The alternate history of June 6, 1944 is too terrible to contemplate
There are few days in history that continue to capture the imagination and fascination of Americans the way June 6, 1944 does. Perhaps the day's only close rival is the day President Kennedy was shot.
There is an old preacher story, so old it is a cliche of bad sermons now, that goes like this: An angel awoke who had slept through the first two centuries after Jesus had gone down to earth and ascended back to heaven. The angel went to the Lord and asked, “Where did you go?”
Jesus replied, “I've been down on earth.”
The angel asked, "How did it go?"
Jesus said, "They crucified me."
The angel protested, "You must have had a wide influence."
Jesus said, "I had twelve followers, and one betrayed me to my death."
The angel asked, "What will become of your work?"
Jesus said, "I left it in the hands of my friends."
"And if they fail?" asked the angel.
Jesus said, "I have no other plans."
That punchline, I think, is why D-Day remains so compelling. The specter of defeat on June 6, 1944 was overwhelmingly dreadful. The Allies had no other plans. There was no Plan B in case the landings were repulsed.
There are many "pivot" days in human history, when the course of human events swung in a new direction because of discrete actions. It is hard to find another moment in all history when so much rested on an outcome of one day as rested on the success of the Allies' landings on Normandy. In military history, no other day in American history compares. The only single day that comes to mind for me right now is the day of the Battle of Marathon in 490 BC, when an Athenian army repelled a Persian landing force. The entire future of Western civilization and the idea of democracy itself lay in the balance. And yet even that may day not stand alone as D-Day does because the Persians persisted and the later battles of Plataea and Salamis were probably even more important. So there was no "one day" of paramount importance in the Persian War, even though it was almost certainly the most important war of ancient times.
The Soviets, pushing toward Nazi Germany from the east in 1944, had clamored for years for America and Britain to open a second front against Germany from the west. A second front would compel Germany to draw soldiers and materiel away from the Russian front. Allied claims that operations in North Africa, southern Europe and indeed, the UK-US bombing campaign constituted a second front were scorned by Stalin.
Placating Stalin was one reason the Allies had to invade Germany through France. All the military and political leaders remembered early 1918, when the newly-in-power Soviet government under Lenin had made a separate peace with Imperial Germany. Even though all the Allies had agreed early in WW II that no separate peace agreements would be made, the nag was always there.
Moreover, neither Roosevelt nor Churchill had any desire at all to see all Germany overrun from the east and fall under the hammer and sickle. The only way to prevent that was to place American and British soldiers on the ground inside Germany. Invasion through northern Europe was the only way to do that (Churchill's claim that an invasion from the south, through Europe's "soft underbelly," proved fantastical in rolling up the Italian peninsula. Whatever Europe's underbelly was, it wasn't soft.)
The Allies could afford to succeed by a mere whisker on the Normandy beaches. Indeed, the planned American and British timetable for operations commencing June 7 proved wildly optimistic. But they did succeed, rather handily most places, as it turned out, and that was enough.
But any failure would have been only catastrophic. As in all major military operations, logistics was the central issue. The moon and tide conditions were acceptable on days in May, June and July; in fact, May 19 was seriously discussed as the invasion date for some time. But the Allies' supreme commander, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, postponed the invasion to June 5 because doing so would yield him an additional 100 landing craft, mostly LSTs, used to land tracked and wheeled vehicles directly onto the beach. (Bad weather caused the invasion to be postponed again until June 6.)
A little-known fact is that America was continually shuttling landing craft, both for vehicles and personnel, back and forth from Europe to the Pacific. The availability of landing craft was almost always the key point in setting landing dates for both areas.
A German victory at Normandy would probably have destroyed stocks of American landing craft by two or three years production, maybe more. Not only could there not possibly been another landing even attempted in Europe for a very long time, Pacific operations would have been dramatically slowed. America was set to take the Philippines back from the Japanese beginning in October 1944. The invasions of Iwo Jima and Okinawa, both in the first half of 1945, were to follow. Significant loss of landing craft at Normandy would have thrown that timetable badly off.
Allied failure on the French coast would have meant enormous American and British casualties. Both the 82d and 101st Airborne Divisions would have been entirely destroyed because they could not have been relieved, having dropped inland. All their soldiers would have been killed or captured. The loss of life that defeat on the beaches would have entailed would have degraded the Allies' capability to try again soon almost as much as the loss of landing craft.
The Soviets certainly would not have slacked their offensives had Normandy failed. If anything, they would have pressed all the harder, but would have pressed equally hard for a much larger share of American war production, insisting that they were making better use of it than we were. As they would have been the only dog in the fight, the demands would have been hard for Roosevelt to resist. Not only would all Germany have become communist, so would France, whose communist cells were very active and which would have benefitted greatly from having the Soviet army literally next door. Imagine the Iron Curtain falling at the English Channel. The Soviet bear would have easily swallowed countries like Denmark, The Netherlands and Belgium. Likewise, Greece's postwar communist insurgency would have succeeded. Italy might easily have turned communist also.
European Jews, of course, would have been wiped out. Israel would not exist today. The Soviet Union would have dominated the Middle East and there's no point in even trying to speculate on what the next decades would have held for the Arabs (or Persians, since the Russians had long cast a covetous eye on Iran's year-round warm-water ports).
Roosevelt, of course, would not have been reelected that fall. He certainly would have sacked Eisenhower and Eisenhower's boss, Army Chief of Staff George C. Marshall. (Eisenhower actually would certainly have tendered his resignation. Marshall had survived the post-Pearl Harbor headrolling, but could not have survived failure at Normandy.) There's no point speculating what Republican President Thomas E. Dewey would have done with the office, but it is fair to say he would not have pushed for the creation of the United Nations, which was mainly Roosevelt's brainchild (for good or ill, take your pick), nor would there have been any reason for Stalin to cooperate with its formation, anyway.
Britain's people were incredibly war weary by mid-1944. Success in Normandy emboldened them to see the war to its bitter, bloody end. They remembered all too well the defeat of Dunkirk, when the British army had been evacuated from the French coast at the war's beginning, leaving behind its dead, almost all its vehicles and most of its weapons. Failure at Normandy would have caused Prime Minister Churchill's unemployment faster than Roosevelt's. I have little doubt that some form of British peace party would have gained the Parliamentary majority and the PM's office. Might the Brits have sued Hitler for a separate peace? Maybe. Already strongly tended toward socialism, it's not hard reasonably to imagine that the UK itself would have turned communist had the Soviets dominated all western Europe.
Without Britain (and I'm treading very speculative ground here, I admit), America could not have continued to oppose Hitler, nor have offered any resistance to Soviet dominion of practically all Europe after they had cleaned up the Nazis. We would have continued to make war against Japan, of course. But consider that with sea-land operations slowed greatly by loss of materiel at Normandy, Japan would probably have been bombed into true oblivion; the Pacific War's end would have been greatly postponed at terrible cost of human life - American, Japanese and persons under Japanese occupation, who were dying in 1945 at the rate of 500,000 per month. Whatever Japan's postwar history would have been, it would not have resembled what it actually was.
All these things lay in the hands of fewer than 200,000 American, Canadian and British soldiers stepping onto French soil on one day. It was a burden that we should pray will never rest on human shoulders again.
End note: What of the atom bomb? It was originally envisioned for using against Naxi Germany, but Germany surrendered before the bomb was ready. With a lengthened war in Europe, could the atom bomb have restored US-UK fortunes there? I would argue that an expanded use the A-bomb from the two that actually were used is no victory. However it might have reestablished US power on the continent, such cannot be considered positively by any stretch of the imagination.
Friday, June 6, 2008
The awful stakes of D-Day
Categories: History
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7 comments:
I really enjoy your blog (which is what people say right before they criticize something...) but your paragraph about landing craft really struck me:
"A German victory at Normandy would probably have destroyed stocks of American landing craft by two or three years production, maybe more. "
I have not seen production numbers for landing craft, but if by 1944 we were producing 50+ tanks/day out of one Ford factory I'd be shocked if we couldn't have pretty quickly geared up to product an equivalently higher number of landing craft. (Tanks not being such a big consumable in the Pacific.)
".... Pacific operations would have been dramatically slowed."
Or the reverse, actually, as the PTO and ETO waged internal war over resources, with some Island landings being famously short of landing craft, support aircraft, etc. Please imagine the difference in the PTO if they'd had the high production P51's and the thousands of Liberators.
"America was set to take the Philippines back from the Japanese beginning in October 1944. The invasions of Iwo Jima and Okinawa, both in the first half of 1945, were to follow. Significant loss of landing craft at Normandy would have thrown that timetable badly off."
Possibly. OTOH would that have given time for the practice of island landings to catch up with the reality on the ground? In other words, would a three or six month halt have given our guys enough time to absorb the lessons on Peliu et. al. and avoid the exact same mistakes on later islands?
-AC
You migtht be right about the PTO. OTOH, we might also argue that the emphasis of war production could have shifted even more greatly to the ETO in order to recapture thr initiative as fast as ppssible.
Remember that FDR and Churchill agreed very early in the war that defeating Hitler was of higher priority than beating Japan. Would a debacle at Normandy changed that decsion, with both FDR and Churchill out of office? It might have, or might not.
And these kinds of uncertainties are what made the stakes of D-Day so high.
Thanks for reading, and for the kind words!
Donald,
It could've been even worse.
We start with Stalin's actions in Ukraine in the 1920s. A time when the Bolsheviks were consolidating power, and he was inaugurating extreme socialist measures. The famines of that time cut into the Russian population, and seriously impacted Russian infrastructure.
Bolshevik/Communist incompetence and obstinate adherence to economic policies already shown to be just plain wrong, added to the mess, and made it harder to maintain population, much less expand it.
The Great Patriotic War made matters even worse, as people were taken from the land and the cities to man the lines and work in the factories to produce war material. Were it not for Lend-Lease the Russians may well have run out of equipment, lacking the industrial base needed to keep up production, and the support infrastructure needed to keep it going.
Inadequate food production. Inadequate transportation to get the food to consumers. A distribution system virtually designed to waste food before it could even get to the consumer. The health problems associated with a bad diet, and emotional stress caused by Stalin's security apparatus. All coming together to degrade industrial capacity. Which in turn makes the food supply situation worse, and cuts into war production.
Now add in battlefield casualties and you've got a serious loss of population. The official figures may be 25 million, but it wouldn't surprise me if it was substantially more. Most of those farm workers and industrial workers better used outside the military.
To be blunt about it, the Russian communists badly misused their resources, and paid heavily for it. By the latter half of 1944 Russia's armies were shrinking in terms of man power, and important formations were being withdrawn to combat rebellions and revolts behind the lines.
Which leads us to the post war period of a "D-Day Failed" scenario. A world where the Soviets are on the English Channel, and agitating in the streets of London itself. A Soviet empire that is overextended, in control of only the cities, and facing round after round of American supported rebellions and revolts. A world where, just a few short years after Hitler's defeat, Russian hegemony collapses and Europe undergoes an extended period of chaos and the rue of warlords. A world where Europe becomes an American colony, because only America has the resources to set things right again.
Consider how that would change the American character.ry
To the serious student of WWII, the waging of that war by all sides is replete with errors; tactical and strategic.
On D-Day, on Omaha Beach, the attack nearly gound to a halt. The American invasion force on Omaha was pinned down because it happened that most of a German infantry division (I think it was the 352 PZGrenadier) had filled out much of the defensive positions there. What if the OKW had realized that the invasion at the Pas de Calais was a feint, and had re-deployed their infantry and Panzers earlier to fill out positions on the other invasion beaches?
If the beachhead at Omaha had failed, the beaches on its flanks might have also been in peril.
If, if , if....
But the battle was won; by audacity, tenacity and just plain raw courage by many men, now mostly gone to their final rest.
That the world is not a much worse place than it is today is in no small part to that generation of heroes that gave all they had to make a better future, a future that many never lived to see.
Lest we forget.
-David
The German 352nd division deployed behind Omaha was regular infantry, rather than panzer grenadiers, but it was a veteran formation, unlike most of the rest in Normandy.
The sheer weight of Allied forces, coupled with air and naval supremacy, make it unlikely that the beachhead could have been crushed once ashore. However the breakout could have been much slower and costlier had the German panzer reserves and assets in Calais been committed sooner.
I would question whether European Jews would have been "wiped out" had D-Day failed. The death camp apparatus of Eastern Europe would still have been overrun by the Soviets more-or-less on schedule, though there would have been that many more deaths at camps like Dachau and Buchenwald in the west. While the creation of Israel seems much less likely, it's not impossible that a Soviet influenced Britain might have gone through with it. Stalin toyed with forming a Jewish homeland in Central Asia ( http://www.traveleastrussia.com/jewish.html ), and he might well have found it useful to exploit the Soviet Union's sole status as "Liberator of the Jews" to strengthen Communist ties to the US Jewish community.
Having read many comments concerning the failure of D Day landing it seems that most assume the Soviets advance to the English Channel. This is a major error ( in my humble opinion, of course). Look at the facts - the Normandy campaign accounted for appx 500000 German troops. It destroyed 10 first rate panzer/SS armoured divisions eg Panzer Lehr SS HitlerJugend. If not tied down and annihilated in a war of attrition for several months in Normany these troops would have fought the Soviets to a stalemate in the East. Remember that the greatest offensive the Soviets launched "Operation Bagration" started on 220644. It destroyed the German Army Group centre with the loss of a further 500000 men. Yet still the Germans halted the Soviets on the Vistula in Poland by the end of August 44. With no D Day these crack divisions in the West would have been moved East. Never forget that the force to space ratio was also rapidly improving the German army's ability to defend - the front they had to cover was shrinking rapidly as they were forced back into Eastern Europe. Failure on DDay by the allies does not indicate a defacto advance to the English Channel by an unstoppable Soviet steamroller.
If the Soviets had lost the Battles at Kursk we can guess that Hitler would have taken over the entire globe. Hitler might have had no Eastern Front to worry about by the time of D-Day.
Probably as big, historically as D-Day.
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