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The Last Stand on the Lys

The Belgian army command on the Lys

Driven back towards western Flanders, the Belgian army commits, in late May 1940, to a great defensive battle on the Lys, around Kortrijk. It is there that the holding of its front is decided, while the Allies evacuate at nearby Dunkirk and German pressure becomes overwhelming.

The Belgian command is caught in a vice. Holding the Lys protects the left flank of the Allied dispositions and covers the evacuation, but exhausts an army at the end of its strength, without reserves or depth. To give way is to open a breach towards the coast and hasten the collapse.

The command may hold the Lys at all costs to cover the Allied flank and the evacuation. It may conduct a fighting withdrawal to preserve the army. Or it may acknowledge that capitulation is approaching, being unable to hold a continuous line. This engagement looms as one of the great trials of the Eighteen Days' Campaign, and perhaps the last for the Belgian army.

24–27 May 1940, in command of the Belgian army on the Lys, the great defensive battle around Kortrijk: how long to hold the line?

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