Quote:
Originally Posted by blackmme
Yep sure is. The Luftwaffe's job (according to FD16) was to make an invasion uneccessary (by getting the Brits to the negotiating table, which Hitler expected) or make it possible.
It failed in both, lots of people were killed by bombs, lots of RAF fighters were shot down and the Germans never got close to achieving either aim.
The RAF succeeded in what it had to do. The Luftwaffe failed in what it had to do.
So yes that's a victory.
Is your definition of a victory that for it to be so you can't sustain any damage or casulties?
Regards Mike
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I dunno man, it's a combination of facts that makes me think it was a draw:
1) Germany didn't achieve its results as planned,
but it didn't give up, it turned its attention to another front.
2) Britain did sustain a lot of damage by the bombing raids, which continued well into 1941.
3) There was no change in terms of territorial dominance (heck, channel islands weren't even freed until the end of the war!), just a war of attrition, with Britain sustaining more of the damage.