ATTEMPTED INVASION.
CATASTROPHE FOR NAZIS
LONDON, Sept. 24. The Daily Mail’s correspondent on the French-Spanish frontier says that Hitler lost between 50,000 and 60,000 picked troops in a disaster winch scattered the, invasion fleet on September 16. They were victims of Channel storms and merciless bombardment by tho Royal Air Force. The German High Command previously decided to make new dispositions because the troops had already suffered heavily from the British bombing. The invasion fleet, consisting of thousands of barges, was taken out of the ports and moored along the lonely Flanders coast. The fleet was ready to cross the Channel on September 14, but because of the terrific losses of German planes'on that day the orders to sail were delayed. South-west, gales swept the Channel and tugs desperately tried to tow the barges to safety, but many overturned drowning thousands of men, and flat-bottomed motor-boats and heavilyladen transport ships drove helplessly before the wind. The Germans are still organising. It is significant that since the disaster only the crews remain permanently aboard the vessels prepared, for tho invasion.
The official British claim of enemy raiding aircraft destroyed during the day of September 14 was a total of eight. The Germans’ greatest loss occurred on the following day. when they lost 185. It was on the morhing of that day that the London Sunday Express stated that Hitler had invited journalists to assemble on the French coast to witness .“the greatest spectacle of the ages”— an invasion of Britain. London reoorted that tlm weeks ot fine weather in the Straits of Dover broko with a south-westerly gale on Septembei 16. i . '
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Bibliographic details
Manawatu Standard, Volume LX, Issue 255, 25 September 1940, Page 7
Word Count
271ATTEMPTED INVASION. Manawatu Standard, Volume LX, Issue 255, 25 September 1940, Page 7
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