#Canadians paid the price for British mistakes in Dieppe, says British historian

“#Canadians paid the price for British mistakes in Dieppe, says British historian”
The losses at Dieppe were, proportionally, among the worst suffered in a single operation in the Allied war in Western Europe. Of roughly 6,000 ground troops who took part, 3,614 were killed, wounded or captured. The scale of the operation meant it carries an intimacy and imaginability. Standing on a summer morning by the sea wall beneath the gardens that run down to the narrow little beach at Puys where the Royal Regiment of Canada came ashore, it is very easy to summon up the horrors of that day; the demonic rip of bullets pouring from the defenders’ MG34 machine guns at a rate of 15 rounds a second, the whistle and thud of mortars and the humped khaki shapes, swaying face down in waves clouded with blood.
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That the victims were mostly Canadians is one of the elements that give the story its heavy tinge of tragedy. The deference which the British were forced to show to the Russians and Americans did not apply to Dominion family members. Despite the blood debt owed by Britain to Canada for its support in the previous war, the old habits of condescension and the assumption of unquestioning obedience died hard. Just as at Passchendaele [in 1917], the Canadians would pay the price for British mistakes. Their leaders too had a share in the blame. If, as some said, the troops were martyrs, then those who commanded them had done much to determine their fate.
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