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27 Zid, a few miles west of Faid. Combat Command A of the 1st Armored Division, at Sbeitla, was at once ordered east in support. Combat Command D * was ordered to relieve enemy pressure on the French by attacks eastward from Gafsa. This force of American armor and infantry attacked Sened, where it was contained by the enemy. Meanwhile Combat Command C moved northeast to cut the Sidi bou Zid-Maknassy road. After reaching Sidi bou Zid on the afternoon of the 31st, it turned south toward Maknassy. Although the Allies succeeded in denying the enemy further gains, the ground lost could not be retaken. Combat Command A attacked Faid on the morning of 1 February, but after fruitless assaults that continued during the next day the action was broken off. To the south the armored units captured Sened but during 3 and 4 February were withdrawn from the Gafsa area and concentrated with other II Corps units near Sbeitla. This move was ordered by General Anderson because of the situation at Faid and exaggerated reports of enemy concentrations between Ousseltia and Kairouan. As a result of the enemy attacks from the middle of January to the early days of February the Allied defensive barrier along the Eastern Dorsal had been seriously weakened, and the arrival of Rommel’s forces in southern Tunisia had made the situation even less secure. There was no other alternative but to withdraw the poorly equipped French units from the line so that they could be issued modern weapons and trained in their use. Troops of the American 34th Infantry Division began to take over portions of the French sector. The front remained quiet from 5 to 14 February, during which time both sides made strenuous efforts to bring up additional supplies and reinforcements. During the period from early November 1942 to the end of January 1943 the British Eighth Army, it will be recalled, had pursued Rommel’s army across most of Egypt and Libya. On 23 January the Eighth Army had entered Tripoli, and that fine port was at last in Allied hands. Rommel continued his retreat toward the Tunisian frontier, which he crossed on 4 February. In exactly three months the Eighth Army had advanced 1400 miles from El Alamein, and as a result its administrative services were stretched to the limit. Before offensive operation could be resumed, the port of Tripoli had to be placed in service so that reserves of supplies could be built up. Eight weeks were to pass after the entry into Tripoli before Montgomery’s army was ready for the opening phase of the Battle of * A provisional force made up principally of the 1st Armored Division’s artillery headquarters, a battalion of the 168th Infantry (34th Division), an armored battalion, and a battalion of armored artillery. Digitized byGoogle |
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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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Axis armor continued to pour through the pass. One column of about fifty tanks and some infantry flanked Djebel Lessouda from the north and west and drove on Sidi Bou Zid. After suffering very heavy losses, the American armored battalion and its artillery broke off the engagement and, reduced to the point of ineffectiveness, escaped to the west. The troops on Djebels Lessouda and Ksaira, although still in fighting condition, were practically isolated by 1300 hours. Throughout the day the highways in the quadrangle Faid-Maknassy-Gafsa-Sbeitla swarmed with German armor and infantry. In the south one force of about thirty tanks had advanced northwest from Maknassy and by evening wag threatening Sidi Bou Zid from the southwest. Another column was advancing along the Sened-Gafsa road. Gafsa, in danger of being cut off entirely, was evacuated in the evening, the troops there withdrawing to Feriana to protect the important airfields near Thelepte. A new defensive line was planned for the protection of Feriana and Sbeitla. During the night of 14-15 February Combat Command B was ordered south from Maktar to support the remainder of the 1st Armored Division. General Fredendall ordered the 1st Armored Division to counterattack on the morning of 15 February. Accordingly Coiribat Command C moved south from Hadjeb el Aioun and with elements of Combat Command A and a British armored infantry battalion attacked about 1600 hours on 15 February. As the leading battalion’s armor approached the enemy defensive position, running northsouth through Sidi Bou Zid, a formation of German tanks was sighted, and within an hour a fierce running battle was in progress. Although the combat command reported the situation under control, appearances proved deceptive, for the frontal action of the enemy’s tanks merely served to divert attention from a sweeping flanking maneuver already under way. The British battalion was following Combat Command C to exploit such success as the counterattack might achieve when suddenly it found both its right flank and rear under the deadly fire of a large German tank force. The Allied troops were then ordered to extricate themselves, and all units fell back rapidly except the leading armored battalion, which had not received the order. It was engulfed by the enemy. As the British had done at Knightsbridge, our tanks had charged blindly into an ambuscade. The units on Djebels Lessouda and Ksaira were now completely cut off, and any thought of going to their relief had to be abandoned. Confused fighting continued east and southeast of Sbeitla during 16 February, dive bombers inflicting heavy personnel casualties on Combat Command A. By this time the II Corps had suffered serious |
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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 |
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In Kasserine Pass the highway forks. One branch leads north to Thala, the loss of which would open the road to Le Kef and effecï؟¾tively cut off the II Corps from other Allied forces to the north; the other branch leads northwest to Tebessa, which was the key comï؟¾munications center of the Allied southern front and the location of large supply installations. Rommel consolidated his position and strengthened his forces in the Kasserine area on 18 February. On the 19th he made a reconï؟¾naissance in force with a battalion of infantry supported by tanks, but the attack was not pressed when it met stout resistance, includï؟¾ing accurate American artillery fire. During the night, however, enemy units successfully infiltrated to high ground on both the northï؟¾ern and southern sides of the pass and from these vantage points brought effective mortar and small-arms fire on the defenders. At daybreak on the 20th a determined attack carried the pass, forcing the defending troops back toward Tebessa. Fortunately the Allies had also been active during the night of 19-20 February. Brigadier Dumphie, commander of the British 26th Armored Brigade, organized a special task force of one comï؟¾pany of motorized infantry, one armored squadron, one troop of antitank guns, a troop of motorized artillery, and a battalion of infantry and took position astride the Thala road about ten miles north of Kasserine Pass. It was this force that bore the brunt of the Axis attack on the 20th. The armored squadron lost all of its tanks, and the infantry battalion also suffered severe losses, but the force held grimly to its position. During the night of 20-21 February some additional British forces moved up behind the task force to cover the Thala road, and others were posted astride the road three miles south of Thala. Combat Command B was moved from the 1st Armored Division concentraï؟¾tion area to a position on Djebel Hainra to cover the road to Tebessa. On the 21st about forty enemy tanks attacked this position, but they were repulsed. On the 21st a strong German force renewed the attack on the Thala road. The British continued to suffer heavy losses but held the enemy ten miles from Thala. Two field artillery battalions from the American 9th Division and part of the 16th Infantry Regiment (1st Infantry Division) lent material assistance to the defense.* During the night of 21-22 February the commanding general of the American 1st Armored Division was placed in command of all * The 9th Division artillery made a spectacular forced march from west of Algiers to Tunisia. In less than 100 hours it covered 735 miles, despite narrow, congested roads and bitter weather. |
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In Kasserine Pass the highway forks. One branch leads north to Thala, the loss of which would open the road to Le Kef and effectively cut off the II Corps from other Allied forces to the north; the other branch leads northwest to Tebessa, which was the key communications center of the Allied southern front and the location of large supply installations. Rommel consolidated his position and strengthened his forces in the Kasserine area on 18 February. On the 19th he made a reconnaissance in force with a battalion of infantry supported by tanks, but the attack was not pressed when it met stout resistance, including accurate American artillery fire. During the night, however, enemy units successfully infiltrated to high ground on both the northern and southern sides of the pass and from these vantage points brought effective mortar and small-arms fire on the defenders. At daybreak on the 20th a determined attack carried the pass, forcing the defending troops back toward Tebessa. Fortunately the Allies had also been active during the night of 19-20 February. Brigadier Dumphie, commander of the British 26th Armored Brigade, organized a special task force of one company of motorized infantry, one armored squadron, one troop of antitank guns, a troop of motorized artillery, and a battalion of infantry and took position astride the Thala road about ten miles north of Kasserine Pass. It was this force that bore the brunt of the Axis attack on the 20th. The armored squadron lost all of its tanks, and the infantry battalion also suffered severe losses, but the force held grimly to its position. During the night of 20-21 February some additional British forces moved up behind the task force to cover the Thala road, and others were posted astride the road three miles south of Thala. Combat Command B was moved from the 1st Armored Division concentration area to a position on Djebel Hainra to cover the road to Tebessa. On the 21st about forty enemy tanks attacked this position, but they were repulsed. On the 21st a strong German force renewed the attack on the Thala road. The British continued to suffer heavy losses but held the enemy ten miles from Thala. Two field artillery battalions from the American 9th Division and part of the 16th Infantry Regiment (1st Infantry Division) lent material assistance to the defense.* During the night of 21-22 February the commanding general of the American 1st Armored Division was placed in command of all * The 9th Division artillery made a spectacular forced march from west of Algiers to Tunisia. In less than 100 hours it covered 735 miles, despite narrow, congested roads and bitter weather. |
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operations in the Thala-Kasserine-Djebel el Hainra sector. During the preceding few days command of the Allied troops in this area had changed several times, with much resultant confusion. On 22 February the enemy again attacked north, the,British on the Thala road being engaged by about fifty tanks. Some ground was yielded, but counterattacks restored the former positions. Durï؟¾ing the afternoon one battalion of the 16th Infantry Regiment, which had been attached to Combat Command B in the Djebel el Hainra sector, counterattacked against the German left flank. Launched from the vicinity of Ain Bou Dries and supported by some artillery from the 9th Division, this attack was completely successful, about 400 prisoners being captured. In large measure it was the cause of the enemy’s decision to withdraw through the pass. During the early phases of the fighting bad weather had hampered air operations, but at this time the skies cleared and the Allies were able to strike telling blows on the enemy columns. Aircraft of the XII Air Support Command flew most of the missions, but other eleï؟¾ments of the air forces, reorganized during this period for closer coordination with the ground troops, were also of great assistance. Early on the morning of 23 February the Germans began to withT draw through Kasserine Pass. Mine fields and well-fought delaying actions prevented the Allies from doing them much damage during the pursuit. By 26 February they had reached the general line Hadjeb el Aioun-Sidi Bou Zid-Gafsa, where they remained. Comments.—The specific purposes of the Axis attacks during Janï؟¾uary and February were: (1) to capture the areas commanding the mountain passes and thus broaden the long coastal corridor in order to safeguard the communications between von Arnim’s and Romï؟¾mel’s armies; (2) to make their airfields in the coastal areas safer from Allied interference; and (3) to throw the Allied forces off balance before any coordinated attack could be launched. The Gerï؟¾man high command felt that Tunisia could be held and during this phase continued to pour in men until 200,000 combat troops, three fifths of them German, were available by 1 March. By mid-February over 500,000 Allied troops were in North Africa, and plans were being made for a large-scale offensive. Reinforceï؟¾ments for the British First Army and the American II Corps were moving up, and Montgomery’s Eighth Army was preparing to apï؟¾proach the Mareth Line in full force. But before the Allies were ready to strike, Rommel made his only really dangerous effort of the campaign when he struck at Faid Pass on 14 February. The initial reverses suffered by the American troops can be attributed to several |
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factors: (1) confusion in all ranks resulting from divided units and an improvised chain of command; (2) inexperience of troops engaged; (3) dispersion of forces over a wide front and lack of sufficient troops to provide adequate local reserves for the forward elements; (4) unskillful use of terrain and available forces in the defense. Many lessons were learned during the Faid-Kasserine operations, but probably the most valuable one was the age-old principle of the necessity for concentration of combat power. Once again it was demonstrated that so long as reserves remain available for employï؟¾ment in time and at the proper place, no situation is beyond repair, regardless of initial setbacks or the necessity for surrendering some ground. Rommel failed in his objectives in spite of the piecemeal nature of the early resistance offered, particularly on the part of the very considerable armor we had in the Kasserine area. If he had thought he could exploit his breakthrough as far as Le Kef and seriously threaten the Allied communication lines, that quickly proved to be beyond his strength. If he intended merely a spoiling attack to do maximum damage to our equipment, he had succeeded in inflicting serious wounds without, however, affecting Allied strength more than temporarily. In any event, his sands were running out, and the turn of the tide at Kasserine proved to be the turn of the tide in all of Tunisia as well. PERIOD OF ALLIED INITIATIVE, March-May 1943 General.—The French political situation was no longer a serious factor in military operations, and the diminishing threat of an Axis drive through Spanish Morocco released additional Allied troops for the Tunisian front. In spite of the reverses suffered during January and February, the Allied supply and troop build-up had continued. The supply installations in the Tebessa area had been augmented to support the II Corps and the approaching British Eighth Army. The rains had ceased, roads had been improved, railroads had been rehabilitated, and gasoline pipelines had been constructed. Amerï؟¾ican troops had received their baptism of fire, and in spite of the initial reverses suffered in clashing with the best the Germans had to offer, they had come out of the campaign battle-wise and tactiï؟¾cally efficient. To go back for a moment, the projected reorganization of the Allied command took place just at the time of the unsuccessful deï؟¾fense of Kasserine Pass. Air Chief Marshal Tedder's Mediterra- |
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nean Air Command became operational on 19 February, with Major General Carl Spaatz as commander of the subordinate Northwest African Air Force.* On the 20th Admiral Cunningham was anï؟¾nounced as Commander in Chief, Mediterranean,** and on the same day General Alexander assumed command of the Eighteenth Army Group. General Alexander’s first order regrouped the Tunisian forces and returned detached brigades, regiments, and combat teams to their original formations. The battle area was divided into three national sectors: the British First Army in the north, the French XIX Corps in the center, and the American II Corps toward the south. Prior to this reorganization units had of necessity been sent forward pieceï؟¾meal to take positions on a shifting front, and the resulting confusion had been increased by the hasty improvisation of battle groups to meet the demands of a rapidly changing situation. Under these circumstances it had been impossible to avoid the separation of units from their parent commands, and troops of all three nationï؟¾alities had become intermingled. The wisdom of the Allied command revisions had already been apparent in the increased effectiveness of Allied air power during the final stages of the Battle of Kasserine Pass and in closer cooperaï؟¾tion of the ground forces. One example of this effective coordinaï؟¾tion is of special interest. As Rommel’s columns advanced toward Tebessa and Thala after breaking through Kasserine Pass, Alexï؟¾ander ordered a strong diversion by the Eighth Army. Montgomery was not ready to attack at Mareth, but he staged a mock preparation for a large assault. This, together with mounting Allied resistance as he pushed westward, caused the German commander to make a hasty withdrawal. He pulled his tanks out of contact and rushed them back to the south toward what he thought was the most threatï؟¾ened part of his front. Early in March Lieutenant General Patton, whom we have met before as a major general, took over command of the American II Corps. After the Battle of Kasserine Pass; the enemy directed his main pressure against the British V Corps (Map 6a). During the first week in March, Medjez el Bab was the chief objective, but the Axis attacks at this point were a failure, as were the attempts to take * The Northwest African Air Force was organized as follows: Strategic Air Force—Major General James H. Doolittle. Tactical Air Force—Air Marshal Sir Arthur Coningham. Coastal Air Force—Air Vice Marshal Sir Hugh P. Lloyd. ** This gave him command of all Allied naval forces in this area. |
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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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to cut the Axis line of retreat. The American II Corps was to secure Maknassy and contain enemy armor which would otherwise be availï؟¾able for use against the Eighth Army. All available air power in North Africa would be used to support the attack. The Americans started first. At dawn on 16 March operations were launched by the II Corps in order to carry out its part of the plan. The attacking force consisted of the 1st Armored Division and the 1st and 9th * Infantry Divisions. Gafsa was occupied withï؟¾out opposition on 17 March, and supply points were established for the later use of the Eighth Army. The American troops pushed on and occupied El Guettar. So far the Italians, who were holding this part of the front, had offered little opposition and had executed a planned withdrawal, but east of El Guettar they took up a strong defensive position to halt any further advance of the Americans. Farther north, rains immobilized the 1st Armored Division and delayed its attack on Maknassy. The battle began at Mareth on the night of 20-21 March. The XXX Corps’ attack against the north sector of the Mareth Line was at first successful. The 50th Division began the assault and during 21 March gained a foothold in the Mareth defenses, a bridgehead two miles wide beyond the deep Wadi Zigzaou, which was the chief antitank obstacle. Axis counterattacks were held off for the next two days, but in the face of increasing pressure the British had to withdraw to their original positions on the night of 23-24 March. Meanwhile the New Zealand Corps had moved out during the night of 19-20 March. After completing a 150-mile march across trackless mountains and deserts, it made contact with the enemy southwest of El Hamma on 24 March. In view of the failure to penetrate the left of the enemy line, Genï؟¾eral Montgomery decided to reinforce the New Zealand Corps; so the X Corps headquarters and the British 1st Armored Division were sent to join the New Zealanders on the night of the 23d. The combined forces were then designated the X Corps. This increasing threat to Rommel’s line of retreat forced him to transfer most of his German troops from the Mareth position to El Hamma, leaving the Italian divisions and a few Germans to face the XXX Corps. General Montgomery immediately took advantage of this weakening of the Axis line and ordered the 4th Indian Diviï؟¾sion to drive to the west to open up the Medenine-Bir Soltane road. The 7th Armored Division was held behind the south flank of the * One regimental combat team of the 9th was attached to the 1st Armored Division. Digitized by Google |
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Mareth Line so as to be in position to go around the enemy's right flank and cut the Mareth-Gabes road. On 26 March the 2d New Zealand Division attacked and broke through the strongly held defile southwest of El Hamma. Heavy fighting continued throughout the night. In the noise and confusion, and aided by the darkness, the British 1st Armored Division passed straight through the enemy. By the 27th the British were at the outskirts of El Hamma, their advance having been strongly supï؟¾ported by twenty-two squadrons of the Royal Air Force. About the same time the 4th Indian Division opened the Medenine-Bir Soltane road, which greatly shortened the line of communication to the El Hamma sector. Rommel now saw that the Mareth position was untenable and commenced a general withdrawal. In the meantime Patton's advance eastward from Gafsa was makï؟¾ing slow progress. On 21 March his 1st Armored Division captured Sened against only slight opposition and on the following day Makï؟¾nassy was taken, but beyond there the armor was unable to peneï؟¾trate. Farther south the American 1st and 9th Infantry Divisions, with the help of a Ranger unit, broke through the defensive position of an Italian division east of El Guettar, but heavy counterattacks by the German 10th Panzer Division barred further advance to the east.* However, the Americans materially aided the Eighth Army by containing the 10th Panzer Division in the El Guettar-Maknassy sector. Farther north an attack by the American 34th Division on 25 March failed to break through the strong German position southï؟¾west of Fondouk. When Montgomery's maneuvers caused Rommel to withdraw from the Mareth Line, the XXX Corps advanced along the coast. The 2d New Zealand and British 1st Armored Divisions, after their sucï؟¾cess in the El Hamma area, pushed on to Gabes, which they entered on 29 March. In the extreme northern sector the British V Corps counterï؟¾attacked on 28 March. It recaptured Sedjenane on 30 March and penetrated beyond to Cape Serrat. The enemy withdrew from the salient south of Bou Arada under pressure of other British forces. Pursuit to Enfidaville (Map 6b).—Rommel's next stand was on the Wadi Akarit, an excellent defensive position with the flanks protected by the salt marshes and the sea. At this time Alexander's general plan was for the Eighth Army to break the Wadi Akarit position and the American II Corps to assist by threatening Rom- * The series of actions in this area is known as the Battle of El Guettar. Digitized by Google |
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mePs rear. A part of the British IX Corps, supported by the Amerï؟¾ican 34th Infantry Division, would launch an attack eastward through Fondouk with the mission of capturing Kairouan and threatening the enemy's line of retreat. Farther north the British V Corps was to secure positions from which a future drive could be made-on Tunis. By 6 April General Montgomery had regrouped his army and was ready to attack the enemy at Wadi Akarit. The main assault, deï؟¾livered by the XXX Corps and directed at the center of the enemy line, opened with a 500-gun artillery bombardment. It began at 0415 hours—in total darkness. The Axis troops, in spite of their desperate counterattacks, could not prevent the collapse of their line on the following day, and another withdrawal commenced. The 2d New Zealand Division and the British 1st Armored Division passed through the gap created by the XXX Corps and closely purï؟¾sued the retreating Axis troops. Sfax was occupied on 10 April and Sousse two days later. Rommel had clearly been surprised by the speed with which the Eighth Army had concentrated for this attack, for a considerable portion of his armor had been dis*****ed to contain the American forces farther north. Prisoners taken since 21 March numbered 20,000. Meanwhile Axis troops had held off all attempts by the II Corps to break through their defenses in the Maknassy-Sened-El Guettar area. However, after the collapse of the Wadi Akarit position on 7 April they were forced to withdraw, and American patrols made contact with Eighth Army patrols on the Gafsa-Gabes road, forty miles east of El Guettar. . While the enemy was retreating from the Wadi Akarit, the 6th Armored Division (plus an infantry brigade group) of the British IX Corps moved to the Fondouk area and with the American 34th Division attacked Fondouk Pass, as planned. This pass, about 1000 yards wide, is dominated by the hills to the north and south. Infanï؟¾try attacks were launched during the night of the 7th against the controlling positions of the enemy in an effort to clear a route for the 6th Armored Division. Very little progress was made, but in view of the enemy retreat up the coast the 6th Armored was ordered, on the 9th, to force its way through the gap. The leading regiment encountered an extensive mine field protected by antitank guns posted on the flanking hill. A narrow passage was secured by nightfall at a cost of seventy-six Sherman tanks (sixty of which were later recovered), and on the next day armored elements reached Kairouan. On the 11th contact was made with the Eighth Army, which meanwhile had made rapid progress after occupying |
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Sfax. Although the bulk of Rommel’s forces had been able to escape the trap, the remnants of nine Italian battalions were rounded up. The Eighth Army continued the pursuit and on 20 April drove into Enfidaville against increasing Axis resistance. Further attacks against the strong enemy position in the hills north of Enfidaville were met by determined counterattacks which convinced Montï؟¾gomery that a regrouping of his army would be necessary before further progress could be made. During this period the V Corps, in accordance with its mission, started local attacks in the vicinity of Medjez el Bab on 7 April to secure advantageous positions from which to launch future operaï؟¾tions. The fighting in this northern area was continuous for almost two weeks, and although a breakthrough was not achieved, some progress was made. This placed the V Corps in a position to strike at Longstop Hill, which together with the circle of hills east of Medjez blocked further progress. All of these dominating heights were strongly held by the enemy and would have to be cleared before any breakthrough down the valley toward Tunis could be made. At this time the V Corps did not have the strength for such an operation. Comments.—General Montgomery says of the Eighth Army opï؟¾erations at this time: The Battle of the Mareth Line was our toughest fight since El Alaï؟¾mein, and whereas the latter was a hard slogging match, at Mareth there had been greater scope for strategems and subtlety ... As at El Alamein, Rommel cast in his reserves piecemeal; and when the battle started, his armour was spread-eagled—with 10 Panzer Division in the Gafsa sector, 15 Panzer Division soon involved on the coast, and 21 Panzer Division arriving in the west to back up the switch line . . . The outstanding feature of the battle was the air action in coï؟¾operation with the outflanking forces ... We retained the initiative throughout. Even when we lost our gains on the coastal flank, Rommel was kept on the move by the speedy development of the western outflanking movement . . . Vital considerations (governing the decision to shift strength to the enveloping force) were, first, the speed with which the decisive blow could be mounted and delivered and, secondly, the necessity to hold the German reserves on the eastern flank long enough to preï؟¾vent their assisting the defenders of the switch lines west of El Hamma. Montgomery clearly proved that an early setback—such as the failure of the XXX Corps to penetrate the Mareth Line—need not necessarily cause a loss of the initiative provided the plan is flexible and reserves are available. |
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After Mareth, Rommel planned to continue hi? delaying action and to defend only when the terrain favored the defense. Although he probably realized that the days of the Axis forces in North Africa were numbered, his mission was to delay the final outcome as long as possible. While still fighting the Battle of Mareth, he had preï؟¾pared a strong position behind the Wadi Akarit in the Gabes gap. Finding that it could not be enveloped by forces advancing from the south, Montgomery quickly penetrated it—much to the surprise of the Germans. After the action at the Wadi Akarit, Rommel lacked defensive terrain until he reached Enfidaville. During the retreat to this place the Germans were faced with the difficult problem of withï؟¾drawing under pressure from the west as well as from the south. While the Eighth Army was pursuing Rommel, the Allies were at the same time attacking von Arnim’s holding forces in the mounï؟¾tains west of the coastal corridor. At El Guettar, at Maknassy, and at Fondouk the Allied forces threatened to break through the passes of the Eastern Dorsal and drive to the sea across Rommel’s line of retreat. If von Arnim’s men gave way too soon, Rommel would be trapped; if they stayed too long, they would be cut off by the Eighth Army. From the course of events we must conclude that once again the German commanders executed a skillful withdrawal under diffiï؟¾cult circumstances. Battle of Tunis, 22 April-13 May 1943.—It was now evident that the Axis forces intended to defend on the line Enfidaville-Bou Arada-Medjez el Bab-Sedjenane, and General Alexander immeï؟¾diately commenced preparations for a general offensive to break through this perimeter. Plans and Preparations.—A large-scale regrouping of the Allied divisions was decided upon. In the space of two weeks the entire American II Corps, over 100,000 men, was moved some 150 miles over difficult country—and across the First Army’s lines of comï؟¾munication—to take over from the British V Corps the sector along the coast in the north. In this regrouping the American 34th Inï؟¾fantry Division and the British 6th Armored Division moved from the vicinity of Fondouk and Kairouan to rejoin their respective corps. At the same time the British 1st Armored Division was transferred from the Eighth Army to the IX Corps. These moves were completed about 22 April, and at this time Major General Omar N. Bradley took over the command of the II Corps (Map 7). Digitized by Google |
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