The Siege of Calais and the evacuation of British and French troops at Dunkirk, France.
The evacuation from Dunkirk saved 338,226 soldiers [British & French].
Operation Dynamo (May 24 to June 4, 1940)Operation Dynamo, also informally referred to as the Miracle at Dunkirk.
I'm guessing you're asking about the evacuation of the British Expeditionary Force from Dunkirk. There were about 335,000 troops evacuated, including some 30,000 French. The bulk of the French forces were elsewhere, south of the Seine River. The effect of the German attack through the Ardennes had been to drive a wedge between the British and French. The gap widened as the British went one direction, toward the Channel ports, and the French withdrew southward.
The French have more croissants.
The nation of France capitulates after the Dunkirk evacuation of French and British forces .
By the evacuation of 338,000 Allied troops from Dunkirk.
Operation Dynamo
During World War II, the "miracle at Dunkirk" was the successful evacuation of over 300,000 soldiers (mostly British and French) by sea from the small French port of Dunkirk, which was at the same time surrounded by units of the German Army. Although historians do not fully agree on the details, the miraculous evacuation seems to have been made possible in part by an order from Hitler that held back German armored units from advancing against the trapped Allied troops -- until most of them had been embarked for safety.
Dunkirk.
The British, as they were able to get most of the British Expeditionary Force evacuated from the encircled position. The Germans stopped their ground forces from pushing them into the sea as the Luftwaffe leader, Reichsmarshall Herman Goering, said to Hitler that the Luftwaffe could crush the evacuation ships, and he was unsucsessfull.Another opinion8000 British troops saved 300,000 British and French troops, so the British technically one. The only thing is that even though Germany had an unsuccessful attack, some British and French soldiers died, so they both won.
The Battle of Dunkirk was part of the Battle of France operation and responsible for the defense and evacuation of French and British forces to Britain in May and June, 1940. The situation seemed dire when the Germans, after crossing the channel went north, a decision that could have trapped French and British soldiers before they could be evacuated to Britain. However, the Germans halted the advance on Dunkirk, deciding instead to consolidate forces. This action enabled the evacuation to complete successfully.
The Siege of Calais and the evacuation of British and French troops at Dunkirk, France.
A fleet of French warships.
They were surprised and outmaneuvered by the Germans. The French heavily relied on the heavily fortified Maginot Line on the French-German border. The Germans had their Panzer tank corp crash through the thick Ardennes Forest, which the French and British allies completely ignored as a possible route of attack. The Germans successful track caused the allied defenses to split. The British made their miraculous evacuation 330,000 men and allies, leaving the French on their own.
The evacuation from Dunkirk saved 338,226 soldiers [British & French].
Because the British Fleet had been driven off from the Bay of Chesapeake by De Grasse's French Fleet at the Battle of Chesapeake Capes on September 5,1781, leaving Cornwallis's British Army completely blocked in Yorktown and Gloucester.