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losses in equipment, ninety-eight medium tanks, fifty-seven halfï؟¾tracks, twelve 155-mm. howitzers, and seventeen 105-mm. howitzers having been lost. There was now no possibility of further counterï؟¾attacks to hold the four armored divisions * that the enemy was employing, much less to restore the Allied strategic position. Since this Axis drive endangered the position of the French XIX Corps on the Eastern Dorsal, the First Army commander ordered the withdrawal of all forces to the high ground of the Western Dor^ sal and the line Feriana-Kasserine-Sbeitla. A battalion of infantry from the 1st Infantry Division and a regiment of combat engineers were assigned the task of organizing a defensive position in Kasï؟¾serine Pass, about six miles northwest of the town of Kasserine. On 16 February General Fredendall directed the 1st Armored Division to hold Sbeitla at all costs until 1100 hours, 17 February, in order to secure time to establish the position at Kasserine. In compliance with this order the remnants of Combat Commands A and C were disposed south and east of the town. They were attacked by the enemy at 0900 hours on the 17th, but held their ground until 1500 houi^s, when Combat Command A moved north to the vicinity of Sbiba and C withdrew along the Sbeitla-Kasserine road. Combat Command B, having completed its movement from Maktar, covered the withdrawal. The entire 1st Armored Division was now ordered to concentrate about ten miles southeast of Tebessa as a reserve to meet any enemy drive through the defenses of the passes in the Western Dorsal—El Abiod, Dernia, and Kasserine. By nightfall the Axis forces had occupied Sbeitla, Kasserine, and the Thelepte airfield and had infiltrated into the hills toward Kasï؟¾serine Pass. The loss of the airfield was a serious blow to the Allies, but they had managed to evacuate most of the planes and stores and had destroyed what could not be moved. By daylight of 18 February the American 34th Infantry Division (less the 168th RCT) arrived at Sbiba to take over the defense of that pass and relieve Combat Command A, which was to join the rest of the 1st Armored Division southeast of Tebessa. Supported by the 18th Regimental Combat Team of the 1st Infantry Division and a British Guards brigade, the 34th Division sustained attacks by tanks and infantry during 18, 19, and 20 February in what was actually a strong diversionary maneuver to prevent reinforcements being sent south to Kasserine, where the enemy planned to make his major attack. * The 10th, 15th, and 21st Panzer Divisions and the Italian 131st Centauro Division. Digitized byGoogle |
العلامات المرجعية |
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