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Divided on D-Day

Page 44

by Edward E. Gordon


  personality, 180–81

  photograph, 180, 281

  Ramsay and Free French destroyer La Combattante, 182

  US Twenty-Eighth Division marches down the Champs-Élysées, 282, 282, 293

  de Guingand, Francis (British major general, Bernard Law Montgomery's chief of staff), 91, 201, 254, 255, 273

  Dempsey, Miles (British lieutenant general)

  background, 154

  Bradley's prohibition, not Montgomery's, stopped Patton's advance to Falaise, 254–55

  Caen, attempt to capture, 192

  Caen Conundrum, 205–207

  command of the British Second Army for OVERLORD campaign, 91, 99

  D-Day beach landing, 154

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

  Montgomery's headquarters, 112, 254–55

  Operation BLUECOAT, 217, 231–33

  Operation EPSOM, 191

  Operation GOODWOOD, 95, 206–10, 212, 214–17, 225

  Operation MARKET GARDEN, 311–12

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

  Operation TOTALIZE, 95, 247, 249–50

  photograph, 173

  Ramsay worked closely with Dempsey (Mar. 1943), 331–32

  Second British Army, 104, 172, 190, 246

  Villers-Bocage, 172–74

  D’Este, Carlo (historian), 46, 100, 163, 210, 254, 267, 328

  Dieppe (France)

  Canadian forces, six thousand troops, 35

  Crerar's First Canadian Army captured Dieppe, 300

  division-sized Allied raid on the port, 119

  Germans drew the wrong conclusions from, 36

  Hallett, Captain, 90

  humiliating defeat, 35, 119

  lessons learned by Allies, 90, 119

  Morgan's COSSAC planners, 36

  Royal Marine Commandos, 35

  site for an exploratory foray (Aug. 13, 1942), 35

  Third Canadian Division, 156

  Dill, Sir John (British field marshal), 20

  Dillon, Frank (US Army Air Force captain), 116

  Dollmann, Friedrich (German general), 126, 141–42

  Dowding, Sir Hugh (British air marshal), 45, 63

  Dunkirk (France)

  channel seaport, major, 35–36, 96

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

  evacuation of French and British forces (Operation DYNAMO, June 1940), 24, 76

  German defenses concentrated around major channel seaports, 35–36

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

  landing beaches, COSSAC proposed, 40

  liberated at war's end (May 1945), 300

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

  supplies for British forces, 40

  Eastwood, Sir Ralph (Gibraltar's governor), 108

  Eberbach, Hans (German general), 26, 256, 261

  E-boats (German motor torpedo boat), 103–104, 128, 154, 169

  Eden, Sir Anthony (British foreign secretary), 59

  Eisenhower, Dwight D. “Ike” (US general)

  Allied air force commanders opposed being placed under SHAEF to support OVERLORD, 93

  Allied general forces commander, 80

  Allied ground force operational plans implemented (Mar. 1945), 80

  arbitrator in dealing with egos of Churchill, Roosevelt, Marshall, Brooke, and de Gaulle, 323–24

  background, 50–51

  battlefield experience, lacked, 54

  Bradley appointed to lead army invasion of France, 68

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

  Bradley/Patton plan not supported; Germans regrouped their shattered forces in Western Europe, 316

  Bradley urged to accept Patton for Normandy bridgehead breakout, 73

  “broad front” offensive, Eisenhower's original (proposed, Aug.–Sept. 1944), 292

  Brooke's reservations about his strategic abilities, 50

  Churchill's respect for Eisenhower, 49

  commander of Allied forces in Europe after D-Day, 61

  commander of US Army forces in Britain, 27

  D-Day invasion was delayed twenty-four hours due to bad weather, surprising the Germans (June 6), 113–15

  directly commanded very few people, 52

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

  Expeditionary Force, supreme commander of, 51, 53

  head of Far Eastern desk of War Plan Division, 51

  invasion experiences (TORCH, North Africa; HUSKY, Sicily; AVALANCHE, Salerno, Italy), 64

  Montgomery, Sir Bernard Law

  Montgomery's initial operational proposals accepted (Jan. 1944), 88

  Montgomery's patronizing lecture, 55

  as temporary Allied ground forces commander during the first stage of OVERLORD invasion, 81

  Normandy D-Day invasion planning, worked with Ramsay on, 27

  Operation ANVIL would not be launched concurrently with OVERLORD, 89

  Operation OVERLORD

  airborne assault to go forward (May 29, 1944), 110

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

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

  plan's ambiguities and the impasse over its bombing strategy, SHAEF resolved, 94

  preliminary plan in Algiers, Eisenhower read (1943); wanted more division to increase assault force, 80

  Roosevelt appointed Eisenhower supreme commander for, 50, 52

  supreme commander, 62, 64, 79

  Operation TORCH, British and American sources questioned Eisenhower's fitness to command, 67

  Operation TORCH and Operation HUSKY, political figurehead commander for, 64, 79

  Paris, decision to liberate, 283

  Patton, Eisenhower's direct intervention with Marshall saved, 72

  Patton appointed commander of Western Task Force invasion of Morocco, 71

  Patton's southern thrust to the Ruhr stopped, 314, 319

  personality and style of command, 52–54

  photograph, 82, 288

  primary job was to keep Allied OVERLORD ship afloat and on course, 53

  requested landing craft and forty-seven additional LSTs from the Combined Chiefs of Staff, 89

  SHAEF meeting in London (Feb. 1, 1944), 53

  SHELLBURST headquarters in Normandy (Aug. 20, 1944), 245, 278–79

  ship building for anti-submarine warfare, 89

  Smith sent to brief Marshall, 49

  supreme Allied commander in the Mediterranean, 61

  Tedder's “Transportation Plan,” threatened to resign if not adopted, 94

  Transportation Plan, supported, 100

  US Army's European buildup in England, major general in charge of, 51

  El Alamein (Egypt), 55, 59. See also Battle of El Alamein

  Essame, Hubert (historian), 240, 277, 298

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

  Exercise TIGER. See Operation TIGER

  Falaise-Argentan Pocket (Aug. 6–22, 1944, ground offensive)

  Allied divisions close Falaise-Argentan gap, 269

  Bradley's issues, analysis of, 270

  Bradley's stop order, four major controversies about, 253–58

  Canadian forces issues, analysis of, 269–70

  closing, 249, 251–52, 259–60, 265, 289

  Eisenhower backs down, 258

  Eisenhower refused to intervene and overrule Montgomery, 272

  Eisenhower's issues, analysis of, 271

  German and Allied casualties, 266–68

  German army destruction, 266

  Haislip's Seventy-Ninth and Ninetieth Infantry Divisions, 251

  inconclusive victory, 274
/>   Kluge cannot supply troops with day-to-day necessities, 260

  military wasteland, 265–68, 265, 266

  Montgomery, Sir Bernard Law

  analysis of issues of Falaise-Argentan Pocket, 269

  and his Twenty-First Army Group's victory, 268–69

  indecision of and missed opportunity to annihilate the Germans, 269

  role of national rivalries, 271–73

  role of personal animosities, 273

  Farago, Ladislas (Patton's biographer), 92, 223

  Festung Europa (Fortress Europe), 15, 35–36, 96–97, 102, 132

  Flanders field battles, 21

  Foulkes, Charles (Canadian general), 270

  Galland, Adolf (German air force general), 95

  Garcia, Juan Pujol (code-named Garbo), 167

  George VI (British king), 63, 105, 111, 137

  German Wehrmacht

  Ardennes offensive (Battle of the Bulge), 58, 319, 333

  armed forces high command (OKW), 16, 121–22, 124, 135, 143, 166, 193

  Axis forces surrendered in North Africa (May 1943), 29

  Blitzkrieg, 123, 334

  defenses concentrated around major channel seaports, 35–36

  E-boats base and sorties on Allied warships from Boulogne, 169

  German chain of command in Western Europe (June 6, 1944), 121

  invasion of the Soviet Union (1941), 25

  Luftwaffe, 31, 45, 95, 121, 125, 128, 135

  Naval Group West, 121

  Ninety-First Infantry, 109–10, 240

  352nd Infantry Division, 109, 127, 133, 147, 150, 163

  German West Wall (Siegfried Line)

  Eisenhower gave Patton two extra divisions for push to the Siegfried Line, 285

  Eisenhower stopped Patton's drive to outflank, 17, 277

  First US Army successfully broke through, 296

  Patton, George S.

  and intelligence reports, 286, 289

  lost the race to the Siegfried Line, 296

  plans of for push to Siegfried Line, 285–86, 289

  plea of to Eisenhower, 294

  US Thirty-Ninth Infantry Brigade crossing Siegfried Line (Sept. 1944), 297

  Geyr. See Schweppenburg, Leo Geyr von

  Goering, Hermann (German commander in chief of the Luftwaffe), 121

  Gold Beach (Normandy landing, June 6, 1944), 138, 155, 156

  Gort, John (British field marshal)

  commander in chief of the British Expeditionary Force, 58

  commander of the British Eighth Army, 59

  Gott, William (British general), 59

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

  Grigg, Sir James (British secretary of war), 62, 232–33

  Guderian, Heinz (German general), 69, 334

  Gustav defensive line, 29–30

  Haislip, Wade (US major general)

  Argentan, advance beyond, 252, 254

  Bradley split Haislip's command, 258

  Carrouges, near, 268

  Falaise, within a few miles of, 252–53

  Patton's orders to destroy Germans, 249

  XV Corps, 241, 247, 249, 251–52, 256

  Hallett, Hughes (British captain), 90

  Hamilton, Nigel (historian), 100, 171–72, 238, 273, 297, 314

  Hansen, Chester B. (US major) 247, 255

  Harris, Sir Arthur (British air marshal), 17, 93–94, 106, 200

  Hart, Liddell (historian), 42, 69, 160, 193, 296

  Harvey, Oliver (Anthony Eden's private secretary), 59

  Hastings, Max (historian), 16, 43, 54, 95, 100, 163, 203, 267–68, 324

  hedgerow. See bocage terrain

  Henderson, Horace Edward (historian), 269

  Hesketh, Roger Fleetwood (US major), 37

  Himmler, Heinrich (Reichfuehrer), 122

  Hiroski Oshina (Japan's ambassador to Germany), 132–33

  Hitler, Adolf (führer of Nazi Germany)

  Albert Canal, rushed reinforcements to (Sept. 7, 1944), 304

  Allies to land in the Pas-de-Calais sector, 124

  Ardennes offensive (Battle of the Bulge), 58, 319, 333

  assassination attempt (July 20, 1944), 212–13, 238

  Atlantic Wall, 117, 119, 126 (see also Atlantic Wall)

  completion date, 119

  Aug. 15 declared “the worst day of my life,” 261

  Battle of the Bulge (German offensive), 17, 58, 267, 274, 319, 328, 333

  Choltitz ordered to leave Paris a wasteland (Aug. 23), 278–80

  command structure from hell, 121–22

  conference at Eagle's Nest mountaintop hideaway in Obersalzberg (Mar. 1944), 123–24

  conference on Germany's defense of Western Europe (Sept. 1942), 119

  conspirators rounded up by Gestapo, over seven thousand, 213

  German defeat at Falaise due to Hitler's bungling interference, 268

  Hofacker's forced confession, 213

  Kluge deemed a traitor, 262

  Kluge's letter and Kluge swallowed poison capsule, 264

  news of Allied landings in southern France (Operation ANVIL, later DRAGOON, Aug. 15), 261, 284

  Normandy legions, 124–28

  Operation Lüttich, 242–44, 246

  Operation Valkyrie, 213

  photograph, 243

  Rommel ordered to complete building of Atlantic Wall, 119

  Rundstedt reinstated commander in chief in the West (Sept. 4), 307

  Rundstedt's message about ending the war, Keitel gave Hitler, 195

  Seventh Army put in strategic noose with the Mortain (Lüttich) counteroffensive, 270

  Stauffenberg's bomb destroyed the conference room at Hitler's Wolf's Lair headquarters (July 20), 212–13

  supreme commander, 121

  See also German Wehrmacht

  Hodges, Courtney H. (US general)

  Antwerp, 300

  Bradley's deputy, 66

  chief of infantry, 66

  Falaise Pocket, 246

  First Army, 52, 235, 246, 291, 293–94

  Operation MARKET GARDEN, 309

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

  Vire, Germans pushed out of, 242

  Hopkins, Harry (Roosevelt's chief advisor), 46, 49

  Horrocks, Brian (British general), 300, 304, 309, 311, 313

  Hussey, Thomas (British Royal Navy commander), 91

  Ingersoll, Ralph (US colonel, historian), 274, 325

  Inter Services Security Board (ISSB), 37

  Isle of Wight (Area ZEBRA), 137

  Ismay, Sir Hastings (British lieutenant general), 20, 45

  Jackson, Stonewall (US general), 288

  James, Meyrick Clifton (Montgomery's double), 105

  Japan

  Hiroski Oshina (Japan's ambassador to Germany), 132–33

  Korean soldiers recruited by Germany, 127

  Pearl Harbor attack (Dec. 7, 1941), 19–21, 23, 26, 46, 50–51, 66, 71

  US chiefs of staffs and defeat of, 322

  Jodl, Alfred (German general)

  chief of operations, 121

  Hitler's conference with Keitel and Jodl, 159

  Rundstedt requested OKW to release Twelfth SS Panzer and Panzer Lehr Divisions to move them into Normandy, 143

  Jordan, Jonathan (historian), 198

  Joyce, Kenyon (US major general), 51

  Juno Beach (Normandy landing, June 6, 1944), 156–57, 160

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

  Kasserine Pass (Tunisia), 66

  Keegan, John (historian), 26, 256, 267

  Keitel, Wilhelm (German general)

  chief of staff, 121

  Hitler's conference with Keitel and Jodl (June 6, 1944), 159

  Nuremberg trials, 213

  photograph, 243

  Rommel described hopelessness of their situation (June 11, 1944), 171, 213

  Rundstedt and Blumentritt told Keitel the position was “impossible” (July 1, 1944), 193–95

  Kenne
dy, John (British major general), 31

  King, Ernest J. (US admiral)

  anti-British prejudices, 86

  Casablanca Conference (1943) and Operation ROUNDUP, 27–29, 28

  chief of US naval operations, 23, 86

  Operation GYMNAST, Roosevelt forced commitment to, 26

  Operation NEPTUNE and minesweeping, 86

  Quebec Conference (Aug. 1943), 20

  Kirk, Alan G. (US rear admiral)

  background, 85

  commander of Western (American) Task Force, 85

  Omaha Beach, 152

  Stark's role in naval buildup for NEPTUNE, 85

  Utah Beach, 145

  Kluge, Gunther von (German field marshal)

  Allied air attacks caused panzer personnel to begin abandoning their tanks and equipment (Aug. 8), 244

  Allied fighter-bombers targeted his convoy of staff car, radio truck, and motorcycle escort, 261

  army's disintegration reported (Aug. 16), 261–62

  background, 195

  command of the West, 195

  frontline inspection of a shrinking battlefield (Aug. 14), 260

  Hitler, Adolf

  advice to, 214

  headquarters of informed that Americans were “running wild,” 230

  Kluge deemed a traitor by Hitler, 262

  orders of to close the gap at Avranches by withdrawing panzers from other parts of Normandy (Aug. 3), 242

  orders of to Kluge to disengage (Aug. 16), 256

  letter to Hitler and swallowed a poison capsule (Aug. 19), 264

  Operation Lüttich (German), 242–44, 246

  overall theater commander and assumed Rommel's Seventh Army group, 214

  photograph, 196

  Speidel order to issue withdrawal order from Falaise Pocket, 262

  St. Lo–Périers line, staff officer with order to hold the, 228

  tour of Normandy front and to talk to the field commanders, 197

  Weltuntergangsstimmung—the collapse of their whole world, 231

  Knox, Frank (US secretary of the navy), 49

  Kriegsmarine's Navy Group West (Germany), 128–29, 169–70, 187

  Krueger, Walter (US lieutenant general), 51

  Lamb, Richard (historian), 269, 304

  Leahy, W. D. (US admiral), 20

  Leclerc, Philippe (French general), 274, 279–80, 282

  Lee, Asher (British wing commander), 311

  Lee, Robert E. (US general), 288

  Le Havre (France)

  channel seaport, 36

  COSSAC proposed three landing beaches between Le Havre and base of the Cotentin Peninsula, 40

  First Canadian Army

  cleared channel ports, taking Dieppe, encircling German Fifteenth Army at Le Havre, 300

  encircled the German Fifteenth Army, 300

  to land and cover the British flank and advance to Le Havre, 99

 

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