Valen is my name
Mongoose
not if you were going to parachute into an enemy held LZ. A higher percentage of Americans who landed in the French village full of German troops on D-Day died than Paras who took Pegasus bridge in Gliders on D-Day.
Valen is my name said:not if you were going to parachute into an enemy held LZ. A higher percentage of Americans who landed in the French village full of German troops on D-Day died than Paras who took Pegasus bridge in Gliders on D-Day.
Germans again used Gliders in the invasion of Crete to great effect although that was more in a transport role than a direct assault like Eban Emael above. Once on the Ground the highly out numbered paratroops and Glider troops (Fallshirmjagger (FJ)) fought a very bloody battle that all but wiped out the FJ core. Hilter was never to use them in a full scale airdrop again.Their second operation, which this time included parachuting and glider landings, was a month later in the invasion of Western Europe. They did what paratroopers do best, and captured vital river bridges behind enemy lines which the advancing German armor needed to cross, and a formidable Belgian fortress, Eben Emael, which guarded other key bridges.
Eben Emael was manned by about a thousand Belgian soldiers and was strongly fortified. It was a set of seven large fortified artillery positions, with 18 artillery guns, surrounded by many machine gun positions, mine fields, barbed wire, a moat, and connected via underground bunkers and tunnels.
On May 10, 1940, at dawn, this fortress was attacked by just 78 Fallschirmjager troops which landed on top of it with 10 gliders. They were equipped with light weapons and with several 100 pound armor piercing explosive charges. Before the raid these 78 paratroopers trained on a full size model of the Eben Emael fortress. They landed precisely on the roof of the large fortress in total surprise, and with their far superior fighting skill over the shocked Belgians they were able to quickly take over the roof area and confine the defenders to their fortified bunkers which they cracked one after the other with their special explosive charges. The German losses were just six dead and twenty wounded. A day later, when the paratroopers were joined by German ground forces, the hundreds of remaining Belgian defenders inside the fortress surrendered.
The small elite force of just 78 German paratroopers defeated a greatly larger force in a mighty fortress. It was a great success which remains one of the most daring and successful raids in history, a model of what elite soldiers can achieve in properly planned raids.
Of the 147 gliders that had left Tunisia that evening. 69 had crashed into the sea, drowning 326 of the British “Red Devils.” Of the others, just two had been shot
down—by friend or foe—several had been towed back to Tunisia, and fifty-nine had landed somewhere in Sicily, though they were spread out across an area of twenty-five square miles. Resentment against the American tow pilots was so severe that when they got back to Tunisia, British troops there had to be confined to camp to avoid a lynching. In fact, two gliders even landed on different islands, one in Sardinia
and another in Malta.
The American paratroopers were scattered over a thousand square miles, many dropped at too low an altitude so that their chutes failed to open and they were killed outright, or broke bones. Some pilots ordered their men out over the sea, while others simply turned around and flew straight back to Africa. The American paratroopers who fell into the British sector found in the early hours of July 10 that the British troops. not expecting to see Americans there, opened fire on them. Nobody had given the Americans the British passwords, and accidental casualties were common.
Parts of the above were from BLUE ON BLUE...A History of Friendly Fire...by Geoffrey ReganDuring the initial drop, 33 out of the original 144 C-47s were shot down in minutes, while another 60 were so badly hit that they would never fly again. A total of 318 paratroopers were killed or wounded, over one in five of the men involved in the operation. And all were victims of friendly fire.
By the next morning, the full extent of the catastrophe was clear. Of a total of 5,307 paratroopers who had flown in the previous day, fewer than 2,000 were still fit for combat, and more than 1,200 of them had died from acts of amicide. General Eisenhower was shocked by the outcome of the whole airborne operation. Essentially, the elite troops of the American Eighty-second Airborne Division and the First British Airborne Division had been frittered away as the result of what came to be known as the Sicily Disaster.
Valen is my name said:Was Operation Market Garden as bigger failure as people seem to remember it being? It didnt completely fail and it did have several positive effects on the war, and it still help the Allied Armies advance closer to the Rhine.