EPILOGUE

The significance of Pegasus Bridge




Pegasus  Bridge today  plays only  a minor  role in  the Norman  economy. It  is lightly used, and for local purposes exclusively, because all the  long-distance or heavy commercial traffic  uses the new autoroute  that runs from Le  Havre to Caen to Bayeux. But on June 6,  the bridge recalls its former glory, the  day on which  it  was the  most  important bridge  in  Normandy. The  tourists  and the veterans  come in  increasing numbers  each year  to visit  the museum  and  the Gondree  cafe, the  bridge, the  markers designating  the landing  sites of  the gliders. They are keenly interested in  the operation, and want to know  how the British did it.

There was  no single  key to  the success  of Howard's  coup de  main, or to the success  of the  5th Para  Brigade in  providing relief  just when  it was  most needed. Success in this case truly had many parents. John Howard stands out,  of course, but without  Jim Wallwork, Howard  might well have  come to earth  miles from the bridge,  or even on  the wrong river.  And so it  goes, down the  line. Gale's contribution was  absolutely critical, but  then so was  Poett's. Without the  information  George   Gondree  fed  the   British,  and  without   the  air reconnaissance photographs, D  Company might well  have failed. If  Nigel Taylor had not got his company into Benouville in time, or fought so magnificently once there, all would  have been for  nought. So too  for Sergeant Thornton,  without whose Piat all would have been in  vain. If Jack Bailey had not knocked  out the pillbox, Howard could hardly have taken, much less held, the bridge.

There were, in short, many heroes,  each making a key contribution to  the final success. If any one  of these men -  and in fact many  others - had failed,  the mission as a  whole would have  failed. Rather than  single out individuals  for praise, therefore, it is more appropriate to attempt an analysis of the  factors in the British success.

TRAINING: It would be hard to find any company in the entire history of  warfare that was  better trained  for a  single operation  than D  company was on D-Day. Major Howard had  laid the base  in 1942 and  1943 by getting  his men into  the fittest physical  condition possible,  teaching them  all the  skills of  combat infantry, forcing them to become accustomed to fighting at night, drilling  into them patterns of quick response and  immediate reactions. Then in the spring  of 1944, he put them through the drill of capturing the bridges innumerable  times. When they went into the operation, the men of D Company were far better  trained for the battle that ensued than their opponents were. And their esprit de  corps was as good as that to be found anywhere in the British army.

PLANNING  AND  INTELLIGENCE:   The  quality  of   British  planning,  like   the intelligence  on  which  it  was based,  was  outstanding.  Possibly  no company commander in any invading force has  ever known so much about his  opposition as John Howard knew. On the basis of this intelligence. General Gale came up with a plan  that was  both highly  professional and  brilliant. Poett  added his   own touches to his part of  the plan, as did Howard.  It could not have been  better conceived.

EXECUTION:  The  execution of  the  operation was  somewhat  less than  perfect. Because of a navigation error, one-sixth of Howard's fighting strength never got into the battle.  Howard's emphasis on  having his platoon  commanders lead from the front cost him dearly - in  retrospect it certainly seems a mistake to  have Lieutenants Brotheridge  and Smith  lead their  platoons over  the bridge, or to have  Lieutenant  Wood  lead  his platoon  in  clearing  out  the trenches.  The paratroop  drop  was much  too  scattered, causing  a  delay in  the  arrival of reinforcements  at critical  moments. Coordination  between ground  and air  for strafing and bombing support was sadly lacking. Radio communications were poor.

The things  that went  right were,  obviously, of  more significance.  First and foremost, the achievement of the  glider pilots was crucial, unprecedented,  and magnificent. Second, the way in which D Company recovered from the shock of  the landing and went about its drill exactly as planned was outstanding. Third,  the night-fighting and street-fighting ability of  D Company proved far superior  to that of the enemy. Fourth, although  the paras may have been understrength  when they  arrived, and  a bit  late at  that, they  did get  there in  time and  did outfight the Germans, even though the Germans heavily outnumbered and  outgunned them. Fifth, although Howard lost a majority of his officers and NCOs early  on, he had  the company  so well  trained that  corporals and  privates were able to undertake critical missions on their own intiative.

SURPRISE: Without  surprise, obviously,  there could  have been  no success. Any kind of a warning, even just two  or three minutes before 0016, would have  been sufficient  for the  Germans. Had  Major Schmidt's  garrison been  alert when  D Company  landed,  every man  in  the three  gliders  could have  been  killed by machine-gun fire before any got out. Surprise was complete, both with regard  to method and target.

LUCK: Give me generals who are lucky said Napoleon, and so says every  commander since. Howard and the British had more than their share of good luck. The  best, probably, was  the bomb  that did  not explode  when it  hit the bridge. (One is tempted to think that this was not  just luck; it is at least possible  that the bomb had  been deliberately  sabotaged by  a French  slave labourer  in a German munitions factory.) It certainly was good luck that Thornton's Piat bomb set off the explosions inside the tank near the T junction. And it was wonderfully lucky that Hitler did not release the 21st Panzer Division to attack until after  noon on D-Day.

METHOD: In his May 2  orders to Howard, Poett had  said that the capture of  the bridges would depend on 'surprise, speed,  and dash for success'. In the  event, Howard and  D Company  showed all  three characteristics  in carrying  out their assignment. What did it  all mean? Because the  operation was a success,  we can never know its full significance; only if  it had failed would we know the  real value of Pegasus Bridge.  As it is, any  assessment of the operation's  worth is speculative. But then speculation is the secret vice of every history buff,  and in any case is unavoidable when passing judgements.

Suppose, then,  that Major  Schmidt had  managed to  blow the  bridges. In  that event, even if Howard's men held both sides of both waterways, the easy movement that the  British enjoyed  over the  bridges would  have been impossible. Howard could not  have brought  Fox's platoon  over from  the river  to Benouville, and Thornton would not have  been by the T  junction with his Piat.  The most likely outcome, in  that case,  would have  been a  failure to  hold the  ground in the Benouville-Le Port area, with the  resulting isolation of the 6th  Airborne east of the Orne. Had German tanks come down to the bridge from Benouville, the enemy surely would  have repulsed  the invaders.  In that  case, with  the bridges  in German  hands,  the  6th  Airborne  would  have  been  isolated,  in  a position comparable to that of the 1st Airborne later in the war in Arnhem.

The loss of a single division, even a full-strength, elite division like the 6th Airborne, could by itself hardly have been decisive in a battle that raged  over a sixty-mile front and involved hundreds of thousands of men. But 6th Airborne's mission,  like  the  division itself,  was  special.  Elsenhower and  Montgomery counted on General Gale to hold back the Germans on the left, making him the man most responsible for  preventing the ultimate  catastrophe of panzer  formations loose on the beaches, rolling them up one by one. Gale was able to hold off  the German armour, thanks in critical part to the possession of Pegasus Bridge.

Denying the  use of  the bridges  to the  Germans was  important in  shaping the ensuing campaign. As  Hitler began bringing  armoured divisions from  the Pas de Calais to Normandy, he found it impossible to launch a single,  well-coordinated blow.  There  were two  major  reasons. First,  Allied  air harassment  and  the activities of  the French  Resistance slowed  the movement  to the  battlefield. Second, the only area available  to the Germans to form  up for such a blow  was the area between the Dives and the  Ornc. The natural line of attack would  have been  over Pegasus  Bridge, down  to Ouistreham,  then straight  west along  the beaches. But because the 6th Airborne controlled Pegasus Bridge, such  divisions as the  2nd Panzer,  the 1st  SS Panzer,  and the  famous Panzer  Lehr, had been forced to go around bombed-out Caen, then  enter the battle to the west of  that city. As a consequence, they went  into battle piecemeal and against the  front, not  the  flank, of  the  main British  forces.  In the  seven-week  battle that followed, the Germans attacked again and  again, using up the cream and  much of the bulk of their armoured units in the process.

At a minimum, then,  failure at Pegasus Bridge  would have made D-Day  much more costly to the Allies, and especially to the 6th Airborne Division. At a maximum, failure at Pegasus Bridge might have meant failure for the invasion as a whole.



There was one other matter of significance about Pegasus Bridge that needs to be mentioned. Dwight Eisenhower used to say that no totalitarian dictatorship could ever match the fighting fury of an aroused democracy. That was certainly true in this case. The Germans provided their  men with better weapons than the  British had available; they also put more men into the battle. But with the exception of a handful of fanatic Nazis, none of those wearing German uniforms in and  around Pegasus Bridge (no matter  what country they came  from) wanted to be  there. In the case of D Company  and the 5th Para Brigade,  every man who was there  was a volunteer who  wanted desperately  to be  there. In  addition, the  Germans were badly hampered by the mistrust that prevailed among their high command. Jealousy and suspicion are  common in all  high commands in  war, of course,  but nowhere else did they go so far as  in Nazi Germany. The direct consequence for  Pegasus Bridge was  the holding  back of  21st Panzer  until after  Hitler had  woken, a disastrous delay.

By contrast, the British high command trusted General Gale and allowed him  wide leeway  in meeting  his objectives.  Gale trusted  Poett and  Kindersley.  Poett trusted  Pine  Coffin;  they  all  trusted  John  Howard;  Howard  trusted   his subalterns. In every instance, superiors  left details of operations to  the man on the spot.

The common soldiers of the Third Reich were almost incapable of acting on  their own. Deprived  of their  officers and  NCOs, they  tended to  fade away into the night. Whereas British soldiers - men like Jack Bailey and Wally Parr and  Billy Gray and Wagger Thornton - were eager to seize the initiative, quick to  exploit an opportunity, ready to act on their own if need be.

It is, therefore, possible to claim  that the British won the Battle  of Pegasus Bridge primarily because the  army they sent into  the fray was better  than the enemy army,  and it  was better  precisely because  it represented  a democratic rather than a  totalitarian society. Ultimately,  then, the victory  was one for freedom, won by an army of the free.