The final rout of Hitler's armies in Normandy, viewed from the RAF's perspective. A series of official photographs vividly documents the German retreat.
Such an encirclement was not originally anticipated by the Allied high command. On 6 August, Montgomery issued a directive that envisaged expansive operations across the whole area between Normandy and the River Seine, and it was not until the 9th that this strategy was revised. Only then were Allied forces ordered concentrate their efforts on closing the single German escape route. This was to be achieved by a Canadian assault on Falaise and a subsequent advance south to meet the Americans at Argentan. German defences around Argentan were thought to be stronger than those confronting the Canadians along the Caen-Falaise road. Unfortunately these assumptions were mistaken. As a result, while the Americans halted at Argentan, the Canadians were unable to capture Falaise until 16 August.
On the same day, a full-scale German retreat began, following more limited earlier withdrawals. At this point, as it was obviously too late to close the Falaise-Argentan gap, Montgomery sent his forces east, the Canadians towards Trun, the Americans to Chambois. Soon, the German evacuation was restricted to an area of just four miles between these two small towns, from which roads ran north-east towards Vimoutiers and, ultimately, the Seine. By the 17th, tens of thousands of German troops were moving into this area in broad daylight. Every conceivable form of motorised transport was in evidence, along with tanks and other armour, towed artillery and huge numbers of horse-drawn carts.
The only roads available were narrow country lanes that were easily blocked. When blockages occurred, the Germans took to farm tracks or drove straight across the fields. However, between Turn and Chamois they were confronted by a far more formidable obstacle - the narrow but steep-sided River Dives, which was impassable except via bridges at Trun, St Lambert and Chambois, and a ford at Moissy.
Barely more than a stream, the Dives still represented an
insuperable obstacle to many German vehicles
The inevitable
result was colossal traffic jam of German military transport along the few
available approach roads. The Allied air forces were presented with an
incredible target array. By the 18th, the area was also being subjected to
continuous long-range artillery fire from the north. German losses of both
manpower and materiel were of catastrophic proportions. The infamous Falaise ‘Pocket’,
now a tranquil and picturesque expanse of the Normandy countryside, was in
August 1944 the scene of one of the most destructive and horrific military actions in modern
history.
Air operations
over the Falaise Pocket have acquired an almost legendary status within the
broader history of the Normandy campaign, epitomised by Wootton’s famous
painting of rocket-firing Typhoons. But the role of the Allied air forces
merits a level of analysis that extends further than the popular imagery.
Indeed, Falaise provides an example of ‘reverse’ or ‘counter’ interdiction - preventing or limiting an enemy withdrawal from the battle area.
The most westerly of the official photographs; the German vehicles were heading for the Putanges crossing over the Orne |
It was also agreed that retreating German forces should be targeted by the fighter-bombers of Second Tactical Air Force (2 TAF) and the US Ninth Air Force, and their spheres of action were then carefully demarcated. 2 TAF was assigned to the northern area of the Falaise Pocket and the roads extending north-east through Vimoutiers towards the Seine. Ninth Air Force assumed responsibility for the south and west of the Pocket, and for supporting US ground forces during their drive towards Paris.
Night reconnaissance image of Putanges; German columns can be seen crossing the Orne to pass through the Falaise-Argentan gap |
The area of the Falaise-Argentan gap and the Falaise Pocket |
Many German troops went through the gap at Clinchamps |
A wartime enlargement from the same photo, showing lanes literally crammed with German transport |
Northeast of Clinchamps, the German columns entered the Bois de Feuillet |
Period mapping of the Falaise-Argentan gap |
Like
most battles, the great plan to encircle the German forces in Normandy took longer
than was expected to reach its climax, and the targets that we have been
awaiting for nearly a week did not appear until today.
No
better targets have, however, been offered in the course of the war. All mobile
forces in the Argentan area - the majority being from Panzer divisions - were forced
into a narrow funnel by the allied advance, and emerged at CHAMBOIS S.E. of
TRUN. From here they pressed N.E. towards VIMOUTIERS and on to BERNAY. A mass
of M.T. and tanks jammed the roads in this area, and were attacked with every
available A/C in the Group.
As
the roads became blocked with burning vehicles, some drove off into the woods,
some were abandoned where they stood, and some were seen heading back westwards
in order to find a free road. The usual mass of ambulances was reported, and
even white flags were reported from VIMOUTIERS. In all this mass of equipment,
it is possible that some tanks and M.T. were attacked more than once. Even,
however, if the “destroyed” figures only are taken, it is obvious that a very
damaging blow has been struck at the most dangerous portion of the German Army
in France.
18 August witnessed the greatest destruction, as 2 TAF hit convoys heading from the Pocket to Vimoutiers – the area that was soon christened the ‘Shambles’. Subsequently, Allied ground troops closed on Trun and Chambois, forcing an extension of the bomb-line that prevented further air attacks inside the Pocket. 2 TAF’s focus then shifted north-east, to the area between Vimoutiers and the Seine.
Ultimately, some 5,644 destroyed, damaged or abandoned German vehicles were counted in the Shambles, including 358 tanks and self-propelled guns. Operating over a somewhat larger area on the 18th, 83 Group claimed 3,003 mechanised vehicles destroyed or damaged and 164 tanks – the result of some 1,318 sorties, 1,041 of which were armed reconnaissance sorties sent out to find targets of opportunity.
Blazing German vehicles in the Gouffern forest, north of Argentan |
German vehicles under rocket attack from RAF Typhoons in the Falaise Pocket; this photo was taken just outside Tournai sur Dives |
Another Typhoon rocket attack, between Tournai sur Dives and Chambois |
The ford at Moissy littered with wrecked German equipment |
Subsequent operational analysis conducted by 21st Army Group cast doubt on 2 TAF’s claims - at least in so far as they applied to the Shambles - and the findings of their Operational Research Section (ORS) have often been accepted uncritically by historians, their assumption being that the ORS’s perspective was objective and scientific. Quite how objective it really was may be gauged from one statement that the large-scale German withdrawal was ‘enforced by land action’ and by the ultimate, mysterious, omission of an early draft statement that ‘whenever an RP was found to have hit an armoured vehicle, that vehicle was invariably destroyed.’ Furthermore, the ORS study was based on only 3,379 vehicles. It was not until later that 197 Infantry Brigade’s Battlefield Clearance Group established that this represented an underestimate of 2,265.
In the Shambles
area, where the Germans had come under artillery as well as air attack, the ORS
went to great lengths to demonstrate that ground fire had caused more
destruction than air attack – a conclusion that should hardly give cause for
surprise, given that 2 TAF was prevented from attacking the Shambles by the
extension of the bomb-line after 18 August. In any case, conditions in the Shambles
were so utterly chaotic that meaningful, scientific distinction must have been
all but impossible. Indeed, it was found that the vast majority of the vehicles
omitted from the ORS study had been hit neither by artillery shells nor air-to-ground
munitions. They had simply been abandoned.
As we shall
see, when confronted by equally massive German attrition in an area where no
ground fire was involved, the ORS had to change their methodology. The truth is
that the Shambles was the outcome of combined land and air operations that were
mutually reinforcing. Moreover, the physical destruction examined by the ORS
told only part of the story. Other effects such as demoralisation, confusion, lack of
supplies and maintenance facilities lay behind the mass abandonment of vehicles and
equipment.
The road from Trun to Vimoutiers |
Horse-drawn 'ambulances' near Orbec; the abuse of the Red Cross was widely reported by RAF pilots |
Most of all,
the Allied air forces were frequently engaged by mobile light flak that took a
considerable toll. On 18 August, 83 Group lost 17 aircraft while 84 Group lost
eight more – the heaviest losses sustained by 2 TAF on a single day throughout
the Normandy campaign. On the following day, Coningham’s squadrons lost another
15 aircraft.
The majority of
German forces seeking to escape from the Falaise Pocket towards Vimoutiers faced
a protracted climb towards the summit of Montormel after they had crossed the
Dives. Elements of the Polish Armoured Division - part of First Canadian Army - took up position on Montormel on 19 August, blocking the German retreat.
The Poles had
87 Sherman tanks and 2,000 supporting infantry - a formidable force. They were also
accompanied by forward artillery spotters who could call in fire support from
long-range guns located to the north-west. German forces emerging from the
Pocket soon found themselves under heavy fire.
Google Earth shows this location to be south of Vimoutiers |
A German vehicle destroyed between Montormel and Vimoutiers |
Vimoutiers was heavily bombed; at high magnification a German column is clearly visible |
Nevertheless,
the Poles still faced a desperate struggle. Periodically, their lines were
breached, there was intense fighting at very close quarters, and their
logistical situation became increasingly parlous. Direct air support proved
impossible in the absence of a clear bomb-line, and supplies dropped by the RAF
fell into German-held territory. In these circumstances, the artillery spotters
played a critically important role in the defence of Montormel. With artillery
support, the Poles held out until 22 August, when Canadian armoured forces
arrived to relieve them. They inflicted further heavy losses on the Germans but
lost 20 per cent of their strength in the process, and many Germans succeeded
in bypassing their positions to escape north.
9 SS Panzer
Division’s thrust from Vimoutiers towards Trun was substantially thwarted by 84
Group’s Typhoon squadrons. Again, there were difficulties establishing a
bomb-line because of the close proximity of Canadian and Polish troops.
However, on this occasion, a forward air controller - known as a Visual Control
Post (VCP) was on hand to direct the Typhoon attack, which was very successful.
Although published
histories of the Battle of the Falaise Pocket invariably focus on the Shambles,
the rout of the retreating German armies continued right up to the River Seine.
Indeed the area between Vimoutiers and the Seine – 2 TAF’s area of
responsibility – became known as the Chase.
Map of the Chase
Considering the judgements of the ORS regarding the Shambles, the story of the Chase merits closer scrutiny than it has sometimes received, for there was no land battle in this area. The overwhelming majority of German losses were inflicted by air directly (through destruction), indirectly (through the destruction of essential support vehicles) or through psychological effect - the fear or expectation of aerial interdiction.
Again, while the ORS found numerous abandoned tanks, self-propelled guns and armoured vehicles, few German AFVs showed signs of rocket damage, but many supporting soft-skinned vehicles had been shot up by cannon or machine gun fire, which was far more accurate. The loss of transporters, support vehicles and fuel bowsers would have been enough to prevent much of the armour from reaching safety; the prospect of moving even a single tank from Falaise to the Seine without transporters or a significant supporting effort was extremely remote.
Map of the Chase
Considering the judgements of the ORS regarding the Shambles, the story of the Chase merits closer scrutiny than it has sometimes received, for there was no land battle in this area. The overwhelming majority of German losses were inflicted by air directly (through destruction), indirectly (through the destruction of essential support vehicles) or through psychological effect - the fear or expectation of aerial interdiction.
Again, while the ORS found numerous abandoned tanks, self-propelled guns and armoured vehicles, few German AFVs showed signs of rocket damage, but many supporting soft-skinned vehicles had been shot up by cannon or machine gun fire, which was far more accurate. The loss of transporters, support vehicles and fuel bowsers would have been enough to prevent much of the armour from reaching safety; the prospect of moving even a single tank from Falaise to the Seine without transporters or a significant supporting effort was extremely remote.
The Chase: a disabled tank blocks the Vimoutiers-Orbec road near the Bois de Mille, forcing a detour on other vehicles |
This remarkable photo of a Spitfire attacking German vehicles was taken on the road from Livarot to Orbec |
The Germans felled trees to slow the Allied pursuit |
In summary, the
Allies inflicted a crushing defeat on the Germans during the retreat from Normandy,
and it would probably have been optimistic to expect much more. The
Falaise-Argentan gap could have been closed earlier, and this phase of the
Allied envelopment was mismanaged between Montgomery and Bradley, who were clearly
not working well together. Nevertheless, many of those who escaped were not
front-line combat troops, and the Germans still lost an estimated 10,000 killed
and 50,000 taken prisoner, and vast quantities of equipment, including much of
their armour.
Allied air
power played a vital role in operations around the Pocket, both independently
and in combination with ground forces. It did as much as could reasonably have
been anticipated, given the technological limitions of the period. In Normandy,
since D-Day, the two tactical air forces had all too often been thwarted by the
weather or by highly effective German passive air defence measures. However, at
Falaise, the weather provided little protection to the Germans, and they were
compelled to retreat in staggering numbers in broad daylight. It was an unprecedented
opportunity for the RAF and the USAAF, and they took full advantage of it.
Retreat from Falaise Then and Now
German vehicles under attack yet again while approaching the Seine near Rouen |
Allied reconnaissance aircraft observed hundreds of German vehicles crammed on to the bank of the river at Rouen |
The inevitable result: Allied bombing set off an inferno |
The aftermath: a mass of incinerated vehicles and equipment clogged the Seine's southern bank at Rouen |
Retreat from Falaise Then and Now
its taken a long time to find out what happened after falaise now i know great. how they make out targets flying fast at height i cant imagine .
ReplyDeleteHello, i would like to know the sources of those pictures especially the fifth from the top.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your return.
Julien
Original vertical air photos including the photo of Putanges are at the Air Historical Branch (RAF) along with some ground-level shots. All the AHB photos have been copied and are available to the public via the Imperial War Museum Photograph department, London. Low-level oblique air photos came from files in the UK National Archives. The ground photos of the River Dives came from a private collection; the ground photos of Rouen are widely available online.
ReplyDelete