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Join Us At 0900ET, Friday, 4/10, for the LIVE Morning Brief.
Watch It LIVE at
www.airborne-live.net

Mon, Jun 07, 2004

A Tale Of Two Jumps

60 Years Apart

The combat controllers, aircrews and paratroopers made the drop of almost 700 paratroopers into the historic drop zone outside Ste. Mere Eglise look easy Saturday. But don't use that to measure the accomplishment of 60 years ago this day in 1944.

"We can do the same thing day or night," said a combat controller, "But look what we have to work with."

Today's combat controllers have state-of-the art communications equipment and the global-positioning system. The aircraft can hold twice as many paratroopers, in the case of the Air Force C-130s, and four times as many in the case of the Air Force C-17s.

Now, imagine the night of June 5, 1944.

Portions of two US airborne divisions and one British division jumped into Normandy. It was dark, the weather was rotten, and there was an unexpected wind that sent the C-47s – the military version of the DC-3 – all over the skies. Some pathfinders jumped in early, but their communications gear was primitive and in many cases wouldn't work. They did have lights that signaled to planes overhead where to drop and they set those up.

Now add to that: Someone is shooting at you.

"It was a tremendously difficult accomplishment from a purely military viewpoint," said the controller.

The late historian Stephen Ambrose in his book "D-Day" said that Operation Overlord commander Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower was, of all facets of the invasion, most concerned about the airborne operations. Officials at his headquarters estimated the paratroopers would take 80 percent casualties.

"We still would have done it if we knew that estimate," said Ralph Harp, one of the men who made the jump in 1944. "For the guys on the beach to be successful, we had to be here. Besides, it was the Army. It wasn't like we had a lot of choice."

(ANN salutes Jim Garamone, American Forces Press Service)

FMI: www.normandy-dday.com

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