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Operation Torch Delayed – Part 3 By: Dale Cozort
This is going to be a very short
segment. The perfectionist in me wanted to dig deep into the politics of
who would replace Hitler after he was
assassinated. The rest of me found digging through the dark personalities
a chore to be avoided. I finally just decided to assume
that Goering takes over the official reins
of power. He actually exercises some degree of real but limited power by
playing the army against Himmler and
his SS. At the same time, Goering is not a person to be respected by the
power-hungry personalities of the
1944 Germany. That will inevitably start to cause problems because
Hitler set up the Nazi system as a
collection of competing, almost warring, power centers, with himself as
the sole arbitrator of disputes over
resources between those centers. Goering doesn't have the authority to
play that role, and the disputes
between the power centers gradually become more bitter as the struggle
to become the real successor to
Hitler intensified. Until that leadership struggle is resolved, German
policy will not be entirely driven
by rational national interest considerations. The German leadership looks at the
world: When they take a timeout from their infighting and take a
hard-headed, realistic view of what is
going on, the German leadership is scared. They've only had a small
set of tastes of U.S. land power, but each
of those tastes has been a little more bitter than the last. The token
U.S. forces that reluctantly participated in the invasion of Rhodes
fought extremely well compared to the
ones that fought briefly in Southern France a year earlier. The German
leadership can also read production
numbers, and while their intelligence on the US is not that good they
know enough to realize that the flow
of military equipment form the US is becoming an avalanche, threatening
to bury them. The reality of life in June 1944 is that
Germany has too many enemies. The US or the Soviet Union would each,
by themselves, be very close to enough to defeat the Germans. Put the
two together and add in England
along with the various exile forces, and the odds become overwhelming.
The German game plan is fairly
straightforward. In order of priority, the Germans need to: None of those tasks is going to be easy. Splitting their opponents seems
superficially easy to the Germans. After all, the three major allies
have fundamentally different views
of what the postwar world should look like. The Soviets haven't fought most of the
battles and taken most of the casualties over the last three years just
to end up exhausted at their pre-1939
borders. The British and French have not fought
this war to see their empires liquidated and their pre-war Central
and Eastern European allies replaced by
Soviet client states. The US has not made the huge sacrifices
necessary to build a gigantic war machine in order to shore up faltering
colonial empires and replace a Nazi dictatorship with a Communist one as
the dominant power in Europe. The Allies are united by hatred and fear
of the Nazis. They will split at some point. Unfortunately for the
new German leadership, the Allied split
will probably come after Germany is defeated, and that doesn't help
them. The key to this part of the German
strategy is to force the Allies to make decisions that put their
differing goals in sharp conflict as
soon as possible. The German leadership is making a concerted effort to
get inside the heads of Allied
leaders, to figure out what their hopes are, and their fears. Splitting
the Allies is an absolute German
priority—more important than all but the most vital territory and
worth the sacrifice of hundreds of
thousands of troops if necessary. In June of 944, Germany will almost
certainly lose the war is the Allied
coalition holds together. It has a good shot at winning if that
coalition cracks. The Germans have
some ideas on how to crack the coalition. We'll see those ideas later. Keeping the western Allies form
deploying their forces on the continent is a real problem. If the
Germans try to be strong everywhere along the
entire Atlantic and Mediterranean coasts of Europe, the Allies will
have already tied down more divisions
than Germany can spare without lifting a finger. At the same time,
the Allies will be at their most
vulnerable at landing. Also, given Allied air power there is no
guarantee that troops in central reserve will get
to the battle in time to do any good. That 'strong crust' versus 'strong
reserves' argument is still raging unresolved as the Allies land in
Southern France. Southern France has its
own problems for the Germans. They are reasonably sure that the southern invasion is just a
preliminary move in an Allied master plan that also includes an invasion
of Northern France across the English
Channel. That happens to be true, but the northern invasion has fallen
still further behind schedule. It won't
happen until mid-July at the earliest. Leapfrogging the Allies technologically
is an obvious priority, but easier said than done. Picking the right
technologies is a problem, as is getting
the promising technologies to the point where they are more dangerous the Allies than to their
users. Germany is wasting an enormous amount of resources on ideas
that are simply silly, but even
technologies with potential require tough decisions. For example, V2
rockets are a marvelous leapfrog technology, but
they may or may not be more militarily useful than the 20,000 or so additional fighter planes that
Germany could build with the resources those V2's will take. The ME-262
jet fighter is a machine with marvelous
potential to turn the war in the air over Germany around. With Hitler dead, the jet can actually be
used as a fighter, but it isn't that simple. In June 1944, the ME-262
has an average engine life of ten hours,
after which the engine has to be replaced. Pilots have to be retrained,
special longer runways built, and
glitches like the tendency of planes to crash when hard vacuums develop around their control surfaces
and freeze them if the pilot tries too steep a dive have to be overcome. New technology is absolutely necessary
to keeping American war material out of Europe. Germany has lost the U-boat war decisively for now.
New technology is coming in this area, but not for nine or ten months. When the new U-boats do arrive
they will have a major problem. The US is fighting and winning naval wars against two major powers in
two major oceans. By mid-June of 1944, the Japanese navy is being overwhelmed by the sheer number of
ships and planes the US can throw at it. If Germany tries a revival of the U-boat threat, the US
could switch a lot of naval power to the Atlantic, though at the cost of
slowing down its advance in the Pacific. Rationalizing new weapons research is
essential, but almost impossible without a central authority to make
the necessary decisions. The parts of
the Nazi apparatus already were fierce competitors. With Goering nominally in charge, they become more
like independent kingdoms within the Third Reich, negotiating with each other for scarce materials,
and fighting serious and sometimes deadly inter-German feuds. In mid-to-late June of 1944, it is
difficult even to move army divisions from one front to another, as army
commanders increasingly ignore the weak
central authority. Goring (probably rightly) views appointing an overall commander of the German army a
threat to his fragile authority, yet doesn't have the power to enforce his decisions against the wishes
of the commanders of the various fronts. In a multi-front war, that
leaves the Germans dangerously
vulnerable. Course of the war: The Allies storm
ashore in southern France. The German response is sluggish and uncoordinated at the strategic level.
The Germans haven't sorted out their leadership problems yet, and
they have serious doubts about
committing too much of their power to southern France. The huge Allied
force sitting in England, and obviously
poised for an invasion of northern France is a major deterrent to any
massive move south. German forces in southern France are a
frail shadow of the force that pushed the Allies into the sea a year
ago. Active divisions and armor have
been stripped away by urgent needs elsewhere. Those divisions have
been partially replaced by lower-grade
divisions, some of them Italian, and others officially German but in
reality mainly manned by ethnic Poles or
Russians. As in our time-line, Germany is desperate for manpower and is getting it from whatever
sources it can. The Allies quickly consolidate their
beachheads in southern France. Several Italian divisions simply disintegrate, leaving gaping holes in
the Axis defenses. The Italians are tired of war, and with the Italian
overseas empire gone they see little
reason to remain in the war. They are also appalled at the sheer firepower the Allies throw against them. With their defenses starting to fold,
the Germans have a choice of stripping vital divisions from northern
France, or pulling back. In the
unsettled command environment after the assassination of Hitler, that
decision remains unmade long enough that
events start to make it for the Germans. Faced with a choice between being surrounded and
withdrawing, local commanders withdraw. Crucially, the Allies are able
to capture some of the port facilities of
southern France relatively intact. The facilities are already in bad
shape from the German invasion of southern
France in 1943 though, so the Allies still find that they have a tough
logistics situation on their hands. The German withdrawal is handled with
considerable tactical skill, but the Allies control the air, and they
make it difficult for the Germans to
reestablish a coherent defensive line. The French resistance movement
also makes that difficult. Thousands of
men from the Vichy army faded back into the hills and mountains of southern France after the Allies were
pushed out in 1943. Those men added training and firepower to the resistance movement, and made German
control of some areas very fragile. Now they are moving to take complete control of several
mountainous parts
of southern France. Meanwhile, the Allies are very afraid
that the Germans will be able to shift forces south, crush the southern
invasion, then shift back north before
the Allies can launch the invasion of northern France. In the two
weeks after the landing in southern
France, the Allies launch division-sized raids on the coasts of northern
France and Norway, along with only
slightly smaller ones against the German/Italian held island of Crete
and against the Italian coast,
perilously close to Rome itself. The raids have major, but mixed,
results. The raid on Norway provides cover for a Royal Air Force operation that succeeds in sinking a
German pocket battleship that had been a thorn in the side of the
British since early in the war. The raid
on the coast of France is a disaster. It runs head-on into a sudden
once-in-a-century storm, the same one
that shut down the Allied buildup for a few days shortly after D-day
in our time-line. An American division
is essentially destroyed, as the storm capsizes fragile landing craft
and leaves survivors stranded for days
without air cover or hope of rescue and the Germans quickly move in to eliminate pockets of resistance. The disaster is a major blow to US
self-confidence, especially when contrasted with the success of the
mainly Anglo-French invasion of southern
France, and the two mainly Anglo-French raids in the Mediterranean. The French/English raid
on the Italian coast routs demoralized Italian troops and humiliates Mussolini as it spends
several days systematically destroying Italian coastal installations
before going home. The raid on Crete is less of
a walk-over, but the raiders win a hard-earned foothold that Churchill is reluctant to withdraw from
as scheduled. The English and French are growing
somewhat closer together, not out of mutual respect or liking, but out
of a desire to keep from being totally
dominated by their giant partner, the US. The French bring a reasonably large navy, a considerable
merchant marine and a growing army to that tacit alliance. Their role
in the alliance is enhanced by the US
disaster on the coast of France. As the Germans struggle to cope with the
growing Allied threat to southern France, their already shaky command structure is under attack from
within. Himmler has been trying to use his investigation of the death of Hitler as a vehicle to
intimidate the army leadership so that it will stand aside as he
positions himself to replace Goering as Hitler's
successor. Dozens of German officers are arrested. Some of them were actually involved in the plot. Most
weren't Himmler's investigation is heading in
the direction of Field Marshall Rommel, the man in charge of German defenses along the Atlantic Coast
of France. Rommel's superior, von Rundstedt, sees where things are headed. He's not a great
friend of Rommel, but he needs the man's abilities. After the failure of
the US raid, he gambles that any major
invasion of northern France will be delayed by that fiasco, and appoints Rommel to lead a force to
restore the situation in southern France. Part of the idea is that
leading that force will get Rommel out of the
way of Himmler's witch hunt. Himmler then overreaches himself,
detaining and interrogating Rommel. In this time-line, Rommel did
have some contact with the conspirators,
but he had an ambiguous and at most marginal role in the plot to kill Hitler. His arrest while commanding
an active front in a crucial moment in the war is the last straw for
many German officers. They make it clear
that if Goering doesn't stop Himmler, they will. After several tense days where it looks as though a
civil war might break out, Himmler backs down and releases Rommel, but not the bulk of the other
arrested officers. The Field Marshall is able to take command of southern France after a crucial delay of
nearly five days. The German army in southern France has
been disrupted but not completely paralyzed by the fiasco. Tactically it has been handled
competently, managing to retreat relatively intact from a situation
where it could easily have been overwhelmed. At
the same time, even with a trickle of reinforcements the Germans are grossly outnumbered, and their
forces are totally inadequate to establish a coherent line anywhere in
southern France. Opposing them, the
relatively small US contingent is led by Patton, and he is aggressively exploiting any German
weakness to destroy successive German defense lines before they can
really be established. The French and
British are not quite as aggressive, but they are advancing quickly,
and are limited more by logistics than
by German opposition. Patton is attempting to turn the
sideshow to which he was relegated after stepping on too many toes
(different set of circumstances in this
time-line but similar results) into the main event. Giving Patton
nearly 5 days to operate without an
effective strategic-level response can be disastrous. When Rommel
returns, the Germans are well on their
way to losing the southern half of France. Rommel moves quickly to salvage what he
can from the situation. He is allowed to pull two panzer divisions and half a dozen or so fairly
well-equipped infantry divisions out of the reserves for northern
France. He isn't allowed to call on
German forces from the east, because the Soviets are back on the offensive, this time on a more ambitious
scale than anything they've tried since Stalingrad. After a year-and-a-half of grinding
attacks aimed at wearing down the German forces, the Soviets launch an ambitious attack against German army
group Center. Stalin scents weakness in the German political turmoil. The initial results of the
attack tend to reinforce that impression. A section of the German line
that has held almost in place since
mid-1942 suddenly collapses, and the Soviets push easily, almost suspiciously easily, tens of miles into
formerly German-held territory. And that's when I ran out of time. I
have to cut this short to get it in this issue of POD. So, what happens next? How do the political
battles inside Germany play out? What if anything are the Germans up
to on the eastern front? Will the
Germans get their jets into service in numbers large enough to threaten
Allied air superiority? How will the
budding Anglo-French alliance within an alliance fare? Will the loss
of a US division due to the 'storm of
the century' significantly delay the D-Day landings? How will that
disaster play politically during a US
election year? It appears that a classic tank battle is
brewing somewhere in central France. If Patton keeps driving north,
and Rommel counters with his panzers,
two strong-willed commanders will clash on something very close to equal terms. Both will be running on
logistic shoe-strings, as usual. Patton will have outrun most of his
air cover, and Rommel won't have much to
begin with. The German tanks will be more heavily armored, but not as mechanically reliable as the
American ones. In this time-line the US has up-gunned its tanks since getting pushed out of southern
France in mid-1943, so the German edge there is much smaller than in
our time-line. If it happens, this clash
will come down to the quality of the generals and the quality of their
men, with the fate of France in the
balance. Any thoughts on who will win? Actually, I may be really mean and turn that clash into a story,
which would mean that POD people would see it but not people reading this on the web. We'll see. In
any case, this will be continued, and hopefully completed, next issue.
If you are enjoying this scenario, or if you are disappointed with it, please let me know. I always read and enjoy any feedback I can get. Note: Starting next issue I'm planning to start an 'e-mail to
the editor' section. If you do e-mail me, please indicate whether
or not I can use your e-mail in that section.
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Copyright 2000 By Dale R. Cozort