The Coup de Main operation at the bridges between Bénouville and Ranville were the first successes of an invasion which would take almost a year to arrive in Berlin. From this tidy and efficient start the Allied soldiers soon found the going tougher than expected with Caen, the objective for D Day +1, falling after a month of bitter fighting. However, had D Company's mission failed, then the Allies may never have reached Caen and COSSAC could have seen a similar sequence of events as at Dunkirk three years earlier with soldiers having to flee into the sea to escape the German machine gun fire. Colonel von Luck of the German 192nd Regiment of 21st Panzer is said to have speculated that had D Company failed to hold the two bridges, then his tank regiment would have been on the beaches to greet the disembarking troops and if that were the case then it is quite possible to predict a very different outcome to the invasion.
However, D Company took and held the bridges and they did it with such speed, efficiency and professionalism that on the river bridge there was not even a shot fired in the capture (the holding is a different matter). Major Howard puts the success of the operation down to several key factors; the amazingly high level of morale in the company, not just amongst the soldiers but the whole company, officers and other ranks gelled almost seamlessly. In addition the level of fitness was such in the company that they were physically prepared for every eventuality on their high-risk mission as the men of glider number five proved.
There were, though, two factors which greatly increased the likelihood of success for the mission. One was the skill and preparation of the glider pilots. Possibly one of the chief reasons for so many of General Gale's sleepless nights was the decision to glider land troops inland, unprotected. The events in Sicily, a year prior to D Day where so many men had lost their lives in a catastrophic attempt at glider-based assault, served as a constant reminder to Gale the danger and frailties of an operation like this. However it paid off, the glider landings were exceptional. In fact, Air Chief Marshal Leigh-Mallory commended the glider pilots on D Day saying that he believed it to be the best piece of flying in the Second World war. The secret behind the accuracy of the flying and, indeed the whole operation, was the training that everyone involved was put through and the vast amount of preparation that was done. When the day came to put the operation in to effect, Howard's men had been drilled for every possible situation that they could face and this preparedness meant that they caught the Germans completely by surprise. With the help of the French Resistance in Bénouville and in particular La Famille Gondrée who lived in a small cafe just by the canal bridge, D Company knew exactly what to expect in terms of numbers of men, weapons and nearby German reinforcements. In addition the glider training that the pilots and navigators were put through meant that on 6th June, they could fly the mission blindfolded. It is incredible to think that all this training and preparation was done without one Allied soldier stepping on French soil, moreover that it worked.
It is hard to suggest that this one action itself swung the War round completely, as well as this assault there were the significant attacks by 6th Airborne on the Merville battery and the bridges over the River Dives and the American attack on the battery at Pointe de Hoc and the two US Airborne Division's assault onto the Cotentin Peninsular, away to the west, but this coup de main assault did go a long way to making sure that the Allied troops were able to disembark safely on the beaches. In showing their gratitude to the men of 6th Airborne the bridge over the Caen Canal was renamed in their honour; Pegasus Bridge (named after the winged horse which appears on the Airborne Forces badge).