Self-Inflicted Wound: Allied Defeat In Crete, May 1941
eBook - ePub

Self-Inflicted Wound: Allied Defeat In Crete, May 1941

  1. 54 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Self-Inflicted Wound: Allied Defeat In Crete, May 1941

About this book

The Germans appeared unstoppable during the early stages of World War II. Inexperienced Allied forces were willing to fight, but the sentiment was the Germans were too powerful. Defeat became a forgone conclusion. To defend at all costs no longer appeared viable. Withdrawal and evacuation seemed almost commonplace in Allied strategy.Great Britain and Germany identified early in the war the strategic importance of the island of Crete for conducting military operations in the Mediterranean. Operationally the British maintained naval supremacy in the Mediterranean, while the German Luftwaffe ruled the skies.The German plan for the occupation of Crete, Operation MERCURY, called for gliders and Hitler's elite paratroops to conduct the largest airborne operation to date. The plan pitted 22, 000 men and 1280 aircraft against an erroneously estimated enemy strength of 5, 000 men. The success of this plan relied upon surprise and the paratroops securing one of the three airfields on the island so reinforcements could be flown in.A reluctant Crete Force Commander set the tone for subordinate commanders' leadership failures. The invasion began the morning of 20 May 1941. The Germans suffered heavy casualties. At the end of the first day of fighting, they were short ammunition, and the Allies maintained control of the airfields. However, the battalion commander defending the airfield at Maleme, lacking communications and situational awareness, was unaware of the success of his unit and that night mistakenly ordered its withdrawal from the airfield. The Germans occupied the airfield in the morning and reinforcements were flown in. The Allies conducted an attack the night of 21 May to retake the airfield, but poor Allied leadership at the Brigade and Division level resulted in failure. Consequently, the Germans were able to mass combat power on the island and defeat the Allies.

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Yes, you can access Self-Inflicted Wound: Allied Defeat In Crete, May 1941 by Major Andrew J. Kostic in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in History & European History. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Publisher
Lucknow Books
Year
2015
eBook ISBN
9781786254139

BIBLIOGRAPHY

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Table of contents

  1. Title page
  2. TABLE OF CONTENTS
  3. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
  4. PREFACE
  5. LIST OF MAPS
  6. A LANDMARK IN HISTORY
  7. OPERATION MERCURY
  8. ALLIED LEADERSHIP FAILURES
  9. GERMAN LEADERSHIP: GENERAL STUDENT
  10. CONCLUSION
  11. BIBLIOGRAPHY