US Airborne Soldier vs German Soldier
David Campbell
Sicily, Normandy, and Operation Market Garden, 1943–44
Click here to join our rewards scheme and earn points on this purchase!
Release Date: 28/06/2018
Sicily, Normandy, and Operation Market Garden, 1943–44 The US Airborne force fielded some of the toughest, best-trained and most resourceful troops of World War II – all necessary qualities in a force that was lightly armed and would be surrounded from the moment it landed on the battlefield.
A fully illustrated study into the evolving trial of strength at the height of World War II between American airborne forces and the Wehrmacht.
The German Wehrmacht grew to rely on a series of defensive measures to combat the airborne threat, including fortifications, localized reserves, and special training to help intercept and disrupt airborne troops both in the air and on the ground. Despite such methods it was cool-headed command and control that would prove to be the real key to blunting the Airborne’s edge.
Using specially commissioned artwork, this book examines the development of the American airborne forces that spearheaded the Allied effort in Sicily, Normandy and Operation Market Garden, and the German countermeasures that evolved in response to the threat of Allied airborne landings.