Winston Churchill was calmly tapping his fingers away on his office desk, while his lips were pursed to a Le Aroma de Cuba cigar (Brewster, 4). He closed his eyes, and he had to make a decision quickly. He opened his eyes and he shook his head because he thought the decision he made was horrible. He called one of his generals, and told them to start planning an attack on France (Brewster, 4). This is when the Dieppe raid was created. Without the execution of the Dieppe raid, the Allied forces would have lost the war against Hitler and the Nazis, in World War Two. The Dieppe raid allowed the Allied forces to gain confidential German documents regarding future German operations, prevented Hitler from capturing the Soviet Union, and made the Allied forces learn how to organize and execute an army and a military operation respectively.
The Allied forces needed to know what the Germany army was up to, and they can only get this information through German codes and ciphers (“Dieppe Uncovered”). In fact, David O’Keefe, a historian, says, “The Dieppe raid was used to
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The first lesson that the Allied forces learned was the fact that they needed to establish better communication systems between the Allied commanders and their troops. Canadian general Graham Crerar said, “The Dieppe raid helped us develop better communication systems which saved many men’s lives in Normandy” (Humphreys, 231).With the new communication system, the Allied commanders were able to execute the Invasion of Normandy successfully (Humphreys, 232). The new communication system continued to be useful at the operations following the Invasion of Normandy as well. Thus, if the Dieppe raid wasn’t executed, the Allied forces would not have created a new communication system, and the results at Normandy would have resembled the abominable results at