Commencing on August 31, 1942, a month
after the German Panzerarmee Afrika was checked at the Battles of El Alamein,
Alam el Halfa was Erwin Rommel’s final attempt to break through to the Nile
valley in continuation of his frustrated drive across Cyrenaica and western
Egypt. Leading the British Eighth Army, Gen. Sir Bernard Law Montgomery
deployed his forces near Alam el Halfa, an east-west ridge astride Rommel’s
path of advance. On the first day of battle, three German armored divisions
defeated British forces, turning the Eighth Army’s southern flank. However,
Montgomery rallied an extraordinary defense—considered by military historians a
textbook example of the modern repulse—and, coordinating armor and infantry
with air and artillery support, stopped Rommel at the ridge. By the fourth day
of the battle, Rommel had been forced into retreat, redeploying his armor in a
defensive line running north and south. The battle was over by September 7, by
which time Rommel, checked again, had lost significantly more than the 1,750
casualties (killed and wounded) suffered by the Eighth Army.
#
North African battle between German Field
Marshal Erwin Rommel’s Afrika Korps and British Lieutenant General Bernard Law
Montgomery’s Eighth Army. Fearful that he would permanently lose the initiative
to the Eighth Army after his advance was halted at the First Battle of El
Alamein in July 1942, Rommel reorganized with the intention of resuming his
advance toward Suez. Meanwhile, Montgomery assumed command of the British
Eighth Army on 13 August and began planning for the offensive, all the while
expecting Rommel to attack first.
Late on the evening of 30 August, Rommel
attempted, as at Gazala, to get around Eighth Army’s left flank although his
force was weak in armor. With diversionary attacks designed to hold British
forces along the coast, Rommel ordered the Afrika Korps east and south of Alam
Halfa Ridge with the aim of swinging north to the Mediterranean coast behind
Montgomery and enveloping the Eighth Army.
The Eighth Army had established a defense
in depth, including strong positions on the Alam Halfa and Ruweisat Ridges, and
Montgomery rejected any withdrawal. The 10th Armored Division, 22nd Armored
Brigade, and 44th Division defended Alam Halfa, while the 7th Armored Division
was south of the ridge. Montgomery ordered his armored units to defend from
their current positions rather than advancing to meet Rommel’s Panzers.
Slowed by British minefields and fuel
shortages, Rommel’s tanks did not reach Alam Halfa until the evening of 31
August. Daylight brought vicious Desert Air Force attacks against the Axis
advance, and the 7th Armored Division’s placement forced Rommel to swing north
prematurely, into the teeth of a tank brigade on Alam Halfa Ridge. Fuel
shortages prevented the Afrika Korps from outflanking Alam Halfa to the east,
forcing Rommel onto the defensive there.
On 1 September, after a flank assault on
the 22nd Armored Brigade failed and having suffered severe losses, Rommel
ordered his forces to retire to their original positions. The withdrawal, which
began the next day, exposed the Afrika Korps to further devastating British
aerial attacks. Rommel repulsed a counterattack by the 2nd New Zealand Division
on the evening of 3 September, and Montgomery believed that he lacked the
resources to force a general Axis withdrawal, so he decided not to press his
advantage for the time being. Certainly Rommel’s past successes made Montgomery
wary of pushing too far forward.
Montgomery had fought his first battle as
commander of Eighth Army with great skill. Rommel now had no choice but to go
on the defensive. He established positions between the Mediterranean and the
Qattara Depression as both sides prepared for the Eighth Army’s upcoming
offensive: the Second Battle of El Alamein.
Historically, the victory here is
significant as an outstanding instance of ground-air coordination and the
exploitation of intelligence. British breakthroughs in the decryption of the
enemy’s coded communication proved crucial to the triumph at Alam el Halfa. On
August 15, 1942, Rommel, using the Enigma cipher, transmitted his plan of
action—to effect a breakthrough to Cairo and the Nile—to Adolf Hitler. Within
48 hours, Montgomery had a decrypted translation of this message. Learning that
Rommel intended to move south around the end of the British line, then strike
the British flank to cut off the Eighth Army from its base and supplies,
Montgomery was able to deploy his forces at the Alam el Halfa ridge and check
the German advance.
Further
reading: Hinsley, F. H., and Alan Stripp, eds.
Codebreakers: The Inside Story of Bletchley Park. New York: Oxford University
Press, 2001; McCarthy, Peter, and Mike Syron. Panzerkrieg: The Rise and Fall of
Hitler’s Tank Divisions. New York: Carroll & Graf, 2002. Stewart, Adrian.
Eighth Army’s Greatest Victories: Alam Halfa to Tunis 1942–1943. London: Leo
Cooper, 1999; Stewart, Adrian. North African Victory: The 8th Army from Alam
Halfa to Tunis, 1942–43. London: Penguin UK, 2002.
No comments:
Post a Comment