The Secretary,
Chiefs of Staff Committee,
Offices of the War Cabinet.
15th July, 1943.
1. In my original Directive (C.O.S. (43) 215 (O))
I was charged with the duty of preparing a plan for a full scale
assault against the Continent in 1944 as early as possible.
2. This part of my Directive was subsequently amplified
(see C.O.S. (43) 113th Meeting (O), Item 4), in that I was ordered
to submit an outline plan for an assault, with certain specified
forces, on a target date the 1st May, 1944, to secure a lodgement
on the Continent from which further offensive operations can be
carried out. It was indicated to me, in the course of this amplification,
that the lodgement area should include ports that, suitably developed,
could be used by ocean-going ships for the build-up of the initial
assault forces from the United Kingdom, and for their further build-up
with additional divisions and supporting units that might be shipped
from the United States or elsewhere.
3. I have the honour now to report that, in my opinion,
it is possible to under-take the operation described, on or about
the target date named, with the sea, land and air forces specified,
given a certain set of circumstances in existence at that time.
4. These governing circumstances are partly within
our direct control and partly without. Those within our control
relate first to the problem of beach maintenance, and secondly to
the supply of shipping, naval landing craft and transport aircraft.
Wherever we may attempt to land, and however many ports we capture,
we cannot escape the fact that we shall be forced to main-tain a
high proportion of our forces over the beaches for the first two
or three months while port facilities are being restored; and that,
in view of the vari-ability of the weather in the Channel, this
will not be feasible unless we are able rapidly to improvise sheltered
anchorages off the beaches. New methods of overcoming this problem
are now being examined. There is no reason to suppose that these
methods will be ineffective, but I feel it my duty to point out
that this operation is not to be contemplated unless this problem
of pro-longed cross-beach maintenance and the provision of artificial
anchorages shall have been solved.
5. As regards the supply of shipping, naval landing
craft and transport air-craft, increased resources in these would
permit of the elaboration of alterna-tive plans designed to meet
more than one set of extraneous conditions, whereas the state of
provision herein taken into account dictates the adoption of one
course only, or none at all. In proportion as additional shipping,
land-ing craft and transport aircraft can be made available, so
the chances of suc-cess in the operation will be increased. It seems
feasible to contemplate addi-tions as a result either of stepped-up
production, of strategical re-allotment or, in the last resort,
of postponement of the date of assault.
6. I have come to the conclusion that, in view of
the limitations in resources imposed by my directives, we may be
assured of a reasonable chance of success on the 1st May, 1944,
only if we concentrate our efforts on an assault across the Norman
beaches about Bayeux.
7. As regards circumstances that we can control only
indirectly, it is, in my opinion, necessary to stipulate that the
state of affairs existing at the time, both on land in France and
in the air above it, shall be such as to render the assault as little
hazardous as may be so far as it is humanly possible to calcu-late.
The essential discrepancy in value between the enemy's troops, highly
organised, armed and battle-trained, who await us in their much
vaunted impregnable defences, and our troops, who must of necessity
launch their assault at the end of a cross-Channel voyage with all
its attendant risks, must be reduced to the narrowest possible margin.
Though much can be done to this end by the means available and likely
to become available to us in the United Kingdom to influence these
factors, we are largely dependent upon events that will take place
on other war fronts, principally on the Russian front, between now
and the date of the assault.
8. I therefore suggest to the Chiefs of Staff that
it is necessary, if my plan be approved, to adopt the outlook that
Operation "Overlord" is even now in progress, and to take
all possible steps to see that all agencies that can be brought
to bear are, from now on, co-ordinated in their action as herein
below described, so as to bring about the state of affairs that
we would have exist on the chosen day of assault.
9. Finally, I venture to draw attention to the danger
of making direct com-parisons between operation "Husky"
(1) and operation "Overlord."
No doubt the experience now being gained in the Mediterranean will
prove invaluable when the detailed planning stage for "Overlord"
is reached, but viewed as a whole the two operations could hardly
be more dissimilar. In "Husky," the bases of an extended
continental coastline were used for a converging assault against
an island, whereas in "Overlord" it is necessary to launch
an assault from an island against an extended continental mainland
coastline. Further-more, while in the Mediterranean the tidal range
is negligible and the weather reasonably reliable, in the English
Channel the tidal range is considerable and the weather capricious.
10. Attached hereto are papers setting forth the plan
that I recommend for adoption.
F.E. MORGAN, Lieutenant-General,
Chief of Staff to the Supreme Commander (Designate).
H.Q., C.O.S.S.A.C.,
Norfolk House,
St. James's Square, S.W.1.
Het door luitenant generaal Morgan aanbevolen plan
Object.
1. The object of Operation "Overlord" is
to mount and carry out an opera-tion, with forces and equipment
established in the United Kingdom, and with target date the 1st
May, 1944, to secure a lodgement on the Continent from which further
offensive operations can be developed. The lodgement area must contain
sufficient port facilities to maintain a force of some twenty-six
to thirty divisions, and enable that force to be augmented by follow-up
ship-ments from the United States or elsewhere of additional divisions
and sup-porting units at the rate of three to five divisions per
month.
Selection of a Lodgement Area.
2. In order to provide sufficient port facilities
to maintain these large forces, it will be necessary to select a
lodgement area which includes a group of major ports. We must plan
on the assumption that ports, on capture, will be seri-ously damaged
and probably blocked. It will take some time to restore nor-mal
facilities. We shall thus be forced to rely on maintenance over
beaches for an extended period.
3. A study of the beaches on the Belgian and Channel
coasts shows that the beaches with the highest capacity for passing
vehicles and stores inland are those in the Pas de Calais and the
Caen-Cotentin area (2). Of these, the
Caen beaches are the most favourable, as they are, unlike the others,
sheltered from the prevailing winds. Naval and air considerations
point to the area between the Pas de Calais and the Cotentin as
the most suitable for the initial landing, air factors of optimum
air support and rapid provision of airfields indicating the Pas
de Calais as the best choice, with Caen as an acceptable alternative.
4. Thus, taking beach capacity and air and naval considerations
together, it appears that either the Pas de Calais area or the Caen-Cotentin
area is the most suitable for the initial main landing.
5. As the area for the initial landing the Pas de
Calais has many obvious advantages such that good air support and
quick turn round for our shipping can be achieved. On the other
hand, it is a focal point of the enemy fighters disposed for defense,
and maximum enemy air activity can be brought to bear over this
area with the minimum movement of his air forces. Moreover, the
Pas de Calais is the most strongly defended area on the whole French
coast. The defenses would require very heavy and sustained bombardment
from sea and air: penetration would be slow, and the result of the
bombardment of beach exits would severely limit the rate of build-up.
Further, this area does not offer good opportunities for expansion.
It would be necessary to develop the bridgehead to include either
the Belgian ports as far as Antwerp or the Channel ports Westwards
to include Havre and Rouen. But both an advance to Antwerp across
the numerous water obstacles, and a long flank march of some 120
miles to the Seine ports must be considered unsound operations of
war unless the German forces are in a state not far short of final
collapse.
6. In the Caen-Cotentin area it would be possible
to make our initial landing either partly on the Cotentin Peninsula
and partly on the Caen beaches, wholly in the Cotentin or wholly
on the Caen beaches. An attack with part of our forces in the Cotentin
and part on the Caen beaches, is, however, consid-ered to be unsound.
It would entail dividing our limited forces by the low-lying marshy
ground and intricate river system at the neck of the Cotentin Peninsula;
thus exposing them to defeat in detail.
7. An attack against the Cotentin Peninsula, on the
other hand, has a reason-able chance of success, and would ensure
the early capture of the port of Cherbourg. Unfortunately, very
few airfields exist in the Cotentin, and that area is not suitable
for rapid airfield development. Furthermore, the narrow neck of
the Peninsula would give the Germans an easy task in preventing
us from breaking out and expanding our initial bridgehead. Moreover,
during the period of our consolidation in the Cotentin the Germans
would have time to reinforce their coastal troops in the Caen area,
rendering a subsequent amphibious assault in that area much more
difficult.
8. There remains the attack on the Caen beaches. The
Caen sector is weakly held; the defenses are relatively light
and the beaches are of high capacity and sheltered from the
prevailing winds. Inland the terrain is suitable for airfield
development and for the consolidation of the initial bridgehead;
and much of it is unfavourable for counter-attacks by panzer
divisions. Maximum enemy air opposition can only be brought
to bear at the expense of the enemy air defense screen covering
the approaches to Germany; and the limited number of enemy
airfields within range of the Caen area facilitates local
neutraliza-tion of the German fighter force. The sector suffers
from the disadvantage that considerable effort will be required
to provide adequate air support to our assault forces and
some time must elapse before the capture of a major port.
After a landing in the Caen sector it would be necessary to
seize either the Seine group of ports or the Brittany group
of ports. To seize the Seine ports would entail forcing a
crossing of the Seine, which is likely to require greater
forces than we can build up through the Caen beaches and the
port of Cher-bourg. It should, however, be possible to seize
the Brittany ports between Cherbourg and Nantes and on them
build up sufficient forces for our final advance Eastwards.
Provided that the necessary air situation can first be achieved,
the chances of a successful attack and of rapid subsequent development
are so much greater in this sector than in any other that it is
considered that the advantages far outweigh the disadvantages.
The Lodgement Area Selected.
9. In the light of these factors, it is considered
that our initial landing on the Continent should be effected in
the Caen area, with a view to the eventual seizure of a lodgement
area comprising the Cherbourg-Brittany group of ports (from Cherbourg
to Nantes).
Opening Phase up to the Capture of Cherbourg.
10. The opening phase in the seizing of this lodgement
area would be the effecting of a landing in the Caen sector with
a view to the early capture and development of airfield sites in
the Caen area, and of the port of Cherbourg.
11. The main limiting factors affecting such an operation
are the possibility of attaining the necessary air situation; the
number of offensive divisions which the enemy can make available
for counter attack in the Caen area; the availability of landing
ships and craft and of transport aircraft; and the capac-ity of
the beaches and ports in the sector.
12. Although the strength of the G.A.F. (3)
available in 1944 on the Western front cannot be forecast at this
stage, we can confidently expect that we shall have a vast numerical
superiority in bomber forces. The first-line strength of the German
fighter force is, however, showing a steady increase and although
it is unlikely to equal the size of the force at our disposal, there
is no doubt that our fighters will have a very large commitment
entailing dispersal and operations at maximum intensity. Our fighters
will also be operating under serious tactical disadvantages in the
early stages, which will largely offset their numerical superiority.
Before the assault takes place, therefore, it will be necessary
to reduce the effectiveness of the G.A.F., particularly that part
which can be brought to bear against the Caen area.
13. The necessary air situation to ensure a reasonable
chance of success will therefore require that the maximum number
of German fighter forces are contained in the Low Countries and
North-West Germany, that the effective-ness of the fighter defense
in the Caen area is reduced and that air reinforce-ments are prevented
from arriving in the early stages from the Mediterranean. Above
all, it will be necessary to reduce the overall strength of the
German fighter force between now and the date of the operation by
destruction of the sources of supply, by the infliction of casualties
by bringing on air battles, and, immediately prior to the assault,
by the disorganization of G.A.F. instal-lations and control system
in the Caen area.
14. As it is impossible to forecast with any accuracy
the number and location of German formations in reserve in 1944,
while, on the other hand, the forces available to us have been laid
down, an attempt has been made in this paper to determine the wisest
employment of our own forces and then to determine the maximum number
of German formations which they can reasonably overcome. Apart from
the air situation, which is an over-riding factor, the practicability
of this plan will depend principally on the number, effective-ness,
and availability of German divisions present in France and the Low
Countries in relation to our own capabilities. This consideration
is discussed below (paragraph 35).
15. A maximum of thirty and a minimum of twenty-six
equivalent divisions are likely to be available in the United Kingdom
for cross-Channel operations on the 1st May 1944. Further build-up
can be at the rate of three to five divi-sions per month.
16. Landing ships and craft have been provided to
lift the equivalent of three assault divisions and two follow-up
divisions, without "overheads," and it has been assumed
that the equivalent of an additional two divisions can be afloat
in ships.
17. Airborne forces amounting to two airborne divisions
and some five or six parachute regiments will be available, but,
largely owing to shortage of transport aircraft, it is only possible
to lift the equivalent of two-thirds of one airborne division simultaneously,
on the basis of present forecasts.
18. Even if additional landing ships and craft could
be made available, the beaches in the Caen area would preclude the
landing of forces greater than the equivalent of the three assault
and two follow-up divisions, for which craft have already been provided.
Nevertheless, an all-round increase of at least 10 per cent. in
landing ships and craft is highly desirable in order to provide
a greater margin for contingencies within the framework of the exist-ing
plan. Furthermore, sufficient lift for a further assault division
could most usefully be employed in an additional landing on other
beaches.
19. There is no port of any capacity within the sector
although there are a number of small ports of limited value. Maintenance
will, therefore, of neces-sity be largely over the beaches until
it is possible to capture and open up the port of Cherbourg. In
view of the possibilities of interruption by bad weather it will
be essential to provide early some form of improvised sheltered
waters.
20. Assuming optimum weather conditions, it should
be possible to build up the force over the beaches to a total by
D plus 6 of the equivalent of some eleven divisions and five tank
brigades and thereafter to land one division a day until about D
plus 24.
Proposed Plan.
Preliminary Phase.
21. During the preliminary phase, which must start
forthwith, all possible means including air and sea action, propaganda,
political and economic pressure, and sabotage, must be integrated
into a combined offensive aimed at softening the German resistance.
In particular, air action should be di-rected towards the reduction
of the German air forces on the Western front, the progressive destruction
of the German economic system and the under-mining of German morale.
22. In order to contain the maximum German forces
away from the Caen area diversionary operations should be staged
against other areas such as the Pas de Calais and the Mediterranean
Coast of France.
Preparatory Phase.
23. During this phase air action will be intensified
against the G.A.F., par-ticularly in North-West France, with a view
to reducing the effectiveness of the G.A.F. in that area, and will
be extended to include attacks against com-munications more directly
associated with movement of German reserves which might affect the
Caen area. Three naval assault forces will be assem-bled with the
naval escorts and loaded at ports along the South Coast of Eng-land.
Two naval assault forces carrying the follow-up forces will also
be assembled and loaded, one in the Thames Estuary and one on the
West Coast.
The Assault.
24. After a very short air bombardment of the beach
defenses three assault divisions will be landed simultaneously on
the Caen beaches, followed up on D Day by the equivalent of two
tank brigades (United States regiments) and a brigade group (United
States regimental combat team). At the same time, airborne forces
will be used to seize the town of Caen; and subsidiary opera-tions
by commandos and possibly by airborne forces will be undertaken
to neutralize certain coast defenses and seize certain important
river crossings. The object of the assault forces will be to seize
the general line Grandcamp-Bayeux-Caen.
Follow-up and Build-up Phase.
25. Subsequent action will take the form of a strong
thrust Southwards and South-Westwards with a view to destroying
enemy forces, acquiring sites for airfields, and gaining depth for
a turning movement into the Cotentin Penin-sula directed on Cherbourg.
When sufficient depth has been gained a force will advance into
the Cotentin and seize Cherbourg. At the same time a thrust will
be made to deepen the bridgehead South-Eastwards in order to cover
the construction and operation of additional airfields in the area
South-East of Caen.
26. It is considered that, within fourteen days of
the initial assault, Cherbourg should be captured and the bridgehead
extended to include the general line Trouville-Alencon-Mont St.
Michel. By this date, moreover, it should have been possible to
land some eighteen divisions and to have in operation about fourteen
airfields from which twenty-eight to thirty-three fighter-type squad-rons
should be operating.
Further Developments after Capture of Cherbourg.
27. After the capture of Cherbourg the Supreme Allied
Commander will have to decide whether to initiate operations
to seize the Seine ports or whether he must content himself
with first occupying the Brittany ports. In this decision
he will have to be guided largely by the situation of the
enemy forces. If the German resistance is sufficiently weak,
an immediate advance could be made to seize Havre and Rouen.
On the other hand, the more prob-able situation is that the
Germans will have retired with the bulk of their forces to
hold Paris and the line of the Seine, where they can best
be covered by their air forces from North-East France and
where they may possibly be reinforced by formations from Russia.
Elsewhere they may move a few divi-sions from Southern France
to hold the crossings of the Loire and will leave the existing
defensive divisions in Brittany.
It will therefore most probably be necessary for us to seize the
Brittany ports first, in order to build up sufficient forces with
which we can eventually force the passage of the Seine.
28. Under these circumstances, the most suitable plan
would appear to be to secure first the left flank and to gain sufficient
airfields for subsequent opera-tions. This would be done by extending
the bridgehead to the line of the River Eure from Dreux to Rouen
and thence along the line of the Seine to the sea, seizing at the
same time Chartres, Orleans and Tours.
29. Under cover of these operations a force would
be employed in capturing the Brittany ports; the first step being
a thrust Southwards to seize Nantes and St. Nazaire, followed by
subsidiary operations to capture Brest and the various small ports
of the Brittany Peninsula.
30. This action would complete the occupation of our
initial lodgement area and would secure sufficient major ports for
the maintenance of at least thirty divisions. As soon as the organization
of the L. of C. in this lodgement area allowed, and sufficient air
forces had been established, operations would then be begun to force
the line of the Seine, and to capture Paris and the Seine ports.
As opportunity offered, subsidiary action would also be taken to
clear the Germans from the Biscay ports to facilitate the entry
of additional Ameri-can troops and the feeding of the French population.
Command and Control.
31. In carrying out Operation "Overlord"
administrative control would be greatly simplified if the
principle were adopted that the United States forces were
normally on the right of the line and the British and Canadian
forces on the left.
Major Conditions Affecting Success of the Operation.
32. It will be seen that the plan for the initial
landing is based on two main principles--concentration of force
and tactical surprise. Concentration of the assault forces is considered
essential if we are to ensure adequate air support and if our limited
assault forces are to avoid defeat in detail. An attempt has been
made to obtain tactical surprise by landing in a lightly defended
area-presumably lightly defended as, due to its distance from a
major port, the Germans consider a landing there unlikely to be
successful. This action, of course, presupposes that we can offset
the absence of a port in the initial stages by the provision of
improvised sheltered waters. It is believed that this can be accomplished.
33. The operation calls for a much higher standard
of performance on the part of the naval assault forces than any
previous operation. This will depend upon their being formed in
sufficient time to permit of adequate training.
34. Above all, it is essential that there should be
an over-all reduction in the German fighter force between now and
the time of the surface assault. From now onwards every practical
method of achieving this end must be employed. This condition, above
all others, will dictate the date by which the amphibi-ous assault
can be launched.
35. The next condition is that the number of German
offensive divisions in reserve must not exceed a certain figure
on the target date if the operation is to have a reasonable chance
of success. The German reserves in France and the Low Countries
as a whole, excluding divisions holding the coast, G.A.F. divisions
and training divisions, should not exceed on the day of the assault
twelve full-strength first-quality divisions. In addition, the Germans
should not be able to transfer more than fifteen first-quality divisions
from Russia during the first two months. Moreover, on the target
date the divisions in reserve should be so located that the number
of first-quality divisions which the Germans could deploy in the
Caen area to support the divisions holding the coast should not
exceed three divisions on D Day, five divisions on D plus 2, or
nine divisions by D plus 8.
During the preliminary period, therefore, every effort
must be made to dissi-pate and divert German formations, lower their
fighting efficiency and dis-rupt communications.
36. Finally, there is the question of maintenance.
Maintenance will have to be carried out over beaches for a period
of some three months for a number of formations, varying from a
maximum of eighteen divisions in the first month to twelve divisions
in the second month, rapidly diminishing to nil in the third month.
Unless adequate measures are taken to provide sheltered waters by
artificial means, the operation will be at the mercy of the weather.
Moreover, special facilities and equipment will be required to prevent
undue damage to craft during this extended period. Immediate action
for the provision of the necessary requirements is essential.
37. Given these conditions--a reduced G.A.F., a limitation
in the number or effectiveness of German offensive formations in
France, and adequate ar-rangements to provide improvised sheltered
waters--it is considered that Operation "Overlord" has
a reasonable prospect of success. To ensure these conditions being
attained by the 1st May, 1944, action must start now and every possible
effort made by all means in our power to soften German resis-tance
and to speed up our own preparations.
Offices of the War Cabinet, S.W.1,
30th July, 1943.
(1) Operatie 'Husky'
is de geallieerde invasie van Sicilië die begon op 10 juli
1943. (2) De Pas de
Calais area is het gebied tussen Gravelines en de rivier de Somme.
De Caen area is het gebied tussen de rivier de Orne en het Contentin
schiereiland, en de Contentin area is het schiereiland waarop Cherbourg
ligt. (3) Met de G.A.F.
wordt de German Air Force, de Duitse luchtmacht, bedoelt. Deze wordt
echter vaker aangegeven met Luftwaffe.