The Globe At War
This Month in History: July 1944
July, 1944 - Normandy:

Following D-Day the Allied campaign to liberate France is often regarded as
anticlimactic. What is often forgotten however, is that July of 1944 proved an anxious
time for the Allied leadership. By July of 1944, enormous political pressure was
mounting within the western democracies as the Allied military machine had bogged
down in Normandy. Real fears regarding a return to the horrors of World War One style
trench warfare swept through the Allied command. By July 1, 1944, the Allied
beachhead was at only one-fifth the size Overlord's planners had envisioned it would
be nearly one month following D-Day. In addition, Allied strategic planners increasingly
worried the Germans may actually commit their reserves to Normandy. Most
distressingly for Eisenhower, if the Germans did move the Fifteenth Army's striking
power from the Calais region to Normandy then Rommel could pull his panzer divisions
from the frontlines and refit the spent panzers for a massive counterattack.

The Fifteenth Army's disposition carried enormous implications for the Allies. If Hitler
and OKW created the preconditions for creating an armored reserve behind German
lines, by releasing the field capable infantry divisions in Calais, the Germans might have
indefinitely tied down the Allies in Normandy. As evidenced by the limited port capacity
at Cherbourg the feared artificial cap on the Allied army's size in France created by the
tyranny of logistics would allow the Germans to hold the Allies in place until the winter.
If that happened the winter weather would partially vitiate Allied advantages in air
power. In addition, the winter weather would have likely regularly put out of action the
artificial Mulberry harbors off the Normandy beaches. In July of 1944 there were thus
real and immediate time pressures on Eisenhower and his staff. Eisenhower had to
break the stalemate.

Furthermore, the first weeks in July had proved anything but comforting to Allied
commanders as they witnessed the first substantial German infantry redeployments to
the German 7th Army defending Normandy. Rommel was even able to withdraw several
battered panzer divisions for temporary respites, as the rate of advance in the
American sector of the beachhead slowed to little more than a crawl. The VIII and VII
Corps from the American First Army, though capably led by Middleton and Collins
respectively, still only won meager advances in July's first weeks. Middleton's VIII
Corps advanced a mere 12,000 yards from July 3-July 14th in an offensive attaining
nowhere near its objectives. The Americans had sought to move south from the
Cotentin's west coast, with lofty goals of forging a jumping off point for the larger
planned breakout near Coutances.

St. Lo eventually fell to the Americans, but the offensive was instrumental in bringing
to the forefront Allied fears regarding renewed World War One style attritional battles.
Five American divisions sustained 11,000 casualties during the two-week's it took to
secure the city. Meanwhile, the British faced a veritable defensive wall near Caen;
draining British manpower to crisis levels. The British industrial and military effort had
neared its breaking point. Thus, when General Omar Bradley set about planning how to
break through the German defenses just south of St. Lo, the last remaining barrier
between the Allies and the relatively open tank country in Central France, he would
leave almost nothing to chance.




by Steven Douglas Mercatante




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