06/03/2026
🌜 German Officer Watched 7,000 Allied Ships on D-Day – Knew The Invasion Was Unstoppable
June 6th, 1944. 5:00 a.m. Chrisc Battery, Normandy Coast. The binoculars trembled slightly as Oloitant Zuri Walter Omson swept them across the horizon, recording in his mind an image that would haunt him for the rest of his life. Through the pre-dawn gloom, he witnessed something that contradicted every assurance from the high command.
The English Channel, that protective moat that had shielded the Third Reich's western flank, had transformed into a steel highway, an endless armada of vessels stretching from horizon to horizon, their dark silhouettes merging into one continuous mass of approaching doom. The invasion force comprised 6,939 vessels, 1,213 warships, 4,126 landing craft, 736 ancillary craft, and 864 merchant vessels manned by over 195,000 naval personnel from eight Allied countries. At 552 a.m.
, Olmson's battery received the order to open fire. 3 minutes later at 5:55 a.m. the first shells from his 210 mm Czechmade Scoda cannons arked toward the invasion fleet. Drops of water against an approaching tsunami. His battery engaged the US cruisers USS Tuscaloosa and USS Quincy and the battleship USS Nevada.
At 6:30 a.m., his guns would claim the destroyer USS Cory, the only US destroyer lost on D-Day. From his reinforced concrete observation post at top the Crisb battery, the 32-year-old naval officer had just become the first German defender to sight and engage the Allied invasion of Fortress Europe.
What Om saw through his Zeiss rangefinder that morning was not just an invasion fleet. It was the physical manifestation of an industrial capacity that N**i propaganda had assured him could not exist. The mathematics of defeat were sailing toward him at 8 knots. The transformation had begun. Within hours, German officers across Normandy would witness a demonstration of Allied industrial might that would shatter every assumption about their enemy's capabilities and mark the beginning of the end for Hitler's thousand-year reich. The darkness of June 5th had
brought ominous signs. At Army Group B headquarters in Laros Guyong, 50 mi from the coast. Lieutenant General Hans Spidel, chief of staff to Field Marshal Irwin RML since April 15th, 1944, monitored increasingly disturbing reports. RML himself was absent in Germany celebrating his wife's birthday, convinced the weather was too poor for any invasion attemp
At 1:20 a.m., the 7th Army received notification of massive parachute drops across Normandy. The 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions numbering over 13,000 men were being delivered by Douglas C 47 Sky Trains. General Dere artillery Eric Marx commanding the 84th Corps from his headquarters in St. Lau understood immediately. A veteran of the Eastern front who had lost a leg at Stalingrad, Markx possessed the tactical instinct that years of combat had honed to a razor's edge.
Yet even Markx, one of the Vermacht's most experienced commanders, could not imagine the scale of what was approaching. The German defenders had prepared for an invasion. They had not prepared for an industrial avalanche that would bury them under sheer material superiority. Vice Admiral Friedrich R***r, appointed as naval adviser to Raml in November 1943, had spent months inspecting the coastal defenses... 👉See more photos and the full story in the comments below⤵️👇👇