In May 1940, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg did not simply face an invading army; they faced an assault on time. Airborne seizures targeted bridges, airfields, and headquarters while armoured columns pushed to turn local confusion into irreversible operational collapse. The result was not only battlefield defeat, but a cascading failure of coordination in which leaders struggled to see clearly, authorise quickly, and move forces without losing coherence.
The Fall of the Low Countries interprets the campaign as an operational problem of strategic surprise and institutional response. Hans Keller traces how prepared plans collided with disrupted communications, coalition friction, and the political constraints of neutrality and legitimacy. He explains why command and control is not an abstract staff function but a lived system of permissions, liaison, and fragile networks, and how communications disruption can manufacture uncertainty faster than any opponent can destroy units. Across Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg, the book shows how early hours shaped later impossibilities: once bridges were lost, roads clogged, and headquarters blinded, choices narrowed into desperate improvisation.
Written for students, general readers, historians, and analysts, this research-friendly synthesis replaces easy verdicts with a usable framework. Readers come away understanding how decision delay is produced and compounded, why small states can be operationally strong yet institutionally brittle, and how rapid defeat often reflects a mismatch between tempo and governance rather than a lack of will.
We publiceren alleen reviews die voldoen aan de voorwaarden voor reviews. Bekijk onze voorwaarden voor reviews.