History of the Second World War (127 page)

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Authors: Basil Henry Liddell Hart

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BOOK: History of the Second World War
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Supplies: Rommel misses British dumps, 191; British loss of, in North Africa, 268, 277, 279; to Rommel, lost in Mediterranean, 299; minimal, to Axis forces in Tunisia, 425-6; Russians depend on capture of, 482; Russian ability to survive on less than other armies, 486-7; restricted, for Patton’s Army, 562-3; deficiencies in, hampering Allied advance to Rhine, 563-4; lavish scale of Allied compared to German, 564; Russian advance checked only by problems of, 569; problem of, in recapturing Burma, 632-3, 637; Russian build-up of, before offensive, 664
Supply columns, road-bound, of Germans in Russia, 162, 164; bombing of German, at Alamein, 283
Support groups for convoy protection, 387

 

Tactics, Japanese errors in, at Midway, 353; Russian improvement in tactical ability, 487; Martel on tank, 489
Tank(s), Ardennes regarded as barrier to, 38, 707; landing of, for ‘Torch’, 321, 324; divisional strength in, German and Allied, 403n., 647n
. See also
Armoured divisions and under tank names in General Index
Tank destroyers, 403, 416
Tank landing craft.
See
L.S.T.
Tank warfare, high-speed, 20, 22, 160-1; Poland and France defeated by, 20-2, 27-30, 65-6, 69-72; Guderian fired by idea of, 22, 66, 706; Rommel’s improvisations in, 118-19, 177, 179, 181; cross-country movement essential to, 158; ‘battle of theories’ on, in Russia, 159-61; by encirclement, 161-2; British piecemeal methods, 185, 267, 272-4; Rommel’s high-speed, 189-90, 192-193, 279; U.S. piecemeal methods, in Tunisia, 403, 405; Martel on tactics for, 489; costly German success in, near Jassy, 575
Tanks, British: decisive part played by, against Italians in N. Africa, 113-15; lost in Greece, 118; in Crete, 135, 138; sent to Egypt via Mediterranean, 175-6, 178; cruiser and infantry falsely regarded as un-combinable in action, 178, 181, 184-5; caught in Rommel’s tank-traps, 179, 180-1, 185; disproportionate loss of, at ‘Battle- axe’, 180-1; used piecemeal, 185, 267, 272-274; not qualitatively inferior to German, 270-1; distrust of infantry for, 286; faulty tactical combination between infantry and, 287; fail to move in dark, 287, 306; in Tunisia, 335/7.; divisional strength in, as compared to German, 403n.; advance by night, 419, 421; knocked out in river crossings in N. Italy, 541; massive attack by, near Caen, 552-6; flame-throwing, 671, 673; amphibious, 671, 678
Types and models:
A. 10, 181
Churchill, 671
cruiser, in N. Africa, 115-17, 175-9, 181, 276; arms and armour of, 270; old type, 176.
See
A. 10, Crusader
Crusader, 183; 111, 335n.
infantry (‘I’).
See
Churchill; Matilda; Valentine
light, 176, 194
Matilda, in N. Africa, 113-14, 176-9, 181, 183-5, 194; armour of, 271
Valentines, in N. Africa, 183, 185, 194, 287, 298, 335/7.; arms and armour of, 270-1, 335/7.
See also
Tanks, United States
Tanks, French: in 1939, 21; piecemeal use of, 21, 707; at Algiers, 325
Tanks, German: fail on road to Austria, 9; in 1939, 19, 66; break through Western front, 65-6, 69-72; Hitler fearful for safety of, 80-2; in planned invasion of Britain, 89; Rommel’s use of dummy, 118-19; used in Balkan campaign, 132-4; reduction in scale of, in invasion of Russia, 157-8; encirclement pattern of use of, 161-2; used by Rommel in combination with anti-tank guns, 181, 188, 195; use of, in Stalingrad, 260; Rommel reinforced with, 267, 270-1, 288, 291; more strongly armoured, 267; used piecemeal, 302; in Tunisia, 337, 403; divisional strength as compared with Allied, 403n.,
647n.;
heavy losses of, in Arnim’s offensive, 411; rendered useless by lack of fuel, 425-6, 429-31, 655, 658; at Salerno landings, 459n., 462; given as reward to Manteuffel by Hitler, 495-6; remote controlled, explosive-filled miniature, 530-1; scarcity of, on Western Front (1944), 559; in Ardennes offensive, 652
Goliaths, 530-1
King Tigers, 665
Mark III, 157
Mark IV, 157, 459n.
Mark VI, 652
Panthers, 459n., 486
Panzer II, 279, 298
Panzer III, 267, 339n.
Panzer III(J) Special, 271, 291
Panzer IV, 292, 298, 337, 339/7.
Tigers, 339, 403, 411, 442, 486, 652, 665
Tanks, Italian: defeated at Beda Fomm, 116-117; captured, used by British 2nd Armoured Division, 172; pulverised at Alamein, 304; in Tunisia, 403; in Sicily, 443
M.13, 172
Tanks, Japanese: in Philippines, 223; in Malaya, 224, 227; on Biak Island, 616
Tanks, Russian: total strength, compared with German, 158-9; ineffectiveness of, 162; increased production of, 245, 665; improved quality of (1943), 486
Josef Stalin, 575, 665
Tanks, United States: used in Eighth Army, 183, 271-2, 279, 298; in N.W. Africa, 337; establishment of, in Armored Division, 337n.; division strength of, as compared to German, 403n., 647n.
Grant, 271-2, 279, 298
Sherman, 298, 657, 671
Stuart, 183, 337, 403
Tank-dozers, 671
Tank-traps, Rommel’s, in Desert, 177, 179, 185; British discount reports of 88-mms being used in, 180-1
Target identification, aids to, ‘Gee’, 596; flares, 597; Pathfinder force, 606; low-flying Mosquitoes in, 607
Torpedo-boats, German motor, 391
Torpedo-bombers, British, at Taranto, 212; Japanese, 216, 226, 351; United States, lost at Midway, 351-2; British, attack
Bismarck
, 379; U.S., at Leyte Gulf, 624
Torpedoes, aerial, used in shallow water, 212; Japanese ‘long lance’, 359; German ‘homing’, 390
Troop carriers in airborne conquest of Crete, 136

 

U-boat(s), Raeder suggests Norwegian bases for, 53; sink U.S. transport near Algiers, 325; in Atlantic before war starts, 370; attack merchant ships, 370-7, 380-91, 393; coastal type, 370, 376, 393; increased strength of, 375, 381-2, 384-6, 393; destruction of, 375, 381-2, 386, 389-90, 393; ‘wolf-pack’ tactics of, 376-7, 385, 389; night surface attacks by, 376; welded pressure hulls of, 381; sent to Mediterranean, 381-2; withdrawn from S. Atlantic, 382; attack American shipping, 383-4; sent to Norway, 384, 392; hindered by mines in Baltic, 384, 393; new and improved, 385, 393; refuelled on oceans, 385; new British devices and weapons against, 383, 389; Horder’s co-ordinated counteroffensive against, 387-8; defeat of, 388-9; withdrawn from N. Atlantic, 390, 393; air support for, 390-1; ‘Walter’ type, 390; new devices improving, 390-1; concentrated against cross-Channel invasion, 391; 1944 inshore campaign of, 392; new types of, 393; in 1945, 393-4; surrender or are scuttled, 394; attack ‘Husky’ convoys, 441; Schnorkel, 609
Types XXI and XXIII, 393
‘Walter’ type, 390
U.29,
370
U.39,
370
U.47
, 371
U-cruisers, 385
‘Unequal leg’ attack, 213
U-tankers, 385

 

Vehicles, uselessness of roadbound, in tank warfare, 158, 164; amphibious, 439, 511-512; tracked landing (Fantails), 671-3
V-weapons, 551, 677

 

War: objectives of Western Powers, 3; declaration of, 16; strength of opposing forces (1939), 17-19; economics in control of, 22-4; basic products essential for, 23, 682
War correspondents precede advance of Eighth Army, 465
‘War is won’ attitude nullifies chance of early victory, 567
Warning system, British, 94-5
Weather: difficulties of Luftwaffe in Battle of Britain, 95-6, 99; causing delay of Russian campaign, 131, 134; winter, German armies in Russia caught by, 160, 167, 710; wet, stays German advance, 163-4, 167; rain helps Rommel’s escape, 306; prevents Allied offensive in Tunisia, 341; storm and wind affect Sicily landings, 441-2; rainy, in Italy, 469, 471-2, 531, 541; thaw hampers Russians, 481, 668; foggy, at Ardennes offensive, 647, 651; foggy, at opening of Russian last offensive, 665
Western Desert Force, 178
Western Naval Task Force, at Sicily landings, 441
Western Task Force, U.S., at Casablanca, 316, 321-3
Window radar-distracting device, 601

GENERAL INDEX

A6M.
See
Zero
Aa, River, 80
Aachen, 561, 646, 655; entanglement of U.S. First Army around, 560, 564-5, 649; air raids on, 600
Aalborg, 100
Aandalsnes, 62
A.B.D.A. Command, 227-8
Abbeville, 75
Abuyog, Philippines, 628
Abyssinia,
see
Ethiopia ‘Acrobat, Operation’, 267
Acroma, 196, 275
Adachi. Lieut.-General H., 615, 687
Adak Island, 500
Addis Ababa, 125
Addu Atoll, 237
Adige, River, 674
Adler tag
(Eagle Day), 99
Admiral Graf Spee,
the, 371
Admiral Hipper,
the, 374, 384, 387
Admiral Scheer,
the, 374, 377, 384
Admiralty Islands, 509, 613
Adriatic, Allied failure to use amphibious power in, 474-5
Agedabia, 198, 267
Agheila, bottleneck, 116-17; Rommel’s advance to, 119, 172
‘A-Go, Operation’, 618
Agordat, 126
Agra, Central Command H.Q. at, 364
Aire-St Omer-Graveline canal, 75, 80
Aisne, River, 72, 80-1, 84
Aitape, New Guinea, 615, 687
Akagi,
the, 351
Akyab Island, 365-6, 515-16, 634
Alagir, 255
Alam Haifa, Battle of, 291-7, 335
Alam Nayil Ridge, 293
Alamein, Eighth Army driven back to, 266; Auchinlek decides to stand at, 278; Rommel pauses near, 281, 296; defensive position at, 281; ‘First’ battle of, 281-3, 296; July battle of, 284-90; final battle of, 297-304; comparative strength of armies at, 298-9; Martel on reasons for success at, 489
Alaska, 500
Alban Hills, 528-9, 536
Albania, 135; oil of, 24
Albert Canal, German capture of bridges over, 68-9; scratch German forces to line, 559-60; British secure crossing over, 559; British failure to secure bridges over, 565-7
Aleutian Islands, Japanese attack, 345, 349-350, 352; American expedition to regain, 500-1
Alexander, General (later Field-Marshal) Sir Harold, in Burma, 235-6; appointed C.-in-C. Middle East, 266, 290; acts on Auchinleck’s plan, 291-2; fixes date for Alamein attack, 297-8; Deputy C.-in-C. to Eisenhower, 402; commands 18th Army Group in Tunisia, 402, 415, 420; on rout of Allied forces, 405; lucky placing of forces by, 406; plans for ‘final’ Tunisian offensive, 423-4; fresh plan of, 426-8; completes conquest of Tunisia, 430-1, 435; on number of prisoners taken, 431; commands 15th Army Group in invasion of Sicily, 439; reports on Sicilian campaign, 442, 445; in Italy, 450; gives object for Calabrian landings, 457, 467; optimism of, about landings in Italy, 458; visits Salerno bridgehead, 464; four-phase directive of, 471; on slow advance, 473; plans Anzio landing, 527; endorses destruction of Cassino monastery, 530; calls off Cassino offensive, 532; and 1944 spring offensive in Italy, 532-3, 535; opposes ‘Anvil’ operation, 537-8; loses divisions and air support to ‘Dragoon’, 538; follow-up plan of, 539-40, 542; Supreme Commander, Mediterranean, 541; mentioned, 295, 463, 528
Alexandria, tank convoy arrives at, 176; Rommel fails to reach, 266; British Fleet leaves, 283
Alexandropolis, 133
Algeria, project for landing in, 310, 313-17; landings in, 323-6; French forces in, 332; advance on Tunisia through, 334.
See also ‘
Torch, Operation’; North-West Africa
Algiers, Allied landing at, 313-16, 320, 325-6; assault forces for, 317; secret meeting with French near, 318-19; French resistance at, 320, 323, 325-6; cease-fire at, 323, 327-8; confusion among French in, 327-30; planning of ‘Husky’ in, 439; convoys embark from, 441, 460
Allen, Major-General Terry, 323, 409, 415-416
Allenstein, 667
Allfrey, Lieut.-General C. W., 340, 423, 467
Alps, German infiltration through, into Italy, 451-2
Alsace, 560
Altenfiord, 388
Altmark,
the, 55-6
Amba Alagi, Ethiopia, 127

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