WWII Decisions Online · Waalhaven — assault on the Rotterdam airfield
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Waalhaven — assault on the Rotterdam airfield

Oberstleutnant Dietrich von Choltitz, 16. Infanterie-Regiment (22. Luftlande-Division), German army

Waalhaven airfield, south of Rotterdam, commanded the air defence of the Rotterdam-The Hague area: it was the pivot the Germans wanted to seize intact in order to land their reinforcements. At 04:45 on 10 May, a company of Fallschirmjäger paratroopers dropped into the marshy ground bordering the runway. The Dutch defence, a few hundred men supported by Fokker G.I heavy fighters, resisted but gave way in under 2 hours; the airfield was in the attackers' hands by early morning.

At once, dozens of Ju 52s landed in a continuous chain on the captured runway to disembark the infantry of the — the first massive tactical airlift in military history. It was on this shuttle that Oberstleutnant arrived at the head of the .

Choltitz — the officer who in August 1944 would refuse to destroy Paris on Hitler's order — took operational command at Waalhaven. Before him lay the centre of Rotterdam and its bridges over the Maas. Behind him, a freshly captured airfield, still loosely held, vital for the flow of reinforcements. He had to decide on the immediate use of his forces.

Waalhaven, 10 May 1940, Oberstleutnant von Choltitz: push for Rotterdam or lock down the airfield?

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