81 years ago this morning the British and Americans landed at Normandy.
If you believe @MrNubbz you would assume that the operation was a massive failure since the clownishly buffoonish British Army was responsible for three of the five beaches.
Contra his ignorance the landings were successful and with the Western Allies now on the Continent to his West along with the Soviets pressing in from the East, Hitler's days were numbered. Less than a year later he would crawl into his underground bunker beneath the ruins of Berlin and never return to the surface alive.
I enjoy reading history so your comments are a nice change of pace. When did Mr Nubbz state any such drivel - dig that one up I'll wait. Churchill declared Addressing a joint session of Congress, he warned that the real danger at present was the “dragging-out of the war at enormous expense” because of the risk that the Allies would become “tired or bored or split”—and play into the hands of Germany and Japan. He pushed for an early and massive attack on the “underbelly of the Axis.”
That Italian campaign began on September 3rd 1943 and soon degenerated into what historian David Reynolds has perceptively called “a slogan not a strategy.” As Stalin pointedly put it, the Germans would keep “as many allied Divisions as possible in Italy where no decision could be reached….” Whatever the benefits or pitfalls of the Italian campaign, Churchill stuck with it through thick and thin.(David Reynolds, “Churchill and Allied Grand Strategy in Europe”)
Yet it was Churchill himself that stated to FDR right after Pearl Harbor - Germany 1st. Then sends his boys out into the desert ,that's sticking to the game plan isn't it?
And so, to “speed” things up, the British prime minister and President Roosevelt set a date for a cross-Channel invasion of Normandy, in northern France, for May 1, 1944, regardless of the problems presented by the invasion of Italy, which was underway. It would be carried out by 29 divisions, including a Free French division, if possible.
Churchill and Brooke both tried putting D-Day off again and himself tried to woo Stalin at Tehran Conference. Stalin landed firmly on the side of FDR they both told Churchill Operation Overlord was going forward,if you read as much as you blather you'd know that. The Mediteranean Campaign was using up too many resources(fuel,landing craft,air cover, - American mostly on Winston's "soft under belly" chardade. As one German general stated after the war - next time you invade Italy you might want to start at the top.That whole campaign was a slog, there was like 1200 nautical miles to sail from Southampton to Salerno around France/Spain/Portugal thru the straights of Gibralter and 1/3 of the way of the mediterranean. It was 30 miles across the channel 21 from Dover to the Pas de Calais. Look or have it looked up for you - David Reynolds a British Historian on YT he'll explain it.
When Stalin questioned whether or not “the Prime Minister and the British staffs really believe in Overlord,” Churchill’s bombastic reply was: “It will be our stern duty to hurl across the Channel against the Germans every sinew of our strength,”
ignoring his desire to deploy some of that strength in Italy, the Aegean, and other assorted locales. He wanted to lead the GIs around by the nose
Winston kept insisting on a Mediterannean campaign to secure British Imperial interests instead of Allied strategic objectives.Winston yelled and screamed at IKE right up until OVERLORD was launched. Stalin was tired of Churchill/Brooke wanting to henpeck around the periphery while the Red Army was paying the Butcher's bill from the Wehrmacht onslaught. But Winston was all on board by the afternoon of the 6th all giddy casualties had been turning out much less than either he or Brooke had imagined.
Britain did have some sharp naval officers specially Adml Ramsay who led the planning of Neptune the Amphibeous landings. Along with many US officers brought over from the Pacific where the GIs were Island hoping and landing everyday. Don't confuse him with Montgomery who had 6 months to plan the CAEN operation that he ran into the sand immediately but he was Alan brooke's pet project and therfore protected but not much longer