
The battle for Normandy remains one of the grandest operations of the Second World War. By far the most definitive action of the Allies during the conflict, it encapsulates the direct approach favoured by the American command for their fight to liberate Europe against Nazi aggression. Anthony Beevor's book comes as the third of a triumvirate of books written by him describing some of the most important events of the War, after Stalingrad and Berlin.
Many tomes have been written about this particular battle, not least lengthy texts by noted military historians Max Hastins and John Keegan, and the noted achievements of the US 82nd and 101st Airborne divisions have been turned into celluloid history with the TV series Band of Brothers. Although it is often difficult to talk about this fight when compared to the truly gargantuan clash of armies that was occurring on the Eastern Front (Operation Bagration, which occurred at the same time as Operation Overlord, is now considered to be the most successful operation of the war, and was achieved with deception in the same way is still to be covered in any notable way by western historians), the facts bear out that the battle for Normandy, and therefore France, was as bloody as any during the whole War. Both Allied and Nazi divisions suffered a rough rate of 2,500 casualties per month, compared to 1,500 as an average on the Eastern front.
Beevor's text throws the reader directly into the action, with the dicey few days before invasion, when weather reports were indecisive. The main thrust of Overlord, which had been in planning ever since the US entered the War in late 1941, was to achieve total surprise with the Allied thrust landing in Normandy, rather than Pas-de-Calais, which the Germans and in particular Hitler had expected. Arguably the greatest military deception of all time was achieved, as German commanders still thought that the main Allied armies would land some time after D-Day had started. This is not Beevor's territory to cover, and to his credit he does not get sidetracked into describing this. The landings, which have caused so much controversy over the years, are covered quickly, as the Allies made quick headway initially.
It's in the heavy fighting afterwards that his skill as a historian cum storyteller rises to the occasion. After establishing a bridgehead, it was then necessary for the combined Allied divisions to break out and try to push the Germans back to the Seine. Facing them were the Wehrmacht, which was a mixture of crack SS Panzer formations, including the notorious Adolf Hitler Leibstandarte, Hitler Jugend and Das Reich divisions and in striking contrast, poorly equipped standard troops often made up of captured Polish soldiers forced to fight. They were under the command of Field Marshalls Rommel and Rundstedt, experienced soldiers who were aware that the invasion was imminent, and that the resources at their command, both in logistics and men were scarce.
By 1944 relations between US and British commanders had become strained. The Americans, frustrated by British reluctance to commit to a second front for so long, also disagreed that the indirect approach to fighting, propagated with such tireless campaigning by Winston Churchill, was the way forward. The British though were right to be cautious. They had suffered ignominy at the hands of the Wehrmacht in 1940, and it was clear that their troops and equipment were not up to standard. The Second Front would only be launched when it was perceived that the chances of victory were high. Leading the British troops was Montgomery, a soldier much loved by his men, but known to exasperate his superiors. The Americans were led by a combination of Omar Bradley and joining them later, the irascible Patton, who brought a confident swagger to proceedings.
With virtually utter air superiority, the Allies were able to roam the skies at will, yet one of the lesser known facts of the campaign is most of the main bomber operations were considerable failures. Montgomery used heavy bombing to flush out the Germans out of Caen, but this only succeeded in destroying the city and killing over 5,000 civilians. It is worth knowing that more French civilians died during the entire Normandy campaign (including the sustained bombing since January 1944) than British civilians during the entire War. Normandy was essentially sacrificed so that France could be saved.
And despite fighter-bombers such as the P-47 Thunderbolt and Hawker Typhoon proving to be the nemesis of Panzer crews, the Germans fought with exceptional skill and ferocity to bog down the Allies in the sylvan alleys of the Bocage. This network of impassable verdant greenry created a nightmarish labyrinth for the inexperienced Allied crews to negotiate, not helped either by the Wehrmacht's superior weaponry. The 88mm anti-tank gun was without doubt one of the most effective of the War, its range and destructive potential often able to pick up numerous Allied tanks without being engaged.
Speed and momentum are vital to mechanized warfare, and the countryside in Normany did little to help. Combined with the fanatical resistance of the SS divisions, and considerable experience in fighting in the Eastern front, the Germans, despite heavy losses inflicted so much damage that it was feared at one point that a breakout would not be achieved. What cost the Nazis defeat in France was the inability of Hitler to concede that a mobile defence was more effective. His strange decision to adhere to the Great War dictum of defence via fortresses seems all the more mysterious when one considers the achievements of Blitzkreig in 1940. It was only when the tigerish General Model arrived, having replaced the hapless Kluge, that German resistance stiffened. By then though, the Americans and British had broken the resolve of enemy troops that were worn down by relentless air attacks and a lack of equipment. By August, French soldiers entered Paris as the vanguard of a liberating force that would see the the great city relieved without much damage, thanks in part to General Von Choltitz, who ignored Hitler's command to raze the city to the ground.
Given the immensity of D-Day, and its impact as the Western Allies decisive event of the conflict, it is often easy to become bogged down in much of the other attributable events that happened within its sphere. The problems of a shared Command structure are enough for a series of books in itself (see Andrew Robert's Masters and Commanders which I will review soon) and to his credit Beevor manages to describe these without losing touch with the intensity of the experiences that the ordinary soldiers had. Unlike the Desert War, which was often called the "Gentlemans War" due to the fact that civilians were not involved and the terrain was to a certain aspect forgiving, the battle for Normandy was a ghastly, bloody affair. Inexperienced British and American troops suffered tremendously at the hands of fanatical SS troops, who would often fight to the last man. There is much to be said for the trouble in organising and motivating a conscription army from a Democracy against the tireless zealots of a Totalitarian state affected by propaganda, and it is to their credit that the US and British commanders were able to sustain a bloody battle and eventually force a hard-won victory that enabled France to be saved.






