The Hour of The Donkey

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The Hour of The Donkey Page 33

by Anthony Price


  Like—

  ‘I never was any good at Latin, sir,’ he said to the Brigadier. ‘But I know someone who is.’

  They both frowned at him.

  ‘If I could introduce you to the original Captain Willis—would that do?’ he inquired politely.

  ‘Who the hell are you, then?’ snapped Freddie, lowering his pistol.

  ‘Bastable,’ said Bastable. ‘Harry Bastable. Acting captain, Prince Regent’s Own South Downs Fusiliers, sir.’

  Epilogue

  Saturday, 24 May 1940, and ever after

  ‘ON THE MORNING of Saturday, 24 May 1940, the German panzer divisions advancing up the Channel coast were ordered to halt on the line of the Aa Canal, just short of Dunkirk.

  ‘Although opposed by only weak British and French units, the Germans remained on the canal line for three days, and when they were at last permitted to resume the offensive it was too late: the defences of the Dunkirk perimeter had hardened sufficiently to delay their advance, allowing the British Expeditionary Forces to retreat to the beaches off which an armada of little ships had assembled.

  ‘On 24 May Winston Churchill himself believed that the Allies would be lucky to have as many as 45,000 men from those beaches; between 26 May, when the ‘Operation Dynamo’ evacuation began, and 4 June, when the last of the gallant French rearguard was overwhelmed, a total of 338,226 Allied soldiers were rescued. These included the bulk of the BEF, which provided the trained nucleus of Britain’s future armies.

  ‘An unparalleled military disaster thus ended with what the British ever after regarded as a miracle—The miracle of Dunkirk’.

  ‘What might have happened if there had been no such miracle must remain a matter of conjecture. Supposing that Britain had fought on—supposing that Churchill’s shaky new government had survived the greatest British surrender of all time and that the RAF had still won the Battle of Britain—it is very difficult to imagine how she could have reinforced and held the Middle East while defending her own islands with the depleted wreck of her army; and the loss of the Middle East must surely have signalled the end of the war.

  ‘But since the miracle did take place the more important ‘ conjecture shifts inevitably to that “Halt Order” of 24 May, which Adolf Hitler in person confirmed when he visited Colonel-General von Rundstedt’s Army Group Headquarters that morning.

  ‘No one now believes (as was rumoured at the time) that Hitler deliberately allowed the British to escape, on the grounds that they would be more likely to make peace if he left them their pride intact, for his subsequent actions do not support such a theory.

  ‘Goering’s offer to finish the job from the air may well have influenced the decision. Certainly, this would have combined a political merit—unlike the Wehrmacht, the Luftwaffe was very much a Nazi creation—with the military virtue of preserving the travel-worn panzer divisions from further loss at the hands of a defeated but still dangerous foe when there were important battles to come.

  ‘Yet if that was the case, the military consideration was even more certainly the stronger of the two. For the fog of war, which had utterly confounded the retreating Allies, equally concealed many things from: the advancing Germans—above all, the completeness of the brilliant victory which they had already won.

  ‘Indeed, what appeared to the rest of the world to be a new type of warfare, devilishly conceived and ruthlessly executed, was in fact a campaign plagued by doubts and hesitations, and by arguments between conventional commanders and innovators. It was Hitler’s supreme insight that the French Army of 1940, and France herself, lacked the will to re-fight the battle of the Marne. But his insight went no further, and on that fatal 24th both he and von Rundstedt believed that the Battle of France was as yet only half-won. As a result, both were deeply and not unreasonably concerned for the vulnerability of their flanks to counter-attack, and for the concentration of their scattered forces for that final supreme effort.

  ‘Also, one other factor needs to be remembered (and not least by the beneficiaries of the miracle that was to come), imponderable though its contribution must always remain in the historian’s calculations.

  ‘Although by comparison with the “contemptible little army” of 1914 the British Expeditionary Force of 1940 was lamentably ill-equipped to handle the army of Rommel and Guderian, the quality of the British rank and file was as high as ever.

  ‘The gallant, haphazard, hopeless British tank attack at Arras on 21 May undoubtedly played a part out of all proportion to its actual size in raising doubts in Hitler’s mind; it is unlikely that the self-sacrificial heroism of the garrison of Calais was altogether in vain; and who knows what unrecorded acts of defiant bravery by individual units, or even single soldiers, contributed to the sum of events which in the end tipped the scales of decision?

  ‘But so much for conjecture. What is certain is that the “Halt Order” of 24 May was given—and confirmed. And in that hour the final victory which was within Hitler’s grasp, which his soldiers had won for him, began to slip through his fingers, and the last days of his Thousand-Year Reich had begun.’

  —From Sir Frederick Clinton’s The Dunkirk Miracle

  (Gollancz, 1959)

 

 

 


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