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German efforts to create the British Free Corps were farcical. During the time of its existence fewer than 60 British and Commonwealth POWs and internees volunteered or were coerced into joining. It's greatest strength was just 27 soldiers. and it never saw action as such

Recruitment only got underway during 1943 when the tide of the ward had turned against Germany.

What if the Germans had chosen to recruit or a British SS unit earlier in the war perhaps at the same time as the creation of the Wiking Division in 1941? British fortunes were still very much on the back foot at that time of the war. Perhaps Germany could also lay the crusade against bolshevism card more strongly

I'm not suggsting that recruitment would be substantial but might earlier recruitment lead to a somewhat larger unit perhaps company strength perhaps even with one or two British officers*?

If the unit saw action on the Eastern Front would this materially affect anglo-soviet relations?

The BFC members received relatively lenient treatment after the way (none wee executed and the last BFC member was released from prison in the 50s). Would members of a larger unit that fought against an ally receive rather harsher treatment after the war?

* A small number of British offices did work for German radio (Walter udy and Railton Freeman spring to mind but only one officer, Douglas Berneville-Claye, appears to have put on waffen-ss uniform - he was not prosecuted ater the war due to lack of evidence)

NB I am asking out of interest not out of an actual desire to see more British soldiers fight for teh Reich)
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