Codenamed Cobra, the Allied breakout from the Normandy Beachhead finally began late in July 1944
after a brief but intense planning stage. In directing Cobra U.S. General Omar Bradley left nothing to
chance; as Cobra's objective was nothing less than breaking out of the bridgehead in Normandy in
which the Allied army's had been bottled up for the better part of two full months. Bradley's plan
was two-tiered; he first sought to breakthrough the German defensive positions near the Norman
town of St. Lo, and then, second, turn loose General Patton's' newly activated Third Army to cut off
the Brittany peninsula from France. After securing his flanks Patton would then race for the Seine
River to the east and then beyond. On the Allies' left flank Montgomery, pursuing his own ambitious
offensive, would mostly maintain the pressure on the German defenses near Caen and deny German
reinforcements from switching across the front to stop Cobra. Ultimately, the armies under
Montgomery would serve as a pivot point for the allies once the German front collapsed under the
Americans assault. If Bradley's plan developed as expected the allies could finally destroy the
German armies in Normandy.

Weeks of planning set up Cobra. The allies stockpiled immense quantities of supplies to guarantee
not only penetrating the German lines, but also to ensure the success envisioned for the
subsequent breakthrough. The Americans prepared a massive aerial and artillery bombardment to
support Cobra, as the American reliance on firepower continued to comprise her primary weapon for
battering through the German defenses. To that end, Bradley amassed approximately 2,500 bombers
and fighter-bombers to hammer German positions sited within a small box totaling just six square
miles of land west of St. Lo, with the bombers set to roll across the front in staggered waves
depositing an aggregate total of 4,000 tons of bombs.

The American VII Corps, led by General Joseph "Lighting Joe" Collins, spearheaded the planned
breakthrough. Collins ordered two infantry divisions to wrench open a hole in the German front, and
then hold open the breach's shoulders as one infantry and two armored divisions punched through
the weakened German defenders. The U.S. infantry would then advance on Coutances, some 15
miles behind the German lines, and the armor would push on to Avranches and beyond. These
assault divisions would be the primary beneficiaries of the supporting firepower raining down upon
only some 5,000 German soldiers holding the front in Cobra's immediate path.

The Germans had built their defensive positions along the bocage's last stronghold, where the
favorable defensive terrain in Normandy began giving way to the more open countryside in central
France; land ideal for allied armies built on mobile warfare. The battered but elite
Panzer Lehr
division would face the brunt of Bradley's assault, and though reinforced with a combat element
from the 275th Division and a regiment from the 5th Parachute Division it was hardly capable of
stopping what Bradley had planned. The
Panzer Lehr, although once one of the most powerful
divisions in the German army, by the end of July was a mere shell of itself after nearly two months
of constant combat. The
Panzer Lehr could only field one-third its authorized strength - all told
about 45 tanks and 3,200 infantry. Supporting the
Panzer Lehr stood the 2nd SS Panzer Division,
with only two companies from the 2nd SS representing the Germans scant armored reserves - hardly
enough to stop the Americans if they broke free of the bocage.




Map Courtesy of: Department of History, United States Military Academy
The Globe At War
July 1944 - The Plan for Breaking Out of the Normandy Beachhead