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Proposed Airborne Assaults In The Liberation Of Europe Canceled Allied Plans From The Falaise Pocket To Operation Market Garden James Daly

  • SKU: BELL-69483670
Proposed Airborne Assaults In The Liberation Of Europe Canceled Allied Plans From The Falaise Pocket To Operation Market Garden James Daly
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Proposed Airborne Assaults In The Liberation Of Europe Canceled Allied Plans From The Falaise Pocket To Operation Market Garden James Daly instant download after payment.

Publisher: Frontline Books, Pen & Sword Books
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 3.63 MB
Pages: 256
Author: James Daly
ISBN: 9781399036214, 1399036211
Language: English
Year: 2024

Product desciption

Proposed Airborne Assaults In The Liberation Of Europe Canceled Allied Plans From The Falaise Pocket To Operation Market Garden James Daly by James Daly 9781399036214, 1399036211 instant download after payment.

The bitter fighting in the so-called Falaise-Argentan Pocket in August 1944, during which the Allies encircled and destroyed a substantial part of Hitler’s forces in northern France following the D-Day landings, marked the last major battle of the Normandy campaign. Despite this, tens of thousands of German soldiers managed to escape through the infamous Falaise Gap.
It was as the Allies continued to pursue the retreating enemy forces that the planners considered or drew-up a number of further airborne operations. As James Daly reveals, three operations, namely Lucky Strike, Transfigure and Axehead, might well have been part of the last of the fighting in the breakout from, Normandy itself. The first of these, Lucky Strike, was intended to see General Montgomery’s 21st Army Group strike to the north-east in the direction of the River Seine, where bridges near Rouen were to be taken by the British 1st Airborne...
The bitter fighting in the so-called Falaise-Argentan Pocket in August 1944, during which the Allies encircled and destroyed a substantial part of Hitler’s forces in northern France following the D-Day landings, marked the last major battle of the Normandy campaign. Despite this, tens of thousands of German soldiers managed to escape through the infamous Falaise Gap.
It was as the Allies continued to pursue the retreating enemy forces that the planners considered or drew-up a number of further airborne operations. As James Daly reveals, three operations, namely Lucky Strike, Transfigure and Axehead, might well have been part of the last of the fighting in the breakout from, Normandy itself. The first of these, Lucky Strike, was intended to see General Montgomery’s 21st Army Group strike to the north-east in the direction of the River Seine, where bridges near Rouen were to be taken by the British 1st Airborne Division.
Transfigure was to be a major operation with the aim of using the First Allied Airborne Army against the French road network with the object of c

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