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Rommel's Desert Commanders - The Men Who Served the Desert Fox, North Africa, 1941-1942 (Hardcover)
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Rommel's Desert Commanders - The Men Who Served the Desert Fox, North Africa, 1941-1942 (Hardcover)
Series: Praeger Security International
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Perhaps the most famous and admired soldier to fight in World War
II was Field Marshal Erwin Rommel, who achieved immortality as the
Desert Fox. Rommel's first field command during the war was the 7th
Panzer Division—also known as the Ghost Division—which he led
in France in 1940. During this campaign, the 7th Panzer suffered
more casualties than any other division in the German Army, at the
same time inflicting a disproportionate number of casualties upon
the enemy. It took 97,486 prisoners, captured 458 tanks and armored
vehicles, 277 field guns, 64 anti-tank guns and 4,000 to 5,000
trucks. It captured or destroyed hundreds of tons of other military
equipment, shot down 52 aircraft, destroyed 15 more aircraft on the
ground, and captured 12 additional planes. It destroyed the French
1st Armored Division and the 4th North African Division, punched
through the Maginot Line extension near Sivry, and checked the
largest Allied counteroffensive of the campaign at Arras. When
France surrendered, the Ghost Division was within 200 miles of the
Spanish border. No doubt about it—Rommel had proven himself a
great military leader who was capable of greater things. His next
command, in fact, would be the Afrika Korps, where the legend of
the Desert Fox was born. Rommel had a great deal of help in
France—much more than his published papers suggest. His staff
officers and company, battalion, and regimental commanders were an
extremely capable collection of military leaders that included 12
future generals (two of them SS), and two colonels who briefly
commanded panzer divisions but never reached general rank. They
also included Colonel Erich von Unger, who would no doubt have
become a general had he not been killed in action while commanding
a motorized rifle brigade on the Eastern Front in 1941, as well as
Karl Hanke, a Nazi gauleiter who later succeeded Heinrich Himmler
as the last Reichsfuehrer-SS. No historian has ever recognized the
talented cast of characters who supported the Desert Fox in 1940.
No one has ever attempted to tell their stories. This book remedies
that deficiency.
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