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As planned in Operation Overlords American landings on the Cotentin Peninsula, two U.S. Army airborne divisions - the 82nd and 101st - were to drop behind the assault sector of Utah Beach before dawn on D-Day and support the landings of the American 4th Infantry Division on the beach. The tasks and objectives allocated to the 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions were subdivided into various missions. The overall objective for the airborne forces on D-Day were to secure key bridges, roads, towns, and strategic choke points that could prevent possible German counterattacks on Utah Beach. Major General Maxwell D. Taylors 101st Airborne Division, a well-trained division that would see its first action, was to jump into Normandy on the night of D-Day alongside the veterans of the 82nd. Parachuting into Normandy to the west and southwest of Utah Beach at Drop Zones A, C, and D, it was the 101st Airbornes objectives for Mission Albany to ensure that the Utah Beach landings by the 4th