D-Day, June 6, 1944, and the 76 days of bitter fighting in
Normandy that followed the Allied landing, have become the defining episode of
World War II in the West—the object of books, films, television series, and
documentaries. The story is a familiar one—and yet, approaching the 75th
anniversary of this epochal event, its traditional narrative is still driven by
both myth and assumed knowledge that is often incorrect.
In NORMANDY '44, Holland has crafted a fresh chronicle that reframes our understanding of D-Day and the Normandy campaign: challenging the accepted views that Germany only lost because of the .Allies" material advantage; that the U.S. dominated the Allied effort; that air power was of lesser importance than ground power. Drawing on archives and testimonies of eyewitnesses—from foot soldiers, tank men, commanders, fighter pilots, as well as civilians caught in the maelstrom—Holland recreates the brutal campaign that, in terms of daily casualties, was worse than any in World War I. Field Marshal Sir Bernard Montgomery was in charge of Operation OVERLORD, whose main target was Caen, principal city in Normandy where rail, road, and river converged. Its capture took almost six weeks of bitter fighting from the bloody sea landing and chaotic air drop to the slog through the hedgerows and sunken lanes that were Normandy's landscape. Holland introduces characters such as Sgt. Curtis Curlin of the 2nd Armored Division who ingeniously devised saw-teeth to be added to the fronts of Sherman tanks, and Major General Pete Quesada, Commander of US IX Tactical Air Command, who developed crucial communication techniques between his planes and troops on the ground.
A stirring narrative by a preeminent historian, NORMANDY '44 sheds new light on one of history's most dramatic military engagements and is an invaluable addition to the literature of war.
James Holland is the author of Big Week, The Rise of Germany, and The Allies Strike Back in the War in the West trilogy, as well as Fortress Malta, Dam Busters, and The Battle of Britain. Holland regularly appears on television and radio and has written and presented the BAFTA shortlisted documentaries Battle of Britain and Dam Busters for the BBC, among others. A fellow of the Royal Historical Society, he has his own collection at the Imperial War Museum.
NORMANDY '44
by James Holland
Atlantic Monthly Press, $35.00 hardcover, publication date: 4 June 2019
ISBN: 978-0-8021-2942-0
by James Holland
Atlantic Monthly Press, $35.00 hardcover, publication date: 4 June 2019
ISBN: 978-0-8021-2942-0
Six Myths about the D-Day landings debunked by historian
James Holland
1. The myth: German soldiers were better trained than Allied soldiers.
REALITY: The best German units might have been at the
start of the war, but not by 1944. There were a few exceptions - such as the
Panzer Lehr, for example, but for the most part, German units were nothing like
as well trained as Allies. Some Allied units in Normandy had been training for
the best part of four years, while many German troops had had little more than
a few weeks'. The kampfgruppen - or battle groups - the ad hoc units
that traditionally are seen to showcase their tactical flexibility, were borne
of extreme shortages and desperation towards the end of the war. And even these
units still kept counter-attacking, and exposing themselves to Allied firepower
in the process.
The Fallschirmjager (paratroopers) were acknowledged
to be among the very best trained troops in the German Armed Forces, yet one Fallschirmjager
I spoke to recently had barely had any training at all, save a few route
marches and practice at laying mines. He had never trained with a tank, had no
transport at all, and when sent to the front from Brittany, marched 200 miles.
His case was not untypical. More than 80% of German forces in Normandy were
dependent on their feet and horses and carts for transport. He reached St Lo, a
major Normandy town in the American sector, on 12th of June with a company of
120 men. When he was captured on 19th August, he was one of just nine still
standing, the rest killed, wounded or captured.
Nor did the word aufstragstaktik- better known today
as Mission Command - mean anything to him whatsoever. This doctrine, the
ability to think on one's feet and use initiative, has been repeatedly hailed
as what set the German soldier apart. Training had become so reduced it was
simply impossible to implement.
2. The myth; The tactical skill of the Germans.
REALITY: The dogged determination of the Germans to
fight has been confused with tactical skill. Recent post-war conflicts in
Afghanistan, or even Vietnam a generation earlier, have proved that western
forces can have the best trained troops, best kit, and most lethal weapons in
the world, but still struggle to defeat a massively inferior enemy. As the
Taliban have shown, it is very difficult to completely defeat your enemy if
they don't want to be defeated. The only way is to kill them all.
This is why the Germans took so long to be defeated in
Normandy and beyond: they were still a very dangerous and deadly enemy, with
plenty of powerful weapons and a fierce determination to keep fighting. This
was for a number of reasons: Nazi indoctrination, a profound sense of duty, and
the threat of execution for deserters. In World War I the Germans executed 48
men for desertion; in World War II, that figure was 30,000.
3. The myth: D-Day was a predominantly American operation.
REALITY: For many people, D-Day is defined by the
bloodshed at Omaha - the codename for one of the beaches where Allied forces
landed - and the American airborne drops. Even in Germany, the perception is
that D-Day was a largely American show; in the recent German TV mini-series.
Generation War, there was a reference to the 'American landings' in France. But
despite Band of Brothers, despite Saving Private Ryan, and despite those 11
photographs by Robert Capa taken in the swell on that morning of 6th June 1944,
D-Day was not a predominantly American effort; rather it was an Allied effort,
with, if anything, Britain taking the lead.
Yes, Dwight D. Eisenhower, the Supreme Allied Commander, was
American, but his deputy. Air Chief Marshal Sir Arthur Tedder was British, as
were all three service chiefs. Air Marshal 'Mary' Coningham, Commander of the
tactical air forces - those directly supporting the ground troops - was also
British. The plan for Operation Overlord - as D-Day was codenamed - was largely
that of General Sir Bernard Montgomery, the land force commander: he was, of
course, British. The Royal Navy was overall responsible for Operation Neptune,
the naval plan. It might surprise many to know that of the 1,213 warships
involved, 200 were American and 892 were British; and of the 4,126 landing
craft involved, 805 were American and 3,261 were British.
Indeed, 31% of all US supplies used during D-Day came
directly from Britain, while two-thirds of the 12,000 aircraft involved were
also British, while two-thirds of those that landed in occupied France were
British and Canadian (Canada was then a British Dominion and Canadian and
British troops shared uniforms, equipment and weapons). Despite the initial
slaughter at Omaha, casualties across the American, and British and Canadian,
beaches were also much the same.
This is in no way meant to belittle the U.S. effort; rather
it is meant to add context. It is not helpful to anyone to view their history
through the narrow prism of their own experiences: rather a wider, 360-degree
view, is far more instructive. History needs to teach us as well as entertain.
4. The myth: American forces were ill-disciplined amateurs.
REALITY: By the end of the war, the U.S. had the best
armed services in the world bar none, and the 77-day Normandy campaign did a
huge amount to help them reach that point. But repeatedly throughout the war,
US troops showed their incredible ability to learn on the hoof, and then swiftly
implement changes.
Normandy was a showcase for American tactical and
operational flexibility At the start of the campaign, the Americans found
themselves fighting through the Normandy bocage, an area of small fields lined
with thick raised hedgerows and al the Germans would quickly retreat after a
successful Allied landing. For the German troops, the bocage offered both cover
and great ambush opportunities, with mortar teams and machine-guns hidden
behind the hedgerows. To effectively break through the bocage US infantry
needed the support of tanks to blast their way forward, but even thirty-ton
Sherman tanks couldn't get through these hedgerows. The ingenious solution came
from a lowly U.S. sergeant, who dreamt up the idea of attaching a hedge-cutting
tool built from German beach obstacles to the front of a Sherman tank. Within a
week, his prototype had been made and a few days after that he was able to
demonstrate it in front of General Omar Bradley, the US First Army commander.
He was so impressed with what he saw, he ordered the conversion of as many
Shermans as possible, as quickly as possible. Within a fortnight the device had
been fitted to 60% of all US Shermans in Nornmandy.
In no other army in the world would a solution created by a
junior non-commissioned officer have been implemented quite so readily and
swiftly. It showed the Americans' incredible tactical flexibility; and this was
just one example. During the campaign huge strides were also made in the
development of close air support, and in improving coordination between
infantry, artillery and armor. Medical services advanced so much that one in
four casualties returned to the battlefield after treatment. For 1944 this was
remarkable.
5. The myth: The allies allowed themselves to get bogged down in Normandy.
REALITY: It's true that in the pre-invasion estimates
for the campaign, the Allies expected to be roughly 50 miles inland. This was
based on experience of German retreats in North Africa and Italy. But Hitler
ordered his forces to fight as close to the coast as possible and not give an
inch. On a map, it seemed the Allies weren't making much progress, but
actually, the German policy worked to the Allies' advantage. By continuing to
fight close to the coast, the Germans remained in range of Allied off shore
naval guns and allowed themselves to be out-smarted by an enemy that had worked
out how to defeat them.
By 1944, the Allies had realized that tactically, the Germans
were rigidly predictable. The Germans were very proud of their military
heritage and drew on doctrine established by men like General Carl von
Clausewitz (1780-1831), who wrote the seminal pamphlet, On War. Part of their
DNA in World War II was to always counterattack - the idea was to strike back
at the moment the enemy had over-extended himself.
But the Allies realized that this penchant for
counter-attacking meant the Germans, previously well dug-in, then moved into
the open and exposed themselves. The Allied trick was to probe forward, get the
Germans to counter-attack - which they always did - then hammer them with a
combination of devastating artillery, air- and off-shore naval fire. By the end
of the Normandy campaign, the Germans had hemorrhaged men and machines and two
entire armies were all but destroyed. It's true a handful escaped the attempted
encirclement around Falaise, but it was still a massive Allied victory. In the
rapid advance that followed, the Allies sped more miles more quickly than the
Germans had done in the opposite direction back in May 1940 during the
Blitzkrieg in France.
6. The myth: America and Britain got off lightly in World War II.
REALITY: Allied front line troops suffered
horrifically in World War II. Democracies, such as Britain and America, quite
rightly, were trying to achieve victory with as few casualties as possible. For
the most part, they did this very successfully, using technology and machinery
to shield lives as much as possible.
However, the hard yards still had to be won by the infantry,
tank units and artillery, technology meant the Allies needed fewer of them than
a generation earlier, but those in the firing line had pulled a very short
straw, losses to front line troops were proportionally worse than on the Western
Front during World War I. Over the course of the 77-day battle, the average
daily casualty rate was 6,870, worse than the Somme. Passchendaele and Verdun,
three battles usually viewed as a benchmark for wanton slaughter. Normandy was
absolutely brutal.