Exercise Fabius
Exercise Fabius was a formal exercise for the Allied Operation Neptune in World War II.[1] (The other was Exercise Tiger, which had occurred a week earlier.)[2]
The exercise was planned to start on 2 May 1944, but bad weather delayed it to the next day.[1]
It consisted of six separate exercises:[1]
- Fabius 1 - elements of the 1st Infantry Division and 29th Infantry Division (United States) practiced amphibious landing at Slapton Sands.[1]
- Fabius 2 - elements of the 50th Infantry Division practiced landings at Hayling Island.[1]
- Fabius 3 - elements of the 3rd Canadian Infantry Division practiced landings at Bracklesham Bay.[1]
- Fabius 4 - elements of the 3rd Infantry Division and associated units practiced landing at Littlehampton.[1]
- Fabius 5 and 6 - practice for American and British forces working on buildup of forces and supplies on Allied beaches.[1]
They formed the largest amphibious training exercise of the war.[1] As the final exercise before Operation Neptune, it resembled closely the final operation and no major changes could be made to Operation Neptune.[1][3]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 1.9 Gators of Neptune: naval amphibious planning for the Normandy invasion, Christopher D. Yung, p.153
- ↑ Gators of Neptune: naval amphibious planning for the Normandy invasion, Christopher D. Yung, p.152
- ↑ Gators of Neptune: naval amphibious planning for the Normandy invasion, Christopher D. Yung, p.153