The Invasion of Czechoslovakia, also known as the 1938 Defensive War (Czech: Československá obranná vojna 1938) in Czechoslovakia and the Czechoslovak Campaign (German: Feldzug in Tschechoslowakei) in Germany, was an invasion of Czechoslovakia carried out by Nazi Germany, while its ally Hungary used the opportunity to satisfy its own territorial claims and started its own independent military operations against Czechoslovakia. The invasion began on October 1, 1938, a day after the Czech government refused to abide to the Munich Agreement, and ended November 26 with Germany and Hungary dividing and annexing the whole of Czechoslovakia.
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| - Invasion of Czechoslovakia (WFAC)
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| - The Invasion of Czechoslovakia, also known as the 1938 Defensive War (Czech: Československá obranná vojna 1938) in Czechoslovakia and the Czechoslovak Campaign (German: Feldzug in Tschechoslowakei) in Germany, was an invasion of Czechoslovakia carried out by Nazi Germany, while its ally Hungary used the opportunity to satisfy its own territorial claims and started its own independent military operations against Czechoslovakia. The invasion began on October 1, 1938, a day after the Czech government refused to abide to the Munich Agreement, and ended November 26 with Germany and Hungary dividing and annexing the whole of Czechoslovakia.
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Strength
| - Czechoslovakia:
* 1.28 million men
* 350 tanks
* 750 aircraft
Soviet Union:
* 900000 men
* 200 aircraft
Total: 1,300,000
- Germany:
* 900,000 men
* 3000 guns
* 2100 tanks
* 2100 aircraft
Hungary:
* 250,000 men
* 153 tankettes
* 292 aircraft
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dbkwik:alt-history...iPageUsesTemplate
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dbkwik:althistory/...iPageUsesTemplate
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Partof
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Date
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Commander
| - Gerd von Rundstedt
- Wilhelm List
- Fedor von Bock
- Walther von Brauchitsch
- Ludvík Krejčí
- Josef Votruba
- Jan Syrový
- Lev Prchala
- Ritter von Leeb
- Sergej Vojcechovský
- Vojtěch Luža
- Walther von Reichenau
- Hugó Sónyi
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22px|border|Poland Władysław Bortnowski
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Territory
| - Polish territory divided among Germany, Hungary and Poland
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Title
| - From left to right: Junkers Ju 87 dive bombers of the Luftwaffe preparing to bomb Czechoslovak forces; Wehrmacht soldiers of the 1st Panzer Division in front of a destroyed Czechoslovak bunker; German tank formation; Czechoslovak infantry and tanks during the Prchala Offensive in southern Moravia; Hungarian forces moves into Khust in Carpatho-Ruthenia; Bombing of Prague.
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Image size
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Casualties
| - 121(xsd:integer)
- 3400(xsd:integer)
- 5126(xsd:integer)
- 18000(xsd:integer)
- 21383(xsd:integer)
- 36000(xsd:integer)
- 63200(xsd:integer)
- 135500(xsd:integer)
- 637000(xsd:integer)
- Germany:
- Hungary:
- Czechoslovakia:
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Result
| - * Decisive Axis victory
* Beginning of World War II
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combatant
| - France
- Nazi Germany
- Soviet Union
- Czechoslovakia
- Hungary
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22px|border|Poland Poland
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Place
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Conflict
| - Invasion of Czechoslovakia
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abstract
| - The Invasion of Czechoslovakia, also known as the 1938 Defensive War (Czech: Československá obranná vojna 1938) in Czechoslovakia and the Czechoslovak Campaign (German: Feldzug in Tschechoslowakei) in Germany, was an invasion of Czechoslovakia carried out by Nazi Germany, while its ally Hungary used the opportunity to satisfy its own territorial claims and started its own independent military operations against Czechoslovakia. The invasion began on October 1, 1938, a day after the Czech government refused to abide to the Munich Agreement, and ended November 26 with Germany and Hungary dividing and annexing the whole of Czechoslovakia. The morning after the Šluknov incident, German forces invaded Czechoslovakia from the north, south, and west. Having mobilized its forces in the months leading up to the war, and relying on its lines of border fortifications running along the German-Czech frontier, Czechoslovakia was able to resist the initial German advances for far longer than the Germans expected while awaiting expected support and relief from France and the United Kingdom. When the Germans finally broke through the border fortifications two-three weeks into the campaign, the Czechs withdrew from their forward defensive lines to the second line of established defensive lines in Moravia and around Prague. After the capitulation of Prague in the beginning of November, the Germans gained an undisputed advantage. Czech forces, having withdrawn to Moravia and Slovakia, where preparing for a final stand, but suffered to some degree from desertion among Slovak soldiers. On October 20, 1938 the Hungarians launched their invasion of the Slovak part of Czechoslovakia despite low ammunition and supply stockpiles. Although a Hungarian offensive was anticipated, which also motivated Slovak soldiers to fight against the invaders, it rendered the Czech plan of defense obsolete. Facing a second front, the Czechoslovak government concluded the defense of Moravia and Slovakia was no longer feasible and ordered an emergency evacuation of all troops to neutral Poland and Romania. On November 10, following the Czechoslovak defeat at the Battle of Topoľčany, German and Hungarian forces gained full control over Czechoslovakia. The success of the invasion marked the end of the Czechoslovak Republic, though Czechoslovakia never formally surrendered. On November 28, after an initial period of military administration, Germany directly annexed Sudetenland and established the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia from the rest of the occupied Czech lands. Hungary annexed Slovakia and Carpathian Ruthenia, while Poland annexed the Zaolzie region. In the aftermath of the invasion, a collective of underground resistance organizations formed the Czechoslovak Underground State within the territory of the former Czechoslovak state. Many of the military exiles that managed to escape Czechoslovakia subsequently joined the Czechoslovak Legions in Poland and in France, an armed force loyal to the Czechoslovak government in exile.
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