EasyManua.ls Logo

Microsoft Close Combat - Page 86

Microsoft Close Combat
163 pages
Print Icon
To Next Page IconTo Next Page
To Next Page IconTo Next Page
To Previous Page IconTo Previous Page
To Previous Page IconTo Previous Page
Loading...
Chapter 4 The Normandy Campaign in Close Combat
85
For the Americans, the cost of capturing Saint-Lô and the surrounding
countryside is steep: Nearly 11,000 U.S. troops are killed, wounded, or
missing between July 7 and July 22. However, Bradley’s forces now
have the terrain they need to launch the breakout into the long-sought
war of maneuver against the Third Reich.
Epilogue: Operation Cobra and
the Allied Breakout
While Bradley’s troops are attacking Saint-Lô, the long British assault
on Caen finally comes to an end with the capture of that city on July 8.
The Germans suffer another
loss on July 17: Rommel is
seriously wounded when a
British Royal Air Force
fighter strafes his staff car,
and von Kluge takes over his
command. The next day, the
British launch Operation
Saint-Lô
After providing flanking
support during the assault on
Hill 192, the three regiments
of the 29th turn west toward Saint-Lô. The 116th
and 175th advance on a front astride the ridges
east of the town; by July 17, they fight their way
over Hill 147, clear Martinville, and take up an
advance position near la Madeleine.
For days the Americans pound Saint-Lô and the
surrounding area with air strikes and up to 14,000
artillery rounds a day. On July 18, General Cota
assembles Task Force C—a force consisting of
reconnaissance, tank, tank destroyer, and engi-
neer units—to race down the Saint-Lô–Isigny road
and capture Saint-Lô. The task force rolls at 1500
hours, with infantry units joining along the way. By
1900 hours, after encountering pockets of resis-
tance in what remains of the town, the 29th
Division secures Saint-Lô.
After the battle:
Street scene in
Saint-Lô
Close Combat Operation: German Side
As the German commander, you can choose to
defend Saint-Lô to the last man, in house-to-house
fighting, and hope that reinforcements show up in
time—or at all.
Close Combat Operation: U.S. Side
As the American commander, you have no more
hedgerows to deal with—only blasted buildings,
rubble-filled streets, and a shell-cratered cemetery.
The Germans are holding out in the ruins, waiting
for reserve troops to reinforce them. If you don’t
take Saint-Lô quickly, you may lose it altogether.
“I have the honor to announce
to the Corps Commander that
Task Force C of the 29th
Division secured the city of
Saint-Lô after 43 days of
continual combat from the
beaches to Saint-Lô.”
Gen. Charles Gerhardt, U.S.
29th Infantry Division

Related product manuals