French soldiers encountered the S-mine during minor probes into the German
Saar region on 7–11 September 1939, during the
Saar Offensive. The S-mine contributed to the withdrawal of these French incursions. The mine's performance in the Saar region affirmed its effectiveness in the eyes of the German leadership and prompted the United States and other countries to copy its design. After their experience, the French nicknamed the mine "the silent soldier".
Nazi Germany used the S-mine heavily during the defense of its occupied territories and the German homeland during the Allied invasions of
Europe and
North Africa. The mines were produced in large numbers and planted liberally by defending German units. For example, the German Tenth Army deployed over 23,000 of them as part of their defense preparation during the
Allied invasion of Italy. S-mines were deployed on the beaches of
Normandy in preparation for the anticipated invasion as part of a general program of heavy mining and fortification. On the
Îles-St.-Marcouf, just off
Utah Beach, where Allied planners believed the Germans had established heavy gun batteries,
Erwin Rommel had ordered S-mines to be "sown like grass seed." To build the
Atlantic Wall, Germans laid millions of mines of various types including anti-personnel mines such as the S-mine, dug hundreds of kilometers of trenches, laid barbed wire, and constructed thousands of beach obstacles. The mines were subsequently used to defend German positions during the
Battle of Normandy and in the defense of Northern France and the German border. S-mines were typically used in combination with anti-tank mines to resist the advances of both
armor and
infantry. The S-mine acquired its
alliterative nickname "Bouncing Betty" from American infantrymen. The S-mine had a great psychological effect on Allied forces because of its tendency to maim, rather than kill, infantry. The German habit of laying them around anti-tank and anti-vehicle mines contributed to the S-mine's reputation. If a vehicle was disabled by a mine, the soldiers would be trapped in it until someone came to rescue them. Limbs and
genitalia were particularly vulnerable. In his book
Mine Warfare on Land, Lt. Col. Sloan described the S-mine as "probably the most feared device encountered by Allied troops in the war." S-mine production ceased after the end of World War II. No information has been discovered as to the exact fate of the remaining stockpiles of the S-mine, but it can be assumed a majority were destroyed as part of the disarmament of Germany after its surrender, although possibly some were preserved for study and
reverse engineering by the Allies. Many direct imitations of the S-mine appeared in the years following World War II. During the military occupation of Germany and the postwar rebuilding of Europe, the American
Army Corps of Engineers, the newly established French government, and the British
Ministry of Defence engaged in one of the most prolonged and successful mine-clearing operations throughout Western Europe. France deployed a variety of personnel, including 49,000 German prisoners of war. This joint operation eliminated a majority of the remaining fields of mines on the war-torn western half of the continent and was greatly assisted by the German policy of clearly marking and accurately recording the locations of minefields. Incidents involving accidental explosions of mines in North Africa, former
Warsaw Pact countries, France, and Germany still occur sporadically. North Africa and Eastern Europe have a particularly large amount of uncleared World War II-era minefields. While German documentation stated that the S-mine had an effective lifespan of two to seven years once planted, the explosive charge may remain dangerous indefinitely. == Characteristics ==