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Mareth. This was to be a period of some anxiety to the Allied comï؟¾manders, for while the Eighth Army was making its preparations and the remainder of the Allied forces were building up their strength, the enemy troops in Tunisia were free to devote their full attention to the British First Army and the American II Corps, thinly stretched out over a wide front. With Rommel’s divisions available, the total Axis strength in Tunisia had increased to approxiï؟¾mately 200,000 combat troops. Battle of Kasserine Pass, 14-26 February 1943 (Map 5).—During the first two weeks of February an extensive regrouping of Allied forces took place. In the II Corps sector the 1st Armored Division, less detachments, was assigned a front of about fifty miles from Djebel Trozza, near Fondouk, to Djebel Ksaira, south of Faid Pass. Combat Command B was attached to the British at Maktar. Comï؟¾bat Command A and the 168th Regimental Combat Team of the 34th Division moved into the Sidi Bou Zid area, where the 168th was placed in defensive positions on Djebel Ksaira and Djebel Lessouda (positions that jvere not mutually supporting) to cover Faid Pass. Combat Command C was concentrated at Hadjeb el Aioun, and the remainder of the 1st Armored Division was at Sbeitla. The 26th Regimental Combat Team of the 1st Infantry Division was in the Feriana area. The Germans did not remain passive for long, for at dawn on 14 February they launched a determined attack from Faid in the direction of Sbeitla-Kasserine and made a secondary attack from Maknassy, in the south. The enemy forces involved in these initial attacks were the entire 21st Panzer Division, which had been withï؟¾drawn from Rommel’s army in Tripolitania, and elements of the 10th Panzer Division, which had recently been re-equipped at Sfax. The immediate objective of the main attack, which was supported by artillery, motorized infantry, Stuka dive bombers, and fighter planes, was the road junction about five miles north of Sidi Bou Zid. The enemy first overran a battalion of armored artillery on the slopes of Djebel Lessouda, near the road junction, and by 0715 hours had occupied the road junction itself with a force that included some twenty tanks. Allied forces on Djebels Lessouda and Ksaira were threatened with complete encirclement. One battalion of tanks of Combat Command A, supported by a battalion of artillery, launched a counterattack against the enemy south of Djebel Lessouda while the remainder of Combat Command A withdrew to the west to take up a defensive position at a road junction about ten miles northwest of Sidi Bou Zid. |
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