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Bou Arada, farther south. To the north, on the coastal road, von Arnim met with some local success and after a fierce struggle forced the V Corps to evacuate Sedjenane. He then made an unsuccessful attempt to drive down the road to Beja. By 17 March these attacks had forced back the British line in the sector northwest of that town, but further advances were then definitely halted by the V Corps. Battle of Mareth, 21-29 March 1943.—During the first week in March the Axis command undoubtedly knew that General Montgomery’s Eighth Army would shortly stage a full-scale attack upon Mareth. In order to disrupt the British preparations and postpone the attack, Rommel took the initiative and on 6 March attacked from the vicinity of Toujane (southwest of Mareth) toward Medenine. This attack was delivered by a strong armored force—elements of the 10th, 15th and 21st Panzer Divisions. The British were on the alert and, having over 500 antitank guns in position around Medenine, knocked out fifty-two enemy tanks during the day while committing only one squadron of their own armor, which lost no tanks. This unsuccessful engagement cost Rommel over half the armor in his attacking force. He had thrown his armored troops against defended localities without adequate reconnaissance and before the supporting infantry had cleared a path. The time when even Rommel could lightly disregard basic principles had passed, and the disaster that he courted was inevitable. From the 6th until the 20th the Eighth Army continued to gain strength as its rear units came up. By the latter date its main components were as follows: X Corps: 1st and 7th Armored Divisions and 4th Indian Division. XXX Corps: 50th and 51st Infantry Divisions and one armored brigade. New Zealand Corps (especially formed for this operation) : 2d New Zealand Division, an armored brigade, an armored car regiment, a medium artillery regiment, and Leclerc’s French force. At this time General Montgomery had 600 tanks to Rommel’s 140. The Axis foot troops at Mareth were estimated at 120,000, and these too were outnumbered by the British. The original plan was for the XXX Corps to penetrate the left of the enemy’s Mareth position and capture Gabes. The X Corps was to be held in army reserve ready to exploit the anticipated breakthrough. Meanwhile the New Zealand Corps, screened by General Leclerc’s French Desert Force, was to make a wide.swing around the right flank of the position and was then to move north and east Digitized byGoogle |
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