It was not until December 1943, General Dwight D. Eisenhower was appointed Supreme Commander of the Allied Expeditionary Force. (“D-Day and The Normandy Campaign”) Plans continued on how the Allies should …show more content…
(“World War II: D-Day, The Invasion of Normandy”) The US would invade Utah and Omaha, Great Britain would invade Gold and SWORD, while Canada would join Great Britain at SWORD. The best way to distract the Nazis was with a fake invasion at Pas De Calais. Keegan: They would use inflatable tanks and dummy landing craft. (“Why D-Day Was So Important to Allied Victory”) As they finished planning the attack the whole plan was to leave on June 5th, 1944. As the date got closer, they had to postpone the attack for 24 hours due to a weather delay. (“D-Day and The Normandy Campaign”) Even though the weather was a problem, they didn’t have enough resources either to successfully invade Normandy. The Allies went through a strategic shift that moved the invasion to 1944. (“D-Day and The Normandy …show more content…
The invasion began at 12:00 A.M. with 23,400 paratroopers jumping out of C-47 transport aircraft. All of the paratroopers would then land in the Cotentin Peninsula in Normandy. Their main objective was to secure exits for the soldiers on the beaches. (“Why D-Day Was So Important to Allied Victory”) They were successful in their mission and 3,999 casualties. Keegan at 1:00 A.M. the deception at Pas De Calais. According to Imperial War Museums, it is one of the most successful deceptions ever conceived. At 3:00 A.M. the aerial attack began and the bombers started to destroy enemy ground vehicles. At 5:00 A.M. the Naval Attack started as they fired on German defenses at the landing areas. Finally at 6:00 A.M. the beaches of Normandy were invaded. The Nazis had the most casualties. The Nazis in total had 320,000 casualties. 30,000 were killed, 80,000 were wounded, and 210,000 were missing. Next, the Americans had 2,700 casualties, Britain had 1,030, and Canada had 1,200. Omaha beach is the bloodiest beach. The first wave of Allied troops almost all shot. Although there were many casualties, the Allies had won and further invaded Europe. Since D-Day happened, it led to the liberation of France. Keegan (“D-Day - Normandy Invasion, Facts &