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Battle of France



         


(Picture)
The Battle of France
ConflictWorld War II
DateMay 10, 1940 - June 22, 1940
PlaceFrance
ResultDecisive German victory
Combatants
Allies (France, Britain, Belgium, Netherlands) Germany
Commanders
Maurice Gamelin (French)

Lord Gort (British Expeditionary Force)

Gerd von Rundstedt (Army Group A)
Fedor von Bock (Army Group B)
Wilhelm von Leeb (Army Group C)
Strength
144 divisions
13,974 guns
3,384 tanks
3,099 aircraft
141 divisions
7,378 guns
2,445 tanks
5,446 aircraft
Casualties
401,000 killed/wounded

1,900,000 French POWs

27,000 killed/wounded

In World War II, Battle of France or Case Yellow (Fall Gelb in German) was the German invasion of France and the Low Countries, executed 10 May, 1940 which ended the phony war. German armored units punched through the Ardennes, outflanking the Maginot Line and unhinging the Allied defenders.

Fall Gelb had been suggested by General Erich von Manstein, but had been rejected by the German General Staff. The crash in Belgium of a light plane carrying two German officers with a copy of the then current invasion plan (termed Case White) led Hitler to ask about alternatives; Manstein's plan turned up. It had the virtue of being unlikely (from a defense point of view) as the Ardennes was heavily wooded and implausible as a route for a mechanized invasion. It had the considerable virtues of not having been intercepted by the Allies (for no copies were being carried about) and of being dramatic, which seems to have appealed to Hitler.

France fell in less than a month. Much of the British army was able to escape by an evacuation from Dunkirk and other channel ports. The French Republic collapsed and was replaced by an "État Français" ("French State") headed by Marshal Henri Philippe Pétain. His government based in Vichy (hence the name, Vichy France) became a loyal partner of the Axis for the rest of the war. This campaign included Operation Rot.

Some of the suggested causes of the Allied defeat were:

American journalists, being neutrals at the time, observed much of this on both sides. It is they who took a famous sequence of photographs of Hitler dancing a jig for his officers the day of the surrender ceremony.

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Casualties

Many versions vary in the number of casualties in the Battle of France. Approximately 27,000 Germans were killed or wounded. In exchange, they had destroyed the French, Belgian, Dutch, and British armies. 1,900,000 Frenchmen had been made prisoner. Casualties were 300,000 French killed or wounded, 68,000 British, 23,000 Belgian, and 10,000 Dutch.


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Further Reading


Berlin Diary, William L. Shirer. In the period just before the surrender, Shirer worked for CBS News under Edward R Murrow, moving around Europe as events dictated. This is his written account of the period.


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See Also

For the World War II campaign to liberate France in 1944 see Battle of Normandy.

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External Links


Campaigns and Theatres of World War II
Europe
Poland | Denmark & Norway | France and the Low Countries | Britain | Balkans & Greece| Eastern Front | Italy | Western Front
Asia Pacific
South-East Asian Theatre | Pacific Theatre of Operations
North Africa
Libya-Egypt Campaign | Tunisia Campaign | East African Campaign
Other
Atlantic Ocean | Mediterranean Sea | Strategic Bombing
Contemporaneous Wars
Chinese Civil War | Sino-Japanese War | Winter War | Continuation War






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