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Re: Luftwaffe aerial recon prior to D-Day
hi ed,
just a quick question, have you stopped posting ebay links for a reason, or are you just to busy.:) |
Re: Luftwaffe aerial recon prior to D-Day
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Re: Luftwaffe aerial recon prior to D-Day
It surprise me that nobody in this thread is talking about checking german documents about what they knew about the preparation for D-Day
Best from Norway Olve Dybvig |
Re: Luftwaffe aerial recon prior to D-Day
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Re: Luftwaffe aerial recon prior to D-Day
Larry: exactly.
Regards, Bruce |
Re: Luftwaffe aerial recon prior to D-Day
Hi John,
I have not been posting eBay links because I have been very busy and was ill for a brief period. Hopefully, I will get back to it soon. Thanks for asking. Ed |
Re: Luftwaffe aerial recon prior to D-Day
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And Ultra is not a german document Best again from Norway Olve |
Re: Luftwaffe aerial recon prior to D-Day
Well, since this thread is about german aerial recon prior to D-day, I suppose the question here is what the germans knew about which allied unit who was based where in england in spring 1944. And how they collected that info. Not how the allied tricked the germans about the landing site. Everybody knows that. And since your books tell little about it, it seems that this topic is not so thorough research as you tell. Probably because historians normally don't goes in detail about such stuff.
And Ultra is not a german document Best again from Norway Olve Then what do you think it is? It's the untranslated and translated verbatim transcript of an encrypted German message intercepted and decrypted by British signals intelligence. As for German knowledge of Allied units in the U.K. in spring 1944, there are loads of documents in the Ic Fremde Heere West/OKH collection (NARA T-78) and Ic Fremde Luftwaffe West/Ob.d.L. collection (NARA T-321). They are quite detailed - but not very accurate - down to infantry/armored division and air group level, but what's the point? There is a big difference between having knowledge of an enemy's order of battle and acting on it. This thread is about D-Day and what the Germans knew about troop buildups and shipping concentrations and what that might say about where the invasion might be expected. All the OB intelligence gave them was partially accurate information on units, over all size, and some details on locations. But they still did not know where or exactly when. |
Re: Luftwaffe aerial recon prior to D-Day
What's the point ?
Ehhhhhhhhhh trying to answer the question that was raised in this thread: Can anyone point me to a source that describes Luftwaffe flights over England just prior to D-Day? Or should we don't bother since the germans lost the war ? And if Ultra is a german document or a british transcript of an encrypted German message, depends probably of whom you ask Olve :-) |
Re: Luftwaffe aerial recon prior to D-Day
Hello Ed
Re your message #16, 21.PzD was released for use on 6.6. at 6:45am and was moving towards British Paras on eastern bank of Orne at 9:00am and 12.SSPzD got its order to concentrate for the move to coast at around 7:00am on 6.6., so they definitely got orders on the D-Day. Juha |
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