The Six Weeks' War : France : May 10 - June 25, 1940
by Draper, Theodore
Published by : Army Education Press (GHQ,Rawalpindi) Physical details: 322 Pages 22x14 cm | HB Year: 1986Item type | Current location | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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General Stacks | Non-fiction | 940.5421 D756S 1986 (Browse shelf) | Available | 25383 |
This book has been reproduced for Army Education Press by Pap-Board Printers Ltd., Rawalpindi (Pakistan) on behalf of Ferozsons Ltd., Lahore (Pakistan) under the authority of the Publisher of this book.
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A work of considerable background and insight, but largely for students of military and diplomatic affairs. A sober study, thoroughly researched and reasoned, of that short, sad saga of compromise and confusion and contradiction. The paradox of the French campaign which was to be based on a ""continuous front"" and ""unbroken fortifications"" and which was never more than a paper theory. Why was the Maginot Line not completed; what were the errors of the march into Belgium; of the French offensive-defensive which combined the weaknesses of both; the action -- day by day -- position by position, division by division. And the politics behind the civilian and military blunders the defeatists, the dualistic Reynaud, the use of Petain as cover, and the war between the defeatists and anti-defeatists with de Gaulle the spokesman of the latter. Then the Belgian capitulation and the question of Leopold's integrity; Dunkerque, which finished the French and brought the British to life; the fall of Paris, the new capital and the new government. And in recapitulation, the diplomatic and military lessons to be derived. A thoughtful and provocative book, but not for the man in the street.
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