On June 6, 1944, allied troops stormed a handful of beaches at Normandy, France, marking the first push towards Germany’s surrender during World War II. It was the beginning of the major invasion of Western Europe by the allied forces. These Western Allied troops consisted of 156,000 troops from the United States, France, the Soviet Union, United Kingdom, and China. This brutal attack is called Dooms Day, otherwise known as Operation Neptune. It will go down in history as the largest seaborne attack in the world. It was a clever, thought-out invasion with both naval and airborne attacks.
It all started in the year1942. Germany invaded the territory of the Soviet Union. In order to combat the Germans, leader of the USSR Joseph Stalin needed
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The Allies wired a fake radio network that would deceive the Germans into thinking they could tap in to their plans of attack. This lead Germany to believe there would be an attack on Norway. The Allies even created a phony militant group that lead the Germans to believe there would be an attack at a place called Calais. The Western Allies also destroyed many German radar stations on the French coast, which confused the Germans and allowed the allied forces to move in safely in this attack. These were ruined in preparations for the landings of the allied troop invasion. To throw the Germans off, they sent out fake paratroopers. Equipped with dummies, these false paratroopers tricked the Germans into believing an airborne attack had …show more content…
Germany had retreated. The victory of the Allies was lead by several different factors, the main reason being that Germany had overcomplicated plans. Other factors include the several successful plans of deception and other mistakes made by Germany. The Germans were unprepared for the size of the invasion, and Germany was too focused of the coastline so they couldn’t interfere with airborne bomber attacks. France’s transportation routes were demolished from the attacks, so it made it difficult for Germany to gain resources and supplies. The ultimate factor of the German loss was indecisiveness and over-complication of plans they couldn’t