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- Title
La Grande Illusion: Belgian and Dutch Strategy Facing Germany, 1919-May 1940 (Part II).
- Authors
Gunsburg, Jeffery A.
- Abstract
Following the defeat of Germany in 1918, the dissolution of the Allied coalition and the gradual liberation of Germany from restrictions on its armed might, placed the neighboring Benelux countries before the dilemma of how to defend themselves against resurgent German aggression. The Netherlands and Luxemburg chose to rely on neutrality; Belgium at first flirted with the idea of joint defense with France, but from 1936, influenced among other things by the growing mechanization of warfare, embraced la grande illusion: that it could deter its neighbors from using its territory in case of a new war. Pursuance of this illusion until Germany actually attacked, together with the failure of the Netherlands and Belgium to create a joint defense, played a decisive role in the catastrophic Allied defeat of May 1940.
- Subjects
BELGIUM; NETHERLANDS; CAUSES of World War II; MILITARY strategy -- History -- 20th century; NEUTRALITY; MILITARY readiness; INTERWAR Period (1918-1939); GERMAN foreign relations; TWENTIETH century; HISTORY; 20TH century European history; REIGN of Wilhelmina, Netherlands, 1898-1948; INTERNATIONAL relations
- Publication
Journal of Military History, 2014, Vol 78, Issue 2, p605
- ISSN
0899-3718
- Publication type
Essay