The Germans in Normandy by Richard Hargreaves
Author:Richard Hargreaves [Hargreaves, Richard]
Language: eng
Format: azw3
ISBN: 9781781594711
Publisher: Pen & Sword Books
Published: 2006-11-06T00:00:00+00:00
The ordinary German was also impressed, as the Sicherheitsdienst monitors reported from the city of Schwerin:
The destruction cannot be too great; hatred for England is finally finding an outlet yearned for, for so long, a revenge without mercy or compassion. If one action of the Führer ever found an unqualified response, it is this vengeance. The only regret is âthat we cannot get even with the Americansâ.69
In July 1944, the V1 was Germanyâs sole âtrump cardâ. For the first time since the days of Blitz in the winter of 1940 and 1941, the English capital was âin the line of fireâ, Joseph Goebbels celebrated. âTheatres and cinemas are for the most part closed. Life in London has been badly disrupted by our new weapon. We hope that it will be disrupted even more in the future.â70
The problem was that the British had the measure of the Germansâ âtrump cardâ. The majority of Allied fighters could out run the âdoodlebugâ, as the British public nicknamed the flying bomb for its distinctive sound, but shooting the V1 down remained a challenge. The interceptors had barely seven minutes to destroy the missiles over the Channel and southern England before the V1 entered Londonâs twenty-mile deep defensive belt of barrage balloons and anti-aircraft guns. But shoot the V1 down the British did. And in great numbers. In the first month of the flying bomb offensive, 1,240 V1s were destroyed by the defenders. Of the 4,361 flying bombs launched at London and the south-east, barely three in ten reached the target area. The Engländer bore the vengeance stoically. In London, British officials noticed âstrain, weariness, fear and despondencyâ among the capitalâs inhabitants: âMany think these raids worse than the Blitz.â The flying bomb offensive was the main topic of conversation in London for more than a month, but for all the destruction, the Briton saw the V1 for what it was: a nuisance. âThese raids are extremely unpleasant,â the monitors of opinion noted, âbut will make no difference to the outcome of the war.â71
It didnât take long for the mood in Britain to filter back to the German public. Even before June was out, some sections of the populace were becoming disillusioned with the V1. It simply had not lived up to the hype. âPeople expected the retaliation would be sudden and destructive based on earlier propaganda,â the opinion monitors in the Sicherheitsdienst reported; now the newspapers were talking about Störungsfeuer â disruptive fire â not destruction. Still, after months of promises, the ârevenge weaponsâ were about all the public had to believe in. The SD observed: âFaith in the overall ârevenge actionâ is nevertheless undiminished, especially because people are confident that the German leadership has even more âunknown trump cardsâ.â The German people âhave high hopes it will bring about a fundamental change in the course of the war in our favourâ.72
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