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Kasserine Pass

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Title
Kasserine Pass
Description
In early 1943, Rommel planned to outflank the Allied armies in Tunisia from the south in order to cut off their supplies in three major thrusts: 21 Panzer Division ranging through Sbiba Gap, 10 Panzer assaulting the eastern reaches of …
Subject
Source
Publisher
Date
1943-02-22
Scenario#
D15
Scenario Description
In early 1943, Rommel planned to outflank the Allied armies in Tunisia from the south in order to cut off their supplies in three major thrusts: 21 Panzer Division ranging through Sbiba Gap, 10 Panzer assaulting the eastern reaches of Kasserine Pass near Thala, and Kampfgruppe DAK, last remains of Rommel's once proud Panzerarmee, forcing its way west of Kasserine Pass at Bou Chebka. Against this force lay five Allied divisions. Already 10 and 21 Panzer had been repulsed. Now it was up to Kampfgruppe DAK to break through the Allied line northwest of Kasserine. 22 February 1943 began grimly for the American 1st Armored Division: it had been pounded for six days straight, being forced back almost 40 miles with heavy casualties. Its Combat Command B now hung on to the northern heights of Kasserine Pass, directly in the path of Kampfgruppe DAK, only 10 miles from the Algerian border. U.S. 2nd Battalion, 13 Armored Regiment and the 601 Tank Destroyer Battalion waited the heights near Djebel el Hamm (Point 1112) in hull down positions for the advance of the Axis forces.
Location
Kasserine, Tunisia
Battle Narrative
The Battle of Kasserine Pass was a series of battles of the Tunisia Campaign of World War II that took place in February 1943. Covering Kasserine Pass, a 2-mile-wide (3.2 km) gap in the Grand Dorsal chain of the Atlas Mountains in west central Tunisia. The Axis forces, led by Generalfeldmarschall Erwin Rommel, were primarily from the Afrika Korps Assault Group, the Italian Centauro Armored Division and two Panzer divisions detached from the 5th Panzer Army, while the Allied forces consisted of the U.S. II Corps (Major General Lloyd Fredendall), the British 6th Armoured Division (Major-General Charles Keightley) and other parts of the First Army (Lieutenant-General Kenneth Anderson). The battle was the first major engagement between U.S. and Axis forces in Africa. Inexperienced and poorly led American troops suffered many casualties and were quickly pushed back over 50 miles (80 km) from their positions west of Faïd Pass. This result confirmed a prediction of Winston Churchill, who had strongly advocated that the invasion of France as laid out in the proposed 1942 plan Operation Roundup be delayed until the Allies could support such an ambitious undertaking, which would give the U.S. troops time to get up to speed with the realities of war against the experienced and well-equipped Germans. After the early defeat, elements of the U.S. II Corps, with British reinforcements, rallied and held the exits through mountain passes in western Tunisia, defeating the Axis offensive. As a result of the battle, the U.S. Army instituted sweeping changes of unit organization and replaced commanders and some types of equipment.
Narrative Source
Combatants
German / Italian
American

Geolocation