Afrika-Korps
By Ian Baxter
3.5/5
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About this ebook
Afrika-Korps is an illustrated record of Field-Marshal Erwin Rommel and his desert troops that fought in North Africa against British and Commonwealth forces between 1941 and 1943. Using previously rare and unpublished photographs, many of which have come from the albums of individuals who took part in the desert campaign, it presents a unique visual account of the famous Afrika-Korps operations and equipment. Thanks to an informative caption with every photograph Afrika Korps vividly portrays how the German Army fought across the uncharted and forbidding desert wilderness of North Africa. Throughout the book it examines how Rommel and his Afrika Korps were so successful and includes an analysis of desert war tactics which Rommel himself had indoctrinated. These tactics quickly won the Afrika-Korps a string of victories between 1941 and 1942. The photographs that accompany the book are a fascinating collection that depicts life in the Afrika-Korps, as seen through the lens of the ordinary soldier.
Ian Baxter
IAN BAXTER is a military historian who specialises in German twentieth century military history. He has written more than twenty books and over one hundred articles. He has also reviewed numerous military studies for publication, supplied thousands of photographs and important documents to various publishers and film production companies worldwide. He also lectures to schools, colleges and universities throughout the United Kingdom and Southern Ireland.
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Reviews for Afrika-Korps
5 ratings1 review
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5While the photos were mostly rare/unusual the captions in this particular book were not on par with the others Ive read in the series. Several misidentified tanks (Naming Italian tanks German), and guns etc.
Book preview
Afrika-Korps - Ian Baxter
Chapter One
Afrika-Korps Arrival
By the time that the order came through from Berlin to the German military command in late 1940 there had been no thorough preparations to send German troops to North Africa. Nonetheless the Germans soon got down to detailed planning. There was a large selection of all troops deemed medically fit to fight in the desert. Masses of equipment and tropical uniforms, together with a variety of vehicles camouflaged with sand paint, were quickly readied for North Africa. Training programmes too were distributed among the new troops, which included subjects such as operating in extreme heat across vast areas of terrain and coping with the harsh conditions. There was even a section that dealt with field hygiene and water discipline.
Once the new Afrika-Korps were prepared for operations in North Africa the first part of the journey for the men was normally overland to Italy and then they were transported either by air or by sea. Most troops, during the initial stages of arrival in the port of Tripoli, were transported by sea, but when shipping losses increased, all transport was eventually carried out by air only.
On 14 February 1941 the first troops of the elite Afrika-Korps sailed into the port of Tripoli. That night thousands of tons of equipment, ranging from guns and armoured vehicles to tents and mosquito netting, were unloaded off onto the floodlit dockside in spite of the risk of an aerial attack.
The next day a military parade was held in the town watched by bewildered groups of Arabs and Italians. Under the baking African sun the vanguard of the Afrika-Korps, clad in their new tropical uniforms with pith helmets, marched flawlessly passed the government house, with General Erwin Rommel and a group of Italian generals standing by his side taking the salute. This would be the first of many such military parades as the build-up of German soldiers increased.
Over the next days and weeks, further ships and aircraft brought more fresh men and equipment and disembarked with the usual propaganda parade. With crowds cheering and the German and Italian national anthems playing, the main roads through the Libyan capital were brought to life by the spectacle of endless columns of rattling German tanks of the 5th Light and 3rd Panzer Regiments. To the waving spectators there seemed no end to this armoured military might, for Rommel had in fact cleverly ordered the tanks to drive around the block to give the impression of a large army. He was determined, telling the Panzer Regiments’ officers that until the rest of the force arrived, they were to ‘bluff’ their way into North Africa, and not show the enemy their weakness. To add to this measure of deception he had ordered his troops to build hundreds of dummy tanks, constructed out of plywood and canvas, in order to fool air reconnaissance. Out in the desert this so called ‘staged army’ was surrounded by real trucks and motorcyclists driving in and around them, with real tanks churning tracks across the sand for enemy planes to spot them and take photographs.
Almost none of the soldiers had actually fought in the desert before, and many of them did not really know what to expect. For any soldier fighting in North Africa, conditions would not be very favourable. They would have to endure the enormous distances which they had to travel especially during the scorching days and chilling nights, and would be subjected to frequent blinding sandstorms. To make matters worse they not only had to trudge through this open wilderness, naked to the enemy, but they had the hazards of the desert sand-choking valuable machines and equipment. They also had to contend with the rarity of water, and the great strain on vehicles from wear and tear.
The terrain factor for the newly arrived Afrika-Korps was not considered very favourable, especially under battle conditions. Immediately though, General Rommel set to work from his headquarters in Tripoli and made good use of what he had at his disposal. The lack of terrain obstacles and the supply difficulties were all taken into consideration. Unlike in Poland and Western Europe Rommel was totally aware that, with the exception of a few isolated fortified localities in towns and villages, there were no long defensive lines that existed which he could probe to find weak spots for penetration and exploitation. However, Rommel had earned his reputation against France as a great tactician, and now in North Africa would use the same rough principles with his new Panzer force to destroy the enemy using tried and tested Blitzkrieg tactics. Rommel planned to use his force to advance across the desert in several columns, with the Panzers being concentrated in one or two columns. A battalion of 70 or 80 tanks were to use a ‘V’ formation with two companies leading and one in reserve. Across the desert the tank battalion would be used in short rushes, taking full advantage of the terrain, with lines of spaced out Panzers advancing quickly in waves. Both field artillery and anti-tank guns were to be kept in close support of the advancing armour and were used to protect the flanks and keep open the spearhead.
In spite of Rommel’s methodical planning and tactics to be used on the battlefield, his force arrived in Tripoli almost completely unprepared for their new task. However, initially the newly formed Afrika-Korps were to be used as an armoured blocking force to bolster the badly depleted and shattered forces of the Italian Army in Tripolitania and prevent further British advances. Any plans Rommel had of using his German force in an offensive campaign in the desert was ruled out, if only for the time being. Instead the General had to watch impatiently as his African force was slowly built up, whilst at the same time observing the situation out in the desert deteriorating further.
By mid-March 1941 only 150 Panzers had been unloaded in Tripoli harbour, of which most were the lightly armoured Pz.Kpfw.I. By this time Rommel could no longer wait and watch the campaign worsen any further. He now gathered his troops for an offensive in the desert.
February 1941 and many transport ships can be seen anchored in the port of Tripoli following the first dispatch of German troops to North Africa. The first troops were comprised of advanced echelon troops of the 5th Light and 3rd Panzer Regiments as well as reconnaissance soldiers and support units.
Two photographs showing the same transport ship, which has arrived in the port of Tripoli after it had sailed across the hazardous Mediterranean. Throughout 1941 the British began waging an intense and relentless war against enemy transport ships and supplies travelling from Italy and Libya. Moreover, dock installations at the port of Tripoli were limited and could not allow the unloading of more than four or