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Dday Through German Eyes Jonathan Trigg

  • SKU: BELL-53291668
Dday Through German Eyes Jonathan Trigg
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Dday Through German Eyes Jonathan Trigg instant download after payment.

Publisher: Amberley Publishing
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 1.3 MB
Author: Jonathan Trigg
ISBN: 9b6e341b-367b-4623-a306-677b4ba70512, 9B6E341B-367B-4623-A306-677B4BA70512
Language: English
Year: 2019

Product desciption

Dday Through German Eyes Jonathan Trigg by Jonathan Trigg 9b6e341b-367b-4623-a306-677b4ba70512, 9B6E341B-367B-4623-A306-677B4BA70512 instant download after payment.

Everyone is familiar with the story of D-Day and the triumphal liberation of France by the Allies - a barbaric enemy was defeated by Allied ingenuity, courage and overwhelming military force, helped by dreadful German command errors and the terrible state of Wehrmacht forces in the West - but is this all true? The Wehrmacht was hugely experienced, equipped with some of the best weaponry of the war and was holding its own in Italy and Russia at the time. Berlin knew the invasion was coming and had had years to prepare for it. So how did the Germans view the impending invasion and campaign, did they feel ready, just what forces did they have and could they have done better? Previous histories have focused on the 'clash of the generals'; the battle between Runstedt and Eisenhower, Montgomery and Rommel, but on the German side in particular this was a battle that would be fought by divisional and regimental commanders; the 'German D-Day colonels' upon whom the real business of trying to defeat the invasion fell - it was they and their men; outnumbered and outgunned, who somehow held Normandy for ten whole weeks against the greatest seaborne invasion force ever assembled, and occasionally even came close to defeating it. In the end they lost, and the majority of these unsung leaders ended up killed, wounded or captured in the fighting. As for their men, they ranged from elite Waffen-SS stormtroopers through to bewildered teenagers, old men, 'recycled' invalids and even anti-communist Eastern legions. Written from the 'other side' and told as much through the words of the veterans as from standard histories, this book is a revelation.

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