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Battle of Dunkirk

For details about the major evacuation of British troops from Dunkirk see Operation DynamoThis article is about a Second World War battle in 1940, for the 1658 battle of the same name see Battle of the Dunes (1658) Military Conflict
conflict=Battle of Dunkirkpartof=World War IIimage=caption=date=May 26, 1940June 4, 1940place=Dunkirk, Franceresult=German tactical victorycombatant1=United Kingdom, Francecombatant2=Germanycommander1=Lord Gortcommander2=Gerd von Rundstedt (Army Group A), Ewald von Kleist (Panzergruppe von Kleist)strength1=approx. 400,000strength2=approx. 800,000casualties1=68,000 casualties including
34,000 captured
9 destroyers and 200+ smaller vessels sunk
177 planes shot down
casualties2=? killed
132 planes shot down
}

The Battle of Dunkirk (French: Bataille de Dunkerque) was a major battle during World War II which lasted from May 26 to June 4, 1940. A large force of British and French soldiers were cut off in northern France by a German armoured advance to the Channel coast at Calais. Over 330,000 Allied troops caught in the pocket were subsequently evacuated by sea to England in Operation Dynamo.

Background

After the Phony War, the Battle of France began in earnest on May 10, 1940. The German Army Group A burst through the Ardennes region and advanced rapidly to the west, then turned north in the so-called "sickle cut". To the east, Army Group B invaded and subdued the Netherlands and advanced westward through Belgium.

A series of hastly organized and limited Allied counterattacks, among them the Battle of Arras, failed to sever the German spearhead which reached the coast. This advance separated the British Expeditionary Force near Armentières, the French 1st and 7th Armies and the Belgians in the north from the majority of French troops south of the German penetration. After reaching the Channel the Germans swung north along the coast, threatening to capture the ports and trapping the British and French forces before they could evacuate to Britain. These lightly opposed German panzer divisions were halted outside Dunkirk on May 24 by Adolf Hitler against the declared will of commander-in-chief of the Wehrmacht Walther von Brauchitsch, as Hitler feared they had become over-extended. This order allowed the Germans to consolidate their gains and prepare for a southward advance against the remaining French forces. In addition, the terrain around Dunkirk was considered unsuitable for armor. The destruction of the Allied forces was initially assigned to the Luftwaffe and the German infantry organised in Army Group B.

The Dunkirk Pocket

On May 25, General Lord Gort, the commander of the BEF, decided to evacuate British forces. From May 25 to May 28, British troops retreated about 30 miles northwest into a pocket along the Franco-Belgian border extending from Dunkirk on the coast to the Belgian town of Poperinge. The Belgian army surrendered on May 28, followed the next day by elements of the French 1st Army trapped outside the Dunkirk Pocket.

Starting on May 27, Operation Dynamo began the evacuation of Allied troops from the Dunkirk area. The German Panzer divisions were ordered to resume their advance the same day, but improved Allied defences halted their advance. By May 31 the remaining Allied forces were compressed into a 5 km wide coastal strip from De Panne through Bray-Dunes to Dunkirk.

A total of five nations took part in the successful evacuation from Dunkirk – Britain, France, Belgium, Netherlands and Poland.

The defence of the perimeter required led to the loss or capture of a number of British Army units such as the 2nd Battalion of the Royal Norfolk Regiment who were involved in the Le Paradis massacre on 26 May.

Aftermath

The successful evacuation of troops from Dunkirk ended the first phase in the Battle of France. It provided a great boost to British morale, but left the French to stand alone against a renewed German assault southwards. German troops entered Paris on June 14 and accepted the surrender of France on June 22.

What if?

The battle of Dunkirk poses one of the great "what-ifs" of World War II, which has attracted speculation from many military historians.See for example John Strawson, If By Chance (MacMillan: 2004); Peter G. Tsouras, ed. Third Reich Victorious: The Alternate Decisions of World War II (Greenhill Books: 2002); Niall Ferguson, ed. Virtual History: Alternatives and Counterfactuals (Basic Books: 2000). If Hitler had not ordered the German panzer divisions to halt from 24 May to 26 May, but instead ordered an all-out attack on Dunkirk, the retreating Allies could have possibly been cut off from the sea and destroyed. If the whole of the British Expeditionary Force had been captured or killed at Dunkirk, not only would have Britain been vulnerable to invasion but morale in Britain could have possibly sunk so low as to have toppled the government and replaced it with one more disposed to making an accommodation with Nazi Germany, similar to the Vichy regime in France. Without the need to oppose the British in the Atlantic and North Africa – or even with the assistance of a Quisling government in Britain – perhaps the troops and resources thus freed would have been enough to wholly defeat the Soviet Union in 1941 and led to German conquest of the whole of Europe and Asia.

On the other hand, the panzer divisions were stopped for repairs and resupply, and to allow the rest of the army to catch up. Had they pushed forward recklessly, they could have outrun their supply lines and become vulnerable to being cut off themselves. Even if the British Expeditionary Force had been cut off and destroyed, it has generally been believed that few in Britain wanted to negotiate with the Nazis – Churchill had become Prime Minister after the fall of the Chamberlain government on May 10, 1940 precisely because his uncompromising belligerence reflected the mood of the nation. A commonly reported feeling at the time was relief that Britain was no longer encumbered by a requirement to defend France, and could fight alone on her own terms. However, in British wartime cabinet documents released in 1998, it was revealed that after the failure of the British Expeditionary Force in France and its evacuation at Dunkirk, Winston Churchill had lost support in the cabinet and in Parliament and there were suggestions that he might have been replaced by Foreign Secretary Lord Halifax who favoured peace negotiations.

The Dunkirk Spirit

The successful evacuation of Dunkirk in 1940, and particularly the rôle of the "little boats", was subsequently exploited very effectively in British propaganda, with the results that for many decades after the war the catch-phrase "Dunkirk spirit" stood for an almost romantic belief in the solidarity of the British people in times of adversity.

Later fighting at Dunkirk

The city of Dunkirk was besieged in September 1944 by units of the Second Canadian Division; German units withstood the siege, and as the First Canadian Army moved north into Belgium, the city was "masked" and left to the rear. The German garrison in Dunkirk held out until May 1945, denying the Allies the use of the port facilities.

See also

* Military history of the United Kingdom during World War II
* Blitzkrieg
* Battle of France

References

* Holmes, Richard, ed. (2001). "France, fall of". The Oxford Companion to Military History, New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198662092.
* Keegan, John. (1989). The Second World War, New York: Viking Penguin. ISBN 0670823597.
* Liddell Hart, B.H. (1970). History of the Second World War, New York: G.P. Putnam.
* Murray, Williamson and Millett, Allan R. A War to Be Won, Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press. ISBN 067400163X.
* Weinberg, Gerhard L. (1994). A World at Arms, New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521443172.
* Wilmot, Chester. (1952). The Struggle for Europe, Old Saybrook, Conn.: Konecky & Konecky. ISBN 1568525257.





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