Battle of Gazala

Battle of Gazala
Part of the Western Desert Campaign of the Second World War

Panzer III and Rommel's command vehicle during the Battle of Gazala.
Date26 May – 21 June 1942
(3 weeks and 5 days)
Location31°57′N 23°27′E / 31.950°N 23.450°E / 31.950; 23.450
Result Axis victory
Territorial
changes
Northeastern Marmarica recaptured by Axis forces.
Belligerents
 Italy
 Germany
 United Kingdom
 India
 South Africa
 Free France
 United States[a]
Commanders and leaders
Fascist Italy Ettore Bastico
Nazi Germany Erwin Rommel
Nazi Germany Walter Nehring
Nazi Germany Ludwig Crüwell[b]
Fascist Italy Ettore Baldassarre
Fascist Italy Enea Navarini
Fascist Italy Benvenuto Gioda
United Kingdom Claude Auchinleck
United Kingdom Neil Ritchie
United Kingdom William Gott
United Kingdom Charles Norrie
Units involved
Panzerarmee Afrika/Gruppo Corazzato Africa Eighth Army
Strength
90,000 men (60,000 Italian, 30,000 German)
560 tanks (228 Italian)
542 aircraft
110,000 men
843 tanks
604 aircraft
Casualties and losses
German:
3,360 men (26 May – 24 June)[3][c]
400 armoured vehicles damaged or destroyed
Italian:
3,000 men
125 tanks
44 armoured cars
39 guns
74 anti-tank guns
450 motor vehicles
50,000[3] killed, wounded or captured
(incl. c. 33,000 prisoners at Tobruk)[d]
1,188 armoured vehicles damaged or destroyed
Many damaged tanks were returned to action by both sides.

The Battle of Gazala, also the Gazala Offensive (Italian: Battaglia di Ain el-Gazala) was fought near the village of Gazala during the Western Desert Campaign of the Second World War, west of the port of Tobruk in Libya, from 26 May to 21 June 1942. Axis troops of the Panzerarmee Afrika (Generaloberst Erwin Rommel) consisting of German and Italian units fought the British Eighth Army (General Sir Claude Auchinleck, also Commander-in-Chief Middle East) composed mainly of British Commonwealth, Indian and Free French troops.

The Axis troops made a decoy attack in the north as the main attack moved round the southern flank of the Gazala position. Unexpected resistance at the south end of the line around the Bir Hakeim box by the Free French garrison left Panzerarmee Afrika with a long and vulnerable supply route around the Gazala Line. Rommel retired to a defensive position backing onto Allied minefields (the Cauldron), forming a base in the midst of the British defences. Italian engineers lifted mines from the west side of the minefields to create a supply route through to the Axis side.

Operation Aberdeen, an attack by the Eighth Army to finish off the Panzerarmee, was poorly co-ordinated and defeated in detail; many British tanks were lost and the Panzerarmee regained the initiative. The Eighth Army withdrew from the Gazala Line and the Axis troops overran Tobruk in a day. Rommel pursued the Eighth Army into Egypt and forced it out of several defensive positions. The Battle of Gazala is considered the greatest victory of Rommel's career.

As both sides neared exhaustion, the Eighth Army checked the Axis advance at the First Battle of El Alamein. To support the Axis advance into Egypt, the planned attack on Malta (Operation Herkules) was postponed. The British were able to revive Malta as a base for attacks on Axis convoys to Libya, greatly complicating Axis supply difficulties at El Alamein.

  1. ^ Yeide 2006, p. 52.
  2. ^ Time 1942.
  3. ^ a b c d Playfair 2004a, p. 274.


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