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Divided on D-Day

Page 43

by Edward E. Gordon


  Operation OVERLORD, 39, 238

  Patton's Third Army, 87, 238, 240–41, 275

  Sixth Armored and Seventy-Ninth Infantry Divisions, 238, 241

  XV Corps, Fifth Armored, Eighty-Third, and Ninetieth Infantry Divisions, 238

  British Chiefs of Staff (BCS)

  COSSAC invasion plan (Aug. 1943), 40, 102

  cross-channel attack, secured postponement of, 33

  cross-channel invasion (1944), agreed to, 52

  Eisenhower SHAEF supreme Allied commander in chief, 52

  Operation OVERLORD, 24, 29–30

  final full-scale briefing (May 15), 105–107

  Operation RANKIN, 25, 30

  Operations ANVIL, or DRAGOON, opposed, 283

  US Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) joined, 23 (see also Combined Operations Command)

  British Expeditionary Force (BEF)

  Ardennes offensive, 58

  Brooke commander of II Corps, 45

  German forces held back on road to Dunkirk allowing the evacuation of 338, 226 British and French troops to England (June 1940), 45, 58

  Gort commander in chief of, 58

  landed in France (Sept. 1939), 57–58

  Montgomery was rescued from Dunkirk, 331

  Operation DYNAMO (May–June 1940), 76

  British Intelligence Service, 96, 109, 133

  British Special Operations Executive (SOE), 25

  British Territorial Army, 57

  Brittany (France)

  Allied advance into Brittany and pursuit of Wehrmacht, 231

  Allied target according to Hitler, 124

  Americans and British forces after D-Day, 192

  Americans capture of Cherbourg, St. Lo opened door to Brittany, 99

  breakout into (Aug. 1–12, 1944), 238, 240

  final OVERLORD Plan (May 1944), 40, 99

  German Seventh Army in Normandy and Brittany, 133

  Hitler's abortive counterattack on Patton's advance into Brittany, 238

  logistical support for campaign to defeat Germany, 37

  Operation COBRA (July 25–Aug. 1, 1944), 223, 226, 231

  Operation FORTITUDE, 133

  Operation OVERLORD and American logistical needs, 235

  Patton and VIII Corps, 234

  Patton's Third Army to capture Brittany region and seaports, 105–106, 235

  Patton to clear Brittany, seize seaports, and cover First US Army's right flank, 99

  Rommel's Seventh Army defended Normandy and Brittany, 121

  US First Division and the Second Armored Division, 225–26

  William the Conqueror, 236

  See also Operation FORTITUDE

  Brittany Sweepstakes (Aug. 1–12, 1944), 238–41

  Brooke, Sir Alan (British chief of imperial general staff)

  Allied invasion of France vs. forty-six German divisions, 28

  Allies should invade Sicily or Sardinia, 28

  background, 43–45

  Battle of the North Atlantic, 22

  Casablanca Conference (1943), 27–29, 28

  chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, 45

  chief of the imperial general staff, 45

  Churchill assured the cross-channel invasion command, 46

  commander in chief of the Home Forces, 45

  Eisenhower, final judgment on, 54

  Imperial Defence College in London, 57

  master strategist of Britain's military effort, 45

  Montgomery, Sir Bernard Law

  corps commander of, 57

  guardian of, appointed himself, 58

  most capable British general of World War II, 45

  Normandy invasion, doubts about, 22

  Normandy operation, 24

  northwestern Europe, invasion of, 29

  Operation GYMNAST, 26

  Operation OVERLORD, 30–31

  Operation TORCH, 28

  photograph, 44

  Quebec Conference (Aug. 1943), 20

  quotation, 19

  US war production required for invasion, 22

  war of attrition, 22

  Browning, Frederick (British lieutenant general), 309–10

  Caen (Normandy, France)

  armored divisions and liberation of France, 40

  British airborne secured Pegasus Bridge, 158

  British and Canadian objective for Caen, 99

  British armored advance into, 110

  British faced defeated German forces, 102

  British parachute units seized, 142, 143

  COSSAC plan, 40, 99

  D-Day objective of Second British Army, 106

  D-Day objective of Third Infantry Division, 158

  German panzer attack, 139

  Granville-Vire-Argentan-Falaise-Caen corridor, 106

  Marcks requested a panzer counterattack, 150

  Montgomery, Sir Bernard Law

  and German Twenty-First Panzer Division, 109, 124, 127

  “plan” of, 92–93, 99–100

  plan to take and hold Caen ensured its failure, 163

  Ninth Canadian Infantry Brigade, 156–57

  North Nova Scotia Highlanders, 157

  Operation OVERLORD, 87–88, 106–107, 163

  photograph, 265

  Rommel and Twenty-First Panzer, 136, 141, 154, 158–59, 163

  Second SS and Ninth Panzer moved to, 135

  Staffordshire Yeomanry and 185th Brigade, 158

  Third British Division, 160

  Third Division and Twenty-Seventh Armored Brigade, 161

  Caen-Bayeux bridgehead objectives, 87–88

  Caen Canal Bridge (code-named Pegasus Bridge), 139–40

  Caen Conundrum, 205–207

  Calais (northern France)

  Allies wanted Hitler to believe they would invade at Calais with diversionary attack in the Balkans or Norway, 97, 111

  Atlantic Wall, 119

  channel seaport, major, 96

  Crerar's First Canadian Army of cleared channel ports, taking Dieppe, encircling the German Fifteenth Army, 300

  fell on Oct. 1, 300

  Germans wrecked the port, causing serious supply crisis for Allies, 300

  Rommel forces of, 132

  Rundstedt defended English Channel fortresses to starve Allies of logistical support needed for advance into Germany, 307

  See also Pas-de-Calais

  Callahan, Raymond (historian), 268, 319

  Canada

  ABC Conference (Washington, DC), 23

  British Second Army, Canadian troops in, 99

  Caen, objective for, 99

  capture of Caen by British and Canadian forces, 100

  Crerar commander of First Canadian Army, 99

  Gold and Juno Beaches, 143, 154–55

  OVERLORD command appointments, 52

  Third Canadian Division at Juno Beach, 99, 156

  See also Crerar, Henry

  Canadian-British bridgehead, 160

  Carrell, Paul (historian), 244, 267

  carrier pigeons and Allied intelligence, 133

  Casablanca Conference (1943), 27–29, 28, 62

  CCS. See Combined Chiefs of Staff

  Chalfont, Alun (historian), 314, 327

  Chateau de La Roche-Guyon (France)

  Kluge and Model met (Aug. 17), 282–83

  Kluge met Rommel regarding conditions in Normandy, 197

  Model's staff conference (Aug. 18) during the Allied Falaise operations, 264–65

  Pemsel called Speidel regarding Allied invasion, 142

  Rommel called Speidel regarding delayed panzer counterattack, 160

  Rommel's headquarters, 110, 124–25, 135

  Cherbourg (Cotentin peninsula)

  Americans advanced to, 179, 186

  Americans to take Cherbourg, capture St. Lo, and advance to Avranches, 99

  Bradley was advancing toward, 190

  British and American armored units to land and fan out around German Atlantic Wall, 87

  delay, 186–89

  Engli
sh Channel storm (Oct. 8) damaged, 316

  EPSOM battle (June 29), 193

  German destruction of Cherbourg Port (June 1944), 189

  German E-boats

  British radar noted departure of, 103

  conducted nightly sorties on Allied warships, 169

  German forces in garrison of, 126–27

  major port vital for successful invasion and deployment of large numbers of troops, 37

  Morgan and large buildup of forces, 39

  naval bombardment, 187

  Operation ANVIL, 40

  Operation SLEDGEHAMMER, 23

  OVERLORD and hamlet of Sainte-Mere-Eglise, 110

  supplies for American forces, 40

  Tenth Destroyer Flotilla smashed German Eighth Destroyer Flotilla west of, 169

  Churchill, Winston (British prime minister)

  acquiesced to War Cabinet's choice of Montgomery as OVERLORD's British ground commander, 62

  Admiral Sir Bertram Ramsay made Allied commander of the Naval Expeditionary Forces, 24

  Allied landing in France, vetoed 1942, 26

  American commander for invasion of northwestern Europe, 33

  Arcadia Conference and campaign requirements, 40

  armistice (1940), unwilling to negotiate an, 117

  assault across the English Channel on German sea-front in France, 21–22

  Brooke and cross-channel invasion command, 46

  Brooke appointed chief military advisor, 45

  Casablanca Conference (1943), 27–29, 28

  had pneumonia and bedridden for several weeks, 61–62

  Communist Russian dominance in postwar Eastern Europe, hoped to prevent potential, 25, 62

  cross-channel attack, secured postponement of a, 33

  D-Day desire to view from the deck of a Royal Navy ship (June 1), 111–12

  diversionary maneuvers, insistence on, 22

  Exercise THUNDERCLAP of OVERLORD planning (Apr. 7), 98–100

  indirect war strategy better suited Britain, 25

  Ismay, personal chief of staff, 45

  military decisions, meddling in, 45

  Montgomery met Churchill at Marrakech (Dec. 1943) to review OVERLORD plans, 80–81

  Mountbatten the new supreme commander in Southeast Asia, 46

  Normandy operation, 24

  Operation DRAGOON/ANVIL, 283–84

  Operation HUSKY, 33

  “Operation Mothball,” 37–38

  Operation OVERLORD, 30–31, 38, 46, 62

  final full-scale briefing (May 15), 105–107

  Operation TORCH, US commander appointed chief of, 27

  quotation, 15

  Roosevelt and Pearl Harbor attack (Dec. 1941), 19–21

  Second Washington Conference (June 1942), 25–26

  supreme commander for each theater of operations, 20

  Tehran Conference (Iran, Nov.–Dec. 1943), 30–31

  See also “Big Three”

  Clark, Mark (US general), 29

  Clausewitzian principle, 27

  COC. See Combined Operations Command

  Combined Chiefs of Staff (CCS)

  directive to clear German forces from France and the Low Countries, 39

  formation of, 23

  met fifty-six times since July 1942, 27

  Morgan, Frederick

  advocates for artificial harbors (code-named Mulberries), 90

  appointed chief of staff to the supreme Allied commander, 33

  Operation OVERLORD

  to force Germans to retreat, 39

  target date of May 1, 1944, 41

  Quebec (Quadrant Conference) and review of Morgan's plan, 40–41

  US-British staff to plan the future amphibious assault, 33

  Combined Operations Command (COC)

  Anglo-American officers chose Normandy, 37

  Mountbatten, head of, 35–36, 91, 119

  Nazi-occupied Europe, British raids along coasts of, 36

  Rattle Conference (June–July 1943), 36–37

  training headquarters at Largs in Scotland, 36

  Commonwealth's war needs, 25

  “Communications Zone” (COM Z), 285–86

  Cosmos (Nazi spy code name), 108

  COSSAC

  British Chiefs of Staff, 40

  identified Pas-de-Calais and coast of Normandy west of the Seine estuary as invasion sites, 36

  Montgomery belittled COSSAC plan for OVERLORD, 39

  OVERLORD, COSSAC was a rough draft for, 41

  planners learned important lessons from Dieppe debacle, 36

  planning for suitable landing area for the cross-channel invasion, 35–36

  proposed landing beaches, 40

  See also Morgan, Sir Frederick E.

  Cotentin Peninsula (Normandy)

  Allied airborne divisions, 88

  Allied fleet off Normandy, 143

  Allied real target, 124

  Allied target according to Hitler, 124

  American paratroopers, 142

  Bradley and roads intended for breakout to Coutances, 198

  Bradley had cut off the Germans (June 18), 186

  code-named Utah, 143

  Eighty-Second Airborne Division (June 18), 165, 179

  Eisenhower, Bradley, and Montgomery wanted airborne divisions, 88

  German defenders would stop the Allied invasion, 40

  German Ninety-First Air Landing Division and mobile units, 127, 142

  landing beaches, COSSAC proposed, 40

  Marcks's LXXXIV Corps, 127, 142

  Reichert anticipated Allied landing, 142

  Rommel's defensive battles, 210–11

  Rommel's inspection of (May 17), 135

  route for Allied offensive thrust into Germany's industrial Ruhr, 124

  US First Division and Second Armored Division, 225

  See also Juno Beach; Omaha Beach; Utah Beach

  Crerar, Henry (Canadian general)

  Antwerp, 300–301, 308, 315

  Canadian army, 57

  Falaise-Argentan Pocket, 246, 249–50

  First Canadian Army captured Dieppe, 300

  First Canadian Army commander, 99, 246, 249

  Imperial Defence College in London, 57

  Montgomery's directive to Bradley, Dempsey, Patton, and Crerar regarding advance against German positions near Falaise, 232

  Montgomery's headquarters (June 1), 112

  Operation TOTALIZE, 249–50

  Operation TRACTABLE, 250, 258–60

  OVERLORD's final full-scale briefing (May 15), 105–107

  photograph, 301

  Cunningham, Sir Andrew (British admiral), 27, 57, 85–86, 89

  Davies, Norman (historian), 314, 333–34

  D-Day (June 6, 1944)

  controversies, critical perspective on, 17–18

  D-Day beaches objectives attained, 162

  deception and secrets

  Cicero (Turkish agent) photographed false information he sold to the Germans, 96

  Daily Telegraph crossword puzzle with eight code words, 98

  D-Day announced by US air force major general at a reception, 98

  deception campaigns Operations Bodyguard, Fortitude North, and Fortitude South, 96–97

  First US Army Group (FUSAG) under General George S. Patton, fictional, 96–97

  German Enigma ciphers, Britain's Ultra code-breaking program cracked the, 97

  Kane, Thomas P. (US sergeant), 97–98

  Montgomery's double (Meyrick James) traveled to Gibraltar and North Africa to fool the German intelligence (May 25), 108–109

  Operation JAEL (deception plan), 96

  Operation NEPTUNE's communication plan, stolen briefcase containing, 98

  Operation ZEPPELIN (Balkans and Greece invasion deception plan), 96

  OVERLORD operation, 189,000 invasion maps prepared for, 97–98

  three-part deception plan: Fortitude North, Fortitude South, and Bodyguard, 96–97

  OVERLORD D-Day objectives, 87<
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  seventy-fifth anniversary, 15

  strategy

  air and sea armada crossed the English Channel; seven thousand Allied ships; NEPTUNE armada, battleships, cruisers, and destroyers; troop transport convoys; and Allied air support (June 6), 115–16

  airborne assault to go forward (May 29), 110

  Allied aircraft destroyed every bridge over the Seine River between Paris and the coast (May 30), 110

  BIGOTed the ultimate secret code of D-Day, 114

  Caen-Bayeux bridgehead objective of British, 87–88

  D-Day air and sea armada reconnaissance report by Captain Frank Dillon, 116

  dress rehearsal (May 15), 105–107

  Eisenhower delayed invasion for twenty-four hours due to bad weather (June 5), 114–15

  Eisenhower launched D-Day in bad weather, surprising the Germans (June 6), 114–15

  Eisenhower viewed OVERLORD armada from his war camp (SHARPENER) northwest of Portsmouth Harbor (June 2–3), 112

  Exercise THUNDERCLAP of OVERLORD planning (Apr. 7, 1944), 98–100

  new intelligence, unnerving (May 26), 109

  Norfolk House conference (Jan. 1944), 87

  Operation NEPTUNE (May 28), Ramsay ordered launch of, 109–10

  Patton doubts Montgomery's plan, 91–93

  preparing the forces, 101–104

  Ultra intelligence intercepts estimated Germans with fifty-five divisions in Western Europe on D-Day, 99

  See also Gold Beach; Juno Beach; Omaha Beach; South Beach; Sword Beach; Utah Beach

  de Gaulle, Charles (French general)

  Armée Secrete (FCNL), organized, 181

  background, 179

  Champs-Élysées, French victory parade down (Aug. 26), 280–81, 281

  Choltitz and surrender of Paris (Aug. 23), 279–80

  commander of Fourth Armored Division, 179

  D-Day and de Gaulle's Free French, 181

  Eisenhower ordered Bradley to send Gerow's V Corps to aid Leclerc's French Second Armored Division in freeing Paris, 279

  Eisenhower's decision to liberate Paris, 283

  Eisenhower's SHELLBURST headquarters in Normandy (Aug. 20), 278–79

  France, surrender to Germans (June 1940), 117

  Free French Forces, fled to England and assumed leadership of, 179–80

  Free French told the people to mobilize for resistance, 278

  French Army, modernization of, 69

  French Communist Party, 181

  French government in exile, Roosevelt and Churchill were skeptical of de Gaulle's, 181

  French underground campaign, 182

  Hitler demanded Choltitz to leave Paris in ruins, 279–80

  Leclerc's final assault on Germans in Paris, 280

  Nazi army had marched into Paris, 182

  opposed surrender and feared arrest, 180

  OVERLORD, briefing on, 182

 

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