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Operation Totalize
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=={{lang|de|Panzergruppe West}}== [[Brigadeführer|SS ''Brigadeführer'']] (General) [[Kurt Meyer]], commander of the 12th SS Panzer Division, had already ordered infantry from various formations shattered by the bombers and by the armoured attack, to occupy Cintheaux. He also moved forward two [[Battlegroup (army)|battlegroups]] from his division, consisting of [[Assault gun|assault guns]], infantry and Tiger tanks, positioning them across the Canadian front.{{sfn|Bercuson|2004|p=228}} Shortly after midday, he ordered these two battlegroups to counter-attack the leading Allied troops. At this point, the Allied offensive plan called for additional bombardment by the Eighth Air Force, before the 4th Canadian Armoured Division and the 1st Polish Armoured Division pushed south towards Falaise on either side of the Caen–Falaise Road.{{sfn|D'Este|2004|pp=424, 422}} The counter-attack by the 12th SS Panzer Division failed but placed Meyer's tanks north of the target area that the Eighth Air Force bombarded, ready for the second phase of the Allied attack. Spared the effects of the bombing, the tanks slowed the advance of the 1st Polish Armoured Division, preventing a breakthrough east of the road. West of the road, the German infantry at Cintheaux held up the Canadian armoured formations. Neither division (both on their debut) pressed their attacks as hard as Simonds demanded and laagered (took up defensive positions) while vehicles and troops were supplied and rested when dark fell.{{sfn|Bercuson|2004|pp=229–230}} To restore the momentum of the attack, Simonds ordered a column from the 4th Canadian Armoured Division to seize Hill 195, just to the west of the main road, halfway between Cintheaux and Falaise. Worthington Force with B, C and HQ companies of the [[Algonquin Regiment]] supporting {{nowrap|52 tanks}} from the [[British Columbia Regiment]], bumped into the rear of Halfpenny Force fighting the SS in Bretteville-le-Rabet, went round them and lost direction. When dawn broke on 9 August, Worthington Force was {{cvt|4.5|mi}} to the east of Hill 195 at [[Battle for Hill 140|Hill 140]], halfway between [[Estrées-la-Campagne|Estrees-la-Campagne]] and [[Mazières|Mazieres]]. Of the fifteen attacking Allied tanks only two were able to escape.{{sfn|Fellgiebel|1986|p=366}}{{sfn|Bergström|2014|p=172}} By 17.00 hours what remained of Worthington Force had either been captured or forced to withdraw.{{sfn|Bercuson|2004|p=230}}{{efn|German armoured counter-attacks led notably by {{lang|de|SS-Oberscharführer}} [[Rudolf Roy]].{{sfn|Számvéber|2018|p=168}}}} Because the column was on Hill 140, the wrong objective, other units sent to reinforce went towards the wrong hill. Eventually, another force captured Hill 195 in a model night attack on 10 August; the Germans had been given time to withdraw and reform a defensive line on the [[Laison River]].{{sfn|Van der Vat|2003|p=166}} By 11 August, the Anglo-Canadian offensive had ended.{{sfn|Cawthorne|2005|p=125}}
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