Operation Haft

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Location
Date8 July to 11 August 1944
OutcomeAllied victory
  • Heavy German casualties from allied air attacks
Operation Haft
Part of Operation Overlord, in the Second World War
Location
Date8 July to 11 August 1944
Executed by United Kingdom
Free France
OutcomeAllied victory
  • Heavy German casualties from allied air attacks
CasualtiesNone

Operation Haft was a British special forces operation by the 1st Special Air Service that took place between 8 July to 11 August 1944 in the Mayenne area near Le Mans in the north-western part of German-occupied France. The operation was part of the much bigger Operation Overlord; the small team of seven men directed allied Air attacks on German troop and tank concentrations reinforcing the Normandy front line which contributed to heavy Germans casualties. The operation was a classed as a big success given the small numbers of the unit deployed.

In May 1944 the Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF) had issued an order for the Special Air Service Brigade to carry out operations in France. They were to undertake parachute operations behind German lines, with assistance from the French resistance. The focus of these would be the disruption of German reinforcements from the south of France to the Normandy beachheads. A number of offensive operations were planned Bulbasket, Wallace, Hardy, Kipling and Houndsworth. In addition two small operations were planned purely for reconnaissance and information gathering. One was Defoe and the other Haft the latter of which was to operate in the area of Mayenne and Le Mans of north-western France.[1]

Haft was to be a small team of seven men led by Captain Mike Blackman. The rest were radio operator John Randall, Lieutenant John Kidner, Corporal Brown, and troopers Harrison and Baker. The seventh was a French liaison officer De Maison from 4 SAS (French).[2] Priority of objectives were as follows: location of potential airfields, emergency landing grounds and telecommunications, but this was changed to reporting on troop movements and identifying targets for airstrikes.[3]

Haft

Aftermath

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI