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Rolf, David. The Bloody Road to Tunis: Destruction
of the Axis Forces in North Africa: November 1942 - May 1943. London:
Greenhill Books, 2001. Published in the US by Stackpole Books.
ISBN 1-85367-445-1
320 pages
Foreword; Preface; photos; maps; OBs; Epilogue; Bibliography; Index
Appendices: Order of Battle: Allied Ground Forces; Order of Battle: Axis
Ground Forces; Allied Battle Casualties: November 1942 - May 1943
The campaign in French North Africa in 1942-1943 in many
ways stands as one of the most interesting of the war, involving as it did
relatively small but potent forces representing the armies of several nations spread
over a wide area and fighting in some unusual terrain. David Rolf has done
an excellent job of explicating the Tunisian battles in a thorough,
academic fashion while garnishing his account with a wealth of fascinating
snippets from participants. Nothing could ever completely replace such
fundamental resources as the British and American official history volumes
covering Tunisia (The Destruction of Axis Forces in Africa by
Playfair et al and Northwest Africa: Seizing the Initiative in the
West by Howe), but The Bloody Road to Tunis certainly stands as
the best book on the campaignexcluding the Torch landings themselves
and the pursuit from Alameinoutside those two heavyweights.
Rolf gets off to a bit of a slow start as he sets the
stage. The first chapter opens with a brief overview of the Torch landings
and the German reaction. The second chapters offers biographical sketches
of Eisenhower, Mark Clark, Monty, Alexander, Rommel, and the other leading
generals of the campaign. The third chapter traces the Axis buildup and the
initial Allied efforts to push small contingents like Blade Force deep into
Tunisia before the Germans and Italians could construct a solid perimeter.
The spotlight then shifts to Rommel's withdrawal from Alamein and 8th Army's slow
pursuit. For the most part this material is relatively sketchy
and unimpressive, but Rolf soon gets up to speed, as does the campaign
itself. By December, the author explains, with 8th Army halted at El
Agheila, Montgomery questioned if perhaps it would be best for Tripoli to
be captured by Anderson's British 1st Army advancing from the west.
This, of course, was nothing but wishful thinking, and
Rolf uses it as a springboard for an important theme running throughout the
book. Despite the manifold possibilities of executing a unified,
coordinated campaign with 8th Army attacking from Libya and 1st Army, US II
Corps, and French forces attacking from Algeria, the war in North Africa
for the Allies mostly degenerated into a series of spasmodic, badly timed
thrusts with each Allied contingent seemingly content to wait for the
other to do the dirty work. Indeed, while Monty suggested that 1st Army
should take Tripoli, Eisenhower's coalition forces, slowed by logistical
difficulties and unimaginative planning, soon ran into Axis counterattacks,
withdrew, and insisted that the 8th Army men must exert pressure to relieve
their comrades in French North Africa.
When Eisenhower asked about the possibility of Eighth
Army action in support of Operation Satin, Alexander's reply had been
non-committal. If the enemy tried to disengage at Beurat, Eighth Army would
attempt to follow up as soon as possible, whereas if Rommel halted he would
be attacked without delay. 'It is hoped that subsequent attacks will take
Tripoli in one bound,' wrote Alexander, 'In either case it is impossible
for us from this end to prevent the enemy detaching some parts of his force
to meet your attacks although every effort will be made to keep up maximum
pressure on the enemy.'
Eisenhower's strategy relied, not unreasonably, on a
respectable rate of progress by Eighth Army in its pursuit of Rommel but
Montgomery was still 500 miles away in the Sirte Desert. The Desert Rats
could render no assistance should US II Corps troops, having broken through
to the coast, be turned upon by the enemy from two sides. This was
certainly not a risk which Eisenhower's superiors at home were prepared to
take. Soon he was to discover the full implications of this as he slipped
towards the nadir of his command in Tunisia.
It soon became apparent to even the most optimistic
Allied leaders that the chance for rapid success in Tunisia had vanished.
Among other problems for the Allies, the jumble of forces and overlapping
national commands made organizational efficiency impossible to achieve.
Despite the best efforts of men like Eisenhower and Cunningham,
inter-allied rivalry was rampant at every level. Even within the US Army,
many personalities clashed. Orlando Ward of 1st Armored Division considered
his superior, Lloyd Fredendall of II Corps, a drunkard and an SOB, while
Ward also had trouble controlling his "mean and difficult" tank
commander, Paul Robinett. These problems of command and control exacerbated
the difficult situation in which the Allies found themselves, notably
Rommel's impressive but ultimately unsuccessful Kasserine Pass offensive.
Kasserine and subsequent events caused Ike to transfer Fredendall back to
the States (although Rolf shows that subsequent inquiry seems to prove that
most of his heavy-handed, faulty tactical dispositions were actually made
according to Anderson's exacting specifications). Ward also found himself
sacked and Robinett was spared dismissal only by a timely wound that sent
him home.
At Kasserine as in many other cases, the Allies in
Tunisia called on Montgomery to provide assistance with more active
operations on his front. In response to the call for aiding 1st Army and II
Corps, Monty subsequently claimed "I speeded up events and by the 26th
February it was clear that our pressure had caused Rommel to break off his
attack against the Americans." Not for the first time or last time,
Montgomery showed little regard for the facts.
Such a claim was patently untrue and dismissed by his
chief of staff, de Guingandnot that Montgomery took much notice.
Alexander's directive [to Montgomery to lend a hand] was sent shortly
before midnight on the 21st; discouraged by the severe check to his
offensive before Thala and Djebel el Hamra Pass on the 22nd, Rommel called
off his assault. ...[Montgomery] was at least 48 hours too late to have
created significant pressure.
When Monty finally attacked the Mareth Line on the night
of 20/21 March, despite his assertion that "...we made the enemy dance to
our tune the whole time," the battle was a close run thing, especially
given the disparity in strengths. Fortunately, the left hook led by
Freyburg's New Zealanderseither a feint or main effort according
to Montgomery at different times as the situation changedcarried the
day and 8th Army swept onward to meet 1st Army and II Corps. While the
latter two stumbled and waited, Monty crashed through the Axis position at
Wadi Arakit, but failed to act in a timely manner and allowed the enemy to
get away again.
This theme of Allied rivalries, lack of cooperation, and
lost opportunities runs through the end of the campaign. Montgomery in
particular emerges from the book as unwilling to exert himself to go out of
his way to assist 1st Army and especially unready to take any risks which
might end up tarnishing his reputation. Approaching the Axis position at
Enfidaville, he seems to have expected an easy time of it. When the
position proved too strong to storm, he absented himself from the
battlefield at a moment found quite curious by all concerned. Thus, the
final successful attacks against the unsupplied Axis forces were carried
out by 1st Army and II Corps, destroying defensive positions, capturing
Bizerte and Tunis, and denying any opportunity for Hitler and Mussolini to
pull off a Dunkirk-style evacuation. Nevertheless, newspaper accounts
mistakenly credited 8th Army with liberating Tunis, much to the annoyance
of Anderson and his 1st Army.
Judged by its original objectives, the Allied campaign in Tunisia was a failure. Eisenhower's early expectations were to be in Tunis by Christmas 1942, and trap Rommel in Libya. Due to a combination of Allied mistakes and determined German resistance, neither proved possible Had the proportion of troops assigned to capture and hold harbours and bases in the Torch invasion forces been reduced, particularly the Algiers contingent, in favour of a more mobile strike force, the initial move eastwards on 10 November might have proceeded with greater dash than it did.
Anderson was not best suited to direct this, nor to mollifying the Americans who remained prickly when told by British officersoften deliberately or unintentionally supercilioushow to do their job. A potent source of trouble, never quite resolved, was the proper application of airpower and the campaign in Sicily would reveal quite conclusively that channels of control, basic allegiance and differences in national aims could still cause problems.
As it was, the failure to wind up the North African campaign until some months later than Eisenhower expected led to unforeseen advantages. By pouring scarce resources into Tunisia in order to keep Italy in the war, Hitler was forced to divert them away from the hard-pressed Eastern Front and ensured that in the end the Allies captured far more men and materiel. This was not what the Allies had thought would happen though much virtue was made out of necessity at the time as if it had been planned that way.
Had two very big 'ifs' been resolvedthat is, had Tunis been taken within six weeks of the TORCH landings and Montgomery been able to cut off and destroy the best part of the retreating German and Italian armiesit is possible, as Eisenhower suggested, that the Italian mainland might have been attacked in early summer 1943 and units firmly established in the Po Valley far to the north before the onset of winter. The timing of the Tunisian campaign was always under severe pressure because of the contingency of other plans waiting upon it; as it turned out, the Allies kept to their revised schedule in North Africa with just two days to spare.
In the process, Americans became battle-hardened and sorted out some of the worst of their training problems. Pitted against them had been German troops, especially the Afrika Korps, whom Bradley considered the best fighters they met in the whole war, 'young men, early twenties, seasoned veterans... good physical condition. Never knew they were beaten.' As late as August 1943 some were still being captured, coming down out of the hills, having refused to give in until completely out of food and ammunition.
While describing the battles in Tunisia, Rolf also
describes the generals who fought those battles. He's certainly not the
first to do so. In Crucible of War: The Fight for Tunisia, 1942-1943, for example, Kenneth Macksey
offers some stern opinions of some of the generalship exhibited in Tunisia.
While Rolf offers a few opinions of his own, in his account he mostly
paints portraits with the generals' own words and the words of other
officers who were on the scene.
A few days later, Fredendall told [Ward] to mind his own
business after a request for photo-reconnaissance. Ward was enraged: "He is
a spherical SOB [son-of-a-bitch]. Two-faced at that...a drunk, a coward,
and incompetent.'
. . .
...Howze (Ward's G-3) considered the divisional
commander should have got rid of McQullin because he was a 'dummy,' and
though pleasant, 'just as wooden as could be,' as did Lieutenant-Colonel
Simons, another 1st Armored Division officer, who thought the
broad-shouldered ex-cavalryman brave but, 'in many ways a genuine
blockhead.'
. . .
'Crasher' Nichols, commanding 50th Division, was about
to be replaced by Major-General Kirkman for his poor showing at the Mareth
Line: 'He has no brains and is really stupid,' complained Montgomery.
. . .
Alexander confirmed that he proposed to attack all along
First Army's front with Freyburg commanding IX Corps in place of the
wounded Crocker. Montgomery dismissed this at onceFreyburg was, 'a
nice old boy, but...a bit stupid.'
. . .
Writing to Eisenhower in 1948 [Anderson] confessed that,
'I have always had to fight against a queer sort of inhibition, or shyness,
which prevents me coming out of my shell except with very intimate friends
or a few naturally sympathetic acquaintances. Often I would like to expand,
but find it very difficult; a queer thing in human nature.'
This kind of uncensored back-stabbing and self-confession
goes far beyond what the official histories can offer. Another advantage
Rolf has over Howe and Playfair (and Macksey as well) is that The Bloody
Road to Tunis was written after the revelations of Ultra intelligence.
While not a main thread in his bookand perhaps one that might have
been exploited a bit moreRolf is able to better explain some events
by placing them within the context of what had been revealed to the Allies
by Ultra. As he shows, especially at Kasserine, this kind of intelligence
was not always available nor always infallible.
Rolf also adds a great deal of immediacy to his account
with many telling flourishes in the form of insights and quotes from
veterans. These kinds of personal touches emphasize that the campaign was
much more than just a matter of marking arrows on maps. This point is made
over and over again with memories of horrible wounds and gruesome deaths.
Most of these asides are fully documented, but occasionally the overall
account is sidetracked by unsubstantiated tales of odd events, some more
believable than others, such as the Luftwaffe dropping booby traps
"resembling fountain pens, pocket wallets, and watches," American tanks
firing practice ammunition in combat against panzers because armor-piercing
ammo had not yet arrived at the front, an unnamed Italian colonel who
surrendered but refused to part with his little dog, and so on.
A few questionable points notwithstanding, this is very
good book, thorough and enjoyable. More than anything else, it's a book
about ground operations and tactics, rich with detail and including
rigorous identification of units involved and the men who commanded them.
(For an excellent complement, by the way, readers should look into The War against
Rommel's Supply Lines, 1942-1943 for a very strong account of air-naval
action during the campaign.) Using a multitude of archives, documents,
papers, microfilms, and unpublished memoirs as well as secondary works, and
densely footnoting most of his material, Rolf has synthesized a
well-rounded account of British, American, German, Italian, andto a
lesser extentFrench forces and actions in Tunisia. Highly
recommended, and quite possibly a contender for our annual Top Ten awards.
Available from online booksellers, local bookshops, or
directly from Greenhill and Stackpole.
Thanks to Stackpole
Books for providing this review copy.
Read and submit feedback
Reviewed 7 June 2001
Copyright © 2001 by Bill Stone
May not be reproduced in any form without written permission of Stone & Stone
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