By Victor Davis Hanson
Thursday, May 29, 2014
Seventy years ago this June 6, the Americans, British and
Canadians stormed the beaches of Normandy in the largest amphibious invasion of
Europe since the Persian king Xerxes invaded Greece in 480 B.C.
About 160,000 troops landed on five Normandy beaches and
linked up with airborne troops in a masterful display of planning and courage.
Within a month almost a million Allied troops had landed in France and were
heading eastward toward the German border. Within 11 months the war with
Germany was over.
The western front required the diversion of hundreds of
thousands of German troops. It weakened Nazi resistance to the Russians while
robbing the Third Reich of its valuable occupied European territory.
The impatient and long-suffering Russians had demanded of
their allies a second front commensurate with their own sacrifices. Their
Herculean efforts by war's end would account for two out of every three dead
German soldiers -- at a cost of 20 million Russian civilian and military
casualties.
Yet for all the sacrifices of the Soviet Union, Josef
Stalin was largely responsible for his war with Nazi Germany. In 1939, he
signed a foolish non-aggression pact with Hitler that allowed the Nazis to
gobble up Western democracies. Hitler's Panzers were aided by Russians in
Poland and overran Western Europe fueled by supplies from the Soviets.
The Western Allies had hardly been idle before D-Day.
They had taken North Africa and Sicily from the Germans and Italians. They were
bogged down in brutal fighting in Italy. The Western Allies and China fought
the Japanese in the Pacific, Burma and China.
The U.S. and the British Commonwealth fought almost
everywhere. They waged a multiform war on and under the seas. They eventually
destroyed Japanese and German heavy industry with a costly and controversial
strategic bombing campaign.
The Allies sent friends such as the Russians and Chinese
billions of dollars worth of food and war materiel.
In sum, while Russia bore the brunt of the German land
army, the Western Allies fought all three Axis powers everywhere else and in
every conceivable fashion.
Yet if D-Day was brilliantly planned and executed, the
follow-up advance through France in June 1944 was not always so. The Allies
seemed to know the texture of every beach in Normandy, but nothing about the
thick bocage just a few miles inland from Omaha Beach. The result was that the
Americans were bogged down in the French hedgerows for almost seven weeks until
late July -- suffering about 10 times the casualties as were lost from the
Normandy landings.
So how did the Allies get from the beaches of Normandy to
Germany in less than a year? Largely by overwhelming the Wehrmacht with lots of
good soldiers and practical war materiel. If German tanks, mines, machine guns
and artillery were superbly crafted, more utilitarian American counterparts
were good enough -- and about 10 times as numerous. Mechanically intricate
German Tiger and Panther tanks could usually knock out durable American Sherman
tanks, but the Americans produced almost 50,000 of the latter, and the Germans
less than 8,000 of the former.
Over Normandy, British and American fighter aircraft were
not only as good or better than German models but were far more numerous. By
mid-1944, Germany had produced almost no four-engine bombers. The British and
Americans built almost 50,000 that by 1944 were systematically leveling German
cities.
Winston Churchill and Franklin Roosevelt were far more
pragmatic supreme commanders than the increasingly delusional and sick Adolf
Hitler. American war planners such as George Marshall, Dwight Eisenhower and
Alan Brooke understood grand strategy better than the more experienced German
chief of staff. Allied field generals such as George S. Patton and Bernard
Montgomery were comparable to German legends like Gerd von Rundstedt or Erwin
Rommel, who were worn out by 1944.
The German soldier was the more disciplined, experienced,
armed and deadly warrior of World War II. But his cause was bad, and by 1944
his enemies were far more numerous and far better supplied. No soldiers fought
better on their home soil than did the Russians, and none more resourcefully
abroad than the British Tommy and the American G.I., when bolstered by ample
air, armor and artillery support.
Omaha Beach to central Germany was about the same
distance as the Russian Front to Berlin. But the Western Allies covered the
same approximate ground in about a quarter of the time as had the beleaguered
Russians.
D-Day ushered in the end of the Third Reich. It was the
most brilliantly conducted invasion in military history, and probably no one
but a unique generation of British, Canadians and Americans could have pulled
it off.
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