WWII Decisions Online · The price in blood
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The price in blood

You play an analyst

In 6 weeks of campaigning in the West, the human toll was heavy, though lower than the slaughter of 1914–1918. On the French side, around 50,000 to 60,000 servicemen were killed; on the German side, some 27,000 to 49,000 dead depending on the sources; Belgium lost some 6,000 soldiers, the Netherlands around 2,300, not counting the wounded (several 100,000) and the civilian losses of the exodus and the bombings.

To these were added the prisoners: 1.8 million French, around 200,000 Belgians, tens of thousands of British and Dutch. The campaign of 1940, brief as it was, was no less deadly: the daily mortality of the fighting in May–June equalled, and at times even exceeded, that of the Great War.

How is the human cost of this campaign to be characterised? Was it a "war without losses" compared with 1914–1918, as its brevity has sometimes led people to believe? A concentrated slaughter whose daily intensity was terrible? Or a tragedy whose first victims, in numbers, were the prisoners and civilians? The diagnosis shapes the memory of 1940.

As an analyst, June 1940: how to characterise the human cost of the French campaign?

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