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User:FOARP/Battle of Steamroller Farm

Coordinates: 39°27′17″N 9°30′31″E / 39.45472°N 9.50861°E / 39.45472; 9.50861 (Battle of Steamroller Farm)
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Battle of Steamroller Farm
Part of Operation Ochsenkopf
Date27-28 February 1943
Location
El Aroussa, Tunisia
39°27′17″N 9°30′31″E / 39.45472°N 9.50861°E / 39.45472; 9.50861 (Battle of Steamroller Farm)
Result See Aftermath section
Belligerents
 United Kingdom  Germany
Commanders and leaders


Template:Campaignbox Tunisia

The Battle of Steamroller Farm took place during the Second World War between 27-28 February 1943, during the Tunisian campaign, in which the Western Allies defeated the Axis powers and ended the war in North Africa. The battle was the result of a German attempt to launch a attack against the advancing British First Army in order to buy time for an attack on the British Eight Army on the Mareth line. After two days of fighting along the road between El Aroussa and Medjez El-bab, primarily at a position known as "Steamroller Farm", the Germans withdrew.

Background

Following the defeat of Rommel's Afrika Korps in the Western Desert by British and Commonwealth forces at the battle of El Alamein in November 1942, and the successful occupation of Morrocco and Algeria by Anglo-American forces during the same month, Axis forces had moved in to and occupied the French colony of Tunisia to forestall Allied forces and provide an area for the Afrika Korps to retreat in to. Tunisia thus formed a final bridgehead for the Axis forces of fascist Italy and Nazi Germany in North Africa.

Despite the long route from Algeria, Allied forces advancing from the west came within 20km of Tunis by late November 1942. However, these forces were then pushed back by arriving Axis forces and by the end of 1942 the front in western Tunisia had stabilised roughly along line running from a point on the coast approximately 40km to the west of Tunis southwards, through Medjez el Bab and El Aroussa. During the same period the British Eighth army under Montgomery had pursued the Afrika Korps through Libya, finally reaching the Mareth Line in south-eastern Tunisia by January 1943.

Tunisia and Operation Ochsenkopf

Upon his arrival in Tunisia in January 1943, the German commander of the Afrika Korps, Erwin Rommel, dismissing the possibility of a serious threat from the Eighth Army until they had properly cleared the harbour of Tripoli, planned a series of counter-attacks against Allied forces in the west in order to knock them back. In the first of these, at Faïd Pass on 30 January 1943, Free French and US forces had been driven from the pass. Two weeks later on 14 February at Sidi Bou Zid, US forces had suffered a serious reversal and the central Tunisian town of Sbeitla had been captured. On 19 February another Axis attack was launched at the Kasserine Pass, and in a five-day battle the Americans suffered another reversal.

Kampfgruppe Koch

Plan

Battle

Advance

Counterattack

Aftermath

Casualties

Result

Notes

Footnotes

References

Further reading

Template:Tunisian campaign