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- Operation_Cycle abstract "Operation Cycle is the name of the evacuation of Allied troops from Le Havre, in the Pays de Caux of Upper Normandy from 10–13 June 1940, towards the end of the Battle of France, during World War II. The operation was preceded by the better known rescue of 338,226 British and French soldiers from Dunkirk in Operation Dynamo (26 May – 4 June). On 20 May, the Germans had captured Abbeville at the mouth of the Somme and cut off the main Allied armies in the north. South of the river, the Allies improvised defences and made local counter-attacks, to dislodge the Germans from bridgeheads on the south bank and re-capture river crossings for an advance northwards to regain contact with the armies in northern France and Flanders.The 1st Armoured Division arrived in France from 15 May, without artillery and short of units that had been diverted to Calais. The division joined the large number of lines-of-communication troops south of the Somme, many of whom were hurriedly organised into the Beauman Division and other improvised units, despite a lack of training and weapons. French troops were sent into the area, as Général d'armée Maxime Weygand attempted to build up a defence in depth on the south bank of the Somme and make bigger attacks to eliminate the German bridgeheads. From 27 May – 4 July, about half of the German bridgehead south of Abbeville was recaptured by Franco-British troops; the Allies were reinforced by infantry divisions and the 4e Division cuirassée (Colonel Charles De Gaulle) but lost many of their tanks and the Germans much of their infantry, some units running back over the River Somme.When Fall Rot (Case Red), the final German offensive, began on 5 June, the IX Corps of the French Tenth Army [that had included the 51st (Highland) Division since it arrived from the Saar on 28 May], was pushed back to the Bresle River. On 9 June, German tanks entered Rouen on the Seine, cutting off the IX Corps from the X Corps to the east and the Seine to the south. The French and British commanders in the pocket decided to make for Le Havre and the 51st (Highland) Division commander detached Arkforce, the equivalent of two brigades, to guard the routes back to the port. During the night of 9/10 June, the remainder of the Highland Division and the French divisions of the IX Corps prepared to continue the retreat but found that the 7th Panzer Division (Generalmajor Erwin Rommel) had advanced from Rouen through Yvetot to Cany and Veulettes-sur-Mer on the Durdent river.With an Allied withdrawal to Le Havre cut off, the Highland Division and the French retreated to St Valery-en-Caux, where from 10–11 June, 2,137 British and 1,184 French soldiers were rescued. The remainder, including over 6,000 men of the 51st (Highland) Division, were taken prisoner on 12 June. At Le Havre, from 10–13 June 1940, 11,059 British troops from Arkforce, other British units in the port and Allied forces were evacuated. Attempts by the Franco-British to prepare a national redoubt in Brittany came to nothing. and Operation Cycle was followed by Operation Ariel from 14–25 June, in which another 191,870 soldiers were embarked from Cherbourg, St. Malo and other Atlantic and Mediterranean ports until the Armistice of 22 June 1940.".
- Operation_Cycle thumbnail 4June-12June_Battle_of_France.PNG?width=300.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageExternalLink valery_1940.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageExternalLink operation_cycle.html.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageExternalLink 37573.html.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageExternalLink UK-NWE-Flanders.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageID "253769".
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageLength "62425".
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageOutDegree "241".
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageRevisionID "705590652".
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink 10th_Army_Corps_(France).
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink 12th_Army_(Wehrmacht).
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink 157th_(Highland_Light_Infantry)_Brigade.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink 16th_Army_(Wehrmacht).
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink 18th_Army_(Wehrmacht).
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink 1st_(United_Kingdom)_Division.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink 1st_Canadian_Division.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink 1st_Panzer_Army.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink 25th_Infantry_Brigade_(United_Kingdom).
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink 2nd_Army_(Wehrmacht).
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink 2nd_Dragoon_Guards_(Queens_Bays).
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink 2nd_Infantry_Division_(Wehrmacht).
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink 2nd_Light_Cavalry_Division_(France).
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink 2nd_Panzer_Army.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink 4e_Division_cuirassée.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink 4th_Army_(Wehrmacht).
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink 50th_(Northumbrian)_Infantry_Division.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink 51st_(Highland)_Division.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink 52nd_(Lowland)_Infantry_Division.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink 6th_Army_(Wehrmacht).
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink 7th_Panzer_Division_(Wehrmacht).
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink 9th_Army_(Wehrmacht).
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink 9th_Army_Corps_(France).
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Abbeville.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Acting_(rank).
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Air_Ministry.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Aisne.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Alan_Brooke,_1st_Viscount_Alanbrooke.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Allies_of_World_War_II.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Amiens.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Andelle.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink André_Corap.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Anglo-French_Supreme_War_Council.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Anthony_Eden.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Archibald_Bentley_Beauman.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Argyll_and_Sutherland_Highlanders.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Arkforce.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Armistice_of_22_June_1940.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Army_Group_A.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Army_Group_B.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Army_Group_C.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Army_general_(France).
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Arques-la-Bataille.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Arrest,_Somme.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Aumale.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_Arras_(1940).
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_France.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Beauchamps,_Somme.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Beauman_Division.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Belleville-sur-Mer.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Black_Watch_(Royal_Highland_Regiment).
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Blockship.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Boos,_Seine-Maritime.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Bresle_(river).
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Brest,_France.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Briare.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Brigade_group.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Brittany.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Buchy,_Seine-Maritime.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Béhen.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Béthune_(river).
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Cany-Barville.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Category:1940_in_France.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Category:Battle_of_France.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Category:Battles_and_operations_of_World_War_II_involving_the_United_Kingdom.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Category:Conflicts_in_1940.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Category:Evacuations.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Category:Naval_battles_and_operations_of_the_European_theatre_of_World_War_II.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Chalk.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Channel_Ports.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Charles_de_Gaulle.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Cherbourg-Octeville.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Cliff.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Commander-in-Chief,_Portsmouth.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Concertina_wire.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Conches-en-Ouche.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Cxc3xb4te-dOr.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Cxc3xb4te_dAlbxc3xa2tre.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Da_Capo_Press.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Defence_in_depth.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Departments_of_France.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Dieppe.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Dunkirk.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Dunkirk_evacuation.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Durdent_(river).
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Eaulne.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink English_Channel.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Entrepôt.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Envermeu.
- Operation_Cycle wikiPageWikiLink Erwin_Rommel.