Incredible as it may seem today, detailed plans were drawn up to
recapture the Channel Islands, the most heavily fortified of all the
German-occupied territories, regardless of the potentially
‘severe’ loss of life and the widespread destruction to the
property of the British citizens. Under the codenames Constellation,
Condor, Concertina, and Coverlet, the islands of Jersey, Guernsey and
Alderney were to be attacked in 1943. The operation against Alderney
would be preceded by a bombardment by between 500 and 600 medium/light
bombers and an astonishing forty to fifty squadrons of fighters. The
official papers which have now become available state that: ‘The
islands cannot be taken without causing some civilian casualties. In
the case of Alderney, it is thought that the air bombardment will have
to be on such a scale that all personnel on the island will have to
become casualties.’ A similar number of aircraft would attack
Guernsey while, for the assault upon Jersey, thirty-one squadrons of
heavy bombers and strike aircraft would bombard the island’s east
and west coasts. This would be followed, on D-Day, by parachute and
infantry landings and then a commando assault in the south-west. On
Day 2 of the operation the first of the tanks were to land, with more
armor and infantry to follow on subsequent days. As the German
garrison of the Channel Islands was some 40,000 strong, the islands
would be turned into an enormous battlefield, and a vast killing
ground. The consequences for the Islanders were almost too horrendous
to imagine and the political fallout beyond calculation if the
operations failed in their objectives after the devastation and loss
of British lives that the fighting had caused. Despite all this, it
was thought that such operations would become the ‘second front’
so persistently demanded by Stalin to draw German troops from the
Eastern Front and might also help the Allied forces which were about
to invade Italy – Operation Husky – from North Africa. Equally,
the Channel Islands would be the ideal base for the D-Day invasion of
France scheduled for 1944. There was much then in favor of mounting
the operations against the Channel Islands regardless of the fact that
it meant the death of untold British citizens at the hands of British
troops and the Allied air forces. The Allied Assault Upon Hitler's
Channel Island Fortress is, therefore, the first detailed analysis of
what would have been the most controversial operation ever undertaken
by the British and American armed forces.
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The Planned Operation to Eject the Germans in 1943
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781399084253
Publisert
2024
Utgiver
Independent Publishers Group (Chicago Review Press)
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter