Falaise: The Flawed Victory

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Falaise: The Flawed Victory Page 31

by Anthony Tucker-Jones


  Army Group G (Southern France)

  1st Army

  LXXX (80th) Corps

  158th Reserve Infantry Division

  708th Infantry Division (by 30 July)

  LXXXVI (86th) Corps

  159th Reserve Infantry Division

  276th Infantry Division (mid-June)

  19th Army

  IV Luftwaffe Field Corps

  271st Infantry Division (mid-July)

  272nd Infantry Division (mid-July)

  277th Infantry Division (29 June)

  LXXXV (85th) Corps

  338th Infantry Division (mid-August)

  244th Infantry Division

  LXII (62nd) Reserve Corps

  157th Reserve Infantry Division

  242nd Infantry Division

  From outside France and the Low Countries

  9th SS Panzer Division (Russia – 29 June)

  10th SS Panzer Division (Russia – 29 June)

  2nd Parachute Division (Germany – to Brittany12 June)

  89th Infantry Division (Norway – early August)

  363rd Infantry Division (Denmark – by 30 July)

  German Order of Battle July-August 1944

  Army Group B (Northern France and the Low Countries) Panzergruppe West (5th Panzer Army)

  I SS Panzer Corps

  1st SS Panzer Division Liebstandarte Adolf Hitler

  12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend

  716th Infantry Division

  II SS Panzer Corps

  9th SS Panzer Division Hohenstaufen

  10th SS Panzer Division Frundsber

  277th Infantry Division

  XLVII (47th) Panzer Corps

  2nd Panzer Division

  116th Panzer Division Windhun

  276th Infantry Division

  326th Infantry Division

  1st SS Panzer Division Liebstandarte AdolfHitler (Mortain counterattack)

  2nd SS Panzer Division Das Reich (Mortain counterattack)

  17th SS Panzergrenadier Division Götz von Berlichingen (Mortain counterattack)

  275th Infantry Division (Mortain counterattack)

  LVIII (58th) Panzer Corps

  Panzer Lehr Division (Mortain counterattack)

  17th SS Panzergrenadier Division Götz von Berlichingen (Mortain counterattack)

  2nd Panzer Division (by 9 August)

  2nd SS Panzer Division Das Reich (10 August)

  10th SS Panzer Division (by 9 August, Corps reserve)

  III Flak Corps

  Flak-Sturm-Regimenter 1 to 4

  Flakkampfgruppen 11700, 13300 and 12400

  7th Army

  II Parachute Corps

  3rd Parachute Division

  352nd Infantry Division (initially subordinate to LXXXIV Corps)

  Fallschirm-Sturmgeschütz Brigade 12

  XXV (25th) Corps (stationed in Brittany)

  77th Infantry Division

  265th Infantry Division

  266th Infantry Division

  319th Infantry Division (stationed in the Channel Islands)

  343rd Infantry Division

  2nd Parachute Division

  LXXIV (74th) Corps

  21st Panzer (transferred from LXXXVI Corps late July)

  LXXXI (81st) Corps

  9th Panzer Division

  Panzer Lehr Panzer Division

  331st Infantry Division (kampfgruppe)

  708th Infantry Division

  LXXXIV (84th) Corps

  Panzer Lehr Division

  2nd SS Panzer Division Das Reich (Kampfgruppe Weidinger)

  17th SS Panzergrenadier Division Götz von Berlichingen

  21st Panzer Division (transferred mid-June to LXXXVI Corps)

  116th Panzer Division Windhund (Kampfgruppe Lueder)

  243rd Infantry Division

  275th Infantry Division

  353rd Infantry Division

  5th Luftwaffe Division

  91st Airlanding Division

  LXXXVI (86th) Corps

  21st Panzer Division

  Panzergruppe Eberbach (subordinate to 7th Army)

  II SS Panzer Corps

  XLVII Panzer Corps LVIII Panzer Corps

  Included remnants of 1st SS, 2nd SS, 9th SS, 17th SS, 2nd and 116th Panzer Divisions and 708th Infantry Division

  Appendix V

  Panzergruppe West and 7th ArmyPanzer Division Commanders

  Heer Panzer Divisions

  2nd Panzer

  Generalleutnant Vollrath Lübbe: 5 Sep 1942-1 Feb 1944

  General der Panzertruppen Heinrich Freiherr von Lüttwitz: 1 Feb 1944-5 May 1944

  Generalleutnant Franz Westhoven: 5 May 1944-27 May 1944

  General der Panzertruppen Heinrich Freiherr von Lüttwitz: 27 May 1944-31 Aug 1944

  Generalmajor Henning Schünfeld: 31 Aug 1944-15 Dec 1944

  Generalmajor Meinrad von LauchertL 15 Dec 1944-20 Mar 1945

  Generalmajor Oskar Munze: 20 Mar 1945-1 Apr 1945

  Oberst Carl Stollbrock: 1 Apr 1945-8 May 1945

  9th Panzer

  Generalleutnant Erwin Jolasse: 27 Nov 1943-10 Aug 1944

  Oberst Max Sperling: 10 Aug 1944-3 Sep 1944

  Generalmajor Gerhard Müller: 3 Sep 1944-16 Sep 1944

  Generalleutnant Harald Freiherr von Elverfeldt: 16 Sep 1944-6 Mar 1945

  Oberst Helmut Zollenkopf: 6 Mar 1945-26 Apr 1945

  21st Panzer

  Generalleutnant Edgar Feuchtinger: 15 May 1943-15 Jan 1944

  Generalmajor Oswin Grolig: 15 Jan 1944-8 Mar 1944

  Generalleutnant Franz Westhoven: 8 Mar 1944-8 May 1944

  Generalleutnant Edgar Feuchtinger: 8 May 1944-25 Jan 1945

  Oberst Helmut Zollenkopf: 25 Jan 1945-12 Feb 1945

  Generalleutnant Werner Marcks: 12 Feb 1945-Apr 1945

  116th Panzer

  Generalmajor Gerhard Müller: 28 Mar 1944-1 May 1944

  General der Panzertruppen Gerhard Graf von Schwerin: 1 May 1944-1 Sep 1944

  Generalmajor Heinrich Voigtsberger: 1 Sep 1944-14 Sep 1944

  Generalmajor Siegfried von Waldenburg: 14 Sep 1944-Apr 1945

  Panzer Lehr

  Generalleutnant Fritz Bayerlein: 10 Jan 1944-20 Jan 1945

  Generalmajor Horst Niemack: 20 Jan 1945-Apr 1945

  Waffen-SS Panzer Divisions

  1st SS Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler

  SS-Brigadeführer Theodor Wisch: 7 Apr 1943-20 Aug 1944

  SS-Brigadeführer Wilhelm Mohnke: 20 Aug 1944-6 Feb 1945

  SS-Brigadeführer Otto Kumm: 6 Feb 1945-8 May 1945

  2nd SS Das Reich

  SS-Gruppenführer Heinz Lammerding: 23 Oct 1943-24 July 1944

  SS-Standartenführer Christian Tychsen: 24 July 1944-28 July 1944

  SS-Brigadeführer Otto Baum: 28 July 1944-23 Oct 1944

  SS-Gruppenführer Heinz Lammerding: 23 Oct 1944-20 Jan 1945

  SS-Standartenführer Karl Kreutz: 20 Jan 1945-29 Jan 1945

  SS-Gruppenführer Werner Ostnedorff: 29 Jan 1945-9 Mar 1945

  SS-Standartenführer Rudolf Lehmann: 9 Mar 1945-13 Apr 1945

  SS-Standartenführer Karl Kreutz: 13 Apr 1945-8 May 1945

  9th SS Hohenstaufen

  SS-Obergruppenführer Willi Bittrich: 15 Feb 1943-29 June 1944

  SS-Oberführer Thomas Müller: 29 June 1944-10 July 1944

  SS-Brigadeführer Sylvester Stadler: 10 July 1944-31 July 1944

  SS-Oberführer Friedrich-Wilhelm Bock: 31 July 1944-29 Aug 1944

  SS-Standartenführer Walter Harzer: 29 Aug 1944-10 Oct 1944

  SS-Brigadeführer Sylvester Stadler: 10 Oct 1944-8 May 1945

  10th SS Frundsberg

  SS-Gruppenführer Karl Fischer von Treuenfeld: 15 Nov 1943-27 Apr 1944

  SS-Gruppenführer Heinz Harmel: 27 Apr 1944-Apr 1945

  SS-Obersturmbannführer Franz Roestel: Apr 1945-8 May 1945

  12th SS Hitlerjugend

  SS-Brigadeführer Fritz Witt: 24 June 1943-14 June 1944

  SS-Brigadeführer Kurt Meyer: 14 June 1944-6
Sep 1944

  SS-Obersturmbannführer Hubert Meyer: 6 Sep 1944-24 Oct 1944

  SS-Brigadeführer Fritz Kraemer: 24 Oct 1944-13 Nov 1944

  SS-Brigadeführer Hugo Kraas: 13 Nov 1944-8 May 1945

  Waffen-SS Panzergrenadier Divisions

  17th SS Götz von Berlichingen

  SS-Gruppenführer Werner Ostendorff: 30 Oct 1943-15 June 1944

  SS-Standartenführer Otto Binge: 17 June 1944-20 June 1944

  SS-Brigadeführer Otto Baum: 20 June 1944-1 Aug 1944

  SS-Standartenführer Otto Binge: 1 Aug 1944-29 Aug 1944

  SS-Oberführer Dr. Eduard Deisenhofer: 30 Aug 1944-Sep 1944

  SS-Oberführer Thomas Müller: Sep 1944-Sep 1944

  SS-Standartenführer Gustav Mertsch: Sep 1944-Oct 1944

  SS-Gruppenführer Werner Ostendorff: 21 Oct 1944-Nov 1944

  SS-Standartenführer Hans Linger: Nov 1944–Jan 1945

  Oberst Gerhard Lindner: 15 Jan 1945-21 Jan 1945

  SS-Oberführer Fritz Klingenberg: 21 Jan 1945-22 Mar 1945

  SS-Oberführer Georg Bochmann: Mar 1945-8 May 1945

  Heavy Tank Battalions

  Schwere Panzer Abteilung 503

  Hauptmann Graf Kageneck: May 1943-Feb 1944

  Hauptmann Fromme: Feb 1944-Dec 1944

  Hauptmann von Diest-Koerber: Dec 1944–Jan 1945

  Schwere SS-Panzer Abteilung 101

  SS-Obersturmbannführer Leiner: 9 Nov 1943-13 Feb 1944

  SS-Obersturmbannführer von Westerhagen: 13 Feb 1944-20 Mar 1945

  SS-Sturmbannführer Kling: 20 Mar 1945-8 May 1945

  Schwere SS-Panzer Abteilung 102

  SS-Sturmbannführer Laackmann: Jan 1944-Mar 1944

  SS-Sturmbannführer Weiss: Mar 1944-18 Aug 1944

  SS-Sturmbannführer Hartrampf: Aug 1944-May 1945

  Appendix VI

  Principal Allied Codenames

  Allied Deception Codenames

  BODYGUARD

  Overall Allied strategic deception plan for the invasion of France, designed to shield Overlord from German intelligence. This encompassed Operations Fortitude, Qmck-silver and Zeppelin.

  FORTITUDE (NORTH AND SOUTH)

  Allied deception plans designed to convince the Germans that the main invasion in France would occur in the Pas de Calais area and/or Norway.

  QUICKSILVER

  Part of Fortitude which covered the fictitious US 1st Army Group under General George S Patton in southeast England, poised to strike across the Pas de Calais.

  CASCADE

  Deception plan designed to mislead the Axis as to the true strength of Allied forces in the Mediterranean; was followed by Operation Zeppelin.

  ZEPPELIN

  Deception plan designed to convince the Germans that the Allies would attack Crete or Western Greece from the Mediterranean, or Romania via the Black Sea.

  Principal Allied Operational Codenames

  OVERLORD

  6 June 1944: American, British and Canadian seaborne invasion of northern France, conducted on the Normandy coastline between Quineville in the west and Ouistreham to the east.

  NEPTUNE

  6 June 1944: The naval and assault landing element of Overlord.

  PERCH

  13-14 June 1944: British attack west of Caen designed to turn the German flank by seizing Villers-Bocage.

  EPSOM

  25/26 June – 1 July 1944: British offensive west of Caen toward Evrecy, south of the city; intended as a pre-emptive strike to tie up German armour reinforcements.

  DAUNTLESS

  25 June 1944: Subsidiary attack supporting Epsom, designed to secure the western lank prior to the main operation.

  MARTLET

  25 June 1944: British operation to capture Fontenay-le-Pesnil as part of Epsom and Dauntless.

  CHARNWOOD

  7-10 July 1944: Frontal assault launched by the British and Canadians to capture Caen, only succeeded in taking the northern half of the city.

  JUPITER

  10 July 1944: British attack west of Caen following Charnwood.

  GREENLINE

  15 July 1944: British attack intended to pin down German armour west of Caen prior to Goodwood.

  GOODWOOD

  18-21 July 1944: British offensive east of Caen, intended to assist the capture of the city and pin down German forces prior to the American break-out from the Cotentin Peninsula.

  ATLANTIC

  18-20 July 1944: Launched by the Canadians in conjunction with Operation Goodwood to capture Caen and get over the Orne.

  SPRING

  24-27 July: Conducted by the Canadians, designed to capture the Bourguébus and Verrières ridges south of Caen to open up the Falaise road. Also tied German forces down during Operation Cobra.

  COBRA

  25-31 July 1944: Launched by the Americans just west of St Lô to break out from the Normandy bridgehead, enabling them to strike southwest into Brittany and southeast toward Falaise and the River Seine.

  BLUECOAT

  30 July-7 August 1944: Intended to support Operation Cobra by drawing German forces to the Caen area and capturing Mont Pinçon.

  TOTALISE

  7-13 August 1944: British, Canadian and Polish attack along the Caen-Falaise Road intended to capture Falaise.

  TRACTABLE

  14-16 August 1944: Development of Totalise designed to close the neck of the Falaise salient, thereby trapping 5th Panzer Army, Panzergruppe Eberbach and 7th Army.

  DRAGOON

  15 August 1944: Allied invasion of the south of France between Toulon and Cannes forcing the German evacuation of France.

  Appendix VII

  Table of Equivalent Ranks

  German Army Waffen-SS British Army US Army

  Feldmarschall Reichsführer-SS Field Marshal General of the Army

  Generaloberst SS-Oberstgruppenführer General General

  General der Panzertruppen etc SS-Obergruppenführer Lieutenant General Lieutenant General

  Generalleutnant SS-Gruppenführer Major General Major General

  Generalmajor SS-Brigadeführer Brigadier Brigadier General

  Oberst SS-Oberführer or SS-Standartenführer Colonel Colonel

  Oberstleutnant SS-Obersturmbannführer Lieutenant Colonel Lieutenant Colonel

  Major SS-Sturmbannführer Major Major

  Hauptmann SS-Hauptsturmführer Captain Captain

  Oberleutnant SS-Obersturmführer Lieutenant 1st Lieutenant

  Leutnant SS-Untersturmführer 2nd Lieutenant 2nd Lieutenant

  Stabsfeldwebel SS-Sturmscharführer Regimental Sergeant Major Sergeant Major

  Hauptfeldwebel SS-Hauptscharführer Sergeant Major Master Sergeant

  N/A SS-Oberscharführer N/A Technical Sergeant

  Feldwebel SS-Scharführer Staff Sergeant Staff Sergeant

  Unteroffizer SS-Unterscharführer Sergeant Sergeant

  Stabsgefreiter N/A N/A Staff Corporal

  Obergefreiter SS-Rottenführer Corporal Senior Corporal

  Gefreiter SS-Sturmmann Lance Corporal Corporal

  Oberschütze SS-Oberschütze N/A Private 1st Class

  Schütze SS-Schütze Private Private

  Bibliography

  Note on Sources

  English language published and unpublished literature covering the many aspects of D-Day and the subsequent Normandy campaign is simply quite vast, but little of it deals explicitly with German experiences or indeed that of the panzer divisions. I have referred to, and quoted extensively from, the wide-range of works listed in full in the bibliography. Detailed endnotes, most notably for the quotes, have been deliberately omitted for the sake of brevity.

  In preparing this volume I would particularly like to recommend Eric Lefevre’s superb Panzers in Normandy then and now, Richard Hargreaves’ The Germans in Normandy, and Niklas Zetterling’s Normandy 1944. Lefevre’s work is by far the best single volume dealing with the panzer regiments role and organisation in Normandy. Zetterling’s magisterial study, drawing on primary German source
s, provides a comprehensive organisational surveyof almost every single German ground unit, including Heer, Waffen-SS and Luftwaffe, committed to the battle.

  Also of note is Georges Bernage’s The Panzers and the Battle for Normandy, though this only covers up to late July 1944, missing out the final stages of the battle, and Jean-Paul Pallud’s Röckmarsh!, looking at the German retreat to the Seine. In contrast, Paul Carell’s Invasion – They’re Coming!, first published in Germany in 1960, documenting the battle from the German perspetive, has since been discredited as being inaccurate in places.

  The postwar debriefs by Generals Eberbach, Fahrmbacher, von Gersdorff, Hausser, von Lüttwitz and von Schweppenburg, edited by David Isby , provide invaluable insight into the deployment of the panzertruppen and subsequent bitter squabbles amongst the German commanders about how the battle played out. They do, though, need to be treated with a degree of caution as many of the generals were seeking to exonerate their own performances, whilst blaming others for any perceived shortcomings. The original interviews are held at the US National Archives and the Military History Institute at the US Army War College. Basil Liddel Hart’s classic The Other Side of the Hill, in which he interviewed manyof the senior German generals, provides similar insight into the German High Command.

  The German sitreps, or Weekly Situation Reports, also provide a snapshot of the slowly deteriorating situation in Normandy, especially in terms of the Allies mounting pressure on the German defences and the paucity of replacement troops and equipment. The Imperial War Museum, Public Archives of Canada, and the UK and US National Archives are the key depositories for most of the English language primary source material relating to this campaign.

  Readers seeking a good overview will not do better than reading Major General David Belchem’s perceptive Victory in Normandy. He served as head of Montgomery’s planning staff and provides a first rate, concise yet comprehensive account. Likewise Max Hasting’s Overlord has much to recommend it.

  The best accounts of the brutal battle for Caen are the works by Henry Maule and Alexander McKee, while the best works on Operation Cobra are James Carafano’s very detailed analysis, though this is mainly from the American point of view, and Steven Zaloga’s readily accessible volume. There are many works on Falaise. The best known is James Lucas and James Barker’s study and the most concise is Ken Ford’s, while William Breuer’s book verges toward the sensational. Recent detailed battlefield guides include the useful volumes by Stephen Hart and Paul Latawski. The most readily available accounts of 2nd SS Panzer Division’s troubled march north are those by Max Hastings and Phil Vickers, both titled Das Reich. Notably, many of the earlier published studies consulted are out of print.

 

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