In Britain at its darkest hour, how did Churchill turn the tide?

Mondo History Updated on 2024-02-25

And on the European continent, a man stood up, and his name was Churchill.

On the European continent at this very moment, France had surrendered, and England was the last enemy of Germany.

While planning a plan to attack the sea lion in Britain, Hitler pretended to convey to the British top brass that he wanted peace.

Hitler's overtures shook the resolve of many in the British hierarchy, who felt that peace with Germany would be unnecessary.

And Hitler didn't want to invade Britain at the moment, because he felt that he had no reason to fight Britain. Hitler felt that as long as France was defeated, the British would definitely accept his peace talks.

As a matter of fact, there are many people in the British leadership who want peace talks with Germany. This story should have ended with Hitler's occupation of Europe, and if it were not for Churchill, Hitler would never have thought that Churchill, who succeeded Chamberlain to power, was the same person as him, and they were both the scenery of war.

Churchill knew that capitulationism could not bring reconciliation at all, only victory could bring peace, and dignity would always be above the edge of the sword.

Truth is always within the range of a cannon, so when Hitler frequently extended an olive branch of peace to Churchill, there was that speech.

Churchill told everyone that even if we would die under the terrorism of the Nazis, even if we would fight alone, even so, we would fight to the end.

We will fight in France, we will fight in the seas, we will fight in the skies, we will defend our great Motherland at all costs, we will never surrender.

If Hitler had proved to be a leader from the beginning of the march into the Rhineland, now he had won the policy of the army, the indecision of the Anglo-French army, and the victory of the whole of Germany, and he had got everything he wanted.

When he wanted to leave the table, Churchill grabbed him, he and Churchill were the same, they were both gamblers, they were heroes, Hitler, who had been winning, naturally did not believe that he would lose, so he sat back at the table and played the last game with Churchill.

Hitler was convinced that this one would win them all. So on July 16, 1940, Hitler issued Directive No. 16 to prepare for an attack on Britain, also known as the Sea Lion Project.

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