PLANES BLAST OUT PATHS FOR ASSAULT
Full U.S.-RAF air cover given after 10,000-ton bombing of coast by ‘heavies;’ Luftwaffe is wary
Allied mediums, fighters wreck foe’s communication, even shoot it out with tanks
By Harold Denny
London, England –
The Allied air forces hammered out the paths for yesterday’s invasion blow and held a shield over our forces at sea and ashore with an unprecedented power and skill that kept our losses well below the cost Allied commanders had been prepared to pay.
Beginning with attacks by more than 1,000 British heavy bombers on the French coast Monday midnight and followed at dawn by 1,300 U.S. Flying Fortresses and Liberators on the same targets, Allied planes of all sizes and types shuttled in and out of battle all day and were still at it last night.
About 31,000 Allied airmen flew on 7,500 sorties between Monday midnight and 8:00 a.m. yesterday. As many more sorties were flown over the French coast up to dark last night, and Supreme Allied Headquarters reported 1,000 troop-carrying planes had ferried the greatest airborne force in history into France. The total Allied loss for the day was 20 planes.
Aerial action unceasing
The air assault went on last night. The London sky throbbed with the passage of more great British bomber formations heading toward the continent.
The Royal Air Force struck in strength over France through Tuesday night in support of the ground operations, the Associated Press reported.
All day Tuesday, according to American air officials, our fliers over the invasion area encountered only about 50 Nazi planes and they shot down at least 26 of the foe. U.S. air losses our of more than 9,000 sorties by daylight were 50 planes: 25 bombers and 25 fighters.
In closely coordinated attacks before dawn and all day, U.S. and British airmen blasted German defenses and gun positions to silence them with bombs and rockets and diving machine-gun bursts.
Medium and light bombers and fighter-bombers of the U.S. 9th Air Force and the RAF roared down to treetop level far behind the German frontlines and smashed bridges, disrupted traffic centers, shot motor convoys and railway trains into flaming disorder, wrecked radio stations and made the greatest mess they could of enemy transport and communications.
Our fighters formed so tight an air cover that our advancing sea convoys and assaulting ground troops gained the beaches virtually unhampered by the Luftwaffe.
Fighters do thorough duty
Some fighters even shot it out with German tanks. And in all these operations, including the towing of thousands of parachutists and airborne infantry deep behind the enemy’s lines, our aircraft met astonishingly little opposition. The Luftwaffe hardly appeared, although sometimes there was sharp enemy fire from the ground, including rifle fire by enraged German infantrymen.
Fighter planes of the 8th Air Force shot down three Me 109s in a chase over Paris rooftops, the Associated Press reported.
The first wave of 9th Air Force Marauders, 350 strong, that bombed Nazi beach defenses met a few Me 109s that were soon routed, said a United Press dispatch. Two Marauders were missing from this operation.
In addition to their big dawn attack, the 8th Air Force’s Fortresses and Liberators made three attacks on targets near the French coast during the day.
The failure of the Luftwaffe as yet to fight gratified the Allied commanders, but it did not lull them into any confidence that the Nazi Air Force would not appear later in formidable numbers. The Luftwaffe is believed to have 1,500-2,000 fighters in the west and perhaps 500 bombers, and can still deliver a considerable sting.
Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring and his German air aides face a difficult dilemma. The Allied aerial forces are strong enough to strike simultaneously deep inside Germany and give full support to the invading forces. The Luftwaffe must choose whether to protect the heart of the Reich or try to stem the invasion. It apparently cannot do both at once.
U.S. and British heavy bombers, in planting the aerial barrage ahead of our landing forces, rained more than 10,000 tons of explosives on hundreds of German defensive targets between Monday midnight and 8:00 yesterday morning.
Following up the great work of the 8th Air Force and the RAF’s Bomber Command, the mediums and fighter-bombers of our 9th Air Force had flown more than 2,500 sorties before 1:00 p.m. (local time). Commanders described it as “the most violent 12 hours in the history of aerial warfare.”
By 10:00 last night, the 9th Air Force had increased its total sorties to 4,750. The largest number ever flown before in one day was about 1,600.
In providing its share of air cover, the RAF’s Second Tactical Air Force flew more than 2,000 sorties yesterday.
As part of the all-out operations, additional formations of RAF “heavies” during Monday night bombed the major rail center of Osnabrück in Northwest Germany without loss of a plane.