This is the story of the biggest seaborne landing in history.
Codenamed Operation HUSKY, the Allied assault
on Sicily on 10 July 1943 remains the largest amphibious invasion ever mounted
in world history, landing more men in a single day than at any other time. That day, over
160,000 British, American and Canadian troops were dropped from the sky or came
ashore, more than on D-Day just under a year later. It was also preceded by an
air campaign that marked a new direction and dominance of the skies by Allies.
The subsequent thirty-eight-day Battle for Sicily was one of the
most dramatic of the entire Second World War, involving daring raids by special
forces, deals with the Mafia, attacks across mosquito-infested plains and
perilous assaults up almost sheer faces of rock and scree.
It was a brutal campaign - the violence was extreme, the heat
unbearable, the stench of rotting corpses intense and all-pervasive, the
problems of malaria, dysentery and other diseases a constant plague. And all
while trying to fight a way across an island of limited infrastructure and unforgiving
landscape, and against a German foe who would not give up.
It also signalled the beginning of the end of
the War in the West. From here on, Italy ceased to participate in the war, the
noose began to close around the neck of Nazi Germany, and the coalition between
the United States and Britain came of age. Most crucially, it would be a
critical learning exercise before Operation OVERLORD, the Allied invasion of
Normandy, in June 1944.
Based on his own battlefield studies in Sicily and on much new research
over the past thirty years, James Holland's SICILY '43 offers a vital new
perspective on a major turning point in World War II. It is a timely, powerful
and dramatic account by a master military historian and will fill a major gap
in the narrative history of the Second World War.
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