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On August 7th, 1944, the German Army launched Operation Lüttich, its last major armored counterattack in Normandy. Commanded by General Hans Eberbach, four Panzer divisions—nearly all remaining German armor in the west—were ordered to strike through Mortain, capture Avranches, and cut the Allied breakout corridor, isolating General George S. Patton’s U.S. Third Army. What followed was not a conventional tank battle. Within minutes of the advance, RAF Typhoon fighter-bombers detected German armored columns moving in daylight under clear skies. In a four-minute attack, the momentum of the counteroffensive was broken. Over the next seven hours, Allied air power—coordinated through forward air controllers and supported by nearby airfields—systematically denied German forces the ability to move, regroup, or resupply. By nightfall, 175 German tanks had been destroyed or disabled, along with hundreds of fuel trucks, ammunition carriers, and command vehicles. Operation Lüttich collapsed without achieving its objective, and the failure at Mortain directly contributed to the encirclement and destruction of German forces in the Falaise Pocket days later. This documentary examines: Why the Mortain counterattack was designed to isolate Patton’s Third Army How RAF Typhoons paralyzed four Panzer divisions in minutes Why air power and logistics—not tank duels—decided the battle How Mortain revealed the decisive role of industrial systems in modern warfare Mortain was not just a failed counterattack. It was the moment German armored warfare became obsolete in the face of Allied air superiority and industrial capacity. #WW2 #WW2documentary #normandy