Phoney War: Difference between revisions

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A period of the [[Second World War]] between October 1939 (i.e., the fall of Poland) and  April 1940 (i.e., the invasion of Norway) was called the '''Phony War''', or, in a pun on [[blitzkrieg]], '''sitzkreig'''. There was relatively little U.K. combat during this period. While there was a good deal of intelligence work, very little was done to redeploy troops.
{{Subpages}}
A period of the [[Second World War]] between October 1939 (i.e., the fall of [[Poland]]) and  April 1940 (i.e., the invasion of [[Norway]]) was called the '''Phony War''', or, in a pun on [[blitzkrieg]], '''sitzkreig'''. There was relatively little U.K. combat during this period. While there was a good deal of intelligence work, very little was done to redeploy troops.


The two major incidents were the [[Battle of the River Plate]], after which the German "pocket battleship" ''Graf Spee'' was scuttled, and the raid on the British naval base at Scapa Flow in Scotland, in which the German submarine U-47 sank the battleship ''Royal Oak''.
The two major incidents were the [[Battle of the River Plate]], after which the [[Germany|German]] "pocket battleship" ''Graf Spee'' was scuttled, and the raid on the [[British]] naval base at Scapa Flow in [[Scotland]], in which the German [[submarine]] U-47 sank the battleship ''Royal Oak''.

Revision as of 17:24, 13 September 2008

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A period of the Second World War between October 1939 (i.e., the fall of Poland) and April 1940 (i.e., the invasion of Norway) was called the Phony War, or, in a pun on blitzkrieg, sitzkreig. There was relatively little U.K. combat during this period. While there was a good deal of intelligence work, very little was done to redeploy troops.

The two major incidents were the Battle of the River Plate, after which the German "pocket battleship" Graf Spee was scuttled, and the raid on the British naval base at Scapa Flow in Scotland, in which the German submarine U-47 sank the battleship Royal Oak.