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During August 1944 the Falaise pocket (also known as the Chambois pocket, Chambois-Montcormel pocket and Falaise-Chambois pocket) was the area between the four towns of Trun, Argentan, Vimoutiers and Chambois near Falaise in France, in which Allied forces tried to encircle and destroy the German Seventh Army and Fifth Panzer Army which took place in the Battle of Normandy, during World War II.
Prelude With Allied troops having made slow progress in Normandy through most of June and July, the US 12th Army Group under General Omar Bradley started to make rapid progress at the beginning of August, thanks to the success of Operation Cobra. By August 4 the German front facing the 12th Army Group had largely collapsed. A small but fierce German counter-offensive (Operation Lüttich) was launched on August 7 at Mortain. This was a last-ditch attempt at halting the Allied breakthrough by cutting off Patton's Third Army. With the aid of air support and advance warning thanks to Ultra, the Germans had been repelled by the evening, and Bradley had retaken Mortain. The Germans' Mortain counterattack was an unwise move, because it shifted the weight of their forces westward at the very time when they needed to retreat eastward. In the process the Germans had been weakened, and allied commanders Bradley and Montgomery moved to exploit the situation with a plan to encircle the Germans. The initial plan was to cut off the Germans by sending the First Canadian Army, under General Crerar, south through Falaise to meet elements of the American Third Army Patton attacking northwards to Argentan. Realising that the Germans might escape, Montgomery later modified the plan to close the gap between Trun and Chambois 18 km further to the east. South
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Inside the pocket Under the combined pressure of the Americans and French to the south, the British to the west, and the Canadians and Poles to the north, by August 10 the Germans were aware of the danger of encirclement, although Hitler was demanding another counter-attack on Avranches rather than a deliberate withdrawal. On August 15, Hitler replaced Field Marshal Günther von Kluge with Model. Kluge was absent from his headquarters for most of that day. Hitler was later to allege that von Kluge had attempted to surrender his armies to the Allies, but was prevented because Allied plenipotentiaries failed to make contact. Kluge's version of events (supported by other German officers) was that his car was knocked out by Allied fighter-bombers, and he had then been pinned down until nightfall by Allied artillery fire. No Allied account makes any mention of an offer of surrender or of any contact with von Kluge. (Von Kluge was shortly to take his own life.) The following day, with the remaining 150,000 troops of the German Seventh Army and Fifth Panzer Army almost encircled, Hitler finally ordered a general withdrawal of troops towards the Seine River. On the field the retreat had effectively been underway since the 14th, in an attempt to save what remained of the German armored divisions. The German infantry, spread out over the bocage without support, became increasingly disordered as the troops tried to reach the narrow Falaise Gap and safety. For most of the Normandy campaign, Allied fighter-bombers of the RAF Second Tactical Air Force and USAAF Ninth Air Force had controlled the skies over the battlefield, but the Germans had suffered few actual casualties since they occupied dispersed and camouflaged defensive positions and moved at night only. From the Mortain counter-offensive on August 7, they had been compelled to move by daylight, and losses had increased. Now they were compressed into a narrow pocket and attempting to flee by day, and the Allied fighter-bombers and artillery caused havoc. Eventually, the pall of smoke from burning vehicles prevented the Allied aircraft from finding further targets. The German retreat turned into a desperate flight along what became known to the Germans as "the death road" (Todesgang) between the villages of Chambois, Saint Lambert, Trun and Tournai-sur-Dives. Late on August 21, after French priest Abbé Launay pleaded with the German field commander, the remaining German troops in the pocket were ordered to surrender. The aftermath Although perhaps 100,000 German troops succeeded in escaping the allies due to the delay in closing the gap, they left behind 50,000 prisoners, over 10,000 dead, and the road practically impassable due to destroyed vehicles (including 500 tanks) and bodies. Among those not captured were one army commander, four corps commanders and 14 division commanders, who would escape the pocket. The Canadians also suffered heavy losses, with over 18,000 dead or wounded. The failure to capture greater numbers of German troops was questioned by some commanders and postwar writers. The formation and reduction of the pocket was a great Allied success; there was however a sense, even as the pocket closed, that the prisoner haul could have been more. The US forces pushing northward were halted due to an inter-Army boundary line. Bradley did not request that the boundary be moved (not an uncommon procedure) nor did Montgomery suggest it. Although there was a legitimate need to avoid friendly-fire incidents, and fast moving units might have fallen victim to friendly fire if link-ups were not carefully coordinated, a boundary change would not necessarily have led to fratricide. Bradley also stated that he preferred a strong force able to hold in place rather than a weak one, over-extended in an attempt to seal the pocket. However, his eastward attack by XV Corps even before the pocket was closed belies this position. With strong personalities on both sides of the question the controversy was quite heated, especially postwar as competing memoirs were published. Falaise Pocket in Pop Culture In the PC game Company of Heroes, the final mission involves closing the Falaise Pocket by controlling 4 bridges to deny German supply reinforcement. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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