@oztea:
you arent deraling the thread, on the contrary, you are enriching it.
However, you are on the soap box for france now, so be prepared to see some flack come your way.
Emperor_Taiki is right, in the most simplest terms “France helped and hurt the Allies” For every free french soldier somewhere, there was a Vichy soldier somewhere else, for every partisan there was a collabirator, there were as many ships of the french navy with the allies as were scuttled in port.
The invasion of poland was a win win for Germany, either it gets half of poland for itself, or it gets half of poland AND forces France and the UK into war with it. A War Germany wanted for revenge after what happened in WWI
Do not think I demeane the French or their sacrifice during WWII, however I do frown upon thier choice to give up so quickly. There is honor in fighting a losing battle, you earn the respect of who is fighting you, much like what the US did to Japan, as the war dragged down, we hated the Japanese, but respected their fighting spirt
The Germans had nothing to respect about the french.
The Germans had nothing to respect about the French until the Battle of Bir Hakeim.
Actually, even before Hakeim, Hitler himself said the French are, after the Germans, the best soldiers in Europe.
What he said after Bir Hakeim:
@Adolf:
You have heard, gentlemen, what Koch recounts. It is a new proof of the thesis I’ve always supported; namely, that French are still, after us, the best soldiers in Europe. France will always have the possibility, even with its current birthrate, to raise a hundred divisions. We will definitely, after this war, have to set up a coalition able to militarily control a country capable of such impressive military feats.
Rommel had some good things to say too:
@Erwin:
On the 11th, the French garrison was about to receive its death-blow. Sadly for us, the French did not wait for us. Despite all the security measures we took, they managed to leave the fort, under the command of General Koenig, and preserved most of their men. Thanks to obscurity, they headed southwest and rejoined the 7th British Brigade. Later on, we would notice that where the French broke through, my encirclement measures had not been correctly set up. Once again, proof that a French commander, determined not to throw its guns away at the first opening, can work miracles, even if the situation seems desperate. In the morning, I visited the fort, site of ferocious battles; we had long waited for its fall. Fortifications around Bir Hakeim included, among others, 1,200 dug combat emplacements for infantry and heavy equipment.
Hitler ordered for the Free French prisoners Rommel got to be executed, an order that he refused. I mean, he even allowed French prisoners and German soldiers to have the same water ration.
Emperor_Taiki is right, in the most simplest terms “France helped and hurt the Allies” For every free french soldier somewhere, there was a Vichy soldier somewhere else, for every partisan there was a collabirator, there were as many ships of the french navy with the allies as were scuttled in port.
Actually, after Operation Torch, and with the subsequent Axis occupation of Vichy France, all Vichy forces in Africa, the Armée d’Afrique, joined the Allies. With the Vichy military also dismantled at that point, there was a lot more Free French than Vichy soldiers.
But the collaborator part is quite true. Fascist Frenchmen served the Wehrmacht, specialized units even serving in the Eastern Front. In the Resistance you could never tell who was a Gestapo rat. The Allies did see the squabbling Resistance as valuable assets, but they still feared they wanted more to do with their own political gains than the ultimate defeat of Germany.
That’s true in some ways. But although yes, the French did get their butt kicked, I can see why. WWI, the Western Front anyway, was fought on French soil. By the end of the war Northern France looked like the surface of the moon, except with more guts, dead people, and corpse-eating rats. It wasn’t a politically unified nation and the military continued to think 1918. They got Alscace-Lorraine back. Yay! Now let’s not fight anymore, we got what we want, we don’t want another Verdun.
I personally find one to frown on a nation giving up so quickly a little odd when the French Army was severely hampered by its own government and leadership.