
Why France Collapsed
Description
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This book is a bold attempt to clarify responsibilities and to answer the question of how an army-not greatly inferior to the enemy's and only ten years before believed to be the strongest in Europe- met such an ignominious defeat. First it tells the story of the reconstitution of the army after 1919 and of the French defence preparations. It shows the chiefs' of staff lack of imagination: how dull were their analyses of the recent war, how blind they were to the outside world, how negligent of such matters as the increase in speeds and range of armaments, how incurious as to their enemies, and how subservient to the politicians who courted an electorate which loathed war but was not ready to pay for peace, while an out-of-date armament industry existed on high protective tariffs. In 1939 France had an army and an air force trained for defeat.
The major part of the book, however, is a blow-by-blow narrative describing each stage, chiefly at the level of the lower formations. The events surrounding each operation create an astonishing picture of self-inflicted defeats, failure of communications, contradictory orders and an inability to control the mobs of civilian refugees who blocked roads and prevented reinforcement and supply.
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Person
Having trained as a lawyer, Chapman's chief literary works from the 1930s onwards analyzed French political system and modern French history, and his time in war.
Content
- Cover
- Title Page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Part I The Withered Laurels
- 1 The Quavering Hands
- 2 The Return to the Middle Ages
- 3 The Baulking of Weygand
- 4 The Surrender of the Rhineland Outwork
- 5 Arms for Defeat
- 6 The Betrayal of an Ally
- 7 On the Brink
- Part II Drôle de Guerre
- 1 The Loss of a Second Ally
- 2 Illusions and Disillusion
- 3 Deficiencies and Defects
- 4 Forecasts and Plans
- 5 The Eleventh Hour
- Part III The Disaster
- 1 The Seventh Army and the Islands 10-17 May
- 2 The First Army and the Dyle Line 10-14 May
- 3 The Meuse
- Dinant 13 May
- 4 The Meuse
- Sedan 10-14 May
- 5 The Meuse
- Monthermé 13-15 May
- 6 G.Q.G. Action 13 May
- 7 Dismemberment of the Ninth Army 13-15 May
- 8 The Splitting of the Centre 13-16 May
- 9 The Disarming of the 2nd Armoured Division 13-21 May
- 10 The End of the Ninth Army 15-19 May
- 11 The Loss of Maubeuge and the Oise 15-19 May
- 12 Reaction in Paris 15-17 May
- 13 Stopgaps 16-20 May
- 14 The End of Gamelin and Arrival of Weygand 17-19 May
- 15 The British at Arras 20-21 May
- 16 The Widening of the Gap 17-23 May
- 17 Weygand: Consultations and Orders 19-23 May
- 18 Confused Discussion 23-26 May
- 19 The Retreat: Lille and Dunkirk 26 May-2 June
- 20 Failure on the Somme 25 May-4 June
- 21 'Fall Rot'
- to the Oise 5-10 June
- 22 The End of IX Corps 7-12 June
- 23 Reynaud Reconstructs. Italy Declares War. Paris Evacuated 6-10 June
- 24 General Prételat and Army Group Two 10 May-8 June
- 25 Army Groups Four and Two 9-12 June
- 26 Army Group Two Isolated 13-15 June
- 27 Across the Loire 13 June
- 28 Alsace-Lorraine 11-16 June
- 29 From Seine to Loire 11-16 June
- 30 Armistice 14-17 June
- 31 The Last of the Maginot. The Italian Farce 17-25 June
- Epilogue
- Maps
- Appendixes:
- A The Make-up of the French Ground Forces
- B The German Forces
- C The British Expeditionary Force
- D The Belgian Armed Forces
- E Relative Aircraft Types
- F Air Operations
- source notes
- Select Bibliography
- Footnotes
- 1 The Quavering Hands
- 2 The Return To The Middle Ages
- 3 The Baulking of Weygand
- 5 Arms for Defeat
- 6 The Betrayal of an Ally
- 7 On the Brink
- 9 Illusions and Disillusion
- 10 Deficiencies and Defects
- 11 Forecasts and Plans
- 12 The Eleventh Hour
- 13 The Seventh Army and the Islands, 10-17 may
- 15 The Meuse
- Dinant, 13 May
- 16 The Meuse
- Sedan, 10-14 May
- 17 The Meuse
- MonthermÉ, 13-15 May
- 19 Dismemberment of the Ninth Army, 13-15 May
- 20 The Splitting of the Centre, 13-16 May
- 22 The End of the Ninth Army, 15-19 May
- 23 The Loss of Maubeuge and the Oise, 15-19 May
- 24 Reaction in Paris, 15-17 May
- 26 The End of Gamelin and Arrival of Weygand, 17-19 May
- 27 The British at Arras, 20-21 May
- 28 The Widening of the Gap, 17-23 May
- 29 Weygand: Consultations and Orders, 19-23 May
- 30 Confused Discussion, 23-26 May
- 31 The Retreat: Lille and Dunkirk, 26 May-2 June
- 32 Failure on the Somme, 25 May-4 June
- 33 'Fall Rot'
- to the Oise, 5-10 June
- 34 The End of IX Corps, 7-12 June
- 35 Reynaud Reconstructs. Italy Declares War. Paris Evacuated, 6-10 June
- 36 General PrÉtelat and Army Group Two, 10 May-8 June
- 37 Army Groups Four and Two, 9-12 June
- 38 Army Group Two Isolated, 13-15 June
- 39 Across the Loire, 13 June
- 40 Alsace-Lorraine, 11-16 June
- 41 From Seine to Loire, 11-16 June
- 43 The Last of the Maginot. the Italian Farce. 17-25 June
- A the make-up of the French Ground Forces, 10 May-zs June
- Imprint
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