Allied bombing of Europe’s villages and towns leaves complicated legacy
STORY BY STEPHEN J. THORNE
The June 4, 1944, letter written by a Norman woman was unequivocal in its fury at her Allied liberators, describing the pilots who destroyed her French port city of Cherbourg as “bandits and assassins.”
“My dear Henri, it’s shameful to massacre the civilian population as the supposed Allies are doing,” she wrote her husband, who was being held in a German prison camp. “We are in danger everywhere.”
The French port on the Cotentin Peninsula was a key stepping-stone in the Allied advance—a coveted harbour, a heavily defended German garrison of 40,000 troops, and one of the Allies’ earliest objectives in the weeks after D-Day.
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