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June 3rd, 1944 (SATURDAY)

UNITED KINGDOM: In Operation COVER, the USAAF's Eighth Air Force in England flies two missions, both designated Mission 388. In the first, 219 of 238 B-17s and 120 of 124 B-24s attack coastal defenses in the Pas de Calais, France area, bombing a total of 22 targets without loss. Escort is provided by 91 P-38 Lightnings and 129 P-47 Thunderbolts. In the second raid, 97 of 102 B-17s and 98 of 104 B-24s hit 16 of the same targets hit in the morning without loss. Escort is provided by 102 P-38s, 34 P-47s and 83 P-51 Mustangs; one P-51 is lost.

During the night, 23 B-24s participate in CARPETBAGGER operations in France. 

The USAAF's Ninth Air Force dispatches 250+ B-26 Marauders and A-20 Havocs to bomb airfields, highway bridges, and coastal defence batteries in northern France; 400+ P-38s and P-47s dive-bomb targets in northwestern Europe.

FRANCE: Cherbourg: As bad weather in the Channel worsens, RAF bombers destroy the second of two major wireless intercept stations at Ferme d'Urville.

Tonight, 259 RAF aircraft bomb four gun positions, three in the Pas de Calais and one in Normandy, opening a wave of round-the-clock bombings.

D-Day Countdown The German Perspective Saturday, 3 June, 1944

The weather in France is still nice, although cloudier. Rommel is at his study this morning, going over the reports. The latest weather report says that there is a storm coming in. That is good news for him. Looks like the trip home is on.

Enemy bombers the night before have hit another radio jamming station near Dieppe. Another group had bombed four of his batteries in the Pas de Calais

There are two significant reports, both of them disconcerting. The first is a communications intelligence report. The army operational centers all over England have gone on radio silence. Rommel feels a chill go through him. In the desert, radio silence usually meant that the enemy was getting ready to attack them. But here in western Europe, after all this wait, it could mean anything. For the last few months, a few of these periods of radio silence have come and gone. This one, like the others, probably is not significant. Still, he had better not take any chances - not this late in the game. He writes out a memo to Speidel requesting that the Luftwaffe immediately conduct aerial reconnaissance flights over all British southern ports.

The second message is from General Marcks at LXXXIV Corps. He reports that, they are quite behind in their defensive barrier construction program, due to a lack of supplies, inferior materials, and a shortage of power. Marcks estimates that the defensive construction program in his zone is only about half done.

At La Roche Guyon, administration of the army group continues. Another debate breaks out regarding a battalion of SS geological engineers in the 7th Army Sector. They are excellent at helping with the defensive barriers. Now Himmler wants to transfer them out of the area.

And orders from OKW via OB West inform Rommel that the 19th Luftwaffe Field Division is going to be transferred out of Belgium. It is slated for -Armeegruppe G,- specifically, to Chevallerie's 1st Army.

A number of staff pursue on the phone some mundane subjects such as smone candles and types of smoke- creating acids. Two army generals* promise Rommel that the manufacture by Major Becker's men of these multiple rocket launchers will continue.

Fearful now of a possible low-tide invasion, Rommel puts out an order to continue with his huge offshore barrier construction program, but to now concentrate on low- tide obstacles.. Most areas have finished or are over three-quarters finished with the high tide barriers, and the two mid tide barriers are coming along; but many of the low-tide barriers have not even been started yet, especially in the 7th Army sector. Now that the even lower spring low tides are here, Rommel wants the men to take advantage of this temporary condition and set up as much of the low tide barriers as possible. He writes:

"The enemy has conducted repeated invasion maneuvers at low tide, which means we may have to take such an invasion seriously into account."

Rommel also requests that the Luftwaffe lay some quick minefields in both approach channels around the Isle of Wight.**

Fortified by a forecasted storm coming their way, Rommel is thankful that a possible low tide-good moon Allied landing for the 4 to 7 June period is now probably just an academic question. He and Lang that afternoon drive down to the capital area.

First, they call on von Rundstedt at the suburb of St.- Germain-en-Laye. The old Prussian greets them at his villa, and they walk, accompanied by Blumentritt, together down the hill to the OB West blockhouse headquarters. There, they sit and have tea, and are called upon by -Generalmajor- Hans Cramer. Now refreshed from some leave and mineful of the Fuehrer's instructions, he fills them in completely on what the Allies had shown him shortly before he was repatriated. Of the many weapons and vehicle depots, the FUSAG*** units ready to go in what was probably southeast England…

They all discuss the information. To the old man, this is more confirmation that the invasion will come at Calais. Rommel is not so sure. Surely the Allies had some good motive for showing him all of that stuff. To discourage the Germans into giving up? Hardly. Maybe it was to throw them off the track…

Then they talk about Rommel's trip home. Both of the field marshals agree that it is a good time for it, and that Rommel needs the break.****

Rommel gets ready to leave, and as he does, he looks at them and addresses the possibility of a landing once more. "There's not even going to BE an invasion," he says as he starts walking out. "And if there is, then they won't even get off the beaches!"

He sets off for downtown Paris, intent on buying those birthday shoes for Lucie. He ends up purchasing a beautiful pair of handmade gray suede leather shoes - size 5-1/2, just like she had told him.

--------

Allied intelligence, examining of recent aerial photos, finally begins to suspect that some elements of another unit, probably the veteran 352nd Infantry Division, have relocated northwards along the Calvados coast, east of the Vire Estuary. Intelligence analysts, having heard nothing of this move up until now from any Resistance elements, theorize that these few units, if they are indeed part of the 352nd, have only recently relocated to the coast for a `defensive beach exercise' and probably will withdraw as soon as it is concluded. Still, major commands should be notified

General Bradley, commanding the American troop for that area, will not find out about the `temporarily' reinforced coastline for another 48 hours - just after his flagship puts out to sea on June 5th. The American troops hitting this strip of beach will never know until it is too late that this entire area has been permanently reinforced and fortified by major elements of a veteran infantry division, . or that these seasoned troops have been alerted and are patiently awaiting their arrival.

This coastal strip is designated as Omaha Beach.

-----

It was early evening. The 15th Army's Signal Center is busy intercepting the BBC transmissions. A weary -Oberstleutnant- Meyer is listening to the broadcasts himself tonight, even though he desperately needs some sleep. This is the third night in a row that the first part of that Verlaine poem has been picked up. Meyer had been led to believe that it would only be transmitted once. Could these repetitions indicate some kind of cancellation? Or are the Allies just making sure that the Resistance received the word? Chances are, it is the latter. Maybe it is a sort of `standby' indicator... Why couldn't intelligence work be easy once in a while?

About an hour later, they intercept a chilling message. It reads:

URGENT PRESS ASSOCIATED NYK FLASH --- Eisenhower'S HQ ANNOUNCES ALLIED LANDINGS IN FRANCE."

Meyer fights down the panic rising in his chest. The Allies have already landed?!? How? And more importantly, WHERE? Certainly not in the Calais area. But where is the second Verlaine verse? Have they missed it? If so, he is in deep trouble. At any rate, he had to alert all the major headquarters immediately. But they would certainly ask him where the landing was at. What would he tell them? `I don't know'? That would look really stupid on his part.

Quickly he scans the message traffic for any other signs, but there are none. No radar reports, no sightings, no phone calls, no NOTHING. Everything seems boringly normal.

The intercept simply had to be a ruse. The second part of the Verlaine message had not come yet. Besides, there is absolutely no indication of any trouble anywhere, other than the normal enemy air activity. If there had been a landing somewhere, sure as hell SOMEBODY would have said something. He had to bet on Canaris's information being right. And yet, Berlin had been wrong so many times before. He had no idea how many intelligence reports he had received in the last few months, giving them information that had later proven to be either partially or (more often) completely wrong.

And yet...

He looks down at the message again. He has made up his mind. He will hold off hitting the panic button for now, even though he calls Hoffmann and tells him. Hoffmann reacts by telling him to stay on it, and find out for sure. And that is what he will have to do. So much for his social life--- or for sleep...

=======

* Generals Leeb and Schneider.

** Between the lethargy and the inadequacy of the Luftwaffe at this time (to say nothing of the preparedness of the Allies), -this was very unlikely.

*** First U.S. Army Group - Patton's fictitious command, as part of Operation Fortitude.

****Blumentritt later noted that Rommel seemed "tired and tense...a man who needed to be home for a few days with his family."

Pete Margaritis (156)

NORWAY: U-477 (Type VIIC) Sunk west of Trondheim, in position 63.59N, 01.37E, by depth charges from a Canadian Catalina aircraft (RCAF-Sqdn. 162/T). Although five men were sighted in the water after the attack, there were no survivors. 51 dead (all crew lost) (Alex Gordon)

ITALY: The Allies maintain movement towards Rome. Field Marshal Kesselring abandons Rome and declares it an "Open City".

Operations by the USAAF's Fifteenth Air Force in Italy is drastically curtailed by bad weather. In Yugoslavia, 36 B-24s bomb the waterfront area of Omis and 38 hit the port area and western part of Split. Fighters sent to strafe targets of opportunity in the target areas abandon the mission because of low clouds over the targets.

Anzio: Sgt. Maurice Albert Windham Rogers (b.1919), Wilts Regt., ran through barbed wire and a minefield to take two German positions, continuing to advance until he was killed. (Victoria Cross)

NEW GUINEA: US forces advance against heavy Japanese resistance on Biak.

PACIFIC OCEAN: CINCPAC PRESS RELEASE NO. 431, A single search plane of Fleet Air Wing Two bombed and strafed shipping and shore installations at Truk Atoll at night on June 1 (West Longitude Date). Four one-thousand-pound bombs were dropped over a medium cargo vessel, two of them scoring direct hits and two straddling the vessel, which was believed sunk. The search plane then strafed a number of small cargo vessels, the seaplane base at Dublon and the airstrips at Eten Island. Two of the small vessels were set on fire, fires were started at Dublon Island and Eten Island, and an ammunition dump exploded. In retiring the search plane was pursued by a single enemy plane which did not make an attack. Over the target antiaircraft fire was moderate. Two Liberators of the Eleventh Army Air Force bombed Shimushiru Island in the Kuriles before dawn on June 1. No opposition was encountered. Ventura search planes of Fleet Air Wing Four bombed Paramushiru and Shimushu Island before dawn on June 1. Fires were started. Antiaircraft fire was light and inaccurate. (Denis Peck)

CANADA: HMCS Eastview commissioned. (DS)

U.S.A.: 20th Fighter Headquarters evaluates the P-38. Here. (Daniel Ross)

 

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(1) The 352. ID was not technically a "veteran unit," despite this often being stated. It saw its first action on June 6, 1944. What is true is that its cadre came from the veteran 268. and 321. IDs. But the mass of the 352. ID were untried men. What really set the 352. apart from most of the other German infantry units found in coastal areas is that it was an almost fully equipped Infanterie Division (though short of what would have been considered necessary transport earlier in the war), instead of an immobile, badly equipped "Static" Division. It had better quality men and more firepower than most other coastal divisions, but not substantially more experience. (Marc Rikmenspoel)

I concede, PARTLY. Perhaps the phrase "veteran 352nd
Infantry Division" is a bit misleading. But there were a lot more differences between the 352nd and the other (static) units in the area...

The 352nd, like her sister, the 353rd, was made from the
cadres of two units smashed in Russia. But the cadres
were substantial. You indicate that most of the men in
the 352nd were raw recruits... I'd have to see some proof
of that.

In any event, they were capable, physically well qualified,
and not sick. On the other hand, most of the men in the
static divisions were, in fact:

Old men
Young teenagers
Convalesced or once-wounded soldiers
Men with chronic ailments
Foreigners, like the Russian troops

OK, we agree there.

Unlike almost ALL the infantry divisions, the 352nd as you mentioned was indeed fully mobilized. Again, agreement.

The 352nd was fully-manned, as well. Many of the other
units were not, especially with transfers "East" coming
as often as they did. Some static units only had two regiments, or only two battalions per regiment.

The 352nd was fully-trained. The static divisions had a spastic, on-and-off combat training routine interrupted by work on obstacles, minelaying, and other defensive barrier construction projects.

So, I guess that I am saying the 352nd was a superbly
better division than her counterparts, and if they all were
not veterans, many (even assuming that it is not most) of
her complement were. And remember, even recruits don't
have to be "raw"... They could have seen action some
where else.

Pete Margaritis