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World War 2:
Campaigns in Africa
First British Offensive in North Africa
June 1940-February 1941
British Expedition to Greece and Crete: April-May
1941
Iraq and Syria: April-June 1941
East Africa and the Red Sea: June 1940 - November 1941
Arrival of the Germans in North Africa: February
1941-May 1942
Naval Operations in 1941
British Defeats in North Africa and the Turn of
the Tide: May-November 1942
Anglo-American Invasion of French North Africa: November
1942-May 1943
CAMPAIGNS IN AFRICA
French and British staff conversations, which began
in London at the end of March 1939, included the broad outline of plans
for conducting joint operations in the Mediterranean. Later, in May
and June, meetings between British and' French commanders in the Mediterranean
and the Middle East were held at Rabat, Aden, and Jerusalem.
With the outbreak of war between Germany and the Allies
on Sept. 3, 1939, Italy found herself in a difficult position. She had
an extensive African empire, consisting of the older colonies of Eritrea,
Italian Somaliland, and Libya and the more recently acquired Ethiopia.
Even if her Axis partner gained early successes in northern Europe,
Italy's communications with her African possessions would be cut except
for the occasional ship or aircraft which might make a hazardous journey.
The British and French navies dominated the Mediterranean with powerful
fleets based on British naval bases at Gibraltar, Malta, and Alexandria
and on French bases at Toulon, Bizerte, Algiers, and Oran. In Libya
the Italian garrison was sandwiched between strong French forces in
French North Africa and considerable British forces in Egypt; and Italy's
other colonies were surrounded by potential enemies on all sides, although
the forces arrayed against her were not very formidable in the early
stages of the war. Under these conditions the Italian dictator, Benito
Mussolini, adopted the only practical course of remaining nominally
neutral while giving all possible support to Germany.
With Italy neutral and Germany without access to the
area (except for an occasional submarine that might slip through the
narrow Strait of Gibraltar), the Mediterranean theater remained inactive
for the first nine months of the war. During this period the Allies
took steps to improve their position and perfected their plans for joint
action in the event of a hostile Italy. In June 1939, Lt. Gen. (later
Field Marshal) Sir Archibald Wavell (later 1st Earl Wavell) was appointed
commander in chief of all British land forces in the Middle East with
headquarters in Cairo. The first contingents of Australian and New Zealand
troops arrived in Egypt to reinforce his command in February 1940.
On May 10, Winston Churchill became prime minister and
minister of defense, and on the same day, Hitler's armies invaded France,
Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg. German success was spectacular.
By June 22, France had signed an armistice with Germany, and hostilities
had ended; the British Expeditionary Force had withdrawn to the United
Kingdom; and the northern half of France and all of Belgium, the Netherlands,
and Luxembourg became German-occupied countries. Meanwhile, on June
10, Italy had declared war on Great Britain and France (effective June
11). France also signed an armistice with Italy, on June 24, and the
British Commonwealth was then alone in arms against Germany and Italy.
The effect of these events on the Mediterranean theater
was alarming from the British point of view. The authorities in French
North Africa, the other French African dependencies, and Syria decided
to recognize the new French government at Vichy under Marshal Philippe
Petain and to obey his orders. The carefully laid Anglo-French plans
for joint action had collapsed. The burden of keeping open sea communications
in the Mediterranean, defending the Suez Canal, and dealing with the
Italians in East Africa now fell entirely on the British Navy and on
General Wavell's scanty forces centered in Egypt.
As of the beginning of June, the Commonwealth had 1
battleship, 1 six-inch cruiser, and 9 destroyers based on Gibraltar,
and 4 battleships, 8 six-inch cruisers, 1 aircraft carrier, and 20 destroyers
in the eastern Mediterranean based on Egypt, while Italy had 6 battleships
(2 of which did not join the fleet until July), 7 eight-inch cruisers,
12 six-inch cruisers, and 50 destroyers. Commonwealth land forces included
1 armored division, 1 incomplete Indian division, 1 New Zealand brigade,
1 horsed cavalry division, part of an Australian division, 2 independent
cavalry regiments, 19 British infantry battalions, and 2 artillery regiments,
totaling about 63,500 troops, in Egypt and Palestine; and about 9,000
troops in the Sudan, 1,500 troops in British Somaliland, and 8,500 troops
in Kenya, or a total of about 19,000 in East Africa. Italy had 9 metropolitan
(regular) divisions, 3 Black Shirt divisions, and 2 Libyan native divisions,
totaling about 200,000 troops, in Libya; and about 91,000 European and
199,000 native troops, with 400 guns and 200 light tanks, in East Africa.
The Commonwealth units were generally considerably understrength, but
those of the Italians were at full strength. British Commonwealth aircraft
of all types numbered 375 (205 in Egypt and Palestine and 170 in East
Africa) ; Italian aircraft, 638 (313 in Libya and 325 in East Africa).
In addition to General Wavell, the principal commanders
on the British Commonwealth side were Adm. (later Admiral of the Fleet)
Sir Andrew Cunningham (later 1st Viscount Cunningham of Hyndhope) and
Air Chief Marshal Sir Arthur Longmore, in charge, respectively, of naval
and air operations in the Mediterranean and Middle East. Gen. (later
Field Marshal) Sir Henry Maitland Wilson (later 1st Baron Wilson of
Libya and of Stowlangtoft) was in command of British troops in Egypt;
Lt. Gen. (later Gen. Sir) Richard N. O'Connor, of the Western Desert
Force; Lt. Gen. (later Gen. Sir) William Platt, of troops in the Sudan;
and Lt. Gen. Douglas P. Dickinson, of the East African Force, based
on Kenya. General Dickinson was replaced by Lt. Gen. (later Gen. Sir)
Alan G. Cunningham, younger brother of Admiral Cunningham, on November
1. On the Italian side, Marshal Italo Balbo, who was killed in an air
accident in June, was succeeded as commander in chief in Libya by Marshal
Rodolfo Graziani. The duke of Aosta served as viceroy and commander
in chief in Italian East Africa.
First British Offensive in North Africa June 1940-February 1941
The first clash between British and Italian forces took
place in the Western Desert in the early hours of June 11, before the
Italian troops concerned had been told of the declaration of war. During
the next six months the British carried out many small raids against
Italian positions in Libya. In addition, there were numerous patrol
clashes in which the superiority of. the British Commonwealth troops
became apparent. On July 3, the British Navy sank or put out of action
a number of units of the French Fleet at Oran and Mers-el-Kebir in order
to prevent their falling into German hands. French warships at Alexandria
were immobilized on the following day. Later, on September 2325, British
and Free French forces failed in an attempt to land at the Vichy French
port of Dakar but succeeded in badly damaging the battleship Richelieu.
Meanwhile, between September 13 and September 18, the Italians advanced
in strength approximately 60 miles into Egypt but halted at Maktila,
east of Sidi Barrani. It was a disappointment to the British that they
did not advance farther, for plans had been made to deal them a heavy
blow with the 7th Armored Division as they approached Matruh. During
the advance the Italians lost more than 3,000 men; the British, about
150.
On October 28, Italian troops based on Albania invaded
Greece. A fortnight later, on November 11, the British Fleet Air Arm
attacked the Italian Fleet at Taranto and, for a loss of two aircraft,
put half of its major units out of action for about six months.
In December, the Western Desert Force, consisting of
the 7th Armored Division and the Indian 4th Division, began the first
major British offensive in North Africa. Operations were under the direction
of General Wavell, with General O'Connor in executive command. The offensive
began on December 9, and by December 11, Sidi Barrani had been taken
with a loss to the Italians of 38,300 prisoners. Important decisions
now had to be made. The offensive had been planned to last no more than
five days and to stop after the capture of Sidi Barrani. Its success
had greatly exceeded expectations, and General Wavell, urged by General
O'Connor, agreed to the continuance of the advance. Arrangements had
been made, however, to send the Indian 4th Division to East Africa,
where it was required for offensive operations: shipping was already
standing by at Suez to carry it to Port Sudan. The Indian division was
therefore withdrawn from the Western Desert Force on December 14, and
replaced immediately by the Australian 6th Division, but the exchange
caused a delay in the resumption of the offensive.
Successes followed in quick succession. Bardia was captured
on Jan. 4, 1941 (32,000 prisoners were taken), and Tobruk on January
22 (about 25,000 prisoners). By this time the Italian Tenth Army (together
with considerable reinforcements sent from the Fifth Army in Tripolitania)
had been greatly depleted in strength, and General O'Connor decided
on a bold step to complete the destruction of the Italian forces in
Cyrenaica. This plan required the 7th Armored Division to make a desert
march to Bedafomm near the coast with a view to getting behind and cutting
off the remaining Italian troops, while the Australian 6th Division
was to advance on Benghazi by the coastal route. This operation was
completely successful. The 7th Armored Division reached Mekili (El Mechili)
on January 27, Msus on February 4, and the Bedafomm area on February
5. Meanwhile, the Australian 6th Division, having captured Derna on
January 30, advanced on Benghazi, which it reached on February 6. After
some brisk fighting at Bedafomm, in which gallant efforts were made
to break through the British positions, the Italians surrendered on
the morning of February 7. There were about 25,000 prisoners, including
Gen. Giuseppe Tellera, commander of the Tenth Army, who was mortally
wounded. Immediately after the surrender a small protective group was
established at El Agheila, with patrols out for 40 miles along the coast
toward Sirte.
The campaign had been a remarkable success. The 13th
Corps (as the western Desert Force was renamed on Jan. 1, 1941) had
never exceeded a strength of 31,000 men. Between Dec. 9, 1940, and Feb.
7, 1941, it had advanced more than 500 miles and captured more than
130,000 prisoners, about 400 tanks, nearly 850 guns, and thousands of
wheeled vehicles. The 13th Corps’ own losses were about 500 killed,
1,373 wounded, and 55 missing.
With the destruction of the Italian Tenth Army and the
occupation of the whole of Cyrenaica, the British were faced with a
difficult problem. The only Italian forces left in North Africa were
5 very weak and dispirited divisions of the Fifth Army around the port
of Tripoli. General O'Connor was confident that the 13th Corps could
advance and capture Tripoli, with the prospect of eliminating all Axis
forces from North Africa, and he immediately drew up plans for doing
so. There was, however, another urgent call in a very different direction.
When the Italians began invading Greece, they had met with some initial
success, but very soon the Greeks counterattacked and drove them back
into Albania. Partly to help their ally and partly for other reasons,
the Germans decided to advance through Yugoslavia and occupy Greece.
German preparations for this move had been apparent to the British intelligence
service for some time. Hitherto the Greeks had declined British aid,
but on Jan. 29, 1941, Premier loannes Metaxas died, and his successor,
Alexandros Korizes, intimated that he would welcome British help against
what he regarded as an imminent German threat. British resources in
the Middle East were insufficient to allow both an advance to Tripoli
and aid to Greece. After numerous exchanges of views between the British
government and General Wavell and discussions in Cairo and Athens (Athenai
), which were attended by Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden and the chief
of the Imperial General Staff, Gen. (later Field Marshal) Sir John Greer
Dill, it was decided to send a force to Greece and remain on the defensive
in North Africa.
British Expedition to Greece and Crete: April-May 1941
The force sent to Greece was commanded by General Wilson
and consisted of about 24,200 British (including an armored brigade),
17,100 Australian, and 16,700 New Zealand troops. The dispatch of British
troops from Egypt began on April 5, and on the following day, German
forces invaded Yugoslavia and Greece. By April 16, British and Greek
forces had been withdrawn to a front south of Mount Olympus (Olymbos)
. In the face of superior German forces and of an Italian offensive
from Albania, the situation deteriorated rapidly. The decision was made
to withdraw British Commonwealth forces from Greece, and the withdrawal
was carried out between April 24 and May 1. Meanwhile, on April 27,
German troops entered Athens.
From the outset the British authorities had realized
the risks involved in the Greek venture, but the political advantages
were thought to outweigh the military hazards. Viewed in the light of
later knowledge, it seems that the chances of success were remote in
the extreme. The expedition was hurriedly planned, the headquarters
was an improvised one, the troops were not the most experienced or the
best trained, and the Greeks, although brave, were ill equipped. The
expedition cost the British approximately 12,000 casualties. In contrast,
the German invasion of Greece was carefully planned and made in considerable
strength, with well-equipped and well-trained troops. The Greek expedition
deprived the British of the chance of seizing Tripoli and of expelling
the Italians from North Africa.
Following the decision to evacuate British troops from
the Greek mainland, the question arose as to whether Crete should be
held. Prime Minister Churchill insisted that it must be held, and on
April 30, General Wavell flew to the island to discuss plans for its
defense. Maj. Gen. (later Lt. Gen.) Bernard Freyberg (later 1st Baron
Freyberg), commander of the New Zealand Division, was placed in command.
By May 3, he had disposed his troops as follows: the 14th Infantry Brigade
at Candia (Herakleion), the Australian 19th Brigade at Rethymnon (Retimo
) and Georgeopolis, a composite force of 14,800 men in the Suda Bay-Canea
(Khania) area, and two brigades of New Zealanders in the Maleme Airfield
sector. In addition, Greek battalions were distributed among the various
sectors. The total strength was about 42,500 troops. Many of them had
recently been fighting on the mainland, some were comparatively untrained
administrative personnel, and there was an acute shortage of arms and
heavy equipment.
Under the direction of Gen. (later Col. Gen.) Kurt Student
and the executive command of Col. Gen. Alexander Lohr, the Germans decided
to attack and capture the island mainly with airborne troops. The aircraft
available consisted of about 500 serviceable bomber, fighter, and reconnaissance
planes, about 500 transport aircraft, and 72 gliders. The bombing of
Allied positions and installations began on May 14, and the first airborne
troops landed on May 20. The capture of Maleme Airfield on the following
day enabled the Germans to fly in reinforcements rapidly. As the Germans
built up their strength, the British position gradually deteriorated.
By May 24, General Freyberg had abandoned hope of holding Crete, and,
in view of the heavy losses being suffered by the Royal Navy, the decision
to evacuate the island was made on May 27. Severe losses were sustained
in attempts to embark troops from the northern parts of the island.
The last evacuation was made from a beach at Sphakia (Chora Sphakion)
on the south coast on May 31. Allied casualties in the campaign were
about 17,500 killed, wounded, and prisoners; German losses, just over
6,000. In addition, 9 British warships were sunk, and 17 were damaged.
For a more detailed account of operations in Greece
in 1941, see section 7. Balkan
Campaigns.
Iraq and Syria: April-June 1941
In 1941, Italy's ally, Germany, began to interest herself
in Iraq and French-held Syria. On April 3, a pro-German politician,
Rashid `Ali al-Gailani, brought off a successful coup d'etat in Iraq.
At the same time, reports reached General Wavell that German cadres
of officers and technicians were arriving in Syria in French aircraft.
On April 17, an Indian brigade was sent to protect the
oil pipeline running from Iraq to Haifa. British Commonwealth forces
engaged the insurgent forces in Iraq on May 2, and on May 31 occupied
Baghdad. The pipeline was secured, and the regent, Emir `Abdallah, was
reinstated.
By June 8, it was clear that German forces had infiltrated
into Syria in some strength, and that the Vichy commander, Gen. Fernand
Dentz, was supporting them. In the next six days, British Commonwealth
forces under General Wilson advanced into Syria and, in a sharp campaign,
defeated the Vichy forces and occupied the country.
East Africa and the Red Sea: June 1940 - November 1941
Because of the negligible strength of British forces
in East Africa, the four months following Italy's declaration of war
saw a number of Italian successes. In the Sudan, Italian troops occupied
the frontier towns of Kassala and Gallabat on July 4, 1940, and in Kenya
they captured Moyale on July 15. Then, between August 5 and August 19,
they occupied British Somaliland.
By November 1940, the British were able to adopt a more
aggressive attitude, though still on a limited scale, and by February
1941 they were in a position to mount a large-scale offensive. The situation
was also greatly improved by the growth of a considerable patriot movement
in Ethiopia, where native forces organized by Maj. (later Maj. Gen.)
Orde C. Wingate and other British officers were increasing rapidly in
strength and efficiency. At the time the offensive started, the Indian
4th and 5th divisions were stationed in the Sudan. In Kenya the units
were more diversely organized and of more varied composition. Of the
77,000 troops in the area, 27,000 were European South Africans; 6,000,
Europeans serving in East and West African forces; 33,000, East Africans;
9,000, West Africans; and 2,000, of various nationalities.
The British plan called for an advance eastward from
the Sudan through northern Ethiopia to Eritrea and the Red Sea, together
with an approximately simultaneous advance northward from Kenya through
southern Ethiopia to the capital, Addis Ababa, and also eastward from
Kenya to Italian Somaliland. The terrain in many parts of this area
affords a striking contrast to the Western Desert. Much of Ethiopia
is mountainous with wide and torrential rivers. The country favors highly
trained troops, and it also gave the Ethiopian guerrillas full scope.
The British offensive started early in February. Progress
was rapid, and the various columns inflicted heavy losses on the Italian
troops and took arge numbers of prisoners. By February 25, forces from
Kenya had captured most of Italian Somaliland, including the ports of
Kismayu and Mogadishu. A force from Aden, escorted by warships, landed
at Berbera on the coast of British Somaliland ( Somaliland Protectorate)
on March 16. On April 6, Addis Ababa was occupied. Meanwhile, forces
from the Sudan captured Keren, Eritrea, on March 27, and by April 4
the area between Lake Tana and Addis Ababa had been occupied. Massawa
was occupied on April 8. On May 16, after stubborn fighting, the duke
of Aosta surrendered at Amba Alagi ( the formal surrender took place
on May 20) . Organized resistance ended, but isolated detachments continued
to fight for some months, and it was not until November 27 that Gondar,
the last place to hold out, surrendered.
The two most important battles of the East African campaign
were those fought at Keren and Amba Alagi. The British land forces were
well supported by the air force. Typical of this assistance were the
attacks made by the South African Air Force on the airfield at Addis
Ababa on April 4, 5, and 6, when about 30 Italian aircraft were destroyed.
All of the Italian forces, white and native, who had
not been killed or who had not deserted (as many of the native troops
had) became prisoners of war. Total Italian losses were estimated at
289,000. There had at times been serious fighting, but it is true to
say that, from the British point of view, the East African campaign
was a struggle against the climate and disease rather than against the
Italian enemy. Between June 1940 and May 1941, British Commonwealth
troops suffered only 1,154 battle casualties but 74,550 cases of sickness
or accident, of which about 10,000 were due to dysentery and 10,000
to malaria; 744 of these died.
In East Africa as in other campaigns, Italian arms had
not prospered. The campaigns in Africa, as well as that against the
Greeks in Albania, had shown Italian troops to be poorly led and trained.
They were badly equipped, especially in tanks, and logistically ill
found. In Africa they had been completely defeated in two campaigns
by British Commonwealth forces of greatly inferior strength. Not less
than 420,000 Italians (including Italiantrained native troops) had been
killed or captured, as compared with approximately 3,100 British Commonwealth
battle casualties. The Italians also lost hundreds of tanks, guns, trucks,
and aircraft and vast quantities of other equipment and stores. The
collapse in East Africa was Italy's third serious .defeat since entering
the war. By early February 1941, she had been decisively beaten in Cyrenaica.
By mid-March, her last effort to defeat the Greeks without German aid
had failed. For the British the campaign in East Africa was the last
of the easy victories. Thereafter they were to meet Germans, who were
well led, well trained, and well equipped.
Arrival of the Germans in North Africa: February 1941-May 1942
After the Battle of Bedafomm in February 1941, the bulk
of the British forces in the Western Desert were withdrawn in preparation
for the expedition to Greece. The defense of Cyrenaica was then left
to the Australian 9th Division and part of the 2d Armored Division.
Later the Indian 3d Motor Brigade was sent to the desert as a reinforcement.
This force, which was much less experienced than the Australian 6th
Division and the 7th Armored Division which it had replaced, was under
the command of Lt. Gen. (later Sir) Philip Neame.
Up to this time the Germans had participated in the
Mediterranean operations only in the air ( since early January, the
Luftwaffe had made attacks on British warships and convoys from Italian
airfields). The predicament of the Italian forces in North Africa after
their serious defeats in Cyrenaica, however, had convinced the German
High Command that a substantial force must be sent to the assistance
of their Axis partner. The decision to do so had been made on January
11, and on February 5 the formation of the German Africa Corps was made
known to the Italians. The new corps, which was to consist of the 5th
Light Motorized Division and the 15th Panzer Division, was placed under
the command of Lt. Gen. (later Field Marshal) Erwin Rommel. Within three
months, German efficiency and equipment and Rommel's skill in armored
warfare, combined with the reduction in British strength, were to change
the whole position in North Africa and see the British driven back to
the Egyptian frontier.
Rommel arrived in Tripoli on February 12, and at once
began organizing the defenses of the area with such Italian troops as
were available and making plans for offensive action as soon as the
Africa Corps arrived. General Wavell and his intelligence staff estimated
that Rommel would not be able to stage a major offensive before May
1. In this they were wrong. In early March, there were a number of clashes
between the opposing light forces in the El Agheila area. Then, on March
24, Axis forces occupied El Agheila, and on April 1 they took Mersa
Brega. Thereafter their advance was rapid. The weak British forces were
outmaneuvered and thrown into confusion. On April 3, Benghazi fell,
and on April 7, Generals O'Connor and Neame were captured by a German
reconnaissance unit. Mekill was taken the next day, and by April 11,
Axis forces had reached Bardia and Sallum. In the face of this serious
threat to the Suez Canal, General Wavell had decided to hold the port
of Tobruk with the Australian 9th Division, the Australian 18th Brigade,
and some armored and other ancillary units. Their task was facilitated
by the existence of the old Italian defense works on the landward side,
which were still in fairly good condition. By April 11, Tobruk had been
invested, but the speed with which Rommel's forces pressed on past the
port made it apparent to Wavell that the Axis objective was the Suez
Canal, and that it was necessary to make a stand somewhere in the neighborhood
of the Libyan Egyptian frontier. The reconstituted Western Desert Force,
consisting of all the troops Wavell could make available, was put under
the command of Lt. Gen. Sir Noel M. de la P. Beresford Peirse; it comprised
the Indian 4th Division, the Australian 7th Division, the incomplete
6th Division, and a mobile force equivalent to a brigade.
Between April 13 and April 17 and again between April
30 and May 4, Axis troops unsuccessfully attacked Tobruk. Meanwhile,
British defenses along the Egyptian frontier had been organized, and
it soon became clear that this factor, combined with the threat to their
flank from Tobruk and logistic difficulties, had brought the Axis offensive
to a halt. Between May 15 and May 17, the British carried out a local
offensive in the Halfaya-Sallum-Capuzzo area. Although this offensive
was partially successful, the Germans recaptured Half aya on May 27.
Meanwhile, on May 12, a sea convoy code named Tiger
had arrived in Egypt with 82 cruiser tanks, 135 infantry tanks, and
21 light tanks, and this made it possible to start rebuilding the 7th
Armored Division. By the end of the month, the British forces had been
reorganized and reequipped sufficiently to assume the offensive, and
on May 28, General Wavell issued orders for Operation Battleaxe. The
Western Desert Force was to defeat the enemy on the frontier and occupy
the Bardia-Sallum-CapuzzoSidi Azeiz area, then attack the enemy around
Tobruk and relieve the port, and finally move on Derna and Mekili. The
forces available were the 7th Armored Division, the Indian 4th Division,
the Indian 11th Infantry Brigade, and the 22d Guards Brigade. Axis forces
consisted of the 15th Panzer Division in the frontier area, with three
Italian infantry battalions around Capuzzo and the rest of the weak
Trento Division and Bardia.
The attack began on June 15 and achieved some initial
success, but on the following day progress was slow, and further advance
was checked by enemy counterattacks. By the morning of June 17, losses
in tanks and the generally unfavorable situation made it clear that
the attack had failed. The order to withdraw was given, and the British
forces retired to their original area. British casualties totaled about
960. Of 90 cruiser and about 100 infantry tanks which began the battle,
27 cruisers and 64 infantry tanks were lost. The air force lost 36 aircraft.
The Axis forces sustained about 800 casualties, mostly Germans. They
had 12 tanks destroyed and about 50 damaged; and they lost 10 aircraft.
The British failure in Battleaxe was attributable to
the haste with which it was mounted, the lack of opportunity to train
the troops with new equipment, and the lack of tactical training, especially
in armored units. Cooperation between air and ground forces also left
much to be desired. The Axis defenders occupied well-prepared positions
and showed marked skill in handling their antitank weapons and in staging
counterattacks. It was clear to the British that a much greater effort
was required if the Axis forces were to be eliminated from North Africa.
The next. six months were to be a period of preparation by both sides.
Meanwhile, on June 22, Germany attacked the USSR, and Prime Minister
Churchill at once acclaimed the Soviets as an ally with whom his country
would cooperate to the fullest extent.
On July 5, General Wavell was replaced as commander
in chief in the Middle East by Gen. (later Field Marshal) Sir Claude
J. E. Auchinleek. It would be hard to imagine a more difficult military
task than that which had faced General Wavell during his two years in
command. With the entry into the war of Italy and the fall of France,
he found himself with totally inadequate forces, imperfectly trained
and not fully equipped. He was outnumbered on all fronts. In less than
12 months he had completely defeated the Italians in North Africa and
East Africa, and had killed or captured more than 400,000 of the enemy
at a cost of just over 3,000 British Commonwealth casualties. These
results were attained despite distractions in Syria and Iraq. In April,
on political grounds, he was compelled to send a large force to Greece,
but in spite of this contingency and the arrival of the German Africa
Corps in North Africa, he succeeded in carrying out his main task, which
was the defense of the Suez Canal. Those Allied commanders who came
to the Middle East and the Mediterranean later never experienced the
same difficulties: their resources in men and materials were incomparably
greater.
During the summer of 1941 there was little change in
the dispositions of either side. Planning for the next British offensive,
known as Operation Crusader, began in August. On September 18, the Western
Desert Force was redesignated the Eighth Army and placed under the command
of General Cunningham, who had earned such a high reputation in East
Africa. Meanwhile, in July, there were reports of German intrigues in
Iran, and on August 17, a joint Anglo-Soviet note was sent to the Iranian
government. British forces from India entered the country on August
25. There was some resistance at first, but it ceased by August 28.
At about the same time, Soviet forces entered Iran from the north, and
on September 17, British and Soviet troops occupied Teheran, the capital.
The occupation of Iran prepared the way for the development of a supply
route to the USSR. While these events had no influence on the war in
the Mediterranean, the denial to the Germans of access to that part
of the world relieved General Auchinleck of any anxiety from that quarter.
By the beginning of November, plans had been completed
for Operation Crusader. The twofold objective of the operation was the
relief of Tobruk and the occupation of the whole of Cyrenaica, to which
General Auchinleck added the rider that this must be accompanied by
the destruction of the enemy's armor. The British Eighth Army (including
the Tobruk garrison) consisted of 1 armored division, 3 armored or tank
brigades, and the equivalent of 6.5 infantry divisions, or about 118,000
troops. There were about 680 British tanks, with 500 tanks in reserve
or on the way to North Africa. The Axis forces comprised 2 German and
1 Italian armored divisions and 1 German and 6 Italian infantry divisions,
or about 119,000 troops. There were about 390 German and Italian tanks,
with practically no reserves. The German-Italian numerical inferiority
in armor was in some respects compensated by the superiority of their
best tanks in performance and gun power. The real superiority of the
Axis lay, however, in antitank guns that fired a much heavier missile
than the British 2pounders, had a much longer range, and were handled
with great skill.
The offensive began on November 18. The first attempt
to relieve Tobruk failed, and British losses in armor were heavy. On
November 26, General Auchinleck relieved General Cunningham of command
of the Eighth Army on the ground that his plans for the future were
not sufficiently aggressive. Cunningham was replaced by Maj. Gen. (later
Gen. Sir) Neil M. Ritchie, who had been deputy chief of staff in the
Middle East. The offensive was resumed on December 5, and on December
10, Tobruk was relieved. The Axis forces withdrew from El Gazala on
December 16, and on December 24, British troops entered Benghazi, having
advanced about 300 miles. There the offensive ended. The Eighth Army
had attained its first objective, the relief of Tobruk. It had also
occupied Cyrenaica, although the occupation was to be a fleeting one.
It destroyed many Axis tanks, but its own losses were also very heavy.
The German Africa Corps showed remarkable powers of recovery, and on
Jan. 21, 1942, Rommel resumed the offensive. By January 28, the British
had withdrawn from Benghazi to the El Gazala-Bir Hacheim line. There
was then a lull in the Western Desert until the end of May.
Since Operation Crusader began in November 1941, British
casualties had totaled about 17,700, and those of the Axis about 38,300.
Tank losses are more difficult to assess accurately. Up to December
12, the 7th Armored Division suffered 526 battle casualties and breakdowns
in tanks, of which about 281 became battleworthy again. How many again
took part in Crusader is not known. In addition, more than 200 British
infantry tanks became casualties, although many of these were eventually
recovered and used again. Axis losses in tanks were around 340, many
of which were recovered and repaired. British losses in aircraft totaled
about 300; those of the Axis, about 332. Crusader was a British victory,
but the price paid, especially in tank losses, was heavy. It was apparent
that British equipment and standards of tactical training, although
more than a match for Italian troops, were still below those of the
German Africa Corps.
Meanwhile, outside the Mediterranean theater, great
events had taken place. On Dec. 7, 1941, the Japanese delivered a crippling
air assault against the United States naval base of Pearl Harbor. This
brought the United States into the war against Germany and Italy. With
Britain, the Soviet Union, and the United States in alliance, eventual
victory over Germany and Italy, and the new Japanese enemy, seemed certain.
Naval Operations in 1941
As all British Commonwealth personnel and supplies for
the land forces in the Mediterranean had to come by sea, except for
a small proportion sent by air, it was of vital importance to keep water
communications open. This was comparatively easy in the Indian Ocean
and Red Sea, through which reinforcements and supplies from Australia,
New Zealand, India, and, frequently, North America, arrived, although
there was some anxiety for this route when japan entered the war. The
Mediterranean was, however, by far the more important area of naval
warfare. There the British and Italian navies, supported by seaborne
and shorebased aircraft, strove to safeguard their own communications
and cut those of their opponents.
After the attack on Taranto by British air craft in
November 1940, the chief events of naval interest were the bombardment
of Genoa ( Feb. 9, 1941) , the British naval success at Cape Matapan
(Tainaron; March 28), and numerous actions and convoy work connected
with the British expedition to Greece and the subsequent occupation
of Crete (April-May). An Italian motorboat attack on the harbor of Valletta,
on July 25-26, was completely defeated, but the British subsequently
lost the warships Ark Royal (November 13) and Barham (November 25),
and attacks by Italian "human torpedoes" on the harbor of
Alexandria resulted in severe damage to the Queen Elizabeth and the
Valiant (December 19).
Throughout 1941, Malta was a target for Axis shore-based
aircraft. The many attempts to reinforce, revictual, and fly fighter
aircraft to Malta from aircraft carriers cost the British many lives,
the carrier Ark Royal and numerous other warships, and many merchant
ships, valuable cargoes, and aircraft. But Malta held out and was of
inestimable value during the Allied invasions of Sicily and the Italian
mainland in 1943.
British Defeats in North Africa and the Turn of the Tide: May-November
1942
At the beginning of May 1942, the British war cabinet
was pressing for an early offensive in the Western Desert, and General
Auchinleck made the necessary plans. In this he was anticipated by General
Rommel, as on May 27, Axis forces attacked the El Gazala-Bir Hacheim
position in strength. For several days the battle hung in the balance,
but on June 5 the Axis began to get the better of the fighting, and
there followed a series of disasters for the British. By June 12, the
so-called "Cauldron" Battle had been lost; the Free French
troops, after heroic resistance at Bir Hacheim, had been withdrawn;
and British armor had suffered a major defeat. The decision to withdraw
from the El Gazala line was made on June 14. On June 21, the mainly
South African garrison of Tobruk was forced to surrender. Four clays
later, General Auchinleck assumed direct control of the Eighth Army,
which took up a defensive position running from north to south, with
its right on the sea near El Alamein and its left on the Qattara Depression.
Attempts by Rommel to break through this position between July 1 and
July 5 failed, and on July 10, General Auchinleck started a series of
counterattacks with limited objectives that lasted until July 26. By
this time both sides were exhausted, the British through a series of
defeats and heavy losses, and the Axis mainly because of logistic difficulties
but also because of considerable casualties. Once again German armor
had demonstrated its superiority in material qualities, training, and
tactical handling. It was, however, the last Axis success in Africa.
Between August 4 and August 10, Prime Minister Churchill
visited Cairo and held a series of meetings, in which he was joined
by Field Marshal Jan Christian Smuts, prime minister of South Africa;
Gen. (later Field Marshal) Sir Alan F. Brooke (later 1st Viscount Alanbrooke),
chief of the Imperial General Staff; and General Wavell, who was now
commander in chief in India. As a result, major changes were made. On
August 13, Lt. Gen. (later Field Marshal) Bernard Law Montgomery (later
1st Viscount Montgomery of Alamein), assumed command of the Eighth Army,
and two days later Gen. (later Field Marshal) Sir Harold Alexander (later
1st Earl Alexander of Tunis) succeeded General Auchinleck as commander
in chief in the Middle East. A number of lesser appointments also changed
hands about this time.
The directive given by Churchill to General Alexander
stated that his main duty was to destroy as early as possible the German-Italian
army commanded by the recently promoted Field Marshal Rommel. Immediately
after General Montgomery took command of the Eighth Army, he began the
task of reorganizing and redisposing his troops. He also made known
that there would be no further retreat, and that, if attacked, the army
would fight where it stood, on what was known as the Alam el Haifa position.
The British had not long to wait, for by August 25 it was apparent that
Rommel was about to assume the offensive. Available to him for this
operation were 4 German and 6 Italian divisions, of which 2 German and
2 Italian divisions were armored. To meet this force, Montgomery had
7 divisions, of which 2 were armored.
The attack began against the southern flank of the Alam
el Half a position in the early hours of August 31. Fighting continued
throughout that day and the next, but the British held fast. By the
evening of September 2 the Axis armor was short of fuel, and, with little
prospects of success, Rommel began to withdraw his forces. He was in
full retreat by the following day. The retreating Axis columns were
heavily attacked from the air, but Montgomery did not press the pursuit
with his ground troops. For this he was criticized in some quarters,
but he suspected a trap to lure his armor onto the powerful and numerous
Axis antitank guns and was doubtful if his troops were yet a match for
the Germans in fluid operations. By September 7, the battle was over.
After Alam el Haifa, Churchill pressed strongly for
an early offensive, but Montgomery was adamant that this would be unwise.
He informed the prime minister that an early offensive would fail, but
that he guaranteed the success of one late in October. Meanwhile, the
greatest energy was displayed throughout the Eighth Army to accustom
the troops to new equipment (which was now being delivered in increasing
quantities), to reorganize the forces, and above all to improve the
standard of tactical training. By October 20, all was ready for the
Battle of El Alamein. Montgomery disposed of the equivalent of 11 divisions
(3 armored), organized in three corps. To meet this force Rommel had
13 divisions, 4 of which were German. Of his 4 armored divisions, 2
were German and 2 Italian. The British attack opened on the night of
Oct. 23-24 with a massive artillery bombardment. Bitter fighting continued
for several days, during which both sides lost heavily and fortunes
fluctuated. After a short pause to regroup, Montgomery renewed the attack
on November 2. By November 5, the battle had turned in favor of the
British, and Rommel began to withdraw, pursued by the British 30th Corps
(the 1st and 7th armored divisions and the New Zealand 2d Division).
Anglo-American Invasion of French North Africa: November 1942-May 1943
The Battle of El Alamein was not only the beginning
of a series of unbroken victories; it was also the start of a new phase
in North Africa. Henceforth the campaign in the Mediterranean was to
be a joint Anglo-American undertaking. For some months the American
and British staffs had been working on a plan for the occupation of
French North Africa, with a view to the elimination of all Axis forces
from Africa and as a preliminary to the invasion of Italy. At the end
of August 1942, an Allied headquarters had been established in London
for Operation Torch, the code name for the enterprise. The over-all
command of sea, land, and air forces was vested in the American Lt.Gen.
(later General of the Army) Dwight D. Eisenhower. The land forces consisted
of the British First Army under Lt. Gen. (later Gen.) Sir Kenneth K.
N. Anderson and the United States 2d Corps under Maj. Gen. (later Lt.
Gen.) Lloyd R. Fredendall. Initially these formations were very weak,
the First Army being little more than a weak corps, but as the campaign
proceeded they greatly increased in strength.
The first landings took place on November 8, and by
the morning of November 11, Algiers (Alger), Oran, and Casablanca were
in Allied hands. The French troops, acting under orders from the Vichy
government, offered some resistance, but nowhere was this wholehearted,
and in many places it was merely token. On November 11, all hostilities
between the Allies and the French in Algeria and Morocco ceased, and
on the following day, Adm. Jean Francois Darlan, now recognized as the
French high commissioner in North Africa, handed over the French territories
to the Allies and appealed to the French Fleet at Toulon to cross over
to North Africa. Events moved quickly. By the end of November, the Germans
had occupied the whole of France, and most of the French warships at
Toulon had been scuttled by their crews. Meanwhile the Axis forces in
Tunisia were being heavily reinforced by air and through the ports of
Bizerte and Tunis.
On December 11, the Allied advance in Tunisia was halted
by Axis counterattacks in the area of Medjez-el-Bab. Then, on December
24, the already difficult political situation between the Allies and
the French authorities was complicated by the assassination of Admiral
Darlan. By this time the Allies were supported by numerous French troops
under Gen. Henri Giraud; these, although at first inadequately armed,
greatly improved in quality toward the latter stages of the campaign.
During January 1943, both sides confined themselves
to local operations and attempted to build up sufficient strength for
a decisive offensive. Then, on February 14, Axis forces launched a powerful
attack against the United States 2d Corps, which, heavily outnumbered,
was driven back about 50 miles between Faid Pass in the north and Gafsa
in the south. Kasserine and Sbeitla were captured, and the enemy, advancing
up the Kasserine Pass, threatened the important centers of Tebessa and
Thala. This advance was serious, for it endangered some of the Allied
forward airfields. By February 23, the advance of the Axis forces had
been halted, however, and between February 26 and March 3 they were
driven back to approximately their original positions. It had been a
difficult period for the Allies, but General Eisenhower had demonstrated
that he was a field commander of the first order.
Meanwhile, the British Eighth Army, after its victory
at El Alamein, had made rapid progress. Tobruk was captured on Nov.
13, 1942; Benghazi, on November 20; Tripoli on Jan. 23, 1943; Mareth,
on March 20; and Gabes, on March 29. On April 6, Wadi Akarit was attacked,
and on the following day troops of the Eighth Army made contact with
the Allies advare;ng in Tunisia. In mid-February, General Alc°ander
had flown from Egypt to join General Eisenhower as his deputy. In that
capacity he was charged with coordinating the action of the First and
Eighth armies and of all Allied ground troops operating in North Africa-American,
British, and French. Mid-April saw an extensive regrouping of Allied
forces, including the transfer of several of the Eighth Army's best
troops to the First Army, as it was considered that better and quicker
results would be achieved if the final blow was struck in the north
rather than in the south, where the country was more difficult and unsuitable
for armor.
On May 1, the 120-mile Allied front ran roughly from Enfidaville northwestward
to Pontdu-Fahs and then northward to the coast about 18 miles west of
Bizerte. The British Eighth Army was on the right, French units on the
right center, the British First Army on the left center, and the United
States 2d Corps on the left in the coastal strip. The main attack, by
the First Army and the 2d Corps, began on May 4, the British drive being
directed on Tunis and the American drive on Bizerte. The assaulting
troops were supported by a powerful force of aircraft, and the attack
was preceded by a heavy artillery bombardment. Although the Axis troops
fought with great determination, by May 6 the defense had cracked, and
on the following day American and British troops entered Bizerte and
Tunis, respectively. Confused fighting occurred from May 7 to May 12,
but the British succeeded in clearing the Cape Bon Peninsula, where
it had been thought that the Axis troops might make a last stand.
On May 13, all Axis forces laid down their arms in surrender.
About 240,000 prisoners were taken, including 125,000 Germans. Col.
Gen. Dietloff Jurgen von Arnim, the German commander in Tunis, was among
those captured. Field Marshal Rommel escaped.
With the surrender of Axis forces in Tunis, no Germans
or Italians remained in arms in Africa. From the time that Italy entered
the war in June 1940, the number of Axis soldiers killed or captured
in Africa totaled about 950,000. Approximately 2,400,000 gross tons
of Axis shipping were sunk, and 8,000 aircraft were destroyed. In addition,
6,200 guns, 2,500 tanks, and 70,000 trucks were captured or destroyed.
Allied shipping losses and British losses in army equipment in 1942
were also heavy and serious. Casualties in personnel, however, were
only a fraction of those suffered by the Axis. Apart from the heavy
Axis losses, the latter stages of the campaign in North Africa brought
the Allies many advantages. Very soon the victory was to result in Italy's
defection from the Axis partnership, and it paved the way for the reentry
of the Allies to the European mainland. Moreover, the Tunisian campaign
showed that American and British sailors, soldiers, and airmen could
fight efficiently as one team, under one commander, against the common
enemy.
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