Chapter 522: Britain and the United States are ready to jump into the pit

If we put the battlefield on the Maginot Line on the Franco-French border, we will have the right time, place and people. The only thing we should pay attention to www.biquge.info is that we must deploy a large number of radars on the German-French border to prevent the British and American air forces from sneaking up on our industrial area.

Our specific strategy is like this, wait for the British and American forces to land and give a large number of casualties, and then resist step by step, retreat step by step, lead them to the Maginot Line, and then arrange a huge encirclement in front of the Maginot Line, and annihilate these British and French forces that landed in one fell swoop.

In order not to arouse the suspicion of Britain and the United States, none of the coastal defense divisions arranged on the Atlantic barrier did not move, and we only quietly transferred the four divisions in the Netherlands and Belgium. ”

"My Führer, in addition to the coastal defense division, we also have field troops! It is better for us to transfer 20 more divisions to Normandy, plus the original 8 infantry divisions and 2 armored divisions in Normandy, our strength will reach 500,000 troops. ”

Rommel shook his head and said:

"If we deploy like that, the British and Americans will not land in Normandy, or they will give up the landing, no matter what the situation is, it is not something I don't want to see, this year's 1.8 million British and American troops will not be wiped out for a day, and they will have a blue dream every day.

Therefore, we must annihilate the 2.8 million Anglo-American troops in one fell swoop, and if we want to completely encircle and annihilate them, we must let them land successfully, there is no doubt about this. ”

Because of the easy-going nature of the Führer Rommel, the marshals who attended the meeting also spoke very enthusiastically, and everyone spoke freely.

"My Führer, many of our fortresses in Normandy have not been completed, should we use this time to hurry up their completion."

"Of course you can, it's just that our construction can be put at night, and we should try to camouflage it as much as possible."

Field Marshal Rundstedt was in charge of Normandy, and it was Rundstedt's duty to quickly build the unfinished forts, and Rommel could allocate the building materials and the large-caliber artillery needed for the construction of the forts from the German arsenal in France.

If the Normandy defenses were to be built, the forts of the other defensive sections would also have to be repaired, and of course the other defensive sections were to be built only for cosmetic purposes to deceive the Allied reconnaissance aircraft.

If the Allies choose to land in a period in history, then half a month is enough time for Rundstedt to build some defensive fortresses, and Normandy itself had good anti-landing facilities before.

……

Most of the German deployments were carried out without any changes, and the four Panzer Divisions deployed in Normandy quietly retreated to a distance of thirty kilometers from Normandy, and then used the local forests to cleverly hide.

There is also a reason why Rommel did not place his tanks on the beach, the first beach is not suitable for armored combat, and the other is the countless super-large caliber naval guns of the British and American forces, in order to avoid the naval guns of the British and American forces, Rommel can only arrange the tank cluster thirty kilometers away from the coast.

After Rommel had assigned all the tasks, he immediately flew to the Maginot Line to inspect the Maginot Line on the spot. Marshal Moder, an expert in defensive warfare, had been transferred to serve as commander-in-chief of the Maginot Line.

Moder can't fight an offensive war, but Moder is very good at fighting a defensive war, not to mention that the German army still has a very strong Maginot Line to rely on, and Germany only needs to change the door into the Maginot Line on the German side, and the amount of work is not very large.

Moder started the Maginot Line with the project, because the 1 million second-line soldiers drawn from the German mainland had reached 780,000, and with these soldiers, there were enough manpower to start the reconstruction project.

At the same time, some German divisions stationed in Western European countries also received Rommel's order to begin to change guards with the EU troops, and the transfer of these troops will take more time, and it is conservatively estimated that it can be completed within half a month.

In short, all the work on the Western Front was running efficiently under the command of Rommel, and all the goals were to create a huge encirclement.

……

As early as September 1940, Stalin proposed to Churchill the request to open a second theater in Europe to carry out a strategic flanking attack on Germany, but at that time the United States had not yet entered the war, and Britain was simply unable to organize such a large-scale strategic landing operation. In response to the Soviet Union's suggestion, Britain responded only by sending small forces to carry out sneak attacks and harassment on the European continent.

Seeing that the Soviet Union could not bear it, and that the United States had joined the "Atlantic Charter" organization, the Soviet Union and Britain reached an agreement that Britain and the United States would open a second battlefield in Europe, but Britain and the United States made some reservations about the obligations they undertook in the memorandum.

In March 1941, the Anglo-American London Conference, but at this time the Soviet-German battlefield situation was very serious, the German army had advanced to Stalingrad, and the Soviet Union strongly requested Britain and the United States to launch a landing operation in Europe to contain the German army and reduce the pressure on the Soviet army.

Britain hastily sent an assault force of 20,018 men to land in Diep, France, and suffered a crushing defeat, suffering 18,810 casualties, or 96.5%.

In April 1941, at the Anglo-American Conference in Casablanca, the Soviet Union once again asked Britain and the United States to open a second battlefield, and Britain insisted on postponing the landing on the European continent on the pretext that the failure of the last landing and the complexity and danger of a large-scale amphibious landing must be carried out cautiously.

In fact, Britain wanted to take advantage of the Soviet-German rivalry, and on the other hand, it wanted to use the power of the United States to restore the traditional power of the British Empire in North Africa and southern Europe before the war.

Of course, it was opposed by the United States, the failure of the British American atomic bomb program, and the German atomic bomb was still steadily advancing, and Germany had to be defeated before Germany could build an atomic bomb, so the United States could not wait.

Under strong pressure from Roosevelt, Britain made a compromise and agreed to set up the Anglo-American Special Planning Staff to formulate a landing plan in Europe. British Army Lieutenant General F. Morgan served as Chief of Staff.

Immediately after Morgan took office, he formed the "Kausak", which was the Supreme Staff of the Allied European Expeditionary Force, and the main members were the deputy chief of staff, Brigadier General Ray of the United States Army. Vice Admiral Mountbatten, commander of the British Joint Operations Command, who commanded the sneak attack and harassment operations on the European continent, was also an ex officio member of Barker, the representative of the Army, Navy, Air Force and all branches of the armed forces involved in the landing.

"Kausak" immediately began to draw up a landing plan, first of all, to determine the landing site, and according to the experience and experience of previous landing operations, the landing site must meet the following three conditions:

First, it should be within the radius of the fighter taking off from British airfields, second, the crossing distance should be as short as possible, and third, there should be a large port nearby.

The 480-kilometre stretch of coastline from Vlissingen in the Netherlands to Cherbourg in France is a good place to measure: the Contantine Peninsula, Calais and Normandy.

In further comparison, the narrow terrain of the Constantine Peninsula made it inconvenient to deploy large forces, and was the first to be rejected. Calais and Normandy have their pros and cons, with Calais having the advantage of being the closest to the UK, only 33 kilometres and close to the German mainland. (To be continued.) )