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Operation Ochsenkopf

Operation Ox Head/Unternehmen Ochsenkopf
Part of the Tunisia Campaign of the Second World War

Panzer VI (Tiger I) in Tunisia, 1943
Date26 February – 4 March 1943
Location
Northern Tunisia
37°03′00″N 09°14′00″E / 37.05000°N 9.23333°E / 37.05000; 9.23333
Result Allied victory
Belligerents
 United Kingdom
 Free France
Germany
 Italy
Commanders and leaders
Kenneth Anderson
Charles Allfrey
Jürgen von Arnim
Rudolf Lang
Strength
V Corps Korpsgruppe Weber
Casualties and losses
4,200 casualties (2,300 prisoners)
16 tanks
31 guns
40 vehicles
4,500 casualties (2,200 prisoners)
71 tanks
60 vehicles

Unternehmen Ochsenkopf (Operation Ox Head) also known as the Battle of Sidi Nsir and the Battle of Hunts Gap was an Axis offensive operation in Tunisia from 26 February to 4 March 1943, during the Tunisia Campaign of the Second World War. The offensive and a subsidiary operation Unternehmen Ausladung was intended to gain control of Medjez el Bab, Béja, El Aroussa, Djebel Abiod and a position known as Hunt's Gap, between the British First Army and the Axis Army Group Africa (Heeresgruppe Afrika/Gruppo d'Armate Africa). The offensive gained some ground, but none of the more ambitious objectives were achieved before the operation was called off due to increasing losses of infantry and tanks, particularly the heavy Tigers. Unternehmen Ochsenkopf was the last big Axis offensive by the 5th Panzer Army before the surrender of the Afrika Korps in May 1943.[1]

Background Edit

After the Battle of Kasserine Pass (19–24 February), the Axis created Army Group Africa (Heeresgruppe Afrika/Gruppo d'Armate Africa) as a command headquarters for the 5th Panzer Army and the Italian 1st Army in Tunisia. Adolf Hitler and the German General Staff Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (OKW) believed that Generaloberst Hans-Jürgen von Arnim should assume command but Generalfeldmarschall Albert Kesselring the German Oberbefehlshaber Süd (OB Süd, Commander-in-Chief South) argued for Generalfeldmarschall Erwin Rommel, who was appointed to command the new Army Group Africa on 23 February.[2] Comando Supremo, the Italian General Staff, ordered Rommel to end the attack at Kasserine, in view of the Allied reinforcement of the Tebessa area, to conduct a spoiling offensive against the Eighth Army (General Bernard Montgomery) as it approached the defences of the Mareth Line from the east.[3]

The villages of Gafsa, Metlaoui and Tozeur were to be held by mobile troops and most of the attack group was to return to the 1st Italian Army. The 10th Panzer Division had retired from Thala by early on 23 February and the 21st Panzer Division ended its attack on Sbiba on 24 February. The divisions were to refit and also rejoin the 1st Italian Army, ready for an attack in early March, the moves to be covered by minor operations on the 5th Panzer Army front. On 24 February, Arnim flew to Rome without consulting Rommel and advocated an offensive towards Béja, being convinced that the British First Army (General Kenneth Anderson), had sent reinforcements south from the northern front to save Sbiba and Thala. Arnim gained the approval of Kesselring for an attack on a wide front against the V Corps (Charles Allfrey) sector on 26 February.[4][3]

Axis plan Edit

 
Tunisia 1942–1943

Unternehmen Ochsenkopf was a plan to penetrate the British defences on 26 February, with Korpsgruppe Weber (General Friedrich Weber) of the 334th Infantry Division, elements of the Luftwaffe Hermann Göring Division which had recently arrived and the parts of the 10th Panzer Division not involved in Unternehmen Frühlingswind (Operation Spring Storm), in three groups or horns, in the shape of a bull's head. The northern horn, with most of the tanks, was to advance on the route from Mateur from the north-east, to capture Béja 40 km (25 mi) west of Medjez.[5] The second group was to attack from Goubellat towards Sloughia and Oued Zarga to envelop the British at Mejez El Bab and the third group was to carry out a pincer attack in the Bou Arouda valley, then advance through El Aroussa to Gafour, with the objective of the road junction at El Aroussa. In the north, the improvised Division von Broich/von Manteuffel (Division von Manteuffel), in the subsidiary Unternehmen Ausladung (Operation Disembarkation), was to defeat the British in the Sedjenane valley, cut the communications from Jefna to Djebel Aboid and cover the northern flank of Korpsgruppe Weber. The operations would force the allies to withdraw and delay a further advance, while Rommel prepared the attack of the 1st Italian Army (the former German-Italian Panzer Army) from the Mareth Line defences against the Eighth Army.[2][6]

Unternehmung Ausladung Edit

 
German paratroopers in Tunisia examine a captured Thompson M1928 / M1 sub-machinegun, 1943

The subsidiary Unternehmung Ausladung began on the morning of 26 February, to outflank the British in Sedjenane and the high ground opposite Green Hill, with an attack on the hilly coastal strip to the north between the town and Cap Serrat. The area was lightly held by poorly-equipped French troops of the Corps Francs d'Afrique.[7] Division von Manteuffel led the attack with elite troops of the Luftwaffe Fallschirmjäger Regiment (motorized) "Barenthin" (Major Rudolf Witzig) and the Italian 10th Bersaglieri Regiment.[8] The Axis forces, with air support from the Luftwaffe made good progress across the hills held by the Free French between Cap Serrat, the railway and Sedjenane. The French managed to repulse an Italian attack but were then overrun and many were taken prisoner.[9] On 27 February, elements of the 139th Infantry Brigade of the 46th Infantry Division and attached No. 1 Commando, supported by the 70th Field and 5th Medium regiments RA, moved up to counter the German advance but lacked air support and were short of artillery ammunition, after taking part in the Battle of Kasserine.[7][9] Until 1 March, the British conducted expensive but successful counter-attacks, which delayed the Axis advance on the hamlet.[8]

On 2 March, a Durham Light Infantry (DLI) counter-attack was a costly failure and the battalion was withdrawn to a wooded area outside Sedjenane; more German attacks on Sedjenane that day and the next were defeated.[8] A counter-attack by a battalion of the Lincolnshire Regiment, the DLI and Churchill tanks of the North Irish Horse drove the Germans back in determined fighting. The British position became untenable due to withdrawals by the French further west in the Medjez area, when Axis troops occupied high ground dominating the town. The French commander had thought his position was being outflanked and ordered a withdrawal. The German penetration towards Béja and Medjez along with the French withdrawal had caught the 139th Infantry Brigade in a salient and two companies of Sherwood Foresters were overrun.[9] On 4 March, the British retreated 24 km (15 mi) from Sedjenane toward Djebel Abiod to stabilise the front.[7] The Axis attack on Djebel Abiod was delayed for five days by the defence of Sedjenane and it was not captured.[8][10]

Battle Edit

Southern Horn Edit

The southern horn of the operation was to be conducted by Kampfgruppe Audorff with the Hermann Göring Parachute Division, the 334th Infantry Division and supporting panzer battalions.[11] Protecting this area was a British force known as Y Division, an ad hoc force, which had been formed from the 38th (Irish) Brigade, a mixture of commandos, Grenadier and Coldstream Guards, elements of the 1st Parachute Brigade and Churchill tanks of C Squadron 142 (Suffolk) Regiment under command.[5] The kampfgruppe attacked on the evening of 25 February, their first objectives being Tally Ho corner, an important road junction and a knoll nicknamed Fort MacGregor.[12] The Luftwaffe had attacked the British positions and shot up transport behind the front. At Fort MacGregor, D Company of the East Surreys were attacked by the paratroopers of the Hermann Göring Division.[13] After two German attacks were repulsed, paratroopers blew holes in the barbed wire and the defenders were soon overwhelmed and destroyed.[12] Djebel Djaffa, further west, held by a battalion of French Colonial troops was attacked simultaneously by the paratroopers. The French were surprised and swiftly overrun, most being captured.[13]

 
Panzer III knocked out by a Churchill during the Southern Horn attack

A hasty counter-attack by the Surreys on Fort MacGregor was attempted but was stopped just forward of the start line and the Surreys withdrew with many casualties. British artillery bombarded the hill for several hours with all the medium and heavy guns and when the Surreys attacked again, it was empty save for six shell-shocked Germans.[13] The paratroopers had been devastated by the shelling and had no choice but to withdraw.[12] The summit was no bigger than a football pitch and was strewn with human remains, mostly German but also the British dead of D Company.[13] Allfrey sent forward the Lancashire Fusiliers, 600 men of No. 6 Commando, the 56th Reconnaissance Regiment, Valentine tanks of the 17th/21st Lancers, elements of the 51st Royal Tank Regiment (51st RTR) and the North Irish Horse.[7][12][14] The next day almost as soon as they arrived, the Surreys and the Valentines of the 17/21st Lancers counter-attacked Djebel Djaffa, which was recaptured after some resistance.[13]

The 334th Division struck at Tally Ho corner just before midnight, surprised and overran the commando garrison, whose survivors were rescued by Churchill tanks.[14] The Germans pressed on to a small ridge 6 mi (9.7 km) to the east of El Aroussa, where two battalions of the Hermann Göring Division and a supporting panzer company assaulted a position defended by the Churchill tanks of Suffolk Squadron, 142nd Regiment RAC. Firing from hull down positions, the Churchill tanks knocked out four Panzer IVs, disabled three Panzer IIIs and destroyed an 88 mm gun for the loss of a Churchill. The German infantry suffered many casualties and the survivors withdrew after determined resistance by the British infantry supported by massed artillery.[5] The British received reinforcements and counter-attacked after another bombardment, pushing the Germans back from Tally Ho corner into the hills east of the Medjez-El-Bab to El-Aroussa road during the night.[15][14]

 
Churchill tanks move up on 28 February, to meet the Southern Horn attack

After dark, the British advanced and mopped up halfway along the road to Steamroller Farm, held by about 2,000 men from two battalions of the Hermann Göring Division, elements of a panzergrenadier regiment, 5 cm Pak 38 and 88 mm anti-tank guns.[15] A squadron of the 51st RTR in Churchill Mk III tanks and a company of Coldstream Guards set off just before midday on 28 February and by 4:00 p.m. they were in sight of the farm.[16] German artillery-fire was directed at them and shortly afterwards they were attacked by Junkers Ju 87 (Stuka) dive bombers, losing five Churchills.[17] The 1st Troop pressed forward into the farm area with the Coldstream Guards but were pinned down.[18] Another Churchill tank, commanded by Second Lieutenant J. C. Renton, arrived and two tanks made a 1,500 yd (1,400 m) dash across an exposed causeway covered by an 88 mm gun. At 20 yd (18 m) the gun fired and grazed the turret, before the crew fled and the Churchill flattened the gun; the Churchills then reached the summit of the pass and surprised the Germans there.[17]

The tanks came across German transport and shot them up as they went by, then knocked out two Panzer IIIs and two anti-tank guns as they tried to deploy.[16] The Germans fled and as dusk fell the column was destroyed.[5] Hollands and Renton were ordered to rejoin their squadron but the leading tank stalled and had to be given a tow start. The tank sortie destroyed two 88 mm, two 75 mm, and two 50 mm anti-tank guns, four smaller anti-tank guns, 25 wheeled vehicles, two 3-inch mortars and the two Panzer IIIs and inflicted nearly 200 casualties.[17] The next day the French owner of the farm arrived at El Aroussa to say that the Germans had gone and the British occupied the area.[16] The depleted Hermann Göring Regiment had suffered many more casualties; its commander had assumed that the tank sortie was from a much bigger formation and sent a message to Fliegerführer Afrika that he had been attacked by a "mad tank battalion which had scaled impossible heights" and "compelled his ultimate withdrawal".[17]

Northern Horn Edit

Kampfgruppe Lang had 77 tanks, including twenty Tigers of the 501st Heavy Panzer Battalion and motorised infantry from the 10th Panzer Division. The rest of the 10th Panzer Division was to attack once the objectives were achieved and advance westwards, about 25 mi (40 km) south of Medjez.[2] The area was held by the 128th (Hampshire) Infantry Brigade and numerous batteries of artillery.[19] On 26 February, the northern attack of Ochsenkopf commenced and the Germans quickly captured the Sidi Nsir hamlet and railway station, where the road and railway connecting Béja and Mateur diverged, the road east into the hills and the railway along the easier north-east route.[20][21] The 172nd Field Regiment RA, with three batteries of 25-pounder gun-howitzers, and 155 Battery, with eight 25-pounders, were dug in around a farm, with the 5th Battalion Hampshire Regiment. They were to monitor German movements but most were poorly-trained, with no battle experience.[2] At Hampshire Farm, the defenders were to absorb the first shock of an Axis attack on Béja, to give the defenders between Medjez and Beja at Hunt's Gap time to prepare. It was estimated the Germans attacked with thirteen infantry battalions, c. 13,000 men, with the supporting troops of two divisions c. (30,000 men) on the northern front.[22]

 
British 25-pounder field gun-howitzer

During the night, Verey light signals began to go up in the hills around Sidi Nsir, and at 6:30 a.m. next morning, German mortars began firing on the British guns. After 45 minutes, German tanks drove down the road from Mateur and four of the 25-pounders opened fire. No. 1 gun had been specially placed at the top of a slope to cover the approach from Mateur and fired over open sights. The leading German tanks ran onto mines, were damaged and withdrew with the infantry.[2] At 11:00 a.m. the Germans made another attempt on the left flank, but F Troop opened fire and hit four German tanks, setting them ablaze.[23] German infantry engaged B Company with small-arms fire, but were repulsed. Around midday, the Germans prepared to attack again, but massed British artillery fire broke up the attack before it began.[24]

By 1:00 p.m., thirty German tanks, self-propelled guns and infantry had worked round both flanks and were within 600 yd (550 m). The highest observation post was attacked, its wireless transmitter destroyed and telephone lines cut. Eight Messerschmitt Bf 109s fighters strafed each gun in turn all day, inflicting casualties and also attacked rear areas.[24] Several of the British vehicles on the road to Hunt's Gap were hit, and ammunition had to be salvaged at risk by the gunners. Bivouacs and ammunition dumps were also hit and left burning. Just after 2:30 p.m., German lorried infantry turned the southern flank by infiltrating forward under cover of a hill. At 3:00 p.m., German infantry commenced small-arms fire at close range and a column of tanks led by a Tiger moved along the road into the battery position, as thirteen more tanks gave covering fire from hull-down positions. The British gunners switched to armour piercing shot and knocked out three tanks, which blocked the road.[25]

At 5:30 p.m., another German attack on the remaining guns began; seven tanks were hit but one by one, the remaining British guns were hit by tank-gun and machine-gun fire.[2] By nightfall, only one 25-pounder and several Bren guns remained, engaging the German tanks at ranges of from 10–20 yd (9.1–18.3 m).[24] "Tanks are on us" was the last wireless message and Newham ordered the evacuation of battalion headquarters.[26] When the battle began, there had been nine officers and 121 other ranks; nine men reached British lines, seven of whom were wounded.[24] The defence of Sidi Nsir gained time to prepare defences at Hunt's Gap, a defile about 24 km (15 mi) north-east of Béja. The 128th Infantry Brigade had support from seventy-two 25-pounders, fifteen 5.5 inches (140 mm) medium guns and two squadrons of Churchill MK IIIs of the North Irish Horse.[27] A tank-killing zone had been prepared with minefields, anti-tank guns, hull-down Churchill tanks and direct fire areas for medium and heavy artillery. A cab rank of Hurricane Mk IID fighter-bombers, equipped with 40 mm Vickers S guns, circled overhead in communication with the ground, waiting for targets.[28]

 
Hurricane Mk IID fighter-bombers in Tunisia

On 28 February, Rommel ordered Oberst Rudolf Lang to hurry up and he ordered a pre-dawn attack by about ten Panzer IVs and lorried infantry after an artillery bombardment against the positions of B Company, 2/4th Hampshires.[29] Churchill tanks knocked out four Panzer IVs, which halted the attack.[30] The Germans then attacked again and penetrated C Company but the tanks of the North Irish Horse stopped the Germans until dusk. B Company was ordered to withdraw after a platoon was overrun and a second was in danger of collapse.[28] C Company was overrun by German infantry and armour later in the day but the attackers were unable to advance further.[10]

The next day Lang found he was only 10 mi (16 km) from Hunt's Gap but was down to six operational tanks.[31] The 2/5th Leicesters arrived and a thick fog fell across the valley, which hampered RAF sorties. The Germans attacked again and in the fog, D Company was surprised and a platoon was overrun but the rest of the attack was repulsed by artillery-fire and infantry of the 1/4th Hampshires. The fog lifted and immediately the RAF made eight sorties into the valley and caught German supply columns as artillery concentrations were directed by the Forward Observation Officers and Air Observation Post observers.[10][32] The German tanks and infantry suffered many casualties; the serpentine road which the Axis transport was using was turned into a wilderness of bomb craters and burning vehicles, which forced a withdrawal.[32][33] The 2/4th Hampshires held on to their last positions as the Germans tried to advance along a wadi to the south. The British surprised them with a counter-attack in which forty Germans were killed and sixty captured.[28] Further along the road towards Sidi Nsir, artillery broke up another German attack. Eight Tiger Is had been immobilized by mines and had to be blown up by their crews to avoid capture.[34] A British tank officer went forward to investigate, saw no sign of Germans, reached the tanks and found the turrets open and the crews gone.[35]

On 2 March, the Germans withdrew, having lost over forty tanks and nearly sixty other armoured vehicles; two out of the four German infantry battalions were taken prisoner, in addition to the killed and wounded.[28][32] Many of the prisoners had been on the Eastern Front and claimed that they had never experienced such a weight of bombardment.[35] The offensive had failed to achieve the main objectives and Arnim called off further attacks.[27] Anderson had considered abandoning Medjez, until the success of the defence of Hunt's Gap, the no retreat order issued by General Harold Alexander (commander of the 18th Army Group) and the end of the German attack, which saved the village. By 5 March, 2/4th Hampshires had lost 243 men killed or missing and were relieved by the 8th Battalion, Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders, of the 36th Infantry Brigade, 78th Division.[28]

Aftermath Edit

Analysis Edit

 
A knocked out German Tiger I, after the attack at Hunt's Gap

Weber ordered Lang to fall back to defensive positions; Rommel was dismayed when he heard that 19 Tigers had been destroyed.[36][37] Major Hans-Georg Lueder, commander of Schwere Panzer Abteilung 501 (Heavy Tank Battalion 501) was severely wounded and the detachment lost so many tanks that it ceased to be an effective fighting force.[38][34][39] None of the Axis operational objectives were met, despite gaining some ground in the west. The battle cost the Germans the initiative; at best they had only slightly delayed an Allied offensive.[40] The divisions needed for the attack of the 1st Italian Army on the Eighth Army were delayed for a week by the failure of Unternehmen Ochsenkopf and the Battle of Medenine was a costly failure.[41][42] Allfrey was promoted to major-general on 9 March.[43] An Axis success would have meant the loss of Béja and the retirement of the Allied line along the northern sector, including a withdrawal from Medjez el Bab, which would have prolonged the campaign and interfered with Allied plans for the Allied invasion of Sicily.[37]

Casualties Edit

 
German prisoners wait in a roadside ditch after a British counter-attack, April 1943

The Germans lost 71 panzers—nearly 90 per cent of the tanks used—while sixty other vehicles were destroyed or captured.[44] The Germans suffered nearly 2,800 casualties and another 2,200 men, who could not be easily replaced, were captured.[40] The British suffered 1,800 casualties and lost 2,300 prisoners, 16 tanks, 17 guns, 13 anti-tank guns and forty other vehicles.[45]

Subsequent operations Edit

On 17 March, Axis forces were reinforced by the 504th Heavy Panzer Battalion, while the 501st repaired 25 of its tanks bringing it back up to quarter strength.[38] However, Ochsenkopf was to be the last major Axis offensive by the 5th Panzer Army in Africa.[1]

On 25 March, General Alexander ordered a counter-attack. On 28 March, the 46th Infantry Division attacked with the 138th Infantry Brigade, keeping the 128th Infantry Brigade in reserve and the attached 36th Infantry Brigade, 1st Parachute Brigade and French units (including a tabor of specialist mountain Goumiers). The division was supported by the field artillery of two divisions, medium and heavy guns. In four days, the 46th Infantry Division recaptured the ground lost to Division von Manteuffel and took 850 German and Italian prisoners.[46] Sedjenane was re-captured by the Allies on 1 April.[47]

On 7 April, Anderson ordered the 78th Infantry Division to clear the Béja–Medjez road. With artillery and close air support, the division methodically advanced 16 km (10 mi) through difficult mountain terrain for ten days on a 16 km (10 mi) front. The 4th Infantry Division moved up on the left of the 78th Infantry Division and pushed towards Sidi Nisr.[46] With the salient at Medjez relieved and lateral roads in the V Corps area cleared, Anderson began to prepare the big attack scheduled for 22 April to take Tunis. Within three weeks the Axis front collapsed and the 230,000 remaining troops in Tunisia surrendered.[37][46]

See also Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ a b Windrow 1972, p. 23.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Rolf 2001, p. 152.
  3. ^ a b Playfair et al. 2004, p. 305.
  4. ^ Howe 1991, pp. 464–466.
  5. ^ a b c d Perrett 1993, pp. 18–20.
  6. ^ Playfair et al. 2004, p. 306.
  7. ^ a b c d Atkinson 2013, pp. 399–400.
  8. ^ a b c d Villahermosa 2010, pp. 243–245.
  9. ^ a b c Dunning 2011, pp. 109–112.
  10. ^ a b c Holland 2006, pp. 496–500.
  11. ^ Stimpel 1998, p. 134.
  12. ^ a b c d Ford 1999, pp. 46–49.
  13. ^ a b c d e Evans 2012, pp. 112–115.
  14. ^ a b c Doherty 1994, pp. 43–45.
  15. ^ a b Flood 2013, p. 547.
  16. ^ a b c Crow 1971, p. 85.
  17. ^ a b c d Rolf 2001, p. 155.
  18. ^ Paget 2000, p. 318.
  19. ^ Perrett 2012, p. 128.
  20. ^ Perrett 2012, pp. 128–130.
  21. ^ Lewin 2012, pp. 177–179.
  22. ^ Perrett 2012, pp. 128, 137.
  23. ^ Perrett 2012, pp. 134–136.
  24. ^ a b c d Lewin 2012, p. 177.
  25. ^ Perrett 2012, p. 134.
  26. ^ Perrett 2012, pp. 137–139.
  27. ^ a b Bidwell & Graham 2004, pp. 258–259.
  28. ^ a b c d e Rolf 2001, p. 154.
  29. ^ Mitcham 2010, pp. 76–78.
  30. ^ Syron 2013, p. 113.
  31. ^ Schneider 2004, pp. 96–97.
  32. ^ a b c Lewin 2012, p. 180.
  33. ^ Hart 2001, p. 135.
  34. ^ a b Williamson & Bujeiro 2005, p. 28.
  35. ^ a b Marshal 1943, pp. 88–90.
  36. ^ Watson 2007, p. 114.
  37. ^ a b c Perrett 1993, p. 139.
  38. ^ a b Schneider 2004, p. 44.
  39. ^ NIH 2015.
  40. ^ a b Atkinson 2013, pp. 407–408.
  41. ^ Mitcham 2010, pp. 117–118.
  42. ^ Watson 2007, p. 119.
  43. ^ Anderson 1946, pp. 1, 351.
  44. ^ Atkinson 2013, p. 408.
  45. ^ Coggins 1980, p. 134.
  46. ^ a b c Anderson 1946, p. 11.
  47. ^ Ferguson 1984, p. 10.

Bibliography Edit

Books

  • Atkinson, Rick (2013). An Army At Dawn: The War in North Africa, 1942–1943. The Liberation Trilogy. Vol. I. London: Hachette UK. ISBN 978-1-40552-727-9.
  • Bidwell, Dominick; Graham, Dominick (2004). Fire Power: The British Army Weapons & Theories of War 1904–1945. Barnsley: Pen and Sword. ISBN 978-1-84415-216-2.
  • Coggins, Jack (1980). The Campaign for North Africa. New York: Doubleday. ISBN 978-0-38504-351-9 – via Archive Foundation.
  • Crow, Duncan, ed. (1971). British and Commonwealth AFVs, 1940–46. Armoured Fighting Vehicles of the World. Vol. III. Leatherhead: Profile Publications. OCLC 278597.
  • Doherty, Richard (1994). Only the Enemy in Front (every Other Beggar Behind–): The Recce Corps at War, 1940–1946. London: Tom Donovan. ISBN 978-1-87108-518-1.
  • Dunning, James (2011). When Shall Their Glory Fade: The Stories of the Thirty-Eight Battle Honours of the Army Commandos. London: Frontline Books. ISBN 978-1-84832-597-5.
  • Evans, Bryn (2012). With the East Surreys in Tunisia and Italy 1942–1945: Fighting for every River and Mountain. Philadelphia, PA: Casemate. ISBN 978-1-78337-673-5.
  • Ferguson, Gregor (1984). The Paras 1940–84. Elite. Vol. I. Oxford: Osprey. ISBN 0-85045-573-1.
  • Flood, Joe (2013). Unravelling the Code. Raleigh, NC: Lulu.com. ISBN 978-0-99232-810-8.
  • Ford, Ken (1999). Battle-axe Division: From Africa to Italy with the 78 Division 1942–45. Stroud: Sutton. ISBN 978-0-75091-893-0.
  • Hart, Russell (2001). Clash of Arms: How the Allies Won in Normandy. Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner. ISBN 978-1-55587-947-1 – via Archive Foundation.
  • Holland, James (2006). Together We Stand: America, Britain and the Forging of an Alliance. New York: Miramax Books. ISBN 978-1-40135-253-0 – via Archive Foundation.
  • Howe, G. F. (1991) [1957]. Northwest Africa: Seizing the Initiative in the West. United States Army in World War II: Mediterranean Theatre of Operations (online ed.). Washington: Department of the Army. ISBN 0-16001-911-7. OCLC 23304011. Retrieved 2 June 2015 – via Hyperwar.
  • Lewin, Ronald (2012). The War on Land: 1939–45. New York: Random House. ISBN 978-1-44810-412-3.
  • Marshal, Howard (1943). Over to Tunis: The Complete Story of the North African Campaign. London: Eyre & Spottiswoode. OCLC 2056845.
  • Mitcham, Samuel (2010). Blitzkrieg No Longer. Barnsley: Pen and Sword. ISBN 978-1-84884-302-8.
  • Paget, Julian (2000). Second to None: The History of the Coldstream Guards 1650–2000. Philadelphia, PA: Casemate. ISBN 978-1-78337-939-2.
  • Perrett, Bryan (1993). Churchill Infantry Tank 1941–51. Oxford: Osprey. ISBN 978-1-85532-297-4.
  • Perrett, Bryan (2012). Last Stand: Famous Battles against The Odds. London: Hachette UK. ISBN 978-1-78022-526-5.
  • Playfair, I. S. O.; Molony, C. J. C.; Flynn, F. C.; Gleave, T. P. (2004) [1966]. Butler, J. R. M. (ed.). The Mediterranean and Middle East: The Destruction of the Axis Forces in Africa. History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series. Vol. IV (facs. repr. Naval & Military Press, Uckfield ed.). London: HMSO. ISBN 1-84574-068-8.
  • Rolf, David (2001). The Bloody Road to Tunis: Destruction of the Axis Forces in North Africa, November 1942 – May 1943. London: Greenhill Books. ISBN 978-1-85367-445-7.
  • Schneider, Wolfgang (2004). Tigers in Combat. Vol. I. Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole. ISBN 978-0-81173-171-3.
  • Stimpel, Hans-Martin (1998). Die deutsche Fallschirmtruppe 1942–1945: Einsätze auf Kriegsschauplätzen im Süden (in German). Vol. I. Berlin: Mittler E. S. & Sohn. ISBN 978-3-81320-577-0.
  • Syron, Mike (2013). Panzerkrieg: The Rise and Fall of Hitler's Tank Divisions. London: Hachette UK. ISBN 978-1-47210-780-0 – via Archive foundation.
  • Villahermosa, Gilberto (2010). Hitler's Paratrooper: The Life and Battles of Rudolf Witzig. London: Frontline Books. ISBN 978-1-47380-553-8.
  • Watson, Bruce Allen (2007). Exit Rommel: The Tunisian Campaign, 1942–43. Stackpole Military History. Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole. ISBN 978-0-8117-3381-6.
  • Williamson, Gordon; Bujeiro, Ramiro (2005). Knight's Cross and Oak Leaves Recipients 1941–45. Osprey. ISBN 1-84176-642-9.
  • Windrow, Martin (1972). Luftwaffe Airborne and Field Units. Osprey. ISBN 978-0-85045-114-6.

Journals

Websites

  • "North Irish Horse - The Goatherds of WW II". northirishhorse.net. 2008. Retrieved 4 June 2015.

Further reading Edit

  • Chant, Christopher (2013). The Encyclopedia of Codenames of World War II. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-13464-787-3.
  • Fraser, David (2011). And We Shall Shock Them: The British Army in the Second World War. London: A & C Black. ISBN 978-1-44820-482-3.
  • Jaques, Tony (2006). Dictionary of Battles and Sieges: A Guide to 8,500 Battles from Antiquity through the Twenty-first Century. Santa Barbara, CA: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-31333-536-5.
  • Macksey, Kenneth (1969). Crucible of Power: the Fight for Tunisia, 1942–1943. London: Hutchinson. ISBN 0-09098-880-9.
  • Mallett, D. R. (2013). Hitler's Generals in America: Nazi POWs and Allied Military Intelligence. Lexington, KY: University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 978-0-81314-253-1.

operation, ochsenkopf, operation, head, unternehmen, ochsenkopfpart, tunisia, campaign, second, world, warpanzer, tiger, tunisia, 1943date26, february, march, 1943locationnorthern, tunisia37, 05000, 23333, 05000, 23333resultallied, victorybelligerents, united,. Operation Ox Head Unternehmen OchsenkopfPart of the Tunisia Campaign of the Second World WarPanzer VI Tiger I in Tunisia 1943Date26 February 4 March 1943LocationNorthern Tunisia37 03 00 N 09 14 00 E 37 05000 N 9 23333 E 37 05000 9 23333ResultAllied victoryBelligerents United Kingdom Free FranceGermany ItalyCommanders and leadersKenneth Anderson Charles AllfreyJurgen von Arnim Rudolf LangStrengthV CorpsKorpsgruppe WeberCasualties and losses4 200 casualties 2 300 prisoners 16 tanks31 guns40 vehicles4 500 casualties 2 200 prisoners 71 tanks60 vehicles Unternehmen Ochsenkopf Operation Ox Head also known as the Battle of Sidi Nsir and the Battle of Hunts Gap was an Axis offensive operation in Tunisia from 26 February to 4 March 1943 during the Tunisia Campaign of the Second World War The offensive and a subsidiary operation Unternehmen Ausladung was intended to gain control of Medjez el Bab Beja El Aroussa Djebel Abiod and a position known as Hunt s Gap between the British First Army and the Axis Army Group Africa Heeresgruppe Afrika Gruppo d Armate Africa The offensive gained some ground but none of the more ambitious objectives were achieved before the operation was called off due to increasing losses of infantry and tanks particularly the heavy Tigers Unternehmen Ochsenkopf was the last big Axis offensive by the 5th Panzer Army before the surrender of the Afrika Korps in May 1943 1 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Axis plan 1 2 Unternehmung Ausladung 2 Battle 2 1 Southern Horn 2 2 Northern Horn 3 Aftermath 3 1 Analysis 3 2 Casualties 3 3 Subsequent operations 4 See also 5 Citations 6 Bibliography 7 Further readingBackground EditAfter the Battle of Kasserine Pass 19 24 February the Axis created Army Group Africa Heeresgruppe Afrika Gruppo d Armate Africa as a command headquarters for the 5th Panzer Army and the Italian 1st Army in Tunisia Adolf Hitler and the German General Staff Oberkommando der Wehrmacht OKW believed that Generaloberst Hans Jurgen von Arnim should assume command but Generalfeldmarschall Albert Kesselring the German Oberbefehlshaber Sud OB Sud Commander in Chief South argued for Generalfeldmarschall Erwin Rommel who was appointed to command the new Army Group Africa on 23 February 2 Comando Supremo the Italian General Staff ordered Rommel to end the attack at Kasserine in view of the Allied reinforcement of the Tebessa area to conduct a spoiling offensive against the Eighth Army General Bernard Montgomery as it approached the defences of the Mareth Line from the east 3 The villages of Gafsa Metlaoui and Tozeur were to be held by mobile troops and most of the attack group was to return to the 1st Italian Army The 10th Panzer Division had retired from Thala by early on 23 February and the 21st Panzer Division ended its attack on Sbiba on 24 February The divisions were to refit and also rejoin the 1st Italian Army ready for an attack in early March the moves to be covered by minor operations on the 5th Panzer Army front On 24 February Arnim flew to Rome without consulting Rommel and advocated an offensive towards Beja being convinced that the British First Army General Kenneth Anderson had sent reinforcements south from the northern front to save Sbiba and Thala Arnim gained the approval of Kesselring for an attack on a wide front against the V Corps Charles Allfrey sector on 26 February 4 3 Axis plan Edit nbsp Tunisia 1942 1943Unternehmen Ochsenkopf was a plan to penetrate the British defences on 26 February with Korpsgruppe Weber General Friedrich Weber of the 334th Infantry Division elements of the Luftwaffe Hermann Goring Division which had recently arrived and the parts of the 10th Panzer Division not involved in Unternehmen Fruhlingswind Operation Spring Storm in three groups or horns in the shape of a bull s head The northern horn with most of the tanks was to advance on the route from Mateur from the north east to capture Beja 40 km 25 mi west of Medjez 5 The second group was to attack from Goubellat towards Sloughia and Oued Zarga to envelop the British at Mejez El Bab and the third group was to carry out a pincer attack in the Bou Arouda valley then advance through El Aroussa to Gafour with the objective of the road junction at El Aroussa In the north the improvised Division von Broich von Manteuffel Division von Manteuffel in the subsidiary Unternehmen Ausladung Operation Disembarkation was to defeat the British in the Sedjenane valley cut the communications from Jefna to Djebel Aboid and cover the northern flank of Korpsgruppe Weber The operations would force the allies to withdraw and delay a further advance while Rommel prepared the attack of the 1st Italian Army the former German Italian Panzer Army from the Mareth Line defences against the Eighth Army 2 6 Unternehmung Ausladung Edit nbsp German paratroopers in Tunisia examine a captured Thompson M1928 M1 sub machinegun 1943The subsidiary Unternehmung Ausladung began on the morning of 26 February to outflank the British in Sedjenane and the high ground opposite Green Hill with an attack on the hilly coastal strip to the north between the town and Cap Serrat The area was lightly held by poorly equipped French troops of the Corps Francs d Afrique 7 Division von Manteuffel led the attack with elite troops of the Luftwaffe Fallschirmjager Regiment motorized Barenthin Major Rudolf Witzig and the Italian 10th Bersaglieri Regiment 8 The Axis forces with air support from the Luftwaffe made good progress across the hills held by the Free French between Cap Serrat the railway and Sedjenane The French managed to repulse an Italian attack but were then overrun and many were taken prisoner 9 On 27 February elements of the 139th Infantry Brigade of the 46th Infantry Division and attached No 1 Commando supported by the 70th Field and 5th Medium regiments RA moved up to counter the German advance but lacked air support and were short of artillery ammunition after taking part in the Battle of Kasserine 7 9 Until 1 March the British conducted expensive but successful counter attacks which delayed the Axis advance on the hamlet 8 On 2 March a Durham Light Infantry DLI counter attack was a costly failure and the battalion was withdrawn to a wooded area outside Sedjenane more German attacks on Sedjenane that day and the next were defeated 8 A counter attack by a battalion of the Lincolnshire Regiment the DLI and Churchill tanks of the North Irish Horse drove the Germans back in determined fighting The British position became untenable due to withdrawals by the French further west in the Medjez area when Axis troops occupied high ground dominating the town The French commander had thought his position was being outflanked and ordered a withdrawal The German penetration towards Beja and Medjez along with the French withdrawal had caught the 139th Infantry Brigade in a salient and two companies of Sherwood Foresters were overrun 9 On 4 March the British retreated 24 km 15 mi from Sedjenane toward Djebel Abiod to stabilise the front 7 The Axis attack on Djebel Abiod was delayed for five days by the defence of Sedjenane and it was not captured 8 10 Battle EditSouthern Horn Edit The southern horn of the operation was to be conducted by Kampfgruppe Audorff with the Hermann Goring Parachute Division the 334th Infantry Division and supporting panzer battalions 11 Protecting this area was a British force known as Y Division an ad hoc force which had been formed from the 38th Irish Brigade a mixture of commandos Grenadier and Coldstream Guards elements of the 1st Parachute Brigade and Churchill tanks of C Squadron 142 Suffolk Regiment under command 5 The kampfgruppe attacked on the evening of 25 February their first objectives being Tally Ho corner an important road junction and a knoll nicknamed Fort MacGregor 12 The Luftwaffe had attacked the British positions and shot up transport behind the front At Fort MacGregor D Company of the East Surreys were attacked by the paratroopers of the Hermann Goring Division 13 After two German attacks were repulsed paratroopers blew holes in the barbed wire and the defenders were soon overwhelmed and destroyed 12 Djebel Djaffa further west held by a battalion of French Colonial troops was attacked simultaneously by the paratroopers The French were surprised and swiftly overrun most being captured 13 nbsp Panzer III knocked out by a Churchill during the Southern Horn attackA hasty counter attack by the Surreys on Fort MacGregor was attempted but was stopped just forward of the start line and the Surreys withdrew with many casualties British artillery bombarded the hill for several hours with all the medium and heavy guns and when the Surreys attacked again it was empty save for six shell shocked Germans 13 The paratroopers had been devastated by the shelling and had no choice but to withdraw 12 The summit was no bigger than a football pitch and was strewn with human remains mostly German but also the British dead of D Company 13 Allfrey sent forward the Lancashire Fusiliers 600 men of No 6 Commando the 56th Reconnaissance Regiment Valentine tanks of the 17th 21st Lancers elements of the 51st Royal Tank Regiment 51st RTR and the North Irish Horse 7 12 14 The next day almost as soon as they arrived the Surreys and the Valentines of the 17 21st Lancers counter attacked Djebel Djaffa which was recaptured after some resistance 13 The 334th Division struck at Tally Ho corner just before midnight surprised and overran the commando garrison whose survivors were rescued by Churchill tanks 14 The Germans pressed on to a small ridge 6 mi 9 7 km to the east of El Aroussa where two battalions of the Hermann Goring Division and a supporting panzer company assaulted a position defended by the Churchill tanks of Suffolk Squadron 142nd Regiment RAC Firing from hull down positions the Churchill tanks knocked out four Panzer IVs disabled three Panzer IIIs and destroyed an 88 mm gun for the loss of a Churchill The German infantry suffered many casualties and the survivors withdrew after determined resistance by the British infantry supported by massed artillery 5 The British received reinforcements and counter attacked after another bombardment pushing the Germans back from Tally Ho corner into the hills east of the Medjez El Bab to El Aroussa road during the night 15 14 nbsp Churchill tanks move up on 28 February to meet the Southern Horn attackAfter dark the British advanced and mopped up halfway along the road to Steamroller Farm held by about 2 000 men from two battalions of the Hermann Goring Division elements of a panzergrenadier regiment 5 cm Pak 38 and 88 mm anti tank guns 15 A squadron of the 51st RTR in Churchill Mk III tanks and a company of Coldstream Guards set off just before midday on 28 February and by 4 00 p m they were in sight of the farm 16 German artillery fire was directed at them and shortly afterwards they were attacked by Junkers Ju 87 Stuka dive bombers losing five Churchills 17 The 1st Troop pressed forward into the farm area with the Coldstream Guards but were pinned down 18 Another Churchill tank commanded by Second Lieutenant J C Renton arrived and two tanks made a 1 500 yd 1 400 m dash across an exposed causeway covered by an 88 mm gun At 20 yd 18 m the gun fired and grazed the turret before the crew fled and the Churchill flattened the gun the Churchills then reached the summit of the pass and surprised the Germans there 17 The tanks came across German transport and shot them up as they went by then knocked out two Panzer IIIs and two anti tank guns as they tried to deploy 16 The Germans fled and as dusk fell the column was destroyed 5 Hollands and Renton were ordered to rejoin their squadron but the leading tank stalled and had to be given a tow start The tank sortie destroyed two 88 mm two 75 mm and two 50 mm anti tank guns four smaller anti tank guns 25 wheeled vehicles two 3 inch mortars and the two Panzer IIIs and inflicted nearly 200 casualties 17 The next day the French owner of the farm arrived at El Aroussa to say that the Germans had gone and the British occupied the area 16 The depleted Hermann Goring Regiment had suffered many more casualties its commander had assumed that the tank sortie was from a much bigger formation and sent a message to Fliegerfuhrer Afrika that he had been attacked by a mad tank battalion which had scaled impossible heights and compelled his ultimate withdrawal 17 Northern Horn Edit Kampfgruppe Lang had 77 tanks including twenty Tigers of the 501st Heavy Panzer Battalion and motorised infantry from the 10th Panzer Division The rest of the 10th Panzer Division was to attack once the objectives were achieved and advance westwards about 25 mi 40 km south of Medjez 2 The area was held by the 128th Hampshire Infantry Brigade and numerous batteries of artillery 19 On 26 February the northern attack of Ochsenkopf commenced and the Germans quickly captured the Sidi Nsir hamlet and railway station where the road and railway connecting Beja and Mateur diverged the road east into the hills and the railway along the easier north east route 20 21 The 172nd Field Regiment RA with three batteries of 25 pounder gun howitzers and 155 Battery with eight 25 pounders were dug in around a farm with the 5th Battalion Hampshire Regiment They were to monitor German movements but most were poorly trained with no battle experience 2 At Hampshire Farm the defenders were to absorb the first shock of an Axis attack on Beja to give the defenders between Medjez and Beja at Hunt s Gap time to prepare It was estimated the Germans attacked with thirteen infantry battalions c 13 000 men with the supporting troops of two divisions c 30 000 men on the northern front 22 nbsp British 25 pounder field gun howitzerDuring the night Verey light signals began to go up in the hills around Sidi Nsir and at 6 30 a m next morning German mortars began firing on the British guns After 45 minutes German tanks drove down the road from Mateur and four of the 25 pounders opened fire No 1 gun had been specially placed at the top of a slope to cover the approach from Mateur and fired over open sights The leading German tanks ran onto mines were damaged and withdrew with the infantry 2 At 11 00 a m the Germans made another attempt on the left flank but F Troop opened fire and hit four German tanks setting them ablaze 23 German infantry engaged B Company with small arms fire but were repulsed Around midday the Germans prepared to attack again but massed British artillery fire broke up the attack before it began 24 By 1 00 p m thirty German tanks self propelled guns and infantry had worked round both flanks and were within 600 yd 550 m The highest observation post was attacked its wireless transmitter destroyed and telephone lines cut Eight Messerschmitt Bf 109s fighters strafed each gun in turn all day inflicting casualties and also attacked rear areas 24 Several of the British vehicles on the road to Hunt s Gap were hit and ammunition had to be salvaged at risk by the gunners Bivouacs and ammunition dumps were also hit and left burning Just after 2 30 p m German lorried infantry turned the southern flank by infiltrating forward under cover of a hill At 3 00 p m German infantry commenced small arms fire at close range and a column of tanks led by a Tiger moved along the road into the battery position as thirteen more tanks gave covering fire from hull down positions The British gunners switched to armour piercing shot and knocked out three tanks which blocked the road 25 At 5 30 p m another German attack on the remaining guns began seven tanks were hit but one by one the remaining British guns were hit by tank gun and machine gun fire 2 By nightfall only one 25 pounder and several Bren guns remained engaging the German tanks at ranges of from 10 20 yd 9 1 18 3 m 24 Tanks are on us was the last wireless message and Newham ordered the evacuation of battalion headquarters 26 When the battle began there had been nine officers and 121 other ranks nine men reached British lines seven of whom were wounded 24 The defence of Sidi Nsir gained time to prepare defences at Hunt s Gap a defile about 24 km 15 mi north east of Beja The 128th Infantry Brigade had support from seventy two 25 pounders fifteen 5 5 inches 140 mm medium guns and two squadrons of Churchill MK IIIs of the North Irish Horse 27 A tank killing zone had been prepared with minefields anti tank guns hull down Churchill tanks and direct fire areas for medium and heavy artillery A cab rank of Hurricane Mk IID fighter bombers equipped with 40 mm Vickers S guns circled overhead in communication with the ground waiting for targets 28 nbsp Hurricane Mk IID fighter bombers in TunisiaOn 28 February Rommel ordered Oberst Rudolf Lang to hurry up and he ordered a pre dawn attack by about ten Panzer IVs and lorried infantry after an artillery bombardment against the positions of B Company 2 4th Hampshires 29 Churchill tanks knocked out four Panzer IVs which halted the attack 30 The Germans then attacked again and penetrated C Company but the tanks of the North Irish Horse stopped the Germans until dusk B Company was ordered to withdraw after a platoon was overrun and a second was in danger of collapse 28 C Company was overrun by German infantry and armour later in the day but the attackers were unable to advance further 10 The next day Lang found he was only 10 mi 16 km from Hunt s Gap but was down to six operational tanks 31 The 2 5th Leicesters arrived and a thick fog fell across the valley which hampered RAF sorties The Germans attacked again and in the fog D Company was surprised and a platoon was overrun but the rest of the attack was repulsed by artillery fire and infantry of the 1 4th Hampshires The fog lifted and immediately the RAF made eight sorties into the valley and caught German supply columns as artillery concentrations were directed by the Forward Observation Officers and Air Observation Post observers 10 32 The German tanks and infantry suffered many casualties the serpentine road which the Axis transport was using was turned into a wilderness of bomb craters and burning vehicles which forced a withdrawal 32 33 The 2 4th Hampshires held on to their last positions as the Germans tried to advance along a wadi to the south The British surprised them with a counter attack in which forty Germans were killed and sixty captured 28 Further along the road towards Sidi Nsir artillery broke up another German attack Eight Tiger Is had been immobilized by mines and had to be blown up by their crews to avoid capture 34 A British tank officer went forward to investigate saw no sign of Germans reached the tanks and found the turrets open and the crews gone 35 On 2 March the Germans withdrew having lost over forty tanks and nearly sixty other armoured vehicles two out of the four German infantry battalions were taken prisoner in addition to the killed and wounded 28 32 Many of the prisoners had been on the Eastern Front and claimed that they had never experienced such a weight of bombardment 35 The offensive had failed to achieve the main objectives and Arnim called off further attacks 27 Anderson had considered abandoning Medjez until the success of the defence of Hunt s Gap the no retreat order issued by General Harold Alexander commander of the 18th Army Group and the end of the German attack which saved the village By 5 March 2 4th Hampshires had lost 243 men killed or missing and were relieved by the 8th Battalion Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders of the 36th Infantry Brigade 78th Division 28 Aftermath EditAnalysis Edit nbsp A knocked out German Tiger I after the attack at Hunt s GapWeber ordered Lang to fall back to defensive positions Rommel was dismayed when he heard that 19 Tigers had been destroyed 36 37 Major Hans Georg Lueder commander of Schwere Panzer Abteilung 501 Heavy Tank Battalion 501 was severely wounded and the detachment lost so many tanks that it ceased to be an effective fighting force 38 34 39 None of the Axis operational objectives were met despite gaining some ground in the west The battle cost the Germans the initiative at best they had only slightly delayed an Allied offensive 40 The divisions needed for the attack of the 1st Italian Army on the Eighth Army were delayed for a week by the failure of Unternehmen Ochsenkopf and the Battle of Medenine was a costly failure 41 42 Allfrey was promoted to major general on 9 March 43 An Axis success would have meant the loss of Beja and the retirement of the Allied line along the northern sector including a withdrawal from Medjez el Bab which would have prolonged the campaign and interfered with Allied plans for the Allied invasion of Sicily 37 Casualties Edit nbsp German prisoners wait in a roadside ditch after a British counter attack April 1943The Germans lost 71 panzers nearly 90 per cent of the tanks used while sixty other vehicles were destroyed or captured 44 The Germans suffered nearly 2 800 casualties and another 2 200 men who could not be easily replaced were captured 40 The British suffered 1 800 casualties and lost 2 300 prisoners 16 tanks 17 guns 13 anti tank guns and forty other vehicles 45 Subsequent operations Edit On 17 March Axis forces were reinforced by the 504th Heavy Panzer Battalion while the 501st repaired 25 of its tanks bringing it back up to quarter strength 38 However Ochsenkopf was to be the last major Axis offensive by the 5th Panzer Army in Africa 1 On 25 March General Alexander ordered a counter attack On 28 March the 46th Infantry Division attacked with the 138th Infantry Brigade keeping the 128th Infantry Brigade in reserve and the attached 36th Infantry Brigade 1st Parachute Brigade and French units including a tabor of specialist mountain Goumiers The division was supported by the field artillery of two divisions medium and heavy guns In four days the 46th Infantry Division recaptured the ground lost to Division von Manteuffel and took 850 German and Italian prisoners 46 Sedjenane was re captured by the Allies on 1 April 47 On 7 April Anderson ordered the 78th Infantry Division to clear the Beja Medjez road With artillery and close air support the division methodically advanced 16 km 10 mi through difficult mountain terrain for ten days on a 16 km 10 mi front The 4th Infantry Division moved up on the left of the 78th Infantry Division and pushed towards Sidi Nisr 46 With the salient at Medjez relieved and lateral roads in the V Corps area cleared Anderson began to prepare the big attack scheduled for 22 April to take Tunis Within three weeks the Axis front collapsed and the 230 000 remaining troops in Tunisia surrendered 37 46 See also EditList of British military equipment of World War II List of German military equipment of World War IICitations Edit a b Windrow 1972 p 23 a b c d e f Rolf 2001 p 152 a b Playfair et al 2004 p 305 Howe 1991 pp 464 466 a b c d Perrett 1993 pp 18 20 Playfair et al 2004 p 306 a b c d Atkinson 2013 pp 399 400 a b c d Villahermosa 2010 pp 243 245 a b c Dunning 2011 pp 109 112 a b c Holland 2006 pp 496 500 Stimpel 1998 p 134 a b c d Ford 1999 pp 46 49 a b c d e Evans 2012 pp 112 115 a b c Doherty 1994 pp 43 45 a b Flood 2013 p 547 a b c Crow 1971 p 85 a b c d Rolf 2001 p 155 Paget 2000 p 318 Perrett 2012 p 128 Perrett 2012 pp 128 130 Lewin 2012 pp 177 179 Perrett 2012 pp 128 137 Perrett 2012 pp 134 136 a b c d Lewin 2012 p 177 Perrett 2012 p 134 Perrett 2012 pp 137 139 a b Bidwell amp Graham 2004 pp 258 259 a b c d e Rolf 2001 p 154 Mitcham 2010 pp 76 78 Syron 2013 p 113 Schneider 2004 pp 96 97 a b c Lewin 2012 p 180 Hart 2001 p 135 a b Williamson amp Bujeiro 2005 p 28 a b Marshal 1943 pp 88 90 Watson 2007 p 114 a b c Perrett 1993 p 139 a b Schneider 2004 p 44 NIH 2015 a b Atkinson 2013 pp 407 408 Mitcham 2010 pp 117 118 Watson 2007 p 119 Anderson 1946 pp 1 351 Atkinson 2013 p 408 Coggins 1980 p 134 a b c Anderson 1946 p 11 Ferguson 1984 p 10 Bibliography EditBooks Atkinson Rick 2013 An Army At Dawn The War in North Africa 1942 1943 The Liberation Trilogy Vol I London Hachette UK ISBN 978 1 40552 727 9 Bidwell Dominick Graham Dominick 2004 Fire Power The British Army Weapons amp Theories of War 1904 1945 Barnsley Pen and Sword ISBN 978 1 84415 216 2 Coggins Jack 1980 The Campaign for North Africa New York Doubleday ISBN 978 0 38504 351 9 via Archive Foundation Crow Duncan ed 1971 British and Commonwealth AFVs 1940 46 Armoured Fighting Vehicles of the World Vol III Leatherhead Profile Publications OCLC 278597 Doherty Richard 1994 Only the Enemy in Front every Other Beggar Behind The Recce Corps at War 1940 1946 London Tom Donovan ISBN 978 1 87108 518 1 Dunning James 2011 When Shall Their Glory Fade The Stories of the Thirty Eight Battle Honours of the Army Commandos London Frontline Books ISBN 978 1 84832 597 5 Evans Bryn 2012 With the East Surreys in Tunisia and Italy 1942 1945 Fighting for every River and Mountain Philadelphia PA Casemate ISBN 978 1 78337 673 5 Ferguson Gregor 1984 The Paras 1940 84 Elite Vol I Oxford Osprey ISBN 0 85045 573 1 Flood Joe 2013 Unravelling the Code Raleigh NC Lulu com ISBN 978 0 99232 810 8 Ford Ken 1999 Battle axe Division From Africa to Italy with the 78 Division 1942 45 Stroud Sutton ISBN 978 0 75091 893 0 Hart Russell 2001 Clash of Arms How the Allies Won in Normandy Boulder CO Lynne Rienner ISBN 978 1 55587 947 1 via Archive Foundation Holland James 2006 Together We Stand America Britain and the Forging of an Alliance New York Miramax Books ISBN 978 1 40135 253 0 via Archive Foundation Howe G F 1991 1957 Northwest Africa Seizing the Initiative in the West United States Army in World War II Mediterranean Theatre of Operations online ed Washington Department of the Army ISBN 0 16001 911 7 OCLC 23304011 Retrieved 2 June 2015 via Hyperwar Lewin Ronald 2012 The War on Land 1939 45 New York Random House ISBN 978 1 44810 412 3 Marshal Howard 1943 Over to Tunis The Complete Story of the North African Campaign London Eyre amp Spottiswoode OCLC 2056845 Mitcham Samuel 2010 Blitzkrieg No Longer Barnsley Pen and Sword ISBN 978 1 84884 302 8 Paget Julian 2000 Second to None The History of the Coldstream Guards 1650 2000 Philadelphia PA Casemate ISBN 978 1 78337 939 2 Perrett Bryan 1993 Churchill Infantry Tank 1941 51 Oxford Osprey ISBN 978 1 85532 297 4 Perrett Bryan 2012 Last Stand Famous Battles against The Odds London Hachette UK ISBN 978 1 78022 526 5 Playfair I S O Molony C J C Flynn F C Gleave T P 2004 1966 Butler J R M ed The Mediterranean and Middle East The Destruction of the Axis Forces in Africa History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series Vol IV facs repr Naval amp Military Press Uckfield ed London HMSO ISBN 1 84574 068 8 Rolf David 2001 The Bloody Road to Tunis Destruction of the Axis Forces in North Africa November 1942 May 1943 London Greenhill Books ISBN 978 1 85367 445 7 Schneider Wolfgang 2004 Tigers in Combat Vol I Mechanicsburg PA Stackpole ISBN 978 0 81173 171 3 Stimpel Hans Martin 1998 Die deutsche Fallschirmtruppe 1942 1945 Einsatze auf Kriegsschauplatzen im Suden in German Vol I Berlin Mittler E S amp Sohn ISBN 978 3 81320 577 0 Syron Mike 2013 Panzerkrieg The Rise and Fall of Hitler s Tank Divisions London Hachette UK ISBN 978 1 47210 780 0 via Archive foundation Villahermosa Gilberto 2010 Hitler s Paratrooper The Life and Battles of Rudolf Witzig London Frontline Books ISBN 978 1 47380 553 8 Watson Bruce Allen 2007 Exit Rommel The Tunisian Campaign 1942 43 Stackpole Military History Mechanicsburg PA Stackpole ISBN 978 0 8117 3381 6 Williamson Gordon Bujeiro Ramiro 2005 Knight s Cross and Oak Leaves Recipients 1941 45 Osprey ISBN 1 84176 642 9 Windrow Martin 1972 Luftwaffe Airborne and Field Units Osprey ISBN 978 0 85045 114 6 Journals Anderson Lt General Kenneth 1946 Official despatch by Kenneth Anderson GOC in C First Army covering events in NW Africa 8 November 1942 13 May 1943 London Gazette London ISSN 0374 3721 Websites North Irish Horse The Goatherds of WW II northirishhorse net 2008 Retrieved 4 June 2015 Further reading EditChant Christopher 2013 The Encyclopedia of Codenames of World War II London Routledge ISBN 978 1 13464 787 3 Fraser David 2011 And We Shall Shock Them The British Army in the Second World War London A amp C Black ISBN 978 1 44820 482 3 Jaques Tony 2006 Dictionary of Battles and Sieges A Guide to 8 500 Battles from Antiquity through the Twenty first Century Santa Barbara CA Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 31333 536 5 Macksey Kenneth 1969 Crucible of Power the Fight for Tunisia 1942 1943 London Hutchinson ISBN 0 09098 880 9 Mallett D R 2013 Hitler s Generals in America Nazi POWs and Allied Military Intelligence Lexington KY University Press of Kentucky ISBN 978 0 81314 253 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Operation Ochsenkopf amp oldid 1179674098, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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