AMPHIBIOUS/AIRBORNE THRUSTS ACROSS RHINE
Xanten, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany · March 23, 1945
In the aftermath of Operation Market Garden, the inventive but failed September 1944 thrust into Germany, came Operation Plunder, another offensive conceived by British Field Marshal Bernard Law Montgomery. It kicked off on this date in 1945 when the first set of 300,000 U.S., British, and Canadian troops crossed the Rhine River north of Xanten (the medieval town in North Rhine-Westphalia had been captured by Canadians on March 8) and established bridgeheads near Wesel on the east bank, 90 miles north of the cathedral city of Cologne.
The next day, March 24, while Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Field Marshals Montgomery and Viscount Alan Brooke drank tea on the Rhine bank, several thousand Allied aircraft participated in the largest airborne operation of the war, Operation Varsity, landing over 17,000 troops and masses of supplies east of the Rhine and capturing bridges and securing towns that could have been used by the enemy to delay the advance of Allied ground forces. The land-based and airborne offensives constituted the last great battle in the West.
The Wehrmacht’s shock troops, Fallschirmjaeger (English, paratroopers), were thrown in against the Allies, but they offered only slight opposition to the advancing Allies. Wesel fell on March 24, the same day Reich Minister of Propaganda Joseph Goebbels confided in his diary that the situation in the West had entered an extraordinarily critical, ostensibly almost deadly, phase. Two days later Gen. George S. Patton’s Third U.S. Army reached Germany’s fifth largest city, Frankfurt am Main, entering the city across the Niederrad bridge in the south. On March 27, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, Supreme Commander of the Allied Expeditionary Force, underscored Goebbels’ worst nightmare, saying in a press interview that the Germans in the West were “a whipped army incapable of throwing in sufficient strength to stop the Allies. . . . The crossing of the Rhine marks the end of one phase of the campaign and the beginning of another.” By the end of the month, the Western Front had moved east of the Rhine and was 200 miles from Berlin, while the Eastern Front (Red Army) was 50 miles from the Nazi capital. The end of the war in Europe was four weeks away.
Operations Plunder and Varsity: Crossing the Rhine River into Germany’s Heartland, March 22–28, 1945
Above: Gen. George Patton’s Third U.S. Army crossed the Rhine River west of Mainz and near Oppenheim just before midnight on March 22, 1945 (third arrow up from bottom east of Rhine). The next day the Third Army made another Rhine River crossing near Worms, Germany (second arrow from bottom), while the British Second Army and Canadian First Army launched their assaults further north across the Rhine north of the Ruhr River (hashed area). By early April seven Allied armies had crossed the Rhine and were ready to advance on the Nazis’ capital, Berlin.
Left: Men of the 15th Scottish Division leave their assault craft after crossing the Rhine River near Xanten, North Rhine-Westphalia, March 24, 1945.
Right: British Prime Minister Winston Churchill (center right in photo) looks over the Rhine River from the ruins of the west end of the bridge at Wesel, North Rhine-Westphalia, March 25, 1945. A watchful Gen. William Simpson, commander of the Ninth U.S. Army, shouted a warning to Churchill that German snipers were still quite active in the area.
Left: Operations Plunder and Varsity: Churchill and American generals on a balcony watch Allied vehicles cross the Rhine into Germany, March 25, 1945.
Right: Operations Plunder and Varsity: Men of the British 5th Dorsetshire Regiment cross the Rhine into Germany in a Buffalo tracked landing vehicle, March 28, 1945.