SarthakGanguly
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No. Britain had only the Navy and its small but fearless RAF to protect itself. They even drafted old men into pathetic Home Guard units. They even leased out 50 pacific islands to the US for a handful of destroyers to help in anti sub warfare.After BEF evacuated safely, there was no realistic chance of capturing Britain as they had not only a strong navy but a very effective chain home defence utilizing the wonder eyes(radar).
Today we know it was decisive. But it was not known on that day. It was just a mistake. Errors were made by all sides, and it is not necessary for one to be particularly decisive. That said, it was a failure of the German Luftwaffe and the army group command (plus Hitler). Individual units did try to break the perimeter at Dunkirk inspite of the halt order. But, without a joint effort, piecemeal attacks were bound to fail. And they did. Let's accept that for a change the French fought really hard and well.
Many commanders then felt that a 48 hour halt would be fine, especially since the infantry was fatally lagging behind the panzer spearheads - which is militarily sound. German intel failed here as well - they apparently overestimated the French strength in the south and underestimated the British capability in Dunkirk. Blaming Hitler alone was a convenient tactic of all post war German generals. It was much more complex than that in 1940.