Chapter eight hundred and sixty seventh French defeat(2/2)
"Where are the tanks?! Our tanks are almost useless in front of the German tanks, but they can penetrate the armor of our tanks with one shot! Do you know how many tanks we have now?! Less than fifty! Mine
Sir! Remember: the Third French Republic currently has less than fifty tanks!!"
"The British have less than 500 fighter planes left. They have made it clear that they will no longer send fighter planes to support us. How can the war continue?! Charles! Tell me, how should it continue?!"
Even so, I will continue to fight! Charles de Gaulle, the Undersecretary of Defense and Undersecretary of the Army of the Third French Republic, said to himself, I should persist. For France!
"Chirp, chirp, chirp...boom, boom, boom..." The British generator plan did not have such good luck in history. In history, a period of heavy fog caused the German Air Force to interrupt the Dunkirk bombing.
But now there is no heavy fog like in history. What is even more terrifying is that German naval submarines, torpedo boats and minesweepers are also dispatched from the newly occupied ports of the Netherlands and Belgium, using the cover of darkness to attack the British ships responsible for the retreat.
The flames of the explosion guided the bombers in the sky. Goering was now willing to spend money to prove that his air force could prevent the Allied forces from retreating. German fighter planes continued to attack even in the dark, conducting non-stop bombings against the British and French Allied forces in the port.
and strafing.
Although the bomb dropped at the beginning was absorbed by the soft beach, most of the energy of the explosion, even if it exploded next to it, it only caused a shock and splashed mud and sand on the face.
But then the Germans changed their strategy, and they began to strengthen the role of fighter jets in the attack. They used the cannons of the fighter jets to straf the coalition forces on the beach.
The war at Dunkirk continued, and Charles de Gaulle fled France directly by taking advantage of an opportunity to contact an airplane.
"I am Charles De Gaulle, and I am in London now." On the day when Pétain announced the ceasefire, the French people heard De Gaulle's voice on the radio.
“I appeal to all French officers and soldiers, armed or unarmed, who are currently on British soil and who may come to British soil in the future, and to all engineers and military factories who are presently on British soil and who may come to British soil in the future.
The skilled workers have issued a call for you to get in touch with me. No matter what happens, the flame of French resistance must never be extinguished and will never be extinguished!"
"I and those comrades who are willing to fight with me will continue the war! We will fight until we liberate our motherland, France!"
Chapter completed!