WWII Decisions Online · The Belgian Army on the Lys, 23 May 1940
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The Belgian Army on the Lys, 23 May 1940

The Belgian high command on the Lys

Driven back from the Albert Canal and then the Dyle, the Belgian army falls back from one river to the next. Around 23 May 1940 it clings to the Lys, around Kortrijk, on a front that forms the linchpin of the Allied left flank: to its right, the British Expeditionary Force is flowing back towards the coast; behind it, Dunkirk is becoming the only way out.

The Belgian army is bled white, its units worn down by 2 weeks of retreat, its morale shaken. Bock's attacks in force on either side of Kortrijk, seeking to break the junction between the Belgians and the British in order to open the road to the sea.

The Belgian command must choose. It may fight a desperate battle of attrition on the Lys, to hold the flank and cover the Allied evacuation, at the cost of probable sacrifice. It may disengage once more towards the coast and the "national redoubt" envisaged by the King. Or it may acknowledge that the army can take no more and move towards capitulation. The time left to the Allies in the north to reach Dunkirk depends in part on the resistance on the Lys.

At the Belgian high command on the Lys, 23 May 1940, the lock of the Allied left flank: fight a last battle or disengage?

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