That assumption is not that uncommon in the air combat community.An airforce, (in this case Luftwaffe) can not invade a country: they can support the ground troups that do the actual invasion.
Goring thought he could annihilate Englands remaining defence before that invasion, he was wrong. (as usual)
That's a dilemma that has historially faced most continental European nations. The biggest threat for those nations has always been (still is) land based and so priorities are given to land warfare. Compare that to the US and UK where air and naval power supremacy forms the backbone of their doctrines - Australia's "air-sea gap"The lack of strategic bombers hindered the luftwaffe but to build them would mean something else had to go.
This is exactly my point! i dont think even the germans were prepared for the outstanding success, had they dreamed of being this successful, they had made preparatiions for the invasion even before dunkirk was finished off.windscorpion said:Well they couldn't invade immediately after Dunkirk as they had little amphibious warfare capability, luckily for the British as in the first few months after Dunkirk they didn't even have enough rifles for all their soldiers.
RN vs ~1500 German aircraft ? in the channel ? + a few u boats ?.Feanor said:They could never effectively supply an army in Britain. The RN wouldn't let them. That meant an invasion was out of the question.
Well they wasted a lot of time, including oddly Hitler spending a few days with his WW1 army mates in the old trenches in France with strict orders not to disturb him while his Generals were frantically wanting to go for Britain.This is exactly my point! i dont think even the germans were prepared for the outstanding success, had they dreamed of being this successful, they had made preparatiions for the invasion even before dunkirk was finished off.