Lightning War: Blitzkrieg in the West, 1940Wiley, 2003 - 388 pages "So long as the English tongue survives, the word Dunkerque will be spoken with reverence. For in that harbor, in such a hell as never blazed on earth before, at the end of a lost battle, the rags and blemishes that have hidden the soul of democracy fell away. . . . This shining thing in the souls of free men Hitler cannot command, or stain, or conquer. . . . It is the great tradition of democracy. It is the future. It is victory." -- The New York Times, June 1, 1940 In Lightning War, historian Ronald Powaski tells the dramatic story of the German defeat of the Allies in northern France and the Low Countries in 1940. This is the first book to cover the campaign as a whole, examining the issues from all sides-- those of the French, British, German, and other involved nations. From the Battle of the Meuse to the German drive to the English Channel, from the Weygand Plan to Operation Dynamo, Powaski relates the events through the eyes of the generals, politicians, and servicemen who witnessed and forever shaped history. |
À l'intérieur du livre
Résultats 1-3 sur 37
Page 21
... army would remain fixed on French soil , holding the line of the Meuse from the Bel- gian border to the town of Sedan . To the right of the 9th Army , the five divisions ... army's soldiers had much training , and they had The Dyle Plan 21.
... army would remain fixed on French soil , holding the line of the Meuse from the Bel- gian border to the town of Sedan . To the right of the 9th Army , the five divisions ... army's soldiers had much training , and they had The Dyle Plan 21.
Page 39
... army had displayed in World War I. Brauchitsch even said there were " mutinies " in some units and displays of drunken indiscipline at the front that invited comparison with the uglier scenes of the army's disintegration in 1918 . With ...
... army had displayed in World War I. Brauchitsch even said there were " mutinies " in some units and displays of drunken indiscipline at the front that invited comparison with the uglier scenes of the army's disintegration in 1918 . With ...
Page 169
... army's chief of staff , that “ it looks as though the French 1st Army has been broken up in the northern and southern outskirts of Namur . " Léopold reacted to this news by calling his chief ministers to his mil- itary headquarters at ...
... army's chief of staff , that “ it looks as though the French 1st Army has been broken up in the northern and southern outskirts of Namur . " Léopold reacted to this news by calling his chief ministers to his mil- itary headquarters at ...
Table des matières
CHAPTER Two The Dyle Plan | 7 |
CHAPTER THREE The Manstein Plan | 33 |
CHAPTER FOUR The Battle Begins May 1014 | 55 |
Droits d'auteur | |
8 autres sections non affichées
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Expressions et termes fréquents
10th Panzer Division 1st Panzer 2nd Panzer 2nd Panzer Division 9th Army Abrial advance Allied armies Armored Division Army Group army's Arras arrived artillery asked Battalion battle beaches Belgian army Belgium Billotte bombers bombs Brauchitsch bridge bridgehead Britain British Bulson Cabinet Canal Churchill Churchill's Colonel Corap's counterattack Daladier defend destroyer Dunkirk Dutch Dyle Eben Emael enemy evacuation Fall Gelb fight fighters fire flank forces France France's French 1st Army French army French tanks front Führer Gamelin Gaulle Gelb Georges German attack Gort Gort's Guderian guns Halder Halifax headquarters Heinz Guderian high command Hitler Huntziger Infantry Division Kleist Luftwaffe Manstein Manstein Plan Meuse River miles military minister mole Monthermé morning motorized night offensive officers Operation Dynamo Paris perimeter Pétain Pierlot planes Prioux Ramsay recalled Regiment Reinberger replied retreat Reynaud Rommel Rundstedt Sedan ships Shirer Somme River Spears staff surrender told Weygand withdraw