The Battle of Crete (World War
2)
On JULY 1941, two months after the fall of
Crete, General Kurt Student, the German Airborne leader, was
summoned to Hitler's headquarters at Wolfschanze. Together with a number
of senior Paratroop officers who had survived the Crete battle, he
was awarded the Knight's Cross The Fuhrer congratulated the Airborne
warriors on accomplishing a vital task by the only method possible
m the circumstances?Airborne assault. This was encouraging talk for
Student. Already his Airborne Corps was nearly back up to strength
The many casualties had been replaced, equipment losses made good.
He had ambitious plans for further operations In the Mediterranean
against Cyprus, Egypt, and Malta. But after lunch, over coffee, Hitler
shattered his hopes.
Turning to Student, the Fuhrer said quietly: "Of course,
General you know that after Crete we shall never do another Airborne
operation. The parachute arm is one that relies entirely on surprise.
That surprise factor has now exhausted itself...the day of
the Paratroops is over".
The Invasion and Battle for Crete
(Unterrnehmen Merkur - Operation Mercury)
Crete was the scene of the largest German Airborne
operation of the war, and the first time in history that an island
had been taken by airborne assault. Afterwards, Crete was dubbed the
graveyard of the Fallschirmjager (German Parachutists); they
suffered nearly 4000 killed and missing in the assault. It was
also the first time the Germans had encountered stiff partisan activity,
with women and even children getting involved in the
battle. The XI Fliegerkorps was responsible for ferrying the paratroops
to Crete using 500 JU-52's and 70 DFS-230 light assault gliders, all
together 8100 men were dropped on to Crete, 1860 men at Maleme, 2460
men at Hania, 1380 men at Rethymno and 2360 men at Iraclion.
Crete was chosen because of the British airfields
on the island, which were more than capable of striking the vital Ploesti oil
fields in Rumania. Hitler's forces needed all the oil they could get
for the impending assault on Russia. Securing Crete would be tantamount
to driving the British out of the Eastern Mediterranean; it would also
be the first step towards Cyprus and the Egyptian Delta.
One major problem was the lack of transport aircraft,
there was not enough to ferry all of the forces across in one go. There
would have to be two waves, one in the morning and another in
the afternoon, so enough time in between for the aircraft to return
from Crete, refuel and return again back to the island. The lack of
ships for the amphibious forces was overcome by the confiscation of
caiques and fishing vessels from the coastal areas.
The allied troops on Crete (3 British battalions,
2 New Zealanders Brigades, 8 Greek Battalions and 6 Australian Battalions)
had been aware of the impending assault through Enigma intercepts,
the Germans had been provided with inaccurate intelligence and dropped
into stiff resistance of nearly three times the amount of men they
were expecting. The garrison had been re-enforced by allied troops
who had retreated from the Greek mainland. In most of the drops they
were sitting targets.
As the battle wore on and casualty reports started
to come in to General Student's HQ at the Hotel "Grande Bretagne" in
Athens, it seemed that the battle was lost, but luck was on their side,
the allies made some tactical mistakes and withdrew from positions
around Hill 107, overlooking the Airfield at Maleme,
which gave the Germans the upper hand and enabled them to land the
desperately needed air landing troops of the Gebirgsjager on the airfield,
although it was still coming under artillery fire. The allies pulled
back in the face of a constant flow of fresh troops and began their
retreat, first southwards across Crete and then by sea to North Africa.
Although the assault on Crete had finally proved to
be a success the losses were high, not only to the Fallschirmtruppe
(3764 German soldiers killed) but to transport aircraft, which would
be desperately missed in future operations in Russia, so they
were never again used in an airborne operation of this size. However
the heroic struggle of the people of Crete never stopped: The Cretan
Resistance Movement that was organized during the German occupation
continued to inflict heavy casualties to the Nazi forces - even the
kidnapping of a heavily-guarded German general - for four more years
after the invasion and set an example for all the conquered people
of Europe to follow. The people of Crete also suffered savage punitive
reprisals for their fighting and resistance and thousands of civilians
were randomly executed, while entire communities were burned and destroyed
by the Nazi invaders.
The Invasion and Battle for Crete, a detailed
report
Airborne
Landings (20 May 1941) Early on the morning of May 20, waves
of dive bombers (Stukas- Dive Bomb Technique) and
low flying fighter planes subjected the Maleme, Hania, and Souda Bay
areas to the heaviest bombing and strafing attacks yet experienced
by the seasoned troops manning the defenses. Most of the antiaircraft
guns were put out of action and the defenders were forced to seek shelter.
Bombs were dropped at the approaches to the airfields to put the telephone
lines out of order.
At 08:00 the first gliders, each carrying twelve
men, landed near the airfield and on the beaches near Hania. At the
same time, approximately 2,000 parachutists jumped in waves of 200
each at fifteen-minute intervals. Two of every three parachutes in
each wave carried containers with weapons and supplies.
At Maleme, the parachute troops jumped into strong
enemy fire from infantry weapons, emplaced in positions built into
the hills south of the airfield. Many of the paratroopers were killed
during the descent or shortly after landing. Because of the concentrated
enemy fire most of the men were unable to recover the weapons containers
and had to rely on the pistol, four hand grenades, and large knife
they carried.
One battalion of the assault regiment landed too far
to the east among olive groves and vineyards near Maleme and was greeted
by murderous machine gun and heavy weapons fire. Casualties were very
heavy, and the medical platoon that had set up a first aid station
in a farmhouse was overwhelmed by the constant influx of seriously
wounded men. The gliders would have been completely destroyed by enemy
fire, had they not been covered by clouds of dust, which formed as
soon as they touched ground. The commander of the 7th Airborne Division,
Generalleutnant Wilhelm Suessmann was killed during the approach flight,
while Generalmajor Eugen Meindl, who was in command of the Maleme group,
was critically wounded shortly after landing. Both the Maleme and Hania
groups were therefore without their commanders.
The success of the Maleme operation depended on the
quick capture of the airfield so that reinforcements could be landed
without delay. To achieve this the British forces had to be dislodged
frown Hill 107, which dominated the airfield and the surrounding
terrain. The remnants of the initial force launched simultaneous attacks
on the hill and the airfield at 15:00. Despite heavy opposition and
fire from the British antiaircraft guns emplaced near the airfield,
the attackers captured the northern and north-western edge of the airfield
and advanced up the northern slope of Hill 107. Two German transport
planes tried to land on the airfield toward evening but machine gun
fire prevented them from doing so.
The Hania group, which was to capture the village
of Souda and the town of Hania and eliminate the British command staff,
located in that area, landed on rocky ground and suffered many jump
casualties. The few men who were not wounded attempted to gather weapons
and ammunition and establish contact with their comrades. Here the
German paratroopers were opposed by New Zealanders who engaged them
with small arms and heavy weapons fire from olive groves offering perfect
camouflage for snipers and machine gun positions. The isolated German
elements made little headway against the well-entrenched enemy forces.
Meanwhile, the German command in Greece assumed that
the operation was progressing according to plan because all troop carriers
with the exception of seven returned to their bases. On this assumption,
which was proved erroneous only after several hours had passed, the
troop carriers were readied for the afternoon landings at Iraclion
and Rethymno. Because of a delay in the refuelling, these planes arrived
too late over the designated drop points and the paratroops were therefore
without direct fighter and bomber support.
One parachute combat team in regimental strength jumped
over each of the two points between 15:00 and 16:30. Running into very
heavy British fire, the parachutists suffered even more casualties
than at Maleme and failed to capture the airfields, towns, or ports.
Some of the troops landed at the wrong points because the troop carriers
had difficulty in orienting themselves. After they touched ground the
Germans found themselves in an almost hopeless situation. Surrounded
by greatly superior enemy forces, they struggled for survival. Their
signal equipment had been smashed during the airdrop and they were
therefore unable to establish contact with the nearest friendly forces.
Although they were completely on their own and faced by an uncertain
fate, they were determined to hold out to the end in the vicinity of
the two airfields so that they would tie down the enemy forces and
thus assist their comrades in the western part of the island. Air reconnaissance
and radio messages had meanwhile rectified the erroneous picture of
the first landings in western Crete.
By the evening of 20 May not a single airfield was
securely held by the Germans. The most favourable reports came from
Maleme, where the defenders were falling back from Hill 107 and their
perimeter defences around the airfield, which, however, was still under
British artillery fire. Moreover, crashed aircraft and gliders obstructed
parts of the field. Thus, no field was available for the airborne landing
of the 5th Mountain Division, which was scheduled for the next
day. Hania was still in enemy hands and the isolated troops landed
at the four drop points had so far been unable to form airheads, let
alone establish contact among themselves. While the attacker had run
into unexpectedly strong resistance and had failed to reach the objective
of the day, the fury and strength of the onslaught surprised the defenders.
Seaborne Invasion (20-22 May) During the night
of May 20-21, a British light naval force broke through the German
aerial blockade and searched the waters north of Crete. Admiral Schuster
thereupon decided to call back to Milos the first naval convoy, which
was approaching Crete under escort of an Italian destroyer. At dawn
on May 21, German planes sighted the British ships and subjected them
to heavy air attacks. One destroyer was sunk and two cruisers damaged.
At 09:00 the waters north of Crete were cleared of
enemy ships and the convoy was ordered to continue its voyage in the
direction of Maleme. During the day German dive bombers based on Skarpanto
and Italian planes flying from Rhodes scored several hits on British
ships returning to Crete waters, thereby preventing them from intercepting
the Axis convoy. The German troops on the island were anxiously awaiting
the arrival of artillery, antitank guns, and supplies, but poor weather
conditions so delayed the convoy that it could not reach the island
before darkness. When it finally came around Cape Spatha at 23:00,
a British naval task force suddenly confronted the convoy, which was
on the way to Souda Bay to land reinforcements and supplies. The British
immobilized the Italian escort vessel and sank most of the motor sailers
and freighters. Many German soldiers, most of them mountain troops,
were drowned. Sea rescue planes, however, picked up the majority of
the shipwrecked. The second convoy, which had meanwhile reached Milos,
was recalled to Piraeus to save it from a similar fate. No further
seaborne landings were attempted until the fate of Crete had been decided.
On the morning of 22 May, VIII Air Corps started
an all-out attack on the British fleet, which was forced to withdraw
from the Aegean after suffering heavy losses. The battle between the
Luftwaffe and the British Navy ended in the victory of German air power,
which from then on dominated the air and waters north of Crete.
21 May-1 June On the morning of May 21, a few
planes were able to make crash landings on the beaches near Maleme
and bring in badly needed weapons and ammunition to the assault troops
in that area. Enemy artillery fire interdicted any landing on the airfield
proper. It was therefore decided to drop additional parachute troops
behind the enemy positions dominating the airfield. Oberst Bernhard
Ramcke assembled 550 paratroopers who had been left behind on the first
day and formed a reserve battalion. He was ordered to jump west of
Maleme airfield and assist in clearing the British positions in its
vicinity. Mountain infantrymen already seated in their transport planes
were hastily unloaded and immediately replaced by Ramcke's men.
In the early afternoon four companies of parachute
troops jumped from low altitudes above the vineyards near Maleme. The
two that were supposed to land behind the enemy lines descended directly
into well-camouflaged enemy positions and were almost completely wiped
out. The other two joined the assault troops, which, by 17:00, succeeded
in dislodging the enemy infantry from the town of Maleme and the hills
surrounding the airfield. The airdrop was effectively supported by
tactical air force attacks on enemy defenses. Throughout this fighting,
however, the dive-bombers were unable to silence the British artillery
pieces, which were particularly well camouflaged, and which, in order
not to uncover their position, held their fire whenever German planes
were in sight.
Troop carriers with the 5th Mountain Division troops
began to land at Maleme airfield at 16:00, even though the field was
still under intermittent artillery and machine gun fire. Low-flying
planes kept the defenders' fire to a minimum and the landings proceeded
without major losses. A captured British tank was used as prime mover
to clear the airfield of burned-out and damaged planes. As soon as
the landing strip was cleared, planes came in and left without interruption.
From that point on, reinforcements and supplies kept pouring in and
the fate of Crete was sealed. Little by little the entire 5th Mountain
Division was flown in. Even more important to the attack forces were
the artillery pieces, antitank guns, and supplies of all types, which
had been missing during the initial stage of the invasion and which
were now being airlifted into Maleme.
On May 22, Generalmajor Julius Ringel, the
commander of the 5th Mountain Division, assumed command of all the
German forces in the Maleme airfield. His first task was to establish
contact with the Hania forces and to clear the western part of the
island of enemy troops. For this purpose his mountain troops used the
same tactics they had employed so successfully at Mount Olympus and
Thermopylae. By climbing along paths that were not even real trails
and over heights previously considered to be unscalable, the mountain
troops, loaded with everything they needed to fight and supply themselves,
broke their own ground as they advanced and then attacked the enemy
in the flank or rear at points where he expected them the least. They
had no mules and were therefore forced to hand-carry their heavy weapons
and ammunition across the rugged terrain. Throughout the struggle for
Crete they adhered to the motto that sweat saves blood. In their heavy
uniforms the mountain soldiers withstood days of scorching heat with
temperatures rising up to 130 degrees F, and nights when the mountain
air at altitudes ranging up to 7,000 feet was so cold that they were
unable to sleep.
On D + 5 the mountain troops outflanked the British
positions east of Maleme, and on the next day they entered Hania, the
capital of Crete, and occupied Souda Bay after a forced march across
the mountains. During this fighting the British offered strong resistance
and showed no signs of willingness to give in. They made very skilful
use of the terrain and delayed the German advance by sniper and machine
gun fire. Wire and mine fields protected some of their positions. Armed
bands of Cretans fought fiercely in the mountains, using great cunning
and committing acts of cruelty such as mutilating dead and wounded
German soldiers. The air-ground coordination of the attackers occasionally
failed to function during these days. At 13:10 on May 26, for instance,
Dornier planes subjected elements of the 85th Mountain Regiment to
a heavy bombardment, although the latter had laid out Swastika flags
and fired white flares. The air attack continued until 14:00 and had
a very detrimental effect on the ground troops' morale. While the struggle
for western Crete was raging, German reconnaissance planes reported
that a few British planes had returned to Iraclion airfield on May
23, and that reinforcements were arriving by sea in the eastern part
of the island.
If complete air superiority over Crete was to be maintained
by the Luftwaffe, the return of British planes en masse had
to be prevented by all means. It was therefore decided to reinforce
the German troops in the Iraclion pocket by dropping hastily assembled
parachute units. They were to take possession of the airfield and,
until relieved by approaching ground forces, prevent the landing of
British planes. Four companies of parachute troops were formed at Maleme
and dropped in the vicinity of the Iraclion pocket west of the town.
Immediately after landing on 28 May, the parachute units contacted
the embattled pocket force and launched a concerted attack against
the British positions, eliminating several enemy strongholds with the
support of dive-bombers. After regrouping his forces during the night
the German commander at Iraclion set out to capture the town and the
airfield early on the next morning. At daybreak the German troops closed
in on the British positions. Not a shots was fired. British naval vessels
had evacuated the Iraclion garrison during the preceding night. By
that time British resistance had crumbled everywhere. German supplies
and equipment were landed at Souda Bay without interference from enemy
naval or air units.
On 29 May, motorized reconnaissance elements,
advancing through enemy-held territory, established contact with the
German forces in the Rethymno pocket and reached Iraclion the next
day. A small Italian force that had landed at Sitia Bay on the eastern
tip of the island on 28 May, linked up with a German advance detachment
two days later. After repeated encounters with enemy rear guards, the
German forces reached the south coast of the island on 1 June. The
struggle for Crete was thereby terminated. Despite the long delay in
the issuance of evacuation orders, the British Navy was able to embark
approximately 14,800 men and return them to Egypt. Subjected to severe
losses and constant harassment by German planes, the Navy performed
the evacuation during four nights.
A film about the Battle of Crete: The British
cinema produced many propagandist, flag-waving war films glorifying
their "finest hour" of battle against Germany and Japan, including
the inspiring
"In Which We Serve" (1942) about a valiant crew of
a British destroyer (HMS Torrin) during the Battle of Crete in WWII.
The film was the directorial debut of David Lean with Noel Coward as
producer, writer, co-director, and star.
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