This is an apolitical forum for discussions on the Axis nations, as well as the First and Second World Wars in general hosted by Marcus Wendel's Axis History Factbook in cooperation with Michael Miller's Axis Biographical Research, Christoph Awender's WW2 day by day, Dan Reinbold's Das Reich and Christian Ankerstjerne's Panzerworld.


Sam H. wrote:I doubt the Luftwaffe would have won, they lacked the strategic strike capability needed to seriously hurt Britian. The British would have withdrawn from the battle and waited in Central England for the invasion.


David Brown wrote:Sam H. wrote:I doubt the Luftwaffe would have won, they lacked the strategic strike capability needed to seriously hurt Britian. The British would have withdrawn from the battle and waited in Central England for the invasion.
But given that the Germans had landed and most of Britains military equipment was still on Dunkirk Beach, what would we have used to repell the Nazi invasion?

Sam H. wrote:David Brown wrote:Sam H. wrote:I doubt the Luftwaffe would have won, they lacked the strategic strike capability needed to seriously hurt Britian. The British would have withdrawn from the battle and waited in Central England for the invasion.
But given that the Germans had landed and most of Britains military equipment was still on Dunkirk Beach, what would we have used to repell the Nazi invasion?
The Royal Airforce and the Royal Navy. Getting ashore is only half the fight, staying ashore and keeping the troops supplied is where the Germans would fail. Those troops aren't going far after a week without food, water and ammunition.






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