Difference between revisions of "Erwin Rommel" - New World Encyclopedia

From New World Encyclopedia
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==Inter-war years==
 
==Inter-war years==
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[[Image:Rommel.jpg|thumb|left|Rommel shortly after WWI.]]
 
After the war, Rommel held battalion commands and was an instructor at the [[Dresden]] Infantry School from 1929 to 1933 and the [[Potsdam]] War Academy from 1935 to 1938. Rommel's war diaries, ''Infantry Attacks'', published in 1937, became a highly regarded military textbook and attracted the attention of [[Adolf Hitler]], who placed him in charge of the War Ministry liaison with the ''[[Hitler Youth]]''’s Headquarters of Military Sports. This was the Hitler Youth branch involved with paramilitary activities: terrain exercises and marksmanship. Rommel applied himself energetically to the new task.
 
After the war, Rommel held battalion commands and was an instructor at the [[Dresden]] Infantry School from 1929 to 1933 and the [[Potsdam]] War Academy from 1935 to 1938. Rommel's war diaries, ''Infantry Attacks'', published in 1937, became a highly regarded military textbook and attracted the attention of [[Adolf Hitler]], who placed him in charge of the War Ministry liaison with the ''[[Hitler Youth]]''’s Headquarters of Military Sports. This was the Hitler Youth branch involved with paramilitary activities: terrain exercises and marksmanship. Rommel applied himself energetically to the new task.
  
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At this time, Rommel strongly requested reinforcements that the High Command  believed it could not spare. Amery Chief of the General Staff Franz Halder, angry that his order not to advance beyond Maradah had been disobeyed and alarmed at mounting losses, dispatched [[Friedrich Paulus]] to "head off this soldier gone stark mad." Upon arrival Paulus forbade Rommel from undertaking any more small-scale assaults, but to plan a systematic, all-out attack. His composure restored, Rommel complied. His planned major assault scheduled for November 21, however, was not to take place.
 
At this time, Rommel strongly requested reinforcements that the High Command  believed it could not spare. Amery Chief of the General Staff Franz Halder, angry that his order not to advance beyond Maradah had been disobeyed and alarmed at mounting losses, dispatched [[Friedrich Paulus]] to "head off this soldier gone stark mad." Upon arrival Paulus forbade Rommel from undertaking any more small-scale assaults, but to plan a systematic, all-out attack. His composure restored, Rommel complied. His planned major assault scheduled for November 21, however, was not to take place.
  
Following the costly failure of ''Battleaxe'', Wavell was replaced by the Commander-in-Chief of India, [[Claude Auchinleck|General Claude Auchinleck]]. Auchinleck launched a major offensive to relieve Tobruk ([[Operation Crusader]]). Initially ''Crusader'' appeared as doomed as ''Brevity'' and ''Battleaxe''. The British (including Commonwealth troops) deeply outflanked the German defenses along the Egyptian frontier with a left hook through the desert, and reached a position whence they could strike at both Tobruk and the coastal road, "Via Balbia." The Germans were then supposed to counter-attack so as to drive the British back. This, as a result of British numerical superiority in both planes and tanks, would result in the Germans' annihilation. The Germans, confident in the strength of the defenses covering the Via Balbia did not oblige but stayed, waiting on the Allies’ next move.  
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===Operation Crusader===
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British Commander-in-Chief of India, [[Claude Auchinleck|General Claude Auchinleck]] had now been assigned to the task of relieving Tobruk and launched a major offensive to that end—[[Operation Crusader]]. Initially ''Crusader'' appeared doomed. The British had deeply outflanked the German defenses along the Egyptian frontier with a long left hook through the desert and reached a position where they could strike at both Tobruk and the coastal road, "Via Balbia." The British planned for the Germans to counter-attack so as to drive the British back. This, as a result of British numerical superiority in both planes and tanks, would result in the Germans' annihilation. The Germans, however, were confident in the strength of the defenses covering the Via Balbia and stayed put , waiting on the Allies’ next move.  
 
[[Image:Rommel in Africa1941.jpg|left|thumb|310px|Rommel in Africa - Summer 1941.]]  
 
[[Image:Rommel in Africa1941.jpg|left|thumb|310px|Rommel in Africa - Summer 1941.]]  
The baffled British, whose plan did not provide for this eventuality, felt compelled to attack and try to relieve Tobruk and sever the Via Balbia. They were cut to pieces in an effort for which they had neglected to bring the necessary heavy artillery and because British breakthrough tactics comprised a headlong charge with the tanks in the lead, paying little or no attention to mine fields and anti-tank guns. Rommel tried to over-exploit this success and, against the advice of his officers, resolved to drive the British further than their start line and, himself, outflank the border positions through the desert.  
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The baffled British, whose plan did not provide for this eventuality, felt compelled to attack and try to relieve Tobruk, severing the Via Balbia. However, neglecting to bring the necessary heavy artillery and other tactical errors, they suffered heavy loses and failed in their objective. Rommel then over-exploited his success by  by attempting to drive the British further back than their start line and outflank them as well.
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Rommel's contempt for the enemy proved excessive and the gamble failed. His forces suffered major losses from British antitank guns and, as they dispersed over the desert, from [[Royal Air Force]] planes. Unlike the British, Rommel could not replace not replace his losses and his forces were soon unable even to hold their initial positions. During the confusion caused by the ''Crusader'' operation, Rommel and his staff found themselves behind Allied lines several times.
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Crusader was thus another defeat for Rommel. After several weeks of fighting, he ordered the withdrawal of all his forces from the area around Tobruk on December 7, 1941. The Allies followed, attempting to cut off the retreating troops, but Rommel's [[counterattack]] on January 20, 1942 mauled the Allied forces. The Allies pulled back to the Tobruk area and commenced building defensive positions.
  
If so, Rommel's contempt for the enemy proved excessive and the gamble failed. His forces suffered heavy losses from British antitank guns and, as they dispersed over the desert, from the [[Royal Air Force|RAF]], which was unscathed by the earlier fighting. Losses which, unlike the British, they could not replace, and soon were unable even to hold their initial positions. During the confusion caused by the ''Crusader'' operation, Rommel and his staff found themselves behind Allied lines several times. On one occasion, he visited a New Zealand Army field hospital that was still under Allied control. "[Rommel] inquired if anything was needed, promised the British [''[[sic]]''] medical supplies and drove off unhindered." ([[Fritz Bayerlein|General Fritz Bayerlein]], ''The Rommel Papers'', chapter 8.)
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===Temporary Victory===
  
Crusader was a defeat for Rommel. After several weeks of fighting, Rommel ordered the withdrawal of all his forces from the area around Tobruk ([[December 7,]] 1941) towards [[El Agheila]]. The Allies followed, attempting to cut off the retreating troops as they had done in 1940, but Rommel's [[counterattack]] on [[January 20,]] 1942 mauled the Allied forces. The ''Afrika Korps'' retook [[Benghazi]] and the Allies pulled back to the Tobruk area and commenced building defensive positions.
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On May 26, 1942 Rommel's army again attacked. In a classic ''[[Blitzkrieg]]'', he outflanked the Allies at [[Battle of Gazala|Gazala]], surrounded and reduced the strongpoint at [[Battle of Bir Hakeim|Bir Hakeim]], and forced the Allies to quickly retreat in order to avoid being completely cut off. Tobruk, isolated and alone, was now all that stood between the ''Afrika Korps'' and Egypt. On June 21, 1942, after a swift, coordinated and fierce combined arms assault, the city surrendered along with its 33,000 defenders. Although the able troops who had defended Tobruk in 1941 had been dispatched to the [[Pacific]] at the insistence of the Australian Government, only at the [[Battle of Singapore|fall of Singapore]], earlier that year, had more [[Commonwealth of Nations|British Commonwealth]] troops been captured. Hitler made Rommel a [[Generalfeldmarschall|field marshal]].  Within weeks, the Allies were pushed back far into [[Egypt]].  
  
On [[May 26,]] 1942 Rommel's army attacked. In a classic ''[[Blitzkrieg]]'', he outflanked the Allies at [[Battle of Gazala|Gazala]], surrounded and reduced the strongpoint at [[Battle of Bir Hakeim|Bir Hakeim]], and forced the Allies to quickly retreat in the so-called "Gazala Gallop," to avoid being completely cut off. Tobruk, isolated and alone, was now all that stood between the ''Afrika Korps'' and Egypt. On [[June 21,]] 1942, after a swift, coordinated and fierce [[combined arms]] assault, the city surrendered along with its 33,000 defenders. By then, the able troops who had defended Tobruk in 1941 had been dispatched to the [[Pacific]], at the insistence of the Australian Government. Only at the [[Battle of Singapore|fall of Singapore]], earlier that year, had more [[Commonwealth of Nations|British Commonwealth]] troops been captured. Hitler made Rommel a [[Generalfeldmarschall|field marshal]]. (Rommel later told his [[confidante]], [[Hans von Luck]], that he would have preferred the ''[[Führer]]'' gave him another division.) Within weeks, the Allies were pushed back far into [[Egypt]].
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===Gradual defeat===
  
 
[[Image:Rommel with his aides.jpg|thumb|Romel with his aides, 1942.]]
 
[[Image:Rommel with his aides.jpg|thumb|Romel with his aides, 1942.]]
Rommel's ''21.Panzer-Division'' was eventually stopped at the small railway town of [[El Alamein]], just sixty miles from [[Alexandria]].  
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Rommel's ''21.Panzer-Division'' was eventually stopped at the small railway town of [[El Alamein]], just sixty miles from [[Alexandria]].
With Allied forces from [[Malta]] interdicting his supplies at sea, and the enormous distances supplies had to travel to reach his forward troops, Rommel could not hold the El Alamein position forever. Still, it took a large, set-piece battle, the [[Second Battle of El Alamein]], to dislodge his forces and even this British attack would not have pushed the Germans further than Fuka had Hitler not forbidden a retreat, during a lull in the battle, that was already in progress with his infamous "victory or death," stand-fast order.
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With Allied forces from [[Malta]] interdicting his supplies at sea and the enormous distances supplies had to travel to reach his forward troops, Rommel could not hold the El Alamein position forever. Still, it took a large, set-piece battle, the [[Second Battle of El Alamein]], to dislodge his forces.  
  
In September, Rommel took sick leave in Italy and Germany, but immediately returned when news of the battle reached him. After the defeat at El Alamein, Rommel's forces managed to escape by using all the Italian transports. Despite urgings from [[Hitler]] and [[Mussolini]], Rommel's forces did not again stand and fight until they had entered [[Tunisia]]. Even then, their first battle was not against the [[British Eighth Army]], but against the [[U.S. II Corps]]. Rommel inflicted a sharp defeat on the American forces at the [[Battle of the Kasserine Pass|Kasserine Pass]].
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Rommel had taken sick leave in Italy and Germany, but immediately returned when news of the battle reached him. After the defeat at El Alamein, Rommel's forces managed to escape by using all the Italian transports. Despite urgings from [[Hitler]] and [[Mussolini]], Rommel's forces did not again stand and fight until they had entered [[Tunisia]]. Even then, their first battle was not against the [[British Eighth Army]], but against the [[U.S. II Corps]]. Rommel inflicted a sharp defeat on the American forces at the [[Battle of the Kasserine Pass|Kasserine Pass]].
  
Turning once again to face the British Commonwealth forces in the old French border defenses of the [[Mareth Line]], Rommel could only delay the inevitable. At the end of January 1943, the Italian [[General]] [[Giovanni Messe]] was appointed the new commander of Rommel’s [[Panzer Army Africa]], which was now renamed the [[1st Italo-German Panzer Army]] (in recognition of the fact that it consisted of one German and three Italian corps). Though Messe was to replace Rommel, he diplomatically deferred to the German, and the two coexisted in what was theoretically the same command until March 9, when Rommel finally departed Africa. Rommel's departure was kept secret on Hitler's explicit orders, so that the morale of the Axis troops could be maintained and respectful fear by their enemies retained. The last Rommel offensive in North Africa occurred on March 6 1943, when he attacked [[Bernard Law Montgomery, 1st Viscount Montgomery of Alamein|Bernard Montgomery]]’s [[British Eighth Army|Eighth Army]] at the [[Battle of Medenine]] with three Panzer divisions ([[German 10th Panzer Division|10]], [[German 15th Panzer Division|15]], and [[German 21st Panzer Division|21]]).  
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Turning once again to face the British Commonwealth forces in the old French border defenses of the [[Mareth Line]], Rommel could only delay the inevitable. At the end of January 1943, the Italian General [[Giovanni Messe]] was appointed the new commander of Rommel’s [[Panzer Army Africa]], which was now renamed the [[1st Italo-German Panzer Army]]. Though Messe was to replace Rommel, he diplomatically deferred to the German, and the two coexisted in what was theoretically the same command until March 9, when Rommel finally departed Africa. Rommel's departure was kept secret on Hitler's explicit orders, so that the morale of the Axis troops, as well as the respectful fear of their enemies, could be maintained. The last Rommel offensive in North Africa occurred on March 6 1943, when he attacked [[Bernard Law Montgomery, 1st Viscount Montgomery of Alamein|Bernard Montgomery]]’s [[British Eighth Army|Eighth Army]] at the [[Battle of Medenine]] with three Panzer divisions ([[German 10th Panzer Division|10]], [[German 15th Panzer Division|15]], and [[German 21st Panzer Division|21]]).  
  
Decoded [[ULTRA|Ultra]] intercepts allowed Montgomery to deploy large numbers of anti-tank guns in the path of the offensive. After losing fifty-two tanks, Rommel was forced to call off the assault. On March 9 he handed over command of ''Armeegruppe Afrika'' to [[Hans-Jürgen von Arnim|General Hans-Jürgen von Arnim]] and left Africa because of health reasons, never to return. On [[May 13,]] 1943, after the collapse of the [[German Fifth Army|German 5th Army]], the fall of [[Tunis]] and the surrounding of the [[Italian First Army|Italian 1st Army]], still holding the line at Enfidaville, [[Giovanni Messe|General Messe]] formally surrendered the remnants of ''Armeegruppe Afrika'' to the Allies. On May 12, one day before the surrender, Messe was promoted to the rank of [[field marshal]].
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Decoded intercepts allowed Montgomery to deploy large numbers of anti-tank guns in the path of the offensive. After losing fifty-two tanks, Rommel was forced to call off the assault. On March 9 he handed over command of ''Armeegruppe Afrika'' to [[Hans-Jürgen von Arnim|General Hans-Jürgen von Arnim]] and left Africa because of health reasons, never to return. On [[May 13,]] 1943, after the collapse of the [[German Fifth Army|German 5th Army]], the fall of [[Tunis]] and the surrounding of the [[Italian First Army|Italian 1st Army]], still holding the line at Enfidaville, [[Giovanni Messe|General Messe]] formally surrendered the remnants of ''Armeegruppe Afrika'' to the Allies.
  
 
==France 1943-1944==
 
==France 1943-1944==
[[Image:Blaskowitz, Rommel, Rundstedt2.jpg|right|thumb|250px|Field Marshal Erwin Rommel (centre) discusses the expected Allied invasion of France with Colonel General [[Johannes Blaskowitz]] and Field Marshal [[Gerd von Rundstedt]].]]
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Back in Germany, Rommel was for some time virtually "unemployed." On [[July 23,]] 1943, he moved to [[Greece]] as commander of [[Army Group E]] to defend the Greek coast against a possible allied landing that never happened, only to return to Germany two days later upon the overthrow of Mussolini. On [[August 17,]] 1943, Rommel moved his headquarters from [[Munich]] to [[Lake Garda]] as commander of a new [[Army Group B]], created to defend the north of Italy.  
 
Back in Germany, Rommel was for some time virtually "unemployed." On [[July 23,]] 1943, he moved to [[Greece]] as commander of [[Army Group E]] to defend the Greek coast against a possible allied landing that never happened, only to return to Germany two days later upon the overthrow of Mussolini. On [[August 17,]] 1943, Rommel moved his headquarters from [[Munich]] to [[Lake Garda]] as commander of a new [[Army Group B]], created to defend the north of Italy.  
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[[Image:Rommelatlanticwall.jpg|thumb|300px|Rommel inspects defenses along the Atlantic Wall.]]
  
 
After Hitler gave General [[Albert Kesselring]] sole Italian command on November 21, Rommel moved Army Group B to [[Normandy]], France, with responsibility for defending the French coast against the long-anticipated, Allied invasion. Dismayed by the situation he found, the slow building pace, and fearing he had just months before an invasion, Rommel reinvigorated the whole fortification effort along the Atlantic coast. Under his direction, work was significantly sped up, millions of mines laid, and thousands of tank traps and obstacles set up on beaches and throughout the countryside. Rommel, like all other commanders in Wehrmacht, was sure that landings were to occur in Pas-de-Calais.
 
After Hitler gave General [[Albert Kesselring]] sole Italian command on November 21, Rommel moved Army Group B to [[Normandy]], France, with responsibility for defending the French coast against the long-anticipated, Allied invasion. Dismayed by the situation he found, the slow building pace, and fearing he had just months before an invasion, Rommel reinvigorated the whole fortification effort along the Atlantic coast. Under his direction, work was significantly sped up, millions of mines laid, and thousands of tank traps and obstacles set up on beaches and throughout the countryside. Rommel, like all other commanders in Wehrmacht, was sure that landings were to occur in Pas-de-Calais.
  
After his battles in Africa, Rommel concluded that any offensive movement would be nearly impossible due to overwhelming Allied [[air superiority]]. He argued that the tank forces should be dispersed in small units and kept in heavily fortified positions as close to the front as possible, so they would not have to move far and en masse when the invasion started. He wanted the invasion stopped right on the beaches. However his commander, [[Gerd von Rundstedt]], felt that there was no way to stop the invasion near the beaches due to the equally overwhelming firepower of the [[Royal Navy]]. He felt the tanks should be formed into large units well inland near [[Paris]], where they could allow the Allies to extend into France and then cut off the Allied troops. When asked to pick a plan, Hitler vacillated and placed them in the middle, far enough to be useless to Rommel, not far enough to watch the fight for von Rundstedt.
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After his battles in Africa, Rommel concluded that any offensive movement would be nearly impossible due to overwhelming Allied [[air superiority]]. He argued that the tank forces should be dispersed in small units and kept in heavily fortified positions as close to the front as possible, so they would not have to move far and en masse when the invasion started. He wanted the invasion stopped right on the beaches. However his commander, [[Gerd von Rundstedt]], felt that there was no way to stop the invasion near the beaches due to the equally overwhelming firepower of the [[Royal Navy]]. He felt the tanks should be formed into large units well inland near [[Paris]], where they could allow the Allies to extend into France and then cut off the Allied troops. When asked to pick a plan, Hitler vacillated and placed them in the middle, far enough to be useless to Rommel, not far enough to be useful to von Rundstedt.
  
During [[D-Day]], several tank units, notably the [[12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend|12th SS Panzer Division]], were close enough to the beaches to create serious havoc. Hitler refused, however, to release the panzer reserves as he believed the Normandy landings were a diversion. Hitler and the German High Command expected the main assault in the [[Pas de Calais]] area, thanks to the success of a secret Allied deception campaign ([[Operation Fortitude]]). Facing only small-scale, German attacks, the Allies quickly secured a [[beachhead]].
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However, during [[D-Day]], several tank units, notably the [[12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend|12th SS Panzer Division]], were close enough to the beaches to create serious havoc. Hitler refused, however, to release the panzer reserves as he believed the Normandy landings were a diversion. Hitler and the German High Command expected the main assault in the [[Pas de Calais]] area, thanks to the success of a secret Allied deception campaign ([[Operation Fortitude]]). Facing only small-scale, German attacks, the Allies quickly secured a [[beachhead]].
  
 
==The plot against Hitler==
 
==The plot against Hitler==
[[Image:LangRugeSpeidelRommel May1944.jpg|right|thumb|250px|May 1944, Rommel (right) with his closest staff members: (L to R), his personal aide Captain [[Hellmuth Lang]], his chief naval aide Admiral [[Friedrich Ruge]], and his chief of staff General [[Hans Speidel]]. Speidel was heavily involved in the anti-Nazi conspiracy within the [[Wehrmacht]].]]
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[[Image:LangRugeSpeidelRommel May1944.jpg|right|thumb|250px|May 1944, Rommel (right) with his closest staff members: (L to R), his personal aide Captain [[Hellmuth Lang]], chief naval aide Admiral [[Friedrich Ruge]], and chief of staff General [[Hans Speidel]]. Speidel was heavily involved in the plot against Hitler and later blamed Rommel for his actions.]]
[[Image:Erwin rommel death.jpg|thumb|250px|A memorial at the site of Field Marshall Erwin Rommel's [[suicide]] outside of the town of Herrlingen, [[Baden-Württemberg]], [[Germany]] (west of [[Ulm]]).]]
 
On [[July 17,]] 1944, Rommel's staff car was strafed by an [[Royal Canadian Air Force|RCAF]] [[Supermarine Spitfire|Spitfire]] piloted by [[Charley Fox]]; he was hospitalized with major head injuries. (Although the Americans claimed to have hit the vehicle as well, many German reports specifically mentioned a Canadian Spitfire as the sole attacker). In the meantime, after the failed [[July 20 Plot]] against [[Adolf Hitler]], a widespread investigation was conducted to identify possible participants in the plot. Rommel was identified in some of the coup ringleaders’ documentation as a potential supporter, and an acceptable military leader to be placed in a position of responsibility should their coup succeed.
 
  
No evidence was found that directly linked Rommel to the plot, nor that he had been contacted by any of the plot ringleaders. At the same time, local Nazi party officials reported on Rommel's extensive and scornful criticism of Nazi incompetent leadership during the time he was hospitalized. [[Martin Bormann|Bormann]] was certain of Rommel's involvement, [[Joseph Goebbels|Goebbels]] was not. The only serious evidence against him was provided by his chief of staff Speidel, who scapegoated Rommel for his own actions, claiming that the rebellious orders were issued by Rommel, not him, and that he, Speidel, tried to report this criminal acts to Berlin, but was prevented from so doing (See Reuth 2006). This was clearly self-serving testimony. Unfortunately for Rommel, the 'Court of Military Honour' that was to decide whether or not to hand him over to [[Roland Freisler]]'s people's court included two men with whom Rommel had crossed swords before, [[Guderian|Heinz Guderian]] and [[Rundstedt|Gerd von Rundstedt]]. The Court decided that Rommel should be handed over to the People's Court.[[image:Rommels-grab.jpg|thumb|left|250px|Erwin Rommel's Grave.]]
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On July 17, 1944, Rommel's staff car was strafed by an [[Royal Canadian Air Force]] [[Supermarine Spitfire|Spitfire]] and was hospitalized with major head injuries. In the meantime, following the failed [[July 20 Plot]] against [[Adolf Hitler]], a widespread investigation was conducted to identify possible participants in the plot. Rommel chief of staff, Gen. Hans Speidel was heavily implicated and Rommel himself was named in some of the ringleaders’ papers as a potential supporter who could be placed in a position of responsibility should their coup succeed.  
  
The true extent of Rommel's knowledge of, or involvement with, the plot is still unclear. After the war, however, his wife maintained that Rommel had been against the plot. It has been stated that Rommel wanted to avoid giving future generations of Germans the perception that the war was lost because of backstabbing, the infamous [[Dolchstoßlegende]], as was commonly believed by some Germans of [[World War I]].  
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No evidence was found that directly linked Rommel to the plot or that he had been contacted by any of the plot ringleaders about the coup. At the same time, local [[Nazi]] party officials, during the time Rommel was hospitalized, reported on his extensive and scornful criticism of Nazi incompetent leadership. [[Martin Bormann|Bormann]] was certain of Rommel's involvement, but [[Joseph Goebbels|Goebbels]] was not. The most serious evidence against him was provided by his chief of staff Speidel, who blamed Rommel for his own actions, claiming that the rebellious orders were issued by Rommel, and that he, Speidel, tried to report this criminal acts to Berlin, but was prevented from so doing (Reuth 2006). Unfortunately for Rommel, the Court of Military Honour that was to decide whether or not to hand him over to [[Roland Freisler]]'s People's Court included two men with whom Rommel had crossed swords before, [[Guderian|Heinz Guderian]] and [[Rundstedt|Gerd von Rundstedt]]. The Court decided that Rommel should be handed over to the People's Court.
  
Because of Rommel's popularity with the German people, Hitler gave him the option of committing [[suicide]] with [[cyanide]] or facing a trial before [[Roland Freisler]]'s "[[Volksgerichtshof|People's Court]]" and the murder of his family and staff. Rommel ended his own life on [[October, 14]] 1944, and was buried with full military honors. After the war, an edited version of his diary was published as ''The Rommel Papers''. He is the only member of the [[Third Reich]] establishment to have a museum dedicated to him. His grave can be found in Herrlingen, a short distance west of [[Ulm]].
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The true extent of Rommel's knowledge of, or involvement with, the plot is still unclear. After the war, however, his wife maintained that Rommel had been against the plot. It has been stated that Rommel wanted to avoid giving future generations of Germans the perception that the war was lost because of backstabbing, as was commonly believed by some Germans of [[World War I]].
 
 
==Battles==
 
* [[Battle of Caporetto]] (1917)
 
* [[Battle of Arras (1940)|Battle of Arras]] (1940)
 
* [[Siege of Tobruk]] (1941)
 
* [[Battle of Gazala]] (1942)
 
* [[Battle of Bir Hakeim]] (1942)
 
* [[First Battle of El Alamein]] (1942)
 
* [[Battle of Alam Halfa]] (1942)
 
* [[Second Battle of El Alamein]] (1942)
 
* [[Battle of Medenine]] (1943)
 
* [[Battle of the Kasserine Pass]] (1943)
 
* [[Battle of Normandy]] (1944)
 
  
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===Death===
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[[image:Rommels-grab.jpg|thumb|250px|Erwin Rommel's Grave.]]
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Because of Rommel's popularity with the German people, Hitler gave him the option of committing [[suicide]] with [[cyanide]] or facing a trial before the People's Court which could result in the execution of his family and staff. Rommel ended his own life on October, 14 1944, and was buried with full military honors. After the war, an edited version of his diary was published as ''The Rommel Papers''. He is the only member of the [[Third Reich]] establishment to have a museum dedicated to him. His grave can be found in Herrlingen, a short distance west of [[Ulm]].
  
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When Rommel's alleged involvement in the plot to kill Hitler became known, his stature was enhanced greatly among the former Allied nations. Rommel was often cited in Western sources as a general who, though a loyal German, was willing to stand up to the evil that was Hitler. The release of the film ''The Desert Fox: The Story of Rommel'' (1951) helped enhance his reputation as one of the most widely known and well-regarded leaders in the German Army.
  
 
==Quotations==
 
==Quotations==
  
{{wikiquote}}
 
 
* "Sweat saves blood, blood saves lives, and brains save both."
 
* "Sweat saves blood, blood saves lives, and brains save both."
 
* "Mortal danger is an effective antidote for fixed ideas."
 
* "Mortal danger is an effective antidote for fixed ideas."
 
* "Don't fight a battle if you don't gain anything by winning."
 
* "Don't fight a battle if you don't gain anything by winning."
* "In a man-to-man fight, the winner is he who has one more round in his magazine."
 
* "Courage which goes against military expediency is stupidity, or, if it is insisted upon by a commander, irresponsibility."
 
 
* "In the absence of orders, find something and kill it."
 
* "In the absence of orders, find something and kill it."
 
* Referring to Italians: "Good troops, bad officers. But remember that without them we wouldn't have civilization."
 
* Referring to Italians: "Good troops, bad officers. But remember that without them we wouldn't have civilization."
 
* "Training errors are recorded on paper. Tactical errors are etched in stone."
 
* "Training errors are recorded on paper. Tactical errors are etched in stone."
* "There is one unalterable difference between a soldier and a civilian: the civilian never does more than he is paid to do."
 
* "Men are basically smart or dumb and lazy or ambitious. The dumb and ambitious ones are dangerous and I get rid of them."
 
* "Be an example to your men, in your duty and in private life. Never spare yourself, and let the troops see that you don't in your endurance of fatigue and privation. Always be tactful and well-mannered and teach your subordinates to do the same. Avoid excessive sharpness or harshness of voice, which usually indicates the man who has shortcomings of his own to hide."
 
 
* "I know I haven't offered you much; sand, heat, scorpions ... but we've shared them together. One more last push, and it is Cairo. And if we fail, ... well, we tried, ... together"*
 
* "I know I haven't offered you much; sand, heat, scorpions ... but we've shared them together. One more last push, and it is Cairo. And if we fail, ... well, we tried, ... together"*
  
 
==References and further reading==
 
==References and further reading==
<references/>
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Susan.. alphabetize, put last names first. some need dates and other cleanup
 
* John Bierman and Colin Smith. ''The Battle of Alamein: Turning Point, World War II'', (2002). ISBN 0-670-03040-6
 
* John Bierman and Colin Smith. ''The Battle of Alamein: Turning Point, World War II'', (2002). ISBN 0-670-03040-6
 
* George Forty. ''The Armies of Rommel'', (Arms and Armour Press, London 1997) ISBN 1-85409-379-7
 
* George Forty. ''The Armies of Rommel'', (Arms and Armour Press, London 1997) ISBN 1-85409-379-7
 
* David Fraser. ''Knight's Cross: A Life of Field Marshal Erwin Rommel'', ISBN 0-06-092597-3
 
* David Fraser. ''Knight's Cross: A Life of Field Marshal Erwin Rommel'', ISBN 0-06-092597-3
 
* Jack Greene. ''Rommel's North Africa Campaign: September 1940 - November 1942'', . ISBN 1-58097-018-4
 
* Jack Greene. ''Rommel's North Africa Campaign: September 1940 - November 1942'', . ISBN 1-58097-018-4
** Jon Latimer. ''Alamein'', . ISBN 0-674-01016-7
 
 
* Jon Latimer. ''Tobruk 1941: Rommel's Opening Move'' ISBN 1-84176-092-7  
 
* Jon Latimer. ''Tobruk 1941: Rommel's Opening Move'' ISBN 1-84176-092-7  
 
* Ronald Lewin. ''Rommel as military commander'' B&N Books: ISBN 0-7607-0861-4
 
* Ronald Lewin. ''Rommel as military commander'' B&N Books: ISBN 0-7607-0861-4
 
* Samuel W. Mitcham. ''Rommel's Greatest Victory'', ISBN 0-89141-730-3  
 
* Samuel W. Mitcham. ''Rommel's Greatest Victory'', ISBN 0-89141-730-3  
* Reuth, Ralf Georg. ''Rommel: The End of a Legend''. London: Haus Books, 2006 (hardcover, ISBN 1904950205).
+
* Reuth, Ralf Georg. ''Rommel: The End of a Legend''. London: Haus Books, 2006 ISBN 1904950205.
* Dennis Showalter. ''Patton and Rommel: Men of War in the Twentieth Century. 2005. 441 pp. ISBN 978-0-425-20663-8.
+
* Dennis Showalter. ''Patton and Rommel: Men of War in the Twentieth Century''. 2005. ISBN 978-0-425-20663-8.
* Desmond Young. ''Rommel The Desert Fox''
 
* ''21st Panzer Division: Rommel's Africa Korps Spearhead'' (Spearhead Series), by [[Chris Ellis]]. ISBN 0-7110-2853-2
 
* ''With Rommel's Army in Libya'', by Almasy, [[Gabriel Francis Horchler]], [[Janos Kubassek]]. ISBN 0-7596-1608-6
 
* ''Germany and the Second World War''. Vol 3, part 4 Clarendon Press • Oxford 1995
 
 
* ''Inside the Afrika Korps: The Crusader Battles, 1941-1942''. ISBN 1-85367-322-6
 
* ''Inside the Afrika Korps: The Crusader Battles, 1941-1942''. ISBN 1-85367-322-6
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
  
* [http://www.badley.info/history/Rommel-Erwin-Johannes-Eugen-Germany.biog.html Rommel Chronology World History Database]
 
 
* [http://www.eyewitnesstohistory.com/rommel.htm The Forced Suicide of Field Marshall Rommel, 1944]
 
* [http://www.eyewitnesstohistory.com/rommel.htm The Forced Suicide of Field Marshall Rommel, 1944]
 
* [http://www.eyewitnesstohistory.com/blitzkrieg.htm Excerpts from Rommel's account of the blitzkrieg, 1940]
 
* [http://www.eyewitnesstohistory.com/blitzkrieg.htm Excerpts from Rommel's account of the blitzkrieg, 1940]
* [http://www.prominentpeople.co.za/people/5php Prominent People - Erwin Rommel]
 
* [http://pedg.org/panzer/public/website/gen1.htm Erwin (Johannes Eugen) Rommel, The Desert Fox / Der Wüstenfuchs] at Achtung Panzer!
 
* [http://www.montjoye.net/index.php?mod=chateaux&ac=rommel_la_roche_guyon  A history of Rommel in headquarters of La Roche Guyon (French) ]
 
 
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=2228 Erwin Rommel's Gravesite]
 
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=2228 Erwin Rommel's Gravesite]
* [http://www.wzaponline.com/Page3.html Essay: The Success of the Deutches Afrika Korps was Based on Rommel's Leadership]
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* [http://www.wzaponline.com/RommelsLeadership.pdf The Success of the Deutches Afrika Korps was Based on Rommel's Leadership]
{{GFMofWWII}}
 
 
 
{{RKDiamonds}}
 
  
{{Persondata
 
|NAME=Rommel, Erwin Johannes Eugen
 
|ALTERNATIVE NAMES=Desert Fox (nickname)
 
|SHORT DESCRIPTION=German Field Marshal
 
|DATE OF BIRTH=November 15, 1891
 
|PLACE OF BIRTH=[[Heidenheim, Germany]]
 
|DATE OF DEATH=October 14, 1944
 
|PLACE OF DEATH=[[Herrlingen, Germany]]
 
|UNKNOWN FACT=[[Some historians believe Rommels' irregular intuition came from his regular use of the URINE TREATMENT he received, mistakingly thinking he was using the same miracle drug Hitler was using.]]
 
}}
 
  
 
[[Category: History and Biography]]
 
[[Category: History and Biography]]
  
 
{{Credit|109497260}}
 
{{Credit|109497260}}

Revision as of 02:54, 30 March 2007


Erwin Johannes Eugen Rommel
November 15, 1891 - October 14, 1944
File:AKrommel.jpg
Generalfeldmarschall Erwin Rommel, 1941

Erwin Johannes Eugen Rommel November 15, 1891 – October 14, 1944 was one of the most distinguished field marshals of World War II. He was the commander of the Deutsches Afrika Korps and also became known by the nickname “The Desert Fox” for the skillful military campaigns he waged on behalf of the German Army in North Africa. He was later in command of the German forces opposing the Allied cross-channel invasion at Normandy.

Rommel is remembered not only for his remarkable military prowess, but also for his reputation for chivalry towards his adversaries. He was one of the few German commanders who disobeyed Adolf Hitler's infamous 1942 Commando Order requiring that commandos captured in Europe and Africa should be immediately executed even if they attempted to surrender. He is also noted for possibly having taken part in a plot to assassinate Adolf Hitler, for which he was forced to commit suicide before the war's end.

Early life and career

Rommel was born in Heidenheim, Germany, approximately 27 miles from Ulm, in the state of Württemberg. He was baptized on November 17, 1891. He was the second son of a Protestant headmaster of the secondary school at Aalen, also named Erwin Rommel, and Helene von Luz, a daughter of a prominent local dignitary. The couple had three more children, two sons, Karl and Gerhard, and a daughter, Helene.

At the age of 14, Rommel and a friend built a full-scale glider that was able to fly, although not very far. Young Erwin considered becoming an aeronautical engineer and would throughout his life display extraordinary technical aptitude. However, at his father's insistence, he joined the local 124th Württemberg Infantry Regiment as an officer cadet in 1910 and, shortly after, was sent to the Officer Cadet School in Danzig.

File:Rommel cadet.jpg
A young Rommel as an officer cadet around 1910.

While at Cadet School early in 1911, Rommel met his future wife, 17-year-old Lucia Maria Mollin (commonly called Lucie). He graduated in November 1911 and was commissioned as a lieutenant in January 1912. Rommel and Lucie married in 1916, and in 1928 they had a son, Manfred, who would later become the mayor of Stuttgart. (1 p. 56).

World War I

During World War I, Rommel fought in France, as well as in Romania and Italy as part of the élite Alpen Korps. While serving with that unit, he gained a reputation for making quick tactical decisions and taking advantage of enemy confusion. He was wounded three times and awarded the Iron Cross, First and Second Class.

Rommel also received Prussia's highest medal, the Pour le Mérite—an honor traditionally reserved for generals only—after fighting in the mountains of west Slovenia in the Battle of the Isonzo. The award came as a result of the capture of Mount Matajur, Slovenia, and its defenders, numbering 150 Italian officers, 7,000 men and eighty-one pieces of artillery. Rommel's battalion also played a key role in the decisive victory of the Central Powers over the Italian Army at the Battle of Caporetto.

Inter-war years

File:Rommel.jpg
Rommel shortly after WWI.

After the war, Rommel held battalion commands and was an instructor at the Dresden Infantry School from 1929 to 1933 and the Potsdam War Academy from 1935 to 1938. Rommel's war diaries, Infantry Attacks, published in 1937, became a highly regarded military textbook and attracted the attention of Adolf Hitler, who placed him in charge of the War Ministry liaison with the Hitler Youth’s Headquarters of Military Sports. This was the Hitler Youth branch involved with paramilitary activities: terrain exercises and marksmanship. Rommel applied himself energetically to the new task.

In 1937, Rommel conducted a tour of Hitler Youth (HJ) meetings and encampments, and delivered lectures on German soldiering while inspecting facilities and exercises. Simultaneously, he was pressuring Hilter Youth leader Baldur von Schirach, to accept an agreement expanding the army's involvement in Hitler Youth training. Schirach interpreted this as a bid to turn the Hitler Jugend into an army auxiliary, a "junior army" in his words. He refused, and Rommel, whom he had come to dislike personally, was denied access to the Hitler Jugend. An agreement between the Army and the Hitler Youth was concluded, but on a far more limited scope than Rommel had sought. Cooperation was restricted to the army providing personnel to the Rifle School, much to the army's chagrin. By 1939, the Hitler Jugend had 20,000 rifle instructors. Rommel retained his place at Potsdam and was awarded the highest war ribbons for excellent performance.

In 1938, Rommel, now a colonel, was appointed commandant of the War Academy at Wiener Neustadt. Here he started his follow-up to Infantry Attacks, Panzer greift an (Tank Attacks). However, Rommel was soon removed to take command of Adolf Hitler's personal protection battalion (FührerBegleitbataillon), assigned to protect him in the special railway train used during his visits to occupied Czechoslovakia and Memel. It was at this period that he met and befriended Joseph Göbbels, the Reich's minister of propaganda. Goebbels became a fervent admirer of Rommel, and later ensured that Rommel's exploits were celebrated in the media.

Early World War II

Poland 1939

Rommel continued as Führerbegleitbataillon commander during the Polish campaign, often moving up close to the front and seeing much of Hitler. After the Polish defeat, Rommel returned to Berlin to organize the Führer's victory parade, taking part himself as a member of Hitler's entourage.

France 1940

Rommel asked Hitler for command of a panzer division and, on February 6, 1940 only three months before the invasion, Rommel was given command of the German 7th Panzer Division for "Case Yellow," the invasion of France and the Low Countries. This string-pulling provoked resentment among fellow officers, the more so as Rommel had no experience with armor. Nevertheless, he showed considerable skill in this operation, repulsing a counterattack by the British Expeditionary Force at Arras.

Rommel also set the record for the longest thrust in one day by Panzers up to that point, covering nearly 150 miles. The 7th Panzer Division was one of the first German units to reach the English Channel (on June 10) and captured the vital port of Cherbourg on June 19. However, Rommel's has also been criticized for misappropriating supplies and bridging equipment belonging to the neighboring divisions, gravely hampering their operations. His commander, Hermann Hoth, considered court-martialing him for this, but was dissuaded by his own commander, Hans von Kluge. The fame gained by Rommel during the campaign made a court-martial, or even a reprimand, impractical. Rommel's reward for his success was to be promoted and appointed commander of the German 5th Light Division and the 15th Panzer Division, which were sent to Libya in early 1941 to aid the hapless and demoralized Italian troops, forming the Deutsches Afrika Korps

Africa 1941-43

File:General Erwin Rommel between Tobruk and Sidi Omar.jpg
Rommel with the 15th Panzer Division near Tobruk in 1941.

His campaign in Africa earned Rommel the nickname “The Desert Fox.” He spent most of 1941 building up his forces, the Italian component of which had suffered a string of defeats at the hands of British Commonwealth forces under Major-General Richard O’Connor.

Tobruk

An offensive pushed the Allied forces out of Libya. Though ordered not to advance beyond the oasis of Maradah, Rommel disobeyed and was shortly stalled exactly on the Egyptian border at Helfaya pass, after he ordered that the important port of Tobruk be outflanked, hoping thus to trap the bulk of the enemy force entrenched there. This outflanking manuever could not be carried out as rapidly as was necessary due to logistical overstretch. Before long, a sandstorm further complicated the advance. Although surrounded, Tobruk was remained under the control by Allied forces under the Australian General, Leslie Morshead.

The unsuccessful assault on Tobruk, whose capture was logistically imperative, was a failure that imperiled Rommel's career. Impatient to secure success, Rommel ordered repeated small-scale attacks which were easily repulsed by the defenders. Before long, his logistically strapped forces became so weak that a break-out from Tobruk could most likely have reached El Adem, sever the Afrika Korps’s communications, and topple it. Luckily, Morshead was misled by intelligence overestimates of the German forces opposing Tobruk, and thus Rommel was saved.

At this time, Rommel strongly requested reinforcements that the High Command believed it could not spare. Amery Chief of the General Staff Franz Halder, angry that his order not to advance beyond Maradah had been disobeyed and alarmed at mounting losses, dispatched Friedrich Paulus to "head off this soldier gone stark mad." Upon arrival Paulus forbade Rommel from undertaking any more small-scale assaults, but to plan a systematic, all-out attack. His composure restored, Rommel complied. His planned major assault scheduled for November 21, however, was not to take place.

Operation Crusader

British Commander-in-Chief of India, General Claude Auchinleck had now been assigned to the task of relieving Tobruk and launched a major offensive to that end—Operation Crusader. Initially Crusader appeared doomed. The British had deeply outflanked the German defenses along the Egyptian frontier with a long left hook through the desert and reached a position where they could strike at both Tobruk and the coastal road, "Via Balbia." The British planned for the Germans to counter-attack so as to drive the British back. This, as a result of British numerical superiority in both planes and tanks, would result in the Germans' annihilation. The Germans, however, were confident in the strength of the defenses covering the Via Balbia and stayed put , waiting on the Allies’ next move.

File:Rommel in Africa1941.jpg
Rommel in Africa - Summer 1941.

The baffled British, whose plan did not provide for this eventuality, felt compelled to attack and try to relieve Tobruk, severing the Via Balbia. However, neglecting to bring the necessary heavy artillery and other tactical errors, they suffered heavy loses and failed in their objective. Rommel then over-exploited his success by by attempting to drive the British further back than their start line and outflank them as well.

Rommel's contempt for the enemy proved excessive and the gamble failed. His forces suffered major losses from British antitank guns and, as they dispersed over the desert, from Royal Air Force planes. Unlike the British, Rommel could not replace not replace his losses and his forces were soon unable even to hold their initial positions. During the confusion caused by the Crusader operation, Rommel and his staff found themselves behind Allied lines several times.

Crusader was thus another defeat for Rommel. After several weeks of fighting, he ordered the withdrawal of all his forces from the area around Tobruk on December 7, 1941. The Allies followed, attempting to cut off the retreating troops, but Rommel's counterattack on January 20, 1942 mauled the Allied forces. The Allies pulled back to the Tobruk area and commenced building defensive positions.

Temporary Victory

On May 26, 1942 Rommel's army again attacked. In a classic Blitzkrieg, he outflanked the Allies at Gazala, surrounded and reduced the strongpoint at Bir Hakeim, and forced the Allies to quickly retreat in order to avoid being completely cut off. Tobruk, isolated and alone, was now all that stood between the Afrika Korps and Egypt. On June 21, 1942, after a swift, coordinated and fierce combined arms assault, the city surrendered along with its 33,000 defenders. Although the able troops who had defended Tobruk in 1941 had been dispatched to the Pacific at the insistence of the Australian Government, only at the fall of Singapore, earlier that year, had more British Commonwealth troops been captured. Hitler made Rommel a field marshal. Within weeks, the Allies were pushed back far into Egypt.

Gradual defeat

Romel with his aides, 1942.

Rommel's 21.Panzer-Division was eventually stopped at the small railway town of El Alamein, just sixty miles from Alexandria.

With Allied forces from Malta interdicting his supplies at sea and the enormous distances supplies had to travel to reach his forward troops, Rommel could not hold the El Alamein position forever. Still, it took a large, set-piece battle, the Second Battle of El Alamein, to dislodge his forces.

Rommel had taken sick leave in Italy and Germany, but immediately returned when news of the battle reached him. After the defeat at El Alamein, Rommel's forces managed to escape by using all the Italian transports. Despite urgings from Hitler and Mussolini, Rommel's forces did not again stand and fight until they had entered Tunisia. Even then, their first battle was not against the British Eighth Army, but against the U.S. II Corps. Rommel inflicted a sharp defeat on the American forces at the Kasserine Pass.

Turning once again to face the British Commonwealth forces in the old French border defenses of the Mareth Line, Rommel could only delay the inevitable. At the end of January 1943, the Italian General Giovanni Messe was appointed the new commander of Rommel’s Panzer Army Africa, which was now renamed the 1st Italo-German Panzer Army. Though Messe was to replace Rommel, he diplomatically deferred to the German, and the two coexisted in what was theoretically the same command until March 9, when Rommel finally departed Africa. Rommel's departure was kept secret on Hitler's explicit orders, so that the morale of the Axis troops, as well as the respectful fear of their enemies, could be maintained. The last Rommel offensive in North Africa occurred on March 6 1943, when he attacked Bernard Montgomery’s Eighth Army at the Battle of Medenine with three Panzer divisions (10, 15, and 21).

Decoded intercepts allowed Montgomery to deploy large numbers of anti-tank guns in the path of the offensive. After losing fifty-two tanks, Rommel was forced to call off the assault. On March 9 he handed over command of Armeegruppe Afrika to General Hans-Jürgen von Arnim and left Africa because of health reasons, never to return. On May 13, 1943, after the collapse of the German 5th Army, the fall of Tunis and the surrounding of the Italian 1st Army, still holding the line at Enfidaville, General Messe formally surrendered the remnants of Armeegruppe Afrika to the Allies.

France 1943-1944

Back in Germany, Rommel was for some time virtually "unemployed." On July 23, 1943, he moved to Greece as commander of Army Group E to defend the Greek coast against a possible allied landing that never happened, only to return to Germany two days later upon the overthrow of Mussolini. On August 17, 1943, Rommel moved his headquarters from Munich to Lake Garda as commander of a new Army Group B, created to defend the north of Italy.

File:Rommelatlanticwall.jpg
Rommel inspects defenses along the Atlantic Wall.

After Hitler gave General Albert Kesselring sole Italian command on November 21, Rommel moved Army Group B to Normandy, France, with responsibility for defending the French coast against the long-anticipated, Allied invasion. Dismayed by the situation he found, the slow building pace, and fearing he had just months before an invasion, Rommel reinvigorated the whole fortification effort along the Atlantic coast. Under his direction, work was significantly sped up, millions of mines laid, and thousands of tank traps and obstacles set up on beaches and throughout the countryside. Rommel, like all other commanders in Wehrmacht, was sure that landings were to occur in Pas-de-Calais.

After his battles in Africa, Rommel concluded that any offensive movement would be nearly impossible due to overwhelming Allied air superiority. He argued that the tank forces should be dispersed in small units and kept in heavily fortified positions as close to the front as possible, so they would not have to move far and en masse when the invasion started. He wanted the invasion stopped right on the beaches. However his commander, Gerd von Rundstedt, felt that there was no way to stop the invasion near the beaches due to the equally overwhelming firepower of the Royal Navy. He felt the tanks should be formed into large units well inland near Paris, where they could allow the Allies to extend into France and then cut off the Allied troops. When asked to pick a plan, Hitler vacillated and placed them in the middle, far enough to be useless to Rommel, not far enough to be useful to von Rundstedt.

However, during D-Day, several tank units, notably the 12th SS Panzer Division, were close enough to the beaches to create serious havoc. Hitler refused, however, to release the panzer reserves as he believed the Normandy landings were a diversion. Hitler and the German High Command expected the main assault in the Pas de Calais area, thanks to the success of a secret Allied deception campaign (Operation Fortitude). Facing only small-scale, German attacks, the Allies quickly secured a beachhead.

The plot against Hitler

File:LangRugeSpeidelRommel May1944.jpg
May 1944, Rommel (right) with his closest staff members: (L to R), his personal aide Captain Hellmuth Lang, chief naval aide Admiral Friedrich Ruge, and chief of staff General Hans Speidel. Speidel was heavily involved in the plot against Hitler and later blamed Rommel for his actions.

On July 17, 1944, Rommel's staff car was strafed by an Royal Canadian Air Force Spitfire and was hospitalized with major head injuries. In the meantime, following the failed July 20 Plot against Adolf Hitler, a widespread investigation was conducted to identify possible participants in the plot. Rommel chief of staff, Gen. Hans Speidel was heavily implicated and Rommel himself was named in some of the ringleaders’ papers as a potential supporter who could be placed in a position of responsibility should their coup succeed.

No evidence was found that directly linked Rommel to the plot or that he had been contacted by any of the plot ringleaders about the coup. At the same time, local Nazi party officials, during the time Rommel was hospitalized, reported on his extensive and scornful criticism of Nazi incompetent leadership. Bormann was certain of Rommel's involvement, but Goebbels was not. The most serious evidence against him was provided by his chief of staff Speidel, who blamed Rommel for his own actions, claiming that the rebellious orders were issued by Rommel, and that he, Speidel, tried to report this criminal acts to Berlin, but was prevented from so doing (Reuth 2006). Unfortunately for Rommel, the Court of Military Honour that was to decide whether or not to hand him over to Roland Freisler's People's Court included two men with whom Rommel had crossed swords before, Heinz Guderian and Gerd von Rundstedt. The Court decided that Rommel should be handed over to the People's Court.

The true extent of Rommel's knowledge of, or involvement with, the plot is still unclear. After the war, however, his wife maintained that Rommel had been against the plot. It has been stated that Rommel wanted to avoid giving future generations of Germans the perception that the war was lost because of backstabbing, as was commonly believed by some Germans of World War I.

Death

Erwin Rommel's Grave.

Because of Rommel's popularity with the German people, Hitler gave him the option of committing suicide with cyanide or facing a trial before the People's Court which could result in the execution of his family and staff. Rommel ended his own life on October, 14 1944, and was buried with full military honors. After the war, an edited version of his diary was published as The Rommel Papers. He is the only member of the Third Reich establishment to have a museum dedicated to him. His grave can be found in Herrlingen, a short distance west of Ulm.

When Rommel's alleged involvement in the plot to kill Hitler became known, his stature was enhanced greatly among the former Allied nations. Rommel was often cited in Western sources as a general who, though a loyal German, was willing to stand up to the evil that was Hitler. The release of the film The Desert Fox: The Story of Rommel (1951) helped enhance his reputation as one of the most widely known and well-regarded leaders in the German Army.

Quotations

  • "Sweat saves blood, blood saves lives, and brains save both."
  • "Mortal danger is an effective antidote for fixed ideas."
  • "Don't fight a battle if you don't gain anything by winning."
  • "In the absence of orders, find something and kill it."
  • Referring to Italians: "Good troops, bad officers. But remember that without them we wouldn't have civilization."
  • "Training errors are recorded on paper. Tactical errors are etched in stone."
  • "I know I haven't offered you much; sand, heat, scorpions ... but we've shared them together. One more last push, and it is Cairo. And if we fail, ... well, we tried, ... together"*

References and further reading

Susan.. alphabetize, put last names first. some need dates and other cleanup

External links

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