D-Day
Sous-titre
6 June 1944
“I have to announce to the House that during the night and the early hours of this morning the first of the series of landings in force upon the European Continent has taken place. [...] This vast operation is undoubtedly the most complicated and difficult that has ever occurred.” That is how Winston Churchill announced the launch of Operation Overlord, in his statement to the House of Commons at noon on 6 June.
The landings were no surprise, either for British MPs or for the Germans, who by now were almost certain that they would take place. What they did not know was where or when…
The location of the landings was one of the best kept secrets of the war. The Allies had used great ingenuity to keep it a secret and put the enemy off the scent, for instance by implementing the Fortitude South plan. This vast smokescreen operation was intended to mislead the Germans into expecting an invasion of the Pas-de-Calais, by forming a fictitious invading army, in the command of General Patton, complete with inflatable Sherman tanks, plywood and canvas aircraft, and false landing craft and landing stages, all masterfully put together by a team of theatre designers in Kent.
The date was uncertain right up until the last minute, when General Eisenhower issued his famous “OK, let’s go!”, on the night of 4 to 5 June, after being informed of favourable weather conditions for the following day. On the German side, the meteorological services had proved less effective: the Kriegsmarine thought it highly unlikely that an invasion would take place between 4 and 7 June, due to bad weather. It had also cancelled its own patrols. Field Marshal Rommel, commander of Army Group B on the Western Front, was also confident of these weather forecasts, and took himself off to Germany to celebrate his wife’s birthday and try to convince the Führer to deploy more armoured divisions in the West.
It was at Rommel’s instigation that the system of German defences on the Normandy coast, one of the links in the Atlantic Wall, had been reinforced from early 1944 onwards, with the laying of more mines and obstacles on the beaches and the flooding of low-lying areas, in particular at the base of the Cotentin Peninsula. Dreaded by the Germans, the landings had been awaited for many months by Stalin, who urged his allies to open up a second front in the West in order to relieve his troops in the East. It was true that, since June 1941, the Red Army had been alone in its relentless struggle against the Wehrmacht on the European continent. By keeping a large part of the German forces on the Eastern Front, the Soviets would be able to claim a share in the success of operations on the Western Front.
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