At 21:00 on 9 May 1940 Codeword Danzig was issued alerting Adolf
Hitler's airborne troops that they were about to spearhead an attack on
Belgium and the Netherlands. The following day his blitzkrieg rolled
forward striking the British Expeditionary Force and the French armies
in Belgium and in northern France at Sedan.
The desperate attempts of the allied armies to stem the Nazi tide proved
futile and, once their reserves had been exhausted and the remaining
forces cut off, Paris lay open. By early June, it was all over - trapped
British, Belgian and French troops were forced to evacuate Dunkirk,
Calais and Boulogne and the defeated French army agreed to an armistice
leaving the country divided in two.
This dramatic story is shown in a sequence of over 150 historic
photographs that Anthony Tucker-Jones has selected for this memorable
book. The images he has chosen cover every aspect of this extraordinary
campaign, but his main focus is on the vital role played by the armored
fighting vehicles of both sides. The book is a graphic record of the
destruction wrought by the Wehrmacht's lightning offensive through the
Low Countries and France.