Allied Retaliation |
The Lines Move BackParis was liberated on 25th August, a symbolic day for the free world which raised high hopes of a swift final victory. But that was not to be, as the Germans withdrew into Belgium and the Netherlands with no sign of slackening their resolve. They opened the dykes of the extensive drainage works throughout the Netherlands to cause flooding--to act as an efficient military barrier--while positioning themselves along the Scheldt Estuary to deny Allied shipping use of the port of Antwerp. This ensured that supplies still had to be brought to the front from Normandy, hundreds of miles away. But eventually Antwerp was captured and reopened to become the Allies' main seaport. |
The text on this page has been taken from Courage Remembered, by Kingsley Ward and Major Edwin Gibson.
|
|