Invasion Of Normandy Essay

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Pages: 3

There have been many conflicts in human history. Many varying from conflicts that rewrite history or to those that have a minor outcomes. Each conflict varying in scale, from planet wide war to small civil wars. One particular conflict was World War 2, where the outcome of the war would change everyone’s daily life. In each war, there would be many operations to hopefully change the tide of war. Operations can vary from charging into battle without thinking, to strategic advance taking out key defences. The invasion of Normandy was the operation that changed the tide of war in 1944, taking part of France and then being able to push inwards toward Nazi Germany.The Invasion of Normandy was one of the most important battles in World War 2. …show more content…
The liberation began when the French Forces of the Interior (Military structure of the french resistance) staged an uprising against a German garrison approaching the U.S Third Army division that was lead by General George Patton. During the night of the Twenty-fourth of August, General Phillip’s second French Armoured Division made its way into Paris and arrived at Hôtel de Ville shortly before midnight. It was the next morning that the bulk of the second armoured division and the U.S Fourth infantry division entered the city where the commander of the German garrison and the military governor of Paris surrendered to the French resistance and the American forces. Based from these few sentences, it would’ve been nearly impossible for Americans/Canadians involved in D-Day to continue advancing through France without help, so given by that information, liberating the people of france, city by city, gave them a much larger advantage aside from the element of surprise from attacking an area that Hitler believed that the allies would not attack. By liberating the people of Paris and of other cities, the numbers in the allied forces grew rapidly compared to what they would have gotten from reinforcements alone. So in other words it was a strategic way to get more troops without having to spend more money on uniforms, food, and supplies for new