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no breakthrough. The action might have continued along the same line, with additional small advances that would have gradually comï؟¾pressed von Arnim’s forces into a smaller perimeter, until finally the Axis troops would have successfully withdrawn to defensive positions along the base of the Cape Bon Peninsula. It may be that at no time did the Axis command hope to execute a Dunkirk in the face of the Allied control of the sea and complete mastery of the air, but it is quite clear that they fully expected to make a Bataan out of Cape Bon. The first attempt to break through having failed, Alexander again regrouped his forces. This time he achieved a concentration of combat power sufficient not only to penetrate the Axis position, but also to exploit the success most effectively. The actual breakthrough took place so rapidly that the Axis troops were completely surprised and thrown off balance. Von Arnim was caught just as the French had been caught in 1940, by an attack launched by an overwhelming striking force moving at great speed. For use in the event of an attempted evacuation, the Allied navy had drawn up a plan in close collaboration with the air force. Grimly looking back to Norway, Dunkirk, Greece, and Crete, the plan was named Operation Retribution. All possible means, both in the air and on the sea, were organized to forestall any enemy escape from Tunisia. It was certain that an evacuation could only be attempted under cover of the Italian fleet, which at long last might be compelled to stand and fight. Since, as it turned out, the Axis high command did not dare join issue at sea at a time when its forces on land were in a desperate situation, it was compelled to sacrifice a large army and immense quantities of stores and equipment. From the purely military standpoint, the Axis proved the folly of flouting the age-old strategic axiom that to commit large ground forces across a sea withï؟¾out assured and continuing control of that sea is to court disaster. The excellence of the plan is also evidenced by the fact that von Arnim miscalculated the location of the main attack and as a result made a faulty distribution of his forces. Lack of aerial reconnaisï؟¾sance was largely responsible for this error, but Montgomery’s realï؟¾istic diversion was likewise an important factor. The German high command made the same error in Tunisia that it had made in Russia in November 1942: there were no reserves behind the front. When, therefore, the British armored troops arrived in Axis rear areas, they met but slight opposition and were able to disorganize the entire defense by cutting lines of communicaï؟¾tion, destroying command posts, and disrupting supply facilities. |
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