Siege of Tobruk: Difference between revisions
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{{distinguish|Axis capture of Tobruk|British capture of Tobruk}} |
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{{short description|Military confrontation in North Africa during the Second World War}} |
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{{Infobox Military Conflict |
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{{EngvarB|date=November 2017}} |
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|conflict=Siege of Tobruk |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2024}} |
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|partof=[[World War II]], [[Western Desert Campaign]] |
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{{Infobox military conflict |
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|image=[[Image:AustraliansAtTobruk.jpg|300px|]] |
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| conflict = Siege of Tobruk |
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|caption=Australian troops occupy a front line position at Tobruk |
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| partof = the [[Western Desert campaign]] of the [[Mediterranean and Middle East theatre of World War II]] |
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|date=[[April 10]] – [[November 27]], [[1941]] |
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| image = File:Soldiers of the Allied Armies in Tobruk 1941.jpg |
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|place=[[Tobruk]], [[Libya]] |
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| image size = 300px |
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|casus= |
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| caption = Soldiers of the victorious Allied armies: Polish, British, Indian, Australian, and Czechoslovak |
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|territory= |
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| date = 10 April – 27 November 1941 (7 months, 2 weeks, 3 days) |
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|result=Allied victory |
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| place = [[Tobruk]], [[Italian Libya|Libya]] |
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|combatant1={{flag|Australia}}<br>{{flagicon|Czechoslovakia}} [[Czechoslovak government-in-exile|Czechoslovakia]]<br>}<br>{{flagicon|Poland}} [[Polish Armed Forces in the West|Free Polish]]<br>{{flag|United Kingdom}} |
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| coordinates = {{Coord|32|04|34|N|23|57|41|E|display=INLINE}} |
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|combatant2={{flagicon|Germany|Nazi}} [[Nazi Germany|Germany]]<br>{{flagicon|Italy|1861-state}} [[Kingdom of Italy (1861–1946)|Kingdom of Italy]] |
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| result = Allied victory |
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|commander1={{flagicon|Australia}} [[Leslie Morshead]] (to Sept '41)</br>{{flagicon|United Kingdom}} [[Ronald Scobie]] (from Sept '41) |
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| combatant1 = {{flag|Australia}}<br />{{flag|United Kingdom}} |
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|commander2={{flagicon|Germany|Nazi}} [[Erwin Rommel]] |
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*{{flagcountry|British Raj}} |
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|strength1=27,000<ref>Fitzsimons, P: "Tobruk" page 250. Harper Collins, 2007 </ref> |
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*{{flagcountry|Dominion of New Zealand}} |
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|strength2=35,000? |
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*[[Libyan Arab Force]] |
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|casualties1=Allies:Unknown |
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{{flagdeco|Second Polish Republic}} [[Polish Armed Forces in the West|Poland]]<br />{{flagdeco|Czechoslovakia}} [[Czechoslovak government-in-exile|Czechoslovakia]] |
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|casualties2=8,000 |
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| combatant2 = {{flagicon|Nazi Germany}} [[Nazi Germany|Germany]]<br />{{flagicon|Fascist Italy (1922-1943)}} [[Fascist Italy|Italy]] |
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| commander1 = {{flagicon|Australia}} [[Leslie Morshead]] (Apr.–Sep. 1941)<br />{{flagicon|United Kingdom}} [[Ronald Scobie]] (Sep.–Nov. 1941) |
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| commander2 = {{flagicon|Nazi Germany}} [[Erwin Rommel]]<br />{{flagicon|Fascist Italy (1922-1943)}} [[Gastone Gambara]] |
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| strength1 = 27,000{{citation needed|date=May 2024}} |
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| strength2 = 35,000{{citation needed|date=May 2024}} |
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| casualties1 = 5,989 |
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| casualties2 = 12,296<br />74–150 aircraft |
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| campaignbox = |
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| battle = Siege of Tobruk |
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}} |
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{{Campaignbox Western Desert}} |
{{Campaignbox Western Desert}} |
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| coord = {{coord|32.08179521184162|23.96307356363244}} <!--lat and long coordinates for middle of the map --> |
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[[Image:WesternDesertBattle Area1941 en.svg| right|thumb|310px|Map of the Western Desert battle area]] |
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| zoom = 6 <!--zoom 0=whole world, 18=a street.--> |
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The '''Siege of [[Tobruk]]''' was a lengthy confrontation between [[Axis Powers|Axis]] and [[Allies of World War II|Allied]] forces in North Africa during the [[Western Desert Campaign]] of [[World War II]]. The siege started on [[10 April]] [[1941]], when Tobruk was attacked by an Italian-German force under [[Lieutenant General]] [[Erwin Rommel]] and continued for 240 days, when it was relieved by the [[Eighth Army (United Kingdom)|Eighth Army]] during [[Operation Crusader]]. |
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| caption = Location of Tobruk on the north Libyan coast. |
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| mini-file = Map of Libya and Egypt (1977).svg |
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<!-- Marker 1 --> |
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| label = Port of Tobruk. |
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| mark-coord = {{coord|32.08179521184162|23.96307356363244}} |
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}} |
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The '''siege of Tobruk''' ({{IPAc-en|t|ə|ˈ|b|r|ʊ|k|,_|t|oʊ|-}}) took place between 10 April and 27 November 1941, during the [[Western Desert campaign]] (1940–1943) of the [[World War II|Second World War]]. An [[Allies of World War II|Allied]] force, consisting mostly of the [[9th Division (Australia)|9th Australian Division]], commanded by Lieutenant-General [[Leslie Morshead]], was besieged in the North African port of [[Tobruk]] by German and Italian forces. The tenacious defenders quickly became known as [[the Rats of Tobruk]]. After 231 days, they were finally relieved by the British [[Eighth Army (United Kingdom)|Eighth Army]]. |
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For much of the siege, Tobruk was defended by the reinforced [[9th Division (Australia)|Australian 9th Division]] under Lieutenant General [[Leslie Morshead]]. General [[Archibald Percival Wavell, 1st Earl Wavell|Archibald Wavell]], Commander-in-Chief of British [[Middle East Command]], instructed Morshead to hold the fortress for eight weeks, but the 9th Australian Division held it for over five months, before being gradually withdrawn during September and replaced by the [[British 70th Infantry Division]], the [[Polish Independent Carpathian Brigade|Polish Carpathian Brigade]] and [[Czechoslovak 11th Infantry Battalion]] (East) under the overall command of Major-General [[Ronald Scobie]]. The fresh defenders continued to hold Tobruk until they were able to link with the advancing [[Eighth Army (United Kingdom)|Eighth Army]] at the end of November during [[Operation Crusader]]. |
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In late 1940, the Allies had defeated the [[Italian 10th Army]] during [[Operation Compass]] {{nowrap|(9 December 1940 – 9 February 1941)}} and trapped the remnants at [[Beda Fomm]]. On 22 January 1941, Tobruk's Italian garrison surrendered. But in early 1941, much of the British [[Western Desert Force]] was sent to the [[German invasion of Greece|Greek]] and [[Syria–Lebanon campaign|Syria–Lebanon]] campaigns, leaving only a skeleton force short of equipment and supplies. |
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The [[Royal Navy]] played an important role in Tobruk's defense, providing gunfire support, supplies, fresh troops and ferrying out the wounded. |
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[[Adolf Hitler]] felt compelled to send reinforcements, commanded by ''Generalleutnant'' [[Erwin Rommel]], to rescue his beleaguered Italian ally. Rommel launched [[Operation Sonnenblume]] {{nowrap|(6 February – 25 May 1941)}}, driving the Allies back across [[Italian Libya|Libya]] to the [[Egypt in World War II|Egyptian]] border. However, Tobruk held out, depriving Rommel of a supply port closer to the Egyptian–Libyan border than [[Benghazi]], {{convert|900|km|mi|order=flip|abbr=on}} west of the Egyptian frontier. The Axis [[siege]] of Tobruk began on 10 April and continued despite two failed Allied relief attempts: [[Operation Brevity]] {{nowrap|(15–16 May)}} and [[Operation Battleaxe]] {{nowrap|(15–17 June)}}. The garrison repulsed several Axis attacks. The port was frequently bombarded by artillery, dive-bombers and medium bombers, while the [[Royal Air Force]] flew defensive sorties from airfields far away in Egypt. Allied naval forces, such as the British [[Mediterranean Fleet]] (including the Inshore Squadron) ran the blockade, carrying reinforcements and supplies in and the wounded and prisoners out. Finally, [[Operation Crusader]] {{nowrap|(18 November – 30 December)}} succeeded in raising the siege. |
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Maintaining control of Tobruk was crucial to the Allied war effort. Other than Benghazi, Tobruk's port was the only one on the African coast between Tripoli and Alexandria. Had the Allies lost it, the German and Italian supply lines would have been drastically shortened. Furthermore, Rommell was in no position to attack across the Egyptian border towards [[Cairo]] and [[Alexandria]] while the Tobruk garrison threatened the lines of supply to his front-line units. |
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{{TOC limit|3}} |
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Tobruk marked the first time that the [[Blitzkrieg]] of the German Panzers had been successfully brought to a halt. It was also the longest siege in British Imperial military history. Rommel nonetheless captured Tobruk in a new offensive in 1942 after the [[Battle of Gazala]]. |
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==Background== |
==Background== |
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===Operation Compass=== |
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{{Cleanup-section|date=March 2008}} |
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{{main|Operation Compass}} |
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In early 1941 British forces were engaged in [[Operation Compass]], an attempt to drive the Italians out of North Africa. On [[January 21]], [[1941]] the [[6th Australian Division|Australian 6th Division]] made an assault to capture the Italian garrison of Tobruk which offered one of the few good harbour between Alexandria and Tripoli. |
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The Western Desert Campaign was fought from [[Mersa Matruh]] in Egypt to [[Gazala]] in Cyrenaica on the Libyan coast, an area about {{convert|240|mi|km|order=flip}} wide along the [[Libyan Coastal Highway]] ({{langx|it|Via Balbia}}), the only paved road. A [[erg (landform)|sand sea]] {{convert|150|mi|km|abbr=on}} inland marked the southern limit of the desert, which was at its widest at [[Giarabub]] and [[Siwa Oasis|Siwa]]; in British parlance, the Western Desert came to include eastern Cyrenaica in Libya. Extending inland from the coast lies a raised, flat plain of stony desert, about {{convert|500|ft|m|abbr=on}} above sea level, for {{convert|200|-|300|km|mi|order=flip|abbr=on}} to the sand sea.{{sfn|Luck|1989|p=92}} Scorpions, vipers and flies populated the region, which was inhabited by a small number of nomads. [[Bedouin]] tracks linked wells and the more easily traversed ground; navigation was by sun, star, compass and "desert sense", good perception of the environment gained by experience. When Italian troops advanced into Egypt in September 1940, the [[Maletti Group]] got lost leaving Sidi Omar and had to be found by aircraft.{{sfn|Playfair|1954|p=116}} |
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The Italian troops generally offered little resistance - large numbers surrendered without fighting. The Italian commander, [[General Petassi Manella]] surrendered himself after only 12 hours, but he had refused to order the surrender of his forces, which meant that it took a further day to clean up any resistance. Australian casualties were 49 dead and 306 wounded, while capturing 27,000 Italian POWs, 208 guns, 28 tanks, many good quality trucks and a large amount of supplies. They also found that the Italians had constructed some impressive defences, including a perimeter of concrete pits. |
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In spring and summer, days are hot and nights cold; the [[sirocco]], a hot desert wind blows clouds of fine sand, which reduces visibility to a few meters and coats eyes, lungs, machinery, food and equipment; motor vehicles and aircraft need special oil filters and the barren ground means that supplies for military operations have to be transported from outside.{{sfn|Lewin|1998|p=149}}{{sfn|Playfair|1954|p=115}} German engines tended to overheat and tank engine life fell from {{convert|1400|–|1600|mi|km|abbr=on}} to {{convert|300|–|900|mi|km|abbr=on}}, which was made worse by the lack of standard parts for German and Italian types.{{sfn|Creveld|1977|p=183}} The ground is a hard surface which drops to sea level in steps, with the coast cut by ravines. |
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The Australian commander, Lieutenant General Leslie Morshead divided the {{convert|50|km|mi}} perimeter into three rough sectors. It would be the job of the three Australian brigades to ensure these were not breached. The 26th would hold the western sector, the 20th would hold the south and the 24th would hold the east. The 9th Division was reinforced by the Australian 18th Brigade (detached from the 7th Division) and British artillery units. Morshead also ordered all Italian signal cables to be re-laid. He wanted to know what was happening, and where, so he could adjust his forces accordingly. He also kept a reserve of runners in case the telephone lines were disrupted by the German attack. |
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The Italian fortifications at Tobruk included an outer perimeter, comprising a double semi-circle of dug-in [[strongpoint]]s with concrete walls, positioned well for forward observation, an inner anti-tank ditch, some parts of which were behind barbed wire and/or included booby traps, as well as several more fortified positions closer to the port, at the Bardia–El Adem road junction and towards Fort Pilastrino.{{sfn|Playfair|1954|p=290}} |
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By the end of the first week in February Operation Compass had resulted in the Italian forces being driven from [[Cyrenaica]] and in the surrender of the [[Italian Tenth Army]]. |
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=== Capture of Tobruk === |
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However, the Allies were unable to take advantage of their victory. With the Italians close to collapse, [[Winston Churchill]] commanded the British General Staff to call a halt to the offensive in order to allow many of the most experienced units from [[Richard O'Connor]]'s [[Western Desert Force|XIII Corps]] to be moved to [[Greece]] to fight in the [[Battle of Greece]]. XIII Corps was wound down to become a static HQ and O'Connor became commander British Troops Egypt (in Cairo) while Lieutenant-General Sir [[Henry Maitland Wilson]] became military governor of [[Cyrenaica]]. Cyrenaica was left with only the inexperienced and under-strength [[2nd Armoured Division (United Kingdom)|2nd Armoured Division]] and the newly-arrived (and only partly-trained) [[9th Australian Division]].<ref>Mead (2007), p.317</ref> |
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{{main|British capture of Tobruk}} |
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In January 1941, the British [[XIII Corps (United Kingdom)|XIII Corps]], under the command of [[Lieutenant general|Lieutenant-General]] [[Richard O'Connor]], as part of [[Operation Compass]], surrounded Tobruk, which was defended by the Italian [[XXII Army Corps (Italy)|XXII Corps]], commanded by General [[Enrico Pitassi Mannella|Pitassi Mannella]]. |
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After blockading the fort for a fortnight, on the night of 20 January, the British Navy, led by the [[HMS Terror (I03)|HMS Terror]], under the command of Captain [[Hector Waller]], bombarded Tobruk. Further out naval destroyers laid a trap for the ''[[Italian cruiser San Giorgio|San Giorgio]]'' in case it tried to break out. On the morning of 21 January between 5 and 7 am, the British artillery bombed the town. At 7 am the [[2/3rd Battalion (Australia)|2/3rd Australian Battalion]] attacked the town and quickly created a massive breach and by the evening half of Tobruk.{{clarify|date=April 2024|reason=Half of Tobruk what? Was captured?}} The next day, the naval command surrendered and by 4 pm General dalla Mura also surrendered, Mannella having been captured earlier on in the day. |
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Meanwhile the Germans had started to concentrate in Africa the two divisions of the [[Afrika Korps]] under [[Erwin Rommel]] (see [[Operation Sonnenblume]]) in an attempt to prevent total collapse of the Italian forces. The British High command was ignorant to this. Even when German reconnaissance units were spotted in Africa they insisted that there were no Germans forces in North Africa. |
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==Prelude== |
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===Rommel takes the initiative=== |
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On [[24 March]] Rommel launched his first offensive with the newly arrived ''Afrika Korps''. By early April he had destroyed most of Major-General Michael Gambier-Parry's [[2nd Armoured Division (United Kingdom)|2nd Armoured Division's]] tanks ([[British 3rd Armoured Brigade]]) and severely damaged its 2nd Support Group at Mersa Brega<ref name="2Arm1">{{cite web| title=Rommel's First Offensive 31 March - 11 April 1941: British 2nd Armoured Division| work=[http://76.162.77.149/drupal-4.7.4/ Command Decision Test of Battle website]| url=http://76.162.77.149/files/RommelsFirstOffensive.pdf |first=Frank| last=Chadwick| date=2007| accessdate=2008-01-24}}</ref> leaving the road south of the Jebel Akhdar (''Green Mountains'') to Mechili open.<ref name="Ausad">{{cite web| title=The Siege of Tobruk |work=North Africa 1941 - 1942| publisher=Veterans Support and Advocacy Service Australia website| accessdate=2008-01-24| url=http://www.ausvets.powerup.com.au/alamein.htm}}</ref> He brought forward along the coast road, elements of the 17th "Pavia" and 27th "Brescia" Divisions while pushing his mechanised units across country towards Mechili. On [[6 April]] the leading Bersaglieri columns of the Italian ''Ariete'' Division reached Mechili.<ref name="Ariete1">{{cite web| title=Rommel's First Offensive 31 March - 11 April 1941: Italian 132nd "Ariete" Armoured Division| work=[http://76.162.77.149/drupal-4.7.4/ Command Decision Test of Battle website]| url=http://76.162.77.149/files/RommelsFirstOffensive.pdf |first=Frank| last=Chadwick| date=2007| accessdate=2008-01-24}}</ref> |
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===Operation ''Sonnenblume''=== |
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On [[6 April]] Lieutenant-General [[Philip Neame]], by that time the military governor of Cyrenaica (Wilson had been sent to command W Force in Greece), withdrew his headquarters to Tmimi. During the withdrawal his staff car was stopped by a German patrol near Martuba and both he and O'Connor (who had been sent forward from Cairo by [[Archibald Wavell]], C-in-C [[Middle East Command]] to advise) were taken prisoner.<ref>Mead (2007), pp. 318 & 333</ref> |
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{{main|Operation Sonnenblume}} |
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The positions at Mechili were defended by non-tank elements of [[2nd Armoured Division (United Kingdom)|2nd Armoured Division]] (3rd Indian Motor Brigade and elements of the 2nd Support Group). Surrounded, they fought bravely in defence of Mechili but on [[8 April]] Gambier-Parry surrendered to General Zaglio of the "Pavia" Division.<ref>Hunt (1990) p. 59</ref> 2,700<ref>{{cite web|title=I Bersaglieri in Africa Settentrionale| work=Avanti Savoia website| date=2003| accessdate=2008-01-26| url=http://digilander.libero.it/avantisavoiait/I%20Bersaglieri%20in%20Africa.htm}}</ref> British, Indian and Australians were captured at Mechili after an attempted breakout was broken up by the Ariete's "Fabris" and "Montemurro" Bersaglieri Battalion groups.<ref name="Ariete1"/> |
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[[File:AustraliansAtTobruk.jpg|thumb|Australian troops occupy a front line position at Tobruk]] |
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[[Image:Italiansoldierlibya.JPG|200px|right|thumb|An Italian soldier in Libya.<br>Many Italian [[field gun]]s were captured and used against the Axis forces in the Siege of Tobruk]] |
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In February of 1941, the Allies defeated the [[Tenth Army (Italy)|10th Army]] and the ''5°'' {{lang|it|Squadra}} of the ''[[Regia Aeronautica]]'', after which Allied leaders decided to hold the area with minimal forces and send the remainder of the WDF to Greece. The Australian [[9th Division (Australia)|9th Division]] and the British [[2nd Armoured Division (United Kingdom)|2nd Armoured Division]] (Major-General [[Michael Gambier-Parry]]), minus a brigade group sent to Greece, were left to garrison Cyrenaica under Cyrenaica Command (Cyrcom: Lieutenant-General [[Henry Maitland Wilson, 1st Baron Wilson|Henry Maitland Wilson]]), despite the inadequacy of the force if the Germans sent reinforcements to Libya. Command in Egypt was taken over by Lieutenant-General [[Richard O'Connor]] and the XIII Corps HQ was replaced by the HQ of the 1st Australian Corps (Lieutenant-General [[Thomas Blamey]]). It was believed by General [[Archibald Wavell, 1st Earl Wavell|Wavell]] and the [[Middle East Command|GHQ]] in Egypt that the Germans could not attack until May, when the 9th Australian Division, two more divisions and support troops, particularly artillery would be ready and the tanks of the 2nd Armoured Division would have been overhauled.{{sfn|Playfair|2004a|pp=1–3}} |
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The 2nd Armoured Division had a reconnaissance regiment and the [[3rd Armoured Brigade]] (Brigadier [[Reginald Gordon Ward Rimington|Reginald Rimington]]), which had an under-strength light tank regiment and one equipped with captured [[Fiat M13/40]] tanks. The cruiser regiment{{clarify|date=January 2023}} arrived in late March with worn-out tracks, after many breakdowns en route and brought the division up to an under-strength armoured brigade. Most of the British tanks were worn out and the Italian tanks were slow and unreliable. The British 2nd Support Group (similar to a small infantry brigade) had only a motor battalion, a [[Ordnance QF 25-pounder|25-pounder]] field gun regiment, an anti-tank battery and a machine-gun company. The division was short of transport and its workshops were understaffed and lacked spare parts. Two brigades of the 9th Australian Division (Major-General [[Leslie Morshead]]) were swapped with two from the [[7th Division (Australia)|7th Australian Division]] (Major-General [[John Lavarack]]), which had insufficient training, equipment and transport.{{sfn|Playfair|2004a|pp=2–4}} |
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Rommel's initial attack plan called for his tanks to sweep around Tobruk to the Eastern side and attack from the Bardia road, so cutting the town off from [[Cairo]]. Approaching Tobruk, however, wishing to maintain his momentum, he ordered General [[Heinrich von Prittwitz und Gaffron]], commander of the newly-formed [[15th Panzer Division]] (most of which had yet to arrive in North Africa), to take the three battalions from his division then available to him (his reconnaissance, machine gun and anti-tank battalions) and to attack Tobruk directly from the West along the Derna Road.<ref name="Rommel118">Rommel (1982), p. 118</ref> Rommel expected that the Allied forces would crumble under this attack.{{fact|date=March 2008}} |
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Lack of transport made it impossible to supply a garrison west of [[El Agheila]], the most favourable position for a defensive line and restricted the 2nd Armoured Division to movement between supply dumps, reducing its limited mobility further. In February, Lieutenant-General [[Philip Neame]] took over Cyrcom and predicted that the armoured division would lose many tanks through breakdowns if it had to move far. Neame asked for a proper armoured division, two infantry divisions and adequate air support to hold the area; he was told that there was little to send and none of that before April. In early March, the 9th Australian Division began to relieve the [[6th Division (Australia)|6th Australian Division]] (Major-General [[Iven Giffard Mackay|Iven Mackay]]) at [[Mersa Brega]] for shipment to Greece, which demonstrated the difficulty of tactical moves with insufficient transport and it was withdrawn to the area east of [[Benghazi]].{{sfn|Playfair|2004a|pp=4–6}} |
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Soldiers from the Australian 2/28th Infantry Battalion spotted three armoured cars and fired the first shots of the siege using two captured captured Italian [[field gun]]s for which they had only had one week's training. The cars quickly retreated. As the tanks aproached a bridge crossing a [[wadi]] on the perimeter of Tobruk the Australians blew it up. When von Prittwitz urged his staff car driver to drive him through the wadi and towards the Australians his men called for him to stop, but he replied that the enemy was getting away. The staff car drove into the firing line of a captured Italian 45mm anti tank gun, whose gunner fired destroying the car and killing both von Prittwiz and his driver. A three hour skirmish then ensued after which the Germans retreated.{{fact|date=March 2008}} |
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Neame was ordered to conserve the tank units, retire as far as Benghazi if pressed, abandon it if necessary, and hold the high ground nearby for as long as possible, with no prospect of reinforcement before May. Neame was to fight a delaying action up the ''Via Balbia'' towards Benghazi and then the defiles near Er Regima and [[Barca (ancient city)|Barce]]; the tanks would move to Antelat to operate against the flank and rear of an attacker moving up the road or across the desert to Tobruk, falling back on a flank if necessary. On 20 March, the 2nd Armoured Division took over from the Australians, who moved back to [[Tocra]], near Er Regima. The force was to use depots at [[Msus]], Tecnis, [[Martuba]], [[Mechili]] and [[Timimi|Tmimi]], [[El Magrun]] and Benghazi as a substitute for lorry-borne supply. The [[3rd Indian Motor Brigade]] (Brigadier E. W. D. Vaughan) arrived in late March, with lorries but no tanks, artillery, anti-tank guns and only half its wireless sets; the brigade was based at Martuba, ready to use its vehicles to move towards [[Derna, Libya|Derna]], Barce or Mechili.{{sfn|Playfair|2004a|pp=6–8}} |
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In the meantime the Australians continued to work on the defences, laying barbed wire, mines and other obstacles. |
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On 24 March, Rommel advanced with the new ''[[Deutsches Afrikakorps]]'' (''DAK''). The 3rd Armoured Brigade was south-east of Mersa Brega, where the 2nd Support Group held an {{convert|8|mi|km|abbr=on}} front; the Australians were {{convert|150|mi|km|abbr=on}} to the north, minus a brigade left at Tobruk, deficient in much equipment and out of contact with the 2nd Armoured Division. Allied air reconnaissance had observed German troops west of El Agheila on 25 February and by 5 March, it was expected that the German commander would consolidate the defence of [[Tripolitania]] before trying to recapture Cyrenaica and then invade Egypt, using bases at [[Sirte]] and [[Nofilia]] but not before April. Rommel was identified on 8 March but local intelligence was hard to find under the restrictions to preserve the few troops and vehicles near the front and avoid the danger of the faster German eight-wheeler armoured cars, which inhibited Allied tactical reconnaissance.{{sfn|Playfair|2004a|pp=9–11}} |
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On [[11 April]], with his forces regrouped, Rommel reverted to his original plan, sending his tanks around Tobruk to the Bardia Road. |
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On 3 April, Gambier-Parry had received a report that a large enemy armoured force was advancing on Msus, site of the main divisional supply dump. The 3rd Armoured Brigade moved there and found that the petrol had been destroyed to prevent capture. The tank brigade was reduced by losses and breakdowns to {{nowrap|12 [[Cruiser tank]]s,}} {{nowrap|20 light tanks}} and {{nowrap|20 Italian tanks.}} Neame received conflicting reports about the positions of the Allied and Axis forces and news on 5 April that a large Axis force was advancing on [[Abyar, Libya|El Abiar]] led him to order the 9th Australian Division back to Wadi Cuff and the elements of the 2nd Armoured Division to guard the desert flank and retire to Mechili. Other reports led Neame to countermand these orders, which caused the Australians much confusion. On 6 April, Allied air reconnaissance reported that there were Axis columns in the desert and the 3rd Indian Motor Brigade repulsed an attack at Mechili, which led to O'Connor at the Cyrcom headquarters (Neame had left to visit Gambier-Parry) to order a general withdrawal.{{sfn|Playfair|2004a|p=28}} |
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The city was now besieged on three sides (the harbour was in Allied hands) by the the [[Afrika Korps]] composed of the [[21st Panzer Division (Germany)|5th Light Division]] and elements of 15th Panzer Division, and by three Italian infantry divisions and the Italian [[Italian 132nd Armored Division Ariete|Ariete Armour Division]]. The Allied forces consisted of the Australian 9th Infantry Division and 18th Infantry Brigade of the [[Australian Imperial Force]], as well as 12,000 British soldiers and 1,500 Indian soldiers.{{fact|date=March 2008}} |
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====Loss of Mechili==== |
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Rommel had intended to attack Mechili on 7 April but the Axis forces were scattered, short of fuel and tired. Group Fabris moved forward during the morning but the [[132nd Armored Division "Ariete"|132nd Armoured Division "Ariete"]] (''Ariete'' Division) and Group Streich took all day to arrive, having been attacked all day by the RAF. A Squadron of the [[Long Range Desert Group]] (LRDG) had appeared from the south, to harass Axis movements. By nightfall on 7 April, the 9th Australian Division (less the [[24th Brigade (Australia)|24th Infantry Brigade]]) and British 2nd Support Group had blocked the ''Via Balbia'' at [[Acroma]], about {{convert|15|mi|km|abbr=on}} west of Tobruk, where the [[18th Brigade (Australia)|18th]] and 24th Infantry Brigades were preparing the defences. (The 18th Australian Infantry Brigade had arrived from Egypt by sea after the dispatch of the 7th Australian Division to Greece had been cancelled.) A small force held [[El Adem]], south of Tobruk to observe the approaches from the south and south-west and at Mechili, Gambier-Parry had the 2nd Armoured Division headquarters soft-skinned vehicles and a cruiser tank, most of the 3rd Indian Motor Brigade, M Battery [[1st Regiment Royal Horse Artillery|1st Royal Horse Artillery]], part of the [[2/3rd Anti-Tank Regiment (Australia)|2/3rd Australian Anti-tank Regiment]] and elements of other units.{{sfn|Playfair|2004a|pp=30–34}} |
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Just after noon on [[11 April]] [[1941]], the Germans and Italians positioned themselves for a concentrated attack on the city. To exaggerate the size of their force and strike fear in the defenders, they were ordered to make more dust than normal. The 5th Panzer Regiment of the 5th Light Division drew fire first to try to assess the defence. Within an hour, five of the German tanks were destroyed and the others pulled back. At 3:00 PM the men of the 2/13th Battalion saw about 400 German soldiers approach. The Australians defensive fire forced the Germans to retreat, carrying their dead and wounded with them. |
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The Germans tried twice to bluff Gambier-Parry into surrender but he received orders from Cyrcom to break out and retreat to El Adem and decided to attack at dawn, to gain a measure of surprise. On 8 April, A Squadron of the [[18th King Edward's Own Cavalry|18th Cavalry]] broke through and then turned to attack Italian artillery, as some Indian troops of the [[11th Cavalry (Frontier Force)|11th Prince Albert Victor's Own Cavalry (Frontier Force)]] got away. Most of the garrison was pinned down and after a second attempt at {{nowrap|8:00 a.m.}} when small parties of the [[2nd Lancers (Gardner's Horse)|2nd Royal Lancers]] escaped. The garrison had fired most of its small arms ammunition at the vision slits of the German tanks, which had hung back in fear of mines and when Italian infantry attacked, had little left. Gambier-Parry and {{nowrap|2,700–3,000 British,}} Indian and Australian troops surrendered to the [[17th Infantry Division "Pavia"]] (General [[Pietro Zaglio]]).{{sfn|Playfair|2004a|p=30}} |
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At 4:00 PM, a [[platoon]]-sized formation from the 2/17th Battalion saw 700 Germans launching an attack on their position. The Australians were outnumbered and outgunned with only two [[Bren]] guns, a few dozen rifles and a couple of [[Rifle, Anti-Tank, .55 in, Boys|Boys]] [[anti-tank rifle]]s. The Australian artillery opened fire and inflicted significant casualties, but the German soldiers kept advancing. Several groups of Panzers and Italian [[Fiat M13/40|M13]]s advanced on the Australians. As the Axis armor closed in, four British tanks arrived, firing over the head of the infantry. The Axis tanks could not hurdle the obstacles set for them and they fell back to regroup. This attack yielded only one dead on the Allied side. |
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===Supply=== |
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Morshead's defence plan was aggressive. He ordered rigorous patrolling of the anti-tank ditches and more mines laid. The aggressive patrolling appeared to work. The 2/13th Battalion encountered a German raiding party with a large amount of explosives. The party had clearly intended to blow the sides of an anti-tank ditch, allowing easier passage for tanks to cross - but they were forced to retreat. |
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[[File:Italian convoy heading towards North Africa.jpg|thumb|{{centre|One of many Italian convoys heading towards North Africa}}]] |
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Axis supplies came from Europe and deliveries were moved by road; after Operation Compass {{nowrap|(December 1940 – February 1941),}} only Tripoli remained, which had a maximum capacity of four troopships or five cargo ships at once, about {{convert|45000|LT|t|abbr=on}} per month. Tripoli to Benghazi was {{convert|600|mi|km|abbr=on}} along the ''Via Balbia'', which was only half-way to [[Alexandria]]. The road could flood, was vulnerable to the DAF and alternative desert tracks increased vehicle wear. The Axis advance of {{convert|300|mi|km|abbr=on}} to the Egyptian frontier in early 1941, increased the road transport distance for supplies to {{convert|1100|mi|km|abbr=on}}. Benghazi was captured in April but coastal shipping could only carry {{convert|15000|LT|t|0|abbr=on}} and the port was within range of the DAF. Tobruk could take about {{convert|1500|LT|t|0|abbr=on}} per day but lack of shipping made its capture irrelevant.{{sfn|Creveld|1977|pp=182–187}} |
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A German motorised division needed {{convert|350|LT|t|abbr=on}} per day and moving the supplies {{convert|300|mi|km|abbr=on}} {{nowrap|took 1,170}} two-ton lorries.{{sfn|Creveld|1977|pp=182–185}} With seven Axis divisions, air and naval units, {{convert|70000|LT|t|abbr=on}} of supplies per month were needed. [[Vichy France]] agreed to [[Bizerta]] being used for supplies but none passed through until late 1942. From February to May 1941, a surplus of {{convert|45000|LT|t|abbr=on}} was delivered; attacks from [[Malta]] had some effect but in May, the worst month for ship losses, {{nowrap|91%}} of the supplies arrived. Lack of transports in Libya left German supplies in Tripoli and the Italians had only {{nowrap|7,000 lorries}} for deliveries to {{nowrap|225,000 men.}} A record amount of supplies arrived in June but at the front, the shortages worsened.{{sfn|Creveld|1977|pp=185–187}} |
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In cases where panzers and Italian tankettes did reach or pass the Australian lines, the infantry — ensconced in well-built strongpoints, including many installed by the original Italian garrison — simply concentrated on the German or Italian infantry, knowing that the tanks' guns could not be brought to bear on them and the Axis tanks would face anti-tank guns in the second line of defences. On the most important of these attacks on [[1 May]], a combined Italo-German infantry and armour force attacking, had its armour driven back and the infantry stood and fought behind Australian lines for quite some time before they withdrew. |
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There were fewer Axis attacks on Malta from June and ships sunk increased from {{nowrap|19%}} in July, to {{nowrap|25%}} in September, when Benghazi was bombed and ships diverted to Tripoli; air supply in October made little difference. Deliveries averaged {{convert|72000|LT|t|abbr=on}} per month from July–October but the consumption of {{nowrap|30–50 percent}} of fuel deliveries by road transport and truck unserviceability of {{nowrap|35 percent}} reduced deliveries to the front. In November, a five-ship convoy was sunk during Operation Crusader and ground attacks on road convoys stopped journeys in daylight. Lack of deliveries and the Eighth Army offensive, forced a retreat to El Agheila from 4 December, crowding the ''Via Balbia'' where Allied ambushes destroyed about half of the remaining Axis transport.{{sfn|Creveld|1977|pp=189–190}} |
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On [[15 April]], [[1941]] an Australian fighting patrol was returning from patrolling in the area of 2/48th Battalion when, at about 5.30 p.m, an Italian attack threatened to overwhelm the forward positions of the 2/24th Battalion. Italian infantry numbering about 1,000 advanced on the bunkered platoons against mortars, rifle and machine gun fire and one post was overrun. Early in the battle, the 2/23rd Battalion's 'B' Company also arrived and engaged the Italian force. The combination of aggressive fire from the Australian soldiers plus devastating fire from the 51st Field Artillery Regiment swung the battle in the Australians' favour. The aggressive Australian patrolling continued and on [[16 April]], the main body of the 1st Battalion 62nd "Trento" Regiment was encountered approaching from Acroma. The Italian battalion then came under heavy shellfire and were halted. About half a battalion of panzers of the German 5th Armoured Regiment followed the Italian infantry but, as they reached the perimeter defences, came under intense fire from the 51st Field Artillery Regiment and withdrew. The 2/43rd Battalion War Diary reported that ''"The Italians attacked our 48 Bn and whilst withdrawing and whilst they (the Italians) were withdrawing were fired upon German tanks believed to be supporting the attack".'' [http://www.awm.gov.au/cms_images/awm52/8/AWM52-8-3-35-009.pdf] The Australians sent out Bren gun carriers specifically to find the Italian battalions' flank. The extra fire-power finally stopped the Italians, and all firing ceased. A British communique on [[17 April]], [[1941]] described the actions:{{quote|One of our patrols successfully peneterated an enemy position outside the defenses of Tobruk capturing 7 Italian officers and 139 men. A further attack on the defenses of Tobruk was repulsed by artillery fire. The enemy again suffered heavy casualties. During yesterdays operations a total of 25 officers and 767 of other ranks were captured. In addition over 200 enemy dead were left on the field.|''New York Times''<ref>{{cite journal| journal=New York Times| issue=[[18 April]], [[1941]]| title=The Text of the Day's Communiques on Fighting in Europe and Africa: British| accessdate=2008-04-12| url=http://collections.civilisations.ca/warclip/objects/common/webmedia.php?irn=5000652}}</ref>}} |
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===Tobruk=== |
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An intelligence assessment by the 2/43rd Battalion concluded that: |
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[[File:Arrivo di un automezzo militare a Tobruch nell 1941.jpg|thumb|left|{{centre|Italian troops and arms on their way to Tobruk 1941}}]] |
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''Reports from PW indicate that a large scale attack was to have been launched on the Tobruch defences on or about 16 April 41. There appears to have been no co-ordination between enemy tanks and inf units. The ITALIANS appear to have been some what in the dark as to their actual objectives and the method of co-ordination by means of GERMAN liaison offrs working with ITALIAN units has not been successful. PW also state that the spasmodic attacks in different sectors between 14 and 16 Apr, sometimes inf alone, sometimes tks alone sometimes both, were all intended to be a simultaneous assault which apprently went badly asray in its timing.'' [http://www.awm.gov.au/cms_images/awm52/8/AWM52-8-3-35-009.pdf] |
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Work on the fortifications at Tobruk had begun in March, using the Italian defences, two lines of concrete bunkers {{convert|8|–|9|mi|km|abbr=on}} away from the port, making a perimeter about {{convert|30|mi|km|abbr=on}} long, far enough out to keep artillery out of range of the port. Few intermediate defences had been built by the Italians except at the Bardia–El Adem road junction, the barbed wire was in disrepair and an anti-tank ditch was unfinished. The Allies selected another line about {{convert|2|mi|km|abbr=on}} back from the perimeter and worked on this while the original line was refurbished. Two battalions of the Australian 24th Infantry Brigade and the newly arrived Australian 18th Brigade (which had been detached from the 7th Division) took over the perimeter and the Australian [[20th Brigade (Australia)|20th]] and [[26th Brigade (Australia)|26th]] brigades took up a covering position on the outside until 9 April, while more work was done on the defences. Once inside, the three 9th Australian Division brigades took over the defences and the 18th Brigade went into reserve.{{sfn|Playfair|2004a|pp=390, 36–37}} |
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A [[Cadre (military)|cadre]] of the British 3rd Armoured Brigade was refitting at Tobruk, with personnel and equipment sent from Egypt by sea and had a regiment of armoured cars, two composite regiments with 15 light, 26 cruiser and a troop of four infantry tanks. There were 4 25-pounder regiments, two anti-tank regiments and an anti-tank company in each infantry brigade, the British [[4th Anti-Aircraft Brigade (United Kingdom)|4th Anti-Aircraft Brigade]] had sixteen heavy and fifty-nine light guns, all but two [[Bofors 40 mm Automatic Gun L/60|Bofors guns]] being sited around the harbour. Rear area units had accumulated at Tobruk and {{frac|1|3}} of the {{nowrap|36,000 personnel}} were in base units or local refugees and prisoners of war. Morshead planned an active defence and stressed that, with battalions holding {{convert|5|mi|km|abbr=on}} frontages, a break-in should be expected anywhere that the attackers made a serious effort and that it should be eliminated, since there would be no withdrawal.{{sfn|Playfair|2004a|p=37}} |
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==The Battle of the Salient== |
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==Siege== |
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On [[30 April]], the Axis forces second attack attempting to push through the perimeter at post S.1 and push through into the centre of Tobruk. The attack captured an 8 km wide by 3km deep section of territory. However the battle caused heavy losses to Rommel's forces, and he did not attempt another major attack in the immediate future. |
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===Investment of Tobruk=== |
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At about 2000 hours tanks moved up to the perimeter wire in front of S.1 and, using grappling hooks, pulled it away. Tanks from 5 Panzerkompanie and supporting infantry from the 2nd Machine-Gun Battalion and a Pioneer Battalion proceeded to clear up the bunkers manned by Captain Fell's 'A' Company, 2/24th Battalion. Post S1 was the first to succumb. Two panzers drove to 100-200 yards of the post, and opened fire, and, after a brief fight (in which three men were killed and four wounded), Lieutenant Walker and his men surrendered. These tanks then proceeded to attack S.2 (Major Fell), which contained the Company HQ and 7 Platoon. Getting to within 200 yards, the panzers opened fire, shredding sandbags on the parapets and blowing up sangars. On each tank were riding German infantrymen, who under cover of the tanks' fire, ran forwards with grenades. S.2 then surrendered.<ref>[http://www.awm.gov.au/cms_images/histories/19/chapters/06.pdf Maughan (1966), p. 209]</ref> |
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By 8 April, the most advanced German units had arrived at Derna; but some units which had cut across the chord of the [[Jabal al Akhdar|Jebel Akhdar]] ran out of water and fuel at Tengeder. [[Heinrich von Prittwitz und Gaffron]], the commander of the 15th Panzer Division, was sent ahead with a column of reconnaissance, anti-tank, machine-gun, and artillery units to block the eastern exit from Tobruk as the 5th Light Division moved from the southwest and the [[27th Infantry Division "Brescia"]] advanced from the west. On 10 April, Rommel made the [[Suez Canal]] the objective of the {{lang|de|Afrika Korps}} and ordered that a breakout from Tobruk be prevented. The next day, the port was [[Investment (military)|invested]]; but the rush ended with the 5th Light Division on the east side, the Prittwitz group to the south (Prittwitz having been killed), and the 27th Infantry Division "Brescia" to the west. Reconnaissance Unit 3 went on to [[Bardia]], and a composite force was sent on to [[Sollum]] to try to reach Mersa Matruh. The British [[7th Armoured Division (United Kingdom)|Mobile Force]] (Brigadier [[William Gott]]), on the frontier from [[Halfaya Pass]] to [[Sidi Barrani]], conducted a delaying-action around Sollum and [[Fort Capuzzo|Capuzzo]].{{sfn|Playfair|2004a|pp=35–36}} |
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====El Adem road==== |
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Then was the turn of 9 Platoon dug in posts R.0 and R.1 – after a fight in which three were killed and four wounded, the posts surrendered. The crews of two RHA 2-pounders put up a fight, knocking out some of the panzers, but when the guns tried to turn to engage panzers moving to their flank, they exposed themselves to German machine-gunners, with the gunners either killed or wounded. The bunkered platoons from the neighbouring C Company from 2/24th Battalion were also attacked. Post S.5 was taken at first light on [[1 May]], but Posts S.4 (Corporal Deering) and S.6 (Captain Canty) held out grimly until the morning. Post S.7 (Corporal Thomson) stubbornly resisted, inflicting heavy casualties on the attacking Italians, before the attackers were able to throw in grenades.<ref>[http://www.awm.gov.au/cms_images/histories/19/chapters/06.pdf Maughan (1966), p. 210]</ref> Attacks by Italian infantry, on posts S.8, S.9 and S.10 were repelled. Nevertheless 'C' Company suffered 20 men killed and wounded, and another 44 taken prisoner in the fighting in the northern sector that largely employed troops from the "Brescia" Infantry Division. |
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[[File:Un mulo nelle linee retrostanti al fronte di Tobruch nell 1941.jpg|thumb|left|{{centre|Italian gunners in position at Tobruk}}]] |
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From {{nowrap|11–12 April,}} the 5th Panzer Regiment probed the defences of the 20th Australian Brigade near the El Adem road. The tanks were held off by artillery-fire; German infantry who reached the anti-tank ditch were forced back by Australian infantry. The Germans were surprised, having assumed that the shipping at Tobruk was to evacuate the garrison and planned a night attack by the 5th Light Division for {{nowrap|13/14 April.}} Groups of Axis vehicles were attacked by [[No. 45 Squadron RAF|45]] and [[No. 55 Squadron RAF|55]] Squadrons RAF, which rearmed at the airfields inside the perimeter. The attack began after dark, with an attempt to get over the anti-tank ditch west of the El Adem road in the [[2/17th Battalion (Australia)|2/17th Australian Battalion]] sector, which the Australians repulsed. Another attempt was made later and by dawn a small bridgehead had been established, where the 5th Panzer Regiment drove through and turned northwards, ready to divide into one column for the harbour and one to move west to stop the escape of the garrison.{{sfn|Playfair|2004a|pp=37–38}} |
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[[File:Czech_11thBattalion_Tobruk_1941.jpg|thumb|[[Czechoslovak 11th Infantry Battalion]] defending Tobruk]] |
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The German tanks were engaged head on by the 1st RHA and veered away, only to drive into the path of the British cruiser tanks, waiting [[hull-down]] and received anti-tank fire from three sides, losing sixteen of {{nowrap|38 tanks}} and retreated. The Australian infantry had stood their ground and pinned down the German infantry. As the retreat continued, every gun and aircraft at Tobruk fired into the area and the German 8th Machine-Gun Battalion lost about {{nowrap|75 percent}} of its men including its commander [[Gustav Ponath]], for a garrison loss of {{nowrap|26 men killed,}} {{nowrap|64 wounded,}} two tanks and a field gun knocked out. Attacks from the south were abandoned and the 5th Light Division dug in, with the Schwerin Group (renamed after Prittwitz had been killed) to the east.{{sfn|Playfair|2004a|p=38}} In support, the [[Luftwaffe]] and Regia Aeronautica flew 959 [[sortie]]s over Tobruk; on 14 April 40 [[Junkers Ju 87|Ju 87s]] bombed the defences and on day 27 they succeeded in destroying a heavy anti-aircraft battery at Tobruk by swamping the defences with 50 aircraft allowing for an entire ''staffel'' (12) to concentrate on each gun.{{sfn|Smith|2011|p=268}} |
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====Ras el Medauar==== |
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The attack in the southern sector also involved Italian troops and Lieutenant Mair's 16 Platoon from 'D' Company defending Posts R.2 and R.3 and R.4 were overrun. According to an Australian defender, ''"That night the slightest move would bring a flare over our position and the area would be lit like day. We passed a night of merry hell as the pounding went on."''<ref name="Ma216">[http://www.awm.gov.au/cms_images/histories/19/chapters/06.pdf Maughan (1966), p. 216]</ref> Italian infantry were then able to close in, and stick grenades were thrown into the bunkers. Nevertheless, Posts R.5 (Sergeant Poidevin), R.6 (Captain Bird) and R.7 (Corporal Jones) were taken only after stubborn resistance, and fought on until they had run out of ammunition or had had stick grenades tossed into the firing pits. After they had been taken prisoner, General Rommel spoke to them''"for you the war is over and I wish you good luck",'' recalled Corporal Jones.<ref name="Ma216"/> |
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On 16 April, Rommel led an attack from the west, with the 132nd Armoured Division "Ariete" reinforced by the 62nd Infantry Regiment of the [[102nd Motorized Division "Trento"|102nd Motorised Division "Trento"]]. The [[2/48th Battalion (Australia)|2/48th Australian Battalion]] counter-attacked and took {{nowrap|803 prisoners.}} In the morning, the 132nd Armoured Division "Ariete" attacked again and some tanks reached the most advanced Australian posts, found that their infantry had not followed and retired after five tanks were knocked out. Morshead ordered the garrison to exploit Axis disorganisation and their inability to quickly dig in on stony ground, through conducting patrols and small sorties. On 22 April, a company of the 2/48th Australian Battalion, three infantry tanks and a troop of 25-pounders, raided a hillock held by the Fabris Detachment south-west of Ras el Medauar; the raiders destroyed two guns and took {{nowrap|370 prisoners.}} At the same time a company of the [[2/23rd Battalion (Australia)|2/23rd Battalion]] advanced across the Derna road and in a costly attack, took about {{nowrap|100 prisoners}} from the 27th Infantry Division "Brescia", which led the Germans to hurry on the 15th Panzer Division from Tripoli.{{sfn|Playfair|2004a|pp=37–38}} |
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===Air and sea war=== |
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The 51st Field Regiment had been constantly firing, causing an entire German battalion to go to ground and, according to Rommel, creating panic in the Italian infantry. Seven British Cruiser and five Matilda tanks also appeared in the Italian area of penetration, to engage in an inconclusive tank battle with Italian tankers. |
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The defeat of the Axis attacks in April greatly improved the situation in Tobruk but [[10th Air Corps|''Fliegerkorps'' X]] had sent {{nowrap|150–200 aircraft}} to Libya from [[Sicily]] in February, which flew frequent dive-bomber sorties by day and medium-bomber raids by day and night on the docks, buildings, anti-aircraft sites, artillery positions and the airfields.{{sfn|PRO|2001|p=130}} [[Westland Lysander]] aircraft and all but the most essential ground crew of [[No. 6 Squadron RAF|6]] and [[No. 73 Squadron RAF|73 Squadron]] were withdrawn to Egypt. At least ten [[Hawker Hurricane]] fighters were based at the port during the day and on 19 April, Hurricanes of 73 and [[No. 274 Squadron RAF|274 Squadrons]], intercepted a Ju 87 raid escorted by fighters. After another two days, 73 Squadron was down to five operational aircraft with very tired pilots. By 23 April, three more Hurricanes had been shot down, a further two were damaged and on 25 April the squadron was withdrawn. The fighters of 274 Squadron stayed at Gerawla and 6 Squadron remained at Tobruk to fly tactical reconnaissance sorties. Fighter cover could only be maintained at intervals by the last {{nowrap|14 Hurricanes}} in the desert; Axis airfields at Gazala, Derna and [[Benina]], were bombed at dusk and night to limit Axis air attacks on Tobruk.{{sfn|Playfair|2004a|pp=38–39}} The Desert Air Force [so-named from October 1941] flew long-range missions to attack German armour massing near Tobruk in the early stages of the siege. On 12 April, for example, 45 and 55 Squadron [[Bristol Blenheim]] bombers, operating from airfields in Egypt, attacked German tank formations near the port. The attack succeeded in breaking up the German advance.{{sfn|Ring|Shores|1969|p=34}} |
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[[File:Me 110E ZG26 shot down near Tobruk 1941.jpg|thumb|right|A [[ZG 26]] Bf 110 crash-landed near Tobruk, 1941]] |
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Air Commodore [[Raymond Collishaw]], commanding 204 Group RAF (renamed the Desert Air Force), wrote to Air Marshal [[Arthur Tedder]] on 24 April. In his view the situation in the air had rapidly deteriorated. The arrival of two German fighter wings ([[Jagdgeschwader 27]] and [[Zerstörergeschwader 26]]) near Tobruk allowed the enemy formations to arrive at great height within ten minutes of an air raid warning, leaving British fighters at lower altitude and a great disadvantage. He remarked attrition had caused "a serious reduction in our fighter force."{{sfn|Shores|Massimello|Guest|2012|pp=128–130}} The bombardment and [[close air support]] operations in the initial phases were carried out by [[Lehrgeschwader 1]], III./[[Sturzkampfgeschwader 1]] and II./[[Sturzkampfgeschwader 2]].{{sfn|Ring|Shores|1969|pp=33–37}} Collishaw noted the aggression shown by Axis aviation and reported to Tedder that 274 Squadron, which had only 13 fighters available as of 23 April, formed the major part of the fighter defence for Egypt and he was "loathe to send them to Tobruk."{{sfn|Shores|Massimello|Guest|2012|pp=128–130}} As Collishaw wrote his letter, the RAF lost a further six aircraft over Tobruk, equating to very heavy losses given the small contingent defending the port.{{sfn|Ring|Shores|1969|p=36}} He requested Tedder's advice. Air Marshal [[Arthur Longmore]] cabled the [[Air Ministry]] in London. He wished to operate in greater strength, and complained reinforcements and fresh pilots were needed to replace the exhausted 73 Squadron. He told London that to maintain patrols, the fighters were forced to refuel at Sidi Barrani granting Axis air units a free hand over Tobruk but arguing that without patrols to defend fighter squadrons refuelling at Tobruk on the ground, they were "hostage to a fortune we cannot afford."{{sfn|Shores|Massimello|Guest|2012|pp=128–130}} On 1 May, for example, 274 Squadron lost all six Hurricanes it sent on a single mission when a flight of [[Messerschmitt Bf 109|Bf 109s]] from JG 27 led by [[Gerhard Homuth]], and containing the most successful fighter pilot in Africa, [[Hans-Joachim Marseille]], engaged them from a superior altitude over Tobruk.{{sfn|Ring|Shores|1969|pp=36–37}} |
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From 1–14 May each side paused to stockpile supplies for the next battle.{{sfn|Ring|Shores|1969|p=38}} Of stated losses from 10 April—14 May [excluding claims made by either side], 73 Squadron lost 15 fighters and five damaged. Five pilots were killed, one captured and one wounded. 274 Squadron lost six fighters, three pilots killed and two captured. 45 Squadron suffered the loss of three aircraft and five killed, while 55 and 6 Squadron lost one and two respectively. [[No. 39 Squadron RAF|39 Squadron]] lost three bombers and [[No. 14 Squadron RAF|14 Squadron]] one for a total of 31 aircraft.{{sfn|Ring|Shores|1969|pp=34–38}} Reported German losses, excluding RAF claims, were lower. III/StG 1 and II/StG 2 lost eight between them while III/ZG 26 reported three destroyed and one damaged, two killed, one wounded and three captured. III./LG 1 reported the loss of one aircraft.{{sfn|Ring|Shores|1969|pp=34–38}} JG 27 suffered the loss of four fighters, three damaged and three pilots killed.{{sfn|Ring|Shores|1969|pp=34–38}} The Regia Aeronautica's 151 ''Gruppo'' reported two aircraft destroyed and one damaged.{{sfn|Ring|Shores|1969|pp=34–38}} |
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The attack faltered when the Panzers leading the assault ran into a minefield placed by Morsehead to stop any breaches of the blue line. A Panzer officer recalled: ''"Two companies get off their motor lorries and extend in battle order. All sorts of light signals go up - green, white, red. The flares hiss down near our own MGs. It is already too late to take aim. Well, the attack is a failure. The little Fiat-Ansaldos go up in front with flame-throwers in order to clean up the triangle. Long streaks of flame, thick smoke, filthy stink. We provide cover until 2345 hours, then retire through the gap. It is a mad drive through the dust. At 0300 hours have snack beside tank. 24 hours shut up in the tank, with frightful cramp as a result - and thirsty!"'' [http://www.geocities.com/firefly1002000/tobruk.html] After several tanks lost their tracks the remaining Panzers retreated. |
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The intensity of the battle for [[air superiority]] was mirrored by the air war over the sea as the Luftwaffe and Regia Aeronautica attempted to [[Maritime interdiction|cut off sea traffic]] supplying the defenders. The air-sea battle, after the failure of [[Operation Battleaxe]], was the main sector of operations for Allied and Axis aviation throughout the summer.{{sfn|Ring|Shores|1969|p=47}} [[Sturzkampfgeschwader 3]], another Ju 87 wing arrived in Africa in the summer. The eight-month long siege was costly for the ''Stuka gruppen''. At the end of April, virtually all Tobruk-based fighters had been removed from the encircled port. The Ju 87s were facing defenders with [[anti-aircraft artillery]] numbering 88 guns—28 heavy (90 mm or above). Ships lent their weapons to the defenders. In an example, the gunboat [[HMS Ladybird (1916)|''Ladybird'']], sunk in shallow waters to her deck by II./StG 2, was able to use her 3-inch deck guns.{{sfn|Weal|1998|pp=44, 46-48}} In April, ''Draco'', ''Bankura'', ''Urania'', and {{HMS|Chakla}} were sunk by Axis aircraft.{{sfn|Admiralty|1947|pp=20–21}} On 4 May the [[hospital ship]] ''Kapara'' (846t) was damaged evoking fury on the Allied side.{{sfn|Smith|2011|p=272}} |
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The Australians achieved a notable success in holding off this Italo-German offensive. One German POW said: "I cannot understand you Australians. In Poland, France, and Belgium, once the tanks got through the soldiers took it for granted that they were beaten. But you are like demons. The tanks break through and your infantry still keep fighting."<ref name="Miller">Miller (1986)</ref> Rommel wrote of seeing "a batch of some fifty or sixty Australian prisoners [largely from C Company of the 2/24th Battalion that had been taken prisoner by the Italians]... marched off close behind us—immensely big and powerful men, who without question represented an elite formation of the British Empire, a fact that was also evident in battle."<ref name="Miller"/> |
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The arrival of Italian Ju 87s from 97 ''Gruppo'' resulted in the sinking of the 3,741-ton tanker ''Helka'' on 25 May before it could reach Tobruk.{{sfn|Weal|1998|pp=48–51}} The squadron involved, the 239 ''Squadriglia'' was the successful unit, which became among the most successful over Tobruk.{{sfn|Smith|2011|pp=269–270}} The escorting [[Sloop-of-war|sloop]], [[HMS Grimsby (U16)|''Grimsby'']] was damaged, and sunk by 3./StG 1. Commensurate with the sinking of ''Fiona'' and ''Chakla'' in April, the burden fell to the [[Mediterranean Fleet]]'s destroyers to carry out supply operations in daylight. Moonlit nights also proved hazardous.{{sfn|Weal|1998|pp=48–51}} On 24 June the sloop ''Auckland'' was sunk by 239 ''Squadriglia''. This unit also sank the destroyer [[HMAS Waterhen (D22)|''Waterhen'']]. The vessel had just survived an attack by [[Junkers Ju 88]]s of III/[[LG 1]] and II/[[StG 2]].{{sfn|Smith|2011|p=270}}{{sfn|Weal|1998|pp=50–51}} The lack of fighters made for a straight battle between the gunners and German pilots. The gunners changed their tactics from a sustained barrage at a fixed altitude, to a staggered, and thickened belt, at various altitudes covering 1000 meters or more, thereby forcing the Ju 87s to fly through fire for much longer. The gunners spread their fire from side to side, to prevent German pilots from travelling down the side of the barrage and sliding in underneath it.{{sfn|Weal|1998|pp=52–53}} The ''Stukas'' were active in night operations. On 26/27 October 1941, I/[[StG 1]] attacked a convoy transporting 7,000 British and Polish soldiers with munitions sailed toward Tobruk. An attack by the Ju 87s sank the ''Latona'' (2,650 t) with a direct hit—though the vessel could reach 40 knots. The destroyer [[HMS Hero (H99)|''Hero'']] was badly damaged in the same attack.{{sfn|Smith|2011|p=270}} |
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In the Battle of the Salient, known German and Italian losses were 167 Killed, 574 wounded, and 213 missing/captured. The Australian garrison had 59 killed, 355 wounded, and 383 missing/captured. [http://www.cityes.org/aussies-at-tobruk.html] |
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[[File:Ju 87 burning near Tobruk 1941.jpg|thumb|left|Ju 87 ''Stuka'' burning near Tobruk—souvenir hunters have taken the [[Nazi Swastika]] from the [[Vertical stabiliser]].]] |
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Rommel placed the blame for the failure to capture Tobruk squarely on the Italians.{{Fact|date=January 2008}} However, it was the 19th and 20th Infantry Regiments of the 27th "Brescia" Division along with the 5th and 12th Bersaglieri Battalions of the 8th Bersaglieri Regiment, the 3rd Company, 32nd Combat Sappers Battalion and "Ariete" Armoured Division who after much hard fighting, had possession of most of the positions which the Australians had lost<ref> [http://www.guastatori.it/1941-1945/xxxii_btg.htm ''(Italian)'']{{verify credibility|date=April 2008}}</ref><!--What is this citation? What official standing does it have, who wrote it etc.. It is most unstisfactory to have a link to a web page that has no identification on it. It might just as well be random--> The 7th Bersaglieri Regiment soldiers bunkered along the newly captured concrete bunkers. The Australians fought hard to win back their positions. Many fierce hand-to-hand fights took place from [[1 May]] till the end of August 1941 when finally the weary soldiers of the 7th Bersaglieri were ordered move to Ain Gazala to rest and refit.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.ibersaglieri.it/rgt_in_vita/7_rgt/pagine/epopea.html| title=L'Epopea| language=in Italian| publisher=I Bersaglieri website| work=Associazione Bersaglieri della Regione| accessdate=2008-04-15}}</ref> According to an Australian soldier, "In Tobruk we became part of the 9thDivision with the 28thand 16thBattalions. Each Platoon had to do two or three weeks in the Salient, which was a section of ‘no man’s land’ where the enemy had driven us back from fortifications that skirted Tobruk from sea to sea. Time up there wasn’t exactly pleasurable. We were in dugouts with interconnecting trenches about a foot or so deep (hence becoming known as the ‘rats of Tobruk’). The Germans pummelled us with trench mortar bombs and also had fixed machine guns firing on us." [http://www.anzac.dpc.wa.gov.au/documents/stories/arthur_olsen_20060117.pdf] |
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In March, destroyers were withdrawn from the Inshore Squadron to escort convoys to Greece and in April, four more ships joined the squadron. As the army retreated to Tobruk and the frontier, coastal operations were conducted on the nights of {{nowrap|10–11 April}} by gunboats, which bombarded transport on the Via Balbia around [[Bomba, Libya|Bomba]] and [[Kambut|Gambut]] airfield and on the night of 12 April, six destroyers and two cruisers made a coastal sweep from Ras Tayones to Ras et Tin. Next day, three ships bombarded Sollum and on 15 April, transport was bombarded at Bardia and Capuzzo, as Gazala airfield was shelled again. For the rest of April, naval bombardments continued along the Libyan coast on the Via Balbia, airfields and ports. A Commando raid was carried out on Bardia and supply runs began to Tobruk.{{sfn|Playfair|2004a|pp=39–40}} From {{nowrap|11 April – 10 December,}} {{nowrap|47,280 men}} were taken from Tobruk, {{nowrap|34,113 were}} brought in and {{convert|33946|LT|t|abbr=on}} of stores delivered; {{nowrap|34 ships}} were sunk and {{nowrap|33 damaged.}}{{sfn|Playfair|2004b|pp=24–26}} |
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====Bardia raid==== |
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Rommel was impressed by the conduct of the Australians. The heavy losses incurred by the attackers led the commanders of the Italian divisions and the German 5th Light Division to argue against further attacks until better preparations could be made. Rommel decided to hold off further major attacks until the end of November 1941, awaiting the arrival of more German forces and allowing more training of his forces in the art of siege warfare. |
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{{main|Bardia raid}} |
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The Bardia raid was planned for the night of {{nowrap|19/20 April,}} by 'A' Battalion, [[Layforce]] to disrupt Axis lines of communication and damage installations and equipment. The landing force sailed to the area in {{HMS|Glengyle||6}}, escorted by the [[anti-aircraft cruiser]] {{HMS|Coventry|D43|6}} and the [[destroyer]]s {{HMAS|Stuart|D00|6}}, {{HMAS|Voyager|D31|2}} and ''Waterhen''. The Commandos of 'A' Battalion and a troop of tanks from the [[Royal Tank Regiment]] were to land on four beaches from [[Landing Craft Assault]] (LCA). On arrival, one LCA could not be lowered and there were difficulties releasing the others. On the run-in, there were no lights to guide them in, because the advance [[Folding kayak#Second World War|Folbot]] section had been delayed, when their [[submarine]] {{HMS|Triumph|N18|6}} had to dive and take evasive action when it was mistakenly attacked by Allied aircraft.{{sfn|Saunders|2007|p=53}} As a result of these issues the main force was late and landed on the wrong beaches, albeit unopposed. Once ashore the Commandos found that the port was empty of Axis forces and faulty intelligence led to some objectives being missed and others turning out not to exist. The Commandos destroyed an Italian supply dump and a coastal [[artillery battery]] before re-embarking. Seventy men got lost, ended up on the wrong evacuation beach and were captured.{{sfn|Chappell|1996|p=16}} |
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== |
===Battle of the Salient=== |
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[[File:Planning tank operations, Siege of Tobruk cph.3b18203.jpg|thumb|alt=The second battle of Libya. Before zero hour; the Brigadier commanding tank units in Tobruk instructs tank commanders on the operations, using a sand table for demonstration purposes.|British officers plan tank operations]] |
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The Tobruk defenders had been fortunate that Rommel had concentrated his attacks on the strongest parts of the Tobruk defenses which were around Ras el M'dauar. Although the Italians had spent considerable effort in building permanent defensive works, they were at their weakest in the south-east sector, an area overlooked and dominated from without by the hills of Bel Hamed and Sidi Rezegh. The advancing Allies had exploited this when capturing Tobruk from the Italians in January 1941 but, inexplicably, Rommel had ignored this. He appeared to have learned his lesson, however, by June 1942 after the [[Battle of Gazala]] when Tobruk fell relatively easily to Rommel's attack from the south-east.<ref>Hunt (1990), pp. 59-60</ref> |
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After the failure to capture Tobruk off the march, ''[[Comando Supremo]]'' and the ''[[Oberkommando der Wehrmacht]]'' (OKW) agreed that Tobruk should be captured and supplies accumulated, before the advance into Egypt was resumed. Rommel thought that Tobruk could only be taken by a deliberate attack, which could not begin until support units had arrived in the area and the Luftwaffe had been reinforced, particularly with transport aircraft to carry ammunition, fuel and water. On 27 April, Major-General [[Friedrich Paulus]], a Deputy Chief of the General Staff, arrived from ''[[Oberkommando des Heeres]]'' (OKH) in [[Berlin]], to question Rommel on his intentions, impress on him that there was little more help available and to forecast the defensive possibilities of the area, if Sollum was lost. Paulus refused to allow an attack planned for 30 April, until he had studied the situation and on 29 April, allowed the attack to go ahead, as did General [[Italo Gariboldi]] who had arrived on 28 April. Nothing more ambitious than securing the Axis hold on the Egyptian frontier, from Siwa Oasis north to Sollum was envisaged.{{sfn|Playfair|2004a|pp=40–41, 153}} |
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The Tobruk garrison continued work on the defences and sowed minefields, the first being planted in the south-west, between the outer and inner perimeters. Twelve infantry tanks had been delivered among {{convert|5000|LT|t|abbr=on}} of supplies landed during the month, despite Axis bombing of the harbour and the sinking of two supply ships. The Axis attack was to be made in the south-west, either side of the hillock of Ras el Medauar, about two weeks after the previous attempt, using the 5th Light Division on the right and the 15th Panzer Division on the left, even though it had only recently arrived in Africa. At {{nowrap|8:00 p.m.}} on 30 April, the divisions were to break into the Tobruk defences, followed by assault groups from the ''Ariete'' Division and 27th Infantry Division "Brescia" to roll up the flanks. German infantry would press forward to reconnoitre the vicinity of Fort Pilastrino, to see if the attack could continue to the harbour. If not, the Italian infantry would dig in on the flanks and artillery would be moved forward for an attack the next day.{{sfn|Playfair|2004a|pp=153–155}} |
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Both sides set to re-building and re-inforcing: Rommel for a further attack on Tobruk in order to free his threatened lines of communication and resume the advance into Egypt, Wavell to stabilise the front on the Egyptian border and prepare an assault to relieve Tobruk. |
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[[File:Gruppo di ufficiali (tra i generali Gastone Gambara e Alessandro Piazzoni) presso Tobruch nell'autunno 1941.jpg|thumb|{{centre|Group of Italian officers, including Italian Generals [[Gastone Gambara]] and [[Alessandro Piazzoni]], near Tobruk in autumn 1941}}]] |
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In May 1941 Wavell launched [[Operation Brevity]], a relatively minor offensive which attempted to unbalance and disrupt the Axis forces on the border, which achieved little (although it had never been planned as an attempt to relieve Tobruk). |
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The attack came in the area held by the 26th Australian Brigade, which had the 2/23rd and [[2/24th Battalion (Australia)|2/24th battalions]] in the line and the 2/48th Battalion in reserve at Wadi Giaida. The Australians expected an attack, after withstanding bombing and artillery-fire on the perimeter defences on 29 April; Axis troops seen massing in the evening of 30 April had been dispersed by artillery-fire. The posts either side of Ras el Medauar were shelled and bombed and German troops began to dribble forward, under cover of dust and the gathering darkness. By {{nowrap|9:30 p.m.,}} the Germans made a small bridgehead as planned but several Australian posts held out, the reconnaissance party vanished and the Italian troops were not able to reach their objectives. The night passed in confused fighting as the Germans tried to reorganise and mop up at Ras el Medauar and attack south-westwards along the perimeter. The new attack failed and by morning, some of the Australian posts were still holding out.{{sfn|Playfair|2004a|p=155}} |
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A thick mist rose and German tanks moved eastwards instead of south-east and then ran into the new minefield, where they were engaged by anti-tank guns and repulsed. Tanks of the 15th Panzer Division, tried to drive north but were prevented by anti-tank fire. No German reserves were left and the most advanced troops were south of Wadi Giaida, tired and isolated in a sandstorm. Paulus judged that the attack had failed and Rommel decided to attack on the right to widen the breach. In the afternoon, German tanks attacked south-east towards Bir el Medauar and Morshead sent {{nowrap|15 cruiser}} and five infantry tanks to counter-attack. The German attack was stopped for a loss of five British tanks and in the evening, the Australian [[2/48th Battalion]] counter-attacked Ras el Medauar but met determined resistance and was repulsed. During the day, 73 and 274 Squadrons had maintained standing patrols over the area and on the morning of 2 May, the fighting around Wadi Giaida continued in a dust storm, as German troops tried to trickle forward. On the night of 3 May, the 18th Australian Brigade made a converging counter-attack with two battalions, which lost co-ordination, failed and was ended, to avoid being caught in the open at daybreak.{{sfn|Playfair|2004a|pp=155–156}} |
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==The Siege== |
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The besieging troops were mainly Italian belonging to the following 5 Divisions: the "Ariete" and "Trieste" (the XX Motorised Corps), the "Pavia", "Bologna", and "Brescia" (the XXI Infantry Corps). The Italian commanders remained determined to enter the beleaguered town. On the night of [[16 May]], two platoons of the 32nd Combat Sappers Battalion breached the barbed wire entanglements and minefields guarding the forward bunkers manned by the 2/9th and 2/10th Battalions.<ref> [http://www.guastatori.it/1941-1945/xxxii_btg.htm ''(Italian)'']{{verify credibility|date=January 2008}}</ref><!--What is this citation? What official standing does it have, who wrote it etc.. It is most unstisfactory to have a link to a web page that has no identification on it. It might just as well be random--> With the obstacles removed, the "Brescia" Division who brought flame-thrower parties and tanks assaulted the defences and overpowered a number of bunkered platoons. The desperate defenders fought back with terrible ferocity and the Commanding Officer of the 32nd Combat Sappers, Colonel Emilio Caizzo was killed in a satchel attack on an Australian machine-gun position which was to earn him a posthumous Gold Medal. Although the Australian Official History describes losing three positions to German attackers<ref>[http://www.awm.gov.au/cms_images/histories/19/chapters/07.pdf Maughan (1966), p.250]</ref> an Italian narrative has recorded:{{quote|On the night on 16 May, 1941, two platoons of the 3rd Combat Engineer Company in union with assault groups of the "Brescia" Infantry Division, which had been sent as reinforcements on the 11th of that month, initiated the attack. With total disregard to danger and usual stealthness the combat sappers open three paths in the wire fencing in front of each assault group . They use explosive chages in tubes. Fighting side by side with the assaulters, in fierce hand-to-hand combat, they inflict heavy losses on the enemy conquering the objective.<ref>[http://www.guastatori.it/1941-1945/xxxii_btg.htm ''(Italian)''{{verify credibility|date=January 2008}}]</ref>}}<!--Ditto--> |
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The Axis attack had overrun the perimeter defences on a {{convert|3|mi|km|abbr=on}} front, to a maximum depth of {{convert|2|mi|km|abbr=on}} and captured higher ground useful as a jumping-off position and from which observation points could be established, for a loss of {{nowrap|650 German}} and {{nowrap|500 Italian}} casualties. The [[8th Bersaglieri Regiment]] of the 132nd Armoured Division "Ariete" had captured most of the Australian positions.{{sfn|Dominioni|Izzo|1967|p=18}} Paulus ordered that no more attacks be made, unless the Allies were evacuating the port. The ''DAK'' was to hold Cyrenaica regardless of who held Sollum, Bardia or Tobruk and a new line was to be built further back at Gazala. In a report on 12 May, Paulus wrote that sea communications between Italy and Libya should be reinforced, that any air and anti-aircraft units sent to Libya should be German and that the army in Libya needed ammunition, fuel and food first, then more vehicles before the dispatch of more men, of whom medium artillery and anti-tank gun crews should have priority. The Tobruk garrison settled into a routine of patrols, air raids and minor attacks, some to regain positions in the Medauar salient and some in connexion with WDF operations.{{sfn|Playfair|2004a|pp=156–157}} |
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Major-General Leslie Morsehead was furious and ordered the Australians to be far more vigilant in the future.<ref>[http://www.awm.gov.au/cms_images/histories/19/chapters/07.pdf Maughan (1966), p.251]</ref> |
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====Twin Pimples raid==== |
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==All change in the Tobruk defenses== |
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{{main|Twin Pimples raid}} |
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In the summer of 1941 the Prime Minister of Australia, [[John Curtin]], insisted on the withdrawal of 9th Australian Division from Tobruk. Based on reports from Australian H.Q. Middle East that the health of the troops had been suffering he rejected requests from Winston Churchill to change his mind and the replacement of the division was effected by the [[Royal Navy]] during August and September.<ref>Hunt (1990), p. 66</ref> |
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[[File:Tobruk trenches.jpg|thumb|alt=Australian troops in trench system|{{centre|Australian entrenchment on the Tobruk perimeter}}]] |
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The Twin Pimples was a defensive strong point outside Tobruk, on two hills close together which overlooked the Tobruk perimeter. It was held by the Italian Army, and the 18th King Edward's Own Cavalry (normally part of the 3rd Indian Motor Brigade) held the perimeter opposite. No. 8 Commando was selected to carry out an attack on the Twin Pimples, which conducted patrols for several days with the Indians, to reconnoitre the ground.{{sfn|Mountbatten|2007|p=39}} The 18th Cavalry Regiment was to mount a diversion, while {{nowrap|43 members}} of No. 8 Commando and some [[Royal Australian Engineers|Australian Engineers]] crossed the Italian forward positions and a supply road, to attack the Twin Pimples from behind.{{sfn|Mountbatten|2007|p=40}} |
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The Commandos advanced at {{nowrap|11:00 p.m.}} on the night of {{nowrap|July 17 and 18}} and crossed the Italian lines undetected. At the supply road they took cover, waited until {{nowrap|1:00 a.m.}} and edged forward just before the diversion by the 18th Cavalry. The diversion attracted Italian machine-gun fire and [[Very light]]s, as the Commandos got within {{convert|30|yd|m|abbr=on}} of the Twin Pimples before challenge, at which the commandos attacked. The password ''Jock'' was used when a position had been taken and the Italians were swiftly overcome. The Australian engineers planted explosives on several [[Mortar (weapon)|mortars]] and an ammunition dump. The plan assumed that it would take {{nowrap|15 minutes}} for Italian artillery to open fire on the captured trenches, and the raiders were only about {{convert|100|yd|m|abbr=on}} away when shelling began to come down onto the position they had just departed.{{sfn|Mountbatten|2007|p=40}} |
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As the Australians were gradually withdrawn they were replaced by the [[British 70th Infantry Division]], the [[Polish Independent Carpathian Brigade|Polish Carpathian Brigade]] and [[Czechoslovak 11th Infantry Battalion]] (East). Moreshaed was succeeded as commander of the Tobruk fortress by 70th Division's commander, Major-General [[Ronald Scobie]]. |
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==Relief operations== |
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==Allied Attempts to Lift the Siege== |
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===Operation Brevity=== |
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{{Main|Operation Brevity}} |
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Operation Brevity {{nowrap|(15–16 May)}} was a limited offensive to inflict attrition on the Axis forces and to secure positions for a general offensive towards Tobruk. The Allies attacked with a small tank-infantry force in three columns and seized the top of the Halfaya Pass, Bir Wair and [[Musaid]], then pressed on and took Fort Capuzzo. The coast group failed to capture the bottom of the Halfaya Pass. The garrison on the east side of the Tobruk defences was strengthened in case of a sortie and a German counter-attack recovered Musaid. The coast group eventually overran the foot of the pass; but, the next day, Allied retirements against German counter-attacks to a line from Sidi Omar to Sidi Suleiman and Sollum, left all but Halfaya Pass in German hands. On 26 May, [[Operation Skorpion]], a German attack on the pass, succeeded and the Allies were ejected.{{sfn|Lewin|1998|p=43}} Brevity failed to achieve most of its objectives, only briefly holding the Halfaya Pass. The Allies lost {{nowrap|206 casualties,}} five tanks destroyed and {{nowrap|13 damaged.}} German casualties were {{nowrap|258 men,}} three tanks destroyed and several damaged. The Italians had {{nowrap|395 casualties,}} of whom {{nowrap|347 were}} captured.{{sfn|Greene|Massignani|1994|p=70}} On 12 May, the Tiger convoy lost one ship and arrived in Alexandria with {{nowrap|238 tanks,}} to re-equip the 7th Armoured Division and {{nowrap|43 aircraft;}} on 28 May, planning began for Operation Battleaxe.{{sfn|Playfair|2004a|pp=159–163}} |
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===Operation Battleaxe=== |
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{{main|Operation Battleaxe}} |
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[[File:BattleaxeDay1.PNG|thumb|{{centre|Operation Battleaxe (Day 1)}}]] |
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[[File:Smiling Indian Soldiers in Tobruk 1941.jpg|thumb|A group of smiling [[Indian Army during World War II|Indian soldiers]] in Tobruk, 4 October 1941]] |
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Operation Battleaxe, {{nowrap|15–17 June 1941}} was intended to lift the siege of Tobruk and capture eastern Cyrenaica. The attack was to be conducted by the 7th Armoured Division and a composite infantry force based on the 4th Indian Division headquarters, with two brigades. The infantry were to attack in the area of Bardia, Sollum, Halfaya and Capuzzo, with the tanks guarding the southern flank. The Tobruk garrison was to stand by but not to sortie until XIII Corps drew close. The Halfaya Pass attack failed, Point 206 was captured and only one of three attacks on Hafid Ridge succeeded. |
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At the end of 15 June only {{nowrap|48 British}} tanks remained operational and next day, a German counter-attack forced back the Allies on the western flank but was repulsed in the centre; the Allies were reduced to {{nowrap|21 Cruiser tanks}} and {{nowrap|17 Infantry tanks.}} On 17 June, the Allies evaded encirclement by two Panzer regiments and ended the operation. The Allies had {{nowrap|969 casualties,}} {{nowrap|27 cruiser}} and {{nowrap|64 Infantry tanks}} were knocked out or broke down and lost; the RAF lost {{nowrap|36 aircraft.}} German losses were {{nowrap|678 men}} (Italian losses are unknown), twelve tanks and ten aircraft. [[General (United Kingdom)|General]] Wavell, the XIII Corps commander, Lieutenant-General [[Noel Beresford-Peirse]] and Major-General [[Michael O'Moore Creagh]] the 7th Armoured Division commander were sacked and [[Claude Auchinleck]] took over as [[Commander-in-Chief]] of the Middle East.{{sfn|Playfair|2004a|pp=163–174}} |
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====Australian relief in place==== |
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[[File:Men of the Leicestershire Rgt. man a Bren gun near Tobruk.jpg|thumb|right|alt=|{{centre|Men of the 2nd Battalion, Leicestershire Regiment in defences around Tobruk, 10 November 1941.}}]] |
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{{Sectstub}} |
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In mid-1941, Blamey, as commander of the [[Second Australian Imperial Force|Australian Imperial Force]] (AIF), with the support of the Australian government, requested the withdrawal of the 9th Division from Tobruk. Blamey wrote that the health of the Australian division had deteriorated "to the point where it was not longer capable of resisting attack"; he also wanted to unite Australian forces in the Middle East. Auchinleck agreed but noted that a troop movement this big could only be made by fast warships during moonless periods, to evade air attacks. The Mediterranean Fleet was busy elsewhere, the Inshore Squadron was carrying supplies into Tobruk and Operation Crusader was being prepared. The Australian withdrawal began in the August non-moon period and from {{nowrap|19–29 August,}} {{nowrap|6,116 men}} of the [[Polish government in exile|Polish]] [[Polish Independent Carpathian Brigade|Carpathian Independent Rifle Brigade]] and [[Czechoslovak 11th Infantry Battalion]] and {{convert|1297|LT|t|abbr=on}} of stores were landed.{{sfn|Playfair|2004b|pp=23–25}} |
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An unsuccessful attempt to relieve the forces at Tobruk by land. |
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[[Operation Battleaxe]] ([[June 15]] - [[June 17|17]], [[1941]]) |
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The navy took out {{nowrap|5,040 men}} of the [[18th Australian Infantry Brigade]] and the Indian 18th King Edward's Own Cavalry, on three destroyers, a minelayer and one destroyer carrying supplies, with cruiser escorts as anti-aircraft ships, a cruiser and a destroyer being damaged. From {{nowrap|19–27 September,}} the British [[16th Infantry Brigade (United Kingdom)|16th Infantry Brigade]], [[70th Infantry Division (United Kingdom)|70th Infantry Division]] (Major-General [[Ronald Scobie]]), the HQ of the [[32nd Army Tank Brigade (United Kingdom)|32nd Army Tank Brigade]] and the [[4th Royal Tank Regiment]] with {{nowrap|6,308 men}} and more {{convert|2000|LT|t|0|abbr=on}} of supplies arrived, while {{nowrap|5,989 men}} of the 24th Australian Infantry Brigade left, with no loss of ships. From {{nowrap|12–25 October,}} the rest of the 70th Infantry Division was delivered and most of the Australians removed. Ship losses on normal delivery runs, led to the [[2/13th Battalion (Australia)|2/13th Australian Battalion]] and two companies of the [[2/15th Battalion (Australia)|2/15th Battalion]] remaining in Tobruk. Command of the garrison passed from Morshead to Scobie.{{sfn|Playfair|2004b|pp=25–26}} |
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===Operation Crusader=== |
===Operation Crusader=== |
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{{main|Operation Crusader}} |
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{{Sectstub}} |
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[[File:General Sikorski visit.jpg|thumb|{{centre|General Sikorski visiting Polish soldiers in Tobruk}}]] |
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A successfult attempt to relieve the Forces at Tobruk by land. |
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Operation Crusader began on 18 November 1941, with an outflanking movement that brought the Eighth Army to within {{convert|48|km|mi|order=flip|abbr=on}} of the Tobruk perimeter. It was planned that the 70th Infantry Division would break out from Tobruk on 21 December, to cut the German line of communication to the troops on the border to the south-east. The 7th Armoured Division would advance from Sidi Rezegh, to rendezvous and roll up the Axis positions around Tobruk. The [[2nd New Zealand Division]], attached to XIII Corps, would take advantage of the distraction of the [[21st Panzer Division]] and [[15th Panzer Division]] and advance to the [[Sidi Azeiz Airfield|Sidi Azeiz]] area, overlooking the Axis defences at Bardia. The 70th Infantry Division attack surprised Rommel, who had underestimated the size of the garrison and number of tanks in Tobruk. A three-pronged attack by the 2nd King's Own on the right flank, the 2nd Battalion, [[Black Watch]] in the centre and the [[The Queen's Own Royal West Kent Regiment|2nd Queen's Own]] on the left flank, advanced to capture a series of strong points leading to Ed Duda.{{sfn|Maughan|1966|pp=439–442}} |
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[[Operation Crusader]] ([[November 18]] - [[December 10]], [[1941]]) |
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By mid-afternoon, the Allies had advanced about {{convert|3.5|mi|km|abbr=on}} towards Ed Duda on the main supply road, where they paused as it became clear that 7th Armoured Division would not arrive.{{sfn|Murphy|1961|pp=91–93}} The central attack by the Black Watch, involved a charge under massed machine-gun fire to strongpoint ''Tiger'', which incurred 201 casualties. On 22 November, Scobie ordered the position to be consolidated and the corridor widened, ready for the Eighth Army. The [[2nd Battalion, York and Lancaster Regiment|2nd York and Lancaster Regiment]] with tank support, took strong point ''Lion'' leaving a {{convert|7000|yd|m|abbr=on}} gap between the corridor and Ed Duda. On 26 November, Scobie ordered an attack on the Ed Duda ridge and in the early hours of 27 November, the Tobruk garrison captured the ridge and later met a small force of New Zealanders advancing from the south. The 7th Armoured Division had planned its attack northwards to Tobruk for {{nowrap|8:30 a.m.}} on 21 November. At {{nowrap|7:45 a.m.}} patrols reported the arrival from the south-east of about {{nowrap|200 tanks.}} The 7th Armoured Brigade and a battery of field artillery turned to meet this threat and without the tanks, the northward attack by the Support Group failed; by the end of the day, the 7th Armoured Brigade had only {{nowrap|40 of 160 tanks}} operational.{{sfn|Neillands|2004|p=90}} |
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==Referances== |
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* {{cite book| first=Peter |last=Fitzsimons| authorlink=Peter FitzSimons| title=Tobruk| location= New York| publisher=Harper Collins| date=2006| isbn=0-73227-645-4}} |
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* {{cite book| first=Frank |last=Harrison| title=Tobruk: The Great Siege Reassessed| publisher=Brockhampton Press| edition=| date=1999| isbn=1-86019-986-0| origdate=1996}} |
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*{{cite book|last=Hunt| first=Sir David| authorlink=David Hunt (diplomat) |date=1990| origdate=1966| title=A Don at War|location=London| publisher=F. Cass| isbn=0-71463-383-6}} |
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*{{cite book|authorlink=| first=Thomas L.| last=Jentz| coauthors=| title=Tank Combat In North Africa: The Opening Rounds, Opertions Sonnenblume, Brevity, Skorpion and Battleaxe, February 1941 - June 1941| publisher=Schiffer Publishing Ltd| date=1998| location=| origdate=| isbn=0-76430-226-4}} |
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* {{cite book| first=Jon |last=Latimer| authorlink=Jon Latimer| title=Tobruk 1941: Rommel's Opening Move| publisher=Greenwood Press| isbn=0-27598-287-4}} |
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* {{cite book|last=Long| first=Gavin| url=http://www.awm.gov.au/histories/chapter.asp?volume=17 |title=Official History of Australia in the Second World War Volume I – To Benghazi. Chapters 6 -12| series=Series 1 - Army|date=1961| origdate=1952| publisher=Australian War Memorial| location=Canberra|pages=}} |
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* {{cite book|last=Maughan| first=Barton| url=http://www.awm.gov.au/histories/chapter.asp?volume=19 |title=Official History of Australia in the Second World War Volume III – Tobruk and El Alamein. Chapters 4 - 9| series=Series 1 - Army|date=1966| origdate=| publisher=Australian War Memorial| location=Canberra|pages=}} |
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* {{cite book| url=http://www-cgsc.army.mil/carl/download/csipubs/9thaustr/9th_part1.pdf |first=Col. Ward A.| last=Miller |publisher=Combat Studies Institute, U.S. Army| date=1986| title=The 9th Australian Division Versus the Africa Corps: An Infantry Division Against Tanks-Tobruk, Libya, 1941| accessdate=2007-03-09}}. |
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* {{cite book| first=Major General I.S.O.| last=Playfair| authorlink=Ian Stanley Ord Playfair| coauthors=and others| title=History of the Second World War, Mediterranean and Middle East volume II: The Germans Come to the Help of Their Ally" (1941)| series=United Kingdom Military Series| publisher=Naval & Military Press |location=East Sussex, UK|date=2006| isbn=1-84734-427-5| origdate=1956}} |
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*{{cite book |last=Rommel|first=Erwin|coauthors=Findlay, Paul (translator); [[Basil Liddell Hart|Liddel Hart, Basil]] (editor)|authorlink=Erwin Rommel|title=The Rommel Papers |year=1982|month=March|publisher=Da Capo Press |location=|format=paperback |edition=New edition|origyear=1953 |language= |isbn=0-30680-157-4|pages=545 pages}} |
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[[File:Tobruk 1941 - British Matilda tanks.jpg|thumb|upright=0.75|{{centre|[[Matilda II|Matilda tanks]] at Tobruk, September 1941}}]] |
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==External links== |
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On 22 November, the [[25th Infantry Division "Bologna"]] repulsed an attack from Tobruk towards Sidi Rezegh and next day, Rommel sent the ''Afrika Korps'' towards the Egyptian border (the Dash to the Wire) to exploit the victory and destroy XXX Corps. The blow mostly fell on empty desert and gave the Eighth Army time to regroup and re-arm. The ''Afrika Korps'' was ordered back to Tobruk, where the 70th Infantry Division and the New Zealand Division had gained the initiative. At noon on 27 November, the 15th Panzer Division reached Bir el Chleta and met the [[22nd Armoured Brigade (United Kingdom)|22nd Armoured Brigade]] (reduced to a composite regiment of fewer than fifty tanks), which was joined later by the 4th Armoured Brigade. As night fell the British tanks disengaged and the New Zealand Division, fighting at the south-east end of the corridor into Tobruk, was endangered by the ''Afrika Korps''.{{sfn|Murphy|1961|p=355}} On 4 December, Rommel attacked Ed Duda and was repulsed by the [[British 14th Infantry Brigade|14th Infantry Brigade]] of the 70th Infantry Division. Rommel ordered a retirement from the eastern perimeter of Tobruk, to concentrate against XXX Corps to the south. On 7 December, the 4th Armoured Brigade engaged 15th Panzer Division and knocked out eleven tanks. Rommel was told on 5 December, by ''Comando Supremo'' that supply could not improve until the end of the month, when airborne deliveries from Sicily began. Rommel decided to abandon Tobruk and withdraw to Gazala, which led to the relief of Tobruk and the occupation of Cyrenaica.{{sfn|Playfair|2004b|pp=73–87}} |
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*[http://www.kki.pl/piojar/brygad/brygad/tobruk/tobruk_e.html Polish Carpathian Brigade in the defence of Tobruk] |
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*[http://www.guastatori.it/1941-1945/xxxii_btg.htm The Italian 32nd Combat Sappers Battalion] |
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==Aftermath== |
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*[http://digilander.libero.it/avantisavoiait/I%20Bersaglieri%20in%20Africa.htm The Bersaglieri in North Africa (2003)] |
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===Analysis=== |
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*[http://www.comandosupremo.com/1941.html The Italian War Effort in 1941] |
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{|class="wikitable floatright" align="right" |
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*[http://www.kki.krakow.pl/piojar/brygad/brygad/tobruk/tobruk_e.html The Characteristic of Tobruk defence in 1941] |
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|+Allied naval casualties<br>on Tobruk supply operations.{{sfn|Harrison|1996|p=338}} |
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*[http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/ww2/A1124777 BBC - WW2 People's War - Siege of Tobruk] |
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|- |
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*[http://www.awm.gov.au/encyclopedia/tobruk/ Australian War Memorial - Siege of Tobruk] |
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! Service |
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*[http://www.svetskirat.net/istorija/afrika.htm Siege of Tobruk] |
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! Killed/<br>missing |
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! Wounded |
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! Total |
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|- |
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|RN, RAN||align="right"|469||align="right"|186||align="right"|655 |
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|- |
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|Merchant<br>Navy||align="right"|70||align="right"|55||align="right"|125 |
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|- |
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!'''Total'''||align="right"|'''539'''||align="right"|'''241'''||align="right"|'''780''' |
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|} |
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For much of the siege, Tobruk was defended by the 9th Australian Division and other troops. Wavell ordered Morshead to defend the port for eight weeks; the Australians held on for over five months, before being gradually withdrawn during September and replaced by the 70th Infantry Division, the Polish Carpathian Brigade and Czechoslovak 11th Infantry Battalion (East). The fresh defenders held Tobruk until they broke out on 21 November and held open an {{convert|8|mi|km|abbr=on}} corridor, unsupported for several days, then captured Ed Duda on 27 November, to link with the advancing Eighth Army, during Operation Crusader.{{sfn|Playfair|2004b|pp=73–81}}{{sfn|Harrison|1996|p=325}} |
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[[File:Long line of German prisoners from the Siege of Tobruk cph.3b18198.jpg|thumb|German POW]] |
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The [[Tobruk Ferry Service]], made up of Royal Navy and Royal Australian Navy warships, played an important role in the defence of Tobruk providing gunfire support, supplies, fresh troops and by ferrying out the wounded. Control of Tobruk was useful to the Allies because it was the only significant port east of Benghazi and west of Alexandria. The supply of Axis troops on the Egyptian frontier could have been eased by sea transport to Tobruk. The siege of Tobruk was the first occasion in the war that German Panzer units had been stopped.{{sfn|McDonald|2004|p=204}} The siege of Tobruk was lifted in December 1941 in the course of Operation Crusader. Axis forces re-captured the port on 21 June 1942, after defeating the Eighth Army in the [[Battle of Gazala]].{{sfn|Playfair|2004b|pp=223–277}} During the course of the siege, two destroyers, three sloops, seven anti-submarine vessels and minesweepers, seven store carriers and schooners, six A lighters and one fast minelayer were sunk, a total of 26 ships. Seven destroyers, a sloop, eleven anti-submarine and minesweeping vessels, three gunboats and a schooner were damaged, a total of 23 vessels. Six Merchant Navy ships and a schooner were sunk and six merchant ships were damaged; a total of 62 ships were sunk or damaged.{{sfn|Harrison|1996|p=338}} |
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===Casualties=== |
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{|class="wikitable floatright" align=right |
|||
|+'''Siege of Tobruk<br>Allied ground forces casualties<br>10 April – 27 November 1941'''{{sfn|Harrison|1996|p=338}} |
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! Forces |
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! Killed |
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! Wounded |
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! Missing |
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! Total |
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|- |
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|Australian||align="right"|744||align="right"|1,974||align="right"|476||align="right"|3,194 |
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|- |
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|British||align="right"|88||align="right"|406||align="right"|15||align="right"|509 |
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|- |
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|Indian||align="right"|1||align="right"|25||align="right"|0||align="right"|26 |
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|- |
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|Polish||align="right"|22||align="right"|82||align="right"|3||align="right"|107 |
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|- |
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|Sub-totals||align="right"|855||align="right"|2,487||align="right"|494||align="right"|3,836 |
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|- |
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|70th<br>Division||align="right"|—||align="right"|—||align="right"|—||align="right"|2,153 |
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|- |
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|'''Total'''||align="right"|—||align="right"|—||align="right"|—||align="right"|'''5,989''' |
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|} |
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The Rats of Tobruk suffered at least {{nowrap|3,836 casualties,}} there being a small difference in Australian casualty figures quoted in the Australian and British official histories. Most of the Australian garrison withdrew from Tobruk between August and October but others remained in Tobruk for the duration.{{sfn|Maughan|1966|p=395}} In [[Australia in the War of 1939–1945]] (1967) the Australian Official History, Maughan recorded 9th Australian Division casualties from {{nowrap|8 April – 25 October,}} including two days before the siege started, as {{nowrap|746 killed,}} {{nowrap|1,996 wounded,}} {{nowrap|604 prisoners,}} that {{nowrap|507 Australians}} were captured between 28 March 1941 and the investment of Tobruk and {{nowrap|467 more}} were taken during the siege.{{sfn|Maughan|1966|pp=401, 755}} |
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In the [[History of the Second World War|British Official History]] (1956), Playfair calculated the losses in the table created by Harrison in 1999.{{sfn|Playfair|2004b|p=26}}{{sfn|Harrison|1996|p=228}} When Harrison calculated other losses, there was no RAF casualty list but he recorded ten aircrew and six ground crew burials at the cemetery and six aircrew shot down in the harbour.{{sfn|Harrison|1996|p=228}} Italian casualties from 15 February to 18 November were {{nowrap|1,130 killed,}} {{nowrap|4,255 wounded}} and {{nowrap|3,851 missing.}} Libyan losses were {{nowrap|184 killed}} and German casualties for the same period were about {{nowrap|538 killed,}} {{nowrap|1,657 wounded,}} about {{nowrap|681 missing}} and from {{nowrap|74–150 Axis}} aircraft shot down.{{sfn|ITOH|1974|pp=258–259}}{{sfn|Maughan|1966|p=413}} |
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==Fiction films== |
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* ''[[The Rats of Tobruk (1944 film)|The Rats of Tobruk]]'' is a 1944 Australian film about the siege, focusing upon the Australian defenders. |
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* [[The Desert Rats (film)|''The Desert Rats'']] is a 1953 film about the siege. It also emphasised the Australian defenders but had a number of historical inaccuracies and omissions. |
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* [[Tobruk (1967 film)|''Tobruk'']] is a 1967 film which dramatised raids on the Germans. |
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* ''[[Raid on Rommel]]'' is a 1971 movie that used some of the earlier film from ''Tobruk''. |
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* [[Tobruk (2008 film)|''Tobruk'']] is a 2008 film about a [[Czechoslovakia|Czechoslovak]] soldier's disillusionment with war. |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
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* [[John Hurst Edmondson]] - [[Victoria Cross|VC recipient]] during the siege |
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* [[North African campaign timeline]] |
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* [[Desert Rats]] |
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* [[List of World War II Battles]] |
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* [[John Hurst Edmondson]]: [[Victoria Cross]] recipient during the siege |
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* [[Rats of Tobruk]] |
* [[Rats of Tobruk]] |
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* [[ |
* [[Twin Pimples raid]] |
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* [[Africa Star]] |
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*[[List of British military equipment of World War II]] |
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*[[List of Australian military equipment of World War II]] |
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*[[List of German military equipment of World War II]] |
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*[[List of Italian military equipment in World War II]] |
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*[[British capture of Tobruk|British Capture of Tobruk]] |
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== |
==Citations== |
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{{ |
{{Reflist}} |
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==References== |
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{{Refbegin}} |
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'''Books''' |
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* {{cite book |last=Admiralty |first=British |title=British merchant vessels lost or damaged by enemy action during Second World War, 3rd September, 1939 to 2nd September, 1945 |year=1947 |publisher=[[Her Majesty's Stationery Office]] |location=London}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Chappell |first=M. |title=Army Commandos 1940–1945 |year=1996 |series=Elite |number=64 |publisher=Osprey |location=Oxford |isbn=978-1-85532-579-1}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Creveld |first=M. van |author-link=Martin van Creveld |title=Supplying War: Logistics from Wallenstein to Patton |year=1977 |location=Cambridge |publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] |isbn=978-0-521-29793-6}} |
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* {{cite book |series=Testimonianze fra cronaca e storia |number=203 |title=Takfír: Cronaca dell'ultima Battaglia di Alamein |trans-title=Takfír: Chronicle of the Last Battle of Alamein |language=it |last1=Dominioni |first1=P. C. |last2=Izzo |first2=G. |year=1967 |publisher=Ugo Mursia Editore |location=Milano |oclc=163936563}} |
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* {{cite book |last1=Greene |first=J. |last2=Massignani |first2=A. |title=Rommel's North Africa Campaign: September 1940 – November 1942 |year=1994 |publisher=Combined Books |location=Conshohocken, PA |isbn=978-0-585-19391-5}} |
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* {{cite book |ref={{harvid|Harrison|1996}} |
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|first=F. |last=Harrison |title=Tobruk: The Great Siege Reassessed |publisher=Brockhampton Press |location=London |year=1999 |orig-year=1996 |isbn=978-1-86019-986-8}} |
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* {{cite book |ref={{harvid|ITOH|1974}} |
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|series=Ufficio storico |title=La Prima controffensiva italo-tedesca in Africa settentrionale: (15 febbraio – 18 novembre 1941) |trans-title=The First Italian-German Counter-offensive in North Africa: (15 February – 18 November 1941) Annex 32 |volume=I |language=it |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|year=1974 |publisher=Ministero della difesa, Stato maggiore dell'Esercito |location=Roma |oclc=13007244}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Lewin |first=R. |year=1998 |orig-year=1968 |title=Rommel as Military Commander |publisher=B&N Books |location=New York |isbn=978-0-7607-0861-3 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/rommelasmilitary0000lewi }} |
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* {{cite book |ref={{harvid|Luck|1989}} |
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|last=von Luck |first=H. |author-link=Hans von Luck |title=Panzer Commander: The Memoirs of Colonel Hans von Luck |year=1989 |location=New York |publisher=Dell (Random House) |isbn=978-0-440-20802-0}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Maughan |first=B. |url=https://www.awm.gov.au/collection/RCDIG1070202/ |series=Australia in the War of 1939–1945 Series 1 (Army) |title=Tobruk and El Alamein |volume=III |year=1966 |edition=1st online |publisher=[[Australian War Memorial]] |location=Canberra |oclc=954993}} |
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* {{cite book |first=N. |last=McDonald |title=Chester Wilmot Reports |location=Sydney |publisher=ABC Books |year=2004 |isbn=978-0-7333-1441-4}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Mountbatten |first=L. |author-link=Louis Mountbatten, 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma |year=2007 |title=Combined Operations: The Official Story of the Commandos |publisher=Read Books |location=London |isbn=978-1-4067-5957-0}} |
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* {{cite book |url=http://www.nzetc.org/tm/scholarly/tei-WH2Tobr-_N66107.html |series=The Official History of New Zealand in the Second World War 1939–1945 |title=The Relief of Tobruk |edition=online|access-date=18 March 2015 |last=Murphy |first=W. E. |editor-last=Fairbrother |editor-first=M. C. |year=1961 |publisher=War History Branch, Department of Internal Affairs |location=Wellington, NZ |oclc=846906679}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Neillands |first=R. |title=Eighth Army: From the Western Desert to the Alps |year=2004 |publisher=John Murray |location=London |isbn=978-0-7195-5647-0}} |
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* {{cite book |ref={{harvid|Playfair|1954}} |
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|last1=Playfair |first1=Major-General I. S. O. |author1-link=Ian Stanley Ord Playfair |first2=Commander G. M. S. |last2=Stitt [[Royal Navy|RN]] |first3=Brigadier C. J. C. |last3=Molony |first4=Air Vice-Marshal S. E. |last4=Toomer |editor-last=Butler |editor-first=J. R. M. |editor-link=James Ramsay Montagu Butler |series=History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Military Series |title=The Mediterranean and Middle East: The Early Successes Against Italy (to May 1941) |volume=I |publisher=HMSO |year=1959 |orig-year=1954 |others=3rd impression |oclc=888934805 |display-authors=1}} |
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* {{cite book |ref={{harvid|Playfair|2004a}} |
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|last1=Playfair |first1=Major-General I. S. O. |first2=Captain F. C. |last2=Flynn RN |first3=Brigadier C. J. C. |last3=Molony |first4=Air Vice-Marshal S. E. |last4=Toomer |editor-last=Butler |editor-first=J. R. M. |series=History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Military Series |title=The Mediterranean and Middle East: The Germans Come to the Help of their Ally (1941) |volume=II |publisher=Naval & Military Press |year=2004 |orig-year=1st. pub. [[HMSO]] 1956 |isbn=978-1-84574-066-5 |display-authors=1}} |
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* {{cite book |ref={{harvid|Playfair|2004b}} |
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|last1=Playfair |first1=Major-General I. S. O. |last2=Flynn |first2=Captain F. C. RN |last3=Molony |first3=Brigadier C. J. C. |last4=Gleave |first4=Group Captain T. P. |editor-last=Butler |editor-first=Sir James |series=History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Military Series |title=The Mediterranean and Middle East: British Fortunes reach their Lowest Ebb (September 1941 to September 1942) |volume=III |publisher=Naval & Military Press |location=Uckfield |year=2004 |orig-year=1st. pub. HMSO: 1960 |isbn=978-1-84574-067-2 |display-authors=1}} |
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* {{cite book |ref={{harvid|Saunders|2007}} |
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|last1=Saunders |first1=H. St. G. |last2=Mountbatten |first2=Louis |author-link=Louis Mountbatten |title=Combined Operations: The Official Story of the Commandos |publisher=[[HMSO]] |location=London |edition=Read Books |year=2007 |orig-year=1943 |isbn=978-1-4067-5957-0}} |
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* {{cite book |ref={{harvid|PRO|2001}} |
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|series=Public Record Office War Histories |title=The Rise and Fall of the German Air Force (Air 41/10) |number=248 |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |year=2001 |orig-year=1948 |publisher=Air Ministry |location=Richmond, Surrey |edition=repr. |isbn=978-1-903365-30-4}} |
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* {{cite book |last1=Ring |first1=Hans |last2=Shores |first2=Christopher |year=1969 |title=Fighters over the desert: the air battles in the Western Desert, June 1940 to December 1942 |location=London, UK |publisher=Neville Spearman |isbn=978-0-85435-060-5}} |
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* {{cite book |last1=Shores |first1=Christopher F. |last2=Massimello |first2=Giovanni |last3=Guest |first3=Russell |year=2012 |title=A History of the Mediterranean Air War 1940–1945: North Africa: June 1940 – February 1942 |volume=I |location=London, UK |publisher=Grub Street |isbn=978-1-9081-17076}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Smith |first=Peter |year=2011 |title= The Junkers Ju 87 Stuka: A Complete History |location=London, UK |publisher=Crecy Publishing Limited |isbn=978-0-85979-156-4}} |
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* {{cite book | last=Weal | first=John | title=Junkers Ju 87 in North Africa and the Mediterranean | publisher=Osprey Aviation | publication-place=London | year=1998 | isbn=978-1-85532-722-1 | oclc=40883686}} |
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'''Websites''' |
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* {{cite web |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |title=I Bersaglieri in Africa Settentrionale |trans-title=The Bersaglieri in North Africa |language=it |work=Avanti Savoia website |year=2003 |access-date=5 April 2015 |url=http://digilander.libero.it/avantisavoiait/I%20Bersaglieri%20in%20Africa.htm}} |
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{{Refend}} |
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==Further reading== |
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{{Refbegin}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Beaumont |first=J. |year=1996 |title=Australia's War, 1939–45 |location=Melbourne |publisher=Allen & Unwin |isbn=978-1-86448-039-9}} |
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* {{cite book |title=Tobruk: The Great Siege, 1941–42 |first=W. F. |last=Buckingham |publisher=Tempus |location=Stroud |year=2012 |isbn=978-0-7524-4501-4}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Combes |first=D. |title=Morshead: Hero of Tobruk and El Alamein |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=Melbourne |year=2001 |isbn=978-0-19-551398-1}} |
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* {{cite book |series=Australian Army History |title=Armies of Empire: The 9th Australian and 50th British divisions in Battle 1939–1945 |first=A. |last=Converse |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=London |year=2011 |isbn=978-0-521-19480-8}} |
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*{{Cite book|last1=Cull|first1=Brian|last2=Minterne |first2=Don |title= Hurricanes Over Tobruk: The Pivotal Role of the Hurricane in the Defence of Tobruk, January-June 1941|year=1999 |publisher=Grub Street|isbn=978-1-902304-11-3}} |
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* {{cite book |last1=de Zeng |first1=H.L. |last2=Stankey |first2=D.G. |last3=Creek |first3=E.J. |title=Dive-Bomber and Ground-Attack Units of the Luftwaffe, 1933–1945: A Reference Source |volume=I |year=2009 |publisher=Ian Allan |isbn=978-1-9065-3708-1}} |
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* {{cite book |first=P. |last=FitzSimons |author-link=Peter FitzSimons |title=Tobruk |location=Sydney |publisher=Harper Collins |year=2006 |isbn=978-0-7322-7645-4}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Glassop |first=L. |year=1992 |orig-year=1944 |title=We Were the Rats |location=Sydney |publisher=Angus & Robertson |edition=Penguin |isbn=978-0-14-014924-1}} |
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* {{cite book |series=Air Vanguard |title=Junkers Ju 87 ''Stuka'' |first=M. |last=Guardia |publisher=Osprey |location=Oxford |year=2014 |isbn=978-1-4728-0119-7}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Hoffman |first=K. |title=Erwin Rommel |year=2004 |publisher=Brassey's |location=London |isbn=978-1-85753-374-3}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Hunt |first=Sir D. |author-link=David Hunt (diplomat) |year=1990 |title=A Don at War |url=https://archive.org/details/donatwar0000hunt |url-access=registration |location=London |publisher=F. Cass |orig-year=1966 |edition=rev. |isbn=978-0-7146-3383-1}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Jentz |first=T. L. |title=Tank Combat In North Africa: The Opening Rounds, Operations Sonnenblume, Brevity, Skorpion and Battleaxe, February 1941 – June 1941 |publisher=Schiffer |year=1998 |location=Atglen, PN |lccn=97-80326 |isbn=978-0-7643-0226-8}} |
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* {{cite book |first=M. |last=Johnston |title=That Magnificent 9th: An Illustrated History of the 9th Australian Division |publisher=Allen & Unwin |location=London |year=2003 |isbn=978-1-86508-654-5}} |
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* {{cite book |first=J. |last=Latimer |author-link=Jon Latimer |title=Tobruk 1941: Rommel's Opening Move |publisher=Greenwood Press |location=Santa Barbara, CA |isbn=978-0-275-98287-4 |year=2004}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Long |first=G. |author-link=Gavin Long |title=To Benghazi |year=1952 |edition=1st online |series=Australia in the War of 1939–1945 Series 1 (Army) |volume=I |publisher=Australian War Memorial |url=https://www.awm.gov.au/collection/RCDIG1070200/ |location=Canberra |oclc=18400892}} |
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* {{cite book |first=G. |last=Long |title=The Six Years War: A Concise History of Australia in the 1939–45 War |publisher=Australian War Memorial |year=1973 |location=Canberra |isbn=978-0-642-99375-5}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Maule |first=H. |title=Spearhead General: The Epic Story of General Sir Frank Messervy and his Men in Eritrea, North Africa and Burma |year=1961 |publisher=Odhams |location=London |oclc=2127215}} |
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* {{cite book |first=R. |last=Mead |title=Churchill's Lions: A Biographical Guide to the key British Generals of World War II |year=2007 |publisher=Spellmount |location=Stroud |isbn=978-1-86227-431-0}} |
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* {{cite book |title=Rommel's Desert Commanders: The Men who Served the Desert Fox, North Africa, 1941–1942 |first=S. W. |last=Mitcham |publisher=Praeger Security International |location=Westport, CN |year=2007 |isbn=978-0-275-99436-5}} |
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* {{cite book |first=M. |last=Montanari |series=Le operazioni in Africa Settentrionale |volume=II |title=Tobruk (marzo 1941 – gennaio 1942) |trans-title=Tobruk (March 1941 – January 1942) |language=it |publisher=Stato Maggiore dell'esercito, Ufficio Storico |location=Roma |year=1985 |oclc=886499428}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Rommel |first=E. |others=trans. Findlay, Paul |editor-link=Basil Liddell Hart |editor-first=B. |editor-last=Liddell Hart |author-link=Erwin Rommel |title=The Rommel Papers |year=1982 |publisher=Da Capo Press |location=New York |edition=New |orig-year=1953 |isbn=978-0-306-80157-0}} |
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* {{cite book |first=B. |last=Spencer |title=In the Footsteps of Ghosts: With the 2/9th Battalion in the African Desert |publisher=Allen & Unwin |location=St. Leonards, NSW |year=1999 |isbn=978-1-86508-145-8}} |
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* {{cite book |title=Iron Hulls, Iron Hearts: Mussolini's Elite Armoured Divisions in North Africa |first=I. |last=Walker |publisher=Crowood Press |location=Ramsbury |year=2006 |isbn=978-1-86126-839-6}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Wilmot |first=C. |year=1993 |orig-year=1944 |title=Tobruk 1941 |location=Sydney |publisher=Halstead Press |edition=repr. Penguin |isbn=978-0-670-07120-3}} |
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'''Websites''' |
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* {{cite book |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |title=2/43 Infantry Battalion War Diary, April 1941 (Appendix No. 30: Summary No. 2, entry for 16 April) |url=https://static.awm.gov.au/images/collection/bundled/RCDIG1026557.pdf |access-date=5 April 2015 |publisher=Australian War Memorial |pages=111–112 |location=Canberra |id=RCDIG1026557 |archive-date=4 March 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304084734/https://static.awm.gov.au/images/collection/bundled/RCDIG1026557.pdf |url-status=dead }} |
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* {{cite web |first=W. A. |last=Miller |url=http://www.cgsc.edu/carl/resources/csi/miller/miller.asp |publisher=US Army Command and General Staff College, Combat Studies Institute |location=Fort Leavenworth, KN |year=1986 |title=The 9th Australian Division Versus the Africa Corps: An Infantry Division against Tanks: Tobruk, Libya, 1941 |access-date=5 April 2015 |oclc=815355690 |archive-date=25 February 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100225041650/http://www.cgsc.edu/carl/resources/csi/miller/miller.asp |url-status=dead }} |
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* {{cite web |url=http://usacac.army.mil/cac2/cgsc/carl/download/csipubs/toppe.pdf |title=German Experiences in Desert Warfare during World War II |access-date=5 April 2015 |last=Toppe |first=''Generalmajor'' A. |orig-year=~1947 |year=1991 |publisher=US Army General Command and Staff College |location=Fort Leavenworth, KS |oclc=58531612}} |
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{{Refend}} |
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==External links== |
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{{commons category|Siege of Tobruk}} |
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* [http://www.awm.gov.au/encyclopedia/tobruk/ Australian War Memorial – Siege of Tobruk] |
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*[https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=uwde38e89Ts Australian War Memorial – Siege of Tobruk Short Documentary] |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20140225152838/http://www.kki.pl/piojar/brygad/brygad/tobruk/tobruk_e.html The Characteristic of Tobruk defence in 1941] |
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* Rats of Tobruk Tribute – https://www.ratsoftobruktribute.com |
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{{World War II}} |
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{{Tobruk in the Second World War}} |
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Latest revision as of 23:33, 15 November 2024
Siege of Tobruk | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Part of the Western Desert campaign of the Mediterranean and Middle East theatre of World War II | |||||||
Soldiers of the victorious Allied armies: Polish, British, Indian, Australian, and Czechoslovak | |||||||
| |||||||
Belligerents | |||||||
Poland Czechoslovakia |
Germany Italy | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Leslie Morshead (Apr.–Sep. 1941) Ronald Scobie (Sep.–Nov. 1941) |
Erwin Rommel Gastone Gambara | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
27,000[citation needed] | 35,000[citation needed] | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
5,989 |
12,296 74–150 aircraft |
The siege of Tobruk (/təˈbrʊk, toʊ-/) took place between 10 April and 27 November 1941, during the Western Desert campaign (1940–1943) of the Second World War. An Allied force, consisting mostly of the 9th Australian Division, commanded by Lieutenant-General Leslie Morshead, was besieged in the North African port of Tobruk by German and Italian forces. The tenacious defenders quickly became known as the Rats of Tobruk. After 231 days, they were finally relieved by the British Eighth Army.
In late 1940, the Allies had defeated the Italian 10th Army during Operation Compass (9 December 1940 – 9 February 1941) and trapped the remnants at Beda Fomm. On 22 January 1941, Tobruk's Italian garrison surrendered. But in early 1941, much of the British Western Desert Force was sent to the Greek and Syria–Lebanon campaigns, leaving only a skeleton force short of equipment and supplies.
Adolf Hitler felt compelled to send reinforcements, commanded by Generalleutnant Erwin Rommel, to rescue his beleaguered Italian ally. Rommel launched Operation Sonnenblume (6 February – 25 May 1941), driving the Allies back across Libya to the Egyptian border. However, Tobruk held out, depriving Rommel of a supply port closer to the Egyptian–Libyan border than Benghazi, 560 mi (900 km) west of the Egyptian frontier. The Axis siege of Tobruk began on 10 April and continued despite two failed Allied relief attempts: Operation Brevity (15–16 May) and Operation Battleaxe (15–17 June). The garrison repulsed several Axis attacks. The port was frequently bombarded by artillery, dive-bombers and medium bombers, while the Royal Air Force flew defensive sorties from airfields far away in Egypt. Allied naval forces, such as the British Mediterranean Fleet (including the Inshore Squadron) ran the blockade, carrying reinforcements and supplies in and the wounded and prisoners out. Finally, Operation Crusader (18 November – 30 December) succeeded in raising the siege.
Background
[edit]The Western Desert Campaign was fought from Mersa Matruh in Egypt to Gazala in Cyrenaica on the Libyan coast, an area about 390 kilometres (240 mi) wide along the Libyan Coastal Highway (Italian: Via Balbia), the only paved road. A sand sea 150 mi (240 km) inland marked the southern limit of the desert, which was at its widest at Giarabub and Siwa; in British parlance, the Western Desert came to include eastern Cyrenaica in Libya. Extending inland from the coast lies a raised, flat plain of stony desert, about 500 ft (150 m) above sea level, for 120–190 mi (200–300 km) to the sand sea.[1] Scorpions, vipers and flies populated the region, which was inhabited by a small number of nomads. Bedouin tracks linked wells and the more easily traversed ground; navigation was by sun, star, compass and "desert sense", good perception of the environment gained by experience. When Italian troops advanced into Egypt in September 1940, the Maletti Group got lost leaving Sidi Omar and had to be found by aircraft.[2]
In spring and summer, days are hot and nights cold; the sirocco, a hot desert wind blows clouds of fine sand, which reduces visibility to a few meters and coats eyes, lungs, machinery, food and equipment; motor vehicles and aircraft need special oil filters and the barren ground means that supplies for military operations have to be transported from outside.[3][4] German engines tended to overheat and tank engine life fell from 1,400–1,600 mi (2,300–2,600 km) to 300–900 mi (480–1,450 km), which was made worse by the lack of standard parts for German and Italian types.[5] The ground is a hard surface which drops to sea level in steps, with the coast cut by ravines.
The Italian fortifications at Tobruk included an outer perimeter, comprising a double semi-circle of dug-in strongpoints with concrete walls, positioned well for forward observation, an inner anti-tank ditch, some parts of which were behind barbed wire and/or included booby traps, as well as several more fortified positions closer to the port, at the Bardia–El Adem road junction and towards Fort Pilastrino.[6]
Capture of Tobruk
[edit]In January 1941, the British XIII Corps, under the command of Lieutenant-General Richard O'Connor, as part of Operation Compass, surrounded Tobruk, which was defended by the Italian XXII Corps, commanded by General Pitassi Mannella.
After blockading the fort for a fortnight, on the night of 20 January, the British Navy, led by the HMS Terror, under the command of Captain Hector Waller, bombarded Tobruk. Further out naval destroyers laid a trap for the San Giorgio in case it tried to break out. On the morning of 21 January between 5 and 7 am, the British artillery bombed the town. At 7 am the 2/3rd Australian Battalion attacked the town and quickly created a massive breach and by the evening half of Tobruk.[clarification needed] The next day, the naval command surrendered and by 4 pm General dalla Mura also surrendered, Mannella having been captured earlier on in the day.
Prelude
[edit]Operation Sonnenblume
[edit]In February of 1941, the Allies defeated the 10th Army and the 5° Squadra of the Regia Aeronautica, after which Allied leaders decided to hold the area with minimal forces and send the remainder of the WDF to Greece. The Australian 9th Division and the British 2nd Armoured Division (Major-General Michael Gambier-Parry), minus a brigade group sent to Greece, were left to garrison Cyrenaica under Cyrenaica Command (Cyrcom: Lieutenant-General Henry Maitland Wilson), despite the inadequacy of the force if the Germans sent reinforcements to Libya. Command in Egypt was taken over by Lieutenant-General Richard O'Connor and the XIII Corps HQ was replaced by the HQ of the 1st Australian Corps (Lieutenant-General Thomas Blamey). It was believed by General Wavell and the GHQ in Egypt that the Germans could not attack until May, when the 9th Australian Division, two more divisions and support troops, particularly artillery would be ready and the tanks of the 2nd Armoured Division would have been overhauled.[7]
The 2nd Armoured Division had a reconnaissance regiment and the 3rd Armoured Brigade (Brigadier Reginald Rimington), which had an under-strength light tank regiment and one equipped with captured Fiat M13/40 tanks. The cruiser regiment[clarification needed] arrived in late March with worn-out tracks, after many breakdowns en route and brought the division up to an under-strength armoured brigade. Most of the British tanks were worn out and the Italian tanks were slow and unreliable. The British 2nd Support Group (similar to a small infantry brigade) had only a motor battalion, a 25-pounder field gun regiment, an anti-tank battery and a machine-gun company. The division was short of transport and its workshops were understaffed and lacked spare parts. Two brigades of the 9th Australian Division (Major-General Leslie Morshead) were swapped with two from the 7th Australian Division (Major-General John Lavarack), which had insufficient training, equipment and transport.[8]
Lack of transport made it impossible to supply a garrison west of El Agheila, the most favourable position for a defensive line and restricted the 2nd Armoured Division to movement between supply dumps, reducing its limited mobility further. In February, Lieutenant-General Philip Neame took over Cyrcom and predicted that the armoured division would lose many tanks through breakdowns if it had to move far. Neame asked for a proper armoured division, two infantry divisions and adequate air support to hold the area; he was told that there was little to send and none of that before April. In early March, the 9th Australian Division began to relieve the 6th Australian Division (Major-General Iven Mackay) at Mersa Brega for shipment to Greece, which demonstrated the difficulty of tactical moves with insufficient transport and it was withdrawn to the area east of Benghazi.[9]
Neame was ordered to conserve the tank units, retire as far as Benghazi if pressed, abandon it if necessary, and hold the high ground nearby for as long as possible, with no prospect of reinforcement before May. Neame was to fight a delaying action up the Via Balbia towards Benghazi and then the defiles near Er Regima and Barce; the tanks would move to Antelat to operate against the flank and rear of an attacker moving up the road or across the desert to Tobruk, falling back on a flank if necessary. On 20 March, the 2nd Armoured Division took over from the Australians, who moved back to Tocra, near Er Regima. The force was to use depots at Msus, Tecnis, Martuba, Mechili and Tmimi, El Magrun and Benghazi as a substitute for lorry-borne supply. The 3rd Indian Motor Brigade (Brigadier E. W. D. Vaughan) arrived in late March, with lorries but no tanks, artillery, anti-tank guns and only half its wireless sets; the brigade was based at Martuba, ready to use its vehicles to move towards Derna, Barce or Mechili.[10]
On 24 March, Rommel advanced with the new Deutsches Afrikakorps (DAK). The 3rd Armoured Brigade was south-east of Mersa Brega, where the 2nd Support Group held an 8 mi (13 km) front; the Australians were 150 mi (240 km) to the north, minus a brigade left at Tobruk, deficient in much equipment and out of contact with the 2nd Armoured Division. Allied air reconnaissance had observed German troops west of El Agheila on 25 February and by 5 March, it was expected that the German commander would consolidate the defence of Tripolitania before trying to recapture Cyrenaica and then invade Egypt, using bases at Sirte and Nofilia but not before April. Rommel was identified on 8 March but local intelligence was hard to find under the restrictions to preserve the few troops and vehicles near the front and avoid the danger of the faster German eight-wheeler armoured cars, which inhibited Allied tactical reconnaissance.[11]
On 3 April, Gambier-Parry had received a report that a large enemy armoured force was advancing on Msus, site of the main divisional supply dump. The 3rd Armoured Brigade moved there and found that the petrol had been destroyed to prevent capture. The tank brigade was reduced by losses and breakdowns to 12 Cruiser tanks, 20 light tanks and 20 Italian tanks. Neame received conflicting reports about the positions of the Allied and Axis forces and news on 5 April that a large Axis force was advancing on El Abiar led him to order the 9th Australian Division back to Wadi Cuff and the elements of the 2nd Armoured Division to guard the desert flank and retire to Mechili. Other reports led Neame to countermand these orders, which caused the Australians much confusion. On 6 April, Allied air reconnaissance reported that there were Axis columns in the desert and the 3rd Indian Motor Brigade repulsed an attack at Mechili, which led to O'Connor at the Cyrcom headquarters (Neame had left to visit Gambier-Parry) to order a general withdrawal.[12]
Loss of Mechili
[edit]Rommel had intended to attack Mechili on 7 April but the Axis forces were scattered, short of fuel and tired. Group Fabris moved forward during the morning but the 132nd Armoured Division "Ariete" (Ariete Division) and Group Streich took all day to arrive, having been attacked all day by the RAF. A Squadron of the Long Range Desert Group (LRDG) had appeared from the south, to harass Axis movements. By nightfall on 7 April, the 9th Australian Division (less the 24th Infantry Brigade) and British 2nd Support Group had blocked the Via Balbia at Acroma, about 15 mi (24 km) west of Tobruk, where the 18th and 24th Infantry Brigades were preparing the defences. (The 18th Australian Infantry Brigade had arrived from Egypt by sea after the dispatch of the 7th Australian Division to Greece had been cancelled.) A small force held El Adem, south of Tobruk to observe the approaches from the south and south-west and at Mechili, Gambier-Parry had the 2nd Armoured Division headquarters soft-skinned vehicles and a cruiser tank, most of the 3rd Indian Motor Brigade, M Battery 1st Royal Horse Artillery, part of the 2/3rd Australian Anti-tank Regiment and elements of other units.[13]
The Germans tried twice to bluff Gambier-Parry into surrender but he received orders from Cyrcom to break out and retreat to El Adem and decided to attack at dawn, to gain a measure of surprise. On 8 April, A Squadron of the 18th Cavalry broke through and then turned to attack Italian artillery, as some Indian troops of the 11th Prince Albert Victor's Own Cavalry (Frontier Force) got away. Most of the garrison was pinned down and after a second attempt at 8:00 a.m. when small parties of the 2nd Royal Lancers escaped. The garrison had fired most of its small arms ammunition at the vision slits of the German tanks, which had hung back in fear of mines and when Italian infantry attacked, had little left. Gambier-Parry and 2,700–3,000 British, Indian and Australian troops surrendered to the 17th Infantry Division "Pavia" (General Pietro Zaglio).[14]
Supply
[edit]Axis supplies came from Europe and deliveries were moved by road; after Operation Compass (December 1940 – February 1941), only Tripoli remained, which had a maximum capacity of four troopships or five cargo ships at once, about 45,000 long tons (46,000 t) per month. Tripoli to Benghazi was 600 mi (970 km) along the Via Balbia, which was only half-way to Alexandria. The road could flood, was vulnerable to the DAF and alternative desert tracks increased vehicle wear. The Axis advance of 300 mi (480 km) to the Egyptian frontier in early 1941, increased the road transport distance for supplies to 1,100 mi (1,800 km). Benghazi was captured in April but coastal shipping could only carry 15,000 long tons (15,241 t) and the port was within range of the DAF. Tobruk could take about 1,500 long tons (1,524 t) per day but lack of shipping made its capture irrelevant.[15]
A German motorised division needed 350 long tons (360 t) per day and moving the supplies 300 mi (480 km) took 1,170 two-ton lorries.[16] With seven Axis divisions, air and naval units, 70,000 long tons (71,000 t) of supplies per month were needed. Vichy France agreed to Bizerta being used for supplies but none passed through until late 1942. From February to May 1941, a surplus of 45,000 long tons (46,000 t) was delivered; attacks from Malta had some effect but in May, the worst month for ship losses, 91% of the supplies arrived. Lack of transports in Libya left German supplies in Tripoli and the Italians had only 7,000 lorries for deliveries to 225,000 men. A record amount of supplies arrived in June but at the front, the shortages worsened.[17]
There were fewer Axis attacks on Malta from June and ships sunk increased from 19% in July, to 25% in September, when Benghazi was bombed and ships diverted to Tripoli; air supply in October made little difference. Deliveries averaged 72,000 long tons (73,000 t) per month from July–October but the consumption of 30–50 percent of fuel deliveries by road transport and truck unserviceability of 35 percent reduced deliveries to the front. In November, a five-ship convoy was sunk during Operation Crusader and ground attacks on road convoys stopped journeys in daylight. Lack of deliveries and the Eighth Army offensive, forced a retreat to El Agheila from 4 December, crowding the Via Balbia where Allied ambushes destroyed about half of the remaining Axis transport.[18]
Tobruk
[edit]Work on the fortifications at Tobruk had begun in March, using the Italian defences, two lines of concrete bunkers 8–9 mi (13–14 km) away from the port, making a perimeter about 30 mi (48 km) long, far enough out to keep artillery out of range of the port. Few intermediate defences had been built by the Italians except at the Bardia–El Adem road junction, the barbed wire was in disrepair and an anti-tank ditch was unfinished. The Allies selected another line about 2 mi (3.2 km) back from the perimeter and worked on this while the original line was refurbished. Two battalions of the Australian 24th Infantry Brigade and the newly arrived Australian 18th Brigade (which had been detached from the 7th Division) took over the perimeter and the Australian 20th and 26th brigades took up a covering position on the outside until 9 April, while more work was done on the defences. Once inside, the three 9th Australian Division brigades took over the defences and the 18th Brigade went into reserve.[19]
A cadre of the British 3rd Armoured Brigade was refitting at Tobruk, with personnel and equipment sent from Egypt by sea and had a regiment of armoured cars, two composite regiments with 15 light, 26 cruiser and a troop of four infantry tanks. There were 4 25-pounder regiments, two anti-tank regiments and an anti-tank company in each infantry brigade, the British 4th Anti-Aircraft Brigade had sixteen heavy and fifty-nine light guns, all but two Bofors guns being sited around the harbour. Rear area units had accumulated at Tobruk and 1⁄3 of the 36,000 personnel were in base units or local refugees and prisoners of war. Morshead planned an active defence and stressed that, with battalions holding 5 mi (8.0 km) frontages, a break-in should be expected anywhere that the attackers made a serious effort and that it should be eliminated, since there would be no withdrawal.[20]
Siege
[edit]Investment of Tobruk
[edit]By 8 April, the most advanced German units had arrived at Derna; but some units which had cut across the chord of the Jebel Akhdar ran out of water and fuel at Tengeder. Heinrich von Prittwitz und Gaffron, the commander of the 15th Panzer Division, was sent ahead with a column of reconnaissance, anti-tank, machine-gun, and artillery units to block the eastern exit from Tobruk as the 5th Light Division moved from the southwest and the 27th Infantry Division "Brescia" advanced from the west. On 10 April, Rommel made the Suez Canal the objective of the Afrika Korps and ordered that a breakout from Tobruk be prevented. The next day, the port was invested; but the rush ended with the 5th Light Division on the east side, the Prittwitz group to the south (Prittwitz having been killed), and the 27th Infantry Division "Brescia" to the west. Reconnaissance Unit 3 went on to Bardia, and a composite force was sent on to Sollum to try to reach Mersa Matruh. The British Mobile Force (Brigadier William Gott), on the frontier from Halfaya Pass to Sidi Barrani, conducted a delaying-action around Sollum and Capuzzo.[21]
El Adem road
[edit]From 11–12 April, the 5th Panzer Regiment probed the defences of the 20th Australian Brigade near the El Adem road. The tanks were held off by artillery-fire; German infantry who reached the anti-tank ditch were forced back by Australian infantry. The Germans were surprised, having assumed that the shipping at Tobruk was to evacuate the garrison and planned a night attack by the 5th Light Division for 13/14 April. Groups of Axis vehicles were attacked by 45 and 55 Squadrons RAF, which rearmed at the airfields inside the perimeter. The attack began after dark, with an attempt to get over the anti-tank ditch west of the El Adem road in the 2/17th Australian Battalion sector, which the Australians repulsed. Another attempt was made later and by dawn a small bridgehead had been established, where the 5th Panzer Regiment drove through and turned northwards, ready to divide into one column for the harbour and one to move west to stop the escape of the garrison.[22]
The German tanks were engaged head on by the 1st RHA and veered away, only to drive into the path of the British cruiser tanks, waiting hull-down and received anti-tank fire from three sides, losing sixteen of 38 tanks and retreated. The Australian infantry had stood their ground and pinned down the German infantry. As the retreat continued, every gun and aircraft at Tobruk fired into the area and the German 8th Machine-Gun Battalion lost about 75 percent of its men including its commander Gustav Ponath, for a garrison loss of 26 men killed, 64 wounded, two tanks and a field gun knocked out. Attacks from the south were abandoned and the 5th Light Division dug in, with the Schwerin Group (renamed after Prittwitz had been killed) to the east.[23] In support, the Luftwaffe and Regia Aeronautica flew 959 sorties over Tobruk; on 14 April 40 Ju 87s bombed the defences and on day 27 they succeeded in destroying a heavy anti-aircraft battery at Tobruk by swamping the defences with 50 aircraft allowing for an entire staffel (12) to concentrate on each gun.[24]
Ras el Medauar
[edit]On 16 April, Rommel led an attack from the west, with the 132nd Armoured Division "Ariete" reinforced by the 62nd Infantry Regiment of the 102nd Motorised Division "Trento". The 2/48th Australian Battalion counter-attacked and took 803 prisoners. In the morning, the 132nd Armoured Division "Ariete" attacked again and some tanks reached the most advanced Australian posts, found that their infantry had not followed and retired after five tanks were knocked out. Morshead ordered the garrison to exploit Axis disorganisation and their inability to quickly dig in on stony ground, through conducting patrols and small sorties. On 22 April, a company of the 2/48th Australian Battalion, three infantry tanks and a troop of 25-pounders, raided a hillock held by the Fabris Detachment south-west of Ras el Medauar; the raiders destroyed two guns and took 370 prisoners. At the same time a company of the 2/23rd Battalion advanced across the Derna road and in a costly attack, took about 100 prisoners from the 27th Infantry Division "Brescia", which led the Germans to hurry on the 15th Panzer Division from Tripoli.[22]
Air and sea war
[edit]The defeat of the Axis attacks in April greatly improved the situation in Tobruk but Fliegerkorps X had sent 150–200 aircraft to Libya from Sicily in February, which flew frequent dive-bomber sorties by day and medium-bomber raids by day and night on the docks, buildings, anti-aircraft sites, artillery positions and the airfields.[25] Westland Lysander aircraft and all but the most essential ground crew of 6 and 73 Squadron were withdrawn to Egypt. At least ten Hawker Hurricane fighters were based at the port during the day and on 19 April, Hurricanes of 73 and 274 Squadrons, intercepted a Ju 87 raid escorted by fighters. After another two days, 73 Squadron was down to five operational aircraft with very tired pilots. By 23 April, three more Hurricanes had been shot down, a further two were damaged and on 25 April the squadron was withdrawn. The fighters of 274 Squadron stayed at Gerawla and 6 Squadron remained at Tobruk to fly tactical reconnaissance sorties. Fighter cover could only be maintained at intervals by the last 14 Hurricanes in the desert; Axis airfields at Gazala, Derna and Benina, were bombed at dusk and night to limit Axis air attacks on Tobruk.[26] The Desert Air Force [so-named from October 1941] flew long-range missions to attack German armour massing near Tobruk in the early stages of the siege. On 12 April, for example, 45 and 55 Squadron Bristol Blenheim bombers, operating from airfields in Egypt, attacked German tank formations near the port. The attack succeeded in breaking up the German advance.[27]
Air Commodore Raymond Collishaw, commanding 204 Group RAF (renamed the Desert Air Force), wrote to Air Marshal Arthur Tedder on 24 April. In his view the situation in the air had rapidly deteriorated. The arrival of two German fighter wings (Jagdgeschwader 27 and Zerstörergeschwader 26) near Tobruk allowed the enemy formations to arrive at great height within ten minutes of an air raid warning, leaving British fighters at lower altitude and a great disadvantage. He remarked attrition had caused "a serious reduction in our fighter force."[28] The bombardment and close air support operations in the initial phases were carried out by Lehrgeschwader 1, III./Sturzkampfgeschwader 1 and II./Sturzkampfgeschwader 2.[29] Collishaw noted the aggression shown by Axis aviation and reported to Tedder that 274 Squadron, which had only 13 fighters available as of 23 April, formed the major part of the fighter defence for Egypt and he was "loathe to send them to Tobruk."[28] As Collishaw wrote his letter, the RAF lost a further six aircraft over Tobruk, equating to very heavy losses given the small contingent defending the port.[30] He requested Tedder's advice. Air Marshal Arthur Longmore cabled the Air Ministry in London. He wished to operate in greater strength, and complained reinforcements and fresh pilots were needed to replace the exhausted 73 Squadron. He told London that to maintain patrols, the fighters were forced to refuel at Sidi Barrani granting Axis air units a free hand over Tobruk but arguing that without patrols to defend fighter squadrons refuelling at Tobruk on the ground, they were "hostage to a fortune we cannot afford."[28] On 1 May, for example, 274 Squadron lost all six Hurricanes it sent on a single mission when a flight of Bf 109s from JG 27 led by Gerhard Homuth, and containing the most successful fighter pilot in Africa, Hans-Joachim Marseille, engaged them from a superior altitude over Tobruk.[31]
From 1–14 May each side paused to stockpile supplies for the next battle.[32] Of stated losses from 10 April—14 May [excluding claims made by either side], 73 Squadron lost 15 fighters and five damaged. Five pilots were killed, one captured and one wounded. 274 Squadron lost six fighters, three pilots killed and two captured. 45 Squadron suffered the loss of three aircraft and five killed, while 55 and 6 Squadron lost one and two respectively. 39 Squadron lost three bombers and 14 Squadron one for a total of 31 aircraft.[33] Reported German losses, excluding RAF claims, were lower. III/StG 1 and II/StG 2 lost eight between them while III/ZG 26 reported three destroyed and one damaged, two killed, one wounded and three captured. III./LG 1 reported the loss of one aircraft.[33] JG 27 suffered the loss of four fighters, three damaged and three pilots killed.[33] The Regia Aeronautica's 151 Gruppo reported two aircraft destroyed and one damaged.[33]
The intensity of the battle for air superiority was mirrored by the air war over the sea as the Luftwaffe and Regia Aeronautica attempted to cut off sea traffic supplying the defenders. The air-sea battle, after the failure of Operation Battleaxe, was the main sector of operations for Allied and Axis aviation throughout the summer.[34] Sturzkampfgeschwader 3, another Ju 87 wing arrived in Africa in the summer. The eight-month long siege was costly for the Stuka gruppen. At the end of April, virtually all Tobruk-based fighters had been removed from the encircled port. The Ju 87s were facing defenders with anti-aircraft artillery numbering 88 guns—28 heavy (90 mm or above). Ships lent their weapons to the defenders. In an example, the gunboat Ladybird, sunk in shallow waters to her deck by II./StG 2, was able to use her 3-inch deck guns.[35] In April, Draco, Bankura, Urania, and HMS Chakla were sunk by Axis aircraft.[36] On 4 May the hospital ship Kapara (846t) was damaged evoking fury on the Allied side.[37]
The arrival of Italian Ju 87s from 97 Gruppo resulted in the sinking of the 3,741-ton tanker Helka on 25 May before it could reach Tobruk.[38] The squadron involved, the 239 Squadriglia was the successful unit, which became among the most successful over Tobruk.[39] The escorting sloop, Grimsby was damaged, and sunk by 3./StG 1. Commensurate with the sinking of Fiona and Chakla in April, the burden fell to the Mediterranean Fleet's destroyers to carry out supply operations in daylight. Moonlit nights also proved hazardous.[38] On 24 June the sloop Auckland was sunk by 239 Squadriglia. This unit also sank the destroyer Waterhen. The vessel had just survived an attack by Junkers Ju 88s of III/LG 1 and II/StG 2.[40][41] The lack of fighters made for a straight battle between the gunners and German pilots. The gunners changed their tactics from a sustained barrage at a fixed altitude, to a staggered, and thickened belt, at various altitudes covering 1000 meters or more, thereby forcing the Ju 87s to fly through fire for much longer. The gunners spread their fire from side to side, to prevent German pilots from travelling down the side of the barrage and sliding in underneath it.[42] The Stukas were active in night operations. On 26/27 October 1941, I/StG 1 attacked a convoy transporting 7,000 British and Polish soldiers with munitions sailed toward Tobruk. An attack by the Ju 87s sank the Latona (2,650 t) with a direct hit—though the vessel could reach 40 knots. The destroyer Hero was badly damaged in the same attack.[40]
In March, destroyers were withdrawn from the Inshore Squadron to escort convoys to Greece and in April, four more ships joined the squadron. As the army retreated to Tobruk and the frontier, coastal operations were conducted on the nights of 10–11 April by gunboats, which bombarded transport on the Via Balbia around Bomba and Gambut airfield and on the night of 12 April, six destroyers and two cruisers made a coastal sweep from Ras Tayones to Ras et Tin. Next day, three ships bombarded Sollum and on 15 April, transport was bombarded at Bardia and Capuzzo, as Gazala airfield was shelled again. For the rest of April, naval bombardments continued along the Libyan coast on the Via Balbia, airfields and ports. A Commando raid was carried out on Bardia and supply runs began to Tobruk.[43] From 11 April – 10 December, 47,280 men were taken from Tobruk, 34,113 were brought in and 33,946 long tons (34,491 t) of stores delivered; 34 ships were sunk and 33 damaged.[44]
Bardia raid
[edit]The Bardia raid was planned for the night of 19/20 April, by 'A' Battalion, Layforce to disrupt Axis lines of communication and damage installations and equipment. The landing force sailed to the area in HMS Glengyle, escorted by the anti-aircraft cruiser HMS Coventry and the destroyers HMAS Stuart, Voyager and Waterhen. The Commandos of 'A' Battalion and a troop of tanks from the Royal Tank Regiment were to land on four beaches from Landing Craft Assault (LCA). On arrival, one LCA could not be lowered and there were difficulties releasing the others. On the run-in, there were no lights to guide them in, because the advance Folbot section had been delayed, when their submarine HMS Triumph had to dive and take evasive action when it was mistakenly attacked by Allied aircraft.[45] As a result of these issues the main force was late and landed on the wrong beaches, albeit unopposed. Once ashore the Commandos found that the port was empty of Axis forces and faulty intelligence led to some objectives being missed and others turning out not to exist. The Commandos destroyed an Italian supply dump and a coastal artillery battery before re-embarking. Seventy men got lost, ended up on the wrong evacuation beach and were captured.[46]
Battle of the Salient
[edit]After the failure to capture Tobruk off the march, Comando Supremo and the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (OKW) agreed that Tobruk should be captured and supplies accumulated, before the advance into Egypt was resumed. Rommel thought that Tobruk could only be taken by a deliberate attack, which could not begin until support units had arrived in the area and the Luftwaffe had been reinforced, particularly with transport aircraft to carry ammunition, fuel and water. On 27 April, Major-General Friedrich Paulus, a Deputy Chief of the General Staff, arrived from Oberkommando des Heeres (OKH) in Berlin, to question Rommel on his intentions, impress on him that there was little more help available and to forecast the defensive possibilities of the area, if Sollum was lost. Paulus refused to allow an attack planned for 30 April, until he had studied the situation and on 29 April, allowed the attack to go ahead, as did General Italo Gariboldi who had arrived on 28 April. Nothing more ambitious than securing the Axis hold on the Egyptian frontier, from Siwa Oasis north to Sollum was envisaged.[47]
The Tobruk garrison continued work on the defences and sowed minefields, the first being planted in the south-west, between the outer and inner perimeters. Twelve infantry tanks had been delivered among 5,000 long tons (5,100 t) of supplies landed during the month, despite Axis bombing of the harbour and the sinking of two supply ships. The Axis attack was to be made in the south-west, either side of the hillock of Ras el Medauar, about two weeks after the previous attempt, using the 5th Light Division on the right and the 15th Panzer Division on the left, even though it had only recently arrived in Africa. At 8:00 p.m. on 30 April, the divisions were to break into the Tobruk defences, followed by assault groups from the Ariete Division and 27th Infantry Division "Brescia" to roll up the flanks. German infantry would press forward to reconnoitre the vicinity of Fort Pilastrino, to see if the attack could continue to the harbour. If not, the Italian infantry would dig in on the flanks and artillery would be moved forward for an attack the next day.[48]
The attack came in the area held by the 26th Australian Brigade, which had the 2/23rd and 2/24th battalions in the line and the 2/48th Battalion in reserve at Wadi Giaida. The Australians expected an attack, after withstanding bombing and artillery-fire on the perimeter defences on 29 April; Axis troops seen massing in the evening of 30 April had been dispersed by artillery-fire. The posts either side of Ras el Medauar were shelled and bombed and German troops began to dribble forward, under cover of dust and the gathering darkness. By 9:30 p.m., the Germans made a small bridgehead as planned but several Australian posts held out, the reconnaissance party vanished and the Italian troops were not able to reach their objectives. The night passed in confused fighting as the Germans tried to reorganise and mop up at Ras el Medauar and attack south-westwards along the perimeter. The new attack failed and by morning, some of the Australian posts were still holding out.[49]
A thick mist rose and German tanks moved eastwards instead of south-east and then ran into the new minefield, where they were engaged by anti-tank guns and repulsed. Tanks of the 15th Panzer Division, tried to drive north but were prevented by anti-tank fire. No German reserves were left and the most advanced troops were south of Wadi Giaida, tired and isolated in a sandstorm. Paulus judged that the attack had failed and Rommel decided to attack on the right to widen the breach. In the afternoon, German tanks attacked south-east towards Bir el Medauar and Morshead sent 15 cruiser and five infantry tanks to counter-attack. The German attack was stopped for a loss of five British tanks and in the evening, the Australian 2/48th Battalion counter-attacked Ras el Medauar but met determined resistance and was repulsed. During the day, 73 and 274 Squadrons had maintained standing patrols over the area and on the morning of 2 May, the fighting around Wadi Giaida continued in a dust storm, as German troops tried to trickle forward. On the night of 3 May, the 18th Australian Brigade made a converging counter-attack with two battalions, which lost co-ordination, failed and was ended, to avoid being caught in the open at daybreak.[50]
The Axis attack had overrun the perimeter defences on a 3 mi (4.8 km) front, to a maximum depth of 2 mi (3.2 km) and captured higher ground useful as a jumping-off position and from which observation points could be established, for a loss of 650 German and 500 Italian casualties. The 8th Bersaglieri Regiment of the 132nd Armoured Division "Ariete" had captured most of the Australian positions.[51] Paulus ordered that no more attacks be made, unless the Allies were evacuating the port. The DAK was to hold Cyrenaica regardless of who held Sollum, Bardia or Tobruk and a new line was to be built further back at Gazala. In a report on 12 May, Paulus wrote that sea communications between Italy and Libya should be reinforced, that any air and anti-aircraft units sent to Libya should be German and that the army in Libya needed ammunition, fuel and food first, then more vehicles before the dispatch of more men, of whom medium artillery and anti-tank gun crews should have priority. The Tobruk garrison settled into a routine of patrols, air raids and minor attacks, some to regain positions in the Medauar salient and some in connexion with WDF operations.[52]
Twin Pimples raid
[edit]The Twin Pimples was a defensive strong point outside Tobruk, on two hills close together which overlooked the Tobruk perimeter. It was held by the Italian Army, and the 18th King Edward's Own Cavalry (normally part of the 3rd Indian Motor Brigade) held the perimeter opposite. No. 8 Commando was selected to carry out an attack on the Twin Pimples, which conducted patrols for several days with the Indians, to reconnoitre the ground.[53] The 18th Cavalry Regiment was to mount a diversion, while 43 members of No. 8 Commando and some Australian Engineers crossed the Italian forward positions and a supply road, to attack the Twin Pimples from behind.[54]
The Commandos advanced at 11:00 p.m. on the night of July 17 and 18 and crossed the Italian lines undetected. At the supply road they took cover, waited until 1:00 a.m. and edged forward just before the diversion by the 18th Cavalry. The diversion attracted Italian machine-gun fire and Very lights, as the Commandos got within 30 yd (27 m) of the Twin Pimples before challenge, at which the commandos attacked. The password Jock was used when a position had been taken and the Italians were swiftly overcome. The Australian engineers planted explosives on several mortars and an ammunition dump. The plan assumed that it would take 15 minutes for Italian artillery to open fire on the captured trenches, and the raiders were only about 100 yd (91 m) away when shelling began to come down onto the position they had just departed.[54]
Relief operations
[edit]Operation Brevity
[edit]Operation Brevity (15–16 May) was a limited offensive to inflict attrition on the Axis forces and to secure positions for a general offensive towards Tobruk. The Allies attacked with a small tank-infantry force in three columns and seized the top of the Halfaya Pass, Bir Wair and Musaid, then pressed on and took Fort Capuzzo. The coast group failed to capture the bottom of the Halfaya Pass. The garrison on the east side of the Tobruk defences was strengthened in case of a sortie and a German counter-attack recovered Musaid. The coast group eventually overran the foot of the pass; but, the next day, Allied retirements against German counter-attacks to a line from Sidi Omar to Sidi Suleiman and Sollum, left all but Halfaya Pass in German hands. On 26 May, Operation Skorpion, a German attack on the pass, succeeded and the Allies were ejected.[55] Brevity failed to achieve most of its objectives, only briefly holding the Halfaya Pass. The Allies lost 206 casualties, five tanks destroyed and 13 damaged. German casualties were 258 men, three tanks destroyed and several damaged. The Italians had 395 casualties, of whom 347 were captured.[56] On 12 May, the Tiger convoy lost one ship and arrived in Alexandria with 238 tanks, to re-equip the 7th Armoured Division and 43 aircraft; on 28 May, planning began for Operation Battleaxe.[57]
Operation Battleaxe
[edit]Operation Battleaxe, 15–17 June 1941 was intended to lift the siege of Tobruk and capture eastern Cyrenaica. The attack was to be conducted by the 7th Armoured Division and a composite infantry force based on the 4th Indian Division headquarters, with two brigades. The infantry were to attack in the area of Bardia, Sollum, Halfaya and Capuzzo, with the tanks guarding the southern flank. The Tobruk garrison was to stand by but not to sortie until XIII Corps drew close. The Halfaya Pass attack failed, Point 206 was captured and only one of three attacks on Hafid Ridge succeeded.
At the end of 15 June only 48 British tanks remained operational and next day, a German counter-attack forced back the Allies on the western flank but was repulsed in the centre; the Allies were reduced to 21 Cruiser tanks and 17 Infantry tanks. On 17 June, the Allies evaded encirclement by two Panzer regiments and ended the operation. The Allies had 969 casualties, 27 cruiser and 64 Infantry tanks were knocked out or broke down and lost; the RAF lost 36 aircraft. German losses were 678 men (Italian losses are unknown), twelve tanks and ten aircraft. General Wavell, the XIII Corps commander, Lieutenant-General Noel Beresford-Peirse and Major-General Michael O'Moore Creagh the 7th Armoured Division commander were sacked and Claude Auchinleck took over as Commander-in-Chief of the Middle East.[58]
Australian relief in place
[edit]In mid-1941, Blamey, as commander of the Australian Imperial Force (AIF), with the support of the Australian government, requested the withdrawal of the 9th Division from Tobruk. Blamey wrote that the health of the Australian division had deteriorated "to the point where it was not longer capable of resisting attack"; he also wanted to unite Australian forces in the Middle East. Auchinleck agreed but noted that a troop movement this big could only be made by fast warships during moonless periods, to evade air attacks. The Mediterranean Fleet was busy elsewhere, the Inshore Squadron was carrying supplies into Tobruk and Operation Crusader was being prepared. The Australian withdrawal began in the August non-moon period and from 19–29 August, 6,116 men of the Polish Carpathian Independent Rifle Brigade and Czechoslovak 11th Infantry Battalion and 1,297 long tons (1,318 t) of stores were landed.[59]
The navy took out 5,040 men of the 18th Australian Infantry Brigade and the Indian 18th King Edward's Own Cavalry, on three destroyers, a minelayer and one destroyer carrying supplies, with cruiser escorts as anti-aircraft ships, a cruiser and a destroyer being damaged. From 19–27 September, the British 16th Infantry Brigade, 70th Infantry Division (Major-General Ronald Scobie), the HQ of the 32nd Army Tank Brigade and the 4th Royal Tank Regiment with 6,308 men and more 2,000 long tons (2,032 t) of supplies arrived, while 5,989 men of the 24th Australian Infantry Brigade left, with no loss of ships. From 12–25 October, the rest of the 70th Infantry Division was delivered and most of the Australians removed. Ship losses on normal delivery runs, led to the 2/13th Australian Battalion and two companies of the 2/15th Battalion remaining in Tobruk. Command of the garrison passed from Morshead to Scobie.[60]
Operation Crusader
[edit]Operation Crusader began on 18 November 1941, with an outflanking movement that brought the Eighth Army to within 30 mi (48 km) of the Tobruk perimeter. It was planned that the 70th Infantry Division would break out from Tobruk on 21 December, to cut the German line of communication to the troops on the border to the south-east. The 7th Armoured Division would advance from Sidi Rezegh, to rendezvous and roll up the Axis positions around Tobruk. The 2nd New Zealand Division, attached to XIII Corps, would take advantage of the distraction of the 21st Panzer Division and 15th Panzer Division and advance to the Sidi Azeiz area, overlooking the Axis defences at Bardia. The 70th Infantry Division attack surprised Rommel, who had underestimated the size of the garrison and number of tanks in Tobruk. A three-pronged attack by the 2nd King's Own on the right flank, the 2nd Battalion, Black Watch in the centre and the 2nd Queen's Own on the left flank, advanced to capture a series of strong points leading to Ed Duda.[61]
By mid-afternoon, the Allies had advanced about 3.5 mi (5.6 km) towards Ed Duda on the main supply road, where they paused as it became clear that 7th Armoured Division would not arrive.[62] The central attack by the Black Watch, involved a charge under massed machine-gun fire to strongpoint Tiger, which incurred 201 casualties. On 22 November, Scobie ordered the position to be consolidated and the corridor widened, ready for the Eighth Army. The 2nd York and Lancaster Regiment with tank support, took strong point Lion leaving a 7,000 yd (6,400 m) gap between the corridor and Ed Duda. On 26 November, Scobie ordered an attack on the Ed Duda ridge and in the early hours of 27 November, the Tobruk garrison captured the ridge and later met a small force of New Zealanders advancing from the south. The 7th Armoured Division had planned its attack northwards to Tobruk for 8:30 a.m. on 21 November. At 7:45 a.m. patrols reported the arrival from the south-east of about 200 tanks. The 7th Armoured Brigade and a battery of field artillery turned to meet this threat and without the tanks, the northward attack by the Support Group failed; by the end of the day, the 7th Armoured Brigade had only 40 of 160 tanks operational.[63]
On 22 November, the 25th Infantry Division "Bologna" repulsed an attack from Tobruk towards Sidi Rezegh and next day, Rommel sent the Afrika Korps towards the Egyptian border (the Dash to the Wire) to exploit the victory and destroy XXX Corps. The blow mostly fell on empty desert and gave the Eighth Army time to regroup and re-arm. The Afrika Korps was ordered back to Tobruk, where the 70th Infantry Division and the New Zealand Division had gained the initiative. At noon on 27 November, the 15th Panzer Division reached Bir el Chleta and met the 22nd Armoured Brigade (reduced to a composite regiment of fewer than fifty tanks), which was joined later by the 4th Armoured Brigade. As night fell the British tanks disengaged and the New Zealand Division, fighting at the south-east end of the corridor into Tobruk, was endangered by the Afrika Korps.[64] On 4 December, Rommel attacked Ed Duda and was repulsed by the 14th Infantry Brigade of the 70th Infantry Division. Rommel ordered a retirement from the eastern perimeter of Tobruk, to concentrate against XXX Corps to the south. On 7 December, the 4th Armoured Brigade engaged 15th Panzer Division and knocked out eleven tanks. Rommel was told on 5 December, by Comando Supremo that supply could not improve until the end of the month, when airborne deliveries from Sicily began. Rommel decided to abandon Tobruk and withdraw to Gazala, which led to the relief of Tobruk and the occupation of Cyrenaica.[65]
Aftermath
[edit]Analysis
[edit]Service | Killed/ missing |
Wounded | Total |
---|---|---|---|
RN, RAN | 469 | 186 | 655 |
Merchant Navy |
70 | 55 | 125 |
Total | 539 | 241 | 780 |
For much of the siege, Tobruk was defended by the 9th Australian Division and other troops. Wavell ordered Morshead to defend the port for eight weeks; the Australians held on for over five months, before being gradually withdrawn during September and replaced by the 70th Infantry Division, the Polish Carpathian Brigade and Czechoslovak 11th Infantry Battalion (East). The fresh defenders held Tobruk until they broke out on 21 November and held open an 8 mi (13 km) corridor, unsupported for several days, then captured Ed Duda on 27 November, to link with the advancing Eighth Army, during Operation Crusader.[67][68]
The Tobruk Ferry Service, made up of Royal Navy and Royal Australian Navy warships, played an important role in the defence of Tobruk providing gunfire support, supplies, fresh troops and by ferrying out the wounded. Control of Tobruk was useful to the Allies because it was the only significant port east of Benghazi and west of Alexandria. The supply of Axis troops on the Egyptian frontier could have been eased by sea transport to Tobruk. The siege of Tobruk was the first occasion in the war that German Panzer units had been stopped.[69] The siege of Tobruk was lifted in December 1941 in the course of Operation Crusader. Axis forces re-captured the port on 21 June 1942, after defeating the Eighth Army in the Battle of Gazala.[70] During the course of the siege, two destroyers, three sloops, seven anti-submarine vessels and minesweepers, seven store carriers and schooners, six A lighters and one fast minelayer were sunk, a total of 26 ships. Seven destroyers, a sloop, eleven anti-submarine and minesweeping vessels, three gunboats and a schooner were damaged, a total of 23 vessels. Six Merchant Navy ships and a schooner were sunk and six merchant ships were damaged; a total of 62 ships were sunk or damaged.[66]
Casualties
[edit]Forces | Killed | Wounded | Missing | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|
Australian | 744 | 1,974 | 476 | 3,194 |
British | 88 | 406 | 15 | 509 |
Indian | 1 | 25 | 0 | 26 |
Polish | 22 | 82 | 3 | 107 |
Sub-totals | 855 | 2,487 | 494 | 3,836 |
70th Division |
— | — | — | 2,153 |
Total | — | — | — | 5,989 |
The Rats of Tobruk suffered at least 3,836 casualties, there being a small difference in Australian casualty figures quoted in the Australian and British official histories. Most of the Australian garrison withdrew from Tobruk between August and October but others remained in Tobruk for the duration.[71] In Australia in the War of 1939–1945 (1967) the Australian Official History, Maughan recorded 9th Australian Division casualties from 8 April – 25 October, including two days before the siege started, as 746 killed, 1,996 wounded, 604 prisoners, that 507 Australians were captured between 28 March 1941 and the investment of Tobruk and 467 more were taken during the siege.[72]
In the British Official History (1956), Playfair calculated the losses in the table created by Harrison in 1999.[73][74] When Harrison calculated other losses, there was no RAF casualty list but he recorded ten aircrew and six ground crew burials at the cemetery and six aircrew shot down in the harbour.[74] Italian casualties from 15 February to 18 November were 1,130 killed, 4,255 wounded and 3,851 missing. Libyan losses were 184 killed and German casualties for the same period were about 538 killed, 1,657 wounded, about 681 missing and from 74–150 Axis aircraft shot down.[75][76]
Fiction films
[edit]- The Rats of Tobruk is a 1944 Australian film about the siege, focusing upon the Australian defenders.
- The Desert Rats is a 1953 film about the siege. It also emphasised the Australian defenders but had a number of historical inaccuracies and omissions.
- Tobruk is a 1967 film which dramatised raids on the Germans.
- Raid on Rommel is a 1971 movie that used some of the earlier film from Tobruk.
- Tobruk is a 2008 film about a Czechoslovak soldier's disillusionment with war.
See also
[edit]- North African campaign timeline
- List of World War II Battles
- John Hurst Edmondson: Victoria Cross recipient during the siege
- Rats of Tobruk
- Twin Pimples raid
- Africa Star
- List of British military equipment of World War II
- List of Australian military equipment of World War II
- List of German military equipment of World War II
- List of Italian military equipment in World War II
- British Capture of Tobruk
Citations
[edit]- ^ Luck 1989, p. 92.
- ^ Playfair 1954, p. 116.
- ^ Lewin 1998, p. 149.
- ^ Playfair 1954, p. 115.
- ^ Creveld 1977, p. 183.
- ^ Playfair 1954, p. 290.
- ^ Playfair 2004a, pp. 1–3.
- ^ Playfair 2004a, pp. 2–4.
- ^ Playfair 2004a, pp. 4–6.
- ^ Playfair 2004a, pp. 6–8.
- ^ Playfair 2004a, pp. 9–11.
- ^ Playfair 2004a, p. 28.
- ^ Playfair 2004a, pp. 30–34.
- ^ Playfair 2004a, p. 30.
- ^ Creveld 1977, pp. 182–187.
- ^ Creveld 1977, pp. 182–185.
- ^ Creveld 1977, pp. 185–187.
- ^ Creveld 1977, pp. 189–190.
- ^ Playfair 2004a, pp. 390, 36–37.
- ^ Playfair 2004a, p. 37.
- ^ Playfair 2004a, pp. 35–36.
- ^ a b Playfair 2004a, pp. 37–38.
- ^ Playfair 2004a, p. 38.
- ^ Smith 2011, p. 268.
- ^ PRO 2001, p. 130.
- ^ Playfair 2004a, pp. 38–39.
- ^ Ring & Shores 1969, p. 34.
- ^ a b c Shores, Massimello & Guest 2012, pp. 128–130.
- ^ Ring & Shores 1969, pp. 33–37.
- ^ Ring & Shores 1969, p. 36.
- ^ Ring & Shores 1969, pp. 36–37.
- ^ Ring & Shores 1969, p. 38.
- ^ a b c d Ring & Shores 1969, pp. 34–38.
- ^ Ring & Shores 1969, p. 47.
- ^ Weal 1998, pp. 44, 46–48.
- ^ Admiralty 1947, pp. 20–21.
- ^ Smith 2011, p. 272.
- ^ a b Weal 1998, pp. 48–51.
- ^ Smith 2011, pp. 269–270.
- ^ a b Smith 2011, p. 270.
- ^ Weal 1998, pp. 50–51.
- ^ Weal 1998, pp. 52–53.
- ^ Playfair 2004a, pp. 39–40.
- ^ Playfair 2004b, pp. 24–26.
- ^ Saunders 2007, p. 53.
- ^ Chappell 1996, p. 16.
- ^ Playfair 2004a, pp. 40–41, 153.
- ^ Playfair 2004a, pp. 153–155.
- ^ Playfair 2004a, p. 155.
- ^ Playfair 2004a, pp. 155–156.
- ^ Dominioni & Izzo 1967, p. 18.
- ^ Playfair 2004a, pp. 156–157.
- ^ Mountbatten 2007, p. 39.
- ^ a b Mountbatten 2007, p. 40.
- ^ Lewin 1998, p. 43.
- ^ Greene & Massignani 1994, p. 70.
- ^ Playfair 2004a, pp. 159–163.
- ^ Playfair 2004a, pp. 163–174.
- ^ Playfair 2004b, pp. 23–25.
- ^ Playfair 2004b, pp. 25–26.
- ^ Maughan 1966, pp. 439–442.
- ^ Murphy 1961, pp. 91–93.
- ^ Neillands 2004, p. 90.
- ^ Murphy 1961, p. 355.
- ^ Playfair 2004b, pp. 73–87.
- ^ a b c Harrison 1996, p. 338.
- ^ Playfair 2004b, pp. 73–81.
- ^ Harrison 1996, p. 325.
- ^ McDonald 2004, p. 204.
- ^ Playfair 2004b, pp. 223–277.
- ^ Maughan 1966, p. 395.
- ^ Maughan 1966, pp. 401, 755.
- ^ Playfair 2004b, p. 26.
- ^ a b Harrison 1996, p. 228.
- ^ ITOH 1974, pp. 258–259.
- ^ Maughan 1966, p. 413.
References
[edit]Books
- Admiralty, British (1947). British merchant vessels lost or damaged by enemy action during Second World War, 3rd September, 1939 to 2nd September, 1945. London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office.
- Chappell, M. (1996). Army Commandos 1940–1945. Elite. Oxford: Osprey. ISBN 978-1-85532-579-1.
- Creveld, M. van (1977). Supplying War: Logistics from Wallenstein to Patton. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-29793-6.
- Dominioni, P. C.; Izzo, G. (1967). Takfír: Cronaca dell'ultima Battaglia di Alamein [Takfír: Chronicle of the Last Battle of Alamein]. Testimonianze fra cronaca e storia (in Italian). Milano: Ugo Mursia Editore. OCLC 163936563.
- Greene, J.; Massignani, A. (1994). Rommel's North Africa Campaign: September 1940 – November 1942. Conshohocken, PA: Combined Books. ISBN 978-0-585-19391-5.
- Harrison, F. (1999) [1996]. Tobruk: The Great Siege Reassessed. London: Brockhampton Press. ISBN 978-1-86019-986-8.
- La Prima controffensiva italo-tedesca in Africa settentrionale: (15 febbraio – 18 novembre 1941) [The First Italian-German Counter-offensive in North Africa: (15 February – 18 November 1941) Annex 32]. Ufficio storico (in Italian). Vol. I. Roma: Ministero della difesa, Stato maggiore dell'Esercito. 1974. OCLC 13007244.
- Lewin, R. (1998) [1968]. Rommel as Military Commander. New York: B&N Books. ISBN 978-0-7607-0861-3.
- von Luck, H. (1989). Panzer Commander: The Memoirs of Colonel Hans von Luck. New York: Dell (Random House). ISBN 978-0-440-20802-0.
- Maughan, B. (1966). Tobruk and El Alamein. Australia in the War of 1939–1945 Series 1 (Army). Vol. III (1st online ed.). Canberra: Australian War Memorial. OCLC 954993.
- McDonald, N. (2004). Chester Wilmot Reports. Sydney: ABC Books. ISBN 978-0-7333-1441-4.
- Mountbatten, L. (2007). Combined Operations: The Official Story of the Commandos. London: Read Books. ISBN 978-1-4067-5957-0.
- Murphy, W. E. (1961). Fairbrother, M. C. (ed.). The Relief of Tobruk. The Official History of New Zealand in the Second World War 1939–1945 (online ed.). Wellington, NZ: War History Branch, Department of Internal Affairs. OCLC 846906679. Retrieved 18 March 2015.
- Neillands, R. (2004). Eighth Army: From the Western Desert to the Alps. London: John Murray. ISBN 978-0-7195-5647-0.
- Playfair, Major-General I. S. O.; et al. (1959) [1954]. Butler, J. R. M. (ed.). The Mediterranean and Middle East: The Early Successes Against Italy (to May 1941). History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Military Series. Vol. I. 3rd impression. HMSO. OCLC 888934805.
- Playfair, Major-General I. S. O.; et al. (2004) [1st. pub. HMSO 1956]. Butler, J. R. M. (ed.). The Mediterranean and Middle East: The Germans Come to the Help of their Ally (1941). History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Military Series. Vol. II. Naval & Military Press. ISBN 978-1-84574-066-5.
- Playfair, Major-General I. S. O.; et al. (2004) [1st. pub. HMSO: 1960]. Butler, Sir James (ed.). The Mediterranean and Middle East: British Fortunes reach their Lowest Ebb (September 1941 to September 1942). History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Military Series. Vol. III. Uckfield: Naval & Military Press. ISBN 978-1-84574-067-2.
- Saunders, H. St. G.; Mountbatten, Louis (2007) [1943]. Combined Operations: The Official Story of the Commandos (Read Books ed.). London: HMSO. ISBN 978-1-4067-5957-0.
- The Rise and Fall of the German Air Force (Air 41/10). Public Record Office War Histories (repr. ed.). Richmond, Surrey: Air Ministry. 2001 [1948]. ISBN 978-1-903365-30-4.
- Ring, Hans; Shores, Christopher (1969). Fighters over the desert: the air battles in the Western Desert, June 1940 to December 1942. London, UK: Neville Spearman. ISBN 978-0-85435-060-5.
- Shores, Christopher F.; Massimello, Giovanni; Guest, Russell (2012). A History of the Mediterranean Air War 1940–1945: North Africa: June 1940 – February 1942. Vol. I. London, UK: Grub Street. ISBN 978-1-9081-17076.
- Smith, Peter (2011). The Junkers Ju 87 Stuka: A Complete History. London, UK: Crecy Publishing Limited. ISBN 978-0-85979-156-4.
- Weal, John (1998). Junkers Ju 87 in North Africa and the Mediterranean. London: Osprey Aviation. ISBN 978-1-85532-722-1. OCLC 40883686.
Websites
- "I Bersaglieri in Africa Settentrionale" [The Bersaglieri in North Africa]. Avanti Savoia website (in Italian). 2003. Retrieved 5 April 2015.
Further reading
[edit]- Beaumont, J. (1996). Australia's War, 1939–45. Melbourne: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-1-86448-039-9.
- Buckingham, W. F. (2012). Tobruk: The Great Siege, 1941–42. Stroud: Tempus. ISBN 978-0-7524-4501-4.
- Combes, D. (2001). Morshead: Hero of Tobruk and El Alamein. Melbourne: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-551398-1.
- Converse, A. (2011). Armies of Empire: The 9th Australian and 50th British divisions in Battle 1939–1945. Australian Army History. London: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-19480-8.
- Cull, Brian; Minterne, Don (1999). Hurricanes Over Tobruk: The Pivotal Role of the Hurricane in the Defence of Tobruk, January-June 1941. Grub Street. ISBN 978-1-902304-11-3.
- de Zeng, H.L.; Stankey, D.G.; Creek, E.J. (2009). Dive-Bomber and Ground-Attack Units of the Luftwaffe, 1933–1945: A Reference Source. Vol. I. Ian Allan. ISBN 978-1-9065-3708-1.
- FitzSimons, P. (2006). Tobruk. Sydney: Harper Collins. ISBN 978-0-7322-7645-4.
- Glassop, L. (1992) [1944]. We Were the Rats (Penguin ed.). Sydney: Angus & Robertson. ISBN 978-0-14-014924-1.
- Guardia, M. (2014). Junkers Ju 87 Stuka. Air Vanguard. Oxford: Osprey. ISBN 978-1-4728-0119-7.
- Hoffman, K. (2004). Erwin Rommel. London: Brassey's. ISBN 978-1-85753-374-3.
- Hunt, Sir D. (1990) [1966]. A Don at War (rev. ed.). London: F. Cass. ISBN 978-0-7146-3383-1.
- Jentz, T. L. (1998). Tank Combat In North Africa: The Opening Rounds, Operations Sonnenblume, Brevity, Skorpion and Battleaxe, February 1941 – June 1941. Atglen, PN: Schiffer. ISBN 978-0-7643-0226-8. LCCN 97-80326.
- Johnston, M. (2003). That Magnificent 9th: An Illustrated History of the 9th Australian Division. London: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-1-86508-654-5.
- Latimer, J. (2004). Tobruk 1941: Rommel's Opening Move. Santa Barbara, CA: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-275-98287-4.
- Long, G. (1952). To Benghazi. Australia in the War of 1939–1945 Series 1 (Army). Vol. I (1st online ed.). Canberra: Australian War Memorial. OCLC 18400892.
- Long, G. (1973). The Six Years War: A Concise History of Australia in the 1939–45 War. Canberra: Australian War Memorial. ISBN 978-0-642-99375-5.
- Maule, H. (1961). Spearhead General: The Epic Story of General Sir Frank Messervy and his Men in Eritrea, North Africa and Burma. London: Odhams. OCLC 2127215.
- Mead, R. (2007). Churchill's Lions: A Biographical Guide to the key British Generals of World War II. Stroud: Spellmount. ISBN 978-1-86227-431-0.
- Mitcham, S. W. (2007). Rommel's Desert Commanders: The Men who Served the Desert Fox, North Africa, 1941–1942. Westport, CN: Praeger Security International. ISBN 978-0-275-99436-5.
- Montanari, M. (1985). Tobruk (marzo 1941 – gennaio 1942) [Tobruk (March 1941 – January 1942)]. Le operazioni in Africa Settentrionale (in Italian). Vol. II. Roma: Stato Maggiore dell'esercito, Ufficio Storico. OCLC 886499428.
- Rommel, E. (1982) [1953]. Liddell Hart, B. (ed.). The Rommel Papers. trans. Findlay, Paul (New ed.). New York: Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0-306-80157-0.
- Spencer, B. (1999). In the Footsteps of Ghosts: With the 2/9th Battalion in the African Desert. St. Leonards, NSW: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-1-86508-145-8.
- Walker, I. (2006). Iron Hulls, Iron Hearts: Mussolini's Elite Armoured Divisions in North Africa. Ramsbury: Crowood Press. ISBN 978-1-86126-839-6.
- Wilmot, C. (1993) [1944]. Tobruk 1941 (repr. Penguin ed.). Sydney: Halstead Press. ISBN 978-0-670-07120-3.
Websites
- 2/43 Infantry Battalion War Diary, April 1941 (Appendix No. 30: Summary No. 2, entry for 16 April) (PDF). Canberra: Australian War Memorial. pp. 111–112. RCDIG1026557. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 5 April 2015.
- Miller, W. A. (1986). "The 9th Australian Division Versus the Africa Corps: An Infantry Division against Tanks: Tobruk, Libya, 1941". Fort Leavenworth, KN: US Army Command and General Staff College, Combat Studies Institute. OCLC 815355690. Archived from the original on 25 February 2010. Retrieved 5 April 2015.
- Toppe, Generalmajor A. (1991) [~1947]. "German Experiences in Desert Warfare during World War II" (PDF). Fort Leavenworth, KS: US Army General Command and Staff College. OCLC 58531612. Retrieved 5 April 2015.
External links
[edit]- Siege of Tobruk
- Conflicts in 1941
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