Revision as of 01:47, 23 June 2008 editSteyr2007 (talk | contribs)21 edits Enough of this childish fight, both of you; I've inserted an extract from an encyclopaedia that supports the claim the Italians took 6000 Allied prisoners, and not 6500 as has been claimed by others.← Previous edit | Latest revision as of 06:28, 7 January 2025 edit undoGreenC bot (talk | contribs)Bots2,555,705 edits Rescued 1 archive link; remove 1 link. Wayback Medic 2.5 per WP:URLREQ#newshub.co.nz | ||
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{{Short description|Battle of World War II}} | |||
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{{Use British English|date=March 2022}} | |||
{{Infobox Military Conflict | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2024}} | |||
|conflict=First Battle of El Alamein | |||
{{Infobox military conflict | |||
|partof=], ] | |||
| conflict = First Battle of El Alamein | |||
|image=] | |||
| partof = the ] of ] | |||
|caption=Allied infantry manning a sandbagged defensive position near El Alamein, 17 July 1942. | |||
| image = File:1stAlameinBritDefense.jpg | |||
|date=] – ], ] | |||
| image_size = 300px | |||
|place=], ] | |||
| caption = British infantry manning a sandbagged defensive position near El Alamein, 17 July 1942. | |||
|result=Tactical stalemate; Strategic Allied victory | |||
| date = 1–27 July 1942 | |||
|combatant1= {{flagicon|Australia}} ]<br />{{flagicon|India|British}} ]<br> {{flagicon|New Zealand}} ]<br /> {{flagicon|South Africa|1928}} ]<br /> {{flagicon|United Kingdom}} ] | |||
| place = ], British-occupied Egypt | |||
|combatant2={{flagicon|Germany|Nazi}} ]<br /> | |||
| coordinates = {{Coord|30|50|29|N|28|56|34|E|region:EG|display=inline,title}} | |||
] ] | |||
| result = Inconclusive | |||
|commander1={{flagicon|United Kingdom}} ]<br />{{flagicon|United Kingdom}} ] | |||
| combatant1 = {{flagcountry|Fascist Italy (1922–1943)}}<br>{{flagicon|Nazi Germany}} ] | |||
|commander2={{flagicon|Germany|Nazi}} ] | |||
| combatant2 = {{Flag|United Kingdom}}<br />{{flagicon|British Raj}} ]<br />{{flagcountry|Dominion of New Zealand}}<br />{{Flag|Australia}}<br />{{flagicon|Union of South Africa}} ] | |||
|strength1=150,000 troops in 3 army corps, 7 infantry and 3 armoured divisions 1,114 tanks, over 1,000 artillery and over 1,500 planes | |||
| commander1 = {{nowrap|{{flagicon|Fascist Italy (1922–1943)}} ]<br>{{flagicon|Nazi Germany}} ]<br>{{flagicon|Nazi Germany}} ]<br>{{flagicon|Fascist Italy (1922–1943)}} ]<br>{{flagicon|Fascist Italy (1922–1943)}} ]<br>{{flagicon|Fascist Italy (1922–1943)}} ]}} | |||
| strength2=96,000 troops (including 56,000 Italians) 8 infantry and 4 armoured divisions (2 Panzer 2 Italian) 585 tanks (fewer than half of which were Panzers), fewer than 500 planes. | |||
| commander2 = {{nowrap|{{flagicon|United Kingdom}} ]<br>{{flagicon|United Kingdom}} ]<br>{{flagicon|United Kingdom}} ]<br>{{flagicon|United Kingdom}} ]}} | |||
|casualties1=13,250 killed, wounded or captured<ref name="CM589"/> | |||
| strength1 = 96,000 troops (56,000 Italian, 40,000 German)<br />70 tanks initially (585 tanks later){{efn|Reported strength on 30 June (55 German and 15 Italian tanks). An unknown number of tanks were also in repair workshops behind the front.}}<ref>{{harvnb|Barr|2005|p=39}}</ref><br />~500 planes | |||
|casualties2=10,000 killed or wounded<ref>Watson (2007), p. 6</ref><br/>7,000 Captured | |||
| strength2 = 150,000 troops<br />179 tanks initially (1,114 tanks later){{efn|Strength at the frontline on 1 July. In addition 902 tanks were in repair workshops behind the front, of which 34 were serviceable and many unrepairable. }}<ref>{{harvnb|Barr|2005|p=40}}</ref><br />1,000+ artillery pieces<br />1,500+ planes | |||
}} | |||
| casualties1 = 10,000 killed or wounded<ref>{{harvnb|Watson|2007|p=6}}</ref><br />7,000 prisoners<ref>{{harvnb|Barr|2005|p=184}}</ref><ref name="CM589">{{harvnb|Mackenzie|1951|p=589}}</ref> | |||
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| casualties2 = 13,250 killed or wounded<ref name="CM589"/> | |||
{{Campaignbox Western Desert}} | |||
| campaignbox = {{Campaignbox Western Desert}} | |||
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}} | |||
] | |||
The '''First Battle of El Alamein''' (1–27 July 1942) was a battle of the ] of ], fought in ] between ] (German and Italian) forces of the ]—which included the {{lang|de|]}} under ] ]—and ] (] and ]) forces of the ] under ] ]. | |||
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In this battle the British halted a second advance by the Axis forces into Egypt. Axis positions near ], only {{convert|106|km|mi|abbr=on|sp=us}} from ], were dangerously close to the ports and cities of Egypt, the base facilities of the Commonwealth forces and the ]. However, the Axis forces were too far from their base at ] in Libya to remain at El Alamein indefinitely, which led both sides to accumulate supplies for more offensives, against the constraints of time and distance. | |||
The '''First Battle of El Alamein''' ]–] ] was a battle of the ] of ], fought between ] commanded by ], and ] commanded by ]. The battle halted the furthest (and final) advance made by the Axis forces into Egypt, El Alamein being only just over 50 miles from ]. | |||
==Prelude== | |||
==Background== | |||
===Retreat from Gazala=== | ===Retreat from Gazala=== | ||
] tank hunters with an ] armoured car in front.]] | |||
Following the defeat at the ] in June 1942, the Eighth Army had retreated from the Gazala line to ], roughly 100 miles inside the Egyptian border. On ] General ], C-in-C ] relieved ] and assumed direct command of ] himself. He decided not to seek a confrontation at the Mersa Matruh position: it had an open left flank to the south of the sort well exploited by Rommel at Gazala. He decided instead to withdraw a further 100 miles or more east to near ] on the ] coast. Only 40 miles (60 km) to the south of El Alamein the steep slopes of the Qattara Depression ruled out the possibility of armour moving round the southern flank of his defenses and limited the width of the front he had to defend. | |||
After their defeat at the ] in Eastern ] in June 1942, the ], commanded by ] ], had retreated east from the Gazala line into north-western ] as far as ], roughly {{convert|160|km|mi|abbr=on}} inside the border. Ritchie had decided not to hold the defences on the ], because the defensive plan there was for infantry to hold defended localities and a strong armoured force behind them to meet any attempts to penetrate or outflank the fixed defences. Since General Ritchie had virtually no armoured units left fit to fight, the infantry positions would be defeated in detail. The Mersa defence plan also included an armoured reserve but in its absence Ritchie believed he could organise his infantry to cover the minefields between the defended localities to prevent ] engineers from having undisturbed access.<ref>Playfair Vol. III, p. 279</ref> | |||
To defend the Matruh line, Ritchie placed ] (in Matruh itself) and ] (some {{convert|24|km|mi|abbr=on}} down the coast at Gerawla) under ] HQ, newly arrived from Syria.<ref>Playfair Vol. III, pp. 281''n'' and 283</ref> Inland from X Corps would be ] with ] (with only one infantry brigade, ], and two artillery regiments) around Sidi Hamza about {{convert|32|km|mi|abbr=on}} inland, and the newly arrived ] (short one brigade, the ], which had been left out of combat in case the division was captured and it would be needed to serve as the nucleus of a new division) at Minqar Qaim (on the escarpment {{convert|48|km|mi|abbr=on}} inland) and ] in the open desert to the south.<ref>Playfair Vol. III, pp. 284–285</ref> The 1st Armoured Division had taken over ] and ] from ] which by this time had only three tank regiments (battalions) between them.<ref>Playfair Vol. III, p. 281</ref> | |||
] | |||
On 25 June, ] ]—Commander-in-Chief (C-in-C) ]—relieved Ritchie and assumed direct command of the Eighth Army himself.<ref>Playfair Vol. III, p. 285</ref> He decided not to seek a decisive confrontation at the Mersa Matruh position. He concluded that his inferiority in armour after the Gazala defeat, meant he would be unable to prevent Rommel either breaking through his centre or enveloping his open left flank to the south in the same way he had at Gazala.{{efn|GHQ Cairo estimated that the Axis could have as many as 519 serviceable tanks on 30 June although 339 was a more probable figure. In fact the actual number on 26 June was 104 compared with 155 tanks in Eighth Army<ref>{{harvnb|Hinsley|1981|p=390}}</ref>|group="nb"}} He decided instead to employ delaying tactics while withdrawing a further {{convert|160|km|mi|abbr=on}} or more east to a more defensible position near ] on the ] coast. Only {{convert|64|km|mi|abbr=on}} to the south of El Alamein, the steep slopes of the ] ruled out the possibility of Axis armour moving around the southern flank of his defences and limited the width of the front he had to defend. | |||
===Battle of Mersa Matruh=== | ===Battle of Mersa Matruh=== | ||
{{Main|Battle of Mersa Matruh}} | |||
While preparing the Alamein positions Auchinleck fought strong delaying actions first at Mersa Matruh on ] and then Fuka on ]. The late change of orders resulted in some confusion in the forward formations (X Corps and XIII Corps) between the desire to inflict damage on the enemy and the intention not to get trapped in the Matruh position but retreat in good order. As a result there was poor coordination between the two forward Corps and units within them. Inland the ] found itself surrounded by 21st Panzer Division at Minqar Qaim but succeeded in breaking out on the night of ] to join the rest of XIII Corps at the Alamein position without serious losses.<ref name="NZ88"></ref> However, the withdrawal of XIII Corps had left the southern flank of X Corps on the coast at Matruh exposed and their line of retreat compromised. They too had had to break out and in the process sustained heavy casualties including the destruction on Indian 29th Infantry Brigade at Fuka. On the morning of 29 June, at 0930 hours, Colonel Scirocco's 7th Bersaglieri Regiment stormed the fortress of Mersa Matruh, after the German 90th Light Division had attacked the forward posts, the Italian shock-troops capturing 6,000 defenders. | |||
] | |||
===Defenses at El Alamein=== | |||
While preparing the Alamein positions, Auchinleck fought strong delaying actions, first at Mersa Matruh on 26–27 June and then Fuka on 28 June. The late change of orders resulted in some confusion in the forward formations (X Corps and XIII Corps) between the desire to inflict damage on the enemy and the intention not to get trapped in the Matruh position but retreat in good order. The result was poor co-ordination between the two forward Corps and units within them. Late on 26 June, the German ] and ] managed to find their way through the minefields in the centre of the front. Early on 27 June, resuming its advance, the 90th Light was checked by British 50th Division's artillery. Meanwhile, the 15th and 21st Panzer Divisions advanced east above and below the escarpment. The 15th Panzer Division were blocked by 4th Armoured and ], but the 21st Panzer Division were ordered on to attack Minqar Qaim. Rommel ordered 90th Light to resume its advance, requiring it to cut the coast road behind 50th Division by the evening.<ref>Playfair Vol. III, p. 290</ref> As the 21st Panzer Division moved on Minqar Qaim, the 2nd New Zealand Division found itself surrounded but broke out on the night of 27/28 June without serious losses and withdrew east.<ref name="NZ88">{{Cite web |url=https://nzetc.victoria.ac.nz/tm/scholarly/tei-WH2Egyp-c10.html#n81 |title=Scoullar (1955), Chapters 10, 11 and 12 |access-date=2 November 2007 |archive-date=2 December 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081202195257/http://www.nzetc.org/tm/scholarly/tei-WH2Egyp-c10.html#n81 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
Alamein itself was an insignificant railway station on the coast. Some twenty miles to the south lay the Ruweisat ridge, a low stony ridge that nontheless gave excellent observation for many miles over the surrounding desert. Another thirty miles ot the south of that lay the Qattara Depression. The British had commenced construction of several "boxes" (localities with dug-outs and surrounded by minefields and barbed wire), but in reality the "line" was just open empty desert.{{fact|date=June 2008}} | |||
] in North Africa (June 1942).]] | |||
The British position in Egypt was in a critical position. The rout from Mersa Matruh had created a panic in the British headquarters at Cairo, something later called "the Flap". In courtyards of British headquarters, rear echelon units, and the British Embassy, confidential papers were frantically burned before what was expected to be the entry of Axis troops into the city - which was to be nicknamed "Ash Wednesday". The Axis too believed that the capture of Egypt was imminent - ], sensing an historic moment, flew to Libya in preparation for what he expected would be his triumphal entry to Cairo.<ref>Barr.N (2005), p.69</ref> | |||
Auchinleck had planned a second delaying position at ], some {{cvt|30|mi|km}} east of Matruh, and at 21:20 he issued the orders for a withdrawal to Fuka. Confusion in communication led the division withdrawing immediately to the El Alamein position.<ref>Playfair Vol. III, pp. 292–293</ref> X Corps, having made an unsuccessful attempt to secure a position on the escarpment, were out of touch with Eighth Army from 19:30 until 04:30 the next morning. Only then did they discover that the withdrawal order had been given. The withdrawal of XIII Corps had left the southern flank of X Corps on the coast at Matruh exposed and their line of retreat compromised by the cutting of the coastal road {{cvt|17|mi|km}} east of Matruh. They were ordered to break out southwards into the desert and then make their way east. Auchinleck ordered XIII Corps to provide support but they were in no position to do so. At 21:00 on 28 June, X Corps—organised into brigade groups—headed south. In the darkness, there was considerable confusion as they came across enemy units laagered for the night. In the process, 5th Indian Division in particular sustained heavy casualties, including the destruction of the 29th Indian Infantry Brigade at Fuka.<ref>Playfair Vol. III, pp. 294–295</ref> Axis forces captured more than 6,000 ], in addition to 40 tanks and an enormous quantity of supplies.<ref>Panzer Army Africa Battle Report dated 29 June 1942 K.T.B. 812 {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081030043341/http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a4/Battle_report_of_Panzerarmeeafrika_for_28_June_1942.jpg |date=30 October 2008 }} and {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090325125623/http://commons.wikimedia.org/File:Battle_report_of_Panzerarmeeafrika_for_29_June_1942.jpg |date=25 March 2009 }}</ref> | |||
==Prelude== | |||
On 30 June Rommel's Afrika Korps approached the Alamein position. The Axis forces were exhausted and understrength, but Rommel was confident of continuing the advance on to the Nile. Rommel's plan was for the 90th 'Afrika' Division to screen the 1st South African Division (who occupied the northern most position around Alamein), while the 15th Panzer Division and 21st Panzer Division struck past the Ruweisat Ridge. However, Axis intelligence had failed to disclose the presence of a British brigade, 18th Indian Brigade, which had occupied an exposed position just west of Ruweisat Ridge at Deir el Shein late on ] after a hasty journey from Iraq.<ref> Mackenzie (1951), p.580</ref> | |||
===Defences at El Alamein=== | |||
] | |||
Alamein itself was an inconsequential railway station on the coast. Some {{cvt|10|mi|km}} to the south lay the ], a low stony prominence that gave excellent observation for many miles over the surrounding desert; {{cvt|20|mi|km}} to the south was the Qattara Depression. The line the British chose to defend stretched between the sea and the Depression, which meant that Rommel could outflank it only by taking a significant detour to the south and crossing the ]. The British Army in Egypt recognised this before the war and had the Eighth Army begin construction of several "boxes" (localities with dug-outs and surrounded by minefields and barbed wire) the most developed being around the railway station at Alamein.<ref>{{harvnb|Latimer|2002|p=58}}</ref> Most of the "line" was open, empty desert.<ref name="Playfair332">Playfair Vol. III, p. 332</ref> Lieutenant-General ] (] ]) organised the position and started to construct three defended "boxes". The first and strongest, at El Alamein on the coast, had been partly wired and mined by ]. The Bab el Qattara box—some {{cvt|20|mi|km}} from the coast and {{cvt|8|mi|km}} south-west of the Ruweisat Ridge—had been dug but had not been wired or mined, while at the Naq Abu Dweis box (on the edge of the Qattara Depression), {{cvt|34|mi|km}} from the coast, very little work had been done.<ref name= "Playfair332"/> | |||
The British position in Egypt was desperate, the rout from Mersa Matruh had created a panic in the British headquarters at Cairo, something later called "the Flap". On what came to be referred to as "Ash Wednesday", at British headquarters, rear echelon units and the British Embassy, papers were hurriedly burned in anticipation of the fall of the city. Auchinleck—although believing he could stop ] at Alamein—felt he could not ignore the possibility that he might once more be outmanoeuvred or outfought. To maintain his army, plans must be made for the possibility of a further retreat whilst maintaining morale and retaining the support and co-operation of the Egyptians. Defensive positions were constructed west of Alexandria and on the approaches to Cairo while considerable areas in the Nile delta were flooded.<ref>Playfair Vol. III, pp. 333–334</ref> The Axis, too, believed that the capture of Egypt was imminent; Italian leader ]—sensing a historic moment—flew to Libya to prepare for his triumphal entry into Cairo.<ref>{{harvnb|Barr|2005|p=69}}</ref> | |||
] guns of the 2/8th Field Regiment, ] at El Alamein, 12 July 1942.]] | |||
The scattering of X Corps at Mersa Matruh disrupted Auchinleck's plan for occupying the Alamein defences. On 29 June, he ordered XXX Corps—the 1st South African, 5th and 10th Indian divisions—to take the coastal sector on the right of the front and XIII Corps—the 2nd New Zealand Division and 4th Indian divisions—to be on the left. The remains of the 1st Armoured Division and the 7th Armoured Division were to be held as a mobile army reserve.<ref>Playfair Vol. III, p. 295</ref> His intention was for the fixed defensive positions to channel and disorganise the enemy's advance while mobile units would attack their flanks and rear.<ref>Playfair Vol. III, pp. 332–333</ref> | |||
On 30 June, Rommel's ] approached the Alamein position. The Axis forces were exhausted and understrength. Rommel had driven them forward ruthlessly, being confident that, provided he struck quickly before Eighth Army had time to settle, his momentum would take him through the Alamein position and he could then advance to the Nile with little further opposition. Supplies remained a problem because the Axis staff had originally expected a pause of six weeks after the capture of Tobruk. German air units were also exhausted and providing little help against the ]'s all-out attack on the Axis supply lines which, with the arrival of ] (USAAF) heavy bombers, could reach as far as Benghazi.<ref>{{harvnb|Hinsley|1981|p=392}}</ref> Although captured supplies proved useful, water and ammunition were constantly in short supply, while a shortage of transport impeded the distribution of the supplies that the Axis forces did have.<ref>Playfair Vol. III, p. 331</ref> | |||
===Axis plan of attack=== | |||
], Supreme Commander of Axis Forces in North Africa and Rommel's superior.|alt=|234x234px]] | |||
Rommel's plan was for the 90th Light Division and the 15th and 21st ''Panzer'' divisions of the '']'' to penetrate the Eighth Army lines between the Alamein box and Deir el Abyad (which he believed was defended). The 90th Light Division was then to veer north to cut the coastal road and trap the defenders of the Alamein box (which Rommel thought was occupied by the remains of the 50th Infantry Division) and the ''Afrika Korps'' would veer right to attack the rear of XIII Corps. | |||
==Battle== | ==Battle== | ||
An Italian division was to attack the Alamein box from the west and another was to follow the 90th Light Division. The Italian XX Corps was to follow the ''Afrika Korps'' and deal with the Qattara box while the ] and German reconnaissance units would protect the right flank.<ref name= "Playfair3498">Playfair Vol. III, p. 340</ref> Rommel had planned to attack on 30 June but supply and transport difficulties had resulted in a day's delay, vital to the defending forces reorganising on the Alamein line. On 30 June, the 90th Light Division was still {{cvt|15|mi|km}} short of its start line, 21st ''Panzer'' Division was immobilised through lack of fuel and the promised air support had yet to move into its advanced airfields.<ref>{{harvnb|Hinsley|1981|pp=392–393}}</ref> | |||
===Panzer Army Africa attacks=== | ===Panzer Army Africa attacks=== | ||
On ] ] attacked along the coast but was repulsed by the South African 1st Division in the Alamein box supported by heavy artillery fire.<ref>Barr.N, (2005, p.81</ref> At about 1000 hours on ] ] attacked Deir el Shein. The Indian brigade held out the whole day in desperate fighting but by the evening had been overrun. However, the time they bought allowed Auchinleck to organise a hasty defence at the western end of Ruweisat Ridge.<ref name="Mac581-2">Mackenzie (1951), pp.581–582</ref> | |||
] of the ''Afrika Korps''.]] | |||
On ] Rommel ordered the offensive to be resumed, with Afrika Korps to drive over the Ruweisat ridge outflanking the South African positions at Alamein. By this time Afrika Korps was at a very low strength (just 37 tanks),{{fact|date=June 2008}} but the British defence of Ruweisat ridge relied on an improvised formation called Robcol, comprising a regiment each of Field artillery and light anti-aircraft artillery and a company of infantry. Robcol, in line with normal British army practice for ''ad hoc'' formations, was named after its commander, Brigadier Robert Waller, the artillery commander of ].<ref name="Mac582">Mackenzie (1951), p. 582</ref> Robcol was able to buy time, and by late afternoon two British armoured brigades joined the battle.{{fact|date=June 2008}} Repeated attempts by the Axis armour were driven back and by dusk they withdrew. Ruweisat was further reinforced on the night of ] and with its growing size Robcol presently became Walgroup.<ref name="Mac582"/> All this time, the Axis units were subjected to heavy air attacks from the Royal Air Force.<ref>Barr.N, (2005), p.88</ref> | |||
At 03:00 on 1 July, 90th Light Infantry Division advanced east but strayed too far north and ran into the 1st South African Division's defences and became pinned down.<ref name="Playfair3498"/><ref>{{harvnb|Barr|2005|p=81}}</ref> The 15th and 21st ''Panzer'' Divisions of the ''Afrika Korps'' were delayed by a sandstorm and then a heavy air attack. It was broad daylight by the time they circled round the back of Deir el Abyad where they found the feature to the east of it occupied by ] which, after a hasty journey from Iraq, had occupied the exposed position just west of Ruweisat Ridge and east of Deir el Abyad at Deir el Shein late on 28 June to create one of Norrie's additional defensive boxes.<ref>Mackenzie (1951), p.580</ref> | |||
At about 10:00 on 1 July, 21st ''Panzer'' Division attacked Deir el Shein. 18th Indian Infantry Brigade—supported by 23 ] gun-howitzers, 16 of the new ] anti-tank guns and nine ]—held out the whole day in desperate fighting but by evening the Germans succeeded in over-running them.<ref>Playfair Vol. III, pp. 340–341</ref> The time they bought allowed Auchinleck to organise the defence of the western end of Ruweisat Ridge.<ref name= "Mac581-2">Mackenzie (1951), pp.581–582</ref> The 1st Armoured Division had been sent to intervene at Deir el Shein. They ran into 15th ''Panzer'' Division just south of Deir el Shein and drove it west. By the end of the day's fighting, the ''Afrika Korps'' had 37 tanks left out of its initial complement of 55.<ref name="Playfair341">Playfair Vol. III, p. 341</ref> | |||
Rommel ordered the offensive against the Ruweisat ridge to be resumed on ]. This time the Italian XX Motorised Corps would take the leading role, an indication of the exhaustion and low strength of Afrika Korps. The advance of Afrika Korps that morning was soon halted by the combination of British artillery fire and constant air attacks - on ] the Royal Air Force flew a total of 780 sorties. Although the Afrika Korps was halted, the Italian Ariete Armoured Division initially made good progress along Ruweisat ridge. But as the Italian tanks drove along the ridge they became engaged in a battle with more numerous and better armed British tanks of 4 Armoured Brigade.{{fact|date=June 2008}} | |||
During the early afternoon, 90th Light had extricated itself from the El Alamein box defences and resumed its move eastward. It came under artillery fire from the three South African brigade groups and was forced to dig in.<ref name="Playfair341"/> | |||
To relieve the pressure being exerted on the right and center of the Eighth Army line XIII Corps on the left advanced from the Qattara box (also known as the Kaponga box by the New Zealanders) on ]. It was planned that the 2nd New Zealand Division with the remains of 5th Indian Division and 7th Motor Brigade under command would swing north to threaten the Axis flank and rear.<ref name="Mac582"/> It was this force that encountered the Ariete Armoured Division's artillery which was driving on the southern flank of the division as it attacked Ruweisat. The Italian commander ordered his battalions to fight their way out independently but the Ariete lost 531 men (about 350 were prisoners) 36 pieces of artillery, six or eight tanks and 55 trucks.<ref name="Mitcham113">Mitcham (2007), p. 113</ref> By the end of the day the Ariete Division had been reduced to just five tanks.<ref>Walker.I, (2003), p.141</ref> Attempts by Rommel to resume the attack with the Afrika Korps ran into the British 22nd Armoured Brigade and 4th Armoured Brigade, and after a fierce tank battle, halted.<ref>Barr.N, (2005), p.92</ref> | |||
On 2 July, Rommel ordered the resumption of the offensive. Once again, 90th Light failed to make progress so Rommel called the ''Afrika Korps'' to abandon its planned sweep southward and instead join the effort to break through to the coast road by attacking east toward Ruweisat Ridge. The British defence of Ruweisat Ridge relied on an improvised formation called "Robcol", comprising a regiment each of field artillery and light anti-aircraft artillery and a company of infantry. Robcol—in line with normal British Army practice for ''ad hoc'' formations—was named after its commander, Brigadier Robert Waller, the Commander Royal Artillery of the 10th Indian Infantry Division.<ref name="Mac582">{{harvnb|Mackenzie|1951|p=582}}</ref> Robcol was able to buy time, and by late afternoon the two British armoured brigades joined the battle with 4th Armoured Brigade engaging 15th ''Panzer'' and 22nd Armoured Brigade 21st ''Panzer'' respectively.<ref>Playfair Vol. III, pp. 342–343</ref> They drove back repeated attacks by the Axis armour, who then withdrew before dusk. The British reinforced Ruweisat on the night of 2 July. The now enlarged Robcol became "Walgroup".<ref name="Mac582"/> Meanwhile, the Royal Air Force (RAF) made heavy air attacks on the Axis units.<ref>{{harvnb|Barr|2005|p=88}}</ref> | |||
To the south the New Zealand group pushed on again on ] but came under heavy fire from the "Brescia" Division at El Mreir and the XIII Corps attack was called off.<ref name="Mitcham113"/> | |||
The next day, 3 July, Rommel ordered the ''Afrika Korps'' to resume its attack on the Ruweisat ridge with the ] on its southern flank. ], meanwhile were to hold El Mreir. By this stage the ''Afrika Korps'' had only 26 operational tanks.<ref name="Playfair343">Playfair Vol. III, p. 343</ref> There was a sharp armoured exchange south of Ruweisat ridge during the morning and the main Axis advance was held.<ref name="Playfair343"/> On 3 July, the RAF flew 780 sorties.{{efn|During the period 1 to 27 June the Desert Air Force flew nearly 15,400 sorties.<ref>Playfair Vol. III, p. 335</ref> Auchinleck later wrote in his official despatches "...Our air forces could not have done more than they did to help and sustain the Eighth Army in its struggle. Their effort was continuous by day and night, and the effect on the enemy was tremendous. I am certain that, had it not been for their devoted and exceptional efforts, we should not have been able to stop the enemy on the El Alamein position."<ref>{{London Gazette|issue=38177 |date=13 January 1948 |page=367|supp=y}}</ref>}} | |||
To relieve the pressure on the right and centre of the Eighth Army line, XIII Corps on the left advanced from the Qattara box (known to the New Zealanders as the Kaponga box). The plan was that the New Zealand 2nd Division—with the remains of Indian 5th Division and 7th Motor Brigade under its command—would swing north to threaten the Axis flank and rear.<ref name="Mac582"/> This force encountered the ]'s artillery, which was driving on the southern flank of the division as it attacked Ruweisat. The Italian commander ordered his battalions to fight their way out independently but the ''Ariete'' lost 531 men (about 350 were prisoners), 36 pieces of artillery, six (or eight?) tanks, and 55 trucks.<ref name="Mitcham113">{{harvnb|Mitcham|2007|p=113}}</ref> By the end of the day, the ''Ariete'' Division had only five tanks.<ref>Walker.I, (2003), p.141</ref> The day ended once again with the ''Afrika Korps'' and ''Ariete'' coming off second best to the superior numbers of the British 22nd Armoured and 4th Armoured Brigades,{{efn|The two British armoured brigades started on 3 July with a total strength of 119 tanks<ref name= "Playfair343"/>}} frustrating Rommel's attempts to resume his advance.<ref>{{harvnb|Barr|2005|p=92}}</ref> The RAF once again played its part, flying 900 sorties during the day.<ref name= "Playfair343"/> | |||
To the south, on 5 July the New Zealand group resumed its advance northwards towards El Mreir intending to cut the rear of the ''Ariete'' Division. Heavy fire from the Italian ] at El Mreir, however, {{cvt|5|mi|km}} north of the Qattara box, checked their progress and led XIII Corps to call off its attack.<ref name="Mitcham113"/> | |||
===Rommel digs in=== | ===Rommel digs in=== | ||
] | |||
At this point Rommel decided his exhausted forces could make no further headway without resting and regrouping. Afrika Korps had just 36 Panzers, his three German Divisions numbered just 1200-1500 men each, and his men were exhausted and operating at the end of their supply lines. On 4 July Rommel ordered the Axis forces to go on the defensive.{{fact|date=June 2008}} | |||
At this point, Rommel decided his exhausted forces could make no further headway without resting and regrouping. He reported to the ] that his three German divisions numbered just 1,200–1,500 men each and resupply was proving highly problematic because of enemy interference from the air. He expected to have to remain on the defensive for at least two weeks.<ref>Playfair Vol. III, p. 344/</ref> | |||
Rommel was by this time suffering from the extended length of his supply lines. The Allied ] was concentrating fiercely on his fragile and elongated supply routes while British mobile columns moving west and striking from the south were causing havoc in the Axis rear echelons.<ref>Clifford (1943), p.285</ref> Rommel could afford these losses even less since shipments from Italy had been substantially reduced ( |
Rommel was by this time suffering from the extended length of his supply lines. The Allied ] (DAF) was concentrating fiercely on his fragile and elongated supply routes while British mobile columns moving west and striking from the south were causing havoc in the Axis rear echelons.<ref>Clifford (1943), p.285</ref> Rommel could afford these losses even less since shipments from Italy had been substantially reduced (in June, he received {{cvt|5000|ST|t}} of supplies compared with {{cvt|34000|ST|t}} in May and 400 vehicles (compared with 2,000 in May).<ref name="NZ79">{{Cite web |url=https://nzetc.victoria.ac.nz/tm/scholarly/tei-WH2Egyp-c9.html#n79 |title=Scoullar (1955), p. 79 |access-date=2 November 2007 |archive-date=16 October 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081016044919/http://www.nzetc.org/tm/scholarly/tei-WH2Egyp-c9.html#n79 |url-status=live }}</ref> Meanwhile, the Eighth Army was reorganising and rebuilding, benefiting from its short lines of communication. By 4 July, the ] had entered the line in the north, and on 9 July the ] also returned, taking over the Ruweisat position. At the same time, the fresh ] reinforced the depleted Indian 5th Infantry Division.<ref>{{harvnb|Mackenzie|1951|p=583}}</ref> | ||
===Tel el Eisa=== | ===Tel el Eisa=== | ||
On 8 July, Auchinleck ordered the new XXX Corps commander—Lieutenant-General ]—to capture the low ridges at Tel el Eisa and Tel el Makh Khad and then to push mobile battle groups south toward Deir el Shein and raiding parties west toward the airfields at El Daba. Meanwhile, XIII Corps would prevent the Axis from moving troops north to reinforce the coastal sector.<ref>Playfair Vol. III, p. 345</ref> Ramsden tasked the Australian 9th Division with ] under command with the Tel el Eisa objective and the South African 1st Division with eight supporting tanks, Tel el Makh Khad. The raiding parties were to be provided by 1st Armoured Division.<ref name="Playfair346">Playfair Vol. III, p. 346</ref> | |||
On ] the 9th Australian Division made its presence known, launching an attack at ] in the north. The 621st Radio Intercept Company and 835 Italian troops from the "Sabratha" Division were taken prisoner by the 2/48th Battalion under Lieutenant-Colonel Hammer. The newly arrived 382nd German Infantry Regiment and a battalion of the Italian Bersaglieri was committed to plug the gap and initially recovered some of the lost ground at Tel el Eisa... According to the 2/48th Battalion diary, ''"At approx 2000 hrs enemy tks--number unknown-- and inf attacked D Coy front. They overrun posn and enemy inf forced D Coy to withdraw and occupied their psn."'' While the Bersaglieri and German infantry suffered crippling losses in the attack, it bought time to allow Italian XXI Corps to rush in a battalion of the "Trieste" Division and L3 and M13/40 tanks of the 3rd "Novara" Armoured Group and Major Gabriele Verri's 11th Armoured Battalion to affected sector seal off the Australian breakthrough. (Source: Paolo Caccia-Dominioni, Alamein: An Italian Story) Nevertheless the loss of the German radio intercept unit was to be of vital importance - Rommel had relied heavily on signals intercepts from this unit for his intelligence.<ref>Barr.N, (2005), pp.111-114</ref> | |||
Following a bombardment which started at 03:30 on 10 July, the Australian 26th Brigade launched an attack against the ridge north of Tel el Eisa station along the coast (Trig 33). The bombardment was the heaviest barrage yet experienced in North Africa, which created panic in the inexperienced soldiers of the Italian ] who had only just occupied sketchy defences in the sector.<ref>{{harvnb|Johnston|Stanley|2002|p=58}}</ref><ref>Caccio-Dominioni (1966), pp. 70–71</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Bates|1992|pp=139–141}}</ref><ref>Scoullar (1955), {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081016120242/http://www.nzetc.org/tm/scholarly/tei-WH2Egyp-c19.html#n205 |date=16 October 2008 }}</ref> The Australian attack took more than 1,500 prisoners, routed an Italian Division and overran the German Signals Intercept Company 621.<ref>{{harvnb|Stewart|2002|p=125}}</ref> Meanwhile, the South Africans had by late morning taken Tel el Makh Khad and were in covering positions.<ref name="Playfair346"/> | |||
===Ruweisat Ridge=== | |||
As the Axis forces dug-in, Auchinleck developed a plan to attack the Ruweisat ridge, codenamed Operation Bacon. The intention was for the 4th New Zealand Brigade and 5th New Zealand Brigade to seize the ridge in a night attack, then for the 2nd Armoured Brigade and 22nd Armoured Brigade to move forwards to protect the infantry as they consolidated on the ridge. The attack commenced at 2300 hours on 14 July. The two New Zealand brigades successfully took the ridge in the night attack, but minefields and pockets of resistance created disarray among the attackers. As a result, the New Zealand brigades occupied exposed positions on the ridge without support weapons. More significantly, communications with the two British armoured brigades collapsed, and the British armour failed to move forwards to protect the infantry. The 15th Panzer Division launched an immediate counter-attack, which drove the New Zealanders from the ridge with heavy losses. More than 2000 Axis prisoners of war were taken, mostly from the "Brescia" and "Pavia" Divisions, as against 1405 New Zealand casualties.<ref>Barr.N, (2005), pp.118-142; Scoullar.J.L, (1955), pp.232-298</ref> | |||
Elements of the German 164th Light Division and Italian ] arrived to plug the gap torn in the Axis defences.<ref name="Playfair346"/><ref>{{harvnb|Johnston|Stanley|2002|p=65}}</ref><ref>Scoullar (1955), {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081202195019/http://www.nzetc.org/tm/scholarly/tei-WH2Egyp-c21.html#n220 |date=2 December 2008 }}</ref> That afternoon and evening, tanks from the German 15th Panzer and Italian ''Trieste'' Divisions launched counter-attacks against the Australian positions, the counter-attacks failing in the face of overwhelming Allied artillery and the Australian anti-tank guns.<ref>{{harvnb|Bates|1992|pp=141–142}}</ref><ref>Caccio-Dominioni (1966), p. 74.</ref> | |||
On ] the Eighth Army attacked the Ruweisat Ridge in the centre. The Axis position was in the main part held by Colonel Gherardo Vaiarini's 65th Regiment and Colonel Umberto Zanetti's 66th Regiment both from the "Trieste" Motorised Infantry Division and the 9th Bersaglieri Regiment. In the second battle the inexperienced British 23rd Armoured Brigade was virtually wiped out in attempting to cross a minefield and then running into a hastily created anti-tank screen. The rest of the 21st Panzer then destroyed what was left of the brigade.<ref></ref> The resulting failure of armour to reach the infantry in time led to the loss of 700 men. More than 2,300 New Zealanders were killed, wounded, or captured in the two battles.<ref> Accessed 13 January, 2007</ref><ref> Accessed 13 January, 2007</ref> It was during these battles that Vaiarini and Zanetti were mortally wounded and, for their gallant actions decorated posthumously. (Source: Paolo Caccia-Dominioni, Alamein: An Italian Story, p.83) | |||
At first light on 11 July, the Australian ] supported by tanks from 44th Royal Tank Regiment attacked the western end of Tel el Eisa hill (Point 24).<ref name="Playfair346"/><ref>{{harvnb|Johnston|Stanley|2002|p=67}}</ref> By early afternoon, the feature was captured and was then held against a series of Axis counter-attacks throughout the day. A small column of armour, motorised infantry, and guns then set off to raid Deir el Abyad and caused a battalion of Italian infantry to surrender. Its progress was checked at the Miteirya ridge and it was forced to withdraw that evening to the El Alamein box.<ref>Playfair Vol. III, pp. 346–347</ref> During the day, more than 1,000 Italian prisoners were taken.<ref>{{harvnb|Johnston|Stanley|2002|p=68}}</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Bates|1992|p=143}}</ref><ref name="Barr114"/><ref>{{harvnb|Barr|2005|p=114}}</ref> | |||
A notable feature of the first battle was the result of the engagement between units of the 21st Panzer Division and Indian 5th Infantry Brigade which had recently had its 2-pounder anti-tank guns replaced with the new 6-pounder guns. These proved highly effective and knocked out 24 of the attacking tanks before they withdrew.<ref>Mackenzie (1951), p. 587</ref> | |||
On 12 July, the 21st ''Panzerdivision'' launched a counter-attack against Trig 33 and Point 24, which was beaten off after a 2½-hour fight, with more than 600 German dead and wounded left strewn in front of the Australian positions.<ref name="Barr114">{{harvnb|Johnston|Stanley|2002|p=70}}</ref> The next day, the 21st ''Panzerdivision'' launched an attack against Point 33 and South African positions in the El Alamein box.<ref>{{harvnb|Johnston|Stanley|2002|p=72}}</ref> In the El Alamein Box, the Royal Durban Light Infantry (RDLI) faced the full force of the German attacks. The RDLI did not have adequate anti-tank guns and the German artillery cut the South African telephone cables, disrupting their field artillery support. The attack was halted by intense artillery fire from the defenders. Although the South Africans repulsed the German attack, by 16:10, German tanks and dive bombers had advanced up to 300 metres from the South African positions. The 9th Australian field artillery, 7th British Medium Regiment had to assist in repulsing the German attack. At last light, the 79th British Anti-Tank Regiment was deployed to assist the South African forces, but the German attack was petering out. The South African losses on 13 July totalled nine dead and 42 wounded. | |||
In the meantime Colonel Angelozzi's 1st Battalion 85th Infantry Regiment of the "Sabratha" Division, after regrouping, had launched a fierce counterattack on the 2/48th Battalion on ]. In the afternoon the Australians had a desperate battle to hold on to Tel el Eisa against what was incorrectly reported as German counter-attacks. Supported by tanks, the Italian soldiers in the evening broke into the Australian positions. So fierce had the attack been that under the cover of darkness the Australian /48th Battalion abandoned this very important position. On 16 July, the 2/23rd Battalion, supported by British tanks, attacked the important Tel el Eisa feature, but they suffered nearly 50 percent casualties and had to withdraw. | |||
Italian counter-attacks continued on ] when the 3rd Battalion, 62nd Regiment of the "Trento" Motorised Division attacked with a column of tanks and succeeded in inflicting crippling losses and capturing 200 troops from the 2/32nd Battalion that had stormed the feature Trig 22 held by 100 men of the Italian 32nd Combat Sappers Battalion. (Although the Australian Official History of 2/32 battalion describes the counterattack force as "German",<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.awm.gov.au/units/unit_11283.asp | publisher=Australian War Memorial| title=Australians at War: 2/32 Battalion| accessdate=2007-12-27| work=Australian War Memorial website}}</ref> the Australian historian Mark Johnston reports that German records indicate that the Italians were responsible for overruning the Australian battalion.<ref></ref> Barton Maughan, Australia's official historian has written that ''"two forward platoons of the 2/32nd's left company were overrun, 22 men were taken prisoner"''<ref></ref> but fails to shed more light on this attack.) | |||
South African casualties were relatively light due to their skill in withstanding the German attacks negated their casualties. Had the El Alamein Box been captured by Rommel's forces, the consequences for the Eighth Army would have been devastating; the El Alamein line would have been ruptured, and Australian forces would have been cut off from the Eighth Army and forced into a general retreat to the Nile Delta.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Jacobs |first=Colonel (Dr) C. J. |journal=Military History Journal |issue=2 |date=December 2004 |title=The Role of the 1st South African Division during the First Battle of El Alamein, 1–30 July 1942 |url=http://www.samilitaryhistory.org |publisher=The South African Military History Society |volume=13 |pages=1 |via=Database}}</ref> Rommel was still determined to drive the British forces from the northern salient. Although the Australian defenders had been forced back from Point 24, heavy casualties had been inflicted on 21st ''Panzerddivision''.<ref>{{harvnb|Johnston|Stanley|2002|pp=73–76}}</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Bates|1992|p=145}}</ref><ref>Maughan (1966), {{Webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151208210804/https://www.awm.gov.au/cms_images/histories/19/chapters/12.pdf |date=8 December 2015 }}</ref> Another attack was mounted on 15 July but made no ground against tenacious resistance. On 16 July, the Australians—supported by British tanks—launched an attack to try to take Point 24 but were forced back by German counter-attacks,<ref>{{harvnb|Johnston|Stanley|2002|pp=78–80}}</ref> suffering nearly fifty per cent casualties.<ref name="Johnston03p86">{{harvnb|Johnston|2003|p=86}}</ref> | |||
Auchinleck was determined to retain the initiative and another two attacks were launched on ]. One in the north at Tel el Eisa was a moderate failure. The other at Miteiriya, however, sustained heavy losses as the minefields were not cleared and the infantry were left without armour support when faced with a Italo-German armoured counter-attack. The Australian 2/28th Battalion lost 65 men dead and 490 captured, in an attack on the 62nd Regiment of the "Trento" Motorised Division entrenched along Sanyet el Miteiriya that was supported by the Armoured Reconnaissance Group of the "Trieste" Division.<ref>{{cite conference | first = Dr. Peter | last = Stanley | authorlink = | title = Remembering 1942:Ruin Ridge, 26–27 July 1942 |booktitle=Transcript of speech| publisher = Australian War Memorial | date = ], ] | location = Canberra | url = http://www.awm.gov.au/atwar/remembering1942/alamein/transcript.htm | accessdate =2007-01-13 }}</ref><ref>Caccia-Dominioni (1966), pp. 87-88</ref> The Commonwealth forces lost about 600 in the fighting. | |||
After seven days of fierce fighting, the battle in the north for the Tel el Eisa salient petered out. Australian 9th Division estimated at least 2,000 Axis troops had been killed and more than 3,700 prisoners of war taken in the battle.<ref>{{harvnb|Johnston|Stanley|2002|p=81}}</ref> Possibly the most important feature of the battle, however, was that the Australians had captured Signals Intercept Company 621, which had been providing Rommel with priceless ] from British radio communications.<ref>{{harvnb|Johnston|Stanley|2002|p=66}}</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Barr|2005|pp=112–114}}</ref> | |||
The Eighth Army was exhausted, and by ] Auchinleck ordered an end to offensive operations and the strengthening of the defences to meet a major counter-offensive. | |||
===First Battle of Ruweisat Ridge=== | |||
Rommel was later to say that in the fighting to restore the broken lines ''"the Italians were willing, unselfish and good comrades in the frontline. There can be no disputing that the achievement of all the Italian units, especially the motorised elements, far outstripped any action of the Italian Army for 100 years. Many Italian generals and officers earned our respect as men as well as soldiers."'' (Erwin Rommel & John Pimlott, Rommel: In His Own Words, London, 1994, Greenhill Books, p. 128) | |||
] | |||
] | |||
As the Axis forces dug in, Auchinleck—having drawn a number of German units to the coastal sector during the Tel el Eisa fighting—developed a plan codenamed Operation Bacon to attack the Italian ] and ''Brescia'' Divisions in the centre of the front at the Ruweisat ridge.<ref>Playfair Vol. III, p. 347</ref> Signals intelligence was giving Auchinleck clear details of the Axis order of battle and force dispositions. His policy was to "...hit the Italians wherever possible in view of their low morale and because the Germans cannot hold extended fronts without them."<ref>{{harvnb|Hinsley|1981|p=404}}</ref> | |||
The intention was for the 4th New Zealand Brigade and 5th New Zealand Brigade (on 4th Brigade's right) to attack north-west to seize the western part of the ridge and on their right the Indian 5th Infantry Brigade to capture the eastern part of the ridge in a night attack. Then, the 2nd Armoured Brigade would pass through the centre of the infantry objectives to exploit toward Deir el Shein and the Miteirya Ridge. On the left, the 22nd Armoured Brigade would be ready to move forward to protect the infantry as they consolidated on the ridge.<ref>Playfair Vol. III, p. 348</ref> | |||
The attack commenced at 23:00 on 14 July. Shortly before dawn on 15 July, the two New Zealand brigades took their objectives, but minefields and pockets of resistance left behind the forward troops' advance created disarray among the attackers, impeding the move forward of reserves, artillery, and support arms. As a result, the New Zealand brigades occupied exposed positions on the ridge without support weapons except for a few anti-tank guns.<ref name="Playfair349">Playfair Vol. III, p. 349</ref> More significantly, the two British armoured brigades failed to move forward to protect the infantry. At first light, a detachment from the 15th ''Panzerdivisions'' 8th ''Panzer'' Regiment launched a counter-attack against New Zealand 4th Brigade's 22nd Battalion. A sharp exchange knocked out their anti-tank guns, and the infantry found themselves exposed in the open with no alternative but to surrender. Approximately 350 New Zealanders were taken prisoner.<ref name= "Playfair349"/> | |||
While the 2nd New Zealand Division attacked the western slopes of ], the Indian 5th Brigade made small gains on Ruweisat ridge to the east. By 07:00, word finally reached the 2nd Armoured Brigade, which started to move north west. Two regiments became embroiled in a minefield, but the third was able to join Indian 5th Infantry 5th Brigade as it renewed its attack. With the help of the armour and artillery, the Indians were able to take their objectives by early afternoon.<ref name="Playfair349"/> Meanwhile, the 22nd Armoured Brigade had been engaged at Alam Nayil by 90th Light Division and the ''Ariete'' Armoured Division, advancing from the south. While—with help from mobile infantry and artillery columns from 7th Armoured Division—they pushed back the Axis probe with ease, they were prevented from advancing north to protect the New Zealand flank.<ref name="Playfair351">Playfair Vol. III, p. 351</ref> | |||
Seeing the ''Brescia'' and ''Pavia'' under pressure, Rommel rushed German troops to Ruweisat. By 15:00, the 3rd Reconnaissance Regiment and part of 21st ''Panzerdivision'' from the north and 33rd Reconnaissance Regiment and the Baade Group comprising elements from 15th ''Panzerdivision'' from the south were in place under Lieutenant-General ('']'') ].<ref name="Playfair350">Playfair Vol. III, p. 350</ref> At 17:00, Nehring launched his counter-attack. 4th New Zealand Brigade were still short of support weapons and also, by this time, ammunition. Once again, the anti-tank defences were overwhelmed and about 380 New Zealanders were taken prisoner including Captain ]<ref name="Playfair350"/> who gained a second ] for his actions, including destroying a German tank, several guns, and vehicles with grenades despite being shot through the elbow by a machine gun bullet. At about 18:00, the brigade HQ was overrun. At about 18:15, the 2nd Armoured Brigade engaged the German armour and halted the Axis eastward advance. At dusk, Nehring broke off the action.<ref name="Playfair350"/>]Early on 16 July, Nehring renewed his attack. The 5th Indian Infantry Brigade pushed them back, but it was clear from intercepted radio traffic that a further attempt would be made. Strenuous preparations to dig in anti-tank guns were made, artillery fire plans organised, and a regiment from the 22nd Armoured Brigade Gsent to reinforce the 2nd Armoured Brigade.<ref name= "Playfair351"/> When the attack resumed late in the afternoon, it was repulsed. After the battle, the Indians counted 24 knocked out tanks, as well as armoured cars and numerous anti-tank guns left on the battlefield.<ref>Bharucha and Prasad (1956), p. 422</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Barr|2005|pp=143–146}}</ref> | |||
In three days' fighting, the Allies took more than 2,000 Axis prisoners, mostly from the Italian ''Brescia'' and ''Pavia'' Divisions; the New Zealand division suffered 1,405 casualties.<ref>{{harvnb|Barr|2005|pp=118–142}}</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Scoullar|1955|pp=232–298}}</ref> The fighting at Tel el Eisa and Ruweisat had caused the destruction of three Italian divisions, forced Rommel to redeploy his armour from the south, and made it necessary to lay minefields in front of the remaining Italian divisions and stiffen them with detachments of German troops.<ref name="Hinsley405"/> | |||
===Miteirya Ridge (Ruin Ridge)=== | |||
To relieve pressure on Ruweisat ridge, Auchinleck ordered the Australian 9th Division to make another attack from the north. In the early hours of 17 July, the Australian 24th Brigade—supported by 44th ] (RTR) and strong fighter cover from the air—assaulted Miteirya ridge<ref name= "Playfair351"/> (known as "Ruin ridge" to the Australians). The initial night attack went well, with 736 prisoners taken, mostly from the Italian '']'' and '']'' motorised divisions. Once again, however, a critical situation for the Axis forces was retrieved by vigorous counter-attacks from hastily assembled German and Italian forces, which forced the Australians to withdraw back to their start line with 300 casualties.<ref name="Playfair351"/><ref>{{harvnb|Johnston|Stanley|2002|pp=83–85}}</ref><ref>Maughan (1966), {{Webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151208210804/https://www.awm.gov.au/cms_images/histories/19/chapters/12.pdf |date=8 December 2015 }}</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Stewart|2002|p=130}}</ref> Although the Australian Official History of the 24th Brigade's ] describes the counter-attack force as "German",<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.awm.gov.au/units/unit_11283.asp |publisher=Australian War Memorial |title=Australians at War: 2/32 Battalion |access-date=27 December 2007 |work=Australian War Memorial website}}</ref> the Australian historian Mark Johnston reports that German records indicate that it was the ''Trento'' Division that overran the Australian battalion.<ref>{{cite book |last=Johnston |first=Mark |title=Fighting the Enemy: Australian Soldiers and Their Adversaries in World War II |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zOgMy7rBFCoC&pg=PA13 |date=16 April 2000 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-78222-7 |page=13}}</ref>{{efn|Barton Maughan—Australia's official historian—has written that "two forward platoons of the 2/32nd's left company were overrun, 22 men were taken prisoner"<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.awm.gov.au/cms_images/awm52/8/AWM52-8-3-36-016.pdf |title=Maughan (1966), p. 575 |access-date=6 January 2008 |archive-date=27 February 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080227210124/http://www.awm.gov.au/cms_images/awm52/8/AWM52-8-3-36-016.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref> but fails to shed more light on this attack.}} | |||
===Second Battle of Ruweisat Ridge (El Mreir)=== | |||
] | |||
The Eighth Army now enjoyed a massive superiority in material over the Axis forces: 1st Armoured Division had 173 tanks and more in reserve or in transit,<ref name="Playfair353">Playfair Vol. III, p. 353</ref> including 61 ]<ref name="Hinsley405">{{harvnb|Hinsley|1981|p=405}}</ref> while Rommel possessed only 38 German tanks and 51 Italian tanks<ref>Maughan (1966), {{Webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151208210804/https://www.awm.gov.au/cms_images/histories/19/chapters/12.pdf |date=8 December 2015 }}</ref><ref>Scoullar (1955), {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081016060853/http://www.nzetc.org/tm/scholarly/tei-WH2Egyp-c29.html#n328 |date=16 October 2008 }} and </ref> although his armoured units had some 100 tanks awaiting repair.<ref name="Playfair353"/> | |||
Auchinleck's plan was for Indian Infantry 161st Brigade to attack along Ruweisat ridge to take Deir el Shein, while the New Zealand 6th Brigade attacked from south of the ridge to the El Mreir depression. At daylight, two British armoured brigades—2nd Armoured Brigade and the fresh 23rd Armoured Brigade—would sweep through the gap created by the infantry. The plan was complicated and ambitious.<ref>Scoullar (1955), {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081016060853/http://www.nzetc.org/tm/scholarly/tei-WH2Egyp-c29.html#n319 |date=16 October 2008 }}</ref> | |||
The infantry night attack began at 16:30 on 21 July. The New Zealand attack took their objectives in the El Mreir depression<ref>Scoullar (1955), {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081022193840/http://www.nzetc.org/tm/scholarly/tei-WH2Egyp-c30.html#n338 |date=22 October 2008 }}</ref> but, once again, many vehicles failed to arrive and they were short of support arms in an exposed position. At daybreak on 22 July, the British armoured brigades again failed to advance. At daybreak on 22 July, Nehring's 5th and 8th ''Panzer'' Regiments responded with a rapid counter-attack which quickly overran the New Zealand infantry in the open, inflicting more than 900 casualties on the New Zealanders.<ref>Scoullar (1955), {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080725155323/http://www.nzetc.org/tm/scholarly/tei-WH2Egyp-c31.html#n352 |date=25 July 2008 }}</ref> 2nd Armoured Brigade sent forward two regiments to help but they were halted by mines and anti-tank fire.<ref name="Playfair355">Playfair Vol. III, p. 355</ref> | |||
The attack by Indian 161st Brigade had mixed fortunes. On the left, the initial attempt to clear the western end of Ruweisat failed but at 08:00 a renewed attack by the reserve battalion succeeded. On the right, the attacking battalion broke into the Deir el Shein position but was driven back in hand-to-hand fighting.<ref name="Playfair355"/> | |||
Compounding the disaster at El Mreir, at 08:00 the commander of 23rd Armoured Brigade ordered his brigade forward, intent on following his orders to the letter. Major-General Gatehouse—commanding 1st Armoured Division—had been unconvinced that a path had been adequately cleared in the minefields and had suggested the advance be cancelled.<ref name="Playfair356">Playfair Vol. III, p. 356</ref> However, XIII Corps commander—Lieutenant-General ]—rejected this and ordered the attack but on a centre line {{cvt|1|mi|km}} south of the original plan which he incorrectly believed was mine-free. These orders failed to get through and the attack went ahead as originally planned. The brigade found itself mired in mine fields and under heavy fire. They were then counter-attacked by 21st Panzer at 11:00 and forced to withdraw.<ref name="Playfair356"/> The 23rd Armoured Brigade was destroyed, with the loss of 40 tanks destroyed and 47 badly damaged.<ref name="Playfair356"/> | |||
At 17:00, Gott ordered 5th Indian Infantry Division to execute a night attack to capture the western half of Ruweisat ridge and Deir el Shein. 3/] from ] attacked at 02:00 on 23 July but failed as they lost their direction. A further attempt in daylight succeeded in breaking into the position but intense fire from three sides resulted in control being lost as the commanding officer was killed, and four of his senior officers were wounded or went missing.<ref name="Playfair357">Playfair Vol. III, p. 357</ref> | |||
===Attack on Tel el Eisa resumed=== | |||
] | |||
To the north, Australian 9th Division continued its attacks. At 06:00 on 22 July, Australian 26th Brigade attacked Tel el Eisa and Australian 24th Brigade attacked Tel el Makh Khad toward Miteirya (Ruin Ridge).<ref name="Playfair357"/> It was during this fighting that ] performed the actions for which he was posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross. The fighting for Tel el Eisa was costly, but by the afternoon the Australians controlled the feature.<ref name= "Playfair357"/><ref>{{harvnb|Johnston|Stanley|2002|pp=88–93, 97}}</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Bates|1992|pp=208–211}}</ref> That evening, Australian 24th Brigade attacked Tel el Makh Khad with the tanks of 50th RTR in support. The tank unit had not been trained in close infantry support and failed to co-ordinate with the Australian infantry. The result was that the infantry and armour advanced independently and having reached the objective 50th RTR lost 23 tanks because they lacked infantry support.<ref name="Playfair357"/><ref>{{harvnb|Johnston|Stanley|2002|pp=93–96}}</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Bates|1992|pp=212–214}}</ref> | |||
Once more, the Eighth Army had failed to destroy Rommel's forces, despite its overwhelming superiority in men and equipment. On the other hand, for Rommel the situation continued to be grave as, despite successful defensive operations, his infantry had suffered heavy losses and he reported that "the situation is critical in the extreme".<ref>Panzer Army Africa Battle Report dated 22 July 1942 K.T.B. 1220</ref> | |||
====Operation Manhood==== | |||
On 26/27 July, Auchinleck launched Operation Manhood in the northern sector in a final attempt to break the Axis forces. XXX Corps was reinforced with 1st Armoured Division (less 22nd Armoured Brigade), 4th Light Armoured Brigade, and 69th Infantry Brigade. The plan was to break the enemy line south of Miteirya ridge and exploit north-west. The South Africans were to make and mark a gap in the minefields to the south-east of Miteirya by midnight of 26/27 July.<ref name="Playfair357"/> By 01:00 on 27 July, 24th Australian Infantry Brigade was to have captured the eastern end of the Miteirya ridge and would exploit toward the north-west. The 69th Infantry Brigade would pass through the minefield gap created by the South Africans to Deir el Dhib and clear and mark gaps in further minefields. The 2nd Armoured Brigade would then pass through to El Wishka and would be followed by 4th Light Armoured Brigade which would attack the Axis lines of communication.<ref name= "Playfair358">Playfair Vol. III, p. 358</ref> | |||
] in North Africa, carrying British infantry]] | |||
This was the third attempt to break through in the northern sector, and the Axis defenders were expecting the attack.<ref>Barr.N, p.176; Bates.P, p.216.</ref> Like the previous attacks, it was hurriedly and therefore poorly planned.<ref>Bates.P, p.217.</ref> The Australian 24th Brigade managed to take their objectives on Miteirya Ridge by 02:00{{efn|Playfair states that the "...timing soon fell behind, but by 3 am the Australians had taken their objective"<ref name= "Playfair358"/>}} of 27 July.<ref>{{harvnb|Johnston|Stanley|2002|p=102–106}}; Bates.P, p.219.</ref> To the south, the British 69th Brigade set off at 01:30 and managed to take their objectives by about 08:00. However, the supporting anti-tank units became lost in the darkness or delayed by minefields, leaving the attackers isolated and exposed when daylight came. There followed a period during which reports from the battlefront regarding the minefield gaps were confused and conflicting. As a consequence, the advance of 2nd Armoured Brigade was delayed.<ref name= "Playfair358"/><ref>Barr.N, pp.178–179 and 181–182</ref> Rommel launched an immediate counter-attack and the German armoured battlegroups overran the two forward battalions of 69th Brigade.<ref name= "Playfair358"/><ref>Barr.N, pp.179–181; {{harvnb|Johnston|Stanley|2002|p=107–112}}; Bates.P, pp.224–225.</ref> Meanwhile, 50th RTR supporting the Australians was having difficulty locating the minefield gaps made by Australian 2/24th Battalion. They failed to find a route through and in the process were caught by heavy fire and lost 13 tanks. The unsupported 2/28th Australian battalion on the ridge was overrun. The 69th Brigade suffered 600 casualties and the Australians 400 for no gain.<ref name="Playfair358"/> | |||
The Eighth Army was exhausted, and on 31 July Auchinleck ordered an end to offensive operations and the strengthening of the defences to meet a major counter-offensive. | |||
] on the road from Alexandria to El Alamein at the high-water mark for the Italian advance. The inscription reads: ''Mancò la fortuna, non-il valore'' (A lack of fortune, not of valour).]] | |||
Rommel was later to blame the failure to break through to the Nile on how the sources of supply to his army had dried up and how: | |||
{{blockquote|then the power of resistance of many Italian formations collapsed. The duties of comradeship, for me particularly as their Commander-in-Chief, compel me to state unequivocally that the defeats which the Italian formations suffered at Alamein in early July were not the fault of the Italian soldier. The Italian was willing, unselfish and a good comrade, and, considering the conditions under which he served, had always given better than average. There is no doubt that the achievement of every Italian unit, especially of the motorised forces, far surpassed anything that the Italian Army had done for a hundred years. Many Italian generals and officers won our admiration both as men and as soldiers. The cause of the Italian defeat had its roots in the whole Italian military state and system, in their poor armament and in the general lack of interest in the war by many Italians, both officers and statesmen. This Italian failure frequently prevented the realisation of my plans.|Rommel<ref>Liddell Hart (ed), 'The Rommel Papers' (London 1953), pp.261–262.</ref>}} | |||
Rommel complained bitterly about the failure of important Italian convoys to get desperately needed tanks and supplies through to him, always blaming the ], never suspecting British code breaking.<ref>{{cite book |last=Gannon |first=James |title=Stealing Secrets, Telling Lies: How Spies and Codebreakers Helped Shape the Twentieth Century |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Kgb14s5UNmAC&pg=PA81 |date=1 August 2002 |publisher=Potomac Books, Incorporated |isbn=978-1-57488-473-9 |page=81}}</ref> | |||
According to Dr James Sadkovich and others, Rommel often displayed a distinct tendency to blame and scapegoat his Italian allies to cover up his own mistakes and deficiencies as a commander in the field.<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal |last=Sadkovich |first=Dr James |date=May 1991 |title=Of Myths and Men: Rommel and the Italians in North Africa 1940–42 |journal=International History Review |volume=13 |issue=2 |pages=284–313 |doi=10.1080/07075332.1991.9640582}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Robinson |first=James, R |date=September 1997 |title=The Rommel myth |journal=Military Review |volume=77 |pages=81–89}}</ref> For example, while Rommel was a very good tactical commander, the Italian and German High Commands were concerned that he lacked operational awareness and a sense of strategic objectives.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Kirkland |first=Major Donald. E |date=May 1986 |title=Rommel's Desert Campaigns: a study in Operational level weakness |journal=School of Advanced Military Studies |pages=4–36}}</ref> Dr Sadkovich points out that he would often out-run his logistics and squander valuable (mostly Italian) military hardware and resources, in battle after battle, without clear strategic goals or an appreciation of the limited logistics with which his Italian allies were desperately trying to provide him.<ref name=":0" /> | |||
==Aftermath== | ==Aftermath== | ||
] | |||
The battle was a stalemate, but the Axis advance on ] (and then ]) was halted. Eighth Army had sustained over 13,000 casualties in July (including 4,000 in the New Zealand Division, 3,000 in the Indian 5th Infantry Division and 2,552 battle casualties in the Australian 9th Division) but had taken 7,000 prisoners and inflicted heavy damage on the Axis forces in terms of men and armour.<ref name="CM589">Mackenzie (1951), p. 589</ref> | |||
The battle was a stalemate, but it had halted the Axis advance on ] (and then ] and ultimately the ]). The Eighth Army had suffered over 13,000 casualties in July, including 4,000 in the 2nd New Zealand Division, 3,000 in the 5th Indian Infantry Division and 2,552 battle casualties in the 9th Australian Division but had taken 7,000 prisoners and inflicted heavy damage on Axis men and machines.<ref name="CM589" /><ref name="Johnston03p86"/> In his appreciation of 27 July, Auchinleck wrote that the Eighth Army would not be ready to attack again until mid-September at the earliest. He believed that because Rommel understood that with the passage of time the Allied situation would only improve, he was compelled to attack as soon as possible and before the end of August when he would have superiority in armour. Auchinleck therefore made plans for a defensive battle.<ref>{{harvnb|Hinsley|1981|p=407}}</ref> | |||
In early August ] and General ], |
In early August, ] and General ]—the ] (CIGS)—visited Cairo on their way to meet ] in ]. They decided to replace Auchinleck, appointing the XIII Corps commander, ], to the Eighth Army command and General ] as C-in-C Middle East Command. Persia and Iraq were to be split from Middle East Command as a separate ] and Auchinleck was offered the post of C-in-C (which he refused).<ref>{{harvnb|Alanbrooke|2002|p=294}}</ref> Gott was killed on the way to take up his command when his aircraft was shot down.<ref>{{harvnb|Clifford|1943|p=296}}</ref> Lieutenant-General ] was appointed in his place and took command on 13 August.<ref name="CM589"/>{{efn|Brooke and Auchinleck had both thought Montgomery a better candidate than Gott but Churchill had favoured his appointment.<ref>Alanbrooke Diaries, 4 August 1942</ref>}} | ||
==Legacy== | |||
A second attempt by Rommel to bypass or break the Commonwealth position was repulsed in the ] in August, and in October the Eighth Army decisively defeated the Axis forces in the ]. | |||
The battle and the ] three months later remain important to some of the countries that took part.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Commemorations to mark 75th anniversary of the Battle of El Alamein {{!}} Ministry for Culture and Heritage |url=https://mch.govt.nz/commemorations-mark-75th-anniversary-battle-el-alamein |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210825133709/https://mch.govt.nz/commemorations-mark-75th-anniversary-battle-el-alamein |archive-date=2021-08-25 |access-date=2021-08-25 |website=mch.govt.nz}}</ref> Particularly in ], this is due to the country's significant contribution to the defence of El Alamein, especially the heavy role the ] played.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Wright |first=Tony |date=2021-11-02 |title=75 years since New Zealand handed Nazi Germany its first land defeat of WWII|work=Newshub |url=https://www.newshub.co.nz/home/new-zealand/2017/11/75-years-since-new-zealand-handed-nazi-germany-its-first-land-defeat-of-wwii.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171102081308/http://www.newshub.co.nz/home/new-zealand/2017/11/75-years-since-new-zealand-handed-nazi-germany-its-first-land-defeat-of-wwii.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=2 November 2017 |access-date=2021-08-25}}</ref> Members of this battalion have been labelled war heroes since, such as commander ], ] and ], the last of whom was killed in action.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Tso |first=Matthew |date=2021-03-29 |title=Street name honouring Māori Battalion commander a 'spiritual return' – Granddaughter says |url=https://www.stuff.co.nz/national/124684754/street-name-honouring-mori-battalion-commander-a-spiritual-return--granddaughter-says |access-date=2021-08-25 |website=Stuff}}</ref> | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
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*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
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==Notes== | |||
{{notelist}} | |||
===Citations=== | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{Refbegin}} | |||
*{{cite book|title=War Diaries 1939-1945| last=Alanbrooke| first=Field Marshal Lord| authorlink=Alan Brooke| year=2002| origyear=1957|coauthors=Danchev, Alex and Todman, Daniel (editors)| publisher=Phoenix Press| location=London|edition=Re-edited edition| isbn=1-84212-526-5}} | |||
*{{cite book |title=War Diaries 1939–1945 |last=Alanbrooke |first=Field Marshal Lord |author-link=Alan Brooke |year=2002 |orig-year=1957 |editor-last1=Danchev |editor-first1=Alex |editor-last2=Todman |editor-first2=Daniel |publisher=Phoenix Press |location=London |edition=rev. |isbn=1-84212-526-5}} | |||
*{{cite book| first=Paolo | last=Caccia-Dominioni| title=Alamein 1933-1962: An Italian Story| publisher=Allen & Unwin| date=1966}} | |||
*{{cite book |first=Niall |last=Barr |title=Pendulum of War: The Three Battles of El Alamein |publisher=Pimlico |location=London |year=2005 |isbn=0-7126-6827-6 |orig-year=2004}} | |||
*{{cite book | title =Three Against Rommel: The Campaigns of Wavell, Auchinleck and Alexander| first=Alexander| last=Clifford| year = 1943 | publisher = George G. Harrap & Co.| location=London| }} | |||
*{{cite book |
*{{cite book |first=Peter |last=Bates |title=Dance of War: The Story of the Battle of Egypt |publisher=Leo Cooper |location=London |year=1992 |isbn=0-85052-453-9}} | ||
*{{cite book |first1=P. C. |last1=Bharucha |last2=Prasad |first2=Bisheshwar |title=The North African Campaign, 1940–43 |series=Official History of the Indian Armed Forces in the Second World War, 1939–45 |publisher=Combined Inter-Services Historical Section, India & Pakistan |location=Delhi |year=1956 |oclc=563270}} | |||
*{{cite journal| first=Colonel Conrad H.| last=Lanza| title=Perimeters in Paragraphs: The Axis Invades Egypt| journal=The Field Artillery Journal| issue=September 1942| url=http://sill-www.army.mil/famag/1942/SEP_1942/SEP_1942_PAGES_685_692.pdf}} | |||
* |
*{{cite book |first=Paolo |last=Caccia Dominioni de Sillavengo |title=Alamein 1933–1962: An Italian Story |publisher=Allen & Unwin |year=1966 |oclc=2188258}} | ||
*{{cite book |title=Three Against Rommel: The Campaigns of Wavell, Auchinleck and Alexander |first=Alexander |last=Clifford |year=1943 |publisher=George G. Harrap |location=London |oclc=10426023}} | |||
*{{cite book|last=Mitcham| first=Samuel W.|title=Rommel's Desert War: The Life and Death of the Afrika Korps| publisher=Stackpole Books| location=Mechanicsburg, PA| date=2007| origdate=1982| isbn=9780811734134}} | |||
*{{cite book |first=James |last=Gannon |title=Stealing Secrets, Telling Lies: How Spies and Codebreakers Helped Shape the Twentieth Century |publisher=Brassey |location=Washington DC |year=2002 |orig-year=2001 |isbn=1-57488-473-5}} | |||
* {{cite book| 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| last=Maughan| first=Barton|publisher=Australian War Memorial| location=Canberra|date=1966}} | |||
*{{cite book| |
*{{cite book |last1=Hinsley |first1=F. H. |last2=Thomas |first2=E. E. |last3=Ransom |first3=C. F. G. |last4=Knight |first4=R. C. |author-link1=Harry Hinsley |title=British Intelligence in the Second World War. Its Influence on Strategy and Operations |volume=II |location=London |publisher=] |year=1981 |isbn=0-11-630934-2 |ref={{sfnref|Hinsley|1981}} }} | ||
*{{cite book |last=Johnston |first=Mark |author-link=Mark Johnston (historian) |title=Fighting the Enemy: Australian Soldiers and their Adversaries in World War II |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=London |year=2000 |isbn=0-521-78222-8}} | |||
*{{cite web|url=http://www.nzetc.org/tm/scholarly/tei-WH2Egyp.html | |||
*{{cite book |first1=Mark |last1=Johnston |first2=Peter |last2=Stanley |author-link2=Peter Stanley |title=Alamein: The Australian Story |publisher=] |location=South Melbourne, Victoria |isbn=0-19-551630-3 |year=2002}} | |||
|title=The Official History of New Zealand in the Second World War 1939–1945; The Battle for Egypt: The Summer of 1942 |accessdate=2007-11-02|accessdaymonth=|accessmonthday=|accessyear=|author= |last=Scoullar|first=Lt.-Col. J.L.|authorlink= |coauthors=] (editor)|date=|year=1955|month=|format=|work=|publisher=Historical Publications Branch, Wellington |pages=|language=|doi=|archiveurl=|archivedate=|quote=}} | |||
*{{cite book |
*{{cite book |first=Mark |last=Johnston |title=That Magnificent 9th: An Illustrated History of the 9th Australian Division |publisher=Allen & Unwin |location=Crows Nest, N.S.W. |year=2003 |isbn=1-86508-654-1}} | ||
*{{cite journal |first=Colonel Conrad H. |last=Lanza |title=Perimeters in Paragraphs: The Axis Invades Egypt |journal=The Field Artillery Journal |issue=September 1942 |publisher=Field Artillery Association |location=Fort Sill, OK |url=http://sill-www.army.mil/famag/1942/SEP_1942/SEP_1942_PAGES_685_692.pdf |issn=0191-975X |access-date=30 December 2007 |archive-date=27 February 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080227210124/http://sill-www.army.mil/famag/1942/SEP_1942/SEP_1942_PAGES_685_692.pdf |url-status=dead}} | |||
*{{cite book |first=Jon |last=Latimer |title=Alamein |publisher=John Murray |location=London |year=2002 |isbn=0-7195-6203-1}} | |||
*{{cite book |first=Ronald |last=Lewin |title=The Life and Death of the Afrika Korps: A Biography |publisher=Batsford |year=1977 |isbn=0-71340-685-2}} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Mackenzie |first=Compton |year=1951 |title=Eastern Epic: September 1939 – March 1943, Defense |volume=I |publisher=Chatto & Windus |location=London |author-link=Compton Mackenzie |oclc=1412578}} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Mitcham |first=Samuel W. |title=Rommel's Desert War: The Life and Death of the Afrika Korps |publisher=Stackpole Books |location=Mechanicsburg, PA |year=2007 |isbn=978-0-8117-3413-4 |orig-year=1982}} | |||
*{{cite book |url=https://www.awm.gov.au/collection/RCDIG1070202/ |series=Official History of Australia in the Second World War |title=Tobruk and El Alamein |volume=III |last=Maughan |first=Barton |publisher=] |location=Canberra |year=1966 |oclc=954993}} | |||
*{{cite book |first1=Major-General I. S. O. |last1=Playfair |author1-link=Ian Stanley Ord Playfair |first2=Captain F. C. |last2=with Flynn ] |first3=Brigadier C. J. C. |last3=Molony |first4=Group Captain T. P. |last4=Gleave |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: British Fortunes reach their Lowest Ebb (September 1941 to September 1942) |volume=III |publisher=Naval & Military Press |year=2004 |orig-year=1st. pub. ] 1960 |isbn=1-84574-067-X |name-list-style=amp}} | |||
*{{cite book |first=Erwin |last=Rommel |author-link=Erwin Rommel |author2=Pimlott, John |title=Rommel: In His Own Words |location=London |publisher=Greenhill Books |year=1994 |isbn=978-1-85367-185-2}} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Scoullar |first=J. L. |editor-first=Howard |editor-last=Kippenberger |editor-link=Howard Kippenberger |series=The Official History of New Zealand in the Second World War, 1939–1945 |title=The Battle for Egypt: The Summer of 1942 |year=1955 |publisher=Historical Publications Branch |location=Wellington |edition=online |url=https://nzetc.victoria.ac.nz/tm/scholarly/tei-WH2Egyp.html |access-date=2 November 2007 |oclc=2999615}} | |||
*{{cite book |last=Stewart |first=Adrian |title=The Early Battles of Eighth Army: 'Crusader' to the Alamein Line 1941–1942 |publisher=Leo Cooper |location=Barnsley, South Yorkshire |year=2002 |isbn=0-85052-851-8}} | |||
*{{cite book |first=Bruce Allen |last=Watson |title=Exit Rommel |publisher=Stackpole Books |location=Mechanicsburg PA |year=2007 |orig-year=1999 |isbn=978-0-8117-3381-6}} | |||
{{Refend}} | |||
== External links == | |||
==Footnotes== | |||
{{Commons category}} | |||
{{Reflist|30em}} | |||
* | |||
* Royal Engineers and Second World War (Deception and mine clearance at EL Alamein) | |||
* New Zealand Electronic Text Centre | |||
*{{cwgc cemetery|131900|Alamein Memorial}} | |||
* | |||
{{World War II}} | |||
==External links== | |||
{{commons|Second Battle of El Alamein}} | |||
* | |||
* a free/educational lunch-hour boardgame of the battle, to print off, assemble, and play | |||
* New Zealand Electronic Text Centre | |||
* Royal Engineers and Second World War (Deception and mine clearance at EL Alamein) | |||
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Latest revision as of 06:28, 7 January 2025
Battle of World War II
First Battle of El Alamein | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Part of the Western Desert campaign of World War II | |||||||
British infantry manning a sandbagged defensive position near El Alamein, 17 July 1942. | |||||||
| |||||||
Belligerents | |||||||
Italy Germany |
United Kingdom India New Zealand Australia South Africa | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Ettore Bastico Erwin Rommel Walther Nehring Giuseppe De Stefanis Enea Navarini Benvenuto Gioda |
Claude Auchinleck William Ramsden William Gott William Holmes | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
96,000 troops (56,000 Italian, 40,000 German) 70 tanks initially (585 tanks later) ~500 planes |
150,000 troops 179 tanks initially (1,114 tanks later) 1,000+ artillery pieces 1,500+ planes | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
10,000 killed or wounded 7,000 prisoners | 13,250 killed or wounded |
Western Desert Campaign | |
---|---|
1940
1941 1942 Associated articles |
The First Battle of El Alamein (1–27 July 1942) was a battle of the Western Desert campaign of World War II, fought in Egypt between Axis (German and Italian) forces of the Panzer Army Africa—which included the Afrika Korps under Field Marshal Erwin Rommel—and Allied (British Empire and Commonwealth) forces of the Eighth Army under General Claude Auchinleck.
In this battle the British halted a second advance by the Axis forces into Egypt. Axis positions near El Alamein, only 106 km (66 mi) from Alexandria, were dangerously close to the ports and cities of Egypt, the base facilities of the Commonwealth forces and the Suez Canal. However, the Axis forces were too far from their base at Tripoli in Libya to remain at El Alamein indefinitely, which led both sides to accumulate supplies for more offensives, against the constraints of time and distance.
Background
Retreat from Gazala
After their defeat at the Battle of Gazala in Eastern Libya in June 1942, the British Eighth Army, commanded by Lieutenant-General Neil Ritchie, had retreated east from the Gazala line into north-western Egypt as far as Mersa Matruh, roughly 160 km (99 mi) inside the border. Ritchie had decided not to hold the defences on the Egyptian border, because the defensive plan there was for infantry to hold defended localities and a strong armoured force behind them to meet any attempts to penetrate or outflank the fixed defences. Since General Ritchie had virtually no armoured units left fit to fight, the infantry positions would be defeated in detail. The Mersa defence plan also included an armoured reserve but in its absence Ritchie believed he could organise his infantry to cover the minefields between the defended localities to prevent Axis engineers from having undisturbed access.
To defend the Matruh line, Ritchie placed 10th Indian Infantry Division (in Matruh itself) and 50th (Northumbrian) Infantry Division (some 24 km (15 mi) down the coast at Gerawla) under X Corps HQ, newly arrived from Syria. Inland from X Corps would be XIII Corps with 5th Indian Infantry Division (with only one infantry brigade, 29th Indian, and two artillery regiments) around Sidi Hamza about 32 km (20 mi) inland, and the newly arrived 2nd New Zealand Division (short one brigade, the 6th, which had been left out of combat in case the division was captured and it would be needed to serve as the nucleus of a new division) at Minqar Qaim (on the escarpment 48 km (30 mi) inland) and 1st Armoured Division in the open desert to the south. The 1st Armoured Division had taken over 4th and 22nd Armoured Brigades from 7th Armoured Division which by this time had only three tank regiments (battalions) between them.
On 25 June, General Claude Auchinleck—Commander-in-Chief (C-in-C) Middle East Command—relieved Ritchie and assumed direct command of the Eighth Army himself. He decided not to seek a decisive confrontation at the Mersa Matruh position. He concluded that his inferiority in armour after the Gazala defeat, meant he would be unable to prevent Rommel either breaking through his centre or enveloping his open left flank to the south in the same way he had at Gazala. He decided instead to employ delaying tactics while withdrawing a further 160 km (99 mi) or more east to a more defensible position near El Alamein on the Mediterranean coast. Only 64 km (40 mi) to the south of El Alamein, the steep slopes of the Qattara Depression ruled out the possibility of Axis armour moving around the southern flank of his defences and limited the width of the front he had to defend.
Battle of Mersa Matruh
Main article: Battle of Mersa MatruhWhile preparing the Alamein positions, Auchinleck fought strong delaying actions, first at Mersa Matruh on 26–27 June and then Fuka on 28 June. The late change of orders resulted in some confusion in the forward formations (X Corps and XIII Corps) between the desire to inflict damage on the enemy and the intention not to get trapped in the Matruh position but retreat in good order. The result was poor co-ordination between the two forward Corps and units within them. Late on 26 June, the German 90th Light and 21st Panzer Divisions managed to find their way through the minefields in the centre of the front. Early on 27 June, resuming its advance, the 90th Light was checked by British 50th Division's artillery. Meanwhile, the 15th and 21st Panzer Divisions advanced east above and below the escarpment. The 15th Panzer Division were blocked by 4th Armoured and 7th Motor Brigades, but the 21st Panzer Division were ordered on to attack Minqar Qaim. Rommel ordered 90th Light to resume its advance, requiring it to cut the coast road behind 50th Division by the evening. As the 21st Panzer Division moved on Minqar Qaim, the 2nd New Zealand Division found itself surrounded but broke out on the night of 27/28 June without serious losses and withdrew east.
Auchinleck had planned a second delaying position at Fuka, some 30 mi (48 km) east of Matruh, and at 21:20 he issued the orders for a withdrawal to Fuka. Confusion in communication led the division withdrawing immediately to the El Alamein position. X Corps, having made an unsuccessful attempt to secure a position on the escarpment, were out of touch with Eighth Army from 19:30 until 04:30 the next morning. Only then did they discover that the withdrawal order had been given. The withdrawal of XIII Corps had left the southern flank of X Corps on the coast at Matruh exposed and their line of retreat compromised by the cutting of the coastal road 17 mi (27 km) east of Matruh. They were ordered to break out southwards into the desert and then make their way east. Auchinleck ordered XIII Corps to provide support but they were in no position to do so. At 21:00 on 28 June, X Corps—organised into brigade groups—headed south. In the darkness, there was considerable confusion as they came across enemy units laagered for the night. In the process, 5th Indian Division in particular sustained heavy casualties, including the destruction of the 29th Indian Infantry Brigade at Fuka. Axis forces captured more than 6,000 prisoners, in addition to 40 tanks and an enormous quantity of supplies.
Prelude
Defences at El Alamein
Alamein itself was an inconsequential railway station on the coast. Some 10 mi (16 km) to the south lay the Ruweisat Ridge, a low stony prominence that gave excellent observation for many miles over the surrounding desert; 20 mi (32 km) to the south was the Qattara Depression. The line the British chose to defend stretched between the sea and the Depression, which meant that Rommel could outflank it only by taking a significant detour to the south and crossing the Sahara Desert. The British Army in Egypt recognised this before the war and had the Eighth Army begin construction of several "boxes" (localities with dug-outs and surrounded by minefields and barbed wire) the most developed being around the railway station at Alamein. Most of the "line" was open, empty desert. Lieutenant-General William Norrie (General officer commanding XXX Corps) organised the position and started to construct three defended "boxes". The first and strongest, at El Alamein on the coast, had been partly wired and mined by 1st South African Division. The Bab el Qattara box—some 20 mi (32 km) from the coast and 8 mi (13 km) south-west of the Ruweisat Ridge—had been dug but had not been wired or mined, while at the Naq Abu Dweis box (on the edge of the Qattara Depression), 34 mi (55 km) from the coast, very little work had been done.
The British position in Egypt was desperate, the rout from Mersa Matruh had created a panic in the British headquarters at Cairo, something later called "the Flap". On what came to be referred to as "Ash Wednesday", at British headquarters, rear echelon units and the British Embassy, papers were hurriedly burned in anticipation of the fall of the city. Auchinleck—although believing he could stop Rommel at Alamein—felt he could not ignore the possibility that he might once more be outmanoeuvred or outfought. To maintain his army, plans must be made for the possibility of a further retreat whilst maintaining morale and retaining the support and co-operation of the Egyptians. Defensive positions were constructed west of Alexandria and on the approaches to Cairo while considerable areas in the Nile delta were flooded. The Axis, too, believed that the capture of Egypt was imminent; Italian leader Benito Mussolini—sensing a historic moment—flew to Libya to prepare for his triumphal entry into Cairo.
The scattering of X Corps at Mersa Matruh disrupted Auchinleck's plan for occupying the Alamein defences. On 29 June, he ordered XXX Corps—the 1st South African, 5th and 10th Indian divisions—to take the coastal sector on the right of the front and XIII Corps—the 2nd New Zealand Division and 4th Indian divisions—to be on the left. The remains of the 1st Armoured Division and the 7th Armoured Division were to be held as a mobile army reserve. His intention was for the fixed defensive positions to channel and disorganise the enemy's advance while mobile units would attack their flanks and rear.
On 30 June, Rommel's Panzerarmee Afrika approached the Alamein position. The Axis forces were exhausted and understrength. Rommel had driven them forward ruthlessly, being confident that, provided he struck quickly before Eighth Army had time to settle, his momentum would take him through the Alamein position and he could then advance to the Nile with little further opposition. Supplies remained a problem because the Axis staff had originally expected a pause of six weeks after the capture of Tobruk. German air units were also exhausted and providing little help against the RAF's all-out attack on the Axis supply lines which, with the arrival of United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) heavy bombers, could reach as far as Benghazi. Although captured supplies proved useful, water and ammunition were constantly in short supply, while a shortage of transport impeded the distribution of the supplies that the Axis forces did have.
Axis plan of attack
Rommel's plan was for the 90th Light Division and the 15th and 21st Panzer divisions of the Afrika Korps to penetrate the Eighth Army lines between the Alamein box and Deir el Abyad (which he believed was defended). The 90th Light Division was then to veer north to cut the coastal road and trap the defenders of the Alamein box (which Rommel thought was occupied by the remains of the 50th Infantry Division) and the Afrika Korps would veer right to attack the rear of XIII Corps.
Battle
An Italian division was to attack the Alamein box from the west and another was to follow the 90th Light Division. The Italian XX Corps was to follow the Afrika Korps and deal with the Qattara box while the 133rd Armoured Division "Littorio" and German reconnaissance units would protect the right flank. Rommel had planned to attack on 30 June but supply and transport difficulties had resulted in a day's delay, vital to the defending forces reorganising on the Alamein line. On 30 June, the 90th Light Division was still 15 mi (24 km) short of its start line, 21st Panzer Division was immobilised through lack of fuel and the promised air support had yet to move into its advanced airfields.
Panzer Army Africa attacks
At 03:00 on 1 July, 90th Light Infantry Division advanced east but strayed too far north and ran into the 1st South African Division's defences and became pinned down. The 15th and 21st Panzer Divisions of the Afrika Korps were delayed by a sandstorm and then a heavy air attack. It was broad daylight by the time they circled round the back of Deir el Abyad where they found the feature to the east of it occupied by 18th Indian Infantry Brigade which, after a hasty journey from Iraq, had occupied the exposed position just west of Ruweisat Ridge and east of Deir el Abyad at Deir el Shein late on 28 June to create one of Norrie's additional defensive boxes.
At about 10:00 on 1 July, 21st Panzer Division attacked Deir el Shein. 18th Indian Infantry Brigade—supported by 23 25-pounder gun-howitzers, 16 of the new 6-pounder anti-tank guns and nine Matilda tanks—held out the whole day in desperate fighting but by evening the Germans succeeded in over-running them. The time they bought allowed Auchinleck to organise the defence of the western end of Ruweisat Ridge. The 1st Armoured Division had been sent to intervene at Deir el Shein. They ran into 15th Panzer Division just south of Deir el Shein and drove it west. By the end of the day's fighting, the Afrika Korps had 37 tanks left out of its initial complement of 55.
During the early afternoon, 90th Light had extricated itself from the El Alamein box defences and resumed its move eastward. It came under artillery fire from the three South African brigade groups and was forced to dig in.
On 2 July, Rommel ordered the resumption of the offensive. Once again, 90th Light failed to make progress so Rommel called the Afrika Korps to abandon its planned sweep southward and instead join the effort to break through to the coast road by attacking east toward Ruweisat Ridge. The British defence of Ruweisat Ridge relied on an improvised formation called "Robcol", comprising a regiment each of field artillery and light anti-aircraft artillery and a company of infantry. Robcol—in line with normal British Army practice for ad hoc formations—was named after its commander, Brigadier Robert Waller, the Commander Royal Artillery of the 10th Indian Infantry Division. Robcol was able to buy time, and by late afternoon the two British armoured brigades joined the battle with 4th Armoured Brigade engaging 15th Panzer and 22nd Armoured Brigade 21st Panzer respectively. They drove back repeated attacks by the Axis armour, who then withdrew before dusk. The British reinforced Ruweisat on the night of 2 July. The now enlarged Robcol became "Walgroup". Meanwhile, the Royal Air Force (RAF) made heavy air attacks on the Axis units.
The next day, 3 July, Rommel ordered the Afrika Korps to resume its attack on the Ruweisat ridge with the Italian XX Motorised Corps on its southern flank. Italian X Corps, meanwhile were to hold El Mreir. By this stage the Afrika Korps had only 26 operational tanks. There was a sharp armoured exchange south of Ruweisat ridge during the morning and the main Axis advance was held. On 3 July, the RAF flew 780 sorties.
To relieve the pressure on the right and centre of the Eighth Army line, XIII Corps on the left advanced from the Qattara box (known to the New Zealanders as the Kaponga box). The plan was that the New Zealand 2nd Division—with the remains of Indian 5th Division and 7th Motor Brigade under its command—would swing north to threaten the Axis flank and rear. This force encountered the 132nd Armoured Division "Ariete"'s artillery, which was driving on the southern flank of the division as it attacked Ruweisat. The Italian commander ordered his battalions to fight their way out independently but the Ariete lost 531 men (about 350 were prisoners), 36 pieces of artillery, six (or eight?) tanks, and 55 trucks. By the end of the day, the Ariete Division had only five tanks. The day ended once again with the Afrika Korps and Ariete coming off second best to the superior numbers of the British 22nd Armoured and 4th Armoured Brigades, frustrating Rommel's attempts to resume his advance. The RAF once again played its part, flying 900 sorties during the day.
To the south, on 5 July the New Zealand group resumed its advance northwards towards El Mreir intending to cut the rear of the Ariete Division. Heavy fire from the Italian 27th Infantry Division "Brescia" at El Mreir, however, 5 mi (8.0 km) north of the Qattara box, checked their progress and led XIII Corps to call off its attack.
Rommel digs in
At this point, Rommel decided his exhausted forces could make no further headway without resting and regrouping. He reported to the German High Command that his three German divisions numbered just 1,200–1,500 men each and resupply was proving highly problematic because of enemy interference from the air. He expected to have to remain on the defensive for at least two weeks.
Rommel was by this time suffering from the extended length of his supply lines. The Allied Desert Air Force (DAF) was concentrating fiercely on his fragile and elongated supply routes while British mobile columns moving west and striking from the south were causing havoc in the Axis rear echelons. Rommel could afford these losses even less since shipments from Italy had been substantially reduced (in June, he received 5,000 short tons (4,500 t) of supplies compared with 34,000 short tons (31,000 t) in May and 400 vehicles (compared with 2,000 in May). Meanwhile, the Eighth Army was reorganising and rebuilding, benefiting from its short lines of communication. By 4 July, the Australian 9th Division had entered the line in the north, and on 9 July the Indian 5th Infantry Brigade also returned, taking over the Ruweisat position. At the same time, the fresh Indian 161st Infantry Brigade reinforced the depleted Indian 5th Infantry Division.
Tel el Eisa
On 8 July, Auchinleck ordered the new XXX Corps commander—Lieutenant-General William Ramsden—to capture the low ridges at Tel el Eisa and Tel el Makh Khad and then to push mobile battle groups south toward Deir el Shein and raiding parties west toward the airfields at El Daba. Meanwhile, XIII Corps would prevent the Axis from moving troops north to reinforce the coastal sector. Ramsden tasked the Australian 9th Division with 44th Royal Tank Regiment under command with the Tel el Eisa objective and the South African 1st Division with eight supporting tanks, Tel el Makh Khad. The raiding parties were to be provided by 1st Armoured Division.
Following a bombardment which started at 03:30 on 10 July, the Australian 26th Brigade launched an attack against the ridge north of Tel el Eisa station along the coast (Trig 33). The bombardment was the heaviest barrage yet experienced in North Africa, which created panic in the inexperienced soldiers of the Italian 60th Infantry Division "Sabratha" who had only just occupied sketchy defences in the sector. The Australian attack took more than 1,500 prisoners, routed an Italian Division and overran the German Signals Intercept Company 621. Meanwhile, the South Africans had by late morning taken Tel el Makh Khad and were in covering positions.
Elements of the German 164th Light Division and Italian 101st Motorised Division "Trieste" arrived to plug the gap torn in the Axis defences. That afternoon and evening, tanks from the German 15th Panzer and Italian Trieste Divisions launched counter-attacks against the Australian positions, the counter-attacks failing in the face of overwhelming Allied artillery and the Australian anti-tank guns.
At first light on 11 July, the Australian 2/24th Battalion supported by tanks from 44th Royal Tank Regiment attacked the western end of Tel el Eisa hill (Point 24). By early afternoon, the feature was captured and was then held against a series of Axis counter-attacks throughout the day. A small column of armour, motorised infantry, and guns then set off to raid Deir el Abyad and caused a battalion of Italian infantry to surrender. Its progress was checked at the Miteirya ridge and it was forced to withdraw that evening to the El Alamein box. During the day, more than 1,000 Italian prisoners were taken.
On 12 July, the 21st Panzerdivision launched a counter-attack against Trig 33 and Point 24, which was beaten off after a 2½-hour fight, with more than 600 German dead and wounded left strewn in front of the Australian positions. The next day, the 21st Panzerdivision launched an attack against Point 33 and South African positions in the El Alamein box. In the El Alamein Box, the Royal Durban Light Infantry (RDLI) faced the full force of the German attacks. The RDLI did not have adequate anti-tank guns and the German artillery cut the South African telephone cables, disrupting their field artillery support. The attack was halted by intense artillery fire from the defenders. Although the South Africans repulsed the German attack, by 16:10, German tanks and dive bombers had advanced up to 300 metres from the South African positions. The 9th Australian field artillery, 7th British Medium Regiment had to assist in repulsing the German attack. At last light, the 79th British Anti-Tank Regiment was deployed to assist the South African forces, but the German attack was petering out. The South African losses on 13 July totalled nine dead and 42 wounded.
South African casualties were relatively light due to their skill in withstanding the German attacks negated their casualties. Had the El Alamein Box been captured by Rommel's forces, the consequences for the Eighth Army would have been devastating; the El Alamein line would have been ruptured, and Australian forces would have been cut off from the Eighth Army and forced into a general retreat to the Nile Delta. Rommel was still determined to drive the British forces from the northern salient. Although the Australian defenders had been forced back from Point 24, heavy casualties had been inflicted on 21st Panzerddivision. Another attack was mounted on 15 July but made no ground against tenacious resistance. On 16 July, the Australians—supported by British tanks—launched an attack to try to take Point 24 but were forced back by German counter-attacks, suffering nearly fifty per cent casualties.
After seven days of fierce fighting, the battle in the north for the Tel el Eisa salient petered out. Australian 9th Division estimated at least 2,000 Axis troops had been killed and more than 3,700 prisoners of war taken in the battle. Possibly the most important feature of the battle, however, was that the Australians had captured Signals Intercept Company 621, which had been providing Rommel with priceless intelligence from British radio communications.
First Battle of Ruweisat Ridge
As the Axis forces dug in, Auchinleck—having drawn a number of German units to the coastal sector during the Tel el Eisa fighting—developed a plan codenamed Operation Bacon to attack the Italian 17th Infantry Division "Pavia" and Brescia Divisions in the centre of the front at the Ruweisat ridge. Signals intelligence was giving Auchinleck clear details of the Axis order of battle and force dispositions. His policy was to "...hit the Italians wherever possible in view of their low morale and because the Germans cannot hold extended fronts without them."
The intention was for the 4th New Zealand Brigade and 5th New Zealand Brigade (on 4th Brigade's right) to attack north-west to seize the western part of the ridge and on their right the Indian 5th Infantry Brigade to capture the eastern part of the ridge in a night attack. Then, the 2nd Armoured Brigade would pass through the centre of the infantry objectives to exploit toward Deir el Shein and the Miteirya Ridge. On the left, the 22nd Armoured Brigade would be ready to move forward to protect the infantry as they consolidated on the ridge.
The attack commenced at 23:00 on 14 July. Shortly before dawn on 15 July, the two New Zealand brigades took their objectives, but minefields and pockets of resistance left behind the forward troops' advance created disarray among the attackers, impeding the move forward of reserves, artillery, and support arms. As a result, the New Zealand brigades occupied exposed positions on the ridge without support weapons except for a few anti-tank guns. More significantly, the two British armoured brigades failed to move forward to protect the infantry. At first light, a detachment from the 15th Panzerdivisions 8th Panzer Regiment launched a counter-attack against New Zealand 4th Brigade's 22nd Battalion. A sharp exchange knocked out their anti-tank guns, and the infantry found themselves exposed in the open with no alternative but to surrender. Approximately 350 New Zealanders were taken prisoner.
While the 2nd New Zealand Division attacked the western slopes of Ruweisat Ridge, the Indian 5th Brigade made small gains on Ruweisat ridge to the east. By 07:00, word finally reached the 2nd Armoured Brigade, which started to move north west. Two regiments became embroiled in a minefield, but the third was able to join Indian 5th Infantry 5th Brigade as it renewed its attack. With the help of the armour and artillery, the Indians were able to take their objectives by early afternoon. Meanwhile, the 22nd Armoured Brigade had been engaged at Alam Nayil by 90th Light Division and the Ariete Armoured Division, advancing from the south. While—with help from mobile infantry and artillery columns from 7th Armoured Division—they pushed back the Axis probe with ease, they were prevented from advancing north to protect the New Zealand flank.
Seeing the Brescia and Pavia under pressure, Rommel rushed German troops to Ruweisat. By 15:00, the 3rd Reconnaissance Regiment and part of 21st Panzerdivision from the north and 33rd Reconnaissance Regiment and the Baade Group comprising elements from 15th Panzerdivision from the south were in place under Lieutenant-General (General der Panzertruppe) Walther Nehring. At 17:00, Nehring launched his counter-attack. 4th New Zealand Brigade were still short of support weapons and also, by this time, ammunition. Once again, the anti-tank defences were overwhelmed and about 380 New Zealanders were taken prisoner including Captain Charles Upham who gained a second Victoria Cross for his actions, including destroying a German tank, several guns, and vehicles with grenades despite being shot through the elbow by a machine gun bullet. At about 18:00, the brigade HQ was overrun. At about 18:15, the 2nd Armoured Brigade engaged the German armour and halted the Axis eastward advance. At dusk, Nehring broke off the action.
Early on 16 July, Nehring renewed his attack. The 5th Indian Infantry Brigade pushed them back, but it was clear from intercepted radio traffic that a further attempt would be made. Strenuous preparations to dig in anti-tank guns were made, artillery fire plans organised, and a regiment from the 22nd Armoured Brigade Gsent to reinforce the 2nd Armoured Brigade. When the attack resumed late in the afternoon, it was repulsed. After the battle, the Indians counted 24 knocked out tanks, as well as armoured cars and numerous anti-tank guns left on the battlefield.
In three days' fighting, the Allies took more than 2,000 Axis prisoners, mostly from the Italian Brescia and Pavia Divisions; the New Zealand division suffered 1,405 casualties. The fighting at Tel el Eisa and Ruweisat had caused the destruction of three Italian divisions, forced Rommel to redeploy his armour from the south, and made it necessary to lay minefields in front of the remaining Italian divisions and stiffen them with detachments of German troops.
Miteirya Ridge (Ruin Ridge)
To relieve pressure on Ruweisat ridge, Auchinleck ordered the Australian 9th Division to make another attack from the north. In the early hours of 17 July, the Australian 24th Brigade—supported by 44th Royal Tank Regiment (RTR) and strong fighter cover from the air—assaulted Miteirya ridge (known as "Ruin ridge" to the Australians). The initial night attack went well, with 736 prisoners taken, mostly from the Italian Trento and Trieste motorised divisions. Once again, however, a critical situation for the Axis forces was retrieved by vigorous counter-attacks from hastily assembled German and Italian forces, which forced the Australians to withdraw back to their start line with 300 casualties. Although the Australian Official History of the 24th Brigade's 2/32nd Battalion describes the counter-attack force as "German", the Australian historian Mark Johnston reports that German records indicate that it was the Trento Division that overran the Australian battalion.
Second Battle of Ruweisat Ridge (El Mreir)
The Eighth Army now enjoyed a massive superiority in material over the Axis forces: 1st Armoured Division had 173 tanks and more in reserve or in transit, including 61 Grants while Rommel possessed only 38 German tanks and 51 Italian tanks although his armoured units had some 100 tanks awaiting repair.
Auchinleck's plan was for Indian Infantry 161st Brigade to attack along Ruweisat ridge to take Deir el Shein, while the New Zealand 6th Brigade attacked from south of the ridge to the El Mreir depression. At daylight, two British armoured brigades—2nd Armoured Brigade and the fresh 23rd Armoured Brigade—would sweep through the gap created by the infantry. The plan was complicated and ambitious.
The infantry night attack began at 16:30 on 21 July. The New Zealand attack took their objectives in the El Mreir depression but, once again, many vehicles failed to arrive and they were short of support arms in an exposed position. At daybreak on 22 July, the British armoured brigades again failed to advance. At daybreak on 22 July, Nehring's 5th and 8th Panzer Regiments responded with a rapid counter-attack which quickly overran the New Zealand infantry in the open, inflicting more than 900 casualties on the New Zealanders. 2nd Armoured Brigade sent forward two regiments to help but they were halted by mines and anti-tank fire.
The attack by Indian 161st Brigade had mixed fortunes. On the left, the initial attempt to clear the western end of Ruweisat failed but at 08:00 a renewed attack by the reserve battalion succeeded. On the right, the attacking battalion broke into the Deir el Shein position but was driven back in hand-to-hand fighting.
Compounding the disaster at El Mreir, at 08:00 the commander of 23rd Armoured Brigade ordered his brigade forward, intent on following his orders to the letter. Major-General Gatehouse—commanding 1st Armoured Division—had been unconvinced that a path had been adequately cleared in the minefields and had suggested the advance be cancelled. However, XIII Corps commander—Lieutenant-General William Gott—rejected this and ordered the attack but on a centre line 1 mi (1.6 km) south of the original plan which he incorrectly believed was mine-free. These orders failed to get through and the attack went ahead as originally planned. The brigade found itself mired in mine fields and under heavy fire. They were then counter-attacked by 21st Panzer at 11:00 and forced to withdraw. The 23rd Armoured Brigade was destroyed, with the loss of 40 tanks destroyed and 47 badly damaged.
At 17:00, Gott ordered 5th Indian Infantry Division to execute a night attack to capture the western half of Ruweisat ridge and Deir el Shein. 3/14th Punjab Regiment from 9th Indian Infantry Brigade attacked at 02:00 on 23 July but failed as they lost their direction. A further attempt in daylight succeeded in breaking into the position but intense fire from three sides resulted in control being lost as the commanding officer was killed, and four of his senior officers were wounded or went missing.
Attack on Tel el Eisa resumed
To the north, Australian 9th Division continued its attacks. At 06:00 on 22 July, Australian 26th Brigade attacked Tel el Eisa and Australian 24th Brigade attacked Tel el Makh Khad toward Miteirya (Ruin Ridge). It was during this fighting that Arthur Stanley Gurney performed the actions for which he was posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross. The fighting for Tel el Eisa was costly, but by the afternoon the Australians controlled the feature. That evening, Australian 24th Brigade attacked Tel el Makh Khad with the tanks of 50th RTR in support. The tank unit had not been trained in close infantry support and failed to co-ordinate with the Australian infantry. The result was that the infantry and armour advanced independently and having reached the objective 50th RTR lost 23 tanks because they lacked infantry support.
Once more, the Eighth Army had failed to destroy Rommel's forces, despite its overwhelming superiority in men and equipment. On the other hand, for Rommel the situation continued to be grave as, despite successful defensive operations, his infantry had suffered heavy losses and he reported that "the situation is critical in the extreme".
Operation Manhood
On 26/27 July, Auchinleck launched Operation Manhood in the northern sector in a final attempt to break the Axis forces. XXX Corps was reinforced with 1st Armoured Division (less 22nd Armoured Brigade), 4th Light Armoured Brigade, and 69th Infantry Brigade. The plan was to break the enemy line south of Miteirya ridge and exploit north-west. The South Africans were to make and mark a gap in the minefields to the south-east of Miteirya by midnight of 26/27 July. By 01:00 on 27 July, 24th Australian Infantry Brigade was to have captured the eastern end of the Miteirya ridge and would exploit toward the north-west. The 69th Infantry Brigade would pass through the minefield gap created by the South Africans to Deir el Dhib and clear and mark gaps in further minefields. The 2nd Armoured Brigade would then pass through to El Wishka and would be followed by 4th Light Armoured Brigade which would attack the Axis lines of communication.
This was the third attempt to break through in the northern sector, and the Axis defenders were expecting the attack. Like the previous attacks, it was hurriedly and therefore poorly planned. The Australian 24th Brigade managed to take their objectives on Miteirya Ridge by 02:00 of 27 July. To the south, the British 69th Brigade set off at 01:30 and managed to take their objectives by about 08:00. However, the supporting anti-tank units became lost in the darkness or delayed by minefields, leaving the attackers isolated and exposed when daylight came. There followed a period during which reports from the battlefront regarding the minefield gaps were confused and conflicting. As a consequence, the advance of 2nd Armoured Brigade was delayed. Rommel launched an immediate counter-attack and the German armoured battlegroups overran the two forward battalions of 69th Brigade. Meanwhile, 50th RTR supporting the Australians was having difficulty locating the minefield gaps made by Australian 2/24th Battalion. They failed to find a route through and in the process were caught by heavy fire and lost 13 tanks. The unsupported 2/28th Australian battalion on the ridge was overrun. The 69th Brigade suffered 600 casualties and the Australians 400 for no gain.
The Eighth Army was exhausted, and on 31 July Auchinleck ordered an end to offensive operations and the strengthening of the defences to meet a major counter-offensive.
Rommel was later to blame the failure to break through to the Nile on how the sources of supply to his army had dried up and how:
then the power of resistance of many Italian formations collapsed. The duties of comradeship, for me particularly as their Commander-in-Chief, compel me to state unequivocally that the defeats which the Italian formations suffered at Alamein in early July were not the fault of the Italian soldier. The Italian was willing, unselfish and a good comrade, and, considering the conditions under which he served, had always given better than average. There is no doubt that the achievement of every Italian unit, especially of the motorised forces, far surpassed anything that the Italian Army had done for a hundred years. Many Italian generals and officers won our admiration both as men and as soldiers. The cause of the Italian defeat had its roots in the whole Italian military state and system, in their poor armament and in the general lack of interest in the war by many Italians, both officers and statesmen. This Italian failure frequently prevented the realisation of my plans.
— Rommel
Rommel complained bitterly about the failure of important Italian convoys to get desperately needed tanks and supplies through to him, always blaming the Italian Supreme Command, never suspecting British code breaking.
According to Dr James Sadkovich and others, Rommel often displayed a distinct tendency to blame and scapegoat his Italian allies to cover up his own mistakes and deficiencies as a commander in the field. For example, while Rommel was a very good tactical commander, the Italian and German High Commands were concerned that he lacked operational awareness and a sense of strategic objectives. Dr Sadkovich points out that he would often out-run his logistics and squander valuable (mostly Italian) military hardware and resources, in battle after battle, without clear strategic goals or an appreciation of the limited logistics with which his Italian allies were desperately trying to provide him.
Aftermath
The battle was a stalemate, but it had halted the Axis advance on Alexandria (and then Cairo and ultimately the Suez Canal). The Eighth Army had suffered over 13,000 casualties in July, including 4,000 in the 2nd New Zealand Division, 3,000 in the 5th Indian Infantry Division and 2,552 battle casualties in the 9th Australian Division but had taken 7,000 prisoners and inflicted heavy damage on Axis men and machines. In his appreciation of 27 July, Auchinleck wrote that the Eighth Army would not be ready to attack again until mid-September at the earliest. He believed that because Rommel understood that with the passage of time the Allied situation would only improve, he was compelled to attack as soon as possible and before the end of August when he would have superiority in armour. Auchinleck therefore made plans for a defensive battle.
In early August, Winston Churchill and General Sir Alan Brooke—the Chief of the Imperial General Staff (CIGS)—visited Cairo on their way to meet Joseph Stalin in Moscow. They decided to replace Auchinleck, appointing the XIII Corps commander, William Gott, to the Eighth Army command and General Sir Harold Alexander as C-in-C Middle East Command. Persia and Iraq were to be split from Middle East Command as a separate Persia and Iraq Command and Auchinleck was offered the post of C-in-C (which he refused). Gott was killed on the way to take up his command when his aircraft was shot down. Lieutenant-General Bernard Montgomery was appointed in his place and took command on 13 August.
Legacy
The battle and the Second Battle of El Alamein three months later remain important to some of the countries that took part. Particularly in New Zealand, this is due to the country's significant contribution to the defence of El Alamein, especially the heavy role the Māori Battalion played. Members of this battalion have been labelled war heroes since, such as commander Frederick Baker, James Henare and Eruera Te Whiti o Rongomai Love, the last of whom was killed in action.
See also
- Alamein Memorial
- Battle of Alam el Halfa
- List of Australian military equipment of World War II
- List of British military equipment of World War II
- List of German military equipment of World War II
- List of Italian Army equipment in World War II
- List of North African airfields during World War II
- List of World War II battles
- Second Battle of El Alamein
- Timeline of the North African campaign
Notes
- Reported strength on 30 June (55 German and 15 Italian tanks). An unknown number of tanks were also in repair workshops behind the front.
- Strength at the frontline on 1 July. In addition 902 tanks were in repair workshops behind the front, of which 34 were serviceable and many unrepairable.
- GHQ Cairo estimated that the Axis could have as many as 519 serviceable tanks on 30 June although 339 was a more probable figure. In fact the actual number on 26 June was 104 compared with 155 tanks in Eighth Army
- During the period 1 to 27 June the Desert Air Force flew nearly 15,400 sorties. Auchinleck later wrote in his official despatches "...Our air forces could not have done more than they did to help and sustain the Eighth Army in its struggle. Their effort was continuous by day and night, and the effect on the enemy was tremendous. I am certain that, had it not been for their devoted and exceptional efforts, we should not have been able to stop the enemy on the El Alamein position."
- The two British armoured brigades started on 3 July with a total strength of 119 tanks
- Barton Maughan—Australia's official historian—has written that "two forward platoons of the 2/32nd's left company were overrun, 22 men were taken prisoner" but fails to shed more light on this attack.
- Playfair states that the "...timing soon fell behind, but by 3 am the Australians had taken their objective"
- Brooke and Auchinleck had both thought Montgomery a better candidate than Gott but Churchill had favoured his appointment.
Citations
- Barr 2005, p. 39
- Barr 2005, p. 40
- Watson 2007, p. 6
- Barr 2005, p. 184
- ^ Mackenzie 1951, p. 589
- Playfair Vol. III, p. 279
- Playfair Vol. III, pp. 281n and 283
- Playfair Vol. III, pp. 284–285
- Playfair Vol. III, p. 281
- Playfair Vol. III, p. 285
- Hinsley 1981, p. 390
- Playfair Vol. III, p. 290
- "Scoullar (1955), Chapters 10, 11 and 12". Archived from the original on 2 December 2008. Retrieved 2 November 2007.
- Playfair Vol. III, pp. 292–293
- Playfair Vol. III, pp. 294–295
- Panzer Army Africa Battle Report dated 29 June 1942 K.T.B. 812 page 1 Archived 30 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine and page 2 Archived 25 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine
- Latimer 2002, p. 58
- ^ Playfair Vol. III, p. 332
- Playfair Vol. III, pp. 333–334
- Barr 2005, p. 69
- Playfair Vol. III, p. 295
- Playfair Vol. III, pp. 332–333
- Hinsley 1981, p. 392
- Playfair Vol. III, p. 331
- ^ Playfair Vol. III, p. 340
- Hinsley 1981, pp. 392–393
- Barr 2005, p. 81
- Mackenzie (1951), p.580
- Playfair Vol. III, pp. 340–341
- Mackenzie (1951), pp.581–582
- ^ Playfair Vol. III, p. 341
- ^ Mackenzie 1951, p. 582
- Playfair Vol. III, pp. 342–343
- Barr 2005, p. 88
- ^ Playfair Vol. III, p. 343
- Playfair Vol. III, p. 335
- "No. 38177". The London Gazette (Supplement). 13 January 1948. p. 367.
- ^ Mitcham 2007, p. 113
- Walker.I, (2003), p.141
- Barr 2005, p. 92
- Playfair Vol. III, p. 344/
- Clifford (1943), p.285
- "Scoullar (1955), p. 79". Archived from the original on 16 October 2008. Retrieved 2 November 2007.
- Mackenzie 1951, p. 583
- Playfair Vol. III, p. 345
- ^ Playfair Vol. III, p. 346
- Johnston & Stanley 2002, p. 58
- Caccio-Dominioni (1966), pp. 70–71
- Bates 1992, pp. 139–141
- Scoullar (1955), p. 205 Archived 16 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine
- Stewart 2002, p. 125
- Johnston & Stanley 2002, p. 65
- Scoullar (1955), p. 220 Archived 2 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine
- Bates 1992, pp. 141–142
- Caccio-Dominioni (1966), p. 74.
- Johnston & Stanley 2002, p. 67
- Playfair Vol. III, pp. 346–347
- Johnston & Stanley 2002, p. 68
- Bates 1992, p. 143
- ^ Johnston & Stanley 2002, p. 70
- Barr 2005, p. 114
- Johnston & Stanley 2002, p. 72
- Jacobs, Colonel (Dr) C. J. (December 2004). "The Role of the 1st South African Division during the First Battle of El Alamein, 1–30 July 1942". Military History Journal. 13 (2). The South African Military History Society: 1 – via Database.
- Johnston & Stanley 2002, pp. 73–76
- Bates 1992, p. 145
- Maughan (1966), pp. 565–566 Archived 8 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine
- Johnston & Stanley 2002, pp. 78–80
- ^ Johnston 2003, p. 86
- Johnston & Stanley 2002, p. 81
- Johnston & Stanley 2002, p. 66
- Barr 2005, pp. 112–114
- Playfair Vol. III, p. 347
- Hinsley 1981, p. 404
- Playfair Vol. III, p. 348
- ^ Playfair Vol. III, p. 349
- ^ Playfair Vol. III, p. 351
- ^ Playfair Vol. III, p. 350
- Bharucha and Prasad (1956), p. 422
- Barr 2005, pp. 143–146
- Barr 2005, pp. 118–142
- Scoullar 1955, pp. 232–298
- ^ Hinsley 1981, p. 405
- Johnston & Stanley 2002, pp. 83–85
- Maughan (1966), pp. 572–574 Archived 8 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine
- Stewart 2002, p. 130
- "Australians at War: 2/32 Battalion". Australian War Memorial website. Australian War Memorial. Retrieved 27 December 2007.
- Johnston, Mark (16 April 2000). Fighting the Enemy: Australian Soldiers and Their Adversaries in World War II. Cambridge University Press. p. 13. ISBN 978-0-521-78222-7.
- "Maughan (1966), p. 575" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 27 February 2008. Retrieved 6 January 2008.
- ^ Playfair Vol. III, p. 353
- Maughan (1966), p. 577 Archived 8 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine
- Scoullar (1955), p.328 Archived 16 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine and p.337
- Scoullar (1955), pp. 319–337 Archived 16 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine
- Scoullar (1955), pp. 338–351 Archived 22 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine
- Scoullar (1955), pp. 352–363 Archived 25 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Playfair Vol. III, p. 355
- ^ Playfair Vol. III, p. 356
- ^ Playfair Vol. III, p. 357
- Johnston & Stanley 2002, pp. 88–93, 97
- Bates 1992, pp. 208–211
- Johnston & Stanley 2002, pp. 93–96
- Bates 1992, pp. 212–214
- Panzer Army Africa Battle Report dated 22 July 1942 K.T.B. 1220
- ^ Playfair Vol. III, p. 358
- Barr.N, p.176; Bates.P, p.216.
- Bates.P, p.217.
- Johnston & Stanley 2002, p. 102–106; Bates.P, p.219.
- Barr.N, pp.178–179 and 181–182
- Barr.N, pp.179–181; Johnston & Stanley 2002, p. 107–112; Bates.P, pp.224–225.
- Liddell Hart (ed), 'The Rommel Papers' (London 1953), pp.261–262.
- Gannon, James (1 August 2002). Stealing Secrets, Telling Lies: How Spies and Codebreakers Helped Shape the Twentieth Century. Potomac Books, Incorporated. p. 81. ISBN 978-1-57488-473-9.
- ^ Sadkovich, Dr James (May 1991). "Of Myths and Men: Rommel and the Italians in North Africa 1940–42". International History Review. 13 (2): 284–313. doi:10.1080/07075332.1991.9640582.
- Robinson, James, R (September 1997). "The Rommel myth". Military Review. 77: 81–89.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - Kirkland, Major Donald. E (May 1986). "Rommel's Desert Campaigns: a study in Operational level weakness". School of Advanced Military Studies: 4–36.
- Hinsley 1981, p. 407
- Alanbrooke 2002, p. 294
- Clifford 1943, p. 296
- Alanbrooke Diaries, 4 August 1942
- "Commemorations to mark 75th anniversary of the Battle of El Alamein | Ministry for Culture and Heritage". mch.govt.nz. Archived from the original on 25 August 2021. Retrieved 25 August 2021.
- Wright, Tony (2 November 2021). "75 years since New Zealand handed Nazi Germany its first land defeat of WWII". Newshub. Archived from the original on 2 November 2017. Retrieved 25 August 2021.
- Tso, Matthew (29 March 2021). "Street name honouring Māori Battalion commander a 'spiritual return' – Granddaughter says". Stuff. Retrieved 25 August 2021.
References
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- Bates, Peter (1992). Dance of War: The Story of the Battle of Egypt. London: Leo Cooper. ISBN 0-85052-453-9.
- Bharucha, P. C.; Prasad, Bisheshwar (1956). The North African Campaign, 1940–43. Official History of the Indian Armed Forces in the Second World War, 1939–45. Delhi: Combined Inter-Services Historical Section, India & Pakistan. OCLC 563270.
- Caccia Dominioni de Sillavengo, Paolo (1966). Alamein 1933–1962: An Italian Story. Allen & Unwin. OCLC 2188258.
- Clifford, Alexander (1943). Three Against Rommel: The Campaigns of Wavell, Auchinleck and Alexander. London: George G. Harrap. OCLC 10426023.
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- Lanza, Colonel Conrad H. "Perimeters in Paragraphs: The Axis Invades Egypt" (PDF). The Field Artillery Journal (September 1942). Fort Sill, OK: Field Artillery Association. ISSN 0191-975X. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 February 2008. Retrieved 30 December 2007.
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External links
- First Battle of El Alamein, from Italian "Comando Supremo"
- Royal Engineers Museum Royal Engineers and Second World War (Deception and mine clearance at EL Alamein)
- Alam Halfa and Alamein New Zealand Electronic Text Centre
- Cemetery details: Alamein Memorial. Commonwealth War Graves Commission.
- Rommel’s 621st Radio Intercept Company
- Conflicts in 1942
- 1942 in Egypt
- July 1942 events
- Western Desert campaign
- Battles of World War II involving Australia
- Land battles of World War II involving the United Kingdom
- Battles of World War II involving New Zealand
- Battles and operations of World War II involving India
- Battles and operations of World War II involving South Africa
- Battles of World War II involving Germany
- Battles of World War II involving Italy
- Egypt in World War II
- El Alamein
- Erwin Rommel
- Tank battles involving Germany
- Tank battles involving Italy
- Tank battles involving the United Kingdom
- Tank battles involving South Africa
- Tank battles of World War II