Force U craft were was decided, after discussion, to post-
loaded mostly at Plymouth, Dartmouth, pone decision for seven hours and in the
Tor Bay, Torquay, Poole, Salcombe, meantime let Force U and part of Force
Brixham, and Yarmouth. They were di- O sail on schedule for their rendezvous
vided into twelve convoys for the cross- for the 5 June D Day.
Channel movement depending on their At 0430 Sunday morning a second
missions, assembly points, and speed. meeting was held at which it was pre-
Force 0 was split into five convoys and dicted that the sea conditions would be
the craft loaded in a relatively concen- slightly better than anticipated but that
trated area including the ports of Port- overcast would still not permit use of
land, Weymouth, and Poole.7 the air force. Although General Mont-
Operation OVERLORD was ready. gomery then expressed his willingness to
On 29 May the senior meteorologist go ahead with the operation as scheduled,
for SHAEF, Group Captain J. M. Stagg General Eisenhower decided to postpone
of the RAF, had drawn an optimistic it for twenty-four hours. He felt that OVER-
long-range forecast of the weather to be LORD was going in with a very slim mar-
expected in the first week of June. On gin of ground superiority and that only
the basis of that forecast all preparations the Allied supremacy in the air made it a
had been made. General Eisenhower sound operation of war. If the air could
cabled General Marshall on Saturday, 3 not operate, the landings should not be
June: “We have almost an even chance risked. A prearranged signal was sent
of having pretty fair conditions . . . only out to the invasion fleet, many of whose
marked deterioration . . . would dis- convoys were already at sea.9 The ships
courage our plans.” 8 But marked de- turned back and prepared to rendezvous
terioration was already in the cards. That twenty-four hours later.
Saturday evening Group Captain Stagg On Sunday night, 4 June, at 2130 the
again came before the Supreme Com- high command met again in the library
mander and his commanders in chief of Southwick House. Group Captain
who were meeting at Southwick House Stagg reported a marked change in the
north of Portsmouth, the headquarters weather. A rain front over the assault
of Admiral Ramsay. Group Captain area was expected to clear in two or three
Stagg had bad news. Not only would the hours and the clearing would last until
Tuesday morning. Winds then of 2.5 to
7 ANCXF Report, Vol. III, Rpt, Comdr Assault
Force O, p. 5; Ibid., Rpt, Comdr Assault Force U, 9The first ships actually sailed on 31 May. They
pp. 13-14. were 54 “Corncobs” (Blockships) for the artificial
8 Cbl. Eisenhower Personal Files. harbors which weighed anchor from Oban.
THE SIXTH OF JUNE 273

ALLIED INVASION CHIEFS. Left to right: General Bradley, Admiral Ramsey,


Air Chief Marshal Tedder, General Eisenhower, General Montgomery, Air Chief
Marshal Leigh-Mallory, General Smith. This photograph was taken during a con-
ference in early 1944. ”

31 knots velocity would moderate. Cloud Both Eisenhower and General Smith
conditions would permit heavy bombing welcomed the break and felt the decision
during Monday night and Tuesday should be made to go in on Tuesday.
morning although there would be con- The gamble that worried Smith was the
siderable cloudiness Tuesday. The cloud possibility of not being able to spot naval
base at H Hour might be just high fire but he thought it was still the best
enough to permit spotting for naval gun- gamble to take. To call off the invasion
fire. now meant to wait until 19 June before
All this was good news, but it indi- it could be tried again. Troops would
cated weather that might be barely toler- have to be disembarked with great risk
able rather than ideal for the assault. to security, as well as to morale. The 19
After listening to the forecast Admiral June date would mean acceptance of
Ramsay reminded the commanders that moonless conditions for the airborne
there was only half an hour to make a drops. Finally, the longer the postpone-
decision, and that if Admiral Kirk’s ment, the shorter the period of good cam-
forces were ordered to sail for a D Day paigning weather on the Continent.
on Tuesday, 6 June, and were later re- Still Air Chief Marshal Leigh-Mallory
called they would not be able to sail was skeptical of the ability of the air force
again for a Wednesday rendezvous, the to operate effectively in the overcast pre-
last day for two weeks on which light and dicted. Air Chief Marshal Tedder agreed
tidal conditions would be suitable for that the operations of heavies and me-
the assault. diums were going to be “chancey.”
274 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

General Eisenhower refused the pessi- the high commanders, the planners with
mistic view. “We have a great force of whom we have been so long concerned
fighter-bombers,” he said, and then turn- had no choice now but to sit back and
ing to General Montgomery he asked, wait. They had done what they could
“Do you see any reason for not going to insure that the men who crossed the
Tuesday”? Channel on 5 June 1944 should have the
“I would say-Go!” Montgomery re- greatest possible chance of success at a
plied. cost as low as careful planning could set
“The question,” Eisenhower pointed it. Long before the armada sailed, the
out, “[is] just how long can you hang Combined Chiefs of Staff had focused
this operation on the end of a limb and their attention far ahead of the battle of
let it hang there.” the beaches. The SHAEF staff similarly
The discussion continued a few more had long been working on plans for the
minutes. later phases of the operation. The nearer
At 2145 Eisenhower announced his H Hour approached, the more heavily
decision. “I’m quite positive we must and exclusively the responsibility for the
give the order. . . . I don’t like it, but invasion settled on the lower com-
there it is. . . . I don’t see how we can manders.
possibly do anything else.” lo In the narrative to follow, the great
There remained still a possibility that names drop out. Even Eisenhower and
the weather might become so much worse Montgomery appear but seldom. In their
that the decision would have to be re- place will be the corps and division com-
versed. A final meeting was held shortly manders, the colonels, the lieutenants,
after midnight. Weather charts were and the privates. For the few will be sub-
studied again, but nothing had changed. stituted the many, as the battlefield, so
The invasion was launched and through long seen as a single conceptual problem,
the choppy waters of the Channel the becomes a confused and disparate fact-
5,000 ships and craft of the largest fleet a maze of unrelated orchards and strange
ever assembled held to their carefully roads, hedgerows, villages, streams and
plotted courses toward the transport woods, each temporarily bounding for
areas off the enemy coast. the soldier the whole horizon of the war.
When General Eisenhower left South- One may say of almost any successful
wick House before dawn of 5 June, he operation that it carried out the plan, but
had made the last of a long series of this is to say little of how or why it suc-
planning and command decisions which ceeded. The Normandy assault was per-
through three and a half years had trans- haps as thoroughly planned as any battle
lated the idea of the cross-Channel attack in the history of war. Nevertheless the
into an operation of war. The war leaders, fighting men went in trained to impro-
vise battlefield solutions to the imme-
10 Account of the meeting from notes made by Air diate problems facing them-how to take
Vice Marshal James M. Robb, SHAEF CofS for Air.
Direct quotes are as given by Robb in sgd rpt, Mon out an unseen machine gun in the hedge-
A.M., 5 Jun 44. Hist Div files. rows, how to outflank an enemy holed
THE SIXTH OF JUNE 275

up in a stone farmhouse. The fighting in eight hours.12 This was at 2215,13 pre-
these terms proceeded not according to cisely the hour at which the transport
plan but according to the trial and error planes carrying troops of the U.S. 101st
of battle. It is to the narrative of this Airborne Division began taking off from
testing that we now turn. airfields in England. What happened
While the Allied invasion force next is not altogether clear. While Fif-
steamed across the Channel, the Ger- teenth Army put its troops on the highest
mans in France, so long schooled for this alert, Army Group B apparently took no
moment, had no direct knowledge that it action. On the basis of past experience
was at hand. The enemy was all but Rommel’s staff considered it unlikely
blind. There had been no air recon- that the intercepts warned of an immi-
naissance during the first five days of nent invasion. Rommel himself was in
June. Naval patrols scheduled for the Herrlingen at his home, on his way to
night of 5-6 June, along with the mine- visit Hitler at Obersalzburg; he was not
laying operations for that date, were can- immediately called back. Army Group
celed because of bad weather. B did not alert Seventh Army. In fact
The stages of alert among the various the routine daily orders from Seventh
commands in the west varied, reflecting Army headquarters to subordinate corps
both the nebulous character of such in- on the evening of 5 June actually can-
telligence as was available and the lack celed a planned alert for that night.14
of command unity. On 1 and 2 June Perhaps the chief reason for the cancel-
German agents who had penetrated Re- lation was that a map exercise, to which
sistance groups picked up twenty-eight of a number of division and lower com-
the BBC prearranged signals ordering manders in Seventh Army had been in-
the Resistance to stand by for the code vited, was scheduled for the morning of
messages that would direct the execution 6 June at Rennes. Whatever the reason,
of sabotage plans. The central SS intel- it is apparent that General Dollmann be-
ligence agency in Berlin reported these lieved on the night of 5 June that there
intercepts on 3 June to Admiral Doenitz was less cause for alarm than on many a
and warned that invasion could be con- previous night in May when his troops
sidered possible within the next fort- had been alerted.
night. At the admiral’s headquarters The net effect on German prepared-
they were not taken too seriously. It was ness of the intercepted warnings to the
thought that perhaps an exercise was in Resistance was therefore slight. Seventh
progress.11 Army was alerted only in the sense that
On the evening of 5 June OB WEST it was in the same state of “defensive
and Fifteenth Army independently in-
12 Fifteenth Army, KTB 1.I.30.VI.44, 5 Jun 44.
tercepted the “B” messages which at this 13Double British Summer Time. German clocks,
time Fifteenth Army at least understood set by Central European time, showed 2115. All
to be warnings of invasion within forty- times given in text are DBST.
14Rad, 5 Jun 44, Seventh Army to XXV, LXXIV,
11Seekriegsleitung/I.Abt., KTB 1.-30.V1.44, 3 Jun and LXXXIV Corps. Seventh Army, KTB Anlagen
I.
44. l.V.-5.VI.44.
276 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

readiness” that it had been in all through provided by their observations were of
the spring. The Resistance messages of limited usefulness. The Germans could
the evening of 5 June may have per- not have forecast the break in the
suaded OB WEST that invasion was im- weather which Group Captain Stagg re-
minent, although there is evidence that ported to General Eisenhower.19 Al-
Rundstedt’s intelligence officer at least though there is no evidence that mete-
rejected the warning on grounds that it orologists advised German commanders
would be absurd for the Allies to an- that invasibn on 6 June was impossible,
nounce their invasion in advance over it is clear that the generally unfavorable
the BBC.15 In any case, a last-minute wind and sea conditions contributed to
alert of the supreme headquarters in such reducing the enemy’s alertness.20
vague terms was of little value for the This was particularly true of the naval
command. It gave no indication of where command. Lulled into a sense of security
or precisely when the Allies would strike; by the weather and the judgment that
reconnaissance, moreover, could not be the Allies had not yet completed essen-
put out in time to answer these ques- tial preparatory bombardment of the
tions. coastal fortifications, Admiral Krancke
As for the Navy, it was, on 5 June, received reports of the SOE intercepts on
thoroughly complacent. German naval 5 June without alarm. Notice of the
experts had calculated that Allied land- BBC affair was faithfully transcribed in
ings would be possible only in seas of less his war diary for 6 June together with
than intensity 4,16 with a wind force up to his assurances that nothing was likely to
24 knots and a visibility of at least three happen-all under the general heading:
sea miles. These conditions were not “Large-scale enemy landing in the Seine
being met on 5 June .17 Lacking weather- Bay.” 21
reporting stations to the west whence
most of the Channel weather came, the 19It is likely, however, that they would not have
German meteorologists were unable to considered that the break made invasion possible,
since weather conditions were still unsettled and the
make reliable predictions.18 Weather German Navy view was that at least five consecutive
planes flew out over the North Sea daily days of favorable weather would be necessary for
to points west of Ireland, but the data the success of the landings. Rpt, Beitruege zur Frage
der Landemoeglichkeiten an der Kueste des Kanals.
1 Jan 44. Seekriegsleitung/1.Abt., KTB Anlagen 1.I-
15 Marinegruppenkommando West, KTB 1.-7.VI.- 30.VI.44.
44, 6 Jun 44.
20 The story told by Captain Harry C. Butcher,
16 Wave heights between five and eight feet. My Three Years with Eisenhower (New York, 1946))
17Seuenth and Fifteenth Army commanders pp. 646-47, concerning German weather predictions
thought the weather was not too adverse for inva- is erroneous. Major Lettau, far from being “the chief
sion, but it is not clear what standards they applied. German meteorologist,” was in fact attached to an
See the KTB’s for the respective armies. The almost antiaircraft outfit and had nothing to do with fore-
complete lack of co-ordination between Army, Navy, casting invasion weather, He was with the 155th Flak
and Air Force headquarters makes generalization on Regiment, stationed in Amiens, and his job was to
German preparedness extremely difficult. analyze flying conditions over England from data
18 One German meteorologist commented that com- collected by radio sound stations. See interv cited n.
manders were virtually reduced to looking at the 18.
morning skies for their weather forecasts. See Interv 21Marinegruppenkommando West, KTB 1.-7.VI.-
with Maj Heinz Lettau, 5 Oct 49. Hist Div files. 44, 6 Jun 44.
GERMAN FIELD COMMANDERS. Upper left, General von Schlieben; upper
right, General Marcks; lower left, General Geyr von Schweppenburg; lower right,
General Dollmann.
278 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

The Airborne Assault three o’clock LXXXZV Corps had taken


its first prisoner. The situation was still
The time and place at least of the obscure, but, as reports piled in, some-
“large-scale landing” caught the Germans thing of the extent and scale of the opera-
wholly by surprise. Seventh Army’s first tion became visible. Generalmajor Max
knowledge that anything was afoot was Pemsel, Seventh Army chief of staff, had
a series of reports in the early morning already (by 0300) concluded that the
hours of 6 June that Allied paratroopers long-heralded major invasion had begun,
were dropping from the skies over Nor- and had correctly located the points of
mandy. At 0130 Lt. Col. Hoffmann, com- main effort near Carentan and Caen.”
mander of the 3d Battalion, 919th Regi- His judgment, however, was at this time
ment of the 709th Division, was at his a minority report. Field Marshals Rund-
headquarters in St. Floxel east of Monte- stedt and Sperrle and Admiral Krancke
bourg. (Map VII) He heard aircraft as well as Rommel’s chief of staff, Gen-
approaching. The sound indicated great eralleutnant Hans Speidel, all thought
numbers, and, as he listened during the they were probably experiencing the
next hour, it seemed to him to swell diversionary operation which had been
louder and louder. At 0200 six airplanes expected in the Seventh Army area
flying, he thought, at about 500 feet while the Allies prepared to strike the
approached the headquarters shelter and main blow against Fifteenth Army. But,
released parachutists in front of and whatever the larger estimate of the situa-
above it. In a few minutes Hoffmann’s tion, local measures could be and were
staff and security guards were heavily promptly taken. The 91st Division in
engaged with paratroopers of the 101st reserve in the Cotentin was released to
Airborne Division in one of the opening Seventh Army, attached to LXXXZV
skirmishes of the battle for Normandy.22 Corps, and, together with the 709th Divi-
News of the landings spread fast. At sion, was ordered to counterattack. There
0215 Seventh Army ordered the highest was actually little else to be done. All
state of alarm through the LXXXZV units in the Cotentin had been briefed
Corps sector. The alarm was passed at to expect airborne operations. The meet-
once by wire to all Army, Navy and Air ing engagement was inevitably the indi-
Force units in the corps area. At 0220 vidual problem of these units.
Naval Commander Normandy (Konter- The situation on the American side
admiral Walther Hennecke)23 reported was similar. The first actions of all air-
paratroopers near the Marcouf battery. borne units in the Cotentin on D Day
During the next five minutes additional were attempts by small groups of men to
reports came in of landings in the sector carry out in the fog of the battlefield
of the 716th and 711th Divisions. Before their own small portions of the assigned
22 Hoffmann Report. Seventh Army, KTB Anlagen
plan. There could be little over-all direc-
1.I.30.VI.44. tion from above. And, in fact, little in-
23Naval district commander for the Normandy
coast, under Admiral Kanalkueste who had the whole 24He reversed himself later in the day to agree
Channel coast command. See naval command chart, with higher command estimates. Tel Msgs. Seuenth
p. 245. Army, KTB Anlagen l.I.-30.VI.44.
TIHE SIXTH OF JUNE 279

PARACHUTE TROOPS marching onto airfield on evening of 5 June.

formation got through to corps and army to land paratroopers to mark the drop
as to what was happening.25 zones. Glider reinforcements would be
By the revised VII Corps field order of brought in at dawn and again at dusk on
28 May both U.S. airborne divisions were landing zones that the paratroopers were
to land in the eastern half of the penin- expected to have cleared of the enemy.
sula between Ste. Mere-Eglise and Caren- The whole airborne operation was by far
tan, establishing a beachhead from which the largest and most hazardous ever un-
the corps would push west and north to dertaken, and thousands of American
the capture of Cherbourg. The six para- lives depended on its success.26
chute regiments of the two divisions,
which together with organic supporting 26 Allied airborne operations required 1,087 trans-
port aircraft including lift for the pathfinders but
units numbered over 13,000 men, were excluding aircraft used to tow gliders. See AEAF
loaded in 822 transport planes at nine Memo, Operation "NEPTUNE," Employment of Brit-
airfields in England. They began taking ish and American Airborne Forces, 27 May 44.
SHAEF G-3 file 24533/Ops (Future Operations).
off before midnight to fly routes calcu- Pathfinders of the 101st Airborne Division began
lated to bring the first serials in from the dropping at 0015; the first serial of combat troops
west side of the Cotentin Peninsula and was scheduled to drop at 0119. See Leonard Rapport
and Arthur Norwood, Jr., Rendezvous with Destiny
over the designated drop zones between (Washington, 1948)) pp. 73, 94.
0115 and 0130. The main flights were Records of airborne operations in the Cotentin are
preceded by pathfinder planes that were very sketchy; those of the 101st Airborne Division
in particular are all but useless. The narrative fol-
25See First Army G-3 Jnl. lowing is based on a set of comprehensive interviews
280 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

The primary mission of the 101st of the 2d Battalion outside their assigned
Airborne Division was to seize the west- zone. (Map VIII) The battalion as a re-
ern edge of the flooded area back of the sult spent most of the day assembling
beach between St. Martin-de-Varreville and, as a unit, took no part in the D-Day
and Pouppeville. Its secondary mission fighting. The regiment’s planned artil-
was to protect the southern flank of VII lery support did not materialize. Only
Corps and be prepared to exploit south- one of the six howitzers of the 377th
ward through Carentan. The latter task Field Artillery Battalion was recovered
was to be carried out by destroying two after the drop, and the fifty men of the
bridges on the main Carentan highway battalion who assembled during the day
and the railroad bridge west of it, by fought as infantry in scattered actions.n
seizing and holding the la Barquette lock, The commander of the 3d Battalion,
and finally by establishing a bridgehead 502d, Lt. Col. Robert G. Cole, dropped
over the Douve River northeast of east of Ste. Mere-Eglise. (See Map VII. )
Carentan. He began then to make his way toward
Two parachute regiments less one bat- St. Martin-de-Varreville. Out of the
talion, the 502d and the 506th (-), were darkness, toy “crickets” snapped as para-
assigned the primary mission. The 502d troopers identified themselves and began
Parachute Infantry, with the 377th Para- assembling in groups. The groups were
chute Field Artillery Battalion attached, generally miscellaneous at first. The men
was to drop near St. Martin-de-Varreville, looked only for company and leadership.
destroy the enemy coastal battery there, Seventy-five men, including some para-
secure the two northern beach exits, and troopers from the 82d Airborne Division,
establish a defensive line tying in the gathered in this way under Colonel Cole
division’s north flank with the 82d Air- and moved steadily toward the coast.
borne Division to the west. The 506th Except for an encounter with a small
Infantry would seize the two southern enemy convoy on the way, in which some
exits. Germans were killed and ten taken
The four battalion serials of the 502d prisoner, the group had no trouble reach-
Infantry came in ten minutes apart led ing its objective. Discovering that the
by the 2d Battalion and regimental head- guns of the St. Martin coastal battery
quarters. The leading planes, scattered had been removed and that the position
by clouds and flak, dropped the majority was deserted, Cole went on to Audou-
ville-la-Hubert where his men estab-
conducted during July 1944 by Col. S. L. A. Marshall lished themselves at the western end of
with officers and men of the airborne units. Colonel
Marshall, subsequently European Theater Historian,
the causeway without a fight.28 About
developed the information thus secured in a num- 27377th FA Bn MR.
ber of battalion and regimental studies which in 28 Bombing had not injured the six Russian 122-
mimeographed form are in the Historical Division mm. guns at the St. Martin emplacement but had so
files. The airborne material is exploited in greater damaged the fire control setup that the guns were
detail than here in [R. G. Ruppenthal] Utah Beach moved before the invasion. See MS # B-260 (Gen-
to Cherbourg (Washington, 1948). to which the erahnajor Gerhard Triepel. gen. Schulze). Triepel
author is generally indebted for the bulk of the during the first half of June commanded the 1261s:
story of U.S. VII Corps operations during June 1944. Army Coastal Artillery Regiment; in the latter half,
See Bibliographical Note. he was artillery commander of LXXXZV Corps.
THE SIXTH OF JUNE 281

two hours later, at 0930, the enemy be- fight was conducted almost single-
gan retreating across the causeway from handedly by S/Sgt. Harrison Summers.
the beach. The paratroopers, lying in Summers rushed the buildings one by
wait, shot down fifty to seventy-five and one, kicked in the doors, and sprayed
at 1300 made contact with the 8th In- the interiors with his Tommy gun. On
fantry (4th Division). They had suf- occasion he had the assistance of another
fered no casualties. Cole, having com- man, but it was his drive and initiative
pleted his mission, remained in the area that kept the attack going. When the
to collect and organize his battalion. By last building was cleared in the after-
the end of the day he had about 250 men. noon, about 150 Germans had been
With this group he was ordered into killed or captured.29
regimental reserve near Blosville for the Near the close of this action Lt. Col.
next day’s operations. John H. Michaelis, regimental com-
The 1st Battalion, 502d Parachute In- mander, arrived in the area with 200
fantry (Lt. Col. Patrick J. Cassidy), had men. Cassidy was thus free to complete
a much harder fight for its objectives. his D-Day mission to cover the north
Colonel Cassidy, landing about in the flank of the regiment and tie in with the
center of the battalion zone near St. Ger- 82d Airborne Division on the left. While
main-de-Varreville, collected a small the fight near Mesieres was in progress
force mostly of his own men and moved the men of the 1st Battalion whom Colo-
toward the stone buildings on the east- nel Cassidy had sent to Foucarville in the
ern edge of Mesieres which were thought morning had succeeded in establishing
to be occupied by the German unit man- four road blocks in and around the town
ning the St. Martin coastal battery. With- and had trapped and largely destroyed a
out opposition the battalion secured the four-vehicle enemy troop convoy. De-
crossroads west of St. Martin near which spite this early success the road blocks
the building stood. Taking stock of his were threatened all day with being over-
position there, Colonel Cassidy found run by a superior enemy force that oc-
that both the northern exits for which cupied prepared positions on a hill to
the regiment was responsible were clear. the northwest.
He then made contact with a group of The American situation was not im-
forty-five men of the battalion who had mediately improved by Cassidy’s move
assembled north of his own position and north, since he came up west of Foucar-
ordered them to establish a defensive line ville in order to carry out the plan of
at Foucarville. The situation to the west tying in at Beuzeville-au-Plain with the
of St. Martin, however, remained ob- 82d Airborne Division. He ran into
scure. Colonel Cassidy decided to keep a trouble there. The company ordered to
portion of his force (nominally a com- Beuzeville-au-Plain mistook the hamlet
pany) in reserve to block any enemy at- of le Fournel for its objective and there
tempt to break through from the west to became involved in three separate pla-
the beaches. A group of about fifteen
29 Summers was awarded the DSC. Details of the
men was sent to clean out the buildings action from interviews by Col. S. L. A. Marshall. Hist
on the eastern edge of Mesieres This Div files.
282 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

toon fights which proceeded in some con- large things that had been planned, even
fusion until dark. The troops then though they seldom knew what was ac-
withdrew to the south where they re- tually happening beyond the field or
mained under enemy pressure during village in which they found themselves.
the night. Since contact was not made The two beach exits south of the zone
with the 82d Airborne Division, Cassidy of the 502d Infantry were the responsibil-
committed the reserve company on the ity of the 506th Parachute Infantry Regi-
left and moved up some spare riflemen to ment (Col. Robert F. Sink). The 506th
fill the gap between le Fournel and the (less the 3d Battalion) was to land be-
road blocks around Foucarville. Even tween Hiesville and Ste. Marie-du-Mont
so the whole line remained very weak, and seize the western edge of the inun-
and the regimental commander, having dated area between Audouville-la-Hubert
already decided to pass the 2d Battalion and Pouppeville. The 3d Battalion,
through the 1st on the following day, dropping just south of Vierville and
ordered Colonel Gassidy to pull back and charged with defending the Douve River
dig in. line in the regiment’s sector, was to seize
During the night the Germans facing two bridges at le Port and establish a
the battalion’s right flank at Foucarville bridgehead there for subsequent exploi-
unexpectedly decided to surrender, ap- tation southward.
parently because the increasing volume Like the 502d, the 506th experienced
of American machine gun and mortar a badly scattered drop, but had rather
fire led them to overestimate the bat- better luck in assembling rapidly. With-
talion’s strength. Eighty-seven Germans in two hours of landing, about ninety
were taken prisoner and about fifty more men of regimental headquarters and
shot down as they attempted to escape. fifty men of the 1st Battalion (Lt. Col.
Here as elsewhere in the 101st Air- William L. Turner) had assembled in
borne Division’s early contacts with the the regimental zone. Colonel Sink estab-
enemy, it seems that the German disper- lished his command post at Culoville.
sion of units in small packets to garrison At the same time the 2d Battalion (Lt.
villages and strong points t.ook no ac- Col. Robert L. Strayer), despite a landing
count of the splintering effect of airborne completely out of its zone in the sector
landings in their midst, even though the of the 502d Parachute Infantry to the
enemy command expected just such north, succeeded in assembling rapidly
landings. The isolated German units, about 200 of its men. Strayer had the
apparently out of contact with their principal regimental mission of securing
parent outfits, ignorant of what was occur- the southern beach exits at Houdien-
ring as well as of what German counter- ville and Pouppeville. Before dawn his
measures were in the making, were prone men headed south toward their objec-
to fancy themselves about to be over- tives. They ran into opposition on the
whelmed whenever American fire was same road over which the 1st Battalion,
brought to bear on them with any per- 502d Parachute Infantry, had passed
sistence. The attackers at least had the shortly before. Delayed all morning by
psychological advantage of knowing the enemy machine guns, they did not reach
THE SIXTH OF JUNE 283

their first objective, Houdienville, until quarters personnel, was sent at 0600 to
early afternoon, after the seaborne troops clear the Pouppeville beach exit.
were already through the exit and pro- At about 0800 Ewell’s men reached
ceeding inland. Pouppeville and attacked to clean it out.
Meanwhile Colonel Sink, at Culoville, The enemy force of approximately sixty
knowing nothing of the 2d Battalion’s to seventy men of the 1058th Regiment
movements, decided to send his reserve, (91st Division) 31 did not offer deter-
the 1st Battalion under Colonel Turner, mined resistance, but it was nevertheless
to carry out a part of the mission. Tur- a slow task for the numerically inferior
ner’s “battalion” of fifty men was ordered Americans to fight them house to house.
to Pouppeville. Again relatively light It was noon before the local German
enemy opposition succeeded in harassing commander surrendered. The Americans
the march and delaying for several hours had suffered eighteen casualties, while
Turner’s arrival on his objective. inflicting twenty-five on the enemy and
In the course of the delay a third unit taking thirty-eight prisoners. The rest
was sent on the same mission by the divi- of the enemy in Pouppeville retreated
sion commander, Maj. Gen. Maxwell toward the beach where they were caught
Taylor,30 who had no knowledge of the by the advancing U.S. seaborne forces,
two previous moves. The 3d Battalion, and at last surrendered to the 8th In-
501st Parachute Infantry (Lt. Col. Julian fantry. The first contact between sea-
Ewell), had been designated to land as borne and airborne forces was made at
division reserve with the additional task Pouppeville between Colonel Ewell’s
of protecting the glider landing zone men and the 2d Battalion, 8th Infantry
northwest of Hiesville. Although three (Lt. Col. Carlton 0. MacNeely).
planes of the 3d Battalion serial were Throughout D Day Colonel Sink at the
shot down with the loss of three-quarters 506th regimental headquarters felt
of their personnel and other planes were wholly isolated and almost alone on the
scattered by fog and flak, enough carried Cotentin Peninsula. Most of the time
out their scheduled drops so that about he was out of touch with his own bat-
300 men of the battalion and of the divi- talions and with the division; he had
sion headquarters were able to assemble little information about the enemy, and
quickly and establish the division com- his headquarters was involved in scat-
mand post as planned near Hiesville. tered fights for its own security. The
From there Colonel Ewell, with a group regiment unknowingly had set up in the
of about forty men from the line com- midst of a small hornet’s nest. In the Ste.
panies and some miscellaneous head- Marie-du-Mont area was the entire 2d
30 General Taylor, commissioned in the Corps of Battalion of the 191st Artillery Regiment
Engineers from West Point in 1922, transferred to which had been committed to coastal de-
the Field Artillery in 1926. As chief of staff of the
82d Division in 1942 he assisted in organizing the fense in the 709th Division sector.32 The
first airborne divisions. In 1943 he went overseas as battalion headquarters was in Ste. Marie
artillery commander of the reorganized 82d Airborne
Division. After serving through the Sicilian and 31Probably of the 3d Battalion, whose headquar-
Italian campaigns he received command of the 101st ters was at St. CBme-du-Mont.
Airborne Division in March 1944. 82 MS # D-330 (Blumentritt) .
284 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

and the three batteries, each with four tential earthwork into which the de-
105-mm. howitzers, were all in the im- fenders cut often-elaborate foxholes,
mediate vicinity. Four of the pieces were trenches, and individual firing pits. The
captured near Holdy by groups of the 1st dense bushes atop the hedgerows pro-
Battalion, 506th Infantry. The enemy vided ample concealment for rifle and
battalion headquarters was overrun by machine gun positions, which could sub-
combined action of the 506th Infantry ject the attacker to devastating hidden fire
and elements of the 4th Division later from three sides. Observation for artil-
in the day. 33 For the most part, however, lery and mortar fire was generally limited
Colonel Sink had no men to spare either to a single field, particularly in the rela-
to clear the enemy from his immediate tively flat ground of the beachhead areas.
vicinity or even to reconnoiter to make Each field thus became a separate battle-
contact with other friendly units. He be- field which, when defended with deter-
lieved it necessary to keep together his mination, had to be taken by slow costly
handful of men to protect the rear of advances of riflemen hugging the hedge-
the units engaged in clearing the cause- rows to close with the enemy with rifle
ways and to provide a nucleus for con- and grenade. Both Americans and Ger-
centration of the regiment. The group mans complained that the hedgerows
maintained itself, fighting off enemy rifle- favored the other side and made their
men who twice during the day closed in own operations difficult. In fact, the
among the surrounding hedgerows. In country was ideal for static defense and
the evening, with forces of the 1st and all but impossible for large co-ordinated
2d Battalions, Colonel Sink controlled attacks or counterattacks. The chief bur-
about 650 men. den of the fighting remained with the
The hedgerows, which bottled up individual soldier and the advance of his
Colonel Sink’s men in apparent isolation unit depended substantially on his own
despite the nearness of friendly units, courage and resourcefulness, and above
were to become the most important all on his willingness to move through
single preoccupation of American fight- machine gun and mortar fire to root the
ing men during their next two months enemy out of his holes.
in Normandy and would remain as their The 101st Airborne Division within
most vivid memory of the land. These a relatively few hours of landing had
hedgerows, ubiquitous throughout the secured the western edge of the inun-
Cotentin and the bocage country, were dated area west of UTAH Beach. The task
earth dikes averaging about four feet in was accomplished, not quite according to
height and covered with tangled hedges, plan, but on time and with much smaller
bushes, and even trees. Throughout the cost than anyone had thought possible
entire country they boxed in fields and before the operation.34 The remaining
orchards of varying sizes and shapes, few 34 Total D-Day casualties calculated in August 1944
larger than football fields and many amounted to 1,240 including 182 known killed and
much smaller. Each hedgerow was a po- 501 missing and presumed captured or killed. See
32d MRU Rpt, Analysis of Battle Casualty Reports
33 Another of the batteries was captured still later Received from 101st Airborne Division, 13 Aug 44.
by the 8th Infantry. See below, p. 329. FUSA file CC 21, dr 4, item 704.
HEDGEROW COUNTRY. Aerial view (above) of typical hedgerow terrain in
Normandy; and (below) infantry crouching behind the bushes atop hedgerow.
CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

part of the division’s D-Day task was to which he readily backed off when the
seize and occupy the line of the Douve Americans opened fire. The situation at
River on either side of Carentan, ini- Brevands on D Day paralleled that on the
tially to protect the southern flank of VII northern flank where the 502d Parachute
Corps and later to drive southward Infantry was also holding a tenuous line
through Carentan to weld together the facing superior enemy forces. Both de-
VII and V Corps beachheads. fenses succeeded chiefly by grace of the
The 3d Battalion, 506th Parachute In- enemy’s reluctance to leave his prepared
fantry, was to drop south of Vierville, positions and attack, and his confusion
seize two bridges over the Douve at le as to American strength and intentions.
Port, and establish a bridgehead on the It is worth observing, however, that the
south bank of the river. Its mission came Carentan canal was the boundary be-
perilously near failure at the outset. The tween the 709th and 352d Divisions. The
enemy, fully alerted before the drop, latter, located to the south, would not
not only put up a heavy antiaircraft bar- attack across the canal without orders
rage but illuminated the drop zone by from corps. Corps, in fact, had ordered
setting fire to an oil-soaked building near the reserve unit, the 6th Parachute Regi-
by. Paratroopers that landed in the area ment, to make such an attack from the
were greeted by a concentration of ma- south but it did not at once come into
chine gun bullets and mortar shells. action.35
Others, experiencing delayed drops, came Completion of the IOlst Division’s de-
down in or near the swamplands east of fense of the Douve River line west to St.
the drop zone. Come-du-Mont was the task of the 501st
The battalion S-3, Capt. Charles G. Parachute Infantry (Col. Howard R.
Shettle, landing near Angoville-au- Johnson) less the 3d Battalion. The regi-
Plain, collected two officers and twelve ment’s missions in detail were to seize
men and then proceeded at once across the lock at la Barquette, blow the bridges
the flat marshy river plain toward his on the St. Come-du-Mont-Carentan
objective. By the time he reached the road, take St. Come-du-Mont if possible,
bridge at Brevands at 0430 he had picked and destroy the railroad bridge to the
up a total of thirty-three men, and was west. Of these objectives the lock at la
there reinforced by twenty more a little Barquette had a special importance for
later and by another forty during the the planners.
night of 6-7 June. Shettle’s group es- The purpose of the lock was to permit
tablished themselves first on the south- the controlled flow of the tide up the
east bank of the river but could not hold river channel so as to maintain a depth
the position in the face of increasing sufficient for barge navigation as far up-
enemy machine gun fire. They therefore stream as St. Sauveur-le Vicomte. If the
withdrew across the river and dug in on lock were destroyed the swamplands of
the northwest bank. During the day the the Douve and Merderet would suffer
enemy did not counterattack; in the erratic tidal flooding. On the other
middle of the night he made only a half-
hearted push toward the bridge, from 35 See below, pp. 293 ff.
THE SIXTH OF JUNE 287

hand, partial obstruction of the lock Colonel Johnson, the regimental com-
would permit controlled flooding of the mander, by good fortune landed about
same area by backing up the river flow. where he was supposed to and, in the
The latter kind of inundation had been process of moving southward toward la
effected by the Germans before D Day. Barquette, managed to collect some 150
Capture of the lock, it was believed, was men of miscellaneous units with whom
tactically important in order that VII he set out to accomplish his mission. The
Corps might control the Douve and Mer- first step went well. Before the enemy
deret inundations, which together con- had been fully alerted, a portion of the
stituted a barrier to military movement force crossed the lock and dug in on the
across the whole eastern half of the base far side. They seemed relatively secure
of the peninsula. The importance was there as the enemy made no attempt to
stressed even though it was recognized press in on them. Colonel Johnson there-
that flooding and draining of the area fore decided to try to get the Douve
were slow processes and that the natural bridges to the west. With fifty men he
swamps and flat bottomlands, crisscrossed first went north to Basse Addeville, where
with drainage ditches, in themselves he had ascertained that a considerable
formed a convincing obstacle to vehicle number of paratroopers had assembled
movement and a grave hindrance to in- under Maj. Richard J. Allen, the regi-
fantry maneuver. mental S-3. Although Allen’s men were
Just before D Day the drop zone for already in contact with the enemy to
the 501st Parachute Infantry (and the the north and west, it proved possible to
3d Battalion, 506th) had been shifted assemble about fifty of them in the early
about a mile and a half southeast-from afternoon to return with Colonel John-
the vicinity of Beaumont to east and son to la Barquette. Met by intense
south of Angoville-au-Plain-in order to enemy artillery, mortar, and small arms
bring the paratroopers down nearer their fire, chiefly from the rear, the force called
objective and avoid the antiairlanding for naval fire support through a naval
obstacles which last-minute reconnais- shore fire control officer who had initially
sance had discovered on the original drop joined Major Allen’s unit at Addeville.
zone. The change does not seem to have Salvos from the 8-inch guns of the
been responsible for the inaccuracy of Quincy adjusted on enemy positions
the drop. The scattering of the 1st Bat- around St. Come-du-Mont caused almost
talion planes resulted from the same con- immediate slackening of the enemy fire.
ditions of fog and enemy antiaircraft fire At about 1500 Major Allen was ordered
which had affected all the other airborne to bring the rest of his force to the lock
units and was certainly no more serious. and he joined Colonel Johnson an hour
What was serious, however, was the loss or two later.36
in the drop of the entire battalion com- 36 The account here follows that of Cal. S. L. A.
mand. The commanding officer was Marshall, who interviewed a number of the officers
and men, including Colonel Johnson, soon after the
killed; the staff and all the company
action. See Marshall’s account in The Fight at the
commanders were missing from the first Lock, mimeo MS. Hist Div files. Some doubt has
critical battles. subsequently arisen as to whether Johnson reached
288 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Even with this support, however, it lard was ordered by Colonel Johnson to
proved impossible to advance westward move to la Barquette to participate in
to the Douve bridges. The 3d Battalion the drive from that point toward the Car-
of the 1058th Regiment held St. Came- entan highway. The 2d Battalion disen-
du-Mont and the surrounding ground in gaged but, in attempting to move south
force and strongly resisted with fire every through Addeville, was stopped almost
move in that direction. The opposition immediately by heavy fire from the same
here in the sector of the 91st Division enemy force that had opposed the attack
and immediately to the south where the on les Droueries. Ballard’s men remained
6th Parachute Regiment held Carentan during the night in close contact with
and the road and rail bridges was much the enemy. In the meantime, Colonel
more determined than anywhere in the Johnson, abandoning for the time the
coastal sector held by the 709th Division. attempt to get to the Douve bridges, con-
The unexpected strength of the enemy solidated the position at la Barquette,
in the Carentan-St. Come-du-Mont area deepening the southern bridgehead,
had been discovered by the 2d Battalion, pushing out his flanks, and maintaining
501st Parachute Infantry (Lt. Col. contact with the 3d Battalion, 506th Para-
Robert A. Ballard), shortly before Colo- chute Infantry, on the east. Patrols dur-
nel Johnson tried unsuccessfully to move ing the night of 6-7 June were sent out to
westward. Colonel Ballard had assem- try to find the 506th Regiment and divi-
bled parts of his lettered companies and sion headquarters, but they did not suc-
his battalion staff between Angoville-au- ceed and the southern line remained iso-
Plain and les Droueries. Since his as- lated and precariously held by groups
signed mission was the destruction of the equivalent to about three companies in-
Douve bridges above Carentan, he began stead of three battalions as planned.
at once an attack toward St. Come-du- By the end of D Day the 101st Air-
Mont. The companies, of about thirty borne Division had assembled only about
men each, ran into strong opposition in 2,500 of the 6,600 men who had dropped
the hamlet of les Droueries, which they during the early morning hours37 They
had attacked frontally in the belief that were distributed in mixed units of vary-
not more than an enemy platoon faced ing size. But despite the handicaps of
them. After they were turned back ini-
scattered landings and heavy losses in
tially, a renewed flanking attack was
both men and equipment the division
meeting some success when Colonel Bal-
had carried out the most imnortant of
its D-Day tasks. Above all, the paratroop-
the lock during the morning befcwe he made con-
tact with Maior Allen. See Lawrence Critchell, Four ers had succeeded in clearing the way for
Stars of Hell- (New York, 1947)) pp. 52-54. In view the move of the seaborne forces inland.
of Colonel Johnson’s death, the issue cannot be
finally settled. The evidence for Critchell’s version
This was the task which had been con-
does not seem conclusive. See Leonard Rapport and sidered so vital to the whole Allied inva-
Arthur Norwood, Jr., Rendezvous witIa Destiny sion plan as to warrant the extraordinary
(Washington, 1948)) p. 111. Rapport tried unsuc-
cessfully to resolve the difficulty through extensive
correspondence with survivors. 37See above, n. 34.
THE SIXTH OF JUNE 289

risk of airborne landings in heavily de- ping west of the river, were to consolidate
fended enemy territory. If the division’s the two 505th bridgeheads and push out
defensive line north and south was weak, a defensive line about three miles west-
that weakness was for the moment bal- ward, anchored air the south at the cross-
anced by the enemy’s failure to organize roads just west of Pont l' Abbe and thence
concerted counterattacks. extending north in an arc through Beau-
vais. The 507th Parachute Infantry would
The position of the 82d Airborne Di- defend the line of the Douve, destroying
vision (Maj. Gen. Matthew B. Ridg- bridges at Pont l' Abbe and Beuzeville-la-
way) 38 on the west was cause for far Bastille. Both regiments would be pre-
greater concern both to General Ridgway pared to attack west in the direction of St.
and to the Allied command. Landing on Sauveur-le Vicomte.
the edge of the assembly area of the Ger- Only one of the 82d Airborne Divi-
man 91st Division, it met more deter- sion’s missions was carried out according
mined opposition in the early stages. It to plan: the capture of Ste. Mere-Eglise.
suffered more seriously also from scat- Success at Ste. Mere-Eglise was due in part
tered drops which left two of its regiments to the exceptionally good drop of the
unable to assemble in sufficient force to 505th Parachute Infantry northwest of
carry out their missions. the city. (Map IX) Most of the regiment’s
By the revised plan of 28 May, Ridg- planes, though initially scattered like the
way’s division was ordered to drop astride others, were able to circle back and re-
the Merderet River, clear the western por- lease the paratroopers over the drop zone
tion of the beachhead area between the which pathfinders had clearly marked. In
sea and the Merderet and from the Douve addition the regiment had the f for-
River north to Ste. Mere-Eglise, and es- tune to come down in an area devoid of
tablish a bridgehead on the west bank of enemy. The 3d Battalion (Lt. Col. Ed-
the Merderet. One parachute regiment ward C. Krause), which was to take the
(the 505th) was to capture Ste. Mere- town of Ste. Mere-Eglise, rapidly assem-
Eglise, secure crossings of the Merderet bled about a quarter of its men and moved
near la Fiere and Chef-du-Pont, and es- out in the early morning hours. Counting
tablish a defensive line north from Neu- on speed and surprise, Colonel Krause or-
ville-au-Plain to Beuzeville-au-Plain to tie dered his men to enter the town without
in with the 502d Parachute Infantry of a house-to-house search and to use only
the 101st Airborne Division. The other knives, bayonets, and grenades while it
two regiments (507th and 508th), drop- was still dark so that enemy gunfire could
be spotted. The enemy was caught off
38Generel Ridgway, a 1917 graduate of the U.S. balance and before dawn the town had
Military Academy, served with the War Plans Divi- fallen-the first prize for American arms
sion of the War Department from 1939 to 1942. He
then became assistant division commander of the 82d in the liberation of France. Resistance
Division at its activation in March 1942 and com- had been slight: when Ste. Mere-Eglise
mander three months later. When that division was was cleared Krause’s men counted only
reorganized as the 82d Airborne Division he con-
tinued to command and led it in the Sicilian and ten enemy dead and about thirty prison-
Italian campaigns. ers. The battalion cut the main Cher-
290 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

bourg communications cable and estab- talion commanders, Colonel Krause took
lished a perimeter defense of the town. charge of the defense. The first enemy
The 2d Battalion, 505th Parachute In- thrust up the Carentan road, made in
fantry (Lt. Col. Benjamin H. Vander- strength of about two companies sup-
voort), in the meantime had assembled ported by some armor, was repulsed.
half of its men and was moving northward Krause then ordered a counterattack.
to establish the regimental defense line Company I with eighty men was in-
through Neuville-au-Plain and Bandien- structed to move out south, turn east, and
ville. (See Map VII. ) At 0930 the enemy hit the flank of the enemy, whose main po-
counterattacked Ste. Mere-Eglise from sitions were astride the highway. The at-
the south and the regimental commander, tack, however, hit only a single enemy
Cal. William E. Ekman, ordered his 2d convoy moving southward. Having de-
Battalion back to aid in the defense. Be- stroyed the convoy with grenades, Com-
fore turning back Colonel Vandervoort pany I returned to Ste. Mere-Eglise The
detached a platoon under Lt. Turner B. enemy made no further serious effort dur-
Turnbull and sent it to organize a de- ing the day to dislodge the Americans.39
fense at Neuville which was reported to The prompt occupation of Ste. Mere-
be lightly held by the enemy. Turnbull Eglise and its defense were a boon for
moved through the town without opposi- which the 82d Airborne Division had in-
tion and deployed his men on the high creasing reason to be grateful as the day’s
ground north of the town. He was hardly actions along the Merderet River de-
in position before the enemy attacked veloped. The establishment of bridge-
with a force outnumbering the defenders heads over the Merderet was the mission
about five to one. The platoon fought of the 1st Battalion of the 505th Parachute
stubbornly and for eight hours held its Infantry, attacking from the regiment’s
ground. The small action had a signifi- drop zone east of the river. Ultimate suc-
cance which Turnbull did not realize at cess in this mission, however, depended
the time. The fight at Neuville kept the on the ability of the 507th and 508th Para-
enemy in the north at arm’s length while chute Infantry Regiments to occupy the
the defenders of Ste. Mere-Eglise beat off west bank of the river in force. The 507th
the simultaneous enemy attack from the and 508th drop zones lay in the triangle
south. The cost of the platoon’s gallant at the confluence of the Douve and Mer-
stand was heavy. Only sixteen of the forty- deret Rivers-an area of about twelve
two men who had gone to Neuville-au- square miles-and along the outer perim-
Plain survived to be withdrawn late in eter of the VII Corps planned beachhead.
the afternoon to rejoin their battalion. Presence of the enemy in the scheduled
In Ste. Mere-Eglise the 2d Battalion of drop zones prevented the pathfinders
the 505th on its arrival at about 1000 took from marking them, and the pilots of the
over the northern half of the perimeter two regimental serials, looking in vain
defense, permitting the 3d Battalion to for the markers, in most cases delayed
strengthen its position on the south. Two
39For extraordinary heroism in the capture and
companies were held in reserve inside the defense of Ste. Mere-Eglise Colonels Krause and
town. By agreement between the bat- Vandervoort were awarded the DSC.
THE SIXTH OF JUNE 291

flashing the jump lights until they had the gently rising hedgerow country of the
overshot the zones. Both regiments were west shore.
thus widely dispersed and many para- Two of the first groups on the scene,
troopers, heavily laden with equipment, portions of Company A of the 505th and
dropped in the swamplands along the a group mostly of the 507th Parachute In-
river. fantry under Lt. John H. Wisner, had
Absorbed naturally with the basic prob- tried to rush the bridge in the early morn-
lem of assembling, these paratroopers ing but were repulsed by machine gun
tended to collect along the embankment fire. When General Gavin arrived, he de-
of the main railroad from Cherbourg to cided to split the la Fiere force and sent
Carentan, both because it was high dry seventy-five men south to reconnoiter an-
ground and because it was a recognizable other crossing. Later, receiving word that
terrain feature. By following this embank- the bridge at Chef-du-Pont was unde-
ment south, they crossed the river and ar- fended, he took another seventy-five men
rived in the vicinity of la Fiere with the himself to try to get across there. The
river between them and their objectives. groups remaining at la Fiere made no
The only large group which, under com- progress for several hours. Then General
mand of Brig. Gen. James A. Gavin, As- Ridgway, who had landed by parachute
sistant Division Commander, tried to with the 505th, ordered Col. Roy Lind-
push down along the edge of the swamps quist, the commanding officer of the
on the west bank of the river was delayed 508th Parachute Infantry, to organize the
in starting until dawn by vain efforts to re- miscellaneous groups and take the
cover equipment from the swamps. With bridge.41
daylight, enemy fire west of the river be- In the meantime west of the river about
came intense. Gavin therefore had to give fifty men of the 2d Battalion, 507th Para-
up the attempt and moved his men on chute Infantry, had collected under the
down the embankment to join the others battalion commander, Lt. Col. Charles J.
west of Ste. Mere-Eglise.40 Timmes. Shortly after the drop, Timmes
By the middle of the morning 500 to had passed through Cauquigny, the tiny
600 men of miscellaneous units had village at the west end of the la Fiere
gathered at la Fiere, which was one of the causeway. But he did not stay. Hearing
two known crossings of the Merderet in firing in the direction of Amfreville, he
the 82d Airborne Division zone. The la reckoned that paratroopers were attack-
Fiere crossing was an exposed narrow ing the village from the north and decided
causeway raised a few feet above the river to support the attack by advance from the
flats and extending 400 to 500 yards from east. His estimate proved wrong; the
the bridge over the main river channel to enemy firing was actually directed against
his own group. Unable to proceed toward
40 General Gavin, a graduate of West Point in
1929, took command of the 505th Parachute In- the village Timmes withdrew his men to a
fantry in July 1942 and led that regiment into com- 41 By the original plan Ridgway was supposed to
bat in Sicily a year later. He commanded the same come in by glider just before dawn, but this was
regiment in the parachute landing on Salerno Bay in changed a few days before D Day. See Ltr, Ridgway
September 1943 and the following month became as- to Maj Gen Harry J. Malony, 12 Nov 48. Hist Div
sistant division commander. files.
292 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

position along the river east of Amfre- beaten back. The bridge was lost. Colonel
ville and began to dig in. When the posi- Timmes’ group east of Amfreville rein-
tion was organized about midmorning, he forced by Schwarzwalder’s company was
sent a patrol of ten men back to Cauqui- isolated under heavy and continuing
gny to establish a fire position to dominate enemy pressure which effectively pre-
the rvest end of the la Fiere causeway. The vented it for the next two days from any
patrol set up a machine gun in the further active attempts at accomplishing
Cauquigny church, and awaited develop- the division’s mission. The enemy tried
ments.42 to follow up his advantage with attacks
At noon the forces around la Fiere across the causeway. These netted him
gathered for a co-ordinated three-com- only temporary footholds on the east bank
pany attack. In two hours one company but during the day compelled the Ameri-
under Capt. F. V. Schwarzwalder suc- cans to bring back most of the troops sent
ceeded in carrying the attack across the earlier to probe out crossings of the river
causeway, and established contact with to the south.
Timmes’ patrol. The Iray was then open Vthile the la Fiere bridge was won and
to consolidating the bridgehead and com- lost, the attempt to cross at Chef-du-
pleting one of the most important of the Pant almut two miles south had reached
82d Airborne Division’s missions. The a temporary deadlock, as a relatively
initial success, holvevcr, was not followed small number of Germans dug in along
up. Probably because it was difficult in the causelvay tenaciously resisted all ef-
the hedgerow country for any unit to tell forts to dislodge them.44 Late in the after-
quickly what was going on beyond its im- noon, after most of the paratroopers had
mediate limited observation, the first been recalled to strengthen the la Fiere
crossing by about seventy-five men was position, the understrength platoon left
not immediately reinforced. Furthermore at Chef-du-Pont under Capt. Roy E.
Schwarzwalder’s company, instead of Creek was threatened with annihilation
holding on the west bank, decided to pro- by an enemy counterattack. Under heavy
ceed on to Amfrcville to join the 2d Uat- direct fire from a field piece on the op-
talion, 507th Parachute Infantry, to posite bank and threatened by German
which most of the men belonged. As infantry forming for attack on the south,
Schwarzwalder moved out, the enemy Creek’s position seemed desperate. At that
began to react to the initial American at- moment a glider bearing an antitank gun
tack with artillery, small arms fire, and at landed fortuitously in the area. With this
last a tank sally. 43 It was in the middle of gun the enemy was held off while about a
this comrterattack that belated American hundred paratroopers, in response to
reinforcements arrived on the west bank Creek’s plea for reinforcements, came
and were immediately disorganized and down from la Fiere. The reinforcements
42See S. L. A. Marshall, La Fiere Bridgehead,
gave Creek strength enough to beat off
mimco MS. Hist Div files. I‘he account in Ruppen-
thal, L’tal~ l3each, p. 38, differs slightly. 44 Their tenacity may in part have hcen caused by
43 Undoubtedly units of the 100th Panzer Replace- the shooting on two occasions of enemy soldiers who
ment Baltalion equipped with light Russian and stood up apparently with the idea of surrendering.
French tanks. See Marshall, La Fiere Bridgehead.
THE SIXTH OF JUNE 293

the Germans, clear the east bank, and Shanley’s success three enlisted men have
finally cross the river and dig in. This po- received a large share of the credit. They
sition, however, did not amount to a were Cpl. Ernest T. Roberts, Pvt. Otto
bridgehead and Creek’s tenuous hold on K. Zwingman, and Pvt. John A. Lock-
the west end of the causeway would have wood who, while on outpost duty in
meant little but for the action of the 508th buildings at Haut Gueutteville, observed
Parachute Infantry west of the river. the forming of a German counterattack
Elements of the 508th, amounting to by an estimated battalion of infantry with
about two companies of men under com- tank support. They stayed at their posts
mand of Lt. Col. Thomas J. B. Shanley, holding off the enemy attack for two
commanding officer of the 2d Battalion, hours and allowing the main body of
were the most important of at least four Shanley’s force to establish an all-around
groups of paratroopers who assembled defense at Hill 30.45
west of the Merderet but who for the most As reports of the airborne landings
part, being forced to fight for survival, came in to the German Seventh Army
could contribute little toward carrying headquarters and the extent of the land-
out planned missions. Dropped near ings became apparent, General Dollmann
Picauville, Colonel Shanley gathered a ordered a series of moves designed to seal
small force of paratroopers-too small to off the airhead and destroy it. (Map 2)
proceed with his mission of destroying the The 709th Division with the 1058th Regi-
Douve bridge at Pont l’Abbe. He tried ment (91st Division) attached was or-
during the day to join other groups in the dered to clear the area east of the Mer-
vicinity with whom he had radio contact, deret.46 At the same time the 91st Division
but under constant enemy pressure he was counterattacked from the west using the
unable to effect a junction until late in 1057th Regiment and the 100th Panzer
the day. It had then become apparent to Replacement Battalion in an attempt to
him that he was engaged with an enemy wipe out paratroopers who had landed
force of at least battalion strength, and he west of the inundated area. The 6th Para-
decided to withdraw to the battalion as- chute Regiment under control of the 91st
sembly area on Hill 30. In fact, the Ger- Division was to attack through Carentan
mans, elements of the 1057th Regiment, from the south.47 Finally at the end of the
had been pushing eastward in this area
most of the day under orders to counter- 45All three were captured. Pvt Zwingman was
attack in order to wipe out American killed in December 1944 while still a prisoner. The
parachutists west of the Merderet. Colo- three men were awarded DSC’s.
46Seventh Army KTB 1.I.-30 .V1.44, 6 Jun 44.
nel Shanley’s resistance undoubtedly Schlieben denies that the 1058th Regiment was at-
helped save the forces at la Fiere and Chef- tacheddivision
to his and in fact the regiment’s ac-
du-Pont. Once he was firmly establishedtion on D Day does not seem to have been directed
at first by the 709th Division. MS # B-845 (Schlie-
on Hill 30, he formed a valuable outpost ben) .
against continuing German attacks and 47Again the subordination ordered by Seventh
a few days later would be in position to Army was apparently not effected. Von der Heydte
directed the operations of his regiment without any
contribute substantially to establishing orders from the 91st Division. MS # B-839 (von der
the Merderet bridgehead. For Colonel Heydte) .
TO PONT L’ABBE GUEUTTE’i’ILLE HILL 30 AREA

MERDERET RIVER CROSSING at Chef-du-Pod. Village of les Merieux is in


lower right-hand corner of picture.
CA PONNET TO CHEF-DUPONT L.4 FIERE BRIDGE
MAP 2
GERMAN COUNTERATTACK IN THE COTENTIN. Reproduction of a cap-
tured OB WEST map dated 6-7 ]une 1944.
THE SIXTH OF JUNE 297

day the Seventh Army Sturm Battalion Falley (of the 91st Division), together
was ordered to move against the American with some of the subordinate command-
bridgehead from the vicinity of Cher- ers, were at Rennes attending a war game
bourg, attacking in the direction of Ste. when the invasion struck. Schlieben did
Mere-Eglise. A regiment of the 243d Di- not get back to his headquarters near
vision was ordered to move by night to Valognes until noon. Falley on his return
Montebourg.48 By means of these moves was killed by paratroopers. To the un-
and concentric counterattacks Dollmann certainty caused by the commanders’ ab-
was sure at first that he could cope with sence was added the confusion of dis-
the Cotentin landings without moving in rupted communications. Von Schlieben,
any additional forces. It was only in the for instance, during the day had no con-
evening that his optimism waned, as the tact with two of his battalions in the thick
91st Division reported that its counter- of the fighting, the 1st Battalion, 919th
attack was making very slow progress be- Regiment, in the UTAH Beach area, and
cause of the difficulties of maneuvering the 795th Georgian Battalion near
in the hedgerow country. In fact the at- Turqueville. In attempting counterat-
tack had scarcely materialized at all except tacks against scattered U.S. riflemen the
in local actions along the Merderet. Germans experienced the same difficulties
Similarly the 1058th Regiment, appar- with the hedgerow country that the
ently harassed by scattered American Americans did. Finally the LXXXlV
paratroopers, could not get moving in its Corps headquarters, far away in St. Lo,
attack toward Ste. Mere-Eglise. By eve- could not exercise effective control and
ning its advance elements were still north co-ordinate the action of the three divi-
of Neuville-au-Plain. Generalleutnant sions in the peninsula. On the other hand
Karl-Wilhelm von Schlieben, commander communications were not set up to enable
of the 709th Division, ordered it to re- the division commanders to effect their
sume the attack on Ste. Mere-Eglise the own co-ordination.50
next morning. He attached to it two mo The experience of the 6th Parachute
torized heavy artillery battalions, the Regiment illustrates in striking fashion
456th and 457th (each with two 150-mm. the confusion and lack of co-ordination
guns and a battery of Russian 122-mm. in the initial German reactions and
guns), and the company of self-propelled throws a strange half-light on the D-Day
guns of the 709th Antitank Battalion.49 battles in the Cotentin. The commander
For the general sluggishness of German of the regiment, Major Friedrich-August
reaction in the Cotentin, there seem to be Freiherr von der Heydte, was at his com-
several explanations. In the first place two mand post north of Periers when the Al-
of the three division commanders, von lied landings began. But telephone lines
Schlieben and Generalleutnant Wilhelm to the 91st Division and to LXXXIV
48The regiment, nominally the 922d, contained
Corps were broken during the night by
a battalion of the 922d. a battalion of the 920th. and open action of the French Resistance. It
the division’s Engineer Battalion. MS # B-845 was not until about 0600 that von der
(Schlieben) .
49 MS # B-845 (Schlieben) ; MS # B-260 (Trie-
pel) . 50 MS # B-845 (Schlieben) .
298 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Heydte was able to reach General Marcks sea. The 3d Battalion was to return to
at LXXXIV Corps headquarters by a Carentan to provide the regiment with a
private line and get his orders, which were defense in depth, and the attached 3d Bat-
to attack with his regiment through talion, 1058th Regiment, was to remain
Carentan and clean out the rear area of with von der Heydte in St. Come-du-
the 709th Division between Carentan and Mont. The 1st and 2d Battalions moved
Ste. Mere-Eglise. Von der Heydte arrived out at about 1900. By midnight the 1st
in Carentan in the morning and found Battalion had marched apparently with-
no Allied troops and very few Germans. out serious trouble through the territory
He got in touch with his battalions and occupied by the 101st Airborne Division
ordered them to assemble southwest of and reached the vicinity of Ste. Marie-du-
Carentan. He then climbed the church Mont. The 2d Battalion moved north and
steeple in St. Come and looked around. possibly reached the vicinity of Fauville.
The picture before him was, he said, Both battalions sent a number of Ameri-
overwhelming. He could see the Channel can prisoners back to the regimental head-
and the armada of Allied ships, covering quarters.
the water to the horizon. He could see During the night the landing of U.S.
hundreds of small landing craft plying to glider reinforcements impressed von der
the shore unloading men and tanks and Heydte as new large-scale airborne land-
equipment. Yet, for all that, he got no im- ings. They cut off the 2d Battalion from
pression of a great battle in progress. It the regiment and from the 1st BattaEion.
was then about noon. The sun was shin- (In reality, both battalions were already
ing. Except for a few rifle shots now and cut off by the advance of the 8th Infantry
then it was singularly quiet. He could see inland, but this development was ap-
no Allied troops. The whole scene re- parently unknown to von der Heydte.)
minded him of a summer’s day on the He ordered the battalions to maintain
Wannsee.51 contact with each other and pull back to
It was apparently his impression that form a crescent defense of St. Come. Only
no seaborne U.S. troops had come inland the 2d Battalion acknowledged receipt of
in the direction of St. Come. In accord- the order and reported that it was not in
ance with that impression he made his dis- touch with the 1st Battalion. As for the
positions. He ordered his battalions to 1st Battalion, it set out on the morning of
come up to St. Come; the 2d Battalion 7 June to rejoin the regiment, moving
was then instructed to proceed to Ste. south toward Carentan. It never got there,
Mere-Eglise and attack and destroy any for at the Douve River it ran into the
enemy encountered. The 1st Battalion 1Olst Airborne Division units and sur-
was to move to the high ground near Ste. rendered almost to a man.52
Marie-du-Mont and protect the regiment The experience of the 6th Parachute
from any enemy thrusts inland from the Regiment was typical of the inability of
the German forces to concentrate against
51 This paragraph and the following two are from the landings, even when, as in the case of
van der Heydte’s report, MS # B-839. The Wannsee
is a lake near Berlin, a favorite place for Berliners
to spend a Sunday. 52See below, Ch. IX.
CROSSING THE CHANNEL. Columns of LCI(L)‘s (above) heading for the
French coast, and troops on deck of LCI (L) (below) on D-Day morning.
300 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

the 82d Airborne Division, they were day’s postponement, reassembled during
scattered and relatively weak. Thanks to the morning of 5 June and sailed again
this failure, the 82d was able to maintain for the transport areas 22,000 to 23,000
itself while it gradually built back its yards off the French coast in the Bay of the
strength. At the end of D Day, the divi- Seine. Behind mine sweepers which
sion was strongly ensconced in the vicin- cleared and marked ten lanes through
ity of Ste. Mere-Eglise but was precari- old enemy mine fields in the Channel, the
ously situated outside the main VII Corps huge convoys, under constant air um-
beachhead. It had no contact with the brella of fighter squadrons flying at 3,000
101st Airborne or 4th Infantry Divisions. to 5,000 feet, made an uneventful voyage
It had assembled only a fraction of its own unmolested by the enemy either by air or
men. Planned seaborne reinforcements sea.56 H Hour for U. S. beaches was 0630.
had not arrived. The bulk of the glider re- The weather was still cause for concern.
inforcements (the 325th Glider Infantry) During the passage a gusty wind blowing
were not due until the next morning. At from the west at fifteen to twenty knots
the end of the day, the division reported produced a moderately choppy sea with
that it controlled only 40 percent of its waves in mid-Channel of from five to six
combat infantry and 10 percent of its ar- feet in height. This was a heavy sea for
tillery.53 The first estimate sent on to VII the small craft, which had some difficulty
Corps indicated total casualties of about in making way. Even in the assault area it
four thousand.54 The bulk of these, how- was rough for shallow-draft vessels,
ever, were the missing paratroopers scat- though there the \t:ind did not exceed fif-
tered far and wide in enemy territory. Re- teen knots and the waves averaged about
vised calculations in August 1944 showed three feet. Visibility was eight miles with
D-Day losses of 1,259 including 156 ceiling at 10,000 to 12,000 feet. Scat-
known killed and 756 missing, presumed tered clouds from 3,000 to 7,000 feet cov-
captured or killed.“5 ered about half the sky over the Channel
at H Hour becoming denser farther in-
Hitting the Beaches land. Conditions in short were difficult
though tolerable for both naval and air
While U.S. airborne troops dropped on forces.57
the Cotentin and British paratroopers Most serious were the limitations on air
landed near Caen. the invasion fleet was operations. Heavy bombers assigned to hit
bringing the main body of the Allied the coastal fortifications at OMAHA Beach
armies to the shores of Normandy. The had to bomb by instruments through the
assault convoys, after turning back for the overcast. With concurrence of General
Eisenhower the Eighth Air Force ordered
5382d Div AAR. At noon, 8 June, the division re- a deliberate delay of several seconds in its
ported still only 2,100 effective--r less than a third
of its combat strength. release of bombs in order to insure that
54See Phantom Intercept in 21 A Gp Sitrep 4. they were not dropped among the assault
SHAEF G-l file 704/G, 21 A Gp Casualty Rpts, Vol. I. craft. The result was that the 13,000
55 32d MRU Rpt, Analysis of Battle Casualty Re-
ports received from 82d Airborne Division, 13 Aug 56 ANCXF Report, Vol. III, Annex D, p. 44.
44. FUSA file CC 21, dr 4, item 704. 57 Prov Eng Spec Brig AAR.
THE SIXTH OF JUNE 301

bombs dropped by 329 B-24 bombers did sin. This news, in conjunction with an in-
not hit the enemy beach and coast de- creasingly sharp definition of the extent
fenses at all but were scattered as far as of the airborne landings, at last convinced
three miles inland. Medium bombers Admiral Krancke that he was confronting
visually bombing UTAH Beach defenses a large-scale landing. He gave such orders
from a lower altitude had slightly better as he could. The Western Defense Forces
results, although about a third of all were to patrol the coastal waters; the
bombs fell seaward of the high-water Landwirt submarines were to be alerted;
mark and many of the selected targets the 8th Destroyer Flotilla was to move up
were not located by pilots. Of 360 bomb- from Royan to Brest; the 5th Torpedo
ers dispatched by IX Bomber Command, Boat Flotilla was to reconnoiter the Orne
293 attacked UTAH Beach defenses and 67 estuary area; and the 9th Torpedo Boat
failed to release their bombs because of Flotilla was to patrol off Cap de la Hague.
the overcast. On the whole the bombing The torpedo boats of the 5th Flotilla left
achieved little in neutralizing the coastal Le Havre at 0430, but an hour out of port
fortifications. they met six Allied warships escorted by
At about 0230 the Bayfield, headquar- 15 to 20 destroyers. After firing torpedoes
ters ship for Task Force U (Rear Adm. at the Allied vessels, the small German
Don P. Moon) and VII Corps (Maj. Gen. boats were attacked from the air. They
J. Lawton Collins), dropped anchor in the succeeded in driving off the attackers with
transport area off UTAH Beach. Twenty antiaircraft fire, but then had to return to
minutes later the Ancon, flagship of Ad- Le Havre to replenish their load of tor-
miral Hall and headquarters ship for pedoes and ammunition. Two torpedo
Task Force O and V Corps, reached the boat flotillas reconnoitering out of Cher-
OMAHA Beach transport area. Unloading bourg were forced by heavy seas to return
of assault troops into the LCVP’s that to port at dawn. This virtually concluded
would take them to the beaches began. German naval activity for the day. Ad-
Up to this point there had been vir- miral Krancke wrote in his diary: “It was
tually no enemy reaction. The German only to be expected that no effective blow
radar stations still in operation had failed could be struck at such a superior enemy
to pick up either the air or the sea ap- force.” 58 He made plans, however, to at-
proach. Because of bad weather Admiral tack the Allied fleet that night.
Krancke had no patrol boats in the Chan- German coastal batteries began spo-
nel during the night, nor did he order radic firing at 0535, or only fifteen min-
them out after he heard of the airborne utes before Allied naval bombardment
landings. Tidal conditions would not per- opened prearranged coumerbattery fire.
mit them to leave the harbors before day- Projectiles from Allied battleships and
light and, besides, Krancke was still not cruisers and destroyers continued to thun-
sure that a major attack was in progress. der over the heads of the troops making
Shortly after three o’clock, however, the final run-in to shore until a few min-
Naval Commander Normandy reported utes before the touchdown. Beach drench-
sighting ten large craft lying some seven 58Marinegruppenkommando West, KTB I.-7.VI.-
miles off the coast north of Port-en-Bes- 44,6 Jun 44.
302 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

ing was then taken up by the close-support yards. The 8th Infantry (Cal. James A.
craft. Although the time schedule went Van Fleet), with the 3d Battalion of the
generally according to plan on both 22d Infantry attached, would make the
American beaches, the volume of fire initial assault. It would first occupy the
laid down on vital targets was consider- high ground along the road between Ste.
ably less at OMAHA than expected. Most Marie-du-Mont and les Forges and would
enemy coastal defenses were sited to cover be prepared to move with the bulk of its
the beaches rather than the sea ap- force thereafter westward across the Mer-
proaches. They were therefore well con- deret River in the zone of the 82d Air-
cealed from observation from the sea and borne Division. One battalion would be
were correspondingly difficult to hit. The left in the area west of St. Martin to pro-
beach drenching seems generally to have tect the division’s north flank until the
missed its targets; a large percentage of arrival of the 22d Infantry. The 22d In-
the rockets overshot their marks.59 fantry (Col. Hervey A. Tribolet), next
Naval gunfire coupled with the air infantry unit to land, beginning at H
bombardment, however, had one impor- plus 85 minutes, would turn north from
tant effect at OMAHA Beach which was not the beaches to seize the causeway across
at first apparent to the assaulting troops. the inundations at les Dunes de Varre-
The Germans credit the Allied bombard- ville. Continuing the push northwest, the
ment with having detonated large mine regiment would capture Quineville and
field areas on which they counted heavily occupy the high ground at Quineville
to bar the attackers from penetrating in- and Fontenay-sur-Mer. In the center of
land between the infantry strong points. the beachhead the 12th Infantry (Col.
Preparatory fire seems also to have Russell P. Reeder), landing after H plus
knocked out many of the defending rocket 4 hours, would advance with two bat-
pits. But it was supporting naval gunfire talions abreast to seize the high ground
after H Hour which made the substantial between Emondeville and the Merderet
contribution to the battle, in neutralizing River. One battalion of the regiment was
key strong points, breaking up counter- at first designated as division reserve to
attacks, wearing down the defenders, and pass to division control in the vicinity of
dominating the assault area. Turqueville. By the late May change of
In the VII Corps zone the 4th Division plan, following the alteration of the air-
(Maj. Gen. Raymond O. Barton60 borne missions, the battalion was instead
planned to land in column of regiments released to regimental control and the
on a two-battalion front of about 2,200 12th Infantry was assigned the additional
59 Notes by Col B. B. Talley, Asst CofS, V Corps.
mission of seizing a crossing over the Mer-
Hist Div files. Talley also says the rocket-carrying deret at le Port Brehay just southwest of
LST’s did not come up on line and consequently the regiment’s main objective area. One
did not fire their rockets simultaneously as planned.
so General Barton had been chief of staff at head-
regiment (the 359th Infantry) of the 90th
quarters of the 4th Division in 1940. In June 1942 Division, the first follow-up division, was
he took command of the 4th Motorized Division, attached to the 4th Division to begin land-
which subsequently became the 4th Infantry Divi-
sion, and in January of 1944 arrived with his unit in
ing on D Day. 61 It would assemble in re-
the European theater. 614th Div FO 1, 12 May 44.
TROOPS ON UTAH BEACH. The troops wading ashore (above) were photo-
graphed shortly after H Hour. Note DD tanks on beach. Soldies(below) take
shelter behind sea wall while awaiting orders to move inland.
304 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

serve near Foucarville. In May, enemy ac- rent. In any case it turned out to be for-
tivity was observed on the St. Marcouf tunate since it brought troops in on
Islands flanking UTAH Beach on the north. beaches much less heavily defended than
It was therefore decided to land detach- those designated in the plan. Although
ments of the 4th and 24th Cavalry Squad- the mislanding meant that the tasks as-
rons two hours before H Hour to clean signed to each assault section could not be
out tvhat was suspected to be an enemy carried out as planned, the lack of serious
observation post or mine field control enemy opposition permitted reconnais-
point. sance and speedy reorganization for im-
The airborne troops had done their job provised maneuver. 63 After company-size
well and the 4th Division therefore had task forces had reduced the very lightly
little difficulty getting ashore. The cavalry defended field fortifications covering the
detachments (132 men) found the St. two middle beach exits, both assault bat-
Marcouf Islands unoccupied though talions began their advance across the
heavily mined. From mines and a concen- flooded area. The 1st crossed toward Au-
tration of enemy artillery that hit the douville-la-Hubert; the 2d turned south
islands in the afternoon the cavalry units to pick up the Pouppeville road. (Map 3)
lost two men killed and seventeen The first infantry wave was followed by
wounded.62 The small craft (LCVP’s) engineer and naval demolition parties to
carrying the first waves of the 1st and 2d clear the underwater obstacles. The ob-
Battalions of the 8th Infantry were stacles were all dealt with dryshod and
launched in relatively sheltered lvater and were so much sparser than expected that
had no serious trouble with the wind and the original plan of blowing fifty-foot
surf. At H Hour there was no enemy op- gaps was abandoned in favor of clearing
position. The thirty-two DD tanks sup- the entire beach on the first tide. The job
posed to land in the first wave were de- was completed in an hour. Engineers
layed by the loss of a control vessel that then proceeded to their next tasks of
struck a mine. All but four, which were blowing gaps in the sea wall behind the
lost when the LCT carrying them hit a beach and clearing mine fields. Enemy
mine, were beached approximately fif- opposition consisted only of intermittent
teen minutes late. But, as it turned out, shelling.
the assault troops had no immediate need While engineers worked on the beach,
for them. the 3d Battalion, 8th Infantry, supported
Leading elements of the two assault bat- by tanks of the 70th Tank Battalion, and
talions louched down approximately on the 3d Battalion, 22d Infantry, were land-
time but almost 2,000 yards south of ing and moving out. Well before H plus
where they were supposed to land. The 3 hours the beach area had been cleared
error was probably caused in part by the and landings were virtually routine, har-
obscuring of landmarks by smoke and assed only by sporadic enemy artillery fire.
dust raised by the naval bombardment 63 Brig. Gen. Theodore Roosevelt, assistant division
and in part by the southeast coastal cur- commander, who went ashore with the first wave and
helped organize the attack inland, was awarded the
Medal of Honor for gallantry displayed in his leader-
62 4th Cav Gp AAR. ship under fire.
305

MAP 3

Early success and extraordinarily light dicted that view and much longer before
casualties on UTAH Beach contrasted the Allied command could feel secure
sharply with the difficulties experienced about the V Corps beachhead.64
during those first critical three hours at Leading the attack of General Gerow’s
OMAHA. The German LXXXIV Corps V Corps was the 1st Division (Maj. Gen.
and Seventh Army believed through most Clarence R. Huebner) assaulting with
of D Day that the OMAHA assault had been two regiments abreast, the 116th Infantry
stopped at the water’s edge. It was late in (attached from the 29th Division) on the
the morning before General Bradley
aboard the Augusta could have contra- 64First Army G-3 Jnl.
STE MARJE-LIII-,MMONT EXIT 2 DOUVE RIVER

AERIAL VIEW OF UTAH BEACH ON D-DAY MORNING.


MERDERET RIVER EXIT 3 STE. MERE-ECLISE
308 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

right, the 16th Infantry on the left.65 bardment and the heavy naval fire di-
Each regiment was to land two battalion rected on them just before H Hour, two
landing teams at H Hour with initial mis- Ranger battalions were attached to the
sions to clear the beach defenses and seize 116th Infantry with the special H-Hour
and secure that portion of the beachhead mission of taking out the guns. Three
maintenance line in their respective companies of Rangers from the 2d
zones. (Map X ) The beachhead main- Ranger Battalion were to land at the foot
tenance line roughly followed the ridge of the cliff which the fortified battery sur-
of high ground parallel to the main mounted, scale the cliff by means of rope
coastal road and was in most places from ladders, and attack the German position.
two to three miles inland. From this line Another company, landing on the 116th
the assault regiments, supported by the Infantry main beaches to the east, would
18th Infantry landing after H plus 3 attack the fortifications at Pointe et Raz
hours and the 26th Infantry landing on de la Percee and then continue westward
order of the Commanding General, V to cover the flank of the Ranger force at
Corps, would punch out toward the D- Pointe du Hoe. The rest of the Rangers
Day phase line. Occupation of that phase would land at Pointe du Hoe, provided
line would mean securing a coastal strip the initial landings succeeded; otherwise
five or six miles deep astride the Bayeux they would come in on the 116th beaches
highway. and assist the right battalion of the 116th
The 116th Infantry was responsible for in attacking westward.
capturing the Pointe du Hoe coastal bat- The whole right flank of the V Corps
tery. On the assumption that the six par- assault forces would thus swing due west
tially casemated 155-mm. guns would not almost immediately on landing while the
have been destroyed by pre-D-Day bom- left battalion of the 116th and the 16th
Infantry pushed south. It was hoped to
65 Maj. Gen. Leonard T. Gerow was graduated
from the Virginia Military Institute in 1911. Between clear the coast as far as Isigny by the end
1920 and 1940 he was on four separate occasions as- of D Day. It even seemed possible that
signed to War Department staff duty: in the War Isigny itself might fall either to the 116th
Plans and Organization Section (1923-24) , in the of-
fice of the Assistant Secretary of War (1926-29) in
or to the 115th Infantry.66 The latter regi-
the War Plans Division (1935-39), and as Assistant ment, landing on corps order, would
Chief of Staff with duty in the War Plans Division initially leapfrog the 116th to organize
(1940-41). He commanded the 29th Division in
1942 and took command of V Corps in July 1943.
the high ground around Longueville.
General Huebner enlisted in 1910 and was commis- Perhaps the most important job as-
sioned in the infantry in 1916. He went overseas as signed to the first assault waves was the re-
commander of a company of the 28th infantry in
1917 and served with the 1st Division at Luneville, duction of enemy positions defending the
Beaumont, Cantigny, and in the Aisne-Marne, St. roads leading from the beach inland. The
Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne offensives. He was twice gently sloping sand of OMAHA Beach was
wounded and received the DSC with cluster, the
DSM, and Silver Star. In 1940 he was chief of the backed by an embankment of loose stones,
Training Branch of the Operations and Training or shingle, in places as much as fifteen
Division of the War Department and in 1942 Di- yards wide. In the Vierville sector the
rector of the Training Division, Headquarters SOS.
In August 1943 he took command of the 1st Division
in North Africa. 66See above, p. 187.
THE SlXTH OF JUNE

shingle piled up against a part-masonry, other hand, the 1st Division had precise
part-wood sea wall. On the rest of the information on the location of these de-
beach there was no wall, but the shingle fenses and every provision was made to
lay against a sand embankment or dune give the assaulting infantry the heavy fire
line. Both the shingle and the dune line support needed to knock them out. (Map
were impassable for vehicles. Behind the XI )
beach rose scrub-covered bluffs 100 to 170 At H minus 50 minutes, two companies
feet high of varying steepness and merg- of DD tanks (741st Tank Battalion) des-
ing east and west with the cliffs, which at tined for the 16th Infantry beaches were
Pointe et Raz de la Percee and east of launched 6,000 yards offshore and almost
Colleville marked the extremities of the immediately began to founder. Of the
7,000-yard crescent beach. The bluffs thirty-two .tanks launched only five
were cut by five draws. Through four of reached shore.69 These were the first of
these ran unimproved roads, one connect- the casualties to the weather. There were
ing with the main coastal highway at Vier- others. The assaulting infantry was trans-
ville-sur-Mer, two at St. Laurent, and one ferred from transports to LCVP’s ten to
at Colleville.67 The fifth draw northeast eleven miles offshore. At least ten of the
of Colleville was steep and contained only ferrying craft were swamped on the way
a trail, but it was considered capable of in. More serious for the operation was the
development as a vehicle exit. The plan sinking of much of the artillery. The at-
assumed these exits would be open to tempt to ferry guns ashore in DUKW’s
traffic at least by H plus 2 hours when the through the heavy seas proved disastrous.
heavy flow of vehicular reinforcements All but one of the 105-mm. howitzers of
was scheduled to begin. The importance the 111 th Field Artillery Battalion were
of the beach exits was, of course, as obvi-
ous to the Germans as to the Allies and
heavy weapons and a local reserve. Strong points
local coastal defenses were grouped to might be grouped in a Stuetzpunktgruppe either for
deny their use to the attackers.6s On the command unity or for defense of a small fortified
area. None of these strong point groups existed in
67 The road that passes through les Moulins will the invasion area. Finally, certain strategically im-
be called hereafter the les Moulins Exit. The St. portant places like ports, submarine pens, and
Laurent Exit will refer to the road immediately mouths of large rivers were organized into defensive
east which leads up the valley of the Ruguet River. areas (Verteidigungsbereiche) garrisoned by units
Note that the towns of Vierville, St. Laurent, and whose size was conditioned by the size and impor-
Colleville in this sector all bear the suffixes “sur- tance of the area and the forces available. All had
Mer.” Only in the case of Vierville will the suffix both local reserves within the defensive area and
be retained in order not to confuse it with the reserves in general support stationed outside. See
other Vierville in the UTAH Beach sector. Grundiegender Befehl des Oberbefehlshabers West
68 German coastal defense works were of four NT. 7, Begriflsbestimmungen in der Kuestenvertei-
classes depending on size and complexity. The small- digung, 28 May 42. OKW/ WFSt, Op. (H.), Grund-
est and most usual was the resistance nest (Wider- legende Befehle West 28.IV.42-7.V.44.
standsnest), a single self-contained defensive position 69 Three of the five were beached by an LCT
manned by one or two squads sometimes though not which could not lower its ramp at sea. For details
necessarily with heavy weapons. When several re- of the difficulties in the initial landings at OMAHA
sistance nests were combined for co-ordinated de- see [Charles H. Taylor] Omaha Beachhead (Wash-
fense of a larger sector the defense was called a ington, 1945). The narrative of U.S. V Corps opera-
strong point (Stuetzunkt)
Strong points in general tions is largely based on Taylor’s study. See Bibli-
were manned by at least a platoon of infantry with ographical Note.
\‘IER\‘ILLE AN11 I)RA\t LES MOULINS LlRAM’ ST LAURENT 1lR

AERIAL VIEW OF OMAHA BEACH ON D PLUS 1.


Note the five draws leading up from the beach.
COLLE\‘ILLE DRAW COLLEL’ILLE NUMBER 5 DRAW
TERRAIN ON OMAHA BEACH. Bluffs west of Vierville Draw (top). In distance
is Pointe et Raz de la Percee Concrete casemate in bluff is sited to cover beach.
Hamel au Pretre (center) as seen from Vierville Draw. Les Moulins area (bottom)
as seen from the east.
THE SIXTH OF JUNE 313

sunk. Six of the 105’s belonging to the 7th land. The 1st Division men in the first
Field Artillery Battalion suffered the LCVP’s could hear machine gun bullets
same fate. Five of the six howitzers of the splatter against the steel ramps of their
16th Infantry Cannon Company were also craft before they grounded. Debarking in
swamped. In addition to these wholesale water sometimes up to their necks, the
losses the 58th Armored Field Artillery troops on some sectors of the beach were
Battalion, whose guns were mounted on met with a hail of bullets that drove some
LCT’s and had taken part in the initial to seek shelter under the surf, others to
beach drenching, lost three of its pieces scramble over the sides of the craft. Con-
when the craft carrying them hit mines. trol of boat sections was thus often lost
In short, the artillery that was planned to before the men were even started in to
support the infantry attack particularly in the beach. The troops, overladen with
the advance inland did not reach the heavy clothing and equipment, waded
shore. slowly through the surf and through fire
The weather contributed also to navi- that increased as they approached the
gational difficulties. Mist mixed with the beach. Some stopped to rest or seek shelter
smoke and dust raised by the naval bom- behind obstacles. Some lay at the water’s
bardment obscured landmarks on the edge and were able eventually to crawl
coast; in addition a lateral current of from in with the tide. But casualties generally
two to three knots tended to carry craft were heavier among those who delayed in
eastward of their touchdown points. The getting up onto the beach. Many of the
actual errors in landing caused thereby wounded were drowned in the rising tide.
were considerably less than at UTAH, in The first wave should have landed nine
most cases amounting to not more than a companies evenly spaced along the beach.
few hundred yards. On the other hand, Because of withering enemy fire and mis-
they proved much more serious for the landings, however, the right wing all but
tactical situation, partly because the disintegrated; two companies bunched in
errors were not constant, with the result front of les Moulins, and the remainder
that units became scattered on the final of the landings (elements of four com-
approach. Since the men had been briefed panies) clustered in the Colleville sector.
only for their particular areas, they were One company was carried so far to the east
confused by the changed picture. The that it landed an hour and a half late.
difficulties were compounded by the The two right-flank companies (Com-
heavier enemy opposition which had the pany C of the 2d Ranger Battalion, and
effect of isolating boat sections only a few Company A of the 116th Infantry) landed
hundred yards apart and at first made re- as scheduled in front of the Vierville
assembly and reorganization for impro draw. One craft foundered and one was
vised missions almost impossible. hit four times by mortar fire. Men from
Naval gunfire had temporarily neutral- the remaining craft struggled to shore. In-
ized some of the enemy batteries and forti- tense small arms fire took toll of about
fications but most of them were still able two-thirds of Company A and more than
to fire at the incoming troops as soon as half of the Ranger company before any
the bombardment was forced to lift in- reached the comparative shelter of the sea
ASSAULT LANDINGS, OMAHA BEACH. LCVP’s unloading infantry in the
surf (above), and (below) men of the 1st Division, loaded with equipment, heading
for the shore.
THE SIXTH OF JUNE 315

wall or the base of the cliff. Of the six- of the beach was the Colleville strong
teen tanks scheduled to land in this sector point, which was planned as three mutu-
just ahead of the infantry, only eight ally supporting resistance nests. Of these
survived enemy artillery to reach the the field fortified position atop the bluff
shore. All had been brought in on LCT’s midway between the two draws was un-
as 116th Infantry officers decided the sea occupied in February 1944 and seemingly
was too rough to launch the DD’s. remained unoccupied on D Day.70 Ap-
In the eastern part of the 116th Infan- parent German negligence that left the
try zone the initial landings had not gone beach northwest of Colleville without im-
much better. A l,000-yard gap separated mediate defense was balanced at first by
the troops who touched down there from Allied ill fortune in landing so few men
the remnants of the two companies on the there. Except for those four boat sections
right. The two companies of tanks that of the 2d Battalion the first wave of the
landed first were brought in on LCT’s 16th Infantry (Companies E and F)
without losses. This initial success was not touched down immediately in front, or
shared by the infantry. Only two of the east, of the occupied fortifications of the
three companies of the 2d Battalion, Colleville strong point and was there
116th Infantry, landed within the regi- caught in machine gun fire as intense as
mental zone. One of these companies lost that which decimated the 116th Infantry.
a quarter of its men to enemy fire during Many of the men of Company E, hard hit
the forty-five minutes which it took them and exhausted in their efforts to wade
to cross the beach to the protection of the ashore, flopped on the sand and crawled
shingle bank. The remainder had better in ahead of the tide; nearly half of them
luck in landing in front and just west of did not survive. Because of the swamping
les Moulins where the bluff was obscured of most of the DD tanks and immediate
by smoke fires and enemy fire was sporadic enemy destruction of five of the company
and inaccurate. Even these men were of mediums beached from LCT’s, the
somewhat disorganized and the officers 16th Infantry had initially only a third
who survived with them were confused by of the planned armor support. Those
the knowledge that they had landed east tanks available went into action on the
of their designated beaches. beach between the St. Laurent and Colle-
The experience of the 16th Infantry on ville exits.
the left flank of the division duplicated The heavy losses and disorganization of
that of the 116th, as scattered landings the first wave had repercussions on each
and heavy casualties left the first boat sec- succeeding wave through the morning of
tions incapable of undertaking their pri- D Day. The first serious effect of the fail-
mary assault missions. In the 16th’s zone, ure to neutralize enemy beach defenses
however, one soft spot was discovered. was the inability of the 6th Special Engi-
Four boat sections of the 2d Battalion, neer Brigade and naval demolition parties
16th Infantry, landing between the St. to blow gaps in the beach obstacles as
Laurent and Colleville exits, crossed the 70 Ltr, OB WEST, O.Qu. to OKH/Generalquartier-
meister, 4 Feb 44. OKH/Generalquartimmeister,
beach with only two casualties from Stuetzpunktbevorratung an der Atlantik- und Kanal-
enemy fire. The local defense of this sector kueste.
FIRST AID ON THE BEACH. Soldiers of the 16th Infantry (above) being
treated for injuries, and wounded soldier (below) receiving plasma.
THE SIXTH OF JUNE 317

planned. Weather conditions also played demolishing the obstacles until the tide
a hand in hindering the engineers from covered them, and returned to the job
accomplishing their mission. Half the when the tide permitted and was again
demolition teams were delayed in land- wounded; an enlisted man operated a
ing and only a third of them touched tankdozer until it was knocked out of ac-
down on their appointed sectors. Since tion and then crossed the fire-swept beach
the rest were carried eastward by the to mount a deserted bulldozer and con-
coastal current, the 116th Infantry zone tinue his job.72
received substantially less than the sched- The second group of assault waves, con-
uled effort. But enemy fire also took a sisting of five separately timed landings,
heavy toll of both men and equipment. was to complete the build-up of the two as-
Of sixteen bulldozers only three could be sault regiments by H plus 1 hour and
put into operation on the beach, and one bring in the 81st Chemical Battalion, two
of these was prevented from maneuvering combat engineer battalions whose prin-
freely by riflemen who sheltered behind cipal task would be to clear mine fields
it. So many of the marking buoys and for the advance inland, naval shore fire
poles were lost that only one of the six control parties, and advance elements of
gaps blown by 0700 could be marked. artillery, medical, and antiaircraft units.
Casualties to the engineers amounted to In the’ zone of the 116th Infantry, the re-
about 40 percent for the day and were cer- maining three companies of the 1st Bat-
tainly very much higher for the first talion were to come in behind Company
groups ashore. In half an hour after H A on the right. On the left the heavy
Hour the tide, rising at the rate of about weapons company of the 2d Battalion
four feet an hour, had covered the ob- would land to complete that unit and
stacles to an extent that made further would be followed by the 3d Battalion.
clearance impossible;71 remnants of the The right flank, however, continued to
engineers joined the infantry behind the be an area of particular misfortune. Only
shingle to wait for the next tide. Fifteen scattered sections of the reinforcing units
officers and men of the demolition parties managed to land there and they were hit
from private to colonel were awarded the by the same destructive fire that had vir-
Distinguished Service Cross for carrying tually knocked Company A out of the
out their missions under incredible diffi- battle. The battalion headquarters com-
culties: a colonel had his craft come close pany, including the beachmaster for the
to shore and directed it under heavy fire 1st Battalion sector, landed at the base of
up and down along the beach so that he the cliff west of the rifle companies and
could observe what had to be done, then under such severe enemy small arms fire
came ashore, issued new orders to expe- that it was unable to move most of the day.
dite the clearance, and supervised the The heavy weapons company, scattered
work under fire; a lieutenant, though and hard hit on the approach, took two
wounded in the legs while coming ashore, hours to assemble survivors. It salvaged
refused evacuation, directed his team in only three mortars, three machine guns,
71About 80 yards of sand would be covered each 72 For a complete list of the DSC winners, see App.
hour. I, below.
318 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

and a few rounds of ammunition. Only Sidney V. Bingham, Jr., coming ashore
one company of the 1st Battalion sur- near les Moulins, organized a few sections
vived as an organized group capable of of Company F which had landed in the
pursuing its assault missions. This was first wave and attempted an assault on
Company C, which mislanded 1,000 yards the enemy positions in the draw.73 The
east of its planned beach within the area attempt made with only a handful of men
of the bluffs covered by the smoke of a was unsuccessful, but in the meantime the
brush fire. With few casualties and equip- 3d Battalion was landing bunched up
ment virtually intact, the company waded astride the regimental boundary just east
in on a front of not more than a hundred of les Moulins. It was somewhat disor-
yards and reorganized in the shelter of the ganized by the intermingling of units but
sea wall. suffered little from enemy fire in crossing
Next to land in the 116th zone were the the beach.
Rangers. The 5th Ranger Battalion to- At the end of the first hour the 116th
gether with two companies of the 2d Infantry had at least a nucleus of force
Rangers had waited offshore for news of which could be organized for attack
the assault on Pointe du Hoe, which against the enemy’s beach positions. Most
would determine whether they landed hopeful was the situation roughly in the
there or came in on the 116th Infantry center of the regimental zone just west of
zone. The Pointe du Hoe assault, how- les Moulins where enemy fire masked
ever, had been delayed forty minutes by by smoke was light and ineffective, and
the eastward drifting of the craft carrying where shortly after 0730, by great good
the Rangers. There was therefore no news fortune, the regimental command group
at all, and the Ranger reinforcements, with Col. Charles D. W. Canham and
concluding that the assault must have Brig. Gen. Norman D. Cota, the assistant
failed, proceeded with the alternative division commander, came ashore.
plan. The 5th Ranger Battalion followed The experience of the 16th Infantry’s
Company C, 116th Infantry, and shared later waves was similar to that of the
the relatively easy assault in landing too 116th. Losses were lighter but the confu-
far east. But the two companies of the 2d sion and intermingling of units on the
Ranger Battalion came in about where beaches became more serious. The two
planned on the fire-swept right flank be- remaining companies (G and H) of the
hind elements of Companies A and B. 2d Battalion followed by the 1st Battal-
Only between a third and a half of the two ion landed about where planned, due
65-man companies survived to take shel- north of Colleville. The 3d Battalion
ter at the head of the beach. completed landing on the left shortly
In the 2d Battalion zone, the second after 0800. The 3d Battalion headquar-
wave brought in the heavy weapons com- ters, however, landed to the west and
pany and battalion headquarters. Com- could not join its troops for several
pany H suffered such losses and disorgan- hours. The 16th Infantry suffered an-
ization that it could be of little immediate other misfortune when the regimental
help in supplying mortar or machine gun executive officer, coming in with the first
support. The battalion commander, Maj. 73 Major Bingham was awarded the DSC.
THE SIXTH OF JUNE 319

section of the headquarters, was killed an overextended static division as ex-


together with thirty-five of his men. The petted, General Huebner’s troops hit on
commander, Col. George A. Taylor, did the front of a full attack infantry division,
not arrive until 0815 with the second the 352d, whose presence in the coastal
headquarters section. zone had been missed by Allied intelli-
Command was generally one of the gence even though it had been in place
gravest problems faced by assault units, for almost three months.75
not only because officer casualties were To the German officer in command of
high and mislanding of command groups the fortifications at Pointe et Raz de la
had left many units leaderless, but also Percee it looked in these first hours as
because of extreme difficulties of com- though the invasion had been stopped on
munication. Three-quarters of the 116th the beaches. He noted that the Americans
Infantry’s radios were destroyed or use- were lying on the shore seeking cover be-
less.74 Furthermore, in the confusion of
75 Reasons for this failure remain one of the more
the mixed units, which were under heavy interesting mysteries of the war. Allied intelligence
fire in some places, their men huddled had otherwise a remarkably detailed and accurate
along the shingle embankment or sea wall picture of the German defenses and troop disposi-
tions. It was unquestionably difficult to get reliable
and generally shaken by the shock of the information from agents in the coastal zone since all
first few minutes of severe action, it would persons whom the Germans allowed to remain in
have been impossible for any commander these areas were carefully screened. In this connection
the short distance of the move of the 352d Division
to exercise control over more than a small from St. Lo to the coast may have contributed to
group of men on a relatively narrow sec- concealing it, although a similar inching forward
tor of the front. of the 21st Panzer Division was found out. Another
interesting surmise is suggested by the fact that one
In these first few hours on OMAHA agent known to be active in the zone of the 352d
Beach, the OVERLORD operation faced its Division as late as May was working in the Grand-
gravest crisis. Deprived of the expected camp area which happened to be the sector of the
3d Battalion of the 726th Regiment of the 716th
air support by accident of weather and Division. That the 726th Regiment had been at-
preceded by a generally ineffective beach tached to a new division could easily have been un-
drenching, the 1st Division had gone in known to him. In May the Germans shot down a
carrier pigeon carrying a message from this agent.
against the one sector of the Normandy The message was a report of the location of the 3d
coast that had anything like the kind of Battalion of the 1716th Artillery Regiment, also in
cordon defense which Field Marshal the Grandcamp area and also a 716th Division unit,
attached to the 352d. See MS # B-022 (Ziegelmann) .
Rommel counted on to hold and smash Brigadier Williams, G-2 of 21 A Gp, has said since
the Allies on the beaches. Instead of at- the war that just before the invasion he did find
tacking in the sector of one regiment of out about the 352d's presence on the coast but was
unable to inform the troops. See Interv, Pogue with
74Carrying heavy communications equipment Williams, London, 31 May 47. This is partially con-
through the surf under enemy fire was a formid- firmed by 21 Army Group Weekly Neptune Re-
able task that took many lives. Five men of the 16th view 17 of 4 June which warned: “It should not be
Infantry were decorated for their heroic work in surprising if we discovered that it (the 716 Divi-
struggling ashore with vital radios and wire despite sion) had two regiments in the line and one in
serious wounds. T/5 John J. Pinder, Jr., received a reserve while on its left 352d Division had one regi-
posthumous award of the Medal of Honor for his ment up and two to play. . . .” The fact remains
intrepidity in recovering two radios and other noteworthy that for almost two and a half months
equipment, while suffering two severe wounds. On the Allies were unaware of the true position of the
his third trip into the fire-swept surf he was killed. 352d Division.
320 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

hind the obstacles, that ten tanks and a Already, however, as Talley sent for-
“great many other vehicles” were burn- ward his ‘discouraging reports, the crisis
ing. The fire of his own positions and the was bit by bit dissolving. Among the
artillery, he thought, had been excellent, groups of scared, tired riflemen huddled
causing heavy losses. He could see the along the beach were a few intrepid lead-
wounded and dead lying on the sand.76 ers-officers, noncoms, and privates on
Sketchy reports to V Corps and First whose individual backs the big responsi-
Army must have painted very much the bility at the moment lay. They began by
same picture for the American command. example and exhortation to prod the
From a DUKW cruising 500 to 1,000 men to get up, leave such poor shelter as
yards offshore, Col. Benjamin B. Talley, they had found, and walk or crawl across
the assistant chief of staff of V Corps, ra- the beach flat and up the hills where the
dioed General Gerow what he could ob- enemy was dug in with rifles, mortars, and
serve of the progress of the landings. Ob- machine guns. From the larger perspec-
servation was difficult, and on the whole tive the combined weight of Allied arms
Colonel Talley refrained from reporting was gradually wearing down the defend-
mere pessimism. However, he had to re- ers. The 916th Regiment in the center of
port something of the evident disorgan- the 352d Division sector, while reporting
ization. He could see that the beaches that the landings had been frustrated,
were jammed with infantrymen and that added that its own casualties were mount-
enemy artillery and machine gun fire was ing chiefly from the heavy Allied naval
still effective. He sent a message to that fire and that consequently reinforcements
effect about 0930. What particularly con- were needed. Reinforcements, however,
cerned him was the fact that reinforcing could not immediately be spared since
waves were being held up by the contin- they were much more urgently needed
ued enemy opposition and the LCT’s elsewhere.
were milling around offshore like “a stam- The gravest immediate threat for the
peded herd of cattle,” although some of Germans arose to the east of V Corps
the more daring commanders took their where the British assault cracked through
craft into the hail of enemy fire and the coast defenses in some places during
beached them. This situation seemed to the first few hours. (Map XII ) The Brit-
Talley to continue without alleviation ish Second Army attacked with three divi-
until midmorning, and it was the situa- sions abreast under control of 1 and 30
tion conveyed to Generals Gerow and Corps. Immediately on the flank of the
Bradley.” American attack, the British 50th Divi-
76 MS ## B-432 (Ziegelmann) . sion landed two infantry brigades sup-
77 Talley Notes, cited n. 59. The milling of the ported by tanks of the 8th Armoured
landing craft offshore was actually caused at least Brigade and assault teams of the 79th
as much by an order from the 7th Naval Beach Bat-
talion at about 0830 to suspend the landing of
Armoured Division and the 47th Royal
vehicles pending clearance of some beach exits. This Marine Commando. The troops touched
fact seems to have been unknown to Talley. See down approximately on time at 0725.
below, next section. Cf. Taylor, Omaha Beachhead,
p. 79. Talley was awarded the DSC for his liaison Opposition was heavy at certain points,
work on 6 June. but on the whole it was much less deter-
THE SIXTH OF JUNE 321

mined than at OMAHA. In the 50th Divi- But earlier in the morning (at 0400) the
sion zone ie Hamel, strongly defended by 915th had been ordered to the Carentan-
the Ist Battalion, 916th Regiment, re- Isigny area to attack reported large-scale
sisted until late in the day. To the east, enemy airborne landings between the
however, the British division’s left bri- Vire and Douve Rivers. The report was
gade struck a soft spot in the German de- discovered to be unfounded at just about
fenses. The strong point at la Riviere held the time the hole in the 716th Division
out only a few hours and when it fell at opened up. Threatened with having his
about 1000 its defenders, the 441st Ost whole right flank rolled up, Generalleut-
Battalion, attached to the 716th Division, nant Dietrich Kraiss, the commanding
broke and pulled out, leaving the road to general of the 352d Division, secured
Bayeux open. This development, how- corps approval for the return of the 915th
ever, was not known to the British. Oppo- Regiment. But an hour was consumed try-
sition continued to be reported south of ing to reach the regiment. Then it had to
Buhot, at Ryes, St. Sulpice, and Summer- countermarch almost twenty miles from
vieu. It was always difficult in the early a point nearly five miles west of the ForCt
stages of the assault properly to distin- de Cerisy. The march was made partly on
guish enemy delaying action from major foot, partly by bicycle and French motor
opposition or to discover where the holes vehicles which suffered numerous me-
were in the German defense. The 50th chanical breakdowns. Another three
Division, moreover, still had only its hours passed before even a portion of the
assault forces ashore. Rising tide had pre- unit was in position to attack. That delay
vented effective clearance of underwater proved crucial, for in those hours much
obstacles. Enemy opposition and mines happened to change the situation on
delayed the opening of beach exits. OMAHA completely.‘79
Caught in the resulting congestion, the
two follow-up brigades of the 50th Divi- The D-Day Beachhead
sion were two hours late in landing.
\vhen they did arrive, they found their First Army’s assault plans provided that
assembly areas still not entirely cleared the initial task of clearing the beaches be
of enemy. Elements of the 352d Division, carried out by assault sections organized
in fact, were still on the Meuvaines ridge by boatloads. Troops were then to pro-
after midday.78 ceed inland to various assembly areas
From the German point of view the where they would be reorganized in bat-
crumbling of the 441st Ost Battalion was talions and regiments to carry out their
immediately critical. The gap had to be subsequent D-Day missions of securing
plugged at once. The 915th Regiment re- and consolidating the corps beachheads.
inforced (LXXXZl’ Corps reserve) had On OMAHA Beach the troops of V Corps
been stationed near Bayeux and had often in order to reach their assembly areas had
practiced just the maneuver now re- to cross a beach flat, varying in width from
quired-counterthrust, toward Crepon. a few yards at each end to about 200 yards
7s Facts on British action furnished by the British
in the center, and climb steep bluffs be-
Cabinet Office Hist Sec. 79 MS # B-432 (Ziegelmann)
322 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

hind. (See Map XI. ) Although the beach nary fire, stayed in the area near shore and
flat offered only patches of tall marsh grass watched over the Ranger action most of
for concealment, the bluffs had irregulari- the day. By 1730 it had expended 70 per-
ties that could provide cover for individ- cent of its ammunition in missions in aid
ual riflemen. The plan called for clearing of the Rangers and was relieved by the
five exit roads from the beach and an ad- Barton and Thompson. The Satterlee’s
vance inland generally along the axis of fire was particularly effective during the
these roads. But despite naval bombard- first moments of the assault when it forced
ment and tank fire from the beach on en- the enemy to take cover while the Rang-
emy positions defending these roads all ers scaled the cliff with ropes and lad-
remained active during the first two hours ders. 82 Enemy fire, re duced by the naval
of the assault. Movement off the beach, shellings, remained light after the Rang-
in consequence, at first took place be- ers reached the top of the cliff and began
tween the exits. It began before 0800 in a moving inland in groups of three or four
number of independent actions by groups across a desert cratered by concentrated
of men, never more than of company size aerial and naval bombardment. In dis-
and often much smaller. Some of the at- parate and confused actions the Rangers
tacks had tank fire support; others were speedily carried out their primary mis-
materially aided by the bold action of sion. Patrols found the 155-mm. gun em-
destroyers which came within a few hun- placements deserted. The guns them-
dred yards of the beach and delivered di- selves were discovered farther inland in a
rect fire wherever they could observe en- camouflaged field position. They were,
emy activity.80 curiously enough, unmanned and un-
Certainly the first troops to move in- guarded. The handful of Rangers who
land were the Ranger companies at Pointe stumbled on them were therefore able to
du Hoe, though their action was inde- destroy them easily. Thus far the Rangers,
pendent of the main landings at OMAHA despite thirty to forty casualties in the
and was, in fact, part of the fire support landings, had not had a hard fight. Their
plan rather than of the assault proper. difficulties began later in the day with the
Forty minutes late, the three companies first of a series of counterattacks by the
of the 2d Ranger Battalion under com- 1st Battalion,914th Regiment, that would
mand of Lt. Col. James E. Rudder 81 keep them in a state of siege for two days,
made landfall under close-in supporting and reduce their combat effectives to
fire of the U.S. destroyer Satterlee and the about ninety.83
British destroyer Talybont. The Satter- 82 The 352a Division, anticipating commando as-
lee, having delivered effective prelimi- saults on the cliffs, had laid 240-mm. shells hooked to
trip wires, along the crest at 100-yard intervals. They
80Admiral Hall, commander of Task Force O, were designed to roll down and explode over the
paid special tribute to U.S. destroyers Carmick, Doyle, water with an effective radius of about 650 yards.
McCook, Thompson, Frankford, Harding, Emmons, These shells caused no difficulty for the Rangers al-
and Baldwin, and British Hunt class destroyers though they hindered beach clearance parties later
Melbreak, Talybont, and Tanatside. ANCXF Report, on. See Talley Notes, cited n. 59; MS # B-432
Vol. III, Rpt, Comdr Assault Force O, p. 56. (Ziegelmann) .
81 Colonel Rudder was awarded the DSC for ex- 83 For a detailed account of the Ranger action, see
traordinary heroism in continuing to lead his bat- Charles H. Taylor, “Pointe du Hoe,” Small Unit
talion despite being twice wounded. Actions (Washington, 1946).
RANGERS SCALING THE CLIFFS AT POINTE DU HOE
324 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Apart from the Ranger movements at Penetrations in the 16th Infantry zone
Pointe du Hoe, the principal areas of were made between the St. Laurent and
penetration inland were four, two in each Colleville exits and up the draw on the
regimental zone. The 116th Infantry with extreme eastern flank of the beach. The
the 5th Ranger Battalion made successful former breach was opened up by two com-
independent attacks inland on both sides panies of the 2d Battalion, 16th Infantry.
of the les Moulins draw. On the west side Company G and a section of Company E
Company C, urged on by Colonel Can- made separate attacks at about the same
ham and General Cota, left the protection time and only a few yards apart. After
of the sea wall and, after blowing a gap in blowing gaps through the wire beyond
the concertina wire along the beach road, the shingle embankment the two groups
crossed the 150 yards of beach flat to the crossed the flats and converged on the
bluffs.84 Men were lost to machine gun lower slopes of the bluff. But despite some
fire in this initial attack but, once they effort to co-ordinate the advance the
gained the hillside, smoke concealed their “companies” continued independently,
moves and small folds in the ground gave threading their way through mine fields
them good protection from enemy bul- that took some casualties and slowed the
lets. They found no Germans atop the advance. Company G, covered by the fire
bluff and proceeded a couple of hundred of their 60-mm. mortars and light ma-
yards inland before fire from the flanks chine guns emplaced on the beach, gained
caused them to halt. Company C was the top of the bluff against only light en-
closely followed by the 5th Ranger Bat- emy opposition and pushed inland. Com-
talion which sent its men forward by pla- pany E (consisting of twenty-three men
toons as they landed. The command under 2d Lt. John M. Spalding) on
group of General Cota was established reaching the top of the hill turned west
shortly after 0830 near the crest of the hill and attacked the rear of the enemy fortifi-
and began the task of reorganizing dis- cations defending the east side of the St.
ordered units. Laurent exit. It was a typical coastal posi-
At approximately the same time the 3d tion including pillboxes and a maze of
Battalion, 116th Infantry, in a series of communicating trenches. The garrison,
simultaneous, independent advances by men of the 916th Regiment, caught by
straggling columns of twenty to thirty surprise and demoralized by naval fire
men, left the beaches east of les Moulins hitting just below the top of the bluff,
and arrived by various routes on the high fought a confused battle for about two
ground. Meeting no resistance on the hours before an officer was cornered and
crest, the sections, coagulating haphaz- forced with a group of about twenty men
ardly into larger groups, began moving to surrender. Although Lieutenant Spal-
southwest generally toward St. Laurent ding had too few men to mop up the area,
and their designated assembly area be- his action was the first step in clearing a
yond. vehicle exit from the beach. In the mean-
time most of the 2d and 1st Battalions of
84 Both General Cota and Colonel Canham were
awarded the DSC for extraordinary heroism shown the 16th Infantry had followed Company
during their D-Day leadership under fire. G’s route up the bluffs, on order of Colo-
THE SIXTH OF JUNE 325

nel Taylor, regimental commander, who embankment and vehicles were piled up
on his arrival on the beach at 08 15 had along the narrow strip of beach.
begun organizing his men and pushing In breaking this deadlock during the
them forward. next hour, naval intervention played an
The 3d Battalion, 16th Infantry, at the important part. At about 1030 two land-
same time had opened its own path in- ing craft, LCT 30 and LCI (L) 544,
land at the draw northeast of Colleville. steamed full ahead through the obstacles
Under covering fire from tanks on the off the Colleville beaches, firing all weap-
beach and naval guns, 3d Battalion units ons at enemy strong points guarding the
made a direct attack on the enemy strong Colleville draw. The craft continued to
point defending this draw and by 0900 fire after beaching. Not only did their ac-
had, with surprisingly small losses, suc- tion prove that the obstacles could be
ceeded in subduing it.85 breached by ramming, but their fire,
Improvisation and courageous personal though failing to neutralize German posi-
leadership in the first hours had taken tions in the Colleville draw, had at least
considerable numbers of troops off the a heartening effect on the assault troops.
beach where for a time it had looked as At about the same time two destroyers
though they might be stopped. However, approached to within 1,000 yards of the
the initial successes were limited by the beach and shelled enemy positions from
fact that the infantry had very few heavy les Moulins eastward. Under cover of this
weapons, no supporting artillery, and, fire engineers of the 37th and 146th En-
since the beach exits had not been gineer Combat Battalions 86 bulldozed
cleared, little prospect of getting tank sup- two gaps through the dune line on either
port or large-scale supplies or reinforce- side of the St. Laurent exit, filled the
ments. The beaches themselves remained antitank ditch, and cleared the mine
under heavy enemy fire and on most sec- fields. The resistance east of this draw had
tors no gaps had been blown through the already been neutralized by the 16th In-
obstacles. The obstacles submerged by the fantry. While the engineers worked,
rising tide materially increased the diffi- heavy weapons of the 3d Battalion, 116th
culties of approaching the beach. Land- Infantry, contained other enemy defenses
ing craft became more and more con- still in action. A pillbox west of the draw
gested offshore. When shortly after 1000 was reduced by skillfully directed de-
the 18th Infantry began landing in col- stroyer fire at about 1130. The Germans
umn of battalions in the 16th Infantry in this last organized defense at the St.
zone, it must have looked to them as Laurent draw surrendered to the 2d Bat-
though little progress of any kind had talion of the 18th Infantry, which had be-
been made in the assault. The enemy ap- gun landing at about 1000. Thus, in little
parently still had control of the high over an hour, concerted bold action had
ground above the beach; American troops wrought the most substantial improve-
still seemed pinned behind the shingle ment on the beach since H Hour. Rein-
forcements were coming ashore, and most
85American losses were one killed and five
wounded. Thirty-one German prisoners were taken 86 Not the 149th, as given in Taylor, Omaha
at the strong point. See Combat Interv, 16th Inf. Beachhead, p. 82.
326 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

important of all a road \vas at last open splintered, the vast supporting nal,al and
to rnove vehicles inland. air power was practically unopposed. By
In the meantime the battles inland dominating the battlefield, planes and na-
were already being joined. The troops val guns smashed such German reserves as
who gained the top of the bluffs by mid- could be gathered for a counterthrust and
morning were scattered groups, a small so gave the fragmented V’ Corps infantry
percentage of the assault battalions, who a chance to recover, rebuild, and again be-
were incapable of carrying out the D-Day come a ground army superior in numbers
advances as planned. Their objecti\res at and equipment to anything that the Ger-
first were simply to reach the various bat- mans could thereafter muster to meet
talion assembly areas. Because of their them.
small numbers and the difficulty of con Action during the remainder of D Day
trol in the hedgerow country their actions inland from OMAHA Beach took place in
were fragmented, and because they com- three general areas, Vierville-sur-Mer, St.
pletely lacked both armored and artillery Laurent, and Colleville. The three ac-
support their movements could be, and tions were generally unconnected and un-
constantly were, checked by small enemy co-ordinated.
prepared positions seldom held in even Attacks on Vierville-sur-Mer were made
as much as company strength. by elements of the 1st and 2d Battalions
Under the circumstances, this scattered of the 116th Infantry and the 5th Ranger
resistance by small enemy groups consti- Battalion-something more than 600 men
tuted in sum a considerable obstacle to altogether. These units were reorganized
American advance. Furthermore, spo- near the edge of the bluff and started in-
radic and un-co-ordinated as it seemed, it land between 1000 and 1100. The plan
was in general the kind, though not quite was for the Rangers to bypass the town
the scale, of defense that the Germans and attack from the south while the 116th
had planned. Determined resistance in advanced along the exit road. The Rang-
coastal positions, even though isolated or ers reached the coastal highway but found
bypassed, did succeed at first in splinter- further advance across the fields checked
ing the attacking forces so that only weak, by enemy machine gun positions con-
disorganized elements could penetrate cealed among the hedgerows. After four
the hinterland. Continued, though rela- hours of trying in vain to get around the
tively feeble, nodal defense inland during enemy guns, they turned and entered
the day had the further effect of hindering Vierville in the early afternoon. The town
reorganization and co-ordinated Ameri- had already been captured by the 116th,
can action. So far the theory of coastal de- which met little opposition in its frontal
fense seemed justified in practice. That attack. At 1100 Vierville was clear, and
nothing came of this initial success was Colonel Canham then tried to push the
due, first, to the Germans’ lack of reserves attack westward to make juncture with
with which to counterattack the relatively the Ranger force at Pointe du Hoe. His
weak penetrations, and, second, to the men, however, encountered the same kind
fact that, while the American ground at- of nettling opposition that had stopped
tack had locally and temporarily been the Rangers. Lacking heavy weapons to
THE SIXTH OF JUNE 327

support the attack, Colonel Canham de- tially the 115th Infantry was to be on call
cided to call it off and return to the de- between the first and second tides. But
fense of Vierville. He had few men to Maj. Gen. Charles H. Gerhardt, com-
spare from that task since few reinforce- manding the 29th Division, contended
ments had landed in the area and the that this plan meant leaving the 116th
beach exit was not opened until evening. Infantry without reinforcements for a
Although enemy beach defenses opposite dangerously long time.88 At the last min-
Vierville had been largely neutralized by ute, therefore, General Gerow decided to
naval fire early in the afternoon, the en- commit the 115th Infantry immediately
gineers responsible for clearing the exit in support of the 116th. At H Hour Ad-
had scattered in the landing, losing three- miral Hall on General Gerow’s request
quarters of their equipment and many of gave the order to land the 115th begin-
their men. ning at H plus 4 hours.
East of the les Moulins draw, the 3d Like so many units, the 115th Infantry
Battalion, 116th Infantry, and scattered drifted eastward, and instead of coming in
sections of tile 2d Battalion fought inland where scheduled on the beaches in the
toward St. Laurent and the 3d Battalion left portion of the 116th zone it landed on
assembly area southwest. During the day top of the 18th Infantry east of St. Lau-
confused and inconclusive fighting by rent. The confusion on the crowded
small groups of men took place in country beaches and intermingling of 18th and
which, though relatively open, still pro- 115th units delayed the movement in-
vided the enemy with sufficient cover that land of both regiments. It was early after-
the American troops could seldom locate noon when, under orders to carry out the
their positions. The 116th Infantry was primary mission in the Longueville area,
stopped short of St. Laurent. the battalions of the 115th Infantry
In the meantime northeast of the town started for their assembly areas southwest
another attack, by the 115th Infantry, was of St. Laurent. The 2d Battalion attacked
in progress. The 115th had been brought St. Laurent, estimated to be held by
ashore ahead of schedule. Original plans about a company of Germans, but could
had called for the rifle and heavy weapons make no headway. At dusk the attack was
companies of this regiment to be held as halted and the battalion withdrawn to
V Corps floating reserve to be employed join the lst, which had bypassed St. Lau-
on order of General Gerow. If all went rent to the east and moved a few hundred
according to plan in the initial assault, the yards south of the town. The 3d Battalion,
115th Infantry would be committed in on the regiment’s left flank, had in the
the zone of the 116th to organize the high
ground near Longueville and be prepared proposed by British Commanders following the
to capture Isigny. Alternative plans were Dieppe raid. See above, p. 191.
88 Ltr. Gerhardt to Gen Malony, 2 Jan 47. Hist
made to have the 115th take over missions Div files. General Gerhardt was commissioned in the
of the 116th in case any units of the latter cavalry from West Point in 1917. He served with
regiment should fail in the assault.87 Ini- the 89th Division in the St. Mihiel and Meuse-
Argonne offensives in 1918. In May 1942 he became
87 Notes on V Corps Plan, 17 May 44. Pre-Inv file commander of the 91st Division and in July took
670. Compare this use of a floating reserve with that command of the 29th Division in England.
328 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

meantime made even slower progress and The St. Laurent-Colleville sector was
drew up at dark still north of the St. Lau- still considered weak. When the 26th In-
rent-Colleville road. fantry, the first of the follow-up forces,
Between St. Laurent and Colleville a landed in the evening, two battalions
whole series of confused and generally were ordered to take defensive positions
un-co-ordinated actions were taking place southeast of St. Laurent ready to attack
during the remainder of D Day as parts of toward Formigny. The remaining battal-
two battalions of the 16th Infantry, sup- ion backed up the left flank where the
ported during the afternoon by the 18th 3d Battalion, 16th Infantry, with about
Infantry, attempted to maneuver south to one hundred men had managed to occupy
positions along the beachhead mainte- le Grand Hameau. To help hold the posi-
nance line. Company G, the first unit to tion during the night seventeen tanks
move inland in this area, at first made were moved up from the beach.
rapid progress, but an attack against
Colleville drew an enemy counterattack While V Corps units struggled to find
that put the company on the defensive for secure defenses for the night in their shal-
the rest of the day. Elements of the 1st low lodgment VII Corps was pouring
Battalion fought separate actions in the ashore almost unhindered. (See Map 3.)
same general area attempting to clean up As the 8th Infantry battalions moved in-
isolated enemy riflemen and machine gun land to their objectives they had only
positions. minor engagements with an enemy who,
As the 18th Infantry landed, Brig. Gen. on the whole, showed little inclination
Willard G. Wyman, the assistant division to fight. The 3d Battalion was held up
commander and senior army commander briefly north of Ste. Marie-du-Mont where
ashore, had diverted all three battalions it overran another of the batteries of the
to take over the missions of the 16th In- German 191st Artillery Regiment-the
fantry. The 2d Battalion, going to the unit which earlier in the day had caused
assistance of the 2d Battalion, 16th In- the 506th Parachute Infantry so much
fantry, at Colleville, passed to the west of trouble. The battalion then went on to
Company G and at dark halted just south the les Forges crossroads where it bivou-
and southeast of the town. The 3d Bat- acked for the night and where it was
talion, at first ordered to capture For- joined in the evening by the 2d Battalion.
migny and Surrain, was held up so long The 1st Battalion had moved almost due
by small arms harassing fire that its orders west from the beaches and reached
were changed and it was sent to the high Turqueville by nightfall.
ground south of the highway to tie in The 8th Infantry, when it halted for
with 16th Infantry on the left and the the night, was confronted by an enemy
115th on the right. The 1st Battalion was salient which cut the Valognes-Carentan
directed into the same general area with highway between Ste. Mere-Eglise and les
orders to attack Surrain, but at dark was Forges, extending northeast as far as
still north of the St. Laurent-Colleville Turqueville. It was enemy from this sa-
road.89 lient that had attacked Ste. Mere-Eglise
89 18th Inf S-1 Jnl, 6 Jun 44. during the morning. The 505th Para-
-I-HE SIXTH OF JUNE 329

chute Infantry counterattack had caused vision zone neither the 12th nor the 22d
only a slight enemy withdrawal south- Infantry Regiment reached its D-Day ob-
ward. The Germans were able thereafter jective. Delays were caused not by enemy
to consolidate on high ground at Fauville opposition but by the difficulties of mov-
where they formed a strong barrier be- ing up through the marshes. The 22d was
tween the 8th Infantry and the 82d Air- halted in the general area from Hamel de
borne Division. Cruttes on the coast to St. Germain-de-
Late in the afternoon a task force of Varreville. The 12th came up on the left
infantry and tanks, belonging to the 82d of the 502d Parachute Infantry, which was
Airborne Division and under command holding the 101st Division north flank
of Col. Edson D. Raff, landed by sea with near Beuzeville-au-Plain.
the mission of reinforcing their division General Bradley’s right corps on UTAH
in the Ste. Mere-Eglise area. Raff’s men, Beach had its weaknesses at the end of
including ninety men of the 325th Glider D Day, but on the whole it was in a sound
Infantry and a company of tanks of the position, smaller than planned but better
746th Tank Battalion, followed the 3d organized and stronger than might have
Battalion, 8th Infantry, into the les Forges been expected. The beach, though still
position. The infantry battalion had al- under intermittent enemy artillery fire,
ready decided not to attack northward was cleared and prepared for the orderly
that evening. Raff, however, was con- reception of reinforcements. The 4th Di-
cerned not only with getting his tanks vision was present in the beachhead virtu-
through to his division, but also with ally intact, organized and equipped for
clearing the area north of les Forges. The offensive action. Its casualties for the day
meadows in this area were the division’s were less than 200. If the position of the
glider landing zone. Here at dusk artillery 82d Airborne Division caused some con-
units were to land. Raff’s tanks and infan- cern, the force was at hand to consoli-
try made several jabs at the enemy to try date it.
to discover his dispositions but, after The situation on the left at OMAHA was
three tanks were lost to enemy high-ve- quite different. The main V Corps posi-
locity fire, the attempt to get through was tion at the end of the day was the narrow
abandoned. The enemy remained at full sector between St. Laurent and Colleville,
strength and still well concealed when, on a toehold on the enemy-shore nowhere
schedule at 2 100, about sixty gliders came more than a mile and a half deep. The
in low over the area and cut loose for right flank at Vierville-sur-Mer, held by
landings. The Germans reacted with in- elements of the 116th Infantry and the
tense automatic fire. Many of the gliders Rangers, was isolated from the main body
crashed, others came down within the although the beach exit was open and re-
enemy lines. Casualties were heavy. Rem- inforcements thus could be brought in.
nants of the glider force including the All units were lacking vehicles, supplies,
pilots were collected by Colonel Raff and ammunition, artillery, and armored sup-
formed into a makeshift defense for the port necessary for further advance inland.
night. No artillery could be landed during the
In the northern portion of the 4th Di- morning. The elements of five battalions
330 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

which beached in the afternoon all suf- additional information on the whole in-
fered heavy losses of equipment, includ- vasion front. The 709th Division oppos-
ing a total of twenty-six guns. Two anti- ing U.S. VII Corps was reporting strong
aircraft gun battalions scheduled to arrive armored reinforcements landed from the
on D Day could not come in until the fol- sea. At the same time the British were
lowing day. Only one artillery mission building up their beachhead. A concen-
was fired on 6 June. The V Corps losses tration of shipping observed off St. Lau-
for the day were about 2,000 killed, rent was thought to indicate Allied inten-
wounded, and missing.90 tion to reinforce what had heretofore
been considered minor penetrations in
The failure of the Germans to exploit the St. Laurent area.91 General Kraiss con-
the weakness of V Corps was the result cluded (apparently for the first time) that
quite simply of their own greater weak- the Allies were planning a two-pronged
ness. During the first few hours it looked attack on Bayeux from bridgeheads at St.
as though the OMAHA assault had been Laurent and Meuvaines. The 2d Battal-
stopped, and the chief concern of the ion of the 915th Regiment was therefore
352d Division was with its right flank split off from the force on its way toward
which was threatened by the British pen- Crepon and together with one antitank
etration near Meuvaines. (See Map company (with twelve self-propelled 75-
XII. ) To meet this the LXXXZV Corps mm. antitank guns) was attached to the
reserve, the reinforced 915th Regiment 916th Regiment in the center of the divi-
(Kampfgruppe Meyer) had been ordered sion sector. The infantry reinforcements
to attack in the direction of Crdpon. By moved into the Colleville area in the
1100 the division commander, General early afternoon but reported that their
Kraiss, began to consider the situation in counterattack had been stopped by firm
his center more serious in the light of American resistance and that they had
90 This is frankly a guess, based on a number of
suffered heavy losses.
estimates of various dates and various headquarters, The body of Kampfgruppe Meyer 92
none of which agree. Under the Army’s present in the meantime advanced toward the
casualty reporting system, it is unlikely that accu-
rate figures of D-Day losses by unit will ever be
area Bazenville-Villiers-le-Set whence it
available. The V Corps History gives D-Day losses planned to attack to Crepon. By the time
as 2,374, of which the 1st Division lost 1,190, the it reached its assembly area at about 1730
29th Division 743, and corps troops 441. The after
action report of the 1st Division and the 29th Divi-
it found the British already in possession.
sion history both scale down their own losses slightly. The units on the right were able to with-
See Joseph H. Ewing, 29, Let’s Go (Washington,
1948), p. 306. Source for the 1st Division report is 91 It is possible that the Germans were interpreting
its own G-l report of daily casualties; source for the as concentration of force what was actually only
29th Division figures is not given. On 8 June the 1st congestion of landing craft backlogged by the dif-
Division G-l issued a “corrected” casualty report ficulties of beaching them. See above, n. 77.
for D Day and D plus 1 which reduced total losses 92 Consisting of the 1st Battalion, 915th Regiment,
reported for the two days from 1,870 to 1,036. See the 352d Fuesilier Battalion, and one company of the
V Corps G-3 Jnl. Neither the original report nor the 352d Antitank Battalion (the 1352d Assault Gun
corrected one conforms to the division G-l’s account- Company) equipped with ten assault guns. MS #
ing in his monthly report of operations. See study B-432. Ziegelmann’s reference to the 1352d Assault
of First Army casualties during June 1944, prepared Gun Battalion is an error. Cf. Kriegsgliederung, 18
by Royce L. Thompson, MS. Hist Div files. May 44. Seventh Army, KTB Anlagen 1.1.3O.Vl.44.
THE SIXTH OF JUNE 331

NINTH AIR FORCE B-26 OVER BRITISH BEACHHEAD at Lion-sur-Mer.


Note markings on plane. All Allied aircraft, except 4-engine bombers, in support
of the invasion were painted thus for purposes of identification. Two black and three
white stripes were painted on wings and around the fuselages.

draw to St. Gabriel where they were were attached to the 726th Regiment,
,joined by the ten assault guns of the which was ordered to establish a defen-
Kampfgruppe. But the infantry battal- sive line: Coulombs-St. Gabriel-the
lion under direct command of Colonel Seulles River west to Esquay-sur-Seulles-
Meyer on the left brushed with British Hill 64 (west of Bazenville)-the Gronde
forces near Bazenville. Meyer was killed River to Asnelles-sur-Mer. The plan for
and the battalion lost contact with other 7 June on this front was simply to muster
German units for several hours. It seems all available troops including artillery
clear that Meyer’s forces made no con- units in Kampfgruppen to prevent a Brit-
certed attack, but were chewed up in ish break-through into Bayeux.93
small defensive actions. The assault guns
scored the only success of the day in 93This story has been pieced together from the
knocking out four British tanks near telephone diary of the 352d Division and from reports
of British action supplied to the author by the
BrPcy. On the other hand four of the British Cabinet Ofice Hist Sec. The account (MS
guns were themselves lost, possibly to # B-432) written after the war by Lt. Col. Ziegel-
British naval fire. Out of the entire mann, G-3 of the 352d Division, telling of a counter-
attack smashed by Allied fighter bomber interception
Kampfgruppe only about ninety men es- and overrun by British tanks seems considerably ex-
caped. In the evening these remnants aggerated.
332 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

In the meantime the commander of the defense. Caen was the gateway to the
British 50th Division had decided to halt open country constituting the best tank
on a line north and northeast of the city route to Paris. In German eyes it was
roughly between Vaux-sur-Orne and therefore the key to their whole position
Vaux-sur-Seulles. He had been advanc- in France.
ing against very slight opposition, but be- At 0500 Army Group B released the
cause of the delays in getting started he 2Zst Panzer Division (Generalleutnant
feared that he could not occupy Bayeux Edgar Feuchtinger) to Seventh Army
and organize a proper defense before control in order to counterattack British
dark. He ordered the attack to be re- airborne landings east of the Orne River.
sumed at daylight.94 For the attack the division lacked half
Most of the countermeasures initiated of its infantry, one artillery battalion,
by OB WEST and Army Group B on and the antiaircraft and antitank bat-
D Day were directed against the British. talions. These units, located on both
Because the British had established the sides of the Orne River, had been at-
most extensive beachhead, their land- tached to the 716th Division after the
ings seemed to constitute the main Al- seaborne landings began. General Feuch-
lied effort. Matching the success of the tinger organized the remainder of his
50th Division immediately on the flank troops and started them northward. But,
of U.S. V Corps, the 3d Canadian Divi- while still on the approach march, at
sion, landing on beaches near Courseulles, about noon he was ordered to cross the
had advanced from three to six miles and Orne and make his attack west of the
had sent armored patrols as far as Bret- river to counter directly the threat to
teville l’Orgueilleuse some ten miles from Caen. Delayed in passing through Caen
the beach. On its left the 3d British where only one bridge over the Orne was
Division advanced beyond Bieville to still usable, Feuchtinger could not jump
within about two miles of Caen. East of off until 1600. Then, with his troops or-
the Orne River the two parachute bri- ganized in two regimental combat teams,
gades of the 6th Airborne Division had he attacked the British 3d Division from
successfully accomplished their missions about the line St. Contest-Herouville.
of seizing bridges at B6nouville and de- The attack was heavily resisted and made
stroying the enemy coastal battery at little progress along the Orne. But to
Merville. Although the advances of all the west one battalion struck through to
British units fell short of their objectives Cresserons and sent elements to the coast.
(particularly in the failure to take either A few stragglers got into a Luftwaffe
Caen or Bayeux), they nevertheless rep- communications bunker near Douvres
resented the widest and deepest penetra- where they held out until 17 June, but
tion on the Allied front. Besides, they the bulk of the battalion after being
broke through what the Germans con- badly mauled pulled out. Before dark
sidered an especially vital portion of the Feuchtinger halted the attack all along
the line and ordered his units to dig in
94 From information furnished by British Cabinet
only a few hundred yards north of the
OfIice Hist Sec. line of departure. He tied in with in-
THE SIXTH OF JUNE 333

fantry units of the division fighting east no time to debate contingencies. He


of the Orne.95 reasoned further that, even if the Nor-
Feuchtinger’s attack, stopped before mandy assault were planned by the Allies
it had achieved anything, was the only as a secondary effort, it was probable that
large-scale counterattack on D Day. That they would exploit whatever success it
no more decisive moves were taken was achieved. The attack, whatever its charac-
due at least in part to the muddled Ger- ter, should therefore be met with all avail-
man command system. Rundstedt had able force. Rundstedt’s reasoning was
reacted to the first news of the airborne clear and his action decisive. But the two
landings with a quick decision to com- panzer divisions which he ordered’ to
mit at once all operational reserves with- move were not under his command. They
in striking distance. (Map XIII) He were in OKW reserve. To save precious
took this decision, despite uncertainty as time Rundstedt issued his orders first and
to the extent of the Allied landings, on then notified OKWof the action,request-
the grounds that whether the landings ing approval. OKW did not approve. At
were major or subsidiary it was still im- about 0730 Jodl informed Rundstedt
perative to repel them at once. It was that the two divisions would not be com-
between 0330 and 0400, two hours before mitted until orders were received from
the seaborne landings, that he ordered Yitler. The 12th SS Panzer Division was
the 12th SS Panzer Division to move im- to hold up at Lisieux; Panzer Lehr would
mediately toward Caen and the Panzer not move at all. In contrast to his earlier
Lehr Division to prepare for similar decisiveness, Rundstedt apparently ac-
movement.Q6 He estimated that the re- cepted this critical intervention by Hit-
ported airborne landings were on such a ler’s staff without argument. He made
large scale that they could not be a mere no effort to reach Hitler himself.97 The
deception maneuver and they therefore two panzer divisions waited, far from the
would have to be reinforced from the beachheads, all during the morning
sea. The only feasible area for such rein- hours of heavy overcast that might have
forcement was the east coast of the permitted them to move without serious
Cotentin and the beaches between the interference from Allied aircraft. They
Vire and Orne Rivers. From observation waited until 1600 when Hitler at last
of Aliied assault exercises, the Germans gave the word to move both divisions
were sure the assault on the coast would into battle. But by then cloud cover had
take place at dawn. Rundstedt wanted broken up. Allied fighters and bombers
to have armor at hand to counterattack ranged the skies smashing at everything
in the first hours. There was therefore that moved. It was necessary to delay
the move further until dark.
95 MS # B-441 (Feuchtinger). Although scattered infantry elements
96 This timing is given in MS # T-121 (Zimmer-
mann et al.). See also Rad, 0445 (0545 DBST) , OB of the 12th SS Panzer Division arrived
WEST to OKW/WFSt, 6 Jun 44. OKH/Op.Abt., 97 Under the German command system it would
Lagemeldungen OB WEST 1.IV.-8VI.44;cf. Fif- have been perfectly proper for Rundstedt to have
teenth Army, KTB 1.1.30.VI.44, 6 Jun 44. Rund- appealed directly to Hitler, since OKW itself did
stedt’s reasoning detailed in the remainder of the not have command authority except as it spoke in
paragraph is as reported in MS # T-121. Hitler’s name.
334 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

during the afternoon at forward assembly threatened with airborne landings. When
areas in the zone of the 21st Panzer Divi- Dollmann repeated his request that night
sion, it was actually not until 8 June that as the 352d Division front seemed to be
the bulk of the two reserve divisions rapidly reaching a breaking point, Rom-
could be committed. The plan for their me1 yielded so far as to alert the units
use, developed on D Day, was to place involved.99
both the 12th SS and Panzer Lehr Divi- While waiting for these reinforce-
sions under I SS Panzer Corps along ments, the 352d Division had to depend
with the 21st Panzer and 716th Infantry wholly on its dwindling resources. Its
Divisions (the latter consisting at the last reserve, the engineer battalion, was
end of the day of little more than one moved from the vicinity of St. Martin-
German battalion and about twelve ar- de-Blagny and attached in the evening
tillery pieces). 98 The massed armor was to the 916th Regiment in the expecta-
to counterattack on the right wing of tion of heavy Allied attacks on 7 June
LXXXIV Corps. The new corps bound- to exploit the Colleville-St. Laurent
ary was to be the former boundary be- beachhead.
tween the 716th and 352d Divisions. At midnight General Kraiss reported
The commitment of another corps in his situation to General Marcks at corps.
the Caen area would mean an indi- He was not sanguine. He thought his
rect strengthening of General Marcks’ present forces might be sufficient to hold
(LXXXZV Corps) position by relieving off enemy attacks on 7 June but his
him of responsibility for the Bayeux- losses were so heavy that he would need
Orne sector. More direct support was on reinforcements for the following day’s
the way, The 30th Mobile Brigade was fighting. In the coastal positions, he
moving by bicycle from Coutances to- said, he had suffered a total loss of men
ward the invasion area, but it would and equipment. His casualties for the
not arrive until the morning of 7 June. day were about 1,200, or nearly one-fifth
In addition Seventh Army had taken the of his combat effectives. General Marcks
first steps to shift its weight into Nor- replied that the reserves which could be
mandy. In the morning the army com- spared to the 352d Division had already
mander, General Dollmann, ordered the been sent forward. Kraiss would simply
XXV Corps in Brittany to prepare the have to hold on as tenaciously as possible
mobile Kampfgruppen of the 275th and withO what he had.100
265th Infantry .Divisions for immediate Actually there was reason for the Ger-
movement to the invasion area. General man outlook to be considerably darker
Dollmann also wanted to move the than it was. All of the reinforcements
Kampfgruppe of the 266th Division and ordered up on D Day would arrive late
the entire 77th Division from Brittany and many would take severe losses from
into Normandy, but Rommel considered Allied air attack on the approach march.
the move premature in view of certain Although all German commanders had
reports that Brittany itself might be long realized that their mobility would
99 Seventh Army, KTB l.I.-30.VI.44, 6 Jun 44.
98MS # B-621 (Richter). 100 MS # B-432 (Ziegelmann) .
THE SIXTH OF JUNE 335

be severely restricted by Allied air su- 500 sorties altogether, consisted largely
premacy, the full tactical significance of of fighter interventions, a good part of
that fact was not yet apparent. General which occurred far inland. Some of
Dollmann, at his most pessimistic, could these were planned interventions; many
not have foreseen that the so-called were chance encounters by planes sent
mobile Kampfgruppen ordered out of on support missions and jumped by Al-
Brittany would take ten days to reach lied aircraft before they could reach the
the battle area. battle area.101 The 500 sorties of the
The immediate effect of Allied air Luftwaffe were in striking contrast to the
power on the battle for the beaches was almost 3,000 sorties by the Ninth Air
discouraging enough for the Germans. Force fighters and bombers alone, flying
The 352d Division observed that not a chiefly tactical missions in the U.S.
single German plane had appeared over zone.102
its sector during the day. All of the 250
sorties flown by II Air Corps on 6 June 101 MS # B-620 (Buelowius) .
102 [Lt Col Robert H. George] Ninth Air Force,
were against shipping. The rest of the April to November 1944 (Army Air Forces Historical
German air effort, which did not exceed Studies: No. 36)) MS, p. 81. AAF files.
CHAPTER IX

The V Corps Lodgment


(7-18 June)
Securing the Beachheads maintenance line, but they were so badly
chewed up and disorganized by the hard
Supreme in the air, the Allies began on fighting that they were scarcely capable of
D Day to build up a similarly crushing continuing the attack as planned. Units
superiority on the ground. By the end of of VII Corps had been more successful in
6 June 1944 First Army had succeeded in staking out a beachhead large enough to
landing most of eight and a third infantry remove the beaches from direct enemy
regiments-only a little less than planned. fire and to provide sufficient space for
For operations on 7 June five divisions maneuver and build-up. The 4th Divi-
were ashore and operational (although sion had taken only light casualties and
one, the 29th, lacked one of its regiments was in relatively good condition for sub-
until later in the day). All of these divi- sequent attacks. Nevertheless the area
sions were seriously deficient in trans- was considerably smaller than desired
port, tank support, artillery, and above and the initial efforts to push it out west-
all supplies. The worst situation was in ward across the Merderet and southward
the V Corps zone where, of 2,400 tons of toward a junction with V Corps were
supplies planned to be unloaded during barred by the hard-fighting 91st Division.
D Day, only about 100 tons actually came The operations in the two days fol-
in. Ammunition shortage was grave. lowing the landings were a continuation
Both beaches on D plus 1 were still under of the assault phase as all units sought to
enemy artillery fire. On OMAHA pockets reach their D-Day objectives.1 The ex-
of enemy riflemen still held out at vari- haustion of the 16th and 116th Infantry
ous poin,ts along the coast; beach ob- Regiments in the V Corps zone required
stacles, even after work by the engineers some reshuffling of regimental and bat-
during low tide of the afternoon of D talion missions, and, in the VII Corps
Day, were still only about a third cleared; zone, missions of the 4th Division had to
beach exits had not been opened as be tempered to conform to the realities
scheduled nor vehicle parks established of enemy opposition.
inland on the scale contemplated. In effect, the V Corps attack continued
Nowhere in First Army zone had ini- on 7 June with two divisions abreast al-
tial objectives been fully achieved. In though the regiments of the 29th Divi-
the V Corps zone not only had the two
1 See below, however, for shift in operational pri-
assault regiments stopped far short of orities to insure early junction of V and VII Corps
their objectives along the beachhead beachheads.
THE V CORPS LODGMENT (7-18 JUNE) 337

sion did not formally come under com- afternoon of D Day. Expected counter-
mand of Maj. Gen. Charles H. Gerhardt, attacks had not materialized and the
the division commander, until 1700. Ger- enemy’s morale seemed low. The 1st
hardt had landed on the evening of D Day Division realized that it was through the
and with General Cota planned and coastal crust and at the moment had to
directed the operations of the 115th and deal only with remnants of the 352d
116th Infantry Regiments during D plus Division. It was thought, however, that
1. (Map XIV) The third regiment of the an armored counterattack might be in
division, the 175th Infantry, began land- the making.2
ing at 1230 on 7 June, two hours later On the right, Huppain and the for-
than scheduled, and was ashore by 1630. ward slopes of the ridge line 1,000 yards
The 29th Division operated generally north of Mt. Cauvin were occupied. But
west of a line through St. Laurent and the enemy, strongly opposing simultane-
Formigny; the 1st Division, with all three ous British attacks from the east, con-
of its regiments in line, operated gen- tinued to hold a narrow wedge be-
erally to the east. tween American and British beachheads
The principal 1st Division attack on through Port-en-Bessin and south along
7 June was the 18th Infantry’s drive the valley of the Drame River. In the
southward toward its D-Day objectives: center the 18th Infantry made two cross-
the high ground north of Trevieres and ings of the Aure, the 2d Battalion occu-
the Mandeville-Mosles area south of the pying Mosles and the 3d, Mandeville.
Aure River. For this attack the 3d Bat- The 1st Battalion, effectively supported
talion, 26th Infantry, was attached. The by five tanks of the 741st Tank Battalion,
other tasks confronting the 1st Division captured the high ground at Engranville
were to make contact with the British after a fight with something less than a
and to clean out the Colleville area. To company of German infantry which
accomplish the first, two battalions (the lasted most of the afternoon.
1st of the 26th Infantry and the 3d of the The success of the 18th Infantry attack
16th Infantry) under control of the 16th was somewhat qualified by the inability
attacked southeastward with the mission of the 3d Battalion, 26th Infantry, on the
of taking the high ground west and south- division’s right to take Formigny. Al-
west of Port-en-Bessin, including Mt. though opposition by exhausted elements
Cauvin. The clean-up job was assigned to of the 916th Regiment was not heavy.
the 1st and 2d Battalions of the 16th the battalion was unable to get moving.3
Infantry. The 2d Battalion, 26th Infan- 2 1st Div G-2 Per Rpt 1.
try, was held in division reserve. 3The 26th Infantry casualties for the day were
Despite wide dispersion of the attack- only 15 killed and missing and 30 wounded. The
G-3 of the German 352d Division in reporting on
ing battalions and scanty artillery and this action cited the Formigny assault as an ex-
tank support, all units made good prog- ample of the sluggishness of American infantry at-
ress against slight and sporadic resistance. tack over open terrain, which he found in strong
contrast to the determined fighting by individual
A marked degree of enemy disorganiza- American riflemen in the towns. See MS # B-433
tion had been observed beginning on the (Ziegelmann).
338 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

It was not until the next morning that ture of the action with what actually
the enemy was driven out of Formigny happened.4
by a company of 18th Infantry and some In the early afternoon following the
tanks attacking from the Engranville commitment of the 30th Mobile Brigade,
position. General Kraiss’s headquarters believed
On the German side the 352d Division that the 352d Division held a thin de-
at the end of D Day had been chiefly con- fensive arc north and northeast of Bayeux
cerned with its open flank where the from about Vaux-sur-Aure to Sommer-
British were driving into the hole opened vieu. From left to right the units en-
by the collapse of the left wing of the gaged were the 30th Mobile Brigade
716th Division. Throughout 7 June there (-), elements of the 2d Battalion, 916th
was little General Kraiss could do to re- Regiment, and elements of the 3d Bat-
pair the damage, for his last organic re- talion, 1352d Artillery Regiment. Having
serves had had to be committed in the expended their last rounds, these units
center where the 916th Regiment was had destroyed their guns and fought as
strained to the breaking point. At noon infantry. South of this line there were
he requested and secured the attachment only scratch forces, the most important
of the 30th Mobile Brigade. The brigade, of which were remnants of Kampfgruppe
which came up from Coutances on bi- Meyer (2d Battalion, 915th Regiment
cycles, arrived only late in the afternoon, and the Fuesilier Battalion, 352d Divi-
its young, inexperienced recruits tired sion), thought to be defending weakly
in body and spirit from constant attacks northeast and north of Tilly-sur-Seulles.
by low-flying planes along the route. One The Bayeux defense was believed to have
battalion (the 513th) was committed in held during the day, despite penetrations
the vicinity of Formigny to strengthen by British armor and a British thrust
the 916th Regiment. through Sommervieu which was reported
The brigade, less this battalion, as- to have split the 2d Battalion, 916th,
sembled northwest of Bayeux and was from the artillery unit. At midnight, the
attached to the 726th Regiment with or- 352d Division and Seventh Army sup-
ders to attack the flank of British forces posed that the main British advance had
advancing on Bayeux. (See Map XII .) been checked short of Bayeux and that
Action of German units in the Bayeux countermeasures were in process to avert
area during 7 June was so confused that the fall of the city. While the 352d Divi-
no coherent story can be told in detail. sion commander, General Kraiss, seri-
The whole flank of the 352d Division ously doubted that those measures would
from the Drome River to the division succeed in view of t.he depletion of his
boundary east of St. Leger was falling own forces and their exhaustion after
apart. The disintegration, furthermore, constant pounding by Allied aircraft and
was so rapid that reports reaching divi-
sion headquarters were late and scattered. 4 See MS # B-433 and MS # B-434 (both by
Ziegelmann); Seventh Army, KTB 1.I.30.VI.44, 6
As evidence of the confusion, it is worth and 7 Jun 44; information from British Cabinet Of-
contrasting the German command pic- fice Hist Sec. Hist Div files.
THE V CORPS LODGMENT (7-18 JUNE) 339

naval artillery, he still did not know the British was assigned to the 26th In-
the true extent of the collapse on his fantry. The attack, however, never
right.5 gathered momentum, partly because of
The collapse was, in fact, almost com- the difficulty of assembling the widely
plete. In the morning of 7 June, before dispersed battalions, and partly because
the arrival of the 30th Mobile Brigade of heavy enemy resistance.
on the Drome River, two battalions of The 2d Battalion, 26th Infantry, re-
the British 56th Infantry Brigade (50th leased from division reserve at 1745, 7
Division) entered Bayeux and by noon June, had moved during the night from
had cleared the city. The British then the vicinity of Etreham to the crossroads
pushed out along the southwest road to between Mosles and Tour-en-Bessin
occupy the high ground at Monunirel. which they occupied about dawn. There
The third battalion of the brigade in the they awaited the rest of the regiment
meantime advanced about two miles throughout 8 June. The 1st Battalion,
southwest from Vaux-sur-Aure. On the meanwhile, bogged down on 8 June at
coast, the 47th Royal Marine Commando the Aure River crossing at Etreham,
captured Port-en-Bessin in a stiff fight where the enemy fought stubbornly to
beginning about 1600, 7 June, and not hold one side of the Drome corridor. The
ending until the early morning hours of 3d Battalion remained at Formigny dur-
8 J une. East of Bayeux, if there were ing the morning until it could be relieved
still German forces at nightfall on 7 June, by a battalion of the 115th Infantry. In
they were no more than remnants with the early afternoon it began a march
insufficient coherence even to form a re- down the Bayeux highway. At 1800 it at-
sistance pocket within British lines. Two tacked through the 2d Battalion positions,
brigades of the 50th Division were south and through Tour-en-Bessin to Ste. Anne
of the Bayeux-Caen highway. On their which it reached shortly after midnight.
left and astride that highway was one During the night a violent and confused
brigade of the 3d Canadian Division. action took place at Ste. Anne as the
The converging moves of the British Germans, now in process of withdrawing
50th Division and the U.S. 1st Division from the corridor, fought to keep the
on 7 June had squeezed the German 30th escape route open.
Mobile Brigade and elements of the The 1st Division thus failed to trap
726th Regiment into a narrow corridor the enemy. The British were similarly
along the Drome River north to its junc- checked east of the Drome. Elements of
tion with the Aure. (See MapXIV.) On the 50th Division attacked and cleared
8 June the Allied vise was tightened in Sully during 8 June but were unable to
an effort to destroy the enemy forces sep- hold a bridgehead over the Drome. Other
arating the British and American beach- elements of the division pressed in the
heads. On the American side, the mis- northern end of the enemy corridor by
sion of attacking to effect a junction with clearing the chateau at Fosse Saucy. But,
5 Losses of the 352d Division during the day were in the face of threatened enemy counter-
virtually made up by the attachment of the 30th
Mobile Brigade but the combat value of the latter
attacks, the British withdrew to high
was inferior. See MS # B-433 (Ziegelmann). ground near Escures.
340 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Thanks to these actions, the German riflemen or isolated strong points was al-
726th Regiment during the night of 8-9 most continuous; American troops grad-
June was able to extricate the bulk of its ually became used to moving under the
forces. This was perhaps the first German constant crack of bullets.
withdrawal from coastal positions ac- D Day had left the units of the 115th
complished on orders from division and and 116th Infantry Regiments and a
corps. In direct disobedience of Hitler’s large part of the two Ranger battalions
command to hold every inch of ground in the sliver of coast between Vierville
to the last bullet, the decision reflected and St. Laurent, where they were still
the seriousness of the German position. meeting scattered opposition. The 175th
During the morning of 8 June the 352d Infantry was still afloat. A precondition
Division was out of touch with the 726th for the division’s pursuit of D-Day objec-
Regiment. At about 1500, however, con- tives was to expand this toehold and clear
tact was established with the regimental room for maneuver. The 115th Infantry,
commander (possibly just west of Sully). after mopping up around St. Laurent,
He was ordered to resist stubbornly with attacked generally southwest toward Lou-
all available forces until nightfall and vieres and Montigny, while the 116th
then break out to the southwest and form Infantry with Ranger units undertook to
a defensive line from Blay east to Haley clear the bluffs and go to the relief of the
and thence south to Agy. Shortly after three Ranger companies isolated on
General Kraiss had given this order, the Pointe du Hoe.
corps commander, General Marcks, came The 115th Infantry made slow prog-
into the 352d Division command post. ress. Moving on a broad front, the regi-
Marcks was asked to approve the decision ment found communication difficult.
on the grounds that, if the troops in the Furthermore, since the regiment still had
Bayeux salient were sacrificed, the divi- no transport, ammunition and heavy
sion would have nothing with which to weapons had to be hand-carried. Near
repair the rip in its right flank and the the end of the day Col. Eugene N. Slap-
way would be open for unopposed Al- pey requested the immediate establish-
lied marches to the south. “After a long ment of army supply points as an urgent,
pause, the Commanding General prerequisite for further advance.7
[ Marcks] agreed. . . .” 6 Colonel Canham’s 116th Infantry, on
While the U.S. 1st Division and the the other hand, advanced rapidly. The
British converged on Bayeux the 29th regiment moved in column down the
Division on D plus 1 still found itself en- coastal road with ten tanks rolling be-
tangled in the enemy’s coastal defenses tween files of infantry. Tank fire was
and spent most of the day cleaning up employed to neutralize small enemy posi-
the fragments of enemy units that were tions and the main body of the regiment
shattered but not destroyed by the initial pushed on past them. Before noon Can-
shock of the landings. In some areas ham was only 1,000 yards from Pointe
small arms fire from groups of enemy du Hoe. The Rangers awaiting relief

6 MS # B-433 (Ziegelmann) 7 29th Div G-3 Jnl.


THE V CORPS LODGMENT (7-18 JUNE) 341

there then numbered less than 100 effec- ville-au-Plain, reached the forward slope
tives. Their position had seriously de- of hills between Azeville and le Bisson
teriorated during the night of 6-7 June where, faced with stiffened resistance, it
as a result of a counterattack by the halted for the night to reorganize. The
914th Regiment which overran their 22d Infantry on the right advanced di-
outpost line and pinned the force to a rectly on Crisbecq. It moved rapidly to
strip of the headland only about 200 a point between Azeville and de Dodain-
yards deep. While destroyer fire and the ville where it began getting fire from the
Rangers’ two mortars kept the enemy at forts.
bay, the situation remained desperate Both the Crisbecq and Azeville forti-
until the afternoon when two LGVP’s fications were permanent coastal artillery
landed water, food, and ammunition and positions thoroughly organized for de-
about thirty reinforcements. At the same fense from land attack. Crisbecq was a
time a series of attacks by the relieving naval battery with 210-mm. guns.s Aze-
force from the vicinity of St. Pierre-du- ville contained the four French 105-mm.
Mont, although frustrated by well-placed guns of the 2d Battery of the 1261st Artil-
enemy artillery fire, at least eased the lery Regiment (army coastal artillery). At
pressure. both positions massive concrete block-
By 1630 on 7 June the 175th Infantry houses with underground ammunition
(Col. Paul R. Goode) had come ashore storage and interconnecting trenches con-
and was placed in the line in the vicinity stituted the core of the fortifications and
of Gruchy. Additional landings of artil- were ringed with barbed wire and de-
lery units swelled the 29th Division’s fended by automatic weapons. At Aze-
artillery support to a total of twenty-nine ville the main positions were outposted
guns belonging to five battalions. Al- with concrete sentry boxes.
though the achievements of the division Attacks were launched on both forts
on D plus 1 seemed slight measured in in battalion strength and were driven
yards or vital objectives taken, in reality back. The task at Crisbecq was espe-
the crust of enemy defenses was broken cially difficult because approach to the
and the division was set for a full-scale fort was canalized along a narrow hedged
attack on the morrow. trail. Open fields lay on the west, and on
The fighting in the VII Corps zone on the east were either swamplands or steep
D plus 1, like that in V Corps, aimed first slopes. The battalion advancing along
at clearing the beachhead already staked this trail was counterattacked on the left
out and second at pushing on toward flank and fell back in considerable confu-
D-Day objectives. (Map XV ) sion to re-establish a line 300 yards south
The only substantial advances of 7 of Bas Village de Dodainville. The Ger-
June were made on the north flank where mans, trying to press their advantage with
the two regiments of the 4th Division renewed attacks after dark, were routed
pushed the enemy back two miles to his by naval fire.
strongly fortified positions at Azeville In the meantime, along the beach, the
and Crisbecq. The 12th Infantry, attack- 8 In German documents it is called the Batterie
ing on the left from the vicinity of Beuze- Marcouf.
342 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

3d Battalion of the 22d Infantry had left, advancing astride the main highway,
been advancing northward with the mis- was stopped hard at the Fauville-Eco-
sion of reducing the beach fortifications. queneauville ridge by machine gun and
Progress was slow and costly as troops artillery fire. These troops were shaken
came under small arms fire from the loose, however, by the 2d Battalion’s
beach resistance points as well as artillery capture of Ecoqueneauville, and both
fire from inland batteries. About 2,000 units continued the advance. When they
yards were made during the day and two reached Ste. Mere-Eglise they found a
enemy resistance nests cleared. In the German counterattack in progress, al-
evening the battalion was brought inland though they apparently did not recognize
as regimental reserve to guard against it as such.
further counterattacks from the Azeville- This counterattack, which lasted most
Crisbecq positions. During the night the of the day, actually represented General
bulk of the battalion returned to the von Schlieben’s supreme effort to drive
beach to receive the surrender of the in the Cotentin beachhead from the
enemy at Taret de Ravenoville who had north. It will be recalled that the 1058th
been discouraged from continued resist- Regiment (less one battalion) had been
ance chiefly by naval shelling. ordered to attack St. Mere-Eglise on D
In the center of the VII Corps beach- Day. Lacking artillery, it had spent all
head the day was occupied chiefly with day working through the hedgerows
eliminating the enemy forces south of against spasmodic paratroop opposition
Ste. Mere-Eglise who on D Day had pre- and only reached Neuville by nightfall.
vented firm junction between the 8th At dawn on D plus 1 the attack was re-
Infantry on the south and the 82d Air- sumed. For it the 1058th now received
borne Division. A patrol of the 82d Air- attachments of the 456th and 457th Artil-
borne Division got through to General lery Battalions, the 3d Battalion of the
Barton during the night and plans were 243d Artillery Regiment (less one bat-
then co-ordinated for the next day’s oper- tery), the Seventh Army Sturm Battalion,
ations. In the morning the 8th Infantry, and one company of the 709th Antitank
on General Barton’s order, attacked the Battalion with ten self-propelled 75-mm.
Turqueville salient. Turqueville itself, guns.10
held by the 795th Georgian Battalion, After preparatory fire the Sturm Bat-
was hit by the 1st Battalion from the talion began the attack astride the main
east. After a hard fight the Russian unit highway, initially to make contact with
was talked into surrender by a Russian- elements of the 1058th Regiment which
speaking American captive. At the same had been cut off in action during D Day.
time the 2d and 3d Battalions struck When contact was made, the attack was
north from their positions near les For- reorganized and the Sturm Battalion
ges. The 1st and 2d Battalions were sup- struck down the west side of the high-
ported by two companies of the 70th way, with the 1058th on the east. It is
Tank Battalion.9 The 3d Battalion on the apparent that the 1058th Regiment, de-

9 70th Tk Bn AAR. 10 MS # B-845 (Schlieben) .


TROOPS ON UTAH BEACH UNDER ARTILLERY FIRE
344 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

moralized in the fighting of the day be- Neuville, destroyed two enemy assault
fore, made little progress. The Sturm Bat- guns, occupied the town, and took about
talion, however, supported by the 709th sixty prisoners as well as releasing nine-
Division assault guns, which the Amer- teen captured U.S. paratroopers.12
icans mistook for tanks, carried the at- More significantly this armored slice
tack to the outskirts of Ste. Mere-Eglise. northward cut the German forces attack-
To the American command the situa- ing Ste. Mere-Eglise and began a panic on
tion looked gravely threatening. Ste. the German side. For the first time in the
Mere-Eglise, besides being important as a early beachhead battles the Americans
communications hub, was the core of the were confronting the Germans with some-
82d Airborne Division’s position, which thing like massed armor in a relatively
elsewhere was still tenuous. General Ridg- small sector. When the 8th Infantry (-)
way, thinking that a German armored arrived north of Ste. Mere-Eglise with two
thrust was building up, called for assist- companies of the 70th Tank Battalion in
ance. A staff officer met Maj. Gen. J. Law- support, about sixty American tanks were
ton Collins, VII Corps commander, at deployed in the area. While some of the
the 4th Division command post near Au- tanks of the 746th Tank Battalion were
douville-la-Hubert.11 Collins ordered a moving on Neuville, Colonel MacNeely’s
task force of the 746th Tank Battalion, 2d Battalion, 8th. Infantry, joined Colonel
which had been in 4th Division reserve Vandervoort’s 2d Battalion, 505th Para-
near Reuville, to proceed at once to Ste. chute Infantry, in an infantry-tank attack
Mere-Eglise. The task force, commanded to clear the enemy in the vicinity of Sige-
by Lt. Col. C. G. Hupfer and consisting of ville. Vandervoort, with the commander
Company B, the assault gun platoon, and of the 70th Tank Battalion, Lt. Col. John
three headquarters tanks, drove into Ste. C. Welborn, directing tank operations
Mere-Eglise in the early afternoon and from a jeep, advanced up the highway
turned north along the Montebourg high- north of Ste. Mere-Eglise, while Mac-
way. A few hundred yards out of town Neely swept in from the west.13 In the en-
the leading tanks came under heavy en- velopment 300 of the enemy were cap-
emy artillery fire and about the same time tured or killed.
spotted the German assault guns in col- The 1058th Regiment, thus splintered
umn along the road. A fire fight began by two separate American attacks and de-
which, because of the column formation moralized by the presence of so many
on each side, was inconclusive. Colonel American tanks, broke and pulled out in
Hupfer in the meantime reconnoitered a disorder. The Sturm Battalion west of the
trail east of the main highway leading highway and out of contact with the main
north into Neuville. Some of the 746th force also withdrew. The retreat was
Battalion tanks took this route, entered checked only late in the day by interven-
11 Collins had commanded the 25th Division in the tion of General Schlieben. The division
Pacific theater in 1942 and 1943, achieving a notable
combat record in the Guadalcanal and New Georgia 12 Hist Div Combat Interv with S-3, 746th Tk Bn.
campaigns. In December 1943 he was transferred to 13 First Army GO 35. Colonel Welborn was awarded
the European theater, assuming command of the the DSC, with citation covering both this action and
VII Corps the following February. action of 6 June.
THE 1’ CORPS LODGMENT (7-18 JUNE) 345

commander rallied his panicky troops While the 82d Airborne Division had
and began putting them into a defensive thus consolidated its base, its principal
line about 1,300 yards north of Neuville. D-Day assignment-the establishing of
Convinced after the failure of the Ste. bridgeheads across the Merderet-came
Mere attack that he no longer had the no nearer accomplishment. On the con-
strength needed for a successful counter- trary, during the morning of 7 June it
attack to reduce the American bridge- was touch and go whether a determined
head, Schlieben determined that his pol- enemy counterattack might not break the
icy must be simply to contain it and pre- division’s hold on the east bank of the
vent a breakthrough to Cherbourg. He river. At about 0800 the attack of ele-
concentrated therefore on building a ments of the enemy 1057th Regiment be-
strong defensive line. He brought into the gan to form against the American la Fiere
line a battalion of the 919th Regiment as position. Mortar and machine gun fire
well as the 922d Regiment (243d Divi- ranged in, chiefly on Company A, 505th
sion), which had arrived during the morn- Parachute Infantry, which was dug in to
ing of 7 June. All these elements were the right of the bridge. An hour or so later
formed into a Kampfgruppe under com- four Renault tanks led a German infantry
mand of Oberst Helmuth Rohrbach, com- advance across the bridge. The lead tank
mander of the 729th Regiment. Further was disabled by either bazooka fire or a
to concentrate his strength, Schlieben or- shell from a 57-mm. antitank gun that was
dered the withdrawal of the bulk of the supporting Company A. Although this
troops from defenses along the east coast checked the advance, the German infan-
which were not under attack. In succeed- try took advantage of the cover furnished
ing days this defense was to be still further by the knocked-out tank and some
reinforced until it constituted a strong burned-out vehicles, which the American
barrier to the attempts of the 4th Division defenders had pulled onto the causeway
to push north.14 during the night, to open a critical fire
After the 8th Infantry had pushed fight at close range. At the same time Ger-
north from les Forges, the 325th Glider man mortar shells fell in increasing num-
Infantry began landing in the area in two bers among Company A’s foxholes. The
serials as scheduled. Although somewhat American platoon immediately to the
scattered and hit by ground fire, the ma- right of the bridge was especially hard
jority of the gliders came in where hit and eventually reduced to but fifteen
planned and rapid assembly was effected. men. These men, however, encouraged
The regiment originally intended as 82d by the heroic leadership of Sgt. William
Airborne Division reserve was actually D. Owens and by the presence in the thick
split: one battalion was committed in the of the fighting of division officers, includ-
la Fiere area to strengthen attacks to force ing General Ridgway, held their line.
a crossing there; and one battalion was at- The fight was halted at last by a German
tached to the 505th Parachute Infantry request for a half-hour’s truce to remove
for operations to the north of Ste. Mere- the wounded. When the half hour ex-
Eglise. pired, the enemy did not return to the at-
14 MS # B-845 (Schlieben). tack. A count of Company A revealed that
PLANES AND GLIDERS CIRCLING LES FORGES on the morning of 7 ]une.
Dust is raised by gliders landing in fields at upper left. Wrecked gliders in fore-
ground are some of those that landed on the evening of 6 June.
THE V CORPS LODGMENT (7-18 JUNE) 347

almost half of its combat effectives had the remainder were killed in the fire fight
fallen in the defense, either killed or seri- preceding surrender. Only twenty-five
ously wounded.15 men escaped to Carentan.17
South of the 82d Division the 101st Di- During D Day no news of the actions
vision with small forces of the 3d Battal- along the Douve had reached the 101st
ion, 506th Parachute Infantry, and the Division headquarters. Since capture of
501st Parachute Infantry still held pre- the Douve bridges was one of the most im-
carious positions on the north bank of the portant of the division’s missions, on
Douve. Isolated and short of ammuni- which depended the immediate security
tion, these troops were unable to go on of VII Corps on the south and ultimate
the offensive on 7 June. They nevertheless junction with V Corps, General Taylor
scored a notable success during the day decided on the afternoon of D Day to send
when together they killed or captured the the 506th Parachute Infantry (less the 3d
whole 1st Battalion of the 6th Parachute Battalion) south on a reconnaissance in
Regiment. This battalion had advanced force. The reconnaissance, which in fact
on regimental order to Ste. Marie-du- became an attack, led off on the morning
Mont on D Day and then had been cut of 7 June in column down the road from
off. Patrols sent out by von der Heydte on Culoville. Though harassed by scattered
7 June from St. Come-du-Mont became rifle fire, the 506th reached Vierville with-
involved in fighting a few hundred yards out undue delay, cleared the town, and
east of the town and could not get then split, with the 1st Battalion heading
through. The isolated battalion in the down the highway to Beaumont and the
meantime was already moving south. 2d diverging cross country to the left
About the middle of the afternoon para- toward Angoville-au-Plain. Halted just
troopers at le Port and la Barquette ob- beyond Vierville by heavy small arms fire,
served the Germans (about 800 in all) the attacks broke loose only after a pla-
advancing through the open fields and toon of medium tanks had been brought
marshes north of the river and east of the up and attached to the 2d Battalion. The
Carentan highway. In independent ac- 1st Battalion fought its way down astride
tions the men under Captain Shettle and the highway to Beaumont where it was
those under Colonel Johnson opened fire. stopped by two enemy counterattacks.18
Caught by surprise and bluffed by demon- The 2d Battalion medium tanks together
strations designed to impress them with with a platoon of light tanks were then
overwhelming American strength, the sent to its support and they advanced an-
majority of the Germans surrendered. other 1,000 yards to just east of St. Come-
About 250 were taken by Captain Shet- du-Mont.
tie’s men at le Port, about 350 by Colonel 17 MS # B-839 (von der Heydte).
Johnson at la Barquette.16 More than half 18 These “counterattacks” may have been only the
probing patrol actions by which von der Heydte
was trying to regain contact with his 1st Battalion.
15 Details from S. L. A. Marshall, Regimental Study Von der Heydte reports no counterattacks in this
5, MS. Hist Div files. Marshall’s full account was area. Lacking two of his four battalions, he was much
based on group and individual interviews which he more concerned at the moment with maintaining his
collected. position than with aggressive action. See MS #
16 Colonel Johnson was awarded the DSC. B-839.
348 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

At the same time that the 506th Infan- ing in assembly areas between Caen and
try was attacking south, the 2d Battalion Bronay during the day and Panzer Lehr
of the 501st Infantry, which on D Day had Division formed to its left rear, north and
fought an isolated and inconclusive ac- northeast of Tilly-sur-Seulles. In the after-
tion around les Droueries, continued its noon the reconnaissance battalion of the
attempt to push westward into St. Come- 12th SS Panzer Division was committed to
du-Mont, still held in some force by two reconnoiter the wide gap between the
battalions under von der Heydte’s com- 21st Panzer and the 352d Div isions.‘” But
mand. This attack, co-ordinated in early air attacks had so delayed the assembly of
afternoon with Colonel Sink, command- I SS Panzer Corps and caused such heavy
ing the 506th Infantry, and supported by casualties that the corps postponed until
six medium tanks of the 746th Tank Bat- the morning of 8 June the scheduled two-
talion and the guns of the 65th Armored division counterattack to recapture Cour-
Field Artillery Battalion, made substan- seulles. Rundstedt on 7 June had decided
tial headway. But it was a typical Nor- to put his own armored staff, Panzer
mandy battle-cleaning out dug-in enemy Group West under General Geyr, in
riflemen and machine gun positions from charge of the attack. Geyr was attaclled to
the hedgerows field by field. The battal- Seventh Army and ordered to take over
ion did not get far enough west to tie in the sector on both sides of the Orne River
with the 1st Battalion, 506th Infantry. and west as far as Tilly-sur-Seulles, seal
The latter was therefore ordered to with off the penetrations at Caen ancl in the
draw to Beaumont and all units held dur- 352tl Division sector, ant1 counterattack
ing the night, reorganizing for resump- the Allies who had broken througll soutll-
tion of the attack the next day. east of Bayeux. But Geyr did not arrive to
The small American gains of 7 June take over until tile night of 8-9 June. In
encouraged the Germans to feel that they the meantime I SS Panzer Corps had de-
had at least frustrated the Allied time cided to make only a limited-objective
schedule.19 On the other hand, their own attack with the 12th SS and 21st Panzer
countermeasures planned for the day llad Divisions and a Kampfgruppe of Panzer
also been checked, and, in general, it was Lehr Division, pending the arrival of the
clear that the invasion had succeeded in tanks of the latter division. The attack of
gaining a foothold. The build-up race 8 June to gain a line of departure for the
was on. later planned three-division attack made
On the Caen front the 21st Panzer Divi- little progress and before evening both
sion had called off its counterattack on the
evening of D Day short of its objectives. 20Apparently this reconnaissance unit tangled
(See Map XII. ) Throughout 7 June the with the 3d Canadian Division near Authie and an
division remained on the defensive except engagement resulted heavy enough to give the
Canadians the impression of an enemy counter-
for small unsuccessful attacks east of the attack. See notes by British Cabinet Office Hist Sec.
Orne against the British airborne forces. Hist Div files. The German Seventh Army war diary
The 12th SS Panzer Division began arriv- is, however, emphatic on the point that no attack
by Z SS Panzer Corps took place on 7 June. The
19 Tagesmeldung, 7 Jun 44. Seventh Army, KTB narrative (MS # C-024) of General Kraemer, chief
Anlagen 6.30.VI.44; MS # B-433 (Ziegelmann). of staff of the corps, confirms this.
THE V CORPS LODGMENT (7-18 JUNE) 349

divisions had gone over to the defensive.21 thought, since it looked as though the
The I2th SS was holding positions astride Allies were fully committed in Nor-
the Caen-Bayeux road between Authie mandy.23
and Carpiquet. The 21st Panzer Division, Later in the morning Seventh Army as-
also on the defensive, was split on either signed the task of cleaning up the west
side of the Orne. Panzer Lehr remained coast of the Cotentin to the II Parachute
in assembly areas near Thury-Harcourt, Corps then in Brittany. In addition to the
southwest of Caen. As the attack failed to 77th Division and the 17th SS Panzer
materialize on 8 June and Allied pressure Grenadier Division, already under orders
continued to build up, the plan for a bold to move, the corps was to command the
strike to the coast with two armored divi- 3d Parachute Division. The latter re-
sions abreast was abandoned. Seventh ceived marching orders to move by motor
Army, concerned over the loss of Bayeux, to assembly areas near those planned for
decided to maneuver to recapture it. I SS the 17th SS northeast of Avranches.
Panzer Corps intended, therefore, to hold The 77th Division, which received or-
north and west of Caen while directing ders to move by foot at 1015, actually
Panzer Lehr and portions of the 12th SS began moving out at 1500. By 2000, ad-
Panzer Division on Bayeux. Thus, as Gen- vance elements of the 17th SS Panzer
eral Geyr commented later, the fist was Grenadier Division had crossed the Loire.
unclenched just as it was ready to strike.22 But traffic thereafter was interrupted by
While Seventh Army indulged fatal Allied air attacks on the Loire bridges
second thoughts concerning its critical which lasted for an hour and a half and
.right flank, Field Marshal Rommel began scored twenty-four hits on a railroad
to focus attention on the threat to Cher- bridge that the division had been using.
bourg. Reports of large-scale Allied air- With requisitioned vehicles the 3d Para-
borne and glider landings in the Cou- chute Division formed an advanced mo-
tances-Lessay area caused him on the torized group consisting of one battalion
morning of 7 June to order the immediate from each of the regiments, two engineer
move of both the 17th SS Panzer Grena- companies, two artillery batteries, and the
dier Division and the 77th Division to antiaircraft and signal battalions. This
meet the threat. He believed that the Cou- group moved out, surprisingly, without
tances landings were part of an Allied opposition from the air. But Seventh
move to cut off Cherbourg and the whole Army reported that movement of the re-
Cotentin Peninsula and that it was there- mainder of the division was dependent
fore an “unconditional necessity” to coun- on motor transport space from the two
ter with all available forces. The risk of corps remaining in Brittany and re-
weakening Brittany by the transfer of the quested an additional 2,000 tons from
77th Division could be accepted, he OB WEST and other reserves. On the
morning of 8 June after General der Fall-
21 See special Hist Div questionnaires on this action schirmtruppen Eugen Meindl, command-
answered by Kraemer (CofS, I SS Panzer Corps) and ing II Parachute Corps, had personally
Bayerlein (CG, Panzer Lehr Division) , MS # B-814.
See also MS # C-024 (Kraemer).
22 MS # B-466 (Geyr). 23 Seventh Army, KTB 1.I.-30.VI.44, 7 Jun 44.
350 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

confirmed that the reports of airborne mans could not have profited materially
landings in the Coutances area were with- from the knowledge. Rommel was not
out foundation, the II Parachute Corps free to shift the weight of his defense to
with two divisions was diverted to St. Lo.24 the American flank to block either the as-
Concern over the defense of Cherbourg sault on Cherbourg or Bradley’s planned
again faded before the greater urgency move southward toward Brittany. The
of holding at Caen. This reaction was not major operational threat, from his point
due to ignorance of the true situation. of view, remained the possibility of a
On the contrary, on the evening of 6 June British breakout at Caen and a sweep to
a copy of the VII Corps field order had Paris. Without British plans, the Ger-
been picked up by the 914th Regiment mans could not be sure that such a move
from a boat that drifted ashore in the had not been calculated. Even if it had
mouth of the Vire River. The next eve- not, a German collapse on that sector
ning a copy of the V Corps order was would undoubtedly be exploited to turn
taken from the body of an American of- the flank of Seventh Army. In short, com-
ficer killed at Vierville-sur-Mer. The Ger- plete knowledge of American intentions
mans thus had in their hands the entire could not have altered the logic of the
scheme of maneuver and order of battle battle dictated by terrain, the disposition
for American units in the first phase of of forces, and the location of the strategic
the invasion.25 objectives.26
The fact that possession of these plans One fact might have been deduced
had no effect on the German conduct of from the plans: that they envisaged such
operations throws considerable light on a large commitment of force as to rule Out
the tactical and strategic problems facing a second major landing attempt. General
the enemy command. From the plans, Dollmann drew this conclusion. Field
Seventh Army and OB WEST learned Marshal Rundstedt was inclined to agree.
that the major immediate objectives of But OKW and Hitler figured the evi-
Bradley’s forces were Cherbourg and St. dence was inconclusive. Again the fact
Lo. But this news, after the first day, was that British plans were missing left a large
hardly a revelation. The plans were con- realm for speculation and, according to
fined to outlines of the initial phase and German intelligence estimates, a large
did not reveal American intentions be- uncommitted military force.
yond the establishment of a lodgment in- As of 1 June, the Germans had esti-
cluding Cherbourg and St. Lo. Even if mated that the Allies had combat forces
they had revealed the planned American in the United Kingdom equivalent to
push into Brittany, however, the Ger- eighty-five divisions including eight air-
borne divisions.27 The Allied high com-
24Ibid., 8 June; cf. MS # B-401 (Meindl). The 26Ibid.
two divisions at first ordered to St. Lo were the 17th 27 MS # B-782 (Oberst Anton Staubwasser, G-2,
SS Panzer Grenadier and the 77th Division. The 77th, Army Groufi B). Cf. MS # B-901 in which Zimmer-
however, was later ordered to Montebourg (see be- mann (G-3 of OB WEST) says that the large num-
low, p. 370) and the 3d Parachute Division actually ber of Allied units estimated to be still in England
came into the St. Lo area. after the Normandy assault made it impossible for
25See MS # B656 (Pemsel) ; MS # B-637 (Blum- the Germans to rule out the probability of a second
entritt) ; MS # B-636 (Ziegelmann). landing.
THE V CORPS LODGMENT (7-18 JUNE) 351

mand, aware that the enemy was overes- tactical commanders in disposing their
timating British and American strength, reserves were continually confronted with
made every effort to sustain the illusion. emergencies and never with tactical
In addition, the Allies made use of the choices. Absorbed, therefore, in sealing
high regard in which General Patton was off today’s penetrations, they had no re-
held by the Germans to persuade them sources with which to face tomorrow’s
that an army group under his command threat.
still remained in England after 6 June.
The existence of this large reserve force Junction between V and VII Corps
was easy for the Germans to believe since
it fitted with their preconceptions that a The failure of both V and VII Corps
second major landing would strike the to make any substantial progress toward
Kanalkueste. The Allies fostered this be- the vital joining of the beachheads, to-
lief by various ruses so successfully that gether with the general slowness of the ad-
not until July did OKW finally appreci- vances on D-Day objectives, had become a
ate that no second landing would take matter of concern to General Eisenhower,
place. In the meantime the Fifteenth General Montgomery, General Bradley,
Army remained tied to the Kanalkueste. and both corps commanders. The Ameri-
Tactically, German knowledge of can build-up was far behind schedule,
American plans might have made some particularly in the landing of supplies.
difference by enabling the Germans to At the end of D plus 1 not more than a
mass reserves and stage counterattacks at quarter of the planned 14,500 tons were
points along the planned axes of the ashore. The troop build-up, planned at
American advance. Such a concentration about 107,000 for the first two days, was
of reserves was actually carried out by 20,000 short. Scarcely more than half the
Seventh Army in and around St. Lo, but 14,000 vehicles had been disembarked.28
even without knowledge of American in- Delayed build-up was in part due to tech-
tentions the Germans would probably nical difficulties of unloading and in part
still have chosen to defend St. Lo because to the slow advance inland. Rapid expan-
of its importance as a road junction and sion of the beachhead was vital to permit
the terrain configurations that made it the massing of supplies and reinforce-
defensively strong. For the rest, the Ger- ments. Both expansion and reinforcement
mans could never maneuver with enough were necessary to defend the lodgment
freedom to exploit any tactical situation. against the expected full-scale enemy
Instead of being able to mass reserves in counterattacks which, it was thought,
accordance with plan, General Dollmann 28 Unloading figures for the first two days are
picked up the reserve companies and bat- estimates. Figures for UTAH have been taken from
talions as they straggled in, delayed and ANCXF, Report, Vol. III, Rpt by Comdr Assault
Force U, pp. 33-34. OMAHA figures, not available
decimated by air attacks, and put them in from naval sources, are taken from the Provisional
to plug gaps in his lines wherever the Engineer Special Brigade and OMAHA Beach Com-
immediate danger seemed gravest. The mand situation reports as cited in [Clifford Jones]
NEPTUNE, Training, Mounting, the Artificial Ports
policy of maintaining an intact defense, (The Administrative and Logistical History of the
whether wise or not, meant that German ETO: Part VI), MS, II, 175ff. Hist Div files.
352 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

U.S. COMMANDERS. Left to right: Generals Bradley, Gerow, Eisenhower, and


Collins.

might come any time after D plus 3 and Plans for the employment of the 29th
would almost certainly come during the Division were discussed that evening at
first week. General Gerhardt’s command post in a
General Eisenhower toured the assault rock quarry just off OMAHA Beach. (See
area by mine layer with Admiral Ramsay Map XIV)The mission of taking Isigny
on 7 June and ordered that the immediate was given to the 175th Infantry; it was to
tactical plan be altered to give priority to drive between the 116th and the 115th
a concerted drive by both corps to link up straight for its objective while the other
through Isigny and Carentan. General two regiments cleared either flank of the
Bradley gave orders accordingly during advance. The 747th Tank Battalion (less
the afternoon of 7 June. For VII Corps Company B) was attached to the 175th In-
the changed priority resulted in assigning fantry and the attack jumped off that
to the 101st Airborne Division the sole night. Advancing along the Longueville-
task of capturing Carentan with rein- Isigny road with tanks leading the col-
forcements to be provided if necessary. umns of infantry, the regiment captured
V Corps gave the 29th Division the pri- la Cambe before daylight and met its first
mary mission of seizing Isigny while the real resistance about three miles west of
1st Division continued the push east to that town. Antitank guns knocked out
join with the British and south to expand 29Cbl, Eisenhower to Marshall, 8 Jun 44. Eisen-
the beachhead.29 hower Personal Files.
THE V CORPS LODGMENT (7-18 JUNE) 353

one tank in front of the town and artillery time was granted. The 914th Regiment
fire disabled six more to the west. How- found itself unable to offer effective resist-
ever, isolated enemy resistance, here and ance on the road to Isigny. The battalion
in other villages north and south of the of the 352d Artillery Regiment had to
Isigny road, was overrun, in some cases pull out in such a hurry that its guns
with the aid of naval fire. There was no were abandoned, thus reducing division
organized resistance in Isigny itself, and artillery for the fighting on 9 June to four-
it was entered and cleaned out during the teen guns. The Ost battalion which was
night of 8-9 June. The town was partially supposed to blow the bridge at Isigny
gutted and burning from heavy naval across the Aure retreated without doing
bombardment. so.
The speed of the 175th Infantry’s ad- The fall of Isigny meant that the 352d
vance collapsed the left flank of the 352d Division could no longer block the corri-
Division and opened a hole in German dor between the American bridgeheads.
lines comparable to the disintegration at The 914th Regiment was ordered to or-
Bayeux. The sector overrun was the re- ganize a defense south of the Aure in the
sponsibility of the 914th Regiment and vicinity of Hill 35 near la Madeleine to
had contained, in addition to the rem- prevent the division’s left flank from be-
nants of that regiment, a battalion of the ing rolled up. Kraiss counted on the Aure
352d Artillery Regiment and the 439th inundations to cover the gap in his lines
Ost Battalion. In the Grandcamp area, between Isigny and Trevieres.30
where the 116th Infantry was attacking, While the main 29th Division attack
were additional units of the 914th Regi- gathered momentum that carried it with-
ment and the 3d Battalion of the 1716th out pause to its objective, both the 115th
Artillery Regiment which manned fixed and 116th Infantry Regiments had
coastal artillery positions there. General cracked resistance in the coastal area, and
Kraiss recognized that in view of the in- virtually completed the seizure of the
creasing pressure on his center and right whole of the high ground north of the
he could not expect to hold with his left. Aure River by the end of the day. The
At about the same time that he ordered troops of the 115th met almost no resist-
the 30th Mobile Brigade and 726th Regi- ance, although lack of transport brought
ment to pull out of the Dr8me corridor, them tired and without rations to theil
he gave similar orders to the 914 t h Regi- objectives overlooking the river. The
ment. They were to fight to hold all posi- 116th Infantry, reinforced with Rangers
tions during the day but withdraw the and two companies of tanks, and sup-
bulk of their forces at night south of the ported by destroyer fire, achieved the re-
Aure. A small bridgehead was to be held lief of the Rangers on Pointe du Hoe be-
at all cost northeast of Isigny. The isola- fore noon and then proceeded to Grand-
tion of the various units in the Grand- camp where, because of a canalized ap-
camp-Isigny area as well as the presence proach over a flooded area, it ran into a
of valuable artillery pieces there compli- nasty fight lasting until dark. One battal-
cated the problem of withdrawal. It re- -___-
quired time to organize and carry out. No 30 MS # B-434 (Ziegelmann).
TO I’ALOGNES ST. COME-DU-MONT TO CARENTAN

ST. COME-DU-MONT AREA


BEAUMONT LES DROUERIES
356 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

ion of the 116th had been detached to tory fire followed by a rolling barrage, the
sweep south of the main regimental ad- attack jumped off at about 0500.32 The
vance toward Maisy. The Maisy position glider battalion bogged down in the
was taken on 9 June and the rest of the hedgerows. But Colonel Ewell’s men, de-
area mopped up to the Vire River. spite considerable confusion and inter-
With dispatch V Corps had completed mingling of units, reached their objec-
its part of the drive to join the American tives south of St. Come within three
beachheads. The 10 1st Airborne Division hours. In the meantime the battalions of
had a much harder time. (Map XVI) the 506th pressed against the town from
After the failure of the 506th Parachute the east and artillery continued to fall
Infantry (Colonel Sink) on 7 June to heavily on the German defenders. In the
wrest St. Come-du-Mont from the 6th first hour and a half, the 65th Armored
Parachute Regiment, a much larger at- Field Artillery Battalion fired about 2,500
tack was mounted the following day. The rounds of 105-mm. high explosive.
1st and 2d Battalions of the 506th were The brunt of the U.S. attack was borne
reinforced with the 3d Battalion, 327th by the 3d Battalion, 1058th Regiment,
Glider Infantry, 31 the 3d Battalion, 5Olst which on 7 June had been reinforced by
Parachute Infantry, eight light tanks, and two companies of the 3d Battalion, 6th
the 65th Armored Field Artillery Battal- Parachute Regiment, from Carentan.
ion. The glider battalion, commanded by Early in the morning, the 1058th men
Lt. Col. Ray C. Allen, on the left wing of under heavy artillery fire began to show
the attack was to pass to the east of St. signs of cracking. Von der Heydte, still in
Come-du-Mont, proceed down the main charge of the defense, had no more re-
highway, and blow the bridges on the serves to bring up. Observing that men of
Carentan causeway. Colonel Ewell’s bat- the 1058th were beginning to straggle
talion of the 501st was to attack to the in retreat westward and having lost con-
south of St. Come to cut the highway there tact with the 1058th battalion headquar-
while Colonel Sink’s two battalions ters, von der Heydte decided to pull out
(506th) drove in column directly into the his own units and such troops of the
town. Behind effective artillery prepara- 1058th as he could contact. The with-
drawal involved some severe fighting with
31The 327th Glider Infantry, like all glider regi- Ewell’s battalion posted south of the
ments at the time, had only two organic rifle bat-
talions. In the informal reorganization of the air- town, but eventually the majority of the
borne division between the Sicily experience and Germans got out to the west and re-
the Normandy D Day, a third rifle battalion was treated on Carentan following generally
added to the glider regiments of both the 82d and
101st Airborne Divisions by splitting another regi- the axis of railroad embankment.
ment, the 40lst, between them. Thus the 1st Bat- This route was also taken during the
talion, 401st Glider Infantry, while retaining its day by the 2d Battalion, 6th Parachute
formal status as an independent unit, normally
functioned as the 3d Battalion of the 327th; the 2d
Battalion, 401st, similarly constituted the 3d Bat- 32For details of this action see S. L. A. Marshall’s
talion, 325th Glider Infantry, 82d Airborne Division. account based on his interviews with personnel of
To avoid confusion the attached battalions will be the 101st Airborne Division. MS in Hist Div files.
referred 10 as the 3d Battalions of the respective The story is also told in detail in Rapport and Nor-
foster regiments. wood, Rendezvous with Destiny, pp. 153-59.
THE V CORPS LODGMENT (7-18 JUNE) 357

Regiment, pulling back from north of St. zone. On 9 June, however, Colonel Sink
Come. With surprising ease the 2d Bat- led a patrol across the causeway toward
talion disengaged and streamed south- Carentan. He was fired on and returned
ward. Most of the men swam the Douve before reaching the city. The reports he
and arrived in Carentan with few losses. sent back were apparently misinterpreted
There von der Heydte with the bulk of to indicate that Carentan was only lightly
two battalions plus elements of the 1058th held. It was therefore considered possible
Regiment organized his defense. Late on to make a two-pronged attack across the
8 June he had learned that Isigny had causeway and through Brevands to en-
fallen and, primarily concerned with pos- velop the city.34
sible attack against Carentan from the The final plan was for the 327th Glider
east, he at first placed the whole 2d Bat- Infantry to make the main effort on the
talion on that side of the city.33 left, crossing the Douve near Brevands
The U.S. 101st Airborne Division, to clear the area between Carentan and
meanwhile, with the occupation of St. Isigny and join with V Corps near the
Come-du-Mont, completed the clearing of highway bridge over the Vire. Since the
the enemy north of the Douve and east of key to possession of this objective area
the Merderet. Preparations began at once was Carentan, the 327th planned to use
for an all-out attack on Carentan from the bulk of its force in an attack on the
the north. In preparation for that attack, city from the east. At the same time the
the 101 st Airborne Division, by the night 502d Parachute Infantry, relieved of its
of 8 June, had grouped three regiments defensive mission on the right flank by
along the Douve with a fourth regiment the 501st, would cross the causeway over
assembled in reserve near Vierville. The the Douve River northwest of Carentan,
502d Parachute Infantry was placed in bypass the city on the west, and seize Hill
line on the right flank from the junction 30. To secure Carentan after its capture,
of the Douve and Merderet Rivers to the 101 st Airborne Division had the addi-
Houesville. The 506th Parachute Infan- tional mission of occupying the high
try was assembled astride the Carentan ground along the railway west of the city
highway, and the 327th Glider Infantry, as far as the Prairies Marecageuses.
which had come in by sea, relieved ele- The causeway over which the 502d Par-
ments of the 506th and 501st Parachute achute Infantry was to attack was banked
Infantry Regiments at la Barquette and le six to nine feet above the marshlands of
Port. The 501st Parachute Infantry was the Douve and crossed four bridges over
in reserve. branches of the river and canals. One of
The scheme of this attack had been the bridges was destroyed by the Ger-
worked out by the division in England. mans. Difficulties in repairing this under
It appeared then that the only feasible fire forced postponement of the right
route of attack was across the river flats in wing of the division attack, first sched-
the vicinity of Brevands. Accordingly VII
Corps on 8 June ordered attack in this 34Account based on correspondence conducted by
Lt. Leonard Rapport, 101st Division Historian, with
General Taylor and other 101st commanders. Other
33 MS # B-839 (von der Heydte). patrols were sent out by the 327th Glider Infantry.
FARMHOUSE DOUVE RIVER ST. COME-DU-MONT

CARENTAN CAUSEWAY. In foreground is northwestern tip of Carentan. Circles


indicate position of bridges.
THE V CORPS LODGMENT (7-18 JUNE) 359

uled for the night of 9-10 June. It was the machine gun emplacements hn hedge-
middle of the afternoon of 10 June before rows to the west. These were overrun and
the 3d Battalion, 502d Parachute Infantry the Germans killed with grenades and
(Lt. Col. Robert G. Cole) advanced over bayonets.36
the causeway single file. The men moved The heavy casualties and disorganiza-
in a low crouch or crawled, and it took tion of the battalion prevented Cole from
three hours for the point to cross three of following up his advantage. Instead he
the bridges. Then the enemy opened fire sent word back to have the 1st Battalion
from a farmhouse and hedgerows, me- of the regiment pass through and con-
thodically searching the ditches with ma- tinue the attack south. The 1st Battalion,
chine guns. At the fourth bridge a Bel- which was near the fourth causeway
gian Gate had been drawn so far across bridge when request came to move for-
the road that only one man at a time could ward, reached Colonel Cole’s position
squeeze by it. Under cover of artillery fire, through heavy fire. But since it was as
which all afternoon worked on enemy po- hard hit and disorganized as the 3d Bat-
sitions, this maneuver was tried. Six men talion it was in no better condition to
made it; the seventh was hit, and the at- move on. Both battalions set up a defen-
tempt was abandoned in favor of building sive line and held on during 11 June
up additional fire. Mortars were brought against determined German counterat-
forward. The stalemate, however, lasted tacks, which on one occasion threatened
until midnight while enemy fire and a to break through. The 2d Battalion took
bombing and strafing attack after dark over the line during the night, but the
took heavy toll of the thin battalion line 502d Parachute Infantry was too ex-
stretched across the causeway. After mid- hausted to renew the attack and the 506th
night, resistance slackened and three com- Parachute Infantry was sent to its relief,
panies were able to filter men through the While the bitter battle of the Carentan
bottleneck and across the last bridge causeway was being fought, the left wing
where they could deploy on either side of the 101st Airborne Division attack had
of the highway. carried south and made tenuous contact
The nub of the opposition seemed to with V Corps units east of Carentan. In
be a large farmhouse to the west of the the early morning hours of 10 June all
road on ground that rose sharply from the three battalions of the 327th Glider In-
marshes. In the morning of 11 June after fantry were across the Douve near Bre-
attempts to knock this out with artillery vands. One company, reconnoitering to
had failed, Colonel Cole, battalion com- Auville-sur-le Vey, met the 29th Recon-
mander, ordered a charge which he and naissance Troop and Company K of the
his executive officer, Lt. Col. John P. 175th Infantry. The 175th Infantry (29th
Stopka, led. Followed at first by only a Division) had followed up the capture of
quarter of their 250 men, Cole and Stopka Isigny by sending Company K to take the
ran through enemy fire. The charge gath-
ered momentum as more men got up and 35 For exceptional bravery in this action Colonel
Cole was awarded the Medal of Honor. The award
ran forward. The farmhouse was not oc- was made after Cole’s death in the Holland airborne
cupied but the Germans had rifle pits and operation in September 1944.
360 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Vire bridge at Auville-sur-le Vey while dier Division (Generalmajor der Waffen-
the main body of the regiment moved SS Werner Ostendorff) was assigned the
toward objectives in the Lison-la Fotelaie primary mission of blocking an Allied
area to the south. The bridge was found westward thrust. Ostendorff’s orders were
to have been destroyed and the company, to move to positions southwest of Caren-
reinforced with the reconnaissance troop tan prepared to counterattack south of
and a platoon of tanks, fought most of the the city.
day of 9 June to force a crossing. They These plans were frustrated by the dif-
forded the river late in the afternoon, ficulty of getting the units into position.
seized Auville-sur-le Vey, and held it dur- On 8 June the move of Meindl’s troops
ing the night while engineers built the was reported greatly delayed by air at-
bridge behind them. Contact with the air- tack and sabotage. Ostendorff’s division
borne unit the next day was only the be- had been forced by continued severe air
ginning of the link between the corps. attacks on the railroads to make most of
A savage fight remained for the possession its march northward by road. Shortage of
of Carentan as well as some confused and gasoline then further delayed the move.
costly maneuvering to clear the ground to By the end of 11 June only Ostendorff’s
the east. forward elements had reached their as-
The Germans meanwhile made plans sembly areas southwest of Carentan.37
to reinforce the city, whose defense Field While awaiting reinforcements and
Marshal Rommel considered vital not holding off the concentric attacks of the
only to prevent the junction of the Ameri- 1Olst Airborne Division, von der Heydte
can beachheads but to forestall any at- in Carentan was running desperately
tempt by General Bradley to cut the Co- short of ammunition. It was impossible
tentin by a drive southwest across the to bring up resupplies by truck in view
Vire toward Lessay and Periers. As imme- of the shortage of motor transport and gas
diate stopgap measures LXXXIV Corps and Allied air interdiction of the roads.
sent von der Heydte two Ost battalions OB WEST at last considered the need so
and remnants of the defenders of Isigny. critical that an air supply mission was
He placed these troops, of limited combat flown during the night of 11-12 June and
value, on the east side of the city and eighteen tons of infantry ammunition
concentrated the two battalions of his and 88.mm. shells were dropped to von
own regiment on the north. But this was der Heydte on a field south of Raids, some
still admittedly a weak defense for such a seven miles southwest of Carentan.38
critical objective. Late on 9 June Rommel This, the first air supply mission at-
decided to commit the II Parachute Corps tempted by the Germans in Normandy,
(Meindl), which was on its way up from came too late to save Carentan.
Brittany, to counter this threat.36 Under On 10 June the bulk of the 327th
Meindl’s corps, the 17th SS Panzer Grena- Glider Infantry pressed in on Carentan
from the northeast. Its initial objective
36The corps actually controlled only the 17th SS
Panzer Grenadier Division. The 77th Division had 37Seuenth Army, KTB II-30.VI.44, 11 Jun 44.
been diverted to hfotltrbourg. See below, pp. 371, 38 Oberquartiermeister W’est, KTB l.I.-17.VIII.44,
39.5 II Jun 44.
THE V CORPS LODGMENT (7-18 JUNE)

was to seize the highway and railroad the Bassin a Flot. The 501st Parachute
bridges over the Vire-Taute Canal and Infantry was to be taken from defensive
so seal off the city from the east. The regi- positions north of the Douve and com-
ment advanced rapidly until at 1800 it mitted through the Brevands bridgehead.
came within five hundred yards of its ob- It was to drive east of the 327th Glider
jective. Stopped by enemy fire from the Infantry in a wider envelopment of Car-
east bank, it reorganized and resumed the entan designed to link with the 506th In-
drive with two battalions abreast on ei- fantry south of the city at Hill 30.
ther side of the Carentan-Isigny highway. Gerow’s corps was drawn only slightly
The men fought until midnight through into this new effort. The bulk of V Corps
those last five hundred yards and suc- continued the drive south to expand the
ceeded at last in clearing the enemy from beachhead. But inasmuch as the 101st
the east bank and digging in along the Airborne Division task force was now
hedgerows beside the canal. wholly absorbed with the envelopment of
Col. Joseph H. Harper, who had taken Carentan it became necessary to use V
command of the 327th Glider Infantry Corps units to protect the east flank in the
that afternoon, now decided against any area between the Douve and Vire Rivers.
attempt to rush the bridge in favor of The bridgehead at Auville-sur-le Vey was
moving a portion of his force north to reinforced on 11 June by the 3d Battal-
cross on a partly demolished footbridge ion, 41st Armored Infantry Regiment of
and approach Carentan through the the 2d Armored Division, which had be-
wooded area along the Bassin B Flot. Most gun landing on 9 June. In addition, on
of the regiment would hold positions 12 June, the 175th Infantry was ordered
along the canal and support the attack by to reconnoiter in force in the region of
firing into the city. After a patrol had re- Montmartin-en-Graignes and seize two
paired the footbridge, three companies bridges over the Vire-Taute Canal, to
crossed under enemy mortar fire during secure the still insubstantial link between
the morning of 11 June, but were unable the corps from German counterattack
to advance more than a few hundred yards from the south.
before they were stopped by enemy fire The city of Carentan blazed during the
from the outskirts of Carentan. night under concentrations of naval fire,
In the evening of 11 June, First Army artillery, mortars, and tank destroyer
decided to commit another regiment and guns. The attack of the 506th Parachute
co-ordinate the two wings of the attack Infantry got started at 0200, 12 June, and
by forming all units into a single task advanced rapidly against slight resistance.
force under command of Brig. Gen. An- On his objective, Hill 30, Colonel Sink at
thony McAuliffe, artillery commander of 0500 ordered the 2d Battalion to attack
the 101st Airborne Division. The 506th into Carentan. Despite interdictory artil-
Parachute Infantry was to take over from lery fire and some spasmodic machine gun
the 502d the attack on the west toward fire the battalion entered the city within
Hill 30. Colonel Harper would continue a few hours. At the same time the 327th
to hold east of Carentan while attacking Glider Infantry on the northwest attacked
with a battalion plus one company along out of the woods at Bassin a Flot and
TO STE MERE-EGLISE TO LA HAVE DU PUITS TO PERIERS HILL jo ARE

CARENTAN AND HILL 30 AREA


HASSIN A FLOT \‘lRE-ET-TAUTE CA.N.lL TO ISIGN
364 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

drove rapidly into the center of town. The westward. In the morning a task force
two units met at about 0730. Only enemy consisting of two companies of the 175th
stragglers remained to contest possession Infantry, reinforced by mortars and heavy
of the city. While the concentric attack machine guns, crossed the VireAnemy
squeezed into the city, the wider envelop- outposts of the newly arrived mobile
ment made equally rapid progress as the Kampfgruppe of the 275th Division 42ob-
50 1st Parachute Infantry swept down east served the crossings but made no serious
of Carentan and made contact with the attempts to interfere with them. Not far
506th half an hour after the entry into the from Montmartin, however, the Germans
city.39 ambushed and badly cut up one company
The closing of the trap had captured on a hedgerow-lined road. Remnants of
the objective, but few enemy prisoners the company withdrew north of Mont-
were caught. The fact is that von der martin to re-form and there joined with
Heydte had pulled out of the city before the remainder of the task force. Into this
dark on 11 June without being observed position in the afternoon came the 1st
and had set up a defense line to the south- BattaIion, 327th Glider Infantry, which
west.40 This new resistance line was dis- with the 2d Battalion had attacked south
covered in the afternoon (12 June) when early in the afternoon after the capture of
General Taylor attempted to push the at- Carentan. The combined force then se-
tack to the southwest. His objective was cured high ground south of Montmartin.,
to establish a deep defense of Carentan The 2d Battalion in the meantime had
hooked up on the right with the 82d Air- been checked at Deville to the northeast.
borne Division, which was driving south During the night Colonel Goode, 175th
across the Merderet in the direction of commander, took a company across the
Baupte .41The 506th Parachute Regiment Vire to attempt to reinforce General Cota
thrust out on the axis of the Baupte road but stumbled into a German bivouac.
while the 501st attacked along the Periers Colonel Goode was captured. Remnants
road. But both bogged down and by the of his force straggled back across the
end of the day had reached out only a few Vire.43
hundred yards from the line of departure The fighting southeast of Carentan had
near Hill 30. been on a very small scale and was not in
The simultaneous effort to secure the itself important, but, in the course of it,
ground east of Carentan on 12 June reports came in to General Bradley’s
proved just as inconclusive as the push headquarters of a strong concentration of
German forces in the area, including the
39 See Ruppenthal, Utah Beach to Cherbourg, pp.
78-93, for further details.
17th SSPanzer Grenadier Division. Signs
40 The withdrawal was a blunder for which von pointed to a possible enemy build-up of
der Heydte reportedly escaped court martial only three divisions with the probable mission
on the basis of his past record. See Pemsel, CofS
Seventh Army, commentary on von der Heydte’s ac-
of counterattacking in force between Car-
count. Von der Heydte explained his action rather 42For the move of this unit from Brittany, see be-
weakly on the grounds that he did not know that the low, pp. 378-79.
17th SS Panzer Grenadier Division was on its way 43 The account of the Montmartin action in Tay-
up. MS # B-839 (von der Heydte). lor, Omaha Beachhead, pp. 157-59, was checked with
41 See below, Ch. X. General Cota and as a result is here slightly modified.
THE V CORPS LODGMENT (7-18 JUNE) 365

entan and Isigny where, General Bradley brought down to Carentan to reinforce
pointed out, “we are very weak.” 44 As the defense of the 506th. At 1030 the arm-
communications were temporarily out be- ored task force arrived and in the early
tween First Army and V Corps, Bradley afternoon the 101st Airborne Division
sent a letter by courier to Gerow ordering resumed the initiative. The 502d drove
him to move a battalion of tanks and a through the 506th, and the 501st con-
battalion of armored infantry from the tinued on its mission of the day before.
2d Armored Division into the Montmar- With close support from the 14th Arm-
tin-en-Graignes area “prepared for action ored Field Artillery Battalion the en-
to the south.” The movement was to be emy was thrown back with estimated
completed by daylight and co-ordinated losses of 500 men. A defensive position
with the 327th Glider Infantry. In addi- was secured along the road from Baupte
tion Bradley ordered that the 116th In- to the Carentan-Periers highway.
fantry be held in reserve for possible com- On the east the company of the 175th
mitment on the right of the 175th. By Infantry beleaguered at Montmartin was
0630 of 13 June the 2d Battalion, 66th pulled out and Colonel Harper estab-
Armored Regiment, in accordance with lished a line north of the main railroad
these orders had joined the 3d Battalion, linked with the 29th Division to the east.
41st Armored Infantry, already west of Now V and VII Corps were securely
the Vire, and the task force was ready to joined, although the strip between them
move south. The move, however, did not still lacked depth for adequate communi-
take place, for by morning Carentan was cations and defense. First Army, however,
being threatened from the southwest now had resources to deepen it and on 13
rather than the southeast and the armored June the mission was assigned to XIX
task force was diverted to go to the sup- Corps, which became operational the
port of the 506th Parachute Infantry. next day.
After the fall of Carentan, the Germans Operations to fuse the two First Army
planned to counterattack with the 17th beachheads have been traced through to
SS Panzer Grenadier Division to retake it. their conclusion because they form a
But the attack was delayed on 12 June single story with few direct contacts with
because the battalion of assault guns, what was going on elsewhere in Nor-
which moved north by train, was held up mandy. The actions described were con-
in the assembly areas by air attacks. With sidered by the high command as of first
the guns in position on the morning of importance. They did not, however, con-
13 June, Ostendorff attacked. The attack stitute a main effort by the First Army.
hit both the 506th and 501st Parachute Larger forces were being used simultane-
Infantry Regiments at about 0630 and ously to expand the beachead westward
during the morning drove them back to and southward. Virtually the whole of V
within 500 yards of Carentan. (Map 4) Corps during the week of 8-14 June was
The 502d Parachute Infantry was pushing south through the bocage coun-
44 Ltr, Bradley to Gerow, 13 Jun 44. V Corps G-3 try making rapid progress against a disin-
Jnl. tegrated German defense.
366 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

of seizing the Foret de Cerisy, high


ground which always figured prominently
From its D-Day objectives reached on in V Corps plans as a possible assembly
8 June, V Corps ordered a three-division area for enemy counterattack forces and
attack designed simply to push out the as ground dominating the whole corps
lodgment area in conformity with the ad- beachhead. The 1st Division on the east
vance of the British on the left. The 2d was to put its main effort on its right and
Division (Maj. Gen. Walter hl. Robert- advance to seize three towns: Agy, la
son) ,45 which had begun landing the eve- Commune, and Vaubadon, on high
ning of 7 June, had enough units ashore ground along the St. Lo-Bayeux high-
by midday of the 9th to be operational way. The 29th Division, on the other
and it took over 5,000 yards of the 1st Di- flank, would seize the north bank of the
vision front north of Trevieres. (Map Elle River from la Communette west to
XVII) Here the main effort of the corps the Vire. A portion of its forces, as already
was to be made with the final objective noted, would operate west of the Vire to
45 General Robertson was graduated from West establish contact with VII Corps. Each di-
Point in 1912. Assigned to duty with the 2d Division vision was to attack with two regiments
in 1940, he became commanding officer of the 9th
Infantry in 1941 and took command of the division abreast and each was to leave all or part
in May 1942. of the third regiment prepared to defend
THE V CORPS LODGMENT (7-18 JUNE) 367

the D-Day positions. Positions gained by prise, cut down about forty of them, and
the attack would be organized for defense took a dozen prisoners. Thanks to this
in depth. Both latter measures were insur- action the regiment’s crossing the next
ance against enemy counterattack in day was unopposed, for Colombieres
strength, a contingency that continued to turned out to have been the only de-
figure prominently in Allied calculations. fended locality on the south bank of the
Enemy resistance broke first on either river within range of the Canchy cross-
flank of the attack and then disinte- ing. The lack of opposition was ex-
grated all through the corps zone. De- tremely fortunate, for the physical diffi-
spite this collapse, however, certain units culties of crossing the swampy flats made
had hard fighting on 9 June. The 29th progress very slow and exposed the
Division, after clearing Isigny in the troops for several hours as they struggled
morning, pushed south with the 175th through the mud and waited for impro-
Infantry on the right, the 115th on the vised bridges to span the few impassable
left.46 The 175th Infantry, having streams. Two battalions were across by
smashed the 914th Regiment in its rapid 1100. The third followed after enemy
seizure of Isigny, advanced southward fire frustrated an attempt to cross a nar-
against only scattered opposition. Near rower portion of the river valley farther
la Foret, 352d Division stragglers de- east. Once across, the 1st Battalion
fending a supply dump held off the moved to Bricqueville and the 3d Bat-
American advance long enough to per- talion farther south to la Folie. Neither
mit the evecuation of the bulk of the had met serious opposition. But the 2d
supplies. This action cost the Germans Battalion ran into trouble from the start.
an estimated 125 killed. The 175th In- Turning west to clean out the Bois de
fantry then moved on down to its objec- Calette, from which enemy riflemen were
tives in the Lison-la Fotelaie area before harassing bridging operations at the la
nightfall. Cambe-Douet causeway, the battalion
The 115th Infantry, during the night brushed with enemy bicycle troops near
preceding the attack, reconnoitered cross- Vouilly. Although the wood was not oc-
ings of the Aure River. The crossing cupied in force the battalion took three
promised to be difficult since the river hours to flush snipers from the thick
flats were flooded to a width of half a brush. Then heading south for le Carre-
mile to two miles. Although nowhere four it took a wrong turning that added
deep under water they were marshy and three miles to the six-mile march to its
crisscrossed by drainage ditches. During objective. Thoroughly exhausted the
the night 2d Lt. Kermit C. Miller of troops reached their initial objective at
Company E took a platoon across south 0230, 10 June. Leading units moved off
of Canchy. Entering Colombieres on the the road. Reconnaissance to establish a
south bank, which had been hard hit by temporary defensive position was diffi-
American artillery, Miller’s patrol caught cult in view of the condition of the men
a considerable force of Germans by sur- and the dark night. Most of the men
46The 116th Infantry with the 2d and 5th Ranger
simply dropped to the ground and were
Battalions attached spent 9 and 10 June mopping up. almost at once asleep.
368 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

While the rear of the column still objectives on the St. Lo-Bayeuuxx high-
waited on the road to move into the biv- way. Only the 3d Battal ion at the edge
ouac area, an enemy infantry and ar- of the Foret de Cerisy met resistance.47
mored vehicle column blundered down In the center of the corps zone the
the road in retreat from the Aure valley newly landed 2d Division had a harder
fighting. A machine pistol was fired. time, in part because it hit the center
American rifle shots replied. The enemy of the 352d Division, which despite the
swung into action, sprayed the road with collapse of both wings continued to hold
machine gun fire, and sent armored out during 9 June in strong defenses
vehicles (probably self-propelled 88-mm. about Trevieres, and in part because it
guns) down the road, firing- into hedge- lacked most of its artillery, transportation,
rows and fields. The 2d Battalion men, communications (wire and radios), ma-
scattered, confused, and disorganized, chine guns and mortars, as well as a large
could offer no effective resistance. One part of its supporting troops.48 For the
man had presence of mind to take a attack of 9 June, one company of tank
bazooka and attack the enemy guns, destroyers and one company of tanks
knocking out two of them. But the were attached.
greater part of the battalion-its com- While the 38th Infantry attacked Tre-
mander, Lt. Col. William E. Warfield, vieres from the north, the 9th Infantry
killed-dispersed in small groups and re- struck to the east to cut the Trevieres-
treated north and west during the night. Rubercy road. The 9th Infantry had re-
In the melee 150 men were lost, includ- lieved the 18th Infantry at Mandeville
ing 11 officers. The next day the bat- and Engranville. The line of departure
talion was reorganized with 110 replace- for its attack was due east of Trevieres,
ments, moved back into the line, and the but the 2d Battalion was at Engranville
115th Infantry proceeded to its objectives north of the Aure at 1100 when it received
on the Elle River without opposition. orders to jump off. It spent the whole day
On the opposite flank of the corps at- fighting to the line of departure, unable
tack the left wing of the 1st Division without heavy weapons to overcome en-
drove forward against rapidly collapsing emy flanking fire from the direction of
resistance. The 26th Infantry reached Trevieres. By midnight, however, it
its objectives, Agy and Dodigny, at night. reached the initial objective, Rubercy.
The 18th Infantry, held up initially by The 3d Battalion, starting from the Man-
a single enemy strong point, at length deville area, fought down the road toward
bypassed it leaving it to be cleared by the
47 Here S/Sgt Arthur F. DeFranzo was killed in a
reserve battalion. Thereafter moving heroic action in which he destroyed an enemy posi-
rapidly, with strong artillery support on tion with grenades despite five wounds that finally
known enemy positions, possible assem- felled him a few yards in front of the enemy. He was
awarded the Medal of Honor.
bly areas, and roads, it continued to ad- 48 Since it had not been anticipated that the divi-
vance through the night. It met no sion would be sent into action immediately on land-
enemy after midnight and arrived by ing, the weapons and equipment had been preloaded
in vehicles scheduled to land on 10 June. Ltr, Col
morning abreast of the 26th Infantry. Walter Elliott (CO, 38th Inf) to author, 4 Feb 48.
During 10 June it moved down to its Hist Div files.
THE V CORPS LODGMENT (7-18 JUNE) 369

Rubercy but made very slow progress and occupied the town except for a small
was still short of the objective by dark. A strong point on the southern edge which
gap of at least 4,000 yards separated the was cleaned out the following morning.50
battalion from the 1st Division on the The Germans’ abandonment of Tre-
left. This was covered only by patrols vieres, however, was not due primarily to
of the 18th Infantry. the efforts of the 38th Infantry. The
The attack on Trevieres by the 38th 352d Division with both flanks torn open
Infantry ran into difficulties aggravated had at last decided to pull out of an un-
by its total lack of mortars and machine tenable position. At about 1900, 9 June,
guns, the hedgerow terrain, and a stub- General Kraiss reported his hopeless situ-
born though not numerous enemy. The ation to General Marcks at LXXXIV
Aure River had been selected as the line Corps and received orders to withdraw
of departure, but both the 2d and 3d far to the south to establish a defense
Battalions ran into opposition before along the Elle River from Berigny to
reaching it. Progress was slow. The men Airel. The withdrawal was to take place
were continually pinned down by enemy during darkness and to be completed
fire difficult to locate among the hedge- by 0600, 10 June. For the defense of
rows and still more difficult to neutral- this new line of about ten miles, General
ize with only light infantry weapons. Kraiss had 2,500 men, 14 artillery pieces,
The attacking troops were given direct 16 antiaircraft guns, and 5 tanks.51
support by accurate fire from two bat- The withdrawal of the 352d Division
teries of the 38th Field Artillery Bat- allowed the 2d Division on 10 June to
talion. But the attack was kept moving march to its objectives west and south of
chiefly by bold leadership. The success the Foret de Cerisy. About ninety enemy
of the 3d Battalion in crossing the Aure stragglers were rounded up during the
under heavy German machine gun fire advance. Both the 1st and 2d Divisions
was due at least in part to the intrepidity spent the day of 11 June virtually out of
of Capt. Ornery C. Weathers of Com- contact with the enemy, reorganizing
pany K who led his men through the fire the ground won and preparing for a new
at the cost of his own life.40 Col. Walter attack. The 1st Division units had made
A. Elliott, the regimental commander, no advances since noon on 10 June. The
unable to depend on communications in only fighting on 11 June took place at
the typically fragmental maneuver of the southern tip of the Foret de Cerisy
groups of men through the fields and where the 1st Battalion, 38th Infantry,
orchards, spent most of the day moving fought to dislodge a stubborn group of
between his battalions pushing the at- enemy well dug in at the Haute-LittCe
tack forward. Late in the afternoon the crossroads. Even patrols probing far in
regiment, still short of its objective, was
50 Ltr cited n. 48.
ordered by General Robertson to con- 51 MS # B-435 and MS # B-436 (both by Ziegel-
tinue the attack to take Trevieres that mann). Kraiss estimated that he was lucky to es-
night. By midnight the 2d Battalion had cape with any of his division since he felt that, had
the 29th Division driven east after crossing the Aure,
‘scaptain Weathers was awarded the DSC post- it would have rolled up his flank and trapped the
humously. bulk of the 916th Regiment in the Trevieres area.
370 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

the south met no large forces and on the attacking. (Map 5) This hole grew di-
entire 2d Division front during the day rectly out of the D-Day collapse of the
only twice was enemy artillery fire re- left wing of the 716th Diuision followed
ported. by the capture of Bayeux and the smash-
The 1st and 2d Divisions on 10 and 11 ing of the 352d left flank. The ten-mile-
June were in fact facing a gaping hole in wide corridor opened the way through
the German lines more than ten miles Caumont to the high wooded terrain in
broad from Berigny due east to Long- the vicinity of the Bois du Homme and
raye where the Panzer Lehr Division was le Berry-Bocage. Occupation of that high
THE V CORPS LODGMENT (7-18 JUNE) 371

ground would have placed V Corps in a by train and on 9 June were strung out
deep southern wedge in Seventh Army between la Fleche and Saumur. Because
lines which the Germans feared could of rail breaks due to air attack the last two
be gradually reinforced and then ex- trains had to be unloaded south of the
ploited either to outflank Caen or more Loire. Only advance elements of the divi-
decisively to drive westward toward Av- sion had reached Balleroy, including the
ranches.52 General Dollmann foresaw this reconnaissance battalion equipped with
development on the morning of 9 June, amphibious Volkswagen. Reconnaissance
but the LXXXIV Corps no longer had north and northeast of Balleroy was be-
any troops to plug the gap. Dollmann gun on 10 June preparatory to commit-
therefore proposed that the II Parachute ment of the division in that sector.
Corps be assembled south of Balleroy for In the meantime, however, plans were
attack northward in conjunction with the changed. Rommel considered that Ger-
I SS Panzer Corps. Although the order for man weakness in the Carentan area was
this maneuver was given to General more dangerous than the hole on the
Meindl, Dollmann was doubtful whether right of LXXXZV Corps. II Parachute
it could be accomplished since it was not Corps was diverted to block the sector be-
known when the II Parachute Corps units tween Carentan and St. Lo, and this task
would arrive. It was probable that they was given priority over support of the
would straggle into the battle area and 352d Division despite the desperate con-
would not be available for a concerted dition of the latter. The 3d Parachute Di-
counterattack.53 vision was still to come into the St. Lo
Of the units originally attached to area with the tentative mission of occupy-
Meindl’s corps, the 77th Division had al- ing the north edge of the Foret de Cerisy.
ready been diverted to the Cotentin. The The 353d Division, the last mobile unit
increasing urgency of blocking a threat- in Brittany, was also ordered to St. Lo to
ened penetration at Montebourg made it come under Meindl’s corps. But the chief
imperative that the 77th continue on that concern was along the Vire. Most of the
mission.54 Meindl was thus left with only 17th SS Panzer Grenadier Division was
two fresh divisions, the 17th SS Panzer sent southwest of Carentan. Kampf-
Grenadier and the 3d Parachute. By the gruppe Heintz (mobile combat group of
evening of 9 June the bulk of 3d Para- the 275th Division) was to move on arrival
chute Division had only reached BrCcey, into the St. Jean-de-Daye area.55
east of Avranches. The 37th SS Panzer The only immediate step to plug the
Grenadier Regiment of the 17th SS Divi- Caumont gap on 10 June was the decision
sion was in the same general area; the to leave Ostendorff’s reconnaissance bat-
38th SS Panzer Grenadier Regiment was talion in the vicinity of Balleroy. Al-
east of Laval. The tracked vehicles of Os- though the move does not seem to have
tendorff’s division were being transported been intended as deception, it had that
52 See MS # B-204 (General der Panzertruppen effect. The 1st Division immediately took
Heinrich Freiherr von Luettwitz, CG, 2d Panzer prisoners and located forward positions
Division) .
53Seuenth Army, KTB 1.I.-30.VI.44, 9 Jun 44. 55Seuenth Army, KTB l.I.-30.VI.44, 9 and 10
6.1See below, Ch. X. Jun 44.
372 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

of elements of the 17th SS Panzer Grena- rumors from prisoners and civilians that
clier Division south of Balleroy east to St. there were large enemy concentrations in
Paul-de-Verney.56 Unidentified medium the Foret de Cerisy. First Army G-2 wrote
tanks were also reported on the afternoon at the end of 9 June: “No surprise should
of 10 June in the vicinity of la Londe.57 be occasioned should this cover produce
The light mixed units actually in contact an armored or motorized division.” co
were recognized to be incapable of major The whole tone of the intelligence esti-
counterattack, but from prisoner interro- mates of this date was dominated by con-
gations V Corps deduced that the 17th viction that the enemy \vas preparing to
SSPanzer Grenadier Diuision might be in strike a major blow. In summing up the
position to attack, probably from the di- fighting of 9 June, First Army reported:
rection of the Foret de Cerisy by daylight “Enemy forces pursued their delaying
of 11 June. 58 The G-2 further warned of tactics pending the arrival of armored
a long-range contingency. The 11 th Pan- counterattack forces.” 61There was no ap-
zer and 1st SS Panzer Diuisions were re- preciation of the havoc that had been
ported on the move from the south and wrought in the German defenses by Al-
northeast respectively. It was thought that lied success in smashing the coastal crust.
one of them might be used against V On 10 June First Army observed that the
Corps, although when either would arrive 17th SS Panzer Grenadier Division had
could not even be guessed at. come into the area south of Carentan and
The possibility of enemy armored that no new identifications had been
counterattacks was in the forefront of made on V Corps front. The enemy units
most American commanders’ minds. This in contact were still only the 352d Divi-
was D plus 3, when according to all plan- sion and elements of the 716th. First
ning calculations the enemy could begin Army G-2 believed that in the fighting of
to exert heavy pressure against the beach- 10 June German forces had withdrawn
heads.59 Signs that the Germans had actu- south along the Vire and their eastern
ally succeeded in concentrating reserves flank had been forced back to the north-
for counterattack were, to be sure, scanty. ern edge of the Foret de Cerisy.62’ In real-
They consisted chiefly in the identifica- ity, not only had the German forces been
tion of elements of Panzer Lehr Diuision south of the forest for at least twelve
in the British sector, of the 17th SSPanzer hours, but at the time the intelligence
Grenadier Division in front of the 1st Di- report was issued troops of the U.S. 2d Di-
vision, and a curious multiplication of vision were also south of the forest.63
The Caumont gap was literally held by
56 1st Div AAR.
57V Corps G-2 Jnl. Corps located the 17th SS the reconnaissance battalion of the 17th
Panzer Grenadier Division chiefly by prisoner re- WIFirst Army G-2 Per Rpt.
ports. The bulk of the division was thought to be 61 Ibid.
moving up opposite the 2d Division. The latter, 6aFirst Army Int Sum as of 2400, 10 Jun.
however, had made no identifications through 11 63 See above, p. 370. Despite concern over theForet
June. See 2d Div G-2 Jnl. deCerisy as a possible enemy assembly area, ap-
58 G-2 believed that the division had both a tank parently no special report came to the First Army
and an assault gun battalion. Actually Ostendorff G-2 when the 2d Division found the forest clear. It
had no tanks and his guns were far to the south. seems that the intelligence summary as of 2400, 10
59 See above, p. 176. June, was prepared on information probably twelve
THE V CORPS LODGMENT (7-18 JUNE) 373

SS Panzer Grenadier Division during 10 thus refused its right flank at the gap to
June. Plans were made that day to bring establish an arc defense north and north-
the XL VII Panzer Corps (General Funck) east of St. Lo. The gap was slightly nar-
into the gap with the 2d Panzer Division rowed but it remained open.
(Generalleutnant Heinrich Freiherr von While attempting to fill the gap, the
Luettwitz). The 2d Panzer Division had Germans on 10 June had also made a final
in fact begun its move from Amiens to effort to mount a counterattack in the
the battle area during the night of 9-10 Caen sector against the British. Inasmuch
June. Advance units had reached Paris, as Panzer Lehr was fully engaged in de-
but the movements under air attack dur- fensive fighting south of Bayeux, General
ing the day were slow and costly. On the Geyr (Panzer Group West), who took
evening of 10 June while wheeled ele- over command in the Caen sector on 9
ments were near Alenqon the tanks had June, planned to use half of the 12th SS
just begun to move from Amiens by and half of the 21st Panzer Divisions in a
train. With the example of the ineffective limited-objective attack due north of
piecemeal commitment of the 12th SS, Caen. The objective was the Anisy-An-
21st, and Panzer Lehr Divisions, Funck guerny area. Both Geyr and Rommel
wanted to delay commitment of the 2d would have preferred to attack more to
Panzer until it had completed assembly the northwest of Caen, but Geyr did not
with its tanks. This was expected by 13 want to spend another twenty-four hours
June. In the meantime, on the strong urg- maneuvering into position. He felt that
ing of General Luettwitz, the reconnais- what was needed was aggressive action
sance battalion was committed at Cau- even if its immediate purposes were rela-
mont with the mission of holding the high tively inconsequential. Rommel agreed,
ground there. and the attack was ordered for the eve-
During the day one reinforced regi- ning.65
ment of the 3d Parachute Division ar- Even this attack could not be carried
rived in the vicinity of St. Georges-d’Elle. out. In the afternoon British pressure
The division commander, Generalleut- mounted against the right of Panzer Lehr
nant Richard Schimpf, wanted to take po- and the left of 12th SS Panzer Division
sitions according to plan in the Foret de where the British 30 Corps had commit-
Cerisy area along with Ostendorff’s recon- ted the 7th Armoured Division to drive
naissance units.64 But Meindl (II Para- through Tilly-sur-Seulles, toward Villers-
chute Corps), to whom the regiment was Bocage. Knowing that Panzer Lehr was al-
attached, believed that the more urgent ready dangerously weakened Geyr called
need was to strengthen the 352d Division off the attack.
defenses along the Elle. The regiment Less than an hour later his headquar-
therefore went into line from Berigny to ters was hit by fighter-bombers that wiped
St. Germain-d’Elle. ZZ Parachute Corps out his entire staff. All personnel in the
hours old. The G-2 report of 11 June covers the operations section were killed, as well as
error by saying that the 352d Division “was forced
back from the line Moon-sur-Elle-la Gouesmerie and 65sMS # B-466 (Geyr) . Geyr believed that, against
from the Foret de Cerisy . . .” Italics are the author’s. enemy air superiority and heavy naval artillery fire,
64 MS # B-541 (Schimpf) . no daylight attack would have a chance.
374 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

most of the officers of the forward eche- would help take pressure off VII Corps,
lon. The bulk of the signal equipment which was making the main army effort
was destroyed. With Geyr physically un- aimed at the capture of Cherbourg.
able to exercise command, the sector re- The 1st Division estimated that, al-
verted to the control of I SS Panzer Corps though the enemy was capable of offering
and Seventh Army. Seventh Army hence- only scattered opposition to the advance,
forth abandoned the idea of a decisive there was a chance that weak elements of
armored counterattack and bent all its Panzer Lehr might penetrate the division
efforts to solidifying its defense.66 left boundary and that the 17th SS Pan-
After the rest and reorganization of 11 zer Grenadier Division might attack the
June, V Corps mounted a new attack, this right flank of the advance. General Hueb-
time with the deepest southward penetra- ner’s plan provided strict control of the
tion planned on the left flank in the 1st attack. Regiments were to move by
Division zone. (See Map XVII. ) This was bounds and prepare to defend successive
designed primarily to assist the British phase lines. They would report arrival
Second Army attempt to outflank Caen. at the phase lines and, except for pushing
The Panzer Lehr Division, despite heavy out aggressive reconnaissance, would con-
losses, had checked the British 7th Ar- tinue the advance only on division or-
moured Division on 10-l 1 June at Tilly- der.67
sur-Seulles. On the other hand the U.S. The attacks of 12 June on either side
First Army advance had evidently struck of the army boundary at first seemed to
a weak spot in the enemy lines. Although promise rapid and spectacular success.
the true extent and significance of the The 1st Division, jumping off at 0800
gap were unknown, it was planned to take with the 18th and 26th Infantry Regi-
advantage of obvious German weakness ments on a 3,000-yard front behind a
in the area to thrust the British 7th Ar- screen of two troops of the 102d Cavalry
moured Division south close to the inter- Squadron, moved rapidly against light en-
army boundary and hook past the Punter emy forces which readily gave way. The
Lehr to capture Villers-Bocage on the 18th Infantry had reached the Caumont-
Caen-Avranches highway. The 1st Divi- St. Lo highway by evening and sent pa-
sion advance to the high ground at Cau- trols into Caumont. The 26th Infantry at
mont would protect the right flank of the same time got one battalion to the
this maneuver. In conformity with the edge of Caumont but there ran into de-
drive to Caumont the 2d and 29th Divi- termined resistance from an estimated
sions would continue to push south, but two companies of Germans who belonged
with objectives echeloned to the right to the reconnaissance battalion of the
rear so that the advance called for on the 2d Panzer Division. The town was not
Vire River flank was relatively small. Be- cleared until the following morning.68 On
sides achieving specific tactical objectives, 67 1st Div FO 37, 11 Jun 44.
the renewed V Corps attack, it was hoped, ss The enemy patrolled strongly during 13 June,
giving the Americans the impression at some points
s6 MS # B-466 (Geyr) and Panzer-Armeeober- that counterattacks were in progress. Actions, how-
kommando 5 (referred to hereafter as Fifth Panzer ever, though sometimes sharp were all local and in.
Army), KTB lO.VI.-8.VIII.44, 10 Jun 44. volved few troops.
THE V CORPS LODGMENT (7-18 JUNE)

the 1st Division right the 9th Infantry of Villers-Bocage remained for about six
the 2d Division occupied the Litteau weeks in enemy hands. The Caumont gap
ridge south of the Foret de Cerisy. Not remained open between the 2d Panzer
until it reached the objective did it make and 3d Parachute Divisions, but in view
firm contact with the enemy. of the strong enemy opposition to British
The 7th Armoured Division in the advance the 1st Division was ordered to
British 30 Corps zone, starting its attack hold at Caumont while Gerow continued
in the afternoon, at first made similarly to push with his right against the 352d
rapid progress. By 1745 leading elements and 3d Parachute Divisions in front of
had passed through Livry three miles St. Lo.
northeast of Caumont. At dark the point The push was to net few gains during
of the attack was south of the divisional the next week. Two regiments of the 2d
objective and the armor began to wheel Division and the whole of the 29th Divi-
east. Villers-Bocage was entered the fol- sion had run into a new kind of enemy
lowing morning. This initial success, resistance, based in part on stubborn de-
however, was qualified by the failure of fense of positions prepared in depth and
the British 50th Division on the north- in part on small counterthrusts against
east to make any progress in direct attacks the flanks of advancing American forces.
against the Panzer Lehr Division west of The 3d Parachute Division, moreover,
Tilly-sur-Seulles. On 13 June the 2d Pan- turned out to have some of the best and
zer Division (with two infantry regiments toughest infantrymen in Rundstedt’s
supported by two battalions of artillery armies.
but no tanks) strongly counterattacked On 12 June the attacks of the 2d Divi-
between Cahagnes and Villers-Bocage. sion in the center of the corps zone were
The Germans drove up almost to the Cau- split by the Foret de Cerisy. While the
mont-Villers-Bocage road. The 7th Ar- 9th Infantry on the left advanced in con-
moured Division, with its forward move- formity with the 1st Division and against
ment stopped, found itself in a danger- only slight opposition, the 23d Infantry
ously exposed thin salient. In the after- directed its attack southwest toward St.
noon it withdrew to high ground some LB in an operation linked with the ad-
two miles west of the town where it tied vance of the 29th Division on its right.
in with the 1st Division at Caumont. Dur- Principal objective of the 23d Infantry
ing the afternoon of 14 June, renewed en- was Hill 192-a dominating hill mass
emy attacks induced a further withdrawal north of the main Bayeux-St. Lo road-
of about five miles north to the Parfouru- the key to St. Lo because it provided ob-
L’Eclin area on the Aure River and Cau- servation of all approaches to the city for
mont-Caen road. The 2d Panzer Division miles to the north and east. The regiment,
attacks were broken up in large measure attacking with two battalions, was stopped
by artillery concentrations in which bat- at the Elle River. This stream, only ten
teries of the V Corps, which had observa- feet wide and no military obstacle in it-
tion of the enemy from the Caumont self, marked the enemy’s main line of re-
heights, took an important part. sistance. It was clear, too, that the enemy
Positions on high ground covering was making effective use of the observa-
376 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

tion afforded by Hill 192. But neither ure.‘O In the afternoon two platoons of
American fighter-bomber missions shortly tanks were put in with the 1st Battalion
before dark nor repeated artillery con- to try to outflank the enemy holding the
centrations on enemy positions there river crossing southeast of Ste. Margue-
achieved any effective results. rite-d’Elle. After three tanks were lost,
On 13 June the 2d Division renewed the attempt was abandoned. In the eve-
the attack and the 38th Infantry, with ning the 116th Infantry was passed
heavy artillery support (more than 6,500 through the 115th and not only succeeded
rounds were fired), advanced about two in crossing but by daylight had ap-
miles south of the Elle. As enemy resist- proached its objectives, against resistance
ance thickened, the American troops were reported to be light. Continuing under
stopped by division order and directed generous supporting artillery fires the
together with the 23d Infantry to organ- regiment entered St. Clair-sur-Elle and
ize their present positions for defense. Couvains. Casualties to the 29th Division
The difference in enemy opposition east for the two days were 547.
and west of the Foret de Cerisy can be At the end of 13 June the V Corps
seen from comparative casualties. While attack toward St. Lo was halted by order
the 1st Division lost 92 men in the two- of General Bradley. The Carentan-Isigny
day attack, the 2d Division lost 540, most link between his two corps was still thin
of them from the two regiments that had and weak, and despite success in beating
struggled toward Hill 192. off the attack of the 17th SSPanzer Gren-
The 29th Division attacked on 12 June adier Division it still seemed possible that
with one regiment, the 115th, while the the enemy might try again. Furthermore
175th Infantry held north of the Elle pro- XIX Corps was just becoming operational
tecting the corps west flank and the 116th in this area and it was necessary to adjust
remained in corps reserve as precaution troop assignments between the corps. The
against an enemy counterattack west of 29th Division passed to the control of the
the Vire.69 The 747th Tank Battalion was new corps and the 30th Division was
held in division reserve also against the brought into the zone between the Vire
contingency of counterattack. The 115th and Taute Rivers. Supporting troops
Infantry, despite direct support by three were reshuffled.
battalions of artillery, had hard going. In calling off the southward push, Gen-
The 1st Battalion was stopped at the river eral Bradley was also influenced by the
bank mostly by small arms fire. The 3d desire to avoid a general engagement of
Battalion succeeded in crossing and ad- V Corps which might absorb resources
vanced south about 3,000 yards. Enemy needed for First Army’s main effort-the
forces built up in the hedgerows, and by VII Corps attack to cut the peninsula and
the end of the morning the battalion was take Cherbourg. 71 Finally, since the Brit-
not only stopped but was fighting to avoid ish seemed to be stopped north of Tilly-
being cut off. After taking severe losses it sur-Seulles, any advance by V Corps
withdrew to its original line of depart-
70 115th Regt S-3 Jnl.
69 See above, section on Junction Between V and 71Ltr, Lt Gen C. R. Huebner to author, 17 Oct
VII Corps. 47. Hist Div files.
THE V CORPS LODGMENT (7-18 JUNE) 377

would expose both flanks to possible en- Combat Command A) 73 in reserve. The
emy armored attack. There seemed a real XIX Corps (Maj. Gen. Charles H. Cor-
danger of that in the afternoon, when the lett) 74 became operational on 13 June,
2d Panzer Division was identified on the with the 30th Division (Maj. Gen. Le-
left of the 1st Division, and the warning land Hobbs) attached, and on the next
was issued to both 1st and 2d Divisions to day took over from V Corps control of the
dig in when they reached suitable defen- 29th Division.
sive positions. In anticipation of renewing the drive
For the time being the mission of V south, both V and XIX Corps on 14 June
Corps became to hold its present posi- issued warning orders marking out ob-
tions while First Army devoted its main jectives and schemes of maneuver. Fol-
effort to the capture of Cherbourg and, as lowing the outlines of these orders all
a precondition for that, strengthened the forward divisions except the 1st made lim-
Vire-Taute corridor. The corps’ divi- ited-objective attacks during the next
sions, however, were given a certain lati- week primarily to secure better defensive
tude to improve their defensive positions positions, although commanders hoped
and were ordered to conduct aggressive that larger rewards might be reaped.
patrolling “so as to deny the enemy any The series of limited-objective attacks
opportunity to abandon this front with began on 15 June with a thrust by XIX
impunity” and to give the impression of Corps aimed at securing the high ground
continued major offensive action.72 on the line St. Georges de Bohon (three
miles southwest of Carentan)-le Hommet
Toward St. Lo d’Arthenay (three miles northwest of
Pont Hebert)-St. Lo-la Barre de Semilly.
When V Corps halted on 13 June, the The 30th Division, which had not yet
whole First Army line on the south was landed all its troops, attacked initially
echeloned to the right from Caumont with only one regiment. The attack made
held by the 1st Division to the Carentan very slow progress even though the esti-
area in the zone of the 101st Airborne Di- mated enemy opposition consisted of only
vision. The 1st Division held a salient in one platoon of riflemen and a section of
the Caumont area substantially in ad- the machine guns. At the end of the day
vance of the 2d Division on its right. The the 120th Infantry occupied Montmartin-
2d and 29th Divisions were deployed on a en-Graignes and the high ground north
northwest-southeast line generally from of the Vire-Taute Cana1.76 The day’s op-
Cormolain to Airel on the Vire River.
They confronted the right wing of II Par- 73 CCA was still attached to the 101st Airborne
Division.
achute Corps, temporarily subordinated 74General Corlett had come to the European
to LXXXIV Corps, wich defended St. theater after serving in the Pacific. He had taken
Lo on an arc along the high ground north command of the 7th Division in September 1943,
and led it in combat on Kwajalein. He was trans-
and northeast of the city. The 1st and 2d ferred to Europe to take over XIX Corps in April
Divisions remained under V Corps, which 1944.
had also the 2d Armored Division (less 75Although Montmartin had been entered on 12
June, troops had pulled back to a defensive line
72V Corps FO 5, 13 Jun 44. along the high ground north of the town.
378 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

erations cost it less than twenty casualties. ing of 6 June to begin immediate priority
Again the fighting between the Vire movement to the battle area. The divi-
and Taute Rivers had proceeded on a sion headquarters then at Redon in Brit-
very small scale, as the attitude on both tany was less than 120 miles by rail from
sides remained defensive and the oppos- St. Lo. A day or two should have been
ing forces almost equally weak. Curiously ample for the movement. But Allied air-
enough, each opponent viewing his own craft, sovereign in the skies, ruled other-
weakness expected the other to attack. wise.
Though the narrow zone between the riv- The Kampfgruppe took only about ten
ers cut by the open muddy depression at hours to assemble but was delayed in en-
the Vire-Taute Canal would have made training by air attacks which blocked
any attack difficult, the rewards of success tracks, damaged locomotives, and gener-
might have tempted either of the respec- ally interfered with the assembling of
tive commanders to accept the risks. The cars. These delays continued through the
Americans expected the Germans to night, and by 0800 the following morning
strike for the sea and split the First Army; only three sections of the Kampfgruppe
the Germans expected the Americans to had been loaded. In the afternoon five
drive for Periers and split the Seventh trains were under way; three were still
Army. The fact was that neither oppo- being loaded. The lead train made good
nent had the strength to do anything but progress to Avranches, where at 1400 it
hold on. was held up by undetermined trouble
Weakness on the German side resulted ahead. While this was being cleared up,
mainly from the nearly incredible diffi- the rails behind it were cut. Late in the
culties of moving troops into the line- afternoon the train passed through Av-
difficulties that had constantly disrupted ranches and reached Foligny a few miles
Seventh Army offensive plans and jeop- to the north. At Foligny, however, air at-
ardized its defensive positions everywhere tack destroyed it with total loss of vehicles
in Normandy. The story of how Kampf- and equipment and very heavy casualties.
gruppe Heintz struggled up to Montmar- The second train in the meantime
tin-en-Graignes where it fought against reached Pontorson but was there halted
the 120th Infantry is worth the telling for by rail cuts to the east. Under heavy air
it shows how completely the battlefield attack which took severe toll of the men
was sealed off by Allied air forces. (Map and equipment of the engineer unit
XVIII) aboard, the train was unloaded and the
Kampfgruppe Heintz consisted of the troops ordered to continue on foot.77
984th Regiment of the 275th Division, re-
consisted of a headquarters and headquarters com-
inforced by the division Fuesilier battal- pany, a heavy weapons company, and two infantry
ion, a three-battery artillery battalion, companies, which were committed west of the Vire
the engineer battalion, and a Flak bat- on 10 June when the 17th SS Panzer Grenadier Divi-
sion was delayed in moving into its sector south of
tery. 76 It had been ordered on the morn- Carentan. Seventh Army, KTB 1.I.-30.VI.44, 27 Jan
76 It also took over command of the Angers En- and 6-9 Jun 44.
gineer Battalion, an alarm unit, which consisted of 77 The account of the move of Kampfgruppe
the school troops and students of the Seventh Army Heintz is from the Seventh Army, Trans. O., KTB
Engineer School at Angers. On 6 June the battalion 1.I.-30.VI.44.
THE V CORPS LODGMENT (7-18 JUNE) 379

All other trains en route on 7 June had stricted Allied air attacks was by no means
been attacked and so delayed that at 1800 exceptional. On the contrary the diffi-
they were still all south of Rennes. At that culties of a unit of the 265th Division or-
time it was reported that bombs had cut dered out of Brittany at the same time
the rails in three places between Rennes were even worse. Original orders to move
and Dol and the whole movement was the whole 265th unit by train were can-
ordered rerouted via la Brohiniere-Di- celed on 7 June in order to save trains for
nan-Dol. Scarcely had this decision been the use of Kampfgruppe Heintz. The
made when it was discovered that be- bulk of the troops thus turned out on the
tween Dinan and Dol the tracks were road arrived in about five days in the
broken in no fewer than nineteen places. battle area. But the so-called immobile
All during 8 June seven trains languished portions deemed essential to move by rail
on the rails south of Rennes. Two other entrained at Quimperle and took seven
trains meanwhile were struggling to load days to reach Rennes about one hundred
artillery units of the Kampfgruppe and miles away. From that point they had to
were being continually interrupted by walk.
air attacks. It was 1915 on 8 June before Discouraged by these and similar ex-
the last train got under way. Since no periences, on 13 June Seventh Army de-
progress had been made to clear the route cided that rail movements between Brit-
beyond Rennes on 7 June, it had been tany and Normandy were impossible and
decided to reroute the trains through that there was little hope that the situa-
Fougeres. On 9 June the Fougeres line tion would improve. Dollmann therefore
was cut. The transportation officers then closed the branch rail office under
gave up. The troops of Kampfgruppe LXXIV Corps which had been estab-
Heintz were all unloaded and ordered to lished on D Day.79
proceed by truck or foot. The bulk of the
unit had thus in two days and three nights By the attack of 15 June XIX Corps se-
traveled less than thirty miles. Three to cured a defensive position fronting the
five more days were consumed in the road depression of the Vire-Taute Canal. In
march to the final assembly areas where this position the 30th Division continued
the Kampfgruppe was attached to the to build up. It did not seem feasible to
17th SS Panzer Grenadier Division and continue the push south through the
put at once into the line southeast of Car- bottleneck of the St. Lo highway across
entan. 78 the lowlands. The decision was made to
The experience of Kampfgruppe wait for additional troops with which to
Heintz in trying to move under unre- force a crossing of the river in attack west-
ward. General Corlett therefore ordered
78 It was attached to the 352d Division for supply. the 30th Division to defend the line of
The 2d Battalion, 984th Regiment, and the Fuesilier
Battalion came up on bicycles in the evening of 11
the canal while the 29th Division and the
June. The 1st Battalion arrived on the 13th. Order,
13 Jun 44, Kampfgruppe Heintz. Miscellaneous or-
ders in 275th Division files, 1944; cf. XXV Corps, 79 Seventh Army, Trans.O., KTB l.I.-30.VI.44. Ger-
KTB and Anlagen 6.-30.VI.44; Seventh Army, Trans. man supply by road and rail was similarly dis-
O., KTB 1.I-30.VI.44. organized. See below, pp. 410-11.
380 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

2d Division of V Corps renewed the at- fill the Caumont gap. Although the final
tack toward St. Lo.80 (Map XIX) assembly of all three regiments of the
The critical objective of the new attack division was not complete until the night
was again Hill 192. The hill itself was the of 17 June, the line was already strong
assigned objective of the 38th Infantry by the 16th. Unlike most German units
on the right flank of the 2d Division. To moved to the front during June, the regi-
assist in taking it the 29th Division, at- ments of the 3d Paruchute Division ar-
tacking with two regiments abreast, was to rived almost intact. By marching only at
put its main effort on the left. There the night, avoiding the main roads, and main-
116th Infantry, with the 3d Battalion of taining strict march and camouflage disci-
the 115th Infantry attached, was to drive pline, they had almost wholly escaped air
for St. Andre-de-l’Epine and Hill 150 at attack.81
the northeastern end of the Martinville The U.S. 2d Division in the attack of
ridge (later one of the bloodiest of the St. 16 June, which began for all three regi-
Lo battlefields). The 175th Infantry, at- ments at 0800, pushed both wings forward
tacking with its right on the Vire River, slightly but was unable to advance in the
would advance to Hills 90 and 97 north- center. All along the line, heavy fighting
west of St. Lo. The 2d Division, besides netted advances measured only in yards,
taking Hill 192 with the 38th Infantry, as the enemy put up a skillful and stub-
would seize the high ground astride the born defense in position that made maxi-
St. Lo highway near la Croix Rouge with mum use of the tangled hedgerow coun-
the 23d Infantry and the heights west of try. The experience of one platoon of the
St. Germain-d’Elle and northwest of 9th Infantry on the left was typical. The
Montrabot with the 9th Infantry. The 1st platoon advancing through open fields
Division was alerted by V Corps to ad- was hit by fire from eight machine guns
vance later to a line roughly from la emplaced in the network of hedgerows:
Lande-sur-Drome to Cahagnes, but the its leader was lost as well as a third of its
attack would wait for the completion of men. With observation from high ground
the 2d Division advance. west of St. Germain-d’Elle, the enemy re-
Enemy positions had been discovered peatedly permitted the attackers to reach
on 15 June, in and around St. Germain- exposed positions and then opened with-
d’Elle, by patrols of the 102d Cavalry ering fire. At the end of the day the 9th
Squadron which probed as far south as Infantry had lost 140 men-twenty of
Vidouville. The cavalry also identified them killed-and had advanced only a
German paratroopers at Montrabot. few hundred yards. St. Germain-d’Elle re-
Since the arrival on 10 June of advance mained in enemy hands.82
elements of the 3d Parachute Division to The most important advance of the day
take up defensive positions on the right occurred on the 2d Division right, where
flank of the 352d Division, other march the 3d Battalion of the 38th Infantry
groups of the division had straggled in to pushed up Hill 192 to within 700 yards of
extend the line southeast and gradually the crest. The value of the success, how-
80 Ltr, Gen Corlett to author, 14 Oct 48. Hist Div 81 MS # B-541 (Schimpf) .
tiles. 82 Regimental S-3 Jnk.
THE V CORPS LODGMENT (7-18 JUNE)

ever, was limited by the failure of units All units got off on time and at 0930
on the right and left to keep up. The 23d the lead battalions were both making
Infantry in the center of the division zone good progress against slight opposition.
fought hard all day, losing 11 officers and About noon, however, the 3d Battalion,
162 men. But the end of the day found it 115th, reported meeting two companies
still virtually at the line of departure. of enemy infantry with two tanks. By mid-
Despite the exposed position of the bat- afternoon two of its own tanks were
talion on Hill 192, it was decided to leave knocked out and forward progress was vir-
it in place and the 2d Engineer Battalion tually halted east of les Foulons. At the
was ordered up to double for infantry same time the 1st Battalion, 116th In-
and reinforce its lines. The hill salient fantry, was far to the south, only about
was held throughout the rest of June, as 1,000 yards short of St. Andre-de-l’Epine.
the 2d Division by corps order passed to Here it was stopped by artillery fire and
the defensive. an enemy counterattack. The 2d Battal-
The attack of the 29th Division on 16 ion, committed about noon to attack
June at first seemed to go well. Colonel toward la Luzerne, was held up just west
Canham planned to advance his 116th of the highway near Villiers-Fossard
Infantry by bounds. The 1st Battalion where the enemy was dug in on a nose of
leading off at 0800 would pass through the high ground. Supporting artillery fire
3d Battalion to take the plateau between failed to shake the battalion loose. The
the Bois du Bretel and la Blotrie. There 3d Battalion, 115th Infantry, in the mean-
it would reorganize and be prepared to time was withdrawn 1,000 yards to the
advance to capture Hills 147 and 150 on rear. By 1800 General Corlett at corps
the Martinville ridge. The 3d Battalion, had given up the idea of reaching final
115th Infantry, attached for this opera- objectives before dark and all forward
tion, would advance southwest to cut the battalions dug in to hold for the night
St. Lo-Isigny highway near la Fossardire and resume the attack the next day.83
and organize the high ground there for Enemy resistance from commanding
all-around defense. The 2d Battalion, ground and hedgerows had been stub-
116th Infantry, then in contact with the born, but Colonel Canham was neverthe-
enemy at St. Clair-sur-l’Elle, would break less not satisfied with the effort his regi-
contact and assemble in the vicinity of ment had made. He admonished his sub-
Couvains prepared to strike through the ordinate commanders that night to take
other two battalions to take Hill 115 and up’the attack the next day with new vigor.
the stretch of highway near la Luzerne. They should advance their units on a
The two battalions that led the attack broad front, he said, and “get around the
(Canham’s 1st and the 3d of the 115th) sniper and machine gunner and wipe him
each had eight tanks attached. The order out. . . . If you allow your unit to bunch
emphasized the organization of all objec- up behind a hedgerow and wait for hours
tives for defense against enemy counter- you are only playing into Jerry’s hand. He
attack. The 115th Infantry, less the 3d will move around where he can enfilade
Battalion, was held in corps reserve near 8329th Div G-3 Jnl; 115th and 116th Inf Regts S-3
Ste. Marguerite-d’Elle. Jnls.
382 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

you or drop artillery or mortar fire on Villiers-Fossard the enemy was strongly
you. . . . It is time to get over the jitters entrenched. General Gerhardt observed
and fight like hell.” 84 that it was “a devil of a place. Every time
The 175th Infantry (Lt. Col. Alexan- they go forward they are driven back.” 88
der George) 85 during the day met much Attempts to smash through with artillery
lighter resistance as it attacked with its or 4.2-inch mortar support foundered on
right on the Vire River. The 1st and 3d the difficulties of observation. Sources of
Battalions, north of the Elle River, were enemy fire could be located generally but
relieved during the night of 15-16 June seldom pinpointed.89
by elements of the 119th Infantry and This was true everywhere on the front.
crossed the river to gain a line of depart- It was also noted that preparatory artil-
ure along the ridge line on the south lery fire did little good since the Germans
bank. The move was made without op made a practice of thinly outposting their
position, but the next morning both bat- front lines and moving the bulk of their
talions ran into some enemy machine forces forward to meet the infantry at-
gun, mortar, and artillery fire as they tack after the artillery lifted. The attack
pushed south to reach Amy and les Bu- of the 115th Infantry (less the 2d Battal-
teaux. One company of the 119th Infan- ion) got off at 1840, 17 June. Leading the
try followed the 3d Battalion, stationing attack, the 1st Battalion lost direction and
patrols along the river to guard possible was caught by machine gun fire in an or-
crossing sites against an eruption of the chard not far from the line of departure.
enemy into the regiment’s open flank. The 3d Battalion remained in the assem-
The comparatively rapid advance of bly area and dug in for the night.
the 175th Infantry led the 29th Division Under the attacks of the 29th Division
command to believe that enemy opposi- on 16 and 17 June the German 352d Divi-
tion in this zone had cracked.86 As late as sion, already only a Kampfgruppe of
1400 on 17 June General Gerhardt told about regimental strength, lost about 500
General Corlett, “I feel we’ll be getting to men. On the other hand withdrawal
St. Lo before long.” But he added, “It’s southward coupled with the build-up of
hard to tell.”87 the 3d Parachute Division had resulted
Actually, in the fighting of 17 June in a substantial shortening of Kraiss’s
there appeared indications of stalemate. lines. His right rested on high ground
The 116th Infantry, renewing the attack west of St. Andre-de-l’Epine, his left on
at 0400, ran into strong enemy machine the Vire. The division, furthermore, was
gun and mortar fire. The worst spot was strengthened on the evening of 16 June
in the gap of about 1,000 yards developed when Kampfgruppe Boehm of the 353d
in the previous day’s attack between the Division arrived from Brittany. Boehm,
116th and 175th. There in the vicinity of who was commander of the 943d Regi-
84 116th Inf S-3 Jnl.
ment, brought up two infantry battalions
85 George replaced Colonel Goode, who had been and a few supporting troops on bicycles.
captured 13 June. See above, section on Junction Pending the arrival of the rest of the divi-
Between V and VII Corps.
86 So estimated in 29th Div FO 9. 88Ibid.
8729th Div G-3 Jnl. 89 See, for instance, 115th S-3 Jnl. 18 Jun.
THE V CORPS LODGMENT (7-18 JUNE) 383

sion (still south of Avranches) he was at- relieved at Meauffe about midnight by
tached to the 352d and ordered into the the 119th Infantry, attacked south the
area of la Luzerne. It was chiefly Boehm’s morning of 18 June and reached le Ca-
fresh infantry that fought in the Villiers- rillon without meeting much opposition.
Fossard salient during 17 June.90 But the 1st Battalion was getting badly
In the 175th Infantry zone only the 1st battered on Hill 108. To relieve it, the
Battalion attacked on 17 June. On Hill 3d Battalion was first diverted at 1400 to
108 it ran into heavy enemy artillery and attack southeast toward Hill 102; later it
machine gun fire and at 1440 reported was ordered to disengage and go directly
that it was unable to advance. About the to the assistance of the 1st Battalion.
same time the 2d Battalion, which had Positions occupied by V Corps units on
held in position just northwest of the lst, 18 June were held for the next two weeks.
reported a counterattack that seemed de- Less than five miles from the key city of
signed by the Germans to cut off the 1st St. Lo, the 29th Division would not enter
Battalion, Although the enemy made no it for almost a month and then at the cost
significant penetrations of the 175th In- of some of the most difficult and expen-
fantry’s lines, the advance southward was sive fighting of the war. A foretaste of the
effectively halted. struggle had already come in the last three
For the third day’s attack (on 18 June) days of the June attacks as V Corps mired
General Gerhardt got eight battalions of in the hedgerow country. One of the
artillery, six of which were to mass fires prime difficulties faced by the Americans
in front of the 115th and 116th Infantry in this terrain was in co-ordinating tanks
Regiments. A seven-minute artillery con- and infantry. The enemy skillfully estab-
centration before the jump-off had little lished defenses combining antitank guns
effect in softening enemy defenses. At and automatic weapons well concealed in
noon the 115th reported that the general hedges. Tanks could not go forward to
advance had been stopped. The troops knock out the machine guns, nor could
were getting mortar, 88-mm., 105-mm., infantry spearhead the advance to take
and 20-mm. explosive fire and found it out the antitank guns. The effect was
impossible to determine the exact loca- graphically described in the account by
tion of the enemy in the immediate area. the 747th Tank Battalion of a limited-
As for the 116th, it was exhausted by the objective attack on 20 June to reduce the
attacks of the first two days. The 1st Bat- Villiers-Fossard salient:92
talion commander reported that he could
not attack as he had “hardly anyone left.” At 0600 Company B moved forward, with
His executive officer added that “every- the engineers blowing gaps in hedgerows
one is done out physically. No leaders left. and the infantry following. The infantry was
pinned down and tanks could not move fur-
No reorganization possible.” 91 ther forward. But they were on part of their
A similar situation developed in the objective. Tanks were forced to withdraw
175th zone. The 3d Battalion, after being due to heavy antitank fire and bazooka fire.
One tank was knocked out and the crew of
90MS # A-983 (Generalleutnant Paul Mahlmann, five men were wounded. The tanks kept try-
CG, 353d Division).
91116th 8-3 Jnl. 18 Jun. 92747th Tk Bn AAR, with supporting documents.
384 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

ing to move forward, but got stuck. And the hedgerow cutters were devised and
infantry stayed pinned down. Another tank welded to the fronts of the tanks to allow
was hit. On order of the regimental com- them to bull through the earth banks.
mander four tanks forced their way through
fire to the objective. No infantry followed. Technicians wrestled with difficult prob-
Two tanks returned; one was knocked out lems of direct communication between
by antitank guns. The other was stuck so infantry and tanks. All during the rest of
that [the ] crew had to abandon [the] tanks June training took place in the V Corps
as no help could reach them. The infantry zone to perfect tank-infantry tactics
withdrew 900 yards and took up defensive
positions. The tanks covered the with- which could set the attack rolling once
drawal. . . . more toward St. Lo when the time came.93

One answer was the development of 93 During the remainder of the month the whole
V Corps front was static, except for a limited ob-
small infantry-tank teams which could jective attack in the Villiers-Fossard area on 29 June.
advance together. To make this possible See below, p. 444.
TANK EQUIPPED WITH HEDGEROW CUTTER
CHAPTER X

The Capture of Cherbourg


(8 Tune-1
\ J
July)
Securing the North Flank butted up against the southernmost de-
fenses on 7 June but had been unable to
On 18 June, when V Corps went on the subdue them.
defensive in front of St. Lo, VII Corps After the D-Day lodgment area had
on First Army’s right had just completed been cleaned out on D plus 1, VII Corps
a brilliant victory-the cutting of the Co- organized a full-scale attack to the north.
tentin-which split the German Seventh It was essential to reach the Quineville-
Army and sealed the fate of Cherbourg. Montebourg line in order to knock out
The victory, swift and dramatic in the enemy batteries which kept the UTAH
final stage, was preceded by ten days of landing beaches under artillery fire as
hard slugging in order to break out the well as to widen the base of attack for a
ring which the Germans pressed around drive westward across the peninsula.
the D-Day beachhead. Four regiments attacked abreast on 8
Some of the hardest fighting during the June: the 505th Parachute Infantry and
first week of the invasion took place on 8th Infantry west of the Montebourg
the north flank of VII Corps where the highway with objectives between the
4th Division, together with the 505th Par- Merderet River and Montebourg, and the
achute Infantry (82d Airborne Division) 12th and 22d Infantry Regiments in the
on its left, fought to take the corps D-Day zone east to the coast with final objec-
objective: the ridge line, Quineville- tives along the Quineville-Montebourg
Montebourg-le Ham, from the coast to ridge.
the Merderet River. (Map XX ) The en- The 8th Infantry and 505th Parachute
emy in this area had the advantage of de- Infantry made slow but steady progress
fending higher ground which rises gradu- under harassing opposition during 8 June
ally northward to the Quineville-Monte- to reach a line generally from the Monte-
bourg ridge. Field fortifications were pre- bourg highway through Magneville to
pared throughout the area making maxi- the Merderet. Probing attacks farther
mum use of the network of hedgerows. north before dark revealed what seemed
In addition, the fully developed fortified to be a prepared defense along the tribu-
areas at Azeville, Crisbecq, Ozeville, and tary of the Merderet just north of Magne-
along the beach as far as Quineville pro- ville. Centers of resistance were apparent
vided strong nodes of defense. It will be at the Magneville hangar and at Ecausse-
remembered that the 4th Division had ville. Along the creek bank machine guns
THE CAPTURE OF CHERBOURG (8 JUNE-l JULY) 387

were dug in and artillery was registered Regiment, were shifted from Fontenay to
on all routes of approach.l positions about half a mile west of Lestre.
These positions were actually part of In addition the guns of two fixed coastal
the defense set up by General von Schlie- battalions at Videcosville and Morsalines
ben after the unsuccessful counterattack (about four miles north of Quineville
on Ste. Mere-Eglise on 8 June. The main ridge) were removed from their bases and
German defensive line, however, was to mounted on carriages so that they could
the north along the railroad from le Ham be used in the land fighting-the job be-
to Montebourg and thence northeast fol- ing done by ordnance personnel working
lowing the main highway to Quineville. day and night under almost constant
Between 9 and 12 June troops were gath- American fire. The effectiveness of this
ered to man this line from miscellaneous comparatively large aggregation of guns
units of the 709th, 243d, and 91st Divi- in support of the German defense was
sions and the Seventh Army Sturm Bat- qualified, however, by a shortage of am-
talion and formed into three Kampfgrup- munition and by the fact that the crews
pen of nominally regimental size. The were submitted to almost constant Allied
east wing of the line rested securely on naval bombardment and air attacks.3
the high ground at Quineville extending Co-ordinated American attacks on 9
to the sea, but the west flank was open. It June had varying success. The 8th Infan-
was planned that the 77th Division would try at the cost of hard fighting and heavy
tie in on the west as soon as that unit, still losses made significant gains in overcom-
moving up slowly from the south, should ing some of the points of heaviest Ger-
arrive.2 The chief strength of the German man resistance. Company L took the han-
defense in the meantime was its unusually gar positions at Magneville by charging
strong artillery support. In addition to across open fields in the face of heavy
the artillery that von Schlieben had on 8 grazing fire and at the cost of many lives.
June (a battalion of the 243d Artillery In the meantime the 2d Battalion, assault-
Regiment and two heavy motorized bat- ing Ecausseville, which was reported to
talions, the 456th and 457th), on about be lightly held, had its leading company
9 June two Russian 122-mm. guns were chewed by enemy artillery, mortar, and
moved from Carteret on the west coast of machine gun fire that caught it in a hedge-
the Cotentin to northwest of Quineville. rowed trail. The 1st Battalion, however,
At the same time the six French 155-mm. took up the fight late in the day and fared
guns of the jrd Battalion, 1261st Artillery better. With two platoons of tanks in the
lead the 1st Battalion moved up the road
1 Combat intervs, 82d Abn and 4th Inf Divs. For
treatment in greater detail of this action and others
east of Ecausseville. At the crossroads east
on the road to Cherbourg see Ruppenthal, Utah of the town, tanks shot up a group of
Beach, pp. 95ff. houses from the rear and enabled the in-
2 MS # B-845 (Schlieben) ; cf. Hoffmann Report.
Seventh Army, KTB Anlagen 1.I.30.VI.44. The
fantry to move in and take 100 prisoners.
Kampfgruppen formed were: Kampfgruppe Hoff- Ecausseville itself held out as enemy 88
mann from the le Ham railroad station to Monte- mm. guns prevented the tanks from enter-
bourg; Kampfgruppe Keil from Montebourg to the
vicinity of les Landes; and Kampfgruppe Mueller
from les Landes to Quineville. 3 MS # B-260 (Triepel) ,
388 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

ing. But the outflanking maneuver was On the morning of 11 June Colonel
successful, and during the night the Ger- Ekman, regimental commander, ordered
mans withdrew to their main defensive the 2d Battalion to employ a holding at-
positions. tack on the north of le Ham while the 2d
The 8th Infantry then advanced rap- Battalion, 325th Glider Infantry, thrust
idly and by the night of 10 June all three at the enemy from the east. The attack
battalions had reached objectives along of the latter battalion, though prepared
the le Ham-Montebourg highway. But by a fifteen-minute artillery concentra-
attacks toward the le Ham-Montebourg tion and covered by smoke, nevertheless
railroad line were met with very heavy cost heavy casualties as troops struggled
enemy fire. The entire regiment there- through open fields and swamps. The bat-
fore dug in east of the highway and es- talion was halted short of its objective,
tablished a defensive line which it was weakened by casualties and low in am-
to hold until the beginning of the major munition. Then the enemy began to
drive north to Cherbourg on 19 June. withdraw. A new attack was mounted
The simultaneous attack on 10 June of and the battalion, widely deployed,
the 505th Parachute Infantry on the left moved in against a badly shaken covering
proved more difficult, largely because of force. Passing abandoned German field
the nature of the tactical problem. The pieces the Americans entered le Ham to
regiment was to take the Montebourg find it deserted. The bridge over the
Station and le Ham. The latter town was Merderet west of le Ham was secured,
the western anchor of the German de- and during the rest of the day the whole
fense line and was situated on the Mer- position was organized for defense. On
deret between two small tributaries, The the morning of 13 June the 505th Para-
plan of attack was for one battalion to chute Infantry was relieved by a battalion
seize the Station and defend to the north of the 359th Infantry of the 90th Di-
while the 2d came up behind and then vision.
swung west between the creeks to le The attacks of the 8th and 505th In-
Ham. fantry Regiments, which have been
The first part went well. Under heavy traced through to their conclusion, were
artillery rolling ahead of the attack, the only part of the general advance of the
1st Battalion reached its objective with- 4th Division northward which in four
in six hours of the jump-off. The 2d Bat- days pushed back the enemy into his last
talion, following the 1st slightly farther prepared defensive positions south of
north than intended in order to avoid the Cherbourg Landfront (landward for-
flanking fire from the left, turned to at- tifications of the port). In the center of
tack le Ham along the axis of the Monte- the division zone Colonel Reeder’s 12th
bourg road. The enemy troops at le Ham, Infantry, after losing 300 men in a vio-
some of whom had retreated there from lent fight around Emondeville during 8
the Station, fought stubbornly as they June, broke loose and moved up to
were pressed into their last stronghold. Joganville where it destroyed a German
The attack was halted at dark still about resistance point. Reeder then advanced
a thousand yards from its objective. anotlrer 2,000 yards. The next day his 3d
FONTENAY FORTIFIED AREA DANGUEVILLE CR ISBECQ

CRISBECQ FORTIFICATION. In foreground is village of St. Marcouf. Inset:


One of the forts.
CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Battalion sped north to just short of the proaches had been rendered almost im-
regimental objective, 1,500 yards north- penetrable by mine fields, barbed wire,
east of Montebourg, and far in advance and concrete one-man shelters. Although
of all other 4th Division units. there were mines and wire on the west,
On the division’s right the attack of 8 too, the Germans here had not cleared
June against the Crisbecq and Azeville fields of fire and apparently had made no
fortifications repeated the experience of preparations to cover this approach. The
the day before. Two companies of the assaulting troops were thus able to cut
1st Battalion, 22d Infantry, led the as- their way through the wire and pick
sault on Crisbecq after a twenty-minute paths through the mines without remov-
preparation of naval fire, together with ing them. Bazookas and one tank that
field artillery and mortar concentrations. managed to get through the mine fields
Advancing then under a rolling barrage opened fire on the nearest of the block-
which the infantry followed at about 200 houses but without effect. A demolition
yards, and under indirect fire from heavy team then made three separate attempts
machine guns, the two companies reached to blow up the blockhouse. All three
the edge of the fortified area with few failed. It looked as though once more
losses. The third company was then the attackers might run out of explosives
passed through to blow the concrete em- and have to pull back. Then happened
placements with pole charges. The as- one of those minor miracles that may
sault sections, however, used all their turn the course of battle. On orders of
explosives without materially damaging his company commander, Pvt. Ralph
the concrete and then became involved G. Riley took the last available flame
in small arms fights with Germans in thrower to “give it a few more squirts.”
the communicating trenches. A counter- Reaching the blockhouse after running
attack on the left at last forced the bat- through enemy fire, Private Riley lighted
talion to withdraw to its starting point his flame thrower with a match, as the
north of Bas Village de Dodainville. firing mechanism failed, and trained the
Action of the 2d Battalion before Aze- stream of blazing oil on the threshold of
ville was similar, and similarly unsuccess- the door. The fire should have had no
ful. more effect than previous squirts. But it
Twice turned back, Colonel Tribolet, did. It hit some ammunition inside. Ex-
commander of the 22d Infantry, on 9 plosions followed. Within minutes a
June revised his tactics. He temporarily white flag emerged. When the firing
abandoned the assault on Crisbecq and ceased the German commander stepped
concentrated on Azeville. The 3d Bat- out and surrendered the whole of the
talion (less one company engaged in at- Azeville fortifications with their garrison
tacking beach defenses) was brought up of 169 men. Riley received the Silver Star.
to take over the mission of assaulting that The capture of Azeville opened the
position. While naval and artillery fire way for continuing the attack north to-
neutralized the Crisbecq guns, two com- ward Quineville. Even though Crisbecq
panies circled to the west of the four and other known German prepared posi-
Azeville blockhouses whose southern ap- tions remained in action, General Bar-
AZEVILLE FORTS are located at upper left of photo on both sides of road.
Inset: One of the forts.
392 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

ton, in view of success all along his front, where it relieved the 1st Battalion, 22d
decided to bypass them and send a task Infantry.
force straight through to Quineville. The 39th Infantry (Col. Harry A.
But although each of the regiments of Flint) in part profited from the hard
the 4th Division at the end of 9 June fighting of the three previous days which
had succeeded in cracking determined had seemed to batter unsuccessfully
enemy resistance no holes had been against the enemy’s fortifications. The 2d
punched in the enemy’s main defenses. Battalion found Crisbecq unoccupied,
A task force of the 22d Infantry 4 un- and pushed on to take Dangueville in
der command of Brig. Gen. Harry A. the afternoon. Advances elsewhere were
Barber found that it was not at liberty more heavily contested. The 1st Bat-
to move through the Azeville gap for talion cleared the beach between Taret
direct attack on the Quineville positions. de Ravenoville and Fort St. Marcouf,
Germans held out in strength all along while the 3d Battalion captured Fonte-
the right side of the proposed advance- nay-sur-Mer in a hard fight against an
at Crisbecq, Dangueville, Chateau de enemy whose resistance grew more stub-
Fontenay, and Fontenay-sur-Mer. On born as he was forced back against his
the left, the enemy had scattered posi- main line on the Quineville ridge.
tions in the mile-and-a-half gap between Freed now for the attack north, Task
the 22d and 12th Infantry Regiments. Force Barber devoted its entire strength
Too weak to contain the enemy on its to the reduction of the Ozeville fortifica-
flanks and at the same time push ahead, tions. Two battalions took up flanking
and plagued by bad weather which pre- positions from which they could deliver
vented air support, Task Force Barber mortar, tank, and cannon fire on the
made little headway for the next three enemy defenses while the 3d Battalion,
days. with a company of chemical mortars and
On 12 June General Collins, VII a platoon of tanks, advanced behind artil-
Corps commander, decided to commit lery concentrations from two battalions.
another regiment on the right to clear At the same time naval fire neutralized
the fortified beach and coastal area and German guns at Quineville. Bad weather
so free General Barber for his main mis- again prevented the use of air, but the
sion of advancing to capture the Quine- concentrated volume of fire was decisive.
ville ridge. Collins was also anxious to Ozeville in short order hung out the
take out the coastal batteries whose white flag. The close of the fight, how-
harassing fire on UTAH Beach threatened ever, was not to be capitulation. An
to slow down the unloading of supplies. American officer trying to stop the firing
Accordingly the 39th Infantry of the 9th in order to receive the signaled surrender
Division, which had landed on 11 June, was shot down. Infuriated, the assault
was committed in the zone roughly from company rushed the enemy emplace-
the Fontenay-sur-Mer-St. Marcouf road ments with bayonets and grenades and
all but exterminated the garrison.
4With the 899th Tank Battalion and the bulk of Capture of Ozeville was the signal for
the 746th Tank Battalion attached. the 12th Infantry on the left to advance
THE CAPTURE OF CHERBOURG (8 JUNE-l JULY) 393

to its objective on the Montebourg end formed to contain the city. The right-
of the Quineville-Montebourg ridge. wing units of the 4th Division then set
The 12th Infantry had actually reached about completing their D-Day tasks. What
this objective on the morning of 11 June remained was the capture of the Quine-
but it was then far ahead of units on both ville ridge. The 12th Infantry, which
flanks. It was therefore ordered back be- already occupied the western end of the
hind the Montebourg-St. Floxel road ridge, was to hold there and protect the
where it remained on the defensive until 22d Infantry’s left flank while the 22d
the attack on Ozeville seemed assured of advanced north and then east along the
success. Late in the afternoon of 12 June ridge toward Quineville. At the same
it reoccupied the heights of les Fieffes time Colonel Flint with the 39th Infantry
Dancel.5 would attack north along the beach and
The enemy from the Merderet to west edge of the inundations.
Montebourg had thus been forced back Progress of the attack during 13 June
to the line of the railroad by the night of was disappointingly slow. The 39th In-
12 June. Montebourg itself remained in fantry made only small gains while Colo-
enemy hands. Until 12 June General nel Tribolet’s 22d Infantry was able only
Barton felt that the limited forces at his to maneuver into position for attack in
disposal would not warrant involving any column of battalions down the ridge to
considerable numbers of them in street Quineville. On 14 June the attack was
fighting. On that day, after reports that resumed. Tribolet’s three battalions
Montebourg was lightly held, he at last fought their way to the nose of the ridge
ordered Colonel Van Fleet to take the and captured two hills just west of
city, if it could be done cheaply. Quineville. The 3d Battalion of the 39th
Actually the Germans were prepared Infantry in the meantime came up from
to defend Montebourg strongly as a key the south and, when abreast of the 22d
to the defense of Cherbourg. Located in Infantry, turned east. The plan then was
the angle between the German line de- for it to continue the advance on the
fending south under von Schlieben and town of Quineville with the 3d Battalion,
the line of the 91st Division defending 22d Infantry. Instead, Colonel Flint
west, the city was ordered to be held with permission of the division attacked
with every available means. On 8 and 9 alone, after a bombardment of Quine-
June twenty-five light French tanks and ville by thirty-six A-20’s.
the 3d Battalion of the 919th Regiment Company R of the 39th led off the at-
had moved in to the defense.6 tack and at first moved rapidly. Sup-
When the 8th Infantry task force dis- ported by mortar fire the company en-
covered the strength of the Montebourg tered Quineville but at once ran into
garrison, the attack was called off and a stiff opposition from Germans defending
mixed force of infantry and armor of the beach positions east of the town.
somewhat less than battalion size was There was little room for maneuver and
it was impossible to employ the other two
5 Colonel Reeder was wounded on 11 June and Lt.
Col. James S. Luckett took command of the regiment. companies without exposing them in
6 MS # C-018 (Keil) ; MS # B-845 (Schlieben). open fields barred by wire entanglements.
QUINEVILLE. Village is in foreground. At top of photograph along beach is
Quineville Bains.
THE CAPTURE OF CHERBOURG (8 JUNE-l JULY) 395

Tanks could not advance because of an impossible.8 Actually with all airfields
antitank gun on the beach and heavy in the vicinity of the coast unusable,
enemy mortar fire. The answer was Luftwaffe fighters were never able to in-
smoke. A concentration fell squarely on tervene in the Cotentin battles.
enemy positions and permitted Company While awaiting ground reinforce-
K to push the attack to the beach forti- ments, Marcks tried to straighten out the
fications. The enemy’s situation was command situation in the Cotentin.
then hopeless and he promptly surren- Troops had been rushed hurriedly into
dered. While the capture of Quineville battle and committed promptly on ar-
was accomplished, the 1st Battalion of the rival to plug the defense wherever the
39th Infantry, despite severe casualties weakness seemed most critical at the
from mines, had completed the clearing time. Reorganization became necessary.
of the beach with the capture of Fort St. Marcks named Generalleutnant Heinz
Marcouf. Hellmich of the 243d Division to com-
The northern flank of VII Corps an- mand a Kampfgruppe of these miscella-
chored on the Quineville ridge was neous units along the Montebourg-
now secure. In the ensuing lull in the Quineville line. The formation of
fighting the enemy would be allowed to Kampfgruppe Hellmich simplified the
build up slightly opposite the 4th Divi- chain of command, but at the lower
sion but his attitude remained purely levels it is probable that the mixed
defensive. Actually, after the initial at- Kampfgruppe had considerably less co-
tempt to counterattack on 6 June, the hesion in defense than regular units
Germans never could muster enough would have had.
strength on this front to take the offen- On 10 June the advance elements of
sive. On the contrary, from 9 June they the 77th Division, consisting of about a
became increasingly concerned over their battalion, arrived in the vicinity of
ability to hold and prevent a clean break- Valognes. Two days later the bulk of
through to Cherbourg. On the 9th the the division was in position on both sides
77th Division received orders to pro- of the Merderet. General Dollmann ex-
ceed to Valognes and at the same time pressed himself as satisfied that the situa-
General Marcks, the corps commander, tion was restored to balance on this por-
secured the immediate release of two bat- tion of the front.B Units of the new
talions from the Cherbourg Landfront. division relieved Kampfgruppe . Hofl-
He also asked for air support, saying that mann, which had been holding the west-
the fate of his troops, pressed hard be- ern wing of the Montebourg line.10 But
tween Montebourg and Marcouf, de- the restored balance was short-lived.
pended on it. Third Air Force replied Again success in the defense of one sector
that bad weather made it momentarily was almost immediately nullified by
7Seventh Army, KTB l.I.-30.VI.44, 9 Jun 44; breaks in the line elsewhere. The Ger-
Kriegsgliederung, 18 May 44. Seventh Army, KTB
Anlagen l.I.-30.VZ.44; MS # B-845 (Schlieben) . 8.Seuenth Army, KTB 1.I-30.VI.44, 9 Jun 44.
The battalions released were the 2d Battalion, 92Zst 9 Ibid., 11 Jun 44.
Regiment, and 1st Battalion, 922d Regiment (both of 10Hoffmann Report. Seventh Army, KTB An-
the 243d Division). lagen 1 .I.-30.VI.44.
396 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

mans’ Montebourg line could hold only 508th Parachute Infantry Regiments, to
so long as their position on the west gether with some tanks and artillery and
remained firm. U.S. VII Corps troops in the 1st Battalion of the 325th Glider In-
the week following D Day hammered this fantry which had moved up with the 8th
position into crumbled ruins. Infantry after landing by sea. West of
the river were three organized but iso-
Attack to Cut the Peninsula lated groups, ranging from company to
battalion size. After the failure of the
The drive north had reached only a attempt to establish a bridgehead at la
little beyond D-Day objectives in a week Fiere on D Day, the 82d Airborne Divi-
of hard fighting. The delay had been sion had been under violent counterat-
caused chiefly by German success in tack. While elements of the division held
bringing up considerable reinforcements the bridge, other units cleared the east
to hold a line which the enemy command bank of the river and established firm
deemed vital to the defense of Cher- contact with American forces to the
bourg. On the VII Corps west flank on the north and south.12
Merderet River a similar delay of about a Late on 8 June two men from Colonel
week in reaching D-Day objectives was Timmes’ force west of the Merderet dis-
caused principally by the original acci- covered a submerged but passable road
dents that befell the airborne drops and across the swamps north of la Fiere,
by terrain difficulties in subsequent at- crossed without incident, and reported
tempts to force the river crossing. Al- to division headquarters. The discovery
though the 91st Division was ordered to opened up a promising route to reach
counterattack the American bridgehead Colonel Timmes’ and Col. George V. Mil-
from the west, the Germans were never lett’s groups, isolated on the west bank,
able to concentrate in the Merderet area. and then attack south in force to clear
The parachute drops in their midst the enemy defending the la Fiere cause-
caused heavy losses and disorganization, way. The plan was for the 1st Battalion,
including the death of the division com- 325th Glider Infantry (Maj. Teddy H.
mander, General Falley, and effectively Sanford), to cross the swamp road after
stifled the planned attacks.11 dark while Colonel Millett’s force near
Even against relatively small enemy Amfreville thrust southeast to join with
forces, the problem of seizing a bridge- Colonel Timmes. Sanford’s battalion
head over the Merderet remained diffi- negotiated the crossing successfully and
cult. At the end of 7 June, there were at made contact with Timmes. (Map 6) But
la Fiere some 600 men of the 507th and in the meantime Millett’s attack failed
as his column, fired on in the dark, fell
11 Memo, Dollmann for Army Group B, 10 Jun 44. apart. Millett and some of his men were
Seventh Army, KTB Anlagen 1.I.30.VI.44. Seventh
Army considered the Allied mass use of airborne captured; the remainder withdrew north-
troops in an occupied area a brand new tactic com- east toward the river and took no further
parable to the British introduction of the tank in part in the fighting until 10 June. Lack-
World War I. Cf. von der Hevdte’s discussion of the
difficulties of assembling his cidely scattered troops
to concentrate for attack. MS # E839. 12See above, p. 346.
398 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

ing Millett’s support, Sanford organized and the disheartened. Congestion which
his men and headed for the western end threatened to abort the attack was made
of the causeway. They had not gone far worse by a tank that got out on the cause-
when the enemy opened heavy fire. The way and hit an uncleared American mine
Americans were thrown back with severe field. An enemy tank destroyed in earlier
losses to Colonel Timmes’ position along action already blocked the road in part.
the river east of Amfreville. The double constriction increased the
When Colonel Lewis, commander of difficulty of crossing and added to the
the 325th Glider Infantry, reported the casualties. Despite all this, men en-
failure of the attack, General Ridgway, couraged by Generals Ridgway and Gavin
the division commander, decided to re- and Colonel Lewis did succeed in reach-
new the attempt to force the causeway at ing the opposite bank and parts of two
la Fiere. The mission was given to the companies were able to proceed with
3d Battalion, 325th Glider Infantry, their missions. Company E cleared Cau-
which was to move up under cover of quigny with comparative ease as the Ger-
smoke from positions at Chef-du-Pont. mans under heavy fire from the east bank
A fifteen-minute artillery and tank fire were disposed to surrender.13 Company
preparation was arranged and a rein- G, deploying southward, made slower
forced company of the 507th Parachute progress. The delayed crossings meant
Infantry was to follow up the causeway that when the support company, Com-
attack if it faltered. General Gavin, the pany F, crossed under orders to mop up
assistant division commander, was di- the bridgehead it found no bridgehead.
rected to co-ordinate the attack. On the initiative of the commander,
Although the smoke screen proved too therefore, it attacked west along the main
thin and the troops of the 325th Glider In- road.
fantry came under enemy machine gun In the meantime, General Gavin, lack-
fire before they reached the line of depart- ing reports of progress in pushing out
ure, the men were able to creep up along a the bridgehead from the west bank and
stone wall to the jump-off point. At worried about the increasing congestion
1045 the attack was signaled and the men of the causeway, committed the company
left their shelter under orders to sprint of the 507th under Capt. R. D. Rae with
the 500 yards across the exposed cause- orders to sweep the causeway stragglers
way. Everything depended on the first across with him. A part of Captain Rae’s
dash. But it proved too much for most company pushed westward with Com-
of the men. Under mortar and artillery pany F and entered le Motey. Another
fire, all but a handful yielded to the over- part broke off to the south to seek con-
powering instinct to seek shelter, and tact with Company G. At the same time
though there was no shelter they threw a platoon of Company E in Cauquigny
themselves down along the roadside. was sent north to join the 1st Battalion,
Some were casualties, and later arrivals, 325th Glider Infantry, held up near Am-
seeing them, lost the spirit needed to freville. This platoon was pulled back
carry them across. The causeway became 13 See above, Ch. IX, n. 31, for glider regiment or-
congested with the dead, the wounded, ganization.
LE MOTEY CAUOUIGNY AMFREVILLE

LA FIERE CAUSEWAY. Merderet River is in foreground.


400 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

later when a patrol reached Major San- the east. When Company E moved up,
ford’s position and discovered that enemy it in effect exchanged positions with F,
pressure had so far eased that Sanford neither group having observed the
was actually freed to move as he wished. other’s move. Company E, coming into
While the north flank of the new bridge- line where it expected to find American
head was thus secured, fighting con- troops, was greeted only by enemy fire
tinued in the center and on the south, from the flanks. With a sense of isolation
complicated by confused small unit and under the impression of being coun-
maneuvers extremely difficult to control terattacked, it pulled out in disorder.
among the hedgerows. The retreat was checked by officers on
The gravest threat to the new bridge- the west bank of the river before it ac-
head developed during the day at le quired the momentum of a general
Motey. Le Motey, sited on a slight rise, panic, and fortunately the enemy made
afforded ideal ground for defense of the no move. The bridgehead was saved and
la Fiere causeway. By the same token, its the line was redressed. The four com-
commanding position and the cover of panies that had crossed from la Fiere
its buildings provided a good assembly were securely tied in on the north with
point for German forces to form for a the 1st Battalion, 325th Glider Infantry,
counterattack. It was the intention of plus Colonel Timmes’ force. On the
Company F and the company of the south, contact was made with the 2d
507th to clean out and secure the village. Battalion, 508th Parachute Infantry, un-
While they were proceeding to this der command of Colonel Shanley.
task, however, General Gavin on the For Shanley the la Fiere bridgehead
east bank of the river, unaware that the served as a long-overdue relief. He had
American push had already carried into fought for three days in a virtual state
le Motey and fearing a German as- of siege on Hill 30. Although he had a
sembly there,’ ordered the supporting relatively large force occupying stra-
artillery to pull back its fire and hold it tegic ground that might have provided
on the village. One or two shells fell on a basis for developing a bridgehead at
American troops. Few casualties were Chef-du-Pont, he attracted such heavy
suffered but commanders on the spot enemy pressure that he had to fight hard
tried in vain to get word back to have and ingeniously just to maintain his posi-
the fire lifted. Company F was therefore tion. As far as the command on the east
forced to withdraw to poorer defense bank of the river was concerned, Shan-
positions on the lower ground. In its ley’s men were isolated and apparently
new position the company found both its the only thought was to rescue them.
flanks open, and the commander there- One such attempt made on 9 June failed.
fore requested that Company E move up Not until the bridgehead was established
on his left. at la Fiere and tied in with Hill 30 did
That move was accomplished, but only Shanley’s real contribution to the divi-
after a considerable delay during which sion’s battle become clear. In denying to
Company F, apprehensive of being sur- the enemy control of the west bank of the
rounded, again withdrew a few fields to Merderet and in absorbing a large meas-
THE CAPTURE OF CHERBOURG (8 JUNE-l JULY) 401

ure of the enemy’s striking force which 82d Division just west of la Fiere. The
might otherwise have been pointed more 358th Infantry would cross at Chef-du-
sharply at la Fiere, he had done much to Pont attacking toward Picauville, Pont
assist the ultimate establishment of a l’Abbe, and St. Sauveur-le Vicomte.
bridgehead.14 When the 82d Airborne Division had
Late in the afternoon of 8 June the been relieved by the 90th’s attack, it
Merderet bridgehead was consolidated as would first hold the line of the Merderet
the 1st Battalion, 508th, was moved in River and then, following the 90th Divi-
between Colonel Shanley and the 325th. sion, would take over the security of the
With all units west of the Merderet at VII Corps south flank along the Douve.
last brought within a single bridgehead, The attack of the 90th Division jump-
the crossing was ready for exploitation ing off early in the morning of 10 June
in the first step of the major corps effort went badly from the start. The 357th
to cut westward across the peninsula. Infantry (Col. Philip H. Ginder) scarcely
This mission was given to the 90th advanced beyond the perimeter of the
Division (Brig. Gen. Jay W. MacKelvie), 9 June bridgehead. Just beyond le Motey
which had begun landing on D Day, and the regiment ran into strongly en-
verbal orders were issued by General trenched troops of the 1057th Regiment
Collins on 9 June.15 The 359th Infantry (91st Division). The 2d Battalion in the
had been attached to the 4th Division to lead recoiled under its first experience
assist the latter in the attack north in with heavy enemy fire and was relieved
accordance with the original operational in the afternoon by the 1st Battalion.
plan that contemplated committing the But the latter, attacking toward Amfre-
entire 90th Division on the 4th Division ville, made virtually no progress. Since
right for a co-ordinated advance on Cher- the 325th Glider Infantry had stayed in
bourg. Despite the change in plan, the position after being passed through, the
359th Infantry was to remain at first with bridgehead, though scarcely enlarged,
the 4th Division while MacKelvie op- remained secure. Ginder lost ninety-
erated west of the Merderet with his re- nine men in the action.
maining two regiments, the 357th and On the left, the 358th Infantry (Col.
358th. The initial divisional objective James V. Thompson) advanced a few
was the line of the Douve where the hundred yards west of Picauville before
river flows south between Terre-de- meeting serious resistance. It then halted
Beauval and St. Sauveur-le Vicomte. on Thompson’s order and the forward
(Map XXI ) Th e northern part of this companies dug in. Thompson felt that
objective was assigned to the 357th In- his position was insecure. Germans still
fantry attacking through the lines of the held out in a chlteau to the rear which
had been bypassed in the advance, and
14 For details of Shanley’s action see Col. S. L. A.
Marshall, “Affair at Hill 30,” The Marine Corps an engineer-infantry detachment ordered
Gazette, February 1948, pp. 8-15, and March 1948, to blow the Beuzeville-la Bastille bridge
pp. 20-25. over the Douve had been deterred from
15 VII Corps Opns Memo No. 10, 11 Jun 44, con-
tains the commanding general’s verbal order of 9 its mission by heavy enemy fire from
June. across the river. When the regiment
402 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

tried later in the afternoon to resume the the 100th Panzer Replacement Battalion,
attack westward, it was unable to move. which was holding this sector with a
Both the 1st and 3d Battalions dug in on large number of foreign personnel and
the forward line. The bulk of the 129 makeshift equipment, broke at first con-
casualties of the 1st Battalion, 358th In- tact with the Americans and pulled out.
fantry, during the first day of action ap- The debacle not only opened a new
pear to have been from mortar and artil- hole in the German lines but resulted
lery fire. in exaggerated reports of the strength of
On 11 June both regiments continued the American penetration. German
the attack, but nightfall found them still countermeasures were taken in the be-
short of the D-Day objective line set for lief that American armor had broken
the 82d Airborne Division by the orig- through in strength .18The Kampfgruppe
inal plan. The 357th Infantry was still of the 265th Division, which was just ar-
fighting in the vicinity of les Landes, and riving, was diverted to hold the Baupte-
the 358th had encircled but not captured les Moitiers sector and was ordered rein-
Pont l’Abbe. Next day the 359th In- forced by one battalion of the 1049th Reg-
fantry, released from attachment to the iment of the 77th Division to be brought
4th Division, was committed between down from the Cherbourg Landfront.19
Cinder and Thompson on a, 1,000-yard While the 508th Parachute Infantry
front and assigned objectives along the drove unexpectedly into a hole in the
Douve in the center of the division zone. enemy lines, the 90th Division continued
South of the 90th Division zone the its sticky movement through defended
508th Parachute Infantry, reinforced and hedgerow country. By 13 June it had
under command of Brig. Gen. G. P. struggled to its initial objectives roughly
Howell,16 was ordered to attack across on a line from Gourbesville to Pont
the Douve on 1.2 June to seize the area l’Abbe. The latter town was captured
between the river and the Prairies Mare- by the 358th Infantry after bombing and
cageuses and join with the 101st Air- artillery concentration had leveled it,
borne Division at Baupte. By the same leaving, as the regimental commander
order the 325th Glider Infantry was remarked, only two rabbits alive. Criti-
given the mission of defending the north cizing its own failures in the four-day
bank of the Douve westward as the 90th attack, the 90th Division afterward
Division advanced.17 After a night cross- pointed out that training lessons had not
ing of the river at Beuzeville-la Bastille, been properly applied, particularly the
Howell marched to his objective without doctrine of fire and maneuver and the
a fight worth mentioning and reached precept of closely following artillery.20
Baupte by 0800. What happened was that In the hedgerow country the normal
difficulties of any division green to com-
16 Howell was commander of the 2d Airborne
Brigade, a headquarters that originally controlled bat were greatly intensified. In a country
the 507th and 508th Parachute Regiments, which
were not organic to the 82d Airborne Division. In 18Actually TF Howell
had no tank support.
combat Howell was attached to the division head- 19Seventh Army, KTB
1.I.30.VI.44, 13 Jun 44.
quarters and assigned special missions. 2090th Div Opns Memo No. 2, 19-Jun 44; 358th
17 82d Abn Div Opns Memo, FO 6. Inf Jnl, 15 Jun 44.
THE CAPTURE OF CHERBOURG (8 JUNE-l JULY) 403

where each field constituted a separate the attack were issued by General Collins
battlefield and where there was no chance on 13 June. The 82d Airborne Division
of seeing what was happening on either was assigned the southern part of the 90th
side control was at times impossible. Division’s original attack zone with an
To the shock of experiencing hostile fire axis of advance along the Pont l’Abbb
for the first time was added the de- St. Sauveur-le Vicomte road; the 9th Di-
moralizing invisibility of an enemy en- vision in the northern half of the zone
trenched in natural earthworks and con- would attack toward Ste. Colombe. The
cealed in the thick vegetation that luxu- 90th Division, when passed through,
riated on their tops. These conditions would wheel north to take objectives
were, of course, pretty general through- along a line from le Ham to Terre-de-
out the Normandy fighting and each Beauval covering the north flank of the
division had to work out a solution. westward drive. On General Collins’ re-
General Eisenhower believed that the quest, General Bradley assigned the 79th
90th Division’s special difficulties were Division to VII Corps as a replacement
due to the fact that the division had not for the 90th, but as it turned out the
been “properly brought up.” 21 On 13 79th was not used in the attack.
June General MacKelvie, who had com- Attack on 14 June began in the south
manded the division since 19 January where the 358th Infantry advanced
1944, was relieved without prejudice and 1,000 yards west of Pont l’Abbe. General
replaced by Maj. Gen. Eugene M. Land- Ridgway committed his regiments about
rum.22 Two regimental commanders noon, the 325th Glider Infantry and the
were relieved at the same time. 507th Parachute Infantry abreast, left
The division was left in the line, but and right of the highway respectively.
General Collins decided to reorganize Despite an evening counterattack which
completely his attack scheme. The main forced back the right flank of the 507th,
attack west was to be taken over on 14 the division by night had pushed forward
June by the 9th Division (Maj. Gen. about a mile. While the 358th Infantry
Manton Eddy) and the 82d Airborne was relieved, the 359th began a pivot
Division.23 Detailed verbal orders for northward toward its new objectives,
opening a gap in the lines near Gottot.
21 Ltr to Marshall, 5 Jul 44. OPD file 319.1, sec. I, Here the 9th Division’s 60th Infantry
cases l-80.
22 General Landrum enlisted in 1910 and was com- (Col. Frederick J. de Rohan) was com-
missioned in 1916. He served with the American Ex- mitted, attacking through the narrow
peditionary Forces in Siberia in 1918-19. Assigned to zone in column of battalions. Under
the Alaskan Defense Command in 1942-43, he com-
manded U.S. troops in the occupation of Attu. In enemy mortar and artillery fire, the lead
October 1943 he took command of the 87th Division. companies advanced slowly to reach the
23 Each division put only two regiments into the Valognes-Pont l’Abbe highway by dark.
attack. The 39th Infantry of the 9th Division was
still engaged on the 4th Division right flank. The
505th Parachute Infantry was released from attach- General Eddy since 1942. Eddy, who had served with
ment to the 4th Division on the morning of 13 June. a machine gun detachment and been wounded in
The 508th Parachute Infantry had a defensive role World War I, led his troops in 1942 and 1943 through
in the Baupte bridgehead. The 9th Division, a battle- the campaigns of North Africa and Sicily before en-
tested unit like the 82d, had been commanded by tering the Normandy operations.
404 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Virtual paralysis of the 90th Division, 325th Glider Infantry got within 1,000
however, continued and the 359th and yards of St. Sauveur-le Vicomte while the
357th Infantry Regiments made little 505th Parachute Infantry, after relieving
progress. Two full days of fighting were the 507th, established its night line just
required for the 357th to take Gourbes- south of Reigneville. The 60th Infantry
ville, while the 359th inched forward and on the other hand was hit shortly after
a battalion of the 358th committed on the jump-off by a strong counterattack
15 June on the division right flank supported by tanks which drove it back
achieved little. to its line of departure. Fighting through
Whatever may be the full explanation the remainder of the day succeeded in
of the 90th Division’s continued slow recovering only about half the lost
progress, there is no question that the ground. Resistance here turned out to
German defense on the north and north- be the enemy’s last stand east of the
west was substantially stronger than on Douve.
the west. While Landrum faced elements Colonel de Rohan’s direction of at-
of the recently arrived 77th Division, tack had been shifted slightly to point
opposition to the drive due west was still more nearly due west, increasing the
only the 91st Division, now beaten down divergence between his advance and that
to a battle-weary Kampfgruppe. The of the 359th on the right. This permitted
bringing up of the Kampfgruppe of the another regiment to be committed be-
265th Division did not reinforce the tween them. The 47th Infantry (Col.
91st, since the bulk of the new unit was George W. Smythe) was brought in to
committed in the Pretot area south of attack shortly after noon for the high
the Douve where the Germans thought a ground west of Orglandes. Colonel
large-scale break-through threatened. Smythe’s advance was rapid, though he
General der Artillerie Wilhelm Fahrm- was bothered by the exposure of his
bather, who replaced Marcks as com- north flank which was harassed by enemy
mander of LXXXZV Corps after the fire from the vicinity of Orglandes. De-
latter’s death in an air attack on 12 June, spite this the regiment reached its ob-
reported to Seventh Army on 14 June jective by dark.
that a, large-scale American attack west- In planning the continuation of the
ward could not be held because of the attack on 16 June, General Collins de-
splitting and mixing of units, the fatigue cided to drive to the Douve with his
of the troops, and the lack of sufficient southernmost regiment (the 325th) re-
ammunition.24 gardless of whether commensurate ad-
He was right. On 15 June the 82d vances could be made on the rest of the
Airborne Division accelerated its ad- front. The whole attack would thus be
vance against decreasing opposition. The echeloned to the right rear, as each regi-
ment refused its right to tie in with the
24 Seventh Army, KTB 1.I.30.VI.44, 12 and 14 Jun regiment to the north of it. Speed in
44, and MS # B-784 (Criegern). Fahrmbacher, reaching the Douve seemed essential in
former commanding general of the XXV Corps in
Brittany, took command of LXXXIV Corps on the order to forestall enemy reinforcement.
evening of 12 June. Although the only enemy opposition con-
TANK ENTERING ST. SAUVEUR-LE VICOMTE. Company A of the 746th
Tank Battalion supported the 325th Glider Infantry in the aduance on St. Sauveur.
406 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

sisted of small groups fighting delaying the 9th Division and directed that, in-
action, it seemed possible that, given stead of stopping at the limited objec-
time, the Germans might be able to or- tives (Reigneville, Hautteville-Bocage,
ganize a co-ordinated defense along the Orglandes) assigned in the original order,
Douve. The main effort of the corps, Eddy should push his leading regiments,
General Collins announced on 15 June, the 47th and 60th, all the way to the
would now be to cut the peninsula. To Douve line, while the 39th swung around
give more weight and cohesion to the to protect the north flank. Eddy ordered
attack the 39th Infantry was returned to Colonel de Rohan to advance the whole
the 9th Division, and in addition the 60th Infantry to the river. Colonel
359th Infantry was attached, with the Smythe was assigned objectives for the
result that the division resumed the at- 47th Infantry on the high ground just east
tack with four regiments in line. The of Ste. Colombe. Smythe had a hard fight
90th Division committed only the 358th in the area of Hautteville-Bocage and Bi-
Infantry in its zone. The 82d Airborne niville on the last high ground east of the
Division employed the 325th Glider In- Douve, but pushed on to the main high-
fantry and the 505th Parachute Infantry way west of Biniville.
in the attack while the 507th relieved the While this advance was going on, the
508th in the Baupte sector and the latter 2d Battalion of the 60th Infantry under
regiment passed to reserve in the vicinity Lt. Col. Michael B. Kauffman, with the
of Pont l’Abbe. support of a company of tanks of the
The attack of the 82d Airborne Divi- 746th Tank Battalion, made a cross-
sion again made rapid progress on 16 country sweep, avoiding enemy contact
June, and before noon both the 325th except for a brush with some machine
Glider Infantry and 505th Parachute In- gunners, and entered Ste. Colombe.
fantry had reached the line of the Douve Scarcely pausing there, Kauffman’s lead
opposite St. Sauveur-le Vicomte. They company began crossing the river without
were joined here by the 508th, released any preparatory fire. The Douve at this
from reserve. General Ridgway, observ- point splits into three small streams and
ing the enemy withdrawing from St. the road traversing the river flat runs for
Sauveur, asked and received corps per- almost 1,000 yards between Ste. Colombe
mission to continue his advance. The and Nehou on the west bank. Both towns
city was occupied easily as artillery in- are built on the hills rising from the river
terdicted the escape routes north, south, valley, but the slopes are gradual and ob-
and west. The 505th and 508th together servation restricted by the ubiquitous
established a bridgehead 2,000 to 3,000 hedgerows. With tanks in the vanguard,
yards in depth. the crossing of the first two bridges pro-
Actually the Germans had been pull- ceeded uneventfully. But the third bridge
ing out through St. Sauveur all during was out and the tanks turned back. En-
the night and it looked as though they emy artillery fire began to range in on all
were in general retreat. General Collins three rifle companies. Company E reached
therefore decided to accelerate his attack. the west bank and dug in before Nehou,
Before noon he called General Eddy of under increasing enemy artillery and di-
DOI JVE RI\‘ER NEHOU STE COLOM BE

STE. COLOMBE-NEHOU AREA. Circles indicate position of bridges.


408 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

rect large-caliber fire. The other two com- spected throughout the German west
panies, disorganized by enemy fire, either army as an inspired leader, was killed. His
dug in between the bridges or withdrew death coincided roughly with the loss of
to Ste. Colombe. Company G was at last Carentan, the capture of the Quineville
moved up to support Company E on the ridge, which strained von Schlieben’s
west bank and during the night the 3d Montebourg line to the breaking point,
Battalion was brought up to bolster the another postponement of offensive action
shaky line. against Caen by the I SS Panzer Corps,
and a discouraging survey by Seventh
Hitler Intervenes Army of the resources remaining in Brit-
tany to reinforce the Normandy front.
By the end of 16 June, the 9th and 82d This survey turned up only a handful of
Divisions together had broken the last mobile battalions suitable for transport
enemy defenses east of the Douve in their to the battle area.25 In Normandy Seventh
zones and had given impetus to what Army had no closed front, no prepared
looked like a precipitate German with- positions behind the front, and no possi-
drawal that might be followed rapidly to bility of even making up the losses in
the sea. As a matter of fact the way wyls front-line units, much less of building up
open, and the withdrawal was actually the a striking reserve.
retreat of disorganized remnants; the 91st Still worse was the situation in the rear
Division had been smashed beyond re- areas, where Allied air power assisted by
pair. saboteurs of the French Resistance had
For the Germans, the threatened split- so effectively sealed off the battlefields
ting of their Cotentin forces was serious that supplies and replacements could not
enough in itself. But the crumbling of the hope to keep up with the need. Before 6
91st Division was not a unique or merely June Leigh-Mallory’s tactical air forces
local failure; it took place against a back- had knocked out all the bridges across
ground of developing crisis in the whole the Seine River between Mantes-Gassi-
German defense of the west-a crisis that court and the sea. (See Map IV.) Between
in the view of OKW demanded not tac- 6 and 15 June at least eight bridges over
tical doctoring but far-reaching revision the Loire were destroyed and all were se-
of policy. verely damaged.26 The Seventh Army
During the first week of operations quartermaster noted on 13 June that rail
there remained a chance that German traffic since the invasion had been 90 per-
armor in the beachhead might be able to cent paralyzed. No transport at all had
seize the initiative at least locally and come into the army area from the east.27
that, by so doing, might so far check the One bridge over the Loire at Tours had
Allies as to allow the Germans to restore been repaired on 17 June to the extent
a balance of forces. Whether or not that 25Seventh Army, KTB 1.I,30.VI.44, 12 Jun 44.
was ever a real chance, by the end of the 26 AAF Evaluation Board, Effectiveness of Air At-
week it was becoming increasingly illu- tack Against Rail Transportation in the Battle of
France, Jun 45. AAF file 138.4-37.
sory. On 12 June General Marcks, the 27 Report of Railroad Situation, 13 Jun 44. Sev-
LXXXZV Corps commander, who was re- enth Army, O.Qu., KTB Anlagen 1.-30.VI.44.
SEINE RIVER BRIDGE AT MANTES-GASSICOURT UNDER BOMBARD-
MENT by aircraft of Ninth Air Force.
410 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

that it was possible to push cars across it, by the unpredictability of rail movements
although it could not support the weight resulted in an increasing paralysis that
of a ‘locomotive. An officer from army made impossible even traffic which was
headquarters was assigned to make sure not physically blocked. Finally, once the
that five trains a day were moved across.28 rate of attack outstripped the rate of re-
Interdiction at the river lines was re- pair, attacks causing only minor damage
inforced by air attacks on the rail centers had the same effect as destruction of large
of the Region Ouest and by continual portions of the rail system.
strafing attacks which made the Germans Examples of the effect of interdiction
refrain from risking rail movements that on troop movement have already been
would otherwise have been possible. For noted. The effect on supply was at least as
example, although some rail lines re- serious. During the first ten days of the
mained passable between Paris and Or- battle Seventh Army received from OB
leans traffic along them was negligible. In WEST supply depots a little over one mil-
the week ending mid-June only four lion gallons of gasoline against estimated
trains came through: in the three succeed- requirements of almost four million. To
ing weeks, none at all.29 Within the Sev- make up part of the deficit, about a third
enth Army area, the routes between Nor- of the 900,000 gallons in army stock piles
mandy and Brittany had been mostly de- was consumed. In the same period ammu-
stroyed by bombing and sabotage. Engi- nition requirements were 6,700 metric
neers worked night and day repairing the tons.31 Against actual consumption of
lines, but they could not keep up with the about 5,000 tons, deliveries amounted
rate of destruction. Finally, even on the only to 3,000, leaving again a deficit to
undestroyed routes, few undamaged lo- be made up out of local reserves. Against
comotives could be found to move the ten days’ ration requirements of 5,250
trains.30 tons, only 200 tons were delivered.32
The total effect of constant air attacks, By the middle of June, rail supply had
dispersed over main and secondary lines become impracticable. For supply by road
and small wayside stations, was much Seventh Army was allocated 1,300 tons of
greater than the reduction in rail capacity transport space, of which only about one-
statistically computed. In the first place, quarter was serviceable because of unre-
because losses of equipment and person- liable French drivers and the disrepair of
nel through line attacks became insup- the vehicles.33 With this truckage Seventh
portable in view of already grave short- Army needed to bring up daily 3,200 tons
ages, the Germans were forced to ban
nearly all daylight movements, thus cut- 31A metric ton equals 2,204 pounds and thus com-
ting two-thirds of their capacity. In addi- pares roughly to a U.S. long ton (2,240 pounds).
32 Supply Requisition and Consumption Figures
tion, cumulative disorganization caused for Seventh Army, 6.-lS.VI.44, 15 Jun 44. OB WEST,
OQu., KTB Anlagen 1.I.-17.VIII.44.
28Seventh Army, Trans.O., KTB 1.1.30.VI.44, 17 33 Report of the Supply Situation, 14 Jun 44. OB
Jun 44. WEST, O.Qu., KTB Anlagen lJ.-17.VIII.44. German
29 AAF Evaluation Board study, cited n. 26. Transportraum (transport space) means total ca-
30 Report of Railroad Situation, cited n. 27. pacity of vehicles fully loaded.
THE CAPTURE OF CHERBOURG (8 JUNE-l JULY) 411

of ammunition, gasoline, and rations for fighter planes. 36 Without such air sup-
a defensive action or 4,500 tons for attack. port, the transport situation would cer-
Although the army had substantial stores tainly get progressively worse. The Ger-
of ammunition on hand, most of it was man Army would continue to have its
captured material and most of it was in strength drained away far behind the bat-
Brittany. Dollmann estimated a mini- tle lines.
mum need for 3,000 more tons of trans- Hitler’s solution to this dilemma was
port space and a daily arrival of eight to to exhort the dying man to fight harder.
nine trains carrying gas, ammunition, ra- On 12 June Seventh Army received word
tions, and vehicles and equipment.34 He that every strong point and resistance nest
looked with envy at the vehicles with a surrounded by the enemy must fight to
capacity of 15,000 tons which were being the last man and the last bullet in order
held for the support of Fifteenth Army. to prepare for the counterattack which
But requests for transfer of trucks from would strike through to the coast. Hitler
Fifteenth Army were rejected by Rund- bluntly ordered Seventh Army to wipe
stedt and OKW who, in view of the esti- out the Allied beachhead between the
mates that large Allied forces still re- Vire and Orne Rivers.37 What Dollmann
mained in England, held to their belief would use to counterattack with was not
that the Kanalkueste was threatened by immediately clear. Hitler had taken one
a second landing. Allocation of more constructive step in canceling a planned
trucking might have eased the shortages, attack at Kowel on the Eastern Front so
but it was perfectly clear to General Doll- that the ZZ SS Panzer Corps with the 9th
mann that there was only one real solu- SS and the 10th SSPanzer Divisions could
tion. He wrote on 11 June that it was ab- be released for employment in the west.38
solutely essential that the German Luft- But the move of these reinforcements
waffe be committed in strength to elimi- would consume many days. Furthermore,
nate the unbearable enemy air superior- it was the opinion of Keitel and Jodl in
ity. 35 Supplies must be able to move by OKW that the time had passed when the
day if the army was to be nourished for situation could be patched up. Only a
offensive action. Armor must be rendered bold revision of strategy could hope to
mobile, not only by sufficient deliveries meet the crisis.
of gasoline, but by protection from direct Keitel and Jodl believed that the situa-
attack both in the battle zone and on the tion was very serious. If the Allies once
approach marches. Rail movement of Eought their way out of the beachhead and
troops and supplies could be resumed gained freedom of action for mobile war-
only if one line was protected with all fare, then all of France would be lost. The
available forces, engineers, Flak, and
36Seventh Army, Trans.O., KTB l.Z.-30.VZ.44.
37 Seventh Army, KTB l.Z.-30.VZ.44, 12 Jun 44; cf.
34Report of Seventh Army Supply Situation, 21 Fifteenth Army, KTB Anlagen Z.Z.-30.VZ.44, 12 Jun
Jun 44. Seventh Army, OQu., KTB Anlagen l.-30.- 44.
VZ.44. Ammunition stocks on 21 June amounted to 38 OKW/WFSt, KTB Ausarbeitung, Der Westen,
16,000 tons. l.ZV.-16.X11.44,cited hereafter as Der Westen. For
s5 Seventh Army, KTB l.Z.JO.VZ.44, 11 Jun 44. nature of the document, see above, Ch. VI, n. 115.
412 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

best hope of avoiding that defeat, they Germany and by naval alarm units. Prep-
felt, lay in an unsuccessful Allied landing arations were to be made for a mass ar-
attempt at some other point. But they mored counterattack using the three pan-
questioned whether the Allies would zer divisions relieved from the line and
make such an attempt unless they could the four panzer divisions that were on
be compelled to by the long-range rocket their way to the battle area (the 2d SS
bombardment of London soon to begin. from southern France, the 1st SS from the
If there were no second landing, a chance Netherlands-Belgium border, and the
still remained of isolating the Normandy 9th SS and 10th SS from the east).
beachhead. To that end, they thought, The plan looked good on paper. With-
German efforts should be directed with out really weakening any front-the Fif-
all possible means. 39On 13 June Jodl rec- teenth Army would actually be strength-
ommended to Hitler that the risks of ened-seven armored divisions would be
landings on other fronts now be accepted freed for offensive action. What the plan
and the maximum forces moved into the failed to take into account was simply the
critical fight for France.40 sum of the military realities of the battle
Three days later Hitler sent an order developing in Normandy. To discuss the
to Rundstedt which conformed in tone to future conduct of operations in more re-
the recommendations of OKW but in alistic terms, Rundstedt had asked that
substance amounted to no more than an- either Jodl or Warlimont come to France.
other attempt to patch up the front with- On 16 June Hitler decided to come him-
out altering the basic strategy.41 The or- self. Accordingly he flew from Berchtes-
der told Rundstedt to concentrate his gaden to Metz and then drove to a spot
forces, taking the risk of weakening all near Soissons where he met Rundstedt
fronts except that of Fifteenth Army. and Rommel on the morning of the 17th.
Specifically, one infantry corps (the There was an irony in the meeting place.
LXXX VI) was to be moved up from First Hitler, the field marshals, and their aides
Army. The 12th SS Panzer, Panzer Lehr, gathered in a concrete bunker that had
and 2d Panzer Divisions were to be re- been designed and built in 1940 at the
lieved by infantry divisions to be trans- height of Hitler’s success to serve as his
-ferred from Holland and the Fifteenth headquarters for the invasion of England.
and Nineteenth Armies. But the Fif- It had never been used until this mid-
teenth Army in return was to get two new June meeting called to discuss measures
divisions from Norway and Denmark, to check the swelling flood of military
and the Nineteenth Army’s loss would be disasters. The pall of defeat hung over
made up by transfer of one division from the meeting.

39 Conf, 12 Jun 44, ONI, Fuehrer Conferences, 1944. He [Hitler] looked sick and tired out.
The first ten V-l rockets were launched on the night
Nervously he played with his spectacles and
of 12-13 June. See Rad, OB WEST to OKW, 13 Jun
44. OB WEST, KTB Anlagen l.I.-30.VI.44. with colored pencils which he held between
40Der Westen; cf. MS # B-672 (Buttlar-Branden- his fingers. He sat bent forward on a high
fels) . stool while the field marshals remained
41Der Westen; Seekriegsleitung/l.Abt., KTB l.- standing. His old personal magnetism
30.V1.44, 16 Jun 44. seemed to have gone. After brief and cool
THE CAPTURE OF CHERBOURG (8 JUNE-l JULY) 413

greetings, Hitler, raising his voice, first ex- might cut the peninsula. He decided ac-
pressed sharp dissatisfaction with the sue- cordingly that two divisions (the 709th
cessful Allied landings, found fault with the
and the 243d) were sufficient for the de-
local commanders, and then ordered that
fortress Cherbourg be held at any cost.42 fense of Cherbourg and that the 77th Di.
vision should be moved to defend against
The field marshals sought in vain to im- the Americans’ westward push. Seventh
press Hitler with the need for compre- Army issued orders accordingly and pro-
hensive revision of the conduct of opera- vided that, if the peninsula were cut or a
tions in the west. What they wanted above break-through threatened in the Valognes
all was freedom of action, including per- sector, the 709th, 243d, and remnants of
mission to draw reserves at will from the 91st Division should fall back on
coastal areas not immediately threatened Cherbourg .44 Against this contingency,
by invasion. They deplored the depend- LXXXZV Corps divided the Cotentin
ence on fixed defense of fortified areas forces into two groups: Group von Schlie-
and recommended certain withdrawals ben, to be charged with the defense of
in order to shorten their lines and mass Cherbourg and comprising chiefly the
their forces. They predicted the fall of troops on the Montebourg line (except
Cherbourg and asked that future plans the 77th Division); and Group Hellmich,
be made accordingly.43 which with the 77th Division and all
To Hitler any proposal to withdraw, troops south and west of the Merderet
whatever its motive, was evidence of de- would have the mission of building a de-
featism. He made no direct reply but fensive line along the Prairies Mareca-
talked instead of how the tide would soon geuses north of la Haye du Puits.45
be turned by the V-weapons. The meeting The 77th Division apparently had
ended without decision, but Rommel and trouble disengaging on the north front,46
Rundstedt could not have been left in and no major moves were made on 15
any doubt that Hitler would continue to June. On the morning of the 16th Gen-
demand an absolutely rigid defense of eral Fahrmbacher of LXXXZV Corps tel-
every inch of ground. His decision on the ephoned army that the planned division
Cotentin crisis was characteristic. of forces must be carried out at once.
On 14 June it had been clear to Rom- Group Hellmich was already completely
mel that he must reckon with an Ameri- cut off from supplies and fought out; it
can break-through at St. Sauveur that could only hold for a matter of hours.
Only two companies of the 91st Division
42 MS # C017 (Speidel) Speidel, Rommel’s chief and scattered elements of the 243d Divi-
of staff, was present in the bunker during the meet- sion remained between the Americans
ing and took notes which he later expanded. See MS
# IL718 (Speidel) and the west coast. Fifteen minutes after
43 MS # C-017 (Speidel) Rundstedt recalled after Fahrmbacher had made his report and
the war that he had proposed at the meeting the urgent request for immediate action, Sev-
evacuation of southern France and withdrawal from
Normandy in order to establish a defensive line along 44 Seventh Army, KTB II.-30.VI.44, 14 Jun 44,
the Seine River to the Swiss border with Army Group 45 MS # B-784 (Criegern).
B on the right, Army Group G on the left. See MS 46Tel msg, CofS Seventh Army to CofS Army
# R-633 (Rundstedt) and MS # R-308 (Zimmer- Group E, 15 Jun 44. Seventh Army, KTB Anlagen
mann) . II-3O.VI.44.
414 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

enth Army was informed by Army Group night of 16-17 June command in the Co-
B that Hitler had forbidden the planned tentin remained paralyzed, letting slip
withdrawal of Group von Schlieben on what was in the judgment of both corps
Cherbourg. 47This meant that it would be and army commanders their last chance
impossible to shift the 77th Diuision from to rescue the 77th Division from the clos-
von Schlieben’s right flank, that nothing ing trap.
therefore could be done to prevent the Thus the time for action passed. The
cutting of the peninsula, and that the following day witnessed only anticlimax.
77th Division would be sacrificed in a On the morning of 17 June Hitler at Sois-
bitter-end fight to hold Cherbourg. The sons issued a new’order. He still did not
sacrifice furthermore promised to weaken authorize the 77th Division to pull out to
rather than strengthen the defense of the south. Instead he directed Rommel to
Cherbourg. With limited supplies in the defend Cherbourg under all circum-
fortress and little possibility of bringing stances as long as possible; Schlieben was
in more, an increase in the number of de- permitted to withdraw, but only under
fenders would simply reduce their en- pressure. This decision ignored the fact
durance. that, after the American break-through
Rommel was at LXXXZV Corps head- to the coast, the country to the north
quarters when the Hitler order reached would be undefended between Valognes
him late in the afternoon. In an effort to and the west coast, and that Schlieben’s
make the best of an impossible situation, whole position could thus be bypassed.
Rommel then decided that the 77th Di- Interpreting rather freely this relaxation
vision without giving ground should send of the original stand-fast order, Seventh
weak elements to the south. After Rom- Army at once ordered the 77th Division
mel had left the command post, Fahrm- to move south to assembly areas near la
bather called Seventh Army to say that Haye du Puits50 In the afternoon through
he had decided to shift the whole 77th OKW came a second order scarcely more
Division to the vicinity of St. Sauveur. realistic. Schlieben, instead of pulling
“The Chief of Staff [Pemsel] reminded back into the more or less prepared posi-
him of the Fuehrer order and asked tions of the Cherbourg Landfront, was
whether he had permission of Field Mar- now instructed to establish a line between
shal Rommel for this move. . . . General St. Vaast-la Hougue and Vauville which
Fahrmbacher replied that Rommel had he was to hold to the last.
not given his specific approval but that
they had talked about these measures only
50Later, in response to a questionnaire from Hit-
in that sense.” 48Army thereupon forbade ler, Seventh Army denied that it ever gave such an
the move. The orders earlier given to the order and that the withdrawal which actually took
77th Division to disengage and move place was done on the initiative of a regimental
commander. The available evidence, including a
south were countermanded.49 During the written 77th Division field order signed by General
Stegmann, argues strongly against this version of the
47 Tel msgs, 16 Jun 44. Seventh Army, KTB An- affair. See also the account by the LXXXZV Corps
lagen 1.I.-30.V1.44: chief of staff which leaves no doubt that at least
48Ibid. Seventh Army approved all the moves taken. MS
49 Captured German orders in VII Corps G-2 Jnl. # B-784 (Criegern).
THE CAPTURE OF CHERBOURG (8 JUNE-l JULY) 415

Both the delay in making these deci- west across the peninsula. The 82d Air-
sions and the unworkable compromise borne Division would come under its
that they entailed resulted in disastrous control and, in preparation for this, was
confusion which sacrificed the bulk of the ordered to attack south on 17 June to
77th Division without profit. Still more establish a bridgehead south of Pont
disastrous for the Germans than the tac- l’Abbe about a mile and a half deep. The
tical blunder was the principle that un- 9th Division would extend its zone south,
derlay it. The crisis of the Seventh Army, attacking with one regiment westward
strained beyond endurance in its attempt through the St. Sauveur bridgehead. The
to seal off the Allied beachhead, was to main effort of the 9th Division on 17 June
be met by pretending that it did not exist. was to be made by the 60th Infantry, at-
The renewed determination to hold ev- tacking through Nehou to capture Hills
erything meant that in the end nothing 145 and 133 dominating the west coast
could be held. The principle that with- in the 9th Division zone. The 47th In-
drawals should be undertaken only after fantry, attacking from St. Sauveur toward
enemy penetrations had made them im- St. Lo-d’Ourville, would protect its left
possible to organize in orderly fashion flank. The 39th Infantry would seize and
meant gaining a few hours for the defense hold the ground between Hautteville-
today at the cost of the battle tomorrow. Bocage and Ste. Colombe until the 90th
While the Germans were paralyzed in Division reached its objective.
the Cotentin, General Collins on 16 June The attack drove ahead so fast against
prepared the final coup to strike to the nothing more than straggler units of a
coast, and at the same time alerted both completely disorganized enemy that orig-
the 4th and 79th Divisions for the next inal objectives were changed and battal-
step-the drive north. The 4th Division ions of both the 60th and 47th Infantry
was ordered to prepare for attack on Va- regiments were pushed up to cut the
lognes; the 79th Division was to get one coastal road at Grande Huanville and
regimental combat team ready for move- Barneville-sur-Mer. Escape routes to the
ment on four hours’ notice. The inten- south were effectively blocked when, dur-
tion was to pass the 79th through the 90th ing the night and the following morning
Division as soon as the latter had reached (18 June), elements of the 77th Division
its objective line from le Ham to Terre- attempted to carry out the ordered with-
de-Beauval. (See Map XXI. ) Concur- drawal to la Haye du Puits. West of Hill
rently, in anticipation of an early comple- 145 on the morning of 18 June, an enemy
tion of the drive to the west coast, the column, largely of artillery vehicles, was
southern flank was being organized to caught on the road and methodically de-
hold while VII Corps turned north stroyed by the guns of the 60th Field Ar-
toward Cherbourg. On 15 June VIII tillery Battalion, abetted by infantry and
Corps (Maj. Gen. Troy H. Middleton) antitank fire. This column and others
had become operational with the attach- destroyed near Barneville and north of
ment of the 101 st Airborne Division. The le Valdecie presumably included much of
mission of VIII Corps was the organiza- the 77th Division artillery, which was
tion of defensive positions from Carentan wholly lost in the attempt to evacuate it
416 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

to the south. On the other hand, the 3d (commanding the 77th Division after the
Battalion, 243d Artillery Regiment, suc- death of General Stegmann) to lead about
cessfully passed through the Americans 1,400 men through to the south.
at Barneville during the night.61 In the Relief of the 47th Infantry by the 357th
meantime a bitter night fight developed Infantry of the 90th Division was the be-
around St. Jacques-de-Nehou where the ginning of the new phase of corps opera-
1st Battalion, 39th Infantry, attached as tions. Control of the 90th and of the 82d
reserve to the 60th Infantry, occupied po- Airborne Division passed on 19 June to
sitions astride a north-south road. Ele- VIII Corps, charged with responsibility
ments of the 77th Division trying to move for the security of VII Corps’ south flank.
south attacked here before daylight on The 9th Division, relieved of defense of
18 June. Riflemen fought at close quar- the ground it had won in the drive across
ters, without artillery support, for the the peninsula, began to regroup for the
60th Field Artillery Battalion was forced attack on Cherbourg in conjunction with
to displace by the attack. Mortars at the 79th and 4th Divisions.
ranges of as little as 250 yards fired some
900 rounds. A limited withdrawal was at Advance to the Cherbourg Landfront
length directed and carried out in orderly
fashion. After daylight, as enemy pressure Plans for the final drive on Cherbourg
let up, the battalion prepared for a coun- were developed during 18 June by Gen-
terattack. After a heavy artillery prepara- eral Collins in consultation with General
tion reinforced by 81-mm. mortars which Bradley and some of the division com-
fired their entire basic load, the battal- manders. The original plan to attack
ion pushed back to its original positions, with the 4th and 90th Divisions, while the
taking 60 prisoners and counting about 9th Division blocked the St. LB-d’Our-
250 enemy dead. Among the Germans ville corridor on the west coast, was
who fell here was the 77th Division com- changed in favor of a stronger attack de-
mander, Generalmajor Rudolf Stegmann, signed to move fast and take maximum
fatally wounded by a fighter-bomber at- advantage of German disintegration. A
tack. fresh division, the 79th, was to replace
The 9th Division lines were not pene- the 90th, which would take over the 9th
trated on 18 June by any substantial en- Division responsibility for blocking along
emy force. But the next day, after the the west coast. Three divisions, the 9th,
357th Infantry (90th Division) had re- 79th, and 4th, would then jump off
lieved the 47th Infantry near St. Lo- abreast. (Map XXII ) On the right, the
d’ourville, a battalion of the 1050th 4th Division was to bypass the coast de-
Grenadier Regiment (77th Division) fenses in order to advance directly on
captured a bridge over -the Ollande River Cherbourg as rapidly as possible. To
along with more than a hundred Ameri- screen its right flank the 24th Cavalry
cans and enabled Oberst Rudolf Bacherer Squadron was committed. The 4th Cav-
alry Squadron under 4th Cavalry Group
51During all the fighting since D Day and the
withdrawal on 17 June the battalion lost only four
control was also to be put in line to attack
guns. between the 9th and 79th Divisions. Thus
THE CAPTURE OF CHERBOURG (8 JUNE-l JULY) 417

VII Corps would commit its full combat nated objectives between Rauville-la
strength in the attack. Bigot and St. Germain-le Gaillard before
Through capture by the 9th Division noon. The 4th Cavalry Squadron kept
of field orders of the German LXXXIV pace until it reached Rocheville. There
Corps and the 77th Division, VII Corps it was delayed by enemy resistance and
had a pretty accurate picture of the state at noon the squadron lagged slightly be-
of German defenses in the peninsula. hind the 9th Division.
General Collins knew of the splitting of To keep the 9th Division attack go-
German forces and of the order to Gen- ing, it was necessary to protect its right
eral Schlieben to withdraw on the fort- flank. A battalion of the 359th Infantry
ress Cherbourg. The last-minute attempt (90th Division) was brought up to hold
of the 77th Division to pull south of the the Rocheville area. The 4th Cavalry
9th Division lines had been cut off, and Squadron was attached to the 9th Divi-
it could be assumed that disorganization sion and its zone extended northward.
existed in the western half of the German These arrangements completed by the
lines. By attacking fast and hard VII middle of the afternoon, General Eddy
Corps might exploit the disorganization ordered resumption of the attack. Still
as well as push General Schlieben’s without opposition, the 39th Infantry
planned withdrawal into a rout. The VII reached Couville and St. Christophe-du-
Corps G-2 estimated that the enemy Foe while the 60th Infantry, bypassing
would fight delaying actions and would les Pieux, put leading elements into
stand for a defense of Cherbourg on the Helleville. The cavalry, delayed briefly
line of hills ringing it to a depth of about by enemy artillery and small arms fire
five miles. Fixed defenses in this position near Rauville-la Bigot, nevertheless kept
had been reconnoitered and plotted accu- abreast and entered St. Martin-le Greard
rately long before D Day. Although the that night. From Rocheville east the
exact number of German troops at Gen- corps attack met increasing opposition.
eral Schlieben’s disposal for the defense The 79th Division (Maj. Gen. Ira T.
of Cherbourg could only be guessed at, Wyche) 52 attacked from the line Golle-
it was known that all his major combat ville, the objective of the 90th
units (the 709th, 243d, 91st and 77th Di- Division in its week-long push north
visions) existed only in fragments. The from the Merderet bridgehead. The
total enemy force locked in the peninsula 313th Infantry (Col. Sterling A. Wood)
was variously estimated at between on the left reached its objective, the
twenty-five and forty thousand including Bois de la Brique, west of Valognes
Flak and naval personnel and Organiza- against only slight resistance. But the
tion Todt workers. 315th Infantry (Col. Porter B. Wiggins),
The estimate of enemy capabilities which was supposed to bypass Valognes to
proved substantially correct. The 9th ss General Wyche was graduated from West Point
Division, beginning its attack at 0550, in 1911. Commissioned in the infantry he transferred
19 June, found nothing in front of it, in 1917 to the field artillery. In the 1930’s he com-
manded various artillery units and in 1941 became
and the 60th and 39th Infantry Regi- commander of the 74th Field Artillery Brigade. In
ments marched rapidly to their desig- May 1942 he took command of the 79th Division.
418 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

the west and cut the Cherbourg highway attacking troops was tenuous and some
northwest of the city, was held up by fire units got lost. It was not until daylight
from Urville and a counterattack at that the attack could start moving with
Lieusaint. At night it was still southwest tank support. Then both regiments
of Valognes. General Wyche then de- broke the German line. Schlieben began
cided to leave Wiggins there in position to to withdraw. The 8th Infantry at night-
contain the city, move Wood’s regiment fall was just south and east of Valognes;
to the right of the division zone, and the 12th Infantry was on its right. The 3d
commit the 314th on its left. The 314th Battalion of the 22d Infantry entered
Infantry (Col. Warren A. Robinson) Montebourg at 1800 and found it de-
moved out during the night and came up serted. Later in the evening the 22d In-
abreast of Wood about dawn. fantry was concentrated on the division
In all the VII Corps zone, only the 4th right flank to take part in a three-regi-
Division encountered organized resist- ment attack the next day.
ance. Since General Barton had held the The resistance in front of the 4th Di-
line from Quineville to Montebourg vision on 19 June was actually little more
Station for four days, the enemy had had than a gesture by General Schlieben at
ample time to prepare defenses against carrying out his orders to fight his way
the anticipated thrust to Cherbourg. slowly back to fortress Cherbourg. The
Barton ordered the 8th and 12th Infantry orders could scarcely have been carried
Regiments to attack abreast on a north- out. On his west flank, General Schlieben
west axis on either side of Montebourg. had no positions to hold and only dis-
The 24th Cavalry Squadron screened the organized troops who would have been
right flank while the 22d Infantry was needlessly sacrificed if they had attempted
held in reserve. Through probing by a stand. The plunge forward of the 9th
patrols during the division’s four days in and 79th Divisions during 19 June ren-
place, it was known that elements of the dered defense of the sector opposite the
Seventh Army Sturm Battalion and the 4th Division useless and dangerous. Dur-
729th Regiment (estimated at l,000- ing the night, therefore, General Schlie-
1,500 men) were dug in generally along ben ordered a general disengagement on
the spur railroad that runs from the main this front and drew all his force back to
Cherbourg line just north of Monte- the fortress ring immediately defending
bourg. The plan was to strike through Cherbourg. Delaying actions were or-
this prepared line before daylight, and dered, but the battle-weary troops did
both regiments jumped off at 0300. not stop to fight them.68
Fighting all along the line was similar. 58 Hoffmann Report. Seventh Army, KTB Adagen
None of the forward battalions were able II.-N.VZ.44. Hoffmann pointed out that the Amer-
to break the German defenses in the icans were apparently unaware of the gap in the
German lines west of Valognes where the Kampf-
dark although at least one company gruppe of the 77th Division had pulled out to head
walked right through the line without south. An attack through this gap, Hoffmann be-
being fired on. Where the enemy fought, lieved, either would have turned Schlieben’s flank
and prevented his withdrawal to Cherbourg or
however, he was in deep entrenchments would at least have made that withdrawal more
and difficult to dislodge. Control of the precipitate and disorganized.
THE CAPTURE OF CHERBOURG (8 JUNE-l JULY) 419

When the 4th Division resumed the sitions athwart the Cherbourg-Cap de
attack on 20 June, it found open country la Hague road.
ahead. At first the troops advanced cau- The plan outlined on the afternoon of
tiously. They paused to investigate the 19th was complicated by the dual
Valognes. The city was choked with mission of the division: to breach the
rubble but no enemy were in sight. By Cherbourg fortress by capture of what
noon it was clear that the enemy had were thought to be its two main de-
broken all contact and the regiment took fenses in the 9th Division zone, Flotte-
route march formations on the roads and manville and the Bois du Mont du Rot;
walked north. In this way all arrived by and to block the Cap de la Hague where
nightfall on their objectives in a line it was known the enemy had prepared
from le Theil to the Bois de Roudou. defenses to which he might fall back for
This line was just in front of the main a prolonged last stand. The latter mission
enemy defenses of Cherbourg, and as the was given Colonel de Rohan’s 60th In-
leading companies approached they fantry with orders to drive straight north
brushed with enemy outposts and in to seize positions from Hill 170 through
some cases came under severe hostile ar- Branville to the sea. Colonel Flint with
tillery fire. the 39th Infantry would initially contain
The experience of the 79th Division the enemy to the east while the 47th In-
on 20 June was similar. Both the 313th fantry followed behind de Rohan as far
and 314th Infantry Regiments advanced as Vasteville, then turned east in front
to the road running roughly east-west be- of Flint’s positions to attack the Bois
tween the Bois de Roudou and St. du Mont du Rot. Colonel Flint would
Martin-le Greard. On that line both met support this attack with fire, then move
resistance which clearly indicated that on north across the rear of the 47th In-
they had hit outposts of the Cherbourg de- fantry to attack Flottemanville.
fenses. Eloquent of the haste with which The advance of the 60th Infantry,
the Germans had withdrawn was the paralleling the main enemy defenses,
capture intact at one point of four light was rapid until about noon when it
tanks and an 88-mm. gun and at another reached high ground a few hundred
of eight tanks. The 315th Infantry dur- yards from its initial objective, Hill 170.
ing the day cleared stragglers from the It was slowed then by increasing enemy
Valognes area and then moved into re- artillery fire. Delay here, however, was
serve positions behind the lead regiments. not serious, for sufficient advance had
The 9th Division, which on 19 June been made to permit the 47th Infantry
had already come up against the outer following to come up west of its objec-
veil of the main enemy defenses, had tives and make the turn east. The 1st
quite a different experience on 20 June. and 2d Battalions attacked abreast north
On wings of optimism in the course of the and south of the Bois de Nerest. Both
rapid unopposed advance of 19 June, were stopped not far from their line of
VII Corps had given General Eddy ob- departure as the enemy suddenly un-
jectives deep inside fortress Cherbourg: covered a stiff and carefully prepared
Flottemanville-Hague, Octeville, and po- defense. The experience of the 2d Bat-
420 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

talion was typical of what happened all the city. Advantage was taken of steep-
along the front as VII Corps pressed in sided stream beds for antitank obstacles,
on the enemy’s last bastion. Fired on by and these were supplemented by ditches
German outposts in houses at a cross- where necessary. Included within the
roads southeast of Acqueville, the bat- ring of defense were antiaircraft bat-
talion was first checked. Then from the teries sited for both air and ground de-
main enemy positions on hills to the fense. Although most of the fixed de-
east came withering direct and indirect fenses had long been known to the Amer-
fire from 88-mm., 20-mm., and machine icans and were overprinted on maps
guns. The command group of the battal- issued to all commanders, extensive re-
ion was hit by a shellburst, the com- connaissance of the positions was or-
mander, Lt. Col. James D. Johnston, mor- dered on 21 June in order to discover
tally wounded, and a number of his offi- whether certain sectors might not be
cers injured. Unable to push forward, the weakly held.
battalion had to withdraw out of the During 20 June, after Schlieben’s re-
area of concentrated fire. treat from the Montebourg line, the
Since, with the 47th Infantry stopped, Germans had reorganized the Cherbourg
the 39th would be unable to advance past Landfront as far as possible to put regi-
it toward objectives to the north, General mental commanders in sectors familiar
Eddy promptly altered the division plan. to them and their own troops under
Objectives at Flottemanville were as- them. Foreign and miscellaneous units
signed to the 1st and 2d Battalions of drawn back from the fighting in the
the GOth Infantry while the 3d Battalion peninsula or already present in the port
was directed to carry out a portion of the were distributed throughout the regi-
regiment’s original blocking mission by mental sectors. Four regimental Kampf-
taking positions on the crossroads formed gruppen were formed. On the west a
by the junction of the les Pieux and group under Oberstleutnant Franz
Cherbourg roads into- Cap de la Hague. Mueller, commander of the 922d Regi-
Again the advance north proved rela- ment, comprised the remnants of the
tively easy and the 3d Battalion came 243d Division in the sector between
within 1,000 yards of its objectives. But Vauville and Ste. Croix-Hague. The
the two battalions that attempted to Landfront fortified line from there to the
turn east were stopped virtually in their Bricquebec-Cherbourg road was taken
tracks in front of Gourbesville. The 9th over by the 919th Regiment and the
Division ground to a halt. Road marches 17th Machine Gun Battalion under
were over; hard fighting lay ahead. Oberstleutnant Guenther Keil. Oberst
The German defenses now faced by Walter Koehn with the 739th Regiment
VII Corps consisted of a belt of concrete occupied the line eastward to just south
and field fortifications disposed in a semi- of Mesnil au Val, and on the east was
circle four to six miles from Cherbourg. Oberst Helmuth Rohrbach’s 729th
Placed in commanding ground along the Regiment. The combat efficiency of all
collar of steep hills, the German posi- the troops now asked to make a last stand
tions covered every approach route into before the port was extremely low. Those
THE CAPTURE OF CHERBOURG (8 JUNE-l JULY) 421

who had fought on the northern front Infantry, which was thus enabled to use
against the 4th Division were fought out all three of its battalions for the attack
and the “battalions” contained not more against Flottemanville. The reserve bat-
than 180 effectives.54 The miscellaneous talion of the 47th was committed be-
troops from naval and air force security tween the other two. In short, all three
units and headquarters staffs were all regiments of the division were concen-
green. Schlieben reported to Seventh trated in line and the 60th and 47th,
Army that he was especially worried which would carry the brunt of the at-
about these troops. “Good treatment of tack, had all their rifle battalions for-
prisoners on the part of the enemy,” he ward. The 79th Division similarly con-
reported, “is very dangerous.” 55 On the centrated its weight for the attack by
other hand he was not concerned about bringing up its reserve regiment, the
supply. Ammunition was generally suf- 315th Infantry, into the St. Martin-le
ficient for immediate needs and, except Greard area on the left flank, where it
for a shortage of machine gun cartridges, took over from the 9th Division. Patrols
stocks were maintained at adequate levels of both divisions probing into the enemy
during the defense by air drops and U- lines during the day found the enemy
and E-boat deliveries.56 very sensitive. Attempts to move up
The 9th and 79th Divisions devoted brought storms of artillery and small
the day of 21 June to patrolling and re- arms fire all along the line and yielded
organization while the 4th Division, still a only the negative information that the
little short of the enemy’s ring of pre- enemy would apparently fight hard
pared defenses, continued the attack to everywhere.
reach the objectives of the day before The attack of the 4th Division com-
and develop the German main line of pleted the development of the German
resistance. The 9th Division readjusted main line of resistance. The 22d In-
its front to put its full weight in position fantry, ordered to thrust straight north
to drive into Cherbourg. The 4th Cav- to cut the main road from Cherbourg
alry Squadron was relieved on the right east to St. Pierre-Eglise, put the 3d Bat-
by the 39th Infantry and took over talion on its objective, Hill 158, which
screening of the left flank from the 60th was on the Cherbourg road and just
southwest of the heavily defended
54Hoffmann (in report cited n. 53) estimated that
a worth-while defense of the port would have re- Maupertus airfield. The advance was
quired three full divisions with armored support, resisted, however, and the 1st Battalion
and insurance of regular resupply. Such a force, he was held up 500 yards short of the hill.
believed, might have held out for several weeks, but
even they would have to have been relieved by a Both battalions, moreover, found large
successful attack from the south. Cf. Schlieben’s esti- though apparently unorganized German
mate, MS # B-845. forces to their rear near Gonneville, and
55Seekriegsleitung/l.Abt., KTB 1.-30.VI.44,21 Jun
44.
for four days supply trains had to fight
56 Air drops were modest. Between 20 and 30 June their way up with tank escort.
only 107 transport planes were used and they dropped The 8th and 12th Infantry Regiments
a total of 188 tons of supplies. Luftwafje Historical
Section, Beurteilung des Krieges, 14 Aug 44. AAF during 21 June attacked northwest into
files. the main Cherbourg defenses. The 8th
422 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Infantry’s objective was high ground 800 with all three divisions drawn up tight
yards northwest of the Bois de Roudou. against the Cherbourg fortress, was ready
The attack plan called for the advance for the final assault.
of the 1st and 3d battalions north
through the woods while the 2d Battalion The Fall of Cherbourg
attacked northwest and west from Ru-
fosses. Enemy structures suspected to be The early capture of Cherbourg was
V-weapon sites had been observed in the given dramatic urgency by a four-day
corridor between the Bois de Roudou storm over the English Channel which
and the Bois du Coudray; the regiment’s struck without warning on 19 June. It
first mission was to clean these out. The struck just as the machinery for deliver-
1st and 3d battalions fought their way ing supplies across the beaches had begun
out of the woods, meeting heavy fire to work smoothly and at full capacity.
from unfinished concrete shelters at the Initially considerable delay in the
northwest tip. The 3d Battalion fought planned build-up had been caused by the
through to the edge of its objective. stubborn German opposition to V Corps.
Attack by the 2d Battalion from the east It had been four days before the advance
succeeded in forcing the German posi- of V Corps inland had established the
tion at Bourdonnerie crossroads. A planned beachhead maintenance area.
platoon of tanks deployed in line was During those four days engineers, work-
closely followed by a company of in- ing to organize the beach to receive re-
fantry. Despite limited maneuver room, inforcements and supplies, were ham-
the attack carried as the tanks, unhin- pered by artillery and sniper fire. On the
dered by the low hedgerows, moved easily other hand enemy air activity was much
cross country. After the 2d Battalion had lighter than had been expected and
passed through to the base of its ob- damage from the sporadic raids was neg-
jective, Germans came back into the ligible throughout the month. The peak
.crossroads position and had to be cleaned of enemy air activity, as a matter of fact,
out during the night and the next morn- coincided with the onset of the storm
ing. In all, 300 prisoners were flushed when, on the night of 19-20 June, 116
out of the area by heavy concentrations German aircraft were over the beaches
of mortar and cannon fire. and shipping lanes.
The 12th Infantry, attacking through The first V Corps dumps opened dur-
the Bois du Coudray, at first met little ing the night of 6-7 June despite chaotic
opposition. It arrived at the northwest conditions on the beach. On 7 June en-
edge of the woods on the banks of the gineers finished the marking of the
Saire River before heavy enemy fire and beaches. On the same day construction
a blown bridge stopped the advance. of the artificial port off OMAHA began on
At the edge of the principal enemy de- schedule with the sinking of the first
fenses, Col. James S. Luckett, the regi- blockships to form the outer breakwater.
mental commander, decided not to push No artificial port was planned for UTAH,
the attack further that day. but a line of blockships to provide shel-
On the evening of 21 June, VII Corps, tered water was towed in beginning on 8
THE CAPTURE OF CHERBOURG (8 JUNE-l JULY) 423

June. Two of these ships were sunk by ter, which could be used by coasters
German coastal batteries approximately drawing up to twelve feet, was jointly
in their proper position. The American operated by Americans and British.
Navy sank the rest and the work was com- On 18 June the build-up of men and
pleted on 13 June. supplies, though still slightly less than
The immediate success of the landings planned, was approaching the target
at UTAH made beach organization there figures. The deficiency, moreover, was
much easier than at OMAHA. However, the balanced by smaller combat losses and
unexpectedly stiff resistance which held lower materiel consumption than ex-
up the 4th Division’s push northward pected. At the end of 18 June about
meant that the maintenance area which 116,000 tons of supplies, 41,000 vehicles,
was planned to be extended to Quine- and 314,514 troops had come ashore in
ville had to be confined to the original the U.S. zone.68 The British had at the
landing beaches together with a third same time landed approximately 102,000
beach opened later on D Day. Sporadic tons of supplies, 54,000 vehicles, and
enemy artillery fire continued to harass 3 14,547 troops.59
supply operations until after the capture On the morning of 19 June strong
of the Quineville ridge on 14 June. winds began to blow from the northeast.
Unloading thus fell behind schedule Before noon ferrying operations were
on both American beaches. Beginning suspended on both beaches and antiair-
on D plus 2 on OMAHA and D plus 3 on craft personnel had to be taken off the
UTAH, it was greatly speeded up by dry- outer breakwater of the port of OMAHA
ing out LST’s. This process of grounding because of the heavy seas. In the evening
the craft on a falling tide and unloading the wind velocities increased to 25-32
directly to the shore had been rejected knots. Scores of small craft were driven
in the planning period for fear that the ashore. Some were tossed so high above
beached LST’s might break their backs. normal high-water mark by the combina-
Tried from necessity, it proved so suc- tion of storm and spring tides that,
cessful that it became standard practice, though undamaged, they could not be
eliminating the time-consuming trans- refloated for ten days. Others were de-
shipment of supplies by ferry craft.57 stroyed against the sea walls and rocks.
,Between 8 and 12 June inland dumps On 20 June the storm continued; the
replaced the beach dumps, and the sup- artificial port showed signs of breaking
ply system was integrated on the 13th up. The floating breakwater of bom-
under First Army control. Beach main- bardons broke its moorings, casting all
tenance began to be supplemented about twenty-four bombardons adrift.60 Some
the middle of June with the opening of piled into the pier; others washed up on
three minor ports: Grandcamp-les Bains
and Isigny and Port-en-Bessin. The lat- 58Ibid., II, 175ff.
59 Figures as of afternoon 18 June. Cosintrep 36,
20 Jun 44. SHAEF AG file 370.2/11.
57 [Clifford Jones] NEPTUNE: Training, Mounting, 60 Bombardons were huge air-filled cylindrical
the Artificial Ports (The Administrative and Logis- floats, constructed of rubberized canvas and rein-
tical History of the ETO: Part VI), MS, II, 72-73. forced concrete. Each was 200 feet long and had a
Hist Div files. 12-foot beam and 13-foot draft.
UTAH BEACH DURING THE BUILD-UP. Scene (above) at a beach head-
quarters, and (below) aerial view of beach showing breakwater of sunken ships.
OMAHA BEACH DURING THE BUILD-UP. Reinforcements of men und
equipment moving inland (above), and (below) unloading directly to the shore
from LST’s grounded on the beach.
426 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

land. Strenuous efforts were made to The naval commander at OMAHA, Ad-
bring at least ammunition ashore, but miral Hall, concluded that the artificial
the only ships that could unload were port had proved impractical and should
a few small coasters that beached at low not be reconstructed.62 On the other
tide. On the night of 21 June the arti- hand, he felt that the outer breakwaters
ficial port’s pierheads were carried away should be reinforced, for, despite the
and the bridging connecting the piers fact that they could not survive northerly
with the shore was twisted. Landing craft gales, they provided the only possible
were piled on the beaches. Winds began means of getting sheltered water for
to moderate the next day but still not small craft. Materials for the repair of
enough to permit resumption of opera- the artificial port were diverted to the
tions. Unloading did not begin until 23 port in the British sector near Arro-
June when DUKW’s were able to navi- manches which had not been so badly
gate. damaged. The most important factors in
Damage caused by the storm is im- the decision to abandon the artificial
possible to assess accurately. On OMAHA port project, on which so much depend-
alone 90 ferrying craft were lost plus in- ence had been placed during the plan-
determinate numbers of larger craft. ning period, were, first, the discovery that
Some 800 craft were stranded on U.S. LST’s could be dried out, which meant
and British beaches. The artificial port faster build-up during favorable weather,
was a total loss. OMAHA Beach, littered and, second, the belief that Cherbourg
with wreckage, had few open spots where would soon be opened and would re-
new landings could take place when the place OMAHA as the supply entry in the
seas abated. Opposite one of the OMAHA American zone.63
exits, an eyewitness at noon of 22 June Before the storm ended, General Col-
counted 35 LCM’s, 11 LCT’s, 9 Rhino lins on 21 June issued orders for the re-
ferries, 3 LCI’s, and more than twenty sumption of the attack on Cherbourg.
other craft chaotically piled up. UTAH He called attention to the new urgency
suffered less both in craft losses and in of the objective and the fact that the
beach wreckage. In the afternoon of 23 attack was “the major effort of the
June unloading was resumed there at American army.” 64
full scale, and such congestion of beached
62 A naval investigator, studying the effect of the
craft as there was caused little difficulty storm, concluded that it had proved the total im-
since landings could be extended north- practicability of the artificial port. He pointed out
ward.B1 that the so-called storm had been only a “half-gale”
and that, in fact, the wind had seldom exceeded
force 6. (Force 6-up to 30 miles an hour-is re-
ferred to by seamen as a “strong breeze.“) See Memo,
61 ANCXF, Report, Vol. III, Rpt of Comdr Assault Capt Robert C. Lee for Gen Crawford (SHAEF
Force 0, p. 11; Jones, NEPTUNE, II, 124-27. There are G-4) et al., 26 Jun 44. SHAEF G-4 file 825.1 (Piers) .
no reliable figures on ship casualties in the storm. 63 Actually OMAHA continued to overshadow Cher-
The British estimate that they lost 250 ferrying bourg as a port of entry until the fall of the year
craft. See Ltr, Col Warhurst (British Cabinet Of- and handled far more tonnage than anticipated in
fice Hist Set) to author, 7 Sep 48. The U.S. Navy De- the most optimistic estimates before the invasion.
partment could supply no estimates of American Jones, NEPTUNE, II, 109 and 134ff.
losses. 64VII Corps G-3 Jnl. 21 Jun 44.
ARTIFICIAL PORT AT OMAHA BEACH. Unloading equipment (above) on
pier off Vierville Draw. Pier on right is under construction. Both were destroyed
during the storm on 21 June. Breakwater of sunken ships (below). At upper left
is les Moulins draw.
428 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Collins requested “air pulverization” eleven defended localities in a pattern


of some twenty square miles before the bombing designed to constitute a kind of
jump-off, more to demoralize the Ger- rolling barrage in front of the ground
mans and force surrender than as direct attack. Despite the large number of air-
preparation for the ground advance.65 craft involved, the bombs to be dropped
The air strike would employ the entire amounted to only about 1,100 tons over
IX Bomber Command (medium bomb- a wide area. The attack was not intended
ers) as well as large numbers of U.S. as a “carpet” bombing of the type later
and British fighter-bombers. The plan used at Caen and in the St. Lo breakout.
was developed under great difficulties The idea was to achieve the maximum
not only because time was short but be- demoralization of an enemy who, because
cause all the units of the Ninth Air Force he was already in a state of hopeless siege,
participating in the attack were based might be expected to have an already
in England. Although Maj. Gen. Elwood weakened morale.
R. Quesada, commander of the IX The hopelessness of the German posi-
Tactical Air Command, was able to con- tion was pointed out to the Cherbourg
sult with Generals Bradley and Collins, garrison in a multilingual broadcast
the final plan was made in England with (German, Russian, Polish, and French)
no First Army representatives present. on the night of 21 June when General
It was flown to the Continent on the Collins demanded the immediate sur-
morning of 22 June. render of Cherbourg. General Schlieben
All air preparation was to be concen- was given until 0900 the following morn-
trated in the zones of the 79th and 9th ing to capitulate. But the ultimatum
Divisions south and southwest of Cher- expired without answer from General
bourg. (Map XXIII) Starting 80 minutes Schlieben. Preparations were therefore
before H Hour, four squadrons of completed for the assault.
Typhoons of the 2d Tactical Air Force Attack into Cherbourg itself was to be
(RAF) were to attack with rockets made by the 9th and 79th Divisions while
throughout the northern portion of the the 4th Division sealed off the city from
attack zone concentrating on enemy anti- the east. The 9th Division, making its
aircraft positions. Following them, six main effort on its right, would seize
squadrons of Mustangs also belonging to Octeville while the 79th Division cap-
the British tactical air forces would tured the nose of high ground which
strafe throughout the area. From H terminated in Fort du Roule overlooking
minus 60 minutes twelve groups of U.S. Cherbourg from the south. This would
Ninth Air Force fighter-bombers would bring both divisions up on the high
bomb and strafe enemy strung points in ground immediately ringing the port.
front of the American lines, attacking in The 4th Division on the right was to
waves at five-minute intervals. As ground capture Tourlaville and send patrols
troops moved out, all eleven groups of from there to the sea. H Hour was set
the IX Bomber Command were to bomb for 1400.
65 Rpt by XIX Corps observers: Watson-Hickey
Bombing began according to plan at
Notes, I8 Jun, in XIX Corps G-3 Jnl. 1240, 22 June. From the testimony of
THE CAPTURE OF CHERBOURG (8 JUNE-l JULY) 429

prisoners, it appears that the air attacks battalion beyond Beaudienville. But the
were successful in their main purpose of latter advance was made by bypassing
weakening German will to resist, though the enemy at the crossroads and it had to
the results were not apparent during the be halted in the early evening to permit
first day’s action. For twenty minutes mopping up. At the end of 22 June,
hundreds of fighters dived, strafed, and forward battalions were dug in on the
skip-bombed from altitudes as low as slopes of Hill 171 just west of the Bois
300 feet. Twenty-four were lost to enemy du Mont du Rot. The 60th Infantry
flak. The attacks were entirely unopposed pressed the attack to the edge of enemy
by any German planes, and there was no fortifications at Flottemanville but could
cover anywhere from which the enemy not penetrate the position before dark.
could not be flushed by the ubiquitous The 79th Division, attacking with
fire from the skies. The end of the nerve- three regiments abreast, came up against
wracking attack signaled only the be- similarly stubborn enemy resistance. The
ginning of an hour of relentless bombing 3 13th Infantry, making the division’s
-wave after wave (375 planes in all) main effort along the Valognes-Cher-
flying out of the west and loosing their bourg highway, was first stopped by the
bombs methodically on or near the six les Chevres strong point which straddled
principal targets: Flottemanville-Hague. the road. The German line was broken
Martinvast, les Chevres, la Mare a by the 3d Battalion on the left and rolled
Canards, Fort du Ro.ule, and a defended up while the 1st Battalion attacked
locality just west of Octeville. At the frontally. After reorganization, the regi-
same time, artillery shelled enemy anti- ment pushed on against lighter resistance
aircraft batteries, with particular effec- to reach a point just south of its next
tiveness in the 9th Division zone, and major obstacle-the fortified antiaircraft
then, after troops began to move, fired position at la Mare a Canards. The 315th
on enemy defenses. Infantry meanwhile spent the day fight-
All three divisions made slow advances ing to clear the Hardinvast area. The
during the afternoon. The 9th Division 314th Infantry fought in the draws east
attacked with the 60th Infantry on the of Tollevast until after dark, when one
left and the 47th Infantry (backed by battalion slipped around the enemy posi-
the 39th Infantry) on the right. The axis tions and made contact with the 313th
of advance remained the same: the 60th Infantry west of Crossroads 177. At this
pointed toward Flottemanville, the 47th point the 314th was only a few hundred
toward the Bois du Mont du Rot. The yards from a communications bunker
39th Infantry was assembled near Helle- which contained the switchboard for the
ville. The 60th Infantry, attacking with entire CherbourgLandfront. The bunker
battalions echeloned to the left to guard was not discovered and remained to
its open flank, at first moved rapidly and function for a day or so behind the
captured Acqueville within half an hour American lines, reporting to Schlieben
of the jump-off. The 47th similarly some details of American movements.66
moved past Crossroads 114 where it had
6sHoffmann Report. Seventh Army, KTB Anlagen
been held up on 21 June and pushed one 1 .I.-rlo.vz.44.
430 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

The three regiments of the 4th Divi- military police, and naval and coast artil-
sion experienced hard, confused fighting lery personnel.
on 22 June which netted only small That the final stand was hopeless and
gains. The main effort was made by the could not last long was perfectly clear to
12th Infantry attacking northwest from General Schlieben. On 22 June he had
the northern tip of the Bois du Coudray received from Hitler full authority for
with the mission of seizing Tourlaville. the entire defense of the port together
But in confused fighting, during which with a ringing admonition to do his duty.
the enemy continually filtered to the rear “Even if worst comes to worst,” said Hit-
of the forward battalions, the regiment ler, “it is your duty to defend the last
was able to advance only a few hundred bunker and leave to the enemy not a
yards. On its right the 22d Infantry, harbor but a field of ruins. . . . The Ger-
which was to have attacked from posi- man people and the whole world are
tions near Gonneville to take Digosville watching your fight; on it depends the
and so support the effort of the 12th In- conduct and result of operations to smash
fantry, found itself surrounded by the the beachheads, and the honor of the
enemy and spent the whole day trying to German Army and of your own name.” 67
clear its own rear areas to keep its supply To this rhetoric General Schlieben re-
routes open. The 8th Infantry on the plied with a few facts. He told Rommel
division left flank had the mission of that his own troops were exhausted in
capturing high ground east of la Glacerie body and spirit, that the port garrison
in the triangle between the Trotebec and was over-age, untrained, and suffering
its principal tributary, where it would from “bunker paralysis” (verbunkert),
be pinched out by the northwest advance and that the leaderless remnants of the
of the 12th Infantry on Tourlaville. 243d and 77th Divisions were more of a
Attacking from the north edge of the burden than a support. “Reinforcement,”
Bois de Roudou, the regiment made he concluded, “is absolutely necessary.” 68
little progress. One of its battalions, at- Reinforcement was briefly contem-
tempting to envelop the enemy line, was plated the next day as the 15th Parachute
caught by delayed enemy fire from pre- Regiment in Brittany was alerted for
pared hedgerow positions and by tree movement by sea to Cherbourg. A few
burst artillery fire; it lost thirty-one hours later, reports of the complete de-
killed and ninety-two wounded. struction and closing of the Cherbourg
Although the day of 22 June ended harbor caused cancellation. Dropping of
with slight gains for VII Corps achieved parachute troops was considered but no
against desperate enemy resistance all planes were available.
along the line, there were nevertheless Fighting on 23 June was still heavy,
signs that continued pressure might soon but all three divisions made significant
crumble the Cherbourg defenses. Every- penetrations into the main German de-
where troops met loosely organized
67 Seekriegsleitung/l.Abt., KTB l.-3O.V1.44,22 Jun
Kampfgruppen containing not only frag- 44.
ments of infantry units but labor troops, 68 Ibid.
THE CAPTURE OF CHERBOURG (8 JUNE-1 JULY) 431

fenses. In the 9th Division zone, the 39th resistance and the advance became easier
Infantry cleared fortified positions north- as it neared the objective. In the evening
west of Beaudienville, which had been behind a rolling artillery barrage laid
bypassed. The 47th Infantry completed close to their front, the troops marched
the reduction of enemy defenses on Hill up a hill that commanded the approaches
171, capturing 400 prisoners during the to Cherbourg and dug in for the night,
day’s fighting. The two regiments thus ready for the final assault in Tourlaville.
established themselves firmly astride the The 22d Infantry again on 23 June was
ridge leading to Cherbourg inside the occupied mainly with clearing enemy
outer ring of enemy defenses. The 60th from its own sector. One battalion, even-
Infantry, after a long-delayed air bom- tually released for attack northwest, was
bardment and artillery concentrations on stopped at once by heavy German fire.
the Flottemanville area, moved in to The 8th Infantry, while scoring only
occupy its objective with comparative minor advances during the day, had one
ease in the evening. notable success when the 3d Battalion
The 79th Division was troubled at launched an attack at the very moment
first by enemy infiltrations behind the when the enemy was forming for coun-
forward regiments. While these were terattack. Finding the Germans lying
cleared up, the 314th Infantry attacked head to heel along some hedgerows, the
the enemy positions at la Mare a Canards. battalion opened rifle and tank fire and
The attack failed to achieve its objective, routed them with heavy losses.
but one company worked around to the With the penetrations of 23 June into
northwest and was able to hold there the outer ring of the Cherbourg fortress,
while the remainder of the regiment was the battle for the port entered its final
withdrawn a little to await air bombard- phase. General Schlieben reported on
ment. the morning of the 24th that he had no
The 4th Division, though unable to more reserves and that he had given
reach its principal objective, Tourlaville, orders to his troops to defend to the last
made good progress on 23 June as the cartridge. The fall of Cherbourg, he
attack of the 12th Infantry with tank said, is inevitable. “The only question
support began to gather momentum. is whether it is possible to postpone it
Tanks had not been used in the previous for a few days.” 69
day’s attack because the infantry had On 24 June VII Corps closed in on
been unable to find suitable routes to the city. The 9th Division overran three
bring them up. A route was discovered defended Luftwaffe installations as the
during the night. Two tanks attached to 47th and 39th Infantry Regiments at-
each of the forward companies of the lead tacked along the ridge northeast into
battalion moved generally along the Octeville while the 60th Infantry held
roads firing in support of the infantry and cleared the north flank. Enemy fire
and, on occasion, turning into the fields was often heavy but, when the American
to steamroller enemy riflemen. The tanks
apparently broke the back of German 69 Ibid., 24 Jun 44.
432 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

infantry closed in, the defense crumbled. of the enemy position and the Germans
The 39th Infantry in the evening halted pulled out. The cost of the day’s fighting
and established positions in front of to the 8th Infantry was thirty-seven killed,
Octeville under corps orders not to be- including Lt. Col. Conrad Simmons, the
come involved in the city that day. The 1st Battalion commander. The 12th In-
47th Infantry, after assisting the 39th fantry, again making the main divi-
in the capture of an antiaircraft emplace- sional effort, now with one battalion of
ment, turned north toward the old the 22d Infantry attached, by evening
French fort of Equeurdreville, the Ger- had occupied the last high ground before
man coastal battery north of it, and the Tourlaville, from which the city of Cher-
Redoute des Fourches. With the com- bourg was visible. In the attack Lt. Col.
ing of darkness, however, attack on these John W. Merrill, who had taken com-
positions was postponed. mand of the 1st Battalion the day before,
In the 79th Division zone the 314th was killed. One of the hardest fights in
Infantry, supported by dive-bombing the area was fought at Digosville where
P-47’s of the Ninth Air Force, cleared the enemy stood to defend an artillery
la Mare a Canards and pushed on to position. The position was overrun by
within sight of Fort du Roule. Three at- one company with tank support, after a
tempts to break through to the fort were dive-bombing attack by twelve P-47’s.
frustrated by fire from the direction of The enemy, in withdrawing, left six field
Octeville on the division’s dangling left pieces. Tourlaville was occupied that
flank. The 315th Infantry on the left was night without a fight. In the day’s ad-
far behind, still engaged at Hardinvast. vance the 12th Infantry took 800 prison-
The 313th Infantry, on the other flank, ers.
kept pace, veering slightly eastward to re- General Schlieben in the evening re-
duce resistance west of la Glacerie and at ported: “Concentrated enemy fire and
Hameau Gringor. At the latter position bombing attacks have split the front.
320 prisoners and several artillery pieces Numerous batteries have been put out
were taken. of action or have worn out. Combat effi-
The whole Cherbourg defense was col- ciency has fallen off considerably. The
lapsing and nowhere more completely troops squeezed into a small area will
than on the east. But the collapse was pre- hardly be able to withstand an attack on
ceded by some bitter last stands that ex- the 25th.” 70
acted heavy toll of some of the attacking American materiel superiority would
units. The 8th Infantry making its last at- be still further increased on 25 June by
tack before being pinched out between naval bombardment of the Cherbourg
the 12th Infantry and 79th Division, hit batteries arranged by General Bradley to
determined resistance east of la Glacerie. coincide with the final ground assault.
The Germans here, defending with light The bombardment was to be carried out
artillery, antiaircraft guns, mortars, and by a task force of three battleships, four
machine guns, threw back the first Amer- cruisers, and screening destroyers.
ican attack. The second attempt made
with tank support got around to the east 70 Ibid.
THE CAPTURE OF CHERBOURG (8 JUNE-l JULY) 433

AMERICAN ARTILLERY IN ACTION AGAINST CHERBOURG. This is a


155-mm. howitzer of the 79th Division.

Meanwhile VII Corps closed in. On the share in the capture of the city. All three
right, the 12th Infantry scarcely paused battalions of the 12th Infantry entered
on reaching its objective of 24 June. Con- Cherbourg during the evening. Two bat-
tinuing the attack through the night and talions cleared the city streets in the east-
into the day of the 25th, Colonel Luckett ern portion as far as the limit of the divi-
pushed hard to accelerate the enemy col- sion’s zone, hampered only by scattered
lapse. The 1st Battalion had a sharp fight fire and mines. The 1st Battalion fought
to capture the coastal battery north of all night to reduce pillboxes of beach for-
Tourlaville, but in early afternoon the tifications east of the Fort des Flamands,
enemy garrison of 400 finally surren- but it was not until early the next morn-
dered, abandoning, among other things, ing when tanks were brought up that 350
three g-inch guns. The other two battal- Germans finally decided to surrender.
ions patrolled to the coast. In position Then at last the 4th Division’s part in the
blocking the eastern approaches to Cher- capture of Cherbourg was complete.
bourg, the regiment and the division had On the opposite side of the city, the
completed their original mission. Early 47th Infantry of the 9th Division was
in the afternoon of 25 June, however, fighting in the suburbs during 25 June.
General Collins altered the division After pushing down the ridge .toward
boundary so that the 4th Division could Octeville with the 39th Infantry, the 47th
434 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

had turned north in the evening of 24 were forced to engage in counterbattery


June to attack Equeurdreville and had fire with enemy shore batteries on Cap de
pushed one battalion to within 500 yards la Hague. Nevertheless the added pres-
of the German fort there. The fort was a sure on the German defenses was intoler-
formidable-appearing position on top of a able. “I must state in the line of duty,”
hill surrounded by a dry moat like a medi- Schlieben concluded, “that further sac-
eval fortress. It was used, however, only rifices cannot alter anything.”
as an observation post for the coastal bat- To this Rommel replied by radio:
tery on the reverse slope and was not well “You will continue to fight until the last
defended from the south. In the morning cartridge in accordance with the order
of 25 June the fort was shelled and one from the Fuehrer.” 71
company of the 2d Battalion attacked In the 79th Division zone, just such a
after a mortar barrage. In fifteen minutes fanatic defense was in progress where the
the German garrison surrendered. Two garrison of Fort du Roule south of Cher-
companies then pushed rapidly into bourg chose to fight it out. This fort, prin-
Equeurdreville and a platoon got to the cipal objective of the 79th Division, was
beach, but it was withdrawn for the night. one of the most formidable of the Cher-
At the same time the 3d Battalion re- bourg bastions. It was built into the face
duced the Redoute des Fourches with of a rocky promontory above the city and
heavy artillery support. The enemy’s housed coastal guns commanding the en-
right had now collapsed as thoroughly as tire harbor area. The guns were in lower
his left on the day before, although a levels under the edge of the cliff. In the
node of resistance in Octeville held up upper level were mortars and machine
the 39th Infantry. The 9th Division took guns in concrete pillboxes defending the
more than 1,000 prisoners in the day’s fort from landward attack. On the south-
fighting. east was an antitank ditch.
Schlieben radioed: “Loss of the city Fort du Roule was attacked on the
shortly is unavoidable. . . .2,000 wounded morning of 25 June by the 2d and 3d Bat-
[are] without a possibility of being talions of the 314th Infantry, after a bom-
moved. Is the destruction of the remain- bardment by a squadron of P-47’s which
ing troops necessary as part of the general largely missed its mark and did no appre-
picture in view of the failure of effective ciable damage. While the guns of the
counterattacks? Directive urgently re- 311 th Field Artillery Battalion laid fire
quested.” on the fort, the 3d Battalion led off the
In the early afternoon, Schlieben noted attack, but was halted at a draw 700 yards
the opening of the naval bombardment. from the fort. Here it was greeted with a
“In addition to superiority in materiel hail of small arms fire from enemy dug
and artillery, air force and tanks,” he re- in on the forward slope. Lacking artil-
ported, “heavy fire from the sea has lery (which was fully engaged in neutral-
started, directed by spotter planes.” Actu- izing Fort du Roule) the 3d and 2d Bat-
ally the weight of the bombardment on talions massed their machine gun fire on
the Cherbourg defenses was much less
than planned, for the Allied warships 71Ibid., 25 Jun 44.
FORT DU ROULE with Cherbourg in background.
436 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

the German line. Most of the defenders night the 314th Infantry was in possession
were killed and the few survivors re- of the upper defenses of the fort.
treated to the fort. The 2d Battalion then The 313th Infantry in the meantime
took over the attack under the covering attacked from Hameau Gringor into the
fire of the 3d Battalion. The attackers flats southeast of Cherbourg. Troops en-
came under heavy machine gun fire from tered the outskirts of the city but could
pillboxes as well as shelling from the di- not penetrate in strength because they
rection of Octeville. came under fire from guns in the lower
Reduction of the positions now became levels of Fort du Roule, still uncaptured.
a matter largely of the courage and initia- The fort was finally reduced on 26 June
tive of individuals and small groups. Cpl. by lowering demolitions from the top
John D. Kelly’s platoon of Company E levels, by antitank fire from guns in the
was hugging the ground immobilized by city, and by assault of a demolition team
German machine gun fire from a pillbox. under S/Sgt. Paul A. Hurst around the
Kelly took a ten-foot pole charge, crawled precipitous west side of the cliff. Both the
up the slope through enemy fire, and fixed 313th and 314th Infantry Regiments
the charge, but the explosion was inef- cleared the city in their zones during the
fective. He returned with another charge day, Street fighting was only sporadic.
and this time blew off the ends of the The heaviest resistance fell on the left
German machine guns. A third time flank of the 314th Infantry, left open by
Kelly climbed the slope, blew open the the slower, more difficult progress of the
rear door of the pillbox, and hurled hand 9th Division in the western half of the
grenades inside until the enemy survivors city.
came out and surrendered. In the 3d Bat- The attempt of the 47th Infantry to
talion zone, Company K was stopped by clear the northwest section of the city was
88-mm. and machine gun fire. Here 1st checked by the Germans’ stubborn day-
Lt. Carlos C. Ogden, who had just taken long defense of a thick-walled arsenal on
over the company from its wounded com- whose parapets were emplaced antitank,
mander, armed himself with rifle and antiaircraft, and machine guns. Artillery
hand grenades and advanced alone under support was rendered difficult by the bad
fire toward the enemy emplacements. De- weather and smoke and dust of enemy
spite a head wound, Ogden continued up port demolitions. Assault of the arsenal
the slope until from a place of vantage he was postponed until the morning of 27
fired a rifle grenade that destroyed the June when an elaborately supported
88-mm gun. With hand grenades he then three-battalion attack was planned. Be-
knocked out the machine guns, receiving fore it took place, however, a psycholog-
a second wound but enabling his com- ical warfare unit broadcast an ultimatum;
pany to resume the advance.72 Through shortly thereafter white flags were flown
these acts and others, portions of the Ger- and Generalmajor Robert Sattler, deputy
man garrison began to surrender. By mid- commander of the Cherbourg fortress,
surrendered the 400 men under his imme-
72 Both Kelly and Ogden were awarded the Medal
of Honor. Kelly died of wounds in a subsequent ac-
diate control to Colonel Smythe, com-
tion. mander of the 47th Infantry.
HOUSE-TO-HOUSE SEARCH IN CHERBOURG
438 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

A more dramatic surrender had oc- tified themselves in the city hall. They
curred on 26 June when the 39th Infantry gave up when convinced of General
advancing on Octeville learned from a Schlieben’s capture and after being prom-
prisoner that General Schlieben was in ised protection from French snipers.
an underground shelter at St. Sauveur on With the surrender of General Schlieben
the southern outskirts of Cherbourg. on 26 June and of his deputy, General
Fighting in the vicinity of Schlieben’s Sattler, the following day, all organized
command post had taken place during resistance in Cherbourg ceased. The pri-
25 June and Schlieben had directed it mary objective of First Army in the
until he was driven underground by assault phase of OVERLORD had been
American artillery fire. He stayed on achieved.
there for about twenty-four hours, iso- But this was not the end. Cherbourg
lated and helpless. At 1506, 26 June, he had fallen, but some fighting continued.
got through a final radio message to Seu- General Schlieben had surrendered, but
enth Army: “Documents burned, codes some 6,000 of his men remained to fight
destroyed. ” 73After that, communications on in the Cap de la Hague. The anti-
were broken off. climax was often as bitter as the main
The two companies of the 39th Infan- event and men died making secure what
try sent to take him advanced through they and their comrades had captured.
enemy artillery and Nebelwerfer fire There was no doubt of the eventual out-
from Octeville to the St. Sauveur tunnel come of that afterfight-what the oper-
entrance. A prisoner was sent into the ations reports call “mopping up”-but it
shelter to demand surrender, but the de- still had to be fought.
mand was refused. Tank destroyers were
then brought up to fire into two of the End of a Phase
three tunnel entrances while preparations
were made to blow up the stronghold. A On both sides of the captured port the
few rounds were sufficient to bring the enemy held prepared defenses. On the
enemy out. Some 800 Germans in all, in- east the defense ran from Gonneville,
cluding both General Schlieben and Ad- through the Maupertus airfield, to Cap
miral Hennecke, Naval Commander Nor- Levy; on the west the main line of resist-
mandy, capitulated to General Eddy. ance cut the Cap de la Hague from
General Schlieben, however, still con- Gruchy to Vauville with advance posi-
cerned with gaining time, declined to tions from Querqueville to Vauville. (See
make a general surrender of the Cher- Map XXII. ) While the bulk of VII
bourg fortress. 74The 39th Infantry there- Corps’ three divisions threw their weight
fore pushed its attack northward to the against Cherbourg, the 22d Infantry and
coast. In the city it received another sur- the 24th Cavalry Squadron screened the
render of about 400 troops that had for- east flank and the 60th Infantry with the
73Seuventh Army, KTB 26 Jun 44.
l.l.-30.VI.44, 4th Cavalry Group (-) blocked off Cap
Seekriegsleitung/I.Abt., KTB reports
the same mes- de la Hague on the west.
sage under date of 25 June (evidently an error).
See Schlieben’s account, MS # B-845.
On the east the 22d Infantry had been
74 MS # B-845 (Schlieben). continuously engaged, containing the
AMERICAN INFANTRY CAPTAIN WITH CHERBOURG PRISONERS
440 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

enemy in the Maupertus area and mop- connoitered to the northwest. The
ping up the supply routes to the rear. On regrouping took place under more or less
25 June when Cherbourg was tightly continuous shelling from enemy batteries
ringed and units had penetrated its sub- in the cape. Neither air strikes by fighter-
urbs, the 22d Infantry was ordered to at- bombers and mediums against known
tack to clear the Maupertus airfield. The German batteries nor counterbattery ar-
attack jumped off at 1100, 26 June, with tillery fire reduced the enemy fire.
all three battalions abreast and a troop of The 9th Division attacked on the morn-
cavalry on each flank. The Americans ing of 29 June with the 47th Infantry ad-
fought all day against determined enemy vancing up the north coast, the 60th
resistance and did not occupy the airport Infantry in the center attacking astride
until the 27th. Thereafter the regiment the main cape highway, and the 4th Cav-
pivoted north and speedily overran the alry Group (-) advancing in a narrow
last fortified positions to the coast. Bat- zone on the left. Very little resistance was
terie Hamburg, a naval coastal battery met anywhere until troops reached the
with four 240-mm. guns, was silenced by line just southeast of Beaumont-Hague.
fire from the 44th Field Artillery Bat- The 47th Infantry swept through fortified
talion and surrendered 990 troops. With but unoccupied positions to seize the
that, organized resistance northeast of ridge at Nicolle by midafternoon and
Cherbourg collapsed. Cavalry reconnoi- then attacked across a stream to a known
tering east to Barfleur found the area fortified area which was thought to be an
unoccupied. outpost of the main German defensive
The clearing of Cap de la Hague was line running from Gruchy across the cape
expected to be more difficult, for it was es- to Vauville. Under heavy preparatory fire
timated that about 3,000 enemy troops from two battalions, two companies as-
still held out there. The corps reorgan- saulted the position and in a two-hour
ized. The 79th Division moved south on fight captured 250 prisoners. The 60th
28 June to reorganize under VIII Corps Infantry meanwhile reached the main
for the coming drive southward out of the road junction southeast of Beaumont-
Cotentin. The 4th Division took over the Hague before suffering check. There the
security of Cherbourg, and the 9th Divi- enemy had taken a stand behind an anti-
sion was relieved to undertake the sweep tank ditch defended by antitank guns and
of Cap de la Hague. 75 General Eddy pre- emplaced machine guns which in a singu-
pared for the attack during 27 and 28 larly barren terrain had clear fields of fire.
June; the 47th Infantry assembled in the The 1st Battalion was stopped, but the 3d
Henneville area and the 39th west of Octe- Battalion with tank destroyer and tank
ville, joining the 60th which was in posi- support smashed through the north end
tion near Ste. Croix-Hague. Patrols re- of the line just south of Fleury. It came
within about 1,000 yards of Beaumont-
75 The 4th Division was in turn relieved by the Hague but did not attempt to go farther
101st Airborne Division, and on 30 June it, too, had
started moving south for the new offensive. 4th Div
inasmuch as the Germans still held at the
AAR. road junction.
THE CAPTURE OF CHERBOURG (8 JUNE-l JULY) 441

The road junction was overrun the next mander, Colonel Keil, was captured about
day (30 June) by the 2d Battalion. Just midnight on 30 June. The mop-up, net-
beyond it Capt. Stephen W. Sprindis led ting about 6,000 prisoners, or twice the
his Company E in a classic infantry charge number estimated to be in the cape, was
over open ground with all three platoons completed by that afternoon.
advancing in a line of skirmishers firing The last harbor forts in the Cherbourg
as they charged. Despite the lack of artil- area, after enduring heavy tank destroyer
lery support the men kept going against fire and dive-bombing attacks, at last sur-
enemy machine gun and mortar fire. At rendered on 29 June. Before that, engi-
the same time Company F on the right neers and naval personnel had begun
advanced with tanks up the main road. detailed reconnaissance of the extent of
Both attacks gathered momentum against the damage to the port. What they found
an enemy whose zeal for fighting was was not encouraging. Col. Alvin G.
easily dampened in these last days, and the Viney, who prepared the original engi-
two companies drove into Beaumont- neer plan for port rehabilitation, wrote:
Hague. “The demolition of the port of Cher-
While the 60th’s attack broke the center bourg is a masterful job, beyond a doubt
of the main German defense line, the 47th the most complete, intensive, and best-
Infantry smashed through Gruchy, coast- planned demolition in history.” 76 The
al anchor of the line, and Greville to the harbor was strewn with a variety of differ-
southwest. Greville was entered by the ent types of mines. All basins in the mili-
2d Battalion, after a heavy artillery con- tary and commercial port were blocked
centration, while tank fire neutralized with sunken ships. The Gare Maritime,
some pillboxes. Enemy entrenched near containing the electrical control system
the town had to be routed out with hand and heating plant for the port, was demol-
grenades, but the strong point actually ished and 20,000 cubic yards of masonry
fell with unexpected ease. The 2d Bat- were blown into the large deep basin that
talion had more trouble at Gruchy where had been used in peacetime for docking
the Germans were dug in along a ridge Atlantic liners. The entrance of this basin
line to the west and south and brought was completely blocked by two large ships.
considerable mortar fire to bear on the Quay walls were severely damaged.
attackers. However, a two-battalion con- Cranes were demolished in all areas. The
centration of artillery in the early after- left breakwater for the inner harbor was
noon discouraged the defense here, too, cratered so that the sea poured through.
and the thoroughly beaten enemy came The whole port was as nearly a wreck
out of his holes to relinquish his last as demolitions could make it. For this
chance for a co-ordinated defense of any work of destruction Hitler awarded the
part of the Cherbourg peninsula. The Knight’s Cross to Admiral Hennecke the
drive up the cape continued but little re- day after his capture by VII Corps troops,
mained except to clear out a few isolated
76cited in [Herbert E. French, Morton Yarman,
strong points and round up thousands of and Henry G. Elliott] Cherbourg-Gateway to
prisoners. The senior German com- France, MS, Ch. I, p. 13. Hist Div files.
442 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

calling the job “a feat unprecedented in ity was marked as well on other fronts.
the annals of coastal defense.” 77 While VII Corps advanced on the port,
Planning estimates based on experi- the Germans made their last plans for de-
ence at Naples had calculated that Cher- cisive offensive action in Normandy. On
bourg could begin operations three days 20 June OKW ordered Rundstedt to pre-
after its capture. In reality it was almost pare a co-ordinated counterattack with
three weeks before the port was opened at six panzer divisions to annihilate Ameri-
all and months before it began to handle can forces in the vicinity of Balleroy, and
cargo in quantity. The mine sweeping of drive north generally along the Allied
the western portion of the harbor was not interarmy boundary toward Bayeux.so
completed until 14 July, and not until the (Map XXIV) Th e six divisions included
end of September were all the obstruc- three that had not yet arrived (the 1st SS,
tions cleared from the harbor. The work 9th SS, and 10th SS Panzer Divisions), one
of reconstructing port facilities began be- that was assembled immediately behind
fore the last forts had surrendered. The the front (the 2d SS), 81 and two that were
advance party of the 1056th Engineer Port already in the line (Panzer Lehr and the
Construction and Repair Group arrived 12th SS). The latter two were to be re-
in Cherbourg on 27 June.78 The first task lieved as soon as possible by two infantry
was the clearing of a beach area (the divisions (the 276th and 277th) being
Nouvelle Plage), a fashionable bathing brought up from southern France. The
beach in peacetime, now designed by the main attack was to be preceded by an at-
engineers for use by DUKW’s. But the tack to wipe out the British beachhead
first cargo was landed by DUKW over this east of the Orne which would remove the
beach only on 16 July.79 potentially most dangerous threat of deep
penetration in the direction of Paris.
The capture of Cherbourg completed The scheme of 20 June was ambitious
a distinct phase of operations. The final- far beyond German capabilities. Because
77 Destruction had begun as early as 7 June and of the time required to move troops into
was carried on methodically by naval personnel until position, it was out of the question to
the final surrender. The KTB of Navy Group West
has a daily account of the progress of demolitions.
launch successive major attacks. The
The only comfort for the Americans was the sur- thrusts at Balleroy and east of the Orne,
prisingly small damage to the city itself and the fact therefore, would have to be made simul-
that the rail network of the port could be repaired
with relative ease. taneously, which meant that neither at-
78 Reconstruction was supervised by the 4th Port tack could have adequate artillery sup-
Hq. port. There were guns enough but too
79 Little by little the port capacity was increased
until in November Cherbourg handled more than
few shells. Estimated to be available were
half of all the cargo landed in France for the Amer- 150 pieces of GHQ artillery (including
ican armies, discharging 433,!201 tons, or an average
of about 14,500 tons a day. This compared with a 80 Der Westen.
pre-D-day planning estimate of 8,500 tons a day. Most 81 Seventh Army, KTB 1.I.30.Vl.44, 18 Jun 44. The
dramatically it contrasted to a total peacetime cargo 2d SS Panzer Division was considerably delayed
handling for the entire year of 1937 of only 325,150 in its march from near Toulon by harassing attacks
tons. For details of port reconstruction see French, by the French maquis. It closed at last in assembly
Yarman, and Elliott, Cherbourg-Gateway to France, areas near Torign-sur-Vire about 18 June, when it
Ch. III. passed to Seventh Army reserve.
THE CAPTURE OF CHERBOURG (8 JUNE-l JULY) 443

twelve heavy battalions) and 487 division any for several days at least. In any case,
artillery pieces. But the requirement of he thought it unwise to shift his weight
ammunition for sustained offensive ac- from the Caen front. On the other hand,
tion was calculated at 14,000 tons.82 In fearing that the American capture of
view of the fact that ammunition on hand Cherbourg would lead to a considerable
was already insufficient for defensive mis- strengthening of the Allied west flank,
sions, the additional requirement was Rundstedt wanted to build a strong de-
fantastically outside the realm of possi- fense from Portbail along the south edge
bility. of the Prairies Marecageuses and along
Even if this problem could have been the Vire to St. Lo in order to hold Bradley
solved, it remained doubtful whether the while preparing his own counterattack
Allies would sit still long enough to en- toward Bayeux. Although such a tempo-
able the Germans to relieve the armor in rary diversion of force to the defense
the line. Rundstedt therefore viewed the would delay the counterattack, Rundstedt
plan without much hope. Nevertheless counted it well worth while to be able to
preparations were got under way. All operate without interruption from a
available armor was to be brought again series of emergencies that would continue
under the unified command of General to nibble away his striking power.
Geyr, who with his reconstituted staff of The decision was so made, but it could
Panzer Group West would take over the not be carried out, for an emergency was
entire section between the Seine and already in the making in the British zone.
Drome Rivers with four corps, XLVII On 18 June General Montgomery, in his
Panzer Corps, I SS Panzer Corps, II SS first written directive since the beginning
Panzer Corps, and LXXX VI Znfantry of operations on the Continent, signaled
Corps (east of the Orne). Seventh Army his intention of stepping up his attack.
with two corps (LXXXZV Znfantry and He pointed out: “After the very great in-
II Parachute) would have a purely defen- tensity of the initial few days, we had
sive mission from St. Lo to the west to slow down the tempo of the operation”
coast.83 to get a sound position against possible en-
In the next few days the rapid collapse emy counterattack and build up strength
of General Schlieben’s forces in the Co- to push on. “All this is good,” he con-
tentin caused Hitler to flirt with the no- tinued, “but we are now ready to pass on
tion of a relieving attack up the west coast. to other things, and reap the harvest.”
Rundstedt, ordered to study the possibil- The harvest he had in mind included
ity, replied that he had no forces available Cherbourg (which General Collins was
for such an attack, that he would not have well on the way to capturing) and Caen as
the “first step in the full development of
82 Army Group B, Munition estimate, 21 Jun 44. our plans.” He therefore ordered the at-
Seventh Army, KTB Anlagen, Chefsachen l.I.JO.-
VI.44.
tack by Second British Army to begin at
83 German information here and following is from once to take Caen, which he regarded as
Der Westen; Seventh Army, KTB Anlagen l.I.- “really the key to Cherbourg.” Its capture,
JO.VI.44; MS # T-121 (Zimmermann et al.) ; MS
# B-466 (Geyr); MS # B-633 (Rundstedt) ; and
he added, “will release forces which are
MS # B-672 (Buttlar-Brandenfels) . now locked up in ensuring that our left
444 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

flank holds secure.” 84 But the Caen at- In addition Rommel ordered the II SS
tack could not be begun at once. On 19 Panzer Corps to speed its assembly in areas
June, Montgomery changed the scheme north and northeast of Vire. The 2d SS
of maneuver and scheduled the jump-off Panzer Division was to be attached and
for 22-23 June. Weather then intervened the entire corps would attack at once the
to delay the landing of 8 Corps troops. flank of the British penetration generally
On the morning of 25 June, 30 Corps at along the axis of the Villers-Bocage-Caen
last began a preliminary thrust east of highway. The emergency requiring im-
Tilly-sur-Seulles. The main attack was to mediate piecemeal commitment of the
be made the following day when 8 Corps II SS Panzer Corps was considered so ur-
with one armored and two infantry divi- gent that for two nights (25 and 26 June)
sions would pass through the 3d Canadian all supply m.ovements were ruled off the
Division and advance on the axis St. Mau- roads so that the armor could move for-
vieu-Esquay-Amaye-sur-Orne to estab- ward. But even with this priority the
lish itself southeast of Caen in the Vimont corps could not get in position to attack
-Bourguebus-Bretteville-sur-Laize area.85 until 29 June.87
The push of 25 June resulted in only On that day came another emergency.
small gains for 30 Corps but alarmed the General Gerow launched a limited-objec-
Germans, because it pressed hard against tive attack with the recently arrived 3d
the already worn-down Panzer Lehr and Armored Division at Villiers-Fossard.
12th SS Panzer Diuisions. As the I SS The purpose was simply to wipe out an
Panzer Corps, holding this sector, had no enemy salient in the 29th Division lines
reserves, Seventh Army attached to it the and so secure a more favorable line of de-
advance battalion of the 1st SS Panzer Di- parture for the forthcoming resumption
vision just beginning to close in forward of the 29th Division’s drive toward St. L6.
areas.86 Seventh Army, however, continually
The opening of the British 8 Corps at- worried over the weakness of the II Para-
tack the next day forced Seventh Army chute Corps, demanded that the Kampf-
to scramble further for reinforcements. gruppe of the 2d SS Panzer Division at-
Two battalions of the 2d SS Panzer Divi- tached to II SS Panzer Corps be returned
sion, which had been in reserve behind to reserve positions behind the St. Lo
the II Parachute Corps, one tank bat- front. The crisis at St. Lo passed when the
talion of the 2d Panzer Division, portions 3d Armored Division, having achieved its
of the 21st Panzer Division relieved from main objectives on 30 June, halted.
the bridgehead east of the Orne, the 7th But the German plans for counterat-
Werfer Brigade, and one artillery bat- tack on the east had already been hope-
talion were ordered brought up at once. lessly compromised. On 28 June General
Geyr took command of the sector between
84In First Army file, Directives 21 A Gp. See
Pogue, The Supreme Command, a volume in prepa- the Seine and the Drome Rivers but un-
ration in this series, for discussion in detail of Mont- der circumstances which, instead of giving
gomery’s operations and intentions in the Caen area. him a free hand, forced him to continue
85Information supplied by the British Cabinet
05ce Hist Sec.
86Seuenth Army, KTB 1.l.-30.VI.44, 25 Jun 44. 87 Ibid.
THE CAPTURE OF CHERBOURG (8 JUNE-l JULY) 445

the piecemeal measures already started. warned of the possibility of “a full-


General Dollmann died that day of a blooded enemy counterattack” between
heart attack. Generaloberst der Waffen- Caen and Villiers-Bocage and to meet this
SS Paul Hausser, commander of II SS threat directed that the 7th Armoured
Panzer Corps, replaced him and tempo- Division be pulled out of line and held
rarily took command of the entire front in army reserve.OO 90
including Panzer Group West. This ar- In the meantime Rommel and Rund-
rangement was made pending more far- stedt journeyed to Berchtesgaden. Rund-
reaching reshuffling, which Rommel and stedt had to make the entire trip by car.
Rundstedt had been summoned to When he arrived, Hitler kept him wait-
Berchtesgaden to discuss. In their ab- ing six hours. Tired and angry, Rund-
sence no radical decisions could be made. stedt remarked to Keitel that it should
In consequence, therefore, Geyr had no cause no surprise “upstairs” if an old and
recourse but to order II SS Panzer Corps sick man like himself should fall dead
to attack with the 9th SS and ZOth SS some day like General Dollmann.91 It was
Panzer Divisions as planned against the an inauspicious beginning for a meeting
west flank of the deep British penetra- which did nothing to reconcile the tactical
tion.88 The attack began the afternoon of thinking of Hitler and that of his field
29 June and had largely spent itself by marshals or to restore the shattered con-
nightfall. Although it made some tem- fidence on either side.
porary gains in reducing the British The meeting was long and private; only
bridgehead over the Odon, the two divi- Hitler, Rommel, Rundstedt, Keitel, and
sions exhausted themselves in generally Jodl were present. 92 When it was over
indecisive struggles for local objectives. Hitler made an announcement for the
On the 30th the II SS Panzer Corps was record in which he simply restated the
ordered on the defensive.89 stand-fast tactics he had always advocated
General Montgomery, after identifica- for the west. “The overpowering air su-
tion of the concentration of German periority of the enemy,” he said, “and
armored units on his front, had already his very effective naval artillery limit the
made a similar decision. Orders to Second possibilities of a large-scale attack on our
British Army were to continue offensive part. . . . We must not allow mobile war-
tactics and “develop operations for the fare to develop, since the enemy surpasses
capture of CAEN as opportunity offers- us by far in mobility due to his air superi-
and the sooner the better.” But the ority and his superabundance of motor
army’s mission was to “hold the main vehicles and fuel. Therefore everything
enemy forces in the area between CAEN depends on our confining him to his
and VILLIERS BOCAGE” and “to have bridgehead by building up a front to
no set-backs.” General Montgomery also block it off, and then on fighting a war of

88 Geyr angrily told army that “by this order the 90 Dir, 21 A Gp, 30 Jun 44. First Army file, Direc-
panzer group is already sold out.” Tel msg, 28 Jun tives 21 A Gp.
44, Geyr to CofS Seventh Army. Seventh Army, KTB 91 MS # B-633 (Rundstedt).
Anlagen I.I.JO.VI.44. 92 Conf, 29 Jun-l Jul 44, ONI, Fuehrer Confer-
89MS # B-466 (Geyr). ences, 1944.
446 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

attrition to wear him down and force him victory and meant only the inexorable
back, using every method of guerrilla war- and profitless wearing-down of the Ger-
fare. . . .” 93 It is clear that Rommel and man strength. Probably Rommel and
Rundstedt argued in the meeting against Rundstedt made that point to Hitler in
this conception, perhaps with some heat the 29 June meeting. On their return to
since they were convinced of the desper- France they put it clearly on the record.
ateness of the situation in France. But In their absence, General Geyr of Panzer
what they said has not been recorded. Group West and General Hausser, the
On the following day an order went out new commander of Seventh Army, had
from OKW giving effect to Hitler’s prepared estimates of the situation, sub-
roping-off policy. 94 It canceled the attack stantially along the same lines, calling
planned on the west flank to drive toward for an evacuation of the Caen pocket,
Cherbourg; it declared that an attack to the establishment of a shorter line
split the British and U.S. bridgeheads was (Orne River-Bully-Avenay-Villers-Boc-
no longer possible because the necessary age-vicinity of Caumont) outside the
troops could not be disengaged in the face range of naval artillery, and the relief
of Allied pressure; it recognized that the and refreshment of the armored divisions
LXXXIV Corps was not in condition to to re-create a counterattack force.95 To
attack; and, finally, it admitted that an these estimates, so completely at variance
attack east of the Orne was contingent on with Hitler’s newest order, Rommel gave
the arrival of the 16th Luftwafle Field Di- his complete approval and sent them on
vision and the withdrawal of Allied naval to OB WEST. There was a notable air of
forces. Having thus abandoned all haste about the proceedings. The docu-
thought of offensive action, OKW told ments left Rommel’s headquarters at
Seventh Army that its principal mission about midnight, 30 June. A few minutes
was to avoid being pushed back into open later Army Group B approved the begin-
country. For that purpose it was initially ning of the evacuation of Caen.96 At 0200,
to hold the 2d SS Panzer Division in re- 1 July, Rommel’s proposals arrived at OB
serve for flank attacks against any Allied WEST and an hour and a half later Rund-
drive south. The time had not yet come, stedt had endorsed and forwarded them
OKW continued, to weaken the Kanal- to OKW, adding a request for a free hand
Kuesle defense, but preparations for the in carrying out the planned evacuation
transfer of troops from Fifteenth Army to of the Caen pocket.97 They arrived at
the Normandy battle front should be OKW at 0700. OKW recommended their
made. rejection, commenting that they were
In effect the order said: Hold on-go on
doing what you have been doing. But the 95Tel msg, 30 Jun 44, Geyr to CofS Seuenth Army,
high commanders in the west by the end 30 Jun 44. Seventh Army, KTB Anlagen l.I.-3O.VI.44.
For text of estimates see Rad, Army Group B to OB
of June had become convinced that the WEST, 30 Jun 44. Army Group B, Ia Operations Be-
tactics so far pursued offered no hope for fehle 9.VI.-31.VIII.44.
96 Rad, Army Group B to Seventh Army, 1 Jul 44.
83Ibid. Army Group B, Ia Operations Befehle 9.VI.Jl.VIII.-
84Der Westen; cf. Seekriegsleitung/l.Abt., KTB 44.
1.30.VI.44, 30 Jun 44. 97 OB WEST, KTB 1.-31.VII.44, 1 Jul 44.
THE CAPTURE OF CHERBOURG (8 JUNE-l JULY) 447

tantamount to a decision to pull out of ther von Kluge on 3 July. The following
France and that the question was simply morning Geyr was relieved by General
whether to retreat to the West Wall or to der Panzertruppen Heinrich Eberbach.
fight it out in place to the last man. Hitler Operations in France were then enter-
wanted to fight it out. His decision ing a new phase. General Bradley had
reached Rundstedt at 1740. OB WEST already launched his first full-scale attack
was ordered to hold every position then south in an attempt to push out the lodg-
occupied and halt every threatened break- ment. The Second British Army would
through by stubborn defense in place or shortly resume its attack for Caen. Hit-
local counterattack.98 ler’s decision to attempt a permanent
The decision certainly came as no sur- roping-off of the Allied beachheads was
prise. Why, then, was it so elaborately to be put to the test.
called for? Were the generals in the west The Allied armies were ready for the
concerned only with setting the record test. Since D Day 929,000 men, 586,000
straight, believing they could no longer tons of supplies, and 177,000 vehicles had
hope to make their ideas prevail, and un- been landed.101 American and British
willing therefore to accept responsibility build-ups were roughly equal. General
without power? Did they feel, rather, that Bradley had four corps with eleven in-
Hitler, confronted with the unanimous fantry and two armored divisions.102 For
opinion of the military leaders in France, the new attack under Second British
might at the last moment defer to their Army were four corps (three in the line),
judgment? Whatever the reason back of ten infantry divisions, and three armored
the demarche of 1 July, it had the effect divisions.
of marking an irreconcilable opposition Allied armies, however, occupied a
between OB WEST and Hitler. The lodgment considerably smaller than
aftermath was swift. On 2 July Hitler’s planned. Shortly after mid-June when it
adjutant entered the OB WEST com- became apparent that neither the U.S. V
mand post and, in the Fuehrer’s name, Corps nor the British Second Army could
presented to Rundstedt the oak leaf to the push fast to the south, General Montgom-
Knight’s Cross together with a polite ery asked for a shift in build-up priorities
handwritten note from Hitler relieving to get a higher proportion of combat
the field marshal of his command on troops ashore. This was done in both
grounds of age and health.99 An order was British and American sectors. First Army
delivered at the same time relieving Gen- got the 83d Division about a week sooner
eral Geyr as commander of Panzer Group than planned, and combat units of XV
West. When Rommel heard of these Corps (borrowed from Third Army) were
changes, he is reputed to have said, “I will put ashore a few days ahead of the original
be next.” 100 Rundstedt turned over his schedule. Correspondingly the build-up
command to Generalfeldmarschall Guen- 101 SHAEF G-3 War Room Daily Summary as of D
plus 27, 5 Jul 44.
98 Der Westen. 102 Including the 82d Airborne Division which was
99OB WEST, KTB I.-31.VII.44, 2 Jul 44; MS # used in the initial attack, but excluding the 101st
B-633 (Rundstedt). Airborne Division on guard duty in Cherbourg,
100 MS # B-466 (Geyr). awaiting return to England.
448 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

of service and supporting troops was re- relatively satisfactory for the moment but
duced. The result was at the end of June would not long remain so.104
an increasing disproportion of combat The failure to make anticipated terri-
and service elements. The disproportion torial gains was the only major respect in
could be borne because the shallowness which the OVERLORD operation had fallen
of the bridgehead meant reduced require- short of planning calculations. For the
ments for supply and administrative over- rest, the success achieved by Allied com-
head. It involved, however, a consider- bined arms outstripped the plan. While
able risk. As long as Allied armies the planners had always held their breath
advanced slowly, administration and sup- over the risks of the UTAH Beach assault,
ply constituted no special problem. If the airborne landings had in fact achieved
the increasing pressure of Eisenhower’s such complete tactical success that the
forces cracked the German front and war seaborne infantry had had little to do but
of movement suddenly developed, the walk ashore. Only at OMAHA had the forti-
undermanned supply lines would be fied coast line proved to be the hard crust
severely taxed. This possibility at the end that planners had counted on finding
of June was a source of some concern to everywhere. There the planners’ worries
the SHAEF command, but in view of the about the capacity of naval guns and sup-
limited lodgment the risk had to be ac- port craft to deal with concrete defenses
cepted.103 proved justified. On the other hand, the
The slow advance southward, and es- effectiveness of naval and air power in
pecially the failure to push out into open hindering the forming of German reserves
country south and southeast of Caen, also for counterattack exceeded expectations.
meant a reduction in the planned pro- Throughout the beachhead battles the
gram of airfield construction. This was, confused German command, and in some
however, much less serious than planners cases the inferior quality of green or non-
had anticipated. By dint of improvisation German enemy troops, provided a bonus
Ninth Air Force engineers were able to for the Allies which did not figure in the
lay out fields in country that planners had planning. Perhaps the biggest and most
considered unsuitable for air strips. In important surprise was the proved ability
early July about one-third of the Ninth of the combined air forces and French
Air Force fighters and fighter-bombers saboteurs to cripple the enemy’s trans-
were based on the Continent. It was true, portation system. It would be difficult to
however, that the available space for air- overestimate the handicaps imposed on
fields in Normandy was virtually taken the enemy by his lack of mobility. It was
up at that time and that the fields con- the primary reason why the big counter-
structed on a temporary basis were requir- attack that figured in all Allied estimates
ing an ever increasing proportion of never materialized.
engineer labor to maintain them. In There was reason on 1 July for the
short, from an air force point of view, the Allies to be satisfied with their achieve-
lodgment secured at the end of June was
104 Air force logistics on the Continent will be cov-
103Memo, Gen Bull for SAC, Jun 44. SHAEF G-3 ered in the seventh volume of Army Air Forces in
file (Complete Planning for OVerlORD Buildup). World War II.
THE CAPTURE OF CHERBOURG (8 JUNE-l JULY) 449

ment to date, but there was no time to some of the bloodiest battles of Nor-
indulge that satisfaction. The problems mandy still had be fought. The begin-
of the next step were all-absorbing. The ning had been good; it had carried out the
next step was to break out of Normandy. plan at least in the essentials that counted.
Scarcely an Allied soldier from Eisen- But it was only the beginning; still in the
hower down was not eager to see his last incalculable future lay the final objective
hedgerow and unleash the tanks in open of operation OVERLORD-the thrust into
country. But before that could happen the heart of Hitler’s Germany.
Atmendix A
DIGEST OF OPERATION in the Pas de Calais,* and the Caen t-
“OVERLORD” Cotentin area. Of these, the Caen
beaches are the most favourable, as they
Object. are, unlike the others, sheltered from the
prevailing winds. Naval and air consid-
1. The object of Operation “Over- erations point to the area between the Pas
lord” is to mount and carry out an opera- de Calais and the Cotentin as the most
tion, with forces and equipment estab- suitable for the initial landing, air factors
lished in the United Kingdom, and with of optimum air support and rapid pro-
target date the 1st May, 1944, to secure a vision of airfields indicating the Pas de
lodgement on the Continent from which Calais as the best choice, with Caen as an
further offensive operations can be de- acceptable alternative.
veloped. The lodgement area must con- 4. Thus, taking beach capacity and air
tain sufficient port facilities to maintain and naval considerations together, it ap-
a force of some twenty-six to thirty divi- pears that either the Pas de Calais area
sions, and enable that force to be aug- or the Caen-Cotentin area is the most
mented by follow-up shipments from the suitable for the initial main landing.
United States or elsewhere of additional 5. As the area for the initial landing,
divisions and supporting units at the rate the Pas de Calais has many obvious ad-
of three to five divisions per month. vantages such that good air support and
quick turn round for our shipping can be
Selection of a Lodgement Area. achieved. On the other hand, it is a focal
point of the enemy fighters disposed for
2. In order to provide sufficient port defence, and maximum enemy air activ-
facilities to maintain these large forces, it ity can be brought to bear over this area
will be necessary to select a lodgement with the minimum movement of his air
area which includes a group of major forces. Moreover, the Pas de Calais is the
ports. We must plan on the assumption most strongly defended area on the whole
that ports, on capture, will be seriously French coast. The defences would require
damaged and probably blocked. It will very heavy and sustained bombardment
take some time to restore normal facili- from sea and air: penetration would be
ties. We shall thus be forced to rely on slow, and the result of the bombardment
maintenance over beaches for an ex-
tended period. * “Pas de Calais area” has been assumed as the
3. A study of the beaches on the Bel- area between Gravelines and the River Somme.
t “Caen area” is taken as that between the River
gian and Channel coasts shows that the Orne and the base of the Cotentin Peninsula.
beaches with the highest capacity for pass- 1 The “Cotentin” Peninsula is the peninsula in
ing vehicles and stores inland are those which Cherbourg is situated.
APPENDIX A 451

of beach exits would severely limit the a subsequent amphibious assault in that
rate of build-up. Further, this area does area much more difficult.
not offer good opportunities for expan- 8. There remains the attack on the
sion. It would be necessary to develop the Caen beaches. The Caen sector is weakly
bridgehead to include either the Belgian held; the defences are relatively light and
ports as far as Antwerp or the Channel the beaches are of high capacity and shel-
ports Westwards to include Havre and tered from the prevailing winds. Inland
Rouen. But both an advance to Antwerp the terrain is suitable for airfield develop-
across the numerous water obstacles, and ment and for the consolidation of the ini-
a long flank march of some 120 miles to tial bridgehead; and much of it is un-
the Seine ports must be considered un- favourable for counter-attacks by panzer
sound operations of war unless the Ger- divisions. Maximum enemy air opposi-
man forces are in a state not far short of tion can only be brought to bear at the
final collapse. expense of the enemy air defence screen
6. In the Caen-Cotentin area it would covering the approaches to Germany; and
be possible to make our initial landing the limited number of enemy airfields
either partly on the Cotentin Peninsula within range of the Caen area facilitates
and partly on the Caen beaches, wholly local neutralisation of the German fighter
in the Cotentin or wholly on the Caen force. The sector suffers from the disad-
beaches. An attack with part of our vantage that considerable effort will be
Eorces in the Cotentin and part on the required to provide adequate air support
Caen beaches, is, however, considered to to our assault forces and some time must
be unsound. It would entail dividing our elapse before the capture of a major port.
limited forces by the low-lying marshy After a landing in the Caen sector it
ground and intricate river system at the would be necessary to seize either the
neck of the Cotentin Peninsula; thus ex- Seine group of ports or the Brittany group
posing them to defeat in detail, of ports. To seize the Seine ports would
7. An attack against the Cotentin entail forcing a crossing of the Seine,
Peninsula, on the other hand, has a which is likely to require greater forces
reasonable chance of success, and would than we can build up through the Caen
ensure the early capture of the port of beaches and the port of Cherbourg. It
Cherbourg. Unfortunately, very few air- should, however, be possible to seize the
fields exist in the Cotentin, and that area Brittany ports between Cherbourg and
is not suitable for rapid airfield develop- Nantes and on them build up sufficient
ment. Furthermore, the narrow neck of forces for our final advance Eastwards.
the Peninsula would give the Germans Provided that the necessary air situa-
an easy task in preventing us from break- tion can first be achieved, the chances of
ing out and expanding our initial bridge- a successful attack and of rapid subse-
head. Moreover, during the period of our quent development are so much greater
consolidation in the Cotentin the Ger- in this sector than in any other that it is
mans would have time to reinforce their considered that the advantages far out-
coastal troops in the Caen area, rendering weigh the disadvantages.
452 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

The Lodgement Area Selected. largely offset their numerical superiority.


Before the assault takes place, therefore,
9. In the light of these factors, it is con- it will be necessary to reduce the effective-
sidered that our initial landing on the ness of the G.A.F., particularly that part
Continent should be effected in the Caen which can be brought to bear against the
area, with a view to the eventual seizure Caen area.
of a lodgement area comprising the Cher- 13. The necessary air situation to en-
bourg-Brittany group of ports (from sure a reasonable chance of success will
Cherbourg to Nantes). therefore require that the maximum
number of German fighter forces are con-
Opening Phase up to the Capture tained in the Low Countries and North-
of Cherbourg. West Germany, that the effectiveness of
the fighter defence in the Caen area is
10. The opening phase in the seizing reduced and that air reinforcements are
of this lodgement area would be the ef- prevented from arriving in the early
fecting of a landing in the Caen sector stages from the Mediterranean. Above
with a view to the early capture and de- all, it will be necessary to reduce the over-
velopment of airfield sites in the Caen all strength of the German fighter force
area, and of the port of Cherbourg. between now and the date of the opera-
11. The main limiting factors affecting tion by destruction of the sources of sup-
such an operation are the possibility of ply, by the infliction of casualties by
attaining the necessary air situation: the bringing on air battles, and, immediately
number of offensive divisions which the prior to the assault, by the disorganiza-
enemy can make available for counter tion of G.A.F. installations and control
attack in the Caen area; the availability system in the Caen area.
of landing ships and craft and of transport 14. As it is impossible to forecast with
aircraft; and the capacity of the beaches any accuracy the number and location of
and ports in the sector. German formations in reserve in 1944,
12. Although the strength of the while, on the other hand, the forces avail-
G.A.F. available in 1944 on the Western able to us have been laid down, an at-
front cannot be forecast at this stage, we tempt has been made in this paper to de-
can confidently expect that we shall have termine the wisest employment of our
a vast numerical superiority in bomber own forces and then to determine- the
forces. The first-line strength of the Ger- maximum number of German formations
man fighter force is, however, showing a which they can reasonably overcome.
steady increase and although it is unlikely Apart from the air situation, which is an
to equal the size of the force at our dis- over-riding factor, the practicability of
posal, there is no doubt that our fighters this plan will depend principally on the
will have a very large commitment en- number, effectiveness, and availability
tailing dispersal and operations at maxi- of German divisions present in France
mum intensity. Our fighters will also be and the Low Countries in relation to our
operating under serious tactical disad- own capabilities. This consideration is
vantages in the early stages, which will discussed below (paragraph 35).
APPENDIX A 453

15. A maximum of thirty and a mini- of Cherbourg. In view of the possibilities


mum of twenty-six equivalent divisions of interruption by bad weather it will be
are likely to be available in the United essential to provide early some form of
Kingdom for cross-Channel operations on improvised sheltered waters.
the 1st May 1944. Further build-up can 20. Assuming optimum weather con-
be at the rate of three to five divisions per ditions, it should be possible to build up
month. the force over the beaches to a total by
16. Landing ships and craft have been D plus 6 of the equivalent of some eleven
provided to lift the equivalent of three divisions and five tank brigades and there-
assault divisions and two follow-up divi- after to land one division a day until
sions, without “overheads,” and it has about D plus 24.
been assumed that the equivalent of an
additional two divisions can be afloat in
ships. Proposed Plan.
17. Airborne forces amounting to two
airborne divisions and some five or six Preliminary Phase.
parachute regiments will be available, 21. During the preliminary phase,
but, largely owing to shortage of trans- which must start forthwith, all possible
port aircraft, it is only possible to lift the means including air and sea action, pro-
equivalent of two-thirds of one airborne paganda, political and economic pressure,
division simultaneously, on the basis of and sabotage, must be integrated into a
present forecasts. combined offensive aimed at softening
18. Even if additional landing ships the German resistance. In particular, air
and craft could be made available, the action should be directed towards the
beaches in the Caen area would preclude reduction of the German air forces on the
the landing of forces greater than the Western front, the progressive destruc-
equivalent of the three assault and two tion of the German economic system and
follow-up divisions, for which craft have the undermining of German morale.
already been provided. Nevertheless, an 22. In order to contain the maximum
all-round increase of at least 10 per cent. German forces away from the Caen area
in landing ships and craft is highly de- diversionary operations should be staged
sirable in order to provide a greater mar- against other areas such as the Pas de
gin for contingencies within the frame- Calais and the Mediterranean Coast of
work of the existing plan. Futhermore, France.
sufficient lift for a further assault division
could most usefully be employed in an Preparatory Phase.
additional landing on other beaches. 23. During this phase air action will
19. There is no port of any capacity be intensified against the G.A.F., par-
within the sector although there are a ticularly in North-West France, with a
number of small ports of limited value. view to reducing the effectiveness of the
Maintenance will, therefore, of necessity G.A.F. in that area, and will be extended
be largely over the beaches until it is to include attacks against communica-
possible to capture and open up the port tions more directly associated with move-
454 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

ment of German reserves which might tion and operation of additional airfields
affect the Caen area. Three naval assault in the area South-East of Caen.
forces will be assembled with the naval 26. It is considered that, within four-
escorts and loaded at ports along the teen days of the initial assault, Cherbourg
South Coast of England. Two naval as- should be captured and the bridgehead
sault forces carrying the follow-up forces extended to include the general line
will also be assembled and loaded, one in Trouville-Alencon-Mont St. Michel. By
the Thames Estuary and one on the West this date, moreover, it should have been
Coast. possible to land some eighteen divisions
and to have in operation about fourteen
The Assault. airfields from which twenty-eight to
thirty-three fighter-type squadrons should
24. After a very short air bombard-
be operating.
ment of the beach defences three assault
divisions will be landed simultaneously
on the Caen beaches, followed up on Further Developments after Capture
D Day by the equivalent of two tank of Cherbourg.
brigades (United States regiments) and a
brigade group (United States regimental
27. After the capture of Cherbourg the
combat team). At the same time, airborne
Supreme Allied Commander will have to
forces will be used to seize the town of
decide whether to initiate operations to
Caen; and subsidiary operations by com-
seize the Seine ports or whether he must
mandos and possibly by airborne forces
content himself with first occupying the
will be undertaken to neutralize certain
Brittany ports. In this decision he will
coast defences and seize certain impor-
have to be guided largely by the situation
tant river crossings. The object of the
of the enemy forces. If the German re-
assault forces will be to seize the general
sistance is sufficiently weak, an immediate
line Grandcamp-Bayeux-Caen.
advance could be made to seize Havre and
Rouen. On the other hand, the more
Follow-up and Build-up Phase.
probable situation is that the Germans
25. Subsequent action will take the will have retired with the bulk of their
form of a strong thrust Southwards and forces to hold Paris and the line of the
South-Westwards with a view to destroy- Seine, where they can best be covered by
ing enemy forces, acquiring sites for air- their air- forces from North-East France
fields, and gaining depth for a turning and where they may possibly be rein-
movement into the Cotentin Peninsula forced by formations from Russia. Else-
directed on Cherbourg. When sufficient where they may move a few divisions from
depth has been gained a force will ad- Southern France to hold the crossings of
vance into the Cotentin and seize Cher- the Loire and will leave the existing de-
bourg. At the same time a thrust will be fensive divisions in Brittany.
made to deepen the bridgehead South- It will therefore most probably be
Eastwards in order to cover the construc- necessary for us to seize the Brittany ports
APPENDIX A 455

first, in order to build up sufficient forces normally on the right of the line and the
with which we can eventually force the British and Canadian forces on the left.
passage of the Seine.
28. Under these circumstances, the
most suitable plan would appear to be to Major Conditions Aflecting Success
secure first the left flank and to gain suffi- of the Operation.
cient airfields for subsequent operations.
This would be done by extending the 32. It will be seen that the plan for.
bridgehead to the line of the River Eure the initial landing is based on two main
from Dreux to Rouen and thence along principles-concentration of force and
the line of the Seine to the sea, seizing at tactical surprise. Concentration of the
the same time Chartres, Orleans and assault forces is considered essential if
Tours. we are to ensure adequate air support and
29. Under cover of these operations a if our limited assault forces are to avoid
force would be employed in capturing defeat in detail. An attempt has been
the Brittany ports: the first step being a made to obtain tactical surprise by land-
thrust Southwards to seize Nantes and ing in a lightly defended area-presum-
St. Nazaire, followed by subsidiary opera- ably lightly defended as, due to its dis-
tions to capture Brest and the various tance from a major port, the Germans
small ports of the Brittany Peninsula. consider a landing there unlikely to be
30. This action would complete the successful. This action, of course, pre-
occupation of our initial lodgement area supposes that we can offset the absence of
and would secure sufficient major ports a port in the initial stages by the provision
for the maintenance of at least thirty divi- of improvised sheltered waters. It is be-
sions. As soon as the organization of the lieved that this can be accomplished.
L. of C. in this lodgement area allowed, 33. The operation calls for a much
and sufficient air forces had been estab- higher standard of performance on the
lished, operations would then be begun part of the naval assault forces than any
to force the line of the Seine, and to previous operation. This will depend
capture Paris and the Seine ports. As upon their being formed in sufficient time
opportunity offered, subsidiary action to permit of adequate training.
would also be taken to clear the Germans 34. Above all, it is essential that there
from the Biscay ports to facilitate the should be an over-all reduction in the
entry of additional American troops and German fighter force between now and
the feeding of the French population. the time of the surface assault. From now
onwards every practical method of achiev-
Command and Control. ing this end must be employed. This con-
dition, above all others, will dictate the
31. In carrying out Operation “Over- date by which the amphibious assault can
lord” administrative control would be be launched.
greatly simplified if the principle were 35. The next condition is that the
adopted that the United States forces were number of German offensive divisions in
456 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

reserve must not exceed a certain figure formations, varying from a maximum of
on the target date if the operation is to eighteen divisions in the first month to
have a reasonable chance of success. The twelve divisions in the second month,
German reserves in France and the Low rapidly diminishing to nil in the third
Countries as a whole, excluding divisions month. Unless adequate measures are
holding the coast, G.A.F. divisions and taken to provide sheltered waters by ar-
training divisions, should not exceed on tificial means, the operation will be at the
the day of the assault twelve full-strength mercy of the weather. Moreover, special
first-quality divisions. In addition, the facilities and equipment will be required
Germans should not be able to transfer to prevent undue damage to craft during
more than fifteen first-quality divisions this extended period. Immediate action
from Russia during the first two months. for the provision of the necessary require-
Moreover, on the target date the divisions ments is essential.
in reserve should be so located that the 37. Given these conditions-a reduced
number of first-quality divisions which G.A.F., a limitation in the number or
the Germans could deploy in the Caen effectiveness of German offensive forma-
area to support the divisions holding the tions in France, and adequate arrange-
coast should not exceed three divisions ments to provide improvised sheltered
on D Day, five divisions on D plus 2, or waters-it is considered that Operation
nine divisions by D plus 8. “Overlord” has a reasonable prospect of
During the preliminary period, there- success. To ensure these conditions being
fore, every effort must be made to dissi- attained by the 1st May, 1944, action must
pate and divert German formations, start now and every possible effort made
lower their fighting efficiency and disrupt by all means in our power to soften Ger-
communications. man resistance and to speed up our own
36. Finally, there is the question of preparations.
maintenance. Maintenance will have to
be carried out over beaches for a period Ofices of the War Cabinet, S.W. 1,
of some three months for a number of 30th July, 1943
Appendix B
DIRECTIVE TO SUPREME COMMANDER,
ALLIED EXPEDITIONARY FORCE

1. You are hereby designated as Supreme Allied Commander of the forces


placed under your orders for operations for liberation of Europe from Germans.
Your title will be Supreme Commander Allied Expeditionary Force.
2. Task. You will enter the continent of Europe and, in conjunction with the
other United Nations, undertake operations aimed at the heart of Germany and
the destruction of her armed forces. The date for entering the Continent is the
month of May, 1944. After adequate channel ports have been secured, exploi-
tation will be directed towards securing an area that will facilitate both ground
and air operations against the enemy.
3. Notwithstanding the target date above you will be prepared at any time
to take immediate advantage of favorable circumstances, such as withdrawal
by the enemy on your front, to effect a reentry into the Continent with such
forces as you have available at the time; a general plan for this operation when
approved will be furnished for your assistance.
4. Command. You are responsible to the Combined Chiefs of Staff and will
exercise command generally in accordance with the diagram at Appendix. Direct
communication with the United States and British Chiefs of Staff is authorized
in the interest of facilitating your operations and for arranging necessary logistic
support.
5. Logistics. In the United Kingdom the responsibility for logistics organiza-
tion, concentration, movement and supply of forces to meet the requirements of
your plan will rest with British Service Ministries so far as British Forces are con-
cerned. So far as United States Forces are concerned, this responsibility will rest
with the United States War and Navy Departments. You will be responsible for
the coordination of logistical arrangements on the continent. You will also be
responsible for coordinating the requirements of British and United States forces
under your command.
6. Coordination of operations of other Forces and Agencies. In preparation for
your assault on enemy occupied Europe, Sea and Air Forces agencies of sabotage,
subversion and propaganda, acting under a variety of authorities are now in action.
You may recommend any variation in these activities which may seem to you
desirable.
7. Relationship to United Nations Forces in other areas. Responsibility will
rest with the Combined Chiefs of Staff for supplying information relating to opera-
tions of the Forces of the U. S. S. R. for your guidance in timing your operations.
It is understood that the Soviet Forces will launch an offensive at about the
458 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

same time as OVERLORD with the object of preventing the German forces from
transferring from the Eastern to the Western front. The Allied Commander
in Chief, Mediterranean Theater, will conduct operations designed to assist your
operation, including the launching of an attack against the south of France at about
the same time as OVERLORD. The scope and timing of his operations will be de-
cided by the Combined Chiefs of Staff. You will establish contact with him and
submit to the Combined Chiefs of Staff your views and recommendations regard-
ing operations from the Mediterranean in support of your attack from the United
Kingdom. The Combined Chiefs of Staff will place under your command the
forces operating in Southern France as soon as you are in a position to assume
such command. You will submit timely recommendations compatible with this
regard.
8. Relationship with Allied Governments-the re-establishment of Civil Gov-
ernments and Liberated Allied Territories and the administration of enemy
territories. Further instructions will be issued to you on these subjects at a later
date.
Appendix C
Fuehrer Headquarters
23 March 1942
Top Secret
The Fuehrer
and Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces
25 Conies
Copy No.
OKW/WFSt/Op.Nr.: 001031/42 g.Kdos.
Directive No. 40

Subj: Command Organization on the Coasts


I.) General Situation:
In the days to come the coasts of Europe will be seriously exposed to the
danger of enemy landings.
The enemy’s choice of time and place for landing operations will not be based
solely on strategic considerations. Reverses in other theaters of operations, obliga-
tions toward his allies, and political motives may prompt the enemy to arrive at
decisions that would be unlikely to result from purely military deliberations.
Even enemy landing operations with limited objectives will-insofar as the
enemy does establish himself on the coast at all-seriously affect our own plans
in any case. They will disrupt our coastwise shipping and tie down strong Army
and Luftwaffe forces which thereby would become unavailable for commitment
at critical points. Particularly grave dangers will arise if the enemy succeeds in
taking our airfields, or in establishing airbases in the territory that he has captured.
Moreover, our military installations and war industries that are in many
instances located along or close to the coast, and which in part have valuable
equipment, invite local raids by the enemy.
Special attention must be paid to British preparations for landings on the open
coast, for which numerous armored landing craft suitable for the transportation
of combat vehicles and heavy weapons are available. Large-scale parachute and
glider operations are likewise to be expected.
II.) General Tactical Instructions for Coastal Defense:
1.) Coastal defense is a task for the Armed Forces, and requires particularly
close and complete co-operation of all the services.
2.) Timely recognition of the preparations, assembly, and approach of the
enemy for a landing operation must be the goal of the intelligence service as well
as that of continual reconnaissance by Navy and Luftwaffe.
Embarkation operations or transport fleets at sea must subsequently be the
target for the concentration of all suitable air and naval forces, with the object
of destroying the enemy as far off our coast as possible.
CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

However, because the enemy may employ skillful deception and take advan-
tage of poor visibility, thereby catching us completely by surprise, all troops that
might be exposed to such surprise operations must always be fully prepared for
defensive action.
Counteracting the well-known tendency of the troops to relax their alertness
as time goes on will be one of the most important command functions.
3.) Recent battle experiences have taught us that in fighting for the beaches-
which include coastal waters within the range of medium coastal artillery-
res’ponsibility for the preparation and execution of defensive operations must
unequivocally and unreservedly be concentrated in the hands of one man.
All available forces and equipment of the several services, the organizations
and formations outside of the armed forces, as well as the German civil agencies
in the zone of operations will be committed by the responsible commander for the
destruction of enemy transport facilities and invasion forces. That commitment
must lead to the collapse of the enemy attack before, if possible, but at the latest
upon the actual landing.
An immediate counterattack must annihilate landed enemy forces, or throw
them back into the sea. All instruments of warfare-regardless of the service, or
the formation outside of the armed forces to which they might belong-are to be
jointly committed toward that end. Nevertheless, shore-based Navy supply estab-
lishments must npt be hampered in their essential functions, nor Luftwaffe ground
organizations and Flak protection of airfields impaired in their efficiency, unless
they have become directly affected by ground combat operations.
No headquarters and no unit may initiate a retrograde movement in such a
situation. Wherever Germans are committed on or near the coast, they must be
armed and trained for active combat.
The enemy must be kept from establishing himself on any island which in
enemy hands would constitute a threat to the mainland or coastwise shipping.
4.) Disposition of forces and improvement of fortifications are to be so made
that the main defensive effort lies in those coastal sectors that are the most probable
sites for enemy landings (fortified areas).
Those remaining coastal sectors that are vulnerable to coups de main of even
small units must be protected by means of a strongpoint type of defense, utilizing,
if possible, the support of shore batteries. -All installations of military and military-
economic importance will be included in that strongpoint defense system.
The same rules apply to offshore islands. Coastal sectors that are less endangered
will be patrolled.
5.1 The several services will establish a uniform definition of coastal sectors,
I

if necessary on the basis of a final decision on the part of the responsible commander
named in III.) 1.) below.
6.) By means of proportionate allocation of forces, improvement of posi-
tions (perimeter defense) , and stockpiling of supplies, the fortified areas and
APPENDIX C 461

strongpoints must be enabled to hold out even against superior enemy forces for
extended periods of time.
Fortified areas and strongpoints are to be held to the last. They must never
be forced to surrender because of a shortage of ammunition, rations, or water.
7.) The commander responsible according to III.) 1.) below, issues orders
for coastal security, and assures a speedy evaluation, collation, and dissemination
to authorized headquarters and civil agencies of intelligence procured by all the
services.
Upon the first indication of an imminent enemy operation, that commander is
authorized to issue the necessary orders for unified and complementary reconnais-
sance by sea and air.
8.) All elements stationed in the vicinity of the coast, whether headquarters
or units of the Armed Forces, or organizations or formations outside of the Armed
Forces, will forego the niceties of peacetime protocol. Their quarters, security
measures, equipment, state of alert, and utilization of local resources will be gov-
erned solely by the necessity of countering every enemy raid with the utmost speed
and force. Wherever the military situation demands, the civilian population will be
evacuated at once.
III.) Command:
1.) The following authorities are responsible for the preparation and conduct
of defense on coasts under German control:
a) in the Eastern Theater of Operations (excluding Finland), the army
commanders designated by OKH;
b) in the coastal sector under the control of Army Lapland, the Com-
manding General of Army Lapland;
c) in Norway, the Armed Forces Commander, Norway;
d) in Denmark, the Commander of German Troops in Denmark;
e) in the occupied West (including the Netherlands), the Commander in
Chief West;
In matters pertaining to coastal defense, the commanders mentioned in
categories d) and e) above are under the direct control of OKW.
f) in the Balkans (including the occupied islands), the Armed Forces
Commander Southeast;
g) in the Baltic and the Ukraine, the Armed Forces Commanders Baltic
and Ukraine;
h) in the Zone of Interior, the commanding admirals.
2.) Within the framework of coastal defense missions, the commanders desig-
nated in III.) 1.) above, will have command authority over tactical headquarters
of the services, the German civil authorities as well as units and organizations out-
side of the armed forces that are located within their respective areas. In exercising
that authority, the commanders will issue tactical, organizational, and supply
orders necessary for coastal defense, and insure their execution. They will influence
CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

training to whatever extent is necessary for preparing their forces for ground opera-
tions. The required data will be put at their disposal.
3.) Orders and measures implementing this directive will give priority to the
following:
a) inclusion within fortified areas or strongpoints of all installations im-
portant militarily or to the war economy, particularly those of the Navy (submarine
bases) and the Luftwaffe;
b) unified direction of coastal surveillance;
c) infantry defenses of fortified areas and strongpoints;
d) infantry defenses of isolated installations outside of fortified areas and
strongpoints, such as coastal patrol and aircraft warning stations;
e) artillery defenses against ground targets (in installing new shore batteries
and displacing those in position, the requirements of naval warfare will receive
priority) ;
f) defense preparedness of fortified establishments, their structural improve-
ment, and the stockpiling of reserve supplies, as well as defensive preparedness and
stockpiling of supplies in isolated installations outside of those establishments
(including supply with all weapons necessary for defense, mines, hand grenades,
flame throwers, obstacle material, and similar items) ;
g) signal communications;
h) tests of the state of alert as well as infantry and artillery training within
the framework of the defensive missions.
4.) Similar authority will be vested in the commanders of local headquarters
down to sector commands, insofar as they have been made responsible for the de-
fense of coastal sectors.
The commanders enumerated in III.) 1.) above, will generally confer such
responsibilities on commanding generals of army divisions that are committed for
coastal defense, and in Crete, on the Fortress Commander Crete.
In individual sectors and subsectors, and particularly in establishments that
have definitely been designated as air or naval bases, the local Luftwaffe or Navy
commanders are to be put in charge of the entire defense, insofar as their other
missions permit them to assume those responsibilities.
5.) Naval and strategic air forces are subject to the control of the Navy or
Luftwaffe, respectively. However, in case of enemy attacks on the coast they are-
within the framework of their tactical capabilities-bound to comply with requests
from the commanders responsible for defensive operations. For that reason they
must be included in the exchange of military intelligence, in preparation for their
future employment. Close contact must be maintained with their respective higher
headquarters.
IV.) Special missions of the several services within the framework of coastal defense:
1.) Navy:
_.
a) organization and protection of coastwise shipping;
APPENDIX C 463

b) training and commitment of the entire coastal artillery against sea


targets;
c) commitment of naval forces.
2.) Luftwaffe:
a) air defense in the coastal areas.
This mission does not affect the right of local defense commanders to direct
the assembly of Flak artillery suited and available for commitment against enemy
invasion forces.
b) improvement of the Luftwaffe ground organization and its protection
against air and surprise ground attacks on airfields that have not been sufficiently
protected by their inclusion in the coastal defense system.
c) commitment of strategic air forces.
Instances of overlapping control resulting from those special missions
must be accepted as unavoidable.
V.) As of 1 April 1942, all instructions and orders not in agreement with the present
directive are rescinded.
New combat directives issued by the responsible commander pursuant to my
directive will be submitted to me through OKW.
signed: Adolf Hitler
Appendix D
Fuehrer Headquarters
3 November 1943
Top Secret
The Fuehrer
OKW/WFSt/Op.No. 662656/43 g.K. Chefs
27 Copies
Copy No. . . .
Directive No. 51

For the last two and one-half years the bitter and costly struggle against Bolshe-
vism has made the utmost demands upon the bulk of our military resources and
energies. This commitment was in keeping with the seriousness of the danger, and
the over-all situation. The situation has since changed. The threat from the East
remains, but an even greater danger looms in the West: the Anglo-American land-
ing! In the East, the vastness of the space will, as a last resort, permit a loss of territory
even on a major scale, without suffering a mortal blow to Germany’s chance for
survival.
Not so in the West! If the enemy here succeeds in penetrating our defenses on
a wide front, consequences of staggering proportions will follow within a short time.
All signs point to an offensive against the Western Front of Europe no later than
spring, and perhaps earlier.
For that reason, I can no longer justify the further weakening of the West in
favor of other theaters of war. I have therefore decided to strengthen the defenses
in the West, particularly at places from which we shall launch our long-range war
against England. For those are the very points at which the enemy must and will
attack; there-unless all indications are misleading-will be fought the decisive
invasion battle.
Holding attacks and diversions on other fronts are to be expected. Not even
the possibility of a large-scale offensive against Denmark may be excluded. It
would pose greater nautical problems and could be less effectively supported from
the air, but would nevertheless produce the greatest political and strategic impact
if it were to succeed.
During the opening phase of the battle, the entire striking power of the enemy
will of necessity be directed against our forces manning the coast. Only an all-out
effort in the construction of fortifications, an unsurpassed effort that will enlist all
available manpower and physical resources of Germany and the occupied areas,
will be able to strengthen our defenses along the coasts within the short time that
still appears to be left to us.
Stationary weapons (heavy AT guns, immobile tanks to be dug-in, coast
artillery, shore-defense guns, mines, etc.) arriving in Denmark and the occupied
APPENDIX D

West within the near future will be heavily concentrated in points of main de-
fensive effort at the most vulnerable coastal sectors. At the same time, we must take
the calculated risk that for the present we may be unable to improve our defenses
in less threatened sectors.
Should the enemy nevertheless force a landing by concentrating his armed
might, he must be hit by the full fury of our counterattack. For this mission ample
and speedy reinforcements of men and materiel, as well as intensive training must
transform available larger units into first-rate, fully mobile general reserves suit-
able for offensive operations. The counterattack of these units will prevent the
enlargement of the beachhead, and throw the enemy back into the sea.
In addition, well-planned emergency measures, prepared down to the last
detail, must enable us instantly to throw against the invader every fit man and
machine from coastal sectors not under attack and from the home front.
The anticipated strong attacks by air and sea must be relentlessly countered
by Air Force and Navy with all their available resources. I therefore order the
following:
A) Army:
1.) The Chief of the Army General Staff and the Inspector General of Panzer
Troops will submit to me as soon as possible a schedule covering arms, tanks,
assault guns, motor vehicles, and ammunition to be allocated to the Western Front
and Denmark within the next three months. That schedule will conform to the new
situation. The following considerations will be basic:
a) Sufficient mobility for all panzer and panzer grenadier divisions in the
West, and equipment of each of those units by December 1943 with 93 Mark IV
tanks or assault guns, as well as large numbers of antitank weapons.
Accelerated reorganization of the 20 Luftwaffe Field Divisions into an
effective mobile reserve force by the end of 1943. This reorganization is to include
the issue of assault guns.
Accelerated issue of all authorized weapons to the SS Panzer Grenadier
Division Hitler Jugend, * the 21st Panzer Division, and the infantry and reserve
divisions stationed in Jutland.
b) Additional shipments of Mark IV tanks, assault guns, and heavy AT
guns to the reserve panzer divisions stationed in the West and in Denmark, as
well as to the Assault Gun Training Battalion in Denmark.
c) In November and December, monthly allotments of 100 heavy AT guns
models 40 and 43 (half of these to be mobile) in addition to those required for
newly activated units in the West and in Denmark.
d) Allotment of large numbers of weapons (including about 1,000 machine
guns) for augmenting the armament of those static divisions that are committed
for roastal defense in the West and in Denmark, and for standardizing the equip-
ment of elements that are to be withdrawn from sectors not under attack.

* In this month (November 1943) this division was converted to a Panzer division (12th SS).
CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

e) Ample supply of close-combat AT weapons to units in vulnerable sectors.


f) Improvement of artillery and AT defenses in units stationed in Denmark,
as well as those committed for coastal protection in the occupied West. Strengthen-
ing of GHQ artillery.
2.) The units and elements stationed in the West or in Denmark, as well as
panzer, assault gun, and AT units to be activated in the West, must not be trans-
ferred to other fronts without my permission. The Chief of the Army General Staff,
or the Inspector General of Panzer Troops will submit to me a report through the
Armed Forces Operations Staff as soon as the issue of equipment to the panzer and
assault gun battalions, as well as to the AT battalions and companies, has been
completed.
3.) Beyond similar measures taken in the past, the Commander in Chief West
will establish timetables for, and conduct maneuvers and command post exercises
on, the procedure for bringing up units from sectors not under attack. These units
will be made capable of performing offensive missions, however limited. In that
connection I demand that sectors not threatened by the enemy be ruthlessly
stripped of all forces except small guard detachments. For sectors from which re-
serves are withdrawn, security and guard detachments must be set aside from
security and alarm units. Labor forces drawn largely from the native population
must likewise be organized in those sectors, in order to keep open whatever roads
might be destroyed by the enemy air force.
4.) The Commander of German Troops in Denmark will take measures in
the area under his control in compliance with paragraph 3 above.
5.) Pursuant to separate orders, the Chief of Army Equipment and Com-
mander of the Replacement Army will form Kampfgruppen in regimental strength,
security battalions, and engineer construction battalions from training cadres,
trainees, schools, and instruction and convalescent units in the Zone of the Interior.
These troops must be ready for shipment on 48 hours’ notice.
Furthermore, other available personnel are to be organized into battalions
of replacements and equipped with the available weapons, so that the anticipated
heavy losses can quickly be replaced.
B) Luftwaffe:
The offensive and defensive effectiveness of Luftwaffe units in the West and
in Denmark will be increased to meet the changed situation. To that end, prepara-
tions will be made for the release of units suited for commitment in the anti-invasion
effort, that is, all flying units and mobile Flak artillery that can be spared from the
air defenses of the home front, and from schools and training units in the Zone of
the Interior. All those units are to be earmarked for the West and possibly Denmark.
The Luftwaffe ground organization in southern Norway, Denmark, north-
western Germany, and the West will be expanded and supplied in a way that will
-by the most far-reaching decentralization of own forces-deny targets to the
enemy bombers, and split the enemy’s offensive effort in case of large-scale opera-
APPENDIX D

tions. Particularly important in that connection will be our fighter forces. Possibil-
ities for their commitment must be increased by the establishment of numerous
advance landing fields. Special emphasis is to be placed on good camouflage. I
expect also that the Luftwaffe will unstintingly furnish all available forces, by
stripping them from less threatened areas.
C) Navy:
The Navy will prepare the strongest possible forces suitable for attacking the
enemy landing fleets. Coastal defense installations in the process of construction will
be completed with the utmost speed. The emplacing of additional coastal batteries
and the possibility of laying further flanking mine fields should be investigated.
All school, training, and other shore-based personnel fit for ground combat
must be prepared for commitment so that, without undue delay, they can at least be
employed as security forces within the zone of the enemy landing operations.
While preparing the reinforcement of the defenses in the West, the Navy must
keep in mind that it might be called upon to repulse simultaneous enemy landings
in Norway and Denmark. In that connection, I attach particular importance to the
assembly of numerous U-boats in the northern area. A temporary weakening of
U-boat forces in the Atlantic must be risked.
D) SS:
The Reichsfuehrer-SS will determine what Waffen-SS and police forces he can
release for combat, security, and guard duty. He is to prepare to organize effective
combat and security forces from training, replacement, and convalescent units, as
well as schools and other home-front establishments.
E) The commanders in chief of the services, the Reichsfuehrer-SS, the Chief of the
Army General Staff, the Commander in Chief West, the Chief of Army Equipment
and Commander of the Replacement Army, the Inspector General of Panzer Troops,
as well as the Commander of German Troops in Denmark will report to me by 15
November all measures taken or planned.
I expect that all agencies will make a supreme effort toward utilizing every
moment of the remaining time in preparing for the decisive battle in the West.
All authorities will guard against wasting time and energy in useless jurisdic-
tional squabbles, and will direct all their efforts toward strengthening our defensive
and offensive power.
signed: Adolf Hitler
Appendix E
CHRONOLOGYOF MAIN PLANNINGPAPERS FROM 1 JANUARY 1944
Date Hq Paper
31 Jan FUSA Planning Directive for OVERLORD
1 Feb Joint Commanders NEPTUNE, Initial Joint Plan
4 Feb Second Army (Br) Outline Plan
10 Feb TF 122, FUSA Joint Agreement for Amphibious Op-
erations
12 Feb V Corps Preliminary 'OVERLORD' Plan
25 Feb FUSA Operations Plan NEPTUNE
28 Feb V Corps Planning Guide, Operation “OVER-
LORD"
28 Feb ANCXF Operation “NEPruNE’‘-Naval Plan”
7 Mar 21 A Gp Directive to FUSAG
10 Mar SHAEF Directive to 21 A Gp, AEAF, ANCXF
20 Mar Second Army, 83 Joint Plan
Group (2d TAF)
26 Mar V Corps NEPTUNEPhI
27 Mar VII Corps Plan of Operation, NEPTUNE
8 Apr 21 A Gp, ANCXF NEPTUNE Joint Fire Plan
10 Apr ANCXF Operation NEPruNE-Naval Orders
(ON)
15 Apr AEAF Operation iwwruiwz-Overall Air Plan
16 Apr 1st Div Field Order No. 35
21 Apr VVNTF Operation Plan No. 244 (ONWEST

24 Apr VYar Office Movement Plan


28 Apr 21AGp Amended Directive to FUSAG
1 May ANCXF Amendment No. 1 to ON
2 May Ninth AF IX Tactical Air Command Plan for
Operation NEPTUNE
6 May 82d Abn Div Field Order No. 6
8 May FUSAG, 9th AF, WNTF Joint Operations Plan, U.S. Forces for
Operation OVERLORD (Revised)
9 May VII Corps Field Order No. 1
12 May 4th Div Field Order No. 1
15 May Assault Force U Operation Order No. 3-44- (ON-
WEST/U-3) $
* Superseded by Operation NeP'ruNE-Naval Orders (ON). All copies ordered destroyed.
t Changes of 4, 10. and 22 May and addenda of 29-31 May.
$ Changes of 30 May and 1 June.
APPENDIX E 469

18 May V Corps Letter of Instruction, Amending NEP-


TUNEPhIl
18 May IOlst Abn Div Field Order No. 1
20 May Assault Force 0 Operation Order No. BB-44 (ON-
WEST/O)
27 May FUSA Revision No. 2 to Annex 12 (Fire Sup-
port)
28 May 82d Abn Div Revision of Field Order No. 6
28 May VII Corps Field Order No. 1 (Corrected Copy)
Appendix F
COMPARATIVE FIRE POWER OF THE U.S. AND GERMAN 1944-TYPE
INFANTRY DIVISIONS

U.S. German 1944

Strength (oficers and enlisted men) ........................ 14,037 12,769


Rifles-carbines. ........................................ 11,507 9,069
Pistols ................................................ 1,228 1,981
Submachine guns ...................................... 295 1,503
Light MG’s and automatic rifles ......................... 539 566
Heavy MG’s. .......................................... 90 90
60-mm. mortars ........................................ 90 -
8 l-mm. mortars. ....................................... 54 48
120-mm. mortars ...................................... - 28
Bazookas. ............................................. 558 108t
Flame throwers ........................................ - 20
U.S. .50-cal. MG’s; German 20-mm. AA guns. ........... 237 12
37-mm. AT guns ....................................... 13
ST-mm. AT guns ....................................... 57 -
75-mm. AT guns. ...................................... - 35
75-mm. infantry howitzers .............................. 18
105-mm. howitzers ..................................... 54 36
U.S. 15 5-mm. howitzers; German 150-mm. howitzers. .... 12 185

‘Also had 2.13 1 ritle grenadelaunchers.


tEither bazookas or antirank rifles.
:Eighreen were found in rhe cannoncompanies of the infantry regiments.
Six were infantry howitzers, txvo in WI infantry howitzer companyassigned to each infantry regiment Bach
howitzer companyhad, ia addition, six 75-mm. howitzers.
Appendix G
DIVISIONS AVAILABLE TO GERMANY ON 6 JUNE 1944
(BASED ON GERMAN SITUATION MAPS)

Theater Inf me Pa we Misc

Denmark 2 1+ 3
2 Brig

Norway 11

Finland 10

Eastern Front 122 25+ 17+


1 Brig I Brig

OB SUEDOST (Balkans) 20 2 3

OB SUEDWEST (Italy) 17+ 7 1


1 Brig
~-
OB WEST (France and Low Cduntries) 41+ 11 9
1 .Rgt

Zone of Interior 3+ 1+ 4+
1 Brig 2 Brig 2 Brig

TOTAL GERMAN DIVISIONS 226+ 47-t 37f


2 Brig 3 Brig 3 Brig
lRBt
AXIS SATELLITES

Finnish, Eastern Front and Finland 14+ 1 1 Brig


8 Brig

Rombian, Eastern Front and Rominia 17+ 1 2


5 Brig

Hungarian, Eastern Front and Hungary 9+ 2 5


3 Brig

Bulgarian, Occupation Duty in Balkans and Bulgaria 11

Italian, In Zone of Interior 4

TOTAL AXIS SATELLITE DIVISIONS 55+ 4 7+


I6 Brig 1 Brig
Appendix H
Table of Equivalent Ranks
U.S. Army German Army and Air Force German WaDendS
None Reichsmarschall None
General of the Army Generalfeldmarschall Reichsfuehrer-SS
General Generaloberst Oberstgruppenfuehrer
Lieutenant General General der Infanterie Obergruppenfuehrer
Artillerie
Gebirgstruppen
Kavallerie
Nachrichtentruppen
Panzertruppen
Pioniere
Luftwaffe
Flieger
Fallschirmtruppen
Flakartillerie
Luftnachrichtentruppen
Major General Generalleutnant Gruppenfuehrer
Brigadier General Generalmajor Brigadefuehrer
None None Oberfuehrer
Colonel Oberst Standartenfuehrer
Lieutenant Colonel Oberstleutnant Obersturmbannfuehrer
Major Major Sturmbannfuehrer
Captain Hauptmann Hauptsturmfuehrer
Captain (Cavalry) Rittmeister
First Lieutenant Oberleutnant Obersturmfuehrer
Second Lieutenant Leutnant Untersturmfuehrer
Appendix I
Recipients of the Distinguished
Service Cross
All pertinent Army records have been Buschlen, Sgt. Arthur B. (P)
scrutinized in the endeavor to include in Canham, Col. Charles D. W.
the following list the name of every sol- Cassidy, Sgt. O’Dell K.
Cassidy, Lt. Col. Patrick F.
dier that received the DSC for his part in
Cavalierre, Pvt. Peter
the operations recounted in this volume. Chase, S/Sgt. Donald L.
Inasmuch as no complete listing of DSC Chesnut, 1st Lt. Webb W.
awards is maintained in any single Army Clark, S/Sgt. Philip C.
file, it is possible that some names may in- Clarke, Pvt. James A.
Clayman, Lt. Col. Donald C.
advertently have been omitted. (P) indi-
Coffman, S/Sgt. Ralph S.
cates a posthumous award. Colson, Sgt. Clarence
Alexander, S/Sgt. Paul E. (P) Colwell, S/Sgt. Curtis
Amerman, 2d Lt. Walter G. Cordes, Pvt. Herman J. (P)
Anderson, 2d Lt. William A. Cota, Brig. Gen. Norman D.
Anker, 2d Lt. Leonard A. Cotter, Capt. John J.
AppleL,y, T/4 Stanley P. Courtney, Sgt. William J.
Armelhno, Capt. John R. Curtis, T/Sgt. Earl R.
Armstrong, T/Sgt. L. M. Cutler, 1st Lt. Robert R.
Arnold, Capt. Edgar L. Danforth, Cpl. Vergial E.
Atchley, Pvt. John E. Dawson, 1st Lt. Francis W.
Atwell, T/4 Daniel E. Dawson, Capt. Joseph T.
Bailey, Maj. Woodrow W. Deery, T/5 John F.
Baker, Pvt. Ode11 Dickinson, Pfc. Byron B.
Barba, Cpl. James N. Dillon, 1st Lt. William T.
Barber, Pfc. Alexander W. Ditullio, Pfc. Dominick
Barcellona, 2d Lt. Gaetano R. Dock, T/4 Lowell L.
Beavers, 1st Lt. Harold R. Dove, Pvt. Vinton W.
Beitler, Capt. Kenneth E. Dowdy, Lt. Col. John (P)
Belcher, Sgt. Julius W. Dreher, Pfc. William E., Jr.
Benn, T/Sgt. William R., Jr. Dulin, Lt. Col. Thaddeus R. (P)
Bennct, Lt. Col. Donald V. Earl, Sgt. Thomas R.
Benton, S/Sgt. John L. Eberle, 1st Lt. George M.
Berkowitz, Pfc. Henry Eddy, Maj. Gen. Manton S.
Bingham, Maj. Sidney V. Elder, Pfc. Leonard P.
Blcau, 2d Lt. Kenneth (P) Elder, Capt. Ned S.
Boldcrson, Pfc. John D. Ellis, T/Sgt. Calvin L.
Bowen, Pfc. George H. Ernest, Capt. Charles A., III
Briggs, Capt. Victor H. Evans, 2d Lt. William M. (P)
Brooks, 1st Lt. Elton E. Fair, 1st Lt. Dewitt C., Sr.
Burgin, Pfc. James F. Ferguson, 2d Lt. Forest K.
474 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Fitzsimmons, 1st Sgt. Lawrence Kolodziek, Pfc. Frank S. (P)


Fleishman, Pfc. Ward D. (P) Krause, Lt. Col. Edward C.
Fournier, Pfc. Edgar L. Kulp, Capt. John A.
Fryer, Pvt. Gibson Lacy, 1st Lt. Joseph R.
Gallagher, Pfc. Richard J. Langen, T/4 Robert F.
Ganabrant, Capt. John R. (P) Lanterman, 1st Lt. Raymond E.
Gandara, Pvt. Joe Larson, T/Sgt. Donald W.
Gavin, Brig. Gen. James M. Lee, Capt. Gail B.
Gearing, 1st Lt. Edward N. Leino, Pvt. Loyd J.
George, Capt. Malcolm L. (P) Lillyman, Capt. Frank
Gettman, T/5 John Lockwood, Pvt. John A.
Gibbs, Lt. Col. George W. Lomell, 1st Sgt. Leonard G.
Giles, 1st Lt. Carl K. Lovell, Sgt. Warden F.
Glider, 2d Lt. Joseph Lutz, Pvt. Frederick P.
Goranson, Capt. Ralph E. Mabry, Capt. George L., Jr.
Gowdy, 1st Lt. George H. MacConchie, 1st Lt. Howard P.
Graff, 1st Lt. Elmer W. MacNeely, Lt. Col. Carlton 0.
Griffin, Pfc. Harry E. Mager, 2d Lt. Irvin A. (P)
Griffin, Pfc. John V. Maloney, Lt. Col. Arthur A.
Habib, Sgt. George A. Maloney, Capt. John S.
Haley, Capt. James W. Mansfield, S/Sgt. Paul F.
Hall, Pfc. Henry H. (P) Marez, Pvt. Joe M.
Hannum, 1st Lt. Craig B. (P) Masny, Capt. Otto
Harbauga, Pvt. Francis L. Mayor, Pvt. Arthur C.
Hargrove, 1st Lt. Robert C. McElyea, 2d Lt. Atwood M.
Harris, 1st Lt. Ernest 0. (P) McKissick, T/5 Howard D.
Harrison, Sgt. Bailey McLaren, Pvt. Donald B.
Harrison, Maj. Willard E. Meredith, S/Sgt. b-al (P)
Hartman, T/5 Harry Merendino, Capt. Thomas N.
Heenan, Pfc. John R. Millener, Lt. Col. Raymond D.
Heim, Pvt. Marcus Miller, 1st Lt. Jesse R.
Henderson, T/Sgt. Gerald M. (P) Miller, Pfc. Milan M. (P)
Henshan, 1st Lt. Robert E. Mitman, T/Sgt. Erwin F.
Hicks, Lt. Col. Herbert C. Montilio, Cpl. George
Horan, 2d Lt. Roger J. Moody, 1st Lt. William D. (P)
Houston, Sgt. Robert J. Moody, Sgt. Willie W.
Isley, Lt. Col. Carl J. Morse, 1st Lt. Verne V.
Jackson, Lt. Col. Charles L. Mullins, Lt. Col. Thornton L. (I’
Jenkins, S/Sgt. Floyd M. Murrin, S/Sgt. Richard C.
Jewett, Maj. Milton A. Nash, Pfc. Freeman J.
Johnson, Sgt. Denziel 0. Nicoli, Sgt. Raymond E.
Johnson, Col. Howard R. (P) Nothel, Sgt. Henry V.
Jones, Pfc. Aaron B. O’Brien, Capt. Thomas F.
Jones, 1st Lt. Charles H. (P) Odom, 1st Sgt. Hubert
Jones, 1st Lt. Henry W. O’Donnell, Sgt. Francis C.
Katsoulakos, Pvt. William (P) Ogden, 1st Lt. Carlos C.
Kehaly, 1st Lt. William J. O’Neill, Lt. Col. John T.
Kelly, Cpl. John D. (P) Orndorff, Sgt. Douglas
Kerchner, 2d Lt. George F. Ostberg, Lt. Col. Edwin J.
Kidwell, Pvt. Kenneth P. Panas, 1st Lt. James P.
Kirby, T/5 Varsel (P) Paolini, Pfc. Camillus J.
APPENDIX I 475

Parke, Pvt. Joseph P. Settineri, Capt. John


Parker, 1st Lt. Charles H. Shaffer, T/5 Edward
Patch, Capt. Lloyd E. Shelby, 1st Lt. John D.
Patterson, S/Sgt. Lyman K. Shindle, T/4 Elmer G.
Peliarine, 2d Lt. John J. (P) Shoemaker, Pvt. William J.
Pence, Capt. James L. Shorter, S/Sgt. Paul R.
Perehinec, S/Sgt. Joseph P. (P) Skaggs, Lt. Col. Robert N.
Perry, Capt. Edwin R. Smith, Pvt. Gerald E. (P)
Peterson, S/Sgt. Gerard B. Smulik, T/4 Bolick
Peterson, Sgt. Kenneth F. Soliz, S/Sgt. Marcelo M.
Peterson, Pfc. Lenold C. Songer, 1st Lt. Francis E.
Peterson, Pfc. Victor E. (P) Sosnack, Pvt. Andrew
Philips, Capt. Vodra C. Spaulding, 2d Lt. John M.
Porter, Pvt. Benton L. Sprecher, 1st Sgt. Kenneth N.
Pressley, 1st Sgt. William M. Sproul, Capt. Archibald
Profit, T/Sgt. Carl D. Steiner, Lt. Col. Fred A. (P)
Pryne, Pfc. Gordon Stephens, Pfc. Otto K.
Purvis, S/Sgt. Darvin D. Stockwell, S/Sgt. Leeward W.
Radford, S/Sgt. David N. Streczyk, Sgt. Phillip
Rae, Capt. Robert D. Strojny, S/Sgt. Raymond F.
Ralston, Capt. Emerald M. Sullivan, Maj. Richard P.
Rebarchek, 1st Lt. John C. Summers, S/Sgt. Harrison C.
Reckford, Capt. John G. (P) Sweeney, Pfc. Lawrence G.
Reed, 2d Lt. Richard N. Synowsky, 1st Lt. John
Reeder, Col. Russell P., Jr. Talley, Col. Benjamin B.
Richards, Maj. William A. (P) Taylor, Col. George A.
Richmond, Capt. Kimball R. Taylor, Maj. Gen. Maxwell D.
Riggs, Pfc. William C. Teague, Lt. Col. Arthur S. T.
Ridgway, Maj. Gen. Matthew B. Tegtmeyer, Maj. Charles E.
Ritter, T/Sgt. Ozias C. Thompson, Col. Paul W.
Roach, T/Sgt. John A. Townsend, 2d Lt. John N.
Roberts, Cpl. Ernest T. Tubbs, 1st Sgt. Herbert A.
Roberts, 2d Lt. Eskoll F. Tucker, Pvt. Albert J.
Robinson, T/4 Earl A. Turner, Lt. Col. William L. (P)
Robinson, 1st Lt. James L. (P) Upham, Lt. Col. John S., Jr.
Rogers, T/Sgt. Howard W. Urish, Sgt. Joseph W.
Rogers, Pfc. Lee N.
Vandervoort, Lt. Col. Benjamin H.
Rosemond, Capt. St. Julien P.
Van De Voort, 1st Lt. Leo D.
Rosen, Pfc. Sanford
Van Fleet, Col. James A.
Ross, 1st Lt. Robert P.
Van Valkenburg, Pvt. John J.
Ross, 2d Lt. Wesley R.
Ruby, 2d Lt. Clarence T. Wade, S/Sgt. John E. (P)
Rudd, T/5 Jack L. Washington, Maj. William R.
Rudder, Lt. Col. James E. Weathers, Capt. Ornery C. (P)
Samuels, Maj. Joseph T. Welborn, Lt. Col, John C.
Santarsiero, 2d Lt. Charles J. Wells, S/Sgt. James A.
Savino, T/5 Felice J. Werner, 1st Lt. Carlton G. (P)
Schneider, S/Sgt. George Wetherholt, Pfc. Lee, Jr.
Schneider, Lt. Col. Max F. White, T/Sgt. John W.
Scoroposki, 1st Sgt. Felix Whittington, Capt. George P.
Sefchick, S/Sgt. Joseph F. Wilk, Pfc. Theodore T.
476 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Williams, 1st Lt. Alfred H., Jr. Wray, 1st Lt. Waverley W.
Winters, 1st Lt. Richard D. Wyman, Brig. Gen. Willard G.
Woelfel, Pfc. Earl L. Zahn, Sgt. Donald E.
Woodward, Capt. Robert W. Zantow, Capt. Forrest
Woodward, Pfc. Russell H. Zeigler, 1st Lt. Harvey J.
Wozenski, Capt. Edward F. Zwingman, Pvt. Otto K.
Appendix J

Basic Military Map Symbols*


Symbols wtthtn a rcctanglc mdtcatc d nulttq unit. within d
tnanglc an observation post, and wlthl” d ctrclc .I suppI\. pf”“l

Military Units-Identification
Anttaircraft Artillery !&I

Armored Command El

hrmy AK Forca ..1001

Artillery, cxccpt Anttaircraft and Coast Arttllery El

Cavalry, Horsr ............. lzl

Ct\aIry, Mcchanizcd .El

Chctnlcal Warfare Service ...... El

Coast Artdlery .............. EEI

Engineers ................... El

Infantry .......... lxl

Mcdtcal Cqs ........ .EEl

Ordnance Dcparttncnt .............. lzl

Quartrrmastrr Corps ................ El

Stgnal Corps ................. El

Tank Destroyer ................... lTDl

Transportation Corps ................. El

Veterinary Crrps ................. 6zl

Atrlxrnc umts arc dcsignatcd by combining a gull wing symbol


wtth the arm or scrwcc symbol:

Airborne Artillery 111

Airbl,rne Infantry El

*For complete loring of symbols xc FM ZIP10, from which these arc taken
478 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Size Symbols
The following symbols placed either in boundary lines or above
the rectangle, triangle, or circle inclosing the identifying arm or service
symbol mdlcate the size of military organization:

Squad .

Section. , . .

Platoon. l

Company, troop, battery, Air Force flight 1

Battalion, cavalry squadron, or Air Force squadron 11

Regiment or group; combat team (with abbreviation CT following


Identifying numeral) 111

Brigade, Combat Command of Armored Division, or Air Force Wing X


Dlvlslon or Command of an Air Force xx

Corps or Air Force XXX


Army xxxx

Group of Armies xxxxx

EXAMPLES
The letter or number to the ieft of the symbol indicates the unit
designation; that to theright, thedesignation of the parent unit to which
it belongs. Letters or numbers above or below boundary lines designate
the umts separated by the lines:

Company A, 137th Infantry


Am137

Xth Field Artillery Battalion I l 8

Combat Command A, 1st Armored Division A@


III
Observation Post, ajd Infantry ............ A23

Command Post, 5th Infantry Division ......... 5


‘137
Boundary between 137th and 138th Infantry ...... -lIl-
138
Weapons
Machine gun ................... +-,

Gun ....................... &

Gun battery .................... w


Howitzer or Mortar ................. 4

Tank ...... ............... 0


Self-propelled gun .................. le
Glossary
A-Z Intelligence section of air staff
AAF Army Air Forces
AAR After action report
ABDA area American-British-Dutch-Australian theater
of war covering area from Bay of Bengal to
Australasia
Abn Airborne
AC Air Corps
ACofAS Assistant Chief of Air Staff
Admiral Kanalkueste Admiral commanding Channel coast naval
district
AF Air Force
AEAF Allied Expeditionary Air Force
AFHQ Allied Force Headquarters
AGWAR Adjutant General, War Department
A GP Army group
AKA Cargo Ship, Attack
Amph Amphibious
ANCXF Allied Naval Commander Expeditionary
Force
ANFA Hotel at Casablanca at which plenary
meetings were held in January 1943
Anlage Appendix or annex
APA Transport Ship, Attack
l’drme’e Secrkte Secret army formed by officers and men of the
French Regular Army
ASW Assistant Secretary of War
BAR Browning Automatic Rifle
Bazooka Rocket launcher, hand-carried
BCRA Bureau Central de Renseignements et
d’dction (Central Intelligence and
Operations Bureau)
Belgian Gate Barricade-like gates used as underwater
obstacles
Bn Battalion
bodenstaendig Static (division)
Br British; branch
Bull Bulletin
CC Combined Commanders
CCA Combat Command A
CCS Combined Chiefs of Staff
CG Commanding General
CinC Commander in Chief
480 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

CO Commanding Officer
COA Committee of Operations Analysts
CofS Chief of Staff
COHQ Combined Operations Headquarters
Comdr Commander
Commandos Specially trained British assault troops
Concertina wire Cylindrical portable barbed wire
entanglement
le Conseil National de la Resistance National Council of Resistance
Corncobs Blockships
COS British Chiefs of Staff
Cosintrep Combined situation and intelligence
report
COSSAC Chief of Staff to the Supreme Allied
Commander (Designate)
CPS Combined Planning Staff
DBST Double British Summer Time
DD Duplex Drive amphibious tank
D Day The first day of any military operation,
specifically the day OVERLORD was
launched
DSC Distinguished Service Cross
DSO Distinguished Service Order
DUKW 21/2ton, 6x6 amphibious truck
E-boat Small German torpedo boat (German
S-Boot)
Ersatzheer German Replacement Army
ETO European Theater of Operations
ETOUSA European Theater of Operations, United
States Army
FA Field Artillery
FFI Forces Frarqaises de l'Ieur (French
Forces of the Interior)
Flak Antiaircraft
FO Field Order
Francs Tireurs et Partisans French communist resistance group
Freiwillige Volunteers
Fuesilier battalion Separate infantry and reconnaissance bat-
talion in the German 1944type division
FUSA First United States Army
FUSAG First United States Army Group
G-l Personnel section of divisional or higher staff
G-Z Intelligence section
G-3 Operations section
G-4 Supply section
Geschwader Luftwaffe wing
GLOSSARY 481

GHQ General headquarters


Gkdo. Generalkommando (German corps-type
headquarters)
GO General Order
Grossadmiral Grand-Admiral
Hedgehog Portable obstacle, made of three crossed
angle irons
Hilfswillige Volunteer Auxiliaries (non-German)
Hornets 88-mm. self-propelled antitank guns
Int sum Intelligence summary
Jaeger (division or other unit) Light infantry (division or other unit)
Joint Board
{CBS Joint Chiefs of Staff
Jedburgh teams Three-man inter-Allied teams, parachuted
into French territory to act as liaison
between the maquis groups and SHAEF
JIC Joint Intelligence Committee
JPS Joint Planning Staff
JSM Joint Staff Mission
JSSC Joint Strategic Survey Committee
JWPC Joint War Plans Committee
Kampfiuehrung Conduct of operations
Kampfgruppe A term loosely assigned to improvised
combat units of various sizes, named
usually after their commanders
KMA German coastal mine
KTB Kriegstagebuch (war diary)
Landesschuetzen battalion Home Guard battalion sometimes employed
outside Germany
Landfront Landward fortifications of Cherbourg
Landwirt submarines Submarines of “Group Landwirt,” a special
anti-invasion force of thirty-six small U-boats
LCA Landing Craft, Assault
LCG Landing Craft, Gun
LCI Landing Craft, Infantry
LCM Landing Craft, Mechanized
LCT Landing Craft, Tank
LCT (R) Landing Craft, Tank (Rocket)
LCVP Landing Craft, Vehicle and Personnel
LSH Landing Ship, Headquarters
LST Landing Ship, Tank
Luftflotte Reich German Home Air Command
Luftgaukommando Westfrankreich Headquarters of the Luftwaffe administra-
tive and supply organization in western
France
Luftwaffe German Air Force
Maquisards Men of the maquis
48.2 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Mark III, IV German medium tanks


Mark V German medium tank with heavy armor
and high-velocity gun
Merkbuch Notebook
Militaerbefehlshaber Military governor
MLR Main Line of Resistance
MRU Machine Records Unit
MS-Flotilla German mine sweepers
Nebelwerfer Rocket projector or chemical mortar
OB SUED 0 berbefehlshaber Sued, German theater
headquarters in Italy
OB WEST Oberbefehlshaber West, Highest German
ground headquarters of the Western Front
OKH 0 berkommando des Heeres (Army High
Command)
OKL Oberkommando der Luftwafle (Luftwaffe
High Command)
OKM Oberkommando der Kriegsmarine (Navy
High Command)
OKW Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (Armed
Forces High Command)
ONI Office of Naval Intelligence
OPD Operations Division, War Department
General Staff
Opns Operations
Org. Abt. Organisations Abteilung (Staff subdivision
in charge of organization)
Organization Todt Paramilitary construction organization of
the Nazi party, auxiliary to the Wehrmacht.
Named after its founder, Dr. Todt.
OSS Office of Strategic Services
Ost East
Osttruppen Non-German volunteer troops from
east-European countries
Panther German Mark V tank
Per Rpt Periodic report
Plan Tortue Resistance plan to block road traffic
Plan Vert Resistance plan to cut railroads
POD Plans and Operations Division
RAF Royal Air Force
Rangers Specially trained American assault troops
Rhino ferry Barge constructed of ponton units
RN Royal Navy
S-l Personnel section of regimental or lower
staff
SAC Supreme Allied Commander
SAS Special Air Service
GLOSSARY 483

S-Boot E-boat
SCAEF Supreme Commander, Allied Expeditionary
Force
SF Special Force
SFHQ Special Force Headquarters
SGS Secretary General Staff
SHAEF Supreme Headquarters, Allied Expedition-
ary Force
SIS Special Intelligence Service
Sitrep Situation report
SNCF Socitte’ Nationale des Chemins de Fer
(National French railroad system)
so Special Operations
SOE Special Operations Executive
SPOBS Special Observers
SS SchutzstafleZ (Elite Guard)
Stuetzpunkt Strong point
Teller mines German antitank mines
Tetrahedra Pyramid-shaped steel antitank obstacles
TF Task Force
Tiger German Mark VI tank
Tk Bn Tank Battalion
TM Technical Manual
T/O Table of Organization
UK United Kingdom
USA United States Army
USAFBI United States Army Forces in the
British Isles
USN United States Navy
USSAFE United States Strategic Air Forces in Europe
USSTAF United States Strategic Air Forces
Vergeltung Vengeance
Verteidigungsbereich Defensive areas
Volksdeutsche Citizens of a country other than Germany
who were considered Germans racially
Volkswagen German jeep
Waflen-SS Combat arm of the SS, in effect a partial
duplication of the German Army
WD War Department
WDCSA War Department Chief of Staff, U.S. Army
Wehrmachtbefehlshaber Niederlande Armed Forces Commander Netherlands
Wehrmuchtfuehrungsstab Armed Forces Operations Staff
Werfer Mortars; rocket launchers
WFSt Wehrmachtfuehrungsstab (Armed Forces
Operations Staff)
Widerstandsnest Resistance nest
WP War Plans
484 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

XAP Merchant cargo ship


Y Day Target date for any military operation,
specifically target date for OVERLORD
Zweite Stellung German secondary defense position
Code Names
ABC-I Agreements reached at Washington Conference, Jan-
uary-March 194 1
ANVIL The planned 1944 Allied invasion of Southern
France in the Toulon-Marseille area
ARCADIA U.S.-British staff conference at Washington, Decem-
ber 1941-January 1942
BOLERO The build-up of troops and supplies in the United
Kingdom in preparation for a cross-Channel attack
BUCCANEER Operation planned against the Andaman Islands,
Bay of Bengal, 21 June-15 November 1943
COCKADE Diversionary operations in 1943 to pin down German
forces in the west
CROSSBOW The anticipated enemy pilotless aircraft offensive
against England in 1944
DRAGOON Allied invasion of southern coast of France, 15 August
1944, planned under the code name ANVIL
ECLIPSE Plan for the initial phase of military occupation of
Germany
EUREKA The Tehran Conference, 26 November-2 December
1943
FABIUS Amphibious landing exercises of all assault forces ex-
cept Force U, early May 1944
FORTITUDE Threat operation in 1944 directed against the Pas-
de-Calais area
GYMNAST 1941 plan for invasion of North Africa
HARLEQUIN Loading exercise in connection with operation
COCKADE, September 1943
JUPITER Plan to attack Norway
MAGNET 1942 build-up of U.S. forces in Northern Ireland
MULBERRIES Artificial harbors for OVERLORD
NEPTUNE Actual 1944 operations within OVERLORD. This code
name was used for security reasons after September
1943 on all OVERLORD planning papers which referred
to the target area and date.
OMAHA Beach assaulted by troops of U.S. V Corps, 6 June
1944
OVERLORD Plan for the invasion of northwest Europe, spring
1944
PIRATE 1943 exercise by Force J (British and Canadian)
POINTBLANK The Combined Bomber Offensive from the United
Kingdom against Germany
QUADRANT The first Quebec Conference, August 1943
486 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

RANKIN Plan for return to the Continent in the event of


German deterioration
RATTLE Conference held by the Combined Operations Head-
quarters in 1943 to discuss amphibious tactics and
techniques
ROUNDHAMMER Code name used at the Washington Conference in
May 1943 to designate a modified ROUNDUP invasion
ROUNDUP Various 1941-43 plans for a cross-Channel attack in
the final phases of the war
SEELOEWE (SEA LION) The German planned invasion of England in 1940-
41
SEXTANT The Cairo Conference, 22-26 November 1943
SKYSCRAPER A cross-Channel attack plan drawn by the Combined
Commanders in spring of 1943
SLEDGEHAMMER Plan for limited-objective attack across the Channel
in 1942 designed either to take advantage of a crack
in German morale or as “sacrifice” operation to aid
Russians
STARKEY Threat directed in 1943 against the Pas-de-Calais
TIGER Invasion exercise of Force U (VII Corps)
TINDALL Threat directed against Norway in 1943
TORCH Allied invasion of North and Northwest Africa, 1942
TRIDENT Washington Conference, May 1943
UTAH Beach assaulted by troops of U.S. VII Corps, 6 June
1944
WADHAM Threat directed against the Cotentin in 1943
ZITADELLE German offensive in Russia, spring 1943
Bibliographical Note
Cross-Channel Attack is based almost tween the British Chiefs of Staff and their
entirely on documents now in the custody military mission in Washington, and be-
of the Department of the Army. These tween various commanders and planners.
range from the official records of the Com- Light is thrown on many of the official
bined Chiefs of Staff to the operational ambiguities by the personal letters and
journals of combat battalions; they in- cables between General Marshall and
clude all the records of the German Army General Eisenhower.
which have not been destroyed or sent to The heart of the material for the pres-
the USSR. Quantitatively the archives ent volume is the very large collection of
containing material relevant to this book SHAEF documents. Again cables, letters,
are measured literally in scores of tons. memoranda, and minutes of both routine
Evidently no one researcher could have and special staff meetings recording the
examined the whole record. In the past day-to-day work of the headquarters com-
five years, however, the combined re- prise the bulk of the collection. Besides
searches of Department of the Army his- these, however, SHAEF collected extracts
torians have sifted through the bulk of it. from memoranda by the British Chiefs of
While the author cannot claim a defini- Staff and their affiliated planning bodies
tive exploitation of all the sources, he can as well as minutes of those British Chiefs
at least reasonably hope that the available of Staff meetings at which OVERLORD mat-
documents of major interest have not es- ters were discussed. Finally SHAEF in-
caped his attention. Free access was had herited most of the records of its predeces-
to all relevant material regardless of classi- sors, COSSAC and the Combined Com-
fication. manders. In supplementing the written
record a series of interviews conducted by
Primary Sources
Forrest C. Pogue of the ETO Section of
I the Historical Division in 1946 with Brit-
The formal record of the wartime pro- ish commanders and planners proved very
ceedings of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff useful particularly in filling in back-
and the Combined Chiefs of Staff consists ground to important decisions. The au-
of minutes of their meetings together thor has interviewed and corresponded
with papers embodying all the proposals with a number of American commanders.
which they formally considered. This The bulk of the narrative of operations
record includes minutes of the plenary is based on preliminary studies by War
conferences presided over by President Department historians (see below), but
Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill. these were checked and supplemented by
Rounding out the Joint and Combined reference to the primary sources. The lat-
record are the thousands of cables be- ter consist of unit journals, after action
tween Roosevelt and Churchill, between reports, and interviews conducted by his-
the War Department and the theater, be- torical officers with participants in most
488 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

cases immediately after the battle. The vided the annihilation of von Schlieben’s
unit journals contain most of the contem- force in the Cotentin and the later August
poraneous incoming and outgoing mes- collapse of the Seventh Army. The prin-
sages of the headquarters involved to- cipal extant source is the Seventh Army
gether with overlays of troop dispositions, KTB. This is supplemented by the post-
reports, intelligence estimates, and other war accounts of various unit commanders
supporting documents. These constitute and staff officers. The War Diary of Army
the principal primary sources for the his- Group B has been lost and only a few of
tory of operations during June 1944 ex- the supporting documents remain. The
cept for the action of the two airborne OB WEST diary has been preserved only
divisions. No contemporary record of any from 1 July 1944.
value for the historian was kept by the Some use was made of German naval
airborne units. This lack was fortu- and air force records. The U.S. Navy De-
nately remedied in good part by the ex- partment has duplicates and microfilms
tensive interviews conducted by Colonel of original German Navy documents held
S. L. A. Marshall with airborne officers by the British Admiralty. Especially use-
and men during June and July 1944. ful for the present work were the war di-
The much abbreviated accounts of aries of Admiral Doenitz and of Admiral
British operations are largely based on in- Krancke, Naval Commander in the West.
formation supplied by the British Cabi- Luftwaffe records are particularly spotty.
net Office Historical Section. Most useful were those preserved by the
Luftwaffe Historical Section in the Von
II Rohden Collection, now at the Air Uni-
Information on German preparations versity, Maxwell Field (microfilms in the
and combat comes from original records Library of Congress).
of the German Army and from manu-
script histories prepared after the war by III
more than two hundred German general Following is a guide to some of the
and general staff officers working under principal documents and document col-
direction of Col. Harold E. Potter, USA. lections.
Original documents include army head- AAF files. Army Air Force files contain-
quarters war diaries (KTB’s) and their ing operational records of the Eighth and
supporting papers, special orders, reports, Ninth Air Forces. Now at the Air Uni-
telegrams, and conference minutes. Al- versity, Maxwell Field, Montgomery, Ala-
though a large number of documents bama.
were destroyed by German order or by Adm. file. Administrative file; contains
Allied looters, and a considerable number miscellaneous papers mostly from nonop-
were sent to the Soviet Union, the collec- erational headquarters in the period be-
tion remaining available to the Western fore D Day. Like the Pre-Invasion file
historian is still relatively rich for the pre- (q.v.) it includes chiefly documents which
D-Day story of the German Army in were rescued from destruction or disper-
France. In contrast, few original records sion by historians in the European thea-
of German operations in Normandy sur- ters.
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE 489

Barlzer papers. Personal papers, chiefly Now held in a separate collection by His-
correspondence, of Maj. Gen. Ray W. torical Record Section, AGO.
Barker (ret.) specially made available by Diary of CinC. MS diary of the Office
him to War Department historians. of the Commander in Chief, kept for Gen-
CC. Combined Commanders’ papers eral Eisenhower by his naval aide, Capt.
filed in SHAEF SGS files (q.v.). A dupli- Harry C. Butcher. It was begun in July
cate collection is in the Pre-Invasion file 1942 just before Eisenhower became com-
W). mander in chief of the Mediterranean
CCS. Combined Chiefs of Staff papers Theater of Operations. Edited excerpts
and minutes of meetings. These are all have been printed by Butcher in My
contained in the OPD files (q.v.). CCS Three Years with Eisenhower (New York,
papers are memoranda, reports, reprints 1946).
of cables, etc., prepared by the U.S. or Eisenhower Personal Files. Contains
British Chiefs of Staff or by their subor- communications between General Eisen-
dinate agencies and submitted for com- hower and General Marshall including
bined discussion. Minutes of the meet- both personal letters and cables which
ings are not stenographic. Notes were had limited distribution and were not
kept by U.S. and British secretaries. The sent to regular operational files.
minutes in final form were specifically ETO file. Files of the European theater
and individually approved by each of the headquarters now held by the Organiza-
Combined Chiefs. tion Records Branch, Records Adminis-
COS. British Chiefs of Staff papers and tration Center, AGO.
minutes of meetings, Selections of memo- FUSA file. Administrative and pre-D-
randa and excerpts of minutes relating to Day planning papers of First U.S. Army
matters of interest to SHAEF are bound now held by the Organization Records
and separately filed with the SHAEF SGS Branch, AGO.
collection (q.v.). The few COS papers Hist Div files. A miscellaneous collec-
preserved in other special SHAEF files tion of documents chiefly comprising ma-
are so cited in the footnotes. terial prepared or collected by War De-
COSSAC. Designates papers officially partment historians. It includes inter-
issued by General Morgan’s headquar- views, responses to special questionnaires,
ters and the minutes of COSSAC staff manuscript histories, and certain British
meetings. All such documents are to be documents not found in U.S. operational
found separately bound in the SHAEF files.
SGS files (q.v.). JCS. Joint (U.S.) Chiefs of Staff papers
C/S file. Contains documents filed dur- and minutes of meetings. Copies of all
ing the war in the Office of the Chief of JCS documents cited can be found in
Staff. Now held as a separate collection by OPD files (q.v.). The JCS papers include
Historical Records Section, Departmen- memoranda by the Joint Chiefs as a body,
tal Record Branch, AGO. by individual members, and by subordi-
Dep C/S file. A small collection of doc- nate agencies. Minutes of the meetings
uments which during the war were filed were not stenographic. Cf. note under
in the office of the Deputy Chief of Staff. CCS.
490 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

JZC. Joint Intelligence Committee the working papers of the staff sections of
(British) estimates found, unless other- General Eisenhower’s headquarters to-
wise noted, in SHAEF SGS files (q.v.) in gether with records of COSSAC, the Com-
separately bound collection of JIC papers. bined Commanders, and the British
]JPS. Joint Planning Staff (U.S.) papers Chiefs of Staff. Files of each of the five
and minutes of meetings. Copies of JPS general staff sections and of the Secretary
documents are in OPD ABC files, which of the General Staff (SGS) and the Ad-
include in most cases not only the final jutant General (AG) are separate, each
planners’ memoranda, but OPD drafts, containing the papers of chief concern to
discussions, and working notes. the respective section. For the present
]IVPC. Joint War Planning Commit- work the richest files are those of SGS,
tee (U.S.) papers, many of which were re- G-3, and AG. The SGS section actually
issued as JPS or JCS documents. All cited contains the bulk of the important cables,
are in OPD files. Cf. note under JPS. memos, minutes, and planning papers
Navy Dept files. The manuscript stud- with which SHAEF was concerned. Files
ies of U.S. operations and the occasional are held by the Historical Records Sec-
documents cited are in the Office of Naval tion, AGO.
Record. German documents are in the 12th A Gp file. Operational files of the
so-called Tambach collection which con- 12th Army Group with certain planning
tains carbon duplicates and microfilms of papers from the preinvasion period when
German originals held by the British Ad- the headquarters was designated 1st Army
miralty office. Group. Files now separately held by the
OPD files. Collection of the Opera- Historical Records Section, AGO.
tions Division of the War Department. USSTAF file. Comprises documents
They include the central files bearing the specially collected by the chief USSTAF
OPD decimal classification, and two sepa- historian. Formerly in the Air Force His-
rate collections: one kept by the Strategy torical Section office, some of these papers
and Policy Group within OPD which is have been transferred to the Spaatz file in
identified by the initials ABC, and one the Library of Congress. Others can be
kept by the Executive Group identified as found in AAF files at the Air University,
the Exec file. Maxwell Field, Montgomery, Alabama.
Pre-Znv file. The Pre-Invasion files con- WD Cable Zag. The large collection of
tain miscellaneous papers on planning cables which cleared through the War De-
and strategy originating with or collected partment Message Center, filed by date in
by various headquarters in the European incoming and outgoing books.
theater before the invasion. The docu-
ments were turned over to War Depart- Secondary Sources
ment historians in the theater during
I
1944, and are now held by the Historical
Records Section, AGO. Unpublished preliminary historical
SHAEF files. Files of the Supreme studies by Army, Navy, and Air Force his-
Headquarters, Allied Expeditionary torians greatly facilitated the task of re-
Force. This is a very large collection of all search into subjects peripheral to the
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE 491

main narrative. Especially useful was the Of the dispatches and reports, most of
series, The Administrative and Logistical which are not very useful for historical
History of the European Theater of Oper- purposes, special mention need be made
ations. The eleven volumes of special only of “Despatch of Air Chief Marshal
studies on such matters as training, man- Sir Trafford Leigh-Mallory,” Fourth Sup-
power, planning, and supply were written plement to the London Gazette No.
by Army historians in the European The- 37838,31 December 1946; and Report by
ater of Operations under the direction of Allied Naval Commander-in-Chief Ex-
Maj. Roland G. Ruppenthal, assistant peditionary Force on Operation NEPTUNE
theater historian, USFET. The Adminis- (London, 1944), 3 vols. Both of these re-
trative History, U.S. Naval Forces in Eu- ports are exceptionally full. A pertinent
rope, on file in the Historical Division, special study particularly valuable for the
contains material on naval organization OVERLORD story is George E. Mowry,
for the assault. Other manuscript studies Landing Craft and the WPB (Civilian
of naval administrative history, on file in Production Administration, Historical
the Navy Department, were consulted Reports on War Administration: WPB
chiefly for aspects of the submarine war Special Study No. II) (Washington,
and landing craft procurement. Of some 1946).
help were two manuscript histories of the The Historical Division of the Depart-
Ninth Air Force, one by Lt. Col. Robert ment of the Army has published in the
H. George and one by Col. William B. AMERICAN FORCES IN ACTION
Reed, both in Air Force files. The 1500- series, two preliminary narratives of U.S.
page history of the French Forces of the operations in Normandy in June 1944
Interior, prepared by Capt. Lucien Gali- which cover most of the fighting described
mand, Capt. Marcel Vigneras, and Maj. in Cross-Channel Attack. These narra-
R. A. Bourne-Paterson, is an important tives are [Charles H. Taylor] Omaha
compilation of information on the French Beachhead (Washington, 1945) and [R.
Resistance, drafted in 1945 from docu- G. Ruppenthal] Utah Beach to Cher-
ments that have since been widely scat- bourg (Washington, 1947). Fully docu-
tered. From interview material, Col. S. mented manuscripts of both studies are
L. A. Marshall made a series of small-unit on file in the Historical Division. This
studies of airborne operations in Nor- documentation has not been repeated in
mandy. These manuscripts in Historical the present volume. Official histories of
Division files are often brilliantly illu- the U.S. Navy and Air Forces are just be-
minating as to the nature of the fighting ginning to appear and for the most part
in the Cotentin. those so far published do not cover the pe-
riod with which this volume is chiefly con-
II cerned. However, some use has been
Published sources include official re- made of the first two volumes of Wesley
ports and dispatches of commanders, spe- F. Craven and James L. Cate (eds.), The
cial studies generally for limited distribu- Army Air Forces in World War ZZ (Chi-
tion, official histories, unofficial histories, cago, 1947 and 1948). In addition, por-
and memoirs. tions of that work still in manuscript have
492 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

been made available to the author by the An Intimate History (New York, 1948).
Air Force Historical Section. The pub- A revised edition with supplementary ma-
lished volumes of the semiofficial naval terial was published in 1950. Henry L.
history, Samuel E. Morison, The Battle Stimson and McGeorge Bundy, On Ac-
of the Atlantic (Boston, 1948), and idem, tive Service in Peace and War (New York,
Operations in North African Waters 1948) is a fine volume of memoirs and a
(Boston, 1947), bear only indirectly on the valuable contribution to the strategy story
subjects of this volume. Col. C. P. Stacey, at the highest level. Some use has been
The Canadian Army, 1939-1945 (An made of Dwight D. Eisenhower, Crusade
Oficial Historical Summary) (Ottawa, in Europe (New York, 1948) and Lt. Gen.
1948), a preliminary work, is the only of- Frederick E. Morgan, Overture to Over-
ficial account of British or Dominion lord (New York, 1950), although these
forces to appear so far. books deal with subjects abundantly cov-
Semiofficial histories exist for most U.S. ered by the primary sources consulted.
combat units but few go beyond the bare Captain Harry C. Butcher, My Three
outlines of after action reports colored by Years With Eisenhower (New York, 1948)
accounts of individual exploits. A note- is not the “personal diary” of Captain
worthy exception is the history of the Butcher as advertised but a collection of
101st Airborne Division: Leonard Rap- excerpts from the personal and official di-
port and Arthur Norwood, Jr., Rendez- ary of General Eisenhower kept for him
vous With Destiny (Washington, 1948). by Captain Butcher. Winston S. Church-
Of the unofficial histories touching ill, The Grand AEZiance (New York, 1950)
OVERLORD far the best now in print is Rob- touches only on the very beginnings of
ert E. Sherwood, Roosevelt and Hopkins: the OVERLORD story.
UNITED STATES ARMY IN WORLD WAR II

The following volumes have been published or are in press:

The War Department


arations Chief of Staff Prewar Plans and Prep
Command Post: The Operations Division
Strategic Planningfor Coalition Warfare: 1941-l 9442
Strategic Planningfor Coalition Warfare: 1943-l 944
Global Logistics and Strategy: 1940-l 943
Global Logistics and Strategy: 1943-l 945
The Army and Economic Mobilization
The Army and Industrial Manpower
The Army Ground Forces
The Organization of Ground Combat Troops
The Procurement and Training of Ground Combat Troops
The Army Service Forces
The Organization and Role of the Army Service Forces
The Western Hemisphere
The Framework of Hemisphere Defense
Guarding the United States and Its Outposts
The War in the Pacific
The Fall of the Philippines
Guadalcanal: The First Offensive
Victory in Papua
CARTWHZL: The Reduction of Rabaul
Seizure of the Gilberts and Marshalls
Campaign in the Marianas
The Approach to the Philippines
Leyte: The Return to the Philippines
Triumph in the Philippines
Okinawa: The Last Battle
Strategy and Command: The First Two Years
The Mediterranean Theater of Operations
Northwest Africa: Seizing the Initiative in the West
Sicily and the Surrender of Italy
Salerno to Cassino
Cassino to the Alps
The European Theater of Operations
Cross-Channel Attack
Breakout and Pursuit
The Lorraine Campaign
The Siegfried Line Campaign
The Ardennes: Battle of the Bulge
The Last Offensive
The Supreme Command
494 CROSSCHANNEL ATTACK

Logistical Support of the Armies, Volume I


Logistical Support of the Armies, Volume II
The Middle East Theater
The Persian Corridor and Aid to Russia
The China-Burma-India Theater
Stilwell’s Mission to China
Stilwell’s Command Problems
Time Run,s Out in CBI
The Technical Services
The Chemical Warfare Service: Organizing for War
The Chemical Warfare Service: From Laboratory to Field
The Chemical Warfare Service: Chemicals in Combat
The Corps of Engineers: Troops and Equipment
The Corps of Engineers: The War Against Japan
The Corps of Engineers: The War Against Germany
The Corps of Engineers: Military Construction in the United States
The Medical Department: Hospitalization and Evacuation; Zone of Interior
The Medical Dqartment: Medical Service in the Mediterranean and Minor
Theaters
The Medical Department: Medical Service in the European Theater of Operations
The Ordnance Department: Planning Munitions for War
The Ordnance Department: Procurement and Supply
The Ordnance Department: On Beachhead and Battlefront
The Quartermaster Corps: Organization, Supply, and Services, Volume I
The Quartermaster Corps: Organization, Supply, and Services, Volume II
The Quartermaster Corps: Operations in the War Against Japan
The Quartermaster Corps: Operations in the War Against Germany
The Signal Corps: The Emergency
The Signal Corps: The Test
The Signal Corps: The Outcome
The Transportation Corps: Responsibilities, Organization, and Operations
The Transportation Corps: Movements, Training, and Supply
The Transportation Corps: Operations Overseas
Special Studies
Chronology: 1941-I 945
Military Relations Between the United States and Canada: 1939-l 945
Rearming the French
Three Battles: Arnaville, Altuzzo, and Schmidt
The Women’s Army Corps+
Civil Affairs: Soldiers Become Governors
Buying Aircraft: Materie l Procurement for the Army Air Forces
The Employment of Negro Troops
Manhattan: The U.S. Army and the Atomic Bomb
Pictorial Record
The War Against Germany and Italy: Mediterranean and Adjacent Areas
The War Against Germany: Europe and Adjacent Areas
The War Against Japan
Index

ABC-l: 2, 19 Airborne assault


A-20’s: 393 first contact with seaborne forces: 283
Abbeville: 12 initial German reaction to: 278,293-300
Acqueville: 420,429 size of forces in: 279
Addeville: 287, 288 Airborne Brigade, 2d: 402n
Administrative branch of COSSAC: 51-52 Airborne division: 356n
Adriatic: 92n, 122n in Outline OVERLORD: 75
Aegean Sea: 119 proposed reorganization: 184, 184n
Aerial photographs: 177,215,259 Airborne Division, 82d; 158n 164, 184, 280-282, 300,
Africa. See North Africa. 302, 329,356n, 364,396,402n, 415,416,447n
Agy: 339,365,367 airborne assault; 289-93,289n
Air attacks: 21, 26ln. 333, 334, 335, 360, 365. See also assault plans: 185, 186, 269
Air forces; Air support: Air-ground co-operation; in attack to cut the Peninsula: 401, 402, 403, 408
Allied Expeditionary Air Force; Bomber Com- casualties: 300, 300n, 329
mand, IX; Combined Bomber Offensive; Eighth effort to secure beachhead: 342,344, 345
Air Force; Ninth Air Force; Royal Air Force. Airborne Division, IOlst
on bridges: 348,349 airborne assault: 278-89
on Cherbourg: 428-29 assault plans: 185-86,269
on coastal fortifications: 300-01, 302 assault training: 164
on enemy troops: 348,360,373 casualties: 284, 284n, 288
on railroads: 365,378-79,408-l 1 drive on Carentan: 352-65
Air branch of COSSAC: 51.52 Airborne plannicg: 183-86
Air build-up schedule: June 1942, 19-21 Airborne supply. See Air supply.
Air Forces, Allied. See Allied Expeditionary Air Force. Airborne troops, Allied use considered a new tactic
Air Forces, British. See Royal Air Force. by Germans: 396n
Air Forces, German. See Luftwaffe. Airborne troops, German. See Parachute Divisions,
Air Forces, U. S. See also Eighth Air Force: Ninth Air German.
Force; Twelfth Air Force; Fifteenth Air Force. Aircraft
begins air build-up: 19-21 in air build-up schedule of June 1942: 20-21
and bombing of French railroads: 217-30 in antisubmarine warfare: 84
Combined Bomber Offensive: 207-17 controversy over theater priority: 34-35
command problems: 111-112, 218, 219-20 pilotless: 138-40, 215-17,412,413
establishment of USSAFE (USSTAF): 213 transport: 167, 279
intensification of air war against Germany in spring Aircraft industry, German, bomber offensive against:
of 1943: 86 209-10
TORCH interferes with build-up: 47 Airfields
Air-ground cooperation: 217,428,432 construction: 448
Air offensive, Allied: 45,75-76,86. See also Allied Ex- role in Outline OVERLORD: 78
peditionary Air Force: Combined Bomber Of- AKA’s (cargo ships): 170, 172
fensive. Albania: 122
Air OP’s: 197 D’Albiac, Air Vice Marshal Sir John Henry: 54, 54n
Air reconnaissance: 258,275 Alexander, Field Marshal Harold R.: 87, 111,116,169.
Air supply: 421n 172, 173
and French Resistance: 201-04,207 Algiers: 87n
German: 360,421 Allen, Lt. Col. Ray C.: 356
Air support: 319,326,335 Allen, Major Richard J.: 287,287n
Air Support Command: 214 Allied Expeditionary Air Force: 108. 111, 112, 213,
Air supremacy 215,217,218,219, 220,222,223,224, 334,408-11.
as factor in choice of assault area: 56 See also Air Forces, British: Air Forces, U. S.
as factor in the D-Day decision: 272 Allied Force Headquarters: 46
496 CROSS-CHr-1NNEL ATTACK

Aflied Naval Expeditionary Force (ANCXF) : 16042 Armored Infantry Battalions


Arnaye-sur-Orne: 444 3d, 41st Armored Infantry: 361, 365
Ambush, by Germans: 364 2d, 66th Armored Infantry: 365
Amfreville: 291-92, 396,398, 401 Armored reconnaissance battalion, German: 240
Amiens: 373 Army branch of COSSAC: 51
Amphibious Force, Atlantic Fleet: 160n Arnold, Lt. Gen. Henry H.: 3,19-20.34.44
Amphibious tactics: 54-55, 164, 188-89, 190-93 biographical sketch: 19n
Amy: 382 and Combined Bomber Offensive: 208, 210,211
Ancon: 301 and controversy over bombing of French railroads:
Andaman Islands: 126 221
Andrews, Lt. Gen. Frank M.: 46,53 plan for the establishment of an airhead in the
Angers: 378n Evreux-Dreux area: 185
Anglo-American military conferences of 1941: 2 on struggle for air supremacy: 211
Anglo-American military co-operation, early ground- Arras: 12
work laid for: l-6 Arromanches: lSOn, 426
Angoville-au-Plain: 287, 288, 347 Arromanches-les-Bains: 72
Anguerny: 373 Artificial ports: 73, 166, 272n, 422-23, 42336,426n
ANCXF (Allied Naval Expeditionary Force): 160-62 Artillery, Allied: 356, 375, 376, 388, 390, 392, 402, 431
Anisy: 373 D-Day losses on Omaha: 309-13
Antiaircraft battalion, German: 240 direct support: 369, 376
Antiairlanding obstacles: 263-64, 287. See also Glid- experiments in firing from Ianding craft: 197
ers. interdiction: 406
Antipersonnel mines: 264 preparation: 302, 356, 361, 382, 383, 390, 416, 441
Antisubmarine warfare. See Submarine, German. Artillery, German: 176-77, 23637, 238-39, 240, 241,
Antitank battalion, German organization: 240 280n. 297, 342, 387,470
Antitank obstacles: 420 Asnelles-sur-Mer: 331
Antwerp: 8,72 Assault area, analysis of conditions essential for: 56
ANVIL, 76n. 92n, 126, 127, 164-73, 173n. See also Assault divisions, structural changes: 19192
France, Southern, Assault exercises: 162-64, 269-70
Anzio: 172. 185-86, 232, 234 Assault forces
APA’s (transports) : 170 organization and tactics: 190-93
ARCADIA Conference: 8-9, 10, 15, 21n, 32n, 106 training: 162-64
Argentan: 181 Assault Training Center: 162-64, 191, 270
Armed Forces Commander Netherlands (Wehr- Atlantic convoy system: 84
mnrhtbefehlshuber Niederlande) 130, 242 Atlantic Wall: 41, 136, 147, 151, 152, 155, 26465.
Armed Forces High Command (OKW): 133, 133n See nlso Antilanding obstacles; Beach obstacles:
Armee Secrete, 1’: 199-200 Obstacles, underwater.
Armies, Allied construction of secondary defenses: 156
Second British. See British units. Hitler demands 15,000 concrete strong points for:
Eighth British: 78n, 86-87, 158-60 137
First Canadian: 53, 114 Hitler orders completion of by 1 May 1943: 137
First U. S. See First U. S. Army. propaganda value: 140
Third U. S.: 188, 188n, 447 Rommel’s construction program: 252-53
Fifth U. S.: 169 rumors of impregnability: 176
Seventh U. S.: 86 status of in May 1944: 262-64
Armies, German. See German units. supplies for construction curtailed by Allied air
Armies, Italian. See Italian Fourth Army. attacks: 227
Armor, versus naval artillery: 153, 446. See also work begun on: 132
Tanks. Attacks
Armored Divisions concentric: 297, 360-64
1st: 19 limited-objective: 348, 373, 377, 380-82
2d: 158n, 269, 361. 365, 377 night: 416,418
3d: 444 Audouville-la-Hubert: 280, 282, 304, 344
5th: 567 Augusta: 305
Armored Field Artillery Battalions Aure River: 73, 187n, 337, 339,353, 367.68. 369, 375
14th: 365 Australia: 23,24,25
58th: 313 Authie: 348n. 349
65th: 348, 356 Auville-sur-le-Vey: 359, 361
INDEX

Auxiliaries, German (Hilfswillige) : 145 Beach obstacles: 177, 192-93,263-64,315-17, 336. See
Avranches: 188, 349, 371, 374, 383 also Underwater obstacles.
Azeville: 341,342,386, 390-92 Beaches
confusion on: 327
“B” message: 205-06 cratering of: 196n
B-24’s: 301 terrain: 308-09
Bacherer, Oberst Rudolph: 416 Beachheads, effort to secure: 336-51
Badoglio, Marshal Pietro: 87 Beaudienville: 429, 431
Baldwin: 322n Beaumont: 287,348
Balkans: 9,35,37,41,12X, 122n. 125, 144,202,231-32 Beaumont-Hague: 440, 441
Ballard, Lt. Col. Robert A.: 288 Beauvais: 289
Ball-bearing plants: 211n Begue: French radio operator, 201
Balleroy: 371,442 Belgian Gates: 250, 359
Baltic: 179 Belgium, 12
Bancs du Grand Vey: 182 as an assault area: 56-57, 59
Bandieuville: 290 rail destruction in: 223, 224
Barbed wire: 390, 393 Benouville: 332
Barber, Brig. Gen. Harry A.: 392 Bey-Bocage, le: 370
Barfleur: 440 Berchtesgaden: 445-46,
Barges: 60n Berigny: 370, 373
Barker, Gen. Ray W.: 22, 31, 32, 52, 55, 56, 60, 77, Berlin, raids on: 214
91n, 94, 106n, 110-11, 166 Bessin: 180, 181, 182
Barneville-sur-Mer: 415 Beuzeville-au-Plain: 281, 289, 329, 341
Barquette, la: 280, 286-87, 288, 347, 357 Beuzeville-la-Bastille:: 289, 401-02
Barre de SemilIy, la: 377 Bicycles, used by Germans: 239, 254, 334, 338. 367.
Barton, Maj. Gen. Raymond 0.: 302, 302n, 342, 379n
390-92, 393, 418. See also Infantry Division, 4th. Bidault, Georges: 199
Barton: 322 Bieville: 332
Bas Village de Dodainville: 341, 390 Bingham, Maj. Sidney V., Jr.: 318,318n
Basse Addeville: 287 Biniville: 406
Bassin a Flot: 361-64 Birmingham: 160n
Battalion, Fuesilier: 237 Bissom, le: 341
Battalions. See Antitank Battalions; Armored Field Blaskowitz, Generaloberst Johannes: 248, 248n
Artillery Battalions; Armored Infantry Battal- Blay: 340
ions; Chemical Battalions; Engineer Battalions; Blockhouses: 341, 390
Engineer Combat Battalions; Field Artillery Bat- Blockships: 272n, 422-23
talions; Glider Infantry Battalions; Infantry Blotrie, la: 381
Battalions; Parachute Field Artillery Battalions: Blumentritt, Generalleutnant Guenther: 128n, 136.
Parachute Infantry Battalions; Ranger Battal- 142, 156
ions; Tank Battalions. Bocage country: 180, 188, 284, 365
Battalions, German. See German units. Boehm, Col.: 382-83
Batterie Hamburg: 440 Bois du Bretel: 381
Batterie Marcouf: 341n Bois de la Brique: 417
Baupte: 364, 365,402,403n Bois de Calette: 367
Bay of Biscay: 179,208,232,233 Bois du Coudray: 422,430
Bayfield: 301 Bois du Homme: 370
Bois du Mont du Roc: 419,429
Bayonets: 359,392
Bois de Nerest: 419
Bazenville: 330
Bois de Roudou: 419,422,430
Bazooka: 368,390
BOLERO: 19,24,25-26,27,28,33, 34, 35,42,45,47, 48,
BCRA (Bureau Central de Renseignements et
48n, 94,102
d’ktion) : 198-99, 200, 205 attacked by Churchill: 26
Beach defenses. See aLFo Beach obstacles; Underwater confusion in early use as a code name: 19n
obstacles. Gen. Marshall argues for: 26
as factor in choice of assault area: 56 purpose of: 19
plan for neutralizing: 194 Roosevelt’s attitude toward: 23,24
Beach drenching: 301-02. 313, 319 Stimson’s defense of: 25-26
Beach exits: 283,309,321,324,336 BOLERO Combined Committees: 19
498 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Bolshevrsm: 145,146, 148 attitude toward operations in 1942: 16-18


Bombardons: 423-26,423n and the Cairo-Tehran Conferences: 117, 122
Bomber Command, IX: 219-20,222,223, 301,428 and Combined Bomber Offensive: 213
Bomber losses: 212n concept of Mediterranean operations, May 1943: 68
Bomber offensive. See Combined Bomber Offensive. differ with American Chiefs of Staff in approach
Bombers to the problem of defeating Germany: 9-11
heavy: 19, 86, 196, 217,219, 300 favor principle of a “defensive encircling line of
medium: 19,20, 196,215,301 action”: 32
Bombing. See Air attacks; Combined Bomber Offen- and French Resistance: 202
sive: Daylight bombing: Night bombing. Joint Staff Commission responsible to: 2
of French railroads: 217-30 and landing craft procurement program: 100, 102,
in effectiveness in neutralizing coastal fortitica- 103
tions: 301 liaison between military and political leaders:
of U-boat pens and bases: 212n go-91
Bordeaux: 81 opposed to SLEDGEHAMMER: 30
Bottomley: Air Vice Marshal N. H.: 209n and organization of COSSAC: 48-51
Boulogne: 15, 259 problem of air force command: 220. 222
Bourdonnerie: 422 and questions of Ovwoan command: 107-09
Bourne, Lt. Col. G. K.: 5n reaction to Marshall’s scheme for invasion in 1943:
Bradley, Lt. Gen. Omar N.: 111, 158, 305, 320, 329, 18
350, 351, 352, 360, 36445, 376-77, 403, 416, 428, reject SKYSCRAPER: 58-59
432,443,447 urge peripheral strategy for the defeat of Germany:
named commander of First U. S. Army: 114-15 36-37
Branville: 419 British Combined Operations Headquarters: 177,197
Brauchitsch, von, Generalfeldmarschall Walther: British Fleet. See British Navy.
131n British Fleet Air Arm: 197
Breakwaters: 73-74. 422-26 British Home Forces: 5
Brecey: 371 British Joint Planners: 5.6, 12
Brecy: 331 British Ministry of Economic Warfare: 210
Brereton: Lt. Gen. Lewis H.; 108, 214, 214n British Navy: 52, 53, 129, 193-94
Brest: 301 British Royal Air Force. See Royal Air Force.
Bretteville 1’Orgueilleuse: 330 British units
Brevands: 286, 357, 359, 361 Army, Second: 53,114, 165, 174,183n. 320,374,443,
Bricquebec: 420 445,447
Bricqueville: 367 Army, Eighth: 8687,160
Bridges Army Group, 15th: 169
Allied air attacks on: 228-30, 230n, 349 ArmyGroup,21: 53,101,110,111,114,115,116,158,
captured by Germans: 416 1749224,228
construction: 360, 367 Brigade, 8th Armoured: 320
destruction: 357, 360, 408 Brigade, 56th Infantry: 339
improvised: 367 Brigade, 6th Special Engineer: 315
repair: 230n, 357,361,367 Commando, 47th Royal Marine: 320,339
shortage of equipment: 81 Corps, 1: 189, 320
British agents, and French Resistance: 206-01. See Corps, 8: 444
also Special Operations Executive. Corps, 30: 320,373,375,444
British air force. See Royal Air Force. Division, 3d: 332
British Air Ministry: 209, 210 Division, 30th: 376
British airborne forces: 348 Division, 50th: 221,222, 332. 338, 339, 375
British Army, high command for invasion formed: Division, 6th Airborne: 185,332
52253. See also British units. Division, 7th Armoured: 374,375,445
British Bomber Command: 86 Division, 79th Armoured: 320
BBC: 205,275,276 British shipbuilding industry: 102
British Chiefs of Staff: 2, 13, 16, 18, 21, 22.23, 25.27, British War Cabinet: 90-91
30. 32, 33, 35, 37, 42, 43, 44, 48, 48n, 49. 58, 58n, Brittany: 57, 78, 188,259
59, 65, 68, 68n. 72, 79, 80.90 Britteville-sur-Laize: 444
and the ANVIL-OVERLORD debate, January-March Brixham: 272
1944: 168, 169, 171, 172 Bronay: 348
INDEX 499
Brooke, Gen. Sir Alan: 4, 17, 17n, 25, 38-40, 43-45, Casablanca Conference: 38-45,46,47-49,63,83,107n,
48,68,96n, 113-71-72,221 109, 112-13, 116, 120, 164,207-08, 211
argues for Mediterranean operations: 40-41 Casemating of coastal batteries: 262
attitude toward Ovmoan: 96,97,98,99 Cassidy, Lt. Col. Patrick J.: 281-82
Browning, Lt. Gen. F. A. M.: 207 Casualties, Allied: 283, 290, 304, 324, 329, 359, 368,
Brownjohn, Maj. Gen. N. C. D.: 52 376, 378, 383, 388, 398, 401
Brucheville: 260 artillery: 388, 398, 402, 430, 432
BUCCANEER: 126 D-Day: 284, 284n, 288, 300, 300n, 313, 325n 330,
Buelowius, Generalleutnant Alfred: 266-67 330n
Buhot: 321 Dieppe raid: 55
Build-up schedules: lEEn, 351 drowning: 313
Bulldozers: 317 exercise TIGER: 270, 270n
“Bunker paralysis,“: 430 friendly fire: 400
Bureau Central de Renseignements et d’Action glider landings: 329
(BCRA) : 198-99,200,205 landing operations: 313, 315-17, 318-19
Burma Road: 126 machine gun fire: 313,315,324,380, 387,432
Buteaux, les: 382 mines: 324, 395
Buttlar-Brandenfels, von, Generalmajor Horst Frei- mortar fire: 345, 387, 398,402,432
herr Treusch: 264 officer: 287,319
82d Airborne Division: 300, 300n, 329
Cabourg: 165 101st Airborne Division: 284n. 286,288
Caen: 67n, 74, 75, 76, 78, 182, 183, 184, 188, 257, 278, 1st Division: 330n, 376
300, 332, 333, 339, 348-49, 350,371, 373, 374, 375, 2d Division: 376
408,428,443,444,445,446-48 4th Division: 329, 336
as assault area: 56,57,71, 72,73 29th Division: 330n, 376
decision to make main assault in vicinity of: 72-73 Casualties, German: 142-43, 142n. 281, 282, 283, 289,
terrain: 180-81 330,331,334,339n, 344,347,348,365,367,373-74,
Cahagnes: 375,380 378,396,416,431,434,436
Cairo Conference: 112, 113, 113n, 126-27,166,213 Caumont: 370, 371, 373, 374, 377, 380, 446
attitude of British toward OVERLORDprior to: 122 Caumont Gap: 366-77
preliminary policy discussions: 120-122 Cauquigny: 291,292,398
Calais: 8, 12 Cavalry Group, 4th: 416,438,440
Cambe, la: 187n, 352-53,367 Cavalry Squadrons
Cambrai: 137 4th: 304,416,417,421
Camouflage: 261n, 270,322,380 24th: 304,416,418,438
Canada: 55,58-59,78,84 102d: 374,380
Canadian Army, First: 53, 114 Chaney, Maj. Gen. James E.: 1, 2, 22
Canadian Chief of Naval Staff: 84 Channel Islands: 23, 79, 131, 137, 242n
Canadian Division, 3d: 332, 339, 348n, 444 Chartres: 78
Canchy: 367 Chateau de Fontenay: 392
Canham, Col. Charles D. W.: 318, 324, 324n, 326-27, Chsteaudun: 78
340-4L381-82 “Chattanooga Day”: 230
Cap de Carteret: 260 Chef-du-Pont: 289,291,292,398,400,401
Cap Gris Nez: 23, 259 Chemical Battalion, Elst: 317
Cap de la Hague: 260, 301,419,420,434,438,440
Chemical mortars: 233n, 392
Cap Levy: 438
Cherbourg: 21,23, 56,57, 73, 78, 81, 181, 182, 187-88,
Carentan: 103, 187, 188, 278, 279, 280, 286, 288, 290,
187n. 259,260,263,279,289-90,291,297,301,345,
291, 293, 298, 347, 352, 371, 376, 377, 378n, 408,
415 349, 350, 374, 376, 377, 421n, 426n. 447n
Carentan causeway: 356.. 357-59 capture: 386-449
Carillon, le: 383 destruction: 441-42,442n
Carmick: 322n field fortifications: 420
“Carpet” bombing: 428 port capacity increased: 442n
Carpiquet: 349 reconstruction of port begun: 441-42
Carrefour, le: 367 Rommel’s plans for defense of: 413
Carrier pigeon: 319n Cherbourg Landfront: 388, 420-21
Carriers: 84 Chevres, les: 429
Carteret: 387 Chiang Kai-shek. Generalissimo: 43
500 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Chief of Staff to the Supreme Allied Commander. See Colombieres: 367


COSSAC. Combat efficiency, German troops: 420-21,448
China: 3G, 43 Combat fatigue: 383
Churchill, Winston: 4, G, 11, 12, lG, 18-19, 18n, 21-22, Combat planes, short range of: 208n
23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 31n, 35, 38, 40, 41, 44, Combined Bomber Offensive: 180, 207-30, 265. See
45, 48, Gl, 64, G8, 69, 91n, 95, 9Gn, 119, 160, 173n also Allied Expeditionary Air Force; Air Of-
ANVIL-OVERLORD debate, January-March 1944: 168, fensive, Allied.
172 Combined Chiefs of Staff: 2, 25, 33, 35, 36, 37, 38, 40,
and bombing of French railroads: 223 42, 44-45, 47-49, 64, 67, 69, 70, 71, 74, 75, 80, 83,
on choice of a supreme commander: 44 84, lG5n, l88,209n, 274
concept of ROUNDUP: 23 and the ANVIL-OWRLORD debate, January-March
favors GYMNAST at London conference of 20 July 1944: 164-65, 166, 167, 169
1942: 28-29 British Joint Planners and Combined Staff Plan-
and French Resistance: 203 ners responsible to: 5
interest in eastern Mediterranean: 119-20 and the Cairo-Tehran Conferences: 117, 119,125
and landing craft requirements: Gl, 64 and Combined Bomber Offensive: 207,209,212
on need of guiding and controlling subordinate and landing craft procurement program: 101,104
commanders: 109 operations in Mediterranean to be subject to ap-
pleads for “elasticity” in OVERLORDin order to ex- proval by: 70
pedite Mediterranean operations: 122 and organization of COSSAC: 47-49
and problem of air force command: 219-20 organization and duties: 2,6
proposed attack on the “underbelly” or Axis: 35 and Outline OVERLORD: 74
questions feasibility of SLEDGEHAMMER: 28-29 and problem of control of strategic air forces: 219-
role as military leader: 90-92 20
suggests appointment of Marshall to command and proposed operations against Italy: 87, 93, 98
OVERLORD: 113 at the Quebec Conference: 94-95,98-99, 100
suggests that OVERLORDplan !)c enlarged: 99 and questions of OVERLON) command: 106, 107-09,
suggests planning for operation in Norway: 98 111,112,113-14
suggests supplying French guerillas by air: 99 Combined Commanders: 22,23, 31,47,48, 57, 58, 59
suggests use of floating piers: 22 development of new planning staff in accordance
at Tehran Conference: 122-26 with decisions at Casablanca Conference: 47-51
upset by Dodecanese defeat: 122 directed to study SLEDGEHAMMER: 12
urges GYMNAST: 26,27,28-29 estimate of size of assault: 59
urges Mediterranean operations at the Casablanca formation of: 6
Conference: 40, 41-42 Gen. Morgan chief staff officer to: 48
wants assault increased to four divisions: 102 and organization of COSSAC: 47-51
Civilians: 156, 202, 222-23, 228,410 point out difficulties inherent in SLEDGEHAMMER.
Clark, Gen. Mark: 111 12-13
Close-support craft: 67. See also Support craft. produce SKYSCRAPERplan: 57
Coastal batteries: 131, 176-77, 194, 2Gln report on possibility of invasion of the Pas-de-
Allied air force assigned mission of neutralizing: Calais, April 1942: 13
19496 Combined Operations Headquarters: 5,162
casemating of: 262 Combined Planning Staff: 5n, 19, 33, 126
estimated force required to silence: 193 Command
neutralization plan: 193-97, 308 American versus British views of: 108-10
Coastal current: 313, 317 principle of unity of: 10Gn
Coastal defense, German theory of: 326 problems caused by officer casualties: 319
Coastal defense works, German, four classes of: 309n questions of: 105-17, 218-21
Coastal position, typical: 324 Commando, defined: 57n
COCKADE: 51,70,71 Commandos: 54, 56, 73, 135, 136, 171, 320, 322n, 339
Code messages: 205-06 Committee of Operations Analysts: 208-09
Cole, Lt. Col. Robert G.: 280-81, 359, 359n Commune, la: 366
Colleville: ISOn, 182, 309, 313, 315, 318, 324, 325, 326, Communette, la: 366
328, 329, 330, 334, 337 Communication
Colleville-sur-Mer: 72 destruction of equipment during landings on
Collins, Maj. Gen. J. Lawton: 301,344, 344n, 392,401, OMAHA Beach; 319,319n
403, 404, 406, 415, 416, 417, 426-28, 433, 443. See letter by courier: 365
also Corps, VII. Communications bunker, behind American lines: 429
INDEX 501
Communications, German: 297-98, 368 Couville: 417
“Composite Group Headquarters”: 54 Creek, Capt. Roy E.: 292-93
Concentric attacks: 293-97, 360-64 Crepon: 321, 330
Concrete emplacements, ineffectiveness of naval fire Cresserons: 332
against: 193 Crisbecq: 341,342, 386, 390-92
Congress, Marshall’s relationship with: 113 Crocker, Lt. Gen. J. T.: 189
Coningham, Air Marshal Sir Arthur: 54n Croix Rouge, la: 380
Conseil National de la Resistance, le: 199 CROSSBOW: 21517,215n
Convoy system, reorganized: 84 Crossroads 114: 429
Cooke, Rear Adm. Charles M., Jr.: 65, 169 Crossroads 177: 429
Corlett, Maj. Gen. Charles H.: 377, 377n, 379, 381. Culoville: 282, 283, 347
See also Corps, XIX. Cunningham, Admiral Sir Andrew B.: 4n, 168,168n
Cormolain: 377
“Corncobs” (Blockships) : 272n D Day
corps, II: 114 forecasting weather for: 73
Corps, V: 19, 53, 70, 187-88, 196, 286, 305-08, 320. selection of: 188-90
See also Gerow, Maj. Gen. Leonard T. Daladier, Edouard: 137
junction with VII Corps: 351-65 Dangueville: 392
lodgment, 7-18 June: 33684 Dartmouth: 272
Corps, VI: 169 Davison, Capt. R. E.: 5n
Corps, VII: 66, 158, 182, 187-88, 188n, 269, 302, 336, Daylight bombing, controversy over: 208, 209
336n, 341, 342, 347, 350, 365, 366, 376. See also DD tanks: 192n, 304, 309, 315
Collins, Maj. Gen. J. Lawton De Guingand, Maj. Gen. Sir Francis: 160
airborne assault: 278-300 Deane, Maj. Gen. John Russell: 12122, 121n
and capture of Cherbourg: 386-449 Deauville: 8, 12
and D-Day beachhead: 328-30 Defense, coastal, initial effectiveness: 326
junction with V corps: 351-65 Defense, German: 383-84
landing on UTAH Beach: 302-04, 328 aided by hedgerows: 326
Corps, VIII: 415,416,440 disagreement over doctrine of defense in depth:
Corps, XV: 447 151-56
Corps, XIX: 188, 366, 376, 377, 379. See also Corlett, effect of airborne drops: 396
Maj. Gen. Charles H. effectiveness of scattered resistance by small
Corps, British. See British units. groups: 326
Corps, German. See German units. field fortifications: 386, 420
COSSAC (Chief of Staff to the Supreme Allied Com- lack of freedom of maneuver: 351
mander) : 51-54, 52n, 57,58, 58n, 63, 66, 69, 72n policy of maintaining intact defense: 351
107n positions prepared in depth: 375-76
Gen. Morgan’s appointment as: 48-51 unable to concentrate forces against airborne land-
increasing responsibilities: 52 ings: 282,298300
and landing craft requirements: 66-67 DeFranzo, S/Sgt. Arthur F.: 368n
organization and powers: 51-52 De Gaulle, Gen. Charles: 198-200
plans: 70-82 Delestrain, Gen.: 200
Cota, Brig, Gen. Norman D.: 318, 324, 324n 337, 364 Demolitions: 304,315-l7,390,436,442n
Coteaux du Perche: 78 Denmark: 231,246n. 412
Cotentin Peninsula: 103, 165, 166, 177, 182, 185, 186, De Rohan, Col. Frederick J.: 403, 404,419
187,259, 260,264 Destroyer escorts: 62, 104
assault on ruled out: 72 Destroyer Flotilla, 8th: 301
cutting of: 396-408 Destroyers, Allied: 261n
terrain: 180 Destroyers, German: 261n
Cottot: 403 Devers, Lt. Gen. Jacob L.: 53, 53n, 101, 106, 109, 114,
Coulombs: 331 115
Counterattack Deville: 364
expected by Americans on D-plus-3: 372 Dewing, Maj. Gen. R. H.: 4n
German doctrine of: 153-54 Dieppe raid: 53,54-55, 136, 137, 152, 183, 190691, 193,
measures taken as insurance against: 367 262,327n
Courseulles: 72, ISOn, 332, 348 Digosville: 430,432
Coutances: 334,338, 349-50 Dijon: 79
Couvains: 376, 381 Dill, Field Marshal Sir John: 4, 4n, 25, Sin, 48n
CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Directive No. 40: 133-35, 459-63 165n, 166n, 173n. 174,212,274,276,351,352,403,


Directive No. 51: 148, 151, 152, 154,231,233,234,257, 448, 449. See also Supreme Allied Commander;
46467 Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary
Distinguished Service Cross: 28ln, 290n. 293n, 317, Force
318n. 320n,322n, 324n, 347n, 369n, 473-76 and airborne planning: 183-86
Dive-bombing attack: 432 and the ANVIL-OVERLORD debate, January-March
Diversionary attacks: 76 1944: 165, 167, 168, 169, 170-73
Dives River: 78 appointed commander of OVERLORD:112.114
Divisions, British. See British units. appointed commander of TORCH: 31-32
Divisions, German. See also Infantry division, Ger- appointed Commanding General, ETOUSA: 26
man; Fanzer Division; Panzer Grenadier Divi- appoints Gen. Hartle executive deputy theater
sion commander: 46
characteristics: 175-76 attitude toward GYMNAST: 29-30
four categories of: 254n attitude toward SLEDGEHAMMER: 29
Dodecanese Islands: 119, 122 complains against British tendency to freeze or-
Dodigny: 368 ganization: 108-09
Doenitz, Grossadmiral Karl: 83,84,232,275 and controversy over bombing of French railroads:
Dollmann, Generaloberst Friedrich: 230, 26ln. 275, 219-23
293,297,334,335,350,351,371,379,395,411,445 directive to: 457-58
Domfront: 188 disagrees with Churchill on GYMNAST: 27
Doolittle, Lt. Gen. James H.: 213, 219 favors mainland operations against Italy: 87
Dorchester: 269 on method of assisting Soviet Union: II-12
Douet: 367 opposed to Aegean offensive: 119
Douglas, Air Marshal Sholto: 6 opposes invasion of Southern France: 125
Douve River: 181-82, 186, 187, 187n, 280, 282, 286, ordered to draw plans for invasion of Southern
287,288,289,290,293,298,321,347,357,359,361, France: 99
401,402.404, 406,408 outlines situation in Italy, 24 October 1943: 117,
Douvres: 330 119
Doyle: 322n and problem of command of strategic air forces:
DFLWOON: 173n 21921
Dreux: 78, 186 and problem of selection of D Day: 269, 272-74
DrBme corridor: 353 and shortage of landing craft: 270
Dr6me River: 337,338,339.443,444 takes over direction of strategic air forces in sup-
Droueries, les: 288, 348 port of OVERLORD: 223
DUKW’S: 309, 320, 426, 442 takes up duties as SAC: 158, 164
Dunes de Varreville: les, 165, 302 on vertical envelopment: 185
Dunkerque: 12, 57, 91, 259 Ekman, Col. William E.: 290, 388
El Alamein: 25
Eaker, Brig. Gen. Ira C.: 19, 47, 108, 208, 209, 212n, Eleventh Amphibious Force: 160
213,214 Elle River: 366, 368, 369, 373, 375, 382
Eastern Defense Command: 114 Elliott, Col. Walter A.: 369
Eastern Naval Task Force: 190 Embarkation, organization for: 269-70
East-West troop exchanges: 141-43,146-47, 175 Emmons: 322n
Eberbach, General der Panzertruppen Heinrich: 447 Emondeville: 302, 388
Ecausseville: 386, 387-88 Engineer Battalion, 2d: 381
Ecqueneauville: 342 Engineer Combat Battalions
Eddy, Maj. Gen. Manton: 403, 403n, 406, 417, 419, 37th: 325
420, 438,440. See also Infantry Division, 9th 146th: 325
Eden, Anthony: 18, 121n Engineer Port Construction and Repair Group,
Edwards, Col.: 113n 1056th: 442
Egypt: 25, 26, 29 Engineers: 304, 315-17, 336, 360. See also Engineer
Eighth Air Force: 21,47,86,108,111, 196,2lln, 212n, units.
269n, 300 casualties suffered in removing beach obstacles:
attack on French railroads: 219, 223-24 315, 317
and Combined Bomber Offensive: 20810, 208n, demolition teams: 192-93
211, 212, 213-14, 215 used as infantry: 381
Eisenhower, Gen. Dwight D.: 11-12, 15n, 2627,26n, Engranville: 337, 338
28, 29-32, 46, 70, 87n, 105, 111, 113n, 160, 164, Entrenchments: 418
INDEX 503

Envelopment: 185, 357, 361-64 takes over operational control of American ground
Equeurdreville: 432, 434 forces in the United Kingdom: 158
Equipment. See Shortages: Supply. First U. S. Army Group (FUSAG) , activated: 115
Escures: 339 Flame throwers: 192, 390
Esquay-sur-Seulles: 331, 444 Flank security: 393, 395, 403, 406, 417
Etreham: 339 Flares, use of: 189
Etretat: 16 Fleche, la: 371
ETOUSA: 31, 46, 53, 54, 64 Flint, Col. Harry A.: 392, 393, 419
Eure River: 78, 180 Floating piers: 22, 73-74
Evill, Air Marshal D. C. S.: 4n Floating reserve: 103, 182, 191, 327, 327n
Evreux: 78 Floods: 286-87, 353, 367
Ewell, Lt. Col. Julian: 283, 356 Flottemanville-Hague: 419, 420, 421, 429, 431
Flying bombs: 215-17
FABIUS: 270 Focke-Wulf 190: 265
Fahrmbacher, General der Artillerie Wilhelm: 404, “Follow-up” divisions, defined: 69n
404n, 413-14 Fontenay-sur-Mer: 302, 387, 392
Falaise: 181 Force B. See Task Force B.
Falkenhorst, von, General der Infanterie Nikolaus: Force 0. See Task Force 0.
135n Force U. See Task Force U.
Falley, Generalleutnant Wiihelm: 297, 396 FFI (Forces Francaises de Z’lnterieur) : 206-07
Falmouth: 269,272 Foret de Cerisy: 264, 321, 366, 368, 369, 371, 372,
Fauville: 329, 342 372n. 373, 375, 376
Felber, General der Infanterie Hans-Gustav: 143-44 Forges, les: 302, 328, 342, 345
Fermanville: 176 Formigny: 328, 337, 337n, 338, 339
Ferry Command: 62 Fort des Flamands: 433
Ferrying craft: 423 Fort du Roule, 429, 432, 434-36
Feuchtinger, Generalleutnant Edgar: 332-33 Fort St. Marcouf: 392, 395
Fieffes Dancel, les: 393 Fortifications
Field Artillery Battalions. See also Armored Field attacks at Crisbecq and Azeville: 390-92
Artillery Battalions; Parachute Field Artillery in Cherbourg area: 420, 434
Battalion. Ozeville: 392
7th: 313 permanent coastal artillery positions at Crisbecq
38th: 369 and Azeville: 341-42
44th: 440 plan for assaulting: 308
60th: 415, 416 use of demolitions against: 436
111th: 309 FORTITUDE: 76n
311th: 434 Fossardiere: 381
Field orders: 187, 187n. 350, 417 Fosse Soucy: 339
Fields of fire: 390 Fotelaie, la: 367
Fiere, la: 289, 291-93, 345, 396-401 Foucarville: 281, 304
Fifteenth Air Force: 212, 213, 218 Fournel, le: 281-82
Fifth Army: 169 France, Southern, 93, 173n. See also ANVIL.
Fighter aircraft, effort to destroy in Combined German occupation of: 143
Bomber Offensive: 209-10 historic invasion route through: 14445
Fighter bombers: 373, 376, 428 invasion discussed at Quebec Conference: 99-100
Fire and maneuver, doctrine of: 402 railroad targets: 218
Fire power, U. S. and German infantry divisions: Resistance: 198, 202-03
470 Stalin urges assault on: 123-26
Fire support. See Artillery; Naval Fire Support. Franco, Francisco: 97
Fire support plan: 193-94, 197 Francs Tireurs et Partisans: 198
First Canadian Army: 53, 114 Frankford: 322n
First U. S. Army: 110, 114, 165, 182, 183, 183n, 185, Freiwilligen: 145
187. 188, 320, 321, 336, 361, 365, 372, 372n. 374, French civilians: 156, 202, 222-23, 228, 410
376, 377, 378, 386, 423, 428, 438, 447 French guerilla forces. See French- Resistance.
counterbattery plan: 196 French Labor Service: 252, 263
established in England: 53 French Resistance: 52, 52n, 224,236, 275-76, 297, 408
naval fire support for: 193-94 and national unification: 198-99
and the NEPTUNE plans: 174 plans for direct military action hv: 206-07
504 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

French Resistance: (Continued) Army Group for Special Employment: 149, 243-46
sabotage by: 203-04, 408-10 Batlalion, lst, 6th Parachute Regiment: 298, 347
SHAEF considers mass uprisings unlikely: 202 Battalion, 2d, 6th Parachute Regiment: 298, 356-
supplies sent to: 201-02, 201n, 203, 203n, 207 57
Front National: 198 Battalion, 3d, 6th Parachute Regiment: 298, 358
Fuesilier battalion, organization: 237 Battalion, Seventh Army Sturm: 260, 297, 342-
Funck, von, General der Panzertruppen Hans Frei- 44, 387, 418
herr: 235, 373 Battalion, 17th Machine Gun: 260, 420
Gare Maritime: 441 Battalion, 2d, 191st Artillery Regiment: 283
Gasoline: Germans short of, 3G0, 410, 411 Battalion, 100th Panzer Replacement: 260, 260n,
Gavin, Brig. Gen. James A.: 291, 29ln, 398, 400 292n, 293, 402
George, Lt. Col. Alexander: 382, 382n Battalion, 206th Panzer: 260
Gerhardt, Maj. Gen. Charles H.: 327, 327n, 337, 352, Battalion, 3d, 243d Artilley Regiment: 342, 416,
382, 383. See also Infantry Division, 29th. 416n
German Admiralty: 83 Battalion, 275th Fuesilier: 379n
German Air Force. See Luftwaffe. Battalion, 352d Antitank: 330n
German Armed Forces of the Netherlands: 246 Battalion, 352d Fuesilier: 257, 330n, 338
German Army. See also German units: Reserves, Battalion, 439th Ost: 353
German. Battalion, 441st Ost: 321
average age of troops: 147 Battalion, 456th Artillery: 297, 342, 387
command and tactics: 242-58 Battalion, 457th Artillery: 297, 387
lack of replacements: 147 Battalion, 513th, 30th Mobile Brigade: 338
organization for combat: 236-42 Battalion, 642d Ost: 254
physical standards relaxed: 146-47 Battalion, 709th Antitank: 297, 342
racial composition: 145 Battalion, 3d, 726th Regiment: 319n
strength in December 1943: 147 Battalion, 795th Georgian: 254, 2G0, 297, 342
strength on 6 June 1944: 471 Battalion, lst, 914th Regiment: 322
German combat troops Battalion, Ist, 915th Regiment: 330n
characteristics of: 282 Battalion, 2d, 915th Regiment: 330, 338
used as construction workers: 252 Battalion, lst, 916th Regiment: 321
German defense. See Defense, German. Battalion, 2d, 916th Regiment: 338
German industries, and Combined Bomber Offen- Battalion, Ist, 919th Regiment: 297
sive: 207-10, 223 Battalion, 3d, 919th Regiment: 147n, 278, 393
German Navy: 129, 130, 131, 137, 243, 259, 301 Battalion, 2d, 921st Regiment: 395n
German units. See also German Army. Battalion, Engineer, 922d Regiment: 297n
Army, First: 130, 143. 233, 242, 247, 248, 258, 412 Battalion, lst, 922d Regiment: 395n
Army, First Panzer: 235 Battalion, lst, 984th Regiment: 379n
Army, First Parachute: 238n Battalion, 2d, 984th Regiment: 379n
Army, Sixth: 234 Battalion, 2d, 1058th Regiment: 357
Army, Seventh: 130, 138, 141, 146, 225, 227, 239n, Battalion, 3d, 1058th Regiment: 288, 298, 356
242, 242n, 246, 252, 254, 258, 260, 263, 275, 278, Battalion, 3d, 1261st Artillery Regiment: 387
293, 293n. 305, 332, 334, 338, 348-51, 370, 374, Battalion, 3d, 1352d Artillery Regiment: 338
378, 379, 386, 396n 404, 408-11, 413, 413-14, Battalion, 3d, 1716th Artillery Regiment: 319n,
414n, 415, 421, 438, 442n. 443, 444, 446 353
Army, Eighth: 234 Brigade, 7th Werfer: 444
Army, Fifteenth: 130, 138, 138n. 141, 154, 242, 250, Brigade, 30th Mobile: 334, 338, 339, 339n, 353
252, 257, 257n, 258, 275, 278, 351, 411, 412, 446 Corps, I SS t anzer: 334,348,349,371,374,408,443,
Army, Nineteenth: 144, 232, 242, 247, 248, 258, 412 444
Army Felber: 143 Corps, II Parachute: 252, 349, 371, 373, 377, 443,
Army Group A: 130 444
Army Group B: 87, 130, 149, 246, 248, 249, 275, Corps, II SS Panzer: 235, 411, 443, 444, 445
332, 414, 446 Corps, XXI: 135n
Army Group C: 130, 149n Corps, XXV: 334, 404n
Army Group D: 130 Corps, XLVII Panzer: 235, 373, 443
Army Group G: 248 Corps, LXXIV: 260, 379
Army Group Center: 141 Corps, LXXXIV: 138, l55,242n, 252,254, 260, 263,
Army Group North: 141, 233 278, 280n. 297-98, 305, 330, 334, 360, 369, 371,
Army Group South: 132 377, 404, 404n, 408, 413, 414, 414n. 417, 443, 446
INDEX

German units: (Continued) Division, Panzer Lehr: 234, 235, 248, 333, 334, 348,
corps, LXXXVI: 412, 443 349, 370, 372-75, 412, 442, 444
Diiiision, 1st SS Panzer: 235, 248, 248, 372, 412, Gruppe XXI: 135n
442, 444 Kampfgruppe Boehm: 382
Division, 2d Panzer: 240, 373, 374-75, 377, 412 Kampfgruppe Heintz: 371, 378-79
Division, 2d Parachute: 238, 238n Kampfgruppe Hellmich: 395, 413
Division, 2d SS Panzer: 206, 248, 412, 442, 442n, Kampfgruppe Hoffman: 387n, 395
444, 445, 446 Kampfgruppe Keil: 387n
Division, 3d Parachute: 238-39, 238n, 239n, 252, Kampfgruppe Meyer: 330-31, 338
349, 350n, 371, 373, 375, 380, 382 Kampfgruppe Mueller: 387n
Division, 5th Parachute: 238, 252, 253 Regiment, 6th Parachute: 238, 238n, 239,260, 286,
Division, 6th Panzer: 141 288, 293, 297-300, 356
Divi.rion, 9th SS Panzer: 233, 234, 235, 240, 248, Regiment, 15th Parachute: 430
411, 412, 442, 445 Regiment, 37th SS Panzer Grenadier: 371
Division, 10th SS Panzer: 235, 411, 412, 442, 445 Regiment, 38th SS Panzer Grenadier: 371
Division, 11th Panzer: 248, 372 Regiment, IOIst Stellungswerfer: 260, 260n
Division, 12th SS Panzer: 248, 333-34, 348, 349, Regiment, 191st Artillery: 328
373, 412, 442, 444 Regiment, 243d Artillery: 387
Division, 16th Luftwaffe Field: 446 Regiment, 352d Artillery: 254, 257n, 353
Division, 17th SS Panzer Grenadier: 239-40, 248, Regiment, 726th: 257, 319n, 331, 338, 339, 340, 353
349, 350n, 360, 364, 364n, 365, 371-73, 372n, 374, Regiment, 729th: 345, 418, 420
376, 378n, 379 Regiment, 739th: 420
Division, 19th Luftwaffe Field: 235 Regiment, 914th: 341, 350, 353, 367
Division, 21st Panzer: 235, 242, 248, 257, 257n, Regiment, 915th: 257n, 321, 330
319n, 332, 334, 348, 349, 373, 444 Regiment, 916th: 320, 324, 330, 334, 337, 338, 369n
Division, 60th Panzer Grenadier: 148 Regiment, 919th: 345, 420
Division, 77th: 238, 238n, 257n, 334, 349, 350n, Regiment, 920th: 297n
371, 387, 395, 404, 413-15, 414n, 416, 417, 430 Regiment, 922d: 297n, 345, 420
Division, 89th: 233n Regiment, 943d: 382
Division, Plst: 186, 238, 260, 278, 288, 289, 293, Regiment, 984th: 378
293n, 297, 336, 387, 393, 396, 404, 408, 413, 417 Regiment, ZO49th: 402
Division, 116th Panzer: 248 Regiment, 1050th Grenadier: 416
Division, 243d: 254, 254n, 258, 387, 395, 413, 417, Regiment, Z057th: 293, 345, 401
420, 430 Regiment, 1058th: 283, 293, 293n, 297, 342, 344,
Division, 265th: 254, 379 357
Division, 266th: 254, 334 Germany. See also German units; Hitler.
Division, 275th: 254, 257, 257n, 364 collapse of: 79-82, 120
Division, 276th: 442 and combined Bomber Offensive: 207-17
Division, 277th: 442 planning the defeat of: 8-11
Division, 319th: 131, 242n
Division, 326th: 235 Gerow, Brig. Gen. Leonard T.: 5n, 187, 305, 308n.
Division, 331st: 235 320, 327, 361, 365, 375, 444. See also Corps V.
Division, 346th: 235, 257n Gestapo: 200
Division, 348th: 235 Geyr von Schweppenburg, General der Panzertrup-
Division, 349th: 235 pen Leo Freiherr: 153, 156n, 247, 248, 248n, 348,
Division, 352d: 238n, 254-57, 254n,
264, 286, 319, 349, 373-74, 373n. 443,444,445n, 446, 447
319n, 320, 321, 322n. 330, 331n, 334-35, 337-39, Ghormley, Rear Adm. Robert L.: 1, 2
337n, 339n, 340, 348, 353, 367, 368, 369, 369n, Gibraltar: 97, 129n
372, 373, 375, 379n, 380, 382, 383 Ginder, Col. Philip H.: 401, 402
Division, 353d: 254, 257, 257n, 371-72, 382 Glacerie, la: 430, 432
Division, 361st: 235 Glider Infantry Battalion: 356n
Division, 709th: 147, 238, 252, 254, 258, 260, 263, Glider Infantry Battalions. See also Battalions.
278, 283, 286, 288, 293, 293n, 297, 298, 330, 387, lst, 325th Glider Infantry: 396-98, 400
413, 417 2d, 325th Glider Infantry: 388
Division, 711th: 278 3d, 325th Glider Infantry: 398
Division, 7Z5th: 234 lst, 327th Glider Infantry: 364
Division, 716th: 238,254,257,264,264n, 278,319n, 2d, 327th Glider Infantry: 364
321, 332, 334, 338, 370, 372 3d, 327th Glider Infantry: 356, 356n
506 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Glider Infantry Battalions: (Continued) Harcourt: 349


lst, 401st Glider Infantry: 356n Harding: 322n
2d, 401st Glider Infantry: 356n Hardinvast: 429, 432
Glider Infantry Regiments HARLEQUIN: 70
325th: 300, 329, 345, 398, 401, 402, 403, 404, 406 Harper, Col. Joseph H.: 361, 365
327th: 356n, 357, 359, 36144, 365 Harriman, W. Averell: 12ln
401st: 356n Harris, Air Marshal A. T.: 4n, 5
Glider landings: 186, 283, 298, 300, 329 Hartle, Maj. Gen. Russell P.: 46
Glider regiments, organization: 356n Haskell, Col. Joseph P.: 203
Gliders: 184n, 250, 279, 345 Hausser, Generaloberst der Waffen-SS Paul: 445, 446
Goebbels, Josef Paul: 140n Haut Gueutteville: 293
Goering, Reichsmarschall Hermann: 130, 133, 133n, Haute-LittCe: 369
136, 238,253, 265 Hautteville-Bocage: 406, 415
Golleville: 417 Haye du Puits, la: 260,413,414,415
Gonneville: 421, 430, 438 Heavy bombers: 196,217, 219, 300
Goode, Col. Paul R.: 341, 364, 382n Hedgehogs: 250. See also Beach obstacles.
Gouesmerie, la: 372n Hedgerow cutters: 384
Gourbesville: 402, 404, 420 Hedgerows: 284, 348,356, 359,361, 364,368, 369, 376,
Grand Hameau, le: 328 380, 386,400,402-03, 406, 422,449
Grandcamp-les-Bains: 75, 78, 353, 423 difficulties of fighting in: 297.402-03
Grande Huanville: 415 tactics in: 381-82
Greece: 35, 41, 122 typical action in: 348, 380
Grenades: 359, 436 Helleville: 417, 429
Greville: 441 Hellmich, Generalleutnant Heinz: 395
Gronde River: 331 Hennecke, Konteradmiral Walther: 278, 438, 441-42
Group von Schlieben: 413, 414 Henneville: 440
Gruchy: 341,438,440,441 Heydte, von der, Major Friedrich-August Freiherr:
Gruenther, Brig. Gen. Alfred W.: 32 293n, 297-98, 347, 347n, 348, 356, 357, 360, 364.
Guderian, Generaloberst Heinz: 241,242 364n
Guerrillas, French. See French Resistance. Hiesville: 282, 283
Gun-support craft. See Support craft. Higgins, Andrew J.: 60
Guns. See Artillery: Howitzers; Mortars; Self-pro- Hilfswillige: 145
pelled guns; Weapons. Hill 30: 293, 357, 361, 400
Guns, German: 176, 240n, 241, 368, 383, 420, 441 Hill 35: 353
20.mm.: 383, 420 Hill 64: 331
7.5.mm.: 240, 240n. 330 Hill 90: 380
76.2.mm.: 240 Hill 97: 380
88.mm.: 239, 240, 241, 368, 383, 387, 420, 436 Hill 102: 383
122.mm.: 297 Hill 108: 383
150.mm.: 297 Hill 115: 381
155.mm.: 177n, 196, 308, 322 Hill 133: 415
170.mm.: 177 Hill 145: 415,
210.mm.: 341 Hill 147: 381
240-mm.: 176 Hill 150: 380, 381
Gustav Line: 169 Hill 158: 421
GYMNAST: 10-11, 15, 26, 27, 29, 30, 31 Hill 170: 419
Hill 171: 429, 431
H Hour: 188-90 Hill 192: 375, 376, 380-81
Haig, Field Marshal Sir Douglas: 4n Hilpert, Generalleutnant Karl: 135
Halder, Generaloberst Franz: 128n Hitler: 133n, 152n, 232, 234, 237, 238, 241, 242n, 246,
Haley: 340 247, 248n, 248-49, 257, 258, 262, 275, 333, 350,
Hall, Rear Adm. John L.: 160, 160n, 301, 322n, 327, 414, 414n. See also Germany.
426 admonishes Schlieben on defense of Cherbourg:
Ham, le: 386, 387,387n, 388,415 430
Hameau Gringer: 432, 436 Allied invasion of North Africa a complete sur-
Hamel, le: 331 prise to: 143
Hamel de Cruttes: 329 analysis of Dieppe raid: 137
Handy, Maj. Gen. Thomas T.: 35-36,60 basic order for defense of the West: 133, 135
INDEX 507
Hitler: (Continued) ions; Glider Infantry Battalions; Parachute
Conference of 29 September 1942: 136-37 Field Artillery Battalion; Parachute Infantry
Conference of 17 June 1944: 412-13414 Battalions; Ranger Battalions; Tank Battalions.
Conference of 30 June 1944: 445-46 lst, 8th Infantry: 304, 328, 342, 387-88, 422, 432
decides to attack Soviet Union: 129-30 2d, 8th Infantry: 283, 304, 328, 342, 344, 387. 422
and decline of Luftwaffe: 265 3d, 8th Infantry: 304, 329, 342, 422, 431
and defeat of German submarine: 83-84 2d, 9th Infantry: 368
effort to rebuild western defenses: 148-57 3d, 9th Infantry: 368-69
estimates of Allied intentions: 138, 259, 259n lst, 12th Infantry: 432, 433
intervention in the battle: 411-12.414.443, 445-46 3d, 12th Infantry: 388-90
issues Directive 40: 133 1st 16th Infantry: 318, 324, 337
issues Directive 51: 148, 231 2d, 16th Infantry: 315, 318, 324, 328, 337
orders halt in shift of troops from Western to Sd, 16th Infantry: 318, 325, 328, 337
Eastern Front: 148, 231, 233 lst, 18th Infantry: 328
policy of rigid defense: 152 2d, 18th Infantry: 325, 328, 337
and projected invasion of England: 129 Sd, 18th Infantry: 328, 337
regards Channel Islands important for political lst, 22d Infantry: 390, 421
reasons: 131 2d, 22d Infantry: 390
Rundstedt’s visit to: 140 3d, 22d Infantry: 302, 304, 341-42, 390, 418, 421
takes direct command of Army: 131n lst, 26th Infantry: 337, 339
Hobbs, Maj. Gen. Leland: 377. See also Infantry Divi- 2d, 26th Infantry: 337, 339
sion, 30th. Sd, 26th Infantry: 337-38, 339
Hoffmann, Oberstleutnant: 147n, 278 lst, 38th Infantry: 369
Holdy: 284 2d, 38th Infantry: 369
Home Defense Command: 53 3d, 38th Infantry: 369, 380
Hommet d’Arthenay, le: 377 lst, 39th Infantry: 392, 395, 416
Hopkins, Harry: 16, 18, 21, 27, 28. 30-31 2d, 39th Infantry: 392
“Hornets,” self-propelled 88.mm. antitank guns 3d, 39th Infantry: 392,393
(German) : 241 1st. 47th Infantry: 419
Horse-drawn artillery: 254 2d, 47th Infantry: 419-20, 441
Houdienville: 282, 283 lst, 60th Infantry: 420, 440
House-to-house fighting: 281, 283 2d, 60th Infantry: 406, 420, 441
Houesville: 357 3d, 60th Infantry: 408, 420, 440
Howell, Brig. Gen. G. P.: 402, 402n lst, 115th Infantry: 327, 367, 376, 381, 382
Howitzers, 105-mm.: 197, 284, 309, 341, 356, 383 Pd, 115th Infantry: 327, 367, 368, 382
Huebner, Maj. Gen. Clarence R.: 305, 308n, 319, 3d, 115th Infantry: 327-28, 367,368, 376, 380, 381.
374. See also Infantry Division, 1st. 382
Hughes-Hallett, Commodore J.: 53, 53n, 54n, 60 lst, 116th Infantry: 317, 326, 381
Hull, Cordell: 121n 2d, 116th Infantry: 315, 317, 318, 326, 327, 381
Hull, Maj. Gen. John E.: 169 3d, 116th Infantry: 317, 318, 324, 325, 327, 381
Hungary: 234,235,246n lst, 175th Infantry: 382, 383
Hupfer, Lt. Col. C. G.: 344 Sd, 175th Infantry: 382, 383
Huppain: 337
lst, 313th Infantry: 429
Hurst, S/Sgt. Paul A.: 436
3d, 313th Infantry: 429
HUSKY: 70, 83, 86-87
2d, 314th Infantry: 434-36
Iceland: 17, 19 3d, 314th Infantry: 434-36
India: 17 lst, 357th Infantry: 401
Infantry, American 2d, 357th Infantry: 401
assault troop weapons: 192 lst, 358th Infantry: 402
battle charge: 359, 387, 398, 441 3d, 358th Infantry: 402
German estimate of: 337n Infantry Division, 1st: 158n, 187, 352, 380
Infantry, German. See German units. assault on beach: 305-19
Infantry, German, organization: 236-42 assault plans: 190, 197
Infantry battalions. See also Antitank Battalions; assault training: 162-64, 270
Armored Field Artillery Battalions: Armored casualties: SSOn, 376
Infantry Battalions; Engineer Battalions; Engi in drive on Caumont: 366, 368, 369, 371-77
neer Combat Battalions; Field Artillery Battal- effort to secure beachhead: 337, 339, 340
508 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Infantry Division, 2d: 158n 23d: 375, 376, 380, 381


attack toward St. Lb: 380-81 26th: 308, 337n, 340, 368, 374
casualties: 376 38th: 368, 369, 376, 380
in drive on Caumont: 366, 369, 370, 372n, 374, 375, 39th: 392, 393, 403n, 406, 415, 417, 419, 420, 421,
376, 377 429, 431, 432, 434, 438
Infantry Division, 4th: 284, 300, 329, 336, 344, 345. 47th: 404, 406, 415, 416, 419, 420, 429, 431, 432,
401, 402, 440” 433-34 436, 440, 441
advance to the Cherbourg Landfront: 416,418,419, 60th: 403, 404, 415, 416, 417, 419, 420, 421, 429,
421 431, 438, 440-41
assault on beaches: 302, 302-04 115th: 187, 308, 327, 328, 337, 339, 340, 352, 353,
assault plans: 187, 190, 197 367, 376, 381, 382-83
assault training: 162 116th: 162, 187n, 305-08, 313-15, 317, 318, 319,
capture of Cherbourg: 403n, 423, 428, 430, 433 324, 326-27, 329, 340, 352, 353, 356, 365, 367n.
casualties: 329, 336 376, 380, 381, 382, 383
drive to the Quineville ridge: 386-96 119th: 382, 383
Infantry Division: 5th, 158n 120th: 377
Infantry Division, 8th: 158” 175th: 337, 340, 341, 352-53, 359-60, 361, 364, 365,
Infantry Division, 9th: 158n 367, 376, 380, 382, 383
advance to the Cherbourg Landfront: 416-17, 418, 313th: 417, 419, 429, 432, 436
419-20, 421 314th: 418, 419, 429, 431, 432, 436
assault plans: 187, 269 315th: 417-18, 419, 421, 429, 432
in attack to cut the Peninsula: 403, 406-08, 415-16 357th: 401, 402, 404, 416
capture of Cherbourg: 403n, 428, 429, 431, 433, 358th: 401, 402, 403, 406
434, 436, 440 359th: 302, 388, 401, 402, 403-404, 406
Infantry Division, 29th: 158n, 365, 366, 367, 369n. Infantry-tank teams: 383-84
375, 376 Infiltration: 430, 431
assault on beaches: 327 Initial Joint Plan. See NEFTUNE Initial Joint Plan.
assault plans: 187, 190, 197, 197n Intelligence, Allied: 174-80, 175n, 186, 210-11, 215,
assault training: 162, 270 217, 221, 224, 319n, 372, 372n, 417
attack toward St. LB: 377, 379-80, 381, 382-83 Intelligence, German: 138, 258-59, 275-76, 350
captures Isigny: 352-53 Interdiction
casualties: 330n, 376 by Allied air force: 360, 410
in drive on Caumont: 374 artillery: 361, 406
effort to secure beachhead: 336, 337, 340-41 Inundations. See Floods.
Infantry Division, 30th: 377, 379 Invasion fleet
Infantry Division, 34th: 19 German command unaware of: 275-76
Infantry Division, 79th: 188n, 403, 415, 440 organization for embarkation: 269-70
advance to the Cherbourg Landfront: 416, 417-18, size of: 274
419, 421 Invasion front: 26, 56, 57, 72, 99, 165-66, 181
capture of Cherbourg: 428, 429, 431, 432, 434-36 Iran: 17
Infantry Division, 83d: 447 Iraq: 17
Infantry Division, 90th: 417 Isigny: 180, 181, 187, 187n, 308, 327, 351-53, 357, 359,
assault plans: 187 360, 361, 365, 367, 376, 381, 423
in attack to cut the Peninsula: 401-04, 406, 415, Ismay, Lt. Gen. Sir Hastings: 90, 91n, 98, 121, 121n
416 Isolationism: 92
Infantry Regiments. See also Glider Infantry Regi- Italy: 29, 35, 36, 68, 69, 83, 171-72, 173, 173n. See
ments; Parachute Infantry Regiments. also Anzio: HUSKY; Mediterranean operations;
8th: 281, 283, 284n 298, 302, 328, 329, 342, 344, Salerno; Sicily.
345, 386, 387-88, 393, 396, 418, 421-22, 430, 431, Allied attacks on railroads: 217, 228
432 capitulation: 87, 143-44
9th: 368-69, 375, 380 invasion of: 87-90, 93
12th: 302, 329, 341, 386, 388-90, 392, 392-93, 418, strategy of defeating: 36, 37, 41, 42-43, 68, 93, 96,
421, 422, 430, 431, 432-33 97, 117-19, 121, 122, 169
16th: 162, 308, 309, 315, 318-19, 319n, 324, 325, Italian Fourth Army: 143-44
328, 336 Italian 5th Alpini Division: 144
18th: 308, 325, 327-28, 337-38, 368, 374
22d: 302, 329, 341. 386, 390, 392, 393, 418, 421, Jacob, General der Pioniere Alfred: 136
430. 431. 432. 438-40 Jaeger divisions: 231, 231n
INDEX

Japan: 8, 11, 18, 23-24, 25, 27, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, Kirk, Rear Adm. Alan G.: 53, 160, 160n, 190, 194,
38, 43-44, 129. See also Pacific theater. 273
Stalin promises to join in war on: 123 KMA (coastal mine) : 262
strategic defensive against: 8, 35, 36, 43-44 Kluge, von, Generalfeldmarschall Guenther: 447
Jedburghs: 201-07 Knocke: 56
Jodl, General der Artillerie Alfred: 135, 155, 232, Knudsen, William S.: 26n
234, 257, 333, 411-12, 445 Koehn, Oberst Walter: 420
Joganville: 388 Koenig, Gen. Joseph Pierre: 206
Johnson, Col. Howard R.: 286, 287, 287-88n, 288, Kraemer, Generalmajor der Waffen-SS Fritz: 147n
347, 347n Kraiss, Generalleutnant Dietrich: 321, 330, 334, 338-
Johnston, Lt. Col. James D.: 420 39, 340, 353, 369, 369n, 383
Joint Board, 1942 membership: 3n Krancke, Admiral Theodor: 243, 259, 260-63, 276,
Joint Chiefs of Staff: 3, 4n, 15, 27, 31, 32, 33, 34-35, 278, 301
36, 37, 38. 42, 43, 48, 49, 63, 64, 65, 68, 69, 70. Krause, Lt. Col. Edward C.: 289, 290, 290n
77, 165n, 173n
and the ANVIL-OVERLORD debate, January-March Labor troops: 144, 145, 202, 228, 430
1944: 168-69 Lambe, Capt. C. E.: 5n
and the Cairo-Tehran Conference: 117-19, 120, Landes, les: 387n, 402
121, 122-23, 126 Lande-sur-Drome, la: 380
and Combined Bomber Offensive: 209-10, 213 Lcndfront. See Cherbourg Landfront.
concept of Mediterranean operations, May 1943: Landing, errors in: 304, 313
68-69 Landing craft: 12, 100-05, 122, 191, 321n. 33On
and decision on target date for invasion: 69-70 and the ANVIL-OVERLORD debate of January-
favor concentration on BOLERO in preparation for March 1944: 165, 166-68. 169-73
ROUNDUP in 1943: 32 British development of: 61-62
and French Resistance: 203 congestion offshore: 320, 325
and landing craft requirements: 63, 64, 65, 101-02 effort to make most of existing supply: 105
and organization of COSSAC: 48-51 estimate of requirements: 59-60, 63-65, 100-03
organization and duties: 3-4 experiments in firing artillery from: 197
problem of air force command: 220 priority in construction: 62-63, 104
at the Quebec Conference: 83, 87, 88,90,92, 93-94, reallocation of at Cairo Conference: 12627
96, 97, 98 serviceability rate: 170-71
and questions of OVERLORD command: 108, 11 l-12 shortage of: 63n, 74-75, 75n, 100-02, 103
relative independence: 92 sought by Eisenhower for Italian campaign: 117-
seek overriding priority for OVERLORD in debate 19
at Quebec Conference: 97-100 U. S. production: 61n, 62-63
Joint Intelligence Committee: 222 used to ram beach obstacles: 325
Joint Planning Staff: 6, 23, 34, 104, 184 vehicle capacity: 66, 66n
Joint Staff Mission: 2, 4, 4n, 27, 90n Landing Craft and Bases, Europe: 160
JSSC (Joint Strategic Survey Committee) : 36-37, Landing exercises, British: 264n
83, 86, 90n Landrum, Maj. Gen. Eugene M.: 403, 403n, 404. See
Joint War Plans Committee: 90n, 93 also Infantry Division, 90th.
Junkers 88: 265 Laval: 371
JUPITER: 27 LCA: 61, 67n, 171, 190
LCG: 101
Kampfgruppen, mobile: 254 LCI (L): 101, 127, 167, 170, 172
Kanalkueste: 138-40, 149, 262, 351, 411, 446 LCM (1): 61
Kauffman, Lt. Col. Michael B.: 406 LCT: 54, 61, 62, 63, 64, 66, 67, 100, 101, 103, 104,
Keil, Oberstleutnant Guenther: 420, 441 127, 167, 172, 192
Keitel, Generalfeldmarschall Wilhelm: 133, 136, 227, LCT (4): 61, 61n, 63n
411, 445 LCT (5) : 197
Kellv, Cpl. John D.: 436, 436n LCT (R): 101, 197
Kesselring, Generalfeldmarschall Albert: 149 LCVP’s: 67n, 190, 192, 309, 313, 341
King, Admiral Ernest J.: 3, 3-4n, 23-24, 27-28, 31, LSI: 171
31n, 34, 43, 60, 63, 65, 70, 94n LSI (H) : 170
attitude toward OVERLORD: 65, 93, 94 LSI (L): 127
organizes U. S. naval forces in Europe: 160 LSI (S) : 67n
and shortage of landing craft: 102, 104 L’Armte, Secrhte: 199-200
510 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

L’Eclin: 375 ordered to strengthen defenses: 148


Le Havre: 8. 15, 16, 21, 57, 72, 81, 103, 259, 301 raid on camp near Falmouth: 270-72
Leahy, Admiral William D.: 4, 4n, Sin, 93 use of in defense: 153-54
Leigh-Mallory, Air Marshal Sir Trafford: 21, 52, 52n, Luftwaffe units. See also Third Air Force.
54n, 107-08, 112, 162, 214 Corps, II Air: 266-67, 335
and airborne planning: 186 Corps, II Fighter: 266, 267n
and controversy over bombing of French railroads: Corps, III Flak: 243, 243n
217, 218, 222 Division, 4th Fighter: 266
on German Air Force: 180 Division, 5th Fighter: 266
and the NEPTUNE plans: 173 German Home Air Command (Luftflotte Reich) :
and selection of D-day: 273 267
Lessay: 188, 260, 349, 361 Luzerne, la: 381
Lestre: 387
Lettau, Major Heinz: 276n McAuliffe, Brig. Gen. Anthony: 361
Lewis, Col.: 398 McCook: 322n
Like: 8 Machiqe guns: 380, 386-87, 434-36, 440
Lieusant: 418 MacKelvie, Brig. Gen. Jay W.: 401, 403. See also
Limited-objective attack: 348, 373, 377, 379-83 Infantry Division, 90th.
Limited withdrawal: 416 McLaren, Capt. M.: 56n
Landwirt submarines: 301 McLean, Brig. Gen. Kenneth: 165, 165n. 166
Lindquist, Col. Ray: 291 McNabb, Brig. Colin: 22
Linear defense; German theories: 151-56 McNair, Lt. Gen. Lesley J.: 26n, 184
Lion-sur-Mer: 72, 180, l80n McNarney, Maj. Gen. Joseph T.: 26n
Lisieux: 333 MacNeely, Lt. Col. Carlton 0.: 283, 344
Lison: 360, 367 Macready, Lt. Gen. G. N.: 4n
Litteau: 375 Madeleine, la: 353
Little, Admiral Sir Charles: 4, 4n, 53. 54, 160-62 MAGNET: 19
Livry: 375 Magneville: 386, 387
Lock, la Barquette: 280, 286-87, 287-88n Maisy: 356
Lockwood, Pvt. John A.: 293 Mandeville: 337, 368
Lodgment, development of: 187-88 Maneuver, fire and: 402-03
Loire River: 79, 180, 230, 349, 371, 408-10 Mans, le: 78, 225
Londe, la: 372 Mantes-Gassicourt: 228, 408
London, effect of flying bombs on: 215-17 Maquis: 99, 202-03, 203n. 206, 442n
London Conference Marcks, General der Artillerie Erich: 155, 298, 334,
April 1942: 16-18 340, 369, 395, 404, 408
July 1942: 28-32, 33-34 Marcouf. See Fort St. Marcouf.
Longraye: 370 Mare g Canards, La: 429, 431, 432
Longueville: 308, 327, 352 Maritime Commission: 104
Losses. See also Casualties. Marnitz, Generalmajor Viktor: 152, 152n, 153
Losses, Allied aircraft: 210, 211, 212, 214 Marshaling areas: 269, 270
Losses, Allied shipping: 38-40, 63-64, 83, 84-86, 270, Marshall, Gen. George C.: 1, 3, 8, 19, 21n, 23, 24, 25,
313,423-26,426n 26, 26n, 27-28, 29, 30, Son, 31, 33, 34, 38, 40, 41,
Louvieres: 340 42, 43-44,48n,65,87n, 110, 111, IlSn, 122n, 127,
LST’s: 61-62, 63, 64, 103, 127, 167, 170, 171, 172, 173, 272
270, 302n, 423, 426 and airborne planning: 183-84, 185
Luckett, Col. James S.: 293n. 422, 433 ANVIL-OVERLORD debate, January-March 1944:
Luettwitz, von, Generalleutnant Heinrich Freiherr: 168-69, 172, 173
373 appointment as SAC discussed: 108, 111, 113, lliln,
Luftflotte Reich: 267 114
Luftgaukommando Westfrankreich: 243n attitude toward GYMNAST: 27-28, 30
Luftwaffe: 75, 130, 133n, 212, 223, 227, 237n, 249, biographical sketch: 94n
252-53, 267n, 332, 335, 411, 429, 431 defense of BOLERO: 28
Allied estimates of before I3 Day: 179-80 favors enlarging OVERLORDplan: 99
Allied offensive against: 209-10, 211, 212, 214, 215, on Gen. Morgan: 115
218-19, 221 on invasion in 1942: 16-17
causes of decline before D Day: 265 at London Conference, April 1942: 16-18
never able to intervene in Cotentin battles: 395 at London Conference, July 1942: 29-30
INDEX 511
Marshall, Gen. George C.: (Continued) improvised from artillery shells: 264n, 322n
Navy challenges European strategy of: 93-95 mine-laying fleet depleted by Allied attacks: 262
on Mediterranean operations: 40, 42, 43-44, 97 Rommel’s mine-laying program: 250-52
opposes British opportunism: 94-95 teller: 264
on OVERLORDcommand: 111, 112, 114-15 Mobile operations, German theories of: 151-57
on priority of European theater: 8 Moitiers, les: 402
proposes offensive in Pacific rather than in Eu- Molotov, Vyachesiav: 2425, 41, 121
rope: 27-28, 33-34, 98 Montebourg: 297, 344, 350n, 371, 386, 387, 387n, 388,
relations with Congress: 113 390, 393, 395, 396, 408, 413, 418, 420
relations with Joint Chiefs of Staff: 94-95 Montgomery, Gen. Sir Bernard L.: 86, 116-17, 164,
Marshall Memorandum: 13-19, 22, 33, 34, 37, 62 165n, 166n, 167n, 274, 351, 443-44, 445, 447. See
Marshes, movement through: 329, 367 also British units, 21 Army Group.
Martinvast: 429 and the ANVIL-OVERLORD debate, January-March
Martinville ridge: 380, 381 1944: 165-67, 171
Maupertus: 421, 438, 440 biographical sketch: 158n
MCauffe: 383 and ground command problems: 117n
Medal of Honor: 304n, 319n, 368n, 436n “Montgomery plan”: 167, 167n, 181
Mediterranean air bases: 212-13, 218 seeks broader assault front: 165-66
Mediterranean operations. See also ANVIL; Anzio; and selection of D Day: 272, 274
GYMNAST; HUSKY; Naples; TORCH. succeeds Gen. Paget: 158-60
British and American concept of, May 1943: 68-70 Montigny: 340
British arguments for at the Casablanca Confer- Montmartin-en-Graignes: 361, 364, 365, 377, 377n
ence: 40-42 Montrabot: 380
debated at Quebec Conference: 88-100 Moon, Rear Adm. Don P.: 301
and differences between British and U. S. strategic Moon-sur-Elle: 372n
concepts: 94-97 Morale
Mediterranean theater, drains German troops from Allied: 273, 428
Western front: 143-45 German: 75, 79, 120, 146, 209, 210, 337
Medium bombers: 196, 215, 301 Morgan, Lt. Gen. Frederick E.: 48, 49-51, 52, 59, 64,
Meindl, General der Fallschirmtruppen: 349-50, 360, 66, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 75n, 76, 77, 79, 80, 91n,
371,373 94, 107n, 165n, 167n
Melbreak: 322n and airborne planning: 183
Merderet River: 186, 286, 287, 289,290,291,293,297, and the ANVIL-OVERLORD debate of January-
302, 336, 345, 357, 364, 386, 388, 393, 396, 400, March 1944: 164-65, 166, 167
401, 413,417 appointed COSSAC: 48-51
Merrill, Lt. Col. John W.: 432 and choice of assault area: 71-72
Merville: 332 concept of COCKADE: 70-71
Mesieres, 281 concept of OVERLORD: 58-59
Mesnil au Val: 420 estimate of enemy capabilities: 76-77
Message “B”: 205-06 and expansion of the assault front: 99, 103
Messerschmitt 109: 265 favors floating reserve: 191
Meuse River: 8, 228 and MULBERRIES: 74
Meui.aines ridge: 321, 330 and organization of COSSAC: 51-52
Meyer, Col.: 331 quasi command conferred on: 105-06, 164
Michaelis, Lt. Col. John H.: 281 and questions of OVERLORD command: 105-17
Microwave radar: 84. See also Radar. and struggle for landing craft: 64, 66, 74, 100-05
Middleton, Maj. Gen. Troy H.: 415. See also VIII Morsalines: 387
Corps. Mortars: 416
Midget submarines, German: 179,261 chemical: 392
Milford Haven Command: 54 4.2.inch: 382
Military observers. See Observers. Moscow Conference, October 1943: 121, 128
Miller, 2d Lt. Kermit C.: 367 Mosles: 337, 339
Millett, Col. George V.: 39698 Motey, le: 398, 400, 401
Mine fields: 390 Motor transport, German: 224, 227-28
Mines, German: 179, 26211 Moulin, Jean: 199, 200
antipersonnel: 264 Moulins, les: 309n, 313, 315, 318, 324, 325, 327
coastal: 262, 264 Mountbatten, Commodore Lord Louis: 5, 5n, 6, 18,
detonated by Allied naval fire: 302 25, 54
512 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Mount Cauvin: 337 Nevada: 197n


Mount Cenis: 144 Nicolle: 440
MS-Flotilla, 6th (mine layers) : 262 Night attack: 73, 188-89, 416, 418
Mueller, Oberstleutnant Franz: 420 Night bombing, controversy over: 208, 209, 215, 222
MULBERRIES: 73, 74 Ninth Air Force: 54, 108, 112, 214, 218, 335, 428, 432,
Mussolini, Benito: 87, 144 448
Mustangs: 428 IX Bomber Command: 219-20, 222, 223, 301, 428
IX Tactical Air Command: 428
Naiden, Col. E. L.: 5n Noble, Admiral Sir Percy: 4n
Naples: 87, 88 Norfolk House: 170
National Committee (le Consei[ National de la Rt- Normandy battle, typical: 348. See also Hedgerows.
sistance) : 199 North Africa, 21, 36. See also GYMNAST; Mediterra-
Naval action: 270 nean operations; TORCH.
Naval Beach Battalion, 7th: 320n effect of Allied invasion on Germans: 143
Naval branch of COSSAC: 51 Rommel’s experience in: 249
Naval Commander Normandy: 278, 301 Northern Ireland: 17, 19
Naval fire support: 152, 153-54, 189, 190, 19394, Norway: 27, 35, 70, 98, 137, 146, 231, 412
196-97, 273, 287, 301-02, 313, 322, 325, 326, 339. Nouvelle Plage: 442
341, 342, 353, 361, 373n, 387, 390, 392, 432, 434,
445, 446, 448 Oberbefehlshaber West (OB WEST) : 128n, 130, 131,
Naval gunfire spotting teams: 197 141, 142, 143, 144, 146, 148, 150, 156, 258, 260,
Naval Staff (X) : 53 275,276, 332, 349, 350,360,410,446,447
Navy and attacks on French railroads: 225, 227
disagrees with Army on strategy: 92-94 and OKW policy in 1944: 231-36
and landing craft requirements: 62, 63 Oberkommando des Heeres (OKH): 131, 13ln, 133,
organization for the assault, January 1944: 160, 162 141, 243, 252
permanent observer established in London: 1 Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (OKW) : 128n,
planning in early 1942: 5 131n, 143, 144, 149, 150, 151-52, 153, 154, 155-56,
resists development of landing craft: 60-61 248, 333, 333n, 350, 408, 411, 412, 442, 446
shipbuilding program, 1944: 104 cancels comprehensive defense plans: 233
size of invasion fleet: 274 defense policy in 1944: 231-36
Navy, German: 133n, 276, 276n. See also Mines, Ger- lack of co-ordination with OKH: 133-35
man. Observation: 197, 284, 292, 375, 376, 380, 382
Admiral Krancke’s report on weakness of: 261-62 Observers, U. S., in London: l-2
estimate of strength: 179 Obstacles, underwater: 304, 321, 325. See also Beach
ordered to strengthen defenses: 148 obstacles.
torpedo boats: 301 Octeville: 419, 428, 429, 431-32, 433-34, 436, 438, 440
views on imminence of invasion: 259, 260-61 Odon River: 445
h’any Group West: 243, 259, 442n Officer casualties: 319
Nazi party: 145 Ogden, 1st Lt. Carlos C.: 436, 436n
Nazis, categories of: 145n “Oil Plan,” for bombing Germany: 219, 222
Nebelwerfer: 223n, 233, 239, 239n, 438 Oil plants, bombing of: 208, 209, 212, 223-24
Nehou: 406, 415 Oise River: 12, 228
Nelson, Donald: 103 Oisel: 230n
NEPTUNE Initial Joint Plan: 173-74, 182, 183, 189. OKH. See Oberkommando des Heeres.
See also NEPTUNE plans. OKL: 243
NEPTUNE plans: 173-97 OKM: 243
airborne planning: 183-86 OKW. See Oberkommando der Wehrmacht.
development of the lodgment: 187-88 Ollande River: 416
estimate of the enemy: 174-80 OMAHA beach: 72n, 182, 189-90, 196, 302, 319, 319n,
fire support: 193-97 329, 330, 336, 448
objectives and terrain: 180-83 compared with Cherbourg as a port of entry: 226n
organization and tactics of the assault forces: 190- D-day bombing: 301
93 enemy coastal defenses: 302
selection of D-day: 188-90 landings on: 305-21
Netherlands: 12, 26, 56, 59 storm damage: 426
Neuville-au-Plain: 289, 290, 297, 342, 344, 345 terrain: 189-90, 308-09, 32142
INDEX 513
OPD: 5, 6 Parachute divisions, German: 238-39, 239n
on appointment of a ground commander: 116 Parachute Field Artillery Battalion, 377th: 280
plan for invasion, 1943: 15-21 Parachute Infantry Battalions. See also Battalions.
Operational Groups: 207 Ist, 501st Parachute Infantry: 287
Operational Training Unit: 184-85n 2d, 501st Parachute Infantry: 288, 348
Ortl: 88 3d, 501st Parachute Infantry: 283, 356
Organization lst, 502d Parachute Infantry: 281-83, 359
of the assault: 158-60, 190-93, 269-72 2d, 502d Parachute Infantry: 280, 282, 359
for combat, German: 236-42 3d, 502d Parachute Infantry: 280-81, 359
of German forces in the West: 128-40 lst, 505th Parachute Infantry: 290, 388
Organization Todt: 131, 136, 137. 228, 252, 417 2d, 505th Parachute Infantry: 290, 344, 388
Orglandes: 404, 406 Sd, 505th Parachute Infantry: 289,290
Orleans: 78, 410 lst, 506th Parachute Infantry: 282-83, 284, 287,
Orne River: 78, 184, 185, 257, 264, 332, 333, 334, 348, 347, 356
349, 411, 442, 443, 444, 446 2d, 506th Parachute Infantry: 282, 284, 348, 356,
OSS (Office of Strategic Services) : 202, 203 361
Ost battalions: 146 3d, 506th Parachute Infantry: 282, 286, 287, 288,
Ostendorff, Generalmajor der Waffen-SS Werner: 347
360, 365, 371, 372n 2d, 507th Parachute Infantry: 291, 292
Ostruppen: 14647 1st 508th Parachute Infantry: 401
Ouistreham: 75, 180 2d, 508th Parachute Infantry: 293,400
OVERLORD Parachute Infantry Regiments
airborne planning: 18393 501st: 286, 287, 347, 357, 361, 364, 365
allotment of resources, May 1943: 63-50 502d: 280, 282, 286, 289, 329, 357, 361, 365
ANVIL-OVERLORD debate: 164-73 505th: 289, 291, 291n, 328-29, 345, 386, 388, 403n,
Cairo-Tehran Conferences: 117-27 404, 406
COSSAC plans: 70-82 506th: 280, 282, 283, 288, 328, 347, 348, 356, 357,
digest of: 450-56 359, 361, 364, 365
fire support: 193-97 507th: 289, 290, 396, 398, 400, 402n, 403, 404, 406
landing craft requirements: 59-63, 100-05 508th: 289, 290, 291, 293, 396, 402, 402n, 403n, 406
NEPTUNE plans: 173-83 Parfouru: 375
organization for planning: 46-54 Paris: 12, 181, 185, 223, 350, 373, 410, 442
Quebec Conference: 83-100 Pas-de-Calais: 12-13, 13n, 21,22,57,58,67n, 70,71-72,
questions of command: 105-17 76, 76n, 259, 261
size and shape of the attack: 54-59 Passive resistance: 225
U. S. organization and training for the assault, Pathfinder planes: 279, 289, 290-91
January 1944: 158-64 Patrols: 374n, 377, 380, 382
Owens, Sgt. William D.: 345 Pattern bombing: 428
Ozeville: 386, 392 Patton, Lt. Gen. George S.: 86, 351
Paulus, Generaloberst Friedrich: 38
P-38: 213 Pemsel, Generalleutnant, Max: 278, 414
P-47’s: 432, 434 Periers: 260, 297, 360, 364, 365, 378
Pacific theater. See also Japan. Perimeter defense: 290
controversy over allotment of aircraft for: 34-35 Phoenix: 74
definition of strategy: 35, 36 Photographic reconnaissance: 177, 215, 259
Navy’s primary interest in: 92-93 Physical standards, German: 147
Paget, Gen. Sir Bernard: 5-6, 5-6n, 26-27, 53, 58x1, Picauville: 293, 401
158 Piers, floating: 73-74
Panther (Mark V tank): 241 Pieux, les: 417, 420
Panzer division: 142n, 154n, 248n Pillboxes: 192, 436
eauioment: 148 Pilotless aircraft: 138-40, 215-17, 412, 413
tank armament: 240-41 Pilots, German, shortage of: 265-66
Panzer grenadier division: 142n Pinder, T/5 John J., Jr.: 319n
equipment: 148 Plan Tortue: 205
organization: 239-42 Plan Vert: 205
weapons: 240n Planning papers, chronology of: 468-69
Panzer Group West: 247, 248n, 348, 373, 443, 445, Platoon, organization for assault: 191-192
446, 447 Plymouth: 269, 272
514 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Plymouth Command: 54 German: 188, 261, 301


POINTBLANK: 111, 220. See also Combined Bomber Radio: 3 19n
Offensive. Rae, Capt. R. D.: 398
Pointe du Hoe: 176, 196, 308, 318, 322-24, 326, 340, Raeder, Grossadmiral Erich: 129, 133, 136
353 Raff, Col. Edson D.: 329
Pointe et Raz de la Percee: 308, 309, 319 Raiding operations: 15-16. See also Dieppe raid;
Poland: 145 St. Nazaire.
Pole charges: 390, 436 Raids: 360
Political considerations affecting strategy: 90-91, 92, Railroads
92n, 96n, 106-107, 203, 234 bombing of: 217-30, 408
Pont 1’Abbe: 289, 293, 401, 402, 403, 406, 415 repair: 228
Pont Hebert: 377 sabotage: 204-05, 204n, 207, 224, 225
Poole: 27.2 Ramsay, Admiral Sir Bertram H.: 6, 21, 162, 162n,
Port, le: 282, 286, 347, 357 173, 193-94, 272, 273, 352
Port Brehay, le: 302 Ranger Battalions: 191
Portal, Air Chief Sir Charles: 4. 17, 17n, 20, 43, 54, 2d: 196, 197n, 308, 313-15, 318, 322, 367n
86, 126, 168, 209, 209n 5th: 197n, 318, 324, 326, 367n
and controversy over bombing of French railroads: Rangers: 54, 171, 308, 322n, 329, 340, 353. See also
219, 221, 222 Ranger battalions.
and problem of air force command: 220 RANKIN: 51, 79-82, 120
proposed as commander of whole bomber offensive Rauville-la Bigot: 417
against Germany: 213 Reconnaissance: 197, 258, 367
Portbail: 443 Reconnaissance in force: 347
Port-en-Bessin: 181, 301, 337, 339, 423 Reconnaissance Troop, 29th; 359
Portland: 272 Reeder, Col. Russell P.: 302, 388, 393n
Ports Regensburg, air raid on: 210
as factor in choice of assault area: 56 Rdgion Nord: 230
prefabricated: 73, 166, 272n. 422-23, 423-26, 426n Rlgion Ouest: 230, 410
Portugal: 232, 258 Reigneville: 404, 406
Pound, Admiral Sir Dudley: 4, 168n Rennes: 257, 297
Pouppeville: 280, 282, 283, 304 Replacement Army (German): 233, 234, 235, 236.
Prairies Marecageuses: 357, 402, 413, 443 258
Prefabricated ports. See Artificial ports. Replacements: 368
Preloading: 69n, 369n Reserve panzer corps: 154n
Pretot: 404 Reserves, German. See also Defense, German.
Prime movers, German: 241 disagreement over use of in defense of west: 154-
Prisoners 57, 154n
of Allies: 280, 282, 283, 289, 298, 325n 342, 344, estimated amount available to Rundstedt: 176
347, 367, 371, 387, 390, 416-21, 422, 431, 433, 434. Germans unable to mass in accordance with plan:
436-38, 440, 441 351
of Germans: 293n, 298, 396 lack of: 147-48
interrogation of: 372, 372n. 428-29 use of: 74, 147, 321, 330, 332-33, 334, 338, 348-49,
taken into German Army: 145-46 351, 360, 365, 371, 373, 374, 380, 383, 444, 446
Propaganda, German: 137, 140, 140n. 176 Resistance. See French Resistance.
Psychological warfare: 75-76, 436 Reuville: 344
Review of Strategy: 9
Quebec Conference: 68n, 83-100, 102, 104, 108, 113, Rhodes: 119, 122, 125
117, 121, 126, 164, 183 Rhone Valley: 144-45
Querqueville: 438 Richter, Generalleutnant Wilhelm: 264n
Quesada, Gen. Elwood R.: 428 Ridgway, Maj. Gen. Matthew B.: 184,289, 289n. 291,
Quincy: 197n, 287 344, 345, 398, 403, 406. See also Airborne Divi-
Quineville: 182, 302, 386, 387, 387n, 390-95, 408, 418, sion, 82nd.
423 Rifle company, organization for assault: 192, 237
Riley, Pvt. Ralph G.: 390
“Racial Germans.” See Volksdeutsche. River crossing: 367, 382, 406
“Racial purity”: 145 Riviere, la: 321
Radar: 262 Road blocks: 281, 282
in antisubmarine warfare: 84 Road sabotage: 205, 206
INDEX

Roberts, Cpl. Ernest T.: 293 Royal Air Force: 12, 13, 17, 21, 130, 196, 197, 208,
Roberts, Maj. Gen. J, H.: 54n 209n. See also Allied Expeditionary Air Force.
Robertson, Maj. Gen. Walter M.: 366, 366n, 369. See Bomber Command: 111, 213,214,215
also Infantry Division, 2d. and Combined Bomber Offensive: 207-10
Robinson, Col. Warren A.: 418 high command for invasion formed: 52,53, 54
Rocheville: 417 problem of establishing an over-all tactical air
Rocket craft: 197 command: 107-08
Rockets: 215, 302n. See also V-weapons. Tactical Air Force: 54, 112
Rohrbach, Colonel Helmuth: 345,420 Tactical Air Force, 2d: 428
RomAnia: 122n Rubercy: 367
Rome: 117, 169 Rudder, Lt. Col. James E.: 322, 322n
Rommel, Generalfeldmarschall Erwin: 25, 87, 149n, Rufosses: 422
230, 246n, 260, 275, 278, 319, 334, 349, 350, 360, Ruguet River: 309n
373, 412-13, 414, 430, 434, 444, 445, 447 Ruhr: 58
asks for extension of authority: 247 Rundstedt, von, Generalfeldmarschall Gerd: 130,
at Berchtesgaden: 445, 446 132n, 136, 142, 143, 144, 144n, 150, 154n. 156n,
command and powers: 243-49 175, 176, 235, 236, 237, 239, 242, 248n, 260, 263,
and effort to strengthen the western defenses: 149- 276, 278, 333, 333n, 348, 350, 375, 411, 412-13,
51, 154, 157, 264-65 442, 443,445, 447
mine defenses: 263-64 alarmed by rail sabotage: 204-05
theory of defense: 249-58 and Allied air attacks on French railroads: 224-25,
Roosevelt, Franklin D.: 2, 4, 6, 11, 16, 23-25, 27-28, 228
28n, 29, 30-31, 3ln, 32, 32n, 33, 35, 44, 45, 64, appointed Commander in Chief West: 130, 132
69, 92n, 94-95, 126, 113n, 122n. 172 at Berchtesgaden: 140, 445, 446
appoints Eisenhower to OVERLORD command: 114 and disagreement over defense tactics: 151, 152,
decides to go ahead with GYMNAST: 31-32 153-55, 156-57
disapproves of proposal to press Pacific rather power limited: 24349
than European offensive: 27 proposes formation of a central reserve: 154
interested in exploiting success in the Mediter- relieved of command: 447
ranean: 35-36 report on state of defenses, October 1943: 128,
and landing craft requirements: 64 140-41, 148
opposes committing large armies in Italy, May theories of defense conflict with Rommel’s: 253-58
1943: 69 Russia. See Soviet Union.
promises Stalin a second front: 24-25 Ryes: 321
proposes a British supreme commander: 44
role as military leader: 92 S-Book: 261
seeks advice on future offensive operations, March Sabotage: 203-07, 275, 360, 408,410, 448
1942: 15 SAC. See Supreme Allied Commander.
at Tehran Conference: 123-26 St. Andre-de-1’Epine: 380, 381, 382
urges active operations in 1942: 24-25 St. Clair-sur-Elle: 376, 381
visited by Molotov: 24 St. Christophe-du-Foe: 417
Roosevelt, Brig. Gen. Theodore: 304n St. Come-du-Mont: 286, 287-88, 298, 347, 348, 356.
Rouen: 57, 78, 81, 228 357
ROUNDHAMMER: 66n St. Contest: 332
ROUNDUP: 9, 21, 22, 23, 27, 28n. 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, St. Croix-Hague: 420, 440
36, 37-38, 40, 41, 42, 44, 46, 47, 54, 55-56, 56n, St. Floxel: 278, 393
57, 58, 65, 68, 79 St. Gabriel: 331
concept of, 1941: 6-8 St. Georges de Bohon: 377
contingent on collapse of Germany: 79 St. Georges-d’Elle: 373
fear of competition with TORCH: 32 St. Germain-d’Elle: 373, 380
Gen. Brooke’s view of, May 1943: 68 St. Germain-le-Gaillard: 417
idea of dispersed attacks abandoned as a result of St. Germain-de-Varreville: 281, 329
Dieppe experience: 55-56 St. Jacques-de-Nehou: 416
indefinite postponement of: 32 St. Jean-de-Daye: 371
new plan for, June 1942: 22-23 St. Laurent: 181, 309, 309n, 315, 324, 325, 326, 327,
resources drawn off by TORCH: 46-47 328, 329, 330, 337, 340
Roosevelt’s attitude toward: 23 St. Leger: 338
516 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

St. Lo: 182. 183n 185, 188, 297, 319n. 350, 351, 351n, SHAEF. See Supreme Headquarters Allied Expedi-
366, 368, 371, 373, 374, 375, 376, 377-84, 386, 428, tionary Force.
443, 444 Shanley, Lt. Col. Thomas J. B.: 293, 400
St. LB-d’ourville: 182, 185, 415, 416 Shettle, Capt. Charles G.: 286, 347
St. Marcouf: 392 Shingle, on OMAHA Beach: 308-09
St. Marcouf Islands: 304 Shipbuilding. See also Landing craft.
St. Martin-de-Blagny: 334 British: 102
St. Martin-le Greard: 417, 419, 421 Navy’s 1944 program: 103-04
St. Martin-de-Varreville: 280, 280n, 281, 302 Shipping losses: 38-40, 63-64, 83, 84-86, 270, 309-13,
St. Mauvieu: 444 423-26, 426n
St. Nazaire, raid on: 54, 135 Shore obstacles. See Beach obstacles: Underwater ob-
St. Paul-de-Verney: 371 stacles.
St. Pierre-Eglise: 421 Shortages, Allied: 336
St. Pierre-du-Mont: 341 ammunition: 336
St. Sauveur de Pierre Pont: 182 landing craft: 63n, 75n, 101, 103
St. Sauveur-le Vicomte: 185, 187, 286, 289, 401, 403, shipping: 15n, 21
404, 406, 413, 414, 415, 438 spare parts for landing craft: 170-71
St. Sulpice: 321 supplies: 336
St. Vaast-la Hougue: 187, 414 Shortages, German
Ste. Anne: 339 ammunition: 360, 387, 442-43
Ste. Colombe: 403, 406, 415 cement: 263
Ste. Marguerite-d’Elle: 376 gasoline: 360, 411
Ste. Marie-du-Mont: 282, 283, 298, 302, 328, 347 pilots: 265
Ste. Mere-Eglise: 182, 279, 280, 289, 290, 290n, 291, prime movers: 241
297, 298, 300, 328, 329, 342, 344, 345, 387 spare parts: 242
Saire River: 422 transport space: 410-11
Salcombe: 272 trucks: 411
Salerno: 107, 110, 117, 152, 153 weapons: 368
Salmuth, von, Generaloberst Hans: 154-55, 156n Sicily: 29, 83, 86-87, 152, 153, 182, 183
Sanford, Maj. Teddy H.: 396, 400 Sigeville: 344
Sardinia: 87 Silver Star: 390
Satterlee: 322 Simmons, Lt. Col. Conrad: 432
Sattler, Generalmajor Robert: 436, 438 Sinclair, Maj. Gen. J. A.: 55, 56
Saumur: 371 Sink, Col. Robert F.: 282-84, 348, 356, 357, 361
Scapa Flow, 101, 102 SKYSCRAPER: 57-59, 59n
Schimpf, Generalleutnant Richard: 373 Slappey, Col. Eugene N.: 340
Schlieben, von, Generalleutnant Karl-Wilhelm: Slapton Sands: 270
147n 297, 293n, 342, 344, 387, 393, 408, 414, 417, SLEDGEHAMMER: 16, 17, 18n, 21, 22, 24, 26, 27, 28-29,
418, 418n 420, 421, 428, 429, 430, 431, 432, 434, 30, 31, 35, 41, 65, 79
438, 443 Combined Commanders directed to study: 12
Schmetzer, Generalleutnant Rudolf: 136 difficulties posed by: 21-22
Schreiber, Lt. Gen. Edmond: 21 disadvantages: 12-13
Schwarzwalder, Capt. F. V.: 292 found unfeasible: 27-30
Schweinfurt, air raid on: 210, 211 opposed by Churchill: 22, 27
Schweppenburg, von. See Geyr. Smith, Maj. Gen. Walter Bedell: 165, 165n, 166-67,
SEA LION. See SEELOEWE. 203n 273
Second front, demanded by Soviet Union: 24, 41, Smoke, use of: 191, 318, 324, 388. 395, 398
120-21 Smythe, Col. George W.: 404, 436
Second landing, German speculation regarding: Snipers: 367, 422, 438
350-51, 351n. 411-12 SNCF (Socie’te’ National des Chemins de Fer) : 204n,
SEELOEWE: 129, 130, 131 205n 225,228
Seine: 8, 12, 16, 57, 72, 78, 81, 180, 185, 188, 228, 230, Sodenstern, von, General der Infanterie Georg: 144,
408, 443, 444 153, 155, 253
Seine Bay: 276 Soissons: 12
Self-propelled guns: 197 Somervell, Gen. Brehon B.: 26n
Service troops, build-up reduced: 447-48 Somme: 12, 16
Seulles River: 331 Sommervieu: 321,338
Seventh Army Engineer School: 378n Southern Base Section: 269
INDEX

Southern France. See France, Southern. midget: 179, 261


Southhampton: 269 Supreme Allied Commander. See also Eisenhower.
Southwick House: 272, 274 controversy over powers of: 108-12
Soviet Union: 9, 11, 12, 16, 17, 23, 24, 25, 26, 28, 29, directive to: 457-58
30, 35, 36, 37, 38, 42, 68, 69, 77, 83, 88, 93, 121n, Eisenhower’s appointment as: 158, 164
122n, 125, 144n, 168. See also Stalin. Sully: 339, 340
co-ordination of OVERLORD with: 69-70, 168 Summers, S/Sgt. Harrison: 281, 281n
demand for “second front”: 24-25, 41, 120-22 Supply: 336, 447-48, 442n, 351. See also Artificial
draws German troops from Western front: 141-43, ports; Shortages.
145, 146-47 delayed build-up: 351
estimates of capabilities: 11-12, 24-25, 30 establishment of supply points urged: 340
German invasion of: 129-30 of French Resistance: 201-03,201n. 203n. 207
offensive operations: 38, 88, 120,233-35 hampered by storm: 422,423-26
nationals conscripted by German Army: 145, 146 for invasion, transport of: 269-70
participation in Tehran Conference: 123-26 by LCVP: 341
views on Mediterranean operations: 120-26 by LST: 423
Spaatz, Lt. Gen. Carl: 20, 20n, 47, 213, 218, 219, 221, total build-up, 18 June 1944: 423
222, 224 Support craft, shortage of: 101
Spain: 97, 97n, 129n Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force.
Spalding, 2d Lt. John M.: 324 See also Eisenhower.
Special Air Service: 207 and the ANVIL-OVERLORD debate, January-March
Special Army Observer: 1 1944: 170-73
Special Force Headquarters: 205n and bombing of French railroads: 217-18, 223-24
Special Naval Observer: 1 and French Resistance: 202, 205, 206
Special Operations branch of OSS: 203, 205 and the NEFTUNE Plans: 173-83
Special Operations Executive: 200-02, 203, 205, 276 U. S. organization: 114-17, 158-62
Speer, Reich Minister Albert: 136, 228, 265 Surles, Maj. Gen. Alexander D., 26n
Speidel, Generalleutnant Hans: 278, 413n Surprise, tactical: 73, 74, 76, 188-89, 191, 275-76
Sperrle, Generalfeldmarschall Hugo: 243. 278 Surprise attack: 289
Spotter planes: 434 Surrain: 328
Sprindis, Capt. Stephen W.: 441 Sweden: 121
SS divisions: 240 Switch lines, German: 153, 156
SS panzer-type divisions: 240 Switzerland: 258
Stagg, Group Captain J. M.: 272, 276
Stalin, Joseph: 24, 43, 77. See also Soviet Union. Table of Organization: 184
at Tehran Conference: 123-26 Tactical Air Command, IX. See Ninth Air Force.
urges assault on Southern France: 123-25, 168 Tactical Air Force, RAF: 54, 112
Stark, Admiral Harold R.: 2, 3, 53, 102, 160 Tactical Air Force, 2d: 428
STARKEY: 70 Tactical air forces, U. S. See Ninth Air Force;
State Department: 203 Twelfth Air Force.
Static defense, German theories of: 151-57 Tactical loading: 75, 103, 170, 171
Static divisions, German: 175, 237 Tactics of the assault forces: 190-93
Stegmann, Generalmajor Rudolf: 414n, 416 Talley, Col. Benjamin B.: 320, 320n
Stimson, Henry L.: 15, 25, 31 Talybont: 322, 322n
Stopka, Lt. Col. John P.: 359 Tanatside: 322n
Storm, 19-23 June: 422, 423-26, 426n Tank Battalions
Strafford, Group Capt. S. C., 5n 70th: 304, 344
Strafing attacks: 338, 410, 428, 429 741st: 309, 337
Strategic air forces. See U.S. Strategic Air Forces. 746th: 329, 344, 348, 392n, 406
Strayer, Lt. Col. Robert L.: 282 747th: 352, 376, 383
Sturm Battalion, organization: 260n 899th: 392n
Sub chasers: 104 Tank fire: 340
Submarines, German: 29, 38-40, 45, 63-64, 421 Tank obstacles: 250
bases: 136 Tankdozers: 193
construction of pens: 131, 137 Tank-infantry attack: 340, 344, 348, 383-84, 387-88,
construction yards as target: 208, 209, 211-12, 422
212n Tanks, DD: 192n, 304, 309,315
defeated by Allies: 83-86 Tanks, German: 239-42, 393
518 CROSS-CHANNEL ATTACK

Tanks, German: (Continued) Torpedo Boat Flotilla, 9th: 301


losses: 242 Torpedo planes: 153-54
Mark III: 242 Torpedoes, human: 179
Mark IV: 148, 240, 241, 242 Torpedoes, remote-controlled: 261
Mark V: 240 Torquay: 272
production: 240-42 Toulon: 442n
Russian: 24ln, 260n, 292n Touques River: 181
Tanks, use of: 197, 329, 340-41, 344, 347-48, 352-53, Tour-en-Bessin: 339
381, 392, 406-08, 422, 431, 433, 441 Tourlaville: 428, 430, 432, 433
as close support artillery: 192 Training, 274-75
difficulty of coordinating with infantry in hedge- for airborne operations: i84, 184-85n
row country: 383-84 assault exercises: 160-62, 269, 270
fire fight with enemy assault guns: 344 Assault Training Center set up in England: 162-64
in invasion: 92-93 defects in: 402-03
Tarawa operation: 193 tank-infantry tactics: 383-84
Taret de Ravenoville: 342, 392 Training, German: 147n, 253n
Task Force B: 190, 270 hampered by construction program: 252-53, 253n
Task Force Barber: 392 parachute jumping: 239n
Task Force 0: 187, 190, 194, 269, 270, 272. 301, 322n pilots: 265-67
Task Force U: 190, 269, 270, 272, 301 Transport planes: 279
Task Force 122: 160 Transport space, defined: 410n
Taute Canal. See Vire-Taute Canal. Tree burst: 430
Taylor, Col. George A.: 319, 324-25 Treipel, Generalmajor Gerhard: 280n
Taylor, Maj. Gen. Maxwell: 283, 283n, 347, 364. See Trenches, German: 341, 390
also Airborne Division, 10lst. Trevieres: 181, 337, 353, 366, 368, 369, 370n
Tedder, Air Marshal Sir Arthur W.: 203, 220, 220n, Tribolet, Col. Harvey A.: 302, 390, 393
221, 273 Troop quality, German: 142, 146-47, 239, 420-21,
Tehran Conference: 121, 123, 123n, 128, 168, 169 448
Teller mines: 264 Troop strength, Allied: 47n
Terre-de-Beauval: 401, 403, 415 German estimate of: 351-52
Tetrahedra, 250. See also Beach obstacles. US. troops in England, January 1944: 158n
Theil, le: 419 Troop strength, German. See also German Army.
Third Air Force: 243, 252, 266, 395 in defense of Cherbourg: 417
Third U.S. Army: 188, 188n, 447 divisions available on 6 June 1944: 471
Thompson: 322, 322n estimate of: 174-76
Thompson, Col. James V.: 401 in France 1944: 235
Thompson, Lt. Col. Paul W.: 162 Trotebec: 430
Thury: 349 Turkey: 9, 35, 41-42, 120, 121, 122, 125
Tidal conditions: 189-90, 317, 317n Turnbull, Lt. Turner B.: 290
Tiger (Mark VI) tank: 241, 270 Turner, Rear Adm. R. K.: 5n
Tilly-sur-Seulles: 338, 348, 374, 375, 377, 444 Turner, Lt. Col. William L.: 282-83
Timmes, Lt. Col. Charles J.: 291, 292, 396, 398, 400 Turqueville: 297, 302, 328, 342
TINDALL: 70 Twelfth Fleet: 53, 160
Tobruk: 25 Twelfth Air Force: 47, 208, 212, 212n
Todt. See Organization Todt.
Tollevast: 429 U-boats. See Submarines, German.
Tor Bay: 269, 272 Underground, French. See French Resistance.
TORCH: 31-35, 3ln, 32n, 44, 165n Underwater obstacles: 177n, 250, 250n, 304. See also
attitude of British Chiefs of Staff: 32 Beach obstacles.
attitude of U.S. Chiefs of Staff: 32 United Nations: 92, 92n
chosen as code name for North African opera- IJrviHe: 417, 418
tion: 31 US. Army Forces in the British Isles (USAFBI) : 22
competes with OVERLORD for consideration as main US. Atlantic Fleet: 84
effort: 90 U.S. bases: 19
drain on European theater: 46-47 U.S. Strategic Air Forces (USSTAF). See also Eighth
formation of planning staff for: 31-32 Air Force: Fifteenth Air Force.
Torigni-sur-Vire: 442n and bombing of French railroads: 217-20
Torpedo Boat Flotilla, 5th: 301 and Combined Bomber Offensive: 207-17
INDEX 519

U.S. Strategic Air Forces (USSTAF) : (Continued) War Production Board: 103
Eisenhower takes over direction of: 223 Warfield, Lt. Col. William E.: 368
establishment and organization: 212-13, 213n Warlimont, General der Artillerie Walter: 143, 143n,
U.S. tactical air forces. See Ninth Air Force; Twelfth 412
Air Force. Washington Conference, May 1943: 64-70, 83, 87,
UTAH BLACH: 182, 183, 185, 186, 190, 196, 284, 297, 88,90n, 99, 100-01,209
301, 313, 329, 448 Weapons. See entries for various types of weapons.
landings on: 302-04, 328, 329 ‘12ieather: 86n, 130, 210, 276n, 313, 317, 319
storm damage: 426 D-day forecast: 272-74
terrain: 181, 182, 284 forecasting: 73
V-weapons: 138-40, I40n, 150, 215-17, 252, 412, German meteorologists: 276
412n, 413, 422. See also Rockets. hampers air operations: 300-01
Valdecie, le: 415 storm over Channel, 19-23 June: 422, 423-26
Valognes: 187, 187n, 328, 395, 403, 413, 414, 415, Weathers, Capt. Ornery C.: 369, 370n
417, 418, 418n, 419,429 Wehrmachtfuehrungsstab, WFSt: 135
Van Fleet, Col. James A.: 302, 393 Welborn, Lt. Col. John C.: 344, 344n
Vandervoort, Lt. Col. Benjamin H.: 290, 290n, 344 Wemyss, Lt. Gen. Sir Colville: 4, 4n
Vast, le: 260 Werfer regiments: 231n
Vasteville: 419 West, Maj. Gen. Charles A.: 166
Vaubadon: 366 West Wall: 131, 137,447
Vauville: 414, 420, 438, 440 Westem Defense Forces: 301
Vaux-sur-Aure: 338, 339 Western defenses, German efforts to rebuild: 148-57
Vaux-sur-Orne: 332 Western Naval Task Force: 190, 194, 197n
Vaux-sur-Seulles: 332 Weymouth: 272
Vertical envelopment: 185-86 Whitefoord, Maj. Gen. P. G.: 217-18
Vian, Rear Adm. Philip: 190 Wiggins, Col. Porter B.: 417
Vichy France, occupation of: 143 Wilkes, Rear Adm. John: 160, 160n
“Victory Program”: 96 Williams, Brigadier E. T.: 319n
Vidal, Gen. See Delestrain. Wilson, Charles E.: 103-04
Videcosville: 387 Wilson, Gen. Sir Henry Maitland: 170, 172
Vidouville: 380 Winant, John G.: 122
Vierville-sur-Mer: 72, 180n, 181, 182. 286, 308, 309, Wisner, Lt. John H.: 291
309n, 313, 326, 329, 347, 350, 357 Witzleben, von, Generalfeldmarschall Erwin: 130.
Villers-Bocage: 373, 374, 375, 444, 445, 446 131-32, 132n
Villiers-Fossard: 381, 382, 383, 384n. 444 Wood, Col. Sterling A.: 417, 418
Villiers-le-Set: 330 Woolacombe: 162
Viney, Col. Alvin G.: 441 Wyche, Maj. Gen. Ira T.: 417, 417n, 418. See also
Vire River: 73, 180, 181, 182, 187n, 264, 321, 333, Infantry Division, 79th.
350, 356, 357, 360, 361, 364, 365, 371, 372, 374, Wyman, Brig. Gen. Willard G.: 328
376, 377, 378n, 380, 382, 411, 443, 444
Vire-Taute Canal: 361. 377 XAP: 127
Volksdeutsche: 145-46, 147
Volksliste drei: 145-46 Yarmouth: 272
Volkswagen: 371 Yugoslavia: 92n, 122
Volunteers, German. See Freiwilligen.
Voroshilov, Marshal K. E.: 121 Zeebrugge: 57
Zeitzler, Generaloberst Kurt: 135, 136, 135n
WADHAM: 70 ZITADELLE: 144
Walsh, Air Marshal Sir William: 4n Zuckerman, Professor S.: 217, 219
Wannsee: 298, 298n Zweite Stellung: 263, 264
War Cabinet: 222-23 Zwingman, Pvt. Otto K.: 293, 293n

f2 U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: 1993 33C-517

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