ORIGINAL: Graymane
Even the desire to overload the left wing and take the fight into Belgium is simply a desire to not fight on French soil.
Yeah. It was even overtly expressed by some politicians as a reason for holding on the frontiers. People are reluctant to admit to visceral motivations. When they do, it means they're pretty strong.
I also note that the English suffered from victor's disease as did everyone else pretty much.
Yeah. We were certainly expecting a fairly static war. Hence all these 12" guns we brought over with the BEF. Hence Churchill busying himself with a design for a machine to assault trench systems with ("Cultivator No. 6"). However the psychological effect of the First World War on Britain had been less catastrophic than in France, largely because the proportionate dead must have been only about 60% of what France suffered.
I think it is manifested in the old boy network of the high command between the wars. I think it is also manifested in the German High Command for good and ill.
Well, both armies were dominated by the aristocracy in 1914. One can't expect an overnight transition. Hence the Wehrmacht still had plenty of 'von's even when it was controlled by a socialist dictator.
I like to think, what could Germany have done if their higher command had believed in their new kind of warfare more than they did? There were numerous times in the French campaign when higher commands froze the spearheads (and other units as well). It is highly likely and quite possible it would have been all over in the same timeframe as Poland with the loss of the BEF if the Germans wouldn't have put the breaks on the campaign at certain critical times.
I doubt the French could have been defeated any more quickly, since it really was necessary to bring stuff forward to the Somme before attacking the new line. However the BEF could certainly have been harried if not actually destroyed.
Quite what the ultimate impact of this is not quite clear. Would Britain have come to terms without the nine divisions saved at Dunkirk? I'm not convinced. Certainly no
Sealion could be attempted; the Germans still cannot protect their forces sufficiently during the crossing. Perhaps General Student's scheme for an airborne descent in June could have been attempted. This would have been dicey, however; whilst ill-equipped and under-trained, there were still nearly twenty divisions in Britain, including five which would have been combat ready at this time (1st and 2nd Armoured, 43rd Wessex, 52nd Lowland and 1st Canadian).