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Let’s Bury These Phony Myths About World War II
by
Eric Margolis
Recently
by Eric Margolis: The
French Bombshell – Stranger Than Fiction
METZ, FRANCE
– In this ancient fortress city on the Mosel River that stand guard
on the traditional invasion route into France, one is surrounded
by the ghosts of great wars past – and the often cruel myths that
still linger.
As a former
instructor of military history and specialist in France’s 20th
century wars, let me address four particularly annoying and misleading
myths:
First, France’s
army did not simply surrender or run away in 1940, as ignorant American
know-nothing conservatives claim.
The German
Blitz that smote France on May-June, 1940, scattering its armies
like leaves before a storm, was a major historical revolution in
warfare. Blitzkrieg combined rapidly-moving armor and mobile infantry,
precision dive bombing, flexible logistical support, and new high
technologies in C3 – command, control and communications. In 1940,
Germany led the world in technology: 75% of all technical books
were then written in German.
France’s armies
and generals, trained to re-fight World War I, were overwhelmed
by lightening warfare. France was then still a largely agricultural
society. Blitzkrieg – now adopted by all major modern armed forces
– was designed to strike an enemy’s brain rather than body, paralyzing
his ability to manage large forces or to fight. The Germans called
it their "silver bullet."
Indeed it was.
France still relied on couriers to deliver vital information. Germany
was the world’s leader in mobile radio communications. Amazingly,
the French commander in chief, Gen. Gamelin, did not even have a
telephone in his HQ outside Paris.
Britain’s well-trained
expeditionary force in France was beaten just as quickly and thoroughly
as the French, and saved itself only by abandoning its French allies
and fleeing across the Channel.
No army in
the world at that time could have withstood Germany’s blitzkrieg,
planned by the brilliant Erich von Manstein, and led by the audacious
Heinz Guderian, and Erwin Rommel –three of modern history’s greatest
generals.
They were also
incredibly lucky. Just one bomb on a German bridge over the Meuse,
or one impassable traffic jam in the Ardennes forest could have
meant the difference between victory and defeat. The French had
temporarily moved some of their weakest reserve units just into
the sector the Germans struck. It was, as Wellington said after
Waterloo, a damned close run thing.
Germany’s new,
fluid tactics shattered France’s armies. They were unable to reform
their lines in spite of often fierce resistance. The fast-moving
German panzers were constantly behind them. Retreat under fire is
the most difficult and perilous of all military operations. After
six weeks, and a stab in the back by Mussolini’s Italy, France’s
armies had disintegrated.
France lost
217,000 dead and 400,000 wounded in combat. Compare that to America’s
loss of 416,000 dead during four years of war in the Pacific and
Europe. At least France did not suffer the 2 million dead it lost
in World War I. Germany losses: 46,000 killed in action, 121,000
wounded, and 1,000 aircraft. By comparison, the US, British and
Canadians lost some 10,000 dead and wounded at D-Day.
Second, the
forts of France’s Maginot Line were not tactically outflanked, as
myth has it. The Germans struck NW of the Line’s end, through the
Belgian/French Ardennes Forest, a route anticipated by the French
Army which held war games there in 1939. The immobile French field
army failed, not the Maginot Line.
The Line, which
was never completed, was too costly, tied down too many men, and
came to symbolize France’s defensive attitude. But the Great Wall
of France fulfilled its designated mission of defending France’s
vital coal and steel industries of Alsace and Lorraine.
The Line was
also designed to channel any German attack through either Belgium
or Switzerland.
The Germans
concluded an attack on the Maginot Line would be too costly, and
opted for a different route – through Belgium.
The high water
table of Flanders, and France’s aversion to building forts behind
its Belgian ally, left the Franco-Belgian border with only scanty
fixed defenses.
Ironically,
after the German breakthrough at Sedan on the Meuse, a French corps
held in reserve to cover
this vital sector moved east to the Stenay Gap to protect the Maginot
Line’s left flank, opening
the way for Guderian’s panzers to fan out to the NW behind French
lines.
The second
largest amphibious operation in Western Europe during WWII was the
totally forgotten German crossing under fire of the Rhine in June,1940.
The crews of
the unconquered Maginot forts held out until the armistice. Those
who mock France for building forts that were supposedly "outflanked"
should know the "impregnable" modern US fortifications
at Manila, and Britain’s Fortress Singapore, were both taken from
the rear by the Imperial Japanese Army. Germany’s much vaunted "Westwall"
and coastal defenses fared no better.
Third – Germany’s
Wehrmacht and Luftwaffe were crushed well before D-Day. In commemorating
the war, we must remember to salute the courage and valor of Russia’s
dauntless soldiers and pilots who, like German soldiers, fought
magnificently albeit for criminal regimes. World War II in Europe
was not won just at D-Day, as popular myth has it. Germany’s army
and air force were broken on the Eastern Front’s titanic battles.
Russia just
celebrated the 66th anniversary of victory in World War
II, a commemoration almost totally ignored in the west.
The numbers
speak for themselves. The Soviets destroyed 75-80% of all German
divisions – 4 million soldiers and most of the Luftwaffe. Russia
lost at least 14 million soldiers and a similar number of civilians.
The Red Army
destroyed 507 Axis divisions. On the Western Front after D-Day,
the Allies destroyed 176 badly under-strength German divisions.
When the Allies
landed in Normandy, they met battered German forces with no air
cover, crippled by lack of fuel and supplies, unable to move in
daytime. Even so, the Germans fought like tigers. Had the invading
US, British and Canadians encountered the 1940’s Wehrmacht and Luftwaffe,
the outcome may well have been different.
Fourth – World
War II was not a good and evil struggle between "western democracies"
and "totalitarian powers," as we are still wrongly taught.
It
was a world conflict over land and resources pitting the British
Empire which controlled 25% of the entire globe, the French Empire,
Dutch Empire, and Belgian Empire, and, later, the US imperium (Philippines,
Pacific possessions, Central America), against the Italian and Japanese
empires. The Soviet Union was an empire unto itself.
In 1939, the
only major powers without colonies that were not imperial powers
were Germany (who lost her few colonies in World War I) and China.
Once the war ended, Britain and Holland, who complained mightily
about the evils of Nazi occupation, scrambled to reoccupy their
former colonies, some of which had declared independence.
One can hardly
call this a crusade for freedom. Liberation for the white people
of German-occupied Europe, certainly. But not for the peoples of
Africa and Asia. However, in the end, the war did set in motion
forces that would eventually spell the end of colonialism. The collapse
of the British Empire, which Winston Churchill had vowed to defend
at all costs, opened the way to worldwide decolonization.
We should not
forget all this.
May
24, 2011
Eric
Margolis [send
him mail] is the author of War
at the Top of the World and the new book, American
Raj: Liberation or Domination?: Resolving the Conflict Between the
West and the Muslim World. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2011 Eric Margolis
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