KylieDog said:
Dunkirk was an allied battle and the intent to evacuate allied forces, most of which they did. It it seen as positive because it was a success against numbers twice the size and a lot of civivlian ships were used to help the evacuation, 'Dunkirk spirit' is the positive phrase used, it was seen as British people all pulling together for success. Nearly all of the captured were French since they were the ones holding the front lines. |
Dunkirk was a necessity due to poor military planning. Plain and simple.
The failure in this early stage of WWII was thinking the French knew how to fight a war. I mean France's plan for stopping an invasion of their homeland by tanks was to run barbed wire. How a nation can sit between Spain and Germany in the 1930's and not have a better preparation for war is beyond me. I agree that Dunkirk was actually a success. Getting 330,000 soldiers evacuated at such a minimal loss was a success, but getting yourself backed into a corner after having your defenses over run was a failure.
My comment was tongue-in-cheek to be sure. Hyper-critical, but tongue-in-cheek.







