Posted by Mick Henshall on 06/06/2021 10:07:00:
Today 77th anniversary of 'D' Day, seems a lot of the media have forgotten,
What sad times we live in
Mick
It's the fate of great events to fade from memory, or even to pass by entirely unless we happen to have studied the era. Why do Brits remember Agincourt but not Castillon? Who remembers Trafalgar Day? Or when Ladysmith was relieved, or who won the Seven Years War, which was the first First World War? How many westerners know of Operation Bagration, which started on June 22nd 1944, and inflicted the greatest defeat in German military history by destroying 28 of the 34 divisions making up Army Group Centre?
Although Overlord and Bagration together sealed the fate of Nazi Germany it's interesting to speculate when exactly they lost WW2. It's distinctly earlier than 1944. In 1942 Alamein was followed almost immediately by Stalingrad after which it was all downhill for National Socialism, but arguably the Nazi failure to take Moscow in 1941 only confirmed the writing on the wall. Failure to knock out Britain in 1940 meant there was no prospect of Nazi victory in the long run because US foreign policy before Pearl Harbour was already dead against the formation of a far-right European super-power. (They weren't keen on far-left superpowers either, or European empires!)
If I had to choose one date to remember from WW2 it would be August 30th 1942. Nothing much happened – no historic event or any obvious change of fortune. But that Sunday was the high-water mark of Nazi expansion. After then no more significant victories, just retreats leading to total collapse, unconditional surrender and the German people discovering they'd supported a criminal regime rather than a just cause. Although no-one noticed at the time, 30/8/1942 was the day WW2 tipped finally in favour of the Allies.
Ten years ago I got chatting to an old chap in my doctor's waiting room. Turned out he'd landed on the Normandy beach on Day 2, and felt cheated throughout his life because all the glory went to the first wave. I was proud to shake his hand. Perhaps we forget too easily that June the 6th was only a beginning, and only one day amongst many that should never be forgotten.
Dave