11,200-ton lead softens up foe before invasion
7,500 Allied planes hammer enemy guns studding the Channel
By Walter Cronkite
London, England (UP) –
Thousands of Allied bombing planes softened up the defenses of Western Europe for the Anglo-American invasion armies last night and early today, dropping more than 11,200 tons of high explosives on the Nazi coastal fortifications in eight and a half hours of furious attack.
The roar of bursting bombs and the motors of attacking fighter planes rolled back across the narrow Straits of Dover incessantly from midnight until 8:00 a.m. (local time) as some 7,500 Allied planes hammered at the network of enemy gun emplacements studding the Channel coast.
By midmorning, the Allied air fleets had swept the skies clear of Nazi planes, and fighters were racing as far as 75 miles inland without drawing a challenge from the battered Luftwaffe.
More than 2,300 U.S. and British heavy bombers spearheaded the great sky fleet, crashing an estimated 7,000 tons or more of bombs on the enemy’s beachhead defenses. Another 4,200 tons were dropped by tactical air forces.
It was the heaviest attack ever hurled against a single objective, and all reports indicated that the mighty barrage had all but beaten the Nazi forts into submission before the ground assault began.
A sky-filling parade of British four-engined heavies, 1,300 strong, opened the mighty assault at 11:30 p.m., thundering out in continuous waves until daybreak. The black-winged raiders struck in 10 separate formations of 100 or more planes each and spewed well over 5,000 tons of high explosives across the Nazi coastal forts.
At dawn, 1,000 U.S. Flying Fortresses and Liberators took up the attack sweeping out over the heads of the thousands of Allied assault troops moving on to the French coast.
Wave upon wave of U.S. and Allied medium bombers and fighter bombers followed the heavies across bombing and machine-gunning the beachheads and communications behind the battle area.
Air opposition over the French interior was described as slight. There was no immediate announcement on Allied plane losses.