The Dieppe Raid Canada Leads the Way Origins
- Slides: 18
The Dieppe Raid Canada Leads the Way
Origins Allies were not yet prepared for a full invasion of Europe Dieppe Raid was a way to test new techniques and equipment The raid would serve as a reconnaissance mission and a precursor to the Normandy invasion The town of Dieppe was an important port town If the attack could lure out the Luftwaffe, perhaps Allies could inflict serious losses to them and divert them to the Eastern front
The Luftwaffe German Air force Very powerful at the start of the war but eventually could not prevent German defeat Instrumental in German Blitzkrieg tactics
Blitzkrieg Literally means lightning war Blitzkrieg involved an initial bombardment followed by the employment of mobile forces that attacked with speed to take the enemy by surprise The technique evolved out of WWI as a way to avoid the heavy losses of trench warfare
Why Canada? Most Canadian troops had not yet fought in Europe as much of the war for Canada was being fought in Africa Canadian troops were highly esteemed British General Bernard Montgomery selects the 2 nd Canadian Division
The Plan Intended to gauge the possibility of a sea landing attack, to gather intelligence, and to draw the Luftwaffe out Paratroopers would flank the beach while the main forces would seize the town from the main beach. Tanks would provide ground support After poor weather and scaled down RAF involvement, the raid was cancelled on July 7 th 1942
The Plan General Mountbatten began reorganizing the raid for July 11 th under the codename “Operation Jubilee” Mountbatten went ahead with the raid despite a lack of approval from the Joint Chiefs of staff This created a disjointed plan and a lack of involvement from intelligence agencies
The Plan
The Reality Canadian ships were to have disembarked before dawn but delays kept them in port until early daylight. On the way to the raid, a Canadian ship met a German convoy and a battle ensued. Lost element of surprise They were gunned down easily by German machine gunners as Germans had high ground. Geography/Landscape
The Reality Poor communications led commanders to believe that the first wave of troops made it to shore in good shape They sent reinforcements who also became trapped Tanks could not advance on the pebble beach because of a lack of traction
The Aftermath The raid was a disaster In total, 907 Canadian troops died in the nine-hour battle, while 586 were wounded and 1874 were taken prisoner Some historians argue that the raid was a failure but it taught Allied forces what not to do next time
Dieppe Today
Lessons Learned All services must truly work together. Plans must be flexible Sufficient fire power to reduce German defenses was needed Training must be more specialized. Security must be tighter Communication in the war arena must be improved
New Historical Perspective Recently information has been declassified in Britain. This has led to a change in perspective on this event. Real purpose was a “pinch raid” to capture of the German codebreaking machine. Mission failed, but was accomplished a few months later.
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