GERMAN NEWSREEL, Europa Woche 85 from 10.44 Defense of the SIEGFRIED LINE

Описание к видео GERMAN NEWSREEL, Europa Woche 85 from 10.44 Defense of the SIEGFRIED LINE

🔥PREVIEW ALL YOUTUBE VIDEOS
www.Patreon.com/Military1945
Episode 256

Be sure to give this video a THUMBS UP! Best way to support the channel!
SUBSCRIBE to M1945
   / @m1945  

Europa Woche Nr 85
10.10.1944

- Prof. Martin Moebius visits cactus nurseries
- Tobacco cultivation in Denmark
- Women from Austria knitting for the soldiers
- Norway: fishing on the high seas
- Women doing sports training
- Basketball game
- Typesetting and printing of sheet music
- Concert in an armaments factory
- Fighting in the area of Luneville, France

With the D-Day landings in Normandy on 6 June 1944, war in the West broke out once more.[5] On 24 August 1944, Hitler gave a directive for renewed construction on the Siegfried Line. 20,000 forced labourers and members of the Reichsarbeitsdienst (Reich Labour Service), most of whom were 14 to 16-year-old boys, attempted to re-equip the line for defensive purposes. Local people were also called in to carry out work, mostly building anti-tank ditches.

Even during construction, it was becoming clear that the bunkers could not withstand newly developed armour-piercing weapons. At the same time as the reactivation of the Siegfried Line, small concrete "Tobruks" were built along the borders of the occupied area. Those bunkers were mostly dugouts for single soldiers.

Clashes

In August 1944, the first clashes took place on the Siegfried Line. The section of the line where most fighting took place was the Hürtgenwald (Hürtgen Forest) area in the Eifel, 20 km (12 mi) south-east of Aachen. The Aachen Gap was the logical route into Germany's Rhineland and its main industrial area, so it was where the Germans concentrated their defence.

The Americans committed an estimated 120,000 troops plus reinforcements to the Battle of Hürtgen Forest. The battle in the heavily forested area claimed the lives of 24,000 American soldiers, along with 9,000 so-called non-battle casualties — those evacuated because of fatigue, exposure, accidents and disease. The German death toll is not documented. After the Battle of Hürtgen Forest, the Battle of the Bulge began, a last-ditch attempt by the Germans to reverse the course of the war in the West. The offensive started in the area south of the Hürtgenwald, between Monschau and the Luxembourgish town of Echternach. German loss of life and material was severe and the effort failed. There were serious clashes along other parts of the Siegfried Line and defending soldiers in many bunkers refused to surrender, often fighting to the death. By early 1945, the last Siegfried Line bunkers had fallen at the Saar and Hunsrück.

The British 21st Army Group, which included US formations, also attacked the Siegfried Line. The resulting fighting brought total US losses to approximately 68,000. In addition, the First Army incurred over 50,000 non-battle casualties and the Ninth Army over 20,000. That brought the overall cost of the Siegfried Line Campaign, in US personnel, close to 140,000.

Комментарии

Информация по комментариям в разработке