Operation Plunder

{{Short description|Part of a coordinated set of Rhine crossings during WWII}}

{{redirect-distinguish|Crossing the Rhine|Crossing of the Rhine}}

{{for|other similar events|Crossing of the Rhine (disambiguation)}}

{{More footnotes|date=January 2010}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2018}}

{{Infobox military conflict

|conflict = Operation Plunder

|partof = the Western Allied invasion of Germany in the Western Front of the European theatre of World War II

|image = Crossingtherhine.jpg

|image_size = 300

|caption = U.S. 89th Division crossing the Rhine under fire

|date = {{start and end date|1945|03|23|1945|03|27|df=y}}

|place = Lower Rhine region, Germany

|result = Allied victory

|combatant1 = {{ubl|{{flagcountry|UK}}|{{flagcountry|US|1912}}|{{flagcountry|CAN|1921}}}}

|combatant2 = {{flagcountry|Nazi Germany}}

|commander1 = {{ubl|{{flagicon|UK}} Bernard Montgomery

|{{flagicon|UK}} Miles Dempsey

|{{flagicon|US|1912}} William H. Simpson}}

|commander2 = {{ubl|{{flagicon|Nazi Germany}} Johannes Blaskowitz

|{{flagicon|Nazi Germany}} Alfred Schlemm}}

|units1 = {{ubl|21st Army Group}}

|units2 = {{ubl|Army Group H}}

|strength1 = {{ubl|1,284,712 men|5,481 artillery pieces{{sfn|MacDonald|1973|p=297}}}}

|strength2 = {{ubl|69,000 men|45 tanks}}

|casualties1 = {{ubl|United Kingdom}}

  • 3,968 casualties{{sfn|Ford|2007|p=91}}

{{ubl|United States}}

  • 2,813 casualties{{sfn|Ford|2007|p=91}}

{{ubl|6,781 casualties total}}

|casualties2 = 16,000 captured{{sfn|Ford|2007|p=91}}

|campaignbox = {{Campaignbox Central Europe}}

}}

Operation Plunder was a military operation to cross the Rhine on the night of 23 March 1945, launched by the 21st Army Group under Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery. The crossing of the river was at Rees, Wesel, and south of the river Lippe by the British Second Army under Lieutenant General Miles Dempsey, and the United States Ninth Army under Lieutenant General William H. Simpson.

The Battle of the Rhine was crucial for the Allied advance into Germany, and was planned by Montgomery as a three-army assault, including an airborne assault, a five-thousand-gun artillery barrage, and Anglo-American bombers. Thousands of tons of supplies were brought forward including huge amounts of bridging equipment.{{sfn|Trigg|2020 |p=220 |pp= }}

The First Allied Airborne Army conducted Operation Varsity on the east bank of the Rhine in support of Operation Plunder, consisting of U.S. XVIII Airborne Corps, the British 6th, and the U.S. 17th Airborne Divisions.

Operation Grenade in February by Simpson's Ninth Army and Crerar's Canadians was also expected to prepare the ground.{{sfn|Trigg|2020 | |p=178 |pp= }}

Preparations such as accumulation of supplies, road construction, and the transport of 36 Royal Navy landing craft, were hidden by a massive smoke screen from 16 March. The operation commenced on the night of 23 March 1945. It included the Varsity parachute and glider landings near Wesel, and Operation Archway, by the Special Air Service.

Battle

Four thousand Allied guns fired for four hours during the opening bombardment. British bombers contributed with attacks on Wesel during the day and night of 23 March 1945.

On the night of 23 March, companies E and C of the 17th Armored Engineer Battalion, part of the U.S. 2nd Armored Division, constructed treadway rafts to prepare the crossing of the Rhine about five kilometers south of Wesel. Bridge construction started at 9:45 a.m. and by 4:00 p.m. the first truck crossed the floating pontoon bridge. Over {{convert|1152|ft}} of M2 treadway and 93 pneumatic floats were laid in the six hours and fifteen minute construction project, a record setting for the size of the bridge. It took twenty-five 2{{frac|1|2}} ton GMC CCKW trucks to transport the bridge parts to the construction site, part of the Red Ball Express.[http://www.writecorner.com/they_remember_war_5.asp They Remember War][http://www.facesbeyondthegraves.com/2nd%20armored%20division.html 2nd Armored WW2] facesbeyondthegraves.com

Three Allied formations made the initial assault: the British XII Corps and XXX Corps and the U.S. XVI Corps. The British 79th Armoured Division—under Major General Percy Hobart—had been at the front of the Normandy landings and provided invaluable help in subsequent operations with specially adapted armored vehicles (known as Hobart's Funnies). One "funny" was the LVT-2 "Buffalo" operated by the 4th Royal Tank Regiment, under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Alan Jolly, an armed and armoured amphibious tracked personnel or cargo transporter, which was able to cross soft and flooded ground. These were the vehicles for the spearhead infantry.

The first part of Plunder within the framework of XXX Corp's Operation TurnscrewTim Saunders 2008 "Operation Varsity", p. 61, accessed 10 September 2020. was initiated by the 51st (Highland) Infantry Division, led by the 7th Battalion, Black Watch (Royal Highland Regiment) of 154th Brigade at 21:00 on 23 March, near Rees, followed by the 7th Battalion, Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders (also of 154th Brigade). At 02:00 on 24 March, the 15th (Scottish) Infantry Division landed between Wesel and Rees. At first, there was no opposition, but later they ran into determined resistance from machine-gun nests. On the same day the 51st Division's commander, Major-General Tom Rennie, was killed by mortar fire. The British 1st Commando Brigade entered Wesel.

The U.S. 30th Infantry Division landed south of Wesel. The local resistance had been broken by artillery and air bombardment. Subsequently, the U.S. 79th Infantry Division also landed. American casualties were minimal. German resistance to the British landings continued with some effect, and there were armored counter-attacks. Landings continued, however, including tanks and other heavy equipment. U.S. forces had a bridge across by the evening of 24 March.

Operation Varsity started at 10:00 on 24 March, to disrupt enemy communications. Despite heavy resistance to the airdrops and afterward, the airborne troops made progress and repelled counterattacks. The hard lessons of Operation Market Garden were applied.{{clarification needed|date=October 2022}} In the afternoon, the 15th (Scottish) Division linked up with both airborne divisions.

Fierce German resistance continued around Bienen, north of Rees, where the entire 9th Canadian Infantry Brigade was needed to relieve the Black Watch. The bridgehead was firmly established, however, and Allied advantages in numbers and equipment were applied. By 27 March, the bridgehead was {{convert|35|mi|km}} wide and {{convert|20|mi|km}} deep.

File:Wesel 1945.jpg|The city of Wesel in ruins after Allied bombardment, March 1945

File:British commandos in the shattered outskirts of Wesel.jpg|British Commandos on the outskirts of Wesel

File:8th Royal Scots mortar under fire 24-03-1945.jpg|3-inch mortar of the 8th Royal Scots under enemy fire during the Rhine crossing, 24 March 1945

Aftermath

=Impact on German forces and command=

The Allied operation was opposed by the German 1st Parachute Army, commanded by {{lang|de|General}} Alfred Schlemm, a part of Army Group H. Although this formation was considered to be the most effective German force in the area, it was severely depleted from its previous action in the Battle of the Reichswald. Unable to withstand Allied pressure, the 1st Parachute Army withdrew northeast toward Hamburg and Bremen, leaving a gap between it and the 15th Army in the Ruhr.

Joseph Goebbels was well aware of Plunder's potential impact from the beginning. On 24 March, he began his diary entry with, "The situation in the West has entered an extraordinarily critical, ostensibly almost deadly, phase." He went on to note the crossing of the Rhine on a broad front, and foresaw Allied attempts to encircle the Ruhr industrial heartland.

On 27 March, command of the 1st Parachute Army was passed to {{lang|de|General}} Günther Blumentritt, because Schlemm had been wounded. Blumentritt and his superior, {{lang|de|Generaloberst}} Johannes Blaskowitz, both recognised that the situation was lost. The army's front was incomplete, there were no reserves, weak artillery, no air support and few tanks. Communications were weak, indeed, one corps was never contacted. The reinforcements were so poor that the generals decided against using them, to avoid needless casualties.

Although Blumentritt had strict orders from Supreme Command to hold and fight, from 1 April, he managed a withdrawal with minimal casualties, eventually withdrawing beyond the Dortmund-Ems Canal to the Teutoburg Forest. Within a week of the start of Plunder, the Allies had taken 30,000 prisoners of war north of the Ruhr.

=Winston Churchill=

File:Churchill on the east bank of the Rhine.jpg, General William H. Simpson, Field Marshal Alan Brooke, and Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery on the German-held east bank of the Rhine, 25 March 1945]]

British Prime Minister Winston Churchill was present at Field Marshal Montgomery's headquarters near Venlo on the eve of Plunder. Subsequently, Churchill and Montgomery watched the Varsity air landings on 24 March.

The next day, 25 March, Churchill and Montgomery visited General Dwight D. Eisenhower′s headquarters. After lunch and a briefing, the party went to a sandbagged house overlooking the Rhine and a quiet, undefended stretch of the German-held riverbank. After Eisenhower's departure, Churchill, Montgomery, and a party of U.S. commanders and armed guards took a LCVP landing craft and landed for 30 minutes in enemy territory, without challenge. They next visited the destroyed railway bridge at Wesel, departing when German artillery appeared to target them.

=Military rivalries=

The Plunder crossings in the third week of March were planned as the primary assault across the Rhine, but at the Yalta Conference in early February 1945, it was decided to add another crossing to the south of the Ruhr. The additional crossing was intended to draw off any concentration of forces in opposition to Plunder. Two earlier crossings actually happened.

On 7 March, U.S. troops unexpectedly captured the Ludendorff Bridge as a result of the Battle of Remagen. Within the next 10 days six divisions and 25,000 troops established a bridgehead on the eastern side of the Rhine.

On 22 March, General George S. Patton sent his Third Army across the Rhine, at Nierstein, to form another bridgehead. His superior, General Omar Bradley, released news of this crossing to the press "at a time calculated to take some of the lustre from the news of Montgomery′s crossing".{{sfn|MacDonald|1973|p=273}}

Bradley later remembered that Patton had strongly urged the announcement saying "I want the world to know that Third Army made it before Monty starts across".{{sfn|Saunders|2006|p=15}}

In culture

  • "Crossing the Rhine", Episode 8 of The Lost Evidence, The History Channel, UK, 2004.
  • Heinz Bosch, Wilhelm Haas: Der Krieg am Niederrhein, Kreis Kleve, 1976 (German).
  • "World War II": season 5, episode 8 of Drunk History.

See also

  • https://www.krieg-am-niederrhein.de/en/index.php (full English-language version available)
  • Ludendorff Bridge, the bridge at Remagen

Notes

{{Reflist|20em}}

Bibliography

{{Commons category}}

  • {{cite book |last=Churchill |first=Winston |author-link=Winston Churchill |title=The Second World War |publisher=Cassell |year=1960 |location=London |pages=301–305 }}
  • {{cite book |last=Delaforce |first=Patrick |title=Onslaught on Hitler's Rhine: Operations Plunder and Varsity, March 1945 |publisher=Fonthill Media |year=2015 |location=England |isbn=978-1-78-155441-8}}
  • {{cite book |last=Ford |first=K. |title=The Rhine Crossings 1945 |publisher=Osprey |year=2007 |isbn=978-1-84-603026-0 }}
  • {{cite book |last=MacDonald |first=Charles B |author-link=Charles B. MacDonald |chapter=Chapter XIII The Rhine Crossings in the South |series=United States Army in World War II European Theater of Operations |title=The Last Offensive |publisher=Office of the Chief of Military History, Department of the Army |year=1973 |chapter-url=http://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/USA/USA-E-Last/USA-E-Last-13.html |access-date=9 February 2011 }}
  • {{cite book |last=Moore |first=William |title=Decisive Battles |publisher=Windward |year=1986 |location=England |pages=118–124 |isbn=0-7112-0453-5}}
  • {{cite book |last=Saunders |first=Tim |title=Operation Plunder |publisher=Pen & Sword |series=Battleground Europe |year=2006 |location=Barnsley |isbn=1-84415-221-9 }}
  • {{cite book |author-link = Milton Shulman|last=Shulman |first=Milton |title=Defeat in the West |publisher=Masquerade |year=1995 |location=Chailey |pages=310–311 |isbn=1-872947-03-4}}
  • {{cite book |last=Trigg |first=Jonathan |title= To VE Day Through German Eyes: The Final Defeat of Nazi Germany |accessdate= |edition= |origyear= |year= 2020 |publisher= Amberley Publishing |location= Stroud, Gloucestershire, UK |isbn= 978-1-4456-9944-8 |oclc= |page= |pages= }}

{{Authority control}}

{{Coord missing|Germany}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Plunder, Operation}}

Category:1945 in Germany

Category:Battles of World War II involving Canada

Category:Battles of World War II involving the United States

Category:Land battles of World War II involving the United Kingdom

Category:March 1945 in Europe

Category:Rhine

Category:Western Allied invasion of Germany