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June 5, 2026

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  • 5 min read

Remembering D-Day

“Those who have long enjoyed such privileges, as we enjoy, forget in time that men have died to win them.” (Franklin D. Roosevelt)(1)

Tomorrow, June 6, is the anniversary of D-Day, the very costly but successful turning point of WWII in 1944. The Allies’ invasion on the coast of France, codenamed Operation Overlord, remains the largest amphibious assault in human history, and marked the beginning of the end for Nazi Germany.

Before the D-Day landings on the Normandy beaches, an estimated 50 to 55 million people had already died from the war worldwide. This massive toll—representing roughly three-quarters of the entire war’s casualties—resulted from direct combat, systematic genocides, mass starvation, and disease. And up to this point of the war, the Nazi’s had murdered between 4.5 and 5 million Jews. Though the cost of D-Day was great, the world was changed for the better on that bloody day, and it is appropriate that we honor the sacrifices made. Compiled with some help from AI, here is a synopsis of this historic day.

The Strategic Significance of D-Day

To understand why D-Day was so monumental, we must realize that Nazi Germany had controlled mainland Western Europe since 1940. While the Soviet Union was engaged in a gargantuan struggle against the Germans on the Eastern Front, Soviet leader Joseph Stalin had long been demanding that Great Britain and the United States open a “Second Front” in the West to split Germany’s military strength. Doing so produced 3 immediate and significant results:

  1. By successfully landing in France, the Western Allies forced Adolf Hitler to fight a massive two-front war, drastically thinning out German resources, armor, and manpower.

  2. It shattered the myth that Europe was an impenetrable Nazi fortress, severely degrading German morale, while providing an immense psychological boost to Allied citizens worldwide.

  3. It established a western foothold that allowed American, British, Canadian, and Free French forces to rapidly pour troops, vehicles, and supplies into Europe, ensuring that Western European democracies would be liberated by the Allies (and not fall under Soviet control post-war).

The Master Plan: Operation Overlord

The overall plan for D-Day was a complex undertaking, coordinated by Supreme Allied Commander General Dwight D. Eisenhower. Before the operation, the Allies had to mislead the Germans about where the invasion would hit. The shortest route across the English Channel was from Dover, England. The Germans, naturally, fortified this area, which the Allies capitalized on via Operation Fortitude. They constructed an entirely fake army under General George Patton in southeast England, deploying inflatable tanks, wooden airplanes, and dummy landing craft, along with fake radio traffic. The amazing deception was so flawless that even after the real landings began in Normandy, Hitler still held back vital tank divisions for weeks, believing Normandy was just a diversion!

The Execution Phase

The overall plan relied on a highly synchronized, three-pronged assault at five locations combining airborne, naval, and amphibious forces.

1. The Airborne Drop (Midnight - 2:00 AM):

An incredible 11,000 aircraft supported the D-Day invasion. In the dark early hours of June 6, over 18,000 paratroopers from the U.S. 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions, alongside the British 6th Airborne Division, jumped behind enemy lines. The paratroopers’ job was to seize key bridges, destroy German artillery batteries, and block roads to prevent German reinforcements from rushing to the beaches. Heavy clouds scattered some troops miles from their targets, but the chaos actually confused the German command.

2. Naval and Aerial Bombardment (5:00 AM - 6:30 AM):

An astonishing armada of over 7,000 naval vessels—the largest naval force ever assembled—opened fire on the German defensive positions along the Atlantic Wall. Simultaneously, thousands of Allied bombers dropped bombs over the coast. While the bombing was highly effective on the three beaches attacked by British and Canadian forces, heavy cloud cover caused bombers at Omaha Beach, assaulted by American forces, to drop their payloads too far inland, leaving German fortifications completely intact. This proved to be terribly costly.

3. The Amphibious Assault (6:30 AM onward):

Landing craft dropped their ramps into the freezing surf, releasing waves of infantry—195,000 in all—and tanks into intense enemy fire. Soldiers faced a deadly gauntlet of mined obstacles, barbed wire, and heavy machine-gun crossfire from concrete bunkers.

The experience across the five beaches varied drastically. At Utah Beach, the U.S. 4th Infantry Division landed slightly off-target by accident–which proved to be a blessing, as it was a less-defended area–enabling them to move inland with relatively light casualties. The British and Canadian forces at Gold, Juno, and Sword beaches faced stiff resistance but successfully utilized specialized tanks (“Hobart’s Funnies”) designed to clear mines, bridge ditches, and smash concrete walls, allowing them to push inland by afternoon.

The Americans at Omaha Beach, however, suffered a legendary bloodbath. Due to the weather-related failure of the aerial bombardment and rough seas that sank most of their tanks before they reached the shore, the U.S. 1st and 29th Infantry Divisions were pinned down at the water’s edge by elite German defenders. For hours, the invasion at Omaha teetered on the edge of failure. Only through small, improvised groups of Army Rangers heroically scaling the steep bluffs, supported by destroyers scraping dangerously close to the shallow shore to blast bunkers at point-blank range, did the determined Americans finally break through.

The Aftermath and Legacy

By the end of June 6, the Allies had achieved the impossible: they had cracked the seemingly impenetrable Germans’ Atlantic Wall. Though none of the first-day objectives were fully met, a permanent foothold had been established.

The cost was staggering. The Allies suffered roughly 10,000 casualties on the first day alone, with over 4,000 confirmed dead. German casualties were estimated between 4,000 and 9,000 men. Yet, within less than a week, over 300,000 troops, 50,000 vehicles, and 100,000 tons of supplies were ashore.

In an engineering marvel, two massive artificial harbors, called Mulberry Harbours, were towed across the English Channel and assembled on the Normandy coast, turning a barren beach into one of the busiest ports in the world overnight. Both were fully operational by mid-June! Less than eleven months after the first troops hit the sand on June 6, 1944, Nazi Germany surrendered unconditionally, vindicating the incredible risk, planning, and sacrifice of D-Day.

Take some time tomorrow and consider the sacrifices of those who helped secure our freedom. (Perhaps see the new incredible movie Pressure, about the difficult task of choosing when to conduct the assault. It’s awesome.) Never forget them. “There are the men who took the cliffs. These are the champions who helped free a continent. These are the heroes who helped end a war.” (Ronald Reagan)(2)

Pray with me:

Father, probably all of us could do a better job of honoring the sacrifices of others on our behalf. We know You place a high importance on honor and gratitude. In Your Word, You placed great emphasis on David’s Mighty Men, honoring their loyalty and skill. You also include the accounts of several battles and wars. War is horrible, but You stated that it is necessary at times, in order to defeat evil (Ecclesiastes 3:8).

We thank You for the freedom and blessings we enjoy in America. Help us to never take for granted the price others have paid for our liberty, but to always have grateful hearts. Tomorrow, we honor the lives of those who died in WWII, liberating Europe and ensuring our freedom. Help us to walk worthy of their sacrifices.

Give our citizens the willingness to persevere in efforts to stop Iran’s evil plans. Remind all Americans that the temporary price we pay now will be worth it for the future of our world. Remove the influence of self-centered and unethical politicians who work against our President in order to further their careers. Expose their hypocrisy and vindicate the efforts to stop Iran’s evil regime. All of this we pray in Jesus’ name. Amen.

Our decree:

We determine to live lives of humble gratitude, remembering the sacrifices others have made for us.

Click on the link below to watch the full video.

 
 
 

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