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Disagree with that
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RAF+Royal Navy meant they couldn't control the channel long enough to get an invasion force across.
Disagree with that
You may disagree with it, but it is the truth. The Germans had very little capability to actually invade - their "troop transports" were mostly river and coastal barges that would be towed across the channel at something less than 3 knots. The British would have plenty of time to recognize an invasion fleet departing. It would take over 24 hours to assemble, load, and cross the English Channel and the Royal Navy would be able to intercept it at night, when the Luftwaffe would be essentially ineffective. Britain could put more than twice as many warships of any given type into the Channel on any given night than the German Navy (England had more CRUISERS assigned to defense against invasion than Germany had DESTROYERS afloat), and would have slaughtered the transports. Anyone that made it ashore wouldn't have any hope of reinforcements, because those same transports would then have had to turn around and get towed back across for another run, at the same pace of over 24 hours each way.
The only people in the German military that thought Sea Lion stood a prayer were in the Army, and that was because they simply assumed that the Navy and Luftwaffe could get them across the Channel and keep them supplied. Both the Navy and Luftwaffe knew that wax a pipe dream.
Sea Lion was a bluff, and its only real hope was to convince England to sue for peace. Unfortunately for Germany, England knew it.
Mike