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History See other History Articles Title: Royal D-Day row reveals divide over WWII roles (Andrew Roberts says it was the Soviets) LONDON (AP) Who won the war? A diplomatic tiff over Queen Elizabeth II's omission from the guest list for this week's D-Day commemorations has reopened a divide over who should share credit for the World War II defeat of Nazi Germany. Britons are grumbling that the nation does not get its due either from its wartime ally, the United States, or from the French whom it helped to liberate. On Saturday, President Barack Obama and French President Nicolas Sarkozy are due to stand side by side in Normandy to remember the Allied landings 65 years ago, when more than 150,000 troops swam, waded and parachuted onto Nazi-occupied French soil, turning the tide of the war. The queen Britain's head of state, the supreme commander of its armed forces and a veteran of the wartime women's Auxiliary Territorial Service won't be there. Prime Minister Gordon Brown was invited to represent the country instead. "Sarkozy hijacks Longest Day," said The Times of London, which ran a slew of letters from outraged Britons. The Daily Mail said the queen had been "betrayed" by the "sorry shambles" over the event. After days of diplomatic dallying, Buckingham Palace said Tuesday that Sarkozy had sent an invitation to the queen's son and heir, Prince Charles a royal compromise that helped soothe ruffled British feathers. Military historian Peter Caddick-Adams of Britain's Cranfield University said the spat "says a lot about Britain and France." "There is a concern in Britain that France is keen to diminish the role of the British," he said. "(And) there is this concern in French minds about their liberation at the hands of their Anglo-Saxon rivals." The French insisted no slight was meant, and said Saturday's ceremony is intended primarily as a U.S.-French event, rather than a full-blown commemoration of the Allied effort like those held on the 50th and 60th anniversaries of D-Day. That has left Britons feeling slighted. More than 60,0000 British troops landed on June 6, 1944, alongside 73,000 Americans, more than 20,000 Canadians and a small number of Free French commandos. The total includes more than 130,000 soldiers who came ashore at five Normandy beaches and 23,000 airborne troops. Many of the ships and planes that supported the landing force were British, too. Fatality estimates for the Allied forces vary, but range from 2,500 to more than 5,000 dead on D-Day. Agnes Poirier, a London-based French political commentator, said the attempt to recast D-Day commemorations as a Franco-American affair "is not only the rewriting of history, it's lunacy." "Many French people are really embarrassed about this," she said. Britain, France and the United States have always seen the war rather differently. In The Guardian newspaper, humorist Simon Hoggart summed up the British view with tongue only slightly in cheek as "the Americans took their own good time to join us (fighting Hitler), but when they did, between us we rescued the useless French. And are they grateful? Don't be silly." Some blame Hollywood for distorting popular perceptions of the war. While 1962 D-Day epic "The Longest Day" had a multinational cast, there are few Brits in Steven Spielberg's 1998 film "Saving Private Ryan" or the 2001 TV series "Band of Brothers," both of which dramatized the Normandy campaign from an American point of view. As far back as 1945, the Errol Flynn film "Operation Burma" which recast the liberation of Burma as an American, rather than British, feat sparked angry demonstrations in Britain. The movie was pulled from screens after only a few days. Caddick-Adams said the Americans have always been better at martial myth-making than the British. "During the Normandy campaign, there were about 10 American photographers for every British one," he said. "So most of the footage of the campaign features American soldiers, rarely British." Historian Antony Beevor, author of "D-Day: The Battle for Normandy," said the conflicting views began while the war was still raging. "There have been misunderstandings," he said. "One was that (British commander) Field Marshal (Bernard) Montgomery's attempts to take so much of the credit exasperated the Americans. As a result the Americans tended to downplay the British contribution." The differing views also reflected a shifting global balance of power. The war all but bankrupted Britain, hastening the breakup of its empire and its decline as a world force. "The British were very sensitive at the time," Beevor said. "They knew their power was diminishing very rapidly, while American power was increasing rapidly." As for who won the war, many historians think it was neither Britain nor the U.S., but the Soviet Union, who played the decisive role. "The British and the Americans only killed one in five Germans that were killed on the battlefield," said Andrew Roberts, author of the World War II history "The Storm of War." "Four out of every five German deaths took place on the eastern front. Us arguing among ourselves over the glories of D-Day is squabbling over the scraps."
Poster Comment: On 2 August 1944, in the wake of the complete destruction of the German Army Group Centre in Belorussia, Winston Churchill mocked Adolf Hitler in the House of Commons by the rank he had reached in the First World War. 'Russian success has been somewhat aided by the strategy of Herr Hitler, of Corporal Hitler,' Churchill jibed. 'Even military idiots find it difficult not to see some faults in his actions.' Andrew Roberts' previous book "Masters and Commanders" studied the creation of Allied grand strategy; "The Storm of War" now analyses how Axis strategy evolved. Examining the Second World War on every front, Roberts asks whether, with a different decision-making process and a different strategy, the Axis might even have won. Were those German generals who blamed everything on Hitler after the war correct, or were they merely scapegoating their former Fuhrer once he was safely beyond defending himself? In researching this uniquely vivid history of the Second World War Roberts has walked many of the key battlefield and wartime sites of Russia, France, Italy, Germany and the Far East. The book is full of illuminating sidelights on the principle actors that bring their characters and the ways in which they reached decisions into fresh focus. Interview with Andrew Roberts Posted By cnewman On 3/24/2009 @ 9:00 am In World War II Conversations | No Comments "To understand why men attacked in the places they did, youve got to look at the relationships between the political masters and the military commanders" Andrew Roberts is multifaceted, authoring bestsellers like A History of the English-Speaking Peoples Since 1900 and coanchoring television coverage of Princess Dianas funeral and Prince Charless marriage to Camilla Bowles. Now comes Masters and Commanders: How Four Titans Won the War in the West, 19411945. The four: Franklin D. Roosevelt, Winston Churchill, U.S. Army chief of staff George C. Marshall, and British chief of Imperial General Staff Alan Brooke. For the inside scoop, the prizewinning historian burrowed through archival documents, especially diaries. His greatest coup: verbatim accounts of War Cabinet meetings by Lawrence Burgis, assistant secretary to the War Cabinet. Id like to pretend it was archival genius, but it was pure serendipity. I looked at the catalog because I thought, Whos he? Burgis didnt burn his notes as ordered, but squirreled them awaya trove untapped till now. Why this book? Did your views of the four main characters evolve over time? And FDR? What powered the quartets interactions? How did it work? Why? Some criticize FDR for being so political. You dont? You write, Too much has been made of the Churchill-Roosevelt relationship. How would you describe it? But didnt Americans feel the British looked down on them? So FDR deflected all that for strategic reasons? Because? What about the role of luck? You think democracies work better than autocracies in war. Why? But you also write, Hitler and Stalin influenced the wars outcome far more than any Briton or American. What most surprised you? What do you hope readers discover? http://www.historynet.com/may-2008-andrew-roberts.htm/print/ Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
#1. To: All (#0)
Does everyone realize that yesterday was the 65th anniversary of D-day?
#2. To: Deasy (#1)
It's been all over the TV news. They've been calling it the turning point of WW2. The battle of Kursk in summer 1943 was more the turning point.
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