Operation Queen | |||||||
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Part of the Allied advance from Paris to the Rhine in the Western Front of World War II | |||||||
The Schwammenauel dam at the Rur - one of the main objectives of Operation Queen | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
United States Air support United Kingdom | Germany | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Dwight Eisenhower Omar Bradley Courtney Hodges William Hood Simpson |
Gerd von Rundstedt Walter Model Gustav-Adolf von Zangen Erich Brandenberger | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
Twelfth United States Army Group 1st Army 9th Army |
Army Group B 7th Army 15th Army | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
38,500 | 39,000 |
Operation Queen was an American operation during World War II on the Western Front at the German Siegfried Line.
The operation was aimed against the Rur River, as a staging point for a subsequent thrust over the river to the Rhine into Germany. It was conducted by the First and Ninth U.S. Armies.
The offensive commenced on 16 November 1944 with one of the heaviest Allied tactical bombings of the war. However, the Allied advance was unexpectedly slow, against heavy German resistance, especially in the Hürtgen Forest through which the main thrust of the offensive was carried out. By mid-December, the Allies finally reached the Rur and tried to capture its important dams, when the Germans launched their own offensive, dubbed Wacht am Rhein. The ensuing Battle of the Bulge led to the immediate cessation of Allied offensive efforts into Germany until February 1945.