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Probably the worst terrain in the ETO to attack dug in troops , fighting on those dykesThe Westkappelle landings which my father was part of (operation Cindarella) in 1944 were said to be the bloodiest battle for the Allies in Europe. Ironically it was mostly Canadians again who were landed at Walcheren island.
It was a testing ground.
For equipment, strategy and manpower necessary to arrive, establish a beach head, and prove the ability to hold it.
Nothing more, nothing less.
Dieppe had shown the need for armour on the beach head in an ETO operation was imperative, and without it the toll would be high.
It also showed the need for improved Infantry Landing Craft to allow more troops to de-bus faster and swamp the incoming fire.
As well as improved co-ordinated communications between shore-sea and shore-air.
So many lessons, such little time.
Dunkirk gets my vote. British propaganda says the BEF was saved at Dunkirk. In actuality the 3 BEF army corps were destroyed as combat units.
2,472 out of 2,794 total artillery pieces lost. (I assume this number includes AT and AA guns)
63.879 out of 66,618 total motor vehicles lost.
Huh??? Sorry, Dave, but I don't get it. The British Army did indeed lose a large amount of heavy equipment (it's bloody hard to evacuate heavy equipment) but the keypoint is more than 300,000 troops (of which roughly one-third were French) were successfully evacuated. Think about it - almost one third of a million men in just a few weeks. It was nothing short of miraculous! And, no, you don't win wars by retreating...but it remains one of the pivotal events of WWII. It was a stunning achievement. I guess I'm just a glutton for propaganda!
Huh??? Sorry, Dave, but I don't get it. The British Army did indeed lose a large amount of heavy equipment (it's bloody hard to evacuate heavy equipment) but the keypoint is more than 300,000 troops (of which roughly one-third were French) were successfully evacuated. Think about it - almost one third of a million men in just a few weeks. It was nothing short of miraculous! And, no, you don't win wars by retreating...but it remains one of the pivotal events of WWII. It was a stunning achievement. I guess I'm just a glutton for propaganda!
This kind of testing was not needed, the could use similar British beaches to test it.
I agree, if speaking of Western Allies the Battles of Neth/Belg/France aka Fall Gelb, dwarfed Dieppe as a disaster. Dunkirk itself wasn't an Allied defeat but a salvaging of more than could be expected, once the overall campaign of which it was part had deteriorated to that point. The expected outcome once the British (and part of French) force was hemmed into the Dunkirk bridgebead was loss of almost all their heavy equipment (as happened) *plus* virtually all their men as POW's (which was avoided).Not Dunkirk, but "Fall Gelb" is a strong candidate for worst Allied loss, with the Allied forces outnumbering the Germans. there is no way that a well equipped defender should have been routed like that
.