An exciting account of a little-known, yet vital part of World
War II, the Allied effort to blockade Axis forces in North Africa
with a relatively small number of planes and submarines included
some of the war's most spectacular air battles, and opened the way
to the attack on Fortress Europe from the south. This is the first
book-length treatment of the crucial struggle to cut Axis supply
lines in the Tunisian campaign of 1942-1943, a battle often ignored
or played down even by official historians. The campaign marked the
first big U.S. victory against the Axis powers and served as a
proving ground for several top Allied commanders. This study fills
an important gap in the history of the war, reevaluating the
development of Allied airpower and the role of Italy in the
campaign.
Allied success in interdiction was a critical factor in the
greatest Allied victory in the Mediterranean campaign, a victory
which left the enemy so weakened that it could not stop the
subsequent invasion of Europe from the south. Despite initial
disorganization and early disappointments, the British waged one of
only two successful submarine campaigns ever fought. This study
describes some of the war's most amazing air battles, notably
Operation Flax against the enemy's air transport fleet, and attacks
on convoys, all interwoven with the events of the ground war in the
desert and comparisons with the Pacific effort. It details the
struggle to reorganize and improve the Allied effort, the belated
success of sea sweeps against enemy ships, and the final victory in
the spring of 1943, in which an air blockade was clamped on the sea
and sky approaches to Tunisia.
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