Bimberg provides a military history of the Moroccan Goums, the
knife-wielding irregular troops who distinguished themselves,
fighting under French command in Tunisia, Italy, France and Germany
during World War II. Recruited from the hill tribes of Morocco's
Atlas Mountains, the Goums were garbed throughout the war in the
traditional djellaba of their homeland and were armed with long
sharp knives, in addition to rifles, machine-guns and mortars. They
terrified the enemy not only by their ferocity, but by their odd
appearance. Their particular skill in mountain warfare prompted
General Patton to request their participation in his Sicilian
campaign, and they fought brilliantly in this and many other key
campaigns.
This account follows these forces from their native North
African mountains across the battlefields of World War II to their
final triumph in the Austrian Alps. It recounts their tactics and
their strange traditions, as remarkable Beau Geste type French
officers led them into battle. In Italy, 12,000 strong, they
swarmed over the forbidding Aurunci range, which no one thought
could possibly be penetrated by any sizable force under combat
conditions, to spearhead the French forces in turning the German
flank in Operation Diadem, the final drive on Rome. Their later
exploits in the capture of Marseilles, in the Vosges Mountains, and
on the drive to the Rhine were equally sensational.
General
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