Rants and reactions to contemporary politics, art and culture.
Tuesday, July 4, 2017
Normandy Journal: The Pegasus Bridge
General Richard Gale's uniform (photograph by Hallie Cohen)
In one of the films shown at Memorial Pegasus in Ranville, Prince Charles describes D-Day as the largest amphibious landing in
human history. The taking of the Pegasus Bridge was where it all began. If the
allies could secure control of the river crossings they would
be able to ferry supplies to the troops. At Arromanche-les- Bains you can look down the
mulberries prefabricated by the British who created a man-made harbor. Supply side
economics? Like at lot of things that happened on D-Day including the fact that
Rommel was not given the authority to respond immediately to the enemy, the
allies had both good luck and a good deal of bad luck on their side (especially when it came to the elements). Operation Deadstick in which three gliders tied to the back
of aircraft landed near what is now known as Pegasus Bridge was the hinge upon which the whole success of the Normandy
mission depended. As you ride along the roads of Normandy near the invasion
beaches of Omaha, Juno, Utah, Gold and Sword you will see signs like Operation
Overlord, L’Assault and there are monuments to regiments like the Green Howards and one
Stanley Hollis who was the only soldier to receive a Victoria’s Cross for his
bravery on D- Day. What is stunning is how different the world is today. The
British, French and Americans shared an incontrovertible sense of moral
purpose.By the
60’s De Gaulle who made his first return to French soil at Courseulles was
vilified by student revolutionaries, who now looked at the leader of theResistance as a reactionary. And none of the
allied excursions either in the Cold War or afterwards in Viet Nam would come
close to exuding the same integrity as Normandy. The uniform worn by the British General
Richard Gale together with its U.S. Legion of Honor Medal awarded by General
Omar Bradley now has its own glass display case at Memorial Pegasus,
but one can't help lamenting the fact that it's hard to imagine any of our current leaders walking in his shoes.
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