The Globe At War
This Month in History: February 1943
February 1943 - Kasserine Pass - Page Two

The German assault began on Sunday February 14, 1943. A heavy sandstorm had
covered German pioneers who cleared paths in the American mine fields and offered
Lieutenant General Heinz Ziegler and the men in the 10th Panzer Division even more of
an advantage over the inexperienced Americans. Not that Ziegler needed the help.
Ziegler was an experienced combat officer with an impressive combat resume, including
service on the Russian front. The 10th Panzer began the offensive near Faid by
skipping past the American 168th Regimental Combat Team and then pounding into the
American Combat Command A (CCA). The Germans swarmed the Americans; launching
attacks both frontally and from the flanks. Although the American reserve battalions
launched a brave counterattack, CCA disintegrated under the German pressure. Some
units put up a stiff fight but many GIs fled the battlefield in panic - leaving
considerable amounts of equipment behind. By the day's end, one-third the 1st
Armored Division's striking power had melted away, with 1,500 men and well over 100
tanks and other armored vehicles lost. The German troops took Gafsa the following day
and swiftly began their move on Kasserine as the remaining elements from the 1st
Armored Division moved to intercept the German advance near the Faid pass.

The 1st Armored Division's reinforced CCC had received orders to punch through to the
cut-off American troops; however, the American counterattack quickly ran into
trouble. German
Stuka's broke up the attacking forces as they sat in their assembly
areas. Long-range fire from German artillery and anti-tank guns picked apart American
frontal assaults moving nakedly across the open land. On top of that, the Germans
promptly and aggressively counterattacked. Again, a wave of American troops fled in
panic, with one American armored battalion completely annihilated. The German quickly
cut-off the Americans and marched many off to prisoner of war camps. In just two
days, the Americans lost over 3,000 soldiers and the equivalent of half an armored
division.

British Lieutenant General Kenneth Anderson, Fredendall's commanding officer and a
man equally responsible for the initially poor allied dispositions, attempted to withdraw
his exposed army in response to the carnage at the front. Arnim meanwhile moved
reconnaissance units forward to Sbeitla. Arnim's moves created a renewed panic
amongst the Americans, who again fled in disorganized confusion. Further south
Rommel's small force, advancing from Gafsa, scattered the American forces it
encountered and captured the airfield at Thelepte, where the Americans abandoned
and destroyed 30 of their own aircraft on the ground because of Rommel's speedy
advance. Rommel was ready to go for broke, and sought a deep move into the
American rear designed to not just eviscerate Anderson's army but also take apart the
entire allied front in Tunisia. Nevertheless, Arnim exasperatingly refused to agree to
such a plan, and only consented to a reconnaissance in force near Sbeitla. Rommel
could not convince Arnim to timely release to him the 10th Panzer Division and
Rommel's old 21st Panzer Division - divisions critical to exploiting the initial German
penetrations. Rommel appealed to Kesselring repeatedly for help, and communications
between the two flowed back and forth on February 16th. Meanwhile Kesselring met
with Hitler in Rastenburg but it was too late; the decisive moment passed as the
fractured and halting German command provided the Americans breathing space.

Though further German assaults met increasing resistance had the Germans made a
concentrated effort in a timely fashion the Allies may have been in deep trouble.
Rommel rushed ahead anyway with weaker forces, and the Americans duly stopped his
frontal attacks at Kasserine Pass and Sbiba. All the same, follow up German attacks on
Kasserine with stronger forces broke through, and by the day's end on the 20th
Rommel had seized Kasserine Pass. Allied reinforcements however, blocked Rommel's
attempts to move further forward. Rommel mistakenly exacerbated the German loss in
initiative when he split his command. Accordingly, the American 1st and 34th Divisions,
well supported by artillery, stopped the 21st Panzer Division cold on the road to Le Kef.
Meanwhile 20 miles west of Kasserine Pass the Americans also checked the 10th
Panzer Division's advance. Well dug in American infantry, again heavily supported by
artillery, this time located on the high ground at Djebel el Hamra stopped the Germans
in fierce fighting. The American 27th Field Artillery Battalion alone fired over 2,000
rounds in support of the beleaguered American infantry. Although the American infantry
faltered, they held and then drove back the seemingly invincible German panzer
grenadiers. At the same time, on February 21st the 10th Panzer's remaining units met a
wall formed by British infantry supported by 50 tanks of questionable quality, but
backed up by American artillery led by Brigadier General Stafford Le Roy Irwin of the
9th Infantry Division. Irwin aggressively rained harassing fire down on the assembling
panzers and a group of British tanks sallied forth in an abortive counterattack that
although resulting in 7 of 10 British tanks destroyed caused the Germans to pause in
anticipation of perhaps a stronger thrust. Kesselring belatedly arrived in North Africa
and tried to cheer up Rommel but the Desert Fox knew the game was up. With the
failure to exploit the successes won on the initial days and the stiffening allied
defenses, as allied reinforcements flowed to the front, Kesselring approved Rommel's
request to call off the offensive.

It is likely that only Rommel and von Arnim's failure to cooperate prevented a potential
Allied disaster that may have destroyed the entire Allied army in western Tunisia or at
least resulted in Allied forces thrown back well into Algeria. As it was all the Germans
really accomplished was to bloody the American's nose. During the Battle for Kasserine
Pass and of the 30,000 American soldiers who fought in the eight-day battle over
7,000 were killed, wounded or captured. The Americans also lost 183 tanks, 104
half-tracks and 208 artillery pieces - though the equipment losses were easily
replaceable. The Germans suffered only minimal losses; 1,000 casualties including only
201 dead and 20 permanent tank losses. On paper, it was an Axis victory, in reality,
and with the decision to call off the attack; the entire adventure represented an
exercise in tactical irrelevance.

Rommel's failed offensive at Kasserine Pass had been the last throw of the dice for the
Axis armies in North Africa.. The Axis armies in Tunisia sat trapped between two
powerful armies and reliant on a logistical chain perpetually in crisis, as the Allies
enjoyed overwhelming naval superiority and new air bases in Algeria and Libya to
launch attacks on Axis shipping. By the spring of 1943 the Axis logistical situation had
deteriorated so quickly that Arnim actually surmised Eisenhower did not even need to
attack his army, as the Axis forces in Tunisia would starve by July. The only realistic
Axis option left was withdrawal and thus the chance to save most of the quarter of a
million soldiers and the huge stores of equipment and supplies maneuvered into the
North African dead end but this was not what the Axis leadership had in mind. The
stage was therefore set for a "second Stalingrad".

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by Steven Douglas Mercatante

Map Courtesy of: Department of History, United States Military Academy



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