reccecrewman
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E.R. Campbell said:the Battle of the Atlantic was the only really decisive battle of the Second World
Not so sure I agree with this assessment. To call The Battle of the Atlantic the ONLY decisive battle of the WWII is, in my opinion anyway, false. There's a very strong argument that says 4 others fall into the "decisive" category. The Battle of France, The Battle of Britain, Stalingrad & Kursk. The Battle of France was a decisive battle for Germany. The German Army swept through Belgium & The Netherlands (Evidently, the Allies forgot they did the exact same thing 26 years earlier) outflanking the Maginot Line and causing the BEF which had taken up a position in North Eastern France on the French Army's left flank to head North to face the German Army head on. This move allowed the German's to take advantage of the gap in the Allied line by crashing through the Ardennes which cut the Allied armies in two and pinned the BEF against the English Channel. The Germans launched a final offensive that captured Paris and caused the BEF to evacuate at Dunkirk. Despite having less numbers committed to battle than the French and British Armies combined, the Germans still managed a spectacular, decisive victory in less than four weeks.
The Battle of Britain was also decisive. The Luftwaffe initially began bombing British airfields and factories vital to the war effort, but switched tactics and went with terror bombing such as the London Blitz and the razing of Coventry. This shift in focus on the German side allowed the RAF to get up off the mat and ultimately prevail in a decisive victory against the Luftwaffe. Had the Germans kept their focus on airfields and infrastructure, Hitler never would have had to postpone and then cancel Op Sealion. Had Germany succeeded in invading Britain, the U.S, British & Canadian forces would have lost that all important staging area to enable them to invade Normandy in 1944. The U.S would have been hard pressed to continue the war against Germany from the other side of the Atlantic. The Battle of Britain must also be considered a decisive Allied victory.
Stalingrad & the Kursk were decisive as well. The outcomes of these two major battles broke the back of the German Army and after Kursk, the Germans were on the run. Their ultimate defeat only a matter of time. The sheer volume of tanks and guns lost by the German Army (not to mention men) were gone forever, with no ability to replace them. Despite the Red Army also losing a large number of tanks and guns, their industries were able to continue production on a large scale. Stalingrad and Kursk also deserve recognition as decisive battles of WWII.
There are a few more that could certainly make the list, but these four were battles that were visible turning points in the war, which to me, makes a battle decisive. When a major battle concludes that leaves one side in a clear cut position of superiority over the other, that makes it decisive.
I just realised that the course of this thread has completely veered off course from it's original intent. My apologies and let's steer this back on topic.