THE FORGOTTEN – OTHER D-DAY…. Operation Dragoon
At the Rhone American Cemetery north of St. Tropez, in the little city of Draguignan, above all the graves, a stone wall is inscribed:
In all, 250,000 Allied soldiers stormed France’s Mediterranean shores on Aug. 15, 1944, just 70 days after the D-Day landings at Normandy, catching German troops in a pincer so tight that Hitler muttered to aides, “This is the darkest day of my life.”
The invasion involved significant coordination of US forces represented by the 3d, 36th, and 45th Infantry Divisions, the 509th & 551st Parachute Infantry Regiments, the 550th Airborne Infantry Battalion (gliders), the bi-national troops of the 1st Special Services Forces, and even the OSS. The troops were delivered by the US Army Air Forces and the US Navy, both of which then provided air cover and landing support.
After the ceremonies at the Amphitheater, the assembled moved to the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier
and a chosen few among them placed a wreath.
“Preserving the memories so others will remember…” ™