RAF
Posts: 76
Joined: 6/4/2006 Status: offline
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In thinking back to my previous acts of treason, the only time that I was confident that my efforts had gotten information into enemy hands was in Norway. There, I delivered it myself to enemy soldiers who were watching us while our troops moved up the road. At Chebrehez, we spiraled in on the town so that, by the time we took it, the enemy had been cleared out of the countryside. At Neufchateau, our forces simply kept pushing out until the enemy had been driven too far away to be a threat. What I needed to do was to get into the fight. During the confusion of battle, I needed to find an enemy soldier, hand him the papers, and tell him to retreat and get them to his commanding officer. Looking at the map, the best hope would come from being among the lead infantry units into Wasseiges or Branchon. Of course, that meant getting shot at, since I would be in my German uniform. Another hope was to approach the enemy troops at Thisnes or Merdorp – which General Sachs hoped to bypass as being irrelevant to the day’s objectives. I went ahead with 6 Company, II/35 Panzer Battalion on the right flank. The company had eight PzIVD tanks; some of the best guns on the field. Its initial orders were to travel west, to the hills overlooking Thisnes. Thisnes was one of the towns to be bypassed, but there was value in looking at what was there first. While we crossed the open field, the enemy opened up with their artillery. The enemy had a LOT of artillery, and they had focused it on the town of Fond Overnas, north of Hannus. General Sachs had pulled his infantry back, waiting to find out what the Panzer battalions discovered before committing his infantry. The 2nd/7 Recon Company of armored cars had gone through the town, and somebody must have spotted them. However it happened, the enemy considered Fond Overnas to be enemy territory and lobbed every shell they had onto the village. This immediately said two things to me. First, if the enemy had that many guns here, then they probably had a lot of other things to go with those guns. Out there in those fields, they had set up for a battle. Second, if they had that many guns, then they had weapons that could punch holes through armor. Rifles and machine guns could not do much to a tank; but a 75mm infantry gun was a different story. For a moment, I thought about the possibility that General Sachs could be entering into a trap, and that I should let him. However, I had a job to do and if I performed poorly then I would be replaced, and there was no telling how I would end up. I radioed my observations into headquarters. With all of the artillery, it would be murder for our infantry to spend any time at all in one place. They would either have to be hidden, or moving. If the battle lines became stagnate, we would suffer. I thought about the situation in Longlier where it took a Kampgruppe Balck considerable amount of time to surround and overrun an enemy stronghold in the center of town, and Kampfgruppe Kramer getting stalled at Sart east of Hamipre. If those situations arose here, with the enemy capable of bringing all of that artillery to bear, the results would be catastrophic for the infantry.
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