Info on Operation Market Garden


One of the major Allied operation at the European Theater came on 17 September 1944. Devised by GeneralBernard Montgomery, the primary target was the seizure of some bridges in the Netherlands. The Allies were hopeful that an assault on the ccupied Netherlands would make open a way across the Rhine as well as onto the German Plain. This opening would ley Allied forces break out northward and move toward Denmark and Berlin.
But the operation failed as the Allies could not seize the bridge furthest towards the north at Arnhem. The British first Airborne had been dropped to protect the bridges, though upon landing they found out that an extremely professional German SS Panzer unit garrisoned the town. The parachutists were only slightly supplied with respect to anti-tank munition and fast lost ground. Failure to fast relieve the members of the first that had managed to capture the Arnhem's bridge on the side of the balance of the sixth, and the armoured XXX Corps, signified that the German soldiers were capable to hinder the whole operation. Finally, the operation's challenging nature, the inconstant state of war, as well as failures on the side of Allied intelligence (and strong German defense) may be blamed for the Market-Garden's final failure. The operation signalized the last time either the 101st or 82nd would make an attack jump at the war.
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