View Single Post
  #8  
Old September 2nd 04, 02:12 PM
Kevin Brooks
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"ArtKramr" wrote in message
...
Subject: The greatest missions were tactical, not strategic
From: "Keith Willshaw"
Date: 9/2/2004 1:42 AM Pacific Standard Time
Message-id:


"ArtKramr" wrote in message
...
Subject: The greatest missions were tactical, not strategic
From:
(BUFDRVR)
Date: 9/1/2004 8:36 PM Pacific Standard Time
Message-id:

Bob Coe wrote:

It took years of strategic bombing to even have a Normandy.


Yes and no. Yes, the Strategic Bombing campaign did syphon off

resources
and
men that would have been manning positions at Normandy, but it did not

make
the
Germans short of any equipment or resources. Within a few months of

D-Day,
the
POL shortages would begin, but on D-Day the Germans had plenty of POL.


BUFDRVR


But it was tactical bmbing that cut the Germans off from Normandy. They

had
plenty, they just couldn't move it forward as we sliced up the roads

and
rail
lines and took out the bridges.


The main reason they couldnt move it forward is der Fuhrer
wouldnt let them. On the morning of 6th June the Wehrmacht
were desperate to move the armour to Normandy but the
high command wouldnt release them without Hitler's
authorisation.

Those panzers DID get to Normandy and the British
army had to fight them around Caen while the
US army broke out to the south and west.

The bombing helped delay them and inflicted losses but it didnt stop
them getting there.

Keith



But once they got the Fuhrer's authorization to move forward they

couldn't ge
very far due to the destruction we imposed on the bridges and rail lines.

Also
free ranging P-47's attacked anything and everything thet moved on the
ground. It was tactical operations at their best. It was all a beautiful
sight. You should have been there.


You continue to make up history, I see. Yes, they *did* get "pretty
far"--reread your Normandy history (oh, that's right, you are allergic to
reading anything about that campaign...); you missed Keith's pointing out
the fighting around Caen? Or are you going to tell us those panzers running
around that area were figments of the troops' imagination?

Brooks



Arthur Kramer