Code-name Nelly British Radar Units on Walcheren and Flanders, 1944-1945 Operation 'Infatuate' was conceived to capture the island of Walcheren and was part of the plan to clear the mouth of the Scheldt River, enabling Antwerp to be used as a port. The Germans had heavily fortified Walcheren during its four years of occupation and it was here, at the entrance to the Scheldt River, that the Germans were making a stand. It took nearly two months of bombardments by the Royal Air Force (RAF) and no less than six allied operations by land to quell the dogged German resistance. Paul Crucq With the surrender of the German garrison on Walcheren at the beginning of November, the operations to clear the enemy from the riverbanks of the Scheldt were completed. Minesweeping commenced, but it was not until the end of November that the first Allied supply convoys entered the port of Antwerp. The Germans understood the importance of Antwerp and ordered their Navy and Air Force to bring the Thames-Scheldt convoy route to a standstill. The German Kriegsmarine deployed E-boats, the midget submarines Biber, Molch 19 Zeeuws Tijdschrift 2004/6-7

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Zeeuws Tijdschrift | 2004 | | pagina 21