To Lose a Battle (116 page)

Read To Lose a Battle Online

Authors: Alistair Horne

BOOK: To Lose a Battle
9.2Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

14
. For this, the American Ambassador in Paris, William Bullitt, must be held greatly to blame. In an age when Ambassadors carried weight and were more than merely the post-office clerks they tend to be today, Bullitt appears to have sinned by misleading both his own country and France as to the true situation in the other. Washington was persuaded by Bullitt that France’s fighting capacity was much greater than it was, while through him the French Government was led to expect far greater aid than could possibly have been forthcoming from the United States at that time.

15
. Churchill’s italics.

16
. Isabella was Queen of France from 1389 to 1435; she gave her daughter, Catherine, in marriage to King Henry V of England, whom she recognized as heir to the King of France, and is generally held responsible for the surrender of France to the English. Isabella was buried, without honours, at St Denis.

1
. Where it was later destroyed in an R.A.F. air-raid.

2
. Because of the confusion of the collapse, there are discrepancies here.

3
. It subsequently received orders from Keitel banning all such religious services.

4
. These were; Keitel (the O.K.W. Chief of Staff); Brauchitsch (Army C.-in-C.); Rundstedt, Bock and Leeb (the three Army Group commanders); Reichenau, List, Kluge, and Witzleben (Army commanders); and Milch, Kesselring and Sperrle from the Luftwaffe. Conspicuously absent from these so honoured was Halder; Shirer, watching the scene, thought him the ‘saddest figure’ there.

5
. Killed in Russia.

6
. Killed in the Western Desert, once again fighting under Rommel.

7
. ‘Knight’s Cross with Oak Leaves, Swords and Diamonds’.

8
. After the war, Manstein, sentenced to a lengthy imprisonment for war crimes, was at first reluctant to speak to any Allied interviewers. When he did, in old age, he would often express surprise that anything particularly brilliant should be seen in his plan,
Sichelschnitt
: ‘After all,’ he remarked once, ‘We just did the obvious thing; we attacked the enemy’s weakest point. The hopeless French reconnaissance won us the Battle of France; just that.’

9
. He had also escaped from a German P.O.W. camp in the previous war.

10
. As a further piece of irony, it was the statesman – Charles de Gaulle – who had sold to the French Government the amazing notion of an ‘indisoluble union’ between Britain and France in the darkest hour of June 1940 who kept the door to Europe barred to Britain while he lived.

1
. His reputation later became somewhat tarnished in the Lebanon.

1
. The findings of such inquiries as the Serre Commission are at best only partially satisfactory.

1
.
Geschichte der 7 Panzer-Division im Westfeldzug.

Table of Contents

Cover

About the Author

Title Page

Copyright Page

Contents

Dedication

Tables and Maps

Foreword to 1990 edition

Preface to 1990 edition

Preface to 1979 edition

Acknowledgements

TO LOSE A BATTLE

Part One: 1919–40
Chapter 1: Grandeur and Misery of Victory
Chapter: 2 ‘Thank God for the French Army’
Chapter: 3 Fortune Changes Sides
Chapter: 4 Palinurus Nods
Chapter: 5 ‘Queer Kind of War’
Chapter: 6 Gamelin
Chapter: 7 The Sickle and the Reaper
Chapter: 8 Towards the Brink
Part Two
Chapter: 9 The Crocus Blossoms
Chapter: 10 Through the Ardennes
Chapter: 11 On the Meuse
Chapter: 12 The Crossing
Chapter: 13 Consolidating the Bridgeheads
Chapter: 14 The Break-Out
Chapter: 15 ‘We Have Lost the Battle!’
Chapter: 16 The Panzers Halt
Chapter: 17 The Dash to the Sea
Chapter: 18 Encirclement
Chapter: 19 The End in the North
Chapter: 20 One Last Battle
Chapter: 21 Aftermath
Bibliography
Reference Notes
Notes to Foreword
Index
Index of Military Units
Footnotes
Preface to 1990 edition
Page 34
Preface to 1979 edition
Page 38
Chapter: 1 Grandeur and Misery of Victory
Page 45
Page 46
Page 55
Page 64
Chapter: 2 ‘Thank God for the French Army’
Page 66
Page 71
Page 72
Page 74
Page 75
Page 76

Other books

Mistletoe Menage by Molly Ann Wishlade
Cattail Ridge by T.L. Haddix
All Backs Were Turned by Marek Hlasko
Training Days by Jane Frances
Diving Into Him by Elizabeth Barone
Midnight Man by Lisa Marie Rice
Belle Pearl by Arianne Richmonde
Nate by Delores Fossen
Knight of the Demon Queen by Barbara Hambly