(Airplanes and parachutes above Crete, [German paratroopers from JU 52
cargoplanes]. Greece, Crete, 1941, [Public Domain] via Flickr)
In 1941, Germany set its
sights on the strategically important island of Crete. Any country that
controlled the airfields of Crete could send airplanes into Greece and the
Balkans, and keep an eye on Turkey’s important city of Istanbul—a place that
was filled with much international intrigue during the war.
To take Crete, the Germans
would need to defeat the British and Greek troops that were defending the island.
The task of the German forces would be even more arduous, however, because
British intelligence had already warned the defenders of Crete that an attack
was imminent. In response, the Allies readied their defense on the island’s
coastline, waiting for the Germans to arrive.
Germany’s General Kurt
Student led the planning for the attack on Crete. He decided to attack the
island using a combined invasion force of Italy’s navy and the German
Luftwaffe. The ultimate objective of his plan was to use airborne paratroopers
to seize the airfields of Crete at Maleme, Rhethymnon and Herakleion, where
more reinforcements could be flown in to secure control of the island.
When the plan was put into
action, it did not go smoothly. The Italian Navy took a beating from the Britaish ships, and the German planes carrying paratroopers (and towing gliders)
were also heavily damaged. Nevertheless, the Luftwaffe aircraft flew inland and
dropped their paratroopers in range of the Allied airfields. While the Allied
defenses were still focused on the coast, the German airborne infantry captured
the airfield at Maleme. With an airfield secured, the Germans flew in
reinforcements and weaponry, allowing them to take other parts of the island.
Realizing that Crete was lost, the Allied defenders withdrew.
Even though the Allies lost
the strategically important island of Crete, they gained something even more
vital—a respect and understanding of the power and utility of airborne warfare.
Source:
- Warfare in the Western World: Military Operations Since 1871 (Volume II), edited by Robert A. Doughty and Ira D. Gruber et al. Massachusetts: D. C. Heath and Company, 1996.
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