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LEOPOLD ORDERS BELGIAN ARMY TO QUIT; ALLIES FORCED BACK IN FLANDERS POCKET (5/28/40)
Microfiche-New York Times archives, McHenry Library, U.C. Santa Cruz | 5/28/40 | G.H. Archambault, George Axelsson, Harold Denny, Hamilton Fish Armstrong

Posted on 05/28/2010 5:21:58 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson

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TOPICS: History
KEYWORDS: milhist; realtime; worldwarii
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Free Republic University, Department of History presents World War II Plus 70 Years: Seminar and Discussion Forum
First session: September 1, 2009. Last date to add: September 2, 2015.
Reading assignment: New York Times articles delivered daily to students on the 70th anniversary of original publication date. (Previously posted articles can be found by searching on keyword “realtime” Or view Homer’s posting history .)
To add this class to or drop it from your schedule notify Admissions and Records (Attn: Homer_J_Simpson) by freepmail. Those on the Realtime +/- 70 Years ping list are automatically enrolled. Course description, prerequisites and tuition information is available at the bottom of Homer’s profile.
1 posted on 05/28/2010 5:21:59 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson
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To: Homer_J_Simpson
Selections from West Point Atlas for the Second World War
CAMPAIGN IN THE WEST, 1940, Situation 4 June, and Operations Since 21 May
The Far East and the Pacific, 1941 – The Imperial Powers, 1 September 1939
2 posted on 05/28/2010 5:23:04 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson ("Every nation has the government that it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821))
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To: Homer_J_Simpson
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Winston S. Churchill, Their Finest Hour

3 posted on 05/28/2010 5:23:57 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson ("Every nation has the government that it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821))
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To: Homer_J_Simpson
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Winston S. Churchill, Their Finest Hour

4 posted on 05/28/2010 5:24:47 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson ("Every nation has the government that it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821))
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To: r9etb; PzLdr; dfwgator; Paisan; From many - one.; rockinqsranch; GRRRRR; 2banana; henkster; ...
Cabinet to Fight – 2-4
Partial Reynaud Text – 4
British Party Off For Moscow Talks – 4
Philadelphia Consul Denies Bund Revival – 4
4 French Saboteurs Get Death Sentence – 4
Nazis Drive Wedge – 5
Duesseldorf is Hit by Allied Bombers – 6
Nazis Claim Port Ruse Trapped British Arrivals – 6
Britain Prepared as War is Nearer – 7
Editor Asks Unstinted U.S. Aid for France; Planes Food and Medicine Immediate Needs – 8
The International Situation – 9
Texts of the Day’s High Command Communiques * – 10
Diplomatic Shifts Announced in Paris – 10

* Formerly “War Communiques.” We’re becoming more sophisticated on military matters.

5 posted on 05/28/2010 5:26:14 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson ("Every nation has the government that it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821))
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

ALbert I from the grave must of disowned his cowardly son.


6 posted on 05/28/2010 5:27:04 AM PDT by C19fan
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To: C19fan

http://www.onwar.com/chrono/1940/may40/f28may40.htm

Belgian King surrenders country

Tuesday, May 28, 1940 www.onwar.com

In Belgium... King Leopold agrees to the surrender of the Belgian army without consulting the other Allies or his government (now in Paris). The capitulation becomes effective at 1100 hours.

On the Western Front... Before the Belgian capitulation becomes effective at 1100 hours, these is a desperately hurried redeployment of the British and French forces that prevents the Germans from reaching Nieuport, and from there the Dunkirk beaches. A corps of French 1st Army is holding out in Lille but they are now cut off from the main British and French forces in the evacuation area. The evacuation continues, with 17,800 men being brought off at the cost of one destroyer and several other vessels. There is fierce fighting around Cassel and Poperinghe where Rundstedt’s men again press forward.


7 posted on 05/28/2010 5:37:32 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson ("Every nation has the government that it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821))
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

http://homepage.ntlworld.com/andrew.etherington/month/thismonth/28.htm

May 28th, 1940

UNITED KINGDOM: RAF Bomber Command: 4 Group (Whitley). Bombing - road/rail communications at Givet, Avesnes, Guise and Hirson. 77 Sqn. Eight aircraft. One returned early U/S, one FTR. 102 Sqn. Six aircraft. One returned early U/S, four bombed.
Westminster: After a speech in the House by Churchill the War Cabinet met at 4 o’clock. Halifax did feel that better terms might be secured now, rather than after a defeat. Churchill did not want to go to a conference table with the Germans for, among other reasons, if they did and negotiations came to an impasse and the British left the table all the good will and willingness to fight for their liberty that the British people now had would evaporate. In effect, continuing the war would then be impossible. Chamberlain said that the negotiations involved a considerable gamble. The Labour members, Atlee and Greenwood were for no negotiations.

Churchill’s problem was not just to obtain a favourable vote in the War Cabinet but to keep Halifax in the cabinet. If Halifax were to resign over the issue at this point, Churchill’s position as Prime Minister would be weakened, if not made impossible. Better to keep Halifax in the tent pissing out than outside pissing in.

At this time, 5 o’clock, Churchill asked the War Cabinet to adjourn momentarily and to resume at 7 o’clock. What took place now was what some say was Churchill’s coup. He met with the Outer Cabinet (Cabinet less the War Cabinet) in his room in the House. He told the Cabinet the situation in France and of his resolve to continue fighting no matter what the cost. He went on at some length in this manner raising the spirits of members of the Cabinet. No one expressed the faintest flicker of doubt and at then end of his talk members came up to him, slapped him on the back and congratulated him. Churchill now knew that his position was secure.

He returned to the War Cabinet at 7 o’clock and told the members what had just transpired; of the feeling amongst the Cabinet that they should continue the war. There was no more talk of negotiations. (Jay Stone) (63)

ASW trawler HMS Lady Rosemary commissioned. (Dave Shirlaw)

NORTH SEA: ASW trawler HMS Thuringia mined and sunk in North Sea. (Dave Shirlaw)

FRANCE: Dunkirk: 17,800 men are taken off. One destroyer has been lost in addition to various small craft.

Minesweeping trawler HMS Thomas Bartlett mined and sunk off Calais. (Dave Shirlaw)

Somme: This evening, the French 4th Armoured Division (de Gaulle) with 140 tanks , 6 battalions and 6 artillery groups arrives opposite Abbeville and immediately launches into an attack. By nightfall the first objective is taken.

The 2nd Battalion of the ‘Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler’ under the temporary command of Hauptsturmführer Wilhelm Mohnke secure the village of Wormhoudt after heavy fighting.

‘There had been a number of prisoners captured during the day and indeed many were reasonably treated - one source even says that [Regimental commander SS-Obergruppenführer Sepp] Dietrich entertained some captured British officers and presented them with armbands and flashes as souvenirs. One group were not so lucky. As the author of the Royal Warwickshire Regimental History wrote:

‘...a batch of 80-90 men (made up of the 2nd Battalion, the 4th Cheshires and some artillerymen from a passing convoy) were murdered by the SS in a barn on the outskirts of Wormhoudt. Of the battalion prisoners, there seem to have been about fifty men from D Company (together with Captain Lynn-Allen, the only officer in the group) and some from A Company. They were double-marched to the barn and thrust at with bayonets on the way. Wounded and unwounded alike were then herded into the barn. Captain Lynn-Allen immediately protested. He was answered with taunts, and several hand-grenades were thrown among the crowded troops, killing and wounding many of them. Survivors were taken out to be shot, in batches of five. After this had happened twice, those left behind refused to come out; whereupon the Germans fired indiscriminately into the barn until they judged that none were left alive. They judged wrongly; a few men did survive, thanks perhaps to the self-sacrifice of CSM A Jennings and Sergeant J Moore, who threw themselves on the top of grenades and were killed instantly by the explosion.’ (92)
(Adrian Weale)

Amplifying the above:

The massacre at Wormhoudt undertaken at the behest of SS-Hstf.Mohnke usually takes second place (if mentioned at all) to the SS-TK atrocity the day before on May 27, 1940 at Le Paradis during the heavy fighting for the La Bassee canal. I have read the latter atrocity explained away by SS apologists as an _isolated_ incident by an undisciplined ‘rogue officer’ (ie.SS-Obstuf.Fritz Knoechlein), from a second line unit which had previously been desensitized to human suffering by their participation in the brutal KZ system (SS-Totenkopf Division). The actions of the SS-Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler at Wormhoudt on the next day show that the incident was neither ‘isolated’, nor the product of a second-line formation, for if the burgeoning militarized SS had an elite unit at the time, it was most certainly the SS-LAH. (Also, none of the ‘mitigating’ factors usually dredged up in defence of the SS like, ‘ideological fervor’ - ‘war of annihilation’ etc. used in conjunction with atrocities in the East, are at play here, nor would be in any great measure for further Waffen-SS atrocites on the Western front later in the war.) The same Wilhelm Mohnke (b. 15 Mar, 1911) was also implicated in a cycle of similar atrocities at Fontenay le Pesnil in Normandy in June 1944, where, as a Regimental CO of the 12.SS-HJ Pz.Div., he was implicated in the murder of 35 Canadian POWs; and during the December 1944 Ardennes Offensive, when, as Divisional CO of the LSSAH Panzer Division (Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler), his troops murdered US POWs at Malmedy and elsewhere, and took the lives of numerous Belgian civilians in brutal reprisal killings during the division’s short-lived advance. (Russ Folsom)(110)

The U.S. Ambassador to France, William C. Bullitt, sends a telegram to Secretary of State Cordell Hull urging that the U.S. Navy sends a cruiser to Bordeaux, France to (1) provide the French police with arms and ammunition to quell a “Communist uprising” and (2) to take the French and Belgium gold reserves to the U.S. He also urges that the U.S. Navy’s Atlantic Fleet be sent to the Mediterranean to assist the British and French in keeping German attacks away from the U.S. President Roosevelt agrees with point (2) above and the heavy cruiser USS Vincennes (CA-44) and two destroyers are ordered to the Azores to be in position to pick up any gold shipment. (Jack McKillop)

BELGIUM: Bruges: On orders from King Leopold, Belgian forces laid down their arms at 1100 hours today. At Ypres, a few units without communications continued fighting for two hours.

Leopold’s action has been denounced as “illegal and unconstitutional” by his cabinet ministers, who have fled to Paris. Britain’s liaison officer to the Belgian king, Admiral Sir Roger Keyes, passed on a message from King George VI appealing to Leopold to escape and lead resistance from England. Leopold brushed this aside, saying that it was a repetition of what his ministers had been saying. “The cause of the Allies is lost,” he said.

It has been learnt that Leopold decided to surrender several days ago after an all-night row with his ministers, during which he refused to allow them to be seated. Then, two days ago, the king sent this message to the Allies: “The Belgian command intends to continue the fight to the very end. But the limits of resistance have now practically been reached.”

Yesterday he sent General Derousseaux, his deputy chief of staff , to ask the Germans for an armistice. Almost six hours later, after having been fired upon by German troops, Derousseaux returned with the answer: “The Fuhrer demands unconditional surrender.” Leopold capitulated.

This morning the German High Command made a further demand, requiring Leopold to give unhindered passage through the Belgian lines to the sea. Half an hour later German columns were moving on Ostend and Dixmude and encountering resistance from British forces led by Lt. Gen Alan Brooke.

GERMANY: General Keitel, the ‘Chef der Oberkommandos der Wehrmacht’ announces that only a ‘Gerichtsherr’ or commander of the Waffen-SS or Police is competent to pass judgement and sentence on members of the SS and Police. (Russ Folsom)(109)

U-121 commissioned.

U-177, U-178, U-179, U-180 ordered. (Dave Shirlaw)

NORWEGIAN CAMPAIGN: RN: AA cruiser HMS Cairo is badly damaged off the town of Narvik itself, just as French and Polish troops under French command complete its capture.

Two Dornier Do 26s are shot down by Hurricanes when ferrying troops to Rombaksfjord, and one crash lands are Narvik where the pilot, Graf Schack, and 10 troops are captured.

HMS Glorious is detected by a snooper, resulting in one section of 802 Squadron, led by Lt. G. D. D. Lyver, RN, being sent off and ultimately downs one He-111. Thereafter, Glorious is ordered to return to Scapa. She arrives off the harbour at 1600 on the 29th, but is unable to enter due to fog. (Mark Horan)

U.S.S.R.: Soviet submarines M-121 and M-122 laid down. (Dave Shirlaw)

CANADA:

Corvette HMCS Sackville laid down Saint John, New Brunswick.
HMCS Caribou and Renard depart Halifax for Quebec City for naval conversions. (Dave Shirlaw)

ATLANTIC OCEAN: MS Brazza sunk by U-37 at 42.43N 11.00W.

At 1630, the Julien was shelled and sunk by U-37. (Dave Shirlaw)


8 posted on 05/28/2010 5:49:02 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson ("Every nation has the government that it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821))
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

Why would the king do that? Oh well.

They captured 7 British regiments with a trick eh?

Saboteurs get death penalty, this is how terrorists should be treated.


9 posted on 05/28/2010 5:51:41 AM PDT by GeronL (Political Correctness Kills)
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

http://worldwar2daybyday.blogspot.com/

Day 271 May 28, 1940

Narvik, Norway. British, French, Polish & Norwegian forces attack across the Rombaksfjord from Oyord in landing craft and by land from the East and West. Naval bombardment of German positions begins at midnight, aided by the broad daylight at this latitude (it is dark at the same time at airfields further South, preventing Luftwaffe bombers taking off in response). French Foreign Legion comes ashore with 5 French light tanks at 12.15 AM. Luftwaffe arrives at 4.30 AM, forcing the Allied fleet to withdraw & damaging the command vessel cruiser Cairo with 2 bombs (10 killed, 7 wounded). Narvik is in Allied hands by midday after several hours of back & forth hand-to-hand fighting. http://ibiblio.org/hyperwar/UN/UK/UK-NWE-Norway/UK-NWE-Norway-13.html

Just after midnight, King Leopold III as Commander-in-Chief accepts Hitler’s terms and surrenders Belgian Army. He does not consult the Allies or the Belgian government and both hold him in strong contempt for his actions.

Dunkirk. While heavy fighting rages around the perimeter, 11,874 Allied troops are evacuated from Dunkirk harbour and another 5,930 from the beaches. A flotilla of British fishing boats and small pleasure craft arrives to assist in the rescue. The small boats are able to get into shallow water and ferry men out to the larger warships for the journey to England.

Seige of Lille. 40,000 French soldiers, the remainder of the once-mighty First Army, are surrounded at Lille by 7 German divisions (3 armoured divisions, including Rommel’s). They will fight a delaying action until May 31, while the evacuation of Dunkirk proceeds.

Near Abbeville, French Char B1 Bis tank ‘Jeanne d’Arc’ remains functional after 90 hits in 2 hours.

At 9.24 AM, U-37 sinks French liner SS Brazza 100 miles West of Cape Finisterre, Spain (79 crew & 300 passengers killed). 53 crew & 144 passengers are rescued by French gunboat Enseigne Henry and armed merchant cruiser HMS Cheshire.


10 posted on 05/28/2010 5:53:12 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson ("Every nation has the government that it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821))
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To: C19fan; Homer_J_Simpson

I will never understand why Leopold wasn’t tried for treason.


11 posted on 05/28/2010 6:00:45 AM PDT by wagglebee ("A political party cannot be all things to all people." -- Ronald Reagan, 3/1/75)
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To: wagglebee

At least the Belgians forced the coward to abdicate.


12 posted on 05/28/2010 6:07:14 AM PDT by C19fan
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To: C19fan

Not really...
Look at it from the Belgians point of view.

4/5ths of the country is over-run, the army is exhausted after 18 days of constant fighting, out of ammunition, disorganized, and taking huge losses.

The defense plans of the Belgians fell apart when the vaunted “Impregnable” Fort system was captured on Day one.

What’s left to die for?


13 posted on 05/28/2010 6:09:07 AM PDT by tcrlaf (Obama White House=Tammany Hall on the National Mall)
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To: C19fan

They allowed him to come back for a few years after the war and he proved himself to be a total failure.


14 posted on 05/28/2010 6:10:26 AM PDT by wagglebee ("A political party cannot be all things to all people." -- Ronald Reagan, 3/1/75)
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To: tcrlaf

They were responsible for protecting the flank of the BEF. Leopold left the allies who tried to stave off the Nazi invasion high and dry. His father refused to surrender and fought on despite almost the whole country being overrun by the Kaiser’s armies except for the area around Ypres.


15 posted on 05/28/2010 6:11:20 AM PDT by C19fan
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To: C19fan

Then reelected him to the throne in the early 50’s


16 posted on 05/28/2010 6:16:00 AM PDT by tcrlaf (Obama White House=Tammany Hall on the National Mall)
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

Its cool to see Churchill was already planning reprisals against Italy in the event of an attack.


17 posted on 05/28/2010 6:29:41 AM PDT by GeronL (Political Correctness Kills)
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To: wagglebee

I don’t think a King - a KING mind you - can be treasonous since he technically IS the state (at least in the really old days).


18 posted on 05/28/2010 6:31:57 AM PDT by GeronL (Political Correctness Kills)
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To: GeronL

In 1940 Leopold III was a constitutional monarch and the general concensus was that his actions violated the Belgian Constitution.


19 posted on 05/28/2010 6:38:07 AM PDT by wagglebee ("A political party cannot be all things to all people." -- Ronald Reagan, 3/1/75)
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To: tcrlaf; C19fan
Then reelected him to the throne in the early 50’s

Actually, he was a hereditary monarch and NEVER elected to anything.

He remained king through the war and afterwards in exile.

In 1950 a referendum was held and he was allowed to return from exile. His return was a disaster and Belgium was on the brink of civil war when he abdicated in 1951.

20 posted on 05/28/2010 6:43:37 AM PDT by wagglebee ("A political party cannot be all things to all people." -- Ronald Reagan, 3/1/75)
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