May 1944
(Britain)
The fall of France in June 1940 and the Dunkirk evacuation left Britain and her Commonwealth alone to oppose Germany. When the U.S. entered the war the Allied invasion of mainland Europe, was always the intention of the Allied Forces. Operation Overlord was the code-name for the D-Day landings in Normandy in June 1944, The joint British and U.S. military planned to begin the invasion on the 1st May 1944. Eventually, on the 8th May 1944, the decision was taken to commence D-Day on the 5th June 1944, weather permitting.
On the 15th May 1944, more than 130 Allied political Leaders and military officers met at St. Paul’s School in Hammersmith, in west London. The purpose of the meeting was the final joint briefing for D-Day. In attendance were King George VI, British P.M. Winston Churchill, Gen. Dwight Eisenhower, Gen. Bernard Montgomery, Lt.-Gen. George Patton and LT.-Gen. John Lee.
(Italy)
At the Monte Cassino, the fourth and final battle began at 23:00 hrs on the 11th May 1944. The battle opened with a massive artillery bombardment of 1060 guns on the British Eighth Army Front and 600 guns on the U.S. Fifth Army Front. The two armies consisted of British, American, Polish, New Zealand, South African and French troops. The U.S. Fifth Army had made little progress, but by daylight their French Expeditionary Corps colleagues had achieved their objectives. Attached to the French Corps were 7,800 fighting men of the Morocco forces. They consisted of the 2nd Morocco Infantry Division, the 3rd Algerian Infantry Division and the 4th Morocco Mountain Division. They joined forces, by crossing over mountainous terrain with the 1st Free French Division. By the 15th May 1944 the 2nd Morocco Division had penetrated the German-held Gustav Line. They fanned out across the mountains toward the British Eighth Army to their right. On the Eighth Army Front, east of Cassino, the British crossed the Garigliano River in two places. They were strongly opposed by German defenders. However, on one of the crossings, engineers of the 8th Indian Division succeeded in bridging the river. The 1st Canadian Armoured Brigade was then able to cross the river in readiness for any counter-attack from German tanks.
On the 12th May 1944, in the mountains to the west and above the town of Cassino, the Polish 2nd Corps took the ridge at Monte Calvario (Mount Cavalry). German paratroopers immediately recaptured the area. For the next three days, Polish attacks and German counter-attacks resulted in heavy losses on both sides. On the 17th May 1944, the Polish 2nd Corps launched their second attack on Monte Cassino. From their strongly fortified positions the German defenders attacked the Polish troops with a constant artillery and mortar bombardment. With little natural cover for protection, the fighting was fierce and at times hand-to-hand. With the advance of the Allies, the Germans decided to withdraw along Route 6, to the new defensive positions of the Hitler Line owing to their supply line being threatened. On the 18th May 1944, after linking up with the British, a patrol of Polish troops made it to the heights and raised the Polish flag. The Battle of Monte Cassino had ended with the Allies suffering 55,000 casualties, the Germans 20,000 casualties and over 2,000 civilian deaths.
As a part of the Polish victory at Monte Cassino, a fully grown bear had been recruited into the Polish Military. WOJTEK, a male Syrian brown bear, was adopted as an abandoned cub, by the Polish II Corps army. All his life he only ever experienced human company and when fully grown he was very tame. So tame was he that he would wrestle with the other soldiers and often sleep with them on cold nights. WOJTEK copied the other soldiers by marching alongside on his hind legs. He also learnt to salute when greeted, and carry ammunition in his front legs whilst walking upright. He would mimic the other soldiers by drinking coffee and beer. When the Polish army sailed to Italy, in order for WOJTEK to sail with them, he was enlisted in the Polish army as a private. He took part in the Battle of Monte Cassino by carrying artillery ammunition. The service at Monte Cassino earned him promotion to corporal and had the honour of becoming the official emblem of the company. There is at least one account of a British soldier who recalls seeing a bear carrying ammunition.
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With the Gustav Line penetrated, units of the British Eighth Army advanced inland on the Hitler Line whilst the U.S. Fifth Army advanced along the coast. An initial follow-up assault by the Eighth Army failed and they decided to take time to reorganise. It took several days for the major task of getting 20,000 vehicles and 2,000 tanks through the Gustav Line. On the 23rd May 1944 the Polish 2nd Corps attacked on the right and the 1st Canadian Infantry Division attacked the Hitler Line in the centre. On the 24th May 1944 the Canadians breached the line and poured through the gap. On the 25th May 1944 the Polish broke through the line which then collapsed. The way was clear to advance onto Rome and beyond.
The Battle of Anzio began on the 22nd January 1944 with an Allied amphibious landing. By midnight substantial troops and vehicles had landed on the unopposed beaches and penetrated 3 miles inland. When the Allies landed on the beaches, commander of the U.S. Fifth Army, Lt.-General Mark Clark had wished to swiftly move inland to capitalise on the surprise. However, commander of the U.S. VI Corps, Major-General John Lucas, to repress any counter-attack, preferred to take time to entrench. Whist Lucas was consolidating, Field Marshal Albert Kesselring, the German commander of the Italian Theatre, moved as much of his available forces into a defensive ring around the beach-head. Both ground and weather conditions did not favour either side. Despite sporadic artillery bombardment a state of stalemate was in place until conditions improved. In the meantime Clark had relieved Lucas of his command and replaced him with Major-General Lucian Truscott. On the 23rd May 1944 at 5:45 am the Allies began a new breakout from Anzio. The fighting on the day was intense with both sides suffering huge casualties. Kessselring was convinced when the Allies broke out the intention was to gain access to Route 6. To hold open Route 6, Kesselring ordered the Herman Göring Panzer Division into position. On the 25th May 1944 the U.S. VI Corps was hopeful of getting astride Route 6. On the same day Clark ordered the reluctant Truscott to turn north-west toward Rome. On the 26th May 1944 whilst Truscott’s VI Corps was implementing the change of plan Kesselring had reinforced Route 6. This allowed the German Tenth Army to withdraw from Monte Cassino and head north of Rome which they finally reached on the 30th May 1944. Clark assigned the U.S. II Corps along the coast to join up with Truscott’s VI Corps and advance on Rome. Clark entered and liberated Rome on the 4th June 1944 and he held an impromptu press conference. To ensure the event was an American affair he refused entry into the city for British military personnel. In his bid to attain the glory for himself Clark earned the contempt of both British and American generals. He also extended the European war by many months at the cost of many Allied lives. The Allies suffered 43,000casualties and the Germans suffered over 40,000 casualties during the Battle of Anzio. The irony was that two days after the glory seeking conference Clark’s ”advance” was relegated to the back pages of the press. On the 6th June 1944 the centre stage reporting was focused on the Normandy D-Day Invasion.
(Eastern Front)
In the Ukraine, by early May 1944 the Soviet Union had secured the Dnieper-Carpathian region as the Germans retreated. A significant portion of Soviet troops advanced into the Crimea and recaptured the southwest town of Sevastopol on the 9th May 1944. The whole of the Crimea was under the control of the Soviet army on the 13th May 1944. The remaining Soviet army would confront the Germans during Operation Bagration in June 1944.
(Pacific – Burma)
In August 1943 the Allies created the South East Asia Command (SEAC). American Joseph Stilwell was appointed the deputy supreme Allied commander of SEAC under British Vice-Admiral Mountbatten. He was also an adviser to Chiang Kai-shek, leader of China, and learnt to speak the Chinese language. Chiang Kai-shek was the military leader who also served as the leader of Republic of China. The Burma Campaign of 1944 was conducted along the borders of Burma, China and India. The participants were the British Commonwealth, China and U.S. forces against Imperial Japan and the Indian National Army. 175,000 Chinese attacked the Japanese in northern Burma on the 12th May 1944.
Mitkyina is a town in North Burma and was attacked by the Allies in April 1944. Stilwell built up a special force, known as Merrill’s Marauders, whose role would be similar to that of the British Chindits. The aim was to commence long-range jungle penetration missions behind Japanese lines. During February 1944 the Marauders marched into Burma. In April 1944 Stilwell ordered three Marauder battalions to launch a gruelling 65 mile jungle outflanking movement toward Mitkyina to support the main advance. The Marauders were seriously depleted from both combat losses and disease, having been deployed since February 1944. Having joined up with two Chinese Infantry regiments the Marauders began to suspect Stilwell’s commitment to their welfare, hence his nickname “Vinegar Joe”. Despite their sacrifices, Stilwell seemed unconcerned about their lack of air-dropped supplies. Losses weren’t replaced and rest and rotation were ignored. On the 17th May 1944, Mitkyina airport was attacked by the remaining 1,310 Marauders together with two Chinese infantry regiments. The airfield was very quickly captured as it was only lightly defended. Stilwell’s intelligence reports indicated that the town would be just as lightly defended. The town was garrisoned by well-equipped Japanese troops who were being reinforced. When two regiments of Chinese troops attacked the town they were driven back with heavy losses. By the time additional Chinese troops arrived to attack, Japanese defenders numbered 4,600 fanatical Japanese troops. Not having the manpower to overwhelm Mitkyina’s defenders, the Marauders were forced into a stalemate and a siege. The Marauders were going down with tropical diseases owing to the monsoon season being at its height. When front line commanders and surgeons requested the Marauders be evacuated, Stilwell denied the request. He also ordered any Marauder already evacuated to be sent back to serve.Stilwell was forced to send in thousands of Chinese reinforcements and Mitkyina was captured on the 4th August 1944. He later blamed the length of the siege partly on the British for not responding to his demands to assist. Conversely he had not kept his Allies informed of his forces movements.
(Pacific)
The Admiralty Islands are located north-east of New Guinea and had been under Japanese control since 1942. With the U.S. advance in the region the Admiralty Island Campaign began in February 1944. The United States 1st Cavalry Division attacked the islands and a furious battle ensued. With the aid of aerial and naval bombardments the last Japanese resistance was on the 18th May 1944. The Japanese had 4,000 defenders of whom 3,280 were killed and 75 captured. The remainder presumably evacuated to New Guinea. The Americans had a task force of 35,000 of which 326 men were killed, 1,190 wounded and 4 missing.
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